Newspaper Page Text
Office up Stairs, over the Post-Office.
VOL. 2.
WISISI 3 WSdSTc 1
/• Published every Friday Morning, in the new Town of
Oglethorpe. .Huron County. Ga,,
,ۥ B. YOUNGBLOOD, Editor and Publisher.
T£B!Ks>42 I’w I ‘ear in advance,
RATES OF ADVERTISING.
One Dollar per square (of I*2 lines or less) for the first
nnertion,ami Fifty Cents for each insertion thereafter.
A liberal deduction will be made to those who adver
tise by the year.
Advertisements not specified as to time, will be pub
shed till ordered out and charged accordingly.
S@“ Notice! ZjgjT
PERSONS Winning Brick work done
are hereby informed dial the under.*
signed are prepared to execute all wotk in
thi-ir line as cheap or cheaper than any other
company can do it. For luither particulars
applv to
JAMES LANDF.RS & CO.
Oglethorpe, .4pril 30, 1852. 23m
OGLETHORPE
Candy Manufactory.
AND
CONFECTIONERY.
WARREN JACKSON,
Has the pleasure of announcing to the
public that be lias opened in the CilV ol
O'LET 11 OR PE. on SUMTER St next
door Smith of the Brick Store of il. 11 mms
& Cos., a large and extensive lot of
CONFECTIONERIES,
Such as Candies, Cakes, Syrups, Preset > >s,
Jellies, Jams, Pickles. Almonds, Rais.os,
Cnriants, Brazil and ili/.il Nuts, English
Walnuts, Apples, Oranges, Coma Nil's.
Bananas, [Maintain:-, Dried Fig-, Primes, Ci
gars Tobacco, Cheese, Crackers, Ooirlials,
Wines, for medical purposes, together with
OYSTERS, pickled and fresh, and FISH in
their season, an I all other nrticl. s in the Con.,
fectionei v line.
‘Filey will also MANUF VCTURE, in the
most superior style, and of the best ntateri
inis, all soi ls of
c WHIES CANDY ORNAMENTS,
iV.i .. and will neatly Emboss and Ornament ;
Cakes, for Balls, Ral lies, and Weddings, al
short notice, and on as reasonable terms as
any estalilislime.nl in Georgia.
As they intend doing business strictly on
tlm Cash Piiincipi.r, all mders foi anv ol
the above articles insist be accompanied with
the CASH, m insi re attention.
In connection wiili lln-ir CONFECTION..
ERY they intend keeping a regular and
genteel,
E \TI NO-HOUSE,
and they will be happy at all tithes to serve
up to ilieir fiiemls. and l!ie public generally,
II \M AND EGOS, OYSTERS FISH,
(in their s-ason,) G \ .ME, HO F COFF F. E |
&<-. Bv siiict attention to business, and a
desire to please, they hope to receive, as
they will endeavor to merit, a liberal share
of public patronage,
On. 31,1851. 29-s-ti
TO THE PUBLIC.
rpilE unde rsigued is prepared to execute
A ill the most workmanlike manner, all
work in bis line, such as house building, Gin
Gearing, Screw building, Mill writing &■<-,
on as reasonable terms as any oilier work
man in South West Georgia. All letteis ad
dressed to him in Oglethorpe Ga, will re
ceive prompt attention.
ALEXANDER SMITH
Oglethorpe: May 14, 1852 4—tl
FAMILY GROCERY STORE
THOMPSON Oi PEEL,
©ls&St ie ifci r O XX iFI, m&,
RESPECTFULLY inform their friends
and the public genet ally, that they
keep constantly on hand a full assortment ol
Family Groceries, such as Flour, Bacon,
Lard, Butter, Cheese, Sugar, Coffee, Salt,
Molasses, Syrup, Rice, Mackerel, Corn
Meal, &<-., together with every variety of
Spices, Fruits, Nuts, &c. Also, I oliHC.ro,
Cigars, SouIT, and many other articles too
tedious to mention —all of which they will
sell as low as any other establishment in the
city. Call anJ try litem—store on Cuvier
ptreet.
May 7,1852. 3 ly
S. & D. MILLER,
ATT OHNEYS AT LAW,
OfII.ETHORfE, GEORGIA,
HAVE removed front Lanier, and will
Practice in the Superior Courts of the
Counties of Macon, Sumter, Marion, Dooly,
Houston, Crawford, Bibb and Twiggs, and
in the Supreme Court at the city of M aeon.
STEPHEN F. MILLER, DANIEL W. MILLER.
January 16, 1852. 39-if.
~ BACON, CORN & MEAITT
A Large and superior lm Tettnes
see Bacon, Cora and Meal in
Store, and for sale bv
McDonald & willis.
Oglethorpe, June 15, 185?. 9tf
®j£:. OattyAtat (Steorgiatt.
Dry Goods & Grocery Store.
(On the. corner of Sumter Sf Ctij/er Sts.)
BIODIiES, would res
• • 1 1 pecifully inform his
lonner patruns and the public generally, ‘hat
he now occupies the Store House iunnerly
occupied by Dawson, on the corner of Sump
ter and Cuviers ne. is, where he will keep
a large and well selected stock of
Fancy and Staple Dry-Goods,
Haidware, Crockery, Sadlery, Boots, Shoes
&c. He will also keep constantly on hand a
large lot of
CROCERIES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
The public are respectfully requested to call
and examine for themselves.
Oglethorpe, June 4, 1852. 7—ts
GEORGIA (George W. Taunton
Macon Countv. ) of the 741st District G.
M. of said Slate, loles before me, Hatvey
Rodgers a justice of the peace in said Dis
trict, one eslray bay Horse Male seven or
eight years old with some black marks a
round his legs, five feet high; appraised by
William McDowell and Harvey Taunton at
one hundred and twenty dollais. This No
vember 21st 1851.
HARVEY RODGERS. J. P.
A true extract from the estray book—this
17th February 1852.
W. J.COLLINS, C.T. C.
Fib. 27th, 1852.
M Vnloable Property For Sale. ®
THE LMidersigned subscriber desires to sell
on iircnmodatilig terms. Lots of Land, No.
32 33 fi t 65 66 98 99 126 127 128 129 130
132 158 and 159 in the tent It district, also
No. 2 3 4 23 28 29 30 32 82 97 in the fom
feemh di-iiici; No. 27 28 29 30 31 32 33
34 35 36 in the fifteenth district I Doolv
Count v. Some of the above lands ‘nave val
uable improvements on them and can lie pur
chased either in single or collective lots to
soil the purchaser.
Also one Mart of valuable Tobacco land
containing 720 acres ill the rnont.V of Gads
den Florida, 8 miles N. FV. of Quin,-v on
Little River. Persons wishing anv informa
tion respecting the lands in Doolv county
will please call and see tl e Proprietor of the
j Pavilion House in the Ciiv of Oglethorpe or
at Cedar H ill, nr Slade’s Mills, in the coon
tv of Doolv. Anv person wishing inhuma
tion respecting the tract of land in Florida
will please rail and see Mr. Daniel M. Hin
son Gadsden Cos.. Florida or the propiietor
of the Pavilion [loose in this place.
WM. SLADE.
Oglethorpe April 20i!i 1852. I—ly.
To Waggoners and Stockdrivers.
PH|AHE undersigned would take this ninth-
Jl od of informing Stock Drovers and
Waggoners, that he lias fitted tip an exten
sive gSirOISIR VX\ 0/ ar.d W AGGON
YARD, at the fork of the road leading from
Oglethorpe to Traveler’s Rest and Americas,
within the corporate limits of the city of
Oglethorpe, where he is prepared to accom
modate all those who patronize him, on lib
eral terms.
W. B. JONES.
April 30, 1852. 2 3m
BLACKSMTTtTING.
Peter C rog It ala,
(Late (j XI aeon tin.)
T VKI'.S tins meilmtl of iiforming his friends nnd the J
A public generally that he is carryi hr on the Rlaok
smithing business in all its branches in the City of Ogle
thorpe, where he hopes b'* strict attention to business
to receive and merit a liberal share i*< v at' , nnae. Par
ticular attention will be. given to making or repairing
P\ antfUimi tools. All work done by him will be war
ranted.
*'hop nxtdoor to Messrs. 11 mini mitt & Little's
Carriage .Shop mi Chatham .Street.
Oglethorpe, April 23d, 1552. 1— 3ni.
PAVIL i onTioijs e .
OGLETHORPE GA.
Op.'Sitk thf. Depot
By Wm. Slade.
fW H E Proprietor will be pleased at all
times to have a liberal share ol patioti
age and will Irv al all times to make his pat
rons as rnmfm table as lie can possibly do by
the close at'enlion of himself and servants to
tltuir welfare during their Slav with him.
WM. SLADE:
Oglethpfpe Ga.’ ylpril 23 1852: l—ly.
Sash, Blinds, Pannel
Boors <§*c. made to order,
BY WM. ROBINSON &. SON.
Shop oo William Street, West Oglethorpe.
Feb. 20,1852. 44..at2D.
Georgia-—Macon County.
TWO Months after date application will
be made to tlm ordinary of said County
the leave to sell Lot of land Number 113 in
the Third distiict secon I section of originally
Muscogee now Marion county, also Lot on
land number 275 in the seventh district Third
section Cherokee. Belonging to the estate
of Addison C. Scott, late of Macon County
eceased. E. W. ALLEN Ex’r,
Oglethorpe Arpil 23<i 1852. I—2m
OGLETHORPE, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 1852.
An Ecccmric Scotchman.
The following amusing anecdote we
copy from Harper’s New Monthly Ma
gazine :
Some fifty years ago, in the good city
of Edinburgh, nianv of the convenient-., s.
and even necessaries of household com
fort were arranged inn very primitive
manner. It was about this lime, or a lit
lie before it, that a gentleman, whom I
afterward knew very well, Mi J
F , wooed and won a very beauliuil
giil of the best society in the city. Ris
doing so was, indeed, a marvel to all;
‘hough young, witty, ami well-looking,
he was perhaps the most absent man up
on the lace of the earth ; and the wonder
was that lie cntild e\eu recollect himself
Miffn bully to make love to one women
for two days consecutively. However,
*uit was; and a vast manlier of mistakes
nnd blunders having been got over, the
wedding day was appointed and came.—
The ceremony was to he performed in
the house of the bride’s father; and a
large and fashionable company was as
sembled at the hour appointed. The
bridegroom was known to have been in
the bouse some ; hut he did not appear ;
and ministers, parents, bride, bridesmaids,
and bridesmen, all full dressed, the ladies
in court lappets, and the gentlemen with
chapeau bras under tlnir arms, began to
look very grave.
Tbe bride’s .brother, however, knew
bis fiieud’.s infirmity, and was also aware
that lie had an exceedingly bad habit of
reading classical authors air. place the
least fitted lor such purposes. He stole
out of die room, then, hurried to the place
where he expected bis future brotbertin*
law might be found ; anil a minute after
in spite of floors and stair-cases his voice
was heard ex. laiiiiiiiir, ‘ Jimmy, Jimmy :
you forget you are going lobe married,
man. Every one is waiting lor y ou.’
‘ I will come directly—l will c>>me di
rectly,’ cried another voice—• I tpiite
forget—go and keep them amused. ’
The young gentleman returned, with
a smile upon Ids face ; bill announced
that the bridegroom would lie there in an
instant : and the whole parly arranged
themselves in a formidable seini-circb-
This was just complete, w hen the door
opened, and the hi idegrooin appeared.—
All eyes fixed upon him—all eyes turned
toward his left arm, where his chapeau
bras should have been; and a universal
titter burst from all lips. Poor F
stood confounded, perceived the direc
tion of their looks, and turned his ow n
eyes to his lelt arm also. Close beneath
it, appeared, instead of a neat black cha
peau bras, a thin, (lat, round piece of oak,
with a small black knob rising from the
centre of one side. In horror, eonscinos
ness, and confusioh, lie suddenly lifted
his arm. Down dropped the obnoxious
implement, lighted on its edge, rolled
forward into the midst of the circle,
whirled round and round, as if paying its
complements to every body, and settled
itself with a flounder at the bride’s feel.—
A roar, which might have shook St. An
drews, burst front the crowd.
The bride married him notwithstand
ing, and practiced through life the same
forbearance—the first ol matrimonial vir
tues--which she showed on the present
occasion.
Poor F , notwithstanding the so
beiiug effects of matrimony, continued al
ways the most absent man in the world ;
and one instance occurred, some fifteen
nr sixteen years after bis marriage, which
Ins wife used to tell with great gbe
Sl-e was a very noble woman, and good
housekeeper. Originally a Presby t<-ri
an, she bad conformed to the views of
Iter husband, and regularly frequented
the Episcopal Church. One Sunday
just before the carriage came to tbe door
to take Iter husband to the morning ser
vice, she went down to the kitchen, as
wag Iter custom, in mercantile parlance,
to take stock, and give her orders. She
happened to he somewhat longer thou
usual; the carriage was announced, and
poor F , probably know ing that iI lie
gave himself a moment to pause, lie
should foget himself, and his wife, and
the church, and all other holy and yens’
erable tilings, went down afier her, with
the usual, ‘ My dear the carriage is w ail
ing ; we shall he very late.’
Mrs. F went through her orders
with customary precisions, took up her
prayer-book, entered the carriage with
Itusband, and rolled away toward the
church,
OUR COUNTRY'S GOOD IS OURS.
* My dear, what an extraordinary \
smell ol bacon there is in the carriage,’
said Mr. F
‘ I do not smell it, my dear,’ said Mrs
F
‘ I do,’ said Mr. F , expand
ing his nostrils emphatically.
* 1 think I smell it too, now,’ said Mrs.
F , taking a snifl".
* YVell, / hope those untidy servants of
ours do not smoke bacon in the carriage,’
said Mr. F
‘ Oil. dear, no,’ replied ids wife, with
a hearty laugh. ‘No fear of that, my
dear.’
Shortly after, the carriage stopped at
the church door ; and Mr. nnd Mrs. F
mount the stairs to) their pew,
which was in the gallery, and conspicu
ous to the whole congregation. The la
dy seated herself, and laid her prayer
book on tbe velvet cnHiion before Iter.—
Mr. F put his hand into his pock
et, in search of his own prayer book, and
pulled out a long parallelogram, which
was not a prayer-book, but which he laid
on the cushion like-wise.
‘ I don’t wonder there was a smell ol
baron in the carriage; my dear,’ whis
pered Mrs. F ; and, to Itis hor
ror, he perceived lying before him, in
the eyes o’ a thousand persons, a verv
fine piece ofred and while Streaky bacon
i which lie had taken up in the kitchen,
( thinking it Was his prayer-book.
! On only one subject could Ivir. Fj
S concentrate his thoughts, nnd
■ that was the law, in the profession ol
| which lie obtained considerable success,
t although, occasionally nil awful blunder
j was rnuiinitted ; but, strange to say, nev
j er in tbe strictly legal part ol his doings.
IMe would forget his own name, and
| write that of some friend of whom he was
: thinking instead. He would roulmind
j plaint'll with defendant, and wiine-ses
j with counsel ; hut lie never made a mis-
I take in an abstract legal argument.—
I There, w here no collateral and, as lie
imagined, iuiiiiiiU-ri.il cireiimslanres were
concerned ticli as, who was the man to
be hanged, and who was not—'lie rea
soning was clear, and connected ; and
for all litde infirmities of mind, judges
and jurors, who generally knew him well
made due allow-aru e.
Other people had to make allowance
also; and especially when, between
terms, lie would go out to pay a morning
visit to ti friend, Mrs. never count
led, witlt any certainty, upon bis return
for a month. He would go into the
j house w here his call n as to lie made, talk,
I for a few minutes, take up a bonk, and
| read till dinner lime—time—anti lucky
|if be did not fancy himself in his own
j house, and take the head of the table.—
! Toward night he might find out his de
lusion, ant] the next morning proceed up
on his way borrowing a clean shirt, anil
leving his dirty one behind him. Thus
it happened, that at the end of a twelve
month, his wardrobe comptised a vast
collection of shirts, o f various sorts anil
patterns, with his own name on very lew
of them.
‘Dip stories of poor Jimmy F’s
ecentficities in Edinburgh were iimumer
: able. On one occasion, seeing a lady,
lon his return home coming away from
j hi- own dtiot-, lie handed Iter politely into
Iter carriage, expressing his regret t lt.• t
she hail not found Mrs. F at
home.
* 1 am not suprised, my dear,’ said the
Indy, who vvns in reality Itis own wife,
1 that you forget me, when you so often
! forget j ourself.’
* God bless me,’ cried Jimmy, with the
most innocent air in the world. 4 I was
quite sure I had sent yon somewhere lie
lore ; hut could not tell where it was.’
The Fishery Difficulty.
lon, the Washington correspon
dent of the Baltimore Sun, writes us lol
lows to that paper :
* The dispatches received from tlie
seat of war on the fishing hanks, slmw
that the time for negotiation is passed,
anil that of action has come. It was ev
idently not the intention of the British
government to allow any negotiation af
ter having issued the order of the 26th
May. That order was not rommiwiica
led to this government, nor to Mr. Law
rente, and Mr. Webster received it Iroin
an American source, in tine of the liiit
is.li provinces, to the governor ol which il
! was sent. Mi, Webster made il public,
! not only as a warning, to which the A
merit-aits interes'ed were entitled, but t*>
J sbow that he did not ndmit that I lie con-
struction now assumed bv tbe Brili-li
government, of the treaty of ISIS, was
in accordance with tb intentions of tin
contracting parties. The enforcement
id ibis construction, bv a powerful diet,
|n!l"vvetl e ” quickly upon the publication
by Mr, Welister, that there could have
been no time lor any remonstrance nego
tiation.
4 It is now too late to talk of negotia
tion. Nme will he tolerated until alter
Great B'itain shall withdraw her naval
forces and the naval orders under which
they act, and restore the vessels which
she may have captured, while pursuing
their employments in or beyond the limits
ol three marine miles from the shores of
any bays or indents on the coast, Set".
* As the matter stands, the act of the
British government is an act of war.—
The capture of our vessels, under such
circumstance?, is war; it is a war upon
ns whether we have the spirit to resent it
and the means to resist it, or not. The
war is likely to he all on one side ; for
this government has not a vessel nor a
mart that is available, for the purpose of
offering protection to the American ves
sels on tbe fishing grounds.
4 /t has been taken for granted by
some that Mr. Crumpton, the Briti-h
Millis'pr, lias been, or is engaged with
Mr. Webster in settling this matter. —
Tilts in “St he a mistake. /i is not pro.
bali'ethat Mr. Crumpton had anv know l
edge of I'm order, and, if he had, it is ev
dent that he vvns not authorized e> en to
coiiimuiiicnie it, murli less to negotiate
in regard to it. Tin re is no danger (lint
any hasty .anil inconsiderate negotiation,
such as was seriously apprehended by
some Senators, will terminate this difficnl
tv.
4 It is a sequel to one series of aggres
sions. and ill- coiinneiiceiii’ iit of another
ol nu>re importance. The next news
will be that, among the American fisher
men and fi-liiog vessels, it will be lounil
convent for Great Britain to revive the
doctrine and practice of impressment.—
Tile Bi iti-lt squadrons can slmw thems
selves on the coast of California, as well
as on the Mosquito coast ; on the Cuban
coast; on the Gulf of St. Livvience and
die Bay of Fundy. Il is time, as Gen.
Cuss has repeatedly warned Congress,
that 4 we should he up and doing.’ ’
X., another correspondent ol the Sun,
('s well as the papers generally at the
North.) di-credits the idea that the difii
Cully will ri suit in a war.
Compliment to the United Slates’
The f dinning compliment to our
country is taken Iron a late English p iper:
4 White the people of must ol the coun
tries in Europe go to logger.-beads when
there is any kill I ol diflerc'ire of opinion
amongst llmni, nml could not for ages,
and cannot now, elect a Bishop or a Bur
gomaster, a Landainann, or a King, a
parish Beadle or a member of P.ulia
men!, without contests and coudii ts, wast
ing money and time, generating distur
bances, and breaking heads or shedding
blond, the Americans, by some simple
and reasonable method—cam us, log roll
ing, convention —manage quie.l v to bring
all their di-pinies to tbe do isiou ol a tin- !
metical test.
4 Upw arils of seventy years, during the
most of which the old civilized states ol
Europe have been convulsed with con
tests, insurrections, revolutions nnd wars
being ruined by police, soldiers, a.id re- j
strit- l ions to prevent mischief when not
engaged in bloody battle—the Ameri
cans have lived in almost perfect peace,
and have continually elected throughout
their slates an immense mass ot uflicids
Irniii a hall potter to the President, with
out mine disturbance than is occasioned j
in Europe bv < hanging the quarters id a j
regiment. The explanation ol the plus ;
nutiii unn seems to lit- in the common hut |
general fact kiiovvltdge gives skill.
4 ’l'lte youngest of nations, tbe Fiiiud ‘
States, profit by the cv pet it nee of their
piedecegsors ; and as they hem fit by ail
the admirable m tchinerv of old I-mope,
for i-ultivaiing the soil and manufactni ing
chilli, besides inventing more new and
admirable machinery of their own titan is
possissed by any other nation except the
English, so they benefit bv using lln* best
iii-m hioery of goyenimi-nt previously
ku ‘W” and in use in Euroj e, wlnle tlu-y
have improv itl it hv still better machin
ery o( tli.tr own. They are simply more
skilled in the ait of governiiH-nt, as tlu-y
tire more skilled in the management til
steamboats and telegraphs than tlio*t ol
the people of Europe.’
| TERMS: $2 iii Advance.
Q - The following extract contains
the remarks of the Hon. Daniel Webster,
on the subject of the “Fisheries,’’ Iroin
his speech deliverd at Marshfield, on Sat
urday last, on the occasion of the recep
tion given him by his Iriends :
Mr. Sprague has made allusion to re
cent occurrences threatening disturbances
on aceouut of tin- fisheries. It would not
Incme me to say mm h on that subject
until /-peak officially, and under direc
tion ol tile head nl the Government. And
tin ii I shall speak. In the meantime, be
assured that that interest will not be neg
lected by ibis administration under any
eiictimstnnces. The fishermen shall be
protected in all their rights of property,
and in all their rights of occupation. To
use a Marblehead phrase, they shall be
protected hook and line, and bob and
sinker. And why should they not ?
They employ a vast number. Many of
our own people are engaged in that vo
cation. There aie, perhaps among you,
some who have been on the Grand Banks
for forty successive y ears, and there hung
on to the ropes in storm and wreck.
The most potent consequences are in
volved in this matter. Our fisheries have
been the very nurseries of our navy. If
nor flag ships have conquered the enemy
on the sea, lire fl-heries are at the hntlnni
of it —t he fi-heries were the Seeds from
which these glut ions tiiumphs were horn
and sprung.
Now, genil'-men I may venture to say
one or two things mine on this highly im
portant subject. In the first place, this
-iidden interruption of the pursuits of our
citizens, which had been can it'd ( >n inure
than thirty years without interruption or
molt station, can hardly lie justified by
■anv principle or Condition whatever. It
i-now more that thirty years that they
have pursued the fishing in the same
water and on the same coast, in which,
and along which notice lias now come
that limy shall be no longer allowed these
privileges. Now this cannot he justified
uiihont notice. A mere indulgence of
too long continuance, even if the priv
ilege were but an indulge nee, cannot be
withdrawn at tl i season of the year,
when our people, according to their
custom, have engaged in the business,
w itliont just and reasonable notice.
I cannot but think the late dispatches
from the Colonial Office had not attracted
to a sufficient degree the attention of the
principle minister of the Crown ; for I see
matter in them quite in< onsistent with
the arrangement made in 1845 by the
Earl of Aberdeen and Edward Everett.
Then the Earl ol Derby, the present first,
minister, was Colonial Secretary. It
could not well have taken place without
his knowledge, and, in (act, without his
concurrence or sanction. I cannot but
think therefore, dial its being overlooked
is an inadvertency.
Tite treaty of 1818 was made with the
crown nl England, and il a (i-hing vessel
is captured by one ol the vessels ot war
and brought in for adjudication, the
crown of England is answerable, apd
then we know who we have to ileal with.
Hut it i; not lobe expected that the United
States will submit their rights to be ad
j jiulicated upon in the petty tribunals of
ihe province, or that they will allow our
vessels to be seized by constables and
other petty officers, and coudemaned by
municipal conns of Canada and New
Foiindhind, New Brunswick, or Nova
Scotia ! No! No !!No! !!” [Great
I cheering.] Farther than ibis, gentle*
men, I do not think it expedient le remark
upon this topic tit present ; but yon may
be as-nred it is a subject upon which no
one sleeps at Washington. 1 regret that
the state of my health caused my absence
; front Wa liingtnn when the news came
lof this sudden change in tlie interruption
|of the treaties. My health requires re
i taxation. 1 shall feel it my duty, as soon
! as my lie tilth and strength will justify nte
j in t.isderiekii’g the journey, to return to
inv’ post, and discharge the duties devol
ving upon me to the best ol my abilities.
Well, Dinah, said a would-be belle, to
a black girl, they say that beauty soon
lades, but do yon see any of mv bloom
lading?—now I want you to say plainly,
without any compliments.
Oh! no, inissu-, blit me kinder link—
Think what, Dinah? you’re bashlul.
Old no me no bashful; but den, me
kinder ticks ns bow, young missus dent
i ictain till oli her culler quite so well as de
( ii lered ladies.
If you want to keep your arms nut of
lings keep slings out of you.
rvo ie.