Savannah evening star. ([Savannah, Ga.]) 1872-18??, February 03, 1873, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Savannah Owning £tar. “ I AM A WOMAN.” I am a w^man—therefore I may not Call to him, cry to him, Fly to him, I’ray him delay not! Ami when he cornea to me, I nuiat ait quiet: Still as a atone i?, Harder and colder. 1 f my heart riot— < rtibh aud defy it 1 Should I grow bolder— Say one dear thing to him, All my life fling to him, Cling to him— What to atone is Enough for my sinning ! This were the cost to me, This were my winning— That lie were loat to me ! Not as a lover at last if he part from me, Tearing my heart from me— Hurt beyond cure Calm and demuro , Then my behavior: Showing no sign to him By look of mine to him, What ho has been to me. Pity me—lean to me— Christ—O my Savior ! —So iu. i era for Jan nary A friend said to a merchant, who was trying to collect some outstanding bills, •Y'ou have a good deal of money coming to you, haven't von ?*’ ‘‘Yes,*’ replied the merchant, “and I can't heln wondering how it i3 that I have to run so often after what is coming to me. M “Hoy/ a • you . to-day asked the benevolent Dr. Ik of one of his Irish pa tientj at day's Hospital. “Faith, Doctor,'’ groaned the poor fellow, “I'm that bad that if any one was to tell me that I was ciane dead, I would not be surprised at nil ” tiki* ... _ • The Delaware Indians live in framed houses, wear cut away coats and stand up collars, fail in business and compromise at fifty cents on the dollar, an,d are quite civilized. The editor of a western paper writes: ♦‘My wife and I have separated. As we both wanted to be boss, and as she was about to beat me, I left her. She'says she will ‘nail’ me yet. I believe her.” The sharpest so far this month is the Tr\v girl who makes her unsuspecting father the daily beaim,of sweet missives to a f Icrk in Ins office, who has been forbidden to visit his employer's bouse. She pins the letter in the old man's cloak, and when lie reaches the office and throws cfl* the garment the clerk gets it and responds by the same carrier. A Terra Haute boy of tender years and heart has drowned seventeen kittens, tied pans to the tails of nine dogs, brushed his father’s hat against the grain, aud blown uy the pet canary with a fire cracker, in the last month, and still hi3 mother intends him for the pulpit. QAI.L AND SEE TIIE. MAGNIFICENT DIS- FLAY OF FANCY AND STAPES CHINA, GLASSWARE, JAPANESE GOODS, ETC., ETC. At BOLSIIAW & SILVA'S, Or O B PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT. 157 Bay Street. Cards, Bill Heads, Circulars, Dodgers, i > . ■'* ■ Posters, Ball Cards, Programmes, &c., Ssc., &c., . 'i Neatly Executed ON TIIE Hiosf Reasonable Terms ORFK, WATKINS & CO. ONLY EXCLUSIVE WHOLESALE DRY GOODS HOUSE 4 IN TIIE CITY. e / / 125 and 127 Congress Street. / JQItY GOODS, HATS, CAPS, STRAW GOODS, NOTIONS, &c. Merchants visiting the city are invited to call and examine our stock. octT-Gm ORFF, WATKINS & CO. Thomas ft. Thens & Cos., DEALERS IN lECIISriE WATCHES Jewelry Silverware, MUSICAL BOXES, FANCY GOODS, do. S.W. COR. BULL & BROUGHTON STS. SAVANNAH, GA. jfciP” Watches and Jewelry Repaired. ect”-Gni WHITE LEAD, ZINC, COLORS, CitS 3 Ac., &c.’, W. M. BIRD & CO. No. 8 WHITAKER STREET, . . * * oct~-Gm SAVANNAH, GA. * G. H.. EEMSIIAItT, ; , — DEALER IN* *• Doors, Sashes, Blind-s MOULDINGS, BALUSTERS, NEWEL POSTS AND HAND RAILINGS, 182 Jr 184 Bajf direct, Ccr. Barnard, A.*V Z<r A T:T, O ,A.„ ocß-Cra