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About The Southern sun. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1869-1872 | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1871)
THE SOUTHERN SUN. Official Journal of Decatur County. Largest Town and County Circulation Official Journal of the State of Georgia there it a hov wfTo does not lore to learn the children do not blame hiarJTOHVS^ 1 •aj he ii a wealthy boy.' * The mother law 1 JMUjGH4RWd nb-hJ ger of beliering wealth might take the *Wt place of goodneaa, Jkbe an excuae~for" be held in Uw**, from the Indianola (Texas) Bulletin, one of the sprightliest Bheets in that region : Texas Emigration. —The Southern Sun, published at Bainbridge, Ga., says ‘parties wishing to go to Texas come to us for in - formation, will you X?’ With the great est pleasure brother, and for the informa tion of such we below give you a short description of the fertile and magnificent West of Texas, the loveliest, healthiest and best country in the world, in which a man With small means, can soon, by the aid of energy and industry, build up an indepen" dence for himself and family within a short space of time. Lands cheap, ranging from |1 and upwards, according to location. /gricultural pursuits in Western Texas are yet in their infancy, but those that have engaged in farming find it very prof" itable, and this branch of our future pros" perity is rapidly increasing. With rail*, roads in Western Texas to induce immi* gration, the country will soon be densely populated—as it is, the flood that is pours ing in overland is enormous, most part of which stop at various points short of the West because of the length of the journey and the expense attending it. The great drawback to Western Texas immigration ia the lack of artificial transportation ; but the remedy will soon be supplied by the Western Texas Pacific and fc Gulf Railroad now building rapidly from Indianola, that will soon connect us with the most impor tant points in the interior. A divisiou of the immense territory of Texas—covering as it does 23?,00Q square miles, and its greatest length 800 miles f with a coastline extending36o miles—will add increasing interest to each section separated as it will now be into large and important States, whose vital interests will -receive due and proper attention for their future prosperity by the respective Slate Governments fostering the immediate and tnent of each. This portion, to which this journal is devoting its energies and influence to build up ; located at the principal seaport of all this vast and fertile region, at which must eventually concentrate all its commercial transactions, it becomes oar imperative duty to advocate measures that will redoun to its future prosperity. Emigrants to Texas, intending to settle in the Western portion of the State, will find it to their interest to land at Indianola, as soon as railway communication is es" tablished with the interior, as they will be enabled to reach their different destinations much quicker and cheaper than they can from points out of it, and thus avoid much of the delay and imposition that is encouns tered by a devious route. European emi gration for the West should also be direct to this port, to save time and money and vexatious delays, caused by circuitous routes. In our next issue we will endeavor to give a more extended description of the Vast resources of Western Texas for the benefit of those desiring to settle in the State. The San Antonio Herald. —This able and enterprising Texas newspaper is one of the very best that visits our sanctum; It is uncompromisingly Democratic, and no doubt enjoys a liberal support from that party. We prize the Herald very highly and hope that its managers will not fail to mail it to us regularly. The amount paid for expenses of the Government at Washington, for the month of March, last, was $12,500,000 jusS half a million of dollars more than ihe amount expended by John Quincy Adams when he was President for the whole expenses of the Government for one entire yeas. And yet, he was turned ont of office by the people for extravagant administration. Tempura mirtanter.—San Antonio Herald. Small Farms —Small farms make near neigbors; they make gooff roads; they make plenty of good schools and churches; there is more money made in proportion to the labor; less labor is wanted; everything is kept neat; less wages have to be paid ferhelp; less time mwasted; more is raised to the acre, because it is filled better; there is no watching of hired men; the mind*is not kept in a worry, a stew, a fret, all the time. There is not So much fear of a drought, of wet weather, of a frost, of small prices. There not so much money to be paid out for agricultural implements. Our wives and children have time to read, to improve their minds. • A small horse is soon curried—and the work ou a small farm is always pushed forward in season. Give us small farms for comfort; aye, and give m small farms for profit. 1 address TO THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES * by the democrats or congress. To the People of the United States : Our*presence and official duties at "W ash" iDgton have enabled us to become fully acquainted with the actions and designs of those who control the Radical party, and we feel called upon to utter a few words of warning against the alarming strides they have made toward centralization of power in the hands of Congress and the Executive. The time and attention of the Radical leaders have been almost wholly directed to devising such legislation as wiil» ic their view, best preserve their ascen« dancy, and no regard for the wise restraints imposed by the constitution haß checked their reckless and desperate career. Ihe President of United States has been for mally announced as a candidate for re«elecs tion. Tbo declarations of his selfish sup porters have been re-echoed by a subsidiz ed press, and the discipline of party has al ready made adhesion to his personal for tunes the supreme test of political fealty. The partisan legislation to which we refer was decreed and shaped in secret caucus, where the extremest counsels always dom inated, and was adopted by a subset 1 " vient majority, if not with the intent certainly with the effect to place in the hands of the President power to command his own renoraination, and to employ the army, navy and militia, at his sole discretion, as a means of subserv» ing his personal ambition. When the sad experience of the last two years, so disapm ointiDg the hopes and generous confidence of the country,is considered,inconnection with the violent utterances and rash purposes of those who control the Presidents policy, it is not surprising that the gravest appre hension for the fature peace of the nation should be entertained, At a time when Übor is depressed, and every material ins terest is palsied by oppressive taxation, the public offices have beeu multiplied beyond all precedent to serve as instruments in the perpetuation of power. Partizanship is the only test applied to distribution of this vast patronage; Hon* esty, fitness and moral worth, are openly* discarded, in favor of truckling subrnis* sion and dishonorable compliance. Hence enormous defalcations and wide-spread corruption have followed as the natural consequences of this pernicious system. By the official repol’t of the Secretary of the Treasury it appears that, after the de" J ru'Jn a i u e ictti Tnr uue'"? rd conuwMs 1 tn ■ the internal revenue, and that no proper diligence has ever been used to collect them. Reforms jn the revenue and fiscal systems, which all experience demonstrates to be necessaiy to a frugal administration ol the government, as well as a measure of relief to an overburdened people, have been persistently postponed or wilfully neglect ed. Congress now adjourns without having even attempted to reduce taxation or to repeal the glaring impositions by which iudustry is crushed and an excess of eighty millions of revenue is admitted, and yet, instead* of some measure of present relief, a barren and .'delusive resolution is passed by the Senate to consider the tariff and excise systems hereafter, as if the history of broken pledges and pretended remedies furnished any better assurance tor future legislation than experience has done in the past. Ship building * and the carrying trade, once sources cf national pride and prosperity, now languish under a crushing load of taxation, and nearly every other business interest is struggling without profit, to maintain itself. Our agricultur ists, while paying heavy taxes on all they consume, either to the government or to monopolists, fiod the prices for their own products so reduced that henest labor is denied its just reward, and industry is prostrated by invidious discrimination, — Nearly 200,000,000 acres of public lauds, which should have been reserved for the benefit of the people, have been voted away to giant corporations, neglecting our soldiers, enrirffiing a handful of greedy speculators and lobbyists, who are thereby enabled to exorcise a most dangerous and corrupting influence over State and Feder al legislation. If the career of these con« spirators be not checked, the downfall of free government is inevitable, and with it the elevation of a military dictator on the ruins of the Republic. Under the pretence of passing laws to enforce the fonrteenth amendment, and for other purposes, Congress has conferred the most despotic power upon the Executive, and provided an official machinery by which the liberties of the people are me naced, and the sacred right of local self government in the States is ignored, if not totally overthrown. Modelled np to the sedition laws, so odious in history, they are at variance with all the sanctified theo ries of our institutions, and the construc tion given by these Radical interpreters to the fourteenth amendment, is to use the language of an eminent Senator—Mr. Trumbull, of Illinois—an “annihilation of the States.” Under the last enforcement bill, the Executive may, in his discretion, thrust aside the government of any State, suspended the writofAakaj eorpas,” arrest its Governor, imprison or disperse the Leg. j islature, silence its judges, and trample down its people under the armed heel of his troops. Nothing is left to che citizen or the State which can any longer be called a right—all is changed into mere suffer ance. Our hopes for redress are in the calm good sense the “sober second thought” of the American people. We call upon them to be true to themselves and their posterity and disregarding party names and minor differences to insist upon a decentraliza tion of power, and the restrictions of Fed oral authority within its just and proper limits, leaving to the States that control over domestic affairs which is essential to their happiness and tranquility, and good government. Everything that malicious ingenuity could suggest has been done to irritate the people of the Middle* and Southern States. Gross aud exaggerated charges of disorder and violence owe their origin to the mischievous minds of potential mana gers in the Senate and House of Represen tatives, to which the executive has, we re gret to say, lent his aid, and thus helped to inflame the popular fee'ing. In this course of legislation and harsh re sent nTent, no word of conciliation, of kind encouragement, or fraternal friendship, has ever been addressed only in the language of proscription. We earnestly entreat our fellow citizens in all parts of the Union to spare no effort to maintain peace and order, to pieserve kinds ly relations among all men, and to dis" countenance any violation of the rights of any*portion of the people secured’*under the constitution, or any of its amendments. — Let us, in conclusion, earnestly beg of you not to aid the present attemps of Radical partisans to stir lip strife in the land ;to renew the issues of the war, or to obstruct the return of peace and prosperity to the Southern States, because it is thus that they seek to divide the attention of the country from the corruption and extrava gance in their administration of public af fairs, and the dangerous and profligate at tempts they are making toward ihe creation of a centralized military government. In the five years of peace following the war the Radical administrations have ex" pended $1,200,000,000 tor ordinary purpo ses alone, being within $200,000,000 of the aggregate amount spent for the same pm 1 " poses, in war and in peace, during the sevs* enty-one years proceeding June 30, 1861 not including, in either case, the sum paid upoft interest of the public debt. It is trifling with the intelligence of the mat Inis vast sum 'has been honestly ex pended. Hundreds of millions of it ha g been wantonly squandered. The expen ditures of the government for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1861, were only $62,- 000,000, while for precisely the same pm poses—civil list, army, navy, pensions and Indians—sl64,ooo,ooo were expended the fiscal year ending June 30, 1810. No indignation could be too stern, and no scorn .to severe for the assertions by unscrupulous Radical leaders, that the great Democratic party of the Union has or can have sympathy with disorders or violence in any part of the country, or in the deprivation of any man of his right under the constitution. It is to protect and perpetuate the rights which every free" man cherishes, to revive in all hearts the feeling of friendship, affection and har mony, whicli are the best guarantees of law and order, and to throw around the humblest citizen, wherever he may be, the protecting segis of those safeguards of personal liberty which the fundamental laws of the land assure,that we invoke the aid of all good men in the work of peace and re construction. We invite their generous co-operation, irrespective of all former and iffe fences of Opinion, so that the harsh voice of discard may be silenced ; that anew and danger ous sectional agitation may be checked that the burdens of taxation, direct aad indirect may be reduced to the lowest point consistent with gofid faith to every just national obligation,* and with a strietl; economical administration of the govern ment, and that (he States may be restored in their integrity and true relation to our Federal Union. [Sigued by all the Democratic Seniors and Representatives who were in Wish" ing ton at the close of the session of £on>* gress.] Ceayton on the Ku-rlux —That illfatri' ous exemplar of all human depravity, Clay ton, of Arkansas, claiming to be a Sehafor from that State, made a speech in Wash ington last Tuesday, in which he said that the in the South were numbered not by thousands, but by hundreds of thou sands, and.there were thirty thousands in the State of Arkansas alone. Perhaps there is not a worse man in the world than Clayton, and that he is living to boast of his tyrannous outrages on the people of Aakansas was a standing refutation of his Washington tirade. Telegraph Mesenger Ill's said that one of the results of the negotiations now progressing in Washing ton, is an agreement for the free naviga tion of the St. Lawrence by vessels of the United States. Now is the Time to Subscribe for the Southern Sin, only $2. 50 per annum. STATE NEWS. The bonded debt of Atlanta, is $878,250. The people of Atlanta, are having strawberry ta between Georgia, and Alabama, the latter State won the principal main, by one -Georgia won the second. A considerable amount of 1 spondulix Ch The to* figging season being over in Atlanta the people are now “cussin” about it. 100 la e. The young bucks of Savannah, &fe amusing themselves these dull times by playing cricket James R. and feolomou Hanell, have been aues ed in Savannah, for passing counterfeit greens. We have heard of many different kinds of con ventions—but Blakely has the credit of getting up the first regular singing convention on record. We presume the Rev. Samuel Bard, of sing-sing will be chosen as chairman, A young merchant of Savannah attempted !o cow-hide another— the other man not liking the game of “rap-jacket,” hauled out his “shooting iron,” and was about to blow a light hole througn his antagonist, when parties interfered and put a stop to the difficulty. Right.— The following order from the President of the Albany and Brunswick Railroad, is only one of the many numer" ous proofs that Kimball will not suffer his own enterprise to embarrass the people If every farmer and business man would make it a point never to employ a run way laborer, our labor affairs would soon assume a vastly more healthy aspect: President’s Offige, B. & A. R. R- Cos) Allanta, Ga., April 12, 1811. ) Geo. SchaubjQEsq., Contractor: Dear Sir: As the line of road west from Albany passes through an agricultuial district, it is probable that many laborers, who are now by the planters, may applv to you tor situations, and iC" cognizing that it is important both foi the interest of the road, and the community through which the road passes, that the agricultural' pursuits of the country be in no wise iuterferred with, I have to request that you shall, iu iio instance employ las borers, who have been engaged upon farms anywhere in the vicinity of the road, unless you have the written consent from the planters that the laborer offering his service is no longer required by the planter. Please impress this matter upon all sub-contractors under you, as it must be rigidly adhered to. Yours Respectfully, H. I. Kimball, President. The Hair of the New York Editors. —The hair of the New York editors is thus por trayed; .Bennett’s hair is gray; Greeley’s hair is. white; Marble’s hair is black ; Jones’ hair is red; Howard has no hair; Dana had once dark brown hair; Swinton has hyaciti" I’ms fete" Tilton has chestnut hair; Reid has black hair; and Chamberlain has sandy" Colored hair. Dana, Marble and Bryant wear full beards; Greely and Bennett wear no beards, and the rest of the editors have patches of hair on different parts of (heir phiz. Gree ley would look well in flowing beard and ferocious moustache. Ihe arrival of over one hundred French soldiers at New York, Tuesday, looks like the beginning of a movement toward French immigration, which, it is to be hoped, will be well carried out. The uns settled condition of France, the disorgan* ized condition of the county, and the pov* erty inevitable after a disastrous war. are all cogent reasons why Frenchmen should seek a home in the New World, partic" ularly in the Southern States. The Bonapartes of Baltimore. —There are some notable people resident in Baltimore, says a correspondent of the Newark Ads ▼ertiser. Mrs. Patterson, once the elegant and accomplished wife, of Jerome Bona parte, whom Napoleon would not allow to be recognized as the wife of his brother, still lives there at a good old age. She is a small woman, of most unpretending look and fashionable dress, but still full of vjgor and usefulness. A year or two since, she erected a fine block of stores in a business street, and almost daily went to look after the work. Mrs. Patterson has no family* and lives in a private boarding house. Her son, Jerome, died last season. His widow a Massachusetts lady, still ocuopio*. ih© mansion he lived in nearly forty years, leaving two sons, one recently an officer in the French army and the other now a student at Harvard University, Cambridge Mass., where the fathergraduated. Jerome, Mrs. Patterson’s son, early in life, Bore"a most striking resemblance to Napoleon, his uncle, and the eldest son, Col. 8., re sembles the Bonaparte family in an emi nent degree. Jerome, who died last, summer of a cancer in the neck, never en* gaged in any business, although he studied law, but occupied himself oh his estate near Baltimore. He was a strong Union man, and went against secession, as also did his mother, Mrs. Paitorson. He at tended the Episcopal Church, but bis moth er, is a Presbyterian. Negro Debts—lmportant Decision. —The Supreme Court of South Carolina has lately declared in favor of the Validity of con* tiacts in which slaves were the considera tion. The court was unanimous oh the question.' EORGI k —Disoatur County.—D B. McKinsey x-W as next friend of Ida Smith, McKinsey hasap p iea for exemption and setting apart and valua lon of Homestead and Realty, and I will pass upon the same on the 25th, Inst., at 10 o’eloak at my offi A ce * JOEL JOHN SO’N, . '^l )ri l loth, 1871, Ordinary D. 0. %t\v 40 WEEKS FORONE DOLLAR THE AMERICAN RURAL HOME from April 1, 1871 —A First-Class Eight-Page Agri cultural and Family Weekly. Speci mens Free. HOPKINS & WILCOX, Rochester, N. Y. Your Son s To a practical School, that will train them for ac tive, useful life, and a successful future The In stitution that best accomplishes this and is largely patronized by the South, is Eastman College, Pough hpensie N Y. Address for particulars. Ketpsie, G EASTMANi LLD ., President. EASTMAN'S 7 Business College, ATLANTA CA , Open Mav 10th. For full particulars of the In stitution. Practical "Course of Study. Terms of Tuition, Board, &c., address A. R. EASTMAN, Principal, Formerly of Eastman College, Poughkeepsie. Tk EDWARDS, Councilor-at • Law, 4(51 Penn. Av-, Washington. D. C., gives special attention to claims under the late Act of Congress for examination of claims of loyal citi zens of States lately in rebellion. Charges reas onable. COTTON Machinery* for Sale Cheap. 3,000 Dan forth Spindles with patent 36 in. cards and full preparation. Now running, and in first-rate order. Address MACHINERY, caie Geo. P. Rowell & Cos., 41 Park Row, N. Y. FBAGRAHT SAPOLIER Cleans Kid Gloves and all kinds of Cloths and Clothing; removes Paint, Greese, r lar &c., instant ly, without the least injury to the finest fabric. — Sold by Druggist and Fancy Goods Dealers. FRA GRANT SAPOLIENE CO., 33 -Barclay St., New York, 4i La Salle St., Chicago. how made in 10 hours, without Vlrl drugs. Particulars 10 cents. F. Sage, Cromwell, Conn. AIA A DAY FOR ALL with Stencil Tools Ad qpl Vr dress A, E. Graham, Springfield, Yt. Agents 1 Head This ! WE WILL PAY AGENTS A SALAII I OF S3O PER WEEK and Expenses, or allow a large commission to sell our new aud wonderful inven tions. Address M. WAGNER & CO., Marshall, Mich. FOR $2 PER LINE We will insert an advertisement ONE MONTH iu Thirty four First-class . GEORGIA NEWSPAPERS, Including Five Dailies. We refer to the publisher of this paper, to whom our responsibility is well known. LIST SENT FREE- Address Geo. P. Rowell & C 0.,, Advertising Agents, Nos. 40 & 41 Park Row New York. Bloomington (Illinois) Nursery. 19th Year. 600 Acres. 13 Greenhouses. Lar gest Assortment —all sizes. Best Stock ! Low Brices! Would you know What. When How to Plant! Fruit, Shade, Evergieen Trees, Root Grafts. Seedlings, Osage Plants, Apple Seed, Early -gar pftrMr %'c. ?fec: r/v are ftTife SEEDS : Finest, Best Col lection—Sortsand quality. Send 10 cens fpr New Illustrated, Descriptive Cat aloguM)9o pages. Send stamp each, for Catalogues of Seeds with plain directions—64 pages; Bedding and Garden Plants—32 pages, and Wholesale Price List—24 pages. Address F. K. PIKE NIX, Bloom ington. Illinois. •J Q4)T» BSE THE “VEGETABLE 1 QrA lOiWl) PULM ARY BALSAM LG 4 \J The old standard remedy for Cough, Colds, Con sumption. ‘ ‘Nothing better. ” Cctx,eb Beos & Cos,, Boston. A VOID QUACKS.—A victim to early iudiscre- A tion causing nervous debility, premature de cay, &c., having tried in vain every advertised jemedy, has a simple means of seif cure, which he will send free to his fellow sufferers. Address J. H. TUTTLE, 78 Nassau st., New York. and send Twenty-five Cents for a Ticket and draw a Watch, Sewing Machine Piano, or some article of value . No Blanks. Six for one Dollar. Ad dress. Packard & Cos., Cincinnati, Ohio. CHALYBEATE SPRINGS! Meriwether Cos. Ga. THE undersigned having secured this dcligtful place begs to announce to the public that it is in thorough repair, and will be in perfect readi ness for the reception of guests bv the Ist of June 1971. lo the old patrons of the “Chalybeate*’ it is needless to speak of its merits. To others we will state, that the main Spring is pronounced bv com petent judges to be the finest Chalybeate Spring in i- e J^ n r ite(i S * ates —issuing from, the north side of rine Mountain, and discharging 8,000 gallons per hour. It is remarkable for the wonderful cures it has effected. We have three other Springs—Sul phur, Magnesia, and Freestone—the whole era bracing a most valuable combination of mineral waters. The place is handsomely lighted with £asj nrovdd'irl B P eC Ff B frcnoccmi amueoment will be provided, embracing a fine SKATING RINK thin'iif.wn iea l es t attractions, and one that we iTaWES’sSVSPSHS.Iarire, new, built on a beautiful sparkling stream, rushing from tha mountain. It is 75 feet long. 10 feet wide and a depth to be regulated by the bathers; well en closed, and provided with plenty Os dressing rooms, A beautiful, level DRIVE, constructed along the summit of the mountain, abounding in pictures que views, will afford pleasure to those who like that exercise. A livery stable on the place will be prepared to furnish fine horses and carriages. A Fine band of music w ill be in constant at tendance. • . The Table will be supplied with the best, ana the proprietor will exert himself to make his guests comfortable and happy ; and in view of the strin gency of the times, he has determined to reduce the price of Board to $35 per month. Washing done at reasonable and uniform rates. While every amusement will be provided for those in health, the kindest attention will bo paid to invalids. glTElegant coaches at Geneva S. W. R. R. C. B. HOWARD, Pbopbietor. GEORGIA —Decatur County. —lrving Lassater has tiled his application for exemption and setting apart and valuation of Homestead, and I will pass uppon the same on the first day of May, at my office in Bainbridge, at 10 o’clock. April 22d 1871. JOEL JOHNSON. april 27, Ordinary D, C, GEORGIA —Decatur County. ON the first Monday in April next I will apple the Court of Ordinary of said county for leav to sell all the real estate of David Lvnn. april 13 td DAVID LYNN, Adrn’r CONSUMPTION' lta Cure ai > d P rcveD(it( BYJ - SCUENCK.M. B. the neglect of known and p.ovej Those near and dear to familv tSPSf&gT B,umW D, JOSEPH scmgop SIWIEI> ; and availed themselves of thi* cions medicines, they would a t c or " !orf ilrt, Dt.Scbenck Ims i„ J wherever sufficient vitality by “»■> %? is quickened into healthful vigor In this statement thereto nothin* To the faith of the invalid is tion that is not a thousand ing and visible works. The theoJJSw Dr. Schenck s medicines is a* «h,l failing. Its phylosoply renui It is self-assuring, self.convWinV° arscill «u The Seaweed Tonic and MundL Plll first two weapons with which ti -H malady is assailed. Two third, consumption originate in dispensia J, ally disordered liver With this i bronchial tubes “sympathise" with toTH They respond to the morbific actio! Here then comes the culminatim; setting in, with all its distress Nlfc The Mandrake Pills are comnos*! tine’s noblest gift—the lliey possess all the hloodoeicllil! properties of calomel, hut unlike catom.u^ “LEAVE NO STINGBEtuK^i The work of cure isniwbegiuiife t\ I and mucous deposits in the bowels' andtlafl meutary canal are ejected. The liver lib, is wound tip. It arouses from its torpid ?| stomach acts responsively, and the Jim 'JS to feel that he is getting at Inst * A SUPPLY OF GOOD BLOOD, The Seaweed Tonic, in conjunction titU, J permeates and assimilates with the hod aS cation is now progressing without its p revil# . : |*i tures. Digestion becomes painless and is seen to be at hand. There is no more k|,J rio exacerbation of tho stomach, An Ttli j iu. Now comes the greatest Wood Purifier ererriJ l>v an indulgent father to suffering man Pulmonic Syrup comes in to performitsfmcdJ and to hasten and complete the cure. IteatfiJ once upon its work. Nature cannot berhctJ] It collects and ripens the impaired aiujU portions of the lungs. In the form of gatltnj it prepairs them for expectoration, andloljl very short time the malady is vanquish, J rotten throfio that it occupied is rehotiW J made new, and the patient, in all thettltl regained vigor, steps forth to enjoy theumL.! or womanhood that was. GIVEN UP AS LOST. I The second thing is, the patients a warm room until they get welljitisataiJ possible to prevent taking cold when liefej are diseased, hut it must be prevented onJ cannot be effected. Fresh air and nUgeit,! pecially in this section of the countijint'iea and winter season, are all wrong. Plivw-J recommend that course lose their patients,iiiil lungs are badly diseased, and yet, becausetal in the house, they must not sit down quiet;!)! must walk about the room as much and« tel the strength will bear, to get upaguodciicui of blood. The patients must keep in g«ul»l be determined to get well. ’lhis has agwl to do with the appetite, and is the greatjpal gain. I To despair of cure after such evidenceolrj sibilitv in the worst eases and morale* in all others, is sinful. Dr. Scheoeks p* statement to the facility of hi* own cure* these modest words: “M:in y mars _iuro I was-in the M donsntnpiTon; confined to my \w>\, anaat»i| my physicians said I could not live mu;il like a drowning man catching at stums,ll* of and obtained the prepartions 'thictl*B ter to the public, and they made a pctfelij me. It seemed to me that I could Milimß etrate my whole system. Tiny soon lipt® matter in my lungs, and 1 would upt iyi® than a pint of offensive yellow muttrmsjn® ing for a long time. “As soon as that began to rakw w/ew® fevei, pain and night sweats all fafaa'J and my appetite became so great liialitm»*M difficulty that I could keep fromatiu'fiw*® I soon gained my strength, and flesh ever since.’’ „ “I was weighed short!/ after my recovery ded the Doctor, “then looking /ike a met®* ton; my weight \vas*only ninety-seven my present weight is two hundred W (225) pounds, and for years I liuve ?nJ' J p 1 terrupted health ” Dr. Sehonok lias discontinued Ins r® visits to New York and Boston. Dr. J. H. Schenck, Jr., still continuehj tients at their office, No 15 North ns • ( Philadelphia, every Saturday from• *- , M. Those who wish a thorough exaiuiow* the Respirometer will he charged W j 1 rometcr declares the exact condition o and patients can readily learn ivLt:ti‘ l . curable or not. The directions for taking the wM" 8 i apted to the intelligence even of«'■;»» these directions, and kind nature J' L t H excepting that in some cases tto J 1 m are to be taken in increased doses, cins need no other accompaintu® cm pie instructions that acccinpnn.' appetite Os returning hwills it *illc«o welcome symtom. When 0« let the despariug at once be® tow?' blood a, once follows, the cow- 1 • t ufos*tH sweat is abated. In a short tune bid symptoms are gone forever. Dr. Schenck’s medicines are tens of thousands of f iinii ‘. puigative. the Mandrake Id s astcot* partition / while the Pulmonic tj coughs and colds, may be vo fitiiiV lacteric against consumption t j^eci Price of the Pulmonic Syiup \\.j $1.50 a bottle, or $7.50 a half d ])V a « H Pi lls 25 cents a box. *or j, , iE yEI Pl.oe.Ke^^ A Proclamation By RUFUS B- BOUg^ Governor oi & WHEREAS, Official i " fo ”“^° r ab oot ed at this Department tha jntbe of the 28th day of March fl{ Bibb, one Jack H ° BT f °^ au it with commit the offensive 0 • r. p r ud eDce ~ «1..»p..P» Heron, white, and that m fled from justice : therefore, tJ \j 1 have thought prope > jgg my proclamation, Hereby offer. 5 thousand dollars f°^; it s eri^ delivery of said Jack Hobxo.- ~^ cient to convict, to the bl , ugb t f State, in order that he cb» ~ the offense with which {hc fire** Given under my ha" * c ity of A > SUte^tthecapto.^^.ljl 15tb day or April. " —, T •*, teen Hundred and Se dependence of theb j Ninety-fifth. R UFL*SB B I j| By the Governor. b DavibG. Oorriso. & April 27th.