Newspaper Page Text
Terms'Two Dollars a-year,
SMITH A GOLDSMITH.
Seoe^l 95bertiseh)enis.
fiepe^l Bdbertisetoenff.
A man nain^d Walla kept a, tawm
one of our western Tillages: but thongjb J.;-
his house had a very good name, it WS« \#|
more than he had himwil^f^it wwaw '
miscd by his neighbors that na: used a
great deal of fodder, corn, ett, hr woittr
be never gave an equivalent, 'though It*- . '
had never b^taonijr proved upon him. -
Early one Sfl*ii.ig he waa pet' by *ft/
acquaintance nanrtM Wilkes, asbewaidri*
ving before him a heifer, which ha- had •%
most probably borrived from some for-
mer.
“Hallo, Weils! where did you get that V
heifer T' cried Wilkea.. V-f ~
“ Bought her of CoIonel' t Stevens, , 1 waa
the unhesitating reply. %,
“ What did you pay for her^ . '
“Twenty dollar*;” said Wfeg w ba
hurried on. .
About an hour afterward, as
was setting at .Wells’ bar-room,
Stevens entered After a
-conversation, Wilkes Mid :
‘■A fine animal yoa soH>
I don’t understand jM
Wells any animal
“Didn’t }' ou !”• !- ’ 1 \?
morning with
of
“ He did } , * \j
f fiewfti fldbeHifietoenf?.
W. A CHUHH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CASSVTLLR, GA.
W ILL practice in the Courts of the Cher
okee Circuit. Mar be (band at Col.
Akin’s oSee. Feb. IS, 1860—ly.
CLOTHING
WORK AMD THOTL
Hammer, tonga and anvils ringing,
’Waking echoes all day long.
In a deep-toned voice are singing
Thrifty Labor’s iron song.
From a thousand fly-wheels bounding,
From a thousand hamming looms.
Might and day the notes are sounding
Through the misty het’ry rooms.
Listen! workmen, to their playing—
There’s adviee in every clink;
Still they’re singing—still they’re sayieg-
“ Whilst yon humur, learn to Hint! ”
Think what power lies within yon.
For what triumphs ye are formed.
If, in aid of bonce and sinew,
Hearts by emulation warmed.
Mighty thought ye woo and cherish,
What shall hold your spirits down?
What shall make y onr high hopes perish ?
Why shall ye mind Fortune’s frown ?
Do ye wish for profit, pleasure?
Thirst at Learning’s fount to drink ?
Crave ye honour, fame or treasure?
Te the germs have—work, and thinl!
Think! bnt not alone of living,
Like the hone from day to day;
Think! bnt not alone of giving
£ Health for pelf, or soul for pay!
Think! Oh. be machines no longer—
Engines made of pelf and blood!
Think! ’twill make you fresher, stronger 1
Link ye to the great and good1
Thought exalts and lightens labour;
TFOUNBRY
AND
MACHINE SHOP
for spring ooii gtmnnir.
JUST RECEIVING AND OPENING,
At Wholesale and Retail,
Milner, Parrott A Saxon,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Cartersville and Caasville, Ga.
W LL practice in the Courts of tbe Cher
okee and Bine Ridge Circnits.
James Milner, 1 r rtws _:ii- I R- C. Saxon,
J R. Parrott, f Carteraville. | Caeanlle.
Feb. 9, 1860—ly. \
SOUTH,
KNOWN AS THE
“AUGUSTA WORKS.”
Will be thankful for orders for any kind of
Casting, Machine, Smith
Or Tin Work,
RAILROAD CARS,
Bridges:
Machinery for
Gold Mines,
Flour, Com or Saw Mills;
f ain Goar, Horse Powers, Cotton Presses,
fitf^r ooo:K: >
PARLOR,
^ a vrv so.v
EVEK BROUGHT TO THIS MARKET!?
AND AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE
FIGURES.
Be sure to call and examine.
OPPOSITE THE POST-OFFICE,
Next door to Kay’s Book Store,
ATLANTA, GA.
U. LAZARON,
May 23, I860. Agent.
JOHN A. CBVWVORD,.. if *- H- LEEKB.
CRAWFORD"* LEEKE,
Attorneys at Law,
Cassville, Geo.
Prompt attention given to all business en
trusted to them. Jan. 12, 1860—ly.
J. W. HEATH. W. T. DAT.
, HEATH & DAT,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Jasper, Pickens Ca.» Ga.
P RACTICE in the counties of Pickens,
Gilmer, Fannin. Lumpkin, Dawson, For
syth, Cherokee, Murray end Whitfield. Par
ticular attention given to the collecting bnsft
ness. Jan. 26, I860—tlDec.
W. R. M0RT0M,
ISa MEETING STREET,
Charleston, S. C.
Offers for sale at the' Aqwest possible
price, for Cash or Prompt PA>v
A VERY COMPLETE
AND SUPERIOR ASSORTMENT OF
HARDWARE,
CUTLERY. GUNS,
Pistols,
AND
Plantation Tools,
IMPORTED EXPRESSLY
M. J. CRAWFORD,
stepping
l[.vin£ a personal interest in the business,
c istomers may rely on having their orders
died cheaply, correctly and with dispatch.
Ad.1-ess J. G. MACMURPUY,
Augusta, Oa , Jan. 19, I860. Sup’t.
HARNESSES HOP,
BY W. O. BOWLER,
Cassville, Georgia,
KEEPS ALWAYS ON HAND
Carriage and Buegy Harness,
Self-respect and lore for neighbor,
Mark the men who work—and think !
Think—and let the thought new-nerve you-
Tbink of men who’ve gone before ;
Leaving lustrous names to serve you:
Yours’ the path they’ve plodded o’er!
Freedom fights and wins her charter
With the sword of thought—the pen !
Tyranny can find no quarter
Id the ranks of thinking men.
Think 1 for thoght’s a wand of power—
Power to make oppression shrink;
Grasp ye, then, the precious dower 1
Poise it—wield it—work, and think !
Hold your heads up, toiling brothers;
’Mongst us be it ne’er forgot,
Labor for ourselve and others,
Is for man a noble lot. j
Nobler far, and holier, higher.
Than vain luxury can claim.
If but xeal and worth inspire,
And true greatness be oar aim.
Power to compass this is given—
Power that forms tbe strongest link
’Twixt an upright man and Heaven,
His noblest power—the power to think !
money
gain, y<
Ringgold, Catoosa Co., Ga.
A LL business entrusted to his care will be
\ promptly attended to.
Sept. In, 1859.
P. H. LAREY,
Attorney at Law;
Cartersville, Geo.
W ILL practice in all the counties of the
Cherokee Circuit, and in the adjoining
counties of other Circuits. Particular atten
tion given to collecting Oct. 6,1859—ly.
A young lady, beautiful in person and
attractive in manner, who resided in the
immediate vicinity of Boston, was sought
in marriage some years ago by two men.
One of these was poor, and a mechanic;
the other was rich, and not a mechanic.
The woman loved the former; the family
of the woman liked the latter. As is the
case in such affairs, the woman married to
please her friends. Having thus “sold
herself,” she-ought to hare been m iserable
but she was not Her husband's unaffec
ted love subdued her heart, and bis gold
smothered the rough places in the human
path. Fortune, feeling that this couple
were too happy, frowned, and the man’s
riches took wings and used them in flight.
Thereupon the husband wound up his busi
ness put his wife and children, of whom
there were two, at a confortablc boarding
house, and then departed for Colifornia in
search of money. Some letters and re
mittances arrived from him at first, then
nothing came, and there was a blank for
several years. The family, whose good
opinion of the husband not lately been so
often published as formerly, told her that it
was clearly a case of divorce. When she
“You •-V’O'"'( '*■
Wilkes. W; ■
A curious exj^B
face; he felt
either to tell whcreraflHHHH
or lose twenty dollars;
not safe for him to do the first, he
out his wallet counted out the taon
handed it to Stevens, saying:
“So I did—so I did. I had In
all about it; you most excuse me/
E. L. BRPWN,
Attorney at Law
Cassville, Geo.
April u, is;#.
Merchants visiting the City are respectfully
invited to examine the Stock and prices.
All Orders for G 'ods will Receive
Prompt and Careful Attention.
March 8—6m.
Home Industry.
W. II. SALISBURY & CO.,
257 BROAD STREET,
AUGUSTA, GA.,
Manufacturer’s agents for the sale of the well
known
Victor Cook Stove,
Mannfactured in this city,
The Best Stove now in the Harket
Also, Dealers iu
JOHN C. BRANSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Cassville, Georgia.
P RACTISES in tbe counties of Cass, Flovd,
Gordon, Murray, Pickens and Whitfield.
Special attention given to securing and collec
ting claims. Nov. 17, 1859—ly.
Work
REPAIRING done at short notice.
\j warranted. Give me a call.
May 2, I860.—ly
Direct Importation,
I am now receiving a large stack of
Texas Land Agency.
W. H. SMITH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
TYLER. TEXAS
W ILL attend to the Registering and an
thentiention of DEEDS, the Location o
■■A lireet from Eu-ope, which I propose
..elling hera at New York prices, to
xW Merchants, Hotel Keepers. Colleges. Ac.
I hive a large stock of assorted Crates of Gran
ite and coal-nan Ware for Merchants, which I
will giarintee satisfaction to anv. As a Geor
gian and direct importer, I solicit, orders from
ill. R. P. McEVOY.
Jau. 2, 1866—ly. Macon, Ga.
Webster’s Apostrophe to the Union.
The sublime and eloquent words of
Daniel Webster in his famous reply to
Hayne, are familiar to most of American
readers; yet they are worthy of being re
printed a thousand times, and are espe
cially appropriate at, the present juncture.
He says:
“ When my eyes shall be tamed to be
hold for the last time the sun in heaven,
may I not see him shining on the broken
and dishonored fragments of a once glori
ous Union; on States disseverd, discordant
beligerent; or aland rent with civil feuds
or drenched, it may be, in fraternal blood!
Let their last feeble and lingering glance
rather behold the gorgeous ensign of the
republic, now known throughout the
earth, still full high advanced, in its arms
and trophies streaming in their original
lustre, not a stripe erased or polluted,
not a single star obscured, bearing for its
motto no such miserable interrogatory as
“ what is all this worth?” nor those other
words of delusion and folly “Liberty first
and union afterward;” but everywhere
spread all over in characters of Irving light
blazing on all its ample folds, as they float
over sea and over the land, and in every
wind under the whole heavens, that other
sentiment, dear to every American heart
Lands in Texas, owned by citizens of other
States.
Prompt attention given to the Col
lecting Business. Jan 11, 0 ly
!R..A 1ST GEES,
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS,
Plain, Japanned and Planished
S. B. O ATH AM,
Dsat.SK IN AmBIHCAN, ITALIAN ANIl EGYPTIAN
Statoart, and Tesnkssre
Forco and Lifting Pumps,
BLOCK TIN, LEAD. IRON, acd
GALVANIZED IRON PIPE,
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, 4c.
Agents for the State for the celebrated
LADD, WEBSTER & CO.
Sewing Machine,
which Machine we believe to be far superior
to any that is now in use. * Samples of work
and price of machines sent by mail.
Augusta, Ga., Feb. 2—6m.
XonoMSNTS, Tounft Ukns and Vases, Marble
Mantels, and Furnishing Marble,
Atlanta. Ga.
Ware Rooms opposite Georgia R. R. depot.
James Vaughan, Agent, C^sville, Ga.
Oct. S7, 1859-ly.
husband, who had desejted her, and re
mained absent beyond ^;o time allowed by
the statute. This accomplished there was
no barrier between hef and the mechanic
of her youth. She informed him that she
was his forever, when he should choose to
claim her hand. Her feelings cannot have
been pleasant to learn /hat, since his rejec
tion by her and her nferriage to another,
the unromantic hewerj of wood had drown
ed his passion for her In the waves of time
and that at the time of her handsome offer
he no longer palpitated for her. In feet,
Barkis was not willing. As if all this was
not embarrassing enough, who should
turn up but the husband who made his
appearance in tbe shape of a letter announ
cing that he had accumulated a dazzling
pile of wealth ; that he was on his way
home, and that she was to meet him in
New York. The latter also chid her for
neglect in not writing to him for yea* atf
it was clear that bfMftifiMnotH ef
love and alsoHasfifl/stfat intervals dn
nng his ab-cw^ Where these feed gone,
no one knonfiT Here, then, was trouble.
MhfondMloTcr. The one she had
dfaftMed; the other had refused her. Ta
ring counsel with herself, she packed her
trunk, seeing that her wardrobe was unex
ceptionable and came to the metropolis.
She met (fee coming nun on his arrival,
and told him the whole story as she, na
turally prejudiced in fovor of the defendant
could tell it The husband scowled, growl
ed, looked at tbe charming and becoming
toilet, remembered California and its lone,
lioem, and toek her to his heart A cler
gyman was summoned, a -marriage ifas
performed, and a new volume in their life’*
MASSEY A LANSDELL,
Will sell upon Augusta, Charleston and Sa
vannah terms any orders for
Brags, Medicines, r
CHEMICALS, PAINTS. OILS, 4c.
JCtrosone Oil, and Lamps,
Atsrsyson hand, at tbe lowest price...
*- Atlanta, Oa., Pea. IS, 185V—ly.
Yhitehal! street, Atlanta, Ga.
T HE attention of Planters and Farmers is
especially iorited to tho large and excel
lent stock of
n sale, all of which were made by experi-1
enced workmeiKand cannot foil to give satis-;
faction ; those who r eed anything of the sort
are requested to call and look at his work*—
Blacksmithing promptly attended to.
July 28,1859—ly.
To keef Butter
Journal, a German m
lentown, Penn8ylvd|
will remain fresh^H
and even lona^HB
he has now in store and for sale at the lowest
V CANDIES,
nm» «»ai*
TOBACCO,
prices. His stock consists in part of the fol
lowing Goods:
Bagging, Rope and Twine;
SUGAR, COFFEE,
TEA.S, SALT;
Candlet, Starch, Soap*, Tobacco, Cigar*;
Powder, Shot, Nails, Iron;
LIQUORS, Ac.;
In fact almost scything in the GROCERY
line. Merchants and farmers urould do well
to call and examine his stock before purchas
ing elsewhere, as he flatters himself that he
can sell uion as favorable terms as sow house
in this market.
All he asks is a triaL
No charge for looking. Call and see me
on Whitehall street, below the Johnson block.
Atlanta, Nov. 1. G. W. JACK.
thoroughly out of it, then dry the sumca
of the butter with a dean doth, break in
to small piece* and pack ft solid into a
crock. The air must be entirely expelled.
Set tlie crock in a kettle half filled with-
water then place tbs kettle ova* the fire-
until the water boflk While boiling re
move ftxMW tbe fire, and let the cioek re
mailt in the water until cold. Thcn plaoe
the crock is a cool place. The object in
boiling *8 to purify the buttsr and psorip-
itate the milk, which KraainhiniCpnafe
ous to boiling, to the
fot Cheap bp
BANTON A HARGIS,
I860—ly. Caeevilte. Ga.
“I VYisu t was is Dixie.”—An ambi
tious party of juvenile Philadelphians were
“recently” serenading the pretty daugh
ter of a wealthy Quaker. They had sung
the popular air “ I wish I was in Dixie,”
for about half an hour when a window was
raised and a nightcap surmounting an el
derly face appeared. Presently, in measur
ed p lin.se, tbe old gentlemen proceeded to
say: “My fiddling and ringing young
friends, this u not a fit hour to sing snogs
fHHfc Cabinet Shop
AMD WHEAT FAN MAMUkAUTORY.
JL. ROBIN
UlWtSmLE. Qa., is prepared to do
i anything ia the Cabinet line, at ehort nu-
a and ia a durable Mjrte. He to atilt man-
and play upon instruments to tbe distur
bance of weary people. Ye express tbm
wish that ye were ia Dixie, and I most
say that both I and my daughter Esther’
earnestly wish the samfc But if Dixie is ! tive be could
a distant place, I would advise ye to move [ Jonathan repl
oc or ye will not be in Dixie until tf vwy [and rirtstoBti
fete hour.” And tbe sash went down vitfc beOadiato
C. W. CUTTING
Kov.l. General Agent for the State