THE DANBURY REPORTER. VOLUME VI. THE REPORTER. PUBLIHH ET> WRKKLY AT DAN N . C . PEPPER {• SONS, PUBLISHERS AND rROPRIETORB. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Year, payable in advance, $1 SO Six Months, - • - 100 RATES OF ADVERTISING. One Sqaare (ten lines or less) 1 time, $1 00 For each additional insertion, - SO Contracts for longer time or more space can ks made in proportion to the above rates. will fie expected to remit according to these rates at the time they ( *ad their favors. Local Notices will he charged 50 per cent, higher than above ra'es. Business Cards will bo inserted at Ten Dol lars per annum. 0 r. DAT, AI.UERT JONES DAY & JONES, Manufacturers of 84DDLERY, HARNESS, COLLARS, TRUNKS, Jc. Me. 33U W. Baltimore street, Baltimore, Md. nel-ljr It. r: KING, WITH JOIINSOS, SUTTON ft 0., DltY OOUDS. Nos. 25 aud 2U South .- harp Street., BALTIMORE Mi). T. W JOHNSON, R. M. SUTTON. t. B. R. CHAliliK, (J. J. JOHNSON ael-ly H. U. MARTIN DALE, WITH WM. J. C. DULANY & CO . HUtioners' ami ttuoksollers' Ware house. BCUOOL BOOKS A SPECIALTY. Stationery of all kinds. Wrapping Paper, Twines, Bonnet Bo.'irds, Paper Blinds. •32 W. BALTIMORE ST., BALTIMORE, MD B. J. k R. E. BEST, WITH UENItY SONNEBORN k €O., WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS. 20 Hanover Street, (between Uerman aud Lombard Streets,) BALTIMORE, MD. U. lONNEEON, B. SLIMLINE 47-lj 0. WATKINS. t t W. 8. ROBERTSON O. L. OOTTRELL. / I A. 8. WATKINS. H AIKINS, COTTKEI.L ft CO., Inporters and Jobberi of HARD WARE, 1307 Main Street, BICHMOND, VA. Agents for Fairbanks'* Standard Scales, *h4 Anker llrxnd Bolting Cloth. Aagust 26, 1880. JNO. W. HOLLAND, WITU T. A. BRIAN ft CO., Mankfacturers ol FRENCH and AMERICAN CANDIES, in every vaiiety, and wholesale dealers in FRUITS, NUTS, CANNED GOODS, CI GAR*, ,j-c. It and 241 Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Md. *•"" Orders from Merchants solicited, 'ft® WILLIAM Dtvaixs, WILLIAM It. DRVHISS, essisTiAn usvbiis, of s., soi-ouo* KIMMILL. WILLIAM DKVItIES & CO., Inporters and Jobbers of F«r«ign and Domestic Dry Goods and Aotions, 111 West Baltimore Street, (between Howard and Liberty,) BALTIMORE. J. W. MENJ3FEE, WITH PEAItRE BROTHERS i CO. laporters and Jobbers of Dry Goods. MBN'B WEAR A SPECIALTY. Hoi. 3 and 4 Hanover Street, Aaguatß , 'Bo 6m. BALTIMORE. aoaisT w. rowißS. ii>OAR D. TATLO . R W POWEItS ft CO., WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, Dealers in FAINTS, OILS, DYES, VARNISHES, French and American WINDOW GLASS, PUTTY, &C., CIGARS, SMOKING AND CHEWING TOBACCO A SPECIALTY. 1305 Main St., Richmond, Va. August 26—6 m J. W. RANDOLPH ft ENGLIBiI, HOOKBELLERB. hTATIONERS, AN " BLANK-BOOK MANUEACTERERB. 1318 Mainrtreet, Richmond. A Larf Stock LAW BOOKS alwtyt en ael-Ssa hand. j. a. ABBOTT, or N 0 , with WINGO, ELLETT ft CRUMP, RICHMOND, VA., Wholesale Dealers in BOOTS, SHOES, TRUNKS, &C. Prompt attention paid to orders, and satis faction gauranteed. /MP" Virginia Slate Prison Ooodi a tpcnaUy March, «. °>. ESTABLISHED 1844. 8. T. DAYIB —with— T.J.MACRUDER&CO., Manufacturers and Dealers in •BOOTS, SHOES AND BROGANS, Ms. 11 Sharp Street, Baltimore Md. Aa«att 141 878. OBLIVION. BY C. SUSSSL CHRISTIAN. Upon a high o'erhanpinfr rock I Blood And cast * stone into the floods below me; And as it fell, remembered that the sword Of Death could in an instant overthrow ui»! K'en as into the billows sunk the atona, 80 sink mankind into Oblivion I Before a widely-burning (ire 1 stood And cast a leaf into the flames before me ; And as it burned. rema>uber»d that the sword Of death could triumph in an instant o'er ma I K'en is the Imtlet scorched amid the flames So In Oblivion perish human name* I Far /rom lha iftfm'i t*volvtoz whee 1 T stood And viewad its mad cireer with fmir and sor row ; And as it raved, remembered that the 9word Of Death could mark for men strange >o-raor row I K'en us revolve* the whirlwind through the skies, So dark Oblivion rolls when Nature dies 1 A Pretty Qerman Custom. There is x beautiful custom among the Germans of having chorals played from thp church towers at regular hours of the day It is said they first derived the idea from the Arabs, who at certain hours of the day and night are called to prayers by the long wailing cry of the muezzins from the minarets of the mo w qaes When I firet heard this music in Stuttgart, com ing us it appeared to me from the heav ens, 1 was puzzled to know its objeot, and th« s urcea whence it cauie. I gazed abrve and around me, but I failed to detect its source. The beautiful melody, softened by distance, was floating in the air. It was like the invisible heavenly choir that enraptured St. Cecelia. A few days afterward, happening to be in the sauie neighborhood, and at the same hour of the day, I was m >re fortunate in my discoveries I again heard the musio from above, its pealing notes com ing to me from some far distance like the strains of a church organ. Near me was the Stifts Kirehe.an old ohurch, built in 1308, wi.ich has attached to it an im mense octagon tower, rising to a height of nearly two hundred leet. Encircliu'g this tower, near the top, is a balcony, on which I at last espied the au'hors of the strange musio. Several men with brass instruments were perehed on that giddy height claying sacred uiusio. When they had finished one piece they moved to an other position on the balcony and played a different tune. Four selections n all ' were played, one toward each* point of the compass On making inquiries after ward, I found that this playing from the ohurch tower had been practiced for uiore than a hundred years A German ludy "once upon a time" belonging to one of the noble families, bequeathed a sum of money, the income of whioh was ever after to be devoted to paying tbo expen sea of this religious observance. The olause in her will stated that chorals or selections of sacred musio were to be played from this church tower twice a day, punctually every morning at the rising of the sun, and also from half-past II to 12 st noon. The musicians for their services are paid two marks (fifty cents) a day eaoh—a mark for the morn ing and a mark for the noon service— which, for walking ap and down that long flight of steps, in addition to play ing several pieces of church music, is a small enough remuneration. Chorals are also plsyed from another of the church towers ia Stuttgart by a brass band, and also from ohurch towers in Ludwigsburg Rossenstein, Friedrich shafen, near Stuttgart, and in others of the very old German oities and towns Letttr to Springfield Republican. Death From Tight Lacing. The evil of tight Iseing was shown at an inqueit whioh was held by Dr. Dan ford Thomas, coroner for Central Mid dlesex, England, upon ths body of Mrs Amelia Jury, of 19 Bolton road, Kil burn. Dr Frederiok A Hill, in his ev idence as to the cause of death, stated that upon tmkmg a post mortem exami nation he found that the stomaoh was oontraeted in the middle by a firm band, narrowing it to one-eigbih of ita usual site, so there were virtually two stomaohs and this contraction was on a level witb a deep indentation on the liver, corres ponding to where the stays were tightly 1 bound around. The liver itself was flattened out, sod was driven down very deep into the pelvis also, and there waa DO doubt that this was also produced by tight lacing. The coroner said that be some time ago bold an inquest where it was shown that the liver had been very seriously injured through tight laciog, sod perhaps these osses would act ss a caution against the practice adopted. DANBURY, N. C., THURSDAY. JULY 28, 1881. The Care of the Matohes. In nothing about, tho household does the injunction to have "a place for everything" require more strict enforce ment 11.an in the care of matches What ure known as "parlor oistchcs" light the most readily, and are us much more danuerous than the common matches as they ore more convenient. The general siook should be kept in s tin ►hox, which is not 10 bo opened or Jjkcn fro» accept bj ■nfie timber or mistress of the bouse. For each roooi where ui itches ate und thore should he a metal match.safie of som« kind, and the uiaiohes are to be kept in that and no wh.-re else It should be regarded as a serious > ffeocc for a mate!) to be anywhere or tor over so short a time found "lying around loose." In the kitchen and the bedroom, or wherever else matohes are iu frequent use. it is better t> have the match-sale fixed aud always in the same place, ao that it can bo found, if need be, inthedaik. In taking matches from the larger box to replenish the safes, let that always be done by one person, audit will pay for that person to look over the matches at the time, throwing away all broki n ones ; aud where, as is often the case, two or more are stuck together by the explosive mixture, these should be carofuily broken apart, and unless two good mutches are the result, rather than to put into the safe one with too little and the other with a tagged excess ol the mixture, throw both away. Alst throw into the fire those matches that have two or three times as much of the mixture on the ends as thoy should have. These, iu lighting, uf'en explode aud scatter burning partieleß in a dan gerous manner. If, in lighting a mutch, day or night, it break", or the explosive eud comes off without lighting, do noth ing else until that end is found, and put into the fire, or where it can do no harm In fact, treat laatobe?,' drery match, as it were, us it really is, a firearm, oapable of dangerous mincheif to person and property. Teach the ohidren to careful ly observe the same caution. — American Agriculturist. The German Cookery School. I was sixteen yours of age, and, accord ing to a common custom of Uermao families, I bud 10 go for twelve month) 10 what is culled a cookery school, in order to learu there everything that is expected from a German house wife ThisSustom is not uuiversal in Germany, but it prevails in many districts, espe cially in the northwestern provinces. A girl may be a Countess or a Baroness, a clergyman's or a general's daughter, or else the child of a butcher or a shoemaker. It does not signify how or whero shs has been born, or what her rank is. Tho manners of her country require that, whoever she is, she should kuow how to cook, wash, iron, to clean the rooms, mend the lenon, and plant the garden. Of oourse 1 do not mean to say that all girls, even io those parts of Germany where the custom is most general, are forced to undeigo this training Verv many, as may be imagined, shirk it, aud some parents do not feel the necessity of imposing this useful education on their daughters* Yet the good sense of the majority makes them ulivc to its advantages For it must be remember ed that, whether a woman's future life obliges her to do these thiugs herself or not, aud even if ber positiou io (he world allows her to keep as many servants as she ohooscs, these V£ry servants, being German servants, expect her to know how to do all the work whiub she requires of them. There is only 000 difference between a Bironess and the ohild ot a tradesman. The latter learns the sever a! duties 1 have meutioncd in her father's house and from her mother; while the former leaves her home to learn tb« same details of domest 10 service in* strange bouse.— Cornhilt Magazine HONORED AND BLSST —Wheo a board of eminent physicians and ohemists an nounced the discovery that by combin ing some well known valuable remedies, the most wonderful medicine was pro duced, whioh would oure suoh a wide range of diseases that most all other re medies could be dispensed witb, mauv were skeptical; but proof of its merits by actual trial has dispelled all doubt, and to-day the diso*verera ef that great medicine, Hop Bitters, are honored and blessed by alias benefactors — Democrat •'Here's a fiy in my soup, waiter " "Yes, very sorry, sir, but you oan throw away the fly and eat the soup, can't you T" "Of oourse I oan , you didn't expect me to throw away the soup and eat the fly, did you t"— Austin Sift ing*. -! 1 KAUT DISSASK Wheo an individu al is reported to haye died of disease of the heart, we are in tho habit of regard ing it as an iujvitable event, as some thing whioh c.uld not have been fore seen or prevented, and it is too muoh the habit, when persons suddenly fall down dead, to report the heart as tho esuss ; this si'encee all inquiry and in vestigation, and saves the rouble and nirnoe of post mortem. A truur would have a tendency to save many lives. It is through a report of disease of the heart that ninny an opium eater ia let off iuto the grave, whiih covers at osce his folly and his crime; the brandy diinker, 100, quietly slides around the corner thus, and is heard ot 00 more ; io short, this report of disease of the heart is the mr.ntlc of charity which the folite coroner ar.d sympathe tic physician throw around the graveß of generous people. At a scientific con gress at Strasburg it was reported that of sixty-six persons who had suddenly died, an immediate and luithful post mortem showed that only two pe tons had any heart aflVction whatever—one sudden death otjly in thirty-three, from diseases of the heart. Nine out of sixty die of apop'ejy—one out of every sevnn j while forty-si*—moro than two out of three—died of lung affection, half of them congestion of the lungs, that is, the were so full of blood they could not work ; there was not room eoough for air to «et in to support life. It is then of considerable practical in tercut to know some of the common every day causes of this congestion of the luugs, a disease which, the figures above being true, kills three times as many persons at short warning as apo plexy and heart disease together. Cold feet, tight shoes, light clothing, costiyo bowels sitting still until chilled through alter having been warmed up by labor kor a long* t»o mddenly from a cls!|S, heated room, as a lounger or listener, or speaker, while the body is weakened by continual application, or abstincuoe, or heated by a long uddtets; these are tho frightful causes of sudden death in the form of congestion of the lnngs; but which, betog falsely reported as disease of the heait, and regarded as an inevitablo event, throw people off their guard instead of pointing them to their true cause, all of which are avoid able; and very easily so, as a general rule, wheo the uiiod has once been in telligently drawn to the subject — Hall's Journal of Health The Human Manufactory. A man may eat and drink heartily all day, and sit and lounge about, doing nothicg, m one sense of the word ; but hia body must keep hard at work all the time, or it will die. Supposo the stom ach refused to work within ten minutes after a hearty dinner, the man would die in convulsions ia ufew hours; or cholera or oramp colic would rack and wreck him. Supposing the pores of the skin—meaning thereby ths glaudutar apparatus with which they are oonncct ed—should go on a "strike," he would in an hour be burning up with fo"er, oppression would weigh down tho sys tem, and soon beoome insupportable Suppose tho liver becomes mulish, ap petite would be annihilated, food would be loathed, torturing pains would invade the small of the baok, and the head wout4 acho to bursting. Suppose the kidneys shut up shop, aud danfeers more imminent, sufferings more unbearable, and death more certain, would be the speedy and inevitable result. If the little work-sbops of the eye should close in an hour ho could not shut nor open them without physical ftroe, and in an other hour be would be blind; or if thoee of tbo tongue should olose, it would beoome dry as a bone and stiff as steel. To keep such a complication of machinery in working ordsr for a life time is a miracle of wisdom; but to work them by the pleasures of eating and driuking is a aiiraole of beneficence. Mr. Davis' demonstration of the right of the South to secede is OODOIU sive. His proofs that the Southern people were more fondly devoted to the maintenance of the rights, honors, im munities and dignity of American eiti tensbip than were those who forced them to lake the step they did, are unsn awsrable. That the right to Uke that etep was not aegatived by tbe war, is, in obr view, a postulate, and needed not the labor with whioh Mr. Davis has enunciated it. But io this connection ■'loyal" reader* will God a flood of light shed on the peculiar teoeta of men whom they have long ago canooited among the Patriots of the Republic.—Sdtxin wo/i AVirs, Dcm. Will 1 be Like You, Papa P A gentleman who for years has been niore or less under tho influence of liquor, and whose red nose and bloated figure stamped him as an inchriate, had gone home to his wife and children in this condition lie was not unkind in acts or words. It was his delight to pluy at games with his little ones, as be wns Bb'e, and to 1 uttrUifl them u.U\. wo'riJcrfuTsii.ms On this occasion the family were all together in the sitting room, and the usual gamos having been played, little Freddie, a lad about six years of age, had climed upon his fath er's knee, and was askiug all sorts of boyish questions He talked as a child will talk—of what he would do when he was a "big man !" asked if he would be like papa then ; and finally, after a long und serious look into his father's face, with every shade of cl ildinh curiosity j in his voice and glance, put to him this , bewildering query : '•l'apa, when I grow up to be a man, will my nose be red like yours, and my face all swelled ?" Ah, why should that poor swollen face grow redder than it was wout to be? Why should his arms so quickly draw the boy to his breast? And why should tears flow and voice tremble as he replied io word* and tones that mado his mother's heart glad : "No, Freddie, plsase God you wont bo like me when you get to be a man, and neither will your father, my boy, for from this hour he will lead a sober life." "Ho like him !" he had never thought of that before, and th 3 hare possibility staggered him All the love of his father's heart cried out against him. That boy, his pride, going about with a bloated fac: aud poisoned breith! No, no ! he was not prepared for that! Never before had he own looks s(f clearly; tßey were reflected iV tffc boy's—the boy grown to manbood , and honor, affection, and resson came to the rescue The child had preached a sermon no orator oould deliver; and innocence and ignorance had accom plished what learning and logio had aim ed at in vain. Those words went home. — Baltimore Herald. Does Wealth Bring Happiness. On one of the last days of his earthly existence Mr. John ll»pkins called his devoted gardener to him and said: "I am beginning to hate this placo, beoause it does Dot briug in money. I bate eve rything that does not briog in money. Did you ever feed hogs ? Have you not observed that the strong animals bear away the ears of coru and that the weak cr ones pursue them squealingly, in hopes that all or some cl lt\f treasure will be lost or dropped ?" The gardener replied that the sketch was a true one. "Well, then," said Mr. Hopkins, "I am that strong hog I have that big ear of corn, and every pigish rascal in Balti more is intent upon stealing it or wrest ing it from me !" "Sir," he said, turn ing brusquoly to the gardener, "do you tl.ink a very rich man is happy ?" The gardener answered : "The extreme of poverty is a sad thing. The extreme of wealth, no doubt, bears with it many tri bulations." Mr Hopkins rejoined: "You are right, my friend ; next to the hell of being utterly bereft of money is the purgatory ot possessing a vas'. amount of it. I have a mission, and under its shadow I have accumulated wealth, but not happiness." Eternity. Eternity hag 00 gray hairs The flowers fade, the heart withers, man grows old and dies; the world lies down in a sepuloher of ages, but time writes no wrinkle on the brow of eternity. Eternity 1 Stupendous thought! The ever-present, unborn, undccayiog, undy ing—the endless chain, composing the lile of God—tho golden thread, entwin lug the uestiniea of the universe Eatth has its beauties, but time shrouds rhern for the grave, its honors, they aro but the sunshin of an hour; its palaces, they aro but the gilded sepuloher; its posses sions, they are but toys of obanging iortune: its pleasures they are but as burdening bubbles. Not so in tho untried bourn. In the dwelling of the Almighty oao come no lootstepa of deeay —its days will know no darkening— eternal splendor forbids tho approach of night. Its glory will never wane, for there is the everpreseot God. Its har mony will never cease, exhaustless love supplies the song.— Signs of the Times' The lienoir Topic says : The recent spell of weather is oausiog eastern peo ple to swarm to the mountains even ss the locust swsrmed upon tho land of Egypt. NUMBERS A Beautiful Sentiment. Clasp the hands meek!; over the still breast—they've no uiora work to do, close the weary eyes—they've no more tears to shed ; part the damp looks— there's no more pain to bear. Closed alike to love's kind voice and oalumny's stinging whisper. O, if in that stilted heart you have 1 —ij it vrmrn j IT from tbtl pleading eye you have carelessly turned awav ; if your loving glance, and kindly word, and clasping hand, have come— nil too late —then God lorgive you 1 No frown gathers on that marble brow as you gaze—no scorn curls the chiseled lip—no flush otwounded feelings mounts to the blue veined temples God forgive you! lor your feet too must shrink appalled from death's eold river—your faltering tongue asks : "Cau this be death 1" Yoor fadicg eye lin gers lovingly on the sunny earth, your clam my hands I'eel its last feeble flutter. O, rapacious grave ! yet another vio tim for thy voiceless keeping. What I no words ol greeting from the household sleepers ? No warm welcome from a sister's loving lip-1 No throb of pleas ure from the dear maternal bosom '( Silent all ! O, if these broken limbs were neycr gathered up ! If beyond death's swell ing flood there were no etcrnai shore. If fur the struggling bark there were no port of peace! If athwart that lower ing cloud sprang no bright bow of prom ise ! Alas for lore, if this lis all, And naught beyond. Last week there were 91 failurci in the Uuiied States. Of these 15 were in the South. Some people marry on the principle that what is not enough tor one is quite suffioient tor two. He who is most slow in makiooA the rtosf-Tntrhfittt in the' pcrfottffc ' anoo of it— lioutseau lie who never relaxes into sfurtiveness | is a wearisome companion But beware of bitu who jests at every tiling. There are not less than eleven rail roads now bciug constructed in North Carolina, And many more being pro jected. The average of cotton to the acre in North Carolina is greater than in any of th# Southern States. She produces the finest tobacco in the world. A woman in Eastern Pennsylvania became crazy on seeing her husband kiss another woman. The husband was a rascal. No true husband would ever kiss another woman when his wife waa looking Self-reliance and self denial will teach a man to drink out of his own cistern, and eat his own sweetbread, and to learn to labor truly to get his OWD living, and carefully to save and expead the good things committed to bis trust Lord Bacon. A fashontble yonng lady was seen blacking her brother's boots the other morning and the nest day she helped to do the family washing It is thought she is fitting herself to become the wife of an Italian count — l'tick. ® Greensboro Battle Ground: Two men have carried the mail between Mt. Airy, in this State, and Hillsville, Ve, for ten years. They walk and always blow a horn in regular stage-coach fash ion when approaching a postoffice. Tbe distance, we are told, is 25 miles. Oxford Torchiii/ht : We havo seen tobacco upon the' white floury lands of Northern Granville grown and cured so sweet as to render licorice, whits sugar and all flavoring absolutely superfluous aud unncci asarv. That the wrappers of southern Granville surpass those of ail other seotioos (ha numberless premiums and medal* seen in tbe farmers houses amply attest tbe fact. One perfect daimond is more valua ble thin many defeotive ones. One truth well fixed in the mind and com prehended is better than many but halt understood. A small opportunity fully realized is butter thau a great one miaimproved The wealth of affection ate sympathy aud aid is better thao gold, and fills 'he soul with most perfeet peace Faithfulness lays up treasure in the heavens which nothisg can injure and no one remove — J. M. Ltiyhton. , In commuting the death sentence of Hessy Helfmann, who was implicated ita the nmrfier of Alexander il. the Rus sian government did only what a decent regard to humanity required. The exe cution of MiS. Surratt, as an alleged ac complice of the assassin of Abraham Lioeola, was oua of the horrors of mod ern history, and it if an inefiaoeabla siaia upon A«ierioan honor. That Rus sia shrinks from tbe perpetration of a like barbsrity is one of the most hopo , lul of recent signs.