VOL. XXI IV- THIRD SERIES- SALISBURY, N C, THURSDAY APRIL 13, 1893. wnat iA.V. ; -Castoria is Dr. Saccel Pitcher' prescription for Infants " aad Children. It contains nelilier OiJipi, MoTpliino nor ether Xarcotfc substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Sooilimf? Syrxips, and Castor Oil. It is PleAsatt." Its jrsxarr.nico ."is HiHy. years' use. hj 3Illlicr,s of Blotters. Cagtoria Li the Children's Panacea the Mother's Tricnd. - - CastQT-j.a. OattarUisso -a-elia-laptod tochlMronthcc I it c ev.wavM- to any prri;tion iuowa tow," H. 'V- ARCitZR, Ill o. O-'ord St., Brooklyn, :,. V. " The uc o5 ' C-.sto5'i.i ' i.; itsmcritt :x mil l.-io.vn t'.:.n r.- r:;! versa! an ! it w -:a.i a work -., ' of fupcrcrc.'jstioa to onucriy.i 1 7 :w 'a- totf!li-rnt turAYi'-i -.vj-o do not fc-.vp Ctor:.i iUiiaea: y reach." U-to.5 SlivK, IVD., Siw York City. 1 tiik rLA:i: MONUMENTS, STATESYILLE A .'Lirge. stock of Vermont SI;rb!o . touirrive in a few (lavs. Wc"'iianirtc;o satisfaction in every, respect and positively will not be undersold.' Granite Monuments of all kinds a sneciolt v. W. C. WEBD & GO., 'J J CURE'S All Us Hi ft j ? 1 i 1-. $ ZT"-' :.i Dues CJiu-i.iUr tai, Kt-ea-.nA-.isLi., ".I?.r:, c'i e c; o euu uij Cii.-..m-j Cvaw.-iu;tf aW rm, Tntrr, f nW Mad, e'.-.. tc. MiM Up1a sU,:u.iJ. liif projMrtSo c P. P. P., Frwily Aih, Poit RacU .LIPPaLAK Proprietors, ' Vita. PrW I.Ht.tsvUlo. Mo., wrilps: I s pillCtel With Slt;l1 If'.-). lW U-.C Ui !lt rra nhd one lo for nine years. 1 wi-nt 10 11 ' -----v-- omngs ann jivoir1'(I (UtTtMf-nt i.t()is. l ju found i ttneure until Ilricd Uotant.: VUo i.uun. t m.ni tne sound and we h.- 1 am w eUlnuv. n lu -re- O. ....... .. t. 1... llavlnfT nsf(1 tln't-r luii t lo a 1' P V u. Ir impute Itloixl ami irt-nt ial - eukner atitt having tlerivetl roat lu'nelil.s IVoin the tjanif, having jsiiiu'd 11 junuuls in ' weight in lour weeks, 14h4o ui vat !eas ur ia rveooiuieudin it to unlbmuiates like Yours truly, : JO1IXM0RKI3. Office of J. N. McElroy ,l)ruir?ist. : Orlanda, Fla., April Jl,'l8Ul. Messrs. Lippiitan Bios , Savannah, (ju.. -Dear Sirs I sold three bottles of I. P. ..large sie yesieruay, una one hurtle. Baiall size to-day. - The P. P. P. cured my w ife of rheuma tism winter before last." It caa:eback 011 ber tbe past winter. mid a half bottle, f 1.00 ize, relieved her again, uati she has pot had a symptom siiu e. - I sold a bottle ofP. P. P, to a friend of JXnu, one of his turkeys, a small one took tiick.and his wife naveH aitasnnnn. ful, that wag in the evening, and the lit- vle fellow llirii(.il ni'or liL-f. bf. wna A 'but nextinorniuo; was up hollering and Well. Yours resiectfu 11 v. J. N. MtKLKOY. .r r Savannah, Ga., 17, 1SU1. 'Ftuuu iros., oa van nii,V'a.: TDear Sirs I have sutfeml from rheu matism for a long time, and did not liiul -cure until I found p. l P.,which coui laetely cured mw. Vnn ...,k- . - - VUI 11 III t . ELIZA F.J ONES A , ... J Orange St., Savannah. ULUUU r CURES I - I I is: yri.i.w a; I'm"" t'ri Castoria cires C-aic. Cftnst'pctlon, "- F-cur St'jrasch, Diarrhea, Eruti:wi, XllLs V.'cr.ns, r- ri.vcp, e.-.d. .promotes dJ yrittout C-jj-irious salicttios. "For s.'TcrrJ y.'.w I roeorr.iccndctf vour 'C'ii -t'-i." -'- V3'G continue tc r-jSL-lts." .'.rn, 21. 1)., 1.150; Street s.::d Tint Cs:taii CoKTAirr, 77 It-aAY brer-rr. rr Yoas Citt to (,i:t TOMBSTONES, ETC. Props IT 13 A DIrY Tom r.wo yrurt elf and fam 5!y ta iec tJ.e Snt "niuo tor your nioiicr. V'fcstoiiir-o Sn ?ir factwar by r-i-rchnsinj XV. li. Mif'i. i.ia ?aO''S, tvh.cJj rej-reneot Ihn 1, pryDL& THE SST CJ-iOK J.'JTHS W;PL0 F03 TK 0&T. A cpi.nino tewei eS'if, tfcfff r.ot rip, f.na ca' Vhwh'.i .-r. EJ-.ioot:5 iu3.de, flexible, rtoro com ivt Uu! s: vlivii ami th:rniie than ny ot :.cr uoc ercv ecld s.t tbs rrice. lnaia cusuai saadj aliocoostinj from 4 to .. , . 5 jint ? TTn.r!.neTr e. fln!calf s1:fxs. The most stv!'.'j, cativ i.nt dir2?t jIim ever sold Rtthpricp. 'iUty co uid nsio -iniported sbecs costing 0 Pollen Phre, wn 1y farmers an .1 all ?ewJi others v. bo vani a g-wd he avy calf, threa pled, extwTif iou edr-o sloo, caey to wpli in, uid will fce : p ttc loot c.i-y wa. SO jFiuo'Cik'.l". S.'S and IE'3.00 VV orlc- iJ2jB inidieu's i.lioes will give r.joie vcar for t!io Money thar ..ay cter tunke. Tiiey arc made for ser vice. Tlj ?!K reiiE:i.,J 6alC3dbow tkit Wurk&gBisa ri&vetound t!ift!:t. p,e.i K.tU etia Vrnihs f1 .fS Scfcool Er7CS ,iioc5 ore wcii .y the ic-ys every iierc'r" Tii?:?:-.3i; rcrvii-esbloshoessold at tte prices. LrtaC? fe'S-OO Is .XEd-so'.vctl. .5d. CiU:; .t)0 iin-l !l.Ti Shoes o Pdis.tpc tire male of the b ft Donola or ftno Calf, ai dfsircl. Tre v ji'-e verv sty:if4i, coiiifortaMo and dura ble. Tbe jw".ftho9 f5jnlsciisioni iialofii;oe8c09tin f r-nj ry.oo to fb.J1.-. Laf. ios vrbo v.isa to ecoiiOQiiie iu tiieltlootw tar r.re r" ildiiit? this out. Caurion. W. L. DouglaV narna aud the price U Etamped on tho bottoin of each shoe ; look for 14 when yon buy. Bewcroof deal-.trs &Ueaipf4ag to sub ptitute oilier 121 ak?s fortliem. Suchsubstltotiotisare f r.mrtuleiH and subject to irosec:it;cn by law for ob taining moncv under fai?o iretences. V. i- UOLGii As, iirackloa, Slaw. Boldbj Curia all I-'.uia.aSo r-.!!:ip'.;ms ana XiDntMy irrcgiilarlty, Ijenron-hd'acrVhitos, Painia Baell Or Sides, ntrc;.f Lens tho feeble, builds up the whole sy:ii.:-. lilir-sn'red thousanda aiid vnll cm-o wu. 'Dutjiala havo it, Seruj stamp tor ixvolr. Vli. J. P. DIIMSOOL i CO., loclsTille, Kj. 0 0 0 C5 0 rjvTio saiaUcst Pi3 in the TVprld! Why do suffer from Dysrsrpsia and Sick-Headache, S rendcriug lito miserable, vlxca tint -reidy is at yoar hand ? TiHy Liter P m m enjoyment; otiuo to wliicU you kaverv - & been a etrantrer Doso small. Price, Vj cents. Oiacc, Ei Park Plac, N. Y. Q 10 O O O '.'I' V-" I 1 'S exv..l rpovJily re-ncvo) all tfcla trftable, a cnafi.tyoa to cat sad dicrcsi your food, 3 prevent headao?wi zzid imiirt n-. . W ASEIK GTOU LET rES. From our regular correspondeut' - " The uewspftper romancers of the national Capital having bconni tired of straining their inrentive powers inn describing the result of -the battl royul between. Mr. Clevel md an I the Deuiocra'ic Seiiitors," u b ittle which has not bigu.i and is not likely to bt gin, ihii week started on another tack with the first chapter of a new and excit ing remance entitled "dimensions in the O rbinet," which will be run asasarialin republic in and sensational newspapers as lonj? as the invention of the authors holds out, or until something new and more startling shall huve been evolved from their tanks. Thn first chapter opens with a spirited description of the intention of Secretaries Carlisle and Gresham to resign, which is writ ten with all the skilbwhich has char acterized the numerous "intentions of Mr. Cleveland," written by the samf authors, and it is every bit as true. Neither Secretary Carlisle nor Gres ham are di&satis(ied5or have any inten tion of reliring from the Cabinet. On the contrary they are, in common with their colleagues of the Cabinet, in per fect harmony with President Cleveland in his determination to give the coun try the best and most successful ad ministration it ha had since the war, and, what is mure important, indica tions of success are becoming more plentiful every day. If the Secreta ries named, or any of their colleagues, were contemplating resigning, yon may be sure that the Republican ro mancers would be the last men in Washington who would be taken into their confidence. Ananias was a mere novice in the art of prevarication when compared with the correspondents of tepublican newspapers who try to earn their salaries by writing what :h ir managing editors order, instead f thtt facts about Washington new. No l'reiileut ever jippi'inted so 2 T .1" t i 1 t itkuiv men umler llie ae or -iu 10 res- xu-.sil.le positions as Mr. Cleveland hiis, and his reason is apparent, lie 'viiows that the labor of cvr ing out lis p i'ans for the reform and purihYa- 1 ! of ail branches ol th public scr-1 ' , , i ii vice will be ei!orniou ai d tint or. iv nu'u in the priine and vi or of life, can stand it without. break'Uif down. Unless the Senate adopt a resolu- tioticdiin for the fcts, it is not prob.'ibh: that the pcopie wiil ever know just how extravagant ex-Secretary of State Hosier has been in taking his personal favorites to Paris :iv at taches of himself, ostensibly as neces sary for a proper presentation of our case before the Dehnng Sea -ar I it ra tion tribunal. President Clendend, al though much- shocked at the facts when brought to his attention by Sec retary Gresham, coueluJecLthat it was a matter in which our national honor. , , . . , , 1 r and friends no for his immediate pred - . . . 1 . eessor in tne uu e iiou.se, was mu . . . i;f:c , c , . i ii. i i ti-i. different eves the various nationalities deeply involved to be made public at a oinerent exes t time when an international court of reg trded the enterprise. I he lurkish arbitration is sitting to decide import- '. officials, aminwlMt accustomed to cou aiitq.'estions in which this country tictw,t, Westean ideas, looked at it is interested. Much of the money ex- ' f ,ective reVen.es- pended bv Poster will never be accout- "s . e t vnnr ed for, ns it was taken from the secret . and perquisites, of course -for jour fund, always at the disposal of the Sec- Oriental functionary is continually tary of State. Although ex-private , watcufi 0f opportunities to improve secretary Halford is one of the princi- . . ( ; , n . . n . 'ii i finances at th expense ot travelers n il beneficiaries f Posters s lavish- UUdllt 1 a . n, no one believes that Mr. Harri- and strangers. The townsmen, byn- sou either knew of or sanctioned any-' ans, Moslems, and others, went in thing that, was not perfectly right and j to t,e deiJOt ul,d there inspected with proper Foster as Secretary of State ' wonileHn r eyes the puffing engine and issued t he orders that placed the mon- i ram.,ri.wi ;n sunersti- ev at his disposal as U. S. Agent. tder, and remarked m .uner , The hollers of sinecures in the Govern- tious amazement how trie macinne ment service are all in an apprehensive moved apparently of its own accord tate of mind, as tiiey Know. mat quiet and careful investigations are in pro- gress jn everv cne of the departments, and that as fast as they are reached they will have to go.' A considerable number of important nnointnieuts have been made this week, and so far as cm be learned, they , give general satisfaction to Democrats, varticularly those in the diplomatic and consular service. President Cleveland still retains his fondness for living in the country, and has leased a residence near the one he purchased during his first term, and ... "1 ..IT he expects to have his tamiiy settieu there by the first of May. Secretary .Morton requesrea Assist ant Attorney General Colby, a Repub lican hold-over, to assist cheir clerK iIac Craig, of the Agrjcultural depart ment, in investigating uie cu.iiea which have keen made against officials of the Weather Bureau, in order thnt no one could say it was to be a parti- em affair. He also ordered that 'tl e A nffl cially invited all reputable persoi s who'know anything for or against the accused officials to come forward and testify. Secretary Morton's plain and straight forward way of doing business js rapidly earning him popularity. Steaa in the Holy Land. . Jaffa, March 15. For many.aonths Jaffa has been in a state of Oppress d excitement. From the window of my lodging called by the wildest stretch of courtesy a hotel I haTs peen the narrow streets of the old sea-gate town I swarming with agitated crowd,' broken up into compact little groups, all en-. i ergetically dicuss'.ng in a multiplicity of tongues the wonderful events that are now taking place under tneir very eyes, and, I might add, their -hoses al so, for your Eastern cosmopolite has a rare faculty of ferreting out strange odors, in spite of the fast that he has an abundance to contend with at home. In the larger cafes, as well asin those little wooden affairs 'where' tilt mule teers and camel drivers resort, anion? dervishes, merchants, strangers, and fellaheen, the one a!orbing subject of which they spak with awe and wonderment, incredulity and appre hension, is the railroad. As for the citizens of Jaffa, them- selves, many of them stoutly declare that a section of the millennium has come with the locomotive whistle, and the' are delighte 1 beyond expression ut the prospect of a revival of the an cient presprrity wf their old town, which for dogs, sand, and dirt stands without a rival this side of Egypt. It would be an insignificant place were it not for its commanding sea front, which gives it advantages over any other port east of Alexandria. It crowns the crest ot a hill formed by shelving limestone, rock, and sand, and its environs are attractive enough, with their . hedges, of. prickly pear, their orange and olive groves, and fruit gardens. But tli3 streets are like so many narrow tunnel and step rail waysan old packing box of a town full of allevs, corners uud culde-saes, the threading of which is done at the rik of, breaking one's limbs. Hut the re d life of Jaffa-is the pub lic ."-qua re or common, just oi 'side the town proper, i liere the donkey bnvs. the booths, the pilgrims, the fruit - 1 . t 1 . ?! i.i' , .,,,,, cameN h. loiiging to .1 w v .-..f (in tner ;ul to hivpt ; venders, auu tne long sirings or ioaueu some ciravan ;. are t o be iouud. I 1 the immediate vh:imty stands the pride ifJ.f!i, the new railroid depot, which was form dly opened lately vith imposing ceremonies by the Governor of Jerus tleni, Ibrihim liokki l'asha. A grand hanqu-t fol lowed the opening and t.ie Sultan h special envoy, who had been sent ..on with an eve to bn-iness and to see that i the terms of the concession were ob served, was a leading g-.esr. The engineers of the new road who mad the surveys and directed the building operations are nearly all Europeans, of course. Not i 11 genera tions has J nix 1 seen a day such as that which the new railroad was 1 officially opened for pas-eng , J ! . It was curious to observe enger traffic. ith what ....a drpw heavy cats atter it. as . , ff afc ;trtduillly increasing 11 eur;ilinr blast of the speed and with a sh, . Hu g b ast of the ! whistle, the women who stood at a respectful jdistanc, drew their veus tighter aud shrieked in alarm. The Jews of Jaff held the thing to be a creature of the devil and would not come near it. From Jaffa to Jerusalem. by rail the distance is a little over thirty-five milts, and the trip occupies nearly threee hours and a half. Through a lovely open country the road enters the famous flam otnaron,auu a tne train rushes along the herd of sheep, goats, and camels are seen .scattering on every side. In the distance the the little village of Beth-Dagn is barely visible; it is not of sufficient importance to warrant a depot. As I we nass it one cunt help iniuKingfi. the fi-h-god of the ancient Fhtlistma vvuich once had its headquarters there, ; p wardens and groves we ride ; till Tamleh comes into -view, nioothly till Uan leu nestling among its olm p.aiua and with its one prominent structure 7-uThe Tower pt the Fortv Martyrs" standing out boldly against the clear blue sky. Ramleh w an old Crusaders' stronghold with a erowded history of war, daughter, and con quest. Its lofty tower tradition -de clares to have been the scene of a massacre, but whether of . Ciiritian or Moslems is uncertain, since both clni-n to have been the victim of i dark and blood v tra&redv thern. Thn a tide of battle has rolled about its base from the days of Joshua to those of Richard the Lion Hearted and of Na poleon. Out on the plain from Uamleh the country is still infested with rob bers, but the advent of the railroad will make the ancient and honorable occupation of highwavman, like that ofdragomanalso, much lessiemuner-l015;. ative than before. The next stop is at Lydda, or, as it is now commonly called, Ludd, where the Apostile Peter and his friends once livpd. Wm 1. ,'f fl dunes and find it a dirty little place surrounde l with orange groves. From the car window, on. ,Wr th3 ruins of the church erected since in honor of St. Georgs, only the arch and pillars now remaining of the once tine structure. A few passengers step off for a moment at the little wooden depot, but their artistic contemplation of the heights of A jalou and the distant Judeau mountains is cut short bv the whistle and snort of the restless loco motive. Pulling past Lydda and scattering in terror th ornnn of villnre whn came out to look at the tram, much! ......0v.. after the fassion ot countrymeri gap- . i .. b Y ing at a menagerie for the first time in their lives we pull out or.ee more in to the pki'i. A few miles farther on a knot of Bedouin horsemen boldly stand waiting our advance. Their tine, uar-like figures art silhoutted le tween the while sand and the blue overhead ; but their statuesque pose i spoiled a moment laier as we reach wuCi... X...IUOC..,. eoKO.ee. ,et, out from his engine an ear-sphttmg f liani fits 1 t . ti .. i 1 1 IaIi 1 whisilr, which so demoralizes them tiiat too uee in iiuiigoi, meir an u , ,, " . ., wo, ..win., .i u,lB,uuU8, "u"c i . . i . .. . i : .. 1 1. ,i : m 1 1 i. 1 1. i .. inc . a.ei, cuug w.u, u.mcuuy to meir rot" If the government be carri saddles. i with eeonomv ami a ni-nnnr re- 0,, pa;t solitary ruins, picturesque and olhi-rwise i past villages little I rger than mere hu inlets and misera b!e in appearance, like nearly all such pbue. in Palestine ; past Samson's old il. I TliiiniT ngui.bg ground ana natt.e-neius, now nearly forgotton, till the hills of Judea loom up right, ahead, then Artouf, and we are at the gates of Jerusalem Nowhere in the world can more of history be crowded into three hours of travel. The trains run from Jafft to Jerusalem twice a day. As a result of nil this railroad build ing, the whole of Syria is now expe- Tienciug such a boom as lias never before leen felt in the East. A new ...... a ill i 1 j I I life is beginning tor t alesnne, ana tnis fact is being recognized in a most practical way by many Europeans, who are making investments in land here. Building schemes on a large scale are talked of, and there is in prospect au early and literal fulfillment of the prophecies relative to the restora- tion of the waste places and the build- ing up of Jerusalem, to- with such a network of railways' on every hand, the ancient capital of the Jewish kings is already giving signs of feeling the imnafiw .f modern enterprise and progress. The harvests of the Ilauran where the finest whe..t and oarley in the world are raised now exceed 200,001) tons of cereals, of which five-eights are exported, being carried on camel-back fo Dam-icus which adds nny per to uam..sc u., w.i.c I cent to the cost. Caravans from Da- which adds ntty per mascus which, with its population of OiWnoa ; Ii. eoinniercial center of Svria. travel through Mesopotamia, by the Tigris and Euphrates to Mosul, Bagdad, and Hilleh, and to the most distant parts of Arabia, Africa, and It is impossible to foreshadow, even in the faintest degree, the great changes that must follow the' new regime in these ancient countries. Damascus, the ' Pearl of the Eist," hitherto difficult of access to traveleis, 4 . will become an Asiatic counterpart of Paris or London. Old sis history it self, its re-bi-th will diffuse new lif-; and energy into the surrounding peo- pie with whom its merchants have relation?. The West, which drew its life and intellect from the fcast, is now repaying the debt of ages by a vivify- repaui j . iug -transfusion that sets the future of these Oriental lands aglow with hope. , "ishestofali in Evening Pcr.-laijj TMs is Sound Doctrine. 1 CharlottA One hundred and fifty millions of dollirs can be raised on fifty simple Fifty rai,Iious more cun te nuseu oy a well regulated income tax. One bundled and twenty-five millions can be raised by internal revenue taxa tion. This makes a otal sum of 325,- .000,000, and, under the wise econo- """l0""? fragility of the P''.. and bis admirable Secretaries, tt',tl,, a ear' the exposes of govern- ment can and will be reduced to this; fo that all the talk about a complicat ed tariff system, a mere readjustment nd reduction of McKinlevism, is sheer rot, which, will not stand exami nation and discussion Louisville Com- l ier Journal. The above ought to be, and the Ob server hopes it will be, the "stuff" of the present administration and the gist of the work of the extra session of Congress. The rank and til of th 0 anuu-rat m .,..,,,1 ..U. .. , . f. L, . . , t , the meaning which its lanffuasro nlam- o i ly conveys tariff reform. This is not a poor county; its re source are almost exhaustless; but ths people who are .the. country and tbe government --are opposed to such a support of the different departments of the administration as leads to extrava gance; and, above all, they are oppos ed to a tax on all they.: necessaries of jjfe industrieS" , , , , mnnmn;M As the Courier-Journal expresses it , i u. i , . , vigorously, a "mere. re-ad justment and reduction of McKinlevism is sheer i - j to its dfcCenfc and dinified fctand. ing with other nations, at an expend iture of $325,000,000. why should it not be ? What class ()f people interpose3 to preTenfc this prndent administration J 0f public nffairs ? The cormorants of the peasion ? Lflfc gOTer. ment be ,w PVP11 lihpril, (n ftld Union soldiers, and nothing more. The of great combinations of capital, the men who hold their fellow- man by the throat through the hitherto irresistible power of large manufactur ing interests, all-absorbing and insa tiate ? Let the government be just to them, too, but let legislation proclaim, with no uncertain sound, that the wel- fare of the maDy aboTe th(J eiiriaiment I f the few? tnrougu tortuous and di honest methods, There is much of promise ahead for Mi is irreat republic. Its President is thoroughly iu accord with his party in his def ermination that the tariff shall ue radically reduced, and his Secretary ()f the Treasury is one of the foremost statesmen and leaders of the Democrat hc p;irty in the policy which, in obedi ence to the Chicago platform, must be initiated with the extra session of Con Said Thomas E. Murphy in a tem perance address iu Hartford, Conn : Vlf all the wine cellars in Hartford were' closed up the backbone of in- temperance here would be broken. How can vou people expect your chil- - . - from drinking if you have f .s. ,h,v. acter and standing to the saloon ; it's the fashionable man that dosen't stag ger. If all the moderate drinkers in HaVtfoid shouM sign the pledge ;tnd keep it, in twenty years there wouldn't be a saloon in Hartford, and the race of drunkaids would have died out." Moderate drinking is the seed-sow- .All ing to a harvest oi drunkenness. Some seed fails it may be to bear fruit. but a large proportion brings forth fruit to temporal shame and eternal ruin. The unimpeachable alitor of the u5cribblings," in The Madison, (ia., Ad vertiter does not scruple to assume Ihe fearful responsibility for the following: "An'old colored woman, in the upjei I nFlUu mmiilv iiun 11 lllffC WliSII- r)oX w,jciJ) sne ciamiS, was turned inside out by a cyclone She says the pot i a Uod as ever, ouly the legs and handle fe Qn the iusi(leJnow and peters he: when she stirs the clothes." J V i o. V.. 1 "?-f- Mtfo Time to Head." ,T We dislike verf much to hear a la-' boring man say he doesn't haye time to read, becauer nine times out of tei we know he utters n falsehood Fhett he says it,-and in&dn& ofHhlwrt men wjio have no' time' to rwid spent! their time loafing On the; streets vt arou ud thejjeer conuter and billiard n table. The cases are very rare, where a man has no time; to read oh'e or eVaji three or four weekly papers each Week' if he want to. If is 'because1 h? has 4 not interest enough in his own wel fare to read and post himself on th events that are" transplriog for pr against'him. t tie Is content to Jet oth ers do" his readiug aud thinlcing for him. ': : ;u The class of men that claim tfiey do not have time to read are a curse to the community in whicfi they live. They have minds of theirown, and, being as ignorant as a Hottentot they are used' by the sharpers 'of their town nnd neighborhood to help them cam out schemes to thwartjhe will of the edu cated and respected citizens. TheniHii who doesn't have time to read "is usu ally a loafer. The successful man liai plenty of time to read aud past him self on matters "pertaining to Im buii uess, and that is one.nsason why lie ii" successful. The educated laboring man finds plenty of time to read, aud.-without neglecting his work. either. He is the man whom you wilHndat home even ings with his family. The uail keg in the corner grocery is never kept warm by him white he listens, or tells smut ty stories toa ignorant crowd of gap ing loafers, lie who cannot find time to read never finds time to be: uisu, but is always tin tool of some man who does read. Whenever we hear a man say he doesn't have tiaie to read one paper a week we always pity bis wife and children to think they have such an idoleut, ignorant husband and father. Goldsboro 'Headlight. A Bit of History. " It has come out that the escape of the Confederate Ship Alabama iront -England was due to the, action of La dy Harding. Official documents relat ing to the seizure and detention of the vessel had been sent to her husbaud, who was Crown Counsel, but he insane at the time, and his wife ;o con ceal his condition, kept the document., hopingUmt his reason would return. An urgent dispatch, after four days' delay, required the documents to be re turned, and the condition of her hu -band was made public. In the me m tiine the vessel sailed, aud became the famous Confederate cruiser. Netcsand Observer. To LruggMtis. A meeting of-the Nortii Carolina Board of' Pharmacy will be held in tint City of IUleigh on Wednesday, May 3d, for the examination of such caii didttey for license to practice pharma cy asnnay appear. Any further information will be furnished by the Secretary of lla Board, William Simpson, ' Raleigh, N,C. State papers please copy. J " We learn from the Richmond ) patch that there are eight Lieutenant Generals of the Confederacy still liv- ing. I uey are atepneu IX. tvce. oark ville, Miss.; James Longstreet, Gaines ville, Ga.; Jubal A. Early, Lvnch burg, Ya.; Simon B Buckner, raukfort, Ky.; Joseph Wheeler, Wheeler. Ala.; Ambrose P. Stewart, Oxford, Mi.; Wade Hampton, Columbia, S. C., John B. Gordon, Atlanta, Ga. . Canada Annexation Meeting. WiNDSou, Ontario, April 4. A re ing annexation meeting was held itt Andertown town hall yesterday ?fter uoon. The farmers of the township turned out in large nuraier-, a. d a 100 names on the hst. The meetiv' was a very enthusiastic One, and the sentiment is spreading among all class . s of people, v