Newspaper Page Text
TELEGRAPHIC.
Western Union Telegraph-
Special lo the Kntcrprisc.
Savannah Market.
Savannah, Oct. 31. —Cotton dull,
middling 17, sales 4UO bales, receipts
2,478.
Total number of votes polled for
the three days 3,509. Country ne
groes voted Radical.
Slew Orleans Market.
New Orleans, Oct. 31. — Cotton ea
sier, sales 500 tales, low middling IS
a 184, receipts 2,80 l bales. New crop
of sugar and molasses is bein'.' rec- tv
ed. Yellow contref'uegal sugar quot- j
ed at 16. Molasses, prime, asking 90
Flour firmer, supetfitie 10.25, choice
14 a 15. Corn—very lit le in niaiket
and held at 1 60. Pork dull, no rates
reported, nominally 24. llacon retail
ing, shoulders 15}, clear sides 18 a 19}
Lard dull, tierces 14}, keg 15}.
Fever interments to six Sunday
morning 13.
Raltiinorc Market.
Baltimore, Oct. 31. —Cotton dull,
19 a 194. Flour dull and weak.—
Wheat flat, 5a 6 cents lower. Corn ;
2 cents lower, south rn yellow 20 a I
30. Provisions fiat and neglected.
New fork Market.
New York, Oct. 31 —Cotton a shade
lower, sales 1900 bales at, 19 a 19} j
Flour, State, 8.30 a 10 60, Southern j
10.15 a 14.30. Mixed Western corn j
37 a 40. Pork heavy, 21. Grocer
ies generally dull.
Gold firm, 40|. Steiling less fi m, j
9}a9|. Stocks dull and lower. Go
vernments higher and iu better de
round.
Front V* asliington.
Washington, Oct. 31. —The official
majority against negro suffrage in
Ohio is 50,192.
Revenue to-day 8765,000.
Forty.nine Pay Mast.r Department
Clerks discharged to-day.
Liverpool Market.
Liverpool, Oct. 31, evening.—Cot
ton closed quiet, uplands 84 d, Orleans
9}d, Sales 8000 bales.
From Richmond.
Richmond, Oct. 31.—The official
vote of the State cast is as follows:
whiles 75,924, colored 93,656; for
Convention, 14,835 whites, 92,507
colored; against Convention, «-1,2-49
whites, 038 colored. Gen Schofield,
in view of complaints of fraud, is
about to order anew census of the
voting population of Richmond.
From Havana.
Havana, Oct. 30.—Intelligence rc
ccived hero state that St. Domingo
declared war against Ilayti on account
of the sympathy assistance given by
Ilayticns to Ex-President, Baez. Ra
ez was at Corricas when lie was plan
ning an attempt to return to St. Do
mingo. President Cabrial and Goner
al Pessin were on the 11 ay lien fron
tier with an army of lour thousand
men.
Ten p isoners who took part in the
revolt at the penitentiary nt Smtiugo
DeCuba, were shot on the 23d All
others implicated have been sentene.
ed to longyca:s of imprisonment.
NOON DISPATCHES.
Sew York Market.
New Y ork, N--v. I, 2 p. iu —Flour
10 a2O cents lower. Wheat 2 a 3
cents lower. Corn unchanged Fork
21 a 26.25. Cotton dull, 19 a 194
Stocks dull. Money 6 per cent. Ex.
change, long, 93 a 9}. Sight 9 1
Gold 40jj.
Liverpool Market.
Liverpool, Nov. 1, 2 p. m.—Colton
dull, uplands B}d, Orleans 9d, ales
8000 bales.
Fable Summary.
November 1,2 p. iu.— It is official
ly announced that Italian troops h.- ve
crossed the frontier. Garibaldi’s army
consists of twen'y-two Battalions.--
Ilis force swelled with every mile of
his march His presence at Walls,
Home, is officially confirmed. The
proclamation of the King of Italy ex
asperates the party ot action Violent
demonstrations reported in the princi
pal cities. Cordiality between France
and Austria is complete.
Election Nows.
Macon, October 30.—The election
to day was remarkably quiet, no
wh tes participating. Up to six
o’clock this afternoon there were 1,416
vott s polled, three of which are not
negroes,
Columbus, October 30. —The result
of the two days’ election is 1,117 votes
all for the Convention. Only 25
whites have voted. The number of
registered voters in the county is
2,920 —1,150 whites and 1,160 blacks
Augusta. October 30 —General
Pope has issued orders to the Regis
tration Board to keep the polls open
till 6 P. M. on Saturday, an exten
sion of two days.
How to Grow Onions.
The Prairie Farmer gives the ful.-
lowing directions lor growing ( nioiis :
‘One half bushel common salt, one
pound sulphur, two ounces carbonate
ammonia. This amount to be applied
at one time—the first application to be
made as soon as the onions come up.
If the "round should be Laid ami
weedy, the amount, should be doubled
or even trippled. This is the famous
recipe by which so many onions were
said to be grown in lowa last year.—
No hoeing or weeding is required.’
The composition is lor one acre, to
be applied once a week fi>r eight
weeks, upon onions sown benmltaut*.
Jlo’Jnnt dSntcqirisc
~ (SEMI-WEEKLY.)
L. C. BRYAN, : : : : Editor.
THOMASVILLE, GA.:
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1867
CF*Mr. N. 11. St ah buck is our authorized
A edit for the City of Savannah, to receive
and receipt for advertising and subscriptions
to the Southern Kiiterpi Ue.
'I he communication, .signed, “G ’’
will appear in our Tuesday’s issue.
THE ELECTION FARCE.
The grandest farce of the Nine
teenth Century closed yesterday eve
ning at 6 o’clock. Good order has
generally been preserved throughout
the State, and in this locality the col
ored people deserve credit ior prudence
and good behaviour Their military
demonstrations, marching through the
streets and to the polls, armed with
guns, &c., was the work of their
White counselors, for which the i-e
--1 toes are not responsible. They were
drilled by white men, infer or to the
negroes, as to their course in the elec
tion, and told to come to the polls
armed lor ihe purpose of enforcing
tlieir claims, if necessary, to the right
of suffrage. They would have acted
much better if I ft. to themselves. —
Many of them brought three days ra
tions, to stay and vote each day, but
we believe they became satisfied and
went home a ter the first day’s expe
rience. Some had forgotten the names
by which they registered and were
therefore tumbled about a name in
wh ch to vote. We understand that a
goodly number came up from Florida
to vote, but as we did not do ourse f
the ho -or of visiting the po Is, we
have no notes from head quarters.—
Os course all voted who rer/lstieed.
whether present or not, (we mean the
colored,) for the white men, be it said
to the honor of the country, took no
part in the electron, but simply re
mained at home and attended to their
business.
Since the above was penned, we
find that Dope has issued an order
keepin - the polls open 11-til 6 o’clock
on Satuiday lie ha- found out Fut
Radicals cannot, do all their voting in
three days, although, it used to h
-1 done very succcssful'y in one. It
j now requires fire days for the Radi
cals to being their intelligent masses
\to the polls. By this extrusion they
j will be able to hunt up and scenic the
few straggling negroes who held back,
or did not find the way to the ballot,
box in till last three days, and they
will have time to invent a few more
j lies to send out among the ignorant
j Yesterday a colored man asked us if
j Capt. V\ hitc, the Agent of the Rureau
■ could “ banish him from the country
j or put him back into slavery for rn-t
j voting?” We told him no, of course,
| when lie informed us that the said
) W liite had sent < lit word to the colored
! men win had not voted, that “ 111 -y
vve:e obliged to vote anti if they did
not conic tu town and vuto they would
bo banished or put b o le into s/an rij.’’
Thus did U Into i.iipo-tt upon their
ignorance and oottipelletl many ul tln in
to vote the Radical ticket who did n.it
mean to vi te tit all. Watty ot them
did not know who they voted lor, ami
mu- y had no mure idea of irliat tl rv
voted lor than a blind hmso. Sotn--
said they “put in their tblets to-day,
and would come back tounnrrnw and
vote’' while others cx| eeted to receive
Cor their slips of paper they put in. a
tract ot land, a mule and a yeurk sup
ply I’ provisions. These tilings were
put into their heads by the liadical-,
through thw leading negroes of the
country, together with nuun rous oth
er lalse anil lidieulons üb.-uidities
THE VOTE IN THOMAS.
Our report at tho close of the first
three days stands about 1300 colored
votes ami about 12 white Most of
the voting was done on Tuesday, an-l
to-day very few voters have ma-lc limit
appearance. Tho first act. of the l ine
is therefore about over—the secant/ act
will open at M died go ilie.
TIIE MONEY PRESSURE.
V e bid.eve it is generally conceded
that the groat scarcity of money in the
.country is owing to (he fact that the
fur tu era will not sell their cotton. —
They will not sell because the price is
low ami they hope for a better. Up
on what have they based this hope?—
Surely net upon the shm/ness of the
crop, for it is estimated that the pres
ent crop will reach 2,590,000 b-les,
much greater than tho last, while Eu
rope only requires of America 1,599,-
000 ball's, leaving 1.000,000 of bales
tor American cou-umption. The rea
son why Europe needs only 1,509.900
bales of Ami ne m or Southern cotton
is because, during our late war, other
countries learned to make c-ttiin, nii-l
now come in competition with the
South with a much superior article of
c >tton. Egypt, India and Bra/. 1 are
now competitors, and have g tten the
better ot us in the European murki't.
They cun supply the market without
our aid in one or two more years, at and
their facilities ar * increasing w hile
ours arc decreasing mi aecout of the
difficulty ot labor. Those things have
reduced tho j rice of cotton, and it
will not rise much above the presetu
price in the future The next crop
will have to be sold for less th.iit ten
cents, and the South will have to pro
duce it at low figures or abandon tin
cultivation altogether. The preset t
system of freed labor, on large planta
tions, has proved a failure, and ilm
sooner the land owners recognize the
tact, the better it will be for the coun
try Their lands must be divided in
to stnail farms and settled by while
men To induce this, great liberality
is necessary It would be well to do
nate one half of each tract ot land to
induce the occupation of the other
half, and on no other terms can indus
trious, enterprising white men be in
duce Ito imigrate to this section. Let
this be dot e and cotton can be raised
at much less co-t, and he ce sold at a
profit even at the 1 w tunics indicated.
Our tanners may as w 11. then, sell
their cotton now at the highest price
they can get, and go to work making
arm cements to meet the m w older
ol things that is surely coming upon
them Cotton is now in our opinion,
very near the Inchest price it will reach
in the ,**outh while the cotton tax re
mains unrepealed, and even the remo
val of the tax would be only a tempo
rary advantage on present prises.
GIN HOUSE BURNT.
The Gin House ot Mr Robert Ivey
of this county was burned on I’uesday
nicht last, with about ten bales of
cotton, six belonging to Mr. Ivey and
the remainder to one of bis neighbors,
Mr. Way. The lint room was fired by
a spark from a torch carried by a ne
gro man, and believed to be accidental
WAR IN ITALY.
Garibaldi has been bombarding his
In 1 mess, the Dope in the ancient Ro
man (Japi 01, and caused him to seek
refuge in the strong fortress of St Au
celo Franco has declared in favor ot
me Pope, tin 1 the Garahaldian rebel
lion is to be put down. French troops
have already arrived. Victor Eman
uel has also issued a pr <•! mution
against Garibaldi, which in- ts gene
ral approval, excitement throughout
Europe.
Our readers arc awa-c t, mt t’ e ad
herents of the Methodist. (J urcli
North were in Conference at Atlanta
last week. They organized a Confer
ence for Georgia. Ain mg the ap
pointments made we notice that of
Rev C. W. Darker for Cobnut us.
Concerning this m ivement. Rev. W.
F. Harrison says in a 1 It r published
in the At hint a Intelligencer: ‘The
Methodist 1 piscopal Church, N T ith,
by attempting to organize Churches
within the limits of ihe Methodist
Episcopal Chinch, S -nth, is guilty ol
the Flan of Peaceful Separation, adop
ted almost unanimou-lv by the Gen
eral Conference of 181 F
Had Ilia Radicalism Whipped
out of Him.
Kelly, the nulorinu- Radical emis
sary who was sent Sonllilasi spring y
the Congressional Radical Executive
C -iiinrtti c to M'te I lie Southern heart.'
and p- i-na-le the poor Ignor. lit blacks
that liis Rad-cal employers were their
only true friends, lias hud a flood o
light let in upon his weak and preju
diced mind by the recent Ohio and
Pennsylvania elections. He has ig
rmminiuu ly deserted the cau.-e which
‘lay so near his heart’ when lie was
I exeit ng the brutish negro mob in
Mobil • to acts of hlo-ul and violence
j —ho lias letra/ed the great apostle
of Radicalism, and, with liis duty
plumes tr.iilm 1 in the dirt anil slime
of his recent ns-ociatmn-, h s struck
li-s flaunting colb-rs, on which was in
scrib al universal suffrage and (lie im
peachment "f the President lor daring
to u|-li l-l, niaintu 11 and support the
Constitution of the United States.
Perceiving that, the lotten old hulk
of It-, nali'ii' was being submerged
lie- rath ti e waves o: a righteous pub
lic eniiini- t in the Northern and
W-■ rin . rates, this wily old church
limner as duse-ted liis post on the
quarter deck, and now seeks protec
-1,011 ad succor at the hands of ihe
more mo It rale and honorable of the
Republican party. He wll servo old
I bad. an 1 Chase, and Simmer, and
Phillips no longer Their foi'tuue
wanu before the Id -zing light, poured
over the country from Maine to Cali
louiia by the recent ous- rvutivo vic
; tin ies, and us rats desert a sinking
ship this miserable old reproba o now
deserts the party and the principles
i which lie pietended to support only a
j few sho l weeks since The New
York l imes, alluding to the change
in the hectoring bully ot Philadelphia,
j says :
“Judge Kelley, of Philadelphia,
j one of the extremist of the Radicals,
lias come out for General Grant us th
Republican candidate for th I’re-i
deucy. Nothing could indicate much
more s r itigly than ties fact, tho t uts
it lit of public sent nit-lit iu that dl>
lection. Jiilge K- llv is the pioneer
orator who went 8 mil soon after the
passage of the reooii-iinfi ion liw anil
undertook the organization of the Re
publican paily in the S-m 111 ru States.
In a speech made nig- t I- 1 lust lit
urged iiis nomination, not on the
ground of availability, but because he
would weave into the lifeol the nation
ilie principles ami sentiments estab
lished by tl-e war ”
Colonel Forney’s Press, we observe,
also concedes that General Grunt will
be ihe Republican candidate. Sweet,
sometimes, nr- the uses -if political
atlvtr ity 1 Chronicle N ntintl
Progress of Yankee Philanthropy.
Hen. Howard, who lias special t-liar.e
of Mlie nation's ward-', anti is prcsmjt
! eil to know mere about them than any
body else, sicks lo it Ill.lt tho nemo
r.-ce iu the 1 niti’-l Slat -s lias decrin—
ed over a nrllion and a- airier -iace
the date ol emancipation This-ween
ing of a people out of existence l>\
wli-Jesalo—thirty ler ivn'u hi ■ V
j three years—is without a p.iiadel in
the ivorl I's history. War, pestilence
nor famine can boast id' -mli dot no
tion in the same space ot time
Einaocit-at'on s ems to huv acted
upon the black taee as a great unit
quake. -suit "? etis and takes in it.- lliuu
sa ds at a gulp.
Seven pristine:s broke out of the
State Penitentiary last week aud made
their escape.
From the New York World, (Dein)
Presidential Candidates-Gen.
Grant.
Tho current of Republican journal
ism at lea.-t, if not the drift of party
sentiment, is, since the late elections,
setting so str-ini- ly in favor of General.
Grant, that the leading Radical organ
attempts to breast i in a do"b!e leaded
leader, which sets out by turning pre
tentions like Grant’s into ridicule,
and winds up wth predicting that f
any man of bis type of politics is elec
ted. it will be bv the Democrats. —
The Tribune thus advertises that in
addition to other causes of disintegra
tion and embarrassment, the Republi
can party will be at loggerheads in the
selection of it..- standard 1 earer.
The party stands between the horns
of this .-harp dilemma : with a Radical
candidate on u negro-suttrajte platform
they are ceitairi to be whipped ; wh 1 •
if tl-e party mak- s a pretence of mod
•rati -n and tuns Gen. Grant, the Rad
icals will bring out a separate candi
date
It concerns Gen. Grant more per
haps than it <1- es am body else to
f'< 11 in a c-irreet judgement of the prob
abilities of hi.- suc-css if lie shoul I be
inside the candidate of the Republican
party The reasonable-pride of char
acter which b- fits a nun) in I is posi
tion would naturally with hold him
fri-m running tho gauntlet of au acri
monious political culivu-s, unless It
supposed there rs more than an
even chance of his election. Bur
whatever political syrens may sing in
his ears, the changes, if lie allows
himself to be made the caml'date of
the Republicans, are ten to one against
him. We do not say fn m an over
weening confidence in the fortunes of
the Democratic party ;it is an opin
ion lounded upon irreconcilable differ,
ences among the Republicans, and the
strong vantage-ground possessed by
the Itadicils lor running a ticket
If they can get electoral votes enough
to prevent either of the other candi
dates from receiving a majority, they
arc quite sure of electing the Presb
dent ; s nee, ill that case, the II -use
of Repre-eiiativ- voting by States,
makes ilie choice, and the House on
which this duty would devolve -s al
ready elect and and intensely !radical. -
Gen Giant, as th - candidate of the
more moderate Republ cans, would
priTVe- t desertions to the Democrats,
and thus, ns-the Radicals hope, carry
the election into the House, where
their victory would be assured in ad
vance.
11, therefore, General Grant con
sents to rec- ive a i!,-j iil> icaii nomina
tion, the veiy ut.-i -t hi- friends can
accomplish is in ■ prevention of a
choice Ly the -- 1 -1 - , and tho election
ol liis Rad ion I e -inpc ti 1 or by the llou—
of llepri ,-enl lives. The aggregut
Republic mi vo will be greater if the
party s) I is and runs two candidates,
f linn -t w-'ii I he by attempting t > con
centrate its si etigtli upon one ; since
the moderate candidate of th- Unn
s rvatives would rein. 11 1111 -- -. if mildi
can vot'-rs who would otlicrw -- u-sert
tilth - Heinocra>s, while dir a lie i
rail 11 >date would draw "lit I e lull vote
o' the extremists. This i- the most
sk-dful game that could he played for
defeating the Denmci die arty; but
il G neral (i rant lends hints--If to it,
bo will merely heat the bush for bis
Radical rival to Caleb the bird.
To Enlighten tho Ignorant and
Correct, tho Vicious.
“No Slate shall enter into any (tea.
ty. alliance or eon i-deration, grant let
ters of marque and reprisal, emit mon
ey, emit hills of credit, make anythin!;
but gold and silver coin a tender in
payment of debts, nass any bill of at
aiiidor, ex post facto law, or law im
pairing the obligation of contracts, or
giant any title of iiobil-ty ’’ — Article,]
See A, Clause 1 , Constitution Coiled
States.
‘•Site 5. That when the people of
any one of the said rebel State- shad
have formed a eonstitu irai of govern,
men t in con for in it y with the (’(institu
tion of the United Stubs in all re
spects * * * * saul
State shall In declared entitle ’ to re
presentation in Con ress. and Senators
and Repre-cntativ s shall ho admitted
lliei'- froiii -11 their tak-ng tin o th
present ed by law, and then and tliere
ilt"r the preceding sections of tLi- act
shall be imperative in said State.”
These two paragraphs nro kept stan
ding at the head of th ! Atlanta Intel
ligeiiC'-r for tint purpose of showing
those who are fav- ruble to repudiation
how futile will lie the efforts of such
men to rob creditors of tln-ir just dues.
No State can violate the Federal Con
stitution, and an nrliuaoco of a (’(in
vention would be us invalid as an act
of the Legislature.
Black Crook.
This is a wild and wei-d Drama,
the offspring of some German sensa
tional author. It is paraded by the
wonder mongers to fill their pockets.
I lie scene purports lo be laid in the
famous 11 miz Mountains' Mnnsteis.
spiri s, fairies and clowns are the <//-(/•
mat is ptesome.
It i- a no re spectacle to attract the
vulgar gaze. It tells no truth, ill s
traics no trial of stern realities of ife,
points no inor l Ti.eie was some
good singing and dances abundant by
women in a halt nude state.
No -nan ever yet conceived of grace
uneon-i. eteil with modesty. Ilisdis
t'-r'ed pas-ion and porveited ta-te may
u-ake him dap li 111 ds and uppl md, but
•here 1- s, - in, thing within that level
at the di sei'ialinu ami wil reprove in
In- sober m 11.1 nr- The wh ra thing
is an 1 min r.i| ui,»n-|riK|tv. Truth,
good ue and hi , ,ii.,-v tmo-auituend
them, an-l •i. mn be periiiit'cd,
" :IV even , mt,.. ied, it' tliev admin
II 110 '- iimlih-s and ins rueikm.
"oh lit i-\;--o-e to virtue and lllvni
csty --1 - YYrtICS.
Mr. Greely Thinks the Radical
Party will go Under, and is
Resigned.
The New York Tribune, of Tuesday
contains the following:
‘lfour party and its nominal antag
onist shull stand substantially on the
same platform in the next, Presidential
struggle, we foresee IL at the result will
be 'rat'll like that 01 the Scott canvass
in 1852 and are quite resigned to the
dispens-tion Personally, we have an
easier time, with far less anxiety and
trouble, when our party is out of pow
er* 'J hen we arc not bored to death
with importunities to write office beg
ging letters to the President, the Scc>
ret ary of the Treasury, the Collector
ot the Port, Sco., &c. When the pub
lic in ney is stob n (as stolen it i-ami
will be) we can pitch into ‘the p w
ers that be’ for putting theives ; nto
office or keeping them in—an easier
task than to defend them So, when
ever both parties get substantialy upon
the same | latform, we know that ours
will go urnl r, and we c ntemplate that
result with serene ph losopliy.’
When to make Rails.
It is iti)( 01 taut that farmers should
know when to spli rails, so that, they
wi I k-’cp longest The timber should
b" split in October, as the sap has
then perform and its office. L hen the
rails are split, the bark should K peel
ed off so that they may season and dry
! n their present aiurion many far
mers have to consul: rather their con,
vi-nience than scientific rules, but as
affair- improve, it will be necessary to
observe the proper times ad seasons
for all manner of fai m work. When
we consider the amount of fencing to
he done in the Southern Stata g, this
guf-j- ct of tails looms up as one ol the
first importance.
The Trial of Jeffersoi Davis —
A Negro Jury.
Richmnn , October 19 --It, lias
b -en decided that Jeff Davis shall be
tried here in November. The court
opens November 251 h. ami toe trial
w II p obatdy emu ■ on the 28tli
There is to be an effort mode to ob
ta.: 11 a jury of vhite men. The jmy
to trv t in) now s'aods nine negroes
and three white men.
This looking forward to enj lyment
don’t nay. 'i he only way to be happy
is to take the drops of hupp ness as
God g-ves them to us every day of out
lives. The boy must-leai 11 to be hap
py while he is learning Ins trade ; the
merchant wh.le he is making his for,
tune. I file fails to learn tins art, lie
will suiidy miss liis enjoyment when he
gains vvliut he has sighed fur.
uii.l its Cure.
The great cause of dyspepsia is a want
"f proper aclion of the liver, it being the
. ge-l secretive organ in Ilie system. —
(,’onsi -|Ueiitly, when n. tails lo peilonn ils
lutietions p-'opci-ly, it throws 1 lie whole
system out of older. (Vilen Ihe liver does
mu nei. the membranes that sccrcle ihe
gas; 1 iu juiee becomes impaired and cannot
secrete healthy juices; lumco we have in
digesliot) ni and dyspepsia.
X'ln peculmr oHic! of the liver is lo ex
trael lhesiiperabiiiid.ini carbon mil ~floe
blood. Tins 1 a-boo unileswitli other ele
nienis, and 1 hereby to-ms the bitter fluid
called bile, wmcii is ilirowu iuloihe upper
bowels and laoili ales tin-. |iroce.-:s of di
gesliim and exc-e ions. When ihe -iver is
torpid Ihe bile lias to be taken out of the
t> liy by the kidne.s, ami through the
poi, sin 1 lie skin, ,Xc. Aheuthes are ob
stiucied, il is impossible for them to otter
1 lie necessary assistance; hence die car
honic iiinitei accumulates under Ilie skin,
aud thus becomes, to a great extent, for
eign mailer, producing bilious levers
nud all loose pains and aches which pu
llouts ci'inplain of iu iliosc disorders.
Professor Kay ou has dis uvered Ilie
remedies 10 lelievealt these deraugeineni s.
liis pills act upon ihe liver, caus-ng it 10
r. lieve the bmod ol the carbon, give lone
ami energy lo ihe stomach, promoting
lieii liy sccrelions of the gastric juice,
»ii limn which il is iuip-issible lo supp y
lion 1 1 liy nutriment lo the system. II -
i)b urn Vuae when used as a rubefacient
in billions disorders, aeis like a clntnu in
urou-ing a lieiili by uc- ion in Ihe capillat ies.
and a-sisls them lo throw oti -lie carbona
ceous mailer t hm has cullecled there, re
lieving 1 hose oxcruiiatiug pains and aches
experienced in billions levers, Oilen we
heart) pal 1 ills having l-illious rhi-auma
lism, an-l -l is upon this principal that ihe
tMeiim Vitae so pr- ui|’lly acts. TJwiseex
crucialiiig head idles are r lieved upon
I lie same principle. The pores become ob
sirue,ed, and Ilie brain neing surcharged
null a super'abundance ol carbon ihe liver
and pores are iiul acting properly. You
rub the head will) the Oleum Vitae and ex
cite the poles to action, thereby -cbeving
the brain ol the carbon, ami the head at
once hoc 11m s easy.
Wain of space prevents any further es*
sly at pre-eel on Ihe s tijec:. hut we would
i.lviso our reader- to supply themselves
wnli Professor Kay ton’s remedied, con
sisilng of Kaylon's Oleum Viloe, for nil
pains: Kaylon's Dyspeptic P-lls. and Kay
toil's Magic mm-, for diarrhu- I, \e. They
can he found al our oily druggi-ls, and at
wholesale nl A. A. Solomons \ Co’-. The
I'rolessor requests u- 10 stale that his sig
miiure is on every bollle and box —.Sir
A't u s ami II r it I.
For sale in Thomasvillc by Dr, P. S.
Mower.
New Advertisements.
attention
HP IU 3E3 3N2E33 3NT!
4 TT!:.VD A MKKTINT; FOR DRILL IV INI FORM
2\ On Till. HV ,\| J| 111 | |» ?|.
I* - o'-'lt of I*. M u D LAN HAN, Foreman.
Lf.HR. D«.»lf.. Secretary.
X titer*, ol \ ilitiin iMmiion (or »*nlc
% T TUI* 4XI »14 4
1000 bu. Corn
WANTED I
I Ui'HKR SHELLED OR IN THE EAR,
j For which the highest market price
will be paid at MAIN & CO’S Warehouse,
Th nnasville.
net “b--jip F. SANFORD.
THE ALLEN
Xj i nimont
(1- i.El::: VTED THRODGHODT THE
y Souiliei-n Slates for all
li r i.ui and horse are subject to, can be
h ni at the Drug Store of
oct 25-8 m E. SEIXAS.
ff efTers
AT HOME!!
MU O. A. JEFFERS rcsjipct fully announ
ces to the citizens of Thoimtsville and
vicinity that he has resumed the management
of his Pilot/tgraphic Oallery, and will give his
personal ai tent ion to taking
pro tonit a vs, 1 1 : kitor v p i:»,
AND
povm i:mi\ pier i j res.
Mr. JEFFERS has had Twenty Years expe
rience in the DusineHS and guarantees perfect
satistaction in all cases.
aiiiig IE on t % from 9 a. m. till 1 p. in.
det‘i-2 ft
(JEN L SFFERINTEN DENT'S OFFICE, )
Atlanlic \ I-nil tt. IC. € «> •
Savannah, Oct. 7, 1807. )
NOTICE.
Tiai« Ittl tD WILL liE OPEN TO
Station No. 20, [Cairo,]
Fourteen Miles West of Thomasville,
On Thursday the 10th inst.
|*;iMM«‘iig«‘i* Train i»ill Arriip ni Mia*
lion \o nt S. |.» A. .Tl„ anil la-sivc al
5.1 J I*. VI•
The Reduced Rates, as “Freight West of the
Ocklockonee River,” will cease from that
and ito. H. S HAINES,
oct S Ini (ien’l Superintendent.
HARNEY & CO.,
COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
In Provisions and Sugars,
12 STODDARD’S I PPER RANGE.
S.WAWAII, (LA
oct 23 (irn
E. G HILTON, F. M. RANDELL
Savannah. New York.
Hilton & Randell,
wiH>i,Esu,i: (;ito( i:its,
AND DEALERS IN
fPCIISIDiIS, iODCIIO
A\ r i nos,
111? QUOHS, cfcc.,
19U RAY STREET,
sivaw iei, - - «;i:oiiGit.
INVITE the attention of Buyers to their
large mid complete assortment of
GROCERIES. Ac.
Which t hey oiler at the Lowest Market rates.
A Large and Fine Axnortiiient ol
1’ O P. A C C O
Constantly on hand.
Old Magnolia Whisky ?
lIYH WHISKY,
BOWER S
OLD BOURBON WHISKY,
New Eng’and Rum,
THE CELEBRATED
“ STAR ” WHISKY,
lii €’n«ie«i.
“Old Tom.”
Hlmch, < lai< ts, IliHcis,
Agents for the sale of Hazard * Uunpowder
in K«*d, halt K* ys, uwaiter Kegu and Eases.
Oct II Bk* iim
Agent.* Wanted
TO SELL
The Best Lock-Stitch
SEWIR& MACHINE
■Ol TIIK W'OKI.D.
For the Price, S2O 00
A powrrtNil rival to nil the high priced M i
chines and just us good
Tlio Clinllcngo
Which Challenges the World to produce it«
e puil l*ricr mIO.
A l.arge Wall Map
Os >orlli nnit «oiiih Imrrirn,
On aui*’ >de and Europe on the other, it It a
('ounty Map of the I
mg more than : > other Map of ihe «ante
IVrriUirv. upon t o U**t style of the Art
Frier
AND A RowKRFCL
Microscope,
Which magnifies 100 D > t*—-* f-*r "*1 r
ith a (it's of jeefn SA, »r ue «-f . mag
•\\; s:%.
UtireMi l (' F.VMBRO
O.* 8 I n> Ki'Mv ’i>, iin
I. Kubitshek
AND
BROTHER.
Fall and Winter
DRYGOODS.
Piiiils and Homespun* I*2 1-2
Cents per lard.
WITH t'-e opening of Ihe Fall Trade,
we are prepared lo exhibit to our
friends an-l customers, a complete and va
ried assortment of
Fall and Winter
a-IDDJLS.
Our stock is not surpassed by any in ilie
| city, having been purchased by an experi
enced buyer al the opei ing ot Ihe season,
when ilie best selections could be made.
Our stock will be found to consist in
: part of
(-iic.vr.s. KI'MIAY n.A»E CI.OTII.
IMi. I.AIIIKN’ DIC lit MS (aOODM,
BOOTS ANTI) SHOES, IIATS
A.\U ( Al’S, I.ADIEV
II ATS A ( I.OAKS,
I.ule-t Slides.
| Vandykes, Nubias, Prints, Merinos, DC
i laities, C’assimeres, Satinets, Tweeds,
&.c —Homespuns, Mlencliing, Os
naburgs, Plain and Striped;
Spun Yarns. Plaids,
Fine Med Blankets and Common, Shirts,
Drawers, Yankee Notions, Ribbons,
Mi lling, White Goods, Dress
Ti imtilings. Hosiery,Va
lises, Trunks, Watch
es, Pistols arid
Shot Guns.
flfsY'Give us a call and we pledge our
selves to 1 rave nothing undone lo please
you in goods and prices. sept 17
I. KUBITSHEK
ANI)
Brotlier.
KUDUS!
Wholesale and Retail.
U T E H AVE dUST OPENED a large and
f V well selected slock of
GROCERIES,
Next Door to J. Sell iff & Brother, which
we are now offering to the citizens of Tho
mnsville and surrounding country, and lo
country dealer., at such rales as cannot
tall to Secure a liberal patronage.
Ours is all anew and first class stock,
and figures low.
We are prepared to furnish everything
kept in a first class
Grocery Store!
Including Magging and Rope, by Ilie bale
and coil. Salt. Macon, Flour, Su
gar. Lb fi'-e Hams, (canvassed)
Nails, Tobacco, Powder,
Shot, Lead, Oysters,
Sardines, Caned Fruits, Preserves, Con
fectionaries, Pol ware,
A Fine assortment of Liquors, I! audios
& c., by the Cask and Mottle,
Apples, Onions, Oranges. Mackerel, White
Fish, Ful on Market Beef.
10 lihds. MACON just received.
We are prepared to make liberal ad.
vnneos rn Cotton and ship lo Savannah,
New York or Livetpool. sept 17
BACON.
I (i.ooo*-?***
LINTON, DEKI.E & CO’3.
10,000 , »“ sc,e “ rRIb * ldf! *'
, LINTON, DEKLE k CO’S.
| Cases Dry Saif Itacon,
LINTON, DEKI.E .} CO'S.
ll’ you want Can ITuif,
call at
LINTON. DEKI.E k CO S.
/ 'IS is II I'. H, PuATtli-ietl iiml
V Brown Sugars, at
LINTON. DEKLE & CO’S.
UXTIU Smtihlng Tobacco,
| j at
LINTON. DEKLE .A CO’S.
10,000
I.IN ION. DEKLE \ CO S.
\ M* every itilntc else in (he
\ Grocery Line, su-I- as Magging. K--pe
ei,* in ' LISTON, DEKLE \ in s
a v anil I‘arallnc « amllcs
LINTON, DEKLE A CO S.
\I.I, l.radci of I'iue l.litnm -
al
»ep2Uf LINTON. DEKLE & CO’S.
FERTILIZERS.
TE> T ONS
SWANS ISLAND GI'AXO.
ESGIIT TOYS
RAYVIJONE I’HOSFH ATK.
The best of Pert.tli. for rale bv
f: REMINGTON ft SON
M.,r. lt
|>(>«ri lt ASH VI.K. r (ioten «(
I A . and Porter, received nnd fur a*le bv
feb .’IS-tr JOHN STARK
JUST RECEIVED.
\ FRESH l,n of HAMS »,d NEW
riAU R. t,v
t S K WfiMIXSON .V ('(»