The Carolina Watchman. yOL XVin.-THIRD SERIES, SALISBURY N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1857. NO 43 BY J. J. BRUNER. A Terrible Massacre Ouaneock, Va., Ang. 11. A terrible assaeiv occurred on Monday night at Jpe Charles, in the lower part of the "item shore of Virginia. A fleet of A liin" schooners arrived here on Mon- Grandfather Watts Private Fourth. present also in this calamity and will Grandfather Watts used to tcH us bovs bmd np the wounds of those who are That a Fourth was uot a Fourth Without made snffer to by it. Why such acei- iTJni.'lit from the Rippahauoek river, of the fishermen after drinking 'tuAv trot into a disturbance aU some of the citizens which ,,, Barliff attempted to quiet. He L-imcked down some several times i one of the fishermen, and m revenge opened fire on the strangers wlio were unarmed, several others also joined in the firing and many of the fishermen .mv wounded. The others tied to 1 their boats and put out into the bay, ' carrying with them all the wounded .iit tivf who were too severely in- iirod.toffet awav. Several founded men will probably die. any no we. He would say, with a thump of his hickory stick v - That it made an American right down sick, 1 o see his sons on the nation's day Sit round in-a sort of a listless way, With no oration ami no trainband, Novfirework show and no root beer stnd, While his grandsons, before they were out of bibs, Were ashamed great Scot! to firs oft" squibs. And so ea h Independence morn Grandfather Watts took his powder horn And the fiint-lock shotgun his father had When he fought-under Schuyler, a country lad. And Grandfather Watts would start and tramp . Ten miles to the woods at Beaver camp; dents should be permitted by the All good and the All-powerful it is not for us to ask. The reason is known oiTly to the Infinite. We must be content with the knowledge that the course of this world has been "mercifully order ed" and that it must go on sis directed by the All-wise. Most of the victims of the accident seem to have been res idents of Peoria, at which point the train was made up. i The loss t3 the4 railroad company is estimated at one million dollars, and it ( is thought it will jbreak it up. There is a suspicion that the accident I was caused by incendiaries for the pur- of the A thorough farmer, who knows his business, will never worry about sorrel. It is as good as anything to hold -the Wfld together till we are able to enrich it and grow a more profitable crop. When we get ready to do that; the sor r l will hack out"1jef ore any propeily f l eron of a better sort, and st iy out until nothing rnort vigorous wonts th;.t spot, or is ready to take it jgjfOinn .ill ' M PI III . LOOK OXJXI Compare thU vrlUi your purchase z RESTLESSNESS- FAULTLESS CAXILY MEDICINE. W$k P HIUVDELFHI A . aMf & Ptica ON E DcllarJp For Grandfather Watts used to say scrowl That a dei-cnt chipmunk or woodchuck or owl Was better companv, friendly or shy. Than folks w-ho didn't keep Fourth of July; Aul so he would pull his-hat down on his brow, And march for the woods son'east by sou'. But once ah ! long, long years ago; For grandfather's! gone where good men Ore hot, hot Fourth, by ways of our own, Such short cuts as bovshave always known, We hurried and followed the dear ohl man 4 Beyond where the wilderness began, To the deep black woods at the foot of the Dump, : And there was a clearing and a slump A stump in the heart of a great wide wood; And there on th.it stump our grandfather stood, Talking and shouting out there in the sun, And firing that funny old flint lock gun Once in a minute, Ids head all ban-, Having his Fourth of July out there Thj Fourth of July he-used to know Back in eighteen and twentv or so. First, with hs f:cc to the heaven's blue, lie read the '-Declaration" through; And then, with gestures to left and right, He ma le an oration-erudite, Full of wrds s!x syllables long; AndHhen our grandfather broke into song, An 1, s arin ;Jthu squirrels in the trees, Gave '-Had, Columbia!" to the breeze. And I ti ll you the old man never heard When we joined in the chorus, word for word, Rut h." san r out stronir in the hriuht blue . w sky. And if voices joined in his Fourth of July, lie heard them as echoes from das gone l.y. And "when he h il done, we all slipped back A- still as wc t ame, on oar t iVlptni'i track, While words more c shots Rang in our ears. and V06 roblery many of the unfor tunates having ben robbed in the con fusion which ensued. At the West Point Eidurj Hall. It is accounted "great fnn" to wit ness the first rides of the yearlings, so we will go down there and laugh at their mishaps. Mounting the stairs to the gallery, we look down upon a large space strewn with tanbark, at one end of which i3 a row of some twenty horses with watering bridles. Isoon the performers file in and come to a halt in front of the horses. Do they intend to ride with- only a watering bridle, without even a sadule or blanket? Thev will try to, at all events. The instructor commands : "Stand to horse ! Prepare to mount. Mount T In obedi- nnoa 4-r Vicj onni Tin nrtil f Virt .a f is enrtntr struggle, letvp and kick in their efforts to bestride their horses. The moment thev are -mounted several horses de velop astonishing bucking propehsities to the anguish of tfeeir riders and the delight oi the gallery. Now they star around the nail at a walk, it seems rather tame, doesn't it ? But soon the We. Trot is and the A Good Living:. once listened to a distinguished preacher who opened a secular discourse with the striking statement, that it was tKe first dutv of every man to keep his side like jumping jacks. The trot family off ot'the towiiw When we all accelerated, the horses take the gallop command, fun begins. The poor fellows bounce about on the horses backs like indiJ rubber boy, and wabble from side to coma to think of it, he uttered an in junction which includes NJjl the truth contained in a principle. It is the first duty of a man living in a civilized society to keep his, family off of the town. And after mentally making the round of all the callings and occu pations followed, and studying the list ot industries to whicu men are invited to devote their labor and talent, not one is to be named that so readily sat- Water as a Diuretic. - Fiction Turns to xrutn. Dr. L. Brnton in a recent article The statement contained m itmer tates that water is perhaps the most Haggard s new novel, "Allen Quarter- powerful diuretic we p ossess, although J main, concerning the existence of white races in tne mienor oi Ainca has received a most remarkable confir mation from the mon who above all others is qualified to speak on the sub- f i i . i . ewer experiments nave ueen maue .l . f 1 . 1 1L x. wren it upon animate man wnn wie others. The diuretic action of water drunk by a he ilthy man is very mark- is i.sfies the recjuirements for enabling a .should hffve seen sections of the, Fourth Class exercising under a rigid system and dash around the hall, tumbiin their riders in heaps at the corners, while those who by chance are still mounted grasp franticalty at their horses' manes. Finally the gait is re duced to a walk, line is formed, the dis mounted yearlings, nothing daunted, catch their horses and remount, and then the performance is repeated. If we had visited fhe gymnasium and fencing-academy in the morning we ed, and it appears impossible to explain ject. Zebehr Pasha, the grand old its elimination bv a mere increase in slave King oi central rnca, wnom uie blood pressure, whether general or J German traveller, Dr. Schweinfurth, m loeal. 1871 as living in a palace described It has the power of increasing tissue- "where visitors were conducted through change, and thus multiplying the pro- halls of state by richly dressed and atten .lnnt !nf t;iif-w:isrf wliifh rpstilts five slaves and where chained lions from it, but removes these waste pro- guarded the doors and soldiers in mail ducts as fast as they are foruiedvnnd armor waited on his will," is now a cap thus, bv giving-risc to increased appe- tive in the British fortress of Gibraltar, tite, provide fresh nutriment for the whither he was deported from Egypt tissues and thus acts as a true tonic, some two years ago in consequer.ee of In persons who are accustomed to his suspected complicity in the Soudan take too little water the products of rebellion. Ta king the other day about tissue-waste may be formed faster than the slave countries on the White Nile they are removed, and thus accumula- which are entirely savage, he remarked: ting, mav give rise to disease. Many "At Sakara and Benghieh, in the very gout v persons are accustomed to take heart of the slave country there are little or no water, exceut in the form of f tribes there as white as Europeans, with a small cun of tea or coffee daily, be- long and silky hair. The beards of the sides what thev iret in the form of old men sometimes reach down to their wine or beer." A tumbler of water feet." Zebehr, in describing others of drunk every morning, and especially the black tribes, asserted that cannibal with the addition of some nitrate or ism still prevails and that many of them carbonate of potassium, will prevent a eat none but human flesh. "Men and outv oaroxvsm. women are sold in the markets bv the "Still more numerous, po-sibly, is the pound exactly as one sells mutton and class of people who nse in the morning ueei. ine out anu tat are preierreu feeling weak and languid. Many such people are well fed, thev sleep soundly, and it seems almost impossible to be lieve that the fatigue which thev leel in the morniug can result from mi perfect nutrition, more especially as one finds that after moving about the lan ear than the flint-lock As you value health, perhaps life, examine each package and be sure you get ihc Genuine. See the rtd Z Trade-Mark and the full title un frmt of Wrapper, and on the side the seal and iRiutture of J. H. Zeilln S Co., as in the above fac- simile. Remember ther ao other genuine Simmons Liver Regulator. JlEDMONT WAGON MADi AT HICKORY, N. 0. CAN'T BE BEAT! lie An An i Grandfather W;ttts? shouldered the un his father bore I nnwvhrd olf h ime, norVc-t by nor'. -II. C. Uvauerin Harpers You.ig PepU. Thev stand where tkoy ought to, right square nTTHi FH3NT ! It Was a Hard Flt But They Have Won It ! Just read what about them and if people say vou want a conic quickly and buy . i ' i . .. j.: oae, cither ior cash or on nine. wu'ion .1 Salisbury, X. C. Sjpt. 1st, 1880. Tvvo years ago I .bought a very light two hr.c Piedmont wUijon of the Agent, Juo. A. B yden; have used it nenr'y sill the time inee. have tried it severely in hauling saw logs and other heavy loads, and have not had to pay one ct-nt for repairs. I look up.m the Piedmont wagon as the best Thim ble Skein wagon m ide in the United States. Tin; timber: used in them is most excellent and thoroughly well seasoned. Turn e it P. Thomasox. Salisbury, y. C. Aug.-27th, 1S8G About two years ago I bought of Jho. A. hoyden, a one horse Piedmont wagon ivhich hs done mucji service and no pait of it lias broken or given aw ay and consequent ly it hjia cost nothing for "repairs. John 1)7 IIesi.y. Excursion Wr3ck33. Chatsworth, 111., Aug 11. The Ni aur Fulls excursion train on the Tole do, Peoria and Warsaw railway, consist ing of seventeen coaches and sleepers crowded witii passengers irom t eoria, III., ami all points along the line, was wrecked 2J nines east ot that s worth bv rnnninsr into a burning culvert. The two engines were completely wrecked together with ten coaches and baggage cars. Engineer McClintock was in stintly killed. Two firemen jind an other engineer escaped serious injury The ten cars were idled on top of the ---- - i a two engines, being telescoped and piled across and oa top of each other." It is miraculous how any escaped as the coaches and engines did not occupy more than two car lengths of track and all on top of the road bed. In one coach not a person escaped. In an other only a lady. Seventy dead have been taken out tip to this time and on? hundred woanded are now in Chats worth in the town hall, schoolhouse, depot, etc. At Piper City there are large numbers of wounded. The dead are estimated at over 100. The wreck caughfc-fire but it was put out by train men and passengers. A heavy rain set in two hours after the wreck before the wounded could be taken away. The people are doing all they can for the won iiiiled. Later reports from this terrible affair give the number of dead bodies taken from the wreck at 110; and other ac counts reach the number of 200. Two or three times as many are reported as injured more or less seriously. There were about 900 people on the train. The following very sensible comment this dreadful affair is copied from man to fulfil this duty of caring for his Family as farming.. The soil and the elements are- in" combination to help him in his worthy task. The earth denies nothing reasonable to those who go directly to it for sustenance. The factthat even the rudest methods of cultivation are sure to yield some kind of return, which in some way may become adequate to current necessities, is the strongest passible evidence that a living is certain on tm land when it is preca rious in other ways. Farming is a limit of the nomadic life and the beginning of the social and civilized. Tillage bespeaks fixitv, set tlement and concentrated exertion; and these are the stakes that must always be driven flmriy down before a race can claim to have set out on the high ways of progress. It is nothing to the purpose to say that it does not admit of making fortunes, or even much money, as iome of the other occupa tions do. The latter, be it always rc- memoe.ed, never can reed people, since they produce nothing; while farming is a creative industry, getting some thing that is necessary where nothing was before;. It is sure to give one a living according to the intelligence and skill with which it is followed. This is of far greater importance than mere ly making money. As those' who pos sess fortunes come to regard sound security of far more importance in making investments than high rates of interest, so should the calling that sup plies the best assurance of a living be held ill much higher esteem than one which, though it may tempt with larg and glittering prizes, is not to be de pended upon for a support under all circumstances, and with the applica tion of ordinary intelligence. Who should enjoy a more solid sense of security and contentment than he who feels sure that he can make a living for himself and his dependent family every year? Nor is the family wholly dependent, eithci, in farming, as it is in all other vocations, and. es- pertain to the of instruction; and if from there we had gone to the riding hall at the hour of first-class attendance we should have seen exhibited the nigh uegree ot mus cular skill and activity to which the and cadets. For First Sometimes thev are sold dead and cut up." "There is Pretty Kitchens. The Detroit Tribune says: no objection to a pretty kitchen, or to a trirl filling one un with bric-a-brac if nor, to a great extent, appears .to pass ghe k it frc(1 from dugt A kitcnoil It seems that this languor must n i svstem ot tr. riding hall Class cadets lining in gvmnasium bring ride like Indians. It is immaterial to them whether they have a saddle or blanket or ride bareback. They lenp hurdles, go through the sabre exercise, and are adepts at pistol prac tice; they7 mount, dismount, vault their horses and pick up articles from, the ground, all the while at full speed; they ride forward, backward, side- wavs, and double; lying down, kneel ing, and standing up. Visitors at the riding hall during First Class hours go to admire, not to laugh. -St XicJwlas. md upon the imperfect removal of hich Salisbcuy, N. C. Sept. 3 I, 18SG. Eighteen month ago I bought of John A. Boyden, a 2 inch Thimble Skein Pied mont wagon and havoused it pretty much all the tune and it has proved to be a fnt- leVwasdn. Nothing iout it nasi given awavNuid therefore, it has required no re pairs. T. A. Wai.tojj. SAf.rsnri.r. N. (. Stpt. Sth, 188C. IS months ago I bought of th Agjent,in STisUury; a 2 in Thimble Skein Piedmont wagon their lightest one-'norse wajfonI and -uve k 'it tbiring the 75 loads of weta or repairs. :t in lui;Mt c.nst.:ut use time h ve ouulcd on the Raleigh News-Observer: . That is an awful story of catastro phe from Chatsworth, Illinois. It makes the blood ru cold to read of such a hectacomb of humanity. It is such disasters that make us realize how true it is that uin the midst of life we are in death." Not even the Ashtabula horror Wiis more terrible than is this last strange dispensation of Providence. A long train crowded with pleasure seekers; the light hartedness and gay ety characteristic of such excursion parties; a break in the track; the care are piled upon each other, crushed and broken into eterinty or mangled so that life becomes a torture. Men, wo men and children meet equally that lefalls the throng. The baby is hurled to death along with the strong man and the tender mother. All in a mo ment is nain and death and shriek of despair where b3fore there was nothing 1 1 L . -1 .. .1 ....- iicv on 1 i. ii- If a i Til ! I.... llllli "liWSKHIi licoa cumvi in nniiu, ueciallv those v work or tustriinition. un me rariu every hand is a helping one, great and small. Children are taught to be use ful in various ways, and for their own benefit equally-with that of the family. Woman, too, "finds a natural occupa tion in this strictly .domestic sphere. All things, in fact, assist in making up a littie won a oi industry, i.i which each one is interested. All the occu pation, especially in these modern times, is crowded with variety. It has passedTout of former monotony, and while tkje soil is described as a labora tory the7 home is to be accepted as a hive. Invention, ingenuity and industry are challenge! to their best performance. Is there anything in a life of mere money getting to be compared with this broad and busy life on the farm, where one is certain of a generousub sistence if nothing more, and continu ous labor only enriches the resources that are drawn against by their owner? Massacitusetts Ploughman. Two Finjers Sewcl On. Elmira .physician have regarded and watched with considerable interest the case of Mrs. Davidson, wlio resides on Harriet street. About two months ago, whije cutting wood, she chopped off the middle finger of her left hand and also cut through the bone of the first finger. Dr. J. Jacobs was called who replaced the f)nger3 and sewed them in position. The fingers have become reunited to the hand, and Mrs. Davidson is now recovering the use of them. It is said but three eases of a successful operation of the kind are on record. Elmira Gazette. Wanted to Sea for Himself. London,, Aug. 11. It has transpired that Mr. Blaine's departure from Dub lin for Cork, to the former of which places he intends to return, was made for the purpose of personally witness ing some evictions which he was advised would take place yesterday or today near that city. It appears that he in formed a friend of his desire to see for himself precisely the extent to which evicted tenants were subjected to hard ship and cruelty in order that he might prepare ua absolutely correct digest, of iiis observations, and his un expectedly short stay in Dublin is accounted for by the fact that the opportunity he sought he almost immediately obtained. That he intends to gather material for use in the coining: American Presiden tial campaign, with a view ot securing Irish votes, cannot be doubted and that he will observe that the instructions of the police are litterally carried out and that he will observe that the tenants proceeded against olfer no re sistance to their ejectors sre also beyond question" Mr. Blaine's reputation as a friend of ho ne rale has preceeded him and his tour of Ireland will un doubtedly be made as pleasant as pos sible. His name is known in the south of Ireland almost as well as it is in America and his visit to that part of the country is expected by many of his enthusiastic friends here to wield a large influence in determining the ac tion of the National Republican Con vention in 18S8 as showing that lie is able to draw to his support the bulk of the Irish vote. Mr. Gladstone is rapidly recovering from his illness. He is no longer con lined to his room and his voice is al most as clear and strong as ever. The recent attempt to bring the ex-premier and Lord Hartington together in a con ference on the question of delegating powers of autonomy to Ireland as the basis of a settlement of the Irish ques tion as between the Liberals and the Unionists failed through the refusal of oi Lord Haatiugton to entertain n pro posal. m a I Hl I II ; If you have a boy named Bill, or Bud, or Sam, or lorn, you need not tear that he will be drowned during the swimming senson. The boy who has a plug name and whose hair stands up straight like a hazel brush, and who has stone bruises on his feet, is not in danger of drowning. But if your son has curly hair, and if he wears shoes in summer and has a pretty name, you had better let him wash bowl so says the A r off i elepe the waste products from tne bouy as we know that the secretion ot urine in healthy persons is generally much less during the night than during the day. Such persons drink a tumbler of water before going to bed, in order to aid the secretion of urine and of waste pro ducts during the night."' Practitioner. Varieties of Cera. Some writers assert that maize, or In dian corn, was known in the early his tory of the world to the Chinese, found ing their theory oh drawings of" a simi lar grain in ancient Chinese manu scripts. If tiiis were true, the culture of the grain was wholly lost in later years. There has been much discus- it 1 J 1 l A t 1 1 sion on tne subject, out Aipnonse ue Candolle, who may ba regarded as an authority on the subject, in his valua ble work, "Origin of.'i titivated Plants,"1 savs Mti 117..' IS ( f American origin, and was not introduced into the old world until after the discovery of the new." It was found by the first ex plorers of the western hemisphere to be in cultivation bv the natives, from New England to Chili, but it is thought to have originated in the highlands of Peru and Bolivia, as traces of it have been found there in ancient tombs and in geological deposits with the earliest traces of man in that locality. As to the present exisiting varieties of corn, it may be noted that the maize plant is affected in a remarkable degree by cli mate and soil, and a local variety can he established at any time by the selec tion and continuous sowing for a few years, of seed showing any striking peculiarity. All of the varieties in cul tivation in the United State-, from the smallest kind of pop-corn to the enor mous specimens of maize grown in the western and southern states, are but one species, and owe their differences to pe culiarities of climate and soil and to continued selection in cultivation. Inter-Ocean. Flag Koot. In Fayette county there is a farmer who makes more from a quarter of an acre of swamp than he does from the remainder of his farm. He made last year from this-.qter of an acre, $5, 200. That beats anything but a rich gold mine. The explanation is given in the words of the venerable and well-to-do farmer: k"L tell you,'' said he. when 1 first moved on this place it was very un healthy; my stock (bed rapidly and my family had no health. My wife had been in the habit of keeping calamus in the house for her own use, and she decided to plant out a small patch on the edge of the swamp. It began to spread rapidly, and in a short time the whole quarter of an acre of marsh was covered with it. Tiie cattle drank the water from the branch on which it grew, and nt once became healthy and ceased to die. It was then that I firs! began to lake an interest in the growth of the calamus, and to take pains to save and dry the" root for market, as 1 understood that it would sell well." Calamus is the botanical nam .' for 'flag root.'" to those who do the work in it is the living room, and why should it net be made convenient and pretty? If the kitchen ia comfortable, cherry room. most girls will take a pride in keeping it so. Give them pink colored tissue pa per for the shelves, if they wish it, and a fancy lamp shade to rest alter the kitchen is tidied up for the night. See, too, that they have convenient utensils to cook with, a good clothes wringer and plenty oji clothespins, and a good stove. It will pay you well to look after these things in good, wholesome dishes that will come to the table well cooked. Many girls have to do with makeshifts that yon wotdd not think possible for yourself to use; a broken wringer, a tub without handles, or a washboiler or tea-kettle, with a rag ran through a hole to prevent leaking. No girl likes to ask for repairs, and oftentimes the mistress is too careless to look well after the little things of her kitchen." I would add: Let the girl's sleeping room be" a plea-ant, attractive place. Many a horse has belter quarters for rest than our servants. If not appre ciative at first they may barn Jlo le so. Hero Farm Labor. The labor qnestion comes nearer "cleaning me up" than anything elae. 1 have however, become convicted that the negro is our main "dependence; we have got him, or he has us. 1 don't know which; sometimes I think one way and sometimes the other. At any rate, we have to stay together, ami we must feed him or he will feed himself, aud I prefer feeding him; it takes less to do him or there is less waste at tar li ed to our feeding him. for he had as soon eat a Berkshire pig worth twenty five dollars as a scrub worth only two dollars; or your Plymouth Hock chick ens, as any other cheaper food. On shares, we can't afford to give him a good mule or horse to kill, or a cost Iy lot of tools; or seed to-throw away; for if he was to make six hales of cotton and three: hundred bushels of corn, he would think he ought to live easy ail the rest of his life. You should feed hina, and you or some one else will be certain to do it, too. Now you take the expense off of these bales of cotton (for 150 bushels corn don't go to Iris support; it goes for Sunday clothes and whiskey,) we see very plainly that it will not feed and cloth his family. . I can suggest no remedy that will meet the case. If the negroes would Avork and quit their stealing, I would be on Wall street, New York, preparing my- II. .1. sell tor bauada in less than ten years. At the pressent price of cotton, to work them on shares, or rent them land and furnish them, is sure bankruptcy. Prohibition War in Ohio. A Cleveland, O. dispatch says: There is a prohibition war at Alliance, 0. This was one of theiowns to Vote for local option under the Dow law. The saloons were voted out several months ago, anchthe energy of the en tire, police force has since been inade quate for the enforcement-of the law. Heavy fines and jail sentences have been imposed upon the saloonists, hut thev continued to violate the ordinance. IXast week a temperance demonstration was held and the liquor-dealers attempt ed to counteract its effeet by giving away beer and whiskey in the streets to all who asked for it. Several minors were among the number who drunk, and to-day six of the saloon keepers who gave thejiquor away were arrest ed. Upon being released, four of them went to the Fort Wayne depot, and, mistaking a stranger who they saw there for one of the detectives who as sisted in the prosecution, they set upon and beat him unmercifully. They were all arrested. A Chance Wcrd. Who can estimate the value of a chance word, in the sense in which there is such a thing as chance? L pon the silence occasioned by the sudden stop ping of a street car, there fell these words : '-So long as 3-ou can contri bute to the pleasure, happiness or com fort of any human being, you are of importance in the world and no longer."' Whatever may have been the object of these words, the thought reached the hearts of a dozen or more passengers, and it was interesting to note the changed expression on some listless faces. In utter unconscious ness of any effect of her words, -the lady from whose lips they f"ll, passed out into the street. Perhaps in the great day it may be her happiness to know that the Lord then used lu r tongue for a blessing to some heart which had as yet failed to comprehend the meaning ol its life struggle: for' the truth she emphasized was a truth which all of us need to realize. Not our personal enjoyment, nor yet our seeming success in life, but our part in God's plan for others, is the measure of our importance in the world. Sunday School Time?. York grave- Aslesp Away from Home, A correspondent of the New Post mentions that in tne old yard at German town, New Jersey at the extreme eastern end oi the grounds is a stone placed there bv the historian Watson, with the following inscvip- Daner from Insects. We are in the habit of hearing that flies in multitude are a sign of safety in a house, because they devour the poison in the neighborhood, not considering that if there were no poison the flies could not have it to devour; but we have not lxen wont to hear t he existence of gnats and mosquitoes excused for any reason. To our mind one may eventualfv be found its dangerous to life and health as the other, and the work of Dr. Carlos Finlay, of Havana, has shown what the dangers are which we run from mos quitoes. In his research into the in noculability of yellow fever he six times succeeded in transmitting the disease to a healthy person by letting a mosquito that had previously Ibitten a ' yellow fever patient bite the healthy person. If this can be done in the case of yellow fever, it may be done with equal efficiency in the case of countless other and more dreadful diseases, and it becomes us to seek for means to exterminate these pests and their kindred, if their extermination be possible. Harper s Bazar; I tion : in pa ea i bat;u it.i ve 'Honor to the brave Major Irvine, Capt. ar. (North Carolina), A 1 IT- 1111 uni six somiers Kiiieu in of Germantown One cause hie iacet 1 i'urner, ijt La the one (ddiers of the regular i uese were T;rth Carolina line in the Uontiueti viiiv .mil f4.ii- worn t-ili .il !1 ....... I.l.'t , ash of 1 liiisboro. ong ith tr of Tomato. i be torn itu is our i a of the h most iin- s wini m a Greensboro A St. Paul dog was very fond of tho P rtaut vegetables we have. Uunng house'cat. One evening he was seen j summer luontns, the cnth.ren of comiiv from the shadow of a neighbor fence with a nen in his mouth A Good word for Buttermilk. In warm, summer weather, many persons feel an irresistible craving for something sour, and often gratify this desire by a free indulgence in pickles and vegetables made acid with vinegar. This demand for acid indicates a de ficiency iu the acid secretions in the stomach, and the demand for an artifi cial one is a natural one; but vinegar is notthe best substitute. Lactic acid is one of the chief agents that give acidity to the gastric juice of the stomach in health. This Is the acid of sour milk, and therefore one of the best summer diet drinks that we use is buttermilk. It satishes craving3 for acids by giving stomach a natural supply, and at u tine time furnishing in its cheesy mat t -r a good supply of wholesome nutri tion. A man will endure fatigue iu hot weather better on buttermilk than any drink he can use. can the the the Alter many iamu.es e.it tiiem T I lie most live on buih li .. aud t esx wood aid th it wuluuit any indeed, to think al ut. Yet He who holds us in the hollow of His hand is The stimulating power and comfort I of sympathy none can express, save 1 bo whn has realized it. It has a j J A V " V mm mm i A Pennsylvania dog h3 a legacy of , power, like the magnet, unseen but $1,500, Hie interest being used "f.r his p.tent, which draws to itself the wan support. After hi., death the fund goes during scattered particles that exut to a jhurch. around it. hiding it he went for the cat, which he j rtt lweeu meals. Ihey seized by the neck and dragged to the feast. Me tore the chicken into pieces and helped the cat to the choicest scraps. Neatness and simplicity are the best ornaments; good habits are better than tine elothes. and the most elegaut man ners the kindest. mi. &d, lmld not be restricted either, but encouraged to eat more of them. The tomato is both a mild cathartic aud a febrifuge, and will keep them free from worms and fever during the heated term. Purity, sincerity, obedience, and self surrender are the marble step that lead iuto the spiritual temple, Ecmarkable Surgery. The science of surgery has made such wonderful progress, iu modern times, that the most intricate and delicate operations are now undertaken and carried to a suc cessful issue. There are now several, well authenticated cases of what ijs known as pneumotony, that is to say, the re moval of diseased portions of the hiugg in cases of eonstiuiptiou. While, however, this delicate operation has sometimes beeu successfully performed, the risks utteud, iug it are so great, and the chances of re covery so slight, tliat it is seldom resort ed to. The safest plau in consumptive cases is to use Dr. Pierce's Gulden Medi cal Discovery. This will always cure the disease in its earlier stages, thoroughly arresting the. ravages of the terrible malady, by removing its cause and heft ing the lung: . i I ; II It - m - .