i .1 rnjK V K E K L Y L E D G E R . T II E W E E K,b Y L K J) (i E R. Oin'OSlTK T!IK STOKE OF J. W i ' .1 1 f i.c SUUSCRirTIOX hates : ' . Tfije WEEK L V I ."KIM Ell U 1'iTl i'iiVliot ' tlo subscriners at one dollar and Uiiv ttents per copy per annum, invariab.y iii advance. Six; montlis. one dollar. ' Klj'ven copies one year, fitteen dollar&r Twenty-two copies, tuic vearf Ibirtt: A(Idres all orders to '-The WKKKLY LKlK;Kh" Chapel llil!. Nv V. . - I ' '" i i " KATES OF AI)VtllTlSIX(i : one (i mill oiwruisortioii. 4ne - I each subsequent iiij-ertioii; I tir J- rent. jMHijiI--'itrart.s m.ido for larger adver- VOLU31K FOR THE PUBLIC OOOIX ft ' 4,:il-i4iiM'JuVurs "slnmld be . sent in bv CHAISE L HILL'! N. C, SAT1JU.DAT. J ULY 5; 1879. j jujis'Iay Iet(re each day of issue. - , . . - ' - I s:frr Ff 'fify 4 , ! I . !4 ''hi THE UNIVERSITY OK3IAL SCHOOL. i . ; ; . . - -tii nil) Vhum. ? j if Veiliieslay, Junc'.i!,"). MXTII DAY. Li:im;i:u reports have been ,-.,!. riMi''l' alinost exclusively to the ic, delivered in the col I T . 1 . ' w. niiapei. ii neing ioiuui ininos- Kih!e, p en at a Aunn:il School, to le in Iwo'plaees at once, we have h ul t let "those exercises. m, hitvh art cxnbicted simultaneously in the -trioiis hfils outside the chapel. In 4id not no easy or prohta reQ?"t recitations, ami there-' e the more willinirlv confine itlcnlion to the speakers in the thtpel. I- li aver j ami reading, as usual. Prof L'nhl again complimented ;he map so constantly, hamlles his col-.; Hasten ore I chalks in such a masterly wiv raSvs ami illustrates and : defines I jivonl shmlv. Notation and .Nu meration spoken, word, written with such ease, beauty and clearness that to report his talks is to leel an Junpminious sense of having 'done hiit) injustice.) j Habitable part of North America is jrom uuuude 10 to ou. , Alan is the creature of th Arabic ' method dtoman. Iow is it than by means of 10 char acters we can express all -numbers. ioman has 7. ; " PjiOF. TOML1XSOX. In language, the're must be growth the coridi- a t ing language.' tut it OUT 1 aii'l e.n:iii"e. I uv :ire ;.. tij ... ... i uonoi iiie. ii our language i n i not in. 11 ey say the Devonshire cows, ; , ; ... ; i ill H Itirl'lllil ill'il lili I i.wuli.n lli.iir .ml ' i , , i , t ; lnstancef given ot changes in (Jreat mountain masses ot' North! .America in the West. Narrow, open to winds, and influences of the Pa cific. The two Americas have some likeness. -IJoth extend North and South. lth have great mountain ranges on West, ami small ones oh East, ito I Jut the likeness ceases when we look at the water 'dtsi ribu- si KooB eacii with State, Prof. upon its punctuality, .li KiiL't'tje 1-A Harris ot the university. our friend ot the Crayon portraits, is been intending to spcml his Yicati-ju in Haleigh, but so far has hcen unable to tear himself from the Normal School lectures, presented ' t la . i trie senoiars tins morning copy ot.4,Ihe Old North and of uHo! for Carolina.'" Ladd wants everybody to coipmit theni both to merpory till can sing -mem wncncYcr we we cllOOSt throwing i" and till vc all feel like our hats "over the touth PUOF. -M IVKR. ' How toUlevelop the" faculties, of the! child's mind V is. the question that lies behind the inquiry How tcacn : in all vour experi- apply this test - lots this de- tfie faculties ;'' 1 he bodily are the avenues d approach knowledge. Cultivate them shall I merits velop senses for !all first. Cultivate the faculty of atten tion. in ari'tljioetic we cultivate the perceptiv'e faculties. You can uot.te;tch about color by talking. Thd sense f of sight is needed. In, geography you teach through -the. eyei Also in arithmetic, as I have been trying to impress on you. You ca nnot attach too much impor lauce to drawing. AH our teaching is accomplished by J-its aid. It is violating nature to teach a child to reason. It; is the thiny before his eyep, that fdevelops the idea in the child's mind. Test your success in teachiiig by its conformity to nature Kindergarten work. :Every J large school should have a teacher 'who I underslands and can teach - it. But uo school should depend on it to any great extent. Its time is neces sarily 'short. After the child has learned 10, '.arithmetic -work w ith him is easv. - Arrange numbers, 'o to peak, in 1undles of ten. Take two tps ;twenty. Pleasure the' numbers in , every possible way synthetic process. Then take them apart in every way analytic. De- thought by, exhibiting tact. it is exhibited yi thought and When vou get to il)0 you have ton bundles' of tens. Easv to go ou to 200, 300, 1,000. By this time you vill have taught as much "(and much better) as in the old method by'the four great rules and the! mjdtiplication table. Teachers iu our rimart schools ought to be thorowjldy well educated, r j PUOF TOMLIXSON'-L n J ii ammar. rVcrb has three nioods, as said yesterday: Indicative. Subjunctive, Imperative. .Two tetT: ses: Present, l'refc Those :v"ses lve three I forms, Em halic, Pro gressive and Simiile. Take ui the ! tlOll. I r "J Altitude should mean 0)dy eleva tion above sea. Consideration now I . . !..... . 1 1 . .: n-:.1 l'l l.li-l'l iiu: tUIIUIlflll. lllU-iUl'l country, mi(Iand pieilmont, fcc, S:c. , The piedmont most beautiful as lovelv as-the lovely land .of Northern Italy. Blue Ridge;-Appalachian Mississippi valley, etc., ivjc. Why has the"' .Mackenzie valley so many lakes ?, The stfeam is sluggish the land slopes very little hardly .six inches to the mile. Hence, the water stops and spreads outiii lakes. Why does the t. Lawrer ce run N.' E. To avoid the Atlantic high lands. Beginning. in North (yarolina alid Georgia, tliese highlands decline to tne Jsortu, ami so attoni a jiace for tlie Erie cimal, and the course of Mississippi river commerce is; turned North. Hocks next. Do rocks and continents grow ? Description of Rocky Mountains. Limestone first.! Next Silurian age. f Chapel of Washirgton Lee Universit V built d the bones ot ; corals' Devonian sand-rocks. Carboniferous era veg etation.' ito. . Ecci 'i school- room should luicc samples of all the rocks of the counint. brouuhtliu and labelled by the. scholais. OX XOKTH CAUOIJN'A. The basis of Geographical edge is 'that, which is arov North Carolina is the world larger portion. 'of its people. urouiii. oi verus u I list rated prof. M'tvihi. Lesson on "Reading, i lrojter pro nunciation of letters of i,he alphabet - phonetically. Labials. , dentals, palatals, aspirates, tfce.i Distinct ar ticulation insisted on. (Discussion l lollovveil on i)ronunciation of com mon, words.) ' . " ' I'KOF.. llOTCliKIS. i .,- : . ' : ; 'M On Europe. ; (Fine 'maps accom pany every sulycct.). f V ny does . iemiyson say "Letter fatty years of extreme north end; of the island, t h ey da 1 1 r ea r ". Vh r n bs o. . 1 y by bu i 1 d -in high stone? walls to protect them from ,t he cold winds of the Atlantic, Scenery Sal isbuijy crags Ed in-, burg.: Ingenuity how stimulated Larch seed; lantptVthick and the p!nts pulled. u: at different periods of their growth to be used in differ ent industries at one heightiJbr pea sUcks at a- subsequent growth iojvnop-poiesi. later on lor use in uQxQil. minds and for railroad. -ties. left to groV for shade -Mother wit in great there, i London fhnd- have highest temperature of lir.y ani-. iiiuu, uiougu qi -lower raiiK tnan ine niammalia. (iKxnmples. animal tempe given ;it tire.) . LtTect Jtyity in n oitjoting 'higher ..tempera ' in lay. and. pi Finally a few anil beoiity. exercise over &c. (Examples j ou ture. CliangeJ sleep, . board.) ' . l'KOr, HOTCIIKISS on Asia and Africa. Asia!. great continent, bixteeit ,"s ght black-i ed m Jong ago tliej date uncer Kinsington museum. British- am Speaks of'lhe : great; china manufic toiies.j Of -a set ordereil bv Empress of Russia, each piece costing $300 ; the paintings done by hand. So with every indusiry-f-.of the! best kind. Eiiglaiul is a great j object', school room, illustrating: England's great- I .1 t -i i t r jMirope inau a cycle oi,iamay. lie has reason -on his side. ' jLife, ac cording to Daniel Webster1, is to be ineasured not by years but by the passing, of ideas, thought, emotion through the mind. Europe is trre centre of -civilizatioiu rNote' its po sition, Distribution of waters, Coast line which is its distinctive feature. All lands deeply peneira t.'Wl by the arms of the sea have an equable climate.' No Avater come to it from the East. - Moisture from1 cloud,. mists, -etc., on the West. Of Enghfnd it 'may be said that it is al wet ; always In all Friday, June 27. KLRVKNTIi-; DAY. - i 1 ' 1 -:.':.f Piayer t)y ProraLadd. He .com plimeiits the school again on its uni form punct ualit Seldom seen the like anywhere. 'Great good done themselves by - this. Twenty-third psalm recited. Old North State to be learned. Makes the school prom ise to do iL Knows that when sea. was land. keb wi nd us. to the The ve od Thong action. A assiv. (This is what may be called mass ot vegel: Phil osophy of the English Lan j it spreads out more they learn about it the better citizens theyVbecome. Two-tbirds, of tie time given to Geography should be given to your own State. Next to that Pngland. Nextjto that the Holv Land. Next the rest of P2urope, and in the dim listance Asia and Africa 1 ( ' - Takes Orange couhty (draw6 its outlines on board.) This is the way. How good for the pupil )Lo" ,see. Whatever they do, make them do it with1 all tlveir might and rapidly. Ought to be sable to give piap of neighborhood iir fives minutes, j North Carolina as large as England. But London has three times as many in habitants as all" North Carolina. Find out what your State is in order to know what it ought to be (Draws outline of N. C.) This 'is the frame work. Considers the Gulf Stream .and its influences! : Fish caught on N. C. coast do not live in that warm water but in the polar stream ; sliallow waters inside the GulfVtrcam. (Outlines the. relief of I the State.) ! 1 . lilies ot animal lite veeiaine growth, &c. Climatic conditions. Mountain growths, &c. Albemarle sound, fresh water oystersi don't like it. Filling1!! to the Pllstward with snm . bine market gardens there spuue day ias in Eastern Vir ginia. Dismal sw:Jmp . ilescribed Great - mass of .ooze. Ninety pei ceit vegetable matter. A trembling it ion. In rainy seasons ways wet and never dry and never dry. In a-Jrapi'V i m v i state of equilibrium. Middle of Eu-j rope low country bed. of receding North Sea covers'-'what-, once It is a very shallow sea. Relief of Europe. (Blackboard drawing.) Italy Greece. Maiiv ditlereut nationalities in these Euro pean "lingers" Flanders the great liallle.field ot Europe. .Spain cool climate nierino sheep creature of tie higiflands Mediterranean tiot a .tidal tiGf. Shallow. jAction of hot inds f Tom ifrica described. ..hi mai life not so exuberant as withiis, tc. " Productions. WorKTs great wheat field in tiie South.' -Greatest' wheat market o' eaith. in Odessa, tjts prices regulate the price pi heat, in Noith Caroliiia. iiieh al luviae " plain b!ac,k. earth. Sends vkfhcat to England, the great, bread eating land which raises vast crops and yet imports 100,000,000 bushels. Lullab corn a crop'unknown. Not yarm enough. Season too short Common people live on rye, oats;- Rirds consiotered. Trees. Inter esting to note how huiiian influence has modified Inature on shores ot'tjie Mediterranean. ' Europe is the hisloi ic c.ontineut. Conflict between nations produced that higher intellectual life which is characteristic of "Europe... Arabs liave been school-masters: of the yorld. Norsemen adventurous, sea tiring. Great' advantage in the mingling ot races. Happy now to answer questions. V number of gentlemen accord ingly propounded queries, tVJC.) , i:n(iland (at night.) t Intel esting lo us all. Worlh'y i . . . ! .... i I . . v our best attention, uumuauou, mil lion.- Position. Relief. Climate. North thing Carolinians! pj-omise to do a they M I do Jit, ; though they're mighty slo w about promising some times.';! ; . .'; i-.-.!' v I .riUF. 1I(,)TC"II KISS p , gave a' charming lecture upon Arith nietic. ' Sin feit of text books nien 'al 'dyspepsia prevails on the subject. 'Adatijs' Arithmetic' the best: What is i t his stmlvi fbr 'i To tiraiii the miiid to think - That is of first importance. Second, to give facility in use of numbers.; How many of you cap read numbers-? low inany can look round this "hap.et andtell at oiie glance how uiaufv. pillars :vv in it ? Or.the janes of gTass are in ; the "widows.. Njone of vou can. You caift read numbers. It isjustas easy to see how. many .at, one glance as to see wh .t. Teach children lo read at siyht. How is it to be. j done ? lty doing it: ; Two hours aVtay should be given t(').nuin beis. Not all at one time of course ---not even forty: :miiiutes. at once. Bo on your feet at the black-board. Teach them one thing the figure 1, the word one, and nothing else! till they are thoroughly , T';ey will s5on be hungry for two. Tell them what is to come next day, and they won't Avaii'lo1 miss it. , '; We must go from; the known tolthe unkiiown, from - the ' isim.pl e to the complex, from the whole to its parts. Some man will testify: in.'court that he saw only one bear; another he saw -a thousand. They have ilnn it '"niini I lor i iuvi vi uuiuevi j f , ; Responses should be required the minute yon place aching in sight. The closest wide aV ake attention. The. - primary course is teach'ng ideas, i: '....;! ; ' . j . . Intermediate course comes next. Let a teacher look at . himself, and judge his own work.) "What have I done;?'' All arithmetics in Amer ica teach -nonsense about Decimals. Take thread and needle and sew: tip the pages in your j books about. "Decimals. f of ac- i s- tlie a half niiilion sqiiare niilesJ IMorq than half the world s iiojiulation. All its features gigantic,.- ' f Tit . y - l l -X ' 'ii iiuustraiions on utacRooarl show ing difference in the disjfositp)ii of vsiaiiami European nigniaptis.; All "the feat u res of Asia in Vi and .'r Iropo!libns. Rich -in relief-4-iich in outliiie. Africa- has relief. Slbut no outline.! China 'the oldest Viriliza tion, etc. Asia home of.-ii'Sjj na t ions cradle of the . race. AV h;tt cve.r other continents have, put it in tlie superlative' '.degree, and ybtj have me 'Asiatic ieat tires of; it, ,LJ. self contained continent. "WeaTih of the Indies,v1a proverb v Inch; stimu lated to j the qisc)very of , America Many itain- e the "niter. liimal such, such from e eat- (Splendid map to - slrow i;eliefsl i unique inns tao-um.os. nations, many languages. 31 ou passes 6f Hitnalayas are; abov snow line inipnssabie ,in w Mi: EvJrest 10,000 leet; A life conidered. No where poisonous aiiimais no wn-ere- immense lorms oi nie. .tnousaud deaius in one year 1 ....-,' - -i - , J poisonous -serpents. -egetal ing people. Ten times as many can be supj)oited on ' vegetable ;fo)d as oil animal. 31 1 . Sinai the great pass opens 'through what was once undoubtedly the bed of the Jordan. i lit - Vast plains qf Arabia makrjit an iincohquered country ; no .witter, no gri at river to be the ' artery of the nation. 'Tis variety that giies life. India 'owes' its importauce I to its great contests. . 1 I The great hiountaiir ".passes be tween Imba and Persia-bave isefldom Never furl her England went round t I laid It been crossed.. the Indus. tne inoutn or tne vjranges am her hand on the heart of Indi: has immense -t.r.iile,' wealth, Sic. dia house in 'Loudon ?ives m idea. Sofa there covered wfih cious stones, diainom emeralds. Not! so lli an lap, always uncertain; wished to outflank the Confederate army. Lin-, eoln, undoubtedly one .tf the ablest I Lof rueii, wished him to go straight to ' a Winchester. Je .Lihnstoii at Alanassasj Banks refused . Jackson ba'tle, so hd .fell back. Asbby,. a . nian of geiiiusheld the rear. Jack sou h.ilted at Ml. Jackson. ' ' : All tbe streams run acrdss tho Valley at right ang7e8 to it. Great sjbbne road i uu I hrough Winchester :(nd Harper's Ferry to 'Baltimore. Many brave especially ol the 21st Ns. C., have left their bloody track on this road ; "Stonewair' Jack-' feoir, origin of the rdekname. A nan who knew hot liar, .lie Ijinl . ad no advantages ot. education till e worked his way to Westl Point " Mit r.e'.v'er could spell iiv;vr wrotu i inis-s e'lel letter. Always "kept a. u-l ioi.ar v bv -liim : 1 hail . :ftul tin? Ibble, and Napoleon's iMaxiniB of War.---His bravery .in the -Mexican war. Twice ni oniot ed. -His visit o. the bait lefieldsof Europe.11 Ilia eligious', principles, ijbseivai.ee ot he Sabbath, ttc. : (Ileie followed the spirited ami brilling nariation of 'Jnekson's caiii aign, which -the LkimjKH reporter ijonlisscs an litter inability to i:sti(e to anl therefore declines thu. attempt., Peili5j)S it would be an ven iiuater iniustjce to report it . rrbatim. since - it is to be often re- ated. Its object is, as the speaker iiiU'sjn the beginning, to show-lho f .".hie ol t(qrgiaphical knowledge' ; iid; to describe wliat by its aril and :fu mdelatigable .energy and.activity. ijlie heiy valor of a 'gieat pulitary; genius acconiplished hi 6ne reason. ti The story -annot be told too ofU'n j iii or become loo familiar to Soullien ars.) :; ' ' .; Saturday, June 28. TWELFTH DAY. v 'f After the usual opening exerclscH iiu the Chapel. ;ind some remarks jmd iliolices given oill by lrof. Ladd, the rsormal Sc4iord Debatiiig Club wan iln order. Subiec't ' ''Shall a snecial at her' than a general course if . 'Ed it an pre- nds, v s-ipiires, com fort abie as i stones adorn hat no like a thing of life- ?age. on dialysis lin rt:oF. r.LAit: i "Thanatopsis read and L esson in ! I'KOF. HOLT. bes: rau'mg. Free baud. ruoF. flVEIl 0,1 ; R ading. Teacher must read Ht'll. 1 imself. Make children read Oieiro'vn compositions. .Read slow-Jv- i (C alls up ladies i read.) Prof, plair cad Barefoot Boy. Discus- jon on pronunciation of squirrel. Capt. Jadv Dugger read- extract from tt' the Lake. Prof. Mclver r.ead Hamlet's Soliloquy. Prof. Eng lish read Death of the nowers. Miss The A m - I 10 t IiiTiL- 1. " " 1 v t mi T . Johnson read also Mr. ' Corriher, Mr, liridgers, Jkc, &c. - rUOF.'IIOTCIIKISS. j United States. Teach people k on their feet. Iake children o to blackboard and give ; a syn- VP'sis of the whole lesson. ' n.. j . r ... oi. 11. uses olack board and above suriounding country, tfce. - miss coe. j ' The Kindergarten is. going'. on in the same .trackl as last yeaf. The scholars are largely a new set, and to most of them the system is en tiroly new: ', 3Iiss Qoe herself is as indefatigable' and hard-wo i king as ever. Her instructions turn 'on the identical ofessors! in all the departments. Follow nut ure Go slowly, j Insist on development: of faculties;, observation, thought, memory; mid let your teaching be otjectice: Cultivate the Jive senses. same pivot and arc often with those of the Profess ; Thursday, June 20. TENTH DAY. j School opened with prayer by Kev. 31 r. Cheshire. Remarks by" Capt. Dugger-r-by Prof. Ilotchkiss. Recommends Scribner's maps, tfce. ntOF; m'ivek I contipues on Arithmetic and the way to teach it. (Recapitulation.) Ji U i - Wn ' .Highest stage is solution of prob- - nviil'S i-f:l -Tie (IS. 11 OU. FA- i . . r. J.W'.-, -j - - 7. f .Jllt.l. I.i.i.ninrm nninrrosuivp XpVOr ( "-1,)1S" ; i. .i ... flfi.n,.i9 Tlie boy who , , . . ..Abeat him I lake vour watch and ntul i I I I i I 1 1 1 O t 7 Iklll ! Kl I'll 1 I 1 1 .1 II 1. i;flt.l. I - i " tha't at the late Berlin council Lord Reaconsfield opened wjth a speech in English,c . South of Thames the country is known as the Downs. You pass from tunnel tio valley from tunnel to valley. Ireland' mostly level land of bogs. Snow is rare though ill lies between 50 and 55 N..L. English climate moist and genial causes -. ? - ' I Kain fall near London only about 19 inches. You always take your umbrella out,' but it s4dom. rains to wet you. A line mizJe that keeps everything green and growing, ijedges in Devon green all winter, daisies in bloom, SjC. Loudon; know London and you know the W'orld. Thames ; great tides. City proper has 30,000 inhabitants by night, over a million by day. Here centres the vorld?s commerce and Wealth. Causes. ' Farms of Norfolk aud Suffolk. Kent ot one acre often twenty ' bounds .v sterling or $100. Scenery of Yorkshire. Lake coun- trv. In London at this hour oi night, you could read a book stand- at a window. In .bdinrmrg it would yet be broad day. At '"John" O'Groats' house," tbe time t Read the problems to them doesn't hear it well, tern'. 1 he time will come when the rapidity with which tfiey will geL tlat problem; will astonish you. ; ; ;"" -;- .' ' . . f PROF. W. IL PHILLIPS. ; Chemistry..' Combustion contin ued, Two kinds! of it, quick apd slow. iSlow oxidation ol Phospho rous gives a "diffeient iacid from w hat we obtjain if it is quick. More heat- evolved in formation jof Phosphoric acid (12 05) than in formatioif of Iiosnhorous acid IP'2 Q3). threat- est degree of heat how generated. (Fine illustrations on blackboard land experiments.) Rate of combus dependent "on rate of oxidation, combustion is oxidation. Manls lungs are1 his machine oxidation. Quick combustion pro duces Heat and Light! Slow has no i'J'.o fiir Our sas- spiendut.j 1 r.oc; ous. stones adorn everything. (;):ie diauiond worih S300,000 fbrmiiig the eye of fnl i(Jol gives us still a small ideaJf the wealth of India. People mt illiter ate. C6untrvv of the Sanscrit of a 1 i teratu re ; as auciei i t aiid respectable as of any country, . f ' ' Japan, &c smart people, Good mathematicians Good schlais at -Hartford.- Shrewd. Traujed - at home to ipbsei ve and see.1 Spice lan us I epper must have sun enclosed in its' rinds. safras is cousin to the einuaiTiion and camphor, but suit: and raih-make the difference.' Japan apd China land of toys. ..Invention al)vays at 'work. . - ' i.:.:. ' '- Sight is a ' facility. , Seeipg is an art. . Reads extracts from a itavorito autjior. ! ! . "'. Time now to close these (ectures. Thanks for earnest attentionlin audi ence. (The whole school -rises to express it(s sense of value received.) I i AT XKiHT, JL'NE UTjf, !r . ,.i - -'''.-' .-: ' h - ' .JACKSON S. VALLUY CAMPAIGN JIY ma'j. jed. liorciiivisis.; ; Two blijects ill view by the lec turer, One is to inustraiethe i-on nection between topogi aphy and lustory.- I he .other to describe stern campaign. Heroic virtues are brought out by battle. It is wel we should recount these noble deeds r. In- ideation be pursued r" Aflirinativj ih ssrs. Alaiiney and Johnson. iVc .'die, 'Messrs. AhleriHau and Pat ton. L uite. an animated discussion. Neg ative carried it. Atr. A. Jj. 1'hiJIn t oiiied the geneial 'debate iii favor f the aflii inatiye, and made a good peeeh jiioting niaiiy characters in. lii.si orv who had been '. KiierLsful pecialists.'7 .; . Sunday," June -0th. Till UTKlINTH DAY. oi vine r serv ce in all the' morning. li en and name fof ion All for Light. ence.) (Examples given of differ- Economylof fuel considered. Slow combustion. Tartles, serpents, crocodiles.' In cold-blooded animals Tempel ature is greatly dependent on aud regulated by temperature of me: ditim, but they have also an individ ual heat producing power. Warm blooded animals' temperature is high and constant, audi in certain limits independent of externals. Birds jand remit them to our chil child ren's cliildren. The Stonewall Jackson 'should hevenbe allowed to grow dim. Time -.must only acldi4) the Justre of pis fame Twenty years ago the valley of the Shenandoah as only kngwu as one of the fairest' jiortions of j our fair country. The JSheuandoah-ljoyoly River, " is the nieaning oV the word in Ilnlian tongue. Its only claim to historic notice was tHaSW-fi 'George ashiiigton' lid surveyel sonie county lines there. It is oi)Iy when the geiiius! of history seaslvyrself bv the bright1 waters and faud&dds of a land that it becomes a lanl tb talk ot and remember. (Sketches the Valley7 towns, rivers, Ac.:, as he pro teeds.) This country is tiie sceny of the 3 months, eampaigtiMof ' the year 18b2. . Spring had come. The Confederate army was reay for its onward move. (Draws; raue of Blue Ridge, unbroken witlpa water gap for 160 miles ) The intention of the Federal armv .was tt .push McCleflju to Kichmond. ;McClel- After M 1 1 . .1 cnuicnes in . lown 111 tne 'resident- Battle gave a very iuter- stmg and instructive lecttint in tho LMiapel at 4 p. on Palestine. iNecessary to' understand'-the po itical condition of the Jews. Sketch or lioman power its centralization. 'Public roads, SocJ The Jews con sidered tinder Persian rule; Under Grecian, under Egyptian. '-Jews--in Egypt. Syrian rule. The Maccabees. Roman sv, a v. Herod of the Herol lan. fanrly. (Pedigree stated ton the backboard and the school entreate! o understand- the three Nefods of he New Tcstanlent.) The turbu ence of the Jews their internal liscussiovs. revolts, -dlow Augm us got charge ot Palestine. Pilate. 'John 13aptist ami Ilerbdias, fcc, , Air. Battle .held us all fixed in de lighted attention. These are points on which few conhl stand an exami nation, though' we have be(n familiar Vvith the names since our Sunday School days. Contin ued on Second I'aye.) GOODS ; 1 .. . A.T COST! 1 .' ' . , :! ' ! "I X ;COX.SKQUi:,l l: Ob- COXTLV 1 ucd bad In alth tin; undersigned are einpeIl4Ml 'to 4-1h'. thdr ljiisiness. On and after Monday the 2Sili d' April, wcj shall oiler our euttre stick ot go4j4tsat COST lioil CASH. X4) aee4Hints will b! iiiale. We h4"' to call the atteiitiou of our jiiLstoineiH aul tlie puhlh generally to the fact, tliat thee gooiU 'were' pur hasiMl the p:it sea-on at very low prices. Anv artiele not ut rerent imr ehase will be sohl at present value with out H'gaitl to 4-4t. This isa line opjior t unit v" to bn'v theap, and all are re- $pe4 t"tully invited to examine. t Those wli4owe 'us bv iMt! or aecouiit live earnestly .requested' to come i'Or waiHl and seitle. as we must Iiave tuonepr; to settle 4Mii 4lebts an! close our btti- r . i . . 1 1 .. pes. pry rs4'ei im i , long a xoinvooi). ChaiH l Hill. X. C.. . April 1870. . '-( X -r