Newspaper Page Text
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TELEGRAPHIC. |
Western Union Telegraph.
Nprrial lo Ihc l£n!crpri#o.
\en Oilcans Market.
New Orleans, Nov. 7.—Sugar and
molasses unchanged. Flour dull, su
perfine 10.1 y a 10.25, choice 14.75.
Corn dull, 45 a 50. Pork dull and
drooping, 231. Ilacon, shoulders 14A
a 111, clear rib sides 17f, clear sides
18f. Lard, no sales, quoted dull at
131 fer tierces, 14 kegs.
Baltimore Market.
Baltimore, Nov. 7. —Cotton dull,
middling 181. Flour quiet and firm.
Wheat, prime and choice, advanced 2
cents, red 60 a 65. Corn quiet and
unchanged. Provisions flat.
NTcw York Market.
New York, Nov. 7 —Cotton firm,
sales 2500 bales at ISJ a 19. Flour
active, .State 8 a 10.40, Southern 10 a
14. Wheat active. Mixed Western
corn 33 a 35. Sugar firm. Other
groceries quiet. Naval stores quiet
and firm. Freights heavy. Cotton,
steam » a J, sail 5-16 a f. Grain,
steaui, 12.
Papal troops badly beaten in recent
fights at 51 onterondo until the French
arrived, when the’ide turned.
Liverpool Market.
Liverpool, Nov. 7, evening.—Cotton
closed firm, sales 15000 bales, uplands
81tl, Oilcans 9d.
From Washington.
Washington, Nov. 7.—Customs f r
four days ending Oct 31st $1,500,000
It is announced positively that. Sir
Edward Jliomti n has been tendered
a Ministership, but has not yet signi
fied his acceptance
llevt nuc to-day $137,000.
In a reported convention Wade is
represented as saying that Congress
would never modify the reconstruction
laws, but would make them harder if
the South did not behave better lie
is sorry about the Republican disposi.
tiun t> run Grant. Wade savs let him
come out like a man and show It is print
eiplcs. He characterizes Steven’s con
fiscation bills as unw.se.
Thur.ow Weed’s wing of Republic
cans have proclaimed for Grant.
This morning’s Tribune, in an arti
cle attributed to Groely, is strongly
for Chase and deprecative of Grant,
saying, Gen. Grant, we esteem by no
means a great man nor even a very
great General. T c war being over
we can no longer carry elections by
reading bulletins of Union Victories,
and expecting the people to‘Rally
Round the Flag,’and those who are
pushing Grant for the Presidency will
land just where the Whigs did with
Scott in ’52. If they are allowed to
have their own way they will utteily
mistake the time of day.
HO ON DISPATCHES.
ft’civ l’ork Mill kef.
New York, Nov. 8, 2 p m. Cot.
ton steady at 18J a 19. Flour un
changed, Wheat quiet. Corn 1 a 2
oci.ts better. Pork heavy, 21 a21.05
Lard dull, 12 ; a 13J. Stocks active.
Gold 39. Money 6a 7 per cent. —•
Preedits firtn.
t o
Election .Vews.
Democratic majority in New Jersey
12,000. Joint ballot in the Legisla
ture 16.
Democratic majority in New York
85,000. Joint ballot in the Legisla
ture is conceded Democratic.
Official information shows that 140,•
000 Lite men in Virginia refused to
register, and that 5,500 are disfran
chised.
Latest from Italy—The Insurrec
tion Crushed and tho Leaders
all Killed or Captured.
Near Cores?, November 3. —Garibal-
di concentrated his forces around Mon
te 1! 'tnndn. and was urged to with
draw. Garibaldi replied that lie did
not value his life and a soldier should
not count his enemies. The deputa
tion replied that a geneiul should
count the enemy, and withdrew.—
G ribahli, with 8,000 men and two
cun. , then moved toward Trivoli which
the Pa; als had stormed. Unconsci
ous of the disaster at Trivoli, the Gar
ibuldiuiis, while marching to patriotic
songs, were surprised at M* tana by
sevetal Papal battalions, with even
guns, who attacked both sides and
both flanks, fighting fiercely. Garb
baldi was dragged away. The retreat
ing Gatibaldinns made a two hours
fight at Monte Rotunda, and fled after
900 were killed and 1,000 captured.
Menotti, Garibaldi’s son, was hurt in
the leg.
On the frontier the Gnribaldians
gave up everything but private prop
erty.
Garibaldi looks old, haggard; bro
I:cn and disappointed.
The insurrection is over. The
French took no part, except a few as
volunteers.
All Garibaldian Prisoners Order
ed to be Shot by the Papal Au
thorities.
The feeling of both parties to the
struggle seems to become more embit
tered as it proceeds. The Liberte re
ports that the Pontifical Government
lias Shot several prisoners, and among
them CountPagliacci, of Viterbo, who
was made prisoner at B ignorcur. M
Pagliacci was condemned to death
three years ago for political offences.
The Italian correspondence says that
the Roman prisons are full of priso
ners, and that Count D’Argy, the
commander of the Antibes Legion,
has diiected his officers to shoot all
the Garibaldian ptisoners, which, if
carried into eflcct, will lead to terri
ble reprisals. London News.
J&mitjjcni (Enterprise
~~ (SEMI-WEEKLY )
L. C. BRYAN, : : : : Editor.
THOMASVILLE, GA.:
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1807.
BPMr. N. 11. Stakbuck is oar authorized
Agent for the City of Savannah, to receive
and receipt for advertising and subscriptions
to the Southern Enterprise.
GLORIOUS NEWS FROM THE
NORTH.
A great joy thrills through the
heart of the South. New York,
Nc.v Jersey, Wisconsin, Kansas, Min
nesota, Delaware, and even Re
publican Massachusetts, have vin hea
ted the Constitution, and hurled the
Radicals from power. They have now
received their deathblow and the Corn
stitution will be restored. The Radi
cals lust Forty Thousand votes in
home of Sumner
and Wilson. New York and New
Jersey were swept by the Conserva
tives, and even their Legislatures are
Democratic. New York is reported
10,000 majority /or the Democrats. —
The other smaller States have mud •
like gains lor the Democrat*, where
riot carried altogether. While the
Radicals and negro suffrage ate r in
fant in the South and glorying over
iho election, they have been entire
ly stripped in the North and their
houses left desolate. Negro suffrage
lias now been defeated all over the
North. The Reconstruction Acts ot
Congress have been condemned, and
this grand reaction in the Ninth as
sures us that, these Acts, with all their
supporters and disorganizes, will be
put down.
FRIENDS OF THE COLORED
PEOPLE.
V e understand that some of the
colored people of this county have
fallen out with the editor of this pa
per, because lie wrote and published
an article on Friday last ridiculing the
late election and calling it a miserable
farce ka. If this be true they have
fallen out, not only with us, but with
nearly all of the respectable white peo
ple ot the South and a large, majority
of those of the North. As there are
ordy two or three colored men who
subscribe for the Enterprise, very few
could have known tor themselves
what we published, and the rest must
thereforu be following the advice of a
few leaders; and the chief head ol
these leaders is a white man. The
colored man does not know that he
lias been assailed until the white man
pricks him upon his honor and respite*
tability. V lien he does find it out,
da<t white man again suggests the re
medy. In other words, the colored
people move only when prompted or
forced by white men, and if ever mis
fortune overtakes the colored race,
whether by war and extermination, or
by gradual extinction through neglect
or oppression, the mischief will be
brought about by those evil white men.
To be plain, wo allude to those white
men who pander to his vices in order
to make use of him to gain afire and
money. When they can no longer
swindle him ol his scant earnings—
when they can no longer deceive him
into the belief that they are his only
friends, like “Helper,” they will be
the first to cry out “banish him,’’ ex ■
terminate” him, and will become the
colored man's most active and hitter
enemies. This is the class we ridicule
when wc speak of the election. Our
feeling for the colored people is that ot
deep sorrow. Wo know that they are
uneducated and do not know how to
escape the evil designs of shrewd, in*
trigueing white men. They are told
| all kinds of falsehoods and absurdi*
| ties, and they believe them because their
<1 cetvers put on the garl of friend
ship,ma\ prove it by aliMirdities great
er .-till, but which the color and man has
no penetration to discover. These
men are the real enemies to tho color*
ed race, end the time is rapidly ap
proaching when the truth here spoken
will fully appear. Those who mivi-e
the colored i eoplo to leave off follow
ing alter such leaders—who advise
tin in to be peaceable and cultivate the
friendship of the white people * f the
South—who udviso them to let id me
politics, to be industrious mid educate
their children— these, we sav, are the
real friends of the colored people, and
we beg them to consider this matter
before it is too lalo
Let all your meetings and conven
tions he l* i' the promotion of your wel
fare, for the education ot your cliil
drat, and how you may best feed and
clothe your families and save your
souls I roiu peidition. These are your
interests--tlie true interests of all na
tions, and claim their very first consid
eration Politics is a very great evil,
because it teaches men to he thieves,
liars and hypocrites, all of which are
denounced in tile Bi! le and threaten
ed w ith the greatest judgments. Those
who deal in politics arc liable to bo de
ceived and disappointed Many men
sell their souls to the devil for the mis
eral-le price of hoping to reach a high
position. They tell lies to get votes,
practice hyp* critical friendship to
ward enemies to gain their influence,
and if at last they gain the position tt
is with the loss ot their rjood eharac •
ter —all that was worth having.'-. Foli
tics not only ruins good character in
individuals, but corrupts whole ra
tions, and, when directed by evil men,
destroys their prosp. rity, imposes hea
vy taxes, burdens them with debt and
plungesparties intocivil war. You have
seen all this w ithin the last fi w years
among white men. Be careful that
you do not bring it about among color
ed men.
HARD TIMES AND THE
PRESS.
The two best papers in the State of
Florida, and as good as any in tho
country, are the Floridian aud Senti
nel in Tallahassee. Both are large,
beautifully printed and edited with
marked ability. Simualtaneously,
with our own bumble Enterprise.,
prompted by the favorable prospects
of trade, the crops &c, and determined
to give their readets all the benefit of
prosperity the Floridian and Sentinel
sprung into Semi. Weeklies with the
opening of the present year. They
have been sustained up to this time
by the energy of the proprietors, and
at. a cost (judging them by ourself)
unwarranted by the increase of pat
ronage; but the last few mouths have
borne so heavily upon them that we
notice a card in the Sentiiul ot the
4tli inst. signed by the editors of both
papers notifying their readers that the
stringency ot the times c*-tnpells them
to discontinue their Semi Weeklies
| and return to Weekly issues, as hi fore.
We not ce the fact because our Flor
ida cotemporaiies have anticipated us
but a few weeks.
ELECTION IN FLORIDA.
Tim Military election ordered by
j Dope t i delegatus t<* the State Con
vention of Florida will commence on
lie 14Ji inst. The Florida negroes,
who voted in Georgia, will now have an
opportunity to vote in their own State.
The Augusta Chronicle & Sentinel
I says: The people of the North will
| never consent to make a second St.
Domingo and Dahomey of the South.
| The infamous work of tho Radicals,
j scalawags and Yankee emissaries will
be undone. The white men ol the
! North have declared the recent decs
I tiun farce a stupendous fraud and an
| infamous outrage on the boasted pre
rogative of every American citizen. —
Men of Georgia be resolute and firm ;
! the hour of deliverance is drawing
I nigli;
‘•THE ELECTION IN GEOttOIA.
‘•AnotherState has been enshroud*
|ed with tho sombre pall. Georgia,
| following her sister Southern States
j Virgin a, Alabama and Louisiana—
lias been swept into the black Radical
vortex. Briefly, we mnv regard the
entire ten unreconstructed Southern
Sta'es, with possibly one or two cxci p
tions, a- forced by a secret, and over
whelming revolutionary influence to a
common and inevitable fate, fliey
are all going one way. They are all
b *und to be governed by blacks, spur
red on by worse than blocks —w bite
wretches who dare not show their
faces in respectable white society any
where.
‘‘This is the most abominable phase
barbarism has assumed since the dawn
of civilization. It was right and prop
er to [nit down the rebellion. It was
all right, perhaps, to emancipate the
slaves, although the right to hold
them had been acknowledged befoie.
But it is not right to make slaves of
white men, even though they may
have been former masters of blacks.
This is but a change in a sy-tem of
bondage that is r ndered the more
idiousand intolerable because it has
been inaugurated in an enlightened
instead of a dark and uncivilized age.
•‘The Romans, in the It -ight of their
triumphs, handed tho government of
conquered kingdoms over to the while
races who peopled them—never to no
gioes. It, appears, then, that the
Radicals tire receding from the condi
tion of oiviliz'ilion which marked the
era even of the old Romans. They
are creating black governments in the
South, which will not only destroy the
industiial interests of that section of
the country, hut. overturn all the es
tablished safeguards of civilized socie
ty and lead to utter biubarista; to im
plant upon the soil of our own South
the civil zatioii seen in the interior el
Africa human slaughter, slavery in
its most hideous shapi, mental igno
rance and Paganism.
“Incited hy creatures like lliinni
cutt, iii Richmond, the blacks in ihoir
ignorance are made to believe that not
only the ‘day ol jubilee’ lias come, but
that ot agrarianism or a eou.mon distii
hu inn ol ptoperty also. They arc
now crazy for the promised spoil*, and
tho acts of outrage daily chronicled,
with threats of personal violence’ and
srerct but petempiory orders ofcxpn
ti ia tion ag da.-t obimx THIS w hites, illus
trate i lion infatuated disposition
This tin- Radical party must be held
le-ponsihle for Their acts arc in vi
olation of tho wise com oils of Gener
als Grant and Slieiman, who have rea
son- to be as competent judges of what
is good for the newly enfranchised
race as all the Radicals put together •
“The whole Northern people tire an
pealed to todt feat this atrocious at tempt
to surrender a large poitiun of the
country to ad* lia-Sed race an nttcui) t
IFL characterized by a Northern Re
publican print to be one intended to
‘circumvent the laws ot God.”— New
Yi rh Herald.
Ilunnieutt Shrinks Brownlow
tho Rising Man-
Wo see by the Richmond papers that
the Rev Ilunnieutt, who has rendered
himself infamously notorious by his ef
forts to array the blacks of Virginia
in hostality to the whites, and who
has been elected by bis deluded dupes
to the Convention if that State, tear
ful of the consequences of his perfidy,
and warned by the manife-tations of
popular condemnation at the North,
is endeavoring to shirk the responsibil
ity of his incendiary com!net
He now denies that In- has ever
preached ill favor of eunfi - ti-n, or
that he lias urged the foim.ition of a
negro party in Virginia.
in this, the 1! -v. trick-ter di-plays
his cowatdly pusilaumity, and his un
lit ne.-ssoven for the bad eminence he has
attained as the leader of the tugro par
ty of the South.
Tho Apprehensions of a Negro
Insurrection in tho South.
We find in the New York Ilerald
of the 2d inst. tho following dispatch,
dated Washington, Nov. Ist.;
T lie few facts I telegraphed you a
couple of evenings since, respecting
the apprehended danger of a negro
insurrection in the South, have attrac
ted some attention. That 1 d.d n*t
exagic-rute in the least is fully con
firmed ly the information derived
from the very Inches' so ices. It is
well for the conn ry to know in time
tl at thi negroes aiearming and organ
izing for no peacdui purpose, and it is
well for the Government to take steps
to prevent any disastrous resuits. I
am informed that the President has
: the subject under consideration, and
that lie will undoubtedly act with vig
or. .Much surprise is expressed here
that the District Commanders should
permit the negroes t-> arm arid drill
publicly throughout the South ; but
'li s is not even the wor-t of it, for it
| is known that in some in-ta c- s the
negroes have actually been supplied
| with arms and ammunition by the mil
itary authorities. Such cases have
come to tin- knowledge of the I‘resi
dent, who has refcri and them for inves
tigation to the head of the War De
part in- nt. It is probable that the
President will cause instructions to be
; given to the military commanders to
j prevent further arming of the negroes
| and, where desirable, to relieve them
of such ai ms as they already have in
their possession. It is not impossible,
| either, that the wild fanatical haran
gues of Ilunnieutt & Go., will be cheek
ed hy Executive orders, for such in.
I flammutory utteranc* sure regarded by
the President as certain, if allowed
much further indulgence, to lead to
| violence anil bloodshed. The iiicon*
sisteney of these military commanders
| ill prohibiting harmless lectures and
I suppressing eoleges on the slightest
j pretexts ot disloyalty among the stu
dents, ami still suffering the most in*
cendiary radical harangues to be ut
! tered witlmnt interruption, is severely
criticised, and regarded as indicating a
dereliction of duty. A man named
Frank Ewing, of Alabumma, for in*
stance, was sent to the Dry Tortugas
during the height ot yellow fever for
j speaking disrespectfully of the laws of
Congress, while Ilunnieutt and men
of his stamp are allowed to preach se
dition ami assassination of the whites
|at open air meetings without, being
reprimanded or molested by the mil *
I tury authorities.
Th ere was a lengthy Cabinet ineet
| ing to-day, at which this subject and
| the whole management of the election
business in the five military Districts
were discussed. 1 think *t safe to
state that a determination has been ar
rived at to strengthen the military
force in tin* South in anticipation of
apprehended negro disturbances.
Terrific Storm in Toxas-The Peo
ple on the Verge of Starvation
—An Appeal for Help.
T'he late terrific storm in Texas has
inflicted want and suffering upon tho
people of that section. A gentleman
writing from Brazos says:
The people have saved nothing but
- such clot hors as they had on when the
hurricane broke out, and absolutely no
provisions liavo beeu saved except
such as may have been found among
the ruins that have not yet floated oft
The Rio Grande Courier says ot the
Brown-villi! oases :
There is not a habitation that has
not felt tho tumble fore- of the storm,
while the mujuM, ol our business
hoilsi-s are in rut-
Although w- .. ime the present
number exclusively to this truly awful
calamity, we are unable to particular
ize many instances of individual loss
and stiff nng, an 1 tho many shining
examples i*l heroic self-sacrifice.
It is for the people of the East,
West, and North to come to our aid
and In-Ip.
N--r do tl e h useless and I- melcss
poor of Matamoras I* ss address liem-
I selves to tho sympathies *-f in-- wot id.
i We were in the eleventh hour ol
our deliverance from the scourge of
yellow fever, and owing to a long eon
tiuuanoo of a rigid quar.mtn e, busi
ness being emi.-plelely stagnant, the
poor people are already much .-trained
hy loss of employment, and for that
reu-on this blow fulls more grievously
upon them.
People who have never experienced
a similar misli rtuue can form no ado
quote idea of this tempest whiel blew
with fearful force about three hours,
when a little before midnight, it ceas
ed with an ominous lull ot about one
half hour, only to recoil from the op
posite direction with increased volume
and tenfold fury.
It would need the pen of an Ossiari
or a Daute to de-cribe the 'pluriuiam
ortis imago’ of that never to he for*
gotten night
There were those whose lip- were
long unused to prayer, who, warned
by impcin ing death, knelt down, with
most passionate fervor, to that power
which in the beginning gave and has a
light to take away in his own good
time at and manner.
Wi have grown forgetful of our ob
ligations to Divine Provideoee, and
‘need the wrath of the wild, unchain
oil elements to teuea who rules them.’
Call for tho First Instalment.
The President of the Atlant c and
Gulf Railroad Company, it will be seen
has made a call for the payment of the
instalment on the stock recently -üb
seribed for tho extension of the road
on the 20th inst. Argus.
Washington City
A writer torn New York paper o*ti«
mates the population of Washington,
‘incl idiug the suburb of Georgetown/
it 130,000.
General Sheridan's reception in
Boston cost that city $50,000.
[From the Chronicle &. Sentinel.]
The Suspension of Judge Aldrich
His Remarks on tho Occasion.
Bahkwill Courthouse, Oct. 21, '67.
ings I found myself at this place to
day, and at 10 o’clock followed the
crowd to the Presbyterian Church,
which is now used as the Courthouse.
Judge Aldrich was to preside. Asa
Federal officer had arrived in town
early this morning it was supposed
something important would transpire
The Judge was escorted to the Court
room by the Sheriff, and greeted plea
santly by the gentlemen of th** Bar,
who rose to speak to him. The Clerk
called over the Grand and Petit Ju
rors, but was not directed to swear
them. When the list was called, the
Judge proceeded to address them in
his earnest manner, lie first alluded
to the sad memories called up hy the
deaths of so many of the members of
the Bar in the last thirty years; then
adverted to the present condition of
the country, and the single issue of
the war —to restore the in ion; then to
his course at Edgefield, which had
been noticed by the military. He
then read the modification of Order
No. 89, as communicated in a circular
from Governor Orr, and his reply
thereto, in which he said the mod fica*
tion violatis the jury law of the State
quite as flagrantly asd**es the original
order; and the same conscientious and
constitutional reasons which compelled
me not to * nf'orce the one, will compel
me not to carry out the other, lie
then read an order, which hud been
served on him this morning, suspend'
ing and tut permitting him to hold
any courts in his circuit The Judge
then ad resetd the juries on the Re.
const: notion acts and the powers of tlie
Military Commanders, which do not
include his suspension. Rising from
his seat lie said ;
Gentlemen: —ln forced obedience
to the command of Brevet Major Gen
eral Ed. It. S Canhy, I lay down my
office for the present. Personally, I
feel no mortification at this indignity,
because it has been put upon me for
tlie conscientious discharge ol my con
stitutional duty I did not receive
my office from him, or from any pow
er which lie represents, and he has no
right to remove me. But it almost
breaks my heart to witness tho humil
iation ot th*s proud old State, we all
love so well, in rny poor person. Be
of good cheer—it is only for a time
1 see the dawn of a brighter day.—
The great heart of the American peo
ple beats true to Constitutional liber
ty. The time is at hand when we will
be relieved from tlie tyrany and inso
lence of military despotism.
Gentlemen of tho juries, for the
pr. sent farewell; but if God spares
my life I will yet pnsMe in this
court, a South Carolina Judge, whose
ermine is unstained.
My brethren of the Bar, be patient;
he loyal toihe Constitution; be true
to yourselves.
Mr. Clerk, ass am not permitted to
perform any judicial act, you and tin
Sheriff will issue to the jurors their
pay ci rtificates as if the judge had not
attended
Mr. Sheriff, let the court stand ad
journed while the voice of justice is
Stifled.
You can imagine the scene. I can
not describe it.
Occasional Reporter.
Can’t ‘Write for Glory and Print
for Fun.’
The editor of the Albany News
says.
The high price of material, labor,
provisions and whiskey, render it itn
hossiide to run a first class paper on
tho free system.
liy-IM-psia mid if- Cure.
The great cause of dyspepsia is a want
of proper action of tlie liver, it being the
largest secretive organ in the system.—
Consequently, when it fails to perform its
functions properly, it throws tlie whole
system out of order. When the liver does
not act, the membranes that secrete the
gastric juice becomes impaired and cannot
secrete henithy juioes; hence we have in
digestion aid dyspepsia.
Tin- peculiar office of the liver is to ex
tract the supernbuudatii carbon out of the
blood. This carbon unites with other ele
ments, and thereby forms the bitter fluid
called bile, which is thrown into the upper
bowels and facilitates the process of di
gestion and excretions. When tlie liver is
torpid tlie bile has to be taken out of the
b *dy by the kidneys, and through the
pores in ihc skin, &c. When these are ob
structed, it is impossible for them to offer
the necessary assistance; lienee die car
bo it io umiter accumulates under tlie skin,
and (Ims becomes, to a great extent, for
eign matter, producing billons levers
ami alt those pains and aches which pa
tients complain of in those disorders.
I’mfessor Kayton lias discovered the
remedies lo relieve all those derangements.
His pills net upon the liver, causing ii io
relieve the blood ol the carbon, give tone
and energy to the stomach, promoting
heatdiy secretions of the gasirio juice,
without which it is impossible to supply
healthy nutriment lo tlie system. His
Oleum Vitae when used as a rubefacient
in billions disorders, acts like a charm in
arousing a In-alt by ad ion in the capillai ies,
and assists them to throw otF die carbou.-i
ceous matter that has collected there, re
lieving those exi-riiii iiitig pains and aches
experienced in billions fevers. Often we
hear ot patients having billions rheatmta
lism, and it is upon ibis principal that tho
Oleum Vitae so promptly acts. Those ex
cruciating head aches are r lieved upon
the same principle. The pores become ob
structed, and the brain being surcharged
with a superabundance of carbon the liver
and pores are not acting properly. Von
rub the bead with the Oleum Vitae and ex
cite the pores to action, thereby relieving
the brain of the carbon, anil tbc head at
once hoc imes easy.
Want of space prevents any further es
say at pre-cut on the s -bject, but we would
advise our readers to supply themselves
with Professor kayton’s remedies, con
sisting of k moil's Oleum Vitae, for ill
pains; kayton’s Dyspeptic Pdls, and kay
ton’s Magic cure, for diarrlttv.-i, Jxc. They
can be found at our city druggists, and at
wholesale at A. A. Solomons \ The
Professor requests us to stale that Ills sig
nature is on every bottle and box —Sue
-Win nn,l II rdf.
For sale in Thoma-villc by Dr, P. S.
Bower.
New Advertisements.
RAFFLE!
WILL BE BAFFLED FOB AS SOON
as the Chancea are taken,
Otic Fine
ROSEWOOD PIANO,
» Oct a vest.
Apply at once at the Book Store
FORTY CHANCES at $lO PER CHANCE.
Nov 8-ts
c
LABORERS!
Tlm* I DERSIGNEI) has made arrange
ment* with
P. BONFORT, ESQ,,
OF NEW YORK,
To supply Planters, whose plantations are
situated iii healthy localities, with
German Laborers.
Orders sent to me, describing the number of
hands and tlie description of labor, will re
ceive attention ami be filled as near as possible
according to the description, and in rotation.
LEWi> (aRD\UR,
Formerly of Florida,
117 IS munition Nt., Mavnmiab, (<ia.
REFERENCES IN SAVANNAH.
Roberts <fc Tillman. Commission Merchants
•John W. Anderson’s Son &. Cos. Commission
Merchants, Tison & (lor Uni, John L. Nila
hmga: Octavius, Cohen &. Cos., Ferrill & Wes
low, Phillips Ac Myers* nov 5 Jin
PEI m mill] AT LAST!
Catalytic
HAIR RESTORER.
The wonderful virtue of the Catalytic
have been fully tested, and itiversally proven
to he tile most agreeable, healthy, reliunleund
never tailing combination ever produced
For ISciiutify iiag, Km proving and Ke
hto ling llie Hair.
It should be found in every Southern home and
on the toilet of eve.y Southern lady.
IJv its use, gray and faded hair of all ages
is restored to its natural color. By its use,
dry, harsh and wiry hair is changed into beau
tiful, smooth, glossy,silken tresses, and Inclin
ed to take ami retain whaieverstvle tlie wear
er may fancy—whether "classic braids or shi
ning ringlets"—presenting a marked contrast
to the frowzy carls worn by many to whom
this article is unknown. Tlie most, fastidious
vouug ladies and gentlemen who have used
THE CATALYTIC
Speak of its merits in the highest praise. The
favor it has received and the popularity it has
obtained, is unprecedented and almost incredi
ble.
B&easoss* Vv hy the ( aßt!yH<
Should be S wed us the B2«*sl
lilicle fur tla<* hair.
Because it restores gray and faded hair of
ail ages to its original color; because it will re
store hair on premature bald heads; because it
is the iiiiiHt delightful hair dressing for tin* old
and young; because it gives the hair a rich,
soft, glossy and beautiful appearance; because
it is free from sediment ami the effects of sul
phur. (si great contrast between all other Hair
Restorers;) because it is clean and keens the
! head cool and healthy Because if will not
stain the finest fabiic, or soil the hut or tarn
ish jewelry ; because it quickly cures all bum
ors of the scalp, removes scurf, dandruff, itch
ing, burning, «*c., and is delightfully perfumed
with the sweetest extracts. This is just, whit
the CAI A LYTI (' will do, and thousands who
have used it will testify to this truth.
Be sure to ask your Druggist for the Cata
lytic Hair Restorer, ami hike no other.
J. S. I*EMBERTON \ CO,
Proprietors,
Practical Chemists, Columbus, flu.
For wale in Thomasvillc !>v
Nov 53m REID A C \BSELS
SIOOOO
HEaL <3 -w st 2* ci
FOR AN ARTICLE SUPERIOR
TO THE
GLOBE FLOWER
SYRUP.
Tlii* celebrated Pulmonary Remedy is em
phatically the most certain and pleasant coin
pound that medical skill and science has ever
discovered for the cure of
t'ougliN, 4 old-. ISi onclii iii, .Imlliiirh,
%Vlioopina 4'oiigli. Nielli MwratM,
€ roii|>, II i (lie ii 1 1 IS rca lli i ng,
lii fl im* iizii* M|»» 1 1 i ii;; of IStooil.
And all diseases of tin* Lungs tending to Con
sumption. This Cough Syrup is purely vege
table, obtained by chemical process from the
active principle of (Jlobc Flower, (known also
as Button Bush.)
It contains no Opium in any of its forms It
is pleasant to take, and never does injury but
owing to its tonic and purifying properties,
must do good underunv vin umstances. Its of
feels are finely wonderful soothing, calming,
and allaying the most violent coughs; purify
ing, strengthening and invigorating the who) •
system ; calming and soothing the nerves; aid
ing and facilitating expectoratiou, and healing
the diseased lungs.
Reader, if von have a cough, get a bottle of
the(;LOBE FLOWER SY RCP, and be res
tered to health ami happiness. Do not delay
in this matter. * It is estimated that l
persons di • annually of Consumption in the
Culled ' t ■ s Professor Eberle savs a vast
mum r»f ese could he saved by the timclv
us ‘ m proper remedy." That remedy is
i. t Iw < . .sv nip, plena red in the Lubora
tom J S.'PEMBERTON A CD .
Proprietors aud Chemists,
Columbus, (ia
For sale in Thomasville bv
Nov >3m REID A CASSELS
THE ALLEN
Xj iniment
C CELEBRATED TH tint ti HOOT THE
j Southern States fur all
•tlkllfC-S It DC 1
That man and horse arc subject to, can be
had at the Drug Store of
eet 26 Boi B BEIXAS.
Jeffers
AT Ii Or* E!!
A JIC ti A JEFFERS resjw tdfully amion
y I i•*» to tin *it ns of riioniasville and
vicinity tlmf he has resumed the management
of his Photographs Dallery, aud will give his
personal attention to taking
I*IIOKM. It % I***. FI KKOTI ITS.
V N D
POIU I LtlV PiniltlA.
Mr JEFFERS t-iS had Twenty Years. V
rienee in file Business and guano fees perfect
satisfaction in nil case*.
o|»emting •■ »*• r* fr : l an ti t ;
I. Kubitshek
AND
BROTHER.
Fall and Winter
DRYGOODS.
Print* and Homespuns 12 1-2
Cents per Yard.
YYTITII t!,e opening of tlie Fall Trade,
Yy we are prepared to exhibit to our
friends and customers, a complete and va
ried assortment of
Fall and Winter
-Sim.
Our stock is not surpassed by any in tbc
city, having been purchased by an experi
enced buyer at the opening of the season,
when tlie best selections could he made.
Our stock will bo found to eousist in
part of
cjk’vtw. ufaov r-f.oTli
l\C, l.tltllS* DREBS (t«l)l)S.
BOOTH AN I* SHOES, II ATS
A!VIS CAPS, LADIES’
HATS <V CI.OAKS,
I.ntext Style*.
Vandykes, Nubias, Prints, Merinos, De' J
laities, Cassimeres, Satinets, Tweeds,
&c —Homespuns, Blenching, Os
naburgs, Plain and Striped,
Spun Yarns, Plaids,
Fine Bed Blankets and Common, Shirts,
Drawers, Yankee Notions, Ribbons*,
Belting, White Goods, Dress
Trimmings. Hosiery, Va
lises, Trunks, Watch
es, Pistols and
Shot Guns.
BfayGive us a call and we pledge our
selves to h ave nothing undone to please
you in goods and prices. sept 17
I. KUBITSHEK
AND
Brotiier.
Wholesale and Itelail.
\IT !■: HAVE JUST OPENED a large and
Y f well selected stock of
GROCERIES,
Next Door to J. Sohiff & Brother, which
vv * are now ottering lo tlie citizens of Tlio
masvillc and surrounding country, and to
country dealer-*, nt such rates as cuntiof
fall to secuiv a liberal patronage.
Dins te all anew and first class stock,
and figures low.
We are prepared to furnish everything
kept in a first class
Grocery Store!
Including Bagging and Rope, by the bale
and coil. Salt. Bacon, Flour, Su
gar. (.’« ffee Hams, (canvassed)
Nails. Tobacco, Powder,
Shot, Lead, Oysters,
Sardines, Caned Fruits, Preserves, Con
feet ionaries, Pot ware,
A Fine assortment of Liquors, B andies
kc., by the Ca**k and Bottle,
Apptes, Onions, Oranges, Mackerel, White
Fish, Ful.on Market Beef.
10 hhds. BACON just received.
Wo are prepared to make liberal ad
vances cn Colton ami ship to Bavanfmli,
New York or Live pool. sept IT
E. <1 HILTON, F M. RANDELL
Savannah. New York.
Hilton & Randell,
HIIOI.ESU.r. GROCERS,
AXI) DEALERS IN
PWiSiOfSj fOBJICCO
Wines,
LJQUOHS, cfcc.,
1 !K‘s HAY STREET,
*tv twill. - - Cl CORGI t.
INVITE tin* attention of Buyer* to their
large and complete nssortnient of
GROCERIES.
Which they offer at the lowest Market rale*
I liflryr «n*l Fine A««orfmrnl ol
TOBA C C O
Constantly on hand
Old Magnolia Whisky,
IYYB WHISKY,
BOWER S
OLD BOURBON WHISKY,
New England Ilum,
THE CEI.EBK A TED
“STAR” WHISKY,
lit ( Rift,
“Old Tom.”
Wlkic's, Claret*, indent, 4c.
A. tor the of !l*Mird'j* t? tin powder
»n K* halt htec*. quarter Keg* and fa***
Oct tl 82 60