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Samaritan Yprtine
• -
Hggv|H|
nr n mlnnl ■rikmtm.
a., "Hr nnrr -wh.i.lm it ’ , rrlrlm ll*
ennui?. bcfaow the firu* of all difloaart
•ri»( .« fruin the blood. Ita Nervine, Braolvenl,
Aii« r*ti?*fti»4 I.sxatlre propertic* dim* *ll the
roDdiiioaa hen in referred to. It's known tcorld
IHv|elcloln!q|u|e|rlo|^
It quiets and <onino/i tthe patient—not by the
Introduction of opiates and drastic cathartic*,
but by the restoration of activity t.» tb«stomach
and nervous system, whereby the bnh* Is re
lieved of morbid fancies, which arc created bj
the causes above referred to.
To Clergymen, Lawyers. Literary men. Mer
chants. Banker*. Ladies and all those whose aed
* entary einpioymcntcnnsesnervousprostration.
Irregularities of the bl<v>d. atomacb. bowels 01
kidneys or »vho require a nerre tonic, appetizer
hr stimulant. Saw aniTAxNEnriKsisinvttlnablaw
Thousands proclaim it the. most wonderful fn»
vigorantthateversur-tainedthe sinking system.
$1.50. Sold by all Druggist*. The DR. 8. A.
RICHMOND MUD. ix>., ProprmHt. Joseph, Ma
For testimonials and circulars send stamp.
Chi. V. Criita&tca, Agaat. K«w Tert City. (84>
.Attorneys.
TUO.tl AS ft i#ITH.
Soliaitoi of Paten Oavcats.— Trade-
Marks Copyright*,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Office St. Cloud Building, Corner 9th
and F Streets. Opposite 11. S. Patent
Office.
JOUtt U. SAUDOX,
ATrotINEY At l.tlW
SUMMiIEYILLE, - GLORfaIA,
Will |ir;icii--e in the Superior,Coun
ty, .'mil l>i.suiv.t i onrts.
pTfl EQWAROB,
\TTOIS\»:V AT LAW.
LaFayette, - - Ga.
Collecting a specialty.
Office east side ol the . quire.
sept 7 82
V. M Reary,
Attorney sit Law,
SUMMERVILLE, - - - - GEORGIA.
-wt ftX piactice in th«- Home ami adpdulug Cl*
W cuits. Cnllec *• a sficcisiity.
F. W. Coiieland,
Attorney at Law,
LaFayette, - - - Georgia.
WILI. p'li. tlrr 111 ths »«p»rtArCoorl..or Rum
circuit. Klrcwli.-n- t.v.iwclil s,r-ci.ir.it, <•..!
ccttMi. a .(Mtclally. (IMHc* u|i «.lr< of lUrk.nl.'-
lorc.l
H. I*. Lumpkin
Attorney at Law,
LaFayette - - Georgia.
\A ILL ifive | mont|si attention to all husinosp
t V entrusted in him.
■.*. Oiti. e In tin* Huildlnf.
Hubert M. W. Uicnß,
Altwrney sit Law,
liaKaykitk, - - - - Georgia.
Will practice 111 the Htipetktr Court*
of the Koine and adjoining eirenU* mid
in the Supreme Court of Georgia Of
fice oil east side of square in building
with Dr. G. VV. .McWilliams.
3 ;i» am.
Cgisccllaticous Advertisement*.
811..1>. KMIM,
RESIDENT DENTIST.
KINNGIJOU), - - GEORGIA.
ifiwggQ* Offers services in all braneh-
of his profession to the
citizens of Walker and Otoosa Coun
ties. VV -k promptly done at moderate,
priei 8
All woik warranted. Office on Nash
vifl-i street, first building west of W L
Whitman's store.
New Boarding? House
(Krs. Georgia Bodge*,
Cor- Market St., A Montgomery ventw
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
Will fumisfi fxeelli'iit iimmils and
COOlfortiiMc Itnlgh.g one dollar |**r
da/. Don’t fail to atop with tier when
f(A\ go co Chattanooga. »pi2ti4tii
Hamilton House,
I). B. RAGSD.VLK, Prop.,
CHATTANOOGA,TENN.
eratnillr l.o«*»e>l. flood Acroiumoda
tlons, K. e. K-n. -n il.lr.
free Omnibus to and Prom a P Train*-
Mpl *26 0m
Jfain Killer.
SUMMER j
Imprudences
AftE SURE TO BRING
ON SUMMER DISEASES
INDIGESTION,
DIARRHOEA,
DYSENTERY,
COLIC,
CRAMPS,
BOWEL COMPLAINTS.
FEVERS, Ac., Ac.
fcUT
Perry Dam’B Pain Killer
butvtr The* Awat.
Drives The* Awat.
Dbites The* Awat.
oorr be without nm hush.
our of aot ooooom.
»TW H*T Ml eWAiWT.*
S
Walker County Messenger.
VOL. VI.
THE MESSENGER.
LA FAYETTE, - - - GEORGIA
SCBSCIfIMION:
On* Year - - • • ♦' 00
Six Months - 50 Cents.
Tliiee Month* - - *25 Cents.
COMMUNICA TED.
Ripe Spi-tac* Texa*.
E'itor Mewengtr:
I have been In Texes nineteen
months, and yet ieel tumble t > give
much information aboit the great
IjOue Star State. On the 25 h of
Ncveuib ;r, 1881, I stopped in Wal
ker County, eoutb-eas:. Texa* ; and
if my observations a>e wotth any
thing to the readers of the Messen
ger, I will write two or three short
articles concerning different sec
tion* which I have sino ■ v sited.
Walker County is in thegr at
pine belt of timbered lands in Tex
as, and the manufacturing of lum
ber is the leading business, while
many other public industries give
employment to thousands of tends
all ab g that hr.nca of the Inter
national R. K from Palestine to
Hou'ton and Galveston. Farming
is neglected near the rnilrnad, but
a sow miles back you can find ma
ny thrifty farmers doing well.—
There i* much good land on the
market in the county, and more
timber *han one wishes if he hr.s’o
dear up the Itnd. B hides 'he
pin timber which is found on both
high and low lards, there are upon
the bottoms large, tall white oak*,
pin o-ks, h : ckory ind walnut, to
gether with black gum, sweet gum
and many other kinds of timber,
of the very best quality, and in
1 .rge quantities. Thi* timber i«
coreted with long moss, which
hangs like certain* suspended from
the top of .each tree, forming an
aereealda shade in summer, and in
••-inter the Cattle eat all that is Cast
to the ground by w.iid. or the fell
ing of tre. s.
The summer range for cattle i*
good, and there' are many cane
br-ak* upon which —together with
ti e m"«*—cattle subsist in winter.
Hogs fatten upon thema-l when it
Pits; when it misses, the hog miss
es also. The truer is net good
general'y. No great trouh'e to
have plenty of well wtittr, but most
of it is poor.
Society is the worst of any coun
try I evfct saw. The cow-buy of
the west would make a good
preacher for them Health i« rot
good except upon some few high
sand ridges. i*o much for Waller.
As we proceed north, near Pales
tine, the country gets better, is
m«*re beautiful Mid healthy. Some
of the finest orchards in the South
are to be found in that section. On
tfie streams it is unhealthy, tm'
up >n the 1 igH lai ds people hate
wry good, sllh, nd many S| rings
us go’d fr<.e»ioue and chalybeate
water gre to' he found-.
Around Minneolain Wood Coun
ty and the adjoining counties, so
far as I went, is to be found a good
country, finely watered by both
well* and springs, sad is heallly
except ort the ktfeaccs.
Society i* good, and a kind a r d
hospitable people, mostly from the
States of Alabama and Georgia.
They have good schc-ofs, and m»-
r y churches of different d. n 'tnina
tions.
Some very fine land* for sale a
reasonable prh <s frtrf the up laid*
ara ger erally }>oor, and are inclin
ed to wash as they are more or less
rolling, "at they are ap'endid
cotton lands, and WRI make half ■«
bale to the acre without fertilizing
On bottom land in the same Goa -
ty, I helped to gather eleven hales
of cotton from ten acres, and the
iidjoii tng lands in the woods—
equally as good—cold have her B
In ugtat at five dollars per acre.
Two courtie* west will be found
Hunt Conn's, r : eh f blaeh and
wuxy p airir land. Her peo
pi* are rh h, her lands arc high,
tier crops vqusl to «ny. If you
come to Texas when it is raining
and strike Hunt Couojy, you will
•tick. Ae that portion of Texas
from tbeie to Fort Worth is fi led
with Georgians I will leave the deg
cripti' O to them.
LAFAYETTE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JULY *2, 1883.
Next week I will tell you of Co
msnehee And a recent trip to the
south-west
We need one more rain. New
is the first time we have suffered
since crop* were planted.
W C. Strickland
fuoe 25th, 1883.
Atlanta Letter.
2, 1883.
The Legislators are coming in.
Their summer work begin* day
after to-morrow end continue*—
nobody knows how long. Tne
close old capitul look* more re
pulsive than ever in thi* sultry
summer cene ami the people of At*
lauts are praying that it may
thri ugh its tortures move the
statusnun te start a bu lding fit to
he ttflled the Capitol of G -orgia.
The lobbyist has come to baa
twrin brother of the fol
lowing lim with a devotion that
would have shamed Ruth, wher
ever his wayward steps may fall.
One ol the question* on which the
lobby is going to work this sum
mer is the redistrict'ng of the State.
I suppose there are, at the lowest
calculator now in Georgia one
hundred men who are aiming at
the ten seats allowed the S ate in
Cjngriss. Many of them have
carved out districts to suit them
selves Bird will try to get them
mnnufac'ured according to pattern.
Inside the Legislature also are as
pirants who arc looking out so
number tine ftnd will be gad to
pave tlieir way to Washington if
possible.
The liquor lobby is another big
ar.d well paid institution. There
is no denying' the progress that
prohibition has made in Gerrgin.
Fortv-twr counties now prohib
it the sale of liquor, and the exper
iment in evtry one has been pro
ductive of good l- suits that have
comm emit d it to others. Hie
whisky men showed their alarm
last summer by holding a big con
vention in Atlanta and organizing
to fight a movement which they
ridicule I a j car or two ago as too
! itu igu'fici.nt to be noticed. They
empioytd an attorney at a
high salary to watch the atrtrfstf ol
l gislation and to protect in pier,
way possible their precious traffic.
It is said that there has not be< n
an election in the last year where
the liquor question came in direct
ly or incidentally hut what this
whisky ring poured oert money
like water to carry the day. This
alarm is a healthy sign and shows
that the peop'e are fixing their
co'-demnatioc on the miserable
business that is demoralizing labor,
corrupting politics and degrading
society.
It i» rumored that the per.etin
tiar/ system will lie handled at
Iheaoming session. There nev-r
was a system that needed ventila
tion more. There are datk, hid
den mysteries in the working of
th« system that the light of day
would make hideou*. A little
searching investigation into this
matter might upset'he p'ars o! a
few gentlemen whose p '.czeta are
being lined by this patent method
ol punishing crime. licanntt be
called a penitentiary for the idea
conveyed in the word i* that of re
formation. He would be indeed a
degraded criminal who could lie
improved by Shy of the i flueoces
of our chain awd ball system. It
generally turns out on so-iiety a
worse m<o than it took away for
correction, one readier for crim-,
and the| only pei6on hem-fitted
at all is toe sleek lessee wl o
p ckett the wages of sin.
We hear* ornplaiots sometime* that
the Georgia iierritentiafy has been
slandered. He who sUndcrs it must
do so t*jcau»e he is ignoraat of its
working hir'l coinot conzeive of a
more disgusting story than the re
cital of ac'Oal occurrences that
happen almost eve:y day in the
convict camps of this Christian
commonwealth. Bpy.
A little girl in a Harts r Monday
School sidled up to her teaeder,!
and s.id, ‘ Mother wauled ate to
find out, in a round-about way.
whether you are a Mrs. or Mias ”
I OE WORK neatly rxecntrd -
■ this office Blanks for Jus ire’t
* always on hand. Give us a trial.
fcsnrtirtf, Chins,
Editor MegeeiUj-er:
YVe are having soma weather
to-night that is just a little Ahead
of anything 1 ever saw. It hss
been c'mtdy, rainy, and chilly, and
disagree rble generally, now for
about two weeks. Just now wbils
sitting in my study, I noticed the
window panes were getting cloudy,
and that water whs gslhering on
them just ss it doe* on the outside
of a pitcher of cold water in the
summer time. On going out I dis
covered it wits because the outside
w»s so much warmer than that in
side. It whs liltc coming out of a
cave on a hot day. It began ahout
sunset, but now alter three lours,
it is still ahout two degree* hotter
out doors, than it is in the house.
We have kept the doors shut to
keep the hot air out It is pour
ing down rain but thsre is not a
breath of air -tirrinv. The Chinese
have what they call the iron? mai
tun every year—a season when ev
erything moulds. I expect that
season is upon as n»w though tlier
say it does not gei eral'y come till
June. If this ia only a baby affair
and we are to hSve the regular one
in June, I do nut know what is to
become ot us. 1 heard a mat! say
yesterday that he thought his nose
was mouldy, and when he smelt
his enp of coffee and declared it
mouldy, though the coffee had on
ly been parched the day before, 1
was not disposed to dissent (torn
his opinion.
I suppose the farmers in yottr
section are all done planting corn
by this time.
I have been elected gardener at
our house, but I have not f-njed
my garden in yet. However I live
in hope of getting it ready by next
spring, and I want the trsttrt who
ha* the best corn for roaa'n ears, in
Wake- County, to send me a pint
of it for seed. I d-> not want the
corn until next year, hut I wai t
you to start it a* soon as you see
ttiis, in order tor it to get bere in
time.
Iha wet w at 1 er has d/as aged the
wneat crop here considerably. A
wet May being about as iujtlri -us
to wheat in Asia a* in America It
ha* uNo had a had effect ou the
bean crop.- These bean* like the
li**utln n Chinese are peculi.r. Our
beau is one of our most s -usitive
garden plant*, being killed by the
least frost, hut the«e Chine** bean*
are planted in the' htrH' and early
winter, sonn-limes along with
wheat, and seem to stand the rig
ore of winter fully as we las the
wheat itself. The stalk* are from
knee to waii-t high, very bushy
with large leave. The htana are
very htfge’and have coarse rough
husk*. Some of them are eaten,
but the most of them are pressed
to make cil for cooking purposes.
The residue is u*ed to make cake*
and fri’ters, also milled 1 with a little
phuler of pari* to harden it, it is
used to in/dlfe a sort of bean • urd
that is relished very highly bv the
natives, and I igt but not least,
mixed with a Irtfier mlk and lots
of water, it is used to make ‘‘pure
milk to sell to the foreigners.
The three great spring crops of
the Chinese seem to be wheat,
t e ms. and a kind of itfutfarJ or
kale which ie planted in the fall
and allowed to run to seed in the
et r ng. Theee seed* are also used
f>r making an oil for cooking | ur
poses as well a* fur adulterating
k-rot'ene and such like matters.
These three cf p* are AH gatlierwf
in May and June, and theu the
laud is ready for rice and cotton.
Further observation bat satisfied
me that I pictured the Cldoese
farmer in a letter sometime ago an
having Irr to t easy a time of it. It I
is true for it little while in winter;
he has noth’ll/to (to— exo ptfreei-, I
and why he doe* not do iliat I Car
not. te'l for h. lias no fire. He -. is
out of the mis r ot making fifes
but he b ceatMnlv made ho happi' i
er bv it. A* Hot the rest of the time
the esse rtsnd* about as follow* : :
The crop-, -uoceed each other r*, -*'
idly, generally two »■ V».-ir«
Tne laud hoe to he broken oo
*nd manured after each it-. 0, even
the wheat has to eulti vsted, and
generally t! e rtock of farming tM
plctneuis. '-r.neista of a strong iron
rake, wiifa ihcut four teeth pretty
wid>ly s-purated at the top. but
B .turned nut it the bottom so as
n--arly to touch each other, a ham*
ho >. pole and (wo big buckets.
Those last are for carrying manure
and everything else about the
place, thus taking the place of a
farm wagon, while the rake does
service as plow, harrow sod hoe
oomblned. A few of them howev
er have woodin plows with buffa
los to pull them, and they all car
ry their produce to market in boats,
get'ing it there much easier than
they could in wagons.
W, H. Pabk.
Mrty 10th, 18.33.
MonUn Npilar*. L ferula.
Editor MewKiiyer:
I’ve been thinking so - so nc
time that I would wr.te you a lew
items from this part of the world
hut bays put it off from time to
time until the present propitinu
tnoim-nt; while the household is
wrapped in slumber.no round io
disturb the tnuso, but the ticking
of the little round clock on the,
mantle and the lively chirrup of
the crickets. But for all this yon
must not expect to hear much that
is interesting for I Know of but lit
tle to talk about except my own
affairs.
The health of this country is
good, crops a!s). The people arc
in good spirits working cheerfully
and industriouily, feeling confident
of a bountiful harvest, atd a rich
reward for their labors.
We are not making any crop this
year indiyiduslly, the land being
rented out. My four litMe boys,
and myself (the eldest ten the
youngest five) hoed 1} acres of cot
ton the other day, for a man who
is nearly blind with scrofuinu
sore eye*. Hi* cotton was needing
work badly and lie was effi-ring
75 cts per scie to g-t it chopped
out, but ci u d get no hi Ip for love
nr p »y. By dinner tmiu we weie
b ngry, 'irod and thirsty, and w*r
in an adrairahii c< ndi'iun to do
ample justice to Mrs. 13 It ’s ixnel
lent dim t-r spread for ilk with a
lavish ba id. But that aftt-rimon
nst word fail to ekt'Dai hew
much we enjoyed- th*t! Our
mind* were no* disturbed' by vain
repining Inr wealth’ oi* fitthe, (•!
what the World thought of us, for ,
we fblt that wo Were enjhy iiig the
great or t b iou that Heaven could
give, f wonder if- persons who
neycr worked ru»l : hard ever rested,■
or even know the meaning of the
Woid 1 , if'nut, then try it and you
will fully appreciate'it. YVe went
hawk a« 2 o'cLck and hoed tilt an
hour by sun, t>! en drugged our werri
ed Hiiibe H mile* home:
YVu have a little town in otlt '
community. Tae houses are in
sight of • ach other tor a' mile on
ttie Rome ami Ringgold road. YVe
have a dry goods store. dTUg store,
i-tea Hi corn mill and cotton
and ahout fifteen families li've on
the mile tqti re, Whft I think our
town should have a nam*. ff -rtre
cull it Belllown, 1 suppo e because
Be 1 makes the most nniee of any
one else in town.
YVe have hu*. little fruit tbi.
year, not near so much a* last.
Mi; s Bellie Tate has just com
pleted a quilt containing 4*70
piecee. YY'hi- h show* sweet tem
per, putieuc.; and in U«try. Qu li
i-a whi-;b should rec'mmend her
highly to young men #u search of
wivie.
Our genial young friend Alex H
Fii* has left us for western Ark.
He is deli,'! ted with the country.
O bow we miss In* lively Cheering
preeen&<.
t i ought ave-y poor cow the
first of M»rch (five years old) lor
fifteen do’lars, money that I lintl
made by dimes »nd half dim** !
(like eating soup with a fork) t :
tor el ter oil a smnli patch if
. r.i< *rd .raqftitl t*-l her thnel
ilaacs d day on as moeb meal a* j
she WoOld eolt up clean, curried '
a'-d rutite-l her ones a day. On
tm. 24th of May *he hrmigh' os'
Hwia'l us I «vct saw, and is I
«,w Kiting four gall- ni* <f " >lk '
ior ibv and s fat ennayh far be f. 1
it jvnt’c-ii.t » ! ef’tt" fifl v d liters to I
g-C hl-r ‘
£ 1 • • c the >tk«vKN'.i:!'. "'U rt*usn '
end I ! p y •'! mil- ad'oi -n -
one i f >he iiutOß who Cco. .'I '!'"’
to its colUIOi *.
Aunt HtLiiAti. ■
510. 49.
A Brave Girl.
In the ye»r 1781, while Olinto*.
and YY'ashingt <n Wi-fe wat- birg
e»i h othir’s mnveinunis near N> w
York, Gencriil Schuyler, huvn /
res-gi ul Ira Cimiinissjoii, oil sc
onu it of siioie at just charges
against hi—, was staying at his
house, wnich then stood ilon* out
side tire stockade or wall of Albany.
Tne British commands-, therefore,
sreitiK his opportun tv, S'-nt out
John Walter Meyer, with a paity of
Tori.s and Indians, to capture
General Schuyler.
YVhen the? arrived nt the out
skirts of the city, they lea nod Iruni
a Dutch Inharer list toe Ui ti-r il’s
b -us* was guarded bv six snl liers.
The D.itfliftYah,the minute the
lu n I was nut of ri ht, took to his
eg's, aud w iin-d tire Gem ml of
their approßch.
Soon after, a sirvant announced
that tli* re was a stinnga man a* tire
hack door Had wtslied to lee the
General.
Scliiivler, tti'dervlsnding the
trip, gathrred his family in one of
the upper rooms, r-ml giving order
tbat the doors and windows slreuld
be barred, fired a pistol from one
of the top #(ory windoWrf to alarm
the neighhorhoad.
The guatds who had been loung
ing in the shade of a tree started
to their feet at the sound of the
pistol; but alas, too late I for they
found themselves .urrouiidnd by n
crowd of dusky figure*, who bound
them hand and f. iit heft-re they
had time to resiht. And now you
c*u imagine the li’tle gmiipcollec
ted in that dark room ti| stairs ; the
s'tirdy Genersl.s'andire revolt tcly
by the rirtut,. with his gun in his
hand, and his black slaves gstlier
*d ari-und him, each with si tn*
weapon ; and at the other end of
the roi-tu, the women huddled to
getlitr. sonic wtie) ing, some pray
i «g. Suddenly, a crash is Iremd
which chills the vmy hlnnd, and
i bring* vivid y to each-one’s fit in'
•the titles of Indian nit ssarres so !
'common at' that day. The baud
hail broken in at one of the win
dows.
At that moment. Mrs. PcHuylei
springing to her feet,rti*lnd towar
the door ; fir she remembered tl-n
.the baby, only a few nicntna old
having been forgotten in the burr
of the flight, was asleep in its era
die on the first floor. But the Gen
end catching Ket* in his arm*, told
her that her life was of more value
than the child's, slid that if any
■me must go, he would. Whin,
however, this generous st nlggli
was gt.iug -in, '.heir third daugbrar,
gliding past them, wus suon at the
*ide of the crui’lc
AH was aw block sw night ill tin
hnll, except frr a aui-ill patch of
ight just at die foot of the eta'r*.
Tbiw came from the dining room,
where the 1-ndinnVt cotr'd b - seen
pi'lsging the slrelves, pulling di Wn
h'l chin i, and quern-ling with one
unAthri- over their ill-goiTcn booty.
HnW to get past (his spot was
the question, h it the girl did net
hesitate. She reached the cradle
unci served, anil wisjust darting
lack with her pfecious burden
when, by ill iuok, one 0 he sava
ge- happened to see her. Whiz!
went hi* sharp ton ahawk within *
few inches of the baby’s !5e .<l, and
cleaving an edgv of the brave girl'W
dress, stuck ihcp into the stair-rail.
I Just then one of the Tories, see
ing her flit by, a::d suppos'ng her
to boa at rvsnt, cWll. d after h*f :
’YY'eiich, wench where rs four
master?” She, stopping Ufa mo
tuenr, C' lie I hack, ,f Gone to alarm
the town !” ar.d, hurry-rig on, was
soon safe again with her father up
stairs.
And now, nearly nil the plunditf
having Uen secured, the band wa*
aliout lo prnoe (1 to the rea' objm t
of the ewped.tfon, when the Gener
al, ra sing n»n of the tipper win
dows, c» lied out 0 lu“tr tones, as
if command jug a large body of tnen.-
•‘Conie 00, my brave fellows ! Bur.
round the louse! Secure the »il
iiaus who are plundering f” The
cow ard* knew that v re*, and liny
en eh and ev*ry one of them took lo
*.> - woods a* fat a* ih>re legs
vtGulit Cany t:,e,n, lenv n; D eGen
eral iu | o*.e>.ion jt 'l>« fie .
The old Scbujhr house 1- ok
! iv'w n* i I fiked then, ftkcept (lm(
the S-ack wing flit- th« nliiv(«, half
been f, rn dmVo, mirl a-urfc lew sf-’
t rations have I e-n tfitde nroimrl
ti e place; but wheA'ynu are snWwrf
the ho>is». yon ftrtti stlfl see (ir«
: nAnt ih the eta t rail made ttj thef
FiiilihuV hate'C mnrOthan h h'«nt--
(frod yesra hgo.—'O; tS. Tfaonp irt
SSt iitftfi i».
of fhaii*hf.
IdloUeae ii thn dOO2 t<V all vi< t\:
j S ,cr«< in « Fruit alow to ripen.
Egotism ia the tongue o{ vanitr •
Many Ai’e «‘at,«tfr.ed only bAcaa*®"
1 they are not known.
| Conscience warns us as « friend
In-tore it publishes ua aa a judge.
Hints *re like illistlo-dnWiv You'
cannot te I where they will light.
Tl use who set up a staudaf I
must expect to be judged by tin*! 1
standard.
U>«e not ts y own lor want of ask.
i"g for it ; it win 1 get? thee no'
thanks.
Tht tight is slow-paced—imat*’’-
na'iou ollen reichis the goal ahead*
of it.
A torn jacket is soon 1 mended,-
but hard nordti bruise the heart of
a Ch Id.
You iimv depend upon it, he ia 1
a go id man whore intimate fifontfr
are all good.
The ligfo of friendship’ id the
light of phosphorus—seen plai Drift*
when all aftitfnd is dark.
We seldom find |rt!Ople ungrate
ful to long as wA are in a Condition'
to render then! service.
Envy is a ptfAion so foil of*
cowardice and shame, that nobody
ever had the confidence to own it.
For Twenty-Ore Years,
Eren before the war Hon. Ken
neth liayner, Solicitor of the'
Treasury, wr te: ,- f faiye fouiVtf if
to be a most capital remedy in
trowel iilleoiions. It has acquired 1
• ltd extensive popularity, so much
so as to have bcconvr a regul -t
ftinily medicine.” For tC quart* r"
of a century wi ll the mort astound*
i g r-suits, Dr. Worthington /
Cholt rn and Diarrhoea, Dysont r< ,
Choi rn, Cramps, and Pains ofihw
Stomach and iiotvrls, Dyspepsia/
S.eit Ktnnvatth, In UgeS
oi-r Complsint, Colic, etc. l/r.
I,' vi S Yat'ic, of Ninth Carolina,
dsn endorses it. Sold for 25' ants
"i 0c- nta a titd I*, by di u/giil« anH‘
icait-m *
An ex'.itiiig tragetly ohcurrel rd*
• I tiy «l li i'm town Pa.-
James Nutt, a fifte-u y/arotrf
•oy, shot and killed N Iw DukAe/
nee engnged to Nutt’s aimer',, iitirf
who murdered the father of Ills fw-'
frothed last Dwoenib* r lihtSaUas'O#
some trouble which' grew out of
the wri ing "f improper i«ti* ih*", by
Dnlet-g to Cnpl. Nutt, it rcft-rel CO’
oliia daughter.-
Three ha Is enteret’ Dokek hack i’t
ear of toe heart ami wiltiin' fiuW
inches of eudlY otiier. killing 1 •■■V
victim by the time the last sh> l
took effect. The popular sentiluenfr
• is in favor of Ndtf.
A patrol medicine main Wrofe (■/
'.lie editor of a refijjiVttVi paper eO'
i tossing fiVe dollars milt suvinV : '
Enc'ofl d please find live dofhvrs'
for whmli I wairt ycu 1 to sWy thwti
my chill medium* is the beat rtf
the market ” The editor replied;
“f am thankful 1 for your opinion*
• l my paper as air sdrSTtrsing iWas
diuiu, but I Cannot ooPsci’enti'oWriy
say thot your medicine' is the firs',,
.•niiaeq'ieiilly I decline your pft ’ *
: osition.” “That’s an honest nraht.’’
inr-ied the adv. rtiser;'- ‘fbmitf Ww#
would n«v- —hello, he didn’t ft tofif
the five dollars.”
aw
They wi re discussing an etop*-'
inard, and one Iwdv, turb fig ><■ t
friend, said; “lYont you he i Ve if
would kill yoh if yomr hoabind
was to run away with another it i’
1 mant’ "ft nVul t" wa th • reply)
■‘greet joy sometimes ki a.”
“Where do von lire When 't
are at bo ie,
waa the little InyV r and the
aider let the conveisa"i n langni- V
—*
We assert without ft* of WMtfwff*
fion that Hail*ft (Mint Aperient jft
cheaper and more pteawewt thaw any pilld
ever mode for torpidUrer
or sick tiesiioehe, that K sever prodars*
the least unpleasant feeliatand h* adfaw
More |iroiu|k than any pill made, it mm
terriWe eaomyto the pVI family,drivfag
them from eVeff Wresids. it iaaefM%
phm-sut, •• V suly. aw! prompt la trllfi
Wlieitier nr. HtecaaboaU, railroad*, Mfa
«r at home, that ail ladiee erodel glWag
“Toujgl on BW,**
yares & etaeafo* fact* or
dailed by John Om.
Hysteria, a ,>/’ Wv. evmptoaa
Srioua mon'ti*' ’** nt
1 i»«»eofZ.v : *- • - ■<- 4r * #