Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / March 12, 1874, edition 1 / Page 1
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. . ' : . - .... . . ( ... I. -5 'WeKWWVi :- I . '. . . 1 1 m ' I . ... . ' I . r . - . . . ..!. .' S - - ' . . 1 . .- ; i. j I . ' I L..2T y ma wy tail WT i j r i ..... WW M I I I M I V V I , I I I B ar I I It' I . v ' ' ' ' t-pi w V.H" i'ial 1 ct v-u. Li. i t tH-: to ' n-yfs' i ytvie yt( limf. v1' sjll-.iw VOL. V.-THIRD SERIES. r . hmm; School o anipj MJeln SALISBURY N. C, MARCH 12, 1874 . ,ij. m! iiiii uvl O-'fl:. fir PL" BLI8IIKI) WEEKLY J. J. BBUNER, Proprietor and Editor. J. STEWART, Associate Editor. J. 1.50 10.0 BATBSOP 8KBCBIPTION WEEKLY WATCHMAN. Jm ta. tavllein advance $2.50 gix Months, " 5 Corie40 an adir!M Tri-weekly Watchman. La Vi'in in advance $5.00 jnm nfi 50 RATES : Philadelphia Press. Individual Men. Disease of the Eye Contagious. Dr. Reuling, of the Maryland Eve and Thr i. nnt mnh trnth in thfi HpW- PHI Instittite, wntcs that the diieaae tion made, that individual power ta perish- known as Egyptian or granular inflama 8a Months Omb Month ADVERTISIS Oim Square (1 inch) One . tWO Rate (or a areater number of inertiona, pirate Special notices per cent, more TTTILJl, L,lv..rtsements. Reading notice Ueento per line for each and every insertion insertion $100 150. m . m r j m. f a r- tng. in twenty years, irom to 1010, the First Nap'olean literally predominated in and through Europe. Whatever was done on that continent in that time was in England, before and after Napoleon ajonty of cases, been able to trace the thus became a power, William Pitt pres disease to the use of the so-called rolled throaeh the United States. It sometimes canses blindness and is very contagious. The adds : I hare in many, and I may say in the . . i W - w dominated, as his father, Lord Chatham, had done forty years before. Peel occupied the highest position for over twenty years, and, like Wellington, waw ..t (nff (la vlth Palmoratnn r . mmi m I m wmmmmWs i B. m..fme mnat trAllh. Therf was O'Connell, the uncrowed JBing "" " -j-f-. -----y towels. Such towels are generally found in our country hotels and the Bleeping apartments of the working classes, and being used by nearly every one are made the carriers St one of the most dangerous, of Ireland, from the Catholic Association and "the Rent" until he was fairly driven out of the field by the Young Ireland party and ill-health, liia Kainor a roiim nf nver t-pntv Vftftra. Declining office for himself, he liberally disease to the eye, by which thosands of eye. would strongly reemmend that the use of the rolling towel be abolished, tor thereby we will discard one of the great instra ments for the spread of such a dangerous 1 0 -rr mp THE FAVORITE HOME REMEDY. Thu unrivalled Medicine warranted not to aatain a Bingle particle of Mbrccsy, pr any Lajuriouf mineral substance, but is PURELY VEGETABLE. containing those Southern Roots and Herbs, which on all-wise Providence has placed in countries where Liver Diseases moat prevail. It will cure all Diseases caused by Derangement of the Liver and Bowls. Sksuusss' Liver Regulator sr Mesleae. Is eminently a Family Medicine ; and by being kent readv for immediate resort will save many an hoar of suffering and many and doctors' bills. dollar in time After over Forty Years' trial it is still receiv ing the most unqualified testimonials to its vir tues from persons of the highest character and responsibility. Eminent physicians commend it as the most EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC Tor Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Armed with this ANTIDOTE, all climates and clianaes of water and food may be faced without fear As a Remedv in MALARIOUS FE VERS, UGW EL, COMPLAINTS, ESTLE NESS, JAUNDICE, NEAl'SEA. IT HAS IJO A.L . It is the cheapest rUrost and Best Family Medicine in the Wor d ! Manufactured only by J.H 1EIIIN& CO., MacOn, Oa., and Philadelphia. Price, $1.00. Sold by, all Druggists, dispensed government patronage among his adherents. Peel died in 1850, 'and the history of Europe ever since might be told in the biography of Louis Napoleon ; Cavour, and Bismarck. Who will deny that Individual power has rarely been so throughly represented as in the person of the German statesman ? It is curious, tracing effects up to causes, to see the springs of action in Europe during the last twenty years. Cavour was the rep resentatiye of the great movement south of the Alps which ended in Italian unity. Bistnarch represented the corresponding movement which made the resurrection of the old Germanic Empire. Louis Napo leon Was the blind instrument of Destiny in working out both of these great revolu tions in Europe. It turned out that Cavour and Bismarch were too wily and resolute for Napoleon. It is impossible to determine what would have been the state of things in Europe it the third Na poleon had possessed the decision and dash of the first. Because Louis Napo leon was weak and vacillating, deficient in self-reliance, and insisting on working out his own ideas through the agency of clerks instead of statesmen, Italian and German unity arose in our time. Ever since 1S52 the history of Europe is to be read in the biography of Disraeli and Gladstone. Their names represent ideas and principles. workingmen are annually deprived of their means of support neishi Lr rom a9ni 'W". saaretuj Ukath of Johv Wkslsv Cotton Seed and Cotton Plantino- I ia lh morning the first of the household T o- i ,v , i r . - 1 r In cotton culture it is the worst of bao " ,e ! P management to plant inferior seed, be cause it would cost something to buy the best, but, as we have repeatedly urged, every planter should, by continual selec tion and high cultivation, make his own seed, and take pride in saving the best. Begin with the Dickson seed; or any bet ter sort, if there be any better, and im prove upon that till you have something as much better than the Dickson as the Dickson is better than the common. We inolo OkiJ Relict of a Past NO 26. WHOLE NO. hi h b. went to the chanel. but found no nn nf tns assistant preachers there. Of three or four in the house all were asleep. i preacued myself' write the old man of 84. When he comoU'incd- hi M.i.t.nt. Dr. D. M. Boie eihilited to na rearer- day the skull of a human being, which was found ia this city at a considerable depth were oannr been two othr .k.Utnn. found interred above it. It has evidently been there a sreat mativ vmii nH ifl urged that they were up late io the uiaht Proby antedate Col. Wadddt's I rah- I e rr . . o I man Wk ( . La j . u,i- no maae u a rule tbat every one in the house should retire at nime in or der to attend the morning service at five. At 86 Wesley admitted the weight of years. His eyes, . he said, were dim, BIS VOlCe Was faint, he rnnhl nn lnn..r are accustomed to boast of the perfection kecp hi. accounts or hi. joarnal. He trav r " V ' j ..u ? I wea "m" to the last, and was followed V r'"""' MU " 7",Mby the throngs who never deserted him. In the spring of 61 he was bro't to his in Married and Didn't Know It. TEhe suit of Edward K. Winship, the bankrupt broker, for a divorce from his witt', was Detore a mew lors: conrt on Saturday. In relation to his man-age, Mr. Winship says tbat while he was in the navy, one Butler, his ship mate, a Phihadelphian, went home and was mar ried, and invited him to his honse. He went there and the next day accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Butler to Gerroantown, and was introduced to the person trom whom he is seeking divorce. On the trip some thing stronger than water was imbibed, A K n triiAiw tiAf hm n mAWA Until avbvaIva I Young Men. Read this below and reflect on what it so truthfully says : "A little incident occurred at a boring town lately which we publish for preservation. A noble hearted and sen sible woman was shopping, when a clerk asked her. 'What are our men to do now 1 The merchants are reducing the number of their employes and discarding their elerks, and as we can find no other situa tion what are poor clerks to do f one promptly replied, 'Walk -right into the field and get between the plow-handles, where you are most needed. Too manv vonncr men are huntine easv Dosit j j o u . tions and crowding' the professions, while their mothers are at home, many of them toiling bard to maintain and keep up the family, even chopping wood to make fires to cook and wash with, while the sons, and oo many of the daughters, are dressing fine, keeping company, and like vampires eating up the substance of their living. If all our ladies, both old and young, would but talk thus plainly to our yonng men, many more of them would remain home to make that home happy and com fortable to repay the watch care, anxiety and toils of parents by industrious, useful labors.' That clerk was benefited by that excellent lady's lecture, and we hope many more will be profited her sound views published lieie : for wc have not seen nor heard anything more to the pointany where. Let all our young men advise with their parents upon these points and govern themselyes accordingly." there is still room for improvement something to learn by chose not too wise in their own conceit to secant ucw truths. Only general roles for the culture of any crop can be given, when they are to be applied to various condition, of .oil climate and season. Experience must determine the exceptions and good judgment guide the planter at eyery step. KtMJ Road., stricken with a fever. On the 2d of March he died surrounded by a M m . . . . . . . . - group ox mends. When be was dead, they broke into a paalm, of praise. His furnnal, at 6 o'clock in the morning, was attended by a vast throng, and a sermon was preached in memory of his good deeds in City Road chapel, when the church bang with man. When found it was face downwards, as though it had been buried in that pesi tion. There is a mark nn the hft sirf nf the bead, a. though the deceased had been killed by a blow from a batdio t nr a tomahawk. The front teeth were all gone, but the jaw teeth were well preserv ed . x Dr. Buie pronounce, it the skull of an old man. probably some 60 or 70 vnn old, and think, it likely that the beine to whom it belonged, lived snd walked on (hi. earth previous to the Christian cr i. Wilmington Journal. IB IT ANYBODY 8 BUSLTTMa aiT Ii anybody'! badness If a geuilamaa showld To waft anon a lad v. If the law v don't refoee 1 Or. to .peak a little psdewr. That the toeaaia all way kaow. b Is it anybody's bodaesa ir a lady has a beau ? I. it anybody, botioees When that eullfman doea Or. when he leave, the lady, Or. if he lav at all ? wuil nereaaary That the curtain should b drawn. To save from further trouble. The o.Uide lookers oa t Is it anybody's bone( Hut the lady's if hr been Side oat with other ladiea And doesn't let her know T Is it anybody', hadssss Hot the gentleman. if she r A edi 3 . eft Patross or Husbandry. The Paci- Should accept another fie Rural Press the. .am. ap the object of the ratrons of Husbandry : 1 he ennoblement ot labor and the . a. z .a. a wia nunc wuu mouruine. ana in everv Congress and the Liquor Traffic member of the great audience, exeeot one. producing classes. I S a . . . ... . .ill a a.. wno took the blue ribbon from her hat onnging more closely together the when she saw her error, was clothed in producer and consumer black. Citv Road chanel ia Wedev'a 3- -Mutual instruction. The liehtenine J I r- o x . . . . . Congress ha. taken the iniatory step to investigate the results of the traffic in liquor. Hardly a day has. passed since the session opened on which there have not been presented in the Senate one or more petitions urging government investi gation in the matter. These petitions have come from all part, of the country, and have been signed by clergymen, by state, national and local temperance or- ganisations, and by .thousand of other respectable citizens. A resolution sppoint- ing a committee to investigate Che subject was briefly discussed in the Senate on Thursday aud Friday of last week. Sena tor Schurx opposed it in a vigorous little speech, in whieh he advocated the German plan for suppressing: intemperance ; that is encouraging amusements in whieh whole families join, and discouraging those in which men alone take part. Senator Bayard combatted the subject on consti tutional grounds. Very little interest has thus far been manifested in the subject, aud the probability of its success is very a t . f deubttui. Where he doesn't than. k. If a person oa the sidewalk. Whether great or whether ssaaJl, Is" it anybody's business Where that person saeaas to edl ? Or. if you see a perron A be', calling- anywhere. !l monument. There arc buildings and chad- of bor 7 difmslng a better knowledge 1 u lK W table labor, he planned ; there the room of iw ' MM,D,!- "7 be 4. Docial culture. in which he died his ehurch, hi. tomb He desired at his funeral, he said, no pomp, but only the tears of those who loved him. Harper's Magazine. j. Lee s Modesty. Ben Hill's speech before the Georgia Branch I dustry. Mutual relief in sickness and adver sity. 6. Prevention of litigation. 7. Prevention of ernel'.y to aiminals. 8. The overthrow of the credit system. " Duildine no snd foalenii? home in- w . o "Pay as The fanner Burning Well in Iowa. Of a buining well in Boone County, Ia., the Boonsboro Republican says : "About three weeks ago a well was bored you Go." cannot succeed until he by reading learns to live on what he makes after it is made, and not on what he expects to 1 make before it is made. Many years ago, an economical, thrifty farmer, was asked by a large cotton planter, why it was that, though he was called a poor farmer and made much lets to the hand than many of his neighbors, he was prospering, while they, with all their broad acres and heavy crop?, were constantly falling into debt and becoming embarrassed. He re plied : "You begin at the wrong end, yon buy your supplies at the beginning of on the farm of Mr. John Long, a farmer, living six or eight miles south of Boone. the year ou credit ; I buy mine at the end The Tichborne Case. After the Tichborne trial people must overhaul and revise their ideas of the impossible. Nothing has ever been at tempted so absurd, so insane one may almost say as the scheme of the Austra lian batcher to make himself a baronet and millionaire by simply lying. He had scarcely -a single point to begin work npou, A young gentleman had been drowned at sea, who was heir to a title and a sreat estate. His friends, convinced down Ct.'i feet Without 1 fur rnsh " Thi who. i. true ecre nf at his hotel on the following day, when finding water, but it was noticed that the j the difference. Mr. McDuffie, in an agri- uiecuvcruu a uiuy u ins ,n 1 r: ;uQ ; ;.1Diar m iri mma i ... ... A,.. .I.;-,- - i it l . i y i iivviu in u vuiuiivu tivtiiu lu Luiui auui i so. urn v i:i ru liiii r t loi a : ' i J be awaked and discovered a lady in bed, who said she was his wife, and ex hibited a certihate to prove the fact. He did not know how they came to be mar ried, as he had only known her two hoars before the event took place, and up to the present time he has no been able to find out wheter his wife's surname was Bate- man, Beekman or Bachman. Poison of the Oleander. The oleander, so popalai as a house and yard nlnnt I ft pvrromplv nnlannona. A nltvai. of his death, gave his heritage to the next cian that be wag ca,led to attend of kin. j His mother almost, refusing to chj,d fcw dayg ag0 who d eaten some npHiiu . uuveniBuu iui iuo uiudiue kmc sort of light fluid, haying a peculiar gasc- J ago, in the hall of the General Assembly rous smell. Last Friday, at 10 o'clock at Columbia, introduced, in connection a. m. a lighted match was applied to the j with this subject, the language of tbat re orifice and the escaping gas immediately markable statesman, John Randolph, who ignited, making a brilliant, blush flame, in the midst of one of his brilliant rhap so varying in height from five to fifteen feet. ' dies iu the United State. Senate suddenly It has now been burning for several days paused and exclaimed with the utmost without losing anything in the size or ten tion of his squeaking voice, Mr. Presi brilliancy of the flame, and onr informant j deut ! I have discovered the philosopher's believes it supplies gas enough, if the Bame ' stoue 1 It consists iu these four plain The advertisement coming to the eyes of butcher in Australia, he resolved to small fragments of an oleander bush that had been clipped off. The symptoms were sudden and violent, and the result nearly fatal. Deathly prostration, sunken eves, great pallor, incessant vomiting, ex treme thirst and purging, were the predom inating symptoms. And old medical work quoted by the doctor, after describing the poisonous qualities of the plant, adds : "When ban died -in a close room when the stomach is A m rJrxr nonaoa a nnmknaaa anmin K weighing 360 pounds. d which 8howt that 80mething pof. French more readily .I. u.i - u. n tu. United States Dispensatory mention, the fact tbat it is used by the French peasan try as a poison, and that while the deadly principle exists both in the leaves aud bark it is more active in the latter. was no less was a little, The claimant personate the lost son. Ihere was not a chance in a million that he could succeed. There was no accidental resemblance of person, of manuer, or of character. Mr. Wasby tried to get a drink once at Wil lard's Hotel bv saving he was Charles Sumner. But this attempt ridiculous. The baronet delicate, "scrubby" man. was a roan-mountain The baronet spoke French more readily than English ; the claimant did not know one word of the language. Sir Roger belonged to a widespread family connec tion of which the claimant had never seen a fcinerle member. Yet he confiden tly sailed for England and for seven years fought, the desperate fight which was ended in bis conviction as a felon, with a varyhjsficress which roust always re main a wonder to succeeding ages. His trial has changed men's opinions as to the worth of human evidence. Dozeus of witnesses, among whom was Sir Roger's mother, testified that this was the right faj heir. Several members of Parliament espoused his cause. Popular 'subscrip tion s4 assisted him iu his scheme. He was defeated at last by two things by his own statement in regard to Mrs. Rad eliffe, which all England instinctively cried could not have been made by a man the evidence of could be utilized, to light quite a city. He also gives it as his opinona that the resources of these subteranean gas works are equal to almost any emergency, aud that the supply will not ruu out. Be this as it may, the burning well is quite a curiosity, and many people are visiting it daily. The flame was extinguished once, last Sunday, but shortly afterward relighted. It burns entirely above ground, and not in the well." monosylable. : ''Pay a. you ral Carolinian. March No. i". Ru IOWA ANTI-MONOPOLY PLATFORM. Charles Dickens. The following passage occurs iu Forster's Life of Dick ens, being a letter in which the novelist explains some of the reasons why he was soperated from his wife, Dickens writes : "Poor Catharine and 1 are not made for each other, and there is no help for it. It is not only that she makes me uneasy aud unhappy, but that I make her so too and much more so. She is exactly what you know, iu the way of being amia ble and complying, but we are strangely ill-associated for the bond there is between ii. J 1 .1 tit t us. uou kuows sue woum nave been a thousand times happier if she had married another kind of man. and tbat her avoi- born.a gentleman, and by T 11 1. !J I 1 1 1 .oru wene w wuu e.u uC u - dauce 0f lhi de8tinv wmld LaVe beeu at oir isogerin ins ooyuoou. awowuiwaw leaBt d for n8 both lam two comparatively unimportan .oemeu often cut to the beart fc thiukiug what a from the case and it .. not irapos.ihle XI h for ? T vnai u.e craziest crime g,..t .i uu feU jn her .f j wew iick Qr du. property ever attempted might have .Med to-inormw I know how aorrv .he ceeded, by form of law, in the most aris tocratic country of earth. N. Y. Tribune. A Geohoia Fuatricidk. A horrible tragedy occuried in the lower part of Thomas c ountjJba the J'Jth. Two Brothers, John sou CTunn and Van Qunn, returned from Quitsatv under the influence of liquor. Van raised row with his father and frightened selves to live for. all the women off the place. Johnson, who was at a neighbor's went home and remon strated with Van, wherenpou the latter at tacked him. Johnson, at first, endeavored to get his gun to proteet himself, but was prevented by his father. He then drew his knife "and stabbed Van in thirteen places. The hue died oa the 21st. would he, and how deeply greived myself, to think how we had lost each other. But exactly the same incompatibility would arise the moment I was well again and nothing on earth could make her un- 1 j .. L , . -n aersiana me or suit us to eaen otuer. tier temperament will not go with mine. It matters not much when we had only our but reason, have been growing up which make it all but hopeless tbat we shall even try to struggle on. William Wilson, the man who killed Andrew Strong, one of the Robeson count ty outlaws, died in Fayettecville on Wed ncsuay. THE PARTY'S i Des Moines, Feb. 26. The Anti-Monopoly State Convention met here yesterday. Sixty-four counties where represented by 414 delegate.. The Hon.ThoP. Mitchell, of Polk county, was chosen permanent President. The first resolution declares that the primary object of a free republican gov ernment is the proper protection ot per sons and property, and that simple laws, ailhfnlly administered, will best secure that end. The second declars iu favor of political reform, and to that end demands lonesty, economy, and purity m omcial ife. The third repudiates the doctrine that "to the victor belongs the spoils, ' aud favors a true system of civil service reform, making honesty and capacity the Only valid claims for public employment. 1 he fourth resolution opposes a protective tariff, and demands free iron, steel, salt, lumber, and woolen fabrics, and a tariff, for revenue only. The fifth declares all corporations subject to legislative control, t ederal or fetate, according to the source of the charters of the corporations, and that railroads should pay a full and just .hare of the taxes, and are entitled to only a just and reasonable interest on the money invested. The sixth favors a free banking system, under uational laws. The seventh opposes further land grants to railroads, and declares that the public domain should be reserved for actual set tiers, and invite, all men of whatever call ing, business, trade, or vocation, regard less of political views, to join them in re moving the evils that affect the country. A Sunbeam. The greatest of physh cal paradoxes is the saubeam. It is the most potent and versatile force we have, and yet it behaves itself like the gentlest and most accommodating. Nothing can fall more softly or more silently upon the earth than the rays of our greatest lumi nary not even the featherly flakes of snow which thread their way through the air as if they were too filmy to yield to the demauds of gravity like grosser things Abe most delicate strip of gold leaf, ex posed as a target to the auu. .bafts,. i. not stirred to the extent of a hair, though an infants faintest breath would set it in tremulous motion. The tenderest of hu man organs, the apple of the eye, though pierced and buffeted each day by thou sands of sunbeams, suffer no pain by the process, bat rejoices in their sweetness, and blesses the useful light. Yet a few of these rays insinuating themselves into of the Southern Historical Society. There were many peculanties in the !-! 3 1 . M T ... naous anu cnaracter oi Aiee, wbicb arc but little known and which may be studied with profit. He studiously avoided giv iug opinions upon subjects which it had not been bis calling or training to investi gate ; and sometimes I thought he carried tins great virtue too far. Neither the President, nor Congress, nor friends could get his view, upon any public question not strictly military, and no man had as much quiet, unobtrusive contempt for what he called "military statesmen and political general.." Meeting bim one day in the streets of Richmond, as I was going out, and he going in the executive office, I said to him, "General, I wish you would give us your opinion as to the propriety of changing the .eat of government, and gj.ng further South.' "That is a political question, Mr. Hill, 1 - w ana you politicians must determine it. 1 shall endeavor to lake care of the army you mu.t make the law. and controly the government." "Ah, General," I .aid, "but you will have to change that rule, and express political opiuion. ; for, if wc establish sur independence, the people will make you a w Mr. Davis' successor.'' "Never, sir," he replied with a firm liznky that be longed only to Lee. That, I will never permit. Whatever talents I may possess, (and are but liini ted), are military. I think and civil talents are distinet ent, and full duty in either sphere, is about as much as one man can qualify himself to perform. I shall not do the people the injustice to accept high civil office with whose questions it has not been my busi nrs8 to become familiar. "Well, hut General," I insisted, "his tory does not sustain your view. Casaar, and Frederick of Prussia, and Bonaparte, were all great statesmen, as well as great general." "And all great tyrants, he promptly rejoined. "I speak of the proper rule in republics, whore, I think, we should have neither military statesmen, nor political general?." "But Washington was both, and yet not a tyrant, I repeated. And with a beautiful smile he ssid "Washington was an exception to all rule, and there was none like bun.' I could find no word, to answer further, but instantly I in thought said : Surely Washington is no longer the exception, is 10. Mut lal protection to husband against sharpers aud monopolist.. The eobatanee of onr query. oimpiy siatee would he th la it anybody $ m What an thrr'$ hmnneu itf U it is. or if it tsnt. We woe Id really like to ki r or we are certain, if it UarY There are some who make it so. Lying Abed in the Morning. i Faixch Mas astd Womas Man. sunk below hi. natural level, hates and affects to despise the height where he has walked. Woman, fallen from her fair estate, look, ever back to it with longing and regretful eyes. He proclaims himself not woise than his fellows; endeavors to pill those above down to his level. She admit, her fault; deplores it; is glad there are women so much better and more fortunate than she; stm to have hope for the future, and listens with bounding bhod to every voice thai brings back to her th. .poll ess past. Never doe. she quite renounce morality; humanity elaiins her to the last. Miserable, down trodden, wholly forsaken, she look, up from the dross and mire, and hears the lark of her love still singing at the gates of Heaven. sing of Che joy. of Death of Mrs. Hampton. Columbia Phoenix of Tuesday The sad intelligence of the death of Mrs. General Wade Hampton reached this city yesterday. It occurred at Char lottesville. Va., last Saturday. Mrs. Hampton had been an invalid for some years. She was the daughter and only child of the late Hon. Geo. McDuffie and was educated in part at the celebra ted school of Dr. Marks, at Barhamville, near Columbia. She leaves several chil- A ran an A manv frnrA mtA r.l.ti.M ... I U 1 v 1 1 niiu muii I ii ii.iiuo iiiiu I v I i t I . i Q . f Iia nil htnrv I .... . . . " Ait lbesympatme.otoorwbolecommunityare ' " "uru,r etended to General Ham pi in this severe affliction I love to rove hi the shady grove. When geotle sepbyrs are doatiag; m. mi. iu mi ai we social Where bock wheat eak 1 love to gaae oo tbe eolden NT. ... .. " " . w nera &o( tbe West ia adorning ; But this I love far better than ail ' To lie abed ia the morning. That poets ahoald Spring I. not in tne least ewrprlsiag ; But 1 cannot conceive Low a mi weave A sonnet to early rising. Though Franklin of old was i told. Y i . a e tu K" wun mm in scorning The blissful scenes in the land ,? While lying abed in the ssoraing. Let those who choose retire to an Then the ducks and chickens ing. And rub their eye. when forced to rise At Chanticleer's dismal crowing ; They lose the sight of the gorgeous night And spend their days io yawning l ui midnight damp I'll bora the Lamp And lie abed iu the morning. the ipton and family 5ouih States exists. take for. one like him, here. if not even greater, One of the daily papers wants some attention paid to scientific rece arch in re spect to the ancient remain, in America. Who were the people who boil i the mounds of the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys! What nation worked the abandoned cop per mine of Lake Superior? Who were the first people, the remnant, of whose civilisation exists in Mexico and America! Even iu the Southern much cf archaeological iutercst Why should not the Government these matters nearer home in hand, in or- d r to a rive, if possible, at a solution of them, instead of affording aid to Polaris expeditions, which lose many valuable lives? Whf should Palestine Exploration Societies belormed, while we neglect our e " a a. J . . own lanar am ot wuicn are eonunarums too hard for us to solve. One thing, nevertheless, may be ssid wa are un doubtedly neglecting the study of the primitive civilization of the land in which we live to follow many a wild goose chase. Baltimore. Gazette Which shall make the fire in morning ? Positive inability to tie this momentous ouestion has the honeymoon of a fresh couple is Northampton. Mass., to wane pre maturely. She has returned to the parental fold. He has taken s tre mendous dose of laudanum, but hay ing recovered he now knows perfectly well which must make the fire in the morning, if it is to be kindled at slL A certain Elder Gordon in Ken tucky states in the newspapers that he has labored as' a minister of the Gospel tor thirteen years has traveled over several mountain counties, has baptised over 1,000 persons, and has, dnri all this period of hard service. only $10 "given me by Gressy Creek Church." . a r .as a mass ot iron, like tbe rntaunia tubular bridge, will compel the closely knit parti cles to separate, and will move the whole enormous fabric with as mnch ease as a giant would a straw. The play of these beams upon our sheets of water lifts up layer after layer into the atmosphere, and drops them again in snows upon the hills oi iu fattening showers upon the plants. Let but the air drink iu a little more sun shine at oue lime tb in another, aud it desolates a whole region in its lunatic wrath. The marvel is that s power which is capable of assuming such a diversity of forms, and of producing such stupend ous results, should come to us in so gentle, so peaceful, and so unpretending a manner. British Quarterly Jlevieic, Jones was thrown into a state of won der by the sign 'ladies' felt slippers," which he discovered when passing a shoe- store. He can't understand it ; he says children felt slippers in his day often enough, but ladies generally wore them exc.-pt when removed for cause. A Simple Remedy. Dr. Liverpool, state, that he has for the past twenty year., employed compressed sponge very successfully in the treatment of ingrowing nails. His method i. to render the sponge compact by wetting, and then tying it tightly until it is thor oughly dry. A bit of sponge, in size not less than a grain of rice, is placed under the nail, and secured by strips of adhesive plaster. In this way the point i. kept up from the toe until the surrounding soft parts are restored to their normal condi tion by appropriate mean.. Of course there is no pain in this remedy, and this requires only ordiuary ekill. Jews With Black Skixs. Ia the city Cotochin (Hindostau) and it. neigh borhood live nearly two thousand colored Jews. 1 hey are not quite so darfc skin tied as the Ethiopesn negroes. They are Israelites in the full sense of the word. a id faithfully worship the God of their a ancestors. According to their own state meiit their origin is as follows : 1 he con quest of a portion of the East Indies by Europeans opened to the commercial world the road to unlimited wealth, and the nrosoect of ecttiog rich attracted ad- as ' venturers from ill part, of tbe world Among these were many yonng Isaelite. from Bagdad, Uassora and semen, who came to seek their fortune. After establish ing themselves they purchased female .laves from the natives, a number of whom married their master, alter they were converted, and from these intermarriages the present population of Cotochin is de a s scended. But on account of their, cc . . a w t tbev are under a ban : neither tne i.rae Ilite. of Bagdad nor the white Jew. of their own locality will intermarry or otherwise associate witn tuem. Says the North Carolina Presbyterian : Obituaries. A pastor, iu sending sn obituary, write. : "I feel as if I ought to apologize to edit- t . a. or. wnen 1 send incm ooituary notices. But yon knew that, when they are nearly all alike, yet each family wants them." So apology is ncaded. Inform each family tbat. in all the widely circulated - . . ... . . . J m papers, there is a regular fixed charge for show, itself thai it be. onlj 3,000, tor tSe PltoFlTABLS PlIILASTBBOrr. 1 proprietor of the New York Herald, hav ing contributed a handsome sum fee the establishment of a soup bowse for tbe relief of tbe poor, has been aaasiled by the asasaV g rs of some of the cbaii table iustitStkfSat of New York city, upon tbe ground public soup bouses demoralize and erize the poor. Tbs Herald, boi retort, with concerning these charitable showing that the actual expenditure tbe Fire Point. House of Industry oa the poor for the year ending March 187t, was 814,000, and the cost of expending this .urn 2G,000 ; that the ChiUrssfs Aid Society paid in the last year t75 000 for salaries and other ex possess ; thai it receives from the city and county 974V 000 for educating 9,000 children, and publishing obituaries, and tbat it is uec esssry to reimburse the editor for the type, paper and labor it takes to print the obit- ..a. . nary ; and pastor s labor in writing ttiem ill be greatly dimishcd. It is not a matter of apologies, but of dollars and cent.. The editors are put to an equal expense for every obituary they publish. No family, tbat n fleets on .the subject, would be more willing to receive the ser vices of the printer gratuitously, tbau of the stonecutter, who erects a similar, but 1-1 . l- - A. aacati m or wmcn u is appealing to poaj lie charily, and that this Society, which charges newsboy. 6 cents for a sights lodging, ha. S1G4.000 invested ia the shares of avWestera railroad. The paid philanthropists of New York evidently .tumbled into a hornets' Mercurial Poisoxiko. It is that mercurial poisoning may be esrtirely obviated amongst the workmen ssaslsyij in mirror manufacture, Ac, Acs., deceased. Both are entitled to pay Christian Observer. Admiral oemurs. southern aew. papers are publishing, with emphatic ex pressions of nleasure. an tiivition from different monument to the memory of tbe ! simple proce. of impregnating overnight nt. the air of the rooms mib ammonia, lhe I good eff-cts of this process are as marked that men afflicted with mercurial palsy find their symptom, less acute aud the at tacks less frequent by cootiuuing to work in the workshops thus protected. The abscence of the Princess .Louise aud the Marquis of Lome from tbe recent marriage ceremonies at St. , Petersburg is this explained : The the Grand Array of tbe Republic at Rome, priJioefm wf,ld not expose her husband ' . 1 N. Y., to Admiral Raphael Setnmes, ask- raortificttion, as etiquette forbade "J the 6th him a seat at the Emperor's tabic, and therefore s!ie remainel awav. A ing him to come tnere aim neiiver a lect ure on "the cruiuc ot the Alabama, or of interest," and adding that "tbe people previous experience at Berlin where of Central New York would extend to you ' the Marques was excluded from a State a cordial welcome." They hail it as a banquet because be is not of royal sign that the old animosities are dying blood, was her motive to a uoble and out. , wifely courtesy. Says the Win.tor SeniM of lust : Phillip Bdliter, Esq., died in Old Teem ... . I . L. 1I 1 LL. on l aesoay iae wur. mmm mm father were both bom on the 1st of Feb ruary, both died on the $Bth of February, both sged -3 1 years snd 2S days st the time of their death, both died of the aasse disease, and both sick the same length mi time." H
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 12, 1874, edition 1
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