s c: v PUIUSHEO EVERT SATUROAT Y 3TAMP8 & CHARLES, I50PUIETOU8. TAKBORO', 1ST. C. - Tbe ':crT.rR com.--j. t6 .he M f -f:5f-'' i admiring- cowr. t!p-!-fi Vxuc-nt cf S'.w.Ji. in ::-:tc: itii in All Cxi-vigor of youth, ' '' ' ' yi ; unt of :lie ricliefetigrieBl :"' - 1 -: . i in n ton doing m:..t K-i.i - -iv. .usinesa. cfn' treat :ndace . r--.r-. I run orcBfcniPrioi: JOB WORK-,' Of every description put up i th saitkU,kA anU workman-like mauaer, and en' tk shortest notice. Pi i,-e- will fTorably eoirTkr ftiii"o -m-Sin;. r. -r w Yc-rk.- "'.' r .. CsTQrders solicited ert4 satisfac tion guaranteed. T X V R I A R L Y I' AL.. "ALL POWERS, NOT HEREIN DELEGATED, REMAIN WITH THE PEOPLE." Constitution of N. C. C I. l'H K ATE" : VOL. in. TARBORO', N. C, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1873. NO. 47. m. 4 c i :i :rr GENERAL DIRECTORY. TAUDOKO'. M,! - V.eiani'T M ' ai- Hurl . Ch'-rry C"a IT Aft T 113 rU .W. ' ' " ' i t itLt ' i It; - , W tch H irr;. I: '. - roi n r v. .(.iiuf "..u-: ( 'ir k an ' ' ' llrjkt'.er of l)ed - K J. K '-. : ScrijT Battle Bryan. t'jronr - Wai. T.dodi:i 77?ajurrr Root- II. Aasiic. Nurrfyor- Jesio Harr,-'.'.. S 'loo. A'iairiiiuri - E K. .-' i - KnL and II. H. i Ke'jxr Poor I! 'M 'V::i A i , lunuikrtifri -M I' K '. i"-!-. 1 V-. A. Du?,-an. N. B !'.'. vr. y. .1 IH.. i3d Mr il.uh-w-.ir.. B .1 h. '.'TK. TlAII-. a ; v i. N-: i 1 k. i' r ' ' ; . : -- ; . a t e T . " - - r 1j. " ' A:r. a-, i .-- ' ' . A-HI'..r' N yI MI. . V r' Al.K : . V . . - ' ' .- !.!- r .... A:: u' 1 ar M I OLM. Ki. Thi Mrlt and IMicc or l.vline. ...:J .,ri K A C:; t S " N V : . H.i lr:c-t. M.io:.. ii' : : V. : I'-i .; .:. - - : . ... m- A M C .i.-or.i L-U--' N ' 1 ' v i;.T, Mi-vm, iii... n.- '- r : . . : u r o dock P. SI in i th.r : .; ..: ' 1 -lo. ii A. M. ia .-v-ry . , 1 1 ii Eur un . iiii-u N' i 11 ' ' r .. ;- J' . H. Hpr.' C. r.'.'-t!:. K -..w ' :.. in.-i -v r! - i:. ! ' i '- i h :.:::. N ' r' -v--y I :- .. T - "-in -'-, mc '. - : . v i' ' .. I'M Kc ! lo w ' Hi.i. A '.v.i-.'-o Lo.'..'" N i -i I " '- w'.-iir.-! !.iv ' 11 : '. E- H o' '. o.-'' . M t III lit II K. K. -:v. - " --' ! .: :'ii 1 J o : j.-k A M i ' P M - : :' L,.-'..r . He. lr. ii : , i. ' ' '- - - ' ; ..: each in )n:ti ' ' -.ook P M. K--. J 'A '' iittu try i:-f.: ' .1.1 sjhujv ;:. K - T K.Mwei. P t-' I'rt-ni'ice BifCu: I ur turd:y nd Suudav ear':: r ('clOtlt. IIOTKI.S. Slo-i-.-ai: Htu--. i-ora-r Ma.:. '.V B Harper. Propri-tor. Mr. Pender', former. y ,r- . fiia s:re-H, u-t- ..)i:: " Ei. , M Peader, Pror riet.-- .-.. A M r . - . E . EXPBESS. SoDihern Express Uffl e. .n Ma.:i .:r ! oe every inorni at '--j o e . i t . N. M. LawheN' k, A.-nt. MISCELLANEOUS. DR. RICH'D H. LEWIS O F F B U.S II 1 3 Professional Services .o the public. Office in tt of Wt.itlnfk'i ( Store, Tarboro', N C ' ' 1 ' M. HOWARD, n XT O O I T Dlil.IU 1 tap.B' :-:' . n ' (SLATE HOOFS. The Best and the Cheapest Having been app 'iNiK!' for Maittt-w ri-Tl. '..::i-'-'- 1 will contr ut :or jo- 'ii v, ' po-ti)t: of th- M-i:- TL r r . v d r.- v: d : th-- i ,w . -. .- I '.o f r N -r::. R.vcr 1. : (,'in:-'' ir.'l K i. -. ,. i F. ' F-.r ::-! r .-:.. !'--- A B N ' ' ! ' I . r. .- . A. .'. Feb. j. t:. " ' N Manhood : How Lost, How Restored 1 ir ' ur.wEi. VTPI' in, .l . a u.i K.t. ... P; dulifT.- ' -T t . -'t'.r i. ir1: -- y Pric-.- .i. a a i cent. The ceiciTat.-.i i-:-:. r. HUT, clearly d'-!i.o:.-.r : year' ucce'f-. ; r i '.. . -oneueuce "f -.:" i'iUJi; ia;. tired with"1:-, '...e d.vr.:-r" :-L-dicic-- or t!.'- jpp.iu:,'.:. ' ; oiutimr o-:t a r- "' ' -' r rerta.n. an i cSc-tu..l, i- u, -i:.- rv -ulJ.-r'-r, r.r niatt--r wl.r. : e. may u r. :..::. - . : :. 1 ; r r:.. every y nth n:d - y ina:. S'ct under ?t-ai, j i ; ia.:. -:. a i ire. prut yiui. n .-'':; '. "i t v j pot stit: . Addre Lii- i''jllihir, I H v. - .; i K I . i S "r PJT Bo-ry. S-:w Yo-u. P 1 ' .ici. l?. it':j A ' 5o , - - ni"d: '.n 'V a':-..-'-. ! TO The Spirit of the Age VFIRT I.As? FAMILY PAPER DE-vot.-d to Tempniif-c, Kf-dtnon, Afc'ricui-.r-;, and the Mechani, Art. The Literary Depart ux nt of the Aje is a Tery attroctlTe feature, while all the other Department are full ot matter, both inter eatinr aad lnmrucUnr. M. J. EDWARDS. Managing EJitor. T. H. PeitChard, I). D , ) ,. , v , Rr. ILT ni0s,v ( tontribut.D Ed,. We want active, neretic men and wora'n to solicit abvn'er in every county In the State. Send tor canvaAer blank. Addreaa W. J. EDWARDS & CO , RIeill, N. C. MISCELLANEOU 8. i I:..- ur..-;va'.icd Southern Remedy is ir- I ,-i:r.. ! i. ; ., r..nul -i fitiI'' jartU- -f Mil... '.V r M. ii..irm'i- inui'-ral sv;!c Un'.'f, j PURELY VEGETABLE, -lUi'iii:; t!.o-..' SM'Ubcrn Ro'.H and Herf., i . .... I'ruvi-.tc-n jdaccd in . ... , t. . r,- I.;vr l.- ino-tt Ttvuii. ' ; A , ... , ! '.y di.-rar.KC- ! -. i : '. L .-r. us ?V MPT' 'MS of Liv.-r Oinij.lnint re i ,L - r ;s i i i.ik-- .u moutii ; Pain in B ! i -r .To'.ni, "fien nil-taken lor ; S t;r r. !: . f.ov of ppe- j -.. t'.... . ,i.i. rnaU-;y costi ve and lax . ; 1 i : ;..--..! ::i -:n.rv, illi ;i ;.ai n : u 1 ' ;i :" l.isii.i: !i l.'J I) no i-om'-lhin ! a !.' t u.i- n i'.oue ; DcUl.ty, i: nf tLe ; i . . . ( "". J:! :'.: I.i. 'aktn . ( :. .. , i:. .uy ul ibe ' . . -t -".ii : . .- a. .ith--- very 1 : ., . . r. .. :. . ..u :: ! h-- - - , -. . : dx-a---. soil , .: :. i. . (-.! .-. '. . tail ;;:! . m;' I i : - . . i . 1 1 r . . i i i 1 '. . . . e I 7 . .' .- . .- ' h 'ltl'S ivJ ' .-PEi ' 1 N ' PA" 1' ' N ' : ....i- . k-. r. i 1 F. A 1 1 A 1 HE. ' . i. . t. . ." S' ' ; t; M')M- ' . : :: ! A ." A ' Si mm -:s' Live. .-.or Medicine, , . ' .ci: P.. - ..mi H-'-t Faui ly ; i . . . ii' - u :! : M n: .ct ;ir. d u : v Sv J . H ZEILIN Ac CO. , .-.s. '. . ..l.: i i 1 1 1. a u e p 1 1 i a llan-i:a::rcr and dealer in HARNESS, SADDLES, Bridles, Whips, Horse Cov ers, Saddle Cloths, Bitts, Circingles, Girths, ::: r t "., ev. - ....inir nunally kept in a first class -bLiMiLnt-nt X.AIS slSEET, OPPOSITE THE COUBT HUU3E- 3NT . CD . 3-tf ct 14. WEBER'S BAKERY ! fv: - : i) a h:.i.-hed bakerv i ; v v. . n..:: !. ! Pi i-iin ( ' it- Xtc't. Fruit, v )-., rc ..:.-.:-. : " V : , ' U' r..-;.t ill First . L: ..;;: ::'. f d. kind. -.:...for t!,e i;!. ra! j itron-f ofth .- . :.- . n . :.-. 'T.-.d .k a continuation, a .t : r t:. '. i :" .' i fai-" : Or; . l'rlvule Iiiniilie can nlwnji b-Te t Lie ir ak c lit Ix l here at aliort .l notitc. 0 voters for Parties Balls ; ror:. ; ' ' r. .Jed. Ja'l and ex inline our "took, . : " i F w l ? H AMI E N gCRER OjFHE. N ... 4 JACOB WEBER. II. l COKER, AO-ENT FOR, THE 1 1-Ira.til Wheeler Ac Wilson Sowlus JVIa-oTi 1 ti o. Wi.ic:. L" RPASrfKS all other Machines. ALSO Til E Home Shuttle Machine, ':..:.). . THE BKST cheap Machine in Use. Price from t5 o 70. 7" Th- pnbik i invited lo call and ex ti: . i ti in Ma. Lines b.-fore tjurckwlcp. 1 '.!1 on Pitt Street, a few doors koM Main, TAHHOUO', . c-. Dec r, l-rj. iy PETERS BROS., COM. MERCHANTS, AND DEALERS IN Hay, liraln, Coal, Lime, Ce ment, &c, Corner of Water and London Btre-eU, Portsmouth, Va. -- Ao. 23, 1373. Co. tthfo nquirtr. SATURDAY, NOV- 22. 1873 AN ADDRE8S DiTered Not. 8tfi, 1873, In Xh H&U of the jPriendg of Tempxxac. T U A. WALK IB, kSv Mr. I'rttldmi and M$mbrt of A Council : The abjet I hT cbdMii for to-nif hi Is " The Mechanic Art aad tbeir relations to MenUl and Social Culture." I am well aware that I have chosen a theme that ofie'S a field for the exercise Of the greateit intellects the world has erer produced, and probably to on will ever be able to solve all the intricate quealions that would ari in a full and exhauativa discus sion of thi ubject : hence I do not pro pose to try cuy nniklllful hand on the most subtle of tha& mental and moral influences, but to confine myaelf to the more obrioas and practical phaaea of the subject. So intimately are the Mechanic Arts re lated to every adrance aod decline In the civilization of every nation, that to gie a full account of their progreti would require a review of the hiatory of the whole world , and I hit trac - g of ibeir progress would be-e-me the more difficult from tae fact that many nations that once played important parts i:: the world's history em nerer to hire realized tbe importance of this branch of .i.'I::tt , au.i Oioat that cat: be learned of i is ile velojimeLt in their day must be in- iTre 1 from records that have oaly an indi re: be.inr, up-in this sabject. Tbe rirjt accoont we bare of man s triunii.'i j over tbe material world ia found in the bo- k ; of Gene.'.is Here we are told that Tubal caui a mail of the seventh generation from Adara. was an instructor of every artificer in , brass Ri,d iron , and some intimation of the .c,te:ej.t we would eel iu this auhject is : u:.ij :r, the fact of this record of Tnba! , i a:-., be::. made in connection only with i Mi-h mutters a.3 were permanently to affect - the h n man race ; and at a-point in the world's ; history where whole centurlee are left a I perfect b!a-,k, probably for want of facts of ' K-;tficier,t interest to record. ! c am; then pase on a few peneratioos u the building of the Ark , heie the details are so meaner that each odo is left to hia own iaaagiaatioa to conceive whit prorresa must have been made in the Mechanic Arts to have enabled the men of that generation to construct a vessel that was to battle suc cessfully for many months with the storms to be met on thai world-wide eipanae of waters. The accounts given of the building of the tower of Babel and the cities of that day add but little to our knowledge of this sub ject ; a no minnte descriptions are given of the materials and appliances made use of : n their construction. Many of tbe article of household nae and ornament excavated from the oldest rnins, display an amount of knowledge and skill we are not in the habit of accrediting to the ancieota. and it is aaid that torn a of these articles require in their cons traction a knowledge of materials and appliance en tirely unknown to this generation. How ever this may be we are justified in tbe be lief that there bas been a general and steady progress in the development of the Mechanic Arts, but a little care may be necessary here to prevent a oonfovion of two ideas whose boundary line are aAtnetimes no in distinct and whoee relation are so intimate that our thoughts easily pass from one lo tbe other without detecting tb distinction. I refer to tbe Fine Arts and th Mechanic Arts. The relation in which these stand to each other may be compared to that be tween poetry and history. History in its strict sense is a record of bare facts ; and the mechanic arts consist in an application of the facts of natural philosophy to mairafactnree A poetical idea may embody a historical fact as a work of fine art may display a knowledge of philosophy, but tbe essence of both bas its origin iu the imagination and consists in the creation of new and beautiful suggestion that delight tbe mind without adding- to it knowledge. It is not claimed in thi dis-CLH-ion that we have improved upon tbe old models of painting, sculpture and architec ture ; but accord what we may to rsst ages in the matter of faociful creations, it can not be denied that it has been left to the last lw-0 or three generations to onderstand the secret workings of Nature's laws and to ap ply them in snch manner as to enabe man to make them do his bidding and to err wd the results of whole days of manual labor into the space of one bort hour. For fear of heiDg misunderstood I will remark here that I do not wish to detract from the honor due those who bare devoted their lives to tbe study of pure science, as distinguished from those persuits that direct the attention only to tbe application of sc once ; and justice demand tha t we bould accord more to the man that can enter unexplored fields and bring to light the bid den things of nature, than to him whooe labor it is lo apply thi knowledge in iu various useful form. That was a higher effort of the intellect that discovered the ex istence of the electric fluid and it power to forte itself through a mental wire aroond the world at lightning speed, than that of conceiving an instrument to record the flashes of thi iubtle fluid. But onr busi neas to nigbt is not with the scientist but with the artisan and tbe influenee of his calling on tbe world and on blmsetf ; and in this disctissloai I a hail aaeume that tbe ftp plication of familiar science to opplying our daily want ii doe to tbe development of the Mechanic Art ; for in so far a tbe scientist baa made these application he has so fax been a mechanic. . Tbe influence that ha been exerted on the world by tbe printing press and tele graph is so direct aod so erideet to every one, and the subject bas been worn so thread bare by innumerable essays ihi I shall pass by tbeee witheat farther notice. Tbe nut general proyoelUon I shall lay down i that the preeeot ciriliMUoo of the world could nefer hare existed without Ubor-aaving machinery. Education, iftfead at all, nanet be gotten at the eapeose of iiaae and ineao, and mast be generally denied to tbvse who have dm mora than enough of these fte .provide fer tbe daily rec art-tax1 necessities ot the1' body ; as4 when tbe labor of prod net fofcas to be carried on in each a way as te eensame tbe whole available time of a larf majority of tbe peopls in producing the feed and clothing necessary to maintain lbs World, then leis ure "to devote to the intproveniet of tbe mind mast be confined to the fortauste or powerful few, and be forever denied the populace whose arduous labors make them even indifferent to tbe advantages of edu cation. Tbe popular idea on this subject seems to go bo farther than thi ; if my neigh bors use labor-aaviag machinery they can produce tbe necessaries of life cheaper than I can without it, aod I am forced to use it to be able to make any profit on my pro duction at the red need price ; and that there is 'eventually no benefit to any one, the price? of all productions having de clined in proportion to the amount of labor necessary to produce thern. Tbe fallacy of this view can be exposed by one simple il lustration. Suppoee a family, and in thi case the family might repreeent the whole human race, to be composed of persons of both sexss aod of all agea, and on account of the use of inferior tools tbe members of the family wbo are able to work can not produce more than enough of food and cloth ing to supply the necessities of the family; with improved tools a larger mumber of the mem bers of the family conld become producers and each one be enabled to prod ace more, thereby giving a surplus to be devoted to tbe education of some one of their number. But some one may say that if every one were to produce thai Srpl there would be no demand for it and their last state be no better than their first; in this case they would only spend sufficient lime is labor to provide for their daily wants and oould de vote their leisure time to the improvement of their minds. - It may be objected that a siifflcient ... Si amount of leisure lor eaocation mi) d" had without labor-aving machinery ; but an examination of the habits and mole of life of those nations that retain tbe ue of prim itive tools will reveal the fact that their leisure time i not the leisure the thrift r man enjoys after performing all necessary labor, but is tbe result of laxinea and in difference to tbe comfort of life , time taken rather than sewed from their ordinary labor , a kind of leisure that never spends itself in the mental effort of study. It may also be objected that labor-saving machinery is one of the remits of our civili sation and not one of its causes. The an swer ia that history proves the two have always gone hand iu hand, and though it may be difficult, where tats stale of thing exists, to disxinguiab w lib certainty between cause and effect, on accoont of their reflex influence upon each other ; still no one would be so bold as to say that our civiliza tion could exist without this improvement in the mechanic arts, when all experience shows neither has ever existed without the other. Man by nature has a dislike for manual labor, and to those persons, who realize the necessity of labor being performed, there is a great incentive to invent some means of partially relieving themselves from burden some toil ; and this very study of one branch of the mechanic art becomes an educator itself and successful study here not only gives leisure for mental Improvement but offers a great inducement to others to fol low in the same path. The influence of works of fine art as a cirilizer is so obvious to every one that we never look for specimens if it In the abodes of the vulgar, but they always strike us as becoming in the dwellings of tbe refined; and until the art of picture making by nis chanical means was brought to sach per fection a to multiply copies of pictures of high merit, and until the moulders art re produced tbe finest works of the sculptor, their refining influence could be felt only by the wealthy. Now with a comparitlvely small expenditure the homes of the poor cah be enlivened with works of high artistic taste, that educate the mind by the vivid im pressions they give of scenes and faces to be remembered, and soften tbe heart by tbe ever reminding life-like pfc tores of dear but absent ones. It is not denied that men of great .eflne ment and high culture have lived in agot of the world that knew nothing of onr modern machinery ; men whose perceptions were so keen and whose tastes ware so refined that the effusion of their minds will be admired for ages after the works of the brightest intellect of our day have paised into obliv ion , bat these facts coutrovert nothing of the argument, for In those ages the uiany were made to serve the few and tbe culti vated were the people of leisure. And it is not tbe genius of our civiliaatlon to expend itself in creating one bright star whose bril liance shall be the combined light of all iu fellows, but rather to diffuse -he light till the darkest corner shall feel its genial in fluence. Having said this mueh of the influence of the mechanic arts on society at large, let us now examine some of the influences of me chanical labor on the artiasa bJmsolt There is a great deal of msnnsl labor performed in handling tbe ogauaerce aad conducting tbe business of the world that can not well be classified under any particu- lar bead; leaving ibis out of the account, labor may be divided into three depart- me nts ; mechanical, agricultural and domes- tic. As most of the latter kind is performed by persons not well fitted to do either of the other two kinds, and as the influence of do mestic labor makes but little impression on the world as compared to that of mechanical and agricultural labor, the first two only are generally considered when this topic is un der discussion. As far as my knowlege on tbe subject extends it bas been only in tbe last few years that a calling in the depart ment of mechanical labor bas been much preferable to that of agricultural labor. There were so many hardships to be endured by the apprentice, so many years to be spent under instruction before he was allowed to seek employment of his own choosing, so mall a remuneration for his labor during these years and so much of practical slave ry in his relation to his employer, that many young men no doubt were deterred from learning a trade and driven to engege in ag ricultural labor, where the present freedom was greater, though the hopn of future re ward was less. But now behold the changes that have ta ken place in our day ; changes so radical, so sudden that they have shaken society to its very foundation. But in all of these up beavings the voice of the farm laborer has not been heard ; he seems to be counted a mere cipher in the great questions of the day. And how are we to account for this great difference in the influence of two clas ses of people who seem to have started out so nearly equal in the beginning of the race 1 We can not answer that one party has used it power, while the other has been content to remain unnoticed ; for human natnre acts too uniformly when the question of personal aggrandizement is presented,to admit of this explanation. We can only answer that there is something in the calling of cne that de velops his intellect and opens his eyes to the relation in which he stands to the world, and enables him to grapple with the notions and interests of the world that are antago nistic lo his own ; while the calling of the other dwarfs'his Intellect and fixes him in a rtoltd indifference to all else than bodily comfort. The influence that mechanics, by their steadily increasing numbers and intelligence, might- have exerted on society, was for a lone time so hemmed in by the meshes craf ty cap'talists had woven around them, that they were all unconscious of the power for good or evil that lay within their grasp ; but like the waters of a gentle stream, that have been dammed till no barrier can longer hold them, they broke their bonds and rushed headlong, a mighty flood, carrying destruc tion to all that stood within their reach. It might not be out of place, in connection with this subject, to give some account of Trade's Unions as they exist in this country ; but the good they have done being the na tural result of organized effort, and the evil they are responsible for being the natural out-growth of the tyranny their members bad suffered, and neither being attributable to any influence peculiar to their calling, I will not discuss tbe mstterhere; but will proceed to show that mechanical labor offers opportunities for mental and social culture, and to consider wherein mechanics fail to improve these opportunities. The present high price that skilled labor commands, and the system of working ten hours a day, puts the question of time and means for improvement at rest. Mechanical labor, unlike mere drudgery, does not tempt tbe powers of the mind to stagnate, bnt keeps them in active and healthy exercise ; nor does it bring that depressing fatigue to tbe body that produces mental lassitude af ter the hours of labor. Here we have a class of people whose pay is sufficient to insure a comfortable living and furnish means for tbe purchase of books and periodicals, with snfflcent leisure time for study ; engaged in occupations that are honorable and calculated to foster a manly Independence, without which there can be no true development ; but good opportuni ties are bad companions unless turned to good account. To say nothing of the general information that may be obtained during hours of leis ure, almost without cost, there is an endlefs variety of learning, in reach of every me chanic, bearing directly on his particular trade. The whole field of architecture is be fore the carpenter, the science of drawing and construction is open to the machinist and a thorough knowledge of the smeltiDg and combinations of metals would occupy the life time of the moulder ; and all may find pleasant and profitable study in that ranch neglected branch, the nature and strength of materials. Each one of these sciences has demanded, in Its mastery, the life-time energies of our best engineers ; but the result of many in vestigations, that cost these men years of patient toll, may be learned and applied with but little mental effort. It is not argned that every one has the ability, time and u.fsns for original investigation, nor is this reqimite for a high degree of proficiency in any mechanical calling ; but only let me chanics s;,end one half of their leisure in ap ptopria'e s',udy and they will soon gain such knowledge and cultivate such habits of thought and application as will put them on tbe high road to success in their calling ; and command the respect of all whose good opinion is worth tbe getting. Bat the most intricate and delicate ques tion connected with this whole subject is met with In discussing its social relations ; and I take np thi phase of the subject with a full conviction of it difficulty, and strongly im pressed with tbe fact that I must contend with prejudices of long standing and take a posiUoQ not very comlimentaxy to either I party concerned. ! I hope it is no breach of propriety for me j to remark here that the relations into which I I have leen thrown for the last few years ; should exonerate me from any suspicion of unfairness- in aMimini; my position on this subject. We often hear the bitterest complaints from mechanics ajainsl that portion of s)ci ety whose si route stances laise them above the necessity ol manual labor ; and i:o one can deny that there is a strong disposition on tho part of those, whose hands are never soiled with what they consider the vulgar dirt of the workshop, to fee! Ihai'aR labor is degrading; and these Bentiments show them selves in a thousand ways, w ell understood by the intelligent workman. But however much tbis is to be condemned we should re member that bitterness between any two parties Is generally the resnlt of a fault on both sides ; and the question befora us now is, where is the fault on tbe part of the me chanic, and what remedy for the evil lies within his reach. Much of the evil complained of arises from circumstances over which neither party has any control and for which neither is respon sible ; a wide difference in people's daily oc cupations makes a wide difference in their tastes, and a similarity of taste is, after all, what makes the society of one person attrac tive to another. What does the thorough business man, pouring over his ledger and watching for every useless expenditure in his business, care for the giddy fop who thinks of nothing but pleasure 7 Their social status may be the same, but each has a con tempt for the tastes of the other. Nothing could be more ruinous to the man who has to labor ten hours a day than to form the tastes that control the wealthy and fashion able in their daily rounds of pleasare ; and this difference in their tastes mcst ever be an insurmountable barrier to any intimate relations between them. The only complaint of this kind that can be considered reasonable on the part of me chanics is this ; that people possessing a competence, but of simple tastes and high culture, refuse to treat them with that con sideration that wculd enable them to enjoy the advantages of intimate association with intelli2ence and virture ; and here is where jhe great fault in all society lies , men are judged too much by the faults of their class, and society has not the independence to dis criminate between the good and bad individ ual of any class ; and tbo only complete remedy for this evil is, for mechanics, as a class, to seek for a higher standard of intel ligence and refinement; and in doing- this they must do as all classes of advancing so ciety havo had to do ; that is cut off their unworthy members. So long as human nature remains vrbat it is, individuals of every class of society may expect to be judged, in a great measure, by the virtues and the vices of that class ; and those mechanics, who desire to take the place in society that every man of intelligence and refinement is entitled to, should seek to raise their fellows from ignorance, from vice, from Sabbath desecration and from the damning associations of the grog-shop. A Curtain Lecture. According to the village journal published in Bowling Green, Ken tucky, a member of the city council of that town, upon returning home rather late one evening last week, was regaled by his dear wife, with an animated address, after the following style : " Every night ! Here it is half past 1 o'clock ! It's a wonder you came home at all ! What do you think a woman is made for V 1 do believe if a robber was to come and carry me oflfyou would not care one cent. What is it you say ? 44 City Council business must be at tended to !" How do I know you go to the City Council ? Does the City Council meet e-v-e-r-y night ? They don't meet but once in New York. But 1 suppose Bowling Green is a more importont place. Oh, yes out-e-v-e-r-y night. Twelve o'clock one o'clock two o'clock. Here I stay with the children, all alone lying awake half of the night wait ing for you. Couldn't come home any sooner? Of course you couldn't if vou didn't want to. But I know something; you think I don't but I do. I wish I didn't. Where were vou Monday night ? Tell me that. The Marshall told me that the City Council didn't meet that night. Now what have you got to say ? " Could not get a quorum !" Well, it you couldu't why didn't you come home Out e-v-e-r-y night hunting for -x quorum. Bet ycu wouldn't hunt me in this way if I was miss ing. Where were you Thursday night and Friday night ? There wa? a show in town, wasn t tnere : uo you always put on your best vest and a clean shirt to go to the Council ? What did you buy that bottle of hair oil for, and hide it ? " Oil for your hone," indeed! Who ever heard of hair oil for a whet etone ? So yon think I didn't see you in the other room, brushing and greasing your hair, and looking in the glass at your pretty self? ' A man ought to be decent!" He ought, ought he ? Yes, indeed, a decent man ought to be, and a decent man will stay at home with hU wife sometimes and not go oat e-v-e-r-y night. How comes it th&t the City Council didn't meeti"bat twice a mounth last year ? Tryin to work it out of debt !" Yes, that's probable very: laughingarrd jok ing, and" smoking " an'3 "swapping lies will work a debt off,1 -won't it? Now I want to know how much longer you are going to keep this night business? Yes, I want to know ? Oat eYcry night. City Council, Freemasons, Red Men, Odd Fellows, sfeWFliair oil and it's brush and brosh until you've nearly worn out tBetrash and your head, too. What is it you say? k It helps our" business to keep up your social relational-. Ah, indeed. You've got relations Jexe at home, sir. They need keeping some, I think. What .did you.jj say about "catching it" the other 'night at a enchre party ? " Fellers, its X2 o'clock, but let's play a while longer; we won't catch it any worse1 when we get home." A pretty speech for a decent man! "Catehit!" Catch it !" Well, 1 intend you shall catch it a little. What's that you. say, ? "If I wouldn't fret you so, you would stay at home more f'l-J5yS sir, do you stay at home a P'tew nights and try it. Perhaps 'the fretting would stop. Out every night because I fret you -so What's that sir ? ' Yoo know ladies who ain't always scolding their husbands !" You do, de you? How came you to know them ? What business had you to know whether they women fret or not? That's always the way. You men think all the other women are saints but your wives. Oh, yes saints, s-ai-n-ts. ;M1 have you to know, sir, that there isn't a woman in this town that's any more of a saint than I amw-v I know them all, sir, a heap better than you do. You see the honey rd sugar ;de of them, and they only e the I o.iey and sugar side of you. Now, sir, I just want you to know that if you don't stay at home more than - you do, I'll leave these children to "get burnt up. and I'll go out e-v-er-y niiht. When a poor women gets desperate, why, sir, perate, that's all. she is des Holding back the Cotton for Paying Prices. The Rural Carolinian tor November says : " At the time of writing this, cotton is not selling nt such prices as it ought to command. We hope that before these, lines meet tha reader's eye, there will be an improvement. If not it will come later. Let those whom debt and liens do not compel to posh ' it into market, not be in haste to sell at non-paying prices- Debts must be paid, even if produce be sacrificed. but every one is justified in any hon est effort to get remurerative prices, for the products of his labor. In anj event, let all cotton be ginned and baled as soon as possible, so as to be able to take advantage of any favorable condition of the market. The cotton is safer too in bales than lying loose in the gin house. A liberal use of bagging will pay It is poor economy to leave parts of the sides and ends of the bales ex posed. The whole should be neatly covered, for even in so strictly-, a non-fancy article as cotton, a tidy package helps the sale, Having your crop carefully ginned, well baled and fully insured, much anx iety concerning it will be avoided. The insurance premium is a compar atively small matter, but it may save you from pecuniary ruin." Cost of Living in the South. The Savannah Advertiser, quot ing an vugusia couteiuporaxy, calls for a "marking down of prices, saying : In our Southern cities the rent rates are enormous, and it is almost impossible for a man with a moderate income to get a decent house in a convenient neighborhood. Market ing, too, in tha South, is simply atrocious. Meats are within bounds, but vegetables are entirely too high. One reason of this is because the South, for some inexplicable reason, has not understood and employed th fractions" of nickel. At the North, nobjdy. even during inflated trices, ever thonrja it ct eivins more than two cents it a souD-bmch ?md four cents for a cabbage. In our market a soup bunch and a poor one at that costs ten cents, and a cappage of ordinary dimen sions, brings twenty five cents. There should be reform in these and other things. Let somebody start the fractional copper currency here, if possible, aLd let venders of small articles understand th:tt"they must " mark do n" as well as the venders of luxuries. Subscribe to the Esquibeb