. 1 K ... Oil & ut . 1X1 15 iw xi-vs of a vi; i;k ;.Tiri-:w-:i'VM)M ALL I'Ain: !(k Tin: w'oiM.n. vr i.i.r.M.s a i.r.A .via os ltah-igh ki . nr. rooms. 'JUS students attended the I'lli yersil-vjthis veai'.-' -; - - -That! new. j ;i i M-r. - t '-Corset.' Irlld. ndv to show signs til Durham, is. iby iirt'ii'M'tal. ibev I, i:l:i-'kir.itl. hatching L.T.0 egg' The telegraph. lint between Ilali an.jl Scotland " Neck i' 'im L'p In hiis cost sii'j.oiiti. now the Slar Route . - incut t.l ial old V A n h .Opened at -Kip ! ol'lh ' . has been Nazareth tin- -first one in i In-Holy Laud, Tiii- jstate Dental Association meets al MojchcaiL City on the l'JIh ol'.liine ncr - Lev. Dr. Samm-l Lander, ol' South ( iiiolin a. is named lor l'res; iili-ut otil'i im! ( 'ollege. 'I In- Southern TiMcgraph Coinpa li "s v i ! es -w ill soon reach Wcldoii ln ing arrived it Margaret tsville soinet Hii'r since. ; 11 n;evcr too late to lo good ami therefore" two people in III ad-en ollll!,i aied 71 a1'"! '' years h.e lil-t U"! marr-uil. - ' ' " Lev. li'. i i-ius li.i." been invited to elivcr I he- baccalaureate sci' iui.it tlni. i ar at 1 In Yandcibilt Uiiiveisit.v. ol' N'ashj i,le,T.i.nv Tin- (ici.cral Assembly of tin Presbyterian ( 'Inn ch.'in the, 1 " nit 1 Slates, xv ill nnifih; in Lexington, K.v., on ire lTtli d.uv of May iss:',. F.laboj-afe preparation- nv be 'illU ; made I'ol the Musical- 'olivell t ion of Virginia and :Noith 'arnli lia. to hij In-ld at Petersburg May -'M h. ' I .....!...., I I...,!.- -.1 Miieiiiii. ( ). .! ,. IIMtlWll.il IK. til - tiie State natWial hank ''(' llafeigh, X. ('., aijd a national hank -t 'NVw heriv. S'i i'.. have women presi dents: j Lew is. , prtnerpal ol it; has been appoint- I'ted Bean, a young Iowa farmer, desired a wile, hut (Ml not take? a I'ajiey to the girls ofliis neghbor- h 1. He aspired to something different, ami wrote to an Indian agent in Dakota, inquiring whether a reasonahle good-looking squaw could be obtained. An exchange of letters and photographs ensued, and he is to be married, to the daughter of a Sioux chief. J A cubic inch of gold is worth 1M:' a cubic foot, s.'JG 2,30S ; a cu bic yard, --'.,7!7,7(i2. This is val uing it atj?lS, an mnce. At the commencement of the Christian era there was in the wrld ??427,000,000 in gold. This has. diminished to :,7,(00,(.oo at the time America was discovered, when it began" to increase. Xuiv the aniount of gold in use is estiinateil to Ik' o",000,- 000.(1(10. A-new uiNciitiou for building pur- j poses'is called "terra eotta lumber. ' ' It is a' kind of brick so soft that Ht can be sawed and worked with edged tools as readily as wood and nails can 1e driven into it and will hold as well as in wood. Its makers 'claim that it lias tenacity and re sist aiiec lo strains greater than -oak lumber.-. It is made from a kind of clay faiud in abundajice in New .lcrsey and elsewhere, is as cheap as luick ami has many other ad vantages as a lire-proof budding material. Asr.ii.f.i. GOOD FARMING. WHAT. AX lMstv AiiA- BAMA FAKMER DID. ahead or run MAX. Last February . we jmblished from the Southern Cultirator the "Furman fonnular," by the use of which Mr. Furman of Georgia, pro duced wonderful results. We inanj: farmei-s will use the combination on their land lr. li. II. lviliston 'o!le; cd lect niyr on IMiYsioTogy. next session ol'lhe !.Ti!i-l-inal Si ho.il. . The Ncwi open .bine at it v the 'N br oil Nonii i! School will L'lith. l'lol'.:. ;. ('. lCng- lish will he Sni.l-.. and I'rol'. M. v. S. Nohhyif I lie ilmi'nulon (iradetl School, will assist. I!!. All AlAA.M'K; Tie- la'aviest rainfall that has visited this section in thirty or forty ears fell on Sunday night, the Ji'ud., and the Ireshet which followei! was the, greatest and most destructive known to the oldest cit izens. Co!. .1. F. .lones" mill was coiisiderahly daniaged liy washing away hUsaw mill and playing havoc with his dam and foby that runs his col ion factory, and also the eotin! hridge all of which was on Sandy Creek jaf" Laurel about ten miles liMiii here in Franklin, and in tire s line county, the. bridge at San dy Creek Church was carried away and t wo oi hers, viz: .Lick tiupton's and I '. is-.', add Drakes' bridge in this-county, Ijeading from Nashville to Hansom's bridge was swept awav I'Y the tlood besides other- w-ise.-caasing grear. tesiruciion to the fanners 1 washing aw ay thou- sainls upon thousands of pannels of t'UC. Alter a lour hour's ride through (he conn; v. via Ued Oak, vour cor respomleii was landed at the Falls of Tar Iii'r on Sunday hist, where had 'gathri'd about one thousand people., of Na-di and' Mdguc'ombe upon atlendJine(v.or the Union Meet link of the Primitive Baptists, noticed that the tanners., on tin road were making ''unusually slow learn same this year, and we hope to hear of large crops being gathered by the use of this compost', liy the re questbt one our of most intelligent and successful tarmers, wao appie ciatesthe great advantages of read ing of the experiences of those en gaged in similar pursuits, besides niustrating what the Southern farmer can do by intensive farm ings publish the following taken from the same journal: "On a high hill, about a half mile from the city limits of Troy, Tike county,-is- the residence of J. F. Hill, a cosy frame building, with necessary farm houses in ex cellent repair' without much to attract particular attention, except the tidy appearance of, the yard and house and comfortable surroundings and the large nuui her ot mounds and heaps which which greets the eye. 1 hese are the potato hills and compost heaps, and it is the latter to which we desire to call particular attention. a well as the results they have iccomplished. This farm, under-Mr. IIiIIts ex- celleiit management has Income the nearest to a model farm of any in this section, and for several years lias produced the largest crops gathered from the same acreage of any farm in Alabama. The yield of 64 bales, r.OO pounds average, from fifty acres, is the largest made iu the State, if not in the South, from the same acreage; and his hill compost land even ex ceeded that in ratio of production, being 41 bales front thirty acres. The land is -what is known as "sandy with clay foundation." Last year his crop from eighty acres, cultivated by two mules, was as follows: 50 acre.s cotton, 04 bales, at 50, SsV-'UU 30 acres oats, !)00 bushels at 50 cents . 450 0i 8 acres sweet potatoes, '2.000 bushels at 40 cents, S00 00 10 acres corn, l'-O bushels A the l a Mi sa s negro', in Ciieen cojint.N . sa.vs l'reif Cress." is .very much- iu r.of the "ho I'ern.e"' law because -w hen a poor negro steals ,e l.o lilt him a fioir now lie don't ii over t he Ueliee."" The Columbus jibt.) F.nquicr sensibly ''suggests to the Solltli -in young m: it who- is proud of his family thai he -should try to do sonic! hing to make his family pimld ol hiiii. , ' ' 'I'hcie i, s.l s the 1 ;.i-t oil ' 1 Iciah I? a good di- il of tihies- in tlie selec tion 'of Mi . '. ai i as tlie orator tor Ncs York al I lie (ijieiiiiig of- the big biii!. . lie c in suspend a s. iiii-u. . in t in- air buig. r t ban any ol her iii.ui :i Anii i ii a." h'ia'ii 1 1 :ii ib. -New s" l;!ial .. !..,. of I lie bed cil lllll'i , 1'i'i'nss, .elgiil ! lie bt'd chain!) chamber women to toi in to bed." Thi- unj'hi rible slate of alfaii ui ! i lii.iee. j , A iiei S. .iit'Ii. Wales has t'lis iadeirisemelit: A cultured gentleman. 'liilaileipliia 'lo:;r ladies f ei one a "oluiiaMt ladies ol . and iwthe be.l U (bleel! N'ic- s a ilol--ie. lo.aI tlearual Wanted capable suits of this crop' that the cost connnercial fertilizers wasl 425 for twenty acres and the yield was 1.15 bales of cotton to the acre. The The cost of fertilizers for the other forty eight acres was 2G3,20, about 5,4G per acre. The yield of cot ton wa-s 1.35s haes )er acre. The cost for commercial fertilizers was 21 per acre. Mr. Hill experimented on kainit in one pen of compost, in connec tion with stable manure, cotton seed and phosphate almost ident ical inproKrtiontoFurman's form ula. He regards top soil from the forest asbetter and much cheaper. Iu fact he now uses top soil en tirely for kainit, and his experi ments have fully satisfied him that it is more valuable. He estimates , the value of muck from branches or ponds as more valuable than eith er, and m future, he will use it ex clusively, if he can get it, in the top soil. Mr. Hill regards the value of his team and four hands in making compost as equal to a tou of guano or a bale of cotton per day. The results of his farm show that he does not overestimate, their value. He is now making his compost for the present year, and will have one compost to every three acres. He is making it as follows: Fifty bnshels muck or top soilJ bottom; 5 bushels cotton seed, sec ond layer, 50 pounds phosphate, third layer, 25 bushels stabhviiia uure, lith layer; 50 pounds phos phatc, sixth hvyer; 25 bushels muck or top soil, seventh layer. Maintaining the same order as above until built as high as desired, remembering that the compost is of six layers, and that the bottom and top of the pile should have fifty bushels of top soil, but, for lay ers in the middle of the compost only tweuty-five bushels should be i used. He will use ten loads ot this THAT BAD BOY. INDUCES HIS PA TO JOIN THE GOOD TEMPLARS. MAKIXOrillS FA liETTEli. cuinpost 250 bushels to the acre, lie estimates the cost per acre at 7,70, and will get better results than if twice that amount in value of commercial fertilizers was used. Theodore Parker on Marriage. ol milU ,ag g, preferred! tiaiotiial'sjt,. w ill slitH'p-sk" jl. i.i is; j u i-i -i inaa Vet! iea Irons, with !es. p! aieiency. 1 1.1 lie ad , . ; .-. nw i he !,,vs i.v the able ol'hav iiig a .The 1'epnbiieau Ma vol. ciniies, n-. went out vesa-rd.iv and hung himself because the dav before, he had been b. aU 11 bv a 1 1, -in oer.u . ii ev t r Kei'nblvau w li beaten by a 1 e:i'ne r.';t iu j u lew v ears-lbUow - I hiseaii,i.ie. ..:ue - . . ' ill oe. a ;iap!M il!l!ii!liH;, I'opulatioii. O IS ' next '.! hel e 't our I A. Louisiana p:anr-r bi a iceeul ssiie of the New Ol aiaiis -rjeav-l!!'- very sensibly - savs: "In os p-r, a piajiler shuitld what is ot prune uec iis doiiieslic wants ni.i ;"!, i'aMwhatevel -he likes. ;!v. S abiui.lan;-,. ,,f ,-orii, he adds. I 1 lo i,e perfectly uneon- "(oill 'lie no-sii "I'l.-i I.i pj l'fu.t ii,.sti ess'p.r f,.r- can all' eel lied m '." '''f crops. b ,f- I le.v.. failure no corn, I shall beeo11o,elfed to sillier." I his. ge.Hleiua,, .lei larcs that he 'Mtsevervtl,is,g,(.;,!.ai;lI t( ,ljs Mibs.stence excepfSI1;,;,r .;i4(ltw. and would iiot Imiv th -"use them. hose if he could pidgicss with th'ieir work mid scarcely any cot ton had been plant ed owing to the iinavo:able rainy seasons, and the cold and backward sin nig. . I lie present outlook is anv thing but promisingand flatter ing to the tillers of the soil. The select ion ot'.Ioe Daniels, the brilliant, out hftd and unmarried editor of I he ADVAXt'K as Chief Marshal at the next Fair at Rocky Mount is a good and. wise one, and w e feel sure he w ill succeed in find ing a wile, as fiie eves of the women are upon him. jWc ought to. .omit this "taffy" but as vve know 1'lain Tom, to write only what he wants printed, w lei if pass tins tune. We nun our ti ieinlgin I he wish that "lie may sue ceei in muting a wile. Lie evi dentlv docs not. know that the women have resolved not to marry anv -poor editor, unless t hev can't get. anv body else. I'd. j '1 iie fruit crop ot aii kinds excep pe.ichesis O. K., and bids fair -toi be a tHxinliful v ield. One William Ferry , hailing from the w est a few months ago, after an absence of. twenty vears, found li is wife, -whi theught Jiim dead, mar ried tia n.ii named Spencer Dem by in Halifax.-'who was persuaded to leave her second husband and re turn to her tirst love. Ferry. Now it turns out that Ferry has a living wife and three children in Texas, ! and he is missing and has not been ; heard from in several weeks. Won : der if she thinks now she is married, and whose wife -she .thinks "that she am." iS.e. and how she will en joy her foutjth iioueymobn, and with w hieh husband . F.y vvhich naiiu , caii she. a ml ought she to lie eallett? W hen your girl wants to know t he -number of your hogs she sim- pn means tint you ought to plant more hog ami hominy. Mr. G. II. XewelL who has ln'en here with his tent taking the pret ty faces of our little burg, has mov ed to Nasln die. The present mail schedule is any thing but convenient ;nd satisfac tory between LouisburL and Xasu vil'.e, and ii is looped hf all that the much 'wanted change will soon le ed'ected and that jwe may get our local papers .on Saturday and not I wo days later as it now is. No deaths or marriajres toreiwt. Plain Tom. May 1st, 18S3. A fine - assortment of guns and i'istols at .lacobi's Hardware Depot i Wilmingtou C at 74 cents, 12 acres field peas, Total, ; Premium, 105 00 120 00 !?4,735 OO' 200 00 I.O.'55 00 Total cost of fertilizers, CSS 00 Total' cost of cultivation, etc., 1,500 00 Total profit, 2,547S0 Thirty acres of oats were re planted iu potatoes, corn and field peas, with the results indicated above. The' fertilizer used 011 the oats was a compost made as foll ow s: 20 bushels of cotton seed and 100 pounds of Ashepoo phos phate, in alternate layers. The first layer 011 the ground twjing top soil from the forest, cotton seed next and then the phosphate; then seed layer and jiho.sphate layer alternately, with soil from forest , on top, and no other covering. Of this compost he used 1,050 pounds to the acre. The same land was. fertilized the second jtime before beiug planted in corn, potatoes and1 peas, with compost as follows: 2.) bushels top soil from forest bottom, 5 bushels cotton seed second layer,' 100 pounds phosphate third layer, 50 bushels top soil from forest fourth- layer, 25 bushels stable manure fifth- layer, 50 bushelsTop soil from for est, top. This compost- stood two months iu a rail pen uncovered. It was used on the potato land at the rate of two 2-horse wagon loads on the acre. On corn, at the rate of four loads to five acres, or twen ty bushels to the acre. The fertil izer was put only in the hills on the corn land. Ills cotton lands were divided into 30 and t wenty acre lots. On the twenty acre lot he used one thousand pounds of Alabama fer tilizer to the acre competing for a premium of $200, which was award- Men and women, says Theodore Parker, and especially young people do not know that it takes years to marry completely two hearts, even the most loving and well-sorted. But nature allows no sudden change. We slope very gradually from the cradle to the summit of life. Marriage is gradual a frac tion of us at a time. A happy wedlock is a long fall in" in love. I know young per- somithink love belongs only to brown hair and plump, round, crim son cheeks. So it does for its be ginning, just as Mount Washington begins at Boston hay. But the golden marriage is a part of love which tlie bridal day knows noth ing of. Youth is the tassel and the silk en Uower of love; age is the. full corn, ripe and solid in ea'' Beautiful is the morning of love, with its prophetic crimson, violet, purple and gold, with its hopes ot da-s that are to come. Beautiful also, is the evening of love, w ith its glad remembrances, and Ls rain bow side turned toward heaven as well as earth. Young people marry their oppo. site in temper and general charac ter, anil such a marriage is general ly a good one. They do it instinct- icelv. The v'ounar man does not say, "My black eyes require to be wed to blue, and my overvehe- menee requires to be a little niodi fifid with somewhat of dullness and reserve." When these opposites coiiie together to be wed they do not know it, but each thinks the other just like himself. Old people never marry their opposites; they marj-y their similar and from , calculation, each of these two arnwigements is very proper. In their, long journey, these opposite will fallout of the way a great many times, and both will charm the other back again, and by-and-by they will agree as to the place they will go to and the road they will go by, and. Ih-eomerccoiu-iled. The man will lc nobler and larger lor lieing associ ated with so much humanity un like himself, and she will be a no bler woman for having manhood beside her It hat seeks to correct her deficiencies and supply her with what she lacks; if the diversity be not too great, and there be real pie ty and love in their hearts to be gin witii. The old bridegroom, having a Don't you think my Pa is show ing his age a good deal more than usual!" asked the bad boy of the grocery man, as ho took a smoked herring out of a Imix and peeled off the skin with a broken bladed jack knife, and split it Open and ripped off the bone, threw the head at a cat, and took some . crackers and began to eat. "Well, I don't know but he does look as though he was getting old," said the grocery man, as he took a piece of yellow wrapping paper, and charged the boy's poor old father with a dozeu herrings and a pound of crackers; "But there is no wouder he is getting old.I'wouldn't go through, what your father hits, the last year, for a million dollars I tell you, boy when your father is dead, and you get a step father, and he makes you walk the chalk mark, you will realize what a bonanza you have fooled yourself out of by killing on your laiuer. The way 1 figure it, your father will last about six months, and you ought to treat him right, the little time he has to live." ' "Well, I am going to," said the bov, as he picked the herring bones out of his teeth with a piece of a match that he sharpened with his knife- "But I don't believe in bor rowing trouble about a step-fattier so lonir before hand. I don't think ma could get a man to step into Pa's shoes, as lonr as I lived, not if she was inlaid with diamontls, and owned a brewery. There are brave men, I kuow, that are on the marrv, but none of them would want to be brevet father to a cheru bim like me, except he got pretty good wages. And then, since Pa was dissected he is going to lead a dif ferent life, and I guess I will make a man of him, if he holds out. We got him to join the Good Templars last night." "No, you don't tell me," said the grocery man, as he thought that his trade in cider for mince pies would be cut off. "So you got him into the Good Templars, eh!" "Well, he thinks he has joined the Good Templars, so it is all the same. You see my chum and me have been going to a private gym nasium, on the west side kept by a Dutchman, and in a ba;k room- he has all the tools for getting up mus cle. There, look at my arm," said the boy, as he rolled up his sleeve and showed a muscle about as big as an oyster. "That is the result of training at the gymnasium. Before I took lessons 1 hadn't any more muscle than you have got. Well, the dutchman was going to a dance on the south side the other night, and he asked mv chum to tend the gymnasium, and I told Pa if he would join the Good Templars that night there wouldn't be many at the lodge, and he wouldn't be so embarrassed, and as I was one of 'the officers of the lodge I would put it to him light, and he said he would go, so my chum got five other boys to help us put him through. So we steered him down to the gymnasium, and made him rap on the storm door outside, and I said who comes there, and lie said it was a pilgrim who wanted to jine the sublime order. I asked him if he had made up his mind to turn from the ways of the hyena, and adopt the customs of the truly good, and he said if he knew his own heart he had, and then I told him to come ill out of the snow and take off his pants. He kicked a little at taking oil' his pants, because it was cold out there in the storm door dog house, but I told him they all had to do it. The princes, potentates and paupers all had to come to it. He asked , me how it was when we initiated women, aud I told him women never took that degree. He pulled off his pants, and wanted a check for them, but I told him the Grand Mogul would hold his clothes, and then I bliud-folded him, and with a base ball club I pounded on the floor as I walked around the gym- the Mogul said lie would brand the candidate on the bare back with the initial letters of our order, 'G. j T.,' that all might read how a brand j had been snatched from the burn ing. You'd a dide to see Pa flinch when I pulled tip his shit, and got i ready to brand him. "My chum got a piece of ice out of the water cooler, and just as he clapped it on Pa's back I burned a piece of horses hoof in the candle and held it to Pa's nose, and I guess Pa actually thought it was his burning skin that : he smelled. He jumped about six feet aud said, 'Great heavens', what you dewin',' aud then he began to roll over' a barrel which I had arranged for him. Pa thought he was goin dowu cellar, and he hung to the barrel, but he was ou top half the time. When Pa and the barrel got through fighting I was beside him, and I said, 'Calm y ourself, aud be pre pared for the ordeal that is to fol low.' Pa asked how much of this dum fooling there was, and said he was sorry he joined. He said he' could let licker alone without hav ing the skin all burned of his back. I told Pa to be brave and not weak en, and all would Ihv well.' He wiped the perspiration off his face on the end of his shirt, and we put a belt around his body and hitched it to a tackle, and pulled him up so his feet were just off the floor, and then we talked as though we were away off. aud I told my chum to look out that Pa. did not hit the gas fixtures, aud Pa actually thought he was. being hauled clear up to the roof. I could see he w as scared by the complexion of his hands and feet as they clawed the air. lie actually sweat so the drops fell on the floor. Rime-by w e let him down and he was awfully relieved though his leet were not more than two inches from the floor any of the time. We were just going to slip Pa down a board with slivers in it to give him a realizing sense of the rough road a reformed man has to travel, and got him straddle of the board, when the dutchmau wimc home from the dance, fullern a goose, and he drove us boys out, and we left Pa, and the 'dutchmau said, 'Yot you vas doing here mit dose boys, you old duffer, and vere vas your pantsf and Pa pulled off the handkerchief from his eyes, and the dutchman said if he didn't get out in a holy minute he would kick the stufiing out of him. and Pa got out. He took his pants and put them on in the alley, then w e come to Pa and told him that was the third time the drunken dutch man had broke up our Lodge, but we. should keep ou doing good until we bad reformed every drunkard in Milwaukee, and Pa said that was right, and he wool see ns through if cost every dollar he had. Then we took him home, and : when Ma asked if she couldn't join thcvLodge too, Pa said, 'Xovv you taku my ad- COCKING MAIN. -u:- TUE BARBAROUS FIGHT END ED BY THE LAW. FOUGHT TO THE EX IK Theretwas renewed interest in the big main yesterday, the people being diVided into two .classes; .be lievers that'- fighting was a harm less pastime, and people who thought if brutal in the extreme. The former resented any interfer ence with the progress of the match, while the latter, deprecating - the fact that! the main was allowed to go ou aCthe State fairgrounds and iu sight 'of the capitol, demanded prompt ana severe legal interfer ence, mere was no concealment about the fight, large posters con taining "the particulars adorning posts aud wall in many parts of the cit v for weeks. Oil Thursday the main began, one tight being had, won by Halifax, Wednesday, when there were seven fights, tlie excitement., began." A warrant sworn outliefore Justice M. P. Bar bee, was1 served by deputy sheriff James Rogers, after two attempts Sidney B. Holt, of Alamance, and James A. Falton, of Halifax the principals, were ing or about to bo violated in an? particular building or place, such magistrate shall immediately issue and deliver a warrant to any per son authorized by law to make ar rests for such offender ox offenders, authorizing and directing him J to euter and search such building or place,, and to arrest any person there violating any of said laws, and to bring such persoa before the nearest "magistrate of competent jurisdiction, to lie dealt with ae cording to lav.' of The Protest of the Hegroes. A call for a national convention of colored men was issued on Satur day by a. committor of negroes fair ly entitled to represent the rare, Among the signers are Frederick Douglass, the lion. George W. Wd liams, author of the "History the Negro race in America," am Prof. Richard T. Greener. The fonvention is to lie held in-September.-next at Washlnctou. The basis of representation is one dele gate to every 25,000 of colored pip ulation, three delegates lor every State where there are not less than 10,000 negroes, and one delegate for every other State. By this plan of apportionment the conven tion would consist of nearly three hundred members. j Here -is the interesting thing about the proposed convention: It is intended to be an organ izwl ex- Liberal DUoounU wlU be ado tor Lanror AdtorUacmanU and for Contracts by the Yraf Vata must accompany aU AdrvrtlMment unless rood referaee U (Ivw. LET US SMILE.' -:0 llOW SMILING MAKES A MAX BETTER. CX. I FFECTEli SM I L ES. pression of discontent with the arrested aud political and social treatment of aud taken, before Justice Barbee, the colored eope by their fellow who held them in a00 - bond to j citizens. The signers hold it to Iks appear lefore him yesterday after- i "an undeniable and lamentable noon at 5:30 p. 'in: This bond was) fact that thepresent condition 'of given. All Tuesday there were re-' the race is insecure, and the future marks almut the attempt of 4be le- still more alarming;" and they bring gal officers of the Stare and county ; against the white majority five dis to stopthe match. Many persons ; ttnet and specific charges. We termed the attempt a signal failure, candense the several complaints: I and some very harsh terms were 1 1- Negro labor at the South is ,.iWi - - not fairly remunerated. The South- Yesterday matters' looked pretty . i era negro is not protected by law 1 111 t he collection of money due him. mr.t 1 mtf- -r lii.i'.. cr- w li isl ti'l's ttett. I r. ' . . ! 2. In most par Ls of the country !... nc.t im H..1 rl.wiivii li.lwti w.is til ' , , , - the negro does not have a fair show be picked up -by the. law. lhe au- . " . 1 1 111 1 ne puoiic scuoois. 1 3. The luigro is not protected iin his civil rights, notwithstanding lucked up oy thorities in charge of the State fair forbade the use of the grounds. The j ..r-.-l ..(' ciuu'i' itnrs it n ni 1 if-l'ell snlltc , , , , . , , , , the laws passed by Congress. j hundreds. About 2 o'clock Hon.; V . b , Thos. Riiffin, Associate, Justice ofj 4. His political rights are ignor- the Supreme Court, issued a bench Veil. Six and half niilljous of ptio- vvarrant returnable before hi'm at ; plea re without representation chambers. This was' placed in tlie ' Congress. 'hands of Sheriff Rogers, who served i -,. The negro does not get his it. He arrested S. B. Holt, J. A. share of Executive protection and I'alcon and Gid. Arlington, as prin-; eiicouragenieut. ciples, and several others as- wit-. V.fturmindetl man, . black or nesses. About r, o'clock the trial i vv))it(l? wiirdeny that If these alle coinnieiiced in the Supreme Court ; j,:lti0ns are true it is time for unit room. ( )nly one wi t ness was ex- e( j , , tiei j ,iirt of the negroes ainiucd, wjheti Judge Riilliu ilccm-; f.,,;. - thirty-eight States. Thly : '.l . ..: 1 ...IV...:...... ' ' ' ... nij; me cwuciicc smin icm, hci.i . ().n :ltoi9t one-eighth of the en- Falcon and Holt in UislineU l.onust tireDoimlatioriof Ui country. Eoual A paper called the "Golden Rule,'' luv-s an article on siuiies which contains the following : 'The world is suffering for smil ing faces. The age is tim intense in the business direction, too sar castic in its Mlitical tendency, Iimi aimless in its religious life, too lieaitless in its literature. The world heeds more smiles and fewer frowns, more sunshine and less lighting. Jt eists nothing to al low a smile to play rest fully upon the features when trading or vot ing, when talking or reading. - It pays infinitely more than jit eosls in fneuiLshlp, in finance, in Indiv id , ualgrovrth. We can win uior jieo ple by a wmile than we can frighten by a frowst, just as the sunshine grows more trees than the light ning shatters." No paragraph ever contained more truth than the almve. A good healthy smile, on that roiiics na turally, without lieing sent for, or coaxed, one that seems to bubble up among the dimples like j the water at the bottom of a spring, showing pearly teeth like the little pebbles thrown up by the water of the spring, a smile that goes rip-' pling along the face like the h fore slid water among the daisies and water erens, on its way to the sea, is. worth more to the world - thai- a gold mine. Who is then' ill the wot Id who has not been made lie! ter by a smile ! A smile is a legal tender' anywhere, and a person who smiles naturally, in as site from harm as it is xssilile In !e. Men vvho grovv tired of their homes, sick of the world, and ready to give up the battle, can le strengthened and made ready for ,Jhe tight of vice, and don t you ever join no Good Templars. Your system could not stand fhe racket. Say, I want you to put some cold cream on my back.' I think Pa will be a differ- e-.t man, don't you?" The grocery man said if he was that boy's pa for fifteen minutes he would be different boy, or there would be a funeral, and the boy took a handful of soft shelled al monds and a few layer raisins and skipped out. of 61,000 each, and An ington in a i justified bond of500,.to appear at j the next term of Wake Superior' Court. The cises before Jusliee M. B. Barbee were dismissed. There were, as we have Istated, several battles in the main fought on Wednesday, of these four being won by Halifax, ami three by Ala mance. Yesterday t,here . were s I fights of which Halifax and Ala fights are guaranteed them by the Constitution. The laws are suffi cient for the purpose. If these laws are systematically ignored oreva! ed, ami the negroes kept; out of full citizenship by a conspiracy of whiite officeholders, it is none tK sihui for an organized inoVement to secure just treatment. The -'colored kmi plhave a millioii and a quarter Of votes: which they may make The conclusion of th ..tgliers A Solution Of The Southern Problem. ed to llilll. This twentv nerel nnv too ,..,..i.. . Crunch shorter journey to make, ton weighed as picked which ginned out twenty-three bales of 500 pounds average. Ou the thir ty acre lots he used :v win post made as follows: 50 bushels top sod from forest ltottom; 15 bushels of cotton seed layer: ;iD0 pounds phosphate third layer; 75 bushels top soil fourth layer: 75 bushels stable manure fith layer; 200 pounds phosphate sixth layer; 75 bushels top soil, top. 0f the eompost he used, three hundred bushels per ' acre. The 30 acre lot yielded ".41 bales, 500 pouuds average. r The reader will notice in the re must associate himself with one like himself. A perfect and complete marriage is, perhaps, as rare as -personal beauty. Men and women 'are man ied fractionally now a small fraction, then a large fraction. Very few are married totally .and they" only, 1 think, after some forty or fifty years of gradual approach aud excitement. Such a large and sweet fruit is a complete maniage that it needs a winter to mellow and season. But a real happy marriage ot love and judgement between a man and a woman is ona of the tnings so very handsome that if the sun were, is the Greek poets fabled, a god,'he might stop the world in order to least his eyes with such a spectacle. . Thefiist and most important thing needed is a reform of the abominable credit system that ob tains here. Of course in . every progressive country, such as this ought to be, we cannot get along without a proper system of credit, but it would astonish the indus trious, intelligent peojde of the North to know how loosely it is managed in this country. A per son without property, without char acter,without industry, and with out anything except unbounded lazint'ss, can at the beginning of the year rent land and mortgage his pr spc-ctive crop before he has struck a lick of work, run his 'cred- ick,"' as he calls it, for supplies, spend two-thirds of his time in idle ness and the result is he gener: ally makes a poor crop, and the merchant comes out loser at the end of the yoar. But this is gradually collecting itself, and in a few years we w ill see the tenant system abolished, m a nee won four each. This gave j tlU f.M js interesting. with Tues lay's battle, Halifax a to tal of nine fights against -seven for , Alamance. The main was fought i to the end. The betting all three j days was? exci'pt ion.-illy heavy, il is; said, many thousand dollars chang ing hands on the various events. It is said that the baekcisof the Alamance birds lost heavily. The unless in-i.rcentinTi:iT c!isi. wIiopa nasium. while the lodge, headed bv i .. . , - ,. , , .. " " . ' . I the tenant is able to supply lnm- mvci.uMi, -u , Whiie as a general thing the till morning.7 l stopix-d iu lront "According to the signs of the times, the country is 'on the eve of a great polit ical revolution, 'aud-' lit liehoovcs us, as a race, to aiake oiir interests paraoibunt to those of any party or sect; that, if is our duty jl. unite and strike out ;;ome Itoltl poje cy and line of action vvhih will bring us nearer to t he estate of full this . : ... l ,1- .1...... ..... ! .iii.iir - - . ""i ,itienshi. a.id lwer when the biggest "s,Hrt-tii.eve:.t-'Raleig u.voIlltioll is OVer. t ever saw. The display ot birds was . . . .' . ., ... , , It strikes us that the boIdesfcMil- MIeio, ii! is ,-vim, . .inn tin-, iiiiii..-i attention iaid to the matches, the arrangements U-ing in charge of veteran sporting men.. ' It should in-said that for many years cock lighting has lieen jier initted i iii North Carolina,-' mi law against it existing on the statute books until the adoption of the act of 1881, forbidding cruelty to ani mals, &c. ia'jy have Im cii fought icy and most prouiisijig line of ajc tioii open at this 'iiiM'to the cxdor ed voters of the United States is io nit the thongs which have ImjuiiiI them so long, to the' wheels', of the Republican party.. The Republi can party has flattered the negro and bamboozled him; it lias wept over him and blundered hiin;ithns claimed him as its own and swiii- f died fiim without comnunction; it in I.undn'dsTof j.laces i the State j ma(,(. us1 f ,iim an(tlllllg l.ii., from ycur to year, ami some ol the aside. : Negro;s in several of the Staft are lieginning to find this out, to act for themselves. If the Wash ington convention is a reja-'ew-ntsk- i the lKxly sincere in its purjose and of the ice-water tank and said "Grand Worthy Duke, I bring be fore you a pilgrim who has drank of the dregs until his stomach won't hold water, and who desires to swear off.' The Grand Worthy Mogul asked me if he was worthy aud w ell qualified, and I told him that he had been drunk more or less since the re union last summer, which ourht to qualify him. Then the Grand Mogul made Pa repeat the most blood-curdling oath, in which Pa agreed, if he ever drank another drop, to allow anybody to pull his toe-uails out with tweez ers, to have his liver dug out and fed to dogs, his bead .chopped off and Lis eyes removed. Then negro, as a renter, is a failure, if he can be made to good service when hired for wages and prompt ly paid and when the present sys tem is done away with, and " the negro comiell to go to work for some one abre to pay him, our farms will be kept in good order, thorough culture adopted,, better crops made, more stock raised, and we shall have less "credick' and more money. When we can secure a radical change in the credit sj-steui now ill vogue we can make money, even in raising cotton as well as in numerous other ways; capitalsts ana mechanics win settle among ns, politics will take of itself, and the Southern problem will be solv ed. finest cocks ever raised have" been bred here. They are noted all over the country.. At the Ceiitennil i Ex hibition at Philadelphia Mr. Arling ton's frame cocks : took the highest i.i t l.l.i .1.., k.l !' W It f OIIAIT ill mv" .... .... . m . . . ' .- . . i '-,, , i t, lnneiieudentin its action; it caiulo W e give -the law under vlnch the j ' . i , 1 a 2re:tt deal for the ra-e. arrests were made : j Sec. chap. 3S, laws 1881, is as I - - j follows: "Any irson who shall ! A New lsjok styled '-IVrtj- nve keep, or use, or in anv way IK' con-; avs oi i ojijuuj; mc nected with ' or. interested in the management of, or shall receive money for the admission of any jut i i i v .!. ; a young man who. nan iHigi ii, and committed its xntents to memory- would, at the critical moment,- forget the whole forty-five ways, and blunder along' until the girl helped him out. has been published. in tuglaml. Oh, well, that may do for England, but you might scatter rthose looks son to any place kept or used for broa'ih-ast over Aniertca.! and many the purpose of .lighting-' or baiting any. bull, Inar, cock, or other crea ture; and any eTson who shall en- cou age, aid or assist thetein, or who shall jiermit or suffer any place to be so kejt or ush1. shall, 'upon con viction thereof, be guilty of a mis-, demeanor." ' j - See. 11 reads: "Ujion complaint under oath or affirmation, t any magistrate authorized to issue war rants in criminal actions, that the complainant hae just and reasona ble canse to suspectftliat any. of the provisions of law relating to' or. in any wise affecting animals are be- The feminine habit ofloolcihgnn der theled we mean .tlie romored habit has been proven a -wise one in oue instance. Miss 3Iaggie Hen lev, of Randoluh ; county, found negro uamexl "' Henderson Brower under the bed;and he was promptly jaiied, we learn from the Ashboro Courier. another day oy a smile; n it emnes without lnung sent for. .One man, with a good natured smiie, can go into a crowd of grumbling, growling, business men, who think the, country Is all going to the dogs, and change the whole- at. uiosphere in ten seconds. A man with a good smile can stop a fieht between angry 'men, when Milice men would faik The smile of a good woman, when she c inies ii'mu a party of gossijiers of her own Hex, will change the suhjeia in a moment, ami make them ashamed 1 of thejiiselves. Soiiieliiiies we think it would pay a city to hire more smiling faces and less police men, to keep the peace. With a hundred good, iiatui.il sin i lei s walking around, goin into places w here men were liable to get il .hot Imix, with a pleasant word w here it would do the -most' good, (here would lie very lew r . i M c.nir ,c ' would Im;. necessary for mir Minler to be able tobick his Mnile wiih ' muscle, so if an. llurnlv peis-.n did ntit take kb.dlv lofle- siude. and kii.ked it around under Cie smiler's ear with a chaii r a biii' starter, the Hinder could wipe tin floor witii the wretch. There would be times when a smile j woidd fai to do its work, as there ure iiim-M now when a rondo t ills to iH-coiii-plish all that it desires to, but take it mi (he whole the smile "would le better ttrtn the club or the ievo. ver. There are some men who are continually and constitution rlv de. devoid, of smiles, Who would In sick it they should aividi-u'allv smile, and such wien should be com. jielled to pass two hours a .-day in the-prcHeiici' of good, single handed smilers, and learn to be hapj. If there is nirvthiu'! in the woil.l that has more power than a smile, when it is shot off from the riht kind of a we have' never seen it. Tlie smile of a girl will draw ,t .voting man from his mother, and 'ifroin bad ompiiiy. If will s i teach him to lie a man. and '"-! 1.".. aitl if fie Lives the I'll I i!o lint li ilig that would chase the smile iiwuv. The smile of a mother can C4ujuer the wayward child, and compel it ro come into c.iiop to . spanked or caressed. The smile of. i teacher can do more' wild a pupil than a bundle of hael Wush, A good, old f.i.shioiu!l, natural, nil affected smile cost not hi ng, wens out no costly .machinery, but ratLer oils it, and makes it run Binooth, audit is a medicine that-we- all like to take, aud it leaves no bad tiuste in the mouth. -.Blessed if we wouldn't like to see one this very in iu ti to, as Life as it is and sleepy a we are, as the clocks toll the wee small hours and tjie compositors yawn and say this is copy enough for to-night. The Visitor" states tfuit the Rev. F. Ij. Reid, one of the accom plished editors of fhe Kaleigh "Christian Advocate,'' ha Iteen invited to preach the Commence ment Sermon before Asheville Female College on Sunday, Jane 10th.