The Jefferson news & farmer. (Louisville, Jefferson County, Ga.) 1871-1875, December 10, 1874, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Jefferson News & Farmer. VOL. IV THE NEWS & FARMER. BT ROBERTS BROTHERS. Published every Thursday bforning AT LOUISVILLE. GEORGIA. PRICE OF SUBSCRIPTION. IN ADVANCE. One copy one year $8 00 “ “ six months... i...... 1.00 “ “ three months 00 Per a OnbofPIVE ormose we will make • ednction >©f 25 per cent . - - ADVERTISING RATES Iraauiknt Advertisement), One dollar per quare (ten lines ol tliisftypo or one i»ch) ffr he first insertionfaud 75 cents Tor earh subse quent insertion A liberal deduction made ou advertisements running over one month. Local notices will be charged Fifteen cents per line each insertion. VW All bills ©advertising due at any time after the first insertion and will be presented at the pleasure of the Proprietors, except by special arrangement. LEGAL ADVERTISING. Ordinary's Citations for Letters of Administra tion, Guardiausiiip &c............ 55 00 Application for disrn’n from adm’u..... ti 00 Homestead notice 3 00 Application for dism’n from guard'n 5 00 Application for leave to sell 1and....... 5 00 Notioe to Debtors and Creditors 4 00 Sales of Imni, per tqimre of ten line) 5 00 .Sales of personal per sqr , ten days 2 00 Sheriff")— Each levy of ten line), 5 00 Mortgage sales of ten finer or leu 5 00 Tax Collector's sales, per sqr ,(3 monthslO 00 Clerk’a —Foreclosure of mortgage and ether monthly’s per square 5 00 nonces thirty days 4 00 ffrott»»ional Cavßg. J. G, Cain. J.’l- Pollnll CAIN & POLHILL, attorneys at law LOUISVILL, GA. May 5, 1871. \ D-_ "Tt. wTCowell W. F. Denny. Carswell & Denny ■irTOB.VK I*B .*T WW GEORGIA, WILL practice in all the Counties in the Middle Circuit. Also llurke in Aligns (h Circuit. AH tfiisincsa entrusted to llieir v#ie will meet with prompt attention- Nov. 3.27 Iy - • -** ■ r ~Vf. 11. Watkins, B- L- Gamble. WATKINS & GAMBLE attorneys at law. UouisMlU, <sa. January 22 1” • A. F DURHAM, It- D. Physician sad furgtsa. <»a. XT UOCESSF LILLY treata Diseases of the S Lungs and Throat, diseases ot the Lye, Nose and Ear, and all forms ol l'ropseyi dis , apes of the Heart Kidneys, Bladder and btric lure, secre diseases, long standing Ulcers. Removes Hemoirheidal Tumors witnout pain. Makes a speciality of diseases peculiar to Fe males. Medicines sent lo any point on the Railroad. All correspondence confidential. Fcby 15, 1874 ly - hotels. marshal house, SaVANNAH, GA. n . B. LUCE,— Proprietor. BOARD PER DAY *3.00 Lanier House, Mulberry Street, MACON-- ’ GEORGIA, 1. 808, Proprietor. r Oaalfcas ftMiii t* lie Depot. JdcCOMB’S HOTEL, if Mllledgerille, Ga ■s H. leUWUß'i—Proprietor BOARD PER DAY *B.M Hoarding HousE. Jilrs. M. S. MILLER, Proprietress Good Board furnished; by the iponth, week or day. Charges moderate. Oct. 16ih 1873.tf PALMER HOUSE. 258 Bread St., Angusla, Ga. Over A. C. Foce's Shoe Store. Mrs. S. J. PALMER, Proprietress. H. D.mNLKY, Clerk, Good Board nrnished by The Month Week 3>ay or at teas able rates, The Oldest Furniture House in the State PLATT BROTHERS, SDfi & JBD4 AIJGrSTA, GA*, Keep always on hand the latest styles of ¥ 0 111 T B 1 B Os every variety manufactured, from the lowest to the highest grades. OEAM3ER, PAP.LOU, DINING-ROOM, AIM® Library, Complete Suits, or Single Pieces, At prices which cannot fad lo suit ihe purchaser. Dec. 25ih 1873. 3in. PRICE REDUCE I>. Tilt BE T IN THE WOULD ! Will Last a Lisa- ime! 85,000 07 TS3 03LSSP.AT2D SIIONINGER ORGANS. IN DAILY USE The bes* musical] Islent of the country re ciunmend these Organs. The nicest and best. Moreforyour money, and gives better saislac-tion, Ilian any other now made. They comprise the Eureka, Concerto, Orchestra k Grands Illustrated Catalogues sent by mail, pre to any address,upon application lo B. MIO l\s H&(]0. .veii'H.ifß.v ro.r.v. yuß surtu ATLANTA BUSINESS COLL 7 GB, ATLANTA, KA. IS AN INSTITUTION 108 EDUCATING YOUNG MEN FOR BUSINESS. Thebeat mode of Ins. ruction ever adopted in THIS OR ANY OTHER COUNTRY. The course of study comprises Every Variety of Business & Finance From Retail to Banking Operations, By the great system of Actual Business Instruction BOOK KEEPING In all iU various methods, Business Forms, Terms & Usages, Business, Writing, Correspondence, COMMERC lAL ARJTHMETI f mTUBMfIiP SiTTLiMiNT Detecting Counterfeit Money, Busiueas, Biography, thoroughly taught AT THS 3H-A-QT Lkl -A-JST ATLANTA BUSiHfihS DULLEGB, THE ONLY SCHOOL IS THE SOUTH CONDUCTED ON TH« ACTUAL BUSINESS PLAN THR miMm mmmi, Containing full information of the Course ot Instruction n will be mailed free to any one, by adsi D3IWILKR A MACKE, Conrer Peachtiee and Line. Sts., P. 0, Bex *9B. Atlanta, WNo vata’ious. Students can enter at any time. july3o’l74ly LOUISVILLE, JEFFERSON COUNTY. GA.. DECEMBER 10. 1874 C. V. WALKER, Audios Commission Merchant, 317, 319 k 321 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. fl AVI NO just returned from the Eesster and Western markets, I am now receive mg duly Esa&MrtF FiasiEffwaiE of all kinds which is sold only at PRIVATE SALE, At Wholesale Factory Prices, With Freight and Commission added. I HILL ttJAKANifcE! IV SELL As Cheap As Any House South! Parties wishing to purchase FURNITURE Will do irel 1 my stock before purchasing elsewhere. Special nducements to wholesale dealers. Oct. 1,1874. 2 MEW OFFERS! MEW IDEAS! SEE THE Grand Gifts OIF 1 Our Fireside Friend, TO ITS SUBSCHIBRRS Entirely new aud unprecedented, nnd such as will interest every one, You miss it if you don't send' for samples and full particulars which are sent fr«*e. SEE THE GREAT WATCH OFFER ! OUU FIRESIDE FRIEND is now iu i's Fiftii Volume, thoroughly e.stalmblished as the lending family and story Weekly »u the Union, bus the largest ciiculntii n. and the best ap~ pointed printing and publishing establishment anJ building in the West. Is a large, eight page illustrated and origidaal Weekly, price $3 00 year. Everv subscriber receives a magnificent premium and a share iu the diatri bution. Subscribe now ! W.i WANT AGENTS We want a representative in every neighbors hood. Nothing .equals it for agents, mde or female, young or old, Large Cath Wages and a Superb Outfit, exclusive territory, buoscribe by sending s:t.oo, and receive the papei one year, a magnificent premium, a share in the distribution, and receive also Fkek a Com pletete Outfit, or send for partirnlars. Nome irrit ory desired in writing. Addiess Waters &. Uo.,J Publishers. Chicago, Ul- June 4, 1874. Cm Louisville Academy. THE fall Term a ill begin 21st September and end 21st December next, Tuition Kales j«r Term, (13 wks) s6©i2 Hoard “ per mouth 8© 1C Payment required one-half in advance, the balance ut close of Tei m. The accounts ut all who are entitled to the benefit ol the Public ."chool Fuud will be cred ited with the pro rata from said Fund. Prompt attendance at Ike opeulug of the School is desirable. For farther information apply to Principal or Board of Trustees. G, A. HOLCOMBE, A. M. —Principal. MRS. C. C. GOODE—Assistant. Louisville, Ga., Set, 2nd 1874. 3m CENTRL RAILROAD. GEN’L SUPT’S OFFICE, C. R. R. > Savannah, October 10, 1873. J ON and after SUNDAY the 12th Inst., Passenger trains on the Georgia Central Railroad, its branches and connections, will n ollows: GOING NORTH AND WEST. Leave Savannah... 8 ; 45 a m Leave Augusta 9:05 p m Arrive m Augusta.,«... 4:00 p m Arrive in Macon .............. C:45 pni Leave Macen tos C01umbu5........ 7;|5 n m Leave Maoou for Eufaula 9:10 p m Leave Macon for Atlanta ; : 3u » Arrive at Columbus 12:45 a m Arrive at Eufaula |U:2O a m Arrive at Atlanta 1:40 a m COMING SOUTH AND EAST Leave Atlanta ....12:20 a m Leave Eufaula 5:45 pm Leave Columbus 1:30 am Arrive at Macon from Atlanta 0:30 a m Arrive at Macon from Kutaula 5:20 a m Arrive at Macon from Columpus 6:45 a m Leave Macon 705ara Arrive at Augusta 4;00 p m Arrive at 5avannah................. 5:25 p m DAILY TRAIN (SUNDAY EXCEPTED) BETWEEN EATONTON AND MACON. Leaving Eatonton 5 ; oi) a m Leaving Mille d geviUe 0:4IS a w Arv . Mac 7:45 umi RETIIKNING. Armor at M lvdgesvilie 7:14 p m Arrives Eatonton 9 ; 00 p m Conuects daily at Gordon with Passenger Train to and rom Savanannah and Augusta WM. ROGERS, eaeral Superintendent Early Marriage. Thcreare htiuJreiisof young men that should be moriied who are not marited. To marry early is discreet and wise. And when men and wo.-* men are of a marriageable age, I think it.is to be in general true that it is wholesome lor them to be mar. ried. It. is not necessary that should remain single because they stand in pov ry, lor iwo can Ive cheaper than one if they live wi.b di rection, if they live wiih co-operative zeal, if they live as they ought to live, II the young man is willing to seem poor when be is poor ; if ;ho young woman, being poor, is wil ling to live poorly : if they are wil. ling to plant their lives together like two seeds, and wait for their growth and look lor t heir abundance by and by, when ihey have fairly earned it, then it is a good thing tor them to come early inio this partnership For characters a lapt themselves to each other iu the early periods of' life :ar more easily than they do af terwards. They who marry early are lik vines growing together and twining round and round each oilier whereas, multitudes of those who marry Lite in life stand side by side like two iron columns, which, sepa rated at the beginning, never come any nearer to each oi her. There is no school which God ever opened, or permitted io be opened, which young people can so ill atoid as the school of cure and responsibility and labor in the household ,* and a young min and young woman marrying no ma ter lion whit s>u:ce ill y cuiie mg ilmr, no mutter how high their lathers have stood, one if the ii ost whoh s une tilings tli y c m di, havmg married fur love, and with discretion, is to be wil j. g u> b gin at the bottom and bear the buid ns of ihe funis hoi I life, so Unit tliev -hall have its education. I tell you. there aie pleasmes which many young m i-r ed p- o;ile mi s I would not L’ive u;i the first ye ns ol ,H y marr ed life lor all 1 have n nv. I 1 ve in a fug house with a br--wa stone front, and very fairly furnish ed, but ad, among the choicest ex periences ol u(y life w« re tho-e through which I passed iu Indiana when I hired two eh untiers uji-tuir.*. when ad my furniture was given to ire, and was second-Jiaml ai that; and when the \e-y c'oihes which 1 had ou mv baik had been worn by Judje Bitney la fore me. YVe were not able to hire a servant. We had to seive ourselves. It was a study every day how to g. t along with oursinall means, and it was a s udy never io be fbrgott' ii. I owe many of the pleasures which hive tun thiough my life to being willing to begin wheie 1 had to begin, and to fight poverty w th love and lo over c- me ii, and to learn how to live in service and helpfulness, and in all the thousind ingennities which love sweetens and makes m ire and more deligluful. —H. W. Beecher. Mark Twain on Chambermaids. Against all chambermaids of what s >ever age or nationality, I lau ch Ihe curse ol bachelor Join ! B -cause : They always put ihe pillows at the opposite end of the bed from ihe gas burner, so that while you read and smoke before sleeping (as is ihe ancient and honored custom of bach elors) you have lo bold your book alo't, in an uncorn to riab'e position, to keep the light from dazzling your eyes. \ If they cannot get the light in an uncomfortable postion any other wav they move the tied. If you pull your trunk out six in ches from the wall, so that the liJ will stay op when you open it, they always shove that trunk hack again. They do it on purpoS**. They also put your boots into in accessinle places. They chiefly enjoy depositing them as far under the bed as the wall will permit. It is because this co-npe's you to get down in an undignified attitude and make w ; ld sweeps for ihem in the dark with the b orjack, and swear. They always put the match box in some other place. They bum up anew place for it every day, and put a bottle or other perishable glass thing where the box s ood before.— This is to cause you to break that glass thing, gtoping about in the dark and get jpur-e f into trouble. They are forever moving the fur niture* When you corfle in, in the night, you can caleul ate on finding she bureau whera the wardrobe was in the morning. Anti when you come in at midnight, or thereabout, you will fall over the rocking chair, and you will proceed toward the window and set down in a slop tub. 'phis will disgust you. T hey lik that. No matter where you put any thing, they won’t let it stay there. They will take and move it t ie first chance they get. They always s ive up the old scraps ol printed rubbish you throw or ihe floor, and slack them up cirefully on the table, ard then start ihe fire with your valuable manuscript. And they use more hair o 1 than any six men. They keep always coning to m ike 1 your hed before you get up, thus de- 1 stroying your rest and inflicting ago ny on you. but afn-r you get up itmy ! don’t come any mere till the n. xtl day. HOW TO TRAIN UP A BOY. Directions for S’ariin-j Him Off in the Way He Should Go. Have you a boy from five to eight years old ? If s>, it i* a muter of the greatest iniporfane that you train him up right. Tea h him from the start that he cau’c iu i aero s the floor, whoop, ch tse around the back yard, or use up a few nails and; bo.tid9 to m ike cars or bo it-. It you let him cfms ■ around lie’ll weai out shoes and c'othes. a -d nails and boards cost money. Train him to cnnrol his appe ite, give him the sin ilLst piece of pie, the bme end of the steak—-the small po tat e,and keep the huiter-dish out of his r< ach. By teaching him to curb his appetite you can keep him in ago and humor. Boys are a!wa\s good humored w h n hunger gmws at their s o n.i' l.s. If tie happens to b eak ad sh, tlinsli hi n for it—th n will rnend the dish and teach him a lesson »t the same lime. II you happen to no i e iliatyour boy’s shoes are wearing out, take down the ro I and give him a peel ing 'l’ll se shoes were pu cliasei only leu months ago, and chough you have worn out two pa r of bont< (1 iring th.H time the boy has no bu -ine-s 1 1 b• sc liar ! on sines. Bv giving limi a sound tliras'iiug yo i will pieveut lie shoes from wearing o ,t When you want you boy to gi on an errand, y m should s:a'e it and add ; ‘-Now go as quick as yoi) cun, and if you are gone over live min uirs I’ll cot the hi Jo < ff your buck.” He will I'oc -g'iize the neces-it7 of haste and will hurry on. You | cou'd not do the errand yourself in side of fifteen minoes, but fie is not to know that- If you want hin to pile woo I, the way to ad Iress him is tiiusly: “Now, see here, Hm y, I waul every stick of that wood piled up before uoo >. If l c-oine home and find you haven’t done i', l’.i lick you ti I you c.ui’t stand up.” Ii is more than a hoy of his size oug'ii io do in a whole day, but you are not to blame t-mt i e is not ttiir.een years old ins ead of < ight. If you hear that anyone in the neighborhood ha* broken a window, stolen lrult or unhinged a gate, he sure ih.it ii was your boy If he denies it, lake down the rod an I tell him that you vvi 1 thrash him to death if he doesn’t ‘own up ’ but that you will spare hi n if he do. s. 11c will own up to a lie io get rid ol ihe ihra*hing, and ihen you can talk to him about the faie of the liars and bad boys, and end up by s tying : ‘Go to bed, now, and in the morns iug I’d attend to your case.’ If you take hi n to cnurch, and he looks arou and, kicks the seat, or smiles at so me boy acquaintance, tluashe him the ino nem yo i get Ii nne. He oughl ;o luve been listening to the sermon. If he sees all the other boys going to the cir* cus, and wants fifteen cents to take li n iu,tell him whit awful wicked dungs circuses are—how they de moralize b »ys —bow lie ought io be thrashed lor even seeing the pioces sum go by—and then when lie’s sound asleep do you suetk ofl, pay half a dollar to to goin, and coine home astonished at the menagerie, and pleased with the wmleif.l gymnastic feats. Keep your b »y steady at school— have woi k for him every ho:iday— thrash him it he warns to go fishing or muting—restrain his desiie for skates, kites, and marbles—rout bun out at daylight, cold or hot—cufli' his ears for asking questions— make his c'oth*e out of y-nij; cist-ofT gar ments, an I you’ll have ilia sitisfic-* lion, when old and gray headed, of knowing thai you would h ive traiu ol tp u useful merab -r of s iciety bad he noi died just as ho was get ting well broken .ii. Sfiil a Delioit la ly to asmall bov whom she found crying on the street the oilier day ; “YViil you stop cry ing if I g-ve you a penny ?” “No,” said he, “but if you’ll make it two cents 1 ilstop if it kills me.” j That Steam Potato-Digger. j The Danbury News man gives a J dig at potato-diggers in this way : “lu fiie Fianklin institute fair, h, Philadelphia they have on exhibition a ‘steam p >taio-digg<- r ,’ which is ‘warreme-l to do the work of sixty men.’ Ii interested me very much, j because only a few days before I j heard Cooley tell of his expcience ; with one ol these in ichiues. He put it into Ins potato field, and for a I lime it turned out the potatoes in I magnifii ent style, anil beg in to think { ihat he hud obtii.ie Ia pr z»‘, B t j aft- r a while somthing rccured t> j the tli rot tie valve, and the digger begun to jump about th- u.osi extra ordinary ma iiier, rearing, and pitch- I mg, and snorting, without paying any at ention to the pota'oes. Coo ley managed to g.-t upon it for the purpose of shutting ofl’ the steam, but lie must have (Milled the bar die wrong way, for n > sooner had he r- achd the ground than the digger gave a couple ol preliminary s'lii ks and started on a bee line across the field. It bur.-1 through the fence, ran over two io ws, and ma-he.l a S .uthdown r m out as (hv us ihe cent nts nl a patent office report. 1 hen it dished iiro the birnyard, thr-ugh two stacks of hay, and through file stables, emerging cl se by the smoke-»ho')s \ from which it wrenched the op n door. Th« n it p'unged ov rile- flower be Is, leav ing a furrow three feet wide iwo feel deep; it lore down four dwarf pear tree--, hurried into the kitchen, upset the stove, an 1 from the.e wnirle f into the pai lor, snaslud ihe 10-king-glass meitum-d ihecentre tible and the family bibl-, and fin ally hr lug'u up on ilie top of the piano, which it s-n afr er They g.i it out at las jo-t in liine lo prev lit a general conflagration. An now Cooley digs potatoes with with a shovel. His views are not found amo ig the reco mn nidations of the machine p iuted ii the cio uhus which a e di.-tnlited at ihe fa r.” Many young men who have lathers tluu aie vv-ll off, have no ambition, and no part’cu'ar prosp<ct. They .-corn h trad-. A man that is too well born liir a tra le is very well b rn lor a gnllow.s! Thousimls of par nts, who, by industry, have gained a position which enables them to and stroy their children, take th ■ surest way io accomplish their desirii tion by eucour.ig rig them, as they grow up, to leel that ii is a dis grace to work at w h it'ver manual labor best suits tli or talents, no rn itter wlietli- r their f itli-r is a niiuisier, or a lawyer, or a Senator, or die Pr-sid nt of the United Stales. Many young men are looking for' waid upon life wi h the general idea to enjoy themselves. They are pro vide'l with all the need lul physical comforts, and they mean to be hap py. Th y slight their profession.— I'heir whole governing principle iu 1 fe is to shirk anything like work, and they expect to have enjoyment without industry. But no mm in this world vvili be happy who vio lates the fnndaine dal Utv of indus try. You must work if you are go ing to he a h ippy ma i. 1 know you think it is Inrd, but if God lnd meant that you should be a butter fly, you would be born a butterfly. Andasyoj were not born a moth or a miller, but a man, you must accept the condition of your manhood. And if tlisie is one principle tihit is more import nit nl the very threshold of life than another, it is that man is bo n io work. A young g -mlern hi and his la ly l'tv j were out tiding and enjoying the loveliness of a magnificent June nvening. Tile gentleman took out his time-piece, and seeing the late ness of the hour, said to his compin inn, in an uliecliooute tone : “My dear, it is eleven o’clock.— How qeickly time flies when you a:e in goo I company.” Tne lady who hid been sdeut for some line, answered ; “I w isi 1 c»uld say the sanv\” ••Humph!” replied the young man, “you coifid and you’d lie like the deuce, as I do.” Martha Harmn, a woman’s rights advocate, ot N w York, has put the (in ch on the rglit spot at lasi. Thursd ty when she was found drunk in the street, she swore by all the bines io a sicker that she would not walk to die station-house—that she w ould nut go unless she could rid - ill a whe.elb irrow.' Tlrs she demanded] is a right, and Officer McGuire, finding such a vehi cle, truudied Mirtlia in'o court, where she was fi ied ten dollars.— She said “it made no difference what the fine was, so lo ig ts her rights were rec >gu zed.” NO. 31 A Quaker Printer's Proverbs. Never send an aiticle for publicu t on without giving the edit >r thy name, for thv name oft-ntimes se» cures publication to wotthless arti cles. Thon shoulds’i notrap at the door of u printing office, lor lie tlia an sweteth lit- rapsneen th in his sleeve on I loeeth time. Neverdo th .u loafabout n<>r k ock down the type, or the hoys will love thee as they do the shade trees — when thou leavest. Th >u shoul.l-t never read die copy oil life p int-r’s case, or ti e sharp and hooked contain t there>)f, or he inuy 'knock liv e down. Never inquire of an editor for news, lor behold it is Ins business to give it to thee at t c appointed time without asking lor h. It is not light that thou shoddst ask him wh • is the author ol an nrs licle, for it is his duty to keep suoli things unto himself When th >u dost enter his office take heed unto thysell that thou ilo ? t not look at what may concern th e , not, fir it is not meet in the sight ol go >d breeding. Neither examine thou the proot die. t, for it is not reidy to meet thy eyes them mayest understand. ’ Prefer tlty own town paper to any nth t, and subset ibc 1 'r it immed.* ately; Pay fo r it in advance, and it shall he well with thee and th no. A nenr-ighte I Ind anap dis wo nt hi patched the se.it her hua* bun t’s pants with a coll buckwheat cake, th It the chil Iren j[li id left in her work basket, last week. The color of the patch-w rk matched the origiua trnwse.s. and as the cuke was tough, tlte mistake might never have bee a discovered, but the o!d man got ca ight out in ash >wer a day or or two afterwards; tlte p itch began to swe 1 ; he felt cold patches on his back, aid thinking it was spinal meningitis that bad clutched him, sent for a doctor, who soothed his fears; hut he wants a divorce. — Vermont Times, Wlf AND HUMOR. There are msny who can’t real who know A Bee sees. No inm can read about all thes: burglaries with ml a determination to have his wife sleep on the from side of the be I. In Japan the law requires that when a person cuts down a tree, lie shall plant one in its place. In this way the supply of wuoJ is kept up. George Washington owes his coun try a tree. Tlte manager of a country theatre peeping through the curt tin between the acts was surprised by a glimpse of tlte empty burettes. ‘Good gra cious!” siid-he, turning to the p ompier, “where is the audience!” “He just stepped out to gel a mug ol beer,” was che brief reply. A youth asked permission of his mother to go to a ball. She told him it was a bad place lor little boys to go. “ V/by mother, didn’t you and tether go to balls when you were young ?” “Yes, but we have seen the fully of it,” said his mother.— “Well, mother, I waul to see the folly of it too.” A Western paper tells how “Mr. itim Kmg, with a Coil’s revolver, killed a wild turkey, which weighed U 8 lbs. on the top of a tree one liuun dred and tifry yards distant.’* A good-sized turkey, certainly, but that Mr. King should l ave taken the trouble to weigh u on ihe top of a tree, ai thai par.iculur distance, is a little curious. ‘Corn’ in England is lower than it has ever been, wicuin living memo ry ; and ‘corn* over hete is about as high as it his been in the same length of time. Hut, Vorn’ in England means wheat, and ‘corn’ over here means maize, and ihe difference is amazing. Avery touchy husband told his wile they could not agree, and must divide the house. “Very well,” said sh -, “you take the outside.” Meiaucholly people rarely have well arranged, while teeth. To cure deafness—Tell a mat you’ve collie to pay Imn money. An unpleasant sort of aiithme.ic Division among latuilies. FOR SALE. Scholarships from Bowden (Car* rot ci.) College atii Atlauti Eisi inm Business College- Tney Cau be bought at reduced price,. Parties desiring to uttenJ either of these in* stuuiio.is will find it to their advan tage to ca 1 at tais office right away.