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The Fairfleld Heirald xVERr WDESk1 T011ox~ AWfix BARM,~ A ltOTTE4ToT VABL9. The moon, in Pit th Of man in his espair, Sent to them from her shining place Ior messenger the 1are "'Go tinble one, and say to 10ea That at -1 fade and.dio,,-. Then kisp and'bri ghtlier shino, again Above theta in' to sky.1 So they mtst.fall-nd fado away, 4uLt only die to rise W Pere resurreotion paves, the way To fairer, friendlier,k1es. Dui out of dulneis, trick or feud, The ae'ssage which was sent The fookless little haro:oonstrtiod With most malign intent. - 10race-of men, the moon hath said That as she lives and dies, So tunto death'shall you be led, And mevertnore'shall rise." Now when the muoon had'heard the case Her axe, with'foroe nid grip, Sh'ostruok into the meek hare's faoe, Which caused the split bare lip. The hare, incensed, with claws upborne Soratched laok,witlh right good grace, And aince that d.y the moon has worn A rough and ragged face. .-LJoel Benton,in the Gialkai for August, S1'h 0i Molitain Mn$os lassacre. - Justice In Utah has not only beer blind but lame ; for tho trial just begun at Beaver of men concerned in the infamous and cruel Mountain Meadows massacro comles seventeen years after the event. In the yoar 1857 a largo emigrant train was on its way across the Plains to Cali. fornia. An army officer who sa'w it in June described it as probably the finest train that had ever oroaboi the .Plains. It was believed to contain not less than forty heads of families, somo young unmarried men, womue and many children, and it appears to have had an unceuinonly perfoot outfit, among other things three car. riages-vory unusual appurtenanties on an emigrant, train. Una of these carriages, which wils peculiarly rnarked, is said to have been for some years after the massacre in the pos. session of the Mormons. Th * MAor. ilon loaders were at that timo furioui about some threatened or contem. plated intorference of the United 8tateR government ; and it is related that Brigham Young, preaching in the Tabornaclo, said that as Oover. nor and Indian Agent ho had hitherto "protected emigrants passing through the Territory, but now he would turu the Indians loose on them." It probably inoreased his anger that when this train left Salt Lake City several disaffected Mormons joined it. The emigrants wore journeying toward Los Angeles, in Oalifornia, and were last soon by an Indian Agent near tuo tipper ond of Mloun. tain Meadows. This spot lies about three hundred miles from Salt Lake, and the leadern of the train had been told that a large spring, near the wouth and of the meadow, would be a favorable spot to rest and recruit their stook before entering the Great DeBert; and this they did. Whe Indian, Agent was the last ane who saw the train and reported it. Thereafter, and for some years, nothing was heard of its fate. It was r'eported lost." liut the bloodly tale of its massaero grad ual leaked out, and the details, which we give be low, have now beeun:kpown and forget. -ten for many years. 1The ?lountain Meadows were then surrounded by several Mormon settlements.' The bishops of these one day gathered their people togetber and declared that they had received a commnand from the Mormon capital toe "fellow and attack the accursed Gent\lew, and let the arrows of the Amnighty drink their .blood." A force of sixty white anon and a party of Indians surround od the ill'fated emigrants one morn. ing before daylight, the Mormon 'whites having~ painted and disguised themselves as Indiana in order to give the movement the appearanee of an 'Indian attack. liut the emigrants iTapidly drew theoIr..wagone into a -eircho, made an energetie defence, *and, as quickly as they could, threw up eatthworks, behind which the3 ~sholtod themseolves,. their weoner and children and stoek. They wer< surrounded and-kopt under fire for a long week, the Morinions hoping the3 could weary them otit. The wife e an Indian trader afterward testified that while the firing continued and 'was plaini heard at her house tht :Morison feaders woogoing back. wardand forward bwonthe placi of murder -and her house, and at th< latter place 'pitching quoits ans * amusing themselves-in vrosways.' M'ormonsu appear tphavo.got tiredl o tht slow artick; tho p phed off theia paint, resumed, their clothing ant appeared bfefre 'the sel-eujdyed cmi grants as a rescquing band of whitei Wbo had driven off' the-Indians. Thei were-roeeived as deliverer..; ilhe eni grants accepted -the 'Mokmons as- al .cseort; and on the march these, at ai agreed signalysudenly 'npened 4Ir< upon the party w ~o~they had by riekpe od,eg ay aside to 'guil. n dinst l onod .1i mbusl rushed in to help in the work 'of assas sination, and in a very -brief time *hundred,and twenty men, women ant perish later by starvation or th Indians. NevenitecA 4hldren wer -saved alive, being 6upposed too youn1 to remember the asasaination. All o them were aftowards claimed b' .thair friea,1. In the LEa an- to t n later gave evidence concerning '00-icurder. The property of the o etigrants was divided by the Mot. al mons and Indians ; and it Is said tat h as late as 1802 jewelry taken at g Mountain Meadows was openly worn 4) at Salt Lake City -and its origin not h denied. -1 The despatch which relates to the o, 4 lnow going on in Utah for this tl foul murderspeaks of one Leo, whose t, confession the government refuses to 8 accept. This is John D. Leo, then t, Mormon Bishop of Harmony, and a one of the three obiefs who planned a t.his cruel assassination. He appears to havo beon a peculiarly atrooious . scoundrel ; for it is reiated in the ao- r counts of the massacre which we b have seen that while the Mormons h wore killing the nsn this Lee singled r, out a beautiful young girl and drag.. g ged her out of the meil for his own e vile purposes ; and he himself is said t to have related afterward that "sh1e t struck at him with a large knife, b whereupon he shot her through the t head." So late as 1870 this t scoundrel still lived at Harmony, in 8 Utah; and now in the hands of justice M it is to be hoped he will not Oscape U hanging.-New York. Witer-Some Curious I'arts About It CIleni and Unclean People. Mark Twain was surprised when o ho went to Paris, and stopped at a o Hirst-class hotel, to discover that c water, not to speak of soap, was con. e sideredla great luxury. i1s opinion q on that suloject was no jest, but an r, exasperating truth, corroborated by f, all Americans who have sojourned k in the gay Frenoh capital. The a water of the river Seine is wo believe, 01 not the best for drinking purposes, y and hence the use of light wines as a substitute. The well bred Briton a who takes his daily bath as a roli gious duty, seldom travels on the continent without his tin tub, and we have road of Englishmen carrying a that prized utensil to the swamps of a, Florida and beyond the Rocky 1.oun- al ttkins. ri It is stated, and we dare say vera. ciously, tlint the large majority of d mankind seldom or never wash their bodiet ; sonic because of the scarcity el water, and other, because they are naturally averse to jontuct with it. Some years ago, a Rtussian frigate ar- of rived at New York. The officars ti were scrupulously clean, but a num cc bor of the sailors wore fairly cased in P dirt of ancient and stubborn thick ul ness. It was proposed to give them o 01 good sousing, but this met with E opposition on the ground that such an ui infliction would be "ortelty to ani. oi mals." It was vet y e% ideut from this ot that the Russian b th V .8 not of uni. or versal fashion. A Queen of Spain 1 made a vow that. sho would not ehange her under garments until oi cortain events oame to pass. Years di elasod before the coveted moment V arrived, and her soiled linen, when rc removed was of a blackish brown w color and not very sweet swelliug. a( One of the prime causes of 'George in the Fourth's hatred for his wife, in Princess Caroline, of Brunswick, was sA her filthy and unkept person. It is Si oven said that, at the altar, when c about to be married, he ainted away, -n partly from the effects of too much wine, but principally because of the foulness of his unwholonome bride. P~ Thu "first gent,leman of Europo" was gi internally wicked, but ho kept his B skin free fronm superlicial dirt. Of f course, it is better to be the possessor of of a stainless conscience th in a spot. tI less body, without any other virtue but it6 is best of all to practise clean. a. linoss and godliness at the same tI time. si Weo have been led to this rambling i' discourse by reading in one of our "m exchanges of the singular custom of co the Australians, who have but a L scant water supp)ly and therefore useh very little of it. Speaking of the 04 natives of the interior of Australia, Mr. John Forrest, recently relatedb seine of his observation before the Royal Geographical Society of .Lon. al don. The natives, ho said, "are en tirely without clothing, and sleep with a fire on each side of them,s without any hut, unless in very wetT weoathor, when they made a very poor shelter with wvood and thatched 0 with grass. A native docs not washL or cook with water ; all he uses it for is to drink ; therefore a small rock cavity, with say from twenay to one hundred gallons, will suffice a long while for a number of them, and they la cover it up to keep it freom evaporat- r< ing. They somletimesgo a long way sa away from water, and get it from the g roots of a species ot eucalyptus, call. E ed mallce scrub. They choose the la roots, break them on end, when all r< the moisture drains out into a wood- ti on dish. The travoller meets with p great htaps of these roots, and it is o a bad sign when in searoh of water." a Hie further stated that "the native Australians, instead of waehing, rub y themselves all over with fine sand (a process similar to that performed by the Arabs in the desert whben water is unattainable), and consider this j equivalent to the ablution so common in most other countries." .in spite .of the abundance of water h -in America, i16 is reported -that ourd people to a great-'extent, -cannot -be rated'as first class utilizers of suoh aq groat blessing for ablution *of their bodies. We have beard men say h that they frequently -changed their a~ Ilinen, but rarely washed themselves Ii thoroughly. At the beginning of a~ the last Fall,' a New England editor d eaculated: "First frost of 'the ~ Sseason.; no more wfashing :for this Sdeponent until next Summert"n fDoubtless he had 'many -followers. Henry Clay -Dean, one of the most ~ fbrilliant writers and npaaksr. In . -M. Q;imwoods th3 9ur s iqt who I 40companied b9r. 9naT,is wallt t ulg win oftpromise. One -o his follow-r4potters, when biddint him ts good-by.o,.aid,to him in a ocula i pay: 'I shall have an opportunity a tofltt ybr'obltuary. f Som0 low-born persons beguiled d the Philadelpbla Lodger into pub. a lishing an obituary poem on one d "Jack Roslyn." 16 was a beautiful y elegy-sad, dreamy, . toar.compell, y tng, but, it turned out that Jack e Hoslyn was a Kentucky mule. e. The last issue of the German offil. is oial history of. the war way correct d the habit that is becoming common d of regarding the .battle of Sedan as a 3 mere nmasaore of the Lrench. It 6 reports the German loss In that fight e at 460 officers and 8,500 won. d - -+ h A lucrative opening for young la. g dies has been made by the decsion of an Indiana court that the fact of a r girl being engaged to several gentle. d uon at once is no bar to her suing is each of them for breach of promise. Tho Tartar ladies are studying medicine at St. Petersburg. It to nf quires no unusual scenes to ast on thetu as tartar etuetio. : . 0ww n MARTIN & THOMPSON I. n SUCCESSOR TO 0. It. T HOMPO. 0 d Tanners, Cuiriers and Lcather Mani facturers. r lI- above Parned firm would call epecial atlention to Boot an,.j Sice. d Mlinuacturers an lai.mness Maker. We g will sell pure oak tunned finish ed stootc e or ligLht and heavy ptrpo4es, as low as ny house in the trade at wholesale ,t etil. CASH PAID FOR [1IDES. s an23 9NEW GOODS! n y e L 60 pairs of trao Chains and 1am ies. Back Bands. Cotton and Manilla Ropo for plowing. e Well W. pe. d L. 11 Shovels n I manure forks. Tub a s and Buckets, Nails and Axos, Cotton Cards. Hland Saws. Padlocks, Sad Irons, acil'ce Mills, Locks, Percu s rion Caps y&G o1 'ierce Primne Carolita Rice. 25 lIarrels assorted Exting and Plantin pelatoes. I or Sale low for Cash. 0 BY d Beaty, Bro. & Son. ~ UT RECEIVED 1 IN o Car Load White Corn. 1 Car Load Flour-all gr'ades, r 1 Car* Load Bolted Mea. Whbite andl Smnoked Bacon and, S Shoulders. Rflio and Java Cofl'e-"green it and r.oasted." Newv Orleans and Cominon Syrups. m- All grades of SUGAR. SLard in hbis., bal.-bbls., JKegs and cans. e Gsenune Durham, Smoking To g e BY it D). R. F LENNIKiEN. g _april 10 - DIR ECT Io w 1, 1?ROM d NEW ORLIEA NS. -3 Hlhds. N. 0. Clarified 8 Sugar, 10 Bbls. N. O. M~olass. ~. A former lot of those goods thave given general satisfaction W ve Thoem a Trial, d BIEA TY BisO. & SON. is -- i ?Il Af 2: anal 'after the Zera of: a. iAgun .te'all dogs eforindi ging at teon hestreats"'affhout a bage, ~ Il-' .* takcuu by'th'e)oe and a)Atne SoOw, ila I~eol d 4W the owner4. Al. (lie -e(huffiur htours, all S- dosilie wial be killed. '0. JNOMrA;$RAsERUt july 9.2 Clnek of o,',. Wy,. Doty& Co= W1 . Doom0 . 8 Mit of Post Offoe t to' -IN- Ac T'1ESPIAN.j1AiL JIUILDING. DEALOkS IN A - Shi Fr AJMILY & PLANATION O 2 GROCEUES, & PROVI8ONS, L GRAIN, FLOUIR Io 'lbi HAY &c c yo lot T P A P PR iE T O RS 1 lot Rn -OF-- R ill Ai LIVERY & SALE a - of; 202..~81,29ex Whera we coustantly keep on hand a fully supply ofgood Hoi'ses a MVules, --PR S.A.IA 'E o' 13E3 'Et3.M A marob 25 PIERRE BACOT,"l IVM AGENTFOR e 3 ha STANDARD FER1TILIZE 4S," tit O FFERS for sale the following very ii Popular brands, viz ly till Bradley's Sea Fowl Guano. C. C. Coe's Superphospiate. W] Bradley's Ammotated Dissolved " Rone. I'." Royal Guano Compound. Li Bradley's A cid 1?hosphia te. Partles wishintg Guanost by ithe car-lonel can h-ive thiet ordered to Diko, Ridgewny Lyles' Pordi amd Strothier's Stations, as I am hgent fAr the.enatire County of Fair. field. Timo sales due 'Novemnber 1 -.. For arranlgements on time anti price lilt cottonl option aj pply to Feb 18 *EREE CT -AT THE WInnSboPo Millino;y .BaZaar. inI Mi fred anid patrons generally pa after purchasing a fitll and -completeo stock of M%illinaery, consiing of 'French part-orn .Hats and Ilonnects, 8tsra.w ,Oos Rtibbons, Flow er Laces, and everything uisua'lly foumi in a first,.class ih Millinery Establishmrenit. Also a beau.,irul line of 'Whito Goods, Drees Goods, C -licos, losiery (llove,t NotIons a:ad Fancy Goods. >,d others too nUmerou8 to anciion, all'of Which is expectedto arrive and be open for in spction during the week.. All I ask k to call and see for your-self whent miy goods~ arrivo ?y 35,000 Heart Shingles for salo Cheaip for (iabh. 33 'march 283l O og Charlotte, Columnbiai, & Augulsta ' -Mail Road. OtUSurA, December 28i, 18774 r iE followin,g 'assentger Scedu.le Lwhlbe run over-this r oa:. on andt att h this date: 'TRLAIN--GoNO N4ORTNI. Leal.!oAuguela, at '9.30 .a in "Columbia. 8. 0., . 2 46 a mi " Chest,or, 63. 84 r m' Arrlie gt OJbrlotto,)4. 0. 0.00 p in TRAIN-.-o,o Soul'n. Leave Oharlotte, N '0.-at '8.80 ai ." 'Obeter, 131.2 a n a neboro, 1l2.8pn m " Odittnibia, .2;2 p.na Arive at Augusta 8416 p J7A8. ANDER-ION4 Gen'l Supt- a( A.POPi.j ''1 hc Gen. Passenger andI Ticket. A gent. pgribs,' notorious for his disg U r e 44d, :prodilctiou for dirt lirts, They toll an a4ecAote 1bot 40. which is probabl' trpe, . reat admirlr f his,iqt9ieotdal gif Pked hImtospend some days at h Duse. -Dean consentod, but was ai lited to the-pretnisee only on ndltlon, exacted by the mistres< ig estalishment; tist he aboul ike a water purge and ,put on unday shirt. He reluotantly agree > the first proposition, but franki knowled that he could not compi ith the second, because he was t Osessor of but one such garmen hat difficulty was settled by bo >wing the necessary article from h ot. A year afterward he repeato is visit, with sinilar conditions an sults. When the old shirt-a r< ular small-pox hospital rag-wi itamined, it was discovered to b i0 same raiment he had borrowe ielve months before, and whic ad borm constantly worn . duriu bat lengthened period I I At th rial of the celebrated Cbristopli mart, for lunaoy, one proof adduce as his aversion to changing I udor-garments ; but Samuel John )n, the illustrious lexiograhile rotested against the introduction < ich evidence, as he defied any ma >call him a lunatio, and yet Ii ,tared with his friend Smart a horr f purified apparel. It is writi f Johnson likewise that he was a4 lstomed to frequent a subtorranea xting house. Upon Boswell it uiring as to this freak of fancy, I plied that there were three powei l inducements ; to-wit : he coul aep his hat on, eat with lia fingel 3d, after the meal, wipe hid hand( i the back of a Newfoundland dog e g iarantea that Smart and Johi In, highly gifted as they were, ha holy a horror of water for bathin Irposcs as they bad for itmmaculat uen. The Gracki and Romans wore cot ant bathersand so are the Arabiat id the Turks. It may be that eve )lutions of water carried to luxt ous extremes contribute to sensual and effeminney ; but there is wi >M, justice and moderation in th -actice of eleanlinets as well as i 'orything else.-Constitutionalist. 'Ihe advance within a few days pat wheat to about tweuty cents o e bushel and flur to about eight nts on the barrel is noted by th [ildelphia Ledger, which attril es the advance to the crop losst used by inundations in Franeq ngland and Hungary, and to th ifavorable weather which prevaile ,er the best grain bearing secEion the continent of Europe just at th itical period of gathering the cropi be Ledger says : '*Rains have drenched the alread er-wet fields in some sections, whil ought has parched them in othert yr a month past, throughout Eu pe, the fears of a short crop t beat have been accumulating, unti w the necessity for preparing t oet the deficit has given a suddel ipulse of activity to the grain nan ippping interests of the Unite ates. It so happens that thi untry is now in good oendition t -ko up European losses." The largest rose in the world i obably that no0w wasting its fra ance en the desert air at Sanut irbara, Cal., on Dr. D)immick rm. It is of a delicate lemon tini delightful perfume, is six tee.n 1an tre quarters inches in circu mfor Ice, its shortest diameter five inche id the measurement in various diret ons from tip to tip of petal is' ovc z incites. The depth of the rosei Illy three inches. Another ros arvel in the doctor's garden is uister of 113 buds on a rose tree a Mnrque variety. A common fe] ~t covered the space in which wur uunted the above number of buds. The State of Tennessee is in tror to. The Treasurer, Mr. Morrow ates that there id not enough 1mo0 rto pay the July interest, and not probable there will be enoug pay the January interest. Thi bate will, therefore, have to defaul here -is a.good deal-of feeling amor as people at the unifortunatn stal affairs, and an ex,tra session of td egislature is suggested -though not clear that it could do anythini help matters. Railways haventiely~changed t wa of internal transpotation. The Iquire new" laws of their own. ews that negotiations are no >ing en between G~ermany, Austril ungary. France, Italy,' 8witze ad, Belgium and Holland for th ugulation of international railroa -ansportation, so as to secure unifori rineiples for determining -tihe right tihe ship per and cartier, and ti: tethods of establishing theom. -It should -.beaememabored tAi rofossor Donaldson has been - pr< eunced "killed" five. times durir1 ie .past -two or three years, but ht 'variably oome ,tr life again. '1I an advertiser of his mrial p-rocliv es, and, as,'Barnum says, she. migi wvadropped into the f51iobgaiipii ries, and -is under cover for a fe ay-dust -to get -the people to ii itire about bim adgaik him up." A negro woman in Barhwell, 8.( k-given -birth to twins, a boy ar girl, who na connected by gament of 6esh.- The girl is we taped and health,y, but-tihe boy ovoid of-hands atid feot, said.:h Lee is a..umbIa of tansiElntly feature -RIval haokmen at 'ulagava...al ow Issue ehromoasto passeng6e'r-afts emanner.of religious newspaper NEW. An ,Wa'UB RNTi. 1pipria'aselln to E*v'ryiijlly buys It. Sold'by A gentlg. AdOress G. S. 61ker, Erie, P&. 'OOK AGEN'S .itUik to sell "The peoploe Utipo qrsp Aletdloal lviser," by R. Pre, W.D.j She at ready sellin g book out.. Exclusite ritory and liberal tertus Addrei the.4 Iliorat utffalo, N. Y. ACENTOAl IR tr andhonor & !ab no "4Ifagoicirular & n4 Valutble %3amiles Free. D)onot s bu onoo on potal EM.RED, txT., vw Toms. GIERTS Wattd. The Centen nial Uazetter of the United States. owe the grand restit of 100 years of oodom & Progress. New and oo aldete. er-1000 pages. Illustrated. everybody ym itan I agents make from $f00 to 00 a month. Address J. 0-. MoCULDY NI. Pubs. Philadelphia Pa. IMON.- Xotilo.-The0ge[nuint! e4itioi IFE, AND L A B OR 8 OF I'V~I]MTG-STO] Lq . aliding the "Lnst. Jonitl:.,") ulffunbis idly h1l1: 80 years trange advuniureF, :o the curiosities, wonders and wed -It that III rvelous country, and i- i bso. ely the onl new, completo wark. nce it sells ;. .tist think, 12.000 irst 7 uks Agents' success wonic1 d astoniisl t!. more wantod. 8uiid for Terms and SItive i'rouoof getiuineness 'BIM B l ttt:., ,Pu bs., 7 2?, Sa aso m , Phil. RINITY COLLEGE, N, C. SESSION (OmbiElc ms P.i' 2 1875. 1IULL Faoulty: elegant buildings superior board and accommodations: ation iear lligh Point in the N. C. Ilroal, very healthy. A receipt in full ail expenses, ex cept. books and clot i. for five months. wil ho given for$90. I givenl to young HinI of linittd Inelms, ?,nst Oflice ,Trinity Crllege, N. C." g 3 13. (A RAITEN; Pres. 410 to $500 invested in Wall St., en11 leads to fort-Ine. A 72 pago book )lining everythiiag. and copy of tha 3ll street Review. Sent free. .1lHN CKLINU & CO., llankers and Brokers l1roadway New York. COUGHlS, 039 HOARlSENESS LND ALl, I'llRtOAT D1SEAEES, W..T.4jW U3 Afells' Carbolic Tablets PUT UP ONLY IN B,U B IXEs. Th111D AND SURE REMEDY. ;old hy Druggisa generally, aod inston Holloway & Co., Philadelphia herever it Hi B ieen Tried U R U B E B A, s established itself as a perfect regutar I sure remte ly for disorders of the tem arising from improper nolion of Liver and Bowels. t is not. a Physio. but., by stitulating secretive organs, gently and gradual. remoies nll 'nipurities, and regulates entirn system. [Lis riot a Doctored Bitters. but is a VEGETABLE TONIC. lich assists digest ion, and thust stion. es the appet ite for food necessary to in ;orale tIe weakenc.1 or inactive organ, I gi.ves strength to nill the vital forces. It carries its own reconimeiatiion, as e largo and rapidly increasing stles tify. Price one doiar a ottie. Ask itar druigist for it. Johanston ilollo way o. _Philadelphia Pa. JUST RECEiVED FRESIH SUPPLY OF' SHELF? W.tOCEIiES. '10NSISTI.NCI of Deviled 11am, Tnrkcey / and Tongue, Bloiden's Rohnstt Beef 1 lb catis. Fre'sh ialmnt, and' l.obisters, Ked , Piokles anid Frentch Alnatard. A ge lot otf French Blacking or the fino.et tlity. -Fresh 'andiiy tnnd Crackers otf all ta. Fresh Auigista Meal nrd Flour rays on 'hnnd. Also a large supply of 17cEwans Ala, Irat 'Uingpr.Ale, etad London Piorter, Kept Cons8tanhtly on Im. WM.. D)ONLY. tine 2'd *UST'Roceived, a-supply of Turrip seed of approved Varieties. While Leadl. 8nn.'l Paper, Alixed P aintts, he, Drugs, Medicines, llooks, Paler, ltilk, L., &0. M'cMASTrER.& BiGE. july 17 Jiudk FKye Boo-*iv .y tnd MVoth Trap. N1ONNNOR-OldWiEU & C0.,pror'e .i 'tors for tie coiluttiesof Pa'itIeld nn e ffr 'EREfl4D iIImhts to mtatke use thie samet ..with sample hive for i6.00. Apply at once and be ready to uSetheo fitst swart'es, matr 10 Wiii.ae 1 E Grateftil Thousands proclaim VtbrN F.GAR 111tS the st wond6rful In vigorant 0bptI ever, sustained .hO sinking system. No Person can take these Bitters according p. dircotions and T'emain long unwell, prqvjjed their bones are not do stroye'd by - mineral poison or other meansy and! vital organs wasted beyond .ro air.I. 11110ons, Remittent and Intor nittent Ievers, which are so prova. lent in the valleys of our groat rivers throughogt the United States, especially thoso.of tto Mississippi, Ohio,,Missouri, 1llinois, 'lennesseo, Cunborland, Arkaa sA8, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grando, Pearl, Alabana, Mobile, Savannah, Ro 111oke, James, and iany'others, wit,h their vast tributaries, throughout our entiro country during the Summer and Autuun, and remarkably so during sea-. sons of unusual heat and dryne.s, are invariably accompanied by extensive do. rangemtents of the stoluacli and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatinnt, a purgative, exerting a pow orful influence upon these various or ganls, is cssentially necessary. Thore is no cathartio for the purpose equal to Dn. . WALxIn's VIN9GAR BI'.rBitS, as they will 'speedily ronovo the dark. colored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time. sti ntIlat.ing the secretiois of the liver, and generally restoring the hoathy functions of the digestivo organs. Fortify the bo(ly against disease by purifying all its fluls with VoNGan BITEns. No opidemic can tako hold of a system thus 1oro-armed. Dysp>opsia or Indigestion, Head Rche, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Ernctations of the Stomach Bad Taste in the Aouth, Bilious Attacks. Palpila. tation of the Heart, Inflammation of tho Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kid. nioys, and a hundried other painful symp - tomis are the oThprings of Dyspepsia. One bottio will provo a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise Went. Scrofula, or King's Evil, Whto Swollings, Ulcors, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitro, Scriofulous InlammationS, Indolent Inflammations,' Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of tho Skin, Sore Eyes, oto, In these, as in all other constitutional Dis. MOs0s, WAr,EM'S VINHOAn BITT1-s have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractalAu cdses. For Inflammatory and Chronic R1Ieunatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit. tent and I1terlittent Fcvrers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseasen are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical D [iseases.-Persons mn raged in Paints nnd Alinerals, such n# P'lumbers, Typo-setters, Gold-boaters, and imers, a.4 they advanco in life, aro subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard ltgainst this. take a doSe of WALKER'S YN 11GA R 11TTIaS occlsionially.. For SUR il Dliseases, Eruptions, Tib r, Saltheun, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, 'litules, Bo ils, Calbunclcs, Ring-worms, Sealzd- head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itclh, Sculfs, Discolorations of Ltho Skin, H[umanrs simd Disenses of the Skini of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up .and carrded out of the system in a short timne by the 't.e of these Bitters. Pi,k 'Iape, and othler Wornis, lurking in the systemt of so many thousanda.. sre eflectually destroyed and remnoved. Nlo systen ,of mnedicine, 1n0 vernluges, n1o ant.. tholeinmties will free the system from wormis like thgo lBitters. For Female Complaints, in young or old1, married or single, at tihe dawn of wo manhood, or the turn of life, those Tonlo Bitters display so decided an iniflenc .that Improvement is so0on percoptiblo. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when over you find its impurities bursting th rongh the skin in Pimples, lIruptions, or Sores; eleanse it. whlen you find it obstructed and sluggish ini the v'eims; cleanse-it when -it is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keop tho blood pure, and the health of the atein will follow. It. II. McDONALDl s Co., D)ruggtms uand Genoa. A gts., Sanu Francisco, Califorula andl cr. Elf W~'nshington, atnd (Charltonj tEl., l'. Y. Sold by ali D1Jruggist s and Dealers., Paekages.of NEW\V MACKOELE in IBarrels, half and riurter Bar rels, Kit. 1, 2, 3, anid extrau nun.' -ber i1, M S. 323 S.ks of' fresh,.grotrn,d Fl~L:3Ull, nll siw.es and grades from the Granite Mills Augusta Ga. ALSO, A full stock of G rocerleS, Vr ovisiont and1( *ilantation Sup pl ies. ail of wVhIi(h will 1)0 sold at thl losvd~st prices for CASH. oct 29 l3EATt" llRO & SON. A Fresh Supply of T1lIE following viarietios of Turnip .i.~ Beed just arrived arnd for sale at Early 'ined ''Fo St Leaved, rhmrly White, YF$t Strap Leaved, Galngs Itniproveil 1luta; lBaga, Large Y'ellow Globe, Large White Globe, E~arly .Cowbmorn, Yellow Aberdeen and GJolden Bal, idlu 16