s i . I - 1 rxuaeaif 1.1 id fv,vr) f Vj -ia,. i4sv . of0O VOL. V. THIRD SERIES. SALISBURY! N. C, SEPTEMBER, 24, 1874. e NO. 48. WHOLE NO. ,J2 ' 4 V-' ! T " - - tm u im- lhe Carolina wm vi fii ill vi l ... . K . . Of PUBLISHED WEEKLY: J. J. BRU NEE, Proprietor and Ediioi . J. J. STEWART Amo elate Editor. 2.5( . 1.50 10.0 BATES OF lUBCBIFTlOlf WEEKLY WATCHMAN. On "YEAR, payable madvanee. ... giz Months, k o..,.'u. to rot address Tri-weekly Watchman. 0n YeaeIo advance .00 8.x Months One Month 50 inVRRTIM; BATES I One insertion iw two - l.W number of insertions SIMONTON Statesville, N. C. l ''' 4fc " --"X M is' Kk- . Rev. S. TAYLOR MARTIN, PRESIDENT. Written for the Watchman. -- r 1- The Situation is remarkably healthy. The building is an elegant brick structure, admirably arranged for health and comfort. Efficient teachers have been secured. ON AN AGED HOUSE. There was an old horse, who had "taken his stand" By the aide of a street, in the famed 'Dixie land," ! Ev'ry week-day for forty long years, more or less, (As, forgetting to score, I shall now have to guess,) In the "carved line of beauty" his hack m - swaying low Only three legs he had, when not aiming to go Or gaily a-ftshing down at the Big Shoal, ft. - u I : J it Or a-visitine round to the neizhborin a rt w steeds f he staid at home, writing his life and his deeds If a spell of the colic or swinney he'd got If he'd spraiued his left ankle too bad for to trot If the old tuwn would seer look natural Fill "the sUod" he resumed that hekeot 1od before. ONS Squakk (1 inch) .. ... r. m trrpater liT social notices 25 per cent, more "rZ-lvertiaeraenU. Reading notice 6 cents per line for each and every insertion. 2 QuKsaaBBiBBBBM tJ 1 1 Pall Term begins September 22d, '74, ana Aristocrat hioe-hones looked -hhrh and unlu PulirilQrv T.tli TfK Q : TI 1 I February 5th, 75, and ends June 22d, 75. Board and English Tuition, $100. Music, $25. For other information send for Circu lar. away" From the phalanx of spare-ribs that let in the day .J. . A square-built and lofty, decaying old roan, Whose first speed and bottom were going and gone . From the late Bee. W. H. McO UFFET. D.D. family relic a fossil old nag. IjL.. jj., nyjestor of Moral Philosophy in I Whose past we would often dig over and Voorlv nil diseases originate from Indi mSm nnd Torniditv of the Liver, and i alwav anxioiulv ROUKht after. If the I ivT is Ketrukated in its action, health is al Host invariable secured. Want of action in the Liver catine Headache, Constipation, Jaundic e, Pain in the Shoulders, Cough, Chills, DuzinesM, Sour Stomach, bod taate in the mouth, billious attacks, palpitation of the heart, deireasion of spirits, or the blues, nnd a hun dred other svmtnms, for which SIMMONS' LIVER KEGULAT0E is the best remedy, that has ever been discovered. It acts mildly, effectually, and being a simpTe vegetable com pound, can do no injury in any quantities that it may be taken. It is harmless in every way ; It has been used for 40 years, and hundreds of the good and great from all parts of the coun try will vouch for it being the purest and beat -8IMMONS' LIVER REGULATOR OR MEDICINE, Jj harmless, If oo drastic violent medicine, Jj sure to cure if taken regularly, ig no tuzicating beverage, a faultless family medicine, g the --; f "i meuiciite in the world, Jj given with safety and the happiest results to the most delicate -infant, Does not interfere with business. Dims not disarrange the svstem. Takr tlu- ulace. for Ouinnine and Bitters of very kind. Contains the simplest and best remedies. FOH SALE BY ALL DBUGOISTS. - TO THE Wholesale Trade. the University of Virginia. University q Virginia, October 28th, 1872. I ask the privilege of introducing to any among whom his lot may be cast, my friend and former pupil, Rev. a Taylor Martin. He is a Christian gentleman, a thorough scholar, oi goon talents and much experience in teaching. He may be depended on to per form faithfully and, well whatever he may be willing to undertake. Few men have more practical tact and efficiency. W. H. McGUFFEY. From the Hon. WALT KB P. CALDWELL. Greensroro, June 17, 1874. As one of the patrons of Simonton Female College at Statesville, I have had a full and fair opportunity of becoming acquainted with the resident, Kev. 8. Tavlor Martin. and his corps of teachers, and with the sys tem of study and discipline. I would there fore recommend this Institution to all pa rents and guardians as a very suitable place for the education and training of their chil dren and wards. W. P. CALDWELL. From the Bev. WALTEB W. P II ABB. Mkcklenbtjro Co., N. C , June 16, 1874. From what I know of the discipline, in struction and moral influence exercised bv the Sjmonton Female College at Statesville, undef the control of Rev. S. Tavlor Martin. can cheerfully commend it to the confi dence and patronage of an enlightened Christian public. WALTER W. PHARR. From Maj. W. M. BOBBINS, mernherof Con- grmfrom the 7th District, N. C. House op Representatives, J WA8HIKGTOH, D. C, June 17, 1874. Rev. 8. Taylor Martin Dear Sir : Being; a patron of your School in Statesville, and having many opportuni ties for inquiring into your method of in struction as well as the progress made by jour jpupils, I take pleasure in recommend ing your Institution to the patronage of the public. Your triend and servant, WM. M. ROBBINS. JudiMiu? the future bv the past, we enter with confidence upon this our new enterprise Sf enamting our Wholesale from our Retail Trade, by having a seprale and distinct House for each ; and in doing so we flatter ourselves that it will not only meet the approval oi our numerous customers, but that an "Exclusive Wholesale House" will bring us a large influx of new trade, and of a character not heretofore enjoyed. It must be obvious to every buyer that trictlv " Wholesale House," arranged ana adapted for that Trade only, with a corps of experirntxd Wholesale Salesmen, with a stock carefully selected for that Iraue only, ana moreover, the avoidance of coming in contact with retail buyers, which ire and you all have heretofore found to be so irksome, as it fre quently happens that the retail buyer is your very neighbor, (per naps your own customer; baeh a house, we assert, must and will com mend itself to the Trade. Four years ago we advertised that we intend SB to make Charlotte a wholesale mart and era "The Wholesale House." We now have the proud satisfaction of seeing it an accomplished uci. We now call vour attention to the fact that we have converted our suherb store into an ex elusive Wholesale House, where vou can find all line of goods necessary for a country store, lo-wit : lrv-good. Clothing. Boots, bhoes Hats, Notions, Groceries, Hardware, Millinery all in complete lines, bought in large quantities ana irom the very first hands. Our stock is now arriving and will be com plete about the 1st of September, and will be - the largest of any here, the pretersions of others to the contrary notwithstanding. We respect fully invite your personal inspection, or write to us for circulars. Very truly yours, WITTKOWSKY & RINTELS. kO:-w- Puts a New Complexion on the t e From Bev. MOSES D. H0QE, D. D. Richmond, Va., Nov. 20, 1872. I am gratified to learn that the Rev. S. Taylor Martin is about to become the Prin cipal of the Simonton Female College at Statesvilie, N. C. My intimate acquaintance with Mr. Martin enables me heartily to com mend j him as a gentleman admirably quali fied for such a position. His sympathy with the young, his experience in teaching, and his conscientious devotion to duty furnish to parents and guardians the assurance that pupils intrusted to his care will find a safe and happy home, and enjoy every advan- brag And his name it was Diane ; (I'm willing to vow That my limping Muse canters in dog ger rell now,) Yet I'll wager this equiue Job stood a deal more Than Bucephalus dared ; and he ranked far before Rosinante, in all the original points Of his ugliness dire and distortion of joints Not Joan of Arc's filly or J. Cesar's pad. Which leaped o'er the Rubicon, looked half so bad - Ihrough the summer-beats lighting at blood-thirsty flies Through the winter-winas wiping big tears from his eyes 'Gainst the lamp-post where be was hitch ed every day n a. m mm . or to watch and to wait lor to nght and to pray For to lash bis raw sides with his stumpy old tail For to stamp iu the mud with his hoof and his nail For to ponder his sad, disin al fate o'er and o'er For to wish that his scratchy heels wern't quite so sore Some contraband lay-sermons loud for to preach In the baggy-shaft pulpit-stand, and to be seech From the tournament bot-flies a moments re lief (Like Patience's monument, grinuing at Grief.") For to long for his oats for to deep moralize. And to dream of a home beyond town- - roofs and skies. Where the good horses never get hungry or eold. And the goody colts never, oh ! never get old. Where they whinny and snort around, kick up their heels, And dance all the day to the cavalry reels. And lie down at ni6ht and sleep soundly till morn In gold liv'rv stables, crammed full of sound corn, T was an eve late In Autusan the winds whistled low Through the bleak woods and meadows, and murmured of snow, As I strolled in the wide sedgy fields near the town. Lost in reveries deep and in life-studies brown. When, aroused by the flapping of great sturdy wings, I was shocked by the sight of the strangest of things ! Pale Death is impartial he knocks at the gate Of the cottage or palace though sometimes he's late ! There, eyeless and dead, "Old Mortality lay. And the cormorant vultures were oickinsr away ! Atlanta Herald. mmry - C : . - - . It seems that after all Mr. Davis and his coadjutors have wasted much fine en thusiasm and euergv of denunciation up on crimes that were cot a to order. Wbeu Col. Howard, last Wednesday at the great DeKalb mass meeting, warned the Uemocracy of the tricks of the enemy and among other diabolical devices he spoke of this very Gibson county outrage, as it waa called, we cou Id see an exchange of incredulous smiles even among rood Democrats. The speaker declared then and there that be believed Mr. Davis had been imposed upon by the first reports of tue massacre, and tbat before the cam pargn waa over we would find oat thai this Gibson county lie was only part and par cel of an infamoos scheme of party man agement tbat was inaugurated iu 1865 by men who ought from their poaitwn to be reputable. It seems that Col. Howard waa exactly right. It seems tbat sixteen negroes were involved in the Gibson "Sonth Seas," mesnt the Pseille Oeeen.l wboae waters were still little knowu to Europeans, i bough eighty-uine years be fore old Francis Drake's keels bad plough ed around the bleak and naked recks of Cape Horn for the first time. Within these boemdsmes now lie the States of I well ilfostnts the resJrtaions of. klaSjcf. "Xoi oj SpamarxiMbut As$zstins f ML ored be the memory ef the WiWl chivalrous Frewcb gas lit all Carolina I It will perhaps prove not aural ... -I- .1 l. A -L . norcn ana routh Uarolina. lieorrta. a . large part ( f Forida. AUh.ms. M i..i.inni TBS rosMa or ouvxrmxkt to whic Tennee8e Louisiana, Arkansas and Tex- the pxoplb of JfOXTB1 tiWLiIi HA VX BIXN UBJBCTBD. First, we have the Rujal fTbveMIsm of the province of Carolina under the first charter to the Lords This charter was doted the Soil 1463, bat the roaornssoat under ss, the Indian Territory .New Mexico, Arixona, a large pan of California, and s considerable; portion of Mexico. It is mora lbs n eight times as large as Great Britain asm Ireland, tea Ussas larsrer than Franc fntir rima tUm. . . . - 7 IM1 sat th snumaint n4er it dm. rnp"7 J, ' "" T" PHv began in September following, Whom Sfca and,largT bj lb" GeDrummond was .prWed the ands of square miles, thn M these to- t .-Ja . iiu uukiu. x or on m.nm ilbit i . . - . , 11 tors were enlarged, and rorm mental au thority was conferred on them, and by 1 hem the first General Assembly was convened. Next were introduced 1669, the J 7VTj " T pan-d for the Proprittors by the eelebra- nr 1 re to AiiwnMn Ami Porhana it I r . r of f m wai. a w avoBismv is wsmap combined 1 Almost equal to one-third ot Europe I Tree, it may be said, that this doughty defender ot the Faith and Neill f i , . u wm, was aooui as ranch entitled to a large part of this domain as he was to be calltd iviug of France by the Gioee of -ftJ i t . . vjou ; out. neverihelesi. 11 nht waa Nevermore will the town have the same homely look As it had when old Dixie was tied to the hook ! Nevermore will his figure, so ancient and dear. Loom up in that picture, nnr vision to cheer ! Nevermore will he build his alrcastfos so grand, , (By the side of the street.) of the good-horse's land !" Nevermore will his "blood, sweat and tears" freely flow In the summer-time's duet or the winter time's wow Evermore shall he ronin in Elysian fields Far removed from Tartarean thistle-down yields ! He's a "clean gone up" uag he is sartin sure" dead Of the horse who lived always I've "never county barbarities. Six of these had peacbed on their gang of cut-throats and ceu better than that acquired to all the it waa precisely these traitors to their set shores washed by the Pacific Ocean by tbat the "eighty six masked horsemen" tbe erectioo f a standard on succeeded in killing. The other ten ee snd wading into its waves with caped, and left, like birds flitting through sword by Bajbon, for the Spanish sover- the air, neither track nor sign. Never in tgn civilised history have men so outraged all With this grant of land was also con social and religious obligationa to secure f erred upon the Lords Proprietors, juris 1 he "base euds of party power, as we find diction, ss ample as the territory, to es in the1, history of the Radical party in this I tabhah government, convene legislative country. Even murder itself changes its assemblies, moke laws to pass upon lib- hell Mi type, and becomes a pastime and crty, property and life ; to grant pardons, a frolic to theee men, who after deluging regulate commerce, collect customs, wage, the entire land in blood for the sake of par ty success, now keep alive the fires of perdition rather than lose tbeir hold on the power and plunder tbat place-holding affords-. What can be said of the South war, create armies, exercise martial law, grant tittles of honor, and many other things pertaining to vice regal govern ment that was in substance absolute ; the only proviso being "Thai said laws be manners. MOSES D. HOGE. RETAIL Now a few words about that. We now oc cupy the Riiperb lioune heretofore so favorably known aa the Memra. Brem, Brown A Co.' Dry-good House, to carrv on our Retail wnuneaa, and as "ExceUor" is. and has alwaya ocen, our motto, we claim also in that line to excel in stock, to excel in lowuesa of prices, and to excel generally We will, in that house, nave a corps of thirty Salesmen and Sales- Lsdies, all experienced, affable, and obliging. MoT We wilt make the Millinery branch specialty, -jf W. A. R. Charlotte, N. C, Aug. 20, 1874 2m oa. Intelligencer Copy. OTHER REFERENCES : Faculty of Hampden Sidney College, Faculty of Davidson College, N. C, ,X Rev. Wm. Brown, D. D., Richmond, Va,, Judge B. R. Wellford, Richmond, Va., Rev. D. E. Jordon, Oxford, N. C, Rev. P. H. Dalton, High Point, N. C, Col. John A. Gilmer, Greensboro, N. 0., Rev. Wm. A. Wood, Statesville, N. C, Rev. J. Rumple, Salisbury. N. C., Rev. H. G. Hill, Fayetteville, N. C, General D. H. Hill, Charlotte, N. C, Rev. E. H. Rutherford, D. D., 8t. Louis. Rev. Rich'd Mcllwaine, D.D., Columbia, 8.C. Faculty of Union Theological Seminary, Faculty ot university of Virginia, luage A. a. Guigon, Richmond, Va., Major Robert Stiles, Richmond, Va., Rev. L. C. Vase, Ncwberne, N. C, Rev. J. H. Smith, D. D., Greensboro, N. C, Rev. F. H. Johnson, Lexington, N. C, Rev. Alexander Martin, D. D., Danville, Yc Rev. T. L. De Veaux, Fayetteville, N. C, Rev. J. M. Atkinson, Raleigh, N. C, Rev. John Miller, Princeton. Rev. W. 8. Plumer, D. D Columbia, 8. C. AUg.4J7, 1874. t:b'g:o To J. J. Bell A wife Carolina Bell, Thomas voughenhour, and William C. Coughen hour. Xou will take notice that I shall apply to me Judge holding at the next Superior to for Rowan County at the Court House in Salisbury, on the 4th Monday after Jrd Monday in September next, to have a SBdmade to me as heir st Law of John I. Shaver cd onn linmt rl anil aovpntr acres of land ituated in Rowan and on the Waters of Grant's yetk including the mills situated thereon and Mlonging to Jacob Coughenhour, deceaa- Mj." said lands having been heretofore (Old Undr iImn- rxf iho Pnnrt nf F.ouitv f KoWan Conty( an purchased by my anoes- "onn 1 Hhaver, deceaHed." EDWIN SHAVER, Heir r;4, 1874 6t. a 1 . am - . S . 1 ern man who aids and abets tbis ravening consonant 10 reason, and as near as may l . 1 - - . II M a a uoiue, eiuier uirceiiy or luairectiy. uc wuychwumt agreeaoiu 10 ine laws and customs ot this our realm of Lng- laod.' Will Grant br a White Had t There seems to be no doubt that Under this heading, the Richmond Lis-l tu v.i.r . parcn oi yesterday says : Will Urant allow his troops to stifle the was fardl npplted to ibis whole Atlantic will of the people of Louisiana T Will he coast, and in this respect Virginia is the prove to be false to his race and to his child of her daughter, the child being country ? Will he reinstate a usurper, christened first. In 1562 Gaspaid de well knowing him to be such ? Will he Coligny, the great Admiral of France, snstaiu a robber 1 Will be sunoort a douhle.dyed traitor to his race, bis State, and bis country ? Will he not rather de led John Lock, author of the "Essay On tbe Humau Understanding," under wMeh r y they governed, or professed to go vans, She Lrm ProTc n"1 193' they ware eb- rogated, and the direct role of the Pro prietors was resumed, aud continued an til 1729. In that year the charter waa sail on - dered by seven of tbe eight Proprietors, acid the Royal government waa reensaod. hich continued until the beginning of tbe Revolution. Then the State rovernmenl and tbe Central Continental Congress until 1778. Then under the Articles of Confedera tion until 1789. , Then under the Constitution of the United States until 1860. Then under the Constitution of the Confederate States until 1866. Then through tbe mixed and mingled maxes of bayonets, military satraps, extra and unconstitutional rescripts of Congress, until the readmiesion of our delegates to the National Legislature and the down fall of the carpetbag dynasty. I make no leas than ten radical changes in tbe form of the powers by which we have been ruled in oar history, from 1663 uone" read. Sept. 12th, 1874. E. P. H. From the Daily News. Grangers Bank. Mr. Editor : I am glad to know the Grangers have under consideration the cide, as in the case of Arkansas, to hold I eovery, was to select a home for himself off and allow the neoDle to decide the land bis persecuted fellow Uugnota in questions at issue ? I the wilds of the new world, But if the President shall come to the be unable to maintain themsel conclusion that be cannot lecognise Mi- at home. Riband landed near tbe pres Enery as the lawful Governor of Louis ent of St- Augustine, on the northern iaua, let him at least refuse to restore tbe border of Florida, explored tbe country, usurper. He knows that he usurped the I at)d returned With glowing descriptions of office, and was supported in it bv the ac I the land and climate. The Admiral waa lion of corrupt Federal judge who also I so charmed with the report tbat he de- usurped jurisdiction in a esse which be I termiaed to tound a colony ot nis 1'ro- could not lawfully have entertained. He testant countrymen there, and according- knows that Kellogg cannot mnintain him t -y ,D 167, he dispatched six ships with about 500 souls, nnder the charge ot to 1870. a penod of 207 y V'esre ssso m woe auujiisii vi a i nut.' , . - dispatched ad expedition of two ships changes have average about one for n . I n. r. w . I IWCIHT TW1 ! A M''"ft v wuueft ocoii inunuu mi m lu-nrr. HI c low I , nurnoae of whleh. nnrler nretP.,P nf d... OO the SUblllty ol gOVCromenU, ITUty ; 3 a and tbe more so. wben the North Carolina ia usually uneventful ! paper with history ol should they comparatively ai vee by arms I 1 ih4al e06 propriety of establishing a Hunk, and to fix tbe rate of interest at 6 to 8 per cent. ee'f office onless aided by Federal bay Wo think the idea a rrw.d An nA onets. ntch htm overboard, whatever be easily accomplished by the G.angers eU yU do' Mr' Preirtt. under their organization, and the rate of From the Norfolk Landmark. Sketches of North Carolina. tage for improvement in mind, heart, and Rye, barley and fodder, and sweet clover bay. And soft beds of straw, made for Dixie and Gray, Lee's gallant old vvhitey and Bonaparte's Lear, The Icelandic pony- and Arab's pet mare ; In that Lome, to which waited by buarard's awift wiegs. Whip, harness snd spur are impossible things ; Just sixty leagues off from the dry desert field Where the " cussed mule" picketh the wild thistle's yield, And broils in the hot sun a billion of years Just to make up for kicking clear out of his gears. Now skeptical reader, give Dixie his due. And harbor no doubts that my legend is true For without some air-castles, some mirage of hope, How can man or beast either with life's evils cope ? And how could poor Dixie have borne it so long. Without some such reflections as these in my song ? There he stood, ss a sentinel firm to his Pet, While his "blood, sweat and tears" on the sidewalk were lost. In a "cause" which the good horses all must approve- As the "lone star" of duty, obedience and love, A-waiting and waiting for master to ride. Through the long weary hours, till I'd thought he'd have died ; But he held out so well, that the horse prophets swore He would always be there and would live evermore As a curb-stone fixture and bot-fly's nest As a statue of Pain and an emblem of Best. But I "missed him" at last from his wonted horse "perch," And I wondered if be could hove gone to the church. interest reduced, and more money made at a low rate of interest than at the pres ent usurious rate charged by our present Banks. Before the war our Banks oaid 1 : t 1 1 1 m me siocauoiaers o per cent, every six months, and bad a large surplus to carry Profit and Loss account. This 10 per cpul annualy was paid clear of atl taxes and expenses. Wbv can't it be done a 4 again 1 It certainly can be doue. Tbe profits of a Bank is made by promptness and frequent turning over the same money or interest paid every 30, 60 or 90 days. An I re n n nro Anhiho vans snoonj vj v wis j 1 '"rj r f vuuiuiuo J vui luvsMiv- establish your Dank, and m a tew years yon can have a branch in every Oongres- ional District, and if you choose in every county in the State, aud vou will deserve more credit than all politicians in the State. Wake. GRAND GIFT CONCE BT w 11 be given in the City of Gree ns C A boro, December 31, 1874, for the purpose of erecting an ODD FELLOWS TEMPLE. The Grand Gift is the Benbow House, worth: s6o,ooo.oo GRANh CASH QUI $10,00 0. Real Estate Clifts, $8 1 ,5O0 Cash . $88,500 Only 100.000 tickets to be issued. Price of Tickets, $260. IIOW THE EARLY VIRGINIANS GOT Wives. The history of the Common wealth of Virginia, says the Richmond Whig, commences with an auction sale not, however, in a store, but benoath the green trees of Jamestown, where probably THE ERA OF DISCOVERY THE CLARENDON GRANT A WILD ROMANCE AND A BLOODY RETRIBUTION. 'Wot as Spaniards but Assassin. " Ten different Forms of Government from the Colony to the Present Date, drc., dtc. NUMBER 1. In the leafy month of Jane, in the year of grace 1667, that merry monarch and some hat dissolute man, Charles the Se cond, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, r ranee and Ireland, King, De-! fender of the Faith, etc., dec, was gracious ly pleased to grant unto bis "right trusty and well beloved cnusing and counsellor, Edward, Earl of Clarendon, our High Chancellor of England ; our right trusty and entirely beloved constn and counsel lor, George, Duke of Alberroarle, master of our horse," and with like expressions of courtesy and insincere regsrd, to the Rene Laudoniene. Tbey landed on the same spot as Riband's party, built a fort which tbey called Arx Carolina or Fort Charles, and named the country Caroline or Carolina after the wretched bigot Charles IX. of St. Bartholomew memory. Twenty years afterwards, when Walter Raleigh's colony, nnder Ralph Lane, was first established on Boanoke Island, and Amidaa aud Barlow had earned baek to Queen Elisabeth their enchanting stores of tbe country, its inhabitants and pro ducts, she was so pleased that she order ed the land to be called Virginia, in hon or of her virgin self. Thus the name Virginia superseeded that of Carolina, until it was subsequently revived by the patents of Eliaebeth's aucesaors and ap plied to the territory south of 36 degrees, 30 minutes. The fate of this colony gave rise to one of THE MOST SOMATIC and heroic incident even of those chival rous and advaniurous times. The 8pan iards, who claimed the whole continent, resented this intrusion of the French Pro testants, and seat a force under command of Adroeral Meneodox against them. T.hey surrendered to overpoweriog nam bers on a promise of aafety, but, with a perfidy which no modern European ex cept a Spaniard; could ever equal, they were immediatly slaughtered. A few wbo escaped to the forest were captured cruel their SOME OBSERVATIONS TJFOM STITUTIONB OF LOCKS Although they proved entirely impracti cable, and were soon abrogated, tbey are infinite service to the wise statesman, as proving conclusively the worth leaess of governmental theories concocted in the closet ot tbe scholar. If intellect sad study, abstracted from oil contract with actual life, could under say dreams tan ces found a government adapted la aha wonts of a distant people, it would seem tbat tbis great Englishman, wbo bad sounded 'he depths and shallows of the human mtiid would have doue it. Tot this work, prepared ith tbe utmost ears and tried with patient f lirneas. proved an utter failure. TLe simple eoneeptiuas of the rude pioneer, squatting in tbe loreet, w ithout books, papers or learning to road them, in regard to the laws be wonted, were worth all the fine mediutioas of aha disciple of Aristotle and Plato. Laws are suggeeted by tbe daily recurring wants are as varying as the conditions and cir cumstances by which men are sur rounded. A government so framed as to be promptly responsive to these wants will constitute tbe perfection of human rale. Necessarily such an one must be piece meal. the most anxious and interested crowd of Ejr of Craven j Berkley, Lord Ash- nd Pn be trce with tbe auction nanitnes ever Known in ine history i0V o:, nrM Willi. urLi,v ih. but characteristic inscription upon of the world were gathered. In a letter, ' , m-,cnt A. it j bodies. "Not as Frenchmen but as Here 1 j. nhiMli In mnriorn I Hfco all time. Little did still to beseen, dated London, August 21, b a soveHgIl apon 1621, and directed to a worthy colonist of J m if) inlll..l il.o writer llAMI M U., ' ' AGENTS WATED. SfiT For further particulars, add: Manager, Box 8, Greensboro, N. C. C. P. MEN DEN FI ALL, the that settlement, the writer begius by say- mg: "We send yon a shipment, one widow and eleven maids, for wives of. tbe people of Virginia. There has Leen especial care in tbe choice of them, for there hatb not oue of them been received bat upon good recommendations. In case tbey cannot be presently married we desire tbat they may be pat with several householders that have wives until they can be provided with husbands." But the writer of this epistle had little reason to fear that any of the "maidens faire" would be left over. Tbe archives contain evidence to prove that these first cargoes of young ladies were pat ap at auction and sold for one hundred and twenty pounds of tobacco each, and it was ordered that tbia debt hould have prece dence of all others. Tbe solitary "one widow" went along with tbe others, for they could not be particular iu those days. Tbe good minister of the colony no doubt had a busy time tbat day. He did Charles know what he was giving, and as little did these subjects know what tbey were received. Even now but few con sider the imperial character of the terri tory granted. It embraced " all that province, territory, or tract of laud, situate, lying and being within our dominions of America extending north and eastward as far aa the north end of Cun i tuck river or inlet, upon a straight waterly line to Wyonoak creek. which lies within or about the degrees of thirty-eix and thirty minutes, northern latitude ; and so weat in a direct line as far as the South Seas ; and south and westward as far as the degrees of twenty- nine, inclussive, of northern latitude ; and so west in a direct line as far aa the South Seas ; together with all and singular tbe ports, harbors, bays, rivers, and inlets be longing unto the province or territory aforesaid : and also all the soil, lands, fields, woods, mountains, farms, lakes, rivers, bsys and islets," Ae.t Ace, to bo therein. 10, 187i-6w. not montinn .n v fWa nor did the bridegrooms think of tendering say. All was joy and THW YA9V gladness, no storms ahead ; norosqoisitive ! stretches across the entire continent, from clerk to stand and say "Here's the license ocean to ocean ; five hundred miles in fork over the $1," Nothing of the curt. ! breadth and two thousand seven hundred From some of these eoaplee the first fam- miles in length, and embraced an area of ( ilies ol Virginia art decended. The blood of these murdered French men cried in vain to the corrupt and bigoted French eourr. The gratification of in tolerant hatred to Protestants, ia bearing of their slaughter, was groat as to drown the voice even of natioual pride ; and no redress for the cruel outrage was demanded by the government. But it was not so with their brave countrymen. A Gascon gentleman, Dominique de Goar gues, a bold, patriotic and glory loving soldier aud navigator, after exhausting all other efforts to avenge the murder of bis countrymen, to do it himself. Selling bis entire estate be built a few small ship, fitted them oat at his own expense, and without a band of eboooea companions into whom he bad infused his gallant spirit, boldly set lis prows towards a coast three thousand sides distant across au ocean swarming with the ships of the mightest power in Europe, io search of the murderers of bis countrymen. In due time he foand them, and with bis Gallic blood 00 fire, came down apon tbe Span ish colony like the avenger of blood. The woods of the coasts of Caroline resounded with the desperate conflict as be drove tbem from fort V fort, slaying as be went. The few that escaped the sword wore hooa to tbe wide spreadinr branches of tbe rreen live oaks ou the shore, and to 1 sore than one million rquare miles. The fsir bodies affixed inscriptions which so GOVERN M 1X8 GROW, snd this growth is slow and natural, sad dependent, like all other products, apon soil, climate and cultivation. Hence tbe utter folly of tbe Lord's Proprietors in employing a metaphysician to draft a eea stitution of their colony, scarcely yet bora, three 1 bout and miles distant ia a load bo bad never seen. Pre-natal baby garments arc never remarkable as fits, and I fancy the erode, red faced, squalling colony of Carolina, w tapped in the f owing and courtly robes of tbe "Fundamental Oon stitmiou" resembled very much a new born infant, (though born to be a bruiser) done up in one corner of a suit of long clothes ! rraetical people could abundance of government and but little baby, and snrely, if a man ef mon sense will look over tbe one hundred and twenty sections of that instrumenr and compare its absurdities and tal regnements with rude but homely with tbe colonists built up for themselves, piece by piece, eaeh born of a want and tested by tbe fire of experience, be can not fail, to see where the fine gold of gov. em men tal policy is doc wp, and bo wfO feel tbat this groat folly of making a Ttopian Constitution to order and ship ing it to a strange people like a cargo of shoes, regardless of sise and numbers, is only atoned by tbe grim joke of King Charles, expressed L-rds, be says they have sought the grant "be ing excited with laudible and pions sml for the propagation of the Christian faUkT No donbt of it all ! One of these nrnnaeatora was a member of the ous Cabet. and several of the others high in the annals of that tieentloaa Coart. Bat saoh were tbe beginnings of groat events. Result are iu the hands of God ; and no matter what the saoirvt characters were the genesis of things in America. mli 1 I