THE STBQKGEST. BTJLWARK 1 OF ' OXTR COXJOTY-lIE POT - CARPENTER & GRAYSCK, Editors. CLEXDEXIN & CARPENTER, Publishers. 1 VOL. I. no. . MAJHW r 1ST-GAR31A RUTHERFORDTON, N: C. Terms of Subscription.' r Copy 1 Year in Advance, $2.00 1 ! C months, ' 44 -j.-1.00 tST Any person aending: ua a Club of five triih the Cash at above rates fbronTeir, will be cutitled to an extra copy. Rates of Advertising BPACK lmo. 3 mo. Croo. . 1.(10 2.50 r.oo P.U0 2:00 6.00 12.00 18.00 4.00 R00 20.00 30.00 12mo. 1G.00 30.00 45.00 70:00 1: iuclt " ; 2 j -I" . --: u ;.. S.00 20.00 35.00 45.00 1 column 15 00 40.00 00.00 80.00 12500 ff Mfcial uotices charged 50 per cent Uglier. Local notices 15 lot-ntH a line; t3f";,.Ageriis procuring advertisements will W allowed a commission of 25 per cent. 1)K. J. L. RUCKER, rilYSICIAX AND SURGEON, J- Grateful lor flic liberal patronage hereto fori received, hepes, by prompt -attention to ' all Sea Up. to lut-tlt a coutinuaucc ot tie Kamc. if t r 1 V ; : - v L. f. CHURCH ILL, C m. wiutksii)u CII URCIIILL k WHITESIDE, ' ;- aTTORNKYS AT LAW, : I .' - Ht'THKHKOKDTO.V, N. C. " '-"Will practice in all tlie Courts ot Western Norfli Carol i 11a, in tlib Supreini Courts of the iJtale and in ihe District. Cjicuit and Supreme Coulrts ol the rnit'd Biaten. ltf " .M. II. JUSTICE, ATTOHNKY AT LAW, J , . lntiKHroiTO.v N - C. '-. aimi? collected it all pai t.bt the State. Ill J. L. CARSON, ATigUNKT AT LAW, 1 v . Ut-rilLKIOHDTOX, N. C. Collection! made in any part oi' the State if possible. . "l:tl . I . -:- R.2Wr- I-OftAN. " J. M. JUSTICE. LOGAN & JUSTICE, ATTOilNKY AT LAW, K I'T H Kit YUU I T )N, N. C. Will srive prompt s.tlctit on to all business utfuitcd to their cn ret 1 Particular-attention yiven to collections iti Lotji feupenoF ;nid . ti.-tices' -Courts. 111 J. R. CARPENTER ; AITOKXKY AT LAW, '' . , '" ItCTllKUKOhlJTOX, N. C. Collections promptly attended to. Itf 21 AIL 11 OA D DlllECTO 7? Y AVI I.ITlIINCJ'rOIM,, f;iIA II LOTTK A IV 1 1 HI THI.Itl OUD It A II.nO All. I EASTERN DIVISION : GOING WEST. , ! . - . tiTATIOSS. . PASSKNGXR FKElGH.- ' I.cwve Wilmineion, 8 00 A. M. 6.00 A. M Arrive Lilesrill., i.4 " 10.00 4 GOING. EAST. - STATIONS. , ASSKXGKR IRKIGllT. ' Leave Lik-siille. 7.40 A. M. 12.0'J M Arrive Wilmington, 4 3't T. il. 5.00 P 11 WESTERN DIVISION. STATIONS. : Leave Charlotte, "' .Ariiv at Bi flalo, I h ' eetihning. 'Leave BurTalo. -J Arrive Charlotte, j V. Q. JOHXSOX. y s. I ' - ! Assistant Supt' I rASSKSOER. S 00 A M 11.30 u' 1.30 P M, 5.30 L. FRKMONT, Gen. Supt. 1 IWESTEItN .N, C4KOI.1NA RAIL. "-' . IIOAD. j raspenger Trains ou this Jtoad run- as fol- GOING I WEST. Leave Salisbury at ' ( Arrive at Mrion, ; "'Arrive at Old Foit ' 5.60 m. 12.48 p. in. il.32 t ! GOINO EAST. lLeaTC -"ld Fort, -' ; Leave Marion at Arrive at Salisbury, 1.5 a. ra.' 8.04 " 3.32 p m. niCIinOIVD A INI) 'DANVILLE RAIL ROAD COMPANY. KORTH CAROLIKA DITISIOK .: GOING NORTH. . ' ' . - - s '. ' bTATlOKS. ' ' Leave-Charlotte, i Arri ve G reensboro, Leave CiteeDsl.orof Jrrire Goldsboro1, MAIL. EXPRESS. 7.10 p. in. 6.25 a. ra. 12.50 a. ml 10.10 - 1.45 " i 11.10 ' 11.05 a. m. GOING SOUTH. STATIONS. Lea ve Goldsboro', Arrive Greensboro, Leave Greensboro, Arrive Charlotte, " iJAIL. 4.00 p. to. 1.30 n.m. 2.15 -4 7 20 " EXPRESS. 3.3dp ra 4.00 " 8.30 " I All passenger trains connect at Greensboro with trains to and from Richmond. ' f Tuliman Palace Cars cn all night trains bo tweeu Charlotte and Richmond, (without chauge.) ' . S. E. ALLKN. I ' Genl Ticket Agent. W. H. GREEK, Xiaatjbr of Transportation. THE AIR-LINE RAILROAD. Out Passenger and Freight, tlire times a Week, Monday, Wednesdays and Fridays. ; '. GOING WESTv) .... . ; ' Lear -Charlotte, i 7.30 a. m. Arrive Blacky 11.26 !.u V la Passenger and Freight, Mondajs, 'VTed aeadajs and Fridays. 4 GOING EAST." ' - Leave Black's, . . , 2 00 p. Arrive Charlotte, 5.56 , , B. T. SAGE,! , Koiineer tad Superintendent. t . . Follow Thou He. Have ye looked for my sheep in the desert, . ; " : For those who have missed their ' ' ' Have ye been in the wild .waste y,.-- places, " - ' : "Where th lost and the wandering' 1 stray?- ' "V,.,;' Have ye trodden tbya lonely highway, The foul and i darksome street ? It may b& ye'd see in 'the gloamings The print of Christ's wounded feet Have you folded close to your bosom" . The trembling, neglected lamb, And targht to the little lost one - The sound of the-ShepherdVnaBfte-?- Have ye searphed for tho, poor 'nd needy, - ' . "With no clothing, no home no bread? The Son of , Man was , among Jhem ; t He had nowhere to lay his head ! Have ye carried the living water ; To the parched and thirsty soul 1 Have ye said to the sick and wound-, ' - : cd, j.'-' . . " Christ Jesus' makes thee whole'.' Have ye told my fainting children Of the strength of the Father's hand? Have ye guided the tottering foot steps To the shores landf" of the "golden Have ye stood by the sad and weary, To smooth the pillow of death ; To comfort the soitow stricken, r ' And strengthen the feeble faith ? ' And have ye felt,! when the glory . Has streamed through the open door, And flitted across the shadows, That I had been there before f Have ye wept with the broken-hearted, In their agony of woe 1 Ye might hear me whispering beside " ; , : . you,. ' . . . -. 'Tis a path I often go. . t ' Can ye dare to follow me ? . Then, wherever the Master dwelleth, There Shall the servant be. ' r ' Kind Wards. JFort:e, Power, Work. There is a certain class of words tised in j)hysies and metaphysics supposed to den otc, Dot phenome na or .facts, but the causes of plie nonietia or tacts. Thus it is said, u bodies are attracted to the earth by tr?m." . A body does" uot move,' unless the conditions of motion are present, by reason of its inertia. r u One element unites with anotlier'bv rcjistirt of chemi cal affinity.", Que body displaces anotlier- by reason of their mutual impenetrability." z l Abody returns to its previous form, after being compressed or distorted, s by 'rea son of i ts clmti'citj). " ., " Loner custom in the use of words not only justities their" employ mcnt jn jcertain connections, but impresses us more or lcs&, if not with a notion of their logical mean ing, with an idea tbt they 'iiiust have some meaning ; and we eon tinue to employ them in their un usual cohiiectioii often without stopping to thinks whether they have nnyjm caning at ialh In com bating this fallacy of occult causes, Mr. John Stuart Mil I illustrates th ei r a bsu rd i ty b y : add ucmg no e example-bf a jitudenthQ,; tvlicn asked how opi u m caused ; sleep, replied unhesitatingly that "opium causes sleep bv reason of a certain soporific: quality which it posses ses." e v can all smile at the stu dcnt?s ' soporific quality,! but wenever think of smiling when the philosopher attributes the fall- ing 01 bodies to a certain falhiig property which they possess, ito wit, gravity,, Far be it from us to assert forgetful of , the" New tonian apple, that 1 bodies do not fall. We feel constrained to-acknowledge, the fact. jJ But; HoW much better is the tact understood when attri bnted to a certain force or property " iti' ' the f : 'niaf ter, by whicli it fal Is, or o an occult iorce existing somewhere outside' itself wlycb: ipipejsty the grandest fact that evep'wasior 06 of Jctlii bf JrHatfer. As, .far ao uuuiau jcoouuu gu, ji seejns not only coextenaivc,- out &eter nal with raatter itself, and, if eter nal, of course uncaused. ' . As withthe word rarity, ' the name'given'to the tnosf a'mlliaV of all the so-called,-forc,-8d,vVith! all words denoting' ;a ptoperty or quality, as the. cause of action, and so with the 1 word , force itself in tbotsajnjet sense, fl .With this met- pnj;sVeal or occult forpe nhyeical 8ciece'ba8lnbtb as' we are attempting to illustrate the use of the words heading this articler6bme dilution Ho the per haps ; most comriionapplicationof the J tetiti ' cottld hardly be dis pensed 'with. 1 1 ; i But thb weird force, as employ ed hi mechanics, 18 often ambigu-J ously used, or, rather, it is;usedtdj express such different meanings as to frequently mislead. For.in stancey we say that .there is a cerfaiu amount of force in; a tun, of coal a n d he Oxygen necessary1, for its combustion ,i',i'i "certain ; amount of fdic iW a certain. num ber of cubic feet iof i.oompressed air 'at a given tenslou and! so on. It is in this seiise that the word is used by the very best authorities when speakingof . the conserya tioni 'jdr .persistence i'.of fprce. v 1 .,- - But the meaning is: widely dU ferentjwhen .we.pcak of si cubic foot of iron as pressing, upon : ita support witk a force of 450 lbs.,: or ofai r, compressed to one-tenth of its; ordinary volume at the level of the sea, as exerting a force of 150 lbs tb the square' inch;-, There may be great force in the latter sense, with almost none in the former. V . Suppose a press operating upon a niass ot metal, or some other sensibly incbrnpressible aulmtance to:be screWeldown with all - the force the rress can bear, and to be left in that condition. 1 tier may be now a force of rp any tuns exerted y the press upon, the metal: lHt in the former souse of the wbnl, that is, -ability to pro duce motioii,tlipre is scarcely any! A verv slight motion bftliobCreiv, barely enough to compensate for the elasticity of the press, relieves tlio teil sion. Jiti the -latter 'aense, the word is ' tieai ly synonymous witlvj7 vmtrti ra'ndi. if the pressure is as conditioned that it can iact th ruugh Tfatancc; we have-foree in the forincr sense", rhqs, if the cubic foot of iron be elevated 1,000 feet,- and then held upon a support, it-will exert,, force u of 450, bs. upon .that support, .and will" have, inthe former sense, 450000 foof-pOunds of force, Q? kf much force as is available," with 4 , an ? ofdinai'y iwiler and ehginc, from about a pound of coal, ti thp cubic foot pfu irqn,reisted Aipon aipportinearhthegroundv -say, oneirootf at wouta pres8Upon its support with aorce 9M56 Jba. 1 . . ill , smz u wouia nve lit xme lormer th e; j ettecU ve io re (J ue, , pAy x Jtp of;cpaltVV:hu , l.Oplpi ,feet nigh, it wasin. a CQndition .to .exert 450 iai. s r t - los. ;pt lorce:;( pressure) tnrougp r,OO0 feet ridistajiee, tdr.. 40,000 footipoun ds? i u th e bth er ase nit 'Mid- lit U condition; to eirt-450 lbs. of force (pressure) through one foot, or45(rfixytpou nds. The wbrUrc raer sen9e,-i9 flytionymous with iWQrk,,buti,itis.9eldnv ittfaeC it ought never id bei uedf hi tiwt eii8e.ih niechafiical calcnilatidjis. Work is equal -to force or pressure multtpTiedoy thB distance thfoif srh whicU the, coriditibni ;wiH i3eiert mat, picsauic. xiius, in vur niua- ihch, the work 4rhicbri that? forbe could perform would be onlyl Ivriisad onlv inone signification. icad liaithterefore easily ejipjined. Yet in the minds of manj .lfcj&fe ftincbnfouliJeftlA'wsiri or Thwb!powW' haliiriefetfe to' tho ranidittr-with which the.' cWdltlorrlra Wnaustei; thd nloK cmmoniy usea .ueingin norBe power." or the power necestary to raise5 SOOO' Ibsne foot- in 1 on6 rniriute: : . f .-.r :k: r :.j AYprcA is the constant pressure. Work'is the pressure- multiplied by the di stance through which the force or pressure is or may be keit Upc 'Force and - work have no reference to tirao; Power has reference to the ' rapidity with wnicn me worlds or may be per formed. ;i M ... It is not rrieant to assert here that these- words are; never nro- perly5 used except in -the senses wnicn we nave1 attempted to ae fine, but our experience in cor respondence, and . dealings- with 1 ri veri to r8 an d mechahics, conyi n ce us that there are very-many who confound the various meanings of for"ee, power, and work.- Ameri can Artisan. 'f; ;! a A Talk A boil it Orphans. Have vi sited the Qrpb an Asy. lum in Oxford, silt is really amus- insftd witness i the astonishment of the children as they admire and survey fori the first time the ex tent of the building. One little boy exclaimed . ; "imh I this cer tainly is a good old place." Some arrived there; hungry, and having been accustomed, to eat without ceremony, ,Mr. Cohen found it difficult to induce them to wait even . for a very.i short W'srr ace." But they have, warm rooms, soft beds, good fare, and n ew books. The institution is. in regular op eration, and. is doing , a noble work. , Its benefits are denied to many children, because tbey have been gobbled up by avaricious re latives, and are now growing up Ml jgnoran.ee and semi-slavery. because the demand for their ser vices exceeds the 8uppl5r. : . ; ; , t Well, what arc the rules of the ini titution ? One, rulejis , to have as lit?e 4red tape' as possible. In spme so-called rel igious organiza tion s, charity . is fortified and al- rnore inacceBsible oji . account, pf mysterious regulations, j A rPoor mftfl might as -vj-ell go tolVVash ington to collect dues on . a con tract - for, beef furnished the army in Organ .Another rule is , that the chief , end and aim of hQ ipr stitution shall be to do oodjby faithfully carrying out . tiie. (lesign pf the, G ratad t qdge,. . as expressed in the following resolntions : I "Resolved, Tini.tSt';jn,CoK lege shall bp made anlura for he protection , JrainVng,! and edu cation of Indigpnt orphan chil dren1,, r- - v. JZesolccd That. orbhan children ill jthe saiidj Asum; isMi;;he fed and clotheqjKaqdti shati receive 8ueht nrenardtibn traimnc: , and edtipation a4?yij.i TOP'T' useful, odcunations ' and for the URiial , . business T tranacipris . of life. r j- .t. tiV'. tt i 1 .: : .-, Jicstfctd, That tbfe Superinten dent .of .tVid . Orph Asyltira shall Report o Web nnuOotn- ijumcation jcial acU,frepeipt8, disbursements, with . such BuggesMons as he may , .These jpsoutmpa arenveryH.x- Lcents a mile. LUther.-road3 vill tirobably do. a8 .mucbi' and" ,p6ss,U ihlv more.. If the friends ot itne cuiidreu canseud ftje'n to ltaleigt the Supenntenaent will funnsji transpo rtation to Oxford. t- r ' Are tne Denentsoitne msara- tmcOTinnetliehM of dea8aa?Mfainly noi SendbrigHtibby Mlnd rgirlsTiot m tbaUbght 'in or4 ffi0re. j ttjan jhir teen years .J-wha give berplels 9fetnersttttire Wned'WtKe':Ba paQdyaddy;! a ! 1ivinV; but Wis hfWay1 drntiK 1 Ail i tie does forjn bfeat1 mItri worse off ibsif cnltdfBU that have no daddiv JXIavT go7 tc th Asy- lum?" r His was a hard case ; but he .couid not go. His Iaddy ' ought' to. driiik less or more, lie ought to quit: drinking and be have, or die and get out of the war... ' -a . ! ' How, is the the: iustittution to be supported ? Here is the reso lution ot the Grand Lodge : liesotcea, That tbia Urand linage elect a Superintendent who shall control the Institution, and solicit contributions from ail, classes of our people. . But will the people contribute ? Some will, and- others will not. Some have already done so: others are thiiikinig about it. One Lodge has taken the lead, I others will follow. As the man agement is neither political nor sectarian, and the persons em ployed are members of different religious denominations, tliere is no reason for withholding help, in a cause which carries its bwn appeal to every human heart.-- Biblical Recorda f fc "' Has Our Climate Changed. Thi general conclusion which ah examination seems to warrant, both as regards rain:fall and win ter climate, 1 sthis, 'thai'tliere has been no change in the; lapso of many years." .None can. be sub, stantiated ' as having occurred within a ce htury. This -. proves that changes through agriculture, drainage, ect, give rise to no ap preciable meteorological effect, and that the public opinion which asserts such aii influence is alto gether erroneous. Only recently have precise and correct views been entertained of changes. It is now known that cloudy weather, or rains, or fluc tuations of the barometer and of the themometer, are not of re stricted or local origin, , but that they have a progress in a deter minate direction,;, often of thou sands of miles. ' This fact is ; at the basis of the duties in which the Storm-Signal Corps is sblably engaged. In ; many parts of the United States, there ai'p prairie or treeless regions several hundreds of square miles in extent, yet these are not rainless because they are treeless , clouds drop water upon them to the same amount. that they jdo.on . the neighborurg wooden regionsJ Considerations suchas these -may. satisfy us that tlie surface modificatipiia which "the Atlantic States has undergone since their first settlement have produced -no meteorological lefV ieci ; and that the. rain-fall and .winter probably remain the aame that they were many centuries ago.-Crwci IMcauh, : , , ii Kissing the. Wrong Woman. 1 A,n amusing mistake occurred "ob fhe Miiwaukie4 and La Crosse Railroad recently. In , the .fourth iest1' Back bftlie stoveV in I one' ' of tne paseiier cars, ,.ot ; geuue- "man alidJ lady, 'sweet .and gusljijtg as the ffairy bhe3 of olden tiroes. His anri' encif cled her waists and hiis'wereiied; his fair . companion , with all t the earnestne a Iomeo'. In short, 'ineysferc' ihe: observed of all ob 8erjer8. . . f ;v t . f' An -ne'rttW.Vf;. the couple alluded to, sat ja demure looking lady,; interested' in the display of aftectipn jh frontof her, so natural and . pucjhihgy ; ( ,' " v ?,iA!tie train approached 1 a tun hel,' the ardenLiover left his 'seat for some purpose, and whehlpart of thtf Say1 thrdfih VWIealPwas dark as n igh t, h e gfb pe5 d h is way baek-and jiist : as thfe tralnbe- gan to emerge into the I east glim- nier of Iht, roere asa Jell whlcK startled the 'entire load of passengers. The poor? fellow had gorie one ?eat too far back, and had seated, himself, in the wrong onknd niKsnto kbaVleprare !adywhocouln t OCU IU . JUv . lib UUb 4IM UUU , (lUli with the moat sheeplaTi'lboK eyer seWjtto his1 1 ''placed beside th 'H,;W!eTj;be Brjectrsyere convulsed with laughter. ' "Too Hard." It is no uncommon thing to hear schdql boys and girls say, con cerning this or that particular study, It is too hard. Tney come to the conclusion -that it is both hard and useless. The time spent in studying it will be lost, they say. I Parents often indulge their f children in these foolish notions, and in after years it tells on the history of the child. The object ! ofsending children to school is not simply that they" may, like eo many parrots, learn to. repeat by rote a long string of facs. Chil dren are sent to school to prepare them usefully and honorably to discharge the duties of men and , women. The principal part of a literaiy education consists in Iearnihg to think. Education, properly speaking, is the' act or process of developing Hhc mind. Easy studies never will do this. The 8linging ot the sledge causes the muscles of the arm and fingers of thje blacksmith to grow large and strong. This never would take place if the same arm used small wires as a tool. The solv ing of difiiculties strengthens the mind and at the same times give to the mind tact in grapling with hard thiugs. Many of the mather matical problems that are .put down in the books, are in "one sense1, of very little practical worth. Perhaps the greater part of. the human family have no practical need for the cube root. In practical life, problems in the cube root seldom occur. Still it is necessary for every school boy to master the yrinciplc8 involved in extracting the cube root. charge the ordinary problems which occur in practical life more comfortably to himself and more usefully to society. ,One of the misfortunes of the present system of education is that it aims at making every thing so easy that ho study is required on the part of the pupil. The pupil is taken blindfolded over all the -hard places. ''He ne ver sees them , and the (result is that in after life, when he comes to . grapple with difiiculties in earnest, he fails, to his mortification, and often his loss. Yorkcille, S C. Enquirer. A ITIcchaiiical Teat. At its approaching session, Congress will be asked to provide the means for one of the greatest mechanical feats of the age. The General Post-Oflice building be ing found insufficient in , size for the accomodation of the numer ous clerks required to supervise the work of thirty thousand post offices, Mr. - Mullett, the chief architect, proposes to elevate it into the iur, and to .put another story j beqeath it Headers fami liar with Washington, will re member that this building covers the entire square, between E and F street and Sixth aiid Seventh, and cbntatn8some of the largest rooms in the city. The dead-letter room 13 about ' Beventy teet long by forty-fi vo- wide and two stories high ; the book-keeper's roomns abou t sixty feet square. Li 1836, the wboden structure then used by the department' was destroyed by fire, with many of its archives. To. provide against such a casu alty a second time, the external walls of the new building were' blade of marble, and three; feet thick; the inner w;alli anp of bcick; and the floor of slatoed ded upon; gnined arches of brick. This eubrmou.- inasH of ni:istiirv it is now proposed to raise some twenty feet in height. Buildings' larger in extent, have been lifted -at. Chicago, hut none ofjuch weight, and .where the slightest mistake would , be so fatal. 1 All this is to be done while the btissi ness of the department is to 1 c carried on as usual, with full fa- cilitv of enterance and departtux for. iti hundreds f of clerks and West-Caeolina Record $2. ! f 1. 1 , 1 hi -1