THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. VOL. 4 of " yjePaid: ' on sending ™ » clnb of ten sub gvery P c ™ u ' s entitles himself to one the ten?h of time for which the 2S> I'fcP® l * 6ent to different offices 2fo Departure from the Cash System % Rates af A rfrertfsiitfc advertisements payable in advance: -Jriy advertisement* quarterly in advance. J |1 m. |Bm. 3m. 6m.112 m. toofeoo S4OO *6OoUIOOO V J I 3 001 450 #OO 10 00l 15 00 I Transient advertisements #1 per sqnare for he first, and fifty cents for each -subsc qaent insertion. ■ •X'.j,'-.,. " Dr. W. Will attend calls in /lamance and adjoining cfi * naeß " Addre6 Haw River, P. O N. C. R. R Prices reduced Perfected Banners Fdhni Plows made in Price Two Horse No. 7 ' Two Horse No. Two Horse No. 8 .7.00 ? For ®* le " Gr>ham hJ SCOTT St DONNEJX. BKAHAM ffIGH SCHOOL GRAHAM, N. G. REV. D A. IONG, A. M. REv.W- W.STALKY, A. M. REV. W. S. LOKG. A. M. Board $8 to' #lO and Tuition #8 to 84.50 month. - Wilmington Sun Under the above name >. A Daily BtMcrallc Newspaper of twenty-eight wide columns will be issued in tbe city o( Wilmington, North Carolina, on or about ' " " Thsrmlay ■•raii| October 17th 1878. Tbe Bc* will be published by the BUJ» ASSOCIA noN, from the Printing House of Messrs. Jack •oa k Bell. It will be printed in first-class style, on good paper, with new type, and will he the haadsomeat duly journal ever published is this State The Sex will be edited by Mr. Cicero W. Harris. The City Editorship and tbe Business Ifamagement will be in competent fcaads, and a Correspondent and Representa tive will travel throughout the State. Probably no paper has ever started in the Soatb with fairer prospects than those of the Brat. Certainly no North Carolina paper has eatered the field under more auspicious cir l cams lances. Tbe Sun has SUFFICIENT CAPITAL hirall its purposes, and it will use its money I "®My in furnishing the people of North Caroii aa with the latest and most reliable information "■all subjects of current Interest. Above all «bh»gs it will be a NEWSPAPER. And yst no important feature of the Bus's win be intelligent criticisms of |ae World's doings. Nortl C >roUna matters — industrial, commercial, education! 1, social and ' ™»M*ry—wftt receive particular attention. Tbe So % will be a TFORTR CAROLINA NEWSPAPER. SUBSCRIPTION. TfeWiuaveTOH Sua will be furnished to ~!*™ersat tbe following reasonable and WUbrm rates: ? oße w «ek 15 Cents I For three months $175, Month 66 •« " 6 ix " 350 . I " twelve ." 100 -J. rates tbe Btm will be mailed to any m this country, or left by canrier in the ADVERTISING. m-9* B jysre, (ten lines) one time. #100; two gy> Si 30; one week. 03 50: one month. #9 00; "J" mootts. #9O 00; six months, #35 00. ■ for otber space and time" made at *^ orti °nately low rstes. CORRESPONDENCE. eonreqpondenee solicited. AAtr *««, THE SUN, Wilmington N. C. Yarbrough House RALEIGH, N. C. I*- *' , *C*HAIX, Prsfrictsr, to suit the times. T„V CABOI.ISA TWIRS, SHE. OK THKV, KETI'BX FBOB Millie Christine, Afttr Eight Year* Ah •cace. I'aan Back UPhiladtlpkia. Nad with Twa Tcagan, Talkiwg at Ci i ven Her latpreaaiea mt *•«>«* Travel. [Philadelphia Times, 16th.] " Hie Two-headed Nightingale and party" was what the Register of an up town hotet showed last night. It wasu't a bird or any other species of biped. So far from having two legs it had four. The hotel clerk was in a constant grin. It was evident that he had stored up some fine anticipations as to the surprise | this singula? announcement would canse people when they ran their eyes ovor ihe register. It was not every day a colored woman with two heads, four arms, four legs, four eyes, four ears, two noses, two moiulis aud two tongues registered at that hotel and the clerk was bound to make tlie most of It., The ' 'and party" cousisted ot two Italian dwarfs, both iu top boots and moustaches and goatees and neither larger than a good sized doll. The woman with the liberal sup ply of limbs wa3 Millie Christine, whose exhibition in this city, at the Assembly Building, eight years ago, created a stir among the physicians who bad her be fore them for several days, at Jefferson Medical College, and afterward deliver ed lectnres on her. For tbe past eight yea re she has been on a tour of exhibi lion in Europe, nuder the management of Mr. Smith, who returned to this coun try with her fonr weeks ago, auvl nas since exhibited her aud the dwarfs iu Bostou and ether New England cities. The) came to Philadelphia from Bridges port, Connecticut, yesterday, under a# arrangement with Coup's Eqnescurrica lum, where they make their first appear ance twenty seven years old. Columbus county. North Carolina, of slave parents. There were fifteen children in the family, the others all being perfectly formed, as ate the parents. The woman has been on exhibition since she Was two years old. She has had an eventful experience. Twice she has beeu stolen, once from New Orleans where 6hc was on exhibi tion. In a few months she turned up iu a-New York Orphan Asylum. Her owns er (this was in slave times) got her back again. A few months later she was stol en lor the second time and turned up in England, where the enterprising thief was exhibiting her. Again bor owner got her back. She was exhibited all over the Uuited States afterward, aud then taken the old eonutry. Iu London the newspaper m«>n give her the name ot Nightingale on account ot her vocal pow ers, She sings well, dauces well aud speakes three or four different languages, among them French. The two heads sit oa her sbonlders at angles to each other so that the uct which keeps up the hair of one touches the net j which keeps up the bairof theotner, and if the owner wills it the two heads may bump against each other, like playing bones in tbe hands of an expert. Tbe siugnlar part i» her conversation. Oue tongue begins to talk, tbe eyes brighten, the face becomes animated. At this point the observer catches sight of the other face looking over the other shoul der with a sort of grin on it ai>d tbe otb !er eyes with a leer in them. A man may be excused if his attention strays at this point aud the utterances of the first j 1 tongue become lost oa him in contem ' plating the otber physiognomical appari-. | tiou. Presently the second tongue be- j, gins to talk, too, and there is a sort of 1 ! race between them. One face is rather! I masculiue and the other feminine, and | j voices vary similarly. In talking the ! tongues "chip iu" aud cross each other. To get au idea of the effect of conversas | tiou with ber tbe reaJer must imagine j [ in the following that the italics represent' tbe feminine tongue and tbe other form the masculine" » "How did you like Europe?" I liked it very much. I Mice Eng- Frauce I liked, too, land better than, nearly as any other, well as Englaud. j Its more The French tike America, peo ple are very The Italians nice, are a ' good deal America is my like the French home, you know. IHke and I to travel T am not very much, likely to forget it. 1 1 was born There is.a great deal to in North Carolina, see in I was the old world, in Sonth Carolina especially in during the war. London and Paris." From the above comprehensive state ments it will be evident to the reader fiiat she can accomplish just twice as much talking as women in general, and, more than that, she is talking on two different phases of the subject at the game time. i "Get up and -vaJk. Nightingale," said Wr V * GRAHAM, N. O, the managiflrf The one face grilled, while the other looked solemn. She look herself op oil the sofa and walked across the room erect on her fonr legs'atid came bfcck on her two leas. *The dwarfs who a|e ex hibited with lier are the Brothers Magri. They will be at the Equescurricalniu for two weeks. B»SAITCB «F BlkNtlU DAPGB T SCtt. . On the couclnsion'of the honeymoon the bride and bridegroom will joiu the Chancellor and hi? family at Vitrei u, wheie a family gathering is contemplated about Christinas time. 6c peration from las daughter is said to have been very painful to Prince Bismat*, who is devotedly attached to this, bis favorite child. 6be had been bts faithful coins pauion for many year A. While ber brothers were at the nniversity or io the army she rarely left. In former year*, when Prince, Bhmark was still a passionate horsemen, she accompanied him for hours in rides over the plains and through the woods of Varzin. Owing to the attachnient existing be* tween the father and bis daughter many doubted whether she would ever marry. These supposilionsjircre not ground less far she was no longer young when she contracted her first betrothal with Count Wend Yon Eulenburg, a young noble man of eminent capacities, who bad won | her heart daring his stay at Varziu as an | at attache 011 the chancellor's staff. This engagement was a very happy one. Ths Jay ot marriage had,been fixed and the Invitations were on the point of beiug issued when suddenly the bridegroom was attacked by a severe illness, which, uptwitlistanding the greatest care and attention, terminated fatally. At bis (the young count's) burial, the Iron Cliancel'or was so moved that he wept bitterly. On the expirlion of the time ot mourning many youths of noble birth' aspired to tbe hand of Prince Bistoark** only daughter. She refused, however, the most templing offers, until, moved perhaps by the entreaties otc lier family she finally admitted tbe attention of Rantzan, whom she had known when» ctyld. Some pretend that he was smitten by ber charm even in their earliest youth, when he, as a boy at the gymnasium, y&ited for tbe young conu tess. then a little damsel, to carry her books from school. Count Hantaan a decendunt of an ancient, nsble, but not very wealthy family, was, after an honorable termination of bis university | for some time an officer in tbe Third regiment of (be Prussian Uhlans of the | guard. He subsequently changed his profession and entered on the diplomatic career. On account of his great taleut and general accomplishments, he at tract ed the attention of Prince Bismark, who not only attached him to the foreign office, but often iifvited him to his hjuse. During the congress the count acted as one if its secretaries, a distinction which gave rise at the umo to some envious reports. As Count Rantzan is in pos session Jf a yearly income of ouly about 3,000 thalers, a sua certainly iuadeqnate to maintain a household worthy of the daughter of Germany's leadiug states man, a haudsome dowry, asserted by some to be 500,000 thalers, was be»towed by the chancellor on the youug couple. A 'JOSPE DERATE STOBV. X F.eiter thai Canei Brtcrlira. At a recent political gathering in Tus~ cumbia Ala., General Cullen A. Battle related tbe following story in the course %f his speech: During the winter it was my fortnue to be president of one of the court martial of the Army of Virgininia One bleak December morning while the ' snow covered the ground and tbe wind 1 bowUd around our camp, I left my j bivouac fire to attend tbe session of tbe i court. Wiudiug along for miles in uns ; certaiu paths, I at length arrived at ' tbe court at Round Oak church. Day by day it bad been our duty to ; try the gallant soldiers of that army, j charged with violations of military law ;! but I on any previous occasion ■ been greeted by such anxious spectators as on that rooming awaited the opening ' ot the court. Case after case was «lis- J posed of, and at length the case ot "The Confederate States vs. Edward Cooper" ' was called —charge, desertion. A low { murmur roee spontaneously from the i bat:ie-scarred spectators as a young | artilleryman rose from tbe prisoner's; bench and in resfibnse to tbe qnestiou 'Guilty or not guilty,' answered 'Not guilty.' The Judge Advocate was proceeding to open tbe prosecution, when the court observing that the prisoner was una'tends ed by counsel iuierposed and inquired of the accused 'Who is your Counsel?' He relied, '1 have no counsel.' oupposiug that it was his purpose to represent himself oefore the court, tbe Judge Advocate was then instructed to pros TUESDAY JANUARY 14 1879 The prisoner was then told to introduce his witnesses. 'I have no witnesses.' Astonished at the calmness with which he seemed to IKS enbirilting to what he regarded as an inevitable mtc, I said to hnni 'Have you no ileteuse? Is it -|m&m that yon abandoned your comrades and deserted vour colors without any reason?' lie replied, 'There I* a reason but it will not avail inc before a military court.' I said, 'Perhaps you are mistaken; yen are charged wl'h lite highot crime known to military law, and it is your duty f«> make know it the cau-es that influenced your action'.' For ihe ;first lime his manly form trembled, and his bine eyes swaiu in tears. Approaeblug tbe president or tbe court lie presented a letter saying as be did so. 'There, (ieneral is what did It.' 1 opaued tbe letter and iu a moment my eye* filled with tears. It pc*«ed froui cue to tbe oilier of the cowl, until at last all had seen It. and tho&e stem warriors. wfio had passed with Stonewall Jackson through a hundred battle* wept like little children. Soon-as I hud sufficient lv rccovei ed my self possession, I read the deftnice of the prisoner. It was in these word. t My Dear Edward: t bare always been promt of you, and sinee vour con nection with the Confederate arrav 1 have been prouder of yon Uian ever before I would not bare yon do anything wrong for the world; bat before Uod, unless yon come bone we ; must die! Las' night 1 was aroused by little Eddie crying. I called, and said: * What's tbe mailer. Eddied and be said ! 4 Oh, mamma. I'm so hungry.' And Lacy I Eilward—your darling Lucy—she never complains, but she is growing thinner ami thinuer ever day. Aud before G *l, Edward, unless you come borne we mast die. YOCT MART. I Turning to tbe prisoner I asked: •What did you do when yon received this? Be replied: «f made application and it was refected, again I made I application and it was rejected; a tbiid 1 time 1 made application and it was rejected, and that night as 1 wandered I backward and forward in thinking of I my home, with tbe mild erei ot Laet looking np to me, ondthebnrning words of Mary sinking in my brain, I was no longer the Confederate soldier, but 1 was the lather of Lucy and tbe bnsbaod of Mary, and 1 would have passed these hues if every gun in the batienJwl fired at met. 1 went.to mv borne, flpy tan 9Ut to meet me, and abe wKspited: HMtlfidward, lamsoha\ppy! I am so glad you got ydttr furlungh!' She , mnst bare lelt me me shndder. fersfae turned pale as death, and catching her breath at every word, she E£id: 'Have you come without your furlough? Ob, Edward, Edward, go buck! go hack! Let nn and my cluldienfco down together to the grave, but on tor heaven's sake save the honor ot our name!' And here 1 am gentlemen, not biongbt here by military power, but ia obedience to the conuaand ot Mary, to bide tbe sentence of war court.' Every officer of that court-martial feit the force of the prisoner* words. Be fore them stood iu beatific vision the elo quent pleader of a husbaad's and a fathers wrongs; but tbey Lad been trained by their great leader, Kobert E. Lee, to tread the path' of duty, though the lightnings flash scorched the ground beneath their leet, ami each in his turn pronounced the verdict guilty. For tunately loc humanity, fortunately for the Confederacy, the praceedings of the court were re vie wet I by Ihe commanding « eueral, aud upou the record was written: "Pardon lecoimnended" which was speedily granted. The gall.aut soldier died afterwards at bis post of duty* standing at his gun amidst his fallen com rades. iu tbe roar and carnage ot battle, his commanding officer approached, when the humble hero, witri a smile said to him, "Captain I have one shell left" and | pulled tbe lanyard, and his last shell went crashing into the enemies raaks. Before, however it had rnu its dea;b | dealing course, a moital wound had been i received by.the brave man who sent it, [ ami with a happy smile on his face ha died with the remark. "Captain have I saved.ihe hotior of Mary and Lucie aud little Eddie." LAICISMC VUILI ITVUG (Bhcaa Argus.] On Thursday lost Dr. Edwards was summoned to see Mrs. Sweareugiu, wire of Mr. Arch. Swearengiu. who lives about six miles above Tazewell. She was hot thought to be dangerously sick by herself or her family. Dr. Edwards found her sitting np in bed, talking »nJ laughing with Iter family and some irieuds who were visiting ber, and she appeared to be unusually lively for a sick person. Soon as lie warmed sufficiently be approached the bedside of bis patient, aud, lo his great surprise, he discovered that Mrs. Swearengiu, though sitting up. laughing and talking, was actually dying, lie gently informed ber husband, who could not realize tbe fact. Ue thought the doctor was mtftaken. Dr. Edwards prescribed for tbe jovial woman, aud left her without letliug her know ot her rapid dissolution.. On his return home be met Dr. Hall, whom he asked to call and see bis padeut aud aid Ber restoration it possible. He too decided she was dying. Ue lelt medicine aud directious to apply a blister at a certain time, but before tbe time arrived she was dead. William Cullen Bryant set out in life as a lawyer, in western Massachusetts, where he was born. But one probable reason he gave i* np, so Mr. George S. Hilliard thinks, was the loos of a suit,, which had been appealed him and car ried to the State Supreme Court. • , —„ At tensth & fifth If&ll slrock Ooruoti f graumuiy l)egtii lo ibink of his eowiitioB f t iuUie ponld solid ahotfl left side there is n tittle peice of skoU I i«n, but llie brain is entirely gone. And I yet I am thinki.ig. llow can a matt flunk [ with his head shot «di? Ami if I am thinking I cannot be dead. And yet no man can lire sfte his head ie shot off. I bat not mathm. It I can fill my'lew Ihen lem alive. 1 will try that. Can If let. there is is; lifted up. Tm all right." Tbe Genet el says that everr stage oi tbie solifoqny is indellibly itailnal an hie mind, and that in Ins exhnnstcd etote the reasoning was carried on as |ogk»f|y as ever man reasoned at hie desk. Dttabt succeeded orga—wat and argnment di*. ptared donbt jest as logically aaeooidbew lie says he never will forget with what anxiety be made the test of Kfting hie •eg—with whet aganv he waited to see whether or not it would saove in res ponse to his ffjrt, ead bow he hesitated I tiying| itfor te, rit owght fafl and j ArnaeraMGL-'There is a jtewverhj nbicbsayi, **Whet canbe dmae nt ni especially to a class who have became slaves to tbe habit of |iii>u nitinaliaß,the habitnal postponing of erajtldw flat tbey are not compelled by necesaity In do immettiately. Sow, drihys ore wag ; only damaging In present prospects, hat | tbey are destructive of ukhnat* enemas. ; A dilitory man is not to bn depemftr*! on. The slightest pretext is snfldenA . for him tn disappoint yon. If an raai««e r tbe cotter he is tfisebarged the greater Ibe advantage to the employer. Tbnn are tbose who may properly be cabled ; "afternoon men.* They me always boss | getting ready «o go tn work. In thn speet their duties, aed'aey: "Pleaty to do to-day I I ohm. go to work this afternoon About three o'clockJthey wmy what i ed me any , day. TS leave it and begin bnqeht and etrlv to-morrow mri ; iir 79 * - [ A aingn!orcaseof destitnden ban Jart i come to light at Westfield, Masa. A few > days since a medicine peddler and arte, i giving evidence of respcetnhifity, arrived - in that town end engaged a imam with a 1 good taaaly. The men went oat every r day peddfing has medicine from honse f> boose aritboot ancaess. and at night I wonld tetorn bringing n few appfra io bis bag, nad woohl remart to his hndk . lady incidentally that hie wife wan veey i food of baked appica, and wonhinl she plemse lo bake them in ber nven. Final. , ly tbe woman was taken dangeroanly iIL , ud on investigatioo it was fNnd that I tbeconple were wholly nit bent asanas , for snpport, and notkisf baft a leer bak ed apples tad been their daily diet since . their advent into the place, and allhoagb , actually in a starring coiufirioa. they I were too proad to allow it to ho known. iTuey were suitably cared for. ceceauc srt acuuv. (Ksmka Leader.] On tbe 4th at July, 18C3, at tbe battle of Ciettysbarg. Albert Jteknwa eras shoe in tbe right lung. The baltc* was art extracted. Mr.Jsckaws recovered and removed to this coast. Yesterday ha was uka* with a violent fit af cnaghiag, something obstructing bts w iudptpe, and in the paroxysm tha huliet was coughed np. Gleanings* An observing politician says that the difference between those going in nad out of office is auiahr this —the former are sworn jn, and the hitter go oat swearing. Mother (noticing her son** greediness) -—•lieorge yen should alwaya leava the table feeling that yon could eat n little ■sore." Gwrp— U I do, anther. * — jßocAestsr Mxpn as. During August one hundred end thir ty-live frphans were dotbed end led jtnd taugut at an average expanse ot at tbe Oxford vytnsa. They were fed mainly ou vegetables raised oa the premises. A country girl, whose show of vaaity was large and tender, wrote "buna" that she "traeted a good deal ot 'tenthm" by the stylish way she held op bar % *CIOJU W -'The hi or you hold 'em, yon now, the nore 'teulki yon 'tracts." Mrs. Jenks still lives She has written n letter, which is published, in wbach she save that the U periume-leden breezes of tbe Snmiy South sigh over many an un known hero and political martyr who stoically met their tnte or whose souls went out in their despairing cry tor mer cy, eud whose bones 10-day are bloecb iiig iu the lonely woods' aud dreary swamps of Louisiaua, Mississippi and Srath Carolina." Mrs. Jenks is evident ly preparing to orgauize another political e«mpaigu. N > BOETCM TNCPW 1,1 NPTCKLIT FT IF l&ht (SCQV^E w^Sm and THE PUBLIC. Stock of GOO . - Rl#V^ SFEKFC SSBHITSUB *iigyac£j>-» SZ ■ GGGE^GP^ NEW FIRM &ew Store, AN HEW (LOO4G miIaZZJZT*"* *** ■■* «-*•*'* low figwret for cask SHHSSSN^ Grocery Store J WOELTLS TAS2?»I OW.A»IKW». MTW*ACAP. It. 1. NOKLL Tailor„ -^1 A*a Horn a I Sewing Machine •UAWTMMMMLMTIT «• WAA WT *». 1 s«it for the low prin at im CAILANDJIT HKI