hi i . f i f 1-8 SiI55""KED I3T ISM. A GLIMPSE AT RIO DB JANEIRO. -rv: s i.. MinUter . Jarvis 8 hi pa for i j Newport Sews. May "iwill be at Riode something If J-B I, ofbiiri erica. for JL (7a loeil His.. ire Uf d tie wses Vf ' 5, some - tit a' wi m m t r mm Mjrw 3 w wa7 ired with '!! A gardens. are paveu 'J tbe others 'i8ire sewers, thot 75 miles, ft constructed city. At their iempts are made to iter the sewage be rnito the bay. Water oni ML Corcovado by an ned act, which is 00 Years oldj at is 12 and crosses the valley p and 740 . feet wide, ers of arches, one above The water is distribut- Lit the city to fountains, it is drawn for use. especially those of the e lighted better than, Sr-c'i v iu the world. 2 - worthy of tir tTt .t:wi tnrough it; the custom house, per haps the finest structure in the city j and the marine arsenal, also ia fine building, at the end of the rua Direita, in which are all the . preceding. The rua Ouvidor, lead ing out bf thisti is the principal ' street .of ltio de Janeiro; from it leada the largo do Sao Francisco, jon one side of which is the church ot the same name and on the other -the military academy. A narrow street leads thence into the Jargo :do ' cio, in which is. the theatre of Sao Pedro d' Alcantara. . In tbe middle ot this square is an eques jtrian statue of Dom Pedro I., the L pedestal of which is ornamented i with Indian figures emblematic of the great rivers ol Brazil The ;Camio Santa Anna,-the largest i square of the cityi is unadorned : ; and filthy ; on one side of it is the senate, on auother are military . barracks and the; offices ot the minister of war, on a third those of the .minister of commerce, and on the fourth the 'Italian 6pera house and museum. Among the remain ing public buildings are the hospi tal of Misericordia, the mint, the academy of fine arts, the observa tory, and the palace of Sao Chris tovao. .Among the charitable in stitutions are several hospitals for natives bue for Portuguese, one for English, and others for French and Spauiards. The educational institutions are a natioual college, a military and engineering school, a naval academy, a commercial school, a school of medicine and surgery, a geographical and his torical institute, a poly technic and an agricultural 'school, several night schools for adults, and many other schools. The city contains 30 churches and chapels, and six con veuts and monasteries. Besides jau Anglican chapel there are sev era! congregations of other Pro testant' denominations, composed chiefly of foreigners, the natives being nearly all Boinan Catholics. The hotels, with one exception, furnish wretched accommodations. There are several , libraries, only one of which, the imperial, contains books in different languages, the others being smalt and purely local. The imperial library, formerly the royal library of Portugal, brought ironi xriSDon oy tne emigrating royal family, has now npwartl of 100,000 volomes. Among other treasures it possesses the only com plete series ot Durer's wootlcuts of the "Passion of Christ." There are a government printing establish aw nTTtrrr W-4 ..ft. 1 TW n;;-:i :pbn JK!.-'i ' .froml J Vses ; 70 native tile merit, a well cl. and German conduct'. . , "un ir on large market, Wj'-d with great Brazil 23rd. Janeiro rj, irutt, and good of BSD, M "Jtles, 6nf (ne of the two .wIM Mojfte Passeio rublico "Jn tbdd its limits. Several kfxeet railway traverse the ;t. .nhnrbat omnibuses . t a villa iron irJfflU the neignDorius i: f Rtoam ferry boats cross . -.rj nnm. Pedro railway e oay , v"0,-". ,ta with the x aranyou n , TLi - .aBwrfTunHtothe terminus . rtroroHs railway at the oi tut- ---- Lead of the bayr Steam commnni thn, Hp.anorts ot tbe auuu " v. Mtmire i ia freauent, European steamships arrive depart al most daily, aud there is telegraphic connection with Europe. There are numerous ship yards, and factories for manufacture of cotton, td hoco. naner. soan. crlass. and car- iacroa - hnt nonA nf thn factories - r are very extensive. The climate is damp and unhealthtul, and the city is seldom free from yellow fever, but this rarely assumes a malignant form. Diseases of the respiratory organs are very.com- inon. , The climate of the province of Rio Janeiro, (in area about the size of Guilford county,) is agreeable and salubrious on the high lands, but warm and unhealthy on the low lands and near the sea. Vege tation is luxuriant, and crops are abundant. The forest contain vari ed and excellent timber, and al most all kinds of tropical and tem perate plants are found. Coffee, sugar cane, cotton, mandioca, and tobacco are extensively cultivated ; tea, rice, cacao, and potatoes mod erately. Coffee is the great staple, and its cultivation is steadily in creasing. Nearly all the vegetables jf temperate climes may be raised. Every variety of tropical fruit wounds, and flowers of rare beauty And fragrance j adorn the gardens and forests. Fish of many varie ties are found in all the waters. There is gold ! in ' the Cantagallo region near Miuaa Geraes, and garnets aud amethysts are found. Iron is abundant, bat no mines are worked; ami granite, a great vane- ty of marble, and several kinds of clay suitable for earthenware and porcelain kbound. Primary educa tion is obligatory. Railways are constructing throughout the prov ince, but the "Dom PedroH." is the only completed road of impor tance. Tbe commerce of the prov ince is absorbed by the city of Rio de Janeiro. Although the bay of Riode Ja neiro was undoubtedly visited soon after the discovery of Brazil, and as early as 1503, it remained with out name until Juan Diaz de Solis entered it on January 1st. 1516: thinking it the entrance to a river, he named t Rio de Janeiro (river of January). The first settlement was 1531. In 1710 the 1 Tench made an unsuccessful attempt to take possession of the bay ; their com mander was taken prisoner and assassinated. The attempt was re newed in 1711 with success, but the commander, Dugnay Trouin, accepted a ransom and abandoned the baj In spite of mismanage ment and difficulty, the colon v as well as tbe whole province pros pered ; and in 1763 Rio de Janeiro' was made the capital of the vice-, royalty. Iu the beginning 1803 the royal family of Portugal went to Brazil on account of the occupa tion of the mother country by the French ; their presence gave ' an impetus to tbe growth of the city, which has ever siuce remained the first in commercial importance in Brazil. After the return of King John VI. to Portugal (1821) the Brazilians declared their indepen dence and established an empire, with Dom Pedro I., son of the king of Portugal, as Emperor (1822). The trip is a long one, requiring twenty-four days. The Patriot wishes Minister Jarvis bon voyage, ami a happy return to his native land at the expiration of his minis terial term. Vaace's Eii4 fthe Para. ' (Wynevm Newt. Taking our neighbor's views that our party is entitled to its bosses, aud that we have them, and that they have farmed out the State, giviug our worthy Senator Vance the west end of the political farm what has ho done T There is a principle in agriculture which re quires the husbandman to return something to tbe soil iu return for tbe crop he has gathered. What has Senator Vance returned to Western North Carolina, his end of the political farm : Col. Hani Jones, bis Charlotte neighbor, district attorney's place; Mai. uowti, ni8 law partner, a col" lector's place ; Gen. R, B. Vance, a .. & - ' Iim hrnthflr. nrsr. flasiafa urrz 7W.nce : . slsssnssssnnannnnnnnsssBnslssssllsssssM VOICES OP THE PBEACHERS. ' Beecher Prayer. , "Your salvation doesn't depend on reading the Bible. Your salva Uon doesn't lie -in reading! the Prayer Book. Yonr salvation never can be sang to you oat of a gallery. orK it oat with fear and tremb llpg ; not a servile fear, ,but just "" - a, . I. . 2 a.t..a. .V.Aa anfarnriBA RTK1 iTTTl l &VFr am ward oar worldly business." "Fervency in prayer I llow the thought rebukes the average of oar prayers i uisieu to a aecoroas man, aceusiomeu to omviaie iu public, who begins , and tells God what He is. (ObtThon all-sufficient, omniDreseut. omnipotent Deity: be fore the mountains were brought forth or even the: earth Thou didst exist' good historical information this 'we thank. Thee tnat xuoa hast created mankind in Thine own imW all very well; very good, indeed: anybody can say that we thank Thee that when man fell' they never did, though but 'when they fell that Thou didst raise up a remedy,' and so on and so on. And this is so true to him that he repeats it every time he prays, and in tbe most undisturbed manner no earthly reason why be shouldn't come to it at a jump and leave it at a jump behind him." Better not to give utterance to one single thought of God than to meutiou it with a mere memory, in a recitational voice. JWhen we ad dress God our words should be few, but they should be full of powder, full of report." "Men get nsed to prayer. A man can go over tne lxmrs prayer at the same time that ho is doing a sum in arithmetic a man can read a whole chapter in the Bibln and never think of one solitary von! of what he is reading. I've done it." I - i "Now it is objected that entbus iasm leads to fanaticism. I wish I could see some signs of this danger among us. Fanaticism itself is a thousand times better than languor and torpidity, though it isn't so respectable. We are not so much in danger of fanaticism as we are of cooling off and having no fervid feeling at all." ; ; "I have come to have a great re spect for fanatics I think that all the fifty years of tbe American Bible Society, the fifty years of the American Tract Society, the fifty years of the American Board of Missionaries,' for Foreign Heathen. did not amount to so much, com bined together, as an impulse for setting men) free from bondage as tbe one single incident in John Brown's life his desperate, de spairing endeavor to rescue tne slave. There was .something in that that fired, the heart of the whole civilized world. 'He' was a fauatic I wouldn't want many John Browns ; we are not likely to have many : nevertheless, . fanati cism iu a great soul ia oftentimes a thousand times more beneficial to tbe human race than the waut of some fanaticism." "It is true that enthusiasm wastes. But do yon refuse to eat because it wastes food T When you were after your bu Jness ten , thousand did yon stop because it would waste you to be too intense f The fact is this, that enthusiasm is j shut down by men in this world to tbe lower functions of lifef j "There is nothing that wastes a man like laziness. There isn't a man who owns real estate who does not know that a boose will go to ruin quicker if untenanted than if used as a boarding bouse." 1 "I think that religion j is a farce at least that part of it that is called the means of grace when tbe hearts of men are not in it. The man that drags himself thru7 the Bible as a matter of duty ; tbe man that supers titiously says bis prayers morning and night ; the man that goes to meeting because his wife won't let him stay at home; the man that undertakes in every thing to conform to an average Eublic sentiment, though he don't itself quite like it what a wretch I" I "If there is anything that God despises it is burnt offerings and sacrifices bought by those that don't care anything about them. but who want to appease Him by bringing these thiugs to Him." Go4a Toleration of 81a. In continuation of his aeries of sermons answering Questions which have been submitted to him. Dr. Talmage discoursed on the exis tence and toleration ievil. Choos ing for his text Job xxi.. 7. "When fore do the wicked live T" the Doc tor opened with a vivid deserintion of Job, his affliction, bis surround ings and his miserable comforters, and then set forth the causes which led to the bitter cry of the text. It was a sore affliction, and Job's wife, put to her wits' end, made a diagnosis of the case.and ventured tojrescribe a remedy. In his par oxysmal outbursts, and when his agony was greatest, it might, she thought, afford him some relief if he indulged in a little swearing (audible laughter) and so she re commended. Job's friend's came to see him ; but they only added to his miser'. "You must be an old sinner," they said. "God would not otherwise have sent to you so grent a calamity." In his great agony and. despair Job cried oat. "Wherefore do the wicked liveF The question raised by Job was one which had often been raised since. The good are cut off. The wicked remain aud prosper. Ma nasseb, the worst of all the kings of Judah, reigued the longest. It was a great, sad fact that wicked uess did triumph and that it was too frequently honored in death. Dr. Talmage then went on to give some reasons whr wickedness was allowed to prevail, why tbe wicKeu were anowed to live, une reason was to demonstrate the long 8unerin? and Datience of God. Be fore be allowed Noah to sail with GREENSBORO, N. C, TUESDAY, MAY 1 the ark God had been warning tbe world for one hundred and twenty years. The patience of God was. like all His other attributes, im measurable. A second reason was that tbe punishment and destine tion of the wicked might be more signal. f ' I ! ' "Why don't God (kill the devi and done witb itf" Dr. Talmage's little daughter said to him one day, Laughter.) - It was the same old wav nwi ,.u'Laa. '"Lt k.w far. but be would null them do at last. A third reason was to make it nlaiu bevond 1 all contro versy that there was another place for ad ustments. A wuriu reasuu was that it cave man' au opporta nitv to reftentJf "Praise God for His- slowness,"- said the Doctor, but let us not forget that if slow He is sure, and let us make peace with Him while His patience lasts." "Oar Oatlea Toward the Dead." . Rev. R. Heber Newton preached upon the subject of "Our Duties" Toward tbe Dead." In considering certain factitious duties toward tbe dead, Mr. Newton said : Oar duty toward tbe dead does not call us, to any paradeof grief before the world, j A great cbauge for the better has already come over the mortuary character of good society. We no longer behold tbe bearso draped in flowing black, surmounted with waving plumes, and the horses decked with the insignia of grief. There is still, however, room for improvement in many of our forms ot grief. It is questionable to me whether it is right at all to garb1 our chil dren from bead to foot in the deep est black. Highly nervous chil dren are sensitive beyond realiza tion to colors, to the quality of tbe material and the association in volved in mourning costume. Some proper marks of respect may natu rally be placed upon our children, but it caunot be a duty to tbe dead to endanger; the health of the living or to shadow i long and deeply the tender, impressionable natures of our nervous American children. Concerning women tbe same truth holds good. They will drape themselves from head to foot in the deepest black ; they will covet their faces with tbe mourning veils which shut out the fresh, strength ening afr and the cheering, joyous in, God's natural ministers of comfort through physical nature; they vill cast a pall over their spirits measurable by: the shadow in which they hide their faces, and this they will do not only for weeks, but for months, and not only for months, but for years. . Dr. Newton then r passed on to those real and binding obligations bicb the living are under to the dead, and hile considering the sacredness surrounding a dying wish said : : But what obligations more easily set aside t One of the greatest scandals of our civilization is the frequently recurring, bitterly fought over contests concerning wills. So lightly do most men hold by. an injunction from the grave that he who wishes to see his will well executed had better make himself bis own executor. He who has generous schemes for the use of any of his money after he has left it W unm order his own schemes while living and found the work himself which he would have go on after be has left as. A Railroad to Meant Veraoa. A surveying party is now at work preparatory to the construction of a railroad from Washington City to Mount Vernou. The distance is fifteen miles.1 .The track of the Pennsylvania road ! will be used to Alexandria, and from there there will be a narrow gauge road built a distance, or eight miles, it is thought that the trip can be made in about! three hours, giving visi tors one hour at Mount Vernon. At present the means of connec tion is by a steamboat which makes but one trip each day. Tbe matter of the railroad connection will be considered at the next annual meeting of tbe board of lady re gents of Mount Vernon, which takes place in Jutfe. At present an admission fee of thirty-three cento is charged the steamboat for each" passenger that visits Mount Vernon. I The purpose of this was to secure an endowment fund of a sufficient amount so that the inter est received from it will be enough to maiutain the Mount Vernou estate. ; r i i It is understood that while this endowment fund is not large enough uow, it will be by i the time of the next annual meeting, when Mount Vernon will be declared to be open and free to all. - : Neighboring Cotton Mill. There are ten cotton mills in full blast within seven miles of Com pany Shops.' We give the list and what thi r are doing: - I The E. M. Holt Mills 100 looms; 4,500 yards per day ; Go hands, t Ossipee Mills James N. Wil liamson 2,300 spindles ; 102 looms; 4,aoo yards per day ; bands, 125. Granite Cotton Mills Thomas M. Holt 400 spindles ; 212 looms; 10,000 yards; bands, 250. ; Glencoe Cotton-Mills W. E.and J. m i Holt SySOO spindles : 184 looms; SfA) yards ; hands, 175. Bellemont Mills L. B. & L. T. Holt; proprietors 2,300 spindles; 111 looms ; 5,000 yards ; hands, 130. Alamance Mills E. M. Bolt's Sons 1,00 spiudles; 94 looms ; 4,000 yards, bands, 75. j Carolina Mills J. H. and W. E. Holt & Co. 3,000 spindles ; ! CO looms ; 3,000 yards ; hands, 100. j Swepson's Mills (Falls of Neuse Manufacturing Company) 2,200 spindles ; 100 looms ; 4,500 yards ; hards, 100. I i , Saxaphahaw Mills Holt, Wil liamson & Co. 4,000 spindles ; yarns and warp: hands. 75. Rock Mills (Rock Creek Manu facturing i Company) 32 looms ; .W tfV A T f ouiy piaius; x,owy-gs. - - IJimar and Bayard. WMhinatoa Letter.! ; ' Two of the members of the Cabi net have surprised those who are closely: following the coarse of the administration. Bat ' these sur prises have been of a totally differ ent nature. Secretary Lamar has surprised even his intimate friends with the vigor with which he has entered into the duties ot the head of the Interior Department. For years Lamar baa been called a day dreamer, even by men who have FsociatedjrU&ei tor more than aajii ,W mm 'Vutifnsv f ' IT da srl -m tbe idol of his State, and while his magnificent intellect was acknowl edged everywhere, and in both po litical parties, yet the general be lief was that be was totally unfit for tbe interior portfolio! So well founded was this belief that Lamar occupied a very nnique position in tbe Senate, u nlike any other Senator be was not expected to look after patronage or to pay the slightest attention to route mat ters.; Sometimes he would absent himself from the Senate chamber for days. Then again he would sit for weeks without uttering a word in debat When once in the fray however, he made the country, lis ten to what be bad to say. Missis sippi kept him in the Senate for just such occasions. She did not expect that be would bother him self to descend from this pedestal, and he never did as long as he rep resented bis State in the national council. After Mr. Cleveland had been elected, and wnue he was holding the famous "matinees for statesmen" at Albany, be met Mr. Lamar. He was impressed more favorable with him tbari with any other man he had met from Wash ington. Lamar could have been Secretary of. State if he had but said the word, and as a matter of fact, at one time he was booked for the place, with Bayard for Sec retary of the Treasury, but in the ater reorganization of the Cabinet slate he was given his present po sition. Since he has assumed his duties of Secretary of the Interior be has astonished those who had a fixed idea that he would trust the details of his work into the bands of the assistant secretaries. Just the contrary has been the case. Tbe assistants have been allowed to perform their legitimate duties, but Secretary Lamar has throw u away all his oldtimo day dreaming, and has emerged one of tbe most practical of cabinet ministers. Every detail of his office work he understands thoroughly, and great- y to the gratification of the Presi dent, he is makiug a success in his tosUion. Secretary Lamar sold out the carriages and horses form erly used by bis predecessor. Most people imagine by that he walks. or rides iu a street car : on the con trary, he rides to the White House on a Kentucky mare, the property of Senator Beck. Lamar is" a fine horseman, aud sits astride of his mare like a ringmaster. The so cond surprise among! j the Presi dent's cabinet officers is Secretary Bayard. I! When Bayard's appointment was announced it was greeted witb gen eral commendation by all tbe wings of tho Democratic party. He was the scion of an illustrous family iu Delaware, and had served his state for 16 years in tbe Senate, being his fathers successor.! No doubt ! was expressed that be would make a model Secretary of State, but if i the President bad set himself at work with the deliberate intention of ruining Bayard's chances for the Democratic nomination in 1883, be could have adopted lio more effec tual a mode of procedure than to have appointed, him Secretary of State. Bayard was a large man in he estimation of the public when be was a member or tne senate; since his resignation, and bis acces sion to tbe State portfolio, be bas steadily grown smaller aud small er, until he is now only an ordinary sized politician. Bayard ha been a constant source of annoyance, to the President ever since be entered the Cabinet. Mr. Cleveland's mis takes in the line of diplomatic ap pointments have been in following out the advice of tbe bead of tbe State Department. It is reported here that Mr. Bayard will not con tinue in his present position to the end of the administration. If he finds that his popularity is ou the Wane, such as it certaiuly now ap pears to be, he can resign in a year and enter the Senatorial race to succeed Mr. Gray, whose term will expire in 1837. There are those here who predict .that this is bis intention, and that after, all Lamar will end at tbe State Department, with McDonald as the new member of the Cabinet iu Lamar's present place. ' v - Laokoat for Mad-Doga. rAaaerOle CHiMa. We have sometimes to thank a panic terror for the extirpations of public evils to which legislation will apply no remedy. Every ses sion of our State Legislature is ap plied to in behalf of tbe sheep in dustry to be protected by the abate ment of the dog nuisance; and every year the propositions are summarily kicked out and tbe in troducers made a laughing stock. Just at present the dogs them selves furnish the strongest argu ment against them; an argument so- strong as to be irresistible. They went mad in several sections, and then no plea of merit as coon or 'possum dog, ua fame as fox hound, uo keenness of scent : or staunchness of stand as poiuter or setter, no beauty as iioodle or lap dog availed. All went dowu under the frantic cry of "mad dog V A large part of Mecklenburg and "Cabarrus counties have been freed from tbe .pest, and a Urge section of Buncombe is relieved. It is a hint which all couuties may act upou, and let tbe Legisla ture hereafter alone. The -quest ion of sheep and dog can be very promptly settled. 0, 1885. Duncan K. MeRae'a latpreasloua. Col. Duncan K.- McRae, who has recently been to Washington, is a close observer. He returned home with distinct impressions of what be saw and heard. We quote from an interview; c t iYon ask me what impression the President made upon me.. Really, he makes bat a single , impression on every one ; ami it is because be bas no arts and no practices. He is an earnest, unaffected, straight forward, matter of fact man of bus, ine&s. He has strong limbs, a portly pers6nTn-rrtg -tesand its full of brains. Whoever is not a great man and seeks an en counter with him on that idea wil nod himself unexpectedly in the hands of a giant He ; is heavy featured and rugged, but with Napoleonic cast of countenance and an expression of general good na tare and of great will. I should say ot him that in bis convictions he is obstinate to the last decree : uuiess tne approaches are made on ... . i- the amiable side of his disposition. I have seen a great deal of official presentations and receptious in Washington since the days of Mr. Van Buren, and Mr. Cleveland compares favorably witb the best of them in ease and dignity of man ner, and in an imposing presence, and surpases most or tuein in graci ousness and affability, and the White House looks more like the people had a property in it than it bas since "Old jUickory" was its. occupant. Our two Senators f Wbjr cer tainly, both are on baud. As to eachV respective ; influence, you know "comparisons are odorous." But those who know ihem expect to see them reach results by obvi ously different methods. One by the $uaviler in modo, the other by the fortitfr in re. I Baw Gov. Vance only for a moment, land then he was hard bent on towing Ham Jones into the' Western! Attorneyship, and it is nianifest from the favor shown to his brother, the General, aud froml Hale's getting the impor tant consulship to Manchester, that the Administration likes to keep tbe Governor in a good humor. Be sides, Ransom gave him efficient help in both these matters; . Any one who looks can see that Gen. Ransom has close relations with the President and Cabinet, at once cordial and confidential, and it is well that! it is so, for be is very con servative, and alwa s a safe and wise counsellor, and a true hearted North Carolinian, 'i Iu the (Short conversation which I had with the President be spoke with warrathj of his interest in North Carolina, and said it was both his hope: and expectation to pay our , people a visit, and that before a great while. V I saw, too, Mr. Randall, who is also looking forward to visit North and South Carolina. I saw no Democrat who ras intimical to Mr. Randall;' on the contrary, I heard oil every side the expression of confidence in bis orthodox Demo cracy, ad he is everywhere re garded as tho leader who is ' to maintain and! defend the adminis tration id the; House of Represen tatives. ; Having himself greatly contributed to the platform as it uow stands, lie is expected to be its promiuetit and faithful . expositor in seecl andj action. Anecdote of Judge Thomas Huffiu. (LeakirUle EehoJ ' About 43 years ago Judge Ruffin went to school at Shady Grove, in Rockingham pounty, to Mr. Samuel Smith. Across the river about a mile and a hsilt from the academy, iu the rich bottoms of the Mayo, was a very fine melon patch, to which the boys occasionally made clandestine visits. The widow who owned tbe patch had two pretty day Mers, sprightly and lively and fur . of Tun. ) Ruffin occasionally car d oil these young ladies, and ot.' one 'occasion the theft of the melons was spoken of. The young ladies told young Ruffin that they thought the students of Mr. Smith were the robbers. Ruffin at oace defended the "boys" from the un just suspicion and promised that if it was so be would use his influence to stop it. A few days afterwards a negro'girl came from the melon patch.' with a handkerchief which she had fouud there aud gave it to the young ladies. In one corner was the name "Thomas Ruffin " Tbe mother of tbe young ladies selected tbe finest melon she could find, tied it up iu tbe handkerchief aud sent it to Ruffin next day by one of her sons who attended the school. It cured Ruffin lrom mo lesti ug,- melon patches, and it is said he never could face the young ladies again. . 7 , ! a New Hemostatic. At a recen t meeting of the Acad emy of Mediciue, at Paris, Profes sor Bonafoux read a paper upon a; powder which possesses great hemostatic powers, find is capable, it is said, of arresting the bleeding of large, arteries,-so that it ill prove serviceable in important sur gical operations. ; This powder is composed of equal parts of colo phony, carbon, and gum arabic. Experiments have beeu tried with it on the brachial artery in man, and on! the smaller vessels, on the carotid of the horse, and other blood vessets of the same animal, with marked succcess. It has al ways prevented consecutive hoemor, rbage. ' Tbe application can bo lifted in the course of two or three days, iwhen the vessels are found to be completely obliterated. j! A j grasshoper outbreak has begun j thus early in California ravaging the country in many parts of tie State. The pest is a survi val nfuue of last year, but much mure serious, for the insects are said Wbe "now issuing from the tuountJtf)8 for a second campaign and withTVeener aunetites." 'The California fa apparently would pro rer to iiavi h little Indian war. in a i I n i i u in Kg -TMnMin -i Plain Preaching Auo ioiiowiug extracts aro from a sermon delivered.byRey Sam Jones at Chattanooga last Sunday : I shall ran these, meetings in the way an engineer would run a train. This is God's track,-and I am sim ply doing his work.- ;il I; know there are people in Chat tanooga that would not get up out of bed at six o'clock to save this town from hell ; and they are to be found in tbe churches of this city, too, professing to be Christians, i; ' I want it always understood that ou nave enough you may go. 1 1 ii i nni"T ryr """ w Ha that this fellow Sam Jones' tire hini. Yon know -the way borne, and) you may consider the benedic tion pronounced, if you waut to go. so rar as you are concerned. I j would rather have no religion at an than the type you have here in Chattanooga; and if you don' like that you may lump it. When ever my religion dwindles down to At ; !i..L Lni a 2 - uie pibcuj pi uuaitanooga vnrisuau, I want to go back to the world and commence over. A more innocent game never was invented than baseball; .and yet they have got it as rotten as hell, to-day, and I say that whenever Chattanooga or Atlanta or Nash ville or any other city on the face of the earth suffers this game play ed on ! the Sabbath, that city dis graces herself, and I would not wipe foot on her at tbe front door unless it was powerfully muddy. I will stop right here to say that there is not ranch difference In church members, as it presents it self to tbe world. There is old Brother A. who says "if' you do not turn : the dancers out I will leave the church ; yet he is lending money at 30 per cent. Brother 13. does not j loan money, for a very good j reason, and be denounces usury, but you can take a demijohn and tote old Brother B. into hell after it. 1 Here is Brother C, who does not dance, drink or loan money but you just strike him on a trade and see how quick he will clean you up. (l tell you, you do not know how much-scriptural hell fire there is in a good trade until you get to helL J 1 !j Charlotte Observer. In one of the colored churches in lis city,5 something of a turmoil has: ! lately been raised over the movement on the part of some of the members for a division of the membership on the color line. The project is one of tbe most remark able tbatj we have yet heard of, its aim being to separate the black skins from the inulattoes, the ebon hued desiring to have a congrega tion all I to themselves, aud the ihulattoeS expressing a similar de sire on their own part. Tbe sub- ect was -discussed in a congrega ional meeting a day or so ago, and While each party was -willing for a division, the terms could not be agreed-upon. The minister is la blackskmned divine, and naturally enough tho blackskins laid claim to him, in addition to. the church and church' furniture. Auother trouble was the fact that some 5 of the blackskiuned men had mulatto wives, aud some of the blackskin ned women had mulatto husbands, and how to apportion them in the proposed division was a subject that created a good deal of ansatis- actory discussion. The difficulty a a r seems to De lnsurmountaoie, out both factions are determined upon a umsiou, ana it is oeneveu mat the Synod will have to be called upon to act as a board of arbitra tion. A third difficulty in the way of the proposed division, liars in the fact that -a small portion of the congregation are neither blacks nor mulattoes, but come between the two, and if the proposed color line is strictly df-awn, they will have to be left entirely out in the cold, and will have to seek some other taber nacle wherein such elevated ideas in retrard to tone aud color do hot prevail.; ' ; " Reform In Woaaeu'a Dress. - j (Cincinnati Enquirer. Sneaking: of unseen features of femiuinb toilets, Boston has evolved something in that line. The Dress Reform Committee of that city are the authors of what they call Ithe corset abolishing underwear. One of their j enthusiasts, Abby Gould Woolson, has brought , some of the articles to NewYork for missionary purposes. She showed them to an invited gathering yesterday, and I noticed s that, very ad roi tly , fthe girl who acted as a figure mode on which tO exhibit them was a slim waisted creature, who might as well go without corsets as not; so good were her natural outlines. The outfit consists of three gar ments, viz., a bal moral skirt, com posed of a deep . princess waist reaching to the knee and joined there to a broad, straight flounce; then a suit of white cotton cloth, or muslin, shaped loosely to the form by vertical seams, aud I ter initiating iu sleeves and drawers. With one thickness of smooth cloth the latter garment covers tbe entire body from chin to wrist and ankles. Finally,! beneath this, a woplleu undersuit, woven upon the same model, aud, like the chemiloon, button down the entire front, f An underskirt of fitting make may be buttond : either to tbe balmoral or chemiloon, and to the inner side of of the latter the stocking supporters are attached. I !j Thus equipped with four fgar ments -a union undersuit, a prin cess petticoat and a princess dress you have not a belt in your whole attire nor a bit of gathered fulness, save what -is fOnnd iq the Bkirt: flonnct.. A ift of the should ers meets resictauce only from the toj;s of the stockings, so loosely worn and connected is your entire garbv Summer discards theflan uel undersuit and reduces the num ber of garments to three. Kck, htckL. Btudenta worr-ii.v Student! hurryingN Thinking of friend iu. Longint again for the wv . Of fktbsra utd mother &ni Of brother! and sights and flow x see it all and In my mind ' And tad that I am left behind. " ' : - : 'in. . ' Absent face, empty ehairs. Deserted room and noifelem stairs. , Day long and drear,. ; ' ' . " Sigh deep, sincere, - - Thoughts borne away to home delight. Constant dreams of home's tweet sights, i Of fathers and mothers and fair-faced girls. ui Drotners and uters and Bowing curls, I feel it all and in my mind And sad -that I am left behind. . . HI.,, Hacks, backmen and nan - - Students returning . . , . To lesmns and learning, Thinking of friends and home delights. Coming from home and home's sweet rigtta. I see it all and say in my mind. "I won't again be left behind-" The C. F. fc T. V. R. R. ; . Manufacturers' Record. . 7 ' Of the many enteqirises illustrat ing the progressive spirit of North Carolina, and promising great re sults, there is no one which attracts more attention than the Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley Rail way ."whose construction is being so vigorously y puueu uy tue euergeuc presiuent, Mr. Julius A. Gray, of Greensboro, N. C. Whether it is because the road is essentially- a North Caro lina road, running diagonally across -the State, bringing into close rela- . tion sections far distant and totally ' different, aud v effecting an. inter change of every product. orNorth Carolina soil and waters; or whether" it is because tbe people are rejoiced to see the approaching realization of an old idea and the success of an enterprise that, for thirty years, has been struggling with backsets and perverse fate ; or whether it is because it is the only road in North Carolina which is owned, officered r and controlled by individual North Carolinians, built by North Caro lina money, and operated for the development solely of North Caro lina towns ; whether it is because of either or all of these facts, it is noticeably true that the peoplef the State are particularly interest ed in the buildiug of this- great work of internal improvement. - Garden Cultivation. v ! f In order to be successful inrais ing garden crops, occupy : nomo ground than you can make ric " cultivate thoroughly, t Afou; an acre well fertilized and. , clean will give-more rctarrx quantity and incomparably bl in quality than an entire acre) poor land neglected ardlCT- with weeds.; We have rtrgi manv vears the imuortancey tivating vegetable gardens f horse, as it may beloue r tenth the labor aswell better than by hand, iMl. garden oblong, " so that row!. crops may extend the longest w aud the horse may turn about -the ends on ten feet vacant" A 10-year-old Girl Arrested fur Horse. Stealing. "v v, Hattie Rogers, a preposessing miss of 1C, of Erie, Pa., has been indicted for horse stealing.. The passion for horseback riding led her to take a livery horse from his stall, aud, jumping astride the ani mal, she started at bjrak-neck sryHl to evade the nc4agt whch waV immediate v eiveu -T 0n she rode, over hill and vail. she crossed the State line, ; only stopped long enough) trade for a fresh horse; captured she was so refri to compel tbe officers to lr The Virginia The Democra has issued a cat ventiou, to be he July 29th, to not! and other state 6 publican State oL.. been called for July 1 same purpose. - j The New York WoWt Uarth- i. k oldi pedestal tuud has rrfacbdd tlue- handsome amount of $J5,000, and in a few days will 'exceetfjO,000. The money comes from iltonle of moderate means, for the New York millionaries do not condescend to contribute to it. So the great statue will owe its resting-place to the comparativelypoor, and they generally make the best basis for r liHorfc in APurv fihaiin I '. - 1- . j , There isrso little demar for the famous-Sea Island South Caroliua that few have sold their last year's was formerly used to' ad silk, but the demand has without any apparent reason, ex cept that by means of improved ( machinery ordinary cotton may be used for thread and other purposes as well as the long staple. The farmer-king of Alabama 7 is Bragg B. Comer, of Barbour county. He raised 2,250 bales . cotton last year, besides a larg amount of com. lie has from 8,000 to 10,000 acres in cotton and corn this year, and says crop prospects. were never oetter. --Near ChickasawhatcbeeV t asawhatchee, 1 Y ah AVir, a liif I (till be seen w I by Gen. Jack4 says the Savannah earthworks can stilt were thrown up (Old Uickory) as a protection agaiust the Indians ou bis march to Florida through that section in 1818. i : - Emma, Queen Dowager of the Sandwich Islands, is dead. Her death is chieflv noteworthy because it removes from the living one of the many royal pretenders wbo; ninkft the actual occupants of. thrones very uneasy. Among the 100 laws regulatiug the French ureas is one centuries old, which threatens the proofread- er with death tor even one oiunucr. Jananese-girls, it is said, use tiiir fimr nails as pens when writing love letters, ti ce Co, m am Wm Ha , , . " v ' i " ) - i - if:" T :4 i;: mentand about 50 private publish- in the patent office. . -r-r V n w 1111 in.