The Examiner. (Covington, Ga.) 1865-1870, May 02, 1866, Image 1

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€|jp Cinminrr I» Publi»bed Weekly, at COVINGTON, GEORGIA. at W. A. HARP, Editor and Prop’r. o OFFICE. MURRELL’S BRICK CORNER. Terms of Subscription. Two 60 Dm Onpv, Bi* $1 AO One Copy. TweWe M-fith*. 82 60 •fg“ SubioripU»o< Msti be Paid in Advance •'——-0 Ratos of Advertising. 'One Square (Ten Liner or Le»e, *u!id Brevier ) One In ert pm. S l 00 Sacl> Suberqnent loeertinn. *6 * Contract* F->r Adrer'i-in*. for Any Length of Time. Longer than One Month, can be made on Jteamnabte Term*. OTTranel-et Advertisement* rnu»t I* areom fanjwl bj Ja»l>.f*cepvel»en ConUrfH either • .U«h v e, oi ar# W-ii* toTe.math’ flu- M ’.or all Contrite, will be nmndereddue, after the firet ineortion. ... ... . Advertisement* in«erted without apeemeat’on Mto the number of insertion*, will b-* | , u ,, lie!i«.il anti ordered out,andch*rged accordingly. . • Hm w©sa. We are prepsred to do JOB l* *rINTIN(» with £e»tne-* and D»*patch. Carl*, Pamphlets <’ir. eoiara, Blank*. BillHead*. Ac. got upon Short Notice, and in (•<««! Bt\l«* A liberal .hare of the public pntrouagu solicited. V r W. A. IIARP. Busin ms (Tnrk T. P. SIMMS, Attorney at Law. COVINGTON, GEO. WILL give prompt attention to nil Bu-int-s --entiuited to tutu. •Ullico over Aml«-r«ou A •lluntvr'B Store. April 25 -tl A\«i ATTOILNEY AT LAW, COVINGTON. GEORGIA. TENDERS his Prohv-ioual Services to tii> ViUZi'llSof NoWtUn ami tile MiTolindlllt* folltltifs Prompt Miteution given to tlie colWtmn claims Office over AuJcr>on& Unntei e &i«>u . April ‘Js— l l JAS. McALLENTaCE. ATTORNEY AT LAIV ! COVINGTON, CA. Respectfully offer* his Prtlessionnl Service* jn t<> the public. Prompt and active attention giv •n to the Collection *>f Ofiiim*. •’* ' * Nov. 2:, 'C3—tf L. ETaNDERSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. COVINGTON, GA. WILL Practice in the Courts of New ton ami surrounding counties. jan24tf H. T. Caab Resident Dentist, WILL devote his eti'i'e litn** n Covinuten. Office Second Door h*-low the ni l J*®.- Office Ap il 25 f W.B. RlViißi ffl D. BBiflU, WILL in future devote li mself Exclusively to the Praciiceot TRV. lie i* now prepared t>« do the vulcanite work. Office and Residence near the Depot. Dec 20—ts wsa« ®i«MaaßS©is» irKSPltCrrULLritif fm th« P« pie lit M-.inon, »nc|* elattf, tii>t ba ia t’rrparrd to do nil work in tbo - Boot and Shoe Line. Rivlnf • 7(fiv ind Will fct! rt ct*d Bt"ck of Mitorlil, h# Work fg*»All Work Warrcntdl!! Shop at Ray’s ohl next door to Hough's Tin Shop. Madlann. <7a •> U. 18 « Madison House. MADISON, GEO. c T . { * The nndrralfnnd would artfully Inform lb«* Tra»rl’B.i Pubic llmi )•« liu ii|>rnril lha lintel ■ n lb* k- n « 01 rof übllc .Square. in tb* lawn of N-*d lb ir w II ks it (II iNnm Onmil'nl*l ik" Ivpoi on thaaril.alof train*, tor tba a. rninni da'i ii of l'« (lne.tr. Tbo boar# h*» ju«t been rrm iUlfrl ihornoiihlr frpilrrJ, and I nrnuht"! itiew thr.-0(ihonl; and bo h>q>ea .it lc* Attaotb 6 to th* tt ant. of bl« Own t*» airrlt a ohara of that patr»nat* alwrt. baHoard by * Ifb'tal Pu Ik, on a •ood Li Waft K p* If-I’d 1 will ba aatU fib -ral—aa biucii «o Mtb llwi will adailt . Jen at. 1888. A T. WHIT* AND MEDICINES K% THlrl?D .■ i , Wbolesalelruggist Ko. liO, Broad St. Opp<*ite the Aujju?ta Hot# AUGUSTA. GA. T have on band.Jtiyl am e«>n*t«ntly rMtiflnr. Large Supplier of. Firth and Pure Dun* and Mnhciuei, which I offer to tlie Tra.ia and Fain iliee on Rratnnablc Term*. inn?l—Snt B- P- TUTT. * POT WARE! POT WARE!! AGrojoX adei.-tion of P->t War**, anuli a# Ha kcr*. Epidrrp. Oven*, Kt*til*;a and a (.umber I of Odd Lida. JuM rrcrtrrd and for « - ale hr •*• march 2* 0. B. KIRKPATRICK.! THE EXAMINER. VOL, I. V. R tonmkt. i *.iT W*l T o i oee Newton Cm. Oxford Oa. Oxford (in. IMHAdSI, ■ 3R TOMMEY, STEWART & ORR, Key-Stone Building, Street ATLANTA GEORGIA. HAVE p Large, New and Well A .sorted Stuck td Foreign atid DoiueMic Hard-Ware, Cutlery Qnn*. Pistol*, Iron, R'rel, Chains. Axr* Hatrln-t*. H<h*«, ApvionlMiial tinpleinoiiiK Car pentere* Blnek-iin'h** MaeoiiV Taoi.fr* and Shm .naker'a T.*d*. CaniaoH Hud Ware and Wnod Work, and all other aiti. lee »Mi»lty kept in a HARD WARE STORE AH of which hn- been car. fully eehc'ed from Imp'itte'S «nd American M»nillacl"ter-.for Caeh whurh enable* us t*» sell at the L<>wt—t Market Price-lor Ca*h. either at Wh.-Wab* or Retail. The puhlic are reapectlully invited r» • all a"n examine lor tlwm-elvea. Aprd 2-» - lv NEV ARRIVALS AT THE MILLINERf ROOMS, OF MR?. CHARLOTTE E. CHAMBERS. Madison, Georgia. A DDITIONAL Bupi> i**f» of M'lhnery Goods, **• including the Wry Loe-t 8-vies ot Donnets, Hats,- Laces, Flowers, &e. OM Bi nn<-i* and Haw Rt-nair**<l io Suit ih*- OP Utl S3 Una <3D CELS3 o R.-otii? Up S'Mr* GOLDBERG IloUt>b. npril iO, 1806— ts J. E. GARMANY (innimissiQiL Grocer and FORWARDING MERCHANT, 131 Bread Street •- AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, WILL give his personal attention to the sale of At SI,OO Comtnheiun, per Bale , and guarantee '.lie IligheM Market Ptices. Will also attend to Forwarding Colton. 9 ttfip Orders from the Country will receive Prompt Attention. april 18— fim COLD DECLINING. W ill t?ZLL, until luritier notice, CORN, FLOUR AND URAL, at it.*- Inl'iiwuiK rates: CORN, Yellow, $1 40 per Bushel 44 White 150 ** in quantities nf 10 bushels, und upwards. Small Lots 5 cts higher. WHITE Corn MEAL, $1 50 per bush FLOUR, Superfine, til 00 bbl 44 Family, . 18 00 44 “ Fancy, 15 00 44 E, STEADMAN. April 11 3t Murrell’s Old'Stand lbohc7 wblb Professor of Music \ND ‘gent f<f ihe sale of lhe Dripgs'P* tent Piano F«»rtes. W*ill- at'enft to Piano Tutiin" Orders may be li ft with Mr. Branham mi. Msm «on match 21— 1m CORN MEAL! CORN MEAL WHITE CORN MEAL lor *ale hy 1 FcbQ* C. B. KIRKPATRICK. IDl’ffßfS® IT© ffISWS, MTfEIBATBIS, MSOSSITOSS fIJJID TiHS s'ii'SaaiLT/' ®R!li©IL3. ADDBSSS Delivered in Covington. G>i., on the 2Oth of Mai/, in commemoration of the Con federate dead . Ay CAPT. J. M. PACE. 1 We have assembled t<»-day, ladies nnd fellow citizens, to do honor to the memory of men who sleep at our feet in soldiers’ graves. And it give# me the highest pleasure to appear on this occasion ns the humble organ of the Indies who have inaugurated this interesting ceremony. Would to Heaven that I were capable of sound ing, in befitting language, the just praises of these dead heroes, nnd of striking with harmo nious utterance those chords of feeling in our bosoms which neither adverse circumstance nor the lapse of time can deaden. But to the full performance of such gra eful tn-k, I feel myself 1 incompetent, nnd if I were not moved by s.» | strong a sympathy with thj spirit of the hour. I should have declined the honor which you | have been pleased to confer upon me. Trust | ing to that. I have come, feeling a-sured that the highest praises of these men are to he truly found in the silent emotions of our hearts. In re-ponne tn a suggestion, which I may mention to this assemblage, had its origin in our own loved State, and which ias had a generous re sponse from the Potomac to the Rio Grande, throughout the entire borders of that land in whose defense they fell, we have come together this morning to deck, with choicest flowers, the graves of our Confederate dead, whether of father.brotlier.son, friend, or nntnelessstranger, and thus to signify that we are not ungrateful nor unmindful of the heroic sacrifice Forbid den, by adverse fate, to r-ny them military ! honors, and to stir their martial ashes by the cannon’ll pealing salute, we lay upon their tombs, in fond affection, these garlands of flow ers, and water 'hem with our tears. On this April day, with that electric touch of pytnpathy which makes them kin. the noble women of our glorious South, gl..ri< us still, though in sack cloth nnd ashes, shall, with joint hands and minds, do honor to our patriot dead. Ten thousand graves, all garlanded with flowers, shall bloom in love’s freshness, and send up their rich incense to Heaven. Ah! whnt a • qpectncle this shill lot, my countrymen and Wi'.Kho h.tt*4 survived tfrrt bloody struggle, sha 1 see that w.unnn’s devotion is perennial nnd indestructible; while to the world it shall be discovered from wlint noble source these slain heroes drew their sublime inspiration of bravery. And if to the buried j soldier, it shnll he allowed to look on this scene, ! how shall his heart thrill with pride, nnd his martial spirit flame with patriotic ardor ! It shall he as sweet to him as the note of victory after the storm of battle. Nor C' uld any gen- emu* mind withhold its respect from this -acred rite. - lutolernnen and pr scrintion in their tin hallowed grasp of power nmv take offense, and seek to distort this scene to theirown unworthy ends, but generous minds all over the glohe will recognize in it the performance of a duty so binding in obligation that, to neglect it. would cover us with shame. It is the hnppy lot of those who Tali in defense of a successful cause to receive, bv unquestionable inheritance, the plaudits of mankind. To the victors belong not alone the spoils of conquest, hut the plea— I ing honors of triumph. Their dead are ccle brated in sing and verse, and orator after omtnr with enthusiastic speech, repeats their highly wrought eulogium. But not alwnys is the hero ism of the dcfvnted lost in the splendor which surrounds »he victors. What historic' names hnv. been gathering to themselves fora thousand years fresh hem-lnurels. nml through the future aees will stand ns the brightest exemplars of patriotic sacrifice ? Those 1 rave Greek* who, at Thermopylae offered ineffectual resistance to that mighty tide of invasion which, sweeping over their dead bodies, poured in destructive current into their very capital. Tho«e are tlio men whom successive ages have delighted • to honor. Were not the men wlmni we this day honor animated by the spirit which presided at Thermopylae T and does not a similar glory play about their tomb*? Let us. as oniinpn*- sioned inquirers, look for a moment info the motives which moved them to action, and ex amine their claims to honor. Citizens of a Republic which they would fain have perpet* unted in everlasting harmony, bT>\ which, un happily, became divided in opinion. *hey adopted the theory which their fatt ers had as serted at the foundation of the Government, and which had been steadily maintained hythe State which gave shetn birth. No people in nil hlatory ever deprecated more thnf untimely agitation which drove them to arms. In the former glories of the Republic they shared.— Their attachment to its fortunes was deep and sincere, ?tn illustrious father and founder, wnose name in the firmament of fame, stands in peerless splendor like the brght orb of day sprang from their section. Its chiefestorna ments were the progenitors of these men;— There was everything to attach them to the Government under which they had lived, and much to deter them from th»- hazard of revo lution ; for' they were not unmindful of the power which could bo collected against them. But honestly conceiving their liberties to be threatened, and deducing their political maxims i from that immortal instrument of American faith, ♦hey sought to withdraw from the ? J nior» COVINGTON, GA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 2,1866. of-thti States, and to establish a separate gov ernment, trusting that the separation would be peaceful, but otherwise, resolved, like brave men to boldly arm the virtuous few and dare the desperate perils of unequal war. On this clear apprehension and decided judgment ot the cause, ascertained by their own reason, and collected from the theories of their fathers, it was the noble purpose of their mind* to rtancl forth »ad assert it at the expenso of fortune and the hazard of their lives. It was the pure love of virtue and freedom, burning bright within their bosoms, that alone cot.!d engage them tn embark, in an undertaking of so bold ami perilous a nature. Their claim to withdraw' was dispute'!, and an appeal was had to the dread arbitrament of arms. With an enthusi asm born of their hereditary Into of liberty, they left their peaceful pursuits nnd quiet wnlks, their happy home* and tearful kindred, nnd with high hopes and lion hearts, went out to resist the invader. I need not recount to this ns-emblnge. the incidents of that fearful strug gle. They are graven on oar minds ns with a pen of iron. Their dire impress shall not soon fade away. The varied alternations of hope ami despair—those frequent shocks of battle, filling many a mother’s breast with lasting gloom. The splendid achievements of our arms, the sufferings of oar soldiery, their ad mirable fortitude, the slow waning of our for tunes. And their final overthrow, nil, all stand pictured this day in startling freshness. And when we survej these events, how, u»w, under what c* mpulslon, are we to w ithhold freut these deud heroes, that tribute which we now offer? D>d they nordic for us, and in maintenance of the principles which they recognized as just nnd true? And as one who shared with them their convictions, I here charge it upon the future historian, when he speaks of these men, to incorporate into his page, in justification of their coarse, the sentiment of that eloquent couplet which stands ov*r the ashes of the Greek! at Thermopylae— . “ Go, stranger, nnd at Lacedaemon tell, That here, obedient to her commands, we fell/’ Ah, nev«r shall contumely rest upon their graves. The attempt to fix it there, is born of the basg passions of the hour, and must perish with them. Whenever an enlightened and im p«ftijUoahlic sentiment pre’ nil«, justice shall T»e IMPTSi e m Sfjfylt .flit 4C i; u Ted c hi t s dead! Think for a moment, my fellow citizens, I of dishonor resting upon the grave of Jackson. 1 I that immortal eddier, whose fame fills the j world, and in its magnificent volume swells i upward to the vaulted gtars. I think I see j him now, the very demigod of battle, and son . of victory, directing his impetuous battalions to the resistless onset, and spreading through j their ranks the fiery contagion of his warrior j I soul. Here was a fit type of thp Southern , Soldier. Who shall dare to brand bis memory I with opprobrious epithets? And yet in ninny a nameless grave, perhaps some of those which you now decora’e, there sleep those whose devotion to their country was as strong and pure, and whose souls were as fearless a* Stone wall Jackson's. Not the most rancorous malignity dnre assail him to whom a hostile army offered homage. High up in the niche of the world's heroes, his name stands in letters of screncst light, Ilis tomb ever blooms with rarest flowers, and *• Fteedom doth a while repnir To dwell a weeping hermit there.” There is much in the past, my countrymen. 1 to fill us with regret. Wc have suffervd deeply and our hearts are still sore. Rut there is also much in the past to fill us with, just pride.— Not the slightest taint of dishonor rested upon our arms. They were borne with peerless bravery throughout tho entire struggle—our opponents themselves being judges. Wc gave to the world a Conspicuous instance of prolonged devotion to an espoused cause, sustaining it with unabaied resolve up to its final overthrow. We stave now buried its hopes forever, but we will not willfully and Itnselv abjure its memo ries. We shall ever.cherish in fond remem-j brance the names of our hemes, and to our children will transmit their sacred keeping,— Though the cause for which we went to latttle was forced into surrender and abandonment, those who perished in its defense have not died wholly in vain. They were tiie champions of c« nstitutionol liberty, at and the impartial fjen of history will so Record. That haughty Intoler ance which seeks to sully their fair r amo, shall fail of its ignoble nint, nnd with the defenders of liberty in every ago and dime their names shall be written. Then strew their grates this day with flowers, nnd on the bosom of their ascending fragrance, let, your prayer bo borne to Heaven for the bereaved. And with each returning year, repent this sacred tribute. “ How sleep the brave who . sink to rest. With all their country’s wishes hle*t! When Spting with dewy fingers cold Returns to deck their hallowed n old, She there shnll dre*s a swee'er sod Than fancy’s feet have ever trod. Bv fairv hands their knell is rung. , By form* unseen their dirge is sung. There honor come* a pilgrim grey. To tdess the turf-that wraps their day." A man in spnnhfield, Illinois, has a Newfoundland dog which was Mack as jet four years ago, hut some coal oil being applied to him for tho destruction of fleas, "hr has tdrned as white as snow.' ! . . , Evacuation of Petersburg, \Vr> (i,Vj f}tn fojl count of this event from the Petersburg index: History. —There is not much need to dwell upon the scenes of which these bright, quiet days are anniversaries. No one has forgotten yet, still some notice may be expected. At da 3 break on tbe montin? 6f the Ist of April, 1865, the cannonading which, air ng the lines on the immediate front of the city, had been continued and severe, extendod**long the whole line with re double fierccnc*3, until, bv sunrise, front tbe Appomttox to Five Forks, there was scarcely fifty yards of ground along the entrenchments but had its black mouthed piece belching forth angry smoke and lending the reverberation of its fearful thunder to the maddening tumult. Early in the morning the rattle of musketry began on the right, and soon an unceasing roar told that the battle was in earnest, nnd thnt the spring cam paign hnd begun. General Grant’s forces—two corps of infantry nnd the cavalry under Sheridan—-advanced in solid lines upon the entrenchments held by Pickett ond Bushrod Johnson’s divis ions, under command of Lieut. Gen. R. 11. Anderson, and after several gallant but ineffectual feint attacks, a movement in column was made by Sheridan, to force a passage between the left flXnk of the Confederate infuntryand Fit*. Lee’s feeble cavalry force continuing that line. Bj’ 6mn9 error a gap had been left, which Sheridan struck, ttud his troops poured through. Passing back towards the rear of Lee’s j cavalry, they swung to tbe left upon the rear of Pickett’s lines, and ere long a wild cheer rung from the troopers in the rear to the troopers in front, and long lines of empty trenches, ruids strewed with abandoned guns, and fields dotted with hurrying beaten men, showed that the work was done—thnt Lee’s right hnd been crushed. But this had not been done at once. Night followed speedily upon it'd accomplish men t, nnd (TrtTVu'uflif* ii of disaster which reached Petersburg frotn the distant bittle field, though gloomy enough, were not explicit of the total overthrow of our forces nnd slumber in our city was as as-ured ofsafety that night ns ever. Nu one kuew what real ruin had been done. Night brought with it no qnier, but in stead, the streaming fuses and bursting shells of anew bombardment. Morning came,.as bright and smiling as any day of any spring-time. With light came sounds of conflict, which grew louder and more, frightful. Did they not draw near er ? It sounded so. And soon strange rumors filled the streets. The church bells rang out their first call to prayer, but no one heeded the summons. The clear, sweet tones fell upon the agony of hearts that listened, ns bird-notes sound to those who mourn the dead. Men gath ered in groups around the corners, and looked, with straining eyes, towards the clouds of battle smoke that hung around the town —stood silently, nnd listened to the dull reports of heavy ordnance, and the sharp rattle of musketry, up m which their fute hung trembling. Men grew white in the agony of sus pense, and women wept. The old town clock struck eight—the breakfast hour—hut the scanty meals stood on the board untasted. The houses were deserted, and euger questioners crowded around the men who now came in with haggard faces and wild eves. • * WJ.at is it ? M And one answered, “ They have taken the River Sailent.”, . And anotler. ‘‘Pickett and Johnson were over whelmed yestarday, their line broker), and their commands beaten and crushed out—cut o(T from the army, and forced up the country.” And another, “Gibbon’s corps struck Wilcox’s front at day this morning, piercing his line; the troops to the right were captured, tlir>6o to the left forced back. The enemy have reached the rail road and tho river, and our line is at the stone bridge.” Ami just then a cry of “look” was herad.und turning, wc saw from the ware houses, where, by order of the military authorities, hid been stored all tho to baceo in the city, columns of black, thick smoke go up above a mass of lurid flames. “ ’Tib ao, ’ wa's the speech or every white cheek and streaming eye. Few words told how like a whirlwind of wrath came to the thousand hearts the death of the hopes of years; The group* dispersed and sought their homes. Agonizing sus pense had becomo certainly, and they could weep now. Any attempt to tell of that day, with its hours of dull, dead hopelessness its' moment? of wild hope, feeing* *>f «t- ter wretchedness, of the end of all things to be desired. ' God spare us such an* other experience. Now and then would fiy from house to’ house some good report. “We are pres sing them back-—General Lee has re-es tablished his lens,’’ etc., nnd for awhile the feverish wish would be parent to be lief. About eleven o’clock the Confed* crates did recapture the lines at Rives’, and a ray of real light came in upon the anxious souls. But the real danger was not there. On the right the work went resistlessly on. Fort Gregg fell, despite the most heroic defense of the war, the Union line advanced from Cogbill’s to Turnbull’s, from Turnbull’s to Whit worth’s and there, in stone throw of the corporation limits, marshalled their en thusiastic masses. At Inst Longstreet came. A strength ened line Was formed, and at four o’clock the dispatch from General Lee to his commanders across the Appomattox and James was, “I can hold out until night, nnd shall withdraw.’’ Its terms were abrOr.d, ami there ’ was no more of doubt or Inpc. The fed* erls offieiers seeing the inevitable' result of their success, wisely ond humanely forebore further assault, and the compar ative stillness was oppressive. Dusk came, and with it came the evac uation. • Noiselessly from the line they had so gallantly defended, the Confeder ates withdrew, and the long dark col umns passed through the streets, unat tacked, unpursued. We were spared the horror of a fright through the steels, which had been feared. Now began the wild farewells and long embraces with which mothers sent foilh their sons toun xnown fate*! and perchance endless par tings. \Ve draw the curtain over them. The darkness fell, thotilunt march continued until the old bridge at Pocahontas had re echoed to the treadof the last Confed erate soldier. A signal gun said, “It is finished:*’ from right to left of the trench es rang deafening explosion, while hursts of angry light shot up the bending sky. The army held on its track of retreat along the river bank, the citizens awoke to their changed condition, and the long agony was over. NO. 22. A Short Sermon. ItV Tilt ®I.D MKBMItNC. “There’s nine men a standin’ at the door, and they all sed they’d take sku grr in thcr’u.*’ Sich, frepds and Inclining, was the talk in a wuildly cent, wonst cotninun in this our ninshunt land*; but the dais is gone by, nnd the «ans run dry, and no say.to lus uabur. hoo art thou, iuian, and will you-take any more shugar ! in your kuuphcy. fcut the words of our text lias a differ jent and a more pcrth kclcr moenin than this. Thar they stood at the doors on a cold winturs tnornin, two Baptiss, and ; two Methodise, and five Luthcrins, and jthe tother one was a puhlikin. And i they nil with one vois said they wouldn’t j dirty their feet in a dram shop* hut if the j puhlikin would go in and git the drinks they would pay for ’em. And they all !cried out and every nyin sed, “I’ll take [mine with shugar—for it won’t feel good jto drink the stuff without sweetnin.*’ So j the puhlikin marched in nnd the barkcep jor sed, “What want ye ?*’ and he answer led and sod, “A drink.*’ “How* will yon ! have it Y” “Plane and strate,’’ sez he, “for it aint no use wastin shugar to cir cutnsalivate nkafortis. But there’s nine more a standid at the door, and they all sed they’d take shugar in tlicr’n.” Fiends and hrethring, it aint only the likkerof sperits that is diunk in this rounderbout nnd underhanded way, hut its the likker ol all sorts of human wick* [ edness in like /Banner. Thars the likker of niallis, that menyuvyou drinks to the dregs, but you’r sure to swetin it. with the shugar of self-justification. Tints [likker of nvariss, that sum keeps behind the curtin for constant use, but tiny al ways have it well mixt with the swetnin of prudence and ekunomy. Thars the likker of self-luv that sura men drinks by the gallon, hut they always puts in lots of the shugar of take care*of No. 1. And lastly,thars the likkerof extorshon, which tho man swetins »ck»rdi'n to >urkumstan cos. If he’s in the flour line, he’ll say the poor’! be better off eatin korn bred ; if he’s in the cloth line, why its a good thing to lern ’em to make their cloth at home; if he’s in the lether line, it’ll larn tho needccfsity of takin better krer of shoos. “And there's nine more standin at.the dore and they all sed they’d tako shugar in them.’* But fronds and breethring, there’s a time cummin, nnd a plase fixin, where' thar’ll be no “standin at the door” tn call for “shugar in them.” But they*}! have to go rito in nnd take the drink square up to the f.ont; and the barkeep er II oe old Suitun and nobody elso : and lie’ll give ’em “shugar in them,’* you’d better believe it, and ii*l! bo 4 shugar of led, and red hot led nt that, as sure as your name’s old Conshuncc dodger.— And you II be entitled to your rashuns three times a day if not more frequant* licr, and if you don’t like it, you’ll have to lump it, and so may the old Nick closo down upon all your silk palarverin around the plane old pool? of brotherly luv, and ginerosity, and fellcr-feelio, and fair play Amen.