7 (fjlhafrram jjwtori THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1881 H. A. LONDON, Jr., Editor. MATTHEWS CONFIRMED. The United States Senate by a bare majority of one vote have confirmed the appointment of Stanley Matthews aa a Justice of the Supreme Court, which action is very generally con demned both by Republicans and Democrats. Hayes had attempted to appoint Matthews to this high office, but the Senate would not con firm him, but Garfield has at last succeeded in thus disgracing our highest Judicial tribunal. We sin cerely hope that our North Carolina Senators did not consent. CONKLING'S RESIGNATION. We say "Conkling's resignation" because although his colleague, Sena tor Piatt, has also resigned, yet, as he is so completely a tool of Conkling, whatever lie does is the act of Conk ling. The greatest political sensa tion that has been known for many years is occasioned by the resigna tion, on last Monday, of the two New York Senators. In doing this they have acted like spoiled children piqued by some petty disappointment, and not like men who are fit to occupy such exalted positions. They have resigned because the President has appointed, and the Senate will con firm, Mr. Robertson as Collector of the port of New York in opposition to their wishes. They will of course be re-elected by the New York Legis lature, for that body belongs to Conkling, and they will fctand before the world as endorsed by their party in the largest State in the Union, and an endorsement of them will be a condemnation of Garfield. Well, it is none of our fight, we take no fcide, but calmly look on feel ing somewhat like the old man who seeing a dog fight remarked, "it's dog eating dog." IIQOUR DEALERS' ADDRESS. Last week we published the ad dress issued by the Prohibition State Convention, and we now publish the address issued by the Liquor Dealers' Association, and which is being cir culated throughout the State : 'To the VoTEtts or North Carolina : The General Assembly, of North Carolina, at its late eession having passed a bill prohibiting the manu facture vr 6ale of intoxicating liquoia in North Carolina, provided that said bill be ratifit d by the voters of North Ceiolinaat the polls at an election to beheld in this State in August, 1881, at which election the ticket to be voted will read for or against pro hibition. Now, therefore, in the interest of our good old State, we urge the vo ters thereof to vote solidly against the so-called Prohibition Bill for the following reasons: . 1st. It does not prohibit the sale of Liquor in North Carolina, but leaves the sale of Liquor exclusive ly in the hands of druggists, thus building up a monopoly that the vo ters of this State should never sub mit to, particularly as North Caro lina is Ihuc deprived of a very large proportion of her revenue, which if not paid on liquor, will certainly be levied on real estate and on other branches of business. 2d. While it does not prohibit the sale of liquor in North Carolina, it does prohibit the manufacture ; thus placing thousands of the thrifty, hard-woiking farmers n "Western North Carolina in a most deplorable position. Far from railroad connec tion, in a mountainous section of the country, they have been accustomed to reduce their products to the small est possible bulk for transportation by "mule teams," over almost impas sable roads to the nearest market ; hence their corn nd rye has been manufactured into whiskey, their peaches and apples into brandy. In some western counties we are in formed, there are as many as forty distilleries; these distilleries employ many laborers ; they pay a large revenue to the State. The whiskies and brandies of North Carolina are shipped all over the world and com mand the best of prices. Are you prepared to say to these Western farmers you shall not manufacture your corn, rye, peaches or apples in to whiskey and brandy that you can convey to a market and sell? Not only you shall not do that which im mediately deprives you of all source ol income, compels you to discharge your laborers, renders your farming lands of far less value. But by rea son of the State's being deprived of the tax formerly levied on whiskey, you shall be subjected to an increase of taxation. The druggists shall sell all intoxicating liquors. Our own farmers shall be stabbed in the back, and all liquors sold by the aforesaid drugg,8ts shall be manufactured out side of the State. Our farmers shall suffer their lands to be depreciated, their laborers discharged ; we will strike a blow at our own home in dustries, and help on the manufac tories of Virginia. 3d. The funds derived from the manufacture and sale of liquors go to the common school fund; but then we have more schools now than ne cessary; eo say some; let that money be taken from the children, taken iroru the teacher, taken from the parents and close the schoolhouse coor or lay another special tax for school purposes. Are you prepared todothat? ve trust not. I an fhfl State do without the revenue derived from the sale of li quor? -- .1. jte i f f TITaII toVioti nnr in rati a aovlnmfl. penitentiary, railroads and other pub lic works are completed and we are able to pay promptly the interest on our State deoc, or pernaps reuuuo the same, then the State may dis pense with the revenue on liquors, but not until then. Many of the ablest lawyers in the State pronounce this bill as submit ted to the people unconstitutional in that the General Assembly is dele gating its authority to the people, which is certainly unconstitutional, and in the event that the bill is rati fied by the people, it would only end in litigation all over North Carolina, while the object would not be attain ed, therefore let us vote dewn this unjust discriminating bill, and when the proper time ehall have arrived, give us straight-out prohibition, no evasion ! No drug store monopolies I No class legislation ! Issued by the Liquor Dealers' As sociation." We cannot refrain from comment ing somewhat upon the above ad dress. In the first place we note that the alleged motive that influenc ed the liquor dealers in issuing the address is "in the interest of our good old State." Of course no such mo tive as self-interest prompted these patriotic persons ! Of course they do not oppose prohibition because it will close their bar-rooms and put an end to their business ! Oh no ! Let us briefly consider the reasons given by them why "the voters should vote solidly against the so-called Pro hibition Bill." 1st. Because the bill "leaver the sale of liquors exclusively in the hands of druggists." The Legisla ture very properly thought that as druggists sold other poisons they might also sell liquor under certain restrictions : or, if persons required liquor as a medicine, they might buy it from a druggist upon the prescrip tion of a physician. We hardly think that any prohibitionist will vote against the bill for that reason, for he will bear in mind that at least all the bar rooms will be closed: and this should not influence an anti-prohibitionist, for rather than aUow diug gists to sell liquor the address says "give us straight-out prohibition." That is, these liquor dealers say that unless they can sell liquor they op pose anybody else selling it, even druggists selling it as a medicine in cases of sickness. Surely such self ishness is not becoming in such pa triots whose only motive is "in the interest of our good old State !" 2nd. Their next reason is that by the adoption of the prohibitory law " our farmers shall suffer, then lands be depreciated, their laborers dis charged, &c." This idea is as novel as it is ridiculous. How absurd to say, that our farmers will suffer, their lands will be depreciated and their laborers will be discharged if the manufacture and sale of liquor is pro hibited! "Whoever before has thought that the agricultural interests of our State were dependent upon the manu facture and sale of liquor 1 And yet this is gravely urged as a reason for voting against the prohibitory law. On the contrary, do we not all know that our farmers do suffer, that their lands are depreciated, and their la borers often discharged because of the small groggeries that are scatter ed throughout the country, and to which the farm hands go every Satur day and spend their week's wages in mean whiskey ? Experience has proven that nothing is so demoraliz mg to the labor of any neighborhood as the opening of a bar-room. 3d. The third reason is that with out the liquor tax the common schools will be closed. To show the absurdi ty and untruthfulness of this we will state that, according to the last official report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction of North Caro lina, the total receipts for the com mon school fund for the past year were $523,555.22, and of this amount only the sum of $36,427.04 was re eeived from liquor licenses. And yet we are gravely told by these liquor dealera that the removal of this tax will "close the schoolhouse door." We hope the friends of prohibition will remember these figures of our Superintendent of Public Instruction whenever their opponents make this ridiculous assertion. And also, when this assertion is made, it would be well to remember that Gov. Jarvis in his speech at the State Prohibition Convention said: "My observation leads me to Vnnw and assert that for every dollar re ceived as taxes from the sal nf li" ten dollars aro out of the purse.' So that the objections urged br the liquor dealero against prohibition are uuk, vi ; me sale ol liquor will be restricted to druggists : (2) the agri cultural interests will suffer: and "i pum.c scnoois will be closed, lne idea of the irablm fha nnA agricultural interests of North Caro lina oeing dependent upon the manu facture and sale of lin nor I Anrl li quor sellers should become their Kpecial champions ! G AKFIED AND CONKLING. The war that is being waged be tween Garfield and Conkling is be coming more bitter and violent, and threatens to disrupt the Republican party. Indeed we doubt if anything has ever equalled it in American poli tics. The action taken by the New York Herald has produced a prodig ious sensation. A series of articles have recently appeared in that paper that are exceedingly denunciatory of Garfield, and are evidently inspired or dictated by Conkling himself. To show what harsh things are said of President Garfield by. those who helped to elect him, we copy from the Herald a few extracts as follows : "We have had some men in the Executive chair who were not very strong intellectually men who were managed and moulded by the crafty party leaders among their contem poraries, and whose names remain to us as synonymes of political stupidity and imbecility; but it is doubtful if there ever was an occupant of the White House who has been so com pletely fooh d andblinded as the twen tieth President of the United States. There is something supremely ridicu lous between the promise and the performance of his administration. Every movement he has made since the 4th of March has been a blunder. Who has shown so little real strength and influence as he? Who, of all our Presidents, has become eo completely the slave of petty spites and the tuol oi reckless, designing politicians? This may be considered harsh criti cism, but it is true. And he has nobody to blame for it but himself. A President who through imbecility or design stupidly adopts a policy based upon treachery and deceit must expect to sleep upou a bed of thorns, and that is what Mr. Garfield has done. To those who were the recipients of his pledges his actions about this time were a curious illustration of the sinuous course of a politician without principles who at the same time was endeavoring to masquerade in the robes of a reformer. While his fate trembled in the balance be fore the November battle of the bal lots there was nothing he was not willing to do for those who had it in their power to make or unmake him. We have even seen how he was ready to set a priee upon every place in his gift, from a Cabinet office down to a gaugership. In municipal matters, in the petty intrigues and jealousies of local factions like those of the de mocracy in New York, we have sten many illustrations of political prosti tution of this character, but this was the first time in ali our history that the treat offices of the govern ment were made merchandise of by a Presidential candidate. If the conversations, promises, in trigues, bargains and broken pledges of Mr. Garfield since his nominate- in at Chicago to the present time could be arranged and printed, as it is not impossible they may be, they would present a record which woold make it difficult to decide whether he is not the weakest and most vacillating of men or the most cunning and adroit of political wirepullers of the baser sort. Never in the history of the capital has there been such a lively trade in offices as at present. The corrupt speculation is of course cloaked and concf-aled under the high sounding names ol diplomacy and ernediencv. but it is rank festering corruption all the same. To this pass the Mentor statesman hath brought the high office of the Presidency. Having be trayed and abandoned the friends who saved and elected him, he is now preparing to betray what remains of the republican party in the South. Garfield is great and Blaine is his prophet ! The division which Mr. Garfield has created is the result of a petty, malignant, personal spite and ani mosity. He and his Premier do not like one man, one Senator, and during all these weeks and months the coun try has been disgraced and scandaliz ed by the prostitution of the great office of the Presidency and the ex ercise of the whole power of the government to compass his defeat. Is this decent ? Is it becoming? Was it for this that Mr. Garfield was nominated and elected ? Has the Executive no higher conception of the duty he owes the country ? The spectacle he presents to day-bargaining, dickering, conspiring, breaking his word the word of a President, who is the,successor of Lincoln de scending even to untruth, has never before been seen in all our history. These are the contrasts and com parisons that thoughtful men who have the interest of the republican party at heart are making here to day in discussing the lamentable sit uation which has been brought about by the pursuance of a so called diplomacy which is only duplicity, knavery and fraud of the lnwRt nrA basest character. An administration whose corner stone is laid on a foun dation of falsehood, violated faith and broken pledges cannot possibly enduie with credit to itself or honor to the country. Is the republican party willing to acknowledge such a leader? Are republican Senators willing to accept ioio lusuiem oraer oi such a nar row minded and unprincipled hyp ocrite?" Mother and Child Drunk. Bridget Hudson, forty years old on Wednesday afternoon wat found lying drank in an alleyway in East Eleventh street with her three-year-old daughter beside her and un conscious from the effects of liquor. New York Herald 13th. WASHINGTON LETTER. TFrom our Regular Correspondent. Washington, May 14, 1881. When President Garfield entered so serenely on his four years course, but two months ago, no one foresaw the complicated situations of to day. Eveiy one will remember how even political antagonists were disposed to congratulate each other on the be ginning of a political, industrial, and financial millennium. Robertson had not then been mentioned, and the portentous Mahone was just appear ing equivocally above tue horizon. There is no equivocation in the atti tude of Mahone now, nor, indeed, in the attitude of any of the distinguish ed personages who are playing in the petty politics of the day. Senator Mahone's carriage may be seen at al most any hour in front, of the south side of the general Post Office De partment, where he spends much of his time, closeted with Judge Tyner, forming out the little post-offices in Virginia which, regardless of the wishes of the patrons of these post offices, both Republicans and Demo crats, have been given to him. It is his policy .to place a readjuster in every post office in Virginia where the post master does not have to be approved by the Senate. This will make him dispenser of hundreds of offices, and enables him to play the despot in hundreds of localities that the country at large has never heard of. It is needless to say that this is not right ; that it is not according to correct civil service principle ; that it is not Republican or Democratic in principle; but what we are accustom ed to call in Europe or Asia despo- tism and tyranny. I know of more than one instance where the post master, notwithstand mg his years of experience, his per fect record with the Department here, and in spite of protects signed by a large majority of tno citiz'-ns, both Republicans and Democrats, has been ruthlessly removed to make place for incompetent and characterless men, whose only recommendation is that tney noia 3ianones peculiar views with regard to the Virginia State debt. The paternal functions of the Federal Government should not be felt in this way in small, weak, and isolated communities, whose protests cannot be sufficiently loud to raise that general public indignation which can command redress. Neither Mr. James nor the President would dare to appoint a post master against the i protests of nine-tenths of the good citizens of St. Louis or ew York. It is cowardly to force upon the weak what they would n: -t dare attempt with the strong. It is unstatt smau like and unpatriotic to alienate small provincial communities and to force them to feel the central government only as a mischievous iutermeddler with their local affairs, and as the champion of those whom men of both parties hold in the least osteem. The people of a small village have confi dential and intimate relations with the post master, they advise with ! him, and trust him in all business matters beyond the limit of thoir ac quamtance, and to thrust upon them a stranger, or a neighbor in "hose experience and integrity they have not confidence, is such a mischievous and serious interference with their business interests a9 would not be attempted or tolerated in larger and more powerful communities. Dead Yet Living (New York Herald.) About the middle of April two Polish women, named Stauislawa Trudneaka and Agnes Tales, arrived at this port on board the steamer Victoria as stecrago immigrant pas sengers. When the doctor boarded the ship off Quarantine it was found that the women, among others, were sufiering with smallpox. They wore sent to the fever hospital on the Quarantine island, each patient being ticketed with an order giving her name and the disease with which she was Buffering, according to the usual practice. On the 29th of April the Board of Health received a notifica tion that the woman Trudnezka had died but that the other patient was recovering. Meantime Mrs. Trnd- nezka's husband, who lives in Pitts burg, Pa., had been anxiously ex pecting his wife to return; he had sent her money to join him in this country. Ho reached here after being informed of her arrival only to learn that she was dead and buried. He could not even have the satisfac tion of visiting her gravo, owing to the loathsome disease from which she had died and the quarantined spot where she was buried. The man was grief-stricken when he called at the office of the Commissioners of Emigration at Castle Garden and re ceived the duly authenticated proofs of hia wife's death in the ohape of an official certificate from the Board of Health. It has now been discovered that a serious mistake has been made. By some accident the orders given to the patients when they were sent to the hospital were exchanged, and as neither woman could speak Eoglish the error was not discovered, so that it was not Mrs. Trudnezka who died, but her companion. Yesterdav Mrs. Trudnezka appeared at Castle Gar den in search of her husband, but he disappeared immediately after being informed of his wife's death and no trace of him can be found. As he was last seen in a despondent frame of mind the fear has been ex pressed that he made way with him self. His wife, however. fear that he has married again, as he would have a right to do, being in possession of official proofs of his wife's death from the Bureau of Re cords of the Health Department Statesville Landmark : A calf on the premises of Col. J. S. Miller, fell into the well, a distance of thirty fife or forty feet. It was at once drawn out, with ropes, when it ROMmncrA off, apparently unhurt. Cowpens Centennial (Charlotte Democrat.) Thfi moth anniversary of the bat tle of the Cow Pens was celebrated at Spartanburg, S. u., on Weduesday the 11th. The town -was crowded with visitors from North and South Carolina and Georgia, the number beinuf variously estimated at from 5 to 10,000. Seven military companies were present, including the Cadets of the Carolina Military Institute from Charlotte. After a short speech of welcome by Gov. Hagood of South Carolina, the Hon. Wade Hampton delivered what may be called tho main ad dress, followed by Hon. Thomas W. Higginson, of Massachusetts, and Hon. Wm. H. Francis, of New Jersey. All the speeches were patriotic and harmonious, manifesting thorough reconstruction feelings and ideas. After the speeches, the ceremony of unveiling the Monument and Statue erected to the memory of Gen. Morgan, was performed by thir teen young ladies selected for the purpose. The monument is twenty feet high, surmounted by a bronze Statue of Morgan. Still in Favor of Hugging. The following is from the Now York Evening Post, and explains it self : The account of the Iowa girl who is said to have been hugged to death by her lover has caused 'quite a sensation' among the young ladies of Westfield, New York, who recent ly held a meeting to devise ways and means to prevent another case of death from hugging. They unani mously passed the following pream ble and resolutions : Whereas it is reported that an Iowa girl died recently in her lover's arms while being hugged; and Whereas judging from experience, we believe such an event to bo ut terly impossible; therefore Resolved, That, notwithstanding said report, we are still in favor of hugging. We prefer to run all risks of death rather than have the beau tiful, lovely, delightful, perfectly ele gant custom abolished. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions bo sent to the newspapers for publication. The Temperance Boom. (News and Observer.) A friend writing to U3 from Mor gantou says that the temperance eo ple were to meet in convention there on yesterday, and that the movement has gained ground in Burke county, some of the strongest men of that county taking the lead with great earnestness. We also hear that throughout the piedmont section generally the movement is constantly increasing in strength, gaining new adherents the m r it is agitated. We do not know anything so remark able as the growth of the temperance feeling in North Carolina. During the past ten years it has developed with an energy that would hardly be credited bv one not cons'antlv adver tent to the drift of public sentiment A Boy's Enterprise. President Lincoln's old house at Springfield, 111., was torn down. An enterprising boy bonght all the shingles for a dollar, and with his scroll saw is turninsr them into orna mental mementoes which he sells at from fifty cents to one dollar each. From the Hub. There is perhaps no tonic oifere-1 to the people that possesses as much real intrinsic alue as the Hop Bitters. Jnst at this oeason of the year, when the stomach needs an appetizer, or the blood needs purifying, the cheaj est and best remedy is Hop Bitters. An ounce of preventation is worth a pound of cure; don't wait until you are prostrated by a disease that may take months for you to recover in. Boston Globe. State News. Raleigh Visitor: W. S. Jenks, Eaq., of White Oak Township hns a cat aged 34 yars and three months. Alamanca Gleaner : Mr. John G. Daily, of Alamance county, killed an ouer wwgmng tiiirty-six pounds on niH piAce last wek. Goldsboro Messenger : A negro boy, Robert Smith, asred about, lfi years, was killed by lightning near aoima last Sunday. Ifewbernian : To sav that neas ar now beiag brought into this market and have ben so brouarht imr th last two weeks in rast quantities, gives one but a faint idea of the immense supply receive at this point for shipment. The carrying capacity of the sUamer of the Old Dominion Line is taxed to the ut moet, and is unequal to the demand made upon it. Hundreds upon hundreds of boxes are daily turned away from the wharf of these steamers, and hare to find their way to th Northern markets by rail. Nothing of the kind has ever before been witnessed in the history of Newbern. Peas, cabbaj-e, onions and turnips crowa aua nu our wharves and rail road depot. Hillsboro Observer : Died in Hills boro, May 11th, 1881, George Laws, Esq., in the 80th year of his age. Mr. Laws moved to Hillsborn in ism and learned the carpenter's trade unaer itooert .katon. He never went to school but eleven davs. fT first entered the public service as a deputy under Sheriff Watts in 1829, and from that time until his death, a period of 52 years, he has been in the service of the county, being at the time of his death Judge of Probate and Clerk of the Superior Court of Orange County. Mr. Laws was a faithful and efficient officer, a useful citizen, a kind neighbor, a true friend of the poor, and was loved and respected by all who knew him. Peace to his ashes. ESiscelleneons Adveriteesxsats. '& fi &n j Hl Hi li3 til 171 E - 1; llisll I hi Si !:AS STG-D9 uss it is It should tmmm m m k c m taw u nr I he Best. Cheapest and twa.-s i-cfviin-r xitm-r3 in AlSi 1 rt.'tti jttjgjg 1 1 jj fij'vj end hrh'js ."pfdy oti'l permanent rHrf ia ali CUKt.i ef f .'i'Sij.Vv,' 831 v- V&A i K 'i C't.tK Sprn !:, Severe Rm-na, Haic"., ?. g;Vl.....tJ,.J,-U vg-i. SO f AilJi' 'AN K'.K-EiSr tlil XTI'rJ'C'JT It f'-c'if &nnaliy vo many V.iop.h On w-t ia doctors' bin, cn.i i'.- jiv.j ffjEllIsLi&K'-iS "f -'Ijy hrinito it within tivj reach o ail. I: is eeZd r.t fcfs. Ce. L-LCy mmSSrmf, r:i,r ifTSaefcti a bottle, and can be obtinod from ail Jru?sicta. Prcitticu.T., WL SS MIS Kavo been swKrdod a OoM Ned&l acd First b l-l- V -,'VV li Bi.wdX6 Prize at Agricultural Faira wherever hxrd- V-C, vv- " -''li &&&F0 Mted. Br. Ledoux, in his report fcr 1380, t. X? fJi, JWsf 68 & W), to N. C. State Agrrl Board, jriws Pow- -nxSirP ell's Cheer ioals an intrinsic value of 1;).S5 per xv V '' ' -" . ' '-- 'WSHi formula, vhea thov are sold to tlio fariiier ao -'- ' ;:: il I jgfeK00P $KMX. This is the vui showing r given a Jf'er- 'Vc-5i-vi;-:; IRSI The Best, Cheapest and Kost Succossta Chemical Ixhr:-. ir rc Vila's rr,:-z KssLr e. c. 2&ss, ss$jvj& 5V7SLLfC UClZ-SLiSZ SA2i?S31A, fOWSSL'S T. mi H Handsome Illustrated Caialoeue. frivine fall descriotion of KpS ?5W?11'8 PrSJirsd C&esaicals, fsss lytical value of CS:SSi;5il3 B anv address free, lit ?t Jl a true: jomo A PERFECT IKON BITTERS are h ouiriii"- a certain and eliicient toi muiciii jrtrtrs, tuna cj sippaue, ijoss oj sircngtn, L,acl; oj fLntrrr, elc. ivnrciics fi the blood, strengthens the muscles, and g?vesnew life to the nerves. They net (j like a charm on the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic eyaiptorns. sncli 1 as I'aMinff the Food. ldehi:ia, Heat in the Stomach, Halrltmrn, etc. 'JlhQ C- 'v Iron Preparation that will not biaekesi tlio teeth ov r Kb i liea-dar!: t 8old by all druggists. Write- for the AUG Book, c62 of i useful a;:J arnufci:. r roaming scut free. g BkoYN CHESIICAIi CO., Baltimore, i Ik p-rpi pui 1 PI Iflff I And Dealer in N. E. Ccr. Fayetteville & HargottSts. KALEIC-H. N. C. April 14, 1881. WITH E 11. WMTT (Christopher & Sorrell's Old Standi RALEIGH, N. C. Wholesale 1 Eetail DEALERS IN HEAVY GROCERIES. Csaamm WsMt, And Agent for STANDARD FERTILIZER. We keep a largo st.Kk nf xODS oa hand an.l am daily rocelviug fresh sup.ilies. Wo hope to receive our share of pat ronao from our friends iu Chatham aud adjoining couuties. ded'23-tf FOU THE DAY SCHOOL Oil SUN DAY SCHOOL. Send your orders to Alfred Williams & Co., i 1 1 RALEIGH, . C. mmm i And they wiil bo promptly filled and at satisfac tory prices. Catalogue Irco ou application. mh3-3m i ft k i M to i. & . -4 r-' 5-:teS-a! i A FUEEL? n For interna! anrS External Wr., b a SITE CUKE for all the Dfccase? for vfcch u z rcD .v- and is ALWAYS PERFECTLY SAFE in the hands o? " ' even tha most inexperienced person;. It is R nvre rt.nl quick remedy for rOTJGII, 'U'y TfiliOAT, CHIi-LS, and ?mi'.ar tronWt-is; tllto .,!, r. in the most malignant forms ef SJIPUT IS r.rc! in tf h-Jt known remedy for iilfEiT.ilATirH and JiliL'iliALji THE OLDEST, B7SDKQSTV?SSLY : l-?en used with Pitch vrorutTfaJ M:rcf'.s ; , Iirt$ of the trvM for CZJLVlfPK, CIU'-WIV A, !. WYSIIXTEliV, and a'.i HOlVEiL, CO-tti'lilvI'sS, W, consider sd an unfailinj aure for these d-sfzs. THE Tttl OF YA' m all mmmzs mjd cum&m, Faic tor Ts'isrscs in Itiojtiil.j ra ehOit, ! jLttCjsi&uy evtsyTliero who has ever given it a trial. without a umi AS & im always bo used for PkIii is iter Back 7 G m m V s ' Kost buccossta cr.emjca iHixv. every aiat9 S3 roisr&ncs. . r-. r.t prices and references, with ana- r and 5223, maued to --y.,';. on application to " ft 'J 3. o"ws: TREASURER, 3 . A UEE RZWJm, highly recomnier.ded for all diseases r&- isic ; especially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Liter- & K f -" ? j fp r- m r f- .-, J On anl after April flr: .in.t im:i: U tho Sieainer D. MLI;;iuii,-, cr.. Roberts, will k-.-ive Fayo;tvii!e ..' ttu-1 FrMay a.i 7 oVI'-k a. v.i,, I every Wo.lno5kl.-iy :in,t siitunky ax. The StcanuT K, Cai... Wnu A. leave Fayette villo V. e.Ij.taur.r ivA o'clock a. in., ami Wihidna Thursday at 2 o l.;ci p. m. vry II. k . in. n, will lay at? ,.iy aii'.l J. D. V;rLLIA?.rS & CO., Agents, a?" " rayoltiK. C: IT-, :1 : j C31 F. Ii. CArEIlON, Pro j VS. 7:.ia UlIEO. IL 1ULL. ''-kit i A Hits f;n i?;ja o;- 1 rr i . : '1,1 RiiiO'ig our o v;k p.-oi; o. X-.'r. North Cai3;-,i,u.0:v".t;,0- ... States. It one o.' t e -mt I : paates of Us go in the Us. -Hots ai-s ;ip!y eiilei. i... A i- I cjjst a JHf.:i u--r, t.;";rr.' y . . - :i. y - Iir O 10 i. ,., ; s. "I-v-j lor furtLui i.i'w: Sit? '& i il' - : . m t'::. S v.nt ni i ciu'u-t tti.r . n vs. i-,,i,? rnr :-v.-rk srH prvrH h-f -'i.r i-v.cm i-o tiwy hottt.0 iu 1 "'d,t. iiiiot bit 5i.0i any cir Ako a fai? block o. liSP.vriiiXCr dona' ivt bolt-JS bos- m "ri r. pi Cta, aud iu ISvrU f j; prices pit r"j. A. A. SIcKJJniAli SOIv-? ra'.tl o '.lie, I