Southern enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 18??-1889, August 01, 1860, Image 1

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® @ o %’ o ® (S’ o ® VOL. in* £|6%nt|rrn€nkrfrist. *****— a © ®@ . mcrrs c. br^\n* I'roprimor. ® ¥Bl ® ® m j ® & TERMS. The*-Southern Em eki'kines iapublished, WeelHv fl ter ly, a’ [>®id in lf n ,Jt P“|l m affvaffce, IhreE Dollars will mvariift.lv be charged. . C ‘ -'•* E*l*rfcll# should be accompanied b v ♦be C ash -Chose wishing gie dirertion of their.par** changed ftrfh Mo&j M/je* what office il i. to be Ink, It*B*ed, mtj aud .Si#” © © — ADYEKTrtI.Yf*. - © © terms. AniERTisr.MENTs wilfebe published at One Dollar ®> Iwelv* limn or kaftfortheliil insertion, and bivsr ( t@NTs ior each sufiseqifent insertiozt. Those list Specified as to the time, will Be published anfil or-ti r ed%ut and charged accordingly. Obiti art NuTirtfcs. not d exeeeding six lines, will be .published but Cash a the rate Bi°QsE Dollar lor evet|f twelveoprinted lines exceeding ftmt munber, must accompany all longer indices. ’ cr Advertisers w: please i*ud in t!*ir favors previi ®us to 10 o’clock on Tuesdays. CONTRACT AIJ ERTISE tIESTS. Our c'stftriStts with Advertisers will be governed bv the following Uules, each square 0 being composed 1 of twelve solnl -Minion lines : ‘■ ’ “ T • ~ fTH I;°! °J fi § < LntOTH OF Ag>VETISi.>ItNTS. = Jo . * , v ~ s •.*5 © , S , ® C # In, A c S. mi °.5 c < Lm °J2 £ £ s —& One Square s-f. 00j$8 U 0 $lO 00 sl2 00 Two Squares . B#o U o oo 18 00 20 00 Three Squares 10 00 16 00! 21 00 00 FOW S. | nares 12 Five Squares... 11 00 20 00, 25 00 :30 00 Six Squares 18 00i24 00| 30 00- 35 00 One Half Column B . ®1 25 00 3# 00 1 35 00 40 00 Three fourths C01umn....... 35 00 41 00 52 00 6U 00 OneColunm . y .. 150 00 60 4)0 r7O 0U 80 00 rp“ Blsines#Cards, tdm of one ye#r,will be chargedin proportion to the spade th£y occupy, at One Dollar per Line, (solid Mfniou.) 0 s— ° I > <■ !. Al>V i: KIISIJU DO TS. •4JI persons ha i*ig occasion to tißveulise Legal S#lew, Notices, etc., are compelled -by Taw to* comply with the following rules: c A(laiiiiisii-|ttoi%, xcrirtorn or Guardians: All snips ol Land and Negroes by Administrators, ExSciHoru dt’ Gun*di;is, are required law to bp lipid on the first.Tu<_day m the month, between the hour* of tea o'clock? in •he forenoon, and thrat in the •fteriHurp at the Co*rthousV in the county in which the property is* situate. Notices of these sales must be giveirin a public Gazettu*Fon v Liu vs previous to of sale. © # .* Sale oPersonal property: a* 0 • Notifces oft the sale ot Personal Property* must *be ‘ given at least Tgi Da.fs previous to the day” of sal?.* Estate Debtors and Creditors: 0 ° o’ Noticesio Debtors aftll CKeditorS-pf an estate must be published Forty Days.* Court ofAkrdiuary lifDc to Sell: Notide (hat 3 application will be made tCi tl*e ConS of-Ordinary for leave qLand or Negroes, must be pift>lis 1 1 ednfeehjy lor Two Mofitfis! ° AdAiviiiisirayon ortJ Ctnardiansliip: CitaHons Un’ Letters oi Adnpiiy ignst be published Thirty Days-, for Distoissiqn fft>m Admin istration, monthly for Six Mdhths; Tor Dismissiou from Guardianship, bVrty Days. Foreclosure of Uules for Foreclosure of Mortgage must be *pub lishtfl igonsfcly for Four Mouths'! ~ o Establishiua I.ost l*tipersi Notices for establishing Papers must be pub lished ft.r (lie ftfll (enn of Tltre% Jionths. - a ® ,* “ ® rp“ Publications will always b* continued according to the above rukty mdi ss otherwise *>rdered. ‘ - /sav ®- ® O g” ’U - -- --- °IjAW C4RDS. ® * * —■■■■■■■■ ■■■ - ■ - —— a> .1. 15. SL Stanley, * r Attorney at law, s *• *’ QUITSIAN, BIfOOKS.OO,, CTA. o Will practice in the Coftjities of the Southern Cirwit, and CStitlye, Clinic, Ware and Lchofc of the Brunswick Circuit. 3 ® @ deg 17 ts oil IS & W. 11. Bonnet, ? Attorney at law, , > ° QUITMAN, BROOKS Cp , GA. sVill practice fn Thomas, Lowndes, Brooks and Berri ent Coiyjtics. ® ® m ® p toll 10 tt pj. 15. Alexander, Attorney at law, mh 25—ts TIIOMASVILLE, GA® _ P.@B. Bedford • ® .. Attorney OAT 0 AT law, °° • * ® ‘ WARESBORCftiGH,jOA* Will practice in fti% counties of the Brunswick Circuit 0 and in Lowgdes and Berrien Counties the Southern Circuit. o 8 e , ~ J e 19 ts John HI. %>yson, ° A Ttorney at law, ® A ® GA. Olßce neit noor to Dr. Bruce’s. 9 mh 18 ts “■* *!TC: 7* ® Bugenc L. Hi ms. ooo ® Attorney at law, • . jfi 26-ts @ TBO.MA9VIi.LE, GA. ®® ® L.* C. Bf.van, Attorney at law. mh 10®, ® TIIOMASVILLE, OA. #® @ E. f. Morgan, Attorney at law, ®® • NASHVILLE, BtatRIEN COf, GA. ° NVill practice in the Counties of the CBcitlt; rtnd the Counties of Dool vgWonb ipd Dougherty of the Macon; and Coffee, Clinch and Ware >4’ the Brunswick Circuit. Address at Fiyt Creekgpost Office, Ga. „ mh 18 ® © ts :k :•?5 W -m U, T- Pceples e ® Attorney at law. ® © NASHVILLE, BEiIRIEN CO., GA. -ie 12 * ® ® _ tf 5 . B. Spencer, Attorney at l/w, ® ® ® •• ® TIIOMASVILLE, GA. Will his entire attention o tft die Practise of l4w in the Counties of the Southern Circuit. - Office uk thb secuKd floor of Donald McLean's Brick bujljjng I mh 18 ts ® ® “-*• McCirdel,®^ JUSTICE OF THUPEACE. (S ®® tijfiet the Co&rthou.ie° Thomasvitte, &a. / All bp si ness him will bwattended to prompt lv’and with dispatch. tr3i 2o lv L „ a L, *>■ # : ® f Alias. IK. Hemingtoil JUSTICE OF TJSE PEACE°. ® ® ® Ofice Opposite the PoA Office, Thomasville. ° Collegtions of all kinds taken on liberal tertns. either in Justice'*, Superfbr or Inferitr Courts. 0 mh°lß ts „ . ® • ® Scliofield’s ®** ‘iron 1 WrmivS, ADJOINTNG TIIE PASSENGER DEPOf, •) Ma00n....°. ?s °..© Georgia, ® Manufacturers of © ® STT. IM F.nu'liita. and Boiler#*, ® Mill and Gin Gearing ® @ Cane Mills and Pans, ® ® © Syrup Boilers, Shall in? and Pulley. A Vp ALL KI>?I)S 0¥ MACHINERY MADE TO order at short no©cf <s ® @ ~, ® E ~ jan H-lv ® A*ents. Thomasville, Ga.o Job Worit. ® PBEPABKD TO DO ALIc a farce 0f PR W’ TING. from a Visiting Card to * large tbe ftiterphse office Tjy us. s i. ( traitor dr Proprietor. > o MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARDSr ° j © © o ° S ** A 0 * 9 w ® [3tft)ICAL CARD.] m Brs. Bni( w> Bleed. Having formed a° co °in . th& practice of Iflbdieine, offer ftieir#ervec& to the I public. ® m * * a k Office, she Os- I l.v 15i-e.,.-. for n.atiy *-ears. They have. opened a HttsPIlAL foiAhe cooveuftnce >f thoee ffitraiag davea redhiring Argical attention; and “poor wgite ps*-'"ig>. % • al-le t.. pa - . wa.. !#e tre*r • 1 *Tat , Accommodations comfortable. ’ „ * * * * * * R. J. BIOJCE, M J). 4 June 24, 1860. * J. U. M. REEU, M D. I-■ s vt • * , •* •- Dr. T..G. McDonald, 0 fc I N TfiXDEftlX® His PBOFF'S*- <9 \L iI*PvVIG*!S T to the of Thomasville and vi> :yitv, would in 0 form them tlmt hahA b-ia practicinganediciHe ia Jdhr- * unty. Fitrida, for five ydfi, during which time lk : iias met and treated igosba4 tbe dlsea.- o wliieii 00-urtn this latitude. OFFICE, side street, near tlfe office foruittlv occupied by < J. llal rfc ULSIDBNCE, the house formedv occupied L. Anderson. @ Thomasvil|e, Jafmarv 7, 1860. ts | ° Dr. E. J. Oli^cros, Practitioner of JVltdieine and Surgery, o j* ! 1 Glasgow, Thomas Ck)., Ga. !*• Iff. s. S. Lrfiims. Hereby i.n*for,ms HtS friends and tih? public, that ne will continue the pfaei ice of medi cine atPthe old stand and respectfully tenders his services t<? the public. o Thomasville? April 2. ® ts - [reform PRACTIC#;] ° l>r. I; S. Bower, OFFERS JIIB PROf , i:s>IO.'fAL O SERVICES TO the eftizens of Tliamusville afid vicinity. Calls at all hours, prougply attended. ‘ mil 18 ts, Bfr. Brandon. • ° Has removed -to cue office formerly occupied by Johif .Miller. I2eq., Is a Law Office. C'all*,prouiptlv Aittended. , IfT” Special a(t*,f.;on will be “given to Surgefv and Sittgical°Diieases,. * * 0 Thomasville, Januffty 15, iB6O. ts Bis. 11. B.°& Si. O. hmold,* • Resident Dentists. Thomasville. Ga. ° WE HAVE THE I'IULTICAL OF T fifteen Wars experience in every , ° branch of the prqjfession. * M e cSfl refer to wh > hav had the UFr\-, % of our operations at this County for the past six years. # • • ’ We have every hw-ilitysfor doing die best 0 c PlS.te-W<srk, • . . NOW KNOWN, WHICH IS DENOMINATED .* 0 Gum Work, .on Plate, whicli is impervious to anv of the acids, ‘even in a concentrated form. leetß tilled with pure gold in a superior ngujner. Indents favoring us with tR.-ir confidence raav rclv° o upon our impost exertions to perform evefty operation iii as perfect a ngifinner as possible. mb 10 ts IS. 15. 11. A Riilon, .\\TOrLD RESPECTFULLY INFORM TIIE QTI *t 0 izens of oTliomasville 0 .•* -—-9. (l and vicinity, that they are ‘v i. A 7 o luting upbtheir ‘ . * /’ W f Mcdicnl’ mi* Di-ninl ‘ ysi *'jp; AJ'f / M . OFFICER -'A* ;*. .. V-. - *-J N* N Ii A J \T V L I- . 1,, ■ ® • Thu Dental KooSi is so •> ananged.s not to be moles ® c lel by any business of the ‘ ./ th jfi Ac Medical Office, ana will be •* r .• Iv< |>l !Sjiitily Pfiralc •• —s ior laidie# and Gfeiulduen. wisliintr Dental Operatipns. our patrofis in JITiDICjNE may b#* ass anal MuW no second, prescription to the sgme. patient a ill be ad ministered bjf any other than • °. •* tt. El. I’iKilW .. * **• AS HE HAS NO COPARTNER* IN MEDICIivE and In* Dru"s are all fresh and corrcrtly*!.alib ■. OFFlCE*ecdli(l dooy east of tfte one formerly occupi ed bv Bhcce & Eaton. ® mli lO tfo .• New £rug Sjtore„ DR. I*. S. BOti'Eß has opened a Dnfcr Store at °ihe stand formerltyoccuuied by I’ALMLR &. BKO., j>ppoait%Ee leaiaffMi’g ana is prepared to fumiak . Drugs, llrdjfinas/lVi iijMHT v, InStv *. FANCY 8 ® A upon fair ttAms, to those.who ijjay fa* -n 1 him with a caW. Tahis Reform jriends lie w* o!d lie has (4 hand a fresh and reliable <V „ • * p A T 1 ’ A W.f f MWTiTr fOT , Jj 17 <L\ LO Kt L: -kJa yj, .. J,N e2i Oy and will” be glad to supply tjem witfc such articles as they may need. • *• * ALSO. * . Kero*ine,Firte Cigars and T<bacco, Fine •i'Jedicinal Brundias and Wines, kept const® - on land am? for “%• * ® * * . may gVtf Bm?s o aiitl Medicines:. o • , JUST RECEIVED A LARGE A\D M'gLL SEI.EC- , ted stock of Drugs ani] Medd ines, Cnendyals 04 all kinds. ® @ ® * Also. Paints. Oils, Gl.Vs. Futty, Varnish, Brushes, Dye Stuffs, Patent Medicine*.. Garden Si-ed***L diet Articles, Brushed &c. Kerosine X)il and Lamps; Gampliene, Buffnilig Fluid and Lainps. ° 0 EDWARD Druggie!.. ° Thomasville, May 21, 1851). ts Apothecary's Hall. VriHE,SUBSCRIBER, IJAVINffi A STOLE X gllf Thompson’s 2Vew Brick liiiililing, respectfully inviteslhe attentionlef thejmMic so tas com plete and well selected stock $f 0 ® and Prugs, ® * ® ® ® Medicines, ® ® ® m Cheihicals, ° “Paints, ® @ *bils, © ®* • °° ® Pye-Stuffs, . ■ Perfumery, .. * # Spices, • •• • L @ ® @ SOgsrs, © ® o Fine Brandies, ® ° # , n , : Wines, * ® * . * ° Poi-tar. ® © Ale, ® ® ® Toilet-Soaps, ®® © © ? Potash, ® © ® . # &e@ &c. ALL OF tVHICH WILL BE SQLD’ON REASONA © © AUJ-E TERMS. @ Attention given personally to the preparation of Prescriptions. o 0 * o ** All MEDICINE A Varranled geniiitie. ® N. G. MCDONALD,°M. D. o Thomasville, Ga., June 6, 1860. ts? L u ■’ -8 |a(Jdlc and Harness Manufactory. * A° LARG ? E AND ASSORTMENT OF° Harney and Saddles, © ® © Bridles, ® & O. r’Vh ,°Kept constantly on hand 0 ° if-- ! and for salt, at’the Manu- “ -■■Cf - faetoty of 0 0 McGLASHAN & LITTLE?. Harness and Saddle REPAIRING promptij - “at tended to. , ® m © Thomasville, Jan. 21, 1860. @ © 1£ ; Books 9 ! Books I .] ACHOIGE LOT OF BOOKS. FROM ‘THE BEST Authors, in store and for sale, to which thoaittention * of Lames and Gentlemen is invited. © © PREMIUMS awarded to tlfe pure Iftsen* of s.-veral Book* in tie Jot. o o * © N. G. MkDONALD. L’homasvjjle, Ga & . June 6, ®tf ® . - Soda Water. This delightful beverage, in its per section—with choice “© nips—< ®d and sparklum— commenced Phi wing to-day for the season, at th^storc of the undersigned.® . , ° ? ICE kept on hand constantly, and for sale bv Mavl.jtffiO ® gOHN STARK ■ THOWASYIELE, GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY,".AUGUST it 1860. ®ai• * ‘ . a, 1 o ° “The Old Uansof the 71®iutai.” ® m ‘ ’ o “The 04il Lian of the 9 Nlountains” has long been atl object of woti'ftr to persons visiting the White ; Mountain of New Hampshire. “Moffint Jackson,” c upon whiclclie is one of theese immense piles Muich overlraiig the A tn niA Hotel, and one sidfc of jvfcich is composed of solkl rock, almost perpen- 0 dicular. ‘Ti*!- jutting out of Ace bio* k* of granite, ar thGheight of nine tharwoue tfiousaed feet, pre® sent-a ie vi ;v of tfte hunm® face, sixty feetfin i length liom° fiyehead ao chin,jevery fixture of f Mkiicli, in due prop<9 is distinct and conspicu | ous. Neithe# is it an inanimate profile, but [dbks i the li\u s mnm as if his voice wpulit reach to o the I pf “portioimte di- of its immense size, a nil seems gazing down upon the wild mij faried spread l out before him. — Ex- Goan Jlill. * o. * • • ft © .• * < Old man of the mountains, say whence comes tl^pu. In thy majesty forth, on the dark mountain’s brow? My spiilr is bowed, as rapture I gaze,® And ltt-avenw.-uA! * surely, t-lie thoughts Ihou must rarfe! 61 • 9 # 1 Thg hand of Omnipotence planted°thee there, And chiseledrflty feat (fret so i-tl'ect and rare, Me scarce can believe that no ray from above 9 within thee a°Soul of love. For gently and kind i%flic-'inien thou dost wear, Vet stern in thy grandeur, as high in the air Thou slundest a if between heaven and earth, IV*- scafte can imagine which gave thee thy birth. Xo Hi? I child of the lowest bow With reverence aiiA awe as lie looked on thy brow, And ddeamtd the Great Spirit,dhus guarded his home, life his pale brfwfier sent him in exile to roam. o Oh, hadst thou been human, and lingered thus loffg, What records of tin© would to nicm#ry belong, Since firs® thou did'stluuse upon Lie’s little span, From the infant, of dot's to the o hoary-liair^d°man. l\liat bu’-ftens of sorrow each pilgrim did bear, Tlfeov.ftges of sftt in*a world oucc so 6tir! ’Tis well that thy heart like thy head is of stone, And the griefs of our natutm thou never hast known. . s Old roan of the mountains, I envy thy home; Beneath tfiee the silver cataracts foam. ® ‘ Or calm in their beauty, the still waters lie, Like mirrors reflecting the hue'bf the sky. 0 o Ab®ve thee the suashine%end® forth its first raj', To pl;y on thy©lips, and the eveuing of 3ay Brings t In- dc ,( b high, in nigUtVsilAice to sLed Its iucens’e so f'r.i'grrtnt on thy Llred head. -9 ® m offtresleth itself on thy brow*; Thy mantle of mist, I can see 0 o , The avinter-snows gliUer, lilec diamonds bright On thy breast as it the moon’*gentle light. Thy music is nature's ;°witli oft varied voice, Sy echo doth sometimes in gladness rejoice,* ° Or fearfully sends baek.tlie thunifter’s Aeep*tone, ° Frojfi the caverns <vt eartl*aud the ramjjarts of stone! The stars are thy crt>*m, and tli* wild wiiMls thv j> breafcjy * 9 . Which vieldg not, like ours, a tribute*to death ; 1 Arouuil <, t]* , e,*ukejif*rnarehs, the mountains do stand, 4n silence thcir.ftlaker’s pommand. (T;d man oI*(lic mountains, when tliby < lh-lu, Too, must be subject to blight and decay! °Uith the of the Igi 11s iutrtrujn must fall, As tifciS siufts.wlift nature beneath the saint* nail * 0 ° II. V- li. —*,: * **. — . ° From the Wavorly Jiragazine. * “ ‘flint Wi-fl-Rcuicjukci-cd ( %train?” 0 Hbw dr!4ucft n*v soul of other dbys,*, ° Os joys tliat sliaikne’ei*come agVn, When o’er the chords thy fingers^iwept M * And wald fliat wll refiiemUered strain. . • o • I listffncrl to the music *wcct, • ‘lk#jdaintTve song—?lhe tender lay; • If spolfe to me of happier hours, o ** *Alas! n°w fled fore’er ©way. *O* sing that song once more for me,” °* lt* sooiding sil-ains shaltmless my keffrf*. ( Aifd wflke some 01-ien ■■emory;° • • 0 *7 1 . I tvili let its note© dftpart* . lor it.reminds of pieasurc® gone, < • rtf joys I again; 0! let tlfy voice in song oik® more, Awrfke tlJ* well*i;cm(4*ubered strain. o • • o The blissful ne’er fofget, ‘J stat woke in song thy joyftus heart; 0 Its giusic clivers Sty yet, Nor will 1 Pet its notes*depart. 0 0 • And when at eye I inuso alons ° o ; O’er joys ne’er shalPeome again, J?erclmnce some olden memory, o Will wake tliSt well remembered strain. © IO• © * ® Misqiqitadons From ScripJ|tre. 0 “ God tempers the yiftd to the short? lamb.’* Front Slerue’s SentimetUai Journey to Italy, toiji pare Isaiah £xvii: 8. ° . * © “In the midst of li£e we ar<s in odeatn.’* Fron\the iJuriai Service; and this originally, from a hyffjn of Vmther. ° • * ® s “ Bread and wine which the Lord hath com manded to."te received.' ”® From the °English Catg,cli : sm. ° “Not to be wise above wbatis “written.” Not in Scripture. “ ‘J'liat the Spirit would po frorfi heart to heart* as oil from vessel to vessel.” “Not ii\ Scripture, o “ mtn is mer<y,ful to 9 his beast.” The S*cypturc “Arighteous man re-° gurdeth the life%f his beast.” Proves xii: 10. D “A natfen shall be bopy in a<day.” in Isaiyh it reads,, “ Shsdl a nation beForti uft oncej ” Uvi:B. ® ® * “As iron stearpenetji iron,o doth a man the countenance of his friend.” o . “ Iron sharpeneth iron ;so a mait sliarpcifbth the coun4enance of his frigna.”—Frov. xxvii ; 1?. . “ That Fe who runs may read.” “ ‘a'hat he may run that reatfeth.” — ii: 2. si “ Owe no man any filing Lut&Jove.” “ Owe no m§n thing, Lut to iove orie°another.” — o Rom. xiii :8. ® # ® @ • ° ® “ Prne to sin as the sfiarksftjp forward.” P&Brtt n to troul le°asjhe sfarjes fly upward.”— Job. v : 7. s “ Exalted to” heaven oT’prisilege.” %ot in t|ie 13ib|p. ® ® m * ® o Eve was not Adffcn’s helpmate, But merely a liclp meet tor him ; nor was Absalftrn’# long haif, o£ which ho, was so jiroudf the instrument of hist tlestruetion, lii:? head, and not the hair upon it, having been in the° bougl of the tree. 2 Samuel xviii: 9.— S. C. Advo cate. ® * ® • ® ® • 1 o ® p ’ A Ilnrd Sum. © ® ® °° Are you good at,arithmetic ? 14vill givoyog some Vsse’s’tb o add up id cateulate how much, they come tp. £t is a good one for th® hoys. They are los&s made by strong drink. *Loss of mon time : 1- - - s°’ of health; lot# of bjisi- o ness; loas"of,character®; loss of friends; loss of good yonioitnee ; loss ijf feeling; loss of mind; life ; Insspf the imnfbrtal soul, olt a long and terrible accountXo run up : but it is an *e;fky one w?begin, and Iwe hoys beginning it at the bier °hops; , 9 ,yoftng mrti atftling ta 6l it at the tavern hilbard-saloon. Stop 1 stop ant| reck on up alfcthe losses, before ftp go* farther/ Can • you afford such losses in the long of eterni ty. —S'. C. Advocate , @ I’umiliar t|iaolalion. 0 There are many phrases°and quotations which are as ‘familiar in our mouths as household words,qwhose origiti is*:ifhej- unknokvnoorMis conceived, and.witjiout encroaching upon.<>the sphero of thy works devoted to this o nurpose, we “may mention a fewof'them:—‘Th®re is * in the pot/ 0 is from tht Bible, 2 Kings k., 40.** o ° o * “Loyely and plJksnnt fn >heir lives, and°in death* they were not divided’ is spoken „of SauFand Jonathan* 2 Sanmel i .,£9.** , ; A mao after hi o\rt*i heart/ —t Sanmel ... 1 i to • XIU*, li -0 ‘The appfc his (^ T e/—Duet, xix., 21. o 0 ? A still smalf voice/-—I xix., I^. o ‘ Esfaped the skiu of any teeth.’—Job xix., 20. ° * m -e. ‘ Tha£ mine adversary had written a book.’ Job xxi., 35. •'Spreading himself like o a green tree.’ —Psalm xxxvii.,°3s. o *. ‘Hanged our harps u£on tfie jvilloos.’ Psalm cxxxvii., 2. ® - ‘Riches certainly make (no* take, os is ofteib quoted) themselves tfingg.”—Proverbs xxiii, 5. ‘ Heap coals qf fire ttpou his head.’— lbid. x**v.,|2. ~ * ‘ijo new thing tmder the “sun.’—Ecclesi astes i.,9. • .*> ° ‘OP’makiftg many books there is no nd. ,c< — lbidfx ii., i2. ® % ‘Peace, peace, when there is no, pbace ’ — made famous by Patrick Henry)—Jbremiah vii.,ll. * *; ! ®3ly name is Legion?—Mark v**., 9. o * ‘To kick against the pricks/*—Acts ix., q,. 0 ‘3la If e virtue of necessity/ —aSlMspeft/s Two°Gentlemen of Verona. o ‘ All that glistens is not gold/ usually quoted, ‘ All not gold that glitteris. 9’—Mer chant of Ye nice? • Screw your courage to the sticking jtiv.ce,’ - (not point. J 4— Macheth. o ‘ 31uke assurance sure.’—Macbeth, o # llang out your bamiers on the outward (not ouier) wails.’ — Ibid. ° ‘ It is an ill wind turns non& to good,’ usual ly qufltoi], ‘lt is an°ill°wind that hlotrs no on® good.’—Thomas Yasser, *ISBO. “ ‘ Keep the •'ord°of‘° promise to our ihef eat, tut break it°to our hope.’— lbid. ° 0 ‘ Christmas conies but once a year/— lbid. ‘Look, ete you leaps’—Jludihras, commonly (plowed, ‘ Look before yofulcap.’ ‘.Out of ueind, as soon as out of sight/ usually quoted/’ Out of sight out of mind.’— Lord Rr®oke. ° 0 ° ° 0 ‘What tfiough the field be lost, all is not lost. 0 * . • * o ° Awpke, gris®, or be forever fulTen.’— lbid.° ‘ Necessity the tyranrt’s plea.®— lbid. w old man* eloquent.’— lbid. 0 ( ‘ Peace her victories.’ — Ibfd. 0 ‘Thoufh this In ay bp*play to you, to us.’ lioge®L’.Estrange, 1704. - * ‘ z\ll cry and n® wool-*-(not little wool.)- 6 - filialibras. * * 0 * ‘Count their chickens <*re (not before) they* are batched.’ o fbid°. ‘Through thick and thin.’ Drycbtn. ‘ “Wheat (Greeks joined .(.rte&s, thfn)was°tbe tug of war/ usually, quoted, •"When Greek* nieets Greek, then conies The tug of war.’—r’ Nathaniel Lee, 1G92. . o , * # Of two evils, l have cliose tli® fcutst ’ — Priori , 0 * * \ ‘ Richard is° himself jtgain.’ Colley ‘Gib ber. • , •*, •• ® • • 9 , ‘ Clagsic ground.’ Addisoft. 0 ‘ thousand.’ N. P. Willis. * .% ‘As clear as a thistle/ Byron, 1763. o ‘ A good hater.’ Johnstpiarta. # A fellow fesling°makos one (not s) |wond fous kind.’ Burns. ‘My name is T or°vuk’ o °John Home, 180§. ‘Ask me no* questions, and Ml tell you no •goldsmith. ® ’ * ‘ Not nitidh the “worse for wear’ 0 (not no>i<e the worsg.) Cowper. o 9 ° ‘ )Vhat will Mrs. Gruffly say/ Thomas Morton. •. © ‘ No pflt up Ltica contracts your powerf.’ —Jpnat.ban M. Sewell, o ‘ Ilsitli given to fortune.’ Bacon. ‘Jlis (God’s) image-cut in eb&ny.’_° Thomas Fuller. m @ # ° ‘ Wise p and masierly inactivity.’ Mackin tosh, in 1791, thoughogefferSlly attributed Cos -Randolph 6 . # ® °‘ Fifst in war, first in peace, and first in flie hearts of Ins fellow-dtizens/ (net countrymenff Resolutions presented*to the°Hguse°of Tlepre-ro sentatives, December, 1799, Prepared by, Gen eral Hetrty Lee® * ® ‘ Alilliouis for defense, but not one cent for tribute.’ Charles C. Pinclfney. ‘ The almighty dollar.’ W’ashington Irving. ‘A® good as a play/ King, ‘Charles, when in Parliament, attending the discussion of Lord Ross’ Divorce Jlill. @ s •• ® ‘Selling a bargain/ is in Love’s Labor Lost* *Fast and loose/ Iff id. ® ® 1 lumping a man.’ “Ottoway’s Vrenict%Pre serared. m ‘ Pope’s Prodongue Satires. ‘ In thob wrong Fox’s Martyrs. @ ‘To lamn in the of to hoal.’ King , and no King, Beaumont and Fletcher. ® ® ’ The hackneyed newspaper Latin quotation, ‘ Teihpora nuttanOr, nos” e£ mulanus in Hits,’ is not found in any classic ow Latin The to it was, ‘ Omnia mittan tur,’ etc., and this is found in Borbonlus, a German writer of the middle ages. & ‘ Smelling of |he laftip/ is t 8 fce° found in “Plutarch, and is there°attributed to Pythias. ‘ % little bird told me,’ comes from Ecclesi astes x., 20 : ‘ Fpr a°bird of ihe air shall carry the voice, Sad riiaC o which hath wings shall tell the matter.,ip- ° “He that fightssand runs away* 0 May to fight another day.” © @ These lines, 0 usually ascribed to e lludibras, are reaUy much oltfor. They atoto be found? in a book published in 1656. The same idea is, however, expressed in a ftouplet in 1656. The same idea is° hewevar, expressed °in a crttiplet published in 1542, the few fragments of the Greek 5 * writer, that have beet*pr©sefved, Embodies the same ide® in a single line. The couplet in Hudibras is: © * ° * “0" 0 ° For those that fly may ifghftagain, o Which he can nevig- do that’s slain.” ° < Hell is paved with good intentioQs/ though foun in Johnson aad Herbert. 0 was obviously i in the 4r o day provNrbial expression. ©Walter Scott ascribes k Q to *sotee stern old ifivinj.’ ‘ There’s % time coming/ i#> an expr- hy Sir Walter Rol® Koy, and 9 has doubtless fonti long time heel* a familiar saying ©n Scotian*. . • °* * © o ‘ Kripu.it csdo fvlmtitseeptrton © tyfaiyi wfts a liMe upon Franklin, written by Turuot, thS o Mtoistet ot*2jouis It is. however, luerolvti modification of a line iy Cardinal Po-l lignac, ‘Ki iputqw*Uo*vi fuimai Ph®-luy%Te sa ffittas,’ whichj/n turn, tt;!* tak\n from a hue of, Marcu#Mnilius, who says of Epicurm ‘ Eri- , puitjge Jovi fid Men vi.res<fk> ° “ c3 j ‘ Yo% pcipuli, vox DtA.’ The origin of this fankliar phrase is not kmrtvn, “Auit it is *s a proverb by Wftliam of 31?i1mesbury.Avho‘ livgd in the eariy part of Die twelfth cefttury. o ‘ i/tiiva facias fegum°, This nfqtto was en graved oh the French cannon by order of Loufs°XlV. 0 © “Whistling gieis am? crowing Ikuia o 0 Always Stone to s®me Lad end.” Tn one t>f the curious Chinese books recently translated and published in Pans 0 this proverb occurs in tubstankally, (lie same “words. It is aL an O injunction of the° priesthood, c and a carefully observed household custom, to kill immediately “every lien that oows, as :p preventive against the misfortune? which the circumstance is supposed to indicate. samft practice prevails throughout o many por of thfi I/nited o ' , States. o $ O 0 The 15ii-Ss<><l, . @ © o HiS “estate i%too narrow for his ndnd, and therefore, is fain°tft make liimself room in other’s affairs; y&t eve? itt pretens°e*of love. No news can” stir ln*t by his neither can he know” that which he must not tell. 0 What dvery man ventures in £ Guiana voyage, and what they gained, he knows to a hair. Whether Holland wif! have peace heJkncyivs; anion what conditioas,- and with what *uceo®s, is familiar to him erc„ it be concluded. No post caiupass him withoutijuuetion, :Ind ratha*- than o hc will lose the n°ews 4 he rhU-s back witlt him to appose hiin o qf tidiflgspniid then te the next man he meets he supplies the wants of his hasty intel ligence, and mu keif up a perfect (ale, where with lie so hauntepi the patient auditor that, aftpr many excuses, he is j#i?i so endure rather the censure of his manners in running away, than the tediousftess of an impjrtineflt dis course. “ His speech is often Jjroken off°with*a Succession of which he ever vows to fill up er# the conclusion And perhaps would” effect it ffothe other’s ear, were as ins°toptru. ff helsec two men talk and scad a letter.in the ’ sti’ept lie them and asks if hePiryjy not be jjartticr of that’secret relation :gnd if they deity it,“ho to tell, since ho n*ay noT lie;®', w^m^ers; and then falls ujion the report of the Scottish Aline, of the gmit ii©li taken up at Lyn, or the freezing of the Thames; and after many thanks°and is har 4y entreat ed o ° lie Undertakes as irfuch as he per forins little. TLis man ffill thrustkim©elf for ward td be the guide of the way lie .knows not and calls Beieh°bor’s window and a.-ks why his servants are work. The market hath no commodity whicli lie prioetli anti which thgpext talke shall nofc]iear recited. His torfgue Bke the tail of°Famson’s “foxes, tarries fire brands, and, is enough to set the whole field of the world or* flam#. ■> Ilimscflf begiiis t@ talk <j4 his neighbor at o anothcrs hoard O ’fo whom he hears the news, and adjures him tp eonoeal the importer; whose choleric ftnswet*hf.returns to hifir©t Lost, enlarged with asecjjnfl cddiori: so aa.it use* to be done jn the fight es unwilftog mastift's*, he/claps each on°the side apart, and provokes °tUem to an gager copfßct. There can De noaetpass without his comnflent, whichTs evtfr far-fetched, rajh, suspicious, dilatory. Iliaears are long, und his„eyes quick, but most o°f°all to imperfections 0 ; which,©as life easily sees, so he increases with intermeddling. lie l&rbors an other man’s sert ffnt, and amid his entertain ment aSks what fare is usuaknt h(Mne,"wliafhours are what talk passetU their meals, his master’s disposition is, what his government,, his guests; and when he hath by curious inquiries “extracted all the °jtffee ? and spirit o| hoped intelligence, turn® him off whence lie came, and works on. anew, lie hates constan cy as an eartlieS dullness/unfit fhr men of spir °it, ai|d lovgs to changtf his work and his place ; 1 neither yet can lie weary of him ; for as he sets ‘himself on work smothers pay him with hatred ; and look how lfiany ©masters he Lath, so miy enemies fncifLer is it posable tluft any shoulcf not hate him, but who knows him aiot. Soothen he labors o talks without credit, lfVesfewithqut love, dies without tears, without pity, sav® that* some say it #as a pity he died no scalier .—Bishop Hall.® @ Q . ® @ —® •*•**—# ® @ ® ® A System of Banking. A Bank has been established at °Bostor\. It is described in the Boston Joufnal of 13th. The fir 1 * lesson which the visitor of tlfe institution lfiarns the names of its customers are known to any others than tlft officers of the bank"; nevertheless the offi cers are sufficiently cominuiwcative of statistics. All applicents are treated alike. The man wfio° borrows hjs hundred or thousands— o ancf such customers are not rare even c at the Pawners’ Bank—and the poor widtov or laborer Who pro cures a loan of 9 twenly fh'e cents/pay exactly the same rate of have precisely the §ame privileges, and are bound o by the sanje obligations. o The loans are all granted for„six months,Avhfther asked for vr hot”but t]je<deb£ &r may Redeem hi# pledge gt anytime, paying interest ®nly for ijie time he h|s actually had the lo&n. Very o frequontly loans ar6 paid the nex4 day, and oft®ner still, tho, debt is liquid©- j (ted°wifliin a° Week. The ftictthat in more half th§ Irarftactiongp of* the institution, the it*m of interest amounts 0 to slot ftver twenty scents, show"tke° great value of this eaterprise c( to, the poor? Ii? over the interest col-° ufhn in o the hpoks df the bank 9 , the eye frequent ly engounters tlfe §um “ ones ceyt V carried out against a Joan that 0 had been paid; and. the 0 number of eftiries of five rs ton and fifteen cents, tell *grati%ing°story fts'well for the hank as for its customers. Nortis this all: any borrower hitaself to redeem his pledge when the half year has expired, ° may, if “the security remains 0 unimpaired; reftew !he loan for another term by p*>Yng the accumulated ir>o terest. .• o -© # (3) •’ ® o $ TKJC.ns. TWO DOI/LAbK l° * In Adrauce. ° 5 O j, Item*, I'rm o Th‘ ° Truth I'iu tf.l). —]>ivifio |ruth shotted be 0 •explained, awl enforced, but not di futed. I‘roachers a#d ?tinda) 4 -echool ’ should gurd against diluting : 4he truth, a,nd thereby, Weakening its ibrce. A gentleman | once c gaw°oto a°good man woman a folio o . commentary to aid |hetn in their daily worship. 0 i After they had tried it fw sometiaie, the fius bnd said to the wffe° “ 1 think did better I had this gregt book. we relil the llible itself “only, it was|ike a of 1 bftt “liow it is ltke a glass of wine ill a | pail of jvateri’ “ ® @ @ ® © f “ Let Me Aponte.” —A poor drupkatd had fallen t)i high way, ai in danger of t being riui overby the first wagon coming along. , Some o persons sought to remove him to the Q wayside that he migh| be out of But he resisted their efforts, and kept drying out, “ Let tye alone.’’ o So ynpopiteht “sinners oftimes wish to be let alone in their sin and danger. They are displeased when men approach them with the kindest intentions, clf not. in words e by their acts they say, * let us alone.” But those who lyve their siftds will not let them alone. They will strive to lead thlbi to tiie Savior,. ®, 0 ©6 g TfiE Sure Word of know that book you talk about so much is the lliblc?” is a question asked of me often, ors the cars, in the stage coach, and bjn many of the scenes a fid places which” P “visit in my Ex tensive in^i-cp o urse with men. My Answer to that question always is, “ Try c it, and you‘’will know.” Yes, j o iist try it. Suppose you “Were ° ip “great want of food, of clothing ortif money,’ ana you should recieve tn a letter a bill “for a Jyuniircd dollar* on the Girard or°any other “bank. Ilcw ar&you to know whether it good O for anything? Go to the bank and try it. „'® ® © Why Do Xoy I Become a S. S. Teacher ? At a public meeting in Sheffield, a°t which James spoke inf>chalf o of Sunday 9 - seliool Instruction, he said, “ You wiH nature SFfy ask—why do not LbqcoDje myself a Sun day-school teacher? I have no doubt I could adduces reasons, which would satisfy you ? but 1 must honestly confess that they doYiot so.ful ly satisfy myself.” ° t From that day the illustrioy# poet takes Iris place as a teacher in the Red Hill Sunday school. llow mafiy, if they would°as honestly follow the conyjfctions of their onsciepce follow p The ‘GiiOOMY Suij#e°ct.’— Sometimes dpath coin** sSt) pear us that we ahnost shudder/as though his cold hand were about tqbe laid upon ciis. Such were my feelings o tliis morning l o went to my pla£e ? ol‘ business, fetid found that my neighboc who bad°becn in his accustomed plaew only the day before, ip the enjoyment of apparent good health, had gone to his heavenly es 6. Only a few wcqks ago he had requested the prayais of the meeting that his heart might obe sustained under * sore trod, the decease of a beloved daiWilitur, And now the father too has gofce. And°to be with Jesus? o ° God is speaking to o us aIL He spgaks to me to-day; to morrow he may to you. Who knows ? Let me tell you in what language ihis evef# speaks to°fvu :° “°B@ ye also ready”—-you know the rest. Men of business in . meeting to-day, nva you ready ? lUdtliers and fathers In Israel e yoh ready ? Children, are jou ready ? Uuconverted man, woman or chill, are you ° ready if God should ‘suddenly call for yog? Perhaps you don’t feel thg inS port<s)f this question now, but I tell yoit there are tiipes when you shall feel it. When yog 1 stand by o the bedside of loved ones, ana see the impress of death op theAirow, snd your thoughts fellow after the spirit 0 that has jtfst left the marble 4’orm before }°ou, thenj. he question will coifie h®me, am I ready ? Js it not for us in lift? sometimes so think, of death. 0 ® ® @ 0 “ Nothing to Lije fdr in This World.” Who is licensed to make° such an utterance ? Many.seem to flunk they are, bbth saints and siifbers; bui no, Emphatically no. Such lan guage results from chagrin, disappointnftnt— in a s*rd, some action of° a morbid or perverted sbrajn or heart. Especially when a Christian presumes to say such a thing, it is wrong, all wrong. to live for ?” Have all y®ur talents been taken from you? I hnowa woman who bas Aeen upon her back for twenty jears, ypt rejoice* that she has something to o li\e for, %s she makss a little garment for the poop and prays for God’s blessing upon the re ceiver. Why tha> Christian has something to live in tribulation, for hg can glory in them hers, a#d in their sanctification he gets a fafmore “rich aryl an abundant entrance”-La’ “ all things ? working together for his goods.” Certainly to attain this higher end in glory is worth living for here, just as long aS’he wilfe, in the doleful circuttstances. ol & But to say nothing more, this is certain: that sis long as there is a tear o to Be wiped, a sinner saved, steehild to be brought to your ® knee arsl faftght the way of life, there is much,’ veryy much to lore for. © Christian, look out instead of within, up in stead of down, and then you will sing a-new song! ° J.oB. R. ® ® ® ** T ‘* ® .*® CliincMC Mai a tat lona. V Th# salutation between two Chinamem when they meet consists in eaelv,clasping and shaking 4iis own hands/ instead of each other’s, and bowing°very almost to the ground, several times. ° A question more cqpimon fhan # How do you do ?” is, “ Haveyoueaten rice ?” This being the 9 staple Article of food = throughout the empire, an<f formiifg the chief and° imlispetsable °part of every UKal, it is ta- * ken for granted that if you haye “ eaten*'rice ” . you “tire well. Etiqiftttc requires that, in” con versation, each should *ompliment the oth|r and everybody belonging tohim,intne most /idektory style o ;„a°nd depreciate himself, with him, 6 to the lowest possible point. *>l*h°e following is no exaggeration, though not the precise words: *“ What is your honorable name?” —--‘My sinsignificant"appellation is M ong “Where is yc&r magnificent palace*?’ “My dbntemptiye but is at Suchau.”^—“ How many are youy, illustrious children My vile, worthless brats are five.”—tHow is the health of your distinguished spouse?” —“My good for tfWhing old’woman is well.” ° A NO. 17,