It r fcSTABLIftllED IX 185.) EWBEBlES,NO.M, i ; ; GREENSBORO, N. C, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1885. TERMS t SI.SO ir Year, tn Advwaee. L- , . li . ' . - . I : . It ! " n I : I e . 1 , - ( m prohibition f a failure in j;;1,jJ;!r,hjiowjAi ' i Ah" esteemed correspondent pro tests that "because prohibition i I. failure in the town bf Keokuk is . v ... ... , ib reason wliy he a failure in vnce State of j Iowa." prohibition should the great temper- ENSILlpE CONGRESS. The fourth Ensilage Congressheld iu sessions last week in New York, and wax attended by several hun dred farmers, dairymen and others interested in the subject of ensilage. The discussions were varied and I - : - i full of animation. The questions Certainly ; but does not public 1 AimnmatA i i-i- w. nt l"l&f!SE Planting- tbi proce of cn.tmct- caud by i pacV.p of dyn.mi .Hft, THE DYNAMITE ARGUMENT. An Englishwoman, giving the name of Yseult Dudley, has shot O'Donovan Itossa, in the back, on the streetsiof New York city. In the same city the store of a firm in which there had occurred a strike of clerks was damaged by an ex- tdna.nn nniORed tO haVO been Treating All Creditor Alike. Mr. Buxton has introduced a bill Disraeli Women. Toe jate Eart Beaconsfield was to secure creditors a just division certainly one of "the of the estate of debtors who con vey to assignees for the benefit of creditors. It contains two leading features the first providing that no assignment made to secure deb tors shall contain preferences and the second requiring- the assignee to give bond for faithfully account- most cynical men of his day, nor is it a1 together astonishing that his nature roc) in m! in that direction. d'Ibraeli, a member race, ha found himse set of his political career, at the greatest pnblic dis advantage. .He had thing for himself. N As Benjamin of a despised f, at the out- and literary to do every o one lent him SvSte bf; Iowa'' bf, the Keokuk sustain the action city council in de- ,-laring prohibition a failure in that M wlth other pro ?ltron&coPyof the Grand Bap- cesses. Very much of the time of rr""-rjZ:"I" iA t' Hn.inWlw one of the f.ue " helping aristocracy, tug auu utung suos, ana inequality 77 " - . I will meet wttn universal approua-1 which was then far more influen - ... .. - - . i :h in '.niimirn i nn i -. t .i. ... ! . nrrnillr onrl hna mafia trrm onai. I HLrllLIUir ucib I Lion, iur WUUUUL uuuuv lutio m m ils Gazette we should infer so. The f(wfellhas (lately 'obtained the opinion; of seventy five members of tial than it is now. looked nnon him other day several mysterious par- grievance to be corrected oecause i wnh unconcealed Scorn, : andl it of d vnamite were found placed of the want of diligence, to use no pleased society from the very be ceis or aynamite were wuuu f nm ain-npp- lL5 ,v,ia ki, Tin i.;a the Congress was occupied with discussing the proper method of weighing a silo after the green crop has been placed in.it. The experk ence of the maiorlty of speakers if protoiiient privaU cittzens, as mat i; u oral -; . i troiratWnof tt. prohibitory cientweightj to M the BWte Legislature, Democrats ' and Republicans, and of a number in a pnblie library. Kossa and his friends insist that . tiiA vAman who shot mm is an wuw " w - " 1 agent of the English authorities, hired to assassinate him. This i not likely. other term, of some assignees. Baleigh Observer. I - The former provision is of more importance, and . it .is to be hoped that Senator Buxton will press his bill. Prefering creditors, in .the" majority of intUnces, is legalizing srinmns to ridicule him. But his intense energies trampled upon all that opposed them. The - prm JeflersoB Davla Interviewed. i . New OrleaM Special to Baltimore Boa. TJnon beincr shown the letter published in the Sun from General Trimble on the Sherman-Davis controversy,1 Mr. Davis said the General had the best opportunity of knowing his sentiments upon the subject, as he had spent some time with him. He is very severe on Gen. Sherman, and will in. a short; time present fb the public an arucie on vnesuoject, uwu c- Dected to be a very vigorous docu ment. He says Gen. Sherman is not worthy of a reply, but in jas tice to his (Mr. Davis') mends and the cause be represented ho will shortly give to the public j a coin , plete vindication of bis course while serving as President of the briak In the Time ofihe Cmaadera. ' AUthoYearBoond.l ; : s The Crusaders were great topers, and to them is due the bringing of spirits. The Arabs had reinvented distilling, but the process is de scribed by Galen aud Zosimus, writing in the second and fifth cen. tnries respectively. It is thought to have beeu known, to the old Ghaldies, and from them transmit ted to the Scythians-TarUrs, who, like, the Koords nowadays, were al ways making: iuroads toward the Mediterranean. Alcohol is, of coarse, an Arabic word probably the same 1 as the Hebrew "kaal," Chaldee f cobal meaning auy thing highly suntiiixed, whether in pwt dir or spirit. In the former shape leged el., tagan by bating him. JSSSSS? .'SSSZJTtSZ .huZnW "koir 'WUb wbicb They enea oy, rearing wm ue SC:""!'' ot TorDUbeTl aiy Bastcrnliwonien painl i i . I li.i i j IV " v " , . i 'i v i f i i heir 'respective towns and Counties. From a few of the small er-towlis, where publio sentiment island as; been favorable to pro iiibitioii, thejreportsjare favorable, but most of the reports are of a diiTerent tenbr. Thus a member of the Legislature from the important town of liubuque reports that there Is no effort t enforce the law there or iu tue 'connty, 'except by a tew ininksl There are about the same -'number of jsalbons there was last year, effort on tbW part of any officer to enforce thej obnoxious law." At Davenport the case: is the same:. ! No effort has been made to en force the law in this coanty. I am told that there, to day are - more blaceVTw here liquor is sold than . ;oo: a. vd!ir n rro. The legislators saw at present as i There is no filled. A numbers of Tanners pres ent, however gave it as the result of their experience that silos may be filled gradually, 'some of them havincr been as long as two weeks in getting the crops in without in- jury to the food The weight of evidence seemed to be in favor or cutting ensilage, cropshen nearly ripe or quite npe, to secure mo best resnlts. There was some talk of sweet ensilage, but no farmer present was able to say that he had But the shooting of Bo8sa,. and rascality. ; We doubt whether the the other incidents alluded to as occurring in New York and Cbica. nrove the truth that violence not only begets violence in retalia tioh and revenge, but also through a sort of moral contagion and imi- law would stand the test of the Su preme court A similar statut e has been declared unconstitutional in South Carolina. : The Rdleigh Newt and Ob rer. in mentioning the fact that tation that always follow any cnm- pre8entative8 Dunn and Rogers inai enormity. The moral of it alt is, that, as hrintra wrong. . right will bring right; and this moral is en forced by the facts which show that the weakest victims of humun tyranny and injustice are now armed with a might that no torce learned to know all' their foibles, their weaknesses and their mean nesses, and when he was' in the plenitude of his power, as he was shortly before his death, he twist ed the House of .Lords around u is finger at.will. and was, in the tru est sense of the word,! triumphant alike over the accident of his birth and over the prejudices of caste. Re nubliclv declared that he ruled mankind by despising -it, and his . m nnm w a v mm w mm iinir m iim ii aian i.i ii.inui i ... . a a w of Arkansas, are both natives o -rir.--7- 7nml pers, letters, &c., but tnis is noi whicaconan - 1 was icau auu uwu vvaj. North Carolina, is proud to Know to OMi Bie,; Nothing more paint their eye- proof to 1 support his, accusation that be (Davis) contemplated the establishment of despotic power in the South during the war. anil de nies in - the most emphatic terms that he ever I wrote a letter, upon which such an accusation can be , founded j Most persons, and Gen. Sherman inclndedrare1 laboring under ' the impression that Mr. Davis lost or had captured or sto len from Iu m during tne late uti . 1 mi .f mifiii seen any. inoiiwpnwjwivuwiiB 1 r rt orratnat enaiiag . crop. Bne wi. generally norprecaat.cn c0 guard aga.n t . o m aIro the I " aVAUU a rV4 y mm vv mm w good effect of feeding it with other crops. Testimony was produced both for and against the safety of feeding horses on ensilage ; some ffi To1 Benrive! Zr Vnicipal their horae. tbrired on it, and ...iuj:.0lf oil rwvBrrft of license I nnme said the horses died. No ex- ;Uiai 1 a M.mr.z m k uaa m-rr w" - - Jax and regulation! ' Our iwpula- pfcmation was offered f the fact ition his been agmnted by wloon bf he ,a mannfacto- JSffit kes ofcondensed milk has refused majority ot I our people are disgust- to purchase the milk from cows ed with the prohibitory law and fed on ensilage fodder It "was !the men and, political party that 8tated bowever tUat efforts are 3 inakingtoindncootber Urge con- ?recent: election returns several densed milk factories to adopt it, wrta.ii rtftmocraticl Several of rnnrt on the matter was our beretotore rampant prumui : tionists bave personally told me that they are now (thoroughly con : vinceil of thej nonsense ami; the. ; iDlly f6f the practical workings of ; ii pet iheory. j U my. opinion fully nine tenths of the people of Scott county are iii favor of a literal - . arml ifp licansc law. vvnue cur cityj perhaps, has more saloons gained in its practice 5 than any ther Iowa city, it also . e deepei i i,maiiaf: nrotMirtion OT una oa""--"- s t, I Ami!, the' largest' amount of ink; deposits At' Denison of any city in the "everything 1 runs ? open! and uo restraint and no jne.w At Carrou inere saloons and there is more :ng going on than there was 3 July, 188 4, At vMarenge feeling of opposition te pro-; ion is rouch more general and , 2i rlian tnrmerlv.w At 'n i attention whatever is to tbelaw. j Alcoholic drinks !d openly as before the pas l the) lawj v At Muscatine !asbeen an increase of drunk- 1 i a since the law went into 1- In Fort Madison 'a thirsty 1romi8ed.' I The CongressTisited a couple ot well known farms in the vicinity 6t New York. It likewise adopted a resolution stating that the obser vations carefully made of the sy tern of 'ensilage and thexperience dunng the past year have deepened the confi dence of the m embers ol the congress its in merits, and demonstrated that it furnishes a, more economical food than can be obtained under any other system, and at the same time one that ia perfectly healthful both to the animal and tne pro duct. r: ' . I ' i RASCALITY AT A PREMIUM. In the absence of bankruptcy laws and where debtors are allow ed to prefer creditors, rascality has free course to run and be glorified. In many of the States justice ap pears to have been lost sight of by the men who framed and enacted tne laws for the collection of debts. Laws which enable a bankrupt to secure one creditor at the expense of another to put into A'a bauds as security for debt the goods bought on time of B are in the interest of rascality. -Laws which give tne Danitrupi cucvw w first creditor who brings a suit aud files an attachment, shutting out other1 creditors from any dividend are equally in the interest of injus tice! 1 The true theory of bankrupt legislation assumes that the effects of . an insolvent debtor belong to the creditors pro rata. i . , ' I nL. Qn.a has nsutKAll its J utj uguaw ....w own Inter-State Commerce bill, with the commision attachment, as an alnendment tothe Reagan bill, without the attachment, J which unavailing, conference legis that Senator elect Jones is also of North Carolina stock, his father having emigrated to Mississppi from Wake county. North Carolina in the Van. Baiaifh Obaarrwl North Carolina has long good naturedly borne the ( imputation of being slow though sure. That she is sore all the world aamus, uui, the assertion ! that she is slow is not borne out! by the facts of her history. A very cursory examma tion will ebw that she haa ever ben either first or among the first ot the States in whatever worn seemed likely to redound to the common interest ! or glory of the Unioil. II-.-. ,' i i '- . j - : In 1740 for example our people showed her energy and patriotism by sending a battalion on the ex pedition against ' Cartbagena; in 1754 and subsequently they sent troops to fight the French at ruts . . .1 t ..s !. diatinctlv shows his habitual tone of thonsrht than the contents of a well thumbed little MS. note book, which has recently; come to light. It is quite certain the contents were not intended for pUDIlcaxion. xaerc is a budget of extracts : "Coauettes give their blossoms tn their lovers and " their thorns to their husbands. " t "When a woman .has lost one hAttta she rarelv ! wins another Acruinat the same foe. I " .A bin Ah often J announces the denarture as well as the arrival of ihnmr. ! . "Why do the Oermans make the moon masculine I S ureiy we are inatifiml in regarding Iher as femi- . a I the case. ' Mr. Davis informed the &u correspondent that he has in his possession copies ot all the let ters he wrote during tne ; war, in cluding his messages. These val- name records were, saved ; ior mm by a Catholic priest, who recovered and hid them from him until after bis release from priiour Mr. 'Davis answer to the charges of General Sherman will contain several ex tracts from them. j Daring the conversation Mr. lashesJ 4 With -the article, "ai' it is the spirit, or, as Lucifer, in Long fellow's Hlolden legend," says; Tha alixir of pemtoU youth. Called aloobol in too Arab speech- This, bv and by.' became a for midable rival to the older liquors, of which 1 Gireldns Cambrenis has writteh: Their constant habit or drinking- has made the English famous among all nations. Both nature 7 and custom make them drunkards. It is a strife between icchns: but, in the peer which conquers ami domineers oyer them, Ceres prevail.,. Spirits, however were not made or much drank in! England till the sixteenth centnrv. Even abroad for a long time brandv was Only used fas a medicine, the efforts of chemists like Raymond Lullvbeiug devoted to rectifying what the Arabian Abucasis had taught them how to produce in a hvdrated form. liow fs it that f whisky (uisgebaugh watprof lifel crot into use so uiucu soouer in Scotland and Ireland t It Davis spoke in very compliments- cannot be because mountains are ry terms of Keverdy jounsoudas. 8Uitedtbimaltmaking, for such o she is essentially nine, since fhanrAii.hl. Men are people who make rules; women, are peopie ontitna. i v!"It'is recortieu inac uuu .n, Let us make man in our own im After onr likeness.' It would burg and elsewhere and later they per)ap3 bave j been impolite in were the first to cross the Alle- Moses to biuf more directly that ehaies and ,expiore we 7 "u what has i since: been called the "dark and bloody ground" of Ken- means an and khe postponement of al latioh on the subject. WHAT WIK.X. COWOTES DO I 1 Whatjwtll or will not be accom plished in the four weeks' hurry that is to close the legislative his tory of the present Congress, it is of course impossible to ay. xei the enrrent probabilities appear to uL foVon thn following turn: that IHI 93 VC1 anV w w w w mw the Spanish and other commercial treaties will not be confirmed; that bill will not Capt. Couch, the leader or the Oklahoma colonists, owns a Farm i n Rntler county. Kan- vuini imiu . - - is one of the well-to do iVh SouWeinquencb- the postal telegraph bill will no - hUS Sd he possess- passj that the bm to pejid si in- hi3 thirst, proyiueu u j if it can be gotthrongl sas. and citizens of that section. He is a native of North Carolina and only thirty four years of age. The Senate, last week, passed a bill making it a misdemeanor to sell or give cigarettes or cgars to boys under ten years of age. Why , . aa ;ntnvirAtinff Honors, and tucky. !-.. 1 1 H -:-'! '.'! . i: ' in HiA frvincr times of 1(5 we were behind none and when in 1C9 the citizens of Wilmington resorted to arms "to remove the; particular restrictions imposed upon the com merce of : that place," the action was without parallel in colonial history up to that time. 1 In revolutionary action onr peo plewere confessedly ahead of all the other colonies, aud in 1787 our atotoamp.il declined to accept the constitution until it had been made to conform to their views. ! In 1818 we brought from England Mr. Alexauder II. Fulton, an engi ahilitv. and employed him for a number of years in the work Arjnir.iy nnr waterways, and we know of no similar enterprise at so -lir a date on i the part of any other State. -: i. ('; 1 !''.' I. : t, 1810 Judge Murphy, chair m f thn lioard of imblio improve.- mDI1t rpnorted to the legislature that iu executing surveys an at tempt had been made to gather in formation concerning the geology ,1 minora inrv of the State, and s is4 Prnf. niiiistead. for a ier : Arrnnr rAra. was employeil to study and report on the geology of the State. This was tne first geol- ever maue nr iuo woman was inaue m er Anci ent mould. The concrnston, how ever, is obvious. ! f i "There is no marriage iu heaven; neither is there any heaven in mar- . 1 ! t i riage. j I . .! Alfred Pearce and John P. Kehne dy,of Maryland. He said Beverdy Johnson was ua noble man," and one of the greatest this country has ever produced. James Alfred Pearce he regarded as a statesmaii of exceptional jower and one ot the ablest men of his time.- j On being asked who was j the greatest man he ever met in pub lie life, Mr. Davis answered: "John C. Calhoun. He was a noble, geui m" a. .1 ....tl..Att mirliill al, warm uearieu kciiiiciuih Geii. Jackson was a greater man if we judge by results, but he-was not learned.-- He" "was a safe man, and had more sound common sense jLien. How a Draukard Reformed. . Sa Francteeo CalL "I had noticed that meu who made a business of buying and selliug wines In large quantities sampled them and ascertained their quality and bouquet by taking two or inree mouiuiuis iu euucessiou, rolling it around their tongues, as one might s;iy, bathing their palate in it in short, subjecting It to tue severest tests by the organs of taste and then ejecting it from the mouth without swallowing any. The remembrance of this came upon me one day when I was per fectly sober but terribly despoil dent. : I resolved to try it, J. did. and have met with the most grati fying success, You may laugh, but it is the solemn truth. 1 took a large drink of liquor, but iustead of letting; it pass into my stomach I checked; it in my throat aud gar gled it for a minute and then spat it out. To my joy I found my thirst for it almost as much appeased as though 1 bad swallowed the liquor. I tried it again and again with the same enect l was not made drunk. I ha ve followed this plan ever siuce, and have not beeu drunk since, . al though I have gargled the liquor. never swallowing a drop, us many as a dozen or more times a tiny the s.inie number of drinks I used to take. The plau is a very sim ple one, and is, I believe, the only one for a slave to the cnp.w ; 'Has your appetite increased f "On the contrary, it has decreas etl. -By the means I adopted my brain has become clear und strong again, aud my will power is as good as it ever was before I, became a hard drinker In gargling the li quor I get all of the benefit of the flavor and all the satisfaction to .my appetite, without losing tnv aun BOB " : i ' f Ireland I is7 l lain. and the Welsh have never exchanged their aqces tral cwrw, (beer,) such as it is, for spirits. ! j Moreover, good ales j are still brewwl in Scotland and lire land, notably at DrogUedo, and the old! song about King Arthur's Court testifies that in early times i i i )'-! ' r .. ..'. w f "Th Soot wired ale caiiea Diae-cip. Killed by a Freight Train. . . Danville Regwter.l - Intelligence was received here late last evening that Mr. Aquilla W usoh, an jId citizen of this coun ty, had been killed on the railroad near his home. Mr. Wilson was in Danville yjeStenlay with his wife, son aud daughter, and -the family Were making some purchases at the stores here. About one o'clock K I supi)ose the habit of spirit drink, they left in a vehiclo for their home, in" was learned abroad. Scots of which is near the liichmond and the Duiral Dalgetty class brought over that And other bad customs, mid thev were a numerous ciass, and from ! the colonists to Ulster ' Ciu alu were largely recruueu. owv iTmw Latin. Scot allum) had, by tliA waf. in old records, a far differ- t A hPntv without wit seems to roe to resemble a bait without any paps the best equipped man I .tin nulOHAPT Rbekels.w In Van 13 uwvyi-rf . . . . arcn cOhnty "1 quora are som uu Icr tho guise of ginger pop and pagne cider Drugstores an -ell liabrLv e8 Deer whiev drunk than last year." At J5la:lal "more ,nquw - cnmsd'than before the law took 1' ct." In Ottomwa iuo uuw - iloonsl has iincreaacu .ty three to thirty. Drunken ; increased 20 per cent Brewe are atworktall the time. In -i ! n ma mad A riyniooth county euww to enforce ihe law, but "all the sa loons aWrunning in full blast. The number of the saloons is the same despite tne uaiu ver the Senate, cannot be got the House; that the interstate commerce bill will go into confer ence committee and there diej that the same result is likely in refer ence to the land grant forfeiture bills and to the readjustment of the great indebtedness of the Union and Central Pacific T Railroads; that the Senate bankruptcy bill, a very important measure, will mot pass the House, it having been virtually killed by the filibustererslast week; that the BUir educational bill is so ntangled among the parliamenta ry rules as to make it very difficult of extrication, and its passage a as a yea mnte probability, xne-wic- "tSS . k the favoraWe report. ar,aa ; J ! .t.. n mnnnr i .nhnnnannii. uub ia o .am n Iras wnere mo oiuw. wuu. -t . IIUIU - . cb to C cf r.; ri. wtoaif it co be sot through the inhibiUon apply to bo, ogioaT ww er senate, cannot be got through I nnder fifteen years t i V . nrilcticability of rail ir-Dirfii.TiiRAL commission. - ,Qil dAnioiistrated, North Mr. B. F. Grady, of Duplin. Carolina entered that field pronipt aubmiU the following timely sug- gestious : i: 'I' ; 1 Here is what the census says : J 1. The persons engaged tn i agrt culture, from ten years old and over, in 1879, produced, per capita, in f MaSsachusitts, J372; U Penn sylvania, 431; in aonu v,aro.., 2. Lands devoted to Indian corn vielded in 1879, per acre in Massa ciuseTts 54 bushels; in Peunsylva nia, 33 bushels; in North Carolina, "1 0 l.n.tlllla i - ited vaiue oi consumed, or acre of im- be obliged like a spa- . a . 11 A 1.. Tha ntntllr UOOKO UI awi mLi with charters of railroad com oanies, some of the enterpnes SStod being ot gigantic pro-, portions; and N 1835 an internal improvement ,-on veution that was uasembUgeof intellect 3 Theestima iiroductions, (sold, ' rnr 1879. per Vaa.Jn-M8?acbatfe ii in iennsyivaui, -- North uarouna, - before the r.oae kitttr was small prohibitory law went into effect. The law bas been ip operation since last July. ! We regret1 that the facts arJagainst Prohibition. Pro hibitory legislation is impractica bla The Iowa expexience is the "aloe experience. Bum drinking S a blighting curse, but Prohibi a not the remedy. , .friTIIRAL EXFkKIMENTAl. hi STATiOSS. a liiii i- pending jn Congress .V.k Bthlih yigricultural experi rental stations," which has called MOJ,nrials from vanous quar- ters praying for its passage. Th appropriation of the annual amount cf W,d00 for 4ach State is.asked of Congress, or $575,000 altogeth- father it has not yet been forgot- " i . f ... nnmT mire II.' that uongre! - - - , building and re . 1UU jVBV " m trin fences in 1879, per acre, of i . ntihn i r" " . , .i ! in MecKien passing tne r I r8"?, 'TZUr counties 6 o rronaiflpration. Jiesioes. oeuw""('w,r : iaRBn? the usual appn bills, Congress will do nothing. The anii-fence Sampson i.. ami uauttiioa f-. in DnDlin and KTCULOa ft. movement counties, 313: cents. - - -v rt.ii nnn nir i.iici w m - others strength all along the line. o. the value df B - -J I ieCB!t5l'"6 . mm The fence must go. A BIIX TO PROTECT PROPERTY. a ,, imiiortant bill has passed the State Senate regulating sales of Mnvfmrfa. It IS im lana uuuci poruut to both creditors and debt. - . i.iA i .tiAAdilv enacted ors ana nwum r- a -i i :i V :-nMwlnotJi in wo uuu that the average- yield of an acre li improved land was in .Meekly , ,i nharrus counties, fa- .u" - Sampson counties, of the live stock, inclusive, on into a law. The bill regulates sales capita. establishment of iwtn I fur the C, ....i Colleges in all the TThelmemorialihfavorof bU froni the faculty of the eJ nAiversity states that "to provide sucu it is .agricul in uupuu " 7.76. ft. The value hnraoa tO nOgS lUClUWtc, VZ?.7, iv lot June. 1880, per II 1 ap a"rZ SSS. iXorih Carolina, 8.0i. of lao.l under mortgage.ao au. - , a me, a pei.Woiirtthe General A.seto Ptt.- ttJir nf atrusgling agri D,y iu "-"i - "T:na- But done is done with a know! andorovides toradvertis iogsaleabfreaestaor weeks in some paper Puoi. -the county in which the land lies. besides having notices oi sale posted in five different places for thirty days. Itls a wen . - J"' ainted by the Gen h.t nrrmert is often sold at I wJi5S .ith full power U erai abwuj"jj th irreatest assemblage ever witnessed in the State, was held and a State system of rail ways' wt adopted. Was that not earlv for such ! operations T The W1 mineton and Weldon road, to the stofk of i which Wilmington aubsrS more than all thecal estate irt the town was worth,! was at the time of ts eoetioin the longest railroad us i . For PUDUO wuw. w-. r- early made such prov'si ns as they could, aud when in 1837 the Federal government i!epo.uted with theSte iWWwSyJSJS' j :..A rrr.m the sales of puo lie lands, they devoieu hj r it to the puoiiccuwVa-. Our banking system yt ,f nt on a sound basis, and hav w iwan perfected as experience i..tifid became the equal of any . . ' , i r i i i i. m the lanu. : , inan IThe establisnmeni. i , asvlum was an example to the rest ofTmerica,andan,p.y energetic as wen as iuc hint of our siaicffiuru. . P", i-f nr our State IS ljuriuK M . , admitted to have been the most ii rinnftHierate oiaiea "'"rTInd efftiveoe,, of tuv - . (mviiis Riie seni iuw LUC v",f ' ,Uhobrilliaut. vafcr ' m ... culture in prtn .-- . . : . An la liitie With ft 3S ot .. fact.be.ring o the tugo ui , knoWedze of a great sacriflce on account of ilin attendance caused by a default ; in making proper publication. It U due alike to the creditor and debt that this should uo reuiw what is subject, and -idso a kno ta MHKJ Ul r . -7m IIUKU with fall power fn, int the .toW. ot agricat-,SniNonhCaroH..nPred Hth that in otner oww Saniri" with .peciai reference to 7 ".i. 'l- dml itji economies, and Its bcih i..hors or and the sooner a the purpose, the .t.. M.n ta OT LUtSir miuiit. i iib coi. - - . . i. i '..t fnr - I f!rtn nf the People law IS , for lQe ,mUUuMv- 7-.i a rf of the State and tne guiuuv. , better it will be the field, and heroic endurance or tuose itwi ""r!r 7." . f hfr thoughtful- Instre on the cause or tue V? i0"? r sw was alone in establish ing a system jof blockade runners Lng nf importing sup ior wovkLr-:-'mmarv-tn the and furnished her people corn, pro much has been Ludertaken over which we pass ,to meutuon the creation of .the B tate agricultural j department and the eftablishment ot an wenment station, the second ouij iu -time tn the Union. - hook in it. "I believe there are some women who wear petticoats sunpo thev should bo mistaken tor men. j "There is this ditterence ueiweeu passion and love-ithe oh breeds headaches, tue otner uiwi aches: but neither would 1h dan gerous it there were no fools in the world. J . f "Love certainly increases iup . i.:An f t.lm' world.- DUl 1 doubt whether it adds mucu to that ot heaven. I T Of all the. women wnom j. uc known I chiefly jrememDer ,wiw who forgot themseive-'.! "It is qoife possible for a man to respect a woman ko much that she shall despise him. 1 A man will return rather to her who has deceived jhim than to her whom he has deceived. ; If a man does !not take his wile i.nrc.li the chances are that, . . . ...:tt I, sooner or later, wm to follow her thither. tl Miriam is much ninna lit Wi?o seli in a garden on a winter day. The j ins would be out and the out would ben , Love, like a fire, i liable to be extinguished by overmuch stirnug. . w 1 ..u n man- fA good woman wrnnw . "..., a bad one worrie him. "It is oiten noi uui ii " feels that he U t old to be loved by man that she seeks to be loved n'The word eurl jus' means quaiut as well as inquisitive. Woman, in both senses of the word, is a curi ous animal. , i . . . "Man is a substantive, wow.. . an adjective. I . 'Addition is the bounden duty of a bachelor; when he has mas tered it multiplication will follow as a matter of course. i "The two most difficult things to do are to paint" a piciu.v niug water and U conviucr r man who does not wish to be con- Vl "Man sometimes calls . a woman a goddess, but he would not love her if sue were o". doubtless, accounts for the partial ity which was shown, by the sous of God for the daughters of men in the antediluvian period. The daughters of God must have been a little too eineicu.. , - "It does not sieaK wex .. fairer sex that, as a ruie, ne succeeds among j women ii..'iraut nnminn OI vueiu. mo w "i r- - .. ... ,iiat. i "It is perhaps extraoruiiiij j .t. nnt tnm out more ..main unhappilv, since tne wuuw while the map as Bc""n; : " to get ont of it. :. , " . n rrtltlisf I lift "The greas arguuicuv admissibu of women into public io, uuuaioo j ... . tinnct sitions is ner wawniij r , - -ual. i it. "A woman may not 7 . gion, yet she always has a deity. g tLt women feel flattered when they are charged with we nesses of which they are not gudtj ; tWadse. they anow thjin anv man I ever knew. Taylor was also a great nian,' sind , .t j,, it improperly, a gath one of the best friends I had in the t . n , h n.uu Ui8 ,are,' world, but I did not support In m . . ,Ii1neircolue8 to mean a public for President. John Qiuncy Adams llouseji iu Kinz John's reign the was also a great statesman,! an inn..ii f atm . Al ban's forbids "Viscouuts, foresters, and others ever khew,r-' 9 Tt hnhl Rot ales where they pleas ed." A King's officer would hold n e,..r ui within one of the roval ft TWV . " - . - f nnoo ni nf th ratiu'e. t 01 the common law, and thither lie would compel men to repair, just a iriiUlican nowadays is Some timoa dhln to Prevent a man irom getting work unless lie ueais wiui tim t'lmnsu of call." where Work- pa id 1111. The Eitraordluary Contest lu : ! , -not l,eflsUtiire.- - fj h United State Senator for! the terms ending in 1891 have already been chosen in .twenty two States. Tiii dntv remains to be perfornied in New Hampshire, where the Leg islature does not meet until Jnne, in Oregon, where the balloting i still in progress, and iu Illinois; deadlock, occasioned by; the almost exactly equal division of parties, has resulted in a pro longed contest, with some? yerjj curious features. ' , , ti 1 r , l The Republicans controlled the Senate by a majority of one and jnird tliat body. The House; was not organized until last Thurs day, when Mr. Elijah M. Haines Deniocrat, was'eleeted pernTaneuf Speaker. On the surface of things ha namnts had a majority of one in the House during all of the twenty-txTo days of preliminary wrangling. This would make a tie vote bn joint ballot, provided the leaders 011 both sides were able to marshaLall the iwrty strength and ... a..r.w afrii-.t. iiiirtv disciiiline. But the Senatorihip question and the personal attachments and am mosities of a few members of the Hom e on each side have to a cer tain extent broken the party lines. T lacwla a mm if the KepUDll- cans, but there are a few Farewell men who declare that they will not vote lor Black Jack under any cir cumstances. There are among the Democrats certain friends jof tar tor Harrison who say that they the "bouse of call. men assemble and wage arel hundred dollar Htrawbcriies havM been two ami a half acre of mnn.l hv :i farmer tit ueiawnre " J " v has received a Board of worth i of , raised -on township. and he aeconlingly premioia from the State Agriculture. : !chliee!rle4lclHe. - s)L " Conthttt SiarMliM.1 . - . In a list of 442 Chinese medici nes given iii one of the srandanf medt Slwoik. translated by Dr Hob. sou. of the Loudon Medical Mis sum. l find ueh t nrious items a "driel ml siuitted lizard, silkworm mothJ parasite of mulberry trees, i- J Ziiu tons of hartshorn aud birds' nest, black and white lead, stalactite, asbestos, tortoise shell, human milk, glue from stag's horn nnA iW. ferns." all recommended a- Tonic-1 burned straw,! oyster l.ftlt ' vnl i iitul silver leaf, iron filings, and the bones and tusks of ,..r" OMattw1 to be astringent. pi. b JbIImI dratron's bones, by ar the fossil reroaius ot the Megatherium ami other extinct animals which are fouud in various places, and wbicu our own T -ft n-...nnl lin hi (Til Saxon ancestor , , Danville railroad, some, three miles - east of ltinggold and eighty miles from Danville. On arriving at ltinggold, Mr. Wilson decided to . walk home down the railroad track, his wife and children driving a greater distance along the country road. As lie was going across the railroad bridge over Saudy Creek, three miles east of Ringgold and in sight of his home, the freight tram approached at usual Heed and Mr. Wilson seeing Iijs danger hurried to get across Itcfore the train should reach him, but being an old man he stumbled and fell 011 the bridge and was run over by the train and . his body 8 bock in gty mangled, death following instantly. It is thought he might have Imtii severely injured in the fall behtnv the train rearhed hlin, ami smi,ih a bled from reeoveringi himself, hut of this we haveciio Ksitivein!'.i illation. It is ahso said that he . wn warned by the section master 1 t to attempt the passage ; over I'm bridge as it- was near Irani tin . but thought he" con Id get over l. fore the freight came. Mr. Wilson was probably seven ty Ave years of age, 1 and a well known citizen of the county. A will never vote for the great hori- y for mediciual purposes :findeed, .iit. William It. Morrison. j aminted with the leech who has received the caucus notni- dom8 0f pur own forefathers might nation. Dark horses are snortiPg in the aiinnose. in giaucui& .i:::. .rii.tinn. that! he was 1 Iark uorses are bhw unineseprewii'' 1 -;" . . background. The intrigues of the readiiig; the medical fore of Britain several factoins, the attempted ontU the eighteenth centurj ! combination with shakey partisans There i$ the identical use or iiigre- of the other side, the bitter per- dients; selectwl, apparently, solely Sonal hatreils influencing the course on accoant of their lathsomeiies. of several of the members, the oc Nor are these the worst There ;i nr a lwrwttor. l ; .lidfttawa which the Pli casionai sicnucoo v "T"f.T are pe'"' v . ri Police Ciaxstte Uteratnrr luliibited. The Legislature has panned; a bill, aimed at tulWieGoze tt.Mit lllmtra'ed XewA sort of literal 11 re, f the following import v Sec. I. That any person who j shall import, print, sell or dis tribute a, book, pamphlet, ballad printed paper or other thing con tainiug obscene, indecent or im pit re , language manifestly tending to flic corruption of the morals of yonth or an obscene indecent or impure - print, picture, figure or description manifestly tending to ,tne corrnp tiou of the morals off youth or i:i trmlnees into a family schol , or placeof education, or buys, pro- Litire receives or has in his posses sioii finy such, pamphlet, bnliaii, printed paper or other thing either for the purpose of such exhibition, loan or circulation orjwith intent to introduce the sain?' into a family, school or placerif elucaion shall lie guilty of iiiiiiiwleineanor !aad uioii emvictioii shall b.! fined or iinprisoueil, or lnth, in the dis:re. tion of the court. ' ! Sec. 2. This act shall be in force from and alter April 1st, 188.V' individual holds the casting and the balance ot power, iare some of the elements of one of H e most complicated iwlitical games ever played at auy State capital I - ' The Fence Mitt Col fBwoluUw adopted by Owene County Tn.l rru..- ico th pi 1 Ana owners uuu M 1 1 U n .m i- A.k inf f mm tlie living sou or dauguterioi i patielit! To supply this J piece of flesh is (uaturslly) esteented oiicof the noblest acts of fiual devotion, Q,.d thsre are numerous instances ri record in quite recent years tn has nd owners ano t 8ave ti,e life of a par land owners, find tnat auer ri. nf a mother in law! trying the working of the present A j u heu nj.for R1e stock faw for two years, ! that it is dation iu the Official Oarefte ofPekin in 1870 waatiiatof a! voufig ; girl wno uauj a-j Uiedhewelfto cut th flesh from Kr thigh to , save the lite of her mother, but, finding her courage. E -i.hd cut off two joints of heVflriger and dropped the flesh medicine, whU.h baUy " .j Jftniiv efficacious, "f r.w upvalue of Uvestock MiWly aa lThmik I Gazettttte act -i-i. o. Hor to the enactment 01 "Z,".rr iL n. Mnna had its . 3 A. m tJ w a n n in. mm bf non stock law for two years. ;uiani great benefit to tne iarmers u farm labor in our county. f That prior! to tue euacimem' the stock law in Greene county with a lawful fence enclosing! it, and at present roost of the fence have j rotted down that have- not 'ntmnrcd entirely. I ;ii MV - - - ... . That we find iroraine tax uai v"-" nesses Z. rfnu ar so often a woman's chief charms lt is well remember that a tW stock law, and r : . annnallv. That nmier me urn kuw -- cost the farmers annually re- wri in tto iminwliate very of I live more stock tim vaiue 01 iuo runniigatlargetokeepthetences in repair. t woman's eyeS and ears are not all of. th same side of her bead. . , lf woman were by nature wnat ; . ..nM.. ro noW attribnt she tries to make herself by ar or ciHi. his germ she would be dreadfully discpn-jedo bomea tentetl.w f .'' mm ms. i m mmt f,th honndless laudations" from the Governor General otthe lrov. l"L a ianir-si. who begged that the Emperor wouiu ."t"..titr reward ou the child, sJchl asnherection of a great triumphal arch of carved stone, to commemorate the act. j . p- !Mtliern Bice lloldrr. t Ll'bilmlelibiTimeM.t ' l i That there .will be a general ; change of the- Federal officers in , the South can hardly be a matter . of doubt. Civil service l-efdnn im peratively. ilein'Mids itt as nine tenths ot them have prostituted 1 their powers to the meanest parti san or personatends, and most of l them are couspicmusly lackijig alike iu competency aud character. Instead of regarding public oflice ! 4. '1 a. I. ,t..kak a (I .(.(' sis a puoiic trust, mj role, eiiiployel their portions1 not 1 onlv in the most unscrupulous way ! in polities, but they have persistent ly'and systematically distiirbetMhe. j business and tranquility of theT South, and inflamed the prejudices j of the ignorant blacks to array ; themselves against the people from i whom they must receive employ-, ment and sustenance, me ci vii aervice of the South, taken .as a whole, has been one of the terrple curses tf both races and j it will stand outTii history a one ot the, indelible blots upon the govern ment. It will now te changed aud' reformed, and that wilt eti.W all race oruauizatioit in politics. 7 1 A top dressing of wood ashes is sa d by an exchange to be an ex cellent preventive of the yellows in loaches. It mny .be-' discovered yet that this disease is due to germs aud bacteria and microbes t I I - i if r ural Improvement u laws do for mechanics aud oar law makers. patent for all concerned be copyright l,.w9 for antuor n K K MM f i - . m VI "

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