$3 Per Annum OS THE fiOUTII SIDE OF TRADE STREET , -CHARACTER IS AS IMPOBTANT TO STATES AS IT IS TO INDIVIDUALS, AND THS GLORT OP THE ONE IS THB COMMON PROPERTY OP THE OTHER- IN ADVANCE CHARLOTTE, N. C, TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1867. FIFTEENTD VOLtJIIEN UMBER 776. Will J YATESf Editor and Propreitor. 1 i 1 11 (Published every Tuesdaj,Q) BY i WILLIAM J. YATES, I EDITOR AND PSOPRIETOB. i O OtiJtIS0&3s S3 PER ANNUM, in advance, j $ 2 for six months. j o Transient advertisements mast be paid for j in tdvance. Obituarj notices are charged adverti3- j iog rates. j Advertisements not marked on the manuscript j for a specific time, will be inserted until forbid, and-j charged accordingly. J $1 per ?qii!re of 10 Iine3 or Ie? will be charged for each insertion unless the advertisement is in serted 2 month? or more. WW. WHITK LEAD, at ilcAdcn's ,KPWKy Corner Drug Store. 300 Oallon3 Linseed Oil, at M-e Aden's Comer Drug Store. 3 Barrels Spirits Turpentine, at McAden's Drug Store. NO. 1 Coach and Copal Varnishes, cheap, at ; McAden's Drug Store. FIN'K Lubricating, Lard an.i Sic-m: Oil. at Mc Aden's Corner Drug Store Bright Illumin:itiB Kerosene Oil, cheap, at 11c Aden's Comer Drug Store. Tanners' Strait's and Brinks' 0:1, at the lowest market price, nt McAdeu's Corner Drug Store. May 20, IKCI. Zf HOXKS M A X L- F A C T U I ! E D TOBACCO, rBrUP for sale at the Corner Diu Store. June :, 1807. J. II. McADKX A Ij A 11 O K T J K OK SPBING GOO US Fine white an 1 colored Marseilles Quilts, just received at BAUUIXGEU, WOLFE & CO S. e-V- Ladies' French Dimitry Skirts, India Twilled Long Cloth, Linen Dress Goods. Extra Fine Lace Collars and Culls, Valencine Lae, Cletiy Luce, Black Silk Guper Lace. Call and evamine our New Goods. l; A UR I XG EU, WOLFE L CO. sa' Irish Linen of an extra quality ; Clenched Shirting, extra quality. Call soon. Black Challey for Mounii.'ig Dresses, English Crape and English Crapu Veils, at BARCIXGEU, WOLFE & CO'S. April 15, : 8fJ7. JUST RECEIVED AT C. M. QUERY'S HEW STORE. A Luge and well selected Stock o." fclMSIXi ASI) SUM JJKSft GOODji'i DltY GOODS, at extremely low prices. WHITE GOODS, a fu'I assortment, which will be Bold low fr ca.!i. TUIMM1XGS Our stock of Trimming; is com plete, and was selected with care. A full assortment of VAXKEE NOTION'S and FANCY GOODS. HOOP SKIIiTS Bradley's Paris Trail Skirts the most popular Skirt now worn all sizes Ladies, children and Misses. KID GLOVES all colors and sizes, of the best rticle Ladies" an 1 Children's Milts, all sizes, and of the best quality. FAX'S AX D PAUASOLS A full assortment of all kind. SHOES Ladies', Children's and Misses' boots, shoes and gaiters, of the best Philadaphia make. Also, Men's and Boj's ihocs and hats. MRS. QUERY would inform her friends that fhe has spared no pams in selecting her stock of Millinery and T: immings; and having had a long experience in the business feels satisfied that she can jdease all who will favor her with a call. Bonnets and Hats made and trimmed to order, on the most reasonable terms and shortest notice. Dresses Cut. Fit ted. Ti initned and made, on reason able terms arid at short notice. Our terms are strictly Cash. Our motto is, small profit, and jut dealing to all. April 1, 1S;7. r ox kjTwa vjtkek A Chance to Make Money. The subscriber will purchase Bones at 50 cents per hundred, delivered at Concord Factory, or at any R.iilroad Depot between Charlotte and Greens boro Cash paid on delivery. Those who wi'.l accumulate Bones in quantities ftt any point on the Uailroad lines, and inform the ubscriber, arrangements will be made for their purchase. 11. E. Mcl. AXALD, April 1, 1SG7 tf Concord, N C. OF THE X EAT EST AND MOST SUPERIOR PATTERN. XX- BY33B.LT, Springs' Building, Charlotte, N C, Has for sale "Sptar's .f 111 i- )llSt Cooking1 ST(t fJCV," which, for every aiieiv of cooking and great economy in fuel, caunot be surpassed by any Stove heretofore used. Everybody who has used one of these Stoves testify that, for convenience in cooking, durability ami cleanliness, they are far preferable to all other patterns. Call and see them. D. II. BYERLY has also on hand a good as sortment of Tin, Japan and Sheet-Iron Ware such article as nre necessary for house-keeping. JEST TlX-WAKK made to order at short notice On reasonable terms. KLIVVlKI Vt; promptly exrented. . D IE BYERLY, Spiings' Building, Charlotte, N. C. March 25, 18G7. NEW GOODS! NEW GOODS ! S . 15 - H K A C il A , J3 now receiving and opening his Spring stock of DRY GOODS, comprising every article wanted by th people, bought for Cash, and since the great decline in goods. ' I keep constantly on hand all kinds of goods, viz: Dry Goods, a general ussortuaeat. Yankee Notions, " " Hats and Caps, " loots and Hioes, " " JWooden Ware, 41 feather of all kinds, Hardware, Cutlery, Guns, ic. Groceries of all Kinds, Consisting of Bacon, Lard, Hams, Sugar, Coffee, Pish, Flour, Meal, Pickles, &c , &c. I will sell any of th above very low. All I wish if a call from any one before purchasing. My motto Js, quick sales and short profit Ap.il 29, Js7. ,S. B. MEAOIAM. DEXTJSTKY. DR. W)i. E. CARR, lnte of Wilmington, having located in Charlotte, is prepared to attend promptly to all calls relating to his profession. Having had seventeen years experience in the practice of Den tistry, he is satisfied that he can please all who may give him a call. All work done with reference to neatness, dura bility and dispatch. Office over Barringer, Wolfe k Go's, where he can be found at all hours of the day. All work warranted to give entire satisfac faction. Teeth filled and extracted without paiD. June 10, 1R7. Cm "pictures at so cents And upwards, at the PHOTOGRAPHIC GALLERr Over Jas. Harty ic Co's Store, next to the Court Houte. Call and get a superb likeness of yourself and family, at low rates according to style and finish. Copies taken of old Pictures in a superior manner. Satisfaction guarantied at the Gallery of II. B A U M GARTEN, May 6, 1807. Next to Court House HAMMOND & McLAUGIILIN Have just received a Itrge assortment of Groceries, which they olfer for sale at .reduced prices. Their Stock consists, in part, of the, following articles : 10 Sucks prime Rio Coffee, 30 Barrels Sugar all grades, 5 Hogsheads Sugar yellow, 25 Barrels Molnsses assorted grades, 5 Hogsheads Molasses Cuba, 10 Barrels Potomac Shad, 10 Half Barrels Potomac Shad, 10 Quarter Barrels Potomac Shad, 10 Half Family Mackerel, 10 Quarter " " ' 40 Kits, No 1 and 2, " 100 Sacks Liverpool Salt, 50 Boxes fine English Dairy Cheese, 50 " Adamantine Candles, 50 ,f assorted Stick Candy, 25 Layer Raisins, Fine Lot of Bacon X. C. and Western, " " Flour, Corn and Corn Meal, Codfish and Irish Potatoes, Hemlock Leather. Iron and Nails all sizes, Bale Yarn and Shirting, Fresh Cove Oys:ers, Sardines and Pickles, Sauces, Flavoring Extracts, Soda Crackers, ic. And every other article usually found in a gro cery and P.-( vision Store. We invite the attention of country merchants and others to our stock, and solicit an examination. iiammoxd & Mclaughlin. May 27, 18G7 tf J. E. STEXHOrSE, Xew Yokk ALLAN MACAULAY, Charlotte, N. C. STEMiOUSE & MACAULAY, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 42 Stone Sti eft, New York. Prompt personal attention given to the sale of Cotton, Cotton Varus, Naval Stores, &c, and the purchase of Meichandise generally. Consignments solicited. June 10, 13t;7. NEW STOCK OF GOODS. The undersigned has just returned from the Northern cities with a good Stock of Gr X O O O X O JS , and various other articles, consisting principally of Java Coffee, Rio Coffee of superior quality none better; Black, Green and Imperial Teas; New Or leans and other Molasse; Bacon Sides, Sugar Cured Hams, Fresh Mackerel, Pickled Shad, Soap, Candles, I'epper. Spice, Ginger, Soda, White Wine and Apple Vinegar, Willow Ware, Buckets of all kinds, Tubs Broom, Churns, Kegs, Half-Bushels, &e. Lorillard Snuff best quality ; Soda, Ginger and Egg Crackers ; a fine lot of Brogan Shoes extra i.es ; Liverpool Salt, and best Carolina Rice. Xj o a t 11 o r . White Oak Tanned fine article; large lot of good nnd good damaged Hemlock ; French Calf Skins; Upper and Harness Leather. White Lead, Powder. Shot and Percussion Caps, all sizes; Whim Rope, Well Rope, Bed Cord, Cotton Cards cheap, Scythe Blades, Pad Locks, Blacking, Matches, Cotton Yarn, Durham's Smoking Tobacco, Chewing Tobacco; Crushed, Pulverized, While and Brown Sugars, and a fine assortment of best Ntls. I have selected this Stock with great care, and cannot be undersold. Give me a call before pur chasing elsewhere. Remember my Motto, Quick Sales, Short Profits and fair dealings with all. Wheat, Flour, Corn, Bacon and Lard taken in exchange for Goods. Friends, recommendit g Freedmen to me, may be assured that they will be dealt with fairly, both as to weight and change no objection to all goods being weighed that go from this establishment. Piofits are short, and terms necessarily CASn. I also buy and sell on commission all kinds of Produce. Orders arid consignments solicited. W. BOYD. Charlotte, N. C, June 24, 1S07. C I . a 21 A SI SCHOOL, MEBANEVILLB, N. C. SESSION OF 1SGT. Fall Term opens July 24th. Course of instruction CLASSICAL, MATHEMATICAL and COMMERCIAL. For Circular aJdiess Col. WM. BINGHAM. June 17, 18d7 6w JUST IS EC El TED AT Wilson Eros., Embroidered Bareges, Striped Mozambique, Plain Mozambique?. Lawns, Striped Poplins, and a good assortment of Prints. May , 1SU:7. Grocery and Provision Store, Under the Mansion House, opposite the Springs Building. I have on hand. -and will constantly keep, Corn Meal, Flour, Bacon, Lard, and Country Produce generally.. Also, Sugar, Coffee, Crackers, MoL.sses. and in fact everything in the Grocery line a family may need. I have also a fine lot of Northern Potatoes and some very fine No. 1 Mackerel. I wili sell as cheap as the cheapest. Try me. The highest market price will be paid for country produce cf all kinds. Feb 18, 1867. tn A. BERRYUILL. i HAVE YOU SEEN 1UE ELEPHANT ! If not juat walk down to ! PRESSON 6c GRAY'S ! Family Grocery and ProFhJou Store, Where they are daily 'receiving fresh snpplies of j Groceries of every description, and buy your eup I plies while the Horse and Wagon is standing before j the door ready to convey your purchases to' your house anywhere within ihe'corporafe limits, free of I fi i r-rp i ft r DDPCCnv June 10, 186?. GRAY. SUPREME COURT OP N. CAROLINA. Important Opinion hy the Chief Justice, We are indebted to the Clerk of the Supreme j Court, (says the Raleigh Sentinel.) for thefollow I ing able and interesting opinion, just filed by Chief Justice Pearson, bearing upon . the validity ; of contracts founded on Confederate currency, in this State, during the war. PHILIPS VS. HOOKER. The right of the plaintiff to relief does not rest alone upon the ordinance of the Convention or the act of the Legislature, but upon the broad ground that the courts are bound to admiuister justice and enforce the execution of contracts. ' In 1862, the defendant agrees to sell to the plaintiff' a house and received $2,500 in Confed erate treasury notes, as the consideration, and put him in possession. The contract had no special political significance, and there is no averment that it was entered into with an intent to give aid to the rebellion; so, it is to be taken as a deal ing in the ordinary transaction of business. The plaintiff bought the house and lot " because it suited him. The defendant took the Confederate notes because she needed funds. It is said every dealing in Confederate treasury notes gave them credit and circulation, and con sequently aided the rebellion; so every such deal ing was illeo-Hl. and not lit to be enforced by the .courts, without reference to the intent of the par ties. The proposition is general, every man and woman who, in the ordinary course of business, received a Confederate note, did an illegal act, tainted with treason; it embraces all contracts ex ecuted as executory, for if true as to one, it is also true as to the other, and it aims a blow at all dealings among our people during the war, and upheaves the foundations of society. I do not believe the proposition can be maintained by any authority or any principle of law. 1. It mav be conceded that if, at the outbreak of an insurrection, parties to contracts, with a view of aiding the cuuse, by giving credit and circu lation to its paper, receive it as money in their dealing, such contracts are illegal. But that is not the case under consideration. in ibu'z, tne contest naa assumed tne magni tude and proportions of war; each party in terri torial limits had the boundaries of a mighty nation, and each party counted its people by mil lions The "Confederate States" was recognized by the nations and by the United States itself, as a belligerent power, entitled to the rights of war, and in the exercise of its powers, it had issued paper as the representative of money, which in cluded all other currency and constituted the Only circulating medium f the country. The governmentof the United States was unable to pre lect the people, and there were no currency but Confederate treasuiy notes. In this condition of things, was every man to stop his ordinary avo cations and starve, or else be tainted with treason, and deemed guilty of an illegal act if he received a Confederate treasury note. The Attorney General of the United Stales, in his opinion on the subject of disfranchisement, uses this language: '"Officers in those rebel States who, during the rebellion, discharged offi cial duties, not incident to war, but in the preser vation of order and the administration of law, are not to be considered as thereby engaging in re bellion. The interest of humanity requires such officers for the performance of such official con duct in time of war or insurrection, as well as in time of peace, and the performance of such duties can never be considered as criminal." Was a Judge to cease to do these "duties required by the interests of humanity" "the performance of which can never be considered as criminal," or was he to perform the duties and starve, rather than commit an illegal act by receiving his salary in Con federate treasury notes f Was the mer chant to c'ose his store, the blacksmith and shoe maker to quit woik, and the farmer to let his to bacco and surplus grain rot on his hands, and allow his family to suffer for clothing and the other necessaries of life, or do an illegal act by receiving Confederate notes ? Really, unless the receiving of such notes can be connected with a ciiminal intent to aid the rebellion, the question seems to me too plain to admit of argument. A naked statement exposes the absurdity of the proposition. The courts must act on the pre sumption that Confederate notes were received in ordinary dealing, not for the purpose of aiding the rebellion, but because there was no other currency. 2. Look at the subject in another point of view : At the close of the war the President granted amnesty and pardon to all, save a very few individuals. Congress in the act for recon struction disfranchised only those, who, having taken an rath to support the Constitution of the United States, afterwards engaged, actively, m the rebellion, and bus refused to enforce the rigorous measure of confiscation. On what pricciple, then, can it be, that the Courts are called upon to take up the matter "at the little end search into the private dealings of the people and all the ramifications of ordinary busi ness and declare of no force in effect confiscate ail contracts based upon the consideration of Confederate uotes '( V hat good can result from this action of the Courts ? It can have no effect upon the rebellion ; for that is over. It can have no effect upon the future, for "necessity knows no law," and whenever a condition of things occurs, in which the people most use the only currency of the country or starve, the car rency will be used. Ttie idea of the Courts assuming the duty of preventing civil wars by holding that it is illegal to receive the paper of rebels, in ordinary business transactions, when there is no other currency that such contracts are not fit to be enforced presents to ay mind a palpable absurdity. So, what good will be done by this action of the Courts ? None save only to show, on the part of the Courts, a detes tation of treason by treadir gon the extremities of the monster after it is dead. 3. In Blossom vs. Van Amringe, 1 Phil. 133, the maxim, ev turpi causa actio non oritur. was rreSvd on the Cturt, and it was insisted that, as the parties had made a transfer of pro- ! perty, in Jraud and deceit, icith an intent to evade the confiscation acts of the governmentof the Confederate States, the case fell under the maxim. The Court say : ''The objection would ' co doubt have been fatal, if taken before & Court of the de facto State Government, while it formed a part of the Confederate States, bnt this Court is a co-ordinate branch of a rightful gov ernment, forming a part of the United States, and cannot entertain such an objection." In our case, the matter is reversed. The turpitude, if any, was aimed at the United States, and the maxim applies, provided there be the crimina imenc. in at is tne question i l deny ;ne in tent there is no evidence of it or anything from which it can be implied. It cannot be held that the mere receiving a Confederate note was illegal and base, without involving in the imputation of baseness, every man and woman in the State.! the minister of the gospel, the Judge, who received their salaries: the pbysi cian, the merchant,, the" mechanic, the farmer, who carried on their ordinary business. The poor seamstresses, who at the end of the day received their hard-earned wages, were all guilty of an act so base that the doors of the courts of justice must be shut against them ! The pro position is monstrous. During the war a farmer should not have made more grain than enough to support himself and family; making a surplus was illegal it aided the rebellion. If every mau had quit work, the rebel army could not have been sustained ; the war would have been stopped by starvation. We were told in the argument that "gold, as well as iron, is a sinew of war." It may be added, meat and bread are also sinews of. war reductio ad absurdum. 4. But, it is said, the consequences of hold ing all such dealing to have been illegal, will not be so grievous, after all, for, in its practical application, the maxim will only make void executory contracts. The principle, if a sound one, evidently includes all contracts, executive as well as executory, and the admission, that in practice it can only be made to reach the latter. demonstrates the impotence and absurdity of this action of the Courts, as the means of put ting a stop to civil wars. Let us see how it is to operate: A man buys a tract of land, pays for it in Confederate notes and takes a deed. The Court cannot reach him, for it is met by the maxim "in pari delicto meiior est conditio de- fendmtis;" so he keeps the land, not because he is innocent, but because the Court cannot take it from him and restore it to the original owner, for he is equally guilty. If one has paid off a bond in Confederate notes, whether the creditor will be allowed to sue on the origi nal debt, whioh is not tainted with this "turpi causa" is a problem that I will not undertake to solve. But suppose the bond is only paid in part; the payment must be rejected, for, being in Confederate notes, ifis of no more legal effect than if made in counterfeit money or suppose, in our case, Mr Hooker brings ejectment for the land the contract has been in part per formed, and the Defendant is in possession, will the Court hut its doors against her on the maxim in pari delicto? In short, is the prac tical application of this novel principle to be al lowed to cover all intermediate cases, when the contract has not been fully executed, or is it to be confined to contracts wholly executory, where the purchaser has paid the price, but, in the simplicity of his innocence, has neglected to take a deed and has not even taken possession? The amount of it is all who required the Con federate notes to be paid down or who have taken deeds and acquittances under seal, al though equally guilty, are to go unpunished, and only those who gave credit to their neigh bors or who neglected to take deeds are to be made victims to the vengeance of the law, while the remiss debtors and dishonest vendors are to be the sole gainers, although equal participants in the illegal act. Lame and impotent conclu sion I Thus encouragement is to be given to dis honesty, justice is not to be administered, and the people of the country are to be involved in utter perplexity and confusion, in order to make a useless show of zeal on the part of the Courts 4,io punish rebels." R. M. PEARSON, C. J. - Colic in Horses. I will give you a receipt which I have known to cure in a few minutes I knew a horse taken with it on a tread wheel to a carding machine, so that the owner thought he could not live. He got the veterinary sur geons, and they did what they could, and all decided that the horse must die. The man's wife, who believed and practiced hygiene, from the time the horse was taken, tried to persuade her husband to use a wet bandage, but be in sisted it would do no good. After all had given up that the horse could not live, by her en treaties the doctors sayiog it could do no good or hurt he took a thick bed comforter, bound it around the horse, went to the well and drew water, and poured it on till thoroughly soaked It seemed like a pot boiling. In less than fif teen minutes from the time he commenced the arafortnrv T.rnpoco ifio hnrsa itqc nn qnit Anting. V. f f L'lVVVd? . . j UW.OI; I V. .T f' SUVA tailll to the great surprise of the horse doctors, who knew it could not live. The horse did good service afterwards. This recipe I gave several years ago, and it was copied into mo6t as I was told by an editor of the agricultural, and many other papers in the United States. .Many have tried and proved it. Try it, brother farmers. Farmers' Advocate. Tomatoes a Protection Against Borers. Mr II. J. Foster, Quincy, Massachusetts, in forms tbe iNew England Farmer that be Las an apple orchard which ha? been badly infested by the borer. Two or three years ago while going over tbe orchard in the fall, and removing from ten to fifteen young borers from most of tbe trees, he noticed that invariably there were no signs of their work to be discovered wherever a chance plant of tbe tomato had sprung up from cpprl in anil nr mnnnrp A rf in rr on th disncpru. ! he has since planted tomatoesxtensivelv about his apple trees and quince boshes, and finds it ; a complete protection, as the beetle which de posits her eggs during the summer months upon the Lark of the tree near the ground, shuns every tree near which a tomato plant is growing. A young lady, on being asked wbre was her ! native place, replied, "I have none; I am the daughter of a Methodist minister." f LIFE IN PARIS. ine averybodie and Everything oj the Uity. It is one o'clock in tbe morning. Every cafe, theatre and ball has been closed up half an hoar. There is a midnight excise law here no less peremptory than New York's. . The gas is lighted in the streets, but not in tbe dwellioes. The great hotels even must illuminate in Paris with candles, as tbe city makes barely enough gas for public uses. The practical eivilication of Paris is only a grease-spot compared to the full blaze of our Western cities. There are no hydrants here to speak of. Water must be car ried inter yoor house from the public fountains, or served to you by a barrel wagon at so much subscription per week. In this silence of the night, sit you down on the broad stone quary beside the Seine, where the Toileries looms darkly up in the night, and in the swift river there arc darting fires, where all the miles of street and boat lamps fling their reflections. Up yonder in the central pavilion there is one window aflame the Emperor's. Whether for a statesman's vigil or a sensualist's carousal, he is awake : and at his portal below you see now and then the flash of the light upon the bayonet of the Turco that guards him. Through the dark gardens are other guards, revealed by their steel flashes. Now, all alone, noiseless, like a great creeping glow-worm, you see the most wretched man in Paris steal up to the palace of the most powerful; tbe chiffonier is under toe windows of the King. ' . The chiffonier is the Paris rag-picker, le has a great funnel-shaped basket tied to his back; a lamp drops to his feet; by its ghastly light he discovers whatever in gutter or ash heap is worth his notice, and this he tosses with a dexterous movement of his iron hook into the basket. The motion is so rapid, and the hook so long and thin, that you can with difficulty see tbe transfer. 1 be lamp glares at tbe chiffonier s feet alone; the rest of his body is only a hunch backed shadow, and in the light he seems to be some monster eating the offal of the highway. There are seven hundred chiffoniers in Paris. They live, in main part, on the Rue Monffetard, and if you go thither of a morning, you will see their wives washing out the rags they set. and assorting the old bones. Here they have a ball called the Old Oak, and every Sunday nizht there are several hundred of them here dancing tbe cancan. The most remarkable chiffonier in Paris is Gaston, the Ilibon, or Owlv Gaston. He is sixty-five years old. and bald as a sole- leather truuk. Forty years ago he was a beau and dancer, owned a ball in the Faubourg St Germain, and claims to have invented the van- can, which is the most shameless and poduui ball-room dance extant. A love of earning and worthlcssness ruined Gaston at thirty-five: he married one of the girls be had hired to dance, and while one of them went to the hospital to wrestle with death, the woman took her crook and basket and perambulated in the night. She found a diamond of great value at tbe cleaning out of the Pont Neuf canal, and this so excited the cupidity of Gaston, that when he was con valescent he turned to mud larking himself, and coaxed into the same business several of the broken down belles he had known. They found no more diamonds, but Gaston was shrewd enough to become tho common patron of all bis converts, and is alleged to be well off. He is quite a character in his district, and he has pro bably been into every sluice, sewer and passage under tbe city of Paris. It is related that Baron liaussmann, who has projected a grander system of sewerage for the metropolis, sent for Gaston some time ago to confirm a plan of the subter ranean ditches he had ordered to be prepared. The veteran rag-picker took the map and ex- plored the whole under world of the city, being absent six months, and traveling and retracing nearly a thousand miles of filth. liaussmann gave hi in a years pay oi a policeman, and a pioneer's decoration. TWO O'CLOCK THE NIGHT TROOPS. When the dull lamp of the chiffonier hag got round tbe corner, you hear tbe tramp of hoofs in concert, and directly a company of mounted policemen come sweeping up the street, with guides out in advance, as if for a skirmish with mt 1 a a some enemy, inese policemen wear brass Hel mets, like a Roman General s, with red horse tails streaming out behind : carbines are slung around them; they carry naked sabreg. Riding along in the night, tbey make the city seem a conquered one, full of conspiring citizens. On the opposite side of the river, as if riding down conccrtedly to sweep an enemy from the quays, a squadron of regular cavalry is seen bearing along, their burnished accoutrements glittering; and a bugle call streams over the Seine, an swered back by the gens d'arme. So, in the daikness supporting eolomns move over the whole capital; the forty great barracks of the city and its dependencies are never quite darkened, but in their guard rooms telegraphers aim Beumes keep perpetual Vigil; lour thousand policemen walk all night in cocked hats and side-swords; wherever a taper burns past its season, there is a cold eye in the street fixed upon it. Sixty thousand men of all arms are distributed over Paris, and horses stand day and night to pursue revolution or crime. Within every place of frequent resort the mouchard, or spy, abides no introduced agent in general, bat your friend, bed-fellow or school-mate he to whom you are free to unbosom every indig nation and purpose of your life, purchased by natural deceit or a treacherous political regimen to deliver you up for your thoughts as remorse lessly as for your deeds. Said M. Vivien, of old, the Prefect of Police : . "There is no lack of candidates for spies. They come from every class. Every day a hun dred offer themselves. Our mail is filled with e volunteer letters betraying some friend or rela- u" iow-pncea among my couo try-men The "Felon's Biography" consists of 400 registers and of forty book-cases filled with their supplementary leaves, making a grand catalogue i of French criminals and suspected people, coo- taining 800,000 names. This remarkable book is kept in the Rue de liar lay, on tbe island of i the city. A spy and a policeman get the m ( average pay about 5260 in gold a year, or 75 cents a day. - . . ' FOUR O'CLOCK TUK ABATTOIRS. While these are the night scenes in the leaf, of the city, away out on tie bills of tbe suburbs the butchers of cattle and sheep are getting ready for market, There are but eight butcher shops ia Paris, and three of these are a long distance from the city proper. Tbe five principal ones stand oa the outer boundaries of Paris; tbey are owned by the city, and rented to the several butchers wbe are compelled to drive their cattle to them in the night, to permit none of their employees., to be seen upon the public streets in tbe garments of the slaughter house, aad to transport all tbe meat to market between midnight and sunrise. Tka cattle markets proper are at Poissy and Sceaur, a days walk from Pa ru each; the drover is not com- pelted, therefore, to pay tbe octroi, or municipal tax; this is paid by the butcher when be . passes the city gates, or at the abottoir when he kills. In the great butchery of Monlmartre, the largest in tbe world, there are nine streets, sixty-four boil ing bouses and butcheries, eight pens capable qI inclosing four hundred cows at once, with abun dant shade and fodder; two artesian wells supply U00,000 quarts of water a day; there are tnperies, machineries for curing calves head, and sheep s feet and tongues, almost as perfect as your hog-, killing methods in Cincinnati, and so superb is the drainage that outside of the abottoir not a drop of blood is ever 6een upon the sidewalk or in tbe gutters, nor is the hot summer made a stench by the breezes from the shambles. These butcheries were projected by tbe .first Napoleon, and finished in 1818. The horse-batchers is a new institution 1iere, and il has, until of late, been established' in the abattoir of La Villette, just outside of Paris. About forty horses are killed a day, knocked in the head, their throat cut, and they are made into quarters, shins and ribs in no time. The per formance is perfectly legal, and government en courages the consumption of the horde. "He Shot all but Me." When General Bragg commanded the array of Tennessee, . on day, while on the march, be suddenly came upon one of the "ragged," butternut fraternity, who was just then busily engaged in plundering a garden ihe General drew up, and in that clear, ringing voice, which one heard on the field of battle k not readily forgotton, called out, "To what com-, manddoyou belong?" Butternut was caught, he recogtized the Gerieral, and he knew the maa he had to deal with. Assuming a green, gawky , manner, he answered as follows : Mister did belong to Mr Bragg's company, but he shot all but me!" This was a little too much, and drawing his hat over his eyes and compressing his lips, the General rode on, and let the last man of his "com pany" live. Another Chance for Babnum. Western North Carolina is prolific with natural curiosities, monstrosities, and almost every other kind of osities, but Yancey county bears off the palm for the most prolific Cow-osity. We are reliably in formed that a cow belonging to Mr Hampton, living near Burnsville, presented bar owner a few weeks ago, with four calves at a birth. Wa , have not heard whether all the calves are .living, but our informant tells us the cow is doing weH. She ought to live in clover the rest of her life. Such feats might be commendable in cows, but in human natur it is orful to think of, these bard limes. Ash v tile JVews. China has a population of 400,000,000 peo-, pie, and her rulers govern an area of 4,088,000 square miles. An English journal says it is a curious reflection that if any one man of he military genius of'Geoghis Khan, or Tamerlane or Alexander or Napoleon should arise to com mand these countless hosts he might march his swarming legions with perfect impuBity over all Europe. An editor down South say he would as soon try to go to sea on a shingle, make a ladder of fog, ch ase a streak of lightning through a crab apple orchard, swim up the rapids of Niagara, raise the dead, stop the tongue of an old maid, or set Erie on fire with a wet match, as to un dertake to make an intelligent man out of a person who don't take a newspaper, or a gentle man out of one who refuses or neglects to paj bis subscription." T T Prentice thinks that if a young lady has a thousand acres of valuable land, the young aaen are apt to conclude that there are sufficient grounds for attachment. And after Marriage, those young men will conclude that bad coffee will produco sufficient grounds for a divorce. A lady writes that salt is a sure thing on bed bugs. Wash the articles and places infested with tbe bugs with salt and water and fill the cracks and crevices where the vermin bide. They will give no more trouble. A roor fellow being asked oo a late trial for a certificate of his marriage, exhibited a large scar on bis bead, which looked as though it' might have been made with a fire shovel. The evidence was satisfactory. The sherry-wine merchants at Cadi told our consul that "the stuff sent to the Uoited States was not sherry at all, but merely slops used to wash out the tubs and fur other dirty work about the stills." An indulgent husband and father sold bis cooking stove to take bis family to the circus. Mrs . Yell lately cowbided Mr Lay for not performing a promise to marry- her. As ha wouldn't make her.Lay, she made him yell. Brigbara Young, Jr., and his companion Rich ards, are living gaily in Paris the former with two wives and nine children- the latter with nin$ wives and no end of children. i Philosophers say that shutting the eyes nukes the sense of bearing more acute. A wag sug gests that tbis accounts for tbe many eloaad yes that are aecaatxhurch ejrejj Sanday,