-i VOL XU. THIRD SERIES; SALISBURY, m &NOVEHBE 11, 1880. 110 4 "I - I - ! i - - .... - - - The Carolina Watchman, ; STABLISI1ED IN THE YEAR 1832. ' 3 PRICE, J1.50 IN ADVANCE. rOirSACT ADVERTISING RATES. . t - FEBRUARY 80, 1330. 1 month 2 nrs 3 m's ; 6 ex's 18 la's "$1.50 ti.59 $3.50 $5,W $S.V0 3.00 4.50 5.25 7.59 18.S9 4.50 .00 7-0 11.W 15.99 6.00' X.50 V.W 13.59 18.99 7.50 9.73 11.25 16.59 25.99 11.85 15.75 20X0 25,69 40.99 18,75 26.25 83.75 48.75 75.99 Oattot Tito tor Tnrcc lor r Tir for i column tor f do. do. CwLl rm II F r f.i r ii Id CX Rroncliltls, i, and i 7 hra i-nd heals tho Mcabrano f the LmsV iaSaiaeci azd poiscned by : Sidise, aad pre-eata the nisat " sweats zrA iyz)itcte c,?T?r& the chest teriotau barao xsdaar. It Is only nwwssary to have i'iO rcfti res-ecy, SSr siiil. fcALSASI is Ihr.t remedy; : MOST' IJESPAIB UU" iiiii,iJti, ror If J fTJ& 2ivi -a an the Hod Healing Arini ever JJiscovcra, a F:Zvc 7coaZs luwe, Jkiiry'-i Cn-rcoit.t I a.-J3 c-ircs cores. Jtaury '9 i nrlols.a t'-iifva ?Jja pfth:. JScnr'y' i'nrixd's ri l-i-aT r--'cpUs. Ask foE:cnrya, ::nd Tatxc KoCtber. 1ST iSrcj:CuivnzFiis. a;:- mm "Edsv'k Ca"bolio -Tr 3 M A SUH3 rEETEJTIVS C 3 i Eoliovo Dyspepsia anil HHioumcca. - " if jsr ron satj; hy All, dhucgits. JOHN '"jmCUIAU Ce CO.7 i 1 t POI.B nWJPRIETOES, ; - 84 Colletre Place, . KVrw "Ycrli. l or Sale iUy .'i:Js'. KUfi 1Z, iruis ISt, JA!MES M. GRAY, , Attorney and Ooan3Sllor at Law, SALISBURY, N. C. Officii! tlir Court House lot, next doo to Squire 'llitnghtnn. Will practice' in all the Courts of the State. m aa'a-ovasnAir. ATT0ILKE Y AT LA W, in -' - l -' '- -" : ' - iALlSBUK Y, V. C, jri-if ''; j- - Practices in the State ami Federal a, vouns. i lznjiy KERR CRAIQE, . Blaclmer ni HeMerson, Attorneys, Cou-nselcrs 1 and Solicitors. SALISBURY, N. C . Jaaay02 J379 tt. Wmsv own, --. J salisbuey.it. c. ier m Tm L All low down urj Connci Kx?-;r, l-m fw T will "5, -MilK-J - -sell STOVES 0WVesinfffll fl P3thfnjPP than ; Par1 m 1SS0. Wyou can buy w Offlif , 1 33Tany where else , L fmm '-3 B?in this city.- to the tA.m i j .ftu Short Notice. Nol: tf IF YOU WISH Jr M Your Watches and PtiT v'oc'vs, Sewing Machines,&c, ly.reaby a good, eJieap and ' reNpohubU J leave them with Messrs. Kenaieman, Salisburv, N. C. ' ' K-'L- BROWN. llortg age Deeds for sale here A-lsa various other blans. : 1 lllll Br poetry: A Rosebud. O'er the Sunlit meadow, On the golden beach, Flits a fairy figu re- Sweet with hamun speech. Fair as stimraer's sunshine, 1 'Sweet as burst ins rose. ! C Naught can paint her beauty, ;:Nor her charms disclose. 1 Dainty liamls are playing,. With the billow's foam, Fairy feet are straying. ; Far from love and home. Butniy glances follow, . .kvery-step of grace, r I And the wooded hollow, j 1 -i Cannot Jiide her face, u j, When, with shy heart swelling, -.She has passed' the strand - , Ol.iWI HIU IJCI I1UI1U I x i i.. i a ,rsVill she eount the moments. ' I have loved her long. i And, with sweet confession! I Make my life, a songT POIilTICAIi. OFFICIAL. VOTE ROWAN COUNTY. Dcm. 2035 65$ Hen. 1377 Hancock, Majority Garfieldj .Governor : j - 1979 Buxton 620 j I ' ! CoNTRESS: i 1880 Furches Senate : j 1800 McCork 455 Jarvis Majority Armfield y Majority i . . Williamson Majority 1359 1204 e 1405 Rep!iesstatives : 1874 Ramsay 1814 Rose i Brown Graebur ..1389 1357 Sheriff: 1324 Brinsrle Waggoner 1301 BingJuuu 780 : U'asgotier'a mnjority over Bringl 23 ") do. do. do. Binghani 541 Register of Deeds ; Woodson 2097 Cook j Judges:; 129 ; 1223 ! Bennett Gilmer 1899 -McLeau 1897 . Hadou Amendments Cokieerniug Public Debt Against it ' j 18341 213 Concering Deaf, Diimn, & c..l59i Against it C71 Tlie Result in North Carolina. , ! The result of the election iu thiState i may be summed as follows: We have .li.'r..tl our Governor and other State ofli- I rorn bv :i handsome n.aiority, estimated i sit jS.tXKJ. We have redeemed tho hi st anu third districts electing those gallant gen tlemen, Latham aud Shackelford, in the places of Martin and Russell. Latham will have at least one thousand majority, while Shackelford is elected by a still lafger majority.Ve have elected Cox, Dowd, Scales, Arm field and Vance. In the second district,! tlie Dutch have taken Holland, and our'indefatigablo and eflS- cieut uojuinee, Hon. W. II. Kitchen, was unable to overcome uic ei;cii wtwou black majority wliich confronted him at the polls. As the net result we have gain ed one member of Congress. We have . r ' il.rt n.Aft 4-l ft CO if ll elected our judicial ticket and have add ed: per ma netttly to the strength of our Srtperior Court bench in the persons ot the pure, incorruptible and learned Ben nett and Gilmer. We have e.ected a Lem oclatic Legislature, and havethui perpet uated the reforms j which Judge j Buxton and the Republican, party were jcommit-r ted to ieneal. We have carried every thing in Nprth Carolina that could be carried. I The details from! the counties j come m so'slowly that wo postpone making any tabulated statement of the votes until to morrow. The reported raajoritjies from fifty-five counties give Jarvis a iiet ma jority over Buxton of 3,841. These coun ties embrace two-thirds ot the Mate vote as east in the Vance and Settle election, thfeir aggregate vote being 157,597 in 76. They gave Vance 7'013 majority.! In them there has beenv falling ofl: of 3,172 from Vance's majority. In the remaining 39 couuties.Vance's majority wasG ,172. We ha!ve no reason for janticipating any fall ing off in these counties? but if the same ratio of loss should be continued, Jarvis' majority in them would-be 5,000, making in that event his total majority oyer 8,uuu. jn the first district uine counties that gave Yeates in 187G auiajority of 1,188, are how reported as giving Latham the same. The other counties in the district will. not materially reduce this majority. A dispatch from Wilmington indicates Shackelford's election by over a thousand mnioritv. A'ec8 and Obterrcr, A or. 5. A bushel of wheat is of moro substan tial value than a pound of tea, a yard of muslin than a lace handkerchief, a sew ing machine thau a camel's hair .shawl. Soithe intelligent working classes consti tute the true aristocracy. Bankers, law yers. Siieculators,'! idlers and gamblers most take their proper rank as indicated bv their usefulness or uselessuess to their fellows before Americau society ;cau reach a health v condition.'; TtTthia end our life is dedicated, our journal devoted.-A'a- iional Citizen and Solider. 1 ." Y Saturday, Nov. 6th, 1830.' The- elec tion returns are much more favorable to day for the cause of Democracy, both in the State and the country at large. THE RESULT, As viewed bv the New York Tntth ; "Wiufield Scott Hancock is elected President of the. United States. . - He has a large majority of the popular vote, aud he has the requisite States to give him a majority in the Electoral Col- lege. It remains to bo seen whether the Dem- ocratic party will once more submit to the frauds of their adversaries. It remains to' bo seen whether the peo-J ptefwfll again permit a iresident to "be compensation upon the writfeuautboriza foisted upon thenj whom they have do- tion of the Postmaster-General or his feated at.tlie ballot-box. chief assistants, comprisiifc: 419 in the If the vote of New York State is cast ajyuxisLthjELDemjjcxats it will be. by 'the most brazen fraud, and if it is cast for them Hancock must talce Ins seat. 1 Nothing, then, can deprive him of a majority of the Electoral College except the purchase of Florida, which is even now being attemi)ted. Let the Democrats guard whatisalrea- dy theirs and see to it that the State of New York is not wrested from them by fraud, and the people will seat Hancock in the White House despite the treachery corruption and violence of the reckless Republican leaders." Gen. Hancoclc. Philadelphia Timed Independent. The Ttmes believed that the election of a tried seldier, patriot and statesmau like Wiufield Scott Haucock would have pari- tied the administration of the government, diiinified the the civil .ervice, promoted the now assured business prosperity of the country, and effaced forever the dem- on of sectional strife; but, disc-bunting tlie result bv all than power, money and violence could acconinlish. the election of Gen. Garfield -will be accepted by the country and thd world as the considerate choice of thtf American nconle.and to that judgment all good citizens will bow with generous trust in the rule, thus chosen. i No popular government, or government l,osst'ssIJo auv features of popular! power, ',ns evt'r been overthrown when the peo- j ile were prosperous. It is the pinch of j paralysis, distress and want thajt over- turns existing administrations; and the election of General Hancock, just when the country is emerging from years of em barrassment and business prostration; when the fires" i'f the for"t;s. the linm of RnilIIiP!i ftnii !, lm:ii-s nmsirt of the sh)is f industry have been renewed af euce ami esoiauon, lv been an entirely exceptiona A. I 1 .1 . 1 . would revo- ltion. That the people have pi eferred to continue in power a more than distrust- e( unattended to the polling place in ed political domination, rather tlian ac- pourtl, avenuc. It was in' a plum cept one of the purest and noblest; of our , . . v ! 1 chieftains with a distrusted party behind ;.:..f0.nitUi.,rnri.nl!a .viii All ui IO liut t. umii l f at v a a a a i it in any degree dim the lustre of General Hancock's lame. Like Winfieldj Scott, the great captain ot the last generation, and like Clay whose following bordered on idolatry, he has fallen m a race be- cause no man ca'u be greater than the con- victionsor presumed interests of tH-whole nation. He amcrges from the struggle without a stain upon his record, ijud the Republic will continue to honor him. His : . 4 . , ! . his countrymen is assured can as much be said with entire lakh of General Gar- field! - Tuesday was a bad dav for smashing political machines. It got badly scatter ed in Mecklenburg, it gave up the ghost in Cabarrus,- it "busted"" .in Rovvanj it. was shattered iii Lincoln and in Gaston coun ties. A little further away liy the aid of Kelly it smashed the Hancock train, broke down the rein in Philadelphia by the elec tion of Commissioner Pattison, Democrat, in a city with thirty thousand Republican mnjontx, anu coming oack nomc neariy lost us the scare 01 xwwi uaronna, wuu all that we had been struggling tor in the f t. vPrS. v ri..to nk th nn . -I.L.I i'""" J T tion if parties will profit by the eleri- ence of the past 1Char. Observer. Yes, "it bnsted in Rowan," and liaised up a spirit of indignation which will only relent with, the Hie time ot those who fousht the machine managers. ! The Result. The returns sofar received indicate that the Republicans have bought the vote of New York and Connecticut for Garfield. They have intimidated not less than :J,000 voters of Connecticut and the entire Re publican gains in the country towns can be shown to be the direct result of bribery of voters. Mechanics have'been bulldoz od aud formers and rustics have beeu bought. That is tho situation, j New York's vote has been gained for tho Re publicans by money and intimidation. What will be the outcome of the election? Congress should appoint committees of investigation and trace this money to the hands from . which it emanated.- Those who have intimidated voters should be shown up. - When the facts are all learn ed it will ba established that Hancock is thehoice of the people, and is the law fully elected -President of the United States. Corruption and iutimidation should not be tolerated. The, truth should be made plain and the trne result declar ed. That result is Hancock's election. yew JJaren Conn.) lieylslcr. v An Army .of Postmasters. Vashington, Pet. 29, The annual re port of "the appointment division of the Postoffice , Department for? the, last fiscal year was completed past 'Thursday. , It shows that the number oFipostoffices in operation in the United 'States on tlie 80th of June last was .42,989, an increase of 2,134 daring the year. One' thousand seven hundred and sixty-ofle of the post- maatersLare appointees of the President, The remaining 41 ,22S offices are filled by appointments of tlie Postmaster-General. Besides the nearly i4"3,00U postmasters there are 17,409 persons throughout the country who perform ;servicte and receive PosUffice Department at 'Washington, 5,519 clerks in postofiices oX.thc firs,and 1 second classes, 2,638i letter carriers, 56 suecial aeeuts. 2,948 employes of the rail- way mail service, ami 5,8G2 mail contrac- tors. In addition to the postoffice clerks above reckoned, forwhoseemployraeutal- lowances are made to presidential post- masters of the first and second grades, it is estimated at the department there are at least 50,000 persons acting a's clerks in the third and fourth class postoffices who look for employment and compensation to the local authority j and it is believed, therefore, that there arc now no less than 110,000 persons direcUy connected with our postal service. j James a. uarfield. xNever before in our history were so mauy reluctant votes cast tor succtjsslul Presidential can uiaate as were yesterday given to ueuer al Garfield. .Ho inspired no enthusiasm "is own contest, and hevwas excused rather than entirely trusted in his public record by hundreds orthousanda who aid- 1 i" lectiou." He receives the scep4 "e ot a tree people when prosperity reigus i .. . . . Horn the eastern to the western seas auu from tlie Lakes to the Gulf, aud ho will be expected to administer the government with such iiuelity, integrity and eniigh tened statesmanship as must promote the honor and thrift of tlie uatiou. That he may do so will bo the: sincere desire of the great inaiuriiv of , those who voted against him, and his tuture lame and tlie future happiness of a long distracted country, are now in his keeping. JLct him well appreciate the jewel that is to be dimmed or brightened by his -reign,; aud all will be well. SaiuT J. Tiklea at. tlie Polls. New York, Nov. 3. At 1 oclockj yesterday' r Saniuel J. Tilden left his house at 15 Granierey Park, and vvalk- , 1 ' lwentietli streets, lucre was. no throng at the polls, but the few that were there recognized Mr. Tilden, and cr0VV(ca around Him as he stepped to the boxcg a bunch of ticfei .... Tt i r ets in .his hand. He uncovered his head reverently, and, as tlie inspector loudlv asked him his name and resi- dence,ave the requisite answer. i jMen, S. J , shouted the inspect er. l he clerks looked over their books, . . , . reported that the name had beeu duly registered, and then the inspector un folded the ballots and said, loudly : 'He votes all except the constitu tional amendments.' Then Mr. Tilden put on his hat and slowly walked home alone. After the Battle Two Old. Soldiers. New York, November 3. The j Express gives the following account of mppt;.w, this moruinsr between Gen- , tnr ltxUn T?r , . . a maw who had met the crushing de .TiLIS UU'I iHl'V. -M. .... .... -I - 1 Tf I J. teat ot ins uic, vjenerai nancwK sua tains himself uobly. At 9 o'clock this morning he weut to his oflicial headquarters and was soon immersed , . ti;iilv military corresoondence. TT A Jf ne naa reuu uic uiuuim o v 1 irfnkf:ist mul knew tlie result. Not I 1 11 r I 1! . 1 ..n a wora ieu irom iiisup, uutauiuv- ment of his impassive faco gave token of the emotion wit'iin. Two or three visitors calle I and were received by General Mitchel in the office. At 10 o'clock the ferry yatch brought over to Governor's Island a gentleman who had once himself tasted the bitter ex perience of a soldier candidate fdr presidential honors General George B. McClellan. It was a kindred feel iusr. doubtless, that drew these two men togetlier. f . Well, General was the visitors on ly greeting. j 'Mac, I am glad to see you,' re sponded Hancock 'I am sorrv.' : 51 am sorrv. too. but only for the people arid the party.'; Other visitors withdrew, leaving thc two Generals alone. . A U THE RESULT, AND WHY, . What the Newspapers say About the Election, , The Want of a Policy. j New Youk, Nov. 3. The ng fo8tt ltepublican, in the course or a leading editorial on the result. says : "There was -still a more potent I reason for the inefficiency of the ewYoiik, Nov. 4."-The en Democrats, and that was their want 9 Post aays v If . Nevada "and Cali- of a definite policy and the faithless- ness to such fragments of policy as ihey had positivelya vowed. . The Enquirer Gets Mad. ; ClxciNATi, NovL3".-TeJ5h7Mi'r- f r, Democrat, says that irraut Uonk- ling, Cameron and Logan have been elected President. Among the causes rkl j-. . "or the Democratic defeat it assigns he decision which made Indiana an October State and the cowardice which four years ago gave ' up Til- ien s cause. Congress is not Lost. New York, Nov. 3. The World, he Democratic organ, says that the election of Garfield is virtually the re-election of General Grant, but as- serts that the continued control of the House of Representatives is assured by the election of yesterday to the i enemies of centralization. A Republican Endorsement. prom Resolutions Adopted by a Republican i Convention in the Nineteenth District of Ohio, September 7, 1876. That there is no man to-day offi cially connected with the administra tion of our national government against whom are justly preferred more aud graver charges of corrup tion than are publicly made and abund antly . sustained against James A. Garfield, the present representative of the congressional district. Philosophical.. S. Y. Sun. The rssspff Tostin -WTrffraffioni- , 1 r -f t.ons to be gathered from its exper- lence. Ihe iuture remains still open. The1 Sedan of Vie Democrats. j The Staats-Zietung (dem.) considers the result of the election as the "Sedan" of the democratic party. What It Is. I ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 3. The Con- stitution says: It is the culmination c ' c 11 1 1 of a series of blunders, beginning with the Potter Commiion and end- ing with the surrender of the party to ihe selfish whims of an element which had John Kelley for its commanding general and -Mr. Thomas A. Hen- driei-a as a volunteer adiutant dries as a volunteer adjutant blunders flanked and supported and almost overshawded by a halting, iimping campaign which crippled it self at every corner. Courage Along the Line. Ra!ciIi OLserver, Well, wc will pick our flints and trv 'cm again. The Overpowering Issues. kew Yoiiv-onmurcial. ' T.ie great victory that has been 1, .1 . .1 . 1, f .1. . won c!lini-S T I1JT I IP DPOniH OI lilt! Vnrf hem States are true to the nrin- KM. - ciple for which GrahC Shermanj publican party. Its leaders to-day, p not carry on a conversation with an 1 , , - mr " i i .i i .i i other in company 4i bo at things which the Garfield and Hancock fought. I here were its leaders then, and the people uf; -n ia alrilMt were other issues, Due tins was tue great overpowering one. New Jersey. Philadelphia Tiroee. New Jersey must be a little lonely, as she makes up the Hancock column alt by herself, east of the Rocky Mounts. Speaker Randall. Philadelphia Times. Speaker Randall had to weather strong gales yesterday, but he comes out with a strong majority, as usual. H Blue lien1 8 Oiicktns i. - j Times. ; j I The Democratic Blue Hen's chick-; ens got a good scare Tuesday, but they all got home safe to the Bayard roost: vThc deputy marshals and re pealers..; made it lively for. them in: Wilmineton. but the rural districts ilid their "own' "voting and Steadied the I . o ' Bavard line.'".' ' Philadelphia Times. i ' - There's somo consolation for the Democrats in the I election returns of last night. They are first class ma jorities- for them to gain on, and It Even-Won't cost them anything for powder to fire salutes over the result. ; 1 :i-l-The Acxt Congress, fornia have elected a democratic le- islature and-Teunessee a, republican legislatiire the next United States Senate i.T-be a' tie, counting Davis. ?f Illinois, with the democrats A ve carul -revision of the, returns 153 in the House of Rerpresetatives democrats 133, greenbackers 3, and Hrti.btf.il a JbAn Kelleyf8 Treachery. New York, Nov. 3 At the na- tional democratic headquarter., 138 F,ftf, Ane, there w much de- pression throughout the evening, L .- , lhe dejection was intensified as the . -Li i i i ,i i r i r night advanced and the defeat of r: H . ' , i n,. Gen. Hancock denied assured. Ihe I ,1- r t..i. tii 1 rT.", 1 VU c . j uui-iu , " a"S1" xorw euy w and frequent. It was, asserted l,,dkUC -"uuut uiepuny iW th.s disgraceful riot not a single inci personal ends, and that his enmity to dent is rep0rted of any one of ihem' inucu uaS u.c .a.u wuSC UM the disaster to the democracy. Unly meagre returns were announced, and - I thenational committee were secludedin an upper room. There was not even. a cheer for Gen. Hancock .up to mid night. The Solict-Mrth. Washington, November 4. A special to the Star from New York says : Ex-Senator Dorsey of the Re publican national committee asserts that tlie ltepuoucans navecarneu tue "ae iook mm on nis legs and dashed hira Legislature of every Northern State on thc rocks aftcr which the undertow7 car with the nossible exception of Neva- ?ed hbn out t0 sea- "estmck,ut bravely,' a: ' if: L:x;rc iJr: . y. House of Representatives by a work- . i, canota ,:ii 1 1 1 iv &. 1 1 v a rava 1. 1 1 j ucuuic Hiii 1 be tied with Vice-President Arthur's O J J - . I vote to make a Republican maioritv I ' A. 0f one ' The subject of electing Magistrates, I as demanded bv the Radicals, is at- . . ' I trading attention, and the Democrat- ic press very properly urges the W est to .stand op squarely to the present mode of rhoosino them. It would mode ot choosin them. would be a great wrong done to many coun- ties in the middle and eastern sec- tions to remand the finances of those counties to the management of Radi- cals. The Goldsboro Messenger saya of the present mode of appointing . V T uusucw, 01 u.c x y lature : "Thek people arc perfectly well sat- isfied with the change and have hail- ed with more than ordinary pleasure its many beneficent results. They will - , a;ii 1 1 hard of Radicalism' from which we have so happily escaped. 10 g uuck 10 I 1 1 rn t l j the former system, would mean to go back to the same corruption audi lawlessness. It would mean negro wouiu mean negro 1 Magistrates, negro County Commis- I ' A . . , - 1 1 I I SKlIKTS. illlU llClilU IUIU uvllvlull y . There has beeu no change in the Re- wouiu ue suwjaitu ujr mum iuu.i uie former iniquities from which we have escaped.' The Morey Letter In Colorado. DENVER, Col., Nov. 1. Denver has been in the hands of a mob for ei"ht hours and now fully fifteen hundred rioters are in the streets. It was discovered a week ago that fully eight thousand illegal names were registered in the city and immediate- ly thereafter the streets were filled with strangers of the worst character. Saturday night the Democrats had a procession carrying transparencies with inscriptions aud cartoons tending to excite animosities against the Chinese." This noon they made an assault upon the Chinese, tearing down houses and beating, and drmng xut - the Chinese. One was dragged from Hop Lees place with a rope a$put ; his ! neck aud his skull crpslicd in with 1 Lats and bricks. Ihe .-police '.-were unable e to control the mob Tl. department - was ordered to . throw vrater on Ihe rioters, but the mob at tacked tkew-ani badly wounded two -firejnen. Man Chinamen, were 'fear fully beaten.' At 11.30, everything is quiet, the mob having dispersed. The ' rioters gutted every Chinese house in town, with two or. three exceptions. One Chinaman was hanged over his -front door and several were bad ly beaten and wonnded with stones and other missiles. In nearfy every, in stance the police rcscual the China men, through back doors, while tho : moI was forcing the front doors, four of the rioters were slightly wounded and one seriously; One was rescued try lug-tml Trf(Jn nA t t! was immediately surrounded' bv mob of 1,000 who hrtwLi i i. -.. ' .Jinrranea an - - .unci, wjau, wnicn a and and yelled "Lynch the Leper " Th special police managetl to . keep back uie croweu. The mob hact in v. ,, ihf Abo - t -dark they. Vre cotirely l. yond contol and marched from street to strpt rK: i o-stfeetfiu"ng0hinese houses where- evcP lvw i,a: , ,. tneysaw them and ussatrHinc ritlyonQ ror, i T ' . Clt,zens. Many, colored men were knocked down an.rbt - Special, police ha vebccn sworn in to the number of 300. The Ch inese - population here cannot exceed 160 all , told, and from the beginning of ua vi ng resisted the onsIaurht a j- . a ocottisu Hero. At-Ilfiacombe on Tucsdayi afternoon, several visitors, inclod mg one lady, entered a large cave underthe point of Capstone parau, and were over taken bj the rising tide. There was no ac tual danger in remaining irrthe cave, but there was in attempting to come out; and while ladders and ropes were being brought, a young man went dowirthe rocks and call ed to tbe inmates of the cave to remain where they were and all would be well. At the time a heavy ground sea was running and while the young man was speakinga lml the sea-wa3 to hy ot succor were at hand, so that ho was drown- ed under the eyes of hundreds of personi on tlienando . ti. - a-,.: 1 iv viaiiuia ncic rpspnpn mvw J sonie coast-guardsmen. Glasgow New Death from a Wasis Stixc A short; tl"e ago, at Goldburg, Germany, a farm " S " miauay meai; con- laitttnttrf htun1 1 .1 m 1 1 1.1 " nafr w T- T ' T" " had been senfrout to him from In- ma a. terVl kitc,ien. took wslsn ntn . . nL,r and, although he promptly spat it out, the creature found time to plant its sting ln tne back of throat before he eonld idof The interiof thennfortn- f Zt in ten minntel later lie died of snffocation, after enduring teFrible agouiesln the vain endeavor to breathe ami to force open the r images in his throat. A' surgeon, y ho had . w.tlioat loss of tlIU r"ved within a quarter of an hour from the the time at vhich the sting had been inflicted, only to find a corpse, sur- rounded by horror-stricken peasants, The deceased, an old soldier attached to Mo reserve of the.kiug's grenadier regi- !f leaves a wife and family tolament4 ia iiugitiu auu luiunitjv enu. lie naa Gf battle in two campaigns, to mrisli mis- l ii . . eraoiy at nvst iy the sting of a wasp. The most manifest sign of wisdom, is I nnntii.iwwl .1 . v.. ..f. I i -uu"uu uiwiiumws-. We cannot all be cabin passengers in I fh VOa"P. Ill llf. SninA mmf Iu Iiatam I . t . I rJ ' o ... uuv . uviiu ' 11 as impolite as to whisier. The Scieutijtc American reports that i i portions of a mastodon of gigantic , size f were discovered reveutly in : Wicker' Park, Ch icago, in excavating' for a eewer . 1 Thc indications ur thnf, tli lnrr nntmal' : perished id an ancient marsh or onafrmira and there is hope of tlie recovery of the rest of . tho skeleton. 'The curved tusks- mc abont seven feet long. Ihe tirst ingredient ot conversation should be truth; thejiext, good sense; the third, good humor, and the fourth, ' Wlt f L God hears the heart . without the 8 words, but lie never hears thcTworda without the heart. ' The head of an empty barrel in the corner grocery may support the curb- stone orator, hut -it won't feed -his family. The next Congress will have a Demo cratic majority of S iir the House, and probably 2 in the Senate. T:ie latter U yet i- coubt. ; i I - ?"'-' 1 ii ' " 'S . i - E- V l! i - i ! i I - i k!4 ii- i- i-

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