The Weekly Sumter republican. (Americus, Ga.) 18??-1889, May 15, 1885, Image 1

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The Sumter Republican. All advertisements will be charged 1 passed by the - jorgia—75 cents hot ttie first four i of Georgia—75 each off " * srscssiiisriiadmd OM hundred ‘iTj!? THE WEEKLY SUMTER REPUBLICAN. ESTABLISHED IN 1854 ) BY C. W. HANCOCK. \ DEMOCRATIC IN POLITICS AND DEVOTED TO NEWS, LITERATURE SCIENCE. AND GENERAL PROGRESS | Terms: $2 A YEAR IN ADVANCE Advertisements not specifying tbe length of time for which they are to be Inserted will be continued until ordered out and charged for accordingly. VOL. 32. AMERICUS, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1885. NO. 12. Advertisements to occupy fixed places wll be charged 23 per cent, above regular rate* Notices in local column inserted for ten cent per line.each Insertion. Advertising Bates O ae Square first Insertion, - - -JIM Each subsequent Insertion, ~ - - 50 All advertisements aot contracted for will PROFESSIONAL CARDS. B. B. & E. F, Hinton, Attorneys (it /,«w. A REMARKABLE CURE! WUIVOVr MraWBYaa PHYSICIAKS AMD SDRGEOSS DECIDES TO USE TEE HR TABERNACLE SERMONS. BEY. T. DeHITT TALMAGE ice in State »nd Fed.nl C ■ Llawkins BiiUdlni B. P. HOLLIS, Attorney at hate, AMEBICUS, OA. Office, Forsyth Street, *.n National Banl ion. We were roiiehoppMoJl tcTthe'imlfe Amusements. The tpxt was from Judges xvl., 23. -'And tcame to mm, when their hearts were merry, that they said, call for Sampson .that ' , and they called for i* us sport, a mpsonoutof the pri made them aport.” building. > ai E. G. SIMMONS. Attorney at Law. AMEBICUS GA., s’buildli SK 3,000 people assembled the Temple of Dagon. They had to make sport of eyeless Samp- i the old t f Fort A JanGt B. H. WILKINSON, Attorney at Late. All business entrusted to liii prompt and careful i lected will be iinme *' Kerence: J VV.bhef 1 be immediately remitted.- J- M. E. Westbrook, M. D- Physician and Surgeon. They were all ready for nment. They began to clap and pound, impatient for the amusement to begin, and they cried: "Fetch him oat I Fetch him ont!” Yonder I see the blind, old giant coming, led by the hand of a child, into the very midst of tuple. At his firet appearance there goes up a shout of laughter and derision. The blind, old giant pretends 's tired and wants to rest himself inst the pillars of the house; say* to the lad who leads him: "Show me where the main pillars are.” lad does so. Then the strong man his right hand on one pillar, and the mightiest push that mortal made, throws himself forward until the whole honse comes down in thunderous -ash.grinding the audience like grapes And s l U I!, F. iiAVENPORT, Prescription Druggists. AMKltlCUS, 6UOROIA pass, that when their hearts were m •y, that they said: “Call for Sampi that he may make ns sport.” And they called for Sampson «ont of the m-house and he made them sport. • ears to a heaven fall of song- listen to lhe hiss of a dragon! Why torn back from the mountain dde, all abloom - with wild flowers and dash with the nimble torrents, and with blistered feet attempt to climb the hot sides of fire-belching Coto- irds, thcr ind this branch of the busint ‘coiV.kXf'Sd LAMAR, RANKIN, & LAMAR, MACON, CA. Sir. J. A. FOHT, Physician and Surgeon, TUTTS PILLS bring down and death upon the heads of io practice them. While they d cheer, they die. The 3,000 who perished that day in Gaza are as otbing compared with the tens of ! been destroyed— body, mind and soul—by bad s and bv good amusements carried Edgerton House, MACC.M, CEOFiCIA. 25 YEARS IN USE, 8 Greatest Medical Triumph o ow, all opera-houses, theater ling.alleys, skating-rinks, and all styles of amusements, good and had, I put on trial to-day, and judge of them by certain cardinal principles. First you tqay judge of any amusement b; healthful result, or by its baneful reactions. There are some people who made up of hard facts. They combination of multiplication ta bles and statistics. If you Bhow them an exquisite picture, they will begin discuss the pigments involved in t :oloring. If you show them a beanti- ul rose, they will submit it to a botan ical analysis, which is only the post mortem examination of a flower. They have no rebound in their nature. They never do anything more than Bmile. There are no great tides of feeling surging up from the depths of their soul, in billow after billow of reverber ating laughter. They seen lure had built them by contract, and made a bungling job of it. But bless ed be God, there are people in world who have bright faces, and whose life is a suu, an amhem.a paean of victory. Even their troubles are like the yines that crawl up the side of i great tower, on the top of which the unlight sits and the soft airs of smn- • hold perpetual carnival. They the people you like to have come to yonr house; they are the people I like o have came to my house. If you but oueh the hem of their garments you re healed* Now, it is these exhilirant nd sympathetic ami warm-hearted peo ple that are most tempted to pernicious amusements. In proportion as a ship iwift, it wants a strong helmsman; in proportion as a horso is gay,it w □d these people of' along the the watchman’s clnb, and the rush of the police. What is the matter now? Ob, this reckless yonng man has been killed in a grog-shop fight. Carry him home to his father’s honse; parents down and wash his wonnds, and closo his eyes in death. They forgive him all be ever did, though he his silence ask it. The prodigal has got home at last. Mother will go to her little garden and get the sweetest flowers and twist them chaplet for the silent heart of the ward boy and push back fron bloated brow the long locks that her pride. And the air will be snt with the lather' >n, my son, my poor son! Would » God I bad died for tbee;oh, my You may judge of amusements by their effect upon physical health. The great need of many good people physical reenperation. There Christian men who write hard things against their ^mortal souls when there a your eyes to-day and I aslc you the question that Gahazi asked of the Israelties: “Is it well with thee? Is it well with thy husband? Is it well with thy child?” God grant that it may be everlastingly well. Let ns say to all young men, yonr style of amusement will decide yonr eternal destiny. One night I sew a yonng man at the street corner evident ly doubting as to which direction he had better take, his hat lifted high enough so you could see he had an in telligent forehead, stout chest; ho had a robust development. Splendid young man. Cultured yonng uiau. Honored young man. Why did he stop there while 60 many were going up and CONFEDERATE MONEY. 3100,000,000, and until tho last year of four coll’d people of Niles, Mich.,'” said Brother Gardner as tho echoes of tho triangle died away. "It am a pc- the v , bills of every convenient denomin $1,000 to 25 cents. Thero 5-oent postage stamps with tho profile of Jefferson Davis on them, and these wero sometimes used in making “change,” but tho m: The fact ii has a good and a bad angel contending for the mastery of his spirit. And there was a good and a bad augel struggling with that young man 1 t the corner of tho 6 Come with me,” said the good angel. which many are pledged. CONSTIPATION. TTTT'S PILLS c; . If God ever implanted anythin; in us He implanted this desire. Bu lstead of providing for this demand c ure the Church of God has, fo ignored As Dr. 0. P- HOLLOWAY, DhntisT, TUTTSi HAIR DYE. - Georgia Pflicb, *4 Murray St., Now York. PATENTS and Trade-Marks sa nd before tho Courts prompt- CIIAUGE UNLESS PATENT IS SECUR- Near U. S. Patent C DR. CARLISE’S. L. B. x Morbus Neural Ethonm&th . . Wh\tlo„ Backache, Headache Muscles, Stilt Jolni it. Sore Nipples, Bilious Fevi ores, Cuts, Wounds of any < itarrh, Bay Fever, Ac., Bi Stings of Insects, reptiles or Dogs. Di Dipthi Cords m Caked Bi i, Inllamation of ilon.Sore Throat, ■thache. Gravel, lontracted is nothing the matter with them but incompetent liver. There are Chris tian people who seem to think that it is a good sign to bo poorly, and be cause Richard Baxter and Robert Hall were invalids they think that by the me sickliness they may come to the me grandeur of character. I want tell the Christian people of my con gregation that God will hold you re sponsible for your invalidism .if it is yonr fault, and when through right exercise and prudence yon might l>e .nd well. The effect of the body upon the soul yon acknowledgi ?ut a man of mild disposition upon the tnimal diet of which the Indian par- akes and in a little while his blood will change its unto the blood of tin ion or the tiger or the bear, while hii disposition will change and beeni "I will take you home. I will spread my wing over yonr pillow, and lovingly escort yon all through life der supernatural protection. I s every cup you drink ont of, ei :h you rest on, every dcorway yen will Jo well the uigot nthei t becat hen yon weep. Come with in?,’ Baid the good angel with a voice of unearth ly sympathy. "No, no,” said the bad thing better to offer. The wines I pom from chalices of bewitchiog carous The dance I lead is over flaori solated with unrestrained indulgen i. The paths I tread are through adows daispd and pmmosed. Coi with me!” The young man besitat body has a powerful relentin The There ideas of heaven are all shut out with clouds of tobacco smoke. There people who dare to shatter the physi- h tho blood, and thus in . * flagging digest ‘P. lonal invigorant, Uostettei rs, which, by infusing energd into ations of the stomach, pi res thorough digestion s sed this u-.Iy , iale by all Druggist i J. OLIPI1ANT, Thom- w*. n, (ha ft: it, DRAPER the mayor planti ■nd of the street and lias it fired off, ?ry thing is ent down that hap- stand in the range, the good as the had, so there are men in the Church who plant their batteries f condemnation and fire away indis criminately. Everything is condemned. There are a great many who denonnee ball playing. They hate puzzles. They despise charades. They abhor tab leaux. They say: “Away with all ■arlor games!” They talk as if they would like to have our youth dressed bine uniform, like the children of orphan asylnm, and marched down the path of life to the tnne of the D» March in Saul. They hate a blue sash the hair, tasslcd gaiter, .nd think a man almost ready for Sing Sing who otters a conundrum. Young ciations of the :onntry are doing a glorious work. They have fine reading-rooms, and all tho influences are of the best kind, and adding gymnasiums and bowi ng alleys, where, without any evil mrronndings, onr yonng men may get physical as well as spiritual improve ment. We are dwindling away to a isrrow-chested, weak-armed, feeble- •oiced race, when God calls on us to a vork in which he wants physical as veil as spiritual athletes. I would to God that the time might soon come II onr colleges and theologi- iries, as at Princeton, a gym nasium shall be established, spend seven years of hard study in preparation for the ministry, am' ont with bronchitis and dispept liver complaint, and then crawl np into the pnlpit, and the people saj "Doesn’t he look heavenly!” becaui he looks sickly. Let the Church of God direct, rather than try to suppress the desire for amusement. The besl men that the world ever knew have hat their sports. William Wilberforc* trundled hoops with his children. Mar tin Luther helped to dress the Chi mas trees. Ministers have pitched quoits. Philanthropists have pone bating. Prime ministers have played your duty igs you from your slumbers, yoi ve been where you ought not to hav been. There are amusements that sen a next day to his work bio id-nho: ling, stupid, nauseated; and they rrong kinds of amusement. There with the drudgery of life, with tools because they are not swords,with working aprons because they are not robes, with cattle because they are not infuriated bulls iu the arena. If any amusement sends you home longing or a life of romance and thrilling ad venture. love that takes poison and hoots itself,moonlight adventures and hair-breadth escapes, you may depend a it that you are the sacrificed vic- of unsanctified pleasure. Our ra tions are intended to bnild ns np, and if they pull ns down as to our mor al or as to our physical strength, you may came to the conclusion that they inch God has put th jewel of eternity. There are men with great hearts and intellects in liodier worn out by their own neglects. Mag nificent machinery capable of propel ling a Great Eastern acioss the Atlan tic, yet fastened in a rickety North river propeller. Physical development which merely shows itself in fahulom lifting, or in perilous rope-walking, oi iu pngillistic encounter excites only contempt, brt we confers to great d the bad angel smote the good gel until it departed, spreading wings through the starlight nntil forever the had. That was the turn ing point in that young man’s history, for, tho good angel flown, he hesitated no louger, hut started on a pathway which is beautiful at the opening bat blasted at the last. The bad angel, ding the way,opened gate after gate 1 at each gate tho road became rougher and the sky more lnrid, and, admiration for the great soul in an athletic body, every nerve, muscle and bone of which consecrated to right uses. Oh, it seems o me outrageous that men through icglect should allow their physical health to go down beyond repi ' Still further: those amusements a wrong which lead yon into expenditn beyond your means. S RECREATION not money thrown away. It is folly for ns to come from a plao amusement feeling that we wasted money and time. Yon may by it have made an investment worth more th -an&action that yielded yon hundred or a thousand dollars. I nany properties have been riddled by costly amusements? The table has been robbed to pay tho club. Tin champagne has cheated the children’i wardrobe. The carousing-party hai burned np the boy’s primer. The ta wheni COMPRISES FOUR PREPARA.. »ONS. ball. This church ist of their life irprise for God and the world, but in studying what is t' best thing to take for dyspepsia, ship which ought with all sails set a every man at his post be carrying rich cargo for eternity, employing all its men in stopping up leakages' When you may, through some of the possible and healthful recreations of onr time, a word of yonr spleen and yonr querulousness and one-half of yonr physical and mental ailments; do turn yonr back from snch ;AND MEDICAMENT. ble-cloth of the corner saloon debt to the wife’s faded dress. Excur- ans that in a day make atonraronnd who’e month’s wages; ladies whoso business it is to “go shop ping” have their counterparts have thi educated children, bankruptcies that shock the money market and appal the church, and that send drnnken- Btaggering, across tho richly lig- TAILOR. L1VEB, HEART AND KIDXEI TOXIC souls ^MEASURED RESOURCES I BLOOD PURIFIER, cus Sumter and adjoining! tical and experienced Ta pan’s Actual Measuremen the trade to be the best lit of 9 givf K ”»S , ,— sslon of the latest styles, ed. Altering, cleaning, ndlng a specialty. Spots of grease * Itch and axle , Having beei s for thirty years, kind I ’ any style of the day, being i -* -tyles, and a tit i •aning, repair! . Spots<* ir, pitch a rith the recreation of others, and I will show you a man who is a stnmb- ling-block to the kingdom of God. Such men are caricatnres of religion. They lead yonng people to think that good in proportion DIARRHOEA MIXTURE, s and frowns ' and looks sallow, and that the height of a man’s Chris- proportion ured carpet of the mansion, and dash- the mirror and drowning oi the carol of music with the whooping of bloated sons come home to break their old mother’s heart. When l go into amusements that they can afford, they first borrow what they not earn and then they steal what they can not borrow. First they go into embarrassment and then into lying and then into thief; and when a as far on as that, he does not stop phort of the penitentiary. There prison in the land where there >t victims of unsanctified ments. How often have I had parents and ask New York and beg their boy off Irom that he had committed against his employer—the taking of funds ont of the employer’s till or the disarrange ment of the accoants. Why, he had salary enough to pay all lawful expen- 1, but not enough salary his sinful amusements. And again, and again, I have gone and implored for the young man, sometimes, alas! the petition all unavailing. Merchant of New York, is there a disarrange- •r thirty y experience in the past, I solicit your pat. .. age. IV. B. OLIVER, aplltf ATTENTION Preston, Ga. length of his face. I would trade off five hundred snch men tor one bright- faced, radiant Christian on whose face e the words, "Rejoice, evermore.” Between here and Fulton ferry every morning by his cheerful face he preach es fifty sermons. I will go farther and say I have no confidence in a man who makes religion of his gloomy looks. That kind of a man turns ont badly. aid n J ■ Marble for Toombstones, Hearths, Mantles Ac., Ac. This marble will be found as du rable and as smooth to the touch as well as pleasing to the eye as the native marble and i suffer. Among forty people Again, jndgeof places of amnsement by the companionship into which they put you. If yon belong to an organi; ation where yon have to associate wit the intemperate, with the nnclean, an the abandoned, however well they may bo dressed, in the name of Godqnit it. They will despoil yonr nature. They will undermine yonr moral character. They will drop yon when you are troyed. They will give not one c o support yonr children when yon dead. They will weep not one tea: yonr burial. They will chnckle o yonr damnation. But the day comes when the men who have exerted evil influence upon their fellows will be judgment. Scene: The last day. Stage: The rocking earth. Enter Dukes, Lords, Kings, beggars, clo' No swdYd, no tinsel, nc crown, foot-lights, tho kindling flames of world. For orchestra, the trnmpel that wake the dead. For gallery, the clouds filled with angel spectators. For applause, the clapping floods of the tea. For curtain, the heavens, rolled together as a scroll. For tragedy, tho doom of the destroyed. For farce, the “ srve the world and God at the s. For the last scene of the fifth act, the tramp of nations across the stage—some to the right, others to the left. Again, any amnsement that gives yon a distaste for domestic *'fe is bad. How many bright domestic ircles have been broken by sinful amusements. The father went off, the mother went off, the child went < f There are to-day the fragments befoi of blasted households. Oh, it you r e wandered away, I would like to charm you back by the sound of that your accounts? Is there leakage in your money-drawer? II not the cash account come ont right last night? I will tell you. There ' a young man in yonr store wandering off into bad amnsements. The salary yon give him may meet lawful expen ditures, bnt not the ainfnl indulgences in which he has entered, and he takes by theft what yon do not give him Feathers and Matrasses Our process is a new steam proccs: moving a prevalent cause of disease gives feathers a new vitalitallty and origi nal elasticity. All who wish to hare clean sweet pillows, beds and bolstei consult us at the .A. ZfcsTiEW OLD SIRRENE BUILDING EAST SIDE OP THE SQUARE. Wehne^irmMsUlafulorUy ln AUu- Cotton Ave., Am.Ticu.,.Ga. ta, Macon, Enfanla, Ala., and t rocage from the families In Americus * qjio best references given when solicited. TULLY A BROS. plicantof whose piety l was suspicions. He had the longest story to tell, had seen the most visions, and gave an ex perience so rapturous and profound that all the other applicanta were dis couraged. I was not surprised in a year after to learn that he had run off with the fnnds of the bank with which he waa connected. Who is this black angel that you call religion—wings black, feet black, feathers black? Onr ItU on eiWMltonntJ.W. Hutto- religion ii n bright angel—feet bright, ayes bright, wings bright. Taking her plftce in the soul, she pnlls a rope that reaches to the ekies and sets all the hells of heaven a chiming. There persons who, when they talk How brightly the path of unrestrain ed amnsement opens. The yonng says: "Now I am off for a good I Never mind economy; I’ll get money Mr. J. A. Wesson presents his patentloop for harness, which frees the horse either backward or forward at the pleasure of the Head six cents for postute, . and receive free, a costly box -of goods which will help all. right away than anything else n this world. Fortunes await the workers absolutely sure. At pnee address True A Co. Augusta, Maine. marS-ly . t will receive a Coe lot of River Fist sttrsfigassca— ZSSSg*?'*** ’ majtitf A.C.LAING. to a minister, always feel it politic to look lngnbrions. Go forth,'ob, peo ple, to your lawful amnsements. God meant you to he happy. Bnt when there are so many sources of innocent pleasure, why tamper with anything that is dangerous and polluting? Why will rith I ha’ hesi always pitied a who did it penurious, rascally fellow. * In those days southern men turned up their aristocratic noses at ‘shinplasters,” just as they do * to state troops, and felt like solid, lion- course, tho paper is inferior, but i has a bluo hack, o l by a i „ a inch and a half tall. Thei o uniformity in the designs. On S' bills thero .Will iTnrijrin«ry hands jonfederato heroes and < federate state-houses; as Jeffersi vis on tho 60's and Alexander H. Stephens on the 20’s, tho Nashville, r abovo anodcr pranks played by monkey*. SJ and playful kitten* reasons why do fiend who chops hull lam’ly wid an ax should hav precious body kept fat at do expoi de State an’ his precious soul kept fur prison chaplain to practice on. I left when every thing was ready, the break-'’ do church feelin’ dat murder ’ all laid, tho monkey* all seated, I j wife. t is ready, and they aid. waiting!” she asked Jn dismay. vailing,” 1 ‘I thought o were going t well bekase I wouldn’t lend him $2 1 should hev broken his skull rv%l a club depended on do preacher t federate cy is colored pink around the likenesses. Tho first bills wero simple notes, paya- ober “Our thioves get do sarno itcnccs—when dey happen be alone, and I . Lreeslng-gown.” "The people about ibly dri ioy wear pretty much Imagine, then. irery fashionably drewed thein- . wear pretty **“ things all the year round.” lieder&to states of Amci burglar, but when dev do do hull pco- hat v m! slm for that sort of paper. A silver dollar worth at least thirty confcdi dollars. The confederacy understood that it had to‘protect its currency a ited that it would never open, scenery on either side the road changed from gardens to deserts and the bright wings of the bad angel turned to cloth and the eyes of light beci hollow with hopeless grief. And on the right of the road ihero was a serpent, nd the man said to the bad angel: What serpent is that?” And the nswer was: "That is the serpent of stinging remorse.” A vnltm through the sky, and the mau the bad angel: "What is that vul- their rights, and assed making it treason for moneys a exchanged for different vaJv There is something tender and pathetic the willingness of tho grey soldiers receive confederate bills for pay. They know its depreciation, but they loved the principles it represented, and principles do not, cannot, depreciate. "It took a hatful of tho paper to buy a loaf of bread,” said an old war-horso tc •but bread bought with il tasted mighty sweet.” "Great golly! “Tha mortal dread the whole paper supply of tho country would givo out (they issued so much of stuff), and that wo would have out (they issued ,. md that wo woo do without periodicals and news. Thera of the slai gauto try t had c something that had wound him round and round, and he said to the had 8 gel: "What is it that twists me this awful convnlsion?” an.l the a "That is the worm that n< And then the men said the bad angel: "What does all this id they _ week. They were always on tne buy. bought everything (but negroes), and were glad to buy at high prices—at any price. Results commended their dom. When tho war ended they the propri v " “ isted ii :orner of the street the other night; i6ted it all. and why have yon that deceived me?” Then the last deception sonl, I watched my chance for man; long year; when yon hesitated ti night on the street I gained my triumph; iu are here. - Ha! ha! Come now, let us fill these two chalices of Are and drink together darkness and woe and death. "Hai! hail!” O, yonng man, will the good nt forth by Christ or the bad at forth bji sin get the victory yonr soul? Their wings terlocked this moment above y( tending for yonr destiny, as above the Apenines eagle and condor fight mid sky. This hoar may decide yonr des tiny. God help yon! To hesitate ‘ ) die! Trial by Jury. Augusta Chronicle: Since the modi cvdty household and disseminates telligencc to "all the world and bis wife,” tho jury systei cases, has been brought, partly by neglect, partly by craft and partly by design, into eenous disrepute. As very man of sense reads the papers, ind therefor? has become acquainted •ith all details of criminal offences forming some opinion of the subject, he becomes disqualified for duty. The isily Knoxville Journal utters a truth when lays that "a large majority of those o are placed on trial for murder pre- an ignorant, pliable, to an honei ntelligent jury. They i influenced by the sophistry of lawyi They are less capable of grasping and grouping facts. They’re not so apt tc comprehend the rnliags of coarts. They are much more likely to return favorable verdicts or to disagree somehow. What a fine road ! What a beautiful day for a ride! Crack the whip, and over the turnpike 1 Come, boys, fill high your glasses. Drink! Long life, health, plenty of rides just like this 1” Hard-working men bear the clatter of the hoofs and look up and say; "Why, I wonder where those fellows get their money from ? \\\ have to toil and dradge; they do noth ing.” To these gay men life is a thrill and an excitement. Thej stare at other people, and in turn are* stared at. The watch-chain j regies. The cap foams. The checks flash. The eyes flash. Midnight hears their guf faw. They swagger. Tbeyjottle de cent men off the sidewalk. They take the name of Go<| in vain. They parody the hymn they learned at their mother’s knee; and to all picturea of coming disaster they cry ont: "Who canal” the counsel of some Christian word, "home.” Do you not*ki that you have but little more time domestic welfare, Do yon not father, that yonr children are soon go out into the world, and all the fluence for good yon are to have c them you must have now ? Death will break in on yonr conjugal relation and, alas, if yon have to stand over tl who perished from yoi neglect! I saw a wayward hnsband standing at the death-bed of his Chris tian wife, and 1 saw her point on her finger, and heard her hnsband: "Do yon see that ring ?” He replied; "Yes, I see it.” "Well,” said she, "do you remember who put it there ‘ “Yes,” said he, "I put it there.” And all the past seemed to rush upoi By the memory of that day, w the presence of men and angels yon promised to be faithful in joy and sor row, and in sickness and in death; by the memory of those pleasant hours when yon sat together in yonr new home talking of a bright fotnre by the cradle, and the joyfnl hour when life was spread and another given; by that sick bed when the liftle one lifted up its hands and calls for help and yon knew he must die, and be put one arm round eaon of yonr necks and brought thetnselvei ipnlation of men to form juries has, in some localities, become fine art. In this way justice is to often impossible, and if the crimini have money or influence enough, may reasonably expect to escape you very near together in that dying kis; by the little grave in Greenwood that yon never think of without a gush of terra, by the family. Bibles where, ■ its stories of heavenly love brief bnt, expressive record of birtbi and deaths. By the neglects of the past and by the agonies of the fntnre, by a judg ment day when husbands and wives, parents and children, in immortal groups, will stand to be caught up in shining array or to Ihi ink down into darkness, by all that I beg you to gi’ r elso be let punislinent altogether nderly. It is about tii the jury system. This is presumed bethe age of reform, and nowhere f more imperatively demanded thai the Temple of Justice, called. Ding below par. During tho ' s the depreciation of the c >nder ober it. Find mo do dirti- imp—do meanest thief—dotough- irglar, or do mos’ pitiless mitrder- i’ 1 will find you n lawyer to take so fur $25 an’ do liis lebcl best to ill find you i’ up in do pulpit just punishment. 'When do pulpit back: kin hot ycr last dollar tell you dat bangin’ number of murders. Why? Bcki pulpit makes a martyr of ebery wung off! Ho am ’ g wid an’ made do made to believo dat He: . to receive him. Hi die bravely. Ho a scaffold sacritico his lifo fur s« ' do facks—ju cido accordin’ to do shuns properly conduct a tho south who never confcdi r kept it as long while others iles of blue-back bills id negro tracks at tho backyard gate. Money accumulated 60 rapidly iy kept it in largo liistrio&ic instin They are now engaged l barrels, and in bureau draw- ho writer means confederate Silver and gold wero unknown ley had t< i when da valueless n of stuff and take comfort dark and dreary- Iu 1865 a law was paased by n tho relief of trustees, administrators, and executors who might have in their possession coi fedcrato money realized from sales. By ^ the oflico of larv or probate judge of tho ind swearing that it **■ “ tho ordin: county, guardian or administrator‘was released all liability. Like a two^dged eived for trust property, the t both ways. It * fond guardian, who paid for it i lie, kissed on tho bible, and % recently s bills (there were four hundred of them) leemedso bright and crisp that the ijcs sparkled at tho sight There has never been a craze tho curiosity collectors for conf money. At old bookstores and small shops it is bought and sold 33 be bought foi a bo had for a song, certainty used. Many famUi They before ro compelled begin to impre • take . box of confed- bonds. They homo in a deplor- it ouco they would appcaranco by pa pering it with old journals and period icals, and patting abovo and below a border made of confederate mono;. Screens were made of bonds with money borders—in fact, everything snsceptiblo of ornamentation received its supply of pasto and pink treasury It was said of ono that those he sfew in his death exceeded in number be slew in his life. It is true of the confederate treasury. A Poor Italian Finds $75,000 in Gold Signor A. Yatuone, the person who has suddenly come into tho possession of the proprietors fortune, of the Hotel d’ltalia, corner of Pacific and Sansome sts., Ban Francisco, Cala. He drew tbe $75,003 m the February drawing, on ticket No. 28,- 600, in The Louisiana Bute Lottery for $5. He is a little, black-eyed Ita lian, about 35 years of age, and bears a very good character. He takes his good fortune very, quietly. He Jia« put his money away, without having made any change jet. He made' his brother a present of $10,000, and is going tocslebrate his fortune by keep ing open house all next Sunday.— San Francitco (Cal.) Chronicle, March 3. Keep Looking; Young. Thii is the age of young , T , Other things being equal they are everywhere preferred. Save yonr yonng looks. It means position and money. Ia your hair falling off—dry or lustre less? Preserve and beautify it by establishments.—Cincinnati Enqui Suffering Camels. A correspondent of the London Standard, writing from Gakdnl, says: The marches of Stewart and the going to and fro of convoys, during which many of tho camels were occasionally four and six days without water and food, except the dry, reed-like sabas grass growing upon the desert, told fatally upon hundreds of the poor brutes. Tho stamina was gone out the survivors, and protracted rest necessary, with good feeding for all this enormously of which he himself i author. The old gentleman ing and began to re •' io was coming whi igcr bo ablo to give his sons largo profits, for of lato y< 1 constituted them his mi place of intrusting tho berth family, which to be driven about An awful effluvia. noxious as a pest-house, exhaled from the wonnds of the miserable animals, and has latterly filled the air wherever a camel convoy marches. I say noth ing of the stench from tho cbuntless deed victims which line the route from running the gauntlet of smells insuffer- friend. “Who are you?” Passing to homo your be9t affections’. I look using Parker’s Hair Balsam.. Not dye, sure to work, cDan, Call an 1 'aeo them, next color. apl81m of Amcricus. ‘ J. H. Black & Son will shoes, hats and leather anybody, patronize hoi A r hand, and Sevres, in Mr. Di ... bottle. ^ the other, „ the kind that our raco can boast of. Tho Persian piece, of coarso pastc-imi- K tho careless manner characteristic of thei can be put beside the Chin mens, though distinctly of lo\ lists of to-day, stimulated by the do- tic as well, and of which they only seem to have preserved tho secret, , turning ont work in some respects Brought to Bay. Plunkett McCook, au ex-momber of tho Texas Legislature, was tried for * * n d guilty. asked the prisoner: ‘Prisoner, if you know of any miti gating circumstances you are at liberty in tho Legislature. I don’t know of any. other mitigating circumstances, except that I was in hopes that by im proving my financial c improved morally.” His Honor, in pass atoning in a manner for'tha injuries ho lictcd on the peoplo bv his ca reer of crime in tho Legislature.—Tcx- $ Siftings. ablo than that ot their teachers, shows itself in all that they da. Their work lacks tho solidity, tho seriousness, tho harmless. lies The unfortunate wife of Mclvillo, tho engineer of the, ill-fated Jeannette, is living in Philadelphia supported by tho allowance allotted her by the court. "She has two lov«jy children of T and 9, anil an elder daughu r 4»f U;. who U as gifted ns she VW-.n. ii' h- ,.M days Maud wtu-iu-. ..'linrV •*..