ScisscKii'TioN Hates in Advance Six Month - 1 w r-Moner b sunt by MDC7 Order or 1 tTif iitereJ Let tor at our risk. OFFICE-Tiirboro Street. In tho Old Post oiBco Uuiklinjr. - Nl'.WS Or' a week G VTI1 KI.-ED 1' i-MJM ALL PARTS ! THK WOULD. 'VESCI i-1 ' XOS- QLEAN1XU8 The Mormon question : "Dearest, will you join my aggregation 1" Of all things that man possesses woman alone takes pleasnre in be iug possessed. Joseph Med ill asks : Why is love like a potato Because it shoots from the eyes. Mr. Thos. Dixon, a graduate of Wake Forest, is in Baltimore prepar ing for the stage. 1 A physician at Lancaster. Pa., has been fined W for concealing a small-pox patient. Bath, Deaufort county, is the oldest town in North Carolina. It is almost in ruins. It. T. Gray, Iq-, ha9 been elect ed City Attorney of Raleigh. It is n deserved compliment. A coquette isi a woman 'thout any heart, that makfes a fool of a, man that ain't got any head. A Western man Rays most of the elopements these days are put up jobs to avoid the expense of costly weddings. In Walton county, Ga., on the 5th, Mrs. Whitley shot tho head off of a man who had made insulting proposals to her. - . " The Daily "Reporter is a new Vapor just started in Durham, by D. W. Whitaker & Sons It has our best wishes. Codfish eat up the honing; the Yankees. eat the. codfish,. and the Feejees like nothing' better than to eat a fat Yankee. Judge Tho. S. Ashe was pain fully hurt !y a fall on the ice Sun day, at his home in Wadesboro, says the "Tunes. In Mississippi they tax billiard . tables 81,000 a piece, under belief that they aic a device for the eu pouragoinont of drinking;. Jjm Burton, colored brakesman, while ou top of a car, was knocked into pi by the bridge over the track at Lincolnton, the Press" says. The Grand Jury of Wake has found a true bill against Weslejr -Bunnj who killed Frank Cruise, col ored, August 4th. Bunu is now in jail. . r Rev, Tliaddeus Jones, of Jitk (nghaui, Richmond county, a col ored preacher, is in jail for steal ing a cow from Mr. W. A. Graham and butchering it. The "four; mile law" is being en forced in Tennessee. It means that '' saloon Khali not hp run in four jniles pf a school-house, and is a virtual prohibition. ' : Forepaugh, the great showman, is soon to become owner of a white elephant. His agent, in Algiers, has been instructed to purchase one at a cost of 8 10,000. 1 lion. K. P. Battle, President f t;Lp University, will accent our . thanks for a copy ef his address on University Pay, on "The History of "Hie ' University Bu'ildings.'V This, according to Ben, Bntlor, is the best country in the world for a poor man. Except when he is mar-! ried, he has a right here to do as he pleases with what he makes. Joe Caldwell, of the State'svilje "Landmark," says the only dancing lie ever did was at eorn-shuckings, pu'lhp bare ground tq tho lascivi pus pleadings" of a bull fiddle. The following were elected Direc tors of the Orphan Asylum by the Grand Lodge: IJ. F. Grainger, Thos. S. Kenau, Julian S. Carr, A. II. A. Williams, and II. H. Mun son. . Vainted women are a distress in Uid sjght of most, men, and yet t....... ., ......... there are a ;ti:ai lining Ml IclllgUlifc ones who "lay it on rtiul honest thick'' doirs. before leaving their bou- A Denver damsel rushed into a ball-room the other night and threw a pan of molasses upon the shirt front of her faithless lover. All the rest of the girls pronounced him "too sweet to live." Miss Nellie Burton, a Louisville t belle, w ho had arrived it T'lie age pT'c'ldpemont, having no other offer, ran away with a Chinese laundry-; man, and they have gone to Chica go on a bridal tour. Yes," said the Idaho man, '-it's dreadful unfortunate that my gal got hugged by t hat ar' bu'r. She's Sort o' held me, in contempt ever since." And he thoughtfully wiped oil" his grizzly chin. Two women in Anson, county made a crop of their own,; each .lowing an px anil harvesting two p;ile.s of cot ton to each "critter," be ttdes a'pli uty v.f cbrti, 'faters, fod der, eggs; and such. , They pay preachers in Tennessee an average salary of 838k When, a preacher swears iu that State the recording angel blots it out with a tear uml waits to welcome the Vjaiying yauircr hoine. - A , Methodist minister, , when preaching on ;i charge along the Delaware river received as a salary fVo quarts of whortleberries, a peck of dried upples, three eels, 2 quarts flfbiiana ami .twenty-five cents I wenty oung Jadjes ftf one ctinrch'in Philadelphia have been iii'arried within two irionths. Re ligiou, it appears, is no restraint on ft-,vuug lady v.-hen'she sets her miifn'otflas-soiug a youug man. Dr, J. C. Blue, of Carthage, savs the "Gazette," on last Saturday had a tooth pulled and came very near bleeding to death ; he bled five washpansfull and it was with diffi culty that the flow of blood wa stopped. ' VOLUME 13 There is a reversion ot the gener al order of Bome things in Norway. For instance, a man "and his wife traveling are charged only one tare and a half, he half fare, ac cording to Rev. Dr. Tiffany, being for the man. A new weekly paper has been started in Philadelphia called the ' Spirit of the Times," aud is devot ed to "com batting the modern here sy of prohibition." . A more appro priate name would be the, "Time of the Spirits." ' The convent known as the Insti tute of the Immaculate Conception at Belleville,- 111., was burned last Saturday night, and twenty-two pupils and five sistera were burned to death or fatally injured in at tempting to escape. The Lowell Cotton Factory in Johnston county, says the "Messen ger," tho property of John R. Smith, Esq., was destroyed by fire Friday night. Supposed work of an incen diary. Insurance only about 83, 000. Total loss 87,000. The Carthage "Gazette" says that Mrs. John Kelly tried the plau of feeding a pig twelve months instead of a dog, and the result was 250 iKHinds of nice pork to hang up in she smoke house where there would not have been a pound if she had. feci a dog with the same food. What is fame ? Gov. Jarvis, who -made such a reputation at the Boston Exposition, recently wrote a letter to the committee of arrange ments of tho Andrew Jackson Ban quet and his name appeared as Jones. Shades of Bunker Hill de fend us! Mary V. Young, seventeenth wife of the. late Prophet Brigham Young, the old Mormon Tycoon, died at Salt Lake City on the 5th, in the 40th year of her age. 16 mourning widows still survive the Prophet, fourteen of whom live in Halt Lake. Au exchange says: "No article of commerce has been so largely overproduced as whiskey." That is doubtless true, but it is also true that no article has been so largely over-consumed as whiskey, and no article nas oeen so largely over adulterated. . ' There are thirty-eight large vol canoes in Java, some of which are more than 10,000 feet high. It is a peculiarity of the volcanoes of that regiou that they seldom eject lava, but enormous masses of mud, "riv ers of mud," as they have been call ed, flow-from them. The old song: " . Tou may scrub it, you may rub it. But a niKKtr will be a nigger till his dies." has played out. The'Star" says a negro iij Sampson, has turned white, and tho Hickory "Carolinian" says a Newton negro is turning. The Civil Rights bill has not played outl A foolish boy, Willie Fulbright, who lived at Waynesville, will never see another Christmas.- On the 27th of December he set hi a gun down, tioekcd -jt with his foot and blew down the barrel to see if it was loaded. Of course it was. Death was instantaneous. r A youugstjer, wiiust perusing a chapter of Genefeis, turning to his father , inquired if the people in those days used to do their sums on the ground. It was discovered that he had been wading the nas. sage, vnd the sons of men inuiti plieel on tho face of the earth." . We recollect once, says the "Southern Christian Advocate," to have beard and seen a man, a good man, singing with the cougrega- tion at his wifes funeral and siug- ingbass at that. Singing at all was bad enough, but singing has, was just a little too mucn, tin; our pa tience. i - A colored mau j iu Bickory has just been blessed with the return of his first wife from tho far south, where she was sold in slavery many years ago. He had married a sec ond wife in the meantime and she. had died. According to the "Car olinian" the man i araded the Hick ory streets, last week, with No. 1. Within a radius of less than 30 miles of High foint, Hays the "En- terprise," there aro at least 13 cot- ton factories, 2 woolen factories, aud-14 in i nes in full operation To these add a largo number of tobac- i co factories, sash and blind factories, spoke aud handle, and one lactory that iisnishes shuttles ready for the loom.-; Mauy years ago, says a Washing ton, N C, corerspondeut of the "Reflector," a Mr. Waters etnigrat ed from Beau,foyt cbuiity ta India rff, ,.p.fiiiMv Hiol l.;ivinr f.hroe mil lion dollars to his nearest relatives, most of whom live in this county, a few in Washington county. There are twenty-se ren heirs. N A certain church in Iredell coun ty was being removed and repaired. Two members were discussing the improvement. One said lie had done more to It than any other member. . The other claimed the honor, the "lie" was giycyi aud a figbt ensuecl, The 'Landmark" publishes the1 facts aud says t bat both still claim to be right. Three citizens ot Beaufort coun ty, according to the Washington "Gazette," were driving along n country road, going home, having in their cart a lot of sugarj when they discovered that they were being fol lowed by some Gbiect, . In the course of time it came up to the cart ami tried to enter it, but wa9 beaten off by a ca rt stay. It proved to be a black bear, which had pro bably been attracted ly the smell of the sugar. Dr. G. A. Ramlseur writes tlic Lincoln 'Press1 trow Catawba; Co. that a 1 party pf r 'Ku'-Krux tnade a raid iii the vicinity' of Maiden ou the night of December 27th. The party consisted of tour men disguis ed, who went to the house of John McGinnis, white, and taking him out, gave him a terrible beating, from tho effects; of which he was confined to his bed. for several xlays. Mr. McGinnia was addicted to the sport of wife-beating, and seems to get ' little sympathy in bis afflic tions. ' ABOUT FARMING. what the farmers are doing and talking about. PICKED UP XOTES. Richmond county,' Ga- voted ou the question of "fnce or no fence" on the 8th. "No fenc-j" carried the day by 600 majority. Public sen timent in that State, and in North Carolina too, is growing in favor of abolishing fencing farms and in favor of fencing in stock. A few years ago cotton seed were regarded as a waste material, to be disposed of with as little expense as possible. 2ow it is not only em ployed as a general fertilizer on many plantations, but thousands of tons of it are sold at the oil mills, where, after the jA has been ex pressed, the cakefis useful for feed ing all kinds of stock. A gentleman residing near this place raised the most tremendous crop of watermelons after the fol lowing method : Holes wore dug 10 feet apart each way eighteen inch es square and fifteen inches deep.' These holes were filled with well- rotted manure, which was thor oughly incorporated with the soil. A low, flat hill was then made, and seed planted. When the vines were large enough to begin to run tho whole surface was covered to the depth of a foot or fifteen inches with wheat straw. The straw was placed close up around the vine. No cultivation whatever was given afterward. No weeds or grass grew. The vines spread over the straw, and the melon matured clean and nice. The yield was abundant, and the experiment an entire suc cess. Try it next year.--"Rural New Yorker." How to Make "Beds" Without Feathers and Grow Weeds Worth $1,000 per Was- ou Load. Mr. Thos. A. Lyon, auctioneer at the "Star" Warehouse, Greeusboro, writes to the "Patriot"; , It is pretty generally conceded by the most successful tobacco grow ers, that the best and earliest plants are grown in beds sown about the first or middle of January, although I have seen very fair plants drawn from beds seedeu the first of March. The latter, however, can not be put down as a precedent, for it is dan gerous In the extreme, and is re sorted to in extreme Cases, and then almost invariably attended with fruitless results. In selecting a suitable spot to burn plant beds, it is best to locate the bed on the south side of a hill where they will be protected from cold winds and 'get the benefit of the Ban. There is nothing so disas trous to young plants as dry and sweeping winds. Again, you should be very careful as to the nature of the soil -"made" earth will not, produce plants if ever sq fertile, but on the contrary the soil should tie original, with" a . firm sub-soil. Where hickory and dogwood are plentiful it is a sure 'sign of good plant land. After deckling on the spot to locate your bed, lay it off with judgment with an eye to con venience, so j-ou may . be able to protect it from washing rains, &c. See that the land is thoroughly cleaned off before burning do not leave a leaf or anything that will prevent the iji e from reaching the soil and K'Uiug out all grass roots, i vegetation, &c. When tho land is sufficiently burned rake off the ashes and avoid leaving too many on the bed. Dig up and pulverize the soil thoroughly, and never throw the clay upon the surface. Then apply a light coat of very tine aud well rotten stable manure rake lightly, sow down your seed and tramn under. The old wav of . protecting beds from the frost, &c, j nas iu iuio uvusu upon mem uui the raising of plants is attended with "more unfortunate events, plagues, &c, then when the indus try was in its infancy years ago. There were no traces of the flea bug, cut-worm and many other de structive insects, which are at this day abundant. The flea-bug is de cidedly the most disastrous of all other plagues and their visits result iu the almost complete extermina tion of the young ancyteudex plants as they come (p. the surface of the grouno. xm iailure m crops in large tobaeco growing sections is attributable ta a very great extent tho ravages of tho flea-bug. These destructive little creatures have baffled the skill of the most experi enced growers and not until very recently was a discovery made by which the plants are protected. It is true that many prepara tions, mixtures, &c, called "bug destroyers," "plant protectors," &c. aro lugged over the country for no ither purpose tUan to humbug the farmers ftut ol their hard earnings; but t auij proud to say that the far mers are opening their eyes to such frauds. The remedy that I suggest costs lyou nothing,;so far as I am concerned. It isthis: After the seed have been sown, get four planks 1 inch thickauil 12 inches wide, sink these planks a hou.t two inches hi tlm soil qh the edge of the bed, fit the corners and nailthem up air tight: this will form a com plete box around -the bed. Then get a sufficient cpiantity ol sheet ing the cheaper the better sew the edges together and make a complete cover for the box, . draw j the sheeting tightly over the edges , of the planks and tack it (V. antl I yoiir plauts aye'se&fre' from flea! bugs. ' A)i a glauee you will see its I practical workings. It not only protects the plants from insects", but from frosts, e:c, aud serves as a hot bed. When the plants are sufficiently strong take off the sheeting aud planks and put them away for future use, By using the box and sheeting yon carj, raise plants in your gardens or any wberd the soil is adapted to. their growtUi. This remedy applies -to various vegetable planting for the gardeb. WILSON, NORTH CAROLINA, JANUARY 18. 1884. Fear Held Elm. Novel-writers have tried, with more or less success, to depict life in Washington ; but if the real in side history of men and parties there could be given, it would sur pass any picture in wide improba bility. . . Take for example the following bit of actual history. During the ijast generation, one of the most fa miliar iaces ou Pennsylvania Ave ue was that of a well-known party leader, who was pooularly supposed to be an aspirant for the highest public honors. He was known as a man of great intellectual power and unstained probity, lie had the control of vast national interests. His personal popularity was very great throughout the country, and his ambition was known to be in satiable. Yet when, time utter time, high political ofiices were offered him, he refused to allow his name to be presented as a caudidate. The reason for tins was known only af ter las' death, aud to but few per-, sons. In his early youth, under strong temptation, he had committed a crime which, if disclosed in after life, would have brought irrepara" ble shame and disgrace upon his children. The facts were known but to two or three ersons iu an obscure country village where he had once lived. These ersons were not unfriend ly to him, but they belonged to the opposite political party. When, therefore, Ins name was suggested as a caudidate for a high national office, he received a quiet intima tion from the inland village, that if he came before the people, the sto ry would be made public. We know of no more .dramatic figure in fiction than that , of this strong, ambitious leader, with no ble aims aud true purposes iu his later life, perpetually held in check by au occasioual crack of the whip lrom an unseen hand in a distant hamlet. That single crime in his youth had put a yoke upon him, made him a slave, and 'balked' ev ery hope of his whole life. Yet hard and pitiable as this, man's fate seems to us, is it not measurably that of every man who gives way to vice or folly .in", his youth. No matter how sincere his repentance, or how pure and help ful his after life, tne ineffaceable marks of that early lapse into crime remain on soul and body. The man who frequents v:lgar aud vicious society, or is a drunkard, gambler, or libertine at twenty, will carry the taint with him into old age. and the grave. Algernon and His Betrothed. ''One word," she said, "before we' part," and her bright eyes glowed in the mellow light of the turned down lamp. "Arc you sincere!" "I am sincere," he replied, :n tones whose tiL thfulness could no4, be doubted by any one save the most confirmed pessimist. "Then you canuot give me a place by Lake Conio?" and she looked into his eyes as if she would read his inmost soul. "I cannot," he answered. "Not even a brown stone front:" "No.' There was a. wonderful firmness, a, don't-you-forget-it-noss in the tone which this momentous monosyllable was spoken. "Not even a cottage in the suburbs!" 'kNot even that, darling." "What can you offer me, theui" she asked, ' What can you otter me as an in centive to induce me-., to btcome your bride?" "A share in seven dollars a week, with a prospect of a rise next sprtug." lie saui uns with all the deep conviction of a man who knows just how he stands. 'It is sufficient," she, said, with a radiant smile ; "I am yours, Alger non. A half loaf is better than no bread." , Still a Slave Holder. A HIP VAN WINKLE from THE Wiu- DEEPNESS WITH SELL. TWO SEEFS TO A strange reminder of the ante belluin days was witnessed a short time ago iu the busy streets of the peaceful city of Staunton, iu the Valley "of Virginia. A sturdy mountaineer from Poeohantas Co., West Virginia, had made his way from bis seehided fastness in an outlying district across, the Cheat and Alleghany mountains, 150 miles to the nearest centre of civi lization, to make sale of some; stock, the fluctuations in whose.valueonce sent a throb through the commer cial world. In his high and isolated erie, enjoying the independent freedom and simplicity of rural life, he had not heard of "war's alarm" and none of the 'confusion incident to secession had disturbed the peaceful rounds of his lite. lie had tended his flocks, cultivated the i soil and prospered until, the surplus j was beyond liiscoiisumpth n. Reck-j oncd among the wealth that could bo disposed ol us no longer neces-1 sary for his need were two finely built colored men, and it was m .re particularly to sell these that he had gotten the consent of his mid to make the perilous journey to tho nearest point yi thin the pales of civilizatiou. Arrived iu Stanton he asked fov a s'.ave dealer and tried in vain to sell his slaves. He could not be convinced that there had been a great war and at last he left in disgust. ) When last seen he and his dusky property were ou their way back home to enjoy a life free from the vices of unreal dvifeuipu. Stan ton Letter hj tb,e Baltimore 'Ameri- UUU. - ' Popular Hanging in Missouri. Many women fainted when Bill Fox was swung 'into eternity yes terday. If these women had re mained at home where tley belong ed they would net h,ave fainted The men did iiot laint for the prob able reason that most of them were buoyed up by 10 cent whiskey. No delicately organized woman ought to go through the strain of witness ing a hanging on a glass of red lemonade. W e trust this will be a warning to tbe ladies. Ex. POLITICAL POINTS WHAT THi: POLITICIANS ARK TALKING ABOUT. 27 E POLITICAL CA LI) II OS. A ticket for 1884. For Presi deut, Henry B. Payne, of Ohio; For Vice President, Win. H. Yander bilr, of New Yoi k ; Platform: "The public be damned." Bait. Day, dem. It is said that bills introduced into the llou-.e thus far lr pension schemes and special projects to get rid of the surplus would take ?20P,OOO.uOO out of the Treasury. In the list of fees paid to Gov ernment counsel in the Star Route trials, the name of I.enj. II . Brew ster appears as Jiaviug been paid ?5,0U0 for professional services. Does Mr. Brewster not receive a salary J Col. J. N. Browning, of the Texas- Legislature, represents a district, popularly known as the Jumiio dis trict, which s made up of C7 coun ties and comprises about C4,000 square miles, or nearlv one-fourth of the State. Senator Beck, of Kentucky, de clares that there isn't a decent gro cery store in the country that would Carry on its business as the busi ness of the United States Treasury is conducted, and he w quite cor rect. Phil. Press, Rep. Washington news is that Mr. Morrison, chairman of the Commit tee of Ways and Means, will take his Tariff bill of 1876 as the basis of a new Tariff bill. The most striking feature of the bill was the proposition to restore rhe duty on tea and coffee. The free list was increased bv -00 separate items, which embraced really about 1,500 articles. A little incident, has just trans pired which is cred'table to Gov. Robinson, of Massachusetts. Be ing asked why he did not make his son his private secretary, he replied: 'Because I think too much of my boy ro set him riding on top of a bubble; he -must prepare for honor able Work 'in life; besides, iny fam ily are not going to befitted out with offices." . ' Oeinoci-jUie. tiniu. Gen. John Cochran, ,-.r v..- v,.:- who was last vear Republican member of the board of aldermen, ha gone back-to the ' Tammany Hall Democracy ami been elected a member of the general committee. He was-a member of Tammany Uall before the war and elected to Congress as a Democrat. During and since the war he has been a ! Republican, but now says the aims 1 of the Republican party are not j what they, were, ami that lie feels! more in sympathy with the Demo cratie than the Republican, partyrj TBie'E'ooJ Skitj lies' oiitos! j The Washingtoi correspondent of the Baltimore "Sun" says the House committee on elections 'will decide that the recent congression al election in the first district of this State ought to have been held in tho old territory, or as the first district stood when the vacancy oc curred by the death of Walter F. Pool, and not. iu the new first dis trict; and the committee will therefore report tlrat Mr. Skinner, Democrat, the sitting member from the first district, is not entitled to the scat. It is stated that Mr. Rau- IaII and ouuer prominent. Demo- crats hoLl this view. If it prevails, Mr. Pool1, the contestant, will not ba awarded the seat, out a new election will have to be. held. A St-t,i1Ii ac-i-i--.--iS:5Ii v.-. Mr-Peter V. Deuster. is a Demo cratic Representative in the Con gress from Wisconsin. He is a man of parts. He was asked a day or two ago by the Washington Post if he favored the abolition of t'.ie internal tax on whiskey and tobac co. Here is what he said in re sponse: "No. As Ion; cnue, i .think it. ; as we need a rev should be mainly derived from whiskey aud tobacco. ; Taxes on these articles are less Ult I than upon anything else." 1 . MVhat about beer?" j ' ' "That tax should be retained al- ' so. The brewers have grown , wealthy under it, r.nd I sec no rea- j son .why the Government should I make them a present of the tax. To repeal it. would not reduce the price of beer t the consumer. We can- j not bay cigars and tobacco -any i cheaper at retail now- than before j the reduction of the tax. Mr. Deuster carries a, level head. He knows that" this tax is just and that to lift" it from luxuries is. to ; keep it on necessaries. j Uiiuicr for Governor. ' '!.'." i - A Very slire-wd ulkserver of politi- I cal e'v-nts with whoii I was talking oft the cars 'he other day gave it j as his opinion that Judge Gilmer is j more likely than any other man to j receive the Democratic nomii.ation for (iomlior this year. "You must understand, too, he said, "that I am a Coke mu. I want Coke to get it, but somehow 1, can't help believing that Giluier is, the coming man."' 1 don't know," a bystand er remarked, Coke is a shrewd worked aud GilmeE wouldn't turn round to induce anybody to become enthusiastic for, hiiii."' "You be lieve that, Mr. Innocent," the iirst remarked, "and you will go slight ly wrong. Judge Gilmer may not care for the nomination, but is mar velously popular, and, ou, a stiil hunt he's Uatd to, beat. He can 4ell a joke as good as -Vance, and he knows some good ones too. Scales. 1 lrankly tK-lieve, has pat himself off the track-" Raleigh "Chronicle." r Some Metnods of Wife Getting. In Australia when a young man 5 ... norflnloplr it lrTi nirh o v-kiiTnr . j.u he waitg aronnil nntiI uetch. I es her out without her father or any J of her brothers, and when he sees a good chance hits her ou the head i with his chili and takes her home, j Ol course, when the old man bears of it he is very indignant and turns the tribe cut after the ardent lover. The youth is then given a small shield, and the girl's lather and rel atives stand off aud throw boome rangs and other dangerous missiles at him. If he is generally ilk-diked in the tribe he has to jump around pretty lively to save his life, but if he is considered a '.'"good catch" they manage to make it easy for him. ;, A favorite' custom in 5ew Zeal-' aim, when there are two suitors or tolerably equal pretensions, is that of pulling. Each of the men seizes an arm of the maiden and attests the ardor of his affection by the stiength with which he tugs at it. It not unfrequently happens that the girl's arms are dislocated- The man who loses then takes o if his shoe and gives it to rhe victor, to show that he. renounces' al! claim to the l-.ul.v, and from this custom, it is sr.iii. by some, the old shoe throw ing at weddings was derived. . When a young Polynesian negro wants a wife he goes to the damsel's father and fixes on a fair price. He then starts on a year's hunting and fishing excursion, during which he begs from all .his friends whom ho may visit, and at the end of the trip takes his catch to the desired father-in-law. The old gentleman then either gives the youth credit for the amount Or lets him have the girl and takes a lien on her for the balance. In former times a Swedish bride gooni went to the church accom panied ;by abouut a hundred friends and allies, who were well armed for the occasion. These constituted his "best men," and if the girl was at all good looking or wealthy their prowess was generally put to test. The "best men" of -our the day are but a shadowy lemnant -of those stalwart groomsmen. A Manufacturing Site. The Roanoke "News" published at Weldon, S. C, says: Weldon has a canal eighty miles long with an average fall of twenty five feet to the river throughout its entire length. It leaves the river just below Gaston and enters it just below this-piace. . 'It is capable of indefinite ..development. Prof. V. C. Kerr, at the time State Geol ogist, wrote a letter to a gentleman of this county in 1881 concerning the canal, in which said: "The water; power of Roanoke may be taken at a ininnium (for low water) at 300 horse-power per foot, wtiich will give yom canal at Weldon 10,800 horse-power, and from Weldon to the river G.OOO," and that "the. sum of the above.' 10,800, is nearly equal to the whole available, power of Lowell and Lawrence together." There is a fortune iir this canal for any one who willmiprove it. Tka Candidate. Uon. S. S. Cox, in the "Youth's Companion,", says:. "An incident of tho iK'vsmisilitii's of" t!u. "siiintn'l ' was related to nie by. Gen.- A. M. Scales, a niemb: of Congress from North Carolina. v "When a young man," said the General, "I ran for the Legislature i:i my native county, AO&one of the precincts, as I passed by a crowd, I noticed a ni di, one. Sam Stewart, whom I had known from chiklhood. He was engaged in earnest talk with the crowd, and as I pa.-sed I heard him say . 'I am agiiin all lawyers, and though I like A. M. Scales who is one I will not support him on that j account. j I walked boldly up to the crowd, I and asked what engased them so earnestly. S;im repeated his lan guage. I said : "You till me with amazement. I am as much surprised as if it came from mv own f. it her. You have known me from an infant, have dandled me on your knee, and your wife has it-il me wit of the same siioon with her own boys. I have j hunted, fished and played with your eldest ooy, who was my uamesaKe. You had just as well vote against that son." i'lle hesitated a '.moment, and then turning to the ciowd, said : "Gentlemen, them' is facts ; just as little A. M. has said. He was alters an honest boy; and I know he is not lawyer enough to hurt. We can all go for him." "And thev did." A Beautiful Idea. ; A wav among the Alleghanies I there is a spi iug so small that an ! ox in a snmim r's d y could drain it ; irv. it steals i:s is lino trnsivo. wav himong rhe hills until it spreads in ! to the beautiful Ohio. Thence it stretches away a thousand miles, leaving on its b inks inore t han a j hundred villages and cities, and many cultivated farms, and bear ing o:i its bosom nioi-jtxthan a half thousand steam boats. Then, join ing tbe. Mjssissippi, stretches away some l'.OJi miles more uutI it lalls into the great cmblcii of eternity. It is one oft Ije. gro-a t tiibntaries to ! the ocean, which, obedient to C,h1, (shall roar until the Angel, with one foot on the sea and the. other on the land, sh ill lift up his hand to heav en and swear that time shall be no longer. So with moral influence. It. is a rill a river an ocean, boundless and fathomless as eter nity. ' . A False, Plea.. 'JfUe of tho society man' or woni.in that a palpable' indecency is any the less objectionable because perpetrated in polite circles is lalsc and eouM : not have been made by ! anybody having very correct ideas I of the proprieties of life. Chicago i -Herald." I -Elder E. F. Baldwii says the ; Greensboro "Patriot," has left for i Algeria and will lie- absent several months in, missionary work. His charge and the ieojle of the place generally will lie glad to welcome him back. A LIBEL SUIT. :or- f WHICH CREATES A BIG SEN SATION IN RALEIGH. PR U CEEL IX (IS : i)ISM ISSED. Says the "Raleigh ".News-Observer" of Jan. 12th; "About mid night Thursday night, Judge" Jas. E. Shepherd, acting' as a magis trate, issued a beuch warrant for Messrs. F. T. Booker and E. T. Smith, the. editors of the .Siuithfield 'Herald,' the allegation being made that they had published in that paper a liliel upon Hou. I). G. Fowle. The warrant was issued upon application ol' Judge Fowle's attorneys. Deputy Sheriff James Rogers left here on the freight train at 1 o'clock yesterday morli iug; went to Stnithfield and ar rested Messrs. liooker; and Smith, returning with them here, eaily yesterday afternoon. Lnv ws,! ,,,'itm rruu i alternoon before Juhlge Shepherd, j sitting in a magisterial capacity i and "outside of court,' as the pnrase goes. . Ihe courtroom was packed with people. The counsel for Judge Fowle were Messrs. T. (;. I' uller, 1 . P. Devereaux aud Arintead Jones the counsel for Messrs. Booker and ftnith were Messrs. T. M. Ar go and W. N. Jones. Col Fuller read the following, which is the li bel: : ' "UXPEOFESSIOTiAl.. A rumor is abroad to t his effect : On the day after Willie Watkins. of Wake couuty, was .. murdered, Joseph Williams, the murderer of Watkins, went to Raleigh and told Judge Fowle what he had done, and who was with him, or who he asked to go with him. It is sup posed that Williams told the. Judge what took place afterward. When Williams went back home he told Pool that the Judge said that if he (Pool) did not go out there (to Raleigh) d- d if -we both would not'-be huiiir. Pool went as requested, and it seems that the Judge had fixed it up to be quite a nice thing on the part of Williams, from the reported con versation which is said to have ta ken place between Pool and the Judge, which was about as follows: Good morning, .Mr. Fowle. Good morning, sir. Is this' Mr. Pool? Yes sir. Did Williams tell you what I told him to tell you ' Well, I reckon so, says Pool. Well, you know all. al tout it anyhow, says the Judge. Now the Jude tells him what t do. He tells Ptol to say that lie and Williams went tip to Willis Watkins' to have j little Christ mas fun, and he (PoobLtook his gun along with him and accidently lie shot Watkins and killed him. Wil liams will swear to the same thing, i says the Judge, and I will clear' you both. Will you swear" to t his j statement, says the Judge!' W-e 1-1 j I r-e-c-k-e-U so, says I ool. 'V ell, ! sir, just step into the back, room j and testify to .this statement .before -j those men.- Pool, not understand- j ing precisely what the Judge j wanted him to do, did what the Judge told him to do, and walked out. What do we learn from this! Simply this much, if no more: that the Judge tried to put the innrdoi of Watkins on an innocent man and rake it off of. the murderer. Is this professional? We -say no, but that it is a shame and a disgrace to the law proiesiou likji mh-h iiiniys, should go on. Let every siood citizen and the ; press open tire on such actions, j then we will have better times.'' j After readthg this pacr he made some remarks. Iu reply,'-counsel for defendant stated that they waived examination and asked that they be lound over until next term of the court. -. Tne question of the amount ot bond to be given was agreed Upon as !!,000 for each. A discussion arose upon the point whether the defendants should be bound over until the next term. Mr. Ai go. for the de fense, argued ..that the court could F only bind them over until the next term, while plaintitt s counsel ar gued that they should Ihj bound oyer from day to day at. the present term until the matter was disposed of. Mr. Argo s iid that tie que j tion of the liberty of the press was , involved in this matter. Mr. Dev iereux.for the plaintiff, sanl that j Judge Fowle desired to fire his.ac I cusers, and that -they werctiying to i shirk and delay. i ' Col. r uller made some iviciein-es ! to the liberty of the press, asserting 1 . i . - .. . - 1.1 - . . 4. .. .1 1 .. mat II was noi mn-m : liberty to malign. He asked th iti . . .. . i.. i. i.i -... -1 j tne , prisoners uc nrm m appear i from day today t answer such in dictment as the grand .ury may furuish. Judge Shepherd J'.eie inade soine remarks, sayulg that l.u had issued tbe warrant as a magistrate nd was now sitting outside ."of court. -He wanted time to 'think wr this matter and would require tin fendauts to aptear U-fow him at ; o'clock to-da, giving Umd in j 000 each, as had already agreed u cm by the counsel fur the resjHv; I tive parties f I The bonds were then given, i Msrs. Alfred Uic;hiuch, C. IJ. Edwards and Chas. D. Upchurch I justifying . . as sureties, in l.iuo S each." Js-vcra! witnesses weie rec jognized to apneaiv It is stated ! that the case would go 'lie-lore the ; grand jury at lo oYloek this morn ing. .'.'.-.-; - .' Silica the above? was in t.vic we ; have seen it statl Yhat Slessrs. Booker suiitn liave written a ": ,1 ajiologizing to Jndge Fowle, ! wht luis withdrawn the prosccu- J tion. How A. T. Stewart Won His Bride. About sirty years ago Cornelia Clinch was one otthe prettiest girls ! in New York. She and her brother, ! who afterwards liecaine Collector of the Port, were the children of n 1 ship chandler, who was pretty rich NUMBER 49 as wealth was reckoned in those ! days. He lived in a big house on j Duane steet, then one ot the most ' fashion able parts of the city. Old Clinch was a self-made mau and thought every other mau ought to be the architect of his own fortuue. So he frowned away every wealthy young lop who came to woo Cor nelia, and sent her regularly to school to learn to be a sensible, t uselut woman. And his ideas were respected, for he had a terrible tem IHr when he was crossed. There is still standing near Stu vesant square a little old fashioned church known as St. Mark's. In those days It was away out of the city in the green fieldsBut every Sunday old Clinch wit up there with his pretty daughter. One day young Stewart saw them. On his side it was clearly a case of love at first sight. He In'gan at tending church regularly. Then ho made Cornelia's acquaintance, and as he was poor but industrious, the old man smiled upon , lam and invited him to call, aud take drinks with them. After' ja while Stewart asked Cornelia a very interesting question, and she like a good girl, blushed and aiu "Y-e-o-s if nana savs so." Then Stewart interview- tMfoul ,nch, and he said: "Want ti( Iuarrv v0ilie. eh! Think she's j got a rich father , eh? and you'd j like to -'come in for a share of his ... ..... m 'No, ; you needn't leave her or me a cent, I'llsoon be richer than you, an vwav. "Yoc'i will, will a ou Well, I like that. Go ahead and tako her, then, and Heaven bless you both.' So the young folks, who were .tremendously in love with each oth er, were married and vent to live in a modest little cottage on Reade street, and were glad to le able to cover t he floors with rag carpet. Old people who knew them there tell me that they lived an almost ideally happy life.; They studied each other's happiness in all things, and consulted with each other abont every detail of household or busi ness affairs, and became "two souls with but a single thought" a good deal more completely than most couples now-a-days. Speaker Carlisle Not a Sportsman. Senator Vance of this State, Jack son, of Tennessee, and Beck, of Kentucky, spent the .holid;fs hunt ing on the coast it North Carolina, particularly Currituck Sound. They bagged one hundred dnclks, sixty snipe, two geese and two' swan. When about leaving .Washington on the hunting expedition they lag ged SjK'aker Oarlisle to accompany t hem. lie made all sort of excuses. Finally he said he had no gnu. "I have a gun that you can use," said iieek. lisle. "Is it loaded T" isked Car- Yes," was the answer. "i hen rake it away lrom here, said the speaker; "i've no use for a loaded gun.' 1 Don't Leave North Carolina. Brother Foote, of the Warrentou 'Gazette," lets off some sensible re- nec tions on seeing notice ol many Carolinians, returning from Texas. : Hir him : "We gather from our xcha.nges that hundreds of those who left our State last ve.rr for Texas and other Southern aud Western States are returning sic and disgusted. We have never been able- to see .the .necessity of leaving North Carolina. - .Whj, how, wherein do people expect to better their condition by migrating? Those ,v ho have been there and know whereof they speak assert positively,:! hat as much monev can o- maoe in ortn c arouna as in Texas, if a man will work as hard here as ho mut, work there. If you want to work liard it ;isuscless to go all the way to Texas to. do so. Let Us stay at home, build up North Carolina and determine to do bet ter ami success will finally' crown our elb'rts. A Sensation at LeaksYille. While a couple were being joined iu the holy 'ootids of matrimony on Thursday of Christmas week at the factory, when the question was ask ed if any one c-ouhl show cause why t hey should not marry,' a very pret ty young lady handed the officiating minister a note stating that the brilegi'(Mui wa.- engaged to the writer. Quite a sensation was cre ated, but the ceremony was ".per formed notwithstanding the test. Reidsville "Weekly." ' A Seosible Determination. pro- A girl in Wilkesbarre iindertinik to shix;t herself for the love of a Pittsburg politician. The pistol ball was ;oi lied aside by her corset steel. With the dellcctiou of the leid tlic tuaid also hanged her c liii-se. She is now leterininel to shoot ; he politician instead of her self. Thi is sensiide; and if she doesn't hit him ou the cheek she .may bring him to term. A Governor s Promise 10 his. Child. ' Dying A St. Louis telegram of Wednes day says: When ilovenior Critten den's little daughter Katie was dy ing a few weeks ago,-it' was said that she received a promise from her father that he wonld pardon Clias. Steveus alias Ornaha Charles, serving a life seuicnce". in the- Mis feo'nii iieiiiteiitiarv'---To-day in ac cordauce with that nmis, Ste vens was pardoned. He wa in for the murder of John Ma vhan, wheuu he killed iu ;i saloon in Marcli 1878. Stevciis was an artist and carved many beautiful trinkets, which he presented the Governor's daughter, thus winning the love and friend ship of the child. An Honest Ration. , The Chinese have a very original method of winding up the old year. Every Chinaman must settle op hij affairs and pay all of his bills. JT he is unable to do so he is declared a bankrupt, and not allowed to re sume business till he is able to liquidate all his claims. . . Liber. 1 no. . : u wiu bu made for Larpcr AJverttcioejitj nJ tt Contracts by tho Tear Cash mitM aeoOB'iiar.y u Advertlarmenu vntam rboa rvf ernoo is elvco. J - RT T T TCP'S ' T X T TT .1111 V 1 11 K TALKS SENSIBLY NEGROES. ABOUT .! I: X A COOKS Theie are a good many troubles in this life, but kind Provideuce has enabled is to' fortify against them. They are more imaginary than otherwise. We can make them big or make them bltlc. A good nabor told me the other da he had received a letter from hi father who lived iu Atlanta, aud his father 'wanted him to get him a cook. A cook!! Lord ht!p ! Why the man is - worth u hundred thousand dollars and wants a cook. Darn a cook. Why I run tiHik everything I want to eat mywlf. I like a cook for the family aud tor company and all that, but 1 o.si live and thrive aud get fat without a cook. That f all imaginary. Some folk thmk thc.N arc just obliged to have a cook ai.d tfiat is what is the matter with this gen eration. They had voks before the war, and that is what is the matter with this generation. They had cooks liefore the-war, aud they had roast beef and mast turkey and all sorts of pies and pastry -and they think they must have it now but it is all a mistake. If I lived in Atlanta, I wouldn't give tluee ceuts for a cook. There is baker's bread, and nice butter and cheese and cakes and, it don't take five miuutes to cook oysters, or broil , u .steak and thel cook nii'sht go to thunder for. me. All I want is somebody to wash the 'dishes and clean up after the cooking aud I cm hire some little yaller gal to do that. We attach entirely too much imjiortance to cooking. Why 1 met a lady In Atlanta a nice sweet la dy, who is sick and she lives close-? to me, and when t asked her when . she was coining home she said she did'nt know but she thought she "would come when her husban.d got a cook. . Is thin the problem that Is to to solved! Is cverylKdy troub led about a cook! Well, I reckon we hurt better eat less and worry less about vittaln. Kverj bmly can't -dine at Debnonieo'.-. Mrs.. .Vip wauts a cook too. Shu was raised on cooks and waiting maids. J think she used to have a iozciif running an mud after her. and it was Miss Tavy this and Miss Tavy that, and they dressed her and un dressed her, and fi'llowrd he: around and were proud to have such a priucely mistress. There were over a liiiuureo niggers on tne place aud they all Wanted to be long (o Miss Tavy. Well, I conic along one day and stole Miss Tavy away and they all wanted to follow Lher, and 1 took a passcl of 'em along and managed to support ein until Abe Lincoln conic along and kindly relieved ine fiom tjn bm den. Blessings on old Abe. He didn't know whit he was doing but he lifted a load on' me sun-, for the darned niggois wasn't worth a darn cent to me. They weep good for one thing and that was to give oil' to a child when she got married. It saved the old man fh.it much expense in supporting Vtn and it made the child happy in keeping' the old family servant. If they were ever fit for anything else in ihe up country I never found it out. I liked to own 'cm first- rate. . I liked to say "Jerry you black rased go and hifch up .Slim and put him iu the buggy and d rive him around to the front gaie." And I liked to hear Jerry say, "Yes. massa ; hav him dar quick.'' uell, 1 hired Jem to tue rail road as a track hand and the bull gine come along one day :unl i u: his toes off, and his doctor's bill cost.- me a hundred dollars, and alHMit the time 1 paid it Abe Lin .coin told Jerry lie was a free pin son of color, aud Jerry pti t mc as a servant, but hung on to me. a a Itcncfactor and I had lo siipMrt him with his sore toes for two years afterwards. , ' 15ut it is all right. 1 like Hie niggers aud they like inc. 1 iitlher have 'em than not have 'em. Kom lolks linK)se.oll 'em but I don't. I've no resjHct for a maa lh.it diM-s. 1 like to have 'em around mc f :nrt alMjiit me. i think a to-np t .".Viii. and I'm going to stand by 'oi and protect cm. They are a yood. kind-beaited, faithful iac and 1 love 'em. That's all. j The Reason Wny. i , ' i s . Scientists say that the reason kissing i.s ho pleasant is Ik-cuum' the teeth, jaw bones and bps are full of nerves, and when t he lips me-t au electric current is generated. We are glad to ! set right iu t hi- mat tcr. Heretofore we have suppOM-d that .i kiss was pleasant ou ac count of a jiretty other end- gill ln'ihgut the & Woman's Season. Tell inc. iuM'ilf ii- why y ou hVt Hie Is it for my house 'and goldr Is it lor my manly vigor, For my cairiage, free and bold, For the heart I give yori tiulyf Swtvtest maid that ever was Tell me, tell me, w Ih you love, iu And she answered, 'Cauae." The Med Trnth. The following interesting adver tiscmcnt apfK-ai-s in a Ixuidoti pa txr : "Mr, aud Mis May have have left off clothing of every de cription.,, This even goes ahead of American women at the seaside watering plaes aud at New York balls. - There's Many a Slip. . A young lady in ew Hertford, Mass expecting to get marricrt. had all her new clothes marked wMrs." The engagement suddenly broke off, and now the young wo man don't know whether to use 'em up for dust-rags or send Vm to the beat ben. 77