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Devoted to Tloirio liittcrcst-s and Gnltiivc.
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TWO IJOLLAliS A Yearin Advance^
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T7T71—jr—•
VOLUME X.
Aiialvl tin. t*}? iT*a
RElRRY; OEORGlA, THURSAAV JANUARY 1, I8S0:
NUMBER !.
reft «a
——
CHAP. I.
I am proud of my cattutry, afad I am
S r jud ol q>y calling. ’ Labould lie proud
f my country tore I’d Kalmuck or Es
quimau*—how much more rearou for
pride have 1 not in being n native of
Dublin, which is admittedly the Quest
city in the fineat cotmlry-i» tlie worlii?
^nd as to uiy calling, it gives me brqth-
ii A -*ofii®ilHrith ever^imm who ever iiitii a
name wuiti u-imiug in any country—
strike the adventurers out of your- fiis-
loriss, and whats iclt.won’t be more
.than..a.duyA-r<Mudiog.- And-as to being
an Irish adventurer—I’ve heard that
name sneeivd kt in iny time; , but never
j • by anybody whose betid wasn’t too con
temptible to be worth cracking. ■
My adventures nave had lyconsidera-
, ble ranged tffi'ddi'iSo^^wjrigB t&6
in twenty Volumes as well as aDy man.
i For the present, however, and Siikply
by way of preface fo a short account cf
content
df, and pique the curi
leader. by'boifihg tfieth down in twen
ty Iipes. My. uunae isYilomas Conner
•—an orignul 0 haviug bten somehow
, iosl in company with the rest of the
lamily property, which had been regal
in ancient times, but had Been reduced
to-seVeupeure-halfpenny- op the day I
c-.uho"of age. It is true there were a
few debts besides,, but tb<y-could : hard-
ly be cull d possessions, seeing that I
never kue\v precisely what , they were-.
TPucii iny poor father died, nobody—
not even himself—kue.v how much he
and it wasn’t worth riiy While to
go through the court for anybody’s
benefit, seeing that sevenpeLce-hatf-
penny wouldn’t have paid for the iriel-e
WliiteWash, not to speak of a dividend.
But; though I found myself ou • iny
twenty-first bit thday better cleaned out
than a hundred tubs bF whitewash
Wotild brave made me, I found no rea
son to complain "Of itfy "friends. It’s
rubbish, and I know it, to talk of the
badness of the wof-ld io H
hift'nr-w hen he’s down . You’d be iveiiv-
ei- the rrn k if jou’il talk of the badness
. hi ft fufiii who’s clown to the world.
When a man complains of having been
cut,, or raae tuy-wom torn;
js-javijifuy has for once got what he de
served. 'Why, 1 had hot been ofic-aud
twenty for four-and-twenty hours when
I got a note from old. Miles Cregan,
whom my only sister, Kate, had lower
ed the Conners by marrying (for he
was only an attorney,) offering ’me- a
free passage io New' York and live
- pounds offer. Without a Word ,6'f being,
repaid, an J with no conditions except
that I wouldn't come bad: to Dublin
riiitii {'d fhitde three lmuJred a year of
my own—which, equrse. , it wasn’t
likely I’d want to Jo. I took it all the
kinder of Miles, because he was so f oud
of money that he wouldn’t even let poor
Kate'help me whin I’d now and then
Wanted to get out of a scrape, snch
ybuig itteg .will fall into -without pi
ticular ifiult of anybody’s,and ouee
- ■^wh’en I’d asked him myself for a loan, to
6e repaid punctually as soon as I’d be
able, be .said Shat he 'didn’t
fest-'in wild oats ou prin&plc-
. when.a man talks of hrTprinciple, you
may bo sure he means hi3 pocket, apd
(thing less nor more, - fStus Sooh as
;t qfiiit,? therefore, ten
adveuturohs ups and
downs—my perils among niiiiers aiid
Indians in the far W-.si, my narrow es
cape from an Iudian tiger, my second
and,third shipwreck (so that I began to
stand in same, fear of a rope for my end)
—and come, at'oue bound; to where the
arch, adventure, of tby life began—
Uamely. in South Africa. By. the time
I was thirty-one I had not made, three
hundred a year; but I hiid got more
than three-quartes rqnnd the world.
And when I speak of the arch advent ure
pf my. life, I mean the most reniavkable
adventure that ever happened to any
man,
I had been ostrich-funning up the
cdiintr^.I with E young Englishman
named Paul Andrews—a Sue fellow of
jabout five and thirty. We got on fa
mously together, tbdngli we, w^-e
about .as'unlike ils two men I could be.
and though we lived all iildiie. It’s
iiiy ejfperienco that it is always easy
enough to get on -well with any man.
He was ii gentleman all round (By
io. curiosity of, the: which, however, I don’t mean to say
’’ • ’ • 1 that he was' riulike a Connor as iny
words might seen to imply), and I al
ways used to think there was a sort of 7
mystery about him: even out there; hiid
iu his rough dress, ainl iu the middle of
our rough ways, life always used to look
its if ho was a major in the guards just
dropped out of his club in a mistake,
and yet, for all his cool and easy tfpys,
he’d be liable to fits of silence that
listed for days, -followed by the sort "of
spirits that make a man seem as if lie.
wttnted to . forget something. l?ii’t
though we 1.veil like brothers, he nev
er told me much of his past life—per,
for-that matter, did I tell him much of.
mine, except maybe about the tiger.
No doubt I told him that, for I'll defy
any man with a tiger sfrjty to keep it
to himself altogether. I’d sometimes a
sort of - fancy that though his name
might be Paul,- it might turn out not to
be Andrews—and' wlien one suspects
an edicts, it’s bad nlanuerS ti nSk qiies-
.tious., .Yhav.e inysi-lf not always- Galled
myself Conner; when one’s promt of
one’s name, one doesn’t like it to lie
carried by erq|rfti'»ftv.. Hint one ui.t'v
a tq tieivitHiri a course or „poj. 0
round the globe, //e was handsome,'
but,it was in r. different vhy fruit' my
self—that is to say, while he was also a
fiqe figure o£-a man, he was dark, »1
most like an italian, with brown eyes
tt'at seemed to dream straight iuto the
very r middle of you, and hair to match
—he’d have stood, for all he was -an
A -n Triell A rlvrDTlfinTW 1 thimfed out to be! But I gafe wbfrb we know ptetty well Wcrehan
' V - mygelf twenty lines for my self intro- there’s none at alL No, no. Pve bet-
“™* '** ' ’’fhjve taken nearly two ter iuck than..you,.anyhow: rilgo ajid
yotr’ll-sfeiy. You are tob generous by
half, my boy,” . ,
“Nonsense:”, said he. “Perhaps I’m
going because I don’t want to stay. I
sometimes tbiuk I’m the Wandering
dew, No no. Yon make the best you
can.of the old ground, and let a wilful
mini go bis own My. Whether you
move or not, I shant stay here.
Yes, there was clearly a mystery about
this man, young, handsome, with an
iron will, and no vices, who woali'. Have
been ku ornament to a crack regiment
or a duchess’s drawmg-room, ana . yet
hiding liiriisell in poverty and Africa;
I couldn’t make it out at all. I don’t
like to i>e outdone in generosity by ah
E nplb-Lniap but I felt it was a kind of
destiny that was driving him. and that,
as he said, his boots were beginning to
lioiL, So the next movuiDg we just
shook hands, and said. “Good lack to
'yon. old fellow!” anil then he went his
way, and I mine, .without more ado
than if we expected to meet again at
supper-time.
Will I ever forget that Sky? I Iladu’t
been at work three hours before I knew
myself to.be master of a more splendid
diamond than I had ever dreamed of.in
iny wildest . dreams'. Yes, in your
wretched little patch Iliad lighted upon
an African Koh-i-noor! Don’t turn lip
your nose at Cape ili itnonds if yon have
never seeii that one. It was a ijtieeu;
aud a tug at my heart told me what our
patch was going to be.
Oitr patch? It was mine; it was the
sole property of .Thomas Connoti With
a vengeance indeei^had lack turned at
(he departure Of Paul Audiews—pour
devil! It was a sin anil a shame. He
had lost-his share by t hree hours; and
all because he had beeen generous, aiid
hail given up the eld ground to me.
My first- thought h'ad been, now for
Hate and Dublinl My sCConit tvas to
get hold of a horse, and tp gallop like
mail after Paul Andrews, to bring him
back again into the firm; for I could no'
mure have kept that luek to myself than
I could have picked a pocket. I kuew
which way he had gone/and one doesn’t
get far in the country iu three or four
no
literally bating''oightpence in the
world, and notQing-left but to enlist or
e'se tp live on uiy , wits, , this: man di$-
proveif forever 111 the cant about the
world’s ooid shoulder, and did for.his
bel^4^ik’d
wife’s brothe r what I ddn’t- b
hafe done for his hWn son.' So 1
thanked him, as warmly-as he’d let me—
for Ire Was’one of' those' men"who, un
der a cold outside; lnde. thiir; Ihearts kt
very much indeed—and then spent an
hoar alone with Nate, saying -good-bye.
I had no sweetheart just then, '-By some
Queer accident or other, so my sister
tfad the last Irish girl I saw in Ireland.-
Poor girl! She cried when I told her
hbit' kind Miles hjid been, and tried^o
drake me4ake-£dl d»it she’d . |ot in her
own purse, which was nine-and-fonr-
pence—I remember if now; but I didn’t
Eke to take advantage, for A Thought
that being as real a Conner as myself, if
was likely enough that she too might
hkve a debt or too 1 haV sHe wouldu’t
like to tell Miles
fhfee pouna'- ' v ihy pocket—for two
KEEPING WARM.
English-gentleimin, for a portrait oi
ohfe of Byron's Blackguards. He didn’t
drink much, anil he talked less—except
when he was iu oho of his fever fils,
as a I used to call them, and theu he’ll
show, without making a show, that if
he wasn’fnh earl himself, he’d been
hand aud glove w?tFt‘tli&m that afe.
Somehow, however, though ostriches
are undeniably .cheap beasts to feed
ours -tFdii't % very well. Whether
feathers went out of demand, or wheth
er there was a glut of them, or whether
if was the new Fancy foreheap funerals,
6i - Whatever it was'i; we didn’t find them
pay; a nrlwed i d-fi'ud thcm*die off in the
most spiteful mauner you can conceive.
So oiie da;y^ said Pan).
' ^ let’s'go ; for'diamonds.”
r D\Ve will,” said t
During: six months we went for dia
monds. I had my regular luck; that- is
fersay, 5t was never quite the worst pos
sible. rj- wasn’t robbed or murdered,
either of which would very likely haVe
happened to nfefif. I’d found anything
worth .robbing.me,of or mnrdering me
or i Panl’s luck was worse than mine,
for example; r I did find a fetf'trifling
yhich we shared; bping partners,
ept body aiAl sbnl togetner;bnt
I don’t rem’ember his finding any at all/
I began to think he was a downright
unlncky man; and though a Conner
can’t desert a man of Ins own accord,'
I wasn’t altogether displeased when he
said to me one night, . when we were
djinking whiskey and watef—-'that is to
say, I the whiskey, sm’d he the water.
* ‘Tom. old mac, this won’t dol' We
[on’t get on as partner'. We’ve trifed"
lioitrs. Buf though I rude as much
like in .id as the nature of a beast, and
of the ground, would let me, I couldn’t
C.oniH ini \vitliAlim *•»>»
new place, nor anywhere else that I
could hear or-iiiid. Aiid thougli I tried
fur days,, aud was more or. less on t.li‘e
look ouf for mouthi-.after, no uews '6f
Paul Auilrew-s could 1 hear. I almost
fell like a fiiief; bit*, there was ati help
to! it I
back into- tilings; anil work^awnv.
| to BE CONTINUEB.-I
A PAlUSEIivN'E’s WINTEB TOILET—AWFULLY
ihcB.
The Yie Pariseinne had a grimly ter
rible article on the art of keeping, your
self warm in wint »r. The article was
addressed to the typical reader of the
journal, the jolin Pariseinne, thd spoiled
child of the public opinin, but the cottn-
■^ets of perfection to her as to the art of
keeping herself warm may be read with
generakprofit as a sort of last' word on
on the subject of Parisian luxury. The
directions are under sixty heads, and
they constitute in their ensemble a sort
of whole duty of a mirioaare woman to
ward her own precious skiii. “An hour
before you get,up/' says the author,
“your maid will light your fire and
theti screen it with a silver frame-work,
lined with rose silk, which a ill tamper
the heat aud give to tjie whole room
a sort of rosy morning light that Warms
whil6 it illumines.” Then she Will
bring you on a sil ver plate warmer your
cup of chocolate, hot aud foamiug, whieh
yob will drink from the warmer itself,
munching the while your rusks, served
on a little gold toast rack, kept hot in
its turn by a little live charcoal, sprink
led with Vanilla, to. ptn-fume the air.
After von have taken your chocolate
you will snooze again For a couple of
hours. Then yob will pnt on a desha
bille of pink satin, lined with swan’s
down, enveloping the'whole body from
head to foot. The waistband and the
fastening of the npek of this garment
must be velvet, so ns to be warm to the
touch. You may now pass into.the
bath room, the atmosphere of which
will be kept at mi agreeable tempera-
tffre by,little gnsts of rose-sented vapor,
pumped through ab aperture in the
wall. The next part of oiir rnbject is a
delicate one; but lioni soit qid mat y
pense. It is now time.to draw on stock
ings lined with warm flossy silk, long
and Surf limed, and gartered with Rus
sian sables clasped with cat’s eye stones
set in diamonds. The boots are to be
lined with swan’s down, and trimmed
with Russian,sables as Well. Our pre
cious product i«niighcivilization-is now
in her dressing room, whither we may,
perhaps, he allowed to follow her with
out offense. This is to be made com-
t or table by m'eans of an immense foot-
^rarm<'l'| J aofi£6 t ffO m«4i*co-fql|)llJt!,y»vl.rOu
s to form a liind of second -floonug all
about Sue dressing table. The blinds
may be colored to represent “the ar
dent rays of file sbnl” anil the padding
; tq keep out the draughts is to be tri m-
Dis: ppoi^ed Ein'grimts.
A number of emigrants, who left- here
a few kiohthsago hopeful, full of life and
energy, .returned yesterday perfect
wricks oi tlieir former selves. They
are perfectly dis gusted with their expe
rience of Western life, tlieir former day
dreams. Their fnbes wore a haggard,
poverty stricken look, and they draw -
most woeiul pictures of their life in
that country. They say that in some
sections of Tixas there has been no rain
since last May. and that sometimes far
mer s must travel twenty miles for wa
ter. All the brooks, streams, spriugs,
are dried np in certain localities and
everlhibg wears a burnt, }>aiTlieil ap
pearance. They report that the cotton
erop is excellent, never better, but they
are so weakened by the climate, to
which they are unaccustomed, tliatthev
canbot pick iheir cotton as it should
be..
Returning emigrants ore becoming
nnnierous. They come Back in every
manner, in wagons, railroad anil afoot.-
As a rule they wear a woe-ui.-gobe ex
pression, whic h convinees one that the
land “flowed no t in milk andl)OLey”for
them. The only reason that more do
not return is that they do not have the
means. Their sad experience is teach
ing them that there is no better climate,
soil and society, under the sun than in
the hotnes they left. The farmers in
this country are now beginning to find
this out, aud the ofteaer they are re-
HOWWATCHE1 ARE MADE, j TO TEACHERS AND :
I , I OF HOUSTON §G.
It will be apparent,to any one, who; h— *
will 'examine, a Soi-hb Gold Watch.: -.: ! ? ,_ . ?- t
Mint nsidefrom tlie neeessiirv tliiekuess! J wotild iuyite your, atteulion to ikir-
forenWvirig ami polishing, a large i f“ i ''»«n«iwyi»r ^hBbi
° . t ■ By your Goiiutv Board <,f Ivlueatimi for
proportion of the p ncions feetel used, , be Schquli of ftuimfoi; Cohuly,
is heeded only to stiffen and hold the _
minded of it, the bitter iff they \vi'
be —Chattanooga Times.
Tie Idvos of G^eat Mou
rned'with natural flowers, ’’ This wil
I couid do nothing'bht put nfy make the place look and feel like Si
summer bower.in the. depth of winter.
The maid may now “fumigate tiie nape
of-tfra heck” with-a little behzoii:, to
Station Among the MooasMtfe*? - m? * e - * snpple^an exquisite cluhactcr-
,istic;pri)yish>n-, for-, without a- supple
necj i-iww.eonld b French -person pos-
Oecasional lt-ports. still dontinue^fo ; sible get through the duties of 'puli to
nes* for Hie-ddy?
.We must not forge^t the hands. These
lihay b'e'^ept warm by .holding iuhh'eiii
two little vessels of enamel filled with
warjm' vmter and shaped-like a;pples—
rather i n..bad taster irf this dirt»e.fran as
tending ;to remind our Parisemne of
the frivolity of taste by which her sex
first came' to grief.' The. promised ad
vantage of'this arrangemsut is that it
gives the lfiiiids ■; that attraelive rosiness
which warmth alone can impart. So
much for this, the begincuig-of thc-day,
There are no directions for the middle
of it, as this haYno immediate..cpnaec’-;.
tions; with tife snbject;.but i^iseasyrto
supply the omission. -.The'Pirribeiiiue
simplj continues " ’all. - these' pre
cautions by avoiding' ies-though it were
laden with'the : breath of pestilence;
every touch of Cold air. The rusk that
form her morning meal might be baked
in her drawing rooni, and the carriage
in which she takes her drive is hermeti
cally closed. iS’he may realize -winter
reach this City through private sou:
that all is no; quiet auioug the "u oon-
slflners of North Georgia. The raids ^qf
a few weeks ago and vigorous resist 1
auce offered them seems to have created' 1
a. ferrSintatiou throirghoat .-the eufn?5
mouhtaiu district. A geutl •ufin from
Rtb.m county remirke.l till, murniug
that iu Iris own county, and iu tub
cou-ity. aijoiuiug on the west, tfflP
moonshiuers were oil the lookout-, “a
stranger would not be allowed to ram
ble at will in those comities to day,” he
said “if lie could not clear himself of
the suspicion of being connected with
the revenue service. I have hedvd that
some of the passes iu the inouutuius
were constantly guarded, and the dis
tillers seemed iteSeruuue-I not to be-
surprised.’’^ It is to be hoped that
there wili be no occasion, however, for
further trouble with the mountaineers,
Present agitatiou is quite naturMly the
result of recent raids', and confidence in
their ability to resist was inspired in
the moonshiners by their recent suc
cess in Union county. Prolonged re-
sistenee, hotvever, is inrpossiola. They
were violators of the United States laws;
and so long as those laws exist there
will be a power to eufurce them. Us
ance will’ in the end,_afr_ least, b!
idle as tlie winds.
ft
me off soffiehow Jur-
®^ew York in
a
■\ha
rt -•
feathers, and we’ve tried stoue; and I
l don’t' know whibb is the worst specula
i tion. Let’s dissolve. Yon stay where
id. I’ll go S'mile or two higher.
There’s a’ vacaiit bit theTe aud if that
Qh turfiqoutnobetter.than this has done
1 ii—I I! turn missionary, and 1 see if-that
&&&” .-i '
In an adventurous life we get nsed to
sudden and eternal partings froiff' o'
cli
X’ s udd ~ Bow little one mi'udb' ot-hi
)d-byes when tliere’s one big “good-
f sticking' like a knife into one’s
\; for ten years had made me want
' Dublin and poor Hate again, and
Vl :l Bit nearer to then than when
cm ho I only said.
yotvre right. Paul. Amy-
there's no harm trying a’ Chance.'
isn’t fitlr that I should have the
wherjj we know
: aiid you should, go
. ^ — -
•j s'T it m
If is'on one. of the wooded streams of
Maine.' A summering papa lay fishirrg.
in compauy with his two boys. A mag
nificent silver eel, haying fooled aronnd
the bait, was' nimbly landed, and' its
mortal coil shofflrd off without unncee's-'
sary delay. The father has .resumed-
Iris open^tapn.* when oue.of the young
sters,,noticing the; spasmodic action of
the' htriped Bel, called but excitedly:
“L >0k, father! Look at the beastl'
is bed time, and we are once more in
tlie hands qf our guide. He, however,
stands discreetly in the backgronnd un
til bis interesting patroness has assum
ed the yestement &dinaire. Mj- then
comes forward 1 torecommend 'a second
garment—a sort" of of Ulster, of white
plnfeb; trimmed r^th' ostrich feathers at'
neck anil wrists—which is to be worn
as an overall.- The nightcap of white
satin should be trimmed with' feathers
of the same bir-a, and. for additional'
Bucou lived a life of mi anness and
distress.
Pliiitus, the Roman comic poi-,
turned a mill.
JPa-H Borghese had fourteen trades,
aud yet starved with all.
Tasso, the Italian poet, Was often dis
tressed for five shillings,
Sleele, the humorist, lived at)life of
perfect ware fa rc with bailiffs.
Outway. the English dramatist, died
prematurely arid through hunger,
Chattertou, the cliil 1 of genius aud
misfortune, destroyed himself at 18.
Beutivoglio was refused admittance
into a hospital he’ liatl himseif erected.
Savage died in. prison,., at Bristol,
wUore he was confined for the ilebt of
forty dollars, ,
The death of Collins was through
neglect, first causing' mental derange
ment.
.Mlton sold his copyright of “Para-
diae Lost” for #75. at three payments,
ail'd finish’eif his life in obsenrity.
Recipe fsl Cwiring Meat, •
f As; the season has arrived when caring
meat is in order, we publish as of old,
our famous recipe for curjng beef, pork,
mutton, hauls, etc, as foliowsf To one
gallon of water, take li lbs. of salt
1-1 lbs sugar, 1) oz. of saltpetre,
11 oz potash','.
In this ratio the pickle can be in
crease J-to any quantity desired. Let
these be boiled together until all the
dirt from the sugar rises, to tlie top and
is skimmed off. Then thro w it into a
tub to cool, and when cold, pour it" over
your beef or pork. The meat must be
well covered with pickle and should not
be put down for at least two days after
killing, during which time it should be
slightly sprinkled with powdered salt
petre, which removes all the surface
blood, etc., leaving the meat fresh and
clean. Some omit boiling the pickle
and find' it to answer well, though the
operation, of boiling purifies the pickle
by tlirowing off the dirt Eiways to b
found m salt and sugar. If this rceeip t
is strictly followed, it will require only
k*single ■ trial to prove its superiority
oyer the co mm'on vfay; or most ways of
putting down meat, and will not soon
be abandoned for another. The meat is
unsurpassed for sweetness/delicacy and
freshness of color.
engraved portions iff place, aiid supply
the ncceessary solidity and strength.
The Surplus gold is ucuidly needless
so far os UI’Ilitt aud Beauty are con
cerned. In JauesBjss’Fates! Gold
Watch Cases, this waste of precious
metal iirovercomej anil the same s.ilid-
rrr asp sihensth produced at from one-
third t j one half of the usu d cost of
solid cases. This process is of tlie mast
simple nature, as follows; a plate of
i.ickle composition metal, especially
adapted to the purpose, his two plates
of solib gold soldered one ou each
side. The three are then passed be
tween polished steel rulers, and the re
sult is a strip of heavy plated compo
sition, from which the ciises, backs,
centres, bevels, Ac., are cut aud shaped
by suitable dies and formers. The
gold in these cases is suffien-utly thick
to admit of all kinds of chasing, engra
ving and enamelling; the engraved ea
ses have been carrried until worn per
fectly smooth By tfihe ai.3 use without
removing j. Lie gold.
THIS IS THE ONLY CASE MADE WITH
TWO PLATES OF SOLID GOLD AMD WAllBAN-
I3DBT SPECIAL CEHT1FICATG.
Fur sale by all Jewelers Ask for Il
lustrated Catalogue, and to see warrant.
fihocp Wanted.
I want to buy, 300 owe Sheep for
which I will pay a good price. Address
me at Montezuma, Ga.
4w. S S Taylob.
A TtiNTION FARMERS!!
LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST.
New Giydqd jReatTere. Oil heart’s Liters
ary Readers. Robinson's Arithme
tics, Algebras, etc.. S win ton's
spellers. Historic s and Qe-
ogiapUSpuncerjaii
Copy-iiTooks, Web-
sters Dietion-
alies. ' '
Bryant aiid Strattons s Book*F.ef?piu.g
Messrs. Ivisou. Blakemau. Taylor, A’
Co., N. Y’.. Publish in addition to above;
, ..fferls Euglish
Grammars and Bin t-
orics, Dana’s Geologies, ’
Fasquelle’s French Course.
Woodbnry’.s German Course.
Well s Scientific Works, White’sln-
dustria! Dinwing books, Gray’s BotanV
ies. and nearly 300 other Text Books, for
schools and colleges.. „ .These books ca '
be obtauied of the hocksellers-asd lead-'
iug merchants of Perry, or cau be pur-
e.'uued direct of. » *'
EGBERT E. PARK, f .
General Agent, '
Get. 23d. Macon Ga.
HAWKINSVILLE, CA
MOTTO—rEACE AND PLENTY..
. .. - . A V« IJ.
THE sc a nuoiioiJntT i r fiotfSE bu teccnny be** •
rcfutniHliud. l'vcr>tbiny new, <cJe*j( irad comfort--
able. Table furnished with the best the market af-
fur^s, iHiiite a:ul accommod*tiug r Com-’
luodioiiiKAlLple roosn and special attention paid to*,
commercial ttuu isis. A liack will meet every train
ami convey passengers and batftnirc to and fr*m the
Hotel gratis.
B. F. & \Y. J^ BOON.V .
Proprietors.
Iam before you 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 the
best farmers that used it this year, 1879.
They all speak well of it and advise you
o use it. I guarantee it when put up
nd used according to Formula,
Respectfully
S. H. OATES
Nov. 20—1879— tf.
45 YeafS Before the Public;
THE GENUINE
DR. C. MeLANE’S
CELEBRATED
LIVER PILLS,
FOR THE CURE OF
ffepatitFs, or Liver Complaint,
- ” <
DYSPEPSIA AND SICK HZADACKft.
a little turtle dove may be
hove the left eaiv The ■
warmth,
teued above
bauds are. to—have. Iheir
fas-
very fore st
uigiit *ap—
A page of the Czar’s Diary, if we-ntaj
believe the San Francisco NsuziiieUsry.
rmis-as follow;- “Got np afiT' A. iL ap^
ordered my bath. Found four gsflions:.
of vitriol in it,. aud did not- take* if,
Went to breakfast- The Nihilists had
placed two torpedoes on. (lie stairs, but
I diff not step on them. The coffee
smelt so strongly of Prussic acid that I
was afraid to drink it. Fc
on in my left shpi'er,
it out before putting
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver.*
P AlN in (Tie right, side, under the
edge of the ribs, increases on pres-:
sure; sometimes the pain is in the left
side; the patient is rarely able to lie
6n the left side; sofffetimes the pain is"
felt under the shoulder blade, and it
frequently extends to the top ^f the*
shoulder, and is sometimes-, mistaken’
for rheumatism in the^afm.
stomach is affected with/foss X)f
tite and sickness; the bowels-in-gen
eral are costive, sometimes alternative
vfcith lax; the head is troubled wjth
pain, accompanied with a dull, fieavy
sensation iii : the back part ® There is
generally a considerable loss of mem-
ory ? accompanied with a painful sen
sation pf haying left undone soi^e.-
thing ;$^ich ought to hqv^ beeff done.
A slight, dry coiigh' fs ^'sometimes an
attendant The patient complains of
.weariness and debility; .he is easily
startled, his feet are cold of burning,
dfid he complains of a prickly sensa-
^ ticui'of the skin ; his spirits are low/
and'alth'oHgh ne is satisfied that exer-
£&§ woufif be,beneficial to him, yet
ihe- r ean'scarcery summon up fortitude
epoagh to try it. In fact, he distrusts,
ei-eiy^emcdy.' Several of the* above*.
isted, yet examination of the body,
ikota, was shaken By an
earthquake at 1'2:30 Sanday night. The
shock lasted ab-.iuti.ne minute, aud was
accompanied bv internal rambling?.
Hu dreds of sleeping people were
awakened by it. Port Sally reports- a
similar' viri'tation 1 .
JMe Macon (Ga.)
a" greater amount of mail
nates in that city
txdi
liille.) so ah’not to’check the cirenji
The bed is to be bqated by ttie^fi
huirneil’ lim'e, fibwers and. violets/
Th'ese a^reeiibie and calming em'aua-
tionsrepl ice advant ageonsl- the old fash
ioned warming pan.” “Enfia,” he’s
in conclusion—and tli& word has al!
iity- of a blessing—.“enfin, vi
-ink just before going to sleep _
Iffeht creme de S-ibaillout nice and hot,
m\de with two fresh eggs aud a
s' of Jllideira. By carefully
Mrs. IV. F. Bnoirs, k f ... BUW.B. Bsmua
Fonuerly Br/il-n Himsc f j Formerly Lanier Hou« 3
rKOl'KIETOBS.
tteTKMMl H@T*L, .
MACON, - - - CEORC1A.
BATHS FREEpFCHARGE
C?s and ; WaterJthroughou ! i
the r House.
Commodious Rooms Fitferf
up with T’lew Furni
ture, Etc.
JONES & COOK,
General Commissiofi' Merchanfs,
AXD PHlLElli IN
Produce, Provisions amt ?
Stiiple Groceries,'
LIME,
CEMENT, .
LATHESAND
, flasteriwc hair
CORNER COTTON AI’ENUE anil CHERRY ST.'
MACON, CA. .
V\7 k'lUAIN yireaent our card io the pconlo of .
* • Houston-, Macon and Dooly counties, a- 7 .
return our Uurnks for tile patronago heretofore
tended to ns. anil ask a conUnnance of the ss
and solicit now customers. Guaranteeing tc
efAjeumc seeds,
WHEAT,
-<y
RYE.
OATS, AND
baBj
JONES &oor"
■MS.. >AC‘
FUiST XATIONA
MACO
Biuik of PiqRysit, 1
W WWCIGLEY,
Cashier.