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About Weekly Gwinnett herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1871-1885 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1877)
gW INNETT HERALD. rCBUSHKD KVKRY WW.SKSDAY.BY pE6PL es> BAACKENRIDQE. TVLKIi M. iWLIvS, »«««. I>vTKS OF SUBSCRIPTION RA 1 452 00 o.* , w° I g 3 Kut^ ; *' * l I" One . fcr ,« mouths 50 °J 6 S iiim r *‘f art ‘ eu6h "* l ’ ttyab c ill or n ,E!r«6vc subscribers, ami wishing itor mp'rs Salw -f* 1 * 01 n .«»-o’ffioe *® another, ehansH f . r *" h ° e name of tbe post-office m' 4 thev wish it changed, as well f fJ ' n tt .'L which they wwh :t at ‘ lrt - professional cards. PR. A- WINN ’ l.awreisoevltfes - “ <ia " . a , lk professional Services to the r '’ n ' ,f I -iwrcnccville and vicinity. WM. R. RVMSMtWS fIfcM. J- *"*’ W [N T > r & SIMMONS. ATTORNEYS at law, „ ... .Georgia- CAWItF.SCEt hu-k i, ,««"»'« marlo-iy Counties- N. L- HUTCHINS, ATTORNEY AT’ law, , llt X3*. liWKESCB'VtU.ET Practice it. the eonntiee es the XVesteni Circuit, and iu MHlcu and Forsyth of the , . bust in-hy Ulue lt'.dge* TYLER M. PEEPLES, ATTORNEY at law. fi A Practices,iu the counties ctf Gwinnett flail, Jackson and Milton. Pension claims promptly attended t° mar 15—Vl S3OOT AND SHOE SHOP AT Suwannee, - ~ 4x&. Mr. B. T. I vie, respectfully announces tfo the citizens of Suwannee and sur ■rnundiug country that he is prepared de mianufacture and rnptiir sheets arid o*oif at Suwannee, Ua. Owing 'to the hard Himes aud scarcity of money, he has con clude* to make a reduction in the prices charged for his work. All wotk entrust ed to his care will he executed with neat mess and dispatch, and lie guarantees -satisfaction. Terms cash; Country produce taken in (payment for work at the market price. marchls-ly rVKHK J. DABNKV. WM. T. WALL’ C. THOSIiS* WITH DABNEY & WALE, (Successors to Howell & Co.) WHOLESALE tIJRiAL'JL'JiH, 51 Peachtree street, Ati.aNTA, CißOßttlA. may 10-tf.' &■' HWINSHIPIRON WORKS SAW MILLS .GRIST MILIS AMSE POWERS SORCHUM MIIIS c 1N A OTIC 7; ! \'! persons indebted to the Ordinary's aie hereby notified that immediate i.V-iK’iU of uil amount* dne me from Kir- Administrators and Guardians * I he required. I atn now preparing to turn over tlie .»r. ° "’ v ww * l '. and will i.sstis 1 .0,, m a || cases w^we a „ )fm „t "*t unsettled, j I’artks interested will confer a favor O , JAMK.ST. lamkiv. * ar y ? Olfiee, January 30, 1877. g F -M> 2f»e. to (j. P. ROWKLfACO.. ‘ w *.°fk for J’umphlet of 100 and list ° f 300 news P a P‘' l ' B ' ” s ' s^o,ri Ms cost ul advertising Weekly Gwinnett Herald. T. M. PEEPLES, PROPRIETOR ] Vol. VII. VEGETINE PUR!FES THE BLOOD. Renovates arid Invigorates the Whole System. Its Slwlioinal Properties are Alterative, Tonic, Solvent and Diuretic. Vkgbtinr is made exclusively from the jniies «>f carefully selected Imrks, roots nut; herbs; and so .-strongly concentrated that it will effectually-eradicate from the system every taint of Scrofula, Scrofu lous .Humor, Tumors, Cancers, Cancer ous 1 i iHo -r. Erysipieus, Salt Uheuni, Syphilitic Diseases, Canker. Faintness at lire Stomach, and all discuses that arise Irom impure blood. Sciatica, In flammatory and Chronic Rheuinuliw., Neuralgia, Gout and Spinal Complaints can only he effectually cured through the bloc d For L’lcers and Eruptive Diseases of •the Skin, Pustules, Pimples, lilotelies; Moils, Tetter,Scald-head and King-worm Vhukunr has never luiltd to eflcct a permanent cure. For Pams in the Hack. Kidney cont p'aints, Dropsy, Female Weakness, Leueot r' .-uei, arising-from internal ulcer ation. and uterine diseases him] -General Debility; \ kuktikk acts directly upon the canoes of these complaints. It invi<r orates and strengthens the whole system; acts upon the setirntive organs, allays inflammation; cures ulceration asid regu lates the bowels. -For Catarrh, Dys|)epsia, Habitual Costiveness, Palpitation of the Heart, Headache, Piles, Nervousness ao-d Gen eral Prostration of the nervous System, no medicine has given such .perfect satis faction us the VkcKriNk. It purities the blood, cleanses all of the organs, and .possesses a controlling power over the nervous .-system. The remarkable cores effected by Veg etine have induced many physicians and apothecaries whom we know to prescribe and use it in their own families. ]n fact Vegetine is the best remedy yet discovered for the above diseases, and is the only reliable Hlood Purifier yot placed before the public. THE BEST EVIDENCE. The following letter from Rev. K. S. •Best, Pastor ol M.K Church, Natick, Mass,-will be read with in'eresl by many physicians. Also, those suffering Irotr. the same disease as afflicted the sou of the Rev,ifi. S. Best. No person can doubt this testimony, as there is no -doubt about Hie curative powers of Vegetine: Natiok, Mass., Jan. 1,1874. Mr. H. R Stevkns: Dear Sir—We have good reasons for regarding your -Vegetine a medicine of the greatest value We feel assured it has been the means of saving our son’s life, He is now seven teen years of age, for the last two years he has suffered from necrosis of his leg, caused by scrofulous affection, and was so far reduced that nearly all who saw him thought his recovery impossible. A council of able physicians could give us but the faintest hope ol his ever rallying, two ot the number declaring that he was beyond the reach of human remedies, that even amputation could not save him, as be had not vigor enough to en dure the operation Just then we com menced giving him Vegetine and from that time to the .present-he-l as been con tinuously improving. He has lately re sumed his studies, thrown away his crutches and cane,and walks about cheer fully and strong. Though these is -still some discharge from the opening where the limb was lanced,we have the lullest confidence that in a little time he will be perfectly cured, lie has taken about three dozen bot tles of Vegetine, but lately uses but lit tle, as he declares that he is too well to be taking medicine. Respectfully yours, K. S. BEST. MRS. L. 0. F. BES T. All Diseases of the Blood. If Vegetinc will relieve pain, cleanse, purify and cure such diseases, restoring the patient to perfect health after trying different physician*, many remedies; suf fering for years, is it not conclusive proof if you are a sufferer, you can Ik- cured? Why is this medicine performing such great cutes? It works in the hlood, in the circulating fluid, it can truly be called the Great Blood Purifier. The irreut source of disease originates in the blood, and no medicine that does not uet directly upon it. to purify und reno vate, lias any just claim upon public at tention. Recommend It Heartily. Sot'TU 80-ton, Feb 7, 1870. Mr Stkvkns: Dear fir—l have takes several hollies of your Vegetine, and am convinced it is a valuable remedy for Dyspepsia, Kidney Complaint, and gen eral debility. . .I 1 can heartily recommend it to Ail sulleriug from the above cowplmute. Yours respectfully, M its. MONHOfc 1 AKkKK -386 Athens Street I‘awarkd livll. H Ktuvim, Boston, Mass , Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists, apr. 4 Duo. Lawrenceville, Ga., Wednesday, x A xpril 18, 1877. One Wminu.’s Answer. He kissed her lovely downcast eyes, Her bonny'brown lacks lulKng low— ‘ Mv heart, love, was not over wise To be caught in this silken snare, 1 know. Fate mocks us in tnal cious guise; The world forbid* the bans; and so Kiss tne, d.ariutg. and let me go!' She stood a tip-toe at his side, Her tawny head just reached his breast; “Ah, love, whatever fate betide, Of all the world, 1 love thee best ! And what were all the world beside* If (ate from mine, thy hand should wrist?’’ She drew his dark face down and press’d His lips with passionate kisses—“No, My love, 1 cannot let thee go!” .“Nay, sweetheart, hear me out;’ he said; “Fate is.averse, and the worlfe unkind; The way of life, that we must tread Lies dark be ore us. and love is blind Ease, wealth, the path wKh roses qtwad, My dainty (lulling must leave behind, Tor.ake up the bind.-it of life instead, YVi li; care and squalor, and waut — and so, Kiss me and bid me go.’ (dose she cuddled hor dusky head Against his breast: “Nay, deurest, see, I; love were over, and hope were dead, The wealth of the world were uaughl to me, But , sweet, were it ever so poor a shed* Attd a simple crust earned cheerfully, With love to sweeten the bitter bread, Welcome a life of poverty— Or welcome love aud death,” she said, “If only I live and die with thee!' Hir white arms fetteied hint fast; “Alt, no! Dearest, I will not let thoe go?’ A Widow’s Story- Ott last Friday afternoon John Morrison, aged thirty two, residing at 18‘J.J Beacon avenue, Jersey. City, was tun over .by a tc.tn! train at west End, and both logs and one aunt were cut oQ He died in tins evening. Yt-sietday his widow with two children, the elde-t five the youngest three years old, cling ng to -her skirts, called On a mini her of undertakers, trying to ar range for the burial ol her husband. Her husband had been out of em ployment for nine mouths, during which the pawn shop had absorbed everything <ef value that could l»* spared from the house. On Fi t day he secure 1 an odd job to re move a piano, and was to have re ceived $1 for his services. t'l*is. he told his wife, would take them over Eastir. Soon after a postman called with a note from George W Downing, Superintendent of tin* Jersey Horse Car Company, telling him to report for duty on Monday. Aptil 2. The family r- joined over ilit ir good fortune, and while de vising means lor spending the iV.’ilat in the most economical manner they tound there would he none left for coal, The happy -£n liter seized an old bug, which had frequently duue similar duty during the winter and said he would go out on the rail road aud pick up coal enough. He had collected half a bagful wksu the accident occur, cd. Oil I* iid ay night there was neither fuel, light nor food in the house, and the widow sat ’beside the mangled corpse with the window open to let the moon light in, that cost nothing- The family i* entirely destitute.—-Veto York H arid. A writer in the Sc.ibirer ha* an article on the subject, /Llow to keep the boys on the farm.’ He evident ly means well but be doean l touch lho point. To keep boys on the t'auu it should be well paved auJ lighted with gas and have a band stand and billard tables ami k« own bar and race course. We hope onx farmers are just as auxious as they appear to keep their boys on th v farm, but they don’t »eeem to take ally debititc auiton .-Danbury Xart. “COMING EVENTS CAST TIIEIR SHADOWS BEFORE!” A Now Uatiic. A man came into a restaurant last night an.) mounting a high stool, foiled o«rcr the counter and ordered a porter-house stake wiilt eggs oil the side, and ramie ale alii’ oysters IO begin cm. lit about hall an hour he had frtti-hed his repaid and it was begining to deliberate what kind of de«et\ lie would wind tip on, alien a t&a.i walked in, and t ipping him on the shoulder re mflrttei'L ‘ls your name Billy Hicks?’ ‘Yes, that’s my name,* said the man on the Stool, as the hand stole down to his hip pocket, fumbling for the handle of a batket- ‘what do you warn?’ ‘We had a little difficulty once before in While Fine, aim now 1 guess I have got you dead to i iglits,' j continued the new comer, polling out a large-sized six shooter. *!f you’ll just step into the sheet and pace <>tf your distance, I'm your man, said I lot feeder, who had just finished his pie, and whipping out a revolver he sprang off his perch anJ rushed alter the other into the sheet. The frightened restaurant man got down behind the counter aiu! ! hent his ear to listen <o the shots i and the rush of the mob, but he didn’t hear anything unusual, and in about five minutes he recollected that there was $2.50 owing on the meal. Then he went out on tbe sidewalk to investigate. ‘Was there a row out here a few minutes ago?’ he inquired of a star' | gazer on the sidewalk, j ‘Didn't see airy, I’ve beeu hei« for the last half hour or so.’ ‘See two fellows with ulsters and I rev* lveis collie out?’ ‘Yes, they was talkin’ about j srrappin’ guns, and they’re over across the way now lakin" a drink.” The restaurant man went hack to clear up the dirty dishes and reflect on his idiocy.— Virtpiititt Chronicle. RkvKRSES of F tItTCNE. — Tilt! New York correspondent ot tbe Boston Journal says; Mr. VNhito liousc, who died the other day, was a millionaire two years ago, lie believed it: real estate as an invest ment, Hi! nought night and h it. He lost neatlly everything he had. 1 saw a gentleman to-day trying to sell an estate just out of the oily He had SSOO OuO in cash i:i » bank ing bouse. The house stopped payment suddenly and dUastiously and the man is bankrupt. A lady Tram one of the lake cities cade to New Yoik to visit her mother. In her absence Iter Lm-hand died. He had a fine store, lull ol goods, paid for. She had an (tiler ol $75,000 lor the concern. She sent her Javvy-ex oil to consummate the sale, He reached this city on Sutur-day a.t noon,bringing the money with him. lie put it into the hank to hand it over to (lie widow on Monday. The bank never opened. The wo man sever caw a dollar of her moil* «.y, and was left iu abs-dute desti tution. ‘Sotne visitors are coining, and vou must keep it little still this af* ternouo,’ remarked a Chicago tea cher to her pupils one day lately. •We can’t keep a liulc ‘still,’ or a big one cither,’-chimed is one lad, ‘leant-wise we can’t unlost we pay a government lieeusj’ The teacher then remembered that the boy was tlie sou of a for* mer revenue defaulter, and par* dotted Iris remark. Obsiinatk minds mit-t onrrendif and admit, that the wcudeiful cures or Cough, Colds and Bronchitis effected by.DrJ.li McLean’s Cough and Lung Healing Glolwlea. 'lbis new way, new principles, producing a gas* going direct to the affected pails, is the only remedy Trial Boxes 250. hy mail. Dr. J. 11. Me- Lem 311 Chestnut, St. Louis, A Liltlo Every Day. ' The I ongesl lite is made up of simple days—few or many, but the days grow into years’ and give llie mi x me of our lives at the last. Tne Site is at tile last what the days have been. Let the children .therefore look after the days—one -day at a lime—and put into each one something that will ImfI —some- tl ing worth doing, something worth remembeiing, something worth imi tating by those that follow ua -1 Every day a little knowledge. One fact in a day. How small a thing is one fact! Only one! Ten years pa-m Iy. Three thou sand six hun-bed and fifty facts arc not a small thing. 2. Fiery day a little self denial The .thing that is difficult to do to day’ will he an easy thing to do three hundred and sixty days hence, if each day it shall have been repeat ed. What power of self mastery shall lie enjoy who, lo Ting to God for His grace, seeks every -day lo practice the grace lie prays f-u! ■£. Evetv day a little hopefulness. We live lor tlie good of others’ i* our living he in any-sense true liv ing. It is not in the great deeds ol philanthropy that the only blessing i« found. In “Little deeds of kindness,” repeat-ad every day. we find tine happiness. At home, at school, in the street, in live neighbor's house on the p'ay ground—We shall find opportunity cveiy day for nseltJws-*. 4. Every day a little look isto the bible One chapter a nay. What a treasure or bible knowhdi*** on* | may acquire m ten years, Eieiy day a verse committed to memoiy i What a volume in the miin lat the | «n«! of twenty five yeais! A Dug l.enps from a Tower One llutie!red Feet high un it iirt. Ycfterdav evening a very sedate gentetel looking dog, of the poinlei species, went to the, top ol the It C— moot Hotel to have a look at the city. A hevy ol hoys spied h'.in, and at once betook themselves to the top of the building lo experi ment oil the jumping qualiti. s o ! the animal. He was an elderly dog. and had that philosophical turn ot mind that convinced him that U would be useless lo argue t.lte dar. ger-tbiM-e was ill undci taking the feat his assailants hail suggested lo him and at) without any snailing urgue ment or snapping debate lie announ ced himself toady at;d prepared himself for I lie ordeal. The leap from -the Tieißont Hotel to the ground its a -perilous one, hut the dog was brimful ol enterprise, and made it. The distance is about on« ill inn! rod feel’ ami while passing through that space Foe dug evident ly had some grand old ideas of gravity thatAhe world will never know. When he btruek tbe ground he was stunned,and lay motionless tor ssveral minut***. hot finally got tip and walked oil. resolved hi his own tuind. doubtless, -iievs-r to as cend lo such lofty heights again,aud parliculatly when there is a boy ill sight.— Galveston News. A soldier ol a cavalry regimen' was brought lip for stealing his comrade’s liquor ration. lie whk an Irishman, and Id* defence was unique. '4M Ihj sorry indadc smr, to be a tliafe! 1 put the liquor in the same bottle, and mins was at the botlouq and sure I wan obliged to drink his to gel at my own!’ A clergyman recently asked -a girl concerning her intended.: In lie in bis conversation and can mge a consistent Christian?’ She replied; •In his conversation he is very pious but I never saw him «n hia car* riage.’ Sheet rnu»ic —snoring. Sweet home—a bee*!live. Odd fellows haul—a rich w ife. Board of education —the black 1 boa ill. An expen*ive wife makes a pen sile husbaud. \VI A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Had a Right to l^atigli. There i* a legend tdlb tiling that one day nearly a liiindied years .ago, .the snow was seven Cent deep on the streets of Detroit. On that day not a woman Was seen down town, blit next *lav, w hen the snow lia-l set tied a foot or so, they were out ycstoidav, wandering through the slush and jumping llie pools aud one of theta fell ‘kerwUtsliV as she passed the soldiers' monument' A min standing thirty feet away beg-n laughing upioarionsly. He got red in the I'aea, tears came into Ills eyes, and his hat fall off as he laughed ami ci led out: ‘Went right down like a hag of sand ir.to slush a I'.-ot deep scraleli >d up to kill; never saw anybody bulk so-cheap —ho hoi ho! lit.J’ 'You are no gentleman, sii!’ re mark* d a mail who had witn*essed lilt; mishap. ‘Can’t help that— In. 1 , ha! ha! laughed llw! other, bending almost don Me. •You hav’ul the £ rut instinct o.| a genii*man, sir!’continued the other growing .veiy mad. ‘1 know it, hut l.o? Iml ho'!’ scienamd the other '1 know just how slit! fell as she went down car tying all that aiyle, a*«-l I hid ha ha!’ ‘I don’t see anything *» very funny in it,’ growled the oilier. 'No you don’t, but I—'!’ And he limit; to ilu* lamp post and laughed tili has legs weakened, WU«a he hail lecovered Ids breath lie ex plaii ed to the crowd : Mi was mv wife you see. She pro!) ably wanted a p air of shoestring* or two cent's worth u( silk twist, and it took her tluee hoars to ourl and twist, nnd powder and £x ujj to come down he;*e and w’ade a round. Then lo fall flat with all her best ilu Is on, ami to le helped up by a rug buyer, and to hear the h ) S yell out, why, i‘. jjust taken .ill the h"! In*.! muscle right ha! lin! out of tneT Asking a IMrsslng. Ay, but wait, good wife, a minute, I have first a word lo say, Do you know what day to-day is? Mother, 'Us our .wedding day! d-tisf at; now.-we sat at supper When the guests laid gone away, You sat that side; I sat this siile, Forty years ago to-day! Thun what plana we laid together, What brave tilings I meant to do! -Could we dream to duy would fiud us At this I aloe—»e aud you. Bettor so, no doubt—aud yet I S met hues think—l can-ot tell Had our boy—ah, ye.-! 1 snow dear, Yes, He doelh all ihigim well. Wetl we'-ve had our ’joys and sorrows, Shared our smiles as well as tears, A.ud—.the best of all—l’ve hud your Faithful love for-forty years! Door we’ve been, but not forsaken, Grief we’ve known, but never shame— Father for Thy endless mercies Still we bless Thy Holy name. A nice young lady in a west-aide Sunday school has a class of bright little boys with whom she labox to have eventhing clearly under rtuod, and to this end frequently cads upon live class to define tlie ‘hard word*.’ Happening to Use the woid ‘responsibility,’ she asked some one to explain what it meant upon which oue of the smallest, a wiee little chpp,spoke up as follows, greatly to the astonishment of the aforesaid young lady; * A hoy has two Imltous for his s’penders so’s to keep Ins partis on. When one button comes ofl why there’* a good deal ol responsibility ou the otiier bn Hoax’ A lady in oar neighborhood who had Huff'eied for over three months the most extrema torture Uy a vio* lent cough, has became completely cured by L>r. Bull’s Cough Syrup. For sale iu every thug store. GWINNETT HERALD. RATES OF ADVERTISING. Sq'r's | ) W | 2 W | 3 \\ | l M I 3 Vt 1 f?l SI 50 $2 CO $2 50 S 3 00 2 200 3«0 400 ft no 12 01 3 3DO 45 < 500 fiO i 5 « > 4 4 'MI SOO 700 «DO 1C 00 'i 001. ’ 0 700 gOOIoDO 20 00 >. ead. «4) * 13 00 Ifi (Ml !M 0 * 3o 00 1 coi. I C (Ml 22 <1 27 00 30 00 sf) 00 And by special con true! for a longer timethafi three mnatlis. A square is <*«e inch (« (tepti of cnlnma The nw.ey for advertiaing is due oa Ike first inserliwn. No. 6. Itat-Klling Kxtrcoi-diimrj. At 10 p. m„ yesterday soma two score of dog fatK'iers, sporting mea and pci room attracted by coriositf assembled in a loft, not half a male liom |s*lie.e Isca* I quarters lo sttDM a match for $20() betwueU Ume ami Jamm (J. Hpeuoea’a ‘Nip’— ‘Nip’s owner burking him to kill ICO rats within thirty minutes. Nip is as liuwdHome a UMi-pouud eight-ounce Skye teriicr an can be foul’d in America. The rats were lively ones, and comprised a score of sumtl-ones, ttm most dilK nil vernim for a dog matched against lime to tackle. They weie care!oily counted,and on being turned loose, ih«*y formed pyramids in the coriicia of tlm pit or wooden stjudwre, three feet high, *urioninling a space aix feet square, ‘Nip’ whined anxious ly until lie was loosed, and then we>nt to work lik** a |*ei ambulating sausage machine, and in fiv-e min utes forty rats, untight deftly, either in the miildle of tlve back or in tlm neck, were, -pitched out of Ua« pit stone dead. These were rat a that were wared out of tha pyramids already spoken of, and then tli« liaid work began. ‘Kip' for th er. or four minutes had to attack these pyramids, and gist badly bitten, but not a wldnu escaped him, and at the thii terii.tli tninu'e the re— iu.lining rata had aca tered all over the pit, tuint running up the .legs of the 'handler,’ and *X.i|>,’ went t<* work 4i4mj lightning to c. nipletw hii« tank. Three successive times in rudiing about (lie pit., lie mapped up without changing hi* grit, three ruts ui three seconds, und uncle eonie uhtoiiiabing 'ki'ls.'' catching rat* that jumped to avoid his jaws in add air, tuid throwing llie’it aside as lie dashed it it** a corner and do niohehed terintim half a ebzeu. •Nip’ was quicker at the fini*ii than at the *iait, ami (he Inal five rat* were killed in litre sec ond*. Time wa* called on the 400th rat, like stop-watch indicat ing fifteen minutes fifty wounds, no average of seconds per rat. tu OJd W liig's Answer. k Uadical paper in M iiitgoioctj, A'ln., some tiiu* ago, puhliabed a very offensive article inviting cer tain gentlemen of that State who were formely Whigs .to go back ns their own iace, and j.>in the negroes and tiheiu - uiieeiabk; white all.h* iit that Stale is support es Mr. Hayes. One of the gentlemen especially aps pealed to was the li «• L. R. Havis, of Limestone oosinty, and be thus rhi ponded to the insulting proposi ti u; The Alabama State Journal, in an article brimful of bosk, .rails Li-lily up H Old Liao Whig* to rally in support id Hayes. Uo singles out some fifty men, amusig whom we find our name, and call* upon us in particular to raise tke banner* for Hayes. VV'e will uol quoin from Hie article, viewing it as we do us adding insult to injury, but will simply say to I nigh on L f’o , tbsi we would sec you d—d first. If we ever do qu’t till* Jtemocratic party, we do nut in'ead to join .in with a baud of thitvas who have become no expert in tbe business a* to steal die Pre*ideucy, we arc fully dull rminod to go fu.rl.ker, if we fan: worse, Never-harbor animosity toward a friend for a mere huaty -expression., forgiveness is a godlike quality, and a true friend is ho scarce that he should not be repudiated on slight •pounds, (ml those wlto injure you from ’m si roe prepense’ should ha »hunucd as you would avoid a tiger. Kmurcucs Vknukancs:. — Sotuo one having urged Tasso to avenge himself upon a man win* had done him Missy injures, Ise said: ‘I wish to lake from uiiu neiibsr his prop* erty nor his life, nor his honor, hut only Ida ill-wrU towards me.’