Newspaper Page Text
I
OUTH
Brilliant.—Read the beautiful poems and The Cuthbert Family.—In our last issue we Kisses—Not that style of fancy confectionery
splendid essays, long and short, in this issue; published an article written by our distinguished held in high repute by juveniles on account of
and don t fail to read the “Y alentine,” on the fellow-citizen, Judge R. H. Clark, giving some facilities offered for love-making in the way of
[For The Sunny South.]
my first hyacinth.
BY MBS. MABY WABE.
fifth page. It is the best hit of the season.
.IOII\ II. SEALS, - Editor and Proprietor.
General Gordon’s Portrait.—We shall pre
sent in our next issue a splendid engraving of
this distinguished Georgian, with one of the
most brilliant and thrilling biographical sketches
ever written.
ATLANTA. GA„ SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1875.
Young Men’s Library. — One of the most
comfortable and delightful places in the city is
interesting reminiscences of prominent Georgia cheap rhymes, little reason and a vast deal ot
families, and among them the Cuthbert family, stale nonsense: but that labial process which has
A citizen of Mobile, Alabama, now furnishes us been significant ever since first indulged in. and
the following additional facts in regard to this which it is reasonable to infer was inaugurated
same family: in paradise as one of the beatitudes of that sin-
“ Allow me to thank you for your energy and less state - and even now reminds one of that
enterprise in attempting to supply a long-felt beatific era. The memory of the “oldest inliab-
Fight .it out. and gain the itant," though treacherous at times, often goes
Dainty, little snowy flower—
Child of one bright, sunny hour—
Tender, fragile little thing,
Reminding us again of Spring.
want in the South.
prize that is sure to come if you weary not.
•Being much interested in the reminiscences
Yet I wonder why you come
To cheer our frozen, wintry home ?
Ah! you bring a sweet surprise
In vour tender, starry eyes!
The money must accompany all orders for this paper, the library room, in charge of the genial and early Georgians, particularly of the Cuthbert
and it will be discontinued at the expiration Of the time,
unless renewed.
Write your name and post-office plainly.
Club Rates.—Ten copies at $2.50 each, if all are ordered
at the same time.
Ij-Offlre of “The Sunny South” in Young
Men’s Library Ruilding, on Broad Street.
polite Charlie Herbst; and it is not onlv inter
family, I wish to add mV mite.
, . , .. . “John A. Cuthbert is a resident of our citv.
esting, but a cheering evidence of the culture of Daily he is seen upon our streets, in the pursuit
our people to see the throngs which frequent it of his profession (law)—a venerable man, but
active and in the full possession of his mental
day and night to peruse the precious volumes
therein gathered.
back to the first “long, lingering kiss of youth
and love and it is something, too. that has not
staled by custom nor repetition, for the same
old, old fashion is to love. It is still exquisite,
pure and sweet as the kiss of Diana to the sleep- l
iug Endymion: thrilling as that of Aurora wak-
Why did you not wait for Spring.
Little, modest, trembling thing ?
There’s no sound of bird or bee,
Little flower, to waken thee,—
E
faculties, though verging upon ninety years. He in g to life the statue of Memnon; lasting as Cly-
is an active and useful member of the Baptist ties - love for the recreant Apollo.
, . . a .. , . church, and often has it been the writer's privi- ■meiormemir™
..x-Presidcnt Andrew Johnson—Thesketch lege to bear his voiee lifted in bnmb j e thankful- But th, ‘ purest kiss
Slience reigns o'er brake and fen.
Go to sleep, bright one. again!
Tet I would not have you go,
Precious flower,—I love you so.
ft' Jhiblishcd every other Saturday for the present, but
every subscriber will get the full number of copies. Fifty
copies make a volume complete.
Unparalleled Success—50,000 Readers!—
In less than sixty days this paper reached a bona
fide circulation of very nearly five thousand copies.
This week we print over that number, and it is
reasonable to say that it has from thirty to fifty
thousand readers. The lists continue to swell,
and before the first year of its existence has ex
pired, it will doubtless reach a circulation of
fifteen or twenty thousand copies, and be read
by over one hundred thousand people. Does
not this speak volumes for the literary taste of
our Southern people? Let the charge never
which accompanies the splendid portrait of this
great American statesman, on the opposite page,
was written by one of Tennessee’s most popular
; citizens and an intimate friend of the ex-Presi-
dent. Though brief, it is certainly inultum in
parvo, and is expressed with a vigor and earn
estness truly refreshing.
—pure as an angel’s—is
ness to Him who reigneth, for the blessings he that of a mother for her new-born babe, whose
enjoys. It is pleasant to know that in his old little life is held by so frail a tenure, vet so pow-
age he is surrounded by devoted children, who , , , - , , ' , , , . .
seem to live for his comfort and happiness. His erful as to 1,111,1 her ‘^art-strings with a love that
circumstances, like all of his countrymen, are neither chance nor change can affect, and ceas-
sriaightened, but peace and plenty abound under ing only with life, to be renewed in eternity.
Ah! I think you came to earth
To celebrate the Savior's birth;
And that is why your starry eyes
Look so straight up in the skies!
the modest roof that is his home.”
Agents.—R. G. Agee, of Richmond, Virginia,
is a regular agent for this paper, and is a faithful
and reliable canvasser.
F. Lewis Marshall, a native of Virginia and
The agonizing pressure of lips we love for the
last time, where death had chilled to silence and
set his seal, is an agony that could not be endured
save for the hope of a resurrection and recogni
tion of our angels.
What a variety there is of this labial luxury. ;
And, little, timid, trembling thing,
I thank you for the love you bring!
Thrice welcome to my heart and home,
Sweet harbinger of joys to come!
PERSONALS.
General Wilder has settled in the South,
is connected with some large iron works.
Miss Kellogg is making two thousand five
doesn’t care for
first canvass the Old Dominion.
Mrs. M. B. Sheridan, one of our most worthy
. , , , . , r and energetic lady citizens, takes the field in
again be brought against them that they do not Telmessee and Missouri .
appreciate home literature, and will not sustain
a first-class literary journal. Let those chronic Good for Thomasville.—At the close of the
croakers and self-inflated swells who have ever rece nt session of the State Agricultural Society,
been so ready to make these flings at Southern the following resolution offered by Gen. William
intelligence and patriotism, blush in shame and M. Browne was unanimously adopted as an ex-
liasten now to confess their error. A\e have pression of the gratitude of the members for
always regarded such charges as unmitigated the princely manner in which they had been
slanders, and are now prepared to brand them
as such for all time.
It is true that many literary enterprises have
been inaugurated in the South and failed from
a want of patronage, but was not the failure of
Be Farmers.—The Hon. A. G. Brown, of
Mississippi, gives the following excellent advice
to young men:
“ Be a farmer ! There is a fascination in office
which beguiles men, but be assured, my young But there is one that should be known as the
grandson of the great Chief Justice Marshall, friends, it is the fascination of a serpent; or to Judas salute, which is the society kiss- unmean- hundred do^lare a week mdi
takes the field for The Sunny South. He will change the figure, it is the ignis fatuus which ] ng and conventional, disgusting ad nauseam, men.
coaxes you on to inevitable ruin. I speak of negative and a nuisance, and one of the observ-
that which I do know, and it my young friends ances that should be suppressed as injurious in
will be governed by my advice, I have this to tendency and damaging altogether. Think of
say, after all my success as a public man, now . two females feeling no special kindness for each
when my head is blossoming for the grave, I other—rather entertaining a lively dislike—meet-
feel that it would have been better tor me it I i n g, and with an exuberance of gushing affection
had followed the occupation of my father and
been a farmer. Of all the pursuits of life, that
of a farmer is the most respectable. It may have
its trials and disappointments; so do all others,
j The mechanic may lose the wages of his labor,
He
entertained:
“Resolved, That the members of this Conven
tion acknowledge with heart-felt gratitude the
generous hospitality and considerate attention
which have been extended to us by the citizens
of Thomasville during our stay in their city,
equaled only by the deception, indulging in one
: of those salutes intended only as telegraphy
from heart to heart, and perverted when other
wise employed. It is a malpractice unpardon
able while there are so many nice old bachelors
a large majority of them an argument of itself and that we severally bear with us to cur respect-
in favor of Southern literary taste? Were they !' e llol „ ne , s an appreciation and lasting recollec-
, , .. , , „ , . , tion of the many evidences of friendship and
worthy of a better fate ? A few possessed some g0 od-will which we have received at their hands. ”
merit, but was any one of them ever gotten up
in a manner to commend itself to the cultivated A Club in Two Minutes.—A good citizen
taste of our people? We do not know of such, of the thriving little city of Gainesville sends
What our people wanted and have long desired us the following:
the professional man all his fees, the editor may
weep over delinquent subscribers, but the hon
est, industrious farmer is certain of a fair return
for his labor. True, ‘ Paul may plant and Apol-
los water, but God must give the increase.’ But
where is the faithful cultivator of the soil, God’s
heritage to man, whoever yet suffered for bread?’ tators—how persistent the practice—how com
plete the success !—those seeming fair yet false
pining for the privilege, and who would cheer
fully submit and consider themselves honored
in the observance.
With a kiss Judas signaled his treachery; and
with him the race of traitors did not become
extinct, for how numerous and accurate his imi-
was a literary journal in the South equal to
those from the North or elsewhere, and they
have ever been ready to sustain it. This fact is
now established beyond all controversy. The
Sunny South meets the demand, and even now,
in the midst of the most stringent times in
money matters they have ever experienced, they
are sustaining it in a manner never before known.
They seem proud of it as a Southern enterprise,
and the universal sentiment is that it must and
shall be sustained.
We are not surprised at this demonstration,
for we thought we knew the Southern people,
and projected the enterprise with the fullest
confidence of success. We made it in the out
set—in its infancy—equal to the oldest and most
popular literary journal of the day, and the
people all over the South are manifesting a most
wonderful appreciation of its merits and a most
liberal disposition to sustain it. The North can
no longer assert, with sneering exultation, that
we have not the genius in the South to get up a
decent paper, nor the intelligence to sustain one.
It astonishes Northern publishers and print
ers, and many of them are unwilling to believe
that it is gotten up in the South. They seem
disposed to claim it as a Northern job. Buff
we boldly assert that there is not a single weekly
in all the Northern States which equals it in me
chanical beauty. A prominent editor says:
“The only paper north of Mason’s and Dixon’s
line that vies with it is the Waverly Magazine,"
and that costs six dollars a year. Another lead
ing editor says: “It is the brightest and ablest
illustrated literary paper now published in
America. Those who have read and patronized
with interest the old Philadelphia Saturday Post,
Saturday Courier, or Bonner’s Ledger, can now get
in our own Sunny South all that they can desire. ”
See in other columns of this issue what the press
everywhere says of it.
But the paper is still in its infancy. Only five
numbers have as yet been issued, and the de
mand for them has been without a parallel in
Southern journalism. So urgent and general is
the call for the first number that we are now
making arrangements to republish it entire.
We cannot as yet issue weekly, but have re
cently had an interview with a polished Belgian,
who is a first-class artist, and have some hope of
securing his services as a designer, and through
him, some splendid engravers. We are after the
best, and shall have none others. The paper
shall not only be equal to any other, but shall be
superior to all others in all respects. There is no
good reason why the South should be behind
any portion of the world in any particular, and
if our people would only determine that it
shall not it would be fa it occomple.
Be patient. Y'ou will lose nothing. You will
get the full number of copies but will not get
them quite so rapidly as you will after awhile.
The Modern Young Lady.—A female cor
respondent of Woodhull & Claflin's M eekly ex
presses herself thusly in regard to the modern
young lady:
“I herewith hand you post-office order for ten “Whenever I see the most approved pattern
dollars to pay for The Sunny South for one year, I of the modern young lady, I'm seized with an
according to your club rates in last number (five.)
I made up the club in tico minutes this morning,
in my office, after receiving my wife’s copy.”
Now that’s business; and we appreciate such
patrons. Thousands of others could do the
same thing in about the same length of time if
they had a little of that same sterling business
vim in their composition. Make an effort. It
won’t hurt you if it takes four minutes to make
up the club. Ten dollars pays for four copies
one year; twelve dollars and a half pays for six
copies.
One Reason Why Farmers are so Poor.—
The Rural Carolinian utters the following correct
sentiments: “It is believed that seven-tenths
of the planters and farmers of this country,
North and South alike, are staggering to their
fall under a load of debt and mortgage. What
is the matter? As a class, farmers are not lazy.
They are seldom idle. They work as hard as
anybody ought to work. They make, taking
one year with another, what may be considered,
under the prevailing standard of agriculture,
fair crops, and they get, as a rule, good prices
for the surplus products they put into the mar
ket; still, they don’t get rich—in fact, are getting
poorer and poorer every year. Why is it so?
To say nothing now of a faulty system of crop
ping—all cotton, all wheat, or all something else—
or of credit, liens and interest, the reason which
we had in mind with which to point this para
graph is, that it costs too much to make our crops.
almost uncontrollable impulse to shake her up;
put a little wholesome restraint upon her de
cidedly loose actions, which she evidently thinks
so charming and artless; make her see herself as
others see her; cut her corset lacings; clip her
dirty, disgusting trail; relieve her foolish head
of surplus fal«« hair and ‘things;’ clothe her
from head to foot in healthful, easy garments,
and set her wayward feet in the path of knowl
edge and true happiness.
“As seen in the light of the present, what is a
modern young lady but an inharmonious con
glomeration of ignorance, misnamed innocence;
affectation, misnamed accomplishment; impu
dence, mistaken for ease and grace, and disease,
construed as feminine delicacy ?
“One need not go on a hunt for specimens, for
they are everywhere present, with nothing else
to do but keep their social estimate at par and
themselves conspicuously in the market, dis
playing, as Charles Dickens said of the modern
young man, various varieties of puppyism—fe
male puppyism—and stupidity; amusing all
sensible people near them with their folly and
conceit, and happily thinking themselves the
objects of general admiration.”
ones seeking to beguile only to betray—making
a kiss, too, the synonym of treachery as well as
a token of the love that has rescued the world
from the dreariest desolation, for no life is com
plete without affection. Bereft of that, how bar
ren, how bleak, how void of warmth and color.
Though you may have “lain in the roses and
fed on the lilies of life,” unloved, ’tis as dreary
as Spitzbergen—frigid as the steppes of Siberia.
Go to Work.—The great curse of the South
is idlers, white and black. In all our towns and
cities there are hundreds of strong, healthy and
fine-looking men of all colors standing or
strolling about the streets from day to day and
week to week with no occupation, and of course
no money; and yet the white ones dress well,
look fat and seem happy. The universal ex
cuse is, “ there is nothing to do.” What an idea !
When we have here in the South the grandest
opportunities that were ever presented to any
people to accumulate fortunes; a land teeming
with resources, and should literally flow with
milk and honey. This is no time for idlers. If
Mr. Spurgeon, the great English pulpit orator,
has left London for the continent in search of
health.
Mlle. Albani has suddenly terminated her
contract with Mr. Strakosch and returned to
Europe.
Horace Maynard is to have the Turkish mis
sion, and Congressman Donan, of Iowa, the Bel
gian mission.
General George D. Johnston was appointed
by the State Grange, at its last session, general
deputy for the State of Alabama.
Hon. Jefferson Davis will deliver an address
over the tomb of General Robert E. Lee at Lex
ington, Virginia, in October.
The Mobile Register says nobody knows any
thing about John Bruce, the new District Judge
that Grantism has furnished Alabama.
The country has sustained a great loss in the
death of the Hon. Landon C. Haynes, which oc
curred at his home in Memphis, February 17.
The Macon Star announces a new partner in
Mr. Samuel H. Jemison, who has been connected
with the paper for some time in an editorial ca
pacity.
Hon. George F. Pierce has accepted an invi
tation to deliver the annual address at the deco
ration ceremonies in Milledgeville on the twenty-
sixth of April.
It seems to be understood that Senator Gordon
wrote the admirable address that was signed by
all the Democratic members from the South ex
cept Mr. Stephens.
Senator Reese offered a highly compliment
ary resolution to Hon. T. J. Simmons, President
of the Senate, for the able manner in which he
presided over that body.
Col. B. G. Lockett has attached the entire -
Brunswick and Albany road in his mammoth suit
for seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars for
an alleged violation of contract.
Judge R. H. Hardaway, of Thomasville, de
livered an essay on “ Gardening ” before the
recent State Agricultural Convention in that city
that was highly complimented.
Joint resolutions have passed both branches of
the Alabama Legislature, raising a committee to
inquire into the manner of Mr. Spencer’s elec
tion to the United States Senate.
George de Baptiste, who brought over one
Choice in Books.—Some one has hand
somely said that every book carries with it its
own peculiar atmosphere, just as does every
person, and it is no more possible for one to
take equal pleasure in all books than it is to en-
We grow poor, not so much because our incomes I j°y the society of every person one meets.
are so small, but because our outgoes are so large. | There are some authors whom, by a law of se-
The expense of making a crop has not been re- i lection that is commanding as instinct, we take
duced to a minimum. We fence in too large a ! a t once to our hearts and delight in their corn
field and travel over too many acres to produce panionship. There are others whom we find it
ten bales of cotton or a hundred bushels of i pleasant to read occasionally, just as we have a ! low after to glean the shattered stalks and find I ‘ a ' the greatest effort of his life.
you can’t get work in one department, get it in I thousand slaves from the South to Canada with-
T ,, ... , ..... out the consent of their owners, previous to the
another. Leave the cities and get out on little war> died at De troit last Monday.
farms. Get a few acres of ground, make it rich, j A SALUTE was flrecI at McPherson’s barracks
plant no cotton, and in a few years you will be j yesterday, in honor of General Irwin McDowell,
comfortable, independent, and on the road to j the department commander of the South. He,
fortune. Don’t try to be merchants, lawyers, ^ se his famil - v ’ is s °j° urnin g at the Kimball
preaches nor teachers. Everybody cannot belong 1 ‘ , „ ,,
,, „ , Harvey Jewell, brother of the postmaster-
to these professions. Be farmers; be producers, gene ral, has been confirmed for the vacant place
and not consumers. In other words, go to work, j in the court of Alabama claims. He succeeds
There is work, and hard work, too, and plenty ; Judge Martin Ryerson, who resigned on account
of it to do. The vinevard is wide, the laborers 1 ol ill-health.
few, and idlers crowd the market-places. The , T t HE Polk couat . y bar P a f e J l th « Allowing res-
„ . olution m compliment ot Judge Hugh Buchanan
fields are ■white, the harvest is great, and there ; of Georgia: We feel that we have in fact, as well as
is work enough for all. Reaping is work for the | in name, been before a court of justice, presided
strongest man, who fills his bosom with grain at ; over by an upright, honest judge, who has been
„<■ ,, . ,, , ,, , : diligent to administer the law and that only,
one sweep ot the sickle; the feeblest man can ! b J
_ ..... . . ,, ,, . Lieut. Gov. R. B. Hubbard, of Texas, has re
reap a little, and now and then gather a sheaf. ; cently made a great speecb upon the L ’ ouisiana
Boaz can go forth among the reapers and direct and Arkansas question, which has been pub-
them in their toil; and even timid Ruth can fol- lished in full in the papers and pronounced to
* He is the most
corn. e pay out too mucn for labor and for good man} acquaintances who are agreeable, but some handfuls dropped to encourage her in her popoiar man in that State,
fertilizers for the results produced. The remedy with whom intimacy is neither possible nor de- work. we f if n
must be sought in sounder methods, labor-sav- i sirable; and there are others whom we would
the beautiful soprano,
was in the finest health and singing to delighted
| There is work to do—but who will do it ? It | audiences who fairly covered her with bouquets,
ing implements, better trained labor, and less j always pass by on the other side. Just as a man ; is not forming resolutions, joining societies, or 1 But Nilsson, the still more beautiful singer, in-
of it, and small farms and little or no cotton. may be known by the company he keeps, so may making a great ado; but it is putting your shoul- steacl .. of entertaining delighted audiences, was
Tie k. Unirr, i i i . ~ . , ! unwell and entertaining a score or two of doc-
he be known by the books he reads, and espe- der to the wheel. If you want a thing done tors> who fairly covered her with mustard plas-
Piia.11V 1C rnic frn a n-Vi nu a • . r i i . *a rui _ , ■* _ _ ai • • I , , , i • i x
ent
Painted Beauties. A New York correspond- eially is this true when he has opportunity to right, do it yourself. The way to do a thing is i ters and fly-blisters,
it ‘ goes on as follows . “ Since the early days | exercise a cultivated and intelligent choice. I to do it! Let every man begin
intelligent choice. ! to do it! Let every man begin at home, build ! It is known to the intimate friends of Senator
of paint, powder, and court-plaster patches, the j There is no one so peculiar in his mental con- j against his own dwelling, and live in humble ! Johnson, says the Nashville l nion, that when
ladies have not disguised their natural complex- stitution that he may not by searching find just dependence on the Lord,“looking up to him for he left for Washington via Greenville, he carried
Club Rates.—Clubs of four and upwards can
get The Sunny South for one year at $2.50.
Any one sending a club of five and upwards at
$2.50, shall receive a copy free for one year.
ions as they are doing at the present time. Not the author to sympathize with him; to go with guidance day by day, and standing ready to do documents, m^oranX^mdc^espondence^hat
long ago one could tell a lady the moment he him in those trains of thought and of feeling all his blessed will. There is something for all , is destined to be the Pandora's box of Radical-
saw her; now it is impossible to tell a Murray that predominate in his mind. Not only have to do. 1 ism. When that trunk is opened for use, even
Hill belle from one of' the demi-monde. Your we authors for our prevailing moods, but for “ I „ T ho P e ' 5Vl11 not remam Behind.
- - Speaker Hardeman’s Farewell.—In the Ex-Gov. Horatio Seymour met with a painful
accident on last week. Mistaking a pitcher con-
eman delivered to the Legislature at the close of ! gaining a strong solution of sulphate of copper
for a pitcher of water, he rubbed some of its
contents to his eyes, and, as they became pain
ful, he administered glycerine. This greatly
increased the pain, and when medical aid ar
rived the governor was unable to open his eyes.
own cousin —perhaps your sister, too —blacks every varying phase of sentiment and thought , ... , , . . . . ., ,
, , t ’ l beautiful address which the Hon. Ihornas Hard
her eves and paints her face after a fashion which and aspiration we may, if we know where to
we used to think belonged to an entirely differ- seek it. find an interpreter i
. . • . . T .. , • j i ta i At ay i . * the session, we find the following sound, sens-
ent class of society. I am utterly surprised when Doubtless the happiest people are those who , , , ’ . .
... , , .. ti * , . , . . , F 1 lble, and handsomely-expressed sentiments:
looking around me, at the theatre or opera, to can and do choose wisely and widely from books. ’ , , V . -
. T1 , , , A . • * a ui? v i . , * ‘ , “Be not seduced bv a spirit of revenge to acts
see persons whom I know to be ladies painted ■ “For books are not absolutely dead things, but of T j 0 i ell ce and disorder. Thwart, by your sub
like ballet-girls. One is utterly bewildered at do contain a progeny of life in them as active mission to law, the purposes of your enemies, ——
the matinees. The young ladies who follow the as that soul whose progenv they are- nay they i for, believe me, their hopes for success in the The Secret of Beauty. It is not in pearl pow-
i • -ay ay • .I 1 i . . . . , * J J fntnrp arc based uDon their desire to drive you, der, nor in golden hair-dye, nor m jewelry. It
fashions appear with their eyes blacked, and do preserve as in a vial the purest efficacy and K p “ssion and ? yranny , to acts of disloyalty cannot be got in a bottle or a box.
sometimes with their lips painted red after a extraction of that living intellect that bred them.” and revolution. Be patient, yet firm—bold in It is pleasant to be handsome; but all beauty
peculiar French style, and their hair brought “If I were to pray for a taste.” savs Sir John the assertion of rights, yet submissive to the laws is not in prettiness. There is a higher beauty
down low on the forehead and plastered in reg
ular scollops an inch above their carefully corked
eyebrows. Then their lips are so heavily-loaded source of happiness and cheerfulness to me ; a heroic endurance of wrong you cannot remedy make your face over for you in the end, whether
Athens, Georgia.—A gentleman in South with a salve-like preparation that talking becomes through life, and a shield against its ills, how- rob the warring elements of political strife that nature has made it plain or pretty.
Carolina writes to us to know who are the gen- an impossibility, and kissing utterly out of the ever things might go amiss, and the world frown tempte i thrirfec^TmLybe! ^amiable expression atoles
eral agents of the Georgia Home and Georgia question. Over this conglomeration they wear upon me, it would be a taste for reading. Give ; n wb i eb vou worship. Be not discouraged, be- for all. If they can be cheerful also, no one will
Mutual Insurance Companies in Athens. Will j a thin vail of the palest gray, sometimes dotted a man this taste, and the means of gratifying it, cause Pharaoh and his Egyptians threaten your love them the less because their features are not
the agents there inform us ? with black, which heightens the effect to an as- and you can hardly fail of making a happy man. destruction, for the heaven-appointed signals ' regular, or because^ they are too fat or too tttin,
. tonishing degree. Under all this stuff they may unless, indeed, you put into his hands a most
Pressman—For the beautiful and unsnr- have a most beautiful complexion: but that is perverse selection of books. Y’ou place him in 0 f a “ pe0 ple with whom civil liberty is yet re
passed press-work done on this paper we are not the fashion, so they cover it out of sight, but contact with the best society in every period of garded as a sacred heritage and constitutional
indebted to our young friend Lawrence Thrash, preserve it by bathing their faces in cold cream history—with the wisest, the wittiest, the ten- government a priceless^legacy. Be true, then,
the regular pressman of the Southern Publish- on going to bed. To say that these ladies look derest, the bravest, the purest characters who
are already leading the hosts oY Israel, and the too pale or too dark. Cultivation of the mind
songs of deliverance are breaking upon the ears adds another charm to their laces.
to your duty and vour State. Her future is in
• .... , , ... - - - vour hands. Peace, order, quiet, the enforce-
mg Company. I hough young, he understands downright fast would be doing them scant jus- have adorned humanity. Y’ou make him a deni- ment of law, equal and exact justice to all, are
J his business and takes great pride in his work, tioe.” zen of all nations, a contemporary of all ages.” essential to her growth and prosperity.”
The first green peas of the season, says the
Thomasville Times, have been placed on our
desk by Ylr. L. Goldberg. Who next ?
Josh Billings says that “good vittles
to good morals.”