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'? Te thine ewn self be true, and it mutt follow, m$ ihe night ike day, tikom ?mV net tften be Jalee to ame/ mom/* ?' \Y ROBERT YOUNG & CO. WALHALLA, 8, C, FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 18G0 VOL. IT...?N0. 44. fi [vari?t y ._ The Confederate Cotton Loan. 0 e8 of an ^nolis? bondholder. To the Editor of the fond?n Post : Sir : It has becu asserted that these bouds would! Jetas a net-off against the Alabama claims, and this may be their ultimato fate ; but, ana bolder, I am by no means disposed to admit that our olaims, which nro founded?first, on ^the American government having seized the ^otton which was hypothecated for their pay ment; second, on tho government of the United States, or rather tho Congress, having forcibly interfered to compel tho Southern Static to repudiuto their obligations to tho bondholders. On botli or cither of these causes tho United States Government are bound, according to the law of nations, to pay these bonds. I think, therefore, it will bo admitted that although they ihay, for the sake of burying all diff?rence? between the United States and Euglaud iu oblivion, bo set off agttiust tho damages dono by the Alabama, they stand, on international and equitable grounds, on u'far higher footiug. So far, therefore, ns settling all differences arising out of ?the late war arc concerned, I should be glad to see tho matter adjusted ; but I protest agni usti our equitable and legal claims depending in any way on tho settlement of the Alabama cluinis, which, in an international point of view, can only bo paid as an act of graco. Tho holdore of Confederate cotton bonds I epoak of those issued by Messrs. Schroder Co., the only foreign loan the Confederates oontractod, huvo only to exorcise a litt)o\more patience und their claims will bo paid, by the Southern States themselves. Tho dishonest tyranny which compelled them to repudialo* tho debt, which they held moro snored than any other as a point of honor to pay, oannot ! last much longer. Tho South is beginning I to brcuthc again, aud they will obtain plenty of Chiucso labor to replace that of tho negroes; ) and as prosperity advances, and nice capital is required for them tn cultivate their estates, the first thing they will do is to turn their eyos toward England for its supply ; and the first thing that will naturally suggest itself is the payment of this paltry loan. What w uld be three or four millions ster ling divided among tho Southern States?? Besides this, the South will have something to say as woll 08 tho West, when tho great question?tho real question whioh caused tho Iste war, viz., free trade?cornos on for dis cussion. The holders of ootton bonds have only to look thoir bonds up in their boxes aud calmly await events. Tho Com in it too of Cotton Bondholders having placed their case before tho go ver 11 m ont. not only of Mr. Disraeli, but f Mr. Gladstone, and both governments bay ing agreed that it should bo referred to any commission that may bo set on foot, they bave only to exercise a little moro patience. It neither suits tho commercial nor politi eal relations of tho two countries to have the largo olaims t' at oro udmittcd to exist on both i* ios tor damages arising out of the incidents ta tho war to be kept open?nor will they be kept open?respcoially during suoh an agita lion as is about to oommenco in the Unitod BUtea relativo to freo trade. Thank God, this freo-trado tigitaticn will Otnmenco free from the qucstiuu of slavery j It will noe bo again stifled by onlisting sympa thy with tho North, becauso they alleged they Were fighting tho battio of Freedom against Slavory. All Amcrioa, with tho oxoeption of tho New England States, will be in favor of free t rade ; and out of this agitation some thing favorablo may arise for A Cotton Bondholder. July. 19, 1800. Retrospective Glaucos at Arkansas Trage dies. Tho readers of the "Appeal" are woll lu formed as to tho murdor of Capt. MoAllstor, Major' Ilarney, William Tioor, and othors, confederates, who were butchered hist Febru ary by tho piilitia in Cfittendon oonuty.? T?tere is no ono who protonde that those un fortunate men wore.tricd by military cotutor otherwise, and all admit that they wen: takod to tho woods and shot by these floods in hit I i man shape* But tri? btetory of tho murdor of John V. Organ Is cot so wo?l known. Ho aud several others were riding along the Mil' Itary Road, and at Pit'teort If Uo Bayou ran iato a squad of militia, oouiniaoded by Cap? tain A. J. Haynoe. Organ'* horse was shot down and Organ taken prlsonev. The others ruado thoir escapo.' Organ saw ??ayno? and called upon htm to protect him from the vjo lenco of the nefefn militia, Heyne* replied *h*t hft^w'oMS otiontt td his es?re hio}solf. and throwing hin? doKP put his foot upon his neok and shot him twice through the heaji This was done in' the presonoo of some soven ** tud Perfol whit* ?tu, ted Oso ty? well established by tho evidences of many of tho spectators, both white and black. Hayncs was conspioous amongst the ovil doers. Hie word was death to tho un for tu nato prisoners, and those superior iu command listened to him, and tho death sentence was passed at hie behest. Ilo derived this influ ence from the fact that he-lived in Critten den county for three years, and knew who to kill. Th?*other officers who ranked him, ex cept ono, woro strangers. The male inhabi tants of tho county wcro compelled to fiy for their lives. requisition for sixteen prom inent citizens was mudo at Olio timo upon the Governor of Tennessee, nnd a second requi tion for a much larger number was ruado shortly nfter. MoAlistor, Ilarnoy, Ticer, Wallace, nod several others had boon murder ed without charges being preferred and with out trial ; and there being no gamo now in view, and awaiting the result of his requisi tions for more subjects, Ilnyues amused him self a little by raiding, and being inclined to "tura a penny," found many opportunities of filling his pocket. He took a horso that be longed to Clarence Collier and swapped him off for a mulo. Ho peremptorily refused to make reparation. Ho hud large herds of cat tle driven to this place and butchered. These cattle belonged to tho inhabitants of the oounty, yet Hayncs got a vouoher for cnoh and evory one of them. This is well known in Crittendcu county nnd it is also well-known that on tho coming of tho militia Hayncs drove his entire cattle in this market and sold thorn?thcreforo he did not own one hoof of tho cuttle for which ho obtained his fraudu lent vouchers, amounting to tunny thousands of dollars. It would rcquiro pages to enu merate all his doings. The people wcro by him insulted, robbed nnd murdorcd. His bare.word was death, but, unexpectedly, civil law was restored, he was shorn of his power, and these whom ho hud run off nnd then made requisitions for, returned to their homes ?Clureuco Collier amongst them. His homo boing desolated, his parents gone, he stopped ut Marion for a fow weeks, and while there, was" repeatedly warned of threats made by Hnynes that if lie did not depart he would be kilicd ; he persisted in staying at Marion, and paying no attention to these threats. On tho evening of tho. 15th instant ho met Hnrnoa in tho streets of Marion, nnd shot him. Hnynes died nnd Collier made his es cupe. Tho conduct of each party is vnriously stated. Tho courte of the country will devel op the fuels whenever Collier shall bo put upon triui Wo will content ourselves to await the result without passing judgment. Hayncs wus the first ex-Federal soldier ever killed in Crittendcu county by nu ox* Confederate, and Wallace was tho eighth ex Coufedcrato sold?cr killed in Crittetidon oouuty by ex-Federal soldiers who have stop ped in said county since the wnr; yot Radi cal papers marvel at the killing of Huyncs, but say nothing of the murder of MoAlistor nnd others.?Memphis } > July 25. Out of the Frying Pan. It is a very common thing for poor geoplo in this country to bo very unensy fco got to tho oifcy. There thoy fancy all their troubles will bo ovor. Work will bo plenty, and if one thing fails, they can turn thoir hands to something else. Then, too, thorcjis some-' thing rather grand in the idea of living in tuV oity, which dazsles tho imagination. Any ono who has this oity fover should first spend a month there by himself, before he de cides to remove wifo and children If the season of tho yoor is July or August, tho ex periment will bo 8,;11 moro sa tin factory. Ho oan thuehtivo a good ohanco of solving tho question: "How do you liko it" without involving himself too deeply to make an es cape possible. A glauco at tho homes which tho poor oc cupy in ho oity, compared with tho samo i tho co mtry, should bo enough to satisfy any thinking person with regard to the desirable-' noes of tho two situations. On a little knoll just outside of our village, lives a poor Dutch shocmakor, with a most thriftless wifo and half a dozen ohildron. Tho man is sober and industrious, and tho wife good-humored, but hopelessly careless in hor housekeeping. The house thoy occupy is too old and out of repair for a bettor otase of tenants, but some owner, tw??otyor moro years ago, planted pear and apple troO? a.'.1 about it, and now tho old shell is, porfcotly on^oworcd in green all through tho summer. Two ?wmi old maplea shade tho walk just before it, arie? hore, on summer ovonlngs, tho family nil sit Off. the soft grflon $tm, tho picture of country cano and oontont. Tho children luxuriate on poors and appio? in fcholr season; and many baskets might be aof * j market which arc waetorl or thrown to'the pigs. Thorc I* ft fine strip of garden laud, which, oven, with tho slight atten tion it gote, aft?trd? them many a useful vago larle. ' i ti /.? }^.? " O .'?' titkos ?*> . Jtar, I haw ?ftuu tfctmfbfc, as I pswwd thoir house, v/hat thoir conditi m would bo in tho oity. Two or thrco oloso, suffocating rooms, in ?omo dismal basement of dreary garret, would bo tho best they could afford No strip of greenward for tho children's play ground ; uo cooling shado or refreshing sum> mer fruita; eoarcoly any chanco of thoir growiug up other than idlo and vicious, with tho street oulture they would bo sure to re ceive. Oh, a gb'nipso at the reeking dens whoro poor peoplo live in tho cities, is enough to mako o.no shudder 1 The hollowoycd women that look from tho broken window*, the sick ly, tattered children that quarrel together in tho gutters, form a night that should cause a poor man to hesitate aud think twice before ho runs tho risk of bringing such misery on his own household. Iu sickness or trouble, too, country neighbors aro glad to help each other, but in tho city each ono must look out for himsolf. It seems as if thero were an in fluence in brick and mortar to muke the heart grow hard and unfeeling, Fathers and mothers, if you aro compara tively comfortrblo in the country, du not think to hotter yousclvcsby going to tho city, and if you iind it hard work to get along where you are, then doubly .should you be ware of going to tho city. There aro too many thero now who realize bitterly the force of tho old proverb, "Out of tho frying pan into the fire."?Country Gentleman. Gen. Johnson at Atlanta Wo givo an interesting extract from Pol lard's " Life of Jefferson Davis," concerning tho situation at Atlanta before tho removal of Gen. Johnston by Mr. Davis, whioh tho au thor considers a fatal mistake aud the death blow of tho Confederacy : " Gcnerul Johnson wob now executing the masterpiece of his military Ufo. Ho had fought down to Atlanta with far more success and brilliancy than Lcc had fought down to lliohtnond, with mure inoideots of advantago, and to greatly better effect. His retrograde from Dalton to Atlanta has been described as a futuro study in military schools', and as ex aot as a ligure in geometry?his plaus in cam paign boing tho avoidance of pitched battles and the substitution of flank movements, in terspersed with actions between detachments and sometimes rising to a genetu] engagement He had performed the wonder of conducting .an army in retroat through nearly one bun. dred and fifty miles of intricate country, ah solutoly without any loss in materials or pris oners ; he had brought along everything, ev. ory gun, every wagon, every camp-kettle 5 he had inflictod a loss upon the enemy of forty five thousand men, more than four times his own j aud in pursuance of his plan of redu ciug tho numerical superiority of Sherman's army suas " to copo with it on equal ground by the timo the Chattahooohio was passed," he had now (bat army south of that stream, where its defeat would be inevitably its de struction, and whore, on .the* other hand, the Confederates would havo a refuge in Atlanta, which their commander, writing officially to Richmond, had described ns " too strong to bo assaulted and too oxtensive to bo invested." Never was any situation of the war so ad van ta/onus for the Confederates, and so critical and tremulous for tho enemy, unable, as he was, to go further, brought to a placo which he dared not assault, and whioh ho was una ble to invest, and suspended one hundred and forty miles in a hostile country, by a singlo lino of communication. Tho feats of the gid dy onomy woro oxcessivo, almost to demorali zation ; tho assurances of Johnson woro as perfect as human foresight could mako them. Wo repeat that his position in Atlanta was moro scoine than that of Loo in Kiohmond. Judging prospectivo by past ovonts, it was impossible to doubt that ho would havo held Sherman as well us Loo hold Grant. He could at least have dono this ; and it was probable ho would havo dono moro, for if he had sucoccdod in destroying Sherman's line of land communication, whief was obviously easier to reach than that of Grant ovor water, he might havo forced his enemy to a roti oat, in whioh surrender or annihilation would bo tho dioico. No wonder that tho heart of tho Oonfederaoy was elated, and that tho tiptoe of expectation was the attitude of tho most intelligent." -? -? Heavy Express Robbery, Tho "Augusta Chronlolo" brings us the pavtioulav;i of a heavy robbery, whioh occur red in Georgia a few days ago, and of whioh tho Southern Express Company has been tho violini. Tho booty oaptured on tho occasion was considerable, tho thieves getting four thousand nino hundred dollars in currency. Thero le la tho employ of tho Southorn Hxproms Company a young gentleman, a resi dent of this county, nod of tho best family, Mr. Bntlor fi. Mays, who had a situation as messenger, and ran in that oapacUy on the Central Railroad, between Savannah and Ma con. few night? 9?QOO bo left the compa- ? I.?a-???.m il r...iiin?.Il uni I j n^. ny's oflioo in Savannah to go to Macon, re ceipting for and taking on board of his oar with him a quantity of Express freight, and ono of the iron ohests in whioh tho money forwarded by tho company is usually trans ported. Entering his car with the money j all right, tho train left Savannah for Macon. On tho portion of the lino between Savannah and Mill?n, j?e understand that Mr. Maya went to sleep, leaving his money and freight all right. On arriving nt Milieu ho awoke and found a package containing four thusnnd nino hundred dollars had been stolen from his possession while he slumbered. Not know - ing what else to do, tho horrified messenger immediately returned to Savannah and report ed tho loss to his superior officers. Wo arc informed that Dcmpsey and General Super intendent O'Hricn wcro fortunately in Savan nah at the timo, and nt once took the matter in hand and endeavored to ferret out tho rob. ber or robbers Up to this timo, however, their efforts in that direction have been of no avail, and tho affair still remains enshrouded in mystery. Mr. Mays camo to this city a day or two since and was closely examined by both tho officers of tho Express Company aud tho chief of tho polioc ; but was unable to give any information by whioh a clue to tho guilty parties oould be obtained ; but wo arc glud to hear that no criminality attaches it self to Mr. Mays. Three men who were on tho train at the time aro suspected of being the guilty parties, but sufficient proof has not yot been collected to warraut their arrest.? One of these men is said to have come to Au gusta, and the police boro are on his track and nnd are busy endeavoring to get a clue by which he may bo nabbed. In Savannah the polico is also busily engaged in working up the case. Tho most reasonable hypothesis seo'vs to bo that these men followed Mr. Mays from Savannah,-.v/bcro they had prob ably seen him, and planned th? r?fe?^-sy, had watched him ou the train until ho slept and then bagged tho booty. The Chinese Movement Now, while Memphis is holding publio meetings inviting Chiucso labor to tho South, tho following protest against tho further im portation of these people into California, pub lished by tho Anti-CW.ic A?vQciatiou, is of special interest : There are about 110,000 Chinese in California, 100,000 of whom aro in a state of pcoungo or slavery, nnd are rented out 'by tho company owning them to the various parties by whom they arc employed, in gangs of from 50 to 500, as they may be required ?their wages being paid to the ngont of the company, who is responsible, for the perform once of their labor, and for the return of tho slaves, dend or nlive, in tho Celestial Empire. The bulk of the fumalo portion of them arc scattered throughout our towns and oitios, de moralizing our youth and laying the founda tion of futuro disosso aud sorrow to an unlim ited extent. Tho importation of these slaves has alrcndy lod to sc?nos of conflict on our wharves, between tho rival companies owning them, and threatens to assume gigantic pro portions. Tho employment of theso slaves displaces a like portion ot white labor, and moro particularly of tho rising generation. There aro in San Francisco about 18,000 to 20,000 boys aud girls, of from ton.to twen ty yoars of ng.?, tho majority of whom are brought up iti idlmioss, ns there is no employ ment for them, and'no opportunity for their learning trades, n? all the inferior work in our mills, fnctorics, stores, workshops, &c, that is clsowhore dono by apprentices, is here dono by Chincso iabor. Tho conscqueuoo is, that our boys aro but preparing for tho Stato Prison, and a vast number of our girls must, alas ! siuk to the lowest depths of degrada tion. Py tho gonoral employment of this slave labor in overy brauoh of industry, immigra tion of dceorving whito y >oplo from tho East nnd Europe is retarded, nnd will ultimately censo, whilo many now here must leave. We may instanoo tho oigar makers, fivo hundred of whom, with their families, who woro oarning good wages, and investing and spending them hero in tho country, woro compolled two years ago to retiro beforo tho Chinoso labor and leave tho Stato. In tints connection it is a noticeable fact that the introduction of cheap labor has not cheapened the prioo of a blan Wt, a cigar, or any othor artiolo of home manu facturo, ono single oont to tho consumer. Tho employment of Chincso labor on the Contrai Pacino tt??lroad may have expedited its eomplotion a fow months, but wo oontOnd that tho injury d?no our State ?an nover bo balanced by the gnin in timo. Had white labor bcon ymployed^ hundreds of aores would even now have bcon rontat m ed from tho wastes end ticcomo tho hompctonde of happy families Who would have purchased the land and in oreasod tho revenue of tho railroad company, and aleo ?T the onti/o Staio, whilo tho money i*** Ohino80 labor has b?eix ?iia'.ued oxjt of tho country for export to Asia, and on the retirement of tho Chinese slaves from their field of labor not a vestige of improvement will remain?not oven a bono of them will bo left in the soil. For twolve months aa epidemic has been raging in our midst, which for a long time baffled the skill of oar medical mea and the sanitary regulations of our oitj; and this small-pox, or bleck plaguo, is generally attrib uted to tho Chineso. From tho density of their population and their peculiar mode of living, they are subjcot to many diseases al most unknown among tha Cauoassian race, to which wo are rendered puouliarly liable by tho introduction of -Chinese into our hotels, restaurants and privato dwellings as cooks, washers and domestic servants. It has been objected to our association that it is an Irish crusade against cheap labor; but, on tho contrary, we embody in our own ranks all classes, creeds and political parties, imbued not with hostility to the Chinese as a race, but fully believing that all the vast re sources of California can bo felly dovelopcd, and her railroads, canals, and other public works, oan bo as well and profitably compio ted by freo white labor, as they havo been in the Eastern States, and that tho future great ness of California depends more upon the gcucral prosperity of her industrial classes than upon the vast accumulations of a few capitalists. By order of the Central State Council of tho Anti-Coolie Association of tho Pacific Coast. F. R. J. Dixon, Secretary. Gettysburg BatUo-Field Tho following letter has been sont to the Federal and Confederate Gonerals, in pursu* anco of the resolution some time since adopted by tho Gettysburg Battlo-field Memorial As- j :^ia^tou....X)n$^^rf iSSlJSSL^feas^ . Gettysburg, Pa., July 29, 1869. General: Tho Gettysburg Battle-field Memorial Association, organized soon after tho battle, eince incorporated and holding in absolute tenure the more important portions of the battle-grounds, being memorial nnd historical in its purposo and character, has unanimously adopted resolutions (already published) which accompany this letter, de termining to proceed to indicate tho field with enduring memorials constructed of the granite from its hills, and thus to permanently mark out the positions and movements of the arm ies, corpa, divisions and important commands in the battle. Its object is to perpetuato tho history of tho battle in its simplo truth, and to that end to make tho battlc-fiold its own interpreter. It seeks to preservo this Geld, truly indicated as an enduriug historical momorial of t? j mil itary events of the 1st, 2d aud 8d of July, 1803, aa a school for study in practically illus trating the art of war, and an event eloquent, though silent exponent, alike to eitieen and foreign visitor, of the battio of Gettysburg. Tho more effectually to accomplish this its purpose, and before proceeding to ereot the indications, the Association desires to derive tho important requisite information from au thentic and original sources. It earnestly realizes that justice to themselves and fidelity to tho truth of history entitled the officer? who commanded tho forces In action to desig nate tho positions and defino tho movements thus to be perpetuated. With this high historio purpose in view, I am instructed by the board, as secretary, aud on behalf of tho association, to invite you, General, to co operate in this work of indi cation, and to attend a re-union of the officers of your brigado, division, corps and army, upon the battio grounds, thero to confer to gether and determino tho positions and im portant pointe proper to bo thus ondoring?y designated. Tho timo fixed for tho meeting is the week commencing with the 28d day of August next. Tho placo of meeting is tho Gettys burg Springe Hotel, upon the battle-field, whcTO the accommodations aro ampio and ex cellent. It is requested that, at the samo timo ihat itioy reply to; this invitation, the othoors in vited, address the surviving ranking officer of their corpo, and oxpr?ss, if practicable, thoir intention to bo present; and ho is also requested to conumvhiooto with tho secretary. Arrangements are io progress to seguro to tb? visiting officers tho courtesy of freo travet tu ? and probaUy a?flofrom this ro-union ovo* the railnnds leading thiihor. The afttooi&tio? han also arranged for tho commutation of the hotel ohargos to a very moderato pri?e, while ?eeuring comfort and every desirable atten tion. Tho press of tho country has nW been requosted to farcir the consummation de^rcd and ie generally rcfpondi?g., Tho officers an<( dlreotore elneerely hopo , that you, Cenoni, way find ? both/igroe&b?e and convenient to accept the invitation hereby tender?; i to this reunion, which will be an occasion of great personal and public as woll as historio interest. Awaiting your reply, I am, very respectfully, yours, D. MoCONAUGAH, Scct'y of Gettysburg Battle-field Memoria' Association. Manufactur?e at the South. People everywhere are beglnuing to open their eyes to tlio marvelous advantages which this Southern land of ours possesses as a man* ufacturine region. Tho contrast between the' doleful talk of tho Now England miU-ownoi* and the cheerful reports from tho cotton fac tories of South Carolina, Qoorgia and other Southern States, is too marked to long escape the attention of tho keen sighted capitaliste of the North. Massachusetts manufac turor has recently doolarod that it coste at least sixteen conte to manufacturo fabrics which would not bring in market more than fifteen cents per yard. Whether this bo true or not, certain it is that either because of real loss or in order to secure a high protective tariff on foreign goods, the wholo Yankee . manufacturing interest is just now making particularly wry faces. Formerly, as is Well known, tho profits of cotton manufacturo were very great, and it may now be that th? com plaint is owing rather to a reduction of these large dividends than to the alleged total t?o* privation of profits. In any event, however, it is gratifying to know that the depression, .J. real or affected, which prevails in Now Eng land, is not felt in any degree by our'otrb > mills, and that even recently established cot ton factories in the cotton producing rogioriaX^ are paying quarterly dividends of five per" cent, upon initial experiments. New Eng? land manufacturers must look to it, or theiir oooupation will soon be gono. JT???A?ii*\?i UfcSS2?&tt^ ?'ug" tl?omsclves with smaller profits, transferring their mills SoutH-lSaR ward, or turning their capital into other ave nues, In a few years the poople of tho catiro South will bo supplied with cotton fabrics manufactured whero the cotton is grown, and possibly Southern mills may find a largo mar kot also in tho North for their goods. In the . face of tho united opposition of tho great West, and of a South steadily and surely in creasing in wealth and power, tho "industria kings" Down East cannot hopo much longer to bolster up by special legislation, at tho es? pense of consumer*!, the pleasant monopty whioh has so long kept them sleek and fat. [Charleston Neto?. ? State Penitentiary.?The escape of couv?ctfl from this institution is becoming quite a nuisance. Every few days we observo the mention of another batch of prisoners es oaping from tho guard, generally composed of negroes, we believe. In addition to this taking of French leave, Goy. Scott recently pardoned sixteen oonviots. There aro about (our hundred inmates of the Penitentiary, seven-eigths of whom are colored Republican votors. At tho present rate of diminritiou, those will all have boon sot at liberty iu ample time to exeroise the right of sucrage at the next general election. It is also rumored that O en. Stoib rand, tho Superintendent, whoto likewise Commander of the Grand Army of tho Republic for this Stato,;has 10,000 stands of erme stored away in the Penitentiary build ings. Aro the oonviots drilled in tho men ? aal, in orderte fit them for the advance guard of the militia f We aro reliably informed that tho w^l of tho main building has not rcooivod a sinews atone since tho removol of MaJ. lieo from the position of Superintendent. v Tho outer wall enclosing tho grounds has not progressed ?ny more rapidly. How aro tho laborers employ ed ? ?-Anderson Intelligencer. The Love o? utit. B*AUTT?uiv-*Place yonng girl under the caro of a kind hfcarted, graoerul woman, end she unconsciously to herself grows lut? a graoeful tady. Flaco a boy in tho establishment of a thorough-going straightforward business man, and tho hoy becomes a self-reliant, practical business matt. jOhildronaro eunooptiblo oroatttron, and.^ir oumstanoo>?; *?*no? s&t r.cUuris aiwaye im press them. An you influen?a tft>ete< not, by <??. arbitrary rules, not by stern example alone? butin tho thousand other ways that, ?p?aW through beautiful forms, through br^hfc soonos, soft utt?raneo and preUy pio^ure^jr'f^ will they grow, T?ftoh your childr^l^^ love the beautiful. Give them *^r??Vfa;i$? j gardon for fiorer?, eoebUregotfrp^?;'\ shape tao hanging tetoe?!?, :$ i have tfctdr favorite tr???, 'dad thorn - I der I? the prolii??*, -<n\lU'%j?^^^gP ' ?whoro thev' oan, beet view tito thom in *ho worrit^ r?ot M ? t?melo bnt *? th* nVeUy jitotttfo* and cmoon.i ' rato their rootk.?, oaoh b fly, .tfttfefiM iil