Newspaper Page Text
Carriage Manufactory
4 »»
BY
GOWER, JONES & CO.,
CARTEHSULIE AND ROME, GA.
Repairing; of all kinds* Done to Order.
Cim'iitiics,
Manufactured and Repaired to Order, and for
Sale, at the Manufactory and Repository of
GOWER, JONES & CO.,
Cakteksville and Rome, Ga.
Baggies,
-*?*?*% r ■ • . JJL
**'VTvS
Manufahtured and Repaired to Order , one?/or
Bale, at the Manufactory and Repository of
GOWER , JONES & CO.,
Qartersnille and Rome, Ga.
2H^jp
Oiio, Two, Four, nml .Six-
H 0 RSI,
Manufactured and Repaired to Order, and for
Sale, at the Manufactory and Repository of
GOWER, JONES dc CO.,
Cakteksville and Rome, Ga.
Jan. 1.1870. wlv
J. G. M. M ONTGOMERY,
Fresh Groceries.
GREEN CORN,
PEACHES,
STRAWBERRIES,
TOMATOES,
OYSTERS,
TINE APPLE,
Maccaroni,
Sugar
COFFEE,
STAIICH,
BACON HcYMS,
Candles, and the genuine Durham Smoking
Tobacco, just received, at
MONTGOMERY’S.
April 14, ts.
f"1 ARDEN SEED. A complete variety of
T Puists Warranted Garden Seed, at
feb 15 MONTGOMERY’S.
NEW 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
fob 15 MONTGOMERY’S.
mp?
p \Jv Southern
MONTHLY MAGAZINE, .
Two Dollars per Annum.
64 PAGES READING MATTER.
30 PAGESADVERTISEMENTS.
WALKER, EVANS & COGSWELL,
AND
D. WYATT AIKEN,
CHA U LI'.STOX, S t C.
Bartow Land for sale.
161 Acres,
X TING just across tlie Etowah River, and on
JLi the River, South of Cartersville, on an air
line about 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 River 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,
line water, for sale.
Also,* 490 Acres Erwin County Land,
lot litre. Wild state, but well timbered.
J. N. DOBBS.
Cartersville, Ga.
For further particulars apply at Cartersville
Express Office. aug 10—swtf
SAM’L H. SMITH,
VOX. 9.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
g " »
THE SECOND VOLUME OF
A.H.STEPHENS
Great History of the War is now ready.—
Agents 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
eouri. ts
Book Agents Wanted in the
South, to sell our New Boots TEN
YEARS IN WALL STREET. One
agent took 25 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 wlih illustrations. Extra
terms to Agents. Send for circulars to
Worthington, Dustin & Cos.. Hartford,
Conn. ts.
A GREAT CHANCE FOR AGENTS.
$75 to S2OO per month, We want
to employ a good agent in eve r y
County in tlic U. S. on commission
or salary to introduce our World
Renowned Patent While Wire Clothes Lines ;
will last a hundred years. If you want prof
itable and pleasant employment, address It.
S. BUSH & CO. Manufacturers, 75 William
St ., N. Y. or 16 Dearborn St. Chicago, ts.
k fA Wanted to sell our
/\ T JTjjAN X Home Physician,
Anew and reliable Handv-Book of Family
Medicine, by Dr, Beard, ol N. Y. and the
Farmers’ Mechanics’ Manual, 211 cuts, a
book of facts and figures for workingmen.
E. B. Treat & Cos. Pub. 654 Broadway, New
York, tf*
Cure guaranteed. on
•ad Deataws sent free. Dr. T. H. stilwell,
102 Broadway, New York*
This is no humbug !
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. I OX,
P. 0. Drawer No. 24, Fultonville, N. Y. ts.
AGENTS f- an n t cw
Books. For Good Books. For the best sell
ing Books in the Market. Apply at once
for Circular of terms, &c, to Crittenden <£
McKinney, 1308 Chestnut St. Phil. Pa. ts
BIG PAY! $2,500,00 A YEAR.
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., rhil Pa. if.
Agents wanted to sell the
‘ PEN LETTER BOOR.”
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 has only to show it prop
erly, and it sells itself. Price $2.25 and up
wards. Adapted to every kind of business ,
and does not play out with the first sale.
Address P. GARRETT & CO., Philadel
phia, Pa. tf*
AGENTS irylA'7Z».— sloo to S3OO per
Month — Clergymen, School Teachers, Smart
Young Men and Ladies wanted to canvass
for the New Book.
•OI K FATHER’S IIOiSE;’
or, the
UNWRITTEN WORD.
Py Daniel Marcii, 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
ted Word. Rose-tinted paper, ornate en
gravings and superb binding. Send for cir
cular, in which is a full description and uni
versal commendations by the press, minis
ters and college professors, in the* strongest
possible language. ZEIGLER, McCURDY
& CO., 16 S. Sixth Street, Philadelphia, Pen
sylvania. ts.
Agents, Read This!
SSO TO S2OO PER MONTH MADE BY AGENT
SELLING
THE HOME OF WASH
HOTOJi,
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 luternal Revenue,
This most remai'kable book ever published,
being a complete exposure of the powerful
confederations or “Rings” preying on our
Government. Showing up all cliques from the
lowest to the highest, Cabinet officers and
Congressmen as well vs minor operators sys
tematic depredations, conspiracies, official
corruption, political influence, patronage
and ivire-pulling. A fearless historical
work, invaluable to every citizen • Contain
ing 540 pages, by a prominent Government
Detective. Over 20,000 copies already sold.
Agents wanted. Canvassing books free.
Address W. Flint, Publisher, Philadelphia,
Ia Boston, Mass., Chicago, 111. Qr Cincin
nati, O. ts j
CARTERSVI lil.E, BARTOW COUNTS’, GEORGIA, SEPT. «, 1870.
PATENTS.
Inventors who wish to take out Letters
Patent are advised to counsel with MI’NN &
CO., Editors of the Scientific 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 . ts.
$lO HADE from 50 Cents.
Call and examine something urgently needed
by everybody, or Samples sent free by Mail
for 50cts that retails easily for Ten Dollars.
Address, R, L. WOLCOTT, 181 Chataru
Sqpwuae, N. Y. ts.
GREAT, R E U U CTIOIT
IN THE PRICE OF
TEAS AAD COFFEES
TO CONFORM TO
PRICE OF GOLD.
Increased Facilities to Club Organi
zers. Send for New Price List.
GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO.
(P, O. Box 5643.) 31 & o$ Vesscy St., N. Y.
June 31870—ts.
XTTT ANTED AGENTS—To sell the HOME
W SHUTTLE SEWING MACHINE.—
Price $25. It makes the “Lock Stick,”
(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 & 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 & 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 sls or less are infringement. Address
OCTAGON SEWING MACHINE CO., St.
Lousis, Mo., Chicago, 111., Pittsburgh, Pa.,
or Boston, Mass. ts.
A CENTS WAITED.—(Sio PER
AdAY)-BY THE AMERICAN KNITTING MA
CHINE CO-, BOSTON MASS., or ST. LOUIS,
MO.
dl* 1A A D'VY. Business entirely new
ftb lw honorable. Liberal induce
ments. Descriptive circulars free. Ad
dress J. O RAND & CO- Bindeford Me
!F YOU DOUBT IT COME AND SEE
WE HAVE 0\ HAND AND
AND ARE RECEIVING
THE LARGEST GENERAL STOCK W
WATCHES JEWELRY AND
ol o a :bc s
Silver and Plated Ware, Etc.
Ever brought to Atlanta, and
and having purchased direct from
manufacturers at net cash prices, we are
able, lmd 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 the purchase and sale of certain classes
of fine Watches then any other house South
has. or can get, and we will give our
customers the benefit of the advantage.
OUR ONLY REFERENCE IS
2i Years Experience In the Jewelry
BTJSILTESS
IN ATLANTA,
AND TO THOSE WHO HAVE TRADED
WITH THE OLD ESTABLISHMENT
OF ER LAWSHE.
We have better arrangements than
any house in Atlauta for repairing Watches
and Jewelry.
Sept.29th, 69-ly. LAWSHE & HAYNES,
NEW YORK,
PHILADELPHIA
—AND—
BALTIMORE,
COME TO ATLANTA ! !
Ho Ko fflimEWli,
WHOLESALE
wo. 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 CdEAPEST ANl> BEST
Champagnes
in this market. t@uSend for Price
List, and see for yourselves that I can
A *
uuplicate your New York, Philadelphia
and Baltimore bills. Orders prom^ fITT
filled. <. -rv
11. Tv. SHACKLEFORD,
June 23. 1870—ly. '
SE MI-WEEKLY.
Somi-lVKxpress.
We commence, to-day, (the 4th day Au
guM' 1870, the publication of The Express
iwice a week instead of once a week, as
he|j*isbiy, on Mondays and Thupsdavs.—
ThVgftftMYeekly is $3 .00 per annum.
‘ The Flag of tlie Union.”
The following we clip from the
Louisville Courier-Journal. There is
something in it, despite the wrongs
inflicted upon the South by the North,
that we like. In battle it waved over
the foemen of the Southland we have
always thought that had it waved over
our own gallant soldiery in that great
sectional contest; or, in other words,
had the South maintained her cause
in and not out of the Union, the result
might have been quite different. For
the “Flag” itself, it was designed and
unfurled by the decree not of those
who, in their triumph, have placed
stains upon it, but of a more patriotic
breed, men of noble blood who have
passed away, and whose “like,” we fear
we “shall not see <. gain.” But under
the same ‘ Old Flag” the South will
have to march; over her people it will
eonliniie. to wave; and is it not better
for the South to uphold it as they
once did, patriotically and gallantly,
one of her provinces being the remov
al of whatever of stain, on her judg
ment may be upon it, so that again it
may become emblematical of that
which the Fathers of the Republic de
signed it should be—a Union of States
as represented in its Stars, and a ter
ror to the enemies of free government,
is represented in its Stripes. — Atlanta
Intelligencer.
Says the Courier-Journal:
“The sword has decided that the
Union shall stand; and, if the North
and the South are to live together, the
voice of common sense, no less than
the instinct of human nature, calls for
a truce to violent passions. The peo
ple of this country are not prepared
for an imperial oligarchy or a Repub
lican despotism. They w ant a union
of reciprocal interests, a mutual and a
just union of free and equal States,
and they know that this cannot be ob
tained without some concessions and
sacrifices on both sides. The red-hot
Radicals and the red-hot Democrats
would commit us to an endless war—
to a war of ignorance and hate —which
end only w ith the loss of our liberties,
losing us meanwhile our law r s. The
national Democratic party steps out
boldly to the music of the future—the
music of freedom, peace and union, a
new and a god-like trinity —marching
under the flag of our fathers.
“The Flag of the Union, which has
been desecrated by a thousand unwor
thy uses, which has been employed as
the drop-curtain in a partizan play
house, covering all sorts of bad actions
and bad men, is to be snatched out of
the jaws of death, chastened and puri
fied by blood and tears, and raised
once more as a symbol of protection
over the host of the Lord. That host
does not propose to sing in honor ei
ther of John Brown’s body or Jclin
Brown’s soul. It proposes as it moves
fcrw T ard to the light to take up an old
er and a sweeter song, a song suited
to the ensign and the cause, a song
whose tones will bring back many a
wandering heart to its better self and
recall many a vagrant footstep to the
beaten tracks that were worn into the
American system by the patriots of
other days, and an old, God blessed,
familiar song, which the people have
not forgotten to sing—
And the star-spangled banner, oh, long may it
wave
O’er the land of tlie free and the home of the
brave.” __
‘ FILTHY LUCRE.”
In eagerly looking over exchanges for an
item of interest with which to treat the
readers of the Exntsss, this week, our eye
lit upon the following article, which we find
in, and clip from, the editorial columns of
the Savannah Daily Republican, as well a
dapted to the people, and the time in which
we now live. If something is not done to
divert the minds and hearts of the people
from the subject which heads this article,
the people and country will all go to the
devil, we awfully fear.
The Republican says:
Whatever may have been the origin of the
unflattering name given to the great neces
sity of civilized life—money—it will not be
denied that it can be applied, in these degen
erate days, with painful and regrettable
truth. An “honest has, specially in
our large cities ffltoag those whose influence
is latent for good or evil, become to nemly
a mere sound, that we not unfrepuently hear
the man struggling to earn a Uvlthood,
Editor and Proprietor.
little bark beating against wind and tide,
groan in almost despair, and express the
sentiment ©f the embitterd Jaffier, [itv
“I’m thinking Pierre, how that starvingqual-
Callcd honesty, got footing in the world.”
Well may the thrift gained by murder,
robbery, treachery, swindling, deception in
all its forms, and impurity generally, be
despised by all to whom honor is not an
empty name, and such gains, coined in
shame, be stamped as “filthy lucre,” The
disciples of logo crowd the mart and detile
the stock exchange, faithful to but one idea,
“ Put money in thy purse.’**
Here and there, like some grand relic of
the old regime , a monument of the past, tow
ering like the pyramid of Cheops amidst a
degenerate people, a bright example illu
mines the glcom who daily acts in the full
appreciation of the high-toned morality of
Brutus —“the noblest Komuu of them all.” —
What noble scorn L
“I can raise no money by rile means;
By Heaven 1 had rather coin my heart,
And drop my blood for drachmas, than wring
From the hard hands of peasants their vile trash
By any indirection.”
How transcendency more worthy of imi
tation the stern, lofty virtue of the Homan
patriot, than the time-serving policy of the
Venetian sneak, the prince of betrayers—
“honest Iago!”
Vv ell may the spirit yet not completely
lost be appalled at the sight of ‘filthy lucre,’
which, like a gorgon, rises to reproach and
disturb it with dreams of ill-gotten wealth-
Farewell, “Innocent sleep 1” Poor victim!
how he writhes under the goatlings of afiliet
ed conscience! Still he clutches the spoils
of hard dealing —the wages of dishonor.
“There’s some ill a-brewing toward my rest,
For I did dreaui of money bags to-night.”
Some, we fear, and charity bids us hope
they are few, have either been denied a fair
share of moral sense or they have ucquircd
an indurated philosophy that defies all self
rebuke. With them ‘filthy lucre’ lias been
metamorphosed into a smiling god, radiant
as Apollo. Such an one may be said to have
accomplished, by a feat of legerdemain, or
by some distorted process of moral reason
ing, the difficult task of holding
“A fire in liis hand,
By thinking on the frosty Caucasus.”
The basely gotten gain is viewed only in
the light of the show and splendor that daz
zles the eye of paltry ambition. The filthy
thing is held with rapture by thinking on
the luxuries that rise before the distempered
imagination. It is no longer a vile reptile;
it is a seraphic vision. Mepliistopeliles, the
magician, is before the footlights; he ex
hibits —what? “Filthy Lucre.” Hold!
presto , change ! Astonished victim, what see
you ? Pure, virgin gold, coined in the mint
of honor—stamped with the image of Inno
cence. Powerful wizzard ! hardened admi
rers ! blind, deluded victims!
But we must not omit the “silver lining,”
for, to the millions—those who find their
daily bread in the “sweat of the brow”—it
is no longer the same polluted thing. It has
then been baptised and regenerated. Hard
labor concecratea and restores it to the vir
gin purity it had in its original bed in moth
er earth. The consciencious worker in the
pulpit—at the bar—at the desk. —who strug
gle to meet, the necessities of nature sancti
fies it the moment it touches his hand. It is
converted into a winged messenger cf joy
when dispatched by love and charity to the
cabin of want. It enters like the stray sun
beams th&.t qr.eep through the chinks of the
cold, dark,, and dingy garret to cheer the
sa<i hearts and warm, the thin blood of the
emaciated thousands who—
“Stich, stich, stick,
In hunger, poverty and dirt.”
It is not, however, of any of these points
we designed to speak when we commenced.
We desired specially to remark upon the
piles of “filthy lucre * accumulated in cer
tain Sections of the country, which has been
the direct product of a corrupt press. Orig
inally intended as a blessing to man, for the
enlightenment of ignorant mind, and the
dissemination of health-giving knowledge, it
has become the engine of evil—a vast and
imposing car of Juggernaut, before which
deluded thousands are prostrating them
selves to their sure destruction, while society
weeps and wails for its loved and lost. The
richest gifts of the mind are being prostitu
ted in the unholy work of manufacturing
the unhealthy literature that, like a pestilen
tial vapor, has settled upon the land. Beau
tiful art has been dragged into the arena
and forced to play its part in the great dra
ma of “filthy lucre."’ It has been made the
handmaid of Vice, to paint her in the seduc
tive colors that fascinate the eye, and allure
the young into the vortex of guilt and shame.
The sun rises every morning upon car loads
of literature steeped in poison and reeking
with the fumes of depraved talent, to be dis
tributed throughout the length and breadth
of this magnificent land, to do its deadly
mission upon the yet tender and vulnerable
hearts of the pure and innocent. Let out
raged society answer. Crime, in all its hid
eous forms, stalks naked in tk,e light of day.
Marriage has, in certain latitudes, ceased to
be sacred —has become a mere conventional
garb to be changed according to the pleasure
or whim of the wearer, or the dictates of
fashion. Even the law has been converted
into a murderous instrument of domestic
death, and woos its victims into the unlial
• —,ii WA . » og “without
lowed practice oi , .
publicity,” prostituting the noble profession
t„ the beastly appetites, by encourogmg do
mestic strife, and offering a premium on dis
honor in tlie great circles of Vanity Fair. _
Cannot all this be traced, in great meas
, ure , directly or indirectly, to these vile ema-
Premium for Nit I>s<-r Utter*.
IfagrtVe will give atn man a splendid new
Silver Watch, worth s\>f*.oo, who will send u* the
names of l-'iftv Subscribers wiili $l6O.
We will give any man a u«*w s£*(M) Sad
dle who will do the fame; or a flfc.OOSaddle, wb<*
will send 25 names with fNO.t»O.
ftfirwe will give any man a s3o.ooset ot bug
gy Harness, w ho will -tend us the names of Sixty
Subscribers with liau.OO. *»,* ip l
All the above articles are new*.
fbrjr" We w ill give anv man a number one top
Buggy, worth $150.00, who wilt aeivJ ns the
names ot 300 subscribers with SOOO.OO.
Jfcay»\Ye will give any man ar> per cent, in
greenbacks, advertising, lob Work, or subscrip
tions to the A’jejtrrs*, for all cash subscriptions.
Job work, and advertising, they will send us at
our advertised rates. j
.HaT so, friends, go to work, and avail ydur
olves of one or all of the above propositions.
XO. 14.
nations of the press? And when we glance
back and around us, well may we shudder
fertile future; for, is not this monster jet
young, indeed? Filthy lucre, its offspring,
growing by whui ii feeds on, is ac.,uTfliVg *
daily accumulative power, und is now infill
copartnership to widen and extend the en
terprise.
>Vitk these facts staring us in the face,
why will we contribute to, or countenance,
either directly or by silence, a literature
that threatens to sap the very foundations
of society ? It should be frowned down, not
encouraged ; for every cent that is expended
in this product, but adds to the capital stock
of filthy lucre, to enable it to extend the cir
culation of an issue that can only result in
still further ruin. >Ye say spurn it! there's
blood upon it! there is shame upon it—
shame without a blush ! It is the subtle
poison that is now at work upon the heart
and brain and vitals of the country, divert
ing youth from the proud mission once the
pride and glory of the American citizen.—
Time was when the presence of even a novel
not warmly approved by the guardian genius
of the family, was hateful in every bousc--
hold- Purely imaginative literature, not
properly stamped with the approval of.
watchful affection, was cast out like a viper,
over the thrcslikold. Now, the enemy has
come in such force that resistance seems
feeble,, and the Angel oj! I’euce, whose pre
sence is all that makes dear the domestio
sanctuary, is in constant danger of perpet
ual banishment.
Is there no hope—no remedy? Is society
to submit without a serious, earnest struggle?
We at the South have long boasted a free
dom from these depraved appetites that find
a god in filthy lucre. How do we stand to
day ? Arc we, too, drifting into the im
mense current, which, commencing at the
great metropolis, is broadly sweeping over
the laud from the Atlantic to the Pacific?—
Are we erecting no bcarier to stay the tide?
Is the Southern press doing its duty? Its
representatives, as we know they are will
ing to do, should arrange themselves in sol
id phalanx to beat it back. Like the glori
ous old “Knights of the round table,” they
should be ever ready, lance in rest, to bear
down upon the common enemy; to defend
the cause of the victim of filthy lucre; and,
above all, to rescue virtue, and guard the
honor of woman—woman, who, in her nor
mal lovliness, untainted by outside evil,
stands the guardian angel of our homes—
the central light of the domestic circle, and
without whom, in her natural purity, life
would, indeed, be a desert waste, or a fierce
battle of contending passions, more than ev
er realized the terrible figure of disappoint
ed, reckless ambition
‘•A tale,
Told by an idiot, full of found and lury.
Signifying—nothing.”
JOYFULLY, JOYFULLY,.
Joyfully, joyfully, onward we move,
Bound to the land of bright spirits above;
Jesus our Saviour, in mercy, says, Come,
Joyfully, joyfully, haste to your home.
Soon will our.pilgrimage end here below,
Soon to the presence of God we shall go,
Then, if to Jesus our hearts have been given,
Joyfully, joyfully rest we in heaven.
Teachers and scholars have passed on before;
Waiting, they watch us, approaching the
shore;
Singing to cheer us, while passing along,
Joyfully, joyfully haste to your home.
Sounds of sweet music there ravish the ear.
Harps of the blessed, your strains we shall
hear,
Filling with harmony heaven’s high dome,.
Joyfully, joyfully, Jesus, we come.
Death with his arrow may soon lay us
Safe in our Saviour, we fear not the blow:.
Jesus hath broken the bars of the tomb,
Joyfully, joyfully we will go home..
Bright will the morn of eternity dawn;
Death shall l?e conquered, his sceptre, fee*
gone;
Over the plains of sweet Canaan weTl roam,.
Joyfully, joyfully, safety at home.
MOEN AMID THE MOUNTAINS.
Morn amid the mountains—
Lovely solitude!
Gushing streams and fountains
Murmur “God is good.”
Murmur, murmur, murmur “God is good.”
Murmur, murmur, murmur “God is good.”
Hymns of praise are ringing
Through the leafy wood;
Songsters sweetly singing,
Warble, “God is good.”
Warble, warble, warble “God is good.”
Warble, wartyle, warble “God is good.”
-
Wake, and join the chorus,
Child, with soul endued; ,
God, whose smile is o’er us,
Evermore is good.
Ever, ever, evermore is good.
Ever, ever, evermore is good.
PUBLIC SPEAKING.
At the solicitation of friends, Col. It. C.
SAXON will address the people of Bartow coun
ty, at the Courthouse in this place, at an early
hour on Tuesday morniny next.