KSTABI-tSlTEn imx -SEW SSKIESV, KO. 4oP I THE REAGAN BILL. jThfc Keagan Interstate commerce : paSsejtl the I House by a very jojculed Diajority. Such legislation belongs rtP wnieh are a 'class of measures obsolete, lit is based , upon;' a i theory which experience false. All practi- I luis shown to be caj experiment ;rie3 1 to; prbve" io transportation that ; attempts , to ngulate" it; arbitrarily on pnnHcs-mustifail, and that they fail, and t con not produce the results aimed ad but are sure to cause confusion to cause con fusior aud injury to a II the interests con cefn ed. .Iu: the: Reagan bill, principles I are assumed toibe true which can , be conceded. The principle of tb higher charge for $,he shorter haul is, for instance, condemned iu dtSaneeofacts, the , truth being that the servico of railroads to the piibl fc ; would lp greatly reduced, anil their area of business curtail (.ifif'thiyl were prohibited from putting I long-haul rates at a mini- mtiniuo: tne many cases in which . that J arrangement alone; renders thrrrige otjcheapi freight possi ble. There is hardly a probability that it will pass the Senate. ' TO KXCbu.RAGE MANUFACTURES. I'Tlierej shall be exempt from "taxation and license fer a period rdf ten years, be capital, machin ' "iryj arid other property employed uin the; manufacture of textile fa : "ijrics, jfeathejr shoes, harness, saAllerJ hatjs, flour, machinery, 'Agricultural implements and fur "niturej and other-articles of wood, 'marble or stone ; soap, stationery, "ink and paper; provided that not "lesVthan five- hands are employed "in kn.xone factory - J .,; lyvho will iulrodace such a bill in ther-Sorth ; Carolina Legislature t . . ( If uiicdus itntioual, amend the con- stitnjddii.j iJilllARTqF ADVERTISING. ;Tnsjis a petty art when it is ap lZ- M t6;petty concerns, but when it' is .applied no great affairs it is th6 urtldf all arts. It is vulgar wuei iij is managed in a vulgar " way Vnt .in the hands - of a man wlio'possessesj the audacity of geni us it becomes sublime. Ad vertis in": has made great generals out of menjwho had no generalship, sates J . menoUt of con) mon place po) iticians and successful editors out of bar , bers, stonecutters, school boys and breifless la wy rs. ; . : - j The art ot advertising lies at the I basis of success in every undertak . ingnj business or politics, in pro j fession or trade. ; We can recall two recent instances, l . by Way of illustration, but as sue rcesslsyet to be attained, it might seerei personal. . " j - - SUCiARjFOR ONE CENT A POUND. f pir. Peter (jollier, fbrmerlyBhem ; jstio5ti4 Agricultural Bureau at Washington, makes the startling v' pr6ipsition that sugar can be made in abundance! from sorghum for one cjpta pound. Such an achieve j menjor;anyclose approach to it, . would be of immense importance to the people; of this country. No . vihere in the 1 world, except, per- haps,-ip England, is as much sugar "eaten in proportion to the popula tion as in the United States. Our aunual consumption is .200,000, (joOfpblinds; Europe, with six times as prany people, eats only about 7, Q00,,000 pounds. Leaving out the cost lot' refining the raw sugar when we have bought it, which ;woutd add from a quarter to a third to ihk price, jand saying nothing of the 75,000,000 gallons of syrup and 1 molasses we Use, our annual sugar bill is about $100,000,000. Seven- ' eighths of this money goes to for ; eigiiers. If Dr. Collier's proposi , ' tio'n is sound, weneed not pay over ; ' $20,000;000 or $25,000,000 a year for our J sugar: and every cent of ' this should go iuto the pockets of American farmers. Not only this; !in time we should be ableto pro duce more sugar than we ueed, jto undersell the growers -ot cane and beet sugar ii other countries, and J to build up! a large export trade that' would still further enrich the American agriculturists refiners and merchants.! , What Dr.lCollier says is entitled to;great we'ght j No one haacon tribnted so much as he to the solu- ' tion oi the (practical diflicultiesin the way of making sugar from sor- ffhum In 1879, while as yei ms famous experiments were only fair ly begun, the whole product of tnis .wmmnlitv !in the United .States i , i.i. iT nno . iwmnds. " Yet Wtta-teas iu"" F - ' scientists had been wrestling with the Droblem for thirty or forty years, Last year, directly as the - resnltof hisdiscoveries, the amount , was l,500,oj)0 pounds an increase of tone hundred and twenty five J ! tu in five vears. The New-Yoric rihimber of Commerce has invited . hiui to expound the theory. An importout jservice .to the country WHERE THE LAW IS IMPOTENT. . The trial of Madam j ; Clovis Hughes, in Paris, has resulted in her acquittal. She was charged with the murder of one Morin, who had brutally defamed and slander ed her. The homicide was admitt ed. (The prisoner conducted her own defence, pleading provocation, a plea unknown to American juris prudence. - - I The result was a triumphant ac quittal by thejury, which has been hailed with satisfaction in all civil izedjeountries. ;.' , j ;1 ,.J Cowardly, malignant and secret attacks' upon the tamilv I and the marital relation are immeasurably more calamitous and cruel than the killing of the body, yet against which the courts afford no protec tion and can furnish little redress. The law is condemned when the guilty escape. j j ' Society generally demands pro tection" aa in at such outrages and persecutions as that which drove this woman to the revolver, and so ciety will at once vindicate its civ- ilization by refusing to condone private vengance j r Against the swift slander that undermines family peace, : blasts the honor of woman, poisons their lives, overwhelms them (with un deserved shame, what defence or protection exists!- The alow nrn. cess of courts which' are hampered by technicalities ; the dextroa de vices of unscrupulous shre wd prac ti tionersj the delays which every knave can throw in the way of his own conviction ; demonstrate the inadequacy of the only pretence of redress which the law proffers in such cases; and combine to goad the outraged, persecuted,' humiliat ed victim on to lawless methods of vindication and revenge.) I In such cases, where the law has proved impotent, does t&e popular judgment approve the breach, of law- which is the last desperate re sort of a hounded. Wron&red and maddened, woman for whom the courts have, no relief. Great Havoc Among West Point Cadets. There is considerable surprise over the result of the semi annual examination at the West Point military academy just ended.-A large number failed to pass. , Five were sent back from third to the fourth class, and the fourth class lost a quarter of its whole member ship. The first class is a small one, havmg only thirty nine mem-. bers. The Becond class stood the ordeal well. It numbers 82 mem bers, and is the largest second class ever at the academy. "The sons of United Senator Butler, in the third , class, and of General Williams, the fourth class, were among the tonnu wanting, xne Ohio colored lads are doing fine, Alexander, of the third class, standing nineteen in a class of 70, and Young, in the fourth' class, be tug about midway in a class of 7b members. 1 Cleveland's Administration as Governor. ' From Got. HiH's inaugural address. It may be safely asserted that the administration of Governor Cleveland for the two years past, has more than met the "just expec . tations of the people ; and made its lasting impress on the annals of the State. It has been brilliant in its sterling integrity,' safe in its true conservatism, noia in lis euort for reform, faithful in its adher ence to pledges and vigilant in its opposition to .corruption. Its straightforward : and business like conduct, united with and unques tioned honesty of purpose, nas w.on for it and for himself the warm ap-, oroval of his i political friends, the sincere respect of his opponents and the unswerving and unselfish support of independent citizens everywhere. That . he may meet with the same uegree oi sacccos iu the greater ofiice to which he has been called in the earliest wish of all the citizens of this State and of every lover of good government. , j ! Death of Myra Clark Gaines. f Mrs. Myra Clark Gaines died in New Orleans last week of pneu monia. the!was in her 78th year. FTur imir litioration to recover prop erty allegetl to be unlawfully with held from her Dy me uuitia.c i Louisiana Tmade ner ianou throughout the country, nue was met with a oiwerf rcaioi", a f mighty attempt, oeiug niy to prove her an illegitimate child and not lawfully empowered to in herit ' I : ?In 1870 the city government of New Orleans offered Mrs. Gaines a million of dollars in settlement-of her claims against the city. She felt that her claim was worth many times more than this, aad declined the offer. Finally, after twelve years, her judgment was placed at about million dollars, and by that time lawyers and brokers and speculators had got away with al Sosi the entire claim. Mrs. Games was little better than a paoPf; Litigation had eaten up "J" -off resonrces and her expectations. Her judgment against the city of New Orleans is an appeal in ' the SupremiurtoftheUnited States. 3he passed away without enjoymg the fruits of her arduous labors. ! A cyclone swepi through io. and Baldwin counties. Geor- Hnndav nigut, w3ov-ft .loroll infra.- fiTlU nouses.- uarus nuu funnel. Florses and . mules - were blown away. Several persons were Knf. nn lives were lost. The noise of the cyclone was heard distinctly eight miles away. TIJE OL.D MAN HAKUEL. ICoL T. C. TuUer in Nowitaky'i MonUJy.l in the Fall of 18C8, a horrible crime was committed in the County of Cumberland in this State. A colored man by the name of Mainor had been shot, and instant! vicing in his own house, at a dead hour of iue nignc ; suspicion fell upon a colored man by the name of John Manuel, and he was at once arrest ed and imprisoned upon the charge of murder. Jacob Manuel was an intelligent; man. ot about thirty- five years of age, and had, np to mat ume, norne a good character. It was alleged, that, being moved oy -jealousy, ne bad gone to the caDin inhabited by Mainor, had stealthily crept opto the house, and tnrosnng ms gun i through the cracks of the log hut, had put a neavy cnarge of buck shot through his victim's head. f . I was at that time practicing law in the tOWn nt Favot-fnvilla niwl - - j v i uin uu n m applied to by the old man Manuel." uw,u lamer, u unaertaKe the de fence of his son. ; The old man, was about seventy years ! of j age very tall, straight afid spare of a' red copper color, with thick, bushy, white hair, neat ly, but coarsely dressed, and had a stern put rather sad expression of countenance, tie was of more than ordinary j intelligence, "was quiet, easy and even dignified in his man ners, slow and deliberate in his speech, and showed that he had suffered, and that he could ' suffer and be still." The old man told me the story of his life, how born to the hard lot of a free negro,ff he had struggled; how pinched by poverty and without friends, he had toiled and starred to provide even' the barest necessaries of life for his family- how his wife had died many years ago, leaving him with six small children; how he had striven to raise them in credit how some of them had wandered from the right road ; how he bad tried to bring them back to virtue, and how he had failed. All this he told in his artless, slow, deliberate way. He then added with some emphasis " Jacob has been a good boy, God koics, and I do not believe hiin guilty of this crime." Through sympathy. and pity for the old man, I undertook the de fence; of his son. Soon I became interested in the case, and exerted myself to the uttermost. The trial came off, the evidence, though mainly circumstantial, was terribly strong, and Jacob was eonvicted of rr?3. der, about twelve o'clock at night the jnry filed into the Oonrt room, and by the dim light of a few candles, they solemnly delivered their verdict of "guilty in manner and form as charged in the bill of indictment." ;v ; The old man was standing by me at the time; he showed no feeling and made no sign, be merely whis pered ' God inoic$t and I know he is not guilty." ' .'j Jacob,was sentenced t6 be hang ed an appeal was taken to the Supreme Court, the judgment was affirmed another sentence; the day for the execution was again set, and then; to save the man's life, there remained only the hope of a par don or commutation of sentence. Through the kindness of Sheriff Hardie and others, who sympa thized with the old man, petitions for pardon were signed, and by the old -man presented, in person, to Governor Holden, who granted several reprieves ; but Governor Holdeu went out of ofiice "and his successor, Gov. Caldwell, declined to further interfere with the execu tion of the sentence. .The day for the execution was rapidly approach ing I felt then and I feel now, that though the circumstances relied on for convictiou, vere strong in hem-j selves and" strangely well connects ed, jyet the man was not guilty j that he was 'about to be offered up as another jvictim upon - the altai of circumstantial evidence. But! yet f as the day drew near, as the preparations for his execution were almost completed, I felt that al would soon be over with poor Jacob Not. so, however, with the "old man Manuel ;" he never doubted, he never abated one jot of heart or hope,,' he knew his boy was innof cent and lie 'would not believe that his innocence would not, proridenr tially, be made manifest. Old as he was, and infirm as he was, h walk pi l from Favetteville to Bal eigb, a distance of sixty miles, and then presenting another petition for( his soa,s pardon, he mutely awaited the! Governor's action. j Jtist before the sun went down on the day preceding that appoin ti ed for the execution, as I sat in my office, thinking that Jacob Manuel would never see anotner sunset, uie old man " came in, and deiivereu to me a paper from the Executive ofiice. It was a commutation of Jacob's sentence fiom death to im prisonment for Jife in the peniten tiary. All the old man said was "God has saved my boy." i Shortly after this I moved to Raleigh. I never lost my interest in Jacob Manuel, and soon my law ..rtnir hffran- to feel as - much trest in the case ajema. vuxs n . . as I did. For regularly, every half year, the " old man Manuel,", travel stained, weak and weary, would knock at our ofiice door, and, after the usual saluta tions, would fsimply say, " I have come to see my boy.' One or the other of us would always go with the old maufto the Governor's of flee, aud make a fresh appeal for Jacob's pardon ; but in vain. All that could be done was to give the old man a permit to enter the peni tentiary "to see his boy.1. I am told that the old man would go out, give his hand to his son, aud follow him about, he was at his tasks, never speaking to him or anyone else,, unless he was ad dressed ; but would" never take bis eyes off bis boy. When he could remain no longer, he would silently give to Jacob the little articles he had brought for his comfort, shake liin tiaml And CI nietlv depart. As GREENSBORO, N. C., TUESBAItT Se n?f ' half year would roll round. man ould-appear again, and the same things as related would occur. AtouroSce, the ex. ecutive chamber and the peniten tiary, he was always expected, and never failed to come, at his set time. Every one who met the old man pitied Tiim ; his belief in his son's innocence, his perfect reliance upon a providential interposition m bis behalf, and his entire and thorough and unselfish devotion to his boyrwon for him the profound respect of all who knew him or bis story. LAnd so the " old man Man uel" came and wentJ and the years rolled on. j Gov. Holden had gone out of of fice, Gov. Caldwell had died, and Gov. Brogden was in the last year of his term. It was Christmas eve, dark, cold and chilly, as I sat by my ofiice fire; my partner was at the desk writing; suddenly, I do not know why, it came upon me that I could then secure the pardon of Ja cob ManueL- ; ! I put on my overcoat and said to my triend, " Captain, I am going to the Governor and get him to par don Jacob Manuel." l.went to the! Executive ofiice, fouud the Governor in, and said to him, Governor, I have come to ask you for a Christmas present. I have come to ask yon for a man's life poor Jacob Manuel is wasting his life in prison and his poor old father is dying of his grief. . Par don the boy,' and make the old far therms heart glad,1 .once more before he dies. He cannot see another Christmas; make this, his last, a happy one for him." , - The Governor; sat musing for awhile, but I could see that the word! in season I had been spoken. He soon called his Secretary, had a pardon written, signed it and han ded it to me. h . I sent a messenger, on a fleet horse, to the penitentiary, the con vict's garb was stripped off, citi zen's I clothes were put on Jacob Manuel, a small sum of money, due him as a reward of good conduct, was given to him, and as the clock struck twelve that night, he gently knocked at the door of his father's humble cabin. The old man open ed the door and i saw him, but be would not welcome him, be would not touch him ;" Jacob," he said, " have you escaped . from the peni tentiary, or do you , come as a free man!" "Father," he replied, I am a free man;! am pardoned." Then , the old man fell upon his son's neck, and, for the first time, he wept. He sat all night with Jacob's hand elaspedjin his own, and all he could say was "Thank God ! Thank God !' ! The next norning the neighbors gathered in and fouud that the old man j was rapidly passing away ; the revulsion of feeling had been tod much for him. In a short time he died ; died from an excess of joy. ! : . Nh !'- : I Kind hands provided for him de cent burial, sympathizing friend followed him to the grave and thus passed away a most devoted father, "The Old Man Manuel." i i ' : 1 . I f - Eeartbqaakea la Spain. 1 1 . . iartuquake shocks began on Thursday, December 25, and con tinued with more or less violence for the 'space often days, levelling whole towns and cities and causing the death of oyer two thousand people. The provinces most affect ed were Andalusia, Malaga and Granada. The towns of Albania and Santa Cruz were complete ly destoyed and many of the in habitants perished iu the falling ruins. A mouutain near Periana disappeared from view. At Zaf farraya, a town near Loja, fifty persons were j killed. I Sixteen houses were destroyed at Lanjaron, and numerous houses were demol ished and lives lost in. other vil lages. Fifty i corpses were found at Ventas de Tain Arranza. , At Priego, iii the province of Cordopa, the shocks came while the theatre was; crowded with peo ple. A terrible, panic followed. Many persons jumped from the galleries and from the windows up on the crowd, below, receiving fatal injuries. Harrowing scenes are depicted iu Albunuelas. Half of the town is in ruins. The churches, the convent and the town hall were thrown to the ground. One bun dred and ninety-two dead bodies were taken from the ruins. Many persons were resetted alive, alter being partly buried for twenty-six hours. Some were half crazed with fright. Piteous cries were heard in the ruins for jtwenty-four hours, but it was impossible to render any assistance to sufferers, j Similar tales are told of the dis aster in Alhama, where a thousand houses are in rnius The inhabi tants in the day-time wander about their ruined homes, risking their lives in their j endeavor to save something from the wreck. They remain at night in an improvised camp of carts, tents and sheds. Three hundred and fifty corpses have been discovered at Orenas del Bey, and 250 persons there are now suffering from! injuries- received. The town of Albuqueros was com pletely destroyed. Many people perished. ? j f ; - H . To add to the horrors of the sit uation, terrible gales of wind swept over the ruined towns, completing the work ofj devastation. No dis aster of like nature so terrible and destructive as this has foccured on the Peninsula since the Lisbon earthquake bt 1755. j j. . j - i ; i f ! - Desperate Mea Cowe4 by a w.oma jTwo desperate colored criminals fined in the Golds boro jail Sat nrdav nicht succeeded in- breaking the inner door, and were at work on the' outer, when Mrs. i it' (nttifn. xnompson, j iue xeujsio auw, rnahed fn. drew a revolver and Mmmanded them to I Stop. Her courageous action checked them. and by the time other help came the men were completely cowed. mwm . 'X. boardin"uA"riy y.ea ago the cato ItaliaV .1"", "en was very ""uuwnilDP." Thi. regular," audNri 8lt"n? Very It had, moiwverVho X. TV?1 legible'. Follow me"t of being brief interval wherX.13 .cam a been taught to admL 1DSj first open-handed models7VCJ?py",book allowed to develop wtf nl was herent individuality h" Ja might possess. We all kVcript men of forty or fiftv to daA. wo handwriting is clear as primX86 ueaniirni am tiia umrir nf v copyists. But this reign of g sense was in its turn supersede by that craze for things English which embraces all utilities, from ulsters to tea cozies, from etiquette to inflections. An English hand writing became an essential part of the curricnlum Of fashionable schools, and teachers even adver tise to "instruct in the English style, at their own residences, ladies who are dissatisfied with their old fashioned way of writing." This English model is very square, very regular, imposing and stately as Britannia herself, and in its perfec tion almost whollj illegible. But English, Italian, or Yankee is a melancholy truth that the hand writing of many educated women, if deal, is positively ugly, and if graceful, is commonly blind. . "lis true 'tis pity, and pity 'tis 'tis true." For this failure to com bine the beautiful is but one more of the evil, consequences of haste and slighting with which our time is crowded. We look at things too much from the - point of view ' of necessity, and think they will "do" if they barely serve their purpose of usefulness. But beauty is a higher end than use, after all; and why should not the less be includ ed in the greater! If we are to give our correspondent pleasure by the charm of the sentiments or the grace of the phrases or the bright ness of the chit chat which we send him, why not deepen that pleasure by the beauty and clearness of the pages which contain them! That legibility aud beauty are natural companions is shown in the old Roman inscriptions, in the pages of old German books, in the missals and manuscripts which are the treasures of modern libraries, in the Arabic scrolls, and letterings on tiles and friezs. One need not know a word of the languages to which these belougto see that they aie as legible as they are beautiful. Modern haste threatens to banish caligrapbs as an art. The work of the type writer has already made the scrivener's elaborate aud ele gant handicraft a thing of the past; and to their , necessities must, of course, be pardoned the scrappy and unfinished script of most pro fessional writers. But the laity, youug women, matrons of leisure, have no excuse for a graceless or unreadable hand. It is as unlady like as any other infraction ofcour tesy.! I - We are glad that the old fashion ed custom of sealing letters with wax has beeu revived of late. Of course it is no longer a necessity, as in the old days when few men could write, and the seal was the substitute for a signature, a certi ficate of the genuineness of the documents But it is a pretty and tidy way of securing a letter, pleas anter to a fastidious person than a gummed envelope. If, however, the writer will not take the time and trouble to drop the wax prop erly and stamp her signet ith care, she can at least refuse to use the sham seals that come . ready made and are stuck on to hide the ad hesive flap. The perfect paper, iuk, and pens of Our i time lend their aid to the writer's service, and leave ouly practice and determination for con tribution. Handwriting is an ex pression of character, as dress or speech is, and, like them, should be a tribute to beauty, aud not alone a sacrifice to utility. A well cooked beefiiteak would remain a well cooked beefsteak whether it were served on a cracked kitchen plate or a fine china platter. But the moral condition ot the eater thereof would not be the same if she consented Ml the plate for con venience' sake when she might have had the platter.-JVo give up too much to time-saving and money saving, and we need to practice sentiment-saving and beauty-saving. Why not begin with hand writing! : ; Stopped III Train Just In Time. Just before the night express train on the Alabama division of the East Tennesse, Virginia and GeorgU Railway reached uamioipn Rnndav night Engineer oisco con eluded to stop and cool a hot jour nal. ;He had scarcely sunt on steam when just ahead of him he saw a huge obstruction on the track.! He applied the: air brakes and stopped the train just as it struck the obstruction. The train wreckers had driven fence-rails in to a cattle-guard, between which twenty-five cross ties had been piled.; Had the train struck the obstruction it would havej been hurled over an embankment seven tv five feet "high. j Strack y Jansary Llgbtaiag. Lightning struck the Methodist church at Cannel, 111., Sunday night, wrecking the .cupola and front nf the building, i About 50 persons were in the church at the time but although several were in the vestibule, where the lightning tore the ceiling, splintered the door and tore out tne weaiaer ooarumg, no one was seriously Injured. t1ia total aonronriations for the navy for the entire fiscal year f IRAS. 414. 980. 472.59. or 4913,. 901.64 less than was appropriated for the fiscal year 1554. ' " " "" : ' - T ' ' " " 20, 1885. Washington's Religion IReT. K. D. NeUl in the EdubomI RumnU. i a La ftf daTi ?go, of the vi inn i icev. itichard M Abercrombie. Rwtnr nf Sf r thew Protestant Episcopal church ."wcragr v-uy, memories ooynood arose, i He was far from mv father's udelphia, and was the son scholar ami rViT'- 'w". - v vmm, a aiicii'.nim am i nma i r . . uu, ia i early "life. correinrinloi k i great lexicographer, Samuel John wn, and in later vears wa tha -- -v u w X LIIH 1 sistant minister of Christ's and St. . viwb cuarcues. in Phila.lii.i. where my maternal ancestor hn.i wo: Mhi.A.l . - atiod. . i" , T touiicu I0r mom than TKL?2y a"er "e father had decwur score years, the lately of tha n took me iuto the stud v iciier v uuu snowea inn a i iir..LtNl. n A ' ; Tmn hi . "eorge father, thhad written ;to .his w-.K- nr,o . ioan " " i Ti.T- "'"" ularattendantsUts wife were rear- while residing in? his ministry The President adelphia. ..cant, noiwiinstauot a comma, one no wftistle will better set the congressional district of Maryland ?S!y.ft0,T t0tieCt;;a" tbSS?, aD,d rtar the truest wall j Ms djing at his resident naru! - nfrpr llio olrtcn rvf tho M anA I I In tint i-nli ..n r . . . . I . r . . ' 1 1 ."" v auuauicuuu ouuunjouiiu wit uu i ill rnn namr. nr rortrinor trui n church while his wife reraainethe communed, i Unon one !. occd Dr. Abercrombie alluded to the utpo nappy teudencv of the examnle oine buose uignineu oy age and position turning their i backs upon the cele bration of the Lord's supper. The discourse arrested the attention of Washington,! and after; that he never came to church with his wife on communion Sunday. Dr. Aber crombie, in a letter which appears in the fifth i volume of Sprague's 'Annals of the American Pulpit," mentions that he did not find fault with the sermou, but respected the preacher for his moral courage. There is a story about Washing ton being found in the woods in thelwiuter time in prayer by the owner of the bouse which he used as his headquarters at Valley Forge which I wonld like to believe if it were not so improbable, and if it had not been first put in print by the eccentric and not very accurate Episcopal . irjmister, Morgan L. Weems. John Potts, of Pottsgrove, had several! sous and daughters. Que," James, j studied law at the Temple, Loudon, and was a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in Philadelphia at the beginning of the war of the Involution, and be ing a Tory eventually weut to Hal ifax ; Jonathan, another son. studied medicine at Edinburg, and esM)used the cause of the colonies, and was the medical director of the middle department; another sou was a Quaker and neutral, aud owned the house at Valley . Forge which is still known as Washing ton's headquarters, and the three were brothers of the graudmother of the writer of this article. With a capacious aud comfortable house at his disposal, it is hardly possible that thesby, silent, cautious Wash ington should leave such retire ment and enter the leafless woods in the vicinity of the winter en campmeut of an army and engage in audible prayer. The alleged scene has been often produced by the pa'uter and engraver, but I fear it is only a myth. ! Randall's Southsra Welcome. ' ' ; IN. Y. Sun. . . . The Southern journey of the Hon. Samuel J. Kaudall was un dertaken merely for business pur poses, but it has become a sort ot personal and political "triumph. Between twenty and thirty South ern cifies have honored him with cordial receptions or invitations. and throughout the South his visit seems to have excited extraordinary interest and enthusiasm. The kindly feeling of the South erners for Mr. Randall may be in part explained by their old grati tude for his staunchscrvicesin their behalf! in the days of Grantism, and in part by the instinct of hos pitality, made still more generous by the unjust attacks . and asper sions of those of his oppouents who can see no goou .in mm uwuuao they do not agree with him in cer tain matters of oninion. But the demonstrations which have marked the progress have been too eager arid general to have in them noth ing but hospitality and gratitude. to a stranger wuo uas oeen tne friend of the South iu the past. It is not with the past, but with the future, that the Boutuern peo- nle mostly concern tuemseues in welcoming Mr. jsanuaii. yncre the South is most prosperous and active, where emigration is most pneouracred. and where the indusl trial progress is most conspicuous, Mr. Kaudall is received with en ' . thu8iasm and honor as the repre sentative of that economic policy under which industrial develops ment has been encouraged in the Forth, and under which, in the view of an over increasing numuer . . l : nf Southern, men. the ssoutn can grow to the greatness which ner i resources and he energies of her people seem to mark out for ner. heart of an iron country which al ready aspires to rival Pennsylvan ia, a inottoTn honor of Mr. Bail dall's coming read : Welcome the Champion of the New Eebelliori, the New South Against the Old South." '" I . l I The new South welcomes Mr. Randall because it is building up a new empire of free labor, and re gards him as a champion of the economic policy which is neccessary to the growth ot that empire. j TWid . Dobbs. Will's P. 0 Ala., says: My grand daughter had anffArod with a sore upon ner leg. Month's sUnding, which yieldetl quickly to Ramon's Nerve and Bone Oil, and is permanently cured by its use. Eob't. G. Glenn. t For - sale ; by ; j The.Moral .r WhUtUmg, f I , I tDr.Taluuta in Frank LecOa's Sunday Maoxina j;; j , , i : lor ztonurj.i . . , it is a prevalent notion that a propensity to whistle indicates an indolent or trivial nature. Whn iiiiinir daim ... i IT "t. . . ciisreputabie. p is - notmng - more nealthfnl than i ut : . IIUIS exercise.. : Thn fai.nlt. has NUnU been I granted to thnoa nf na who cannot sing much. Though c uiigui Jose our wav in a tun a it c Mbiempceu tne custom arv sni.ro. : . ... w -- no or base, we revel in th mnn. which, without anv mIt ill rash nih tne breath thronrii tha l X G"mbIers seldom, if ever whistle. Thft art. iu loff Anf 4 i ' blithe and cheerfnl. Whti.Aw i- ine wnistiA tha i-uouisue mat makes th iwi :r iuo goou r of mv I we are indulcnn? in it: liv wo,- of the TTnitt Sfufo. :-?... born not soliloquy and some one i meets us, .n Baltimore, was entered by burg! ... xuii- Buapiuog me wnis-1 ia4 oamruay nigutand robbed of i of Rev. tie in two, as though we had bn several hundred dollar. I cueer, or me good cheer that makes -fu r1 Pub"shes an interview the whistle, we have ao no tN Tlth James R which he w "f0? ! iuia Kiud of music is r " !"i"ue accompaniment o work. Let two mmn. k- Jhescaffblding, theirstrength alike; their liods and trowels alike, the irMr : " any oi our ueips.i w vwonu wants is an aug-M iunrArirtn n i . , I . taiuments: not. I ZTa r.T":? nierea the second and curvetinir: hnTnT" u?? a nday night. objections: or He wonld not Ml K ,r,.rt golde,, tu?1Ibe kitten with nU - i-w F mi irisK,;, and the dog with face ? to U M t' K w IHUllf uars, and send the mVht viti I gable with moSthfal 5 .7"0'm.'" ? ri nied tl? knOW not w'hy omen, uiea tlfeir naroa pt.nnM f!"int rjsreise, and yet an un den it. DVhas for fnrh.vi women mayg something that HlSw donotwani Wtnr, lnml on -An fl,. r"'uM"ci,eu - KJaneh, very J, T '-"f-w"0 " -Hr long list uaj Alwari oom to soma bad cikv ' , There are times iu a wok nas wnen a psalm-tune does nov,- particularly appropnate, a carol seems too formidable to tack ; the former is too grave an( the latter too jubilant; and nothing ou earth is consonant with the cir cumstances but a whist.c. That privilege she shall not be denied if we have anything to say about it. jf Soon after going on board the Steamer! we, noticed a little pewter instrument that hung to "the boat swain's jacket. Ou such a simple thing yon would not suppose a man could make more than one or two Sounds.i but that little instrument can play a hundred tunes, and at its call cables, cordage, rigging, sails, colors, boats, and anchor re spond, and all the crew fly swiftly from capstan to ratline. 'After eight days of headwind we he inl the boatswain's long, keen, Ire bounding whistle. It meant that the wind had changed and the sails must go np. There uas in that pewter whistle more music than in aay harp we have since heard, and when it, fell down again from the boatswain's lips we re-examined it to see where all that chirrup and glee of I sound and shrillness f of blast could hide themselves. Thus we saifi on in life and sometimes into the! teeth of a headwind, and it is tough navigation. Our whis tie, dangling to our neck, seems of u6use;i Everything is against "us; but after a while there is a change in the moon, and the wind that was adverse wheels around in our favor. IThen wo take up our whis tle, aud, all handson deck, the sails rise, and the port looms ; up inffhe distance. If at such a time we make more noise with our mouth than we ought to, charge it nqtto us, but; charge it to the boatswain's whistle; alow Doctors Differ. The prevalent notion that promi nent traders are just the . men '. to tell us what- is the matter when trade is out of order, and to pre scribe the right remedy, calls to mind ,J the sayiug Who would weigh fat men must himsef be fat." If the'traders areso wise, how does it ever happen that trade gets! out of shape! The responses of presi dents tf Chambers of Commerce and Boards of Trade to Inquiries by The iVV T. World as to the cause of existing depression and the proper remedy are both interesting; and amusing. v j ) New, York hesitates to speak, and Cincinnati has not time. Prov idencef says overtrading in 11880 was the cause, and, and reduced production is the remedy, j St. Louis I thinks liquidation is the cause,! and 'he remedy is a restora tion of confidence that is bad health is the cause of sickness, and the remedy is to get well. Minne apolis finds in cheap wheat and too much lumber the cause of all our woes, and sagaciously suggests as the remedy good crops which will make wheat continue cheap. l)e troitthinksoverproduction ot grain, manufactured articles and stocks is the-cause, and a reduction of the surplus on Jiand is the remedy. Richmond finds ttie cause on trou ble in irregularity of crops, and the remedv in "time, temperance and IndustrY.'' Kansas City thinks protection caused to many manu facturing establishments, and these caused too many railroad and se curities, and the excess and aepre elation of these Caused disaster whioh i a beautiful instance or nnttintr the cart before the horse Steel rails went to 485 per ton in 1RMU and uii? iron to 441, because hre were not enough manufactur- inr establishments for the railroads then! in progress. Buffalo thinks the abnormal development of some industries is the cause of the dis- vhprMs it is only the out ward Kvmntoin. and says the reme- Axr tn wait natientlv. Atlanta cars there is no depression, e xcep is-short, and nA Mmmlv , is needed which IS consoling. r GENERAL NEWg, A!UU,ni sredGen: Grant 1100,000, to let him exhibit his ttuu iropnies. . ii"xiy . a ;i The Chicago tfetr asserts that the socialists in that city could not Y uu uai overanunured drilled and ; armed men, and that the scare isr fostered in the interest of a larger ; ?;-A San Francisco judge has de. cMed that Chinese children born in ' iSnAUar- tiHed to ad mis- h sion to the public schools. r ' ' - , ;. . """u; wtic j 7. Yra ine 6toT that he trietl I, V , ooun onr h cold blooded forcrerv" -Dr. W. II. Cole, democratic Congressman elect 'from Z S The residence of Jadim ti.i i "w : w a a a. a t ",UIC irom erysipelas. Saint Roses Catholic church at fSSric8 taken atto""ting in all T " "V rr"v,c U1 silver tCOO. m. 8,fippI,0t 2,00,000, instead ft10'?'?00 asked for, and the Missouri river about 1500,000. instead of $1,300,000 asked forL Mr. Gladstone's health in . . . - storms -prevailed Suu- wn we coasts of Great Britain. many lives were lost. The English (!nnrtArni..nM.n . . vuouw;i v mmiA a. iuirnufnnl ZZtiTJ r lTC, uai: mjunciiou .u.wmugiDo puoiication of Lord kytton's letters. The Secretary of War has re i- eci to order, a court martial eu. Uazen'8 chanres nrain0f POarlingtou. Feb.X' ors of tbo World's ltr flw Orleans have set amir drummeA6. commercial travel- -An ed2Lattem,anc6 ?f Pittsburgh tow i I : purpose of haviiiPng made in i the temperance oney ror the . permanently iu thli8 Murphy. (burcb of Gosiiel Teu& locate JPrrf Hilli'mtit, VS tUC died VYelneslay- die m w miiiiiiiuui VaV M. I tromineut Place amonir heTe.i ty of Yale since he assumed v chair vacated by his distinguishv j fill hlr ill 1&vl ITa n-tiH nnalnfHu' best known of Americau physicists. A sensational - suit has been commenced in the Circuit Court in! Milwaukee by Ken ben F. Sherman, a rich fanner of Waukesha County. against Merrick. F. Spalding, owner of the Capital Hotel at Madison. Wis., claiming 425,000 d imaged or an alleged alienation of the af- ections of the plaintiffs wife.! Ow ing to the. standing of the parties the scandal attracts more than u ual attention. n I! . r- thi: TALK OP tui: day.; j The first bill introduced in the Ohio Senate after the oieninirof tne session was a bill to abolish the October election. ! I ' ; 1 Grover Cleveland will be inau gurated on. March 4. which i this year falls on - Wednesday, as it did u the years when Jefferson, Jack) son and Buchanan were inaugurat ed, thus making Wednesday a good Democratic day without robbing the Republicans ot the credit at tached to "Black Friday." j j Should Senator Bayard accept a cabinet portfolio, the indications are the people of Delaware will , witness a Senatorial struggle un-. equalled in intensity and bitterness since the famous contest of 1871. when the two brothers, Willard and Gove Salisbury, fought for supremacy and were beaten ; by a third Jrother (Eli, the present oeii ator). . . 4 ; y A mysterious well is reikrted n Indiana from which buckets of. water are constantly drawn by uri seen hands. The ghastly visitants have even taken upon themselves tbejask of watering the stock of Mr. Madden, upou whose premises the well is located, whereat the worthy Uo sier is said to be horri fied. No one who has ever "water ed stock" would consider such ser vice maddening. This well is prob ably not the well of truth nnde filled. . 5 - f-f ' With a view to relieving Gen. Graut Vanderbilt. recently bought in asa - preferred creditor his swords, medals and valuable ouv enir. These, together with the mortgages, deeds, &c, held as se enrity for his 4150,000 indebted ness he proposed to turn over to Mrs. Grant, with the simple pro vise that the relics referred to be placetl after the General's death in an appropriate department in Wash- ington. This proposition was not acceptable to the Grants and Mr. Vnuderhilt modified it, leaving it still a clear gift of $150,000 to thcmJ Mrs. Grant declined to accept the generous offeiy though General Grant was willing. She wrote a very curt note to the Railway King; declining peremptorily, and, so the matter ends. Gen. Grant still owes Mr. Vanderbilt 4150,000. I j- At the battle of Chu, January 1st, the Chiuese lost COO killed and large numbers of wounded. The French enptured two batteries bf Krupp guns, a large number of rifles, a quantity of ammunition and provisions and some Chinese standards and couvoys. The French losses were "three onlcers wounded and nineteen men killed and sixty five wounded .'!.-- Mi . , X ': A i 4- may thus be pertormeu.