The Dawson news. (Dawson, Ga.) 1889-current, March 27, 1889, Image 1

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By E L. RAINEY. ERceg fi’gé/f,% IH'"‘?:% ,’_‘ "°'; £ " ‘ 5 :’i , "‘:’,s % \,\t\}\\\_ 3 ‘ ‘f /‘“‘fz j GUARANTEED. The only medicines sold by druggists, under apositive ?mra.lwee from tt?(gr manufacts urers, that they will do just what is claimed for them— that is, benefit or cure in all cases of discases for which they are recommended, or the money paid for them will be promptly refunded—are Dr. Picrce’s world-famed spe cifics, manufactured by World's Dispensary Medical Association, of Buffalo, N. Y, Dr, Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures gll diseases arising fron a torpid or deranged Jiver, or from impure blood, as Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, Pimples, Blotches, "Eruptions, falt-rheum, Tetter, Erysipeias, and Scrofu- Jous Sores and Swellings. Consumption, or Lung-scrofuls, is aiso cared by this won derful remedy, if taken in time. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the world-famed remedy for all those chronic weaknesses and distressing derangements so common to American women. It is a most potent, invigorating, restorative tonic, or m;fih giver, imparting tone and vigor to the whole system, As a soothing nervine it {8 unequaled. See 5‘”“’?"“‘“ printed on the bottle- wrapper and faithfully earried out for many years. Copyright, 1888, by WORLD'S DIS. MED. ASS'N, : i T } for an incurable case of Cae N tarrh in the Head by the prietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. By r:’mild, soothing und healing properties, it cures the worst cases, no matter of Low long sanding. By druggists, 5 cents, 1K 3icC | A MILLER ORGAN Is TyE Fingpst AND Busr., ; vul?u\-lul‘,' - g T by t 4 ) &o i }‘.‘:m{( g I - N n SRR S Qe iR TR By e S ~3:“‘:=":‘:1:§"~<_ i ~ Y e i i R Y R o AR e < ws % E g ‘,,,'.“.'23'--"', F‘%‘}-‘v = § TR R S Q ,L,'l' e 8 q 5.'4 AN PP el gy . O Y RTOR R S P e '!;5; S s RLY g ’;d: [t stands at the head of all good organs. Those who desire to bave thebest organ should acquaint them ®lves with the merits of our instrue ments. Don’t take our word for ¥hat we say, but see and test our instrum.ents. It no dealer sells our Organs in your locality, write to the factory, BUY NO® OTHER. AppßEss, NILLER ORGAN CO. Lebanon, Pa. WCatalogue, &c., tree, Sept. 26. - -y O & "3 s o B w 2555 Bl BS = O ;‘;_:?-'195'?-‘1_,5’5:,'-? SxEIREEs T 3 F.‘“,.dg;ri @ 5.83° AR B rGEEE¥Eg =BO L= = £.O P == c= = - + R L S rul @ <O i :3_’-—’--10‘.'?_5<1’ !m n,'" 2‘ :?\_. o - B o & =T - ‘F"‘sb‘;*-c. & 4ESpss g g SRS ate s < b R | ‘E T BLo B s eEE EoBSFT EEco FB3B°¢9 ~=C = . 2 Sl B T - T L = o Wl c T BoE b -2 =5 E®aBas ¢ - e=3 -~ O 8 = e O s am : oz =2 5 TE o ¢ ms':m B 9 e sf o £a - ' S 2 oen BT % O} & ] c—ggmr: ::amg' i - s ~=-°‘°g -o—a"saC‘ A & e = Siy | T 0 s S na B = I e Mo ,:-Q_:rg -11. 8 > = 3B o sEsP D "I oS w = : Es g w B =S = et S E = o B =2 = = BS a 3 = =R s oW G 1 76<%a | e e e<o & = . nn—-ga‘g':""‘-;’: ES bR S s sA s FETEE e ;ouoq“.ga"“‘ - 4 :a.n - —v"{ sEE . PBR 2R &g I o .a'fl!!=e-‘A b ° 141 Who are Weak Nervous HRand Debilitated and suffer iE\in: from Nervous Debili- N 2iVty, Semina) Weakress, ightly Enissions, and all the ef feets of early Jyj Habits, which b 1 Premature Decay,Consump tion or Ins;mity, send for Prax'’s Trc“_“fie on Diseases of Man, with P‘"flculurs‘ for Home Cure, Vures B"‘“‘aut-ced. No cure no y, JB. Peags, 612 anq 614, Church St. Nashville, Teun. THE DAWSON NEWS ; EDITOR!AL Squigs. | e The Coustitution says that an exposition will be held in Atlenta next tall. It is alreedy on the slate tbat President Harrison will attend, and that he must ride into Atlavta on a truin mude in Geora gia. A North Georgia woman hes been imprisonel six months for whipping Ler husband. It he deserved it, which no doubt he did, she ought to have been given a medal instead of being i priss oned. Ex-President Hayes has made a donation to the Confederate Vet eran’s Hot e. In this he was joii ed by several generals who wore the blue. In this way will the lines of sectional distinction he blotted out and the nation brought closer together. Two young men from Douglass county, of geod fimilies, are uns der arrest iv Atlanta for passing “raised money.” A cypher was added toa $5 or $lO Lil, converts ing them iato $5O or $lOO, These young bloods will doubtless speni some time in Albany or Sing Sing. Senator Colquitt and Represent~ ative Stewart have gone to Massas chusetts to lend the prohibition cause a helping hand. Prohibi tion in Maine and other Northern States has never been able to close up the barrooms. Massachusetts wants to learn of Georgia how the thing can be accomplished. The Cuthbert Liberal states that there are mules in that county that have carried heavy mortgages uutil they have become swayback. It wight bave added that a good many tarms and farmers are even worse off trom the same cause. Mortgages have broken the back of prosperous farming the world over, The lawyers and the court in Macon had & high old time trying to rake up and scrape together a jury in the Wooliolk case. Durs ing the multitudinous hauls, a col ored brother was brought up, and his temporary selection fanned up a considerable breezee in court. Wooltork’s attorney demanded that a juror should be a peer of the ac» cused, and that ‘“‘Sambo” didn’t come up to the standard. His name, after much talk, was dropp= ed, greatly to the indignation of our colored fellow-citizens. Some ten years ago Col. Tenuie C. Clattin and her sister were noio rious characters in New York. They were up to everythingof a disreputab.e nature, They wuded deep in the slums of vice, and were the champions of free love, Now they are reputable English mat rons, and Col. Tennie Ulatlin is my Lacy Cook. She is visiting New York, but will not patronize her old haunts. As she 13 of the great nobility, doubtless the peerage worshippers ot Gotham will do her much obeisance. The ways o the world iy past finding ont. &adly aut. of Joiit. The complaint is general along all lines ot the Central road that the trains do not run om time. A special from Co.umbus says nearly every day there are delays and ac cidents en the central system. The pubiic are asking wby is this the case and why cannot it be reme— died. There isa belict that the employes of the company are not to blame, but that the authorities are not keeping the tracks and rolling stock up to the proper standard. The Atlanta Constitu~ tion says that for several movths the arrival of the Central trains are so irregular that if a party goes to meet a forenoon tran he carries his dinner, and if an after~ noon train he takes along his sup per. s Dr. Pierce's Pelicts cure onsti pation, biliousue-s, sick headache, bilious headache, and all derange ments of the stomach, liver and bhowels. : WORK AND BE HAPPY, ARP'S ADVICE TU-T_H_L:BOYS AND GIRLS. Be Independent by Earning Your Living~s Cutting a High Figure on a Small Salary Den't Pay. ~ Not long ago I saw nice young man who is yet in his teens going round town hun‘ing for a place in a store. He looked anxious and timid and didu’t spem tobave n.uch faith iu finding a place. The hoy belonged to a hroken down aristos cratic family and suddenly realized that he had to work for a living., He had never plowed or hoed or dug or chopped wood, or curried a horse, or done auything but go to school and visit around and have a good tinie, but now he had worn out his welcome and realized that the realities of life were upon him. He must go to werk. His hands were soft and feminine, He had very good clothes, was handsome and would have made an attracs tive clerk in a dry goods store. But there was no place and he had no experience. A few days after wards, as I was weandering around, [ saw him making up mortar for a brick mason. He was pulling awty as hard as he could, but I noticed he had gloves on. I didn’t like that until I learned that his hands were blistered so bad he had to wear gloves or quit. Ie was bright and cheerful—said he was getting seventy-five cents a day and was promised a dollar as soon as he could do as much work as “a nigger.” He said he enjoyed his weals and slept splendid, and had four dollars in his pocket that he had earned, the first money he had ever earned, and he felt richer and more independent than he had ever felt before. There is grit in that boy. He has met the enemy_and the enemy ishis. He has wlipped poverty and dependence at the start, and if he will keep out Lat line his fortune is made—l mean the line of work. He bas begun at the bottom and will work up. He won’t spend those dollars—they cost too much to tkrow away on foolishness. They eust sweat and tireq museles and aching bones and blistered hards and humility, but he is getting over that now.” It nearly killed him for the society girls to ride by and see him at work. They know him, and cne said: “I thought he would have to come down.” Anoth ersaid: “Poor fellow! lam just as sorry for him as I can be. He is o nice and dances so charms iugly.” That is what is the matter with a good many of the yvoung wen. They are afraid of what the girls will sav. They had rather loaf around anong their kin or pretend tobe reading law than to go ta work —work iz not exactly respee table. This false pride isa cons temptible wealness and disgusts me $0 I fecl like taking my coat aud driving out to tote murtar or dig in the ditches for the gas pipe juet #8 an example. I eounted twenty-six negroes all in a row diggine these ditches and not a white man among thew. A work ing boy won't have to 1o that kind of work long. He is vatched and talked about and very soon somes body waats him aud he gets # bet ter place. Hecrawlsup, Itissn old saying that if & young man saves his first theusand dellaes he will get rich—thuat i 3 so in nine cases out of ton—yes, if le will save bLis hundred, he will succeed, and any y u 1z man can save that much in a year if he will let whis key and tubacco ard the society girls :lone —society wiil keep a poor young man poor, It keeps married folks peor. I am thinkivyg now of a married man who 3 bowed dawn with debt, while Lis tomily are trying to keep on the ragged ed e of society. A milliner makes their clothes, aud they are just obliged to ride in a carriage when they go vigiting, Such people are the town talk and don’t know it. There are nice young men in every town who bave been clerking for years and havent laid up a dollar. They musi take a girl M\v that DAWSON, GA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 18839, -comes along, and spend five dollars ;on every dance, for those who -dance must pay the fiddler, Capin tal is very particular now-a-days, ' When capital wants a young man it looks round for one who doesn’t drink or smoke or gamble—one rwho saves his money and doesn’t run about every night. Family [influence isu’t worth a cent now. A voung masn stands on bis merits, his ‘babits, his associations, I know & young man sho lost hig plice be cause he kept a bottle dw his room.. So he quit for a year, and was just about getiing a good situation, when ke got on a spree aud that set him back for another year and dis couraged him, and now he drinks whenever he can get it and does odd jobs around, but can’t get any regular employment, Nobody but sick folks ceo aflord to drink, and it doesu’t do them any good. I never saw a father who was willing for his son te driuk - I never saw a son who was willing for his father to dvink. The wife feels as much concern about her husband drink ing as he does about her taking morphine. Young man, there is ¢ blue beok in every town and your name is on it. But thereis no ex~ cuse for a young man failing to get empleyment in this blessed coun~ try, If he does not it is his own fault. If he can’t get rich fast he can slow. If he will begin young aud work hard and behave himselt he will accumulate a plenty for his old age. Old age wants some mone ‘ ey. It wants rest and ought to have it. “Otium cum dignitate” is the Latin for dignified leisure, but I heard Judge Underwood say it meat, ‘‘rest comes by digging.” Dig first and rest afterwards. Old age don’t want to get up on a cold winter morning and mske the fire and cook the breakfast. Yester day morning a little darky tapped at our bedroom door and said: “Mammy say she sick and her can’t come des mornin’,” and then I heard a female voice reply, *“Oh, dear me, there it is again. I thought last night she was fixing to get sick. She is such an aggra~ vation. [ wish she would quit and stay quit. Here it isseven o’clock, and not even a fire made.” And go the breakfast was like the trains, an hour late, and the children were late to school, and got marked, and everything was out of joint, and baven’t got strightened. out yet. Eight dollars a month and perquisites won’t keep a ecranky cook in order. In such emergen— cies I used to get up and cook the breakfast myself, but I won't do it roy. Dve struck. I'll do without it first. I want my otium cum diz. Mrs, Arp shan’t do it, either. She wants Ler otium, and is entiled to it. We have acother darky close by, and so the case is not desperate but 1t is provoking. There is a good deal of provoking in this vale of tears. Lest night I started to town. The silver mnon was shine ing nearly vertical, ard as I step~ ped off the piazza to the pavement, I thought 1 saw our black dog ly~ ing by the step, and so I stepped high to step over him, and Mys. Arp says she, “‘what are you step ping so high for—yon remind me of a blind horse with the strings halt,” “[ didu’t want to step on the dog,” suid I, indignantly. She just laughed and eaid, *‘children did you see your pa trying to step over his shudow-—there iz no dog there,” and they all laughed but me. Such things always disturb my serenity, Go to work young man and lay up som» money for your old age— for the time when tho grass hopper will become a burden and the cook will quit before breakfist, and you will think your :hadow is a doz. *¢3 hat about the girls?” says a friend. Let the girls quit their foolishness, as Sam Jones says. If thc:v." can’t make money, let them quit spending it. I kuaw young ludics in this town whose fathers aro on a strain, and yet they won't make their own dresses. They have them made by the milliner. They prance all over the twn, and gad about aud read novels, 2nd dou’t do a Llessed thing to help their father maintain the family, A girl whose father is on a strain ought to make her owa clothes and some more be~ sides.. If she doesn't know how, she should learn. Every mamber of the family should at. least earn their satt and pepper and pickles and chewing gum. A girl of eighteen who can’s make her own clathes is not fit to be & wife, much les¢ a mother, Rich or poor, they ought to do something useful. Get up early and fly round and sweep and dustand look aiter the diniug. room and the lamps. After breaks tast’ gd to that sewing machine and make it hum and june like your grandmothers did the spianing wheel. In the afternoon put on your nice homwemade dress and go to see somebody you want to sce, somebody who wants to sce you, and talk sense when you get there, Oh, tor more model boys and maod. el girls to raise the next erop from, Young man, don't you marry a young girl who is too proad or too lazy to make her own clothes. Young lady, don’t you marry a man who drinks or who spends all that he makes. If following this advice stops the breed, let it stop. } =B Arr in Atlanta Consti tution, INTOXICATED 8Y DRINKING WATER. New Fuacls in Alesholic Heredity--Some Remarkable Cases. A prominent military man, who had drunk moderately during the war and had abstained from that time, while attending a dinner with his old comrades, where niost of them were intoxicated, suddenly became hilarivns, made a foolish speech, and settled back in his chair in a drunken-state, and was finally takeun home quite stupid. He had not drank any spirits and had only used coffee and water, aud yet be had ali the symptons of the others, ouly his was intoxica~ tion from contagion—the favering soil had been prepared long ago in the army. Another case was that of a man who had been an inebriate years ago. but had refornied, says the popular Scientific Mouthiy. He was recently elected to office and gave a dinner to some frieus, Among them was a physician who has been greatly interested in thes studies. He sent me a long re« port, the sabstance of which was this: On the occasion referred to many of the company became partially intoxicated, and the host, who drank nething but water, hecame hilarous and finally stupid with them. He was put to bed with every sign of intoxication, but rc covered, and next morning had only a confused notion of thece events, - The third case oceurred four years ago, A relorm>d man, of twelve years' sobriety, went on a wilitary excursion with a drinking company, and, although he drank nothivg hut lemonade, became as much intoxicated 43 any of the company. This event was the sulject of much comment and loss to him, socially and otherwise, although Le protested, aud others confiriaed his statements, that he did not take any spirits at this time.—New York Journal, § e Forty Acres and a Cew. A dispatch from Raleigh, N. (~ says: Bouthern agents, wmoviny negro fimilies to Arkansas, are quietly but successfully at work. Their operations are eonfinel thus fiar to a few counties on ruilroud lines, near Goldsboro, 'l'he coun ties are systematicalyl ¢ ..vasse!, Several thousand persons nave ul ready gove, and ludications poing to an extensive wovement. M:my larze plantations are almost desert. ed. Negro drummers are paid five dollars for each family _secured The eutire expeuse of the transpor tation to Little Rock s paid by the agents. The negroes say they «I%¢ promiged forty acres of land, a brick house, cow and a dollar and a palt per duy for lubor, and are told that ¢ra sells for nineteen cents per barrel and meal at one fourth ceut per pound ‘Lhey know nothin: ot their destination The removal is by families, Plan ters in the counties affected are reatlgnemburraesed at the loss of %flrm uds at the besinning of the plapting season, THE NEGRO AT THE NORTH. HOW OUR COLIRED FRIENDS FARE IN NEW YOSRK. In New York city a short time time #go, a colored man asked for a drivk at the barof the Astor House and was refused. He sp ke indignantly of the affront, and cn that accouat, was ejected, placed under arrest, and fincd $lO in a po- It has omly been a few days since the principal ot the pub'ic schaols at Jamaica, L. 1., excluded a child because its mother was sup posed to have a taint of negro hlood in her veins, Not only does this rece prejudice | exist socially, but it extends to| business matters. No negro can be apprenticed to learn a trade.‘ He cannot be a clerk or asalesman in a store. He cannot be a teler graph operator or engineer and he can follow mno profession except | among his own race. He cannot even fill the place of street-car driver or conductor. In short all business is closed to him except that of waghing, scrubbing, or othe cr menial work. | In religion there is little or no: attention paid to the colored man. He has his own churches, which are attended only by his own race, and there are no white churches whose doors are open to him. Politieally the negro in the north cut no figure etall. He is allowed to go to the polls and deposit his vote for some white candidate, but there his political equality begins and ends. No colored man is fool ish enough to ask or expect any political recognition, except, pers haps, to be sent to Liberia or Hay» ti, on some unimportant mission. On one occasion during the summer I saw & well dressed white woriun, escorted by a stalwack eol ored man, enter the grand stand at the Wild West show. In a mos ment sll eyes were directed towards ihem and when they ut last found swits every woman in the vicinity gathered up her skirts and hastily sought other seats. Kvery oune scemed to think that they were go ing to be contaminated, aud in a little while the ill sorted couple were oceupying their seats with no one within ten feet of them. An effort was made to have them cject vd from the stand, and when it was found that this could not be legally dove, they were subjected to all kinds of ridicule and insult~ ing remaiks. This they stood for a little while, but finaily they re tired. Or Long Isdand there are thous ands of negroes whe live in little liets, scattered through the woods, or gathered in little settlements apart to themselves, These people cannot attend the white schools or churches and being too poor to support onewf thewr own, they have passed through more than halr a century without mental or moral treining. The result has been deplorable in the extreme and the average Long Islund negro of tosday is in point ot civilizatiou midway betv eea the negro of the south a.d the wild inhabitant of the Conze country, It was in oue of these regro set tlements, not two miles distant from the cclebrated Creedmore range, that the horrible murder of the colured girl, Maria Jones, was commiited lust April. The supers stition of the negroes in the sottle ment caused them to keep among them an old white hag whom they regard.d as a witch, apd who was feared on aceount ot her supposed supernatural powers. This wisery~ ble old erestare went from shanty to shauty in bher rounds, and one night finding Maria Juues slone in her eubin, she cruelly wurdered her with an ax, aud aiterwards re« mainea in the rocia to driuk a bots tle of - whisky over the corpse.i Notbing but the worse sort of sue perstition everkep ki old white woman in the settlement aid even after her terrible erime nany i»fi the negroes were afiaid to testify against her. { Op one occasion last summer 1 weni to sce a vegro picnic down un] | Long Isiand close to the little vils l lage ot Ja naica, and while there I winessed sights which I am sure are never seen among the negroes in the south, The pienic was one “incessant round of barbaric mirth and de bauchery. There was no orchestra of string or wind iustrumesdts, but dancing was kept up to the beating of littleand big drums and the clangiug ot brass cymbals, There day and night’aa to this wierd noise the negroes danced snd cas pered as wildly as canibals wround some missivnary roasting fire. There was no let up and when any of the dancers stopped for a mo rient it was only to visit a dirty san loon where the vilest kind of whisky was dealt out at five cents a glass. Long betore night fighta ing begun in which men and women indiscriminately mingled, and at an early hour of the morning the affair wound up with a general row. I could not help contrasting the negroes at this picnic with the plantation darkey of the South, and I could draw no conclusions but which wepe fuvorable to the latter. The mnegro | saw before me had been ireec for many years, but whet had treedom done for him? It was too plainly evident that it had pusbed him down rather than litted bim up. Here he wis just as poor and just as ignorant as the colored slave of a quarter of a century ago, and without a single trace of that happy, light« Learted disposition which will cause the plantation darkey to live in poetry aud song through ages to cowe. Wx. E. Epwarpy.. Cancer. I am satisfied that Cancer is hes reditary in my family. My father died ot it, ‘m sister of my mother died of it ind my own sister died of it. My feelings may be imagio ed, then, when the horrible dis cuse made its appearance on my side. It was a malignant Cancer, eating inwardly ix such a way that it iv could not be cut out. Nums~ erous remedies were used for it, butthe Cancer grew steadily worse, until iv seemed that I was doomed to follow the others of the family.- I took Switt’s Specific, which, tram the first day, torced out the poisou and continued its use until I had taken several bottles, when I found myself weli. I koowthats.S.S. cured me, Mrs. 8, M. Idol. Winston, N. C., Nov. 26, 'BB, His Right Ear. ] I had a rising on the inside of my head behind my right ear,which 1 grew 50 bad that the flesh sloughed ofl. It was lanced—swelled nyain : and was lanced the second time. I tovk &. 8. 8, which torced out pois fon, the discharge being cnpinus..! Soon as the sore began healing and ina short time was perfect!y well | 8. 5. 8. has cured me of this dan~ gerous trouble which was thought to beincurable, J. R. Bullock, ! Greenwood,S, C., Oct, 23, 1383. | Geuntlemen—Kuowing that you appreciaie voluntary testimoniuls, | we take pleasure in stating that | one of sur lady customers has re= | guined her hezlth by the use of four | large bottles ot your great remedy | atter baving been an invalid tor{ several years. H v trouble was ex- | treme debility, caused by a discase | peculiar to her sex. Willis & Co., Drugists. Wacen, Tex, May 9, 1833, Switt’s Specifie is entirely a veg. | etable niedicive and is the only med- | icine which has ever cured Ulou«l‘, Poison, Scrofulz, Blood Humnrsl aud kindred diseaso, Seud for our | books on Blood aud Skin, Diseases, : mailed tree. THE SWiFL SPk~| CLEIC LO. l Drawer 3, Adavta, Ga. [ It is a crime ror wen to prepare and advertise « a worthless, inert remedy as a cure tor terri ble aud chrovic klood poison in hope that tie sufferer will usea hundred botiles before he finds out its worth lessness, and yet there are some who do. Botanic Blovd Balm (B. B. B.) is not a remedy of this kind. The first bottle begins to do good, and a cure usually toliows beforel a dozen bottles are taken. YOL. V.—NO. 45. THE GIPSY QUEEN. - ORIGINGL:: 1 smiled, half sadly srailed, to-day, Thinking ou days of old; Passing the house where, long ago, I had my fortune told. Smiled, thinking of the flutt'ring : haod b iy - gave the Gipsy Queen; The blushing cheeks, the down~ . m‘ e’e’ V, e ¥ ’ - The trembling, shrinkmg mien. Sl kg 9 e v Which quelted my boyish fears— Pictures ot bright and wild uelight To crown wy future years, She said: “‘Dark clouds are in sy eky, \Vhiih hide the suw’s fair light: But in the book of Fate I see At lasi—all will come right.” And o'er my face there stole & sniile, And in my heart a lest, : To think the augel Peace would fold Her white wings in my breast, I wore fsom out the Gipsy's door A gladsome face that (lia_v; Her cheering words had sent my heart Rejvicing on its way.. And for long months whatever clouds O'er my yeuug lifc were cast, I swilingly would murmur forth— “ All will cowe rigut at Last.” But now T enule, hult sadly smile, At the Lrilliunt fortune thd By the Gipsy Queen, in the old ved house, : For the little coin: of gold. “One Touch of Nature."" ‘ As 1 write a scene from war tinies: { comes before me. A numberof i Massachusetts soldiers, wounded in: | the battle of New Market, were left. in my native village, in the Shene avdoah Valley. A few days bew ! ture, the Coufederate authorities,. f movir.g their stores to prevent capt ! ure by the approaching Federals, bad requested the citizens to. take: | into private houses a few Gonfeders . ate soldiers too ill for remaval from ' the town, Licutenant Woodly, a W est. Virginian, was carried to my farther’s house, and.though every effort was. made to save him, he: d'ed iu afew days. At my fathe i er’s request, Dr. Allen,the surgeon | of the Thirty-fourth Massachusetts: l regiment, left in charge of the " wounded. Federals, wisited Mr. s Woodly at cur keuse, and paid: | him every possible attention. In: ~wy daily visits to the Foderal hosv pital,which was near us,many kind~ | ly inquries were always made for | the wounded “stranger within our ’gates.” Oue morning I told the Federal soidiers that oungnest was: ; dead, and many regret and mucke sympathy {or his family were exe~ pressed. A coldier named: Adams I belive, who sat on the £bor nursirg; his wounded' foot, said th:me: genw tiy.**l am.a marbie cutterby trade, and' it you will give me a slab of hud wooid, I'will carve Lieutenant. Woodiy's name on it, so that hig fanily can find hisgrave after war: isover.” Oueof thy walnut boards. used to mark the soldiers’ graves: was scat to the hospitul, and the: wounded Federal forgot his own: puin in e rving, in.clear type, the Contederate’s name and regiwent with the words. e gives his be -1o ced -loep Inthe spring of '65; aiter General Grant hal received Lee's surrendir and. ordered.thas. the*boys"should keep theiw horses,. ““they would veed to makea crop.™ a young widow,with her two lovel boys, the eldest about six yearsok{. purting the targled grase, found her hasbanl's nam: carved by the toe, who had beea actuated hy{ova,-. Aot hate, though he,too, had saff ered, There was no peusion for the widow. or her babes; a cruel. steuggle with puverzf' lay befora: them, but as she knelt and kisse | the sod. above her lover-husband. she biessed the man whose case bad’ enabled ier to.find the grave,-~Boss ton, Transeript. : Tihey Back it Yp. The superior merits, as a blosds puritier aund. invigoeating: tonie, possessed. by De. Bieroe's Golden viedical Diseavery,. warrant its. mavufacturers in solling iy (asthey are doing through.druggists) uu der a positive guarantee that,, it given a fair trial, it will core il diseases arising trom & deranged op torpid liver, such as indigestion, or dyspepsia, and all bumors, or bloods taints, from whatevér cause aris ing, as skin, sealp and serofuloug atiections. The terurs are,a bouetic or eure, or money izturpad: !