.i 3 - v.".:i - ." "' - " : I. r In. ' . . K ' ' ' I ! . . 'J vii.. ; ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' l' : .; j- -- imj; mj I j:-, . !; Established in 1821. j GREENSBORO, IT. C? WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1881. 1 f ' " ' j : '-. ' '. I : I -I Wow Scried No (591 .... ,, s , , j, .. ; ; j - . !.!' jj , .v j . pi x 4 ICID WUIIT AT OKKENHIIOUO, r. c Office ei &atfc Ela SU Cf twc-'i ; y ceat lor ire aaoata. ir f Xte rATRlOTUilill DoCTmxi . j a-X ih movt actire and Utidjrrat poe- ; cf t' am coen eatraorcmAry a'.iattart to a4eruri. i mo;) mo I i 4 tV! 6 Ou 10.CC I - ti, 6jx;i).co 12.00 3 0 T Ct tiJO 1V0O 4lC 8 CvJ IS CO SO (X CtJ liVC litO VI 0C I5.CU w'.00'40.1-0 lO CCl ; - - ft- ; 1 jiCll bo:j 1 V iMtt nl bo:Jc 11 cat r Um for Irst tfDti pr lia for taca ta. X- pot ' r f -,..c: ijTrriixafaU pajabla ia aJ I : J' lTeitionU qoartaxlj ! rt fci ioall eolama advar ex Creenstoro Eusiness Directory e ijTlcuUural Implcmcnti, Hardware, Ac. V. II. VTV.e tell A Co Sooth Elm wikr'.oa A- Whxrtoa, " IXtvoks and MatJonerr. p.' V:, Soatb E'ea at. IlanUIn; Ilonac. $;.os.i Eak cf Crcaboro. S. Ela 8t Drj tiood, floota, Snoea, AC. X'. . B.vrt, Wwt Market U WCCU. Et UatkUaU K. K. Il2.rj, Et llAikat at. i j DrussUIi, Ctc. . -r.C. i'ortfr Jc Co Soath Elat at. I'rult Ioual lard. 2,:. A !VrI. Aitororjr at Lav. JFcuclrj, fclltcr-ware, i ;,a C-tcnlwtUia -waih Elm el Etc ; Tlholra!eaud Kctall Grocer ; J.W.at;ffcCxa Sootb Elm U i Jf MaavawaaMPaaBaaaHMRMBaaaBwaBaawMaaBBBBBBBBBmaaBaaBBBBBBBaaa Fruit Tree, YInea, Ac . J T. Lic4f, roiaooa 1LU Narweria , Nar t!. Cij. Joblera lu 5otIoni, Ac 1 W !: A Co South Elm U , La it ScIjooIs. 3l ,.L4.t. p. D4k. Eat ILkiktt Street. Richmond Business Directory. TThoiraule Grocers, Ac te5p.rt A M rri. aaJ Dock 8i : Cresnsboro PcstOrCce Directory t t.riU ar. at y Vt m ol 8 17pm " 1 a M aad 9Wr 9 Jo a x: ao4 7 i7 r U 31 a M abd s37m 7 li! r m a - -. -at. - 7 3i P M f Atb. r - ar iianda by 6 r Uru-U" " " " 6 A Tulaj e aad y-n C. a. V4'j aad SAt'd'e r i.: U ar. tta:tU)e tj 6 r W t-o 30 miua'ea bfara de ,,c" tur rr. vi.T I...., ft.ja h9A 11 atd 11 A.il. ? . J. IX WHITE. P. at ltAXLin,vi oixiKcrroitv Ti tabtahoa the rannlnf '''"".m traU u aad from Greece aitbt Hvtrtada: y. ,. o A lAX f ttXa BAllJtOAD. 9.19 K.rhm. .,1. P lift; kchooo-lf 9.V6 a Ml p sosra cifuji a a u.ao a rx 941 77 9.31 i-. VXJ m and 7 aad - iu- 9.4 J a ea aad p M X. C A ll AD. .70 . ; 9.co 10.00 p av P a b ;:-eVV SCHOOL wa-.t a t urn. JkA, ar-pl U jony n dillaed. I 6 mol 1 yr. i t 110.00 tl-VXO 1SJX VM 00 20 00 30.00 24 00 24.00 30 00 40 00 40 00 CAM cS CO. liO 0O , -, CaarU tte, fr s VkarUctP. - greffssicsat Cards. um x. cott. waxtxa r. catdwxu SCOTT Jt CALDWELL. GBEEXSBOEO.N.C. WILL. preJ la iba FatArUr Crl Omilfurtl. AJaaaaa. Kaadol rftu Dartd on, Frrtk, Uovu, IrdJ ud Aiackl- arg. la the Baprrae Ouri ef lb Sum: la ih FdrU Court at OrMitttor tpcUJ aruatloa grtu t Ioajui of aion a Uorunur aad etLr vitiM. i X. BOTP. JXO. w. BOYD & ALBEETS02T. ATTOIIIIEY3 AT LAW. Of-ct ai Grttnj&or mmd CraXws 2?. C. PrUo ia tha 3iU ao4 Federal CoarU. ATTOUflEY AT LAW III oa Poorr, S. C. VTilJ praUe la 8taU aad rdaral Co art Collaetloea a 8pciaJty3 Dm. X 18T9 lr&3f- IL LL. Crrsorr EESPECTFUIXI OFFERS ma PROFESSIONAL SERVICES to 14 Cxttzru cf GrtCTUborv. FEES TIIE AHE AS THOSE 0Krj:ej by other Practicing Phvticia of tU dtf. . Uat .. tly.. ". STOTCt, ?ousa FuniiaMng Good3 Failly Oroo cries, . aoaActorar of TI!f WARE & Cnttcrior W. R. MURRAY Is exhibiting an unusually LarC and attractive Stoclc of Spring and Summer Goods FINE DRESS GOODS A larre lot of Fancy Lawns, Prints, Cambrics and White Goods that is well worth your special attention and which you should not fail to see before buying. Ladies fine Shoes and Fancy Sup pers, Men's new Style Hats, Ready-Made clothing a good stock of New and Beautiful Wall Paper, Linen and Paper Shades. First class Goods Cheap for Cash. See and be convinced. Greeoaboro, Jf. C Aoril 23rd. tf - Call on J. F. YATES & Go. "Vot Cocc CttOCtTVtS, FAMILY FLOUR 1 SPECULTT. We keep tha beat mada la tha Uolted 8taU. Jalj Plh d Ser. W. J. BLACKBUE5 W. E. BEVILL, RETAIL DEALER IN STAPLE Dry Guode. Hata. Boot a. Shoae. Naaona. MaH ware. Crockery. Glaaavare, Wolao Ware. Tlawae. Powder, Shot, Rope, Asia Graaaa, Tal Oil Cloth.8oape. A!a- lia Oil; Grwrice ooeiattsf ia oajar, Coffa8pice. Teppe'. BAkiafc powaare Aim ToUacca and Cigara. . - HaTln bought itrotly for eaa-, l an prepared to oifrr them at Low rrteee . . ... , ii - ..11 Hibtr tor eaaa or tunan uit store bnTior. Eaat liaxket JJ treat Graabnro. N C. Ne. 4,180. Valuablo City Property FOR 3AT.T1. rarilea dairiaff to psrcBa MU fur tae MKtioa of Cot too or Totaeoo raetnrle. Tobacco WarboeM. t dwalliBjra ia th CITT OF GREENSBORO, oold do well to call on tha aaderlr4. I kiTMtnl rr dMirabla Iota wall lo cated for tha poreoee aaaied which I will a. II at reAeuaabla Cara : aaa apoa tarma. Craca P. MnDiHIX, GrBboro, N.C.J aaa W. imi-iiw TIIE OBIGIKAlT AND Genuine Durham Long Cut, Durham Cut Plug, AND DURHAM TWIST. Aleo Sittlnrr Ball SnsHsnTcbiCtt Are Maaefaetttred mj ay E H. FOGCE. DarhABi, K. C For ea!a by all dealer la Oreaoaboro. April Si. dim MEETING OF TRUSTEES OFTHE UNIVERSITY. There will bo a neetlajf of tha Tnuteee of the Ualreraity of Korth Carousa, 10 tha Exeeatlve OSm, ia RaUich. oa Toeedaj. tho I3th Jaly. 1J1. at 4 o'cloek p vt, at which a Profeewir of Kataral Hiatory will bo elioeeo la uo piaoe w u F. W. w.&aoad-, raatKoed accoost of m-1 health laalth. AppbeAtioBO eheald bo addreaaoU I The Ideat. I Trasmtnt of one of J3r. 1 " Gentru. I ' ? The 17 lr r.A. I . I! J ' -'.-'! ', 'i i' .t- Ml - it ' , I tklah tha aoof Uat'a wee toe t Ia tho one thai'a Barer aaar. That liea at the heart of th aiager Too graad for mortal toorma ; Aad eomeiixaee la Ilb alleooa, Detweaa the day aad alfht. He faaeiea that lu aaeaaaraa. Bid farewell to the lifkt. Tha nobleat, eaadaat poeai, Liee not la his aad fold, Aaaoog tho treaaared veJaaiea, That roerwood book abalTM held ; Bat la bright flowing tiaioaa. It eomeo to the poi4 brala, ' Aad wkea ha trUe to (raap it lie fiada hie aCorta vala. A rlctore that ia fairer I Thaa all that hare a part, Ameer the maa'ar aioeaa, Ia the marble balia of art, la the aao that haanu the palater, Ia all hla goldea dreamt, Aad to tbe pajaur only, A rwal pic la re aeeae. A firy head froia oreate-Uad BeckoBe aa here aad tbera, Aad wbea wo try to lap It, It raalaboa lata air : Aad thaa oar fair Ideal Floata al were Jart be Tore, Aad we with leaffiaf eplrit Kaach for it erermoro IZentarki btfJZer. Cube Tucker, I J. A. Maeoa ia Berihaer'a Uaraxlna. Tea may aoUh it en da paUa aa a mighty reeky piaa To make year Jodrmeat by da elee dat hirer sp a ton ; For I aardly aooda to tall yea hew yea aRea owaie aeroaa A fifty dollar aaddle ea a tweaty-dollar 1 Aa' wokla la da low froandi, yea d'thirer aa yoa ro. Dat tha fiaeet ebaek Bay hlda tha meaa. eat BBbbia la a row I I thlah a ataa haa rot a aolrhty aleader ekaoeo far ilebea Dat holde ea to hi piety one day oat ab eba; i . Dat talk aboat da inn era with a heap o eolema cbat, . An' oebber drape a alohle In da Btlaaleoary hat; Dat'a foraioet ia da meetls heaaa far raiaia all de thane j Bat lay alde hi ligioa with hla Sanday paataieoo I I aebbr jodge o poopl dat I maoia along do way . i . By do place vbar day come foai an' de boaee wbar dey auy; For de banian chleken'a awful fon e' rooetia' p ratty high. 1 i Aa' d turkey-bo Izard aaila ahor d oagle la de akr: Dey hetcbea littl mlaaera la da mlddl ob do eaa An' yoa find da am a! lee' 'poaaara ap de hlggee'klBdo'troa! j Fair JPIaTif. The disposition that ; soma anti Stalwart papers sho to make po litical capital by charging the Stal warts with complicity la tbe aasaa ioatioa of Mr. Garfield fa not to be con mended, aa there la not the lightest evidence for tbe founda tion of such m charge. ' It U more thaa likely that the aoimas engen dered between the rival j faction of the Republican party imay have had aomethiog to do with leading the disappointed and demented aa aaasin to the determination to com mit the act, bot It woald Jat aa logical and just aa fair to bold a church refpooib!e for tbe fnsaoity of men who lose their reason from religions excitement and perpetrate horrible deeds, aa to hold a poli tical party reepoasile (or tbe des perate acta of a political zealot, on leas each ecu be endorsed by 1L It was that same nojust, unrea soning spirit which charged tbe Southern people with complicity in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, because a Booth, driven to madneaa at the overthrow of a people with whom he sympathized, cried for vengeance and sent, the death dealing bullet into the bead of tbe nation's executive in the presence of a thoosand horrified neople. '.'!! We do not believe that tbe lead ers of tbe Stalwarts would bavr bed many tears bsd tbe assassin bullet done tbe work for which it was sent, but that they would bare conspired fr that purpose, or con nived at or eicooragrd it in ao way ia more tbsn any eandid man in tbe country believes, bowevrr much be may detest these men po litically. Taey are capable of much trick ery and much vlllaioy, but have not gotten quite ao low In tbe scale oi moral degradation as to stoop to asssssiosiion to accomplish tbeir purpose. CXarlotU Ubucrrtr. HVanartf T7exfesfir. Mss loves tbe mysterious. A cloudless sky and a full. blown rose (rare him unmoved ; but the violet which bides its blushing beauties behind the bush, and tbe moon when emerglog behind a cloud arr to bim sources oi inspiration and of pleasure. Modesty Is to merit what shade ia to a figure in paint log it. gives boldness and promi neoce. Nothing adds, more .to female beauty than modesty. It sheds around the countenance a halo of light which is borrowed from virtue. Botanists have given tbe rosy hue, which tinges the cup of tbe white rose, tbe name ol maiden blush. This pure and delicate hue ia the only palm Christian virtue should use. It if tbe richest ornsment. 'A woman without modesty is like a faded flower diffusing an unwbolesomr odor. Beauty pusses like tb flowers of tbe A I be, which bloom and die In m few hours; but modes ty gives the female cbarma which apply tbe place of transitory freshness of youth. ' Gold Is found in thirty-six coun ties in this 8tAte, silver in tbrre, copper In thirteen, iron in forty- three, diamonds in twenty-aix. whiskey in all of them, and tbe ,Mt etS away with all of the rest. JVcrmotI f en mf tub DTTjra yeah : WATCinna ht. This is the first Sabbath aad the first day in 1S7L Last sight the Old Tear. died. Did yau see that old man, ao pale, frail, and ghostly woo strod out npon tbe bleak and Icy hills last eight, leaning in his decrepitude npon the feeble arm of bis last surviving but dying child, the departing December! Tbe chsplet of bud,, flowers, and fruit, wreathed around bis brow, by Spring, Summer and Autumn were frosted by Winter : his sandals were old and covered with snow and mod; hla garments were tat tered, and glistening with, sleet were folded around bis wasted form; his gray locks were frosty; bis brestb waa cold: and bis pulse quivered like an Icy thread in his chilled and ahrunken arm. Who waa be 1 He waa tbe child of remorseless Time. He was one of a numerous family whose gene- fc'Ogy presents us no two contem porariea. Tbe birth of one has always been preceded by the death of tbe eolitary other. The wailing requiems over the death of the one have always ended in lullabies over tbe cradle or lta s accessor. Who waa bef He was the Old Year. Last eight. Eternity'! hor- oiogn "touea out low twelve npon ita Bounding belL It was bis death knell and at that lonely hour bile we slept, .when cadaverous ghosts are fabled to creep amid the ivied ruins of castles old, ani shriek through the crevices of tottering church belfries, and dry old bones shake and clatter In tbeir vaulta in churchyard, be died, and the spirit of winter hearsed him In a cold cloud drawn by boreal winds, and drove him out to sepul chral oblivion and buried him in a grave whose cerements are eternal. He will return po more no, forev er. .Farewell, uia x ear I let tay cold ghost mingle with the shades of thy predecessors, but let It not come back, ob, let it not come back, to baunt us when we die. Gone,4 but be baa left his foot prints. The lovely babe the mother ao fondly kissed last New Year is cot here this morning. It simply came, smiled, then wept and departed. It seemed to came from heaven, and to stay just long enough to make us love it, and then to return. Ita mission appears to have been to gather np our affections and carry them back to heaven with it, to make as love heaven more, and earth less. Some beautiful girls and noble boys. hose laugh and shout enliv ened oar homes daring tbe last Christmas and New Year holidays, are not with ns to-day. Dreamless, tbey sleep beneath the snows of tbe winter In our neighboring cemeter ies, and foul decay haa marred their lovely forms. In placing tbe bonse in order for these holidays we have found a toy, a shoe, a bat, . at a a a dook, uociaimea ana owneriees. hich made as. weep anew. Ob, shall tbey ever live again T Tbe old arm-chair which aat in the corner, and waa tenanted by smil log old age one year ago, is empty now 'lta occupant is gone ana some of as are fatherless. The bead 01 the table is also vacated,, the dust lies heavily upon the mantelpiece, and disorder baa crept into tbe facy chamber, for with some of us mother is gone too. Borne triend is gone, some familiar footfall is missed, some well-known voice is bushed. Tbe receding year has touched as somewhere. We are a vear older, a year bearer tbe grave. This year may land as In heaven, or sink as In bell.! Are yoa ready to diet If die we must, thisear, may we ascend to beaven. But as the misty spine oi tne Old Year wreathed away into tbe dark dim past, the angels of God sang tbe birth hymn of the New ..a a . a 2 ear. And still yoa may near me inspiring touches of the dying musio still lingering in tne moan- tain tops, and quivering gently in tbe happy air, and coursing sweeny the nerve corridors leading, to the mind's sensorinm; to greet the human soul. 1871 is here. How many years since tbe world waa made I know not, neither does any tan. II ow many years since man was made I know not our chrono logies cannot be absolutely relied a poo. But it is eighteen hundred sod seventy one years since tbe infant Satinr was born, wrspped in swaddling clothes, and laid to sleep in a manger; eighteen hun dred and thirty-eight years since ilia crucifixion, banal, resurrection and ascension to beaven. Tbe New Year Ia here, and with him his children. Two come crowned with glittering frost, and robes of trailing snow; two witb tempests in their fists, and stray sunbeams npon their brows; four clothed in green enamelled witb buds, flowers,and frait,and fraight ed with golden ripeness; three with robea of red, yellow, andpnrple; one in freezing ; nndlty with a sceptre of ice. Before tbe first may pass we msy be dead, aad the remaiuing eleven may dance their rounds npon our graves. No tear baa ever passed without some one dying -whom we knew and lot ed. livery succeeding year maika ita number and. name npon some tombstone In our cemetery. Our burial grounda keep op tbe record of tbe agea. This year will be tbe date of the death of aome uoe preseoL 1871 will be chiselled in the marble which will . mark some of our graves. Who f MJsiisftippi baa 193,000 voters, of whom 105,000 are negroes. The last number of the Ne iors: ooku has a wood-engraved likeness of Meredith P. Gentry and a sketch of his life. He was born In Rockingham county. North Caro lina, eeptember 15, 1809, and rep resented xennessee in tbe united States House for several terms, and oi wnicn De was one of tbe ablest members. He was a 8tate Eights wmg. lie wssone of the leaders in this country for a long time. 2ortb Carolina has eiven Tennes see, her daughter, most of the dis tinguished men who illustrated her annate In the past. Her three Presidents. Andre wJasksorj. Jamon E. Polk and Andrew Johnson were all born in North Carolina. Gen. 6oncoffer, Gentry, Ethsridge and othv foremost men tsf TennsxMVA were all natives of North Carolina Tbe sketch in tbe South is interest J M mw. mm. - 11 V.. . . uk uu wen a one. it is from no less a pen than Alexander H. Ste pbensr, who knew Mr. Gentry in Umatelyand served with him in Congress. Mr. Stephens concludes his instructive sketch with these words: After the collspse. and the re. suit of the war was known, the last hope of good government left him. and oa the 2d of November, 1867, bereft of fortune, with blasted hopes, and gloomy forebodings for tne i u tare or bis count rv in the dark days of reconstruction, be de parted this life on the plantation of one oi nis daughters, lie left four children surviving, two daughters by tbe first marnaee, and two sons a . w a- . Dy tne last. 'ibis brief tribute Is in ven to the memory of one of tbe truest and noblest gentlemen the writer ever met with in his eventful life. A ... . . no prorounasr pniiautnropist. no one more devoted to Constitutional Liberty aver lived in this or any other country than Meredith Poin dexter Gentry . As Mr. Gentry is unknown to most of the present generation of readers, we copy the above. North Carolina has given to the country very many men of distinguished mark, many of whom fonnd fame and fortune abroad. We would like to see a volume containing one page sketches of eminent North Carolinians who have become lead ers in other States. It would be an instructive and useful volume. especially as Northern writers per sist in underrating our people and misrepresenting' tbe truth of his tory, as Mrs. Mary Bayard Clarke pointed ont. In a notice of a new Yankee school history that teems fairly with studied depreciation and misrepresentation of our peo ple. ; In every Southern State, and in many of the Northern States, North Carolioians have risen to places of distinguished honor. A volume like that spoken of shonld of course contain sketches of the real leaders of thought and activity at home. A volnme of five or six hundred pages, if well and faithfully exe cuted, woald be a desideratum in deed. Our people do not know tbe hundredth part of the names of the men ot North Carolina who have become distinguished abroad. A partial list from one county alone embraced ao many names ;that the 'oldest inhabitant" thereof was as tonished fairly when he heard them. Tbey were to be fonnd in every de partment of human endeavor and were leaders among men. If one of those self-appointed slanderers of our people, like the fellow Cabot, (such we 'believe is his name, whose book does onr people so much wrong) knew a little of what North Carolina has done really, even such a creature would be ashamed to so misrepresent as and to so expose his own intense ignor ance and incapacity. Gladstone on Irish ft on. Etnigra- a London, July 12. The House of Commons went into committee on tbe la:id bill to-night. Clause 25 was passed. On reachiog clause 26 8ir George Campbell (Liberal) member for. Kirkcaldy, moved an amendment imposing as a prelimi nary condition that arrangements for promoting emigration shall be dependent npon obtaining sufficient security for money advanced under that section of the bill. Mr. Glad stone said he did not object to tbe amendment, but he believed its principle had been fully provided for in a subsequent part of tbe clause. It was inaccurate, be de clared, to suppose that tbe Cana dian Government contemplated a mere emigration of laborers, bnt tbe emigration of families was ex pected, and that provision shall be made for them of means for tbeir maintenance as was done in Ire land. He did not view favorably a decrease of any population, but tbe government felt it to be their doty, coder tbe circumstance in which Ireland was pieced, to pro vide assistance for those desiring to emigrate. Sir George Campbell's amendment was rejected, and the House adjourned, leaving clause 2C still under discussion. f Death from Sunstroke. Jacob Morrow, a laborer, thirty seven years old, fell dead from sun stroke on Eace street, near Dela ware avenue, yesterday morning. Tbe bodv was taken to tbe Morgne. Patrick Boyle, 571 Nine street, was found insensible from the heat on a lot at Broad street and Washing ton avenue on Monday afternoon and waa removed to the Philadel phia ILoipltiL-Fhiladtlphia Timet. The Vie of ZtnottM. n. ". ' ' 1 1 i xne lemqn tree is a native of A!l allhnnnli : I . : 1 ! France In?Frirnn i tne smallest tree, while in its! native State it ferowa fh nvor airtv ieet in neignt. p very part of, this . i ; j j.". ' """I o medicine, though 7 jay bat Its fruit tree is valuable we rarely employ mat is, tbe lemon itself. And every one knows howf to employ tms in lemonade to soaeeze tha juice In cold water ; this is tbe shortest way or to cut into thin slices and then boil ic Either wav is good, lie moo ad e is one of tbe best and ; safest drinks for any person, wnetner in health or' not. It is suitable to all stomach diseas es, ls excellent in sickm-ss io cases of Jaundice, gravel and liver complaints. The pipuns crushed may also be mixed with water and sugar, and be J used as a drink. Lemon juice is tbe beit scorbutic remedy known, jit noj; only cores iuib uisease, DUli prevents it. The bands and nails ire. also kept clean, nire, suit and suple by tbe daily use of lemon Instead f soar. Tr also prevents chiibluin$. Lemon is nsed in intermittent fevers: mixed witb strong, hot, black coflee with ont sagar. Neuralgia may be cured by robbing the part affected ltd a cut lemon.. It is valuable also to cur warts and to destroy dan droll on tbe bead by rubbing me roots ot the hair with it. In fact, its bsesare ;man)foIdr aod tbe more we employ Jt, externallv and internally, the better! we shall find ourseives. : .natural remeates are i . . . the -best, and nature is our best doctor, if we wonld listen to it. Decidedly, rnb yoorihands, bead and turns with lemon, and drink lemonade in preference to all other liqaids. I 1 t Very UttjutCtslo2H. "James is nataraUy smart,: find we are going to give bim an educa tion, perhaps make a inrcyfT; or minister, of him.? "George -don't seem to get along well, jrjth hi dooks la rather, doll and we shall make a: farmer pf bim." We have beard talk just like this.' and tbe majority of people acc upon this principle. It. is rank cruelty. rank injustice, at giviug to the rich from the i poor.' any rate. 1 it is and withholding If (through the fault of bis parent, or otherwise. George is lean endowed witb intel lectual gifts, he should have all the more doue for bidi to make np a natural defect, by culture, . by discipline, by exercise; of the mind. ana cons p. ace- uiin npon a par wun a more gifted brother,1 If a youth dislikes arithmetic! or any particu lar branch ot study ar thinking, ic shows a deficiency in 1 that faculty. a a : Li l ia wnicuj culture auu fiuuy snouiu make up, and thud produce a well balanced I mind. VT4 abominate tbe whole system of "elective studies," pow so popular iu some schools and colleges, which allows a scholar to mainly; cultivate those mental powers, in which he is already most proucieut. A rigid course of diverge study, planned to develope j uniformly ihe various faculties of the mind) is the one which will turn but the best and most useful men. Alter a good general ground work jis thoa laid, and the thinking! faculties are well and uniformly developed, the final study jmay be directed to some specific line, that willjbe required in a particular b outness, or proles eioual life. American Agriculturist. ; f Crisis , Coming. ISovie Remarks of an English Paper Upon This Country s financial j lituatiun. London, July Hi The Pall Mall Gazette this evening in a leading article; beaded ."The- .Clearness ot a Financial Crisis1 in the U.iited Slates," argues that the stability ot the 'New York money market de pends npou its power to continue drawn g gold from ihorope. An excess of exports qver imports is uoc necessarily a tjigp of wealth. A nation that always xports more goods than it imports is nearly always ia debtor nation and us excess of exports i needed to pay its debts. Whether the process ot expansion Dy drainage irom Eu rope, which witbi'i the past two years has added 05 000,000 to tbe circulation of tbe fjuioii, is to go on, depeuds upon (the ability of America to control Mh its produce the markets of Eunlpfv The indi cation are that jtfje European harvests will be bonntifal aud that the Uuifed States wll? have to face great competition, probably at very low prices. With tti overwhelm in anrnlna vield tbey mh:bt be able to do this,1 but should tbeir surplus be, as many allege, com paratively small,1 tbe difficulties of their trade may wei oos. The article follows: i become seri- concindes as W think tbe position of the U uited States is nod jsuytbing like so serious ai tbe more sanguine Americans assume. I They are just iu the circumstances where a finan cial crisis might develop with extraordinary rapiditt'. Some look for each a crisis in tbe coming autumn, but we are? by no means certain that it will develop itself then, even should things core to the worst. With tbeir trade the credit bubble may go on swelling tor mou'bs beyond the time; when cantiouk men look! for trouble. Holders of TJuited States securities bowevefv must j lay jtheir account for serious financial difiiculties much sooner than the cuuu-.mpla-tinn of tha wouderldl progress of the past three years might lad in em to eapcvu Scbenck will show what liqaoi -coijrrow, m. May zSi. I Prof. W. fl TTrrr . i . " - - ""it" " a-eajs dib : xour letter, inquir - i0g what percentage of crime,, in my opinion, was attributable directly or indirectly to the iutem- perate use of ardent spirits,! has bean received. I was at theJ bar from 1S56 to 1874, and had a large prac.ice on the criminal aide ot tbe docket. From 1874 to 1881, I was one of the Judges of tbe i Saperior i Courts of North Carolina 1 and ! traversed the State from one end i of it to other, and. therefore. m i opportunities for f observation j auu j reflection on this subject have been ample. I give yoa ray deliberate opinion that fully, seventy-fife pei cent, of all crime,, in this State, is j attriDutable to intoxication b spirituous liquors,' and that of the! Crimea characterized4 by violence the proportion, la '-, even larger. I add to this that very much ol civil litigation originates in this fru tfoi source of evil; , The taxes raised from the sa eof spiritaous liquors do not amount to 1 1 oue-iourth the money , paid . oat by thepeople iu lwyers fees, court costs,' jail fees, aDd' other ' expend!- thjed incident to tbe'execDtion ot the criminal law, and three-fourths of these expenses, aa I before stat ed, are chargeable to'.whisaey.f j , jmow add tor this' the'morat ruin, the social destruction ' and jtbe political corruption whiskey produ ces, and the computation is : appall ing to everp lyirtaous and sober mind. I have no( doubt that the statistics yoa can gather from j the inmates of ourjails and penitentia- win connrm an x nave writ ?t. M a. v. en. Very truly yours,' 1 f CD. SCHEJIClL We4; oppose prohibition In .this State and id North Carolina for the following reasons 1 1 of It will endanger the success tha T)mnnraf!ff norv ' It is aa unwarranted, attack on civil and religifjasr liberty. It is class legislation, taking the privilege of selling .liquor! away from, one set of men and giving it to another. ' -: ..' f I ill: j It legislates a large number of persons out of their property with out giviog tbera just coupensatlof) tor it; T I .It is an ; impractjcablameasore for. the cure of jin temperance, hav ing been tried pver and over, jio various counties and at different times; and proved to be worthless. xIt deprives the government of a large revenue which ; liquor, as ) a luxury, ought to pay,' and imposes an additional tax upon other prop erty, j Ml ; r j I Ic takes the ministers of the Gos pel out of their pulpits uod mixes them ap in politics, j Mi it win tempt men to all sorts of I to I arts cf dissimulation in order procure ardent spirits, and will crease tne number ot illicit a tillers. .-'I - I - M : ' I'i Our honest opinion is, that it one of the veiy worst measures which conld possibly be thought pf, and hence we are so bitterly oppds ed to It. Danville Ttmes. JTIr. Jtlac 1'eagh JRrostratett by Overwork.- . j Special dispatch to the Times. Washington,! July, 12- Attor ney General Wayne MacVeagh was driven borne from the Department: of Justice to day downright sick; He has been bard worked ever since bis instalment in. office. During tbe past ten; days be baa not onl kept pace with bis official duties, but has been almost indefatigable in his attendance upon the WhiCtj House. Mri MacVeagh has j bW'ri giving more; personal attention to tbe business of his department thaw bis predecessors. He has ! beeii especially active in pushing; the preparation of tbe celebrated o' at route cases attending : personally to all the details of evidence and formula ot I presentment. Toj all this work has recently been aadet the investigation of tbe crime acaiost the Executive. It has beep u. .frrr Htrinl Heat and ! ove work prostrated bim to-day and a obvsician was called in. liest is tbe principal requirement. Jtlurder n an Isylum Montreal, July 12. Sl terrible murder took place at tbe lxoguii Point Astldm yesterday morning Two womeci, named Delia .Pqivet aud Gertrude I Roberts, occupied tbe same cell during tbe night, and Poiver, known to be a religious mono-mauiac. ranciea i sne saw a frightful dragon' and for the safety of herself and all other inmate? killed it with a piece of board by pounding jit on tbe nead 1 The dragon was her i companion,. Gee trade Roberts.! An inquest was held to-day "Homeward" Bound." ncutx. Thon fairest fisher maiden. Row thy poat to tbe land. Come' hero si.d eit beaide me, Whiepering, hand in hand. Lay thy bead on my bosom. And 1iavb!bo rear of me. For erf leiy thoa tratet Daily tho bb ea. Mr heart ia like the ocean. With atorna and ebb arid now. Ad d aa spy pearl US bidden fVitbia ita depth below. Hail TaflV, new-born goddeu t Thoaart I eoas :.4 i i I': Into the world emollient and Karen' "?itbj liberal hand dispensing balmy .im.JL i s uvuou, 1 1 inoiMwa-Tiaagea Mil I queen v What an thoa elrinar hmL Cm TiitAniJti fThpa doe 6 aeeaaire oar datlv earaa anal 1 n. ij-j l0U8 , . ffi"L Satd Tri..i I the rasping daa, aomeatio broils; , a to win his Joy, sine Biases man jooketu toward thee, and' f JJ !thopreaohr,- 1 ..). , l(.--f Tbe interriewer and the drnmmer-bor. mv : m. .... i.oer,'. , Who drnmmeth wisely i ownicg thee for "III 'teacher. - - - ' jj ; . . ... The olam-dispenser toots tby tanefnl praia STho lightning-roddist knoweth aU thy. . . . j . TX 'A; A, pnmdfit in Scribhar't Uagaant- . : 1.1 , . f Forretter Jl'oi the .TJttrttcrrr. 1 Clugiton : Among tne thodana and one uriptcions in connection; with the mysterious Clugstool marderat Val ley Porge last Spring the . latest Is ; the,' notorious . Billy Forrester, anas vonrad Foltz,1 who was year go arretted on suspicion of being thetnbrderer of Benjamin Nathan, ip'New York. Forrester was re-i cently sent to the pastern Peniten- flary coder tbg name of Foultz. and . i a a . . ml Iji order to , set oil loubt at , rest , Johostdb,' the party. bo hob-nob- before the crime, was - taken out to the Penitentiary, aud. given.avletf ?of Forrester., . He failed to identify t Miui tuu tuuo ouuiurj v'Ha laiia. , j . , j .iZore 'Star' tZoutJ. Savings. A I8p'eial Dispatch td the Time. .. , . YAs.I?INOTON I 13-Secoud . Assistant postmaster General, Gen. , Elmer, says tbatj reductions In the ' Star route service have been effect . ed quietly and have;; caused, little complaint. They; haya been made u every time on the recommendatiou of at special ; agent. ' 'When just vtomplafat is made'1 remedy will be accorded.j HetbInkB"ahouc ten per cent, of be service wilr have to be ! Restored. Since j "July. 5 the red net ions have amounted to $50,- , 000. The1 grand total. since Jamea has! beerJ Postmaster General f is" l50,00Q. i.vi.i .u.:a,-M'V A j . "J f--v-rrri lit- Ii; man O. Draper, LL. D.. Secre tary of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, has published a work entitled "King's Mountain nd"Its Heroes History j ot the Battle", of Kitig's Mountain,; Odd 7. 1780, anC i he! Even (a which L4u to lu" We are4 glad that Dr.- Draper 'has done tbei iwork that ougbti I to havri beeh doqe by some North Carolinian. Butj as has been said ! by as,JNorth ' Carolioians are much, .more given to making history tbau to writing bis roryl We can bat hope that D. Draper is accurate and i fair. Msj. Daniel's address iguored to some extent the; part North Carolina per formed in the battle, when as ai mat ter 4 fct this State Reserved the " most marked mention! One of the I most valuable works I bearing upon North Carolina is by a-Yirginian " Footed Notes." No son ot our Sratfe seems to be well acquainted withftheevents and men of every . ectlpn. One is well nformetl as to his particular secfiori other is equally well whilst an- posted as to bis sectiouj The best way to obtain a just and j thorough view ot the whole State wonld be for each sec tion1 io be iwell written upby sonie quauned scholarly person living in it. j Gentlemen, you msy hang the ocean on aj grape ;vlujuj to dry, lasso an afala'icbe, pin a bapkin to tbe mouth of aj volcano, skim the clouds from the sky witb a teaspoon, throw nalt on the tale of our! noble Ameri can; eagle whose ! Sleepless eye a atches oyer the welfare of the na tion, paste; for rent? Von the moon and stars, aud bang oat a siga npou rbe tjun for customer but you will never, in this age oti progress and intelligence, convinoH 'tbe masses rhatjtbe sQ-called prohibition law is right, fairiand proper.;! Hot right because it gives to one class ot men a prjvilege which another is unable to Obtain.1 j Unfair because it 11- eenseay countpuancee ; anu auows thousands npon thousands ol gai looSjOf liquor to be sold and none manufactured : improper because ic impovensnes tne ataieuy laauug from! the I Treasury. I an immense dmoont or money aud makes worth- less thousands of orchards. "When we are mirried ,Lacy,n said he poor man's Ron to the rich man's daqgbtsr. "oqr noneymoon be parsed abroad. We will in tbe Bois, promenade the . crnzA down iri to tbe blue shall drive Prada, watet oi the Adriatic from1 the KialtbL and enjoy hk iNespolitan sunsets, sjroHiog alou the Chiaja." "HoWl delicioos," epe jmurmuruu, "but 'John, dear, baV.el you. monfey .nnnb to lo ell ! this tor t a pays 1 muHthh expect any ming until .; he dies.'jf John's conujejifnee under went sucli a change j (that she could not btflp asking bim i(be felt ei(ik. "No,!darling,"be angered faintly, I am not sickl I was only think ing that perhaps wenaa pett.s iMixtii One tne mairiMge uuiu ucr the luueral." -BrooAiMj Eagle. v- ' 1-rn . ifel you, (T vnnm rather V for a long- " paid I an eared oooaey tnan y independent voter to a Galveston candidate. "O. come now! Son on so hi not to allowiybureeli to be fluebced by fahiily ties," re epou'd ii ai,(iit:ti'. the voter has beeb pnz2f!lug bis bead ever , toi; find nut why ; the I crowd since laughed, 4 H ' i V. i 1 1 : III I n - - V: ft- 4 it, Ms f ' i I -I .V 1 ! 1 'i 1 I 1 i'S. r "I 1 ml njy j, a- w tvw t w -j - - i if ,4 .1