The Cassville standard. (Cassville, Ga.) 18??-1???, August 25, 1859, Image 1

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% aSdtI| Jfamilg fe tos|aptr—pttortebr to ^0n(|trn Sliglrts, literature, J furafi pfc Puntestif •• | ; ii ..-aim. E. M. KEITH A B. F. BENNETT, Editors. “ EQUALITY' IN THE UNION OR INDEPENDENCE OUT OF IT.” TERMS—TWO DOLLARS a.year, in Advnnoe. < VOL. 11. CASSVILLE, GA.., THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1859. TSTO. 32, istellaneflns. Premium List Of the‘Third Annual Fair of the Cass County Agricultural Society, to be held at the Grounds of the Society on the 26th, 27th, and 28th September, 1859. FIELD CROPS. Largest yield Cotton, 1 acre, Prem. $5.00 Largest yield Corn, do. 5.00 Largest yield Wheat, do. 5.00 Largest yield Oats, do. 2.50 Largest yield Rye, do.. 2.50 Largest yield Barley, do. 2.60 Largest yield Sweet Potatoes, do. 2.50 Largest yield Turnips, do. 5.00 Largest yield Hay do. includ. Clover 5.00 Best bushel Corn, to be on exhib’n, 1.00 Best bushel Wheat, do. do. 1.00 Best bushel Oats, do. do. 1.00 Best bushel Rye, do. do. 1.00 Best bushel Barley, do. do. 1.00 Best bushel Sweet Potatoes, do. do. 1.00 Best bushel Irish Potatoes, do. do. 1.00 Best bushel Turnips, do. do. 1.00 Best bushel Field Peas, do. do. 1.00 Best bale of Hay, do. do. 5.00 Each of the above articles must be en tered at the Annual Fair, but if any crop cannot be gathered in time for the Fair, exhibitors may notify the Executive Com mittee, and the Committee shall make the award on the first Tuesday- in January next. Of Potatoes and Turnips only one- fourth of an acre need be gathered and Best Plow—open to *11 the world, 5.00 of the Exhibition, and no animal or arti- Best Thrasher, 5.00 cle, so removed, shall be entitled a Pre- Best Fan, 5.00 iniutn. Best Straw-cutter, 2.50 All animals .and articles entered must Best corn and cobb Crusher, 5.00 have Cards attached, with the number as Best Reaper, ' 5.00 entered at the Secretary's office ; and Ex- Best Seed Planter, 2.50 hibitors, in all cases, shall obtain their Best lot of agricultural and horticultu- cards before placing their animals or arti- ral implements, 5.00 cles on the Grounds. Best lot of Mechanics Tools, 5.00 The Committees selected will report Bast cabinet work—not less than 3 ar- themselves to the Secretary on Tuesday tides—Georgia made, 5.00 morning, 27th. Best Buggy, “ 5.00 The Judges will, in all cases, withhold Best Carriage, “ 5.00 Premiums when the animal or article is Best Sewing Machine, 2.50 not worthy. Best Washing “ 2.50 No spirituous liquors will be allowed Best lot of Iron—Georgia made, 2.50 within a quarter of mile of the enclosure 44 Mill-irons, 44 2.50 during the Fair ; and “ drunk person*” “ Castings, “ 2.50 shall be excluded from the Grounds. Best sack or bbl. Flour, “ 2.50 The Executive Committee have the au_ DOMESTIC MANUFACTURES. thority (from the Legislature) to exclude Best piece of Jeans—not less than 3 spirituous liquors (as above proposed) and yards. $2.50 to preserve good order; and they will ex- 2d best do. 1.00 ercise their authority whenever necessary. Best pair woollen Blankets, 2.50 Arrangements will be made to supply 2d best do. 1.00 provender to those who may desire. Best 10 yds. Negro Cloth, 2.00 Annual Address by Col. J. G. Ryals, 2d best do. 1.00 at 11 o’clock, A. M. on the 28th. Best Coverlet—of wool, 2.00 JAS. W. WATTS, 2d best do. LOO JAS. C. SPROULL, Best Bed Quilt—Patch work, 2.00 A. J. WEEMS, 2d best do. 1.00 B. W. LEWIS, Best Bed Quilt -Rais'd work, 2.00 ABDA JOHNSON, 2d best do. 1.00 March 3d, 1859. Executive Com. measured. Each exhibitor must accom pany his entry with his own certificate of yield and mode of culture. HORSES. Best stallion 3 yrs. old and upwards $5.00 Second best do. do. do. 2.50 Best stallion 2 years old. 0.00 Sceon 1 best do. do. 2.50 Best stallion 1 year old, o.uO Best Gelding 3 years old, 5.00 u ii o “ “ 5.00 Best Colt or Filly, 5.00 2d best 2.50 | Best brood marc—to be judged hv her produce, 5.00 Second best brood mare—do. do. 2.50 Best Filly 3 yea is old, 5.00 2d best 3 “ 5.00 Best Filly 2 5.00 2d best 2 “ 2.50 Best Filly 1 year old, 5.00 2d best 1 “ 2.50 Best saddle horse or mare, 5.00 2d best 2.50 Best single harness horse or marc, 5.00 2d host 2.50 Best draft horse. 5.00 2d best 2.50 CATTLE. Best Bull 3 years old or upwards, $5.00 2d hest3 “ “ 2.50 Best Bull 2 years old. 5.00 2d best 2 “ 2.50 Best Bull 1 year old, 5.00 2d best 1 “ 2.50 Best bull calf. 2.50 2d best 2.50 Best milk cow, of any age, 5.00 2d best 2.50 Best heifer 2 years old, 5.00 2d best 2.50 Best heifer 1 year old. 5.00 2d best 1 “ 2.50 Best heifer calf, 2.50 2d best 2.50 Best pair of Oxen, 5.00 2d bast 2.50 HOGS. Best Boar, $2.50 2d best 2.50 Best Sow, 2.50 2d best 2.50 Best pair or litter of Pigs, 2.50 SHEEP. Best Buck, $5.00 2d best 2.50- I Best pen of Ewes—two or more, 5.00 i 2d best 2.60! Best pen of Lambs—two or more, 5.00] 2d best 2.50 1 Best samp!* of Wool, 2.50 j MULES. Best single Mule—Georgia raised, $5.00 Best Mule 2 yrs. old, “ “ 5.00 Best Mule 1 yr. old, “ “ 5.00 Best Mule Colt, 5.00 Best single Mule—open to the world 5.00 Best pair 5.00 JACKS AND JENNETTES. Best Jack, $5.00 Best Jennette, 5.00 MANUFACTURES. Best Gent’s Hat—Georgia made, $2.50 Best I doz. wool Hats—Ga. made, 2.50 Best f doz. negro shoes, “ 2.50 Best lot sole leather, “ 3.50 Best lot upper “ “ 3.50 Best lot harness leather, “ 2.50 Best man’s saddle, “ 2.50 Best lady’s “ “ 2.50 Best buggy harness, “ 2.50 Best wagon, do. “ 2.50 Beet 4 horse wagon, “ 5.00 Bests “ 5.00 Beni ■2.50 Besi Bed Quilt—imitation Marseille, 2.00 2d best do. Best Wove Counterpane, 2d best do. Best Lady’s Dress, 2d best do. Best Comfort, 2d best do. Best Carpet, 2d best d<\ Best Hearth-rug, 2d best do. Best Shawl, 2d best do. Best Mantle, 2d best do. Best Cloak—Lady’s 2d best do. Best Child’s Dress, 2d best do. Best pair Stockings — wool, Best “ cotton, Best pair Socks—cotton. Best “ wool. FANCY WORK. Best Painting, 2d best do. Best Picture—needle work, 2d best do. Best Piano Cover, 2d best do. Best Ottoman, 2d best do. DAIRY. 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 5.00 2.00 2.00 | 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 Gath ering Fodder. Corn blades stripped or mowed at the, ! proper period for making hay, furnish as 1 nutritious food for stock, as hay from any ■ of the cereals whatsoever; but who thinks of gathering fodder at that proper period? When the tassel of the stalk and silk of j the car are in full bloom, and the grains ! swollen full with milky fluid, in which | the valuable elements of corn arc to be deposited and perfected, which valuable i elements, at this time, abound merely in 1 the stalk and b'ades; if then, your fodder be stripped at this time, you have very superior hay-, (fodder) but your corn is light and imperfect, indeed ruined. We I cultivate corn for the grain, it being the 1 most valuable grain the planter can grow. From the Masonic Signet k Journal. ■ore Light. A MASONIC PRAYEK. Father of Light—the Mason’s trust— From Thee all blessings flow; Thy ways are ever true and just, And Thou all hearts dost know; Give us td walk with humble care, As ever in Thy sight, And let our constant, earnest prayer, Be still for Light—more Light We need Thy favor, sovereign Lord, To save us when we’re tried, The counsels of Thy holy word, Through this dark state to guide. Oh! be’t Thy gracious pleasure still To keep our feet aright In all doubts Thy holy will. To give us Light—more Light. Whene’er by passion led astray, Thy claims we would forget, Restore us to the narrow way, Thy truth has wisely set. Here in our reared to Thee, Cheered by Thy symbol height Let us look upward still and see, Effulgent Light—more Light. Thus in the way our Father’s trod, Be ours, already to advance. Relying more and more. Oh God ! On Thee, and not on Chance; Till rising from the coffin’d dead, The grave yard’s gloomy night By thy unfailing arm we’re led, Into perfected Light. The Human Hand. Issuing from the wrist is that wonder ful organ, the human hand. In a French book intended to teach young people phi losophy, the pupil asks why the fingers are not of equal length ? The master makes the scholar grasp a ball of ivory, to show him that the points of the fingers are then equal! It would have been bet ter had he closed the fingers upon the palm, and then have asked whether or not they corresponded. This difference in the length of the fin gers serves a thousand purposes, as in holding a rod, a switch, a sword, a ham mer, a pen, pencil, or engraving tool, in all which a secure hold and freedom of motion are admirably combined. On the length, strength and perfectly free movements of the thumb depends, Case of Russian Justice. ] —Take a straight course through life and| Last December an Officer in the elegant, zealously pursue it j &—& mind your own business & let J others alone, Ac., Ac. j uniform of the Chevalier Guards, galloped along one of the most crowded and fash ionable streets it Petersburg. Passing a magasin de mode-*, he saw a charming young girl enter. He followed her, and was struck by her cheerful but modest grace, and the freshness and tenderness which distinguished her. On her retiring, he learnt that she was the daughter of a poor chinowich, (civilian,) that the sliop- Sheep-KUling Hogs. Editors Southern Cultivator: It was a very true remark of that able Statesman, 1 Daniel Webster, that “some things had to l be talked into existence.” This remark j was made in relation to the National Mon-J ument; but we think it applicable to ina- j st aa ' UlUhl taludUlC t'lain luc wiiuiiu wu , » * 2 00 in- . .. % ,, moreover, the power of the human hand. i W e must therefore allow the blades to re- , , . , , , , 1-00 . . ... _; To the thumb indeed, has been given a , „ n I main on the stalk till the gram in the ear : ’ .. . , 1-00 . . ... * special name (Pollux, from a Latin verb , is perfected, at which period the blades | 1 , ,, ’ . , . . . 1: * : meaning to be able, strong, mighty) be cause of its strength—a strength that is ny other things, and permit us to talk a . people worked for her at a >owfrom little through your able journal to the ! farmers of Georgia. j admiration of her youth and character,— and that she would return at six. That officer, with two of his friends, indulged in a sumptuous dinner, inflaming his pas sions with costly champagne. But exact ly at six, a large and gorgeous troika, (a double seated sledge) stopped near the magasin, harnessed with three splendid horses. The poor Olga advanced, was in- gfantl v half stiflftfl in a fur rlnak—• to the troika, carried on to Czarsko Zelo, where a convenient and lonely house of entertainment awaited them, and was bru tally ravished, after indignantly rejecting every kind of bribe. But her resistance was so violent that she disfigured the faces of her assailants. On her return her fath er appealed to the hated police,—but in Protection from the depredations of sheep-killing dogs is all the State of Geor gia lacks to make it prominent in the Un ion in the production of wool. Nature has done everything necessary' for the de velopment of this branch of husbandry— a mild climate, an abundance of hill coun try, _ where the domestic grasses flourish- e greatest obstacle in the way of this primitive and most pleasant occupation is that worse than worthless creature-—the dog. The little State of Vermont produces more wool than the “Empire State of Georgia,” from the fact that every man in the State of Vermont that owns more than one dog pays a tax on them, which vain. The police-master assured him that | dog4ax ; s appropriated to the paying for !"?„ i have parted with ali the valuable elements LOU i 1 j q fj 1 they once possessed, and then, indeed, j your fodder is trashey and of little value. I It is much better to appropriate a few $2.U0 ; acres, giving it the proper (and very lit- 1.00 ; tie) attention, whereon our native crab 2.00 ; KI ass, without the trouble or expense of . ,, , . .. 1- 00 seeding, will produce from four to six b - V the ,7, 2.00 ; tons> (mowed at the right time and well i s P eclal ,uark of the huma " *" d ^ 1 no ' n r .t i * u I ticularly that of a clever workman. 100 . savc d) of the very best hay, and allow , „„ r 2- 00 your blades to remain on your corn stalks necessary to tlic power of the hand, being equal to that of all the fingers. Without the fleshy ball of the thumb the power of the fingers would be of no avail, and accordingly the large ball form- 1-00 to perfect the grain ; because it is a well ■ ascertained fact, that whatever may be Bast jar Butter not less than 4 m. old $2.00 | the per centum of value possessed by the 2d best do. do. 1.00 ; fodder gathered from the corn, though it 2.00 he but 1 per cent., that is lost to the 1.00 | grain. 2.00 I Ours is a fine grass country', both in 1.00 ■ climate and soil, and any argument in fa- Bcst Cheese, 2d best Best Gallon Milk, 2d best do. ‘-vu j Milk to be on the ground the second j vor of raising and saving hay would seem day of the Fair j to be superfluous ; but our planters are HOUSEHOLD DEPARTMENT. Best jar of Lard, 2d best do. Best lot of hard Soap, 2d best do. Best lot of soft Soap, 2d best do. Bast samples of Jellies, Preserves, Aa, by one person, 2d best do. Best YVine, do. 2d best do. Best lot dried Peaches, Best “ Apples, Best “ Quinces, Best “ Pears, $2.00 1.00 2.00 j 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 accustomed to stripping fodder, they have cultivated the corn and grown the blades, and to allow them to dry up on the stalks ; they say, “looks like a waste.” Well it may, under such circumstances, look like a waste, at the same time not be so, real- i ly. Though it may' “ look like a waste,” j because we do not see the injury done the ' grain by stripping off the blades from the 1 stalk, ere the grain be ripe, it is neverthe- , less, as the most carefully conducted ex- i periments have proved, beyond doubt, a much greater waste than would have been ; drying up of the bladas. Cotton Planter <b Soil of the South. The loss of the thumb almost amounts to the loss of the hand. Conscripts, un willing to serve in the army of France, have been known to disable themselves effectually by cutting off the thumb of the right hand. The loss of both thumbs would reduce a man to a miserable de pendence. Nor should we overlook another pecu liarity. Were the tips of the fingers and the thumbs bony instead of being covered with flesh, many things . we readily do would be absolutely impossible. We can now take up what is small, soft, and round, as a millet seed, or even a particle the criminals could not be identified. On this her brother, an officer in the country regiment, was written to. He was inde fatigable in his inquiries, discovering that three officers had suddenly announced themselves sick, to hide the scars in their faces, wrote a petition to the Emperor, and succeeded in awaking his sympathy. The police-master was summoned, and theCzar charged him instantly to procure a true report of what had passed. This was done. The criminal was Prince Galitzin. But mark the punishment: The Czar instant ly compelled him to marry the sufferer— endowed her on the spot with half his worldly goods, making her at once very wealthy, and then immediately issued a ukase of divorce, leaving her entirely free.. All the three officers were transported to a country regiment, deep in the heart of Russia, and were refused any rise in mili tary rank. Never was political justice more rapid and more complete. The sen tence does honor to the Emperor, and al most makes us long, in certain cases, for an omnipotent despot. But this is not the only instance iu which Alexander II. nas given proofs of a good heart and great vig or. The circumstance has excited an im- sheep that arc killed by dogs. The con sequence is, every farmer can afford to keep a flock, knowing that if they arc killed he will get paid for them. Now, let us raise such a buzz about the ears of the next Legfslaturc ( in the shape of petitions) that they cannot refuse to pass a bill taxing every dog over one in the family twenty-five cents, and more if that is not sufficient to pay a fair price for all the sheep killed by these amine ma rauders ; and in less than ten years we will export wool as well as' cotton If a dog is not worth twenty-five cents a year, he Is not worth the keeping; but as superstition says it is bad luck to kill dogs and cats, hundreds are allowed to roam the country over that would be kill ed if the owner had to pay for their poll. THOS. G. PARK. Rossville, Walker Co., Ga., 1859. Louis Napoleon at Milan and Turin. It is stated by a correspondent of the Manchester Guardian, that when Louis Napoleon passed through Milan, on his re turn to Paris, he was hooted and hissed; that flags and emblems of the French alli ance were torn down and trampled upon mense sensation in the Russian capital, along his passage; and that at Turin it and will doubtless have good results. ; was only by the utmost efforts, on the Alphabetical Advice i ? a * of the F\ ern,, ‘ cnt a,,<1 th “ r , f , „ . i that excessive insult was spared the ex- The New York Mercury gives the fol- j L ;, jerator of Italv _„ lowing advice to its readers: j * J A—Always attend to occupations, and j ^poleon and coent ch ock. avoid ale-houses and artful women. j When, after the peace, M. de favour J B—Be benevolent but not prodigal.— j found himself for the first time face to face j Bury all bickerings in the bosom of forget- j with the Emperor and King, he found it j fulness i impossible to remain within the hounds oTi C—Contrive to collect cash and keep it. etiquette, and his indignation hurst vio- D—Do your duty and defy the devil. | lently forth ; so violently, that at length E—Early endeavor to eradicate every i Louis Napoleon, under control as he is, error both of head and heart. ! lost temper in turn, and threatened! The F—Fight fairly when you do fight, but | word “arrest” escaped his lips ; at which the best way is not to fight at all. Fiddle ! the betrayed Piedmontese minister turned . not for fools. round, saying: “Arrest me! Try it! But j G Grace, goodness, and gumption and ! you would not dare; for you would then | a little goose grease, enable a man to slip have no choice left you hut to go back to j .. i ij — f’/i* • Fmpis» thrmiffli the Tvrol I” The Late Judge Underwood. The Augusta “ Dispatch,* Mi iMcing the death of this distinguished gentleman, calls up a juke of his, which is not alto gether inappropriate: Shiny years ago, when. Marietta was a rustic village, compared to its present con dition—the Judge was preparing to leave town after a long and tedious scssioo of the court Seated in his buggy, he called to a brother member of the bar, now a dis tinguished lawyer of that place, who was often boasting of the attractions of 1 Mari etta. “General,” said the Judge, “I intend to con e to Marietta to die.” Struck with the serio-comic manner in which the remark was made, General H. replied— “Then yon have changed yoilr mind in relation to our town, Judga” “No, General, but I do not know a pl*»* less regret;” and with a gracious nod of adieu, he rode off amidst a universal laugh at the expense of the General. It is a singular coincidence that after the lapse of many years, the quaint pre diction of the -Judge should be literally verified. Pkobakle Destkcction of St. Anthony Falls.—During the recent flood, at least one hundred feet of the rock has given a- way. Thus the position of the principal fall is now that distance higher up the riv er than it was at commencement of the freshet The stratified rock causing the fall, lies in a horizontal position, and va ried in thickness from ten to fifteen feet —This rock is underlaid by a stratum of sand of some twenty feet in thickness.— The reaction of the current is rapidly wast ing this bed of sand, and the result is manifested by the frequent (alls of large masses of overhanging stratum of rock,— decreasing in thickness as well as solidity —the farther up the stream it recedes, and that it entirely disappears some 1,200 feet above the present crest of the fall, we cao readily conceive of the entire extinction of the magnificent fall. YVhen we state that one hundred and fifty feet of rock has fallen within the limit of a single week, the reader may readily form some idea of what the fate of the falls is likely to be.— ilinneajtoli* Jour. UfTf A laughable circumstance once took place upon a trial in Lancashire, where Mr. "Wood was examined as a wit ness. Upon giving liis name—Ottiwell Wood—the Judge, addressing the rever end parsor, said : “Pray, Mr. Wood, how do you spell your name?" The old gentleman replied ; “O double T, I double U, E double L, Double U, Double O, D.” Upon which the astonished lawyer laid down his pen, saying it was the most ex traordinary name lie ever met in his life, and after two or three attempts, declared he was unable to record it. The Court was convulsed with laugh ter. What Nations Fight Hardest? A FEW FACTS AND FltlCIiES. of human hair. So exquisitely preheiisi- through this world mighty easy. Get them ; France through the Tyrol 1 ble are the human fingers. | and glory in them. The nails are often of special service,— j jj—Harbor hope in your heart if you j perhaps always in works of art which rc-1 wouk j be happy ; but hark ye, hope can- j quire nicety of execution. Their sub- not render rotten the rope of the hangman. Assuming, says an exchange paper,] stance is just what is needed; they are ea-! I-Inquisitiveness is insufferable-in-} that the French and Austrian accounts of j sily kept at the precise length which an- j d,,]^ not in it t,le battles to be true— and they arc the, swers every purpose; had they been plac- j J_J u lips may be called the juice of joy on b‘ data " c 1,ave to rel >’ u P on > tlle total j ed on the tips of the fingers there would and the yeast of just; hut let them alone, number of killed and wounded at the hat- liave been a loss of power, but their posi- f or too much joking often destroys the jo- tle °f Solferino, a fight which lasted fotir- tion ensures their highest efficiency. virility of the social circle. i teen hours, was 29,375, or seven per cent An interchange of power for velocity j £—Kindness kindles the fire of friend- j tke w * icde number engaged. On com- • i . i i - . . . ... . •• .i ' narinir this with the list of killed and 2.00 2.00 2.00 As a sample of the coolness of rail i which takes place in the arm adapts the j ship . A kiss always avails more than a | P 8 ™*! ‘ hls " t ,th the . 1,st of kll,e 1 a, ’ d 2-00 road conductors, the Harrisburg Patriot! hand and fingera to a thousand arts, re-; kick . ; wounded ».other decide 1.00 & Union tc lls the following tough story : quiring quick or live motions. In setting i L—Love the ladies, “ look before you i countrj and in Mexico, we a ^ One of them having been discharged, up-the type of this article there have been Ieap - eschew loaferism. 2 50 ! Best sample of Syrup—Chinese, 2d best do. 2.601 Best plow boy of 12 years old or un der, to plow on the grounds, 5.00 f rom his trust applied to he reinstated.— . '‘You were dismissed,’said the Snpcrinten- Regulations. dent austerely, Tor letting your train come All animals and articles for Exhibition tw ; ce into C0 nj s i 0 n.’ ‘The very reason,’ must be on the Grounds and entered at t h e 0 ther, interrupting him, ‘why I the office of the Secretary before sun set j ask to bc restored.’ ‘How so f ‘Why, on the 26th. No animal or article will be s j r> y j i lad any doubt before as to wheth- admitted after ttpt time, under any cir- er two trains can pass each other on the eumetanee*. i same track, I am now entirely satisfied— Any person may become a life member j h ave tried it twice, sir, and it can’t be by the payment of Ten Dollars, and enti- don e, and I am not likely to try it again.’ E l.. BROWN, Attorney at Law, Cass- v illv, Ga.—Will attend promptly to all • business entrusted to his care. April 14. 1S-VJ. B H. LEEKK, Attorney at Law, Cass- ville, Ga.—Business entrusted to hi* • care will meet with prompt and vigilant attention, and monies paid over punctually.—• Office under Standard office. Feb. 1,1809. W Y. WESTER, Attorney at Law, Calhoun, Ga.—Will practice in nil the « counties of the Cherokee Circuit. Par ticular attention will be paid to the collection of claims, and to promptly paying over tho money when collected. Nov. 28. 1858. tied to all the privileges of the Society He regained his situation. Without further charge. ‘ Persons, by the payment of Two Dol lars, to he entitled to one year's member- a list of revolutionary soldiers on the rolls ship, and to enter any article free of of the States of Georgia and Alabama, who [charge, and have access to the Fair are regularly receiving their pensions, and Insetting ^ ,, J ed to conclude that our own troops, the movements on the part of the compositor j q—Make no mischief by meddling with ] English, and even the Mexicans, whom it. of surprising rapidity to any ordinary ob- ‘ 0 j kcr folk’s matters. j has been ^ habit to depreciate, art- server ; and the execution of performers j jf—Never he caught napping except in , mucb harder fighters than the French on the pianoforte, as well as on many the night-time. j and Austrians. Let us repeat the figures wind instruments, is often astonishing ; q—o r< j e r is heaven’s first law—obey it j a tabular form : these are among many instances of the , p—p ursue the plain path of probity.— j Nations. ^Battles, advantage gained by this sacrifice of force | p ut j n practice what you will in precept j to velocity of movement. i q—Quarrel not, quibble not, he not j -Amer. and Eng. Bunker Hill, Ca**elC» Popular Natural Hittary. food of Mking quest ions, or addicted to i “ ’ “ Chippewa, Newspaper DECis.oN.-The Supreme J queries. j Americans, Buena Vista, Court of Indiana has made a decision, which ! R—Bum ruins respectability; renounce* j Mexicans, ! Amcr. and Mcx. Molino del Rey, Valley of Mexico, French, Sardinians and Austrians, at H. Grounds. All other persons will be allowed to ] has an important bearing upon the inter- [ renew and renovata ests of the newspaper press. A controver- S—Seek salvation, O ye sinners! be- Americans, Thb Roll or Honor.—The following is g j- existed relative to a charge for adverti- come saints and you are safe. gln g between the commissioners ofHamil- j _ T—Take time by the forelock; try to ton county and the Patriot newspaper. It j turn every moment to account was held by the Judge that “that the pub- ; U—Union, unite and unity; in the whole Per cent of kill- • ed and wounded. ; 43 i 21 17 j 10 j 23 24 their age in 1859: Micajah Brooks, Polk county, Georgia, 98 years of age. William Coggin, Gordon county, Geor- Solferino, 7 These figures show that if the armies in Italy bad fought as desperately at So!- lUhed terms of newspapers constituted a j universe there is unison ; be ye therefore j ferino as our soldiers, the English and the Mexicans did in the above engage ments, their loss should have been four or five times as great as reported. All and articles must be enter- 8 "j 0 hn McMillionf Habersham Co., Ga., ry to prove what the work cost er was in the name of the owner or manufcc- 99 years of age. worth—the pubbsbera have a right to fix John Nicholson, Union county, Georgia, i the value of tbeir columns, and if so fixed, » miml ertmed ri-U be | dmmberooom.tr, No *2.50 removed from the Groands until the dose abama, 97 yens of age. contract If work is given to newspaper i united for the sake of unison, publishers, without a special contract con- 1 V—Vanity has no connection with val- travening the published terms, the pub- or, remember that W—Women and wine bring want, woe and wretchedness when wickedly indulg ed in. X—Xtra 'xertions accomplish ’xtraor- dinary ends. Y"—Yield yourself while young to study. Z-Zigsaggingisaeharaeteristicofiiiany. • prior thus charged can be recovered.” prio resuscitate a drowned English man, place a piece of roast beef under his nose ; an trishman, a gill of whiskey ; a Scotchman, a halfpenny; a Welchman, a few leeks; a Ifeochman, a pinch of snuff; a Spaniard, Seme fresh blood; an old maid, an okr of marriage ; a Yankee, at tempt to pick his pockets. L. RAY. Attorney at Law, Ellijay, Ga!—Will practice in the counties of • C iss, Cherokee, Pickens, Gilmer, Dsw- son, Fannin, Union nnd Towns. Collecting of debts will receive special attention. March 10. 1859—ly. E m. KEITn, Attorney at Law, Cass- vi'le Ga.—Practices in the counties- of s Cass’, Cherokee, Gordon, Whitfield And Paulding All business entrusted to hi»Care will meet with prompt attention. Office north of the public square, in Rice’s building. Nor. 1-*, 185S. A C. DAY, Tailor, Cassville, Ga.-, Shop near his residence—on the same • lot. All work done in good style, and warranted to last. Particular attention given to Cutting, lie asks a continuance ol the lib eral patronage heretofore bestowed. Cassville, Oa., Feb. 1st, 1859. D OCT. J. w. KIN ABREW, having lo cated permanently iu Cassville, offer bis professional services to the public, and will attend promptly to every call, day or night. Office next door south of J. A. T*r» refi’s residence, where he can be fuaodi daring the dav —at night at the residence lately occu pied by Rev. I). Kelsey. Thankful for past oatronago. he asks a sontimaaee of the asms, Cassville, Gs., Feb. 1, 1859. G EORGIA. CASS COUNTY: Whereas-Ja cob and a. V- Hosteller applies to me tor letters -dismissory from administration on the estate of Daniel-Mostellsr.. . . i Theee are therefore to cite *»d admonish all persons concerned to be and appear a* rmj office within the time prescribed J® fihtHT oaasr, if mi j Ihej mw, Mid letters ahonld not be granted. * , ' aPBrrrMjwti**