The Jefferson news & farmer. (Louisville, Jefferson County, Ga.) 1871-1875, April 04, 1872, Image 1

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THE JEFFERSON & HEWS A FARMER Vol. 1. TIHSE Jefferson News & Farmer B Y S. W. ROBERTS & BROI LOUISVILLE CARDS. P,\V. C; r.wcli, W. F. Dcuny. Carswell & Denny, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, LOUISVILLE, GEORGIA, WILL practice ill. all tlio Counties in the Midilie Ciicuit. Al.<o Burke in Au gusta Circuit All business entrusted to their care will meet with prompt attention. Nov, 3. 27 ly if W. .1. lIAJI. o,Ts;or,r.7r.i i; jit saw, SWAINS3OKO’, GA. Will practice in the Middle and Augusta Circu ts. All business entrusted to his cam wil nr et with prompt attention. No,-. 17th. 1.171. 2 If. roTcAnF J. H. rOLHILL. CAIN s POLHILL, ATTORNEYS AT LAW LOUISVILLE, GA. May 5,1871. 1 ly. T. F. HA R LOW Wa,t cla IVC a lx. © r —AND— "23 3P .*SL II 3-1. jS2 jtt , Xiouisvillc, G- a. Special ATTENTION GIVEN to reno. vating and repairing WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SEWING MACHINES &c , Ac. Also Agent for the Home Shuttle Sewing Machine May 5,1871. 1 lyr: DR, I. R. POWELL, LOUISVILLE, GA. Thankful for the patronage enjoy fid heretofore, takes this method of con tinuing the offer of Isis professional services to patrons and friends. May 5. 1871. I lyr. DU. J. U. SMITH late of Sandersville Oa., offers his Professional services to the citizens of Louisville, and Jefferson county. An experience of nearly forty years in the profession, should entitle him to Public Con iidence. Special attention paid to Obstetrics and the diseases of women and children. o*‘ lice at Airs Doctor Millers. Louisville .June *JO, 1871. 8 if. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS. IfUl Look Out for the Sign of THE GOLDEN BEE HIVE, IF you wish to buy your Dry Good3 at the lowest prices, GliOitbi: WEBER. No. 176 Broad Street, Opposite, AUGUSTA HOTEL. E F. Bryan, W. S. Mclntosh. BRY AN A IcINTOSH, RECEIVING, FORWARDING AND Commission Merchants, No, MO (KELLY’S BUILDING) BAY ST., SAVANNAH, GEORGIA Agents for sale of tlio ‘‘PRATT” COTTON GIN. Prompt attention given to the sale of Cotton Wool, and Country Produce of every descrip lion. Liberal cash advances made on above when in store. Correspondence Solicited. Nov. 17 29 3m, !§| /oltiTT hJjhb pa Hfrrt rriEr SAVANNAH, Possessing powerful invigorating These Bitters aro positively invaluable in They purify tho system, and will cure miiitemLmtmmmßL Remittent and Intermittent Fever., and are a preventive of Chilla and Fever. imNSiHifflaHi^mHaagiaaagw All yield to their powerful effieacy. Are an antidote to change of Water and Diet* j to tho wasted frame, and correct all Will save days of suffering to the sick, and * The grand Panacea for all the ills of life. ■■■■ i ■ in 3jsmm » wa-K! CUPIMATI \ Jr 1 n Young or Old, Single, these Bitters arc quailed and have often been f means of saving life. TRY ONE BOTTLE* MILLER, DISPELL & BURKIJM, Whole side Agents, i n<J Wholesale Grocers and Com mission Meichan 1 !, 177 Broad Strrrt, AV ai'S'l'A, OA. # Louisville, Jefferson County, Ga., Thursday, April 4, 1872. New Advertisement*. Dissolution —OF— The Copartnership heretofore e.\~ isling between the undersigned, un der the firm name <d SAMUEL M. LEDERER & CO. is this day dissolved by mutual eon -’em. Messrs ISAAC M. FRANK and GLft L AY E ECKS I LIN are alone authorized to settle the afliiirs ot the late firm, collect all monevs due, and sign in liquidation. SAM’L M. LEDERER, I. M. FRANK, G f ISTA VE ECKST EIN Savannah, July ISth, IS7I. Copartnership Notice. The undersigned have this duv associated themselves together as Partners for the transaction of a ! General DRY GOODS business in the City of Savannah, under the firm name of FRANK & ECKSTEIN, AT 131 BROUGHTON ST., where they will continue to carry an extensive stock of S TP il IP IL US AND Ml &©o®§ AND HBTI 8 1 S . Possessing facilities to purchase Goods in the tl NEW ST* . New York. Northern Markets on the very best terms, will contin ue to offer such INDUCEMENTS as will make it the interest of BUYERS to deal with us. Thanking you for the kind favors bestowed on the late firm, \vc re spectfully solicit your patronage in future. Also an early examination ofuur stock and prices. Yours respect full}’, FRAAK & ECKSTEIN, 131 Broughton St- Parties desiring to send orders for Goods or Samples of Dry Goods will find them promptly attended to by addressing P. O. BOX 3S, Savannah, Ga. Aufttit 18, ly. it J. Walker Proorfotar. R U. llcT>o:*at.t> * Cos., nraggistsan* <**•. Ag’tc.Saarrantisao Gal., m i Sr anl A t Cowsiarce St.N.Y. MILLION'S Hern* Truliniony to their Wonderful Curative Effects. They nra not a vile Fancy Drink, made ot Poor Rnm, Whiskey, Proof Spirits nnd Itef'use Li <l n ors doctored, spietd and sweetened to plcnsc the taste, called “Tonic*/' “Appetizers." ‘‘Restorers/' Ac., that lead the tipplor on to drnnkennoss and ruin, but are n true Medicine,made from the Kativo Rootsand Herbs of Cali fornia, free from nil Alcoholic Ktimulants. They are the GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER and A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, a perfect Reno vator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy con dition. No person can take these Bitters according .to directions and remain long unwell,provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and tlio vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. They are a Gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, possessing, also, the peculiar merit of acting as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs. FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS, in yonng or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood or at the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters have no equal. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheuma tism aiul Goat, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bil ious, Remittent aud Intermittent 'Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Much Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood, which is generally produced by derangement of tho Di gestive Organs. DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION, Headache. Pain in the Shoulden.Coughf:. Tightness of the Chest Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth. Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of tho lleart. Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in tho regions of the Ridneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, arc thi oftspriugs of Dyspepsia. They invigorate tho Stomach and stimulate the torpid Liver and Bowels, which render them of unoqualled effi cacy ia cleansing the blood of all impurities, and impart ing new life and vigor to the whole system. FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions. Tetter, Sal Rheum, Blctebes, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Bolls, Car buncles, Ring-Worms, Scald Head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch. Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Dis. •axes of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system ia a short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle in such cases will convince the most incredulous of their curative effects. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its im purities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Erup tions or Sores; cleanse il when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; eloanse it when it is foul, and your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, aro effectually destroyed and removed. Says a distinguished physiologist, there is scarcely an individual upon tke face of the earth whose body Is exempt from tho presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that vorni exist, but upon the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed these living monsters of disease. No System of Medicine, no vermifuge*, no anthelmintics, will free the system from worms like these Bitters. J. WALKER, Proprietor. R. K. MuDONALD dr CO.. D r "egista and lion. Agents, san Francisco, California. BarSOLl) BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS, p M.y 13, 1871, ly. D.AJRiSY’S PROPHYLACTIC • FLUID fptli.6 invaluable Family Mcdiciuo, toi -*• purifying, cleansing, retuoviug La odors in all kinds of sickness; for burns sores, wounds, stings; fur Erysipelas, rheumatism, and all skin diseases; lot catarrh, sore mouth, sore throat, diptLeria for colic, diarrhoea, cholera; ns awash U soften and beautify tlio skin; to rcmovi nk spots, mildew, iruit stains, taken m fernally as well as applied externally; sc highly recommended by all who have used it—is for sale by all Diugsrists and Ooun ry Merchants, and may be ordered di rectly of the DAitßy'Htoid'lYbAUfit; <m"~ 101 William Si rapt, N. Y. p T)ec24’7o ly. rMayS u June3 ly Wm. H. Tison. Wm. W. Gjhdak TISON & GORDON, (established, 1854.) COTTON FACTORS AND Commission Merchants, 112 BAY STREET SAVANNAH, GA. Bagging and iron ties advan CED on Crops. Liberal Cash Advances made on Consign ment of Cotton. Careful attention to all busU ness, and prompt returns Guaranteed, oct 9rtn 4in. T. MARKWALTERS' sa&s&b wmM®* Broad St., Augusta, Ga. MARBLE MONUMENTS, TOMB STONES &C., &C. Marble Mantels and F urniture-Marhle of all indd Furnished to Order. All work for the Ounlry ctrenilly boxed for shipment. MV.li 12 p ? 7<i Iv. Rub 1. '7l I v M. Dve, J. 7*. liotliwell, J.M. Dye Jr. DYE, BOTIIWELL & CO., COTTON FACTORS —AND— COMMISSION MERCHANTS NO. 143 REYNOLDS ST., AUGUSTA, - - - GEORGIA LIBERAL advances made on cotton and other produce when required. Orders for Bagsing, Ties and family supplies prompt ly tilled. All business entrusted to us will have our prompt porsoual attention. Commission for selling Cotton, percent TJ S.p. 23 rt!) fiin From the Louisville cutler Jcmuil. Ths Cincinnati Convention. j Everything looks wcl 1 for tin- Gin cimiati Convention; ;io»l tin* Ail | miriisirativc forces nre obviously | armed. The New Ymk Evening : Post, which, in the gui-e of rjaa-i liberalism (and a very sp«-( i <us atii cie of liberalism, at tiiM), i. lining good work (or the I’resuh-ni, eon tains a seared editorial, pointing o it in sugar-and water accents that the proposed conference of Li hem's is not designed to divide the Radicals but to unite thent. The view ot the case might have some fbnnda'iou if j there were two sides to the basis of j union surmised by the I’o.-t. !> it | there are not two sides to it. With tlie Radicals it is Gram and Grant ism. or nothing, and the Liberals ev ery where are iireeon ifibly commit ted ngiitisl both. Mr. fjmnarr wdl preside, at Cin cinnati. Mr.Greef y and Mr. Bowles, the two most poweiful jmrnilists i . the Republican party wdl be there. Not less Ilian eight K“puhlicun .Sen ators, inc'iidinti Mr. Trumbull and Mi. Scbtirz, are devoted to the move ment. Asc >re of Republican m in bers of the lower house of Congress, including Mr. Dawes and G-m. (Jar field, and perhaps the S[ e iker him self, who is one of the ~blest, most mliuentia! and popu ar men in N.-u England, are ready to act. Their is in. long, r any Republican paitv. There are Liberal* and Radio ds; and, il the Conven.ion he a failure, it will not be on account of the De mocracy, who desire to make all the concessions that m .y be needful to secure a combination of liberal and conservative dements ugiii st Grant, but because the leaders ol the Cin •innati de rauisi ration themselves tack the organizing dash and ag gressive spirit which a great reform atory movement requires. 11 the rose tiuti and suggestions ol the New York Evening Post, which may be regardt il ns a perfectly reli tble Grant nrgm , are considered, the Cincinnati Convention will not be a succe s, and wj may b • sure that as i is a mass convention, there will he plenty of Administration men dirre to throw in opportune fire brands and take the direction out of j the hands of those who really mean reunion and reform in the sense ol the Missouri icsoiulions. But if the L berals who have abandoned the fortunes of Grant, and have cut loose from Radicalism forever, arc practi cal and bold, they will net vigorous ly, trusting the Democratic party, which can he relied on not to throw itself across the pathway of a bouu fulc union ol the opposition. The Democratic party, as an or ganization, is not going to play tin fool or the traitor either to itself or the Liberals. Wc lay down plainly and broadly its position, anil we know that wc speak lor the masses of the Southern people and for the leaders ol the party everywhere. If the Cincinnati Convention is a suc cess—if it puts an acceptable ticket in the field—if the great Republican Journals support that ticket—then the Democratic parly will not stand in its way. With endorsing—with out being responsible for the Cincin nati movement of nominees, without defending them or their antecedents, it will, in the absence of a (air chance for ilsell, choose between the Liber al candidates and the Radical can di latis It will preserve its own organization in the several Stales. It will put its nominees in the field for Governors, Congressmen and Legis lators. It will not embarrass the Liberals by a coalition, nor compro mise itself by a passivism which may be regarded as the first step toward dissolution. But it will hope by the dcieat of Grant, and by the division of the present Senate, and by the electionjjof the next House of Rep resentatives, to so enlarge and chas ten all the elements of the opposi tion so as to open the new’ adminis tration with a fresh set ol books, to which justice and law are the lilies, and to reorganize the Government upon constitutional principles which can claim the allegiance ol every pa triot. The trouble the Reformers will have to meel and overcome will not proceed born the Democracy, but born Grant men disguised as Dem ocrats and as Liberals. The Ad ministration has money to spend in buying up a lew impracticables to make a row in the Democratic camp, and of course it has many paid agents who yvdl confess to he Liber ds in order to betray the Liberal move ment at the right moment. Indeed, so great an interest has Grant in di viding, or in seeming to divide, the Democracy, that, with the enormous public plunder at h.s disposal, lie cobid afford to defray the expenses of putting an ultra-Democratic ticket in the field. Wedo not believe that any Demo crats ot respectability or standing can be found impracticable enough to be seduced into honestly aetiug ! against the counsel ol so -h leaders i as Mo re: s nos Ohio, Vnm ■ e •< ol Iu- I diana, Beck of Kenluek , < ' :l. |of California, Bayard ol 1> liwinv Thurman of Ohio, Stock! .n <T N w Jersey, Blair of Missom . U .b .i-i.n and Marshall of Illinois F. bid.; Wisconsin, Arthur and M 11 ury ■' Kentucky, Whitt bore and It igbt ot j Tennessee, lie I intnt, Sohvii, Scv tnour and Tildcn of N w Yolk, and, in fact, all the intelligent leaders <>: opinion in and out of Congress, w in., no matter how they ddVor on minor points and details, arc of one min I in this, that the party him sii k ;<> gether, keep its eotms I, and act f>r the best after we have seen what iln- Cincinnati Convention comes to. It that convention is a success—this we repeat unequivocally—fit puts an acceptable ticket in ’.lie ii Id—it the great Republican organs named support that ticket—then that ticket is going to beat Gem Grant, and it would be, and will hr considered, sheer madness in us to g.-t in its way. It is believed at Washington by the most in'elligent Democrats that we cannot get a fair election in the face of the Radical military elec tion machinery handled by the I’res idem, who is bound to ic elect him self if force and fraud will do it. I is believed that, if we could get be yond the iron-clad b dim-box and the troops that will surround it, we shad not be able to gel a fair count ol tie- vote from the present Radical House of Representatives. 8ti!l fur ther, it is believed that the election of an out-and-out Democrat would prove a second Andy Johnson abor tion, since he would have a Radical Senate opposed to him, to pass an another tenure-of-olfice law and sit in judgment on all his acts aud ap pointments. But a break-up of the oligarchy at Washington—:i divis ion of the old Republican party into Liberals and Radicals—the election of a Democratic House of Repre sentatives, with a Liberal P.esidcnl whose friends in the Senate, aided by the Democrats, would o n 'dime a majority—these things are possi ble. and by their aid the great re.-u!l so long sought by goo I men—re union and reform—would be r< ach ed. On the other hand, if Grunt gels lour years more lease of power, we may hid good-bye, not only to the hope of reunion and n form, but to free elections. Next time it will be a mere dumb show of an elec tion, and alter that a plebisi in-. It is almost a dumb show now, vh-n a great party, like the Democratic, sees in front of it a b dlot-box hedged about by bayonets and m ird.il law, and an electoral machinci v so iron coated as to be irresistible from with out, and oolv assailable through the agency (if internal combustion. To this complexion lias it come at last in this country, and a stronger argu ment cannot be ottered in support of the plea which everywhere swells up from.the good men and true for a union of all the elements that can be brought to bear upon the forces of usurpation and corrupli n. The Liberals need two or three leaders as bold and sagacious as Scliurz. The Democratic party is not the lion across their path. Their stumbling block will be party spirit. If they expect patty spirit to vanish they must set the example them selves. We believe they can salely do this. If they will take the bull by the horns ana wrestle with him, it will not be long before they find help enough at hand. University of Georgia. Editors Telegraph and Messenger: Please indulge me in a few com ments on a passage or two from the interesting address of Hon; Jas. A. Nisbet, published in your paper ot the 22d inst. Those who were present at the meeting, at which the address was delivered, will not ask an apology from one —not an Alumnu3 of the University of Geor gia—for commenting on the address. If others not aware of all that trans pired on the occasion, demand one, let my relation to the subject of ed ucation in Georgia, and my inter est in every scheme that can pro mote it, be my apology. From the address in question,* I quote a passage: “The trustees of the University have resting on the.n the gravest responsibilities; the demon of politi cal strife should he forever exorcis ed by their counsels; the dark wing of sectarian bigotry should never shed its pestilential blight over their action. Let us hear Horn them no more the oft-repeated cry, ‘down with denominational colleges. ’ These denominational seminaries are doing much good—they a e educa ting young men, who, but for them, would never be educated; they are elevating the tone and liberalizing the views ot the great sects. The lernalc institutions, in a marked de gree, arc the pride and glory of the South, and are annually turning out mothers of Gracchi. So, instead of [warring on them, let the heathe. j prohibition in our State Con-tut;- m |be sltiekcn out and let I* •gislaiure.. and people (osier ami chciisb the.-u valuable institutions. Let litem be j colleges; and the University be a i University inde-d, whec every art and all the applie 1 scienm-s arc taught, and thus we wdl lime a sys tem planetary and (Ihd.goo . ’ A little forth o on me eloquent speaker says: “Dir University, a well as our colleges, ar<- nurseries of children rather th in of men. Pin s cal and mental untmity is essential to ripe soholLrsl.iji, and to mastc-rim; the abstruse ,c i-no-.s. Besides, it is not to be expemed that the tone and discipline of the University c..n be elevated and rounded into come ly proportions, a.- long as it is liif and with youth in tin- impetuous license of hey day blood.” lu uiv bumble opinion, these two passage- strike ill - key note, and ,bi t the friends ot a teal University Im | Georgia must j >iii i.i unison belon they cm actin-ve success. Tne points we would bung mu in ill- ar gument are tin’s' : 1. A University—real and proper —can not be bolt up of !> v.---.t inu-t have better mater iai th in Hedged mi lergiail tales, or it is, i;f ter all, only a coi.ege wall a high soun Imy name. 2nd. A* such, it can b - niy ;r little more than a competitor welt the and noiniiiational college--, an* every lrteti I and patron of tin -e will lack interest in the Umvetsu, —perhaps, it Ins (leinnhii .Oi H I feelings are liuense, he wdl lee hostile to it. W etlever good inns lie in it, of whatever advance u makes upon the curriculum ot the colleges, wil! be depreciated, aim their graduates discouraged from finishing tin ii studies it the Univer sity’. This may be all wrong, but it is human nature, and this (lie Trustees ol the University cannot transform. 3d. So long as the powerful de nominations in Ge irgia purpo e to keep up (heir own colleges, j- si so long will they opp >se the endow merit by the estate ot an institution ot very little, il any, higher grade than they maintain, while their own cherished institutions are left wholly to private munificence—impaired by the calamities of the times— further diminished by the amounts taken from their purses to build up an institution in which they have less personal interest than in their own colleges, unless it were, in deed, what a real University can he made—a compliment to them. This, again, may seem wrong—narrow, sectarian to liberal souls—nevetUnl ess, it is a fact, and wise men take facts as they find lltttn, and try to turn them to good account. -lilt. These postulates granted, and it follows that unless the denom inational colleges maintain their rank and prosperity, Georgia cannot feed a real University; and unless their friends relax their opposition —which seems improbable—Geo - gia legislators will not be likely to endow a competitive college under the name of'a University. And just here it might be proved, but tor four of writing too much at one lime, that these denominational colleges have in them no single e/«- ment of mischief sullicieui to warrant the well-named heathenish proscrip tion of aid to them, which has found place in the Constitution of the great Stale of Georgia. Enough can he said in their favor to show that they richly deserve the fostering care ol the Stale. But 1 forbear, lest 1 weary editors and readers, though the field is inviting, aud the subject capable of overwhelming proof. Tlti however, is not needed; lor Mr Nis bet wisely strikes at the root of the matter. Let the friends of educa tion in Georgia rise in their might and repeal the obnoxious clause. Then the way isopen to an educa tional system in Georgia, that shall make her foremost among the States. Then may Franklin Col leg be endowed as a college along with Emory, Mercer ami Oglethorpe, un til they reach the point of highest efficiency, and from the trustees of all these colleges, selected under their own laws —a University Board may be selected with such repre sentatives of the State in it, as good policy may demand, and to this Board as the Regents of the Univer sity system —the sy stem embracing ail the colleges, may be assigned the task of fixing ti e curriculum lor them nil. But I find myselfin dan ger of go ng into p irticulars upon a system that I conceived of in detail months ago, aud I will cease. E nough, that the friends of a Univer sity for Georgia are opening their eyes to the real obstructions to their plans and purposes; and if this brief communication may be considered of any importance as coming from one who partly represents an inter est thus lias heretofore seemed to antagonize their views, it may per- No. 48 I *; f, l ,s , "al ill .1 t:ol|j |>ar 'll ; •'! coiim g ound, v. it- re ri ! rift!, ;i• i I .in < , <lii' ;t!i:in i superstmc- J lure ii arcd ilril r-li ill honor Gror ! ss*'•» ml bless coming generations i through ail lime. E. H. Myers, March '-12. ISTif. The Dalton Citizen, of Fridav, says: N>» SnucßLi.vfi i— We invite ai lt*lli:'»u in (lie wi 11-timrd article if itic Miicdu Tihgi'iph , elsewhere copied. i here ate const it utional cr-akrts; those lo<i. there are, who lorm a .cl write, no i talk opinions bused upon partial knowledge or tgnotatnv hi facts ; tho.-e, also, who oak so intently upon a single issue— usually one in which they have some pet sona I interest — that they lose '•gat "I collateral anil more impor tant a anti is. Tim Great work of die present Legislature was to dis entangle the web nl (rant! so skillful ly woven by the late Radical admin istration. This could he done only through appropriate committees.— Ihe raising ol these committees was, by tar, tl e most important thing done at the lii-t session. That it was well done is large,y due to the s igaeiiy I out tepre-eiilutive in the Sen te. Ol this his judicious ap« p intment, as well as ol his casting vote, by whi h the Slate was re lieved ot a Radical Governor, we have scon but one opinion—that of n-ju-ilili (I approval. It has given u- great pleasure to note the “golden opinion-,*’ won by President Tram mell m the diseli irye of iln- duties of the high oilice lie so worthily fills, A correct estimate of the labors o! til-' L gi~ lat me cannot lie made up moil tin- sell* tries it inaugurated have pioduced results. We have uo sympathy with the impitience manifested by a few malcontents. Let them possess their righteous souls iii patience. Our new iy elec ted Govern >r, in whom the people justly repose confidence, am! a Legislaiuie ot the people's choos ing, can man age the affairs of the .■suite Without tiie assistance or ad vice of the repositories of wisdom, whom the world, in its hilly, has failed to appreciate. We ask these dissatisfied, if not disappointed, Democrats to give tlie administra tion they have assisted to put in power a few months trial before they work themselves into a fret and annoy other people with their com plains. Until such lime, at least, ictus give tie Governor and the Legislature a hearty support. Let the insinuations, and grumbling, and groundless complaints be hushed. Let a broader conception of our em barrassments and more manly con fidence in our State government pre vail. “The part of the holdmg of a tanner ot land owner which pays best lor cultivation,” said the im mortal Charles Dickens,” is the small estate within the ring fence of his skull. Let him begin with the right tillage of his brains, and it shall be well with his grains, roots, herb age and forage, sheep and cattle; they shall thrive, and lie shall thrive. •Practice with science,’ is now the adopted motto of the lioyal Agricul tural Society.” Death.— Soon death will take this chrystal cup of life and dash it in pieces against the marble of the tomb. A few more nights and then the night of death will put its wing over us, and the cool breezes from the Jordan will make our sleep sweet. A few more mornings, and we will rise from our robes of victo ry and coronation. Into this world we are bom, and our first utterance is a cry; into Heayen we are born, and our first utterance will be a sung. When the Christian expires, men say, “close ilie eyes;” but an gels shout ‘give him a palm!’ men say we must put him iu the g.outul, ittgels cry, ‘give him a thrum !’ On earth it is, ‘Farewell! farewell ! *lu Heaven it is, ‘Hail, and welcome!’ I take up the lull cup of human tears, and a ray from the throne of G<*d strikes it, and I read thereon, ‘Weeping may endure for a night, but joy eoineth in the morning.’ A Western editor speaks of a co temporary who i3 “so dirty that eve ri time he goes up stairs there is a rise in real estate.” A man who has traveled through New Jersey says lie found some land there so poor that you couldn’t raise a disturbance on it. A thoughtful Connecticut widow has had a mourning ring made of the gold fillings in bes deceased hus band’s teeth, thinking it wasteful to let the precious metal be worn out inposl mortem guasluijg.