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PEPRY, CA.
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PERRY, GA., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1874.
NUMBER 43
VOLUME IV
became ! tortured into compliance. One of the j A 'Woman s Heart
He was ! methods is to tie the sinew of some j Sooner or later the crack will come.
10 reigDed ! animal around her fingers until she | That is what I used to believe, before
nr the as- faints. Another gentle process, is to I knew what it was to be a woman;
;he Dutch I break a nrad-nest of ferocious ants j I don’t believe it now, I wish I did,
re Dutch-! upon her naked person and these j for then I could prophesy a happy,
[led fifteen sting her into a more reasonable sudden end to the trials and tribula-
augle en- ! frame of mind. It sometimes hap-Jtions of more than one brave, little
n the end [ pens that an old man of seventy with j body I know.
harka dy- j a dozen wives takes a fancy to a girl ] I would say this: “Never mind lit-
The African at Homs- j
The Reverends Daniel Lindley and
Alexander 'Wilson left the county of
Mecklenburg, N. C., in 1834. Mr.
Wilson lost his wife and returned to
the United States for a short time,
went back to .Africa and died there.
Wilson,
ra. /. asi*e9o;c, President W.E. Brown, Caahltr.
Professional Cards.
Cards inserted at one dollar a line per annum
if paid in advance, otherwise, two
CASH CAPITAL, $100,000.
I. J. TRAYWICK &0
PLANTERS’ BANK
Attorncv at Law
PERRY, HOUSTON COUNTY. GA.
Office in tli4 Court House.
Special attention giwn to buaineps in the Supc*
rior and County Courts of Houston County,
feb 21, IT.
FORT VALLEY, OEOROIA.
He was a brother of J. H.
Esq., of Charlotte, N. C.
Mr. Lindley remained
until 1873, when the failing health of
|Mrs, L- induced him to come back to
As be spent
Transact! a General Banking, Discount, aad
Excliauge Business.
Particular attention given to the rolUxttioa t
Notes, Drafts, Coupons, Dividends, etc.
j of fifteen. He may be noted for his
savage character, the girl may loathe
and abhor him, and she may be dread
fully afraid of ill-treatment from his
other wives; bnt if the father gets the
ten cows he will sel her to the old pol
ygamist and force her to go with
him. The wives hate each other so
cordially that the husband is forced to
give each of them a seperate hut. He
takes care that each one shall do work
enough to pay him back for his ten
cows. In two weeks after tLe birth
of a child, the mother straps it on
her-shoulders and goes to the-field t o
work the corn, pumpkins and sor
ghum, for the support of her leige
lord, and her children. He loafs
aronnd and chats with other idle men
or goes to court to conduct his own
law snit abont a cow
AND
COUNTRY PRODUCE,!
40 THIRD STREET,
lithe United
thirty-nine years in Africa, speaks the
language fluently, and has traveled
thousands of miles through the coun
try on foot and on horse-back, there
is probably no man living so v/ell ac
quainted as he with the religion, the
mental and- physical characteristics
and the manners and the customs of
the natives of Africa. We will, then,
give some of the interesting facts re
lated by him.
Central and Sonnthem Africa are
mainly inhabited by three nations or
tribes, the Guineas, the Hottentots
and the Zulus. The last named tribe
extend for some six hundred miles on
the eastern coast. They have never
been guilty of the infamy of the slave
trade, and when Mr. Lindley fonnd
them forty years ago, they were un
contaminated with the vices of civili
zation. They were in a state of na
ture and furnished a fine illustration
cf what the light of nature, unassisted
by revelation, can do for the elevation
of the human race. They had no
if ea of a God, none of the future
state, rone of the immoitality of the
soul, none of rewards or punishments
beyond the grave. So completely
ignorant were they of these momen
tous truths that they had no words in
their language to express them. Un
like the heathen world in general,
they were not even idolaters, for the
simple reason that they had no idea
of superhuman or superior beings.—
They were afraid, however, of the
ghosts of their ancestors, though they
hud ill-defined notions of what these
ghosts could do or could not do. A
“ghost” they said, “is a shadow
which cannot be seen.” They had
(in 1834) no clothing, save an apron
of untauued monkey hides, which was
tied around the waist with sinews ta-
aniinals. They bad no
A. M. WATKINS,
C. J. KARRIS,
Attornov at Zj w,
MACON GEORGIA.
XTIIX practice Uw in litigated case* iu the
OL1YER DOUGLASS & CO
CURRIER. SHERWOOD & CO.
476 & C78 Broome Street,
if counties of the Macon Circuit to wit: Bibb,
Houston, Crawiord and Twiggs.
BOOTS & SHOES
J. A. EDWARDS,
At tor n e y'at L aw,
MARSHA LI.Vn.LE GEORGIA.
TINWARE,
AT WHOLESALE,
are concerned. They are hospitable
in their own way and are ever ready
to welcome a stranger, give him a
portion of their mash and a skin pal
let among the sheep and cows in the
hut.
The two great obstacles which the
missionaries have to contend with are
superstition and polygamy. The ne
groes believe in ghosts and witch
craft. When a child has fallen in the
fire, or an adnlt is taken sick, the ca-
either to the
W. H. REESE,
Attorney at Law.
J1ARSHAIXV1IXE GEORGIA.
ja-Spedtl attention given to cases in anV
ruptcy.
JOHN B. COFIELD,
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS.
or a strip of
land.
The narative of Mr. Lindley sug
gests two thoughts. 1. That the so-
called light of nature can never teach
man the character and attributes of
God, and the duty man owes to him.
Rome, when -mistress of the world,
and at the head of the world’s civili
zation, worshipped as her chief God
Jupiter of Olympus. The dieties to
whom the war-like Romans and the
cultivated Greeks bowed down were
all monsters of wickedness. Mr.
Lindley gives it as his deliberate
opinion that the Africans would never
in all time have emerged from heath
enism without aid and instruction
from abroad. This proves beyond a'l
peradventure the necessity for mis
sionaries, and answers the objections
to the missionary cause. 2d. The
South has christianized and civilized
more heathens than all the misriona-
ries in the world for two hundred
years. The North b; ought these
heathens here, and when they were
uprofitable to them as laborers,
turned them over to the South.
Our people have accomplished the
work so well that even in the judg
ment of our enemies, or “late ene
mies,” (more appropriately?) they not
only “fought nobly for the Union,”
but are cow the only loyal subjects
his Majesty, Ulysses, in all the South,
and are the only persons in'all the
South fit to be rulers and trusted offi
cials, save the carpet-baggers and their
allies of blessed memory and savory
character.—Southern Home.
Photocrcplcr & Portrait Pain sr
Perry Georgia.
TifZLL take all styles of picture* at the loirrs
’ * prices, and guarantee satisfaction. He in *
rites everybody to call and examine liis speci
mens, and to comparts Ins work with that of any
other artist. In juice and style of work he defies
competition.
Gallery on Carroll Street,
TTP Stairs, where he has good sky-light and a
otherwise amply prepared to serve those who
msy call
Dec. IS.
The Largett Stock of
POCKET AND TABTE CUTLERY
In Macon.
DUNCAN & MILLER.
Attorneys at Xiaw,
PERRY and PORT VALLEY. GA.
C. C. Duncan, Perry, office oh Public Square
A. L. Miller, Fort Vslley- office In Mathew’s Hall
lnmity is attributed
ghest’s being oflended or to the effect
of witchcraft.
B. M. DAVIS.
Attorney at Law
PERRY. GEORGIA.
ows, she sings of the sunlight, ana uo
yon think her heart is broken? It so,
blessed be the pieces! The smallest
is more precious than the crown jewel
of a.queen.
Fool a woman in love, and before
you get half throngh making a pocket
memorandum of the sighs she sighed
and the tears she has shed over the
loss of your precious self, you will
hear her singing and chirping away in
a snug little nest with a tenderer and
more constant mate than you could
ever have been to her.
Take away health and give her sick
ness; she will say, “God’s will be
done,” and bear it so sweetly and pa
tiently that her sick bed becomes the
magnet that draws her family closer
together and makes her room the
brightest in the house—the room
where the children come with their
playthings, and the older ones with
their vexations and doubts. She
gives a smile an* 1 a tender glance of
approval to one, a cheery bit of ndvice
or a soothing word to another, and her
heart to all.
Take away riches and give her pov
erty; she will accept it with a gra-
courtcsy—look up in your face
There is a medicine
man who decides that question. If
ne says the ghosts have been offend
ed by not being sufficiently well fed,
the afflicted persons set aside a dou
ble portion of food to propitiate them.
If he says that witchcraft is the cause
of the trouble, there is a solemn con
vocation of the whole tribe, no one
dare absent himself. The medicine
man then picks cut the negro who
has the most cows and sheep as the
wicked cmjnrer. The wretched man
is immediately run through with a
New Goods! New Goods!!
Mrs. C. F. Evans,
H aving just returned with a fins
Assortment of Millinery and Fancy Goods,
is now prepared to exhibit to the Ladies of Perry
and the surrounding county, her Stock of Fall A
Winter Goods.
I shall now be receiving weekly additions to
ray stock, all or whi-h are selected with the ut
most care. I would be pleased to have all call ana
examine my Stock and Prices.
My Stuck in Quality ia not inferior to Macon or
Atlanta, and for yonr benefit I win enumerate a
few of the many articles now on hand.
PATTERN BONNETS of the Latest Importa
tions. VELVETS of .U1 Kinds and Colors; BON
NETS and HATS Trimmed and Untrimmed;
FEATHERS, TIPS and PLUMES; ORNAMENTS
of almost Every Description; RUFFS, -COLLARS
and BELTS; also a Select Stock of Imitations for
the Hair. HATS for Uia*e3 and Boys. Yon can
only be convinced by calling and examining the
many New and Fashionable Goods.
r.T. practice in the Courts of Houston
and adjoining counties; also in the Su-
Court and U. 8. District Court.
U. M. GUNN,
Attorxxov «.* I»aw
BYRON, S. W. H, R. GA.
fiySpecial attention given to collections.
MACON GA.
■ UR STOCK OF GOODS IS NOW OPENED AND ARRANGED. HAVING
bought it for Cosh, we can and will sell ns low as c filers in the trade.
We offer among other things,—
H. Dutton's Saw Mill Goods of all kinds,
l ools of every kind.
Buggy nnd Wagon Material.
Attoruev at X. c vr
FORT VALLEY, GA.
f ^-Collections and Criminal Law a speiiall;
Office at Miller, Eicwn A- Co’s.
Rubber and Leather Beltings,
Fairbanks Scales.
Wooden Ware,
Hollow Ware,
ken from
knowledge of working cotton, wool or
flax. They knew nothing of the met
als, gold, silver, iron, etc. Their
houses were made of long poles, an
inch or'two in diameter, worked into
the shape of a cone and covered with
gnu-s. A hole to crawl in was the
only opening in it; the hut having
neither window nor chimney. The
women, who did all the work for
their lordly masters, dug a hole iu the
middle of the hovei, made there the
fire, and cooked in an earthen pot
the mush for the family. When the
meal was prepared all gathered round
the pot and ate with paddles or w iod-
en spoons. The dogs licked the pot
Iron and Steel,
Table and Pocket Cutlery
Builders
jJS&'In short, All Goods usually kept in such a business.
Ths Parker Breech-Loading Gun,
Togethtr with tbe best makes of English Muzzle-Loading Guns, Dupont’s and
Hazzitrd’s Powders.
Manufacturer and Retail Dealer in
DENTIST,
PERRY AND HAWKINSVILLE GA.
H E WILL SP. ND tho first ball of each month
in bis office in Perry, overthe old drugstore,
rad one-fourth, or tho lattur half of each mouth
TENT WARE,
COOKING STOVES,,
SHEET IRON,
TIN WARE,
ET CETERA.
REPAIRING, ROOFING, GUT-
_ TERING, &c., done at short no
tice and in the best manner.
T. T. MARTIN,
tf. Perry, Ga.
THe Pratt Gin
And have them of oil sizes on hand.
^s3'CaU and See Us.
cions
with her sweet, soft eyes, and suy,
“never mind, dear; if we can’t get a
whole loaf, we can be happy on a half”
—step out of her silk dress and look
altogether so bewitchingly sweet nnd
simple and hopeful in' her cotton
print and house-keeper’s apron, that
yon are ready to declare she was cut
out—from the crown of her bright,
quick little head to the sole of her
springy little foot—for a poor man’s
wife.
Hunt her down with the blood
heunds of slander, envy, malice and,
uncbaritableness, and when yon think
they have caught her, and stop your
ears to shut out the death cry, she
turns at bay, draws np her slender
figure to its fnll height, and faces the
whole pack with such a deliciously
darling li t!e laugh that you shout
bravolin spite of yourself.
No, no, a woman's 1 e irt was not
made to be broken. It was made to
bear not break; to take love and to
give it; to comfort and to be comfort
ed; to warn, to brighten and to bless.
To be as tender as the coo of s. dove—
as fresh and breezy as the wild rose
of May, and as pure and clear as the
dew drop that sparkles on it.
Of coarse there area land wearing
the long rippling robes of a woman,
who languish and faint, and wpuld
break a dozen hearts (if they had
little
F. S. JOHNSON & SONS,
No. 31 Third Street, near City and Central Banks, Macon, Ga.
the Civil Code relative to marriages iu
California. The law provides three
distinct ways in which a couple may
marry: First a contract, followed
by a consnmation; second, the old
fashioned method by solemnization;
and third, by declaration of intention,
signed, acknowledged, and filed like
any other legal instrument. The firbt
marriage under the third of these
methods was recently made in Stock-
ton, and has already created a very
favorable impression as a convenient
succeeded, however, and at length
got out primers and portions of
scripture for their use. But they
were for a long time afraid to look at
them, lest death should be the penal
ty. Children, however, were at length
persuaded to come to school and
these influenced their parents. Now
there are forty churches on that coast
and a‘thousand professing Christians.
Most of the preachers laboring there
are converted Africans. The influ
ence of k these native converts, and of
the English residents, is felt for hun
dreds of miles around Port Natal,
which has been the centre of the op
erations of Mr. Lindley and other
missionaries on the coast. Over a
laige belt of country, European civ
ilization has been introduced to some
extent. The natives in that belt wear
shirts if no other clothing,'use horses
and plows and cultivate sugar cane,
sweet potatoes and the cereals, They
have also leamed-tq handle the ^xe,
the saw and the plane. In 1834, the
negroes, as we have said, had no im
plements save the spear and the hoe.
When the latter was worn down al
most to the end, they put a different
handle to it and changed it into an
axe, with which they ent down the
reed-like poies that are used to make
the frame-work of their houses. Over
a large portion of Africa there is noth
ing of the timber kind, except these
reeds or bushes, which are somewhat
like the cliapparal brush of Mexico — j
The vast plains are covered with
grass and are roamed over by herds
of antelopes, gazelles, gnus, rabbits,
etc., which are the prey of lions, ti- j
gers," jackals, and other ferocious an- i
imols The lion is less courageous
and dangerous than the tiger. He
never pursues men or animals, but
lies in wait and makes a sudden |
spring. If be fails in liis leap he |
gives up and makes no farther effo:t.
to catch his intended victim.
The natives having no knives in I
1834, killed their beef cattle by run- !
ning a spear in the left side and then j
cut them np, as best they could with i
their spears and rude axes. They ate
all the beef, including the entrails, j
except the bones, and these were,
AMERICAN CYCLOPAEDIA,
New Revised Edition.
and spoons, and that was all the wash
ing they get. Many children were
burned to death or seriously injured
every year by falling into the pit
where the cooking was done. Owing
to the life of drudgery of the women
and to their ignorance, improvidence
and carelessness, a small fraction of
the children borne by them lived to
be grown. The, bedsjifi the huts
were nothing but skins spread on the
floors, tne pillows and bolsters were
stones or sticks of wood. The natives
owued sheep, cows and chickens.—
These they took with them into their
huts every night asr a protection
against wild beasts, The heat, filth
and stench from the. conglomerated
mass were beyond conception. The
Miiphana were raised only for their
feathers, as the negroes would neith
er eat their fiesh nor their eggs. The
Zulus had obtained scraps of iron
from Cape Town, and these were
shaped into rude hoes ana spears..—
FURNITURE FREIGHT FREE
Entirely rewritten by the ablest writers on every
subject. Printed from new tyde, and illustrat
ed with Several Thousand Engravings and
Mors.
Warehouse and Commission Merchants.
MACON, GEORGIA.
A N entirely New and Elegant Stock of
FTJjaKTITTmE
Just received and for side at Foil Talley
and Macon prices.
^®-BUY AT HOME.
T O MEET THE DEMANDS OF THE TIMES, WE DETERMINED, EARLY IN
in the Spring tot ttcrapta reduction in the rates of Storage and Commission on
Colon, and now announce he following changes
OLD R ATES | PRESENT RATES’
Commission 14 percent Commission 1} percent
Storage 50c per bale. | Storage -. 25c per bale
Thankful for theliberaliiy of onr friends in the part, must look to them for in
creased patronage to enable us to adhere to the low rates we have inangnated.
Mb. J. W. Stubbs, a prominent Granger and Planter of Bibb County, will bo onr
Weigher the present season.
\Ve guarantee onr best efforts for the interests nil who favor us with business.
jSr-I he usual Advances made on Cotton in store.
A Hearse can be fnrnished to order at any
time, on short notice- I can be found in
the day time at my store, next to the Hotel
at night, at my residence, adjoining that
MERCHANTS. READ IT!
pro vid.es. * ‘Marriage is a personal re
lation arising out of a civil contract
1 to which the consent of parties capa
ble of making it is necessary. Con
sent alone trill not constitute a mar
riage; it most be followed by a sul-
1 emnization or by a mutual assunp-
tion of marital rights, duties or obli
gations.
I ' ; 1
Pecnliorltirs of Negroes-
Dr. A. W. McDowell publishes in
the A merican Practitioner some obser-
; rations on ibis subject, which contain
j some facts that are. news"to’ns.' The
negro’s want of power of resisting
disea se was abundantly shown in the
j late war. Dr. McDowell states that
the fine chests frequently seen among
j the males are due solely to the great |
development of the pectorial muscles.
I and that the lungs are decidedly less
i in weight than those of white men.—'
; The liver on the other hand is larger, j
He goes on to say: “The negro’s low- I
IT’S MEANT FOR YOU!!j
Furniture Made to Order,
and repaired at short notice.
BURIAL CLOTHES,
Ready-made, for ladies, gentlemen and
children always on hand.
GEORGE
PERRY, GA.,
en of Africa.
Tho great political revolutions of the last de
cade, with the natru-al result of the lapse ot time,
have brought into public view a multitude oi ! new
men, "whose iuvxues are in every one’s mouth, aud
of whose lives every one is curious to know the
particulars. Great battles have been fought and
important seiges maintained," of which tho do*
taila are as yet preserved only in newspapers or
in the transient publications -of. the day. bnt
which now onght to take their places in perma
nent and authentic history.
In preparing tho present edition for the press,
it has accordingly been the aim of the editors to
bring down the information to tho latest possible
dates, and toTarnish an accurate-account of the.
meat recent discoveries in science, cf every fresh
production in literature, and of the newest inven
tions in tho practical aits, as well as to give a
succinct mid original record of the progress of
political and historical events.
The worthasbeeii begunafter long and care-
ful preliminary labor, and with the most ample"
resources for carrying it bn to a successful termi
nation. . • •• • - r , - V- _
None of the original stereotype plates have
been used, but every page has been printed on
new type, forming in fact a. new' Gydopiedia,
with the same plan and compassas its predecssor.
but vt itk a far greater pecuniary expenditure, ai.d
with such improvements iu its composition as
have been suggested by longer experience and
enlarged knowledge.
The illustrations which arc introduced for the
first time in the present edition have beenudded
not for tbe sake of pictorial affect, but to give
greater lucidity and fofee to the explanations in
the text. They embrace all branches of science
aud of natural history, and depict the most fa
mous and remarkable features of scenery, archi- j
lecture, aud art, as well as the various processes
of mechanics ard manufactures. Although in- J
tended for instruction rather than embellishment:
no pains have been spared to insure their artistic !
excellence; the cost of their execution is enor- j
xnous, aud it is believed they will find a welcome •
reception as an admirable-feature of the Cydo- j
piedia, and wortny of its high character.
This work is sold to Subscribers only, payable j
on delivery of each volume. It will be completed
in sixteen*Jarge octavo volumes, each containing
shout 800 pages, faly illustrated with several!
thousand Wood Engravings, and with numerous ;
colored Lithographic Maps. i
Price and Style of Binding.
In extra Cloth, per volume, - - $5 00 ,
In Library Leather, per vol. - - 6 00 ;
In Half Turkey Morocco, per vol. - - 7 00 i
In Half Russia, extra gilt, per vol. - - 8 00 j
In Full Morocco, antique, gilt edge, per vol. 10 00 i
la Full Itussia, per vol. - * - - 10 00
Six vo lumes now ready, Succeeding volumes, ;
110 til completion, will be issued once in two j
months.
%*Specimen paces of the American Cyclopaedia
showing type, illustrations, etcwill be sent
NOW OFF1JR TO DEALERS AS LARGE AND COMPLETE A STOCK
Groceries and Provisions,
hoe. They also cultivated a Kina oi
sorghum cane, hut for the seed only.
The cane and sorghum cane seed-were
ground into a kind of meal by rub
bing between two rocks, and this meal
was cooked into a kind of mnsh.—
This, with pumpkins, constituted the
breadstuff of the natives. Their meat
was either beef or mutton. Living on
a coast abounding in fish, they did
not know how to catch them, and
would not eat them when caught by
other persons.
The government under which the
Zulus lived was a hereditary monar
chy. A king by the name of Charka
had subdued many tribes and his
kingdom covered many hundreds of
miles. He v.as the Napoleon of Af
rica, and by his bold innovations
npon the old system of tactics became
a crest conquerer. The Eastern
room in their narrow selfish
bosoms to carry so m ray). And
other kind who have no hearts t-
break. But these are not women—
they are only females; or. amateur wo
men at best. Believe me, there is
nothing God basmade. that is so good
and true, so hard to break as the gen
tle, faithful-heart of a . womanly wo-
J man; unless it be the big, staunch
heart of manly man.—N. 0. Pica
yune.
ANOTHER CHANCE.
' FIFTH AND LAST GIFT CONCERT
In aid of the
Public Library, Kentucky
Postponed to
November 39, 1874,
DRAWING CERTAIN AT
Tii^t Time.
LLST OF GH T3.
One Grand Cash Gift $250,000
One Grand Cash Gift 100,001
One Grand Cash Gift 75.000
One Grand Cash Gift 50,000
i One Grand Cash Gift 25,000
5 Cash Gifts, $20, COO each, lOo’oOO
Our Coodsare Fresh. They are Full Weight. They are
Bought Right and will be Sold the Same Way.
We Can’t be Undersold by any Honseinthe South.
- Seymour, Tinsley & Co.,
; MACON, GA.
FIRST STREET, CORNER OF CHERRY.
WABEROOMS; Poplar Street, Between Third and Fourth Street*.
MAcON, GrA.
i 10 Cash Gifts, 14,000 each, 140,000
j 15 Cash Gifts, 10,000 each, 150,000
20 Cash Gifts, 5,000 each, 100,000
j 25 Cash Gifts, 4,000 each, 100,000
; 30 Cuih Gilts, 3,000 each, 90,000
| 50 Cach Gifts, 2,000 each, 100,000
^ s 'b Gifts, LOGO each, 100,000
240 Cahh Gifts, 500 eacti, 120,000
500 Gash Gilts, 100 each, 50,000
19.SGG Cash Gifts. . 50 each, 950,000
Grand Total 20.00c Gifts all Cash 3450,000
PRICE OF TICKETS.
Whol* Tick-.ts ten m
Half Tickets QO
Tenths, or each Coupon * 00
11 Whole Tickets for 500.00
224 Tickets ;or i 000 00
[GUERNSEY, BMTKpt & HENDRIX,
j DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS, WINDOW AND DOOE FRAMES, BALLS-
j TERS, NEWEL POSTS, SCROLL WORKS, BUILDEB8’ HARD- !
WARE, GLASS, OILS, PAINTS, PUTTY, ETC., Eld
lint of the above always in ttoek, and supplied to eft* and country*
notice * June 27, gm.»
2
! 1
K
3
3
i 1
8828S88