. . ..am !. a iyi.frqf-' ortl) State dAJ.IMTKY. I'l.'i IK V, NOV. Iti. Utii. Til i: NuLTULLN Ll.UTlUNS- PAK- ions were lull iii IViinavIvanla, Ohio and .in- vi imu will' r State, in I h-tober, with what result our reader Itn.'W. bi 1 Yiuvy lvunla the Republican candidate for (Jowrtior, tin sigh k ii mean n crv mMilur nun, IkuI I "acker, U . O.-ni'ici .i'ir c niJi.l.itc, a Mali offrreet fiopiilari- . . I . 1 I . . .. . it, mere nun iu.ii n . ...n .i i..i,-s. I I'ino tin- majority of Uov Kay, i: publican, ..- In- LTiaVa d Troll) tWO III Seven llm .-Hi.!. while I i .- cninjtlcx'i'ii !' ilic. I iclamre was changed from J cuioT.iic to Republican. On Tuesday l.v! election wire held in a i. i of otlar Stales North, but villi no rtvull iinlicalUitf any chancv in tlir political scutinicm of any one of tln-m. NVw York win carried fry the Democrat by a majority somewhat smaller tluui tlint by wliirli (iov. Huffman waa elect, d a year an, aid not ninili greater than that by which it wait airicil by Mr. Seymour. The I-agUlaf um wa Sfcarcd hy the I i)iiioer-4t. In Illinois the. H' publican' triumphed, electing a Urge majority of the member of the Constitutional Conven tion. Maryland wax triumphantly carried by the 1 lemocrat, an a matter of course. In Mi r.icjiunetu the Republicans were triumphant, electing their cajidiibite fur Guyertur ami tin i r entire State ticket. In Minnesota the lb . 1 1 J I ' -cam likewise swept everything before them, ha-ting their candidate for (Jovernor and their entire Slate ticket by very large majorities. In -New Jersey the IA'mocrala carried the Legiaia- tnre by a amaJI majority in each branch. In Wisconsin the Republicans made large gain. One thing to bo remarked of the reault of the elections in the Weatern Stales, ia tlie fact that the 7i.n' repudiation acheme of paying the na tioual debt in greenback, ha utterly failed to work the revolution in parties there, which it waa claimed it would. Even PenJleton, the originator of it, w:ia defeated by a much larger majority than tlie bat Democratic candidute for ttovemor of Ohio. And all of thin too, in an i lection at which a greatly diminished number tf Totes were thrown. When we view the situation, and the surround ing drcumstancoa, we see nothing to be surprised at in the result. The great rallying, oint with uie .ormern iAimocral, lias been tlie horrors ol reconstruction. The worse it was, for us of the South, the better was the chance for the Northern Democracy to obtain political )iower. While profe.ving great sympathy for us, the Northern Democrats were secretly wishing that reconstruc tion might be made ten times more odious than it wa, and were doing all in their jiower, to nuke it a rnueh so as they could. The moderate Re publican io Congress were opposed to the harsh, est features of the Reconstruction Acts, a actu ally Hissed. The Republican ) tarty was livided between .pialifiH and unliiuitod suffrage for the negro. The Deniocnitio members held the balance of power, and united witii the Stevens wing of the Republican party, to make the bill as odious as iiossible. Totlie Democratic member of Congrt, therefore, arc we indebted for unirerm! manhoo-l-mffraje. After having assisted the nl fra Radicals to engraft it in the bill at the lat hour of the session they could not have prevented it passage, had they even desired to doso. With the political capital manufactured out of the Re c instruction Afitsthedeniocracv made mine gains at the election in the Kail of llsii7. But the stock in trade thus obtained was all expended by Noveuilx r 1863, when fien, If rant was so Iri limphanlly elected to tlie Presidency by the Re publican parly. Many predicted that great change would be made manifest at the elections just held, but they have been sadly disappointed. And the reason is obvious. The reconstruction question ha been settled by an acceptance of those nieas nres by the Southern people. The Democracy can no longer harp upon that string. Ota feel ings and old passions, engendered during the war, have carried many back to the Republi can ranks who abhored the reconstruction poli cy. In all of this there is nothing unnatural. These passions and prejudices will only die with the present generation. So party it likely io tuc cttd, during the promt arp, which retor,nita the Copperhead at the North and the old Seeemon- f'jfc at the South as it national leader. There .are thoiisMula of Northern men, not Repub licans, who will never support men like Pendlc- t'M and V a Han dig hum for tlie Presidency, any more than the Secessionists of the South would have supported John 31. Botta for the same of- nae if the Confederacy had been established. To ignore tliia fact is to abut our eves to the sim plest laws of human nature. There is no doubt that a very large propor tion of the Republican party ia tired of follow ing the lead of Sunnier, Butler, Logan and the other Radical leaders, but they will not desert them to follow the lead of those who were op Ittsal to the Union during the late war. The Democratic party, too, is at strife within itself. Mothing but mutual antagonism and the pressure of surrounding circumstances keeps Ihe two orgimiaatlons together as compact and and distinct parties. Without that pressure it may bo doubted whether they could be kept to gether for six months longer. If there waa no Democratic party in existence all the probabili ties are that the Republican party would speed ily dissolve and go to pieces, and the discordant dements of which it is composed array -themselves' in opposition to each other. In the pres ent condition of things, then, is it mil a most op portune time for the organisation of a great LtliEKAL Pxrsty in conformity to the wants und emergencies of the times ? The great need of the. country now ia to heal the wounds and re pjirkhe mischiefs wrouirht by the war. To this enri ejpedie'iU, rattier than pnncipl THE KD KI.I X AND LEAGUE OUT UAOEH. We are that certain editors and newpapcr writers are devoting much space to this subject, and, we fear, with no good emit. Thf.v acctu to be endeavoring to paliate, if not to justify, the Ku k'lut by pyadlng the many similar crimes -oimiiiited, a alleged, by the members of the Loyal League Those outrage, among which may he mentioned the murder of Col. Nether cutt, tho l ome family and others In Join- aud Lt noil, and lite Irnni burnings, others still worse, in UnuiRc, cannoi be defended or paliated. Nor can it iK claimod that the Htate aathnritlra acted with proper awl becoming energy in tbttirelliirts lf ferret out aoi bring U justice the guilty pur tics. We shall certainly not defend them In the premises, hnt rather censure them for their re missness if nothing worse. Rut what gisnl enn possibly conic of the course now pursued by cer tain paper of both parties? Retaliation only begets, retaliation ; crimination only begets re crimination; violence, under whatever pretence, only beget more violence. And shall this thing be continued? I thete to be no end to these disturbances? Are the outrage of the one party to be forever kept before the public as a juatincation for those of the other ? As long as this is so peace will never return to bless our borders, but perpetual strife will prevail. How long will they persist in kindling into a name the dying embers of hatred that but for such kindling would before now have ceased to glow ? Never while the extremists of either party bear sway in Ktete iiiiticx Surely the day for mod eration and conciliation for icaee and harmo ny haa ooasa if only those in authority, and out of it. would cultivate it. Some of the Judge it u said, we know of no case of it ouraelf ex hibit their part win feelings on the bench. Am long aw this continue, If it be an, peace will nev er come in their judicial districts. Frrtm the Sentinel. Mr. Eotron: The repeated allnaiona in your paHr, editorially and through correspon (h uts, to that immttroeity, that moat outrageou of ull tho oiwratlon of tho "Ring," to-wit: The Catawba Lime lied Branch Railroad, suggest me kiw uiai ii aoiitit be welt lor you, and your readers, to know something if its historv, par ticularly u to who were it aleadfast friend, those that stood by it when the question came as tnwh iher it should be immediately constructed, or ku off to aom indefinite perioil, far in tho future, if ever to be built at all. j The last Ixtgialaturn passesl a bill ratiliqil the Wlh day of January, the l'.th Stu'iioii of which remls thus: I " That said Western North Pnrolina Railroad (VSnpinv shall have power to make or disson tinue brancluw of saiil Road at will, nnd it may ue the brandies as will best uroiuole its conve iiUnceand interest: VociVW, nevertheless, this section shall not conn r anv uower to interfere I with the Branch Bond to Paint Rock, and ho th, r brmnoh thall be bantu until the main 7'iksJ n iirX- 7Wn, nmifAe frii:A to Iiint lloek, nkitll An lie 6-en completed." Under this section of the act the IJnaa h.-.l branch was plaeisl uiiiong llie impmhabilities; but we will go on and how how it wa made whole, and who made it so. The same legislature passed anotlter ax t rati fied the loth day of April, amending the l"nh fcection, of tlie bill above mentioned, which was ed among the people, trampling on and crush ing them to death. JUSTICE. We publish the article below from the Wil mington Journal aa an act of justice to the Dis trict Judge, We are frank to say that with the eintU exception of his conduct in relation to the bankrupt printing we have heard nothing but praise of hlra a a Judge ; and, with the Jour I'll, we join in the wish that we had more such: MvnoE Brooks. The patience and impar tiality which Hh Honor, Judge Brooks, has ex hibited, especially during the session of the U. S. District Court over which he presided last week, has been such as to win for him the re spect and good will of the member of the Bar presented bin meeting of the Stockholder of the Western North Carolina Railroad (uinnanv in the C.l hming manner, a taken from the written proceeding. 'The meeting afscmhlcd at the expiration of the half hour." "Judge Merrimoa then introduced the fol lowing resolution." "Uraolred, That the private Stockholders of the Eastern Division of the Western North Car olina Rail Road Company, the stock of the Stab; not being voted, do hereby accept tho act, and all the provision of such art, passed by the Jen era! Assembly of die State of orth Carolina at iu last mo, entitled, "an act to be entitled an act amendatory of the act to incorporate the Western North Carolina Rail Road Company, 186ft and all act amendatory thereof." in the wonts ami bgurea following, that ia to av." -Now come that which together with the fore going resolution made the Lime Bed Branch a hied fact as. far a the action of the legislature anu ot me MocJLookler of the Company could do it This ia the document of which on that occa sion Judge Merrimon seems to have been tha special guardian, produced by him then and tliere, lrom the safe recesnc of a breast jiocket. Here it is, as the Jurhrc avs "in words and fur ore frdrowing. BrxTIOM 1. The a-ncral Awemblu of Xorth Carolina do enact. That the provision in section 15 of said act, hull nut be so evnetrverl a to art rent the immedinte eimetrurtion of the, branch lfmd leading from a point near CnfaivVi Station, in Ca tawba roimty, to the 7iW tieth u pro,ided for in section 1st uf mid net; and in all meetings here after held by the Stockholder of the Eastern ami all wlwi have been connected in any man- j Division of said Company, tile State stock, if rep- FiAkXNUUU LEAP INTO THE KIYFR. While this so n waa transpiring on the main dock, what were the cabin paMenger doing 7 Tbey had just set down to lupper when a terrible turmoil arose, and they learned at once (hat the boat vrSjl on fire. In that nw (ul moment they vain looked for a loophole to escape from the fate which threatened them. Below, aft and forward there waa a furnace of uolold fierceness, and on each aide there was a waste of waters, which indued offered a pre ferable fate to the other. The cabin passen gers chose to accept the risk of the milder late, and they jumped from the boiler deck into the watery chasm, between land and land, below. The dock passengers also leaped into the uver as they became more and moro hotly pressed by the flames. In ten minutes from the first alarm the Stonewall was enveloped in lla.iiea fiom stem to atern. from main deck to pilot house a vast funeral nvre. By this time all who could had jumped off the boat and were struggling for hie in the rapid current T r . ' m i-ry icw were ante lo save tbeiiiselve. 1 lie it. ut majority were, it is feared drowned al ijost .mi lutcly. ErronTs to ma ate. While the deck passengers aud crew were nmlilled together on the forecastle, K. P. Ws son, Me earpeoter of the boat, endeavored to get some of them to assist bim in putting the Mage ptaiiK overboard. It would have floated, it was tx-lieved, one hundred persons to the land, but the passengers were struck helpless by i he prospect of the horiible fste atari bg i hem in the lace, and tailed to launoh the plank. Fifteen feet of it was pushed over Ihe side. About twenty persons got on if, some were pushed off, and about sixteen managed lo cling to it until i hey war taken ott in a skiff which ws sent from the shore. Fulton, the engineer, stayed at hi post un til he was driven from it hv the Auiim ml jumped overboard. He started to swim to wards the land, hut found the mules so numer ous in the water that he could make no pro gress, and so swsm into the wheel-house. He clung here in fsncied security until the lines holding the levers burned off and the wheel commenced to revolve. It made three i evo lutions, and he was caught by it and consider' ably bruised. GEORGE ;PEABODY Ili Carter and hltBenioetion$Cnrae tcrUHe Anecdote Hit Sojourn at the Springe The Southern Education Fund. Gkeexbries White Sixphi-r Rxamos, t August 86th, itm. S net With his Court. The justice which he has ever manifested uixni the, bench since his eleva- 1 I -L - 1 1 1 ... . 1 O.L rwwiiirM, mi in vote iuowucu in wic nm see- i lion ol tne act raiilicd the L'ihh day of .January. lion thereto, has Uvn such to nnurcsa our ltM9( for the "Western Division," of which this i . . i - - .i.i .i . : ........a....... i ,l . j .i e .i i iune winj me .act llia uc IS among llie lew j l7t hwvuiwpui, aim inc nuojnion Ol uie-c unu now-a-days who are ineurruptible. The Bar I further ameiidinents shall be left to the private here bear for him a decided respect, and he is believed to lie and known amonir them and the community from whence hej came as u man of sirici iincgi-iiy. Among K.ciu u juugn lie is regarded as the imart worthy, andrthe wish is general that we had more such, ronviniwd, as we have been, that Judge Bnsjk sits uxn the bench in the honest discharge of hi dutv as he conceives it, without the displav of partuan pre- judtcesor ft-clings, we take pleasure in acknowl- eilging the fact and wish with our Iriends that we liail more such, and that our Stale Courts claimed none wurav than lie.'' TiroRtxoTOS v. Smyth & Hartley. We learn that the opinion of the Sujirenie Court of the United States in this case, just delivered and involving the validity of contract based ou Uut;- federato currency, will bo reported in full in tile Stockholders of the Eastern Division Nothing now prevented the "immediate con struction" of the Branch. I will give the vote upon this last amendment and resolution and leave the public to judge of the conduct since, of some of those whose' nanus are recorded as having voted for them. "The Committee to superintend the ballot through (iov. Vance "reported a follow : . "Altirraative; E R K'vler, 5 shares; B A Ber ry, 10 share; Win M Walton, 30 sliares ; Thos i Walton, for elf and as proxy for others, R78 shares ; John .Casson, for self ami as proxy !tfl share ; W W Fleming, for self and aV proxy ItO share ; M L MeCorkle, for self ' and as proxv ")"'. shares; R A Caldwell, for self and as proxy 2,1 HO share; J A McDowell, for self and aa proxy, 546 shares ; N W Woodfin, for self and proxy 408 shares; J W Wilson, for self and proxy 7,088; A 8 Mtrrimon.5 shares; Cotilev S Neal, 3o3 shares; J A Caldwell, ltf shares; i II" T . ii. .1 . t ii, .. November number of tlie Wrir. 1nv- Vines, I . ,, . T I. IWisubwi in asningion uy. we supsi-e that gentleman of tlie Bar dcsiring.il could ob tain it by applying at once lo Rowland Cox, P. Q...laeibo.x, No. 29, Washington, D. C. The opinion in the celebrated Verge r case will also but ohk bkiep available. There was only one skiff available to take passengers from the burning wreck. It made several trips from the boat to the land. Be sides being the means of cscano for those on the stage-plank, it was used to take Fulton from his perilous position. He was the last brought away; after that no oneescaped from the boat, lt was feared that some, hemmed io by the flames, were burned to death, and, rumor had it that some met with such a dreads hil fate in the cabin. How many, will never be known. It can only be honed that ther ull succeeded in jumping into :he river and got to snore. The coal oil fortunately not a large quanti ty and the bacon burned very fiercely; Tlie Stonewall was burned to the water's edge in about one hour and a half after the fir R as discovered. But long before tbislhere was no living soul in it. A TXKKIUI.E SCENE. The scene was a terrible one; one never to be loigotten by the survivors. The lamenta tions, groans and shrieks o( dying men and wo men mingled with the noise of ihe cracking timbers, and to intensify the horror ol the mo ment, burning spars, fenders and beams, fell over iuto the water, where nearly two hun dred beings were trying to save themselves lrom the jaws of death. appear, and other important decisions of the Supreme Court. A Homb E.vcKurfttSE. Tlie fimt number of the second volume of the Carolina F-trmer is on our tablo. Tiii really meritorious journal has been changed from a monthly to a weekly, and contains eight pages of choice original and se lected reading matter lor the farm and fireside. It ha a beautifully engraved head, and hand some rule border with tastefully designed corner pieces. In typographical execution ii is a cred to Southern skill and enterprise. Published at the low price of $2 per year. Address Wm. H Bernard, editor and proprietor, Wilmington N. C. shares ; V Meh esson. Moo shares ; Jt Bri lain, ." shares; R F Siniontun, oO shares; Cico P Krwin, ') shares," it is unnecessary to give the names of those vuu voicu in me negative. v;. Demorest'r Monthly.- A splendid Christ mas number. This favorite periodical for la dies improves with every issue. Its reliable fashions, its numerous full-siied patterns, its ad mirable illustrations, and great variety of useful and interesting reading matter, render it by far the most desirable magazine of the day, and in fact indispensable to ladies living away from the metropolitan centers. It is also the cheapest magasine at $3 per annum, with a handsome premium, which, for a limited time, may, we see, be a large and magnificently engraved copy of Lillie M. Spencer' "Fourth of July Pic-Nic" a picture worth three time tlie cost of the mag azine. Published at 838 Broadway, N . Y. The Edinburo Review for October is on. our table. It is unnecessary to say any tiling more of it than that it fully sustains the high reputation of that publication. Address the Leonard Scott' Put. Co., 140 Fulton st, N. Y. s. arc necd d fetich a partv would at orice unite all the moder ate and properly conservative men of all the present Hiiics airaiasl ikmliLinihU and iheJ : ' .? n W r. a . ,1 1'iiprai-iit aoics ol all. Mich liarj, wo -jvece ft the country ar..f r.ugijrate an ra cf good feeling, whidi niither of the present partiist can do. Jobh Murray, the London Publisher, an nounces that the ''London Qunr. Review" for October will contain hitherto unpublished Let ters from Lady Byron lo Mrs. Leigh, in 181fi, which completely, disprove Mrs. Beecher Slowe's story. Byron'.s Pi Wisher, any statement emanating from this well known house is authoritative. The Review will be republished by the Leou loty re-Nanl 8eottTiib"fi1iing C, ci.lv in Novembe THE LATE DISASTER. Recent Jlietimippi Jlitct '( damityThe Burning of the Steamer Stonewall Statement nf Suni wi Horrible Scene Incident, Ac. The full accounts furnished by the telegrams nuruisneii in tne Hun ot fridayand Saturday leave but few of the main facts to record. Tto. causes which prevented an extinguishment ot the names, the appalling scenes inseparable lrom all such dire calamities, and tlie hair breadth escapes and death struggles of the pas sengers, as nirnistieu by w estern exchanges, are, howevw of painful Interest. The St. Louis Republican gathers its facts from survivors who returned to that city by the Belle Memphis, and lrom the columns ot that paper the follow ing extracts are made: DEPARTIRE OF THE BOAT. The Stouewall left St. Lo-ria at ix o'clock on Tuesday evening, with thirty-five cabin pas senger, one hundred and six ty-live deck pas sengers, seventeen officers, thirty-eight deck crew, twenty cabin crew, and freight of five thousand barrels of flour, live hundred sacks of oats, one hundred and fifty bales of hay, a large quantity of bacon and pork, some petro leum, and one hundred and fifty mules. At a quarter past six o'clock on Wednesday even tug the Stonewall reached a point opposite neeiey s Lnaing, ouc hundred and twenty mues oeiow si. ijouis. AID FROM THE SHORE. There were nunbers of people on the shore who had flocked from the houses in the neigh, borboodpf the (landing, but they were unable io give any assistance except what a lew could render with thetTny i-kin belore mentioned. They saw many an nnfortunato passenger tsKing ins last leap, ana, as some who had (nonaged to get hold of a spar or piece of tim ber drilled from the wreck, they eagerly sought to give a helping hand to some poor iciiow as no nearea tne snore. They did all they possibly could to mitigate the horrors of the night, and at different points of ihe river, for a mile-below assisted persons to get on shore. Tho number so saved, it ia regret; cd, was but small. By Telegraph. FORTH ER FROM THE DISASTER OR THE SII8- SIKMFrT RIVER. St. Louis, Oct. 30. The Republican has a disnatch from Cantain Taylor, one of the committee that left here last night for the wreck of the steamer StonewalL late burned in the Mississippi, which stales that no bodies were found to-day. Three were buried yesterday ; names unknown 8eve -ml persons were picked up below here veeterdav alive, but their names are not ascertained. The wreck was still burning. The freiaht in the hold is uninjured, but being stolen rapidly. If the board of underwriters had sent atuedown 00,000 worth ot property would have been saved. The safe .of the boat has been taken out. and is now in the keeping of Henderson - : .: r . 1 justice oi me peace. The presence of Mr. Peabody within our bordejs for the first time since he became specially eminent suggests the thought that a brief review of the career and benelactions of that great philanthropist, together wiih some notice of Ms preut ojournat our fa vorite fountain, may prove intereetiu;. With thia idea in view we have, through the kiudneka of the relatives and fi lends of that gentleman who attend him here, gained trustworthy information as to all the facts to which reference will be made. He, .fortn natdy, needs no partial pen to impress the world with the greatness of it obligations to his benevolence. George Peabody come of as ancient En glish family, settled in America aa early a 1U33. aud waa born in Dan vers, Mass.. on the 18th of February, 1795. He commenced business as a elerk 10 a store at tha early age of eleven, and rout tuned to thus serve in several plaeea la New England for sis years. At the age or seventeen he formed a part nerahip in the drapery business, in George town. D. C with Mr. Elisha Riggs. who furnished a capital of $3,000, youug Pea body having the inanagoment of the busi ness. That this, partnership was mutually satisfactory the following anecdote sufficient ly proves : At tha time it waa formed the age of his youthful partner, already si feet high and unusually mature in appearance, was unknown to Mr. Risks, who, in conver sation with him some time after its eatabjish- meut, remarked that many men improperly entered b indues when too young, aanming responsibilities for which their experience did not qualify them. etc. Mr. Peabody at the time made no reply, but upon oonvng of age recurred to tnts remark or his associate, and informed him that though they had been in partnership nearly four years he waa now only twenty-one, Mr. Riggs heard this with astonishment, but without complaint, and a few years after, upon the winding up of the concern, reeeived fl.Vf.fJUO as his share of the profits ou the original capital of three teousand. During his residence in Georgetown the war with Great ltritain was iroiiiir on. sod the young merchant for a time became a oldier, serving iu a volunteer artillery com pany in defence of the capital. In 1815 the house of RiK(rs A: Peabody was established in Baltimore. I he style or the firm subse quently became Peabody. Riggs Ac Co., and branch heuses were opened iu New York and Philadelphia. In the year 1837 Mr. Peab dy fixed his home iu London, wJiere he has ever since resided, though still elafiu ilig lo be citiaen of the United States. He has crossed the Atlantic fourteen times, and if his health permits, will next spring make his fifteenth passage. His business In London vns that of a banker and commission agent, nnd his sa gacity in all financial concerns was soon con spicuous. It seems only lea wonderful than ins iioeratry because it is oftener paralleled. The foundation of his fortune, for example. is Mm 10 nave oeeu due to Ins extensive purchase during the crisis of 1835 of Mary- im.l 1......I- .1. GU..A- L r . . ' i.,uu mr, ma .-Mate oeiiiir men in iinn.-..i r ! . . . . . ... . .i ifpuuiaiion an act by which he saved tier credit, an J himself realized largely. He also rendered similar service subsequently to .1 .emu -iaies ami corporations in America. Numerous railways in the United States are indebted to hi in for their speedy con pletion; be supplying them with iron and takb g their ii. is 111 payment, iu tins nay, u lnle add ing greatly to the wealth of his nnfiva l..H he is understood to have acquired no small part of his private fortune. Mr. Peabody' extraordinary libervlity, if not before evinced, developed itself as early as 1851, wl- en he assumed the en tire ex pense of arranging the American department in the Great Exhibition iu London, aud In 1852. when he gave tlO.000 to defray the cost of the second expedition in search of Sir John I rauklin. The same year he bestowed r',oo isince increased tento hit, is educational grant to found the I'. city of Baltimore, tor twenty years his home, has reeeived for educational purpose not lea than a million of dollars, and the cause of southern education double aa much. Moat of hi other donations in the United States have been in the North, chiefly New Eng land, and are too numerous to detail here He has distributed among his living rela tives iu America more than two millions of dollars, and has built in-Georgetown. Mas., as a memorial to his mother, a new church at a cost of a hundred thousand more. The first donation ill behalf of southern education, made in IHfiti, waa $l,0t)0,tMMI iu cash abd 11.100.000 in Mississippi State bonds. The second donation, made withiu ii,.- laat eight weeks, was $1,000,000 in rash and 41,000 in Florida State bonds. The nominal amount, therefore, is more than a:t.."lNt.NMi. thongh only tJINNI.OOO are at present available. I Ins ia judiciously in vested, and yields annually about $130,000 In special recognition of the former of thee donation, the Congress of llleUuited States on the Kith March. 1817. voted to Mr. Pea body a magnificent gold medal, since made and presented to him This testimonial, though called a medal, is more properly a piece of symbolic statary about oaa loot in height an extiuisite work of art. It was manufactured ia New York, and rust. $7,000. Some notion of the policy pnrsued in its distribution by the almoners of Mr. Tea body's bounty to the .Smith seems in this connection appropriate, and will be briefly given. It being of e urse impossible, with the means at their command, for the Board . I Trustees to assist all school, or even all those of one claas worthy of their aid. they have, afer mature deliberation, and with the approbation of the great dam r, deter mined for the present to confine the benefits of the fund to public free schools for elemen tary instruction, believing that in this way tha neediest portions of tha whole popula tion ran oe most readily reached. The en tire cost of maintaining schools is in no caae met by the Board, but communities are en couraged to establish them by a contribution from the Board of a part generally a small pan 01 me money necessary tor that pur pose. A school being established, the pot tion contributed by the Board Is applied by the same municipal agent, that control the ouuay or tne rest, the economical admiois MbH Wsi Pain killed.. ta.aitattaa.r ubiie t Ull , mo oil I 1 4 'H ,,, FAMILY If EDICT v. , . . mmwm mi mm in . urBDiy L ii. , .. . ilurlnf kl b limn mt hvr miiii inn in. ,!,, , 1 . r f.HU, rasSSSf l... iIIm.k. uuj t, l'J. i-l U r,i', 1..1 1 lnii..i S...I.I. ,, C 1.1. O . m - 1 . 1 ri Hi bj . A w 1- RIUIuui rvr, I'.li.i S ih, si, -.vk . II ag In II,,- Joint. .,,.1 1 . llJ Hli. 11 .1 .1,, ,l In m,f .,',, ,,, .' ftern, Tiha.- n, , p.IUi , ,h( A a rftOou furtfirr ami Tunic , II Ill- Ill full. In IBM I'lMlli'lNllll. Ai-ill Hlnniarh I.' -I ' ..' "''""-. L Sim llewl.c... f.l... AMlunsur fl,nr , , 1 ivmk r.. wa.iiu.., 01.1 aur,.,. ;L;t 1 lirlirr.l 0,1. Mil, ,.f f, ,,, U'-IUU,,W a spw a lit I'siip! mill if lltllfr.t imnr r-iu,., f Cr.n 1 liu , li, l 1 t rat ion of which, s it is produeed hy tax ation, the people are sufficieutlv iealona ii guarding. All expense to the trustees ir making this contribution Hvniluld.. U thn avoided, and a system of schools introduced which, being entirely controlled bv the or gans of the people and those immediately in terested in their success, are generally aeeep- muie, null naeiy u be perpetuated even when the aid in question i withdrawn. The fund being, as before intimated, wholly inatt mctent to assist all needy communities, it snouid bo added that the plan of the Board thus far has been to con entratH it unon cities aud towns where the largest number of rnnareii are accessible, thus employing it most efficiently exhibiting model to the surrounding country of n successful system, and encourogmg the foundation of similar schools elsewhere. Mr. Peabody' gift being designed for the benefit of both races, the innuirv ia snvires. ted. and has beim nlt ,.-t,..,i,..r "mixed schools" are contmplatel by him or his representatives. To thin nnestion a pointed reply can be given.' The Board, as indicated above, as'timeno control whatever over the the arrangement of the schools to which assistance is accorded, leaving all such matters erti rely with the local authorities. who establish and chiefly maintain them ; consequently no portion of the fund can be expended on mixed schools except by the sn.iriiou 01 rimse authorities a sanction which, so far as is known, baa been niiitm. ly withheld. Iu point of fact, much the Irr- gerpa t of the help hitherto given has been to white schools, those for colored children having been to a larire extent nr,,vi,l..,i for from other source, and the Board always af fording their aid where it is most needed. Mr. Peabody is attended at the Springs by his nephew. Mr. Ceorce l..:.i..iv R IittaAil 1 and Mrs. Russell, of Salem, Mass., as well as by the Kev. H: Sears. D. D.. LL. I)., of of tttaunton, a. This gentleman was for merly .superintendent of Public Inauuction in MassachtiBett, and subsequently succeed rln in I Or ei. inml,. 1'iilnl, i , c .11 Summrr l'omi'aiat, Chnlrm v rbu Scalds, Hun t, Sprain, i, .... frm wrll a liar Sllnira ol Inxi o, Set rpi , Ike HilM ut foironuaa liurrli ami Sea Dtrreiioa acis.niiu .. em 1. 1 BrM-flU of lift- iV.ihuc, TL. M..l. t - - . 1 1 nr .-.- umi-iili mwiinif I .,'l,i,.i , iireuiiuiua prouimly without . 1,.. .. vr. H. MtiLDKU.VPSn t,v, ?U, Anlr I-lte In,. . 0 Taomasvillr, N . C. Dr Sir. You will pu.,c accept my,;,, cere thanks for your prompt payment, in't, ,, charge, ot the amount of Ihe mdiev i.r 1..' aoce on my Husband's Life, amounting tu uJe sum of three thou and dollars. At vmir ..... neat aud repeated solicitation be was" in,l ... I to insure iu your Company, and now ...o recipent of iu benefits. To y on and the .North America Life in ... ance Company we shall feel under obligath.ns such as only the widow and fatherh-- can feci aud express. May rou have snooesf in mdnrine nth insure in your most liheral rniniun, ...a - the Lord of the widow aud oniluii s'i.l.ui .-.. and prosper you In your good work. SlAaM. (RFTC. It X RBKR, of Kowaii Mills, Ji.C. Mr. Hofdorness is also aeeui f. r th, t , pool, Loudon and filohe fSK Immranee t : ,," paay, which insure all kind- or public and -rate buildings, Kailroud DeooU. -Itriite... v. tories, Foundcries, Mills and Aferehamim pay all i'a losses promplv. All letters addressed to Mr. Holderm - .1 Thomasville, N. C will receive proin .i ,a. tion i A Clergyman while residing in Sontl .-... Icaaa a missionary, discovered u sftTS ii i . -Y pie remedy for the Cure of Nervous Weakney. Barly Decay, Disease uf the Urinary and Seia. inal Organs, and the wh ile train of disonienii brought on by baneful and vicious habit. i,r ,t numbers have been cured by this noble :, : . ITouipted by a desire to hnnebt the air! and unfortunate, I will send the recipe inr paring ana using uus medicine, in u si 1 . velope, to any who needs it. Free f ( Address. JOSEPH T. lM .s. Button D., Hible Dnase, Oct I601 Nw. Tork at . ov iitisi r 1 k jcs it 1 1'1'kks ccac DTSPEPill. THK WROLS STORY IN A Sl'T-intLL. The offlce of the stnmach is to coavert the fnmt into a rre .mi. like semi-fluift, raited 1 nvso . Tin. is elfected partly by the action of a solvent. ia,!f,l the esstric juice, which exudes lrom the the stomach, and partly by a mechanical movemsni of that organ, which chums, an it wete, Uiedit. olv- ug aliment 1 be t nvxs passes from the aUuuirh uto the duodenum, or entiance to the lmain where it is subieotsd to the action of th.- hit. . the nutritious portion of it convert.! intu , i called Cbtlk, which etentuaily becomen bluud. Now, it i evident that if the great aulveiit. the t nitric juice, is not nroiliiced in suffici or if the mecbanlcal action of tli sLi.m.l. 1 ml sufficiently brbtk. the linn process of digestion i.e on iiuperieciiy jwrlormed. It ia al.-o Hear tl,;,t iftlie liver, which pi cy 'such an Inipotbuil iiart m chaniringthe BOftrishing portion of the cl line into tne material of the blood, is congested, or 111 nny unnatural condition, the sc. ..ml proceiai will nol he thoroughly a complihe.l. The result of tlT rao failure sre. csspbestsw ,tt Miai ,if The mode in which HOBTKTTKft ItlTTI !'- erate in such ca-es is this: thev inyiuoi.de :l , ue ofthe stomach, which eve 11 ess. I' ll Institute in his native town, then .!.!. ...;;. ed the eelvhrntaJ 11, VV... 1 ...J .... u u 1 - naiiaau an l lesiuciu the centennial anniversary of its corooration of Brown ITniversitv. m Pr,,,-;,!,,,,... 1 . - -r. 1 ------1 - ... a,, A SEVERE WINTER PREDICTED. THK FIRST A I. A KM. Here the cry of "fire" was ven bv one of -. - . 1' a the iWck passengers, who thottted to Geo; W. Pulton, the engineer, then on duty. Darkness had set in and the alarm came with a terrible significance. The boat was at a point where the river is one and a half miles wide, with much that was combustible on board, and with o means of escape except what might be ob- ained by runnincr the-vessel airaiost the bank. rtulton rushed oat and raw a bale of hay in the portion ot the boat burning. So rmall was fire that it could have been extinguished Willi one or two buckets of water if they had been at hand, but lhe?e were not there. SiPUAp OF THE FLAXES. The bay was piled up 10 ihe boiler deck and mes spread with greaT rapidity, extend- Thc elder Murray having been 1 ,u9 "lm bMl 10 ba,rt 'Mfi CorpmunicaUng ocAi 10 uie tiry woonwina ot t bo boar. the 1 Tit: KyogvilJiE WhKi declares tliat Tennes see will not repudiates that tlie State debt has been incurred, ami it most be met, and will be rnet. no matter what cost or sacrifice. And its isirrecpondent nt Nashville, who has mixed a good deal with the members of the Legislature, ritethat the suggestion of repudiation is odious arid niousfrous. t3 What hk4 Iscomc ofthe Henderson 2a 6ei ! Vr'c have not sen it (ut several Week. 'either have we scii the Itutherforijton jaijicr f;: te time, exoeix tlie 'britian-f en. ?5U We learn from the Standard that '. II. Broken, Km., of Wavhe Cormty, saorceds the defa iliing Kt t 'ol lector of Internal lleTC- Wm iu the and all who wish to secure a copy of tills huni ber should mak. itnmediate application, citiier direct to the publL-hers. or to a local agent Tas Caroms t Farmsb. The October nnm ber of this vnluable woik is on our table. Oil ed with articles of interest and profit to the farmer. This cumber closes th first volume, and is tbj last iA the uonthl series. On the fourth of November the first number of the Weekly will appear; and in its new form il will no doirbt prove nstich more acceptable to its many readers. It w ill contain' eight pages of five colu'nns each'; and iu ad.li'ioii to a largely -in creased am 0 ant of agricultural mat ter, Jfifl g'vo miscellaneous, family reading, matket reports and the geneial news of ,tl.eJ day. e subscription priei-(J2 0.3 per year) will oot be changed. Aud:eia, m. II. Ber nard; Editoi and.rroptietor, Wilmington, N C. ly woon'vo.g t, tJ(. bosti nnd n was seen as a "laiice 1 hat the" Stonewall Was doomed. The majority of the iteek t hssbugcrs j were ntllie firm: emirec-ntcd alt, ;j-d 3 fia.r.ic ; .Tiiico larnui-ieu iiicio HjH-e?ries? 10 iioanyiluug t to provebt iho hnneadin destruction ensued ' among them. Fulton left bis unpines, and, un aided, exqenl by one or two ocKstjiis. essared to piHveni the read of tho devout i rig ele ment. n got rue section -hoso and went over to thei donkeyengme lo artaeh it Ifi efforti weri, however, fruitless. The people had become I ranlic and movci!' rapidly in a dene streaib forward. Fulton found t'lialtdie could not advance ft one step and he gave it up in despam IVerioo tu t!.i lie fad shout ed 'brough Ihe sj-kr.g trumpet lo.Fulkerson the pilot, to lind "the hyata' ?oon as nessible: Tiie host wasWiiinding towards the Missnuti The coming winter, saya the Petersburg Index, it is predicted will be a very hard one. Old hunters and woodsmen on this continent and scientific calculators both here and in Europe have adduced signs . and tokens of an early and severe season. Pounded upoa the observation, experience and study of years, which cannot be rejected. Animals that house themselves away in the cold season have advanced their preparations for the frost, while tlie fearful tempest that recently raged upon sea and land, are regarded as no equivocal warning. It will doubtless be remembered by all what a remarkably mild 'winter thelaet was. Much of the time the temperature was thai ot early spnnir, and save at intervals but lit tle increase of eh .thing was need d in this-1 climate ; and the suffering among the poorer classes was cwtnparaUvely trifling. In point of mildness the w-i nte s of 1797. 1822, 1828 and I834v are the only ones with in the last three-quarters of a century that approached it. i 'I A distingttiahtHf'ivirwnft writifjr to the Bul- lenu or me .cenunc society of Europe, I he Legislature of Maasaehnaerta haa r., cently changed the name of this town from uanvert to I'eabody. It is. however, with in eighteen years past that his henev,,!..,,,... lias Been most striking, and whatever mav netore nave been the case, all that he has done in that time has not been the retult of impulse, but the carrying out of a pre-con- 1 .VM-i f ... . . cei en ju.iii. i 1113 is indicated by the fol lowing iucideut : - Mr. W. W. Corcoran, of Wasington city, his friend for half a century, aud a gentle man well known for his great wealth and numerous noble charities, had signalized 1.1 in I .. m .. a. uiuiseu uf proviirug tor tlie wants ami traps- an office which he resumed to assume tha duties of General Agent of the Southern r.duca.ion r und. ror this position his tal ents, experience, and character, eminently yiiuiov nun. ne is Known to Possess the en tire confidence of the distinguished gentle men composing the Board of Trustee a confidence which Mr. I'eabody has confirm ed in the warmest terms to the present wri ter. Mr, Peabody shares with ex-fJovemor Wise the uppermost cottasre in Rwltim.,ra T . . " " . . "- how. anu sits at the same table with fiton.. ral Lee, Mr. Corcoran, Mr. Taggart, and oth- ano. lular Ueinliraue nwimiai n.iu i.i insuring an ainieultii ieii.-, tlie rliiid to ronii.letely dissolve the lood. is' . o act ormn Uie nerves of the stomarh. ran.i,',- .. acceleration of the mccbaalcai movemeat wrt-i-un tn reduce the food to a homogeneous mass I! . v alas act BBSaaaaaalty n pea the Hver. strsartl eniec it and so enabling it to pnxlnee an ample and rex- inar sunpiy oi one. lor tlie .rpi.ar or lonveituip the uotritiona particles ot the rfiyme n.t,. i ilr, and promote thepasaage through the I.. uf'u i nseless dehrfa In this way. HOSTKTTKR S fllTTEttf . pepsia and liver romnlaint. The . xplau iiaiu, niuipic. puuusopuieni, an.: Tiirx. co new adve:tjsemlnts. i I He is now in hia aovsntw.KHk xfcr .. 1 ,,,, ,-Bl , mrge oouy or lortuuateiy ror tne world, a bachelor. Hungariana who had just been landed at Being quite infirm, ha haa been seldom able ciew a. or, m a state ot utter destitution. Mr. to come to parlor or dining-ropm. though he I'eabody. in a letter from I. on. Ion Mr has re -eiveH mini i,..i;,.u nJ ..... . - , , mm... - ....... j ammma.vmj cuv. KVUCICUIVU Urn Corcoran, dated October 3. 1851. uses ih his cottage. mid m,i, f.,.i ..r tat. follow ing language : ' manners are ajngularly affable and pleasing, "However liberal I may be. I cannot keen and bis countenance one of the moat to.-.,.. pace wiih your noble acts of charity at 0,t we have ever seen. It is also itdis nome, but one of these days I mean to come putebly handsome. It is pleasant tn L-m.u, out. and tfteii. if my feelings regarding that he is particularly gratified with the re inouey don't chance, and I have idem v. I cent ion he has met here ami ...ot. .1... hall become a strong competitor of yours in eiderate attention that has been on every l ou acted nobly nnoa shown bim. Such evidence of regard tells the world thst since the atmospht i ic pertubtttions of lrio' '((), the years have Ti. cn warifjer. cleret and dryer, aiid the bar- ometor pressure 1 enter than bofore. The anomalies, he thinks, cannot fail to find their compensation ere long, the winter be fort last closely corresiiondinir w itb thai of IHOH and .ver vtl.i uiz bed, ft en i ng that alnt 1870 shall oave a great winter like thas of irc2M-;si The tabautr are ! : 5 uei is Hra-uBivHi'ea evidence in tbeir favor tosriowthut o-i general indications. and are- ears past, they is concern ng are not invariably right, but mla'ed evidence in their favor nnnK amen it procn.lcii on jatu.: oar, atni u. mauietl immovable some tw-o hundred yards from the sJiore. with de p wa ter intervening.! In See minutra after t lie alarm Ihe flames had extended uver all Ibeaft, por tion nnd a considerable pirt 61 the forward portion of - tlm poat. Ti:e deck passengers nshed towards' the' IvreeasiS every inth of w hich was covered with a shrieking and dread fully afjightcd rarisi of liumanily. To com plete the general constcrcaUor. the mulegdasb- fu! con.p.iri-on kent np for can -M'.e some fair predict the year tr come Tin's.- predictions may not fall unnleea. n ef called Tea I ntly njMm the ears of those whose business it is to , ell w inter wear and winter material -especial!) when comfort and plenty fill their homes but to the poor they are alarm ing. We trost tVr their sake the seasen may not he exceptionally severe. But at any rate, whether tha prediction are MfHssd or not, it would be both wisj and politic to to i n t ared as far as Possible for what m. At least no Kann can retuh frum such pre - ranffMna f benevolence.- by the lluuirariau.'' How the pledge thus given has been re deemed, the world knows. The only change in hia K-m....l . ... I n a .1 .- . P - mtmm 'ii.iii. luwuuvug regard I ug t lie u uiwu orates, as men eutortaiued. that is known tn have taken place, is that funds which were designed to advance education in the whole country he has since the war de voted entirely to the South. His own words to a member of the Board of Trustees of the Southern Education Fond, on the occasion of hia Inat nrnuf itotiolinn ........ . ul J.. i 1 - ... ......... . . nrio . a uii 111 ID tortlie South lor the benefit ol the whole country." Mi. Peabody ia known to be charitable on principle, to recognise his obligations to Gol as having prospered him nbove others. and to consider himself merely a stew ard of ins bounty, lie says that he gives accord ing to his means ; Great, however, as is his liberality, he entertain application fur aid from sti linger, and habitually decline tt aav- rcr letter contatneng them. On one occa sion he committed to the flames as many as 4.01)0 snch letters. One of his most striking characteristics more or less illustrated in every gift he has made is a freedom from sectional or seetaraiaa prejudice and bigotry; aeatnoiicity ot spirit aLd large-hearted be nevolence. He declares that he never has bestowed hem-fits npon any particular re ligious denomination as such, -and that he nevf r will do so, and he has distinctly ex pressed the wish that this policy should ob tain the aportionment of the fund for edu er.fion in the South. He is not a member of any church, thongh educated a Presbeterian. The total amount he has given away in the last seventeen years is hut little short of ten millions of dollars. His splendid gifts to tne poor ol Utmmyan ipidll two millions of dollars in the aggregate are still fresh intb" minds of all. and the letter and tnin'ui- nsr.r l.. I' - . i niieoi uersen aeni mm uy ine vueen uvery where remembered. A well-written and most interesting account of the manner Iu which this money ha s been bestowed is fnnrot in I At.lcton's Journal for July 3J. JabV. The ttte nighty appreciated by a man who has Steadfastly declined titles a:d decorations at the hands of the greatest sovereign in Europe. )l HLlfJ BALE.- WJLLSELJ A at Pablic Auction on the nrrin.aaa ' . 30th. 1W,R at the Correll layaT near the Yadkin Htver, Kowan county, formfrlj- known a the Brad baa Place, tbe follow iiur property, vir. 9U0 Bushels of CornOaU, Hay, Folder, Ilors. Cattle ami Stock, One 3 Hone Wagon. Oa Buagj and Harness, Household and Kitchen Furniture ic'. nAL?o-Mr dower, consisting of 117 acres, with Pf Barn, Stables, and all aecesssry oot-baildinxs on said land. 0VX19. lat-3t ELIZA CORItEI.I . DMINISTEAT0R 8 HOTICE-ll a ins? taken OUt letters of A dministrut ion nv the estate of John Garner, deo'd., 1 hereby no tify all persons hay ins; claims aawinat aaiil es tate to present them to mo onar Uafom tin. ir,,h day of Novomber 1870. or thia not ice aritl hu plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to the estate are requested to make eur- iy setuenieut. RICHARD H. C0WAN 4a Cw Adm'r.of John Garner. nARHIsTD: At Cottege Home. Lincoln county, on the CM inst., by the Rev. A. W. Miller, D. D., Col. John h.. ron, of Charlotte, and Miss Laura P .1.. r.C T l IT If i , , . uaiajiini ui aw. xv. 11. aiurrison, U. u. In t 'a harms county, on the 2d int.. hv -the r, T"a t. . .-. . ... . ' i.e.' . r i'r.,ui- vi . i....,.u. . i. i 1 i - " " - ' J , vwun n.. iii.ioioin UI1U Miss Margaret U. Johnston. In Forsythe connty. on the 19th nit1V Jnn ledtOrd and Miss Clementine Spaugh. ni i:n. In Steel Creek, in Mecklenburg county, on the 23d ult, Mrs. Don as Grier, wife of James drier, deceased, aged 77 year. She was the l -i.-t one ol s or 10 children of John Xeely all . C 1 19 1 . '1.1 . ' oi noni nveu to an oiu age. SPECIAL NOTICE. Alien s LUNG BALSAM. ' THE REMEDY FOB CCR1XO 'Consumption, Coughs, Bronchitis, Asthma and Croup, JLm an Expectorant it has no Bqnal. It i composed of the active principles of root and plants, which are chemically extracted so as to retain all their medical qualities. MINISTERS AND PUBLIC SPEAKKCSl Who are so often sffl'cte.! with throat disease. ..-Ill :,..! . ...... .1.. . 1 i, , . ... ...... .. ..u,.i, ,u lU(i jtacsani. i.oz. -I- ges and wafers sometimes give relief, but thia Italsani, taken a few times, will insure a perma nent core. With all those afflicted with Coiurhs or Prm. sumption, give this Balsam a fair tnafj the v will he pleased with the result, and confess that the Sure Remedy iehmnd at tatt. It wsoIdbyIR. G. B. PoiLsos, Salisbury, 45-' SPIBITS TIKPKl.'..Fi:- PERSONS have any idea of the treat difference in this taple article Painters and A rtiznns cannot do satisfactory work with an inferior article. Like " all other Essential Oils, it is mrn-h (..i,.rior:u,..l by age and careless keeping ; losing much of its strength and valuable properties. For these reasons the snhsoriber has always boon careful in getting it, freshly distilled by one of the most experienced manufacturers 1n the State, and it may always be bad, in anv quantity, and at prices much In-low those here tofore cbareed here. . At E. SILL'S Drug Store, Salisbury Nov. 5,1869. 45-2t" KbdaMZe StoekiBga. KNEE CAPS, ANKLETS i ND BODV" BRACES. These invaluable he!ps lo the crippled and laine, are too little known. Made of Elastic Silk or Cotton, they are, from the bracing sup port they give tbe weak or crippled joint or limb, productive of incalculable benefit. Their benefits have been lully demonstrated in fth- cases of well known individuals of this county. Their high price ba hitherto deferred per sons from usin? them 1 ul ihcv uuf n..e. had at prices easily v..l u the mean of anv one. Persons at a dlMSnrc -an have them sent hv mail, (as the notiii.'- is a nsi re trifl.'t bv sim ply sending the measure ot parts they ate lestgnerl for." r To K. SILI, Irug Store, Salihttrv. Nov. 12, 1889. 4.V2t ' xfOTzca. Mary A. Campbell, .Plaintiff, aa-ainat William !'. Camnbs'l. rvft. Tlie defendant will uk not' fm that on Salnnlne. the 18th day of IVi-cmber neat, at the Court Iheise in ranidea.Sonth I'arolina. I ahaii 1 1 take the deposition of J. K Withers ..mi si:.( others, to I read in a salt now eod.ng in ihe Siisrrior Court "i i.rninr ruuniv. .Mntli t arolina. s heie you are defendant and I ass plaintiff" MARY A. CAMPBELL. ov. 10 lsap. -.!. i.rnr fee ?3 5 Dr. I. W. JONES, nAylXG lO'-R'el! i Piefcssii.)...; :.i rvi th. hceontmrtrtl rjtrpet. nppi. ife'lte u t: -. t and next door io tbe Law atCiy ( lion, Iturtfri Craigr, May H5C9-U.

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