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No. 12. : ::;FAEilil ' y";d ... . . X - .. ' . ' . i . . ' v- . , '-....,-.1. . I. if gov; . -iivi 9(1 toi OCTOR!; 23 1 873; (.From the Memphis Appeal. . - j A Fearfal DIselosnre. The Character of the Hajkant Fever r atHeaphis.' 12 00 24 00 55 00 - Innocent bnt'ConTlfctetfyMJttf " j and His .Mother In the An- burn, N. YM State Prison. A Iad' wlio was pome 3 ears ago left, a widow with u small family of children, after ninth Irihulaljon, suc ceeded in bringing up to manhood one son, who proved, himself able and wil ling to be a support not only to her, but to his younger brothers and si tors. About a voar after b.ccominf of " age ho- was offered a lucrative posi - tion in the West, and ho emigrad tf.Ith ly, soon married .New tics, however, did not absorb old affections, and," as he prospered in his business, ho sent regularly to his mother the means necessary for her support and that of her. family. The years passed on and brought n.any changes; but still regu larly as the quarter came, so also did the ample remittance of this model son and brother. When the tide of cmifirration turned to the Far West. thia,son was carried with it to Oma ha, where he invested his earnings in town lots, whiih spedily rose in value and made him a man of wealth. At least tins was the intelligence seuj, his mother. .Lately; whilst visiting Auburn, his parent was invited to make the tour; of the State Prison, and whilst passing, through the vari ons wards she accidentally encounter" ed one whose, presence caused her checks to pale and her heart to tem porarily slop its beating. It was her son, her good and well beloved boy who for years had been her pride and support; tor a moment she was speech less, but at length bursting into a tor rent of tcarjj, in which the prisoner joined, she said: "p, 1113' son, my son' how came 3-011 here?" His story being told devclupe'd the1 fact that he had, by trading with straugers, come into possession of a large quantity of coun- torleit money, and that in ignorance of its character, he being on a visit to jew xorii. naa aiiemntea 10 pass it had been arrested as a chief of a gang of counterfeiters and having been identified as having endoavored to circulate it, was, in spite of all evi dence of previous good conduct offer- ' cd, convieted aud sentenced to serve out a term in the fStato Prison. His wife, with whom he was in constant correspondace, had aided him in keep ing his incarceration a secret from his "mother, and had roirularly remitted the quarterly allowance, tpgclher witli letters forwarded from the, prison by him But for the unfortunate visit the mother woiild have remained for ever unaware tnat her son was serv ing out a penal sentence for a crime never committed by him; she learned, however, that by tho rise of corner flots he had been made a wealthy man, and when ho should come out of pris--onjTwhich would be in a few months, ho, through the skillful stewardship ofhis wife, would find awaiting him the sum of not less than $200,000 in United Stales bonds. 1 Such aro the vicissitudes of life. Philadelphia Sun day Dawn. The Long Lost Found. lue unmn, un., jscks gives an in teresting description Of the finding of a lady in that plate by her uephew after sixteen years alsance. The lady a native of South Carolina, was mar ried sixteen years ago, and emigrated to Georgia. Sometime aince her hus band died aud she then assumed her maiden name, and , with her little chil dren endeavored to eke out un exist ence. Uer situation becoming worse, however, shp wrote to ber nephew iu Carolina, giving a history of her dis tress aud poverty, and praying him to come to her relief, pledging herself to do whatever work she could to repay any expense incurred by him. The nephew arrived in Griffin last Thurs day, but unfortunately discovered that be had forgotten the lady's name. 'But with the aid of several gentlemen be succeeded in finding his long ab sent relative, in an humble pabio, andj carried her and her children back to Carolina. A private letter to gentleman in this .city, dated last Friday, at Memphis, Term., says: "Death on the pale horse is riding madly over our city. Many ot our best citizens have been swept away by this fearful scourge, yellow fever. Hundreds who fled to the coun try have since died. The ministers of the different churches havo worked earnestly to help the suffering. Some have been called to their long home while in the dischargo of their duties visiting the sick and burying the dead. Money and nurses we need most." ! Jlaleigh News. It is a remarkable fact the medical faculty of Memphis are by no means a unit as to the nature of the disease now prevailing iu the wty. That it la yellow fever is asserted by some, but it is nothing more than a virulent type of the common malarial fever of the Mississippi bottom is the opinion of more than oce the best physicians we have. The fact that it is conta gious, or communicated by .contact with tho infected'r persons, v proves nothing,.T9ince,scf --',demtSra is mbro or less of a contagious nature. It not yellow lever, theD, and if malignant type of malarial fever, why should it be present here iu Memphis at this time? The leading physicians ot jew Orleans announced within the last two or three days that there was not a single case of yellow fever in tiie uresent Uity, toe nilheito sup posed hot-bed ot that lear-inspinng malady, and that tho city was as healthy as it has ever been at this season of the year. We hear of no yellow fever in Galveston, of none in Charleston, Cjoutn Carolina, 01 none even in Havana, one of f the original introducers of the pestilcnc into the American continent, jls it not 1 little strango that, in view of the fear ful ravagos or the .so called "yellow fever in Shreveport, Louisiana, and of the highly inflamed condition of the public mind outside of Memphis, touchiujf the fatality of; that aisease in this city, !New Orleans,! and the cities of the Mexican Gulf the nat ural continental sates of ingress of this tropical pestilence should be free from the presence of the destroy er ? It is accepted, too, we believe, . a r m among the medical proiession, as a theoremic truth, 6r postulate, that the negro is not liable to be attacked by yellow'fever his tropical blood be ing, it is assumed, fortified against a disease indigenous to the tropics. 1 But the prevailing fever has not respected this right of the colored man, which tho fifteenth .amendment tb tho Constitution ot the United States fails to cover or protect, and our daily mortuary report shows that black men die of the disease as well as white. Physicians of ibis city tell of cases in their practice in the Mississip pi bottom, characterized by alT the smptoras and effects of the present disease, including the 'coffee grounds ejections from the stomach, and saf Iron color of tho victim after dissolu tion, and yet there is no 'yellow fever' in the" country at the time, and no man dreamed of calling the disease by any I other name than malarial fever. Bat, leaving the elucidation of this interest ing question to our learned friends of the school Esculapian, we can't avoid tho fact that a disease of a malignant type is among us vigorously plying its mission of death; nor are we less persuaded that this fatal fever has its hidden, but plain, cause hero in Memphis. A subject of as much im portance as this dreadful pestilential visitation naturally awakened in quiry, and inquiry has discovered a condition of things so appalling as to excite the wonder that the death deal ing breath of pestilence has not before this dociminated our population. We have no system of sowcrago in Mem phis, and the necessary consequence is that the filth of the city is left to take care of itself. Our sanitary po lice consist, for tho most part, of some half dozen of tho chain gang, who oc casionally do little more than eman cipate the confined odors of the ken nels of Main street, and give wings to imprisoned effluvia.- Our alleys and obscure streets aro left to the rag packers, to porcine and scavengers, to cleanse them of their superfluos foul ness, and were it not for the rains ot pitying heaven, would of themselves give abundant employment to our un dertakers and grave diggers. Anfl yet these aro the least of tho fob jectionable features touching the vio lation of tho laws of hygiene in Mem phis. We almost shudder whon we consider tho condition of every fam ily in Memphis in the matter of a sup ply of pure water. Nearly every fam ily in tho city is dependent upon a cistern for its supply of water; nearly every cistern in the same yard, in close proximity to, and generally in a di rect geographical line with the privy ! No. intelligent man need be toldot toe percolative and absorbent qualities of the earth, and no Mpmphian need be reminded of the difficulty of finding cistern water in the city free from the impurities of animalcuhe induced by decomposition. The train of evils following these disagreeable truths suggest themselves to the intelligent reader without further elaboration. Tbo great question with us now is to apply the remedy, and no time is better than the present to awaken the community to a proper sense of the situation. A Remarkable Predletldo. -,,... x. '';,i;;.v,.'t:'-?.;" Mr. O. I. fJroly, sometime! manag ing' editor of -tb New York World, and now the" mpyiug spirit of he; Daily Qrajjhter has come before the .country as a-veritableprpphet.---He wrote for the Modern :Miikert in December 18 72 the followipg article: i - . 1 r It is now a commonplace of modern thought that ability to predict' estab lishes the- validity of any scheme. To pr6ve that sociology has made. " some advanee in Ibe direction of certainty, 1 veatnre upon a few generaliztffions touehing the futar: - ? v-.'; '!' .predict that the. u JJemorat n laenimt election nnaer its old name and organization. The new anti-ad ministration party will have another name and will fight under newsread ers. 2 - ' j' : 2. I predict that questions of ad ministration, such as civil service re form, minority representation, the control of .telegraphs and railways, and the extension of tho powers, of the central government, will be the main issues in future political 1 com paigns. 3. I predict that within the com ing two years this couutrj will experi ence the worst hnancial panic known to its history. It will bo more wide spread and disastrous than even that of 1857. All the debts created by our paper money era will be wiped out or compromised. Land will temporarily fall to one half its value. ! 4. The panic will be precipitated, in all probability, by the failure of the Northern Pacific liailroad, aud per haps the bankers who manage it, Thi3 will bring to light such an amazing amount of fraud in connection with our railroads as to discredit all stocks good aud bad. The bears will hold high carnival. Tho men of mo3t repute in financial circles and on the "street" will prove to be common cheats. While the panic will commence, from all ap pearance, in railroad circles, and -I will be confined for a time to the new Western enterprises, ifc will spread finally to the national bunks, and will developeau amount of rottenness in those institutions which is" now be yond the power of tho imagination to conceive. . , 5. I predict that in ten years, time the Northern Pacific Railroad enter prise will be regarded as un o - the most astounding instance of human creduelity and folly. It will bo a mat ter of profound astonishment that among a business community tens of 1 I thousands of sensible men could be found to invest mojuey, with a hope pf profit in a railroad which began no where, and run for the most wart through a howling wilderness. That' this road may be built is possible; that it can be made to,pay the present gen eration, is too crazy a chimera to be for a moment entertained. 6. I predict that when all the great Pacific roads break down, as break they must, an immediate demand will be made for the Government $o con trol and run them. This will "be the entering wedge for the final control of all means of . rapid transit by the Central (jovernmcnt. 7. 1 predict that, before the break down of our railroad system, corrun- tion will be rampant in Washington. he rail road rings will run tho Gov- crpment wherever their interests are at stake. ' 8. I predict that very few will pay any heed to theso prophecies, and that after they prove tfrue, they will have been forgotten, and another in stance will 'have been given how prophets aro not honored in their own time and nation, in the fate of A Positive Predictor. A NGtorira El The following York paper: fIoJuiy,PraV Maximilion 'ton J throe years of a" c resetted hitT;l bi Africa as agpe : periala.Governoc the condition -Ot-Consnlatifiitj:; In perfomiafJl VonKraoi' 'c' theTTfa,-' lTcnjnrcr :reer. --earned !ieepitsi V of the im .amine' into 3ns German Ithebrld. ;wlkf Tlic Iit!Siattr KjfUm the Self Cairo, and lived Upon the money thus obtained in a most luxurious manner, nntillhe reached, on his return trip, Cairo. The German Ambassader in that city caused Kraut to be arrested on a charge of a common svvindler. The nobleman waa put in ; irons, and conveyed in that state to Stettin, his birthplace, in Pomerania. Max. Von Kraut, in 1861, wheu scarce ly 21 years of age, came to this conn try from Prussia, where be had been dismissed from the militarj school at Potsdam, and declared unfit to ever hold a commission in the army in that country. He figured for a time as an officer of Prussia, on leave of absence, in New York and sncceeded in de frauding a number of Grerman import ers out of various sums of money. The' Prussian consul, however, compelled-, him) to leave New 'Xork. Krant now went to Harrisbnrg, Penn., where his insinuating manners soon secured him a clerkship nnder the State Gov ernment. At Harnsbarg Krant be came acquainted with Simon Cameron, who, upon the breaking out of the war, gave Kraut, whom he believed to be an educated Prussian officer, a com mission as colonel of the 1st West Tennessee .Regiment, an imaginary or ganization. Kraut went to Cincinna ti, where he spent his salary in a verv disreputable manner, until one day he was charged by a woman in a ques tionable' house with having stolen her jewelry. . A In consequence of this damaging charge he was compelled to leave the Union army. He therefore went South, but was refused a command in the Rebel army; and trying to escape from the Confederacy on the blockade runner Themis, was .caught and sent to Fort Delaware. There he remained until 1865, when President Johnson ordered his release. He nextfwent to Mexico, where be became a staff officer of the ill-fated Maximilian. But when the latter was caught he turned infor- mer, ana received a commission ln tue Republican army. It is said that;: in that capacity, he was present at the execution of the Emperor at Quere taroi " . I .' . - He returned spedily to Europe, how'-j ever, and was publicly chastised in Berlin, in 1868, by Prince Slam-S!am. Since that time Kraut disappeared from public view until he has now come again to the surface, but this time in the toils of Prussian justice, with the prospect of a long term in the State irrison. -r A tlispatch irQm Nev York, date46T John1. .Tt Irviithe self confessed murderer , of Mr. Jfathafthas reaqbed Ne rYork" .from r; San Jprihcisco - in charge of dpiecfiyea Jt is stated .that ijie, prisoner; baa Imrfdo": another. " com-, mpntcaUon.' which, while) known to be partljfajse, cqitaips adm .highly im pojrtnJt vnlermatjon., t One-of .he de tectives states ; th'iV the 6toryas now as.pnblished and jhefia of the opinion J&ajjie, vi v- tviih .oilc;tdl hatev to h4 : Many iacts.tuai avo ficver appeureu in print relative to the Nathan case have been known by the officers en gaged in the case some , time, who were only awaiting connecting links which would make the chain of evi dence complete, and it is now believed that Irving has the power to place them on the right track. It is believed that tho following named persons were engaged in the attempt to rob Nathan's house July 29, 1870: Geo. Ellis, Dan Kelly, who is now in Sing Sing serving a term for burglary; Carr, also in Sing Sing; Billy Forrester, new in Joliet prison. The job , was '-put qp" by a German Avoman, whoso ; name could not bo ascertained, and who was then lodg ing ats Billy Johnson's. She subse quently went to board with Irving, and wjiile there no doubt the latter managed to secure the papers, etc., by which he proposes to show all about the Nathan case. Dan Kelly was heard to say that he killed Nathan, and to tell how he used tho dog in do ing so. ' It is said Irving will prove that Kelly, now in Sing Sing, killed Na tcan with the iron dog, which he ob tained ofiacalkor in the Brooklyn navy yard; that $10,000 in bonds, which were in Nathan's safo, were seen in Kelly's hands a few days after the murder; that those bonds were negotiated, and that Nathan's watch; and chain were pawned , in Centre St., the day after the murder. 'J.t ii'Aity9tt'i ilJ ha079 - . . 51 nip ClCwUdJoDei-eocnly ! tome- JTheirost ,haa .badly, damaged ,1b e. to&Bccd Jo t Ortytbouad Stokes coun ties:: -.-c"". - ......... - I BkipriciGetrf'of Greono conn ! f . A. .Inrrro iirnnnl ion Aft It a Rlntn mI ;5pmj,ty" taxes' of Now Hanover remain All L' t Salem, mid NYJhston want to tot up the coning of the frost atr. Memphis: WMteit yeV i willed ..erj A Change of Fashion. A Mocking bird in a tavern near Lake George imitates the buzz of a rattlesnake so well that when men come into the house they kick off their boots and run away. A man who can marry and does not, ought to be damned,' is what the Hev. J. E. Wicks, of San Diego, Cal., is re ported to have said in a sermon on marriage; : Noble Devotion. The following is one of the most noteworthy instances of self-sacrifice: "Lieut.1 Woodruff, of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, whq died1 while attending the plaguo stricken city of Shreveport, fell while engaged in as noble duty as any ever discharged 63- a soldier on "the ten ted field." Ho was engaged during tho summer in removing the great; Red river raft, which has for a long time obstructed the navigation of the river, and refused to suspend work during tho sickly season because he wanted the river made navigable in time for the movement of the cotton crop. On tho 10th of September he arrived in Shreveport without having received any warning of the epidemic that was, raging there. He immedi ately joined the . Howard Association, and, although ho wa3 not acclimated, devoted himself to tho care of the sick, At tho end of the week he was attack ed by the fever, and after fourteen days of sickness he died, having sac rificed his life in tho cause of duty and of humanity." ' ' Charleston News.A Courier. Mr. Aiken and the Planters. MWhy do you set your cup of coffee on the chair, Mr. Jones?" said a worthy landlady one morning at break fast. "It is so very weak ma'am, I thought I would let it rest." ' . Tho Colorado papers arei bragging over the wonderfully restorative ef fects of their climate upon on Ohio la dy, who could not sweep her room at home, but shortly after her arrival in Colorado was able to chase her hus band a mile with a pitchfork. I We publish in another column the re ply of Mr. D. Wyatt Aiken, to the criticisms. elicited by hip Cokesbury letter. When that letter appeared, we pub lished a respectful but earnest and energetic protest against the doctrines which it advocated. We felt: that, if accepted and acted upon, the only re sult would be to embitter the planter against the factor, and alieuate the factor from the planter, at a critical period when good feeling and united action were essential to the success of both. It behoved us, in the .interest of . the community, to speak plainly and boldly. But, while most strongly reprobating' the advice given, we ac corded to the adviser that; justice which he had failed to render to him self, and stated our belief that Mr. Aiken did not himself perceive the logical consequence of his own teach - We are glad to perceive from Mr, Aiken's present letter that we were correct in this, and that he really did not intend to advocate any breach of faith or violation of law, and that he only "advises cottonplanters to affect compromise with parties to whom thej are jubtly indebted and; if pos sible, effect an indulgence for siity days." Had this advice been ex pressed in his former letter there nev er would have been any indignation excited, or any criticisms passed upon his letter- certainly not by us. It would have merely been saying frankly to the factors: ' 'We have had your money and, like honest men, we are ready to pay our debt, but you know our condition and see what a forced sale may cost us, and we ask you, if yon can, to grant us an indulgence which will enable ns to pay you-with out ruining ourselves." The nego tiation for an indulgence must, at last be made through the factors, who can be , relied on to , do their best for the planters,?-because the proceeds of the cotton in the majority of cases is all that they have to depend on for the repayment of their advances. v Frost at last. . ' V The grand October "openings," as they are called, are now taking place in New York, and all sensible people will be glad to learn that a "pictur esqne simplicity" is the highest rule. Furbelows and paniers have vanished. and the scanty plain robe clings to the lovely figure just about as close us it ought to. The mass of dead woman's hair is goqe from the shapely head. -The long cramped feet are at last free to rest -their corns and bunions in heel less broad j soled beds of ease. Even displays of costly embroidery or jewel ry are forbidden. "In short," says an eminent fashionable authority, "the true woman of ton will endeavor this fall, by the grace and simplicity of ber attire, to show that her husband has neither robbed a bank nor been the leader of a ring." What a relief in these money stringency times. Make a .Note of This. ! Whenever a gentleman wants any- thing published, whether it interests tho public or only an individual, ho is willing and will 1 propose to pay. Somebody must pay for ft, hereafter it vi)l not be the printer. Tho faci tert the proposed publication would interest the public has nothing to do with tho matter at issue. Newspapers arp private, not public property. They aro published to make money for their owners, and if anybody would use them they must pay the cost. Never did we go to a merchant and use his goods for any public purpose without paying, and if we and hundreds of others tho public employ a lawyer ubuut a street or other highway, we pay the lawyer. The dodge is very tiresome, it is very old, and wo hope to hear of it no more forever. If -you 1 - want some scheme v it interests yourself iiods you must not expect us to pay the cost. The Scythe A Horrible Outrage near Boyds- Yille, Tenn. ' , Memphis, Oct. 13. Near Boydsvillo, in West Tennessee, last week, eighteen armed men went to the house of a citizen and took: a negro girl out into the weods, and each in turn outraged her person. They did not attempt to disguise themselves, and carried their victim but a short distance from the. house. The people with whom the girl was living were unable to prevent the out rage and were compelled to listen to the agonizing shrieks of the helpless creature. Her body was found soon after tho beasts had left, most hor ribly maugled, and life ' extinct. . It is stated in conuoction with tho horrible affair that the facts were never repor ted to the authorities, and the body was buried without any legal exami nation, and the crime waa sought to bo hushed up because of the alleged respectability of some of' the parties who perpetrated the fiendish outrage. , 1 - "' i'' An orphan, nnder age, married his female guardian in Illinois the other day, and was compelled , to get her written consent to his marriage before the welding could take place. t tWMiirnt..ana ..er Ihe'dappledrca t bird Vet opened toe gatef of doypUkq riMQjj'ap' Jiostify attired men and wompn,, '.t'cini. nude children H 4 f'Brmsiy ere out tn thVstreets-hrcajhingtne , precious air of ; the, Jn riy j n , f ijps'K , JBe'f oj s too pin 'sjiffio!tere"hiid -ful of tpe gli tic ring hqEr;frcOT. wYifctfy and gazing Qn; it. frith sewhat .ot ihegladUpgsnflit IsraelitxsVgatbertjd the raannninVfie we tnanK xneo ror. vtni8j Diessing;- utners oame ana toucnea ,witnv.-rev- erenlial fingers the pure, cold- nies sentrer of health, as if to satisfy them selves, like the half-believing Thomas of old, that the saviour of the city naa not risen but .descended irom heaven, to save tho peoplo from the destroying angol of the ( pestilence. r Groups of men and womcnj moved from place to place to prove by cumulative evidence that indeed it was frost,. and not some optical delusion; that (be wished tor guest had notmeroly con fined its visitations to one '.locality. but enjoyed the trecdomlof the city Here a palo-face, ouco.a handsome woman, with atQuder "habo ,at her breast, kneel down on the' cold around to thank God that. tho frost haocomo I Poor, stricken heart! fsho. and "her orphan boy wore all : the, pestilence had spared out of a once happy , fam ilyJ Strong men, bare-headed and bare-armed, walked excitedly hither and thither rejoicing in the . fact that a phyician had come to whose nos trums the whole faculty, mustyyjcld precedence as the only .true panacea tor tne tcrriDle yellow; lever... Win dows and doors were , thrown open wollen and cotton garments were ex posed to tho disinfecting . agency of ine coia ana rarenca ar, anu cvery- wnere in tho city as wc4l as in tbo vi cinity of the infected Vegion tho. en thusiasm was a marked, if not as., fer vent and joyoue:" ; . . yro hope they " ntilatod, whether alone or thous- . .Dr. Munscy, y'.' 1; The Lexington Gazelle publishes the paragraph from tho' Kii:n , Register about the aject conditl iM ot'tliis once disti!u;iished and' Wnquuf.t minisf r, and comments as follows np'oii it? ' ".This .is a sad picture;: wo do not say ia shocking one, for the unfortun ate man is more sinned against than sinning. This country has novcr pro duced a rarer genius than Munscy. With all his wonderfrl gifts ho was as gentle and guileless as a child. i Ho overworked his fccblo' body in serving a church in Bajtimorc hud succumed to a paralytic sCroko that deadened one side and deranged his mind. We saw him in that city over a year ago at his homojstill tugging with a laboring oar.We gave oar opinions to friends at the tjme that he was suffering from tho excising labors of a city pastorate: It seemed to the noble fellow as deserting his post, and ho refused to leave. Another severe attack of palsy, wrecked mind and body. He left the city for tho scenes ofhis early life in. tho back counties of iVirginia, bordering oirtue Te lines- see. His own people in ere were poor and obscure. Ho was moneyless. It is a shame to tho church, to society, to; humanity, that, this man of mar vellous powers and noble .. life should end his days friendless . and insane, and the sport of the vicious." . . . j Tkxas akd Aukaxsis. As many North Carolinians are emigrating -or traveling to and through the fertile States of Texas aud Arkansas, we iu yite attention to the' comfortablo and expeditious route offered by the 31 era phis, Charleston and Texas short line which has been opened 'to this travel within the last few, months, it being an all-rail route, avoiding both iver aud gulf navigation. This liiie , is com posed of the following, 'roacjs: The North Car6!ina to CharJest,on4 S. C t Kichmoud and AtlantiVjAirLiDe (.0 Atlanta, Ga., the Western ( and Atlan tic to Chattanooga and. Memphis, the Charleston from Chattanooga to Mem phis, the Memphis jin'J Little Rock to Little Rock, "the Cairo and "Fulton to Texarkana, and there connect with all the JTexas roads. Special Jarrange ments have been made over this line by the General Superintendent, Can tain J. C. Ross, andlLe General Tick et Agent, Col. J.'C. Lopez, and'tickets can be had at all the' principal ticket offices in North Carolina. ' ' . Mrs. Jefferson Davis has., recently recovered an elegant album of paint ings that was "confiscated" by a J?ed eral soldier dnring the time; of the war.' : . . . - Among the flummery afloat concern ing John Howard 'Payne, "'it isstnted that ho never had a horned Ho' had Ks good a home as anybody" need to 'have, but ho chose to live e! so where.' Mrs. Judge Simon tou won the fiit prjze at a recent Iowa baby show with her 22ud iiifant, aud competing'mat ron8 obsorve that is no' wonder, con sidering the practice she's had. A new color, which it is predicted will sweep every thing before ii this winter, is as yet unnamed.-?' Xt'JFai des cribed asi looking litre spoiled preserve!, and wilt be 'worn in polouttisea over blaekdlk;: ' "r' ya v.: jT .:: V . A couplo named Burell, living in Philadelphia, got married thrco years ago, and have not spoken a word to each other since, though Jiving as man and wife. Both dumb you know. The Chinese icmples in Su IVan ci sco are not a popular objects of curiosity with the Eastern tourists as Uhey were previous to tho discovery that the sacred buildings are frequent ly used by the Chinese to socrcto small pox patients. Donaldson can claim that he has done something for sciouco. Hn lus ascertained that the easterly current which starts from tha Ciptolino Grounds, Brooklyn, hs ilb terminus in a well dc-Cued sour npplo tree iu Connecticut.- A novol application of ico was mjido at St. Louis tho other day, 'when forty five tons were used to cool and Hhih contract the iron tubes of tho mat; moth j suspension bridgo across tho Mississippi, to allow, l he insertion of the connecting tubos. I ' ',Tho SepremG Court of Now York has just decided that a man can pick alh the fruit from a tree growing on his own land though it hanf! over on a'-heighbor's land. The question is an old-and oliiayuluLoJlC- laif-beteisn'thera. frill w-IV -'I'V1 lbirteen fcih' honsds wefo deslroycit id 6ne locaniy Stf Florida, Miccosoukl, during ) to) to rm. ; ... .. j . , Tfltt laairt'bnSrness of tho Bank tell erfl'fri many citreic now is to tell the people ;Voy have; ocarency i Ap Eoglisbf judge has decided that aarrcL between man aud wife is not Sefc .!.t.b.e I?5.aceV - r7 : V CJonid. had been aunposcd to bo. n boy; but Ihe. Kansas City Journal has discovered tUAl he mu ''darter." ' j?ATtnso.N, N. J. -Only 'oiie 'siik mill itt'thls city isninnirrtf fiill' time. Several har-q entiiely mi spondAd --OhlytSOaMvorih of stamps ' were irfd! in'lho Witdiicgton poet-ofllpo durjpf ttb mrnth ot Sopterabor,, - wia-u'uvuctforuwallj England, was marricl .ToulOniuo county, Cal. on tho-liot' ultimo, to her lovork whom sho travelled 7,000 miles to meet; 'm ( A man who drew a revolver on thrco plckpokcts who wcro trying to rob him, at Indianapolis, was arretted for carrying concealed weapons. Thoro Is nothing equal to tho majesty of the. law. IK I mo don't tako thod mcl- grcon,and God ccs The editor of an Indiana paper has' been presented by aJiniring frivndi with a lot 111 a cenietery. Lhu in th; fir&( instanco on record . of uu ditor being atlo to "dead bead' it into a grave-vard. u An essay rqad bofriro tho I'emisyl. vania Agricultural bocicty, at it last meeting, by Dr, Dhambbcrliin, estim ates the production of silk in tho Uni ted States to bo already worth .SiL-( 000,000. . . .. . . - rJ An Ohio woman lately traveled with one ticket, four trunks, two band-box. es, a flower pot, poodlo dog, umbrella, jug ot raiiK, luiJCh oasicct, a paper sack full of peacdes, and a boy of fif teen whose ago she gavo-as nine. "Fred," said a voung man walking up uortianut street, tho other clay, alter listoning to! his wondcrful'story, "do you know why you aro liko a harp struck by Jicliininii "No," mvm Fred, "I givo it up." "Bcauso a harp struck by lightning U a blaslM Uyrc.n ' i A farSmcr near Chicago, who ham fino pa6h of melons by tho roa-lidc, has inis aamoniiory sign cnaiuci out and put up conspicuouHiv patch : " Boys, ons, for they aro you. it is anuonnco i 1n.11 rj ti.Mani wns tbo only civilized country which did not send homegrown tobacco' toitho Vienna Lxhibition. Varictici are shown from Norway and .Sweden, an well as from tho tropics, aud from all intermediate tcrrilor.iss. . - There aro 400j .ril the United' Suites. Tha .Mjhodi!.H hare 47. t hi largest number: thru cunu? the Catholics, who number 41: the B iptists, 33; tholPresbyterian.', 29; t!io Episcopahauu, z iinthcrns,M; Cjcr man Iteformed, 14; Jews, C, aud Cu gregationlists, 3. ? Agne3 Lee. The press of Virginia ' is deeply sympathetic in its express sions regarding the death of Anes Lee, youngest daughter of tho late General It. E. Lee, who' died in Lex ington Tuosday nitfht. On n:ch nn occasion, as the Norfolk Isinliaaik feelingly oljserves, "silence is our txibt eloquence.' .. 1 . ( Ii is said that tho Nebraska Indians aro allowed to ride freo on all. trnin they can jump on whilo tho latter aro in motion.j Tho tribo L;i n ' ivduo- ' ed very rapidly. This is by all odJn the most economical and cflVcMvo systom of doadbcaling on record. The C. C. Railway. The Passengvr Train has at last como up to tbo Wadesboro' Depot, and will continue to run there regularly hereafter. ' Last ' Friday was the first through run, but they still have to return to Liletvillc, to turn round ns they hfvo not da yet, constructed a Turntable at this point. Tbefe wtre quite a number prcseutou the occasion. Col. S. L. Fremont, Chief Engineer and. Superintendent, was on board,- Wadesboro Argus ' .