Newspaper Page Text
IE SOUTHERN WATCHMAN.
TERMS. - '■ ■
ILY TWO DOLLARS A-YEAR,
Vhtn paid iii <tdran>zt; otherwise, 7hret Dollart. - iS
rNo paper ^
■ of the editor) until mil mrpt«um(M mfmjriM,
Ttf$v a copper still in which tan o6ze may
be heated without the least injury to the
ADV KKTISINOr.
■I inserted at dim u
Bi;*l advertisement* inserted at the usual rates.
iisient advertisement*! whom nbt marked, iviH bS 4>
iisliud til! forbid, at One Dollar per sqaare of 9 lines
tlio first, and fifty Cents par aqwm J*t emab.sobee-
nt insertion.
-A liberal deduction to yearly mdtertlsem; -r*
p rV~AnnmincemuuU of .candidate* io, in advance.
-Vr-Olntnary notice* exceeding, six tinea in lengu
be charged a* advuriilbMIlC 1<k•
business affffiofcssionjffiffjHL
interest—but ( think they fail to
meet the wants of the farmer, especially
. thpe&m bfrattnoa ctrctimstaflees.-*\Ndu®r
every former has from five totonfiides;
ifad,t£eni*hoile'co«ld<aii hjs%tiNm leather *| *
at-hume, these' few: hides .would make
M. WYNG & CO.
HARDWARE, CROCKERY, CHINA AND
t SS, Broad Strt*t, Athena, fl» f
W.& H. B-XtOKCWholesile
■ and Retail DRUQaiSTS, Atboas, tt«
W. LUCAS, Wholesale and Re-
• tail Dealers In DRY GOODS, GROCERIES,
■iVTAKB, At., Mo. t. Broad Street, Athana-y ;, \
L. McCLESKEY, M.D., having
permanently located in AtlienfcJfill boAtfayi
L|* bractiee of Medicine' and Surgery:' Resid luoe, that
■Hfetly occupied by Mr. eka**-^Offlce,*t hots*, when
IKay b*found.. ;- v ..-a,. »j.>
[From the Soutbem and Fireide.]
HbHE*Y'*9E tSATHER^ijf
• x/t-c* : dbomsYnvLe,Gtt,NoV. Sthr 4
T^r. I.KE^—DearSir: Your editorials up-
6itthe-.suhjecA'of-;Taamog-***<?**?’ ¥hh IqjUes require less handling. We should
i p^|Dg them at ~
leather enough to furnish shoes for ell:
his fapfilfc *a4:fiWM^*hitation use besides.
I^usjs a time of speculation, and
A ~ : hand-pump should be put'fre-
than will buy a pairofsjioes at th«.;poces
asJfe^fir them. ’ 1 .hope you will .
THEN’S STEAM COMPANY,
bh« Forcing and - Lifting PUMPS. Shapiisc and
nixxur; Mii.u Gin and all other kinds of-GEAR*
■ Inok and lluaia CaKTinna, of every denjnpticn.p J . | H (I
gSSLS3SS48SS«#U^^-^M»» FiM.amtFtrSUS^AiFm^-
■ ——m — ~~—- _"" _ •' raerfc may tan their 6whleather at home.' J
• -Yours resDectfullv. J. -G. J. -
B GILLKLAND, Dentis
• kinariUe, Gn., rcapeotfully aoliclts |
n or the nun-oundin*;-country.
Yfriven in hia profoaaion.
M. RENNET, (next door to tBC
La Bank of Athena,)'constantly keep* on hand STA-
!«E and FANCY DRY GOODS, and Choice Fa-nfly jr
i.-orit-*, cheap for ciuib, or to prompt customers.
M. MATTHEWS, Attorney *t
LAW, DanicLvillc, Op, ;* '"**
riing is in. troughs dug put of largc.trees
+m* * bacon hogsheads will form the cheapest
**■' ’Ttiui'VatsM ' Digput the
earth tWo'thirds bftHe depth of tbfe hogs
heads, poundmoist clay over the bottom
, an • which the hogshead .is to stand, Thre%
*k* r
Fancy BOOK AND JOB PBINTBBHteoad St.,
^bens, Ga. Office e«ru«r Broad and W.aB st)«cti, over
rtoro of Sausote A; PUtnrd. . '' f , , ' *f .■
AMES A. CARLTON, Dealer in
Silk, Pancy imtl Staple DRY GOOpS^ Hardware
id Crockery, No. 3, t lnwiite R^>w, Athefta. ,.i ^ .
W: H A N C OC K, Attornfy at . ,. T ,
i LAW, Danifcbvi!l(>, «a. r will pnsetir* m Jack'- . both IjOgi^eads IS covered Wifh itV
In:, t'hirkc, Madison, llart, Ojrlothorpc and Elbert. *'* * ' ‘ r ’’ f ’
F. O’KELLEY, Photograjih and
AMBROTYPE ARTIST. RoomsbirRresAand
jirinj: atreota, over the store of John- R.’Matthews,
|t bans, Ga. , x . . .MaPMf
AS. M. ROYAL, Hamera-Maker^
(head of W'all ifl.roct, nearly opposite tbo old State
nk) Athens, On., keeps always ou hand a general aa-
rtmeut of articles in hia line, and is always ready to
orders in the best style. * '
R. DAVIS) Land Broker,'CoH^er
TOR and GENXRAL^AbHENX. Auguat^am—:
ninaaa utt- nded loin any county of the State.
•ner of Jaokson and EUlia stroets. t . ^
Paper Rulers.and Blank Baok JKanuteoturem,
iitoball street, Aiisui ta, Ga. . J, H. CnautTT,
hens, Ga.
-^Youre respectfully,!
The htxJVe reqifest »I>6th tonsibW and
^imil^ add we will endeavor to meet the'
w&fertffthe "iwritisr:-. ft' will be“ better 4
for several farmers having from five* to
in every acre cultivated, is stjill a ihyth
to most planters. Southern nationality
fiqupf.or the ; still. The heated ooze il Will eipose and happily correct many er-
put on the bark as it is much better thail rors. We shall leaui to make as rauch
waters where it. is allowed to beconao
about as cool as the atmosphere.
As ihe tanning ' advances, skins
aiid
in diameter, in and under the ooze. The
eqds of these sticks or rods lljould rest on
a light frame in the hoghsead and four
jmshes or more below the top. Allow-*
ini? tWh inehes for each stick aud side,
en sides would occupy thirty inches
in width in the hoghhead. I Plates and
-butts hah^ down near the bottom of the
hogshead where the oozc .ia str ongest.
Cotton and corn on‘two acres as we. now
do on six, aud at the same time we shall
produce ten-fold more, of- the necesjiaries
_ 'Rnd comforts of .civilized lifej ^ Gui, -de»
across stWks an - hicir or less L mderice on foreign industry and skill
for so much of what we consume encoiir-'
ages the world to believe that our subju
gation is only a question^o'f'time.' £ i8inpff.‘ j
and bade me, in the name of God, to shun
the fata! snare; and, twining her arms
around^nwr^Tiecic; while het eyes beamed
with love’sjdeep inspiration, she- poured'
oil upon the troubled waters : told me of
, P Urer .liopek and higher aims, and iq my -
ear whispered a golden word that has out
lived all sorrow. Leila, would yoiirkftbyf
the name af-my firstifovie&^ ? Tis my
ther!” . » &tvr*’in
mechanical trades are necessary to ouy
independence ond happiness, we should
encourage, our own sons to become jcieu-.
tific mechanics, as well as farmers; law-:,
-yers, doctors, priests and soldiers.
nc ?l
Second
-quently by the side of the leather and of.
the hogshead to' lift the Ooze at the -6ot-»
givr-aj^sa are h;,ndled n we *' t ''
structions,'throngh' the coiiihWs ~ of the* 4 ’ -
-Ay in
•o r befafe suspending them separate^
, . . --.^i [classically moulded brow upon the shottl-
: As pumpi.ng is essier.aad less wasteful * f-*der of her lover. -<n ui v» *1£h hU> w
than dripping, we will state the: w;uy in
_jWbiCh \vomake a- cheap and. good pump
foHwnyardpcifposes y - Its whole letigtlv
should be somh she- feet, aria the Tnaterr- ■ ^LuVe the other
;ai, |fank not over ^ahjflhh thfak^ The;^ m ^t^J > \ wK y ,
onen SDace on the iuside for the ascend * ’ ■ •
ter lying ori the former no both sides,
' will form aa aperture a»- tha^odBtre of
Ohree inches square.^' The plank ought to
be closely jointed, and either panted or
coveipd withYai oT^meltrid DVtch to i tiSak%
all tof
, nailitig should be elose.' hod . perfcqL :;
.A box of half-inched plank homes iip,
twoinches inside from die bottom ofthtf
pump forthe lower leather wedve to : test
<mi.- tine side-’of the valve is riailed lo-
FIRST lOVE.* 5 '*
A Pleasing Sketch.
(SfT
.ZCCu
:x,
•rtu i
4 iAm I.your only and first love?”-, ask-
a bright-eyed girl, as she reclined her :
' “No, Leila, you are not m'y only, i_
hrst lbve ; I have loved another—andUI
Ipve.that other still.
* ‘El knew you'would, ^eita,
,-ldve is’as dSear as the first.’;/,•>.-"<?.7^
•S /‘How^fctte Slaves-are Affected. £ v
r From the best accounts we have beeu
able to obtain of the effect of the late glo
rious success at Port Royal lslaud . upon
the colored population, the number who
have-come in, under various aspects, ei
ther as rmiavvays .or traders in chickens,'
turkeys, vegetables, &cic^d not exceed
fifty J *We are indebted principally to
the New York Evening post correspond
ence for this statement, which'sets down
that-exact number- ; Lt is to be remem
bered that Beaufort District, hi South Car
*, i I'JrMi 1
still, and better than
do you/jell
asked she, raising her daak blue Ayes and
* gazing^steadfastly into those of her lover,-
:l(aUk:ia.- s8toaishm8Ut ) -'htlf :ia srirrotr
while her jeweled finger tightened con
vulsively upon his arm. ; „ V
“You ask me, Leila, and t answered
. with truth aud sincerity j you woulid^iiot.
3,mo deceive you, would yop ?”. /';// ' '
“l love her still!” - / p
“And better than you d<» me f’’ -
w ^Nwi>etter, tfatas'Wtell:"'*'
“And will love her still.?”
“ tfjitil'death, and|:even aftef/^l
over her fast resting place Will I
, spring’s:earlie ! st flowers and ! bedew iiie
sacred spot with the purest tearsUiSLlo.ve
evpr abftA. ,> <jp»m
- “ Eandsomer thad I,'is she not ??’ .
“ Her eves*were as-black as high t, and
or IflUffWU Mm -4B#Wiujg part-. uf ^ooe side’of .the bb'x-, and a pfea^ br'wbbal'
leather-making. Let Mwa.qtfc, Coqae,L C pyefi t h6Teatfertostrengdirihthe ViT^.
Within SIX inches of each Other, SO that 'l’lift'WnnAr v»1Vp is Vfirv simnfe'. hut. liot
OHN H. CHRISTY, PUin aad -«moist efay^tHky*^ poured cloetiyrfrotfbd
ieadi hrigshead to within thrfee inehenof
tlmtop.- -if the bark cannot be ground,
axe, so as to fill two /pLAha hogsheads.
Hea|, cl§ar spriug'OF rain .water.hQiling,lipf
fa '«r Jtift the hark fa^
hotfa bogheads is covered with’ & jLet"
the bark steep, aud soak .a Week or more,
While the ni w hides are prepared for die
ooze and tanning. One Hogshead will do
fof tfiis, but two are better.,. They ought
ThjeAipppr vaiie iy very simple, but not
easy. tade8cribelImagine a funnel made
of thiiiy fiaoky aoie leather, 4our inches
fa'diameler acraW'tlMatAop ^aa. many
,? y " olina, has a very targe population, uum-
it should be broken or cat flric wi0 an • deeDdowii to the neck 4ud that its cea- h T a, » n 5 TT
srafc*- hnnhnA* her hair m-glossy blackness outvied the
tre is nailed or ti*d ; fast to a rod that is to
serve as "a piston in the pfafa?.* The
, misod japumping, can set this ’ H
to stand some yards from the bark vats, narrow-strips of leather sewed' to the lop
l>ecause lime spattering into the Ooze in
jures it. Surround these with clay like
th« hogshead used for tanning/ - . ;
Aftei the horns, tail and hew*efaW»
- We ren»oved from a^WMahide, it-is split
into two halves or sides, from the tail t*
the ^ase oa the. pate. If the hide is r dry-, ;f
P. MAfcJDN & GO., Iibukbin<kr9 r v >fa»a soften, first. ,-cMflgHBfa^gggI paaqriH imAe in the
W r T, Awn^;:;
ICtlOLSON, Heaves & Wtnh,
Wliolrralo and HmUU iKmlcr# in STvtl’LE »n,*l
NOT GOODS, GROCERIES,IlARDWAllK, Csock-
, Ac., Urgu iiuw Brick Store, corucr 3riJge>nd Rrikd '
ict*. Atli,««, U*, -• : - * -’i : •• tf '
i ATMAN & SUMMEY, Dealersin
HARDWARE au<l CUTLERY,-ccnmar of Bru*d
Wall streets, Atheos, G*. , T * if
ITNER, ENGLAND & FR££»
MAN; Vf holoe*!* *iul Rei*U Dctlorn iir GROCE
ES. DRY GOODS, HARDWARE,SHORS A BOOTS,
ail StreSt, Athens, da.. . ' * - tit
\ BARRY; Fashionable Boot and
• SHOE MAKER, Broail *tre«t,^L t tiw»si
ays in readiness to 911 orders in his line,
m a r m' ~''
^ BISHOP & SON. Wholesale and
Retail r
Deal*
STAPLE 33RY WOO£-3,mi
XTL. Mi^RLE .Attotoey at
Y LAW, Jeffirson, Jackson county, ija.. _ .
1 T LA\V., Jeffjrson, Jackson con
RureRKNCB!.—J. .‘If. SteL*ste« r and f
b#., Jeffesroii; D. W. 8p«n,c *nd I,-JfL F««
wrouccrillcj John H. Nejrton. and J.-**
liens. :-.-i 'mt
pfAfc&bides./ffad skins.
0. nEU)NY, Attbraey at
Y LAV r , AUions, Ga., will attend promptly to all
' vbfs earn. ^Ofe* s*-~ '
linens tntnutod te bi
er I.M. Kenney’s store.
^tiugo Or
uweta Circuit, in tte Sd;
Istriut .Conrtat Mry^etuT^Sj^B
■HITE & JUTCHr.; Wlsolmale.fc
M. N, WRITE, Book^ lerSnd
■ ^TAUCXKM, H.4X«rw^rwlH.guii-
genfc.—Derlwr in Mksio'AMpdc^IInstnuteniU, Lamps,
"lAyik antes* promptly fillodat An,px^» rate?,--,
PLANTER’S HOTEL/? T f f '
A i 1:1111 a, ( i: i.
> (OWOS1TE yilK PAS|SBNGBR‘f»K! , hT.) « f
H'G HLY renoratoft and r*-esnH«M|d} and'in
'' > r .' ttesjiapaanpiOteiuiA#«titetj
(GLOBE HOTEL,
AuguHta, O*. Syt* '•<! n-v
AUSTIN MBLLAKKX, PROfRIHJroa.-: .
r0TIOE. 7 .p l iss«n K us holding Through 3 will
Vtep carried t.>aqd f.um this Hotel freo^f,C)oiiiibus
PASS THE WOS&A^'
■M .te* pyopi* lu.»w *ho:.he*tT
split, it goes upon, the beam, and the op^
erytiyq .scrapes faid
and a part of fascia or membrane, which
covers tfa? flesK side'of every skin. It fa
nbw teady for the lime. / A half bushel/
of fecently^slaked time or some dess of
quick-lime will do for k hogdieaa nearly
full ofw&ttr. ‘ The litne and water should
be Well stirred with a clear htte,or “plunge”
{Mfafwqfantiffigf :fadas'!or skins fato the
same, They should heuften moved about
jn the J ime-water by ITjpyfir . spme seven
or eightJeet long, and hauled out puce a
jda^ vyltn a» iron or wbodeii liopk/such' as
tanners use. So'soon as tlfeir ‘hair will
m fist
wing of the ravemTShe^ hasn’t your
sweet blue eyes, tior youi; soft broyyi)
hair; yet, oh ! LeilaVlier eyes fiavij bepli
, . . . fheaw^^MRr^tcTmfeifhetever looked
NPfSlP to.adapt itself to the^the look of eternalJoV£*’< T&
shape of the aperture m tlie pcfasuicig, 1 -
can set this pliable leather cup or funnel
falling back in lifting ooze or water, three
of the futiriel tm tliree sid«*s(one on each, )
are nafled' 4 wijth smaii nails to the pistfai- ’
rod above, say six inches from the fanri^I.;
Jbut strong, wo^en pin passes’,
through the upper end of the rod, whicii
held in,the hand, enables 040 to lift eas
ily all the liquidjin the pump, The dis-
■*PauI, why do you
‘ r CH Paul, PJL' forgf*ri ydir tfad, share
iypfafioyfa^ipdeed,
beririg, we believe, between 30,0U0 and
; 40,000. ' As the matter stands at present,
therefore, the' distress attributed'to us hy
the New York T r *bune, on;this accouut,
is very much alleviated.' Uriless a.nfach
larger proportion ofthe negroes than are
yet enumerated run away, we think: we
Magenta, June 4th, 1859, the French 7.
At Solferino the French and Sardinians
IQ; the Austrians 8. It is somewhat
reinarkable in the last example, that the
army which was best provided with rifled
arms did less damage than the one which
was equipped in the old style. v ? 5$
Fat are Political Hi tain nr. or ikj .Yortk aod
. Sonth* - ’ i;a -;;;
f.tMr. Russel^ correspondent of the Lon-,
don Times, in his last letrer published
in tEis country, says: The contest over,
new political relations may be establish
ed, bat France and England will not- be
more distinct.”:!* ^ 15^7* ^€ *’? :*
i'/ It may be premature to say what those
“political relations”- wifi Be, after the war
is over, or to discuss the merits of the
question. But it is not too soon to say
/that it would be to the interest of the
South to. erect a wall, not less impassa-
-ble than that of the Chinese, between the
* territory 1 of the - two -^governments, 4. A
great danger, we may say ; the greatest
danger, which can threaten the' security
and stability of the Confederate States of
America, will arise fromand influx ol Yan
kees by emigration, If the South was
visited,.(or the first.ten years after peace,
with yellow fever and cholera, annually,
tidt a hundredth part of the injuay would
be entailed, upon her people, that would
result in case citizens of the North are
permitted to come and 1 ive amongst us for
the purpose of selling goods, running En-
Man ufactor ies, teach-
shall manage to get comfortably tlwough. gmes, oyerseetng . ..
wiilitifa^ffiiecme oasasfan ^iros/^ €•**» * ing ff m.#pre.vriag money ofa^f usia wiy
<****.• T Other way. Talk 00* o( naturalization
it
ith tlteafflicting occasion.
tier. ' ■
usual way, afoot or more below the top of
it. Apy.oue Who can use a plane can
make a pump ofthis kind tak(ebpsfa 'tijjfi! 4
the pottfanqir one vat, tub or hogshead fUL
ed with^:eWher*bark or leather, and pnt jt^
expedhiously hitaanother/wheraiall styiA,-
orva level, or- neatly; so/ A thin naAe
keeps the tan-bark of leather from filling
the little space required by the. pump,
which is put into the vat' or hogshead and
taken out as‘often as needed;. ,/
Any blacksmith can make the - beam-,
ingkfiives used by tanners, hutmot those
used'hy curriers in finishing leather. The *
Li&K-XMutib g. r-r4***~*' j former afe curvied/ahd often have;
hogshead,: to remove the hair ariQi'all tKtf^ SKin. ; •
lime.-'. f l’he hogshead, used as a -soak,
washed clean, is now to serve as a; han-
dung vat or bate to extract all the tissues a
A bushel-af cJeauv dry - hen manure
will-aswer.far/a bale. Jtebmnhnts and is
ripe for uwi in one or two. days, atfar soak-
sides apd Mppajfut of fae ba^. as , they
gerfrom this into.
They will soon taiut-and spoil in warm
weather. Worked and washed cleau, the
side^aitch skins are nestt- handled fWo’Iij.
three times a day in tan ooze uritil they
are evewly coloured-afld get a hauds«urie^i
fine grain. s
The handling is-done * in thiS' wiVe:
.. ixm »*? I'ti
iAU . tan-bark should- be' kept clean -a nd
dry; for dirt and earth -blacken/leather.
Careless persons dften get clay bi 4 mull
into taii-vats, than which noth me-s more
5 demaiid-eqUal nti
rr
oy«r the hogshead, and let ooze-from- thei,
leather, when-lifted ^nit of it upon thftr
plank, run b.-.ek into the hogshead and
not waste.011 the, grouiid. Shprt .pieces
of scantling or slicks of clean wood lie/pn.'
fhree sides of the planfi^ over/ whichJhe
edges of jlie two, first sides laid dowu,
eS^jitjqaajtf rhi is' hniri a sort‘dr trough,
opeu nnly at the-erid that lives’ dvfer the
edge ot the hogshead. All the sides are
i drawtfuj' separate from the'liqtrof'with
.a hook and spread by hand on the plat
form, and are thrown back into the bnze
t again. the latter is weak, it- ishalf-ort
more pumped out. and flesh strong ooze
; I s ?» m H ;>• Tue of
■ittX'-: . ■! bark, wiLlithoihng hot water, will keep
injurious. Few arts demaiid equal n3a^-
ness ib their operatives. With the rhosi
improved apparalusmid good bark %he
labor of tauniug is small. ( »Au export:
will work one hundred:grown hides into
in a iriouth,''- t for which
. we-gcnerally paid twenty dollars; and
tlie labor tanning two hundred sides
tvas.about the same, after they' came
to the barlu. If a farmer can get his
hides taiitied-aud.curried forfialf of (the
leather they will make* it iSphabahly bet
ter 4haa to attempt to tan them himself;
■Let hirii improve his pastures by culti
vating the best grasses, and raise more-
WHITE FISH
r !u ; ’ uit
' t, M.-RENNEX
- ~ 1
aid 'u t-Perfiunery,»-..♦i?
1 uiou article, al*o, In bot-
uhIk. Brown, Wiuiimr and
three- or ifonir pieces of plank foiin i| fat«battle for home cqnsum ption , r and ,tb us
Infa.fapg doxvji^s a platform, so as to slope have three or four hides tor the -’taurier
.wher^he has one now.- This ‘Will - call
first-class tanneries into exjsteuce, that
will give a pound of.good;sole leather for
a ptlund of dry. hide, or nearly that. Ev
ery farmer .ought to save all the tan-bark
he can; for we sj>eak advisedly when we
say.that the Confederate States are even
now short of-oalc hark if they-are-to man
ufacture all-the leather which they .coft-
I shine in’saddles, bridles, harness, saddle
bags, buggy and carriage trimmings, caf^.
flat-lings, book-bindings, shoes and boots,.
,lt has been the misiortuue of the Cotton
•States to underrate all other industries
but that Of producing their great siaple.-
Heuce the scarcity of good mechanics
and artisans. Hence we nmk" ho effort
to deveisify our agriculture, and thereby
meet many public wants while resting out-
Utud from the scourge of eternal plowing,
at system ,oi husbandry which accu
mulates the elements of crops and fertility
up the strength as last as ten or twelve sides
can possibly absorb it,-after starting with
two hogsheads of good ooze.-Yon cannot
heat old oozj in an iron vessel, as it would
spoil it; but you may perhaps beg or bor-
heart ? Why have you taught me to
love yoii so wildly arid blindly, anti then,
in the midst of my happiness, -t ell- me
that there is an impassabe barrier be
tween us? . This flight, Paul, we must
part, forever ! 1 would not have, believ
ed this, had another told me ?” and her
eye^arew dim with toar»,'‘ <
“Be not too rash, Lelia ;
the end ; you love me too dearly Ip part
with me thus! Think you tflfit you
couid not share ray heart with one that I
so dearly love ?” ' 1
‘*<Never, Paul, nevr P* • ' '■ -* P
'-**You shalli Lelia, arid must f* ^Listen
for a moment, while I tell you of fay first
lovrij and lam sure you wililre/,Wjnjrig^
<0 share with her/thf h.” ^ „ Y*,, *r
“I will listen, Paul, bpt wiil• pp^i-/$ha^.*A
.your,love; 1 must have all or none- c 1 3i
am selfish in that respect, and who tha:/.
loves as I do is not ? Fo/get me; Paul/
or forget lier forever *• " /'M: ?' «./• /- ’
j “ Forget.heL Leila ? Never.! /Twould.
,n..t lose one.jot ot her pure affection for
-the fairest face that, ever bloomed ; no...
^not.for the girdle of Venus,'or theloveo*
asecond Hcleu i<’- ’• i - l> rirr-wi
“ Then Paul you are’lost, ttf trie forever^
•\Ve must part. Farewell to OOr eviir hopq f
.of a.briglittined future. I love you tod .
well, and. am too proud to share youc lpve.
with nuht.-created. O l Paul, yofi have
‘ wronged me deeply and. her exquisite
ly chiseled lips curled with indigniint sor
row. ; . ""Hrtii.ll
H3= A/clergyman and one of his (tlder-
ly parishioners were walking home from
chrireh one icy day fast winter, when th'cT
Qhl jtpytlemai^altigped ^rnd felLflfa oii/hfa
Bacifl ./TlHi mifaster,, looking at him &
mom6»L«nd.jbeing assuaed that^ .was;
not much hurt, said to him :
stand on slippery^jilaces.-”-j. The old gear
tleman looked up, as if to assure himself
of the fact, arid said: **I see they do r
butf cari»tl”' ' *- ' ' '*'» > •.
gJr Wanted, for e^ibfett iti tiiQ prrh-
-JSb: W;
stove pjpe witliout meuta.l dr oral prbfani-
~
The Methodists and the War. 7
e Georgia Methodist Confi
icfl met iii Atlanta recen tly^ '
•nWi.f
“Stop, Leila, or ybn 'will deeply‘wrong
e, also. I rhet'/this loved'pne, as Lsaid
a committee on public affairs. They
made an excellent^ report, acoouiftanied
with the following resolutions, which
were rinanimocisly adopted : > “ * -
1. Rfesofoerf, Thatas tftJonferehce of
Christian ministers, we return our most
grateful ACfaia^l^lqTOiebfa ‘tp t
God for the kiud interposition of ’fas
providenceas manifested ip ourabuu.aant
crops, and the brilliant victories we have
achieved by our arms. -
1 2- Resolved^ That in - our devotions;
VfjS'will-contiuue tb-phty Ufa facerts
<j( our arms, and the conquest of ii pfa/
mdiujut peace, audio ask' the blessings of i
our HeavetQy.Eather J .upoti our ciyd;aud
religious officers, aud soldiers and their
I i-
THat -we recommsnd/a
Y prayer meeiing, to be held Wher
ever practicable tor the same special pur--'
:pose!.' L ' :; '//^' • J ' ‘' '/ v:
4. 4 Resolved, That there is ti0: suc7i ;
tfliug as a Union party among us, and
the assumption ofthe existence of such
a party is false, in fact, a -. fabrication of
the. euerny to excuse the utrholy - war
agqinst the Confederate State®. That
■tfae^Union being broken,'it. is brokeu lor
all Time';' we never will consent to be
come citizens of the United States.
• d-; Resolved, That the-above reports*
mud resolutions be sent to our delegates,
.in Congress, and hud betore that body,
i to to
faws/ Whaf do t,hey care about voting,
when they can make money by ingenui
ty or trade. Disfranchisement would he
» very small matter with men who had a
five cerit piece so cicse to their eyes that
they could see- nothiug else. No, the
tmfjjfa»,.tfata.p<dicf v^exclude all by leafy-
, Alfow MO man who was a citizen oi' the
ihft limp pOffidr is made, ever.--lO«-
locate on Houthem soil. - Unless this is
done fly our Congress, in six months af
ter peace is cfaelared, there will be anex-
odusfrbfa Yankeedbin that v ill put to the
blush Anything ^he. wprld ever Saw. Our
mjjfll* iue sbppg jp iUbe;fiiled wahadeptefl"
cit«wiufl.-wfa> AF-dL.swp|r feaiiy to to%h
Government, with as much readiness as
did the Yankee prisoners;- who have du-'
ring, the war, been put on oath, and viola-
leges and scKools, oitr towns ariff'clties,
aye/and in a few years, our pulpits, will
be fill* d with the .scions of. Ward, Beech-'
er stock. The onerous taxes at the Norto«
and the general stagnation of business
everywhere at thc North-after the war
doses, will drive thousands the mean
est Northerners into the South, unless
we close tire doors fa advance. Naturali
zation laWsr WiU not reach the Yankees.
Tfaol, absolute, exclusion fa all that wdL
—rFederal Union t ./ 7 ; ;
> ulnoi
-wj ftv?f More Polar FxpedUlons,
It-may.not bo.generally, known that a
Swedish expepition to Spitzbergen sail-
before, long years ago, in one of the ed during the month of June last, with
sweelpsl and siinnipst valps nf nnr hrnad ! ^ • . _ j _/>■ .r-
sweetest and. sunniest vales of our broad
wmidered with her,-hand
. for years beside the sparkling waters of
my childhood’s home. Fir&tj by the smile
,of Her exquisite sweetness, she taifghLmy
heart that loved irie with' unutterable
foiidness; and never have-I doubted ; riiy.
iove in her has never beeii steadiest aiid
fearless; never has her eye- lookeid cold
ly upon nie, and never will it, till the
breath of the death angel shall dim it for
the long sleep. "- >*}■ tv- t v -
1 f Oft in the still hours of the' ri^ht
•have l been awaked, as.lf by tlfa, geiitle^
fauuing of the sleep god’s whig ; aud be
held that face ; those eyes gazed upon
me with all the beatie tdndernoss of a
guardian angel over a repenting prodigal ;
and a ki-.s would fall uptm my brow
more soothing than the dews of Hernum.
The same gentle hand has led me along
life’s flowery way and beside its,; unruf
fled waters : and if ever my arm was rais
ed to do a deed of wrong, or my fieart to
conceive it, that admonitory voice came
whispering in my ear, and stayed the one
mid-way aud drew the iron from the oth
er, And 1 do well remember, in lily man
hood s riper years, when tlepp sor !oiv ’fall
upon fay soul, and \ would fafa have
drank oblivion from the wine cuf's fiery
brim, that same dark-eyed wouiafl oame,
irgi'nia, Bays the Richmond Dis*
pfacA,. has already, expentled over S3;U(>0,-
UQdfln behalf of the Southern teauec/with.„
out 'taking into account the vast fat al con.
fributioiie; of ravtivy bestowed upon partfa.
ulai* regiment* iritne new. Htweoniribit.f
fa' ,lll Y 0 heeaiizilyjn proportion :
toller. 1 expenditures.
“^HAiurloua FlgUUng Parsed/ " - *
V ’A Columbus correspondent'’ ofthe Mon t-
gGmery^Advertises, dereribiug the battle
of Belmont “gets rather heavily on” Pai-
Noa Brady. Pity. th«: good man should
have got so veiy adgry^' 1 - / •
Yt would bo fa'tiie to' particularize in-
stacroes of braveiy and desperate courage
evinced by“oiir gailant troops on the field
Let a fe w sutflee. Parson Brady, of Tup-
Regiiriebt/after shooting two of the
ehtmy,'seized anOther by tlies.boulder, aud
01,6 of his bfavie cut his throat
ififira dav to eai 5 . arid, then riishing on the
now retreating toe, lie exciaime*!, to hell,
you "d d sons ofbilcbers. The boys tease
Parson very much for this rather unusual
’nwimer.of dismissing an audience.
* • U* - I '-'a r "
-ri irenr y Ward Beecher once jiaid that
sleeping a good
■ -TiriMij -f. f - . . wfid hd, - “ if the -
westward of Greenland. If unsuccessful, minister does not sleep during the . week,
it was their purpose to spend the winter ins e<nigregatiJfinFnfWSMrljf^afa^’Sf*.
out broad j .the intention of endeavoring to reach tire he prepared his sermons by ,
id in hand pole by following Perry’s track .t(?//the- deal iu the week—“ for,” sai<
W IltP rS fl f tirn nFii*n rrl ( f*I n/% n n In it /I If* i ni.-f An /I .1..
in Spitzbergen, aud resume their journey
the following season. Intelligence is
^also looked for with great anxiety from
Mr. Hall, .who saileddrom New Loftdon
oh board a whaler-18 months ago, with
the avowed intention ol makings,search
Tor additional relelics, or for some , survi
ving merribefs of. Franklin’s expifartiqu'/
His’ undertaking vvifl;possess noyer iutef-
'.est, [larticularly from the lac^ that. Mr/
Hall will he unaccompanied by any Eu-
Iropeari, as he intends to acchstorri himr
self to the Esquimaux mode of fife, and .
employ them aud journey with them : oh-'
ly. Mr: HhII undertook' this journey
so.ely under a religious conviction ol du
-ty, and sacrificed everything to jice6Hir
plish this gieat desne of his life.
Hfccq rti in—~-f* A4i -
Losses in Batti.e.—At Austerlitz the
French losr 14 men out oi every hundred f
the Russians 30/ the Austrians 44, or
nearly one half.- At Wagram tlio French
lost thiateen men out of every hundred,
the Austrians 14- At Moscow ilia French
*3.; the Russians 44- At Bautkeu the
French 2b; the Russians 14. At Wafers
loot the French 3ti; the allies 31.
IP
jSantluy.” There vyassense in pfa rqniark.
flaWnBa* alf asleep hlmsFlf
'keep-people;fav’ako? ly-
Deprived ofthe Gospel by Foxes.
Thai was a novel but not so b nl aii':ar-
whiclrthernioiuhhincei' iirgccf in
. the-Kentiicicy-Lteglslalufe.'/'A- faw°yearit
:S j£2t U ^ proposing a prcrifimiV on fox-
.scaljis was afalei discussion. It had been
sdmeAvha-Frdughly handled fit debate by
• mcnibere frortf tlie populous regions, where
doxes-wcrFscaree, and Mr. L^—; from
: O, *c r of|be lnotiijsain coanties rose to reply :
—•‘'and \ve, .Mr:-Speaker—we of the moun
tain regions—are not only Lo v.uness the
jrtdiual destrUctroreOfour crops, h.,t aem-
aily i<> he depriood by those varmints
the consolation of- redgioii !” ;i This woke
the H< mse Hj», and set it agape'for an o\-
pfauatidu^ ' He- continued You know,
faivSpeaker, that,*ybur fancy- churches-
your Presoytc-i-iatis and Episoojiuiiuns
never sen-J preaeiierS amon >-us. W'e (fd-
penu tor too ©uspei upon tile eivcait-rfa,
ers ot the MctiiO,.i^t cliurcu ; and. sir, vv>-.
er) body knows rhat t1te<| . aitnot be in-
Uueed Lo U'ua ci w n e re there is O.o eh I eke ns
and that cmckens cannot qe raised where
foxes abound f
The argument was unan
the bill became a law