:)yly:y . ""-' - ft nr ti nil r -44f:4f CHARLOTTE, N.v C., ' TUESDAY!, JULY 5, 1870. jyjj, J. 11 kh3i Editor akd Proprietor. f-rmt of Subscription Thbiv Dollak. in advance. , NINETEENM V0LUIIE K V U D E H ZZO, A III I . I k 1 1 - I I t S V r .m. I Il'l - I m. - V.--i r l'.HKli"X a1 4 ar -m a'av i M 1 W I XV' rj i If J II t ; i it i ii v-i r n ? r ; n u i -,r-v : .ifLyr avv-.v i j- '. . n ! . . .i ; ; ; ti 1 ; . . ... : . " ' . . . 1 . - .-. . rr t - .-. i - : a i . . ' ' i 1 1 . ! ' T II E . I i j "V estern Democrat H-BLUHID BT 1 WILLIAM J. YATES, EJHor and Proprietor. ; i O . . , -J ' ylEMSTLrce Dollars pr annoni in adrance. jTertienients wll be inserted at or in accordance with contract. reasonable Obi'urT notices f orer trtf lines in length will . . . . . - - KchargeJIor ai rneniung raics. Dr. W. ' H. Hoffinan, j DKXTIST, ' Late cj Lincolnlon, A-.. C.) I pfnecif"Hj informs the citizens of Charlotte and the public generally, that be has permanently loca tel in Charlotte. lie ia fully prepared to attend to all cUs relating to his profession. - i ,i.--K.ftil practice for more than 10 Tears MM tki"j 4oTa of country and in the Confederate army of Virginia during the te war, warrants him in ,rnniing entire satisfaction to all parties who majr jfir his !erTices. ! 1 ?xjl)Sice OTer Smith & IlammonU's Drag Store. OJife uours from 8 A. M. to o P. SI. " j KerrEitscr. M. P. l'egram. Cashier 1st National r. nfc uf Lbarloue: lr. wra Moan, vr. j. ii. iic- .n, and. W. J, " Jan SI. 1T( Vates, Editor Charlotte Democrat. ly DENTISTRY. . The firy of ALEXANDER & BLAND is here to rrvufl. t the former stand in Brown' building, .iioitc the ChaHotte Hotel. Entire natisfaction is ruraneed, and teetli oin be extracted without pain. r 1 :i lMirUtCT OI our oid customers is respectfu elicited Robert Gibbon, M. D., rilVSICIAX AND &'UltUKOX. tlT Office OTPr Smith i Hammond's Drug Store RMi lfnce on College btreel. Ja 21, 1x70. , . J. P. Mc Combs, M. D., fffrs his irofes!ion.l services to the citizens of Charlotte and surrounding country. All calls, both nir ill and promptly attended to. j O.fice in l.rown s building, up etairs, opposite the Charlotte Hotel. . ' Oct '2, i-. Dr. JOHN H. McADEN, ; Wholesale and , Retail Druggist, CIIAliLUTTE, A. C, I Ha on hand alaree and well selected stock of TUBE I)RCtitf. Chemicals, l'stent Medicines, Family Sledi- ein, Paint-s Oils. Varuishe?. Dye Stuffs, Fancy and TuiUt Article.-, which he is determined to. sell at the ery lowcs1? prices. - i Jin 1. 1870. "I . ! W. F. DAVIDSON, A T T O R . r. V AX L. A Charlotte- N. C, . i i i i Office over B. Koopmaxs's Store. !ec M, IWJ ly . I DR. E. C. iVLEXANDER, - Charlotte, N. C , j OTor his seTiees s Physician to the citizens of fbrl..tte nd purroun din? country. j OSce nearly oj po-ite Charlotte Hotel. . j trf- Dr. Alsiander-iiinkM a good Cough Mixturty iFiirrth.tn spy Patvut Medicine. Try it Feh 7. lsto. rSACTICAX. Watch and Clock Hi!or, i i ' AND !KALER l!f JEWELRT, FIXE WATCHES, CLOCKS, Ytch Materials, Spectacles, J;r. Aug. 19. CHARLOTTE, N. C. MANSION HOUSE, f Charlotte, N. C- 1 This well-known Houxe baTing been newly fur aishH and recital in every drpariuient. is now open fur the areommodttiun of the ! TUAYELLXG PUBLIC. j CT..fHnibiies at the Depot on arrival of Trains. Ju 21. 1870. ' II. C. ECCLESI B R. SMITH & CO, ! General Commission Merchants, GO Kill'if .SVrrr, IJiijJTON, Mass., . j For the salt of Cotton. Cotton Yarn. Naval Stores. Ac, and the purchase of Gunny Cloths and Merchan dise generally. t Liberal Cash alrances made on consignments to u. and all uul facilities offered. i We hope by fair and honest dealing, and cur best efforts to please, to receive from our friends that en couragement which it fhall be our aim to merit. Orders fol'citcd and promptly filled for Gunny Edging, Fish. Boots and Shoes, &c., ic. , j Befek bt Pehmissiox TO ( Jhn Pemerrift. Eq., Pres. EI.otNat. Bank, Boston. Loring Reynolds, 110 Pearl St.. Boston. j Murchi.on & Co.. 207 Pearl St.. New York. ' j J Y Bryce & Co., Charlotte. N C. - . j H T McAden.'Esq.. Prcsl 1st Nat. Bank. Charlotte. T W Dewey & Co , Bankers. Charlotte, N C. . I 11 M OAt & Co., Charlotte. NO. Villiams Murchison, Wilmington. N C. ' Cl Wm Juhnston. Pres. Citat ion uj Augusta Rail roal. Charluite, N 0. , i Sept 0, 18rj. i LARGE STOCK. i "r i i ' x . Wittko'wrsky & Rintols nve receive! on of the largest Stocks of Goods ever offered in this market, and are receiving week ly addition, so that they are prepared to supply any amount of patronage they maybe favored with du ring the Fait and Winter, j tdT" Country Merehanswre epecial'y invited to call and exa;iite this' Stock of Goods, as they can find anjthing wanted for stocking? a country Store and at very reasonable wholesale prices. I Give n a call and see our Goods and hear our Trices before making ynar purchases. - WiTTKO.?SK.Y & RINTOLS. March 13, 1S70. ; , Stoves. Tin & Sheeting Iron Ware. Alwavt on hand the bet STOVES in the market. sPrt Chlorine, Excelsior, Columbia and Live-Oak Cooking Stoves. i Box and Parlor Stoves. j Tin and Sheet-Iron Ware. i Hollow Ware, Japanese Ware, and various ttotisokeeping Articles. All 1 .li-.v-v-.. Orders respectfully solicited. ''-'MO. ' D. II. A! ISTERLY. The Tnuios that Make: 3lEX.It is not the best things that is, tho ithinps which we call best that make nien ; it id not the calm experiences of life; it is life's rngged expeien- cca; its tempests, its trials, v Tho discipline of Jiie is here pood and there eyil here trouble and there jny, here rudeness and there finoothness, one workmgjwith the other; and the alterna tions of the one and the other which necessita tes adaptations, constitute a part of that educa tion which makes a man a man, in' distinction from an animal, which has no education. The successful man invariably bears the marks of the struggles which he has had to undergo on his brow. . . j : i Valuable Real Estate for Sale. Will be sold'at the Conrt House door "in the Oifv of CliHV'lotte. on Thuriay the 14th of Juiynnt.oue" f nau intremTTTHe KTOKJi JIOUMi and XOT. now occupied by IS rem. Brown Co; as a Dry Good Srore: Sixteen acres of LAND, on the Lawyers' Boad, near the corporate limits of the City, odjoiDine Dr. SI. SI. Orr and CapLlBaxter Sloere ; also, the Homestead of the late A. li Steele, subject to the widow's dower. i - , Terms Six feionlhs credit with Interest from date, note and approved security Tjtle held until paid. J. M. WHITE, Executor, S. J. WHITE, Executrix, j of A. . Steele, dee'd. Cw . ' June 13, 1870 Land for Sale. By Tirtue of Decree of the; Superior Court of Mecklenburg county, I will IsclL'at public auctiou to the highest bidder, at the Court House door in the City of Charlotte, on Saturd;iytbe i'th day of July, lfU, that raluable Tract of LAND belongina to Win. Wallace, deceased, lying on the Atlantic, Tennessee & )hio KailroaJ. about b miles from Charlotte, con taining about ICO Acres About one-lijiir or tne Land is under cultivation. The above Lund will be sold subject to fhe widow's dower.! Teems Nine months credit -with interest from date, with bond, and good security! ! i JANE WALLACE, Administratrix of Vni. Wallace, dee'd May CO, lt7U wpd I ; Administrator's Sale. On Tuesday, the "th of July next, I will expose at public sale, at the late reoideuce; of Jno. P Boss, Esq., dee'd, in the City of Charlotte, the following property: A lot of liouseliold and Kitchen Fuini Hire, 1 large Field Thresher, Ij House Thresher, Wheat Fans, Cotton Gin, Road Wagon, 1 fine young Jack, 1 Jennctt, and other; articles not here men tioned. ; I i : I The above property will be sold on a credit ofJ months, with interest from date purchaser -Riving bond wit unapproved security. '. y June J3, 1S7M 4w II. jM. MILLER, Adm r.. - Tie Greatest Invention of th8 -Age. Great Victory Obtained in SJ'JiWYlX G My hull s. f s .. , Having obtained the exclusive Agency to manu facture and sellUheiustly celebrated K.I.LLE11 IM PROVED PATENT SPJLVXiu wilEKL ip iu iMate or unnai-oT7ua. I propose to sell a hunted nuniber of Couaty Bights to manufacture and sell. Persona-desiring to embark .in a light, honorable and prcrfTtablc Lusinoss, by which they nny be able to realize .from 'S" to 20 per dayj clear of all ex penses, would do well tu coinujuuic.-tte with me at -Once. I . t Any pel son selling or,using the i-bnve Wheel, un less obtained from ine or my uthorii.-d agents, will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. f B N. SillTII, Agent, June 13. 1870 1m Charlotte, N. "C T T R. LI. MILLER & SONS, Wholesale Grocers, GXXERAJl PRO DICE DEALERS Commission Merchants, 1 I - ! ColJeije Street, ClIAULOTTr, X. C May 1G, lb70.' ! " j. 1 j ; Sparkling Catawba I Springs, CATAWBA CUUNTYt N. C. 7 This celebrated . Watering iTlaceJ formerly called North Carolina White Sulphur Spriiigs, wjii be open for visitors on Wednesday, the 1st day of June. Being situated in the Northwestern part of the State, in a section remiknble lor its deligtittul climate, beauty aud healthiness, these, together with the virtue of the, waters, make it one of the most de sirable Watering Places to be found. The Mineral ; Waters of these - Springs are. the White and Blue Sulphur, and ChaTyebeate r Iron, and they possess ail the finest qualities of thefe waters, and are sovereign ; remedies for all J-emale Diseases, diseases of- long standing, diseases of the liver, bowels, stoinnch, kidneys, Pulpomiry diseases, Eruptions of the; skin. Scrofula. WuaKuess, Debility, From the numerous wouderful cures that have eome immediately under my own observation within the Inst four years (by the use of these waters) I m satisfied that thiiais the place for all whose condition can be improved by the salubrious character of any water that Hows from the earth, and the medicinal qualities of the same are not excelled. Our rooms, in both. cottages and ;other buildings, are. large and pleasant ; cottages containing from two to six rcxims each, suitable for large or small families. Many rooms having been already applied for, arrangements will be made to accommodate a large number of visitors, and it is to be hoped that onr Southern people will patronize the Sparkling Catawba, which ought to be the p'ride of North Caro lina, as well as the South, for no watering place can offer greater inducements for either health or pleasure. ) . The Bar will be supplied with Choice liquors and segars. Good Ten Pu Alleys. Billiard Tables, cue of which will be of the most approved style. Good Bath Houses, for Pool, riunge or Shower Baths, and Sulphur Baths, hot or cold. .A good Band of Music, six or more performers, has beeu engaged for the season, and a good Physi cian permanently located for the benefit of invalids, who will have good attention.' . j The Sparkling; Catawba ibis season will be under the management of Mr John L. Eubank, (who, for the lat three years, has been manager of the Heal ing Springs in Virginia) assisted, by Mrs. M. A. Wrenn, and visitors may rely upon landing a good" table. . . . ; The esrs, on the Western and Morganton Railroad, leave Salisbury !very morning, .Sundays excepted, for Hickory Station, the Sprines Depot, where hacks with good drivers will be ready to take passengers to the Springs, a dNtance of six miles, over a beau tiful, well shaded road. .1 . .1 V' ' A good Laundry connected with the Springs, and washing done al reasonable rat ;s. ' : jBOAUD.j - For four weeks, St 8. Ter! week, $13. . Ter day, $3. Children tinder ten-years of Jage and colored servants hair price. No charge fur infants, or children under two years of age. Reasonable deduc tion ma:e for large f.niiHcs ;who tpend the season. Tickets at reduced rates, or return tickets, can be Lad on the different Railroads to the Sparkling Catawba. j ! . , i J. GOLDEN WYATT & CO.. Sparkling t atawba Springs, Catawba Co., N. C. JoneO, 1870 -in Registration. The act concerning '.'Elec tion and ' llefrifctration" for the year 1870 provides that the Secretary of State shall, ,on or before the first Monday in June, forward suita ble books to the commissioners of, the various counties, on their requisition; when needed, aud if they da "not receive a sufficient number, they are authorized and! directed to provide the same at the expense of the State. : The Commissioners are also required (Joselect, on or before the first Monday of July,' one jus tice of the peace for each election precinct, who shall act as registrar of voters, and when there are not enough justices of the peace to have one at each precinct, the commissioners fihall appoint some discreet person to act as registrar: ; f The duties of the Ile;istrars will commence on me tirst. liiursqay in July ana end on the Hr8tsThursday in Anxnst, on the - closing : of ihet polls. It is made the duty of ; the connty :' commis sioners, also, to appoiut, on or before . the hrst day of July, two electors at each precinct, who shall,! jwith the registrar, be judges of .the election. ir IN FORMATION FOR THE FRUIT DRIERS. In order to get the highest market price for dried fruit, observe the rfoilowin"' directions :, i Slice yonrapples, and not cut them in quarters,' and take out all the core. Dry them a light yellow, and keep the dark 1 1 Fruit to itself; Dry j your peaches by cutting' them in halves,, and snot in quarters, and do uotjlet the fruit tret wet. By l . -'1:1" -ii " t' :'. ' . ODserving' inese rniep, you win always get tne highest priceJ Keep your dark fruit tol . itself, and, it will sell as well as if the bad and j good were mixed. Statescille American. i , j' j COTTON GINS. CHARLOTTE, N. C, June18, 1870. Messrs. Bbkm, Bhowx & Co z-y&entlemtnT We, the undersigned, Cotton buyers jyaa Grocery dealers of this City, have bought cotton ginned on the Gul led Steel Brush Gin, and have found it to be free froift trash and dirt, and 'of superior lint., (fibre un- "broHen and free fronvkiap.) and good cottou sold for hatt"a cents per pound and poor and stained cotton Ti orr one to t wtvcentsj per pound over cotton of the same clasdillirtion i. .: t J. a .t : i Qatks, Saxdeks & Oates, STExnorsE, Macaclay & Co. E. M. Holt & Son, J, Y. Beyck & Co. x, We are Agents, and keep on hand a supply of the above Gins. Anyoue.in want of a Gin should call and examine thena before buying. ' . - Call or send for Circular ". . I i . BREM, BROWN & CO. - Jane 20, 1870 4in i ; : j t. j . ; 'I--.' 1 ! Just Received, U -T' -rt STL "V TiAliRF.rS Mnl-iseon and R m u m ra p.. . u rj ii i-i - vruns in U. Kjr Ji store ana to arrive all grades' aud ' I prices to suit, 2-5 Bags Rio Coifee, W Hftis Pivmiltr 2000 Lba. iiurce"Uountry Side Baconj . 50 Bags Country Flour, ' " ' i 10 Boxes Assorted Soda, : t i 60 Boxes Candle, i L 20 Boxes Family" Sonp, ! 1 10 Boxes Fancy Soapj chenp. -i A. large lot and ba'rrels No. Ij 2 and 3 Mackerel, at ' K. M. MILLER. & SO.NS. June 20, 1870. j BINGHAM SCHOOL, . ! : i MKBANLV1LLK, N. C. The Session of 1870-'71 opens August 24th. For Catalogue address Col. WM. BINGHAM, June 20, 1870 Cw Mebanev.ille, N. C. Wilmington N. C. Life Insurance , , i company JOHN DAMSON, 'l'r:sident. Authorized Capital $l-000,(00 Guaranteed Capital j ' - ' S800,OCO..' - j ! Having accepted the Genewil Agency for the Ninth Judicial District of the Wilmington Life Insurauce Company, I am desirous cf appointing an Agent in each -comity. ;Refere'nces requiredof applicants. Aduress me at Charlotte, N. L. S. EUSSJ June IH, 1870 ". Cm 1 Office (at Charlotte! Hotelr V Hardware! Too lai-zc.t stock of 'Table andirocketj Cutlery m Norti OarolinaJ Brades' Rivet-Eve Hoe, Grillin's Gra'Js and Grain Eludes, Scythe Stones and Snaths, Glass, rut ty, and a general assorfment of Hardware at Mclaughlin k WALTER. BREM'S. Jujne 6, 1870. ' Thirty Millions of Dollars. Fully appreciating the necessity for RELIABLE INSURANCE AGENCIES to tLis community, w havel -during the past three years, secured the npenjry of several of tho j - ' t Safest and Strongest Companies In tlje World. The combined assets of the Compa nies hve represent make up the priind total of Thirty MillSons Nine lluudred and Fifty-Eight Thousand Dol! rs. ! - i HH ring been engaged " in the Insurance business for several years, we feel competent to judge of the stan ine or insurance companies, ana oniy repre- sent puch as we can safely recommend to Our friends. We have paid losses since the War amounting to near Seventy Thousand Dollars ; And have never'appealed to the law to make settle- mend for us, Policies written on; all classes of Merchandise; Storehouses. ; Dwellings, Churches, farm House., Barnls and Manufacturing Establishments of all kinds At filr rates. I Of5ce Corner of Collece and lourth Streets. :. j j '' Ju ie.l3 1870. BURROUGHS & SPRINGS- , J. Ci. BCKBOrCUS. .;. ji : - -i" K. A. SPKIXGS. j. i 18701 HARRIS & PHARR, 1S70. .1. f . ' AT I -j V- Old China Hall, BelKten Tale jf IJevetM onn first national jsanr. CIIAKLOTTC, W. ' t Wholesale and Retail dealers iu China, Glass, Crock ery ajnd all other House I urnis-iung Ooodt to e found in any first-tdasaj Crockery House. ' :. ; r Goods having beenceleeted witn care ana wnu r v . . .9 tt . the iitention on our part of meeting, to me iunesi extent, the wants or .Mercnania maxtag purcHss-ro for retailing, and also for the wants cf families, all of wh. ich we offer for vasn. solicit orders by j m til or otherwise, and a call W from jbnyers, when tbey visit our City, before making their Spring purcliases. Jai 31, 1S70. HARRIS -ft rifARR. Notico. . "I"".! - NoKce is hereby given, tuai.at tae cxpiraiion oi ninety days application wiii ie mat:e icr aaupucaie of Certificate No. lfe d:;el tpt-mher 24 tb. 1802; for Tlshares of sto?k in the Chaiiotte South Caro lina Railroad Company in favor of Moses B. Taylor, the original having been lct. ' mL- o 1870 am- J. II. ilcADEN. The' Revenue, Income. Tax and General Finan- ' I--- eial (Situation. " . , The? revenue of the government is, in round numbers; $354,000,000 that . is. from internal resources $180,000,000, : and from "customs 174,000,000. The leadingjand prominent men of the 'dominant land administration party, in Congress assert that the government can be jearried on with an 'expenditure of a hundred millions a year, or less, independent of the inter est on the debt. The total interest on the debt is, without calculating fractions, 8127.000,000. Add a hundred millions to! this for current ex penses and this will erive a total of S227.00O.Q00. jiut suppose we add thirty! millions more, that is $130,000,000 a year for current expenses, inder pendent of the interest on the debt we: then -t,aVA n tntai mkt tinn nnn n)..hnnt nrlt,nr1r.l m;ii;r,no tWoi. T.AT;Avno Tilfi, ; : millions less than the revenue, lhere is a surf piU3 oi a nunarea midionsa year, nu ims oas been about thfis amount which the: Secretary -of the Trealury has had to apply for the purchase or liquidation of thedebt. . ; u - This is a very gratifying state of things J.'ox tho--conn try,' so far as its resources and tlxepayt ment of the debt go. It raises our credi abroad and at hfme and makes the bondholders, every where happy. ?,' The Secretarytrf the treasury and many believe that it wilt enable the governr ment to fund the debt atVlower rate of interest though there may be "some doubt if the bond holders jtvoiild willingly relinquish v securities which stand so- high in the market and . bear ng six per penf interest for others bearing fiur or four an"ja half per cent. At any rate, it shows theabllity of the country to pay the. debt, enjr jnous as t is, within .a short) time. : i : iJ'iv j : Tti y - A Foe to DcEUNG.--The late letter of G(ov ernor Stevenson, of Kentucky, now Senator elect to (j!ongress from that State, is full of manly !V1- sentiment. Jones, a ml , after some allusion to -rthe -j-various party and personal qaarrels in which a political career had involved hnn, the Governor saidJ tl dtrel I , will' not fiirht. For, more than thirt years I : .have; been a professor of the Christia i" -r': r v " n - I. t ' rcii2;ionj am now; cnier i majnsrrare or ine State. Nobody can induce me tot stab Chris tianity or trample upon the majesty of the piuU lie laws which I am sworn to unhold." This frank be J an d fearless avowal is all the -more to commended from its belngnttered in a communi ty where the duello has not altogether gone Jout of fashion, and. where, from a natural fear of be ing taunted 'with cowardice, more than one pub lic man Has yielded toa barbarous praeticfc whjich Women and Me; of "Perit .A'the Limanian beauties areshort, rather stout, pin inp and fat, indjthe efforts to appear tliin nnd,Wiisp- like, the frantic attempts to draw in the waist j . 1.4, iiTrTnmrer-Tiiicreceuis soni ernm jrnfore: than ludicrous. It often causes me ire":ret to see the silly attempts tq spoil a really rouod and plump hgureJ But it is a singular ;iact . that while the women are! all short, arid stout, the men. on the 'contrary, 'are sallow," tliin, and nar- row-chesUdj more like the French than KiiitHsh men. But 1 attribute this leanness: of figure to the constant smoking in which they continiiiilly indnlo-e from the earlv asre of nine ahd ten vears. O 1 7 - r . i . j , ;t... ... I : : ' r pROLfFiCiMiciHGAN. Michigati unqucstion ably deserves praise for what she is doing for the. preservation; of the "human race. ji he Jate j re port of the Secretary of State, shows that from . . t i ' i. .. i ro .i . :L. . i. :. i. jpru co xeceiuuer, aouo,. ine puiiit iu-which the statis tics! are made! up.) there we're two 'hun-'- f ten pairs of twins born i i the State, f dred andl ten pa and. as friends of :-thef agricultural interest, we are proui tojsay that two-thirds of the fathers of the twins were farmers ihere were also born three setk of, triplets : i but two out h? the three triplets, e are compelled to acknowledge, were in ooiHm: arp nappyj cwitrivancea lor shoemakers. The explanation of these interest- f hf ?'u ,Jrf - but. unftunAteIy, it is not con-in- facts we leave to the regular statisticians. ?,derfJ thodox. for grbwu-Jip people to engage X Urnip beeCl. - .. . v - ' I Received this ' Large Wh ' White Globe RuUi Baga, Golden Ball .' .At! ' -! June 27, 1P70. WILSON & BLACK'S, 1 '.-.! Kl ,: -M Lriig Store. l' At . i- - -. so SECRET. Smiths' Shoe Stored You can buyjthe best and cheapest Boots, Shoes, ; Leather, Hats, Trunks and Tobacco. J;1 April 4, 18 0. s. p. smith a CO. Just Received, k BARRELS MOLASSES, gT 20 Bags Coffee,. , :-:' ! 00 Kits Family jMackerel, 30 Dozen Pickles,.' 4 25 Boxes Assorted Soda, 20 Barrels extra C Sugar, at June 13, 1870. A;. R. N1SBET "ft BROS. PRESSON'S FAMILY GROCERY r Fresh Goods! Just recetvra at lite Sjn of the LiijJiaKt, Next i doir below Bryec's Banding, CU A R TV. C ' t . . . - I desire to invite my friends and the pujUirc genr friends and the pujbltc erallr. to call and inspect my Jarce fresh; and utj selected Stock of) 1 - - fc&r '. Groceries, &e., . ; Which have (just, been opened, cnibracins Sugars of all grades and low prices, ' Coffees, the usual! variety, M","5 : Teas, Green and BUck,; warranted. Molasses, thi bes - barrel. S Ulta lllc lowest, . ur j iu. I ' 1 ... . -1 li..' Mackerel,; pronounced by my customers the best ever opened io the City, ill ' , ' . . . FLOUIt, a specialty, as I select and offer none but the best, i ..- f-M ' .: Bacon. Uam; Shoulders and Sides, stlecjed brands, .well cured and the most! Approved by Connoisseurs of a well supplied larder, -i ! - " "'"' V'j;-! Lard, first quality, ia Cans and Barf eLV"' ! V Pickles, Ketchups and Sances, Jellies. Preserves and Fruits, Pepper, Salt and Splice, Soda, Starch and Soap, Candles, and Crockery, Shirtings, Sheetings, &c , Shoes of jjhe best manufacture, lor ladies, gen tiemen and boys, and cbpicej Liquor?, Foreign and Domestic,' for medicinal use, ( Motx'g choice Copper Distilled Whiskey. ' .Also, Cans, self-scaling, for fruit and yegeUble-!. ' WT? ' "v -f-g- Call and see my Goods, for you ; may secure better offers I ban are Usually tna'.ie. June Xi, 18 70. B. M. BRESSON, A-'L -" From Jhe Kaleigh Slethodist. Brain-Work, Diet and Rest, v BY - REV. L. PERKINS. An uninformed laborer, who has just returned from the field 'with jhis grubbing-hoe ' on his shoulder, would.be vety much astonished if you were to tell him thai the student, who had spent four or six hours of the day in hard study, had wasted as much of th power of hie as the man with the hoe. .Men lwho are used to having weary muscles imaginq themselves the only class oi peupie iuai are .weanoj: ous : meir aves oy their calling, and. theyi have but little sympathy with those woo pre, bra in-weary as it is a condi tion !to which fcftey areo!ten strangers. , It is, however, truej that brain-work exhausts a man's J energies, not fonly astiiuch but even rffiorethsrtt muscuhtr elloi t -if ls iiioro essential that the train-worker should be suitably provided with food espcciaiiy adapted to his wurk, than the man oi mere uiusce.--"It has been estimated bv Prof- llauhton . that th ree' bours of hard study will produce, mure important changes of the tissues than a whojo day lot muscular labor, so that it may be considered us a maxim that. "the labor orVtho braiji causes jrreater waste of tissue than the labor of the muscle The importance of the brain-in the ', animal econpmy is" indirnied by the! fact,' that one fifth of the blood is sent to urjiin, !aUhough the brain is but about' one-forget b. of the whole body, weighing about fifty ounces. , This fact indicates, further, that the1 worl of wasto : aud repair is iidly fu tLj going on, more rapi bruin, than in any other portion oi the huinau system I his leads us to thei inquiry," whit is i that is. sa rapidly consumed by the bra ri, aud that calls I lor so much and such constat t repjtir '( ?, . ; ; j- Chemical experimet ts have shown that phos phorus is a prominent ingredient of -the' brain. i It is! further ascertained that after, and oveu during a severe mental effort, ao unusual amount of phosphorus is taken, tip jfroru the blood and thrown or! by the kidneys. This indicates that during a mental ellbrt he brain demands for its use, and j uses, ajarget autbnnt of phosphorus than1; at a, time of meutil quit.i( r ;. If, then, pnospiioruslor plkosphoric acid.irivefl energy to the braini, ly bu; pplying it with the peculiar! material for its consumption, it clearly points to such diet as contains an abundance of the phosphates, for thefuse ojf those persons who undergoj great mental labor. J Ut such diet, may be mentioned as the est, beans,1 eggs, oysters, lifish, coaise wheat. bread and milk. .Beans and eggs may be cousideretl, with milk, as Ic-aJing the l!ist, with fresh fii thrown in as often as tliey tan be obtained. -fA (jnerinan professor in formed the writer of thus article, that whenever hhv could Iget beans to pat ttree times per day, he would not become but without his beans ervous from, hard study, le hqcame veiT nervous. had taught him to use hosd articles of diet that brain. . ' administer ed strength t the Then as to quantify, teverv tnan must become his owu jud-;o. Giant intSjlectsi are. irenerallv supporttjd by goiid stoiach sji and sound diges- ' v - ttUU. : J i ! . ; mpcrr'ect digeS iou ip a!deadlj.euemy to lactive t lought, theiehif e evj ery inau of studious -habits s iouid be watch ul cuneernijrs' the condi- jtion iof his sto.nmeh. Eat! nqthihg that you t. ' . , - . , ,i . . . . , Know to ne luaigestiDie, tnougnat be -;ever so tempting to the appetife. It tne quality of the blood is impaired by udidestion. the brain is iamoug tlhe first onrans o suijerL The machine-' jry of thought is'ciicubibared,and mental as well s physical disorder isthe certain result. One hour's study uhder such Cirtnfiistances, is more labori ous than four under :cirdumsiances of good 'sound jdigcsti6nl. . As mosculaf "exfercisejis essential to oodj digestion,., the tp-ainvofker should pay strict: attention to the due exercise of all parts J. L' 1 ' L J 1 f P! I I - a. L 1 1 1 - f . I" W'l 1 avo e.en, IQ.V?"- iiu cuwn c'ujio, uuu uiuuuq uatc uvcu yiv t.1JihTiriiilr" - vrmil ir. iBnndln'r im tlm trurAun li;i.-o Indents have cause to rC I II I III. m , 'S M ' i jl ne ntiporiiince oi ski p uas not oeeo properly istituated by many fctu - . ..1- . S'l- ! ous .persons. Unce the active thiuking, it can d the hours of ilev't duri lirifMiTi hnr. lirr.li rost r sleep,-1 it 13 uniiKe nmscie-weannes. v hen the mules are weary, i Jittle cessation from la bor and they" rest : tut when the! brain is wearv. to tt-.p reading,: or to Itop" Siting is-"not 'rest: The Uiinkl has to be divirted to get eren a Mr- tial relas'.itiou. ..; The thtiushtg keen niovitie i the mind! will be tliiokiiiir. kiulil sieen - brings ouict to the brain. ,h! !v-:-i - " is during slefp; ithat the brain gathers ;vt" sfrcngtn ;' it is tfrcn that the brain receives more blood; to rrpair thejj wasted 'tissues, -Ittniay be cbnipkrctl- to a reservofr, that I i,3 emptied by wakefulness and repleiiished'"a;aiflby" sleep. Therefure studious persons, uietinf active minds,' to preserve a well balhoiced .system should' be sci uf'ulo is about their sleep, f Do not be misled by the wmdorful tales aiout Bonapart's sleeping bnly our Hours m a ,tweiry-lour,!Xr .about Wcs loy's sleeping "only six! or bbut Brougham's " .i.-lll L -.r.V .."!.-.-! .'..! -- t- prorractou i&uors.- w nom . .sieepv "Ail men nave not such rmwers of efidufttnce. ; Vv hen sleep cills yon ' to rtst. take rt. - JfiTcry, man mnst by ex perience pind out what bjs system needs Keep the fact steadily in vielw- that it is slepp that invtiroraties tne uruin. lit you are called upon ia put forth at any particular UitU4 some p-iwer-' egart of mind, see treat the effort is preceded plenty of refreshing llecp. !i ijaving"first pre pared your subject, take rest, and jro fresh, with' a.previousij wen uiatierear 8unjecrto tne tasK !Jf To work the brain then to ad vantage. is what you havej tolearnl ,To h this seek suoh dietns wiil contribute to brHinenergy,;and take ail tbo -rest your system requir3. '.A violation of these Thles leads to many serious evi!sr notr the least of which ia nervous hea4iche t&k" Independently ik' hcr'accnlents 'which occur aaiiy to lauien ii-nm wearing: ntgn neelea boou and Shoes, a. vkriy of painful effecti are produced fin the nerves ud anatomy of the f'K.it, Originating in the unnatliral portion which that Important memoer oi tnp fiuuiau in while snpporting the framcL bnly is placed 1 1 be medical men - ore ! freneutfy consulted for sufferings, gcnerjtUy IocjI but sorodtimes spinal, originating iu thin fashion, which make women walk lame, and distorts their gcucrai bearing. j , Agricultural. Cause and Prevention of Rest in Cotton. From an Essay on this subject by Edw'd E. Evans of South Carolina, published in tho Rural Carolinian, make ; the following extracts which! yre know will bo intercstin j to Cottoo planters: ' - ' ' ' 1 "ITaying thus stated the theories of the dis-. ease, it will be instructive to examine the Tarioui facts which have fallen under our observation, ', both in the appearance of the disease and the -remedies which have been employed, to see how far they may accord with ono or the other of these theories; how far they may be explained upon recognized. principles, and 1 ow fir they may ILrnwlJurther light upon tbia obscure eub ject. i he first fact which we observe i- that in j unpropitious seasons, 6uch os the last, the dis- ease prevails generally, and uffects soils of almost every description. 't Here the exciting causa . would Beeni to ho in certain atmosphcrio conii- t ions, and in conflictwith the theory of noxious . matter as an exclusive one. Hero the disease would seem to be beyond the, contro) of the v farmer ; but it is not eutirely so. On my own ; farm, during tho last season, amid the general prevalence of the disease, a new ground and ' premium acre under high treatment, on opposite ' sides of the farm, were entirely exempt, j This fact proves that under the most adverse atoios pheric condition, a high condition of the soil, i natural or artihcial, will mitigate if not prevent the disease. The second Tact which we notice, is that certain soils are extremely liable to the disease, while others,' and especially new lands. are generally exempt. ' Here the exciting cau?9 is evidently in the sou, and the cause is c. . . : apparent. Imperfect drainago and exccs3rf vegetable or mineral matter are clearly unhealthy to the growth of plants, and, as might be antici- pated, a removal of them will correct . the evil. rs ' Mora thorough drainage and thecpplication of lime or ashes has, with the observation of many . , of us, arrested ! the tendency to rust in certain lands.-: !;:;!,,- , i , . ' Thero is one class of lands extrcmply liable ta rust, the cause of which is difficult to understand. The isinglass lands upon our . rivers f are among r our dryest and most fertile soils. r In thoproduc- ' tlon of corn they 6tind unrivalled, and yet they almost invariably produce rust in cotton. W10 ' new,' they are said not to rusty and it may bo , that their very geucroiis Bature has led to cx -vn li-ustion in some osscntiat element, . Itwould be .-, difficult to1 estimate the amount of. potasb . phospliorio acid, lime, etc., which these generous soils have, year after year, yielded to the tillage ; - of the farmtr. This view ia , sustainci by tho i fact that high manuring has been fouud at) ' effective remedy.1 '.'-1 . j y . " i :A tnira met is tnat coitorf usaally rusts at (about the same period of its erowth about the period of fruiting. I have never known a younr piant to do nuectea by the disease.. It is at the tinie -of fruiting that tho demands npon (be toil are larjrest. The ash of tho cotton seed amrmnta ' to four' per cent of weight, and is ono of tho richest of all vegetable substances a inorgsnio .matter. It might be expected, thentbat any defect of the soil would bo exhibited at this critical period, and the vigor andstrcngth of the plant being impaired, jt would fall an easy tictinl to disease. - It is a well attested fact that man. uring, at this time, has often cheojked the develop ment of rust. Again, it has been observed that -cotton manured with guano has taken rust, while that unmanurcd and adjacent has escaped. This fact is not singular when we reflect that thq effect of guand, especially in small quantities, Is soon exhausted, and the plant is then left upon ' very poof soils in worse condition than if no manure had been used.- . ,. - ' . Again, it is said that the prolifio varieties,' which are now known under tho general term of Pickson' seed, were found more liable to rust than the ordinary varieties. The principle opor) whicu this depends will not bo difficult to dia- ' ' cover when we examine into the exact function ! which the plant performs in producing fruit. " Alone tho plant can produce nothing. It can1 only wot k up into living forms tho dead elements ' of the soil, and, if thee elements are wanting the very tendency to fuitfuluess is itself a ourco ' of failure. . ".; . ? ' ; ; ' " "In the report of a commission appointed, by ,1 the Government of; Australia, to in vestigate the , cause of mildew in wheat, it is stated as sap portrd by facts that thdtnOrc improved and pro-, anctiye varieties were peculiarly subject to tne, '. , -, disease. This .troth is sustained by analogies r . from animal JifeJ '? Improved itock !req aire im- j proAcd pasturage; -and improved and prolifio plants require a higher condition of the noil. " ( ,,. Z: From what has been said, I think .we may Conclude that whatever may . be t)ieeutt iiatre i of the disease,! its cxciting.canse varies with the''" varied condition of soil and eeiison. .It .may bfl. affirmed that whatever is unhealthy to tho plant, ' will generally cause h to develop rust- . A gen- . 1 ' era! remedy is alone to be found in judicious ,'-, manuring and cultivation' A frpccial cause will often require the application of a special reiucdy. . , .There is a dispsitiou onKgig the purely pracv 1 ' -t ticaj farmers of the country to oscrilo tho dis- 1 ' ease to some general cause, such, for example, as ' ' fhe presence of the pokeweed, aud to seek fur a remedy applicable to all cases. , In this view . ' common, salt is sometimes recoiaroen4ed as a i--' ' paoacai. k The value of salt, both ai a manuro ' 1 and as a remedy formlldew ju grain, eontt Unlet one of the most vexed questions in the literature of Jjngiiiih agriculture, and its value in . this country seem equally uncertain. - Some remark able facts have been stated ,to me by, several of j our' best farmers, attesting its value ks a preven- ' ,, i'-rt" " t tivd of rust. ''But it s difficnlt to account for iu' action in this tept'Cf. 'Its base ctHiktitutca ono of the least iinportaut elements which enter into' plants, and its value as a septic agent moat be' iufcriot' to both lime and ashes. Its effect in I destroying fuscct-lifc is well known; sud in Eg. laud it has been found equally dost rnctive to ' fuugns growth. It is to, thU (hat l'rofessor , Johnston ascrdes its value both as a preventive and a remedy for mildew., . 1 . F BAN CIS JUSTICE.,; . Attorney at Law, v V.rycSi JhtiliUfig, CHAHhOTTrJ, X C Jiiuelt), ISJ'A 1 i , i ,11 , :' Hi la t ; i i 17 . i .! It rsir s i J s