Southern enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1867-1867, November 05, 1867, Image 2
TELEGRAPHIC. j
Western Union Telegraph- ,
Special i» Iho Enterprise.
Saviuiuali Jlarkcl.
Savannah, Xov. 4.—Cotton dull < ;
p 705 bales, tniddl ng 17, receipt ß :
2200 bales.
RaUimore Market,
Baltimore, Nov. 4.—Cotton very ■
dull, 18. 1 lour, no sales. Wheat & '
cents lower. Corn steady, white 35 a ,
2(5, mixed 27. llye dull, prime 50.
Provisions, nothing doing.
IVcw York Market.
New York, Nov. 4. —Cotton heavy
and lower, sales 1300 bales at 18J.—
F i it, .State, 8 a 10 40, Southern 0.70
a 14.10. Wheat active.
Corn—mixed Western 35 a 37$ |
jlcsp u k heavy and lower, 20.85. ;
land heavy, 12|j a 18$. Groceries 1
firm and steady. Naval stores firm,
i .eights declining. Gold 41
New Orleans (Market.
New () leans, Nov. 4. —Louisiana
sugar receipts light, quoted common |
1 !. pt me 15, yellow clarified 16, Cu* j
ha dull, numbers twelve and thirteen
12 j a 13] Cuba molasses 53, Louis
-• .. 00. j. .cu, quiet, HUfterune ;
10 25, choice 11a 14 50. Corn lower i
1.40a 1.50. Pork dull, no sale s, no
minal* 22.75. Paeon, jobbing trade, ;
, I! i. clear iib sides 18. clear i
sides 18:] a 10. Lard dull and unset- j
j 13] all, keg 15. Cot. j
tonlß C
Seven interments from yellow fever j
t. day. Eleven yesterday.
• - - - - —-
Sherman the Coming Man* j
General Sherman, according to a j
Washii gton telegram in the New I
York IL rald, is entire’y opposed to
the revolutionary ultras, and in favor
i t the constitutional principles upheld
by the President.
Northern State Elections.
The 8 tati sos New York, New .Ter.
• . Del ware, Maryland, Massachu- ,
igan, Wisconsin,Minnesota,
llli n’.s, Kansas, Missouri and Nova'
da, hold elections for State officers to
day.
[From the New York Herald.]
The Nigger Question and the
Republican Party.
Shall this continent be given up to
barbarism for a fanatical experiment
and a party scheme ? This, and none
other, is now the question before the
American people. Shall we throw
away waat wc have acquired of sci
ence and civilization, blot out our his
tory, give up all aspirations of the fu
ture. that the nigger may become su*
pri me and restoie the land to that
happy state of nature in which Africa
t. iW in i' is Africa such a magnificent
evidence < f the nigger’s greatness that
the example of its history should in
-1111 -e us to change our system for his ?
For uncounted centuries the negro has
bud possession of (hat continent, and
never built a city, never bridged a riv
er, never made the smallest discovery
having any tendency to widen the lit
tle space that separates him from the
gorilla — never even borrowed the disi
reries of raci s with which he came j
in contact, except as they supplied
mote efficient means for the gratifica
tion of his instinct for cruelty. Such
is the history of the nigger in his na
tive land. Hut he comes to another
continent, becomes subordinate to a
race that, forces him to iabor, and
pre-to . there is a change ! Freedom
had kept him a brute, slavery made
him a Ulan, and what must the second
in vdoin make him ? Lord of ibe as
i mlaiit 1 lie must be the master and
ma t e.i. lml the political destinies of
the, alioti. though it bo to the cxclu
i.onol'utaee of white men without
superiors on the lace of the eaith.- - j
Eueii s the drama now in progress.—
The white man of the North holds
down t! o white man of tlio South
while tie nigger tramples upon him.
“ The Old Woman.”
O. co she was •Mother,’ and it, was
'Mother, Ftu hungry,’‘Mother, mend
my jacket,’ ‘Mother, put up my din
ner,’ and ‘.Mother,’ with her loving j
aands, would spread the bread and
butler, and stow away the luncheon, j
and sew on the great patch, her heart
brimming with affection for tlie im- !
ncrious little curley pate that, made j
her so many steps, and nearly (list,rue- j
ted her with his boisterous mirth.
Now she is the old woman,’ but
site did not think it would ever come i
to that. She looked on through the i
future years, and saw her boy to man.
hood grown, and he stood transfigured !
in the light of her own beautiful love, j
Never was there a more noble sm !
that ho : honored of the world, and
the staff of her declining years.
Aye. lie was her support even then, j
but. siie did not know it. She never
realized that it was her little boy that, i
g ve her strength for daily toil—that !
liis slender form was all that upheld
her over the brink of a dark despair, i
She only knew how she loved the 1
child, and felt that amid the mists of
age hie love would bear her gently j
through its infirmities to the dark hall
leading to the life beyond.
But tbe Soli had forgotten the
mother’s tender ministrations now.—
Adrift from the moorings of home, he
is cold, selfish, heartless, and ‘Mother’
has no saert and meaning to the prodigal
She is ‘the old woman,’ wrinkled,
gray, lame and blind.
Pity her, O grave, and dry those
tears that roll down her furrowed
checks! Have compassion upon for
en-itive heart, and offer it thy quiet
rest, that it may forget how much it
longed to tie ‘dear mother’ to the boy
it nourished through a careless child
hood, hut in return for all this wealth !
of tenderness has cnly given hack re
proach.
(Enterprise
( SEMI-WEEKLY.)
L. C. BRYAN, : : : : Editor, j
THQMASVILLE, GA.:
Tl ESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1807. j
N. 11. StARM7CK is our authorized
for the City of Savannah, to receive
and receipt for advertising and subscriptionts
to the Southern Enterprise.
CORN WANTED.
The merchant advertises that lie j
will sell cheap goods and buy country
produce ; but we wiil ouy country pro
duce without selling goods. We have
heard all the season that the corn
crops were, good, and wc desire to test
its quality. Wiil not some of our |
friends who have made good crops
bring us corn in payment of their dues \
to this office? In the absence of!
money provisions will do as well.
VOTE OF THE 7th DISTRICT
Thomas County.
Whites for Convention, 38.
Blacks “ ,l 13(53.
Total, 1407.
C .i.quitt County.
Whites for Convention, 08.
Blacks “ “ 7.
75.
Whites against Convention, 3.
Total, 78.
Brooks County.
Whites for Convention, 2
Blacks '• “ 615.
Total, (517.
Grand total for Convention, 2090.
“ ‘‘ against “ 3.
ARE TIIE STATES SOVER
EIGN ?
The first article of the “ Definitive !
Treaty of l’cace between the United 1
i Stales of America and tits 1 »italic j
Majesty,” formed by the conim ssion- j
ers of the two countries at Paris, Sep
tember 3d 1783, reads us follows:
“Article I. His llrituuic Majesty ac
knowledges the said United States, viz:
New Hampshire, Massachusetts l»ay,
Rhode Maud and Providence plantations,
Connecticut, New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Vir
ginia. North Carolina, South Carolina, and
: Cieorgia, to I}Q free sovereign itml independent
Stiffen j that he treats with them an such ;
and for himself, his heirs uud successors,
relinquishes all claims to the government ;
propiietary and tentorial rights of the
same, and every part thereof.”
Who, but cowards and paltroons
j would surrender without a struggle,
the glorious heritage of Sorereopity,
achieved by their forefathers and ack- i
nowledgcd by all the world ? We I
make this prediction : Peace and liar
tnony will never bo restored to the
United States until the Soven iynty
of tin 1 Staten is again acknowledged by |
the General Government, and the fact j
established beyond cavil for the future.
AGRICULTURALOIIGANIZA
TION.
We approvo of the objects sot forth
in the communication signed “G,’’ and
I ope our pooplo will lose no time in
organizing an Association for tins ad
vancement of t lie Agricultural intern j
csts of tho country.
FIRE IN TALLAHASSEE.
We omitted, through inadvert- j
ence, to notice a very disastrous lire,
which occurred in our sister city of
Florida on the night of tho 24th ulti
mo. Tho clothing store of Pratorius
& Clark, and tire drug store of T. P.
Tatum were consumed with their eon.
tents —no insurance. Dan Castollo’s
j Circus was on hand, and the press
j compliment the company and tho
| freed men very highly for their sorvi
; ccs on the occasion.
NEWSPAPER FOR SALE.
4 he Southern If carder published
at Milledgeville G:t , by the Messrs. I
Drill is offered for w.Jo. The lienor
dor )i as been published for forty years i
by the Seignior partner of the present
I proprietors, and ho now wishes to ro
l tire to n more quiet and less active !
life. The junior also desires to dis
pose of his interest in the paper, but
j will continue in the bus ness, if he !
1 can procure a suitable partner.
Destructive Fire at Fort Valley.
A lire broke out in the town of j
Fort Valley on Thurshay night, and
before it was arrested consumed near
ly the entire business portion of the j
town. Ail tho buildings, from An- j
tL rson’s store to th > Hmlnmil Depot, |
on l ho ninth side of the street, were i
destroyed.
Total Voto on tho Election.
Agusta, November 4. From the |
election returns received at the Head- j
quarters at Atlanta, it is estimated ]
that 105,000 votes have been east, on
the question of Convention, out of
186,000 ret isleted. The official count
can only show a majority in lavor of !
the Convention, as i pposition candi- j
dates were only nominated in the Nor- :
them part of the State, whero the !
whites arc largely in the majority.— 1
In other portions of the State ttic Con j
servatives took no part in the election
Ihe Candidates favoring a Convent
t ion have been all elected bv large
majorities.
Atlanta, Novemt cr 4. —Additional
returns reeeved indicate a majority for
Convention of front twelve to fifteen
thousand.
I he regular Radical nominees arc elec
ted in every district
Richmond, Nov. B.—Gen. Sch field
lias is.-uid an older convening the
j Elate Convention in this city Dec, 3d
(Communicated.)
Major Bryan :--l was very much
gratified at the appearance of two an
tiejes in the Enterpiise of tho 20th
inst., viz: A card, calling the attem
tion of the planters of this county to
the propriety of organizing, in Tltom
asvil e, an Agricultural and Labor As
sociation, and a discussion of tbe Joint
Account Labor System as app'icable
to ibc picsent condition of the coun
try.
The material interests of the South
are in tbe hands of the owners of its
soil, and upon them its future prosper
ity depends. All hope of relict from
the introduction of foreign capful, or
tbe legislation of Congress, lias been
extinguished, and our own resources
and industry are ottr sole dependence.
For the successful development of
these resources, labor and skill are re
quired. How to obtain the necessary
labor and to render it tbe most effi
cient and available, are questions of
paramount importance, which are en
gaging the attention of every cultivu
tor of the soil In no way can these
questions be so advantageously consid
ered and discussed as through the ag
ency of agricultural organizations,
which shall embody the reflection and
experience of the practical farmers
and planters of the country.
Much or anizations are just now the
great want of the country, and, if ge
nerally and heartily cute ed into, will
result in incalculable benefit.
Let our agriculturists come together
often in these meetings and fully in
terchange opinions on all subjects of
common interest, each communicating
bis peculiar theories with their praeti*
cal merits, whenever tested ; submit
ting subjects for enquiry, discussion
and investigation. No ntan, of ord’n
nary intelligence, can fail, if disposed,
to make a contribution, which will be
prouiotivc of the general good, and to
receive in return, Irom those bestquab
ifiod to instruct, important lessons of
wisdom and experience.
1 earnestly hope the subject introi
duced by your correspondent will not
be permitted to rest, bu’ that a call fur
a Meeting will follow, and that it wiil
be responded to in a manner commen
surate with ils importance, and tint,
you, Mr. Editor, will encourage and
assist the movement and press it upon
the attention of the community.
G.
Thomasvillc, Oct. 31, 18(57.
[From tbe Nashville Bamier, SUlh till.]
Tho Exited Trio.
’There are three Confederates now in
Europe who are not adventurers
I hey ought not to he forgotten by any
one, and, so tar as this random, off
hand ‘small talker’ can recall them,
shall nut l e t ore o I ton by comfortable
bodies at, home who are 100 apt to be
unmindful and ingiate. We icier to
John G. IJrcekitmdge, Isliaut G. liar
j ris and A. Dudley Mann. A recent
j letter from Paris makes mention of tlie
j three. Gen. Breckinridge lives quiet
ly on the Boulevard Malesheibo witii
: his family lie is enjoying' gf,od
I health, and though lie seeks obscuri
ty, cannot wholly insulate hmsi II
from his American ftiends He looks
with great interest, upon transpiring
events both at home and about Inin,
and confidently expects to bo able to
retorn to Kentucky anil resume tbe
profession lrom which be was with
drawn so rally.
Tl. ns 1 who do not know hint would j
be surprised to find in a man who, !
twenty years ago, was a Major in the ;
United States service, and has since :
been the most briliant party leader
of bis time, a Vice President, a Sena
tor, a Lieutenant Genetal and a Sec
retary of War, a handsome young fel
low turned of forty, vviili graceful
manners and fifty years of life in
him ! Before he is laid on tho shelf, j
New England niny secede, and we !
tuny have a campaign in Massachu
setts’ in which lie and Grant will com
mand a couple of advancing Union
coin ulus 1
IFrum tin* l.al'r ■ Democrat.]
Obituary Notice.
Dai,i,as, Texas, Sept. 23, 1867.
M. M. Pomkroy ;—A few days j
! since this community was startled by
tlie inti'll genre of tlie death of Brevet
Major General (’lias, Griffin. But a
lew days ago we received infotuiutimi
of the banishment of Major General
1 ’liiiip Blieriilan,
•Mislortunes come not singly as
spies.’
So said some great man.
‘Death loves a shining mark.’
So said another.
('hails was born in Ohio, was eduoa- !
led in New York, and sent to Galves l
ton, in the State ol fexas, for the tutr
[iosc ol looking to th ! intern t of the
nigger.
The Lord gave—The Lord hath ta
ken away. Blessed tie tlie name ol
the Lord. Sad indeed is the news
which has reached us in the last, few
days ('liatles dead—Phil, banished!
‘Tho evil that men do, lives after
them. The good is oft interred with
their bones’ So it is with Charles.
All the good lie lias ever done now I
lies mouldering with his bones in tin*
coffin. Tho evil that Charles did is
still alive. Murk Antony was right
The good dies with the man, tho evil
lives when he died.
Florida and Now Orleans!
The Tallahassee papers announce
that a line of first-class steamers will
cotnnienee running regularly hereafter,
on the sth and 20th of each month, ■
from New Orleans, touching at Pen*
sncola, St Marks, Cedar Keys, Tam
pa, and Key West, and on return their
days ol depaituro from St Marks will
be the 10th and 25th.
Juarez will Im and the dead body ol
Maximilian till Ids title to the Presi
dency of Mexico shall be recognized
by tlie European powers, or at least
by Austria.
How to Take a Whipping.
’fhe Western Morning Sun, an Ens
glish journal, has the following fresh
version of and o'd story :
Mr. Dickens, in t tie of his books on
American Journalists, represents
them as turning every incident into u
point with a sensation leader, so that
even when the editor got thrashed f’o
personalities lie at once brought out a
special edition with the flaming an
nouncement: ‘The Editor Cowt.ided
again.’ It is not i think, generally
known that Mr. Dickens was refeiiog
to an actual case, whic h is tolerably
notorious in America, and is told with
great glee by the person most ii«t< rest*
ed. That person is no other titan tho
notorious Janies Gordon Bennett, ol
the N"W York Herald, and it is thus
he tells the storv to his friends.
The Herald hud for some time vio
. lent ly attacked a certain actress. One
day the lady's husband, himself an ac
tor, came to the Herald office, walked
into Mr. Bennett’s room’ and said :
! ‘Are you Mr, Bennett V ‘I am,’ was
' the reply ; ‘tgke a scat,’ ‘No, sir, 1
j will not take a seat; you have insul
j ted my w fe.’ ‘Who is your wife?’
* Name mentioned. ‘Never heard of
; her.’ ‘But your dramatic critic has in
! suited her.' ‘This is bis affair.’
| ‘But I bold you rowponeiblo;’ ur>d
j thereupon Dio angry husband took the
j propriet >r of the Herald front his chair
and flung him on the floor, kicked him
j in the rear, rolled him over, kicked
him again, clutched hold of his throat
J and left the office.
W'liut did the victim Jo? He call
ed upon one of his employees, wrote out
an account of the affair, caused sensai
tion cards to he struck off—‘Fourth
Edition Atrocious Assault upon the
P 1 1itor.’ ‘Fifth edition—Further Par
ticulars of the Cowardly Assault upon
the Editor and soon all New York
was buying the Herald. ‘But,’ said
Bennett, ‘1 added a little garnish
which was not strictly true.’ I said,
‘We would have pardoned this un
mannerly, cowardly assault upon anun
! armed mail but for one ciicumstatice.
This despicable wretch, it it content
with ferocious violence, bad the un
i speakablc meanness to take up a quar
ter-! oliar piece which was lying upon
tho table, at ml to pocket it.’ The
next day when the actor appeared tip
| on the stage, lie was greeted w't,h cries
of‘Who stole Bennett’s quarter?’ and
whenever he appeared the same cry
greeted him, until he and his wife
were driven off the stage and ruin
el. ‘T hat,’ adds Bennett, ‘was my re
vengc.’
Photoisculpture is the product, oflltc
photograph an ! the pantograph, re
producing tho exact forms of natural
objects in all their fullness and com
pleteness of proportion. The impres
sion printed upon the sensitive plate in
the camera is transl'ere.t in all its dc
tails *o plastic clay’and may then bo
1 re-cast and reduplicated in plaster pa-
I rain or bronze. The proccs- is and serib
jed as follows: I'lte o* orating room
differs from titers of its kind in fact,
that it is circular with art arched glass
roof overhead. In the centre of this
rotunda their is a raised circular plat
form, upon which the sitter is placed, j
His seat is in the exact centre of the ]
room, which is .* scertainod and assun I
ed by a [dumb line falling from tlie !
centre of tho cupola above. It tins
line could descend to tin* surface of the
platform, it would t*>ucli a point Iron:
which radiate twenty-four lines, mark
ed in black, pointing to the centres ot
twenty-four cameras, set at equal dis
tances from each other in the circular
wall. In an instant twenty-four little
doors are opened, and in a few mo
uicnts the figure of the subject is ;
printed upon as many plates. The j
doors then are closed simultaneously, !
and the sitter descends from It s perch.
So far as he is cone. rneJ, there is noth
ing more to lie done.
But twenty tour pictures of his fig
ure have been taken, and each of these
gives ti profile view of,me part of th
cut.’ re circumference of his body ; each
differing from the other.
The work ot the pniita/r.iph tiowbei
gins. There are twenty *lour difler
ent profiles oftlte subject, all of small
dinientions and it is desired to have a
statue tho full size of life. At once
the little pictures, by means common
In photography, are increased to the
required dimensions. Each of these
i- fastened to (lie wall, and numbered
Loin one to twenty-four. On a table
near them is a mass of soil clay, which
is fashioned somewhat in the shape ot
t he slat no to be made.
Holding in bis band one end of the i
pantagraplt, tho operator begins to fid ;
low the outlines of the profile of the
picture number one, by means of the .
mao! inory of the instrument, so that
ptooisely tin* same outlines is marked
or rather out in the suit clay ; and as
the operator goes oil trout on to twen
ty four' following the outline of the
prulil i in eaeli, ho makes the circuit of
the entire mass ol clay nod produces
an exact far simHe. of the model.
It is impssitde to imagine the limits
to the use of this art, for it may tie
applied to every form of architectural
and monumental ornament ami me
chanical and sign, as well as to the mod
eling of th * human figure It has
been contended that it will be an in
jury to art, and that tlie sculptor may
close bis studio or seek another ehau
tti 1 tor bis getiious ; but what proved
true of th*' daguerretype, tin* ambro
lype and tin* photograph in their rela
tion to portrait painting, will be doub
ly true of photo-sculpture in its rela
tion to plastic art It may spoil the
market ter bail arti-ts, but it will ho
an itivaluhle a—istanoe to men of real
gemu- —lioston font.
In round numbers tbe entire num
ber ot blind per-ons >n the Unitid
States i- a’nuif 12,(10*; in 'in.-it
Britain about 30,000 ; in France 38,-
000.
Solomon’s Throne.
The sides of it were pure gold; the
feet of emerald * and pearls, intermixed
vith other pearls, each of which was
as large as the egg of an ostrich The
j throne had seven steps; on each side
were delineated orchards full of trees,
the branches of which were composed
! of precious stones, representing ripe I
and unripe fruits. On the tops o! the
i tacos were to be seen towls of the j
| most beautiful plumage, particularly
the peacock, the staub and tbe kurg
us; all these birds were artificially hob |
| lowed wiihio, so as occasionally to ut
ter a thousand nielodeous notes, such
jas the ears of mortals had never bes
fore heard On the first step were de
| lineated vine branches, having bunch
es of grapes, composed of various
snrts of precious stones, fashioned in
! such a manner as to represent the dis
-1 feront colors of purple, violet, green
i and red, so as to exhibit the appear
ance of real fruit. On the second
j step, on each side of tl e throne, were
j two lions of ntas-ive gold, of terrible
aspect, and as large as life. The pr .
pet ty of this stone was such that when
I Solomon placed his loot upon the first
| step, al' the birds spread their wings
! and made a fluttering noise in tbe air.
; On his touching tho second step, the
! two lions expand their claws. On his
j reaching the third step, the whole as
| setnbly of deevs, peris and inert re
peated the praises of the Deity. When
he arrived at the fourth step, voices
were heard addressing him in the fol
! lowing manner.
‘Son, of David, he thankful for the
hlcsnini/s ichirh the Aim/‘/lily has se
■stowed upon thee,.' The same was re
| pcated on his reaching the fifth step.
On his touching the sixth step, all the
children sang praises. On his air val
at the seventh step, the whole throne,
with all the birds and other animals,
by secret springs, discharged a show
ier ot the most precious musk upon the
! prophet; after which two of the kurg
uses, decending, placed a golden
crown upon his head. Before the
throne was a toluiiin ot burnished
i gold, ori the ti.p ol which was placed
a golden dove, which hud in its beak a
roll bound in silver. It this roll were
| written the psalms of the prophet Da*
| vid; and the dove having presented
! the roll to King Solomon, lie read a
portion of it to the children of Israel.
It is farther related that on the ap
| proacli ol wicked persons to this throne,
I ibr judgment, the lions were wont to
set up a terrible roaring, and to lash
: their tails about with violence; the
| birds also began to erect their featli
ers; and the whole assembly of deevs
| and g' nis uttered such loud cries, that,
i for fear of them, no person would dare
to be guilty of falsehood, but instant*
ly confess liis crimes.
Such was the throne of Solomon,
the son of David (Jlarkc's Com men
taries; II Chronicles , 'Jlh Chapter.
A Gay Town.
A letter from the fast city of Jt les
! burg on wheels’ away out west, says
j that, in one day recently they had two
I si reel fights, hung a man, rode three
men out of town on a rail, got up a
quarter-race, a turkey shooting, a
gander pulling, u match dogfight;
bad preaching by a circus rider, who
afterwards ran a foot-race for an apple
jack all round; and, as that was not
enough, the judge of the court after
losing his fees at single-handed po
ker, and whipping a fellow for saying
he didn’t understand the game, wont
out and helped to lynch his grandfar
tlier for horse-stealing.
One reason why General Grant don’t
say more, is because he can not talk and
smoke at the same time.
Dyspepsia and ils Cure.
Tin* great cause of dyspepsia is a want
of proper action of the liver, it living the
largest secretive organ in the system.—
()niisi-i|uciitly, when it fails to perforin its
functions properly, it throws the whole
system out of order. When tho liver does
not act, the im-nihranes that secrete the
gast l ie juice becomes impaired and cannot \
secrete healthy juices; hence we have in- !
digestion aid dyspepsia.
The peculiar office of the liver is to ex- !
trad the superabundant carbon out of the j
blood. Tins carbon unites with other ele
ments, ami thereby forms the bitter fluid
called bile, which is thrown into the upper j
bowels and facilitates the process of di
gestion and excretions. When the liver is
torpid the bile lias lo be taken out of the
body by the kidneys, and through the
pores in the skill, Ac. l\ lien tlu-s • are ob
structed, it is impossible for them to < fli*r j
ilie necessary assistance; hence the car- !
honic mailer accumulates under the skin, j
and I tins becomes, to a great extent, for- !
eigu matter, producing bilious lovers
and all those pains and aches which pa- |
lients complain of in those disorders.
Professor Kay on Inis discovered the
remedies I o i elieve all I hese derangements.
liis pills act upon the liver, causing it to
relieve the blood ot the carbon, give tone
uud energy lo tbe stomach, promoting
licabhy secretions of tin* gastric juice,
without which it is impossible lo supply
healthy nutriment lo the system. His
Olenin Vilae when used a- a rubefacient
ill trillions disorders, nets like a charm in
arousing a healthy action in I lie capillat ies,
ami a-sists them to throw off the carbona
coous matter that lias collected there, re
lieving ihose exerutiating pains and aches
! experienced in billions fevers. Often wc ,
bear o: patients having billions rheniitua
tistn, and it is upon tin- principal that tin-
Oleum Vitae so promptly acts. Th* seex
crucialing headaches are r lii-ved upon
i lie same principle. The pores become ob
structed, uud the brain living surcharged
with a superabundance of carbon the liver
and pores are not anting properly, lon
rub the licit i with the Oleum Vitae and ex
cite the pores to adieu, thereby relieving
the brain of the carbon, and the head at
: once beennea ea-v.
Want of space prevents any further es.
say al present on the - hi eel. but we would
advise our reader- to supply themselves
with I’rofessor Kaytoo's remedies, con
sisting of Kaylon's Oleum \ tt.ie. t *r all
pains; kuytoti's Uy-peptio Ihll-. and K ly
i.m’s Magic cure, for diarrhoea, \o. They
can be found at our city drnggi-i«, and al
wholesale at A. A. Solomons \ !V-. Tbe
Urofe-sor request- u< to slate that Ins sig
nature ia on every bottle and box —5
A ■;-.<■ I ltd It r 11.
For sale in Thotnasville by I*r. P. 8.
Power.
The declining lim Rh of Thud. Ste
vens, it is said, will | revent him pari
ticipatirig; in the proceedings of Con
gress this session. Ho has prepared
| an" address, however, in which ho firm
! ly adheres to the views he has already
! expressed, and upon an adherence to
| wh ; ch, he thinks, the safety of the
, country depends.
New Advertisements.
C ERMAN
LABORERS!
The UNDERSIGNED has made arrange
ments with
P-. BOfTFORTj ESQ,,
OF NEW YORK,
j To supply Planters, whose plantations are
j situated in healthy localities, whh
German Laborers.
Orders sent to me, doKcriliinif the number of
hands uiul tlie description of labor, will re
eei ve ailention and be Jilled as near as possible
according to tlie description, and in rotation.
h c; unwell,
Formerly of Florida,
fl 7
RFFEUFXCFS IX SAVANNAH:
Roberts iV 7 ill man, Commission Merchants,
John \\ . Anderson’s Son iV Cos Commission
Merclumls. I’i.son & Cor on, John L. Vila*
loiiifa: ()(•!.• vius. Colien & Cos.. Fei ii'l &, Wes
low. Phillips & Myers- nov 5 3m
MTlliraiD ATLAST!
Catalytic
IfAIK RESTORER.
I Tlie wonderful vh'lue of the Catalytic
j have been lolly tested, and uiver>ully proven
! lo be the most agreeable, healthy, reliaideand
i never la ’•ii!' combination ever produced
For Iteaiuil. iiig. liii|ii oviiig and Ke
tlie
j D should be found in every Southern home and
; on tlm toilet of eve y Southern lady.
I*v ils use. gray and faded hair of ullages
|is restored so i<s nut lira I color. Ry iis use,
! dry. harsh and w'rv hair is clmn;/ed into beau
! t'lul. smooth, glossy,silken tresses, and ineliu
j edlo lake and retain whaieverstyle the wcar
lor may fancy—w heiher “classic braids or sbi
J niu*< liugiyls —p'eseuiin.i' a marked contrast
: lo she j row/, y curls worn by many to whom
j this ai tnde is unknown. Tlie most fastidious
young ladies and gentlemen who have used
THE CATALYTIC
j Speak of its merits in the highest praise. The
lavor it has received ami the popnhii itv it has
obtained, is unprecedented and almost incredi
i tile.
Ri'uxoiis hy liiu ('aful)(ic
MioiilU be S sell :is tin* lU-sl
tel ieie lor t Eae IS ail'.
lteeauze jt restores gray and faded heir of
ail ages lo iis original color; lieeanse it will re
-tore hair oil premutan; hald heads; heeause it
is I he most deliglillul hair iliesriug for the old
andyoung: been use ii gives the Intir u rich,
[ soil, glossy and heanliliii appearance: because
u i- lice sediment and lie- elli-e,a of sal.
ph"f- (a great com asl hei ween all oilier Hair
lie.l orers ;) heeause it is eleali and l.cens llte
head cad and healthy Itecause it will not
Stain the tinesl f.ihiie, or soil the Iml or tarn
isli je welrv ; lieeanse it quickly cures nil hum
ors ot the scalp, removes seui f, damlrutl. itch
ing. h teat lug. .V e., and i- delight full v pertained
with Ihe sweetest e.t r.ots. This isjnstwhat
tin- (’A I A t,\ I It’ will do. end tltonsalilts who
have used it, will testify to this I ruth.
lie sure lo ask your Druggist lor the Cata
lytic Hair Restorer, and lake no other.
J. S. PEMBERTON &. CO.,
Propi let ors.
Practical Clietnists, Columbus, Ua.
For sale in Tlioinasville by
Nov S-3m REID & CASS EES.
810,000
HFL o "w ar and
FOR AN ARTICEE SUPERIOR
TO TIIE
GLOBE FLOWER|
SYRUP.
Tl»i«* ct b-binfed Pubnomry Remedy i« cm
pbulicallv the moHt certain uud pleasant* coin j
pound ill at nicdinil skill mid science lias ever |
discovered for tlie cu.e of
f'oiigliN, ColiU. ISt oiicliitiM.
Wlioopiiuc
4'roiip, DHliciill If cr stilling,
1 iiJlikiis.i. Sp j ii i ■■ w |fi |oo<l.
And nil dis« '.-us *>f flic Luuys lemliiHr lo (’on
sumption. This (\»uy|, Syrup is purely
t.ihLu obtained h\ ciiciuic;i| process from llie
nrlivc principle of(.ihd>e Flower, (known algo
;i s I>n< 1 1 »n Hush.)
I tcnuliii iH no Opium in unv of its forinH. It
is pleasant to take, mid never does injury ; but
(twilit to ils tonic mid \iny properties,
H'list do not).l umlerunv x irnm'istances. Its es
fe« I- me hutdv womhoful soothing, calming,
mid uilaving ihe most \ i'»leut coughs; purifv
i'V-f- 8-1 reiiQilienin-f and ins i fonuiny the who'l *
svshmi; ; (idmin •' uud soot hiiltf the nerves ; I‘ id
’’py uud t.ietlii;ii iiu{ expectoration, mid healinir 1
• lie diseased luo-s.
Reader it vim have t\eoii''b. ujef a bottle of j
ihe(;LOi;F FLOW I:r* SVIU I*. mid he res |
i red to health ami happiness. Do not delay l
in tins in..tier. ‘ Jt is e>iiuiafed that lot) (MM) !
pi smtH . j,- miliualiv «>f ('onsumpi ton in the
Fuited Stales I'rote-sor Ftierle m\ n a vast j
mtuiher ot T hese could be saved by the timely j
use of some proper remedy.' That remedy U
tih>be Flower Synip. pnp..ied in the La bora 1
to y of J. S. I*I.M r.LU iON A CO.,
lb opt ietors and ( hemists,
( olumhus. (la.
For sale in Thomas\ ille by
Nov o dm Rl ID A CASSKI.S.
THE ALLEN
Ij iniment
CILLKRUATKD THIUH’UIIOIT THE
j Southern States for all
iDi)C$ ;p)k i, J ;|n)s
Thai man ami lu»rxc a* t* auttjecl to, can be
Imil at the Drug Store of
oct 25 E. SKIX AS.
Jeffers
AT no.GIB!
\ I
■ I
vicimtv tlutt he h«* renuimnl Uh* nmnimement
ot his Rh. t ’graphic Dallery. and will vi»ve his
perstmal intention to taking
I'lio it Klum pit.
AND
I'OIU 1.1. %l \ nr* i lies.
Mr JEKKERS !at»» had Twi nilv Years ex pt
rieuee in the Itiisiness and gtuunHlvtf* perfect
Bllt I**(iH'fHMl 111 lilt Gist's
Operntiag Hour* fr <' a m till 4 p
II
NEW FLOUR.
Plffi sale bv
I ' E KKMIKOTOX A, SuN
I. Kubitshek
AND
BROTHER.
Fall and Winter
DRY GOODS.
l*i'iii(s and llomvNpuns 12 1-2
Cents per Yard. s
WITH the opening of the Fall Trade,
we are prepared to exhibit lo our
, friends and customers, a complete and va
ried assortment of
Fall and Winter
IMIL
Our stock is not surpassed by any in the
city, having been purchased by an experi
enced buyer at Hie opening of l lie season,
when i lie best selections could be made.
Our stock will be found to consist in
part of
hIiXTS. Itu tut MADE 11,0111.
l. % «»!« >»• Illtl— I.IIOIIS,
BOOTS A\l» hats
AND < tl'.H, I.AIIII!-'
HATS A ( 1.0 iliS,
l.nli it Mlyh’N.
| Vandykes, Nubias. Prints, Merinos, De
laines, Cassitneres, Satinets, Tweeds,
&c —Homespuns, Bleaching, <*s
naburgs, Plain and Striped,
Spun Yarns, Plaids,
Fine Bed Blankets and Common, Shirts,
Drawers, Yankee Notions, Ribbons,
Belling, White Goods, Dress
Trimmings, Hosiery, Va
lises, Trunks, Watch
es, Pistols and
Shot Guns.
BtSyGive us a call and we pledge our
selves to have nothing undone to please
you in goods nml prices. sent 17
I. KUBITSHEK
AND
Brotlier.
Wholesale and Itelaii.
■4 5 T E H.\ VE.) LEST OPEN ED a large and
If well selected stock of
GROCERIES,
Next Door to J. SoliilT & Brother, which
we are now offering lo tlie citizens of Tlio
tnnsvillo and surrounding country, and lo
country dealers, at such rates as cannot
fall to secure a liberal patronage.
Ours is all anew and first class stock,
ami figures low.
We are prepared to furnish everything
kept in a first class
(jJroccry Store!
Including Bagging and Rope, hy ihe bale
and coil. Salt, Bacon, Flour, Su
gar, Coffee, Hams, (canvassed)
Nails, Tobacco, Powder,
Shot, Lead, Oysters,
Sardines, Caned Fruits, Preserves, Con
fectionaries, Pot ware,
A Fine assortment of Liquors, B andies
Ac., hy the Cask and Bottle,
Apples, Onions, Oranges, Mackerel, While
Fish, Kill.on Market Beef.
10 hhds. BACON just received.
We are prepared lo make liberal ad
vances on Colton ami ship lo Savannah,
New York or Livei pool. sept 17
E O HILTON, r M. BANDELL
Savannah. New York.
Hilton & Randell,
W 1101.155A1.15 GROCERS,
AND DEALERS IN
fBCf ISIOHSj ftUJIIIUB
AV ines,
LJQUOIIS, cfc„
193 BAY STREET,
SAY AW All, - - GEORGIA.
INVITE lii<* attention of Buveni to their
largo uud complete u***o rime lit of
GROCERIES. &c.
Which they offer sit tin* Low. st Market ratcu.
.% I.nrgr ntt«l Finr Voorlimnl of
T O IS A C’ C O
(’onstiintly on hand.
Old Magnolia Whisky,
BOWER 8
OLD v/HISEY,
Now Knglaiul Rum,
THE CELEBRATED
“STAR” WHISKY,
111 < HM-*.
“Old Tom.”
H lnr«, € lan li. IHIIm, ic.
Ay**«ts» f r t • «sile >»f Hazard » Gnnpowcfer
in K**»:*•. half Kej,;*. omArter x* end I****
Oetll m*m