People's friend. (Rome, Ga.) 1873-18??, March 15, 1873, Image 7

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A. Noble Boy. * Two boys were in a school-room alone to gether, when some tire-works, contrary to the master’s express prohibition, exploded. The one boy denied it; the other, Bonnie Christie, would neither admit nor deny it, and whs severely flogged for his obstinacy. When the boy got alone again: “Why didn’t you deny it?” the real de linquent asked. “Because there were only we two, and on. of us must have lied,” said Bonnie. “Then why not say I did it?” “Because you said you didn’t, and I * would spare the liar.” The. boys heart melted—Bonnie’s moral gallantry subdued him. When school resumed, the young rogue mulched up to the master’s desk and said, “please, sir, I can’t be a liar. I let off the squibbs,” and burst into tears. The master’s eye glistened on tbe self aes-u-er, and the merited punishment he hn J inflicted on his schoolmate smote hie c "'“••ieiice. Before the whole school, hand in hand wth the culprit, as if they paired in ; e confession, the muster walked down to ’..here Christie sat, and raid aloud with cr- otion: “Bonn!-, Bonnie, lad —lie and I Leg your pardon, we are both to blame.” < he school was bushed and still, as older schools are apt to he when anyting tme u~ ' r.otilc is beinsr done—so still, they im./ut have )<e<»r»i Bonnie’s big boy tear di< ;> proudly on Li> copy Look, as be sat enjoying the u»»r* I triumph which enlxlued L~. as well . s the rest; and when, fur want O ! -otuethi "g d e to say, he gently cried — “Mrnaer, loievi.i 1” the glorious shout of thv -rholnrs lil'rd the man’s ryes with so” <ohiUg behind his spectacles, which m.itr’ I,'m wipe them before he resumed the chair. S ■•ciety is full of failures that never hav Im-. )■ made ; full of men who have «ever sue ceded, wlvn they might ana should have .succeeded ; full of women, who, in th'- find half of their days did nothing bat en »nd sleep and simper, and in the lust hat hare done nothing bat perpetuate then follies and weakness. The world is full, I say, of such people, full oF men in . Cvt r\ trade and profession who do not i H i.Giiikl tw anything, ami of girls and wo rn who have no desire to mu innt to any thin-- ; and I do nut speak irreverently, ’ ami I ti u. t not without making due allow ance for the irieviinblr in life, when I say th d (Lid hih. thoughtful men am weary of their pn-encc. Everybody ought to inj-I p vc <>u Ida father, every girl grown into | a nnhler, gentler, more self-denying wo inuihood than the *jother. No re produc ts.i us former type will give the world a j pi iii-r.t type. I know not where the mil- Jeni'iiji is, as measure^ bj; •U'-tance of time; bin 1 do know, uHd so do you it is a great way off us measured by UumtiiJ g owtn and cspan ion. V.’e have no such men nnd women yet —no iHtc lifts ever had any as shall stand on earth in that age of pe. u (hut will not. conic until men are wor- lby ot it. ’* • »O« Tin- l.vri- N inu.i'cv s t ovriiTv. TH iinpvriitl iniutlx Hl i'iiixc’l• urs 1 . have un in—urn of 412.1MHL nyeiT. The Span ish estaf. a umlprividr prop-ity <>* ilo- Empress uro worth X’fi.fKK) i. veur, au i the sale of her >li;mi<>btl* jewelrv and pi< fines produced about £I2tUH)W. Tim Emperor had hardly any iueoiac of bis own. He nii/ht huve etirbdied Innisulf, him! beqi’er.thed ,-t ruDo’*’:il fortum- to his wife and son, lull if la •lid not disdidu l.< «■.-id.'inp’ ./. ■ flu oa«- ' nihility of (li-lit or exi’.i ho ».’l;dl;'v llo.p, . t< d I-- t- k< p’Xe. .It , the future, which, judpi . afi< . ,ir< cient. i. > oiu v>i u!.l io a. ; • .: \ to have been v.nv we. N >.p» w-i ton! to enrich other.*. lit received lil’jn*Mims 1 ->m the i'rcnt'h T-’«MtNH’’\ l> " ->’l |h<- ’» >nev »w>t c] t o t-t ’»v stair' nr ...... «... pi ... wnl>s-riptionst » :-* evdhm publi. ol met--. ■- - \ >t O ll.'O. V 01.o 1 . »l . It !-«■ i-’rsegr n . > i.f: n- d. ’ • s'i -nl I‘ • i--» '• | ■ t•• '■' • ■•-v -o <-• -v R>. I tin. ~ ■, .... .« V* » • Vlih Ml fin t wh-. thev»<—m- > » "‘hs’Wrnoot C m’i->-'-« (o t.~ pi .•, s’-f \’* »-¥sh iW lo>W .. a 1 vw> up'-leci- R’e the r r -V or e’.i- tniuer angel*.' fl »•.> art* o> t ti »<<i to lw w<>- t: n . t. v. r where w? should i< i. I. h. . US. It WOUKII arete .■ - J t i to, it is our duly to be Ih .I, i. \\ c 11«.<»• i. I : u..» , u«. i 11.e t I : n : n't erii.c t' to t>y a J::: t- l / • - 4. . • • ' . ' 1<• II J l «•- u.s r ~I A .tH ..udifdw. it no: io- for the u. st |ait, few of uh a ''viiitu t an mm • partners, our associates on occasion, we ad mit our inferiority and our fear lest they should know of us what we know of our selves. We have not advanced so far be yond baronial barbarism and Eastern indul gences as we would fain believe, while we hold our wives and daughters in the prisons of ignorance and the seraglios of restraint. It is not consideration for women that induces us to keep them in the border-land of acquaintance with our real lives. It is consideration for ourselves ; it is supreme selfishness ;it is engrossing egotism. We shrink from the thought that the gentler : and purer beings who love us, and whom ! •we love —when we have naught else to do— ■ i should have a perfect understauding, a ; ‘ eleer revelation of what we are. It is an ! ; article of our social creed that they prefer ‘ ’ pleasant illusions to disagreeable facts.— i I This is not without its verity; but it evin- • | ees the false education of women, and one * I of their weaknesses that should be removed- | i Tn this age we live, or ought to live, above • I everything else, for truth. Whatever leads i I thereto should be followed, though the fol- * ' lowing dispel every deception which, from . the first, has been our most grateful food. ■ ; The men are precious few who would be j : willing their lives should be unrolled pano- : ! rutna-like before their nearest and dearest ■ feminine friends. The things that they are I vain of, even to boasting, they would hide j from their wives or mother at imminent i ! peril to themselves. The worship most of ! • us receive is a species of fetishism offered 1 under the delusion that the idol is far more 1 I than it seems ; that it possesses powers of ; i infliierum; linking it to the divine. Trans- ■ 1 parent as we may be to our own sex, we are ■ ! opaque to tho opposite. Genuine to the i i one, we are shams to the other, and wc ex- I I ereise continnal care that we shall continue ; lunch, in respect, esteem, admiration and ■ j affection, we are actually obtainers of goods ; i under false pretenses, and are amendable ; i to a spiritual law which we always evade. Is it flattering to our manhood, to our sense j of integrity, to know that to those we rev- ■ eretico mo*t we are miserable fictions and j . Hiiimate.d lies7 —“ W<ni»rn«u< • 1 hy JtfHtuJt Henri Brmtm, tn Erijrneury Gal~ ■ , J \ An Inebriate Asylum. 1 We Hie o’enMed to observe the move- i '■ luent luade in the Legislature toward entabluihing an institution us this kind ■ in »rgia, and We hope to see it be- • i come a reality as soon as practicable. ■ , Them*, can be no question either of its -• i urgent need or the immense benefit I I that will follow its establishment. The I statistics cf similar institutions in other States show such gratifying re sults in reclaiming inebriates that ; there is no argument on Hint head. There can be no question that inebriety, in many cases, is as much a specific, disease us any other, and that its successful treatment is entirely within the power of kkiH and judgment. ’ There are hundreds of men in Georgia ♦o-day hastening downward to prema- • Liat- graves, who might lx- sieved to s-icieiv and themselves for venrs of u t ful labor by the treatment and dis i n..”nu <»f such an institution. \\ e. idiserve a strong article on this ’ subject in the Rome Courier, from a corrcsiMuident who signs himself ! "Romulus." and who suggests that an ‘ nsyliun Im- establ’slhxl st Marietta, the State :n preprinting or $fiU,tXX) • f r the purpose, which "Bomuhiß” thinks will Lay the ground, put up ull ' ii.,;sary buildings and prepare them I f hr i\ ci.pLlou of patient*. He fur- I tl r suggt sts that the word “inebriate” 1 i.eL-y i’i < anti the qiv-Htion decided by .i jury under oath, and that 1 wui k>hop> of ei.iy description be pro- \ idrd. iu order that the State patients < iiihv viisoit-.i to Uain a trad*-. a* .» the < \l e!IM of k»S j.uig lip the llisli i.it'. -i.. h< siiggesu tout a tax o( such n jH'i ceiiL us, with the product of the l ib 'r »'f the ; ninnh*. will b< xuftfrient t-> maxe it sea-susiainiug, ln» levied u u,4tn n't th- -l. r.b.K in -v in th«- State. I- , v be r-» u .rr nn unpropi- ; ,1 . ..... .. ... if «. ’Hlblic pond •” Hu* o’’«*Mi<h' on -i'count of tt.e mon- y appropriation rv-.piisite to out u in p-riu ticv. but it run do no • ■ ■ «d.| A Qi kKK C *."...u -Tln- J S. ‘ ;.'in,. . f ; - ja. ...g .. ’ ret' -t tor th no 'vc'. Thre- t rces u ' \e»i «prt-w-l ■< roiitl !•«•«,-ie »l»«- grav<' . I tia.i ucp-rteu friend.*, and, alter a litlic ...mi. .'uu in and eat it theiuselve*. Ch. a r< c-'' i- of this kind forty ex pre.-w wagon* were employed in tnuwport ing hog>..ciiickeu«, rice and iiqoor to the ’ ivmetery, and over one buodrvd wagoM > ' ifi HV4MMM* * A Model Newspaper. THE SAVANNAH DAILY NEWS. The Savankah Daily Moknin« News i» acknowledged by the press and peopfe to be the best daily paper sooth of Louisville and east of New Orleans. Carrying with it the prestige and reliability of age., it has al! the vigor and vitality of youth, and its enterprise as a gatherer of the latest and f reshest news has astonished its contempo raries and met the warm approbation of the public. During the year 1873 no expense of time labor and money will be spared to keep the ■ Morning News ahead of all competitors in ■ Georgia journalism, and to deserve the flat- I taring encomiums heaped upon it from all ! quarters. There has, as yet, been no seri ; ous attempt made to rival the special tele ; grams which the News inaugurated some ■ years ago, and the consequence is that the i rtader in search of the latest intelligence i always looks to the Morning News. The ' telegraphic arrangements of the paper are such that the omissions made by the gen ; eral press reports are promptly and reliably j supplied by ir4 special correspondents. The Morning News has lately been en larged to a ♦ hirty-six column paper and this broad scope of type embraces daily every* thing of interest thut Iranjmjres in the do main of Literature, Art, defence, Politics, Religiau and General Intelligence ; giving to the reader more and better digested mat ter than any other paper in the State. It is, perhaps, needless to speak of the politics of the Morning News’ For years and years—indeed since its establishment — ■ it has been a representative Southern pa per and from that time to the present in all conjuncture it has consistently and per- I sistenily . maintained Democratic States I Rights principles, and labored with an ar- I dor and devotion that know no abatement, j to promote and preserve the interests and i honor of the South. The special features of the Morning News will be retained and improved upon during the ensuing year and several r.ew attractions will be added. The Georgia news items, with their quaint and pleasant burner, and the epi- I tome of Florida affairs wilt be continued i during the year. The local department ’ will be, as ft has beeu fur the past year, i the most eoinplete and reliable to be found j in any Savannah paper, and the commer- I ciul columns will be full and accurate. The price of the Daily is SIO.OO per an- : nmu; $.5.00 for six mouths; $2.50 for; three months ; for one month- ♦ I The Tri-Weekly News. This edition of the Morning News is cs- ! peeially reeoinmended to those who have : not tho facilities of a daily mail. Every-; thing that has been said in the foregoing j in regard to the daily edition may Im re- I peated of the Tri-Weekly. It is made up ‘ with graat care and contains the latest dis- } patches and market reports. The price of ! this edition i« $6.00 per annum, $3.00 for • six months and $1.50 for The Weekly Ne'Mb. : The Weekly Morning News particularly ! recommends itself to the fanner and plan- ; ter and to those who live off the lines of ’ railroad. It is o eof the best family pa-I Eern in the country and its eheanness ' rings i t wrtbin the reach of all. It eon- 1 tains thirty-six solid columns of reading matter and is mailed so a« to reach sub scribers with the utmost promptness. It is a carefully and laboriously edited com pendium ot the nows of the week, and con- ' tains in addition an infinite variety of other choice reading matter’ Editorial* on all topiat. sketches us ineu, manners and fash ions, talcs, puelry, biography, pungent paragraphs and condensed telegrams enter into it-, make up. It contains the latest teferraphte dispatches and market report* up to the hour of going to press, and is in all respects an indispenriblc adjunct io every home. Price—One year $2.00; six months $!.- . 00 ; three months, 50 cents. 1 iSubrciiptions for either edition of the Morning News may be sent by express at the risk snd expense of the proprietor. Ad dress J. H. ESTKLL, Savannah. Ga. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. Western and Atlantic Railroad Company. Atlanta. Ga., Jvme 30, 1872. Os Nhl s/t»r ifci* Wtuvrav HiraiM, ‘'-'-B’-’—Vaf Mr Krw York acd W«wt. Leaves At’anta 9.30 P M. Arrives at IHltoo. 3.02 A M. ChattaiKxrfw 5.23 “ r« iut Senn -aS Wrti. earninc Paia, c i • Jjeaves Atlanta.---.. 8.30 A. M Arrives st DnH’WJ 2.01 P M. •• Chattanooga 4.5* •• . rwmmr*** L*nn< Ai«am> I r-HirKr in Rew U>« e«vud aUerutxw al CH r. a. 1-4 Hour* anil UA Mmeataw *«> U-1‘ Fa— .ravinf by ixw evealMf. Leaves Atlanta 4.15 P. Id. Arrives ai Daltuu 9.47 P. M. eocraaaa Kisaaae. I Paeaee Cuj Irc-ta Lenuerwe K»nS S«l. • 1/Mves Cbaicanouita. 4 45 P M. ■ Arrives M Atlanta 12.45 AM. I--T PtMtaaaa Taeis, Kaet Hm Nena ex>4 Wert. leaves Chattanooga, 5.45 A. M. Arrive* at Atlanta,. A 1.45 r. M. Ac< Ta*ia, Loaves Dalton... 12.45 A M. Arrives at Atlanta, 9.50 A.M. * *• ptwmmm Virginia TONIC OIL FOR THE HAIR! i j For Bcavtifying"aad Preserving tfte Hair and rendering it Soft ahd (jlosty. USED AS A DRESSER, twice a week, or daily, and it promotes the row h, remove* the (Lndn-fi, ku f. r-c Will always prompt the hair to its growth, when falling out- Warranted from Injurious Substance. I Prepared only by W. B. Fenner, Pharmaceutist, ROME, Ga. i W. D. HOYT & CO., Sole Agts. ; For Burns, Erysipelas and inflamed sores : use Fenner’s Soothing Ointment, it will. : cure a hum in from 3to 5 days. Testimo ; als furnished if doe-red. W. D; Hoyt A Co. : SOLE AGENTS, ROMF, GA. G. W. McCHEADT, GENERAL : Commission Merchant, AND WBOUSALK SlxUk IN : FLOUR, MEAL. HAY, CORN, OATS. : IRISH POTATOES for seed &. table us Apples, Onions, Butter, Cheese AND EGGS. No. 105 WEST MAIN STREET, Lotiisville, Ky. I JO- G!v« pri iapt aueuiiM to ftlliui a.l «r» for Mr ; cUaaJuia. (tP- --Tir-nt for EKATKR ITJfrPI ■ f««il Bhkf-lL Georgia Railroad Schedule. ARRIVAL&DKPARTUKEOF TRAINS «•••<»• Rattrwa*. DAY PA*MKNH«KTRAIX. . I Lravtw Aurc>-u 9.99 •Wvak, a m Atlanta S 30 << am J Arrive at Atlanta K4O >< r M ‘ “ at Awgurta J 30 •« r M MIGHT PAHSF.NGEg TKA I Ji. : LrartM Anaiuta I 15 << as • “ Atlanta 815 •< F M J Anlrra at Atlanta 8 C « A M ** Asjh.m 8 kg M A M ACCCMMODATtON TMAIN. ‘ Lervrr AtSiara •« as j •* Stone Meantxin 45 •• as > Arrivm at AUanla Hl * am *’ at Ft»<ie Mooiilhlh W* “ P s ! U. S. MAIL PACK ET LINE 1 « ' 1 * ! Coosa River Steamers. ON IND AFTtR JULY lai, the i*ieatnrr* ou the ■ • K«rrr will run w m ~-h»nn> »-MHeet ' I ..up.-iue F»l Otte., on Mau R—Me No. ; Leavr Home every Tuesday- at 7 A. M ‘ Anlve at Gu.'mlvo *V -Ji.e-.iay at 6 A. M A.eave Gadadeu Weduevday at A M ' • Aynve at Kon,e Lhnr-day at 7 P M. • L-Ave Rainy every Friday at 8 R. M. ' Arrive atGadadea rtatawtav at 7 A. M. t Leave G.<f«den Fntnrday at. 9 A. M. ' Arrive at Kent Monday at 7 P .M J. M ELHirrr. GauT Hupt. THE beet Boy.’ aed ClrU’ M-r./1,-, Yuvxc Aaaarc*.’ Alwava • rnwiiie, PwKxnß*. Mnw.-, TravrU, Df r h<ue-. Kamea, and other entertaining seam-e,. alt par »A,-t| mnairaied. If von WWI u> R N-«t|tnt nUe prever.: tea Bnr orUlr! ~„r , Aw a vear’a «utMeriftlloa for Young Ant—.—, men. wstn <:rceh»r», masted free on reeviut nt o-tl.. « 4drf.e„ W JEMXIWv,- UEM-ip.R-tsL. i V Y-kne<»!e, ; AllanaA We Point Railroad DAY PASSENGERTRAIN-(Outwtrd) I.eavn» Atlanta ar 8 M » m * Amva. as Wn.; p«;kt it 40 a s Day PaMCutaM* Trale- laward ) • Leevee Went Pejrtt at la 30 r M • Arrives at AUaou 5 0C r ■ Xlfffet Fueeemger Traln- Ortward.l Leaves Atlanta 7 M p u Arnvea at Wee; Falci M U a ■ Sight PiMtufer Tiata— Inward ) I eevee We-t r>.at 1 45 » • A -jy g Atlanta Constitution, For 187*8 A DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER, DAILY AND WEEKLY. The Favorite of all Classes. Lawyers, Merchants, Farmers, Etc. TWEL VE BEASONS FOB SUBSCBIBING. 1 The Constitution is publiihed at the Capital of the State, and contains Pro ceedings of the Legislature io full, together with constant and accurate information of the actings of all the Departments of the State Government. 2. It has the sole and exclusive right of pub lishing the Decisions op the Supreme Count from tbc Reporter of the Court. These Decisions are delivered ou Monday of every week and are immediately pub lished in Tax Constitution. Hence every lawyer in Georgia nhouid take the psper, and the great proportion are subscribers’ 3. The Constitution is th« Official Journal of the State, of the city of Atlant* and a large number of counties. 4. The Constitution publishes a weekly Cotton. embracing remarks on the Gold Premium and all matters affecting the cotton trade, wuh statistics difficult to be obtained elsewhere. Producers and detflers in cotXgn, not alone in Georgia, but aM over procure the The Con BTITUTTON !br niese articles. 5. The Constitution furnishes Tele graphic Dispatches and news from *B quar ters of the globe, including markets, do mestic and foreign- Hence the paper is popular with merchants everywhere. 6. Besides our Daily Associated Press Dispatches, “The Constitution” haußpe cials from Washington, the Nalijnal Cap ital. 7. Its Correspondence Department is unsurpassed in toe South, having special correspondents at Washington. New York, and in various parts of the country. 8. “The Constitution” publishes a mombly Fashion Letter from New York, written by the celebrated female Fash ion writer in the United States. Tho la dies, therefore, ail want “Thu Conatituliou. 9. A new feature for this year will be Weekly European • Correspondence, by which the readers of "The Constitution” will be taken cn a tour through Europe. 10. The ablest writers and statesmen, of Georgia selects “The Constitution’’ to give their views to the public, and so do the PEOPLE, and hence it is the admited lead ing Democratic Journal of the Stale. 11. The two great BPECIAITIES, our Su preme Court Decisions for the lawyers, and our Cotton articles for the merchants and farmers, make “The Constitution unrivall ed in this part of the South. 12. For the reasons giveu above, “The Constitution” is the paper for all classes, lawyers, merchants, farmers, mechanics and others, circulates in every ceunly of Geor gia, has the largest State circulation and is, therefore the favorite medium for Adver- TIREKE. Every Georgian uhouhl, after taking his own local pa i>ri\ subscribe for “The Con stitution, published at the Capital of his Slate; and we would here return thanks to the people fora patronage, that has culmi nated in the grandest newspaper sikwm known in the Southern States. “The C!nnatiturion.”hmt yet five years old, has attained a circulation never readied by a Daily paper in Georgia, and has elected a magnificent five-story building of its own, as complete as any in the United States, giving employment tnt-eventyor eighty per sons daily, and running a halt dozen presses by steam. Visitors to Atlanta are cordialy invited to call and examine “The Constitu tion’’ building ami its powerful presses, printing four or five thousand papers per hour. EDITORIAL CORPS. I. W. Avery, Editor Political Dep’t J. T. Lumpkin, Editor News Dop’t W. G. Whidby, Editor Local Dep’t N’KTF". k h“ n ’} A ’~ i *“ E ' ii ‘ < > nl E. Y. Clark, Mamtfing Editor. W. A. Hemphill, -Business Manager. Cnpt Henry Jackson, Supreme Court Reported is exct.usively engaged by “The Uomd.itut.ion” to furnish the DecudoiM. Proprietors— W. A. IIIMPUULF and E. Y. CI.AHKE. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily, per anuni $lO 00 Six months 5 00 Three mouth# 2 f.O On* month 1 00 Weekly, per anum 2 00 Six months 1 00 OUR JOB DEPARTMENT to do any work in the print ing iine, from a card to a finely-bound book On editorial matters, address “Editors Constilltinn;” on busin*««, address W. A. HEMPHILL * CO., Atlanta, Ga. Rome R. R. Company CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. ON AND AFTER SUNDAY, OCTOBER a*U. 1F72 me trotne on th« Rome Sailroad will run k fellow- : BOaaiMS TBAIM. Morning Tnln leaver Rome at : 8:30 a. ■ Amv« at Homo t : : ; : 1:00 p. a. HIbMT TBAIK. Nigtit Train leaves Rome a: : : 6:1*) r. n Arrive at R»«ne at : ; : : 'jam r. k Ntjbl train ma«— ci«»«- ewnneetion at K:n<»tnn foe New York and al! point? Nonh. A'»o make rloaa con nection at Roma with Mall train on Selma, Rarao and Dalton Rail R..ad far all poiiik Routh. tran- makea chwe connection far uunttanoosM, Narttvilf anni al! points West. Both Uaina ekwe er Ark* nu W. 8. GOTHBWf.rrNa