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v vET T ll E L D
wf dnksp* t bt
~,cr> E* r,r
; PUE S & BOWLES.
• »ir rio* katks:
1 ' a f1t1.50 in advance.
[•3iuos., ' j fl advance.
> m ° s '’ 50 in advance.
] rncS-t
;noug» tor Everybody
I t'h b
msanionto pop. ‘RA
■ minn a summer evening
■ P?" renewing dreaming.
■ ,'Liind star-! were beaming
■**l,l was faintly gleaming
■ i T inside my p H ,,vr *
B t /murmur of a billow,
gloom,
■. W a, heard a gentle sound,
■v on the « ir 1) ;’ onn ”’
Kuncclo from above,
KidTplrUiewhitm-d head
i^S r cooing,
■i heart to soothe with wooing,
H a n angel from the sky
K ypirit hovering mgh.
11 [i ,y entranced and dreaming,
lle ,l by tbs echo seeming
i lie wliispered Irom above,
i,O starlight faintly gleaming,
I, its form of beauty beaming
beheld the snowy dove :
I, „ thrill ol wond-r gazing
he visitor amazing,
kmunded : ‘‘who are you ?
H,| dm gentle bird of whiteness,
Hjih its snowy robejof btigh' ness,
with a (“00 ;
■Tmse.it,’he said,‘from Aide..,
a fair and lovely maiden,
a message unto thee ;
■ni come to soothe thy sorrow,
Hj thee from despair to borrow
■ ilorie that thou her lace shall see ;
t r thy cherished one is living
,j her thoughts to thee is giving,
■On a brigl t and distant shore ;
Hml I come, her carrier dove,
K ith a message Irom thy love,
I Who is thine lore vet more.’
By this joyful news excited,
Rap turd, Ravished, and excited,
■ j the snowy bird addressing
Bsk'ed, with earnest voice inquiring,
K'luit my smti was most desiiing,
m That Iwr name to me expressing,
lie would set my heart at rest—
■till the tumult in my breast,
■ mi assure me that my maiden
Bn the distant field, ot Aiden
II Waited for me on that shore—
I Wfuld be mine forevermore
■J’J}o» 1 -p<»k© with U-ivnr,
E. the maiden's ardent lover,
■ ‘Does my own d parted live ?
■To the bitd of wliitencs- listening.
■While n.j eager ey-e were glistening,
I For the answer lie wou d give ,
■‘Tell me, 0 thou carrier dove,
■Of my absent cherished love,
Whom I knew in days of yo-e :
■Has she passed the elii- ing portal
■Of the blessed land immortal,
I Going through the golden door ?
■lloes she moye in light an I “piendor,
IDo the graces all attend her,
On that fair and distant shore ?'
Words and tones and looks revealing
All my depths of inward feeling,
Moved, affected by my pleading,
And my ax.ous question heeding,
Thus the dove| my soul discerning.
Answer made these wurds returning,
‘ln the distant fields of a‘u3» n,
Ou a bright, Klysian shore,
Dwells a fair and lovely maiden,
And her name is Klinorc ,
Mid the lowers about her blooming
Mid the odors sweet, perfuming
All the balmy air around
She, arrayed ir, robes of whiteness,
Walks an angel in her brightness.
With a wreath immortal crowned. 1
Then the bird, his wings unfolding.
Left me, as I lay beholding
Filled with transport and delight:
With a soft,sonorious coo '
Nodding, bidding me adieu,
Through the open window flew
Out into the gloomy night.
-’at the bright enchanting vision
Of the distant fields of Klysian,
And my cherished Klinore,
As a fair and lovely maiden,
Dwelling in the land of Aklen,
is my light (oievermore;
'1 here shall I, my loved one gree ing,
At our future, early met ting,
On that distant radient shore,
M ith ecstatic joy and gladness,
Iree from parting, pain and sadness,
Olagp again my Klinore.
Oall her mine forevermore!
MIBCEIX.ANY.
ENOUGH.
A SERMON BY DR. TALMAGE.
“Be content with such things ns
ye have.”— Heb. 13 : 5.
If I should ask one, ‘Where is
Brooklyn to day ?’ he would say,
'U Shelter Island.’ ‘Where i H
to day?’ ‘At Longßranch’
Where is Philadelphia.?’ ‘Cape
May. ‘Where is Boston,?’ ‘At
Martha’s Vineyard.’ Where is
Virginia? ‘At the Sulphur Springs’
‘?here is the great multitude
from all parts of the land. ?’• ‘At
huratoga.’ The modern Bstlisai
** a ' ”here the angei of health is ev
the waters Bu s , my
f>‘«nds the largest multitude are
Weekly Gwinnett Herald.
TYLKR M. PKKPI.ES.)
Eorrou am, Pbopriftok. f
AT HOME,
detained by busir*sn or circum- |
stances. Among them all new.,- i
panel' men, the hardest worked j
and the least compensated ; city
railroad employees, and ferry mas 1
ters, and the polioee, aud tens of j
thousands clerks and merchants I
waiting; for their turn of business'
and households with an invalid
who cannot be moved, and other
multitudes by the stringency of;
the times hinderd from further ex
pendituro, and the great multitude |
of well to do people who stay at
homo because they like home bet
ter than any other place, refusing
to go away because it is the sash -
jou to go,
When the express wagon with
its mountain of trunks directed
to the Catskills or Nirnga goes
through the streets, we stand at
our window envious and imps
tient, and wonder why we cannrt
g® as well as others. Fools that
we are! us though one could not
be as happy at ho in (5 as anywhere
else. 011 r grandfathers and
gran 1 mothers had as good a time
as we have long bofore the first
spring was bored at Saratoga or
the first deep shot in the Adiron
docks. They made their wedding
tour to the next farmhouse, or liv
ing in the city, they celebrated the
event by a walk on the New York
“batter v.”
Now, the genuine American is
not happy until ho is going some
whore, and the passion is sr great
that there are Christian people
with their families, detained in the
city, who come not to the house of
Cod, trying to give people the idea
that they are out of town; leaving
the door plate unscoured fo*- the
same reason, and for two months
ko'ping the front shutters closed
whilflTHey sit in the back part of
the house, the thermometer at
ninety. My friends, if it is best
to go let us go and be happy. If
it is best for ns to st ay at home
let us stay, and be happy. There
is a great deal of good common
sense in Paul’s advice to the He
brews, “Be content with such
things aa ye 1 ave.”
I. The first reason that I mention j
as leading to this spirit advised in j
the text is the consideration that j
the poorest of us have all that is
indispensable in life. Wo make a
great ado about our hardships i>ut
how little we talk of
CUR BLE3S<NO9.
Health of body, which is given
in largest quantities to those who
have never been petted and fond
led and spoiled by fortune,we take
as a matter of course. Rather have
this luxury and have it alone, than
without it, look out of a palace
window upon parks of deer stalk
ing between fountains and statua
ry.
These pe pie sleep -asunder on
a straw ruatress than fashionable
invalids on a couch of ivory and
eagle’s down. The dinner of herbs
tastes better to the appetite sharp
ened ou a woodman's axe or a reap
er’s scythe, than wealthy indiges
tion experiences seated at a table
covered with partridge and veni
son and pineapple. He who
trades that off for all tho palaces
of the earth is infinitely cheated.
We look back at tho glory of tho
the last Napoleen. but who would
have taken his Versailles and his
Tuilerias if with them wehadbeen
obliged io take his gout.
‘•Oh,” says soma one, “it isn’t
the grosser pleaaurers /covet, but
it is the gratification of an artistic
and intellectual taste.” V by, my
brother, you have the original
from which these picturers are cop
ied. What is a sunset on a wall
compared with a sunset hung in
loops of lire on the heavens? W hat
is a cascade, silent on a ciuvas,
compared with a cascade that
makes the mountain tremble, its
j ~prav ascending like the departed
j spirit of the water slain on the
Lawrenceville, Ga. Wednesday, Feb. 21, 1883
rocks ? Oh, tlioro is a great deal
of
HOLLOW AFFECTION
about a fondness for pictures on
the part of those who never aj pre
ciate the original from which the
pict*res are taken. As though a
par- tit should ha to no regard for
his child, but ge into ecs/acies at
the photograph. Bless the Lord
O man, O woman, that tho’ yon
may he shut out from the works
, of a Church, a Bierstadt, aliubens
j and a Raphael, you still have free
access ta a jail rj grander than the
Louvre or the Luxemburg or the
Vatican—the royal gallery of the
noonday heavens, the King’s gal
lery of the midnight sky.
11. Another consideration leading
U 8 to a spirit of contentment is the
! fact that our happiness is not de
pendent u ion outward circumstan
j res. You see people
HAPPY AND MISERABLE
under all circumstances. In a sum
i-iy where the last loaf is on the ta
ble and the last stick es wood on
the fire, you sometimes find a cheer
fill confidence in God, while in a
v°ry fine place you will see and
hear discord sounding her war
whoop and hospitality freezing to
death in a cheerless parlor.
I stopped one day on Broadway
at the head of Wall Atm;/, at the
foot of Trinity Church, to sec who
seemed to be the happiest people
passing. 1 judged from their locks
that the happiest people were not
those who went down into Wall
Street, for they had on their brow
the anxiety of tho dollar they ex
pooled to make; nor the people
who came out of Wall Street, for
they had 01 their, hr v» the anxiety
of the dollar they had lost: nor
the people who swept by in splen
did cquipas*, fur they met cai li
nages liner than thoirs. The
happiest person in all that crowd,
judging from the countenance,was
the woman who sett at Ike apple stand
knitting. I believe real happiness
ofteucr looks out of the window
of an humble home, than through
the opera glass of the gilded box
of a theatre.
I find Nero growling on a
throne IfindPaul sieging in a dun
geon. I find King Ahab going to
bed at neon through melancholy,
while near by is Naboth content
ed in the possession of a vine
yard. Hainan, Prime Master o's
Persia, frets himself almost to
death because a poor jew will not
tip his hat, and Ahithophel, one of
the great lawyers of Bible times,
through fear of dying, hangs him
| self. The wealthiest man forty
’ years ago in New York when con
j gratulated over his largo estate re
| plied, “Ah, you don't know how
j much trouble I have in taking care
; ct it.”
Byron declared in his last hours
that be had never seen more than
twelve happy days in all his life.
I do uot belive he bad seen twelve
minutes of thorough satisfaction,
Napoleon, said, “I turn with d s
gust from the cowardice and sel
fishness of man. I hold life a hor
ror; death is repose. What I
have suffered the last twenty days
“s beyond human comprehension.”
While, on the other band, to
show how one may be happy amid
tho most disadvantageous circurn
stances, just after the Ocean Mon
arch hue. been wrecked in the En
glish Channel a steamer was ernis
ing along in the darkness, when
the captain heard a seng, a swoet
sung, coming over the water, and
he bore down towards that veice
and found it was a Christian, woman
on a plank es the wrecked steamer,
singing to the timo ox St- Mar
tin’s :
“Jess'!, lover of my soul,
Let tne to tliy bos, m fiv
While die billows near me roll
While the tempest still is high •’
The heart right toward God and
man we are happy. The heart
wreng toward God and man, we
are unhappy.
A TEMPORARY AHKANUEMEX".
111, Another reason why we
sheuld come to this spirit inculca
ted in the text is tho fact that all
the differences of earthly condition
are transitory. The houses you
build, t.be land you culture, the pla
ces in which you barter are seon
to go into other hands However
hard you may havo ( it now. if you
area Christian the scone will soon
end. Bair., trial, peijt< cutisn never
knock at the door pf the grave.
A coffin made ant qf piuo boards
is just as good a rafting place as
one made out of silver-mounted
mahogany orrosewfud.
Go down among the resting pla
ces of the-dead amt,you will find
that thu ugh people, tlioro had a
great difference of worldly cireum
stances, now they are all alike uu
conscious. The hand that greeted
the nenotor aud the president and
the king is as still as tho hand
that hardened on tho mechanic's
hammer or the manufacturers
wheel. It does not any differ
once now r whether there was a
plain stone ab»va them from which
the traveller pulls aside the weeds
to read the name, or a tad shaft
springing into the heavens ns
though to tell their virtues of the
skies, in that silent laud there are
no titles for grout men and there
are no rumblings of chariot wheels
aud there is never board the foot
of tho dance. The
EGYPTIAN GUANO.
which is throwD on the fields in
the East for the enrichment of the
soil, is thedu® lakal out from tho
sepulchres of kings aud lords and
mighty men. Oh tho chagrin of
ihoso mighty men if they bad ev •
er known that in after ages of the
world they would have been called
Egyptian guano 1
IV. A l. other* "Pfiasoii why we
should culture a spirit of cheerful j
ness is the fact that
GOD K.MOWS WHAT IS BEST
for his creatures You know what
is best for your child. He thinks
yon are n*t as liberal with him as
you ought to lie. Ho criticizes
your discipline; but you look over
the whole field, and you, lovir g
that child, do what in your -lelbe r
ate judgement is best for him.
Now God is the best of fathers.
Sometimes His children think that
He is hard an them and that He
is net as liberal with them as He
might be. But children do not
know an much as a father.
I can tolf yon why you are not
largely alll tout an 1 why you ,
ixuve not been grandly successful.
It is because you cannot stand the
temptation. If your path has been
smooth, yon would have depended
upor. your own surefootedness;
but God roughened that, path so
yon would have t@ take hold of
His hand. II the weather has
been mild yon would have loitered
along the water courses, but at
the first, howl of the storm yon
quickened your pace heavenward
and wrapped around you the
warm robe of a Savkmr’s righteous
ness.
“What have I done,” says the
wheatsheaf to the fanner, “ what
have I done that you beat me so
haid with your Hail *”,The farmer
makes no answer, but tha rake
takes off the straw, and the mill
blows the chaff to the wind, and
the golden grain falls down
at the foot of the windmill. After
awhile the straw looking down
from the mow upon the golden
grain banked up on either side
the floor understands why the far
mer beat the wheatsheaf with the
flail.
Who are these before the throne?
answer 'Ninie “these are they
whe out of great tribulation had
their robes washed and made white
in the blood of the lamb. Would
to God that, we could understand
that oor trials ar° the very best
thing for us. If we hud uu appreei
ation of that truth then we should
knew why it was that •/>hu Noyr
tho martyr, in tho very midst of
the flame reached down and pick
ed up one of the faggots that was
consuming him and said : “Bless
od bo God for the time when I
was bom to this preferment."
They who suffor with him on earth
shall bo glorified with him in lioav
en. Be content then with such
things as yon have.
V . Another consideration lead
ing ns to the spirit of the text is
the assurance that
THE LORD WILL PROVIDE
somehow. Will 110 who holds the
water in the hollow of Ilia hand
allow Ilia children to die of thirst?
Will He who owiib (lie cattle on a
thousand hills asd all tho earth s
luxuriance of grain anil fruit, allow
His children to starve? be out to
morrow morning at five o’clock,
into the woods and hear the birds
chant, They have had no b-eak
fast. They knew not where the)
will difle. They have no idea
where they will sup But bear
the birds chant at five o’clock in
tho morning. ‘Behold the fowls
of the air, fer they sow not neither
do they gather into barns, yet
your heavenly Either feedetb
them. Are ye not much better
than they?
Seven thousand people m
Christ's time wont in*o the desert
They were the most improvident
people I over heard of. They
were deserved to starve. They
might have taken food enough to
last them until they got back.
Nothing did they take. A lad,
who had more wit than all of them
put together, asked his mother that
morning for some loaves es bread
and some fishes. They wero put
into his satchel. Ho went out in
to the de- ert. From this provis
ion the 7000 were fed, and the
more t icy ate the larger the loaves
grew, until the provision that tho
boy brought in one satchel was
multiplied so ho could not have
carried the fragments home in six
satchels. ‘Oh,’ you say, ‘times
have changed and tho day of mira
e'es has gone.’ 1 reply that what
bod did then by miracle He does
now hi some other way and by nat
nral laws.
have been young,' said David.
•but now am I old; yet have I nov
er seen tho rioheous forsaken nor
h’s seed begging bread.’ li. is
high time that you people who
are fretting about worldly cireum
stances and who are fearing you
are coining to want, understood
that the oath of the Eternal God
is involved in tho fact that y’ou are
to havo enough to cat and to
wear.
VI. Again 1 remark that the r c
ligion of Jesus Christ is die grand
ost influence to make a man con
tented.
INDEMNITY AOAINHT ALU
financial ami spiritual harm. It
calms the spirit, dwindles tho
earth into insignificance and swal
lows up the sonl with tho thought
of heaven. oye who have been
going about from place to place
expecting to find in change of cir
cumstances something to give sol
ace *o the spirit, I commend yon
to the waim hearted, earnest, prac
tical, commonsense religion of the
Lord Jesus Christ. ‘There is no
peace, saith my God, for the wick
ed,’and as long as you continue
in yonr sin you will be miserable-
Como to Christ. Make Him your
portion and start for heaven and
you will be a happy man—you
will be a happy woman.
Yet my friends notwithstanding
all these inducements to a spirit
of contentment, I havo to tell you
that the human race io divided in
two classes—those who scold and
those who get scolded. The car
penter wants to be anything but a
carpenter, and the mason anything
bntja mason, and the banker any
thing but a ban) er, and the I«w
yer anything but a lawyer, and the
minister anything but a minister,
jVol. XII.—No. 49
an I ever 'body would I>* happy if
ho were sorubody she. Parents
hare the worst children that ever
were, and everybody has the great
cst mi«fortune and everything is
upside down or going te be. Ah,
iny friends, you never make any
advance through such a spirit as
that.
YOU CANNOT I'UKT YOUR6KLF UP.
you may fret yourself down. Amid
all this grating of tones I strike
this string of tho gospel harp :
‘Qjdliness with contentment is
great gain. We brought nothing
into this world, and it is very cer
tain wo can carry notlrng out;
having food and raiment lot us
therewith be content."
Let us nil remember, if we arc
Christians, that we are going after
awhile, whatever bo our circum
stances now, to have
a glorious vacation
As in summer wo put oil’ our
garments and go down iuto tho
cool sea to bathe, so we 'will put
off these garments of flesh and
step into the cool Jordan. We
will look around for some place t >
lay down our weariness, and the
tiees will say : “Como and rest mi
der onr shadow!" and the earth
will say : “Como and sloep in my
bosom and the winds will say,
“Hush, while I sing thee a ciudle
hymn;" and while six strong men
carry us out to eur last resting
place and ashes como to ashes and
dust to dust, we will see
two scarred feet standing amid the
broken soil and a lacerated brow
bending ovei the opei grave, while
a voico tender with all affection
and mighty with all omnipotence
will declare: ‘I am the resurrec
tion and the life ; ho that belioveth
in Me, though ha ware dead, yet
shall ho live.’ Cemfort one anoth
erwith these words.
The Governors of Goorgia.
1 have taken the troubled to
compile from tho eflioial records
the following Sesijui Octennial list
of the Governors of Georgia,which
will be found valuable for rsfer
o co, and also show the propriety
of having Governor Stephens, the
Scsqui Centennial Governor, as the
orator on Monday :
1732 gun. JAB. kd. ooi.KriiDßfa 1732
VVm Stephens 1 “ a:{ VV in Rabun I*l7
floury barker 17 ."> 1M at Talbot 18111
Jno Reynolds 1754 J ohn Clark 181!)
Henry Kills 17.47 GII Troup 1823
Jus Wright 1701 John Foisylh 1827
J Habe-s'.mm 1771 (J It Gilmer 18211
VVm Kw.-n 1775 VV its on Luin-
Arc 1 -. Bulloch 1776, kin 1831
Hutton Gv*in- | Win Schley 18 ft
nett 1777 G R Gdiner 1837
J V Treutlen 1777 Ghas J Me-
J llourtoun 1778 Donald 1839
John Wereat 1770 Geo VV Craw-
Geo Walton 1779 lord 1845
It Howley 178 i Geo VV Towns 1847
btepli. Heard 1 781,11 ■•well Cobb 18.41
Nathan Brown H V Johnson 1853
•me 1781 J h Brown 18.47
John Martin 1782 Ju* John-on,
Lyman Hull 1783 Provisional
J Houstoun 178 t! Governor 1805
Sam Klb"rt 1785 Chus. J. Jt-n-
K«l. Telfair 1780 kins 130.4
G Matthews 1787jGen T H Rug
Jarc<l Irvrin 1 79G; get’, US A .
Jas Jack •‘on 1798 Military Gov
David Baiun- ernor 1808
uel 1801 Rufus u Bu'.
Josiali Tatnnll IHOlj 10 -k 1868
.John Vlillcge 1802;li Conely Pres
Jared Irwin 1806, Senate 1871
1) it Mitcheli 1801). J VI Smith 1872
Peter Karly 1813 A 11 Colquitt 1870
D 15 Mitchell 1815,
1882. nov. ai.v.x a. srupwcNs. 1882.
The above list includes Royal
Governors. the Presidents of Pro
visional Councils, tho CelonialGov
ernors, tha Governors under the
Constitution, and Presidents of
the Sensate as governors ad intfr
im. The list is complete but not
classified. Some served only a
few months, hence tw® names ap
pear for the same year or term of
office. Governors Button Gwin
nett, George Walton, aad Lyman
Hall were the ‘Signers of the Dec
laration of Independence” from
Georgia, and were known, with
many ethers about Savannah, as
the “Liberty boys’ during tho
Revolutionary struggle.
It is a singular fact that from
Governor Drown to Governor Ogle
thorpe, all the Governors are dead;
and from Gov. Brown to Gov. Sle
phens they are all alivo; Governor
Brown f irming the dividing line
between tho dead and the living.—
Savannah X
"" AiV—
A n A tin r i iniii f/ 31 < till in
The HERALD in itnei/ttaied by
rearnn of it* ertrnmve rirruinlicti and
rrvuirkuhl>j low rate*. limine** men
xhvuld r<member thin.
BLANKSfBLANKS! BLANKS
(am. KINDS .NKATI.Y pkintud)
FOR SALE ATTHI
UK If A LIJ JO It OFFICE
HTY I M I \ WASH IMi t O.V
llow tbo >E;id;ili>««* .tJako I.L'o
Worth fiiviiig in the
Capital City.
One of the handsomest turnouts
in town is a light spring landau
that cost $2,80i). It is upholstered
in heavy crimson satin and perfum
ed with the fair owner s favori’e
flower—violets. It is drawn by a
pair of light bays, young, fleet
footed creatures worth $1,200.
They wear u $llOO gold mounted
harness and SIOO blankets, with
beautifully embroidered mono
grams in the corners, io keep their
shining coats from the frosty air.
The man who bonis tho ribbons
over them lias his livery furninhsd
and receives SSO a month, with a
stable man to help him. H*
tucks a SOOO lap robe of sealskin
about him, and flourishes a whip
that cost SB.
Thu nobby footman who opens
and closet the carriage door, who
races up and down steps and rings
the bells must not bear about him
any flavor of tho stable. He re
ceives $25 a mouth, when ysung
and charming, and none other less
favored will fill that post accepta
bly. llis livery is also furnished
by his employers.
While those horses or being
groomed, scraped, washed and pol
ished they aie put in harness j
then they prance before the deor
with the soft cushioned, faintly
poi fumed carriage, ready for the
lady She enters, ’i he hair dress
ei s art has embellished her ewn
and other’s hair—now hers by pur
chase■ her maid or a professional
Ims polished her finger tips until
the nails have tho appearance of
tiny sou shells. For effect, as we
have described, she wears the won
derful pink silk dress with tho
rose pattern luce, a dress costing
SI,OOO. The jewels worn are large,
opals set with diamonds, valued it
$2,000 more. A closo fitting, fur
'iued jacket protects the lace cov
©red arms aud bosom from the
cold, and an ample dolman *f seal
skin trimmed with sable is worn
over that, the deep hood of which
is brought over tho head and face.
The wrap was bought far SSOO. —
The carriage floor is covered with
a long woolen vicuna rug; besides
there is a foot muff of Russian far
worth SSO, for the lady's feet..—
These are clad in richly embroider
ed silken stockings for which waa
paid $25, and the satin boots cost
sls mors. Her handkerchief of
poist lace is worth ten times ;its
weight in gold. Her fan, gloves
and Ixi'piot of long stemmed rose
lmds are another SIOO. If there
are several receptions on the same
evening tho lady and escort can
stop but a short time at each. To
expedite matters, tire footraan in
that case waits at the door with
the wraps until they come out, as
tine saves tho trouble of ascend
ing to the dressing rooms.
Jt is but n dress parade. The
same people utter the same plati
tudes from house to house, until
the waning night or dawning ‘lay
sends tthsra to their beds. When
our grand dame returns home her
maid helps her up stairs, undress
es and puts on her mistress a soft,
warm, negligee robe, brushes out
her hair to woo sleep, nhd when
dreivsiness comes lifts liar bodily
and lays her in lied,
S.)mo folks may imagine that
the daughter of the Pharoaks did
great things, but or queen of eoci
oty owns a steam yacht that could
run down the old Nile bargo and
sink it in no time, and she has
money enough to buy a whole car
go of rare German and French
wines without fooling with her
jewelry.
ElizabotbTu b>r was so proud of
o o forlorn pair of silk stockings
that were made a present to h®r
that she mentionpd it in history.
Our fine lady has dozens of pairs
in all shades and colors. Sho has
silk hangings, rich carpets, raro
paintings and delightful music ;
exotics in mid-winter and ices in
dog days. Sho has mire comforts
and greater luxuries than the grand
, monarch ever dreamed of iu his
most pleasure pursuin ; age.
Think of seven thousand
in watermelons. And yet this ia
the number of acres to ba planted
by southwest Ga., furmars this
season.
Rewards to the amount ®f six
tien hundred dollars are offered
for the convif tion of tin* murderer
I of Jacob .‘8 iaivk who was killed is
j oeutly m G .in^viik.