I WILSON' ADVANCE UnurlsinKT). liVKKY ElU WtLSox NokthGaeo BY JOSKPHUS DAMtLS. - Hitorao StXBSCRU' TIOX KATES IN ADVA ' One Year - '" Gix Months. : - . WMnnnv oan be sent W""" T Kri8UTcd Letter at our Slr.-et. in lIK LM -l r. i.l"-- "Hie I'uil-itii'- NtfWS 01' A . QH;iM.l) FHOM ALL PART ;-Ol TIIE WOIiU) XCii., , ws-Gl'IlAXINti -Sun and Qn te bxpo- sitio herfor.i rolled is mane 1U. r. m- i i si.lent 01 Allege, u I). 1 e Nor lb Ciirolii I'iiarma- ceiitica! Association w nieet in" .A. Cltarlotae on the m.h if Ilgll-Sl. b'ington is at to have t new hotel np the corner Dock r-U'vts. Good! is mighty and must pre- lltllli(ti'i until has been lined . riv,riL, in .. horse trade. Phillips-, of Wil- ven e hctcd a mem ber of the Germ i.omicai socie ty, of Berhn. The ice lacioru )n j;,leifrli ls nearly completed. i-,i,s js ;l new enteiiise fur North Carolina. Is it not the t'nstf , . A ttsht over an Vwk in tlleveland cou nt v h.iscr.t iirut.i' last, the Aurora" sjys ' iyo iu. 'lln- lJ'Xt rssioll 'of tho Uni versity Normal-School will le held at Chiii-1 1 1 ill, in the University liiiildiu'. from June 17th to July 17th. Twenty years njjn lliere were twelve womeifi doctors in the Uni ted Sbfctcs. j;w u.ie are SOO in the tield andian ann.v of recruits in t i-.i in i ii A violcn't storm in Dinwiddle a l;iptisl count , V:ij, Sunday chuicli ii. -ai J',i,hii (ii.e was blown down: .,,i ;, W( ., .-.killed In liKhtniii. It do 'I ,(si mm h to;et mar ried in Nei .h-is.-v. The liien-e fee U o ' v2 i,.;.nts. p,t S1N. States, hm.Iu J Pennsylvania, have neithL,. ii, , IS1. or lee. Sherilt u. Hill, of Samp.soii. escorted hjur eouviets to the pent tentiary hlst W41.k, vi.: Troy Car ver, cig(,t years; J. Dam, 2 years; Any llerriii", t ears. ' '''ir 'ehne a Hindoo woman dies a js brought in so I hat she maf hold its tail as her l leaVfH;tlP, lM,dv. ' Perhaps der tliHtftiiu -might realize th. --. -lklmumf Hnhardson, in of the World's Industrial an., ton Centennial Exposition, at New "Orleans, is the largest cotton plan ter and cotton tacior iu the ..ill. -.Estimated- worth 1o,0uo,ihm iol lars. : Oxford "Orphan's Friend'': We are jilad to say io the Iriemls of the Orphan As him all over I lie State that vevery thing niovmg on hariuonhmsly and pleasantly at the instil ntlon. The health id the children is Hd. 1 -Tle faintly of Mr. .1.11. 1'.ai nes of Kockiutrlittu, together Willi. some miest, werefnade vcrv sjcj;. last Sunday week'A says the ' Um ket'', by eating ice. ftVeani. It is believed that theloisong was rail ed by somo adiilteraviion in I lie lemon extract..- Hie tiohlsttoro ".lies; ener says. It is runioieml beie th ai AViley Crnnipler, Jr., whVse lioine is but a few miles fromVown, drank a quantity of lam!auil the early part of last week, and iSaieiliately, ii-lt his house, sinee- which, time no tidings have been hid of him. The AsheviHe.ti.lvanee''sa.vs, Mr. ltichinond Pears i stated be fore the board of coini.issioiier.sand magistrates, that he knew posi tively of !?f00,00() that ,ad been in vested in Buncombe ennty, as a consequence of the erei joii-of the new iron bridge aei.s French Broad river. The curie-' lni doing much damaged corn in tlir east era part of the State. The Stmie: wall "Enterprise" tells ol a citizen oi i aiiiueo eoinu. wno is pay in . UK", per iuu n-r ai can be canghi in acre field of coi n h i. The curlew bug at at the root an 1 sin k of it. ''in that in t.MM- ii'iu : to him. the corn sap out The Goldsboio "Messenger"' says, the Executive Committee of .the State Fruit Association have decided to ask SenatiislI:insoin aud Vance to be present at the state Fruit Fair. The annual address i to .x delivered by Senator Uansdin and a lecture for the benefit of tiir Fruit Growers Association by Sen ator Vance. The Fruit Fair will tie held in Goldshoru July -3oth ai.il 31st. . "'-.. -The catalogue of Davidson c,,i lege lor 188:5-4 shows that the in stitution has a faculty of seven, and llrt students who come from eleven different States and one foreign, country. During the past year the Trustees have liegun the-'woik" of adding 75.000 to the permanent endowment, $50jO(H) of which i hex expect to raise in North C'arolina, ami ? 12,000 of which have already bee.n raised in this State. Senator Cokiv of Texas, has a remarkably imweriiil voire, and it is said that when he was discussing the pliiei-o-pneumoni i hill and his throttle valve wide open the pages piu cotiou hi iheir ears and wedged the window sashes to keep them from rattling and breaking the glass. The Senator- is a brother to Capt, Octavius Coke of North Carolina, who himself has a voice which is like the rushin'of -mighty waters. " The sure effects of Ayer's Ykilrillo. i-. Sarsa- ,....... kuumugu ami nerini nent. If there is a lurking taint of scrofula about,you, Ayer's S ir ssapanlla will dislodge if. and ei tr. Trnm rr.t-n. I) AY - ! r1- i PrprJ f I i 1 IT--" ' ' " -I - VOLUME M. Romance of the ( TIIE STRANGE HISTORIES OF TIIE INMATES OF TWO CALIFORNIA i HOARDING HOUSES. , Twenty-five or thirty years aim. 1 I i mink, at rdarysville, Cat, whicli was then an established yet shanty I like town, lived Judsre Stephen Field, and in his law office was a rmboai tied with a plain family, aim at me Lp fj auUbiier i T I I I I I W I VKi " a florid, weltsh-looking Btrangei-. In the next u6use liyel an Irish man named Murphy? who had a bright, interisting daughter, but he was fond of paddling her when anything wint wrong with him. This paddlifig had been going on for some time, aud one day the hoarders held an indignation meet ing and resolved to go next door and see old Murphy, and tell him that ifjic did not stop correcting Senate. that eljild on eei im an oecn- ry cnainnan ot the convention, and sions they would take bun down to j Fix-Senator Henderson, or Missu the stre mi and duck Imn. None j ri, was lieiinanent chairman. The ; of. the guests were especially brave, j Mahone. delegation was admitted lmt t hv -nut on a very brave front, from Vinrinia. ..Fi-idav sit.' 4-:u and held the indignation meet iug. j Several years alterwards one ot j thosiM,lirties' ' caueii loi be juslii o of thi supreme court. stii'i liter, by sdveral years, the ; rei.ul.liea" in California nominated (lorhani for governor, and they put oil tin' ti' ket with him the present Uiittoi States Senator, Jones. Wif. ii .loues met Gorham ho said: ., i . ,.n tlie little fellow from Tjncr ( ' ' 1 4 ----- lV-i.iiiii who boarded at MaVysville w - if it TiU ' "jrou ju miuw me. 'No. 1 doTr44link I do" Why, I'm Jones, the. WensJi lookiug fellow who torined one of Ue posse to go in ami make old M urphystop keeping that child screaming," 1 Tle,sh)ok I, amis warmly, and then Jones said: 'Gorham, do you know what hus heeome of that Mary Murphy?'' No. "Why she is now Mrs. William Sharon." My informant says that conse quently there met at Washington city, Jones aud Sharon in the United States Senate, Gorham secretary of the Senate and Field on the supreme bench all brought out otMhat boarding house. Mary Murphy grew up to le an interest ing woman, and the paddling was only temporarily disadvantageous Cnpid's Odd Capers. Spriugfiehl, O., was thrown into a Hot ter by the appearance of a beautiful yo'ung woman, elegantly dressed, walking arm in arm with a negro through the streets. She proved to be Maggie Burton, of Meehanicsburgind soon tiecome Mrs. Je uersoii tilrothers, the ne . i. becoming her loved and lov II;; liiisband. Miss Constance Bell, a handsome - ar old girl of Boykin, S. C home from boarding school and found Dr. Benson, an 80-year-old strauger sick in her fathers house. She nursed the old gentleman, and at, the end of two weeks, as soon as lie was able to walk they were married, the girl's parents giving full consent. Mary Sullivan, aged 23, a New York domestic, is stieing William Hayes, aged 70, for breach of promise. She claims that Hayes made love to her, and that alxHit ,Iu!v 1, 18S.I, made an agreement with her that if she would marry him within :i reasonable time he would transfer to her all his real i stale, his bank accounts, and all other property lie" owned in the world. Walter Burden ami Miss Fanny Swallenberg, a young heiress, eloped from Long Island City, and being inaried in New York, sent a messenger to notify the young lady's widowed mother. The couple were-much surprised soon afterward to receive a long and warmly congratulatory telegram from Mrs. Swallen berg, anil the ad ditional information that all the; members'" of both families approved the match. Mrs. Mary Duffy, of Phila delphia, drew a pension as a soldier's widow until she xvas re married to William Chainliers, when by law the pension was discontinued. She has now learned that William has another vile. living and that her marriage to him. being illegal, is void. Hence i she claims to be still a soldier's widow, entitled to i the oension for all the years that s.iiiuiii,.w-uii iiu u'-.id Mrs. Chambers (V :'n"-""- , - insieaii oi xv mow jjuiij. - Ella Wheeler's marriage had its miauce liehiud it. When the Army of the Oumlierland held its reunion iu Milwaukee Mr. liobert M. V,le.ox, a young mauHfacturer from Connecticut xvas present, lie had read Miss Wheeler's poetry and wished to see her. It haj) pened that, she contributed )Mein to the occasion and was pointed out. toMr. Wilcox. On his return home he wrote to her, and, though she had never met him. she liked his letter and replied. A pleasant j correspondence folloxved, and soon a meeting xvas brought bouf. It proved a case ot mutual love at ! fp-st sight. ' "Heroes." , , -- M i Morrill, who was appointed Mcre Can anybody i.nagme tl. , poss.- Treasury, he was elected ditv that Gen. Bob t h. 1 1., tli Senate or-t-lio Unitt.-.! States vmld, for ui.j eons.derat.o lend b V-elected to the Ins i.:mie to si lottery scheme? .... i.. m i. noo. He was not that sort of a "hero." -Nash v,lle Christian AdvcH-ate." The imasrination would W . im possiitU. for the. greatest trait of the greatest hero of modern times as ins deep religious onvic lions ami religion and lottery can no more hiix than oil and water they are utterly repellant, the for, iner is d"G-otl, and the latter of the evil one. No: General Lee, would rather hae severed ! his heart- i strings with his own Iiands than ; have snveiiA bis nitJuence io a frairtl to n "Jackson Tc . bis' fellow-men. in Whig." ! : . A whisker de mu to apply, tupossi .! euc io use, easl hie 'to rub off, a nee, and chea ingham's Dye ,tfle NXst?.rs these merits. unites in itself Try it. . . , HE WILSON ABVAHGE;;- Jr lET ALL TSJTOlUlW'T AT, BE THY COUyfUY'S, THY GOD'S. ASP TBIITI1S'." 7 WILSON, NORTH CAROLINA, JUNE 13. 1884.. BLAINE AND LOG AN THE l.EPUBLICAN CANDI DATES NOMINATED. THE PLUMED KNIGHT. eimliliean Coiivelituoi in Chicago lal?WCJan the most i,thnsfver Leld hJ that nartv. The hall xKi-lLse,y nneb-t.l J I . ... .. i a. . 1 . - r""-,i i.iuuu"iioiit me enure ses Sion. Intense excitement prevail ed aud it was evident from the first that Blaine was the choice of the Convention. Whenever his name was mentioned the hall niiig with shouts and hnzzahs. A neero named Lynch was made tempora o'clock Blaine was nominated for President on the fourth ballot. ine lollowing wi re the cast : ballot TIIE I1AI.L(T4. Blaine a-J-i.i ;H:'375 i44 Arthur , 27s 270 J7o 207 Edmunds 85 78 41 Logan f,:U c.l CO 7 Sherman .'( 2S 19 Hawley 12 13 15 Lincoln 4 4 2 Gen. Sherman 2 - 2 The vote was received with en thusiasm, the band playing and cannon looming.- The st reets xx-ere thronged with excited people, all cheering" wildly. At 1:15 Blaine's nomination xvas made unanimous. The convention adjourned until S p. m. The evening session began at 8:15 ami the call ot the States for the presentation ol candidates lor Vice-President began. No re sponse xvas made until Illinois was reached, when Senator Plumb, of Kansas, took the stand to pre sent Logan's name. The mention of this name' xvas received with great and long-continued cheering. Houk, of Tennessee; Thruston, of Nebraska; Bradley, of; Kentucky; Horr, of Michigan; Lee, of Penn sylvania; Pettibone. of Tennessee, and Lee, of South Carolina, all seconded Logan. A motion xvas made to nominate Logan by ac clamation, but a call of the roll was demanded and the 'motion was withdrawn. At ;i:32 p. m. Logan was nomi nated by acclamation. The result was received xv ith cheers and the convention at once began break ing up. The. convention xvas again called to order afler I lie chairman had anjrounced Logan's 'nomination by acclamation anil on a roll call of States all voted sojidly for Logan, except New A orkj which cast 1 vote for Foraker land (i for Gres liani. The convention formally ad journed at 0.55 p. m. lheie is great disappointment among 1 he Arthur wing and other opponents of Blaine. The New York -'Herald," the New York "Times," the "Everting Post.'' and other leading paper, have already declared against the: ticket. Geo. W. Curtis and Henry' Ward Beecher of New York say 'they will not support - Blaine. So say leading Republicans all over the country. -Logan adds no strength to ticket, especially South. 1 lis "bloody shirt" record can but weaken him everywhere. Lincoln as Vice-President, would have made the ticket stronger. The democrats everywhere feel satisfied with the ticket they are to beat. Speaker Carlisle said that the democrats would haxe -an easier time Hi n he expected. "If," said he, "we can't beat the nomination made lo day, we 'can't beat any thing. I xvas ve y much afraid they would nominate. John Sher man, Ilnwley, or some such man but Blaine." THE REri'BLICAN NOMINEE. James G. Blaine, the Republican nominee lor the Presidency, was born iu Washington county,'; Penn sylvania, January 31, 1830.- r After a preliminary tutelage he entered Washington college, in that State, from which he graduated with dis tinction. Circumstances led him to adopt the profession of a journa list, and he soon drilled to Maine. where he became editor of the Port land ''Advertiser" and afterwards of the Kennebec "Journal," In 18.VJ he made his advent' into active ixilitical life as a member of the Maine legislature, and served continuously until 1S02, xvhen he was elected to represent- his district in the Congress of the United State He remained a member of the House until 170, when, on the resignation, of Senator Lot M. V1 - ' : ( or ,, i11;11i nr ii!1rii..ld-!4 c.t'biliet untii piesident Arthur speeded to the Piesideney, wlien - 1 K! Ietired. IIe al.jv'.- displayed a bitter an tagonism towaitls hisjbrilliant rival, Rescoe Conkling, then a representa tive from New York, and fastened upon him the sobriquet of "the strutting turkey gobbler" a piece of malevolent wit that Conkling i nAifli.tf fm-offit nor forfax-p. As violent however, as were his i personal antagonisms Blaine yet managed to control the majority -ni his r:irr,x" in me liouse ami - j . , . ... nncommo 1OW(,r. degant in al)near";The period of his i-egime was Hn pne-e. . iict-, rl - r t, i,istnrv nr ! oar country. Jobbery - flourished. Great grant3 of public lands were waue mj tuiouiauuus. xmpviiaub questions affecting the railroad corporations chartered during the war, and involving large amounts--of .money in which , the government was interested, were brought forward for legislation. Speaker Blaine it is alleged, al ways was favorable to these measures. The public treasury was lieing milked by the adroit manipulators of railroad magnates and the Speaker, it has been re garded, promoted their designs. How far he feathered his own nest is not" known.-. -.When the Dem ocrats '.K'caine the dominant ma jority in the House the judiciary committee was instructed to make some investigations ami judge was Oil St, Sllh ern.. 1 IlOUiaS!Rr.1f anma niuotlnoo -, , - ' til. -.1 1WI 1.3 UlllbCl t V hi v -. . . that appeared to m the intefirritv of the ex speaker was during this investigation that the notorious "Mulligan letters" came before the public The inci dents of that occasion are not en tirely I resli in our memory, but as we! recall them, Mr. Blaine when a crisis' xvas reached suddenly suffered a stroke of apoplexy or dangerous illness that arrested the proceed ings. Later on he recovered some what, and having by a disreputable trick obtained possession of the damning proofs of his guilt, he Haunted them in the face of House and then was restored to health xvith maivelous rapidity. It goes without saying that the written evidence of his guilt contained in the Mulligan letters which he thus secured, was never I made public by him. But the voice of the country .was pronounced, and many of his own party friends re gard him as a very disreputable person. 'The "Evening Post" and the New York "Times," both lead ing Republican papers along with numerous other Republican sheets have'' never hesitated to speak ot him as a disgraced aud dishonored man, and as oue .unworthy of the support ot decent citizens. irausierreii to tuft senate in 187(5, Mr. Blaine lost no time in measuring .strength xvith his old adversary Conkling, who had been called to the Senate chamber soma years before. In 1870 Mr. HIaine was tirst brought 'forward as a can didate for t he Presidental nomiua- tion, on the tirst ballot in the convention of that year, 37'J lieing necessary to a choice, he received 285 votes and on the seventh ran up to 351; hut the tield being against, him there was a stampede to Hayes, xvho received 384 votes and was nominated. Maine's de feat at that time taught him a les son, for Hayes was controlled by those leaders xvho had made him President. And so when the next issue came, he determined -'that if unsuccessful himself, he yet would dictate the President. In the fol lowing convention therefore, he held his 284 votes against Grant's 30( until the 35th ballot when he threw his strength to Garfield and named the President.- As the fruit of this stroke of pol icy, Garfield selected Blaine as the leading figure of his adminis tration and he entered the cabinet as Secretary of State. The effect of this alliance between the Presi dent and Conkling's personal ene my was to throw Conkling and his followers, among, them Vice-President Arthur, into violent oppo sition, and upon a trifling pretext the New York Senator resigned and appealed to the SMlwart wing of their party for a vindication. Blaine with much, adroitness mar shaled the "Ilalf-breeeds" and xvith consummate skill ..managed lo 'defeat both ol the retiring Senators and to obtain for Gar field a dominant influence-in New York polities. One of the results of this epi sode was the assassination of the President-" by a deranged Stalwart and the elevation of Arthur to the Presidency followed by the retirement of Blaine to piix ate life. During his short career as Sec retary of State, Mr. Blaine exhib ited an activity -unknown to the public men of his party. He sought to signalize his administration by a foreign policy that would be a departure from all of our tradi tions. Ire aimed to subordinate tlie entire Western Hemisphere to the influence of these United States, and announced the pur pose of establishing the doctrine that this Union would interpose to preserve the peace of the isew World, and to control its affairs, while European interference would not be tolerated. A policy leading so inevitably to distant warfare and threatening to inxolx-e us in all sorts of difficulties did not receive the approbation of the American people and yet it xvas audacious and calculated by its very boldness to win favor. The wheel of fortune however that turned Blaine out of his high office put a quietus to these wild dreams, and President Arthur quickly returned to the old ways of -"nonintervention,"' - while announcing a linn adherence to the Monroe doctrine. To this rap id and hasty sketch of Mr. Blaine's caieer, xve must add a word as to his jiersonal appearance. 'He is a large, well made man, xvith a strik ing carriage, quick m his move-, nieuts, of dark complexion ap proaching the olive, and full of vigor. The strength of his nomination lies in his record in omiositioh to j the Chinese, which gains him fav ; on the Pacific coast? and in Ws r Kr?ss,ve toreign policy which i i ivor ng- is J a,c" win to his support j t,IOSft ln,sh v,0,('rs who ,,0l tbaC may embroil this country in a war with Great Britain. While his re lations with President Garfield were such that h.- might lx re garded as Gartield'. political heir, aud thus find a strong support in Ohio, that very cirriuustance is his greatest element of weakness, lor it renders his carilidacv without i Ij?! inasn'ch as ibe. Ulwart of j ?ew X.rk will not vote for bim. It ' Me impossible. lor liiame i i uunure r-iiaie, " i though his adherents claimed in t ,e convention that they could elect him withont xw York, vet wlJeu tUe concede jthat New York Wl11 casfc Us vote against bim, tbey ucicai BILL ARP'S TALK. MONEY ' AND ITS USES THE FAMILY. IN MONEY AS A STIMULANT. ' Money is a right good thing and no sensible man 'will turn up his nose at it. Money biings comfort au l leisures and Solomon says in leisure there is wisdom. A man who has to be digging away every day for a living don't have mnen time to read and reflect aud rumi- n t matter whether he is a merchant" mecnanic or farmer or a pTofessk1 ma" if he works hard all 'day'' liwant8 io rest an night. Money promotes domestic tfu quility and that is the biggest and best thing I know of. But money ftughi to be haid to get, so that its rearsvalue may be appreciated money :.as to lie earned to be prized. If it is inherited or drawn in a lottery or won at games of chance or found in the' road or obtained by lucky speculation iu stocKs or bonds or cotton futures, it goes at a discount. It is under valued and .don't stick to a man long. A fortune gained in a year rarely sticks tfe anybody. Luck is a right good thing when it follows along with labor ;,nd honesty, but luck by itself is 'a 'Receiver. "Trust to luck" is the devil's maxim. I knew a hard working man who was so anxious to get ahead that he stinted his family and invested part 'of his earniugs in the Louis iana lottery for hye years and never drew but ten dollars. He told me he had lost live hundred dollars tiat way, and every time he saw tie list published of the lucky men who drew the prizes it fired him up and he tried it again. Sometimes IHvish Uncle Jnbal and General Bc.Wegard would tote fair and pub.ikh a list of them fel lows who -diufoit draxv anything. But 1 reckon That would lie so long and occup.W many columns in the newspais they couldent afford it. I It is just huma 1. know to want more money than have got es pecially if we are-liaid run and living on a strain. I want more myself, and if I xvas to find a hun dred .'dollars in the road 1 couldenr help hoping that tho owner would never miss it, and never call lor it. Just like a boy who finds a pocket knife and feels like it is his, but that sort of money is not as solid and satisfactory as money we work for. I know an old preacher who had ten dollars and his sou hail ten dollars and the young limn weut down to Atlanta and took all the money to buy somr things and he came across a wheel of fortniie and saw a fellow win ten. . dollars just as easy, and so he Was persuaded to try his luck,' and sure enough he won ten dollai, and it hope him up mightly and he tiied it again and xvon some more, aid he kept -on until be had won fflt1 dol lars'. -and became a fool, for light then his luck changed and lie1 lost it all and his ten dollars audi his daddy's ten besides, and! ha to borrow a dollar and a half toWt home on, and liked to have perisied to death in the bargain. 'Well, the. belonged to,the church and ihV.y had him up and tried him. and mane a ciean orcasr aim rout m he xvas overtaken and tempted .iiill how he went on and on mil ne nan inane uity dollars cieaitl "And right there" said the ol man is where Johns sin begun 11 lie nail stopiHMl riiriit there it .would have lieeii nil right but like a fool he xvent on and outo.dct srriiciion. en, .lonn wasenr s-icii a dreadful sinner after all for hiv wanted the money to buy some-' thing io please- the old folks. But money dont come t hat easy very often. I know a man who has been kept on a strain for tix'e years working, out of his losses on cot ton futures. Sometimes luck runs I ... A t - f A aiong xviin a man lor ten xears and more and th vain and he thinks is infallible-nnd lapses like Seney Keene. No money is safe except made by honest men. The rewards of labor are mighty good and sure. Here 1 set iu my piazza and look over my farm anil see the wheat and the oats all in a strut and waving- so beautiful in the breeze-" and I feel proud and serene for I sowed rhat wheat my self and helped to prepare the land and it is my wheat and my oats and come honestly and xvnsent made' out 'of . somebody else, and it does me good to cut a few choce heads and bunch 'em anil take 'ein to town and shoxv the folks w hat I can do. It beats mon ey made by luck all to pieces, and so does xyalking in my gnrdeu and di5ii" t'ho potatoes I pijanted and working them e-er sol nice aud biinging them in the I house to shoxv to my wife and heijr her say, "they are very fine." he nexer saxs much on that line, fdie don't, but a little goes a great xr il Ii 11 me. She never indulge tnre, she nexer uses ad j any excess, sucli as li in rap- ctives to x-ely, ex- qnisite, splendid and the like, but I know what she thinks alhout uiy- thing just as well as I'm going to get her it she did. mess of rasberries to-day, the fir ;t of the season, and I'll surprise 'em at dinner time. She her with likes that. Womeu lite ruose utile thought like oil ful attentions. I hey are on the axletree. and nil kes the machinery run smooth, there ought to lie a little IBut then honey to mix un things. Money i.- a good domestic lubricator itself. A man feels more like a gentlein m with some chauge in his pocket and he ouffht to always have a dol ar or so inst to feel of . -It stiffens bim up and keeps him from feel in Ir like a vncaboud. 'Ami woman wants en some too. .When a pedlaj comes alonsr with tin ware or iJI wagon load of jugs or the Gypsllls come along with lace or the bo6aflgent i . comes along with pictures, and besides it is such a dignified com fort to have a little hid away for the children when they ae jnst obliged to have something to wear aud dont want to ask papa for money, for he is so hard run- aud talks so poor all the time. This is the kind of money that goes for all it is xvorth. Money that comes hard, money that is earned. Even woman does not prize money xvhen she has oodles of ii and has every want supplied. Folks must be cramped to be hap py. They must have something to stimulate them. Something to provoke economy and industry, and I'm thankful we've always had these stimulants at my house. Bill Arp. ' Temperance In Washington. "A Washington letter to - the Springfield Republican notes that both Randall and Caislile, xvho used vto look upon wine when it lowetb its color in the cup, are f-rkf..l nlwt-iinni'c Tin. ii'.-it..i- IIAI yr. ... ( ..- Ii . II, ..- JIK II I1U . also rciv5t's ,ni,t ' a dozen Sena tors wh.u w "PI". ,mt" lias drank air,5 Un' txo ye-.us, and that all th ?tol'K ''xcept perhaps one or two,"Sjyei'.v J)ll, dent in the ue of liipmrN. lr t" iu the House, so with moMU"".'1 men. According to .his autiioS there has grown up a sentimeut T7 ...dtiuvliti n. t ui..,k - . a fool xvho uses liquor inimoderaii ly, and that all men are better for uot using any." We quote from the Republican's letter: "Three years ago I saw one of the most brilliant members of the Senate staggering drunk in front of Willards Hotel. The other day 1 saw that he left Ills champaign untouched at a dinner. Said he: "I haxeu't touch alcohol in any form for three years. I woke up one morning realizing that what pretty much all the temperance lectures have said was true, and I simply said to myself that I have had enough. 'And. I have. 1 have never seen the time from that day to this that 1 have not felt a repugnance for liquor." Garland," the learned lawyer from Arkansas, is a teeto taler. Said he: "I was pissing by the cemetery near my home one day, and I saw the graves of a dozen brilliant men who had be gun life with me, every one of them hastened to his end by whis ky. I made up my mind that I hail drunk my share, and stopped." Marrying Early. The New York Evening "Post" says observation among oneV ac quaintances shows the fact to bet-hat people do not marry early nowadays, and, indeed, as a gen eral rule, do not marry eaily enough. In many cases that event takes place as a result oPp'r.udenc'e and calculation. The New York "Ledger" rejoins: We cannot agree with our contem porary in regarding time a so im portant an element in mmiage. A girl can afford to wait a great many years rather than many any one but the right, inan; while, on the other hand, it may be wiser torn man to marry the ri-lit girl as soon as he is sure he has found her, no matter how early. As Derrick sang, so he - may say to himself : "Hather ye rose-buds while ye may: Old Tunc is still a-tlyliip; And thin same Hower that smiles to-day; To-moriMW will be dyiiisr. "Then be not coy, but use your time, And while ye may, go marry; For haviiiff lost but once your prime, Vou may forever lurry." Our contemporary sjicaks of piu deuce and calculation in the same breath, as though each was equal ly objectionable in the selection oi a wife, but xve cannot go so far. Surely prudence should be an elc- iment in , exrerv matrimonial ar- augeinent. A Sensible Old Man. IlitANXii the offshoot of anything, as of a rivei. Wurcrtttrr. The educational advantages n- ed by t he boy s and girls of North olina during I he earlier decades he present century were of a hat makes- him 7f l,mItpf,lM "'T'' w his judg.nentJriT' rf a ,verv k'w suddenly he eo-fTutl"nfs ,1 k? whs'. 1'" v and Eno aiiYX" f t'n,1('' l;oml lm)s oft- State, and whose standards of cheat inn were among the best. NotiUle among tiiein was one loca ted iithe seat of justice in the countyofB , wl-ieh still main tains its reputation. A certain ...... -.j i . pianie- i-esnieii in a -contiguous i county whose eldest sou had at tained a the age when at the pres ent young men are fully pre jtaret t enter college, whose edti cationlas sadly deficienr. What he hailVas acquireil ly occasional and infi niiited .dte.nNn'-e at the "log sclL.J Itoiise" in his vicinity, at such limes as an old-fashioned school -nlstcr ''tanghtand birched" the lioyslnd girls. The faler of the lad in question, posjiesscilif ample means, deter mined tl-T ins son John should Ik placed at, he aforesaid school in the vihVgi of A ; and accordingly iccomp. iiv by his son, carried out his i .tff'.ton, leaving him with ample n;-as aud prepaid tuition under chi "i of the worthy princi pal. On igjeave of his son he xva.- iufnTtit .that ;. monthly reiorts wrui.1 io?,'r( him by mail of his son's progro in stndy, etc. At the expiratio of tlie first month the report vs accordingly sent, and a note, a.bllows, accompanied tlie report: 'When you placed your son Johmnder my charge, you forgot to reet what branches you desired ln Ut be put 1u." This note of n inder rather con fused the worly old gentleman, whase own edition barely ena bled him to reai id write (the lat ter by no ineanstn ea-sy task for him.) C'onsultiukis wife, aud af ter with her readand re-reading the report and ile, he replied thereto as follows jt "Sue. We gote letter and see yon, want ttioiowe what branches we want Uiu put inter we doant care wbartty ar so yon keape mm oaten ralnrer. 4S. I Harper's Drawer, kt SUPERSTITIONS. -:o MR. W. G. RANDALL'S SPEECH AT THE UNIVERSITY. NORTH CAROLINA FOLK LORE. We are glad tq lie able to pub lish extracts from the graduating speech of Mr. Win. G. Randall, of Burke, on "Popular Superstitions, or North Carolina Folk Lore," de livered at the University commence ment last week: "The last remuauts of supersti tion, whose natural home remote from cities, must be sought in for est glens, ' and amid mountain leaks, ou the lonely frontiers, among the mists of the ocean, and in the recesses of mine, are fast fading before the steam engine, the printing press and the Bible. When the newspaper' reaches the remotest home, and oIitie sup plies materials for the eveuiug gos sip round the farm-house faggot, the truth of Christianity diffuses itself through the daily lives of all classes. superstition has lost its the imaginations of the hold of I peoide, though all are more or less linuend. oy superstitious ens ton lOimois- icL.tiu luuau i ini-ii old sup Vrstltious about things lucky Soldiers still carry or uuluck, charms again bullets. Students try to get the liu? y mi in tiers in a r raffle. Our Protest. rs might not, .tii "ii . a a Faculty an, oe wnuug to nou meetiug consisting of thii . eeu. It is astonishing to . const? er the various superstitious beliefs ti to-day are secretly canied in the bosoms of all classes even the ed ucated among ns. A few of them we will mention : Some called doctors recommend as a cure fbr a child 'with the rick ets, to split a standing sapling and push the child through the opening, the child gets well and the sapling takes the rickets. If you have the rheumatism, just carry an Irish po tato in your pocket. No cure, no pay.! Farmers are. much given to superstitions at least in those places in which the same family line has lived for (reiterations. The like pretty and touching custom of telling the bees of a death iu the family is still adhered j to in some places. Plaut your seed in the dark of the moon to prevent too much stalk or vine. If you kill your hogs in the wane of the moon the meat all turns togravv. If you nail on boards iu the uew of the moon they wilt cup up and make your roof look like a sheared porcu pine. You will seldom see a man so much in a hurry that he will not stop to pick up a horse-shoe. One sees this ancient charm against evil spirits in many households, and it has liecomethe popular sym bol for good luck. Iu the country there are still found ersons plying the trade of fortune-telling; while the munlier of haunted houses is still great. The wishing, bone of a chicken is still in wide repute. Plenty of old women will cure you of a burn by blowing the place and repeating, "nit re came three angels out of the north, . One broutrht tire nnil two brought frost ; j Come out fire, come out frost, lu the name ot the Father, Son and Holy Ohost. ' Or they will tell your fortune by shaking up the coffee grounds in a tea cup finding out all aliout your fut sie husband or wife,- how rich, ami a great many other things, by the money, houses ami so on pic tared m the scattered grounds. The resemblance is very -' striking; about : as striking as that between the constellations and the figures of bears, gyats and heroes, which the ancient astronomers saw in Cue heavens. A great many young ladies ivmIIv believe tlod, if von can foim a wish while a meteor is fall ing, the wish will surely le fulfilled. They will not pluck the common ficld-Iily, for fear it will cause them to be freckled. Plants aud flowers those beautiful emblems of im mortality have from time imme morial possessed tlie magical vir tues. There are the mystic plants and there are symbolical ones, like the evergreens used in church dec orations and cemeteries. Superstition is nowhere so 'con spicuous as in the affairs of love. Lovers have always been fond of enchantment.'. It would puzzle the most-. profound antiquary to dis- cover what could gire ontu io i some oi tne strange notion cjiei- Ished by fond nymphs and swains. Shakespeare has represented Oth ello as accused of winding Desde uiona ny-. "conjuration and mighty magic:" and Theociites and Virgil have iHitli introduced into their pastorals., women using charms and incantations to recover the affec tions of their sweethearts. Charms, genii, witches, fairies, and all the instruments or magic, have con stantly been employed by lovers in the business of love. Very few maidens fail to get a ieep at the new un sin oxer the right shoulder, so that they may le able to catch a sweetheart during the month ; and they xvill lie 'sure to ttow to a cer tain large black bird, when they see him Hying near, that they may have an early call from their "dear boy." Here is quite an effectixe charm to repeat on seeing the new moon for the first time : -'All hail to the moon, all hail to thee! 1 prithee, good moon, reveal to me This nifrht, who my husband shall be." ' Young men need not be discour aged, t hey can vary it . by substi tuting wife for husband and tbe potency of the charm is in no way injured. It works equally both wavs. Here is another: v "New moon, true moon. Bright and clear. If my true love ts near. Let me bear a bird sing. If far off. Let me hear a eow low." well "Swear not, by the moon. . . . . l-i - lest uiy love proves n-ewise vana- hie" "ifvoawishto drearA of the one you will marry, put daily roots nnder vonr pillow and bang your shoes out at the window Yoo would not think it, bat a great -NUMBER 19 many dainty slippers are found with dew or frost on them. Cat your hair when the moon is in Leo, yonr locks will like a lion's shag, when in Aries they will cnrl like a rain's horns. If it rains while the sun is shining, the devil is whip ping his wife. A whistling girl and acrowiiur hen Will always oome to some bad end." - When the hen crows jrood men expect a norm within doors and without. Put a flint rock in the fire to keep the hawks awav. If yon dream of losing a tooth, von will lose a friend. To dream of killing a snake siguifies that yon win gaiu a victory, ir you want to raise a big rain to make the crops grow kill a big snake and bang him up a big black snake is the best kind. If the dog bowls it is a sfgu of death. If the cat washes her face there will be a wedding in the family. If the cat sneezes there will be a cold iu the family. There is a spirit in tho room tor tbe candle uurn Diuo, I f your tooth aches your love Is untrue ; Pull out the tooth and bid your love adieu. If the bead Itches it is a slim Of rain. If the head aches ltflg a profitable pain. If your right eye itches you will laugh to-mor row. If your left eye itches you wiU cry for sorrow, IO'our right ear burns, your left friends nay you are rude. If your left ear burns, your right friends say : you are a isuue. If your nose itches, you will shake hands with, or kiss a fool. drink a glass .of wine, run against a church door, or miss them all four If your foot itches, you will tiead upon strange ground ; or if you shiver, somebody is walking over your grave. There is nothing so small and iu considerable that it may not appear dreadful to an imagination filled with omens and prognostics. A screech-owl at midnight has alarm ed a family more than a band of obWers : the chirping of a cricket struck more terror, than the nf a. linn - A rnntv 1in.il- nr roarlu . j a croot5ttl Pin shoot np into prodi- ,'.!. ..iP"o ol the popular be iieT iZl ,NLr skepticism, ed- ucation, science, tor religion have been able wholly o eradicate. They belong exclusive? to no age or class and have been ti. A" . usmitted eration iroin generation to ge nwnt- turougn tne medium ot an i ten language, to which the nat impulse of the human mmd to wards the supernatural is the com raon interpreter." j . lo Use. There is, no use iu putting np the motto, "God Bless Our Home," if the father is a rough old lear, and the spirit of discourtesy and rudeness is taught by the parents to the children, and by the older to the younger. -There is no use in putting up a motto, 'The Lord Will Provide," while the father is shiltless, the ' mother is shiftless, the boys refuse to work, and the girls occupy themselves over gewgaws and finery. There is no use of putting up tho motto, "The Greatest of these js Charity," whil" the tongue of the backbiter wags that family, and silly gossip is liisjiensed at the tea-table. There Vs no use iu placing up conspic uously the motto. "The Lihcritl Man Peviseth Liberal Thing?," while the money chinks in the pockets of the head of the house groaning to get out to see the light of day, and there are dollars ami dimes for wines and tobacco aud other luxuries, but positively not one cent for the church. In how many homes are these mottoes standing lot us say hanging sarcasms, which serve only tooiiit a jest and adorn a satite! The lieauty of quiet lives, of trustful, hoefuI, free-handed, free-hearted charitable lives shed their own incomparable fragrance, aud the world knows where to find them Aud they shall remain trod) aud ! fadeless when the colors of pigment and the worsted and the noss nave faded, and the frames have rotted away in their joints. , - ' A Jewess Elopes With A legro. The New York "Sun" records another case of miscegenation: Three weeks ago John Good, a mulatto, eloped from Easton with a young Jewess, Pauhuu Lewis.. While serving as a waiter in a res taurant Good met Miss Lewis and began to court her. Mrs Lewis forbade her daughter's seeing him. The couple soon afterward disap jieared. Yesterday Chief of Police Bell of Newark received from Easton a telegram saying that they were living together at 'li Canal street, Newark. Last night Good and the girl went to Police Headquarters in Newark, accompanied by the Rev. W. L. .IIoff, colored, and exhibi ted a marriage certificate, showing that they were married in this city-to-day by Mr. lloff. The bride, who is a plump and handsome girl of 19, was neatly dressed. Both she and Good are intelligent. A Sheet-Iron Hes. The 'Inter-Ocean" describe a novel invention of an ingenious fel low in Ohio, who has constructed a sheet-iron lieu that promises to lav bim a golden egg. "It is fin- iaiitkil 11 1-1 tt life, full Rizj lLflrlAH and loots with one eve at a timt ui mirnrallv that it will deceive flip oldest hawk in the count! v. It i i .. . -. . u . I. n. i. ' . . . - I miDs or poiecai pounces on to 111 j the back springs open and the! i wings fly np and force the assail ant on to a ravenous oazz saw that makea 1,700 revolutions per min. nte. After moving half a minute the saw stops, the hen closes od. folj8 it, wigH and begins ilS-J ile as though it bad just laid an v luc YT .,7i in f Lis men a freshly painted one ont in the;001 f .1 i A.t. .1 t.:nL ' . '. - - suu to ury mo uwi wuicu I attracted tbe attention of a line oia cat Deionging xo i bad been, poking a doctor Wbct ti.a h7 Z fan at tbe foot thing. tbere, bat the cat is ence.17. Rates of Adtxbtiswo, Oo, Inch. One luseroon Ona Unntk On Vear. Libera Oiaeounu will . 'JIM1""""'' ' 'awuT POLlffCAlPOllvTS; WHAT TIIE POLITICIANS AliS TALKING ABOUT. 1'UE POLITICAL CALDROX. Onslow has declared for ri... ton J, Green for t'ontrr- Jones county,-by resolution ports Capt, Win, A. Harden ihr State Auditor. -Lot W. Humphrey is tl. v..i. Carolina inemlier of th. n..- v.. lional Republican Pommitte ' The Abbeville "Advance'' nays It is rumored here that Dr. ok' Mott's candidate for Governor will' not accept the nomination on the .uoiigrei ucKCt. The Washington -Post" insists that it "has authentic information full and complete" that "Mr. Til den will not be a candidate More the July convention, and lie will not accept the iiom.tutl ion under any circumstances A letter con taining these statements over his owu siguatnre will be ieud at the New Y'oik Democratic convention of June lth." - Alas Poor York. A Northern exchange has the following concerning the ltepuhti can candidate for Governor: "York, the Republican nouiiuee for Governor of North t'aroliua U a model jHilitician. He rode u mule all oyer his Congressional district two years ago, and jmsed as "tlie poor man's Iriend. Ue told thein in a speech in Ashe county, that if it were uot for-protective tariri mules would be brought - into that region and sold at f lii per head. In the lower counties he told "the poor laboring jieople that but for a protective tariff this country would lie flooded with foreign cot ton and the price of this staple would lie ruu down lielow the cost of production." Mr. Tlldeii Ana The TMria. All signs point to the iiomina- a?u oi Haruuel J. Tilden for the PresITI yicy by the Democratic na- Lveution. This beiuir ko uouni eo? Jo recall the clesr it is ery Wei bring, breaker on record of the great the tariff question. Twenty-nine years ag7 hMr. Til den was a candidate for ofhvi on the Democratic ticket iu his owl State, and on .October 3, lfi.V, in a letter upon the principles aud jsili- cy ol the Democratic party, he used this language : ' Devoted to the rights of our American indus try, which is now beginning U fill the world with the renown of its achievements, it has refused to di rect its application by a prohibi tory or protective tariff, proferring that each man should judge how he can make his own labor most productive, and trusting for the aggregate result to those natural laws which enable one of our null ions of the city imputation to daily choose his food and yet furnish buyers for everything that has been provided Iteforehaoil." Nineteen , years afterwaid Mr. Tilden was a candidate for the Governor of the State of New York on a platform which declared for "revenue reform, Federal taxa tion' for revenue only and no gov ernment partnership with protec ted monoKlies." During the prog ress of that exciting and successful canvass Mr. Tilden, in resisiiise to a serenade, nutde a speech iu which occurred this pannage? "The Federal government Is drift ing Into greater dangers and great er evils. It is rushing onward iu a career f centralism, alisorbing all governmental jsiwers and assum ing to manage all the .i flairs of hu man societj. It undertakes todi lect the business of individuals by tariffs not inteuded tor legitimate taxation, granting special privi leges and fostering mouoMilies at the expenses of the jieople.'' Mere cau be found uo inoonsixleiicy. The Tilden of 1874 was the Tilden of 1855,- The Tilden of 184 is the Tilden of 1874 and 18oj, and in the light of his record the charge that he is in favor of a protective tariff or the pnuciple or the olicy of , protection per se must fall to the ground. "News Observer." Found His Watch By leans 0(1 Dream. The miller at Glenn V Mill, Mr. Elisha, McDanald, warf a few days since grinding, and two or three other persons were in the mill, aud they and Mr. McDanald weie pro jsising to swap watches, Mr. Mc Danald had a 'heavy ca silver watcb and handed it to so'nie of them to examine, they handed it back to him, and he went to till up a sack of meal for an old darkey. A few hours after Mr. McDanald missed his watch and thought some of the crowd had taken it. So he took out a search warrant and searched some of their houses, but discovered no trai-e of the watch. That night he dreamed l tliut. tlm watch was in tlie io I darkev's sack of meal that be hail i rilled and so next 111 truing he i searched through the meal and to : t,;a Awn ftiirnniiA IiiiiTlrl 1 1 . II Wm9 I ... .... ilntto sun running. "aiini,- ... . - - ; . . .. ur. j. . -, A ,i " pAlll, itiisrv 1 "'V !rir! . Tl A Z ello ,e .."f .yi.ic.. ti I Jy tioul1 reiKirveu u. P-otiatiuc jr one of tbe rival itaea of the Western Union, withfpro? ects of success. JIB) ISO ."V-J !-1 "X r 1: r