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TII KSU N.
IUHIWr.I 1.. lIAHT <1 M V. A.l
nXIiM'MIn.V. Aliltnil IS. IM7.
BENSON & McGILL, Editors.
A. G. McCURRY. Associate Editor.
FISH QUESTION.
Asa good dcl of complaint lias been
made by parties in Hart and counties on
the Savannah River on the fish question, it
may interest them to know that our Rep
resentative Hon. A. CJ. McCurry is doing
all that he can on that line with a good
hook to help him. The daily Constitution
of the Bth instant shows that he succeeded
in preventing tho adoption of the adverse
report of committee, which would have
defeated a bill to renuire all parties to
keep open fishways in their dams. The bill
was recommitted, and we hope he w ill get
it presented in such shape as to get it
Ahrough. The Constitution says*
•“ Messrs. Strother and McCurry in terse
and eloquent efforts, urged a disagreement
with the report of the committee, and the
bill was recommitted.”
Senator Hodges has also introduced a
bill in the Senate to prevent parties from
putting in seines, gill nets, Ac., in rivers
at certain points and seasons, which will
allow fish to pass up in abundance.
We are glad to see our representatives
so industrious in looking after the inter
ests of their constituents.
LEVEL-HEADED JIM SMITH.
When the House had under discussion
the mean little bill to reduce printers’ fees
down to nothing, Hon. James M. Smith,
of Oglethorpe made a strong argument
against it, in which, among other things, he
said: “ The newspapers, wherever locat
ed, were among me iuusi useful, com cli
ent and important agencies for disseminat
ing valuable infoamation. They rarely
failed to crehte a spirit of progress and en
terprise. Their value to a village, town or
county where published was hard to esti
mate. The town of Lexington, before the
Echo was started there, was on the decline
—now she is rapidly improving. The Kl
herton Gazette did more togettne railroad
to the town of Elberton than any other
one thing. Thk Haktwkll St'N has
done and is still doing for Hartwell and
Hart county a vast deal. These and other
country newspapers do a vast deal of work
for their county towns and counties, for
which they never ask nor get one cent.
Then why cut down the legal advertising
to a figure so low as hardly to pay cost?”
EDITORIAL CORRESPONDENCE.
House ok Representatives, \
Atlanta, Ga., August 11, 1879. J
Your numerous renders failed to get the
usual weekly installment of actings and do
ings at the Capital for the reasons : First,
it being camp-meeting week, when you go
it on the half-shell, it was presumed your
space would be limited, and in addition
huving taken a hurried trip home, we felt
rather disinclined to devote the last few
hours passed there in narrating the monot
. onous details of Legislation.
V/ t\IUU V tliv txjltft* n* u C
giving the full and minute details of those
occurrences that would have been included
in last week's letter, by simply mention
ing a few of the more important, we will
advance to the proceedings and startling
sensations of the week just closed The
■'following are some of the important ac
tions above indicated up to the commence
ment of last week :
The Senate adopted the report of the
committee appointed to investigate the con
duct of the Governor in signing the North-
Eastern Railroad Bonds by a much larger
majority than was done in the House. 'I he
address of Mr. Stephens was thorough,
able and patriotic, ’flic bill to establish a
college at Milledgeville, to be known as
the Middle Georgia Agricultural and Mili
tary College, was defeated in the House.
The bill proposed to loan the public prop
erty there for that purpose and to appro
priate a considerable sum of money to es
tablish and maintain the college. The bill
to incorporate the Hartwell Railroad Com
pany was passed. The Moffett Bell Punch
hill was defeated by a vote of 108 to 27.
This brings us to the commencement of
last weeks proceedings.
On Monday the Senate continued the
discussion of the bill providing for the bet
ter protection of the convicts. The bill
was laid on the table. Tho Hartwell Rail,
rnul bill was icad the first time and refer
red to the Senate committee on corpora
tions. A bill to prevent fishing with seins.
gill-nets, etc., within one half a mile of
dams across the streams passed. It is
thought that this bill will remedy, to some
extent, the trouble about our people get
ting fish. There is another hill before the
House which requires sufficient passways
for fish to be kept open through all dams,
which we are trying to work through. In
order to succeed, the hill will have to be
framed so as not to interfere too seriously
with the manufacturing and other inter
ests. The bill has been recommended for
-the purpose of perfecting, and we trust a
proper medium can be struck that will
cripple no industries and yet do justice to
.the pcoplo. In the House the roll of corni
ces was called for the introduction of new
i billsV The special committee of thirteen
.appointed to investigate the irregularities
in the Comptroller General’s office made a
report preferring articles of impeachment
agftinst that officer. Solemn and death
like .stillness pervaded the Representative
. Hall while Mr. Samuel \V. Small, with a
. clear, ringing distinctness read out charge
after charge of wrong doing on the part of
Washington L. Goldsmith.
Tuesday, in the Senate several unimpor
tont bills were passed. The committee of
the House appeared before the bar of the
-Semite and notified the Senate that the
•Abuse bad preferred articles of impeach
' ment against the Comptroller General.
The House passed a bill regulating the
practice on the forfeiture of criminal bonds.
’The special order of the day was a bill to
regulate the sale of commercial fertilizers.
The judiciary committee bad reported
against the passage of the bill and a mo
stion was made to disagree to the report.
This gave rise to an animated discussion.
.On a vote taken the report was disagreed
.to and the bill referred to the committee
,-on Agriculture. Several bills of a local
-character were passed. House adopted a
resolution providing for the election of
.impeachment managers.
Wednesday, in the Senate a number of
IHeuse bills were read the second time.
rSenate entered upon a discussion of a bill
<to authorize the lease or sale of the Macon
*nd Brunswick Railroad. The House, on
*mr motion, reconsidered and adopted an
amendment to the resolution for the elec
tion of seven impeachment managers,
which we had offered the day previous and
had been rejected. This was to require
the managers to obtain a majority of all
I the votes cast before they should be elect
f ed. House consumed the session in the
election of managers.
Thursday, the Senate consumed the ses
sion in the consideration of the bill to au
thorize the lease or sale of the Macon and
Brunswick Railroad. In the House a res
olution was adopted calling upon the prin
cipal keeper of the penitentiary for a full
itemized statement of the workings of his
ofHce. House disposed of a large number
of bills which had been reported adversely
by the committees by adopting the reports
ami defeating the bills.
Friday, the Senate continued at length
n discussion of the Macon and Brunswick
Railroad bill, consuming the entire session.
In the House a bill was reconsidered which
provides for one man from each militia
district to be added to the jury commis
sioners. The .roll was called and a num
ber of bills introduced. A resolution was
adopted appointing a committee of nine
each to investigate the following depart
ments to-wit: the treasury, the office of
the keeper of the penitentiary, the office
of the commissioner of agriculture, and
the office of the State school commissioner.
At the close of the day’s session, the com
mittee appointed to present a tribute in
memory of lion. J. M. Brannan, deceased.
frondßbe county of Bryan, made a report
with an accompany resolution that the
House adjourn until Monday. After a few
touching remarks by several members,
the resolutions of respect reported by the
committee were unanimously adopted by
a rising vote.
Saturday, in the Senate the Macon and
Brunswick Railroad bill was adopted.
Forty days of the present session have
passed and the end not in sight yet. The
present temper of the House seems to in
dicate that there is to be no more white
washing. but rigid and thorough investiga
tion of all the departments of government.
As Georgia's gifted Senator and grand
statesman truthfully said in conversation
a few evenings since, “The Augean sta
oies mum ue cieureu, nml me
should prove itself a Hercules competent
for the task,” We have drifted from that
high position of statesmanship and un
spotted character that should distinguish
our proud State. We have drifted under
the ban of suspicion. We need adminis
trative ability at the helm, or the old ship
of state will he stranded forever on the
shoals and quicksands of destruction, and
the sooner the people of Georgia realize
and act upon this great truth the better it
will be. More anon. A. G. McC,
EDITORIAL MELANGE.
How doth tho pure unloaded gnn
Improve each shining hour ;
lly thinning out tho rare of fools
In this gay earthly bower.
The wife of Hon. Emory Speer is dead.
Rabun county is going to build anew
courthouse.
Typhoid fever is prevalent in many por
tions of the State.
There are 5.5 Methodist Churches in the
Columbus district.
A hog bit a negro child to death in
Burke county recently.
Dave Johnson, of Gainesville, killed five
coons the other morning.
[W 319 Ihs of fresh meat have Keen snlrt
in Sparta during the past ten months.
Solomon Shingle, said to be 110 years
old, died in the Oglethorpe poorhousc re
cently.
A turtle was captured on the bar of the
St. Johns river, Florida, recently weigh
ing 400 lbs.
Prof. A. W. Jones, a humbug horse
tamer, has been fleecing tho fanners of
Anderson, S. C.
Lightning struck in a cotton field in
Gwinnett county, recently, and killed one
fourth of an aero of cotton.
Jane Pic, of Columbus, attempted to
drown herself because she could not get
enough watermelon to cat.
Rev. James Punwoody, of Houston, is
90 years old ; has been preaching 02 years,
ami still preaches nearly every Sabbath.
The rich men of Memphis it is said have
done very little toward relieving the dis
tressed in that city'. They will catch fever
at the end of the route.
The day when the Georgia Legislature
will adjourned has been placed beyond
mortal ken by the Goldsmith impeachment
trial. The Legislature secins determined
to sift the matter to the bottom.
Atlanta Dispatch : A negro in Americus
is the owner of fifty-three houses in that
city. This looks like a case of first-class
bull-dozing. The stalwarts should ap
point an investigating committee.
The old wooden building on McCully’s
cornea, at Anderson, has been torn away.
Handsome brick buildings will occupy its
place. It was one of the oldest buildings
in the place, being over fifty years old.
Constitution : The Philadelphia quinine
professors are now engaged in cornering
the market in order to enhance the price of
that drug. Very well. When Congress
meets, it is more than likely that the quin
ine professors will he cornered.
Oglethorpe Echo : General Toombs,
when farming, offered a reward of SSO to
any overseer who would establish the fact
that a cotton square coming as late as the
l(Hh of August would mature ; but no one
was ever able to win the money.
Oglethorpe Echo : Someone asked Gen.
Toombs tlie other day in Atlanta if he
would be a candidate for Governor. “No.
sir,” was the emphatic reply ; “ I have not
a single qualification—never made a damn
ed agricultural speech in my life and don’t
know a single Sunday-school hymn.”
Oglethorpe Echo : We learn that there
is a white woman with a large family of
small white children, actually camping out
under a brush arbor in an old field near
Watson's mill. We suggest that our
churches suspend their collections for the
heathen until this poor family is cared for.
The question of subscription to the Sa
vannah Railroad by townships is being
hotly discussed in Anderson county. An
election will he held in each township on
the 3d of September next. Abbeville
county has already voted to subscribe, and
everything seems to indicate that the road
will be built at an early day.
There is a serious doubt in the minds of
some people in this part of the State in re
gard to the financial responsibility of some
of the bondsmen of Mr. Treasurer Ren
froe, says the Sparta lshmaelite. It is an
important matter, and we hope false mod
esty or real indifference will not cause the
Legislature to fail to look into it. A Leg
islator is supposed to be always brave
enough to do nis duty. A little legislative
prevention is worth a great deal of judi
cial cure. We would be glad to know that
the Treasurer's sureties are “good.” If
it he true, it is the privilege of the citizens
of the State to know it. If it be not true.
it is Hie duty of tboae in authority to tind
a remedy. This is a business matter, and
reference is made to it solely in that spirit.
It is unnecessary to point thu propriety of
it by any reference to Hie case of the late
Treasurer.
HoNESDAI.K, Pa., August Bth—Willie
Bowen, aged 1) years, is a slate picker on
the piers of the Delaware and Hudson ca
nal company at this place. Two ponder
ous iron rollers, one close over the other,
revolve slowly a few feet above the boj°s
bead where lie works. A piece of slate
from the coal that is carried trom screen to
screen, on endless canvas belts, got be- 1
tween these rollers yesterday morning. |
The boy reached up from the scaltolding
on which he stood to take the slate out.
His hand was caught by the rollers and
drawn slowly in. until the little fellow was
raised from his feet and was suspended
over the canal, ten feet above it. Nearly
half of his arm was drawn between the
rollers before his terrible situation was dis
covered and the machinery stopped. Be
fore the boy could be removed a messen
ger had to be dispatched to the machine
shop, some distance away, for machinists
to take the machinery apart. This requir
ed more than fifteen minutes. All this
time the lad hung suspended by his crush
ed hand and arm. the flesh being entirely
torn away, exposing the bones and cords.
The little fellow never uttered a cry nor
shed a tear. His father, an employe of the
pier was a weeping witness of the terrible
scene, and the boy kept saying. “ Don't
cry. father; they'll get me out all right.”
The lad’s arm will have to be amputated
at the elbow.
Hawkinsville Dispatch : We have in
our possession a letter from Comptroller
General Goldsmith saying that a certain
Sheriff who advertised wild lands in the
Dispatch last year did charge three dollars
and (ifty cents per lot as advertising fees,
* i** •''•'•omit has been credited in
the Comptroller General’s otnee wun that
amount on every lot of land sold. The ag
gregate, we suppose, is over fourteen hun
dred dollars. Our actual charges were less
than seventy-five dollars, and the sheriff
had no receipt or bill from us for any larger
sum.
The whole thing Is an outrage, and we
cannot see how the Comptroller could hav/i
allowed the sheriff such a sum in the se£
tlement of his account unless the sheriff
could have shown a receipt for it.
The Comptroller, in our opinion, should
have demanded a voucher from the sheriff,
or have refused to allow him such an ex
orbitant sum for advertising fees.
We have the facts and figures.
Central Georgia Weekly: What the ad
ministration of Governor Colquitt is the
records show. Fraud is unearthed, but no
one is to blame. Widows and orphans
have been robbed, but the man who had
charge of these trusts is as innocent as an
unborn babe. The livery of Heaven does
not cloak these frauds, for they are ex
posed. We will not charge Governor Col
quitt with wrong, but we say it, and the
records bear us out, that bis administration
lias brought disgrace upon the State of
Georgia. Under Bullock, we know ras
cality was abroad. The “Organized”
howled for honesty and purity in official
life, our Governor was put forward and all
was lovely. We are sorry for the people
of Georgia and for Governor Colquitt. Wc
must believe him innocent, for his friends
swear, that in him there is no guile, bnt
God save Georgia from the ignorance and
imbecility of another such administration.
Abbeville (S. C.) Medium : It has always
been claimed that cotton will not grow
when transplanted, but from the result of
an experiment, which we have made in a
"small way, the old notion will not hold
good, and cotton will grow when trans
planted. On the 31st of June, a stalk of
cotton, was brought to this office from the
country and placed on exhibition for two
days, when it was topped and planted in
a little rich earth near our office, and lias
now grown into a vigorous stalk. When
planted it had two blooms on it and thir-
teen shapes. These all fell off, hut others
are putting out, and the stalk will no doubt
produce fruit. If transplanting succeeded
in this case, would it not be practicable
upon a much larger scale, and could not
the whole cotton crop be in this way im-*
proved—the yield increased and the fibre
made finer.
Constitution : On Friday night last,
about 10 o'clock, one mile south of Big
Shanty, a countryman named John Cain,
while lying in a drunken sleep, with his
head upon a cross-tie, within a few inches
of the track, received a painful scalp
wound from the engine pilot of the south
bound passenger, on the Western and At
lantic railroad. The engineer did not see
the unfortunate man until it was too late
to stop the train before passing him. lie
backed to the scene of the accident and
found the poor fellow standing by a tree.
He was carefully placed on hoard and put
off near his home. Tlkc man said that as
soon as he was struck “he suspicioned
something wrong.”
Augusta Evening News: A few days
since, we are informed that a young man
living in an adjoining county, while out
squirrel hunting in company with his fath
er, was bitten just above the ankle by a
large rattlesnake. He immediately sfiot
and killed the snake ; and being some dis
tance from home, he appealed for help to
his father, who promptly applied his
mouth to the wound and sucked it with
great force, repeating the operation several
times. By this means the deadly virus
was so effectually extracted, that no sick
ness or swelling ensued.
Hawkinsville Dispatch : Messrs. Sneider
A Starowski, of this place, made last year,
from a vineyard of two acres and a quar
ter, twelve hundred gallons of wine from
Delaware and Concord grapes. They have
experienced no difficulty in selling their
wine at one dollar and twenty-five cents
per gallon, which will make the product
of the two acres and a quarter in grapes
equal to the prococds of thirty bales of
cotton.
Oglethorpe. Echo : A member of our
Legislature the other day passed a pair of
cast-off pants laying upon the ground, and
jokingly remarked to a constituent. “ ,
is that not a portion of your wardrobe ?”
“No,” was the caustic reply, “ hut you
had better take them along to wear the
next time vou have a job of whitewashing
to do.” The member wiltpd and ordered
cigars for the crowd,
Miss Sarah Root, a religious enthusiast,
of Reading, Pennsylvania, is laboring un
der the delusion that she must fast forty
days and forty nights. She is reduced to
a mere skeleton, and resists all entreaties
to take food, The physicians are keeping
her alive by forcing liquid food through
her nostrils by means of a silver tube,
having failed to get food in her mouth.
Forest News ; Several have reported to
us the fact that since the rain the loose
wheat upon their stubble land has sprout
ed and is growing finely.
rvwssr established ißso. wesr
W. H. BROWN c£ BRO.
IMPORTERS & WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
S. SHARP STREET, BALTIMORE.
Orders bn mail haue prompt attention frow the firm
personally. 165
THOS. Iff. CLARKE <£ CO.,
-A-tlsirrta* O-0,-,
. HARDWARE DEALERS A WHOLESALE AGENTS FOR
Kentucky Cane Mills, Oliver GUM Plows,
MACNEALE & URBANS FIRE-PROOF SAFES,
Dexter Corn Shelters and Straw Cutters,
®ar Orders Solicited. 165
B, F. AVERY & SONS,
ATLANTA, GEORG IA.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Avery Farm Wagons,
Courtland Platform Wagons,
Three-Spring Wagons,
One and Two-Horse Drays,
Pulliam Farm Wagon, Bolster Spring.
Avery’s Sulky and Gang Plow,
Avery’s 2-Horse Cultivator,
Avery's Improved Georgia Stock,
Avery’s Plows and Points,
i&r Send for Catalogue.
B. F. AVERY & SONS.
Robertson, Taylor *£ Cos.
(SUCCESSORS TO GEO. W. WILLIAMS & CO.)
COTTON FACTORS^ WHOLESALE GROCERS
GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
1 and 3 HAV.M) STREET, CHARLESTON, S. (~
Will give all business their most careful attention. Consignments solicited.
W., r
W. G. ASHLEY,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
WRITE PINE DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS, WINDOW GLASS, PUTTY
nOOK.LACKS, HIXOIS, BLIX1) HIXOES, SCJtJiWS,
And all other kinds of BUILDERS’ HARDWARE at the very LOWEST CASH PRICES.
No. 33 South Broad street, - - ATLAN IA, GA.
TAVKI-V ]; LIGHT AVlxi>o\VS AM> lo.lXiiS.'
VLAIN KAIL SASH, PKIMRD St GLAZED. OUTSIDE BLINDS. ROLLING SLATS . T . . . c
4-Light VS Inflows A
I Blinds
Sizoofruir. Price of Pair. 8-Light “ “
15-Light “ “
2- 4x3-111 $ 95 18-Light
2-10x4- 71 115 ~ . , .
•2-10x5- 31 130 Always tu slock
2-10x5-11* 140 at . * , reduced
2-10x0- 7’ 1 00 pnees, for strictly
10x20 2-10x7- 2 210 jj 2-10x7- 3* 180 , Ci,sn '
White Pine Doors, Moulded on Stiles and Hails, O. G, liaised Panels.
ONE INCH DOORS. | 1 3-16 INCH DOORS. | 1 3-8 INCH DOORS.
Size. Price. Size. Price. Size. Price.
2- ox - Q 81 00 2- ox - 0 81 25 2- 6x6- 6 ~..81 45
2- 4x6- 4 1 05 2- 4x6- 4 1 40 2- Bx - 8..... 1 60
2- 6x6- 6 1 10 2- 6x6- 6 1 40 2-10x6-10.. ..., 1 75
2- Bx - 8 1 25 2- Bx - 8 1 55 2-10x6- 6 1 75
2-10x6- 6..... 1 43 2-10x6- 6 1 70 3- ox - 6 1 95
2-10x0-10 1 45 2-10x6-10 1 70 2- 0 to 3-ox7-0 1 95
3- ox - 6 1 50 3- ox - 6 1 85 2- 0 to 3-ox7-6 2 15
3- ox - 0- 1 50 3- ox - 0 1 85 9- 0 to 3-ox B-0.. 2 25
Raised Moulded 4-pant 1 front Doors 2 10x6-10 to 3xß. Square and Circular Top Panel", from $3.50
to 85.25. All orders promptly tilled and satisfaction guaranteed 164
SOMETHING HEW!
0000 AND CHEAP!
BALLOON
FLY TRAP!
ONLY
50 GISIUTS,
FOR SALE BY
E, B. Benson k Cos.
MARK THESE FACTS!
The TESTIMONY ofthe WHOLE WORLD.
HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT.
Bad Legs. Bad Breasts, Sores'and Ulcers
At.L description of wore* are remedial by the proper
and diligent use of this inestimable preparation. To
attempt to cure bail log* bv plastering the edge* of
the wound together ia a folly: tor should the okin
unite a boggy diseased condition remain* under
neath to bfreak out with tenfold fury In ft few days.
The only rational and •uece*ful treftttusnt. a indl*
rated by nature, *h to reduce the inflammation m ana
about the w imilif ftml t<< sooth* the neighboring part*
bv rubbiuK in ulciity of tho Ointment, a* salt is fore
-4 into meat. This Will rouse (hr malignant humor*
to he drained oil from the hard, swollen, and dUool
ored part* round About the wound, wore, or ulcer,
and when these humors ore removed, the wound#
themselves will noon heal; warm bread anil water
poultices applied over the affected parts, after the
Ointment haw been well rubbed in, will soothe and
soften the same and greatly assist tlm cure. Inere
is a description of ulcer, sore and swelling, whicn
need not be Unwed here, attendant upon the folliClfr
of youth, ami for which fhis Ointment is urgently
recommended as a sovereign reined}. In curing
i such poisonous sores it never fails to restore the sysj
tern toll healthy state if tho Pills betaken according
| to the printed instructions.
Diphtheria, Ulcerated Sore Throat Scar
let and other Fevers.
Any of tho above diseases may bo cured by well
rubbing the Ointment three times a day into the
chest, throat, and neck of the )iutient ; it will soon
penetrate nml give immediate relief. Medicine taken
l>y the mouth must operate upon the whole system
ere its influence can be felt in any localirt, where**
the Ointment will do its work at onto. Whoever
tries the ungueut In the above manner for the dis
eases named, or any similar disorders attecting the
chest and throat, wjll And themselves relieved as by
a charm. All sufferers Inun Ibese complaints should
envelop the throat at bedtime in n large bread and
water poultice, after the Ointment has been well
rubbed in ; it will greatly assist tho cure of the
throat and chest. To allay the fever and lessen the
inflammation, eight or ten Pills should be taken
night and morning. The Ointment will produce per
spiration, the grand essential in nil eases of fevers,
sore throats, or where there might be an oppression
of the chest, either from asthma or other causes.
Piles, Fistulas, Strictures.
The above class of complaints will ho removed by
nightly fomenting the parts with warm water, and
then by most effectually rubbing in the Ointment.
Person's suffering iro’m these direful complaints
should lose not a moment in arresting their progress.
It should he understood that it is not sufficient mere
ly to stnear the Ointment on the affected parts, hut
it must be well rubbed iu for a considerable time two
or three times a day. that it may be taken into tho
system, w hence it will remove any hidden sore or
wound as effectually as though palpable to the eye.
There again bread and water poultices, after tho rub
bing in of the Ointment, will do great service. This
is the only sure treatment for females, cases of can
cer in the stomach, or where there may be a general
bearing down.
Sores and Ulcers.
Blotches, as also swellings, can, with certainty, be
radically cured if the Ointment be used freely." and
the Pill's taken night and morning, as recommended
in the printed instructions. When treated in any
other way they only dry up in one place to break out
in another; whereas this Ointment will remove the
humor from the system, and leave the patient a vig
orous and healthy being. It will require time with
the use of the Pills to insure a lasting cure.
Dropsical Swellings, Paralysis and Stiff
Joints.
Although tho above complaints differ widely in
their origin and nature, yet they all require local
treatment. Many of the' worst cases of such dis
eases will yield in a comparatively short space of
time when'this Ointment is diligently rubbed into
the parts affected, even after every other means have
failed. Iu all serious maladies the Pills should he
taken according to tho printed directions accom
panying each box.
Both the Ointment and Pills should be used in the
following cases :
Bad Legs, ('happed Hands, Glandular Swell-
Bad Breasts, Corns (Soft), ings.
Burns, Cancers, Lumbago,
Bunions. Contracted and Piles,
Bite of Mosqui- Stitt Joints, Khemnatism,
toes and Sand- Elephantiasis, Scalds,
Flies, Fistula?, Sore Nipples,
Chilblains, Gout. Sore Throats,
Skiu Diseases, Scurvy, Sore Heads,
Tumors. Ulcers, Wounds,
CAUTION ! None are genuine unless the signa
ture of J. Haydock, as agent for the United States,
surrounds each Im>x of pills and Ointment. A hand
some reward will be given to any party or parties
counterfeiting the medicines or Vending the same
know ing them to he spurious.
*** Sold at the Manufactory of Professor Hollo
way & Cos., New York, and by all respectable Drug
gists and Dialers in Medicine throughout the civil
ized world* in pots at 25 cents, 02 cents, and $1 each.
There is considerable saving in taking the
larger sizes.
N. B —Directions for the guidance of patients it*
every disorder arc affixed to each pot.
o*l r ‘‘* unis * n 30 days on 8100 invested.
Official Reports and information free.
Like profits Weekly on Stok options of 810 to SSO.
Address, T. Potter Wijjlit c! Cos., Bankers. 35
Wall Street, New York. 154
ncilf fID I lar*e " lllus-
UKAn 51 If
KIFMX SHOT KIVOLVFRS.
Address Great Western Gun Works, Pittsburg, Pa.
A GREAT OFFER !
8125 upward*, not used a year, good im
new: warranted. EIV I*Ii\OSandOK
WANS nf EXTRAORDINARY low price*
/>r cash, tala lot ue* Mailed. HORACE
WATERS. Aft.. IO East 14tU St., X. AT..
I*. O. Rox, 35.10.
,01 r\ TD 1 nnru Invented in Wall Street
r -tv-' it/ Sterks makes fortunes every
month, llook sent free ex])lainin£ everything. Ad
dress. BAXTER & CO., Bankers. 17 Wall Street,
Xew York.
SANFORD’S JAMAICA GINGER.
OAU?fSy>IVO ®nly combination of tho
OA Nl Lin U u true Jamaica Ginger with choice
Aromatics and French Brandy
for Cholera, Cholera Morbus,
...... - Cramps and Pains, Diarrhoea and
ISW!A slf u Dysentery. Dyspepsia, Flatulen
U7l 111 ni U n cy, Want of Tone and Activity in
the Stomach and Bowels, and
avoiding the dangers of Change
Plw PT D of Water, Food and Climate.
Ask for
GINGER, uf Water> I:;
Hanfoid's Jamaica Ginger.
USE THIS BRAND.
Trade Mark Registered February 12, 1878.
99 25-100 CHEMICALLY PURE.
BEST Iff THE WORLD.
Aiifl Better IBan any Saleratus.
One toaspoonfiil of this Soda used with sour
milk equals Four teaspoonfuls of the
best Baking Powder, saving
Twenty Times its cost.
See package for valu
able information.
If the teaspoonful is too large and does
not produce ,-ood results at
first, use less afterwards. 131
Xr OTICE FOR LEAVE TO SELL.
am Application lias been made to the Court of
Ordinary of Hart County. Georgia, by C. A. Webb,
Administrator of F. 13. Harrison, deceased, of An
derson Conntv. S. C.. for leave to sell all the lands
belonging to deceased in said State. Notice is here
by given to all persons interested to show cause why
said leave should not be granted at the next An
gust term of said Court. Given under my hand and
official signature, this June 30th, 1879.
F. C. STEPHENSON. Ordinary.
ARM WITH HAMMER, BRAND.