The Home journal. (Perry, GA.) 1877-1889, December 04, 1879, Image 1

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VOLUME IX. ■KERRY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1879. /ArtMU. 1-iilZ'h Til ! aiT * NUMBER 4g v- EMtf. STF/P.1SE /to work Picture el ifaPwwan r&z -o £Y HENRI GREEVILLE IIUWSXiAOTD BY feed and take care of the cattle, churn the batter and do the mending; but the dayejseamed long to her, and to while - ■ ;awaj the hours she loved to look at her- self in a mirror thesize of her'hand, which PART 1. Stepane hfakarief was a peasant liv ing in the government of Kourah ” He motherless. His kfnther, an aged la borer, itnred to toil had brought bim np roughly, exacting absolute respect for his autocratic will. The faiher pos- aesseda Targe plot of ground around tbs house. TUo house itself was built of logs, which were filledV" 1 with moss and tow7»“ d rested on an underpinning of rocks pnt together'compactly to ex clude dampness. A staircase outside led Ta dark Shtechamber,' which alsoWa- ed as a store room fpr provisions, and through which one entered a room light ed by rtiree smalt windo ws of thick greenish glass, with an iron lattice-work. In the stable were accommodated two cows and two small horses, and the gran ary was ample. The aged Makarief himself had hewn and brought from the forest, one by one, the logs of which the house was built. He had the reputation of being rich, and,.in truth, he had two or three hundred roubles. His eon was sole heir to the property. Instead of resembling his father, he was always stern and morose. Stepane was lively, He loved to laugh and joke with pretty girls on the way home from harvesting and on Sunday he would be the first to ^tart tbs ftse-saws, on which seven or eight would crowd as best they could. One evening, at tea-time, the old man: told Stepane that it was time he should take a wife. At these words the young man blushed deeply, but made no reply. He was only nine teen, but the Russian peasant marries early. “I have found. a suitable wife for yon,” continued tbe father, “and have made a proposal in your name; the afiiair in arranged. We will go and see her Sunday*” Stepane remained silent, and contin ued slowly to crunch his brown bread with liis strong white teeth.. “Welt, why don’t you answer?” asked the old man harshly, turning his face towards him. “When a father takes pains to find a rich young wife for his .sun, ought nut the latter to say at least ‘Thank you?” Stepane rore and prostrated himself before his father three times, and so low that he touched the ground with with, the old men at evening before go ing to supper; his wife making no re- jprbSbhesfor his»13eh<iaft V Stfiidhyfshe was fond of attending the various chutehesjt for.-fbo: parish seemed mo notonous to her, and witn other women she wonld organiz a pilgrimage to some saint pf miraculous powers. On the Way thither They would meet the young fellows of the neighboring villages, who would complimeut the young wo- mafa on her fine attire and pretty face. cbal- back- waxd in offering it. Her husband, who rarely accompanied her, left her free to worship, where she liked best. One day be came sauntering home from mass, i swinging his arms as usual An old peasant woman, who had know his mother, stopped him and said “Your wife has gone again to Pretcliis- tinskaia with your best horse and beet wagon.” “I know that,” answered the young man with a yawn. “Yon ought not to permit it, Btepane Makarief. Your deceased father would not have allowed his wife to do it, nor wonld any sensible man. People will talk about you if go on in this way; they say already that you don’t love your wife, and she says so hereelf. Yon don’t beat her; that proves what .she says.” “That is tine,” answered Stepane. The lesson was not lost upon him. and that evening; when Irnia returned. S went- first The t er Unties then were tofshe had^left the village in company with the peddler, who had two good horses to his covered wagon, “If you wish to follow them,” said hig officious informant, '‘they have taken the road towards the city.” / Y capitol-pvBpBMarr- (money and mariages in ra . W 7k t she received a few slaps, of which she showed traces for several days. This act raised.Stepane in the estimation of of his fellow-citizens, and the next day, when he went to work, the married men in the village treated him with marked attention. Inna, after this, loved her husband neither mors or less, these blows belonged as much to the household routine as eating or sleeping. In sparing her heretofore her husband has done her a * wrong rather than kindness. Thus the couple had reached their fourth year of married life, when emancipation was claimed. Not being able to come to on understanding with the seigneur, the commune sent two delegates to the capital of the gov ernment to look after their interests. Stepane Makarief was one. He left, and his wife lived alone in the vil lus chesnnts locks, on which the noon- Jage, .day san seemed to hnYe left a golden gleam.; “Father,” ho said, rising, “I thank you. Who is tlio young girl you have chosen for a daugter-in-Iaw?” “Irina, the second donghter of Var lam, who lives in the village. of Gorki. Her elder EjjgterV dowry wa3 a cow and .fifty roubles in silver money,-, besides .the trosseau. The youngest di •will have as much. * I have bough .a new hat and armiok, which ji wear Sunday when yon goto con You will be married Sunday PenticosL” “Father,” timidly ventured the young you The controversities of the commune lasted a year and a half. A mercantile genius had been awakened in Stepane by the contact with civilized life, and he began to traffic in cattle and grain. Finding no particular attraction in the country, and the affirs of his commune beipg settled, he ‘ let his colleague re turn, with all the musty papers, and re mained in jhe city to conclude several pending negotiations; but while he was these-to a close others pr6- e&selvea. Then Some turned _jy and he had to make np the loss and the rememb iranoe of his wife was not quite strong enough to draw ^nan, “they say. Varlam’s daughter is Very proud, will she accept a simple peasant like me?” “Would she dare refuse whqe the pa rents wish it?” answered the old man, in an irrited tone. Stepane knTw -.^iat it would be tune Tost to oppose his fathW^will, and lmtrg his head and went of to -,lped. The bride destined for him dia no'tr * Ms before a sort of homesick feeling for e induced him to return, letters told him that everything was going on well a£ home, indeed, his shareof forage and wheat had been carefully garnered after every harvest, and the. fields-had been sown again by the man who- had been attei .ding to .him. Irina had'the appearance oftie^ their afiairs. However, Irina had no 4ng both disdainful aud giddy; .ed to laugh with young men, and her Stepane feel disposed to do the eouit- ing required of him. He found the .duty Jess dpfficnlt "than he had feared, for lnffaig girl, with her bright red lips ding day approach with some degree of pleasare, and even awaited it with a certain deggee of impatience. After the marriage Makarief, kept as much aloof as possills in the room ’he. had built adjoining, tnat of the youug couple - On his death-bed he said to his son; am sorry yon have no chil- .dren, your wife needs to have the care .of them. If she turns out badly don’t hesitate te punish her " severely; she jdQesjiot fear yon enough.” His soli mourned his death awhile; ■then for got him. 1 . . He did not much ®iss the old man’s crabbed faceut his fireside; ami yet, /or the first time, he jPcrceived that theT'oiisa was net home- “ke. Irina did not love her husband; ■she had accepted gladly because he was handsome, tall and well made, and a Russian peasant girl would reject with .■scorn an undersized man as she wonld : a stunted sheep she .was about to pur chase. As far as possible, under the same roof, husband and wife lived like strangers. Gnly children and work in (Oaimou can make this unreal-seeming anion a close one. Irina had no chil- Uren = “ud was rich enough to remain at '-money to present to Mm when he • re- turned. i the trouble to ask nations. A few blows with a stick ed to his dissatisfaction; then he set himself to work, and order reigned again. Irina knew very well what had become of the money she ought to have put aside; Her natural judge, her hus band, being away, there was notMngto arrest the full play of her evil propen sities. She had received admirers at her house; every one in the village knew about it; the little children even had learned to recognize the telega of the tallow merchant, who had been the first to reign in Irina’s heart, and to be welcome to hq? home, But his vis its being few, a merchant in wheat suc ceeded him: then several others, all fair- merchants attracted by their hostess’ good living and pretty face. But no one breathed a word of this to Stepane. To these people ..of primitive; civiliza tion; the" situation "of a deceived hus band seemed to be invested* in nothing dicule. The only one to be remarked upon, and her they left for her husband to deal with. Stepane found his wife as he had left her, frivo lous and indifferent, (Their former life was resumed; hut a month .afterMs re turn, while In** peasant was m the fields, the pcddlerreturged unexpectedly. How Jrina prevailed on the latter to elope with her is a mystery. On * reaching home that evernag Stepane found tha house deserted, nothing more to do with her. Then from every house came out old and young, fathers and matrons, every one who had anything to tell him gbput the depravity of his unworthy wife. Stepane then learned where bis money had gone, and what had taKen place in his house. Motionless, with arms crossed, he listened in silence, drawing his dark eyebrows more and more to gether as each shameless deed was re reported, and as the woman whom he married fell lower and lower in the opin ion of the horrified man. When his cup was filled tq overflowing, and no one had another drop of bitterness to pour into it, he said in a repressed voice, “Why did you not tell me all this when I came home?" “Why, little father? because you did not ask,” answered the starebina, amid perfect sileuce. “I could not guess, and I ought to have known,” said Stepane, in an irri tated tone. “Wliy did you wish to know it?” asked one old man from the silent crowd who stood listening in fear. “To kill.her as I would a mad-dog,” answered Stepane, in a deep, ringing voice, and raising his fist towards heav en. Daring the long recj|$bof his wife’s wrong-doing night had come on, the darkened zenith was filled with stars,, the cabin looked black, defined against the white road stretching oat like a while ribbon, and a deep calm rested over all. Stepane’s voice died away without an echo. “Well, my friends,” said h.e 'finally, • ‘you meant to do right: let us talk qo more about it. At present I have a home, but I haveSnothing ready to eat. There will be no one to prepare my meals; and he ! stifled a sort of sob. Who will give me my supper this even ing. Everybody answered, “I will,-” every hands was held out to him. He accept ed the Straehina’s offer and followed him to nis cabin an hour after, while the women were extinguishing the fires in the cabins.and all the children were ly ing down to sleep,', lie. left his host’s house alone, bareheaded as he had come and slowly crossed the viliiage. - The heavens were filled with a mild and ten der light, and the turfy road seemed al most obliterateted beneath his feet. When lie reached his own door he stopped. He ha£ no dog, for during his .absence, Irina had -poisond tho faithful guardian ; that barked at straDgo travellers and snapped at their horses. The house was dark and he windows on the front was darker still; Stepane looked at the sky:once more, then.at the deserted dwelling, and tears ran down his cheeks, he was weeping for his dog. He entered slow ly listening to the sound of his footsteps on the sonorous planks of the floor. The room was in good order,but in- thedark- nes he ha l a vague sense of the absence of a dark object near the window—Irina’s trunk—and of tlie weli-known outline of his. wifes garinents, ordinarily hanging near the stove. The honse seemed to him immense, and the silence oppress ed his ear as though the air were filled with a muffled sound of distant bells. Without lighting a lamp he streched himself out on a bench, and fell into a heavy sleep of wearied peas ants. The next day, on awakening,, he had but little remembrance of wfiat had passed. The lowing of Qe cows, call ing him to milk them (they bad not been been tended to the night before), recalled him to a sense of the situation. He took a brown earthern dish and went out to take care of the poor beasts; but after two or three sttenpts, finding him self awkward about it, he cawled in a neighboring peasant to take his place. The woman came without making- any remarks, arrranged the dishes of foam ing milk, drove the cows to ad jacent^ .fields behind the others alrea dy on their way, . and returned home without waiting to be thanked. After drinking some of tbe milk.'Ste- pane went on his way to the meadows with his : scythe over his shoulder. He was'received by * his fellow-workers as if nothing had happened), and no one said; a word to him about his wife. TO BECONUNOED. A Proposition to Excote CnnnxxiiS BT F&ECTRIOITY INSTEAD OP HANGING, Mr. Park Benjamin has written a let ter in which he urges tbe execution of condemned ‘criminals by the use of a powerfnlAimr<aife|of ju^ectri^$j Jujther than by the clumsy agency of the rope. In his letter Mr. Benjamin says: “A flash of tightening—or the elec tric discharge—occurs in the handred- thonsandth part of a second—that is, it is a hundred times more rapid thin the efefepjfet/ ragdyts jd® dtygrsSfecte j are proportionately quicker. The person struck dies within a period so infinitesimal that it is beyond oar im- agination. It is a carious fact that Professor Tyndall once came very nearly demonstrating in his own person the deadly yet painless efficacy of the elec tric discharge. He states that while lecturing before a large audience, he .accidentally toadied a wire leading from a battery of fifteen Leydeq jars. The discharge passed through his body. In describihg his sensation Be dwells on the peint that ‘life was absolutely blot ied out for a very sensible interval without a pang of pain,’ and he adds that there cannot be-a doubt that to a person struck dead-by lightning the pas sage from life to death occurs without consciousness being iu tbe last degree implicated;’ It remains now to con eider the electric discharge could be produced andfadaplsd to the purposes of the law. Fortunately in the practical inductorinm or inductien coil the ten sion of the electric discharge is sc greatly increased that a few cells of a galvanic battery can-be, made to yield very powerful phy sical, chemical, and physiological effects. With small ex periments apparatus, shocks so potent are often produced that the manipula- ANOTHER RICHMOND TIEED. IN THtd] TO TEACHERS AND PARENTS- OP HOtrSTONECO. The pigee given to money in Parisian marriagos tells heavily upon the poor; especially upon those who are obliged to Boots and Shoes, Best Brogans and for 1 following popular School Ko< ~ounty B Having received preminms at the: State Fair upon the best made 1 i wonld invite your attention to th : wear the livery of repectabitity. - The cost of service in the churches seems Shops. I take great pleasure in asking j J’Rklic Schools of Houptop Comity, el-ill.‘nllr nlnmipil in- llm mnnnpr bpnh „ n klt n .An.,...)!, t-n coil which yields sparks twenty-one- inches in length, wfiicli penetrate glass blocks three inches in thickness. The great induction coil at the Royal Poly technie Institute in Loudon gives mi niature lightning .flashes twenty-nine inches in length. Either of these ma chines would give ample discharge to kill simultaneously more men than have ever been hanged in company, in tMe country. . - - Thfr.awerinspiring influenco of such a mysterious mode of capital punishment he considers one of its important recom mendations, wherc-as hanging produces on the public no emotions-superior to disgust. ABOLITION OF SLAVERY IN CUBA. slavery shall j cease.” Owi overseers, and slaves shall l the finest display of ladies-’ apd children’s ■ by yonr County Board of Education "fo skillfully planned in the manner best best suited to goad to expense-not only vanity, bat’seif-respccLalso. Custom, top, makes burdensome levies on the parse. Therejn}U3t he carrjage s to the Mayors office and to church, the bride must must be an ebtertaumenf. I| remember the daughter of an officer 'rench army. He was poor as a church mouse and was never quite sure that nis wife wonld succeed in making hi^ayk^thppnqpt^ jA^e^ch* back met'tlio the daughter at the ball and fell in love* wnh her. He was worth $8 000 a year. She saw a spine in his land (where it was as straight as an nr- rov,} and let him know at once that ..his suit was successful By dint of borrow ing 25 here 30 there and 50 in another placps and other driblets - right and left, and by getting a “toilette dealer” to make all thp purchases for them |^|^|||^3e^eh3f|^phquld pay before the honeymoon changed, they managed to get through without con fessing theiy poverty. The day after the wedding the mother said to me: You cannot imagine the embarrassment we were thrown by Louise’s marriage, for, poor* as we are, we-could not send her stark naked away. My hus band had his nniforc-m. pat} that of course, passes mnst6r anywhere; but 1 did not know what to do for a dress. I bought i^hJ^Jl^t^rMnC^/yyith lace for her marriage. I took the lace from my shawl anil put it on my .new^-silk dress for the ball. This morning I removed it from the dress aud put;it it Lack on the shawl in time to pity visits. Run ning the. gaitntlfet would be a pleasant promin.u.de; compared to the anxiety and embarrassinent’of his family during the six weeks before, and the three weeks a|ter, their daughters marrjagp. Tee wedding over t - it" remained painfully uncertain, what reception he would give his betrothed’s bills. There are many, and some’ of them heavy. Th.e.sum to tal was very largo, but he paid them without wincing;—Scribner for Decem ber. my friends and the public generally to call M my store and examine my stock of gdods, and as the Booty and Shops IhatCarried off the premiums are fair snmple of my stock, lam satisfied that I can please both as to quality and price. I am noiy prepaired to offer great in ducements in the Boot and Shoes line as I am daily receiving additions to may already extensive stock. I would espe.- cially call attention to my line of Gen tleman’s hand-made Boots • and Shoes, and to the following Brogan Shoes, the Old Virginia Stitch Down and the "Old Reliable,” both of these Brogans are guaranled to give entire satisfac-’ tion. My stock of Indies’ Shoes is now complete, embracing all the grades that are kept by a first class shoe store. I would especial call attention to my line of Button and Lace B^ots. French Kid, Pebble Goat, Serge and Kid Foxed. Also a beautiful line Dancing and Toi let Slippers. I have also a good stock of -boy’s and cMl‘Iren’s Boots and Shoes, which I of fer to the trade at the very lowest rock bottom price. Don’t forget that I am sole agent for Massey’s Revolving Shoe 7 Heei Protec- ters and remember that I run in con nection wilh my'Boot and Shoe busi ness a manufacturing department where I take orders for custom work and do repairing at short notice and iu the the very best-style. Call and see.me when yon need any thing in the Boot and Shoe line. J. VALENTINO. 94 Cherry Street under the Tele- gaaph and Messenger Office., Macon Ga,—Nov. 20—-t f. New Graded Readers, Cn:Iicart's Lite*!* ary Reader?. R'obii?fepu ? P* A/it lime- "* tics, Algebras, etc., Swinton’s Spellers, Bert tints ami Ge ographies, Spencerian Copy Books, TjYt-b- ~ sters Diet kip- 1 ' nries. Bryant and Strut tons’s Book-K’pcpin Messrs. Prison, Blakeman. Taylt.r,’ Co., N. Y.. Publish iii additiuu’to itbovC^ £erl J 8 'English » Grammars and Rhet orics Dana’s Geologies, Fasquelle’s French .CoVirkg, Woodbury’s German Conrse. Well-’s Seientific Works, White’sIn- diistriul Drawing books, Gray's Botan ies. and nearly 309 other Text Rooks, fop schools and colleges. Tlicsp books can be obtained Of the'bookt-^Hers and lead* iug merchants'-of Perry, or ran be purf chased direct of.- ' ROBERT E. PARK, General Agent, Oct. 23d* Macon Ga. ATTENTION FARMERS!! LGCK TO YOUR INTEREST. Dodging Consoi-iption. ■ botto: miles £ne Gazelle A T.ATTE with has just been- discovered northwest of Reno, Nev. |h&t town doserff bottom and around the margin of :e as “of a grayish color, quite te- nacio.us, Bud with a bard, surface.' over which , a cariiage rolls smoothly and noiselessly as over a carpeted floor. thrown 'down it' will rebound like rubber. There is tidk of making a It is reported from Spain that if the Conservative party in the Cortes • are throwing obstacles in tbe way of the bill in trodc eed-by-ffitrabdCtionljf sla- .'veryon Cnb^that PrimoMinisterCampoi threatens either to* appeal to the conn- try or to throw the government into the hands of the Liberals and Sagastics in order to carry the measure through. The bill, Tjhich jras' introduced in the Cortes on November 5 by the Colonial Secretary, is a sweeping one, bnt ap parently not unfair. It provides that on and after the duy of ' tbe promnlga.- tion of the law in the official gazette of the island in Caba “the institution of wners become remain “un der their protection for eight years, un der f regular contract. The laborers are tJ^nnd for this term to their over- 8eejfs*jjW overseers are bound to- the fre^ifhen* to support and clothe them when sick, to piy them monthly wages, to provide primary.ed ueation for min ors and give them facilities for learning trades, and'to take care of their chil- d?eg, whether born before or after emancipation. No - families are 'to be separated under -any circumstances, and the wages are to range-from $1$2 59 S3, according to age and period of ser vice, with higher rates provided, for in special contracts. Yarions provisions are made for the protection of freedom under contracts, and for the extinction, of the contracts in certan contingen cies. It is further provided that after the fifth yer one fourth of the the adult freeffmen shall be set free from the contracts by drawing of lots, anoth er one-fourth the sixth year, and se on until disoharged from sevice: The freedmen thus set free are put under the protection of,the law, bnfr nniess they find work and homes fopr themselyes ars to become amennbje to . provisions- ti . fl "3^ famished with clamps.' cf the vagrant act, which exacts of all and ^ wh ich are fixed J the back offenders seryiqe in tne army or . r the puldicwoKs.' Freemen m subjected to cofp.or.eal pnhisbmei.ti. t stated 1 Mormon of the late outli late commis- f-ra at’ ihe bot- and that they have been inciting the Utes to hostille action by means of secret emissaries, and have been fnx^i^Ui.ng Them with arms and ammunition. The chief say that although the information he has re-' eeived on the subject is not sufficient to convict, still he has no doubt that he can establish the connection or the Mor mons with the outbreak. He says lie has convinced the White Biv. r Utes that they can testify without being placed immediately in irons, theingh the guilty mast be punished, Repngtfance to a miliary life has in duced, among the inhabitants of certain villages; ln/the/Department of. theHiene, a curious practice of atrophying one of the great toes by some secret method of miscular retraction. which has baffled the scrutiny of the most experienced armyiur^CoiA,' 1 Tfie deformation pre vents fisffclaoyf ® - f00t from being brought fanly and fu.ly on the ground/ With such’ snccess has this system of mutilation been carried on for the past forty years in one par- ticular viliiage, and so discretely have the^ffats/kept tM&joVRf counsel that in whole of the long period, only three conscripts were drawn whq were able to march, It must haTC appeared to the baffled investigators of this phys iological phenomenoji as/t u new species of countryman were being developed, but at length a pecnliary suspicions case attracted their special notice and led to an injury before the local tribu nal. A young-man. who had been no ted.as a good walker, and was in great request among the maidens of the dis trict as a partner in The-dance on Sun days and fete days, took to absenting himself from those junketings until he came forth from his retirement an ac complished cripple. It remains to be sees what 'can -be ; dona with him and with oih'er eva-ders - of patriotic duty. Perhaps a law may be passed which will compel! all owners of crooked toes to contribute a feed, proportion of their sedentary-earning ;s to ike State.—Lon- Two - Valuable.Inventions ThC fallowing new inventions by resi dents of/^avadabave been- caveated at the Washington Patent Office: A Barbers Muzzier.—This is a very servcieahle contrivance, can be listen ed over a barbet’s to prevent his talking while shaving'cos tomers. It / is made of iron, padiled inside, and can be fas- teceff secnrelyio as'to cover the whole the barber’s jaw lates which* fit on purpose of b, cone at §3. Tin the cheek aye of the best steel. The Bonne't-Grapple—This SllTe ma chine is destined to be of to ftjeatreigoe-£. It- is' grappling-hook wish a The grapple is thrown over any lady’s Bonnet which-may happen to obstruct the view, and t I am before yon again with that re liable Fertilizer, known as Black’s. It is.useless for me to multiply words. Just call on me at Perry and let me show you some certificates from she best farmers that used it this year, 1879. They all speak well of it and advise yon to nse it.. I guarantee it when put up and used according to Formula, Respectfully S. H . OATES- Nov., £0—1879- tf. 45 Years Before the Public. THE GENUINE DR. e. MoLANE’S CELEBRATED LIVER PILLS, FOR THE CURE OF Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint, DVSPEfSIA ASJJ SICE JiZApACES. Mrs. W.' F; Bhots, 1 [ Fxari B. Hetiii k. Formerly Bro-VfiH^ss} 1 luirr Uou»4 ‘ ’ PBOPItlETOBs'. “ MACON, * GEORGIA. BATHS FREEOFCHARGE* Ces and:! Waterjthroughout the F House. Commodious |ooni£ Fitte^ up with New Furni ture, Etc. HAWKINSVILLE, CA MOTTO-TEACE AND PLENTY. THE SCARBOROUGH HOUSE has Terentiy been refurnished.’ E-rorything new. clean anil eomfert-* able. Table furnished with the best tin market of. fords, Servants polite and accommodstin^. Com-, modious sample room and special attention paid to commercial tourists. A hack will meet eterj train- paesehyers an '' apd convey pa fiilcl yritre. 9 and baggage to and from th» B. F. jf_ \V. /. BOON, Proprietors. General JONES a COOK, Commission Merc ban fa. AND. DEALERS IX Symptoms of a Diseased Liver. P AIN, in the right side, under the edge of the ribs, increases bn pres sure; sometimes the pain is in iJie left side; the patient is rarely able to. Ii on the left side; sometimes th ielt under the shoulder blade, an frequently extends to the top of shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken for rheumatism in . the arm. . The stomach is affected with loss of appe tite and sickness; the bowels ingen- eral are costive, soififetimes alternative^ with lax; the head is troubled wii pain, accompanied with a dull; heai sensation in the back part. There generally a considerable loss, of mem ory, accomnanied with a painful sen- sati&n of having left undone some thing Which ought to haye been done, A. slight, dry cough is sometimes an attendant- The patien^ complains pf weariness and debility; he is easily startled, his feet are cold Or burning, and he. complains of a prLkly sensa tion of the skin; his spirits are low; and. althoughriie is satisfied-that exer- cise would be beneficial to him, yet he can scarcely summon, up fortitude enough to try .it In fact, he distrusts every remej^.- Several of the above symptoms attend the disease,but cases have occurred where few of them ex isted, yet examination of the body, after death, has shown the liver to have beep extensively deranged. AGUE AND FEVER. Dp.. C. McLane’s Liver Pills, in Ague and' Fever, whs* ith Quinine, are productive t happy results. No better c can be used, preparatory to, or after taking Quinine, ffe would advise all who are afflicted with this ^disease to give them a fair trial. .1 ' For all Iniious derangements; apd ps gative. they are t^equaled. 'ARE O? IJIIt/iTIOXS. Produce, Provisions an (J. Staple Groceries, lime, CEMENT* i,ATHES ANQ PLASTERING HAIR CORXEH COTTON AVEXUB and CUEBBX 8T, MACON, CA. \\7 U AGAIN prepent our card to the people if T T Houston, Macon and Dooly countiee. and return our t^iujrs for the patronage heretofore ei. t nded to ns. and ask a continuance of tbe cane', and solicit new ouetomcra, GnucuUriitg to ell Satisfaction. - —- • vz&Jb*aaovi: sfirtiw - >.T, it E, OATS, AND BARLEY. UiST NATIONAL BANK, 0:iiik of Deposit, DIsconnt and Exckaa- ' ; - ’ &• ■ - W WWBIGLEY, Casliier. I.CPLA25T. FURNITURE FRFfGHT FREE ■J^s ENTIRELY NEW AND ELEGANT «TOCS Of fust received and for sale at To prices. - - ^ • BUY AT HGpflff, A Hearaecanfce fnrniahed to'orilerat aor time ' ’ " lia.thuday'timen are never sugar coated. Piiri. Me; .the signatures of C. Teos. on ’ '~t —*- t -iver Pills, . ... Ta., of imitations ef the name fcaeatly but same Furniture . .. short notice. TLET’S UNRIVALLED SPRING BEDS. CEOK&E PAUL, PERRY. GEORGIA.