I I aaaWftft,''t il.iiMiiftftftftftftift- - -t-rm'ii - LZ X TEe Carolina Watchman 4 .? I i i I j VOL. V. THIRD SERIES. SAlilSJBUKl . U., MAKCH 19, 1874. naaw . , NO. 26.WHOLE NO. lDJJJ PUBLISHED j. J. BRUNER, Proprietor and Editor. J. J. STEWART, Associate Editor. From the Indianapolis Journal. i i A Touching Case. 411 fft. J 1 address. .. .. BATES OF SVBCBIPTIOW WEEKLY WATCHMAN. One payable in advance jis Months, Tri-wcekly Watrlimaii. n-r Year In advance $5.00 ill Mom 'is " Otis Month m ADVFRTI! .U RATES : insertion $100 150. ....$2.50 a a 1 .50 10.0 3.00 50 Ova Svji" auk (1 inch) One ; M tWO for a greater number of inftftrtiona, derate. Special notices v 1 SaTregular advertisement. Heading notiee 15 eenta per line for each and every insertion. During the last week the Journal has announced the death at the Hotel Bates, of Thomas. L. Salisbury and Eliza E. Salisbury, bis wife, .the former having died on Monday the 16th, and the latter on Saturday eyening the 21st. Some of the circumstances attending the death of these two amiable and excellent persons were not only very touching bat rather extraordinary. They formerly resided in St Louis, and while there were called upon to mourn the lost of two fine chil dren, their sole family, who were lost to- - - w our Living and our Dead. Roanoke Island. We close the account of the great dis aster which befel the Confederates on the 8th of February, 1862, in the fall of Roanoke Island. Future historians will record this event as one of the mot im portant which had occurred in the pi ogress of the war np to that date. We still hope that more light will yet be thrown upon this event. Justice to Col. Shaw, who gave his life for the cause, and to the brave men he commanded, demands that against his life. Other m urders of simi lar character occuring about this lime, however, induced him to refuse pardon. and it thought his decision was influ enced by the considerations that in the event of their condemnation the pronertv of the prisoners wonld come iuto the pos session of the church. They were, there fore, publicly executed on the piazza of Oirl The Happiness of Two Tmy wrw exhausted x tunnies -Destroyed. has .inaugurated a fatal rxdicv in it. treatment of the Indianspart peace and p.. war oy coaling oat moral V 'e ODE TO THE O&AVOIt nan man t .. ..v. uiuii, iidu imi aw; v w u i i in w j -- the bridge of St. Angelo, September 9th, Edwards, a young girl of only sixteen O' n last Sunday morning the nsnallv Soiet ueighb rhood of Spring Hope, in lash couutv. was dinturhed k ik --- line renort that Griffin HnlLt--.-. . w i j- in., ii , m mm away 1599. mea in to witness the All the windows, roofs and balco- summers, daughter of Mr. W. F Fr1.i. th. vioinito filL-fl aaUL. -. 1 af kta aalS-Jl- : ., 'vuiw "un- in vi Willi UCUUIC I i Vi uio wuc some of the survivors, who participated In the fight, should give more in detail interest felt for the heroine. The portrait by Guido is scene, so great was the have 1 niece. Alas, tbe renort proved too true, and unon er.nuirv it beautiful and young I found that the faithless husband and profligate bad shamelessly abandoned his ffa aa .1.:! J ft 3Jft 1 . . mm tunureii nna enucea witn inm a of fnnd losses sustained pyas, ana the injary ,nd dori her confineinent U, j, happiness and flicted upon the Federals. Where are the Her atnrv h. fnmi.hl fnod J - . hrin, Xm jaj SSCSSL w fherel WmMV Md bM 0ftc gl Thn onc diabolical actj She 31 at, and of the 17th who were there I ,a au. u t n .u i : . , .1 f - wv- gEuciBuv i - v-onvj w iuc ua pui urijB i vwo moo supposed to have been innocent of con- cent families, who are new bowed dowu nection with the crime, and for every one I wb grief aad broken hearts. The, wife recalling tms passage t history, tbe pie wno baa given this wretch all the love tare has a strange fascination. and devotion of a tree woman, and fim WKrtf )ai iu- i t ? i i I , hAf a n cm Irvnn tv vxirk 11 I Mtn T- it i ho I . - . a - ' t a. ax . - rether while skating near St. Louis. They ,T "r rr.ZTT ' O ".P"1 J Iore xeAion. Deantitei girl, who was tbe idol were . yoang Udy aged eighteen, and a T7 nnftn . KCTT Whare at4 the d"n"g, lad of fifteen. They were drowned on the 31st of February, 1864, precisely ten .years before the day of Mrs. Saliabury'a death. i UIB UUUU1C UllllCHUll alUJUOb UlUaC their hearts, and henceforce they lived for each other alone, concealing their great grief as those only uudeistoned who have beep similarly bereaved. Naturally con genial and devoted to each other, their lives grew more closely together by rea son! of the hard providence which at one dispensation had removed both their dar lings from their sight without a word of parting or warning. Two weeks ago when Mr. Salisbury was taken sick, his wife watched at his bedside with sleep less affection. Day and night she minis tered to his wants .till it was feared her THE FAVORITE HOME REMEDY. own frame, never very strong, wonld wholly give away. About twenty-four hoars before his death, finding him able tn Anvrta a littln alio nulril liim if K. Tbw unrivalled Medicine iHwarranted ISOtto k hej H(J 8miling call. nun. a Mngic ..aruc e m J ing call her by name To her inquiry if uuurmu. mmeral HuUstance but is Jf fe 9 PURtLT tut I ADLt. goij "Thomas, voa want to co and see the eantiin'mg tlioae Southern Roots and Herbs, which on all-wine Providence haB placed in countries where Liver Diseases moat prevail. It WU1 cure all Diseases caused by Derangement of the Javer aod Dowls. Mastaa.' Liver Regulator or Medlcuf. Ii eminently a Family Medicine ; and by being tpt ready for immediate wort will save many n hour of Mufl'erina and many a dollar in time aad doctors' bills. After over Forty Years' trial it is still receiv iag the most unqualified testimonials to its vir tut from persons of tbe highest character and rbponsibUity. Kminent physicians commend it aa the most . EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC Tor Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Armed with this A NT I DOT K, all climates and Will they permit the meagre accounts we have to go to posterity as the whole troth concerning this great disaster ? a" i w ft r "w a tm KjOU w.j. ixreen ; wno commandea a battalion, gave in a previous number of Our Living and Our Dead, an inter esting account of the part borne by his command why cannot other officers do the same 1 If Col. Shaw ever made an official report we have thus far been ana ble to find it. His brother officers, his friends, owe it to the memory of that gal lant man to furnish as with the material ne cessary to vindicate his action in the affair. The testimony given before the Congres sional Committee, appointed to investigate the causes which led to the fall of the Island, and the conduct of our troops, was a complete vindication, and led to the Report which we publish iu full ; bnt that testimony is not within onr reach. Many oi the officers who appeared before that committee still live, and why they hesitate to publish their statements now passes our comprehension. It is due to the liv- -ana i - ing, ana in a still greater degree to trie dead, that they should be heard. The future fame of tbe brave Virginians who fell there will be properly and revrcntly cared for by those who survived them, their prowess and gallant conduct will be fitly commemorated, and why should North Carolinians be less careful of the fame of their brethren, the brave sons of the same noble mother! Beatrice Cenci. con Prepare the Land Well and Plant More Corn. whh -n f 4roU!ctj ort, bUc well With R hflnnv hnmo enHHonlv t,.,4 I r n TrJ wftftftftaa j viiiti t.u into misery and desperation, is indeed an object ot sympathy in this hoar of trial. Tbe thoughtless girl, snatched from her The most important jmnt in the colli- on(l parents by tbe allurements of a bad vation of this crop is the preparation of 1 mafl leaving her mother prostrated with tbe land by deep and thorough plowing, disappointment ami agony at the ruin Corn roots run deep enongh to avail them- and disgrace oHier child, what a pity selves of the benefits of all the soil the fr her in her wild, sad and gloomy plow can break. The earing season of atr- corn is very often a period of frequent This man, Ilolloman, married about drouths, and deep and thorough prepara- 8'1X years ago the daughter of Abraham tiou of tbe land is the best remedy for Lamm, of Nash county. He was a Con- droughts. If the sub soil plow is used to federate soldier from this county, aad HIIT OtU Midi :i ani,i,. I n rh. m - & I I . ... uiwi wmae, ana certain death to the most peaeefal, thu adding to the dim. cuHiea and expense of a proper settlement oi una serious question. To divert public attention from tbe ex- "L? Pron'gcy ud extravaganraof omcuua, it pretends the estab- nsnmeni ot a rule of civil service reform. which it applies altogether tea lew clerks V ashmgton, where there are uo votes to be bad, hat ignores elsewhere, where party service as a reward for office is re quired. ' T - aa am it nas dittused erroneous ideaa of the nature of oar government to the voudifnl and uninformed, and taught by example a general looseness of public and nrinte morality, which tends to subvert the per- uiauji-ucy oi onr institutions, and loosens tbe foundation stones of social order and T MUSK W. t Ye stalwart, stardy sons of tott. Providers for the nalian j Te hardy Ullera of the aoat 7 I rue n..bles of creation. Will re be rub-4 hw .M.4Ua Aad triaiapbad o'er by SfiiWIiiT Enroll jour names with frcod'owTs lijj Swell up the Uat mt flrsiipeWT Iw Aijeallfththe, we : earn gaiuut farmer f iiKcarn uie tripplterare. laird oo the waniur'a asaaer L mT am a 9 ' uraap artaly now tbe sword 4 we're oae used to toila mmd aV Moooewliea will neata SWha Before tbe valiant Grmagftca. 9 ft A. STSMtS ej taWWsaliiv The Number Seven in the Bible. The Story of a Wett-Known Face. changes of water and food may be faced without fear. As a Remedy in MALARIOUS FE VKR8, BOWEL, COMPLAINTS, RESTLE XEDSi JAUNDICE, NEAUSEA. IIAS NO It Is the cbaapest. rarest and Best Family Medietas ia the Wor d ! Manufactured only by J. H ZEILIN cti CO , Macon, Oa., and Philadelphia. Price, $1.00. Sold by all Druggists, Correapondent of the New York Sun. The History of the Capture of Campbell and Tracy in Key Key West, Fla., March 2. On the 18th of January last two men calling themselves Sandy Campbell and Billy Tracy arrived here from New York and pretended to be looking for work as la borers. They took board in a respectable boarding house and sauntered around town for two or three days bat got no work to sait them. Ou the fifth day after their arrival they had a fight with some of the other boarders and were arrested and committed on charge of assault with intent to kill. The next day after their commitment tbey hired a boy to get their baggage away from their boarding boose and bid it. The boy stole the bag gage and secreted it, bat was arrested, and children, do you not 1 He answered "Yes." Then she said, 'Thomas, I will follow you soon ; do yon wait for me; I will come very soon." From -that moment she evinced no more anxiety about her husband. She seemed io regard his death as certain, and her own at soon to follow. Yielding to the advice of friends, she re tired and slept till just before her husband's death, wheu she rose and bade him good bye. Immediately after his death she took to her bed and began to sink rapidly. No physical derangement was apparent, bnt it was a case of broken heart, or insup portable sprrow. The doctor did what he could, but it was a case that wholly baffled his art. Her malady was a kind that no human remedy could reach. The gentle In almost every paint shop is to be seen lady was entirely resigned to her situation, the sad face of the unfortunate lady whose aitd seemed to contemplate her approach story is briefly told in the subjoined sketch, ing death with entire composure. During and only recently Messrs. Wdodhoose & the week she. steadly sank until it was Parham had exposed in one of the win apparent that her e .d was near. On dows of their establishment a very strik Saturday evening, a short time before her ing and artistic picture representing the death her friends were startled to see her incident referred to of Guido painting the face illuminated by a bright smile. It portrait of the unhappy Beatrice just be beamed with light that never shone on fore her execution. Shelley has embalm- J l.U : I I 1 I 111 i a . . . aee. or ianu, ana ioiu oi uHspeattnoie joy. ea tier memory, ana misiortnnes, too, in Her eyes gazed into distance and her hands moved as if to welcome some one. A solemn stillness fell upon the bystand ers, and the thought struck all that was greeting her children. From that moment the lady neither spoke nor moved, bat sank away and passed from mortal life with the same eloquent smile upon her face. She kept her engagement with the husband, and followed soon after him to complete the family circle in the land of the hereafter. On the seventh day God ended his work. On the seventh month Noah's ark touch, ed the ground. In seven days a dove was sent. Abraham pleaded seven times for Sod om. Jacob mourned seven days for Joseph. Jacob served seven years for Rachel. And yet seven years more. Jacob was pursued ia a seven day's increase the denth of the Dreoaration. the after the war. settled iu the neighborhood journey by Laban. roots and plants will run far down ia f Spring Hope, where his conduct here- A plenty of seven years and a famine search of food and moisture. tofore has been that of an upright man. f seven years were foretold in Pharaoh's The time of plowing should be deter- "e i about 25 years of age, dark com- dream by seven fat and seven lean beasts mined by tha condition of tho land, and plexion and went off with his baggy, and seven ears of fall aad seven ears of no hind should be nlnwod. psnprinll v in driving a sorrel nair that oaees in harness, blasted corn. the spring-time, when too wet. All lands Uer parents would gladly receive any in- with an aLuudancc of vegetable matter telhgence at Stanhope, that will enlighten growing upon them, should be plowed in them as to the whereabouts or fate of the fall or early winter, so as to allow the their ruined daughter, vegetable matter, to fully decay, that it Language is inadequate for the denun mav become available aa food for nlants. ciation of this wicked and cruel act and Bottom lands and all loose soils, already for the exposure of the villian. who would to the people. containing much vegetable matter, need deliberately perpetrate such a foal deed. In the destruction of Jericho, not be plowed uutil near the time for plan- A tbe sad effects of such a crime could persons core seven trumpet even ... ... I I ft . a ftft 1 oe connnea to tbe guilty, it would nat be so bad, bat lost to all sense of shame, they are not the heaviest sufferers, bat leave behind them in their wicked flight, a sting that pierces deeply tbe hearts innocent. WU$oh N. C, Ad- Why ehoukl we drudge upon our tarmT Have we not earned a uanaioITT Be what ears we for vain displays f We're nature's free rangers ? Ml we'll ot own tbe tyravu'r We re freedom -loving G Then raw, ye toilers' iu tho We are net servile vassals ! With truth engraven oo our ahieUa! We'll storm tbe tyrant's eaaOet"w We ll east tbe fuea of Justkea Disperse the ikmmj Then raise oae Unar, Ia honor of the Grangers Then down with railraada and Control1 ed by modern KstBOOl A lid down with Korean -tike Advance, ye gallant heroes? We're Emperors of Field atod Our thrones are naught hot But justly wield a aaiarhtv aa Tho Bretherhood of Grasxx Uttip a -4. B 4sMt to grass come and his immortal verse. As very few who look upon this sad, sweet face know the facts connected with the tragic history, of tbe subject of the famous picture, this brief sketch cannot fail to be read with interest by the general pnblic: In the picture gallery of the Barberini palace, at Rome, hangs a portrait of a yoang Roman girl, paintctTby Guido. It is a beautiful but melancholy face, whose "south look of sweet, sorrowful eyes" and "touch of prison paleness," reproduced in chromo, are so frequently seen in parlor and shop-windows. For of all the famous a 11 11 ting this will enable tbe corn 1 1 . 1 up ana get aueaa ot tbe weeds. The distance apart corn should be plan ted varies with the fertility and physical properties of the soil. A rich soil can of course sustain a greater number of stalks than a poor one ; but of the two soils equally fertile, one of stiff clay and the other of dark loam, the latter will bear closer planting than the former, because it absorbs more freely the light and heat of tbe snn. Young farmers are more apt to err in haying their corn too thick than too thin upon the land. This crop de mands more than simply au abundance of food, it requires a full of the vance. From the Wilmington Star. Wood's Speech. That veteran Democrat, Fernando Wood, of New York, made a speech in the House of Representatives last Satur- more startling in its array of fi On tbe seventh day of the seventh month the children of Israel fasted seven days and remained seven days in their tents. Every seven days the land rested. Every seventh year the law was read .1 . 1 T seven day. V . I .1 , ., 1 ., kju i ne seven in aay iney surrounuea lite nails seven times, and at the end of the seventh round the walls fell. Solcnon was seven years building the Temple and fasted seven days at its dedication. In the tabernacle were seven lamps. The golden candlestick had seven brauches. Naaman washed seven times in the Ri ver Jordan. Job's friend sat with him seven daya and seven nights and offered seven bul locks and seven rams for an atonement. Our Saviour spoke seven time from the cross, on which he hung seven hours, FLOWER OF LIES BLEEDING. by ni n aui HKanr aPSJ Wee ife-Sal I met a little maid one day. AH in the bright way weather ; She danced, and brushed the dew away . .af A lightly aa a leather. She had a ballad in her baud That she had just been trading. But waa too young to uu.lertand : That ditty of a distant land. Tbe flower of lore he bleeding." She tripped a eroas the meadow To where a brook was flowing. Across the brook lue wind dad Wberever Sower were growittY Like some tewiklered child she Whom fame were misleading : Whose botterflj." 1 said -are yo ? 'Ami what sweet thing U you pa 'The flower of love lies bleeding! and heat, with a free circulation of air. 1 i lie corn plant requires manures con taining potash 27 per cent., phosphoric acid.. 47 per cent., and some manure con taining ammonia to make the plant start off and grow rapidly. Cotton seed con tain all these ingredients and is one of the very best manures for corn. If before applying oar cotton seed to the corn as day more startling in its array ot figures supply of light t',Rn an expose of the financial policy of and after his resurrection appeared seven r - . O I Ln A la.SnalaatliMl vat mafia Inarlna I a the Administration yet made. Following in the wake of Mr. Dawes, of the Admin istration party, and Mr. Beck, of his own nartv. Mr. Wood strikes some sledge hammer blows that must tell fearfully npon the Republican party in the coming elections. We ask the Republicans of North Caro lina who read and have any opinion of tbeir own to ponder this speech well. Do times. V - ft Wft ft ft aft in tbe lievclation we read ot seven churches, seven candlesticks, seven stars, seven trumpets; seven plagues, seven thunders, seven vials, seven angles, and a seven headed monster. Independ ent. Mr. Leo Wheat's Concert. The concert for the benefit of tbe Graee-stieet o mc corn u ft I , - i . -a j i : O -1 1. I. at 1 lla- 11 i in. nni rrnfi il mereiv urcausK il wu uri ver i inuTKiwu vuhivii nut intent u m. iwv- manure we would wet tnem ana roll tbem , . , v . . . ,. T tt-i i i.T. tin , j ea oy a l'emocrai ana 11 is wen to see -r x . n uei, owipicu j un s"u;- and the "Mendelssohn Sex- a in every respect a gran a snc- "I've found the wild roe in the hedge, I've found the tiger-lily. Tbe blue flag by the water's edge, The dancing dnodillv. Kins-cup and pansiaa, every Except the one I'm needing ; Perhaps it crow in some dark And opens at a late hoar, This flower of love lies bleeding . ho a paintings in Rome, none is better k..own or more copied than this. It derives pe culiar interest from the history of her whose features it is said to represent. Francesco Cenci, the head of one of the oldest and wealthiest families of Rome, ' was a man ot violent temper, and. in bis Ripening foe Death. No one, (says Von Humboldt) can fear death less than I do, neither am I much attached to life, but I have never known the feeling of an anxious longing for death ; and although it be a nobler one than that of an absolute weariness of existence, it is nevertheless i t r t . r a DiamaDie. J,tre musi nrsi, ior as long a household, iutolerably crnel. Two of his period as Trovideuce wills it, be enioved 8on8 were assassinated at his instigation. in iflhe police found an outfit for burglars, or suffered in one word, gone through, At length, unable longer to endure his a large sectional jimmy about five feet nd that with a full submission, without crueIties and tyranny, bis family ap- leng being one of the- instruments. The niarmuring, lamenting or repining. There pealed to the Pope, Clement the VIII, police thought the men had come down s one important law of nature, which we for protection. The petition was miscar- a ft aal - a t L aa A m 1ft a! M 1 si Wft A T AM 1 A A M I wV t aT Wftft AA nlftAS 1 ft a , n acre to rob some oi toe pay-masiera saiea; 6 v. , a i-nea, ana remained, ot course, unanswer- at a . . ft a M ft - a I a. I ft ftft. I aa .a a I 1 hat about this time tbe attention ot tbe oi npeping ior aeaio. xseaiu is not a officers was attactcd by the trial of tbe break in existence, it is but an intermediate masked robbers iu your State, and learn- circumstance, a transition from one form ing that one or two of thein had escaped, of our final existence to another. The the police thonght these fellows, Camp moment maturity for death cannot be de bell and Tracy, might be the two. cided by any human wisdom or inward Chief of Police Marshall therefore tele- I ieenng ; ana to attempt to ao so wouia oe received a rothing better than the vain rashness ot human pride. That decision can only be made by him who can at once look back . ii" I is. a through our wnole course : and Dotn rea- in ashes, it would supply the potash. whilejn the fermentation and decay the seed would yield up the phosphoric acid and ammonia, giving all the ingredients necessary for the rapid growth and quick both sides, but because it has the ring of the truth in it. These figures speak with hard metallic voices in condemnation of the policy of the Gra.it Administration, tctte Choir" tette," was The whole body of the chnrch was cess. I wouldn't look for it." I For vow can do without it : There's no such flower." She head; uRnt f tiara Mail itll tt ft a U ft m i - m m mm ww I talked to her of bee and bird. But she was all unheeding : Her tender heart was strangely stirred, She barpped oa that awkevppy watna. "The flow er ! love he bleeding " sb.k her which is the policy of the Republican ly the beauty, nartv of todav. Can Reoublicans who of Richmond i a claim to.be intelligent and to have wills of their own read the admissions of such Republican leaders as Mr. Dawes, made i i : r j : : mold composted in the following manner, " m P,acc , ougre... ftuui.,o- . will mk -n Pidlonc faPfil!-r far damaging to thc party that every ingeoui- filled with an audience representing large- "Mv ehih!." I sight. afli iropfad aionr. maturity of the crop. Prepare the land thoroughly, manure liberally, cultivate well, and don't be satisfiied with less thau 30 bushels to the acre. Ashes, plaster, cotton seed, and woods ed. will make an excellent fertiliser for1 corn. 4 bushels of ashes. 1 bushel of land plaster. 20 bush els of cotton seed . 10 bushels of woods moid. A pint of the above mixture to a hill of corn would have a wonderful effect. ty is resorted to ia vain to avoid the force of their sweeping condemnation, without feeling that there is something rotten somewhere in the party machinery t And will such intelligent men, when they are thoroughly satisfied by the accumulation fashion and musical taste The programme was an admirable one, and gave Mr. Wheat and the soloist ample opportunities to display their rare skill and cultivation as musicians The same combination, wc are gratified to learn, will at an early day give a concert for the benefit of the Richmond Relief Association. Rich. "Wig. I would no lougvr mind it You'll find it some day. never For all of us most fiud tf ' I found it many a year ago. With one of senile breeding ; You aod the little lad yon know, I see fthv vou are weeping . Tour flower of love On the night of the 15th of September, Tr ' !Tr and report. r rance8co was murdered. He graphed to New York, and reply th.11 Campbell at least was one of the men who had escaped, and the Chief waa requested to hold him. But about this A the prisoners broke jail and escaped. on and duty require that we shoula leave Bloodhounds were put on their track, and whhln twenty-four hours they were found "hi the swamps. A desperate fight follow ed, in which several of the officers were lightly huit, but the desperadoes were at length captured' and hanucutted. L amp him, but finally he was lodged in jail, and is chained to the floor of his cell awaiting the arrival of the New York detectives. Tracy having proved to the satisfaction of the Court that he was not one of the masked robbers aad the police of your city having disowned him, he is to be tried here. . Philadelphia wauls to get up a Cen tennial celebration on the 4lh of July, 1876 iu honor of the one huudreth anni versary of the Declaration of Independ ence, and wants the government to appro priate several millions of dollars to the affair. Wo are willing for Philadelphia ft A ioJ3, rrance8co was murdered, tie was found with an enormous nail driven into each of his eyes a mode of assassination which indicated that at least two persons were engaged in the work. One of them was finally captured, and upon examina tion, charged the wife, a son, and the daughter, Beatrice, with having prompted the deed. They had, he testified, put the victim to sleep by administering a narco tic draught, and then had introduced himself and his accomplice into Frances co's chamber. They were arrested and imprisoned in the Castle of St. Angelo, where they were from time to time, as WA thi nrilflina ilnrinor tlio mSdrlla norma w ' j v.....aj a.. ujiuui ucvo. of the rack to force them to confess the crime. As was f. equently the case with the accused, whether guilty or not, preferring death to this lingering agony, the mother and brother made confession. But for nearly a year Beatrice continued firm iu her dec laration of innocence. At last a new TitE 'Norfolk Virginian makes the method of torture was devised, to inflict following practical remarks concerning the which would make it necessary to cut off establishment of cotton mills in the her hair, which is described as being "the South : most silken, the longest, the most mar- "There cau no longer be doubt that vellous in color ever seen." At this she the South is awakeuing to her advantages turned pale. "Touch not my head," she for the manufacture of cotton. Scarcely cried. "Let me die without multilation." Oat-meal, Bone, and Muscle. Liebig has shown that oat-meal is almost as nutritious aa the very best English of nroof from both aides, continue to sup- beef, and that it is richer than wheatcn port such a corrupt and crazy partv t bread in the elements that go to form bone tttdow we nrint the snranuirr of the in- I and muscle. Professor t orbes of Edin against the burg, daring some twenty years 4 dictment Mr. Wood brings Republican party : The government of its creation has maintained a large standing army at great mcas the hour to Him, and never rebel against His decrees by a single impatient wish. The first, and the most important thing is, to learn to master ourselves and to throw ourselves with peaceful confidence Hun who never charges, looking on on bell smashed his handcuffs over a stump, every situation, whether pleasant or other- 8ubjected to the tortures and tbe officers had more trouble wttn I w ? ource, uvea wmcu our nuernr existence and individual character may draw increasing strength ; and hence springs that entire submission which few attain to, although ail fancy tbey feel it. Can't Afford It." How often do we hear this plea from young men when the importance of an education is urged upon them. Many of them can af- expense-during a time of peace. a , .1 , ..1 ! . . lord to poison incmeeives witn uqnor, paying fifty or a hundred dc liars for the privilege ; they can afford to educate the feet in the gayeties of the ball-room on like terms ; to attend sensational places of amusement; to stake this same money they conld not afford for an education, in a game of chance : to expend money for novels, which wonld pay for a library of educational works, and in a variety of other ways useless to enumerate here. urcd the breadth and height, and also tested the strength of both the arms and loins of the students in the University a very numerous class, and ot various i. u i... I .1. c.-.. nationalities, urawn io 11 litis uduiuui, or iuih. uie a"- I fc . ,i ; ...., 1 ui.i.. nm,l., -n. of his teaching. v, ' .1 n;.,in.. iUi, m.. height, breadth of chest and shoulder. v and strength of arms and loins. I be Bel i n it a i in w - w England, the treaty wits the Loxdox, March 11. The Dnify A'rsr and Telegram gives lb fo Ho wing SO a correct account of the taeaty of the Ashanlees : The king- to Orcat Brilsin a war indemnity of SO, 000 ounces of gold ; renounces all aisjsa to Adansi, Aaain, Denkera, Akkra aad Was saw ; withdraws his forces from the a ft ft av ..iaal nart of tbe coat belonging to or enow It has increased the civil list from 4 4. 500 persons in 1860 to 86,660 persons iu 1873. It has instituted a system of espionage and nnnression in the execution of the revenue laws which resulted in enriching Custom House and other officials without This is looking at it from a moral stand- I aiding tho public treasury point. Bat let as suppose the existence of a moral voung man who makes this objection, and yet wastes no money in the ways indicated. He "can not afford it " But he can afford to remain in ignorance for the remainder of his life, of the most essential elements and principles of the business that he will be every day called upon to transact. Exchange. an exchange comes to us from any point south of the James river bnt it brings either record of the success met with tobaveher"centennial," and are in favor of by cotton factories or report of efforts her paying for it too. Tho whole thing making for their establishments. The statistics ot tins industry are aauy laid a is not oalv a humbug, but would be burlesque on the Declaration of Indepen dence to have a national celebration of that event while there were such Stale Excellent Confection. This is the season for oranges. The peel of this fruit, preserved in sugar, is one of the ....... am a ft r And to save her tresses she, too, yield- n"08 delightful confections wbicd a tann ed. I ly can use far scperior to the extracts Her beauty; the belief in hr innocence, ' old in the shops. The peel should of tbe courage she had shown, had won the j course be perfectly clean, and should bo svmnathv and commission of the whole cat in long, thin strips. Stew in water Roman nnnnl.wi- mid thn P.-tne waft ha. 1 till all the bitterness is extracted It has created and maintained direct taxation which, until its advent to power, has been unknown in this country since the close of the American lie volution. It has stealthily absorbed th ; whole Government power of the country at the Federal Capital nutil alt State interests are made subservient and dependent upon its will. It has driven from circulation gold and silver, the only constitutional medium, and notwithstanding its large receipt in coin from customs duties and mines, does nothing toward its restoration. gians were at the bottom of the list ; a Utile above them, the French ; very much higer, the English ; and highest of all, the Scotch and Scotisb-lrish, from, Ulster who, like the natives of Scotland, are fed in tbeir early years with at least one meal a day of good oat-meal porridge. Speaking of oat-meal, an exchange re marks that a very good drink is made by putting about two spoonfuls of the meal into a tumbler- of wafer. The Western banters and trappers consider it tbe best of drinks, as it is at once nourishing, uu- m w w stimulating, and satisfying. 4A Ouaixt Old Writer Sat. R.iinn and Faith may be compared to tan traveler?. Faith is like a man in full health who can walk twenty or thirty praise a Krlinhnrft- he the tho nrntf-r torate of Great Britain : under lie found that in takes to maintaiu a good read Coomaasic to Prah river, and to merchandise transported over sand rnskfl s m will prohibit human sacrifice, and sweat , to perpetual peace with England. Gen. Wolseley does not expect Che entire smonnt of the indemnity will ever he paid, bet regards the other stipuUtions of vtly -greater importance and more likely to be adhered to. The latest dispatches from the Ahaa tee expedition slate thai the British loo in the war was 16 killed and 368 wonn4 ed. - - 4 The most formal and lifeless not lea than the most fervent, are enthusiasm, nnless it be ascertained, n satisfactory grounds, that snA exerewes are, indeed, efficient snenne sW prosaotiog welf-re. Prayer m impiety, asxi foil v. if the one be not a reai our is like a little chikl, who can only wun difficulty aeetnplih three or fear mile. It has increased the salaries of all offi- One day reason proposes to faith to go cials, including that of the Presuient, forih together. , f - . V . aSaaaaaSfta miles at a timo without .offering. Reason ms nm-nt o, o,mnK-.- ana Ilie niner n ni -r kla tJf..rintr tl tltC CiiTrr of fttl TOod. Bl "-' " O - . . Throw before the country, and contrast made be- sieged with petitions to grant her pardon, i away the water and stew again for half tween the 891 factories of the North aud This he was nearl v persuaded to do, when ! n hour in a thick sirup made of a pound of the pitiful 83 of the South. The relative at the trial her cause was most eloquent- J sugar to one of peel, with just water e- rates of labor and the greater profit to be ly pleaded by the counsel appoiuted for nough. Pat away, in a cool place, for fla- the defense, and it was shown how prob- ! vonng puddings, pies, eic. ior mis pur- man so generally disliked and P0e n suouict oe cnoppeu very one. u oetter or cneapcr flavoring cau no lurnisu- hich it still maintains, though industries are oppressed and poverty goes starving through our streets. It has maintained a protective tariff in the interest of a class to tbe detriment of the whole people Fa.lh replies, 0 ton. tnou cami i-ctci Well, they start. Bnt soon they come to a deep river, and Reason saith, l can never ford this river.' Again, they reach lofty mountain, and Ueason un, i iaer elimb Ibis beigut : ana m a can Governments as Louisiana South Carolina aud Arkansas in existence and we hope made liere than there are dwelt upon, and the def our representatives in Ooneress will vote tbe magnificent result of Georgia's enter- ably a on no nronosition to make annmnri- prise In this direction are heralded for all I dreaded as Francesco should have had atious to tho affair. Winston Sentinel. 1 meu 'a information.' euemies outside his owu household to plot a household. It has. since 1869, anticipated tho pub- order to Jeave Ileasoa bhmd, I - aiih was lie debt not due for twenty years, aod obliged va carry , paid $40,000,000 for the privilege of doing ays th so, although the immediate obligations ef wan lit the Government wcie aisbonorea, ana me 0 1 - "a avkal a I . ftaa. . a, aft. I a . -a arft a M a a Si Reasoo to raHbv Lenlrtu rremg- olved whoa once these poioU arvd thev are necessarily invr the tmih of Christianity then, whatevw m improprieties may be chargeable apen the devont, an error of incomparably gr magnitude reats with the nnsV I Ml. T err in saodhat prayer may bo reprehen sible; bnt not to pray is mad iaanc Taylor. The ste-nihiprdra, fVsoa Seveatle for Port ft4d. ha hern lost. Thirty peo ple oa board were drowned f - 1 - . . sffl v" I 1 - -