THE r lliLI/KiETH I'JdEEU !;i}, n-I,i 1::-| J- 1«, 6S?S. I:.-0 M«'T T© Bur. f( Vi'ral ])ei'af)Hn, wTo holilliolp- (irplians in ]?Oiulap'0, liave oil'erd tlioiii io flic Orpliaii Asylum ii>r Ml much immo)-. In oth. vviirds, they wi.sli fii ujioii a spo- cics Ilf iVmerican slave trade 'i licy seise orjilians and so op press them as to make the benev olent redeem them. Such a traf- tie may be called a sale of sig-hs. '\\T do not wish, to buy orphans from any such partie.s; but we appeal to our Judgos aiid Grand .lurio.s to see that these orphans are ]iennitfed to enjoy the f. w rights which our jiresent laws confer upon them. IVe rvere jiresent in one instance when an oiyihan was sold, and we .saw the nioney jiaid for her ; but in that disti’iet the Judge lias expressed him.self against the Orjihan Asy lum, and the Grand Juries give orphans no jirotcction., Tin's statemeut Is shocking to Iiuniani- ty, much more to civnliiiation and religion ; but, alas, it is true, and the [irorif is jiresent with us. And while the.se things are so, our law makers have time to talk about lish-traps, fox-dog.s|ancl bird.s. OUM OOTUUS. IV'c once improved some oftlie hotels of our tstate by slmtiU' telling' tlie Irutli on them. It is our jiresent jiurjiose to imjirove oiliei's in the same >vay. A.s our ladie.s are lirst at borne, first ^ abroad, and iirst in the hearts of their countrymen, we begin witli tliem. I'our oi the beat hotels in the btato are kept by widows, ilrs.^ Miller, at Turnpike, has coinlortable rooms, good fare, and a pleasant location. Single meals 25 els. i^Irs. Yarbro, at Greensboro, occttjiies a small lioUiSe ; but her titble is.. equal to any in the Sttite, and her jirices are moderate., Mrs. Troy is known to,travelers whom she has so often- fed at Hickory and tlie bliops. yiie now supplies excel lent sujipcrs .at Morriaville. iiirs. Tucker, at Eranklinton,—- well, just iiictui;e eggs, good bread and butter, strong coffee, rich milk and nice desert. .. At jiotels kejit by widirws you are not tmnoyed by superciliou.s clerks, nor sent to the, seventlt story. Widows also, giro yon rai ro vicaiilsiind les.s ercclu ry titan you sometimes find in hotels kept by nten. I'ho Kimball House, in Atlanta, lias crystal fountains and royttl chandeliers. IIO.IIBS FOK OSCFJIAtVS. e continuo to receive apjill- calions for orjibans, mostly for girls, who are wanted for nurses, or to as.sist, in g-encral liousoitold work, but in very few instances do the applicants state wliat they intend to do for tliesc cliildron in return lor the adytmtage thet' ex- Jiect to derive from their labor, in tlie way of providiiig for tiieir comfort and fiitura welfare, 'We have more than once inti mated that the Asylum was not designed as a nursery for the col lection of orphans to bo trained and sent out as mere domestic- servants. Eor is it designed, on the ofhor luind, to jircparo tlioni for jirofesjioiial carec-rs or train llieni in ideas above a life of la bor and u.sefuincss in ordinary jairsults. If wo understand the obioct of those wl o have labored lor the organization of the imsti- fution, and contributed and do still so liberally contribute to its sujqiort, it is, that the poor, lielp- Ic.s.s orjilian girls and boys of the State may be re.sc.ucd from the misery ot friendless de.stitution and, often, heartless tyranny in which they have been jilaced by the death of their natural protec tors; give them fair English edu cation ; impress on their hearts the importance of honesty and ujirightness and the great and leading truths of Chfistianitv, and then,tas far as practicable, toassist them in obtaining homes where, in return for the benefit to be de rived from their labor, they may find that symjiathy and enconr- agement, of which they have been jirovidentially deprived, and that kindly taking by the liaiiil and assl.sting forward in lilb -Hliicli is si^ necessary to .success in flieir efforts to become useful citizens and rcsjiectable members of soci ety. It is bnt reiisonalile that Iboy and their friends should ex- jiect this for them. but some of our. .widows could imjirove the table. What a bun gry traveler generally wants, is a iiulo to look at, and a jilenty to eat. David inarriod the widow Abigail; but she Imd jiroyiously fed him and bis men, and herbill of fare, as given in Samuel, was enough to tempt a king. But. we must jia.ss on, and leave. the widows. (To he Continued.) ^ 1. Don’t sei?:© a poor orphan girl withont kin, and expect -to hold lier for life. She ha.s bad very little to cook and nothing to season it with. She ’will give yon lard tare. Be.sides, il she should become desirable, somebody will desire her, I’ossibly she may desire beu'seli and assert lior ina lienable right. 2. Don’t try to. biimbug some (dd negro ivlio has never lieai'd of IJncoln’s proclamation. She will hear of it some day, and , desert you most unexpectedly. J. Don’t bo tardy, irregular, or jtarsiraonious in )-i)ur settlements. Never jiay otf in old clothes. If you do, the cook will get sick and go home and never lie well enough, to return. -redbroaat elui'll visit I’ev. Junius P. Moore jiroaclied in the Ohajiel at the Asylum Sun day afternoon. Hi.s subject was the beautifnl scene de|)'ictc(l by Isaiah of a little clilld leading tli"c wild beasts of the forest side bv side rvitli the animals tliov once limited for ih.eir jircv. Kotwitb- ilanding the inclen'iency of tlic M cafber there were quite a., num- lier out to hear him. “Whou the old robiii your cot, And the udcles li;\ng at your door, Whou your howl sunMcea with somothiuit re viving and hot, ^ Then yon ought to roineinher the poor.” St. Piuil puts Chtinty aa the chief of tho Christiau Virtues— even above Faith and hope. Acts of benevolence flow out as nat urally from a heart filled witli Charity as lig’ht does from the sun. We have all read what the Scrip tures say of the man who jjrofoss- es to love God and yet hates Ills fellow-men; and Vv-e have read al so wiiat tlie Savior said of those wlio neg'locted to feed and clothe the hungry and naked and to visit and minister to those who. ■were sick and in prison How can those who read these jilalii declarations as to onr duty toward the poor and destitute, close their ears ’ and hearts and jiockets to their cries for SY'mpatliy and material aidF It seems that any one ought to be alraid to sitdowii iutltccnjovmeut of tho abundance which theprovi- clence of God hn.s blessed him without first liberally coutrilmiim*- Pur the Cliildrt'ii’s Fricini. ^[|J Dear Young I'nieuds :—I have lived eleveii-foui'teeiiilijj of il.e age allotted to luaii; can you tuU bow old 1 am? Well, if you have luund out my age, 1 will tell you of a few ul the eliaiiges 1 liave witne-ssod siiiee my eiiild- lioud, ill tilings tliat you see and bear of almost o\'ei'y day. W lion 1 was a boy iliere wove no cast jiLows used b)' tlie farm ers in this country, and very feiv tanners bad iron traces for jilow- ing as they do liow. 'i'lie plows Were made of wrought iron m the blacksmith shops ol the coiiutrv, aiid theyt tised wliat was called sbalt jduws, and very poor work tljey ilid.'' Borne jieupie use the same kind of jilows now for oxen. ■ Tiien there was no sueli thing as a railroad in the Bu'ucli. I'eo- jilo traveled in jirivale convey ances and stage coticbbs, and the cotton and tobacco were carried to market, and goods brouglit back, ill large road wagons drawn byi four or six horses. Letters were ctirried by stages and horse mails, and the'jiostage on a letter of one sheet was twenty-five cents, and twenty-live cents for eaeli additional sheet. I have known the postage on one letter to be as much as a dollar. Then there Viiero no eiivelojis to jmt letters in, but they were folded together and sealed with a wafer or sealing- wax. 'J’bere were no telegraph lines in the country then. Now yon can sit down in a telegrajih ollice in. Kaleigh and send a message to New \()“k and get an answer in a few minutes, but when I was a boy' you could not send, a mes sage tliere- and get an back under two or tliree weeks. 'J’bera. -were no jihotograjih gal leries wlien I -was a bo.v. No body ill tbi.s country' liad ever thought or dreamed of taking a jiictni'e of a jierson or anything else, in half a minute, by' means ol tlie sun-llg'bt. Nim' ■\'ou can have a dozen jii'cturcs of .y'ourself taken to .g-ive your friends, for three or four dollars ; but 'Vr-lien 1 wa.s a, boy it would have cost ten or fifteen' dollars -for one of the same -size jiaiirted on ivory or some other surface, and if it were life size-on canvass, it inigiithai'e cost a hundred or two hundred dollars. Lucifer matches were not in use when I was a boy. 1 remcnir her giving twenty-live cents in silver for the first box I ever saw, and burned them nearly.all, slioiv- ing my schoolmates what a won der and curiosity they were. Then, when the fire went out, it was started b\' sjiarks struck with a flint and steel on tinder, or by going to the nearest neighbor for a “chunk.” But I cannot now speak of all tho inventions of the last fifty years, tliat have come into such common use as to be considered absolute necessaries ol life. I may' .speak of some otliers hereafter. ’These that 1 have alluded to are among the mo.st prominent and laimbar, and they' are all the i'Gt .suit of hnaiu-ivork. The men who invented the cast plow and its fix- tnre.s; tho railroad engine and the telegrapli; the discoverer of the jiropcrty of light in jiic- turo ^taking, and tlie chemical combiii^itiou of the friction match, were once Intle hoys like many who may read this letter. Many of tliem had not the advantage bf good schools, and nothing like the good and u.seful books that cliildren may now have, but they by many to'be yet in tlieir Infaii c-y, and that many and great dis coveries and iin eiitlons are yet to lie made. W'lileh of my voutiu r, aloj's have siiilleieut eourago and ambition to resolve that theii names shall be wriiteu among liio.so who are yet to benefit man kind by their labors and .studies ill tiie Lisefni arts aiidseiencesl Jacossu.s. A MOVE iSi 'J'lSE KJUU'l'’ irsBEcrsojii’. “ The lady' members of a Grange in Edgecombe Cou..tv have decided to buy only calico dresses in the future.” ■ The above iiem we find float ing around ill several of, our ex changes. We are rather at.a loss' whether to regard it as a hoax or not. If it i.s true, we consider it as an important move on the pan of Siime of our ladies in the light direction, and sincerely' liopo it will be followed by- otliers. lYe are no Quakeress, (tliougli we have always admired the neatness of their costume) y'ot w'e are con strained to believe that a great deal might be saved for the church, the Orjihau Asylum and other benevolent enterprises. If our ladies would observe more economy in their articles of dress, wo behey'e it would con tribute to, instead of detracting from their cliuniis. L. K. W. Feiv words in our language are more frequently' niisajiiilied tliai the word want. It falls dalL from the lijis of tliose vdio hav>- never ielt the need of anvthing answer except tlie habitual siijiertlnitii.' wliicli, Paley says, w ill beemne wants; but the Inxunous elves that minster To jiamjicred desire.- cannot be made to resemble the grim .sjiectre that haunts tln- ab'ides of poverty', pinching tlu inmates with cold and humver. “Notbing is so hard for those wIio abound in riches as to concoivc liow others can be in want.” The poor are.#a legacy left by' our .Sa vior, and it is a duty entailed on all bis folloiver.s, to mir.ister to tlic wants of the needy ; nor is it su.fiicient to relieve only' those wboso sufferings chance to come under our .observation ; we mu.st seek them in obscure corners, and instead of .saying, “I do not know a case of distress in my neighbor hood,” we .should be able, after c ireful invesii.ration, to “there are none.” “Oh tor a Lodge in some vast wikleriiess,” sighed tlie poet Cow'- per, oppressed by' tlie wrongs of bis race; too many' echo the sentiment and retire to their com fortable firesides and there muse, jierhaps, on some gigantic scheme of philanthrojiy, which is destin ed to pori.sh without lightening the load of a single over-bnrden- ed fellow-cr-iature. Of what n.se are benevolent feelings if we do not give them vent in action f It does not feed tiie hungi-y' or rig'ht the oppres-icd, becamse we wince at the recital of their destitution or fiusli with indignation at their wrongs, . c iting tlu'iu that some moans will Oe devised for .sending them to -chooi. .Such views of want ai.J distress ai'e the siu'ost check to exti-avagaiit desire, for wo ureajit t.) foi'get selfish ends in mlnisler- ing to others ; discontent and bc- novoleuee are rar-ely' found in the same individual; if we cultivate the latter, the former will never trouble us. L. ©use tsviKG Ai\B> ouie dead. The last number of this month ly' magazine contains some verv interesting articles, and sucli a periodical deserves s'.iccess. Col.' Pool, (tho Editor,) invites con- iribiitions on both sides of several very- imponant e lucational que.s- tions. Y’e will tell him a story : When J, M. Stone was a candi date for the Legislat ire, be took the stump in Granville, and gen erally' ojioned his sjteeches by saying, “Fellow-citizens: In tne first place, I will tell y'ou what I am fur, aifd In the second place, I will tell you wliat I am agin.” When he closed, the people knew where ho stood. So w'e want our Superintendent of Public L,.,-50... - tion to g'O before the Le .islatm e with an educational pr gramme of his own, and fight i out on tliat lino. Let him tell as what ha is “fur” and what ha i.s “agin.” lEoM&e ictfiuefi&eva. say, The influences of homo ])orpC't uate tliL-ULselves. Tho g'eiulo ’■race oi rhe iiu.'iher lives in. licr d.iughters long afier her iieaii is jnlluwed In tiie dust of the eartli; ajid lallierly kiiidiies.s finds ins c'lo ill tile n 'bilily and courtesy of so.IS ivli.i eonie to wear his • aaiiile and to {ill Id,s place; while on the otiier Invid, fr.>in an trn- iiappy, nds-govcriied and disur dcred honif, go C.nth ])ors'>n,s ^vllo sli i.l ma’ 0 oth- r li imes mi.ser - ble, and p-apot .nte dm Konnies.i l. lid sabless, the co.itemions and sirife.s and railings, which liave - m. ido their own early' live.s so wretched and di.storted'. Toward tho cheerful home the children gather “as clouds and as di.vei to their windows;” while from tho homo which is the abode of discontent and strife and tioii- blo tiiey^ fly fortli as vu!tures®to rend their prey. d'he class of men that di'sturb and d'sorder and di.stres.s the world are not those born and nur- lured amid the hallowed infiuen- CG.S of Christian hoine.s; b it ralli- er those whose early' lives have been a scene of trordile and vex ation, wlio liave started ivroiig iii the pilgrimage, and wlio.se course is one ot disaster to themselves and trouble to tliose around tiiem.—liurul Yew Yorker. .0 Hio.se m dcsbtution, for tear the 1 studied and worked patiently and ciiixsi; ol (uid should be visited on the world b,as l.ecn vastly be him m some, .shaiie tbr .such lla- filed by their labors grant neglect ol lus command. eiie- But science and imt arc thouglil The most charitable peojile are their own almoners; wlien they- see poverty and des-titution, they seek most earnestly to relieve it; after visiting a starving family-, it i.s not easy to sit down to a well sjiread table without first sending something to the sii.fferers; furs and flannel will not Ixeeji the c-liill from the heart while ga'zing at the jioorly' clad cinhi of poverty, shivering in the, wintry blas't; daily contact with i.gnorant, de- gratlcd children will so iiapres.t one with tho necessity for edu-^ »ec ciiul itU is iSiffht. It is always bad to start on a journey without having looked to the harness and to the horso'.s shoes; and it often hapjiens that the time saved by' omitting exam ination turns out to be a dead a 1- loss when tlie trav-der lias vancod a little on his journo'. Not one minute, but a hundnd minutes may be lost by the want of a little attention at first. S it the morning watch with care, if you would be safe through tho day'; begin well if you would end well. Take care that the liolm of the day is put right, look TV'ell to the point you want to sail to, then whether j'ou make much progres.s or little, it will bo so far in tlie right direction. The mor.i- ing hour is.generally the index of the day.—Spurgeon. A nifin liit. ii.- u.i.i't; n^Aiit tu tiv.'j an nncivil :U’t one; no uuire ri-ijlit to say a tiling to moiiiiur than to kuoc\ liiiul lown.