The central Georgian. (Sandersville, Ga.) 1847-1874, May 04, 1852, Image 1

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sate BY S. B. GRAFTON. THE CENTRAL GEORGIAN IS PUBLISHED JEFFRY TUESDA Y MORNING, TEB1S : If paid strictly in advance, per ^ear, $1 50 jfnol paid at the time of subscribing, $2 00 These terms will be strictly adhered TO WITHOUT RESPECT TO PERSONS, AND ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS WILL BE REQUIRED TO BE SET TLED UP EVERY YEAR. Advertisements not exceeding twel ?e lines, will be inserted at one dollar for the first in sertion, and. fifty cents for each continuance. Advertisements not having the number of in sertions specified, will be published until for bid. S&leS of Land and Negroes by Executors, Administrators and Guardians, are required by law to be advertised in a public gazette forty days previous to the day of sale. The sale of Personal Property must be ad vertised in like manner at least ten days. Notice to Debtors and Creditors of an es tate must be published forty days. . Notice that: application will be made to the Court of ordinary for leave to sell Land and Negroes, must be published weekly for two months. Citations for letters of administration, must be published thirty days—for dismission from administration, monthly for six months— for dis- jfttssion from Guardianship, forty days. Rules for foreclosure of Mortgage must be published monthly for four months—for estab lishing lost papers, for the full space of three months—for compelling titles from Executors or Administrators, where a bond has been giv en by the deceased, the full space of 3 months. Publications will always be continued ac cording to these, the legal requirements, unless otherwise ordered. All letters on business must be vost-paid BUSINESS DIRECTORY. rTlTwarthen, Attorney at Law, SANDERSV1LLE, GEORGIA feb. 17, 1852. 4— ^ MULFORD MARSH, loraey and Counsellor at Law, Office, 175, Bay street, Savannah, Ga. eb. 10, 1852. 3 ~O J. B. H A Y N E, ATTORNEYAT LAW. HA EC YO N D ALE Ga. rill attend promptly to all business en- ted to his care in any of the Courts of the ile or Eastern circuits, alcyondale feb. 2 1852 2 iy JNO. W, RUDISILL attorney at law, SANDERSVLLLE, Ga. farch 10, 1851 3 ' v JAMES~S. HOOK, Attorney at Law, SANDERSVILLE, GEORGIA VILL PRACTICE IN THE COUNTIES OF . ) Washington, Burke, Scriven, !e-circuxt. ^ j e ff ers0 n and Emanuel. ern Circuit. \ - - - - Laurens Igee Circuit | - - - - Wilkinson, ce next door to the Central Georgian jan. 1, 1852. 'sTbTcrafton, Attorney at Law. SANDERSVILLE, GEORGIA, 11 also attend the Courts of Emanu ns, and Jefferson, should business be en, d to his care, in either of those couutie- 11. 4 - tf . - x,otrs & co. irs and Commission Merchants, Mo. 118, BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA. r . C. Loud.] 4, 1851 [P. H. Loud. 42—ly B&HSJ <6l POSIBB, *s and Commission Merchants. Savannah, Ga. IN I [JOHN foster. 1852. a-jy j. T. A»ES. Manufacturer and importer of ms. Pistols, Rifles, Sporting Apparatus, &c. No. 8, Monument Square, Savannah, Ga. feb. 10,1852. 3—ly* So E. B3THWBLL & CO. Wholesale and Retail Store, No. 173, Bay street, Savannah, Ga. • DEALERS IN QUORS, WINES, GROCERIES. <f-< g. £. BOTrfWELL.] . [R->• GAMBLE. Feb. 10, 1852, 3 ~^ mANfeON. JOHNSON A C®. G HUGE It Savannah, Ga. r. SCRANTON, J Savannah. fSPH JOHNSTON. ) t W. B. SCRANTON, ( No. 19, Old Slip, N. Yor ’eb. 10, 1852. 3—ly JOS XttA X.B v. Draper and Tailor. Deal erin Ready-Made Clothing and Gentle- ti *n’»furnishing Goods. 155, Bay street, Savannah, Ga. feb. IP, 1852. 3—ly I. S&aHSU’S €h«ap Dry Goods Store, jsfo. 146, Congress street, Savannah, Ga. (Late H. Lathrop’s) ; A well selected stock of seasonable staple aid Taney Dry Goods, are kept constantly on [and, and wifi be sold cheap for cash. EJF" Please call and examine. Mi 10,1858. 8—ly SANDERSY1LLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, MAI 4, 1852. VOL. VI~~10. is: POETRY. Appeal to a Bachelor. BY JOHN 6. SAXE. ‘‘Double! Double!”—Shakespeare. Dear Charles, be persuaded to wed— For a sensible fellow like you, It’s high time to think of a wife, And muffins and coffee for two! So have done with your doubt and delaying- With a soul so adapted to mingle, No wonder the neighbors are saying ’Tis singular you should be single! Then, Charles, bid your doubting good bye' And dismiss all fantastic alarms— I’ll be sworn you’ve a girl in your eye ’Tis your duty to have your arms! Some true little maiden of twenty, A beautiful azure-eyed elf, With virtues and graces in plenty. And no failing but loving yourself! Don’t se irch for an “angel” a minute; For, granting you win in the sequel, The deuce, after all, would be in it, With a union so very unequal! _ The angels, it must be confessed, In this world are rather uncommon; And allow me, dear Charles, to suggest, You’ll be better content with a woman. Then, Charles, be pursuaded to wed— For a sensible fellow like you, It’s high time to think of a wife, And muffins and coffee for two; So have done with your doubt anddelaying- With a soul so adapted to mingle, No wonder the neighbors are saying ’Tis singular you should be single! Re Active. Be active, be active— Find something to do, In digging a clam-bank, Or tapping a shoe. Don't stop at at corners, To drag out the day— Be active—be active— And work while you may. ’Tis foolish to falter, Or lag in the street, Orwaikas if' chain-shot Were fast to your feet; Be active—be active— And do what you can ’Tis industry only That rnaketh the man. Tis industry makes you— Remember—be wise— From sloth and from stupor Awake and arise. \ ou’ll live and be happy, And never comp ain Of the blues, or duns, Ora dull heavy brain. MlSCELLANEO US. Form* and Regulations lor the Assignment ol juaud Warrants and Eocatious. General Land Office, ) March 23d 1852. f By the first section of the act of Congress ntitled'‘An act to make Land Warrants assmgable and for other purposes,” approv ed March 22d 1852, it is provided: “That all warrants for military bounty land which have been, or may hereafter be issued, un der any law of the United States and all valid locations of the same, which have been or may hereaftei^be made, are hereby declared to be assignable, by deed or instru ment of writing, made and executed after the taking of etfecl of this act, according to such form, and pursuant to such regulations as may be prescribed by the Commission ers of the General Land Office, so as to vest the assignee with all the rights of the orig inal owners of the warrants or location.” In accordance with the provisions of th s section, the following forms are prescribed for the assignment of the warrants and lo cations retired to, to-wit: Form for the assignment of the Warrant. no 1. For value received, I, A. B. to whom the within Warrant, No. was issued, do hereby sell and sign unto C D of and to his heirs and assigns for ever, the said warrant, and authorize him to locate the same, aud receive a patent therefor. Witness my hand and seal, this day of 185 Attest: A B [seal.] EF GH Form of acknowledgement when the vendor is known, to the officer taking the ac- knowledgemen t. State of county of On this day of in the year Personally appeared [heire insert the name of the Warrantee] to rne well known, and acknowledged the foregoing assignment to be his act aud deed; and I certify that the sard [here insert the name of the Warrantee] is the identical person to whom the within warrant issued, and "ho executed the fore going assignment thereof. officer’s signature. Form of acknowledgement where the vendor is not known to, the officer, and his identi ty has to b$ proved. State of county of On this day of in the year Personal ly came before me [here insert the name of the Warrantee] arid [here insert the name and residence of a Witness] and the said [here insert the name of the WitnessJ being well known to me as a creditable aud disinterested person, was duly sworn by me, and on his oath declared and said that he well knows the said [here insert the name of the Warrantee] and that ha is the same per son to whom the within warrant issued, aid . who executed the foregoing assignment, and his testimony being satisfactory evi dence to me of that fact, the said [here in sert the name of the Warrantee] thereupon acknowledged the said assignment to be his act and deed. officer’s signature Form for the assignments of the Location. ho. 2. For value received, I. A B to whom the -within certificate of location was -issued, do hereby sell aud assign to G D, and to his heirs and assigns forever, the said certificate of location, and the warraut and land there in described aud authorize him to receive the patent therefor. Witness my hand and seal, this day of 185 Attest: A B [seal,] E F G H Form of acknowledgement when the vendor is personally known to the officer taking the same. State of ‘ county of On this day in the year Personally appeared [here insert the name of the person to whom the certificate of' lo cation muerf] to me well known, and ac knowledged the foregoing assignment to he his act and d^RI, and I certify, that the said [here insert the name of the person to whom the certificate of location issued.] is the identical person to whom the said certificate of location issued; and who executed the foregoing assignment thereof. officer’s signature. Form of acknowledgement when the ven dor is iiot personally known to the officer, and where his identy has to be proved. State of county of On this day of in the year personally came before me [here insert the name of the person to whom the certificate oj location issued] aud [here insert the name and residence of a witness] and the said [here insert the name of a witness] being well known to me as a credible and disin terested person; was duly sworn by me, aud on his oath declared and says he well knows the said [here insert the name of the person to whom the certificate of location is issued] and that he is the same person to whom the within certificate of location issued, and Tvho executed the foregoing assignment; and his testimony being satisfactory evidence to me of that fact, the said [here insert the name of the person to whom the certificate of location issued. J thereupon acknowledg ed the said assignment to be ins act and deed. officer’s signature. Assignment No. 1, aud acknowledgment must be endorsed upon the warrant, and No 2,and acknowledgement upon thee r tirieate of location; and must be attested by two witnesses, aoKuowledged b fore a Reg ister or Receiver of a Laud Office, a Judge of a Court of Record, a J usl'ce of the Peace, or a Commissioner of Deeds les.deut in the State from which he derives his appoint ment; and in every iustauce where the ac knowledgment is made <>efore any officer otherthan the Register or R-eeivir of a Laud Office, it rnuat be accompanied by.a certificate; under seal of the proper au hor- ity, of the official character of the person before whom the ackuowk-dgmeut. was made and also of the genuineness of his signature. All assignments of bounty land warrants issued uuder the act of September 28th 1850, made before the date of this act, are invalid and void. The same section provides, “That any person entitled to pre-emption right toaiiy land, shall be eniied to use any such laud warrant in payment of the same, at the rate of $1 25 per acre for the quantity of land therein specified.” Bj this provision, all persons entitled to pre-emption, whether on offered or unoffer- ed lan s, can use a military bounty land warrant for the tract pre-empted, reckoning the said warrant at $1 25 per acre for the quantity therein specified, whether the laud so claimed is at the usual or enhanced min imum. Should the acres of the tract claimed ex ceed the amount called form the warraut, the pre-emptor wili have to pay for the ex cess lu cash, but if he should fall short, he is not entitled to a refunding of the excess. It is further provided by the same sec tion, “that the warrants which have been or may hereafter be issued in pursuance ol said laws or of this act may be located ac cording to the legal subdivisions of the pub lic lands, in one body, upon any land of the Un’ited States subject to private entry at the time of such location, at that minimum price*.. Provided, further, that when said warrants shall be located on lands which are subject to eutry at a greater minimum than $1 25 per acre, the locator of said warraut shall pHy to the United States, in cH'h, the difference between the value of such warrants at $1 25 per acre, and the tract of land located on.” By these provisions, where the the lands are subject to private entry at $1 25 per acre, the holder of an, eighty acre warrant can take any two forty acre lots, forming a compact body of eighty acres; aud the holder of a warrant for one hundred and sixty acres, can take two eighty acres, dr four forty acres tracts, forming a compact body of one hundred aud sixty acres. Where the minimum price of the lands, subject to private entry, proposed to be lo cated is more than §1 25 cents an acre, the holder of the warrant can locate, is accor dance with the instructions, contained in the foregoing paragraph, the quantity specified in the warrant, by paying the difference in cash. r ' This act does not authorize the holder of i an eighty acre warrant to locate therewith a forty acre tract of land at $2 50 per acre in full satisfactiou thereof, but he must lo cate, by legal subdivisions, the compact body of eighty acres, as near as may be, and pay the difference in cash. So also of 160 acre warrants except in presemptfon cases as hereinbefore stated. Each warrant is to be distinctly and sep arately located, so that it follows that no body ofland can be located by an assignee of various warrantees, with a number of warrants; nor can a pre-emptor in any case use more than one warraut in the location of the land pre-empted by him, and the ex cess, if any, must be paid for by him in cash. The second section of this act provides : “That the Registers and Receivers of the Land Offices shall hereafter be severally authorized to charge and receive for their services in locating all military bounty iaud warrants issued since the 11th day of Feb ruary, 1849, the same compensation or per ceniage to which they are entitled by law for sales of the public lands for cash, at the rate of $1 25 per acre, the said compensa tion to be hereinafter paid by the assignees or holders of such warrants.” The third section of this act provides : “That Registers and Receivers, whether m or out of office at the passage of this act. “OeceatlY Sucked In.” A man in Philadelphia recently married a woman under the impression that she had “the dimes,” but when he found that it was uot so, he complained before the Mayor, and was prayed for relief. The following are the facts as elicited before the Police Court: A man with a pair of whiskers, or rather a pair of whiskers* with something 'fair inly i^embling a man attached to, them, appea red before the municipal bench with accusa tion against Clementine Derby, otherwise Millet, who, according to the affirmation of the complainant Abraham Millett, had swiudled him out of his personal freedom by iuduciug him to marry * her, the said Clemeutiue, who proved afterwards, on close inspection, to be a mere bundle of false pretences. Abraham, the man of whiskers, had become acquainted with Miss Derby at a reputable boarding house, where ihe l dy had fixed her temporary residence. She had a tine snit of brown hair, charming teeth, a due proportion of roses and lilies in her complexion, an innocent maidenly countenance, a good figure and a fortune of forty thousand dollars, including a nee plantation, ■tocked with n;nety;hree negroes, somewhere out South. Some of these at tractions was visiUie to Mr. Millett, but the rice grounds aud the negroes never had been seen by him: thev were merely ob- or their legal representatives in case of jeets of faith, therefore. Miss Clementine death, shall be entitled to receive from the Treasury of the United States, for services heretofore performed in locating military bounty land warrants, the same rate of ser vices provided in the preceding seetiou for services hereafter to be performed, alter de ducting the amount already received by such officers under an act entitled “An act to require the holders of military land war rants to compensate the Laud Officers of the United States for services in relatiou to she location of those warrants,” approved May 17tli, 1848: Provided that no Regis ter or Receiver shall receive any compensa tion out of the Treasury for past services during any year, a greater compensation than thau the maximum uow allowed by law.” Where parties may desire to avail them selves of the privilege of having their war- auts located through this office, as provi ded for by the act of 28th September, 1850 they must take the necessary steps to pay to the Register and Receiver the fees to which they are entitled. The same course must be preserved by persons remote from the District Laud Officers in making appli cation by letter to those officers. Without the pavmentof those fees, the warrants can not be located. By the terms of this law the fees are as follows : For a 40 acre warrant, 50 cents each For an 80 acre warrant, $1 each to Register and Receiver—total 2 00 For a 160 acre warrant. $2 each to Register aud Receiver —total * 4 00 J. BUTTERFIELD, Commissioner. A gentleman iu the country who had just buri d a rich relation, who was au at torney, was complaiuing to Foote, who happened to be on a visit with him, of the very great expenses of a country funeral, in respect to carriages, hat-bands, scarfs, <tc. “Why, do you bury your attorneys here ?’ asked Foote, gravely. “Yes, to be sure we do ; how else ?” ‘Oli, we never dp that in London.” “No !’’said the other, much surprised ; „how ,do yon manage ?” “Why, when the patient happens to die, we lay him out iu a room over night by himself, lock the door, throw open the sash and in the morning he is entirely off'.” “Indeed !” said the other in amazement ; “what beoumes of him ?” “Why, that we cannot exactly tell, not being acquainted with supernatural causes. All that we know of the matter is, that tliere’s a strong smell of brimstone in the * , ° . „ room the next morning. A Puzzled Irishman.—Mr. O’Flagherty undertook to tell how many were at the par- tv. The two Grogans were one, meself was two, Mike Finn was three, aud—and—who the devil was four? Let me see (counting his fingers)—the two Crogans was one, Mike Finn was two, meself whs three—and --bedad! there was four of us; but Saint Pat rick couldn’t tell the name of the other. Now its meself that has it: Mike Finn was one, the two Crogans was two, meself was three—and—and by my sowl, I think there was but three of us, afther all.” gave him such a particular account of the property—the real estate especially—that Abraham was quite satisfied with its reality. After a rapid courtship, they were married; aud then said Mr. Millett, “I found her out.” Her fine hair was merely a wig, and when this was off, her head was as na ked as a sandy desert; au unvegatatiug Za bara, without a single oasis. Her charm ing teeth were all porcelain, her roses and lilies, chalk and carmine; her exquisite fig ure, cotton-wadding; and as for her maid enly innocence,” observed Mr. Millett, very ruefullv. “I fouud she had two children boarded out in Jersey, one of which chil dren is a dingy, curly-headed little fellow that looks prodigiously like he had African blood in him. Still,” said Mr. Millett, pur suing the subject, “the thouguts of the rice plantation out South, and the ninety three negroes, afforded me some comfort; but it warn’t long before I discovered that this plantation was so confoundedly far ‘out South,’ that there was no coming at it; and as for her niggers, I guess she has none except that little frizzly-headed chap that calls her “mammy.” “I pity yonr oase Mr, Millet,” said the Mayor, but we can do nothiug for you. Your own imprudence brought you into this predicament. You were in such a hurry to secure your for tune, that you got bit.” “Yes,” answered Abraham, “bit indeed, and that by a wo man that hasn’t atootb in her head that she can call her own; for the dentist she bought them from never was paid for them.”, “Set tling that bill is a privilege thnt will belong to you,” said his Honor, as Abraham, with many a convulsive sob; left the il.dl of Jus tice. The Counsel of Women. —In conversa tion I once held with an eminent minister, of our church, he made this observation : ‘We will say nothing of the manner in which that sex usually conduct an argu ment; but the intuitive judgments of wo men are often more to be relied upon than ihe conclusions which we reach bv ai. elab orate process of reasoning. No man that •has au intelligent wife, or who is accustom ed t< the society of educated women, will dispute this.- ‘Times without number you must have known them decide questions *n the in stant, and with unerring accuracy, which you had been poring over for hours per haps with no other result than to find your self getting deeper and deeper iuto the tangled maze of doubts and difficulties. It were hardly generous to allege that they achieve these feats less by reasoning than by a sort of sagacity which approximates [from THE PNNNY DISPATCH-] “The Bald-faced Chicken and Buzzard.” A married German was recently enlisted in the army, whose ornithological knowl edge was rather limited. Shortly after ouf arrival at Fort- Waschifea, 0. N., a negro went on a hunting excursion, aud toward* evening returned with an Owl and a Tur key-buzzard, the fruits of his labors during the day. On entering the precincts of the Fort, Sambo being observed by the Ger man, (whose wife was ill) proceeded with all possible speed to make a purchase, with the intention of making some soup, fit for ‘Kaurtina.’ The following conversation then took place: •I shay, Vat will you dake for de pig-ey ed chicken, and durkey ?’ ‘Dis is no chicken, dis is an owl,’ replied Sainbo. ‘Vat I cares how oldt he pees, I will have him for soups mil mine Kautrina.’ ‘Yah ! yah, yon is one done gone fool, dis is owl 1 owl! and dis is buzzard,’ ve- hemen ly exclaimed Ebony. ‘Vel dat pees no matter how oldt he pees vot you dakes for dem ?’ ‘Four bits, if you wan’t ’em.’ They were accordingly purchased, and Houtz forthwith proeeeded to manufacture a soup for his spouse, in the most approved fashion. While the culinary process was going forward, his olfactory organs were smitten with a powerful effluvia, but the only effect produced was the conclusion that it would make *goot soup, for it ish strong meats.’ The cooking over, Hontz carried a bowl full to Kautrina, and then proeeeded to help himself with a plentiful supply. The first spoonful however, dam pened his ardor, and a noise at the bed caused him to turn his eyes in that direc tion, when he observed his Kautrina busily engaged discharging a cargo from her 6tomach. Whether from sympathy, or what, I know not, Hontz commenced the same delightful performance. As soon as he coulcTfind breath to articulate, he burst forth ip evident anger; ‘Vel Cot tarn dat nigger say he was ouidt-—tarn him ! put my Oot, he not 9ay he was ouidt dat he pees rotten. Tam the bald faced pig-eyed chicken buzzard!” He has not made any big eyed chicken or buzzard soup, since. - The above is liter ally true. * F. A. Family Intermarriage.—On tbia subject the Fredericksburg News says : “In the country in which we were raised for twenty generations back a certain fami ly of wealth and respectability have inter married, until there, canuot be found in three of them a sound man or woman. One has sore eyes, another scrofula, a fourth blind, a fifth bandy legged, a sixth with head about the size of a turnip with no|, one of the number exempt from physical or men? tal defects of some kind. Y et this family persevers to intermarry with each other with these living monuments of their folly before them. It is often done ignorantly by the best people. Young people never reflect upoii consequences, and old people are too avarir cious to forbid a match where money is gotten. Let the law reach it, and it will be stop ped. The Rev. Mr. E. who lived not a thousand miles from Portland, was prepar ing his discourse for the next Sabbath. Stopping occasionally to review what h« had written and to erase that which he was disposed to improve, he was accosted by liia little son who had numbered but three sum mers: “Father, does God tell you what to preach.” “Certainly my child.” “Then what makes you scratch it out I* “I wish I owned an interest in that dog of yours,” said a neighbor in our hearing other day, to agotber neighbor, whose dog to the sure instiucl of the animal races ; and would dart towward the legs of any one there seems to be some ground for the re mark of a witty French writer, that, when a man has toiled step by step up a flight of stairs, he will be sure to find a woman at the top; but she will not be able to tell how she got there. &3T Upon coming "into the office theothr er day, we asked the “devil” his rule for punctuation. Said he, “I set up as long as l can hold npy breath, then put in a comma; when I gape, I insert a semicolon; when sneeze, a colon; and when I want another chaw of tobacco. I make a paragraph.” W-e cannot wiluhold these rules, so admira ble for their simplicity, from the public.. There is a young lady up town who says that if a cart wheel has nine fellows attach to it, it’s a pity that a woman like her can’t have one. A witness in a court of justice, being ask ed what kind of ear-marks the hog in ques tion had, replied that “he had no particu lar ear-marks, except a very short tail.” here, Pete,” said a knowing darkey, “don’t atand dar un de railroad.” ° •‘Ease, if de cars see dat raouf ob yours, dey tint it am de depot, and run rite is.” Turned Round.—A youiig sprig of a doctor once met a a coU'iv.al paity, several larks who were beutou placing in his hat a very heavv brick or, in plain language to make him gloriously drunk which they ac complished at about 10 o’clock at night. The poor doctor insisted ou going and the party accompanied him to the stable to as sist him to mount his horse, which they at length did with his face to the animal's tail. “Hallo, ?’ said the doctor after feeling for the reius. I am inside out on my horse, or face behind’ I don’t know which—some thing rong anyhow.” ‘So you are,’ exclaimed one of the wags “just get off doctor, and we will put you on right-’ • “Get off,” hiccupped the doctor, no you don’t, just turn the horse around and it will,' ail come right, you must be all druuk.” with whom he might be talking, and then ‘back up again” and look up in his master’s face, as much as to say “Shall I pitch into him?—shall I give him a nip on the leg ?’* “An interest in my dog ?’ said the master, “what could you do with it V “Why.” re plied the other, “I’d shoot my half withia the next five minutes.—[Knick. An elderly lady telling her age, remark ed that she was born on the 22d of April. Her husband who was present observed, ‘I always thouirht you were born on the firs of April. t ‘People might well judge so,t responded the matron, ‘in the choice 1 mad* of a husband.’ A western editor remarked, in a polemi cal article, that though he wouldn’t call hi* opponent a liar, h* must say, if the gentle man: ha«i intended to state what was utterly faLsel he had been remarkably successful in his attempt. “I am tliy father’s spirit,’ as the bottle said to the boy when he found it hidden in th£ wood-pile, and wondered what it was. A New Hampshire stage driver one said to a passenger—^’There’s a a woman been ly irig in that house, youder, more than a month—and they haven’t buried her'-yet-J’ “Why not?” asked the passenger. Be cause she isn’t dead,” said Jehu. ; “Genius will always work its way through as the poet said-wheat ha saw a >hole in th* elbpwof his cuat. sir m7Tj . . . were'.; seventy on.® divore®* legalzied at the-recent session of the Alab»* ma Legislature. - - “Capital punishment” is being kissed, to death by pretty girls. M3TA lady being asked her opinion ** bout moutaches, replied. “I alway* wt m F few against them.” ME