rlLSOX "ADTAJfCE. ! er-rrl ' .""r ' . ' X T"T ': " a : .... . ' wjlson advance: ! M H OY A M'PW i j '. . : , . ' tu.:- .-.-nP. ' ; , -. . " ''' . ' ;-''..- ' ! . - ..... PUBLISHED, EVERY FEIDAY AT Wilson North Carolina. JOSfiPHI'S BAXIELS, - Editor aoU'rpnVtr SrBsoRii'TioN Kates in Advance Kn' V'-ar Minth9 ... 2 00 1 00 "LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIBI'ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY'S, THY GOD'I. AND TBUTUSV l rt t S M- A Ilk ' . tc ..UIH t-fMoney can be sent by Money Order or ! ""!! l;,.ifirc-d Letter t our ruk. , s TfT fTTIf 11 1 4 ,(FirE-Trboro Street, in the Old Post! V J L U M Jj lK" jKWS 'Of A' WEEK OATHKKi;i) KKOM ALL PARTS Ol TUE WOULD. WILSON, NORTH CAROLINA, DECEMBER 5. 1884. -NUMBER 44 tn Inch, Oi luoertkm... . I " OnMonik- I - Threo Mootkn-. ' vl Month.... f - " Ona Ycr LiiienU DtMonnts will wamde for Lartv, A 4 Trrtisementa aod for t"nntmrt by the Ter - uA ntm Mooa'pny all Adrertsrmnt nlrM food rctereooc ! clTen. PEN'CILLINGS GLEAN NGS. Cleveland r;ui about two thou Hand l;hinil Scales in the State. Blaine will mend the "winter of liis di.swntent" in WahinKtu. The Wizard Oil wagous are ayain in 'the State. They are now at Goldsbo'o. The d welling house of Mr. Fletcher Coggiun, in Xa.su comity, near Catalia, . was entirely ijou HUined by lire on Saturday morn ing, Nov. 23d, ; Bryant Alf'ord's store and res taurant were burned at Smith field last week. A negro woman chaiged with setting fire to the house, is under arrest. . ! A woman killed herself in Baltimore last week In-cause she feared her husband would loose his place in the post office when Cleveland conies in. Help the orphans. A liberal gentleman ol Wilmington presen ted Ir. Dixon, the: Superintendent of the Orphan Asylum, with a cheek for $50. -Who will do like wise? Let all give. Poor Tourgee is in trouble. He is poor and is. to lecture this winter for a living. He ought to try his hand on 'Outragesin the South." His Quaker story vould pan out the quarters. The. Franklin "Times" says, we are sorry to learn that ..Vernon, a 18 year old son of Mr. II. M. Richardson, of Dunn's township, had his arm so dadly mashed in a cotton gin a few days ago, that it had to be amputated. - This rebellion in Maine against the will of 'the people of the Uni ted States should be suppressed before it leads to secession. The Federal army seems to be massed on the wioug side of the continent. New Orleans, "Times." Joseph Pulitzer, the Congress man editor of the New York 'World' was in early life a coachman. Not all of the Jehus allow fame and fortune, to be thrust upon them by their employer's daughters, for Pulitzer worked his way up. The "Chronicle" says, To them that believe in luck the following current prediction may In; interest ing: , ."Charles Manly Stead man ""wnT preside over the Senate. It must be that, Charles Manly Bus bee will preside over the Fjo.ise." --The New Heme "Journal" says, the County Commissioners of Crav en county have passed an order that no witness nor jury ticket shall be paid by the couuty unless the party to whom the same is issued shall have paid his taxes. Will the New York "Sun" kindly tell us what has become of one B. F. Butler? The theory that he has locked himself in to write letters of thanks to all those who voted for him at the late election will uot do. ne could have finished that job before breakfast. ' Two colored ministers got in a dispute in Athens, Ga., the other night and one killed the other. He afterwards set up with the corpse all night and held a prayer meeting over it the next morning. There is at least something unique in the mode of procedure. The season is drawing near when the thoughtless colored mother locks up her children in a room a (id leaves them to their pranks until she returns, to limi, perhaps, the house burned down, with the charred liodies of her oll' snrintrs in the ruins. For generations the burning ; crecl relationship question has' been to hud a profita ble use for saw dust ; and now comes a New York company and proposes-to couvert it into intper. we have an exchange printed on paper made exclusively fiom saw dust and the stock is very strong. The Franklin "Times" says, we are prepared to inform our leaders that work was" com menced on the Lonisburg 5t Frauk hnto . Railroad, on Tuesday morn iug last. At present there are 10 hands at work. In a few days the force will lie increased to be tween one and two hundred hands.' The Raleigh "Farmer and Me-! chauic" says it is rumored that i friends of Hon. Thomas Iiuflin are preparing to support him for Sen ator against Gov. Vance: while ' another report says a strong effort will be made fo get him appointed ; to one of the soon-to-be vacancies j on the United States Supreme j bench. ' isow, then. let's make a move all along the line to the local postmasters those men in the country who get no pay for attending to the public business. Their time is worth something. , The government ought uot to ask a man to be a postmaster merely for the convenience of the neigh borhood. Give them some pay. "Iialeigh Observer.'' Americau Methodists will con vene in a Ceptenuial Couf'erenc in Baltimore on 9th of Decern ler and remain m session until lf.th. It will doubtless lie the largest body of Methodist ever assembled in this country. This conference will be 'composed of about six hundred delegates. Jf will simply be a reunion and celebration of the organisation of the 31. K. Church in this country. Nearly every man you meet claims to have originated the ex pression "paint the town red." The Danbuiy "News" says. The expression, "painting the town red," signifying a jubilee, origina ted with Gov. Waller, who, in a congratulatory speech at a Yale boat crew victory, said : "I hope, gentlemen, you will ' paint this town red." Yassar Female College cele- brated Cleveland's election. In ro turn the President ought to marry one ot tne assar girls. The "Reunitedir fiion" is to be the title of an article by Henry WatteisoTi, in the January number I'll liic - iii i ii . inn i m-j j For every man that is now) i moving away from North Carolina I a half do.en better ones are com-! i iuc into the State to live. Men of! high grade of intelligence see the; advantages this State possesses, j and are settling in our midst., ! STATE QUESTION. GOSSIP AS TO CLE V KL A X I 'S M Villi! AGE II.L CLEVELAND MAI-SUV proposes to oppress or enslave any part of our jtopulation, or to de stroy the business interests of the country. We hoje, on the other hand, to do something to benefit the people. It seems to mo that our efforts in that direction would i b; :tidcd if mischievous cioakiugs and dark iniaginiugs should give place to an earnest endeavor to inspire ''confidence aud to make lyiiversal a cheerful hope for the tut uie." BILL ARP'S TALK. WHAT I1E8AW AND HEARD IN ALABAMA. WONDERFUL IMPROVEMENT A New York 1 paper enters its iiijimi iiiuL riiiiiiiniiij; iiiit- un limited use of the 'phrase "paint ing the town, red." Yes, indeed. The chestnut has been run into the ground till it make's us tired. Cheese it, boys j give us a rest. If there's anything we hate it's slang; you can 4ef your sweet life on that.' - You' hear as f A young lady of Knoxville, Tenn., is engaged in paying a nov el election wager. She bet with her lover, and promised to give him a kiss for each electoral vote for Cleveland in the event' of his election. Tin- young man- is to have two kisses a day until the debt is paid. That is what may be called -linked sweetness long drawn out." ! -The "Messenger" savs, we are j pained to team that Win. C. Rich, j 1 the oldest, son of Mr. C. C. Rich, of j Faisou, .met with a serious and ! amful accident last week. The, young man was 'attending., to the ginning of some cotton on his fath er's place and 1 he mote board be coming clogged, he reached in fo clear it oil' and his right hand and arm wen- caught and drawn' across ;the saws ami terribly lacerated. ! Winvtmi "Sfiil iifI-' (In l:ir Saturday, Beckton Swindell, a lad aged about 12 years, and a nephew ofCapt.R. R. Crawford, was out near town, gathering ersiminoiis, in company with some companions. While up in the tree, Beckton acct- j dentally lost his hold and fell to the ground, a distance of some 2." feet. Several bones were broken and other serious injuries were sustained. The little sufferer. was carried home, but died the next day from thee fleets of his fall. r The Seven Springs corespondent writes to the New Berne "Journal" while Goldsboro was on fire the ashes from the destruction were seen to fall in our streets. A piece of .charred -paper, was seen to fall in a man's yard with the writing and print ing .-.plainly dis tinguishable. It was from the hardware store of Jones & Yelver ton, and was thoroughly burnt but had not fallen in pieces." The distance from Goldsboro to Seven Springs is about l(i miles. This is trulj' wonderful. Women, as a grand a?id petit juror in Washington Territory Iiave proved-a decided success, if the gallant speech' made by Chief Justice Greene of that Territory means auyjthiug else than a grace fjl complinient. He savs: "Twelve terms of court, ladies and gentle-j men, I have now held, in which! women hae served as grand and petit jurors, and it is certainly ! fact, beyond dispute that no other twelve terms so salutary for re straint,1 of-crime, have ever been ! held in this Territory."-.'. In Albany, it is regarded as set-1 tied that Governor Cleveland is the ; next President, and already the gossips are busy with conjectures as to who will be the ladv of the; 1VI.:-. ' ll,.n.n Tl,n, n ic .i -..II ' IIIIC ivunu. J uvuj i tx vil- Turned Jost Wrong. A good story is told of a country storekeeper in a small village in Pennsylvania. For tweuty-five years I... .'..-. ..l .1 ..... , :Af.n. .l..i.....l i . . 4" ninniirr litu IVi.i.ilo i ' UlrUUtTU utiici aiuun ill--, uicuun " ..ml tlifi imlt- other grocer man in the place voted the republican ticket. The latter has been post master for many years, much to the discomfort of the democrat, as it drew trade from his store. This year the democrat determined to make an effort lor the office, and voted the republican ticket. He made violent speeches against his former party and lauded the repub lican candidate for President. His neigh liors now say he - swears at having made such a mistake, and they are laughing at this particular groiviyman's exjwnse. 1860 to 1885. that there is a vonnsr ladv in ! , . v - Western New York who will soon be led to the altar by the Presi i dent-elect. Others who have known him long and.. well say that he will never marry and that talk j simply comes of the fact that he has shown this young worn an. some slight attentions since he was elected Governor. Earlv in his life his hopes and ambitions for a wife were crushed by the hand of j death, and his affection . for thei lost one has k.ept him treading the j wine press of lite alone. If the re- j ports that he is to mai rv are not I tine then his own immediate fami-S ly will furnish the lady to do the social honors of his administra-l tion. It is generally believed by those! who know him best, that there will j be less festivities during his term I 4f office than there have been tori many years past, lie has been a ; hard-working Governor and will; probably continue his industrious; habits as Proident. Bachelor as i .he is, the White House will, how-, ever, have .a most creditable mis-; tress. There are four ladies in his i immediate family, eithei of whom i' can well do the houius of the., household. His eldest sister in this country, Mrs. W. E. Hoxi.ofi l'a.vetteville, would till any jiosi-' tion with credit. She is a middle-; aged lady, of pleasing addiess, . who lias spent a good deal of her , time at the executive mansion ; here since her brother has been ' Governor. She has made many j Johnson Warehouse last week Helium in tue capuoi oi mediate and will doubtless do the same in Washington, where she will nroiia- i bly go the 1th of next March, j -Miss R. E. Clevelantl is the maid j en sister. She still resides in the little home cottage at Holland Patent, just above-Utical A good public speaker, a quick conversa tionalist and generally a plain If my health will permit I pro pose to-write a history or ' sketch of North Carolina, from 18(i0tolK85. 1 will be greatly obliged to persons w ho will send me documents or tacts in relation to men and events in this State 'for the last thirty years. 1 feel deeply the respon sibility I assume in attempting Mich a wrk, and shall need all the encouragement that may lie kindly ottered. Will my brother editors through out the State copy this notice, and tend me a copy containing it? W, W., HOLDKX. Our Enterprising Ladies. Mr.-. A. G. Land who lives not far away from Oxford sold at the the product of 1400 hills, (about J acre) of land cultivated iu tobacco this year, for the sum of 105, Mrs. Laud is quite a young lady, having beeu married ; less .- than twelve moths, and this tobacco was her own farming, separate and apart from her husband's :crop by way ot amusing herself, in leisure moments, when not encased, in woman oi intellectual lorce, s lie her domestic duties. "Torchlight." would do her share in entertaining j her brother's guests at the Nation al capitol. Mr. Cleveland has a sister who for twenty years has been a missionary at Ceylon. She has two charming young lady daughters, Mary and Carrie Hast ings, whom the Governor has been for years educating in this city. He has giveu them every 'advant age and they have improved them The Supreme Court of Iowa ! has informed a young wife who! married a man knowing him to be ! Intemperate, aud then applied for j a divorce on the ground that he is j a confirmed drunkard, that she vol-1 untarjly t hose a drunkard for a ; husband and should discharge the j dutiesof a drunkard's wife. "His I failure to keep a pledge of refornia- j tion, made before marriage,!' say's j the court, "does not justify you in j deserting him. Having knowing-! ly married a drunkard, you must I make yourself content with the sa A Ciadle -View of Him. . Au old muse has been telling the world what sort of a baby Governor Cleveland was., "He w as," she. says, "one of the quietest children I ever saw, and I was very fond of him. He had large black eves and black hair, and he They will no doubt be a part oft was a very bright and good-uatured their uncle's family circle at Wash-! child. But he would have his own ington, as they have been at times I way when he was two years oldA here. j so far as it was possible j for a child . of that age to have his own way, t John Bright And Free Trade. j oTliS'the good' owTrse kSew tV i, - , . i ! from this that he would eventually John Bright, m a letter favoring j become President. ! free trade, argues that since its. I ' adontion bv Fnorlnml tlm i.i;-.u ri --; ' food, aud the hours of .labor have! Sale Of the diminished, vhile wages have! been doubled. He says that al- , 1. . ... U .1 . - ii. Lii.nigii iiitue in liiHgiaiid is mo mentarily der.ressed the depres sion is far greater in j rotectionist countries like Russia. France and America. He concludes by fli.it- rlii. . ....... I i' .i um iik ivi eui in ci i mow oi rue party of protection and inoiiopoly in America may prove to be u great blessing, and when Fliigland and America bave embraced the policy of free industry, the whole fabric of monopoly -throughout the world will totter to its downfall. Biggest Ranch World. in the No Cause For Alarm. The largest cattle vaueh in. the United States under one, manage ment is that ofT'apt. Richard King of Texas. It commises lmw.ml W11' of 8.0(10.000 acres, all under' fence. and nearly J00,000 head of cattle, horses-.and sheep. This ranch, has been eagerly sought by Knglish, French and Butch capitalists. It was sold to the United States Land and Investment Company of New York city, who have just concluded a purchase at SG,500,iflO for the en tire property. The company an ticipate an annual income of near- if he -Sydney Smith was a fellow of j -Ai.ba.ny, Noy. 20. Cov Cleve ni inne jest, always setting the ,aud W:1S by an associated i.uMt-in .t in;n, oiti ne coiiiu iaiK i press souu sense wiieii lie tried. When asked how to cure low spirits, he gave the following advice: 'lave as well as y n dare; take short "1,.-00,oiO from this source, as i aware to which he re- reporter to-day . of a delusion among the colord South that a change in the admin-' isr.rnx.irin vvniilil nnf.irnt..ihlr- I ........-. i'. I 1.... . . . I . i . . ii -na in mini. ill me; UIICHU IO I lie i- fheif Cohllitioi) effects tea and cotfee l.roduce noon ! . I'lirii . ym.; compare your ; ot with that ; "Yes. I have been astoni .....i... ,...,,.-.., mmu ,,oei;, music, irnc statement that there ....... ,lM cui.cm.,.. , apprelieiiMoii existing among the people; do good; keep blamg tires, j njmed people that Tn some way Sinne of these rules may not at fust j their tlm now ea to rIiem """"" "" i ucniseix es. oui Kiev : inulur tli Ixr ,j.l Iv the increase of cattle is about 85 ' percent. As an indication of a! more settled condition of financial! was exist mgi a Hairs, I lie manager says that the people of the j company's first mortgage per j vent. iMiiids are Ixnng rapidly: sought at 10:. and interest: that' the feeling now shown -by '.Ameri can capitalists in this class of in vestment pro'i t v is growing dai- The other day I took a ride on the narrow gaage to Oeda: town. It is a smart little road and the train can skip oat from a statiou quicker than a wide gaage train. The, whole torn outlooks like it was made for children to go on a Snnday school excursion. The con ductors and eugineers ought to be little men, and I think Mr. West, who owns it, is entirely too big for his road. I remember when he first came south and was prospectiug around for iron property. Before anybody knew it he had bought a few thousaud acres uear Cedar town and now he runs a big fur nace and owns a railroad aud has doubled the xpulation of Cedar town aad tribled the value of con tiguous property. Schools and churches are thriving aud so is utradc and busiuess. it is wonder ful what one smart energetic man cau do for a community. I saw great stacks of plg iron around the furnace aud learned there were over 7,000 tons waiting for a rise in price. Mr. West said there would be a rise before long. He talked like he had " confidence and said that if the politicians would let the tariff on iron alone he did- ent care who they elected presi dent so they dident elect him. He is one of the solid men andde votes his time and money to in creasing the value of our natural products. The ore in the bank and the charcoal in the standinc piues aud the limestone iu the quarry, all cost money but it is not generally kuown that fifty cents . t A . worm win mane a ton oi pig iron that will sell for fifteen dollars. From twelve to fourteen dollars is expended for labor. Labor of man and beast, sweat and toil that is paid for at an average price of one dollar per day. One dollar a daj will keep the average laborer and his wife and children from want but fiff cents will not. When the tariff is taken off and foreign iron comes free into our markets the price will be reduced to seven or eight dollars a ton" and the labor be reduced in the same way. That will help the masses a little I reckon for our plows and hoes and wagons will be a little cheaper, not much, but it will be ruin to those poor humble toilers who make the iron. Fifty cents a day wont 'support - them for bread and meat will be no cheaper than it is now. Some things will come down under the free trade principle but bread and meat will not. We ex port wheat and flour aud pork and beet now to countries that charge uo custom house duties. Then why should they come down. What we all want is diversified industries. Annison flourishes and everyliody seem to be doing well there. Even the farmers in that naborhood are making money. They have a good market for everything they, raise. I saw a bushel of turnips sell there the other day for a dollar. I don't blame those people lor wanting protection on iron for it supports them all. Suppose the Kobles and Tylers have got rich and are get ting richer. Where can you find richer men who have added more to values and done more for our people ? Tbey are just the kind of rich men we want all over the country. I think that my old friend Sam Noble got scared too soon and flopped over to Blaine without any sufficient reason but he can flop back now gracefully and apologize for his haste and it will all come ont right at last. He is too good a man to fight for the Philistines. Selma is improving rapidly. New blocks of handsome ; buildings have been put np since I j was there five years ago and their j commercial business seems to be increasing rapidly. What a splen I spoils lots of folks, both whit "and : blacK. Just about half the chaps j fought to be in the corn field right ; now, they are no account- well, I dont mean to say that the corn field wants no account men bat I ' mean to sny that the college spoils a good corn field man. when he was at home on the farm he was tit ten - to do something. Rut as Sam Joues says he went of to col lege and now he atnt fitten to ct fitten. Marion is about thirty miles west of Selma and is called the Athens of ' Alabama. There 3 are four colleges there, two for girls one for . boys aud one for negroes. Tbey are all in a flourishing con dition. The town is just sweet with pretty girls. A yonug man who is fitten to get married conld go there and get a nice wife just as easy. It seems to me they were the largest, school girls I ever saw. Bnt everybody is large- down there. I could have pinked out a hundred men ax, the fair ground. wno would ; average -'00 pounds and as many women who woobi average 160. There are lot of big folks down there. Most all of the people past middle age wear some thing before them that the French call "Our bong pong." It makes them look healthy and consequen tial. Whenever a man gets rich and feels his oats he begins to pat on some "Oar bong pong'? and strut around. It is a mighty good sign ot contentment and I never saw as much of it as I saw at Marion. When you see a - town with lots of suburbs: dnt up in r large two acre lots and a nice house with a broad . piaza Bet back in a grove of trees in every , tot you may be sure of a happy 'hospt- taoie people." Plenty ot room and plenty of shade and an abundance of flowers in tho front: yard en larges and refines a peoples Those colleges do a great deal for Mari on. They .improve society. They give a high, tone to the churches and the Sunday schools. They help the merchants and the mil liners and the boarding houses and the livery atablos. It is a good thing for a people to fatten off of people afar off. - It is better than to have to live off one anoth er. When a man sends his daugh ter to school in Marion he has to send some money with her and the Marion people get it. That is the way the yankees have been doing us. They have been send ing their goods and their yankee notions and all their torn fooleries down here for fifty years and our folks buy them and they have got rich off ol ns. When 1 was there all Marion was happy. The tjair was in full blast and they had lots of racing and a circus and a bal loon asceussion' and an opera troupe -and all sorts of vehicles were dashing to and fro all the day long. Everybody seemed to have plenty of money and they i spent it free. Alabama is certainly prospering, She has made wonderful strides in the last ten years and has about doubled her property in valne, She has railroads ' everywhere. Her state seal shows her - great rivers but her railroads are of more consequence t now,' -"What huge things these syndicates are, These mammoth corporations that send their lines and systems al through the country and .where there is a gap thev build a road and fill it. I was thinking, about the T. x V ., that cained me away down to Uniontown. How it occupies Georgia and Alabama and 1 dont know how many states What a head it takes to manage so vast an enterprise. It is an ag gressive system and is fighting its way for busiuess and is getting it Our state road property has suf fered by it but our people have beeu lenefited. Competition a good thing. It cheapens freight and fair and gives more speed and deveops . civility and politeness with the railroad commissions and with plenty of competition the peo pie are safe. Bill Akp. LOVE-STORIES. -:o: HOW OUR PRESIDENTS COURTED AND MARRIED. SINGULARLY HAPPY. Colossal Feet. Business men are not supposed to laugh at any order, however ex- he sent them, shed was at : in t, have a substantil ground work. Capt. A. H. A. Williams, of Granville, is urged for speaker of the- House. Rev. Joseph P.. Lee, Colored, was chairman of the Florida dele gafjoii that nominated Blaine. -He says: "I believe Mr. Cleveland to lie honest in u hat he says in relation to my race, and that be will trv to compensate ' J 11 wn- m' enecc win ne i n nunc ooui me wiuies aim oiaci;s, j and antagonisms will cease. .All I we ask is a fair chance and 'fair j treatments There are many good 1 men in t he Democratic party aud ; I don't think they will allow our .rigiits to lie abridged. Some of j my people have beeu alarmed iby false reports of designing meu. 1 he election in this State- as far as 1 know, was honest and fair. The Democratic ticket got the most votes auc won." Constitution ot i the United States were in danger from the election of a Democrat ic ' President. I am even told that some of t'em are led to suppose that the result, of the recent elec tion means that they may again! le made slaves. Ail of this has j appeared me to be so absurd. and I have been so confident that! the slightest intelligent reflection j would dislodge such foolish fears. Romance of a Poor Young Man. C. B. Bishop, Ex-Premier of Thk sandwich Isles, Rkttrn tx; Ho-ik Rim. . How often do we heai of the sudden fatal termination of a case of croup, when a young life might have beeu saved by the prompt use of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral! Be wise in time, and keep a liottle of it on hand, ready lor instant use. .... - . oi uieiii necessary, out there is not the slightest, objection to call ing t he attention of all who are in the least uneasy or uncertain upon this .subject to the fact that i N. V the title of the colored people to with ireenom autt all the rights of citi- zenship cannot le disturbed ox j cept by a change in the Constitu i tion which it would 1h absolutely i impossible to make. ! fUw-i.l.... 1 . . . ............. 1 . j --'va o. nur lufseut coiltlllloll i his go' ! or status of these people have beeu J that th so iuiiv accepted by the entire j country that no oue should have iuc suggest icea that nnv at tempt will be made to change it. If there were any possibility of I accomplishing such a thing, so ; far as the new Administration is related to this subject, the .whole ! country can be sure that the law : fill power and inrisdictioii of th he works alont half the time aud dont want much. It is all done fair aud it is all right for it takes more to do the white folks and the darkey is content with his portion. They are as happy on a little as the white man is on a good deal. They seem to have quiet politics. Mr. Davidson was elected to con gress over his republican opponent by 7.000 votes, notwithstanding the negroes were taree to one in the district. There negrees dident care a cent whether Blaine or Cleveland was elected so they can keep on making cotton and go to towu Saturday and to meeting Sunday .and go to che circus when it comes. I heard two ot them at lains are not known to enjoy the ' the depot talking iolitics, and one did Country lies west, of that town. It is black laud and it is pretty;! travaga tit, that may be sent them black with the negro, but thej j but if one of Lvnn's big shoe deal- white folks speckle it all' over and j ers didn't indulge in a real ghastly get about all the negro makes for smile when he received one order iuaibUA oacituui lira ,-vn,im,n wife of the red-headed and freckled Jefferson, 'had been dead 10 years before her husband was elected President. Bachel Donelson, the wife of the hotheaded, but courtly, Jackson, had-her dresses made to take her-piac as. mistress of the liXeentive Mansion, bat died three months beforaiOkl' Hickory was in-augurated-.fltirnfth Hoes, the con sort of the to xt Miss Nancy Van Buren,-!y in bert grave 17 - j-ears before Jackson mtd ; him his crac- cessor," atra ' President iiarrison died ia. office beiore his wife bad come td JF ashtngton. " f The Presidents wives now living are Mrs. Fbttr,! at Nashville; Mrs. John Tyler, at Richmond: Mrs. Grant, in New Jersey; Mrs. Hayes, in Fremeoc, . and Mrs Gar held,- in Cleveland.' Of these the widows- Mrs. Polk, Mtsh-Tyler, and Mrs. Garfield draw from the govern ment pensions of S5,000 a 'year. Mrs. Zach Taylor died in Louisi- iana during the same administra tion for which her husband was elected.' She opposed her hus band's being a candidate, and would bave nothing to do with the social life of the capital. Abigail Fillmore died -at Willards Hotel here abont oue month after her hus band finished his term. Tho hard work of tho White House hastened her decease. Mrs. Lincoln lay ill at the White House for a long time after her husband's death, and Andrew Johnson did much of his first executive, business at the Treasury Department. Mrs. Ijeti- tia Christian Tyler is the only President's wife who has died in the-Whito House. ; Martha Wash ington died two years after the death ot her husband at Mount Vernon, where Washington died in 179i. -She shut, berselt up in an attic chamber and cut a hole in the door for her cat. She saw no one and lived without a fire, and had she lived to-day she would have been deemed erazy. Abigail Ad ams7 ncaitn iauea nerairer sue nau lived four months in the White House. She left it and went back, to Massachusetts and died there aged 74. Dolly Madison was driv en irbni Washington . when the British burned the Capital in 1814, but the shock did not kill her. She returned here to live after her hus band's death, and she died at 77, in . 1840. Mrs. John Quincy Ad ams also lived to be 77 years of age. She was married at 22 and was born, educated and married in Loudon. John Qumcv Adams was engaged to her three years before he married her, and her . first tour after her wedding was ro Berlin, where Mr. Adams went to serve as Minister. ' It is a curious fact that the first three Presidents married widows. The stories of their courtships abound in romance. George Washington was a Colonel on his way to Williamsburg, the old capi tal of Virginia, when he was stop ped by an old planter friend and asked to stay over night. He replied his business wasnrgentand a stoppage of any kind was impos sible. His friend then cited the virtues and beauties of a beautiful widow of 26 years in such glowing terms that Colonel Washington de cided to take dinner and see the paragon'. He was so delighted that he stayed all night, and ou the way back became engaged to her. This was Mine. Cnstis, whose whoso maiden name was Martha Dandridge. Jefferson's wife had been a wid ow four years -y; hen she married him, and she was only 37 years old at that time; he was 10 years Jefferson's wife, and in that period had six children by him. She died ill 1782. It is said that she was much courted, and two of Jeffer son's rivals met on ber doorstep a day or two before the hitter's en- cacement. They heard sounds ot White Hour that h never went to bed without; taking a locket holding ber picture from his bosom and propping it op against bis Bi ble, so that it would be the first object upon which his eyes would rest in the morning. Andrew Jackson wa the second widower President. Jefferson came before him, and after him came Martin Van Bnren, John Tyler aud Che ter A. Arthur. The only bachelor -President, the country has had is James Buchan an, who respected the woman who jilted him when b was a young man too much to eve -'.marry an other. - - - Martin an Bureu was a green lawyer when he married his wife Hannah. She was of good family, and was a tew months, older than her husband. The two had gone to school together as children, arid their engagement was a long one. They were married a soon as Van fBnren's law 'practice would war- rani o- -Aueir niumeu, lur. ua.c that of the Jefferson), lasted only 10 years. When John Tyler married his first wife he was 23 years old, and she w as 22. lie had long been in lova with her and had courted her for five years. "Still," says his son General Tyler, "he never ventured to kiss her hand until three weeks before the marriage on his last vis it to her prior to the wedding. - John Tyler was at this time a ounc lawyer, and he had already served a term or two , in the Legis lature. He was ; Governor Tyler's son, and his wife was one ot the flowers ot t he r . F. s. be was COTTON PICKER. :o:- MASON'S PICKER A SUCCESS BEYOND DISPUTE. 1 WHAT EFFECT WILL IT HAVE! an Episcopalian and was a beauti- j fill woman. President Tyler s sec ond rife was a Catholic. Sheljved with President Tyler 17 year" and 1 had sons and daughters. President Fillmore was a wool carder and his wife was a school teaser when they fell in love. Both were poor, and Fillmore, af ter studying law aud moving to Buffalo, did not see his affianced wife for three years, because he was too poor to pay the fare of the 150 miles which lay between them. Mrs. Fillmore was two years older thaD her husband, and she was 28 years old when their marriage took "place. She died in 1853. Presi dent Fillmore -survived her 21 years, and married the woman who it is said became iusane before she died. Mrs. Fillmore was a preach er's daughter, and so were Abigail Adams and Mrs. Frank Pierce. She was the same age of Mrs Fillmore at the time of her marriage, and her groom was a member of Con gress when he married her. Mrs. Pierce was somewhat like Mrs. Hayes in the rigid piety with which she observed Sunday at the White House. It was her custom to ask the employes to go to church. She did not like society, and she made the Executive Mansion as lar as possible a christian home for her family. Mrs. Lincoln wore a wedding ring given her by the President, in which was engraved, "Love is eter nal." She was a Kentucky, girl, who had gone to live with a sister at Springfield, 111. Here she met Lincoln, then a young lawyer, and the two were married. and began life as boarders, paying for their accommodation $4 a week. Eliza McCardle was 17 years old when she married a young North Carolina tailor who had settled in Greenville, Tenn. His name was Andrew Johnson, and he was jnst of age. fho possessed more learn ing than her husband, and the two worked together, though she did not, as reported, teach him bis let ters. When, after many years he became President, she was too ii to do the honors of the White House, and her daughter took her place. j Mrs. Julia Dent." President Grant's wife, comes of an old fami ly, and her great-grand-father was the Surveyor-General of Maryland. General Grant met her at St. Lou is, and was engaged.-to her. four years before he irmrried her. Dur ing this time the Mexican war iu- The Mason Cotton Picker has been tested, and while it is not yet perfect its final success has been " settled beyond dispute. The prob lem of removing the cotton from the bolls has at last been success fully solved. The oply remaining difficulty lain the auxiliary con trivances for conveying! the J picked cotton into the bags. The difticul ty is this. The picking stems gath er the cotton ami deposit it so rap-, idly upon the elevators, that, iu heavily fruited cotton the capacity of the" elevators has hfen inade quate to remove it as fast as it comes iu. The result is that the elevators became gorged, and the revolving pickpf stems force some of the cotton already picked off the elevator and throw it on the ground. The small limit of space makes this a troublesome difficulty, but Mr. Mason is confident that he can overcome this one as soon as he can turn his attention to it. At the iuvitation of CoL IV C. More bead, the President of the Ntlon al Cotton Planters' Association a id Commissioner General of the World's Exposition, he will exhibit the machine to a selected commit - tee of the World's ExpositionThe machines will not he placed on the market until the next season. What effect this wonderful in vention will have on col ton plant ing is hard to estimate. It may bo ; sately predicted that it will so in crease tho production in a r me price will be greatly reduced. It will benefit most those countries where labor is highest ; bent it will give us a great advantage over tho cotton raisers of India and Egypt. Since the invention of the cultivator aud horse hoi?, the only impediment to. almost, illimitable production in the south-west has been the cost of gathering. In re moving this imiM'diment the cot ton picker will give them a tremen dous advantage over ns. If may so. cheapen there the cost of mak ing cotton that we cn no longer profitably compete with them ex cept on land which like theirs, will make a bale ier acre. Luis will force ns either to change our crops or chauge our system ol farming. Some of oar most thonghtiul men claim that either of these changes would eventuate in benefit to us. In tho mean time we may console ourselves with the fact that no great invention has ever proven a curse to any country which was de termined not to be crushed by it. When Kmvg Kalakana the dusky .sovereign of the Sandwich Islands, visited this -jty three years ago he was-- accompanied by Mr. C. B. Bishop, his Grand Chamberlain, Mr. .Bish jp, who is an American,' is now a i tout to return to bis na- that I cau hardly deem any notice; tive land. Where grand chamber-j wealth he has aequiried. 11 is story is lull of interest. He was a native of Sandy Hill, Washington county, but left that place in 1848 Edward Lee. Thev were young lawyers. 'and the vessel on M luchtliey were going to San Francisco put iu at Uonoluln, where they were introduced to the King. The latter was reorganizing Lis" 'government, and ierceivmg e two Americans were law- said, "well. I'm all right. I voted for Cleveland, and when I see him I is gwine to tell him so." The other said, "yon is, is you, and when you tell Mr. Cleveland .you voted " for him he . look at you and wink one eye and say "de h 1 vou sav." I heard a "good honest this fall, it was because he had suf ficient strength left. J. M. Far num is a colored preacher in Char lotte, N. C, and his fighting weighj when skirmishing with the legions of Satan is 410 pounds. He stands Ofeet 10 inches high without his lioots. and. taken collectively, would be a dangerous man to fall under at a skating rink. Some time ago a northern gentleman met Mr. Fnrnnni. in the south, and the latter ordered a pair of shoes made for him at the North, for which this gentleman took the measure. The order was given to Lynn's leading shoe manufacturer but-it was too much for him. and a pair of shoes were made from a special last ih Boston and sent the reverend gen tleman. The shoes are thirty -fives. The length from heel to toe is just twenty inches and the width of the ball, including a protuberance that Tut Persimmon. A UnoTiivmi'a Opivin Ob Tut Frvit Before ItJSipkns. . -The persimmon is a peculiar fruit, Its wava am not the ways of everybody, and it has a stub- promising notion as to the time it ought to be eaten. Therefore to A. - . -ll- ,1 tw.A eni ii nuccesniuiiy nuu iimo right smooth time of it, its will roast be respected, or a right roguh time will ensue. There is a persimmon tree down ou .the rait road, and a Boot on inn spci men of the genus homo was seen on' yesterday to spy the fruit with a longing, wishful eye. He hesita-. ted for a moment, and bystanders detected 'for a glance at his anxious deportment that he doted artlessly upon the-tantalizing fruit. He seized a limb, pulled off one of I tin n .in r, .1 a.l AvmAaf I . I' i n fT lAr. simmons, indited his teeth, and with a h-a-w-k, he let it drop. Another with like result, anothet inl another and lust men Ills tervened. and Rbe was 23 jearsMild mouTh asfiUmed a delightful pucker when her weeding took place. Mrs. Hayes is a Cbilicothe girl. Presi dent Hayes made love to her while she was going to school at Cincin nati, and married her alter ;i two years courtship. General Garfield was also associated with his wife mndx ih n anH soon found l hut . anrinc er scnooi nays, aim mere Jefferson was singing a love song j had been a long acquaintance be to the yonng widow while, she play- j fore their engagement iu I80G. ed au accompaniment on the harp, j Such is a brief history of theioves 'Bliey concluded not to press their j of the Presidents. As far as we suits, and left with their love un-jknow they seem to have been sin-told.,-- --. . . I gularly happy in their Jove affairs. Dolly Madison's parents were) t - V irginia Quakers, Guilford -oun- . A OuiqUB CODteSt . . ty, North Carolina, who freed ; their slaves and went to Phiadel- j )rangeburg, S. C, comes forward phia to live. Here, at l'.i, Dolly, a wiib thet most unique contest on demure Quakeresss, married John j record. Tired of base ball match Todd, a Quaker lawyer, who died es swimming contests, foot races, when she was 2M, and left her a;eJlting teLts, spelling bee, walk pretty widow. In less than a year j infr exhibitions and other displays she married again, and this tiinej0f i he sort, two enterprising and Mr. Madison, who was a member of j pi01is colored deacons are about to Congress. She was 37 year old , eUgage ri a praying contest. Bro wheu her husband became Pie-i- ther rtilis Martin iias long been " - . T and looked as if he was tryiug to whistle a onesided tune. He be came much alarmed, and a wag seeing and appreciating his fix, said; "Hello mister, are trying to whistlef He said; "Whistle, the devil! I spec I'm pisened," And seeing that he was the butt of con siderable amusement he vanished into the whereuess of the whither, fully impressed that lusciousness of the fruit was very mutch over rated rand that a 'solid'? South" and h "solid " persimmon were not first-rate for New En glanders. Wilson fMirror. ' Oh Homes Oar Castles. dent. Andrew Jackson's wifer first husband's uame was Robard, and she was only lrt years old when she was married a iealons uim. fellow. esteemed for his skill in supplicaiing the Grace, and Brother and bottom Throne of Jerry Means An interesting conversation with one of President Cleveland's sisters, Jlrs. Bacon, is. reported by our Toledo correspondent. It is evident that strong common wnw and sterling honesty and truth run through the Cleveland family. When asked if she should go to Washington to live, she said that she should object to bringing up has likewise been held in ' high re- f her family of three little girln in . vers of ability , he begged them to remaiu and assist him. and they consented. Mr. Iee was appoiuted (hief Jiuitioe of r.be Sandwich Islands, and Mr. Bishop was of fered and accepted the State Port folio. Lee died iu Washington sunn, veil's arn. niter havinsr be come celelirated as a jurist. Mr. loaed honest darkeys, 1 love them 1 important of-! for their dependence and their . Executive will be so exercised that! fices Asides that of Secretary of j trust iu us, 1 wonldent defraud mav hvt a corn, and may be natu ral, fs a trifling over seven aud a exceedingly ugly disposition. half inches. Some idea of the Rachel Robards separated Iroio "tout ensemble" may Ih gained i him, and got what fth Jackson drt-pv talkino- to his land ord I from the lai-t that a oasteiKian: and she mougnr was a nim ui- IK V . mm Q - - - v I ' about his crop and he said in sab-! copy of the sole of one of tlte shof;s vorce before she was married stance, i "well, boss I is come ' out j which a reporter earned in his i Jackson. She was about -.'.' ye ii. in, l I Vtiowa T .Tnnf. know how overcoat nocket. extended irom ine ioid al mis mnch I owes vou and 1 dont want t lowest neptn oi rue pocket n ne arm pit. lhrs copy was raken from a measurement of the loot less foot of the clergyman, and those who know pronounce it exact.- From the forward end of the sole a piece the size of a desert-plate could easily be cot. The heel, if of the proper material, would make a decidedly generous flapjack, aud the whole thing, in shape and size, Robards jspert for his ability in the same Washiiigioii. Of her sisters MrW. land of an jdisectiou. Au animated to know for I cant pay it, but lioss you knows how it is and you keeps de books and III work and work as long as de Lord gives me strength. Maybe he give poor nigger more rain next year.'" Well, I ilo love these old fash- ' Purge out the lurking distemper j that undermines health, and the i constitutional vigor will rernni. Those who suffer from au enfeebled and disordered state of the system, should take Ayer's Sar saparilla to cleanse the blood, aud restore vitality. the rights of all citizens, white or black, under the Constitution and the law will be preserved and pro tected, and all the advantages to which they are entitled by reasons of their citizeuship will be secured to them. There need U- .no fear that either the Democratic party or its newly elected administration i f...-. nhamhov im : nnA ont oi ins idsg uneK ior ; no Kives one iuv irreMinic iiuuiw . i i 1 1, mivt umuu .... ...... ........ . - t -j. . . amonr them that of Collector Gen-' amount of profit or gam. I had j sionr a tenis racket, oran elonga- ei the has arisen as to the relative merits of the two deacons, and the ques tion is to be sertled by a practical i test . A rlrs; of 1 2 has lced rais- te ! ed for ban who shall ahow the ears ; must iower, skill and endurance. time, and the cireum-! and the watch to be iu the pre- stances of their nniou created no j ence of of au iiuinen.se ca-Mjmeet - general remark over the country. Dg, The hostilities will begin Nevertheless, almost 40 years later, j promptly after the preliminary col dnringthe campaign for the Presi- Section is lifted. This noted ex hibi dencV, ths matter was drug up and ; tion of piety and hmg power will it was charged that Jackson had ', be witnessed by a throng of married ber before she was legally i negroes. ( divorced from Capt. Robards. The , ' j . story is too long to repeat here U Tbc - s uThis 18 euuuii" , 3l "e: it : the chair- il ? ' A' A-Ua liAa I fcbe was not. anxious tol,.; . i.,, u:v. , digimteiw" fiaia : are, uko luyHCif, ! .. .... . . . . .1 : . u : t perieeiiy coiitemeu mm our hiium , I . J L. .. ...... i . . 1. . . lioniw l lie, aim uuinj- in lire rir joyment of onr families."' -.This is the voice of a true American wife and mother. All honor-to its pos w.sor. "New York World."' Tbe Fruklin Foci sometimes says Mr. Donald Bain when be extends tbe death. ' m - I a 1 T 4. A A 1 A.t tx.. .. i 4V TTAnlnnlff An nnl AntfhA i al. He married Princess Ruth, ! rather overpay mm man uuaerpay j mi snin-iroin, wijuoiu , couie lu "B8,u ?r J ' the greatest men that ever lived .!.. linof Kamehame-1 him. But I have uo consideration try. Boston "Globe. said to a friend : "I assure youli- v . .i,. ... hiu ikj ...ou w, iv - "- I . ..... ' , J1 xl !. has, and at hex death became the liossessor of au immense proierty. Mr. Bishop is about to dispose of his vast estate, aud return to the scenes of his childhood. for these eduated upstarts who swell around and talk big about; Mr. Chas. H. Armfield, son of equality. Well, as to that I bavunt s Hon. R- F. Armfield, of States any more respect for lazy Huper-1 ville,' will be Governor Scales pri eillions white folks. Education I vate secretary. womd rather ne a GoorKecper in the house of my God than dwell in that palace in Washington.' An drew Jackson dearly loved but wife, land -there is a tradition at tbe in North Caroiica sat nubile be ! presided over the Senate Bart- lett Yancey. It was in the old Capitol, and Mr. Paul Cameron says this tradition abont it is tnxe.r - ' " Lrij.fa ill 1 1 j i lauaiiu , 1 1. 7.11,1 to BostOQ to be loaned in small sums, to young married mechanics under 2. who bad served an ap prenticeship, bad good character and could give bonds for the re payment of the roopey in annual installments. The changed con dition of mechanics, tbe decay of the apprentice system and other causes bave made the bequest of no value to those for whom it was intended under the rales Franklin laid down. The tund now amounts to more than f 290,000, and is in creasing at the rate of 110,000 a year.