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About Upson enterprise. (Thomaston, Ga.) 1878-1879 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1878)
UM first the TOR Lee 21 the ! 21 •. th. s. and only Box GIN dand "TIE NOBLEST MOTIVE IS THE PUBLIC GOOD.".--Virgil. iNO F MEANS, Editor and Proprietor. THE UPSON ENTERPRISE Written for the ENTERPRISE ,N 18.6 nN’s 2. BY LABAN CURTIS SUGGS. whom they confide. Hence, a repu- tation for int eglity is better capital than gold;—It is more persuasive than eloquence ;—it; s more powerful than the sword. A remarkable ex- lied. "You must deliver it up." Deliver up what?" i M. i 3 M. | 6 M. 4 12 M 12, 187 VOL, I. NO 15 9 Squares. I osquares,| 4 Squares. ! \Column, Column,| Column, $1.00 200 300 4001 500 1000 15 00 250 $7 00 1 1000 5001 10001 1500 - 2000 7 00 1500 10 002000 12 00 : 30 09 20 00 1600 3000 39 00 6500 25 00 | 4000 | 7000 i $1500 2500 30.00 40 00 50 00 8000 13000 ample of its influence is furnished in An honest man is the noblest work | the rivalry of Robespierre and Mira- of God.—Pope. ! beau, during the first epochs Integrity is the brightest jewel in French Revolution. the diadem of character.— Scot. TIORNEY A TL II land .-o earning money to expend unfledged angels,—men with marvel- mit of question. But such was the Iupon his vices ?|ousidiseases, anxious to raise money confusion of testimony, the darkness The ingenuity and skill manifested enough to take them to a famous of the night, and thegreat excitement hospital in a far-off State,—men halt | of the chief witnesses for the State, and maimed, who hobble through that the court seems to have been life, trying to accumulate the means forced to the conclusion that the for buying a wooden leg,—reformed |proof was not "evident" against Pal4 inebriates, anxious to take the pledge mer. And we as have said heretofore, with the accompaniment of a trifling we do not question the honesty of gratuity,—strong men out of work, purp ose with which the court endear- and likely to remain so as long as ored faithfully td comply with thelaw. they can live by logging,—this is the sort of thing which makes the work of charity so discouraging. What is to be done? "Always re- fuse to see these people," is one an- swer. This is easier said than done. An expert will manage to get at you somehow, and there may be cases where it would be very unkind to "The money!" : it ( - - . - The famous railway robery and by a certain class of imposters are of murder, whose perpetrator had short- a very high order. I have learned! lv before been brought back from to be very shy of artles beggars. The America and hanged, was vet. in/ev- more simple and straightforward the of the crybody’s mouth. That it was de- story, the more likely it is to be a lie.i !signed to make me the victim of a Within an hour I have been question- No two men, perhaps, ever p esen - similartragedy that now flashed upon ed about a little, delicate Swedish Iwould rather be right than Pre:- ed greater contrasts 01 person, ability, me. My movements must have been woman, whose hub and is statedly idnt, exclaimed the magnanimous : and character, than these politicians, observed, and the fact ascertained or out of work, and who gos about and chivalric Clay when importuned Mirabeau was of patrician blood; by his time-serving constituents toad- Robespierre, an obscure plebian.— vocate some popular measure, and Mirabeau had the eye of an eagle, the thereby establish himself in the favor port of a lion, the energy of a whirl- of the people. Thus has this great wind, an eloquence which stirred surmised that I had in possession n a considerable sum for the purpose of defraying the expenses of my wedding wind orator and sagacious statesman, whom all Americans delight to honor and whom the world reluctantly ac knoweledged as peer of the most elo ... in the various State and WillpratOffice first door Federal the Webb House, meh12-ly | quent, ingrafted in the hearts of his North of ( countrymen a fairer fame than that W. X. BEALL Attorney I eloquence achieved by the most powerful effort of his life: and, when his patriotic Iappeals in behalf of the Missouri and Counsellor at 200, Compromise shall have faded from THOMASTON, GA. practice in the various Courts of sale of Georgia. Office in the court-lotse- down stairs. meh5-1y JULIUS E. F. MATTHEWS. ITORNEY AT LAW Thomaston, Ga. once up-sairs Cheney Building. |the memory of man, this single ex- |pression of loyalty to sense of right :will survive to immortalize his name :and exemplify the purity of Ameri- can statesmanship. Without this monument recording the true charac- ter of our civil hero we and posterity might have regarded him as a mere politician, gifted and brilliant, indeed, but artful, scheming, and unscrupu- lous. As it is, integrity, like the spir-. men’s souls : Robespierre’s eyes flash- ed no fire, his manner was feeble and uncouth, his voice weak and broken, his oratory was contemptible, and usually passionless. Between such men, one would think, there could be no rivalry; for, how could Robes- Pierre, vain as he was dare to com- pete for influence with Mirabeau? But he did dare; and that, too, with success, as will appear from the fol- lowing scene enacted in the celebrate Revolutionary Club of the Jacobins, where hitherto Mirabeau had reign- tour. As on all English trains, the door of the compartment was locked. Escape was impossible, and any out- cry would be drowned in the crash- ing noise of the wheels• I felt that I had but one chance —to grapple with the robber and master him before he could draw a weapon. A few minutes would bring us to the next station, and, if I could but hold continually trying to get ten dollars to save her furniture from being seiz- ed and carried away. I would have risked almost anything upon this woman’s honesty,—her timid reluc- tance to ask anything but advice, the gentle insinuation of her various wants and woes, the quiet trickling of the tear which she seemed trying to conceal, her unwillingness to take what was offered her, the tremulous expression of her hope that she might be able soon to return the Money. 1 We comprehend the great responsi- bility which devolved on Judge O’Neal and the difficulty of rendering a decision w hich would be universal- ly acceptable; and the contemplation of this de licate position would disarm criticism even if, in our judgment, he honestly went beyond the require- mentiof the 12% in leaning tothe side turn the petitioner away, "Call in of mercy. A correspondent assures :the aid of the law," is a second an- :swer. That, also, is easier said than done. A gentleman who has estab- lished himself before the fire on a Us that the bond, though small, is suf- ficient to insure Palmer’s attendance ed supreme. Robespierre speaking, one him in subjection till then ance would be insured. Acting on this impulse. I sprang up, hoping to take him at a disadvan |the movement in the out Ireached our feet together I possessed both a t, and we J. A. COTTE 8, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Thomaston, Ga. Wil practice in all courts in the State 2r met attention given toallbusiness en Trusted to him. mehb-ty 0 DIPN0 A T THOMASTON, GEORGIA. Collections a specialty. Office in Jolson’s Building, imch5,-ly J. S. POPE ATTORNEY AT LAW GA. JOHN F. REDDING, A T Will practice in all the ( HUNT & TAYLOR A T the V Will practice in the cou nt ies comprisin $ he Flint Judicial Circuit, and in the Su r.he Court of the State. Or Office over rug Store of J. W. Hightower, 0ch5.ly Wm. S. Whitaker, TORNEY AT LAW 1A GA. Mill pract ice in t he counties ofthe Flint ireuitandthe Supreme Court of the State. JOSEPH J. ROGER ITT0RNEY L AW Barnesville, Ge All business promptly attended to CABANISS & PEEPLES, TTORNEYS AT L/ it of Peace, has cleansed his name from every imputation of dishonesty. No motive is sufficiently powerful to move a man of integrity from the straight line of duty. His adhesion to the principles of rectitude is so strong, that nothing can break it.— might, in the club against a decree, which, through Mirabeau’s influence, had that day passed the National As- sembly. Though cold and passionless in his manner, he, nevertheless, brought such severe logic to beat against the principles of the decree, that the club greeted him with thun- |strength, and was not unskilled in |their use, but, in the present encount- er, I soon found I had met more than my match. My first object was to grasp the man round the body in such a way as to secure his arm; but, with |the skill of an athlete, he warded off |the assault, and the next moment my threat was |Money cannot purchase his consent to a wrong action. Pleasure cannot entice him from the ways of justice. The pleadings of |love, the yearnings of friendship, the |threatenings of enmity, are alike pow- .erless to move his steady soul from its purpose to abide faithful to its (convictions. To the wicked in high |places, who would flatter him to turn aside from truth, for the sake of their favor, he indignantly responds, "Shall ed. He sits uneasy in his presiden- tial chair, and at length calls Robes- pierre to order, saying, "No one must| speak against a decree already passed by the Assembly !" This the club will not endure.—| Loud shouts for Robespierre to pro- ceed resund through the hall. Mira- beau mounts his chair, and affirming| that the attack on the decree was in- tended to cover an assault upon him- self, appeals to his friends, crying, "Help, colleagues! Let all my friends surround me!" —for that "Wild wreath of air. That flake of rainbow, flying on the high- est _ Foam of men’s dee ds?" If duty calls him to rise up singly in defence of truth, like Noah preach- ing to a world of sinners, he stands. in the mora eft from the If exposed ace of uns of land, th main." to the v 1and if the forth about his head,—if they floods of enmity to was his high moral position,— halls Bet 11 a eatbraet on an When the storm is on right and left. hills, roll The torrents dashed to the val e reply of K th $g ala teni- pour r bin t 1 and long the renown ed Hungarian warrior, furnishes a beautiful illustration of this virtue,— Ie had escaped the pursuit of the tri- umphant Cossacks, and sought pro- tection at the hands of the Sultan of Turkey, command wealth, military cheerfully offered to Forsyth, Georgia. Will practice in all the counties of hunt Circuit, mch5,-ly BERNER & TURNER, ttorneys Law oil practice in all the Courts, and give Iattention to the collection of k SYTI Refer to Wm. II. Head, Bank a A., Dumas & Allen, Cotton S Forsyth, Ga, mch5,-tf TIN. | T. R. MIL MARTIN & MILL AT GRIFFIN, G4. Practice in all the State Courts 6l DOften the United States Courts, linohe. ront room, up-stairs, in 2mm building, mch5,-6m HANNAH TTO3TASTON, GA. Otte. everne as services to the public and nepleased to wait on his patrons. M. D. L PATTERSON, M. D TTERSON, TAEOMASTON, GA. Tender Vices, he public their profession — _mch6,-y make money . - —- an at anythingssor at work for us tired; we will start apital not re- win long made bytheltou. $12 per day usatns/fen a. Maine Addre (estly RES & 12-1y at court, and that, we believe, is all thie laws requires where the case is bailable at all. It is to be hoped that have been in posed upon times with-, out number, but here was a case that forth in search of the police—to say all parties will be indefatigable in admitted of no question. I have . nothing of the difficulty Be may have in inducing the tramp to accompany| him. "Give them a ticket to the su- snowy evening, does not care to goi bringing out and sifting all the evi- since learned that she has succeeded in raising enough to stock her house with furniture. If it were needed. dence bearing upon the case, to be used in the final trial, and that the and get quite a comfortable living and besides. Why should she or her gripe of steel. A sense of suffocation was fol nis influence over the club. A few| months before it would have brought| a rampart of some six hundred lit-| man breasts around him. But that night, only thirty responded to his call! It was obvious that his influ- him by the Sultan provided he would| renounce the Christian religion, and embrace the doctrines of Mohammed. To refuse this condition would for aught he knew to the contrary be equivalent to throwing himself upon the sword of Russia, which was whet- ted for his destruction. But with death frowning him in the face, the heroic Kossuth nobly exclaimed, "Welcome, if need be, the axe or the gibbet; but curses on the tongue that: dares make to me so infamous a pro-: posal!" 31 this fact, you see both the nature| and moral sublimity of integrity.— The soul of Kossuth, long trained to a love of truth and right, revolted, with indignation, from the bare idea of purchasing his life by the sacrifice | of his conscience. To disloyal to his sense of duty, however cruel the mode| of his death, he regarded as infinitely| preferable to life, honors, and wealth,| with a violated conscience. This is ished, in the conduct of Ulric Zwingle, the illustrious master spirit of the given Zwingle a small pension, and his legate was endeavoring to combat lowed by whirling of the brain. Then my knees bent under me, and I snak unconscious my assailant. ****** Then sensibity returned. benenth * I found niyself supported between two men, in the midst of an excited crowd in front of a station at which the train had apparently just stopped. My late a police official a few moments without furthe who, after listening ceremony pair of handcuffs on my wr clapped a ists; and, cient self- possession to expostulate against the outrage, I was marched off before a magistrate, the crowd, and the man who had so nearly proved my murd- crer, following after. What was the secret of this change? Let the reader note it carefully. Mir- abeau had accepted royal gold ;—his| DIC selfish :was,- had become sus is high qualifica impotent Robez bility. Men believe could purchase his publican principles; ly surrendered them influc nice, until they head of that fearful husband toil with their hands, with such excellent dramatic gifts to fall| back upon. One winter evening I was sitting in my study when a gentleman of ma- ture age, well dressed, and of refined manners, introduced Himself as a brother of the Bishop of HI., one of our remote Western dioceses, and stating that he had a son in the Epis- perintendent of the poor," is a third answer. This is better, although it is possible that the office of the super- intendent is the very last place to which they would care to go. "Give| them a trifle, to get rid of them," is a fourth answer. It is easy to do it, but then this is just what perpetuates The problem of charity is one of the toughest with which we are now called to grapple. There are those who must be helped, or they will die. We would be glad to help them, but perpetrator of this great crime may THE PIVOTS. +*1 :‘ It will be remembered that the democrats have only a majority of 15 ginia. He also represented himself to be a parishioner of one of my brothers, settled in Georgia, and said that he was the owner of a large cot- eight would change the complexion of the lower hotise. Of course, and it is admitted on all sides, even by the radicals themselves, that the next ton plantation in the State. He was fully.—N. Y. Ledger. we do not like to be swindled. In o 3111 1 :: addition to the actual, loss of funds. Senate will show a democratic major we very much dislike to be taken in. | ity of at least 10. Hen :e the anxiety Charitable people are taken in frigit nay the necessity, of the democrats on his return home from Boston, and| found himself in a very embarrass- ing situation. He had relied confi- dently upon the collection of certain: notes, and having been sorely disap- pointed ih this respect, he must now, with the greatest reluctance, throw himself upon my kindness, and ask for a tempoary loan. I then said: "If you are a brother of Bishop II., you must also be a broth- Lager Beer Does Not Intoxiente. I have finally cum to the conclu- er of the Rev. Dr. II., of New —a man much better known part of the country than the |It was evident that he had not intoxicating. I have been told so by a German who said he had drunk it all nite long just to try the experiment, and controlling the lower branch of Con- ress also. But to do this, and to pre serve a clear working majority, they must retain their present strength.— To show however how very evenly balanced many of the districts are, we append the following taken from the Atlanta Constitution: 111 this was obliged to go home entirely so- Bishop. ber in the morning. I have seen this Judge of my amazement when the heard of this relationship, but, after latter forward unblushing effrontery, told this sto recounted, with u |the particulars of a ted upon him sever . | The features of the robbery clearness commit had contrived to he had caught a f for incorrupti- delibly imprinted obber : view ne (18 us 001 ailing a moment’s hesitation he replied :— "Yes, a half-brother." "It is a stong • presumption against you," I added, | "that, instead of calling upon some of our business people, who would be likely to know something about you, if you are a great cotton-planter, you should call upe. fanCclergyman| for assistance." With an air of offend- ed and quiet dignity he rose and said : "I hoped that you would have same man drink eighteen glasses, and if he was drunk it was in German an nobody could understand it. It is proper enuff to state that this man kept a lager beer saloon, and could have no object in stating what was not striq ly thus. [ believe him to the full extent of Second Florida Third Illinois Ninth Illinois Thirteenth Illinois Fourth Indiana Sixth Idiana Eighth Michigan First Missouri Second Missouri (Dem, split) Third Missouri i Third New York Third Ohio Rep. Majority. 18 408 478 and barous for integrity which moulds and} them. Men tell us that our governe a failure. It may be under the ministration of Rett Do XBoards and: Investigating Committees. But there. was a time when the American gov- ernment was not a failure. When the destiny of this nation was com-| mitted to the guidance of such men| as Adams and Jefferson, we enjoyed! internal peace and foreign respect; then it was that our soldiery marched| train which had just passed, he found himself in the presence of the robber who when called upon to restore the fruits of his crime, answered by a author of these heinous act s, less to say, according to the le My counter-statement, I fear, was confused and unsatisfactory at any rate, it must have appeared very lame beside the methodical narrative which preceded it—especially seeing I was forced to admit that the first resortto violence had been on my own side. His worship held it a clear case for committal, and directed his clerk to into the proud city of the Aztecs: make out the warrant, then it was that our ships menaced | Here was a nice situation for a man the shores of England, and the sails of on his wedding-day! What would our commerce whitened every sea; Margaret, and especially her friends and then, too, it was that men of un- think, when they learned that I was sullied INTEGRITY filled the cabinets detained as a thief? Sheand they had| of OIF presidents, and the motto of accepted me very much 01 trust: for our common country I was an American who had never honest n it last that I an 211 to which I replied that I did not feel myself called upon to express any positive opinion on that point, and he left the house. I after- wards learned that on the same even- ing he obtained in another quarter even more than he asked for—one benevolent citizens, upon whom the: entleman called next, be- pressed by his bearing that for the return of which he will have to wait until long after the national debt is paid. When I resided in Phildelphia, a my ability. I never drank but fliree | Tenth Ohio glasses of lager in my life, and that Second Wisconsin made my head outwist as the it was hung on the end of a string, but I,,. was told that it was owing to my bile | Fourth ( California being out of place; and I gucs. that it was so, for I never biled over was than I did when I got homethit nite. My wife thought I was afraid goin to die, and was afraid that I should- n’t for it seemed as the every thing I had eaten in my life was coming to the surface; and I believe that if my 219 314 19 252 451 271 328 Dem. Majority. 1 First Connecticut Eighteenth Illinois Ninth Kentucky Sixth Maryland First New Hampshire Eleventh New York (Rep. split) Thirty-second New York Second Ohio wife hadn’t pulled off my boots just !1.7 . as she did they would have cum thun-1 F ourth Ohio dering up too. O, how sick I wuz! 14 years and I can taste it now. I never had S much experience in |so short a time. Thirteenth Pennsylvania ago Eighteenth Pennsylvania |These figures are enough to 1 f any man should tell me that lager ouig man called beer was not intoxicating, I shud be- sue- liefe him; but if he shud tell me that e and . dignified my stummick was out of order, I shud gentleman of whoin I have just writ- ask him to state over a few words just at my house who met with more ten. Though hemay have had less| experience, he was a better actor, and| 20 393 li 43 427 403 96 81 69 rouse to action every true democrat in the land. While they are close, there is nothing in them to frighten the party. Rather should they have the effect—: as they no doubt will—of nerving every true man for the conflict. U is wuz set up gratifying to see that no Georgia’dis- If I warn’t drunk that nite, I had trict is put down as doubtful, or even. ask him to state over a few words just| how a man felt and acted when he assuthed the role of a genially - - , young person—was very intimate in some.ov the most natural simtum clergymen’s families, and the fact of his being so painfully familiar with their liability to being imposed upon, made him hesitate about telling his own story. However, as he was on such friendly terms with another nothing but what is right—submit to been in England before going there nothing that is wrong!" |to marry Margaret, whom I had met |while on a continental tour, and fal- AN AWWARED PREDICA- |len in love with at first sight. I could MEENT. : hardly expect them to postpone the clerical brother of mine in New It was a bright spring morning—to wedding to await my chances of con- Hampshire, he would inform me that me a very happy morning—when 1:viction or acquittal : on a charge of - after he had taken his room at the took the down train from London to robbery, The happiest day of m. hotel, he found that his pocket-book the little country village where I had life was in a THII way to wind up by had been stolen, and here he was, in an engagement to attend my own being the most miserable a strange city, without any mon- wedding. | The magistrate was in the act of At first I had the compartment all ( dipping his pen in the ink to sign the to myself : but. at the second or third | commitment, when two men walked |in. At the sight of them my prosecu- tor turned pale, and seefied inclined 1. The two the guard admitted another passenger, who, apparently without noticing my presence, took a | to run away incontinently seat at the other side of the carriage |men caught him, one by each arm, and |in a couple of seconds he was mana- I felt too deep an interest in my st then, to take much cled as hard and fast as myself. 1 "Your worship,” said the elder of own thoughts, ju heed of thestran er—a tall, dark man whose features were partially con- cealed by a slouched hat drawn over 1 his forehead. The fleeting panorama of fields and the captors, who seemed to be known it which I gazed list certain scruples which the nascent re- farm-house. former indulged on the question of lessly from the window, passed me retaining it. The spirit of reform by, making quite as little impression was beginning tostir within him, and as did the presence of my fellow pas- a dim presentiment of his ultimate an escaped mono-maniac. His delu- sion is that he was robbed of a large| sum of money once, and that every stranger he meets is the robber!" I got my liberty in time for the wedding l little behind time duty to attack the Papacy was slowly rising in his soul Hence, he wished to be freed from all that would hin- der th mind. impartial action of his great But the papal legate insisted. senger. There is a sort of egotism in supreme felicity, which, for the time, excludes from the mind the contem- plation of other objects. It was from this mental condition that I was but Margaret—God bless her :—never doubted but it was for good reason: and when the true one came out, and some of the m wanted to joke me about ey. It was a very stale story and: would not have entrapped me, if he| had not gone on to say, "I will not ask you to lend me what I need, without asking permission to leave property in your hands as security for your being repaid." What sort of a deposit do’you propose to make?,‘: I inquired. "Thave a few books that I usually take with me when I travel, and they are in my trunk at the hotel Iwill bring them to you immedi- ately." "What are the books?" He then gave the names of several stand- ard church books, and one or two well-known works of devotion, and the bait took, for at once I said to my- self, "A young man that car ries such. works as these with him, must be close. Georgia will send nine una- that = mlni ever had and kept sober, dulterated, simon pure democrats to In the first place it was about 80 10 T..2...2 rods from where I drank the lager the 46th Congress. Just put a pin beer to mi house, and I was jest over down there will you, rads. Put it in two hours on the road, and a hole your pipes and smoke it. busted through my pantaloons andI - didn’t have any hat, and tried to open the door by the bell-pull and hiccup- ped awfully and saw every thing in| HOW TO SUCCEED. The first requisite to success is not the room trying to git round on the to undertake an unwise and impractic ouachi, I Inot Hit long ougi cable thing. For this reason the ad. for it to get exactly under when Iwuz vice often inculcated by wise and going round, and I set down a little | great men has been to give much time too soon and missed the chair about and reflection to the formation of 12 inche and coiildil’t get ip soon enough to take the 11 tone that come along; and that ain’t awl; my wife sed Iwuz as drunk as a beest and as I sed before, I began to spin up things freely. If lager beer is not intoxicating it used me most almighty mean, that I plans Be slow to decide; but, having resolved, be prompt to act.m It is not sufficient, by any means, to be prompt in beginning to act. That is easy to every one. It is the contin- ued, persevering, unflagging activity which, alone, accomplishes great re- sults. / Still I hardly think that lager beer iz intoxicating, for I have been told | The temptations which beset one so; and I am probably the only man ---- living who ever drunk eny when his liver was not plumb. I don’t wan’t to say anything against a harmless temperance beve- rage but if ever I drink eny more it will be with my hands tied behind steps at every stage to divert his at- :arouse, at last, an uneasy feeling—one and Zwingle consented to retain it a : which most persons have, at one time while longer, but added those notable - or another, experienced that of being words: intently watched by some one. "Do not think that for any money I Turning my head quickly, I discov- will suppress a single syllable of the ered that the stranger had changed truth 17 - 1 his place to one directly fronting me. Noble Zwingle! Glorious loyalty He had pushed back his hat, and his to the sense of duty, which not all the face, I now saw, though pale and it, she put her foot down in a way that sub- made the m glad to change the ject.—N. Y. Ledger. E31 PONTOES. BY BISHOP CLARKE, OF RHODE ISLAND. Ten years ago I published in the Ledger an account ot a VoUg 1na11 to the sense of duty, v) hich not all the the wealth of the Vatican can induce OF somewhat worn, was, or was capable |of being, strikingly handsome: TRUTH! Reader, this, too, is integrity. At the risk of being too profuse in my illustrations of this point, I will introduce yet another, and, perhaps, more striking exhibition of this es- The interest of the circumstances, and the hope that the moral beauty they disclose may strengthen some one’s allegiance to right shall be my apology.* One of the first Tects of integrity is to secure its possessor the confi- dence of society. To have the confi-| dence of others, is to have influence over them; for men readily yield themselves to the guidance of those in good for twenty dollars." and I gave| him the money, saving that I would , . . not deprive him of his reading, and : and mi mouth pised open. had not the slightest doubt that I should hear from him as soon as he reached home,—which I never did. It was rather a thin bait by which I was hooked, but it was the skill of the angler that did the business. It might be tedious if I should dwell upon the details which are so I don’t think lager beer is intoxica- ting, but if I remember, rite, I think it tasted to me like a glass of soap suds, that a pickle had bee put tew soak in. tention from the main pursuit he has fixed on, are almost innumerable, and to the irresolute and weak they are" found irresistible. This accounts for numerous failures.# If a man has not attained to what’ he started for it willaimost always be found that he has been attending to something else. Thesong of the bird ADMITTED TO BAIL. Dr. R. U. Palmer, who recen the most finished specimen of fraud which had ever come under my no- tice. I supposed, when I wrote his biography, that he had been dead for upon the whole, familiar to many of ry own profes sion.—the story of destitute Widow by the wayside fell upon his ear and charmed his senses, or the bright flow- ly er caught his eye, and he lingered. His piercing, dark eyes were bent searchingly upon me; with something in their expression which added not a long period, but, to my great sur- *‘‘•1--------- again in Rhode a little to the uneasiness I had felt prise, he turned up whilst unconsciously the object of Island, no longer a young man, with their scrutiny, the same .. ,. "I have waited patiently for the and telling the same pitiful and pious opportunity!” said the stranger, at story-which had entrapped me more length, without removing his eyes from mine. "I judge you are under a mistake I answered: first time." There wa meet now for the and fierceness in the greeted this response. mixture of derision laugh which inctionious countenance shivering on the door-step, with an indfinite number of orphans depend- eut upon them, whose stout an rubi- cund husband is probably waiting round the next corner,—foreign refugees, with big titles banished from their dear native land because of their struggles in the cause of lib- erty, who are hoping 8001 to secure a professorship in some of our Amer- killed Col. Salisbury, of Columbus, in ! when liis pace should have been on- Seale, Ala, has been admitted to bail. :T d and 6148 and quick •• The evidence was quite verbose and war: :1G fi 141 21 1. the trial before the probate Judge of It Foit would insure success in your Russell county OH the habeas corpus undertaking, whatever it may be, let this to say of the courts decision: Our despatch from Seale shows that the protracted legal contest over Dr. Palmer’s application for bail was thant irty years before. He was reap- ing quite a rich harvest among the benevolent ladies of the city, when he .. , found out that I was on his track, diate. emergency, members and suddenly vanished. What must Hebrew D.. be the condition of a man’s mind who verted to Christianity, : .. has lived for thirty or forty years by comes round for soliciting relief,- trading upon the religious sentiment little children trained to lie with a he of the community, talking divinely, sweet artlessness that reminds one of yesterday terminated by the court al- lowing him bail in the small sum of $3,000. We have not yet received a of the report of the testimony taken on Mon- nasion periodically con- day, but we learn verbally that two is the season witnesses swore positively to having ican colleges, and would like l little id to tide them over the immo seemingly little and unimportant it may be, which is calculated to pro- mote its accomplishment. There is no other way to make success certain. It is not luck. It depends on doing, DOING, DOING. Yet simple as the lesson of success very ac of shooting. That a foul murder was com uitted does not ad- learn. is—few as are its requisites—there is’ nothing that people are slower to