The Home journal. (Perry, GA.) 1877-1889, November 06, 1879, Image 1
EPWIN MARTIN, Proprietor.
TJevoted to Homo Interestig :\nd Culture, *
T tVQ POTJiAIvS A. Tearlu Adyaacs,
VOLUME IX.
PERRY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1879.
HUMBER 45
M*cex» -p-«—«,
B, DUB A A ULLMAN, PROPRIETORS.
Repaired, Refurnished, Reju
venated.
Tor OoDTeolenoe to Business and Excellence of
Fare, Superior to any other House.
TO AND FROM TEE DEPOT
TIMSERLAKE & CHAPMAN,
MACON, GEORGIA,
Stewart’s old Stand, near Campbell &
Joues’.
sAtiairira a® mv-
■ gffiT STABLE.
We guarantee the best attention to
stock, anc will be glad to see our
friends and the public generally.
W. C. TIMBERLAKE,
W. B. CHAPMAN,
D. B. LEONATtD.
B. O. LEWIS,
LEWIS, LEONARD & GO.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
HAWKINSYILLE, GEORGIA.
Bnj and Sell Exchange, Bonds Stock, Etc. Col.ec-
tions promptly attended to.
AMO HAKE LOANS. ON GOOD SECURITY.
Adnscee made on Cotton^in store at lowest rates
E^tenter’s Sale of a Valuable Tlanla-
ti.
GEORGIA—Houston County:
By virtue of an order front the Hon,
Ordinary of said County, I will sell to
the highest bidder before the four
house door in Perry on the first fflnra
day in November next, 1879, during t he
legal hours of sole, the following
property to-wit:
That plantation situated abont five
miles South of Perry, known as the
floury Toomer Flat Creek Place, con
taining 1200' acres more or less, well
improved.and in a good state of cultiva
tion.
Terma, half ca*h end bslnnce in one
• id two years
F. A. Toomkp..
Executor Henry Toomer, dec’d,
Get. 2. 1079,—ids.
GEORGIA—Houston Counts.*
Q. H. White, administrator of 1'. B. D. H. Cnller,
lata of said county deceased, has applied for leave
t# sell all the wild lands of said deceased at private
mU:
Thi* ia therefore to cite all persons concerned to
Wear at the IfoYember term 1879 of the Court of
Ordinary of said county and show cause if any tfiey
Jurowrhy said application should not he granted:
Vitnaaa my official signature thia Oct. 2d, 1879.
4w. 4. £. GILES, Ordinary.
G. M, DAVIS,
OsMsasDn vo CsrrxiS A Davis akp.C, Hasxbbsoh
Boarding, Lavery
Feed Stable,
Street,
And
Third
between Walnut and
Streets.
i [J
Macon Ga. •
Mulbery
m j'~riwvi
BETSEY PATYERSOW.
T. T. MARTIN
HANUI ACTUBEE AND DEALER DC
fin*
PERRY, - - GEORGIA.
IIAS NOW CX HAND A NEW AND COMPLETE
U Stock of
tin ware of all kinds.
Which he-will sell cheaper than
•ver Wore offered In Perry.
iolesile, Macon Prices will be
Duplicated.
Seoflng, Guttering, eta., done to order in
ao *t approred style- Apl 3 lyr-
Mministrator’s Sale.
W*
Vo A,on the first Tnesday in December next,
[ (JzJ? 1 ‘m oourt home door in Parry, Houston
!*j/'• Georgia, lots of lands numbers 222 and
forty (is) acres on the South side of num-
*11 containing four hundred and forty
I aefea, »]1 : n the Upper 14th Districtof said
* t l r vccII improved—containing three hundred
I fa]2£» in cultivation—good dwelling housa,
press—-veijh all uecesaary out houses.
I C - Ecm s wlu hp soid rs the property of John
tier of the court of Ordina-
... “>4 pounty for a divisor. C-’uong the heirs of
... tCRumjih, and to pay his debts. Terms
t;. ,11 c:se *third cath, one third on a credit of
lUti 'ri« *fid the other Jhird on a credit of two
Sri, “ .titles to be made when the purchase
| -I ia all paid—as it faR due.
LEWIS D. HUMPH,
. “riinistratorof Johh C. Rumph, dec’d.
- rta ?G 1., Oft.. §—1370—Jus, "
Iu the spring of 1766, a poor boy of
fourteen, named William Patterson,
from the north of Ireland, landed al
Philadelphia. He was tbe son of a
small farmer, a Protestant, one
of that conquering Scoteh-Irish
race which has contributed so many
distinguished persons to the history of
tbe United states. The boy obtained a
place in the counting house of an Irish
merchant of Pniladelphia, and served
him with singular diligence and fideli
ty. He acted upon the,principle, often
inculcated in the editorial columns of
this paper, of making himself valuable
to his employer.
At twenty-one he was in business as a
merchant. When be had been estab
lished about two years the American
revolution broke out, threatening to put
a stop to all business. William Patter
son availed himself of the crisis to make
his own fortune, and, at the same time,
to serve hi* adopted country. He
loaded two vessels with tobacco, indigo,
and oilier American products, investing
in*hi8 speculation the whole of his small
capital, and sailed for France. Both
vessels reached France in safety. He
sold the carg&es, invested the proceeds
in warlike stores, of wLich General
Washington was in direst need, and set
sail for Lome. On the way he touched
at St. Enstatious, an island of the Dutch
West Indies, then a place of great trade,
containing abont twenty-five thousand
inhabitants. Seeing his chance he re
mained on this island, and sentfhis ves
sel to Philadelphia.
They were both soflueky ns to escape
the cruisers, and to arrive in March,
1776, when the army had scarcely pow
der enought to conceal} from the enemy
that they were*short of powder. We
can imagine that these two cargoes of
ammunition were welcome, enough, and
sold at a good priced .The vessels ap
pear to have returned to the West
Indies, where William .Patterson re
mained two or three years, sending
supplies home as best-.as lie t could, unti]
the alliance with France put an end.to
Ihe scarcity of Military fstores, He
then prepared to return. In June, 1778,
he landed in Baltimore, then a tuwr. of
three or four thousand! 'inhabitants,
bringing with him, in gol-1 and
merchandise, a hundred thousand dol
lars, the result of five year’s business.
He was then twenty-six years, of age.
Upon looking upon Baltimore with the
eyes of a long-lieaded man of business,
observing its business situation, and
perceiving the necessity of its becom
ing one of the first cities of the world,
he concluded to settle there. With
one half of liis fortune he bought lots
and lands in aud rear tbe city, as As
ter did in New York a few years later.
With the other half of bid capital, in
cluding his little fleet and small vessels,
he went into the business of a shipping
merchant.
During tbe next twenty years the com
merce of the infant repulic Fbad a most
rapid development, particularly while
supplying the warring powers of Eu
rope with provisions. William Patter-
sou during those twenty years accnmor
lated what was then considered an im
mense fortune. President Jefferson, in
1804, spoke of him as tbe richest per
son iu the United States except Charles
Carroll of Carrollton, who inherited
lands and slaves. His fortune, too, was
a growing one, since he continued ; to
purchase lands near that city, that were
certain to raise iu value with the in
crease of the place.
After settling in Baltimore he mar
ried a young lady named Dorcas
Spear, and soon became a family man
of the old-fashioned type. The Scotch-
Irish have the family instinct very strong,
and are apt to centre all their hopes of
happiness in a home, . He was a man of
quiet and regular habits; during a
long life ho scarcely ever left Baltimore,
either on business or pleasure. He
said once, in speaking of his own histo-
that ever since be had a house of
on’s youngest/brother—that brother
whom; lie '^hoped" would accomplish
on the ocean what he - had done on the
land--was at the"races that day. Na
poleon wanted a great admiral to cope
with Nelson' and conquer the British
navy, and he had flattered himself that
this favorite brother s could be the man.
If beauty of form or face could make &
great commander, Jerome would have
been a promising candidate; for on the
day that he rode out to the Baltimore
races in 18Q3, lie!was theu i r*one , k of -the
most superb looking*!? young men then
living.
_They met! AH'the'world'knowswhat
followed. ■
William Patterson^ witfci[his' sturdy
Scottish sense, perceived the {utter in
congruityVand absurdity of such a
match, he opposed it by every means in
his power.fiHe used both authority
and persuasion. He sent her out of
town, hut she returned more infatuated.
At length, discovering .that both of
them were set upon>'the-marriageThe
gave a reluctant consent; and married
they were, by the Roman Catholic bish-
cy of Baltimore, her father taking every
precautionMo fullfil all the forms which
th? laws of both rations require^,
Bonaparte family, with one exception,
approved ;tke fmatch, and.; several of
them congratulated -Ihe newly married
pair. Tli it one exception., was Napole
on, the head of ihe family, First Consul,
aboutjto’declarehimselfiemyeror. y He
refused to recognize the marriage.
When, at length, Jerome stood in his
presence to plead {the case of his young
and lovely wife, who was about to be
come a'j.raother, * Napoleon , addressed
him thus:
‘ ‘So, sir, you are the first of’my fam
ily who ; has shamefully abandoned his
post. It. will-; require many splendid
actions to wipe ofi that stain, from
your reputation. As to your love affair
withfjyour tittle girl, I pay no regard to
it.”.
And he never did. Jerome had the
baseness to abandon his wife, and she
stooped to accept from Napoleon an in
come of twelve thousand dollars a year,
which was paid to her as long as th6
hand of that'coarse soldier-had the
waisting of the French peoples’ earn-
ingfA She came back to Baltimore with
her child, one of the most wretili-
ed of women. She thought that mar
rying into this family of Corsican rob
bers had elevated her in “rank” above
her wise and virtuous father! She
wrote to that father many, years after,
describing her feeling at this time.
‘‘I hated aud loathed a residence in
Baltimore so much,that, when I thought
1 was to spend my life there, I tiled to
screw my c< lunge up to the point of
commit ling suicide'. My cowardice,
mid only my cowardice, prevented.my
exchanging Baltimore for the grave,
after haying mrrried a person of. the high
rank I did, it became impossible for
me to bend my spirit to marry any one
who had been my equal before my
marriage, and it became impossible for
me ever to be contented in a country
where there exists no nobility.”
This poor deluded woman was the
plague of her father’s years. It is but
common charity Id tLinx that the acute
ness of her mortification had impaired
in some degree her reason. She.spenl
many years hankering after that false
European life, and heaping every kind
of contempt lipon her. native land. She
appears to have been incapable of hu
man affection. She abondoned. her
father and his home, to roam around
ampug.the titled idlers.of Europe, at a
time when he peculiarly needed her
presence and aid. He wrote to he*
thus in 1815, soon after the death of
his wife: '»
‘.‘What will the world think of . a wo
man wild' had' recently followed her
mother and List sister to the grave, and
quit heriathersrhouse where duty; and
necessity call for her attention as tbe
only female . of ’ the family left arid,
thought-proper to abandon all to seek
seek admiration in foreign countries?”
The old man intimates that he, too,
regarded heir as a person not qnite
sound in mind. He died in 1835, aged
eighty-three years, leaving an immense
estate, and the longest will ever record-
, -ed in Baltimore. He did not quite
his own it had-been bis invariable ^ hj3 daDgbtei . } Betsej . bnt
HOW BONKEYS WRITE-
:-r •* - *
OKE SIDS.
For twenty yeara Lthe Yankees have
inonopolized Government patronage,
and now, that our turn has come, arid
we{put in our friends, on whom we can
rely,—gentleman n hn would, blush to
touch one of their greasy Northern
palms,—they complain of persecution!
What right have {; they—hirelings and
upstarts—to dictate to us, the natural
landlords of the soil? Does not their
boasted, education taach that in history
gentle blood will tell; that, in the natu
ral logic of ^events, brains must eventu
ally come to the surface? How does it
come that in- this favored land the
FrenclijOvercaine the Indians, the En-
glish|the French and to-dav the South
er nor'is driving the North before him?
Is it not the God-given right of intel
lect? Had King James sent those das- Scott, seems, from papers found upon
left her a few small houses and lots;
which, however, greatly increased in
value after his death. He .explains the
smallness ofLis-bequest; thus:
“The conduct of my. daughter, Bet
sey has through life been - so disobedi-
'ent that, in no instance hgs she ever
consulted my opronions or-feelings; in
deed, she' has caused me more anxiety
arid trouble than all my other children
put together.”
mance of her early life. In 1S03, at
eighteen years of gge, she was the pride
of her father’s home, arid the prettiest
girl in Baltimore, a place noted then, as
now, for the beauty of its women. If
the early portraits of her are correct,
the word prelty describes her very well.
There was a girlish and simple expres
sion inker countenance at variance with
her character, for, with all' the. faults,
she was a woman of force.
Jn the fall of 1803 this Baltimore
to be up last, at night, and to see that
the fire and lights were ir a safe condi
tion before going to bed. * Like other
rich men, he served as bank director
and President, and luld other offices of
a similar character from time to time,
The most fortunate individuals—-and
few men were more fortunate tknn this
Baltimore merchant—bayje-their share,
of trouble. Calamity came to him in
the bewitching disguise of a most beau
tiful daughter, born in the early years
of his wedded life. This was th&t Eljzf
abeth Patterson,3 whose recent
death at the age of ninety-four has call
ed attention anew to the stmuge ro^ ^ boarding-house on two thousand.
tard Puritans to some deserted island
as they deserved, Columbia would to
day be one homogenous nation, united
in faith, politics and religion, and have
made such strides in civilization as to
distance the effete nations of the Old
World. * * * * As it is, these
Yankees—the refuse of every nation—
have requited the leniency of the foun
ders of the Government by taking up
arms against their natural rulers, have
conquered, persecuted, taken prisoner,
and even put- to death, the Lord’s cho
sen people, destroyed the very natuie
of the Government, and at last set np a
sordid impostor, who has neither the
title io govern, nor "the understanding to
manage what he has usurped. For
years we{have.brorne all this in silence;
but now the day of grace is over,' the
time of mercy is passed. You that have
the authority must bid them come down
from their high places, that their bet-
ters^may reign. [Amen Sand Amen
Fds. Oholono [Miss.) States, Dent ]
TBE OTHER.
Booming, booming, booming, for
Grant. With the nation’s capital in the
hands of traitors,' the low, but deep
murmurs of a defrauded people gro^;
in sullen reverberations that githor,
gather,.gather,[aud, rnmbling over the
graves of a million dead heroes, who
seem to have, died iu vain -that the n
tion might live. Thc-v'Toll grandly i
to,the hearts of thirty million living pa
triots, and break on ttie ears of ihe
world, booming, booming, booming for
Grant in 1880. Tvririsfenclcbhiti.srn.
gush, reconciliation, and ail other tricks
of reconstruction are played out. Exit
doves, olivD.[branches nnd fol de-rol.
Grant- and Gunpowder, Grant and
bayonets. Grant and ttie gallons for
traitors.- Grant andlb'e-grand old Un
ion army on the top shelf. Grant iu
the President cimir, bis Congress and
Cabinet- taken from the gvini warriors
who saved the Upiop to preserve it,
and to stay there till the crack of doom,
if the integrity of the republic requires
it. It was the sword of the Father*
that created the Republic, it was the
sword of their sons that defended it
against foreign foes; it was the sword
of their grana-sons that rescued it from
hell-born domestic treason. To the ar
my we owe its creation, and preserva
tion an d mlern pt ion-;’ from : the ranks of
the civillian and the stateman have come
the imbeciles and blathering impractica-
bles, gushing sentimentalists, and dia-
bolistic-traitors. They may do when
the geach'.blossoms and butterflies
dance in the calm sunbpams of piece;
but- when treason stalks.at moonduy in
the nation’s capital, the sword must bo
unsheathed, the soldiers must ste_p to
the front. Shot arid shell, grapes arid
canister aie the only arguments trai
tors can Understand.—^-L*ma*S (la.) Sen :
tinel; Eep^ ‘ [{
Jil'en Driven iiks Hor?as.
“In Yobohama;” writes a missionary,.
“I was surprised at seeing a native in
European dress with bright metahe but
tons, Harnessed: to anyelegant .tivo-
hanOMfllx I iffpTfid hlS
THE AMERICAN "WHO DIDN’T
BLOW CH1UTAN
The following particulars the cap
ture of .the torpedo boat have just
restchedius:-
One morning, during the last cruise
of the Blanco, and while steaming to
the north, between Iquique and Pisa-
gna, a steam launch was seen. As the
Itata gained upon ihe lunch, some ob
jects were thrown overboard from tbe
latter. . .. . . 3 . f
The prize was found to be a well-con
strncted steam lunch, some thirty feat
long, protected by a steel shield, half
an inch thick, well calculated to defend
the crew against rifle bullets: Her en
gine is in good working order, and cap
able of propelling it at the rate of ten
knots an hour. Its crew consisted of
four men, of donbtfnl nationality. One
of them, whose name appears to be
THE LIBRARY ASSOCIATION.
The members of the association met
TO TEACHERS AND PARENTS;
OP HOUSTON CO.
wheeled carriage ; he politely offered his
services. He was a ginriijksha, per
forming a double function, that of
horse and driver. It was disagreeable
to rite to'eiriploy a fellow 'maa in an
equine capacity; but I could not help it,
for in Yokohama, as vrah as. m Toklo
and Yefido, there wo* not to bo found
a single horse with driver. In the cap
ital of Japan, I am told, the number of
ginrickshas is abont eighty thousand.
Among them are persons belonging to
Ihe-nobilitv (samnary), whom.'poverty
Slie survived him many years, a well reduced to. this Yuduitrv. Palan-
known figure in Baltimore, a brisk old
lady with a red* umbrella and a black
velvet bonnet: with an income of a hun
dred thousand dollars ay ear, but living
him, to be the Director General of the
torpedo force of Peru.
This gentleman some[ r time[ ago of
fered his services to Chili, but tfiey.
declined and then he obtained his pres
ent appointment fit Pern. Ia his pos
session was found a contract made with
the Peruvian Government, by which he
was to receive §50,000 for each iron
clad blown np, and §10.000 for each
wooden man-of-war. Bnt as too often
happens to industrial enterprises, his
business has been nipped] in the bqd,
and he is now likely to receive a long
cord and a short shrift. Scott iasaid to
have been at one time a Colonel in the
United States army, A quantity of
jewels were ifpund in his possession,
and the sum of nearly §5-000, of which
§800 was in gpld and silver, and the
rest in Peruvian notes. If the Cbil
lians do not confiscate all this, we recom
mend bis heirs-at-law to-take immedi
ate steps to establish ijiojr claims.
The commander of the. launch is
called Sherlzler, and from papers found
in his possession we see that he is sub
contractor to Seott, who livs signed an
agreement to pay him the sum of §10.000
for every ironclad, blown up, thus leav
ing a profit to Scott of §40,000 and
§5,000 for any other mad of-war.
Tho fireman is a gentleman of color,
name unknown. As none of the party
would give any account of themselves,
nor answer any questions, the negro
was placed in front of & firing p§rty,
when thinking it was all up with this
nigger, ho made a full confession, sta
ting airiong other things that they had
thrown three torpedoes oveiboard da
ring the chase.
.Scott insists that he is a prjsoner of
war, and has demanded treatment ns
such, but the answer that he received
was that ho ought to he hanged at once.
When this nows wa3 rent off a council
of war was deciding tht-i:- fate.—Chitiian
Times.
Friday night, President Giles in the:
chair. Business was ihe order of the day j I would invite your attention to the.
(er the Dight)* decidedly. Each and j f oliowin « P°P nla £ School B U-adopV*a
every one seemed thoroughly bent on |
acoom plishing something that would
keep afloat this little enterprise, ‘'Our
Public Library” an enterprise so pro
ductive of literary culture and general
refinement. The meeting was presided
over by the elegant and eloquent Presi
dent Judge A. S. Giles and right eloquent
ly did he address the assembly in behalf
of the association. So public spirited a
man could not bnt grow- eloquent over an
institution so pul lie. in its goods influeai
ces. Mr. Chas. E Gilbert was unami-
mously declared Secretary to fill the va
cancy occasioned by the abscene and re
moval of our late efficient Secretary, Mr.
B.C, Holtzclaw.—No better selection
could now be made.
The meeting was well conducted
and several schemes were mooted for
replenishing of the “dilapidated” cof
fers of the Treasury, but more of that
anon when the schemes shall be more
thoroughly matured; they are now in
the hands of those ably capable of
bringing them to perfection—but our
warmest sympathies are extended to
Judge Nottingham for he alone repre
sents his sex in this committee of six
ladies. We would advise him to hold
his own by the keeping of absolute
silence and complete resignation to the,
powers that be. Good luck and pros
perity to oar Library say we, for of all -
things necessary to the advancement
of intellectual pursuits and cultivation
generally speaking, nothing is so essen
tial as this Libraiy. It opens the
doors of learning and information to
many who would otherwise be deprived
of them by reason of limited means.
“Let us then be np and doing” and lei
our gentlemen imiSule the chosen few,
we are sorry to state for our eye looked
iu vain for a full attendance of the
“Lords of creation” for in this as iu all
other things our Ladjes took the lead.
Let not our sister town surpass us but
our gentlemen and ladies of culture
must emerge, come to the fore and make
our library a glorious suceoss.
“A Lady Member.”
Tits Peril-of ilxs Republic.
The Cleaveland Plctindealer has an
elaborate and well considered article on
“The Peril of the.Republic.” Its con-
ciudiug parugraphe is as follows;
‘,‘The rights of States are essential to
the liberties of the pfiriple; and for them
the Democracy contends. A central
ized government is the end of freedom
and the foundation of tyranny; and a
centralized government is the; goal of
the Republican party and its allies, the
moneyed aristocracy' and the monopo
lies. . The greater the diffusion o f power
the nearer the approach to popular gov
ernment] for the eolation of' which
problem this Union was establiuhed.
The liberties of the.individual are only
preserved by the . diffusion of power.
Tyanny feeds 6n centralized power, re
publics vanish before if. The Democrat-
ic’party battles for the preservation of
this republic through the maintenance
of the rights frliicli the Constitution re
serves to States* and those rights—aud
ble with,
Tne Democratic party alone, is the loy
al party, loyal to tWrepublic 6f the fa
thers, a government of the people, for
the people arid by the people. -The re-=
publican party is the champion of a
“strong;’ Government, a centralized 1
government which is the corner stone
^of a throne.”
A lady asked her what reiigiqa she pr e
ferred: She said that if she adopted
any religion it would-be the Roman the wheeling of a fight carriage, is
ently not hard,
is seated
Cat holic, because “that was a- religion
of Kings—a royal religion.” Her niece
said: “Yon would not give np Presby.- though sometimes
Zionism ?” To which replied: -jafe cases a whole fa
‘The only reason I would not is, that gjnridishsha.
ot like to • give np the stool
I should not like to * give np
my ancestors had sat upon.”
Shedied in April 1879, and !eft a lication for divorce. Coanse
million and a hair cf} dollars to her two _
beauty attended tbe races near the city, grandsons* Her letters have been
and there she met her fate. Jerome published, and
Donaparte of the French navy, Napole- J?nreant simple
rule, but
ip carriage,
: are two, and in
ong the
fate Fair
quins, which were, formerly used, are
not now seen. The Government has a
monopoly of ]he ginrachsh^s, and a
great deal of money is spent , for the in-
venticn of the lightest carriage. Hap-
pilv for the ginrickshas, the -tr^ts qf herein contained, shall be construed
theJapanese.citms^eyerrsmoo.b.and of of ^
mrr of n Im hr do*.*»*:o rro 1C *
Under a recent act o? the Legislature
only the folio sing persons are exempt
from Jury duty: Ministers of the gos
pel, engaged in preaching, physicians
and apothecaries, school teachers en
gaged in teaching, millers and ferry
men, rail road employees, telegraph
operators, members of a - fire company.
that character, they stand
. AGUE AND FEVER.,
lasses herein named, or to exclude No better cathartic can ha used j
hem’from th«* jury box. to* or after tr’-~- ^
attractions presented at
iu Macon was a dual bal-
Two bflloous. with a
' in each ^ar, ascended at
A bpfiido hunt, in
s we?£ tnrnd loose
lassoed, in real
also on the bill Icr
:/.m /j x : i -S. tip
Several wood and water stations on
the railroads iu Georgia have recently
started new newspapers. Only a few
more eligible locations are now left.
THE GENUINE
DK. C.
Celebrated American
WORM SPECSRO
OR
SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.
mHE countenance Is pale and leader
i colored, with occasional flashes, c?
% circumscribed spot on one or both
cheeks; the eyes become dull; the p&
pils dilate;: an azure semicircle rune
along the= lower eyedid f! the nose is ir
ritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds:
a swelling of die upper lip; occasional
headache, with humming or throbbing
of the ears; an unusual secretion of
saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath
very foul,’particularly in the morning;
appetite variable, sometimes voracious,
tvith a gnawing sensation of the stom
ach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting
pains in the stbitiacli; occasions!
nausea and vomiting; violent pains
throughout the abdomen; bowels ir
regular, at times costive; stools slimy,
:notunfrequently tinged with blood;
belly swollen and hard; urine turbid;
respiration occasionally difficult, and
accompanied by hiccough; cough
sometimes dry and convulsive; uneasy
and disturbed sleep, with grinding of
the teeth y temper yarisdile, but genejr
ally irritable, &c.
Whenever the, above symptoms
are found to exist,
DR. C. McLANE’5 VERMIFUGE
will certainly effect a cure.
IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY
In any form; it is mi innocent prepara
tion, not capable cf 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. ——:o:
BE. Co McLAHB’S
are not recommended as a remedy “for all
the ills that flesh is heir to,” but in affections
of the liver, and in all-Bilious Complaints,
viz;
New Graded Renders, Caihcnrt’s Litejv,
ary Readers. Rubiusou’s Arithme-.
tics, Algebras, etc., Swiuton’^
Speller*,.Histories and Ge
ographies, Spencerian.
Copy Books, Web-
sters Diction-!,
nries.
Bryant and Strattons’s Book-Keeping,
Messrs. Iversou, Blukeman, Taylor, &-
Co., N. Y., Publish ;ri addition to abuye,’
Kearl’s Euglish
Grammars and Rket-.
orics, Dana’s Geologies,
Fnsquelle’s French Course,
Woodbury's German Course.
Well’s Scientific Works, White’sln-
Austria! Drawing Books, Gray’s Rotan-.
iea, and nearly §00 other Text Books, for.
schools and colleges. These books caq,
be obtained of the booksellers and lead;.
iDg merchants of Peny, or can be pur;_
chaeed direct of,
ROBERT E. PARK.
General Agent,
Oct. 23d. Macon Ga,_
Mbs. W. F. Bbowx, 1 J Fbask B. Betuxx,
Formerly DidwuHonse J {Formerly lanier House.
PROPRIETORS.
mumm
r&ACON, - GEORGIA,.
BATHS FREEOFCHARGEi
Casand Water throughout;
the House.'
Commodious Rooms Fittecjj
up with New FurnL.
ture, EtOi
HAWKIKSVILLE, CA*
MOTTO—PEACE AND PLENTY,
THE SCARBOROUGH HOUSE lias recently been
refurnished. Everything new, clean and comfort
able. Table famished with the best tbe inaikctaf-’
fords. .Servants polite and accommodating,. Coni-'
modions sample room end special attention paid to'
commercial tourists. A back will meet every {rain' 1
and convey passengers and baggage to arid from the.
Hotel gratis.
B. F. & W. J. BOON,
Proprietors,,
r
General Commission- Merchants,
AND DEALERS IX
Produce* Provisions and;
Staple Groceries,
LtMSv
CEBSENT,
LATHES AN.Q>
PLASTEmWG HAIRv
comma oorrou avzhuh «a qbxbm% as.
MACON, OA-.
~fj B AGAIN present otic card fc> ike people e* ,
TV Houston, Macon and Dooly counUee, ead
return oar thanks for the patronage herctefore ex-
tsnded to ut. and tsk a continuance of tbe same, j
•urt^dhjit. now customers, (Guaranteeing to' *H
• ■— : : .*.-
tszmzsxzssi*
WHEAT, : w;vf.-r
BE : * - ' *•
OATS, AND
BARLEY.
JSHE8 & G'OOK, P
MACOX, GA. ;
— id
FliiST N ATIONAL BANK ■
• -
BffAOONT, ,
Bank of P-fpo.-it, Discoanl gad L’xcJ.nn-
ge. * - -
.... —_J_ . ' .- : - .
r
1 C PL-iN'T, ■
President.
W WWBIGLEY,
Cashier.
1 ; VaVif, .ieS-^.
fwmmt PEFienr fhei
- '
-I n 'io
r \ X ENTIRELY NEW AND ELEGANT HTOCE OF
ZPXJ&UH':m-TTttJXZ
fust received and for sale at To