..-J.! ' .!: ' ' . . ,y : ! ; ! - , .. , . . -i .... - , : . .. ; -. . t M Mm mm Mi Mi ft 4": 1Y 1 i : ' 1 EATABLinnED IW 1SSS.T j MM M . . For tit Patkiot. i MY MOTHER BY riLIA. i. ' A h&I A lkM . cot Mmban with tb dMd. AM thara bath atpt for many rM j,1" wU. urow bad. tt I. bar not fnr.mil.. W: xVor I Or, i ' i: ' And drid th Urs I wept. ' " II- j ! Mif l?drliBT waywaHfoa " -1 i J "! w.lerin bar tb roach Una. - i And iu bncht beam, still ehaer my baart. , : rA.? ?nU U faan that riaa. , i : 7T,th fMr iwwt liht that horara atUI memory's aadiJBinad akjaa. ; ' I .? . . ' i v ' - I : j - ! t wanna and cbaara aJlka my baart. aya. taniia it ta iu anra f i i i,TUl Up with ma u o'ar. : My mother a Jora Oh. may ,y iu tint 1 hope to walk . , J"' I am called away from earth - , And to a brifhter clime. , IT.! : . For there decendeth with ita rayi ' U. hat tlune to bright and clear. Through every coming night anvi day, : An inftaeoee that doth cheer. A radiant light that never aets - Bat bright and brighter glowa. Uilding the paths where I should walk ; r or eomion ana repuev. - T.S Oh. how those memorial throng me no As on I pree my way. ! -f Erer rrowiag more sweet and tendar v; A With the closing of day. . ' - Oh menroriea of my sainted mother 1 Brighten ever onto me. , r Hothing eomes to me that's better. -; i Nor can there ever be. : t 'g or I not eare ether name , Like hers now greets min ear: Or makes in ma sach reTerenoe, , I And love that's so ainoera. How eoald 1 fail to see or know Tha lore she bore for m, And how ehe labored for my weal , And. that ineeesantly. She was indeed my dearest friend i In helplens infancy, , ... i And cared for ma both day and night. Sotlng each breath I drew with care. And ewredM soothed each pajn. -i hUe from my heart she chaesd all fear That o'er my spirit came. i j ; Tin.; ! . And oh bow fondly in her arms I) id she in love carets Folding me closely to her breast While axking tiod to bless. And go with me through all my days ' In sorrow and in joy. And shield from every snare of life Her darling little boy. IX. And oh what (oy It gaTo to her - When first on her I smiled 1 In kind regard for what she did For me. her helplem child. How bright the hopes she then indulged, . When I a man should be. " I crowed, she laughed, till by and by We both were in a glee. -:f ; ,; i'x.".' ', ; . She was the first to bold my hand Wbenlbefan to walk. , And heard with pride and sparkling ayes My first attempt to talk. No other one like har was pleased To see my powers expand. Or was so ravish with deiight When first she saw me stand. it XI. I never knew her love to tail But ever with good intent She stood by me when in the wrong But urged me to repent. She seemed alone far me to live That she the more might love. And by example try to lead - re endless bass above. ' ? ! XII. She nursed me ever on her heart Mo matter where she went. And pcured her Meetings on my head. Nor was she then content. But with great patience bore with me In all my waywardness, -Yet oft rebuked, with good advice And tearful tenderness.. : -ih " ' , J-xni.' i.-1!'";-Yea, from the very dawn of life Up to, ami when s man. She labored as few mortals con Id i To keep me in the Tan. And still while moving to look up ' And every hour employ. To make a fortune and a name I That nothing could destroy. ' ; f i XIV. But alas for me, my mother died I Many long years ago. And floods of tears for her I've wept, I And ftilkfbr her they flow When I remember her last look , I w hile she lay faint and weak. . And died in trying me to cheat Joy words she scarce could speak. ' Mil XT. SJfor can I e'er forget those words. The last she ever spoke, hay sank into my inmost heart Ana there nave taken root. Bet now I can but weep for her. W hose love so oft I crossed Rot dreaming of the wrong I did Till 1 my mother lost. ;l jr .1 xti. -m - V v WMMmm miMm n, wwii BVW Mill fd hasten fart and fall wwa ib aurrow at ner laet, And there for pardon call For everything that I hare dene, -That caused to her a pain. Orgrief to spring up in her heart. Or tinged her cheek with shame- i - . - ! ! i . XTII. r I i Hence her last look and loving words . Shall not be feet on me, IU keep the path she bade me tread In all humility. : And if I can do as she did, - Here aU the good l ean I f And be just what she wished me be An honest Christian man. I ! XTIII. Y ml with what strength X may While life remains with me I will obey her but request And from all folly flee, For I am sure she loves me still .And hovers ever near. Numbering each heavy sigh I heave aim Dotuing up each For still she comet to me in dreams. And with affection true, Oft sweetly whispers in mine ears W hat she would have me do. For she lives and will forever. ; . . And that without a change For love bke her soul's inuaortal. Nor can any it estrange. :k- .-r . I now see. can feel and know Her love did ne'er contain The slightest atom of deceit ur ever thought of gain. But flowed as free as it was strong. : JS'er sparkling pure and bright And steady as the polar star - Through every storm and night- l i' xxi- v- A mother's love's a mighty deep, A sea without a shore That out and on will erer sweep . rorerer and forever mora. Her deep afeotiesi knows ne change. There s nothing eaa it mere -From any child that she has reared . Or turn from it bet love. ' S '. ' .' XXII. ' ' Along the ingratee path it shine w ua undiminished ray f i An orb of light that never sets M Ipon his chequered way. j And when disgraced she'll not disown Tho' aU the world forsake. But cleave to him while lit shaH laA Or grief her reason take. xxm. ' i ; Ko other heart like her 'a forgives, ji J No hand like hers foraeoth - i : Can lead the wayward back again ' , Te virtue and to truth. ' f " Her, words alone have power to start' i New hopes within the breast : ' aw i ue aueu onug oaoa again ' Sweet peace with joy and rest. I xxrr. i Her love a a fortress and therein I r I H bve in calm repose Through all the bitter storms of life " ' Till life with n. .h.ll Knceuraged by her hut sweat smiles Ana toe load words the spoke i 1 To meet her in the better land Nor do I care tow soon I'm called ' ' rrom earth s inclement eume If I at death but go to bless - Ana with my mother shine. xo least Lharaavi re' on love. . n mmtw wumw wiu Int every Pleasure la inereaaed On that bright and golden shore. The commencement season is heralded every year by jeremaids from the moralists." It is the fash ion of the day to underrate the no- anirements of colleee trradaates and the nractical advantaces of edncation. The pessimist stands near the platform and with cynical smile and patronizing manner as snres tho blnshing: candidates for academio honors that they will now have a chance to let a practical world know of what stuff tbey are made. What has gone before is juronile by-play : the class room examinations and toe honor roil are not decisive tests of merit; the hot at the foot of the form is more likely to give a better account of himself than the valedictorian be- a e a i . .1 cause ne nas jess to uniearu suu has better health; and their suo- cessin life will depend upon the readiness with which - they can adapt themselves to the every day couditions of practical life. With fine irony the critics insinuate that the main obstacle to the college graduate's progress is his owu t4big head" inflated with injudicious praise and false hopes. The young men are warned that the colleges are spoiling a great many excellent farmers and capital business men and turning out scores ana nun dreds of third and fourth rate law yers, doctors and ; ministers. . In cIwmI the moralists seldom stop short of tho generalization that the colleges while making more pre tensions than in the past are in reality doing .less t and less every year to equip and train young men for the battle of life. Now we have no sympathy with these dismal reflections. In our judgment the colleges have never done better work for the cause of higher education than they are do ing to-day ; and the body of grad nates emerging from them every summer is better disciplined and more thoroughly trained than the collegians of twenty or fifty years ago. Every college graduate who has grown old enough to plume himself upon his reminiscences knows that this is so. When be receives the annual catalogue he finds that the course of instruction has been broadened, that the en- trance requirements have been raised, that! the class room work has been systematized, and that studies are . more thoroughly mas tered and digested than in his own day. When i he returns at commencement demic haunts time to his aca he I sees a better ; laboratories and stocked library observations that were sorely need ed in his time ; geological and bo tanical collections to illustrate stu dies that were formerly barren of interest; and j countless agencies for diversifying instruction and making it at once more interesting and more practical. He finds the collegians themselves more self possessed, better informed and manlier in bearing than the boys of twenty or fifty years ago. If he is honest in his judgment and does not allow his own disappointments or bitter experiments to -color his thoughts, he cannot help acknowl edging the improvement in institu tions, processes, work and men. There is,1 indeed, no respect in which the progress made in higher education is more; unerringly dis closed than in the' collegian's own consciousness j of his limitations. The well-worn gibe that he thinks he knows everything and is not good for much until he has knock ed about long enough to get rid of his conceit is a stale calumny. The graduate ot the college ' is more modest than the graduate of the public school or high schools He knows that he has only learned a few things;. that if he is to excel in any one branch of study he must make it the work of his life ; that what he has acquired in the class room will not be of , much practical value to him 'in after life ; and the most that he has i done is to find out what one thing he can do bet ter than another, i He has a more definite sense of his own limita tions and capacity than the old time collegians had. This is of it self a great practical gain. The yonng men emerging from our col leges to-day have ! fewer illusions and more closely calculated futures than most of the old boys, whose leathery faces now light up with a fine glow when jthey are reminded of . the plans aud dreams of their youth, had jn their owu day of graduation. The world's working force is recruited: with the best material when the valedictories are spoken in this leafy month of June. If there is one tling that the col leges are succeeding in doing bet ter than ever before, it is teaching American youttt bow to work, how to bring itself to bear, how to make the! best use of such power and capacity as it has. A Sbaweref Mineral Water. , Aaherilie Citiaen.1 We are informed that during a munuer storm, mougn uot a very severe one, which i occurred on the upper waters of Cane Creek on Thursday, the rain . water which happened to have; been caught in luos, cecv was louna to be so im pregnated with sulphur as to at iract general attention, it was as distinct both to taste and smell as that of the strongest sulphur spnngs. we Know of no explana tion, i Electricity evolves sulphur ous odors in the atmosphere as any one woo nas Happened to be near wnen me lightning struck will have experienced at the time. The pas- sage oi a stream oi ngutning, a strong current of electricity, in 8tantly generates acid gas, made sensible to dairy people by the sudden coagulation of milk. This explains why "thunder turns milk to clabber ;" the milk absorbing the wu iiji a suu uiua uuagmaung. isut wny it should act on water as it appears to have done in this in stance is beyond ou rken. ' ip. Aesjulred TarUa. Since the use of locusts as food has been mooted, many expressions of disgust at inch an idea have been uttered. But apart from un reasoning prejudice there is really nothing to justify repugnance in the case. The locust is a pheno menally cleap feeder. It is built up entirely on sweet and whole some vegetable juices. It must be infinitely purer as an . article1, of diet than many things which most people eat habitually. There is no foulder feeder than the hog, for ex ample, and the domestic fowl is scarcely more 1 particular. Crabs and lobsters aud shrimps fatten upon nameless abominations, and, moreover, all these crustaceans are exceedingly ugly in appearance. A dish ot soft-shell crabs looks very like a dish of large spiders. There is no essential difference be tween eels and snakes. And Chaa. Lamb thought that the man who af . 9 & - A. Urst swaiioweu su oyster wu rot ter entitled , to Horace's laudatory verses tut robur et a$ trrplexeia. than he who first tempted Fate by going to aea The truth is we are all governed largely, by -habit and acquired taste in eating and drinking. Sturgeon' roe it assur edly "caviare to the general" ori ginally. The first taste of it is dis couraging, and few would take a second probably but : for the force of authority in such matters. The Australian native extracts from the bark of a tree a huge fat white maggot, which he devours with exceeding gusto. The Esqui mau's month waters at the appetiz ing odor of decomposed seal meat and whale blubber; The Fiji Islaibder until quite recently re velled in the human form divine, nicely baked in an oven, with the face neatly blacked -and all the crackling well browned. Out of a decent respect for the prejudices of his contemporaries he called his favorite dish "long pig." In South America they eat great lizards, and find them toothsome and deli cate. In Africa baked monkey is accounted good, though somewhat too like a "Christian child9 for the unemancipated Western taste. In Egypt dervishes are found who make a practice of digesting live scorpions and venomous snakes. Rats and mice and snch small deer have commonly been used as food, from the markets of China to those of Paris during the siege. The people who live on the shores of the Indian Ocean make a food of the gigantic cephalopods, one of which Victor Hugo immortalized under the name of the pieuvre. In Borneo, crabs which stand two feet high and look perfectly horrible are eagerly devoured, tn short. there is scarcely any living organ ism which has not at some time and in some parts of the world been used, as food by . men, , and when the latter decline to eat the creatures themselves they very often do it at one remove by feed ing upon animals that eat the re jected organisms. Men of the world and such as honor science wisely endeavor to overcome hereditary and acquired prejudices against strange articles of food, and such organizations as the Ichthyophagous Club do some good in this direction, though the strength of prepossessions and an tipathies is very great, and doubt less takes time and experience to remove. To a young Irish girl a terrapin stew might easily appear, a thing of unutterable horror and detestatiou. ! Just - so in Central Africa the custom of nudity has reversed things until the women regard the putting on of clothing as immodest. Instead of the taking it off. It will probably not be an easy matter to introduce the locust as a regular artiele of diet in this ! country, but the few who have con-! qnered prejudice, like Dr. Hart- man, of Westchester, Penn., may in time see the frnit of their teach ing in the regular importation and marketing of the insects Already the California Indians prepare them lor food and , preserve them as winter provision, and those who have tasted them in that condition say that they are palatable and nutritious. Of course, ; however, the taste must be acquired, and it is useless for any one to try to force it. Souse Fnsnown OM Malda. - U. North British Advertiser.! Elizabeth of England was one of the most illustrious of modern sov ereigns. Her rule over Great Bri tain certainly comprised the most brilliant literary age of the English speaking people. - Her political acumen was certainly put i to as severe tests as that of any other ruler the world ever saw. Maria Edge worth was. an old maid. It was this , woman's writings that first suggested the thought of wri ' ting similarly to Sir Walter Scott. Her brain might well be called the mother - of the Waverly novels. Jane Porter lived and died au old maid. The children of her busy brain were "Thaddeus of Warsaw" and "The Scottish; Chiefs. which have moved the hearts of millions with excitement and tears. . Joanna Baillie, poet and play writer, was "one of em.? Florence Nightin gale, most gracious lady, heroine oflnkermann and Balaklava hos pitals, has to the present written Miss" before her name. . The man who should marry her might well crave to take the name Of Nigh tin. gale. Sister Dora, the brave spirit of English pest-houses, whose story is as a helpful evangel, was the bride of the world's sorrow only. And then what names could the writer aud reader add of those whom the great world mav not know, but we know, and the little world of tho village,, the church, the family know and prize beyond all worlds! The PiTerlte for 188. The slimsy, uncrushabh) girl. in the white mull is the favorite this year. ; rTlTCElSrSBORQ.'H- C, TUESDAY, JUKE 23, 1885. . A, theory Bwggeeteel. v r Baltimore American. ! The verdict of the jury in the Cluverius case was reached speedi ly. Afterj considering together for but fortj minutes they found him guilty of murder in the first degree. The testimony tor the defence was chiefly to prove the previous good character of the accused, and de nials thaihe worea'mustaehe which went to the question of iden- tiflRfltioh-i-and 'denial that the. watch key fonnd on the reservoir was his. Giviug to these contra dictions their fall value, they fail ed to answer the strong points of the case made by the prosecution. - The theory of suicide was unten able, because Lillian Madison could not have climbed the fence at the reservoir.1! Her canvas sack was thrown Into the river a half mile from the reservoir. If she had gone to the river to throw in her baggage,! would she have walked back and climbed the fence to drown herself In the reservoir I Would she have uttered the scream that one of the witnesses heard f No. She did not kill herself. - She was-killed byr somebody either Cluverius or somebody else. It seems to - be proven beyond reasonable doubt that Cluverius had held relations with the-unfor-tunate girl which placed her in a helpless i condition. She was on the eve ot becoming a mother, yet had been able to conceal this tact np to the time of her visit to Rich mond. That she and Cluverius met in Bichmond by appointment is proven by many circumstances. The! torn note alone fit 'evidence enough, f What was the purpose of this meeting in Bichmoudf To provide the girl : a secret place . here she could pass a few weeks in retirement and seclusiou. The letters written to r account for her absence by a pretended engage ment at Old Point prove this. The humble dwellings of the Belle Isle iron workers offered a promising place, and thither they went to gether on the morning of the fatal night. They were seen by many. If murder had been in the heart of Cluverius at that time, he would not! have been seen in public with her. He would have decoyed her out at night on one of the high bridges over the.rnshing river, and there hurled her from the height to death and this would, perhaps, bare looked like suicide. But the visit to Belle Isle was a failure. The girl was uot satisfied. They visited another place with similar results. Then the girl thought that she would go and throw her self on the mercy of her friends,, the Dunstans, and entreat them to conceal H her i shame. They were seen to go out late; in the evening, enter a street car and go to Reser voir street, on which the Dunstans lived. In the morning she . Was found , drowned in the reservoir, and her red shawl was found hang ing over the Dunstans' gate. What do these facts point tot They in dicate that a scene occurred at the crate. The noor girl, when she ar jived there, felt her heart fail her. She could not enter and tell the story of ; her ruin.; She turned up on her companion and reproach ed him keenly. She implored him to marry her and save her from disgrace. During her excitement she threw her shawl lover the gate. ' Her gloves were cast aside. Her agitation was J intense. Her voice rose. Her lover, fearing that she would arouse the house, drew her away. ' They forgot the shawl. They walked together up the lonely road, and the man who was engag ed to be married to another woman realized that be had an injured, desperate, unmanageable woman on his hand that the thought of killing her entered his mind. They walked on together. She bad ceased to reproach him. and was now tearfully entreating him. She would follow him wherever he ask ed. They reached the end of the road. A dim light showed the gap in the fence. This promised con cealment. They entered, and were alone in the lot. But the high. level bank showed Cluverius that it was a reservoir whose deep waters would otter a better concealment. She ascended the bank with diffi culty, for the hill was steep. There he paused irresolute for a moment. He t dreaded j to ' strike the blow. Their conversation was renewed. Other plans were proposed to her, but she saw safety only in one, and that was for him to marry her. lie took her fiercely by the arm. She uttered a piercing scream that wa . heard two hundred -yards . away. Therfhe struck herand in her del icate condition she fell like one who is shot. Full of horror and fear, he caught her up, lifted her to the height of the fence aud let her tall on the slope of the bank. She rolled down, not quite dead, and clutched her hands full of the slime of the bottom. Tbeu all . was silent. Cluverius was alive ou the bank. There was the canvass bag,, which had been brought but Jn expectation of her staying at the Dunstans; He pick ed it up, hastened to the river and threw it in. ' It was found several miles down the .stream, '.Then he returned to his hotel, and left for home by the past midnight train. I Perhaps it happened la this way, i i fc The President, on the 15tb appointed John A. Young post master at Charlotte, vice W..W. Jenkins, suspended, and Archibald H. Boyden at Salisbury, vice Jas. H. Ramsey, suspended. These re movals were : made for offensive partisanship, j ; . Mr. Albert j Kramer, of Dor ham, is making , the first shipment of leaf, tobacco J from North Caro lina to Germany. Ue is shipping eighty five hogsheads of leaf, the weight of each being about 1,350 pounds Through bills pt lading are optaioea Tor this from Durham to Bremen." ; J. -j - jt . . . ..... 1 ;.,,;.irV r Historical. - ! i i -:.CVwYoim8u.r Mr. J. M. Jones, of i Worcester, Masa desirea. information on the following points: I: f . Who was responsible for the non-exchange of prisoners in: the year 1861 1 Did the rebel Govern ment ever refuse to exchange white prisoners, man for man i i Were any colored prisoners ever -exchanged at any time during the war 1 . Why " was not Jefferson Davis tried V ; ;r I We answer these questions in their order. The Administration of Mr. Jjincoln was responsible for tho non exchancre of prisoners in the year; 1864. Vrhe President had entire control of the subject. Gen. Grant advised against exchanges, on the rround that by sending back to the . Confederate armies healthy, vigorous men, and getting starved and sick ones in exchange, the disproportion in strength of the two sides would be diminished and the Confederates would there by be titter enabled to continue Uirfrir.. Upon ;this theory the Aanxinlotrstion acteu, ana iney alone were responsible for the act. We do not think the rebel Gov ernment ever' refused to exchange white ' prisoners ; and as for the colored, there never were many of them that 'could have been ex changed. Very likely they might have refused to exchange them ; but on this subject we have! no positive knowledge. - 1 Jefferson Davis was not tried be cause the Administration, Presi dent Johnson being at the head of it, thought it better not to try him. He was arraigned in May, 1867, be fore the United . States Circuit Court at Richmond, on the charge of treason, and in December, 1863, a nolle prosequi was entered. This was entirely an act of policy on the part of President Johnson. Had he so willed, ! a trial would have taken place; but we think that the most patnotio and Intelli gent men will now agree that in every respect it was wiser that there should be no trial, and that Mr. Davis should be, released. In our judgment it is a great glory of the United States that, after an unequalled civil war, there were no prosecutions, and, above all, no executions for treason. Am Ant I-Prohibition Mob. Trouble which has been brewing for some time over the enforcement of the prohibitory j law in Maine culminated last week in Spring vale, in the organization of a mob, armed with revovelvers and stones, and attacks npon a number of houses, irr which windows were smashed aud other damage was done. The gang went to the house of William II Frost, about a quar ter of a mile from the village, and sent a shower of rocks through the j windows, accompanied by a volley of bullets from revolvers, fired in reckless disregard of the sleeping family within. Taking "the direct road to the village the mob next stopped at tho house of John W. Frost, a trial justice. Here shots were fired into the house, where women, children and au old niau were sleeping. Fortunately no one was' hurt, but the windows were demolished. The house of G. H. Roberts was next visited. Here also the windows were swashed aud the furniture damaged. The residence of Wilson Cheney, a prominent clothing dealer, was also treated to a volley of rocks. The final effort of the mob was made against the office of the Advocate. The editors of the paper sleep in the office. . A perfect ftisilade was kept up and bullets rained iuto the room. The editors' only offense had been the publication, without comment, of the liquor trials. By what seemed a miracle they escaped injury. The raiders then disband ed. .) Remember that this happened in the God aud morality Republi can Stato of Maine. Editor Pa. tbiot.J j - ' , Does Habit Make Decency U Dress t What is it that constitutes de cency in dressT Clearly nothing but habit. The custom of the par ticular society . or subject matter concerned in " ordinary language, convention. 'This seems strange to some people, but. it is most certain ly true that there is no absolute rale as to what drapery is or is not decent. : Even in the same society the i couditions . vary enormously. Use and custom alone determine the. becoming.. A Turkish lady is shocked if a strange man sees her without a yashmak and a mon strous bundle of wraps. So con ventional , is this covering of the face that a Mussulman peasant woman surprised in the field will often, veil it with her only petti coat. '.; Travelers tell us that a well-bred , African woman blushes to be'seeu for the first time in clothes. The unusual use of clothing appears to her. scarcely decent. Custom, habit and convention decide the matter among ourselves. ; A pure cottage girl in Connemara, who sleeps in a room with men and never. owned stockings, .would feel uneasy in the ball dress of a princess. The princess would almost suffer death rather than share her cottage for a week. If the daughters of Leoui das went to a drawing room at Buckingham palace iu their Spar tan tuuics, they would probably cause : as .'great a . flutter as they would : feel ,; themselves. Ho one would expect a hospital nurse to do what hundreds of innocent girls do in .a. pantomime : but the dan- sense, again, would hardly submit ta the unsparing revelations of a surgical i ward.' Honi eoit is the sole and . paramount rule ; but then this depends on certain conven tional practices being respected. i . " ' . - A young son of Mr. M. Pivett, of Goldsboro. fell from a tree strik- ing a fence and was killed. The wives and daughters of the lower classes in England usually work in mills and factories, and have very, little time for the cares of home, or for preparing the raeal ; therefore, cooking among taese classes is a terra ineognua, ana knowledge is confined to sucu mat ters as roasting a joint,- frying a chop, and boiling a potato. - The breakfast or tne wonting uijco consbits of bread and tea, and, per haps, occasionally a little bacon. But in middle class families, whilst there is very little variety, the cooking is admirably done. The joints are well roasted, and so cook ed as to retain tne strengtn, tne flavor and the juices of the meat. The plants are brought to the table at all seasons of the year thorough ly hot; the meats and. vegetables in covered dishes, and. are served and eaten while palatably warm. ; The English consider themselves very extra vgaut in their expend! tares upon the table. Compared with continental nations, their self- accusation holds good. They will spend more than either the French or the German,' aud will have less variety and less delicious food, but their mo?t lavish extravagance would be deemed great economy in most American houses. The con tinental nations look upon the En glish as most wasteful in their kitchens, but the English tre as much more economical and saving than the Americans as the French and Germans are more economical and saving than the English. The French and the Germans calculate every meal, and the num ber of mouths to be fed. When tho meal is served, especially among the French, nine times in ten there is nothing whatever left, but every thing cooked is eaten. Each day's food is provided day by day. This leads to great economy. All things are bought small in quantities ; even in England all vegetables and fruits are bought by the pound, and the amount needed for the day or tne meal carefully calculated, and only that amount is cooked or served. : 1 The servants in all English fam ilies live almost entirely . upon cheaper kinds' of meat such as may be boiled or stewed ; and .they make their " breakfast on bread, bacon and tea, and usually their supper consists or uremi, cheese and beer. f It is estimated that tho living of each member of a middle class fam ily costs $2.50, iucluding children and servants. jThis estimate would not cover the exiteuditures for wines, which are deemed a neces sary part of the English dinner and supper table; Lighter and cheaper wines are much more used than a score of years j ago. When 1 was first iu Eugland port wine was to be found on every table, whereas-l now it is only occasionally offered to guests. Sherry still holds its place, but light clarets and Rhine wines are gaining favor, ana are becoming common on all English tables. : . Curing Rhenmatlsn with Celery. A German correspondent of an Euglish paper writes as follows: have bad a severe attack of in fluuimatory rheumatism, aud was healed in two days' time by a soup made of the stalks and roots of celery ; therefore I desire to make this simple remedy known through the "columns of your valuable pa per, for the benefit of all sufferers from gout or rheumatism of any form. I was induced to try it by seeing the following notice : Num erous cures of rheumatism by the use of celery have recently been announced iu English ' papers. New discoveries or what claim to be discoveries of the healing vir tues of plants are contiuually be ing made. One of the latest' is that celery is a cure for rheuma tism; indeed, it is asserted the disease is impossible if the vegeta ble be cooked and freely eaten. Tho fact that it is always put on the table raw prevents its thera peutic powers from being known. The celery should be cut into bits, boiled m water until soft, ana the water drunk by the patient. Serve warm with pieces of toasted bread, and the painful ailment will soon yieldt . Such is the declaration of a physician who lias again aud again tnea tne experiment, aua with uniform success. At , least two-thirds ot the cases named heart diseases are ascribed to rheumatism and its agonizing ally, gout. Small pox, so much dreaded, is not half so destructive as rheumatism, which, it is maintained by many physicians, can be prevented by obeying nature's laws in diet. Here in Germany we boil the root and stalks, as the root is the prin cipal part of it, aud afterwards eat it as a salad with oil and vinegar. I received such immediate benefit that I am auxious to let all the rheumatic sufferers know of it. ; Minister Jarv Is. ' Bntland. (Vt,) Herald. Ex Governor Jar vis. of North Carolina, was accompanied -to the State Department to receive his credentials as Minister to Brazil, by Senators 'Vance and Ransom. When he was about to be sworn, the clerk said, as usual : . ''Hold up your right hand, Governor 1" To which Gov. Jarvis replied. "Oh, no ; I can't do that, for some of my Northern friends, a few years ago, made that impossible." Then turn ing to the Senators of his State, he said with much fervor; ''Gentle men, this is the grandest and most magnanimous country on the face of the earth. Twenty years ago we were doing our best to destroy this government, but tailed. Now, instead of expatiation or apy other punishment, you are Senators of the United States, and I am going abroad as an official representative of our country at a foreign court. There is nothing like this in his tory." ; ' '! H: .: j , . .. : Articles et Feed.; The Loudon Telegraph insists vjl everything that crawls, flies, swiraL or runs . la good for food. . . It may be so, but still we confess to pref erences which can't easily be in vaded. We always read , of the Southern clay eaters with a sickly sort of interest, and readily admit the right of . the negro to make; a supper off a handful of tortuous angle ; worms if they happen to snit his taste, but. we do not care to be present at the feast. Doubt less fried rattlesnake is toothsome if one has been brought up on that kind of diet, and we choose to take it for granted, without personally trying tne experiment, tnat rattle snake eggs are delicious and have a decided musky flavor, j Epicures may smack their lips over the nu tritions grasshopper otihel u,, uub. as ior us. our teat i. . too simple to reiiah maea Uitnu- There is one dlab, however, never on the bill of fare, which every man at one time or other unwill ingly eats namely, crow. Profes, Bor Riley, of Washington, says he likes the taste of the bird, but we have a strong impression that the great majority of those : who have indulged in this luxury will pain fully admit that eating crow lis very disagreeable work. i f f Prohibition In Georgia. Reports submitted to the Geor gia temperance convention, recent ly in session in Atlanta, from all parts of the State, indicate a rapid growth of sentiment iu favor of t !Lfi ... . a 1 proniDiuon anu a rising entnusiasm of the masses for temperance. Res olutions were adopted petitioning the Legislature to pass a general local Option law at its session next mouth, so that iu every county in the State there can be an -election on prohibition. Of the 133 coun ties ; in ' Georgia, twenty have re stricted ' the sale of . liquor i and eighty have absolutely prohibited it. It is thought that more than half of the thirty-eight counties where the sale of liquor is now un restricted will' be carried for pro hibition if the Legislature passes the law; asked for. The resolutions declare that temperance must uot be mixed with politics, and in the election for members for the State at large of the executive committee two Democrats and two Republi cans were chosen. There were several negro delegates iu the con vention, and resolutions were pass ed to thoroughly organize the tem perance movement among the ne groes; throughout the State. The convention was the largest I and most I representative body of the kind ever held in Georgia. I j Railroad Notes. i-The tviimmgton cs weidon Railroad Company has. purchased the Midland Railroad, running from Goldsboro to Smith field. We learn that the price paid for the road and franchise is G0,000, less that the cost of the iion j Goldsboro Argus: The Com missioners of Greene county have ordered au election; to be held at Suow Hill on the 25th of July for the purpose of taxing the county $30,000 to aid in building the pro posed j Goldsboro, Snow llill& Greenville Railroad. ! - Shelby Aurora: The survey ing 'party of Capt Ramseur has not yet reached Shelby, but are expect ed in a few days. The route from the Air Line to Shelby would furn ish jus competition; in freights and add ! much to our prosperity. It Would prove an excellent feeder to the Air Line and give us a South ern outlet. Shelby is ready to aid any railroad enterprise. Railroads help to build the country. . 1 The Morgan ton Enterprise says there was a larga. railroad meeting at Black Station, on the Air Line Railroad, in South Carolina, on the 10th. Col. Samuel C. Tate, U I. Davis, Esq., and Prof. W. E. Aber nethy, attended as delegates frpm Burke and these gentlemen came home very much enthused for the project of building a railroad from Shelby by way of Morgantonj to Cranberry or some other Northern couaectiou. These gentlemen Ire port that our Southern friends 'fmean business" and, the ohly question is one of route. Ruther ford, McDowell and Mitchell have made large county subscriptioaaj to secure the building of the railroad. C. H. Wells, in the Manufactur. ers I Record, writes the following about North Carolina railroads i (f A correspondent wants to know 'what railroads are being pushed to completion, and N the number of men employed mi each, in North Carolina.' There are several roads now under construction. The Caie Fear and Yadkin Valley road is being extended from Greensboro to MtJ Airy, and about 300 men are employed. The short cut on the Atlantic Coast Line, from Wilson to Fayetteville, gives employment to'nearly 1,000 men. The Western North Carolina railroad has 140 men at work between Nantabala and; Murphy, and the Asheville & Spartanburg has 200 odd hands now working. Tbeso are the prin cipal lines now ? being constructed in the old North State. The Cape Fear, & Yadkin Yalley road is being constructed in the old North State. The Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley road is being built almost entirely by local capital, and is prospering splendidly." il Mr. Geo. M. Carr, the travelin g correspondent and ed i torial con tri butor of the Western Sentinel, has been honored by the Government with a position as postal clerk ou the! Wilmington & Weidon Rail road. -" - ' . n : j The Caucasian notes that many fanners in Duplin are posting their land against i hncklelerry pickers. They are forced to this seemingly harsh measure in self defence, to prevent a complete demoralization of farm labor during the huckle berry season, i . f . - w sm Aavsuseej. 8TATB MEWS. .?;-.! fadge Ruffln's health is report is improving. died'j.TrArv.nMiL. oi,.l..'T; -RaleTjOth 'K? 000 graded st have v a tir6 a 25,. Judge We RVnildinir. Ederton, last week,w d . . The State Guard enci . will be held at Asheville ou . 30th. ."V Mr. J. J. Jones, postmaster at Milton for seventeen consecutive years, died on the 17th inst. Gen. D. H. Hill will return to . North Carolina , to spend the re mainder of his days with relatives and friends. f v ' ' Henry Davis, one of the vie , . Prof. J. de Bernier Hooper, as sociated with the University of North Carolina since 1S37 hashad a stroke of paralysis. W. E. Skinner;- clerk of the Superior Court of Chowan county, died on the 9th inst, at the ad vanced age of 75 years. He was n good man. ; j . Gov. Scales has commuted the , sentence of William Black, who was convicted of murder at the last term of Jones Superior Court1 and sentenced to be hanged ' on June 26tb, to imprisonment for life. , Mr. Hale, who goes to Man- Chester as consul, has sold the . Fayetteville Obterver to Mr. Geo. LI. Haigh. Mr. Haigh has been conducting the business for several . months. Mr. Hale will correspond regularly with the Observer, The Raleigh Register says that from the outlook it is thought that there will be at least two thousand j persons in the citato who will be entitled to pensions under the Con federate pension act There seems to be more widows than soldiers. .Crop Wotea. i Lumberton Robesonian : All signs point to bountiful crops this year. Small grain is better than was expected. i ; : Concord Times: Prospects are ! air for a good corn crop. There is j a good stand of cotton, and it is in good growing condition. The 1 oat crop is almost a total failure in -some sections. Wheat is under the average. : " Fayetteville Sun : Cotton in nearly ever section of the county is ooking well. Corn is a good stand nearly every where, and has a good color. Small grain of every kind 1 is uot an average ! crop and cannot ' ! possibly be.- potatoes are in very 1 good condition, j - y y T Henderson Oold Leaf: As the season advances the fact becomes j apparent that a considerable por- J tion of the acreage of wheat nmL oats in this locality will produeo'a better crop than was anticipated ; earlier in the season:. Corn and , other grain crops are looking well. Waynesville Netcs : Mr W. H. Crisp, our obligiug correspond ent in Graham county reports a fine outlook for both corn and tn bacco crops in his section. The farmers have increased the acreage iu tobacco about one third. 'The corn crop throughout the western counties is looking very fine and could not be more promising than at present. The wheat crop general ly is a failure. - ; Wake Forest College. The commencement recently at Wake Forest College was a grand success.-- An audience of 2,000 per sons was in Win gate Memorial Hall. Addresses were delivered by seven members of the graduat ing class of fourteen, W. W. Hold ing, of Wake Forest, delivering the salutatory, and A. T. Robertsoo, of Iredell county, the valedictory. The diplomas were presented by. Rev. Chas. E.JTaylor, president of tho college. An address was made by Rev. Dr. Thomas E. Skinner, who, in behalf of the board of : trustees, stated that every dollar of J the large endowment fund was safely and 'excellently invested, and if desired could be at once realized. He declared that it was the opin ion of the trustees that the condi tion of the college was more satis factory than ever before. He call ed special attention to the fact that this was the fiftieth anniversary of the birth of the college, which in 1835 was founded by. Rev. Dr. Samuel Wait He said the trus tees had decided to create a new chair that of chemistry ; and that it was also decided to give frtje tuition to all clergymen of what ever denomination. This announce ment was received with great ap plause. : ";.' ' ;! ' From Twenty -Six. to SeTcnty-Three. i The ages of some notable women are as follows: Mme. Adam, 49; Miss Alcott, 52; Mary Anderson, 26 ; Miss Bateman, 31 ; Sarah Bernhardt, 41 ; Mrs. Besant, 38; Rosa Bonheur, 63 Miss Braddon, 48; Miss Cob be, 53; Eliza Cook, 67 ; Mrs. Craik, 49 ; Miss Gordon Camming, 48; Lady Eastlake, 69; Miss A. B: Edwards, 51 ; Miss M. B. B. Edwards, 49; Empress En genie, 59; Emily Faithful, 50; Helen : Fauci t, 69 ; Mrs. Fawceft, 38 ; Mme. de Gasparin, 72 ; Mrs. Gladstone, 73; Arabella Goddard, .47; Julia Ward Howe, 60; Mrs. Kendal, 46; Jenny Lind, 64 ; Mrs. Lynn Linton, 43 ; Pauline Lucca, 45 ; Florence Marriott, 48 ; Helen Modjeska, . 41 Florence Nightiu gale, 65; Christine Nilsson, 42; Mrs. Olipbanr, 67; Ooida, 45; Adelina Patti,42 ; Mrs. Mark Pat tison, 43 ; Eliza S: Phelps. 41 ; Princess Ratazzi, - 52 ; Christina Ro8etti, 55: Mrs. Stowe, 73; Ellen Terry, 37 ; Mrs. Weidon. 48 ; Mrs: Henry Wood, 65 ; Miss Yonge, 62. 4 fi