filin? 4 r fill! TV ' - -- ; ; -v:i f r mr : r TPf wrt1-- !7 i on: JVOL IX. THIRD SERIES SALISBURY. N. C, AUGUST 1, 1878. r a (3 JLL JL Jl JJl JL vLU; JL 1L 0 : . - ' - . . , Denton, Texas, June 20, 1878. yri?HrT. K. B : ftuir months affo we left S for TieVton, and I guess it is sufficient time for iStoiam up uiy thoughts and pros Sand say whether 1 really like the siuus ,cf or not. Aiwiougn uiue uas wu luborate upon my hands that I kuw not f, w to dispose pf it, yet when I think of fiJfour months; in fact It seeins very Iit W to t tie four .holt for to-day I can see as plainly as Uteiday the copious farewell showers, Ind almost experience the relief of those Uiwsful tears Mint ii Salisbury and Charlotte us they flowed Anvrn like tins-water flour the smitten rock. N?w Wlliko Denton f. IwJllytbe clfoitbV" iuliaHX;bricMjti. my. J.eajth tiunesto;U..provtriJi spe-o the Ire,-. r Lieut and terrible, attacks of lioiucsiek C, ess; but sure; am quite as happy ami " contented as I well could be sa tar from home and friends. The town continues to crow, and there are.few place that ex-, cell it 3n the rapidity of its growth. I ...n with accuracy say, that within the t, iKt four months, -there, has not gouo ut jerts than twenty-live or thirty buildings, and there are quite as many in progress J and-contemplation. !The streets here are frtnincutly crowded and, w hat is most as tonishing, they are singularly quiet. The town otticers are very prompt in observ ing and enforcing their law s. If a person in !inv wav disturbs the harmony of the town"he is nunisbed and fiued in accor- ii .n i to the otVcnco. I am told that a yjing gentleman is subjected to the clos est scrutiny before admitted into society ; he must Iks strictly moral, benevolent, honest and upright in all hiscouduct,and in every respect must come up to their Jtleas of a gallant man ; not forgetting even the smallest courtesies. 1 am sorry to say I have not been aide, an yet, to make a selection for you, owing to niy limited acquaintance with tire sin gle ladies, glad thoiiyh to write that--many of them are like Job's daughters, "l;iir to look upon.' Those" I know are quite .pleasant and intelligent and, if necessary, can sparkle with wit. Since niy last to you, the Uev, A. P. Smith, of Dallas, and lev(S. W. Uogg, evangelist of EastTcxu I'resb v ter.V; have visited and organized here, an01d SclnHl Tresbyteiiaii chinch, consisting of twelve members. The number is small, but we have the assurauce that our Sa viour despised not'snialf beginnings ; jmil while we cultivate a spirit of charity to wards all denominations, we intend to be frank, and decidedly attached to our own l'iebvUi iaiiisin, and intend that our faith idiall bo dearer to us than all others. Our little band is without shepherd or shelter, but hope soon to have a pastor. The Methodist haye been very kiud in in viting ami vacating their pulpit for us, and for which kiudness ve. hate made public acknowledgement. The" Cumber lands have recently erected their church, which they have kindjy tendered the O. H. Presbyterians. The churches are, very plain; they have no gallery for organ'or - choir they 4Ue sujliciently commodious for their several congregations. I have also hail the privilege, but one timejnily, of hearing Jiishop liarrctt. lie is very eloquent, and is said t be a very distin guislied divine. -1 had tho jdeasureofa visit from -him found him very pleasant, indeed most agreeable iu conversation ami of superior talent, and using his own lan guage, entirely free from prejudice. Messrs. T. E. and L. V. Jl. visited Fort W(rth a few days tince were much pleased with the city. L. , by invita tioiy gpent a day ami night wiibMr. tiw -lon Finley of that place, was most kind ly and hospitably eutertaiued by him and , wife, ' '. - Last week the gwitlemen and ladies of Denton city gave a musical entertainment, l am not judge so tlicient to say w ho was the "Prima Dona of the evening. Some have line voices, but'l admire expression dicidedjj as much as tone. My opinion in, there are few-amateurs that can excell : or wjualyi soiree conducted by Mrs. lium , ple-or Mrs. Xeave. Still I bFlievd every -IhmP was pleased, and their efforts elicit ed from tho rightful judges unlimited applause. Tho Kail road has progressed slowly for several months, owing to some coin pan v or party troubles; but hope is the anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast, and it is thus our spirits are kept buoyed with the sanguine hope that it will not bo long ere we are again in sound of the whistle, and that the iron horso w ill toon be in with his train. The summer so far has been favorable to the farmers ; the laborer has been en couraged, and they now huvo solid hopes of a liberal harvest. The corn is line looking, lam told that small grain vields much more abundantly to the acre wheat grows from thirty-live to forty -tmshels tothe acre; oats from- sixty to seveuty-tive. 1 have seen but little-cotton and do not know w hether it is plant ed extensively through this portion of the State or not. Emigrants still continue to crowd Texas. They are coming in everv day. There is almost every vaiietv of tninan kind, from every State ; native :.md Joreign, of all sizes, ages and color. Some moving hither ami thither like swarms ot bees. ou often hear the salute: -'HstI-1, friend! From where did you hale, and where are you going!" The reply, "from uack iu Arkansas ; I'm going 150 miles Jurther west to thecouuty of l'alo Pinto tj crowded here for n.c, want to -et . -'Where 1 can breathe.' ' - : - Ft nit is beginning to be quite plentiful, i caches are ou the streets for sale everv ?J. . I have noticed water melons on the Tublic stiuiU for the past Veek. There' 'eras to be more of u scarcity of apples than any other fruit. -J Master Toinaiio and A. are enjoying splendid health many pleasing iucidVnt's occur-aml viewed through certain glass es appear very remarkable, but under the circumstances I will not sjwuk of them, and m only siiy like some writers have s;iid that they are very astonishing boys for x ieir ages. Xne was ever liko 'them HBce our junior editor was a boy. Yours &c, A. B. c On last Friday, says the Sale m I'rctis, umiug a severe thunder storm, Miss Lon ' Crouchj in the employ of Mr. Joe. ' Jones, of West Bend, Yadkin county, met a sudden death : She was enga-ed u irouing and hud stepped to the dW, hena treeltKated near the house was "ruck, and she also instantly killed. CHAMBERLAIN'S NEW GAME. Correspondence Sun. Charleston-, S.' C, July (JU-The South Carolina Railroad is in trouble. If there is an Institution in the State which clings to the cherished past, it is this compauy. The old bank of the State was once its twin allyTaud the South Carolina Col lege was the alma mater of both. But the bank has long passed away. The college is closed; the commingling of white and colored pupils drove away its old patronage. The railroad alone sur vives, and the power which it represents is now assailed. . ,It is the oldest railroad in the world. 'Wheu it was tirst planned, its track was elevated some six or eight feet on awood eu tresale throughout its entire length. It first Tan to Augusta, Ga?; afterward a bra inch was- built to Columbia. Before the war . it was perfectly solvent. Its stock; was above par and its dividend regularly paid. Its stockholders wero the inoneyed people of the State, and their meetings were annually reunions of the best-' society. Cuambcrlaiu looked with a covetous eye 'upon this relic of a former civiliza tion, and made a strange proposition to Kimpton, tho State financial agent, to get possession of it, as j well as of the (i recti vi lie and Columbia Railroad. He succeeded as to the latter, but there was too much- conservative loyalty .in ithe officers of the South Carol itu to permit the wreck of their road. In fact, they waged an aggressive war agaiust Cham berlain and his wreckers, and finally wrested the Greenville and Columbia Railroad from their clutches. This was an up-country continuation of tho South Carolina RailroadT Though it was reall3' owned by the latter company, it was. neverconsolidated with it, but re tained its separate incorporation. The same blow which is aimed at the one is aimed at the other. Bills have been tiled by Northern creditors to foreclose the mortgages upon both of them, and they have beeu notified of a motion for the ap pointment of a receiver, to be made be fore Circuit Judge Bond, in Baltimore ou Sept. -i. A preliminary order has been granted enjoining tho officers of the roads from disposing of -any -of the property, and the trustees under the mortgages and largest Southern bondholders-from trans ferring or disposing of the securities they now hold. It has long been known that these road wero insolvent. In fact, they have paid no dividends for many years, and on the lstof last January they did not pay the interest upon their bonded debt. Since then they have tried to make some com promise' with their creditors, hut have failed to do so. Upon the coupons for this unpaid interest suit was brought in the United States Circuit Court and judg ment obtained at the last term. Execu tions were issued and levied upon por tions of the real ostate'of the compauy. These executions were enjoined by United States District Judge Bryau, upon the intervention of the trustees under the mortgages. This precipitated the ava lanche. Among the questions of interest is, "Who will be the receiver of these roads?' The position is worth $50,000 a year in money and a great deal more to an am bitious man in political power. Of course, there are many candidates for this Bo nanza. Perhaps tho most prominent among the South Carolina bondholders is Col. William L. Trenholin. But, upon counting noses, it has been ascertained that the Northern bondholders aro iu the majority, and that the old South Carolina Railroad, with all its powes, will pass into the hands of their chosen representa tive, whoover he may be. Among the men spoken of is Col. C. H. Simouton, one of the South Crrolina counsel of the Northern creditors against the road. This gentleman was the tirst and List receiver of tho Bank of the State, and is one of the present trustees of the South Carolina College. He stems destined to close the eyes of all tho old allied power of former civilization. Chaniltcrlaiu, who drew up tho bills, is now hi Europe.- Corbin, from his iutir mate association with that traveller, was thought to be tho coming receiver. But why is not Chamberlain's name on tho record as an attorney ? The counting of noses has been done North as well as South, and it is fearod here that Cham berlain's long coveted prize, tho posses sion of these roads, is to bo awarded to him as their receiver. 'Hiink of it Chamberlaiu once more in- South Caro lina, the representative of its law aud of its capital. Govt Hampton will lo easily tempted to let slip tho warrants of a violated law agaiust his predecessor. There is a com ing election, and whenever any of the lesser Republicans such as Sammy Green or Swails, have shown a disposition to exercise his right to he a candidate, tho Administration has found it convenient to publish his misdeeds, as sworn to be fore tho Investigating Comimttoe. These small men are pigmies along side of Chamberlaiu. How will Gov. Hampton receive him? How will he protect him from political persecution ? Will any protection Ilamp- ton can give save him from criminal pros- ecution. The Republicans say that with a, fair election they can carry the next General Assembly, and ! then elect their United States Senator. Hampton has pledged his word that they shall have a fair elec tion.. I'hanjberlaiu'i wires may lead to the Seuatorship. , The $50,000 per annum for his Bervices ns received may be only pocket money for necessary expenses on the road to AVasliington. ; THE RESULT O F THE , INVESTIGA TION. What Has Been Prered So Far hy the Pot ter Committee Washington Post. The Potter committee have proved be yond successful rebutal, things believed to be true, but not absolutely proven to be true before, to-wit: That tho electoral finej wjtu fraud, nibezzlemenQ bank votes of Florida and . Louisiana, which vuptcy, crime and euffering';andthis were given to Hayes, belonged to Tildefa. Suite of things has been brought ; about Leaving out of consideration the State of ty legislation in the interests of, and Florida, which no honest man will deny ! dictated by, money leuders, bankers and to have been stolen, we will take np Lou- j beholders. Neither the Republican nor isiana. As to this State the Potter com- tJlt5 Democratic parties have, by their niittee lias clearly proved : coum.f shown a sufficient devotion to the 1, That a conspiracy was eutered into iutei.esU of the suffering people by the by certain Republican leaders, the object introduction of any bill or resolution for being to hold no election in East Feli- theU. lvlief by equalizing taxation, uiv- viauf jl l .(lib auu uuici 1uiuiH.iauc pai - ishes. 2. That the fact that no Republican votes wero cast in East Feliciana was not due to intimidation, as alleged, but was owing to Anderson's advice to the Rct- publicau leaders uot to vote, as it would have a better effect than nil the affidavits that could bo procured. 3. That for a period of two days after the election tho Republican leaders ad mitted that Tilden and Nicholls had car ried the State by a heavy majority. . 4. That when it became evident that the election of Hayes depended upon the result of the State, deliberate preparations wero made for the purpose of defeating tho will of the people as expressed at the polls, " 5, That in pnrsuauco of this plan, pro tests, forged and altered to suit the occa sion, were made for tho parishes of East and West Feliciana, whcieby a Demo cratic majority of over 2,800 was changed to a Republican majority of 500. G. That the supervisors of the above named parishes wero prevented by prom ises of reward made by John Sherman and others from exposing such forgeries. 7. That on the 27th day of November, when the returniug board proceeded to sum up the result of their labor, it was discovered that while Packard and a Re publican Legislature wero elected, Hayes, were defeated. 8. That after the above date and in or der to secure the electoral vote for Hayes, forged protest were made for Richland aud other parishes, and the returns from Lafayette aud other parishes chauged so as to increase tho Republican vote. 9. That affidavits bearing fictitious names, and tho names of dead men, were manufactured in the jcusioin house, and iiou sneh affidavits various Democratic polls were thrown out. 10. That tho t acts above recited were known to some of the visiting statesmen and received their approval. 1 1. That the electoral vote of the State as conuted before the two houses of Con gress was a forgery. 12. That John Sherman, now Secretary of the Treasury, aud at the time the per sonal representative of Mr. Hayes was guilty of subordination aud perjury. l'i. That tho leading parties necessary to a completion of the fraud were prom ised by him protection and reward. 14. That tho fraudulent President, in fulfillment of Sherman's and Noyes pro mises, has rewarded with office every scoundrel connected with the great crime in both Florida and Louisiana. 15. That Stanly Matthews, a Republi can Senator from Ohio, and justico Har lan, a judge of the Supreme Court, had guilty knowledgo of the fraudulent trans action by which the vote of Louisiana was stolen, and personally interested themselves to reward and protect tho criminals. 16. That Senator Morton ami General Garfield, both members of tho electoral commission, knew when they voted to couut the vote of Louisiana for Hayes that is was both trauduleut aud a for gery. 17. That Senator Kellogg, who assisted at the forgery of the Louisiana returns, has siuce been guilty of secreting the wit nesses. 18. That not one of the criminals who assisted to perpetrate tho colossal crime of the age has been punished, but that all but two numberiug overa hundred have been provided with office by Mr. Hayes iliroj! ftrxlAl rtf ponnadf o.wl In i . j by and through his continued and per- sistent interference. With few exceptions these facts are proved, exclusive of the testimony of either Anderson or Weber, notwithstand ing that the committee has only fairly entered ujku its task. A note from Col. J. II. Long informs us that ou the night of the 13th inst., four of his cows got into his sugar cane patch and when found next morning two were dead from the effects of eating the green cane : j auother lived till about 12 o'clock and died ; only one out of the four recovering, j Mr. Harris Gray lost two cows from the same cause the week before. Statescillc AincrUttn. THE NATIONAL PARTY. The National, or Greenback-Labor par ty, as it is sometimes called, has obtain ed an existence in North Carolina, and in some portions of the State has taken on the Arm of regular organization , At Winston on the sixteenth Inst., the National party wes crcanizcd, and a re gular platform of principles declared and candidates nominated for the Senate and House. The preamble of this new party recites that: - Throughout the entire State and nation the value of real estate is depreciated, in dustry paralyzed, trade depressed, busi ness incomes and wages reduced,! unpar alleled distress inflicted upou the poorer ami middle ranks of our people, the land ing the people an adequate supply of legal tender currency ; or in any other manner, so to legislate as to meet the pressing wants of the laboring classes. The limiting the legal tender quality of greenbacks,the changing of currency bonds into coin bonds, the excepting of bonds from taxation, the contraction of4hc cir culating medium, the proposed forced re sumption of specie payments, and the prodigal waste of the public lands have been crimes agaiust the people and as far as possible the results of these criminal acts must be counteracted by judicious legislation. We demand the repeal of the speeie re sumption act, and the issue of absolute money iu greenbacks, equal to gold and silver; we demand that all bonds now subject to redemption be immediately redeemed iu absolute money, equivalent to coin ; reduction of all National, State and Municipal salaries, aud the repeal of the law exempting United State bonds from taxatiou. The Internal Revenue system, as now enforced, is ruinous to the industrial pur suits of our section of the country ; com plicated and expensive iu its execution, affording places for thousands of officers and employees, with large salaries, which absorb the bulk of the taxes oollected, while the various complications and ex penses of its regulations exclude the man ufacturer of limited means while the rich nionoplize the whole manufacturing in terests of the country. We earnestly deprecate "the manner in which officers in the Internal Revenue service commit depredations, assaults and other crimes, in the pretended discharge of their duties under the Revenue Laws, which are in direct and flagrant viola tion of the laws of onr State and aro pro tected from just punishment by the in terference of the Federal Courts. The perpetuation of a free government depends upon" the education of its people and as the public lands arc the common property of the whole people, instead of being sold to speculators and donated to Railroads aud other corporations, they should be appropriated to educational purposes and donated to actual settlers in iu limited quantities. We denounce all strikes, mobs and other violence calculated tointerfere with tho administration of the Government, the execution of the laws and legitimate rights of all persons and corporate bo dies, aud ask all good people to assist ns fairly to redress all giiovances through the medium of the ballot box. We be lieve the ballot box should be free aud nutrainmeled, uninfluenced by either force or fraud, and that we denounce all attempts to carry elections, State or Na tioual, by outlays of money, as danger ous and contrary to the free exercise of the elective franchise which should char acterizo all free government. They invite all honest and patriotic citizens to unite with and aid them in tho establishment of a new party of tho peo pie, which they say is to deliver them from the money and corporate despo tism under which all now labor; to se cure to labor its just rewards; give to trade, commerce and credit, solidity aud security; to reform abuses in the admin istration of public affairs ; to remove the burdens of xcessivo taxation, licenses and impositions; to inaugurate a system of absolute money for the American people and to secure to them and their posterity the blessings of civil and religious liber ty. The National party propose no meas ure for the benefit of the people, declares no principle in the interest of the masses that the Democratic party does not hold; and in so far there is nothing whatever to antagoui.e the two organizations. Tho Democratic party in North Carolina has been steadily contendiug for all the meas ures of relief to the people and public protection under the civil law for which this new movement proclaims, and the relief and beneficial results sought are quite as. likely tp bo obtained through the regular organization of the Denio- rT-Afxr. at. itrescnt in possession 01 iiulj ) a li jow tt comment, ami after March next in control of both Houses of Congress, as by the help of a new party, which, at least, could not hope to secure control of the governments of the State and the Nation for some years. party, to be permanent, must be of slow but steady growth, otherwise, as in the example of the Know Nothing organization, it can have bat a mush-room existence. Under the most favorable circumstances, with the living issue of slavery dividing the people of the North and the South, and the free-soil elements of both the Whig and Democratic parties to utilize, it took the Abolitionists or Republicans a quar ter of a century to get control of the gen eral government a majority of the States and eveu that growth was two rapid lor healthy and permanent existence, or we would not see that powerful party going so soon to decayr. But the Democratic party has endured throughout, and to-day presents the same vitality of organization that characterized it in the days of its youthful vigor three quarters of a century in the past; and surviving the wars aud the mutations of parties, is on the eve of resuming control of the Natioual government, as it al ready controls every State government at the South aud iu many of the States North and West. A party presenting such per manency and vigor Of organization , and existence, is not to be lightly cast aside for an experimental party. Holding as it does with the issues presented by the Natioual organization now annouueed in North Carolina as a party, the Demo cracy invites the co-oporation of all those who, in the name of Nationals have de manded iu their platform those reliefs and reforms it is the pleasure, as it will bo in the power of the Democratic party to afford the people of the United States, after the fourth of March next. Therefore; without necessarily antag onizing the new National party, the News insists that Democrats stand to their par ty colors in all the county, district, State and Natioual elections, pledged as that party of the people is to all the measures of reform and relief which the condition of the people of the whole country im peratively demands. Two Ways of looking at the Same Facts. An English scientific paper remarks as a curious physiological fact that although open air life is so favorable to health, yet it has the apparent effect of stunting growth in early youth. While tho child ren of welUtO'do parents, carefully hous ed and tended, iu'o, taller for their age than the children of tho poor, they are not so "strong iu aftiT' years. tfThe labor ers' children, for instance, who play in the louely country roads and fields all day, whoso parents lock their cottage doors when leaving for work in the mor ning, so that their offspring shall not gain entrance aud do mischief, are almost in variably short for their age. Tho child ren of woikiug farmers exhibit the same peculiarity. After sixteen or eighteen, .vSter years of hesitation as it- were, the lads shoot np, aud become great hulking broad fellows, possessed of immense strength. Hence it would seem that in door life forces growth at the wrong pe riod, and so injures. The inference is plausible, but is wide of the mark. The children of thc well-to-do are tall, not be cause they are kept indoors, but because they are well fed and saved from severe exposure. The children of the poor are stunted not by too much suu aud air, but becanso they are ill fed. Give tho first class plenty of outdoor play, with their proper diet, aud they will bo strong as well as tall ; give to the laborers' childrcu tho food suitable to their years", and no amount of suu and wind will stunt them. On the contrary they will uot have to wait till age brings capacity to turn strong food to bone and muscle, and time to overcome tho evil effects of hard times in early life ; but will grow from the first steadily and sturdily. GETTING NAMES FOR POSES. BAD PUR- In all the papers of the flashy sort, as well as some what claim a higher stand ard, may be read tho advertisement, "Your name neatly printed on fifty cards for ten cents postage paid," etc. Every printer knows that the cost of cards fur nished, whioh are of fine board, together with the work and oostaire. will cost at least ten times teu couts. How then, can meu make this traffic pay ? It is claimed that the list of names of thoughtless young ladies and innocent girls, as well as those of voung men and boys, gathered by ad vertisements of this kind in every city and villace. and at almost every post office, command a big price when offered for sale to men who deal in literature of that kiud which poisons the yonug mind. and prepares a foundation for a blasted life. In the hands of these soulless wretches, tho preserved lists aro an nn eerin guide to the hearthstone of almost every family. The cards' are somewhat nice, but circulars offering books aud and pamphlets, sensual and- beastly, at ill doubtless follow. It may be that the advertisers of cards do uot waut the lists for sale, ana are tnem selves the vampires upon society who take this method of getting addresses for a nefarious traffic. Be this as it may, the iwuiiiid of names sent for cards thus i --'-- ad vc. Used, are ou a dangerous journey Shjonrnry Sctcs. From tHe Charlotte Observer. SHORT, SHARP AND DECISIVE. Having, with good cause, abundant confidence in hi statesmanship and pat riotism, the Augusta Chronicle and Con stitutiotialittf we have observed, frequent ly call upon Governor Vance for his Tiews on matters of pnblio policy. Just now the State of Georgia is filled with in dependent candidates who threaten to disrupt our party, and iu this eniergeucy our Angusta contemporary calls upou Governor Vance for his opinion a to the remedy. He responds as follows, and his letter is published in the Augusta paper of the 26th : North Carolina, Ex. Dei't., Raleigh, July 20, 1878. Editors Chronicle aud CoiittitutioualUt : Sirs I greatly regret that my official duties, together with distressing illuess in uiy family, prevent my yielding to your request. The great and only dauger to our party arises from so-called independents. If we cannot maintain discipline the par ty will go to pieces, aud we should begin by punishing the offenders iu high places, not the aspirants for minor offices. The general should be dealt with before the private. Yours, respectfully, B. Vance. This is the only treatment which will counteract the evil. There is uo use fir ing at an independent candidate for coun ty surveyor wheu there is game eqauily near at hand in the shape of independent candidates for Congress and the United States Senator. The Observer has stood and stands yet ou the platform laid down by Governor Yance, aud without much regard to the small fry has let fly its ar rows in the dircctiou where thev will do the most'good, viz : against the Hon. A. b. Merrunon. GAMBETTA AND THE TREATY. What the French Statesman Thinks of the Result of the lierlin Conyrcss. London, July 24. The Tunes' Pari correspondent gives an account of an in terview with Gambetta on the treaty of Berlin. Gambetta being asked if he was an adversary of the treaty and disap proved of the work of the congress, said he could not be an absolute adversaav of the treaty, seeing that whatever may be its defects it procured for Europe in gen eral and France in particular, the great est boon to which we can aspire peace He and others may have thought ill of certain concessions of principle which ap pea red contrary to the ruleon which the international law of Europe reposes, but from the-first-be ssftr two dearly -the-xliffi culties of the undertaking to imagine that it would be accomplished in a per fectly blameless manner. Gambetta con tinued: "1 think at the same time that the European public law received great mark of homage when Russia, notwithstanding the disunited state iu which Europe then was, aud notwithstanding her own vie torious position, submitted the entire treaty of San Stefano to tho judgment of the powers. I will not now examine the triple alliance established iu 187.' I will uot say that it wa3 exclusively directed against France, Jiut I think that when three governments come to sucu an un derstanding those who have been left out of it are entitled to assert that not in favor of their interests has the agreement been made. Franco therefore, is entitled to ask whether the congress at Berlin has left intact ' the triple agreement, and think it would bo difficult to reply hrthc affirmative. Resumption. The Charlotte Observer says : Although- the Attorney General has delivered no fornial opinion as to the power of the Secretary of the Treasury over the resumption of specie payments, yet it is understood that he holds that resumption cannot legally be attempted before January 1, 1870 and it is also uu- derstood that Secretary Sherman will act in accordance with this opinion of the of the chief law-officer of the government. There will, therefore, be no formal an nouncemeut of resumption before the (Lite fixed by the resumption act, and no payment of coin for greenbacks at the treasury before that time. But Secretary Sherman has set his heart ou resumption, aud it is asserted that he will take sever al steps for the purpose of securing practical equivalency of value as between ggld and greenbacks. "The popular idea of resumption," says the Atlanta Const! tution, speaking of this matter, 'Mias always been an extinguishment of the premium on gold, and if Secretary Sher man can accomplish that niuch, he wil doubtless claim the honor of having in stituted specie payments. The following is the official vote of the Gubernatorial aud Congressional election iu the 7th District, for 1876 : Bobbins Dnla Vance Settle 807 :7 808 ;152 516 i:W 5i:i 154 1083 811 10t7 75 1018 6l7 1011 708 1400 14-6 1454 1540 2:354 1207 2:151 J 1230 2160 1201 2163 1250 1360 070 12) 1042 GOO 236 676 301 1328 1484 1284 140U 000 1073 810 1112 13724 0640 13107 10U72 13467 aj. 257 Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Davie, Forsyth, Iredell, Rowan, Surry, Watauga, Wilkes, Yadkin, Robbins, Vauce, Robbins m The Churchmiii says that the clergy of -V Detroit have 'expressed their piiiioira.i t ' ' the duties of all coucerued in the matter of funerals. They say that " before a"r-1 ' 1 rangenients are made as to the time aiid ' place for the ervice, the duties of their . office require that the convenience of the clergy should be first consulted.' "Ther ' say that the desire of many on faucral oc- casions to have the coftxu open in the chnrch edifice is objectionablcf5 and that toe remains should in all cases be viewM before the service is commenced. They feel compelled for obvious reasons, whlcir they give, to decline attendance at funer- ils on Sunday at any hour, unless the re- " ' quest to do so is accompanied with a cer- - ' tiheate from the attending physician, do- u claring the same for specific reasons im- perative. They say that the clerirv havo the right to expect that persons living in 1 the wilful neglectof religious duties should not at any time require the services of the 4 clergy for the burial of their dead, with- ' out having resolved in future to attend the services of the Churclu A Dramatic Suicide. Chicago, July 25. A special dispatch to the Times from Caprou, Illinois says: A dramatic suicide occured on Tuesday night. Geo. W. Burleigh, an old resident ot Ohio, last Sunday published a-card in forming the citizens that iu order to grati fy the curiosity of his townsmen to wit- s ness some such tragedy as the hangiug of Sherry and Connolly in Chicago, he would ou the evening of ths 23d instant deliver a lecture iu Thornton Hall, aud at ! tho conclusion gratify them by shooting him self through the forehead? The price of admission was $1, and the amount rea lized to go for payment of the funeral ex penses, and tho remainder to be invested in the works of Huxley, Tyndall audDar win for a town librury. At the appointed time the hall was crowded, and after de livering an infidel lecture he" suddenly drew a derringer, placed it to his forehead, fired and fell lifeless. The manuscript of Washington's fare well address 'is iu possession of tho new Lenox Library in New York. Mr. Lenox purchased it for $2,000, a very small price compared with whatit would now 6cll for. This library contains other very rare treasures, among which is a superb copy of tho Mazariu BibiOj printed" at Mentz, by Gutenlerg, and compiled in 1455, the first printed with movable type, and btill, singular to say, one of the no blest typographical -monuments in exis- tance. "There arc only two copies on this continent, the other soon to be sow by the executors of the late George Brinley, of Hartford. The last copies sold at tho Perkins side in Loudon,-Juuc 6th, 1873, brought for the one on vellum, $'7,000; that on paper, $13,550. The rite of the conimnnlun of the Lord's Supper was conducted by the RevrJ. G. Neifferlast Sunday, at Zion's Lutheran Church, and w as largely attended. Twenty-four new members were confirmed, making the iotal number one hundred and forty -one, that have been added to the membership of the church since Mr. Neiffer has been the pastor. He has only been itour midst a little over two years, but tho present prospcrty of Tits clinrch speaks well for his energy and faithful ness as a pastor, and also of what may be expected in the future Lima (Ohio) Jtemocrat. Death of a Giant. William Cambell, the Scottish giant, died lately at Newcastle-on-Tyne, at tho age of twenty-six. Campbell had been exhibiting in London at the Egyptian Hall, and returned to Newcastle, intend- , ing to stay only a fev days. He stood 6 feet 3 inches, and weighed 728 pounds,, measured 06 inches round the shoulder,, 76 round the breast, 47 round the thigh, and 35 round the calf of the leg. Hew as the bigest man iu the United Kingdom, and, soTiir as report goes, in the world. , Spurious tickets are being circulated over the State with the names of all the judicial nominees on it except that of J C L Gudger. For this the name of W M Cocke has been substituted. Cocke is au independent candidate for judge in thor ninth district. The people must look out for these tickets and seo to it that none of them get in the ballot boxes. Char, Oohaerrer. The issue is coining square down to money at 365 interest in this country, aud capitalists who hoard money in idle bonds5 locked upfrom that aid to public enter prise and the business of life for which, capital was designed way as well learn The lesson early as late, that the sweat of a laboriug muu is as sacred -in Anitrica as the sweat of a dollar. llaUiyh Seucs. The Anxiraliau Exhibition. London, July 20. The British Com missioners to the French Exposition offi cially notified the other commissioners of the international exhibition to be held s.t Melbourne, Australia, in 1880, and invit ed the present exhibitors to participate. How to acquire shorthand Fool around a buzz saw. ..'.. 1 1