The Cassville standard. (Cassville, Ga.) 18??-1???, April 21, 1859, Image 1

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% Sttteeklg Jamilg Bttospaptr—grtolrt 1® Bflii%rn Bights, Ititeratorr, ^gricnltarr, Jf®rrip ank Dmntstu Brt®s, fa. K. M. KEITH * B. F. ■EMMETT, Mitm. ' EQUALITY" IS THE UNION ORINDKPEXDENCE OCT OF IT.” TERMS—TWO DOUAU m-nmr, VOL. 11. CASSVILLE, GA, TH UK8DAY, A. PHIL 21, 1859. isro. 14. ^Business Carts. Itrttdisemtnts. ) Hftscellantfliis. A C. DAY, Tailor, Cassville, Ga.— j Shop nesi*his residence—on the tame 1 • lot. All work done in good nljrlt, and warranted to laat. Particular attention given , to Catting. He take a continuance of the lib* oral patronage heretofore beatowed. j Caurille, Ga., Feb. I at, 1859. < E L. BROWS, Attorney at Law, Cass- i Tille, Oa.—Will attend promptly to all * bnsineaa entrutted to his care. April H, 1850. J OSEPH DUNLAP, Attorney at Law, I Kingston, Casa county, Ga.—Will prac- j lice in the conn tier of Casa, Gordon, Floyd, j Polk sod Paulding. Will alao attend to the ac- j curing and collection of claims in anr portion of Cherokee Georgia. Office at Mrs. Johnson's ‘ Hotel. June 10, 1S58. B li. LEEKE, Attorney at Law, Cass- rille, Ga.— Business entrusted to bis • care will meet with prompt and vigilant attention, and monies paid over punctually.— Office under Standard office. Feb. 1, 1859. ! | W V. WESTER, Attorney at Law, j Calhoun, Ga.—Will practice in all the j • counties of the Cherokee Circuit. Par- j tiaular attention will be paid to the collection ! •f claims, and to promptly paring over the j money when collected. Nov. 26, 1B5S. i A NDREW II. RICE, Attorney at Law, ' Caaaville, Ga.—Practises in the counties 1 of Cass, Cherokee, Cobh, Catoosa, Gor- ! don, Gilmer, Fannin, Paulding and Whitfield, j Prompt attention given to the Collecting biisi- ' ness III ail of the above nan.ed counties. May be found in the office formerly ocenpied by J. II. A A. II. Rice. June IT, 1S5S. ' T imes of arrival and depar- j tore of Trains on the Western A Atlantic Railroad: Day Passenger Train leaves Atlanta 10.15 A. I. Arrives at Chattanooga 6.25 F. H. Night Paas. Traiu leaves Chat. 3.10 r. M. Arrives at Atlanta 11.22 r. *. Up day Express Freight and Pas senger Train leaves Atlanta 4.50 A. n. Arrives at Chattanooga 4.80 P.M. Down day Express Freight and Passenger Train leaves Chat. 5.15 a. m. Arrives at Atlanta 4.45 r. n Up night Express Freight and Pas senger Train leaves Atlanta 5.40 r. n. Arrives at Chattanooga 7.01 A. a. Down night Express Freight and Passenger Train leaves Chat. 6.05 p. a. Arrives at Atlanta 4.40 s. a. \ar This Road connects each war with the Rome Branch Railroad at Kingston, the East Tennessee A Georgia Railroad at Dalton, and and the Nashville A Chattanooga Railroad at Chnttannooga. Atlanta to Chattanooga, 13» miles. Fare #5. JOHN W. LEWIS, Jan. I, 1859. Superintendent. Bonnets. Of sll the charms dear woman wears, Of all her many traps and snares, The Tain* of a Bit of Knowledge. In the Plazra, before St. Peter’s, at Rome, stands the most Jieautiful obelisk in the world. It was brought from the ! Circus of Nero, where it had laid buried for many ages. It was one entire piece : of Egyptian marble, 72 feet high, 12 feet | square at the base, and 8 feet square at the top, and it is computed to weigh above t * 470 tons, and is supposed to lie 3000 years Three Good Epitaphs. A Callage Joke. One of the earliest P^WenU of Jeffer- J ^ „ T|tAT Gai . last S » Hn- son College, Penn., ww the venerable Dr. j w VgPB »» ^ McMillan, a man of great gravity and dig- wben Vere sought death, armed with hU nitv of manners. In those early times it was customary for the students, when meeting the Presi dent, to remove the hat from the head,— place it under the left arm; make a pro found bow, and pass the compliments of M J. CTIAWFORD, Attorney at Law, Ringgold, Cat man county, Ga.—Will ; • practice in all the enmities of the Cher- \ ukee Circuit.—Particular attention paid to the . collecting »f money, and will promptly pay • over the tame when col'ected. Mh. 19, 1859. 1 C ARRIAGE AND BUGGY' MANUFACTO RY', Cartersvillc, Geo.—The sub scribers invite the attention of the public to their large MANUFACTUR ING ESTABLISHMENT, at R. II. Jones’ old stand.—They are prepared to furnish all kinds of BUGGIES, CARRIAGES and HACKS, of the la test styles and best finish—made of the best materials, from the best Northern and Eastern Factories, just such as arc us- ^ od in the best shops in the Union.—I As none but good workmen arc em ployed, whose workmanship is not ex celled for neatness and durability, they war. ant their work to give satisfaction. All persons wanting a fine Carriage, Buggy, or other vehicle, are requested to come and examine their work before sending North. Carriages and Hacks on hand at all times. Ordeis tilled promptly. All work warranted to be as rep resented. Repairing done in good style, at short notice, on reasonable terms.— pSa Thankful for the pationnge heretofore I0tj received, n continuance of the same is solicited. JONES A GREENWOOD. Gf Cartersvillc, Cass co., Ga., Apr. 7, 1850—lv. 11. 11. Joses j so. cuxeswoon.' Fur real effect there’s nought compares YVitli n truly pretty bonnet; For when or wherever you chance to meet --. , ... - . . . , One that is perfectly modest and neat; ! old. Much engineering skill was requi- theday You may depend that ’tis proof complete! rod to remove and erect this place of art;, Among the students was Tom Devon, an That the head has more in it than on it! and the celebrated architect, Dominico eccentric fellow. Hts father was rich, and | Fontane, was selected and engaged by as Tom was always “ Bush with money,” No matter whether she’s pretty or not, i Pope Sextus V. to carry out the operation. : the height of his ambition was to sport a How much or how little money she’s got, ! A pedestal, 80 feet high, was built for its gold headed cane and gallant the old Greek YYhether she live in a mansion or cot, : reception, and the obelisk brought to its professor's daughters. ’Tis a fact, depend upon it; . base. Many were the ingenious contri- j The term student, which he bore in com- The woman to make a man happy thro' vances prepared for the raising of it to its mon with the other memhers of the college To make a model mother and wife, | life, j last resting place, all of which excited the was a misnomer. Tom’s mind was more Sh>u > ^ lnisb tini „ conquer thtr Is one who, scorning the milliner strife, deepest interest among the people. At deeply engrossed with back-gammon, “old j ^ 4 Wears a plain and tasteful bonnet j length everything was in readiness, and a sledge,” and checkers, than wtth his math- . dav appointed for the great event A great ematics, and he was more deeply read in Now a bonnet of genuine beauty anu grace, | mu ]titude assembled to witness the cere- the lore of Chesterfield than in that of Ho- Y\ orn on the head in its proper place, J niony; and the Pope, afraid that the clam- mer and Virgil. In fact, he was a shallow- Shadowing faintly the wearers face, ^ or 0 f p^opfe might distract the atten-; brained, lily handed fop, and as may be “ Is a thing for a song or a sonnet. . t; 0ll 0 f t), e architect, issued an edict con- supposed, a great favorite with a certain But one ot those gay and gaudy things, ; lining regulations to be kept, and impo- class of ladies who mistake impertinence Made up of rainbow s and butterfly »ings, i s j n g jjj e severest penalties on any one for wit, and fine clothes and attectcd man- A mixture of flowers, ribbons and strings, w j lo during the lifting of the gi- ners for refinement and solid accomplish- sword and shield, Death was afraid to meet him in the field; But when his weapon he had laid aside. Death like a coward, struck him and he died. Ox Sib Thomas Pzbkixs, the Great W bes- TLEB. Here lies the chief, who once threw sll. Thrown by the conquering arm of Death, Who ne’er had given the knight a fall, But that he found him out of breath. But boast not Death! with empty pride, Thy strength ; the day will come when he Arising, with fresh breath supply’d, Ox Miss Loxo, a Beactitul Actkess. Tho’ Long, yd short, Tho’ short, yet pretty Long? Is dreadful, depend upon it. A vulgar mass of “fuss and feather,” A little of everything thrown together As if by touch of windy weather, A wretched conglomeration— A sort of cup to catch the hair, Leaving the head to “ go it bare," gantic stone, utter a single word. : meats. Amidst suppressed excitement of feel-1 But our tale. ■ ings and breathless silence, the splendid ing down the street arm in anu with his ■ monument was gradually raised to within friend, John Smith, who had a piece of the i a few inches of the top * of the pedestal, j wag about him. Seeing the President a when its upward motion ceased; it hung few paces before them, Tom hastily en- i suspended, and could not l>c got further; quired— A striking example of “Nothing to Wear,” \ »»* »^kle was too slack, and there seemed “Smith what is ‘good morning, sir,’- Is this bonnet abomination. ; to be no other way than to undo the great ,n Latin ? ■ work already aceomjdished. The annoyed “jEgo turn stultvs, was the reply, with- It makes a woman brazen and bold, architect, in his perplexity, hardly knew ; out a moment’s hesitation. Assists her in catching nothing but cold, how to act, while the silent people were : Meeting the President, Tom, after the Is bad on the young, absurd on the old, j anxiously watching every motion of his most approved donkeyism, at the same features * to discover how the problem time making a profound salaam, greeted would be solved. In the crowd was an him with— W OFFORD, CRAWFORD & HOW ARD, Attorney* at Law, Onssrille and Cart-civil k-, Oa.—Will faithfully at- Wnd to any business entrusted to their care, in any «f the counties of Upper Georgia. YV. T. Wolford, John A. Crawford, Cassville; J. A. Howard, CarUTsville. July 2S, 1858. E M. KF.ITH, Attorney at Law, Cass ville, Ga.—I’rnetiecs in \he counties of • Cass, Cherokoe, Gordon, Whitfield and I’uulding. All business entrusted to his cure will meet with prompt ntteiit ion. Office north of the public square, in Rice’s building. Mev. 18, !»:.$. H I.. RAY, Attorney at Law, Ellijay, Ga.—Will practice in ibe counties of • Casa, Cherokee, I'iekeus, Gilmer, Daw son, Fannin, Union and Towns. Collecting of debts will reeeive special attention. . March 10, 1859—lv. B RICK MASONRY.—The subscriber will d. any kind of work in his line of ^ bnsineaa at aa low rates as it can be done j KJ large variety of tile beat kind's of printing by aay good workman in the State. At to his materials, we are prepared to do all kinds of abilities as a workman, he refers to any work JOB PRINTING in the best style of the art, OTAGE ROUTE, from Cassville to Mor- ganton, via Ellijay.— The undersigned in forms the travelling public that he is pre pared to accommodate tiioae wishing to Tisit tliellopnei region of Georgia and Tennessee. The route is through some of the most beau tiful mountain scenery of Cherokee Georgia, and is furnished with fine, new and commodi ous Hacks, good horses and careful drivers. Leave Morganton Tues. and Friday, at 1 r. 1. Arrive at Kllijav by 7 r. u. Leave Ellijay Wednesday and Saturday,6 a. a. Arrive at Cassville bv " 7 r. «. Leave Cassville Monday and Thurs. at 5 a. ■. Arrive at Ellijay by 7 r. H. Leave Ellijay Tuesday and Friday at 6 a. m. Arrive at Morgantr.il by 12 U Persons wishing conveyance to the Duck Town or other Copper Mines, can heacri.mnm dated. Feb. 1st, 1«5S. J. M. BANTON. S TANDARD JOR OFFIC E —The Stan dard Office being well supplied with a done by him. Contracts taken in nuv part of the State. J. W. FOSTER. Caaaville, June 3d, 1858. M edical notice.—Doct. j. t. GROVES offers his services hi the pub lic. Prompt attention given to all calls, by day or night. Office in the Patton build ing, north-east of the public square. Caaaville, Aug. 1, 1858. R. OATMAN, Atlanta. Ga., Dealer in American, Italian and Egvptian Sta- * tuarr, and Temicaaee Marble, Mouu- meata. Tombs, Urns and Vases, Marble Man at short notice, and at low terms. Particular attention will be paid to the printing of Circulars, Blanks of all kinds. Blank Notes, Programmes, Hand and Show Bills, Posters, Ac. YVe resjiectfully solicit the patronage ot the public All orders must be accompanied with the cash, or an “acceptable city reference” given. Jan. 1, 1859. &i iy it : EYY BOOK STORE, Atlanta, Geo.— NEW GOODS! NEW STORE! XEYV J-l LOCATION AND NEW ARRANGE MENT ! WM. KAY’, Agent, has for aale a large as- , - . , 1 soriment of Books, Stationery, Musical Itiatru- tala, aud Furnishing Marble. Jas. » unghaii, racnt s. Fancy Goods, Pistols, fine and com- Ageut, Cassville, Ga. April 22, 1*5$. j mtm Cutlery, wholesale and retail, »t the h»w- - — est possible cash rates. A share of the public I O. O. F.—A regular meeting of Y'al- j patronrge is respectfully solicited. lev Lodge, No. 48, I. O. 0. F.. Cassville, P«Jticular attention pkid to country orders, • GeorgiaTwill be held every Friday evem ! •^ forwarded per return majLr.dr.Mid, ex- iag, at 7 o’clock, rransienl brethren invited 1,e * se remember the »lai to attend. By order ot the Lodge. R. C. HOOPER, N. G. A. HAIRK, Sec’ry. Jaa. 1, 1859. And deforms what it ought to deck ; For look at her face, no bonnet is there. See at the side it hangs by a liair. View it behind, and you will declare Tluit the creature has broken her neck No matter where you may chance to be, No matter how many women you see, A promiscuous crowd or a certain she, You may fully depend upon it That a gem of the very rarest kind, A thing most difficult to find, A pet for which we long have pined. Is a perfect “ love of a bonnet.” Wanted, a Wife. | old British sailor; he saw the difficulty j and how to o e:rome it, and with stento- | rian lungs he shouted “ Wet the rope 1” : The vigilant police pounced on the cul- I prit and lodged him in prison; the archi- ! tect caught the magic words, he put his proposition in force, and the cheers of the . people proclaimed the success of the great ! undertaking. Next day the British crim inal was solemnly arraigned before his Holiness; his crime was undeniably prov- ’ ed, and the Pope in solemn language pro-; writers say, Tom’s feelings tuay be more i nounccd his sentence to be—that he j easily imagined than described, j should receive a pension annually during j YVricther the students bored him about Mormon Love Song. The Valley Tan, published at Salt Lake City, came into possession of the follow ing lines, addressed by a Mormon lover to his new flame, who seems slightly reluc- Tom was one day walk taut to be made “ number sixteen” of his little family. Say, Susan, wilt thou come with me, in smeet community to live ? Of heart and head, a home to thee, a sixteenth part I’ll freely give. Of all the love that swells my breast, of all the honor of my name; of worldly wealth by me possessed, a sixteenth por tion thou shalt claim. Nay, tell me not too many share the blessings that I offer you. Thou’lt find but fifteen others—a household happy, gay, and true. A moderate household, I.may say; my neighbor has many more, and Brother Brigham, o’er the way, luxuriates in for ty-four. I promise thee a life of ease, and for thy self Til let thee choose such duties as tliy fancy please; Susan, cans’t thou still re fuse? Sophronia cooks and sweeps the floors, and Hepsibath makes up the beds, Jemi ma answers all the doors, and Prudence combs the children’s heads. “ Ego turn stultu* /’’ “ I am aware of it,” said the President, making a slight bow. This proving rather Yinsatisfactory, Tom posted off to the room of his friend Byles whom he saluted with— “ Deacon, what is the translation of this sentence— 4 Ego turn ttultu*.' ” “ ‘7 am a FoolP ” responded the un sophisticated “ Deacon.” This told the whole story. As novel “Ralph Redblossom,” a racy corrospon- i his lifetime, dent of “ Life Illustrated," thus makes j These little facts stored up from obser- known his want of a wife: i «•» nt ‘ v «' a ^,. hlrm > I wish somebody would make me a ■ and may some day be of great Utility;— present of a good wife. Here I am, near-! and this story only proves the value of re lv thirty years old, and an old bachelor ■ numbering small things as well as great yet. I’m*sure it’s not my fault. 1 can’t i ones, for nothing that is useful is too in- at all relish coming home at night to a j significant for man to know, and there is lonely room, and yawning all the evening 1 no knowledge that has not its use. over a stupid I took, without a soul to speak j ' to. I don’t fancy darning my own stock-! • Bsautifal Incident, ings and sewing on my own shirt buttons.; W Uliam IV expired about midnight, if Boarding-house life isn t tlie grentett \ax-1 wc relnmubcr right, at YVindsor Palace, ury in the world, especially when the in- j The Archbishop of Canterbury, with oth- valid chairs and broken tables in tl.oes-| cr a||d high func Uonaries of the tablishment arc pensioned oh 111 i our ■ kingdom, were in attendance. As soon as room; and the Biddy uses your hair-brush { t||e . l>ice|jtre ^ Hearted,” with the last and anoints herself with your tntfr^i/w 7 (jreath of the king, the Archbishop quit- 1 d like a rosy little w ife mud s chcciful j ^ Windsor Cantle, and made his way home as well as anybody. 1 d like to j possible speed to Kensington Pal- think, at my daily labors down towty of | ace ^*^ den< £7 t the time of , he a pair of bright eyes, looking up and down j p rincesSj already, by law of succession, the street tosec if l in coming, of kettle Q uccn Victoria.^ He arrived long before singing at the firo, ^and a pair of slippers j daylight-announced himseU; and reques- put down to warm by bands that exactly ; ^ • _:.u .i._ it or not. and whether the professor’s daughters ever heard it or not, “deponent not The household duties all devolve on each according to her lot; but from such labors I'll absolve my Susan, if she likes them 1 the Musquito and Kuuian usurpations.— J 1 Ot 11 J.. J 1 WlAk Tim Iran Empertr. “ Allah is the only God, and is his prophet, is the formula of the i Moslem, and “Napoleon is the only f and England is his servant,” is the of the new regime of Europe. With a haughty, self-centred, ta ing poise, Napoleon surveys his Italian chess-board, and decides on his next move with sole reference to himself and France; while England, Austria, Prussia, and the German patches of principalities hang OR his decision with trembling anxiety. War or peace, legions of lives, and national credit or bankruptcy, are his to give cr withhold, and all admit they are power less to control his purpose or resist hh pleasure. Napoleon has made England the men puppet of his iron policy. At Am will she was dragged into the Crimean war, and when it suited hit interest to command peace, there was peace. And this system of French direction and British obedience is now being enacted on our borders. On the Isthmus and in the Antilles the “Iron Emperor” is writing his sign manual with deathless legibility; and here, too, England has unconsciously played the jackal to the lordly lion of France. W hen she sent her fleet to St Doming* in 1854 to cancel a treaty with the United States, and forbid the entrance of Ameri can interests in that magnificent island, it was for the sole service of France. It is a French India Company which has since monopolized all the mines and other lead ing interests there, to the general ruin and exclusion of the British as well a* of American residents. The same results are developing on thq Lsthmus. England supplied Costa Rica with arms to expel the Americans from Nicaragua, and her fleet covers and sus tains the piratical suppression of our be*® road to California; but the plunder of our citizens and the closure of our highway does not enure to the benefit of England; —It is the Felix Belly of France who be comes the recipient of the spoils of otir national enterprise, and a French compa ny plants itself on the Isthmus to take toll of American trade for the use of the mteri sea route, made practicable to commerce by the money and industry of our plun dered citizens. England stained her honor by violating the Clayton-Bulwer treaty, into which she deluded us under promise of retiring from correspond with the bright’eyes! an immediate interview with the PrirwMwc She hastilv attired herself and F i A. M.—A regular meeting of Cass- ville Lodge, No. 1S6, F. A A. M., wifi * be held on the let and 3d TuesdaT in nearest Book Store to the general passenger depot, Atlanta, Geo. Jan. 21,1859—ly. ATEW GOODS AT CASSVILLE.—The^ I\! undersigned would respectfully call the d- 1 attention cf the citizen* of Casirille and have heard existed, _ wiiii 3iiv examined all the young ladies of my ac-j detease( j monarch. “The sovereignty of quaintance, and not one of them realizes, the MOst powerful nation of the earth lay my idea of what a wife should be. I want! ^ tbe feet of a gjrf of eighteen.” She was a gentle, loving companion, to sit at my | ^ : q uccu ^ the e i3y realm, in fact fireside, cheer my existence, console my | or hLstory - on whic h the sun never sets.” 1_ 1 She was deeply agitated at the formidable sayetb not,” but history recordeth that the next-fiat bottomed boat that went down the Ohio bore Tom as a passenger. A Dutch Speech. The following admirable production, de livered before a company of volunteer sol diers, during our revolution struggle, up: oh the eve of their going forth to glorious war, was calculated to inspire them with more than Herculean strength and cour age ? “ Mine frients, ven virst you combed here, you vas boor, aud now, frienta, you ish prout; and yous gotten on your uni corns, and detn Vits you like a dongs up on a hogs back; now mine frients, let me dell you dis, a man is a man if he’s no pigger as my dumb. Ven Tavid vent out to viglit mit Goliah, he dook noting mit him but one shling; now don’t mistake me, mine frients; it vas not a rum shling; no, nor a gin shling; no, nor a mint and rater shling ; no, none of dese shlings; it ' an hickory shtick. Tavid coming, he scoundrel, does you will give you to de pirds of de ficl and dc peasts of de air.”— Tavid says, “ Goliah, Goliah, de race ish not always mit de shwift, nor is de pattlc no pigger as my dumb, cs a shtone in his shling, and he draws it Into.thy hands nidi tasks as,shall give dignity'will I consign ; I’ll let thee black my boots, or make the sock and shirt de partment thine. Til give thee whatsoe’er thou wilt—so it is but a sixteenth part; ’twould be the deepest debt of guilt, to slight the rest who share my heart Then wilt thou not the fraction yield to make up my domestic bliss ? Say yes— and let our joy be sealed with just the six teenth of a kiss. Wive, Mistress axd Last.—This para graph from the German meat happily hits the attributes of a wife, mistress aad lady. It is just as true as writ: Who marries for love takes a wife; who marries for consideration takes a lady.— You have a wife for yourself, a mistress for your house and its friwids, a lady for the world. Your wife will agree with you, your mistress will accommodate you, your lady will manage you. Your wife will take care of your household, your mistress of your house, your lady of appearances. If you are sick your wife will nurse you,— your mistress will visit you, your lady She has hazarded her good relations with this country by exasperating pur republi can masses against her pretentious intw'- feiences in American matters, and all to no purpose except to make the way cleat 1 for Napoleon and his slave trade. His pol icy we have indicated step by step, re gardless of the sneers and contradiction* of the Abolition press, which, inconsfots ently enough, is the firm rlly of hia sy** tern of slave trade under the pretense at combatting slavery in the United States.. It will be felt at last Napoleon III. is steadily progressing, as will be potent to all observers when the labors of Sir William Gore Ousely at* completed. They look to the restriction of American growth by introducing Mi empire of cheap African labor in the rich countries on our borders to supply cotton, sugar, rice, and indigo at half tbo price we can produce them fi»r the European- market. These products will be earned in European ships and exchanged for Eu ropean fabrics to the exclusion of Ameri can products, shipping, and manufactures. This is the policy of the Emperor -Sa. poleon and his coolie trade; his Nica ragua canal and Ills Credit Alobiler, ara all working together at this moment for will inquire after your health. You take a walk with your wife, ride with your mis-1 its acchmplishmcnf. tress, and join parties with your lady.— i Mr. Laresscur, who goes out to •uper* . • , . ... , Your wife will share your grief, your mis- ’ intend Sir YV. G. Ouseiej and the 1’resi- mit de shtrong, and a man is a man if he s tresg r money and your lady your j dents of Costa Ilica and Nicaragua, is one So Tavid he fix-, de)>t8 j f you are dead, your wife will of the new school of “ humanity and ciei- shed tears, roar mistress lament and vour ! lization ’ who avow the belief that the in- I cheap I ROBY C. LATIMER. Cassville, Ga., March 10, 1859. every month. The members will take due no- Caps, Ac. Also, a fine stock of Ladies’ and tiee thereof, and jf >*»rn themselves accord-' Children's Boots. Gaiters, walking shoes— ingly. By order ot tlie Lodge. with and without heels. Gents'fine calf Boots J*n. 1, IS59. SAM’L LEVY, Secr’y. j and Shoes; Brogans; Cloth Gaiters, Congress ; — — !Gaiters, Ac.; Bovs’ Shoes, of various kiuds K YNK AGENCY.—Tuos. M. Coarrcx, j sad prices. Also,'Hosiery, Gloves, Ac. Keeps Caaaville, State change on advances oa Traduce, Ac., and attend to all the bnsineaa usually transacted by Bank A- gents. Nor. 18, 1S5S. | C iIrriapi* ivn Rllfrv WtKIXIi ! AND BLACKSMITH |ARRIAGE AND BUGGY MAKING I ^ Gs bv Wm H eadden.- | Blscksmithmg.—The undersigned V He is prepared to make and repair Car- hereby K'ves notice that he is Bow well riaj!e8( Buggies, YVaguus, or anything in his prepared to do any kind of work in Ins hue of j ine „f business basinaas in good style and at short notice— n e has one of the best BLACKSMITH’S I He employs n ine but good workmen, and is and some of the be*t WOOD WORKMEN in , couldeut that all work put np at hta estab- (jeorgia. -5-:-.- lishment willgive satisfaction j Thankful for past patronage, be begs a con- July I, 1858. II. H. HOLMES. tinuance of the same. Work warranted. j All those indebted to him for last year's i i about in satins and silks-who plays if-1 Vic toria inaugurated her reign, like the vinelp on the piano and don t know how ; in filflon timp ltv to make a shirt—who can embroider on consisting of Clothing, Shirts, Collars, Hats, shed tears, your mistress lament, and your lady will wear mourning. sorrows, and share my joys—an cconomi t <al, domestic, quiet helpmate, to make a j words ^ gg fraught with blessingor calam- at Goliah, and knocks him right in de home for me. Ah, if I could only hndjj^. The first words she was able to utter, forehead, and den Tavid takes Goliah’s such a person! I were these: “ I ask vodr prayers in my 1 swort and cuts off his bead—and den all I don't wwit a wife who goes rusUing j They kneeled together—and ! dc pretty gals comes out, and strewed ' ‘ flowers in his vay, and sung, “Saul is a creat man for he has kilt his dousands, rno can eraDroraer on | of the Most High, who ruleth in velvet and paint in water colors, and ha.s thc kingdom of men, “to understanding not the least idea of the ingredients ncccs- j heart ^ jud ^ % people, who saryto form an apple-pie! {could not be numbered or counted for 1 don t want a wife who dances the Lain- cers with a hole in the toe of her silkj The sequel of her reiga has been wor- stocking. 1 don t want a wife who is too j tb G f suc h a beginning Every throne j Jjjj 3tot ScTim 1 Machine. “nervous to see to the affairs of her'. -V, . ,J= tottered since that' unmnwaais—»«» household, but who is perfectly capable of , M^t of them for a time have been ; Punch, of the 5th of March, contains tlie fashionable dissipations-who goes into ^ following ^nirable description of an old r.tarn^on t youjojt strong hysterics because 1 don t engage a ( so finnl in the and love [** hl0De<1 Machine, which every box at tlie opera, and shops on Broadway, j of the ^ , e K a t this hour. Queen Vic- j haAelor should p^sc&s: wasting all my income in “great *w-{ tfm - a * vmnmno, i„fl„Gn<v too: the! The Ter >' h®?* Sewing Machine a man troduction of two or three millions of Asi- _ i atic and African coolies in tropical Amer- “ Don’t You Do It.”—The man who ica will destroy the slave-labor system in, found out all the philosophy contained in the United States, by tlie irresistablc com- these few precepts was a Solomon ; j petition of production at one-fifth of the . ™ . . , , . When you are offered a great bargain, cost of American laborers.” but Tavid is greater as he for he has kilt; y a ]ue of which you know nothing a : \ Palmerston was capnvated by the idea Goliah.” Now, mine fnents, ven you j vou >re t0 „ et a t half- of surrounding tne United S'.a ca by an goes out to vight mit te tam Pntisb, re- pric ^ bei ng you ”—don’t y0 u do it. empire Of cheap laborers, whose children YVhen a young lady catches you alone, would be free citizens, but too unacccpt- lays violent hands on you expressing “kiss” able for annexation; and if he had the in every glance!—don’t you do it. courage and grasp of a Napoleon, he YVhen a horse kicks you, and you feel would not have left its execution to F’rance. a strong disposition to kick the horse in It is the common hope of the two' Cibi- turn—don't you do it ! nets that the monopoly of the slave Should you happen to catch yourself trade for their citizens will secure tropical whistling in a printing office, and the prin- j America to their uses; aud the next a'rri- ters tell you to whistle louder—don’t you val from the Isthmus may show its first J - i fruit—Washington. States. member vat I tell you, dat a man is a man if he’s no pigger as my dumb.” wasting all my income in ~ great oar- [ toria e „ joys a personal influence too; the ! Yer > * - do ; L gams! and I don t want a wile who reads . r i, n-ni hrr as a wife a i can ^* Te ,s * w, ^ e - ^ 18 °° e that requires “ 0,L -run imvels and works in worsted, with a poo , S ^nd Wfa^tor to ihe 1 but a kind word to set it in motion, rare- If on an odd occmuon your wife should , bundng! r , chriSSn sets out of renair. makes but very little exclaim to you, “Now, tumble over the t,1, il. poor, a worsted, die in her lap. while the meat is _ down stairs in the kitchen, and the pud- w j d(;r an d greater than that of any nion- l ,s ,baked to a emder: , | arch now reigning. She is loved at home That s the catalogue of * hat I don t and j s admired abroad. la America there D OCT. J. W. KIN ABREW, having lo shi'p s'c^iiiUare r^.i«ted to i-al 1 and'stTtle' "° W 1 " ,H enamer * ,e the thu, S s exists a more profound and abiding re- eatto penaoneHtly in Cassrille. offer hia by cash or note, without delay. j 1 s P cct for Viclori » th * n for pnMoiuil services to the public, and j Cassville, llch 2*% 1658—ly « . ■ wa JJ t ? noat, stiinn D little witc, whose ]ivmr person. Being a pr»ctic»l will tUeikd promptlr to every cull, day or } ———* j nicely fitting dress is m«ue by her own we recognize mud appreciate the * C V south ol JA.W \\7 INSHIP IRON WORKS. Atlanta, 1 hands—who can make a loaf of bn»L oTher example to theruiers and the rJl t waidwwv, wh«rr he caw be found dunuff ; I V - - — -—— - »—i— ” amt eeneiactor xo me j --- k but ' Httle ) exclaim to you, “ Now, tumble over the 1 P^iLosorur or Esdobsi.no.—One of Hie * VO YVh°en you have any business to trans- j house . ,n ° rd f. r ^ h « *«"' act with a modern finLcier, and he asks I V«b b» son and tor as follow^ you to go and dine with him-don t you ; fig I four notes of hand of $25,00(1, making J ao^whare he emu be found during ».« Geor*ia.--I A K. WIN.8HIP A CO.. . rC TKl" C sr!ri r y ” Manufacuireni of Swam Kngioe* and pied ky Rev. IL Kelsey. Thankful for past p,„t cr ^ Circular Saw Mills, on The most ap- j pajreaac.toaakaacontinu.ueeoftkea.me. ^ , Turning Lather Sngar Mills. Cassville. Go.. Feb. 1.1859. | ketdes. lining U.chinerv, Mill Work, of all j —— descriptions. New Styles'of Iron Railing tor RON AND BRASS FOUNDRY AND Fences and Ceoietrv' Lots, Bridge Castings’ roast a turkey, or cook a beefsteak—who regards a hole in her husband's coat as a reflection on her own housewifely charac ter, and who can talk about literary news, and even politics, as well as about new ruled. Carious Facts about the Sozm. It is a singular fact that even after i.’ssai.ToiuSKkffcJi ad kinds ul Machinery far Gold Mines. Bndg- . ,i , , n i( oa, Draw Bridges, Gas Work*. Flour Mil^ W L Paper Mills, Saw Mills, Gin Geonug. Water X i Wheels; all kinds of Smith work; Shafting ^th! S aad Circular Saw Mi*, enmplefe | ^n” fiE March 81, 1859—ly. "reprietor. \ in *> “«» quality < B RICK MASONRY.—The undersigned tJm^k vSmb?Radruad**"^ ow_Wea-j toe tormed a copartnership in the boat-: nape *m» I aoa’v winmr | H* mn», | asm af BRICK MASONRY j March 24th, 1859- ly. • ] heJ$ 7 |£ toTS j TTARNESS MADE AND REPAIRED. ‘ pared to do BETTER WORK. IN LESS H —The undersigned keeps couotanthr or TIMJL mm! ml fkirer price*, tban bas ever been ] J. J hand a good snpply of readr-asode Bar-1 does in Cherokee Georgia. Contracts token neaa (mode by hhnsetf.) REPAIRING dooei in my port of the Stats. at short aotiee sod in gotff rtylo. HnoU Fee •pawaeas of work me refer to the two friends aad th# pobtic generally am req *'tot at Caaaville or wj otbar to give him a e»H, when tto want as tap by Jos. Chs^aa. iiabis lioauf besineoa. Call it Mr. M dresses and new fashions—who is a lady : death nature respects the inherent modcs- in the kitchen as well as in the parlor,: ty of woman, for when drowned she floats and who looks upon a husband as seme-; on her face and a drowned man upon bis thing nearer and dearer than a mere ma-. bade. The noblest part of a human being chine to pay her biBs, and hold her hand-; is the head, but the man’s head is liable w _ kerchief and fan at parties! ! to baldness—woman is never bald. The; are much quicker than others. My female acquaintances are all pretty; man’s face is often made repulsive on ac- j pends in noise, is seldom tne cause oi a dust, and, once in motion, wilt go on uninterrupted ly for hours, without the slightest trim ming, or the smallest personal supervision being nece*»ry. It will make shirts, darn stockings, sew on buttons, mark pocket handkerchiefs, cut out pinafores, and man ufacture children’s frocks, out of any old thing you may give it; t ad this it will do behind your back just as well as before your face. In fact you may leave the house for the you ' do it Love.—A love scene overheard and ! 4>lo0,0uo, with bis name on the back.- phongraphically reported by Phredriek { “ Those,” said he, “ are the price paid for Phine: * : endorsing for a friend. I weekly put my “Phairest of the phair,” sighed the lov- j name on them, and had to pay them *8 " pbancy my pheelings, when Ipborsee you see. YVhenever any one asks yon to ; j " J ,. . , : erphancy my pheclmgs, when I pborsee you see. vt nenever any one asasyou to or days, and it vrfU go on ^^kingjust, ^ ooogeqpeooea of oar pheehng endorse, look at those notes Ufon, you he same. If it does get out _ of or ™ r *: troenyour phatheris^utolv. Phew phel-; reply.”— United States Economist. srifby being left alone for a short tune more phortitude J haTC; an d after which it returns to -sewing with ..,7 . . „„ Pike’s Peak.—The Adrian Watcbtow- greater vigor than ever. lines vary a gi ’.tssjs ;=v tafirtasr ■sewing iter vigor tnan 9f course sew-, j , ^ j ^ ^ j to n K orotner, oatea Aurena, K.A ren- 1 machines^ vary »jpto Some becoming yoJrha^und. Phair atb ’ m which hej^rn that the •. — — -.1— It de-! nL ‘,v» : mines pay poorly ; that “for ten who ara making five dollars per day, there are one 'Hold, Phranklin, hold!” screamed wax" doll creatures, with white, richly-1 count of harsh growing beard, so covered i tor pattern you select if y«w are fortu-1 p. « r -uj nhollow you rhorev ringed hands »nJ pale faces, who don’t; with solid hairs, as something scarcely to | nate in picking ant the choicest pattern j ‘ y ’ ■ 1 - .si - k- „ l-ifnk^n 10 anal Km /lL:4>n<MsK-lwviI r - tkn fine rtf to Kftofft* I nf a nrtfa nnn for inciftimt tKlt CinffiC i know exactly where the kitchen is, and would faint* away if you mentioned a wash-tub or a frying-pan in their pras- They are very passable drawing be distinguished from the face of a beast;! of a wife—one, for instance that sings! p .. t n;, -1,1^ and nbotr Phran- ■n ■ «ka — Itond ihst Iupo i ■■kilei w'nrlriniT enH cppmff tn Kn nmror ca" Brwlr t * 1 • . » ’ - - ^ • ■ in a woman, sm the ether hand, the face whilst working, and seems to be never so always remains pure and decent For this j happy as when the husband's linen is in v __ ^ ^ reason, women were by the laws of the; hand—die dewing machine may be pro- mom ornaments, but as to ever becoming twelve tables forbidden to nib their cheeks,; nouneed perfect of its kind : so much so, thrifty, creditable wives, owe might as well ■ lest hair should grow and obscure their : there ia no make-shift in the* world can. it awn- the revolving ladies ia the wmdowB i blushing mdflesty. But the most evident : possibly replace it, rither for love or mo- of Broadway' ! proof of the innate parity of the female ney. In short no gentleman’s estabimh- Am I to marry ’ • . = ““ ^ **““ ccs pbainted. faaMwgpwt ffaaerilfe, March 3d, 1889. in j thing Aolasawl kidgiorct, with a iCarrfago Shop, apt ramrille, Jhn. 9, 1*59— Yy. ■ him rriwnWiM. «a »-iae* ia, that a woman having once washed moot is complete without one of these , and a pair of yellow ia cteut, aad if she wasbea to a Jeoond ■ sewing machine* to the house. aswweaMCri-MNNasatowaa^ ww^oSisaus*.--Ttssrim-m*,, hundred who don’t make fifty cents, *ndP a good many who don’t make anything,: and are waiting for the season to go hack. or start for Califdhiia.” .Mr. Parker thersays: “ Thereareaset ofland-i that have done nothing this lay off town sites, and write . ters about the gold i ’ 41 Jv—*■ ■fg* It was done when it was began, it was done when it was half done; and yet >’t done wheait was finished.'5<iw, ... _ . to it? Timothy Johann courted s 0 " 16 of ^ toy^ 1 ^ for i Susan Dunn. It was done wtop jt was in Aurario.’ begun, it was done when it was half done, fyYVhv tea darilrfBce a mushroom?* 1 ” c - Irr*; 1 " l 7 rapid, andtotypia.miyg^n