1 T T Wi .bur s f i A D VANCE. ' T I -IfHE ADVANCE- M mm ARD FIFTYXENTS : i: r 1 o rote- i J ; Cash in Advance. a .ion woiirc "LET ALL THE ENDS THOU ASJVST AT. KR Till T COUNTRY'S, Till UOD'M, AND Till! SKND Yrc oBPrES TUN'" ?ZZ? Z7TIZZ- VOLUME 19, WILSON, WORTH C A HOLLOA, SEPT. 5, 1880. NUMBER 32 a ARP'S LETTER run A COl'XTRY D.l I". for Disastrous t.'ojiscaumires i too Much 1 i ii it. l'rettn ; What Erenj Farmer Should lie. fl, ).vm look like the farmers : to be -happy. They made est wheat crop that has made for years, . and now are heavy with corn ill soon bd white with Tlirf cattle are all tat ; . ii a fruit crop wals never in (.Jeorgia, I reckon :v happy, for they are picnics ami barbecue.- ',),-. t anil reunions : among -oldierH, and the camp ; have begun early and on till -cotton picking The Tanner's clubs and AHianco men -seem to be w-r- of the situat ion financi , r-ligioiirdy and pr.K'tical- .-.-ili kee iie ly- : it i r: t.i : r ,-pi.ious tanner is to be il. The other day my. wife 1 were invited out to out :. i:2 .".iliy Hood's to eat grapes ml m. -Ions, and we went. He v. s at the foot of the moun- i, two miles Iroui town, and' v. .- round the front yard swept and the backyard, too, and water pail and wash pan I .! been scoured, and the li.l lrea had to put on clean rStlbes, and everything was in ; ;! pie order, for that is the w,: ;; country . f lks do when ; . ' : l folks ar 3 coming to see IK in. We know all about that. ;.:t it is rather embara.ssing r!::"i town company takes !i t ;:; unawares on a' wash day r cleaning up day. 1 remeni- "i.-r that on one occasion my v lla could hardly get one of tin' civil to go to the door and, -.-:. ;i , .-l.e, did go she opened it :;;i1 uot behind it and asked the c 'inp.iny to walk into the par lor until .sl'.e could change her -iriiieiits. i'.illy Hood is my ideal of old Amur's prayer "give me neither jiov. .-r'ty nor riches." lie is just comfortable and had to work hard, to keep so. lie is yhvay-i ci.ie.erfu! and so are his wio) anil children. His good old i:oticr lives not tar away, :n 1 i is married daughter is in , i. lit. lit- lives iu a cottage that ''s shaded by ' some large ok?: tiers. The well with its hi oaken bucket isi.ilhe back yard 'aud the garden and orch ard arri near at hard. Chickens oC ail sizes are meandering :i round, and the ash -hopper and the dairy and the cider press riiow signs of clean things ;.'(, id thintrs. There is nothing iine euoutrh to be afraid of iMthi'ig poor enough ;to excite unit sympathy! every thin TTT-.iurtabiy' tiiid that is all. 1 1 said if there's peace to h. i. iuid in the- world a heart t! I was humble might hope . (.,: it here." ' " ! illy Hood was a good soldier the war and he is a good huiner iii' peace., aIe always !.! his premium acr& in cotton .;!, in com. I think that he mi safely count on two bales is bad I know, but Massachu setts heads the list of crime. Uid that is worse. If some of our people can't read and write, they are good citizens. It.du.ca-. tiou i3not a guarartee for good citizenship, night now the overcrowding of the learned professions is giving trouble in Germany.'- Their press is dis cussing ,the matter very serious ly, and trying to find a remedy. loo much education they say, and it is breeding discontent and socialism among the graduates who can't find em ployment to suit their high. culture.) There are sev"enty-one universities and twenty-eight thousand students fn attend ance, and the number is increas ing fl iro timoa foatar tlian t V ! population. What does this mean ? ""' Pope said : -'A little .learning is a danerous thing ; drink deep, or taste niot of the Pear ian spring." I never did be lieve that ; but now here is a new theory which says that too many are drinking deep, and the professions are all crowded to an alarming extent. Is it possible that knowledge is coming to a discount, and much learning is making people-mad? Is it a fact that the number of graduates in the universities ought to be limited, for fear of the safety of the government" lias a young man less stability and less patriotism because he ha been through the university ? Ger many boasts of.the best educa tional system in the world She has compulsory education and requires five years school ihg between the ages of seven aud seventeen,- and special at tention is given to the moral training of her -pupil's. The - . I ' . 1' 1. 11! iiuierauy oi ner population is only 2 per cent, whicli is a smaller ratio than any state in our union and yet Germany is alarmed at the spread of socialism. Well it looks like-, there is another problem to solve. How much education shall we give to our children ? Pope is not infallible even though he was a "Pope." A little learning is not a dangerous thiny. It is good thing, a safe and harmless thing and every human being ought to have it. To read and to write and to cipher adds to the usefulness, the independ ence and the happiness of mankind. We can all agree npon that. A common schoo education does not put the man It idleness, which is the parent of all vice, and before he knows it he wants a division and is at heart a socialist. The negro does not have far to go to reach thiSi point, it is his nature to want a division. He begins to divide early. "How are you getting along Dougherty ?" said 1 1 to a clever old darky who was raised in the family. "Poorly, sir, poorly. It gets worse and worse. My children are giving me a power of trou ble since they came from coN lege. They won't; work nary lick and they brings a crowd of them lazy college whelps to my house every day and they have mighty nigh eat me out." 1 he working negroes give us no trouble, but every now and then one of these college bred FOR THE FARM. MATTERS OF INTEJIEST TO THE TILLERS OF THE SOIL. Original, Bofrowed, Stolen and Communicated Articles on Farming. Sowing winter wheat is intel- Uieentlv described in the Ameri- editors or school teachers tries caia Agriculturist for Septem ber, and some sound advice given as to the proper fertilizer to be used therewith. It is not yet too lite to sow rutabaga seed for a fall crop. The Government furnish any turnip year. will seed not this i Ensilage is steadily growin in favor. It will not be ten years before silos will be as common in this section as fod der stacks. be worth little more than com mon fowls. No one who has n-if tn..l it -qii iinnHTQUnn thA I :0: amount of thought and roAT""?'W" EZ.LAX, tlnT1.mUrv brneder must va wi UISK HATERS to selecting the right birds foj the breeding Hocks and to buy ing exactly what is needed to NAUTICAL LIFE. IX SO UTHJEliX Sea SoundintiH. TU st..;. fortify weak points; nor can he believe such work is interesting. -Aiuericu.il Agriculturist. of Magellan. TJie Rio de Ui Plata. SiHini.sU Scenea. o stir up a war betweeu the races, and they have an idea that they will be backed by their northern, friends. But they are mistaken. The north has too much money invested here now and is investing more all the time. The north will not take a part in a race war. The northern mind is very much unsettled on this prob- em. On the last Fourth of July a distinguished orator made a speech in Farmiugton, in Maine, and - said that the nation had committed three monumental bluudars one was in opening our doors to all the vagabonds of the earth ; another was in not hanging Jeff Davis aud Bob Lee and all the leaders and officers of the rebellion, and the greatest blunder of all lay in giving the negro the ballot and setting him up as a citizen. He denounced the poor darkey as being worse than the Indian or then China man. Well, I wish they would settle down and let us know Montevideo, L'kugi:ay. It was a lonir Kail d i. Tin-', faumeics ALLIANCE. across the Southern I'loflc Fhe Alliance has made re- the lh'.anda of New Zealand to the markahlf progress in this State, lower extremity of Southern Atn- l.av'nu:: nl-Al!ia'ices in many if ericr. Our course lav on the for. not in .: very county in the State, I ty-cightii parallel of latitude, in that Heep ovur the ocean, but ad verse storuiM i-omiH'Hed ns to change the mute farther toward the south, The long days and short nights followed eacli other la close Buccession, lor it wan nearuig tne end of the veai. Sev. coiiuiosf"! of the verv best reD- res' iiliiive iarmers, who are not only representative farmers, but representative citizens, the equals in standii;u", worth and influent-. Ol Mty in the State. a loth brains and solid worth in the leadership and In eral temno storms and g.t'e the membership of the Alliance, caugni tiie ship id their embrace, It is said that the farms of the Northwestern States which are valued at 5,000)00.000, are mortgaged for nearly :$,tx )(),-- 000,000. It will take a lot of wheat, corn and oats to lift these mortgages. The farmers all over the country appear to be more de termined than ever not to use the jute bagging. We hope that they may succeed this year even more truly than they did last, and that the "trust" may be "busted all to flinders." not terest upon i will only on of U,e nave the the State Messrs C. C Tally ' Sons have one of the finest orchards of fruit that is in this county. They have already made over 1,000 gallons of cider from the fruit that has dropped off. Oh ! how nice it would be if Uncle Sam would just let us boil a leetle of it: we could save so farmers of North notably conservative, but at the same time progressive, and when thus organized under level-beaded, broad-viewed leadership, the organization caunot be other than beneficial not only to the farmer, but to the stale at iartre, whose pros- witn that of the farmer. Wil mington Star. ts influence H winterly winds often failed us. farming in- au1 ,1?-"y seas, frequently forty or State, but fift feet rolled aero itoif Tli our l,alu a:i1 kt'nt the vessel bob- Carolina are bing up ami down to such au extent that a cratt, a tpiarter of a mile away, would have passed uuneeu. V e crossed the l0ih uieridiau ou Monday, and the foHowiiijr day was Monday also, a day t loity elght hour, as a coinjieuiiation to father I line, and au offset for the loss of a day in turning our clocks ahead wheu we came into thin part of the world. -hi: FARM . S A I A KT iMTSTKY, have always believed ur farmers would find profitable, if the land mniKh ti-rnia ,if Hrinkilli' it. wnat tney are going to uoaoouv Chatham iieCord. it. in tne meantime lei us ub catient. Let the south roll on in her prosperity and let every body be calm and serene. Bill Ari This Ueans Yon. in ..net and sixty bushels of l ' other this year aud his ii. d(; crop, is nearly as good. :i is a good citizeu and never .-rumbles- about his taxes or He his Sabbath having to work the road, .is a good Christian and hiidren come to .'u'Ol anu ue ai-w ays vJa ul nl part to the preacher on the iv,t day of every month. What tlio world was full of such . lies, such fathers and , '... tj-crs and childien. ..i , (.i,iiani(ins innneenco ami health, ! ,' S fj.iii-s lamiraucc of wealth, ','!'" ,j )' who cruWus in shuiU-s likt' ' ,.,t "f ?i It ttti ami f fasu.'- Tjiscious- grnpes iu .fence on e ety .at the gate eat f. :iiid after a 'iu"i f sampte .course oi utiful, the L'ar. I . pt 'tran v: ay roufi '.i-.t'i-val iu in peaches nil then f(iTard -Ste. as ns, and i few pears and re t-acKed on. lop a - -: ier was brought i.i ike the repast comp ils t 1 fnt. bnme Hai'e. and ! id only a lunch tor dinui :.irls had prepared an extra ; -upper with a green corn 'Ming, attachment. When '. -ictor left me next day tl ou;;Jit 1 was asleep, ttut I ! 'him whisper to ; v.ifc that lie thought there chance for me to pull iili, fur my constitution . ::Dinl one considering how ...'l imposed on it. Many .iring friends called to see , and while the morphine - working I thought 1- heard . .':(.(!) say that the hearse i i-Dine, end I clutched the t to see if I was really in a '. It took me, about a week . t stTaight again, but tuere "i.ie gttod with the bad. I ; 1 tii.it had more friends it 1 knew of, and I have '-ived lots ofccugratulations , iallv from the atreiit who 1 ocd my life. Tiilly Hood is just a 1 i::Liiiii man with enough ''if ation to serve all hid pur ;J. lie reads the Bible and wspaporsand the Sunday . j boi ks, and no modern : ; , and is content. What '. lie want with more? Some ". i iniiiK tue wuria is on a 1 '"i about education, higl '"""'.tiiii! classical education. '1h said that Georgia heads ",; I'- t i.f illiteracy. Well, that or' the state in any peril does not produce any disinclina to work for a living to work tion in the common.avocations of life. But suppose we could by some enchantment, trive every man and woman a collegiate education, would we dare to do it? Old Uncle Sam chops my wood and cleans out my stable and gets his daily wages and is content. If lie was suddenly endowed with my learning would he chop my wood any more? If not what would he do for a living ; who would do the cooliing and washing, and scour the floors and kill the chickens ? Who would dig and plow and curry the mules I and haul the wood and pick the cotton and butcher the cattle and hogs and work, in the factories? Who would be brakemen on the railroad or firemen on the engines? Who would be porers and araymen and hack drivers in the cold, sleety days of winter. The col lege graduates, won't do it now -would they do it then. In fact, does not a high degree of culture unfit a man for laborious or menial pursuit. If it does then what pursuit - is left him when the professions are over crowded as they are iu Ger many. . ' Now neither tlie state nor the tteoule are responsible for the, unequal condition of man kind Some vessels are born to honor and some to dishonor. Wort has to be done hard work, dirty work, unhealthy and perilous work, of else everything would stop and the human family would perish We cannot help this. For tune and misfortune move LIong together . "Some rise by sin, and some hv virtue fall." Society is its nwn regulator. , 1 have no just cause of complaint that I can't move iiijthe hrst circles, jam happier in my own, and so is everybody even qowu . iu uneie Sam. the" wood-chopper. Our white people are getting aiong nrettv welt and the professions are not yet overcrowaeu io a,uy nlarmiutr extent. lhere i utill rnn.n at the tOD. But the Tioirrrtpq of the feoutu are fast approaching the condition o the whites in Germany. Their colleges are turining out Scores who pan fiud nothing to ao nothing that is congenial to thnir educated feelings. When voinitr iiian, white or blacU We have been insisting that tlie way : for farmers to aid each otbef is by co-operation in every sense. Help each oth er ! i Your Alliance preaches this doctrine and it is not the less true because- it comes from our pen. And the Ad vance holds that one of the best means to help each other is to tell how you succeed with any crop, the preparations you made, the time you plant ed, the seed sown, the cultiva tion given and all the details so that your neighbor can try A mass meeting of the farm ers of the State has been cahed to take place in llaleigh, Octo ber 15th, at the same lime State Fair will be hild object of this meeting, gather from the Call, the farmers of the opportunity to come and discuss and hear subjects bearing upon agricultural industry, the The as we as to give State an together discussed the We that sheep is dry enough. It is of no use to attempt to keep sheep ou wet land, but a flock on a farm will certainly ordinarily prove profitable. As has been said many times by us, and by others, .-h.jep furnish a conveni ent way for the farmer to ob tain tie-h meet, a very desira ble thine for the average far mer an-, ins lamily. Diet is such an important matter that it initio almont be said that too mut'h attention cannot be given to it. U ur port, which is eaten in tin- country to so lartre au extent, was not the best in the world, the health of our people would be severely affect ed, for our consumption of pork is very large. We have always believed that there was enough iu this point alone to induce farmers to ao to raisiug sheep. Then comet the profit, and we believ.' that a profit can be madi from sheep, taking all tunics iiuo consideration, even under unfavorable circumstan ces. Western Rural it next year. The Advance has opened a Department in its col umns lor tnis would be deligh farmers avail our offer. Many purpose aud ed to see our themselves of useful lessons could thereby be learned that must be necessarily lost except to a few. Getting it Sown Fine Politics are getting high in the "State of Wilkes." Last year a widow woman whose husband had teen a Democrat, rented part of her land to a Republican. The landlady's and the tenant's wheat crops were stacked together. Last week was wheat-thresning in that neighborhood. There were two machines, one run by a Democratic squad, the other bv a Republican squad. The landlady wanted the Democra tic machine. The Republican tenant swore he would have the machine ot his faith aud order. There was a lack of har mony, and the laudlady got the machine of her choice to thresh hers one evening, and the ten ant got his Republican machine next morning. That's getting it down Chronicle. The National Econojmist has this to say of Capt. Alexander's speech at the meeting of the N. C. State Alliance Convention : The address of President Al exander is an Alliance docu ment worthy of full considera: tion. His statement that the object of the Alliance is to pro tect the producers against monopoly and not to make I ,vrt irorj itl ThA TA4A51 TT n. those who propose entering up-, iu tbe Soutn and on co-operauve uisiriuuuuu. .r w . . ... fnnfiaA unci'-r;;;;-me!it, has this to say of thu So-ith's fruit-growing qualities and outlook: ' TLe fruit growers of Georgia and other Southern States are l ejoicin .r at the success of their crops this season, especially of the peach crop. For some years past me j.eacn crop in parts or the South has been only fair, but this year opened so prom isinglv that unusual prepara tions were made to handle the crop, yet in many sections hard ly three-quarters of the crop has been harvested, owing to a lack of crates and refrigerator cars. According to a letter in the Atlanta Constitution, car loads of peaches have brought Mr. Edmund Foil, of Mount Pleasant, raised on one and three-fourtht acres of land sixty-four aud one fourth bush els of wheat. This is an aver age of nearly thirty-seven bushels to to the acre. The lot on which this was raised was about eight years ago full of gullies large and deep enough to hide a common. size horse. Good farming and elbow grease made this land capable of pro ducing such crops. Concord Standard. i.I.l i r.tt TiiAN A (iOl.D MINE. l.'i'.drtr the above heading the '.alLiui'tiv .Manufacturers' llec It is but natural that we should feel pride in the beauty of our country, in the si:ce of our cities, in the magnitude of i our commerce, and the va st - ness of our wealth. We should not forget, however, that the true glory of a nation does not consist in the extent of its do minion, th6 fertility of its soil, the splendor of its architecture, or the extent, of its commeice, but in the moral and mtellectu- fine. Wilkesboro ai development of its people. National Economist. Shsw Practical Appreciation- The late Judge David Davis said this, and it is worth repro ducing : "Each year the local paper gives from $500 to 85,000 in free lines for the benefit of the community in which it is located. No other agency can or will do this. I he editor m proportion to his means, does mora for his town than any other ten men." TOO LARGE FARM The Home and Farm thinks, and we agree with it, that as a rule farms are too large. One hundred acres is enough for any farm. This amount of land well cultivated will paodnce more and better crops than 2io acres half cultivated. With this land the farmer with cue hired man can do all the work, except in harvest, when he will need an extra man. He would fin1 timn tn f.nt Yinh nlnTiJ- tl. A'Sonthern View of Tfce New Policy. fen(3e and clean out the fence corners, blast and draw off lare has ac-mired a. hitrh strung education and cain fmd nothing rfrf v ;i to he beems to brood over the" ' vr.'fls -.n dition of things, lie sees class around him" who. are mentally his inferiors, but who have accumulated property and are revelling in wealth. He sees, another class around him who have made fortunes by crooked practices, by extor tion, speculation, monopoly and nolitical intrigues. Hi thoughts fester and fret The white Democrats of At lanta burnt one Federal official in effigy a week ago, because of his appointment of a colored clerk. The colored Republicans of North Carolina burnt three Federal officials in effigy on Saturday, because, as they charged, "it is Harrison's policy to give .11 the good places to white men.'' Altogether, it ap pears that the new "policy," whatever it is, ia in a very bad way, and is not mak- j mg- ior tne uuiuuusmtiuii Char'Jsto2 News and Courier. stones that he has worked over for twenty years or more, pnli the stumps and et them out of the way of the plow and mowinir machine, dig patches repair the fences so as to keep as high as 1.600. With the fruit worth . a bushel and the product of some orchards iq iiuo the thousands of bush els, a h' nre incomo can easily be r-ei'i;. Several Georgia fruit groves have made fortunes ou this year's crop alone. Of rotir.-e these highest prices were :bt::!'! -d only for extra g.tod fruit, specialties, n fact, of some noted growers. - I he result of this immense crop will be the setting out of many Pew and large orchards; in fact, a letter just received by the Manufacturers Record from Florida states that the peach bniiifss threatens to be overdone, u h immense areas have already been planted. 'thing more beneficial to tlie South ';m happen than this incrra-e ii: fruit growing. The lesson of this year's big crop will be that every railway will ptifett its equipment before next session, and be better pre pared to provide transportation; canning establishments will be built i: ii-;M!y every fruit re gio:;, so ;-:s to save the fruit that cannot be shipped, and ice fac torie n ii! be enlarged and new I, u. his cattle on his own prevent a law-suit neighbor. land with and ; his! GRADING UP THE FLOCK. Ae the tree lertuizeu oy iw own broken branches auu lamug leaves, and grocs Sit ot its own decay, so men ana - nations are bettered aitd improved ' trial and re!nei oat of. tbeii mht hopes i u mid bJurhtwt exp.ctatiou. one n. h: of ice. " I hi made owi.r ble.- of dolhn industi it s i that there wil be Idpments for lack tttrs peach crop has ...u.y fortunes lor the , and wi!l bo au untold ir to the South. Millions will be invested in important to fruit It is easier to change from a inohgrel flock to a pure bred one than is generally supposed. The simplest way Is to raije graduallyrom capital breeding stock enough birds to justify one in selling all but that sort, Wiiat ;s called "grading up I the stock ims the disadvantage ! of "the fact tbafthe grade-up ' It is 1 to be an actual fact birds would not be of establish-; that tram j printers are reform ed breed for many generations, ! ing l iitl aro gradually retitinf and during those years would J from the road. growing aud shipping as the result of this monster crop. There will be no danger of overdoing ihe Lusinead, certain- I ly n L at tl. present growth of i the South ."' A line of coa sounding was ran aVug the course at intervals of less than twentv-lour hours, durin? which it was necessary to come to a standstill trout one to two hours. in order to m tte a plummet line. Fiftj -seven soundings were made aud au average depth of twenty- seven Hundred latuoms. or over three milas, was found. Muy marine- specimejs, sheila, corals aud weeds, were brought up from these great depth. In the act of sounding, the lines, which are maue oi piano-smug wire, are operated by properly adjusted. macnintry run iy ini power, and uieasureiuen;' .... . ifceu with great accuracy. l.eie.iu-t depth reached in any of the be-as, iu which oar lines were dropped was iu the Southern Atlantic, wliere a de pre.tsiou of fifty two bundled lath oni", or ab tut six umcs. w.ia loiiiul. Our ship entered t.,o strait of Magellan at Cape Pillar, w here lof ty lock, ou each side of a passage less than a pole wide, or a gate way from the open Pacific Though its entiie IeLth of three hundred and lift v miles, the width of the strait vanes from one to fifteen tuiles. Is ear its center, the shoreu become precipitous, convey ingtbe impression that, once joined together, thev have leen torn as under bv s iuie great convulsion o nature. K uigiu from a few feet to many hundred feet in height with towering mountains behind them ou the north and round- topped hills on the south, the jug ged shore-hues marked the Repara tion pf Tierra del Fuego from the continent. At its eastern extremi ty the lands become low and sandy, where a stormy gnu unites the strart with the open bea. Along its coarse a changing panorama is presented, nnd sceues of pictur esque and alpine beauty are revealed in the lolty anow-covered ingui -tain ranges, ia the hilt cloven peaks, in great icy glaciers, aud iu the valleys of somber forests, which glide away in view of passiugsteam erg. Midway in the strai', lying on the bttrrtierii hhnte, if tlie llttiti Chilian town of Sml lVim, the only M'ttleineiit ol white people iu thi Uiul, a trading ost uilhthe natives aud a stopping place tor the VeSM-ls, wheie e Ul.tde ;i blli-l landing. Ilete is a penal colony of the t'inhau gitverniueiit, and to the west is l'oit l'.iaiine, hu-li was the scene of a sad tragedy ol starvation a few ceiituiies ago. The archipelago of Tieira del Fuego or Land of Fireflies to the .-onth, a group ot irregular, wuu ana ticwi late lslamls, with broken and storm beaten coasts, with high vol canic mountains am) unpenetrable forests, and with rivers ol ice creep nig down worn tlie heights to mingle with the waters of the two oeeans, vrihch tuct-t in contention al the lower point ol the America-. Al tne remotes, t ieiuu oi inese islands is Cape Hum, in rounding which the distance is s huiiilied miles greater th.m the strait a route that is cti.-i lot s.uiiuc vessels tn a u that ol ttui Migeil.iu with its tugs and n:i k ami sudden simalls. The piople of mii1 hinds, i-epa rated by thesTait .tie wnk-lv dnSer eut in appearance rtii.i m u.ales ol life. Tin li;cgans are short in stature and repulsive in !M.ks, witl black hair and rut -colored skin, who live in mud huts with lgH as companions ami with wives and children as menials, and kiiImmsI ou nsn anu oyster-, i uijgamy is common among them, for 'one wo man is not considered competent to provide for a nun band in a In coming manner, who Ion nuts by the wigwam tire while the wivTii are gathering luel and procuring tcsHl lor lli family, llie children of a household are many, but by reason of exiHisiire- and neglect in mfaucy less than half of them rcacu auiut years, r.ous, arrows and lance, are their' weapous of war aud c-hnse, which, together with their bou-ehold and tiahin lmn'.emeuts, are of the rndett kind The natives of Patagonia north of the strait are ot larger sie and of better form, and occupy a little higher plane of life. Leaving .tluy roint, witn ai the savagery of its surroundioes suggestive of the wry dawn of civilization, with something of the feeling of having tteeu ?i uiBportei Dacic to the early pudo i-ac ages of the world, with lie r.ati.p of th glacial epoch upon ns, we pass-t oat into the waters if rl.e .Atlantic and directed th (-c.iis- -f the hltip northward up the great ocen with ninetyix decrees . ' I .titude or nearly seven tl:,.te n . iu:Ies between us aud l.on.e- In tbe noath of the Uio de la Plata which has a width of sixty miles, we dropped anchor before the cap ital or I rugnay that lien on the left bank anrl InriL-a i vu w lluu iUC mill expanorthe rirer. a hon dred miles or more across which and a little above, is Buenos Ayres. 1 he city of Montevideo. iJthoueh witnoat any labor ot note, is as fa vorably located as any place ia tbe wrold. Situated on a narrow lonyneof rock, w.th tbe ocean on one Mdo ami tbe creat river on ih other, it reaches oat from the coast ana preseau a long water-front. The utreepj rise ia terraces one above another, giving superior draiuage and farnlAhine almost every residence with a macaincerit view of the sea. From the river it has a picturesque look, although comparatively low, ia keepiog with ue country ia the background. The city nas a popolation of about oue hundred and fifty thous and, and presents every evidence of prosjienty. Klectric lights tarn th night into day, and streets cars run through all the thoroughfare. for th rieoplo never wala when they caa ride. Beautifal and costly resiliences ami nne Defines blocks line tbe principal avenues, and on the curve of the bay fronting tbe river are many charming villas. that are built in tbe ane'eot Italian style and surrounded with gardens of fruit and (lowers, summer and winter alike, that pre to the place rue appearence ol perpetual spring, The walls of tbe dwellings are of Dricic and of great thickness as a protection against heat and moisture, som of which are point ed iu iue most rantastic and gay colors. The government buildings are in inferor structors of two sto ries, without any architectural adornments. The cathedral is a magnificent edifice, and tbe thea ters, libraries and public buildings will compare favorablv with tbose of any modern city. The cemetery overlooking tbe sea, contains many costly'and beautifal tombs, moan ment ana memorial, and is one of the finest iu all tbe Americas. The climate is salubrious, and a moder ate temjKTature always prevails. The ieople of the city show tueir nationality and blood affini ties la their pearances, amuse incuts and modes of lire. Italian opera Is in vogue. The ladies dress in the heicbtb of the l'arislao fasb ions, and divde their time between church services, dinner parties and balls. The gentlemen go to their places of buseiess at seven o'clock in tne morning, when their wives and daugaters go to mass, and at eleven retarn home for a breakfast or seven or eight courses, after which thev take a siesta, going back to their couutiue-rooms at three and dining with great formia litj at seveu. Later in the evening the social gayeties begin, tLe daughters never appearing in tbe streets or receiving aiteutiong from gentlemen except In tbe presence of an elderly woman. Tbe ladies are famous for tbeir beauty and fine complex t ions, which with tbe symmetry oi lorm lade verv 'earlv in their .tears, doubtlessly due to their indolent habits. Tbe entire Imputation, from the highest to tbe lowest classes, seem tKwsesed wtih fhe spirit of indolence. They e superior equestrians. Tbe goods from the shops are delivered by horsemen, and tbe leader of a udigeuce team is a saddle horse. kven tbe beggars are on horseback for a ragged and dirty creature will gallop up to atranger and ask for a ieuny. The popular aod na tional amusement is bull-fighting which takes puce auder the patron ige of the president and of tbe aristocracy, iu tbe amphitheater which is thrown open anu crowded every Sunday afternoon, where 1 had the privilege of wit nessing one ot tbe thrilling and brutal contests in which tbe Span- sh Americans so much delight. SALISBURY. Political Chat at Tia Xatirral Csji til by Ozx Heslor fiepcrter. -Senator Gorman is said to bare presided over a secret meeting of prominent democrat- held at a country house in Maryland this week to arrange a programme tor tbe democratic minority in tbe House. An informant says that while it ws not definitely 'settled. it was generally understood that tbe republicans would not be per mitted to make my radical changes in tbe present roles of the Uoue, nor will they be permuted to rtsest democrats without good and snftlci ent reasons. If "be who beaitaies is lost.' HOME CHAT. a, a Til Oft; II T FROM OVlt What the Rrtthrrn t,f I he are Thittkina ami Ixiymy, A I JRtlLKu IJetmrett Kujene llarr! and Kngeue (tiistMini, North Carolina nia l a l-ltlL4 tion l,.r it Air tA kifs every rank of women. San- fofd IAlrrs. Can a rte KpaiM-r itoMr and be ailii tituo oIh-d h ia the lat one to It pid f i u. one trst of all to throw cold w ater on and rnn down the paj-r is be who does somebody should be prepared to to I ftn-rilie t&r it, and who taost in search of President lUrrison for be still hesitates, and hesitates, as to whether rt extra 8esion f Congress shall be c:UI. I'xmi people do not mlna s in; it Is fear and not hesitation that ails tie President. Perhaps it is and per haps there will be no extra session. uarlV li.i a hi i!t -fixer in time tmt j. - .,1 f Ailed to lav In Mibxmtt'x.n Mi. Illlr Triet f t tn cabinet ofheers in town time, lor the first time in weeks. at one several I Why is it tint a c;tv lhit p-p! Mm . . " - Cl.." teenue lif!l jjaoT Shops M III! IU1I ' K.,, -.9 riotl- k.tei aud .!l.,-r iiulnivnt.nt lome m kers. anil not Oil! a tfWt I. . t t Frank Hilton has printed a fac- I honor -m,.!, ..,'.. simile of a letter written i. Piril l,' - - ..r" .""TT"" '-"-i a Mt . I " V.I..IIUHO. oerTice yonimiMioner lioosereit. and he want to know of Com. misMoner if tbe writer roul.i pass tne examinatmo roe cop int. From the looks of bis writing Mr. Itoose- velt must have taken lessons from the late Horace Greeley. oocieiy people, me lew that are at present in the city are discussing tne important (to then ) announce ment, jnst made, that Mrs Harrison will not shake hands at the White House receptions this winter. It is Mated that the budding of the. war ship "Texas," about which there is so much mystery, will te investigated bv Congress. The avy department is at present trxiiig to tiutl out whether she will float if finished under tbe present plans, which were purchased of an Lnglish firm or sh p builders, and cost l.i,0.ki. The vessel when completed, if it is ever completed. will cost over -M,0(M. If stopped now the Naval officers say the loss will be more that -5J.oot. Lverytwsly argues that tbe Wot hi's Exoiiioa of 1SS2 should ha beld under the authority of tbe National (tovcrumcnt and in representative American City. I his is a strong uoub'e argument in favor of its heme located at ashmton, which is only city completely controlled by tbe Gov ernment, as well as tbe only city in the United States of more, than 200000 population that can be strict ly sjteaking, called an American city. More tbau .hi per cent of tbe inhabitants ol H ashing are native born Americans. Tbe fight on tbe Civil Service law which is being made Lere got rather personal, this week when some inquisitive newspaper man while fusing around at the War de partment found a copy ol an order issued In I-SSj dituij: ; Civil Ser vice Commissioner l j u. ia from tLe Armv. He sent it to 'ns paper as a siecial and it was Uiegraphed back to a local oier. It was bow A Sf.V KSTKM tF.siltEU. Tit dd stslrni .r oi kiotr roxl- whicli Las U-cti the only Pjstetn of our c-ounty, IN a failure so far as gooa roa.is, Resales working many bardhu. The mm who maumr. at- a sst-tti, void or the t-rds of the fid, ti. giving public high, ways, trill have ac,.tt).hshed a rntkt.ritmtortatiw j ih tot.l second in its U i.. til, !.ii.ue other Wille-ts.io 'lirouK !e. "V "i i:.-i: it n in. Tin- Itet I'at te have mnnee that ran lie handled by J-Culatoni iu that way oogH to wo Ihe eyes of tl e js opl,-, . .l.'ijr (.orht to Ikj umber inure tu.r less than a dollar, tlx u.atter in what Lands it may Iw Liun.I. The tnone of a xiiiiitry ought to N. out of the otrer ol sHTnUtot. lo fleet its vahie e'lher IU the t.ti wav or tbe I other. Cotxvrd 1 ,u,f.. S::arVirg for Cm, In our own State the "rue tion, as the colored brethren call it, has been very "consider able. Warring delegations have camped at Washington until sheer exhaustion and the 'resident's absence compelled them to come home. There lias been much bitterness de veloped in the struggle for of. lico. We realty believe that u some cases llepubllcan an- plicaLla woqld rather Lave I)etntcratic, incumbents con untie inoiuce than to see rival vepublican applicanta appoint- ed Molulft UegisUr, lHm. Give Tnea Tcrk- IN H I. l.Ks. The it ei.lrti.e tne h.i ctflli fi:nuiessf ihe uitlo Democrarv and its devotion to ptmeiple is tbe determination with t hirh it holds on total iff li lot in. This issue is art tssne Ihat ill be .u uutil tbe reltwm is afY-tmiphshed, and tr w CollstatlTlv K- kiiii? rt l1. nr.a r.f ita growth iu .pul.ir favor... The peo p'e are lein: jliir t.-. juid that rapidly. Winston I.inv TUr. kixii m;km;ii. Our et.atily tm d mi-.-ation of farmers bom New Kngland, who know Low to uial.e laritimif tiav. Their ptrsent e in i.ur ti i.ut mi'I .Ia us good in U4.ia w.!s . ..tie of hica is the rxattii letht v will aet for our fain.ers. Ja tlie i. it t.lv many ol .ur tpt,. atv lud jkt they Lave too tnpe.h au.l want a i" s-r a rjas ol in. aud buv small l um. in our ts idst. IleJid Leal. e I a rwme el tie ;oui I-I.r Till.-; A Ctll Kills oulcori.e I !h. a titgro OUld ever a rather sUutt lived sensation, I exodus froai North t as a uuie invesugation at the ar ue to iaak a K-,b. ,t .l,atirt department brought another order I nnepivocallv IVui. ci h : .:iC w ilh- to light revoking tbe first one and granting L;mau an honorable dis charge. It is very aniair t. make sucn attacks, nan tbe man wlm foam, the first otder tnade auv itT- A prisoner in Sing Sing tella the warden that he waa eenten ced to labor, and if be doe not tret it he will go to court when he gets through, and will find out why. The Churchman pav in comment: "Tha la a nw point iu jurisprudence, well as psychology the convict Reeking to hare Lis sentence enforced. Hut it shows in a most lmpressiye way what is the slow, wetrir, degrading, and, lc fact, Intolerable pain of enforced idleness." ont effort t.n the pan of the whites. loeauiant, the colon-. troresentA- li W liotil tins Nta-.e. Suva ll.al frr,m l ,i 4iioj (,! j..a, North Carolina tiiiritti: lb imiiir' falL quirj ii me tupaiimeni be would 1 1'1" mij i ay ol whom w ill go from uts leaiueti oi nas xileuce oflne wrong negro otmtie ia tbe theseoond, bH thai would have I KaMetn part d tl .- Male. Ashe. DOlleu Ills sensation. T.. thm . I Vllle I ili-n f . vv. i.i - - - - - ol the moat prominent opiKo-nLi of iuo utii oervice law, Dj it said i. .. .... . , .. iu-j uiurc aut suco met&ods as that adopted bv this aensatinn monger. Tkey are fighting tbe law, not tne eentiemen who artv,m. missiout-r under the law. Tre country w.ll breathe freer now that the Treasury detriment as announoeu tbrougb acting rvecreiary uaictieUer that It will not permit a financial panic daring tb present aaministratiou. Th an rtouncemeut was mad to allav the lear caused by a tiewi.Ai-r renort ot a Wall street trut form.! in either raise the price bow U-it. paid by the Treasutv lr Is.uds or to throw the country into a ft nan cial pauio. The Wall sti-t sbaiks may piake iu their bxis, r sh when they lie-r about what ibis brave actio? Secretary baa raid, bat it is more probable that they will laugh in their sleeves aud go on in their hen-us as it be bad said ooll,v.-.jr CAll IX .KI!1 WAV. The credit fjstt tn t bad in tnnr i wan. it eurotira'e iu .t.r ijeuoe i an.l etravjg4re 0:1 the one Laotl, extortion and Uktirv on the other. It makes theft rei.-t1,l,. rn-iUhii. aud tains l.otrtea. It shoul I t aVibsfK-,!. li ,ey man in IttiMt.f-- K'rt, Ins .! . lr..tn tboee who tr alJ t, t ,.tKJj, afjcwJ to g'e t. IhttM' ulm et- rj,j ,,4 stl.l realize a Lal.dwne Oxford tbt.h-os I'm n.l ptoht. it 11IH. . I. tU''lf is- lUocks of-Five Dudley Is credited with saying that the l.epati leans would "put come elixir of lite into the Virginia politician? before we eet through with them." Dr. V ana- maker baa demonstrated that he is a political physicbin of great ability. Kansaa City limed. A ins n is a fool, knows noth ing of the progress of the world and Las bat little charity la Lis Heart wbo requires, every per ron to think as he does and conform to Lis own ideas of right and wrong. The na.ne of the new democratic weekly paper to is- issued Lere next week is to be tbe National Iemocrat. It is intended for aa tional circulation and indofMHl by ex President Cleveland, lit Speaker Carlisle and. other promi neat democrats. i Tbe republican state as-ociat ion are making th'ngs very lively around tbe department here. Tbey are bolder then ever tteiote notwithstanding tbe civil arr, law MaLone'a resolations'iu Vir ginia pledged the Ipubllcan party' "sympathy and succor" to the "disabled ex-Confederates or the widows an3 ontrn otded Confederate tidier." lireak it gently t Foraker ! Tell it softly to the Uoo lr shlrt shakers ! New York World. S Mississippi leaaes all berronvirU that is, all ba! Salliran. She simply releases Lint. Yet to tool 11..- af 1 Imi . tg.t' t .i: t'l l-, . o. .,. togtMi-t of ll.t tiou ! N ttth Va: tioti to tke !. I;h's t , -i tl.e N. Stwith. 1 hat toj-vt 1 t b a f pr. 'jr-i a sfr-rgbt I ne I.a.tmiore, p4-..,t:g Jhrotj-n the morjiila.ati m the toie hue ,( least resi.irnte; ILioagti North Carttlms, and bt A!.t . .: e. Aheitfe Cit r . !.i :r w.jial.le ti i. I ..; t. tlATlog, I : .a t.ir enter- " l'" iou tt thm IItio,-l i ate sic 1'4 ill its Tela- ; "-t -.ti ti-t j f. aud the i v L as bot ; ! therL" 4 I .i.i I, lti.t bvu Atlanta li .; fit j. r B.t i nr. i .i, bast that tet I"or bas te--n t t.e u',n a a't.'.r; rvrtam mjtj2 1s 'o ;. ; j Nlh Caro lina. U V.bnu: U-- t-.J y mtetidies n. I .e " I !! ia -I I u tLe lb at Ifee Itn!'te'o. a'tto.fl 1 North 'j-.i.i.a I ..: 1 r men t tir: !i : v: '. i.." !va'! ft tn..?e it -'X..VZ the.f I :-. tiotr m- a S'.a 2 iiie the sTiJUia a j'J-' a'l l ! N'.Ch Ctt..hti4 ! a 4 ; t .1 l-ot tint I ti :: : ; i'n-d ith'is-.. i4 e UU ;r j. o i- J I... A "e catll tirj.!el ! e :Lt at ; 3 and .. t tot Jt- . Late J.t. ketit tliiS - t ! - ttcsl U -:t.a a a&d -:..-. i:ot 4 i!nsa il. si ti t aln i: to at.d 1 J i "vi. sa-! ' ' i ..m We lle u .1 J -, U . s :.4- 1 it t i.e I artiMS lr.t :'i t.t t :. , at i.raja ! kite N . ' j!.-na. J tljibold be (el 'a:ue, a.l tioj'.J i l-ti d L.: !ii.m a4i.!:- s-.-t" Lome er wh- a-so...i . , 1 a . tame ber."' WI in !.. J! - t