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•• XfNi ;
’IdlJWIlN AX-AiiTIIX, Proi^ iotox*.
Devoted to Ilonfe Interests and Cnltixi-e.
TIV O DOL.LAKS Year iu Adranue,
jBSitiMe'X. * *. •• ^
PERRY, GEORGIA, . THTJRSAY, JANUARY S ; ISSCr.
NUMBER 1
An Irish Adventurer.
*' THRILLING ? STOI«Y OF THE DAT,—HOW
To£ CO&EB WON A FOR-BUHE, WIFE AND
s " * ‘
CHAP, t*
where we know pretty well beforahan
there’s none at alL No,-no. I've hot
ter luck than yon, anyhow; Xllgo and
you’ll stay. Yon are too generous by
half, ray boy,”
“Nonsense.” dsaid Tie. “Perhaps Pm
going because I don’t want to stay. I
sometimes think I’m the Wandering
Jew, No no. You makojthe^best you
wilful
move or not, I shant stay here.
ostrich-farming up the
fa
mously together, though we were
about as-Uijlike as 4 wo men could be;
and though we lived aft ‘alone. It’s
my experience that it is- always easy
enough to get on well with any mini.
He was a. gentleman ail round {by
which, however, I don’t mean to say
that he was unlike a Connor as my
Words might, eeem to imply), and I al
ways used to think there was a sort of
mystery about him: even out there, and
in his rough dress, and in the middle of
our rough ways, ho always list’d to look
as if he was a major in the guards jimf.
dropped out sjf his club in a mistake,
and yet, for all his cool and easy ways,
he’d be liable to tits of silence that
lasted for days-, followed by the sort of
spirits that make a man seem as if he
wanted to forget something. Bat
though we lived like brothers, he nev
er told me much of his past life—nor,
for that matter, did f tel] him much of
mine, except' maybe about the tiger.
No doubt I told him flat, for I’ll defy
aiiy man with a tiger story to keep it
to himself altogether. I’d sometimes a
sort of fancy-that though his name
might be Patilf it might turn out not to
be Andrews—and. when one suspects
an alias, it’« bad manners to ask Ques
tions.' T have myself not always called
myself Conner; when one’s proud of
one’s name, one doesn’t like it to bo
carried by everybody that one may
happen to be within a course of a voyage
round the globe, i/e was handsome.,
but it was iu n different way from my
self—that is to say, while he was also a
line figure of a man, he was dark, al
most like an Italian, With brown eves
that seemed to Bream straight- into the
very middle of you, and hair to match
—he’d have stood, for all he was an
English gentleman, for a portrait of
one of Byron a Blackguards, He didn’t
drink much, and he talked less—except
when he was in one of his fever fils,
as a I used to call thorn, add then he’d
show, without mailing a show, that if
he wasn’t an carl himself, he’d been
hand and glove with them that are.
Somehow, howevor, though ostriches
are undeniably cheap beasts to feed,
ours didn’t do very well. Whether
feathers went out of demand, or wheth
er there was a glut- of them, or whether
it was llio hew fancy for cheap funerals,
or whatever it was, we didn’t find them
hiding bimsell in poverty and Africa.
I couldn’t make, it out at all. I don’t
like to be outdone in generosity by an
Englishman; but I felt it was a kind of
destiny that was driving him. and that,
as. he said, l'is boots were beginning to
boil. So the next morning ~ we just
shook hands, and said. ‘‘Good luck to
yon. old fellow!” and 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 day?.I hadu’t
been at v,;ork three hours before I knew
myself to be master of a more splendid
diamoud than I had ever dreamed of in
my wildest dreams. Yes, in your
wretched little patch I bad lighted upon
an African Koh-i-noor! Don’t turn up
your nose at Cape diimonds if you have
never seen that one. It was a queen;
and a tug at my heart told me what our
patch was going to be.
Car patch? It was mine; it was the
sole property of Thomas Connor. With
a vimgeance indeed had iuck turned at
the departure of Paul Auchcws:—poor
devii! It was a sin and a shame. He j turn by little gusts of rose-sented vapor,
bad lost his share by three hours; and pumped ’ through an aperture in the
wm
than I famed Tout to be. But I gave
myself twenty lines for my self intro
duction—an'd I have taken nearly two
hundred! I must omit, ' therefore, ten
long years of adventurous’'tips and
downs—my perils among miners and
Indians in the far West, my narrow es
cape from an Indian tiger, my second
- .1 tin proud of my country, and I am J un< j third shipwreck (so that I began to
l ,ro f Lslumhi WftWad ■ stand in seine fear of a rope for my end) - , . .
of irPmari were;I aKnimnck or Es~; _' an j come ; at OBe bound, to where the {***“ o£ th ® olJ S’°nnd, and let
quimauxe-bow much more rearon for! arcfa adventure of mv life began- mvuso hls owu Whether yon
pride have I not iu being a native of . avimc iy, fa So'uthAafricL By the time
Dublin, which is admittedly the finest |y was thirty-one I Trad not made’three
city in the finest country in the woild ? j hundred a year; but I had got more
fedves me broth- j than three-qnartes. rouud tlig world.
5 ' *«»**»» tva Y »*a-vhb- ever had * Alld wh( & £ ^ 0 flhe arch adventure
name worth naming in any country-^ of , ife> j mean tho most r . ( . IQ ., vkab!e
Stride the ttdvcuhireiK out of your his: adv b a tWthatever happened to any
ivKtyh^^ua AvIiiiW- iclfc-woiit bs more \ ,
than a,days reading. Aud as to being I _ .’ . .
an Irish adventurer—I’ve heard that J ,cen
name sneerediat iu my time, but never,
l,y.nuvbody whose head wasn’t too con- J uamsd Pllul Andrews—a Sue fellow of
foinptible to be worth-cracking. u bout five and thirty. We got on
, My adventures have had a c< nsidara-
j rajig£/an^l l coaid write ray own life
in twenty volumes as well as any man.
For the preseut, however, and simply
by vvftjiof .prcfipe.to a short account cf
•• the strangest’ ’of them all,' I’ll content
• ^XT^*i‘»d piqua^h.e,curiosity. of the
reiV3er,~fljy boiling them down in twen
ty > Jsfy name is Thomas Conner
—an orignai O' having been somehow
.loti.jr in „c( njpnny with the rest of the
• family property, which had been regal
- iu.ancient times,-but had been reduced
to fioncupencc-halfpciiny on the day I
came of ^ge. It is true there were a
few debts besides, dint they could hard
ly bo cull. (1 - possessions, seeing that I
never knew■ precisely what they were.
iKbeu niy poor father died, nobody—
not even himself— knew how much he
owed; and it wasn’t worth my while to
gen through the court for anybody’s
benefit, seeing that sevenpeLcc-half-
penny wouldn’t have paid for the mere
whitewash,, not to apeak .of a dividend.
Biri, though I found myself on my
twenty-first biithday better oleaned out
than u hundred tubs of whiteWush
Would have made me, I found no rea
son to complain 1 of my friends. It’s
rubbish, and.I know it, to talk of the
1 >iuli.(Vsr of the world to a
man vli.-u lie’s down> You’ll be neai-
crjlio uiaik if j on’ll talk of the badness
of u maii who’s down to the world.
When a man complains of having been
. CUQ pr^kiuke.d, take my word for it-that
somebody lias for once got what he fle-
su-rvod. \V by, 1 had not been one-aud-
tweutyfor fuur-und-twei.f.y lioius when
. ,1 get note from old Miles Grogan,
whom any only sister, Kate, had lower
ed the Conuers by marrying (for he
was only an attorney,) offering me a
free passkgo to New York and five
pounds over, without a word of being
repaid, and with no conditions except
that I wouldn’t comeback to Dublin
until I’d made three hundred, a year of
my own—which, of course, it wasn’t
likely I’d wunt to do. I took it all the
kinder of .Miles, because he was so fond
of rnonoy that lie wouldn’t oven let poor
Knto‘ help me When I’d now and then
wanted to get out of a scraper, such as
young men will-fail into without par
ticularmult of anybody’s; and once
when I’d. asked him mj'self for aloau, to
be repaid punctually as soon as I’d be
able, lie said that be didn’t in
vestor wiid oafa oil principle—and
wbeKiv'untu bilks of his principle, you
may he sure he means his pocket, and
rtf^® ’pss nor more, But as soon as
• literally hadn’t eightpeuce in the
world, and nothing.left but to enlist or
oJsfftoUve on my wits, fliis man dis
proved forever 111 the cant about the
world’s cold shoulder, and did for liis
■wife’s brotlie r what I don’t believe he’d
have . done for his own son.. So 1
thanked him, _a§,warmly as he’d letine—
for r he was one of those men who, un
der a cold outside, hide their hearts
- ypty.-inucli indeed—and then spent an
hoar alone with Kate, saying good-bye;
i had no sweetheart jhst then, by some
queer-accident or other, so my sister
was the last Irish girl I saw inTreiand.
Poor girl! She cried when I told her
how kind Miles ; had been, and- tried fa
make me take all that she’d got in'her
owd purse, which was nine-and-four-'
pence—I remember it now; bat.I.didn't;
KEEPING WARAI.
APAHXSEINNE’S WINTER TOIEET—AWHULX.T
The Yie Pariseinne had a grimly ter
rible article oirthe art of keeping your
self warm in winter. The article was
addressed to-the typical reader of the
journal, the jolicPariseinne, the spoiled
child of the public opinin, but the coun
sels of perfection to her as to the art qf [ that country. They say that in some
keeping Tierself warm may lie .read with | sections of Texas there has been no rain
since last May, and that sometimes far-
Eitappoiuied Emigrants.
A number of emigrants, who left here
a few months ago hopeful, fall of life and
energy, returned yesterday perfect
wricks of their former selves. They
HOW WATCHES ARE MADE.
TO TEACHER^ ANDiPARENTS
OF HOUSTON CO
les, there was dearly a mysteryabont j geneni} profifc m a sorf of illst woli QD
this mon, young, handsome, with an iM tbe subject of p urisiln i usury . The
iron vnll, and no vices, who would have ] [lirceti6ns are unaer sixty . ]ieads> ftnd
■been an ornament to a crack regiment;
or a duchess’s drawing-room, and yet
they constitute i.n their ensemble a sort
of-^iutefdrfty 'of a mil 1 i o aare woman to
ward bob own preeioiisskin. -‘An hour
before you get up,” says the author,
•‘your maid will light your fire and
then screen it with a silver frame-work,
lined with rose silk, which v.iH temper
the beat and give to the whole room
a sort of rosy morning light that warms
while it illumines.” Then she .will
bring you on a silver plate warmer your
cup of chocolate, hot and foaming, which
yon Will drink from the warmer itself,
munching the while your rasks, served
on a little gold toast rack, kept hot in
its turn by a little live charcoal, sprink
led with Vanilla,' to purfume the air.
After you have taken yoxir chocolate
you will snooze again for a couple of
hours. Then you will put on a desha
bille of pink satin, lined with swan’s
down, enveloping the whole body from
bead to foot. The waistband and the
fastening of the neck of this garment
must be velvet, so as to be warm to the
touch, You may now pass into the
bath room, the atmosphere of which
will be'Icepfr'nt nu 'agreeable temnera-
It will be apparent to any one, win
will examine a Solid Gold Watch; •
that aside from the necessary thickness' I would invite yonr attention
for engraving and polishing, a large j popular School
are perfectly dis gasttd with their expe^- j proportion of the p reeions metal used j tfie^PnbUc SclmM'o^H- , E f !icS r I,:i .
rieDce of WeBte.rn life, their former day j is needed only to stiffen and hold the;^. . c ' ' ~ ou-ion _u..i..
dreams. Their faces
poverty strict en look,
most woeful pictures __ I M . . . . ....
so far as util nr aud beauty are con- j Spellers. Histories and Ge
cerned. Iu James Boss’ Patest Gold j ographies, Spencerian
Watch Cases,, this wastb of preciousl Copy Books, Web-
metat is overcome, and the same solid- j
the
mer s must travc-l twenty miles for wa
ter. All the brooks, streams, springs,
are dried up in certain localities and
evertBing wears a burnt, parched ap-
sters Dictiou-
, , - . aries.
rrr and srp.cxoTH produced at from one- Bryant and Strattons’s Book-Kecpin.
third to one half of the usual cost of! Messrs. Ivisoa, Blukeman. Tavlcr
solid cases. This process is of the. most j Co^ N. Y., Publish in addition to above
simple natiue, as follows; a plate of I ^ Kerl s English
Grammars and Rhet
orics, Dana’s Geologies,
all because he had beeen generous, and
had given up the old grouud to me.
My first thuught had been, now for
Kute and Dublin! My second was to
get hold of a horse, and to gallop like
mad after Paul Andrews,, to bring him
back again into the firm; for I could no
more have kept that luck to mv.self than
I could bnve picket I a pocket. I knew
which way he Lad gone, end one doesn’t
get fur iu the country in three or four
.hours. But.though I lode as much
like mud as the nature of a beast, and
of the ground,, would let me, I couldn’t'
come up with him. He wasn’t at the
new place,'nor anywhere else that I
could hear or find. And though I tried
for days, and was more or less on tke_
L’ok out for mouths after, no news of
Paul Andrews could I hear, I almost
felt like :v thief; but there was no help
for it. I could do nothing but put my
back into things, and work awivv.
I TO BE COsilNOEiJ. I
Agitation Among tho Moonsliinei's.
Occasional reports still' continue to
reach this city through private sources
that all is not quiet, amoug the moon
shiners of North Georgia. The raids of
a few weeks ago and vigorous resist
ance offered them seems to have created
a femwututiou throughout the entire
mouuwin district. A gentleman fro’m
iv.tbiia conuty remarked this morning
that iu Ifis own county, ainl in the
county adjoining on the West, the
pay, aud r. e did find them die off in the j mqqpshiuers were on the lookout.- “A
most spiteful manner you can conceive.
So one day,.said Paul.
■‘2bm, let’s go for diamonds.”
t‘We will,” said I.
During.six months we went for dia
monds. I had my regular luck; that is
to say, it was never quite the worst pos
sible, . I wasn’t robbed or murdered,
either of which would very likely have
happened to me if Yd. found auythiag
worth "robbing me of or murdering me
for* Paul’s luck was worse than mine,
for example, I did find a few trifling
stones, which we shared, B eing partners,
and sb kept body aiid soul togeuier; ! biit
I don’t remember his finding any at all.
■I Began to think he was a downright-
unlucky man; and though a Conner
can’t desert a man of his own accord,
1‘wasn‘t altogether displeased when lie
said to me one night, when* we were
- _ ... . thinking whiskey and water—that is to
like to fake advantage, for I • thought* ’say/1 the whiskey, and he the water,
that being as rfeal a Conner as myself, it ‘‘Tom. old man, this wou’t do.- -We
uas likely enough that she too migfit don’t get on as partners. We've tried
have a debt or too that she wouldn’t feathers, and we’ve tried stone; and I; in company with his two boys.
don’t know which is the worst specula j uifioein silver eel, having fooled around
tion. Let’s dissolve, You stay where! Wil3 oimbly landed, and its
we are, and I’ll go a mile or t wo higher. I coii shuffled off without unucees-
like to tell Miles of, ' The next day, with
three pbuuds in my pocket—for two
gone off somehow dur-
jT sailed.for New York in
Wilson, with on
aiid my word
spent
VJing: for
stranger would not be allowed to ram
ble ut will in those couuties to day,” he
said “if-he could not clear himself of
the suspicion of being counseled v/ith
the revenue service. I have heard that
some of the passes in the tnouutaius
wire constantly guarded, and the dis
tillers seemed determined not to be
surprised.” - It is to be hoped that
there will be no occasion, however, for
further trouble with the mountaineers,
Preseut agitation is quite natnraliy the
result of roeaut raids, and confidence in
their ability' to' resist was inspired in
the moonshiners by their recent suc
cess iu Union county. Prolonged re
sistance,.however, is impossible. They
were violators of the United States iaws,
and so long as those laws exist there
will be a power to enforce them. Be
au ce will iu the end, at least, be as
idle as tiie winds.
—. ~ -djy >' ‘
Pr ison one of the wooded streams of
Maine. A summering papa lay fishiug.-
A rnag-
wftil. The next part of our subject is a
delicate one; but Itoni soil qui Tual y
peuse. It is now time to draw ou stock
ings lined with warm flossy silk, long
and pnrfnmed, and gartered with Rus
sian snides clasped with cat’s eye stones
set in diamonds. The boots are to be
lined with sworn’s down, and trimmed
with Russian sables as well. Our pre
cious product ofhigh civilization is now
in her dressing room, whither we may,
perhaps, be all->wed to follow her with
out offense. This is to be made com
fortable by means of. rdi immense foot-
warmer, some two metres square, which
s to form a kind of second flooring all
about the dressing table. Fhe blinds
may be colored to represent “theav-
d.ent rays of the stin,’’and the padding
to keep oat the draughts is to be tri ru
ined with natural fl iwcrs, This wil
make'the place look, and feel like af
summer bower in the depth of winter.
The maid may now “fumigate fbo nape
of the neck” with a little benzoin, to
make it stipple—f.n exquisite cliavaeter-
istic provision,-for without a supple
ncc-b, how could a French person pos
sible get through the duties of polite
ness for the day?
We must not forget the hands. These
may be kept warm by holding in them
two little vessels of enamel filled with
warm water and shaped like apples^
rather in bad taste in this direction i
tending to remind our Pariseinne of
the frivolity of taste by which her sex
first came to grief. The promised ad
vantage of thi-3 arrangement is that it
gives the hands that attractive rosiness
which warmth alone can impart.’ So
much for this, the beginning of the day,
There are'no direcitpSs for-the middle
of it, as this has no immediate connec
tions with the subject-; but it is easy to
snpply the omission. The Pariseinne
simply continues ‘all these pre
cautions by avoiding, as though it weae
laden with the breath! of pestilonce,
evfcry t-puch of cold air. The rusk that
form her morning meal might be baked
in her drawing room, and the carriage
in which she takes her drive is hermeti
cally closed. -/She may realize winter
by seeing the street-sweepers blowing on
their fiugecs through the windows. It
is bed time, and we are once more in
the hands of our guide. He, however,
stands discreetly in the background un
til his interesting patroness has assum
ed the veslemenL ordinaire.. ' He-then
cannot pick their cotton as it should
be.
Returning emigrants are becoming
numerous.. They come back in eveiy
inauuer, iu wagons, railroad and afoot.
As a rule they wear a woe-bngene'ex
pression, which convinces one that the
land “flowed not in milk andhoLf-j”for
them. The only reason that more do
not return ls that they do not havc.the
means. Their -sad experience is leach
ing them that there is no better climate,
soil and society, under the sun than in
the homes tiny left. The farmers ip
this country are now beginning to find
this out, aud the oftener they Nu-e re
minded of it, the bitter off the\ wil
be —Chattanooga Times.
The Lives of G^eat Men-
of meanness and
pearauce. They report that the cotton ! ifickle composition metal, especially
crop is excellent, never better, but they j adapted to the purpose, his two plates
are so weakened by tho climate, to I of solid gold;soldered one bn each
which they are unaccustomed, that t hey. side. The-three are then passed be
tween polished steel rolors, and the re
sult is a strip of heavy plated compo
sition, from which the cases, backs,
centres, bevels, Ac., are cut and shaped
by suitable dies and formers. The
gold in these cases is sufficiently thick
to admit of all kinds of chasing, engra
ving and enamelling; the engraved ca
ses have been carrrred until worn per
fectly smooth by time and use without
removing the gold.
THIS IS THE ONLY CASE HADE WITH
TWO PLATES OP SOLID GOLD AND WAT.ISAX-
TZD BY SPECIAL CEIvTaTCA'i'n.
For sale by all Jewelers. Ask for Il
lustrated Catalogue, and to see warrant.
&
Bacon lived a life
distress.
Plautus, the Roman comic poet,
turned a mill.
Paul Borgbese had _ fourteen trades,
and yet starved with.ail.
Tasso, the Italian poet, was often dis
tressed for five shillings,
Steele, the humorist, lived a life of
perfect ware fare with bailiffs.
Out-way. the English dramatist, died
prematurely and through hunger,
Chfitierton, the child of genius and
misfort une, destroyed himself at IS
Bentivoglio was refused admittance
into a hospital ho had himself erected.
Savage died in prison, at Bristol',
whore he was confined for the debt of
forty dollars.
The death of Collins was through
neglect, first causiug mental derange
ment.
-3/ihon sold his copyright of “Para
dine Lost” for §75. at three payments,
and finished his life in obscurity.
—
R-ecipo fur Curing Meat,
As the season has arrived when curing
moat is in order, we publish as of old,
our famous recipe for curing beef, pork,
mutton, hams, etc, as follows; To one
gallon of water, take H lbs. of salt
It lbs sugar, 1-i oz. of saltpetre,
li oz potash,
In this ratio the - pickio can be in
creased to any' quantity desired. Let
these be boiled together until all the
dirt from the sugar rises to the top and
is skimmed Off, Then throw it into a
tub to Cool, aud when cold, pour it over
your beef or pork. The meat must be
well covered with pickle aud should not
be put down for at least two days alter
kilting, during which time it should' be
slightly sprinkled with powdered salt’
petie, 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 purities tho pickle
by throwing off the dirt ai ways to b
found in salt and sugar. If this receipt
is strictiy followed, it will require, only
single trial to prove its superiority
oyer the common way, 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.
. AHAG-H of/tb^Ci^'j^Diary, if we may
believe theS^-';lfc^i.sco Neics Letter,
jams as follow;up at 7 a. sc. and
ordered my b’a'.h. •.^nnd'fqa?, gallons
comes forward to recommend a’seoop.d' ’ of vitriol in it, ^fitLpJd'inat rialfe it,
garment—a sort of of Ulster, of white I.Weut to breakfast. -Ttie'NBiilists had
plush, trimmed with ostrich feather's at} plhced two torpedoes o« fhe stairs,. but
neck and wrists—which is to be worn I did not step on them; The coffee
as an overall. The nightcap' of white smelt'so strongly of Prussic acid that I
satin should be trimmed with feathers was afraid to drink it,' Found a scorpi-
of the same bum, and. for additional | on in my left slipper, 1.til luckily shook
- -,—o , . , . , warmth, a little turile dove may be fas-1 it oat before putting it on. Just bc-
Tbere’s| vaeant bit there and if jifejfe?f ^her lias resumen shove the left ear. The varvi fore stepping into tii^'■'’’-'-'•■“f*
turns oat-no better than this has done ! his one of the young- I Uan . ls —
I’ll—I’ll tarn missionary, and see if that si '’ rs - uorieiu:
pays,” ' ' *
& beep Wanted.
I want to buy 300 owe Sheep for
which I will pay a good price. Address
me at Montezuma, Ga.
4w. K S Taylob.
ATTENTION FARMERS!
LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST.
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 the
best farmers that used it this year, 1879.
They all speak well of it and advise yon
o use it. I guarantee it when put up
ml used according to Formula,
Respectfully 1
• Fasquelle’s French Course.
Woodbury’s German Course.
Well’s Scientific Works, White’sln-
dustriai Drawing books, Grav’s Botan
ies, and nearly 300 other Text Books, for
schools and colleges. These books cn
be obtained of the booksellers and lead
ing merchants of Perry, or can bo pur
chased direct of.
ROBERT E. PARK,
General Agent,
Oct. m Macou Ga.
S.H. GATES
Nov. 20—1879—tf.
43 Years Before the Public.
THE GENUINE
DR. C. McLANE’S
CELEBRATED
FOR THE CURE OF-
Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint,
DYSPEPSIA AMD SICX MSADACJLK.
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver.
P AIN in the 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
on the left side; sometimes the pain is
felt under the shoulder blade, and it
frequently extends to the top of the
shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken
for rheumatism in the arm. The
stomach is affected v/ith loss of appe
tite and sickness; the bowels in gen
eral are costive, sometimes alternative
with lax; the head is troubled with
pain, accompanied with a dull, heavy
sensation in the back part ® There is
generally a considerable loss of mem
ory, accompanied with a.painful sen
sation of having left undone some
thing which ought to have been done.
A slight, dry cough is sometimes an
attendant The patient complains of
weariness and debility; he is easily
startled, his feet are cold or burning,
and he complains of a,prickly sensa
tion of the skin; his spirits are low;
and although he is satisfied that exer
cise would be beneficial to. him, yet.
he can scarcely summon up fortitude
enough to try- it, Lin fact, he distrusts
every remedy.. 'Several of the above
symptoms attend the disease, but cases
have occurred where few pf them ex
isted, yet examination of the body,
after death, has shown the liver to
have been extensively deranged.
AGUE AND FEVER.
pR. C. -.JcLane’s Liver Pills, in
cases or Ague and Fever, whto
taken with Quinine, are productive
h mmm
HAWKIRJSVILLE, CA
MOTTO-FEACE AND PLENTY.
THE SCARBOROUGH HOUSE lias recently been
i-fl.ninislietl. Everything new, clean and coroa.rt-
abla. Tabic furnished with the best tho market af-
tords, Servants polite and accommodating. Com
modious sampl-i room ajid special attention paid to
commercial tourists. A hack will meet every train
and convey passengers and baggage io and from the
Hotel gratis.
B. F. A- W. J. BOON,
' Proprietors.
Mns. w; if. Baon-W, ^ f Frask B. Tim.,.,,
Formerly Brown House J (Formerly Lanier Hons d
PEOBRIKTORS.
-NjAiTcQNjAL HqTIL.j
SV2ACQN, - - - GEORGIA.
BATHS FREE OF CHARGE
Gas andsj Waterjthroughout
the!House.
Commodious Rooms Fitted
up with ?Vew Furni
ture, Etc.
?=?
General | Commission Merchants,
and Dealers in
Produce, Provisions and
Staple Groceries,
LSHflu,
CEMENT,,
LATHESAMD
PLASTERING HAIR
CORNER COTTON AVENUE and CHERRY 8T.
MACON, GA.
W P™ soat our car ‘ l to people of
Houston, Slacon and DooJy counties, and
t C m™7''f lir thnilk f U 'F I'-vh-ens-e heretoiore ex-
UB - ask a continuance of the same.
Satisla^ti* 1 1 * CW c ' astuE ‘ or -'’. Guaranteeing to all
IP-flUEUM: SEEDS, .
WHEAT,
.*_ bye,
OATS, AND
BABLE*’
JONES & COOK,
ItACON
FIliST KzlTIONAL
ivraA.ocsr-j', r
Bank of Deposit, 1
W W WKIGLEY,
Cashier.
Ill UHL FRFfGHT
N ENTIR—-V NE1V I F ’ VC 4-
^'crx-ir-Tyr'r’XT^t...
fust ruri-1 'r.^1 ;v , sale z.i Vo
BUY AT
In an adventurous life we get useu t->
siidden and eternal partings from our
closest friends, a nd take them easy.
He's mit&iug believ^ ihat he’s alive!”
' ' iceoiApiVii-a
n: HTj-'drcds of
lore stepping into toe carnage to go for
the spasmodic SSL of i £l% th V . Din S ,h ' ]ve > i6 was iuf ? ^
the striped eef, easled out «aseitedly: j v fi S fajLa.iiv" rfLivF J f“» ‘ and th^horaes tk s most happy results. No better
“Look, father! Look at the beoil 1 dllt *?* ^ T °^ A cathartic can be used, preparatory to,
mile.) so as not to check the circulation, j Wh of hermetically sealed American or after taking Quinine. We would
| The ben Is to be heated by the fumes of j c snued goods. They can’t fool raej advise 'all who are afflicted with this
Y vys-Tox, Dabito, was shaken bv an ! and vial-ris. j there. Found a poisoned dagger in my ; disease to give them a fair trial
sioned waraangDan. - “Bono;’ he «>.-/« • din^p- -f a- - «. n .i n-ifl
ST infernal rambling-'. . . - 1 . V ; i “ iacer *7* ,-n.. n,.u
. „-nt» • i ’^“chismn^-ana the word has alt 1 :;e; scbcnnowonsfci tasSo"very dish.
a I " U . ~Uy' “U : ~l „ 11 'solemnity oi a blessing—“enfin, you ! died Before the .--rain wi..< -'i
n, ana. awaxmea by ft T- rort Sally reports a ^ a r:;;k iust-nafo-r- °nto. r, r . i- '
when'i f-
' '• to
: ' - : :
eh® ' nates m that c