Newspaper Page Text
HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL
EDITED AND PUBLISHED BY
J. f. WATERMAN,
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING,
AT PERRY, GA.
CARHA/iT & CURD,
J&5L...
Iron & St$el,
PAINTS, OILS, CLASS,
•BY J. T. WATERMAN.- ■ & SXT'iSi PERRY, GA., NOVEMBER 30. 1871.
YOL. L NO. 50
■ EDWIN M. BROWN, -
tSL d? <.'-k |r -
ttoxney at Law,
FORT VALLEY, GA., { '
%. c
' Will practise in all the Courts of the Ma
con Circuit, and in others by special con
tract. ’ janl9-fl
[From the Mokstsg News.]
WAI1TX GF THE REYEIlitEv
BY J. H. HEWETT,
Cotton and Corn Sweeps,
Macon,
inh30-3m
Georgia
O o p al and Japan
Jtiyofe IIb Js alseM .
V-AJE«!irE!S3BC,
AT J^C. GXLgptT’SnDi^l SgQBE.
dec 28-tf”
DU. M. IS. TOBSOKr,
D E N T I S T,
{PERRY,
- • GEORGIA,
I'yyTv:,.
flAwk&fSVILI/E, GA.,
He will spend.tlic first-half ;of each
month- in- his office'-in--Perry' 1 over ' the
old Drug store, and one fourth,; or the
latter half of-each month will begiyen
• to his piactifie-^n Uawkinsviiie at' Mrs.
Hudspeths. . i ;
pEOifelA, HOUSTON, COUNTY.—Whereas, T.
-AX ^/Smith, guaraian of “
f tiii persdnand proper
ty of Wm. T. Sards, a minor of Thos. Sauls, de
ceased,.* respectfully ^petitions- to be dismissed
from tbe same, as he has fully discharged hi? du
ty 4s such guardian; these s-re therefore to cite all
persons mtQre^d.ta he and. appear at my office,
on or before tho first Monday in December next,
to show cause, iPauyV wliy he should not be dis
charged. Given ultder my hand and bfficial sig*
. nature, August 23/1871. ... . W.'F. SWIFT,
• .• . .* *- y ;* v O. H. C.
‘V Houston''Court of
August lanai,
■r-pober*™ maaamtn
flirtdrx): . ..
Mdered: $iwi- Win. K.
‘aw\the^uirch^secy show
'fqixSfc, tfanyjffiy have^si the. tenn.of jjjjbis Court
' jto be.h^d;tlie ‘ first Monday in December next,
_l,tu the said' Jones on
__ jrj' iSTOj.should "not tic set
nijili add ^oid, oh the grounds
set lurux ui uio, • pctitioli Of J. B. Boss & Sou, of
file in this Courff; "and it sjppearmg that' said Jones
-doeir' not liyc' -fn this Shitc^it is lurther ordered
-that .tie. •tie', ‘served by ’publication of" this rule in
the Houston Home Journal once a month for four
months. . W. T..SWJFT, O. H. C.
Administrator’s Sale .
• 'Will be sold oh^the first Tuesday in December
HiSxt, in Perr5 T , the ^a'uds bold aging to the estate of
John Q. Bolton," being- lots number 17, 18, 26, 25,
. 59, 60 aud 20, in the 12th-district,-and' number 6
in the lJth d-strict .of. Uxmrtonuhty,* ebutaining
in all 1G20 acres, more, or less, and sohl iby . virtne
of. an order from the '.Court of;Grdiuai*yof said.
. .county. Terms, ono^lialf cash—balance at twelve
- Viioiiths. It will-bd sold in one body or In parcels
jaspurcbasere-Iua^ desire:' • JAS. B. BICK,
-.October 5,1871. :• ' . * Adinimstratof.
A / Exechtors 1 Sale.. :
, S ••'Will^iie^sdid' in" Pefryi. on ^rst Tuesday in
.*£>ecembfe£. nextrtiie plantation; df : the Tate A. M.
•diett, containing a^'acresi more^dr- less, being
jpsifs t>f lots number 209,-210; 239 and 240, in* the
^tti dfstnet ol 'Houston'coimtyT It is situated, pear
c; SoUth-western iiaUrpadvafid has on
tfrar-good dwelling’iiid out-h'ouses, withhin-’house
•**«?*, etc. -The -lajid' is IcireV -frith* gpod .Water,
fend takfeu altogether'thiais;a pmst demihbleplJMie.
it will be sold under an. omer from the Court ol
Ordinary for the b£nefit.'Qf creditors aiidleghtees.
. U'eriuB',- one-hali''-Cash and "the halahce"on'*crcdi$ ol
tWelv-e months. '' T. H. BEDDICK,
O. A. CLLETT,
W. E. WABREN,.
October 5,1871. . Exaction.
H. M. HOLTZCLAVV,
ATTORNEY AT LAW;
v/UpHRRY,; GiEGRGLA ^ '
CBHgpahfljiggjaii;sa»mT .» a *
Many a. gallant boy we pass
Waiting the reveillS -
Where mttrm’ring soft, thfr brook rolls on
. Oyer.thg gQlden sandj^- . t- . >
There’s station’d many a galiant one
Who .died for his native land. .-
BUFORD M. DAVIS,
3L.t:i.o.3r.poL : ‘S.y’ X, a,-
.?3®EIRY, GEORGIA,
££B&£
C iC .D UN CAN,
-1 AT '40 AAi'.'/ ~-&.karj JHJ
ATTO RN E Y AT L A W,
if r A.
-GEORGIA.
A VALALIBLE TARIVI
AX ADMINISTItATOB’S SAIiE.
Georgia, Houston County:' ,»C
By virtuaof authority :.lKMn tie Court of Ordi-
sa:d county, will be sold at public outcry
e the Couit bouse dooriii f'cri-y, oil tbe fiist
Tdesday iu p.eoember next, tbe valuable farm be-
longing to ■'the- estate ol ’the late Dr. Kdinund. J1
r ai^ehcc,. deceased, .contqinjug about eleven hun
dred' and thiity-ipiir'acres, well improved—con
sisting of lSts tiiiinber nine (9), ten (10), twenty-
Jhrce;(23)v tweaity-lour (24>; : inrthe 14th district oi
said -couut>v and iractions (uumbeia. nnt. known j
lying between noinbers ten (IV) and e|e^en (ll) «k,d
Big. Indian* creekj’also' seventy-four afiG ’a'lrali
.(74'^)'acres iyinghn the fork of Big Indian and
Sayago’s; creeksto be, sold subject to the widow's
"dowerj which has been laid ofi’ and assigned, and
compiTse8 lot number tweutj'rfourTIB/teu. a^res
in the south-west corner of *nuinbet^twelityaJirfeei
and. eighty-sevpn and ono-hah’ acres of the south
ha f of numper nine. 'Terins: one-third cash and
■the balance to Wo equal'annual instalments to be-
.comerine respectively^Jauuary 1, 1873, and Janu-
ary- l r -1874, with interest from January, 1872, ad
ministrator ^yipg bond.'tp xii^luigood tvtlesjwhoii
purchase money, is fully 'pafd x —purchaser* paying
her'conveyances and ’stamps. •
ED WABD L. FELDER,
Oct, 19/.1S71. Administrator.
Georgia, Houston County—^Ordinary's
~ - Office for said County:
county, deceased, having died .intestate, tad
no person having ajiflied for adminiatmtion on
said estate, and tbe estate being still unrepresent
ed; these 'are Incite all-persons intcrcstcn to ap
pear and apply for letters of administration on
sa.d estate; on the first Monday in December next
or show cause why letters Of adminisration should
not issue to tho Clert of the Superior Court of
said county, as provided by the statute. Given
under my hand and official signature this Oct. 31,
1871. ,W. T. SWIFT, O. H. C.
EORGIA, HOUSTON COUNTY.—
XJT Joseph W. Wimbetiy and Robert C.
liryan, Excutors of Dempsey Brown, de
ceased, having petitioned to the Court for
letters of dismission from-their said trust;
these are therefore to cite all persons con
cerned; to be and appear at my office, on
or before the. regular term of this Court in
January next, '[1872)’ to show cause, if any
exists, why said petitioners should not be
■dismissed froiii their said trust.
Sept 28, 1871. W.,T; SWIFT,
3m ' ''Ordinary.
Administmf or’s Sale.
■Will be "sold before the Coui-t House door in the
town, of Perry, on thc-first Tuesday in next De
cember, all of the personal property belonging to.
the estate of John' If. r Sing, consisting of house
hold *and kitdion furnitiu-e, stock, cattle, sheep,
and farming implements; sold for the beuefit of
creditors. Terms cash. J >.: ' T ' •
Kqv. 13,1871. \ JOHN H. KING, Adm’r.
Notice to Debtors and Cjseditobs."
All persons indebted,to the estate of Dr.
J. C. Harvey, late of Houston county, de
ceased, are requested to’ malie immediate
payment, and those having demands against
the estate are requested to present them in
terms of the law. Nov. 16, 1871#
JOHN H. LOW, Executor.
Executor’s Sale.
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in January,
1872, the plantation of the late B. D. White, being
parts of lots of land number 121/140 and 114Jn
thS* Upper Fifth District qfjaoustoh bounty, Be-
in^the place’ on wliich said; White lived and died,
and'eontaining about one hundrediandTofty acres
Also one hundred and fifty acres of lot number
n AU.. T nnrnw Ti’iTtVl njctrift. rtf Kflid COlUltV.
Administrator’s Sale.
war.'be sold in Perry, Houston county,-, onthc
fir§t .^esday in De^uber,.lS71f eleytin QlJ j bjwn
USTON Cowntx: . 5
James J?. .Spra01ey, of tho county 9f Dooly, hav-
tag applied'for -letters of admimstrationBon the
cstata of ^Ulen P. bpradloy 1 , latc bf said county of
Houston, deceased; these arc thei-eforo to cite aU
persons- concerned to appear at my'office ofi-the
first Monday in December next,' to show cause, ai
any-exists, why- said letters should not be w
tqthp bnT,a :
GEOnGIA,HOUSTONGoUNTY; -
ai'imiatie; deceased,’and-alaoaiiihihjsitatoj''of said
deceased, having fully discharged his duties as
such,.asks to be finally dismissed; these
foie to cite'"" ‘ '
^ oh or before'the first Monday in Feb-
rudrt%T872, toTshow oius'e, if aiiy,. why the peti
tion should not be granted. Given finder mj
hand and seal of office, tuis October 30,’ 187L-
W.2?. SWIFT, Q. H. C.
m
FORT VALLEY,- G4.
Authorized-Capital, - ■ •*• * $200,000
. -at in 'fi-rioia
'’CFJJDEB CSAETEB FBOM THE ^TATfi,"'
Receives Deposits, discounts Paper, buys
suipl sells Exchmige, *aj^‘0ol4.ffia3- Silvac.
* TjoJlbctions made. aV all -accessible points.
* OoJIec ; tTons made.
», - ' ' ■ :
' •
T7. J, AndebsoN, - President.
- Gnrlllfa*
W. E- Beown,
Cashier.
■ ’ pikECTOBs:
. W. J. Anderson,.Gai; HughL.Heniiard,
■Wml R. Brown,: Dr. Win. A Matbev
Dr. W. H. Hollingshead. _ ■
.. . - . _ v--' ; ■; v :
148, in the Lower Fifth District of said connty,
whereon J. T-Reynolds now lives. Sold,under an
order.from the Court of Ordinary of said county.
Terms cash. L. B. ALEXANDER.
Nov.6, 1871. ' ' Executor.
U, B. Marshal’s Sale.
■ der and by virtne of a writ .of Ken Facias,
d out of the Honorable the District Oomt of
the United States for the Southern Distract of
Georina, in favor of the plaintiff, Harvey W. Xa-
thrpp, in the-following case, to-vvit:
Ha:-.vi:y W. Lathbop versus Geouge H- White.
1 have levied upon as the property of George H.
White , seven (7) bales of cotton, more or less, in
gin house; thirty (30) bales cotton, more or less,
ungatherod in tue field; tln-cc hundred <.!00l busn-
in the field; sixteen (10) mules, fo-wit: Lot, Poll,
laa Ha-ar, Bill, Jane, Kit, llocK. Selun, Henry,
Lize, PUSS, H ck, Sauce, Clara, SeU, tad one
horse named Hiram; two (2) yoke oxen fifteen (1SJ
head stock cattle, seventy-five (75) head, more or
&o?k und stock hogs, one (1) six-hone wagon
one drav or ox-wagon, two ox-carts, two horse-
1 vo lo--ca.tsTonc buggy, one fifteen horse
noiver en-une and boiler, puo grist mill, Harness
and farming utensils of every description, all be-
Lg on ffi“|iantationofethe said Geo. H. White,
mlhe county of Houston, aud by consent of plain-
tiff and defendant, will,sell the samft except the
cotton, at public auction at the plantation or Kud
a“^°W% e A'23,1871. L
" nni.T.r.'W H. SMYTH, U. S. Marsliah
Under the shadow of4he elm,
Deep in the miry day.
5 itt -WoW'--rc
G r i m sentinels are they!
High.np the.mountain slope they sleqi,-
dews fall; where cold winds
Over Hie nleadoW-grassJ,
On everjr‘hiDd6h 7 £^ve^'stone,
Their pall the drifted snow.
Waiting the reveille :i;: all still
The grimh^Jttalipn sleeps, .\i_ r
The while the eagle, screaming shrill,
Over their lone conch sweeps.
The drum is mute —ih e hugle’s strain
No moire 1 shall 5 wtike the Uiom-: • . f
We meekly bear the-gaUing chain
A tyrant ^e^o^. ^ 0 Q x '
The bayonet hath pinn’d us down
0 B^ide theirRonffrd graves ;
We kneel'and wem-the irpttcrdwh
• That galls -tha brow ofc slaves;
Sail waiting for the reveille, •> - ;
Seneat-diesRehtsod,-: r
The fresh .walls of our liberty
Lopk.np to our .nature's GoR;: rj .-•>
And groans come up from av’ry grave—
A^hSD 53R-yf, jmen," be frehj J. j: .
Cast off theilivfry ahthe decd& U w i V
Beat freedom’s ; reveillo !.’j- • Z t;7T \\
From the Bichmoud Enquirer.].
'AHWii
A YVi naerffil Man.
X
Geni Johh B. Magbudeb—A LogiCQe
TN THE BAP.BAfJgs'^S. AIuitAT^IN SeE
Field—A Vqtabt at the Shbine ;of
Nature—TheEnvxedoe Men—The
Adobed of Women. i _
This.old warrior sleeps the sleep ol
a soldier in a rude Texas grave, ..over
which there is' no nipnnment. The
grass was grbwing about it indhe early
summer, and there’were .some flowerh
there, withered and faded, scattered
by a woman’s hand. . A votary at The
shrine of nature and finMied dijdpsmt
at the court of Venus,- it was .fitting
that there sliould-be largesse of-, green
growing grasses and love ‘flowers.; If
roses are the tear-drops of angels, -as
the' beaufifiil Arab belief puts'forth in
poetry, then is this lowly mound a-hal-
]owed_sp0t,;and needs not The sctdpr
t-nred stone,.the.- fretted, column, : tlie
ivy and the.obelisk.
Magruder was a wonderful-man.
He stood six feet four inches Ligh,
and had ; a.form men envied and women
adored. His .'nerves' ! were all -iron;
Foreign travel and.comprehensive cub
hire had given to his. wit a .zest that
was always crisp nnd, sparkling... He
never lacerated. To The string 'of a
repartee he add.ed, the. lidney of the
clover.' He could fight' all.day and
dance all night. In the morning, a
glass of brandy and a strong cigar re
newed his strength'and. caused the cap
of his youth to run over with the pre
cious wine of health and high spirits.
He loved magnificent uniforms, mag
nificent horses, magnificent riders,
and magnificent women.
Gifted and graceful in conversation,
lie was a pet in the boudoir and a logi
cian in the the basraeks. He had
studied Freicb in Paris, Italian in
Rome, and Spanish* in the Halls of the
Monteznmas. The sabre exercise lie
learned from a Turk. His horseman
ship was of the English kind,, that ,is
to say, not graceful, but impossible to
be surpassed for firm riding and endu
rance. He wrote little love songs that
were set to music ; one of them “Im-
ogene,” had in it the plaintive melody
of a lover and the sad rhythm of burial
bugles.
oithjs'.epanletis—he had been made a ! IVhyRnlltidi Ran Away.
Captain?War wa5''&i§nelementj^the
bivouac hiu deliglit, and the battle his ;
pefTeet'happiness. Beadesf prodigal,; nferhial:
fashionable, foolishly brave sometimes. j vsill tell you why Bullock mnlflvny.
a spendthrift, generons, a true' .friend j He hadissned 'to S”L~Kimball and
4he
; The Farmer—A Beautiful Picture.
BX EON. EDWABD'EVERETT.
in his prime, and wrinkled his fea-
tnreg; which had-befortfafesisteja^®^
attacks of tima
One who wandered far and long
-awfeLttrra:' V-: *>*u; tita' i
sax?
shiny, weatheE- rdates howi from Vera
Cruz to. ^hg^ijltep.eCj .Re.. v[ent with
Magruder alT over’the'battle' fields of
tha Jlexie^itr .war,, The light came
back tuliis eyts,' and' the fire to his
face,, when?, hsllihg' of Gohtfera's' and
CherubuBctt.iand.Perote, and jVIoEHo
dellley, and the Belen Grate and Cha-
pnltepec,- and th’e City of Mexico. His
talk <sfes£aev«r-^ended of- S©otT?-and
Twiggs, "Wool and Worth, Smith and
Pillcgfe TeglogaBd;lG a itman, andVall
the young,. snbordinj,tes, 1 -who^iEhf-
wards played such bloody parts in
the greatest of American dramas. • Of
Mg^Bfignyta toldihi^ ineidSntJ^ong
a'tlioiisand G ’Tlie fire4j^)g.the Iiill jof
Chapidtepee-was terrible.'^Fifty pieces
of artSHgry was massed a§hinst" my
foor-gnn battery at point-blank.range,
mid in the' valey below a re^ment' bf
lancers were, forming .for.a chgrgei
Our fire had been slackened, and the
men were lying.down. A young matt
spft beside one. of. .the. guns amusing
himself Wi th picking up - pebbles an d
shooting them out from, his hand, .j Tjfpj
lancers : came nearer; I.:called', the
young officer whom Ihad noticed; fin'd'
he sprang np saluting, j “lYoarname ?’*
“Lientehau't George B. McClellan.”
“Very well, Lieutenant. Take eom-
maud of one of.these guns and disperse
those lancer^;” ; The ; gii^^ rtshed
altegec. -^ent To foiirij^.
were routed, and- tilo. next -,I saw ; of
Medpllan h" wfis 'smokingjivcigarrefto
in tlife patlaCe of ;&inta Anna, "his ffice
as black as'a-powder keg, and an ugly
wound.ifthia,ippn s ...
mn*** ■" ■ ■**"'
No
FUKNITUKE!
THOMAS WOOD,
Next to Lanier House, MACON, GA.
CARPETS,
MATTING,
WINDOW SHADES,
WALL PAPER, . . . - T.-.i
MATTRESSES,
FEATHERS,
SOFAS, .sw-hrsi-.s-n
SETTEES,
WARDROBES, -
BUREAUS, Em
A large Stcck of
PARLOR AND BEDROOM . SUITES,
: For-sale low for Cash.
- MACON, CA;,
jewklehs,
ElaafSrar ■
£
p\yn.p\e ite^srteatJs,
From $6.0ato.$10.00.
FISK’S PATENT METALLIC
BURIAL CASES & CASKETS
prices. Also Coffins in maho]
nwewood, oedar, and imifilti-
Spend Wisely.
"'Look most, to your spending,
matter what- comes in, if more goes ouf
you will always be poor. The- art is
uot in makigs- money, but in:;keeping
it; little expenses, like mice in a barn,
when they are many, make.great waste.
Hair by hair, heads get bald ; straw by
straw, the thatch goes off the cottage ;
and drop by drop, the rain comes into
the chamber. A barrel is soon empty,
if tbe tap leaks but a drop a minute.
When you mam to save, begin with
youi: mouththere are many thieves
down the red lane. Tho ale-jug is. a
great waste. In all other things keep
within cotopfiss; Never stretch yohr
leg farther than the blankets will reach,
or you will soon be cold. . In clothes,
choose suitable and lasting stuff, and
not’ tawdry fineries; - To - be warm is
the main thing ; never mind .the looks.
Hr the Crimea- he-astonished The
French officers by sleeping at the front
with' the chasseurs under fire. In
Mexico he sent back to the Archbishop
id.found.in his
palace when the city- was won;- and?
with it a note which read* “ It is pretty
enough to have belonged to a queen.
Would she have pardoned me if I bad
appropriated it ? ” As the Archbishop
sent-him-next-day a, basket of delicious -r
wiiiej it is supposed thafithe&i^ownex
ol the glove must have looked leniently
upon
the handsome American soldier.
Later, and he was riding with General
Scott down the long street of Iturbide.
General Garnett joined them and Ma
gruder drew hack a little for his supe
riors to confer together. A white puff
of smoke curled out from an open win
dow, a sudden report followed speedily,
and Garnett and horse fell hard and
bloody. An ounce ball, intended - for
Scott, bad broken Garnett’s tliigh and
iHllefl his charger. Fearing another
fire, Magruder galloped to the side of
his phipf and covered his body with
tonation. 1 ‘How long will it takeyon
to batter down that house ? ’’ he spoke
curdy to Lieutenant Magruder, point
ing with a swep of his finger tojhe one
nearest, and from which the bullet
An hoar by the watch, gene
the hands of some men !. He once im
tended, to write - an autobiography.
Whether it was begun or not, we do
not know—mest certainly it was never
finished. - ..— . .. .L- — - -: ?—i
The brave,- -fond heart ■ is pulseless
now.. The form of thestalwait soldigr
is dust in its far-a-way- grave. -The.
laurels that he-gathered and -wore..so.
well are-faded anil gone. Back fronV
the unknown land no voice will coma
to tell-of what rank he takes ? in the
specteil-columns, closed up-and-sileiit
waiting- the - resurrection- day.';- Yct-
God Seals gently- -with a soldier.—
When'heds-brave and noble and conr-
teousamd merciful,-he Las those .aftri-.
bates- whieh assimiiale heaven,- and
therefore is he foreordained to hapgi;
ncss--aftec death.. It may bo .late inj
coiningthe bivouacs are" right- col®
and dreaiy, .we know, for. %ome,_ but_
after the night the morning, aii<i;afte r
the jndginent .day the New Jerusalem.,
a wise, man to spend it. Remember,
it is easier to* build two chifimies -than
to keep one going. If you give all to
back nnd. board, there is nothing left
for theVavings bank. Fare hard and
work hard while yon are young, and
you have a chance
are old.
ther .woman
fn to 'Texfiignb
ingtom ~^e %ays' lie^^s a large,
white-looking old gentleman, with a
great tenderness for children. He
used to frequently take her upon his
knee, fold her smoothly down across
it, and spank he'r like fun. WeeSleem
the reminiscence a flickering, of the
old beldame’s expiring imagination.
The New. York Sun says ; “ Gov
ernor -Bullock is probably.correct when
he says that- the-people of Georgia who
desire his impeachment are opposed
to the re-election of General Grant-.
It is not strange that such should he
pleted. -JThe 'work is n
and theiState lias of •ebnrs&Beeh s£in-
died. -iSinfiatfran short offnlfiistoid
got?? ; the-* Sm^nor to ‘-the
amoiint-of ffonSs due him, 90 : flfat-he
could hf|)c}thecate .them.--'He 'ddlibS-
iterl them in New York 1 afid : detained
anfidvanfe Gf sixty cents-onThe'donSr?
When 1 the-finife came to : redeem 1 'fib
cbuldnot do if, and abThe'-Bb<fislatufe
was ah6utTo ; meet, they-wonldfiS; sArfi
to ? fib'earttf tSe^vhole thin^'^i^fenie
fciiig tut; law. vmeu xuurvpu aulicul,
Bullock made -frantic gf&yts-’tb' get up
the bonds anil Show that Kimball had
not -been- overpaid, ^-st'-heh-faUedt*
Some of thoibfsees of the’Stfitb Ro^
proposed tb fiefp him, --blit ; fiH : woal4
not cohsen't tofit when'they found die
amohht wns'solarge. This’lastj how - -
ever, is a-inJre'nimor, ■ 1 "
At all events'BtiBpCk'foiled to raise
the wind suffibierit-tb sfet/hftuself square
on thetfe8ord^ and went to NbW-RYork
to see - frhat; Be could do'- Thbrei ■ He-
had his-i-ea^iation and’ “ttddFess-itb
the peoiflef Jill prepared before he left
here, biitTb Tie kept secret nntil he
found Gut 'what he could do in' New
York.' He-failed to make any arrange
ments'there, find with certain impeach
ment staring- him in tlie -face -h fie-
cambback, lie let fly. his address afid
reSigjnfition-, find remains away,’ 1 ' •The-
conspiifiCy^against him-was-hOnb dthfcr
thfina ’deterffiinatibn to impeaclf him
if he had misappropriated the public
funds! 'if-tfiis could nof’fifive'-Sie'eh
prbVed a|;ainst him, and a clefir' -efise
mafie out,’fib would not have lieeti ifii 1 '-
peached. '
The ; -1l^nberacy of this Sfatbake-hot
anxious to iiJCxke a martyr of tetfllock;;
and the • majority of the Le^gislaTare.
are not the men to commit '.perjury^
remove an iniiocent manj'especialTf sb 1
when he has Only some twelve 1 mon&ifi-
to serve. Not two weeks ago? Bullock
told file that' the present Legislature’
was one of the best that had ever been;
electedun'Georgia; that they were eiU
pabie and honest, althougltDemoerat
io, and'miich : better representatives of
the people than the lust one; The
notion about a conspiracy against.him,'
and “another attempt at separation,”
not replace fiffiat lie wrongfully taken
from the treasury. THe fear Unit run
Bullock ; off was. a consciousness of
guilt. • '
Row .to make Rhchief.
! Loop your eyes on your neighbors
j Take earn;of them. Do not’let them]
The man who stands upon his own '■ stirVithout watching. They may do j cou bl remember so
something wrongri* you do. To he i R Lad lie
sure you never knew them to do any-years to reflect for
thing very bad, bat it may be on your! ' tvna f he had read ;ii
soil, whq.feels that by the laws of the
lapdjip whiefi-he .lives—by .the-laws of
civilized nations—he is the rightful
gfflBMolSaifctteitiMBg which he
tills, is bv the ednstitution of natifre,
upd^^i .^hglEg^qne ifl|nence v nQt easi-
Tj^^.imy.iaUhm? - source.
H^;^els 1 ,oth^ . thipgs being , eqtudj
more stapn^y ^h^n another,, the .char-;
acter of a man, as the.lord of the ani-
mafe worJtL Of tfim great' anfl 'ppwt
erfiil' sphere', which! fashioned by. the
hand of God anflngheldby his pow;er,
is roiling through the heavens, a. por
tion. is* his,; his from cehtrb lo sky.. , It
is the "space onj.wliich. ihe ^eneffitioh
ArqHirra GcdHfanofjrr?'
As a general t hing we read too much,
and think, about .what ariiJcaA-too-lit
tle, the consequence is, that most peo
ple that we meet know something, in
a superficial way about everything,
:md very little in a thorough way about
anything. Not a tenth part of what
is read is remembered for a month af
ter the book, newspaper, or magazine
is laid aside. Daniel iWebs.ter, who
hud a rich store of knowledge on al
most every subject of general interest,
on being asked how it was that he
aecurutetly, re-
i his habit for
by a viiible link, with‘those wfio pre
ceded him, as he is also tb those who
fcUpw-fiiin and to whom'he is to trans-
me. "Perhaps his farm lias
down to him from, his fathers.'
Theyiidve gone to their last-home;
biitffie canTifice tlieii hist -stejis oyer
thb : r sceifbs n bf’ his-dfiily labor. The
roof'that shelters him was feared.by
tfios’e ,,r tO t! wfitbin he bws' his being.'
Some interring’ domestic tradition' is
connected With evfify enclosure. ’The
favorite fruit tree wfis plafoted by" his
fatlgirlsihanid.. . .He sported in his boy-
hoqd beside, the brook, -which still
winds,thvoughthe'meadow; Through
theififtkl;lies the • path. to the village
school of earlier days.. j He still hears
fi¥jm. i his. ; iyi^dj9.Ty f v.oiqe oi, the ^ab-
baffi. bell which called.hjs jfore^thers
to the house of God,; and. near at hancL
is Jhe spot., where his parents laid
down to rest and where when his time
is come, he shall be laid, by his -chil
dren. These are the feelings .of the
owners, of the soil Words cannot
paint them, :gold cannot .buy them;
they flow out of the deepest .fruntains
of jfhe heart; they are the, fife, springs
of, a fresh,,’healthy and. generous na-
tipnai character... . .
account they have not. 'Perhaps if it
had not been foryonr kind care they
might -have disgraced themselves a
long time ago. Therefore’do not relax
any effcnT To fieep Them where- they
dsght-to be/ Never, mind yonr own
husiness—that- will take coresof -itself:
there.is,a man ii:issing albug—he is
looking over ihb fence—be suspicions
of him ; perhaps he contemplates, steal
ing, some of these dark ’ nightsT; there
is no knowing what queer fancies'Jib
may ha ve got into: hS head.
'If you find any symptoms of any
one passing out ofthe- path iof- duty,
tell every 6ne else whax you see, and
be particular and "see a great many.
It is a . good way; to circulate such
things, though it may not benefit your-
sffif or any one else particularly. Do
keep 'something goiug—silence is a
dreadful thing ; though it is said there
was silence-in heaven for the space of
half an fconf, do not- let sneh a thing
occur on earth ; it Would b8 too much
for this mundane ^sphere. 1
If, after all your watchful care,' yon
cannot'see anything out ofThe ; way -in
any one^ yon may be sure-it Is nbt be
cause they-have done anythifig bad : ;
perhaps in an unguarded ‘moment you
lost -sight of them—throw out fiibts
that they fire no- better 1 thifil: they
should be—that you should -not wonder
if The’ people found oht what theyyVerfi
after a while, then they may not carry
their heads so high. • Kbep it going,
and-some one may take - the hint and
begin and help it along after a while—
then there will be music, -and' every
thing will work like a charm;
Follow the above, directions and you
will be pretty sure to make plenty of
mischief. '-
Needle MAEKG'.^Thera.is,a needle
factqrylu.^ewHaypn^whera.Uie.yhole
process is done by a shigle machine,,
without the manual labor of any. per
son. A cqii of steel wire is put in,
the machine cuts it off at the required
leiigih’s,'it ^ts the steal pieces coaseor
utirpiy, punches tli'e eye-holes, coun
tersinks the eyes and grinds the point
—and in, fact floes every thing' until
the needles drop out completely form
ed. Another machine picks them up
and arranges’theni heads and points
together, and'a third piece of mechan-
them’ into- paper. One of’
ines occupies no more-space
than an ord inary table, and each of
them turns out from 30,000 to 40,000
needles a day. Most of the needles
were imported fropa England until a
few years past-.-. - •
Secretary Boutwell estimates the
national’debts of the world at $23,-
000,000,000. The New York Evening
Post takes issue" WitliGhifli, :fiufl ,says
they fife not over §20,030,000,000..
And what has the - world to show for
This'iilmost incomprehensible ■ indeb.U
edness 2- Where are the public im
provements that it has made 2 Where,
the ’magnificent charities and •endow
ments to literature and science that it
has founded 2 Not a dollar has been
spent in this way; or for a utilitarian
purpose.—-The 20,000,000,000 only rep
resent millions, of -lives lost, find the
destruction of ten times that amount
of property, in wars either for dynas
tic or for. territorial ambition.- Still
tbe people of the great civilized Slates).-
who alone have these debts, will be
burdened to the remotest generations
with their liquidation' many'times over
in the shape of interest, the principal
still standing- the same as- -ever- - - Shall-
thefolhesand wickednessof Kings and
Princes .and of nations in the -past-
condemn^, large portion of the huma.n
race to beggary and starvation in the
present, and for - all- fntnre .time to
come 2 These questions - force- Them-
selves upon every -mincl in- the’eontem-
plation of these hideous debts. In
Europe the flime will cqrfiejWhefl ;
mfloe wipei
t 0 r ; t \ha you : T«c : CkauipBn Monster Discovered.
A Boston dispfitch to the Herald, of
Sunday, from Lynn, Mass., says that
first beating his wife
a most fffiocking manner, and. .then
pDurmg'.kerqsene over fier and sfottaiig
herfon fire, ' She was literacy rofistefl
to death. Her body was still burniag-
when found, aad.preseated 1 a sicken
ing appearance. -There were marks of
violence on her heafl consisting of tyro.
or three cuts, looking as thou^i' r they
ment. On her breast were also wonm
which appeared to have ’been cans
by something beside the flam.es._.. Tb,?
features were rendered nnrecogizable,
. A : G)?and Reception.—The. recep-
qf the scion pf the . -Russian Imperial
ism in N? w York ift described'by the
World and Hexaid as -a magnificier.t
afiahv i TwenTj/rone regiments of the
National: Guards were.- in line, and'
escorted Alexis to ..the. helel, which had
been assigned as his residence while,
in. the. Metropolis. In . this building
apartments of oriental grandeur, res
plendent .with gold,and silver, silk and
damask, immense mirrors and hand
some paintings, had been fitted. up,
and" the Grand Duke probably thought
that American Republicans are jiot so
simple in their tastes as they are said
to be. 0f course he was interviewed
by all shoddyism and a shoal o; r report-
Sutcide xo Escape Bubning.—As il-
lnstratin'g the fierceness of the flames
in the recent; burning, of Peshtigo,
Wisconsin; and-.the terror into which
the-people wore thrown hv their ap
proach, one or two facts are given.
It took only about fifteen minutes’
time to envelppe ;.the three hnnflred
houses in the ,place. As the. torrent
of Sre approached there seemed to be
no escape from’it except death, and
many shot themselves 'to'avoid perish
ing in the flames. One case is record
ed where a German cut the throats -of
his wife and three children, as well as
his own, preferring this death to The
lingering torture of fire.
- r , -:
Eon Mothebs.—Send- your little
chiffiren to .bed happy.. Whatever
cares press, give it a warm good night
kis3 spa ..ir goes to, ifo-. pillow. The
Suppress the Bad.—A lady writer
prefaces a biographical notice of one
of her friends- with these pertinent and
suggestive remarks:
Would not this world be a better
world if tile Press gave more-space to
the record of virtue, and less to that of
vice 2 If, instead of police reports,
the sayings and doings of the vicious
and depraved, our papers brought us.
accounts of good deeds done, good,
words spoken, good lives lived, and
good holies of better words and deeds,
and lives in the great fntnre, would
they not furnish a better aliment to
the soul, while the body is refsesbed
by the morning and evening meals?
I think the answer is “yes,” and thaf-
we might as'well hope to form healthy
bodies by eating decayed food as heal-
tky sonls-by feeding on the garbage of
crime.
Georgia's Gbeai. Men.—The Mo
bile Tribune.pays the following tribute
to Georgia. It it richly deserved:
We have always looked upon Geor
gia as a great State and regarded her
sons as talented; brave and true, but
we have been ignorant'of the number
of great statesmen within her borders
until R ullock’irresign ation made it ap
parent that a Governor was to be elec
ted for the unexpired term. The
number of truly, great-, ahd eminent
ly good; and scrupulously lioneet, and
unselfishly patrioticstatesmen-tbought
to be so scarce in -these degenerate
times -who have been unearthed by
newspapers and correspondents, with
in the last two weeks is perfectly as
tounding .
Attitude of Napoleon.—Accord
ing to the Journal-de Paris, Napoleon
TTT, considers himself the legitimate
sovereign of France; consequently he
refuses to release from their oath
of fidelity the officers who have
written to lum to ask whether they
ought to place themselves at the dis
posal of the present government.
“Should a question arise, ” says he “be
tween order and anarchy, combat for
the former, bnt yon remain -bound by
yonr oath; until the moment that the
conntry is consulted; I am the legiti
mate sovereign.”
A man may ‘borrow money, steal
from a widow, discount his own whis
ky bill, “nip” a prayer book” from a
dying heathen, find have some chance-
of pardon; but when he -swindles a
facts and ideas worth 'remembering in
his mind. Any one who does this
wiU be snrpried to find bow retentive
his memory wiH become, and how
long after reading a book, or jm inter
esting article, the best portions thereof
will remain.
• doubting
be awfully
Y s6, and
There is not any room
that the coming winter i:
cold. The prophets all
the man is insane who • disputes the
prophets. They have found the moss
growing thick on the trees, frogs stan
ding oh their heads, sunflowers point:
ing towards the North Pole, grape
vines running around poles instead of
up them, and there sire a thousand
other signs to show that every-human
being will befrozen-as stiff as a chip
before February.
Congress, upon reassembling in De
cember, ;wi)t have before it seven hnn-
dred and fifty-nine bills winch were
pending at -the time of adjournment
Of these four: hundred and forty ire
in ; the -JlouSe.:awaitihg tha appoint
ment of the Committees for. reference,
A namber of'the bills’ are (similar in
character, seven of them being for" a
repeal Of the income tux. Ton land-
grab railroad bills are among the bills
pending.. -«♦*
As General Grant is shockingly ig
norant of the geography of his South
ern provinces, we would remind him
that Charleston,. Cohs connty, where
the three Radical negro mnrderers
were Ku-klnxod, hanged and burned,
to death, last week, is in the loyal
State of Iliinois, and, not in Georgia.
Wc call -i^is attention to this fact in
order that lie may pot deelnre martial
law in Georgia by mistake.
Punished. Fob Rudeness.'—John
Gribble. Secretary of a Total Absti
nence . Society, in London, charged
the Queen of England with getting
drunk; and is properly refused all hail
for want of his galkmtry and polite-'
ness. We have no'do'ahfc Gribbic was
drunk when he said it, bht that was
no excuse. '-S
Jim Fisk presented. Grand Duka
Alexis with the.- freedom of ‘1 all he
owned on the American .Continent
yesterday, including, - as, we snppose,
personal’ and real .property. li the
Duke.caiabeperwiaded.to take also all
that Jim is fairly entitled to, many
years would elapsp before Alexis would
see Russia again. , r . ... ...
The Hillsboro (N. C.) JReeorder says
that a traffic dealer in Charleston ad
vertised for chinquepins, and-a coon-
skin firm in. the mountains soon over
stocked tim. He wanted to write to
the firm to sfop, biit.coidfln't spell the
word to save liis hfd."' So he. jm;t got
mad and enclosed two'ctiinquepins in a
letter and told them “please don’t
send me any more, of these damn,
things.” (
A countryman, ’who’ visited' Green-"
ville Tenn., hadhis attentnin attracted
by the glittering sign' of the. -Vflfles In'-"
snrance Company. He. looked at it
longand iutenSy, "and then broke out
in a joyfnl exclamation : “ Well, I
knowed old Andy wonld be at some
thin’ aforelong; I tell ver, they caii’t
keep him down ; no, they can’t,” and
walked on;
The Baltimore American is advised,
that Reverdy Johnson is going to Co
lumbia. South Carolina, to defend the
Kn-klnx prisoners to be tried there at*
the November term of the United
States Circuit Court.' Mr! Johnson is '
a gentleman of eminent legal abilities 4
and possesses-’profound knowledge-of-
Constitutional Law. In the conduct >
of these Kn-klnx cases no hettc-r man •
conld be found. -
A lawyer prosecuting a thief recently
on 'circuit remi-ked that “opportunity',
makes the thief.” “ Not always, sir,'”
replied the innocent; “-1 found a big '
anchor and chain cable on the pave
ment once, and didn’t Touiih it, aiid
there was nobody about either.
F’3,
To cure dyspepsia, take a' new' axe, -
poor printer out of his bill, we tbinlr a w Hite liiekOTyr Handle in it, bore
tbt^evii-has'eueb a firm ; grip o n the a iole in the t oi tlie fifi the
mempyy, pi.tms, in the stormy yearn, seat of his pantaloons that repentance gnm Camphor, and.seal it :
that may be in store for the little one, forgiveness are wholly out of the Thprl fnVp the axe ant ( ctlt Cl
qu
will, be hke Bethlehem’s .star^ to the
bewildered shepherds.. “My father,
A negro member of tne Texas Leg-
foture was met upon the street with
r . ^ Lips parched with the world’s fever I a large roll of greenback
had been made with some dull instru- will become dewy again at the thrill of! looking fit his pile, an
• ~ ’ ’ ‘ ds, useful memories. Kiss yonr little! loud that he attracted * T
child before it goes to sleep. J a bystander,
\-iiapii to—f——«-•«>— — are you
Then take the axe and cut cord wood
until the heat of the handle dissolves
the camphor.
l : -“ Mhat j
at Jim?” Jim
SL. ^ . Tweed, Murphy & Co., stole about f replied : “You see that money!
and the hair was burned close to tlie twelve .milhons of dollars, and tIiej“Yes.” Well, bossi I just got that f
bought four or
who have recently been plundermi
the people of Georgia and South Car
olina are thoroughly identified with
those of Grant.”
.^StiAsa o r- a
• CJJLV.r-.'lGH H
'•■V, : C.«A'!*r r.-H-’i .
ji j'
* r-; :* 1 "•r','-" 5
V* !>,«* v* 1 ’ i '
range, and^leir^
another.”
. Jt was done, and |well done.
The best articles, ia, the market,' tli0se w ho saw Magruder soonest afte- j
.. ' war q s noticed that he had another bar t j
: Hr -
Tell your lady readers to mend their
tin pans with putty. It is very easily
me, and is much better than to
r ,-l L A
«nm>. and^ienve not one-stone-upo LW. - , aa st* this Reonb-
dropping from her hand:
body.
It is not strange head, lkiving the^'Skull bare^"and hqr-. Democratic officials and citizens of ; my vote. I'se been bought four or
thecase. The vfle raoble of. th.ev^ ^ b]aek flesh w;is Xew York at. once took steps to punish ! five times in my life, but dis is de fust
* I*™' recentlT been i- >m have, the principal- thieves [time I ever got de cash myself.”
i the road to Sing Sing. Governor-] ■***■
begun to .throw
riend and ideal—U.
’s : “I? places of
put up for
Govern-
•”
it Tennessee papers menhon the
• that the upper end of the Ala-
■
Scott and his aids stole thirty millions j The honor of being the richest man
- r- : r\ i: .1 ’ f .-m a nil in fn- I ' - tiir-,-1 llAS liptwCPIl Wll-
emor m J
by:. JflHj-■
dred. There appears to be
. within ten
and there is;
j side; let it dry thoroughly, and they
and'wifi never have to mend that place
I have them that I have used , the
1 still lively,
party in that State, where the Repnb
lican used to connt their majorities by
small says the Pittsburg. Post, is the differ- j of these gentlemen can t
ence between the two parties. - j millions what he is
not snpposed t ’
between them.
clium estimate of the wealth of either i mast as common in Bi-oadfray W
of The three. j used to be in Richmond, : ’ '
There were 567 cases of small
n-u thousands. The corpse is in Philadelphia List week, and
' ’ deaths froffi that disease.
It is estimated tl
thousand Souther:
New York city sine
difference : the Confederacy. Southern Gem
millions is a me-: Colonels, Majors atffl Capfains are
tire
-
■ - I ' ":W
{hX y-A
' --- -
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.... ....•..
' -
sir
*