Newspapers / Carolina watchman. / June 11, 1874, edition 1 / Page 1
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A ... mi J 'f'l " d boa ,nw.A uuwvt ,, t j ,, J . . .1 ,,, U1!" ir-TV Mirrigrr-n"! - l -,j-t , " ' 1 a t 'I VOL. V. THIRD oK&lES ULtimVKt N. C. JUNE 11.874. ,. . .ST-,:. - ' NO. 37.WHOLE NO. lUSIjfrf mm f PUBLISHED WEEKLY J. . BRUNEB, Pm,rt.tar.e4Uer. 11. STEW ART Associate tditor. ' to If . i . 1A9 win RATH if 'WBCWrTHIl WEEKLY WATCHMAN. Qj HoNTHS. ------ 5 L'op to rot address H- Tri-weekly W ate .$5.0 ...... The Cresdtf in 0 great grand dadcfe ter of Gov. Caswell, "fourteen years old, wtthoot a ether, mother, brother or Bister, e cent of money, or a particle of property, is now au inmate oi tne Orphan Asylum et Oafee Quite a commentary upon I the ops and downs oMife. Tel this little I girl is enjoying the fruits ol a tree uur- tured' by 'her f feet grand-father many years ago "Cast your bread upon the waters, ice." Have our people contributed ox ineir aounuance, to tne necessities oi the orphans at Uxtord f -Piedmont Fres r sum Ovm Ykao in advaoe Ui.MTua ' .... BBn. t aa IBrBtM! BATES : TT1 La mm. a. a . I The mi Coneenliea l i iiiirir r mar in wiimisaetaM mm O.I. A. A. McKor. of 3a 0B epilMaH Mam SAKf ei m a. Confiscation by Taxation. In the Fair field cotimy , Sooth Carolina, 19,999 acres of laud, besides a number of town lots and manv dwellings, are advertised for I ma iir tM. TUa.la Miiml tn a hnnrlrvrl ,tiW farms of fifty acres each which will SW sTL. j .u. CLat. u -i.. K-q. IJefore mr. w. o. ixorme CfMWliae fat each and everv insertion. majority of tie Judiciary Committee of the Honse of Representative! ' think that the condition of Sooth Caioltna does not need investigation. Char. Courier. HLaaw a T1 CM a. mBHmmZv-l4 Budding into Womanhood. There is. a touching beauty in the radiant look of a girl just crossing the limits of youth, commencing her tourney through the checkered space of womanhood. It is all dew sparkle and morning glory to her HousTOSYiLUt, N. 0. 2nd of May, 1874 ed the nomination for Jnde. Brunawick. waning your paper rer Carteret, New Hanover, Robeson and ,Mtted ( Sampson voted for Col. McKoy . Duplin criber. ) I have gather and Onslow for Col. Wb. A Allen i bv rrailinrr thr W.i. hManialaarr.Taf ,1 tUH ri -ixi Mini mimf ! n o&ii m.w,1 "Z m ' ' I maaeii ano oiomDoe tor J . TV. lUUi, l7om Ay.. - naner that i. the role was announce! n(u.fu i ta ,u f.rwr I M,iaM t . a tJladon ctiangeF ;.,ie for tljf, rc. at no-dtre Ay au tipou uiuuuu oplin, the nomination was made uuamimous ut, ox Kobeaou, receir for Solicitor. - -1 KLOpawkMT in High Life The quite residents of Auburn, New York, are exercised by Che discovery that Captain E.G. Miles, one of their moat reepeeted citizens nsalus. Jiat a large boot and shoe hoOse, a devoted member of the Baptist chnreh, and of the Young Men's Christian Association, and an influential comrade in the Grand Army of the Re public, has run away with hta wife's niece and $2,500 of the firm's mon y. In your but iaene I see eggs, fee , which I will notice. My experience for fifty years, with my I mother's before me is, that you may hatch I MK.1 :u.Jtu j... ifc . t ft . . I roosters or punets as yon wan ; the egga that are small and sharp ttt one end, with riuklea ta the small end, invariably hatch roosters. The abort, thick eggey both ends alike, hatch pulleU. The Hkink's Notion of Hill. The strangest description of bell is that of Heiuricb Heine: "Hell," he says, "ap peared to me like a great town kitchen, 'with an endless long stove, on which eggs seldom fail to hatch. The pallet eggs often mias hatching ; aud the groat oas of eggs iu sitting ta the pulleta which are more tbiu and tender. Never sit a thin shell eg?. As regards keeping eggs to sit, I will just say any old wo man knows a ben turns tier eggs every time she goes to het nest. Thus, for years 1 turn the eggs designed for sitting once every day, to change the position. I keep from 75 to 150 pullets. I select daily all the smooth evenly shaped eggs, keepiogthem man airy place, never cover iog them, and never keeping them in i room where there is a fire, unless in freer. ing weather. 1 here is no safety in sii- Ltiug eggs in cold weather : one hour s - freezing settles au egg. ( Thus, one pa per says the old hen come on witn oue chicken this spring.) In following those , A Cat's Tail om a Roornca Oct ar fasti j Appearance Against Him o J - i mm pot an organ laaen irom a living annual i We took a abort walk yesterday and thia inaid of another aniaaal, very fraquentl v tbra The bisfnry of Kngli-h law was the saluution we heard one aaan witl be eawraftod tbrre. The infukJ few more Hai llinp judicial iravrdiea ibaa Atatula against eaardar . eawrafled the tail of a cat l,wrtJ mut " numane axa. i.usaeiu aa to I on a cock'a aotab. A Urn dara aArr u u make the finding aud poaaive kletiti evtdcnt by pricking the tail tlixt blood wv cir culating in it, and it, Would certainly have staid there bad not the reck had tght and loot iU tail. I Laughter. Ukbcr caaea of graftific tear no doubt la tbu reaped. It ta abowu by t b (act that ora in the amimalx when luv art implanted on a mocoim membraae take five another. The speaker was a sail Tl"""Jc,wnic", chan that b which the , in hi. shirt sleeve, and a aloaehed tlTa' - " oat, auu ne aioou uoiuiug in uia strong A rope attached to the horns of a stunted juvenile steer, that with its eon Ule . campatiuou, loofcod as if the rope were supeiaous, fee there was nothing more foreign to their thought, or Dirit. than running awav. The little f bambting wagon to which the attenuated I hold of it, blood ta attracted there and rirrula- atUe were bitched, groaned in its oilless J"00 UMi Pce-iur. lirown uara s iat joint, under nine .tick, of - green wood, I unplit because too tutu. 1 he wood TUP PAVflRITP HBMF REMtDY. Thia unnValled Medic ine wwarnoited not to onUiu a dingle particle of Mr.RCURY, or any f tir I i. .. i : linnoui mineral Buinwinr, uui m t UMi V GET ABLE. n containing tboae Southern Roots and Herbs, which on all-wiae Providence haa placed in countries where liver Diaeaaes moat prevail. 1 1 sill muwatr inaaflM0uaaad hv Derancrement f the Liver and Bowla. aassi' Ufsr Rrgalatar or Healeac. la aminently a Famil Medicine ; and by being kept ready for immediate resort will save many aa hour of suffering and many a dollar in time anl doctora bills. After orer Forty Tears' trial it ia still receiv ina the most itnonalified testimonials to tta vir tu worn persona of the highest character and rwponibility. Eminent physicians commend it a the most EFFECTUR AL SPECIFIC For Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Araal with this ANTIDOTE, all climates and change of water and food may lie faced without frtr. A a Komedv in MALARIOUS KE ardent, buoyant spirit, as she presses for- I were placed three rows of iron pots, and ward exulting m bhssfull anticipations, in these sat the damned and were cooked But the withering heat oT the coufllict of 1 In the third row sat the heatheu, who life creep, on ; the dew-drops exhale ; I like the Jews, could take no part in saU the garland, of hope, scattered and dead, ration, and aiust burn forever. I beard strew the path ; and too often, ere noon- one of the latter, as a square-built, burly I roles yoo may save all the eggs that will tide, the brow and sweet smile are ex-1 devil put fresh coals under his kettle, I net hatch for table we. I make it a rule changed for weary look oi one longing cry out, 'Spare me! I was once Socrates, I to sit the eggs laid thc.dsys I .it them ; for the evening rest, and twilight, the the wisest of mortals- I taught truth and I and one hen in good weather will hatch night. justice, and sacrificed my life for virtue. I 13 or 21 chickens at a sitting, and not lint the clumsy, stupid devil went on lose a single egg if thus selected. Alter with his work, and grumbled, Oh, shut they hatch I keep the hen. in a coup a op, there ! All heatheu must burn, and few days before 1 turn thin out to scratch we can't make an exception for the sake for the young ; and never Ut them go of a single man . Robbkd op Half Heb Glory. A pretty voting woman of Louisville named rauline 1 ' green The looked like - English hop pole., and the man who vowed the times were hard eould have earned the load eaailr. la the back part of the wagon, secured by a J V . If; . 1 A v . LSI llllil 1 strap, was a glaaed earthen Aug, With a corn cob stopper, supplemented by apiece of red rag. We did not wait to hear store of the stale platitude but went on ; the sight of such steams, such loads, inch men aud such statement, have become too common to excite comment. Late iu the afternoon we aaw the team again, going home through the mad. rain and increasing darkness. The drirur had the glazed jug under hi. head, as he lay on the two planks that formed the wagon bed. We do not know what the jog contained, but whatever it was the man had given all the content, be could, an inside passage. The little steers bad visibly shrunken since morning, looking, onr things, as if they were gradually washing away and longing for the job to be over. The man was not a type of the yeomanry of this land. Unfortunately, it has no class corresponding to the yeoman. He . m 1 a. a was a poor, ignorant while man, with a Warning to Lovers. for Leszinsky, noted for the beauty of her hair, which had reached the unusual length or 5 feet, a few nights ago was awakened about 2 o'clock in the morning, experiencing a sensation as if some one was combing her hair, which was loose about her shoulders. Aa she awoke she saw two men leave the room. When conscious ness returned she aroused the family. Her mother on entering smelt chloroform, and found that her daughter's hair had been cut Sturdy Uld Mkn. I here are some nretlv old men in the world who remain full of works and ambition. Lord John Russell, for instance, who looks upon Dirraeli, who is sixty-nine year, of age, draw its touiie under the thumb aud out oft Ill . ... from the rhrht aide of her head, that on the left sort oi a ooy, is eigniy-iwo yean oiu, .,.,, or rour drons of beef foot oil into side being neatly combed. and yet seeks to rule England. 1 he j lhe w-nj p, Tobacco styms laid iu the emperor William, a man ot seventy seven, r0oatine Dlace helns them to throw the What alcohol will do. It may aeem and the Duke, still older, axe having a worma oul 0f the wind pipe while sneea- Un.l .... .... . . . .. : . I . - i strange, but it I. nevertheless true, mat uveiy -contest, viuizoi, igovy wveu, y ing "Uavd times !" says the man that nev alcohol regularly applied to a iiini y tar woraing w n u,s merary ,u ... ! wriUj lhil) foP the benefit of lhe du, of wwk mors stomach, will remove tne boards r ranee, wnue a neirs, uui uiue uia .un.or, try Krower8 (imt to have my name in make them better. "Hard times !" says ile aud a large family, no doubt, and he lives in a wretched, one-roomed cabin, on t . iiii . a niece oi water was nou tana, unanown get rain water or hog I aua u,,ca, , d fur. with no impulse and uo That is the cause of gaps ald raitte m a uobler life. "Hard times t" Who are making them V The poor wife with her little ouc- huddled about her last night, knew what brought "bard times" to her wretched abode, when the famished brutes stopped, with hanging tongues, in the darkness, and ahe heard the oaths of the greater brute, as he stag gered iu with the little glaaed jug in bis . where tuev can slop to drink in poultry It is a worm that breeds in standing water, low slop, &c. The ouly cure I ever found, was to open the chicken's bill I "X atildy. yoa are the moot good iht ever lived." 44 Oh ma !" sobbed Matilda. " I could not help rayaelf 'deed 1 could not." ' " Could'nl help yourself f That's prtty way to talk T Ain't be a nice young man r "Yee,m.M "Got money V "fea'tn." "And good kin folk.' Te.m." And love, you to distraction T Yea'aa." " W-ll in k. n.n l M, what did you send him home for !" " Well, ma, if I uaitt tell the troth, 1 must, 'spoae, though I'd rather die. Yoa Me, ma, when be fetched hi. cheer op close to mino. and ketched holt of my hand and .quea and drapt on his knee, a. . a n.u aa then It was luat ins ryes rolled and u began breathiu' hard and bis gnllo kept a creakin'anda crakin', till I thongbt in my soul .omethin' terrible was the matter with his inards, lit. vital. ; and that flustered and skeertd me so. that 1 burst out a cryin'. Seciu' me do that, he creaked worse than ever, and that made tne cry harder ; and the harder I cried the harder he creaked, (ill of a anddeu it came to me that it was noihin' but hi. gallo see, and then I bunt oul a laoghiu' fit to kill myself, right ar his face. And then ha jumped ap and eon ont nf the house mad as de ; and ho ain't eomiu' back no more. Boo, boo' ahoo boo aboo boo boo" 'MatilJy ," says the old woman stern ly, "stop snivl in. -You have made 'an everlasting fool of yonrsel f. but your cake tiou ot the slain .noii esaeutAal to aba ton ict ion of the murderer: aud as the same remarkable caae had a peeadiar aaer a i ana social sigiiincauce ur tue lover, of all tunes, wlvo, in tbefV ale UevoUou to each .iher, ar. ill Crthaf too apt to disregard the fWtuaea of eery - txHly else in the world, it may bo re call, d appropriately for modem reading. L pan the death of Mr. George Perkt.: pointed a brother of ba living near mm ping Foreat, the sole gwaidbja of hi. aaiiy . I ami aivacled that aaid goaaaaaa - upw mc uniu oi nr. vcorge I erat.;Uj a widower of considerable property ia Londoa, it was foand that hie will ap pointed a brother of hi. liviaa near Em- ahoald die aiibar should iuhe. it the whose in eaae bis jvoune wan ww ' unmarried or withoat childi.o. I confidence in his brother, who was a die-aged bachelor of limited of coarse, inspired the dying such a will ; but a number of family twin- i lives pronounced the document aa eaua ordinary piece of sen ile- fatuity, and dark ly hinted that harm w.uhl ensue from H. Tbia feeling canard au alienation hef ween the occupants of the Kpphig Forest resi dence and the afoiisaid iiibliets. and made the latter lira butf-mi nroaocalora of the dead man's brother ia kite etranra . and tragic succeeding events, which have been described as follows : Uncle and niece were both aeea owe d.y walking together in the forest, ha the young lady suddenly disappeared, and the nucle declared that be bad sought her aa soon aa he had missed her. and knew not whither she had gone or what had become of her. This aeeoaat wee' cou .idcrcd improbable, and appearance, haw ing clearly suspicions, ha wee arrrated and taken before a snac is Irate. Other circumstance., hourly coming to light. A his literary labors in will remove the boards France, while Theirs, but little his junior, war. as a itomeuy in aiawuo . i. h r I . . .. ;..Jin ...m. iU ri... ,f tk m I x ,x , " . : . . VKKs, DOWEL. COMPLAINT, RKsTLE-,.". "o . v.f, - - , , your paper; noping some one may give Ule young man, too proud to labor With aji joneh yet. It all eomce of no" M-ys, JAUNDICE, NKAUSEA. am ms iron irees, mortgage ma rarm, auia einm. ni c w..o. avw...B n.tor.nation aud experience, Utat I Uto white hand, which he fold, as hel nnl rHfiiimn.Vllr -in1 p-.llow.ea'-nen -r- n dera I believe they call'ein. Never mind 1 HAS 1S3 It is the iisapest. rarest mbU b st rantiy in thai WAr'A Manufactured only by j h zszuir co , Maron (?a., and Philadelphia. Price. $1.00. Sold by all Druggist.. ist J over to America, we find men of seventy benefit me. II you thiuk it worth ng, and over working away like men of forty. in8erljn ju your pper vou cau do so. 1 subscribii myself a LADY READKR sow his fields with wild oates, and thist Irs. It will take the paint oft his buildlne break lite glass out of the windows and There are Commodore Vanderbilt, Daniel fill them with ragsV It will take the gloss fDrew, A. T. Stawaot, L iJdgar Tbontp V . f W K mm m I -II. It ft from his clothes and the polish from hi. hou and W . B. Astor. .tni tunitutiy uauu manner., subdue his reason, arouse his ling thier millions, and yearly adding to paawdaa, bring sorrow aud disgrace upon hi. them. There is milium C. Bryant pro mmilv. and topple him into a drunkard's ducmg in ins eignin uecaue a compreuen grave, it will do this to me artisan ana i sivo nisiory ot n.e ummj ouiup. . . . . I . rni lit l.-lll J waits for chance to give, him an easy job. Hard limes I says the planter, aa be begs the merchant to give him time for BY PHOXBP. CAllY. Weft, let him go, and let him stay 1 do not mean to die ; I guess he'll find that l ean live. Without him it I try. He thought to frighten me with frowns. Ho terrible and black He'll stay away a thousand years Before I ask him back. He said that I had acted wrong, And foolishly beside. I won't forget him after that I wouldn't if I died. If I was wrong what right had he To be so cross with me ? I know I'm not an angel quits I don't pretend to be. He had another sweetheart once. . And now, when we fall out. He always says she was not cross. And' that she didn't pout. It is enough to vex a saint It's more than I can bear : I wish that other girl of his Was well, I don't care where. He thinks that she was pretty too Was beaotiful as good : I wonder if she'd get him back. Again, now, if she could. I know she would and there she is 8he lives almost in sight : And now it's almost nine o'clock Perhaps he's there to night. I'd almost write to him tn come But then I've said I wont ; 1 do not care so much but she Shan't have him if I don't. Besides I know that I was wrong. And he was in the right, I guess I'll tell him so and then I wish he'd come to-night. There the capitalist, the matron and the maiden, is Thurlow Weed still dropping on us as well as to the fanner : for in its deadly from time to timo word, ot wisdom and . - i ' ... w i . - ... . enmity to the human race, alcohol is no I old political reminsceuces. respecter of persons. Alfalfa- Mr, John Cunningham show ed us, yesterday, a bunch of this very prolific clover that he bad taken from bis grounds only two years old and had a root tour teet nine inches long. At is very The catalogue might be continued much longer, but this is enough to show that men frequently need not outlive their usefulness. Civil Bights, and Douglas Lincoln. and THE WAY TO AVOID CALUM NY. "If any one speaks ill of thee," said Kuicletu. "couaider whether he hath truth on his aid. ; and if so, reform thy self, thai his censure may not effect thee." a a a a .a When Ana x inlander was told that the n a a . a a very boys laughed at lit. aiDging, Aye, said he, "I must learn to sing better then." Plato being told that he made innny enemies who spoke ill of him said : "It is no matter, I'll live so that none will believe them." Hearing at another time, au iutimate friend of hi. bony ! I'll send Johny and tell him bow it hanoeued. 'Doloeiac to him. and knit food he need., and payfng 100 or SO per him a real nice pare of yara gallowaee, cent, for his advances, he goes back over jetlike yoor pa's and they never do creak." In view of the recent events at Wash- commonlv thought here that Alfalfa and. inerton. it is proper to refresh our memor- - . . . . I 3 ' . . . . I.. . .. . .. Luc rue are the same thing, hut this is iea occasionally, and show how bravely we had spoken detractively ot linn, tie said an error. A hundred aud fifty pouuds of I are moving onward and upward perfee- I I am sure he would not do it if he had the seed of the Alfalfa was brought from tion. Since Abraham Lincoln is the I not some reason for it." This is the California by Mr. Walker, two years ago, Kreat exemplar of Republicanism, and I surest, as well as the noblest way of and distributed among Uis menus, woo jjouglas oi j.oriuern isemocrauc mhi- i urawing im ai.ng om ot reproacu, auu can now say nothing favorable of the Alfalfa I man.bip, we reproduce what both these I the true method of preparing the man for . - . P . m r.ft I . I I . X ft as a rich aud nutrions ailment tor cattle men were accustomed to say : mat great aim omy reiiet against tu especially for cows. tt can Be sown on I I hold that this government was made pains of calumny a good conscience. llie narren sou oi any portion oi imi ai- i on tue wiiimj uaam, uy wmw uic, ley and will be productive without much 1 benefit of while men, and none others. 1 attention, and yields two crops a year ; I do not believe that the Almighty made rith good attention it would yield three j the negro capable ot sell-government. crops. It is worm cuitiyaung every- i atepnenA. jjouguis. where. 1 am not, nor never have been, tn tavor of makin&r voters or iurors of uegroes, nor Gapes fw ChtckkNS. 1 will endea- iuterroarrying them with white- people ; vor to answer your correspondents in- I and 1 will aay in addition to this, that quiry concerning gapes in chickens. 1 1 there is a physical difference between tne will not undertake to answer her hrst in- I whitc asm black races, which 1 believe, qniry but the second and third ouly. wji forever forbid the two races living I Indepekdkt Candidates. When ever a Conservative endangers the sue- mm . . cess ot bis party by becoming an inoe pendent candidate he should be marked as an ally and tool ot Radicalism, as one willing to sncrific his party and principles for the gratification of his own personal piqnes or ambition. Such men are not to be trusted now or in the future. Win ston Seutincl. barbarous roads to an uncomfortable home to bet his remaining time on that game of chance cotton. "Hard times I" cries the merchant, aa notes fall dne, and not oue dollar for the thousands owing him, tomes iu to meet them. Yes, the times arc hard, and the cause lie. at our own door. Our merchants are the slaves of New York, and our farmer, the vassal, of the merchants. There i. too little of earnest, manly effort, too many of heaven's blessings to incite to persistent labor, qix months from now will tell the story, and the farmer who from neglect, ia forced then to buy his food, deserves all the hard time, it will, be possible to i iHict Columbus da Knquirer. vallev It'll be all A Terrible Romance. " Ye. ma," said Matilda brightening np ; "let m: knum." " So yon shall, honey ; he'll them moro than if 1 knit'em. right. You wind if m won't. Sore enough it prowed to be all right. Tildy and Johnny were married and Johnny', gallowses never creaked aay more." - 1 The Blue and the Gray. From the Chicago Tribune. J There are aaanj evidences that the re mains of the past difference, between the Noith and tha South are passing away. and that a feeling of real brotherhood is growing op not ween tne two To the year 1766, a youug girl of very lbe Mntrw. lite war ot the rebellion i. from oue of the in-1 nm nesunea to iwtve a lasting exno ot strife iu the heart, of the people of this cou.ilry. lime, aba great teacher and t tie great healer, is slowly but certainly eflae ing the scam of war from the face of na Feed the little chicken, a. soon as they I together ton terms of social and political will eat, on fine dry homing, as they grow equality ; aud, inasmuch as they do give it to them coarser ; and a. soon as I remain together, there must be a posi tion of superior and inferior, aud much aa anv other man. am in favor Be sare to give them the hominy I having this superior position M.igned to he white race. Abraham Iahcom. again RETROSPECTION. The old man sat by the cottage fire And he watt bed his children play ; And a tear stole down his check, But he wiptd it not away ; For his thoughts had wandered back To the scene of other years. And his spirit had found a glad relief In the falling of his tears. Again he played on the dear old hearth, And he heard a mother's voice, And the gentle tones fell on his ears And they made his hearl rejoice ; Again he joined in the blind man's buff, And the game of hide and seek, And beard Ida little sister's voice, Ro gentle, soft and meek. Then in the ahade, by the woodland dell, Or soft will. uL ..;,.,, ra iMv Urwandered lo aeek some wild bird's neat, That hung o'er the rippling brook, . 'H bred and weary of boyhood play, He turned to his home again 7 the rustic style and tl broken bridge, And the shady old green lane. nu thu the old man sat and mused, While the tears fall down his check, nU S kaDnicr hour it ' Ia Wim ffc. W "ft m W mwrnwrnm Taaaths .hi man's tongue could .peak, ft be knew 'twas but a pleaaat dream Tnal loo ROOri nnd na-d or'er 'bat hi. erea were dim .ud his lo ary And he could be young no more. they can swallow corn let them have the --. . a . .a aa corn, but select the smallest grains at first. drv. and no wet food whatever. Folio T. ST. . . . ... . the above directions, and it wttl not only prevent the gapes, hot cure it. Do not say this treatment i. too simple, bnt try it. I fed my chickens in this way and it cured them and prevented it afterwards. Correspondence State Agricultural , Journal. Bout well, the Charlatan. Richmond. Dispatch. Boutwell, admits not negroe equality with himself. He never haa negroes to dinner he ha no brother-in-law a negro he haa no son-in-law a negro he has no colleague a negro be haa no heart-warm guest a negro. On, no ; be only wishes na of the South to have the ne- .1 " am . . a . . a A Word for Newspapers. We clip the following articles from an exchange. It is true, and we recommend it to eyery man who has an interest where he resides : Nothing is more common than to hear people talk of what they pay newspapers for advertising, etc., as so much given in charity. Newspapers, by encbancing the value of property m their neighborhoods, given the localities in which they are pub lished a reputation abroad, benefit all such particularly, if they are merchants or real estate owners, thrice the amouut year m looks were a . 7T . , . i i cro in an nia giory at our tames, at oir acuoow, . . . i:- Soui hotels, Ac -He is very clear of even the My of the meagre sum they pay foreir suspicion of meaning to be with him and of support. .Besides, every puonc spirited him at home ! I citizen lias a laudable pnae iu naving a Then, Mr. Boutwell is neither a stateman, a I paper which he is not ashamed of even philanthropist, nor sn honest man. Hewcly T u be Bhouja pjck it op in New York irnothhTnm isa' Brood thins 1 orVf aaliingbMl. A good looking, thriving that such a man cannot live always. He must I sheet, help, to sen property, gives cnar- die. and instead of the cancer of ambition which I acter to the locality, in mil respects is a ' , i j.Lft ft. I ..I . flit 1. Jr r t TrV . ts ever gnawing nta vnais ana tnaueinc; n.m to . desirable public convenience. At, rrom offer up hecelojobaof his white fellow-ciUsens mattAr :n .u- lne.1 r editors 1 -i-.1 c...iu -.:f.. i.: i:a .mUi. . 'i - .1. . ZTZr col- hould not be quite cp to your car and annihilation with which nature ac-1 standard, do not cast It aside and pro- complumea her Work. Poor Boutwell cannot nounce it of no account, until you are sat hows oa Ida death-bed that even his theories I iPfied that there baa been no more labor will survive him. They are the mere expe- t, apon it that i8 paid for. If you eemeK f mmW ' mm : 0 . ',. mmm mmm m I J A .1 . r. aI ha 1 .1 II I avian tor Sumner's helmet. He will be crosn-1 sappwttru. auu m uim --Kr- ed by iU weight, and probably before his na-1 m a spirit of charaity either, bat because tut al death he will pass to oblivion, only to be you fr(. a necessity to support it. The rememliered aa the deceitful friend of the ne-l f nrmmm .t tW movat the gro, the charlatan statesman, and hypocritical I ,'r".l'l,fT a " humanitarian. P' "r ,v The Lovely South-Land. ft H HID ftlB IVOMW M. vw - , , published at Chicago, we find a letter Or Of If. .r tft 1 :.. i-ll.n irom sir. ii. t. rviny. one oi no correspondents, from which we copy the subjoined eloquent and manly tribute to the South. The letter from which we copy bears date. "JSTew" OfcXBaKn. May 1, 1874. "Too wish me to tell yoo ,4how I like the South V Do I like the 'JCden' of A meriea t No t I love it. with a love so strong, and ao deep, that had I the now er I would pluck from her lacerated body ft y every thorn of whatever amoj a wouia heal every wound however deep, and maae Iter, if not the paradise of me worm, cer tainly the paradise of North America, which nature designed her to oe. i would unite her with the North, the East and with the West, in the closest frater- nal bonds, for thus the prosperity and kanninM of tb a whole land would be nromotcd . The South is a land especially blessed by the band of God. When her advantages shall become knowo and ap preciated by the people of this and other nations; when her beauty and her inherent riches are and ei stood, and wise rulers and benificeat lawn .ha told away; when the waste places shall be built up ; when the busy hum of manufactories shall be heard all along the banks of our magnificent streams. Wbsa thia time shall come, than will the South become what the Creator in bis great wisdom designed k to be, the very 'garde of Eden of America. Now. do yoa wooder that I love the South T 1 would that I possessed the pen of a Milton, that I might tell of iu beauty and grandeur in fitting language. " pre posing appearance, terior province, of France, was 'placed at Paris in the services of a saan depraved by all the vices of that corrupt metropo lis. Smitten with her charms, he attempt ed her rui i, but was unsuccessful. In censed at his defeat, h'e determined on revenge, aud, in furtherance of his design secretly placed in her trunk articles be longing to him, aud marked with hisnaiiK. lie then denounced her to a magistrate, who eauaed her to be arrested, and the missing article being round in her pos sesion, sho was brought to trial. In her defense she could only aaaert her ignor ance of the manner in which the property came into her trunk, and protested her in nocence. Stic was found guilty, and the sentence of death was pronounced upon her. The hangman s office was incfhci rendered bis position serious. geutleman iu the neighbor hood had beeu paying his addresses te Miss Perkins. It was stated, and generally believed, that he bad gone, a few day. before she was missed, on a journey lo the North, and that .be had declared that .be would mar ry htm oo hi. return. The uncle had re peatedly expressed his disapprobation of the match, and alias Perkins bad loasay reproached him with his aokindnees and abuse of his authority over bar aa hoi wsrd. A woman named Margaret Oahw wa. produced, who swore that about 14 o'clock ao the day oo which alias Peatfee : in. waa missed she was pee. sag th the forest and beard the vaire ofay lady earnectly expostulating with S man. On drawing nearer the .pot w the sound came, Margaret Oaks that she heard the lady exclaim : ''Don't kill me, unci.-, don't kill me !'' The wo .mm man was greeny ternned, and ran away from the spot. Aa she was doing so aha. heard the report of firearm.. On this combination of circumstantial and positive evidence, coupled with the suspicion of interest, the uncle was tried, convicted of murder, and almost immediately after waids according to (he caaloaa. of lb so. days was banged. About ten day. after the execution ef the sentence upon the uncle, the niece reappeared, and, stranger atill, showed by the history she related, that all the tests mony given on the trial waa.trictly tree. Miss Perkins said th.f. havine resotvid to elope with her lover, they bad given out be had gone on a journey to sections of I North, whereas be bad merely waited the fkirts of the forest until the time ap pointed for the e'openaent, which was she very day on which .he had disappeared. saddl d fur sttea- talking ai l. bar ently performed, it being the first attempt StaU. the touching sight was wimea. of the executioner', eon. The body was of urviving Federals jdscing garlands . I t a f t . i J ! j delivered into the bauds of a surgeon, by n e K.T you.eoeratea m. m, m a mm whom it had been purchased. He imme diately conveyed it home, and waa pro ceeding to dissect it, when he perceived a slight warmth about the heart. By the prompt use ef proper remedies he restor ed the suspended animation. In the meantime he sent for a trusworthy priest, and when the unfortunate girl opened her eyes she supposed herself iu another world, and addressing the priest (who was a man of marked and majtslic counten ance), exclaimed : "Eternal Father! you know my innocence; have pity oo met" In her simplicity, believing ahe beheld her Maker, .be continued to sue for mer cy, nd it was some time before she reali sed she waa still in the land of the lining. The surgeon and priest, being fully con vinced of her innocence, she retired to a village far distant from the scene of her uuiust punishment. The community sub sequently became acquainted with her history, and the author of her misery be came au object of reproach and contempt, though it doea not appear that any at tempt wa. made to bring him to justice. Her lover had horses ready them both, and two servants in dance on horseback. While tore and from the hearts of men. I with her uncle, he reproached her lhe ladies of Chicago did not forget lhe resolution to many a man of whom ha Confederates boiled iu our cemeteries. disapproved, and after some remonsiraa- There were Bowers and evergreen, aud era, slic passionately exclaimed : eerviees for them .. well as tor their ene- " 1 have set my heart upon him. If f mies in life. In Calvary Cemetery, where don't marry him it will be death to see; only one rebel sleeps, his grave wa. re- and don't kill me, nncle, don't kill ms 1" me nbercd. At Springfield Major Bloford Just as she proclaimed those words she Wilson, who delivered the o ration of the heard a gun fired, at which .be started, day at Camp Butler, said that the time and she afterwards saw a taan come from had come when enniiijc and ha tea .hould among the trees with a wood-pigeon ix ao - i ST a an mmm . mmm - - be buried, and thai tbcjivmg should pay I bis band, winch be bad shot. Ou ap proacb'ng the spot appointed for a meet ing with her lover, .he farmed a pretence to induce her ancle to go on before bar. She then fled to the arms of her lover, who" had been waiting for her, and they bo'h mounted their horses aud imsnedi- a j w f i . my amy roae on. ln.lead, oowever. o go- a .a Tm . as a tribute to the lontcderale aa well as to the Federal dead. His recommendation was not unheeded. At Rock Island, in ho died At Cairo the di- in the military orison. vine character of forgivness was the theme ing to the North, they retired to Windsor, of Governor Beveridgc a orati :. At and about a-werk afterwards went oa a Pittsburgh the unmarked rebel graves tour of pleasure to France. There they ' were scattered over with flowers by the passed some months so happily that km same fair hands that decked those of the those days, when newspapers were acarcf. Union soldiers. 1 In Alleghany the same when there was no regular postal comma- . a I a . sblt at. a. a .a. a .a was witnessed. . At rveoaua tne graves mention anu no telegraph, they i-ever beard of their nncle's sad fate uutil th-ir return lo England. - -mmm TROUBLE IN THE CAMP Mj. Erwin Assistant District Attorney, haa resigned so has Gen. E. II. Hamp ton, Cleik of the Federal Court at this place. Why! Because "they will not bend the pregnant hinge, of the kuee that thrift may follow fawning." The power, that be the Greensboro clique, want these gentlemen to support lion. Plato Durham for Congrens, and as independent freemen, skbongh they do There hi a softening of heart in "both the love Government pan. and doubtless re North and the South, and it need. Ho lingaish the teat wile. much wgret th- prophet now, to. sea that the tfme will will not give their support to any saaa I soon come when the loved names of Jack- please Judge Settle, Judge Dick, or Ma son and Lee will be as familiar ia North other man." Set lie and John Pool ha - eru months as en Southern lip. ; when I made friends, and expect to carry thi i- of the seven rebels buried in the National Cemetery received the same attention as the Federal dead . Considering the attitude of the country towards the so -Catted civil rights bill in connection with this other feeling toward? the Confcderahe dead, we may hope that the day oi reconciliation between North, aud Sooth, which most precede the re cupe ration of the latter section, is near at hand. From the CharfWton (9. C.) News. Yd Ptatn ta m Democrat, true and tried. Plato is for Grant, and was for John Pool every man w bo died at bis post, doing his their own way, but they will ind that. for the United States Senate, yet, Plain duty, wtli be beuored, and. wbea every mountain Oepablieans cannot be wane, i. . Am.r.t M .rk Erwin and Gen. I man who lives, who waa Uue to his cU around their fingers. It is rumored that Hampton are made to unload, heeanee I om and whose aword ia stainless, will be lOen. Hampton will run farOngrvw as ac they a. republican, cannot support J regarded with i pride and respect, whether J independent Uepublioa sat iWr Cabv oc gray they as republi Plato. -Press he wure the bide - . - . . it . . - - ; i 1 -W - , 4
June 11, 1874, edition 1
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