J' i.' ' f ' t . t - DJDIX J r;. ' vv. . r. rr it rr f "V II kU. U. J'-wi. r v. V. J. YATES, Editor and Proprietor. rrw f Subscription $2. 00, ha advance. CHARLOTTE, N. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1877. i TWENTY- SIXTH VOLUBJEKi!3 . . . . . hr. 6Ji no rCiiow P 1 la THE Charlotte Democrat, PUBLISHED BY WILLIAM J. YATES, Editor and Proprietor o Tbkms TWO DOLLARS for one year, or One Dollar and Twenty-five Cents for six months. Subscriptions must be paid in advance. -o- Advertisements will be inserted at reasonable rates, or in accordance with contract. Obituary notices of over five lines in length will tje charged for at advertising rates. Dr. JOHN H. McADEN, Wholesale and Retail Druggist, CHARLOTTE, N. C, I las on hand a large and well selected stock of PURE DRUGS, Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Family Medicines, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Dye Stuffs, Fancy and Toilet Articles, which he is determined o sell at the very lowest prices. Jan 1, 1875. F. SCARE. & CO., Chemists and Druggists, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Prescriptions prepared at all hours of the Day and Night. Keep constantly on hand all kinds of Drugs, Medi cines, Paints, Oilsv Dye Stuffs, Spices, Green and Bbtck Tea, fcc, Ac. Jan. 1, 1876. J. P. McCombs, M. D., 'dors his professional services to the citizens of ( iiarlotte and (surrounding country. All calls, both i.urht and day, promptly attended to. "office in Brown's building, up stairs, opposite the ( harlotte Hotel. Jan. 1, 1873. K. I. OSBORNE. W. C. MAXWELL. OSBORNE & MAXWELL, Attorneys at Law, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Office over Ilarty's Crockery Store, near the Court House. Particular attention given to Collections, Settle ment of Estates and Partition of Land and Convey ancing. Nov. 1, 1876 ly DR. W. H. HOFFMAN, Dentist, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Office over A. R. Nisbet & Bro's Store, Trade Street. Feb. 8,187 5. W. F. COOK, Trade Street, on North Carolina Railroad, Charlotte, N. C, Manufacturer of CIDER MILLS and all kinds of FARMING IMPLEMENTS. All orders promptly attended to. Jan. 1, 1872. R. M. MILLER & SONS, Commission Merchants, and WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Provisions and Groceries, College Street, Charlotte, N . C . Flour, Bacon, Sugar, Coffee, Salt, Molasses, and in fact, all kind of Groceries in large quantities always on hand for the Wholesale trade. Jan. 1 1875. Walter Brem & Martin, Dealers in HARDWARE, AND Agricultural Implements, &c, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Jan. 1, 1876. W. M. CROWELL, Commission Merchant, And dealer in Groceries, Tobacco, Cigars and all kinds of : Country Produce, : (opposite Sanders & Blackwood's' Cotton Warehouse,) College Street, Charlotte, N. C. July 31, 1876. HOTEL! The Central Hotel, CHARLOTTE, M. C, Located in the centre of the city, has been fitted up as a First Class House with New Furniture and all conveniences appertaining to a good Hotel. Tehms $3 00, $2.50 and $2 00 per day, accord ing to location of Room. II. C. ECCLES, Proprietor. Feb. 2, 1877. j. Mclaughlin, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Groceries, Provisions, &c, College Street, Charlotte, N. C, Sells Groceries at lowest rates for Cash, and buys Country Produce at highest market price. tW Cotton and other country Produce sold on commission and prompt returns made. D. M. RIGLER, Charlotte, N. C. Dealer in Confectioneries, Fruits, Canned Goods, Crackers, Bread, Cakes, Pickles, &c. tST Cakes baked to order at short notice. Jan. 1, 1877. B. N, SMITH, Dealer in Groceries and Family Provisions of all sorts, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Consignments of Produce solicited, and prompt returns made.,.' Families cau find anything at my Store in the Grocery line to cat, includim fresh meat Jan. 1, 1877. Central Hotel BARBER SHOP. GRAY TOOLE, Proprietor, keeps the best workmen employed, .and guarantees pleasure and aatisfaction to customers. Shop immediately in fear of Hotel office. June 8, 1877. - - ... - . .. , I : . . BLUE STONE! Blue Stone I! A full supply of Blue Stone at SCARR & COS Oct. 26, 1877. Drug Store. Lands for Sale, Rent, &c. VALUABLE HEAL For Sale. ESTATE By virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of jueciiienourg county, we will sell at the Court House door, in Charlotte, JS. C, on Monday, De cember z-iin, tne tollowing- valuable City Property and Lands, situated as hereatter described : Part of LOTS 920 and 921, with a 3-room house ; Lot 919, which has a 5-room house ; Lots 918 and 856. Two unnumbered Lots, one of which has a d-room house on it. All theabovt- is in Square 107. Part of Square 106, beginning at Stenhouse & Macaulay's corner, running 246 feet on Myers street to aixui btreet, thence with Sixth Street 253 ft-et to W. A. Williams' line, then 261 feet with W. A. William's line to Stenhouse & Macau lay's line, and with that line 227 feet to the begin ning on Myers Street, containing two acres, more or less. All the above is City Property, and very valua ble, lying in close proximity to the business por tion of the city. One Tract of LAND known as part of the S W. Davis place, lying three miles Southwest of Char lotte, on Big Sugar Creek, and near the Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta Railroad. This property con tains 109J Acres, more or less, and is good Farm ing Land, joining B. F. Smith, R. li. Rea, and others. Plats of the above property can be found at any time at the Store of Walter Brem & Martin, and the undersigned will be pleased to bhow parties wishing to purchase. Terms of Sale. The following terms must be complied with : Ten per cent of the amount of sale must be paid in cash, and the remainder upon a credit of six and twelve months, in equal pay ments ; Notes with approved security required, with interest from date of sale at eight per cent per annum. Title reserved till last payment is made. T. L. ALEXANDER, WALTER BUEM. Executors of T. II. Brem, deceased. Nov. 23, 1877 5w POSITIVE SALE. By virtue of a power of sale contained in a Mort gage executed to me by T. W. Sparrow, M. L. Sparrow, J. S. Sparrow and II. D. Sparrow, duly registered in Mecklenburg county, I will sell at Public Auction on the premises, at Davidson Col lege, on Wednesday 19th day of December, 1877, that valuable Tract of Land, containing 53 acres, on which is situated an excellent Dwelling House, now occupied by the said T. VV. Sparrow and family, together with all other necessary out buildings. Sale positive. G. F. SHEPHERD, Nov. 16, 1877. 4wpd Mortijatiee. GOLD MINES For Sale. By Virtue of a Decree of the Superior Court of Union county, made at the Fall Term, 1877, 1 will proceed to sell on Monday the 7th of January, 1878, at the Court House in the town of Monroe, the fol lowing valuable MINING PROPERTY, belong ing to the Estate of Hugh Downing, dee'd, viz. : The Stewart Gold Mine, Machinery, and all the Fixtures belonging thereto, lying on the waters of Goose Creek, containing 495 acres. Also, the Fox Hill Gold Mine, lying on the waters of Goose Creek, containing 195 acres. Also, the Lemmond Gold Mine, lying on the waters of Goose Creek, containing 734 acres. And also one other Tract known as the Long Gold Mine, lying on the waters of Duck Creek, containing 50 acres. The aforesaid property is valuable for mining and farming purposes ; also, a fine mill site on one of the Tracts. Terms 10 per cent cash ; balance on a credit of six months, with bond and approved security ; no title to pas3 to the purchaser until all the purchase money is paid. G. W. FLOW, Nov. 16, 1877 7w Commissioner. SALE OF CITY PROPERTY. By virtue of authority granted to me by Jo. W. Wilson and wife, by Mortgage, dated March 13th, 1875, 1 will sell at public auction for cash, at the Court House in Charlotte, N. C, on Monday, De cember 10th, 1877, at 12 o'clock, M., that LOT in the City of Charlotte on which said Wilson resides, corner 7th and D Streets, fronting 99 feet and run ning back 198 feet towards 8th Street, on which is a two-story Dwelling House, and also a Brick Kitchen, Well, and other improvements. Sale positive. S. P. ALEXANDER. Nov. 9, 1877 5vvpd Mortgagee. Trustee's Sale. By virtue of a Deed of Trust, executed by Dela ware Banks and wife, (colored,) on the 17th day of August, 1876, and duly registered, I will sell at Auction, at the Court House door in Charlotte, on Monday the 10th day of December, 1877, for the purposes specified in said Trust, the property em braced therein, being the HOUSE and LOT where the said Delaware Banks and wife reside, on Hill Street, in the Citv of Charlotte. Terms, Cash. J. A. McLURE, Nov. 9, 1877 5w Agent for Trustee. Trustee's Sale. By virtue of a Deed of Trust made to me by Irwin Alexander, (colored,) dated the 7th day of February, 1877, and duly registered, I will expose to public sale, at the Court House door in Charlotte, on Monday the 10th day of December, 1877, a Tract of LAND containing 47 Acres, adjoining the lands of Elam Robinson and others. Also, at the same time and place, a mare MULE will be sold in accordance with the provisions of said Trust. Terms, Cash. J. A. McLURE, Nov. 9, 1877 5w Trustee. Mortgage Sale. By virtue of a Mortgage made to J. W. Wads worth by Ephraim Potts and wife Hannah,(colored,) dated February 2, 1877, 1 will sell at public sale, at the Court House door in Charlotte, on Monday the 10th day of December, 1877, a HOUSE and LOT in Charlotte in Square 79, bounded by 1st and D Streets. Also, one black mare MULE 4 years old. Terms, Cash. , J. A. McLURE, Nov. 9, 1877 5w Agent for Mortgagee Mortgage Sale. In accordance with the provisions of a Mortgage made to J. W. Wadsworth by John Parks and Frank Parks, dated the 15th day of February, 1875, I will sell at the Court House door in Char lotte, on Mondav the 10th day of Decembei, 1877, a certain LOT and parcel of LAND situated near the boundary of Charlotte, near the corner of the Old Fair Grounds, fronting the road leading from Church Street. Terms, Cash. J. A. McLURE, Nov. 9, 1877 5w Agent for Mortgagee. FOR SALE. I offer for sale on Monday, the 3d day of Decem ber, a valuable PLANTATION, containing 163 Acres of Land. A large Brick House, and all neces sary out buildings. It lies 2 miles east of Char lotte, and is known as the Dr. Gibbon Place J. T. A. DA IS. Oct. 26,1877 6w Professional Men. The professional ranks are well filled Our young men as they grow up catch the contagion and early begin to survey the held, lhev want a profession, not so much for the pecuniary benefit they are to derive irorn it, or the service they may render so eiety, as the personal promotion it may af ford. W e have long felt that the honors a'taching to the profession of law or medi cine are more imaginary than real. A few men of distinction have made these profes sions honorable, as is the case in nearly all the professions of life, but the great majori ty ot those who choose a j)rofessional life fall vastly short of the laurels which are worn by the few. To be a lawyer or doctor in name is a cheat a base traud but to be either in reality is an honor. If our yountf men, in choosing a professional life, wrould keep this fact before them, they would not so hastily reach a conclusion. Let any boy, of ordinary mind and acquire ments, determine to enter either of the pro fessions mentioned, and he as soon begins to put on airs simultaneously begins to flourish his cold headed cane in the air, and with his hat placed on his head obliquely, lie lights his cigar and promenades the streets as though he was lord of creation. That he may be fully initiated in the pro fession he has chosen, he fains to be'ieve he must take, now and then, a social drink, treat his comrades and join them in a game of cards, &c. Thus hundreds enter a pro fession and at the same time start in the downwaid road to ruin. Intellect, though bright at the outset, has lost its light and the soul has become dwarfed. Such cashes are indeed pitiable and their presence in the family circle always produces unhappim ss and too often leaves a sting which time mav CD never extract. What the country needs, and what we would n uv earnestly insist upon, is young men of brain, nerve and musclo,and all these sanctified by divine grace. We have the brai i, and to sonic extent the muscle, but are sadly deficient in nerve and moral cour age. Let our parents take a calm and con siderate view of this question, and not hurry their sons through college and to the bar or the practice of medicine. Lawyers and doctors are useful and we cannot do with out them, but the crop at present is abun dant the demand in number is fully met. We need tillers of the soil. We undertake to say that there is as much honor in being a successful farmer as there is in being a professional gentleman. But, says one, "any man can cultivate the soil it does not require brilliancy of intellect or mental cul ture to cultivate the ground." We think differently we can scarcely think of any occupation which men follow which requires more head work (and the best kind of head work) than that of the farmer. I he proper kind of head work is as important as manual labor. What we wish to say to our young men, and we would say it with special emphasis, is this do not be in too great haste to em bark in a proiession. 1 ou had better take time to consider the subject well. A mis take made in early manhood is not easily corrected, and too often proves fatal. Ral eigh Christian Advocate. REMOVAL. I have removed my Store from No. 2 Granite Row, to second door North of Trade Street, next to Dr. Scarr s, into the Store with Mr E. J. Allen, Jeweler, where I shall be pleased to see my former customers and the public. 1 shall enlarge my Stock of Books and keep a full line of Stationery and Notions. Oct. 12, 1877. J. K. PUREFOY. Hardware at Walter Brem's. All parties wanting Hardware for Cash will do well to call on us. as we will sell lower for Cash at Retail than any house in the city. We have a large, lull stock of Goods, and are determined to sell. All we want is an opportunity. Satisfaction is guaranteed. Call on us. WALTER BUEM 5r MAK TIM. Farmers ! Don't forget us. We will save you money by buy ing of us. WAETEli BKEjI JHAK1TM. We have everv'thing a Mechanic needs low for Cash. WALTER BREM & MARTIN. Oct. 5, 1877. REMOVAL. W. B. TAYLOR has removed his Lock and Gun-Smith and Repairing Shop to the wooden building next to Brem, Brown & Co s Hardware Store. Give him a call. Nov. 1G, 1877. Notice to Farmers. 1,000 Bushels choice Seed Oats, 20,000 Pounds Wheat Bran, 200 Bales Timothy Hay, 200 Barrels Indian Rock (Va.) Lime, 100 " Calcined Plaster, 100 " Rosendale Cement, 100 " Novia Scotia Land Plaster. W. W. WARD. Sept. 28. 1877. Seed Wheat and Oats, At JAMES F. JOHNSTON'S. Wagons ! Wagons ! ! Another Car Load of the celebrated White Water Wagons, at reduced prices. JAMES F. JOIIXSTON. Open and Top Buggies, At reduced prices. JAMES F. JOHNSTON, Opera House Building, Charlotte, N. C. Nov. 16, 1877 3w Just Received at the RISING SUN, Fresh Goshen Butter, Fresh Northern Apples, Vrph Or.inces. Fresh Malaga Grapes. Fresh Cheese, Fresh Lemons, &c, &c. j And a general supply of Groceries. Fresh Horae-Made Candy always on hand, and fresh Bread and Cakes every dav. C. S. HOLTON. Oct. 5, 1877. Treasures under the Sea. An expedition is now preparing at New York for an errand of rare romance in this prosaic time. Its object is to search, with ail the appliances of modern science, for some of the "unsunned heaps" of jewels with which centuries of war and wreck are supposed to have strewed the bottom of the Spanish main. One of the most gorgeous of the authentic tales oi thi enchanted re gion is that of the los in 1815 of the Span ish treasure ship San Pedro Alcantara with over $6,000,000 in gold, silver and precious stones, on the Venezuelan shore. This ves sel had be.n sent by King Ferdinand VII to convey some provision-ships for the fleet engaged in subjugating to Spanish rule the S'ates along the South shore of the Carib bean ea. There were 1.300 men on board, and the chests contained $3,000,000 in silver. Oh reaching Caraccan, a revolution was found in prog-ess, and the Spanish citizens hastened to put th. ir property ou board the San Pedro. The gold alone amounting to $1,000,000, and the jewels probably to as much again, and this vat treasure was in creased by more than a- much more by a descmt on some of the revolted towns on the coa-t, and the carrying away of all th? weahh thein-atiate marines could lay their hands on. The acquisition of these riches completely turned the heads of the Span iards, and otlicers, soldiers and sailors pre pared to celebrate their fortune by a grand debauch. In the midst -d their reveiry the cry of "fire" was heard. The drunken mob, tighiing desperately forth- life boats, made no effort to save the treasure r to check the flames which soon reach- d the p wder magazine, and the huge three-decker was instantly blown to fraguu nts, almos. all the lis es destroy nd, and the untold wealth of metals i.nd jewe's s.rewn over the bottom of the sea. ftince that day one of the favor ite undertakings of marine adventurers has been to raise the treasures of the San Pedro Alcantan. The attempts hae all failed irom varieties of causes, chiefly the inade quacy of diving and dredging apparatus to w ork effectively at ttie dep-.h of over 00 feet in which the vessel lit s. Perhaps 8500,000 in all have be n recovered, wh-chis but a small proportion of the millions which un doubtedly repose there among the sands. The present expedition, however, which will start during the coming month, has Lrood assurance of success, as Capt. I. II. Folinnsbee, oi San PVancisCo, the projector, has supplied himself with drags and dredges of the most improved pattern, and which his experience has shown him are entirely adequate for the purpose. lie believes that the chests of gold were i ssed by the ex plosion to a greater distance from the vessel than other explorers have searched, and have sunk deeper in the sand than their in struments could p-netrate. He has obtain ed permission of ihe Venezuelan Govt rn- ment to search for the treasure for six years m consideration of the payment of 5 per cent on all sums recovered, and as he can examine minutely all the ground necessary in eiir'it months, he statts out wnth the con fident expectation of returning within a year possessor of ail the unvalued wealth of the ill-fated ijalleon. Our Boys. Teach them self reliance : teach them to m ke fires; teach them how to saw and split wood; teach them every day. dry, hard, practical common sense; teach them how to darn stockings; teach them how to eat w hat is set before th m and be thank ful; teach them how to black their boots and take proper care of their clothing; leach them how to ay no, and mean it, ami yes, and stick to it; teach them to wear their working clothes like kings; teach them that ste idy habits ar- better than riot ous living; teach them that the further one goes bevond his income the nearer he gets to th - poor houe; t- ach them not to have anything to do with intemperate and iisso lute young men, or with idle or frivolous young women. Huxtixg ox Sunday. Many p rsons hunt and fish on Sunday, forgetting that the Lord has said rerat tub r the Sabbath day to keep b holy ; and n't only this, the laws of North Carolina forbid it, as will be seen by reading se tin 117 of chapter 32, Battle's Kevisd, which is as follows: "If any person or persons whomsoever shall be known t hunt in this Sta e on the Sabbath with a dog or dogs, or shall be found off of th'-ir premises on the Sabbath, having with him or them a shot gun, rifle or pistol, he or they shall be subject to in dictment ; and, upon conviction shall pay a fine not to exceed fifty dollars at the discre tion of the Court, two-thirds of such fine to enure to the benefit of the free public schools in the county of which such convict is a resident, the remainder to the in formant." Grape Vines. The subscriber has a fine lot of .well rooted Grape Vines for sale near Charlotte, embracing all the varieties suitable for our country and climate. Price $10 per hundred, or $1.50 per dozen. All orders promptly attended to, and delivered in Charlotte if required. DANIEL ASBURY. Nov. 23, 1877. NOTICE The creditors of JOHN W. HUNTER, included in a Mortgage made to me July 23d, 1677, are re quested to present their claims to me by the 1st day of December next, for their pro rata share of the proceeds from sale of the Land of said Hunter. j. Mclaughlin, Nov. 23, 1S77 Mortgagee. W. C. Reid, Formerly with G. W. Chalk & Co., is now with W. M. CROWELL, and would like to have all his friends and former customer to give him a call be fore they buy their Groceries, Provisions, Tobacco, Grain, 5cc. College Street, Sanders fe Blackwood's Build ing, next door to J. W. Hall & Co. Charlotte, N. CM Nov. 23, 1877. Transient Troubles. Most of us have had troubles all our lives, and each day has brought.all the evil that we wished to endure, lint if we wery 'asked to recount the sorrows' of our lives, how many could we remember?- How many that are six months old 'should we think worthy to be remembered " or mentioned? To-dy's troubles look , large, but a week hence they will be forgotten and buried out of sight. . If you would keep a book, and every day put down the things that worry you, and see what becomes of them, it would be a benefit to you. You allow a thing to annoy you, just as you allow a fly to settle on you and plague you ; and you lose your temper (or rather get it ; for when nu n are sur charged with temper they are said to have lost it) and youjustify yourselves for being thrown off your balance- by causes which you do not trace out. But if you would see what it was that threw you off your balance before breakfast, and put it down in a little book, and follow it out, and ascertain what becomes of it, you would see what a fool you were in the matter. The art of forgetting is a blessed art, but the art of overlooking is quite as import ant. And if we should take time to write down the origin, progress, and outcome of a few of our troubles, it would m ike us so ashamed of the fuss we make over them, iliat we should be glad to drop such things and bury them at once in eternal for getfulness. Life is too short to I e worn out in petty worries, fretting, hatreds, and vexations. Let us banish all these, and think on what soever things are pure, and lovely, and gentle, and of good teport. Advantages of Fresh Air. Kosseau expresses a belief lhat any man, who has preserved his native temperance for the first twentv-five. Years, will after ward be pretty nearly proof against temp tation, because very unnatural habits can only be acquired while our tastes have the pliancy of immaturity, and I think the same holds good of the troglodyte habit; no one who has nassed twentv or twentv- live years in open air can be bribed very j easily to exchange oxygen lor miasma. Shamvl-ben-IIaddin, the Circassian hero chieftain, who was captured by the lius sians in the winter oi 1801, was carried to Novgorod and imprisoned in an aputment of the city armory, which resembled a com fortable bed-chamber rather than a dun geon, and was otherwise treated with more kindness than the Russians are wont to show their piisoners, as the government hoped to use his influence for political pur poses. But a week after his arrival in Nov gorod the captive mountaineer demanded an interview with the commander of the ar mory, and offered to resign his liberal ra tions and subsist on cabbage-soup like the private soldiers of his guard, and also to surrender some valuables he had concealed on his person, on condition, that they would permit him to sleep in open air. One more week of such nausea and headache as the confinement in a closed room had caused him, would force him to commit suicide, he said, and, if his request was refused, God would charge the guilt of the deed on his tormentors. After taking due precautions against all possibility of escape, they per mitted him to sleep on the platform in front of the guard-house; and Col. Darapski, the commander of the city, informed his govern ment in the following spring that the health and general behavior of his prisoner were excellent but he had slept in open air every one of the last hundred nights, with no covering but his own worn-out mantle, and a woollen cap he had purchased from a sol dier of the guard to keep his turban hom getting soiled by mud and rain. Gen. Sam Houston, the liberator of Texas, who had exiled himself from his native State in early manhood, and passed long years, not as a captive, but as a voluntary companion of the Cherokee Indians, was ever afterward unable to prolong his pres ence in a crowded hall or ill-ventilated room from beyond ten or twelve minutes, and de scribed his sensation on entering such a locality as one of uneasiness, increasing to positive alarm, such as a mouse may be supposed to feel under an air-pump. Wintering Bees. Having had over a quarter of a century of experience in the care of bees, and not having been out of honey for over thirty years, I will give to the leaders of our paper my manner for Wintering bees. Place the hives on a cov ered platform, near together, about two feet from the ground, in a dry place; then bore fine holes in ihe top of the hives, for venti'ation (five-eight bitt is about the size.) Then place boxes two-thirds filled with dry straw to absorb the moisture from the bees and prevent freezing. Pack dry straw around the hives, to keep as even a tem perature as possible. Give plenty of air at the entrance of the hive, but guard against mice. Place a board, edge raised, in front of the entrance, to prevent the snow from drifting in; examine often, and keep the passage clear from snow, ice, and dead bees, to prevent smothering. Mild days in Win ter, if the bees incline to move, raise the hive a little, and remove all dead bees and dirt from the bottom board, and if it is dry your bees are all right if plenty of honey. It is not extreme cold weather that causes bees to perish, but sudden change and a contiuuition of cold. i 2f The Governors of Tennessee, Ala bama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Ohio have united in publishing a call for a Convention to be held in Chattanooga, on the 5th of December, 1877, for the purpose of making an effective appeal to Congress for an im mediate and sufficient appropriation to se cure the completion of the improvement of the Tennessee River, especially at Muscle Shoals, in the shortest possible time. , f . ThieYea in ffotels. ! - "Steal H- .said the old man in accehts of intense scorn. "Steal ! i r.Whyj you'; would " be astonished to find how. i large a i proper-i tion of the traveling public are- infernal ' thieves. They, steal the .bed-clothibg tpftr lows, boot-jacks, soap,' soap dUhes-very-J thing, in fact, which they caii . carry! jbff Everybody Bteals soap. . We expect that : and don't kick. You'd be surprised 5to bear that - (l noted Indiana politician) tnak?; a practice of putting the soap into hisrvalise t every time he pays his bill, lie doesn't f seem to use much of it himself, but L think he takes it home to his children. ' m n.0;i.V The first 'thing to be done when fellow ? comes to the office to pay his bill is to shd I the porter up to his room to see if . anything ; is missing. When a fellow conies V down ' with his valise iu his hand we are unusually auspicious. The only way to get even with . the thieves is to keep a 'thief . account.', . Whenever anything is missed I charge it up at a fair value, and the next time I catch , a thief in the act I make him pay . the entire amount or go to jail. It, One day a nice-looking fellow tamo down with a valise in his hand, and inquired-thc amount of his bill. The minute I saw; him I knew he had stolen something, so I rang the bell and gave the porter the wiukt ... pottered about the books while the porter was gone, and I could see-jhe was getting uneasy. He had a notion to boU, but, ;just then the porter came down, and I say by his eye that something was missing. I jumped over the counter and grabbed the rasial by the throat. 'Open that valise, you d n thief, says I. lie got very white about the gills, and began to beg. Vf hen the valise was opened, sure enough -there was a new bed-spread, for which I had paid five dollars. 'Bill, says I, 'bring me the thief account.' I footed it up, and it amounted to just fifty-six dollars. :'5Tou pay that,' says I, 'or go to jail.' He thought it was hard to have to pay for other men,'s stealings, but on the whole concluded it was cheaper than going to the penitentiary. Compounding a felony ? Well, yes, , it did have that complexion. But maybe it nip ped a thief in the bud." The girls are generally honest, though once in a while wre catch one of them. , ,0ue time there was an internal tree pccldler stopped with us, and he had a black. tatn vest, stolen. I paid him five dollars for" it. He described it very accurately. There was a yellow spot on the collar, where he had dropped some acid on it, and his name . in full was written on the leather with which it was bound at the bottom. I suspected the giil Mary. We watched her for a week or two, and concluded we were mistaken, when one day a fellow came in with'a black satin vest, and there was a round yellow spot on the corner. It was Mary's sweet heart. I collared him, jerked up the vest, and found the name of the tree peddler on 1 the leather. He owned up that Mary had stolen the vest and given it to him. At that time the thief account was only seven dollars, and so he got off cheap. How to be Handsome. Most people would like to be handsome. Nobody denies the great power which any person may have who has a handsome face . and attracts you by good looks, even before a word has been spoken. And we see all . sorts of devices in men and women to im prove their looks. Now, all cannot have good features they are as God made them but almost any one can look well, especially with good health. It is hard to give rules in a very short space, but in brief these will do: . . Keep clean wash freely. All the skin wants is leave to act freely, and it takes care of itself. Its thousands of air-holes must not be closed. Eat regularly, and sleep enough not too much. The stomach can no more work all the time, night and day, than a horse. It must have regular work and rest. Good teeth are a help to good looks. Brush them with a soft brush, especially at- night. Go to bed with cleansed teeth. . Of r course t have white teeth it is needful to. ' let tobacco alone. All women kmrw thaU Washes for the teeth should be very simple.. Acid may whiten the teeth, but it takes off the enamel and injures them. Sleep in a cool room, in pure air. No one can have a cleanly skin who breathes bad air. But more than all, in order to look well, wake up mind and oul. When the mind is awake, the dull, sleepy look passes away from the eyes. I do not know that the brain expands, but it seems so. Think, and read, not trashy novels, but books and papers that have something in ' them. : Men say they cannot afford books, and sometimes do not even pay for a newspaper. In that case it does them little good, they feel so mean while reading them. But men " can afford what they really choose. ; If all the money spent in self-indulgence, in hurt- . ful indulgence, was spent in books or papers ' for self-improvement, we should see a change. Men would grow handsome, and women too. The soul would shine out through the eyes. ' We were not meant to be mere anhnals. Let us have books and read them, and ser-' mons and heed them. ' ' , A remarkable election took place in , ; Richland county, South Carolina, on "the ,, 20th inst. The Capital of the State is situa-; ' ted in this county ; and hitherto the Repub licanshave controlled it easily. But at this "tft last election the Democratic . candidates,, were elected unanimously. Thercv was;,,,, no opposition at all. The "era o(?,good..fj feeling" seems to be a reality in Hampton's . domain. The Republican party is nom'ore , ZST A Nebraska Judge decided to gW. f a horse thief one more, chance to; refornjj u , As the fellow left the neighborhood. .. gin a newer and better life he took: along the Judge's horse to help him