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Cot 7" , 1 ditor Hud Pnblhheri S OK SUBSCRIPTION. ,cr Armim, In variably in Advance. . xriAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET. , For I'rrMdcnt, . . . ' ,; ' HORATIO SEYM OUR, OF Ni:V YORK. l or Vice President, FRANK P. BLAIR, or Missouri. PULASKI, ; TZEILTOT FRIDAY.- JsIOKNJNG,; JULY 17, 1863, RALLY ! RALLY ! ! RALLY! ! ! (Irand Katilitation Mass Meeting at Pu laski To-morrow! Seymour & Blair Jollification ! GOV. NEILL S. BROWN, A. 0. ?. MCHOLSON, AND OTHER DIS TINGUISHED SPEAKERS EXPECTED! Evarybody and his Neijhbor Invited J Come 1 Gome ! ! Oomo ! ! ! It is expected tliat there will be grand rally of llie Democracy of old Gilea to morrow such as has not been witnessed since before tbe war. The ladies are spe cially invited to come. , The Nominations. The Louisville Journal in speaking of tbo nominations, says : ''The Convention clos ed with a revival. It was a reyular camp inoeting afJaii. The impromptu nomina tion of Horatio Soymour, and tbe almost equally epontaneous uprising" for young Frank Blair will thrill the Democratic heart of the land and already gives it an earnest of victory. No matter what our preferences may have been, they are dis solved in this most auspicious flood of light aud hope. No matter whom we were for yesterday, we are now for Seymour and Blair. They revive in us memories of days when freedom was freedom ; when law was law ; when the Union was a blessing and a joy, and the flag something other than a drop curtain hung up bef re the eyes of a credulous section in order to conceal acta of usurpation, oppression, and wrong. All over this broad and fair republic to-day gar lands of peace are twiuing ; hopes are brightening; hearts are growing bold again. We have now an organiza'ion. We have a platform.- ' We have leaders. No more cringing to the cowardly persecutor. No more efforts to conciliate a brutal herd of plundering bondholders and place-holders. It is now a equare fight and a fair fight be fore the people and the ballot-lox for a fi nal settlement of the paet and a final adjust ment of the future. We, look back with Borrow ; we look forward with hope. Let every man do his duty. Let every man 6tand to his post. The night ia over, thank, God. The Convention ha3 settled that. It has reunited the broken ranks of Democ racy for the Eake of the Union. The eagle, wounded by a bhafi tipped with one of its own feathers, Boars aloft once more strong and buoyant. The old bird has nothing more to fear. "Freemen, rc'oice ! and traitors deplore ! Yactifiu anil loud arc pacing away ; 'Twas a low voice, but 'lis a loud roar, Stmoi'B and Jin a in win. Carry the Day !" Glorious Mississippi. The brain glows, the heart throbs, the pulse beat, the uoalilis expand, the eye di lutes, the blood tingles, and the frrme of all true southerners trembles with ecstatio de light at the glorious triumph of the white race in our grand sister Stale, glorious old Mibsibbippi. Alabama heroically defeated reconstruction by non action, and won for herself a pioud and lofty name, despite the infamous Omnibus Bill, that has forced her by fraud and the violation of plighted faith into the Uniun, a manacled clave to thiev ing aud cowardly Scallywags. But Miss nbippi, toeing the fata that awaited her be lovecbeister Slate, and taking ;arning by the deception and fraud piacticed on her, nobly entered the contest and. Lhs defeated by thousands, in a fair, square nod stand up fiht, the attempt to chain her to the des potic chariot of yankee adventurers and ig norrant bheka. Wilcox (Ala.) Vindicator. , Is it Possible T The frest ai Tivies of the HUh in6t., daie make the f.llowin admission : "Intellectually, Seymour 5s the first man of his party. lie bus cold-blooded ability and pclilical culture of a very high ord r. W o have- no doubt .tt present that Giant will beat thia now rival. The nomination of Seymour, however, puts th rote of New York in'di.'ubt, for there he has undoubted power, not only with the marges but with the batiks an'i capitalists, v.Lo will work like beavers to secure his nomination." Not so much the banks nd capitalists, if you please, as the hard-waking, op- piebsed tax-payerc. Verily, w jll they woik liko b.'avcrs to secure his rletli.m, ai.d their J'ui to will t;o !: I. uii!-hh. fl'Hli: fat'ARE- IT STAIHB Characteristic Letter from Gen. Blair. Washington, Jute 30. Col. Jamta O. Brodkead : ; " Dear Colonel In reply to your inquir ies I bg leave o eay'lhat I leve to you to determi !,. on consultation with rny friends from Missouri, whether m; name shall be presented to the Democratic Convention, and to 6ubmit the following, as what I con sider the real and xmly issue in this con test : , The reconbttuclion policy of the radicals will ba complete before . the next election;; the States, so long excluded, will have been admitted ; negro suffrage established., and the carpet-baggers installed in their seats in both branches of Congres3. There is no , possibility of , changing the political oharae'er of the Senate, even. if tbe Demo crats 6hould elect t! eir President and a ma jority of the popular branch of Congress. We cannot, therefore, undo th radical plan of reconstruction by Congressional action ; the Senate will continue a bar to its repeal. Must we submit to it? How c.tn it be overthrown? It can only be don-e by the authority of the Executive, who is sworn to maintain the Constitution, and who will fail to do his duty if he allows the Consti tution to perish under a series of Congress ional enactments which are in palpaWe vio lation of itp fundamental principles. If the President elected - by the Democ racy. enforces, or permits others to enforce, these reoonstruction acts, the radicals by the accession of twenty fpurious Senators and fifty representatives, . will control both branches of Congress, and his administra lion will be as powerless as the preseDt one of Mr. Johnson. There is but one way to rr6tore the gov ernment and the Constitution. , and that is for the President elect to declare these acts null aud void, compel the army to undo its usurpations at the South, disperse the car pet-bag State governments, allow the whitf neorde to reortraniza their own o-overr? - r--j o - o -, ments, and elect Senators and Representa tives. The House of Representatives will contain a majority of Democrats from the North, and they will admit the Representa- tives elccied by the white people of the South, and with the co-operation of the President, it will not be difficult to compel the Sate to submit onco more to the obli gations of the Constitution. It will not be able to withstand the public judgment, if distinctly invoked and clearly expressed, on this fundamental, issue, and it is the sure way to avoid all future strife to put this is sue plainly to the country. . I repoat that this is, the . real and only question which we should allow to costrol us. Shall we submit to the usurpations by which the government has been overthrown, or shall we exert ourselves for its full and complete resloration ? It is idle to talk of bonds, greenback, gold, the public faith and the public credit. What can a Demo cratio President do -in regard to any -of these, with a Congress in both branches controlled by the carpet-baggers and their allies? lie will be powerless to stop the supplies by which the idle negroes are or ganized into political clubs by which an army is maintained to protect these vaga bonds in their outrages upon the ballot. These, and things like the6e, eat up the revenues aud resources of tho government and destroy its credit make the difference between gold and greenbacks. We must restore the Constitution before we can re store the fin&nces, and to do this we must have a PresiJent who will execute the will of the people by trampling into dust the usurpations of Congress, known as the re construction acts. I wish to stand before the convention upon this in'sue, but it is one which embraces everything else that is of value in its large and comprehensive re sults . It U the one thing that iocluds all that is worth a contest, and without it th ro ia nothing that gives dignity, honor, or val ue to the struggle. Your friend, Frank P. Blair. This is a characteristic production. Though some may be timid enough to hrick from or hesitate at certain of its po sitions, none will deny that it id straight forward, manly and bold. There is not a half-way expression or word in it. The writer dares to ppcak the truth that is in him. He dares to undo, in what he deems a constitutional mode, whatever wrono he believes to have been done. Ha does not consider the people of the South as thrust wholly oulsiJe of (he bonds of right and justice. He has no idea ol folding bis arms abd saying, that, inasmuch as the millions in that section have been cast down, op pressed, robbed, subjected to negro eway, &c'.,"&c, by the most infernal usurpations of power the world ever witnessed, their wrongs must be regarded as sceomplished facts beyond the reach of redress and per mitted by the greatest nation of the world to stand through all time. Ha is verv dif ferent sort of a politician and statesman from that. Louisrille Journal A bill has been introduced in the Louis iana Legislature to abolish the elective franchise, by empowering the Governor to declare of his owu will who shall be mem bers of the Legislature. It has passed the Lower House. George Alfred Townsend; the well-known correnpondent of several newspapers, is at present in Cleveland, Ohio. He came out with the intention of reporting Grant's trip West, but he found it loo dull for him, and decides t return to Washington. The fact i U liiat the Giaut enthusiasm is a dead dc in ll The Democratic Platform. In adopting the declaration of principles which we publish elsewhere, the New York Convention, we verily believe, has stved the -Republic, and immortaliied iiself.no matter whom it may select to bear U e standard on which those principles shall be emblazoned. A sounder, wiser, juster, abler, grander platform has certainly never been put forth by any party in this country. It is indeed a most felicitous and magnifi cent expression of the conservative faith. It will electrify the land . We look upon the Convention as having already sealed the doom of the Republican party. "The past at least is secure." Louisville Journal. The following private letter from Mr. Pendleton was addressed to Washington McLean, of the Ohio delegation, before that delegation left Ohio, and was handed to Jno. A. Green, Jr., on their arrival in New York : Cincinnati, Thursday, June 25. Jlv Dear Sir: You left my office this morning before I was aware of it. I seek you at your homs but you are not here. I must 6ay what 1 want to by note. As soon as you get to New York "ea Governor Seymour. You know well what was my feeling before, and I heard from him last fall. He is to-day the foremost man in our party in tbe United States. His ability, cultivation, and experience put him at tbe head of our statesmen. - He commands my entire confidence. I would rather trust him than myself with the delicate duties of the next four years. You know I am sincere. Make him feel' thi, and that he can rely on me and my friends. I have natural pride, an honest pride in the good will of my countrymen, but you know bet ter than any one else it is neither egotisii cal nor over-rul'ng ; that I am ready and anxious to give up the nomination to any- wuuc.n gw uue ngi0 more '8elf' : Express all this frankness to the !. - .1 i . i. ii - Governor, but delicately, and let him un derstand my views, men, and measures as I have frequently given them to you. Good bye.' God bless you. Yours truly, Geo. H. Pendleton. To Washington McLean, Esq. Cut This Out Preserve It. During the approaching' Presidential campaign the question will frequently arise How many electoral votes are there ? how many for each State ?, etc. For the benefit of those who may not already know, we give the following statement : , STATES KEPRE8ENTKD IN CONGRESS WITH THE NUMBER OF - ELECTORAL VOTES OV HACP, California 5 Connecticut 6 Delaware 8 Illinois 16 Indiana 13 Iowa, 8 Kansas 8 Kentucky 11 Maine 1 Maryland t Massachusetts..: 12 Michigan 8 Minnesota 4 Missouri . . 11 Nebraska. . 8 Nevada 8 New Hampbhiro .... h New Jersey 1 New York 3 Ohio 21 Oregon 8 Pennsylvania. 26 lihode loland.. . . . . 4 Tennessee 10 Vermont 5 West Virginia 6 Wisconsin 8 247 STATES NOT REPRESENTED IN CONGRESS. Alabama 9 Mississippi 7 Arkansas . . 5 Florida 8 Georgia 9 Louisiana 7 Whole number Ne:e.-iary to eloct North Carolina 9 South Carolina 6 Texas. 6 Virginia 10 70 .....817 159 If Colorado should be admitted into the Union previous to the election, the aggre gate number of electors will be increased to 320. It will then require 1G1 to elect. Grant and Jackson. It is certainly not very respectful to the memory of Jackson and Clay to associate their names aud memory with the name of Grant, but, by w-ay of conlrasf, ilia appar ent disiespeot will, no doubt, be excused. In his letter accepting tho Radical nomina tion, Grant says : "I shall have no policy of my own to in terfere against the people. U. S. Grant." Now, if you want to see the groat differ ence between- this mau and the immortal Jackson, who was a statesman as well as a soldier, read : "I say again, fellow citizens, remember the fate of ancient Rome, and vote for no candidate who will not tell you with; the frankness of an independent . freeman, the principles upon which, if elected, he will administer your Government. "That man deserves to be a slave, who would vote for a mum candidate, when Lis liberties are at stake. ., "Andrew Jackson.' It would seem that Jackson had this man in mind, for he warns the people against him. But excuse the miserable thing, for he hasn't got sense enough to write a long article, or talk sense. A radical men.b.r of the Georgia Leg islature was knocked down by a gentleman in Atlanta the other day for offensively ob truding his radical opinions upon him. The Planter's Banner (Louisiana) says the crop prospects in all parts of the South are cheering and rejoices in the hope that overflows, pestilence, famine, and scala wags will eoon be among the things that were. Aid for a Good Cause. One hundred aid fifty dollars was raised at ten minutes notice in the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, at Fayetteviie, on ifurtday mon.ing i f. r th beneGl of MudenU for the ministry iu CurcbrUnJ Uu'.v tieitj, LLanoL. BLAIR. ilo Accepts the Nomination for the Vice Presidency. The following is the. speech made by General Blair on the 10:h, accepting the nomination for Vice Presijent : "In reply to Gen. Morgan, I accept the platform of resolutions passed by tho late Democratic Convention and I accept their nomination with feelings of most profound gratitude, and sir,. thank you for the very kiod manner in which you have conveyed to me the decision of the Convention. I ac cept the nomination with the. feeling that the nomination for the Presidency is one which will carry us to certain victory, ap plause and because I believe that nomina tion is the most appropriate that could be made by the Democratic Convention. The contest which we wage is for the restoration of institutional government, cheers, and it is appropriate that we should make this contest under the lead, o one who haa given his life to the mainte nance of the constitutional government. Cheers. He made this contest tot the restoration of principles of government which belong to our race, and, my fellow-citizens, it is most proper we' should select our leader, not from the military, but one who has de voted himself to civil-pursuits, and who has gi ven himself to the study of the under standing of our Constitution and its main tenance with all the force of reason and of judgment.- My fellow-citizens, I have said this con test before us was one for the restoration of our Government. It is also for the res toration of our race. Loud cheers. It is to prevent the people of one race being exclu ded from their homes and exiled from the Government which they formed and crea ted for. themselves, and for their children, and to prevent them being driven out in ex ile or trodden under the feet . of a semi-barbarous race. Applause. In this contest we shall have the sympathy of every man who is worthy of belonging to the white race. What civilized people on earth would refuse to associate with themselves, in all the rights and honors and dignity of their country, such men as Lee and John son. A voice, "None, none." What civilized country would fail to do them honor? While fightingtfor an erro neous oause they distinguished themselvee by gallantry, never surpassed. Applause. In that contest they are sought to badis franchised and exiled from their homes. In that contest they proved themselves to be our peers My fellow-citizens, it is not my purpose to make a lengthened address, but simply toexpiess my gratitude for the distinguish ed honor which has been conferred upon me, and from my heart I reiterate tho words of thanks, that came from my lips wLj:. I begun. Religious. Rev. Jno. T. Hughes will preach a dedication sermon, next Sabbath, at rieasant Valley Church, on. Big creek, three miles west of Reynolds' station. NEW ADVEKTISEM'NTS. OAK GROVE INSTITUTE, Located Six Miles. South of Pulaski, (In the Fogg n-d Anthonr Neighborhood.) I TAKE pleasure in returning thtmka to the jpn tronti of my School, and hope", by proper dili gence and attention, to merit a continuance of the liberal patronage heretofore extended. My Bchool will open for the ensuing session July 27th. The various branches in English are thoroughly taught. Owing to ths depressed state of tho country, I pro pose to reduco my charges to $2.60 a month per scholar. julyl7 -2t. J. D. COFFEE. NASHVILLE B ANIJER FOR THE Presidential Campaign. ' We appeal to tl c friends of Constitutor nalliborty thronphout tho Ptato to use every possible effort to circulate tho Nash vims lizPCBLJOAN Banneb, from now until the close of the prurient Trcbidentihl can vase. The issncs pending tho result of the approaching Presidential election are the most importunt that ever addressed themselves to lLo poojdo of Tennes see. The most effective work to be done in the canvass is tho circulation of sound conservative principles tbroueh the medium of tho press. CafThe price of the liaiiy Banner is Ono Dollar a month, w ith liberal redaction to cluha. J-t?The 'Weekly Campaign Banner, only one dcliar for the entiracampain. Wc venture little m givmp turance that the Weekly CAMrian Banner will contain tho most thorough, comprehensive aud complete record of the campaign that will appear any where in, tho coun try Our facilities for maktoar it eo are extraordinary-, and we propose to use thuin Ud tko -utmost. This Campaign Banner wiil contain regular spe cial diffiaUhea from Washington. It will aliiocon tain all the important spee;hi:s of tho canvass, with, all other political matter of interest, forming a complete weekly hifctory of the campaign. .Address "EEPUBLIGAN BANNEU," julylT. Nashville, Tenn. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST ! COPPER . SCIIOLI j . L JGriITISris G ROD ! PI ALL'S PATENT. HAVING procured the agency for this eor.nty,I am prepared to put up these rods for the w; who desire it. ... These Rods arc grcstly superior and cheaper than all ethers. Itismadeof puia copper. th test ma terial for lightning conductors. It i holWw, and has more than double tho conducting capacity of any other rd. It its pronounced hy tbe profoun 1 cst Electricians of tbo world superior to any othe ever used. No other rhould be used. Call nd get a circular, and exaruina the sol. jnly 10-2m F. A. LEUNH ARD, ag't. In Bankruptcy. '"PIIE undersigned give3 notice that Le lusbrcn ap X jointed Assignee for J. M. Brown, W. V . tree, N. G. E.-!ick,J. A. P err v-and D. L. Kinibr a!i of Giles county , Slate of Tcnnceso, within ti. M:d lie I)i.-tri :t. Vl;. have b-.-cn adjudged I'.oii. riiTsupon their on n j stition. by the Dijlrik Con?., .it D'-sUiti. U L". Vi ''! D. JnlviT-j; A- :g!i-c- NEW ADVE UTISEM NTS (JRE.lT SOUTHERN 'PREPARATIONS. The?c remedies vctp not. discovered amid Green land's icy climes, nor Africa s burning oands ; they were not breathed in thunder from rolling clouds, nor belched from molting volcanoes; thej were not brought forth from Chaos by intuition, nor discov ered by accident ia a far oft" clime ; but they are tho result of a lore 7WaJ experience in tho tSouthern and Western States, beinjf prepared by regular grad uated physicians, with ereat accuracy, from reme dial agents thut are used by the -MEDICAL PROFESSION ALL OVER, THE COUNTRY. The public have long demanded a class of RELIABLE FAMILY MEDICINES, prepared by the medical j rofesaiou, adapted to the actual -wants and necessities of each and every fam ily, and we have new rupplied that want. PHYSICIANS PRESCRIBE THEM I DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND THEM ' FARMERS AND PLANTERS ARE USING THEM IN THEIR FAMILIES IN LIEU OF ALL OTHER PREPARATIONS. Wherever once introduced their sale has been tru ly wonderful. While from tho frigid climes of the North to the torrid zones of tho South, and rora the Eastern shores of tho Atlantic to tb Western shores ot the Pacific, the pealing Rnd discordant thunders of humbugncry are grating harshly upon tho ear, the soft and convincing tones of science have come toy our rescue, and now make strong ap peals upon your?calm renson and judgment to try oar remedies, promising that they will at once merit yon esteem and confidence. (JREA r SOUTHERN PREPARATIONS. npiIESE are" tlio 6tauJiirJ Family Mcdkincs of I A n, Art.m Tl.nw ui-sk u .1 nuril VtV till medical profession. - They are prefercd by every mother and father. They immediately merit pub lic esteem and confidence of all who onco test their virtues. They are preparec by physicians who are fully authorized bv the Congress of the United States, and aro the result of a long bedside experi ence.. - Being neither secrets nor patents, the medi cal proiession imvo uu uesum.j m (iuuj mum a fair trial and a hearty recommeadation. DIARRHEA, 'FHOUSANDS of our fellow being are annually X consigned to untimely gravos, aid tho dying groanaof old and young aro constantly crying aloud for relief from Diarrhea. Cholera Morbus, &c. As a result of much scientific research and a long and faithful bedside experience, we offer a Remedy tor all these Summer Complaints which is pleasant and never failing in its effects. No mother should fTl to have.a supply of the RED DIARRHEA REMEDY. Prepared with artistic beauty, with chemical purity and exactness, selected and combined according to extensivo medical experience, unique in finish and appearance, rnildj-pteasant and oooliug totho sto mach and never-failing in remodial elleots, the un erring linger of truth toint to the RED DIAR REAU RtMEDY as the boasted combination of th day for all forms of Diarrhea, Cholera, Cholera Mor bus nausea, vomiting, Cram i, etc. 1 rice ''-"- or six uoiuei) lor f a.w. i-cm to nil parts of the country on receipt of price. Sold by all drUgtflStB. -J. 1. ifikWOHiOUW, S A). i' e t,.m..i.;., t. rop's. Memphis, Tenn. EXGLISH FEMALE BirrlRS. WHAT WILL THEY DO? They will restoro fading female beauty, will pa'iLt the palo cheek, will hurl Lack tho gathering storm that encircles yor brow, will add brightness and lustre to your lifeless eye, will give brilliancy and activity to your dull intellect, will stregthjn- and soothe your shattered nerve, add tone, liealth aud bouyaucy to your whole system. HOW WILL THEY DO ALL THIS f ' By ajousiiig, regulating and restoring all sickly fern ides to a healthy condition. Bv curing ufl those complaints peculiar to the female sex, such as painful, suppressed or irregular Menstruation, Hvs Uaua, Leucorrhuja. Chlorosis. Prolapsus Uteri, Ul ceration and Irritability of the 'W omb, Pains in the side and back, Melancholy, Palpitation of tho heart, Swimming and Giddiness of tho Head, Cold Feet and Hands. .Nervousness, !ick Headache, a fool ing of suffocation, an indisposition to enter society, and all tnose diseases arising Trom a deranged con dition of the uterine svntcm, whether affecting old or young , married or single. This componnd is neitner Micro; nor patent, out is preparec1 and oiler ed by tho regular medical profession. We have hundreds 6imlur to tho following : Irom an eminent hyeician vf Qarrul Co., Hw. MssB. J. P. Dbomooolk & Co. ' As your "English Female Bitters'' is neither a bo cret nor a pttent, 1 have frequently prescribed it for tho -arious female complaints of our country, and always with the most satisfactory rosults. It is de cidedly the most valuable combination I have ever known lor . the treatment ofthoso complaints jecu liar to- the female ex, old or young, and I do not hesitate to give it a hearty recommendation. Ito as tonishing cure.- have won for it many laurels in Car roll county, and 1 nope its etliciency may soon be heralded all over the country that the medical pro fession and the female community mav reap its ad vantages. G. W. VASSLIi, M.D. The English Female Bitter aro accurately and beautifully put up in largo bottles, ulti.W per bot tle, or three bottles for $9 one bo'.tle lasting about two weeks. Shipped to all parts of the country on rtcciptof price. Sold by all druggists. J. P. DROMGOOLE, Prop's., Memphis, Tenn. KIDNEY AND BLADDER. Affections are cxceedingl j common and troublesome all over tho country, aud the public have long felt the necessity of a remedy that could be rel;cd upon in all those affections, and none are better qualified to prepare such a remedy than tho physician him self. We have practiced medicine about twenty yearn, and can sjiftly tay that we know of no corubi nation to equal our EXT. BE ARBERIIY AND BUCIIU. It is recommended to cure oil derangements of tho Kidneys and Bladder, such as Gravel, Urinary De posit of all kinds, Bloody or Milky Urine, frequent desire to urinate, pain in small of Laok, dull burn ing pain-in region ot bladder, Gout. Dropsy, ner vous trembling, melancholy, evil foreU dings, ef fects of habits of dissipation or early abuse, lcs of power and memory, and all thfc affections requir ing a prompt and decided L'iuretic, whether old or young, male or female. Pi ice f 1, or six bottles for t'.QO. Shipped "to all rr.rtsof the country on receipt of price. rM by all druggists. J. . 1'. DKOilUOOJt fc CO., I'roi s. Memphis, Tenn., The Chill lJnle. a s 1 a sills a 1 1 i 1 1 a s 1 1 i h i 1 1 s sllihchillti sllihcfchills hllihcfofc hills sllihcfogofchilla hllihcfogugofchilln slli hefogni ngofchi 11a a 1 1 i h c i & g ri i K i ii g o f c h i I Is s 1 1 i h c 1 o g n i n g of c b i 1 1 a lliheiogngofchillb sllihcfogofchills sllihofofchills sllihcfchills 9 1 1 i h c h i 1 1 a alii h illi 8 1 1 ills sills sis a The abov will fire afiy eas of chill, even of six months standing, without afiecting the head, cars or nerves. H arouses the vtomach and liver, carries off the bile and efkets permanent cures. In tho swamps of Arkansas, here the chills are ao common and ao ditiicult to cure, they readily yield when treated with our Kicg of Chills. Put up in large bottles ut fl, or t-ix bottles for $". Sent to all parts of thu country on rweipt of price. - -il by all druggists. ; J. 1'. DROMGOOLE& CO., pRorRiBToio, Memphis, Ten.esske. I tsr:'n,.-l in PULASKI bv Sr jirti . ': I'ii 'V, i!-l!r, NA' liVJl.Li; iw L'tttv, DtM-.-w: t.t . . 11 i-'.i'.ij NEW ADVERTISES!1 NTS Wheat-Fans ! Wheat-Fans ! ! . Wheat-Fans ! ! HEW FAHHIlKr-XIILL ! ! I Wheat-Fan, Seed-Cleaner, and Srn'uf machine Combined. '. . ' vr tted for Cleaning and Preparing all kind$ cf Grain for Seed and Market. THE BEST Combined grain & seed Separator IN EXISTENCE It is Compact and Simple in Construction while for the Rapidity and Vari- ety of its work, it Is r rjJlIIS FAN will clean and separata tho Pouleot -w23.&z-fV from Smutl Cheat, Cockle, blighted, broken, and shriveled grains, and other imparities, leaving tlie. BEST, HEALTHY, FLUMP, AND P) KFtCT grUlllb tO SOW. Every intelligent larnier knows the ird vantage of sowing . PURE : SEED-WHEAT, so that when tou raise a crop vou will hsvc NO THING BUT WHEAT, and consequently will raise' three or lour bushels more to the acre. It clean Wheat for market without waste, sav ing tbo small grains. .. . It will c7a from the chaff from 300 f 40C bush elsol Wheat per da, aud cleaner at one running through than any tan in the market. It cleans Corn, Oats, Kye, Barley, Millet, Timo thy, Clover, Hemp, Flax, and Hungarian Grass seeds; audit' Timtilhy bo mixed with Clover, Mil -let, or Hungarian Giass-wod,- it will separat them. r Farmers, will.it Pay Grain-dealers will givo from twenty-five to fifty cents more on tho biinhel for foul wheat cleaned on this Fan. Millers can save from one-third to one-half of tho sciiEKXixuB, which, they would otherwise feed to their hogs, and from which they can make gocd family fiour. It is considered by the best Millers as far superi or to theirordinary Smut-machines, because it lake out the smut grains whole, without breaking them. It can be geared to run by machinery, and every mill shonld have one. Ths best Farmers, Millers, Grain-dealers and Business-men, pronoance this Mill a rr.rmrr sdookh-, and a nluable invention which lias h.-ng Loen need ed. We invite Farmera to bring tho worst sample they have of any kind of (train or Sffds, undAr ovjhly (est it fur trismtflret ; and ask all entrrprising Farmers, Grain-dealers, aud others in to routed if this kind of machinery, to give tins SETA It A T O It a careful investigation, feeling satisfied, that it merits are far superior to all other Fans. Advantages'. It is not ho lnrp and cumbersome aa the ordinary Fanning-Mill, and is shorter, bringingtho wind di rectly under tho aei res. The screens Are longer, giving the grain more unrfice to run over. It has strong, even blast; blowing evenly tho entire widih of the screens ; (many Fans blow ont'good wlwat in the centra, while cheat and light ntuffrun k n the siK-s of the screens with tho good wheat.) The shakirg-hoo has a true circular or rotary mo tif n, which relieves the Mill f f tho constant jar and shaking of the ordinary Fahning-MWl, causing it to rnn bmothor, and with leu v-ie, aud also epreuding the grain evenly over tho entire surface ot the screens. It has a SELF-FEEDING HOPPER, which gives tbe grniu a steady and uninterrupted flow on the sieves ; after which it is caught by th-. concentrated b&ol which carries brant, Cheat, and light substances out of tho mill. Finally, lhj per - " feetly cleaned grain la discharged in a concentrated body, into a half bushel, at the front of the mill, thereby avoiding tho WASTE, ns well as the TIM K and LABOK, forraerlyunaroldablo in 'T ensuring up tho grain. . " ' ENEBUET1C. PESPONS1 BLE MEN r - Who can bring good tfereuec, arid capable of cB ducting a business of from f 5,000 to f .'0,0v, to pur-" chase an interest itf thin Machine. To such parties wo oil' r EXTM0RDINA11Y INDUCEMENTS, and say, come and see us, and seo if we do not con vjneo you that joa can ruike Kokz iov by a ju dicious investment in handling this Separator thun in any other burners. The Pteas on. thi.?. Fan covers ElOHT SPECIFIC and IMPORTANT CLAIMS, thereby saeoring to tho parties purchas i g Territory au EiCLL'bi VE MUNOPOLY in tliia valuable invention f"r ' &EVKXTEEX YEARS. . Also, wanted, good, reliable men inerrry coun ty, to act as Agent for thesaleof the Mills. To tuch a liberal comrni-sioi will be paid. -The Mills are mado cf . ' Good, Stro-Jg-, Well-Seasoned Lumber, AND EVERY MACHINE WARRANTED. Price of the Fa at the Manufactory, FORTY IDOLIVIIS. Freight added. Full riroctionacoomprnjr eavh Mill. Fr TerrH'ry or fanning M'lla in Terir..-., Kentucky, and the Southern fc'tates, call ouocil dro T. it. JOIVES CO.. Xos. 2 a ad t, Cor. College awl Church sis.. (Opposite CLfto.bev &f Ccrumarce.) IIASHVllir, - TENNESSEE. cur Trj'