The bee. (Savannah, Ga.) 1865-18??, April 01, 1865, Image 3

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Sa ll !« DA V Mu KM Mi, J This is the Place ! TO SPEND-YOUR MONEY £ A ik M 'a'A >v'i A! i No. N °' )si^f^lSi FAMILY GROCERIES Special Notice! Y«»ur interest demands that you rail .tin! examine thr Fresh and well select ed St..ck now in Store, ami to w liirh addit i*ms arr daily made to inert the public w ants. M\ assort inrnt con sists ot all arth-L-s usually found in a Family Grocery! Just Received audfor Sale Low FOR QASM ! V 5 bids. liiita Bajga Turnips. 50 package-. Burk w 'lira!, ‘ 500 lbs. P runes A; 1 urranls Maple, Sugar, Butter. Soda and Boston CRACKERS. 50 bushels Ground Peas. A splendid article ot’ \ inegar. The Sour Krout has Arrived, RoB T BALKORE, if) l Broughf<m St. •ITcopplrlith shop \V here you can find a general assortment ol TIN WARE, ' and where any article of Tin or Copper is MADE TO ORDER Thom a Tin tie to a Steam Pipe. All kinds of Hoofing and buttering attended to with dispatch. JOHN J. MAURICE, Bryan Street, Market Square. GARDEN SEEDS A Great \ ariety of CHOICE GARDEN SEEDS. .It'S I REt’EiYED A L TT LDEN’S, 1 "•"> Broughton Street A typo, on kissing a girl “down South, asked how it was ihut she so sweet V "Oh," she replied in utter innocence, “tin father is a sugar planter!" The Dying Phoenix, 1 \<• 1 iS'«nl Inin; enough ! In in> alone I’ve landed (lie tier ;iij ami conversed will, the Si'lieres: "> Wight, starr.v eye.- Dill otkiwimjs- tun e -hew n. Bui met not iheir kindred ihrouyh hundreds of year >. I’ve looked Ini m\ likeness by mm it'- early blush. to tiit,l it alone in the lake or itie stream— At noon, ton. iwas ihere; amt by night s shady fillet,. lilt- lalee water vision stole back in a ill earn. How Tain were lhe ftracee that played in my ere.-l, Aud round my promt ueeii n iIU n- collar 01 -old; lhe rich purine plumule tliat eiolbeil my lone ore-usi 11 nw worthies.', witli mme lilit* wjsi-ll In behold! though pei tool in beauty, U! win* would be one V\ Here earUl all mound a wild solitude lie- 7 i niqUe in creation, l ie moved like me -no. In splendor lo »el ere auotuer can rise. And llien lo liie end ol my eour>e ilo 1 come. Aione nave l bum my neu I uncial pyre; On ivoou m iin luy iru u ee, sweet -pice.' and glim, iiiiunimai.l i mi as mey re turning lo lire! My w ins- tanned Uie pile till luey kindled the liaiue lino wraps lit in urigntnoss uty tonn as i burn, r rmu a sties miu odours lo being i eanie ! io odours and asiic.s eonlcni t o iiiru ! Aiy [lean molls with pity ui Ueatn, X'>r me heir lo an luc nor Hlngiloiu tj nature I v c s-uovv u, W itu no one Us wreain aud us jjiory to snare, 1 lie Joy is m ily llig- lino, s lasieil aione! iue smoKe rise- sweet as uiy ousmn consumes, AuU soiliy li Weaves a mu a siui'ii.* o er my eyes; it winds iiiuurt my lima; li is Wre-liiieo in my pmuie, Aiy Uie mounts trie i touu rolling on ii> me saios. At uie li me ol u great drouth m England, several pioua tanners agreed to bold a spe ciai meeting to pray ior tne much needed raim vv ueu tile appointed tune caule, the minister was. surprised to see one ol ins lit tie Sabbath scholars bring a huge oid family umbrella, and asked her why she did so on such a lovely morning 7 lire child gazed at him with evident surprise at the impary, ami replied, **Vihy, sir, 1 thought as v\e were going to pray trod lor rain, Id be sure to want the umbrella. W hile,they were pray ing, the wind arose and the clear sky be came clouded, which was soon tallowed by a heavy thunder storm, by yviiich those wlto came unprepared to the meeting were com pieielv drenched, while Mary and the minis ter were sheltered by the umbrella her lauh had led her io bring. Matrimony vs. Suigle-iiiessedne.ss. Matrimony is: Hot buckwheat cakes, warm beds, cointori tble slippers, smoking coffee, round arms, red lips, kind words, shirt exuding in buttons, redeemed stock Lugs, boot-jacks, happiness, etc. Hurrah ! Single-blessedness is: Sheet-iron quilts, blue noses, frosty rooms, iee in'the pitcher, uuregeneraled linen, heelless socks, coffee sweetened with icicles, guttapercha biseiuis, tiabby steak, dull ra/.ors, citrus, coughs, colics, rhubarb, misery , etc. I git ■ lot it (loon li ven.'. 1 la-re were lour good habits it wise man earnestly recom mended in his counsels, and w liicii lie con sidercii li) he esseniuihy neei'--;irv for tin management o! leiiilmrai com-crns. and these are -pu.icluahiy. accuracy. steadiness, and despatch. \\ ithout the first ui these, time is wasted : wiilumt the second, mis takes the most hurtful io our own credit and interest and that of others may he commit led: without the third, nothing can he well done: and without the fourth, opportunities of great advantage'are lost, which it is im possible lo recall. What is the difference between ail ui te.mpted homicide and hog killing 7 One is an assault with intent to kill the other is a kill with intent to 3alt TIT id JJ KJG . F. GROSCLAUDE, OEVt.KIt IN w & ’I o s *3, it X} &% k r, SILVErt ARE, STATIONERX, <SeO. Bull 'l., u|i|..i-ii»* Masonic Hail, 'manual), Da. WATCHKn A \:» JfcAWH.ID RKPUULU At Shortest Notice. Perneverauoe. 1 iemoslliem-s. tfial poor stuttering son ot a butler, become the most famous orator of ancient times. Virgil, the son of a baker, was the most celebrated ot Latin poets. »l'lsiip, the sou ot a slave, and almost a slave hinisett, managed to ueipiire imperishalile tame. 1 lioimis W olscy, the son ot a butch er, became Cardiuu! of the Church of Home, and next to lhe King, in lii.s day, the most powerful person in the Kiiglish Dominion. W illiam Shakspeare, also the son of a Initv It er, yet one of the most famous poets the world ha.- ever beheld. Oliver Cromwell rose front a comparatively humble station to be Protector ot the English Commonwealth. Benjamin Franklin was a journeyman prill ter in his early days: In- afterwards becalm one of the most celebrated philosophers aud statesmen. W illiam Build lord, the editor of the Quarterly Review, was in youth an humble shoemaker’s apprentice, ami. for want of paper, was obliged to work his al gebraic problems upon leather with an awl. Robert Burns, plowman, of Ayre.xhire, Scot land, was afterwards the greatest of Scotch pouts, .fames Cook, for a long time a com mon sailor, but afterwards on voyages of discovery, sailed three times round the world Jeremy lay lor was a barber s boy, and afterwards alb D. Thomas I edtord, the great civil engineer, was once a shep nerd •> boy. lniige Jones wa-. first a jour neymai) carpenter, and afterwards the chief architect ot his age. Halley , the astrono mer, was the sou of a pool soup boiler. Haydn, the composer, was the son ot a poor wheelwright, llnury, the chemist, was the son of a weaver. Kmeaton and Rennie, both eminent engineers, were both of them, at one time mcreiy makers of mathematical instruments. And when you have read the fives ot all these, ask yourseit whether per severance hud not us much to do in making these llien great, as any other quality which they possessed. Goiucuie lice. lu a work called the “Lives of the Picsi dents, ia a table ol the periods in whicu they were born and w ent out ofotlice: “John Adams, born 17 do, retired ifsoi. Iho mas Jefferson, born 17 ID. retired James Madison, born 1701, retired 11> 17. James Monroe, born 170.., retired lk'JO. J. Quin ey Adams, born 1787, retired itstib." Now, it will be seen by this, that Jeffer son was born just eight years alter bin pre decessor Adams ; Madison right years after his predecessor Jefferson; Monroe eight years alter MaOison, ami Joan Quiuev .vh aim eight years utter Monroe. Aootini curious laci to be obM-rveit i-. liiui Adams was just sixty six years mu w neu io- reined ; Jefferson was sixty six : Muutson was sixty six; Monroe sixty-six : ami John Qiuucv Aduuis. had he been eh-i-led lo a second term, would Imvr been -sixty six' Adams ■ leflerson, and Monroe, ail ilo-d on the 11 1 ■ of July. i'iie Sabbatii, I his is the loveliest, hrighle.si iluy of th week, to a spiritual mind. I hesc rests r»- fresh the soul in (bid. that finds nothiug but turmoil in the creature. Should not thi be well •nine to the soul, that sets it tree lo mind its own business, which has other day IO attend lu the busim-s-, ot its servants, tin body 7 And tlo-se are a certain pledge to ii ol that expected freedom when it shall t-n ter on an eternal Sabbath, and rest in him forever who is the only rest of the soul. A CAIWI. Win. Vau V tig'll ten Wilson, APo 111 l ie Ali N . SO lon* and Ininihail* known in .ouih-.tioii with the Ih'UK Store of Messrs. A. \ >onovo.ns A t «... will be pleas*‘J t*> see hi- old friends witheaudi date'tor m-w ..in*, at V|***iln-*-ai ie- Ihill. onuei Barnard ami Brou*hloti sireeis, U ,\|, WALSH, I’ro|ii ietor. N. li. V-formerly, l‘h."ieians'l*i eserinUoiis w ill t»e e.o••lull* eoiii|M»uiii|*sf at any limn ot tlie ai*)ii. J a m i ;s oiii ii, M vMTACI i I! I.H u| GEITLIMIIH BOOTS. wh/ta A Kt: s//;/:/■:i\ * *ll*' I >IMI| NI >1 11l .>1 Male. Orders tilled promptly ami Satisfaction guaranteed. REPAIRING NEA IT Y DONE. JDTQI '£!, O’DiLIkSV?, J> [ l " \ J |> I 1 f CAS SAD STEAM FITTER, Broughton Street. < tin- d***'i' \\ i-st >• t |s*«i nai il PRINTING mtM’Til mi 11H ! t iTKKt L rrm i TTi iui *m k » i- 1 f i j- f ii mi mi ki i t im li ii i! 111111 iii )t. if mi Hu t.i n mi mi il ii lkj t I I UH II IT I 1 1 1 I t Ft lAM lJ\r~l »* To TIM y. Hi-wsy JMltiStf i » I »!.{? Si; WIIr It I \LL hIM> -of JRNAM E N T A L IGA I N, FINE AND HANOSOMf r» P R R I I N IM T I N C is Executed at Short Nona* ! OjithiO.N UAt SiKLLI. 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