Planters' weekly. (Greenesboro' [i.e. Greensboro], Ga.) 185?-18??, December 12, 1860, Image 1

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BY STEYEVS & FILLER. VOLUME 3. THE PLANTERS’ WEEKLY PUBLISHED AT Qreenesboro*. Cfra. ROLIN ffi STEYE'VS. ( pi-mnrietors# FRED. C. FULLER. \ rropneiors,. TERMS.—TWO DOLLARS A YEAR; OR ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY w- iOgNTS IN ADVANCE. HNC. R E I D, ATTORNEY AT LAW, jmnel’s9-ly. Qrreenoloro, Georgia. x ROLIN w. stevens; ATTEST AT LAW, ;r°-oVa.en;, . X riLL nr.ct.ee in the cornu. - ,* h ’ k * Myin, Putnam lfjtn, •MlVfi'ttJ t?4oSock - [^b.9,-18rt-,. < casbv, oar*-' 1 * c# * WHOLESALE DRI7£GISTb, ANUIMrOItTSIS or ESCUhH, FRENCH, AND GERMAN DRUGS, 0-..-irti#l*,PcifuWery t> Articlre, aroi-iasfri, PAis'is. mi.s, va'isisum, window oi.ass. .Ac., &e., Ac. KN. Cop.of Light and Lombard streets, bm.timohe. r. V. COOX, IVav, Agt. —jly2B-tf. 6&nL r HEREBY tender mv thanks to ‘he pa olio, for kind- IV no loe'berciofflre, b l*r K er eliarr of pa’.r.than 1 anticipated, and again onermy pro fer „>al —.nic-n to any who may dir” e C “ IL VVh tn not •.>rnf'HO‘i.il!y eojrtged, l may ba found SSttT w L BSrHr.A, M. P. dentistry. |ir, jnonG't ri, Pen/ln/tl, Georgia, WJCI.D titidftn ‘he citizene of Greene and ad j unS‘i,T c iuniiey.thal Ire is prepared to perform any ..-/-ra-tO'i jTirUini'iff to Ilia prol'csaaion,witbnt o<?jb -itd ,ii*p*t3b. H _• will inae.rt from one to an en tire .ini of teeth. It liiliit intention to pieaae. / will ho in GreoHiMboro on Monday, Tuesday aad tfoiaesday of each weeek au4 iu Fonlield the reel .1 ider of hUtiiiic. \*i itall from the country that may be tendered biui will meet with prompt attention. 0’ refer* to Q. J jfiii V!uf*otJ'V*>f —P*b. W. CLOCKS, WATCHES AND J l |L B 1! Till’ undersigned would respectfully fi inform the citizen* of t.is we'.nity and tho public in genera!, that ha has MM* Uelaracd to Creencsfcoro, and will constantly keep on hand a well selec ted stock of dacki, Watches db Jewelry, and will sell lower than ever. Call in and try bin. Clocks, ‘V’ atehes and Jewelry, also, repaired as heretofore at the old stand. J. P. AIIbSTBOX. Grertienboro’, G„ Moy 31), 1860. ts. SOUTHERN DRUG HOUSE. f , SPJSiaS & SIGHT, STILL Oet’lPY THEIR OLD STAND, Ocimsits TEHa’ Hotel. No. Sl6, Where they Oopptantlv keep on hand one of THZI I.ARREST STOCKS IX THE SOIThERX COUNTRY! Comprising’ Every Article in the Drug and Fancy Goods Trade, ALL or Which they will sell AT NEW YORK PRICES. Price. Before fen ttny. • 4 .if>:, Cs„ Jan'.'iry lOih, iB6O. - Wl-I ’ll ■ ‘ ■ LUI- ‘ ■ ■ 1 I - $. & I/. rA ■ BJIStJX WJEMjMj, - * VNUFACTUHEKBOF ~ Trunks *c., See ’ *i v ‘ permanently established H th^ nß e.v: sin lh .tJ e^t n 0 ° f r / eD * nQield. They are ‘ii. , L c 0 a Fine MM #f MateHaiJ 1 and jvill constantly keep on hand a g'v °® assortment of Wiißon.Ooach and Bugsy Harness of THEIR OWN and the NORTHERN MAKE. ry All JOBS put np in the most work-1 manlike rnauner of the best material Repairing done at the shortest no tice. * ‘ f Jan. 1. 1860-ts. NOTICE. I'VRN. ¥ POiVBR'j, haring been burnt had to get aa office elsewhere.— He is now at ying in the house formerly held * t>7 Ur, Latimer. L'r. P. solicita the patronage of those who in ay grant it, and who are willing to pay for it. GLOBE HOTEL. ACGCSTA, GEORGIA. JIUSTIS XICLLARKY, PauraihTua. * XOTICE. — holding Through Tickets will be carried to and from tilts Hotel free 4f Omnibus far#. {nffUH. ©* ftept, 9*. !•*<* —I J . A Weekly Journal;—©eveted to Etas Litorataco, Agriculture, Foreign aad Boiaestie lews, Wit, Htnaor, New Advertisements. REMOVAL. WE hereby give notice to all of oar friends and customers and the public generally, that we have been compelled to move to Nortons Old Stand, (in order to avoid Litigation,) where wo ex pect to remain until our new House is com pleted, which we hope will be but a short time, and in order to reduce our Large and Complete Stock of Fall and Winter Goods, w§ will offer Extra Inducements, WeCTO determined not to be undersold by any of our liome C* Foreign competitors, all we ask ofany one is if’ come * n< i EXAMINE C>UR STOCK, we feel confident, that the inducements we offer, cannot fail to give gener&i sJ ,; sfaction, we offer GOOD Goods at Low Prices, /jar stock consists of everything usually kept • „„ country Town, such as in an J Staple a',?* lancy Dry G00D.9., A Domestics of all discripticns, Cloths am” a,- meres. Vestings, Hats and Caps, Tweeds And Kenneys, Blankets. Ladies Gentlemen anu Childrens shoes. Brogans Hardware, Crockery Groceries, Yankee notions, &c. We would call particular attention io our stock of GEORGIA HADE GOODS , such as Kerseys, Tweeds, (’assurers, Sheeting and Shirting, Osuaburgs, Wool Hats &c. We will sell any of cur old goods, at New York Cost without the expenses of getting them here, call and see us, we shall charge nothing (or showing our GOODS, but will take pleas ure in doing so, dont buy before you examine our atoclc. u> yon might regret it after it is too late. Come one, Come all. WINFIELD. JACKSON k CO. 16th Out. lbuO till 22d Aug. lSdl. Copartnership Notice. WE, the undersigned, having formed a co partnership for the purpose of carrying oh the CLOTHaNG AND Furnishing Goods Business, And haYirjj bought Hf.vrv 0. Weaver's interest in the old lirtn of Crabbe ii Weaver, would inform our friends and the public gen erally, that we offer Extra Inducements in the sale of what goods we now have on hand, our object is to reduce the present stock, as we intend to offer one of the Largest and Best Stocks of Clothing and Furnishing Goods. ever offered to this Community, wc intend to make this a BUSINESS OF ITSELF, and therefor* our stack will he complete.— W e hope that by strict attention to busi ness, to merit a liberal share of your patron age. CRABBE, PORTER & CO. B. B CRABBE, | LB. JACKSON, J. T. PORTER, | J. W. WINEIEI.D. August 15th, IBGO. GUNS! GUNS! GUNS! * IMIE undersigned has put up a shop for the JL purpose of Making and Repairing- Double Guns, Rifles & Pistols. I will do all work entrusted to me with neat ness and dispatch, on reasonable terms, and warrant it. BtjT’ Gire me a Call. Shop over J. P. Aiilstroms’ Jewelry store. IT. ‘MA RK WALTER. <7reenesboro’, July 18, 1860. —3ni. NEW GOODS! nnUE subscriber hereby respectfully informs X bis old customers and the public that he has jusi opened an Entire new -* STOCK OF GOODS j* his old stand (late W. 0. Smith’s) where he >nvite9 their attention. The Goov s consist of Dry ufoods, Groceries, Hardware, a ) ar g e I® l of ClothioJ. Boots, Shoes, *c. &c., Without fo. , !<H' rin ß the custom of publishing my private reato.J f° r every act, I will merely state that I can be found, that I warrant every article offered to iC Dew, that I will sell them of the aarae quality quantity, as low as any one else can or will do if; *tid to one customer as low asanother, not contracting to sell any friend goods at cost. Call and see me and I will be obliged. W. GRIFFIN. Greenesboro’ Oct. 24 1860.—2 m. GKORCUA iUSITACTOaV OF SADDLES & HADNESS, 109 Broad Strict, UNDER AUGUSTA HOTEL. j MACHINE STRETCHED BELTING op Oak, llrnduck ami Rubber. Gin Baud* of Oak. Hemlock awl Rubber. JULIUS HARROW, PROPRIETOR. Q*. ftept. 88, IMA 4m. GREENES BORO’, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 12, 1860 New Advertisements, aa: NITROGEXISED SIPER-PKOSPIIATE . i ; OF LIME. -iAXj. THE undersigned, Agent for the above Fertiliser, in consequence of its marked success the past season, and the greatly in creased demand arising therefrom, has made arrangements with the manufacturer for a targe end full supply; and requiring greater Cicilities forstorage andotberaocommodation, hits fatten the four story Warehouse as below, whera he will bn able to supply any quantity required, with promptness. He may be al lowed to express his satisfaction in view of the fact that of the numerous purchases made of him by planters, generally for the purpose of making comparative tests with other fertil isers. not one case has come to his knowledge where our Fertiliser has not shown a decided superiority. Planters who have used Mapes’ | phosphate, now make it their solo reliance, a i ■jr* ordering (so’ceof them) as much as fifty tor for use the next season. This fact sneaks for , w have discovered a qual ity. devedoped in .“* andr u outh * wblo . h was before unobserved, viz ; its byfometr.c power, or capacity, to absorb ln .,."ure ,rom the atmos phere, which obviated to a .Urge extent the late unparalleled drought wherd *“ USlf!( J> while most other fertilisers were nci, ’' n v, va ‘” u ‘less, but positively injurious to the j. ‘ ID E The ® nd profit as a money investment,* * . foa the use of Mapes’ Phosphate, re an3 ‘ , IpA .j'yvond q -tion, and (lie expert nowpla. ‘* season, has established what ence of the ; .^ ution< a ; sy ,. Tsi asserteo we have, wilij.. ’■ farti |; ser Veliahle un for .t that it H th* ‘"V -q. mo(ie of cultiva dsr ad circumstances t ,r tion, and of weather. . , The undersigned is also • “v'V any description of AGBIOBI,.*-!'**- * (WINERY ami IMPLEMENTS, i? f the .wg improved patterns adapted to Souths rn co ‘- ration, ai lowest, prices. .J. A. QUIMBY. No 3, Warren Block. Augusta, Geo. Oetidier 10 Istlo. LEANDER C. DEMISGh 254 Broad Street 254. UNDER GLOBE lIOTEL, Dealer in Fancy and Dnj Goods. I'have anything you want, and at tec lowest prices. Augusta, Ga., Sept. 26, 1860. lv. NEW FALL” DRY GOODS, 1860. Having received our stock of Full Dry Goods (all of whi h are entirely new, having no old stock on hand) we take this occasion to call the attention of the readeis of the ‘APlanters’ Weekly j’ to our floods and prices— QURSTGCKOF Dress Goods, KERSEYS AND BLANKETS, ISOOP SKIRTS. and all other articles in the Dry floods line is full and complete, all of which will be sold at pricosto suit the short crrq>3 of Cotton and Corn. Planters will oblige us bT calling and examining for themselves which will cost them nothing. KEAN t CAARK. 2nd door above Globe Coiner. 258 Broad Street- August#, f?a. Sept.2B, 1860- — ly. SOUTHERN RIGHTS. MtJCII has been said of late about South ern Rights and Southern Trade, espe cially since the Charleston Convention, You can now, “show your faith •j* by your works.” J. W. WINFIELD, Offers for sale HARNESS of nil kinds, made in this city, out of the best Southern material. by a Southern man and he will give a Southern war rantee, for all work done in his shop. lie is prepared to make, to order, anything from a throat-latch of a Bridle to the finest Carriage Harness. ftgyCall at his shoo in front end of Brother Copolan’s Livery Stable and you will be waited on by a Southern man. G. W. GROGAN, reenesboro, May 15. [feb.22-ly] Agent. TRKdOQ RE H MARBLE WORKS, Broad Street. hear the-Lower , Augusta, Ga . MARBLE MONUMENTS, TOMBSTONES, &C. ALSO MARBLE MANTLES. And Furniture work of all kinds, From the Plainest to the most Elaborate, Designed and furnished to order at short no tice. AH work for the country carefully Boxed and forwarded. digests, (!•*. Sept. 26, 1860, —ly. Job Work of all ; kinds neatly done at this office. MUiUELLANROCS.. From the Rural New-Yorker. Ask, Seek, Knock. Ask and ye bliall receive, seek nnd ye shall find, knock and it shall be opened unto you.—Mathew 7:7. Ask ever* for a thankful heart For all’thy blessihgs given; That thine heart may unceasing raise Its grateful songs to heaven. Ask for the promised love of God To smooth life’s rugged way; And that from virtue’s pleassantpaths Thy feet ma_v never stray ; For He hath said, ye who believe. Ask hut oi’ine, thou shalt receive. And seek thou for the treasures hid Within the sacred hook, For treasures rich and rare are stored For all who humbly’ look; And prayerful seek the pearl of price, A spirit meek and pure, Most precious in the Father’s sight; Ills promises are sure, That if ye seek, with earnest mind, Eternal riches ye shall find. At the door of th’ heavenly kingdom knock, In the twilight hour of life, ‘ TV. gain admittance to the blest. To part from earthly strife, Longing for tliy heavenly rest, Bid sin iftid toil depart; Reaching the gate of Paradise, Knock with unfaltering heart; . F>f the gentle Savior, stands To ooi-n i£ Mth ready hands. Geneva, Wis., iB6O. D 0. D. THE HOLE IX THE POCKET j or, si.” S*cret ofSacc'-ss. Jonas Slack and his wife commenced house-keeping, as many other young peo nlc : ; o, witii little means for defraying the nee-. expenses;? but as he was a good mechanic •‘ ‘ von *d gene, ally find em plovinent in Jds uative village, and she be i-,ig an iiidnstriouf Jiule wolnail > besides doing her housework, ftnied considerable in the course of a year by t- plain sew ii g. But still they did not bii?' a pios per as did Ned Bowen and Ins wii£. plio commenced housekeeping near them aloft the same time, under similar circumstan ces. The reason why, and the way he made the discovery, we will let him tell in his own words. My wife said to me one evening, ‘‘Mr. Black, 1 wish to get some thread and nee dles at the store, and want a little change.” 1 felt in mv pocket, examined my wallet thoroughly, hut could find nothing that would pass for currency at the rdpre, am, repoited the unpleasant fact to her.” “Why !” said she, “what has become of tlic half dollar I gave you this morning, that I got from Mrs. Jones for sewing,” (slic bad always made me cashier of tho firm ) After anolJier unsuccessful attempt to find it, i said:—“Mrs. Slack, I think there must be a bole in some if my pockets, for certainly ] Lave not got it, and I do not think of anything 1 have paid it, out for.” “I'll look to your pockets this evening,” said she, mildly, “‘and mend them, if they need it.” it was not long after this conversation, that I remembered having treated myself and three friends to ice cream and ofanges at a confectidher's shop, but concluded to keep the discovery to myself. “I could not find any hole in your pock et last night,” said my wife, the next morning, in a gentle tone, and with a look that my feelings prevented me from scan ning closely, and all the reply I felt will ing to make, was, “Ah ! couldn’t you ?” But few daysafterward,she called on nje for twenty-five cents she had lately de posited in my sub-treasnry for safe keep ing. A thorough search proved unavail ing- “ Really, Mrs. Slack,” said I, thinking it best to show a bold front, “there must be some corner or seam in my nocket that is open;” (though really I could not find one, any more than I could the missing quar ter.) “If there is, it is singular I did not find it the other evening,’’ said she, in her usual quiet way; “but 1 will be sure to find it this evening if there is any.” On the way to my work after dinner, while passing the Arcade Saloon, the fate of my wife’s quarter came distinctly to rny mind. It had vanished in smoke in front of that institution, i. c., it had paid foi five fine! y-flavorcd cigars, which some of my village “friends” had helped me to dispose of while discussing polities there the pre vious evening. Mrs. Slack never fold me whether she found any hole in my pocket or not, and’ I did not fool disposed to push the investiga tion on theHubject any further at the time. Although 1 was seldoifi entirely out of change, still it was frequeutly unpleasantly J scarce. In fact, 1 spent more than 1 was teally aware of, in sw*H items from day to day, for the double purpose of maintaining cvy reputation of being a “clever fellow.” j and to gratify my appetite or fancy for ; tilings I could have done very wcli uuth -1 out. The result was, that we did without things at homo which my wages would have fniltldl me to bov, and left some- thing for charitable purposes. One day, I was presented with a sub scription paper for the benefit of the Or phan Asylum, which I reluctantly handed back without signing, with the remark that * I really could not afford it. My wile smiled sadly, as she said to mein > an under tone : | “Ned Bowen subscribed five dollars.” “T don’t see how lie. can afford it,” I • replied, “as he does not get any better wa ges. or work more hours than I do.” A few days after the foregqing event, on an invitation fiom Ned Bowen and Ids wife, we spent an evening at their house which we found much better furnished than our own, though there was no appar ent attempt to make any needless display of furniture. Ihe evening passed pleasantly away, hut J could not avoid some unpleasant feelings, whenever I contrasted their home with our own. “I wonder,” said I to my wife, on onr way home, “if Bowen does not go in debt for some of their furniture ?” “He does not;” she replied, “for his wife told me that they did not owe a dollar in the world.” “But how can they livo as they are do ing on his wages, if he gives five dollars .at a time for charitable purposes 1” “I think I can tell you,” said my wife, in a hesitating manner. “W ell do, if you please,” I replied, not a little curious to know what her ideas on the subject were. “Well,” she continued, “in the first place, she never buys for herself any un neccessaiy finery, and takes good care that nothing is lost or destroyed that comes in to the house, nnd—” “But, ’ said I, interrupting her, “I doubt I amazingly whether she is more careful in !hat respect llfan tny own model wife.” “In the second place,” said she, ‘he is as careful iu t lies© respects as she is. He buys no ico cream, oranges, cigars, &o„ neither for himself nor any of his pretend ed friends. In short, my dear Mr Slack, lie has no hole in his pockets'.” It was the first word of suspicion siv wife ever uttered on the subject, and that fact, together with the conviction that she had clearly seen, and so unexpectedly, but in so kind a manner, told me the real cause of the difference between- our home and J.'at of Ned Bowen and his wife, cut me to the quick—or rather, I should have said, it sewed me up, and my pockets too; they have never had holes in since that even ing. Her change has always been safe in them ever since, and our home now will not suffer any in comparison with that of our friends the Bowens. With good books and papers, 1 can spend, my leisure hours more “loasautly and profitably at home than anywhere ftfiu tie iiAYF 1 ” small expenses more than pays for them, j and is the secret of success. The Way of ihe World., Men may swear, gamble, profane the Sabbath, be obscene in speech aud licen tious in conduct —they may absent them selves from home and spend whole nights in lasciviousness, hist, excess of wine, re velings, banquenting, and abominable idol atries—and yet not lose their place in society, but be recognized as lionoiable men. But let a woman follow their ex ample, and she is driven, like Eve, from the social paradise. If even the breath of suspicion blow upon vestal robe, it is soiled. If she lape bnt once, from the path of vir tue, she “falls like Lucifer.” No penitence however protracted, can replace her on the pedestal from which she fell. No- tears can wash away the stain upon her fair name. You might as well attempt to re construct a broken vase or to restore tints and fragrance of a faded flower. “The white snow lay On the narrow pathway Where the lord of the valley-crossed over the moor, And many a deep print In the white snow’s tint Showed lie tracks of Ids footsteps to Eve- Iccn’s door. The next Sun’s ray, Seen melted away Every trace on the path where the false lord came ! But none shall see the day, When the stain shall pass away The stain upon the snow of fair Evcleen’s fame. And yet that proud lord will lift his head in society as if he were as pious as an angel, while the victim of his hellish .".its is, like Cain, a vagabond upon earth. And even the virtuous woman, who would shrink from her presence as from a pestil- ] ence, will, give him bei hand and heart, as if he had nevor sinned. [Philip Slaughter. We always admire the answer of the ■oan who, when asked how old he was, an swered, “Just forty years; but if you count by the fun I’ve seen, I am at least eighty.” Tho following is nn alaiming evidence of the progress of the photographic art: — 1 A lady last week had her likeness taken | by a photographist; and be executed it so ; well that her husband prefers it to tiie ‘ original. “Tiihik, John, (lint’s twice you’ve come home ami forgotten that lard ” * Ln, mother ;it was so greasy that it slipped my mind.’* Terms— sl,3o Always In Advance. WAYSIDE GLimXGS. t ~TV ——— - =sesm 2\o ‘'AJuntlies” in Vice. — lt is idle to talk of the vices as a sisterhood. There may bo association, hut no affiliation. Knaves may bo companions, but not friends. The vain dislike the vain; tho proud hate the proud; the covetous abhor the covetous. But the virtuous are never at war. The just love the just; the chaste esteem the chaste; the Lenevolent admire the bevolcnt. In short, all good tilings harmonize; all bar] tilings are discordant, both \v\th the good and with each other. Juvenile Imagination. —There seams to he a pretty strony tendency, in these mat ter-of-fact days, to suppress the imagina tive faculty in children. This is quite wrong. The imagination is quite as legiti mate, in its way, as any other portion of the mental apparatus. “Facts are stub born things,” and mere dry facts are far too stubborn to be a wholesome pabulum for the graceful and spiritual undeistand ing of children. They find out, iu time, that their dolls are only stuffed with saw dust, and that Santa Clans is a myth. Let them enjoy their innocent illusions, then, while they may, and let die poetic, rather than tli,e prosaic, side of their natures he cultivated first. Don t quarrel with your conscience Own up when she accuses—lie ashamed of your wrong doings, and reform, and thus escape her upbraidings. It is true that “conscience makes cowards of us all, hut tlio fault is with ourselves, and not with conscience. Deal justly with all hearts, pay for your newspaper, and he assured that conscience will permit you to sleep as sound as when you were a nestling uti your mother’s boson. 1 HR Marshal of Cincinnati, a few days since received tlm following telegraphic dispatch from Dayton. Wo hope, for the sake of the baby-, the vrow may be caught. “Mister Marshal, mine vrow rimed away mit one Dutchman this morning; she has bnt one eye, vich is black—t’other eye ish black, too, but she lost hirn. She’s ash pig ash a hogshead. I vant t< ketch her in it the telegraph and send her home to her baby, for if she don’t coins, i vips her like ter tyvle,” Retailing. — Paul Pry, espying a man digging a large pit, and being'disposed to rally him, asked him what ho was digging. “A big hole,” was the reply. “And what are you going to do with bUch a big hole f” “Going to make it into small ones, and retail them to you to set fence posts iu. The fall was a step downward from hi* nocence but also il. was a step onward—a giant step in human progress. it inatfm goodness possible ; for to know the evil, and to conquer it and choose the good, is far nobler than a state which only consists in our ignorance of both. “Good morning, Mr. ilenpeck, have you got any daughters that would make a good type setter {” -Not exactly, bnt i have got a wife would a first-rate devil.” A modem Munchausen, addicted to hum ming an air beginning “Strike the lyre, strike the lyre,” was greatly surprised when one of his acquaintances, Inking him at his word, knocked him down. New Year's Cake. —l enp of butter, 1 of sugar. 1 teaspoonful of cream tartar, £ teaspoonful of soda, and caraway seeds to the taste. Flour must- be added till the dough is fit to roll—these require a quick oven. A sentimental chap intends to petit! -n to. Congress for a grant to improve the chan nels ot affection, so that henceforth the course of true love may run smooth. It takvs three editors to start a paper iiv New Orleans—one to get killed in a duel, one to die of yellow fever, and one to write an obituary of the defunct two. A hoarding-house keeper in Baltimore advertises to “furnish gentlemen with pleasant and comfortable rooms, also one or two gentlemen with wives. Dr. Franklin observed : “The eyes of • others are the eyes that ruin us. Ifni! but myself were blind, 1 should want neither fine bouses nor fine furniture.” A Boston girl writes from Niagara Falls that the Prince of Wales has “whop ping lag feet—that lie is short, nud don’t look like the pictures any more than she docs.” It is better to he poor and honest tlun wealthy and dishonorable. Tho agitation of thought is the Logining of wisdom. Why are nil games of chess of etpial | duration? Because it taker justyear knights | to play every game. “Dear Laura, when we were courting you were very dear to me ; but now I are my wife, and I am paying your hills, i you seem to get dearer and dearer,” I Htorms cleanse the atmosphere, end ihf tempests of life purify the human lieert. NUMBER 50-