CFf,CE up stairs opposite SCARR'S drug store j A Family Paper, deyoted to State Intelligence, the News of the World, Political Information, Southern Rights, Agriculture, Literature, and Miscellany. By WILLIAM J. YATES, EDITOK AND MtOPUETOK. CHARLOTTE, MECKLENBURG COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. a $2 PER ANNUM In Advance. 0?S. A. YA m ti n TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1857. ( vo VOLUME 6. ASSOCIATE EDITOl Now Series M HER 2?S. THE Published every Tuesday C 'I!. tain" the latest News, :i tuil and ueeu- . . -i . i' .1.. f I rate Ui'li'Ti ' inrmi i, cc. t .('.. year, if paid in advance, 82 00 It' nahl within sis months, ir ..MlaftT the expiration ol the year, J r.ti ' fjiuy i" r-"n sending as five ?i sub rs, rcompanipd by the advance sub ., o pi) will receive a sixth copy gra Slibseri' ntlierfl who mt wish it, ii.l roomy t.. us, eaU uo t by mail, at ADVERTISING. iarc ol 1G hues or less, tor.; months, si uu 1 .4 .. " S M 6 00 1 in 00 . .nr.- i I nes, ot less, first insertion. Si 00 I. i- ;- - :Vt il"'"l I i , ,.. iii dvertisemcntfl mast 1 .,.... 3 he for -: advance. ' K..r auuouncinc Candidates for office, .-, in advance. r if dvcrtisemcnta not marked on the - . . - n 1 s iiiiiscn rted uu pt tor ;i ipeinc lime, win nv m til forbid, and charged accordingly WILLIAM .5. YATES. X .iTici a ar 5 5,110. !.. i r'd - rs otl'. r for ssle In (ir body thousand i ) lying in fG'-Tt-itu v h.x-li is in w ESS? UL (in !i COOntT "'II ln'tli .-ides .f tilt! (, uth Fork t the Catawba River, . ,. ,i ... . . II mi;. - .,"it!i - st ol oiuuioti", ani winini tbive aiis-s of Uu? line of Rai!road now building lo'H Charlotti'to Unctdnton. A . Two Hundrt-d Acn s, one-third of which i BIHlY run ii aiiun. AIm, ,'"" Acns on the South Foik in a rood j itt mint anon. XIk :.!.-.vi :e.e jmmmI Fu ming Land, and will k-sU inlotsfesail purchasers. Tms easy. On oi.e ,.j iiie tract - there is a water power of 5BI t, with ronunand of th' whole liiM-r. IVfsom wishing to examhw tb se Lands will In-atfa-aded to bv thenarnea at Siowsville. J. A . E. U- STOWE. nuuiotte, June g, 1 -r.T. 4Mf Jr t attle Wazslcd. Also, 500 IIEiD Oi - ftr'ifWlead of HOGS, ni It or 13 No. I Miicli (o'.v. I lKSIRE to purchase ii i-;e r Ii allow ainonut ol j niji any l.r Bale will uo weii io mr a i" all, as 1 bu willimr lo py uignem BuakH uikf . Farmers will IuhI ittotli u :. ivan tav losell tb.-':r Beeves, Pheep or llgs to me usii-ad ! iwtelM'ring tmnist-lves. as Ithiuk I ran natuiK rat. tlx ni as well if not better than it th. v n J :h msetve. W. A. COOK, CharkiUe. July It. 1-"T. Town Bnt5her. BOOTS & SHOES. Just Til SPRING & A- iliie Boo ts As h: ex oarac ;rn TP 91 P C t JJ .Ti iJ ii I an Assortinent ! er been offered t" a (.'a!! and see tin m at r, m: 3T rerms, CAS1I. Manh '7, 1857. iV; C "S STOUE. t! K.n. Ml'84 IHSOX. -J- howeli IVIQUCHISON HOWELL, p riT i f fTOTnj T n? ; )m A WV5 .Vo. lO l Feb. 3d, l-:7. 13';:.' I Street, .V. J ly D I!. K . WYS0NG, Charielt, W. C. 1 AVIXO loeat.il isi this place, reSM -tfidly i offers his Profi-ssMinal Sutvieea to the citi lis el he town and vicinity. ! .. OFFICE in the new brick building, pptsite the bnrnl ihstriet, Main Street. April BREM & STEELE, Wholesale and Retail Dealers IN Hardware, ?S;ti. ssd Shoes, CHARLOTTE, X. C. May r, 1857. 1 l-tl DRESS-MAKING. 'MRU, WHIAMH K.spectriiIIy informs the Ladies oi Charlotte and vicinity, that she has returned, and offers net ei vices to her old custom is and u n s. RESIDENCE CPPJSITE THE POST OFFICE- Charlotte, June 30. I n7. Dl. JL CHERAS Having located at MONROE, tenders his pro- t' -:oi;ii services to the CltlW ot tile ToWH aa 1 Bummndin country, and respectfully aoli ct their patron ago. I . I :tic at J. Bickett's. April it. -J.:-:!in tar For the Ncatefl stock of Clothing tou e um . f r saw to the Emp ritt!u of Fas FULLLNGS & CO. svrv i or tne l reuiest stocc ot uiotlimt; VI" ,1 Ik T .l 1 you . vor saw g.j t.i t!;e Kt rium of F;i-!i-1 " of FULLISGS & C . For die Cheapest stock of Clothii you eve saw go to the Emporium of Fas I : ! HV LUNGS cv C "i ML State oi'IYortli Carolina. Whereas, the last General Assem bly, by an act entitled, "A supplementary act to take tlio sense of the people of the State relative to the proposed amendment of the Constitution," did enact as follows : Whereas, a bill to amend tlio Constitution of tlm Stato of North Carolina, bus been read in Pach house oi the present General Assembly on three several days, and agree d to by two-thirds of each bouse respectively, in the precise words following: "A bill to amend the Constitution of the State of North Carolina :" Whereas, at tlio rs-don of the last (Jen era! Assembly, begun and held in Raleigh, on l! te third Monday of StnTcniber, la the year of our Lord one thousand eight hun dred and fifty-four, :i bill, entitled "a bill to amend the Constitution of the State of North Carolina." was read three times in each bouse of the said General Assembly, and agreed to by three-fifths of the whole num ber "! members of each house respectively. And whereas, the bill so agreed to hath been duly published six Di mtiis previous to the election of the members of this present General Assembly, according to the clause of section one of article four of the ameud- I ed ('.institution, and th directions con tained in the second sect!. in of the said bill; and it is. the intention, lv this bill, to agree j to the preamble and Brst section of the bill aforesaid, containing the -aid alteration of the Constitution of this State : And whereas, a large number of the people are disfran chised by the freehold qualification now re quired f voters for members d" the Senate ; therefore, Bt it enacted by tht General As sembly dj'tlie State of Xortlt Carolina and it is at r l i enacted In the a u tl, urit u of the same. j tiro-thirds of the ipAoe nttmbi r of members of 1 eadt house coucnrritig. That tlio second J clans! d the third section oj the brst article , of the amended ( Constitution, ratified bv the i d f North Carolina, on the second i Monday f November, i:i the year of our Lord eiirhteeii hundred and Ihirtv-five, shall intended t read as follows : Event tree .. 'lite man of the age of twenfy-one years, be- a native or naturalized citizen of the United States, and who has been an inhabi tant of the Slate for tn Ive months immediate ly preceding the 'lay of any election, and shall hare paid public taxes, shall he entitled to '. for a uu mber -f the Si Hate Jar the dis trict in which he resides And whereas, it was further provided by the .-aid act, "that the foregoing amendment t" the Constitution of thisjRttate, as embodi ed in the preceding section, be submitted by the (lover nor to tlio people, on the first Thursday in August, 1 sixty days no tice having bei u given in ten newspapers': NOW, THEREFORE, ! do hereby give notice tn.ill persons entitled to vote fo members if the Ifou.-i- of ('ominous, that pi -Ii- a iii be opened on the first Thursday in August nest, by the Sheriffs of the respec tive Counties, at the election precincts within tho same, to take the sense of the . , a . 1 . . , i" . 1? ... 1 .-;iii voters as to rue rniiiicuiiou oi ?-a:u u . udiueut to the Constitution of the State; iLos' for ratification to vote with a written or printed ticket "Approved;" those op poscd thereto to vote witli a similar ticket A, A nvrovt ."' Given under my hand, as Govern or of the State of North Carolina, at the Executive office in the City of L. a: rrh i .ii the 18th day of May. A. IL. 1.;7. By the Governor: TUOS. BRAGG. 1'ri.ASK Cowper, Pr. Sec'y. May , 1-7. 2m j l .V o -. est --. -k t j- AT TUB CHARLOTT BOOK STORE. '1 iie bin-- to habits i Am- i i'. : I in: 11 : -. I'll. m m i ti TltK mkith'AN SpoRTyMAS: contaimng xirtsiiam, not. s on shooting, and the (lame Birds and Wild f owl ot . by Lev IS. Legacv: a story of Lif s f.-.mi the ForsTAW or Life . el. n, bv Rev. K. New to: or Ser , 1. 1). Family 1 nsv Chain or Aspiration Ulirouicte. Si : p n Recoi i ECTtosa G!!mpse ef American Life, by V K.VTIIIE CiiAXDE: a Fi'.esid' A Way-Side II.EK March. 1 1 istory of a Qtiiel Life, by I Iulxe Lee. Hoi sr.iiof.D Mvstekies, by Lizzie Pitt. El Gkixgo, or New Mexico and her People. I'm i. 1 ise, by N. P. Willis. Veva, or tlie War of tit.- Peasants and the C nseript: two interesting Romances bound in on oluine. The Napoleon Dvxastv, or the History of the Bonapaite Family: an utirely u w work, by the Ib-rkley Men, with twenty-two authentic Portraits. Call at P. .J. LOWRIITS Book Store. March 31, u. 39-tf EC. S. Dewier 6c Co's CELEBRATED WHEAT FANS. The subscribers are m w Fnion countj . . C. in pi raged at Monroe, in? t:n the above nameu r ans. in iBeir maimer oi cuusuuwkiu and operations and entin adaptation te the pur poses for which they are designed, these rans are untualled by any that have her tolbre been oil red to the public. They arc constructed ol the best materials, and none but the best werk an n employi d. An exp Tience of five years in the business justifies ti:.- belief that entire satisfaction ill be gii i n. ' All our v. oik is warranted. I . 'AH orders will rec ivc pioawp attention and the inachinery delivi red according to order. Rejert no : D. A. Covington, ,L P. Houston, Munroe, K C. James D Robinson, Benj Mihtow, Mecklenburg county. Wm U Smith. li Wadkins, Anson county. i; sk & STEEL. Monroe, Union county , March 90th. 6m A Acw Tailoring tab listaiiieiit. JAMES BRIANT informs bis firienda and former patron . that he has reopen d his 1 A1L ORING ESTABLISHMENT in the up stairs of the Building next to the Bank ef the State, whi re he will be bappy to si all those wanting any tain r done b: his line. All v oik warranted. . i), : 2c?th, 1850. 17-tf .9 oh ii fiaVsiry Wayt, JI. ., SURGEON DENTIST, Graduate of the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery,) Having located permanently, tenders his pro fessional services to the citizens of Charlotte, N. C, and vicinity. T"lr f nri'ii'iri-j oi.il innrti; ,rtilii!nl ,x..l..,i. I and obturators, and attends to the correction of congenital and accidental deformities of the teeth and jaws. He is also prepared to insert artificial teeth, alter the most approved methods. I W Ladies waited on at their residences if required Office on Tryon Street, in Carson's new building, up stairs. Nov. J 3th. Q0 tf. Ready-Made Clothing AND FurBiitliing- Establishment. SPRINGS & HEATH EESPECTFUUbY inform their friends and the public generally that they have received and are receiving an extensive assortment of Ready Made Clothing at their old stand on the north side of Mint street, to which they invite atten tion. Gentlemen's COATS j Among their stock may be found Black Cloth Coats, single and double breasted; black and ! drab Alpacca in Sacks, Frocks and Raglans; 1 reach and .hiighsh JJrap-d fcte; plain and Ian- ev Cassiineres, gotten up in nice suits; plain and tancy Linen Marseilles, in suits; white Lim-n Drill and Linen Duck; each style embracing the different cuts, Sacks, Frocks and liaglaus. PANTALOONS; Pants of French and American Cassiineres. black and Fancy ; black and fancv Alpacca, steel cloth and French ami English Drap-d'Ete ;' plain aiKi t.uicv Jinen aim Marseilles ot grade; They w uld call especial attention to their lot VESTS, both single and double breasted, embracing black and figured Silk, black Satin, and the prettiest lot of Marseilles Vests ever offered in this market. Gents Furnishing Goods, The largest lot in this market, consisting in part of plain and fancy Linen and Cotton Collars, Byron & Bishop; linen and cotton Draw ers; plain and tancy Hosiery ; Cloves, silk, kid, &c; a variety of Cravats, silk and linen; Hand kerchiefs, silk and linen ; Suspenders, &.C., A:e. AliSOf A fine lot of 1 1 ATS for the Summer wear, em bracing all the latest styles of the Silk. Cassimere and Felt Hats; Straw, Leghorn, and Panama do. They offer the above Goods VERY LOW FOR CASH, or to punctual dealers on time, with the- express understanding that accounts are due when they want the money. They return their thanks to their customers for the liberal pa ."onage heretofore bestowed upon them, and hope to merit a continuance of the same by diligence in business and untiring ef forts to ph ase. Call and examine their Goods. SPRINGS 6c HEATH, Charlotte, N. C. April 7, 1857. 40-tf FOR THE LADIES JL 1 E jLi o A large assortment of Fancy Hair and Tooth Brushes of every quality; French, English and American Pomades for the hair; Lubin's Ex tract of Jockey dub, violet, marcchale, tea rose, cedar, beleotrope, rose, new mown hay, sweet scented shrub, sweet pea, niouseline, bouquet Napoleon, summer, blossom, milleflow ers, upper ten. jasmine, Caroline, musk. Cologne, Verb na, Jasmine, and Geranium Waters, &c. Just received at SCAUR cSc CO'S April 1-1 th. Drugstore. Temple of Fashion JS NOW OPEN.. Something Entirely New. GENTLEMEN, one and all, young and old, who wish to wear Good, Fine Clothes, goto J. W. COLE'S NEW CLOTHING EMPORIUM, First Dour above Kerr's Hotel, formerly occupied by Lowrie's Book Store, where you can get the best tits and the finest clothes for tho least money tine, anywhere else in the State. The goods a.e all made up to order expressly for this marki t. Everything is gitii n up in tin-very latest and neatest styles, and the making of every piece is "V7"XXi'3:i.tOCJ. to lat, or otherwise made good. I t all ro and look at his well selected stock of Ready made Clothing, and be sure to examine his prices; he will put you up a suit so low that you will be compelled to wear fine clothes. Gentlemen wishing any particular suits, by leaving their measures, can have them in 12 days, warrnutcd to suit or no sales. He intends to sell very low and conduct a strictly Cash Business. The purchaser will certainly rind the Cash System at h ast 20 per cent, in his lavor. His motto is "quick sales and small profits," for CASH ONLY. Yes, if you want the worth of your money conic to me. ' J. W. COLE, Ag't. Charlotte, April 28, 1K7. Cm VII. II. M. PRITCHARD'S EEr STORE IS REMOVED to the Stand on the North corner of Public Square, known as Irwin's Cor ner, where he will be glad to see his friends and customers. May 12, lc57. 45-tf Cigar, Tobacco, AND FRUIT STORE. THE subscriber reapeetlully informs the citi z. ns of Charlotte and surrounding country, that he has just received a splendid assortment of SPANISH CIGARS of the choicest brands. Also, a lino article of C 1 1 EW ING TOBACCO, FRUITS & CONFECTIONERIES. JAS. D. PALMER, Opposite Boone A Co. 'a Shoo Store. Charlotte, April 7. lo7. 40-tf WESTERN DEMOCRAT, f CHARLOTTES ' THE POISONING OF CHILDREN AT CINCINNATI. Further Particulars The Cincinnati Commercial if Wednes day has tho following pcrticulars of the poisoning: Yesterday afternoon betweei tho hours of two and four, a couple of bays, appar ently from 14 to 1G years if ape, were ob served sauntering up Buckeye street, a densely populated German neighborhood, scattering small lozenges upon the sidewalk about tho size of peppermint drops. In another part of the street a rather robust man, dressed in a black coat, white pants and white hat, with a box under his arm, was also observed occasionally distributing a similar description of lozenges, on.y in larger quantities. As is usual in Gernun localities, quite a number of children wire playing upon the street, and they greediy seized the tempting candies thus gratui tously thrown in their way. Occasional!; the man would give a package to persons ho met, but in these instances the parties declined tasting, suspecting that all was not right. Not so, however, with the un suspecting children, who greedily devoured tho (to them) dainty waifs, and in a short time afterwards they were taken with vio lent vomiting. The neighborhood became speedily alarmed, and Drs. Smith. Davis and Fries were summoned, who speedily detected tho actiou of poison, and ipon a chemist in tho neighborhood, Mr Eckel, analyzing a loziuge, it was found to be composed of equal parts of arsenic, sigar and flour. In the track which the man, or rather monster, had takci:, as many as 1,500 of these death-dealing drops wire found in one pile, and in another spot one fourth pound of arsenic was found tied in a couple of parcels. The neighborhood became fearfully ex cited, for at least twenty children Lad more or less partaken of the insidious poison. The first victim was a fine little by named John Shultz, aged nine years. lis expired at about (1 o'clock in the evening. We were present when the Coroner held his tutjuvst, uml a muic niclunciioly sight it has hardly been our lot to witness. The mother of tha dead child had a few days previous been confiued, and in the same room her eldest born lay a stiff and rigid corpse, while the new-born infant sought in vain for nourishment from the maternal breast, the fount of which sudden grief and agony had dried. Her two other children had also partaken of the poisonous drops, and lay sick in the same room, but they were pronounced out of danger. Immediately upon the other side of tho street, another promising child named Henry Schwartz, about 11 o'clock last night is said to have breathed its last; and at the time we visited the poisoned district some four or five other children, male and female were supposed to be in a very criti cal condition. We heard also that several similar cases had occurred on Fifteenth, between Race and Elm streets. It is with heartfelt pain that we arc com pelled to record a crime which makes us blush for our common nature. Such a fiend as the perpetrator of the above atroci ties might well cause us to claim kindred with the brute and forswear our relation ship with the human species. It is to be hoped that no pains will be spared in hunt ing the vampire to his lair. One of the Lynchers Huxq. A young man named Flinch, son of Deacon Flinch, of Massilon, Cedar county, Iowa, hung himself last Tuesday, about 4 o'clock p. m. lie was with the vigilance committee at the time they took Kelso and his com rade, and on casting a vote whether he should be hung or not, he cast his vote in favor of hanging, but left before they were hung. When he returned home his mother asked him if they had caught the men. He said they had, and he had voted to hang them. His mother told him he ought not j to take that which he could not give. After she had talked with him a few moments, he left her and went to his plowing, attended j OI Piaiu a,,u uuaoTO J"J to that for a while, when he hitched his ments, and plates of various thickness, from horse, and taking ono of the reins, went to t! f,,il to thc "teenth of an inch thick, a tree, tied the strap to a low limb and combined with gold, so as to show gold up round his neck, then let his weight down, j n G ido ad t,,p iJfi 1 10 and when found his knees touched the j a(1 5t was certainly very difhcult to tell ground and he was dead. Anamosa ( la.) Kureka. A Cakgo of Irish Girls. A company of seventy Irish girls passed through this city on their way to the AN est, a day or two since, accompanied by an Irish gentle man, who had them in charge, and had brought them all the way from Ireland. They were a fine looking lut of girls, from sixteen to eighteen years of age, and intend to make the West their homes; and of course tire ready to marry, but are willing to work and earn their living until the time arrives when they will get a husband. They are to earn money sufficient to pay the expense of bringing them over, and return it to the benevolent gentleman who took the expense upon himself, the first thintr, after that they will be at liberty to indulge in ribbons and hoops, if they choose. Detroit Free Press. THE TWO BROTHERS. The following beautiful Arabian legend we copy from the "Voice of Jacob." The site occupied by tho temple of Solo mon was formerly a cultivated field, pos sessed in common by two brothers. One of them was married and had several chil dren; the other was unmarried. They lived together, however, in the greatest harmony possible, cultivating the property they had inherited from their father. The harvest season had arrived. The two brothers bound up their sheaves, made two onual stacks of them, and left them on the field. During the night tho unmarried brother was struck with an excellent thought. My brother, said he to himself, has a wife and children to support; is it just that my portion of the harvest should be as large as his. Upon this ho arose and took from his stack several sheaves, which he added to those of his brother ; and this he did with as much secrecy as if he had been commit ting an evil action, in order that his offering might not be rejected. On tho samo night tho other brother awoke and said to his wife, "My brother lives alone without a companion ; ho has none to assist in his labor nor to reward him for his toils, while God has bestowed on me a wife and children ; is it right that ve should take from our common field as many shieves as he, since we have already more than he has domestic happiness. If you consent, we shall, by adding secret ly a number of our shieves to his stack, by way of compensation, and without his knowledge, see his portion of the harvest increased. This object was approved and immediately put in execution. In the morning, each of the brothers went into the field, and was much surprised at seeing the stacks still equal. During several successive nights the samo contri vance was repeated on each side ; each kept adding to his brother's store, the stacks always remained the same. But one night, both having stood sentinel to divine into the cause of the miracle, they met; each bearing the shieves mutually designed for the other. It was thus that all was elucidated, and they rushed into ! each other's arms, each grateful to Heaven for having so good a brother. Now, saya tho legend, tlie place where so good an idea had simultaneously occur red to the two brothers, and with so much pertinacity, must have been acceptable to God. Men blessed it, and Israel choso it there to erect tho house of the Lord. OREIDE THE NEW SUBSTITUTE FOR GOLD. The manufacture of this new metal, oreide, under the French patent ot II. Migeou, granted iu this country March 3, ld57,Jias been commenced on a large scale in Watcrbury, Connecticut, and it will un doubtedly soon bo in use, as it is already in France, for various articles of domestic economy and all sorts of ornamentation, as it bears relation to gold similar to that of German silver to pure silver; like German silver, it may be used in a pure condition. or as a base of gold plating. It bears so strong a resemblance to gold, that when manufactured into fine articles, such as we have become accustomed to see made only of gold, we arc at once convinced that the articlo we are handling is really the pure metal, yet it is made of a meterial that costs only eighty cents a pound as it comes from the furnace, where the several metals of its composition havo been refined into ingots. The oreide is not a new metal it is only a new compound of old metals, so refined in the process as to have done away with a great part of their disposition to oxidise, as it only tarnishes in about the same de gree as silver, and though ebulition takes place, if tested with nitric acid, it docs not leave a black spot, so that it may be actu ally cleaned with acids which would de stroy such metals as copper or brass. We have examined the metal in bars and sheets prepared for the manufacture of various articles, and also in its manufactured state in spoons, sugar tongs, napkin rags, gob lets, buttons, watch chains, various articles i . 1 J 1 I 1 1 , which was gold and wtncii was oreiue That it is an improvement in the arts there can be no doubt ; and that it so much re sembles gold as to make it necessary for our Legislature at once to require, as in France, that all articles should be stamp ed "oreide" to prevent great frauds, will probably be found out after a great many people have been severely cheated. A. Y. Tribune. As Antidote. Dr. Shaw of Texas, states that he has found sweet oil, drank freely, a successful antidote to strychnine in two cases. The oil is to be poured down without any reference to the patieut's vomiting, l'rof. Rochester has reported two cases of poisoning by the same terrible drug successfully t-cated by a free use of camphor internally, and mustard poultice outside. HINTS TO HORSE DEALERS. Tompkins bought a fine horse paid 500 for him. Tlie horse, after a few months, proved to be lame in tho right shoulder. Tompkins was distressed about it tried all sorts of remedies embrocations, lini ments, Mustang included, under tho advice of the very best veterianaries, still the lane ness was obstinate and grew rather worse. Ho became desperate, and hit upon ili'u de vice to sell the horse, lie drove an bgly ten-penny nail plump into the rigH fore foot, and left it there for ten days, when he led the tortured animal limping to n Uc tgh Vot igj ltlwohnmStV to b. shod. i1:e blacksmith was a dealer in horses, and qtite a jockey in his way. After a while Thomp kins called at the shop for his horse. "That's a splendid gelding of yours, Mr Tompkins ; pity he is so lame, says the blacksmith. "He is, indeed," replied Tompkins ; "but he is very lame, and I am afraid he can't be cured." "Perhaps not, and may-be ho can," says Vulcan. "How much would you be willing to tako for him, just as he stands, Mr. Tompkins, money down ?" "Ah, well, I don't know what to say about that, if he is cured, he's worth all I paid for him. and even much more as horses go now ; but if his lameness should continue, you see ho is worth nothing not a uollar." The blacksmith began to chaffer. First he offered $50 then $100 aud at last $'-200 for the animal. Tompkins was persuaded, aud accepted the last offer. The money was paid, aud the horse delivered on the spot. "Now," says the blacksmith, "as the bar gain is finished, I will be frank with you, Mr. Tompkins. I suppose I can tell you exactly what ailed that horse" "Can you ?" said Tompkins ; "well, I shall be glad to hear it. I thought you knew all about it, or you would not have paid so much money for him." Tho blacksmith produced the nail, and assured Tompkins, with great apparent satisfaction, that, while paring down the ! no,e 8 Iloors' ae I,uu Iounu inai ' l., ,.r : ,1 i t .1.;. lutJ UI U,1U u,tlwu oul U1 frog of the near fore-foot. "Is that all you know about it ?" Tomp-l- l-j . m-;.v "All!" replied the blacksmith: alt: isn't that enough for conscience sake V "Well," replied Tompkins, "I don't know as it is. 1 will bo equally as frank with you, since tho bargain is finished. I drove that nail into the foot, but the lameness is in the shoulder, I think you will find !" Consumption. Sir James Clark, of England, has assailed, with considerable force, the doctrine that a change of climate is beneficial to persons suffering with con sumption ; and a French physician, M. Carriere. has written forcibly against it. Dr. Burgess, an eminent Scotch physician, also contends that climate has little or nothing to do with euro of consumption ; and that, ifit had, the curative effects would be produced through tho skin, and not the lungs. That a warm climate is not in itself beneficial, he shows from the fact that the disease exists in all latitudes. In India and Africa, tropical climates, it is as fre quent as in Europe and North America. At Malta, right in the heart of the genial Mediterranean, tho army reports of Eng land show that one-third of thc deaths among tho soldiers are by consumption. At Nice, a favorite resort of English inva lids, especially those afflicted with lung complaints, there are more native-born persons dio of consumption than in any English town of equal population. In Geneva this disease is almost equally pre valent. In Florence, pneumonia is said to be marked by a suffocating character, and by a rapid progress towards its last stage. Naples, whoso climate is the theme of so much praise by travelers, shows in her hospitals a mortality by consumption equal to one in two and one-third ; whereas Paris whose climate is so often pronounced vil lainous, tho proportion is only one in three and ono-quarter. In Madeira, no local disease is more common thanconsumption. - j Franklin Asking von Work. When quite a youth, Franklin went to London, entered a printing office, and inquired if he could get employment as a printer. "Where are you from ?" inquired the foreman. "America," was the reply. "Ah," said the foreman, from America ! a lad from America seeking employment as a printer ! Well, do you really understand the art of printing ? Can you set type ?" Franklin stepped to one of the cases, and, in a very brief space, set up the following passage from the first chapter of the Gospel of John : "Nathaniel saith unto him, can any good thing come out of Nazareth .' Fhilip saUL unto him, come and see !" It was done so quick, so accurately, and contained a delicate reproof, so appropriate and powerful, that it at once gave him character and standing with all in the office m To Telt. Good Eggs. If you desire to be certain that your eggs are gd ami fresh, put them in water, if the huts turn up they are not fresh. This is an infallible rub to distinguish a good egg from a bad one. THE LANGUAGE OF DRESS. Fil ler this head (says Life Illustrated) we ! are impressed to sav few words to Uio j ladies, the marriageable girls especially. j We do this "privately and confidentially,' and request all young gentlemen to have the politeness not to read (his article. Itis for the Girls exclusively. Well, then, girls, yon expect to get married,do you not? If you do not, you should. Yii also wisli to marry, don't you? If you do not, you arc either more or less than woman. Preaunung that you an . i ! are all light m 'los m in..r wo call TOU1 attention c the following extract, the words of a popular author: "A wife looks prettier, if sho did but kmv it, in her neat morning frock of calico, than ii the incongruous pile of finery which sho dignifies with the titlo of full dross. Many an unmarried female first wins the lieart of he: future husband in some simple, unpretending attire, which, if consulted about, she vould pronounce too cheap except for ordinary wear, but which, by its accidental suitability to her figure, face, and carriage, idmlizc her youth wonderfully. If the sex would study taste in dress moro, and care less for costliness, they would havo no reason to regret, i t." Now we assure ono and all the unmar ried of the fiir sex that we have known many females who really wished to marry, to live in single blessedness and dio husbandless, for no other reason in all human probability than that of dressing too gaudily. We have heard the sentiments of the male sex expressed a thousand times on this point, and in every instance, whether the observer was young or dd, young man, bachelor, or w idower; rich or poor, ugly or handsome, wise man, for or dandy, in every instance an overdressed or expensively "rinsed out" female loslot in his estimation. This is perfectly natural and proper. A foolish and silly nan is not worth marrying; and a sensible oan will surely judge you advantageoiHy in exact ratio to tlie plainness snd simplicity of your dress. A pror man, or man in moderate circum- stansea, however worthy and descrvincr. ustb nui inarr) ti reunite who Is superfluously done up in ribbons and flounces, however lovely and talented she may be, because ho has sense enough to suspect she will be an expensive treasure. He may love her, and still feel that he cannot afford to marry her. And the rich man, though ho likes her personally and admires her other accomplish ments, dare not take her for better or worse, because the dashing style of hor habiliments indicate too great a passion for the admiration of the world. He fears, justly too, that her passion for general admiration will be a serious obstacle in tho way of the manifestation of affection for him individually. And as all men aro selfish, whether women are or not, both rich and poor, in selecting a wife, act on the principle, that I leauty, when unadorned, is adorned thc most. A NEW PROJECTILE. t i i r y a E 'very person lias read oi Jules uernra, the lion-killer, and his wonderful encounters in the jungles of Africa. When Gerard came back to Paris tho last time from his fayorite amusement in Africa, he suggested to Devisme, the well-known gunuiaker of the Boulevard dea Italians, tho idea of inventing a ball that would explode when it arrived in the animal's body. The new projectile is about thc size of t he Minie ball; its penetrating force is equal to thc common ball. Arrived m the animal's body, it xplodc.s iike a bomb, and, of course, causes thc sudden death of the animal. If shot into the lungs of an elephant, for example, the ball in exploding disengages carbonic acid gas, and thc animal, which from its size might otherwise survive for a short time, will suddenly, fall asphyxiated. A few days ago a party of gentlemen accom panied M. Devisme to a horse slaughter house, iu the environs of the city. There the new projectile was tried on five horse who were standing tied to a fence waiting to be shot. They were each shot in the lungs, the ball exploded and the animal fell dead. The experiment WM completely satisfactory. Since then, IL DeviaiiM, to demonstrate the practicability of his new projectile as a substitute for the harpoon in the destruction of whales, has gone to Havre, not with the hope that a whale would present itself to be killed; but to try the experiment on an artilical whale that would respond in iu resistance to a real one. Thc experiment was entirely successful, and those who witnessed it assert positively that thc substitute for the harpoon is found. Lawvers Good Soldikbj?. Somegoiiim has conceived the brilliant idea to pre all lawyers into military service in ease of war because their "dbsvyct" aro so great that no one could stand them.