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7orrs-ppo"dezcorooixisaEixii-. te-ns of crrr^s? ^
ecu—-*e» ^zzsity tda, is • -=.: -«. aiy at =iieel:ram ai^
u _r- * liuuiic-i .;i.:; . - -- -—n^?-- oi
Hn««.JYnrgNAi. will b>» alwv~ .- tu 3*fri-*di
CEESDEO .ir-T JiCfcjttt1. L.«* -»ei»
sireul osz he 03 : «-«?r c _• 11121x7 - ^ f - tBMOOB e s.
titesditossse^l: ’.Lit: . v. ui ott'-m < pets s
TAiLSTMEfiA! iUft?
We aw afew days ago tfe foL- T5» Average Length of Life Be-
lowing- letter ip the hanrkrof Capt.j creismg—Sofc Pestilesee—
Mar&t of our mwS, "and by ont jg^ >]
; - - own Fault.
Mobzux Cooxitts asu nlon-
EE3" Ikvistt nave ferougriif ifc
: on. It comes upon ua nna-
| wares, t The patients have’
! pains about the chrat and ales,
I and sometimes in the baoki
I They feel dull and sleepy; the
I month has a bad taste, especi
ally in the morning; A sort
at sticky slime collects about
the teeth. The appetite is poori
There is a feeling like a heavy-
load on the stomach: sometimes
a faint, all-gone sensation .at
the pit of the stomach which
food does not satisfy: The
eyes are sunken, the handf
and feet become cold and feel
damtny. - After a while a
cough sets in, at first dry, bat
after a few months it is at
tended with a greenish colored
expectoration: The - patient
feels tiled all the while, and
sleep does not seen to afford
any rest After a time he be*
comes nervous, irritable and
gloomy;, and has ev3._forebod
ings. There is a giddiness, a
sort of whirling sensation in
the head when rising op sud
denly. -The bowels become
costive; • the skin, is dry and
hotai tones; the blood becomes
thick and stagnant; the whites
of the eyes become tinged with
tallow; the kidney secretions
becomes scanty and high col-1
C M depositing a seuimeni;
after standing. There is fre- ;
• uently a spitting np of the *
IjuJ, sometimes, with a sour
taste and sometimes with a
sweethh taste; this is fre-
onently attended with palpi-
tiirion or the heart and A c 1l-'
marie symptoms; the vision T e-
comes impaired, with spots he
ir possible. Bnt the inconven-i f cre tire eyes; there isafeel-
iences or an impecunions condi- [jjcr of great prostration amf
tion are a great incentive to action weakness. All of these srmn-
and the .world otS its greatest ] toms are in turn present It
blessing to that unenviable fete, fj thought that nearly one-hmf
implied, in the want of money. . 0 -£ OTII . population has this dis-
The number of those who love esse insomeof its vaiiediorms.
labor tor its own sake is extremely thaker Extract-of Boots (Sei-
small. and a powerful lever is qrdfe Svnip) changes the fer-
needed to move tiie masses to ients ofthe Digestive organs so
healthy action. as to convert the food we eat huo
rm. t . , T a form that will give nourish-
Ine time required tor a tele- , „ iT - >--p -i h
t- - , , * j_, ment tsf tiie feeble boav, ai d
graphic signal to pass around tne , . ... - - : J
,r - ... T. . . , frooa health is the consequence,
earth is the subject or an iqmrv to., p. f «• - - .A -
,, c - ;* . A. _uie enact of-this rsneev is
the Scientific American. It states , nrn-
, i-g. T - , -;mniv marvelous. = MJiions
1 ”” n ^ I 7f *P U "»?,: '-ixt nrilliJna- of bottles lire
of the lemrfh eons! to the mrcnm- , - , + , T . ■ .
... A*., x ... . i.^nsoid m this country, and
terence or the mf*ai.^rom- one , . , .. £ J r-.
■eoeood vonltlx'uShA Oeeon.: tnetestnmmalB m fi.rerof.ts.
oables wool! consiileratjly^ n£.. - ^ . . powsts^ tie over
ereasa Mrifl eroi to sevesg! aeondi* Hiniareds ot.. so-;
... a .. . called diseases tmdgr various
The Dismal Swamp of Yirgmi.-i names are the result of indi-
m no tejiger used as a shelter for yestion, and when, this one
runawny negn-jes. Because the ns- ^rouble is removed the other
gibes no longer have to run away,diseases vanish, for they are
bnt it is calculated that it is toe, but gymptom3 * df : the leaf
hiding place of no less %an ICC malady:
white men who. have good, Testimomaigffom thousands
reasons tor wanting to retire to of people speaking highly of
private life tor a spell A grand Ss curative properties propel
hunt to run them; out is contem this beyond a doubt Sold by.
j pLitedl (huggisis.
f Dr. tsamuel B. WarrI, of Albany.'
J who is one of Fresklenf Gleve- " | ■ iffikiiXb
j LimCs most ndvnate fiends, -is; i
j quoted as havn^ sani that the j ^rUsr
1 'ar and not all danyer-'ns. The Trrr
j president suffered ton m such .v-
j tacks as the present cna wii°jf «n ^
t the north womls with the doctor: A
and there are new lessons and few tribes of caimfBalS Iiv«£ in; shown in; the statistics. A report
new teachers coming. Books we Africa, but there was until recent- from the Sew "Fork postoffice
innst have. To learn we must Iv no reason to believe that the ■ akme shows that last year there
read. But; we may read, about frtfoew of anthropophagi are mrl were distributed, more than 6C.-
boats, and yet we can never leam merous and that rarninhalTara is. 000,008 letters through the bates,
to. sail a: boat till we take the practiced in quite a large part of besides 120,000,€00 distrihuted by
tiller in our hand and trim the sail that continent The iiS^t discov-! carriers, and still 50,000,000 addi-
before the breeze. The book will ery jg ttie rewnlt of evplnratinna ir»' tiimaT postal cards.rj More than
help wonderfully in telling the the Songo basin,..where it is now; 100,900,000 postage stamps, near-
name of things in the Boat, and, if believed cannibals are more nu-i ly *2&,060,000 stamped envelopes,
we have read about sailing, we merous than in any other part of, and nearly 42,000.000 postal cards
shall more quickly learn to sail:; world. There.are some- striking-, were sold during tiie year. The :
but we certainly never shall leam differences tvith re^nl to prac- total weight of mails handled ini
nntil ive are m a real Boat T?e tiee among the various tribes. ; that o£Ee postoifice was over 386,-j
can read ih 4 book how to turn a ; When Lieutenants Bund and; 000 pounds.
heel in knitting, and may "commit Tappenboek were traveling be-; Tn commenting nprm this fact;
to memory whole rales about tween the Wambu and Elwilu;the "World says: “It ‘would be a;
“throwing off two and purl four,” j Bivers there came along the gen-. carious development if we could
and all the rest: yet where is the tie and timid tribe of tiie Pambal- discover the amount of joy and!
la-, who eonfessed that they were | sorrow, of pleasure and pain, eon- ]
man-eaters on a small scale. “It. veyed in this enormous corres- ‘
is true,” they said, “that we eat j pondence. Howmany hearts were j
; of Wisconsin, several years ago, >
| and recently discussed by him in j
; a speech in.Qiissgm contains some :
] features which are interesting;
Briefly stated, “household suf- i
4 frage” allows to every married cit-
| izen two votes, one tor himself and j
I one for.his household. In the first i
! place the plan pnte a premium on j
marriage. At the present day ;
i many influences are at wort: far \
i from friendly to the perpetuation \
; ofthe matrimonial contract. The j
| socialistic element openly aims at;
j the substitution for marriage of a j
| promiscuous- relation of the sexes j
; and the destruction of the family'
| and domestic civilizing influences.
; In addition the individual mind is
i prone to selfish indulgence, impa-
‘ tient of restraint and disinclined
to assume the anxieties of the fam
ily compact which is. therefore,
declining in favor. The single
many stake in tiie country is lim
ited to those outward circum
stances which personally concern
himself Tilt man of family lives
less for himself than for those
whose welfare depends upon Mm,
and his stake in the country ex
tends to the effect of its prosperi
ty or misfortune upon the house
hold of whose interests he is the
custodian. In the words of Sena
tor Doolittle, “any head of a fami
ly, however StonBle, desires such
a police and such a government
that his wife and children may at
anytime, day or night, walk the
streets with safety. It is with him
a constant, and ever present anx
iety to have it so, while the
man without a. family thinks
and cares little for a police force
so Tong as he iskSs. care of him
self and has no one else depend
ent upon Mm.” . Household suf
frage, then, simply means that the
nation is a joint stock concern in
which every stockholder’s voting
influence should be in proportion
to his investment. The seheme is
a very simple one and easy to be
understood. It is only a substitu
tion of household for manheoed
suffrage. It is not even a substi
tution. for manhood suffrage is
unchanged, while to the family is
extended the franchise.
Bsauttok, Miss., 9th Jam, 1887.;
j Capt. J. H. TVfAirrnT—My Dear;
| Sir: I know not by what strange;
i chanee vour Tetter has remHinfHl;
| so tong unacknowledged. It, cer-i
! tainly was not caused by any want;
| of appreciation of ite very gratify-;
ing expressions, for wMch at tills i
late day, affSpt sincere thankri j
The cane von sent me is'doubly!
valuable by irs associations and the ■
care you took to select ifcOThongh j
Sonnbcted with a sad misadventure j
j which has : been the scheme of j
! many scandalous falsehood#? 3D
cannot remember as other than a I
crowning misfortune* without:
. Tnis nowder never varies. A mar re! of puriia
length and “^Holesomeness- More ecmipraicx
than theordi: ar* kinds, and caimoi be so.d h.
competition with *he multitude ot lew test, thort-'
weight, alnm and piioephate pourdcre- hold oni;
jgcana- Boxaz. Baking Povtdo: Co . IOC Wall
ett-eet, S. r.
j haying the needles in her Bands? ;
; This is the idea of the new
j school—to use the hands as well;
as the eyes. Boys and girls who
I go to the ordinary schools, where'
■ ouly books are used, will graduate;
knowing a greet aea!; but a ' boy i
who goes to one of these new J
schools, where, besides the books,
there are pencils and tools, work
benches as well as writi ng books,
will know more. The ofehet boys
and girlsjray forget inbre than
half they read, but he will remem
ber everything he learned at the
drawing-table or the work bench
as tong as Ite lives. He will also
remember more of that which he
reads, because Ms work his hands
do helps him to understand what
he reads.
I remember long ago a tear-
stained book of weights and meas
ures and a teacher’s impatience
with a stupid child who eomd not
master the “tables.” And I have
seen a school where the tables
were written on the blackboards—
thus: “two pints make one quart,”
and on a stand in the school-room
were a tin pint measure and a tin
quart measure and a box of_ dry
sand. Every happy youngster
had a chance to fill that pint meas-
■J. B. McNIECE,
A. B. SMALL
MACON
Respectfully solicits the patron
age of his friends in Houston
county.
Dec. 30—tf.
headquarters;
fel CkeTry Street,
MACG1M. G-EGBGIA-
We recently purchased in the northern
and eastern markets the largest stock of
Optfirng ever brought to this city, and
they are marked to sell at .Living prices.
AAftrateSassTBasiaess Snii, fAHIWooi, $8.
We c«hi snit the boys and Children ex
actly, and onr stock of Gents’ Furnishing
Goo’ods challenges the admiration of alL
We sell the celebrated
DIAMOND SHIRT,
and will make shirts to order, guarantee
ing a perfect lit. Onr stoek of Safe ean—
Braces all the newest styles. Call on us.
We know we can snit you.
to one quart of sand; and with
merry smiles those six-year-old,
philosophers learned the tables of
measures: and they never forget
them. This is, in brief, what is
meant by iuduktrial education.
To learii by using the hands, to
study from tilings as well as books.
This is the new schooL These
tiie new lessons: The children
who ean sew and. design, or draw,
or carve wood, oi* do joinery wort,
or cast metals, or work in day and
brass, are best educated because j
they use ther hands as well as
their eyes and their brains. Ton'
may say that in such schools all the
boys will become mechanics and.
all the girls dressma kers. Some
may, many may not; and yet what
ever they do, he it_ preaching!
keeping's store or singing in con
certs, they will do their work bet-
tm: than those who Snly read, in
books.
Fora chret for $2:1 we -nUprint a ten-linea<i-
Ternsetncnt in One MUUon issues of leading Amai-
Sewspapers* Titis is ai tiie. rate o* only one—
a«h or* cc> : a line. rorrgOOO rireniationi Tne ad-
rwtiKner.: wiilbe placed before One Mnhon aif-
fneat newBcaner puxeinisers;—or Ere WOlior
Baaders. Xen iines -VIa aecanimonate aijont t.-
words. AddresB wifit copy of r dy; and diocfc. or
«ud 30certs for Boot of ITS pages. GEOIMIE JP-
•Jbdge Daniels, ; of New Tort.
iea ° r has adminisiererl a stinging re
buke to the gang erf speculators
who went into a p-ooL to put up the
., price-of lard. After tiie pool had
>Id.th& . ... .. ,, .... . „
performed, its work tne thieves felt
out among themselves, and. one
hat a sued, the other to recover Ms share
tern ing of the profits. Judge Daniels de-
“Itis l dined to make tiie law a sMeld for
Jod to that kind of gambling; and held:
f Em- that “combinations to Beep articles
- called of food or other necessities off the
tizzard market; with the yiew of gaining a
days higher prire fof ft, are unlawful
minis- conspiracies punishable as a cr-fme
Le out- Where suceessfully carried out;
llhme- the efeet wodBf be to StEpose an.
among ! addrnnnai. burden on the public-
HISTOEICAFE L13FIBEIG CO.