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gtinpxrnnrt K:itki hy V. A. Smith, Pit. D. Kim pics cf wlue, and suruplrs of beer," Samples of all kinds or lqiur sold here; Samples of whisky, samples of gin, Samples of all ktnds of bitter. Step In. Hani pics of ale, and porttr, and brandy; Samples as large as you please, and qultO handy ; Our samples are pure, noil alfo yon'il find Our customers always genteel and refined; For gout it men know when they've taken enough, Aud never part.-ik'.-of common stuff. . . Hjfides the-;e atnp!es within, you know, Thoreare samples without of what they ca n do : Samples r.f headache, simples of gout ; ftaioples of ciais witli the elbows ont. Samples of bo t.s wlHion; he Is or toes; Sam pi is of inea with a woken nose ; Samples of men in thegu ter lying, Samples of mm with tselirinm. dylnr. Simples of meu curbing; and swearing, Samples of men all ev;l daring ; H.iiu pies of lonely, tiled men, .Who long in vain for thtir freedom again; 'HA.nples ol old men worn in the strife, Hamplesof young men tired of lifj; Samples of ruined hopes and Uvea, Samples of des i!aio homes aod wive ; :S imples of aching hearts grown cold With auguish and misery untold ; :S iraples of noble youth in disgrace, Who meet you with averted face; :Nample8 of hungry little ones, Starving to death In their dreary homes. Jn fact, there is scarcely a woe on earth jBut our 'samples' have nurtured or given them birth ! J all yu helpers to sorrow and crime ! Who deal out death for a single dime, Know ye the Lord, though he may delay 2 las in reserve for the last great day The terrible 'woe,' of whose solemn weight No mortal cau know till the pearly gate Is closed, and all with one accord Acknowledge the justice of their reward. TIEIN33. Maury lodge speaks of buying an organ- Pat say.s thai lie- w si teetotaler, but thin, lie is not a bigoted one. Several Members of Maury lodge :.uv ifoing to Xelx) Temple to take the Mr. Jy.k Porter expert.-) soon to or ganize lioek Spring lodge of Good 'Templars. Mr. Shirley persists in saying that ''tomieraHce is better nor the tHiureh." tf 'ulleoku is rejoicing in tlie temper ance work recently dune there by Ed itors llelmick ami Watkins. Tlie lir.-t temperance society in this country was organized in Saratoga county, X. V. in March, lsas. Maury lodge of (Jood Templars ini tialed Messrs. T. Lane, and S. J. Hol ler, the evening of the fifth instant. Master Edwin Lewis of Iwisburg, lias joined the Murphy movement, sin:! many other persons have follow ed sod example. It hi been eM limited tliatiftlie ?i.pior trattic eoii.'d be slopped, in one year, enough money might lie saved to pay the national lebt. Lvwisburg is:dive with the Murphy movement, and we I'-ain with pleas tire that ii hundred temperance cards liave been distributed among its citi zens. It will take every good adjective in the dictionary to dcscrilie the carpet that Judge Pillow is going to have Kprcad upon the floor of Maury lodge room. When asked how he l It, two days sifter he had signed the pledge, an old imbiber said, "It seems as if it is a long time between drinks." Not too long, however. J'The win ell. arrow fell over me, and i tV whiskey's fault," said a drinking man, L:.t Tiuslay night, when he was sitting on the ground, and could not rise to his feet. It is a common thing now-a-days, in all parts of the country, to see men and women wearing the blue rihboti, to let the world know they have signed the temperance p'.idge. A v hiski y-heail with a very red nose, snid the other day, that his nose was like a certain farm in (ieorgia; it was very poor, at lir.-t, but was ruin ed by excessive cultivation. Nc1h Degree Temple meets next Monday night, the eighteenth in stant, wheji the ollieers are to be in stalled. Every ( Jood Templarin Mau ry county is invited to be present and enjoy the exercises. Maury lodge, in Columbia, had a love-fca.-t, last Tuesday night. Pros, Woodside, Watkins, .1. (J. Hailcy, (. M. llrooks and othcrsspoke. Pro. W Shirley mu.-t have 1 ten in bad health for he only made li e speeches; he still carries candy to the lodge for the ladies. Wf don't understand hv it it that a c. instable with a search-warrant, looking for whiskey in a temperance town, can search for live days and never get a smell, while a dry and thirsty man in the same town steps out of hi ollit-c, walks briskly away, ami in three minutes is seen emerg ing from an adjacent alley, wiping his perspiring mouth with bis cutis An old ( 'ulmiiliia citizen was read ing the temperance column of the Journal, a few months ago, without knowing who was the editor. Kirst, lie said, "This i Sam." Then a little farther on, "This is Sam Watkins." Then, again, "This is Sain Watkins; for I see it stick im.' out all over." He was greatly relieved when some one told him that Mr. Watkins was the temperance editor. There are ilu'C inillioiis of mothers, wives, sisters and daughters, of eon Miiiic.1 ilrimkards in i.'-e I'nittsl States; Mid women sillier more fro?i this vice than from all other evils combined. The keenest pangs and the shadiest j-eiilt :tre eliilnreil l .v women who i :u.ke r.o sign. In the wa-ted realms ,o t;i-soi-ial allections, in the higher ;0,Hl?u;ier life of w il'e and mother and liieitfl, what tortures are silently in- dureil, w h;it suppressed w ret -belli less is liorne, w hat slow torments of deso- 'date ho-s and broken heart go on, a word of which never re: c'.ies the mit- v.viinl ear! 9 . THE BKIItB. Fatal effects of luxury and easel We drink our pomon, and we eat disease. Not so, O temperance bland; when ruled by Tlie brute's obedient, the man Is free." Statement cf tie Basinets of tfco Sead Eirer Brand Trunk Ballrod. 1. From an accurate estimate It ap pear that this road is carrying 600,000 passengers per year, mostly young men, down to the condition " of Com mon Drunkards. 2. It is carrying towards destruc tion multitudes of the brave and no ble young men in our army. 3. It has carried down to disgrace, poverty and destruction, many of the most talented men in the country, from the Par, the Pench, the Pnlpit, and the Halls of Congress 4. It carries more than 1, 000,000, 000 of dollars-to lc(nn tion. A dis tinguished observer of fkcUsaytf: "All the crimes on earth do not destroy so many of the human race, nor alienate so much property as drunkenness." 5. If the families of drunkard av erage five persons, it carries untold mist ry and wretchedness to mow than l,o00,000 people, a large proportion of whom are women and children. It sends i!00,000.to the almshouse. 0. 133,000 places are licensed to sell spirituous liquors in the United States and Territories. 800,000 persons are employed in these grog-shop. If we add to them the numluT employed in distilleries and wholesale liquor-shops, we shall have at least 570,Ov0 persons employed in sending their fellow-mortals to premature graves. 7. In the National Peer Congress, at their ninth annual session at New ark, New Jersey, in June, 18f9, the president presented statistics showing the total amount of the capital em ployed directly and indirectly in the manufacture of lieer to be $105,000,000, giving employment to 5(1,003 men. 8. Crime is mostly caused by drunkenness. Criminals are an ex pense to the United States of $40,000, O00 per year; 9. The liquor traffic annually sends to prison 100,000 perrons; reduces 200, 000 children to a state worse than or phannge; sends 00,000 annually to drunkards' graves, andmakes (100,000 drunkards. 10. The people of the United States, according to the report of Commis sioner Wells, swallowed from the counters of retail grog-shops, in one year, jxiison liquor to the value of Jl, 573,501,(i.Vi. This terrible business against the laws of Uod and man is rapidly increasing. $5 -&'.iii&&-. "Though I look old, yet I am strong and lusty; For in my yontli, I never did spplv Hot and rcbeU.ous liquors to roy I lioI." tihakrprare. Begularitj. If it is true that a watch runs better, lasts longer, and keeps better time by lieing treatedln the same way in all resjMX't.s; wound at the same time in the day, it is vastly more important for a human In-ing, whose body consti tutes by far the finest mechanism in the world, to bo equally methodi cal in all of his or her habits. Indeed it is believed that method even in a ld habit, is preferable to gross irreg ularity. For example, it is better to retire regularly at a late hour, as eleven, than to do so at six at one time, at twelve the next time, then at one the following day, and so on; each night varying the time by three or rour hours, me numan sys tem is a machine and has it laws de manding olinlienee, toas great an ex tent, to say tho least, as any or the works of the Creator. The lody conforms to customs as certain as Uo the memhers or society; has its habits and those "become sec ond nature." Since we must depend mainlv for our health and strength on our food, and on the perfection of di gestion, and since the perfection of in gestion is made so dejiendent on the regularity of its work, it. is ol the ut most imiiortaiice that our meals be taken at regular periods with an Inter val of aiKHitsix hours, observing aa iar as possible the meat law of simplicity; using but fow different articles at the same meal. line some thnv on one meal each day and some on two, it is probable for most of working classes, the usual custom of taking three is safe and best, perhais, on con dition that the last one snail lie a mere lunch, consisting of not more than one-third of the day's rations, and that of the simplest character, that sleep may Ie refreshing. rhllonophv, relilglous solitude. And labor wait on Temperance; In these ixulre Ih bounded; they instruct the minds And body's action. Xabh't Mlcrocotmtu. Not Amorg wine-LiBber. Tlie charire that Christ was a wine biblier was made by his enemies and was a false charge, and the statement that he either made or uranu intoxi cating wine has never leen proved. It is a mere opinion, given by the wine-drinkers of the present day as an nnologv to cover their own drinking habits. The fact that there are two kinds of wine spoken of in the Pible is as plain and conclusive as any fact need lie. A hundred authorities, lioth ancient and modern, are found to sanction this view. Some of the fore most scholars of the age have adopted and promulgated this theory, ltev Wm. Patton. in his unanswered and unanswerable book, entitled "Pible Wines; or, Ijiws of Fermentation," brings conclusive evidence on this question. The unfermented wine is already on the tables of several thou sand churches of this country. More than a hundred ecclesiastical liodies have recommended the unfermented wine for communion purposes instead of the alcoholic compoundso frequent ly used, and which, in many instan ces, is entirely innocent of any por tion of the fruit of the vine. This view of the matter is daily gaining ground among Christian churches, and we trust the time is not far dis tant w hen the Intoxicating cup will not lie found upon a single table of the Lord in all our churches. Tlie "fruit of the vine" in its purity is so easily obtained that the "cup" which is to'le "drunk anew in my Father's kingdom," where nothing enters which "denletli or maketh a lie," hould not now contain the "mock er," which at last "bites like a serpent and stings like an miner." A jolly Englishman was arrested a fortnight ngo for disorderly conduct in the Haymarket, London, ami taken in-fore a magistrate. He admitted of havinir a gkiss or two, but did not con sider that he was drunk. He denied having ninde any incendiary remarks to a crowd about the w ar. One of JiLs greatest faults, he said, was that he w as addicted to Shakspeare, and it wiui jossible that under theinspiration of a giaw or two he had yielded to that amiable weakness ami recited certain portions of the great dramat ists works to the edification of the mob. The ingenuity of his defense w as of no avail for fie was fined 10 shining". lp Hurpnj the Temperance.Crator. The story of his own life makes up a good part of all his speeches. If he stays-only a day or two In a place, you get an abridgement of it. If he tarries longer, he gives it to you at length, in installments, with more or less of discursive moralizing and de scription and appeal thrown in even ing by evening. The story is well old. You would not tell so much of it, if you were in his place; but j'ou do not feel, after all, like censuring his frankness. You can see in his exiie rience the depth of degradation and woe into which drink plunges men; and he evidently thinks he has a bet ter right to show you the dark side of his own life than that of any other man's. Often as he lias told the tale it is far from lieing a mere recitation. His heart swells with emotions that are not simulated, and the tears start from his own eyes as he speaks of the woes of "mother' and the children in the days when drink was cursing his home. Now and then he strikes ofT into di gressions humorous, descriptive, dra matic some of which are very tell ing. The story of an Irish gill who felt so grand riding in her mistress's carriage that she wished she could stand on the sidewalk and see herself drive by is capitally told; and always when lie drops into his native brogue the Irishman that he gives us is a gen uine bit of character. Some of his more tragic passages are simply tre mendous. Ilis description of Sheri dan's ride, for example, or his imagi native portrayal of the "upas tree" of intemperance are astounding per formances. Such rhetoric, such elo cution, such acting are not often heard nor seen. He races back and forth across the platform: he roars like a caged ticer; he leaps, at the climax of his passion three or four feet into the air. Of course you do not approve all this. It is not your way of doing it. Neither do you approve all of Mur phy's orthu'py or syntax. Put it does the business. Crude though the per formances may be in spots, it is a tell ing performance. The acting is im mense, but it is scarcely more excess ive than is often seen upon the classic stage The rhetoric may be faultj-; but it is a big-hearted man that is talking, and the people do not stop to measure his words by critical stand ards. And now and then comes a passage of natural description or a touch of human nature that mark the real orator. What is lietter, the spirit of the man and his methods of work are so wholly Christian that they disarm criticism. "You can't querl with me," he says every day, "for I won'tquerl." If the Catholic priest forbids his peo ple to attend Murphy's meetings, Murphy eulogizes Father Mathew, and says not a word except in kind ness. 'For "the rum seller,", so long the black dragon of the temperance reformer, he has nothing but sympa thy. And, if the prohibitiouist de nounces him for his gentle treatment of the Honor dealers, he only says to the prohibitiouist: "God bless you we are going to cet everybody to stoi drinking liquor, and then nobody will want to sell it!" Not a word of cen sure or denunciation falls from his lips. Saturday Afternoon. The Silyer Veto The Bill Promptly Repassed. New vrk Hera'd. President Hayes sent his veto of the Silver bill to the House of itcpreoenta' tivo. in which the bill originated. vp terday afternoon. In the whole history of our government there was never In-fore a veto of any bill by any President which was overruled with such sw ift promptitude, or overrules by majoritiesin lioth houses so superrlu ously large. L ntu Andrew Johnson tii-oc no bill was ever passed by Con grcss over the veto of a President. President Hayes is not the defiant bull headed type of man that President An drew Johnson was; but Congress seem to show even more alacrity m humili ating him and proving his want of influence than did Mr. Johnson. We suppose no intelligent judge believed that the Silver bill could lie defeated at this latollay by the President' sneg ative; but-holiody put bo depreciating an estimate on iTesiqeiu wayes' lniiu enee asto predict or conjecture so over whelming a defeat of his veto as that which it encountered. Poth the con temptuous haste and the surprising majoritv with which the bill was re passed must be mortifying to tho Pres ident. In the House the vote was -l!Mi yeas to 73 nays. Had the vote tieen only 14'J yeas to 73 nays the veto would have been equally condemned in that branch of Congress. In the House the silver men had fifty votes to spare. Even in the Senate thej sue ceeiled beyond exectatlon and had su perfluous votes. The vote in the Sen ate was 4? i yeas toll) nays,thesilvermen having eight votes more than they needed for carrying the bill over the veto. And yet it was less than two days since hue J louse circles were professing a lielief that tlie veto might defeat the bill in the Senate. So little does a President understand his weak' nesswhen he has sundered his relations with his own party ineongresM.'President Haves has liegun at the wrone end He does not seem to understand that an ounce of prevention is worth pound or cure. An able l'resident in friendly relations with Congress could have cheeked the lunacy in its earliest stage and have prevented its outgrowing the power of his veto. It is a phenomenon for a bill to be stronger after a veto than it was liefore ith the great advantage oflieing on the right side of the question, the Pres ident has been foiled and mortified le- j'ond the expectations of those who knew now feeble his influence had be come. .Had Mr. Plainc lieen Prcsi dent and had he held the sound views of Mr. Hayes, it would have been political impossibility for tlie Silver bill to be repassed over his veto. ITapsleon's Prediction on &H3sia. Now all eyes are turned to Constan tinople, the Imhic of contention of Eu- rojH-, it may lie to quote an opinion given ny jsapoieon at ."st. jieiena, in 1S17, to his surgeon Parry O' Meara. "Jn the course of a few years," add ed he, "Jlussia will have Constantino ple, the greatest part of Turkey, and all (ireeee. This I hold to be as certain as if it had already taken place. Al most all the cajoling and flattering which Alaxander practiced towards me was to gain my assent to effect his object. I would not consent, fort-seeing that the equilibrium of Euroiie would lie destroyed. -in me natural course ol things, in a few years Turkey must fall to ltussia. The greatest art of her population are ureeKs, who you may say, are itus sians. The Power it would injure. ami who could oppose it, are r.ngiand, r ranee, I'mssia and Austria. Now, as to Austria, it would be very easy for Kussiu to engage her assistance by giv ing her Servia and other Provinces liordering the Austrian dominions. reaching near to Constantinople. The only hyiKithesis that France and En gland may ever be allied with sinceri ty will lie in in order to prevent this. Hut even this alliance will not avail. France, England and Prussia united can not prevent it. ltussia and - Aus tria can at any time effect it. Once mistress of Constantinople, Russia gets all the commerce of the Mediter ranean, becomes a great naval imwer. and heaven knows what may hapien. he quarels witu you, marines oil to India an army of 70,000 good soldiers. which to ltussia is nothing, and 1 00,000 canaille, Cossacks others, and England loses India. "Aliove all other iiowers, ltussia is most to lie feared, especially byyou. 1 cr soldiers are braver than the Austrians, and she has the means of raising as many as she pleases. In bravery, the French and English soldiers are the only ones to be comjtarcd to them. All this I fori Ma w. I see into futurity fur ther than others, and I wanted to es tablislia barrier against these bartiari ans by reestablishing the Kingdom of Poland and putting Poniatowski at the head ot itas King; but your imliecih-sof Ministers would not consent. A hun dred years hence I slmll lie praised, and Kuropc, especially England, will lament that I did not sucoeeil," ' ' MISCELLANEOUS ITEXS. When (Jen. Schenck plays poker there are Republican gains. If it hadn't lieen a goose, it wouldn't have laid golden eggs. It is easy to condemn Judas, but many now sell Christ for leas. Moody, Chicago is extremely weak in her legs, notwithstandiqg her new ehin plasters. A Frenchman in New York has been fined $5 for kissing a woman 50 years old. After a hiccough lasting three daj-s and nights Mr. George Utter, of Lum bertou, N. J., gave up the ghost. President Hayes has three years in which to redeem himself. Chicago Times. Let him be redeemed in sil ver. The proposal to make the Duke of Edinburgh King of Pulgaria was nip ped in the liial by his mother's vehe ment objections. A tour o Alaska is being made by the Roman Catholic Bishop of Van couver's Island with the view of es tablishing missions there. A Paris journal estimates at 50,000 the number of American visitors who will spend freely the dollars" of their daddies at the Paris world's fair. The English 'bus drivers speak of Gladstone as 4,W. E.," going no far ther than his initials. This is plainly one of the signs or a veiled Kepublic Tlie alarming prevalence of dipthe ria throughout Tennessee has induced the State lsoard of Health to issue circular prescribing a general mode of treatment. The Italian exploring expedition which attempted to penetrate into the interior of Africa, has been attacked by the King of Shoa, and compelled to return to tlie coast. A man in Illinois has been saved by his dog from burning to death. He who is born to die from hydrophobia will never lie burned that is to say not in this world. A Germiuan woman, about. 50 years of age, has worked at the trade of blacksmith, as a helper to her hus band, for the past nine years. She is a resident in the suburbs of Pitts burgh. A word with silver men. World head-line. I O, if you want to borrow a quarter, don't lie taking the silver fellows aside. They know how it is, and you are as welcome to it as if it were the inferior article, gold. The Detroit Free Press pretends to have known the Ahkoond of bwat very well, and it says that he was an exchange fiend. The Free Press has evidently got the worthy Ahkoond mixed up with Majah Gutrippah, of Tarn pah Pay. The silver half-dollar of 1&31 is rather interesting coin. Instead of the edge being milled, the words FIF TY CENTS HALF A HOLLAR are stamped into it. I ts breadth is greater than that of the present half-dollar, but its thickness is less. There are 12o species of grass known to be native in iUaine, and it is thought a survey would discover half as many more. Fifty kinds have high agricultural value. The grass crop of the State is said to be wortl $42,000,000 aunually. Two hundred liercn averaging an inch aud a quarter in length, were ta ken from the stomach of a loon sent to C. A. Wyllys, of Roekville, Con., to be mounted. There were at least tw hundred more broken in pieces in the stomach and gullet. Every editor of a paper in Madrid has received the grand cross or com mandery of Isaliella, the Catholic, and among other recipients of favor com niemorative of royal marriage are musical critic, a printer and a large body of professors and inspectors of schools. A Berlin letter says; "It is not gen erally known that the Transvaal Re public, liefore it was swallowed up by r.ngiand, oiiered itselt up to the pro tection of Germany, and that Pis mark refused the annexation of that colony, which is, in area, almost equal to Germany." The lmdy of Mrs. Mary "Weis, who died in 1800, at the age of sixty, and buried at Fort Wayne, was recently disinterred and found to be completely petrified. '1 lie deceased Weighed Ut pounds when she died. When the body was exhumed every jiortion of was hard as rock, and the features natural as life. A litue boy was convicted of mur der by his playfellows in a mock trial iu Madison, Jnd., and sentenced to be hanged. They put a noose around his neck, threw the rope over the aor, and hoisted him up. lie was fast choking to death when a woman stopped the foolery; but lie was so hauly injured that he soon died. We read in an English paper that the "pistol ioeket book" is the latest safeguard for American ladies against thieves, ihese pocket books, when carried in the hand, look exactly like an ordinary purse, but should an un wary person make a snatch at them the owner has only t; press a spring, and the thief is shot through the heart, provided the aim lie good. lhat ancient paragraph concerning the near-sightedness ot Germans is again on its travels. If any lieople . I . . 1 . 1 . 1 . . I 7 . I iieserve 10 lie iiejir-siguicu, it is me German. Their letters are the most villainous invention since those of the Greeks, and are sufficient in them selves to deter even an industrious per son from the study of the German language. The bare thought of them makes the eyes smart. Bismarck is a statesman and a sold ier. 'Wellington was a soldier and a statesman. Ancient and modern history abound in instances of great men who, like Julius Ciesar, Marlbo rough, Washington, Jackson and Grant have been heroes on the field and sages in the council chamlier. N. Y. Herald. Yes, and Louis Najio- leon would have been a soldier and statesman if he had only died a few years earlier. There's always plenty of sage-brush. 1 he inhabitants ot the north may well iKiast of their superior education and culture. What could be finer then this extract from a Minnesota journal, which is siieaking of the ed tor of another paper: "I he hod- carrier and whisky -guzzler of the up town Hell Pox says he has done $107.00 worth of job work in the last twenty-eight days. He .'imply lies like a horse-thief. Resides, what lit tie work he has done, he has bcrrow ed the type with which to do the most or it." For some weeks Mr. Pierce, who lives in Georgetown, has heard a pe culiar noise at night, and has discov ered the gradual loss of chickens. He came to the conclusion that it must lie made by rats. Friday night he aud his wife were awakened by the sharp cry or distress from the crib adjoining their lied, in which their two-year old infant was sleeping. Mr. Pierce im mediately sprang out and discovered a weasel at his child s throat. Catch- ng the animal with his hand, he threw it to the fioor, killing it at once lew moments later the little one would certainly have lieen killed, as a deep gash was already made in its throat. Wash, fctir. A dispatch from our esteemed neighbor the Time foreshadows the line of defense w hich J. Madison Wells pro loses to take when he is brought to trial for forgery and perjury lor fi ayes' sane. "itimiKi will not have a lawyer," sjij's Wells, "but when nyt-ase is called I will aiiiiear and tell thejudgoaud Ogdeu (the Attorney General) that they are a set of con temptible villans, and tell the nisv they are a set of perjured seoundrels,and defy them to do their worst. "Thisinge- mus argument will probably have as much weight with tlie Court as the certificates of Wells' good character furnished by his accomplices. John Sherman ami Eugene Hale. The two contempteble villains on the bench and at the liar will turn the good old nan over to the mercies of the set of K-rjured seoutdrels in the jury kix, who wil undoubtedly mark him "compile:" and send him up to liaton Rouge to le lassitied on the separate cell system. The American TU R B I (I E WATER VH EEL. GUARANTEED THE B EST. Stout. Mills & Temple, DAYTON, OHIO, Manufacturers and Proprietors. ALSO, Flour and Pa llor Mill Machinery, and General Mill Fnr niHher. JLarye illus trated catalogue sent trwon n r-pl ical inn to Stoat, Mill Tem ple, Dayton, Otilo, or uivir Agent, Vic. MB? M Hit I Clambla,Tenn. Ootober2lVly. Pure Bred Fowls. 1. .1. L,lFSCO.im COLUMBIA, TENNESSEE, Breeder and Snipper of Furs Srcd Lr.i ni Water Fowls ! Ega for hatching In Seanon. Fowl for sale at all times. Prtmpt attention given to all orders and communications, which are respectfully solicited. oct!3-77-ly. A. DOiMEm'S Human Hair -AN Fancy Goods Emporium, Perfumery and Toilet Articles. KID GLOVES, FANS, ETC., 105 FOUTH STREET. Bet. Market and Jeflerson, Louitri'le, Ky ept7-ly. JUST RECEIVED! DIRECT FROM D. Landreth i Sons A roll supply of harden Seeds! Always on bad a full stock of DRUGS Medicines, Faints, Oils, &c.' T. B. RAINS, Columbia, Tennessee. January 25,1878. J AS. V. BROOKS, Machinist. T1IOH. J. WALKER, Traveling Agent. Brooks & Walker. -o- We respeetfol'y Invite the attention cf the citizens of Columbia, Manry and ad joining counties tbat we have opened a !S-wing Machine Repair Hhop. We van take any old machine, put In Dew parti, where necessary, all the latest improvements, and make It as good as new, to the delight and satisfaction of owners, and at a very small banco. J. V. Brooks has had fifteen years experi ence In the manufacturing and repairine of all kinds of Sewing Machines, aud will give satisfaction or no charge made. Guns, Pistol aud Locks repaired. Keys fitted, and all kinds of light machinery re paired with neatness and di-xpatcn, and warranted. We keep Machine Needles, OU and At tachments. Give us a call. Correspondence with the country solicit ed. Agent for the Ute6t improved Wheeler and Wilson Machines.. -Office Fleming Block, Dr. Sherpard's oia stann, opposite l-i rut fresoytuiian Cnnrcn, uaraen blreet, Columbia, Xenn. deS!l-77-ly. Titcomb & Towler, DRUGGISTS At the Old Stand, Corner South Main St. and Public Square, COLUMBIA, TENNESSEE JOHN T.TUCKER. W. F. TUCKER. J. T. & W. F. TUCKER, Wholesale and Retail -AN I Commission Merchants North-east Corner Public Square, Columbia, : : : Tennessee. Dealers In cotton and all kinds of nroduce. u Derai aavances maae on gooas in store. rov. iv-jo-iy. Carver & Horn's HOG CHOLERA REMEDY. A certain, effective and prompt enre, and sure preventive of the spread of the dis ease. Price Svi.00 a Package, containing uf- flcient to cure twenty hot. Save your hoes ml outb m ouy ten cpulh a nean. A. J. UAHVH.K CO., Sept7-ly. Nashville. Tenn. Non-Resident Notice. J. W. Irwin, Administrator, vs. F.M.Kindel ana oiners. TN this eanse It appearing to me from cora- m piamant'a Dill nied in tu aoove styled cause, which Is swor j to, that the defend ants. J. K. Bankbead and wife. Ansiie liankhead, and Lucy J. Irwin, are non-resl- deuts oi tbe state ol Tennessee, so that the ordinary processor law cannot be served upon mem: ills tnerrroro ordered by me mat publication be made for four con sec u live weeks in the Herald and Mail, a news paper published In the town of Columbia, uaurj- county. Tennessee, reouirlnn said defendants to be and appear before the Worshipful County Court of Maurv conn t v. Tennessee, on the first Monday In April, iss, auu pieao. answer or ueiuur to com plainant's bill, or th same will be taken for confessed as to them, and set for hear ing exparte. . A. is. am, wieik. VTl'kei ft Bullock, Attorneys. February 2, W78. Non-Residence Notice. K.W. Napier et al., vs. T. J. Dorsett et al. 'TaDDearirjB from affidavit filed In this I 1 caune that the defendants. W. N. Dorsett. Amelia i.yonn, jonn w. iifons, n. . uor- ett, F.mlly t laiett. K. A. Llaeett, Mary H. Berrv. Ufo. W. Berry ' and Maria Hheeeoe are non-renident of the Btate of Tennessee: it is therefore ordered that they enter their ppearance herein oelora or within tbe rslinree aays ti ine uni n-rm or me hancery Court, to be held at Columbia, on tlie nnt Monday In April next, 1S7M. and plead, annwer or demur to complainant's hill, or the same will ne laxen lor eon rossetf as to them, and set for hearing exparte; aud hat a copy 01 mis orner oe puoiisnea lor four conaecutive weeks In the Columbia Herald and Mail. D. rJ. cuorti.i, ;ierk and Matser. Bv T. F. Klkmisq. Deputy CAM. Burnett Hushes, solicitors for complain ants. WXb. 1, 1878, (1 w Ji Xlt Si. ' COLUMBIA . FilMALB INSTITUTE! COLUMBIA, TENN- .y."! - , iva- Si ' sa - "T-f - "Vir-tv-jx shts. Tlie TP nil Term BEGAN SEPTEMBER THE -3, 1877. Circulars stating conive of study, and oth er particulars, will be sent on application tc Rkv. OEO. BECKETT, Rector, rutvlS-ly. Colombia. Tenn. Fashionable Tailoring! Stand from Under! THE SILVKU BILL) AVILL SURE LY PASS ! Under this arr.ngement I will make the best fluiniz Pants in Tennessee, fit war ranted, for $2.00. Other work In proportion. Cutting as usual. J. G.KIRKMAN, No. 7. Embargo St., COLUMBIA, TENNE-SEE. feb8-3m. D. A. Craig. W. J. Stray horn. A. t . Aydelolte. CRAIG CO , Grain and Produce Merchants. Have opened a large Ware-house at the Union Depot. They have ample storage room, and solicit- consignments. Orders promptly ami satisfactorily filled. A fresh supply of Family tiroceries always on hand, fit the very lowest price. Co Tie and see us. oct28-12m. To Your Interest! We hive closed out our stock of goods and we respectfully request everybody to j come forward and settle their accounts. We sincerely trust our customers will not I lorce us to any harsher measures, feblalm. J. L. DUNL AP & CO. Glad Tidings to the Afflicted! A Uniimnt universally acknowledged as the most renowned quick cure ever brought before the public in the Nineteeenth Cen tury, fur the perfect cure of both MAN AND BEAST! This popular and great healing remedy so long need by suffering humanity, is giving unbounded proofs of its merits by aJI hav inir tented lis unrivaled Dowers, and by THOUSANDS, iu all cases claiming it the moKt powerful remedy and quick reliever from agony. DIAMOND OIL POSSESSES The Best Concentrate HeaMne Properties. UuickcMt .Scientific Arts for Pain Relief, Most Combined Medicated Necessities, as a Liniment for MAN AJSD BEAST, ever In troduced for public benefit. Those suffering who will use this Liniment In time will be convinced that it is a sure cure for Rheu matism, .Neuralgia, . Bruises, Sprains, Swellings, Burns, Cuts, Felons, Tumors, Piles, Injured Limbs, Scalds. Gout, Dlp tberia, Sore Throat, Toothache, Headache, Insect Bites, Fits, Colic, Tape-Worm, etc., for the human race. AND IS A POSITIVE CURE for Sweeuv. Rinxboues. Strains. Cal lous. Hinius. Colic. Bolts. Windfall. Poll Evils, Cattle and Sheep Complaints, and all genernl diseases in stock, and many other afflictions of both Man anu Beast. DIAMOND OIL is fo- sale by T. B. Rains, DruitKlst. Cclumbia, Tenn., being well re commended bv all Druggists. Physicians, and every one who has used It. Price 75 ceDls ner bottle. Prepared by W. E. FA- UAN fe CO., Philadelphia. Branch Office: Indianapolis, Ind. nov)-76-ly. Non-Resident Notice. N. C. Bryles et aL, vs. A. C.- Allen et al T appearing from affidavit filed In this ciuse, that te defendants. A. C. Allen Li.n. A II.... J -1. i : - a I. U '. i.r .Hf.iin. t the State of Texas; M. E. Jones, Lewis Kirk, ami his wife. X. E. Kirk, citizens of the Slate of Arkansas; Jessie Foster, a citizen of theHtateof Mississippi, are non-residents of the Slate of Tennasee: it Is therefore or dered that they enter their appearance herein before or within the first three dsys of the next term of the cnancery court, to Hh held at Oolumb a on the 1st Monday in April next, 1H7H. and plead, answer or de mur to complainant's bill, or tbe same will lie taken for confessed as to them, and set for hearinic ex parte: and that a copy of this order be published frr four consecutive wetks in the Heralrl and Mall. Ii. it. tTOOfliit, ciem ana Master, By T. K. FtEMUid, Deputy C. & M. March 8, 1H7S. CHANCERY BALE Valuable City Property ! A. A Lipscomb and wife vs. et al. A. C. Hickey BY virtue of a decree rendered at the Octo ber term of the Maury Chancery Court, in theabovestyiea cause, i win, on .Monday, tbe 1st day of April, ltvH. proceed to offer f r sle at the court-house door In the town of Columbia. Tenn.. the following described bouse and lor, situated in ine hiu civil dis trict of Maniy county, and bounded as fol lows: Beeln ulnar at a stake on tbe west margin of the old town ol Columbia, Tenn. on a line due east from the north-east cor ner ol a lot or parcel of l ind that Jas K. I'ollt purchased ot i-mncK itiaauire, ny de:.lmti or April. 1K27: running; thence south with said Maguire 15 poles to a stake in the road: thence west 11 poles to toe south-east corner of Jas. K. Polka lot; thence north with said Polk's line li poles to tbe north-east corner of said Polk's lot; thence east 11 poles to the neetnnluK, con taining about 1 acre and o poles. Said prop erty will be sold in two or more parcels or lots to suit purchasers, then as a whole, the highest price to De me sale, eie iree irora the riaht and euulty of redemption. To be sold on a credit of one and two years; notes with irood security, bearing interest irom date of sale, required to be executed by pur chaser or purchasers March s, Itxo. u. a. csjftit, J. a. ai. iliei-iir Sale. "TY vi IJ the Honorable Chancery Court at Co- i lntnbla, Tt un., In Ihe catte of Walter Parker, Ad in r. vs. w. r . cims, x win sen lor casu to the highest blUdej-, at tlie court-house door In t li inula, Tenn.. on Monday, the 1st day of April next, all the rlebt, title. claliu ond interest thai the fcald w. F. tiling baa In and toacertxiu nouse ana jot, tllua ttl In Ihe town of Ml. Plea s tit, Tenn., and Imnnded on the north by the property of H. A. Miller belrs; Minth by the propeityof Irvine Bros.; west by the house and lot that belonged to M'ss Sarah Wortham, dee'd: nut bv the central turnpike, and levied up on as the property of said. W. F. Kims. 10 satisfy said execution. Sale In lawful hours. W.A ALf.A.iniT.ll, March S, 18T8.-pr. . aiierirr Maury to. Insolvent Notice. o AVINtJ this day suggested the insol vency of tlie estate or M. J. (irlmn. dee'd., to the Clerk of the County Court of Maury county, Tennessee, notice is hereby w ventoaii ten.nK liaviuz cia-ms aeainsi said estste to tile them duly aut henticated ith saw! clerk on or oeiore the am of Sept.. 17, for prorata distribution, or they Will be lorever oarreu. Jl. i. UUKIHIN, Marcu , 1879. AOmiiUsUnHQr. Nashville 1 Advertisements ESTABLISHED 1850! IlcCLURE'S TEMPLE OF MUSIC Wholesale and Retail Agency For the world-renowned Pianos of STEIIfWAT, KNABE, and DUNHAM Toeetber with the Nation's favorites, Bscon Kerr, Bacon Raven, Haines Brox. J. C. Flfcher. and the "Model Piano, (Arlon Piano Co..) at prices from J175.00 upwards. ra-a for Churches, LodKes and Parlor, from the eelbrated makers, Mssou & Ham lln, Bnrdett, New England Oivan Co., and O. A. Prlnee A Co., all having first-class Medals and Indorsement of the Musical Profession and public In general. Prices from KO.OO to ISOOOO. Competition In genu ine (not bogus) Instruments met with prices and terms to sa t tlie times. ht Music for the million, at one to ten cents per page first-class authors. Largest assortment of Italian and other Strings, and Small Masical Instruments. Eastern discounts to Schools, the Profes sion and Book Stores. Correspondence solicited. Catalogues sent on application. Mnslc mailed free. aThe Proprietor respectfully announces that be has taken the agency for the sale of Lighted Ernst Piano, (Successors to Lt.bte, Newton Bradbury.) The following ex plains their position: MaDlBoir, Ikb, Dec 27, 1S78. To the JSdUor Mume Trade Reviers, N. Y.: Will yon please send me those back num bers of your Review, which contains the exposure of those fraudulent Pianos, which bear the name of good old makers. " This country la being canvassed by drum mers, who try to balm of! tbeso good-for-nothing Instruments upou tbennsuspecllna public, and far.uers especially, as a real, genuine so-and-so's make, fraudulently firoduclngthe old genuine makers'' price sls, and asking from lour to eight hun dred dollars for these bogus instruments, " Now the public is made aware of it, and Ihese f camps arrested, the better. One of my young Irlends paid fioO.CO for a Llghte 4 Co.'s not wot I u over SiOO.UI. aud I .hewr the Brad:ury lsjust the same if not worse. Please publish mis in your able Journal, and ssve some of those who are about to be swindled. Respectfully, J. Mekhell Jaltson. (TheLlglite Co. is a fraud Liglite Ernst mute the only genuine Llghte Pi anos. Beware of all Bradbury Pianos; many of them are made by Uale, Hani man aud others Ed. M. T. K.) Other Correspondence can be shown ex posing booutianot. with other catch names. by applying to 63 UnloU Street, Nashville, xenn. J. A. McCLl'KE, Mrs. S. J. Little, BOARDING HOUSE No. 27 North Summer Street, NASIIVILLE, . : : TEXX. Board S6 ner week: S3 cents per day and aug24 ly. night. MRS. E. PL01MER, BOARDING HOUSE No. 32 North Summer Street,' VASIIVILLE, TEXX aug21 ly. Columbia Advertisements. Jr. Dealer in all kinds of- Country Produce -AND- FAMILY GROCERIES. Persons In town will save money by call ing at the "Little House Around the Cor ner," where everything needed lor tho ta ble can be had cheaper than elsewhere, and those from the country do the same, and al so barter their produce or receive cash from ns for anything they wish to aell. ft- No. 21 Uardeu Street. sept'l-Iy. Wm. Shirley's MARBLE MANUFACTORY. MONUMENTS AND TOMBSTONES All of the best Italian Marble. I, also, have the latest styles of .designs. Ill work as cheap as can be done elsewhere. Manufactory on West Main Street, near the institute sepl.-21-77 , Nelson House ! Mays&Dodson, PROPRIETORS, Columbia Tennessee. RATES $2.00 PEIi DAY, We also have a Livery Stable connected with the house, with new and elegant turn outs, which will be luruished promptly by applying to the Proprietors. janll-77-lf. E. KUHN. T. W.TURPIN ESTABLISHED 1847. We have iu stock a first-class assort ment of BRETTS, PARK niiETONS, JENNIE LINDS, JUMP SKATS, ETC., ETC. Also Harness from 12.00 to $100,00 PER SET. Onr work Is first-class: the nrlcrs lower than the same kind of work can le boni;ut norm ot . oiumoia. KUiiJN & l UHm June al-77-ly. ..... SHERIFF'S SALE. T3V virtue of an order of sale to me dl Cbaucery XJ retted from the Honorable Court of Dickson county. In favor of J. T. H. (ireeu field vs. J. W. Helton, et al., I will sell foresail at tbe court-house dxr In the town of Columbia, on Monday, tbe first day of April next, an me titfut. line, claim anu in terest that Thomas O. T. tireeufleld lias in and to the lollowiDK described tract and parcel cr lanu. (in ine janu 01 ueorce w. Stockard, bis Uuardlau), situated la the tstate of Tennesm-e, Alauiy county, district Ho. 17. and bounded on ine north bv Ihe lands ol T. U. T. Ureeiitleiu; east by Duck River; south by Win. Hawkins' estate; wet by Duck Klver and Joe Vosa, containing 21 acres, be Ihe same more or Jess, and known as tbe brick bouse farm, a Ml levied npon s the property of said T. U. T. Jreen fleld, to satisfy said order of sale aud costs In favor of J. T. H-fJreen field. Hule In lawful boars. W.M. A. AI.KXANDMt, Klierlft Maury County, MarcU!,IS7ti.-pr. fee, i. I Nashville Advertisements. PLOWS! . P. AVERY & SONS, Are the Largest Plow Makers in the World! B. F. AVE RY & SONS make the Iwst riows iu the world, house packed with these elegant implonts at Factory prices. Agents for Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama . GRAY, KDUllAH Ik GO., No. 78 Public Square. NASIIVILLE, Jno. J. And Wholesale Dealer in AGRICULTURAL IMPROVED FARM MACHINERY, Field Seeds, Fertilizers, Etc., Xoh. 62 and 64 South Market Street, NASHVILLE, : : : : TENNESSEE. The largest ami most complete ftoek of Afrrictilturnl Implements and Farm Machinery to ! found in the South or 'Went. The largest Ux-k of the most carefully selected Field Seeds of every, kind, at lowest. pFices for cash alone. Full stock of Pure Fertilizers constantly on hand, at low prices. Consignments for Seeds and Country Produce solicited. Splendid facilities for Storage, and charges very reasonable. Give us a trial In-fore you purchase elsewhere. Satiffuction jfuaranteed. Correspondence solicited. now l(-77-6m. W. R. McFARIjAND. W. 2&. 25ScF'axIand Co., MANUFACTURERS AND PKALKRSS IN MOULDINGS ALL KINDS OF CONSTANTLY ON HAND. Ofiiee and Planing Mill No. 84 North College and 1T5 North Nasiiviixk, Tknn. VAN S. LINDSLEY, M. D., Gives his exclusive attention to the medical and surgical treatment of the diseases of tho Eyo, DEjtx, Tlioat cijzlCL 33oeio, No. 95, Corner of Church and Hummer Streets, (Fp-stairs,) NASHVILLE, : : : : : TENNESEE. GIERS ART No. 45 Union Street. Th nndprslirnfHl hftvlne nnrohasmi thB will nfth til Kits AltTtiALLKRV. won Id l and dptrm I ncd to inHlutaln the renuUillon OALLEHY In the Koutlx-m Htftten. All linproVBinrnU lu photography ro promptly adopied, and nil our work guaranteed to give BrtliHcl Ion. , V. 1Z. AIlSIHTIUIIVfJ. July 20, 1877.-ly. Kncctwsor to t;arl U. U1cp, Ixc'd. W. K. DOBSON, ARCHITECT, Church Street, Corner South Cherry NASHVILLE, TENN. CROSTD WA1TB & H02VR0B, DECORATORS, AND Fapcr JImtffcrs, With Benson A Brown, No. SO North College Ht., - NABUVIIXK ocl5-Iy J.W.OHCHAED, Manufacturer and Dealer In Look i ng-GIiLs.xe.H, Picture Frames, "Wall Pler, Window Sliatles and Cornices, Bibles Boquet and Mimic Stands, Picture Moldings. CardH, TaHHelxniidNailw, Chair (Jain and Pictures of all Kinds, NO. 38 UNION STREET, Between College and Cherry, NASHVILLE. - - TEM. ffir5T" LookiiiK-OIiiHHes I"t o1' frame. Old Pictures and t mines Ite puircd. augl7-ly. H. V. BASSETT, RESTAURANT 1ATZ ICE-CREAM SALOOX, NO. 46 UNION 8TRKET, Tennessee. Nashville, bug i -i y Porter, Bryan &Alford, 'Wholesale Dealers In TOBACCO AND CIGARS Proprietors of the Celebrated ."PORTER RIFLE" CIOAR. Tubllc Square, Xashville, : : : Tennessee. June 2nd-77-ly. FRENCH BOOT MAKER, 104 Church Street, NASHVILLE, : : TENN. Aug. 17.-ly TIIJ3 LATKMT ITew York, Paris -AN LONDON DESIGNS, CAN BE FOUND AT ROWBET'S, Draper and Tailor, No. 87 North Cherry Ht., INAKHVILLE Juuett-iy, PLOWS! Our Ware Wc arc the 1 EN NESS EE. avock, IMPLEM ENTS. "WM. II. DAItll AND SHINGLES. DRESSED LUMBER Cherry Streets nov2-ly GALLERY ! NASHVILLE, TENN. entire Moolr. worklni lntrumnt Hnd ROOI pwdicI fully minouupi; tlmt h In Hilly r-repnr !-pr-AHT of the pMlnlilltlniiPiit ft the rlliwi JBtraT W O U L I) Y () U we JSBoEicy Having an Immense stock, ami Ix-lng de sirous of led tiring it, we oiler gri nt Khfiri, TION3 In all d jinrliin-nls. In Black Cash mere, Alparca, KImiiihI and I'Hsslmer Htock special bargains are f red. Avail yourselves of this urijrttiiilly by giving us an early call. L-FRANKLAND & GO. NO. 1!) UNION HTItKKT, Nashville, : : Tennessee. augl7-l.nl. T.K. Wlnstead. It. O. Wlnstead, MAXWELL HOUSE . Shoe Store! T. E. W1NSTEAD k CO.; Dealers In Fashionable Boots, Shoos, Trunks, Valisoa Umhrellas, Traveling BagH, tc, No. 7. N. Cherry ht.,oppo-lte Maxwell House NASH VIM.E, TENN. A.B COPKLAMhtkilctninn. JuJr6-Iy N O FURTHER KXCUHE FOR GRAY HAIR with those who prefer lis hclno- the former color. K. W. Ureeiihalae's. 'ashvlile Tenn.. RESTORATIVE does not gum tne hair; dispenses with the necebHity u,r cliitmpnoiiiK 'y kocplri il hair and Ncalp nice and clean, which will save you more m m y than the Itestoratlvn coMlsyuu;ls an exquisite drcssliiK; nioely perfumed; spe-dn resUtres Kisy hair tolls lormer color: cleanses I lie head of all dan druff, ItuhliiKi humor, etc.: promotes growth of the hair; prevents Its falliUK off, and ren ders It soft, Klowsy and more lieautllul than ever. Hold al the very reasonable pilc of 50 Cents Per Bottle. The bottles hold as much as the dollar bot tles of other kinds, and the iiialily Is gusi auteed eiial lu a I respects to any lu use, as nothing but strictly first-class articles en ter Its companion. JI ve it a trial, and If It falls to satisfy you, he Hurt to return It and Ket your money. Drug Store, north-west corner public square, i-llwral discount to dealers. For sale lu Columbia by Nat. Uoliuau. autf24-ly La Pierre House, Xo. 37 Summer Street, NASHVILLE, . i . TENNii88EE, asy Neii t non ai cK-Hiiliness the uiiglT-ly. law at tlii.i house. 7 Hotel and Restaurant (Newly Refitted In First-Class Style.) Oprntlny and night, at Nnshville and Chsl tiiiicaara and Hi . I.ou Is Kaliroad is-Ht, Nashville, Tenn. Keeps on band a lul I p plyofKrwiti Oysteis. rassfiigeia will he called day or night In time for the depart ure of all train. Meals ready iion srrlvsl of every train. The Jtar Is nirnlshrd Willi the II next Wines, I.liiior aud Cigars, ro ute clerks aud acrviiiiis are in aiteiidauro at all hours, 'lilies' private dluiug room lust handsomely refllle.1. , McG