' f r-, in-. iWr ; -' 11 1 II UNION', THE C0NST1TI I'lON AND T II E LA W S-TI1 E GUARDIANS OF OUR LIBERTIES. Vol. XLVII. HILLSBOROUGH, N. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER ,4 1867. No. 2404. in, itPT,; to Cx 4 ' , ( '- 'V - i " if ; in lit in in HOW TO BECOME CONTENTED WITH r;ONEJ OWN HOUSE. . Nut long since a gentleman who owns a country residence, became dissatisfied, and concluded thai it was not the place that suited hi hi at all," He talked with his wife and she gradually arrived at the conclusion that the .lawn was not what it should be, that the trees were not sufficient! umbra geous, and that various details were want iug?to make the place acceptable. The couple having reached this unhappy frame of wind became daily more dissatihrd, and it was finally concluded that the estate should be offered at private sale. ' After some delay iheowoer accidentally met Mr. Samuel A. Walker, the well kuown auctioneer, and infoimed hi in ol his inten tion, stipulating:, however, that the adver tisement should give a full description of ttic place. ; ; - ' " You know," he continued, "that! don't want Tom, Dick and Harry running down to inspect the place Trout mere curio aity, and as my wile says she will nut con setlt to a public auction, 1 propose to sell it at private sale." - 1 understand." said Mr. Walker. " I will announce it in such a way that, with out naming the locality, it wilt attract the attention of any one in want of such a country seat, and then they can ap,.ly at my i.fiice." That it exactly what I want," replied the jenllrnun, and you had better drop down and dine with me and look it over, o that you can give it a good tlescrip tion." No need of that." replied the auction eer, " for yoa forget I sold it to you, and 1 described it then, and 1 nevei :orget a place I have once seen ; f course I shall allude to its present condition, v Certainly, replied the cenueman, "and i leave it entirely in yur hand. though there is no immediate hurry, lor I caftaot give possession at present." In the ceorse ol a few davs the gentle man took op a newspaper and read a de scription ol a place winch Mr. w alker had sdvrtised. It was in the peculiar style 1 1 the auctioneer. After pcruis it care Mir, and making note of the " grasy slotte," the "splendid vistas," and the conveniences which irate the country re sidence of a gentleman of wealth and re iiii'iiieot," he read it aloud t his wife. That is jut the place we want, she said. My idea to a dot," added the husb-nd, "of what a place should be. I will call hi at Mr. Walker's and inquire about it this my day." Mr. Walker, received his visitor, and. anticipating some congratulatory remarks, asked hi ui to take a seat. M Mr. Walker," said the gentleman, yu have 'advertised in today's paper jot the place I want." "Just the place you want to sell," added Mr. W. No sir, the very place I want to pur cha, replied the gentleman. Which one do you mranr" inquired Mr. W, handing him a paper. Why, this one, to be sure ; don t you Mippue'l tesd it r" The auctioneer adjusted his spectacles and locked broad at his la'est literary pro 'uction. His spectacles leu iroin leir VUce to the tip of his note, and peering at his visiter, he burst into a laugh, exclaim imst, " Whtr, my dear roan, that's your jlace. My place!" reiterated tho astounded 'reri m placet let'i see. 'Granv lopes, beautiful ista,' 'conveniences f ii grntlemtn ol wealth,' tic." "Why, yes j haven't you i charming 'iew i.f the ocean, don't you look from ruur dining room window upon the mmi aotiful lawn you ever saw f" queried Mr. Well, to I do." added the wprised in ' i ft i.l ii I a.il .flAH m MAMAk.. La!. .a! e ssid i ' Just make out your bill for ad rrtninz and eipenses, for, by Georze. I Wouldn't sell the plsce fur three times what gmiortt," ; Doslon Journal. THE POWER OF THE OLD BIBLE. 1 A Virginia banker who was the chair man of a noted infidel club, was once tra velling on horse back through Kentucky, having with him bank bills ol the value of twenty-five thousand dollars., When he came to a lonely forest, where robberies and murders were said to be frequent, he was soon lost," by taking a wrong road, The darkness of the uight came quickly over him, and bow to escape from the threa tened danger he knew uot. In hi alarm he suddenly espied in the distance a dim light, and urging his horse onward he at length came to a wretched looking cabin. He knocked and the door was opened by a woman, who said that her huvband was out hunting, but would shortly return, and she was sure he would cheerlufly give linn shel ter for the night. The gentleman tied up his horse and entered the cabin, but with feelings which may be better imagined than described. Here he was, with a large sum of money, alone, and perhaps in the house of one of those robbers wlmae name was a ter.or to the country. In a short time the nun of the house re turned. He bad on a deer skin hunting shin, a bear skin cap, seemed much fa tigued, and in no talkative mood. All this boded the infidel no good. He felt for his pistols in lua pocket and placed them so as to be ready fur instant use. Th man ak ed the stianger to retire to bed, but he de clined, sty in: that he would sit by the fire all night. The man urged, but "the nmre t'e mhdel was alarmed. He felt assured that this was hialat night on earth, bu! he determined to sell hi life as dearly as he could. Hi infidel principles gave him no comfort. His fears grew intu a perfect agony. What was to be done r At length the backwoodsman rose, and reaching to a wooden shelf, he took down an old book and said: v Well stranger, if you wont go to bed, I will ; but it is my custom always t read a chapter of holy Scriptures before I go to bed." What a change did these word produce! Alarm was at once removed tro.ii the skep tic's mind! thouli avowing himself an in fidel, he had no con fid nice in the Kible! He fell sife. He fell that a man who kept an old Kible in his home, and read it, and bent his knee in prayer, was no robber or mutdrrer! He listened to the simple pray er of the good man, at once dismied all his fears, and lay down in that rude cabin an-1 slept as calmly ashedid under his fath er roof. From that nijht he ceased to re vile the old Uible. He became a sincere rhiioian, and often related the story of his journey to prove the folly of infidelity. A Dead Lady brocoiitvo Lire. An in teresting and astonishing event ocrurred on the 2d ult., at the(houte of Mr George Chandler, a farmer living near the Lowel road, .Mass. A physician. Dr. Stoinki, stopped on the afternoon of the day men tioned at Mr. C.'s houe to feed bis horse. On entering the house, Mrs. Chandler in formed the Doctor that her daughter, Su aan, died on Saturday, and that the body had been placed in the coffin for interment on Sunday. The Doctor on looking into the coffin, remarked that the girl was n t dead, but only in a fit. He ordered a re raoval of the body and placed it in a warm bath. After a Ion struggle, the girl was brought t life. Leaving some medicine the Doctor took his departure. On the fol io ing day the one assigned for the funeral 'the'resuscitated lady voided a tape worm measuring twenty eight feet in length ; and m-tead of burying Mis Susan Chandler, the parent interred the caste of all her troubles. The following anecdote of the war we have never met before: " During the war lady watdistributing tracts through to the occupants of the ward ol a hospital, sod was excessively shocked to hear one poor fellow laugh at tier. She topped to reprove the wretched patient, Why, ma'am' sayi be, you have given me a tract no the tin of dancing, when 1 have got both legi shot oflf." 13 YOUR HUSBAND LIKE THAT. : There was a poor woman who had fallen into a melancholy and murmuring frame of mind. Her minister tried in vain to tea son her out of it. She persisted that the had nothing to be thankful for. At last he poke to her of her neighbor's husband, an intemperate man, who wasted his money when he was out, and ill-treated his wile when he came home. " Now," he said, " is your husband li ke that . " No," was the reluctant answer. " Well, then, should you not thank God that you have a kind husband ?" She was forced to admit this, and pro mised that she woald thank God every night and morning for his mercy. Some days elaspsed before the minister re-visited her dwelling ; but when he did so, lie was4 struck with her bright look, as she greeted him. ' " Oh, Sir," she exclamed, " I have long ed to see. you ; I have so wished to thank you ! ror a morning or two 1 did as I promised, but I did not rightly feel what I said. But the next day when I was thank ing God that I had a kind husband, I thought I should also thank him that I had healthy children ; and when I was thank ing Him for that, I thought I should thank Him that I had clothes for them to wear, and a house to cover their heads ; and so, sir, when 1 was thanking God for one thing, another came into my head, and another stilt and now I know not where to stop, or how to thank Him enough ; and 1 feel so happy!" So will it be with you, my reai'er, if you will only try the experiment. For grati tude increases with its use. The more thankful we are, the more thankful we shall become, and the more we shall have to be thankful for. A Fan-urn. Wife. A touching scene was enacted upon the Market Square this morning, calculated to impress the beholJer with a high elimaiirn of a woman's patience and her unswerving affection. A staid couple, somewhat advanced in years, ar rived from the rural districts with a toad of tome description of produce calculated to contribute to the sustenance of the city, and the old gentleman had wandered off to one of he numerous places of entertain ment for man and beast surrounding the market, intrustnig.the mercantile inierest entirely to the charge of the old lady. After disposing id the load the good mat ron prepared to return home, and started in pursuit of her truant lord, whom she found near at hand, stretched at full length on a bench and under a total prostration of his mental and physical laculties, as if from a fit ol apoplexy or sun stroke. Ten derly raiting the inattimated form in her arms, the good wife conveyed him bodily to the farm wagon on the opposite side of the street, and tumbled him gently over the end board. Then mounting the vehicle herself, she seized him by the neck band of his shirt, and dragged him lengthwise of the box in the position in which dead bodies are usually stowed. Having ac complished her labor of love, the kind old lady wiped the perspiration from hrr brow with the corner of her apron, tenderly re marking to the uncon.ci"U sleeper t " Now lay there, you old fool, till I get yer home j won't I wollop the whisky out o'yer !" The spectators were deeply affected by the scene, and felt for the old man, as the et lablishment started off on a brik trot over the stones, lUmilton (W.) 77mf. The Tarboro Southerner says that, on the 9th inst., Mr. James S. Long, of Edge combe, on going to his hog pens to feed, just after a storm, found that twenty h-d been struck with lightning and killed, Thrre is an editor in Minesnta wbo weighs C4l pound. His name is Frank Daggct, and he derives sustenance from the Wabasltaw Hrrald. Srrgeant Jamea Brown, company D,8th U. S. infantry, confinrdst Wilmington fur Stea ling from government, attempted to es cape Monday night, and aa shot and kill ed. '-i, v The Puritan's Witch-Pins.- Samuel Phis L , B . . m von, uic lounuer ot tne magnihcent arms manfactory of Hartford, Conn.,' London, &C, and known all over the world, ban- pened to be visiting that somewhat famons museum at Salem, Mass. a vast omnium gainerum ot all the ancient relics of Puri tanism when, among other curiosities, he wag shown a large lot ot crooked brass pins, which had been vomited up by the poor Vilnius vi persecution, wnen me aevu uaa been cast out of them by the good and holy exorcists of that period. ' Colonel Colt examined the pins with great interest ana close scrutiny. At length he said to the attendant: ' 1 ; " Is it certain that these pins were real ly thrown up ty these poor' women-devils at that remote time ?" 4 " You'll find the date in the catalogue which you have in vour hand," was the only reply. . . - " - W aa SAa AD nH 11 All It A m . Hit, IOfVIIUCU UIC VUIUUCI , " but I've been looking into those pins a little, and 1 find that lh Innir rntrt and tha ; h9l nf tha nin ir all in nil, nin I : 'Fklj makes it bad, you see, because that kind of pin was invented about a century and a half after the witches of New-England were executed for being ' possessed with the devel!' Take the idea, sir? These pins ought to have been old English pins, the heads and bodies separate; and I don't know how you are going to get'em now; for nor pins have run that kind out of the " market years and years ago." The exhibitor wilted, and those crook ed pins" have vanished from the museum. Ceruse a New Disease. As Dr. Forden was professing his ability to conquer dis-1 ease in its most aggravative forms, y the medium of his wonderful curative, the. King of Pain," a darkey approached the carriage, in which the Doctor was seated, and exclaimed : "Mighty good Doctor, I 'spect, but I bet dat he couldn't cure de disease wot I got." I can doit confidently exclaimed die Doctor, let me prescribe for your com plaint. What is the matter with you?'. Got an ole pocket book, and nuffia in it, re$pondrd the darkey with a broad grin, which spread through the crowd. Mighty bad complaint remarked the Doctor, I hava had a touch of that disease tnytelf, and know exactly how to cure it. Now, mv colored friend, instead of loafing hunt Mnnlirnmprv dnincr nnthinir imt traveL towards somebody's plantation, take off that old coat of yours and work hard, from sun up till sunset, as I have done since I left General Lee's command ; and that old pocket book of yours will soon be full enough to get yno all you want. If you have any other disease, I'll cure that be sides, fori want to make a happy, content ed man or you, while I am about it. The darkey had jio more to say, and the King of Pain sold faster than ever. . Monfg. MaiL Tna Infutejice or Newspapers. Daniel Webster once remarked : Small is the sum that is required to patronize a news paper, snd amply rewarded is its patron. I rare not how humble and unpretending the gazette which he lakes. It is next to impossible to fill a sheet with printed mat' ter without putting in it something that is worth the subscription price. 'Every pa , rrnt whose son is away from home at school should supply him with a oewspsper. well remember what a marked difference IllPrP Wll DriWn Hint nl mw rhnlm9mm who had and those who !ad not access to new-papers. Other things being equal, the first were always superior to the last in debate, composition, and general intelligence." a4a' OiVicial reports show that from January to July there were 63.376 cases of cholera and 32,704 deaths in Italy. Sicily auSerti' most. . The Great Eastern has been chartered t l-y i cable io May next between Brest and New York. r