x . i0 'ii-. : ear rrfV i . . -.. i. ' i i ; . i WW .Ml .J.l Hi -?1lM.' ,Jj ; r. .fj : fyrf- -?. .,lh tf.:?r ,.,', -T r4- i CHARLOTTE, ! N. CI, FRIDAY; Y ; 14, ; WT ,mE rdLCMEKcEkB-'i 8. IV. . VflTES, AND, PEOPBI Termt of u4Jcnitto-2. 00, in.advaAce. KTO i fSv 1 1 ' hi j i ii. iii ik. 1 ffl i -4J I AVJf 111 V.I U i.AlVA Vy V yJlUX. t.. i i r - ; ; . . , . -f ' I r J , , l I J i i i 1 t II E : - :: ' Charlotte "Democrat, , v : :.. .J A.M '.I. YATES, .E'littjr iad PruprkUir . tHMS- Ttfo'. DOLIiAlIS for one year, or On Polhtr uiJ Twt-nly-fivf Cents for six mouUia . .iiii.iv.iu.ii m-iint'iiA miiii in advance. . i vfitiK mfnts will tx; inserted, at reasonable uiis, (inn acc-'MUiuur i ii . . .. ... :. nm fitro 1 3 1 1 in IPTiirTh wil w. r.i..ir.r.l for ut advi-rtisina-rntee. i i - ! E. K. P. OSBORNE, Attorn a.idCHUageJJor. at. Law, dharlotte, N. C. Speeial-attention given to Collections. Loan Tie,L'otiut-d ou Mui t,r;uf(; and other secuxitie.' 1?" Oflice over liarty's China Store, Trade St. :iear f!onrt 1 Inisr. August D, ;.Cm ; : Dr. JOHN H. McADEN, IVliolosalo and Retail Druggist, ( If AULOTTE, N. C, :, l)isn hand a larire and well selected stock of PURE (IS, (. lieinic als, l'ateni iiedicinps, rainny Meilieiix's, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Dye Stuffs, r aney ano ione.1 ivnieies, wuiu uu i utiuunnw sell at the very lowest prices. Jan 1, 1ST"). J. P. McCombs, M. D., ;r. rs his professional s;rviees to the citizens of h.ii lotle and surrounding omntry. All calls, both ,5 .-lit :ind ihiv. ni'onmllv attended to. otliee in Itrown's buihliug, up stairs, opposite the liarlotie J Ion I. .Ian. 1, lH7:i. DR. J. M. MILLER, Charlotte, N. C. All calls promptly answered day and night Ollk-e over Traders' National Bank Residence opposite V. R Mvers'. Jan. 18, 1878. DR. M. A. BLAND, Dentist, CHARLOTTE, N. C. OfHccs in Brown's building, opposite Charlotte Hotel. (ias used for the painless extraction of teeth. Feb. 15, 1878. j Doctor D. STUART LYON, Charlotte, N. C. Ofkk k : Corner Trade and Poplar Streets (Of fice of the late Dr. C. J. Fox ) Residence with Rev. Theo. Whitfield, D. D. Calls from City and country will receive prompt attention. Nov. 1, 1878. fim. - . T. M. PITTMAN, Attorney at Law, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Prompt attention to all professional business.' Practices in the State and Federal Courts. Collec tions w ill receive bis personal attention. Refers by permission to Commercial National Hank, Charlotte, N. C. ZQ" Office over Dr. Smith's Drug Store. Sept. Ill, 1878 Gin Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. E . J. "all en; Near Irwin's comer, Trade Street, . ;haiilotTE, N. CL, ; : ! PRACTICAL WATCH-MAKER, f?" Repairing of Jewelry, Watches and Cl(x;k done at short notice and moderate prices. April 17, 1876. y D . M. RIGLER, Charlotte, N. C. Dealer in Confectioneries, Fruits, Canned Goods, Crackers, Bread, Cakes, Pickles, &c. tW 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. Ci.iisignmcnts of Produce solicited, and prompt returns made, ' , . ; . ,- if ) ? ' ,;-I Families can find anything' at my Store in the Grocery line to cat, including fresh meats; ' Jan. 1, 1877. " CENTRAL HOTEL, Charlotte, N. C, Located on one Corner of the Public Square. Re cent internal improvements have been made for accommodation of guests, , ,, 11 $2.50 and 2 per day, according to lo cation of Rooms. II. C. ECCLES. Jtilv 5, 1878. tf . t Proprietor. LEWIN W BARRINGETVi Son of the late Hon. D. M. Barringer of N. C.,) Attorney and Counsellor at'Law. 4:ii Walnut Strekt, '-, PHILADELPHIA, PA. Prompt attention to all leiral bnsiness. :Best references given as to legal and financial responsi bility. Commissioner fyr North Carolina. . - Rkfkrenoes. -Chief Justice W. N. II? Smith ; Raleigh National Hank; 1st NatfonaP Bank, Char lotte; Merchants and Farmers National Bank. March 15, 1878 ly-pd - - -M4-V hi 4fO) J. MCLAUGHLIN & CO. 1 Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Groceries, Provisions, &c, Comege 'Stbeeivi jj.iJ Chaulotte,-Ni C, Sells Orooji ries at .loyFe4t"!rates for Cash,1 and buys Country Produce at , , , ..highest ntw price, j dott(,n and other5 country Troddce sold on commission and prompt returns made. AUCTION HOUSE. 7 1. U. . MAXWELL. C. yrilAlUlISOK. 'A MAXWELL & IIARRISjDX, ', Auotion and ' Com'misloH 1 Mercaant Buy mid sell on consignment all kiixlsflf Merchan dise and Country Produqc. Will , give, strict, per-j sonal attention to all business entrusted to our care. tW Fonr doors above'Charlotte Tlotel. - l ; Nov. 8, 1878 tf ' PFEtT8 of Publicity Suicide. lie 'PirtlaJelfU.Ta "Melical and Surica RpoMer states that an' Italian Medical So ftefy which 'meets atr Pisa, recently 'nt a rt''jm?t ' W the : Va'rioA Italian papers to cease rcuortiiiff suicides, statin that after Careful ' ttody of the " snlyect thy had nachvil the eonctusiori'ihat such 'publicity tefidrf," nt, 'least In 'Italy,' materially to iiz eteHKe the number' of those who destroy themselves. The motive is noinetitnes lm tat ion: sornetfrae a 'morb d thirst tor no toriety!1 ' ' 1 ' ' : 1 ' J "7: Mortgagees-Sale. Pursuant to a Mortgage made to the undersigned bv Jam s Night and Rtiodv Night his wife, on the 15th of January, 1878, and registered in Book 20, page 157, we wilfserr arpttbhc auction for cash, at the Court House in Charlowe, imi Thursday the27th day of February, 1870, a HOLSE and LO 1 m the City of Charlotte, situated in Ward No. 2, fronting 40 leet on Second Street and running back 70 feet, adjoining Armstead Ma3'o and others, being the l ite residence ot J im JN lurht and conveveu to lnra by Frank Alexander. F. S. DeWOLFE, J. R. HOLLAND, Jan. 24, 1879 5w - " Mortgagees, NOTICE. By virtue of a Mortgage executed to Sawyer, Wallaces Co. ny J. ti. Steubouse. bearing date August 28th, 1876, for a Tract of LAND Ivincr in Mecklenburg county, near Davidson College, con taining about 208 Acres, the undersisrued will sell on Saturday the 22d of February, 1879, the said Tract of. Land at the Court House door in Charlotte, N. C, far the purpose of satisfying the debts due under said Mortgage. Terms, Cash. ; , ; SAWYER, WALLACE & CO., per Shipp & Bailey, Attorneys Jan, 24, 1879 5vv . , Dissolution. S. S. PEG RAM has withdrawn from the firm of PEG RAM & CO. All persons who owe the late firm, prior to February 1st, 1879, must call and settle with Pegram & Co. We will continue the BOOT and SHOE busi ness at the same stand as before, First National Bank building, Charlotte, N. C. PEGRAM & CO. Feb. 7, 1879. Attention Farmers! Call at Kyle & Hammond's Hardware House and examine their ' Dexter Corn Shellers" and "Feed Cutters" the latest and. best out. Also, new style adjustable Iron Foot Plow Stocks, a great improve ment on those sold in this market last season. We. have a heavy Stock of Steel Plows, Clevises, Single Trees, Steel and Iron Harrow'Teeth, Heel Screws, Grass Rods, &c, which we can and will sell to the Farmers at prices lower than they can possibty afford to mnke them. Nov. 1,1878. KYLE & HAMMOND. A REQUEST! An Earnest Appeal!! To those who are indebted to us by Note or Ac count to come up and settle at once. We have been very indulgent to . our friends who are behind in their payments, and as "short settlements make long friends," we are compelled now to make this earnest appeal to all who owe us to come, up and pay tip. it it is impossible lor you to pay all, don t stay away on that account, but come and see us and we may be able to arrange the matter satisfac- luiy. xjuu i mici ims is uic iiisi ui iiauuaiy, ioiv. BARRINGER & TROTTER. Jan. 3, 1879. Plows! Plows!! ;.Tb. celebrated OUveriChUled PlovriClbS Gale Plow ; the Meihle Plow : the Tate Plow (reversible). for hillside and for subsoiliug. A large stock of Steel Plows. Hege's Feed Cutters. I expect to keep a full stcck of Agricultural Im plements. My stock of rlows cannot be beaten by any one. I have the best in the world, and will sell them at ow prices. Call and examine them before pur chasing elsewhere. ' WALTER BRUM, Agent. Jan. 3, 1879. Shuttles and Needles. Now is. ybur Ttime tot ;tov'the genuine Stewart Singer Sewing Machine, with all the attachments complete, for $30. Shuttles, Needles, Oil. etc., for all kinds of Ma chines for sale. Old Machines repaired or exchanged. Address BRADSHAW & CO., General Agents, Charlotte, N. C. Sept. 27, 1878. A. A. GASTON, DEALER IN Stoves, Tin-Ware And 0 House Furnishing , Goods, A CHARLOTTE, N. C. He keeps the largest stock of Stoves and Tin Ware ever offered in this market. $100 reward will be paid to any party that ever sold a larger or heavier Stove than the "Barley Sheaf." I have sold the "Barley Sheaf " for eleven years. Call at my Store under Central Hotel building, and examine my ..stock. Tin and Sheet-Iron1 Ware manufactured to order, and all Repairing promptly executed. A." A. GASTON. ' Feb. 1,1878:- '' 8 ' ' E. J.i, HALBi & SON. PnblishcrSvBookseilers & Stationers, 17 Murray Street,' Next York, Invite orders: for Books of their own publication ; and for all other School, Miscellaneous and Stan dard Books, and for al! kinds of Staple Stationery. Writing Papers Cap, Letter, Note and other sires. Blank Books, of all grades. ' Envelopes, of all sizes and colors and qualities. ''' School Slates, best quali ty, all sizes. Slate and Lead Pencils, Pens, Inks, Mucilage, &c., &c , . Those who" favor us with' their orders, by mail or in person, may rely upon having them filled prompt ly, and at prices which we believe to be quite as low as can be had in this market. .TQ?RCft&iALE & SON, Publishers, Booksellers and Stationers, March 2d, i878. ) 17 Murray St., New Y'ork. - tit I Window Glass and Paints. Kf)0 BOXES LASS, all sizes at prices lower than have been, known in this city for the past ten years, . A Full stock of all kinds of PAINTS and OILS. For sale by "Oct. 11, 1878. r J. II. McADEN. Cream Cheese. 100 Boxes selected Cream Cheese on Consignment and must be closed out, at : Jan. 31,1879. R. M. MILLER & SONS'. The Good Old Times. . A table of wages and the. cosl.oi Hying, with the price of staple articles t of com merce, going tack as far as the . year 120$ has been published lately. It show? thai" wages during the thirteenth century were about 50 cents a week. In the. next cen tury they, advanced souie 15 cents, and con tinued to advance slowly until, in- ihe las century, ,they had reached, rl 1 . S7. Thg average. for farm labor at present in, ,'soaiJ of the Northern and jVyetern States is a " Xp w wheat is worth, wholesale, about $1.46 a 'bushel, or two and a half days' labor. ' In six centu ries meat has nearly trebled in price ; but wages have increased 'more tban.se ven-fold Thus it will be perceived that the improve ment in pay lor labor, while it may better the laborer's condition, does not tend to in crease his contentment. Subsistence is surely easier than of old, though the laborer is not satisfied to live as his ancestors lived. It is with him as it is with all of us his desires have augmented more rapidly than the means to gratify them. Our wants are innumerable, and, to a large extent, artifi cial. Luxuries, as they were once consid ered, have srrown to be necessities. We think sometimes that we can dispense with necessities, but, luxuries are essential not only to our contentment, but to any tolera ble degree of well being. N. Y. Times. Comparative Wealth. Now that serious labor fe financial troubles assail Great Britain, comparisons are being made between the wealth of that country and France, and it is found that the latter is much the richer of the two. In ' France the real and personal property is estimated at $43,110,000,000, and public property $3,000,000,000 total $46,1 10,000,000. The same values in England, Scotland and Ire land are $42,500,000,000. The highways in Fiance are valued at $1,525,000,000. These are not included in the estimate of Great Britain,' which country has about $200,000,000,000 less wealth than France. The real property in Fiance greatly ex ceeds that in England, while in the latter the personal property prevails over that m France. The increase of wealth in France during the last ten years has been $7,500, 000,000, or at the rate of $750,000,000 a year. At this rate of increase the German indemnity of $1,000,000,000, enormous as it was regarded, was overcome by the savings of sixteen months. 1 1 1 1 - Beer and Wine-Drinking. It has been claimed that beer and wine drinking, in European countries, are preventives ot drunkenness. The following, from the Katholische Wochenblatt for Schlesien, may throw some light upon this matter. It says: "The 8,886 whiskey distilleries of Prussia use up the whole potato yield of the kingdom every fonr years, and every twelve years the whole yield of rye. In 1870 they paid tne Government more than 13,000,000 marks of whiskey tax, and fur nished nine quarts of whiskey , for every inhabitant. Abont 10,000 pel sons die an nually, in the, whole of Germany of de lirium tremens." ; - - ,ii v l At a temperance celebration in New market a little lad . appeared in the proces sion bearing a flag on which was inscribed, Airs right when daddy's sober." ;; Seed Potatoes. 200 BARRELLS choice Northern . Seed Po XJJ tatoes, Goodrich, Peerless and Early Rose, specially for planting, at . ' i t Jan. 81, 1879. R. M. MILLER & bONS'. The Etiwan Acid Phosphate, For money or Cotton, at BTJRWELL & SPRINGS'. Jan. 31,1879. , , Just Received at ,! TIDD Y'S BOOK , STORE. Knights' Popular - History!, of ; England, 8 . vol umes, $10. . . j f ),.. t roude s History of England, 12 volumes, $ 15. Aunt Charlotte's Story of English, French and Greek History. The Family Library of British Toetry, $ 00. Glenalban and other poems by Annie. Y. Duffy, $1.50. , . . Tbe Angel in tire Cloud, by E.'W; Fuller,- $ 1.50, The Vision of Ecbard, by J. G. Whittier, $1.25. Resumption and tbe Silver Question ; a hand book for the times, for sale by Jan. 31, 1879. . T1DDY & BKO. Jffogs, Beeves and ' Sheep. , I have fat Tennessee ! Hags for;sale, either at wholesale or, retail. . , . , , I also buy fat Cattle, Sheep and Hogs, paying the highest market price. ; ( I . .,.; j j. - yv. alaw., , City Butcher. Charlotte, Jan. 24, 1879. 1879. ..... .? , .r, ,1879. BURWELL r& . SBINGS, ; Grocers and Provision Dealers, Have always an stock Coffee,' Sugar,' Molasses! Svruns. Mackerel. Soans. Starch. Meat ' Lard. Hams. Flour, Grass Seeds, Plows, &c., which we offer to both toe Wholesale ard Retail trade.' All are in vited to, try us : from, the smallest tq, the .largest ouyers. Jan. 17, 1879. p . ; HARDWARE 1 . . - ... , -t . . '. . . . f We are now receiving the most extensive stock of HARDWARE purchased "by apy one house in the State, and are prepared to offer WHOLESALE BUYrERS greater inducements to buy in this market than ever offered before Merchants will find our Stock the most complete and pur prices the, lowest Nov. 1, 1878. .. KYLE j& HAM M OND. WILSON & BUR WELL, ' 'Wholesale axd Retail 1 , ; VDroggists.-;: ; Trade Street, Ciiablottb, N. C.h August 16, 1878. Ii!-t 'ao-acl hi .the lastT General' Assembly of MdrVlaiid. approved' April 5, 1878.11 was fna.le obligatory on any. person set ling or wucmijj io seu fiiif arnuie or suosiance in semblance of bmter or cheese.hot the leariti- mate nrodtict of 'the dairv. and not'taadd 'exclusively of milt 'or cream, bat into which uiurs as a uumpuueui P,arr t-nereoi, 10 ct prd the seller shall deliver' 'with' - each, article a the act .'' This stringent law has prevented the. introduction "of oleomargarine biltter into our markets, none being at least specifi cally sold under that title. It sold at all it must, therefore, be sold surreptitiously and with a full knowledge of the risk incurred. Elsewhere, in other States of the Union and in foreign countries, this artificial butter finds a sale limited in the first case, large in the last. Yet the manufacture flourishes. It is reported, on what appears to be good authority, that in the United States two mil lions of dollars have been invested in the business, the largest factories for the manu facture ot this artificial butter being in New York and Philadelphia. ()The New York company sold, it is said, in one large con tract, in. 1876-7, no less than 3,295,000 pounds, and in another contract, in 1877, no less than 1,000,000 pounds of oleomargarine butter, j Up to the end of February last, ac cording to Dr. Mott, it had reduced no less than 8,000,000 pounds of animal fat to but ter, which, allowing, as estimated, one-sixth of the weight of the crude material for loss in manufacture, would leave over six and a half millions of pounds of this artificial but ter to be disposed , of either for domestic consumption or for export. The great bulk of the demand has been thus far for ship ment to foreign countries. This new com mercial product, though highly approved by experts abroad, and regarded as a valua ble adjunct to the food supplies, has never attained to any large" sale with us. Else where it is otherwise. In France it is said to be'in general use, nearly all the hospital using it. ' In Austria one factory manufac tures two hundred tons annually, chiefly for export, and there are also oleomargarine fac tories in many parts of Germany. W heth r the quality of this product be good or bad, whether it be, as alleged, quite as nutritious as real butter, there, appears to be almost everywhere a popular prejudice against it when it is effered for sale as oleomargarine. Abroad, where it is put up in firkins and sold as genuine butter, it finds many cus tomers. There is no law there making a distinction between the real and the spurious article, and the very fact that many of the factories profess to be large exporters of their product is proof that it is difficult to force its sale for domestic consumption in the vicinage. Laws like that of Maryland, making it a misdemeanor to sell eleomar- garine for other than it really is, would have a marked effect in restricting its consump tion, even though all the analytical chemists should declare, as some ot them now do, that it contains all the constituents of gen uine butjter, and is better than much of it. Baltimore Sun. A Great Preacher's Poverty. Jonathan Edwards, by general consent, holds the first place among the original thinkers of America. Mr Parton, who has no sympathy with his religious views, says of him, "Upon every person reared since his day in New England, he has made a dis cernible impression, and he influences to this hour millions who never heard his name." Bnt this great preacher fought a hard battle with penury in his last years, and Was often sorely perplexed to find food for his large family. Dismissed from the Church in Northampton, Mass., over which he had been pastor for a quarter of a cen tury, he removed to Stockbridge to labor among the Indians. Me was obliged to support his family often children on a mere pittance: In this seclusion he wrote his treatise on the "Freedom of the Will," which is regarded as a masterpiece in theo logical literature. So great was his pover ty at this time, th&t the treatise was writ ten largely on the backs of letters and the blank pages of pamphlets, as letter-paper was beyond his means to purchase. His daughters, who were all young women ol superior mental powers, made lace and painted fans for the Boston market, that they might add something to the family re sources. Youth's Companion. am Why" People so Crazy. , f At, the instance of the New Jersey State Board of; Health a leading physician ol Newark. has; been making an investigation into the causes of disease among hatters, the result pi which is to ;be submitted to the Legislature, which meets in Trenton in January. He finds that much injury to health, is caused by the use of poisonous tuff used in hatting, which is composed of nitric acid and quicksilver, and because of its resemblance in color to the vegetable of that name is called in the trade carrot. It is stated .that the poison affects the brain, driving men almost to idiocy, and that it wastes the muscles, enters the pores of the akin, and causes injurious eruptions. Scien tists have long been endeavoring to find a substitute for carrot,. but thus far withont avail. This same, poison also affects those who wear the hats. This is a new theory for increasing insanity, noticeable in many cities, ; f , ,-: . SSIT Judge Nelson, of Brooklyn, N. Y., said to a lawyer, the other day, who was talking about a lady, "Better call her a woman; God made woman, but a lady is only a modern fixture in a fine dress." : Artificial tlutteiuf Jtamp, "bVand r ' ',oh btyj,dbs,-'box, nrkl ffpr pakagethe word " Oleomargarine." Jri'caseor retail sale'the' act provides that ivritten or printed label bearing plainly the word Oleomargarine, under , the "penalty of one Hundred dollars for each violation of j . : ' y rr. . m : : 1 ii i-i Mystenr, of .Africa, fi!E o ' From Harper's Ytiekfy.i; -J i 'Mr 'Stanley's suecessfal 'erploratKm of the great African1 river has revealed almost the last secret of the mystery of ages. It Id dn!y;withiri the 'FastT twenty-'years that civilized "hatiohs 1 haVe 5 beea' 1 able to form any!ele'fitinbtion-:bf the raterior of the vast continent of the1 black races-- Nb! one knew whence came tbe-'rWera that on" either ; side made their rway to the' Atlantic, tb Medi terranean and the Indian Ocean : no civil ized eye had rested upon the1 lofty ' peaks of the tabfeland In whose bosom lie the deep Chasms that' hive" held the' African Makes hidden to all the past: The sources of the Nile, the' growth of Egypt, its' off spring, and the earliest scene of : mental ' progress. the annual overflow, the boundless fertility1 that follows it,' had touched the Curiosity ot ancient travellers. The question was de bated at Rome and Athens whence came these wonderful waters. It was decided almost with correctness. Strabo. in the age of Virgil, points out the annual rains of the interior as the cause of the overflow, and hints at the existence of the African table-land. But the tnggestion was lost or neglected. The Nile was the mystery of the Middle Ages. Home, Uarihag, even the Arabs, seem to have known nothing of the immense population that existed beyond the desert, the vast lakes shut in on all sides but one bv a frowning barrier of mountains, the misrhtv streams that brokr from the everlasting hills, the Congo sweep ing through forest and iuhjrle thousands nf miles to the Allan tTc7l he White Nile car rying the waters of the Victoria Nyanza to the port of Alexandria, or even the rivers that fall into the Indian Ocean. The Nile was tbe first pathway of the discoverers, but failed to lead to any clear knowledge of the interior. Nearly fifteen hundred miles from its mouth is Khaitoom, where the river divides into two affluents that come from the heart of the continent- one is the White Nile, the other the Blue. The Blue is a bright, clear, rapid stream leading into AbysMnia. At Khartooni it ha 'a swift, brilliant flow. It seems the real continuation of the Nile ; and Bruce in the last century passed up its (ertile valley, discovered Lake Dembea at its source, and fancied he had reached the famous spring head ol the Egyptian river. He claimed to be the discoverer of the sources of the Nile, and was mistaken. But the White Nile, the other branch, was long neglected. It is a slow, hluggish stream, hidden at its mouth by an island, its depth and volume scarcely to be discerned until one embarks upon its waters. Bruce neglected it. It was not until 1827 that a French traveller, M. Lin- ant, visited it, explored its shores tor some hundred miles, and bi ought it to the notice of the Egyptians. From that time it grew rapidly to be a great pathway lor the tral- fic in slaves, ivory ; its shores were found to be populous and prosperous; the Egyp tian traders covered, ravaged them with the horrors of the slave-trade, and fixed its seat at Gondokoro. Here the exploration of the White Nile ceased. No one was able to pass far onward to the vast hills of Africa, its unrivalled lakes; and four hun dred miles from Victoria Nyanza the pro gress of discovery was checked. So short was the distance that separated modern curiosity from the revelation of the geo graphical mystery, yet its hopes seemed vain ; the wilds, the savages, the cruelty of the Turks, the fierce hatred of the natives, had apparently shut the gates of the in terior to European science. From the discoveries of Stanley, Spike, Livingstone, Schweinfurth and Burton, it appears that in the heart of the continent an immense group of mountains; elevated plains, walls of rock inclosing inland seas a country where the heavy annual rains fill all the soil with water, all the chasms in the rocks with lakes compose a singular ter ritory, the chief source of the fertility of Africa. It is a mysterious, unknown1 land, that had escaped for ages the scrutiny of civilization, and even a few years ago was never dreamed of by geographer or poet. Its people are black, savage, ignorant, yet formed into despotic monarchies not unlike that of Louis XIV or Napoleon, at least in degree. The Emperor of Uganda is ' the State, the law; his nobility his, cooks and barbers ; they grovel on the ground before him, whine, make strange noises. He cut off his subjects1 heads for pastime enforced upon them all an attention to 'dress, form, obedience, ceremonial, that strongly recalls the usages of Versailles. ' His thousands of wives lived in comparative splendor; but the carrion crows hovered perpetually around the palace of the King, never disap pointed of. their prey; an execution' took place every day. Schweinfurth ha a still more remarkable picture 61 an African prince. , It is a can nil, the lord of many lands, who leeds . each day on human , food. He hasi immense palaces of wood, lofty halls. He sometimes dances in the nadst of his wives andcOurtiers alone. On hi bead is the skin of a black baboon, oyer it a plume of feathers ; he was adorned with the claws and tails of animals and danced with furious getures for hours., , lie was tall, slightly formed, yet powerful, we , are told; of immense strength, with a European nose, but, as one might suppose, no pleasing ex pression. .One. who feeds ,on human , flesh could hardly look candid, and complacent, however sincere But the most remarka ble trait of this singular region is that it should fo long have remained unknown and unexplored. , About thirty years , ago the report of two Protestant missionaries (1849) opened a new path to the heart , of Africa. They , bad settled on the coast near Zanzibar, and .made their way into tbe interior. . They brought back a report of high table-lands, of mountains covered with snow, of vast lakes ; and to Messrs Reb mann and Krapf we owe . the first step in the discovery of the mystery of the conti nent. The attempt to reach the sources of i :"' 1 u : i fire rr-1 the Nile fronij.Gontwrjjwas, apparently abandoned ; all future travellers would start from the easlerii Coast, ah,d follow the path so natural, yet so long coucealedj ft is difficult to seeV noi$ thatXthe way is pointed Cut, why nd- European-) had before attempted to ascend the slowly Ttsibg coun try from. the coast, why .the,, Portugese had never explored H, or the, Arabs, .tko -Egyptians, and Abyssiniana, j-jW-hen roncethe discovery-iQf the, missionaries. had een made public, the great Jakes, and mountains of Africa filled the. f anqyi;of . the; Ad ventur ous ; the hero si of travel turned their attention to the new problem; it was soon solved. , j fnf, .. , .M1li ; . , ,v In. 185759 Burton and Speke made their way from; Zanzibar! to T the -rUnog-i land. Barton fell.ill ; . Speke went . on alone, and reached the - shores- j pf an ; immense .inland sea, said to be lour hundred miles in length it is really two hundred the Victoria Nyanza. He had found the source; of the Nile, for from this great .ravine or cleft in the rock flows down the sluggish waters of the White Nile, to mingle at Khartoom with the - father of rivers. He had reached a point about five hundred miles above Gondokoro when he was iorced to ? return. Once more, in 1860, Speke set out with his friend Capt Grant from Zanzibar , to com plete his discoveries, and tprove, what he had already, fancied, that he bad solved the problem of ages.t-lt was a difficult but not unprecedented joumev, not so remarkable as Stanley's, not. so painful as an arctic voyage. , llie two friends reached Ivazeh in October,' 1861, plunged, iuto the wilder- ness, ana were lost ; to,: sight. . u Xhet. re mained hidden for more than a year.-'- No civilized eye watched them as they slowly made their way through lobbers, savages, disease, impending death, , the , native ty rants, the horrors of the waste; no friendly hand was near, except among the ' natives. But here they were evidently disappointed or overjoyed to find that men have human hearts even in the wilds of Africa. On the fair uplands ofKaiagwe they met with a liberal King, a fine country, hills covered with cattle, a delightful region sloping down to the lake. The next Kiug. ihev met with was Mtesa of Uganda; it was at his court n the upper shore of the Victoria Nyanza that they saw the refinements of African courtesy, the peculiar: parody on the despotisms of Asia and Europe. Mtesa, King ol the lakes, had made all his people neat in their dress of bark cloth, their robes of antelope skin ; ithey were quick and live ly in their movements, at the peril of their lives. They grovelled on the earth, whined like happy dogs when their.master awarded them a present or a whipping. Mtesa was a young man of twenty-five. He was fond of yachting, sport, and even used, we are told, a handkerchief was ; very neat. Speke became his friend, and, unlike some Americans at European Courts, refused to grovel, whine, even 6tand in the sun before the royal despot, and was excused. But the most wonderful of all the objects they saw in the new land was the magnificent Nyanza, whence flows the broad current of the Upper JN lie. The lake is. 3740 feet above the level of the sea. It lies in, a vast rift or ehasm several hundreds of miles long, shut in by mountains. I Yet its sides are low, marshy, covered with reeds, its : form that of a boy's top, the sharp endu pointing nearly directly Sontb. The climate is fine and healthful, the views often soft and graceful, sometimes awful grand ; the land is fertile, andu busy population might some day gather around this mighty lake. It is only a lew hundred miles irom tne Indian Ocean, and a railroad may at no distant pe riod connect the head of the Nile with the harbors of Zanzibar. . . Soon Speke was anxious to press on to the haunts of civilization, the bearer of ex traordinary news. He passed, after a long delay, down the fair waters of the White Nile, left it to cross the country to Gondo koro, and was met there with wild, joyfal sur prise by Baker (1863.) ' His wonderful dis covery filled the world with' curiosity and delight ; : 'yet it should be j remembered t.o their honor that it was the two modest mis sionaries who first, saw "tb6 silver-crowned summits" of the 1 heart '-of" Africa.5, Since 1863 the path tO Uganda has become famil- ? o fn P)ir!tiiii'anl ' Avail 4 Vi A Vie itA ni the explorer; Livingstone,Stanley and Baker, added to the progress of 'knowledge. The chain of lakes was defined, 'the' table-lands described ; '"the 1 sources of; the5 Nile 'are as well known at last1 aS'thOsc of the Hudson. I ) ' '. ' ' Yet one question remained, perhaps the most important of all: , J)id any great river flow lrora thjj ceptral lakers into the '.Atlan tic ? ' .To decider It, Stanley "threw .'himself mio.ine WiJuesi na-unis (oi ine negro, vue unknown centre of the continent, sailed down the mighty Congo,' discovered , an other. Mississippi, gave it to t mankind. It seems the last great achievement in explore tion, There is nothing lefvfa. rival it.,. No other river remains to be scpyered The earth is( exhausted The' heroes" ol.travel must sigh for new'.worlds of wonder. It. is impossible, to say? what , may, be, the future nistory or tnese . immense outlets pi ,iramc arid travel, these mighty rivers .that nearly meet iathe lakes of Middle Africa; ;'of the fair and fertile region so recentfdisepvered, so well suited to the wants of man.,1 Imagi- Nile . converted intb scenes of fri&j. trade, their banks lined with villages, their sources joined by canals, their cities splendid,' their people content, lev it ; is oououui ,j any age can show 0 more 'perfect solution of a great problem. One rejjrets ( that'. the nrys tery of Africa exista no Mbrei,;. :",n-lf Euoehs Lawbskcs. 1ST No matter how ffoodnatured a man may be, he will invariably get' mad when he discovers tbat thereis.no towel in iihe room; and Is compelled ! to'dry' hW -face , on the bed quilt.