Newspaper Page Text
I 00 PER ANNUM
s. P R O P H I TT,
Wm OoVINOTON GEORGIA.
I till bU
■aM»,Y MEDICINES.
Consisting of his—
vr n medicine,
Kanopyne tain kill it >
H & anti bilious pills *
if I ague tills,
■ dysentery cordial,
I FEMALE TONIC, and
if PURIFYING pills,
II . „„,1 will attend to all business in
■‘'"‘".HVom.s to his office.
line, f r ~a t iCntsi C nts when consulted,
V r . t, ° t i,at conic to his office at any
■ t attention given to all Orders.
|i nt Remedies of DU. PROPIIITT,
IHl'tie ®* ce ® -Jfttion— their well known power
K no the diseases peculiar to our South
■ Cllffl n! reputation in fieorgia and the ad
■WV « .e. As the majority ot persons liv-
Ding , «n.!th are predisposed to disease of
-ranted by alt intelligent physi-
Li fer ’ 1 , s 0 f the pains and aches of our
d s that organ i c or functional derange
fH^ P ' * *that important organ.
Dt ot PIIOPHITT’S
WL **re>v Moclioin©
■•J 1 r -tiv at the root of the evil. It cures
' which i» nine cases out of ten, is at
|H« h |ver ’ ,i, e Cough*, Dyspepsia, Colic,
■ b H Ot Che Rheumatism, Constipation, Meu
tt.l Ohstru-C.ms, etc,, so common among our
Stiver Medicine.
■V e C.ntnae of almost any other Prepara-
H* of*Medicine that acts upon the Liver. It is
of , M , „ K i„ia extract—ready for use at
■ th * ,0 . r 7av or "&'t,and can be carried to
BCaiitvin America, winter or summer, as it
■l 10 C? sour nor freeze at any temperature
■"toman being can occupy with safety,
■j * h Ttoo Strong for children, or too weak
HHft “ not rnhust There is no trouble about
■jbTo’ lv tstop the Bottle and drink it
only t 1 It has gained a
■SVb reputstionTn'every locality it has had
nor able chance to prove itself at
■ nf in America, and it has been used in
■ P C,,’ smith of Maine, and is alike appli-
Liver and D.gesuve
■;« ■> .»«tK •»»/ it.
! PARTICULAR notice.
K.rrafter NO MEDICINE WILL BE DELIY
■RED. or SERVICE RENDERED, except for
13-0 A- S H
n«ed not call unless you arc prepared to
AY CASH, for I will not Keep Books.
... 11, 1860. O. S. PROPHITT.
v We are Now! Receiving £
ND OPENING, A LARGE STOCK OF
GOODS
—Coneiating of —
DIB 7 © © © (8 S»
Gentlemen's and Ladles'
IRBSS GOODS
OLOVRS & HOSIERY,
Almost every Variety of
Motions
■eluding BASE BALLS, and other Play Balls
Ready Made Clothing,
lATS, BOOTS, & SHOES,
a r dL w a r o,
GUNS AND PISTOLS,
1 ir.OB findings, jewblry,
VIOLINS, AND VIOLIN STRINGS,
Cutlery, Crockery, Ac.
Also a Fine Assortment of
family groceries.
Ba<: on, Lard, Flour, Meal, Molasses, e
finest Syrups, Cove Oysters Sardines, the
FACTORY AND E. D. CHEESE,
And a great many other articles too tedious
mention.
Come and see us. We are determined
All at short profits, hoping thereby to sell
more.
•CARR & CODY.
Covington, Ga., Oct.23d, 1868.—48.tf.
THE GEORGIA ENTERPRISE.
Newton County Script Wanted.
ANY person having any of the above named
Script to dispose of, will cousult their own
interest by calling on
24if IIOYVKER ,t HARRIS.
DRS. DEARINC & PRINGLE
HAVING associated themselves in the Prac
tice of MEDICINE and SURGERY’, offer
their professional services to the citizens of
N«Vton county. They have opened an offi.-eon
the East side of the Square, (next door to S-
Dewald’b Store,) and are prepared to attend to
all calls promptly. They have also a carefully
selected assortment of the
Very Best Medicines,
and will give their personal attention to Com
peujjding Prescriptions, for l’hysiciaus and
otnws.
Special attention given to Chronic Diseases
At night Dr.. Deahixo will be found at. his
residence, and Dr. Prinole at his rooms imme
i(lately over the Store of C. 11. Sanders & Btto.
■say 15, 25tf
f H 0 TOG R A PIISJ
JIIAVE JUST RECEIVED a Fresh Supply
of Chemicals, and am now prepared to exe
cute work in my line in a superior manner.
Call toon if you would have a superior Pic
tare, at my old stand, rear of Post- Office build
iig—2otf J. YV. CRAWFORD,Artist.
it I would respectfully inform the
Afcnrfoua. citizens of Newton, and adjoining
counties, that I have opened a
SADDLE and HARNESS SHOP
On north side public square in COVINGTON
where lam prepared to make to order, Harness
Saddles, <fec , or Repair the same at short notice,
and in the best style.
47 ts JAMES R. HKOYVN
H. T. HEN It Y,
DENTIST,
COVINGTON, GEORGIA.
mi n_ HAS REDUCED HIS PRICES, so
that all who have been so uufortu
jX? nate as to lose their natural Teeth
«an have their places supplied by Art, at v-ry
small cost. Teeth Filled at reasonable pric‘«,
and work faithfully executed, Office north side
of Square.—l 22tf
JOHN S. CARROLL,
dentist
COVINGTON, GEORGIA.
Teeth Filled, or New ones Inserted,in
the best Style, and on Reasonable Terms
Office Rear oT R. King’s Store.—l ltf
J. c. MORRIS,
Attorney at Law,
CONYERS, GA.
JAMES M . LEVY,
Watchmaker & Jeweler,
East tide of the Square,
COVINGTON, GEORGIA,
Where he is prepared to Repair Watches, Clocks
and Jewelry in the best style. Particular atton
tien given to repairing M atches injured by in
competent workmen. All work warranted.
J OSE P H Y. TINSLEY,
Watchmaker & Jeweler,
I« fully prepared to Repair Watches, Clock
and Jewelry, in the best Style, at short nolice
All Work Done at Old Prices, and Warranted.
2d door below the Court House.—sis
PACE, WOOD & ROGERS,
HAVE JUST OPENED
A Very Large and Handsome Stock of
SS*aiH«
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
We invite ourfriends to give us a call, as our
Stockcvery Department is now complete.
PACE, YVOOD A ROGERS,
South side of Square, Covington, Ga.
COVINGTON GA., JULY 23 1809.
What Is the Spirit’s Destiny T
I am passing away! I am passingjaway!
Soon this body shall mingle with valley clay 1
But the spirit 1 oh ! where shall its airy form
Repose when the wild and tossing storm
Os life is o’er? Oh ! where shall it go?
To sunlight above, or to night below ?
Can yo tell me ye winds that go moaning
along ?
For yc caugiit tho last note of the dying one’s
song,
And still waft it on ;—oh ! say, can yo tell
Where tho lono spirit went when tho frail
body foil ?
The winds liavo not told ; can tho wido ocean
keep
The soul that must like it still wander, nor
sleep ?
“My caverns and beu hold the wroeks of
those forms
“That once gladden’d earth ; but tho spirit
no’er warms
“Nor enlivens them now; alone ’naath the
wave
“Unrcmembcred they sleep in their deep coral
grave.”
Yo waves of the shoreless ocean above!
Does the spirit ne’er pause, liko Noah’s lone
dove,
And pant for its rest where your soft dewy
light
Is caught from the beams of the morning so
bright ?
“Our course is forever the bright isles among
“Os the air, and we melt ’neatu the rosy beam
flung
“From the flaming air .king ; may the spirit
ascend
“To its home, like from earth with the light
nings we blend ?”
Ye altars of freedom ! yodhrones of the storms 1
YVhere wild glens are haunted by shadowy
forms
At midnight; oh ! toll from your summits so
grey.
YVhere the spirits shall dwell when its earth
fades away ?
“YVe have looked o’er the world from our cur
tains of cloud;
“And our voice hath swelled with the tliundor
bolt loud;
“Or we’ve hush'd into silence at death-shrieks
that ran
Thro' the rallies below since time first began :
The Deluge we felt, as the wild-dashing main
Rolled upward and onward its millions of
slain !
We heard a low moan blend with each angry
swell,
But we saw not the soul when the frail body
fell I”
I have asked of the winds, but they answer’d
me not;
And the ocean groaned back that his dend are
forgot;
And tho storm-troubled clouds have asked if
the soul
May upward ascend from the body s control ;
The mountains have whisper'd in low, pensive
gales,
Os sounds that forever arise from the vales ;
They have felt the rough surge of the enshroud
ing deep,
And heard the low moan and the angry wave
sweep :
But winds, clouds, nor oceans, nor mountains
can tell
YVhere the lone spirit went when the frail
body fell 1
Discovery of Human Bodies tiiat Lived
Before Adam. —YVo have heard lately almost
too much about the prehistoric man, and the
supply of flint implements, perforated shells,
and split marrow-bones bogins to exceed the
demand ; but a recent discovery in tho De
partment de la Dordogne of human skeletons
coeval with the mammoths, and undeniably
appertaining to the earliest quaternary period
presents features of such unusual interest that
the French Government have sent M. Lartet,
the distinguished palaeontologist, to make a re
port on the subject. lie reports that the bones
of five skeletons have been discovered, and
that they belong to some gigantic race whose
limbs, both in size and form, must have resem
bled those of tho gorilla. But the simian origin
of man must not bo inferred from these an
alogies, as the skulls, of which only three are
perfect, afford testimony fatal to this theory,
having evidently contained Tevy voluminous
brains. The skulls arc now in the handle of a
committee of savants, who are preparing nn
exhaustive esaniologieai Report. —Pall. Mall
Gazette.
Penitentiary Leased. —We understand that
Messrs. Grant, Alexander & Cos. have leased
the penitentiary, and‘that under tho bill au
thorizing the leasing of the institution, Messrs.
Hawkins, Carrington and McCombs wore ap
pointed- to take an inventory of the establish
ment, which they have done, we believe.
YVe were not aware of the fact that such a
bill had- been passed and signed by tho Gov
ernor. It would have Been well for the Gov
ernor to have at least advertised the fact that
it was for lease, and to have invited bidders.
YY'e know nothing of the terms. If the State
can bo saved the annual expense of its support,
that much is gained if nothing more, though
we believe it could bo mads a paying institu
tion to the State, besides being self-sustain
ing. YVe are glad, however, the step has been
taken, and we wait to-ses how it will work.—
—[Southern Recorder, stb.
The Lady who argued a case in the House
of Lords talked fourteen days, and was then
taken with hysteria. The dead and wounded
among her hearers are not given.
Bide Your Time.
YVe say to our Democratic friends every where
—bide your time. Tho day of redemption is
dtawing nigh. Reason is resuming its sway
over the minds of the pooplo, and Radicalism,
which feeds on crime, nnd fattens on the woes
and sufferings of tho country, is doomod to
defeat. The evidences of its decay are ovary
dny more apparent and encouraging, Let tho
friends of justice, honesty, and integrity in
tho administration of public affairs hide their
time. The hour is coming when they must
striko tho blow and strike it
for tho redemption of the country from tho
thraldom of vice and rascality—from the power
of a corrupt and usurping party. Tho wrongs
of the people have been great, and thoso who
havo inflicted them have boon sustained in
power through tho aid of that kind of fanatic
faith which makes a falsehood dearer than
truth ; but the chain is broken. Thoso who
havo been robbing tho people aro quarreling
over their plunder and accusing each other of
the crimes they havo committed. The time
fosr tho people to speak is approaching. They
will put Radical dishonesty out of power nnd
restoro the people to tho good old days of
honest Democratic ascendency.—Detroit Free
Press.
The Freedom of SrEEcn.— General Mosbv,
of rebel notoriety, was announced to speak in
Fulton, Oswego County, New York, a few
nights since, but an excitcmont was created by
interested parties, and lie left town before night
without speaking. Supposing the thing had
occurred with a Northern man in a Southern
State? What a howl there would have bean.
Freedom of speech is one thing in one place
and another thing in another plaeo according
to the bigot’s reasoning. But the Miltonian
faith is best: “Let truth and falsehood grap
pie; for who ever knew truth put to the worst
in an open conflict
On Monday, July 5, Mr. Arthur Buehrer, a
young overseer at Longview Lunatic Asylum,
Ohio, went out with a company of the inmates,
to engage in some necessary work. About
noon lie was startled by one of the unfortun
ates calling him, “ Look, Arthur, he is going
to hit you.” But it was too late ; ho half
turned, when a pick axe in the hands of one
of the party sank to the eye in his head, killing
him instantly. The poor demented croatures
wept when he fell, and secured the irresponsi
ble perpetrator of the tragedy.
Suicide of a Convict.— Tho Federal Union
says : Luke Arnold, convicted of murder in
YVilkes county, and sentenced to the peniten
tiary for life, hung himself in his cell, on
Thursday night last. lie was received at the
penitentiary the evening previous, and worked
with the other convicts on the railroad Thurs
day. lie was a negro of very bad character,
having committed one of the most fiendish
murders that over blackened the criminal re
cords of this State.
Large Orchard.— Between YVilraitigton nnd
YVeldon, N. C., is a peach orchard of 250,000
trees, occupying 2,500 acres of land. An idea
of its in ignitude may, perhaps, be better shown
by the statement that if the acres were in a
row they would extend to the distance of one
hundred miles ; and if the trees themselves
were in a row, they would extend to the dis
tance of one thousand miles, In the season
for gathering, at only ono basket per tree per
day, there must he on the ground every day a
supply of 250,000 baskets.
YVrat tiie South Needs. —Commodore M.
F. Maury used the following strong words at
the Alumni dinner, at YVashington College, ia
response to this toast:
“The development of the material resources
of the South is the one grant necessity of the
age. God bless the men who are engagod in
the noble work.”
His words have a deep truth.
Direct trndo and emigration were the two
great resources of tho South. “Muscle” is
capital—one strong, hearty emigrant being
worth— computed in money—one thousand
dollars in the way of capital. He had tint as
surance that it only needs for the South to let
her wants be known on the other side, her
resources, etc., and soon nothing would be left
undone to spring the tide of immigration to
her rich fields and fertile valleys.
In thirty-one words, how many “thats” can
be grammatically inserted ? Fourteen ; IJe
sard that that that that man said was not that
that that one should say, but that that that
that man said, was that that that man should
not say. That reminds us of the “says and
“saids:” Mr. B. did you say or did you' not
say what I said you said ? because C. said you
said you said you never did say what I said
yen said. Now if you did say that you did
not say whatr I said you snid r than what did
you say ?
Never intentionally wound the feelings ofany
body. The opinion of the world is the very
best kind you can have, and the more the bet
ter. Tho man or woman who says Ke or she
doesn’t care a pin what the world thinks or
says, giyes utterance to what they know is
absolutely false. YYc do care, and it is well
we do ; and those are gravely mistaken; who
say they do not.
Tar may be applied to hard, dry and cracked
hoofs with good success. It appears to pene
trate and soften the hoof, and give it a bright
and clean look ; also closes the cracks. It
should be applied once or twice a month.
‘My son,' said an anxious father, ‘why do
you use that nasty tobacco?’ The boy, declin
ing to consider the question in tho spirit m
which it was asked, replied; “To get tho
iuice.”
Itrninrkablc Document—Prayer for a Sign
in the Heavens.
The Nowark, N. J., Courier says that a well
known resident of that city is about issuing in
tract form a most romarkable document. Ihe
idea is that a day shall bo set apart by Christ
ians of every denomination when prayer shall
be offered that at a certain day and hour the
Lord will set a sign in tho heavens wheroby
infidels may know that the Bible is the word
of God. The tracts aro to find their wny all
over tho country, and will probably excite a
considerable degree of public attention. They
hare not yet been issued, but the following are
said to bo extracts from them :
“ YVo bcliovo that if the Clergy evetywhore
of all denominations Wore to pray to God that
at a stated time, stvy ors next Christmas eve, a
sign might be set in tho heavens above us, ft
sign intelligent to ns, to continue forever, that
God would grant the prayer.
YVe cannot doubt; for has hot Ttot said. ‘lf
ye shall ask anything in nfy name I will do
it r ”
• ******
“ Now suppose that all cWristian denomina
tions were to instruct their church to pray that
a sign might bo given a» above, how swiftly
the tidings would fly to tho uttermost parts of
tho earth in this age of steam and elootricity.
Millions upon millions of human voices would
join in petitioning the throno of grace.’’
*******
“ Day after day rolls on—’tis Christmas Eve
—slowly sinks the sun to rost. The stars peep
forth one by one, and look down upon millions
and millions up-turnod, silont, prayerful faces.
Ah, what a solemn hour! yet what a beautiful
sight—a world in prayer.
Not a cloud to be seen—nothing but the vast
blue expanse of heaven, gemmed with myriads
of wandering starry worlds t All is beautiful,
silent, sereno. The hew is at hand. Ah,
what suspense—what an awe steals oweV atl f
Suddenly, from the very zenith, bursts forth ft
flood of golden light; soon the air is filled with
angels, shouting “ Behold the hour has come,
ye shall know that Christ is the Lord ; serve
ye Him, for He hath set His sign in the heav
en*. Behold! behold P
The sign appears. It is intelligible to all,
and with Mae accord a feeling world shouts,
“ Glory, glory to God in the highest, this is
Christ our Lord, wh worship Him the only true
God. Glory Hallelujah 1”
The following anecdote is told of the cele
brated Dr. Young:
YVhen Young was in early life, and paying
his addresses to a lady, whom he afterward
married, he was in a garden with bis intended,
accompanied by another lady, when a message
was sent in request’ng the Dr’s, services. lie
emphatically refused the request, upon which
the ladies, hearing the request and the refusal f
immediately seized him and compelled him to
go. YVliile under the force of arms he made
the following extemporaneous expression :
“Thus Adam looked when from the garden
driven,
And thus disputed sent from heaven ;
Like him I go but still to go am loth—
Like him I go, foe
Angels drove us both—
Hard was his fate, but mine
Still more unkind,
His Eve went with him, but
Mine stays behind.
■ - ——- 1 -
A young lady’s opinion of the bonnet of the
season :
“Oh, the bonnets of ray girldhood—the kind
I wore to school T I really thought them pret
tv, I must have been a fool. And yet I used
to think myself on hats a jaunty miss. IYcr
haps I was, as fashion went; but what was
that to this? Oh, the lovely little pancake—
the ebiwming little mat! It makes my head so
level, and so very, very flat I”
Tears.— Robert Hall considered the word
“tears” surpassingly beautiful. It belongs to
the Saxon family he so dearly loved. The
tear itself often glows like a diamond on tho
cheok where the rose and lily blend. Its moral
beauty, a» a perfect Daguerre of compassion
and benevolenoe, is the greater. There are
tears of gratitude, of joy 1 Thoee sparkle like
the morning dew. There are tears of peni
tence. Angels celebrate them with their
hoavenly harps.
A negro in New Haven was warned by a
policeman to desist from rolling, hie wheel
barrow on the sidewalk, whereupon the sable
individual shouldered the barrow, with “Guess
dat’s all hunky,” and marched off down the
street.
A Schoolmaster asked a class of boys the
meaning of tho word ‘appetite.’ After a short
pause, one little-boy said’, “f know, sir; when
I’m eatin’ I’m happy, and when I’m. done I’m.
tight.”
'
Mr: Choate, wishing to compliment Chief
Justice Shaw, oxclaimed : “ When I look upon
the venerable Chief Justice Shaw, I am like
a Hindoo before his idol— I know that he is
ugly, butt I feel that ha-i» great.”
A Pbrtland man has cured one of the most
dangerous cases of cancer by drinking red olo
var tea and applying a red clover compress, and
thinks it will prove an infallible remedy in all
cases.
Reader, did you ever enjoy the ecstatic bliss
of courting ? If you didut get a little gal
lan-try.
A correspondent asks, “ what shall we do in
heaven to employ our time?” Perhaps he
will never be troubled on that point.
He who puts off good duties, shows he had
Do heart to perform them.
VOL. 4 NO. 36
Confciterrttc Head 1 nt Point Lookout.
'fhe Baltimore Gazette says “Tho friends
and relatives of tlm Confederate prisoners who
died at Point Lookout will be glad'to fcarn tf.at
Mr. L. O. Smith has in his possession acori-edt
list of all those who were buried in the CenVtf*
tery set apart for tho reception of their re
mains. This list was furnished Mr. Smith by
the Surgeon of the Post before his departure.
It embraces tho names of all tho Confederates
interred in the Cemetery, each name having a
number attached, which corresponds with the
numbers on the head boards marking the grove* ,r
By this moans tho bodies, even now, in the
dilapidated condition cf the place, can be
readily identified. A copy of tho list is ia
this city, at the office of Mr. J. Wetloy Smith,
Secretary of the Loudon Park Confederate
Memorial Association, and one of the firm of
Smith & Brothers, Booksellers, No. 157 Wesf
Baltimore street. It can be seen upon applte
cation. Mr. L. 0. Smith, of St. Mary’s whose’
farm adjoins the Cemetery, has kindly volun
teered, upon the reooiptof instructions to that
I to forward to their proper destination?
the rotnairrs of any of tho Confederate soldiers
interred in the cemetery, etiarging simply thft
actual cost of removal.”
The problem of »rial navigation is solved.-
Within a year we shall travel habitually to
New York, Europe and China by serial carria
ges. The triad trips of the model steam car
riage, ot Shell Mound Park, have been entirely
and completely successful—exceeding the most’
sanguine anticipations or hopes of the builders.
The power of the propellers was greater, and
the resistance of the atmosphere less than vrera
estimated, and the speed attained woe peoyMsr
tionately groator. Protected by Its patenf
rights, we believe that the Atrial Steam Navi
gation Company' of Calfomia, and its grantees,-
will speedily constitute the gigantic single in
corporation interest in the United States—
overshadowing the railroad, steamships or tel
egraph combinations. The thing is dona f
fully, finally and completely done. YVithin
four weeks the first aerial steam earring*, caper*
We of conveying six persons, and propelled at’
a rate exceeding the minimum speed of thirty
miles an hour, will wing its flight over the
Sierra Nevada on its way to New York and
otheT remote parts.— [San Francisco News-
Letter, June 26.
Anecdote or Calvin. —The late Albert'
Gallatin, President of the Historical Society,
related the following anecdote to tho Hon.-
Gulian C. Vcrplanck, from whom we get it.-
Several years ago, a number of Calvin’s let
ters were fount! among the archives of Geneva,
some of which, relating to his domestia
affairs, exhibit a curious picture of tho doily
life of this great Presbyter, and illustrate his
peculiar habits and temper. In a scolding
letter to the syndics or magistrates of Geneva,
ha complains that they have filled his cellar
with wine of poor quality. “I do not keep
open house,” he says, “nor do I entertain
very many people at my table now; and
therefore the quantity you havo recently
sent me displeases mo, as well as the quality.
I wish therefore yon would take it away, and
replace it with something I can drink ;I de
not want much, merely enough for my own’
use and that of my family ; a few barriques,
(barrels of about forty gallons each) say four
or five, will be sufficient for me, once a quarter
We are afraid the Presbyterians of this cen«-
tury have been tremendous backsliders.
Wanted tiie Man Thrown In. —A Canadi
an Clergyman, not long since, was called upon
by an Irish girl who inquired how much he
asked for “marrying anybody.”
no replied, “a dollax and a-half” and Biddy
departed.
A few evenings later, on being summoned to
the door, he was accosted by the same person,
with the remark that she had come to be mar
ried.
“Very well,” said the minist#—but per
ceiving with astonishment, that she was alone,
he continued, “where is the man ?”
An expression of disappointment passed
over Biddy’s features she ejaculated
“And don’t yoa find the man for a dollar
and a-half ?
Found Their Man. —The advocates of an.
Emtpire have found their man. It is William.
11. Seward. The Imperialist says Mr. Seward'
“ is, more than any other public man, a rep
resentative of the forces and principles which
now rule in these United States of America;,
and that he has been for many years, and no
toriously, a boliever in a strong and splendid
central government as the only hope of his
country. In. fact, except for the name, he is
as much an Imperialist os any counselor of
Napoleon..”
Froimthe manner in which he tinkled’ “ his
little bell” during the war, one might naturally
suppose this to be a fact.
Try It.—A cup of coffee is a sure barome
ter. If you allow tho sugar to drop to tho
bottom of the oup and watch the babbles col
leet in the middle, the weather will be fine ; i?
they adhere to the enp, forming a ring, it will
be rainy, and if the buUbles separate without
assuming any fixed position, changeable weath
er may be expected. Try it.
1 i ,——
A lady, speaking of a gathering of lawyers
to look a<t anew court house, said she supposed
they had gone to “view the ground where they
would shortly He.”
YVhen the clouds of sorrow and repcntauce
darken the countenance, the love of God light
ens tho soul.
The Pal! Mall Gazette has discovered that #
medical preparation to take the kinks out of
negroes’ hair is extensively sold in the Sonth- ■
era States. *