dtTNTRY-Ttffi POPULAR HEART. feARPEOTER & GRAYSON, Editors, CLENDENIN & CARPENTER, IMji-Lishers. MO. .42. THE STRONGEST BUIRR 05? OtiR PROFESSIONAL CARDS. 1 QAITHER. , JSO, GRAY BYXCV. GAITHER ! & BYNuM, XTTORXKYS AT LAW, Moitd 4.NTOK, BT. C. - practice in Uie Federal Court, Sopreme Court ol North Carolina, and m Uie Counties t Cuwba, Caldwell, Rutherford, McDowell, llenJtrson, Mitchell and Yaifeey. "j - Collections made in any part of the State. 38:lv W. HACOX, SURGEON AND XECLIXICAL Dentist.. 38:ly RUTHERFORDTON, N. ; C. DR.- J. A. .HAGUE, Physician and Turgoon, re- ' jortfiilly tt-rtdrrs In IVMiessii: 'rvict- t tlwrilizen f l lit V t Iljtjr and... Mirioutidiu xnUrv, ;tiid lnjc- t writ a lait of their "T)H. '.t, L. -RUCKER,J rilV.SKIAN ANI SUIiGKOX, dMirhl lor llie liberal pitrotHtpe hereto far received, liopos. ly prompt attention to .ill-cull", to, nici it a i-ontiimaiirv of lie. twine. i-tt W. !.()(.; AX, L0GAX & JUSTICE j ATTOITXKVS aT LAW, . HrTiiKKKoiam)?:, CI Will' five -jroinit j.ttiufoir to nil bfsiucss ' utru!4tel -to llsf-ir hire.- I Pariicubir Miii-iitioii ivc-n to rollc-ctibnsl in Li.ih Siii'vrior :md .I'.i.-ticcs' Conrt.. I 1 tt . J. R. CARPENTER, ATTOItX KY AT LAW, , ' lUTHKitKoninox, H rollrviions i ronij'tlr Httrtuicd to. HOTELS: CHIMNEY ROCK HOTEL, Chimney Rock. N. C., Wallaco & Justice, Jyrittors. f llhlf'wy ln'lwecii Asl.eville and I?utluT furdtnn. SuiiKiindc-d ly tlu rtiMli.st. jnioun tiu (kTiierv in tho world, lltit-sts vi!l bo Biitle coiiiloihil.lt mid c-liarv'id iiKKlcrattjly. 41 CIIAULOfTE HOTEL ; ClIAULOTTK, N. C. J . W. M. Matthews & Son. :is:tf i the BURNETT HOUSE, RUTHERFORDTON, N. C. , ' In f'ivn for die m- oinmoilMtiou tf the . tr-lliiijr jMii.jif. ,t,i Hitli Rcxid Irt. jwttt'ii" tiv- Miiiii(., ai.il jrm d -A Un :ind fejd for K.im, il.e jtrc, lit. tor nfL.y u l.nre of trou C. LUKXKTT. Hly Pivr.rittor. AJiLEN HOUSE. HKXDEUSONVILLE, N. C. T. A. ALLKN-Ppiietor. Hood Tallies, Itcntivo 'Servauti. wrlj ven lilUtod l:ooaisiii,d eoinloi talde Sla-blt-K? BUC K H OTEL ,! ASHKY1I.L1-; N. C, R. DEArER, Proprietor. ' ' ' " ' 1 ' t no A 15 D 2.0O Vt-.Il DAI; Ctf riemming- House, 1-onrd per Pay, $1.50 Weyk, 1.00 " Monti.. , 21.00 C. B. FRKKMAN, JVopmtar. BUSINESS CAIiDS. JN0. L. M00RE. produce and 'fjottftn4 Shin-nnr.' AND DEALER IX I ' . GENERAL MERCHANDISE, . SHELBY, N. tC j Nnrt auennon io uk wrwaru- nl r ... . i.i . . . filing xiMii, ti riauiern mccounis, J'Ug'tny torrcfpoiidfiits New York. J"1?. lialtimore and Liverpool, und will ' KOtiate lor advances on Slupmentis! t jce oj jjl, per liale. All perm dotUroui er or otlicrwiv. 38:3m BLACKSMTTHING. clj1?115' Kal,w" wouli amuce ito liii! itili ,,l,d cutlomcrH that liin Shop u Jk ,n-Jul Wast on Main Street, SouUi U Uie icrm8 as low us the lowest. Shoeing Horses fl.OO. I Z, "',ry produce taken in ivaieut for work 11 rket prices. I -ive hi in a Call. KMj WZ&TEIW STAR LODGh Wo. 01, A. F. M. I to eaTrly o the 1st Monday it ijtE't t...i 5.l!,0lLll. Twfdavs of Superior CourU. t fday8 of Superior CourU, u the Festivals ot t If n G-M- Wl ts. John, t 5 G.M. WniThSlPK, Si . i T7EST-CAE0LIIJA RECORD. c L1SIIEIX EV 12 II If MATCH DA V. J.C Clindenin, V M.T. Cabpente j- PuBLISHlt118-. ".; RUTHERFORDTON, N: C. Teems or Subscription. 1 copy 1 year in advance. $2.00 1 copy 6 months x 1.00 .05 Single copy, t copies i year, 10.00 16.00 10 " 1 " W " 1 u , ma nn wyw Specimen copies sent free. Rates or Adtebtxsxkg. Per inch, or less, 1 week, . $1.00 2.50 5.50 9,00 16.00 4 4 1 month, 3 " ii U it 1 l&3r"Non-objectionabe local notices 5 cents per line. Advertisements are payable quarterly, in advance. tzHT Agents procuring advertise ments, will be allowed a reasonable commission. C?a5r Special arrangements, when electroty3es are furnished. ' ' . t&OT Objectionable advertisements, snch as will injure our readers, or the character of the jiaper, as a high toned journal, will not be inserted: t&T Any further information will be givcn on application to the pub hshers. ' Tlire Little Bns. A Three little bugs in a basket, And hardly room for two ! And one was yellow, and one was black, And one like me and you. I The space was small, no doubt for all, So what should the three bugs do? Three little bugs in a basket, And hardly crumbs for two ; And all were selfish in their hearts, The same as I or you. So the strong-ones said, "Well eat the bread ; i ; And that is what we'll do." Three little bugs in a basket, And the beds but two would hold; So all three fell to quarreling The white and black and the gold. And two of the bugs got under the rugs, And one was out in the cold. Sd he that was left in the basket, -Without a crumb to chew, Or a thread to wrap himself withal, When the wind across him blew, Pulled one of the rugs from off the bugs: j V . And so the quarrel grew ! And so there was war in the basket, i Ah, pity 'tis, 'tis true ! But he that was frozen and starved, N at last ; v A strength from his weakness drew. And pulled the rugs from both of the bugs, And killed and ate them, too ! - ",, ' .' ' . m: i . Now, when bugs live in a basket, Though more than it can hold, It seems to me, they had better - agree The white and thex black and the . gold I And share what comes, of beds and crumbs, N And leave no bug in the cold ! Til Ml I CK. The Tribune Agriculturat edi tor says : The more a bed of Canada thistlee is dug into and plowed out and spaded up the better it will thrive. Under such adversit-, it takes comfort and spreads. Such is its nature. If, on the contrary, its growth is en couraged until it is fairly in blos som, and it is then mowed as if it were the most useful forag plant and carefully carried off the ground and burned or buned in the compost heap, it immedi ately resents such care and sends up a weakly.grow h iu place of its toriner , vigorous one. . Then thcc new steins should be cut off just below the surface of the ground with a weeding chisel, but the roots must in no case be touched. The roots left intact make such drafts upon Uie weak ened plant as it cannot supplv, and they 6imply die fcr want of ! I ! il a ? i air, "wnicn is ineir Jiummenr. Ims In California. The farmer in- tliis State is a person of uncommon resources and ingenuity. I think he uses his brains more than our Eastern Farmers. I do not mean to say that he lives better, for he does not His house is otteu shabby, I even though be be a man of wealth, and his table is not un frequently without milk; lie buy? his butter with hi? canned vege tables in San Francisco, and bread and mutton are the chief mrt of his living, both being un iVcrsally good here. But in man age in gji is lands he displays great cnterprisend knows how to fit his efforts to the climate and soil. Thus, iu the tuTe lands, when. they are first drained, he finds it irn possible to work the soil with cat tle or horses ; but this oes not' prevent him trom putting "in a crop, for after burning off the. tules, which are tall reeds, and the hi 211 errassef. he sows his hundreds of acres with a coffee mill wheat sower, and coolly turns a flock of sheep on the ground, driving them compactly and slow ly over it, with the he!p of dogs to keep the flanks ot his flock from scattering ; and wheat thus "sheeped in," as they call it, has borne sixty bushels per acre. Nor is this Unless he depends upon a volunteer crop next year, lie must plow the ground. It is still, however, , commonly too light to bear up horses, and so he shoes, these animals with stout wooden sabotf , eleven inches long by eight broad, and thus they can walk at leas u re and drag the gang-plow after them. The gathering ot the wheat crop goes on, on all the valley lands with headers, and you wiil find on all the farms in the Sacra mento Valley the bet labor-saving machinery! employed, and human labor, which is always the most costly, put to its best and most profitable uses. They talk here of steam-plowe and steam wagons for common roads, and I have no doubt the steam-plow will be first - practically and gen erally used, so far as the tTnited States are concerned, in these California valleys, where I have seen furrows two miles long, and and ton hores teams following each other. . i 'Withal, they are somewhat ruthless m their pursuit of a wheat, crop. You may see a farmer who plows hundreds of acres, but he will have his wheat growing up to the edge ot his verenda.. ff he keeps a vegetable garden,he has -performed a heroic act of selfdenial ; and as for flow ers, they must grow among the wheat or -nowhere. .Moreover, while lie has great ingenuity in his methods, the farmer of the Sacremento plain has built origin alitv ':in his plauting. He raises wheat and barlcv. He might raise a dozen, a score, of other products man' more profitable, and all obligine: him to cultivate less ground, but it is only here and there you meet with one who appreciates the remarkable capa bilities of the soil and climate. Near Tehama some Chineese have m the last two 3' ears grown large crops of pea-nuts, and have, I was told, realized handsome profits from a nutj which will be popular in America, I suppose ,as long as there is a pit and a galle ry in a theatre ;! but the pea-nut makes a valuable oil, and as it produces enormously here, it will some day be raised for this use, as well as for the benefit of the old women who keep frnitstaiids on the street corners. It would not be surprising if the Chineese, who continue to come over to California in great numbers, should yet show the farmers here what can be done on small farms by patient and horough culture.5 As they confine their "culture of land mainly to vegetable gardens. To the farmer the valley and foot-hill lands of the Sacramento will be the most atttractive, and there are still here thonuinda hf acres iu the hands of tha govern- ment and the railroad comnanv to be obtained so 'cheaply that, whether for crops or for crazing:. it will become time before the mountainous lands mid the pret ty valleys they cont ain north of Heading, the present terminus ot railroad, will attract settlers. But for the traveler thej region north of Redding to the State line offers uncommon attractiolns. Harper's Magazine. " ! Variety of Crops. It is a practice with many far mers to depend almost wholly for theitannual income on a single crop.' Some raise! corn some wheat, some potatoes some hemp ; some one thing, some another, and almost nothing elsei Now there are many serious objections to this kind of farming. The first is, it is had for i the land. It violates the principle of rotation ofrops, on which the health and strength of the crops greatly de pend, arms "will run out with this.tillageaud the old men will jiass away by-and-by, and leave degenerate and ruined far m for their children. Men ought to feel a deep interest in the health of their farms. To keep 'them ;n a thriving condition shouldxbe one great aim in agriculture Farms should be kept as fat as stock. The soil should be teem ing with fruitful qualities, so that it will produce anvthing put into it. I The second objection to . the one-crop style of farming, is that it brings the work of the year principally into one or two sea sons. It Hnps not oproarl It through the year., It does not give each raonthxeach dajr, its part, and so make it easy and pleasant. Again it does not give opportunity for so much labor, and hence, for bo much profit. The best farming is that which puts the most profitable labor into the year. It is that which gives to each da- a good day's labor in actual workand profit. The one crop system leaves long vacations to labor, especially profitable la bor. Make every blow count; make every hour tell on the pro fit side of the year-book. That's thetrue plan. j Another and veryserious ob jection to the one-crop systemis that it is liable, in the vicissitudes of the seasons, to a total faiLi re. It is a common thing for ope crop to fail, but an unheard pf thing for all ei ops to in this coun try. .If you trust to one crop you - may fail entirely; ifj-oU trust to many you are almost sure of some. The old saying about u Many irons in the fire " doesn't apply to farming. That is a mechanical proverb. The far mer has many tinies and seasons in the year to attend to his many crops Mechanics and farming are quite different., In - mechanics each man has his part and always does that; in farming the year affords a large round of different harvests. ! There is still another reason. It is best for the country to have a variety of productions. It guards against famine, against failure, against . money panics, against excessive prices, against the cannibalism of speculation. It is a regulator of everything. There may be exceptions to these remarks, but they apply to the great majority of farmers. Ex. Dniryiu? In t be United State. The following fctatistts arefrOm the Lire iStock JqumaC : " But a few persons realize the magnitude1 of the dairying inter est of the country at the present tiinl The present produce of cheese is supposed to be 300,000, 000 ' pounds, ; which, at, fifteen cents a pound amounts to $45, 000,000 ; and of butter, 575,000, 000 pounds; which, at twenty-five cents a pound, amounts to $152, 000,000; with 100,000,000 gal lons of milk sold in the cities and I toWn ' and 60 000.000 allor.a consumed iu families where pro -diiceoY worth $25,000,000 ; mak ing together, a dairy product $215,000,000, besides the pork made from the refuse of cbutter and cheese dairies. The num ber of cows is probably . not less than 9,000,000 ; the number in 1860 was 8,728,862. If we allow 5, 000,000 cows for maki ug the b'utter, it will give one hundred and fifteen pounds, to a cow, and 1,500,000 cows em ployed in producing . cheese, which will be two hundred pounds to a cow; 700,000 cows for the production of milk consumed iu cities and families of producers, 1,800,000 cows iu the Southern and Western States devoted to raising stock. From these facts it will appear that the average product of butter and cheese is very far below what it might be with the intelligence and atten tion to breeding, feeding and general management which the magnitude of the subject de mands. The first Collins cheese factory, ot Erie county. N. Y., for 1869 reports .the average from seven hundred and thirty cows at four hundred and twenty pounds of cheese to a cow, while two hundred pounds and over is a common yield to a cow in butter, from good, well-fed cows." X Eati ng when Exhaust ed. When the strength or nerve power is already worn out or used up, the digestion of food only makes a fresh demand upon it, and if it be unable ,to meet the demand, the food is only a burden upon it, producing Xmischief. to steam engines the food being the fuel and the steam produced the nerve power. The. analogy holds good to a certain extent. If, when the'stearn is low, because the fire is low, you pile, in too fast a quantity of coal, you put out your fire, and if you have to depend upon steam power to fan your fires, that is also extinguish ed beyond this, the comparison fails. You may cleanout your furnaces and begijagain, hut in the body the consequences of this overloadmgare dangerous and some-times fatal. No cause ot cholera is more common than eating freely when exhausted. The rule should be to rest for a time, and take some simple re lreshment, a cup or part of a cup of tea, a little broth, or even a piece of bread or anj'thing sim ple and in small amount, just to stimulate the stomache slightly and begin, to restore its power. After rest,a moderate quantity of any tiling simple which may be handy, and rest. Then, after a time proper food will bo a bless ing, not aburden. The fires will burn, the steam will be up, and you can go on your way safe ly. It is not amiss, in this con nection, to say j, that children would avoid many a feverish night' and many, an attack of dis ease, if mothers would follow this rule. ' Sublimity Whatever ennobles the human character and indicates superior energy of intellectual or moral qualities, is what we call mental or moral sublimits The sublime of human character piroduces love of admiration b a display of all the . noble qualities of our nature; and there is considerable sublim ity in the gifts of the imagination and the understanding, "I ike those possessed by such poets as Milton, by such philosophers as. Newton, by such heroes as Napoleon. But when there is a constant 'ex ertion or mental vigor -an envi able display of elevation of mind a habitual heroism evinced even amid the storms and agita tions of the passions where tnere is heroic disregard1 of danger a cool and firm presence of mind in difficulties and embarrassments disinterested virtues expand ed benevolence- a strong sense of generous feeling a s principle of virtue superior to the opinions of weak and corrupt.mcn and, to the vile and inordinate propensi ties of our low and debased rat- , ture then we " discover o 3 trie ' virtues, and qualities that . form the utmost sublimity of human character. An Illnstratton. A striking illustration of the mutual fovo that exists between Christ and a true disciple, as drawn by a masterly hand. ; Xenophon, the historian, tells us, in the Cyclopaedia, thai when Cyrus the Great, on his march of conquest, approached the borders of Armenia, Tygranes fled with all his family, determined not to be exprosed to the tyranny of such, a monster as he had heard Cyrus : to be. The conqueror ; was too sharp for him; he intercepted. his flight across the mountains, cap tured the king and all bis retinue To show his magnanimity, Cyrus offered to allow Tygranes to pass sentence on each of his own offi cer8 as they were brought before court. He could not induce him to open his lips until the queen was presented. Then Tygraties leap ing to his feet, said, "Oh ! king, I would die rather than she should be enslaved.' Cyrus admiring his conjugal fidelity, dismissed them, telling Tygranes that he might enjoy all of his royal' pre-f ' rogatives, if he would become and remain his faithfnll ally. When thevhad withdrawn from the presence of Cyrus, each of the courtiers had some word of praise to bestow upon the .Persian con querori One admired the majes-? magnanimity of his soul until they had all exhausted their en comiums when Tygranes noticing that the Queen had not even ex pressed any gratitude for their restoration to their dominions, said to her. "And what , dost thou think, Oh ! Armenian Queen of Cyrus?" She. replied, "I did not see him.". . ' Whom, then, didst thou see?" "I saw only him, who said, ' I would rather die, than that x she should be enslaved !' " xx Is it not a forcible illustration of Jesus' love for his people ; Not only was Christ willing to die, , but actually did shed his blood on Calvary,, that his people might not be enslaved by sin.i And as -soon as. the sinner can appreciato this love and realize its fullnes, , freeness, unselfishness he cannot see any other object. No created being, no imaginary gratification ' nothing whatever can attract him from the Cross and from his zeal, , , love, "adoration and , desire' to please that Saviour, whq fast loved him and gave himself for him. Treatment of Enemies. Tnere are many who will en dure any hardship, make any exJ. ertion, bear any sacrifice for heir friends, for whoni they caii' never do enough ; but towards their enemies they are unkind, impla cable and resentful. The man who has injured them they never forgive : for hi m they have . no kindness, but hold .him in con .i tempt, aversion and neglect.' But Christianity requires a higlW er and more disinterested virtue than this, for it commands us to be kind to our enemies. . Many have no happiermomehts than those they pass in solitude, abandoned to their own imagina? tion, which soniotimes puts seep' trcs in their hands or; mitres ' on heads, shifts the scene of plea sure with endless variety, bids all the forms of : beauty sparkle' be fore them, and. gluts them with,, e very change of visionary l uxu ry. Profane ' swearing.is " abomina- : ble. Vulgar language .is disOT8 ting. Loud laughter -: is impolite. , Inquisitiveness is ofl'ensive. . .Tatv, tling is mean. Telling a false hood is contemptable. Ignorance is disgraceful. Laziness is shame ful. Avoid all the above vice, and aim at usefulness. ! .i I 4 . ..- m i ; ft" ; ! V. ! , - f 1 ft