About The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1886)
? - } v ■ be Kbwsa* Herald. PUBLISHED ETEKV T1ESDAY. B. CATES, Editor and PabiUhrr. THE HERAI. mn *r stmcaimes : One copy one year, in advance $1.50 If not paid in advance, the term* are >3.00 a year. A Club of six allowed an extra copy. Fifty-two numbers complete the wolume. WOOTTEN A CATES, Proprietors. WISDOM, JUSTICE AND MODERATION. TkKHS:--$1.50 per per year iu Advance. VOLUME XXI. NEW NAN, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 5,1S80. NUMBER 12 fHE NeWA'AN PUBLISHED EVE1IY IIATK.S OF AOVEKTIS One inch one year, $10; v.-ar, $100; less time than I $1.00 |»er inch for first insel «•£ nts additional for each su* sertion. Notices ill local column, I line for each insertion. Lit inents will lie i -.ade with th inc by the quarter or year. All transient advertiseme] paid for when lianded in. Announcing candidatus strictlv in advance. Address all .•'V»tiiiini<-.r A. lb CAT. .', '"'“•'Ful O ir lives are albums. written throug With (rood or ill, with false or true. RACHEL’S TICKET. i V? BY ELLEN' V. TALBOT. Rachel came to the dinner-table with a very important air. “Just see,” she said, flourishing a pink ticket over the dish of pota toes; “there's going to be a magic lantern in the Town Hajl this even ins, and-they got grandpa to buy t ticket and lie gave it to me.” “Oh, that’s too mean!” er-iaimed Johnny; “It was my turn. randpa gave you a ticket to the Old Folks’ Concert. I think you ought to give it to me.” “Well, I guess not," sa.^^®.chel; “it is mine. Grandpa never thought of you at all.” “’Tain't fair,” said^|^^|^ puck ering up his mouttJ^^^F* *d to see the concert dresT^^^^^iiere’s something else I can't see ” Rachel shrugged her ^ millers impatiently, and began to eat her dinner, and Johnny set up a fretful whine. “There, do stop!” said his sister, (king back her plutp at last. “I you hail a ticket too, I truly Ei’t give away ither had been uner of the tiny Attention to this she called Ra nk your srrand- to your giving t, Rachel ?” uneasily on one for me, mother.” 'hnny a ticket my- jspare the money,” ilwood. “I think, ifhN gjifftndiather had thought, he would have given the ticket to Johnny. It is pret’y hard on the little fellow to miss both entertain- • lents." _ “ Why, I s’pose/ grandpa thinks Johnny is too lit tie. 19 “Oh, no!” said Mrs. El wood; “for the Town Hall is only next door, and he would be perfectly safe.” “Out, mother. I do want to go so dreadfully myself; I never saw a magic lantern * , my life—never.” “Out you iXnt to the concert, which is a gre.ij deal finer than this Will be.” J notherj I don’t think so—I it! This is going to b,- a n.t of, beautiful pictures on a sli •<•;. and the coneert was only s one I i.lies, in old-fashioned bon nets, singing songs; it didn’t amount to much.” ‘ You thought, differently at the time," said her mother, “but there, I don’t want to talk to you any more. You know what you ought to do as a Christian little girl; but of course the ticket is yours.” Neither jlid Rachel wish to talk any longer with her mother. She took the pie that Mrs. Elwood cut for her, and returned to the table. Johnny had, for the present, forgot ten his woes in another piece of the “Sit down, child; sit clown”’ said a voice behind her. But Rachel would not sit down. She went down the ailse to the man that took tickets at the do< r. “Please, sir,” she whispered “won’t you give me back the rest of my ticket ?” “The rest of your ticket, child? What can you mean ?” “Why, sir,” said Rachel, “I would jike my little brother to see the rest of the pictures.” “That wou’t do, little *,irl; he must have a ticket of liis own if he comes in.” “Oh! please, sir, can’t you do any thing about it?” asked Rachel, in great trouble. “I ought to have let him have the ticket in the begin ning, oniy I was selfish; but then I got sorry, and I do want him to see all lie can now. Couldn’t you, please, do it, sir? I’ve only used such a little of the ticket.” “Where is your brother ?” “Just next door, sir!” “Well, well.” The. man actually placed the pink ticket in Rachel's hand Mrs. Elwood had just put the can dy in thesuow toco<d, whpn, look ing up, she • •« Bnehel. “The entertainment can’t be over!” she said. “No, no, mother; hut I asked the man and he gavw me back the tick et and said Johnny might come in again instead of ...e. Where is Johnny? I)o get his best cap, moth er, and let him go. They had not shown but five pictures, and there will lie lots for him to see. Come, Johnny, hurry up!” “O Rachel!” cried Johnny, “you are the best girl in the world. I do love you. Ido! Ido! Oh, I want to see the pictures so much!” and the little fellow fairly turned asom- ersault out of the gate. “Now I have my Christian little girl back again,” said Mrs. Elwood, taking Rachel in her arms.—*. S. Times. The old imnjoist forgot the pain! Toombs on the fond act of the War. in his “left knee-j’int,” and the glow : of youth seemed to tingle in his I sluggish veins ns he called out. “W’at ye ’nout da’, Pete, git erroun’ lively,” and the song changed to— “Blin’ hoss fell in de deep mud-hole, Doo (lali-ali, doo dah-afi; (.'nullin’ tech bottom wki erten-loot pile, I)oo ilali, doo dali. day ’ I’tn iioiiiT ter run all night, I’m bouu’ ter run all day. An" I bet my money on er liolitail hoss, Ef anybody bet ’pqn er bay.” And away they went, loud hursts of merriment adding variety to the song and dance, as each vied with the other in the performance of some ludicrous antic. When the music would momentarily cease there were jabberings and gesticu lations, eacli trying to do ail the talking, until some individual burst into a series of loud “ya! ya! ya’s!” and then the crowd would join in until the mocking echoes of the night reng out in reply. The night grew apace. From time to time the fire was replenish ed, and lli’i merry light flickered and fluttered as it chased the shad ows about the nooks and crannies of the old qua t -i kitchen. The unquiet cocks kept crowing and crowing, eac.i harsh cry being to the uututored minds of these iniplefoik a reiteration of the truth if that saying which had been watt ed down the long vista of eighteen centuries: “This night, before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me thrice/’a constant reminder of the fickle nature of faithless Peter. Now, yo’ all git ready fn’ de rab bit dance,” crfeil Uncle Mingo, and the dancers gathered in a circle,one in the center personating “Brer Rabbit,” and with heads, hands, and feet, they kept time to the music: Way down yan’ner by <le rivali swamp, I!ig-eye rabbit, er lie-haw! De rabbit pat, *n do rabbit stomp, Henry W. Cleveland publishes, in the Southern Bivouac for Janua ry, some extracts from a letter writ ten by Toombs, in 1SB1, when he was Secretary of State. It was to Alexander H. Stephens, when Vice- President, and has not before been published. The lett< r will attract attention, as it throws much light on the disturbed condition of affairs in the Confederacy at that time: “Dear Stephens: I received your letter of the 22d ult., and would have written before but for the fact that you did not expect to be home until the 12th inst. 1 am glad to see that you are doing your duty about the‘cotton loan.’ It is of vi tal importance; but I find nobody but yourself appreciating it, and taking the proper steps to make it effective. I have no doubt but that, if one fourth of the members of Congress had taken your course, we should have been able to put our finances on the most satisfacto ry and impregnable basis. Men will not see that the revolution must rest on the treasury,and with out it it must fail and lead to incal culable mischief. lam constantly urging Memminger (Secretary <>t the Treasury) to action, and writing letters myself alt over the South. Memminger wants experience, and is misled by every little news paper paragraph to the effect that the thing is going on swimmingly. You andr know how to value such things,and that nothing but close, active ami unremitting, universal canvassing in every county in the South can make ic a success. And if it should prove inadequate, noth ing but high, rigid, direct tax can save us. This will bring dis content. The men of property should support this war, and taxa- j tion, if universal, is hardest on the He then objects strongly to sepa r ste companies of State troops com ing to Virginia to be organized, and to regular army men getting the pick of the volunteers. He c< eludes: “1 shall get m.t of the govern ment at an early day. I want to it quietly and inoffensively if possi ble. I have already tendered the President my resignation. He is exireniely disinclined to it, but I am sme ot no use in it save to di vide the respon-ibility for meas ures T do not approve. This letter is for you; I have only thought aloud Iu writing it.” Then, with a wot* l of his own family, he signs it, “Yours very truly, R. Toombs.” Mr. A. H.Stephens gave me tiiis letter with many others of historic interest.and says of them in the letter < f instructions in his own hand, which I still have, “With no restriction upon their use except such as may be dictated by fitness and good taste.” Toombs iu Boston. CHRISTMAS IN THE QUARTERS. Through the deep gloom of the starless night shone a light in every cabin of thequarter, merily dancing and--eoguottingiodlh tho anmh— shadows. In front of the old quar ter kitchen there was a huge light- stand erected, of boards, with a layer of earth on top, where, the fire was built. A generous blaze crack led on ttie stand, and the arrowy Big-cve rabbit, er he-baw, j poor; and in that lies the whole ar- Oli, <le hiy-eve rabbit, er lie-baw-lie, I , „ Der big-eve rabbit, er he-liaw-aw; ■ D Mr. Toombs then devotes near- OIF lie go will or skip an’ er jump er b Big-eye rabbit er he-baw; Meek e’ den ir er liiekory stump, Big-eye rabbit, er he-baw: Oh, de big-eye rabbit, er he-baw-he, De big-eve rabbit, er he-bavv-aw.” “Boom! boomcame the startling report of guns in the direction of the “wteito folk’s hou.-a,’’ and a wild jangle of discordant music follow ed. The tooting of horns, the jingle ol bells, the crash of tin-pans, and the squeaking of fiddles, mixed and mingled in an unearthly clamor. ‘•Fo’ God!” cried Uncle Mingo, ns tongues of light, half illumed the | he dropped liis banjo, “Hit’s des hither aide of the old China tree now midnight,’n’dem ser’uaders is that stood gaunt and grim with its ] des nat’aliy wakin’ ’em up at de same pie. “He won’t think of it again,” said Rachel to her murmuring con science. But Johnny did think of it again, and often, throughthe afternoon. “Never saw anything,” he whined at Rachel’s door, where she stood tying her blue sash while preparing for the entertainment; “just stay )iome, and stay home. Don’t want to go to b»d right along every night’’ “Weli.it would not he good fori him to be up so late,” thought Ha- i c'lei, still justifying herself. Mrs. j Henry Van Alin always has Harry and Reggy go to bed at half past six. I think mother is very careless about Johnny.” Rachel hurried down stairs. Her mother was putting on a kettle of molasses, and had promised that Johnny should sit up and see her make candy. “And how nice that will lie!” said , ichel: “just as nice as going to the leafless brances creaking and groan ing a« they were lifted skyward like poor, helpless, and weather beaten bauds, raised in mute su;>- plication. Hard by stood the mos sy curb of the old well, with its pendulous bucket, the iong, swing ing hand-pole, and the long sweep resting against the deep back ground of the sky, with one end resting on the earth and the other pointing skyward. In the glare of the blazing light- stand dusky figures danced and gesticulated, and sang scraps of quaint plantation melodies with noisy choruses. The master had given them permission to en joy a regular frolic, and Pete bawl ed out as he entered the homely pre cincts of the old kitchen: “C'ris’inas comes but once er yeah. An’ eve’v po niggah arter have ‘e sha.’ “Hello, da’! Uncle Mingo, hain’t- nevabgwine ter git dat ole banjo inchune?” And just then the old man began vigorous stamping with his foot, the sonorous melody of the banjo floated out on the wings of the night, and the crackel and quavering voice chanted the rude accompaniment. "I love party Polly, too-oo-w. An’ 1 love purty Polly Phi. Toad’s in de middle, ’ll’ 'e can’ git crlioM. Toad’s in tie middle. *u’ V can’ git rliont. w’ite folks' house. Des lis’en!- I kin lieaii de guns el’ar down terBurton- ville. Ev’ybody’s er shoutin' ole man Gris’iiios.” A wild yell wont up from the quarter, and then Un cle Mingo called out, “Come, we hain’t got not’n’ ter do wid demser- naders.” , “Go on will de music,” cried Pete, and the banjo tinkled to the song: * “'In ole Vi’ginny, wiser’ 1 was Ikj’ii. Dev eat paYhed peas ’ll’ horainv e’on; (lie folks, young folks, el’a’ de kitchen, Ole folks, young folks, el’a’ de kitchen. Ole Yi’ginny never ti—all.” and the unwearied dancers began an intricate measure of turnings and twistings, stamping and shuf fling, till the ratters of the old quar ter kitchen trembled in unison.—M. M. Folsom in Southern Bivouac. Wise,Words. ly a page of the large letter pa per to the state of the Confederacy. He says: “It is a .lead race for slow between Sc-.tt and Davis.” He speaks of General Walker gather ing arms to defend the two Caro- linas and Georgia, and says that up to six weeks betore the date of his letter nothing of importance bad been done toward getting improv ed arms from Europe through the blockade. Hesays: “Mallory (Sec retary of the Navy), you know, is good for nothing hut to squander public money; he would not make a navy with our means in ten years. An active man would have cleared iiaif the ports of tlieConfed- ercy of the blockading ships. Many of them are nearly worthless ships of commission that can hardly stand the fire of their own ba tteries, but they are very effective against un armed ships of the same kind. Nothing has been done by our com mission abroad save what you see in the newspapers. They give better accounts of the state of things in Europe than the commissioners do, and are much better informed.” Here Mr. Toombs seems to make th.e same mistake that heuriticis es Mr. Memminger for, for he adds: “France and England will ac knowledge our independence this fall unless we are overcome before that time. Simply bolding things as tjiey are will secure that, and any decided success would hasten it. There must be a fight in a few days on the Winchester line. It would not surprise me to hear of it any moment. One is constantly expected also on the Mahassas line. Beauregard is strong and well fix ed. Johnson is weak, unnecessa In an article on Robert Toombs in the Southern Bivouac for Jan uary, Henry W. Cleveland thus describes a lecture delivered by Mr. Toombs in Boston, January 2(i, 185<>: He stated flatly that under .■Southern slavery the uegr < was then in a better position than at any other time or place, whether in freedom or in bondage. He GENERAL NEWS. The third ami lourth-el.lss Post- nasters w ill hold a national con vention in Chicago February '5. The frieims of tlie Bliir and Wil ds Kduc tional hip arc represented is sanguine «>f success at this ses sion of Congress. Senator Miller, of California, ar.d SenatorCamden, of Wi st Virginia, are seriously ill in Washington, the liveliest apprehensions of the friends of each being excited. John Bigelow, recently appointed Assistant United States Treasurer at New York, and the only one of the President’s appointments con firmed during the present season of the Senate, has resigned. The buried Nantieoke miners will never be removed from tlie r pres ent resting places, ail hope of find ing their bodies being abandoned. The company employing them will recompense their surviving fami lies. It was decided by a conference of engineers at Nantieoke to sink a new shaft 175 feet deep, and en- leuvor ljy that means to reach and recover the bodies of the twenty- three buried miners. The work will require from four to six weeks. The mourning drapery on the public buildings at Washington, placed there on the death of tlie Vice-president, was removed Fri day. It is estimated tha t tie cost claimed that the South had done ( attendant upon putting up and re in ire for the negro in a century moving the Grant and Hen Dicks’ W. E. Avery & JEWELERS. Save JVIoved To lTiblie ^quiitS Bide 2-13. Newnan, Ga. W S. Winters ESTABLISHED 1873. a. WintersAHDNels< -DEALERS IN- op OAK -A N I>- tiiaii religion had done in his own land, Africa, aud in freedom, in all lime. He asserted natural inferior ity of race, aud it seemed that some one must get up ana deny it when lie said: “Annihilate his race to-day, and you will find no trace ol liis existence m a score of years, lie would nut leave behind him a single discovery, invention, ( r thought- worthy or remembrance by the IiumaiiTauiiiy.” Then the social aud political bun upon Hie negro iu llie North and among his friends, where he had been for seventy years on trial as a free man, was fuiiy discussed, tlie increase of oniy one per cent there in a decade; compared with tlie increase ol twenty-eight percent ul population (colored) iu the same time in tlie ijjuth; the fact tiiat tlie negro slave race was the largest consumer ot animal food of any laboring t .optila,ioU on tlie globe; the fact mat (he negro received more oj the loud production of the land lie til.eu than any other com mon laborer; theaSoei turn that any master would be convicted and punished for “cruelty to the slave,” if he only gave them as much ol trie prouuce of tha land as common field-labor had in England; all end ing, with this climax: “Under a system of iree labor, wages are usu ally paid in money, the representa tive of products. Under ours it is The best mind cure is to make up one’s mind to be contented. Mary people mistake stubborn ness tor bravery, meanness for econ omy, and vileness for wit. The harvest gathered in the fields of the past is to be brought home for the use of the present. •n • ,-e ;ii»,™,u ..crlu i T, 1 "'e-- ■ . ” ’ ; numbers of population, or as an The misery of illness is nearly, j j,., V e great-confidence m n.sgen-i * 1 ’ manifest in high life as and filth of extreme poverty. paid in the products themselves. One of your most distinguished statesmen and patriots, President John Adams, said that the differ ence to the State was “imaginary.” What matters it (lie said) wlietb >r a landlord employing ten laborers on his farm gives them annually as much money as will buy them the necessaries of life, or gives them those necessaries at short hand. The statistics of America and of Earope were his armory, and he drew freely. He proved that, wi th atl the immorality of the colored race, they, at least, were free from the temptation of hunger, cold, and homelessness. He proved that fewer colored children were born mourning combined was $10,000. The interesting d -tails of a strug gle between Churo-i and State for the control of the schools of the Ar gentine Republic appeals, in the shape of a report to the State De partment from United States Min ister Osborne. J. IT. Zukertort, the Champion chessplayer of Great Britain, and Wm.Steinitz, Am-trie Vs best m in, will soon play a series of games for the championship of the world. The contests will occur in New York, St. Louis and New Orleans. The winner of the stakes—$5,000—must apture ten games before the award will bs made in his favor. The National Republican- news paper of Washington estimates tiiat 14:> Democrats and 53 Republi cans in the House oppose the sus pension of silver coinage, while 30 Democrats and 01 Republicans fa vor it. The West and South are represented as being practically a unit for silver coinage, while the Eastern and Middle Slates appear to be almost as solidly in favor of its suspension. The Fiske Jubilee singers, who are colored people, will probably have to abandon their Northern tour,owing to the refusal of the ho tels throughout that section to re ceive them. The attention of those -OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. OLD * Taken in Exchange for new Ones. CHATTANOOGA, TEN] IS EWNAN MARBLE AND GRANITE WOR] H. D. CHRISTOPHER & -DEALERS IN- marble&granit: persons whoh iveagonized over the MONUMENTS, TOMB & HEADSTONES, TABLI CURBING, ETC. I ork, furnk rilv weak, and must meet the first , . i , out of wedlock in proportion to shook with great disadvantage, but; _ ■ condition of the colored race in the South might probably be turned to ward their own section for a brief period, where they may learn that the race of Pharisees has not be come extinct. The Executive Committee of the Hendricks Monument Association lias adopted unanimously a reso lution to the effect that no national appropriation is expected or asked, it being desired that tlie monument shall be erected by voluntary con tributions. This action is the re sult of the bill offered in Congress by Hon. Frank Lawler, of Illinois, proposing an appropriation of $10,- 000 to erect a monument to the memory of Mr. Hendricks at In dianapolis. The Richmond Whig,the personal organ of i he recent Maiione, of publica- pended Tues- Special Designs, and Estimates for any desired on application. NEWNAN, GEORGIA H. S. WRIGHT S New Drug Store! -IS THE PLACE TO GET AND PURE DRU S. . b ,i i _o_o_.it wont!” cried Johnny, roar. “I—want—to . from T-.a<l’s in de middle, ’n’ V rail" git erbont. Give *im half er dollaii ter come out ’n dar!” A score of voices took up the quaint refrain, and the merry lads and dusky damsels went circlin'? swaying around in the mad whirl of the semi-savage dance. Aa the words. “An’ I love party Polly, too-oo-oo,” were repeated, they all marched around solemn and slow, the wo men silent, and the men droning out a rude bass. But when the cho rus, “Toad’s in de middle, 'n 'e call’ git er- bout,” was taken up, then the clear tenor Promises made in the fin-tion require a better memory | scattering bis forces ; in which ti...,,., i , i absolute per cent, than in the cap- . . in tin, rags! eri .| a |,ip. I hope tor good ugainst; r * . , 1 r Virginia, i-> no hh-to its .•erty. j n|| millitary calculations. Mr. Da-: UMn.i, o.n, -*”> ‘ j paving been su^pendC n time of'af-j vis lias fallen into Scott’s trap of ""T , ’ l ' r .. e ? " day by order of the court i scattering bis forces, ami is there- ] " 1 n K r "° ‘ 1 ^ ' ■ its affairs have recently beenadju- fore too weak everywhere. £ should . ‘-' 0,n P ar,t l% ' ' u< / a >on, proc u<_ 1 * ’ j dmated. The Whig was established - concentrate aud fight wherever I! ! i n J anuar y, an d at on< -“ time most credulous, since they most he- j *>»d tlle 'test chance of success, and : s h W . 4S enlire - iy fre(J froin a ji \ was a powerful political journal. lieve themselves, aud advise most let towns and cities go t<> the the' oratory There was j . with their falsest flatterer and eue- flames if necessary. After whip- : ^ rhetoric. Not | Short ha.r niMasUlhgtmi. than people commonly possess. my—their own self-love. pin • the enemy on his main line, • . or auoniii-ein, ui ™«tu , .. . I the out nosts would he very easily’ 1 nr aoonni.ini m ..petw.. Washington Letter: Depression of spirits, when it jJ >n rosaV; ; Nothing of thateloquence supposed , Th(l jrflort hair craS5e has struck real and when peophf cannot help, ^ ^ & ^ ^ , to be peculiar to the .South but Wash = ngton> Hn(1 Pennsylvania it, is not the result of circumstances, \ . | which Bo.-donians -had sometime?- but, in ninety-nine cases out of a| a a out t us er.i o lesapea _ , .. r< j j r .mi Phillips, Sumner, Ever- I Bay to watch Fortress Monroe, ana ’ hundred from dyspepsia, or rrom a| l9hou!d t aoes mt ukv ^; ett and Cushing. It was a revela- discordant liver-in short, from bod- j than or twentv thousand ! ! ion of dear-cut argument combined »y troops, when two thousand at Nor j with cairn majestic delivery. It We maybe pretty certain thatj fo)k are al) that jg necessary. Yourj was Webster withou. tha rnagnifi- avenue of a bright afternoon is fill ed with thedaugliters of noted men who walk along the sidewalk dress ed in sealskin cloaks, fine dresses and nobby hats, under which the hair, cut like that of a boy, shows FRESH Just what you want and at living figures. He also keeps in stock FIRST-CLASS MACHINE OIL, CYLINDER OIL, NEATS FOOT OIL, &c., &c. AND A SPLENDID LINE OF RAMPS A1STD FIXTU REi Being an experienced druggist, he is ready to FILL PRESCRIPTION at all I hours of day or night. to tyW oft” XX. WRIGrHT.V * ^... : : :— THOMPSON BROS. Bedroom, Parlor and Dining Rooi Fnrnitnn Big Stock and Low Prices. PARLOR AND CHURCH ORGAN* persons whom all the world treat ill j report of private arms is very sa Us-! eeut gu-h of “Liberty ^nd the Union, | forth y olne i on k bitter for the entirely deserve the treatment they j f HCtJ)r y; it shows at least enougti; ant J for ®' er ’ one and insepara 'i change; others are made horrible get. The world is a looking-gtoss,j for Ioca ) defense, and would, there-j bIe ’ a '" 1 wh . e, ‘ rn >' p - ves are turned j byit ° ' A pre uv girl looks well with 1 .4 for the last time to boiu>id the sun ! 3 * and gives back to every man the re- j f ore> release the public arms F ir WOOD and METALLIC BUEIAL CASES Orders attended to at any hour day or night.^9 septa- ly TBOMPSON BROS., Newnan, Ga. short hair, and her plump, ru.-y r the women and the mellow con-1 flection of hi3 own face; frown at it, j Uial HerviC e.” '“'-TT,' ,, “ Y,?U! ’- “ """ i cheeks, round, full, soft w bite neck voices ol the men rolled outI; u wi ,| |n tllril sourly upon . q <|oII . t ;it al , | ik: . 1 1,. - action ' v a,do ’ Enietwm^ni thestump. ; and jauntily poised head on a pan fraud aud rhythmic swell;y OU . laugh at it and with it, and i>' j . government as »o Missouri. IIisfcrv that is good, faithful and of good straight shoulders are .nay never hope to; fa a jolly companion; and so let j „ jve ^ hol) ^„ (I ‘ nets of an ol<1 : y ,,j e take their choice. Bile, if ye will, * men in arms Irue^wiil survive for ages; but j brought into more striking con-. ; would now save ihat .State, and ; slwfiid it have none of these quaii i trast by the rakish cut of to-day. Suspension of judgment at eer- f.| v ,* government abandons her to ties, its passage will be short be- j The thin, scrawny, scraggy-necked j i..e voi< os j jj meg s hould lie sedulously cul- i j ( ,; r { aU . > s^he isol>ligc»i !<» be friend ; tween the cradle and. the grave. | girl, however, looks thinner, seraw- bv a haltor I tiv " ,ed ’ Whcn we rP " ,e,nl *‘ r how i or enemy, and five thousand men j LiMle Aggie’s siltef, had invited j niPr ’ ** ra «f® r tban eVer ’ » nd Q t,M * j i freqaeutiy complex i*c»nditions are j ou j 1 ] triable her to .fifty ! youn^f man to tea. There was ‘ daughters of some of the Sen-; i involved, and how difficult it is to t j„. usa nd IV-iieral troops, aud ibeto a In’ll in the conversation, which ' ators and Representatives attract- bv -realty weaken McCieltan j„ was broken by the inquisitive Ap-. e d less attention and appeared V, nb " r i ^tter advantage under t* ; tint. Your .... encored! —„ _ ... k but I must I understand and appreciate those I’our proud- i conditions and to accord to each its respon-1 proporiionate value, we may well the sim- pause and nflei^^aforecommittiBi thej ourselves to judgment* ^ftivh may t to ha wwi, 1 p?PYP' BRING YOUR JOBWORK 5 QFFICE. ufT r ■ 1 vj Western Virginia, but Mr. Davis immovable. I do not like my pres-: ent position. I have pUee Without i •Id cut. Fashion rules Washington,' fhe President has approved th<- and before the session is over, then-; power, and responsihi{it£f'>r a pel- ! bill granting a pension to Mrs. j will be a lot of natqral hair switch** 1 jcy l disapprove.” ‘ ? j Or»r$t. ’ - ; j for sale cheap. it Bone in The Latest Styles, JTe Guariiftte? A. mk jL