Newspapers / The Daily Review (Wilmington, … / Sept. 23, 1879, edition 1 / Page 2
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ile foil Review. JOSH. T. JAMES. Ed. aud Prop WILMIPTGTOJr. If. C TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, ttn. EWTXBZl AT THS hOSTOFFtCE AT WiLMUTGTOJr, X. 6., as Second-Class Mattkb. GEL GRIXI'S RKTUR5. XX Grant (Ex-President and Ex General) is now in San. Francis), where, of course, the most magnificent prepaid Uoos hare awaited his return. He was sent oat on his travels and his expenses paid by a syndicate of officeholders and politic clans, who wanted to keep him fresh and well groomed for the Presidential contest It was a venture, of coarse, but those who found such nice pop anfl pickings during Grant's two terms can now afford to invest a little with the hope ol seeing those flush times for thieves again restored t the Dohtical calendar. Gen. Grant is nothing now but a private citizen and has no more right to official reccgni tion than the humblest mam in the land be he black or white. Yet, without au thority, and especially against the law regulating suchexpenditures, be is to be welcomed at San Francisco, U a great extent, at the expense of the United States Treasury.Thia is but little, however, when compared with the fact that he has been traveling for the past two yeais- when be could'nt dead head it on land at tVe expense of the people We copy here a few caustic and well pat remarks on Gen. Grant's return, taken from aa article in the New York &i"n, which says: Gen. Ulysses S Grant is really an 'm- portant person, and one who properly commands attention at San Francisco Be is the only ex-General of the Army of the united States He is the only living ex-President of the United States. He is the only man living who, having been elected President of the United States, ever held that office. He is the last of the line of rightful Presidents that began with George Washington. If ht Keeps his eyes open, Gen. Grant will soon discover that changes have oc curred at home while ha has been travel ling abroad. In the first place, business is beginning to look up again. Times are rather bettor than they were when he went out of office. This improvement is largely doe to the fact that the people are do longer forced to provide fornhe waste, extravagance, and plunderings of such a set of scoundrels as they were cursed with the days when Gobberson, Belknap, Babcock & Co. were in power, and when a subservient Republican majority In the House of Representatives voted the mil lions as fast as tbey could be squandered or stolen, la the second place, Gen. Grant will learn provided be keeps his ears shut to the oadiest snobs, and adventurers who will soon be swarming about him In great numbers that he is a less Important fac tor in American politics than ho was two years and a half ago. If the experience gaiaed in his travels has taught him to appreciate the vastnese of the world ani the littleness of any individual, he will accept this fact sensibly, without making any fosi. Gen. Grant has had great opportunities for studying men and things and there by improving his own mind. He has travelled very far farther even than his friend Parse J Newm ui went when the latter pushed his 'nspection of the United States civil service as far aa the Garden of Eden and the lions' den into wbieh Daniel was csst. Parson Newman never had the advantage of visiting the - Malay sian peninsular or of mingling personally with th ; teeming populations of China and Japan. The cost of Gen. Grant's trip must be considerable , although he has deadheaded his way on land wherever deadheading was possible, and has had the benefit of one of the Hon. Richard W. Thompson s war vessels for maritime transportation. But with all this economy hie travelling expenses must have been large. Just how large tbey have feeea, is probably known to a cent by the syndicate of capitalists and politicians who sent him abroad to keep him r fresh and in good condition lor a Presidential candidate in 1.8S0. TUE NEW REVOLUTION IN CUBA. The Southern part of Cuba, the Santi ago de Gab district, is again in a fer m sat, arsvolution against Sp it,h au thority having broken out thrc. The details are ratker meagre, A thousand Cubans ware attacked by the police and military, with the loss of about a doz en men on each side. The insurgents then fled to the mouatains where it is said tbey met numbers of slaves who had fled from their masters to join the insur gents, carrying with them a large propor tion of their masters cattle. In connection with these fasts the dis pitches tell a horrible story of malignant cruelty. It i s sard that seventeen officers who had served in the late Cuban patriot rarolution.'but had, since its close, been" living quietly on their estates, have been massacred by Spanish troops on the bare suspicion of a sympathy for the new movement. Some were plain in their own booses befoie the eyes of their wives sad children, and others were taken to the woods scd massacred there. The act has exritrd great ifidignation throughout the Island. EX-PRESIDENT DAVIS. Let Toombs arid Stephens, on the one side of Mason & Dixon's Line, and his hosts of enemies on the other, say what they will, yet jjeffersjon Davis glands to day a full bead aa'l fbou!ders above aiy and all of his ihluz compers. In every thing that he baa said 'and done, since I he war, as well as djurii;g the war, we sincerely relieve that be has had at heart the best interests of (he people of the South. In his latestjutterance, when be declines a candidacy for United i States Senator, with the6urety of an election to follow, he has calmjyjand firmly and with a dignity that naught but the purest patriotism could j propuce, quietly put aside a high honor1 because he believes i. I . . j that his acceptance won Id wor k a possi ble injury to hjs .beloved people. I Iu thia he has done that which not one of his detractors, North or South, has ever had the firmnes.-1 do and baa fset them an example which not one of tbem will ever wrrulate. Mr. Davis 'letter win! go into history and we produce it here in full so L that all may read his noble utterances: I Beauvoib P. O., Miss., Aug. '79. 11. H.nry, lEs; Elitor B t ool haven Lehjer : My DEAit Sib ;i-To your i: qniyy l might succinctly i reply that! ain.net aj can didate for the office of Uniied siates Sena, t r of MifcS'ssippV'aud i.o' d sire io be elected 'to that position. Tour uidto.'in friendship aud .early advocacy of me for that high station ' entitle ypu to a full itate rreut of the reasoLS which control ine i; this matter. Assuming what, in view of recent events, is by iio J means provable, that, the requisite majority of Congress would remove m political disabilities, aud thus spare our Stable jthe, afl'ont of. denying to our State the! right 'ftp choose her own representative, I roctied to consider, the casehypotheticallt pretjented. j Holdiug that "the 'personal wishes or private advantagejof an individual should uot enter ;uto bis selection for a public trust, I do notthefless grat fully appreciate the generous iprefereuedfbr me which you give assurance is entertained by a ui jyriij of the people cf ' Mississippi. The best return 1 can make for such a imdness is to insist that the ouiy copsiderai'on shall be as to wb at will best pjroinote the welfare and prosperity of the fciate. i The vital issue before the country is the contest between State rights and consolU dation. Or in other, words, between the Constitution as it was' adopted audiuter pred by the fathers, or the unrestricted will of the majority. The first is liberty, the last is despbtioh. The supremacy of law is indispd-i sable to the preservation of popular freedom, er. who is a law ana wnetner tne rui unjto himself, be one man or a multitude, tne result is anke a despotism. The checks , and balances, the distribution1 of bowers, and the Icau- ttous reservation1 in thMOth ar . ' . ic'e 6! tue amendments, hich wlere as conditions annexed to the compact between the States, all distinctly show the purpose to organize a! General jGvernment which should be respousibis to the State and their peop'e. Surely the blood of the Revolution had not! been shed merely to eflftct the a change of masters. It was for self-governmeut that the States declar ed their independence and fought until they were severally acknowledged to be free and independent nations. Thorough ly convinced that he ! restorition of the ideas and practices of the founders and early admiuiatrators of the General Gov mentis the one thiD? essential to secure the liberty, safety audi happiness pf the "people of the State and their prosperity, the point for deliberation! before answer ing your question I was whether I could as a United States Senator,) be useful in at -taing that end.! The other political ques tions which agitate the country ! are, in my estimation, so ! subordinate that I think, after I'decjateiiipUteJ restoration they could all! be easily and happily ad jasted. 1 . 1 ! j . - Taking, as far a one, may in a matter affecting himself, the attijtude of a dis interestea party in this discussion, I will first remark, what is equally known to you, that itJthe Xorthej-n mind there is an unreasoningjoplposition tp the doctrine of State rights;1 add that) my assertion of it, with whatever concl csions were necessarily deducible therefrom, is made the special object of sectional hostility. In has therefore, followed that others could say, without creating excitement, mat tne use otjwnico it utterea by me would be swollen and! distorted for nps in partisan agitation. The future of the country needs that there should be calm refection, and by the light of history the relation of the States to the Union be justly and permanently j determined Sooner or later, the principles io which reference has been made will J I trust, by the force of their inherent truth, vindicate themselves to) the common sense of our countrymen bf every section, j To batten the coasummation, Mississippi has many sons abler than I.I From aaong them let one be selected who has do political "disabilities" to iObstrujt his adtSaittance to the Senate ahd agaicst whom there are no bitter fprejudices to impair his asefulness. . II , I Did I desire to return to political life, the considerations: herein presectel would outweigh that desire. 1 3at the fact is the reverse. . Personally, therefore, while I am grateful to you for your advocacy, I do not wish to re-enter the United States Senate. To the! 'public considerations giren, might be added private reasons, which conjointly, under existing circum stances, render me averse to - public sta tion. You are authorized to anbounce that my name will not j be, with my con sent, incladed among1 the candidates for the Unit d States to represent Mississippi in that body. ' From youth to age it Jhas been my pride to represent Mississippi in military and in civil service and I would that all her sons should realize that it is her interest which dictates) my present decision. Faithfully your friend, , 'l j i effeescn Davis. I Bare floers shoul4 be swept in the dii rection of the grain df the wood. A geiicman gives the following astLe j . -mm 1 1 . menu ot a pertect Maryland dinner. Four small oysters from Lynhaven: Bay; terrapin a lal Maryland; canvass-back dock; a small salad of crab and lettuce; vegetables baked Irish potatoes; fried hominy cake and plain celery.' The ItalianGovernment is about tocon- struet a large observatory on Mount Etna. A site has been selected at a height of 9,652 feet above tne level of the sea, near the Casa called from a building degl Inglesi, erected there 60 in 1811 by the English during their occcpa- tion of Sicily. The purity of the atmos phere is so gret at this elevation that the planets can be observed with the naked eye almost as. well as with telescopes of low power through the thick atmosphere of towns. Venus, when shining alone in the heavens, casts a distinct shadow This will be the second loftiest observa- torv in the world, the United States signal station at Pike's Peak, in Colorado, at an elevation ot 14 336 ieet. beins the - p loftiest station. WASKIJiGTOX LETTER WHtxGTON, D C, Sept 19. 1879. Brdminent OhioDemocrats, recently arrived here, state that the political outlook in that State ha& greatly im proved within the past week; and that our friends there are confident of elect ing the entire State ticket at the ap proaching election, and also ot secar mg a majority of both branches of-tie Degwlature. tieuerai bwiijg is cou stanHy gaining in strength and popu lanty with the people as tho cam- i paign progresses, ana nis speecnef-, which are listened to by i imm rse thrones of people, are having a tellicg fleet. He is aided on the stump by a car as of the ablest and mt popular Democritie orators iu the State, amorg whom is Senator hurman, whose masterly speecDes are doing much in arous ng the people to the importance of the is&ues before thm. If anything has been omitted.bo far, no doubt a rem dv will be proposed at the fprecent meetiDff here bf tbe National Demo cratic Committee. One by one the heads of the D?pirt rneuts and heads of Bureaus are com ing back to Washington, after spend incr most of the summer attending to their own business and their own pleasure or to the political necessities of the Kadical party, never lorgetting to draw with, persistent regiu&nty, from 300 , to i00 of the neoDle's money I each month. Th?rt are some hard (working people; among 'he tax payers of this country iwho are unable to 6ee any honesty in persons who are paid from $1,800. or $50,000 Der vear for services leaving their posts for from one to three months each vear when the bU8inecs they are paid to do is suff ring from want of attention. There is baidiy one of the departments in which tbe work is tot a lone way behind, and V-t Ubder this administration the- officials who gt highest pay have been Washington' more than away Irom uuder 8 by preceding admiuistiation. The Baltimore 6un of this moir.iDg editoril.y diecasses our present trade with Brazil as compared with what it might be made. The subject is at tracting attention at all pur commercial ports, j The two main reasons why the U S gets eo little of this trade, while England, far less favorably situated, gets so much of it are these: 1. The iv)glisn merchant nas ;o ig held possession of the field, ai d exactly what goods the oo-sul Brszil demand. l:-rs in 2. By liberal subsidies to vessel;? the British Government makes it possible for British merchants to underselllu3 in all Brazilian port?. It is proposed by the Sun that menv of capital investigate the needs and demands of ibe people of Brazil, with a view to manufacturing here and shipping there whatever is required Thia will ba done, but it wiii still re main an open question, and one that Congrees will be asked to consider. whether the o a 4 i ner aieaavantage men tioned shonld not be removed by at least temporary aid to American ves sels encaged in eaoh trade. I shall allude to this subject again. A pcandal-monger is a person to add mire. Phiia BaL The English wish the Afghans were worsted ones. Phila BaL , j A rolling stone generally gathers re morse. Tonkers Statesman. ! JjTp man who hates everybody else can be a great admirer of Limctlf. Whitehall Time. It i3 an old saying that rem -rks, 'Virtue never grows old.' The troublo is, most of us doa t give it a chance Gjwand. Euterprise. 1 A 'constant reader' advises us that there is a vast difference between six skilled workmen and aix killed work men. 'S, we know it. Nor Her. When Norwalk people fail to have a loaned umbrella returned they adver- i use iur iwj reuuYwj, xw wunaer tne town has four newspapers. Danbury News. If an equal, diametrically speaking could be found for Senator aDavid Davis, we haven't the slightest suspi cion but that the two would be thick friends Tonkars Statesman. j An anxious inquirer' is informed that the founder of the Aryan raca was not hung. He was not a Hungarian To auother w reply that Leander, when he went to see Hero, did not swim the Po, and therefore he was not a Poleander. Phila Bulletin. ! The fall bonnet will be lost sight of in the profusion of its ornaments. 111 . SI i- Florida Ship Canal: The surveys for a ship canal, under the direction of Colonel S U Jr remont the United States Eoginee-ti pr;n2i- pal assistant to General G.iciorf m charge! of the improvements of the Savannah- river, Brnuswick haroor 4nd the inland passages to Fiorida across the peninsular of Florida from the t.St Mary's river through the Okefeenokee swamp to the Gulf of Mexico at St Mark s have just been completed. Ah we announced in the Npwb early in November last, this work was com menced at Fernandina by M or Mahon, civil engineer. In the mou.h of January he was relieved of the principal charge of the work by Col Fremont, who, in addition to his otner work, took ctr of it. Since that date (January i )the wbik wab prtssed onto completion about the 1st pf April. With a desire, however, to haveeom?iufcrm'iti6n of the swamp in the summer, a party! has recently run a line from St. Mary's to Trader's Hill, and thence thiough the ewamp to Blount's Fsrry, od the Suwanee, and on to Jasper, on the Gulf Rail road. 1 j We are in form td by what we con sider reliable authority tbatithe resuU of the several lines, one en-ire y around the swamp, two through the southern border, ! one directly through the .swamp, and one from Lake Cuv to the Suwanee at Eliaviile, thenca down thatstream to Charles Ferry,' aud from thence to Sc Mark's, pulsing south and west of San Pedre Bay, stli concur in demoastraticg the eu-i nent adaptability of that portion ol Georgia and F.offda for a ship jcanai f any capacity detiredj The water supply for.tha aummitjlevel, Col Fre mont, we learn, has no doubt of, bu he thinks a large canal connecting the Mississippi river at New Orlt;8u3;witii the Atlantic at Brunswick or l ernat- dina would be a most valuable addi tion tojour Eastern arid j Western cheap transportation lines for the produce of the great and growing West. j The average elevation of the swamp has been foudd to be about one hun dred aud seventeen feet above low tide at St Mary's,! the Suwannee ! river at BiouutsFcrry eighty-seven feet, and San Pedro By eighty-five feet. 1he swamp being the highest point cn the line can be made to supply ;the sum mit with water lor locking over it. We understand when Co'onel Fre mont took charge of the work three fifths of the appropriation of S"o00 had been expended, and but very little progress made on the real survey. With the two-fifths remaining he hs obtained ample information and mzie very extensive examlnafious pf tb country along the routes pa-ea ov .r. His assistants were Mjor Mabon. draughtm n. Coir nd W J jWirm, y. ith level, W N Butler with couipasp, Ja? G Gibbes, rodman. Tbe Ust line was I run by Captain 'P W Godwyu, i f Lake City, and Jas G Gibbv rih compass, W H Goodwyn rodrjeay. Miscellaneous. Fever and Ague is most comirrrj in th spring, bat most severe in the fall and winter. It is strictly a ma'arious di?eas, and so ed re ly will the individual who adopts this pr caution be exempted from its pains and pen alties. Add to this its yal tie as a Eto r.acr and anti billions agent, and who wi!. r n ture to gainsay it claims to the rt place among family medicines. Foriileby alt OrugHse and res? .-cb'e Dealers generally. septl-aiw. I - . ' - . - I , , AGENTS WANTED For tbe Bcm! aiid Pastes t-i?e Hi rg Pictorial Books and I Bibles, "lices reduced 33 pr cent. National Pi b lishikqCo. f hilada., Pa., Atlanta, Ga., or St. LiOUlii, Mo.. ' , pt 11 C40fin returna io 30 dAys on $1(0 in VJU vested. Omcial reports infur mation FaKE. lake profit wes-iN gb tck options of $10 to f 0. AddrpjsB T. Potter Wiffht A ChL T?ftTV- er 35 Wail St., .T. 1 sept 11 TCAMJITQC W ANTED soto I CMUnClnO 00 or $uu per MONTH dur-i'g Fall acd Winter- For full particulars address,1 J. U. AiCoURDY fe UOM Pb'Jadelpbia, Pa. sept ll-4w SASD rNSTETJ HXNT CATA10GTTE. Oar Mr catalog of B&a4 posi, Dranj Majors' St5s Bus, pAlet, Csp I,mps, Sutds, and Out fits coctiies vi pijes Maiicu tree. Aidres LVUN . BtALY. MS StaM St.. Cktafo, HL eept ll-4w I ! r . SANFOR T 'S LIVER INViGORATQR is a Standard Family Remedy for diseases of ih Liver, Stomach and Bowels, It is Pure ly "Vegetable. It never Debilitates. It is Cathartie and Toi-ic. It bas been used in my P'actice and by the public, lor more than 35 year with unprecedented result. Send for Circu'ars 8. T. W. HANFOrtD, M. D.. 161 Broadway, New York Citv. AnyDrujgiit will tell jou its repnUUon. i sept 11 ! 0 5 CELEBRATE0 5 . i J STOMACH p& uUdcellaneous. THE BEST SOLD . FOR PARTICULARS - r,jB.n -: . ADDRESS: WhiteSewing Machine Co. Cleveland, ohi'o. YELLOW FEVER BLACK V3M1T. It is tno poon to forget the rav-ig-jes of this terrible difewe, which w.ll no doubt return in a more ma'ignant and riruJent form in the fall months of 1879. j Me&rell's Hepatini, a Reined y-diiOTjered in Southern Nubia asd U3ed with each won derful results in frouth Anjerica wheri the most agrTTatea cases of ferer are found, ca nee from one t two. ounces of bile) to be filtered or strained trom the blood each tiaie it p assess through the Liver, a long as an ex cess of bile exists. By its wonderful action on tb.9 Liver and Stomach the HEPATlXfc not only prevents to a certaintv any kind of Ferer and Black Vomit, but also cures Head ache, CoDitipation of the Bowels, Dyspepsia and all Malarial diseases. o one Deed, fear Yellow Fever who will expel the Malarial Poison and excess of bile trom thje blood by unng-tf kk&kll's Hepatisk, which is sold bj all Druggists in 25 cnt and 1 1.C0 battles, or will be seLt by exr-ress by the Proprietors. A. F. M ?R -iKLL AJCO., - Philadelphia, Pa. Dr Pemberton's Stilliiifiria or Queen's Delight. The reports of wonderful cures Rheumatism, Scrofula, Salt Rheum, bjphi iis, CaDcer, Clcers and Sores, that come from all carts of the country, are tot oniv remark able but so miraculous as to be doubted wer it not tor the abundance of proof. i " Remarkable Cure of Scrofula. &o. CASE OfJuL. J. C. BRANSON. Kisgstos, Gl, Sept, 15, 1871 j ,!'.. ' ! Gents: For tixitv-n y-ars I -hare been a grtsat sufferer Trom Bcrofui in it most dis tressing forms. 1 have been i-o; fi ed to mr room and be i for fifteen y-ars With scrofu lous ulcerations. The niost epproyed reme dies for such cases had been used, and the most eminent physicians c -nsulted, without any decided benefit, 'l hus progtrated, dis tress d, desponding, I was adT:eed by Dr. yer, o Floyd county, Ga , to commence the use of your Compo j- d Lxt act tft llinjiia Language is asjinsafficient to describe the re lief I obtained from th- tose of the f-til'.ingia as it is to convey an adequate idea of the in tensity of my suffering before using your medicine ; sufficient to say, 1 abandoned all other remedies and continued th use of y ur Extract of t-tilliDia, until I can say truly, 1 am cared ot all pain," of al diea?e, witt nothing to obstruct the active pursuit of my profession, ilore than eijjht months have elapsed since this remarkable cure, without any return tf the disease For the truth of the above sta'ement, I re fer to any gentlemaa in Bartow county, ia., and to the members of the bar of Cherokee Circuit, who are acquainted with me. I shall eyer remain with the deepest gratitude, ; Tour obedient servant, j ... J. C. BKAXSON, Att'y at-Law. a miracle:. West Pc irt, Ga., Sept. 16, I8T0 . Gents: My daui;hter was taken on the 2ath day ot June, 1663, witb wht was supposed to be Acute Kheumatism, and was treated for the same ih no success. In arch, fol! w jeer, pieces of bine began to wprk out of th rittht arm, and continued to appear till', all the bon? fr-m tb elbow to the-ehculder joict cnie out. iiany pieces of b .ne caiLe out ..o' the right foot aa e. TDe ctse waa then pronounced one of White swelling. a.fte; hayi-Tg: been confinea aDout eix y ears to her bd, sni the case considered horelt-s, I w& induced tp try Dr. Pembercj)n'8 Compound Extract of Ftiliipia, and was so well satis fied with its effects that I have continued the ue of it until the present. My daughter WILS COD fined to her bed about sixyeajs before she sat up or eyen turned oyer without he p. She now sit? up all day, and sers most cf her ti he has walked acros ui room. Her cenerii health is now good, and I celiev 1 she Will, as her' limbs gain st.-en?th,' wa;.k y -.11. I at rribate her recove ry, with the b!pf g of God, to tbe use o your inyasuible medicine. With pratitude I am, yoursj truly. W. B. ULA-STON. Wkst Potkt, Ga., Sept 16, 1870. Genfcs:--The abrve certificate of Mr.W. B. Blanton we know- and certify to as being true. The thing so; hundreds of them'-st respected citizens will certify to it, As much reference can be gien as may be required. Tours truly, CRAWFURD k WALKER, Druggists. IHOX. H. D WILLIAMS. i DR. Pemberton's rtilliniria i? 'pre pared by A. r. Merrell A Co., Phila., Pa. ?clii by all Druggists in $1.00 bottle?, or sent by express. Agents wanted to canyas everywhere. Send for Bonk "Curious Story" free to all. iledicines sent to poor ! people. rybl? in instalments. r ! may 28 Go to i JOHN CARROLL'S BAR, J bOUTH SIDE MARKET, Between Front ahd Water Streets, you want a first-CHSS drink put up in the finest style of U e arL Fancy drinks are a specialty at th s liar. Oniv the best Wines Wbukies Brand es and Cigars are offered at .this estab isnT3en. iniv 5 For Smithviile, JTEAM YACHT ELIZA- BETE, CapL D.W.Chadwick, U5rW sarryinjg United States Mail.' Leaves wharf toot of Market street daiiy (eisept .-undays j at 3 P. M. Keiuixine, leave 8mithTiIl t 6j A. M. R.P. PADDIdO, sept 8 1 Agent. Thoi. H. IdfiEoy, Eobt- H- McKoy WILMINGTON, N. a Bffic North side Market.'atreet, betwee j ecoud and Third streets. , j Warm Spriaars, j Western North Carolina. ! - FS NOW OPEN for the reception of pleas-' L nre seeker an - invalids. , Thia 1-iVfIy n'aen U sitntnu- t-n Tnl val!ey f "the rrncb Broad, within eLrht uiics ui me rai roaa. We have a fiae band of music, attentive eer vauTS, and all other accommodatinn tn found at a nrs-clas watering piac. ror parucuiari appij ior descriptive pam phlet. v . i W. H. HOWEETON. i i - SO SJMPir mi LIFE IN A BOTTLE the tYalnable Meaicairjd l ery Known to the tf More for Quinine, Tp . or Mieral IVisonsLjfc f Blood, Strenffth for n V lilood, htrength for the' X and Health for AIL fcrr AN OPEN LETTER T0 THE fVJ Believing that bv clean.in building up the constitution wav ofbani hing disea-e and beinJ A ? r tt a L' much broken down in conati bh.U?' alter trjiafe thebeu phyeicuai 'H out my monej for many kinds ofk.5' advertised without finding k perm.-STH I began doctoring. mje& "Si made from roots and herbi . i 0lOai Clcanser,the firet bottle of which L 'BU: i tife and vigor, and in time effected a ' nent cure. 1 was free Irom catvrrh rnJ? ' became strong and sosnd, beinir .ku ' H the most severe cold! and mn.-.- ' , Ii gained over thirty poundi m weiVht i"' ing confideni that I had made a L V discovery in medicine, I prepared a n.. " ot the Root Bitters, and was in ie h giving tbem away to eick friend tJ bors. I found the mediciEejtffccted iUk wonderful cures of all dUeies Ciui, humors orscrofila in the Moid, lmnrn, ! ' Bad Stomach, Weakness, idcJn Torpid Liver, Ac , c. The ni discovery in thu Wiy spread fro n onhl ' to another until I iound myielf called I ' Vi supply patients "witu medicirebrlj wide, anJ I was induced to establish a iJT atorj tor cpmpoundirgandbottJiDthfit j 4 1 . . W : yeeii or uucoTerj in tbis way to!thebh lr J: - . r small capiul, but I am gettiig braTe!r that. fcMnce I first advertised thiimw a UOKUl UiCU Ullie tT!Tl 1 have been crowded wito o Mere f rod; d-u gists and country dealers, arid the hltl of letters 1 have receive p from personi ni prove the fact that no j-emedr I ever did ttiuch good in so short ajtime and hidtonji- uccEi as ine noot outers, in fac 1! convjncea in at tney win soon take thk O' an otner meaicmeg in use. ea in Cleveland, now sell Root 'ttitter jnij. whom have already sold! over onejiLfi-ai bottles. 1 . T anon, kuco as was used in tne tood )odold.ji of our forefathers, when peopl by some simple root or plast calomel and other poisons kingdom ere unknown. If the) cuici 1 hey act strongly on lt liver and kidlm, keep the bowels regular itnd .ihiliid uj to nervous system, i hey peretratf ereryjun of the body, . searching out jeverjj tern, bone and ti--eu9 from the heiij !u ue cleansing and etrengthento tie foatti springs of life, hencd thev! must reaciti diarases.by purification and nounjhoier.t So matter what vour feeling's ir jviedUii are, what the disease or ailment if, v,t Bitters. Don't wait until you are tick, k if you only feel bad or miserab e.'ufci Bitters at once. It may tave your ii!.-, ThotwanJs of persoLa in ail fans of & one try are already u'ing hoot Bit:a They have saved maiy lives of c psniitiTi wlo'had teen given up bv frietdsaRdpiw r5ana tr Hie ml harp nTTrani'7itIT ft iff w rj. , maarold chronic caa-g;f Catarrn,- croj ULeumatUm, Dvapepgia, acd kn DLw where all other treatxuecu :had fa ledji akl. J : ;U Va -.i. a ,airAr. .'fvwvMfiBa w r. rt tr r a haH a c Vu in f nil Trli 1 nervousne?s,and broken downSn coLsnmiif t- . - i J . j r . 1 u i uL .. u;U. iou wii De curei u jfu Juyi u'f br ekiii? .Nothing will cive yo jbealth, str rtb. and beautv a tore. 1 siow Tn-t je Vl-Ui I ph.VS.C!tr.-I :y dic)T.e-y-w crv Lutnbaff because :av n.rtr r.f thfi ratientsJ bl t I CvTt rot l! now my desire and (j"trrn.itation so pii1 reacn 01 ai: tnoi- tune ii.c throughout t1 worio roia Dy wlo gists and country mei n Tf-z on r.(iinl of nrl j ..iji ali. L egalf ahd retail fi-'V rhntL or eent tje ce, f 1 0O pefbottf,4 . - w.v-.. . Ir each b-ttie k medicine. Head anfljdiWl FRAZIVk'S KOCH HITThfK the f ilnod CUarsp-.and take no substitute b eeomrntnd because be mates a vgt?rt" G. W.'KKAIZEK,- PiscoVerer. For sale by J. C. Murids and T. d. Bart Jruirriits. march 16th eowr- Theodore Joseph, Jorner of -Ertfett. & Sal 1 - : I ! Ose Corue- W -?t R&Ieh Xiti ionsJ Pf1 O A. V. .V , 1 he Zuhpwn i Ki J l.iiB V V "M w J - ir ifl Ktif.-rii-n Vurrant-e't in eve.'T f J My barb applied with nache 1,53 Wedding, 10, Gibson's lV71'Bjw a icdO, and many in.-re of tfi y net IStf I 1 I i Fur.-.iture. T 'bT RECEIVE.) FliOtf H' terse1 fcsaortuienti of ' rxies of FURNITURE. : wblcb ff I .t (Jir-at Barzains. dll and extB&f 4 1 11 f 1 - 10 n k. s ill 1H Employmenty it r X THIS CITY OR KLC 1 doors, outs-Mi or on t. man, writing or cin'; fei consignmer-itil Uy a man '? . t xhh trade in all Us bT'ffsAi zue b-s undivided Hm? sad j , ' jj iu!y 22 Houses arid St6res - . APPLlj TO ' I j thf McKOYSf Attorneys and CoimseUors a M Office North Side1 Market FU .i, and 3d. 1 I 1 . june 10 Propriator.
The Daily Review (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 23, 1879, edition 1
2
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