CHARLOTTE MESSENGER. Published ovory Saturday at Charlotte, N. O. By W. O. Smith. Subscript ion Rates.—Always in advance. One Year... 50 I 3 months 60 « months I 00 U months. 35 6 months 76 | .Single L'o*> *’, o Notify us at once of all failures of this i>ni»cr to roach you • n time. All money must he sent by registered letter, money order, or |K>stal note to W. C. SMITH. Charlotte, N. C. Short correspondence of subjects of interest to the public is solicited hut persons must not be disappointed if they fail to so# the articles in our columns. Wo are not responsible for the views of correspondents, -Anonymous ommunications go to the waste basket. DANCY FALSE AS BEFORE. PERSONAL. Mr. Dancy is pardoned in bis feeble ef fort. He rebutted no criticisims 01 ou.s. He writhes and groans wonderfully un der our article of lost week. We are working for a female Mininnry, and if anybody gets in the way they must take the conserjueuces. If our allusions to him are so very harmless he should not fret so much about it. We are ou r own judge and do not hesitate to attack corruption in church or state and if we fail to do good, it is not our fault but our misfort une.-Mr Dancy is pleated to style the female seminary our 4 -pet scheme'*, and says “it has suffered fearful demolition*'' He seems to think lie has killed it and boasts of it. We never claimed (o have done anything great for Zion, and do not hesitate to admit we have never done anything great anywhere. That is the trouble witli Mr John C Dancy; his head is bursting from the effects of his opinion of his own greatness. Will somebody tell 11s what Dancy has ever done? E /er since we have known of him he has been a beneficiary of somebody or society. Why then should ho assume the role of dictator. ♦ We are careful as to the use wc make of any man's name and mean all wchave said concerning Mr Dancy. He has re fused to discuss questions with us con cerning the. church, but has insisted on using personalities. If lie can’t stand what we say let him shut up. We leave it to gentlemen to judge'whether or not we area gentleman, and not.Mr Dancy. It may be that lie is incapable of knowing when he is insulted. This article is per sonal and for Mr Dancy's eye. CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. Presents ate made on Christmas as a token of love and friendship. The store windows are adorned with many bountiful things—ornamental and use ful. Many hearts will lx caused to swell with joy by the receipt of a 4 ‘pres ent from a friend,’’ on ( bristinas n orn ing and during the holidays. The ques tions are going the rounds: What art you going to give your wife, your bus band, your lover, mother, father, friend and some will say your editor? But who remembers the poor old wid ow or the poor old mm weighed down by the labors of many winters and whose lovers and friends have forgotten then*? Who will remember the poor orphan, the street urchin, dependent upon the cold c harity of a cod and thoughtless world. These have lost their best friends. Are they to I e ne glected, forgotten and allowed to suffer while wc* rejoice and make merry around our warm fires and heavy laden tables, while they shiver from the biting blast and hunger for a common meal? Let us remember our neighbors and give them all the* comfort possible; for the Christ whose birth we celebrate, was poor and lowly and rested in r. monger, and died alike for the redemption of the rich and the poor. Let each ferget his own happiness and rejoice in our eflorts to make others happy. When you give to God’s | oor, “it is more blessed to give than to receive.*’ “He that giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord.” The Proposed Railroads. There has been no measure before our people for many years that is so impor tant to the laboring classes’ as the pro posed new railroads that ar<* to voted for on January, lOh, 18K9. They are ca'cu lated to do much toward the? upbuilding of our city, county and State, ns the,' will penetrate the finest section of our State and South Carolina. They wil! give employment to a large number o« unemployed laborers, many of whom to day are asking for work and being unable to get because of the lack ofim provement in 011 midst. The building <*f tnasc mads will bring an immense- amount of capita! to 011 « State as it will cost four trims as much to build the roads in our county ss tin county will subscribe, consequently, tb< remainder inio-t come from the North and nearly the whole amount will be paid out among our laboring men. Then where is the laboring man who c an, or will refuse to vote for these* subscrfpl ions r Let every friend of labor awl of iui provement and progress s?c to it, that there is a full tutc in favor of the sub scriptions. Fcund a Firate’s Buried Hsard, According to a report from Fall Liver, Mass., s man named Eddy ]>a. founj buried in bis farm, in an old iron kettle, 1850 Spanish doubloons, which Here deposited there by one of his ancestor’', who Is said to hare ploughed the Spanish Main with Captain Kidd, as he sailed, at he sailed. Mr. Kddy is still dicin'/ his farm, in which ho expects to uncart h V least 1100,000 more, which may have been taken by Kidd from the “three ships of Spain" against which he “wen* amain.” We hope tha 1 . Mr. Eddy will be successful in his search, and thus prove—wbnt has lm>:< been doubted - that Kidd or any of bis uicu ever buried aay treasure at ail The Longest Speech on Record. The longest speech on record is be lieved to have been made by Mr. Be Cosmos in the Legislature of British Co lumbia, when n message was pending, the passage of which would take from a great many settle: s their lands. To Cos mos was in a hopeless minority. The job had been held back till the eve of the close of the session. Unless legislation was taken before noon of a given day the act of confiscation would fail. The day before the expiration of the limita tion IDe Cosmos got the iloor about 1C a. si. and began a speech against the bill. Its f.-iends cared little, for thev supposed that by I or 2 o’clock he would be through and the bill could be put on its passage. One o’clock came and Be Cosmos was speaking still—ho had not more than entered upon his subject. Two o’clock—lie was saying “in the sec ond place.” Three o’clock—he pro duced a fearful bundle of evidence and insisted on reading it. The majority began to have a suspicion of the truth lie was going to speak till next noon and kill the bill. For a while they made merry over it, but as it came on dusk they began to get alarmed. They tried interruptions, but soon abandoned them, because each one afforded him a chance to discuss and.gain time. They tried to shout him down, but that gave him a breathing space, and finally they settled down to watch tho combat between strength of will and weakness of body. They gave him no mercy, no adjourn ment for dinner, no chance to do more than wet his lips with water, no wander ing from his subject, no sitting down. Twilight darkened, the gas was lit, members slipped out to dinner in relays and returned to sleep in squads, but De •Cosmos went on. The Speaker, to whom lie was addressing himself, was alter nately dozing and trying to look wide awake. lay dawned, and the majority slipped out in squads to wash and break fast, and tlie speaker still held on. It cannot be said that it was a very logical, eloquent or sustained speech. There were digressions in it, repetitions also. But still the speaker lccptcn, and at last noon come to a ba led majority, livid with rage and impotence. And a single man, who was triumphant, though his voice had sunk to a husky whisper, his eyes were almost shut and bleared and bloodshot, lii-s legs tottered under him, his baked lips were cracked and smeared with blood. Be Cosmos had spoken twenty six hours and saved the lands.— San Francisco Chronicle. Electrical Pleasure Boats. “Electricity as a power to drive small boats* Why, of course we will soon have it, and it will be a great deal more convenient and plensant than those hot steam launches and nasty little petro leum boats.” The speaker was a prominent New Ycrk electrician, and he talked of the advantages of electricity over steam and was very sure that soon yachtsmen who could not afford large steam yachts would find electricity much the better power to use to propel their boats. He added: The machinery takes up less room, and then the heat of the furnace is not felt, because there it no furnace, and the smoke and grease are also done away v.-itli. Tiiey arc building them in England. " I have received particulars of one that has just been launched. It is sixtv-five and one-half feet in length, ten feet in beam, and is designed to carry eighty passengers at six miles an hour. The electric machinery and stor age cells are placed below the deck, fore and aft, leaving a clear run the whole length of the boat for passengers. In the middle is a handsomely fitted cabin, with lavatories, dining-room, etc. The electrical energy is converted into mo tive power by two motors of seven and one-half horse power, each driving in turn threc-bladed propellers. Beats will soon be made to store electricity and •un just as Jhe street cars do now."— if ail and Express. At a recent sate ot snort-norn cattle at Cresco. lowa, forty-eight head brought ♦soß'i, wh ch was an average of sl4i for the cows, and for the bulls sold, $99.50. Sixty thousand barrels of sour kroul are made in heading, t’enn . every year. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Mas. Winsi/iw’h Soothing Syrup, for chil dren teething, is the prescription of oneofthe beet female nurses and physicians in the I' nited States, and has been used for forty years with never-failing success by millions of mothers for their children. During the proeees of leething its value is incalculable. Itrelicves the child from pain, cures dysentery and iliar rho.-a, griping in the fiowcls, and wind-colic. By giving health to the child it rests the mother. Pride 20c. a bottle. CONSUMPTION CUBED. An old physician, retired from practice, having had placed in his hands by an East India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and perma nent cure for Consumption, Bronchitis, Asthma and all throat and I-uug Affection, also a luisitive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and all Nervous Complaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of eases, has felt it Ills duty to make it known to bis suffering fellows. Ac tuated by this motive and a desire lo relieie human suffering. I will send free of charge, to all w!n> desire it, this recipe, in (icrniar. French or English, with full direction for prcisirlngand using. Pent liy mail liy ad* d -easing with stamp, naming this pajs-r \V. A. Nofts, HO Power s Block, Rochester, M Y. Grizzly Wilson’s Last Beit. The mistake has always been in allow-i ing a bear to come to close quarters, andl yet some bold hunters will not accept fight on any other terms, preferring a| hand-to-hand encounter while armedj with nothing but a knife. This fool-, hardy notion of fighting a bear on equalj terms is well exemplified In the case of[ old Dick Wilson, or “Grizzly Wilson.”. 1 as he was familiarly called, who a short! time ago was found just over the divide, from here, dead as a door nail and most horribly mutilated. Poor old Dick was found face down-1 ward on the banks of a beautiful,j sparkling mountain rivulet, his head being crushed almost to a jelty, the nose and one side of his face entirely gone, and the left hand and wrist chewed in' such a manner that the men who ex amined it said they could not find a bone! in it even a quarter of an inch long.; The body was almost nude, the clothes' having been torn off. There were tracks of a large bear all around the body, and, the signs went to show that the brute even trampled and crushed with ha ponderous paws and weight after lifet was probably extinct. It seems that old Dick had always boasted that he could knife a bear better than any other greaser in the country could demolish’ one with a repeating shooting iron; but on this trip he was very badly mistaken' and lost His life in the trial. Soon after entering the fight (and the bear must have been a monsters from the size of hie huge footprints) the old man was compelled to take to a tree in order to get away from the animal, but as the tree proved to be of rather small dimension the big brute, by standing on his hind legs, found no difficulty in catching the man by the heel of his boot with his fore feet and pulling him down. Then a hard struggle for life took place. No doubt the hunder drove his long, keen knife into the near’s hide time and again, but as the latter must nave been heavily equipped with fat,the blade never touched a vital point. While Bruin was chewing Dick’s left hand the hunter was plunging the knife into him and slashing with his right. The forest for nearly a hundred yards all around was torn up by the roots, broken down, chewed and generally demolished, as if the animal in its rage after killing its enemy wanted to destroy everything that came in its way. Dick’s knife never was found. Probably a good search for it would discover the blade still in the bear’s hide and up to the hilt. Some of these animals have a wonderful tenacity to life. This is perhaps one of the cases. Within my own experience I know of one b : g silver-tip specimen, far away in Montana, that a nimrodic friend and my self pumped at least thirty-two bullets into before he const nted to give up the ghost. This is something like two pounds of lead, more or less, and he did not drop for good either until the last of the thirty-two pills had reached him. An Ingenious Wire Dirk. As Jailor Birdsong was making a tour around the iron cage at the Macon, Gs., jail, he espied a string hanging down on the outside from the top. He pulled the string and found that it was attached to a dirk, made of a portion of a wire bailing of a bucket. This dagger is a curiosity, and shows the ingenuity of the prisoners. It is about ten inches long, and rounded and tempered to a sharp point, and the handle is made by being wrapped with a strand taken from one of the hammocks. This handle is plaited and woven, and is not only ingenious but a pretty piece of work. Such a dag ger is a dangerous weapon, and in the hands of a strong man is as dangerous as a pistol. * The prisoner* denied knowing any thing about it, but it is supposed to have been the work of James Harmea, sent up from Worth county on the charge of stealing sheep, and who was taken to his county a few days ago for his trial. Several daggers of a similar kind have been made by the prisoners, and Harmon admitted plaiting the handles. It was evidently made for the purpose of using it on the jailer, should the opportunity present itself, but the jailer is too watch ful. Six or seven daggers of this kind have been made for that purpose, and each time the jailer frustrates the scheme by finding the weapon. Tho county |>craists in furnishing the jail with tin buckets haring wire bails, and the prisonere find breaking them up an easy undertaking. There is an in durated wood fibre bucket made that hat no wire bail or hoops and which fur nishes the prisoner with nothing that can be made into a weapon. —Macon Chronic’*. A Man With Owl’s Eyes. John C. Dooley, one of the best known of the aqueduct inspectors, is, strange to say, almost blind during daylight; at night, however, his eyesight is to good that he hat been appointed a night in spector on the masoofy work, and, it is said, can pick out a weak spot quicket than any one engaged in the same work. It is said that bn has followed under ground work so long that the pupils ol bis eyes are now more like those of the owl than thoee of men.— Fit York Hun. The principle ot percussion was pat ented by the Her. Mr. Forsythe In 1807. ; LADIES’ COLUMN. A Fairy Bill or Fare. Ladies who, since it became fashion tble to give favors at dinners, sometimes Ind themselves embarrassed by the con luct of guests who mistake articles of :able furnishings for the gifts of hospi ality, will like the new “fairy” bill of ’are, which, if not too heavy to carry iway, answers the other requsite of tafety when thieves are about, by being ;oo hot. This bill of fare is of slightly ground and roughened glnes, and is irmly fixed in a little sand, which also mpports a fairy lamp with two pretty flower holders, one on each side. The upper part of the gloss is decorated with x painted design, below which the bill of tare is written in lead pencil so that it can be washed off with n sponge. The dullest guest is not likely to suppose himself invited to carry away the lamp, and so the bill of fare is safe. It might be an improvement, one would think, tc place tho fairy lamp behind instead of in front of tho gins*, which would thus serve as a screen to keep off tho slight heat coming from the lamp, and would be more easily read, while at the same time the lamp would be more of an orna ment to the table.— Picayune. Modern Elizabethan Weddings. Word comes from the wise ones that at a swell wedding this winter there is te be a revival of lots ts quaint Elizabethan performances, and that the revival will be due to Amelie Hives, who went through them all religiously at her own wedding. So her followers will, when the outer guests are gone and tht charmed inner circle remains, take tht flowers from the bride’s hair, twist them in a wreath, and, while she is blinded witli many folds of the bridal dress, she will put it at random on the head of a bridesmaid—while with linked hands they circle about her—and the one st distinguished will be the next bride. Then the ushers and best men huddle xip at one end of the room, and the bridt at the other flings her bouquet among them; whoever catches it is the foreor dained next victim of Cupid. When tli< bride slips away to change gowns, if a maid can spy her, and following pull ofi her left slipper, she is sure to be herscll wedded within the twelve-month; also tht maid of honor gives the bride a pail of bine garters with jeweled clasps, and sees to it that in the tiring she wears: "Something old and something new, Something borrowed and something blue,' to make certain of luck nnd happiness, while tlie waiting maid must beat pains to fling away and lose every pin that was ti-ed about the wedding toilet in order that the bride may have no small worries and be always sweet tempered. - Commercial Advertiser. Women Patentee”. The Commissioner of Patents, Mr. Benton 8. Hall, has had prepared a list of women inventors or women to whom patents have ueen granted. The list has been printed and makes a folio pamphlet of forty-four pages. It gives not only the names of the patentees, but also the title of tho patent and date ol issue. The first patent issued was to Mary Kres, Mary 6, 1809, for straw weaving with silk or thread. Six years later Mary Brush obtained a patent for a corset, and then four years elapsed before another inventive woman appeared. This was Sophia Usher, whoso patent was for carbonated liquid cream of tartar. Then, again, in 1822. Julia Planton secured a patent for a footstool. During the four following years a patent was issued each year to a woman, and from that time down to the present tho number of women patentees gradually increased. In recent years feminine in ventiveness has shown marked progress. For instance, from the Ist of January, 1888, to the 16th of June last, no lest than sixty-six patents were issued tc women, while during the year 1887 17f patents were so issued. This latter u the largest ever issued. While the namci of the articles patented show that they were generally in the lino of feminine wearing apparel and household labor saving devices, yet many were of a character that shows the multiplied in terests of women. As nn instance, one woman patented a submarine telescope and lump. Others were granted as fol lows: Improvement in reaping and mowing machines, improved war vessel, furnace for smelting ores, apparatus foi punching corrugated metals, method of construction for screw propellers, low water indicator, material for packing journals and beariugs,. conveyers ol smoke and cinders for locomotives, burglar alarms for windows, etc. Fashion Notes. Fancy ornaments of jet are used in perfusion upon tho winter millinery. Heavy tinsel cord is effectively used to edge tho brims of felt hats .ind bonnets. Gainsborough and Dheciuire hats ol dark velvet are receiving a large share of popular favor. The newest cloths are octagonal in shape, and bang about tho table in rail manner of points that delight the eye in search of new effects. Kovel skeleton bonnets, somewhat after the fashion of tho open-work beaded bonnets, a e made of fine feathers mounted upon a wire frame. Ihe new ostrich plumes show com binations of very dark colors, black with dark green, navy bloc or dark brown being the extrema of sash en. Hot Milk as a Stimulant. “What folly it is to drink liquor for stimulation.” This was the observation of a leading New York physician. “Milk heated to much above 100 de grees Fahrenheit loses for a time a de gree of its sweetness and density. No one who, fatigued by over exertion of body or mind, has ever experienced tho reviving influence of a tumbler of this beverage, heated as hot as it can be sipped, will willingly forego a resort to it because of its being rendered some what less nec- "*"t*le to *1" pa'ote The prompter .. vbi b I tn c.nffixl in fluence is ’ ’• in-V J * • ' mg. Some port •>! ’ > etna to be digested and appropio* ed in,opt. immediately, and many who now fancy they need al coholic stimulants when exhausted by fatigue will find in this simple draught an equivalent that will be abundantly satisfying and far more enduring in its effects. “There is many an ignorant, over worked woman who fancies she could not keep up without her beer; she mis takes its momentary exhilaration for strength, and applies the whip instead of nourisqment to her poor, exhausted frame. Any honest, intelligent physician will tell her that there is more real strength nnd nourishment in a slice of bread than in aquartof beer; but if she loves ’timulants it would be a very use less piece of information. It is claimed that some of the lady clerks in our own city, and those, too, who arc employed in respectable business bouses, are in tho habit of ordering ale or beer in the res taurants. They probably claim that they are ‘tired,’ and no one who sees their faithful devotion to customers all day will doubt their assertions. But they should not mistake beer for a blessing or stimulus for strength. A careful examination of statistics will prove that men and women who do not drink can endure more hardships and more work and live longer than those less temperate.”— Mail and Express. A False? or Salt. The people of Salt Lake City, Utah, are contemplating the erection of a great “Salt Place ” It would be a structure that would lay in the shade all the ice and corn palaces ever constructed. The main part of the structure could I>o of the finest specimens of rock salt to be found in the quarries, chiseled, carved and artistically arranged. while the in terior fittings should be of crystalized work from the lake on a grand scale. Such a palace should be permanent if properly protected from the winter rains; it could be made of the most unique and striking style of architecture; it could be made one of the wonders of tho world. When lighted by electricity tlie structure would hare all the sparkle and diamond glitter of the great ice palaces, and with tho difference in the Salt Palace's favor that heat would not melt or dim its glories in the least.— Nevada Enterprise. The European Powers have come to an agreement to exterminate the African slave-trade. Dress Goods, Millinery, Cloaks and Jerseys, Clothing, Carpets. at— H. BAKU OS, Leader of Low Prices. E. M. ANDREWS, Has the largest ami Moat Complete Stock of FURITITTJIIE In North Carolina. COFFINS & METALLIC CASES. Pianos and Qkgans Os the Best Makes on the Installment Plan. Low Prices ami Easy Terms. Send for Price*. Chickering Pianos, Arion Pianos, Bent Pianos, Mathushek Pianos, Mason & Hamlin Pianos. MASON A HAMLIN ORGANS, BAY STATE ' ORGANS, PACKARD ORGANS, E, M. ANDREWS, : : : Trade Street, Charlotte, N. G. CURIOUS FACTS. About 1517 a wheel-lock came into use, and about 1692 this was superseded by the flint-lock. Henry V., of England, is said to have died of s “painful affliction premature ly.” This is a courtly term of getting rid of a King. The word diocese was at first applied, at that time as a civil division in Home, ascribed to Constantine, A. D., 220; but Htrabo gives un earlier date to such Homan divisions. J. P. Lindloy, of Bridgeport, Con., has the reputation of 1e ng the oldest traveling men in length of time spent “on the road.” lie is seventy-six year* old, and started out years ago with a notion wa -on selling to dealers. When the Devolution came on, the American iron inen had grown skilful enough to make tunuon uud shells foi the Continentals, also big shallow pans in which to evaporato sea water and sup ply salt when the foreign article was cut off. John A. Snider.of Siverlyville, Penn., has a silver watch that has I een in use for more than 110 years and still keeps excellent time. Mr. Snider's grand father took it from the body of a Hessian soldier slain at tho battle of Trenton in the Revolutionary War. A mushroom between two and three inches long was gathered in La Grange, Ga., recently. Its shape is that of tha foot and leg of a duck. Turned over and viewed from beneath, the foot is very similar to that of a human being, for it is broad, with the toes distinctly defined. It is said to be a curious sight to watch the little Indian children when they first come to the House of the Good Shep herd, in Denver, Col., to be educated by the Government. When they first reach the institution they go up stairs on theii hands and knees, not understanding the use of the stairs, and sleep at night un der the ted, from which they first pull the clothes. Society, in Atlanta, Ga., was recently convulsed by an apparition of a promi nent young man wearing a singular arti cle of neckwear. Tlie nrticie is known as a Napoleon fichu, nnd was made of imported Kgyptiau luce of the finest quality. It is one of those ties such as were worn years ago when gentlemen were arrayed in knickerbockers, and when their cuffs were of lace to match their tics. School life in China means something different for the boys and girl* from what it does here. The girls do not have to go at all, and the hoys begin when they are six or seven years old. There are no vacations of nine weeks, oi half holidays, or Fourth of Julys. At dawn in the morning school begins, and when it gets too dark to read school close*. Mothers are not bothered with unruly children, and much of the child's training is thus done by the teacher. Since 1861 the State Government of Maine has disbursed to the soldiers and their families needing aid the sum of *2,307,500 In (his line of Goods you can always find Lowest Prices Consistent with Reliable Merchandise.