THE WILSON ADVANCE. THE WILSON ADVANCE. -HM- Published Kvekv .-'Friday At Batks ok Aivektisixg: Wilson, North CA koi.ixa One Inch, One Insertion, -" ".- One Month, - j - '. Three Months, - """ " SSxfonths, " One year, - - Si. on 2.00 r.M. 8.00 15.1W : H Y . . JOSEPHLS DANIELS, - -Editor and Proprietor. Lileral Discounts will !e Made for larger Advertisements and for Contracts by the Year. Cash must accompany all Adver tisement unless good reference Is given. . I AA:NCiE.! HukRiptxUatWix Advance ' ' - , '- . 'LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIMST At BE THY COUNTRY'S, THY GOD'S, AND TRUTH S " I ' i - ' -aar Money can be sent by llonej' . ----- -- - - ---- ---- ; - ----- , : . , rr..1 .. . -: L 1 Z Order of Kegistered letter at our VOI.12. WILSOX, X. C, FBIAY JUNE 30, 182. ':. J ' A ' ; ' y " ' " ' ' ; J ; . . . . . ' " ' ''' ' ' 1 ' "' ' ;;; ' ; The first fair will e held .at Gree-nslioro August th. "' There is but oue negro voter in Newton county, Arkansas. Judge Graves will hbltl a special term eif .Vance court July 24th. If - Forty convicts were sent to Western X. C. K. It. last week. i - fi - r iSalem Female Academy is the tlie oldest femalejseheiol in the State, There is-talk .of running Thur nian lor Congressman ' at large in UhiO. :'' ! 'I am now running fes 1oth Kepublican,' two part Kays Dr. Motf. - ' : A lawsuit j is going on in New York over a 4.10,000 game of draw loker. j' . The Free Pre notes that an alligator was killed at Kins ton hist Friday. ; : it makes our mouth water to read that watermelons are, plentiful in Georgia. ' One-fourth of an acre near New beroe yielded :$l.'i2 worth of Irish potatoes. !''' j ' W. T Bowmai, Esq., Presiel'ent of the Wachovia National Bank of Winston is dead. ' ; A" negro child'was lrn in Lau renburg a few days ago having a l ull set of whiskers and moustache. An alligator was recently cap tured while oil a promenade down the principal street of Jacksonville, Fla. . . I ; ' . , . i A. negressjut Montezuma, Ga., recently gave birtli to triplets whose coinbiiied weight was pounds. -'- in The annual summer exodusting ; to Jhe mountains anil the seae-oast is 'commencing. Wish we. could exodust. ' i . ' ' Mr. J. ('. troy has bought the Ijiurenhiirg Enterprise, and : will run it in the interests of Dr. Mott's side show. . i ' A KentuifTaii of seventy-four years refuses, to pay liis axes be cause he does not jexpect to live another yeaii. ; :'";" Congressmen bgin to show a desire to adjourn, '.specially those 'who wish to be at home, attenuing to the matter of re-election. There liave leen since December 1st (VI jKistofiices established in North :': Carolina,' 17 discontiiiued, and 15 their names chaii e.d. Ac'-ording to the Atlanta, Con KtifutioH there are ."i,0()0 women n that city who earn -their living in part or wholly by their pwn lalwr. The new Missionary Baptist church at Scot lancj Neck will be dedicated Sunday, July 2nd. Dr. Munday, of Wurrentoii,. will jtiach 1 lie sermon. . . . I . , Miss Etta Triy and Mrs. Fannie l. Watson, of Faetteville, have jessed the examination which ad mits them to the Freshman class at Chapel Hill. A " patriotic woman. An ex change records that a laWrgh iiian-s wile has given birthto a child on every Fourth of July for the last live years, i The greiit strike pf the. workers iti iron legan in j Pittsburg last Thursday morning, when 36,000 employes refused t go to work. It is exiHH ted this uumln'r will soon le doubled. . t The Tarloro Southerner says the many friends of lie v. 'Thos. It Owens will le pained to learn that he has had a stroke of paralvsis, resulting in the loss of the use of his left arm. '' i he temale members of a colo red church in Greenville, S. C, are enoeavonng to raise a fund to se cure the release from jail of an er- tnig sister, who stole -clothes to lie baptized in. ; i An exchange gets off the lest of of the s'asort when he says: l.jcharge thee thng away ambition, Jt.v that sin fell ther angels. -Mark the man whose head is tin ned : by a little oflice." The Republican Coiigressiottal Committee expectso raise a cain paign fund of 500,000 by the als--sessment of : officeholders for the iir'Mse of carrying the doubtful districts next: November, f .Iiutge Toiirgee savs, "the live man. will always be found in f he 'front rank".'j Of course, the dead always aiiears fnrther back in the iiH'ession, hiit he rides in the i"st piomiin-nt vehicle. -Nuce's Investigating commit tee ias unearthed the .fact that Jim Harris the colored iolitician re ceived from, the government 12 I i uiontu dunug the campaign of iu and did no work at all except vkctioneeriuff. Hie Farmer find Mechanic verv tnly says: "We don't blame Mr, i'ioy lor accepting the nomina tion, but his manifesto sounds like the . old story of the 'Bnms,' viz: 1st,; lie it resolved, that in the 1'iiiion of this! meeting charity is heaven lwrn? and tlie highest of the Christian virtues. "2d. liesolvwl, that m rdertj show our charitable instincts, we: will devote the entire proceeds for the imhii's lienefit. Jd, IJesolved that ire are the poor!" cord was dedicated last Sunday, IJev. Dr. Craven preaching the dedicatory sermon. It was" fitting and proper thus to dedicate what will be -a potent factory in the pro gress of the town to the giver of all good. .i Dr. Tahnage does not believe in betting, but in arecentsermon said, There is no more harm . in offer ing a prize to the swiftest -racer than there is harm at an agricultu ral fair in offering a prize to the farmer who has the-best wheat. James Cain, of Walker county, Ga.j aged eighty-seven, who raised twelve children to maturity, and has 103 grand children and forty six great grand children, is still as lively as a cricket and fond of talking polities We'll wager he ts a Democrat. ' j Lee Toy Foon, renowned for his fabulous wealth, was burned in San Francisco the other'day in the midst of a din that revealed a Fourth of July celebration. He was presi dent of one of the Six Companies. He owned an immense plantation in China, stocked with 2,000 slaves, three wives and seven children. Feen was the. ry-hest heathen in America. This is .not a gfwxl year for young democrats to join the republican party. Geo. 11. Everett, a former democrat, joined it and is now col lector of Internal lie venue at Win ston. His tenure of office, how ever, is not secure and he. is in great danger of decapitation. The Re publican County Convention of Forsyth asked that he tie removed and among other reasons they said that they believed he; joined the party for office and that he was still a democrat in principle. The Chicago Timet says: There has actually 1m?cu found in (V in gress a small number of represen tatives, not above eight, who have not presented a single bj!l oft he ,..! winch has thus far been of fered in the House. They are Chase of Khode Island, Dugro and Hen. Wood of New Yprk, Cutes of Iowa, Stone of Massachusetts. Williams of Alabama. Frost of Mississiimi and Shackleford of North Carolina. These gentlemen, should be cele brated as the eight considerate Statesmen. ' W. II. Day, Esq , of Halifax, an nounces that he will not again vote the democratic, ticket, but will vote for W. II. Kitchen or It. Ti. Peebles Capt. Day represented Halifax in the legislature ! last session. .lie will soon grow tired of his new pa-'' litical headquarters and want to come back. The I Wilminirton Post is already giving him soft soap which application will not be pleasant to a man who has been a democrat. Cant. Dav has made a mistake as lie will discover riirl'it early. v- Some men, says the Savannah Xeirs, are born! stupid;' '.others achieve stupidity and mayhap others have stupidity thrust upon them. It is quite: evident that Col. Folk belongs to one of these classes as his position will show. He was a meinlwr of fne Legislature and drafted the present bill on thecounty government question, and he now says he has nothing to take back and still believes -that the present system is the correct one. He also asserts that the prohibition is dead and is not an issue. Holding these democratic views we cannot , see how he can lie stupid enough to say he ltelougs to a party which repu diates both of them. ' . A well informed statist ietrni as serts that every seventh dollar of the annual income in wealth in this country, is burned up chiellv through gross criminal negligence. 'The. great- Chicago fire in LS71 destroyed' Over one hundred and sixty millions of dollars worth of i - property, and the average fire loss in the United States andCanadv is put down lor the last five years at 40.",2G7,70O and the aver age tire loss in the United States alone at. .S0,000,000 per year. Liquor stores, grocery stoi cs and hotel, appear most apt to bTirn, there occurring twice as many tires in these classes of aiildings as in saw mills and 'drug stores, which come next in the list. The Corth Carolina political punch is ". made las follows: Anti- proliibition, that's the wiiiskov, i ... 1 ll .11 11 strong; proiiininon, inai s ine water, :t et tune iiw hi weaken the punch; the oiler of the llepublican party is the sugar and a few dissatisfied: and sour lXcino cratsmake the lemons. Shake and swauow; it is aireauy nuxeti. ine.i noe oi oiuce win gi e n. ine navor ctnil ('I'luuiiiiriii iir.vi Jdii will be to the relief el" the etver - bureleued stemiach. lHw inytou Review. , j The way the Republicans ....... eqqioseel ceialitiou are eating crow is one of the wonders of the age. Keough, Ball and others who with a blast of trumpets gave out if the party favored coalition and anti prohibition that it need not count on theni for support are now eating crow with evident disgust, altho' they are ready to swear it is the inost 'delicious of dishes. Demo crats might learn a valuable lesson from this. uton's daily drill in Ari- thmetic at the Normal School is one of its thief and ing features. most interest- If the varm weather we have ng continues the crops will leen havi not be so ,hort as has been predict ed. A gentleman ' frrifcli Saratoga township aid to us a few days ago that the cotton crop was looking well, and that the indications were that the crop would be as large as usual. S( ' mote it be. Through an oversight last week we omitted to notice the very able and instructive series of sermons preached by Rev. W. S. Bynnm, Evangelism of this diocese, in the Episcopal Church at this place. i A number of our most intelligent citi zens were very much impressed and pleased with the discourses and with Mr. Itynnm's earnest and im pressive s yle of pulpit oratory. We trust that this Vill not lie his last visit to ou town where his efforts were so hi ;hly appreciated. Mr. Jese M. Taylor, with his family, ha:i moved to Black Creek. With his brothers li. J. and 11 II. Taylor, he is engaged in the largest and most extensive milling opera tions in tin State. The firm, It. J. Taylor & lo., are building a rail road (not t tram affair) but a bona fltle railroa I to extend twelve miles through a heavily timbered coun try, and hey propose to make enough 'lumber to supply the whole State. Their extensive operations are already proving beneficial to Hlack Creelk which lias lately re ceived an impetus in the way of new houses being built and other im provements being made. We wish the enterpr sing firm mnch success. Democratic Township' Con vention. jThe Democrats of Wil son township mot at the Court House last Saturday evening for the purpose of ippointing delegates to the County Convention which meets July 1st, and to elect a township Executive Committee. The meet ing was called to order by Mr. J. W Lancaster who explained the object oif the 'meeting, and called on Mr. A . 15. Dea nsi to preside. On motioi T. J. Iladley a Committee of three G. D. Green- aiid J.E. appointed to suggest Clarke, were the names o seven delegates to the comity- com hntion, and to reeoin- mend a towi ship executive coininit- tec The committee reported for delegates, Woodard, - a W. -Barnes, F. A. F. Murray, W. P. 1 Wooten, A..J. Simms, A. B. Deans and M. liouijtree, and for the exe- tteeJ. W. Lancaster, F. W. P.arnek W. P. Wooten, C. A. Young-and V. B. Deans. The re port of the committee was adopted after which the meeting adjourned. The Resources of the State. Prof. Phillips of the State Normal School at this place, in a lecture upon the Geography of North Caro lina, one day last week, gave his hearers some information which, though gener bi kept alwa, illy unknown, should s before our eyes. Speaking-1 four water-power he made the sta bined. rivers eiiienf that the coin of the State furnish more power tl in all tlie steam en gines in the fruited States or Eng-. land, the Yiidkin river alone hav ing capacity' or running 10,000,000 spindle. ()1 minerals he told us that we have marl in twenty comities. The best of all fertilizers thus lying un used beneath tlie feet of fanners who buy ton after ton of guano. Iron is scatteii-d i) thirty counties from' the Itoailoke to the Cape Fear, some of it being of the very best quality.- Goh is found in twenty There are two de 'nine counties. posits" of bitu al nous coal one m ItoCkinghani, one in Chatham coun- tyJ Peat is 1 uuid in the Eastern counties and v ill furnish fuel when gone as they soon the forests ;ft- will Ik at th : present rate ofde- destruction, 'have -bpier, t Nash.'-:.."' n twelve counties we ic nest mine neingiu The best Mil a mine in tlie woijld n part of the State is in the west there are fl orals." w more valuable min- Graphite is Bound ami even Plati num .within our borders, while pre cious stones ohnearly.overy desvrip- tioii lie hidd n in our mountain caves. ' We have eV cry variety of soil. j Tho Vtlgetable kingdom being repre i . . , . ! s'ntl,l,K V'' l 'OI,h Garolm ilmost everv species. is the only State blank sent out by ! that tills even n10 Agricnltnr; l department. Tliv no of our resources. I ' . .... ..i. , il l. assertion that no equal showing, naturally presents j I ! State makes ai The question! itself : "W hy ts not this wealth de- ! vtloned f? Ad North Carolinians we emght to obviate the nee'i u4 n cessitv lor im? "?. (T1V- ,Ij0t not re- fuse the gifts tl ie gods provide. Like a Charm. t'OLVMBl fi, S. C, Feb. 15, 1881. II. II. Warder & Co. : Sirs I j have llstMl your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure in mv nractiee as a nhv- - : ;;., m.l in ivvc e-ic. T n.l 'it j wrk .a dial in. i llAy. Ii. P. Tokteb. Prof. P,l I ! i Now that the blackberry crop is j maturing and grass is beginning to outgrow the cotton in tlie neuis,ine ; season for colored excursions is j fairly inaugurated. Before the sum- j iner is over, every town in the State will be struck by one of these excursions, that will sweep through its streets like a mighty: wave. The average excursionist is accompanied by two or three very ; fat women and several barefooted children with straw hats and-an aching for stick candy and a drink of water. The personal accoutrements of the excursionist is himself inva riably made up of a palm leaf fan, a cane, an umbrella aud a collapsed valise in which he generally carries an extra paper collar and a goodly store of ginger cakes. His manly form is hidden from the critical eye ; of the strangef in the volup tuous folds of a linen duster. The rig out is never considered coin- l.lete without the addition of the j daintily poised beav.er and the ex- cursionist who alights -from the train into a strange place with a hat anything less than eight inches tall on his tufter brow, looks shaine faced and takes the sunny side of the pavement going np town. These excursions are gotten up with the special design of affording the com and cotton fields a brief res pite from the laborers' hoe, ami to permit the lalorer to en joy a. short ! visit with his family to his relatives ill neighboring towns. .; When an excursion train empties its loatl into a town, there is always a run on the soda water fountains, and before the day is half srone. the i town's supply of Long Tom cigars is completely exhausted. The maiir ridea of the excursionist is to drink as mnch soda water as his purse will command and to stroll around ami look at the town. . The crowd is usually as bright as a morning glory when they first reach the place, but j long before the hour for the train to leave they are lying about the shady places around the dopot the men wilted,the women fbistrated and pegged out and wearily Ikmuic ing their fretful youngsters up and down,trying to soothe their irritated spirits with the monotonous "hnsh- a-bye, baby, we'se gwiiie terrectlv." hum I It apjiears ages to them before the lazy engineer gets ready to start,but at lastthecars are brought j up,, they tumble into seats and-; thank goodness that at last they ! are starting oack lor home and the i grassy fields,. On the whole, these excursions! are beneficial to the colored people, j One day spent away from home is about as much as they want,and when they return, they set to work with the greatest good will and are content to continue at it until the crops are laid by. One day-Vtramp around the streets of a strange place instills a love for home into them, which seldom wears off before the next summer conies, and makes the best sort of grass killers out of them. A demented mother, the wile of a I 1AISE y)UIJ QwN Applies. German baker in Chicasro.. last In-! ... . . , a , . . - - . day evening dressed lier four dir. dren, aged respectively 12, 7, and two and a half years, and an infant in white clothes with bright ribbons,' and then gave them all strychine. When they w ere dead she laid them out, placed flowers in their hands and made the surroundings as lieau tiful as possible. She then dressed herself and took a dose of the poi son. At 5 o'clock in the morning on her husband's return from the bakery she met him at the door with the remark : "Come and see 'chil dren, they are .all dead and gone to heaven. See how pretty they are with nice, flowers for the angels." About two hours afterward she died from the jioison she had taken. ' A Missouri woman was astounded - - . trlion n i.tnn tmt lir siiil.linilv in his arms and junipeil into aond of water with her, and grateful when i she leariie'd that her dress had been iu a blaze, which the leap . extin ! guished. The wife of John Ilarriman, of Moretown, Vermont, presented him with four babies the other day, and John is going to move at once from Moretown to a place with less e-n ' mutative name. Ve published last week an adver tisement lmriwrting to le from the i. r tj i I he will elo well f aire out to some a young Democrat to run for lici- . "t.Vl ",.JTi.-. ' I- ... ,. an IU1 Ol lllitli Vlinilllll iUII IHC iUWK" t icket. The startling rumor comes .m A - t W I I OTI1 IT . 1111 T llJk 1 I U1W Kinstou that either F. B. Ix)ftin er 1). E. Terry might. la? induced to ae cept the nomination. i Farming in Dakota. "Yes, sir,"' resumed the Dakota man as the crowd of agricultnr- istr. drew back from the bar and settled themseives around a little table, "yes sir,, we do things on I rather a sizable .scale. I've seen a man on oue of our big farms start out in the -spring and plow 'a straight furrow tintil fall Then he turned round arid, harvested back." !' "Carry his grub "with him!'' asked a Brooklyn farmer, who i raises cabbages ton the outskirts. "No, sir. They followed him un with a steam hotel aud have re- lays of men to 'change plows for for him. We have, some big farms up there gentlepien. A friend of mine owned onern which he had to giye a mortgage! and I pledge von my word, the mortgage Avas due at one and before they could get "it re corded at the thei- You see it was laid oft" in counties." There was a ni'urmnr of astonish ment, and the Dakota man contin ued: ! "I got a letterJfroin a man who lives in my orJhard, jtisfc before I left home, ami .t had beeii th ree weeks getting tolthe dwelling house though it traveled day and night. " Distances aip pretty wide up there, ain't they" inquired a New Utrecht agriculturist. ' : : "Iieasonably, rfeasonably," replied the Dakota manj "And the worst of it is, it breajes up families so. Two years agol ikw a whole fa mil y lrostrated with grief. Women yel klng. One o my men had his Camp truck packed on sev'eif four- ling, children Howling And mule teams and ie was around bid ding everybody gjood by." "Where was ha going?" asked a Gravesend man. ' "He was going half way across the farm to feed the" pigs," replied the Dakota inan "Did he ever j get biick to his lamilyr ' : ?'It isn't time fot him yet," re turned the Dakofa gentleman. "Up there we send I young married couples to milk the ctiws, and their children bring lujjne the-' milk," "I .underlain! you "have,'; fine mines up that 'ay',' .ventured a Jamaica turnip planter. "Yes, but we ojdy use the quartz for fencing," said; the Dakota, .man, testing the bladeiof his knife with his thumb, prepafory to whetting it on his boot. "Itfwoh't pay td crush it, because we lean make- more money on wheat. I put in eighty nine liundred townships of wheat last spring." "How many Sicres would "that be?" "We don't count by acres. We count by townships and counties Mv vield was .(i8,000,000 on wheat alone, and I'm tanking of breaking up from eighty to a hundred more counties next sjiiug." "How do you I get the help for such extensive operations?" asked the New Utrecht? man. "Oh, JalKir is Vheap," replied tlie Dakota man. "pTou can get all you want for from $11 to 47 a day. In fact, 1 never paif over ;S." "Is land cheaifi" "No, land is'lilgh. Not that it ! costs anything, j for it don't; but I under the laws of the Territory yiHi i have got to takejso' much or none. ; I was, in luck. 1 1 had a friend in Yankton who got a bill through the i legislature allowing me to take J 420,000 square miles, which is the ! smallest farm there, though : it ! is " - f : ' "Look here," sjaid the barkeeier. as the eastern hlisbandiuen strolled out in a bunch to consider the last statement, "Is all this thing you've been telling t rue?" "Certainly," responded the west ern man, "at least it is a modifica tion of what I saw in a Dakota pa-i per that was wrapped around a pair of shoes lasl night. 1 didn't dare put it as stiong as the paper did, for no one; would believe it. You can slate tfliat last round of drinks and I'll pay in the morning. Hive right herejbn -Mvrfle avenue." I-list: -sii niiieiv-uine larmers i I (f' ,-,.,- l.nili-e.l this nn.-stion Is it not to t lie interest of the fanner to raise! his own supplies and make the f'Jrm. self-sustaining? and the answei' will be invariably yes, and still ill the face of such knowledge eight-tenths of the farmers are planting large' cotton crops and small provision crops, and buy provisions to support their farms, ami this Is done, admitting it to be a wrong and ruinous sys tem; in a word,? it is persisting in error Knowingly Second; Jet ime say to . all my bi-other tanners mat ianning under such a system insures the same ruin as it wouldjbeto a man whose capital was in nioney,and his family exenses exceil the interest in come, and yearly-' he had to draw on the principal to sitpiort his ex- , Linii.ami.-i ... . '.- If. 1 .11.41.- Wliich would lie fOll- I Kuming the capital in aeldition te . interest. 1 he! ludicious larmer should managef his farming inter-e-sis as a good financier would his mimey. '--...'.. : Third: The plain truth is to make farming profitable, farmers must return to first principles., which is undivieled attention to their busi ness; live withiis themselves, pay as they go, and build up their lands by rotating crops, flowing uutler veg etable matter, aptlhave stock yards and save all manures. Fourth: It is lecessjiry for every the rudiments of farmer to know agricultural se-idnce, it is necessaiy forhini tohavej a business caiac- itv, some foret longht and sounel (lwnient. If 1111 has none of these I1IM1 uim Ilil.., tl lir ciii v an II. - . agricultural paer he will, elo well to sell his tarni, and go at some toinr else lietti'r suited to his ca- i pacity. C. R , t' X. C. Far mer. The Iowa Tornado. The Des Moines Iowa) Hey niter makes this piteous aud earnest aj leal iu behalf of the stricken people in that State : "Alter two days and nights spent in traversing the track of the tor nado that swept over this State with such fearful havoc last Satnrday night, 1 and having reports from scores of reimrters of the Register and Associated Press sent to all parts of it, I i find the condition of the stricken people so 'piteous and needful of instant and generous help' that I send this appeal to the peo ple of the United States in their behalf. The tornado made a de structive sweep through the thickly settled portion of Iowa,' some l.'iO miles in length' and on an average half a mile wide, extending from points south of Ames, iii the centre of the State, in the shape of a cres cent, to South English, in Keokuk count . From the ' southeastern part ol the State Ave have the names now of 09 dead and oOO wounded, half of the latter grievously hurt, and probably ii fifth of them fatally. Over three hundred families have had their homes, totally : destroyed, and there are now at least fifteen hundred persons homeless and iu want. The loss in property will ex ceed 2,000,000, and may reach $3,000,000. In the town of Grinnell 7. y ( alone over 400,000 in property was destroyed, on none of which was there a cent of insurance, ax in the case of fires. It will take at least .00,000 to put the people there lie yond need and distress. It will take f 100,000 at once to put the wounded people in condition to be cared for. It will take 1,000,000 at the lowest to keep the suff erers from want and and to help them to put tlie humblest roofs over their .heads. People of Des Moines, are re sponding generously. Citizens of this city have subscribed 8,000 this morning, and will make it 20,000 before night in money, and are also sending provisions and clothing. It will take the help of every humane city and town in the West, and of every Iileral city ami town in the East, to put comfort and safety be tween these stricken people and further suffering and fatality. All that the people of Iowa can do will be done to alleviate the condition, repair in part the losses of the suf fers, but it will take 1,000,000 to do it even half way, and the jieople of the State who have always borne their share and done their part in all local calamities may freely ask people of other-communities to help them in this hour of great calamity to many of the worthiest of its peo ple,and to this end I ask my fellows of the press throughout the United States to place the facts liefore their readers and give their timely help to its sufficient purpose of raising and providing aid at the earliest moment possibkv Kvery condition of woe exists that most tenderly ap peals to the pity of the human heart. Wounds inflicted .by debris that tilled the air like chaos by elec tric falls of fire, that seemed to tra verse every inch of space and that exploded with fearfully fatal effects will many of them defy all skill and nursing, even ' with the tenderest care. The fury of the storm, which was clearly of electric origin, and wliichjndeed may be described as having, been electricity itself, may b -, understood from the statement that at various places it took up -in its great spirals or funnels houses a thousand feet into the air, and took nn and carried larire droves of cat tle through the air tor thousands of! fi.pt and dashed them deail in ! , ii i,m,o..,i, ,. ,..,Hi,v neaps, aimij iuiinn nn, horses, hogs, and other animals, now lie in the track of the tornado, ami are already rotting and adding to the horror the foul odors of put re faction. The horrors of ; the storm are unspeakable" The cruelties it inflicted and the pitiless woe of its coming iu the night when the dead, were not known and the wounded ; e-ould not be found, the sad state in1 which it, has left hundreds e.f fami-i lies liefore prosperous, may not lj described in words ; but once known ; to Kei,erous hearts, it must e-tm- m. inat.xnt 8. innntiiv of the 111 fl 111 "V' lllDHlttJ lyim'wiiy " liberal, and bring immediate help. Kemittanc.es may lie made to I Ion. ,1. B. Grinnell, at GrinneJl, or to the Mayor of Grinnell. I write from the knowledge of two whole days and nights spent at the scene; of desola tion and among the dead and wound ed, and tell facts and the multitude of lunrors simply as they are, f'eeh . . .1 i ing that they will theriise-lves U'st. appeal to the country, and most :ef- r.tii illv aiI tliA siiflV'i-ers.' 1 in. i, ..... ...w . Rubbing It Out. j ' .. 1 The editor of the Co urier, Mr. W. F. Ceek, was seized a few mornings ago by a terrible ain in the le-ft shoulder and neck. Haying lieen favorably impressed for some time; with the virtue of an artie-le recoin inended for all sudden pains, ; ail csiu'ciallv rheumatism, we rnblH-il the oflending part, and in less time than we write it. relief came. Tliiit . . ,z - article is St. Jacobs Oil.j - Canajoli rie New York Courier. IN tIGHTER VEIN. J "Yott FcsT Massa." A min ister officiating at a wedding 1 tetter Ut .lay any plans for sjiorfc on ihis own account. The langh ma. come" in the wrong place for him, as it did at a negro wed ding in Vi;rginia,where two biawny, ruby lipMd negroes called upon a young ami -popular minister to lie married. J . ' ' Tlie minister was fond of fun, and invited some of his intimate friends, telling tlnhn he would have an ex tra performance in the eeremouy. The parlor was well lighted, and the guests with mirthful faces, were seated, when the couple was shown in. - f!. . ' ,. 4 . . - The ceremony proceeded, 'amid a little tittering of the guests ami no little agitation on the part of the lovers. ;Vs it ended and the minis ter pronounced them man and wife, he added, with a smile, "Saninel, salute your bride." The new made husband looked all round the room, and seeing by the mirth of the crowd that all was not righl, he excitedly said, ! "You lust, nlassah!"iind, prompt ed by a' look of the fond husband, the -bride -'raised her ruby lips for the expected kiss. The tables had turned. The sur prised minister stepped back, and liesitatingly said, "I Will soon have a .-bride lof 'my own to kiss." Chi cuyo Xeirx. . j - - .-;."''.' JCNE-T-TlIK 0th DAUhHTKB OF lS.S2.-This isai.ii4:d hot' happy repu" tation-j.f Junevapples and .lune bugs. The lioys liave lieeh anx iously jc Hiking for her. May was not miieh lieloved. Only one lieau reignecj supreme with her the rain bow.! There was a want of col orific jerulean tints altout her brow, back. iSlie had too much of a draw -.i 'JTiere was considerable dis satisfaction at her , conduct. But .In lie, beuiitit'ul maiden, clothed ih sunshine, scattered flowers on the earth, while she dances-, to- the music Ol the birds and 'brooks,' has arrived.', She is finishing the work that May left, undone, and is deck ing the field in magic tapestry, and arrayitig the valleys and hills in rich attire: the chorister of every grove warble carols in her praise and all that sort of thing, you know.i Well, we are glad June has come. This is the "-luckiest month in the year in which to marry that is lucky for'the fellow if he gets his girl. iY'7. jiobinsoH, Oraiue Ob iter reri . BinrLorti Tiik 0(iY. Speak ing of,. ' Calviiiist brings up a stijry .told me by AJr, Handy', of Pliiladelphia, yesterday, about a iiieetiBg between Senator Yance,'of 'North! Carolina, and Gov. Iloyt, Pennsylvania, at Yorktown, 'one of whonij had beeii in the Rebel anuy and the oilier in t he Union , army. Tlieii- was a saloon convenient, into which?they went, ami having had a d ri nk 'oi' two, Vanee said to Iloyt: . "What church do you bclong tof" I'l-f-sbyti-iiaii." ' " "I (ton't lw-lieve it," -said A'anee. "So ihd mv," said Ibyt. "What is Hie chief end of man?" said Malice. - . " "Tglorify G.Hl,"s;ihl Iloyt. "Hight." TheJn said Iloyt to 'ance: "How niiinyf 'questions are there in the catechism?" - , "Oe. hundred and thirty-eight." "Kiglit." . - - "What is sin?" said Vance. Iloyt rattled oiit th- entire' defi nitioi) f the Westminster divine. aiid-Ys'l'.-ried: Hight again. Now, let us take a ! trhii.r Unfit IVfes.-air to chissica'l. student "If Atlas supported the world, who sup rted Atlas?" Student ''The' (iU-sioii.' sir., lias often been asked, but lieveivso far as I am a ware., sat isfiicjtuilv answered. I have always i t lM'Ciu'of the opinion that Atlas must i,;1V(J lri:u.,i,.,i a ,1,-1, 'Vifi. ami got 4 &iinrilt fVom her father'." . ; t Ofd Scotch geiitleinan sitting in Toronto 'ar-a young lady .-enters. aiidimakes a rush for the topmost seat.- 1 lie. car starts, ratlier sua deiijy, the young lady lands on the old j .-gentleman's - knee, blushing, am exclaiming, "Oh! leg your pa r- j doiy .' Old t.eu. 'Dinna) mention ! itrliissiit. I'd niyther .ia ye sittin' 011 toy Ituee than standing-on e-cre- - : 'V Seotch Humor. ' A Michigan loan dreamed re cefitly 1 that his aunt .was deaeL Tlfedreani liroye-d true. lie trie'tl I th0 same dream 011 his latv, but it didn't work.. i 1 mother-iii- ' LV lucky' fellow named Lamlert i has wedded Miss Kothsirliild, with: i u . i- :n;,.. ... 1 ir a (dowry ol a 1111II1011 jmhiikIs. Hei I wl-pt wheji be heard how rich she j was, but finally resolved .'manfully i tlUt the money should lie no bar t.j their uioii. : , A Denver paper protease- to j think it marvelous that a maiiii,.(,i : .1 whose brains were knocked out is still living. - If he were out this j way he weiuhl not einly le living, : but he. woiihl le holding some im- - 1 junta nt oflice. Louiirille Courier r Journal. A Tale of a Shirt. ThetLegexdof Timkthk Gekat Iowa Statesmen Vobe Oxe. A gixxl, but not very clean shirt story is told of General Sherman's exjerience with- Henry Clay Dean. The two had been friends for years, and wlien Sherman became general, and Dean hapiened to be in Wash ington, the Litter, naturally enough, felt a, desire to renew the old ac quaintance. So he called at Sher man's house, and the General re ceived him with ojien amis. They talked over old times, and nothing would do but Dean, must stay to dinner. "But, General," remon strated Mrs. Sv "I can't havejsneh a, dirty looking man at my fjable; can't voir spruce him up a littlef" The General said he'd fix that! and so at an opiKirtu he moment hej hus tled Mr. Dean upstairs, ransacked a baui'o ami produced a clean shirt for him to put on. Mrs Sher man was molified, and the dinner wax really a charming affair; for there is no more delightful and en tertaining and instructive 'conver sationalist thaif Henry. Clay Dean. One year after this event General Sherman was at the Liudell hotel, St. Lonis, with his family. A card was brought up liearinj; Henry Clay Dean's name'. "He is such a charming talker, we must have ,hini to dinner. Only you must see t hat he, looks presentable.7' These were madam's words to t ho warrior. So Sherman .welcomed Dean, aud just Ind'ore going to dinner flipped nun into a side room ami gave him a clean shirt to wear. Deauj doffed his coat and vest, and, after! a brief struggle, divested himself of the shirt he had on a soiled, griminy, black t hing, that looked as if it had seen long and hard service, i Then they all went down to dinner, and Mr. Dean was more charming than oyer, and Mrs. Sherman was1 iu ee stacies. The next day, as;Mrs. Sher man was getting her husbands duds ami clothes together, preparatory to packing .them for the jou ward march, she gave a sort of "ja wild, haunted scream. "What i it, my dear!" called the General from the next rmnn. "Just look heje for a ininute," replied Mrs. Sherman, be tween faint gasps. a The General went in. There stood Mrs. Sher man, holding in her hand -the le giiinnicd shirt Henry Clay Dean had left.- With her right hand she pointed to certain initials) on the lower end of the liosoin. The ini tials read "W. T. S." It was' the same identical shirt General Sher man had loaned Henry Clay Dean in Wasnington twelve months lie- fore. . Vance's Committee Getting in ts Work. The committee ivestigating this district has already unearthed enough to .cause a stench. We publishe'd last week "the proeif that .Mm Ilarriss a corrupt and im prudent negro,was Imiiiic on the pay rolls of the revenue lotlice of thisolaci- for nine mouth-ti iu 1HSO. I 'at lh a .month.; During jhis time he was going around making o- liticar speeche-s, telling white . her chamlx r, iU-compiiiiietl ly !r. how 'to vote, though 'it i' claimed f l'"'ott, who wa desirous i f w ifnesHM--. by tlie ' revenue crowd tlut his , ' ' it'rview. The wife or Jdl. biiisness was that of a .spy on the Allen was a pious weiman, ami bad white men of t his district. . If so,1 instructed her daughter in the prin how many elistillerleadid litcaiturJj.l,,'H of '1r'H''''t'' ami why was it nee essary j to send 1 As 80011 stM ,M'r tMh?r ll'''d at to Raleigh for a negro to" shadow j ber bedside ahe said to him, "I am the white people f tlie west, any-. s,,MM,t f"?1"' ? ball I. U lieve in I he how f V ! principle 'you have; taught me, r Following is a telegram from ! s,,all I U-lieve in what my mother Washiiigtoii, ilate.l June J5th:- j "Thet-mimittee invest idif iu' t he I crooketlness in the sixth North j'l, bin whole frame shiMik ; and.af " Carolina collection district met to-1 !,'r w'yif' niomentt, lie re-, day and had on the witmvs stand I pld, "lUlieve what your mother A. I. Gillespie, now Ciiited States 'aught you." " ganger, and formerly deputy e ol ! A leath la'd iu fearful tester, lector in sai.l district. Ire refused I -VI o who, while iu health ami to answer,' on the gromrd f hat if jtreiigf h, loudly boast en" their skep he did so he wiaild erimiipite him j tu' i principles ami ridicule religion self. The committee ill meet i fiierally the first, on appioiuh again Satunbiy, when it i claimed, of death, or even Mickne-s lo hlld most 'damaging testimony will t ; ,1,,r wi1' ,n'i,r ! Kv'" t,r HobU-H,. e-licited." !. - ; the e-eh-biate-d infidel, it is ree-ordeel Nextisa soiicialofthe .if th. from ! ,,,:,t ,nM "ot bear Im left Washington, to the Kichftiond "- j patch, referring, to the testimony taken em Saturday last.- ; me nigiir. . ne never ctmid end 11 re "Governor Vance's special e-om- i'lHiy'diHcourse nlxHit eleath 1 ' lull inirtce further examined into f he ; delity has 110 coiiKoLrtiiMi for its un ci eKikcdness in f he sixth Koith Car- bappy followers iu the testing hour., olinaceillection iliHtriet, and elicited'! f' lH Sintihvf Jlaja:ipf. a gKl deal of testimony going to show that there was good reason for, lif.. ;T,. h4Min.1M ()f ,u theinvesligation. F.ir exainp!e,W. j ;ire not in Uh. WMIIltrv jn vhU w tr. .i .. . 1 . 1:1.. 1... , . . . II. Kextler tfstilietl that while he was only employeel a month and received veiuchers were filed 11..., ... f t.. i.. 1... ! 1 J had reeeive-d H 1,125. The vouchers ! were duly sworn to by tlie e-ollction oflici-.ils. C:iit:iin lf;imsj-v t-stitii-il - , ' - that he only received 1(W a month from March 1st, 1872,: to June :id, lS73,Iit vouchers were, file-tl which claimed that he had been paid i50 a mouth during the ri.sl narneel. There waa more testimeuiy ofthis i character.', Senater Vance and Hepresena- five Arnifield senel worel that if ueithiiig ineire is unearthexl than has - the investigatiein is a great i sue-cess. Statesville lAtmlmarL. THE QUIET HOUR. Select ions for Sunday Reading The Hem of His Garment She only touched the hem of Hi garment ' - v As to Hisiside she sNJe, ' " .. Amid the crowd that1 gathered immnd Him And wtraightway he was whole She came in fear ud tivmbling he-; ; fore Him, ' She knew her Lord hml comei: . She felt that from Him virtue had healed her The mighty deed was done. ' ; le tufnetl with "Daughter, W of giMMl comfort ! -A Thv In it h hath mmletrwe whole!" Ami mihw that passethall under standiug, " y With gladness, tilknl hei4 wmiI, (. F. Ktt, VlCTOW HVOO O.N iMMOKTALITY. I feel in myself the future life.- I anl like a foivst which has lieen more than once cut dwn. The. new shots are stmnger and liveli er than ever. 1 am rising, I know towanl the sky. The mnishine is ou my head. The earth gives me. genenms sap, but heaven lights ute with the reflection of unknown worlds. Yoii say the Void is noth- Cng.but the resultant of bodily jnw- . ers. Why then, is my soul the more luminous wheif my liodily jKiwers iiegin to fail. . Winter is on , my he;Kl aind eternal spring is iu my heart. Thus I breathe, at (his hour, the fnigrance oTthe lihws, the vio lets and the hises, as at twenty years. The nearer I apprtmch .the end the plainer I hear ariouiid' ine the immortal symphonies of the i worlds which invite me. It is mar- ; velous yet simple. It is a fairytale, and it is a history. For half a cen tury I have been writingmy thoughts in prose, verss history, philosophy, -drain a, i-onianee, tradition, satire, . mIo, song I have tried all. But I fei-I that I have not said one fhou saiidth jiartof wjiatis in me. When 1 I go down to the grave l oan say, . like so many others, "I haveWii- v ished my day's work," but I can ; uot aay "1 have finished my life." My day's work will Iiegin again the next morning. , The tomb is not a , blind alley ; it is a thoroughfare. It -closes in the twilight to open with . the dawn I iuiprove- every hour lKi-ause I love this world as my fatherland, btM-ause the. truth com jm'Is ine, as it compelled Voltaire, to human divinity. My work is only a ln-ginning. My monument is hardly alxive its foundation. I -wojild h ghul to see it mount ing and iiiomiting forever. '. The thirst for the infinite proves infinity. ';.- .' .''" The . HVixu DAi oiiTKn. Dr. ', Elliott, who .was well acquainted with the celebrated Col. Kt hail A I . It-n, visited him at a time when his daughter wassick and near to death. He was iutnMluced o the library, r when the.Coloiiel read to him some of hh writings, with much wlfcom-placeii-y, and listed, "Is not that well done f While they werethiM employed, a messenger entered and . iii('ii'iii-d Col. Alleii that hi duugh- u'r was dying, anil desire..! to iM-ak him. He'immedhtcly went to "".'"' wr ' ' tremely agitatetl ; his lecamc ex- eiini tiuivei-T -J,, ; ter alom-, mid use-d to awake in great terror if his candle went oiit duriHg j The lieliever's is a Miperbnmait sojourns, Imt in the higher lauds, be yond. His lives in Genl, and thus oxiierieiie-c jH-rreunial joy even when earthly springs are dry, or are turned te bitterness. .. A elevoiit tIifMiglit,a pious denire, a hely purjHiKe, is U tter than a, great estate or an earthly kiugelom. In eternity it will amuunt to uiere to have given a cup of e-oll water, with right motives, o an ; bumble Kervant ef-lod, Hiaii to have U-cii tlatteml by a wheIe generation Dr. Camming. :"IlHlieveSt. Jarsolw Oil to lie the. very best remeely kuowu to man kind." says Mr. Koherts, btisineMH manager of this pafer. Milwaukee (Wis.) Sentinel.