The Home journal. (Perry, GA.) 1877-1889, October 09, 1879, Image 1

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■ • . EI>WIN MARein, Pi-oprietox*. Derotedto Home Interests and Culture. TWO DOI/L.VIiS A Year in, A^yanc^ VOLUME IX. ~ * PERRY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1870- ----- . " OTMBER 46> TIMBERUKE & CHAPMAN, 1 DEATH OF JASPER- MACON, GEORGIA, Stewart’s old Stand, near- Campbell & Joues”. me. pee® «© uy. We guarantee the best attention to lock, and will” be glad - to see our Heads andriha public generally. W. C; TIMBERLAKE, W- B. CHAPMAN, ns, JANKERS AND BROKERS, g .WKDJSVILLE, - 1 -. - • - GEORGIA, y and Sell Exchange, Bonds Stock, Etc: CoLec- tions promptly attended-to. Also MAKE EOAES ON GOOD SECURITY- Advances made on Cotton m store at lowest rates. Executor’s Sale of a Yaluable Planta tion. GEORGIA—Howton County: By virtue of .an order from the Hon, Ordinary of said County, I will sell to the . highest, bidder before the court house door in Perry on the first Tues day in November next, 1879, during the legal hours of sale, the following properly to-wit: That'.' plaiftation situated' about five miles South of. Perry, known as the Henry Toother plat Creek Place, con taining 1200- acres more or less,’ well improved and . in a good state of cultiva'- tion. Terms; half cash • and balance in one And two years. F, A. Toomeb, Executor Henry Towner, decU Got. A 1879,—tds. GEORGIA—Houston County.- ator of P. B. D. H: Cnller, . 0. H. White, administrator ate oT said"coulity deceased, lias applied for leave to sell all the wild lands of said .deceased at private pale: This is therefore to cite all-persons concerned to appear at the November term 1879 of the Court of- Ordinary of said co\ua*y and show cause' if any they have why said application should not becrantofl: Wttnetft my official signature this Oct. 2d, 1879. .. 4*i . A. S. GILES, Ordinary ; , Ljj i j -I: i———! G. M. DAVIS, 8up££Fgpn tjo Chapman k Davis ANp C f Masterson Boarding, Livery And Fetid Stable, I'hlrd Street, between Walnut and Mulbery Streets. Macon Qa. T. T. MARTIN H1IUJFACTUKEE AND DEALER ,K?I^ ‘ ‘ , PERR^, - - GEORGIA. Ntocltir C ^ H ^ IrDi NEW AND' COMPLETE *»- Booftng^Gnl the most apj THET Oct.’2'7tit to Nov. 1st, 1879. /iVl ja.ii AT MACON, . fnri'.irnzai The Most Mugniflcept and Best Ap pointed Grounds in America. liberal cash premiums In all Classes, and thn largest ogored by - some of+he ““ ' NOTED HORSES ON THE TURF* Muaic will be furnished by a celebrated ap rtlie Most Promi nent Statesmen before the 5 Fair, as ^ re atly Reduced Rates r d? Freights and Pvspngirc, or* tOU.ho rjilrojds in. the State. 1 invitation is extended to yon to be an ’ J?ft?°nare teguested to write to the at Macon fpr a Premium List and other iDEMAN, Jr,, President. GSTON, GenT Sup’t. JOHNSTON, Secretary. [From a volume of Poems by the late Bobert M. Charlton, published in 1855.]- Extract. But his banner caught his eye, As it trailed upon the dust, And he saw lile comrade die,. Ere he yielded up his trust. “To the rescue!" loud he cried; “To tlie respue gallant men!”' Ami ho> dashed into the tide Of the battle-stream again, And then fierce the contest rose, O'er i s field of broidered gold 1 , And. the, blood.of friends and foes, 3 Stained: alike its golden fold; ; . But unheeding wound and blow,. He snatched it midst the strife, He has borne that flag away, X’ut its ransom is his life*. "To my-father 1 Thus the dying ] “Tellhim that my latest - word Was a blessing on his head; That when death had seized- iny frame. And uplifted was his dart. That I ne’er fdrgot hfs name, That was dearest to my heart. the iron bridges, we see that the vari- is vehicles and horse-cars pass aloDg precisely as if there. were ho railroad ewe are-examining these The Aberdeen [Mis*] tecvninerazjs.- 6 trains' pass, one on each Sev * ral th ® P as * fo ° r we have taken occasion- to call attention From the foe’s-pollu ‘And Jet all r* * 4 ' 4 When my form lies cold In death, ; That their friend remained sincere To hie last expiring breath. It was thus that Jasper fell, 'Neath that bright autumnal sky; Has a stone been reared to tell Where he laid him down to die? TO the rescue, spirits bold! To the rescue, gallant men! Let the marble page, usfoldi All his daring deads again! THE RAILROAD IN THE AIR- The city of New York is long and narrow. There is a deep river’on either side, T vJiere ships come from''all'.parts of the world close up to the edge of tli& town. Now, where the Ships are the merchants want to be, and where the merchants are a great many other peo ple of business want to be; and so it happens that a very great number of people want to do business in a very small space. The land is thickly cov ered with sipees ard offici s and manu factories. When the city was small tins was all right, and folks lived near their stores and countiug-rooms quite comfortably. Bat more and more peo ple came to live in New Y°rb and the place became to be very crowded. The rivers on each side, and to get-'room they msde new streets farther and farther to the north, up the island. Then people said they must have cars to take them up aud down town from their homes to the stores. They laid tracks on the streets and used horses to move the cars. 1 h s was all very good for a few years; more and more people came there to live. They found the horse cars too slow aud they began to build tall tenement-houses and to put dozens of poor families under one roof. Then the people said: “This will not do, we must have railroads with good engines to tjake us far up town toward the - country. Of coarse these railroads could not be laid in the streets, for locomotives cannot run fast through crowds of wag ons and people. And so .they at first thought they might mate underground i$ heads like those in London, or. they might tear down.a long row of houses and make a lane through the town where the tracks could be laid. Either plan would co§fea great- deal of money go, after many trials rind a great 1 deal of talking, they decided to build higli iron platforms through the broad streets find on top to place the tracks for a rail road. A Locomotive is a, curious animal. He likes a good level road-with no bad bills to climb. If you try to make him climb a steep bUl fee may stop 'short and refuse to stir, a wheel. The 'bind to the west of Central Park is exceed ingly hilly, and the railroad must be made to please these iron horses. So it happens-that where the grouud is low Prices Rill be 3the iron, supports of the railroad are very high. Some of the posts that sup-, port the railroad -are fifty-seven feet filled with cement, some curious work could be seen here while thp building was.going on,—men on high platform^ pouring the stuff info the hollow posts. This matter of running a steam Tail- road through a city, in such a way as not to interfere with the traffic, was a difficult apd puzzling business. In London, ns I have said, the city rail roads are placed in tunnels under the streets and houses; In Paris, there is a railroad in an open “cutting” or de£p ravine, with bridges over it at all the - stxeets thaierossit. -fir man; these methods answer a good purpose, bat they are very costly. In New York an entirely different plan has been tried by these elevated railroads laid on iron bridges through the streets. These roads work admirably. There is in the streets where they are built. There are horse-cars and Crowds of., trucks of wagoDS going np and dawn ail the time. The horse raiL roads are decidedly in the way of all other vehicles, and the cars often cause blockades that delay the"business pto- ple veyy much. Before the elevated railroad was built, the horse-railroad wus a serious cause of trouble in streets already crowded with carts and wagons. But now if we stand on the sidewalk, and can look in Tp^tli directions under icisel; there, things, side of the street,—in fact, one of them runs directly over our heads. ’We might tell our friends when we reach home that we were ran over by a rail road train and that it. didn’t hart a bit. We walk on down-town and come to. a Borrower street, ahd here the-railroad tracks come close together; aDd though the street is shaded by the iron bridge overhead, it ir clear and unobstructed. Here is a station with steps going np to tfie house overhead, and we hear a train stop overhead, and hear the conductor call out the name of the street and open and close the gates for the passengers. There is no loud ringing of bells or blowing of whistle, not even a puff from the smoke-stack, or a, rush of steam from the vacuum-brake. The bridge resounds somewhat, as you can easily imagine, when such a great moss of iron is shaken by the rapid motion of the heavy locomotives and trains; but the noise is not,of much conse- used, qnence. It is. far less than the roar and rattle of the teams in the street below. Certainly the horses do not seem to mind it. Th$K is ope, gravely eating his oats with evident satisfaction and peace of mind, though a rail-tram rushes over bis head every two min ntes. Charles Barnard, in St. Nicholas for October, A NEW METHOD OF COTTON PLANTING?. to the new xiroccess of cotton planting so successfully pursued by Mr J. J, Crump, of this county. The result of this process was 1,300 pounds of gin ned cotton to the acre in 1877; .1,000 ponnds in 1878, and this season the prospects are erood for the heaviest yield it has had. For the benefit of our readers and exchanges we will again give Mr. Cramps formula. He prepares his land in Decembes-by digging holes three feet from each oth- or, each eighteen inches deep; the boles he fills with manure to within four inches of. the top soil. At the nsnal season he plants with a view of Having three stalks to the kill, and piles the clay from the bottoms of the pits as deep over the tops os the supply will ad- his oats with evident satisfaction and the second crop - generally being the -■* . _ best, and ike- first and the last about the same. This plan has gotton be yond the sphere of experiment, and Wby Dr. Janes Resign ed. Excellency, 'Alfred H. Colqiiitl, Georgia: I have been reliably informed that the opposition to the departmenr of agriculture, and hi demand for its ab olition, whichhasfound expression in various forms, is to a large extent based upon personal opposition, to myself, and believing, r.s Tdo; that 'such oppo sition will not only impair my useful ness as the bead- of the department, but seriously endanger its existence; believ ing, too, that the abolition of the de partment at this time would be a ca lamity to the farmers of Georgia and the best ntereats of the Estate, I am not willing, even seemingly, to be an obsta cle to the advancement of thes9 inter ests. Notwitnstanding my convictions that I have faithfully discharged my du ties to the best ot my skill and ability, in a work so new; without example or precedent, errors of judgment- aud mis takes in the exercise of a Very wide dis cretion may have been committed. In view of these facts, I have conclu ded that it i§, my duty to resign my po sition. ■ - I therefore respectfully tender my resignation, absolutely and unqualified ly, of the office of commissioner of ; g- ricultjure, to take effect at such time as you may signify ycur acceptance of the same. Thomas P. Janes. AS^e Gambles.—Educated, pretty and fashionably dressed women were no,t common in Nevada City, California, in 1854, Therefore the arrivnl of Mad ame Dutnont *n that mining .town caused considerable excitement. Jor she was attractive in the three mentioned particulars. Besides, she was not more than twenty years old. She at o»ce hired a corner in a large saloon and opened a faro game. Tlie novelty of a woman defiling the cards ffieiy many gamblers to her table,rand her success was so great that she soon opened a large jestabhshjnent, wfhere.B f x cf 9 z §9 ffajnes were kept going night and day. She gained .tlip reputation, pfilealinghonest- respeet. But her luck init of, with a view to keeping down the grass, and then cultivates with hand and hoe, never allowing a plow to be The preparation is made in De- the fiery cember in order to qualities of the fertilizer, and the holes when prepared will make at least three cropsvwithout changing their contents, there is no longer necessity for a man to scrape over a dozen acres when he can make more cotton by cultivating two or three by Mr. Cramp’s process. A Ball Underneath the Ground- A ball was given last night by Capt. Matt Canavan at the. New York mine, Gold Hill, of which mihe he is Super intendent. The ball took place at the new station opened at the depth of 1,040 feet below the surface. This sta tion is quite as large as an ordinary ball room, well floored, walled in with substantial timbers, and has quite a lofty ceiling. The. station is cool and comfortable, and was appropriately dec orated for the occasion, and was lighted with lamps suspended trom the ceiling. The ladies, were dressed in calico and the gentlemen in correspondingly inex pensive raiment. The furniture was in keeping with the place, and while there was furnished everything necessary to 'comfort, nothing extravagant was seen. Never before in the TJuiied States—if anywherein the woill—has there been a ball given at the depth of nearly a quarter of a mile beneath tlie surface of the earth. There was no. trouble about persons slipping into the ball room without tickets. It was a queer way,- too, of going to a ball, this step ping upon a cage instead of into a car riage, aud being darted straight down towards the center of the earth instead of rolling ofi horizontally in the usual way.—Virginia (Nev.) Enterprise. L’ENGf^ of -the Days.—At London, England, -and Bremen, .Prussia, the longest day has 16 i hours. At Stockholm, Sweden, the longest day has 18 1 hours. At Hamburg,. Gerpaany, and Pantzic, Prussia, tlie longest day has 19 hours and the shortest 5 hours. At Cornpo, England the longest day has 21 J hoars find tbe shorten 2 i hours: At'Wardhuy; Norway, the day lasts from the 21st of may to the 22d of July, without interruption, and at Spitzber- gen the longest $ay is 3 i months. At New York, the longest day June 19 has 14 hours and 56 minntes; at Montreal, 151 hours.' ; But the longest day -of all, though one never seen by"a civilized person, is that at the two poles, where the day lasts for 6 months and is succeeded by long. m I in Sun Francisco, bfit could not recover, into prosperity. A few weeks ago she borrowed five ’ '" ’ dollars from an old friend and started for the mining region of Nevada*, klue and silver border, with the word contemplating a new career as a gam bler. She opened a f%rp game in Rodie; but it lasted onl? » few fioMTS- when the bank was. broken. Sne paid her losses in the ald.smiling manner, re tired to an ante-room, swallowed poison and died. ~~T ---- I Too, Honest- eok- the —It pities the railroads ran over brick.arches the Consulate seryice j at the level of the house-tops. All [off charge of Sew; with the administration, and as a con- 1, while iff i lost caste sequence is to lose his office. A Wash? ington dispatch to the New York Post a night equally as long. Novelty in Wedding Cabds.—It con-, sists of a double card, like the new me morial cards, and is edged with a -pale Marriage” in the centre of the first page in silver. The second page has the intimation, “At Home, after snch a date as tbe wedded pair may decide npop, together with their address. The third page is appropriated to their names, the date of marriage and the church and the minister by whom and w-^ms that CoL Mosby, affiie his dis-. =-p —n closurBTJf ffiS^SSfrapnbiTahd^ftoud in ^rth’page being reserved lor the com- plinjentaiy expression; “With-; our kind regards,”/ to wliich their initials are appended. The card is a great im provement on the old.fashioned wed- ding caid s.—Lanflan Printer's Peg Isfey. ■P- loose at the Hong Kong Consulate, and Who has constituted himself a grand inquisitor and sort of foreign represen tative of the Democratic investigating committee, is too retire from his 0on- be in Washington-To contribute to the . Democratic scandal mills. ” rangements are about completed by the At the evening- celebration of the I,SOOth anniversary of the destruction of Pompeii, a bottle of wine- taken from the rains, where it has Iain since A. D- 79, is to be opened. A Counteb Exodus.—A Washington dispatch says.- “3ontbern farm labor? ers can make more in a year cash or its 6 ;uivalent,iand-ar3 in every way better off than tne same class in any other part of the country. By way. of news a counter exodns has been- started. Ar- planiers for importing colored laborers from Mis souri and the border States. Several railroad companies are about to issue tickets over their roads at excursion tes for tnis purpose. ’ v - - ■ ■ HINDOO WOMEN. The Hiftdpb women, when young, are delicate and beautiful, so far as we can reconcile beauty with the olive com plexion. They are finely proportioned; their limbs small, tiieir features soft : ad regn’ar, and their eyes soft and lan guishing; but the bloom of beauty soon decays, and age makes rapid progress before they have seen thirty years. This may be accounted, for from the heat of the climate and; cusboma of the conn try, as they ore often mothers at 12 years of agQ- No woman cah.be more attentive to cleanliness than the Hindoos; they take every method to render their persons delicate, soft and attractive; their dress is peculiarly becoming, consisting of a long piece of cotton or silk, tied aronnd the waist, and banging in a graceful manner to the feet, it is afterwards brought over the body in negligent folds; under-this they-cover the bosom with a short waistcoat of silk, but wear no linen. Their long black hair is ado^edl with jewels and wreaths of flo wers ; their ears are bored in many place and loaded with pearls; a variety of gold chains, strings of pearls and precious stones fall from tbe the neck overthe bosom; and the arms are covered with bracelets from the wrist to the elbow. They have also gold and silver chains around the ankles and £ ' an abundance of rings on their -fiugers and toes, among those on tlie fingers is frequently a small mirror. I think the richer $he dress the less, becoming if appeals, and a Hindoo woman of dis tinction always seems to be overloaded with finery, while, the v’llage nymphs, with fewer, ornaments, but in the same elegant d?ftlW r y> are more captijatirg —although there are very few women,- even of the lowest families, who have not some jewels at their mairiage. —London Times. FREE PASSES TO LEGISLATORS. The Atlanta correspondent of the Sa vannah News thus speaks on this sub ject. .The New York Sun is quite right in censuring members of the Georgia Leg islature for accepting, W<S sometimes even asking, for free passes over rail roads over the Stale. The censure is justly deserved, and ought to result in passage of a bill prohibiting the acce] - lance of free passes by any officer of the St^te- I remember well when Div E. AFle- wellen, of tbe Macon and Brunswick Railrord, arose in the Constitutional Convention and moved that no mileage be allowed holders of free passes. His motion, however, was voted down al most unanimously, as several such mo tions have been in various sessions of tfio General Assembly. Members who are the. most eager to get free passes, not only over the roads leading t j theii homes, but other lines of travel, are al so the most zealons opponents of any reduction of mileage. But the wossl; of all, 93d most to be condemned, is the piactice of lending,, hiring or selling free passes to friends. Several members have been guilty of al lowing other persons, to useiheir passes, althongh the said passes are plaiuly marked “not transferable.” A Cube Found fob Membbanous Cboup.—The Paris corespondent o { the New York Tribune writes: “A piece of good news for mothers: Dr. Bouchet, experimenting on a new- discovered pharmaceutic vegetable pro- II n k’ li —II ... I" 4 I, i"...... nk kl.rt AKHnn ’duct; ef. Brazil,! the’ juice of the carica papaya; has ascer^aintld that it diss solves the false membranes which ob struct the throat of a patient suffering from croup. This substance is used in Brazil to give tenderness to very fresh meat. Intestinal worms plunged into WurtzTias catalyzed Dr. Bouchet’s new remedy for the terrible malady which, robbed Queen Victora last winter of her most interesting daughter, the Princess Alice.” " Referring to the elections in five States this year over which the Repub licans are congratulating themselves, the World, says that in but ODe of the five (Rhode Island) has tbe Republican where the ceremony was jjerforiiied, the. party-held its own as compared with 1876; in two others (Maine and Califor nia) where-tbree y ears ago it po-sesp :d a majority it is how. in a minority of the popnlar vote; in a fourth (Michigan) where it still preserves a majority that majority has been decreased, and in the fifth (Kentucky), where it was already in a hopeless minority, its minority is- more hopeless than ever. The testimony of Daffiel Lott in the Goldsmith impeachment trial, in which he frankly confessed that his wild hind transactions were‘ : crooked,”has opened the eyes of the people to the existence of a ring of wild land speculators in HUMOROUS-. NEW DRY GOODS 9^—The Yane shows—The direction of thej wind. : Travels invariably wheels of a clock. The future must not be sacrificed to the present. A quarrel is nine times out of ten, merely the fermentation of a misunder standing. The difference between a man and a fish—A man weighs more, and a fish less,, by dressing. Why is your eye with a motp in it 1/k.e a window? Because it opens and shots and is full of pains. “Ah, yes,” said a cabinet maker to a crockery-dealer to whom he was intro duced, “you sell tea-sets and I sell set tees.” The men who alway say a kind word for then} neighbors and; torn a deaf ear to scandal are not only very blessed,, but also very scarce. When Artemns Ward was exhibiting his show in Salt Lake City, his compli mentary tickets to the city officials read) as follows—“Admit bearer and one wife,” “Sam, did yon see Mr. Johnson, the sew overseer# “Yes. massa, I met him down by the cotton-gin.” “He’s a good looking fellow, isn’t he?” Well, massa he talks like a good looking man; he made a bow—dat’s nJdjhe said-” “Captain,” said a cheeky youth, “is there any danger of disturbing the mag netic currents if I examine that compass too closely?” A%d< the st,ern mariner, loving hi$ little joke, promptly respond ed, “No, sir; brass has no effect what ever on them.” Fresh customer: “I’m surprised to see how quietly yonjstand the silly criticisms and objections-of t-lirft shallow-pated cad who has just left the shop,” Mer chant: “ Oh, my good sir, in onr trade we always make- allowances fos emp ties.” A judge of njTgdfc experience says: “I have never had a breacb-of-promise case before me in which the mother of girl did not know more about it than her daughter. She always suspects the fellow is a rascal, and accordingly gets ready for him.” “Steward,” said a passenger on board a steamer one morning whil« at break fast, handing across the table a enp containing some dark muddy-looking liquid, “what is that?” “I think it’s tea sir,” replied the steward after a has ty inspection. “Oh,very well replied the traveler; “then take it 9.w%y, and if it’s ‘ea bring me coffee and if i’ts coffee 1 bring me tea.” Little Fieddie was undergoing the disagreeable operation of having his hair combed by h : s mother,and he grum bled at the process. “Why, Freddie’” said “mama,”you ought not make snch a fuss. I don*4 cry when my hair is combed.” “No” replied the yontlifnl son,, “lmt your hair ain’t fastened to your head.” IN MACON, At Airs. Chadoin’s Old Stand, Second J. C. BANiYON & CO. % Respectfully announce to the people Houston. anijL adjoining counties, tha :n*<k ladies especially, that they have opei and are daily adding to their qew ag/jj very bundsomastock ot DRY GOODS, They make a specialty DRESS GOODS, In aH the latest^ shades agd styles,. The C/feofpS Jjttaeli, Cctsh* meres Ever -sohl in Macon, as wel^as.ih^ PRETTIEST CALICOES* Call and see onr goods, and WO* will guarajitee.th#.mo8&Qourteoas attend tionby gentlemanly and expe^enqed( salesmen. J. O. BANNQN-4f.CO, Mbs. W. F. Bbown, l f Formerly Brown House) [Formi PBOPBIETOBS. MACON, - GEORGIA* BATHS FREEQFCHARGE Cas and Water throughout the House. Commodious F^ooms Fitted up with New FurnK ture, Etc. ItAWKINSVILLE, CA MOTTO—PEACE AND, PLENTY, THE SCABBOBOUGH HOUSE haAiqcoqfly 1 beiUfa rofuinisliQd-. Everything new, dean and CoWKafc; able. Table famished with the best the market af?' fords, Servants polite and accommodating, Com-' modions sample room and special attention paid to commercial tourists. A hack will meet every trsAi£ and convey passengers and baggage to and from the, Hotel gratis. 'B. F. & W. J. BOON^. Proprietors^ As New York is. the barometer of onr national trade, the condition of bnsi ness there is an indication for the rest of the country. The signs of improved business in the metropolis are best told hy figures. For the week ending Sep tember 17th the total exports from that port, not including specie, amounted to $7,627,576, being an increase of $1.- 410,419 over tbe preceding week.. The total value of the exports of the year 1879, Including the week just mention ed, was $234,906,481, an increase of more than $20,000,000 over the same period of last year. Among the exports of last weeek were 2,000,000 bushels of wheat, over 1,000,000 bushels pf corn, nearly 6,000,000 pounds of cat meats, 1,500,000 pounds of bntter, over 3,000,- 000 ponnds of cheese, nearly 2,000,000 pounds of lard, %nd over 6.500,000 gal lons of petroleum. a solution of it are soon reduced to 9 pulpy consistency. The famous savant ^ r ep 0r t er 0 f the Macon Telegraph ’nd T\f D /vnnnrr _ THE GENUINE DR. C. McLANE’a Celebrated, Americas WORM SPECIFIC, OR SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. ; T HE countenance is pale and leader^ colored, with occasional flushes^ otp a circumscribed spot on one ex both; cheeks; the eyes become dull; the piK pils dilate; an azure semicircle along the lower eye-lid; the nose is ir-.’ ritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds - f% a swelling of the upper lip; occasional} headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears; an unusual- secretion of ? saliva; slimy or furred tong-uej. breatl^ very foul, particularly in the. rnppRngj; appetite variable^ sometimes voracious,; with a gnawing sensation of the stom? acl^ at others, qptif^ly gone; fleeting pains in (he stomach; occasional pausea and vomitings violent pain% throujjhqnt tfeie abdomen; bowels ir-' regular,at times costive; stools slimy^ not unfrequently tinged with bloody belly swollen and. hard.; urine turbid 3 respiration occasion^iy, difficult, an^ accompanied by hiccoiighi coughj sometimes dry-and convulsive; uneasy and disturbaj sleeps with grinding of. the. teeth; tetnper varffibje^ but genera ally irritabto, Whenever the above symptoms. ’ axe foutid to exist, has been interviewing tlie statute intend ed fc x tbe top of the Ci n'ederate monu ment in that city, and says of it that it PR. C. McLANE’S VER AtTFTTftT^ . 1— — 1 u* j .1— will certainly effect a cure. ' *-”* is twelve feet in b<’igbt, and ibe ixecu tion is well nigh faultless. The figure is tffat of a Confi . q :te soldier at parade rest. The face is peculiary Sontbrrn, the features well defined, and the e x pression most hapuily engrafted on the marble. It is a most beautiful work of art. The monument will probably be unveiled during the State Fair. It will be thirty-Jiva feet in height, and ti* e figure to rest on the top is the oaoit massive aad imposing in the Saadi. A radical difference still exists between Germany and i}ie Yatican. While ready to make concessions in the application of the May laws, -Prince Bismarck firm ly adheres to the principle of Stale an ti orify in ehnrch matters as established in tnose laws, This is a principle which the Vatican cannot allow, , IT DOES 30,T GO^T^IN MERCURT in any form: it is an innocent prepara? tion, not capable of doing the slightest injury to the most tender infant. The genuine Dr, McLANE’S Ver-. mifuge bears the signatures of C. Mc^ Lane and. Fleming Bros, on the wrapper, :Q-_ r. DR. O. MoLANDW LIVER FILLS! are not. recommended as a rcraedw. ‘,‘fbr ; the ills that flesh is heir to,” but is, affectio of the liver, aud- in all Bilious Complaints,' Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, they, stand without a rival. A well dressed woman dre v a erow d together in a Cincinnati! street by striking - a man across the face several As a simple purgative they are unequal ed. BE!>AUE CF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the lid with Cmrvparri/\n T\ I» Vf /-T I VD>C T tt'WD f IS T’ ! r ° ! of unscrupulous character. Hundreds. the punishment with her She | McLane and Fleming Eros. # of thousand! of acres of wild land have ; coolly explained that he was her rann- i Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. Me. been “gobied up” by this ring, and the: way husband, whom she had laboror.sly : Rank’s Liv^rPilij;, prepared by Flaning State and innocent parties ar? the saf-j traced for the sole piu pose pf whipiiug. f„u of ImitationsV the nmeltftfEaiMfc ierers. - - ‘him. spelled differently, but same pronunciatioe, >