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The Sports op^Fobtchk.—
» skittish and miscMerora* jHg|
lie proverbially delights to
‘ tricks on scurvy people. ' ri* ySB
Lvdmn iiisoknlem ludefe pertinax. N
To take up a boor from the gutter
;<1 pat him n u tlia throne, and then
ion a Siicldec transfer him to a pig
y. is a pleasant pastime. On this
:connt it is. that purple tyrants have
ich oread of the fickle arid potent
mie. \\ e have bail some recent in-
.mcos of her sportive freaks, Twelve
ontns ago Louis hspoleon was the
ost potent rul, r ia Europe. Ilis
uce made the nations quake. Now
■ is a refugee on foreign soil, and
me so poor as to do him reverence.
,vo monins ago, Tweed was omnip-
ent in hew York—swaying its des-
lies and dictating the policy of the
mm JOURNAL
PERRY. Wjm JANUARY 11. 1872.
MAR.'■'IIALY11AE IIGB 10 “ ^avi^A^-ram c a«C
i JL u8T*
^ O 33. O O 1 - HoLLY LoEGE. EtNSINGTON, [
„ . , London, Mav £3.ilfc‘57. 1
’ W. B. FL£_ EX,—Principal
: / : . - r. Henry S. Bauaaa, Jbsq.: „
ilalasiiAElvilde Ga., j j}-. iK g^-—y otl are surprised to
Jn*S?cta*.j lea™ that I have not a high opinion
eLe^ant and capacious 1-cA surpassed by | g M ^Scpf, and I am surprised
oue »i us aiaos iu couth w t-s. osorgia, just <xo»- ■ at your surprise. I am certain that I
itittid. a ixeaAtity looitidu; a and mural tiii; j
icty*akdfespenencedtcaciieiBman the-depart-' never wrote a iinfr, ; and tliat I never,
lciitb, invite a labeisi nLa^e Of'pnbnc i-atrouage:
Kol. CLarit s outlenberger, an accvmpiislied
lus.cmi aud successful teacher wili take charge
increase the distress. The distress
will produce fresh spoliation.
There is nothing to stay you. Your
Constitution is all sail and no anchor, take up the ann;
is I said before, when a society has tel, that
entered on this downward progress, i ous even'
either civilization or liberty must | was 1
perish. Either some Ccesar or Napo- dezv
Icon will seize the reins of govern
ment with a strong hand, or your
■public will be as fearfully plundered
hud laid waste by barbarians in the
twentieth century as
I pire was in the fifth; with this difier-
jSence, that the Huns and Yandals, who
[ravaged, the Soman- Empire,
; from without, and that your Huns
l and Yandals will have been engen
dered within your country, by your
own institutions.
. Thinking thus, of course I cannot
reckon Jefferson among the benefac
tors of mankind. 1 readily admit that
his intentions were g
ities considerable. Odious stories
have been circulated' about his pri
vate life, but I do not know ou what
evidence those stories rest; andl think
it probable they are false or monstrous
ly exaggcraicS. I have no doubt but
that I shall derive both pleasure and
information from ; our account of
him'.
I have the honor to be, dear sir,
your faithful servant,
T. B. Macaulay.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
quill-driver ought to
ais of the National Ho
ds in comic and seri-
For muuy, many years it
the headquarters and grand ren-
rous of political pumps, journalists
and prominent social actors and act-;
re- ) resses or past generations. The. vol
ume of register alone that must be ex
tant would be as valuable as patent
the Boman Em- j office reports, and interesting as those j
of the Agricultural Bureau. There j
was a time when Presidents elect went!
came | from the National to be inaugurated, !
| and lovely belles swept through the
| parlors captivating beaux known to the
Union-. The thought brings up one |
of the last named sort, whose entrance |
I to a ball-room was the ovation to a
j queen—a fair girl from the West, and
at whose feet the so-called statesmen
good and his'ablP of the day bowed in love thatapproach
ed adoration. .She married one of
these statesmen, and a rival belle, her
superior in wit, but not equal in beau
ty, said, commenting upon the event:
;-' “You wonder at the match because
you do not under-stand it.” "
“What do you-mean?”
“ I mean that she married one term
in the Senate.”
“What a small ambition—only six
years out of a lifetime.”
“Six years make up a woman’s so
cial life. After it is a living tomb in a
nurserv; and then she has her chan-
stand the judical inquiry into his con- ! u
duct. Like Bullock he is a fugitive ! T
from justice. May justice overtake ®
ihom both, and all others like them. u
Tweed's fall was* sudden and
great He wielded a huge, power. He: °
prostituted that power to evil. And : 11
surely his downfall came. It is not =
a part of the economy of Providence ;1
that evil shall forever triumph. Crime! “
carries its own penalties. They come 1*
inevitably. It may be sooner or later •
but they pome like destiny, eternally, *
irresistibly. M
Matters of crime rise out of all ad- e
ventitious surroundings. Tweed was j
a Democrat, so-called. His party [=f
spew him out. HisDemoeracy was sim- j ®
ply a tool for his interest. He ought 11
to have been a Radical. Radicals pro
teef their scamps. Democrats punish
theirs. This is the difference. It is
not. healthy for scamps to be Demo- 11
crats. s ‘
The power of the journalism has been ^
signally illustrated in the exposure j ®
of Tweed and his compeers in crime. e:
in ParffiEnehig in conversation, or,:
even on the-hustings—a place where |
it is the fashion to court the populace
—uttered a word indicating an opin
ion that .the supreme authority in a
State ought-to be intrusted to the ma
jority qf citizens told by the head; in
other words, to the poorest and most
ignorant part of S society. I have j
long been convinced- that institutions
purely Democratic must, sooner or |
later, destroy.liberty, or civilszatioriji
ocbolh. . - ■•-. ‘ , V
In Euro; e, where the population is
dense, the effect of such institutions
would be almost instantaneous. What
happened lately in France is an ex
ample. In ISIS a- pure Democracy
was established there. Dating a short
time there was reason to expect a gen
eral spoliation, a national bankruptcy,
a new partition of the soil* a maxi
mum of prices, a ruinous load of taxa
tion laid on the rich-for ,the. purpose
of supporting the poor in idleness.—
S ch x system would in twenty year,
h.-.ve made France as poor and bar
barous as France'of the Carloyingians.
Happily the danger was averted, and-
now there is a despotism, a silent trib
une, am enslaved press. . Liberty is
gone, but civilization has been saved.
I have not the smallest doubt that, if
we had a purely Democratic govern
ment here, the effect would be the
same. Either the poor would plun
der the rich, and civilization would
perish, or order and poverty would be
saved by a strong liiiiiiury government,
..nd liberty vow perish.
You may think that yom- country
enjoys an exemption from'these evils,
r win jjcuikly own to you that I am oi
a very different opihm. Your fate I
believe to be certain, though it is de-
i erred by a physical csvpe. As long
as you have a boundless extent ot
fertile end unoccupied hinds, your
ignoring population will be far more'
at ease, than the laboring population
of the Did World; and while that is
the case the J effersoniah policy may
continue to exist without causing any
u.tiU calamity. But the time wifi
come -amen Ki:w England will be as
■ Lucitiy peopled us Old England.-
ages' Will be as low, and win .fluctu
ate ■ s ludcJ vvitli you as vvitii us. You
.Will Have your Mancliestcrs and Bir-
lii.iighaius, and in tnose Manefieiaeis
..nu iiiiiniugliums hundreds of thpus-
uda o. artisans wiiiassuredly be some-.
: hues out of worii. . Ttien your insti;
tutioiik will be fairly brought io a
Cotton and Corn. Sweeps,
Notice to Debtors and Cbediiobs.
All p-rsqns inilebteii to the estate oi Br,
J. C. Marv.ej, late oi Housioii- county, u«--
ceased, are requested to make nniiiediaie
payment, anci Uiese having demaiiusiqiamst
me estate arc requested to present ihcm in
terms of the law. ivov. itj, 1671.
4<jES. H. LOW, Executor.
attorney at law,
PEP.BY, GEORGIA,
Window Olass ana ruit\
AT J. 0. GILBERT'S ' DRUG fiTOBE.'
dei-28-tf" "U.V
FOBT VALLEY’, GA.
ir, the place Jo bay PCEB unit Uis'AId
TLLAXLL y'lLiid
Organ.rCil Anarchy.
and sell-; Exciiauge^also Geld
' CyueCiions ni.tcle Til all aeces
“YTmtdo you mean by saying she
has her chances?” ’
“Did you never, read the story of
the .philosopher who undertook the dif
ficult task of making the Pasha’s don-'
key read tne written words of the
prophet.”
“Neverdid;tell me.”
“The philosopher, like all other
philosophers was poor. At times lie
was hungry, at all hours he was rag
ged. He offered the Pasha to teach
nis donkey to read in five years. But
during the difficult task he was to be
clothed in purple and fine linen, fed
on the best, and lodged in a palace.
If he failed the penalty, was death.-
One day an old friendmet him leading
forth the royal donkey to the grove
where tlie_lessons were supposed to be
given, and he said, “surely you do uot
expect that ass to read?” The philos-
opfier laid'his thumb on "his nose and
winked one oi. his learned eyes but,
said nothing. ‘But,’ continued the
friend, ‘if you fail at the end of five
years you will be surely strangled.
•My friend,’ responded the philoso
pher, ‘you forget that in that time tilt
ass may be dead.’ These are her
chances. The Senator Bmy die.”
The Capital
W. J. XKjj'caso:
\V. E. Beow.x.
The Pall Mall Gazette says:—The
intematiomdity of tiie International
has a very wide range of significance.
The fact that men- of the same class
can and. do combine for a common
objeet in England, France, Germany,
Spain, Italy, Belgium, cannot be
lightly regarded. An object common
to men oi one class 'in all countries
must be nearer the foundations of
society than questions of monarchical
or republican or communal rule, and
be at least capable of amassing a pro
digious amount of.force on its behalf.
W fiat this object is we may discover
in our own country without regard to
The work-
- -afe- ■ n-mzcroiw:
W. p 'Anderson,' Col. Hugh L. Denvmrl,
Win. B.' Brown, Dr. Wa. A. ila-Jiew«.
Dr. \V.. H. ullqlliugslioait '
TEICJS STBICTL'T CASH
Narrow Guage Railroad.—The
first narrow guage-railroad on this
Continent has been- completed and is
declared to be- successful, viz: from
Denver, City, Colorado, on the Rio
Grande, a distance of seventy six miles.
The track is three feet wide the rails
weigh thirty pounds to the yard, the
greatest curvature is six degrees to the
hundred feet, and the heaviest grade
seventy-five feet to the mile. The
building of the road and its equip
ment cost per mile 513,500, afid thi3
cost was enhanced by the expense of
transportation of materials from the
East. Such a road could be built at
niucli less /expense. The engines
cost from $7,'500, to #8,500. The pas
senger cars are seven feet wide, wi ll
double seats on -one side and single
s:ats on the' other.and can accomodate
thirty-five persons.—Savannah 1Ye:cs
wisg;&.solomoin t
MACON, GA.,
JEWELERS,
watoewobe:,
-ei sa. gf? art/ a s.j. s -
•v'19-3ia
FORT VALLEY, GA.
PL&ftSTEFSS’ WAREHOUSE
Insect Instinct.—A corresponuent
relates a touching instance of insect
instinct as follows:
“I found a cockroach struggling in
a bowl of water. I took half a peanut
shell for a boat. I put him into it
and gave him two wooden tooth-picks
for oars, and left him. The next
morning I visited him, and he had
put a piece of white cotton thread on
one of tfic. tooth-picks, and set the
tooth-pick up on one end as a signal
of distress. He had. a hair on the
other tooth-pick, and tiiere that cock
roach sat fishing.. The cockroach, ex
hausted, had fallen'asleep. The sight
incited me to tears. I never had to
c-hew leather to get a soul I iras
bom with one. I took that cockroach
out, gave him-a. spoonful of gruel, and
left. That animal lias never forgot
tlnst act of kindness, and now my
house ik chuck full of cockroaches.”
Euilding, will do a
the International Society,
ingmen in a mass are ceasing to care
for any part in the affairs of the
country as citizens; they are occupied
with their own grievances, their__owu
iotas a class. Their political powers
and social energies are entirely di
rected to those theories and those et-
for s that promise to give them, per
manent! , • a greater share of the
world s goods, no matter at whose
cost. They are busy, and very busy,
about reconsideration of property in
laud; in schemes for overthrowing the
tyranny of capital; in combinations
for lightening labor, and forcing a
higher ra. eol wages; in protest against
taxes for privileged persons, and the
like. These thoughts largely animate
tens of thousands of men to whom
the International is little more thuB a
name. But they are pursuing exactly
the same ends as that association, and
the object of the society is to or
ganize this mass of striving discon
tent, and associate it in one vast liar
munious force with the'whole body of
similar effort and aspiration through
out Europe.
Warehouse and Commission Busiat:
Of every description repaired nr rsmodeitu.
Rcpairi.ij of Soaring X&wMncs,-
and' all eInds or?
BRASS, .
STEEL,
GOP?ER,
LIGHT niON,
BRI.TTANIA, or
... ' -1.-ALYLI:\YA11L,
Done with nearness ami-ffispalch.
How the Body op a Drowned Mas
■was Recovered.—Last week a man
fell into the Detroit river and was
drowned. Next day - attempts -were
made to find: the body with grappling
hooks. While the men were thus en- -
gaged, a bnyer of junk-stuff, -named
David Bepito, an
Ilia End oi A Murderer,
Last Sabbath a mim named Henry
Smith, aged about seventy years, diet;
rroih esqiosrire and cold in Sand Hill
township, Marshall county, Ya. Hi
history is sirange-and interesting, and
shows that man can live in a state of
nature as well as the beasts of tlie field.
For more than twenty years .lie' liven
in the open air, without a roof to shel
ter him from the storm. He was-a
man oi weak mind and'possessed a, vio
lent and ungovernable temper About
thirty-eight years ago, while in a grog
shop in this city, he quarrelled with a
man, named Joseph Nevit, and during
the affray he stabbed him. Thewounu
proved fatal, and for the crime of .mur
der Smith was sentenced to the pen
itentiary ior sixteen years, at the close
or his term of confinement he desired
bat his
' LLti-essH vt iywlHre makes the la
borer muiinuus am; discoutented, and
ojcfiiies jam to listen with eagerness
to agitators who tell him that it is a
monstrous iniquity that one man
should have a million while anotfier
vannot get full meal. In bad years
there is plenty oi grumbling here, and
sometimes a little rioting. But it
mutters.tittle. For here the sufferers
-le not the rulers. Thesupreme pow
er is in the hands-'Of a class, not nu-
m.uous indeed; : but select, of an edu-
cutod class, of a class which is anti
jiiloWe itself to be deeply interested in
•fie aeeuiity ol property and the.main-
•onaiice oi order. Accordingly the
malcontents are firmly, yet geniiy re-
suameii. The bud uufe is got oyer
Without robbing tlie wealthy to re
lieve the indigent, ihe springs oi
ualiona. prosptrity will soon begin to
dow agaiii; work is plenth'ni,-wages
ijse,. and ail is tiuiiqum.j' and -cheer-,
jiuness. - .
I have teen England'^uss three or
lout times through such critical seasons
as I have - described.. Through such
seasons the Dmted States wiil.have to
pass in the course of the next century,
u nbt oi this- How will yon pass
through them? 1 lieartiiy wish you a
good.- deliverance. But my reason
laid my wishes are at War, and T can
not huip lorebodiug ihe worst. It is
Italian, who'happen
ed to be passing np the docks,. watch
ed them for a while, and-then asserted
-hat he knew of something that would
load to the speedy grappling upmf the j
body. He proposed to get . a loaf of j
baker’s bread, put some quicksilver in j
me end, and, seriously _assserted that
on being thrown into the water it
would-float to a point directly over
the body, and then stand still. He
was Looted at and told to go about |
his junk buying, not a man - believing j
m,the old woman’s whim, as they
termed if. Bepito wqnt away, but re-
turned in a little while, and threw a j
Thira' >SC
Mi-. Lewis has presented in the -ea-
I'atc a petition from Jfichard H, Garrett,
j of Caroline county, Virginia, asking
compensation to the amount oi »-»
525 for his barn and goods destroyed
by Colonel Baker-to effect the capture
of John V/ilkes Booth andD.,0. Har
old, 1355. . Booth and Harold,.it vnll
be remembered were concealed in (hr-
| rett’s barn, and it was-destroyed by fire
I in..order to get them.
MACON, GEORGIA.
PIANOS,
Have u.. .a , , . .n-t. .
moats .u .’.J- ai. --
invito ‘ -' a .■ ■■
v,i oai-thi a ii- their,*
class store.'tc ;i
tsemeerves to sill at tlie
A SewsBaper of tie Present TImoa.
Intcadad fcr.Pceplo Sow os Eartlr.
Inclttdlng jrarnierB, Mcchsnles, .Uerchonte, Pro,
lesaiona! Stun, Workers. Thinkers, ami ah'ilo •
nor of-Honest Folks, auij tho Wives, Hons, an)
laoshters of all sactn
DSi.r ONE DOX.Ij.AE, a SEAR !
ONE HUNDRED COPIES EOS 330,
Sr Ies3 than One Cent a Copy. Let there bo a
S50 Cmb at every Poet Office.
‘You h.
but is that any reason why you should
do so? No such thing, gentlemen.—
You may bring the prisoner in “guil
ty,” the ln.ngifian may do liis duly,
but wiil that exonerate you? No such
tiling.- Iu that, case you will; all be
murderers. -\Vho among you is. pre
pared for the brand of Cain tb be
stamjjed oh-his brow to-day? Who,
freemen, who in this land of liberty
and Ught? Gentlemen; I will pledge
my word that not one of you has a
bowie"knife or a pistol in his pocket.
No, gentlemen, your pockets are odor
iferous with the perfuides of cigar
cases and tobacco of rectitude, in the
pipe of a peaceful conscience; but:
bang my .unfortunate client, and the
.scaly alligators of -remorse will gallop
through theinteriial pfrineiples of ani
mal'vertebral until the spinal anatom-1
ieaL construe jion is turned -into a rail- |
road for the grim and gory goblins of j
.despair.
It is needless to say Ms client was |
acquitted.
lo remam in prison, but hi3 request
was refused. For many yeara : he re
mained at the root oi a fallen tree, and
subsisted on What was given him - by
the charitable. When hungry be
gfeediiy devoured raw meat and vege
tables.- W'iien ciotniug'was given him
ne tore it into fragments, preferring
to be ciotifed in flituy rags rather than
in decent Clean appareL He had Sunk;
even below die; level of the-brutes.
Two years ago Ms neighbors built "him
a comfortable hut, -bat in a short time
he had used it for fueL Afterward he
'rived m an open field ''without any
protection from the inclemency of the
weather. During the severe cold oi
fast week he was round lying in a heap
of ashes ,wim his hands anddeet fro
zen. _ He lingered a few days in great
misery nnt3 death- came to his relief
and ended his . sufferings-.— Wheeling
luleatyenorr.
Either at their old stand,
Uicir new stove, CG Tiiiid
So. 3 Cotlon Avenue, •
i?t. iiuVjti-Gm
SE3II.W3E2SSI4X; STD11, $3 Jl YSAS,.
of the Bama size ana jrencml character - cy
,THS WEESLY, bitt -vritli u greater variety c i
mlBcolIaneous rcaduia, a :d: fiirnLMas tho n?Trx‘
to it3 sncseribeis vritb prcaierfrasli-iess. bccausQ
.* t conies twice a \7eck instead of unco only.
' THS BALLX SlN/03 a -YEAS,
A preeminentlv readable r^wspsper. with t^o
lames(■ circulation m cbo world, 'free; irnlc*
DO’ident, and learlesB in-p6Utics. All tbs new,
from everywhere. Twa cenrs a copy; by nr:dl,
50 cents u month, or §0 a j-w-r.
TL NT4 cDHSTiTUYrO^,
Gibbon, the Hktoeian.—One m
the drollest occurrences in the Sanaa
of gallantry is related of Gibbon, tne
historian, who was short m stature
and very fat. One day, being alone
with tlie beautiful Madame de Cron-
zas, lie dropped.to his knees before
her, and made a declaration - love
in the most pas3i.m:iie terms. The
astonish, d lady rc-j.-ca.-d Ms s,n ‘> ‘ in(i
requested him to rise. The abashed
historian . remained ou a:;, nu'.-es. -
“Rise, Mr. Gibbon, I L ' -i-ch yo^_
rise.” “Alas, madame,” fal.-.red^tur,
unlucky lover, “I cannot. ri
too fat to regran his leet wire <ut as
dic bell,’ and sail to her servant: “Lift
TERMS TO CrOSS.
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MOitroi' the -uol%-s oif tTie 7 >tate Oovermaort.
Auiifasna i'ulijrfeports oa Xie^fafiy^• Ftoucediagr.
(1 uj tne. bUh.chu: Court, t-xc' iiepoitci o
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tfon. 'i-'ulr icpoits g.ven oi tne niecCiifeS ui tiic
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-Ajii meet.
Its Costespoailcnc3 Dopiirtme-Lt
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enta iu the United Stutcs and Lurt^e is iar^e, La.\ -
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Uuxied btates Congress, xne ninnsiitd by a Spe
c.ai tVaslungton Correspondeut. For tHe beneut
of Lady Leaders, the celebrated •• Jennie l-c:. :
has been exuployed, and seuds moutuiy ifLu
Letters from Kew Yorb.
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KPost Offlra orders, checks, or drafts on-'-’-v
York, wherever c rnvealent. ir dot 11,,
Hie letters coataloiag mosey. AadlUr V”
)■ W. ENULA-N-r*, PnO'iiher
ban mate. Nov/ Yoril City.
A deinure-Iooking chap hailed a
charcoal peddler with "the query:
••Have \eu gui cii-iceei iu your
wagon?” “aTs, sir,”-said the expaei-
itni uiaver, stop plug his hyraca. • n
right-,”, observed tlie dciuure efiap,
wirh an approving nou; “always tail
tne trutn and pcopio wifi respcciyou!”
And fie hurried on, much to the re
gret- of ihe peddler, wno was getting
out of the wagon to look for a brick.
dinner. Will choose a Legislature. Is One Ire Dofiirit n.'<te.
it pobbiyio to douh. what sort oi Leg- Tlie carnival of roguery in the
isLtufe Wul he ehooben? South is winding up. Une by one
On one side is a statesman preach- the carpet-bag and domestic scamps of
nig patience, respect for vested rights, the Radical r.girne are, in 'classic
strict observance ox uubiic faith. On j phraseology “playing out.”
the other is a demagogue ranting | One Hrzyzanowski, who has weeded
about'tiie tyranny of capitalists aud j a very • wide row in Savannah, as a
usuiqiera-, and asking wfiy anybody j Radical Revenue Supervisor, has fied.
siiuuidbe permitted to drink cluuu-; HepOfexed people and government—
pugne and to nde in a carriage, while | He was siick-tongued and smooth-
tuousuiuls oi honest folks are ia want j mannered. . Gunning to have been a
01 necessaries. YvMeh ox the two ; Polish exile, he rtssumedyiatriotism as
candidates is likely to be preferred by ! ids special virtue, and stole everything
a worumg 111..11 wno hears ehioiren cry
for mure, [bread? " 1 seriously appre-
nend th.ii you will, in some season oi
adversity ns T have dtsenbe, do things
which will prevent prosperity from re
turning: that yon wdl net ufcs people
would in u enr of scarcity, devoid" aii
make the
ind th
sound ia
much 01 a smoker.
I-.-rili-f, Xnteisture, and other topics, from
jcufn^iiiaths ot the coaati-Y-.. ^
v»re ^..ct.ti.Uca is" kaovia prvanuiaently for
its aaccasiiia exposure of tne corruptions oi tlie
radical visty in OeOTlha. add fer v.-a^ui^ eieep-
*'■> . -ivar cpoi. the enemies of tiie pc -plc and tne
stale, loiushiu and rdtefij- repndTLng cfic.n
ictrocage.riiil throv.ms itself far support sojeiy
01*011 tiie people.
v.‘. .y. HkVp, -1 j.md E. Y. Cr.-r.::::. Froprietois.
i. W. jvuii, hjC £. Y. cl_ildfj:.i'oht;cajhd.tOjS.
'.i. A. Hewhiu; j.usa;css .unoa-er.
We aisj have News and Localkthtors. '
CHATTEIiBOX
TLIBERAL DISCOCN2"
To Teachers, and ihe Trade generally
now nripre
idelphia. the victin
zaimt 5C2 in No-
in Brown county,
ive died, and the
lint is tne ciihereiiee between a
coat and a baby ? The one I wear
and the other I was.
Yv’hy is a new born babe like the re
lief oi' Lucknow? Because it’s the
long expected sucker;
Why do they “do up” so much more
of pears peaches and small fruits now
than formerly? Why, because they
can. •"
Lition.
He has fied, and several unsophisti
cated individuals who were green
enough to go on his bond, now moan
in prospective impeenniosity.
There wiil be,. I j So mote it be.—Atlanta Constitu-
The spoliation wiil; lion.
In Brooklyn and New York the
havoc is very great.
Certainly thorough precautions
should l>e taken to prevent its coming
here. Everybody should be vaccina
ted with pura.. matter.
"Each number contains 32 printod paves,:
illustrated with ten ftdi-ia„e and a acini
smaller BEAUTn’ULLV EXtCUTEp Wool,'.
The printing is in that style whic-h is so attr.
to ctnidicn, ana witich has made seveiai X.I
mjgaz.ucs, and the cLatterboy in na t cular
favor tes v.it'i clnldrcn. ihrrv el.to a year.
Aedress POIT A- A'Xldd
5 and 13 Cooper Union. New V,
the seed corn,
next year a year
absolute famine
fear, spoliation.
rose from whom
a leaf—ihe thorns
future fiusbaiid.
(rhj-ce nomas,).
“ (one
ELKIA'. (Per Amiinii,).
81 Mulberry St.,