Newspaper Page Text
The Bainbridge
Volume 2.
BAINBRIDGE
*«*Iumfciei 37.
THE WEEKLY DEMOCRAT
Is PcBlISHED EVERY THURSDAY
By BEN. E- RUSSELL, Proprietor.
A overusing rates and rules.
Ailvertisements inserted at $2 per square
for first insertion, and $1 for each subse
quent one.
A square is eight solid lines of this type,
liberal terms made wfth contract advertisers.
Local notices of eight lines are $15 per
• uarter, or $50 per annum. Local notices
for less than three months are subject to
transient rates.
Contract advertisers who desire their ad-
Tertisemcnts changed, must give us two
weeks' notice.
Changing advertisements, unless otherwise
stipulated fn contract, will be charged 20
cents per square.
Marriage and obituary notices, tributes ot
respect, and other kindred notices, charged
M her advertisements.
Advertisements must take the run of the
piper, as we do not. contract to keep them in
'tnv particular place.
Announcements for candidates are $10, iT
on lj for one insertion.
Bill.; arc-due upon the appearance of the
advertisement, and the money will he collect
ed as needed by the Proprietors.
Vt dial! adhere strictly to the above rules,
4 „ill depart irorn them under no circum-
•tancii.
TERMS of subscription..
Per annum, in advance, - - $3.00
Per six months, in advance, - 2.00
Per three months, in advance, - 1.00
Single copy, in advance, - - 10
LEGAL ADVERTISING.
Sheriffs sales, per levy, $3; sheriffs mort-
sales, per levy, $5; tax sales, per levy,
citation for letters of administration. $4;
. itition f«e letters, of guardianship, 4; appli-
c-mon f-r dismission from administration. 10:
application for dismission from guardianship,
dication for leave to sell laud (one
ud each additional square, 3;
r homestead, 2; notice to debt-
juare)
6; spi
square ,
application
ouei.'i creditors, 4: land sales (1st
sale of per-
2.50; estray
». and each additional square,
i,liable property, per square
notices, sixty days, t; notice to perfect ser\-
ir-e. 7; rules nisi to foreclose mortgage, per
•quare, 4; rules to establish lost papers, per
square, t; rotes compelling titles. 4; rules
io perfect service in divorce cases, 10.
Sales of land, etc., by administrators, ex-
ecutorsor guardians, are required by law to
be helilnn'The first Tuesday iu the month,
between the’hours of 1" in the forenoon and
f m the afternoon, at the court house door
in the county in which the property is situ-
j’el. N.rtk'f of rfces*'. tales must be given
in o public gazette 40 days j*
dav of sale.
I am ■writing,” he sstid—and he j friendship commenced between them
drummed with his fingers upon the j terminating only by the death of Gen-
upon which his eral Johnson, and now all the affection
blaize covered table
arm rested, and the deep sadness which
clouded his features and followed the
remark was painful to contemplate.
We had been speaking of the distin
guished L. Q. C. Lamar, of Mississippi,
and of Col. Thomas Hardeman, of
Georgia. After some moments he
said, ••the war has been a great misfor
tune to them. A brilliant future was
before them; their talents- and moral
worth gave high promise of eminence
and usefulness in their maturer years.
Lamar has had his disabilities removed;
Congress has refused to do tho same
for Hardeman. I am Sorry for this if
he desired it, but jt is not possible for
either of them to fill up the hiatus
caused by the war; but even were jhis
possible to them, it would ho of no avail
to the country. The flood of corrup
ts >u which has swept over it has, and
will continue to engulf it beyond the
redeeming efficacy of moral worth or
elevated intelligence. You have just
returned from a visit to Lamar, and con
template a visit to Georgia, you tell me;
say to Hardeman, and to Lamar, when
again y m see them, I have a pleasant
memory of them both; and, further,
tell them I am preparing a work with
all the impartiality "possible to me; and
after years of sober thought, which
shall not. leave-the world in darkness as
to my motives aycLmy conduct, or that
of those who acted with me.”
There is something impressively sub
lime in the contemplation of this won
derful man amidst the afflictions of ad
versity. Hurled from the highest po
litical position, robbed of fortune, la
boring daily in almost abject poverty
for the bread which feeds himself and
family, proscribed and disfranchised,
denied the political privileges of the
negro servant who waits behind his
chair as In* takes his meals, and who
vious tu the j b!ack . h ; s boots,’culmly and with a God
like fortitude, bowing to the inevitable,
Notin:? for the sale of personal property j _
naisttie yiven in like manner 10 dsiys p*e- j vo t firm in his principles unyieldin
Tints to sale -lay. *
Noti.’tv to the debtor® «it t creditors of an
tsiitte must also he published 40 days. .
felt for the father seems bestowed upon
the son
General Browne has recently lost his
accomplished lady, and is very sad—
and now he is childless and alone. Gen
eral Browne is, as you know, an accom
plished gentlemen and ripo scholar. It
was an hour to be chronicled in mem
ory, and certainly I shall never forget
it, or the conversation which tr nspired.
I may never meet either of these gen
tlemen again. I am ten years the sen
ior ofjlr. Davis, and thirty, at least, of
the other two. I aui going away, and
our ways of life diverge, and will very
soon lead us far apart; mine is tending
rapidly to the grave—theirs out iuto the
busy world, and I am very sure it will
scarcely be my lot to meet these, or
three such men again in social c inverse
iu the brief remnant of my pilgrimage
in time.
Two Sabbaths since I spent the day
with, and at the home and in the society
of the Il< n. L. Q. C. Lamar, of Missis
sippi. I regret to say his health is
poor, and his spirits much affected by
it. t-till he looks well and at times his
mighty soul beams from his eyes, and
bursts in eloquent burning words from
his lips when a thought or a word
arouses him. In a riiomentr of conver
sational excitement, when with me in
the privacy of my chamber, and when
his lovely wife and her c-hildr*n wer •
away at church—he sprang up from his
seat and standing before me, was rap-
tuously eloquent in the description of a
scene he witnessed in the House of
Commons of Greal Britain, when ih ■
independence of our Confederacy was
under discussion. Every nerve m my
body thrilled and I shared with hiuithe
excitement which was stirring his soul
Suddenly he burst into a laugh, a thing
not usual with htm. Reseating himsell
he said : ‘You are not old ; I saw the
fire of the hoy sparkle in your eye as i
soUi-v
mrt of
(uardiansluV’
d.xi -for <U-i
liiotnbW for
olirttilou will be
■ tlie J it: t
letters adtuitiistra
tion, j
. liijXt-'-
flietiou
must be pubtist.e.
1 oU ;
| row. i
from administration,
liatlis—for dismissimi
®im>. t
Lull
P»WW-'
J i.n-niI:t v
lays.
ure of mortgages must be
or four
months—tor
direst adversity
as weighed him down
But a lew months since I watch-
lim standing by the open grave
eh was to receive the body ot his
)uth of much promise,) and
few moments,
Ob’.
.. Liu
how
was to
son, (a
|m . of j and which, ih a
three mouth®- ! - ..t-V.-.m petting titles from ox- j c ] ose rrtl t from his view forever 'this
eoaot-s or administrators, where bond has ^ child. By hi
hern given by the deceased, the full space cf nncnsueu ^
iLire months.
Publication will always be continued ac
cording to these, the legal requirements,
unless otherwise ordered.
SOUTHERN NOTABILITIES.
A Most Interesting Letter
Memphis, Tenn., May, 1S<3
Editors T> hyrnjih and Messem/cr : 1
am penning to you, perhaps the last In
ter l shall ever write from Memphis
1 regret to think this; but I am on the
eve of leaving this pretty city, so full
of life and active energy, where people
are alive and progressive, whose dest iny
in ilia future l love to contemplate.
I have been spending the day with
Jefferson Davis, and iu his sunny Jittle
<ffiee on Madison street, we have been
hiking over the past of many years.
li was in eighteen hundred and tweu
ty-eight that I first saw this
talked, and I thank you lor your coin
the dignity of his manhood, and. with a j pliment.”
soul unbending, meeting and defying I thought of his father.
the taunts and j much there is of him iu t.h
with sor- j parents, his uncles and Ins aunt*, with
whom I was 30 familiar when life wa*
iu the green, aud could scarcely realize
that I bore the weight of seventy-three
years.
Close by is the grave of Judge Lcng-
strCet and his wife. Their only two
children are the wives of L. Q. C. La
mar and Dr. Henry Branham. Hi s;
live on the adjoining lots in affection
ate relationship, their children aie
grown up, Lamar is a grown father, and
the Branhams are filling the placos ol
men and women ; and 1 was the c.nn-
and and great grand
covered with their heavy wool-skins;
and Englishmen, ’ in that universal
co tunic of checked suit ntd round
hat in which that eccentfic nation
delights to travel. u
“Here, in an open barouche, and
dashing along at his horse’s sharpest
trot, is the Crown Prince ol Ger
many, with the youthful hope of
Denmark by his side. A grave and
even somewhat fierce looking man
is Unserer Fritz, broad-browed, and
heavy-jawed, and squarely built.
Not much of a society man, I should
say. I
“The wi,*e^or thetwo princes are
in another carriage thr themselves—
Victoria of Prussia, plump and ge
nial ami rosy looking, a pret.tier ver
sion of her mother, the Queen of
England, in her best days; the Prin
cess ot Denmark, more fragile autl
dedicate. The Count of Flaudcrs is
on horseback, a situation iu which
he shows to great advantage, and
the Prince of Denmark, who has
just come out- of the exhibition, is
driving tu a low victoria with Baron
Schwarts by his side. Every other
carriage has its one or two occu
pants in uniform. Austrians iu white
and scarlet, Russians in white .and
gold, Prussians in blue with crimson
lacings, and the staring British scar
let glowing in the hot sun. Wear
ied with uniforms and sickened with
shakos, I’seize upon an open fiacre
and order the coach man to drive
into the country. But I am not free
>rom it yet, for at the end ol the Pra
ter, far away from the din, the bustle,
and the mob, I come upon a gentle
man in uniform on a black charger,
ami a lady looking remarkably En
glish in her dark t hie uniform and
.-tove-pipe hat, and in the grace and
ease with which she controls the fret
ting. Iu tiling elites; aut she is riding.
A glance tells me That these are tho
Austrian Emper r and Empress,
and the coachman confirms my im
pression. They are attended but
by two gr oms\ in plain black liver
ies. and while I am looking at them
>■**’: u and ira lop. over the
TTrcrrnr
Doubtless they have had enough of
being bowed and scraped to, and are
glad of a little peace and quiet.”
hist* rical
West
lui stood the
wife and mother in unite despair. No
tear dimmed bis eye. Blanched and
agonizing, his features wore the stein
impress of the deepest grict; yet tliej
were unmoved and calm. The body
was gently lowered to its last resting
place—then: and o-aly then, did his
great soul yield to the overpowering
impulses of a mighty grief. The eyes
closed, the lips compressed and twitcheiR
the hands closed, the head Lowed and
i ne deep torturing groan told of the
soul’s ag ny.
Since writing the above. I have been
to the graves of the confederate dead
in Ehit wood Cemetery. This is a ro
mantic and lovely spot, just beyond the
corporate limits of tfiecity. It is beau
tifully kept, and the flowers and shrubs,
now in their infancy, will soon increase
into exquisite beaut* the ornamental
loveliness of this last resting place of
the dend, who died in Memphis. Mr.
Davis was there—so was General For-
b. th seemed deeply moved, as
Le:
and Ji-c'kmn. at the Battle of th:
Chickahominy.
peer of their
parents.
I must desist, for I am growing sad.
and this letter is too long. I am going
to the sea. and my next may be written
from the white beach of the foamy d ep.
or fr< m the blue mountains of the M cst
1 am, you Lnoa waf and go Mure
the lands Lion- me. Adi-.u.
. Y. M. C.
•Jt formed, aud there ^vas t . ,
«wee in his features thpt gate promise j prised and lon r 1 __ ®
aan. lie had just returned from .. — — * ' . thrv
Mm and wore the uniform of a cadet slowly, and apart from all othu>,
lira ih>n a little mole*! y.ulli., rawed amidst tie -
* « Jeep evee t.MM wi* U* I •/* l'“ J ** *"*"* hc ’*1
**-Jmf i •*.11';,:;
r, eatl was small as it is yet. but adunfa- , dead. "I , sur .
tell" 1 i® f the battlefield forces and long, dark-brown omit- read,.
.. . „ , n j nianv sleeping to their heels, with blue collars rotjiul
l ‘f the future he has fulfilled. *1 hat eye during 16 ' g,q lt At i tlieir necks ; rotund smug burghers
May beams with the steady light of here ^ere the victims 1 ^ ^ ^ | h]ack broadcloth: great In watcii-
».nienuil illumination rarely met with tb j no great su e . shell i chains adorning their stout stoiu-
uf his years and sorrows. Those ! legot w .c yet * ’ of Ae fi--ht | achs, and massive rings decorating
•wares, once so radient, are new se- , and shot-scars. ' m-ematurel v old • Ills 1 their fat forefinger ; female “bonr-
and wearing the cast of deep mel- . Forrest >s ^° wn ? P of his i gco isc. rather bulgy it, the waist,
wchulv. save when animated with the head is whitexan The war’s rather zummy about Hie ank.es.
spirit which yet burns in his bosom , step ts scarce y and rather clumsy about the hands, ana
•Wcuodb, Ikmigb. or convcrsa-; ««■»" “ bin. i rather c-arsl- as resimls the tl,„r.
' 8«4Ai». *. «tokW k» — but
are too prominent upon his features to
be mistaken by the most careless ob-
In the article ot greatest interest
to American readers in the Edinburg
Review for April is the following
description of the interview between
General Lee and Stonewall Jackson,
(luring the battle of the Cbickahouii-
nv: “A few minutes more, and the
gallant soldier himself appeared on
the scene and rode up to greet Lee,
cheered by Longstreet s men,already
ve : tin - enough in war to understand
what his coming meant. Nothing,
it has been said, of this first meeting
of these great soldiers on the battle
field could be in more striking con
trast than the appearance and man
ner of the two; handsome in lace
and figure, finely mounted, a grace
ful rider, calm-visaged and carciully
dressed, Lee presented the beau
ideal ol the commander whose out
ward bearing captivated the soldier s
Fflmnnd Yatc« wives some expo-1 eye. His famous lieutenant rode,
aition pictures of"Vienna and Hie I apparently by choice an ill-griK,ined,
vZl Z, r the sunshine of S nt- rnw.be:,en bt«,
imhiy. May 5,h. .he In. lair__tr.-a.b- | s „rrupeJ us to ta^B-ure^ ^
THE PRATER UNDER SUNSHINE.
Notable Scenes and Feople in Vienna.
studied and so oiten extolled. No
word benceiorward frbm his Govern
ment of any want of confidence in
his powers, or fear of his over-cau
tion. From that hour he b came
the most trusted as %vell as the most
noted General ot the Confederacy.
As to his soldiery,his hardy bearing,
free sell-exposure and constant pres
ence near, their ranks, completed
the influence gained by that- power
of combining th ir force to advan
tage, which they instictively let with
out fully understanding. From man
to man flew the story of the hour;
subtle .influence of sympathy, which
wins many hearts for one, was never
more rapidly exercised. Like Na
poleon, his troops soon learned to
believe him equal to every emergen
cy that war could bring. Like Han
nibal, lie could speak lightly and
calmly at the gravest moments, be
ing then hitusell least grave. Like
Raglan, lie preserved a sweetness
of temper that no person of circum
stances could ruffle. Like C®sar,
he mixed ivitli the crowd of soldiers
freely, and never feared that his
position would be forgotten. Like
B!ucher,his one-recognized lault,wus
that which the soldier readily for
gives—a readiness to expose his life
beyond the proper limitations per
mitted by modern war to the com
mander-in-chief. Wlmt wonder,then,
if he thenceforward commanded an
army in which each man have died
for him;an army tfiom which his part
ing wrung tears more bitter than
any the lull of their cause could ex
tort; an army which A llowed him,
after three-years of glorious vicissi
tudes, into private life without one
though*, oi further resistance against
the late to which their adored chief
yielded without a murmuo'’ •
WLiah is Which,
vn Old ’traveler” iu the East
writes in r gard to the rival claims
of the Greek and Roman Churtfiies
ns o the actual sites of the sacred
scenes iu the actual sites "f the sn
ored scenes iu tl*« —
“The"Contests Tictween the Greeks
and Latins in the Holy Land as to
the sacred places are a source ol re
gret and humilliation to the simple
Buriatia a. Tne inllaeiiee an** £>am
sought to be obtained by these re-
ligionists upon the pious superstition
of their followers are most promi
nent throughout Palestine, and dis
honoring to C.*ristiani y. At Jerusa
lem, upon descending from the St.
jtcphcu s gate and crossing the
Kedrou, the traveler finds, near the
fi»ot of the Mount ol Olives, two en
closures close to each other, belong
ing to the Franciscan monks and the
Greek priests. In each is a garden
and a chapel, on the very spot, as
you arc told, where the Savior en
dured the bitter agony of Gethse-
mane. Iu each chapel is an altar,
and if the pious pilgrim recites cer
tain prayers in it he will recei\e the
remission due to his religious sei-
vice on the very spot where our
Lord knelt and prayed. But which
of the two is the very spot? Aga. i,
at Nazareth there is a fine Greek
church, near the outskirt of the vil
lage, belonging to the Greek commu
nity. On the right hand side of the
alt ar a flight of steps leads irorn the
side aisle down to an underground
chapel, where, the priests say, the
| Annunciation occurred! There is
! the altar and a marble slab cover-
The*Whippyig Post in Delaware.
Two lads, Masters John Mullen,
aged eighteen, and Da/id Clak, aged
seventeen, sentenced for robbing a
marketman df his money box as he
drove through the street, were whip
ped in New Castle. Del., yesterday.
The market-man, a Mr. Tilly, en
gaged -one Andy Ryan, a man of
mature age, and this Ryan incited
the boys to rob his employer, aud
even assisted th m. * ^At the trial
Ryan turned State's evidence, and
escaped, while the boys were sentenc
ed to six months’ imprisonment, ten
lashes apiece,and compelled to make
a restitution of $18,50 each, they
having stolen $37. Promptly atrtwo
o'clock the court-yard was thrown
open aud the crowd admitted, while
at the same tiiye the sheriff hurried
into the warden’s room and grasping
the “cat-o-nine-tails” walked iuto the
yard and took his stand beside the
whipping-post. Less than two min
utes afterward John Mullen, bared
to the waist, and with a coat thrown
over his shoulders, walked into the
yard, accompanied by the warden,
and for a moment stood with down
cast eyes, hesitating what to do. A
nod from the sheriff decided him,and
throwing off his coat he walked bold
ly to the post. It was a horrid sight;
the crowded court-yard still as
death itself, the bare skin of the boy
glistening iu the sun as he placed
his hand# in the iron bands while
the warden pinned them in, and the
sheriff, whip in hand, stood near,
ready to inffict the cruel blows. Bnt
at the first blow the folly and, in
deed, the cruelty ot the custom b -
eame painfully apparent, for the
sheriff' merely lifted the whip ami
the thongs fell on the boy’s back as
lightly as if in play, scarcely redden-
nig the llesh. As eacli blow fell the
warden called out, “one,” “two,’
aud so on until, having counted ten.
the boy’s wrists were released, and
picking up his coat he ran back to
the prison, and the other entered
—i-*
, r the ^ ue describes U,e j or „,e
P ™F. r r*«v-"'beeyec nldslrelchLllege pri^rsblp I* W ™
each side of the drive was thickly , long since 1 i ( j l ; t ’^'^ h ^ a "
aTlt h n" ^hmched^lrats j threadbare, Sut ill-brushed and his! there are lights and pictures hang-
afi kinds , i wonls were jerked out m short,
ns between which
May a Husband Kiss His Wife!
May a husband kiss his wife? and
is it lawful for Ids father-in-law to
knock him down when he does so ?
This does not. seem to be very prob
able question to get into court, an i
to be gravely tried by a judge and
jury. The point has just been de
cided, nevertheless, in Clark county,
Indiana. U. U. Lowd, a man ol
wealth, married there a Miss Hays.
’ He treated her kindly and indulgent
ly, it is sa d. though her friends de
ny this. However this may be, left
him and went to her father’s house.
Lowd was denied access tb or com
munication with her. Alter dilLCnt
watching,the almost fraTitic husband
met her on the street.' and approach
ed her in the kindest, thongi in a
somwhat excited manner, begged to
be permitted to kiss her and talk to
her. The father interfered to pre
vent. The husband persisted in his
attempt,, and the father laid vio’ent
hands on him, aad finally knocked
him down. .The lather was indicted
lor assault anil battery in the Clark
County Criminal Court. The Judge
in h'K charge, stated that the father
liad a right to protect his child
against all persons whilst that child
remained under his protection; but
when the child was married, eithir
bv his consent or without, according
mg the spot, with a cross in thecen- j to law his right of proction w as
ter to imfieate the precise place, and j transferred, by both the operation
of law and nature, to the husband,
The Honhter Tabled
There exists in Paris a cheap table
d’hote for . the J reception of strange
guests. It goes by the name of The
Monster’s Table.- AH - those unfortu-
nate persons who live by the display of
their physical infirmities eonie here to
dine together and avoid the attention
they would elsewhere. The skeleton
mad pour9 out the tin a quat sous for
the bearded woman, and the. grdat Nor
man giantess flirts with Iliquet a fa
houppe, and the Sugar Loaf, whose
pointed head is more than. eighteen
inches from the crown to the chin, sita
smoking with the king of the animals,
so-called from his coating of fur. Made
up monsters are excluded from the sym
posium; so are strangers, aud it is said
that intruders have met with such a
warm receptiou from the hideous shapes
assembled round the board that they
felt, on making their escape, as though
they had just been released from Dan
te’s “InferrtbThe French journal
which describes the dreary assembly
adds some information ‘mot generally
known.” These monstrosities, it ob
serves, are seldom natural, but are the
work of “-English specialists,” who turn
out these spectacles to order at the bid*
ding of the mercenary parents. This
revelation ought to produee national hu
miliation, mortification and prostration,
if anything. This oomes of reading
‘ L 'Monme Qui RU.”
Incendiarism.
The National Board of Fire Un*
derwriters at tlieir late meeting in
the City ol New York resolved to
raise a fund of $100,000 lor the de
tection, conviction and punishment
of parties engaged iu the nefarious
business of iieendarism and arson,
The Executive Committee of that
Board at their meeting on the I4th
ins’, carried out the resolution aud
opened the subscription.
We hail this movement, as a step
in the right direction, and commend
the action as o. e pot only likely to
uenefit Underwriters, but also to
protect the public Mrom wholesale
toss. This action is more important
when it is remembered that the ex*
Alt*?uK-art-* straws rrtttt
the proportion ol loss to be a tribu»
Led to tlie above causes is not less
than 33 per cent, of the whole, or a
loss to tne country ol - least twenty-
five millions ol’dollars per annum.
N. ¥■ livening Bulletin. •
What these Granges Mean.
Mr. Goo. Kimball, brother of
Samuel Kimball ol this city, has been
sick and unable to do his farm work
this spring, .Seventeen of the Bur
Oak Grangers rigged their teams on
Monday and broke up twenty-seven
acres ol ground, and left it ready
lor planting. There is something
practical in that kind of grange
work, aud it has a sniack of brother
ly kindness iu ii. that would make
most an.\ hail decent man want to be
a Granger. Mr. L a mon, an artist
of tliis city, get word of wl.at was
going on, took his instruments and
weuf to the spot and succeeded in
getting an excellent photograph of
this practical demonstration ol the
Gr ger-.-Lawrence(J£as.)Tribune.
•all about, like’a baby-show ; and
he ! her-many pilgrims come to kneei
\ . Tr.TiorUmj J- A. Knighton
Boruin, Sl
Knighton,
DEALERS. i.V
FAMILY AND FANCY
GROCERIES,
DRY
goods,
SIIOJ3S,
Notions, &c., &c.,
No, 3 B'OWNE BL0CIC,
and that henceforth, as against the S*Re«p*cifully call attention of their friend*.
and the pul,lie generally, to-tl.eir cheap and
well assorted stock of goods, whtch they are
Determined to Sell at th«
valued him at bis true --, h
down yonder,’ said handsome climch
Roman
tion.
•ttir.h dances in his eye and lights up ,
features. But sosn tho joyous smile '
into the melancholy, which ha?
^’tne habituaL' His health is good.
Hi has bTit one sound eye. You know
*l* e 'Lion of the other has Tong since
•ried in darkness. This defect forbids
&Uc l* reading or writing. Yet to-day.
*“ 'he familiarity of old friendship I
^narked:
I think, Mr Davis, you will - rtot
‘ " ^ the other eye until you shall have
t,TcQ to the world your views and opin-
15 to the causes wbiob led to the
and ! that,
server. . ,
To-day I have spent an horn in the
private .MSeeof Mr. Davir .Uk «»-
eral Browne and William Trcaton John
son. son of Albert Sidney Jehnsoo. At
prevent .'ir Johnson is a pro.essor in
Washington College, at
Virginia. During .he .« he ™ pn
vat* secretary to Mr Da' iS ' .
B „taee.o4pli.h«dgenttaa.».d*hoh
a,and Very intelligent. H.f.tho »
at West Point with Mr. Pa*i*. »hers
but bngm-eycu. *..*—, ------ , an d cx -' subterranean chapel, approached by
good-tempered ; spectacled protes-, after a feu ■ ch5ef u , lead on i a flight of steps, and like it in the
sors from colleges and hospitals ; j p.anationTie ^ vas aid-1 altar aui marble slab with the cross,
prettv n unse-maids with their chai-jt le a a .. ‘ advance rA u,,r numerous statute.** sot al-
wasp-waisted officers ami pri- ed as it was by a ft c.-h atlvante
vate eoidie.r, princi, rally retnaikn-j.£ .^ e ^™ M Te™,kchcd. | .he R*.-. h.^prote uthethexe^
i fi tctier.iL .1 of thc Annunciation, and
the wor-
brigtit-eyed. intelligent,
ipe
sors from colie
pretty nui
ges ; wasp-waisted officers ami pri- j ett as u »«= “ cn<-a^e»,' The | lowed in the Greek ritual; and this
‘ ” rom • ~ ' - ~
ble foi - the wav in which their
are setonthei, heads, like tho itouoie | nnn “"l ™ rem ai„s of | prayers tit which entitle
<0 •■**«« '“"Ai 6 the |shipper to so tnany tvnrs
husband, he had no more right to
protect ion
one
prevent
lUS-
band has r right to aproach and de
tain his wife, cither in conversation
or to kiss her, anywhere without let ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
or hindrance from antbotly, ltnei _ _ _____
does it without physical violence,
until she is takeh from hi3 protec
tion and control by due process of
law, and he may resist any interfer-
EST
RATES! •
jSf*5~\Ve are constantly receiving new
and fresh supplies of Choice Family
Groceries, and will not be undersold
BY ANY ONE
IN THE MARKET!
handles
remission
foreign- rs, too, in shoals—the Hun- retreaLLee’s ||of purgatorial suffering! Bothean-
Chickabominy m I
■reriaos, in knee-boots, braided frock-
coat and dark wc-olen caps ; Polish
Jews, in grease-stained garbadines, ( ?ncce=r. ’ - _ , jf v ' : t q c .j r church and chape! the g
fir«t battle in fact, was a striking j not be true, probably neither. But
e «. and as well earned as any ! apparently the Greeks can claim
. . thr.ir />hiirc.ii and chape! the g.,eatei
ence with this light, ever, by force;
Wishing to devote our time and
attention exclusively to the grocery line
we offer oar stock of DRY GOODS,
SHOES, and NOTIONS*
if necessary,repelling force by force,
so he tt«e» bo more force than is
necessary to protect himself -in his At Greatly R«$-
sight. The time and place of such ; ^ ^
kissing is a matter of. taste, which-j &CICCQ. Pl?lCGS«
does not concern outsitlers nor the Xo Trouble to show Goods I*^t
courts. The jury brought in a xer- Please call and examine oar stock befbr#
diet of one dollar damages. 1 purohasiog elsewi^?*