The Jefferson news & farmer. (Louisville, Jefferson County, Ga.) 1871-1875, October 15, 1874, Image 1

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Jefferson News & Farmer. VOL. IV THE NEW§| FAiVMER.^ BY ROBERTS BROTHERS. Published every Thursday Morning AT LOUISVILLE, GEORGIA. PRICE OF SUBSCRIPTION. Hr-ADVANCI*. One copy one year $2 00 “ *• six months.... 1.00 “ “ three m0nth5............ 00 For a Club of FIVE or more we will make a .reduction of 25 per cent. ADVERTISING RATES Irmtwmt Advertisements, One dollar per sou are .(ten lines oi this type or one inch) for t Ks.fi Jjtdnsertidn and 75 bents for each atibse quentinsertion. A liberal deduction made ou advertiaasmts running mouth. wiU be <*«*«( Fifteen cents per line eayt insertion. B" All bills for advertising due at any time after tbs first insertion and will be presented at the pleasure of the Proprietors, except by •peeial arrangement. LEGAL ADVERTISING. Ordinary's Citations for Letters of Administra tion, Guardianship Arc.. ..$5 00 Application for dism'n from adtn’n..... 600 Homestead notice 3 00 Application for disrn’u trom guard’n 5 0U Application for leave to sell 1aud....... 500 Notice to Debtors and Creditors 4 00 Sales of Lund, per. square of leu lines. 5 00 •Skies of personal per sqr, ten days 2 00 SArriJPnr-Knelt luvy of ten liner, ;..... 5 00 Mortgage sales often lines or 1e55....:....... 5 00 Tax Collector's sales, per sq;t„ (3 montiulO 00 Clerk's —Foreclosure of mortgage and sther monthly's per square... 5 00 Estray notices thirty days.-..., 4 00 ffrofeaflional garbs. J. 0. C«in. J. H. Polbill CAIN & POLDILL, ATTORNEYS AT LAW LOUISVILL, GA. May 5, 1871. 1 Iy. Ji. W. Carswell. f W. F. Denuy. Carswell & Denny atTTOKJYB »•* jtOLISVJLLE, ..GEORGIA, i\X7 H*L practice in all the Countie. in the TV Middle Circuit. Also iiuritc in Augus ta Circuit. All business ettl rusted to their •Yftre will meet aritb prompt attention. Not. 3.27 I y V/. H. Watkins, K. L. Gamble. WATKIHS& GAMBLE ATTORNEVS AT LAW. UoufatuUc, <Sa. January 22 187 . 1y ar: —: —t —— A. F DURHAM, 9L D. physician and surgeon. Sparta., Ga. SUCCESSFULLY treats Diseases of the Lungs and Throat, diseases of the Eye, >OBO and Ear, and all forms of Dropsey ; dis eases of the Heart Kidneys, Bladder ,ture, secret disease*, long standing Ulcers.— Remove* Heinoirbeidal Tumors witnout pain. Makes a speciality of disease* peculiar to Fe •tales. Medicines sent to auy point on tbs ‘Railroad. All correspondence confidential. Feb/ IS, 1874 ly gyottlla. MARSHAL HOUSE, Sa VANN AH, GA. 4. B. LUBE,— Proprietor. ABOARD jPER DAY $3.00 Lanier House, Mulberry street, MACON GEORGIA, % ]PPB» Proprietor. Free Onnib is fr ■ and to the Depot. IMcCQMB’S HOTEL Ulilledgeyllle, Ga y. u. Mei ORBS-Proprietor PAYU.» Bo4rdi>Q HousE. Mbs. M. Si, Proprietor. Good Board furnished by the month, week or dfry.- Charges moderate. Oct. 16th 1873.tf BpratGEßS PLD LONDON DOCK SIN. Especially designed for the nse of tt# Medico Profession And ihe 1 Fswiig, ' possessing those ZV’XZiST*?’ ” Indispensable to female/ flbjod for Kidney Complaint,: 4 deifeTurf Tmple. Put wp in cases containing owe dozen bottle* each, »»d sold br ail druggists, grocers, &c. A. M, Bin 1 idger A Cos., established 1778, No. 15, Borer #t N, t jpnel ’74 a 801. The Oldest Furniture House in the State PLATT BROTHERS, MS <2s M 4 BXB<a>iUE> AUGUSTA, GA., Keep always on hand the latest styles of ■ i ( H )r) F. B 111 f .O ft I Os every variety manufactured, from the lowest to the bight si grades. CHAMBER, PAF.LOn, DINING-ROOM, ri b * r ... »jt -* t >- 1 ' mw> ■ ■ Library, Complete Suits, or Single Pieces, At prices which cannot fail to suit the purchaser. Dec. 25th 1873. 3m. MUSIC H&SEH&RIS! PRICE REDUCED. THEBE T IN THE B’OKLD ! Will Last a Life-Time I 35,000 OP THE CELEBRATED,. SIIONINGBK OKdrANS, •IN DAILY USE The besi musical, talent of Ills country re commend these Organs. The nicest and best. More foryour money, and gives better satisfaction, than any other now made. They comprise tiro Eureka, Concerto, Orchestra & Grands. Illustrated Catalogues sent by mail, pre to any address,up»n application to B. Mfthlflhhß & 00. jyk If* it., r rr.r.r. JJsrcli 12th, 1874. THE EHIM IN ATLANTA BUSINESS COLL GE, ATLANTA, GA. Is AN INSTITUTION FOR EDUCATING YOUNG MEN FOR BUSINESS. The best mode of Ing;ruction ever adopted in THIS OR ANY OTHER COUNTRY. The course of study comprises Every Variety of Bufjyaess & Finance From Retail to Banking Operations, By the great system of Actual Business Instruction BOOK KEEPING In all its various methods, Business Forms, Terms & Usages, Business, Writing, Correspondence, COMMERCIAL ARITHME TI J LAW. PARTNERSHIP SHTLIMiNTs Detecting Counterfeit Money, Businea*. Biography, thoroughly taught fT ,TBR E4-STJVJ-A^^r ATLANTA SUS!NBSS COLLL6B, TJjTE ONLY SCHOOL IN THft .SOUTH On the ACTUAL BUSINESS PLAN .1 THE « i GOUJEGfi. MOSUL. ;< ■ a ■ - • • ■ . ..1 I Containing full information of the Course of Instruction, will b**wdMd fr«> to any one, by A NIGER, Comer Peachhee and Line Sts., P. «. hi m, AIUbU, G». I No vnea'ions. Students cany-n ter at qnjr time. > - U juiy3o 74 ly|4 LOUISVILLE, JEFFERSON COUNTY. GA.. OCTOBER 15.1874. C. V. WALKER, Auction Coumisbiou Merchant, 317,319 & 321 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. HAVING just returned from the Estern and Western markets, I am now receive ing daily EMMS RJiSOTTOg of all kinds which is sold only at- PRIVATE SALE, At Wholesale Factory Prices, With Freight and Commission added. I WILL GUARAN EE 10 SELL As Cheap As Any House South! Parties Wishing to purchase FURNITURE W>H do well to call and examine my stock before purchasing elsewhere. Special ndOeements to wholesale dealers. Oct. 1,1874. 2m NEW OFFERS! , NEW IDEAS! SEE THE Grand Gifts Cm 1 Our Fireside Friend, TO SU BSC It I BURS Entirely new and unprecedented, and auoli HM will interest everyone. You miss it if yiaii don’t send for samples aud full particnlare, ] which are sent free. SEE THE GREAT WATCH OFFER! OUK FIRESIDE FRIEND is now In its; Fifth Volume, thoroughly estak,blished as the leading family and story Weekly m the Union, bus the largest circulation, and the best ap pointed priming and publishing establishment and building in the West. Is a large, eight page illustrated and origidaal Weekly, price $3 00 p r year. Everv subscriber receives a magnificent premium and a share iu the distri bution- Subscribe now !. \u: WANTiGENTS. We wwnt a representative in (very neighbors hood. Nothing equals it for agents, male or female, young or old, Large Cash Wages and 0 Superb Outfit, exclusive territory, r-übscrihe by sending 9'd.UO, and receive the paper one year, a magnificent premium, a share in the distribution, and receive at.so Fa** a Com pletete Outfit, or send for partirnlars. Name ”tKaßS4siß.Jlssi..a l . June 4, 1874. 6m Louisyille Academy. THE Fall Term »ill begin 21st September and end 21st December next, Tuition Bates ptrTerm, (13 wks) sfi®l2 Board “ per month b(a) 111 Payment required one-half in advance, the balance at close of Term. The a- counts of all who are eutitled to the benefit ol the Public reboot Fund will be cred ited with the pro rata from said Fund. Prompt attendance at the opening of the School is desirable. For further information apply to Principal or Board oi Trust**. Q, A. HOLCOMBE, A. M.—Principal. MRS. C. C. GOODE—Assistant. Louisville, Ua.,Bept, jind 1874. 3m CEiNTRL RAILROAD. GEN’L SUPT’B OFFICE, C. R. R. ) Bavamhah, October 10, 1873. j ON and after SUNDAY the 12th Inst., Passenger trains on the Georgia Central Railroad, its branches and connections, wiU ,uq follows: GOING NORTH AND WEST. Leave Savannah.... 8;45 a m Leave Augusta A... .... 3:U5 p ini Arrive in Augusta 4:1)0 p nr' Arrive in Macon p nr Leave Macen tos Columtips.7:ls p m Leav'e Macon for Eufaula...... ...... 9.-10 p m Leave Macon for Atlanta 7:30 p m Arrive at ‘Jolumbus.. .12:45 a m> Arrive at Eufaulai 10:20 a in’ Arrive at Atlanta 1:40 arn COMING SO.UTH AND EAST 1 Leave Atlanta...... ..’............12:20 a m Leave Eufaula...... 5:45 pm’ Leave Coi.pmbus 1:30 a m Arrive at Macon froip Atlanta 6:30 am Arrive at Maceu from Eutaula 5:26 a in Arrive at tach* from Columpus 6:45 a m Leave* Mac0n...... 7:15 a m Arrive *t Anguatg.................. 4:00 p m Arrive at DAILY TRAIN (SJUNDAY EXCEPTED) RETWEEN EATONTON AND MACON. Leaving Eatonton 5:00 a in Leaving Milledgeville .... 6:43 a m AtV 1 Mao j .................... 7:45 am RETURNING. Leaves Macon 4:00 pm Attivoß at M 1edge5vi11e........... 7:14 pm Aft-rive* at Eatonton 9:00 p m tl ~Y I;.. !L-• ‘A ‘j/itJ •snjifufbiM j r • iConnect* daily Goidon with ,4*nweuger Tr»in to onfi rom Savauannah aud Augusta. .WMj; ROGERfS, 3a« . ouerai Superiu»end#u t. SPEECH OF GEI. R. W. CARSWELL, Lieutenant-Colonel of the 48th Georgia .Regimeat, at Waynesboro, Ga., Oc tober Ist, 1874. At a Grand Re-»iin!o-n of aevrral old Georoia Regiments, at Waynes boro, recently General Carswell de livered the following address: Comrades of the Geor giu Regiment, Ladies and Gen tlemen i . The occasion which has convened us to-day recalls to our minds the memorable events of the n cent pa-t, and awakens emotions of mingled pleasure and sadness. As the sur viving members of one of the vetei an regimeniß in the great war for Southern independence, we have to day, fir the firrt lime since the war dosed, lain aside oqr various occu pations in life ami Assembled toge l ti er in social reunion —lo conlemp'ate ihe stirring scenes and events of ihat sanguinary struggle through which we passed—to cultivate anew those sentiments of personal friendship and esteem for each other which were formed amid ihe hardships of the camp and the perils of the bat 1c field —to renew afresh the memory of ihe noble virtues and gallant deeds of our fallen comrades and friends, and lop erlge again our devoti n ami allegiance to our native .State and country, When wereviev ihecircumsiances and caust s which led 10 the exhaus tive struggle between ihe N.irih and South, the atti ude that we of ihe S-ruth then occupied before the world as a people, and ihe part borne by us in that great cryiflic', now create no regre' and furnish no rea-on for self-reproach. Under ilie influence of that p-oir ssive and enlightened genius wi Hi cliaruc erized the Southern people, the Stit sos ihe South hail grow n lo be great anil powerful commonwealths. As com ponent parts of the great American Republic they had been distinguished for their love of lib -u v, their-devo tion in ihe hee i.s itu ious upon which (®nr whole s\s cm of govern ment rested, and were .scrupul->us : v faithful to all thrir obligations u a- r the Federal compile:. Tin ir st.-i'e— men, wlvo had been loremes- in the formation of our system of govern ment, and the perf cnon of institutions, by iheir moral worib intellectual pow r nad exal ed pi triotism. had c ininderl ihe desii >y and shaped the policy of the country, and bad shetl the inosi enduring lus tre on the American name and bis tory. Their staple products supplied the markets'aud coir ributed to ’.be wealth of ihe world. Their local in stitutions, which ha l been formed in the earliest history and necessities of ihe country, and had be- n handed to us by aur fathers, we e happily udapte.l to. the peculiarities of the Southern climate, and the pr .dm - tions of the. Southern soil, and they had become so interwoven with our habits, interests and traditions, as a people, that they give us our dis tinctive features, constituted the corner stone.of our social and politi cal fabric, and in their highest and - presented to the wu/d and utipuraldled scene of national felicity and refined civi izntion. At the North a sectional party arose, formed upon sectional i-su> s and bound'd by sectional lines, and led by exiramis a and fanatics, whose chief platfnra was hatred ot the Southern people, and win s avowed creed was proscription nt Southern rights and relentless war fare upon the institutions of the South. For.jpone tban a quarter of century previous to t' e war a ieck less cru ade was waged us by ibis political party at the North, with increasing bitterness and fury. The pulpit, the press ami forum be yond Mason’s and Dixon’s lin • te m ed with denunciations of the South arid her domestic institutions. An ir repressible conflict was announced, Which was to he continued unti. the doctrines of the aoi them sectional - ists, and a higher 1 iw was proc'ai to ed, to be engrafted on the adminis tration and policy of the Govern ment, and to supercede the Consti tution of the country. During this excited and piotfacted comest Re»- tween .coflstiitutionalisfji and radical ism the f&Wihcrp States maintained the defensive repelled the assaults of their enemies, were irue ib ail their as qjembe/s of the Federal Union, sad confided their cause, which was (caught with their dearest interests pm! hopes, lo ||be guarantees ot the Constiiuiion and the conservative admiiijstration of the Federal Government., When the electioniß6o result ed in the slayafion of tyr. Liocnln and his party to- power, and gave them ihe possession and coutnd of the National Government, a crisis confronted the Southern States j which menaced them with the grad ual it not vioie.u overthrow of tiieir cherished institutions, and iheir com plete vassalage in the course of time to the Radical policy and power.— Everywhere throughout the South ihe |x»pular h'-art throlib- and wi.h wild emotion, and the p ople a ose with spontaneous enthusiasm and dissolved their connection with a compact of governm nt which im posed on ihein unequal burdens, and threaten'd, in the future, to deny to them its equal beneii s, lo overthrow their dom< stm inst.twt.ua, and to si de their leg.titnate institutions. There are those who censure the withdrawal ol the Southern S ates from the Union as a great ciine, and who chaiacterize it as a s upeu dous blunder, inspire I by lolly aid madness. When viewed in the light of subsequent events, the mo -t ar dent devotees of the ‘ L si Caus ” concede that it was a measure of doubtful, if not mis aken p-dicy.—r But when we consider the circum.- siatie 8 then surrounding the So ith em people, and the exigencies that then p essed upon them, We ate now compelled to excuse,Hi not com mend, their action. They had not Torgott. n ihe early history of the American colonies and theb protrac t'd contest to preserve iheir char tered liber.ies against the e icroa Il men ts of British power—mil tin y lemembered the heroic smuggle oi 1776, which triumphed in the anni hilation ol Br.t.sli dominion and des pm ism, and the recognition ol ihe colonies before the world as sover eign and linl'-peii ‘ent S a Tin* North had seceded trom the Consti tution. The sacred provisions and guarame s m ill t ins roment re main, and the only bulwark of S tuth ern rights and liberties in the Union against reckless fmu ie stu and ag gression and they were declared by the leaders ot the party then eleva ted t > power lo b: a league with d<-a h and a covenant with bell ; and lie Am ri.-au Union, which was mined by the fathers t> est'bi.sh jiut ee, insure douiestic irauqnrhty, provide (oi the co i.nvin defense, pro rote the geneial w Hare and se cure die bless tigs of I berty t > them selves and their post. r.ty. pr uni-eil to b. come perverted from those grea and noble ends to an engine of s-c --ii..n 1 1 tyranny and o'ppr ssion. The S>u h 1 rn Slates were devoted to the prineiples upon which the Federal Government was lounded ; dtey si» them crumb'ing to pieces ground them; they took cuuus< 1 together, and wi li su >ime courage prepared io meet the storm gathering around them and to preset ve and def nd the p ic«lc?s heiitige of coustiiutio al lib -rty which had been transmitted to them i>y their revolutionary sires. When the Southern Confederacy was formed it was not design 4 make war upon the North. Ad that die S;au sot the South desired was t > be permitied to go in peace, and they made every hon.irab e cfliirt in tlieii power to avoid a Li .stile collision witn ihe authorities of the Gove n nient of t e UuiteJ Stat s. But that government proclaimed war, and raars'ialled the armies and husband ed the resources of the great North aud West, to conquer the S .u hern p-’opie—to subjugate the S utlnrit States, and coerce their sutunission to the Fc deral authority. Previous io ibis there had been divisions among die Southern people a s t> the wis dom ands ‘Uuil po cy ol sect s i hi — there were lingering attachim nts for the old Government and is flag—bat the and. data ion of war and the avow ed pu pos • ot coercion buried all di vision hushed all diss nsionc, and they g r ed on rivur armor and pre pared with singular unanimity lo d' fend their danse, arid to uphold the i itegrity of their Govern merit and cherißlie i iustitu tons. The events ol the great conflict that ensued are fresh in the memory of you al'. When we contemplate the scenes of that stormy and irv ing period, our hearts swell with emo tions of pride and congnftilaiion at the heroic c image mid uutal'ering coustaii y displayed by the bravfe sons aiid noble daughters of the Sputh. Our territory becimv one vast iheaTe of war. Uur fertile plains au.il smiling valleys resounded be neaiii the invader’s tread ; army al ter army of the most gigantic mag/ liifude was burled against us, lo de stroy our fieople and desol lie oik ■counAy. For lour long years the armies iif the South maiutjiiueid the Unequal cod est with u' .constancy dud cou.age which was unsurpassed in tne anuiua of.war, aud wn’en won the admirainm and p)aodits of the nation. Th/iogh ass.riLed by a cruel and relent ess tee, u liuje uvcr vbc m- 1 ing numbers, nerved with ihe energy of fan iticism. and enth .se I with the j hope »f conquest and plunder, rav* jagej their country widi tire and I sword 7 ike citix-m soldiery of the South in view ot the rising smoke and burning fires of iheir des ilat-d liom*a and ruined shri ies, fought iheir enemies wiili superhonian val or, and amid the wreck of their hopes aud the despair that settled upon their cause, waged the drea I* iul strifi in accordance with all ilie recognized principles of honorable warare, and gilded their’s and iheir count/ys escutcheon w ith bright and unfuling lusue. And the daughters ot the South were not less devoted and patriotic; every srcrifice which the exigencies of the situation de •tn nided ol them was willingly made —every contribution to the success nt the causa which was within their power they cheerfully gave,and their tears ami prayers so lowed the stun dirds of tiieir country through all the i>ail|e fi. ldsof the war. Tnese seen 'S, my comndes of the Forty-eighih Ga. Regiment, sum mon'd you from the peice and quiet of your ho i es t-> the defense ot your c.untry. Asa part amJ parcel <d the renowned and historic Army of Northern Vi’ginin, under tne ead ol the immortal Lee from M'-chanics vill to appomauox, you bravely de fended the Southern cause, and proudly bote aloft the cscu cheon of Georgia on the bloodi- si Battle fields of the war; and as we meet to-day for the first time since our career as soldiers closed, our thoughts are sad dened ami hdl .wed at the memory of cur f dlen comrades. Our hearts swell with sotrjw when we recount liie long sad list. They perished as willing martyrs to the gn at cause of constitutional lib rt.y ; and though we shall never meet them again in th s liie; though their bones now lie blenching on the p'ains ol Virgin ia, Maryland aud Pennsylvania, yet iheir memories will ever be fresh and grren with their surviving com rades, and tin tr glorious deeds will live in history a.d song so Img as time shall las . TheConfedente Government was utiab'e to sustain this uneqiiiland exhaustive conflict. Shut out £r?ni die outshle world, amhthroMhf tipo.i its own naked resources and over whelmed with resisth-ss numb *rs, its power of resistance and ciye l, and the cause oi the South went down in disaster and and feat. Her aims w ere surrendered, h* r b tuners furled aud hef*%carr> and and veteran ar mies were disbanded amid the tears of weeping millions ; ands cess.on was fo'evei abandoned as a practiced re n< dv to. the evils sought to be remedied, and the Southern people returned ’O their allegiance to ihe Federal Goveretneat.. The surrender was made in peilect good faith. With their country imhoverished, iheir fields des and .tad an I their homes laid waste, tlie Southern people were humbled aud sad bued by the bi ter experience ihrortah which they hal passed ; and while avowing their tull acceptance of all the.c ms queu-. ces of the war, all (.hat they desired and asked was to live ia the Union in quiet and peace—to manage thi ir own 100 and affairs, a .and to have an op portunity of rebubding th« ir wasted ioitunes. A geni-roiis and magnan imous policy towaids the South at ihis ti ne would have touched her great and chiva ric heart, and would 1 have g >ne far to soften the bit'er as perities and in. morirs created by the war, and lo win back h.r ass c uo s lor the Fed ral G vernment and fl ig. Bit and flerent counsels and a short-sigh’U-d (mlicy prevailed, an I we were subjected to all the honors and slow lo- turcs of reconstruction ifter the most app oved Radio.l plan. But, mv comrad s, the and irk night of recons 1 ruction, wliich for the lx»t ten years has enveloped us all, with its strain o( impos tioas, exactions and oppressions, is passing away, and the day is beginning (U dawn which will behold our b loved South redeemed'and and senthnlfed, and fast regaining h r former prestige and influence in the national Union.— The unscrupulous ami malignant po j btical party, which now controll the Federal Government, and has be n the author of all our woes, is fast crumbling to pieces. The base at tempt, lor p&'iisan and p »litical pur poses, to subject the intelligent and virtuous peopie of the South to the title and doinin on of their former ig norant slave’s,- nur.-t ahd will end in certain defeat i Virginia, North Cu rvtJlirta, Tennessee artd Texas have redeemed thninVlve-. and-ire now >iiHVf«?ad tot rir lor.nfer ivealth and pOwh-i*- Ut ilde titUe theif sister States and oampanions tit misfortune will follow vneir' \ li Qtl!i" Cutib’', t 1 rough vanquished oft’ the • k • ** 1 \ «* iS o. 2c bait’e field, i, t lot; it was an is now the muse o’ < e isiiiution liberty ; it has been transferred fro the battle field to a high u »reo.i the Inru nos leas >n and justice—at if we are true to it and ourselves will yet p mail. ♦•Freedoms battle once begun, .Transmitted lrom bleeding sire to son. Though bafflj.i oft is ever won.” The up r t of anr-rican liberty nm dea l at the North. Titer it was nicked in its cradle, an 1 ar to be found soiaa of tile prouder rnonu ne.its of its glory. S >it Mayhew or Ois <«r Adams will y* arise and awake it to new power nn glory. And oh ! how eo oplete w he our reward when, by our devo tion to and service in this gre.i cause, we behold throughout the en tire eumtiy the re-enthrowninent r constitutional liberty and the r. s o ratio i ol our Government to a I th landiuarks of the fathers. A Look around tha World. 'i'lte latest and best air horn gives the p -piil ition of the globe 1,350,300,000. In America, 72 500,000. In Eur pe, 537,000 000- It Asa, 793,000,000. Ii Air ca. 183,000.000. In Austral a ait u Puloneti. 5,300,000. 'l'hese people s, eak a 1 out 3,(* different languages, an 1 are c it tiro 1,000 «fliferent religious see, The aI he rents of tne pinch'; sect , recounting the wlnde pop tion are s rpp rsed to he irmly t The six ot rer Orientii! Cltuiv 6,500,000. Rotnap Catholics, 195,000,0 I’rot' stants, 57,130,000. Mahommedans, 460,000,000. Buddhists. 310 000,000. Other Asiatic religions, 260,0 000. Pagans, 200,000.000. Jews, 6,000,000. The less men think the more th talk. A highly iutellectu il dog— in type s iter. A man who has no r ind wi' change it. A poke way of puffin i Troubled with a chronic indi :~ tion to exertion. ‘ls the candidate lor sherill't. asked a straugi ras li- looked in i:> Illinois Bar Boom. Yes. v answered eighteen tne ias e lOS'\ T. XU p rperglily excl li ;i« Gil ry to God ! ‘Giory to G>d ! w.; dollars received at this olfi e ye.-.r-t. day. Semi in yotir wash liiii’’ — - Strong Arguments.—\V 1 r-ter’ Umbridgel Dictionary contains hundred and -fourteen theustnd words, and three thousand p; :,r,r ■ Jones says when he came hum - Lite the oth r night in the spre--' o fifteen minutes his wife appli and :i! the words to him, besides soma t tea ones and ihe fire shove', sirg vs: iag to his mind the picture <•> ;h- Duck'uy Sto >1 on the 418th page - Abe Die ionary. Gue of the oiliest settlers of st.e Isles of Shoals, s-eing the ua-. Psyche on the hull of ayn k;::' other day, spelled it out slowly, , then explained, “WeT. if fiat :r: : |"1 the duiud St way to spell fish A traveler stoj>ping over ?up;h with a Texas firmer whes • ■ , was utiles and miles in extern sau to him: ‘You must have n meuc- and life very early to aecn&ulab such an estate as this.’ .‘Y es,’- re p ied the farmer, ‘I begau.ltfws.vt hen was a mere baby.’ As the rose tr e is c >tpp the sweetest flower* and the ol.ar .■ est thoTr,B-»-a$ the heavens arp ■pat tiuv-8 oyersflst a<l soiuenjpej r a ternately tein|HßS u >us apd,. saner —so is the life ..I m*u. iuterui;r.gh w.rii hopes and- fe its, with»j »s " s rro -8, w ith pi. asu cs : ’tniti« —BuitTOjr., ‘lty-u don't want the so it and j* up the’chimney, was the reply e titor to ‘res eoiabfe* parties Vr tvquesii and hitii u rt to men ion'’tit fact thai they had been arraigned I the po'icecugrr. t * A Galena uutu went to ifo* «-hr: eterv, dug uVi ltis fltle r\<j u v&SUti'. and, WtfiTeiH it for sale tu a fnarbl cutler. 1 The Guxette tr umphirri'n a Ids, as a chal'enge to the wprhi ‘Brifig rilofirf \ i.ui .i tS rt" eVt P* 1 *