The Weekly Sumter republican. (Americus, Ga.) 18??-1889, March 31, 1871, Image 1

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PUBLISHED HANCOCK, GRAHAMS REILLY Volume 18. DEVOTED TO NEWS, POLITICS AND GENE3AL PEOG2ESS—INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS. professional Cards. From the Constitutionalist. Nellie’s Grave. AMERICUS, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 31. 1871. 1 TERMS:" < Tt\ree Dollars a Year, PAT ABLE IS ADVANCE. Number 6. HAWKINS & BURKE. t tox*xxoy » ix r JLi aw. U. CARTER, \ h V A V h A W, WILLIAMS. lav 18 t I.tk- •CRT & HOLLIS. ••■ISV.1S A'? LAW A” i Solicitors of Patents. Aim*mus, (iconi:i. ?&t me Gown nnG mused awhile, OIJ Friend, not long ago; »wn the lane, by the old oak stile. Where yellow daisies prow ; iere, where the willow leans its leaves, And low its branches ware, gle-wings, I thought them Ned, e ourNollis’s grave. Front, the Episcopal Method iM The Heavens- And I.nid in a golden sheen We thought it were a filli N- l. i C. T. GOODE, Attorn y at Law; AMi.r.icus, gi orgi.v > over W . T. D.. JACK "BRCWi* The A. SMITH, SAV5 LUflSPKiS, TTORNEY AT LAW, | The material heavens, the plurality of worlds, the marvellous unity and diversi ty of the heavenly bodies, have been ob jects of study from the beginning of the world. David says. M ’onsidcr the heav ens,” because there is no word in any language so deeply fraught with endless meaning cs Heaven. The word is de rived from tho Saxon fuo/au, which bine, mellowed through the cloud, j signifies an arch, and is • used for the ex- jpanse above the earth, which appears i like an immense arch in which are seen j the sun, moon, and stars. It is so ex- j tensive, but little U seen at once, aud no mind cau understand one-half of what is visible. Scientific knowledge is re quisite to the understanding of the nat ural heavens, and without it there is a great dread of a fearful calamity; with it, there is no dread whatever. The sta bility of the heavens is based upon the immortality ol‘ Him who made them. The moral heavens is the spiritual ele vation of tho soul above the level of seusuriul life; unless heaven be within, the external cyuuut fully be received and enjoyed as the handy work of Clod.— Truth, without f»rr, is dead and soulless. I f God be revealed by his Spirit, the or der ol life that reigns above is {more glo rious ; as man has the copy below, in the pure inbreathing God, the primal source of the light of heaven. It is the law of the human mind, to believe what it secs l Rut. no: I was awake, anil felt li was but all too true: Ar.4 then, dear Ned. right down I knelt And from the flowers mlled two— Two precious lirtle daisies, Ned, Willi bright eyes dripping dew— 1 k.:j myself, dear Ned; dearly the idling bride Tbs Old Saw and the Drunkard. I EX-GOVE an or ferry to aov,.R i the royal marriage. La*t week Ire heard an old grcatkmnn I > If OR SCOTT- j Wedding ofthePrinceaaLouue. of Eag. tell the following story, which we here j s - C - M »' cb U » j •“*- t0 3“ ■*?»*» ° f UnL treasured up to tell our juvenile renders: i • Excelle nc J Governor brorr . The Marriage of the Princess Louisa to There was rather an old nun. o shoe-' ..w'l'T 1l!ml J°» «*• • - - , slitting your political opponents in every maker by trade, who did not live a thuu? seOttou of the .State as to the Wst means sand miles from Houston, who grew more! ^V ret *‘ rv iug order, peui-e, and the f , ft-reement of the laws'in South Carolina, feud of his liquur, until ho gave hmwlf hare invited prominent gentlemen almost wholly up to his power. He concluded, as a matter of economy, that he would buy his liquor by the jug full and take it home and have it all the time by himself. One uay as he was going home with his jug which had just been filled, he saw a fellow drunkard ly ing full length in the gutter, by the, side of the street, which was full of mud and water. While he stop{>ed to gate at the scene au industrious old sow come rooting along up the gutter, and eamo to the man, ly- ing right iu her way. She was not dis- glits t > the stutter u over and over t of her way. but he n. and still kept his *1 by hers ed us by, Old Friend, • and feels, so : ; these, earth po6ed to give up her so she rooted the i again, to get him o would roll buck ag: place in the gutter. The old shoemaker had set his jug down to see the thin gout. Several per sons passing, stopped with him, and be come interested. The old shoiuaker took the whole thing deeply to heart. He said: ‘‘Gentlemen, did any of yon ever see mo in such a fix as that?” ‘*0 yes,” said several, “wo have seen md he A PRETTY PAGE. WHATAXEXBKB OF CONGRESS FOUND IN WASHINGTON—EXTRAORDINARY HISTORY OP A YOUNG GIRL. From the New York Leader.] Now and then, in this snffruge-seoking age, one encounters an instance of the metamorphosis of sex—going as far as an exchange of the distinctive habiliments. This used to be a very favorable devise with tho novelists of the happy dead and the Marquis of Lorn was solemnized at one o'clock on Tuesday in the royal chap el of St. George at Windsor. The little town of Windsor was crowded witli people during the da*, thousands of , o —— persons, clud in holiday attire, moving throughout tho State to meet you in about on ca-dle green from au early hour * lu ? ^reiifis of the happy dead ai Coin mb is for this laudable and patriotic of tho morning. buneddays ofhigh and dry literature, purpose. I believe, sir, that you are The Fton Coilege ' “boys” were out in “ “ *’ now smeero in this purpose, notwith- i fnll force. They mastered ou the Castle ^andiugyour “Winchi-ster r.fle speech" , hill, enjoying themselves to the utmost, in Washington ft year or two since, in i cracking jokes and cheering, but steered, wbicn yon fiendishly proclaimed thut | so far as the moment whan I write, clear Una instrument of death, in the hand* j of an unseemly collision with the riiop- "fthe negroes of South Carolina, was j keepers or members of the miyrhanie and the most efiectivemeuiis of maintaining ' laboring classes. trder and quiet in the Stair-. 1 rejoice ■ Soldiers of tlie Queen's Guard kept tho pussage from the railway station to chapel clear for the convenience of the invited guests who came from London to Windsor by special train, and who, after landing Even the immortal William himself now and then ventured to attire one of his heroines in a doublet and trunk, to carry ont some pet love project embodied in bis plot But it is not often that in these proaaio find that a change has come _ -pirit of your thoughts and actions; and I, for one, am ready and willing, with ail tho good people of tho State, to sus tain you iu your present course. The tone and temper of your recent message \lenee of your from the railroad coaches, were veyed in carriages belonging to tho U) thq Legislature is evidence of yoiir royal household to the chapel, having sincerity. -Wn first received with cheers by the 1 ermit me to say to you, sir, in all; populace its each of 'he magnates w as rec- cundor and sincerity, that the signs of oguized. me times indicate, unmistakeably to my j Tho ringiug of the joy bells, was also unnd, that wo are on the eve of n bloody j renewed aud continued after each orri- tiioiultuons commotion, unless something val. is done to quiet public opinion. The Tho interior of the chapel of St. incendiary destruction of property every George presented a most magnificent np- night, and tho roguery oi the Logislu-! peurance. ttire in their appropriations, and tax i Tho walls and front of the galleries ution, amounting ultimately to coufi -! were decorated with the various knightly cation of all real and personal estate, j banners which bang in tho church by cannot las borne much longer. There is j right of honor. There were men in tho a point beyond which human endurance | most gorgious uniforms, ladies iu the cunuot g°- l et the consequences be what '■ richest robes, and sparkling and sheen of they may. I diamonds and glorious sunshine stream- I know it is not iu your power to re- ing in through the ancient, windows and form the Legislature, or stay effectually j lighting up the scene. their cornintion. briherv ni.wlct..,,.. days of ours a young and pretty girl ven tures to imitate Viola in exchanging her skirts tor the lc-** decorous garb of the sterner sex. Yet snch a case has turned up within the lost day or two. And its turning-np has excited tremendous scandal in the limited circle which at present compre-. heads and enjoys its detail In a gay and festive lawyer was elected from an- Illinois district Jo. the house of repre sentatives. While there ho became dis tinguished rather for his social qualities, VII ru> y -al JLa \n C f«it M their corruption, bribery, prodigality ' Premier Gladstone, tho remainder of mid roguery. But there are two things ! the Cabinet Ministers, the foreign Ambas- which yon cun do and should do, the I sudors serving “near” the Court of her sooner the better; disarm your militia I Majesty the Queen, with the very “cream” and appoint good and intelligent men to ' of the ‘•‘societv" of Great Britain were;. v , , -y- oflico. AU the lawlessness and violence , present. ‘ to " ew lorii . where he now practices his Inch have disgraced tlie State have J Of tho bridal party the first arrival was ! for , m f r l>r°fes.siou. Ho dispatched bis his downright wickedness, and his stylish dress than for any marked attention to his duties. So loud became gossip that a cousin of his wife, who resided in Wash ington, wrote down to her quiet relative, severely unconscious in the conntry, of her husband's escapades in Washington. Tbe letter recounted tho queer deeds and the evil reputation of Iter spouse. Of course the wife stood not upon the order of her going, nud reached the capital just in time to catch her husband recovering from the combined effects of a drunken bout and a gambling spree. Slio slung some verbal pebbles at his aching aknll, and he retorted with missiles of the same kind. Bnt thi3 wa9 no novelty. At tho end of tho session our festive Congressman concluded to resign his seat i and to transfer tlio light of his presence p tell j admissive of!y° u * n pickle that man is in.” become one in | ‘‘Well, you will never see it again I said he. So, looking around he saw 7 . I " 1 “ l " uhtjiuvvu »UP ounc UUVU ] vt uio uiuuu uut« IUO uut B1IIIU "Da ; -ft ' ■ , .. . *. . ,— 7 rn i store open, and went mb* it and came cut, been owing to these two sources of mis- j the most noble the Duke of Argyll, father { ™ 10 u> wmd n l» matters in Illinois, while ; with two bottles. He opened his jug and} * S t ' ver n-nS there a more fa»al j oMlie bridegroom. ' j lie prepared for her reception in New l!iUUl 1 Uil«i , „ii _» 1 iuiirftake, or a more diabolical wrong 1 TheDnke'waa dressed in full High filled both bottles till., and corked them, committed, than when yon organized land costume, tlie material of the rich • lu-erl?! ud idol l »ov< irgmg HAWKINS & GULRRY.I AUcrneys-at-Law, I Just like a mighty groan ; md all night long l pace and pace, Nor all night sleep agaiu, ■ or rest, until the morning light Brings brief surcea«e from pain. SS±:| V. !!. 1 i LtO W IS ,| UiUll.ivV IT LAW. it puzzled her, dear Ned, to think Who ’twaa that helped her when Her brutal hasband took to drink. And left her with babe Jen:j For fenr she’d ask who 'twas of me. I scarce dared pass her by ; For. t would do her no good, you se To know ’twas you or 1. j And publish ; The signs infallible.*' I leaven must be an interior state he | U P *'gbt, and then poured the Haiti | i-.reitcon he folly enjovrf in .he’.terO the !*?“", 1in, ? J lke , njl oonditiun. i. mus b. within before! s;,,d hw fncmk arc j it cau be projected in the untwarJ world,!- Tna p,,n * : *" *> with thc ,wo bo,tIw? " ! either in t into or eternity. The king- ‘1 »"•"«'P>i“g'» the liquor in I dour of Heaven » the Chitreh on earth— | ,he,D ’ ^ 3 « ert »“ ! 1 » m E» in E <» I that divine order and uni venal hr, that ltee P tlera '° lm,k 1 * m 8*8 *••«» encompasses all mankind. All truths tare rays from the infinite fountain of all -good. Tbe heart of God, and the hearts i I he other, 1 will se. iu m 5 | ience and lawlessness ] house, where I can see it wheu Iain there, j uated : bottle in my shop, right before my scat, where I can see it every time I raise my head. Thc other. 1 prisoners was owing to the The fearful killing and murder of a num ber of men at Chester was likewise ow- ! ing to your colored militia. Tlie vio- '' ’ t YurkviUe origi- , ten united. The intellect of men is I UUU8e ' wnere 1 CJ,n sw “ wneu 1 am inere '! uated ,n « uc - Vour appoiut- • m»d,» »b,» ^*»b i** , 4 | They will remind me of what T have seen I Heretoiore, vour appomtmeuts ; u *8ut the receptacle of the divine light, , . _ „ j have been mostly made of ignorant aud ! and the sensibilities the divine love. A I h ° r ° trt ‘ corrupt men, who cannot enforce the i . .1 . .. The man in the gutter after cooling 01T! laws aud preserve the pence. ; heaven without the conscious presence ol B i -• > • - I pretty well, all the bette of | colored troops throughout the State and j est description and the ornaments of j put arms into their hands, with powder I gold. . and ball, and denied the same to the i Tho Duke was accompanied by his re. white people. Jt was atrocious. The • wife, tlie Duchess of Argyll—the “dear i Moody tragedy at Laurens was owing to Lady Leveson Gower” of Queen Victoria’s this, and nothing else. The murder of j early household—mother of the Marquis Stevens and other white men nt Union of Lorn. by one of yonr negro companies, and the The Duchess of Argyll was robed in a subsequent execution of ten colored j costume fashioned of what is known as cloth of silver. Her Royal Highness, tho Princess of, , - «, Wilks, wore u robe of blue ratio with a i ; vh , ofiu ““““ an , d langoago wtreslnga- ‘rain of blue velvet. | lorlj graceful and polite. Indeed, after Her Royal Highness entered the chapel '■ a w hile, mad&tno fed desperately iu love ..j; ii.. _i -I.i ..r it. ti / , with the nrAttr fellow !in»l nooforod ho prepared for her reception York. When the wife returned she found him domiciled in state ou Waverly place, near Broadway, with a handsome youth about eighteen years of age, smooth-shaved, curly-headed, bright-eyed, and of a de cidedly girlish appearance. This inter esting young stranger onr Congressman page of introduced to his wife the House of Representatives, whose bright, face aud keen wit had attracted his fancy j nd protection. Madame, on part, at once took a liking to thc boy, leading the children of the Prince of! .^ e pretty fellow, and pestered Wales, the little ones clud in full High- ; U,m ln „ a , “ ost * icked aml «nwifely land dress. j Wtt y Wlt h little endearments and atteu- Thero was also present an Asiatic j * W : ml ne ; George W. Wooten, UTOItXKV-VT-LAH, | iLmoricufti, - — — Ora., I’ve kvpi lier Rr.vc It is my sole solace : And, close beside, my constant feet Have worn a standing-place : For hours I’ve stood and thought, ’Till thought would bring to me The same dear, merry, laughing girl, Princess from Iudis, who appeared i „ < t ^ Somehow this reached the benevolent perfect blaze of scarlet, gold and dia- j s ears, and lie found lodg- m ouds. i in 8 8 for j 1 8 protege elsewliere, and Stern- After a short time the bridegroom, the ; *7 upbraided his wife for her demonstra- Marquis of Lorn, entered tho chnrcli °^, u . n ^ ue lntere ®t- in the bov.— from the reception room which had been - Madame s ire was now provoked, and she That niled c Phillip Cook, U o r i\ e y at Law,| AMERUUS, GEORGIA. The hi ugh hath died t silcrn- here to d: 4 ., The God.»thoolUurreur.dkglme^oftbl! ^ welK iU1 f, ’ r h '’** ,he j i rivd^r^a Soul, would be like an ,«,n without P U S0W to , tUr0 h,m nvt ' r » ibw tm,e9 ™*> d hove contiuued lo do so, but for . t. • | j , , . j arose and departed, likely to be found in j ‘be unprincipled carpet baggers who « h « 1 i bated the youth ns much as ebo U«d^- finite r*i . i Act so with the shoemaker. He went! artful and devilish appeals to their fears Tho magnificent choir of St. George’s I * ecle d him. About three days ago an . :p. c }. I ne diYine nature; L ome ^ wt | llD ^ had passions. Uuprincipleu white chapel intoned un anthem immediately, j anonymous note from “A Fnend” can- s,i -L, , Irik , ’’ , ! men living amongst us, seeing an -oppor- j TheMarquisofLornwjLsiittendedby l^^beragaiuhtthopsoudopagecharg- satd, and lived a sober and retormod man ■’ tU uity of office ami plunder, joined the his groomsmen, Earl Percy and Lord j her husband with foisting a lady thc balance of his life. What tbe tem-! carpet-baggers. These two closttea unit- Leveson Gower. profa/e npon her m this ingenious mnn- pcrance lecturers could not do for him, 4,1 in persuading the negroes that they! All three of the noble personages were ; ne £ ....... . the old sow did. She showed him where * oala P ut b ^‘ k " 11(l /hat | dressed in the uniform of the Volunteer i whh thi^^ut To fn’d&nimW .1— must apply the torch to redress! Argyllshire Rifio ArtiJJerv—green cloth, ; nusonnu w ku tuis, but be indignantly sup|»OBed wrongs! It is not stir- j trimmed with silver. | protested the truth of tho story, and of- pri.siug that a people so ignorant and The Marquis of Lqrn appeared pale and Kcvcd to produce corroborative evidence. • • - - i... i i i i i... Iho n«Tt ihv tno “nairr* ’ hud fnrntwl in Wv. that they are called tho children of Heaven—■••all of you arc children of the High,”—and heirs of the heavenly Para- . . , . ! «lise. By science, we know that iu day- 1 ou 11 find tno changed, yes, changed, Old ■ . , , , J .. ( j. j time stars are about us, although wo sec 1 was not then ns now ; ! ‘bem not, till night; so angels arc about thick as beams of light. ■Millions of spiritual creatures walk the :ny hr. ceorge v.. rumaabUGH, ATTORNEY at law, tot, I know, id .ladling blade cc in the Long Ago. oniped hill and glade. Uni earth, eon, both whci sleep.” c wake and when y ‘■lousy hall, me again. Old, Friend, i the lane, , will talk old Friend, passed away— We need not fit’ through space with , the swiftness of light, to find thc proper I abode of God and angels ; they are ucar- • cr to tts than we are to ourselves. uti, D. p. D LH H0LLOWA1 t i ST. .1»J, -Our lives the holy angels keep From every hostile power: And, unconcerned, we sweetly sleep; As Adam in his bower.” thc final level of the drunkard would be found, and thc kiud of associates it would bring arouud him. This story was told us as a proof that even old drunkards could be reformed.— Yes thev tuny, Hjuietiwes, but the cases are few.* When all other weans have failed, aud uten seek for lodgings in thc gutter, they cannot complain ifanoldsow should disturb their repose, aud teach by-stan- stundersthe evils of intemperance, which in one csise at least ‘ — Exchange. M ’ WiLLWM fl. GREENE, tVc laid her lo- D ‘'- i. il. HINKLE Life <*r Death.—Grace to live from ; day to day and increasingly Christian ~ ; life, without being inordinately auxiuus j about the morrow ; faith in Christ as thc ’ j only aud all-sufficient Savior for us; and } more success in imitating thc example of ' Him who is Lord and Master, are, and ! must be, the great aim of every Chris- | tiau, aud if reached and realized, will i prepare him equally for life and death. iiithiul hours of joy, 01.1 Friet novor wholly fly ; NaP‘»: . N>ti, sonin EmtOand.—After twenty- t of illtislrtoiw absence. Iamis Nuvr*1«»u returns to England, plain Lotus Napoleon again. He has been ou ■t. long anil veuturesome voyage. medical ca RD abiaohl fric«..l. JJ,|* f,n l£,Hl! I*** 0 Siguifie: , . » nud many trials and suffered many tenijitatious.* Helms smeared bis name ,T0 - ! all over with bliKHl. and then washed it off again as white ns the driven snow. ! He has been over the channel, where he :>U!V * | tonnd a nation in lire ami left it in fire. j But while h« remained all wa3 prosper- which appears l!v and jkeuce ; aud civilization came Wotlis, and | there and took tip .her abode in his •o-o has a induce and walked hand in liaod with ‘ j * ' | him and his France. For eighteen years t.jo present , }, a ppj trio knew nothing but thrift: Dr. j Corn, t’otht-r d»7. j but ihc^ partnership is dissolved now, and ' be goes buck from whence he came. ; Conner Journal. i he approached and sto*xl by | t eduious as the negroes' are should thus have been led astray. They were told I the altar, that lands .would be-given them nodi Queen Victoria then enter ’heir children educated. Hundreds of ■ Majesty was robed in a dress thousands of dollars have been a pro* i satin, cut very low around the printed for this purpose, and all squan dered and stolen by their pretended > of tho richest lace. Tho next day tho “page ’ had turned in uew direction, aud was no where to lie Hor 1 fo^b black i Madame is now in lliinob, aud inon- v..- .. 8he ! 8ieur can be seen imy fine morninginthe tt coronet of diamonds and long veil I lobby of the United State* hnildtng in Chainbet** street. tiMius; salaries have beeu increased, I motlu-r, the Q: millions appropriated for railroads, and! The Princess tL “ most eitruVil fi aI11 irablio |««tiu, with a **' every • — How to Fatton a poor Horse- j ! .The public, offi cers and the membersof the Legislature j ore. charged with the most shameless ; corrupti«»u, bribery and roguery. It is ' itupossibie for the industry of the State Many good horses devour large quanti- j 'o pay the taxes, There* is no security *?»-«Iw. “<1 Si"ISLSTSrS?-— ta thin and jvior; the food eaten is not; state. The State bonds wi 1 not be properly a-simulated. If the usual feed | pahl. mud grain and hay, noth- i ^. ri iy ; How to Prosper iu Batinm Iu the first place, make up dress of white tB velvet, r. veil \ ju the first place, make up your mind of Honiton lace, and a wreath of orange j to accomplish whatever you undertake ; flowers. ; decide upon some particular employment Eight bridesmaids—daughters of dukes i an j persevere in it All difficultly are carls—lwire up the train of the bride | overcome by assiduitv. i Be not afraid to work with yonr own pure , bands, end diligently, too. “A cat in gloves catches no mice.” Ho who remains * she advanced to the alter. The bridesmaids were dressed bite silk. They had ou white necklaces and reatlis of roses, and appeurcdbcantiful : and tdegaut with their comparatively eim- i earnestly desire the peace and pros- | pie toilet-.. tuy State. I did all tluit I | The bridesmaids did not „ . . _ .. veils. but a change will affect any desirable j could to prevent the soeessou of South Qm en Victoria and he P.imtStLon- altcratiun in tho appearance of the ml- aud ta« «viJ war "hu h asaned.. ; ia<- Unfit betore the hifth altar of the 11 - 1 My predictions of all the evils which church during t* few moments, engaged oil meal cau not l>e obtained j i mv e ensued were treated with scorn and readily, mingle a bushel of flax seed with i contempt by those in power aud a bushel .of barley, ..no of oata and an. I Y *™. * ir ’ V* "?« present tune, may not heed my other of Indian corn, and let it be ground : predictions again ; bnt tho day is fast Tltis will be a fair pro- approaching when you will realize all , that I ll takes pini change i said, unless , Ac., It. F. Perry. into fine utc portion for all his feed. Or the meal or the barley, oats aud com in equal quan tities, may first be procured, and or.e- fourth part of the oil cake miuglcd with it when the meal is sprinkled on cut feed. _ Feed two or three quarts of tho mix ture two or three times with a cake of cut hay and straw. If • rival lie weut quietly to the Exchange tho home wilt oat that proadily, let ^iSutel wiihont desiring apparently to i prayer. ICON. JEFFERSON DAVIS. This illnstriou •lav n.in.-l.al 1 ““wd m our oily Jo.trrdar, nneapocted- - f n,,n n* ^; jy f by the morning triun. . On his or- S. B. HAWKINS. The Domincan*. Dr. Lktridge's D; an t lVx»r 0>tton, half f.miuLM, on foot.) ; DIFFERENT FROM THE AFRICAN. BRIDAL CHAMBER! i ISSAYS ' ! ' s FOK YOUNG MEN For ‘•• ward Sanitary Aid As-ocutiou ! -'-■-TLLi ]1 *.)» .11 J!..tt RETURNItT” i fgy poor dc-rJ, Bo all this as may, it is certain that Aud g'<-« him «K>in« oread I implore yon’ among the Dominicans of the prerent tvn. lh. „ in o Cotton 1 da L ODe with * das » tb n , t I, u r ,o Co t n, , wbicl| 18 ue i.her Sjmuish nor mulatto.— t reocivn.g he meant to make free- ; In figure, the persons of this typo are Lj.w ftt* to sr, yt.n ve ►nmy forgotten I and rather above the average Tlie distanc- between you aud me! . hei Ul of the We st Imliau negroes and To aspect Uut wr, pt^rs of high hirth, I mnlstoes. They are finelv limbed, with Should w*.«c our Llm-tru a* sen* j no trace of the African heel or ankle, :,ut immoree on tarth * nd w,th particularly well-formed liands. 1 p* j g mther long than round, the cheek-bones delicately-shaped and the hack head rarely or never excessive in development. The hair is thick and black, and sometimes, but not by tiny means predominantly, crisped. But the -most striking charastistic of this type is the facial expression, particu larly of the eye. These are not so large will cat four or six quarts at every feeding j days in the interest of tlio Carolina Life : „„ - _ ,i.• i Insurance Copany, of which he is the |three times a day. But avoid the prac- honorea Many of our eiti- j tic© of allowing them to stand at a rack | 7 ^» DS called npon him during the after- filled with lay. In order to fatten a j noon and evening. We had tbe honor of . i.i j taking him by the hand, and observing lioreo that has run down in flesh, the pleasure his still erect figure; aud groom should be very particular to feed* enjoying for an hoar his delightful con- the animal no more than he will eat up j ' vrsat j r 1 "h Mr : P livis 13 one "J ,ke most , 1 remarkable and fumous men of the age. clean and lick his manger for more.— | ^ tte , sat in couveisartou with him, American SlorJc Journal. i our memory weut back beyond the fonr years of stern and glorious controversy, The Marquis of Lorn, attended by the groomsmen, advanced to the altar imme diately afterward. The Lord Bishop of London, assisted by their Lordships the Most Reverend the Bishops of Oxford and Worchester, performed the ceremony of marriage ac cording to the rite of the Protestant Epis copal Clivrch. Qneea Victoria gave away to bride. The Princess Louise made the respons es to the clergy in a clear, audible voice, bnt the bridegroom, Lord Lorn, was al most inaudible in his" replies. statesman and hero ! At the very moment of the conclusion of tbe ceremony the Qneen took the bride in her arms, folded her to her heart and gave her a hearty kiss. The Marquis of Lorn bent on his knee ul kissed the Queen’s hand. Thc Royal party then received the tlio mill grinds, not ho who goes and comes. Attend to your business ; never trust another. “A pot thut belongs to many ill-stirred and worse boiled.” Be frugal. “That which will not make a pot will make a pot lid.” “Savo the pence and tho pounds will take care of themselves.” Be i»b tteminous. “Who dainties love shall beggars prove.” Rise early. “The sleepy fox catches > poultry.” “Plough deep while Hag gards sleep, and you will have com to sell Than to fatten cur*t calico maker*! “ ybat Usliops to bobbins should bend— Should stoop from their benrb’a unblimity Great dealers in lawn, to befriend Yonr eoutemptiolo dealers in dimity 1 “No—vile manufacture! nt-Vr harbor A hope to be fed at onr boardn— . Uaso offspring of Arkwright, tho barber, What claims canal thou hire upon lords? Dissolr 1 * r, *tixi<,u8 to trj it awhile, fPOLE A 8CJ1UMPF.BT. ution Notice. f i! *• *■ HAitr * c».,i« . _ i, r&nii.i ‘.l!; 0 !! ?, The bas-m-M - T - Ml * l H** 5 ohl «tan<l by 1. Hi, I. N. IIart, A. C. Ho.* D F Ha* •; No—thanks to lhatales and debt, And tlio triumph of paper o’er gtdneaa, Oar race of Lord Joiamys, oh yet, - m ■ May deCjr yonr wfijc rabble or Jenny*!' So saying, whip, crack and away Wo* t Corn in his cab through the throng So madly, I beard them all say Square Corn would be dotm, before long. Drench u has its Ntobe. An afflicted mother living there ! bjw lost in the W|ir _ the African eye, and infinitely soft, not to say melancholy, and. the - whole face has something appealing and pathet ic in it, so marked as to arrest Hie atten tion of the least observant. This tyjfe T found more frequent junong the people of the Oibao ami Seybo than among those of Santo Domingo City. It seems to predominate, however, in Ban! and the vicinity., Whatever ma^ bd theexact extent to which It prevails, its existence points ton curions and interesting field of enthnological investigation, while it litical history* of this section of when his irdomiiaUle soul upheld the banners of the Southern Independence against a countless host; beyond the six yeun o! defeat, oppression ami sufferings since the clut>e of tlie terrible contest; beyond the days of conflict and the day: gratulatiohs of all who were entitled by rank to offer them. After this the party quitted the chapel slowly. The bride and bridegroom and the Qneen were received with cheers by the crowd outride, and “wedding favors” w to waved on both sides daring the par- sage of the cortege back to the Castle of Windsor. and keep. Treat every ono with respect and civil ity. “Everything is gained and nothing lost by courtesy.” “Good manners in THE SOUTH—TESTIMONY OF A CAB- PET-BAG SENATOR. Mr. Sawyer, tho Mossachuvetta Senator from the State o/ South Carolina, had thcjboldness to utter the following senti ments on the floor of the Senate, Wednes day lust. : “Ho hold that the South had been in- doctrinod with the brilliant sophistries of tho Southern stateemen for generations, ami that they went into tho war for se cession and principle. Ho abhorred se cession as much as any one, bnt knowing now that they were conquered and t political heresies utterly obliterated, he conhl not follow tho examplo of others and llipantly hurl at them the epithets of rebel and traitor. Ho could not de nounce them because they would not r»*- pent. W.vwe, as they believed they were right, they hod nothing to repent of.- They fought for the principles which they had liven educated from iufaney to im plicitly accept, and there were as brave aud honorable men in the Confederate -urtnv as over drew ft sword or lifted a mnsket.” Further ou iu his speech Mr. Hawyer sets at rest a •‘brflliam** lie of the Radical faction, invented to frighten their white livered constituents. “Much hod l*een said, hero and else where, ns to the inclination of the South ern people to enter into Another 'rebell ion * Ttnf l.n i Bnt ho would tell Senators there not ono word of truth in it. In the face of their maimed sons, their desolated hearthstones, their ruined homes, their devastated fields, no snch foolish idea coulu bo entertained by them for a mo ment. He did not think that any of the disttit bailees in the South originated from hostility to tho general government, bnt that they were inspired by disaffection to tho local governments. And why? Be cause, the men who wero most fitted by education and position to take part in tho affairs of state were excluded from all participation. Through this cause it could not be denied that men of an infe rior moral and intellectual stamp bad been elected into public positions.” A Goon Story.—A Parkersburg (West Virginia) paper says that several mem bers of tlio Legislature took cars at Graf ton, late on the evening of tho fith ult,, for Wheeling, and among tho number was a Mr. G., of somewhat largo propor tions, physically, and a Mr. D., of pro portional undersize. These two—the stalwart G. and the smooth-faced little D.—took a berth together, it seems, in a sloepiug-ear. The little man laid behind, and the good-natured, waggish Mr. G. before. Mr. D. was sleeping and snoring furi ously. Mr. G., more restless under leg islative burdens, soou rose, and was sit ting by tho stove, when an elderly lady came on board and desired a berth. “All right, madam,” Raid G., “I took a berth with my son, and you can occupy my place in that berth where my litUe boy is sleeping.” Taking Mr. G. at his word, the lady, disrobed and lay down with the hoy. After a quiet repose of some time, the boy, Mr. D., became restless from some cause, and began to kick around, to the annoy auce of thc old lady; so in a mater nal manner ?he patted him on the back, and sail: “Lie still, sonny; pa said I might sleep along with you.” _ ^ Thunder and lightning!” criefT the legislator. 4 ‘Who arc you V I’m no boy; I am a member of thc West Virginia Leg islature 2” It is said that the old lady swooned, and could not l»o brought to till P. prom ised G. should be impeached. D. swears that the thing shall not rest there. What action tho Legislature will take for tho protection of its dignity, re mains t o be seen. A Secret of Youth. Thri-u are women who cauuot grew old; women who, without any. special effort, remain always yonng and al ways nttrsotire. Their number is smaller than it should be, bnt there is a sufficient number to mark the vridis difference be tween tliis class and the other. The se cret of this perpetual youth lies not in beauty, for some women possess it who are not at all handsome; nor in dress, for they are frequently careless in that re spect, so far as the mere arbitrary dic tates of fashion are concerned; nor in having nothing to do, for theec ever young women are always as busy as bees, and it is vary well known that idleness will fret people into old nga and ugliness faster than overwork. Tho charm, we imagine, lies in tho sunuy temper—neither more nor less—the blessed gifbofahmys looking on the bright side of life, and stretching the mantle of charity over everybody’s faults and failings. It is not much of a secret, but it is oil that WO have seen, and wo have watched such with great interest and a determination to report tmthfully for the benefit of tho sex. It is very provoking that it ia some thing which cannot be corked op and sold for fifty cents a bottle. Bat this is impossible, and is why the moat of us will have to keep on growing old and ugly and disagreeable as usual. Never anticipate wealth from any other source than labor ; especially never place dependence upon becoming the possessor of au inheritance. “He who waits for j Homan Affair.—Ou last Sunday a dead men’s shoes may have to go a long \ little girl came to the well of Mr. John time barefoot” i Moreland of this, Terrell, county, and He who runs after a shadow hatha carried off to a skirt of woods hard by wearisome Above all things never despair. God is where he is. “He helps thdsc who truly trusts in Him.” Memoriae Lecture.—The Rev. Dr. J. Watkins Hicks will deliver bi3 splendid Lecture on the t Great Virginian, ” iu this city, on tho eyeniugof next Tuesday, ^ ^ 28th inst. Of this lecture, delivered for j (t f t vran y > to Uie time when be drew llis the benefit of the Leo Memorial Fund, I sword on the battlefields of Mexico, and a few nights since iu Albany, the Acts! to the time, when subsequently, his | mind became impressed on the political history of the Old Union, as the leadiufl Dr. 'Bicka* lecture at the Baptist | Intellect in the Cabinet of President Church, on Wednesday mght, filled the Pierce, aqd as the leading Senator in high expectations of his hearers, and sns- his aeut in the Capitol; and we catno lo tMflqdtbe.repatatiou that preceded him. .the coficlusion that there w«m no living As we said, IF is. nearly impossible to man in America whose career hud been criticise the wonderiut powers of oratory mere interesting, noble: and patriotic, possessed by Dr. Hicks, while any ut-1 aud who more deserved the respect and tempt to follow him through tLe^ dizzy affection of onr people. He never heights and towering glories of bis greet j sought nor desired Southern Independ- tlicmc and lofty thought is Utterly out of I efice except as the ultimate defence of tbe question. His grand conceptions of Southern rights in ' property and, law, true greatness are strangely like inspire- and htonever sought nor derired the re turns from higher worlds, and his por- Uponsibiluies of the Presidential office ’ of the character of Leo riseeto a in tlie Southern Confederacy.. Bat no _ far above the common understand- man can deny. that ho discharged . the and bewilders while it entrances. ~j duties of his great offloe with unsufpaas Work, if You would Rise.—Rich ard Burke being found in a reverie, shortly after an extraordinary display of powers in the House of Commons by his brother Edmond, and questioned by Mr. Malone a? to thc couse, replied, “I have been wondering hovrNed has contrived plize all thc talents of the family, hut, then, again. I remember, when we were at plat/ he was always nt work.”— The force of thc anecdote is increased by the fact that Richard Burke was not con sidered inferior in natural talents to his more distinguished brother. Yet the’ one rose to greatness, while the other died comparitively obscure. Don’t frost to your genius, young man, if you would rise; but work! tcork ! ! work 1!! neat granite pavement has been ttaUwThas’ b^diU Bufferings and socri- ~in front of the ExecutivffMan- fices with true nobility of character.— rionin Atlanta. 1 Mobile Paper. Bszaiue has written a defense of bis condnpt daring the war of 1870. It will appear in phaxnpblet form..- The Mar shal Is said to bo very bitter in it on his comrade MacMahon, to whose careless ness he attributes u large abate of the ealamitee which befell the French ar il lles for Measurement.—The fullowiug rules for measuring corn and liquids will be useful to many of our readers: 1. Shucked corn.—Measure the length, width aud depth of crib in feet; multi ply these three dimensions and their pro duct by eight; then cut off two figures to the right so many hundredths of a bar rel. ■* 2. Unshucked Corn.-—Multiply as" in rule first in the above example, and pro duct obtained, by 512; then cut off two figures to the. right; those oh the left will be so many barrels, and those ou the right so many hundredths of'barrels. 3. For grain, fruit, herbs, in house or box, and the length, breadth and debth; multiply them together; then annex two ■iphers and divide thc product by one hundred and twenty-four. Answer n bushels, pecks, and quarts. <A: Liquids.—Find the length in inches from the' bung, the under edge, to the chime; multiply it into itself twice, and the product by five hundred and seventy. Answer iu gallons, quarts, pints and gills. Measure two hundred and seven feet on each aide, and you have lacking one inch, one square acre. ^ . some water in a shoe. She waa followed by some member of Mr. Moreland’s family, who found the mother of tho little girl, Mrs. Barbary Ann Masaaj, prostrate on the ground, and suffering with Pneumonia. She was carried to the house of this good Samaritan, Mr. John Moreland, and the services of Dr. Cheatham were secured, and all done that could bo to alleviate the suffering and preserve the life of this unfoctnuato woman, but of no avail; she died Mon day night She reported having three brothers in Sumter county, John, Ely aodThos. Grimes. The httSe girl says they live near Mr. Shep Green. We could learn but little of the life and character of this woman, bnt enough to imagine rhe was destitute of those prin ciples that make woman what she should be. She waa living with a family of negroes near Mr. Moreland’s who re port that ou last Saturday night some one rodcupto the fence and left a note, op which waa inscribed “coffins,” Ac., and a threat that if this woman was nos put out of the house immediately it would be burned, and the bead of tbe family obeyed the anonymous summons regardless of consequences. We think *1.:.. _ .i: u 4*/.— Ml this a flimsy pretext for turning out fat the weather a dying woman, and Uae case sbonld he investigated.—Dmraoa Journal. A Paris letter says that forty or fifty Americans were killed daring the Franoo- German war, fighting, an the ride of the French; that most bf them had long been residents of the oountry, and had ad opted its muimoja, language and customs. The Gaineavillo Eagle eayk wheat is doing finely. Visitors from adjoining States are purchasing. Corn filing 75 cents from the wagons. 3