The central Georgian. (Sandersville, Ga.) 1847-1874, July 27, 1852, Image 1

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4 BY S. B. GRAFTON. SANDERSYILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1852. VOL. VI—NO; THE CENTRA!. GEORGIAN 18 PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY MORNING,' TERMS : Jfpaid strictly in advance, per year, $1 50 If not paid at the time of subscribing, $2 00 terms will be strictly adhered TO, 'WITHOUT RESPECT TO PERSONS, AND ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS WILL BE REQUIRED TO BE SET TLED UP EVERY YEAR. Advertise i ents not exceeding twel re lines, ^jU inserted &t one dollar lor the first in sertion, ana fifty cents for each continuance. Advertisements not having the number of in sertions specified, will be published until for bid. Sales of Land and Negroes by Executors, Administrators and Guardians, are required by law to bo advertised in a public gazette forty days previous to the day of sale. The sale of Personal Property must be ad vertised in like manner at least ten days. Notice to Debtors and Creditors of an es tate nust be published forty days. Notice that application will be made to*the Court of ordinary for leave to sell Land and Negroes, must be published weekly for two months. Citations for letters of administration, must be published thirty days—for dismission from administration, monthly for six months— for dis mission from Guardianship, forty days. Rules for foreclosure of Mortgage must be published monthly for four months—for estab lishing lost papers, for the full space of three months—for compelling titles from Executors or Administrators, where a bond has been giv en by the deceased, the full space of 3 months. Publications will always be continued ac cording to these, the legal requirements, unless otherwise ordered. All letters on business must be vost-paid lowing reasons, and thus brings in the ex tract of which we write.—Ed. Geo. POETRY. [for THE CENTRAL GEORGIAN.] FARB-WEiL. How sweet thy face, how bright thine eves. When first I gazed on thee, My heart how sad, it heaved with sighs, If e’er by chance they turned on me. Thv voice is sweet, thy form ,s fair, With rosy cheeks and silken hair; Those sparkling eyes with fringes deep The depth of purest love would speak. Farewell C , fare thee well, Indeed I’ve loved thee long too well. Ah, why forget the tender vow ? The vow you made to be, Or why coil back with proud disdain, That neck of spotless snow from me. Too much for me, thou hast forgot, The promise made ’neath yon oak tree, That we should live in a lovely cot Where strays the lone sweet Oconee. Farewell C fare thee well, Indeed I’ve loved thee long too well. As shines the moon on the hoary oak, Where oft our love and fears we spoke, I look for the star that I likened to thee, But it vanished, alas ! like thou from me, As nestle the leaves to the sighing breeze, I kneel where we pray’d with words like these «We ask for a lowly, an humble lot That we both may live in a lovely cot-” Pa cwell C , fare thee well, Indeed I’ve loved thee long too well. J. L. H. A Song for the I.adies. The glorious day is dawning, girls, When women shall be free; When gowns and bonnets, capes & shawls, No longer we shall see ! Miss Webber, bless her heart, sweet girls! Has putj$l& scheme on foot; She leads iptrump of male attire, Ad we must follow suit. We’ll dress in real “bifucate,” girls, With glossy beaver hats, And don the most bewitching coats, And Brummel tied cravats; We’ll wear superb gilt buttons, girls, Upon our vests of buff, Bright extra, rich, plain, treble gilt, Flat surface !—that’s enough! Oh! won’t we iook bewitching, girls, When we’re so trimly drest ? Nor mortal man can brave our charms, Though he may strive his best, Be-whiskered folks may envy, girls, Our many garbs and airs; But let them fret until they tire— - Poor fellows ! no one cares. Perhaps a few may “cut” us, girls, And lay us ou the shelves ; But what of that ? .we’ll crook our arms And act the Beaux ourselves! And if they wont say marry, girls, We’ll call them no gallants ? But.come what will—float, sink or swim; We’ll never yield our pants. POLITICAL. A REMARKABLE PROPHESY. We notice in a speech delivered, by the Hon. Wm. H. Seward, in the U. S. Senate in favor of an appropriation for the Collins’ Line'of Steamers, the following remarkable prophesy, by Mr. Burke, then a member of the British Parliament. It is so singularly accurate that we extract it. Such predictions, made some 75 or 80 years since, do seem incredible to those of us who have witnessed their fulfillment, but they are vouched for by this speaker, and we have no deubt of the correctness of the extract. Mr. S. is speaking of the necessity of maintaining this line of steamers, and if they are abandoned, it must be for the fol- If this enterprise must be abandoned, it must be for one of two reasons namely : either because— » 1. It was erroneously conceived ; or be cause, 2. It has been rendered unnecessary, unwise, or^ impracticable, by subseyuent e- vents and circumstances. 1. Was it erroneously conceived ? To determine this question, we need to aseena some high eminence of time, from which we can look back along the past, and pierce as far as allowed to human vision, through the clouds and darkness that rest upon the future. Come, then, Senators, and sup pose that you stand with me in the galler ies of St. Stephen’s Chappel, on a day so long gone by as the 22d of March, 1775. A mighty debate has been going on here in this august Legislature of the British Empire. Insurrection against commercial restriction has broken out in the distant American colonies; a seditious assembly in Philadelphia has organized it; and a brave, patient, unimpassioned, and not un- trier, soldier of Virginia, lies, with hastily- gathered and irregular levies, on the heights of Dorchester, waiting the coming out of the British army from Boston. The question whether Great Britain shall strike or concede and conciliate, has just been de bated and decided. Concession has been denied. A silence, brief but intense, is bro ken by the often fierce and violent, but now measured and solemn, utterance of Burke : “My counsel has been rejected. You have determined to trample upon and extin guish a people who have, in the course of a single life, added to England as much as she had acquired by a progressive increase of improvement, brought on, by varieties of civilizing conquests and civilizing settle ments, in a series of seventeen hundred years. A vision has passed before my eyes; the spirit of prophecy is upon me. Listen, now, to a revelation of the consequences which shall follow your maddened decision Hencefo rth there shall be division, separ ation and eternal conflict in alternating war and peace between you aud the child you have oppressed, which has inherited all your indomitable love of liberty and ail your insatiable passion for power. Though still in the gristle, and not yet hardened in to the bone of manhood, America will with in the short period of sixteen months, cast off your domition and defy your utmost persecution. Perfecting the institutions you have not yet suffered to ripen, she will establish a republic, the first confederate representative commonwealth, which shall in time become the admiration and envy of the world. France, the hereditary rival whom, only twenty years ago, with the aid of your own colonies, you despoiled of her North American possessions, though they had been strentheued by the genius of Rich elieu, will take sweet revenge in aiding the emancipation of those very colonies, and thus dismembering your empire. You will strike her in vain with one hand, while you stretch forth the other to reduce your colonies* with equal discomfiture. And you, even you, most infatuated yet most Joyal Prince, will within eight years sign a treaty of peace with the royal Bourbon, and of independence with republican America ! With fraud, corruption, fire and sword, you will compensate England with conquests in the East, and within half a century they will surround the world, and the British flag shall wave over provinces covering five millions of square miles, and containing one- sixth of the inhabitants of the globe. Nor shall you lose your retaliation upon your ancient enemy; for she, in the mean time, imbibing and intoxicated by the spirit of revolution in her American affiliation shall overthrow all authority, human and divine, and exhausting herself by twenty-five years of carnage and disolation throughout continental Europe, shall at last succumb to your victorious arms, and relapse, after ineffectual struggles, into the embraces of an inglorious military despotism. Yet and fleet packet-ships, departing and arri ving with exact punctuality; but the Am ericans quickly, borrowing the device, and improving on your skill, will reconquer their commerce. You will then rouse all the enterprise of your merchants, and all the spirit of your Government, and wrest ing the new and mighty power of steam from the hands of your inveterate rival, will apply it to ocean navigation, and lay ing hold of the commercial and social cor respoudence between the two continents, in creasing as the nations rise to higher civili zation and come into more close and inti mate relations, as the basis of postal reve nue, you will thus restore your lost monop oly on the Atlantic, and enjoy it unmoles ted through a period of ten years. During that season of triumph, you will mature and perfect all the arrangements for exten ding this mighty device of power and reve nue, so as to connect every island of the seas and every part of every continent, jyith your capital. But just at that moment your emulous rival will appear with steam ships still more capacious, buoyant, and fleet, than your] own, in your harbors, and at once subverting your atlantic monopoly, will give earnest of her vigorous renewal of the endless contest for supremacy of all the seas. When you think her expelled from* the ocean, her flag will be seen in your ports covering her charities contributed to relieve your population, stricken by famine; and while you stand hesitating whether to de clare between republicanism and absolute power in continental Europe, her ambassa dors will be seen waiting on every battle field to salute the triumphs of liberty ; and when that cause shall be overthrown, the same constant flag shall be seen even in the Straits of the Dardanelles, receiving with ovations due to conquerors the temporarily overthrown champions of freedom. Look towards Africa, there you see American col onies lifting her up from her long night of barbarism into the broad light of liberty and civilization. Look to the East you see American missionaries bringing the people of the Sandwich Islands into the family of nations, and American armament peaceful ly seeking yet firmly demanding the rights of humanity in Japan. Look to the Equa tor, there are American engineers opening passages by canals and railroads across the isthmus which divides the two oceans. And last of all, look Northward, and you behold American sailors penetrating the continent of ice in search of your own dar ing and lost navigators.” MISCELLANEO US. notwithstanding all these unsurpassed con quests and triumphs, shall you enjoy no certain or complete dominion. For on the other hand, wild beasts and savage men and uncouth manners shall all disappear on the American continent; and thefthree millions whom you now despise, gathering to themselves increase from every European Tiie Great Methodist Church Case, North vs. South. The arguments in this important case for several days past has been tried before the U. S. Court in Columbus, Ohio, closed on Friday last, and the decision of the Court has been reserved until the October term Mr. Corwin, Judge LaDe, Mr. Ewing, Mr. Stansbury, aud J udge Brien of Tennessee, were engaged in the case. A great num ber of the leading members of the Metho dist Church were aiso there. The testimony was very voluminous. The following are the points which were re lied upon by the complainants in behalf of the Church south; “1. Prior to 1844, the Methodist Epis copal Church in the United States was one church in organization as well as doctrine. “2. At the present time there is no such Church, de facto, as to unity of organization as existed in 1844. “3. This dissolution, as to the unity of organization, not only exists de facto but de jure, by a valid division of the original body into two parts, authorized by compe tent authority iu the plan of 1844. “4. The Book Concern is a charitable ! fund the capital being devoted to the spread of religious books, and the piofits to sup port of travelling preachers and their fami lies. “5. This fund founded by travelling preachers never belonged to the church in absolute right, but was simply intrusted to its management. “6. Before the^di vision beneficiares of this fund were scattered over the territory, and were legally entitled to its dividends. “7. The lawful division of the church did not destroy this charity, or affect the right A Villainous Affair. The following extract from a gentleman in Laurens county, will show bow negroes are enticed away frpm their masters, and taught viliany, by white men residing a- mong us. We think such men should be exposed:—Federal Union. Dear Sir: I am pained to inform you that it is unnecessary to continue the advertise ment of my man Bob any longer. He made his way to Oglethorpe bv the direction of one of my good neighbors, to a friend of his to get a pass to Ohio, but the gentleman there to whom he was sent, suspected him of being runaway and took him up. The boy pretended to want to see a man on the opposite side of the river, and in crossing over he jumped out of the flat and drown ed himself in shallow water. He had some papers in his pocket that showed him to be from my neighborhood. I went to see him aud found him to be my boy. The scar on his neck I spoke of was made by himself about three months ago ,in attempting to cut his throat. The crime for which I in tended to flog him was, for stealing money from my drawer, to the amount of §120. He was a smart negro a very fine smith, has been raised in the family, and was put up to act the rascal by one or two unprin cipled scoundrels, and sent to Oglethorpe, according to his own statement, by one of my neighbors to get a pass to Ohio. If such men were in the Penitentiary it would be better for black and white, for their influ ence among negroes is corrupting and dan gerous. Stroke of the Sun.—Tersons whose avo cations necessarily expose them to the sun cannot be too carefu$ of themselves. It is very evident that all men cannot carry um brellas, and perhaps there may be some val ue in a suggestion which has been commu nicated to the editor of the Alexander (Va.) Gazette’ The writer says ;—“In conversa tion with the lady of one of our Commo dores who has lately been stationed at Pen sacola, where the officers and men were much exposed to the heat of a tropical sun, she told me that they adopted a very sim ple mode of protection by wearing high crown hats in the inside cf which they placed a quantity of raw wet cotton, which completely warded off the intense heat. At this season, when we hear daily of deaths caused by coup-de soleil—would it not be well to recommend our omnibus drivers, and all mechanics and laborers, who are so much exposed, to try the experiment ?” nation lseives increase giu cvciv , * «• . , - e and island, will, within seventy-five I of beneficiares, but only required a change of years, spread themselves over field and forest, prairie and mountain, until, in your way to your provinces in the Bahamas, they shall meet you on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico, and on your return from the Eastern Indies they will salute you from the Eastern coast of the Pacific ocean. In the meantime with genius developed by the influence of freedom, and with vigor called forth and disciplined in the subjuga tion of the forest and trained afid perfected in the mysteries of ship-building and navi gation, by the hardy exercise of the whale fisheries under either pole, they will, in all j European conflicts, with keen sagacity, as sume the relation of neutrals, and thus the prize of Atlantic commerce dropped in to their hands by fierce belligerents. In the midst of your studies and experiments iu hydraulics, steam, and electricity, they will seize the unpracticed and even incom plete inventions, and cover their rivers with steamboats, and connect and bind together management. “8. After the division, each church be came the proper manager of so much of the funds as belonged to the beneficiary within its jurisdiction. “9. The number of traveling preachers in 1844 is the proper basis upon which to make a division of this fund. “10. That the refusal of the Northern Church to agree to an amicable division of this fund makes a case for a Court of Equi ty. “11. The division of the Church was not a constitutional act, the beneficiaries of the Church South have not, therefore, forfeited their right to this charity. “12. The bill presents the proper parties and a proper cause for the interference of this court, and it can order to the due ad ministration of this charity, whether the di vision was constitutional or not.” “Cry Here.”—A minister of the gospel, not a thousand miles from Cincinnati, who is remarkable for. shedding tears in the pa thetic part of his discurses, accepted an invi- tiop to occupy the pulpit of a neighboring pastor on a given Sabbath. As he was on bis way to fill the appointment, with the sermon in his pocket, all neatly written out for the occasion, by some accident he lost his document ou the highway. A person passing shortly after found the document, and of course took it home to peruse.—Ou reading it, he found on several of the pages these words, enclosed in brackets [cry here.'] The artificial and artistic character of our modern sermons has often been the subject cf criticism and censure, but this is the first instance we have ever known of a preacher noting in the body of a discourse (for fear he might forget it,) when the matter of his discourse needed to be accompanied with tears to make it effective. A pretty good commentary this, on the devotional preach ing of our day.—Temperance Organ. The Battle of tbe Bees* A curious circumstance occurred a few days back at Cuilleville, Eurenet Loire. A small farmer had in a field about 25G bee hives, containing a vast number Qf bees. He sent a man with a cart, dravTn by five horses, to remove some earth from the wall near which the hives were placed. The carter having occasion to go to the farm-house, tied the horses to a tree. Almost immediately after, a multitude 'of l>ees, either iiritated at the shaking of their hives or by the removal of the earth from their wall, or excited by the electricity with which the atmosphere happened to be charged, issued from their hives, as if in obedience to a given signal, and with great fury attacked the horses. In an instant the poor animals were entirely covered with bees from bead to foot; even their nostrils were filled with them. When tbe carter returned he found one of the hor ses lying dead on the ground, and the oth ers rolling about furiously. His cries at tracted several persons; one of them attemp ted to drive away the bees, but they attack ed him, and he had to plunge into the pond, and even to‘place his head under the wa ter for a few seconds, in order to escape from then/. The cure of Guilleville also attemp ted to approach the horses, but he, too, was put to flight by the enraged insects. At length, two fire-engines were sent for, and by pumping on the bees, a great number were killed on the horses or put to flight. The horses, however, were so much injur ed, that they died in an hour. Tbe value of the bees destroyed was"15.00f., and of the horses 2500f. A few days before, bees from the same hives killed 17 goslings.—Galig-, nani's Messenger. Settling a Surgeon.—The following dia logue takes place betwixt Micky Free and his master, O’Malley, where the latter first returned to consciousness after weeks of fe ver, brought on by a wound in the arm. “By the rock of Cashel, he’s cured! he’s cured! the fever’s over! Oh, Master darling! and you ain’t mad afther all.” “Mad! no faith; but I shrewdly suspect you must be.” “Oh, devil a taste! but spake to me, hon ey—spake to me, acushly.” “Where am I? whose house is this? What do you mean by that disguise—that beard “Whisht, I’ll tell you all, av you have patience; but are you cured? tell me that first; sure they were going to cut the arm off you, till you got out of bed, and with your pis tols sent them'flying, one out of the window, and the other down stairs; and I bate the little chap with the saw myself till he couldn't know himself in the glass." Five Parties in. the Fkld.-—A Washing ton letter in the New York Times says:-- There are now five ; parties in the field—- tbe Whig, Democratic,.:Native, Free-Soi! and abolition parties, are each maturing their organization, or have already com pleted it. It is not probable that Mr. Web ster will accept the Native nomination, but if lie decline it, another will be made, and a considerable number of votes may be at tracted to that ticket. There will, be a se cession of the Abolitionists from the Free Soilers, proper. Gerrit Smith, Fred Doug lass, or Lloyd Garrison, will receive the nomination of the former. Senator Chase will be nominated by the Pittsburg Con vention, and will poll about 100,000 votes, chiefly Democratic. Mr. Hall has declined out of personal regard for Gen. Pierce. A Temperance Anecdote.—Old Mrs. N. was a very useful and excellent lady, who had done the village of B——a vast service in the way of washing, Ac. Many of the young sparks of the village owed to their dickies and shirt-collars, as they came from her tub, much of their success in love affairs. At the close of a day’s hard service* the la dy of the house—good hearted woman!— mixed up a cup of warm toddy for her wash woman. The latter took a hearty swallow, and then turned up her nose in evident die- gust. “Poor dear woman!” exclaimed the lady; “you don’t like rum, do you? Well, I hope you Will excuse me—I didn’t know you was a temperance woman—most washerwomen ain’t.” “Don’t like rum!” ejaculated mother N.; “I don’t like to drink a well of hot water to get a thimbleful of it!” my A Short Story, but a True One.—A short time after the California fever broke out, a young gentleman of this city, of res pectable connections, started for the laud of golden promise. Some two years elapsed after his departure, and nothing was heard of him. At the expiration of that time he suddenly returned with a “pocket full of rocks,” receiving the congratulations of his friends. A few wee'ks spent here, and he again left very mysteriously—not even in timating to his friends his intentions. His conduct, and other circumstances, excited suspicion in the minds of many; but the matter had almost been forgotten, when the arrival of two brothers from Mississippi— charging him with robbery and a murder of a brother—was announced. Our story is short. The brothers followed him to Cana da; thence through the Eastern States, and finally to Texas—where he was arrested, condemned and hung by an infuriated party. —Dayton City Item. A Wife in Trouble.—“Pray tell me, dear, what is the cause of those tears?” “Ob, what a disgrace!” “What disgrace?” “Why, I have opened one of your letters, supposing it was addressed to myself. Cer tainly it looks more like Mrs. than Mr.” “Is that, all? What harm can there be in a wife’s opening her husband’s letters?” “No harm in itself. Contents! Such a disgrace!” “What! has any one dared to write me a letter unfit to be read by my wife?” “Oh, no. It is couched in the most chaste language. But the contents.” Here the wife buried her face in her handkerchief and commenced sobbing aloud when the husband eagerly caught up the letter aud commenced reading the epistle that had been the means of nearly breaking the wife’s heart. It was a bill from sprin ter for nine years' subscription. £3T Mr. Clay had a favorite dog which followed his master from his home in Ken tucky, to Washington. After the deafh of the lamented patriot, his faithful canine friend kept close to his body. On Friday, by some accident, the poor dog was left be hind, chained up at the American Hotel in Philadelphia. Daring the night be was very fretful and uneasy. With the instinct of his race he seemed conscious that the body of his beloved master had departed without him. Some of the friends of the departed statesman should forward the faith ful dog to his home.—Albany Register. The master when alive did not so forget his faithful dog. Insensibility to Daily Mercies.—As tbe Dead Sea drinks in the River Jordan and is never the sweeter, and the ocean all other rivers and is never the fresher, so we are apt to receive daily mercies fiom God arid still remain insensible of them—unthankful for them. God’s mercies to us-are like the dew on the ground; our thanks to Him, like tbe dew on the fleece. We are greedy to get mercy, tenacious to hold it, but unthank ful in the acknowledging or right using of it. The rain comes down from Heaven in show ers; it goes up but in mists.—Bishop Rey nolds. Few Method of Cooking u Raw Ones."- “Catch a young gentleman and lady in the usual way. Let the gentleman be raw, and the young lady tender. Set the gentleman at the dinner table, put iu a good quantity of wine, and while he is soaking, stick in a word or two, now and then, about Miss this will help to make him boil. A poor emaciated Irishman having called -thca- a physician in a forlorn hope. the . latter nals, railroads, P and telegraphs. When a spread a large mustard plastered unme- long interval of peace shall have come, your j diately clapped in on the poor fellow’s lean long interval 01 Py.. „ „ oof w jh breast. Pat, who, with a tearful eye, looked allying trade, by substituting capacious, buoyant, a dale of mustard for so little mate. The Infallible Cure—Wife—“O! Doctor if you could only cure my poor dear Augus tus, I should be so thankful! Two or three times a <week he is attacked with three hor rible vertigoes, accompanied by weakness of the knees, and a slight wandering of the mind, indicated by calling his poor dear pa pa—a jolly old brick." Patient—“Don’t suppose, old Ipicac, that Pm drunk; a little bricky, that’s ail. Doctor—“These peculiar cases of vertigo are very prevalent, ma’am, and very obsti nate, and a change of climate is the only remedy; I therefore recommend a remo val to the slate of Maine, where the salub rity of the atmosphere will at onee eradicate the disease. Gov. Cobb's Financial Talents^—The Savannah Georgian, on the authority of a Union Whig, says that Gov. Cobb is the greatest financier now living; that he dis posed of the Georgia Bonds at five per cent premium, and sold the Whig party at par. —Macon Telegraph. * ' When getting red in the gills, take him in the drawing room, set him by the lady, and sup them both with green tea; then set them at the piano and blow the flame till the lady sings; when you hear the gentle roan sigh, it is time to take them off, as they are warm enough. Put them by them selves in a corner of the room, or on the sofa, and there let them simmpr together the rest of the evening. Repeat this three or four times, taking care to place them side by side at the dinner table, and they will be ready for marriage whenever you want them. After marriage, great care must be taken, as they are ap*t to tnrn sour!” A New York letter in the Philadelphia Ledger says: Decidedly the quickest railroad time ever made in this part of the country was that accomplished by a train on the Hudson River. Road on Wednesday. Running time from the depot, Thirty-Second street, to Albany, two hours and fifty-eight min utes—160 miles. Samuel Weller Married.—It seems that the paternal injunction of the elder Weller to ‘Samivel to beware of the vidders,’ has not been heeded by the latter. The follow ing marriage notice occurs in a California paper: In Sacramento, on the 5th of May, Sam’l B. Weller to M. E. Lathrop, widow of Capt. A Lathrop, U. S. A.—-both of Coloma. A good lotion for weak eyes is said to be twenty drops of laudanum and five drops of brandy,a wine-glass of water, appli ed three timesa day, as warm as the eyes can bear it. A young man, who was a great talker, was sent by his parents to Socrates to learn oratory. On being presented to Socrates, the lad spoke so incessantly that he was out of all patience. JFhen the bargain came to be struck, Socrates asked .him double price. “Why charge me double?” said the young fellow. . “Because,” s^d the orator, “I must teach you two sciences; the one to hold your tonge‘ aod^the other how to speak.” W. New York hatter gave away it is said, on Monday last 20,000 palm leaf fans worth some $500. Each fan however, had announcements of his business pasted oh it. A novel and ingenious method of ad vertising certainly, but not half as efficacious as through the only legitimate channel for such purposes viz:—the columns of a well conducted and consequently widely circn lated newspaper. For far less than $500 his advertisements might have reached sev eral millions of persons, had he pursued the latter course. A Worthless Millionaire.—One of these devotees to Mammon once received a lessor from an humble follower, who did not seem to pay to him, the possessor of the purse, sufficient homage. He said, “Do you know, sir, that I am worth a hundred thousand pounds?” “Yes,” said the irritated, but not broken spirited respondent, “I. do; and : I know that it is all you are worth? Worth Knowing.—-Parch half a pint of rice until it is brown ; then boil it as rice is usually done. Eat slowly, and it will-stop tbe most alarming cases ot Diarrhoea. [A friend informs us that this remedy has been tried successfully.] - fcsT Poetry permits her votaries to in dulge in many metaphorical ideas, but the latestest one .we have met is positively the most original. Hear— With eyes of fire, majestically he. rose, And spoke divinely thro’ his double barreled nose. A Minister at a camp meeting said —“If the lady with the blue hat, red hair and cross eyes, don’t stop talking, she will be pointed out to the congregation.” Why is » motherless lamb est creature in the world? Because worthatfcwA. -’Y ^gir Why is cause it is comf plication. like a heads and an