The Home journal. (Perry, GA.) 1877-1889, November 13, 1879, Image 1

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E1)WIN MARTIN, Proprietor. - Devoted to Homo Interests and Culture. TWO DOL.L.AKS A Year In A<Irtui««, volume IX. —— X PERRY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1879. • f . :V, - "M Y? >..: ; NUMBER 49 _ L*iDIRH©B8E, iin« - (xMOMGHt, JJ.DUB * A ULLHAN, PKOrEIKTOES. j n coaTtoifnc« to Business and Excellence. of Faro, Superior to any othor House. Rates,—$?' @® pee* ®ey. Fans Qxmsm TO AND FROM TEE DEPOT TIHBERLAKE £ CHAPMAN, MACON, GEOEGIA, jlft# Jap* W\ fgt Btewart’a old'Stand, near Campbell* . Joues’. i£*: : :y-'**% C SALE, FIS© AN® UV- STASLE. We guarantee the best attention to Hock, - anc trill be glad to see our friends and the public generally. W. C. TIMBERLAKE, ' W. B. CHAPMAN, „ n T. Lieu. C. B. UEOSAltD. S. O. LEWIS. LEWIS, LEONARD ft GO., BANKERS AND BBOKERS, HAWK1H8TIIXK. - - - - - GEOEGIA. Buy and Ball Exchange, Bonds Stock. Etc.' Col.ec tions promptly attended to. AMO MAKE LOANS 05 GOOD SECCRITY- Advaaces mads on Cotton m stors at lowest rates. Administrators Sale. Under and by virtue of an order from the Court of Ordinary of Houston coun ty obtained, at October Term 1879, will be sold before the Conrt Hcnse door in the town of Perry ou the First Tueday of December next, lot of land number Three hundred and thirty three (333) in the thirteenth Dirtrict of Houston county and known ns part of the Wil liam Brown place. Sold as the proper ty of the Estate of Mrs. Lncreatia Brown for the benefit of heirs and cred itors. Terms Cash. Oct, 22d, 1879. H. D. Brown Admr. Estate of Mrs. Lucretia Brown. G EORGIA—Houston County.- O. H. Whit*. administrator af F. B. D. H. Culler, lata af said c.unty dseussd, has applied for leave Uk.11 all tka wild lands of said dsceassd at private sals: This la tharafara ta cita all parsons conearnsd to appur at tha koTtubfr term 11W of tha Conrt of Ordinary of said county and ahow causa if any they hare why laid application ahould not be srantad: Witness jsy official signature this Ost. Id, 1ST*. g w . X. 8. GILES, Ordinary. G. M. DAVIS, Saaamson et Cumy * Datis axp 0, Hmtbbsos Boarding, Liyery And Feed Stable, Th Ird ^tract, between Walnut and Mulbery Streets. Macon Ca. T. T. MARTIN MANUJACTUBXX AND PXALXB IX Tin, «nd Sfe«et PEBRT, GEORGIA. H as sow cx hand a hew and complete Stock of TIN WARE OF ALL KINDS. W XIOX HB WILL SELL CHEAPER THAN arar before offered In Parry. At Wltolettiff, Macon Price* will be Duplicated. *W Eaoflng, Guttering, ate., dona to order In *ka most sppr#T»d style. Apl 3 lyr- Admiiiistrator’s Sale. X ill be sold on tha first Tuesday In Deoembernext, "for, tha court houao door in Parry, Houiton County, Gaargia. lota of land, numbers 222 and *M, mud forty (M) acres on the South eide of num- •w 221, all containing four hundred and forty M®) Korea, all in tbs Upper 14th District of said County—wall improved—containing three hundred (tOO) acres in cultivation—good dwelling houai, tmkoueo and press—with all neceaaary oat houses. Tkaea lands will be sold as the property of Joku C. Rampk, under an order of the court of Ordina- f? of ..id county for a dieiaon among the hairs of said John G Humph, and to pay his debts. Terms °- aale, one-third cash, one third on a credit of eae year, and the other third on a credit af two and titles to be made whan tha purchase “easy is all paid—aa it fall due. LEWIS D. HUMPH, Administrator of Jobh C. Humph, dat’d. I’erryGa., Oo*. »—HTS-toa. - '.'V 1 ’ THE HISTORY OF THE CLEKEXT . AT XACHMEIfT. The Clement attachment was invented about five years agp by a Tennessean named Clement. He lived m Memphis, and bad a small shop there in which he proposed to manufacture bis attach ments. He died shortly after making hisinyention, and it now . belongs to his heirs, baring been perfected by the workman who had assisted him in ma king it. Mr. F. E.~Whitefleld, - of Co rinth Miss., has. charge of its interests for the heirs. There are now six rallies operating this attachment, The first ever built was put in Corinth in 1875. In 1876 one was pnt at Andersonville, S. C., and in the pftsLtwo years four have been added—all along the Pied mont line. The best known of these is at Westminister, S. C., where lives Mr. J. V. Stripling, a most intelligent me chanic; who has charge of tbe affairs of the attachment, and to whom all cor respondence is addressed. THE NEW PBOCESE OF GINNING AND CABD- » ING. N ow I shall give the exact process of the Clement attachment. In the first place, up stairs, in a loft above the gen eral machinery, the seed cotton was stored; near the pile of seed cotton was a cleaning machine, which was used simply to cleanse the cotton of all dust, or airt before it went to the gin. After being cleaned it is let down » chute on to an endless ravolving apron, which carries.it to the gm. By the side of the apron stood a boy, whose duty it was to. regulate the feeding of tbe gin. The apron was marked off into square yards, This amount varies slightly with the weather. Ihe seed cotton having been spread upon tbe apion it sweeps slowly into the gin. The Clement gin differs from the or dinary gin in many respects. In the first place it is much^ slower. There is no rush or clutter, or hurry abo nt it. Its motion is gentle and even, and its speed nbont one-third of the or dinary gin. It is of much finer make than other gins. It has sixty-four saws, and the teeth are much smaller and fin er. Its operation on the cotton seed is essentially different, In the regular gin the saws plunge like flashes tlirough the fibre, catting, or tearing, or pulling it. In this gin the fibre is pnllod from the seed. The motion is so much slow er and the hold of tkosaw-teeth so mnch firmer, that the fibre is palled out and not chopped or tom. The sesd has time to turn completely aronnd under the pull of the bbw so that the fibre may be pulled out, as it were hand- picked. In the one case the lint is roped from the seed—in the other it is coaxed. After the seed is stripped of its fibre it drops ont of tbe way, and the fibres of lint art carried on to the brush. In tbe regular gins this brush re volves with fierce rapidity, its centrifu gal force throwing the lint fre-m itsteeth. In tbe Clement gin it revolves slowly and tbe lint holds it's place. As the brush revolves slowly, holding tbe lint securely, it meets a revolving card cylin- inder armed with steel teeth. The brnBh is covered with hair brnstles, and the cylinder with steel teeth. The teeth of the cylinder push in gently be tween the bristles of tbe brash and pnll the fibre loose. The brush iB inclined to hold it, and the slight resistance made to giving’it up siretches the fibre to fall length and leaves it banging on to the teeth of the cylinder. As the cylinder rolls upward with these pend ent fibres it meets a pair of cards, sus pended jnst above it. The teeth of these cards sweep tbrough the teeth of the cylinder, and card backs as the cylinder pulls' them past. As the cylin der turns on it meets a doffer—another cyliuder moving a trifle faster—which pulls the fibre from the carding cylin der without breaking the fibre or twis ting or dislocating it. As tbe doffer tarns with it, it carries it against a se ries of combs that, moving up and down betweeS the teetli of the doffer, gently strips the fibre offi Nothing can be more beautiful, smooth and even than this fibre as it is combed from the dof fer. It comes off in a roll of 36 inches in width, carded combed and straight ened in marvelous contest to the rag ged, torn, shreds of lint thrown from the harsh teeth and whizzing brush of the regulation gin. A boy stands is combed cy roll of 36 inches width and of dipha- nons thickness. He doubles the ends of it together and forces it into a card head about an inch and a half wide. As the combs feed the roll to the card head, the card head taks.it, and as it emerges from the other end a perfect “silver,” whidh is deposited into, a tin can. A sliver is a roll of cotton fibre about the breadth of two fingers and a half, the thickness of •ne, and it is thqp ready for spinning into yarn. Fiom this point it is fed in to spinning machinery, just such as we see in any cotton factory and is in a few minutes the most perfect yarn. TTTF- THEORY of THE CLEMENT ATTACK- HESTI The reader who has gone thus far with ns will see tbe theory npon which the Clement attachment works. 1. It-aTGids-obopping -og-taariog, or breaklhg the fibre by using fine teeth jkw^sjpl close together, and by ginning so slowly that tbe seed are stripped as if by hand rath er than jostled and rock ed and jerked as in the ordinary gin. 2. Instead of throwing the torn lint into mangled mases, as the ordinary . gip does, it handles it carefully and never releases its hold oh it. It is first taken on a delicate brush, where it is smoothed; then palled to a cylinder, where it is carded; then to a doffer, where it is combed; and then in to the card heads where it is span. After studying it carefully I am struck with two points—its -simplicity aud -its power. It is miraculous, no one has ever applied the principle before. And yet this wonder pales when we think what its effect will be. It is my honest opinion that the handful of machinery before me—for the attachment is noth ing more than the card cylinder by which an improved gin is connected with a system of spindles—will do as much for the .South as the discovery o f steam has. done for the world. A DIFFICULTY IN THE WAY. The only difficulty we can see m tbe way is not with the machine itself. That is perfect in ita simplicity. The gin is simply the improvement on tbe regular gin—the spindles now in use. The Clement attachment is aim' ply two carding cylinder’s—that’s all. It is the marriage of the cotton gin to the spindle,and our inventor has joined these two together bj putting the hand of one into the band of the others and then with the single warning to the gin to “go slow!” be retires directly, There is no complication, or trouble— just tbe weadiDg of two perfectly or thodox elements in a perfectly orthodox way; The only trouble that I can see, is that which will be encountered in the storing of the cottpn seed. For the smallest mill will consume 500 pounds of seed cotton per day, which isl50,000 per annum. For two months it could work on seed brought from the field. It will need the storing of 125,000 of seed cottcn. This cannot be stored too closely and is dangerous ftom fire expos nre. If it is.stored while moist, it will mould or ferment. Those now using- the mills have no trouble with the seed cotton. They have lost none by fire or spoiling, but this mnst be carefully looked iuto. I should think large burns fashioned after the Virginia tobacco houses will be built to meet this want. The question of capital is a small one, for the 125,000 pounds can be bought at 3 cents a pound— 83,750. This capi tal is not for a year, but. commences to return at once, and so comes bnck every month. Besides, where a community of farmers is interested, each one can contribute four or fire bales of cotton to the general fund. The great trouble SZLUX6 CAVAGNARL The B&r Stoby »f the Massacre of c the Bbitishat Cabul: fully and resolct -ly they deultout'death to many a treacherous Afghan^ Cavag- nari would strike while lie could; he or dered the treasure cliest emptied into the Courtyard; his - fire momentarily ceased. The Afghans, yielding to their greed, and thinking resistance over, crowded to seize the glittering rupees. In a moment our men concentrated their fire on the • crowd' straggling for the plunder. A fire more infernal than before was soon reopened by the attackers, and now, to their other mis fortunes, the magazine of the defen ders exploded, and the roof was set ou will be in storing the need cotton, and 1 foe. With'numbers reduced by half, The best story of the Cabul massacre is the following, taken down from, the lips of one of the survivors and furnished to tli6 Standard. Says the writer: “T have just had a long: conversation with one of Sir Louis Cavagnari’s ser vants who escaped; he and three others are, so far as is known, the isole survi vors of the hideous massacre, of which doubtless you have been already inform.:- ed by wire. The particulars of the occurence are as follows.* At about half-past seven A. M. on the 2d, crowds of armed Afghan soldiery were perceived rushing towards the Residen cy Sir Louis Cavagnari must haveex- pected something, as he ordered all the Sowars inside, aud had the gates closed. Soon a mob of about four thousand men had collected, The gate was bro ken down, and in a few seconds the Sowars, though they fought nobly, were borne down by numbers and massacred to a man. A few soldiers, witn tbe four white men, met the as sault of the infuriated throng, who, wild with fanaticism and the exultation of feeling their prey in their grasp, swarmed to the attack. No flinching, no wild firing was .to be seen in the gallant little band that met and repell ed the attack. Again an.l again did the Afghans, like a recurr ng wave, forced on by tbe pressure of those be hind, vainly essay to win their way into the house. Each .effort bat increased the heap of slain that fast, accumnlated ronnd the house. Cowed by the recep tion, they withdrew to the cover availa ble from walls and honses, and from their ’vantage ground poured a hail of lead into every opening in the building. Gallant Hamilton, so lately adorned with the Victoria cross adorned it with bis heroic bravery. He exposed “him self undauntedly to the hottest fire) for a time he seemed to bear a charmed life bnt at length a ballet pierced Tiis heart, and he, fighting nobly, fell. Dr, Kelly ran to his aid, and a belief speed ily laid him low, too. - Jenkyns was the next to fall Cavagnari, still un hurt, cheered on the gradually lessening ma n’ & estate, the recollection of this band: his presence inspisedalU. .Cheer- jbqxcame back to him. He sent it to as said before, there is less danger in this than in .storing tobacco, and it will be overcome, I predict, very rapidly. A FBW WOBDS IN CLOSING. The above is given as the result of observation and persistent question ing. I have no sort of doubt th At the Cle- mei.t attachment is destined to be the great lever that will lift the South. I have no sort of doubt "that out of one hundred planted nt random through the country ninety-five would pay enor mous dividends. I have no sort of doubt that where five are in operation there will bcL five hundred in the next ten years, But I may be mistaken. Let, there fore, those who think of investigating either write to one of the points at which these attachments are berag op erated for information, better still, go and examine the machine personally.^ H. TF. 6. in Atlanta'Constitution. Shot in Game- This being the season when game killed by shooting, and probably con taining the pellets, is eaten, it may be worth while to cantion those who con sume the flesh of birds with avidity that 'the' proportion of instances in which shot is found is probably small in comparison with the number of cases in which the pellets are unwittingly snnl- ready to raise the roll as it ML JR L-,. from the doffer. It is then a thin flee- lowed - M 1811 malter of ^eolation had found its way into a pudding, and was inadvertently swallowed. A : little shot, some pains onghi certainly to he taken to avoid swallowing the missile.— Lancet. lire within, bullets from without, noth ing daunted, each man stood to his post; bnt the reduced number told—a sudden rush of tbe enemy gained tbe door, that feeble barrier gave way; yet no- sign of fear was shown—all met t beir death fighting. “A surging throng filled the room where Cavagnari, a jemander and three natives were. Cavagnari’s revolver spoke three times the death knell of as many Afghans, and then a blow from a heavy Afghan knife laid bimlow. His murderer did not long survive; with one blow of his sabre the jemander swept off his head. A few more such blows be made and then lay beside his master. But one escaped, tbe narrator of the tale to me; he bid in a bath. The roof was .sow blazing, a part had fallen on the dead party of Cavagnari, so the crowd did not wait to search, bnt. dragging tbe dead bodies of the killed from the burning house, they did not search for any concealed per sons: and so iny informant escaped. He was a man who was thoroughly conversant with the Afghan tongne, and, being a Mussulman, managed after bis escape from the honse to pass himself off as a CabulL The bodies were treat ed with all the nnmentionable indigni ties which Asiatics inflict on their ene mies. From 8 A. M.-tiil-2 -P.' M. the attack on the Residency continued, Yakoob had plenty of other troops besides those that Attacked the Resi dency,'yet he made no attempt even to send them to the resene. Dad Shah, tLe Commauder-in-Cbicf, found sufficient reason in-the pelting of a couple of stones at him not.. to interfere. Ya- koob’ssou. a mere boy, visited the seen a of attack; but being politely told not Ameer, and that his words - were the means of saving the lives of George Lawrence and. others of the mission who had been seized and were momen tarily expecting their death. No such good fortune was in store for our unfortu nate countrymen.” ROMANCE OF A WILL- About twenty five years ago, in Prince George connty, Maryland, there lived two brothers who were very rich, very charitable and very proud. ; hey were both, supposed to be bachelors. A short time before the war, however, they both died within a few days of each other. One of them left a will, and from this doenment it was discovered that lie had children liv : ng. All of bis property went to these children, although they were generally supposed to be iilegiji mate. They put in a claim for tbe property of the other biother,’ hut their claim was disputed by a cousin of the dead brothers, who basod his right to thn property oh the ground that he was nearest of kin, claiming, of course, that the children who received the property of one of the brothers were il legitimate. A long, tedious and expen sive litigation ensued, in which some of the ablest lawyers of tbe country were engaged. At length the children, when reduced to poverty by the lawsuit, dis covered in Europe the priest who bad performed the marriage ceremony be tween their father and mother. Their mother had been tbeir father’s house keeper for many years, and until his death, , had oontinned to act in that ca pacity. By the testimony of the priest^ the children proved tbeir legitimacy, and, of course, got their nnck-’s prop erty. Now comes the strangest part of the story. When the bachelor brother died he left his papers in J the hands of his lawyer. Before the commencement of the war this lawyer was called away to the South on business. He left box of papers with his office boy to be delivered to tbe person to whom it was addressed in case of failure to return. The war came on-, the lawyer enlisted in the Southern aimy and was killed in ODe of the first engagements. The boy re tained possession of tbe box, but for got all about it, Latelv, having grown HOTEL WITH A ROOMS. MILLION j TO TEACHER* AND FAREHTfi. OF HOUSTON SO- An English newspaper, the Liverpool Daily Hexes, has lor a year past nsed four type setting nnd seven distributing machines, at a saving of $2,(-’00 per an num, as compared with the same amoun* of work by band. The compositors Working the machine earn better wages than their fellows at the case, while the saving of the establi shment'is over 30 percent. Tbe machines arejised for thei lawyer of the cousin. 'In it -war every kind of composition except tabn found the will of the 3ekd bachelor brother, leaving all his propeity to his cousin. The case has, of course, been reopened, aud is now before the Su preme Court of Maryland. How long the litigation will continue it is, of course, impossible to tell, but probably it will not be concluded until the prop erty has passed into the hands of the lawyers. how mnch mischief a shot may do when passed into the intestines, but the fact that anomalous diseases have been set up by the presence of Teiy small bodies which have become entangled in folds of the mucous membranes renders it desirable to put the public'on their guard. Occasionally.the most disas- astrons results have followed such small causes. We have in recollection the case of a physician who died after prolonging and unexplained sufferings, from, the - pr. f - - impaction of a very small nail which but Yakcob said, ‘lean do nothing.' to interfere could not conquer liis’feel ings of sympathy with the slayersof the A Confederate Relic. [D.-tn tiUe (Va.t Post.] A Confederate cap machine lias been found in Danville in some old rnbbisb, all complete, bill very rusty, and has no doubt been laying in its present- place ever since tbe war. This machine was invented by. Mr. W. H. Wash, of this connty. In May. 1861, Mr. Wash was in Bicbmoxd, where he found the Government had engaged a Mr. Debow, a Northern man, to supply it in musket caps, that were in great demand. De bow asked Wash down in the arsenal, and while looking at it, Wash remarked that he could make a better machine, and a Gen. Dimmock standing by re plied that it was desirable he should do so. He went to Lynchburg, and there in the Phoenix foundery, with A. Dab ney & -Son, iu twenty-two days' time be had produced a cap machine that would make 30,000 good caps m ten hours. This he took to Richmond and sold it to the Government for 815,000. He returned 16 Lynchburg and .made an other machine, a g> eat improvement on bis first, whose capacity was 80,000 caps per day of ten honrs. This ha sold for $3,000. Shortly after be made the third Machine, which would make 12.- 000 caps per hour different sizes of caps, and it was placed in tbe aisenal under Gen. Diminock’ssuper'.i :oa. The Yankee papers at- the time pronounced it “a big Confederate lie.” On th'eevac- nation of Rich mend Mr. Wash was or dered to Lynchburg with t hese ma< h’ nos, five of them, and this last, the 12,000 per hour machine, was loaded on a two- horse wagon and taken throngh the coaniry to Lynchburg, and thence to this city, where it has been ever since. It is, perhaps one of the most prom inent relics in the South of the late unpleasantness. Kaffirs; be, too, did nothing. One no ble man there was a mollah (a Mussul man priest), who sought Yakoob during the attack and "begged him to interfere, and lie reproached him wick thedisgmee of killings friend, and an embassador; It is stated that all was Yakoob’s de sign, and the seeming mutiny of tioops was but a skillful cloak for themnrder- Ojs act of hi* own origination, strange that, at the massacre of Mc- N*ghlen, of the former mission, a Mol- j lull had - similiarly reproached the For the benefit of those nnacqnainted { with the term “dngont,” as nsed in thej _ .... far West, says the New York Hold Ga- , * ™ n,d myi \ e «*§***'’« \° , , . . . I following popular School books adopted zetle, it may be proper here toi state that jbyyonr County Board of Ednoation for , - - - -* ~ the Pnbljc Schools of Houston County, viz; New Graded Readers, Ca.hcart’s Liters ai-y Readers. Bobinsou’s Arithme tics, Algebras, eto;, Swinton^ Spellers, Historns and Ge ographies, Spencerian Co py Books, Web- stera Diction aries. Bryant and Strattous’s Book-Keeping, Messrs. Ivisou, Blakemah. Taylor, & Co., N. Y-. Publish in addition to above, Keri’s English. Grammars and Rhet orics, Dana’s Geologies, Fasquella’s French Course^ Woodbury’s German Course. Well’s Scientific Works, Wbite’sln- dustrin! Drawing Books, Gray’s Botan ies. and nearly 300 other Text Books, for schools and colleges. These books can be obtained of tbo booksellers and lead ing merchants of Parry, or can be pur chased direct of. ROBERT E. PARK, General Agent, Oct. 23cL Macon Ga. in the early days of Kansas it was ensj tomary, owing to the scarcity of timber, for the poorer class of settlers to make their houses in the ground, gen erally on the side of a hill or slope, if (heir claim afforded sneh. This state ment may at first thought seem absurd: bnt it is a fact well known to those who have traveled through the West. Intel ligent and well-educated people, who from one cause or another incident to a lifetime, -had become reduced in circum stances, were not unfrequently met with living in those “dngonts” with ns much comfort nnd ease as many of their for mer associates in mnch costlier homes in'(he East. Much depended on the ‘muscle, ingenuity, nnd taste of the builder whether his home looked like a woodchuck hole or a human habitation. In one of these “dngonts” a certain wealthy hotel proprietor iu Kansas first commenced business as a caterer to the public. His patrons were cuttle herders, Mexican “greasers,” and railroad labor ers, who were content with the simple fare he set before them. His bJiel’eon- tuiued two rooms—the “uugont” aud the “boundless prairie.” In tbe former was kept the cooking ntensils, store, etc., and-tbe latter served ar bis bed-rooms, “I have a million rooms,” he would say---’room enough for the whole world, and a plenty to eat as long us tbe bnffalc and titer lust.” Bis cus tomers, though a rough class,paid tbeir bills promptly, which enabled him in a few montha to lay the foundation of quite a respectable hotel. A thriving town grew np around him; and, as money continued to come, he mode additional attractions, till to-day he enjoys the pat ronage of as fine a class of travelers us visit the West. lfittd and 'displayed work, the matter being set, spaced and justified with greater accuracy than by. band labor. Each machine c osts $750, and the aver age speed is 6.000 e ms per hour. Tub Use of Spectacles Delayed.— Dr, Cheatham recommends, in tbe Louisville Medical Hews, tbe use of su 1 - phate of eserine as a means of Relaying the use of spectacles, to that they will not be reqnired for le-rend years, this alkaloid having the power of stimulat ing the civiary muscle and thus assisf- ng acconrmcdalion TLe strength of solution recommended is ODe grain of is the sulphate of eserice to a'n ounce of water. One drop of ibis solution is to . be pnt in the.ejs at nigLt, cr when ere quired. THE GENUINE DR. C. McLANE’S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC OK VEBMIFUGEL SYMPTOMS OF WORM!. fPHE countenance fa pale and IcxdhB» A colored, with occasional flashes, ot * circtunscribed spot oo on* ar both checks; the eye* become doll; tbe p*> pfls dilate; an azure aemictrde nine along the lower eye-lid; the nose fa 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, with a gnawing sensation of the stom ach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach; occasional nausea and vomiting; violent pains throughout the abdomen; bowels ir regular, at times costive; stools slimy; not unfrequently tinged with blood; belly swollen and bard; urine turbid; respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough; cough sometimes dry and convulsive; uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth; temper variable, but gener ally irritable, &e. Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. MeLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY In any form; it is an innocent prepara tion, not capable of doing the slightest injury to the most tender infant. Mns. W. F. Rrowv. ) ( Fxaxk B. Bkviixe, Formerly Brown Honse) ( Formerly LauiorHomso FROrillETORS. ° N&TIQ&m HteTIL,, MACON, - -j GEORGIA. BATHS FREEOFCHARGE Gas and Water throughout the House. Commodious Rooms Fitted^ up with New Furni- * ture, Etc. HAWKSNSV1LLE, CA, MOTTO-FEACE AND PLENTY. THE SCARBOROUGH HOUSE ban recently been refmnished. Everything new, dean and comforts able. Table fnmislied with - the.be.st tli« market Af fords, .Sei vanlH polite and accommodating, Com modious sample room and special attention paid t# commercial tourists. A hack will meet every train and convey passengers and baggage to and from th® Hotel gratis. • *° B. F. & \V. J. BOON, Proprietors. General Commission Merchants, AND DEaLZC* IN Produce, Provisions and Staple Groceries, LIME, CEMENT, LATHES AND, PLASTERING HAIR OOBnm BOTTOM 4TSSUM and 0H3&&Y MACOMj, CA. W • AGAIX present our card to the people «t Tv Houston. M*co* and Dooly counties, aud return our thanks for the patronage heretofore ex- t*nd*d to us. end a*Jt a continuance of the Mine; and solicit new Customers, Guaranteeing to ail Satisfaction. -J WHEAT. R E, »333SX>». OATS, AND. BARLEY. JONES & COOK, MACON, GA. FIRST NATIONAL BANK. BAA.COKT, . Bank of Deposit, Discount and Exchan ge. W WWBIGLET. Cashier. I. C PLANT. President. FURN1TURL FRF1GHT FREE 4 N ENXIB5LY NEW AND ELEGANT 8TOCX OF . P 2S*Tjr£rt3SrX , 2*T3~}EZS£2 The genuine Dr. McLan^s Ver- '^^^“aforsMeatvo mi fugs bears the signatures of C. Me* Lane and Fleming Bros, on the wrapper. :o: DR, C. McLANE’S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy “for all the ills that flesh irheir to,” bnt in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaint*, Dyspepsia and Sick Headsche, or disea ses of that character, they stand without a rival. Furniture TVIade to Qrder. and repaired AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. As a simple purgative they are unequaled. BE WAKE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the'lid with Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. McLane and Fleming Bros. • ! • . SPR *, full of imitations of the name McLane, : GEOEGE I spelled differently but same pronunciation. ! j v ’ rebuy BUY AT HOMS. A Hearse can bo furnished to order at any time ou short notic*. I eaa be found in the day the* X my store, next to the hotel; at night at my reside** aborning Dr‘. Hara: