, tpo i Ti WW 'p. mm sn m XVCUb J. JLJLJLJLtU!; V V Ub IL VJLJLJLJLX(Ubl. JLo VOL IX. THIRD SERIES SALISBURY, H. C. JANUARY, 3L 1878. mi5 OUir WINDOWS IN FLORENCE. basis of his astronomical system The leaning tower of Pisa is looked ou by AMEicici s-v espucius : his tomb: GALILEO: travellers as a curious-Droblem. and er- , & haps Galileo did not know why it was so ; !i 1. 1 A. t f 1 . A Airs. Browning made the house in which m" Jsl Iar enougn lor mm to i a. - ? i l : j W.id,d in Florence famoit hv M "l":uuieui8 wuu nuung uouies. Bl.V . - j 1 , . - ... -Coni Guidi Windows." Mrs. Jameson anu u llie tower uever 8ervea auy ueuer wrote in the same house. And, wonder- IrPf enougb to that it leaned l.I TT 1 . s l tnrplate. I had Mrs. Browning anart- Iur mm' 116 Knew 100 mncu Ior ms own , o r -, - 1 1 , ., . . . ,. 'mentandMrs. Jameson's table when I lur ue roeu luat au inveuuouui ' was here ten years ago ! But Casa Guidi is not so well placed for sun -light as we The steps were of woodt and they and the railing are ricketty with age, but they had held great men, and were not to break down with me. The tower was not lofty, but, being on a hill-top," it commands the whole horizon : and such a heaven above and such an earth beneath, sure in no other clime and land may the eye rejoice in. Not fair Florence only or chiefly is the glory of this scene: though not a Idoiue or tower or palace in its circle of splendor but shines at my feet in tins brightest of sunlight: but Tuscan-, cov ered with vineyards and olives, rich in corn and wine, ten thousands of villas crowning and studying the hillsides and plains : the Arno rushing among the walls of the city and coursing through the fields beyond : and the whole circuit of moun tains on which the sky rests for support I 4.1. ' A. . il jl . t4 Ilia tiiwu In (Mrini4)i finUinf ilff "-Kill- rf-l.n.mn: anu W1? 01 lueiu P?-.' Flu.uo, , ilU'") " j wishedj-and Ave therefore sacrificed the sentiment to the .advantage of Jjeiug at home 4in mine own inn." It was certain a great man was a sham, and the great man became his enemy and caused the re moval of the Astronomer to Padua. Here he was Professor for eighteen years. WJien he had perfected his first telescope I t.jr . 1. St i ir 1 e xi... a. r lv a nlcasant guidance that led us to the "riWK ,lw euice auu' ,,u,u U1C wr hotel Jcla VilU, where we have found de- "ie Cathedral of St Mark, looked into the Hatful quarters. If tl.e windows lack neaven8 and dered the moons of Jupr theromaneo of poetry jind art, they look ter. This was in 1609. He was now 54 . 1 .j . 1 years old. The fame of his discoveries, out upon waters, bridges, towers, domes, I" v TV- ,C8 nt thai tether inalr a nnnornmii of opinions of the world, were abroad in the Wrno! hi8toriral v interest. If the earth' Science contended stoutly against , . on ., , . him. Superstitiou came to the aid of , t.i. :i t. i k ..mi science and made the fight bitter. How volume luigui cusiiy . uu mauc w luiiu i- 1... : 14. 1 sorely the good man was tried, in thefif- , lcf0u.,. n , w ftm fi. teu years that followed these. brilliant . To the stars he went and walked memories sujrsested by the view trom the I ...... . ; ... . window at which 1 am writing these lines the great world of Europe and making, with their sister Alps, the bulwark of Italy. Yet it was not this view that Galileo studied from this old tower. He did not even look that way. Ad astro, The sun has justgone down. An Ital- . ian sunset in its highest glory is now be . fore us;' Serried ranks of clouds are on , lire. They are reflected from the swollen ' bosom . of the Arno, which glows and burns with the last light of day. All the West is tilled with broken and dissolving rain bows: piles . of purple and orange, and brilliant ml hues and violet rays, are heaped up there in masses of rich color ing,a great heaven of leauty and glory, in which the fading clouds float like is lands of the blest in an infinite sea. The house is fu an open Ktrmrre, 011 which stands one of the oldest churches iu Florence. Within it are the ashes and the tomb of the man whom Americans will never forget, Sthough they regret that they Jiave such cause to reniemler him On a marble slab in the pavement of the high altar, is this inscription : SVIS M LXXI-S AMERIGO VESPUCIO rOSTEKIS: He was one of those few fortunate men who get more fame than is their due. JVuierico Vespuci "followed in the wake of Columbus, and having stumbled upon the coast of the Western-Continent, left his name on the whole of it, and it remai'us to this day, and will to the end of time. More fitting would it have given the hon ' or of the New World's name to Columbus, ; as it certainly belongs to him. And here in Florauce they not only build a tomb to 'Americas and treasure his bones, but they ' point to the greatest celebrated gnomon ' of the Duomo as the greatest astronomi cal instrument m the world. e are. told that this fine meridian was traced as early as 1408 by a physician of Florance, a great philosopher and astrouomer ; Tos-?, canelh, who corresponded with Christo pher Columbus, communicated toliimjhe results of his penetrating researches into astronomical science, and pursuaded the 7 gieat navigator to try the western pas sago to India ! Thus the "Florentines would intimate that-the discovery of the Western World is due to the scientific researches of their citizen. Dr. Tosca nelli. Therefore, with profound conipla cency, they garnish the sepulchre of Amer- kiis Vespuel and put the laurels of Colum . bus on the brows of Toscanelli ! Across the Arno, which flows beneath our windows, we see many hills covered with villas, palaces, convents and church es : but a little tower in the distance, more than anything else, attracts my attention whenever I look out on this splendid scene. From the stone on which Jacob dlept, a ladder seemed to reach from earth to sky. And from that lone tower the old astronomer, the prince of seers, by the aid of his telescope, was wont-to bring the heavens very near. On itjheold man Ktooil to make' those observations which we study with no less wonder to day, than 1iis unbelieving cote in pontiles did in 1G40. It is well to revise one's re collection of facts when there is a new association by which to fasten them. If you are familiar with MiltonV Paradise Lost, youSvill readily recur to the lines in which he yvrites tht Satan's shield ''Hung o'er his shoulders like the moon whose orb - Through the optic glass the Tuscan artist views- At evening from tho top of- Fiesole, Or in Val Arno, to descry new lauds, Ki vers or mountains, iu her spotty globe.'' The Tuscan artist was Galileo, to whom Milton came when the astronomer was old and bind, a prisoner here, under the ban of the Inquisition, waiting for death to come and take him above the stars. Galileo was born at Pisa, only a few hours from Florence, Feb. 15, 1'Aii. Neith er you nor I believe in the'transmigration of souls, but we are entertained by strik ing coincidences. It is asserted that Gali leo was born theiganie Hay and hour when Michael Angelo died ; and when Galileo died, the.year was signalized by tin-birth of Isaac Xewtou ! The world never knew three other men, in such , a succession, of such 'transcendent genius. Galileo was but a boy of eighteen wiiei, in his parish church, he saw "the chandelier swinging to and fro, and was led to think of a pendu lum whose vibrations should be a meas ure of time, lie was only twenty-live discoveries, his published letters reveal, j among them, familiar with their paths, Aud when the Jusuits pretended that re- 1 nor losing ouce his way, he .was at home lirioir would be overturned if it were I when farthest from the earth in quest of proved that the earth revolves around the ! worlds till then unknown. Wonderful sun, the old astronomer for he was now , old man he was ! How patiently he bore three score and ten was ordered to pre sent himself at Rome and answer to the charge of teaching doctrine opposed to the the greatest of all afflictions to one who pursues the stars ! How sad his fate to lose the light of those heavens in which faith of the Church. Into the hands of by sight he lived ! the Inquisition he now was thrown. It is not certain that he was put to the tor- Milton was young when he came to this blind old man. Milton was blind TURKEY INT TUG MIDST OF WA K. Correspondent of the N Y Tribune, 15th. Constantinople, Dec. 21. As long as Plevna held out, even, the most despond ing of the people had lingering hopes that in some way the tide of war might be turned back. Since the surrender of the place, however, every spark of hojie has died out, and I never saw such "despair and such hopelessness as that which now exhibits itself amoug the mass of the peo ple. The' curse their rulers and their generals, and are ready to siuk into leth argy in the belief that -what is fated has been revealed by the events of the last three months. The iieople have learjfed to regard Osmau Pasha as the one hero of the whole nation, and every household is bereaved in his loss, as if it were a death. They feel such a regard for Osmau Pasha that they impute to the Czar a similar ad miration and recount to each other stories of the generosity shown toOsman by him. An old Turk gravely told me of the whole scene of the surrender. Perhaps you would like to hear it. Osmau Pasha was on a litter, having commanded the arniy all day with a bullet in his leg. Thepzar kissed him on s the forehead, aud said to him, "You have done nobly." At the same time he took from his own breast the Grand Cross of St. George and pined it upon that of his valiant enemy saying: ture, though a sentence in one of his let- j before he was old. And Milton saw more ters seems to strengthen the idea that he 1 of heavenly things alter he was blind was. Probably he was a man of such than before. I hojie-that both of them . . . . . ." . ' a 1. in: ii... : sensitive physical organization that he , now, eye 10 eye, are uenoming uie invisi could not face the instruments of torture; ' hie. Iiien.ei's. and without hesitation he admitted that i the earth stood still, rather than to go upon a wheel himself. That he did sign a written retraction of his opiuions is quite certain. But it is not certain that lie said rose from his knees, as he is reported and generally believed to have said. Be that as it may, we know that his recanta tion was not believed to be sincere, and he was condemned and consigned to im prisonment. The intercession of friends procured Jiis release, and he was ordered to remain in duress, under the watch of the Inquisition, at Arcetri, adjoining Florence, where the Inquisition was flour ishing, and abundantly ably and willing to roast a heretic at a moment's warning. The Galli family, to which Galileo be longed, had property there, and the villa which he rented, and where he passed the remaining ten sad years of his life, still remains,- and the tower that bears his ilT lustrions name. To his house men ot learning and fame made pilgrimages, to sec the man who had revolutionized the system of worlds. H toiled on in his forced retirement, writing out those-works which could not then be published for fear of Rome, but which have since be come tho property of mankind. Milton, young and ardent poet, quite as uncon scious of his future as Galileo was of Jus at the same age, came- to Arcetri, and looked upon the glorious old man, who could not see hinv now, for at the age of 74 he lost the sight of those eyes that had often looked into tbe mysteries of the skies. He closed them here in death Jan. 8, 1G42. The men of Florence gave him, as he deserved, a royal burial, and his sepulchre is among them, iu the church of Santa Croce, with an epitaph- that cele brates the greatest astronomer of any age. Galileo's instruments are carefully pre served ami kindly exhibited in the freat Museum of Natural Science in this City. And when you have looked at, not through, his telescope, which is a very poor affair compared with what we have in our mod ern , observatories, and have seen the wonderful preparutions in wax of anatomi cal subjects, giving the minutest exhibi tionsjof the internal and outer parts of the human body", the most complete and perfect thing of the kind in the world, you may go, asl have gone to-day, to the hill of Arcetri, the tower of Galileo, to the house aud room in which he labored, suffered and died. Ou no other height have I stood aud been so profoundly im pressed with sublime associations, as to day ami there. Leaving the carnage at the foot of the last rise of the hill, I walk ed a few rods up through a narrow alley-, aud came suddenly upon space on the very summit, au ancient, rustic, ram bling stone building, a farmer's place ap parently, with a rude tower on one cor tier, crowned the hill. I came to; the door, and a smiling Italian peasaut wo man asked if I would see the iuterior. Stepping into the court of the house, I found on the walls marble tablets covered with inscriptions recording the facts re specting the great astronomer's residence: tlneare that had been taken to preserve it as it was iu his day. All arouud were memorials of him and the noble families with whom he and his history are con nected. I passed up a flight of stone steps iuto the study of Galileo ! His micros cope, his books, his manuscripts, his por trait painted from life, his bust, letters to him from illustrious men, the chairs in which he sat, the large table at which he the abandoned homesteads. People stop to look at the soldiers and the fugitives, aud if your eye rests a moment on tha crowd of spectators yon cannot fail to de tect among them representatives of a doz en nations Persians, with their black wool hats, East Indians, Greeks, Armen ians, Jews and Bulgarians, English, French and Italians. Serenely sailing by both soldiers and refugees, come foreign ladies dressed in the latest shade of green, cut in the latest Paris style, but held re mote from mud in true Pera fashion, and. dashing on horse-back through the throng, comes a brilliant Circassian aid-de-camp, holding high a hugh envelope in lieu of apology for having bespattered with mud every one on the street AU the various classes mingle on the streets to form the Babel, but each race fsdistinct, and - has its distinct degree of uncivUization and its own views of its rights and duties. Each race seems as if it would be separate from every other to the end of time. A BIRD-COMBAT. That trim, gentle-looking, drab-colored bird, erroueouslj' called turtle-dove, by dwellers in the Uuited States, and gener ally deemed so utterly innocent and pure that to kill it for the table or any other use, is branded as heinous in the extreme, is not so inujffitnt after all. Its soft, dark eyes are a sIAvja ; its sober, Quaker garb is calculated to deceive ; its timid move ments are not to be trusted. When once it has been insulted by one of its kind the dove becomes as ciuel and outrageously heartless as any murderer can be. Some years ago I witnessed a fight between two female nioaniug-doves which for utter barbarousness could not be exceeded. was angling iu a brook for sun-perch, half prone on a grassy bank, lost in a brown study, with a cigar between my lips, when I Imppened to see a dove alight ou gnarled bough of a plane-tree a few yards distant. Immediately it began to coo in that dolefully plaintive strain so well known to every lover of Nature, and was soon joined by a male, who perched him self within a feet or two of her. I espied their nest, not yet finished, iu the fork of an iron wood tree near by. The birds made very expressive signs to each other with their heads by a series of bows, nods, and side wise motions, of which I under stood enough to know that some intruder was near perhaps they meant me. The fish were not biting any too well, but the grass was fragrant, the sound of the wa ter very soothing, and the flow of the wind steady aud cooling, so I did not care to move just to humor the whim of a pair of billing doves. It proved, hdwever, af ter all, that I was not the cause of alarm. Another female dove presently dropped like a hawk from a dark, deuse mass of leaves above the pair, and struck the first on the back with beak and wings. A tight ensued, witnessed with calm inter est by myself and the male dove. At first the combatants struggled des" perately together on the bough, tiercel y bea ting each other with their wings, and plucking out the feathers from breast and neck, all the"time uttering low, querulous notes different from anything I had ever ! before heard. Pretty soon they fell off THE WELBORN MINE. - As we are always glad to chronicle any new enterprise in the county, we submit a few interesting facts about the above mine. Ths Welborn mine is about eight miles from Lexington and four miles from Lin wood, on the North Carolina railroad. Three shafts have already been sank to a depth of 60 to 70 feet, and the vein grows larger and richer as they sink. Even while sinking the ores pay working ex penses, and this certainly speaks well for the mine and its management. The mine, we are informed, covers one and a half miles of vein, and good judges claim that it promises to equal Gold Hill in its palm iest days? ' ; "' 1 As an evidence of enterprise, and thrift too, Mr. Welborn has put up a large mill house, a ten-stamp California battery, a 30-horse power engine, an amalgamator, a store-house, and other buildings. We do not wish to decoy capital by ex aggerated statements, but if by calling attention to practical tests and to facts which can be shown at any time, we shall induce capital to come in and help the few enterprising men of our county to de velop our rich mineral resources, we shall feel that we have done well. Much can be said in commendation of the gentleman whose name this mine bears ; he is prominent in schemes of enterprise and improvement. DavidaoH Record. PARENTAL DEVOTION. One of the most remarkable instances on record of parental devotion aud of suc cess in keeping secret a family affliction may be found in the family bf a citizen A STEAM SLED FOR THE NORTH POLE. At a recent meeting of the London Association of Foremen Eugineers and Draughtsmen, Mr. Daniel Cartmel, late Chief Engineer of H. M. S. Discovery, and now of H. M. S. Cleopatra, read a paper on "Polar Exploration, with Suggestions for the employment of Steam Power in Effecting it." The author, with the aid of several charts and diagrams explained, in the first instance, the geographical and meteorological characteristics of the arctic regions, and then advanced to the subject proper. Mr. Cartmel, from his exper iences during the expedition of Captain Xares, came ,t the- decided conclusion that 8ledgiugby manual power t was a hopeless method of attempting . to reach the North Pole, and since his return Jhas been bosily engaged in devising a steam sledge for that purpose. This contrivance, as described by the inventor, consists in THE HICKORY MURDER. THE PRIS ONER GONE TO BURKE COUNTY. The deputy sheriff of Uniou-county boarded the Statesville train .yesterday morning with Hoke C. SccresU accused of the Hickory murder,and expected to de liver his prisoner to the sheriff of Burke county yesterday evening.. The bodies ot the woman and child were fonnd near Hickory but in Burke eountj ; hence the trial will come off in Morganton andot in Newton, the eounty seat of Catawba county. Secrest is a stoat, portly look ing man of about tweulystweyearsofage, and has the appearance of a bold and reckless character but so far as is known, he has never been, accused of any offence against the law, previous to this time. . The weman was a native of th is county, ' having been born jlrpyJidenc,townshiiw tft and is of respectable parentage vAa pre viously stated her name was Maggie. Ezzel. The affair has created much com section of tlieLState. Charlotte Observer. iU general outlines of a flat-bottomed ment in the city, aud is pronounced the boat with two stern wheels, the midship naost horrible that ever transpired iu this cross section being a parallelogram. It would be constructed of steel plates lined with wood, perfectly rigid, aud capable of standing the roughest usage. The l oit sledge, as it may be termed, would be highly polished as to minimize friction, whilst the bow would be stayed and lengthened to the fullest extent, so as to resist concussions. Of course the steam power is intended to be concentrated as much as possible, whilst the steering wheels would be driven directly from the crank shaft. The proceedings closed with a vote of thanks to Mr. Cartmel, who also explained that the sledge might be warp ed forward with rope, aud capstan, when desirable. Here is a suggestion for Cap tain Howgate and other members of the who is keeping a drinking saloou iu the American Arctic Colony, now trying to western part of the city. Twenty-seven reach the North Pole. Scientific A men years ago he kept a house on Western con About that time a number of houses Frexcii Protestantism. The latest news from France is that the Government Corn- row. in the vicinity were destroyed by fire in the night, including his residence. His wife, in a delicate condition, suffered much from fright, and subsequently gave birth to a rooustrosity an offspring with out any of the better senses of a living creature, except that ef sight without toes or lingers; deaf, speechless, without the least spark of intellect or instinct. Twenty-seven years have passed, and the family have kept this creature in the household, secreted iu a room, and only a few of the neighbors besides, who areon . 1 . I.a! I 1 1 me most innuwce reiauous, uave Known woud makJ the Fretfch church very much j. ii i. 1 e .1 I 01 its existence, n eais wnen ioou i akin to the Anglican Church, as at present placed to its mouth, and is kept in a congtituted, with Broad-churchmen, High cleanly condition by the most constant churcnmen and Low-churchmen, all with- care. A long uearu lias grown on its lace. irt ita i;.w irtv hrHiv latino- tho. 1 M.LA t . J Itlll a - m j -- - - - ' it is about tnree ieet in lengtn. ucrawis others anfl makiug the interior of the about some, but moves witn great dim- huroh a jJCene of gtrife and uncharitable- . mi 1 B I culty. inat sucn a creature nas nveu so 4 time of trial seems to await the long is singular. That a family, instead old iIugueilot church. of placing it m some asylum, hasenaurea its presence iu their midst, and nurtured Baltimore Tobacco Men, Meet. it m assiduous privacy through all ot these Baltimore, Jan. 23. The leading to years is a strauge and affecting incident bacco men iJell a meeting, to-day, and of parental devotion. Cincinnati Commercial. The' Washington Star gives this excel lent advice to young men : "The panics" aud the culmination of the ever-impend ing crisis in their depression of the var ious professioirs and trades seem to have overlooked the farmer. Plentiful crops of wheat, corn, oats and potatoes, as well as of business suspensions, bankruptcies, defalcations and suicides, have marked the past year. More wheat by fifty mil lion bushels has been produced that in any previous year. Corn, oats and po-; tatoes flourish iu great abundance. We Can send more than a hundred million bushels of wheat across the ocean to bless the starving Turks, the bellicose Russian, and the snubbed and fuming Englishman, and to fill our own pockets with gold, or silver, or paper, just as the wisdom of our Solons shall determine. The time has at last come when Quesnay's maxim that the flr lnlr tn vrmr nitii n trv ill RJlfpfl I . , . . . 1 the bough, and came whirling down upon pinnnf U (n m iin.ioil !l m:in llk Villi. . 1 1. ... t - , i k i.ii Thia Rtnrvithnm.lrhlv hnltPVPll bv maiiv i.u..huu.. w.u , , . , , . .1. with constantly-increasing fury, their lurKS wnom e wouiu cajji-ui jioui witn . ai,fin int,.lliWnr. U shows ilow ; eyes lainy iiasiug lire, aim nauug uu little even the best informed of those ed ucated here know of the great outside world, whose coldness and cruelty they weep over as does a boy of eighteen on his thrusting with their beaks like swords men. Blood began to show itself about their heads, and in places their necks were quite bare of feathers. When at last of them became so exhausted that , , . . ., ' further struggle was impossible, the other people have trust worthy sources of m- ; , , , . . , ... , , - - . vi a i-.n. i,nf proceeaeu to rawe us scanu upou its neip formation, and thev do not know what 1 . . . sources are trust worth It will tiardly be believed that none of the official news papers have noticed the fall of Plevna at all. It is in all the other papers of the city, of course, but the only official hint that Plevna has fallen, is the bulletin is sued by the War Otiice to deny the death of Osman Pasha. Those who rely on the less opponent, and would have quickly made an end of it had I not interfered The vanquished bird was minus an eye, and was unable to tly for some minutes The secret of the battle was jealousy. The male sat by, and watched in a nonchalant way until it was all over, when he very lovingly strutted up to the victorious Armu Gazette for military news are still " , ' , . . , 4 . . . tone. From that day to this I have re electing daily that there will be news A that the place holds out. Until then they i'"" " - r , ..uL.. fi.. .rh- and whenever an opportunity oftered, JCtlOlr tllCH VVO VII lilv I V"l to Wl IIIV H U-M . . . 7 A I .1 . mission will maKe a report, wmcn win earin is me soie prouueer 01 weaiiu may bring affairs in the Reformed Church to a be appropriately quoted. Lot our young crisis I he sujrffestien ot the commission is men men uecome norny nanueu iarmers that the Orthodox pirtion of the Church since from the soil all treasures seem to should alwtte the rigidity with whick they now. hold to their Creed, and allow the Rationa- iisiic panv in iiie uuri.-n 10 liivc a iiuiinutii I .... . , T, ..T , - . , l. . -- , . . II hat thai say of I n. e heard him I 11', EM llllli IVFIH Irtl 1.1.1 I'll, I .. . a , , . tr ' " uar it. inH lie. ilwIiVf bjiniv tlniT. ire U'Pl'i remaiu wiiiun mu imiu 01 inu vhuiuh, in,., , j. i i i e -li. . , . , a "duel amang 'era taking notes an7 faith lUUUIt HUlUlilU niUOIV ill mai I -r antagonistic doctrines, and tle formal unity . , ' m T , , i -ii annlviuff the 1 reaaurer for license I --k citll liia forriiiaiu in tin j V-rri AttAV jw ii mo avsvii liir o in ii a o i.'iu i iii vva paying his $1,(KJ0 for selling two brands, he said ; "This is high., but to. tell you the fact, Mr, Treasurer, we have never sold a bill in North Carolina that we didlnot get the money for, aud I can't say the samO for other States that we sold more largely in. This is significant of the fact that we "tar heels" call for what we want and pay for what we get. 7?7. Observer, ROYAL MARRIAGE. King Alfonso, of Spain, is United to Mer cedes, the lhird Daughter of Duke De Mon tpensier Magn i Jicen 1 1 resen ts. Madrid. Jan. 23. The marriage of Alfonso and Mercedes, the third daughter of Duke De Montpensier was celebrated in Atocha Cathedral with great splendor. Preseut: Queen Christinia and King Francisco, the King's grand-mother and father; the special ambassadors from France, Austria, Russia and England, the apostolic delegate, the Count and Countess Horse Stealing in Wayne. Oa Friday resolved that the agitation respecting the hist Mr. D. II. Hooks hud his horse stolen reduction of the tobacco tax should cease, from him in this town, together with the or the tar be reduced immediately, or, buggy harness. On Saturday morning he at least, that Congress should give some learued that the horse and thief were cap assurance that when the tax is reduced a tiired by Mr. J. C. Atkinson near Prince- rohiire would be allowed for stock on ton. In resastiH ' arrest the nero was baud. BACK TO THE HOMES OF THEIR THE HOMES DADDIES. knocked down by Mr. Atkinson with a gun, and we learn is .still suffering from the effects of tbe Wow. -The thief proved to be John Green and .both horse and negro were brought here Saturday e v en i ng. (rdUlsbe ro Messenger.. Christians are like the several flow- i .i.i ers in a garden, mat nave eacn oi them the dew of heaven, which, being shaken with the wind, they let fall at ber killed in every Circassian outpost fight, and say, after reading each record, of Rus sians left dead, "May God increase the numlier of them." We have at last a sign of peace. The government has officially warned the peo ple not to speak of Russia as the Bear of the North, ou the ground that such lan guage is disrespectful, and countrary to the rules of courtesy in vogue among civ ilized nation have sped a two-ounce arrow full at the breast of the bird, widow or no widow. When properly cooked by parboiling, stuffing, and baskiug, a dove is a choice bit for the table. While on this subject I may add that in the Southern States of our country doves often cougregate in in numerable swarms, like pigeons, and do great damage to the pea fields, yet even there the prejudice against them is so The fact that quite a number of persona have emigrated from this portion of North Carolina, and the upper part of South Carolina, within the last month, to seek homes in Texas and other western and southwestern States, has leen noted of P uris, Sena. ton and Deputies ana other I from time to time in this paper, always dignitaries. The Pope, the Kings god- with the prediction that thev would re father, sent by the apostolic delegate a tnrn ghortlv, if they still had money each others roots, wlttreby they are wedding ring blessed by His Holiuess, emn,gU to return, and regret the step they jointly nourished, and beeoBie nouT- amiarose ot diamonds ior me Viuecu had taken. They have bejrun to wrae :si,aM ltfM. ,.t1,af -ItnnMn ...... I - I I311CIO "1 UVU vnnt. --- wiii Duke De Montpensier gives his uaugnter yc already, a correspondent writes 25,00(1,000 francs in addition to a great tliat several nf the young men who left quantity of diamonds and wonderfully Marlboro county, S. C, some weeks ago rich trosseau. Alfonso givs his queen Texas, have returued to the homes of several suits of jewels and his portrait set their daddies and are loud in denunciation in brilliants. There are great prepara- f their folly in disbelieviuj: the reports of the press jid disregarding the advice of sensible people. These young men re port Texas to le crowded with men seek ing to gain money by any possible means, when he took his seat as Professor of wrought, paper covered with the drawings Mathematics in the University of Pisa ! that his own hands had made all just as his native nlace, and there ni.nh those if he had stepped out of his study and as- ........ 4 tl..,4 .-.in iNiiiilc si trnrt or Knriiif Those who knoiv Turkey v J " " ' - . --o - 4 4 4l. .... . mi it I f i W ! I !lt Tll4ni say that this is a sure sigu that peace is . . , T t j- v i . , i i xt i i From A nnletons1 Journal for February. nearly concluded. Meanwhile measures 11 m , ; are being taken to make a hard fight for Prussian Religious Statistics. The Adrianople. We were fairly amazed to Cologne Gazette gives the following statis- r Snleiman Pasha's troons beirimiinir to tnVpn from the last census that of land here day before yesterday. The long- December 31, 1875 as to the religious be est way around is the quickest for them. - ijcfd 0f the people of Prussia : Of the 23,- The streets present a peculiarly 742,404 inhabitants of the kingdom 16, Babel-like aspect just now. There are G36,990 returned themselves as belonging to negro soldiers, and Arab soldiers, and the Evangelical National Church ; ot these Koord soldiers men speaking half-a-doz- 13,26,620 are of the United Church, 2,905,- eu dialects in any brigade. On the streets 230 Lutherans and 463,120 of the Reformed these fellows, worn down by hardships in Church. Of those who arc not of the Nation the field, merrily tramp, along with the al Church there are 40,030 Lutherans 35,- long, swinging step that shows they know 030 Reformed, 3,710 Moravians, 2,620 Irvin how to march. Through seas of mud are gites, 12.210 Baptists, 14,030 Mennonites, 2, plodding wearily long files of refugees, 083 Anglicans, Methodists etc., 8,625.840 haggard attd hopeless, women with chil- Roman and Old Catholics, 1,450 Greek dren on their backs and others handne at Church, 4.S00 German Catholics, 17,880 their skirts, men overloaded with mighty Free Thinkers, etc., 333,790 Jews, and 4,674 tions for the festivities. The celebration will hist five davs. 1 here will also be a six weeks' season of Italian opera. The Queen also received from her sister, the Countess of Paris, a magnificent set of ftml that our Carolinas are blessed with jewels. advantages foreign to Texas. These vounir men warn their former associates A Lucid and Satisfactory Explanation. to id 8UCh mistakes as they have made. w For nine years we have searched all the I Char. Observer. quaint and curious volumes of forgotten lore to learn, if happily we might, some thing of the true inwardness of the craw fishhow he conies into the world, why, and how long he stays and what for. Nothing satisfactory, however, concerning the character and habits of this interest ing bird could le fonnd, until last even iug, when we encountered the following iu the Popular Science Monthly for Feb ruary : A sinzularly interesting discovery has beeu made by Reichenbach, with regard to the embryo of the crawfish, tie finds that the "food-yelk" of the egg is not merely absorbed by the embryonic cells by a passive process of diffusion, but that thes latter actually devour me yenc- It is at last lawful tor ih i colored mili tia-man to make a fuss aud show his fine feathers in the streets of Ohio cities and towns and villages. The Democratic Leg islature now in session has passed a bill striking out the word "white" from the militia laws where it had beeiTplaced bv the heretofore Radical law-makers. An4 now, so far as we are advised, the man and brother is as free in Ohio a in North Carolina. What Yankee &tate is to be next? Rd. Observer. Money Bate i England, LoN'nox, Jan. 23. Street rate is ld. and nominal at that. It is believed that clobules in precisely the same manner as the Bank of England minimum rate, which is now 3 per cent, win ue reuueeu ai a discoveries in physics which lie at cended the tower. I went up after him. volls of bedding anil household ware Jroiu vf various other beliefs. an amoiba devours diatoms or desmids The cells throw out psuedopod like pro cesses, and with these develop the yelk globules and drag them into their iuterior, where tuey undergo digestion. The Mecklenburg crawfishes are recora mended to cut this out and paste it in their hats. Char. Observer. meeting of the directors to-njorrow. The discount houses are said to hold very large amoantr of money, which they are unable to employ on any terms. 1 he un certain states joUUcal affairs check all rbusiuess. More than ever do I feel thatasir dividuals and families we must stand in kind but determined opposition to the fashions aud follies, as well as the- open sins of the world, if we would live fur Christ. We niut have the courage and independence to rise, de cidedly above the four of the religious world around usTand live "as seeing him who is invisible." J. W. Alex ander. - The world is made brighter an better by the pure lives and benevo lent labors of a large number; of very humble individuals. The apostles and martyrs of the Church of Christ are few in number-tUe great discoverers of new systems of philosophy may almost bexxmuted on our Martwi Luther one George Fox, one -John Wesley, one-John Howard and one George Acabody. There is ouly one sun in the heavens, but there are many-stars, and how beautiful they are So in the work of the world. IX. is made, wiser and Lappier by ihe many hum ble and alnaoit obscure persons who toil on from day to day., unknown and unblazoued, to instruct the ignorant, comfort the mourner, restore the sick .and reform the vicious.