Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 14, 1874, edition 1 / Page 1
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m 1 1 10 Uarolma Watchman. ; . T . -J.u HMiiAi. ..- jH"iuto , a t. . i sa'mieaji "w i !!!- ' - -, i , , , ii mi i i , w mSk aT "IT TOTJTTJTi Gl?TJTT?a 3 fl A TTCDTTU V TWT it UAV Ii IQrri 1 I I". t a a ttttiat ' - -r i , ? - Klu ' I 1 m ii ii ' mrm ij - , . . .- - s ft . -. - . - . m m-mWVm BATTflDTTDV TaT "fig A V -f A . O w t Helf ! SjgjJ NO. 34. WHOLE NO. lfteVB . : I Oi M Pii t - Villi. V . 1 111111 kJJJL a ajtrj. FUBL1SHKD WKKKLY . J. J. BRUNEE, Proprietoiaad Editor. J. J. STEWART Editor. . KATES OF RUBCHIPTION Associate -T f WEEKLY WATCHMAN. wt Thar, payable m advance $2.50 Six Mouths, 5 Copies to any address...-. Tri-weekly Watchma Senator Louisiana Kerrimon on the Question. The Louisiana bill being under consideration T Tbb lickksb QcsaiioH nr Ohio. The Convention which m framing; a new Constitution for the Scale of Ohio has been engaged for works fa debatinr the lion of regulating the sale of lienor. Finally, the Convention agreed to submit an article to be voted anon bv the neonle separately from the Constitution. The ! aieine. accompanies ay nau ana vote ta to be Xieonae"' or "Ho License." If ''Laeense'' prevail, the Constitution will provide that licence to traffic in In toiicaiinr liquors msy be granted, hot the section shall not be so eoostxoed as to i 1.50 10.0 m 1 0 Ykab in advance. .. gii Months v m Omk Month ........(5.00 3.00 50 RATES t Binding wnite Cnildren to Party Discipline. A White Man's Partv. TkT ml tt'll 1 T 1 I I . V A7T,Vi.no"UUirro r0' M , , , T7 V . .1 The Charlotte Democrat makes the MM VVnrt haa tha tAl Inuini. v a aarn nnanonllanl tdnritHot am mm Ik. Wn .tin,, . in the U. 8. Senate on TbJmdav Mr. M- I mTm- u" Tu"?-.:- LZ'T " Zi ""rn. ' .Ar" T ,0MTKi suggaaUon : btuwu kl.;nul (K. fln-. 1 .L. . .,. ,:i A- "f cuiumioohv, menu ui . p.i,T uitaniiauun. i u suouni IIIC lllinu t. . j - - : . jouroment We make the followtiig suinnuiry w orpnan, tLat bis contact with these mons workings of our party we sboald Uiat here Jn North Carolina the wlie qowtion of regslaling the sale oi ins retnarKS ; i uuiunuuBifu uaa ueveiopeu me nurnu uy an uieaus prevent me uivnjions mat runnip will ht m An ilmv AA V;. "He Said that the Kellon government Was I fnt that man v whilp ohilrlrpn in tliia Stntp I nPCPSBMril v mima whpnovor m mr mmJi I . .1 i . n . r a military despotism, set up in defiance of the 1.... UA- sJ A . ru.-w.,;.. f au. k vuc owa :onf orgao we - .1 ". .. ... . I i".vu wvwuu uui vu miLluvc, us I vwmw. inuoEi w VT IUO C I if whit mcn'i narlv ai.H 4k. t v.onsiiiiiLion ana ine laws nt me Kiatn oi iinu. i v . . - ..-. i - k j uwiai mi iana. He then reviewed at length the relations T i . ' "" " " V. UUUUU"'UK v"u"nww Wh,te man ehall rule the State. The is- of the State to the Federal Government, and ne toinKB tnat in tiariotte alone thirty wituoui party ducipiiae, owe orraniaa- IUR h-u,,, fQrcJ-i nn rn.ui.mm k. tk S re!Twei?sand etkms of. each, or forty instances of this' Mid may be tion wonld epeedily vanish, because aspi- colored people themselves, and U is being " "P W W vwi6iihw w iuuuu. vuo choc vi peculiar uurrur uc i uw ivi umwc wuuiu eccm w siiain UK) l Inreed on those who have hern frienJa the General Government to Louisiana as one I i;u.A0AMi VoM . k. r . .t.;. nhiw.t ;!.... 4. .;iv .rl. . . . . . ' of the States of the TTnmn it ... hnnd hv TTT " ' TT " " " " v1. w' . . & " "l WM wSt in Whom I6e colored men seem to solemn treaty stipulations with France to se wl.dow of a .Uontederate ?w?.r' em! nf,r mocI. drence, to pUee no -political confidence cure the inhabitants of Louisiana in their rights " wjwb. iu a hcrtu wiu v, sou u.uK wtw.ru uuwueea towao peraossa t ? s We are ia favor of according; to restrain and regulate sales, and to eosa ana liberties. He then maintained that Louis- ner aaugnter, a cuiid ot ten years, acting woo oeing iavoniea m their respective t h ,no .11 rnaAtii for imuries H,inr tkiV It gg ifmTSJmPm, r8M "L? blaoaAug NXaWM- prevail, the Leri.-re t ; . , " " " " owu ui uic mivur, aim uuk u 10 uuuni. muai buuiuii iu iuc uiciuon oi mo AWIMQoote tmrnhmm A very curious little county, Oahfoniia. Oa the mootk s thunder storts stry, alt atMt s as frtm'Bftber rwavsi. iud 'pow and very vivid forked lightatep M As the hail began to fall an ning ttasueu, ibouaande of which were iu the poods of which exist in that locality duriess wild prevent the Legislature from making laws winters, sudJealy rose Hp in nutter, as 11 many banters bad si gee' , eery Beat On Sqcam (1 inch) One insertion . - two " $100 150. STEd nTauthorit? BsTrnT OanaSsfi but.,Th !? "Bged condition, that party assembled in ConretUion. Civil Rtghta Bill propoeed by old Sumner, will have power to prohibit the sale by 4 m . . for a greater number ot insertions, moderate, (special notices zo per wawa u"r than regulsr advertisements. Reading notices 15 esats per line for each and every insertion. to pass such ordinances. Therefore he con- ntu he was aiaea by a Denevoieut jew xi any person claiming to annate with iared all tfa gress as unconstitutional, ana null and void at to be placed on the care. the lime ot their passage. , , ,, . warrl i.. u .(a he io,,,,. mi f a . . 1 1 . i w a- - I w waa a -a saa " ui uo iisv iw a uiiouuuoiOtVUU -r g 5 can 1 De PM'018 w e "f uture that tbe parly win prolect t8elr and wiU . . t - . - - men as ine nest means to pro see sa the material interests of both black aaeVwiiite citizens." urns i a uiiiuina nun, wtvouou waaa; ucvflC Ul igivj ouuiu IX 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 had accepted them, the EiecnUve had recoa- "nao. is cnargaoie with such gross niaed them, and Uongress had, by subsequent negligence that the leading citizens fo were in the nature of reto iitionarv acta, hut I r v v,a'u" having been accepted on ail sides they became of the poor whites as to permit such re-. vsiw and 01 eneei. ou"u under voiting associations as the J2ccorr men ho a vw urn uvtivu aaao. iui uicu a 1 1 vj w uuu" THE FAVORITE HOME REMEDY. w I I I i i This unrivalled Medicine is warranted not to aoatain a single particle of Mercury, or any injurious mineral substance, but is PURELY VQE T ABLE. n coataining those Southern Root add 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. Sewsjeas' Uvcr Eegulater er aleae. Is eminently a Family Medicine ; and by being kept ready for immediate resort will save many aa hour of suffering and many a dollar in uine doctors bills. stitution, republican in form, and accepted as such by Congress. Under this constitution n election was held for Stale officers in 1872. Mr. McEnery was a candidate for Governor on one aide and Mr. Kellogg a candidates on the other. He then stated the manner in which the re turns were counted by the board which declar ed McEnery elected. Tsoee returns were can vassed according to the constitution and laws of Louisiana, and the remit was that McEnery was declared elected. No 'one could pretend that Kellogg was declared elected in any manner pro video for by the constitution and the laws of the State. Therefore he was and could be nothihg more or less than a usurper. It was claimed that at any rate Kellogg was de facto Governor, He denied this in toto. Kellogg was no more de facto Governor of Louisiana than he (Mr. M.) would be de facto Governor of the District of Columbia if he should go before an officer and take the oath prescribed by law for tbe Governer of the District, and then, with a thousand roughs at his back, assume to exercise the duties' of the Governor. In support of his position Mr. M. quoted irom the constitution and by-laws of Louisiana. The bill coming up again on Friday, Mr. Merrimon renewed his remarks. He conten tions above. There mast be some mis tike about it. Ignorance of the fact is not a sufficient excuse, if these things are true. not permit his action to defeat their will. Such a person necessarily assumes more for himself than his associates. He sets himself above party discipline. He claims for himself more freedom than he accords to others; and by bis action he wonld recklessly split the party and bestroj its force. There is but one course to be pur sued if we would retain a perfect organi zation and preserve our party strength We shall always favor the rale of white whatever penalties may be deemed appro priate, uadertbe present Constitution, the sale of liqohrs in Ohio is free : that la to say.tt is not licensed. The Baste getsi no revenue from the traffic, which is car- Washington AUston. who stood at the ried on in s semi legal way. There is head of American artists a half cemtary no prohibitory law, bat there are laws ago, was at one lime so reduced by pov- which provide penalties for damages sua- erty that he locked his studio in London tained from the purchase of liquos. If one day, threw himself on his knees and the license provision be adopted, the li- prayed for s loaf of bread for himself and quor dealers of Ohio will pay s license wife. While thus engaged s knock was for the first time in many years. heard at the door, which tb artist hastened ana to open. A stranger inquired lor air. Alls- Tun Sitprvvv Cnrrrnr tri ITwrren a a O " w-w w " mm mm SWJaw ston, ana was anxious to learn who was St LTwm IlrrrYi v Vn Pu.wt wrTTn-v the fnrtnn.tp nil rr Ii aT of t Ii A nainLmv nf I t I . n m !"? Knel Uriel," .Web bed ..S the p'r S"1 " ce'ta'. ued his review of the canvassing of the elec tion returns, and said the Lynch board was entirely illegal and void. He denied there was After over Forty Years' trial it i still receiv- any evidence to prove that anv of the colored iag the most unqualified testimonials to its vtr- people of Louisiana had been denied the privi ties from persons of the highest character and lege of voting- The Republican party, he said, responsibility. Eminent physicians commend had accomplished its mission ; it was founded U as the moat on opposition to negro slavery, which had vvrvnTTTU ax axvOPTPTI heen abolished by the sword. Its acts now urtsttiTic were not ,uch M to commcnd it to the Araeri. a? Or Dyspepsia Or Indigestion. n P:ple. He did not say what party would irn,.,i tkl. AKTltmTK .11 .-limatea and succeed it, but, its day was gone. He trusted Royal Oddities. The King of Bavaria is eccentric. His engagement to marry a princess is said to have been suddenly broken off because she persisted in refusing to express ad nees without regard to personal prefer ences. To fail in this duty is to annul the bonds that biuds as together. No true Conservative, no man worthy of par- ejrsupport will act so as to jeopardize the success of the organization. And when ever au aspirant, ambitious oi office, so miration for Wagners music his freaks was construction of a the top of his palace, in which he sailed abont in a tr at for recreation. A few years since he took a notion that he want ed to sec a representation of an eruption ot Mount Vesuvius, and a far forgets himself as to deny his obliga Among I i lake on party ieaity,nesDouiu oe iorcea in to tue opposition and not be allow to sit un der our colors. Lraccut. The Republican papers of this State 1. , are raising a cry that the Democratic-Con-immediately I . 0 ' a j . . . . . jf servativu party are striving to array race ordered a court pyrotechnist to proceed, . r J . . f , y ., T . , ,r against race. llns is false and they regardles' of cost, to produce such a spec- 6 .. f ., . j J . 1 .1 . 1 u- 1 j j know it. It is the negro a'h is drawing at the exhibition of the Royal Academy. He was told that it was not gold. "Where ia it to be found T" "In this room," said Allston, producing the psiuting from s corner and wiping off the dust. "It ia for sale, but its value has never been ade quately appreciated, and I would not part with it." "What is the price ?" "I have done fixing any nominal sum. I hare always, so far, exceeded any offers. I leave it to you to name tbe price." "Will tour hundred pounds be an adequate re eompeuse 1' "It is more than I ever asked wVie it " rfHen tltaa niiuhmr Sa mine M IVI lit av uvu wiv uuiiuiiil. aa iuius said the stranger, who iutroduced himself dead geeee fMaJ wph huodred 1 case appealed from lows, has recently decided that a State can enact and enforce any and all prohibitions of the sale of intoxicating liquors, as the right to sell them is not one of the immunities and privileges of a silizen which ike fourteenth amendment of the Constitution forbids tbe State to abridge. - X. T. Christian Week Chief Justices Taney said : "If sny . . . we. aaaf State deems tne retail and internal trathc in ardent spirits injurious to its eilisens and calculated to produce idleneas, vice or deb inchery ' I gee nothing ia tbe Constitu tion of the United States to prevent 11 Br m 0m mt m- - mm m up, apparonUy to nee above too wlaWfal cloud. It was nearly dark, sndjjfrarT who saw them rise thought no mors Vf it HSfll monitor, when they began ToTlad and hear of hundreds by thoaeagbwora. had been found. 1 . . as picked up 00 bis farm all two could ball for their feathers. Their were badly torn and their bill f ragmen ta. Many of them hod era of their backs crisped and bli ouugand their bodies burst oprn. The pcauaag, of the country thus affi ctcd was slSt a mile and a half wide and reached eetVral miles Into Butte county. The tetftMe lightning in this cloud wag wrta40Has by people oa the Uoncut m Tama sisjMy and ia the central portion of this SOgnty Tbe thunder was beard twenty miles distant. r Bade a taele on the mountain near his secluded palace. He complied with the order, but the representation was not satisfactory. The court pyrotechnist at Vienna was then sent for, and he made extensive pre parations and give entire satisfaction, and had an order for its repetition, the King expecting and thinking that be was and ould be the only spectator. He, how ever, heard that the villagers had assem bled at the foot of the mountain and had witnessed the Spectacle also. On hear ing this be countermanded, the order for change of water and food may le faced without l1 Gou that il would be swept away at the next its repetition, sent the pyrotechnist home, IV. r. AsaKcmedv in MALARIOUS FE VERS, BOWEL, COMPLAINTS, RESTLK- E86, JAUNDICE, NKAU8EA. XT HAS NO BQPATi. It Is the creapsst. Pureit and Best Family Madloias ia the Wor d ! Manufactured only by J B. ZEI1IN dk CO-, Macon, Ga., and Philadelphia. Sold by all Druggists, MM , .1 1 aV Price, $1 .00. PiTJCAY T.T511B an r, . - 7 To a drowsy country village Came a certain Parson Lee ; Aad s man so quaintly different From all other men was he. That the Squire himself, a skeptic, Came to church to hear him say. And to note the strange things uttered By this marvel of the day, foil elections. To the Officers and Friends or the Bible Cause in North Carolina. We publish with pleasure the following Circular from Rev. C. H. Wiley, successor to Rev. P, A. Strobe I, District Superintendent for the American Bible Societv. Th vacancy caused by the resignation of the Rev. P. A.-Strobel, District Superintendent for the American Bible Society, has been filled by my transfer from the field of Middle and East Tennessee, to which I was unexpectedly called five years ago. 1 he many and strong ties form ed iu my new home, where I had a rich exper lence to the and, ordering the burgomaster of the vil lege before him. severely rated him tor allow iug the people to approach the mouii tain. The eccentric said this planet Was a true and goodly place, And the only thing it wanted Was the more of Heaven's grace; And he sopght to show the people How to thiuk snd work and live, So that each should help the other And unto the needy give. i ffow the door that leads to heaven Was most amply broad snd wide, And how each could turn the handle Aad go easily inside ; That the very gentlest natures , In the world may yet be strong . J"1 4'nd how truth is always wisdom, And all wickedness is wrong. Ho explained how true religion Was day-working, nothing more' . Thai t hi world waa not au ooean, I Mr we pebbles ou the shore : But that thiukiug ineu and women - ' Shou'd find better things to do Than in twisting God's commandments Or quite breaking them in too. From the Daily News. UA Daughter of Bohemia. " This is the title of one of the most in tensely interesting society novels I have ever read. It is a book of very decided of the Devine goodnes, and my devotion power, and shows that the author is stead- majority of over 46,000 white men, and important work opened to me there did jy advancing in her career as a writer of with our bitter experience in the past of neg the line of color. It is the negro who is throwing dowu the gage. They are clam oring for the passage of the civil rights bill. They are prescribing white men in sections where tin y are in a majority That the negro should be dissatisfied with the shabby treatment he has received from his white allies, in the limited quali ty of spoils given to him, is but natural, but that he should claim preferment and office simply because In- is a negro, or wish to deny it to a white man because of a different of the skin, shows an antag onism founded in malice and hate, the ru- sull of the t- aehiiigs of uuscruplous white men. we repeat mat ine negro is to:eing on us ti e issue of color, and unless a stop Is put to it, self protection, the nit law of nature, will force us to accept it. Iu this the negro is prompted by the leaders, of the unprincipled party with which be is now allied, and unless he rejects further leadership from such men a bitter anta gonism will be brought about which will result most disastrously to the best inter ests of his race. We have a registered aa the Marquia of Stafford, and from that (rom reguUUog or restraining the traffic, 4 . . Am. L mm mm mm mwmtm. mm. mm. mm n. mm. C T tm A 1 I A I mm mm mm mmm m mm mmm, I mm mrm m bL m m m mm. m m m mm m time became one of Mr. Allstou's warm est friends and patrons. There was more than the usual cere mony in Mr. Beech er'c church in Brook lyn nn Sutiday, occasioned by tbe acces sion of more than one hundred members to the communion. This was celebrated by a multitude of floral rjecoratioos and a croas surrounded by a crown, emblazon ed Victoiy." Alter the service, Mr. Jl. -ether distributed the roses among the new members, s somewhat picturesque and appropriate custom, then waa sung or from Prohibiting it altogether thinks it proper." 5 Howard, 277. if it A temperance movement has been com menced at Machester, England. On Sundav April 12, a meeting took place on tbe fairground at Knott Mill. From a temporary platform about a dozen workingmen wives add an attentive crowd on the evils of intemperance. I he chairwoman aaid she had been a twenty-seven years and had never regretted it. Some of the speakers were members of the (Jood Templar lodge, and were strled "sister. and all had in some way or other been brough over to total abstinence through the terrible example of drunken husbands or fathers. One a " Te Deum," after which Mr. Beecher made what might be called, a jovial dig- I womairlnt. jdaesd herself as "no faraway bird, rnnren 11. AiA not ihlnlr ntirlatianSv I mm durltr of oM Je Blank, the drunk- -l.rt..M I- o.lm .nrl n.ml.,1 Tk- K.i enest man in Deansgate f another speaker, also -.. o . J r .7- locally connected, said she ' had been twenty 1 ueuiuiciib was ium ui nit tuca ui "Fifty BoUars, or I The pranks of a lady at K11U t.,L ' PieHSirh rejoic ing ; and joy, to Mr. Beecher's mind, was a sigu of love, virtue and holiness. There was a popular idea that religion was a commercial transaction, paying a certain amount of sorrow here for the sake of a very large dividen of joy hereafter ; but this waa not tbe true view. one years drink-eursed, having for a husband the greatest drunkard that ever walked the streets of M an cl i ester," Th is woman's husband, who was at one time never without an excuse to thrash her, waa now a reformed character. At the close of the speeches a number of persons took the temperance pledge. aaee along the line of the Missouri Pacific Railroad recently have caused the depletion of the pocket-book of several hotel proprie tors at different towns, and sari Sal i meiu Warrensburg. and while the saooev wat parted with, there is still at least pwade U the landlords' households. It will swaWb t narrate how this fcmals "did her at W arrensbutg, aa rotated to r Dorter: . . - . - 1- m She visited the town ia tbe ea wastry of a book agent, to itnprees upon the inert aOfcioa the advantage to be gained by s saessrip- tiou t' th "most intrestiog and lnstrwKiTo work ever pu Wished-" Arriving ia toma at noon, she imavrdiatoly went to a Hotel sshicb shall be nameless, and registered. Ska. was shown to a room and made her toilette. Tbe next step was to riag a bajO sabich ushered a boy ia her prmsnea, to whom she oommaoieJled the feet that aho deal red sm see the landlord. Tbe message waa deliv ered to the landlord, and io ine cores mi a few minutes ho mot bar face to face in h. r room. As she entered the' room she eeu-: -ly locked tbe door, and placing the key iu her pocket, sold: -Now. Mr. .1 wish to have Cfcw moments, chat with you. 'VV., rati' tun." replied the Laadjor. . "What you have to say, aay U quickly. Jor I am in a harry. In a very self-compoaed manner the bo..k mf m agent drew herself np. and said she : "Sow . Mr , not?" you are a married man, are, you Coupulsohy Education It will be seen from oar Albany news of this morns rT-T!!!? There are passages ot exceeding; white Radical rascality and the fate of in that the hill nmvidin for the rmm,! 1 iiuu speu l ui mil j jail iu uwn 01 love lor 1 . . 1 1 1 , 1 . .-, . . " , . , 1 0 r . o r the public welifare ; and now I return to re- brW . wnole . production is the poor South Carolina to think over, an gory education of children was yesterday new attachments which neithertime nor distance woiKmansuip oi an artist oi great talents undue elevation of an interior race, en- passed by the State Senate. It is rinht S . 1.1 m 1 m m m I J A 1 mt -A. M. m .1 S I A m W . " can weaaen, anu to uevoie lnyseii to tnat cause ana oi me nnesi taste, it is the Dest tirely under the influence ot nnscrupu- and proper that no child should he allow which ties at the foundation of all individnal I nnvel T ho-trs nvm f.-r.rn c .1 I 1 . 1 ,1 1 : 1 . : - 1. . l I , , . . . . . j r i , ; .t v 1 . m. m-mww eiutu a uuuiucrn luuo sun uwigiiiiig wimib men wno Binst ed to crow up to claim tue rights ot a rrr; wi, VirVa .d r" P!n'.ana or.th y be proud every other consideration for that of pelf citi,en of tho United States without hav- Z m ...... ... ZJm 1 aT lior lltlliaVlllmliaarf and wr .... I. I A ,..,11 L. 1 L.. of Jesus Christ. jsioa...gjistosivu nU wcgj uigmjr i iuu piuuuci nui uu do tuicujr Buuumieu 1 1 rvillA IaikvIiIhi I Iwi a ..... 4 X' m wit pvprv tirnnch nf flip fUinroli i God will bless and honor those, and onlv those, gifted daughter. The characters are few who honor His Word. And it is through the but admirably individualized : tbe storv Ministry of this word alone that society is to is really of absorbing interest ; the style be improved, good government secured, and U clear anjmated, finished, elegant ; the the wilderness and solitary place made elad. ! . I That department of this Ministry over which . 1 . " v o wipiiuB I am now placed in common ground to all de- minute, elaborate and often beautiful, and nominations and I, therefore, confidently appeal the conversations remarkably fresh, enter- to all who love the lxrd Jesus Christ and taming and brilliant. It is well done the supremacy ot is revealed truth, and to throughout, and should take rank with the nnr on ahn nromnle the miklt mlf... : 0 ' ...... m ta ,,nif h.rtiiv with mm in UsTh. mm,n best love-stories of the times. Miss Fisher mm, 'J " " " mm- -.K" 1 . ' .. and widen the interest in that administrative nas n(l croicueis io ventilate, no theories system which is tbe chief instrumentality of the to advance, no mysterious problems to Church for the publication and dissemination unfold. She sits down to tell to the en- oi me written word. The American Bible Society, fostered and watched over as -its Agent by the Church in America, has hitherto proved faithful tons great Mission, ha been most abundant in use ful labors, and is now engaged in operations of to. News "As for acting like our neighbors, Why, we none of us are fools ! Tou cannot be made a Christian Under everybody's rules. If your neighbor's not as good as Haor you would have bim be. Jest you go ahead ami beat him !" Said this candid Parson Lee. mii -Next, he told them how complaining Was a noxious ehoking weed ; That tbe flowers scarcely blossomed Lre they chauged to homely seed ; iw that seed again sprung upward Ann Dore inauy nowrets more; And that lue was ever fading And renewing, o'er and o'er. So, this man, by honest talking, . y Worked his wonders in the town ; But he never cared for praises, Aud he laughed at high renown. Yet the people loved him dearly. And they blessed god for the sight, Till at last the master left them. On a cold, dark wiuter's night. mil ft 1 ' tone he went, they knew not whither ; ' Have you eyer met him, pray f You would know him by his smiling. And the sunshine on hie way. We have hunted o'er creation. Over land and over sea, Bat no traces can discover At. a Of our miming Parson Lee. immense extent and importance; and I cannot tranced reader a story of Southern life, and with the skill of a practiced and charming narrator she unravels the threads of her plot with a grace, a facility and a power worthy of all admiration. Whilst the tone of all her works is noble and U.. u.... ; . . : I . i i old State will continue to meet with a cordial I P,ea8,g. d over them is thrown a bright reception from every class, and that the Auxi liary Socistiee whieli cover the whole territory will be actively supported by the communities in which they are located. It is ray desire, the Lord willing, to visi every part of the State ; but in the mean time, the eyes of the Superintendent should rest con tinuously on the whole field in one view, and therefore he should be able to look and operate through others, and to regard all local officers and agents of the Bible System as his assistants, and himself as one of a united band. The responsibilities and trials of my position are very great and I deeply feel the need of sym pathy and aid on the part of every one who loves the Bible Cause ; and I would respectfully call upon the officers of Auxiliary Societies, anu upon an omen wno are able to otter sug gestion or to furnish information important to my mission, to put themselves in communication with me and to co-operate in unceasing efforts to supply our people with the Word, of God, and to extend liberal aid to tbe American Bible Society in its vast and glorious work at home and abroad, - For the present my address is Green boro. N. I C, and due notice will be given of my change. W. H. WILEY, xsiMrici 011 pi, ror American Bible Society in N. C. April 24,1874. It is estimated that it will cost sixty millions of francs and three years' labor to fortify Paris against foreign enemies. The line of defense is to be pushed as far as Versailles snd Montmorency, so that an invading army woald henceforth bare to form a belt of 120 instead of 60 miles. The advanced forts will be four to six miles distant, and the intervening spaces will be covered by the crossfire of powerful artillery. Tho circle of outworks will thus be sufficiently circumscribed to prevent an enemy from taking Hp a posi tion ueiween two torts. aud genial glow of goodness and humani ty, in "A Daughter of Bohemia" there is added a grandeur of dramatic interest that renders it specially en t hi il ling and praise worthy. In the beginning of the story we have premonitions of the storm that is to burst at last iu fury and madness, and to bring desolation and despair to more than one heart, and death to our un happy victim. The appreciative reader will sincerely thank the author for the creation of Nora Desmond, whose beauty is not more lustrous and unrivaled than her character, as revealed st Isst, is love ly and heroic. Indeed the conception and management of this character appears to me to be of a high order of art. There aie scenes of pathos too that will quicken the heart-throbs and fill tbe eyes with tears. In all the book there is not a dall line or page. But 1 only meant to express my high gratification at tbe perusal of this last production of Miss Fisher, ("Christian Reid " aa she chooses to call herself,) with out attempting either analysis or formal criticism. T. B. Kingsbury. 1 Raleigh, April 21st, (74. Does Mr. any one imagine that every body must sneeze when he takes snuff t It can't be that there is so little respect for the opinions of others. Miss Fisher is indeed a charming writer story teller she has well won an enviable reputation ; bat "A Daughter of Bohemia" will add nothing to it, if we except tlie pare En glish snd beautiful style which lend a peculiar charm to all her writings. M. S. Littlkfield. The Editor of tbe Wilmington "Journal" is ou a visit to Florida. He writes as follows of Lit tlefield : Our quondam friend Littlefield still holds forth at Jacksonville, and we tin derstand entertains his friends iu royal style. He has a fine residence, elegant yacht and equipages, and enough mouey to purchase immunity from arrest, aud those who know what Florida Governors are, well understand how much that takes. He got four millions of dollars of Flori da Bonds to complete the Jacksonville, Pensacola aud Mobile Railroad from Quiucy to Pollard, a distance of two hun dred miles. He built twenty miles to Chattahoochee, and there it ends. To be sure he did not pay his contractors, but that was a species of financiering in which he was skilled by his experience in West, cm North Carolina. During the pendency of the bill before the Legislature, Lit' lefield's drafts in sums convenient for commercial purposes were in circulation freely on the streets of Tal lahassee. The members seem to have them to such an extent that one could suppose that their per diem had been paid in this scrip. iug enjoyed the advantages of a common school education. Parents, of course, have a right to educate tneir children where and how they please ; but the State has a right to say that they must be educated. More and more compulsory education will become law among the civilised nations. It has long been the law in Prussia, where it has worked wonders. It is now the law in England, snd, sooner or later, the principle will be adopted by all the States of the Union N. Y Herald. GenxralCoxfersncbof the Mkth- odist Episcopal Church, South. The General Oouferance of the Methodist Episcopal Church of the South aasembled at the Public Library Hall, ia Louisville, Friday mornisg. About two. hundred delegates representing every Southern States except Virginia, were in attendance, including all of the six bishops. Rev Dr. Paine, as senior bishop, presides. Dr. T. O. Summers, of Nashville, was re-elected Secretary, and standing committees were appointed. In the afternoon resolutions were offered Yes, ma'am ."meekly replied the land lord. Yoa have children, two of whom ar a early of age, have yoa not !" Yes, ma'am," agaia replied the hus band. Well, then." said the book agent, -if you have any respect for yourself or family, pay me fifty dollara or I will scream. . the landlord waa bewildered, and befog; a tnildinan protested only hi wr!l-roundrl phrases. This but made matters Smrv . and desiring to avoid a diaagreeable reflre tion upon his wife and children he Sguod t- pay her fifty dollars; which ho did. asm e the evening train she left for Pleaaaat Hii!. where it is said, she played tho earns garar. The landlord at Warrensburg thiuKs it rather expensive to pay fifty dollars to keep a woman from screaming, but there are on! providing for the appointment of a com mi t tee of seven to ascertain tbe parsonages I a few who know of it. aad being s rath-- aud school budding held, kept mid "gn'neo geuuemao. ana one wnoee prw"- claitned bv the Methodic EoiscoDa ?"mTmT" V J?wa w w v no Northern Sentiment. Alluding to the war in Arkansas, the New York Herald says : . The condition of the Southern States is a scandal. We can never feel that we have perfect peace until we have perfect reconstruction. Dante, in his immortal poem, speaks of visiting that hell where tbe surface of the black waters was ever bubbling. It was because of the sighs of suffering souls imprisoned beneath the waters. We never see these bubbling? snd restless movements of Southern socie ty without feeling that they represent tho imprisoned souls beneath, and hoping that the time may come when they will be rr leas ed from (heir thraldom, and admitted to the responsibility of a generous and untainted citizenship, n w m (jur best wisues go with the Southern people in their efforts to destroy the vampires who have fastened upon them and now have their will. Our reconstruction thus far is a scandal aad a shame. We hare shewn that we could destroy the Confederacy, but we have not shown how to restore the Union. Arkansas is only a series of distressing scaudals. The Supreme Court of Tennessee has decided as illegal a law, paased a few years since by the Legislature of that State, imposing a special or privilege tax. The grounds of the decision are : First, that no power resides in one de partment of government to destroy anoth er, or impair the free exercise of its funct ions ; second, that lawyers constitute a part of the judiciary, snd are essential to the free exercise of its functions, as well as for the protection of the citizen in all his rights as for the aid and instruction of tbe court in the administration of tbe law; third, that to allow the right of specific taxation as to lawyers, is to allow it as to the courts. There is no limit to this power of taxation, once admitted. In the exercise of it the Legislature could des troy, by taxing out of existence, tbe ju diciary, and tbus annihilate a cardinal branch of the government. Church in violation of the rights of the Methodist Church, South , and under what circumstances the Methodist Episcopal Church obtained possession of such prop erty. The point being mode that the resolution is very important, its discussion was postponed. it 8t. Louis DUpatch, April 20. mm They Drop Shot. .it Small Pox. Dr. Conrad, Professor of the Washington Medical University of Baltimore, in a recent paper read before tbe Mediral snd Chirurgical Faculty of Maryland upon the treatment of small pox, gives some interesting statistics con cerning the number of cases treated at tbe Marine Hospital. Says he: "Had vari oloid iunocolatioa 1 , died 1 ; never vacci nated or no eicatrik 410, died, 265 ; un known if ever vaccinated 189, died, 90 ; said they had been vaccinated but no eicatrik 102, died, 61 ; having imperfect marks 262, died, 82, recently, that is from one to eight days, vaccinated 20. died, 18; having one good mark 166, died, 6, two or more good marks 84, deaths, none; total treated, 1,234, deaths 522 ; . ft - ... . m. mmm. total mortality per cent, 42. There was not a singel ease of death when the patient had a good mark from vaccination, done after the age of puberty. Doctor Conrad stated that of the numeroas remedies he tried for small-pox staieely say were of any efficacy; bat a tableapoouf u) of vine gar taken three or four limea a day oi more help than anything tned. To the State Press. The second Annual Convention of the Press of North Carolina will assemble in the mty of Raleigh on Tuesday, May 12th 1874, at 10 o'clock a. m. The meeting will be held in the Senate Chamber. Invitations ta visit the various public institution, schools kc, have been exten ded, and accepted by the committee of arraugeuteuta lor the Press Conven tion. On ike evening of May 13th tbe Board of Trade of Raleigh will give a splendid supper to tue frees Uonveutioo ana other invited guests, i- Messrs. Holt dr. Moore, Haw River, N. C, have made arrangements for an ex- a a a a a wa curs ion to their alius and factory, oo May 14th, and a special train will leave A reporter of the Balusaore .InaHmsj thus describe one of the many processes of waffling shot in one of the shot-towers of that city : One of lb "secret" of the manufacture is thosalxicg of the lead with a certain proportion of icoa bi nation of mineral su balance called tsger ." The "temper" is fused with the load, aadjrra the molten metal that consistency ah irk mat 1 1 it drop. If il were net ice th tauprR tie lead would be moulded by the sieve, and w 11 form little pencil inatead ofrowad shot. Whew uiiB," Bitot, for instance, are to be mad, the lead ia poured inte a pan perforated with corieapooqing to that at. Tbe little com pouring down in a eonunou fall into a lank filled with water on too j M .1 ! J . r aaa m)- - . l mr noor. in inrir ocaceni or zov mr. iney oaWa perfect apheres, firm and denae, and thayarr tolerably cool when they rtrik the waoar, al though tho swift concussion make tho lawk foam and bubble a if the water wa boifw r funooaty. The shot moat fall in water, for if they would strike anv firm substance, the woo i a be nattwteo and knocked oat off bocksmfverv Raleigh at 8 o'clock for that return the same day. Cot. T. M. Holt, President of the N. C. Ag'l. Society, will give a complimentary dinner to the Press aud other invited guests, at his residence, Haw Rivet; oa the 14th, at 2 o clock p. m. A bop will be given in honor pf the Press Convention by the Oak City Pleas ore Club cm (he evening- of the 14th net. The hotel proprietors have very kind ly offered tbe ho pitalitiss st their houses to members of the Press t'rm of charge. Every arrangement has been made for a pleaaaat meeting, and a hearty welcome awaits oar bsethrea of the editorial corps. The programme will appear in tbe eve ning papers on Monday, May 11th, and morning papers ot Tuesday, May 12th. B. T. fnxoHCM, Secy, 1 N. C. Press Convention. Raleigh, N. C , May 5 h '71. To gel the liulc pellets perfectly dry afaHftbre hav been in tee Srir Is tho saoat dmVok aVO d t f b CsfO OfJ 9 NOOCawl fjs Iswffl sTlb0i9 tor. An elevator with small much like those used in Soar mill) shot up aa fan aa they reach th hiiH am Off lb point, and "well," and despoaiu them ha a box sixty few aooTc me nm noor. 1 ne water anus I ram iw bucketa they go up, snd not nvsoa into UtlTeceiver above, although ed to be a sort of dripping sarhisie. Tri i this receiver the shot run down a spout auto i drying pan, which greatly reat sables a i shoe, maoe of i angle which down to the chamber perfectly dry as they pans over eh is poor. J ills taaru . really rss walls a gjswau'e iron. Th pea ream ma i th wt shot to roll ato h r below, aad th peUets b - they pom over warm sJhawt Tbe roots of all plants are uswm re. vealed to the sunlight or lbs open sir, bat ore bid under ground, so that they ahr ea sel ve are uever seen; but they app as m taeir branches, Bowers and fruits, who green foliage, sweet fragraaoeaasl dotig! -ful favor argue that there m a root a! life to them. Tuns, tbe graces of aV- Spirit emplanted in the soul, though tL ia selves invisible, yet discover Mr bcii.g and lite ia the track of a Christian's lif.-. marked at evey stage by his words, bis action, and the frame of hie 1 1 " .. ; ',.:...--.. .1 . .it;i.., -.-M . , mm I Oil 7a au" asm siii m "aa.-r, ntlf-r in , "-. iSfcrrdifr1!! i V ii irfsiw mat isMfi ail amt'f iat a anlftiHsiantMl i Ii Swilli lis iiirifaf r - ..AatiaJ
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 14, 1874, edition 1
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