Newspaper Page Text
Carriage Manufactory
BY
GOWER, JONES & CO.,
CARTERSULIE AND ROME, GA.
Repairing,of all kinds, Done to Order.
Manufactured and Repaired to Order , and for
Sale, at tks Manufactory and Repository of
GOWER, JONES & CO.,
Caetersville and Rome, Ga.
Buggies,
JN- . ...
Ma n ufabtured and Repaired to Order $ and for
Sale, at the Manufactory and Repository of
GOWER , JONES & CO.,
Carteesnille and Rome, Ga.
WAGONS/
Oi»«% Two, Four, oud Six-
HORSE,
Manufactured and Repaired to Order, and for
Sale, at the Manufactory and Repository of
GOWER, JONES & CO.,
Cartersville and Rome, Ga.
Jan. Y, 1870... wT y
J. G. M. M OXTGOMERY,
Fresh Groceries*
GREEN CORN,
PEACHES,
STRAWBERRIES/
TOMATOES,
OYSTERS,
PINE APPLE,
Maccaroni.
Sugar
COFFEE,
STARCH,
BACON HAMS,
Candles, and the genuine Durham Smoking
Tobacco, just received, at
MONTGOMERY’S.
April 14, ts.
CX ARDEN SEED. A complete variety of
JC Buists Warranted Garden Seed, at
feb 15 MONTGOMERY’S.
A TEW ORLEANS SYRUPS AND MO
LASSES, a fine lot, just received and
for sale, at MONTGOMERY'S.
THE choicest brands of SMOKING TO
BACCO, can always be found, at
feb 15 M 0 N TG 0 M ERY’S.
1.. , .. r . l"
' '
MONTHLY MAGAZINE, ...
Ttvo Dollars per A unitni. V
64 PAGES READINGMATTER,
30 PAGES ADVERTISEMENTS.
WALKER, EVANS & COGSWELL,
D. WYATT AIKEN,
CHARLESTON, S, C.
Bartow Land for sale.
161 Acres,
LYING just across the Etowah River, and on
the River, South of Cartersville, on an air
line iibout one and a half miles distant. Good
river land. 100 Acres cleared and in a line state
of cultivation. Balance, well timbered. 50 A
eres Kiver Bottom. Moderate improvements,
good water.
House and Lot in Cartersville,
wheron the undersigned now lives, about two
acres of land, good Dwelling and out-houses,
fine water, for sale.
Also, 490 Acres Erwin County Land,
For sale. Wild state, but well timbered.
,J. N. DOBBS.
Cartersville, Ga.
For further particulars apply at Cartersville
Express Ojfi.ce. aug 10—swtf
SAM’L H. SMITH,
VOL. 9.
NEW Al> V ERTfSEIKENTS.
THE SECOND VOLUME OF
A H STEPHENS
Great History of the v\ ar is now ready.—
AgeDts wanted. Send for circulars with
terms and a full description of the work. —•
Address National Publishing Cos., Philadel
phia, Pa., Atlanta, Ga., or St. Louis, Mis
souri. ts
Book Agent* Wanted in the
South, to sell our New Book TEN
YEARS IN WALL STREET. One
agent took 2d orders for the first day,
another 75 in 4 days. Endorsed by
eminent men as the most exciting, in
teresting and instructive books is
sued. Includes 13 years experience of the
author. Filled wiih illustrations. Extra
terms to Agents. Send for circulars to
Worthington, Dustin & Cos., Hartford,
Conn. tfi
A GREAT CHANCE FOR AGENTS.
$75 to S2OO per month. We want
to employ a good agent in eve r y
County in the U. S. on commission
or salary to introduce our World
nenowned Valent While Wire Clothes Lines ;
will last a hundred years. If you want prof
itable and pleasant employment, address R.
S. BUSH & CO. Manufacturers, 75 William
St., iY. Y. or 16 Dearborn St. Chicago, ts.
a f \ Tfl Wanted to sell our
IjLa A Home Physician,
Anew and reliable Handv-Book of Family
Medicine, by Dr, Beard, oi N. Y. and the
Farmers’ Mechanics’ Manual, 211 cuts, a
book of facts and figures for workingmen.
E. B. Treat A Cos. Pub. 654 Broadway, New
York, •£•
Cure guaranteed. Treatise on
•nd Deafness sent tree. Dr. T. H. Stilwell,
762 Broadway, New York*
This is no humbug i
By sending 35 CENTS,
with age, height, color of eyes and hair, you
will receive, by return mail, a correct pict
ure your future husband or wife, with name
and date of marriage. Address W. FOX,
F. 0. Drawer No. 24, Fultonville, N.Y. ts.
AGENTS ,!Kft
Books. For Good Books. For the best sell
ing Books in the Market. Apply at once
for Circular of terms, &e, to Chittenden $
McKinney, 1308 Chestnut St. Phil. Pa. ts
BIG PAY! $2,500,00 A TEAR.
By selling the best and cheapest Encyclope
dia in the world.
Chamber’s Information for the People.
Revised. 1700 pages 500 Engravings Anv
one, male or female, can do this, without
capital. Send for Circulars to PARMECEE
& CO., Phil Pa. ts.
Agents wanted to sell the
‘ PEA LETTER BOOK.”
For Copying Letters without Press or Water.
This is the greatest time, labor, and mon
ey saving invention of the age ; and none see
it, but to praise its simplicity and convenience,
as you have only to place the written letter
under the copying leaf, and rub with the
hand. An agent lias only to show it prop
erly, and it sells it.elf. Price $2.25 and up
wards. Adapted to every kind of business,
and does not play out with the first, sale.
Address P. GARRETT k CO., Philadel
phia, Pa. ts-
AGENTS WANTD.— SIOO to S3OO per
Month — Clergymen, School Teachers, Smart
Young Men and Ladies wanted to canvass
for the New Book.
‘OCR FATHER’S HOUSE;’
or, the
IJNWRITTEN WORD.
Py Daniel March, author of the popular
“Night Scenes.” This master in thought
and language shows untold riches and beau
ties in the Great House, with its Blooming
flowers. Singing birds, Waving palms, Rol
ling clouds, Beautiful bow, sacred Mountains,
‘Delightful Rivers, Mighty oceans, Thunder
ing voices, Blazing heavens, and vast uni
verse with countless beings in millions of
worlds, and reads to us in each the Unwrit
led Word. Rose-tinted prtper, ornate en
gravings and superb binding. Send for cir
cular, in which is a full description and uni
versal cominandations by the press, minis
ters and college professors, in the strongest,
possible language. ZEIGLER, McCLRDY
j & CO., 1G S. Sixth Street, Philadelphia, Pen
. sylvania. ts.
A. gents, Resi <1 This!
SSO TO S2OO PER MONTH MADE BY AGENT
SELLING
TIIE HOME OF WASH
ISGTOS,
or Mount Vernon and its Associations,
by BENSON J. LOSSING. 150 Illustra
tions, tinted paper, handsomely bound. On
ly book on the subject. Every family wants
a copy. Sold only by subscription. Very
liberal terms given. SANPLES FREE. —
Send for Circulars, and notice our extra
terms. A. S.HALE & CO. Hartford, Con
necticut* ts.
Agents Canvassing Book Sent
Free For
Secrets Os lutcrnal Revenue,
This most remarkable book ever published,
being a complete exposure of tlie powerful
confederations or “Kings” preying on our
Government. Showing up all cliques from the
lowest to the highest, Cabinet officers and
Congressmen ns well vs minor operators ’ sys
tematic depredations, conspiracies, official
corruption, political influence, patronage
and wire-pulling. A fearless historical
work,, invaluable to every citizen ; contain
ing 640 pages, by a prominent Government
Detective. Over 20,000 copies already sold.
Agents wanted. Canvassing books free.
Address W. Flint, Publisher, Philadelphia,
P i Boston, Mass., Chicago, 111. or Cincin
nat'i, O. >f-
CARTERSYIX.I.K, BARTOW COUffTVjf (iEOBUU. AI «. SO. ISTO.
PATENTS.
Inventors who wish to take out Letters
Patent are advised to counsel with M L X N &
CO Editors of the krjen/ife American, who
have prosecuted claims before the Patent Os
fice for over Twenty Years. Their Ameri
can and European Patent Agency is the
most extensive in the world. Charge less
than any other reliable agency. A pam
phlet containing full instructions to invent
ors is sent gratis. MUNN & CO., 37 Park
Row, New York . tr'.
SIO IIADEfromSO Pent*.
Calland examine something urgently neede'l
by everybody, or Samples sent free by Mail
for 50cfs that retails easily for Ten Dollars.
Address, R, L. WOLCOTT, 181 Chat am
Squaae, N.Y. ts.
GREAT. R EUUCTION
IN THE TRICE OF
TEAS AVI) COFFEES
TO CONFORM TO
. PRICE OF GOLD.
Increased Facilities to Club Organi
zers. Send for New Price List.
GREAT AMERICAN TEA COJ
( P, 0. 80x5G43.) 31 &33 Vesscy St., N. Y. 1
June 31870—ts.
WT ANTED AGENTS—To sell the HOME
YV SHUTTLE SE V\ ING MACHINE— 1
Price $25. It makes the “Lock Sticli,” !
(alike on both sides) and is the only licens- |
ed under-feed Shuttle Machine sold for less
than S6O. Licensed by Wheeler & Wilson,
Grover & Baker and Singer k Cos. All other
under-feed Shuttle Machines sold for less
than S6O are infringements, and the seller and
user liable to prosecution. Address JOHN
SON, CLARK k Cos., Mass., Pittsbufg, Pa.,
Chicago, 111., or St. Louis, Mo. ts.
WANTED AGENTS - To sell the
OCTAGON SEWING MACHINE—
It is licensed, makes the “Elastic Lock Stitch
and is warranted for 5 years. Price sls.
All other machines with an under-feed sold
for $415 or less are infringement. Address
OCTAGON SEWING MACHINE CO., St.
Lousis, Mo., Chicago, 111., Pittsburgh, Pa.,
or Boston, Mass. ts.
A GENTS WANTED.-(*l° PER
A DAY)-BY THE AMERICAN KNITTING MA
CHINE CO-, BOSTON MASS., or ST, LOUIS,
MO.
rtfi 1/X A DAY. Business entirely new
1\ / and honorable. Liberal induce
ments. Descriptive circulars free. Ad
dress J. C* RAND & CO. Bindcford Me*
IF YOU DOUBT IT COME AND SEE
WE HAVE ©ft IIA TUB AUD
AND ARE RECEIVING
THE LARGEST GENERAL STDCK OE
WATCHES JEWELRY AND
o i_. o o ik: s
Silver and I’lated Ware, Etc.
Ever brought to Atlanta, and
and having purchased direct from
manufacturers at net cash prices, we are
able, hnd willing and determined to sell as
low as any person, or persons, in any place,
either in town, city, or village North, South,
East, or West.
WE HAVE BETTER FACILITIES.
For tlie purchase and sale of certain classes
of hue Watches than any other house South
has, or can get, and we will give our
customers the benefit of the advantage.
OUR ONLY REFERENCE IS
21 Years Experience In the Jewelry
BTTSIHBSS
IN ATLANTA,
AND TO THOSE WHO HAVE TRADED
WITH THE OLD ESTABLISHMENT
OF ER LAWSIIE.
We have better arrangements than
any house in Atlauta for repairing Watches
and Jewelry.
Sept.29th, ’69-ly. LAWSHE <& HAYNES,
NEW YORK,
PII'LABIIbrHIA
BALTIMORE,
COME TO ATLANTA ! !
WHOLESALE
Mqiior Dealer!
AO. 8 SOUTH BROAD STREET,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA ,
SOLE AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED
O BIAS BITTER S
FINE WINES, Brandies, Whis
kies, Gins, &c., &C.,. Also,
THE CHEAPEST AND BEST
Champagnes
in. this market. for Price
liist, and see for yourselves that I can
I
duplicate your New York, Philadelphia
and Baltimore bills. Orders promptly
filled.
IF. K. SHACKLEFORD.
June 23. 1870—ly.
SEMI-WEEKpLY.
Sfiii-Weekly Express.
We pmunemre, to-day, (the 4th day Au
gust, publication of I hr Lxpekss
twice-, instead of once a week, as
"iicu.un Mirndnyts ami Thursdays. —
The Semi-Weekly is $3.00 per annum.
STAB OF THE EVENING.
Beautiful star in heaven so bright,
Softly falls tliy silvery light,
As thou movest from earth afar,
Star of the evening, beautiful star.
Choru.-i.
Star of the evening, beautiful star,
Beautiful Star. Beautiful Star.
Beautiful Star. Beautiful Star.
Star of the evening,
Beautiful, beautiful Star.
Star, Star of the evening, evening.
In Fancy’s eye thou seem’st to say,
Follow me, come from earth away,
Upward thy Spirit’s pinions try
To realms of love beyond the sky.
Star of the evening, &c.
Shine on, O Star of love divine,
And souls’ affections twine
Around thee as thou movest afar,
Star of the twilight, beautiful Star!
Star* *>f the evening, &c.
WE COME WITH SONG TO
GREET YOU.
A year again has passed away!
Time swiftly speeds along;
We come again to r praise and pray,
And siig our greeting song.
Chorus .
We come, we eome, we come with song
to greet yon,
We come, we come, we come with song
again.
We’ll sing of many a happy hour
We’ve passed in Sunday school,
Where truth, like summer’s genial
showers,
Extends its gracious rule.
We come, &c.
Our youthful hearts will gladly raise,
Our voices sweetly sing
A general song of grateful praise,
To Heaven’s eternal King.
We come, &c.
BEAUTIFUL RIVER.
Shall we gather at the river,
Where bright angel feet have trod;
With its crystal tide forever
Flowing by the throne of God ?
Chorus.
Yes we’ll gather at the river,
The beautiful, the beautiful river—
Gather with the saints at the river
That flows by the throne of God.
On the margin of the river,
Washing up its silver spray,
We will walk and worship ever,
All the happy, golden day.
Yes we’ll gather, &c.
Soon well reach the shining river,
Soon our pilgrimage will cease;
f?oon our happy hearts will quiver,
With the melody of peace.
Yes we’ll gather, &c.
REST FOR THE WEARY.
In the Christian’s home in glory,
There remains a land of rest,
There my Saviour’s gone before me,
To fulfill my soul’s request;
Chorus.
There is rest for the weary,
There is rest for the weary,
There is rest for the weary,
There is rest for you —
On the other side of Jordan,
In the sweet fields of Eden,
Where the tree of life is blooming
There is rest for you.
He is fitting up my mansion,
Which eternally shall stand,
For my stay shall not be transient,
In that holy happy land.
There is rest, &c.
Pain and sickness ne’er shall enter,
Grief nor w r oe my lot shall share,
Bat in that celestial centre,
Ia crown of life shall wear.
There is rest, Ac.
Not Hung.—As usual the people
have to wait to see the Commercial to
hear the true version of events hap
pening. We would state for their in
formation that there is no truth in the
report that young Mr. Johnson, of
Chattooga, was hung a few days since.
*■> r Romo Commercial.
Editor and Proprietor.
Xorth Carolina.
lIALKIIIH, A.Ug. lti-- .lwiljre I'.i n<>k 'l's
frict Judge, ordered Kirk to uvake returns
ef'writs and prisono's before h’i»*i > <• uuy n>
Salsbury. Twenty-three hud arrived. —
Governor sent for (.'licit Justice Pear
son who arrived here last night. Gov. Ho -
ilen proposed to obey the writs to-day, issu
ed by the Judge heretofore and deliver pris
oners before him in Chambers Sixteen or
eighteen arrived-here this afternoon after the
writs issued by Judge Pearson had failed,
because Gov. Holden refused to deliver the
prisoners. Judge Brooks appliesl to and is
sued writs under the IBih amendment Os the
Constitution of the United States for the do- i
livery of all prisoners, and ordered a return
made to him a Salsbury to-day. Holden
and Petvrson thus snub Judge Brooks Anx- '
iety is felt for the result. Other arrests have
been made by Kirk recently. Much indig- 1
nation is felt at the treatment of the ptiso
ners. The editor of tlie Sentinel was put in
a dungeon cell in the. jail at Graham with a
negro, condemned to be hung for i ape, to- I
morrow. Later dispatches from Salsbury
say that Mr. Turner, editor of the Sentinel,
and 23 others had arrived. They all appear
in good spirits. Prisoners brought before
Judge Brooks. Kirk allowed all till 3a. m.
to-monew u> make returns of prisoners re
leased on own recognizance of thousand dol- j
lavs. Ife brought all the discharged writs
granted for thirty more parties still under j
arrest. Bergen arrived in Raleigh at 4 o’- |
clock with prisoners, for whom Pearson had
some time ago issued writs. A motion was '
made by counsel for the dismission of the pe- j
tit ion and retract it upon production of Wil
ly under the charge of tlie murder of Steph
ens. Holden's counsel made a counter mo
tion for oonuiiumcnt upon the bench warrant
on the afhduvct of Berger, motion lies over
until to-morrow. Pearson bailing Willy in
the meantime in the sum of $5,(00. The
other 18 prisoners brought to this city are
still under Holden's guard.
Loving Others Best.
Away oft in Edinburg, two gentle
men were standing at the door of a
hotel one very cold day, when a little
boy, w ith a poor, thin face, his feet
bare and red with the cold, and with
nothing to cover hirn but a bundle of
rags, came and said:
“Please sir, buy some matches.”
“No, I don’t want any,” the gentle
man said.
“But they are only a penny a box,”
the little feftow pleaded.
“Yes, but you see we do not want a
box,” the gentlemen said again.
“Then I will gie ye twa boxes for a
penny,” the boy said at last.
“And so to get rid of him,” says the
gentleman, who tells the story in an
English paper, “I bought a box. But
then I found I had no change, so I
said:
“I will buy a box to-morrow.”
“Oh do buy them the nicht, if ye
please,” the boy pleaded again. “I
will rin and get ye the change, for I
am verra hungry.”
“So I gave him the shilling and he
started away; and I waited for him,
but no Doy came. Then I thought I
bad lost my shilling; but still there
was that in the boy’s face I trusted,
and I did not like to think bad of him.
Well late in the evening a servant
came and said a little boy wanted to
see me. When he was brought in, I
saw it was a smaller brother of the
boy that got my shilling, but, if possi
ble, still more ragged and poor and
thin. He stood a moment diving into
his rags, as if ho was seeking some
thing, and then said:—
“Are ye the gentleman that bought
the matches from Sandie?”
“Yes.”
“Weel, then, here’s fourpence out o'
your shilling, Sandie canna come; lie’s
no weel. A cart run over him and
knocked him down, and he lost his
bonnet, and his matches, and your sev
enpence; and both his legs are broken;
and lie’s no weel at a’, and the doctor
says he’ll dec. And that’s all he can
gie ye the noo,” putting the fourpence
down on the table; and then the poor
child broke down into great sobs.
"“So I fed the little man,” the gentle
man goes on to say, “and then 1 went
with him to see Sandie. I found that
the poor little things lived with a
wretched, drunken step-mother; their
own father and mother were both dead.
I found poor Sanditf lying on a bundle
of shavings. He knew me as soon as
I came in and said: —
“I got the change, sis, and was com
ing back, and then the horse knocked
me doon and both my legs are broken.
And oh Reuby, little Reuby! lam
sure 1 am deein’l and who’ll take care
of ye, Reuby, when lam gane? What
will you do Reuby ?”
“He lay within the light of God,
Like a babe upon the breast;
Where tlxo wicked cease from troubling,
And the weary are at rest.”
Children, listen ! This poor little
man lying on a bundle of shavings, dy
ing and starving, was tender, and trus
ty and true; and so God told the gen
tleman to take poor little friendless
Reuby and be a 'friend to him. And
Sandie heard him say he would do it —
just the last thing he ever did hear;
and then before I can tell ypu,, the
darkroom, the bad otep-raother, the
bundle of shavings, the weary, broken,
little limbs, all faded away, and Sandie
was among the angels.— Chicagoan.
The Southern Beamier suggests the
names of A. G. Thurman, of Ohio, and
H. V. Johnson, of Georgia, as candid
ates for President and Vico^President.
*«. is.
‘‘We’re coming, Father Abraham—
Three hundred thousand wore.”
Baby all the time yelling like mad
with a baby pain, while Alary Ann, up
to her nose under the warm b< and covers
to help out, every now and then im
patiently puls in, just at the wrong
place—“trot him faster Samuel.”
And you trot him, oh how you no
trot him ! If you could only trot his
wind out so far that he could never get
any of it back again, or break his back,
ior neck, or something you would be
immeasurably happy.
But no. The little innocent is
tougher than an Indian rubber car
spring.
Just as you are about giving out—
concluding that you must freeze —that
there will certainly have to be a funeral
in the house inside of thirty-six hours,
and then, with teeth chattering like a
McCormick reaper,, you crawl in by
Alary Ann again and try to sleep^
sth. Gradually you glide away into
a tangled maze of cherry lips, ice.
steamwhistle voiced babies, dimpled
cheeks, more ice, May-flowers, skating
weather, chammomile, jockey club,
sleigh rides, crinoline immense as tho
old bell at Moscow, Indian ambus
cades, chignons like door mats, awful
Grecian bends, angels, snow storms,
and forty other reminiscenses.
6tli. A snort, a thrash, a wild
throwing upward of little arms and
legs, and then, keen and shrill, comes
that terrible “ Ali-wah 1 ah-wall 1”
again. I guess you wake up, don’t
you ?
“ Get the paregoric and a teaspoon,
quick!” says Mary Ann, in a sharp,
staccato tone, and don’t you get it ?
In just three-eights of a second you
are a Grecian bend yourself out there
on tlnr cold floor, dropping paregoric
in a teaspoon.
Hurry! Oh, no ; circumstances are
t A Ski tmon os AVhiskty. —A Cedar
I J>pids (la.) eh r v ymau is reported to
■ Lava Tip 1 ached a funeral sermon liio
j other day, in* which he said :
“The Bible “In tine beginning
I was the word and the word was with
God, and the word was Godbut to
suit the present case, I will paraphrase
it a little, and say, “in the beginning
* was the devil, and the devil was with
i whiskey; and the, devil was wins key,
and whiskey was tho causo of this
man's death.”
.lllllftAL, SLAB.
on U»o IWurrfnjjt* Slllte.
, J .
Ist. Just married. Destined to La
ger in clover, new-mown hay, and such
herbage from nine to twelve months.
2d. Some black, rascally, stormy
n ght, about tho close of tho above
apoch, you are turned out into streets
all ponds and mill races, or amid snow
eighteen inches deep, and drifting like
blazes, and told to run for the doctor.
Yl hen you get home, a little rod
flami el-100 king thing about the size of
a big merino potato undoubtedly
awaits you.
They will call it a baby. Packed
up with it you will liud the first real
squalls of married life —you can bet
on that.
3d. Paregoric and soothing syrup,
and catnip tea, and long flannel, and
diaper Huff, and baby colic, and more
squalls —they will come along, too ;
in fact will become just as much at
home in the house as-dinner,
4th. One of these days, in—
‘•The wee smft’ lma-s ay nut the twak
you turn out again. This time you
are found barefoot, distractedly rock
ing that baby back and forth, and
bobbing it up and down in a cane-seat
chair, and shivering icy, disconsolate
sense of dampness ill about you ; seat
hard, only a cotton shirt, or such a
matter, nearer than the bed to keep
you warm, roaring musically as a wild
bull in a slaughter-yard—
not such as to make you hurry any
Gracious, little Peter, he is describ
ing diabolic curves with all the arms
and legs be’s got, and screaming 100
pounds to the square inch, and Mary
Ann she is rearing around tlicie in
the bed, making a rocking chair of
her back, and yelling bye-bye, O, liko
a wild Cammanche on the war path
that’s all.
Nice, ain’t it?
And then to think that as years rod
on, there has got to be more and more
yet of just such distressed work,
j 7th. Then comes the washing days,
| too, and the spring cleanings and
| moviegs, —-when . your books, and
! papers, and custard pies, and carpets,
and plug hats, and molasses, and
feathers, and baby fixings, and pan
cake batter, all get stirred up together;
when Mary Ann, dress tucked up,
han kerchief around her head, broom
in one hand, mop in the other, pretty
as cistern-pole, temper searching as a
dose of ipecac, goes about hunting
spiders’ webs, and dirt, and spots and
grease spots, and such things, while
Bridgett, the inevitable Bridge tt, slop
ping soap suds all over everything,
brings up the rear.
Bth. Then there is that mother-in
law of yours, and the six or eight
female cousins. .
They have just come over to visit a
bit, and each one has brought all. he*’
trunks and band-boxes along. And
that, too, when you could so easily
have spared all but the mother-m-law.
9th. And so I might run on and
on These things are thicker in such
places than little toads on a country
road after a summer thunder shower.
You can’t dodge them. They come
with married life just as sure as death
and taxes.
Bad! Very bad, my friend. Only
one condition in the world much worse,
than I know of. And that is (I don fc
mind telling you,) that is the single
condition