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Victor Hugo to Louie Napoleon.
What would you have ? Whom do you desire to in
suit? Eoglaud iu tho person of it* people, or rrance
in tho person of her exiles. We have already
in Jersey alone. Is that what you want tb knew 7 Do
you want to -see their tombs ? What would you here, 1
ask ? Leave liberty iu peace; leave the exiles to their
tranquility. Do not come.
W’hat mesh would you tend this generous and noble
nation? What stroke of your talon do you meditate
against Eoglish liberty ? Will you arrive full of promises
as you <£d in Franoe in 1848 ? Will you swear to the
English alliance with your hand, your heart, as you did to
the Republic ? What will you bring to this land ? Their
land is the home of Sir Thomas Moore, ot Hempden, of
Bradshaw, Shakespere, Milton, Newton, Watt, Byron;
it needs no sample of the mud from the Boulevard Mont-*
martre. You seek a Garter, do you ? Ah 1 so deep
have you waded in blood. Will you speak to England oi
the Crimea ? Beware ! you will touch on a great grief:
the disaster of Sebastapol has made the flanks of England
bleed even more terribly than those of France. The
French army agonies, but the English is dead, which
had made one of your own historians say, “We avenge
Waterloo spontaneously.” One year of your alliance has
done more injury to England than fifteen years of your
uncle’s wars.
Why do you come here ? Mark ! among those mem
bers of the government who will welcome you—take die
most entusiastic, the most intoxicated, the most distraught;
take that Englishman who shouts loudest, “Hurrah for
the Emperor'.” be he Alderman, Cabinet Minister, or
Lord, and ask him this simple question: “If it were to
happen in this country, that any man holding power, a min
ister, for instance, (that is what you were, sir,) if it were
to happen that such a man, after the pretence of having
sworn, before God and man, fidelity to the constitution,
were one night to seize England by the throat, to break
up the Parliament, to upset the judgement-seat, to cast
the inviolable members of the national representation into
the cells of Millbank and Newgate, to demolish West- j
minister, to make the woolsack a pillow for his soldiers, to
kick the judges from their seats, to gag the press, to des
troy the printing‘presses, to strangle the papers, to cover
Loudon with canrn n and bayonets, to empty the chests of
the Bank into the pockets of his brigands, to storm pri
vate houses, to massacre men, women, the aged and the
infant, to make of Hyde-park a grave for nocturnal fusil’
lades, to shell the city, to riddle the Strand, Regent street,
Charing cross with cannon balls, to sack and massacre
twenty districts of London, tweDty counties in the country,
to block up the streets with the curpsts of the passers by,
to fill the dead-houses anil the - emettries, to create dark,
ness everywhere, silence everywhere, death everywhere,
—to suppress, in one word, with one blow 7 , law, liberty,
right, the nation, breath, life ; what would the English
people do to such a man ?” Before the questior could
bo finished, you would see starting out of the ground, as
though spontaneously, and rising before your eyes, the
steps of the scaffold !
But one thing alone concerns you; you seek to im.
pose the “ parvenu ” on the old royal house of Bruns
wick ; to hide the catastrophe of the Crimea beneath the
festivals of England ; to rejoice in the midst of crape; to
hide those massacres beneath a fire of joy ; to display your
general’s dress where you had shown your special consta
ble’s stick ; —be gay ; dance a little at Buckingham Pal
ace. That means all. Therefore you go to London.—
Besides, it is preferable to the Crimea. Here, at least,
the cannon will have no balls. At Windsor you will find
the bed of Louis Philippe, to whom you ow'e your life
and his money ; the Lancaster tower will speak to you
of the imbecile Henry ; the York tower of the assassin
Richard. The rest will be feasts, b ills, music, garters,
and glittering palaces. Permit me to mingle with these
details others, that corao from another of the scenes of
your triumph—Cayenne. The transported are there:
the transported whose crime was to resist your crime, and
to be good citizens; the transported are there, working
the long day under the raging sun, fed on gruel, beaten
by slave-drivers, with shaven heads, in rags marked “T.
F.” [forced labor]—barefoot. The money sent to them
is stopped ; if they do not stand bareheaded and before
their jailors, irons, dungeons, famine follow; or they are
chained for lfidayf, and for four hours each day by the
neck, the breast, the arms, and the legs, with heavy
chains attached to a great weight. By a decree of the
29th August, their jailors are permitted to kill them for
“violation” of orders. Under the fearful climate, the
tropical sky, and the pestilential waters, brain fever, typhus
and home-sickness, they perish—3s out of 200 on the Isle
of St. Joseph alone. The corpses are thrown into the sea
* * *-
They tell us to be silent ;*that if we, the exiled, raise our
voice now, the opportunity will be taken to drive us out
of Englad. It would be well done, to expel us when he
is well armed. It would be consistent. There would be
something like glory for the expelled.
[From the Baltimore Patriot.]
THE LOCUSTS IN THE SOUTH.
Besides the seventeen years Locusts, Cicada
Septemdecim , already announced in the Patriot ,
to appear this Spring in Massachusetts, Eastern
Shore of Maryland, from Baltimore to Carlisle, Pa.,
a portion of Kentucky, and a portion of Western
Virginia, there will be several extensive districts of
the Southern family of Locusts that will appear
this Spring. These Southern Locusts only re
quire thirteen years to complete their existence,
and their name, I suppose, should be Cicada Tre
decim. I have on my Register the location and
-dates of ten districts of this family, some of them
very large and one or two very small. The dis
tricts that will be occupied this year by them, are as
follows:
South Carolina —Chester and adjoining dis
tricts, extending into North Carolina.
Georgia. —ln Newton, Cobb, Coweta, Carroll,
Heard, Meriwether, Campbell, Fayette, DeKalb,
Gwinnett, and Murray counties.
Alabama. —ln Greene, Sumter, and Marengo
counties.
Louisiana. —ln Union, Caddo, Clairborne and
Washita parishes,
Mississippi. —about Jackson, and probably all
adjoining parts of the State.
Arkansas. —ln Union, Lafayette, Hempstead and
Saline counties.
Tennessee. —From Nasheille to the Mississippi
river, and extending into a portion of South-Wes
tern Kentucky, probably as far up as Louisville.
In the extreme South the insects begin to appear
about the sth of April, and some may appear from the
Ist to the 10th of that month. Their appearance is i
later ami later as we come North, about a week for j
every hundred miles,until the most Northern will ap
pear from the Ist to the 10th of May. I should
be very glad if persons in the South where the
locusts appear this year would inform me of the
fact, stating the exact time of their first appear
ance, and the counties occupied by them.
There is no difference whatever between the
Southern locusts and the Northern insects, ex
cept in the time occupied by them in completing
their existence.
The districts of the Northern locusts extend far
into the territory of the Southern in many places :
and so do those of the South extend fir up into
the Northern territory, interlocking and lapping
over each other sometimes for more than a hund
red miles. This has caused great confusion in j
tracing out the frue history of the insects, and the
family and districts to which each visitation be- i
longed. North Carotina, Tennessee and Arkan
sas appear to be the middle ground between the I
two large families, and nearly the whole of those I
States are occupied alternately by the Northern !
and the Southern insects, interlocking each other, j
Ac. Yours.
GIDEON B. SMITH. !
To Make an Excellent Sweet-Apple Pud
ding.—Take one pint of scalded milk, half a pint
of Indian meal, a teaspoonful of salt, and six sweet
apples cut into small pieces,and bake not less than
three hours. The apple will afford an excellent,
rich jolly.
GEORGIA. Randolph County.
Court of Ordinary of said County, April Term, 1855.
IT appearing to this Court that William Griffin, Admin
istrator of the estate of James Henderson, late of said
county deceased, has fully administered said estate and faith
fully discharged the trust reposed in him as administrator
aforesaid: And having made application for Letters of
Dismission: It is ordered by the Court that all parties inte
rested, show cause to tliß contrary on or before the next
October Term of this Court, otherwise said Administrator
will be then and there dWnisaed.
Given under my hand April 2d. 1855.
ap2d-6m. O. P. BEALL. Ordinary.
State of Georgiaßandolph County*
Court of Ordinary , March Term, 1855.
IT appearing to tho Court, by the petition of Jacob B. Shrop
shire, that William Taylor, of said county, deceased, did in
his life time execute to Richard Jacobs his bond conditioned
to execute good and sufficient titles to said Richard Jacobs for
lot of land number forty-five, in the fifth district of originally
Lee, now Randolph counto, —and it further appearing that
said William Taylor departed this life witout executing title
for said land, or in any way providing therefor, and before the
purchase money for said land was due: and it further appearing,
that subsequently to the death of said Wm.Taylor,the said Rich and
Jacobs, for value received and by. endorsement,transferred the
said bond to one Delaware Morris, and afterward, on a certain
day,in said petition mentioned, the said Delaware Morris, in
like manner transferred the said bond to the said Jacob B Shrop
shire, and it further appearing that tho said Jacob B. Shrop
shire has fully paid the amount of the purchase money for said
land with interest, to Henry L. Taylor, Administrator jit bonis
non on the estate of said William Taylor; and said Jacob
B. Shropshire having petitioned this court to direct the said
Henry L.TayJor, administrator as aforesaid, to execute to him
titles for said lot ofland in conformity with said bond: It is
therefore hereby ordered, That notice be given at three or
more public places in said county, and in the Columbus'Times
& Sentinel,for 3 months, of such application; that all persons
concerned may file objections in the said Ordinary’s office (if any
they have) why said Henry L.Taylor, adminstrator as aforesaid,
should not execute titles to said lot of land in conformity to
said bond as'requiredby law*
A true extract from the minutes of said court, this March 7tb
1855. marl? -w3m. O. P, BEALL, Ord.
William Wells, ) Bill in Meriwether Superior
vs, ! Court to compel Moses Jones
Moses Jones, Ex*r j Executor of the last will and
&.JohnW. Wells, J testamenof John Wells, late of
said county, deceased, and John W. Wells, to account to com
plainant for the amount in their hands accruing to complaint
ant unde r the last will and testament of John Wells, late of
said county, deceased.
IT appearing to the court that the said Moses Jones resides
beyond the jurisdiction of this court, It is ordered that the
said Defendent, Moses Jones, appear at the next term of this
court on the fourth Monday In August next,and plead or demur
to said Bill; and it is further ordered, that service of said Bill
be perfected on said Moses Jones, by publication of this order
once a month for four months before the next term of this court
in some public Gazette published in the city of Columbus, in
said State. BytheCourl. HALL & BRANUM,
DOUGHERTY,
Complainant’s Solicitors.
A true'xtract from tho minutes of Meriwether Superior
Court at February Term, 1855. This 16th March, 1855.
mar26—wm4m. WM. A ADAMS, Clerk.
Wm. H. Jailiet. 1 Meriwether Superior Court.
vs. >
Wm. Irvine. S mortgage, &c.
Pr sent the Honrable Oville A. Bull. Judge of said Court.
IT appearing to the Court, by the petition of William 11. Jail
let that on the 26th day of July 1854, William Irivn eof said
county, made and delivered to the said Wm. H. his certain
promissory note, bearing date the day and year aforesaid,
wherbythe said Will sm Irvine promised on the 25th day of
January next’ following the date of said note, to pay said Wm
11. or bearer, Two Hundred and Fifty-Right Dollars, andSev
euty-Five Cents, for value received, and that afterwards, in tho
same day and year aforesaid, the said William Irvine,the better
to secure the payment of said note, executed and delivered to
| your petitioner his certain Deed of Mortgage, whereby he con
j veyed to your petitioner thewest hall of lot Number 2, in the
town of Greenville, known as the Taylor’s Short fronting the
Public Square—front 30 feet—running back to .the street ad
joining John Knight’s office ou the east, and William Ragland's
vi holesale Grocery on’the west, containing one fourth of an
acre, more or less, situated in the town of Greenville, Meri
wether county, and State of Georgia, conditioned that if the
i the said William Irvine should pay off and discharge said note
or cau e it to be done, according tb the tenor and effect there
ol: that then the said Deed of Mortgage and the said note should
become null and void to all intents and purposes: An it fur
ther appearing to the Court that said note remains unpaid: Ft
is t herefore ordered by the Court, that William Irvine do pay
into court, by the first day of the next te>m thereof, the princi
pal and interest and costs due on said note, or show cause to
the contrary, if any he has, aud that on failure so to do, ?the
equity of redemption in and to said mortgage premises be for
ever thereafter (barred and foreclosed. And it is further or
dered, That this rule be published once a month for 4 months
or a copy thereof be served on said William Irvine, oraspe
cial agent or attorney,at least tlirie months previous to the
next term of said court.
A true extract from the minutes Eof Meriwether Superior
Court,at February Term, 1855. This March'2oth, 1855.
ap9—wltn4tn WM. A. ADAMS, Cl’k.
N otice to debtors and creditors.—ah perso.,*
having demands against the estate of Richard Dozier, late
of Muscogee county, Ga.. deceased, will present them in terras
of the law, and those indebted to said deceased will come for
ward and make payment.
mar‘26—w4od JOHN B. DOZIER, Executor.
CN EORGIA, ‘Randolph County.—James Little, applies to
T me for letters of administration on the estate of William
11. Little late of said county, dec’d:
All and singular the kindred and creditors of said deceased
are therefore here by ordered, to file their objections (if any
they have) on or before the next June Term of the Court of Or
dinary of said county, otherwise letters will be then and there
granted to the applicant. Given under my hand, at office, the
10th dayof April, 1855.
npi4—w4od. O.P. BEALL, Ord.
GEORGIA, Randolph. County.—Daniel Smith
having applied tome for letters of administration Jr bonis
non on the estate of Gabriel Smith late of said county, dec’d:
* These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular,the
kindred and creditors of said deceased, to file their objections
in this office, on or before the next June Term of the court of
Ordinary of said county, otherwise, letters will be at the term
aforesaid, granted to the said applicant.
Given under my hand at office, this r loth day of April 1855.
ap!4—w4od O P. BEAL, Ordinary.
STATE OF GEORGIA, Early county.
Court of Ordinary for said county, November Term, 1854
XTTHEREAS, Etheldred Hays applies for letters of dismssion
V V from the administration of the estate of Wm. L. Hays, de
ceased : all persona interested are hereby notified to file their
objections, if any they have, in my office in terms of the law;
otherwise letters of dismissory wiil be granted said applicant at
the June term next of our court. S. S, STAFFORD,
Nov 17—tw I t&w6m Ordinary
TWO months after date application will be made to the court
of Ordinary of Early county lor leave to sell the lands be
longing to the estate of William Harrell, deceased, by
BURRELL ROBERTA, Ad’m.
Early county, March 20,1855. mai26—w2m.
BRITISH PERIODICALS.
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LEONARD SCOTT & CO., New York, continue to
re-publish the following British Periodicals, viz:
1. The London Quarterly (Conservative.)
2. The Edinburgh Review (Whig.)
3. Tiie North British Review (Free Church.)
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5. Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine (Tory.)
The present critical state of European affairs will render
these publieationsunasually interesting during the forthcom
ing year. They will occupy a middle ground between the
hastily written news items, crude speculations,and flying
rumors of the daily Journal and the ponderous Tome of the
future historian, written after the living interest and excite
ment of the great political events of the time shall have
pa-sed way. It is to these Periodicals that readers must
look for the only really intelligible and reliable history of
current events, and as such, in addition to their well estab
lished literary,scientific, and theological character, we urge
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Arrangements are now permanently made for the
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PRINTS in the hands of subscribers, about as soon as they
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current in the State where issued will be received at
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CLUBBING.
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ies of any one or more of tho above work< Thus: Four i
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‘ LEONARD SCOTT &. CO.
tw lm. f* i Gold Street, New York.
LilD OPMTO “
INTRODUCTION OF
Professor James McClintock’s
CELEBRATED
Family Medicines.
‘Qfa.This is to certify , that l have placed in the hand of Messrs
A. Cushman&c Cos., New York, the receipts of my “Family Med
icinesP with my full authority to prepare and offer them for pop
ular use.
In securing the co operation of Mr. Alexander Cushman, who
is a thoroughly educated Chemist and practical Apothecary of
many years’ experience, lam enabled to assure the public that
they will beprepared in the best, purest and most perfect form,
regardless of expense.
JAMES McCLINTOCK, M. D., Late Professor of An
atomy and Surgery in the Philadelphia College of Medicine
and Acting Professor of Midwifery; one of the Consulting
Physicians of the Philadelphia Hospital, Bloeckly; late
member of the National Medical association: Member of the
Philadelphia Medical Society; member of the Medico-Cbir
urgical College of Philadelphia; formerly President and
Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in Castleton Medical
College Vermont; and also late Professor of Anatomy and
Physiology in Berkshire Medical Institution, Mass &c.&c.
Important to Consumptives,
And all who are afflicted with Bronchitis, or weakness of the
Lungs. Dr. McClintock’s Pectoral Syrup is recommended
as one of the best and safest remedies ever used for Bronchitis,
Consumption and all diseases of the Lungs and Air Passages •
For any of these forms of disease showing themselves in Cough,
Tickling of the Throat, Sense of Tightness in the Throat or
Chest, Spitting of Blood , Difficulty of Breathing, Hoarseness or
Loss of Voice, Hectic Fever, Night Sweats, &c., this SYRUP
has been used with unbounded success for many years; it con
tains no opium, morphine or antimony, which injurious drugs
form thebasis of almost all the quack remedies for lung com
plaints.
The Great Peculiarity
of Dr. McClintock's Pectoral Syrup, is that in all chronic dis
eases of the throat and lungs, it may be taken by the most delicate
patient with perfect safety. It contains no injurious drugs, like
the common remedies used for pectoral complaints. It is pleas
ant to the palate, produces no nausea or debility, but may be taken
freely and constantly, with the certain result of purifying the
bl od , strengening the stomach, and renovating the entire system
while /leafing and. soothing the irritated organs, and producing
gradually a perfact cure.
Price in pint bottles $1; six bottles for $5. Full directions ac
companying each bottle.
McClintock’s cold and cough Mixture.
Colds and recent C oughs, especially if accompanied by fever or
infamma/ory excitement , require a remedy different in character
from the Pectoral Syrup, which js so valuable in chronic com
plaints. The Cold and Cough Mixture is precisely the cure for
such recentcoughs, cold and irritation of the throat and lungs.
It is especially valuable for children; no family in our changeable
climate, should be without this efficient remedy, which if taken on
the first symptoms of cold, would prevent many an attack of
Bronchitis, and a fatal issue in consumption.
No Laudanum or preparation of Opium, in any shape in this
syrup. Price per bottle 25 cents.
Purifying the Blood.
The following, from the New York Tribune, will doubtless he
very seasonable to all who seek not only to preserve their health,
but to guard against all possible contingences which threaten to
destroy it :
* We would call special attention to the importance of purifying
the blood. Nothing is so prevalent as a gross and sluggish state
of the blood. We have no hesitation in recommending to those
who would preserve their health, a free use of the best purifying
medicine known to modern medical science, viz;
Dr. McClintock’s Tome Alterative Syrup*
This remedy is not only delightful to the taste, but perfectly
safe and rapid in its effects. It stimulates the. liver and other
‘glands to natural action, gives tone and new vigor to all the func
tions, and enables them to throw off all morbid and unhealthy ac
cumulations.”
During the extensive practice of Professor McClintock, one
of the most celebrated Phusicians in Philadelphia, thousands of
cases of Scrofula, Erysipelas , Scurccy, Salt Rheum, Tetter,
Skin diseases of all kinds, Ulcers , Cancers. Pimples, Boils and
Rheumatism, together with Syphilitic and Mercurial diseases in
all stages were cured by the free use of Dr\McClintock's Tonic Al
terative Syrup • For children it is perfectly safe, and from its
pleasant taste can be easily given. ’Those who are troubled with
l any of the above complaints, should take, it regularly, Spring and
| Fall. Price $1 in large bottles. Six bottles $5.
TREATMENT OF DYSPEPSIA.
Our National Disease.
Feeble or Imberfect Digestion or Dyspepsia , in some of its
] forms, is truly the National Disease of America. It. aliases, in
j directly, three-fourths of the sickness common to this climate. It
‘■ causes impure Blood, irritations awl acrid H amors in the Stom
ach, Liver, Bowels and Glands, and the system thus poisoned be
comes a prey to an endless tra in of evil symptoms, of which the
following are a few, viz: Headache, Giddiness, Nervousness,
I Low Spirits, Dimness of Vision, with Mote, Speck or JVcbs bc
! forethe Eyes , Itching of the Nostrils, Dullness of hearing, and
: Ringing or 1 rumming in the Ears, Bad taste in the Mouth,
Tightness or Weight about the Chest, Difficulty of Breathing,
Sense of Suffocation in lying down or ascending stairs, Palpita
tion or uneasy feeling about the Heart, Irregular or deficient Ap
petite, sense of sinking at the heart, sinking at the Stomach, Ac
ridity, Heartburn, pain or fullness in the Abdomen, Costiveness,
&c. Some of these symptoms alway-appear in Dyspepsia. They
arcoft.cn mistaken for, and treated os other diseases. Their
main seat and source, however, is the Stomach, and a deranged
condition of the digestive functions. To meet and overcome those
symptoms radically, and restore perfect health and vigor to the
system, a. safe and certain remedy is found combining all the most
i valuable ingredients offered bit the vegetable Kingdom,in Dr.
: McCLINTUCK'S Jj Y> PEPTIC ELIXIR. Its daily use
; would be a blessing to thousands who suffer from the have of
■ weakness. As the prescription of a leading physician, it can be
used with covfdcnce by all. Trice in large bottles, sl.
An Universal Pill.
Dr. McClinloeVs Vegetable Purgative Pills, though not war
! ranted to cure all diseases, are a specific against the numerous
disorders that arise from Costiveness, and Costiveness is the banc
of life to thousands; giving rise as it docs to Headache, Appo-
I piety, Impure Blood. Nervousness,Low Spirits, Lassitude, Pains
\ in the Bowels and elsewhere, and other spmptoins to numerous to
j mention. Costiveness w ill cause or aggravate almost every
i known disease, thorefore the Pill best adopted to cure this danger
ous habit is entitled to the boasted no me of an Universal Pill
! Those who ore willing to try a scientific medicine, safe, certain,
mild and thorough in its action , yet. operating icithout pain, should
i use freely Dr. McClintock's Vegetable Purgative Pills. Price
twenty five cents per box.
Rheumatism and Neuralgia.
These excruciating diseases are radically cvrsd by taking Dr.
McClintock's RHEUMATIC MIX LUTE in doses of a tea
j spoonful three times a day. We have seen the worst cases nlieved
; by it in twenty-four hours. For external use we have never known
I so powerful and penetrating an application, as Dr. McClintock's
i RHEUMATIC L INR&t F.NT. For swelled lirpbs, bruises,
j internal pants, cramps, chilblains, stiff joints, toothache, and oth
i er painful complaints, where we have seen it tried, it acts with
magical effect. These remedies are sold at 50 cents per bottle.
Kave you the Ague!
If so dn not injure your Constitution by resorting to the com
mon cures in use. t ven very learned physicians are in the habit
of prescribing Quinine, Arsenic, Blue Pills, and other powerful
drugs, which often do more harm than good, even if they stop the
chills. On the contrary, the more, and oft ever you take
Dr. McClintock’s Fever and Agie Specific, the stronger
willyour constitution become, and the better your appetite and the
vigor of the whole system. It is eminently an article that CAN
BE Tsi KEN WITHOUT FEAR! and withal it has never fail
ed to cure all forms of Fever and Ague. Intermittent Fever , Bit
lions Fever, Panama or Ckagres Fever, Dumb Ague, tsc. Price
One Dollar per Bottle.
__ Whooping Cough Cured.
This distressing disease is thoroughly and quickly cured by Dr
McClintock's Asthma aN'd Whooping < ough Remedy. It con
tains no op urn andean be given to children with perfect safety.
A few drops at bed time quiet the cough all night, and a few do
ses cure entirely.
Instant Relief fiom Pain.
No person need suffer from Toothache, Headache, Neuralgia nr
Rheumatic pains. Colic, Chilblains, Pleurisy nr Stitches in the
Side, Pain in the Back, side, limbs, bowels, bladder, or in any
part of the body, who will apply to Dr. MoC/intock's ANOD YNE
MIXTURK. Its effect is like magic—pruiivcmg immediate east
and quiet, refreshing sleep, even in cases of the most excruciating
suffering. Every J amity should be provided with a bottle, Price
Fifty Cents.
Dysentery and Diarrhoea.
These severe diseases are now prevalent in various ports of the
country. They may be. wholly prevented, and in the beginning
promptly cheeked, by Dr. McClintock's DIARRHCF.A COR
DJAf*, one of the most astonishing specifics for all Bowel Com
plaints ever discovered. Thousands of cures hare been made du- ,
ring the part summer, and many lives saved by this medicine —so
simple and cheap that every family can procure it. Price twenty- j
five cents and fifty cents per bat He.
Sold in Columbus by ROBERT CARTER, and by local agents
throughout the State of Georgia.
A.CUSHM K.V, &. CO., 122 Fulton street, N. Y. Sole Proprie
tors of Prof. McCtiniock’s Fnndlv Medicines. Her 2 * —twflru.
EORtiiA, Kaudolph count j.—U Pereas, James
T Hay applies to me tor letter* of Guardianship for the per
son aDd property ot James Uaj and Sunuel Hav, orphans and |
minors of Samuel Hay, laieotsaid county,dec’d:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the
parties interested, to shew causeto toe contrary, on or be*or j
the next June Term of the Court ot Ordinary of said county, j
otherwise Guardianship of the said orphans will be grunted to
said applicant. Given under my hand, at office, this lOUi day of
A piil, 1855.
apH-w3<M, n, P. FIV* \T„, Ordlspry.
SPRING CLOTHING,
if- *
READY MADE AND TO ORDER.
J. H. DANIEL & THOMAS.
HAVE JUST RECEIVED A FULL SUPPLY OF THEIR ‘ }
FASHIONABLE CUT AND WELL MADE CLOTHING; HATS,
liLCAPS, TRUNKS, ICARPET BAGS, VALISES, &C.
ALSO,
A WELL SELECTED STOCK OF
Columbus, Ga., April 3, 1855. w&twtf.
J. n. DANIEL. F. G. THOMAS.
J. H. DANIEL
desirous of dosing his old books immediately, would respectfully inform all indebted to him
that a prompt settlement of their accounts is requested.
The Southern Man.
THE Rev. Win. H. Milburn, recently delivered a lecture be
fore the New Yorh JMeicantile Library Association on “The
Southern Man.” We annex someextracts which both fortheir
fidelity and beauty will be read with interest.
YVhere the summer lengthens itself into nine continuous
months, where the day is deliciousandthe night cooland spicy,
the Southern man grows up a noble specimen of the physical
man, endowed with nervous vitality, for he is accustomed from
his earliesi years to the most active exercises, engaged in all the
athletic sports of youth on foot and horseback,in the forest and
and the held ; used to the pistol and the rifle, and the chase.—
Yet in every motion there is a degree of lassitude,surprisingto
those who understand not the effect of his clime, and which yet
imparts a degree of ease, of graceful elegance, rarely possessed
exceptby an inhabitant of a ay arm southern climate.
in thelonir, glorious noontides, swinging luxuriously in his
hammock, he inhales delicious airs, builadeh.alas ! with death;
they have on his cheek the marks of his origin, and the tale is
soon told that tqe liver of the southern man is altogether out ot
order. Thisisamostinagniflcanthint,audthefact wascontein
plated by the Greeks who made the w ord “melancholy,” which
means, by etymology, “a black or disordered liver.”’
We fullyagree w ith thegifted author of theahoveextract,aiMl
are happy to call the attention of those haviug a diseased liver,
or any of those diseased so coramom to a Southern climate, to
to Hampton’s Vegetable Tincture the great invigorator of ihe
system; by its use all sufferingfrom lassitude and Aveakness be
comes robust and full of energy, we offer below some of the un
solicited testimony,
Washington, A/ay 17,1853.
Messrs. Mortimkr & Mowbray .-r-Gentleinen —Having been
afflicted with Liver Complaint of ten ytars standing, 1 hereby
for the benefit of the afflicted, take great pleasure in announcing
that after using a few bottles of your Hampton Tincture, I found
it had accomplished a perfect cure, 1 have used a different med
icine from time to time, but have never been able to account for
any apparent good; ami It is a blessing to Stricken humanity
that, that medicine is found which possesses the wonderful pomes
of prolonging human life. The many cures it has wrought is a
sufficient guarantee ol the benoflcialresults w hjch may be ex
perienced from its use.
Yours respectfully,
J. C. HAY.
LIVER CO.VPLAINT DEBILITY.
Extract from James Harris, Esq’s Letter, Alexandria, Vir
ginia.]
After speaking of the w onderful cures on himself, he says—
inability, constantly complaining from Aveakness through her
whole system. She now enjoys better health than for thirty
years,being entirely restored by the useof Hampton’s Vegetable
Tincture.
Space wtll not permit to name hundreds of others as Geo. W.
Goodrich, Capt. Thomas Canot, Robert Gault, James Smjlh,
cured of Rheumatism.
John Pervail, S. A. Griffin, John Luke, Rev. V. Eskridge, IT.
8.N., and thousands otherscured of Dyspepsia, Scrofula,Cough,
Liver Complaints, Bronchitis, St. Vitus’ Dance, ftc. Wereler
you to your oAvn citizens Call on them.
Delicate Females and Children will find the Tincturesuited to
all their diseases, by its mild action on the .Stomach, Liver and
the Kidneys, will cure Dyspepsia, Cough, Asthma, Bronchial
and Lung Affections. Pains in the Back, Bide, and Breast, Con
sumption, Scrofula, Rheumatism, Gout,Neuralgia, Fistula,Piles,
BoavolComplaints, Worms, Nervous Debility, w ith all diseases
arising from impurebiood,and is thegrates’t Female Medicine
ever known.
Jtgf’ Call on Agentsand get Pamphletsgratis, Avithcertificntes
of cures and history of its discovery.
For sale by
ROBERT CARTE/f, DANFORTH & NAGLE,
Columbus.
ROBERT CARTER & Cos.
Savannah
COXE & HUCHINGS,
Montgomery Ala.
Columbus, may 20, —w&twl
A CUKE FOR ALL! !
Jlf §Jk
THE AMERICAN’S FRIEND:!
HOLLOWAY’S TILLS.
II OL L O IV A Y’ 8 O I X TM E X T.
CitTfcns of the Union —
You have done me the honor as with one voice, from one
end oi the Union to the other, to stamp the character of my
Ointment with your approbation. I t scarcely two years since j
I made it known among you, and already it has obtained more :
celebrity than any other medicihe in so short a period.
THOMAS HOLLO WAY, _
38, Corner of Ann and Nassau streets, New Y ork. j
Astonishing cure of Sore Legs, after nine years
standing
, Copy of letter from Mr. W. J. Langley, of Huntsville,
Yadkin county, North Carolina, U. S., dated Nov. 1, lcod.
Read iiis own words.
To Professor Holloway, .
Sir—lt is not my wish to become notorious, neither is ini ® ‘
| ter written for the sake of v riling, but to tay, that M )Ur •
| meut cured me of the most dreadful cutaneous diseases
! fleet, is heir to, and which was considered bv all who knew mej
!to be entirely beyond the reach of medicine, ior n > H-.
j was afflicted with one of the most painful and troublesome >rt
I lens that ever fell to the lot ol ranu ; and alter trying J
: icne 1 had ever heard of, I resigned to
! cured ; but a friend brought me a couple • * i * . .
j Ointment, which caused the sores on my legs to healam.ll
entirely regained iny health to my agreeable surprise anudelight,
and to the astonishment of my lriends. T jVNCLEY
; [Signed] ‘ J t ’ .
i AN EXTRAORDINARY CURE OF A BAD lilltASr, tt HF.S
NEARLY AT THE FOIST OF HEATH.
Copy of a letter from Mr. R. Durant , Arm Orleans,
November 9 th, 1853.
To Professor Holloway, , , T v
38 Corner ol Ann and Nassau streets, N. 5 .
i u . ar w, r _Tt is with heartfelt gratitude i have to inform y ; .u
that bv th- use of your Ointment and Fills, the life o. my wile
running wounds, (not ot a cancerous nature.) 1 w-s told tha.
nothin! could save her; she was then induced to use jronrO.nt- ,
mr nt and Pills, when in the shorts space of three months they
effected a perfect cure,to the a-tonwhmewt r*i alt bo mitw
Ud. We obtained your medicines from .Messrs. VY right. A. Cos.,
or Chartres street. New Orleans. I send from, •Hotel des
Princes ” Paris, although 1 had written it at New Orleans, be
fore ve’flually left, at that time, not knowing jour address at
New York. ‘ (Signed) R. DURANT.
The Pills should le used conjointly with the Ointment in
most of the following case?:
Had l,eg. Contracted and Stiff Joints, Lumbago, r<3 T hroats,
Rad breasts,Bunions, Burn*, Chilblains. Chapped bands. Pis- j
lulas. Gout, Glandular Swellings, Piles. Rheumatism, Halt j
Rheum, Scalds, Here Nipples, Skiu disease, Scurvy,“Sore
heads, Ulcers, Wounds.
Id at the Establishment of Professor Holloway. No.
SO >1 .* i d knLa xk , New York, and 244 Strand, I<oudon,
and bv ail re*pectable druggist aid dealers of medicines :
throughout the United States, inPots and Boses at 25 *ents
tilt* cents, and SI Wl each.
There is considerab'e saving bv taking the larger sixes.
N.!. —Directions so r the gu idanceo sp a ren tsi n every disorder
arc affixed to each Put.
.luue !7—:W ly.
CIEORGIA, Taylor county—Whereas, James H. Whicheil
Y ad.ninis'rator on the estate of Albert S. Wiley, late of said
County, deceased, applies for l etters of Dismission from said
administration: It is ordered that all persons concerned be
and appear at my office within the time prescribed by law,aLd
show cause if anv ttry have, wbv letters of Dismission sLould
nut be granted. * JOHN PTFRDIV ANT, Ordinary.
The Great Purifier of the Blood.
CARTER'S SPANISH MIXTURE.
NOT A TARTICLE OF MERCURY IN IT.
An Infallible Remedy for Scrofula, King's Evil. Rheu
matism, Übßtinats Cutaneous Eruptions, Pimples or
Pustules on the Face, Blotches , Boils, Chronic Sore
Eyes, Ring Worm or Teller, Scald Head, Enlarge,
ment and Pain of the Bones and Joints, Stubborn Ul
cers, Syphilitic Disorders, Lumbago,Spinal Complaints,
and all Diseases arising from an injudicious use of
Mercury, Imprudence in Life, or Impurity of the
Blood.
This valuable medicine, w-hichhas become celebrated for the
number of extraordinary cures effected through its agency, has
induced the proprietors, at the urgent request of their friends,
to offer it to the public, which they do w ith the utmost confi
dence in its virtues and wonderful curative properties. The
following certificates, selected irom a large number, are, how
ever, stronger testimony than the mere word of the proprietors:
and are nil from gentlemen well known in their localities, and of
the highest respectability, mat y of them residing in the city of
Richmond, Va.
F. Border, Esq., of the Exchange Hotel, Richmond, known
eA T ery where, says he has seen the medicine called Carter’s Span
ish Mixture admlristered in over a hundred cases, in nearly all
the diseases for which it is recommended, with the most aston
ishingly good results. He says it is the most extraordinary med
icine he has ever seen.
Aguk and Fkvkr—Grkat Cure—l hereby certify that for
three years 1 had Ague and Fever of the most violent desertp
lion. I had several physicians, took large quantities of Quinine
Mercury,and believe ail the tonics advertised, but all without
any permanent relief. At last I tried Carter's Spanish Mixture,
two bottles of which effectually cured me, and lam happy to
say 1 have had neither chills or levers since. I consider it the
bcsttonic in the w orld, and the only medicine that ever reached
; my case. John Longdxn.
j Beaver Dam, near Richmond, Va.
V. 11. Luck, Esq., now in the city of Richmond, and for many
: yaars in the Post Office, has such confidence in the astonishing
i efficacy of Carter’s Spanish Mixture, that he has bought up
wards o(50 bottles, which he has given to the afflicted. Mr
i Luck says he hasnever known it to fail w hen taken according
j to directions.
Dr. Minge,a practicing physician, and formerly of the City
; Hotel,in the city of Richmond, says he hasAvituessed in a num
j ber of instances'the effects of Carter’s Spanish .Mixture which
I were most trulv surprising. He says in acase of Consumption,
dependent on the Liver, the good effects were wonderful indeed.
’ Samuel M. Drinker, of the firm of Drinker Morris, Rich
mond, avus cured of Li ver Complaint of three years standing,
by the use of two bottles of Carter’s Spanish Mixture.
Grkat Cure of Scrofula —Theeditors of the Richmond Hr
publicaiqhad a servant employed in their press •‘ooia cured of
violent Scrofula, combi tied wtth Rheumatism, which entirely
disabled him from work. Two bottles of Carter’s Spauish Mi
i ture made a perfect cure of hitn. and the editors, in a publii
! notice, say they “cheerfully recommend it to all who are afflicted
I with any disease ofthe blood.”
Still another Cure ok Scrofula — l had a very A'aluabb
boy cured of Scrofula by Carter's Spanish Mixture. I consider
it truly a valuable medicine.
James M.Taylor.
Conductor on theß. F. &. P. 1*..C0., Richmond Va.
8 \LT RHEUM OF 20 YEARS STANDING CURED.
Mr. John Thompson, residing in the city of Bichmond, v.c
cured by three bottles of Carter’s Spanish -Vixtnrc of Bnn
Rheum, which be had nearly SO years, and Avhieh all the pic- si
! ciansotthe city could not cure. Mr.Thompson isawell known
! merchant in the city of Richmond, Va., and his cure .s m-t
remarkable.
Wm. A. Matthews, of Richmond,hada M>rvnnt cured “f Syph
ilis, in the worst form, by Carter’s Spanish Mixture. lies;; - h..
I cheerfully recommends it, and consider-: it an invaluable inedi
j cine.
; Richard E. West, ot Richmond, was cured of Scrofula, and
I what physicians cal'eti confirmed Consumption, by three hottici
! ot Carter’se-panish Mixture.
Edwin Burton, commissioner off lie revenue, says he • *as seen
I the good e flee Is of farter’s r-panish Mixture in a number of
[ Syphilitic cases,and saysit is a perfect cure for that horrible dis
-6 Win. G. Harwood, of Richmond, cured of Old Sores and Ul
cers, w'hich disabled him from walking, l ook a few bottles of
Carter’s Spanish .Mixture, and was r enabled to w alk without a
crutch, in a short time permanently cured.
Principal Depots at M. WARD, CLOSE & CO., No. 83, Maid
en Lane, New York.
T. W. DYOTT & SONS,No. 132, North 2d street, Philadel
phia.
BENNETT & BEERB, No. 125, Main street, Richmond, Va.
TIIOS. M. TURNER & CO.
JAS. JJ. CARTER,
Savannah, Ga.
GESNER &, PEABODY,
DANFORTH & NAGEL,
Columbus, G a
And by druggist?and country merchants every %vhere.
Price SI ; six bottles for $5.
June 17, ‘Rsl—wA-tw-lr
GOOD MEDICINES.
It is estimated thsu Ayer's Che. ry Pectoral and Cathartic
Piils have done more to pr note li e|v b < health H:;.n any
other one cause. There can bo no question that the cio n
Pectoral ha* by its tin man! in thousand cores of Coo -,
Coughs, Asthma, Cr<-np, Inliuenza. Uroiichics Ac , very ruti< ,’
reduced the proportion ol deaths from c*i.Mifptixe dis* ns. s in
this countiy. The PilUare aa good as the Pectoral and will
cure more complaints.
Everybody needs mo it* or less purging Purge [he ?>'o, <i
from its impurities. Purge it.e Powel*. Liver and the whole
visceial systtm from obstructions. Forge cut lie d'-rOMs
which fasten on the body, to work - its rcry. Hitler disearc,
we should die only of end age. Take antidotes ear yar c! thn.st
it out Irotn the syst* n , before it is yet too strong to yie ! <i.
Ayt r’s Pills c!o thrust out disease, not only while it is w eak,
but when it has taken a strong held. Read the aetnur.ding
statements of those who have Veen cured l y the in <r rr. diet*;*
ful H< rotula, Dropsy, Ulcers. Hhm HU cast s. Rheuma'isii*. ••
ralgia. Dyspepsia, inlernal Tains, Billion* < < lirpiainT?. Heart
burn, Head ache. Coot, and roar > less dangerous but still Hire at
oning ailments, such as pimples on the tt.ee. Worms, Nervous
Irritability, hh ot appetite irieuuli.riC s, LirziMo s in L
Head,Colds, Fevers. Dysentery, and itideed every var'ey of
complaint for which a Fcrcatixe 1 trredj is required.
Th se are no random statements, hut are a.uher.ticaUd by
your own re ghhors at and \< i;r < wn physicians.
Try them once, and you will never be w ithoHt them.
Price 25 cents per box—f* Boxes u-r? : IJ<K
Prepared by Dr. J.*'. Ayer. Chemist, Lowell, Mass.and *o’d by
Danforth & Nagle, i ‘dmr.bus, Ce..
T.H. Brad field, Wet Point, *•
W. VV. V’ iison, Talbotton. fc *
Dr. J. P. Woodbury,Jlamilten,“
Chauncey Fowler, Tu.-kreee. .'% :. j pTw&tw LTn
CAKOItGIA, Taylor County.— Wiil.br sold on the
T first Tutscay in Jui e next, heiore ;he Court House door in
BuDer, Taylor coo*j. tt hTlie n-ai fsiato biloig'r g jo Fzefciel
Adams, Lite of s*id county, and ceased, lying in said county. T>
he. sold undi r an order ■! Taylor Court of Ordinary r the ’-un
cut > cieditors*. The lands he near R-yooMi*. ant! are known
as the Fzeku 1 Adams lands, and some lots are at Reynolds
known by the same designation.
r**24wtd< MARTHA 1 Adin'rx.
■VTOTICETO DEBTORS AND CREiJITOIH.—AII person
it indebted to the estate of Joshua R. McCook, docess d,ar
required to make immediate payment and these taxing do
rnandsare noi.fital to present them witbinterma of the law.
ftfil4-w4ttl fi. D. 11 VI.P, & li. J. tvlNw, Auiu'i-s.