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/ i TWO DOLLARS PEK ANNUM. } GOD OUR COUNTRY. VOLUME VI SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 15. 1878. ALWAYS IN ADVANCE NUMBER. 1s GIN GEARING SH AI TING AND BOLTS * CHEAPER THAN EVER BEFORE AT THE FOREST CITY [FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS, |GEO. R. LOMBARD & CO., AUGUSTA, GA. ENGINES, COTTON SCREWS, MILL GEARING And Machinery off Kinds Made and Re paired. oct 27 12?0 5*2 MARRIED No. 12 N. Eighth St. St- Louis, Mo. VTh? has had (prater cxpcrlenc* In the treatment of thf ?exual trotrblca of both male and female than unv pliytiehn in tha Wait, kit. ? tha muln of hi. loujr ana aurcruful yracttc* In hU Iwaaaw work., juit ptibllahcd, entitled The PHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIAGE TnoFrciY?lE MEDICAL ADVISER xSooki that are- really flaldra aad BrlMmtrurfor. in oil mnt Wra pertaining to Manhood and fYani*n!ni??l. and mpply Traut long fell. They are beaaUfatlj lllu.irairit. and in p!c.ln latjmjr, ea.lly undrratood. The two hook, nnlmrr ..(?? B*n*i and containvalsaMa Inrnratnllna fur both married and eis:!*, with all tl>? recent Improvement, in mctliealtrrnfiiii-nt Head what our homepaper? lay i'The knowh 'dgc imparted In Or. tin tu' new worka !? In mi way of qiiCftlunablc char acter, but If aomethinR thai e.eryatie thonlil kjuw. Tte Tcaiti. the ylrtim of early lnd|.crrtiont the lUn.othcrwlM parfrally healthy maybe .but with vaniiicvigiir Inthepri ?of lift, ami Iba ?umat, in uil?erv{P**J*f|TnP~VTi" ifrom tha many ilia her $cx la heir lo."?St. l^iula Journal. rorLi.in rfttr.KM ? 00 eta. errh; *?lh in one volume, (1; in cloth and flit. *4 cti. extra. Sent under teal, OD *ee*Ipt of prlca in money or ihunpa. npr'l 27 TO RENT. That lftrpe mid com modi nun Hriek Ptori formerly occupktl hy Mr. i'. lt. Jone Eor terms r.ppfv to MRS, M. E. MONA MARA* anq 11 if. nnd Mornhlno hnMt rnrr.l. Th-Orlclni-.l-n"'' afcartsia t:i;i.L i. 4 .n.t,i. r.-r t?ok aa Oiiliiai I"? 11n; i . ? it Hi|iiltr, tovftUBgt. a. Qrceuu i u.. lud. apr'l '27 T?TT?.PILLS A Noted Divine says They are worth their ? weight Ith gold. | READ WHAT HE SAYS: Dju Tutt:?Dear Sir: For ten years I have been ?mntyr to Drspepsl*,Constipation, and Piles. Last earing ycur puts were recommended to me ; I used them (Cot ivith little faith). I am now a well man, have good appetite, digestion perfect, regular stools, piles gone, and I have gained forty pounds solid flesh. They are worth their weight in gold. Rkv. R. L. SIMPSON, Louisville, Ky. Dr. Tutt has been en gaged In the practice of medicine thirty years, and for a lone; lime was demon, strator of anatomy in the Medical College of Geor gia, hence persons using is Pills have Uic guaran tee that they are prepared on scientific principles, and are free from all quackery. He has sncceeded in combining in them the heretofore antagonis?c qualities of a ttrtngtht*. tng,purgativt%anda pur. ijytngtcnic. Their first apparent ef fect is to increase tho ap petite by causing the food to properly assimilate. Thus the system is nour> ished, and by their tonic action on the digestive or gans, regular and healthy evacuations arc produced. The rapidity with which ptrtons take oh flesh, while under the influence of these pills, ol itself in dicates their adaptability to nourish the body, and hence their efficacy Incur, ing nervous debility,mel ancholy, dyspepsia, wast ing of die muscles, slug ? gishness of the liver. I chronio constipation, and imparting health and strength to the system. Sold everywhere. Office, 35 Murray Street, New York. tutts pills CUBB Ol CK HEAD ACHE. TUTfSPILLS CUBE DYSPEPSIA. TUTPSPILLS CUBB CONOTIP AT 10N TUTPSPILLS CURE PIT.P.8. TUTPSPILLS CUBE PEVEE AND ague. tuttTpills CUBB BILIOUS COLIC tittpspills CUBE KTDKB7 COU ^ PLAINT. tutt's pills OUEE TOBPID UCVEB TttlUMPH OF SCIENCE.'1 Gray Hair can be changed to a glossy black by a single application of Dr.TilTT's Hair Dye. It acts like magic, and la warranted as harmless as water. Price $1 joo. Office 35 Murray St., N. Y. What is Queen's Delight? "Road the Answer It is a plant that grows In the South, and is spe cially adnpted to the cure of diseases of that climate. NATURE'S OWN REMEDY * t Entering at once into the blood, expelling all scrof ulous, syphilitic, and rheumatic aflccUons. Alone, it it a searching alterative, but when combined with Sarsaparilla, Yellow Dock, and other herbs, it forms Sr. Tntt's Sarsaparilla and Queen's Delight, 4 The most powerful blood purifier known to medical science for the cure of old ulcers, diseased joints, foul discharges from the ears and nostrils, abscesses, skin diseases, dropsy, kidney complaint, evil effects of secret practices, disordered liver and spleen. Its use strengthens the nervous system, imparts a fair com plexion, and builds up the body with . ? HEALTHY, SOLID FLESH. As an antidote to syphilitic poison it is strongty recommended. Hundreds of cases of the worst type have been radically cured by it. Being purely veg etable its continued use will do no harm. The best time to take it is during tho summer and fall; and instead of debility, headache, fever and ague, you will enjoy robust health. 0 Sold by all druggists. Price, li.co. Office, 35 Murray Street, New York. ft! ay (> 1877 ly C lii?l<a-c Break fust Strip*. R?ld low dowiibv A. Id SUIK li. Bline Disaster. A fearful explosion occurred lust we?k in the Evaus Wood Pit Colli ery at Hay dock, England. Tno number of persons in the pit is e?ti nu.ted at 250; ten of whom were rescued nlivc and seilt to the surface when one of the number died; eight arc supposed to be still alive below, having taken refuge in a working of the Mine; and 232 are dead. Of the-e bodies ninny are headless, and Shapeless masses while others are blown to pieces. Tho mouth of tlie pit is thronged by a crowd of anxious nun, woman and children, relations and friends of the Miners. The cause of the explosion is yet unknown European Congress. The meeting of this body, to lis eiiss the matters contained in the St.. Stephann treaty, is at. last divil-d upon. All the leading power- will | participate on ihn basis airea iy au- 1 mm need in this paper. Fran:: ?iii I consented t-t put in ai app.Mr.iu c \ provided tbe discuvu.iu.-ho eonii.i ;.l '? to the questions raised by the war. i It is asserted by MiiiU;.er Wad i in ** i urn, ami unanimously appriv :?! by > the Chamber, that ibe uiaintenau ee of ' the puiee of Europe is ceitain. Tbc Servians are making ever y efiort. to id)tain admission to tha Con gross, but, as yet, without success. Trickery. Senator K Imuuds, of Verm nit, ; ?eoks to ingraft, upon the'i;>;>rop-.*i ? lion itiil an aiueiidineutproviding thai, if Potter's Comaiitt^e revive 20,000 dollars expenses, an equal sjm -hail be set aside for the use of any investigation tho Senate may see fit to make. This indicates a detenu ina M il nil the (mit ot the Republicans t? carry on a co inter investigation. The !i:ai, or 1'oUei'*s to bo gospel for tbe Domoenits; Cbe'weoud, or Fdmunds to be gospel for thu It '.public.in-, bus seeking to destroy by a mere rick an hotlC.it search after truth , and what good will it do the country. It is a pity consulships could not be provided for some of our st'itusuien in His Sntamic majesty's (lomiuiott. Socialism. Tbe young'i brother of Dr. Nobel- j ?ctl, who altciuptcd t? murder the | ICmpcror ol Germany, is arrested. Many arrests have already been | made and othirs will be, of those who are supposed to be connected with iiim, or in some way accessory to the fact s. It is creditably stated that the I Criminal C ourl of Berlin has receiv- j ed letters notifying it, that all tho j sovereigns wPI be assassinattd i! any j harsh treatment befalls Nnb.-lgen. fliis has caused the ??ervousnuss of Prince Bismarck to increase su much that it will necessary to appoint a colleague. The Kin pi ror's condition is improving slowly. The Secretary of tin* United States Semite has been summoned to appoa r before the Potter investigating Com mittee to produce the Louisiana elec tion returns. Alter Mime discussion that august body d? cided to instruct the Secretary to appear with tho papers and to submit them, from ' nie to time, for examination according o (he convenience of the Committee, ft j appears that two sets ot returns .vet-i made; the f rst was irregular because the returns for President find Vice President were grouped, but sigued ; properly; tbe second was in legal form but the name of Judge Levize y is forged in nine places. Tbe State Denial Association met in Colambia on Thursday last. Ac tion was taken in the mutter of prac titioners of dentistry who are now following the profession con trary to law; also a resolution was passed to publish in pamphlet form the early history of dentistry in this Stat s (iov. Hampton returned from bis J trip to "Washington on the 7th I instant. The Old Subscriber. The following o'er true, title copied from n Western exchange, is a very pathetic history of the man who don't tako a paper. We publish forth) benefit of others of bis cla?s : He came wearily up the sanetuui steps yesterday afternoon, mid turn ing the waste basket upside down sat I down upon it with a .sigh that might I have born cut up into tornadoes -nd whirlwinds enough to go around half a dozen agricultural counties. He had a weary look abgilt him ns .hough he hud been trying to die and could n't find a doctor; His coat was rag ged and patched here and there with, prosp rous and clannish communities of cockle burs. His boots, water proof variety, were so arranged that if you stuck them in the river ?he water would run out faster than it would run in. We a?ko i how be fared and he glanced savagely at a I Kansas paper among our exchanges, \ before be answered sadly : "Well, pretty niii'rablv; thank ve. j Ye i*eo, times conn- pretty b ird, and r it was pretty bard s e-lio' l ? g*t along. ; I either just ha I to sell six lo^s, or cut down expenses in some other '< way. and so I Slopped tbe paper. I : missed it powerful bad the first few ! weeks, then I k?nd <>' >^ot used to it. Borrowed it once an* a while here und there, but folks didn't appear to like to lend their papers, and so I finally lost wight of it altogether. Theu trouble begu n right off. The first thing I knew, I was arrested and fined $20 for violating the game law. See, the thing has been changed a little, and I didn't kn ow nothing nbout it, hut the judge said as how ignorance wasn't no excuse in these days when the State was so full of papers that you couldn't fir;? a stone out ol the window without hitting an editor. Then in a week 1 whs arrest, eil und fined S2C for violating*"!lie fishery law, and when I begged off*] and said 1 didn't know uotliin' about I it, the judge asked where I was raised nnd remitted $2 of the fine for in: to take a paper with. But I kinder thought I couldn't get in any more scrapes, au' I sorter hung on to the two dollars. In about three days after, I wa.s took up ami fined Sla id costs for bun tin' on Sunday; and I h pe I may die it I k no wed it was Sunday; an* I had to sell the gun to get out of the jug Then a fellow come along and bought every grain of corn I had in the crib for sixty cents less than I found next day it was worth in the market; and I 1? st two of the best cows you ever saw, and they was took and advertised, and all the lime I was buutitt' all over the whole country for'em an' when I found 'em at last, the costs was more'u t';e cows was worth. Tue j taxes come due an' I bad big costs to I pay before I k no wed a word about it, an' every week since 1 stopped the paper I've paid out more money to keep out of trouble than would keep me in newspapers aU my days, t'ut my name on the list." A California paper describes ''the j latest thing out" as a new horse shoe ! made out of three thick:) s-'js of ra w .bide compressed tdget.ieY by heavy pressure. It is said to last longer, weighs ?ii-v' on ??four, i n mich as ;he com hi :. ??.(?? in . .-r -pin- the hoof) and i- ii . nh ? itiiluo?c ..i i.he toot 1 .- . v ; . s ., s:o:? i.'i neve? viii ? i fui ?vio remind iuntie - who ? ??? attiearid horses across ibcpuiiu.- in early days, of the fact, u > \ iihiiosl lorg ?neu, that th<s no new in vent i<ui, or ihn cattle, and hnisos, ton, wer ? ofieu | shod with shoes made out of buffalo hide, cut from ti?e neck, where, the i-kin is almost an inch thick. ? kriti inn Union. Tho Ohio Medic I College id'Cin ciutiati lias got in > jor-ip mean \ ?I the finding of tbe body ?i Hon. I S. Harrison, son of ex President liar rison, in its dissecting rooms immm mm, \ Noah's clock went on the first j Ark-tic expedition. Comedies of the Courts. "Take, off yonrCoat, Uilibs"?Frcdi from tho Limestone Kegion. (BEFORE JUSTICE BIXBY.) Judge?Where did you find this colored man, officer ? Officer?I found him last night .linnging around Devlin tfcCo.'s cloth ing store. Mr. Devlin hai hrul a good deal of c'othiug stolen lately and I brought this man in on suspicion. Judge?What is your name, pris oner ? Prisoner?Napoleon Bonaparte. Gihbs. Judge?What id your occupation ? Gihbs?I'se traveling agent lor de new patent white wash brudi. sab. Judge?Take off your coat, Gihbs. Gihbs?I hope you '.souse mo sab. Use been troubled lately wid the 'fluency in de bead, du'zuntic,sah. I'se verv bud. Judge?Take ofF your coat, Gihbs. (Gihbs takes off his coat slowly.) Judge?Ah ! Another coat under that; no'hing like being well wrapped up, as they say in Alaska when they go a skating Take off* your coat, Gihbs. Gibb??I isen't well, I isetl't sah, De doctor say, Napoleon, you wear plenty clothe--. . Do 'fluency, sah. (.Takes off his coat.) Judge?Ah ! What have we hero? A swallow tail! Take off your coat, Gibbs. Gihbs?Dis yere won't do, Judge. I'se got a stiffness in de borax, I'se very bad. (Takes off his coat.") Judge?Ah ! A double breasted frock ! Take oft* your coat,Gihbs. Gihbs?Dare gwine to he a funeral here, dar ts, sah; I feels the stuffness rising in de borax, ( fakes oft* bis coat.) Judge?What's this? A shooting '^ri'"'?. &3 I b -? ? Mtj.of NimroJ! Take off you coat, Gihbs. Gibbs? I'se gwinc for a (corpus? I'se getting cold. Dis yere is murder in de first degree. (.Takes oft* bis coat.) Judge?A Hncn duster. I think I've got yon down to bard pan, Gibbs. I sbull commit you without bail. Take him down gently, dficer, for he is a lily?a 1 i 13 of the valley. He toils not, neither does ho spin; yet Solomon, in all bis glory, was not chit hod like him. "Next!" called his honor, and a loan, hatched faced specimen of the rural districts, with a green cotton umbrella under his arm, stepped up the railing and inclined his car to wn ids 1 he judge. Judge?What is your name? Prisoner?It was the water, judgo. You see I have always lived in a limestone region ? Judge?What is your name? (In alto.) Prisoner- Yes, judge, I came down last night from ttouudout to sell my teasels? J idge - What is your name? (In alt 1 and robusto^) Prisoner?1 am sure, judge, it was the water. 1 have aiwavs lived in a limes tune? J ti lge?My-! ibis man is deaf us an adder Bute a Inde in his ear, officer, ami u.-k him his name. Officer? lie uses au ear trumpet, ; your honor. I Judge- - ^Veil, then sound a caval* i iy charge 'brough it and find out his j name. j Officer (through ear trumpet)? What is your name? Prisoner--Israel Pudger. I've ein troubled fur the lift twenty I year.-, jud-e, k\iin p.tHUinonia; meas les, in iik sickness and worms. I use ! cider Im' the pneumonia, lu in bn go, whisky fur (he 1 iimbago, gin tansey for the measles, Btone fence and for j the in dk-sickness, und I feed tho worms'on rum and molasses. But it was the. water that dono it, judge; the limestone region ; Juilge--Ollicer, :ell him I shall dis charge him this time, and tell hiiu to 1 reitirn to the limestone region and j a void the sea coast as he would a 1 creditor. I How She Managed It. Mr. Marooney is foreman in a foundry, and gets $30 aweok. With this salary the family ought to got along well and save money,but they do not. Mr. Marooney has a cousin, a shoemaker, who gets only $15 a week, yet who sails right along in lightning express, while Marooney cum es logging along in a freight with a hat-box. "How do you manage it, Jack ?" he would frequently ask, "to get along the way yuu do? Here you actually keep your family and sav e money on 815 a week, whilo it takes every cent I make to live, and I get double the pay I" "Oh, 1 don't manage it at all," says Jack; "I jur-t take my money home to the old woman on Saturday night, and she takes 85 to run the house with, aud puts the rest carefully away I" "Do you give her all the money ?'? usks Mr. Mnroonoy, musing. "Oh, no, not quite; I keep out a little for tobacco during the week, and a trifle to keep me from feeling loncorae. If I kept it all in my pocket I would spend it sure, but Mary keep- it tight and aafe." Mr. Marooney talked it over with his wife that night, and thty conclud ed to try Jack's plan. The following Suturday night he brought home his 8.10, and keeping back one, put the rest iu her keeping, and she promised to do her level beat to set the table on but 85. The first week she squeez ed through somehow, and got along with $6 50. Mr. Marooney was quite pleased, aud began laying awake at night thinking about what kind of a house he would build. He thought a plain rustic cottage with a bay win dow would be about right. The next week her expense account footed up $5.80, aud Mr. Marooney changed his desigu lor a future residence from frame to brick, 'i he next week she - brought it down thirty cents more, aud he added a wing, with a wash house. Then she made a superhuman struggle, quit buying milk, ami came within two shillings of the goal for which she h id been striring. Mr. Marooney decided on an iron fence in front of his premises. The next week she lost ground, slipped, and cam e out at the $6 post. Mr Marooney thought a neat railiug fence was good enough for anybody, but when the ensuing week she came in with Hying colors, and struck the $5 mark in both eyes, Mr. Marooney had tho iron railing reinstated, and granite steps running up to the door. The next week she took the money ?he had saved, and went aud bought her a 1 ?ve of a hat, too cute for any thing, a black silk dress, and a cher ub of a cloak, that made the woman next door cry with envy till her nose got sore, aud Mr. Marooney camo to the conclusion that it didn't pay to live iu one's own property, keeping up repairs, iusurauce, etc., and tho worry and stew iu dread of fire and earthquakes more than counterbal anced any trifling disadvantage there might be.?Pittsburgh Gazt tte The Tribune's uew printing-press is one of the most interesting ob jects to he seen in New York City. In a small compact space stands a machine that draws a wide strip of paper from a continuous roll, prints two copies at a time on both sides, gathers and folds the sheets ready for mailing, and drops them out at the rate of four to five iu each second, or 15,000 an hour! AH this is done by the machine itself, without the interven tion of human hands, except to turn on or shut off steam with a lever. Any oue happening in the city in the ear ly forenoon of any Wednesdav should drop in at the Tribune building aud see the press in operation. ?->. o . mm Eighteen cubic feet of gravi 1 in earth before digging make twenty seven cubic feet when dug. Tbe effect of soap and honey upon a bee sting is marvelous. It will make a fellow feel glad he was stung. Family Worth. Hardly anything i* more contemp tilde in n young mau Lhaii a claim to personal superiority on the strength of his parentage <>r his family connec tions. It is practically an admission, to begin with, that be ha.s no special merit or ability, and therefore ho call* attention t<> tho worth and piominencc of those with whom he is connected by the incident of birth. His claim is not likely to be recog nized by those who*-! oj ininti is. most valuable; and, as be has nothing else to put forward to them, he fails en tirely to receive their confidence. Good family is a thing to he grateful for. It has its advantages. But it never makes a wise man of a fool, nor does i; transform a bore into a pleasant companion. Its value is in addition to desirable traits of charac ter and praiseworthy methods of con duct; never in substitution for them. Tl.- .-.i . :.__,!,_ _ iliu > uUltg m.in ?lim I9H u"iun l?? preset)talivu of a good family will show it by being a man independ ently. J!e will place no reliance for bis own standing on the niuinmcufci or the character of his ancestors. Ami a young man who is thus Worthy is even all the more notable if, like Napoleon, iie begins his family in stead of finishing it up. Indeed, the important question to every young man about his family is, "Have tuy parents and relatives reason tobe proud of me?" not "Have I reason to be proud of my family and rela tives?'' Any young man has cause for shame?never for pride?if his relatives are more worthy than hois. Aull Dog Tax Man. "1 won't doit!' and he put down h>s number 11 broguu with rcsouaut emphasis. "I'm a po' man. It's much as I can do to -grt-Har.g-VpporttrrX??^, Luke, .lohn, Bill, Mary , an" de twins, but if yer's gwinc to lav a lax on Ring, Ranger, Snip, an' lloltight, as good dogs as ever -link a varmint, den it ain't w uth while for a po'man like me to i ry to gil "long." "1 tell yer, 1 won't do it !" said tho t 'ouctnc man. "Bui," tliu granger pleaded, "if you sign this petition you can raise sheep to cat, get wool to clothe your children, and he thrifty. YourdugS eat more than I he sheep would, and besides suck ail your eggs and kill your neighbor's sheep." "U?h,?U-h! Mighty putty talk, but '(ain't no go. I'll eat dirt, go naked, th ink at de branch, die po' ami go to h ? 1 'fore I'll vote for a dog man, or sign dat paper" Then he swapped feet, run his ! and* in his pocket ami looked after the gruug?r.? Varboro Southerner. .lames Red path, general manager of the Edison speaking phonograph exhibition*, -tat^s that Mr. Edison has just completed ami tested an in vontion for measuring heat?an in strument so sensitive that the heat of rays from the most distant stars can be accurately ascertained by it. Ho estimates tint it would require a Fahrenheit thermometer fifteen miles in height to record the samo range of degrees of beat. Ho has been en gaged on this instrument for a long time, anil regards it as his most diffi cult achievement.?N. V. Tribune. Packard, a widower, in Milton, Yt , has just been publicly horse whipped by one woman and sued by another fur $10.000. Both chargo him with breach of promise tomarrj. One was Fiance May,a dressmaker, w hom ho courted for several years, anil the other was Mary Hormon, ono of Fanny's em ploy or, who became her successful rival, only to bo jilted herself. The whip was used by Mary. When a man ?lies, they w ho survive bim ask what property he has left be hind. The angel who bends over the dying man asks what good dcods he ha* sent before him. A fashion writer says: Patched trousers will be inu-b worn this season.