$hn Ojhthm Record. H. A. LONDON, Jr., KMTOrt .M I'lCiil'ltlKTOll. BATES ADVERTISING. Out Miliar, one Insertion, One square, two Insertion, One sqaaro , one month, 1.M - l.SO i.M TERMS CF SUBSCRIPTION: on ce t, ens rem , Onseoiijr .tin muuilt Oaaropr, tltna muntUs . i.ipu VOL. II. PITTSBORO', CHATHAM CO., N. C, JUNE 3, 1880. NO. 38. For larraJteitlHumciit Mlwrsl coutratU will BMtlttess and FrafrK.tiotmt Vnvtln. E. C. HACKNEY, Attorney n,t Law, ash no no, x. c Practices in the Supreme oni Fe. J al Oomits ol the State, and tbo Bitii-i : Courts Chatham, Randolph anil Gii! ord , , T Associate Counsel -Col. Janus Graham. Col. Graham will regwlarly altetd l.e Buperior Courts of Chatham Oouui v. t" Attention Riven to Collect ii i i: all parts of the State. JOHM M. MORINC. Attorney at Law, lurlii8 lllr, f'lialhnni Co., N. C. ;a)M srmsn, Of Chatham. Ai.rnm A. KCBIKO, Of Orange MORINC & MORINC, Attorneys At w- DVRilA.1I, '. l". All business Intrusted to thera will receive prompt attention. H. A. LOIiQGN. Jr., Attorney at Law, PITTKUOKO, X. 4'. JKJ-Special Attention Paid to ColleeUna- W. E. A.NDERSO.t, freiid.iit. P. A. WILBT, r.aht.r CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK. OF KAI.EIGII, V. O. J. D. WILLIAMS & CO., Grocors, Commission Merchants and Produce Buyers, FAYETTEVILLE. N. O. Certain and Reliable! HOWARD ISFAM.TBLE WORLD BE- NOANi:i IlEMliDK FOtt WORMS la now for m'v by V. I.. liOndnn. in Fittsboro'. All thosiwlm a' annoyed wilh tonne Peata are adiso I to call nr. J get a package of this valuable remcdv This compound i no hum bng. but a (frnnd fincce". One agent wanted fa every town in the sttate. For particulars. avMie-M .n -lniiing 3 cent (tamp. Dr. J. If IIOWARP. Mt. Olive. Wavneconnty, N.C. 100 Buggies. Rockaways, Spring: Wagons, &c. made of tbo brat mattriais asd fully warrant ed, to be fold regardless of cost. Parties ih want will oonsnlt their own interest by exuni iuing our Bt'H'k and prices before buying, as we are determined to tell, and hsve cnt don onr price' so they cannot be met by any other bonne in the Htate. Also a full stock of. llaiul 3Iade IlarncNN REPAIRING done at bottom pheea, and in bent mnn r. Bend for price and cuts. A. A. McKETHAN' & SOS3. Fayetieville, N. C. NORTH CAROLINA STATE LIFE INSUEANCE CO., on?1 R.lliEIMl. . CAR. T. U. CAMERON, rrtrtiltnt. W. E. AN1EK!()N, Pee I'r-f. W. 11. HUKS, S ('y Tha only Home Life Insurance Co. In the State. All It fund loaned out AT IIO.Tl K, and anion? our own people. Wc do not rend North Carolina money abroad to build up other testes. It ! one of the moot successful com panies of Its age in the United State. Its ns net are amply sufficient. All Iowa paid promptly. Eight thousand dollars paid !n Hit list two year to families in Chatham. Itwll! cost a man aped thirty years only live tents a day to Insure for one thousand dollars. Arply for further information to H.A. LONDON, Jr., Gen. Afit. PITTSBOltO', N. C. READ THIS!&- NOKTIF CAROLINIANS AND OTHERS! THE CELEBRATED Liquid Enamel Paint i MANUFACTURED BY NEW JERSEY ENAMEL FAINT COOP ANT, Has been sold in your State EIGHT YEARS Thousands ef (alloni having been disposed o f. In so can has it failed to give satisfaction. The finest pnblio buildings in Baltimore are painted with this elegant Paint, among which are The Carrollton Hotel, The New American Office, The Armstrong, Cator & Co's Building, The Hurst, Fnrnell & Co's Building, The Trinity M. E. Church South. And HART PRIVATE RESIDENCES ill Orer tiie Country. Mlxod Ready for Use Any One Can Apply It: Sample cards by mail on application. C. P. KNIGHT, Solo General Agent ASD MANUFACTURER OF roofing Paper, Building Paper & Roofing Cement, No. 93 West Lombard Street, Baltimore, Md. WILL YOU SELLTHE FARM? Chapin's Farm Agency, 11ALEIOIE N. c. Dr. A. B. CHAPIN. Manager. NORTH OAROMXA URiNCH OF iE0KGE H. CHAPIN'S FARM AOF.NCV, UOflTON. MASS. Bpecial attention givon to the eale of Sorth Carolina Beal Eitato. No charge mado until a sale la effected. Ail property placed in onr bands for sale will bo advertiaed in the popu lar work, Tbo Booth Illustrated, free of ex pense. The Charleston News and Courier save: Everybody bas beard of Ueo. 11. Cbapiu's farm agency, and few aro unacquainted with the suooess which has attonded its operations.' The New England Farmer says: Oeo, H. Ohanin has advertised his farms to the amoum of 959,001) during tbo past year. Yt-i commend him to onr readers.' The Aiken, . O., Review says: 'No one has done more than Geo. 11. Cbapiu in the caue of Southern inmiRratiou. Our villtga io thronged with Northern people in search of Southern homes, tnd good snles are being made. The 'doath lilaetrhted' is doing a great work for us.' . The New York Tribune, the Boston Hera d. JonrnalTraveler, Olobe and. Ad vertiser i-peak in the highest terms of Chapin's Farm Agency. N. B. SMALL FARMS (partieularlj ) are wanted at once. Offloe Fisher Building, RALEIGH, S. C. I H. BRIGGS & SONS nniaas buildi.no, HALEIGH, 1ST. O. , DEALERS IN HARDWARE, WAGON AND RUM MATERIAL, SASH, DOORS, AND BLINDS, PAINTS, OILS. AND GLASS, LIME, CEMENT, AND PLASTER. Stoves, Nails and Iron, Children's Carriages., SPORTING GOODS AND FISHING TACKLE. Send for a Sample Card of "Town Country" HEADY MIXED I'AINTS. It is the Best. We offer Best (loods at Lowest Prices. SQUAKE DEALING. JACOB 8. ALLKS. FRED. A- WATSONf of Ch.th.aru. JACOB S. ALLEN &. GO., RALEIGH, N. O.. Building Contractors, ana mannfacturers of Sash, Doorsi Blinds, Mould ings. Brackets, and all kinds of Ornamental, Scroll and Turned Work ;Window and Door Frames made to Order. . " Qiv us a call before ordering. Bbopa located on LUrrington street, where it crosses the Raleigh and Gaston Rsilroad. Steamboat Notice! Tbo boats of the Expres a Steamboat Compa ny will run as follows from the first of October until farther notice: Steamer D. MURCHISON, Capt. Alonsa Gar rison, will leave Fajetteville erery Tuesday and Pridav at 8 o'clock A. M., and Wilming ton every Wednesday andSatuiilay at ii o'clock P. M. Btoamer WAVE, Cant. W. A. Robeeon, will leave Fajetteville on Mondays and Thnrsdayi at 8 o'eioeV A. M. , and Wilmington on Tue. davs and Fr.dava at 1 o'clock P.M., connecting with the Western Riilroad at FayettaTUle om Wsdnesdays and 3tnr;',ajs. J. JD. XT1LLIAMHA CO. Agents at Fa jetUville, N. 0. 1Ove of Home. Blinding on tlio threshold, with thu,vakening heart and mind, Standing on tlm thicehold, wilh hr childhood lelt behind; The wointtu softness blending wih the look sweet surprise For lilu and nil itH mnrvels tit it lllit tlin clear blue eye. Standing on tho threshold, with liM loot and liailcm bund, As the yoiint: kniglit by his urmor in a r.iiiiHtei nnvc m;!lit stiind; The lresh red lip just tuucUing youth's ruddy rapturous wine, Tlio nvr heart nil brnv.t, pure bopo oh happy child of mine ! I could guaid the helpless inftt'.it that nestled in my iirniB; I coiiH snvo thu prnttlei'a goldon head Iron. pretty bu'iy Imris I could brilr-en childhood's gladness, ai eoinfiirl riii'jluiod's t!;in. But. I ciimiot er-.j tlm threshold with the 6tq of riper J.ur.. For hopes, and Joys, and miiiden dreams an wiftins; lor her there, flliero i,ir:iicxl fnneiis hud and bloom : Apiil's polon nir; and pn"ionBl' love, and ptiHsioniito griel, at e pis.sior.ute gUdnet li" Amoni; tlx crimson (low. rs thut spring u. youth goe9 fluttuiing by. Ah! on those rosy piithwnys is no place hn if .ilicieil leet, My til" oil oye-a hiivo naught of strengtl" uil. ti.'i vid glow to meet; My voice is nil too sad to nound amid th joyous notes Ot the music t iiKt through chuniied nir I'.n opening fiihond flouts. Yet thorns nmid the lenves may lurk, ai.i. thundereloiids mny lower, md rienlh, or change, or l'ilneiood bliyht tin inniino in thy bower; Mny od nveit tho ived, my child; but, oh' hould tempest coins, LVnimiher, y the tluebliold waits the pntien love ot home ! TABERNACLE SERMONS. Dlsroura of Hn. T. DrU'lt Tnlmnae. Mlnlnkea About IheMomh Corrected. "Glvn me a h!ettsliift; for tbou bast Klvcn roe a Fnuth land; gy uxo also springs of water. 4UUKCS, I., 13. Caleb's daughter had been married to General Oihuiel, and she had received from her father as a wedding gift a (arm at the south, in a sunshiny and warm region. 8he asked the farther gift of somesprirgi of water near by so that ker farm might be properly irrigated, ihe water brought down through tun nels and aquedncts. "Give me a bless ing, for Thou hast given mo a sonth land, find it is a magnificent reach of country; but it especially needs to be irrigated from the fountains of divine mercy, and this nation ought to offer the prayer most devoutly, ''Give me a blessing; for Thou hast given us a south land; give us also springs of water." To meet engagements in nine of tbe southern states, and to catch a glimpse of the southern spring time, and to soe how these regions aro recovering from the desolations of war, I started a few weeks ago southward, equipped with my mind full of questions, and hungry for information on all social and political, moral and religious subjects. Among other things, I had a grae Georgia to visit the grave of my uncle, Rsv. Dr. Samuel K. Talmage, for 20 yetrs the president of Oglethorpe university. Alter walking among the ruins of that institution, from which many men went forth to bless the earth, which institu tion wan slain by the war, I went to see his last resting place. When the war opened his heart broke, and he lay down to rest near the scene of his erai nent usefulness, his grave oovered with a monument adorned by his own name, and the suggestive scripture possae, "How beautiful upon the m3untuius are ihe feet of him that bringeth geod ti.Jin.gs, thut publisheth peace." He wus one of those contemporary ministers of tbe south, who, alter eloquent words for God, and earnest service, are resting from their labors: Dr. James H. Thorn well his biography by Dr. Palmer a holy enchantment and Dr. Smythe, and Dr. Donoan, and Dr. Pearco, and many others. Bat my mission was not with the dead, bnt with the living. I wont southward with no partisan predilections; I had no prejudices, I was resolved on coming back to report what I saw, whether it might meet with general favor or the condemnation of one or both sections. I bad no politioal record to guard or to look after, since most of my ministry has been passed since the war closed. My admiration for the democratio and republican parties as mere parties is so small that it would take McAllister's most powerful magnifying gla-s to see anything. American politics are rotten, and that party steals the most which has the most chance! At tho south all the doors of information seemed to be open. I talked with high and low, with gover nors of states aud water-carriers, law yers, clergymen, doctors, judges of courts, and I found that there had been a persistent and, in some cases, most omtrageous misrepresentation of tho feeling at the sonth by some correspond ents of some of onr northern secular and religious newspapers, and by overbear ing and dishonest men who, going from the north to the south, behaved third in a way that excited no friendliness. I found out that if a man behaves well at the south, he will be treated well. There is no more need of a severe govern mental espoinnge in Charleston and At lanta and Augtinta than in New York and Brooklyn. The feeling ut tho south to-day has been so misrepresented that I shall devote this morning's sermon to the carrection of the misapprehensions, and to overthrow, so fnr as I mny be able, some of tho slanlers. The first misreprpsentation in regard to tho south I wish to correct is that the southern people want to get back aud havo re-instated slavery. Why, nil tlia people are giad to get rid of it. The planters told me that they could cultivate their land now at less expense unlor the new system of labor than uuder the old. A planter who had a hundred and twenty slaves before the war said that there was so much care necessary iu looking after so many slaves and iu looking after the aged who could not woik, and helpless childhood, that thtro was constant anx ii'ty and van.t expense and exbuuitiou. Now they have nothing to do but pay the wnges when they aro due, end each family looks after its own invalids aud minors. Submit to tbe ballot-box of southern people today the question, "Shall negro rlavery bo re instated?" and all the wards, aud all tue cities, ai'd all the counties, aud all the states would give a thundering negative. They fought for the institution eighteen years ago, but uow they congratulate themselves at tho overthrow of the institution. O jd be thanked thut north aud south at last wo have one seutiment on that snbject, and those northern politicians who keep the subject of Amerienu slavery rolling on and rolling on aro doing a thing as useless and inapt as it would be to make the Dorr rebellion of Rhode Island, or Aaron Burr's attempt at the overthrow of the United States government a test for our fall ejections. Tho subject of American slavery is dead and damned. I said to the planters: "How do thesn men work now uuder tho now system?" aud they replied: "They work well; we have no trouble; there was a good deal of trouble just after the war closed, and a demoralization and disorganization conseqneut npon a change of things, but now they work most admirably, and they work far better than the northern men who come here, because the climate seems better adopted to the c ilored peo ple, who will on a summer day, at their nooning, go out and lid ilown to eiijoy the sun." My friends, all this talk about the dragging of rivers and the lakes of the south to haul ashore negroob murdered and flung in, "bile it may be bolieved by many at the north, is a false hood so absurd it is hardly fit to men t'on in a religions assemblage. The white people of the south feel their de pendence on tho dark people for the culture of their lands; the dark people feel their dependence ou the white peo ple for tho payment of their wages. From what I have seen of the oppression of female clerks iu soma of the dry goods stores of the north, and from what I have seen of the oppression of some yonng men at the north ou tmnll salaries, which they must take tr get nothing at all, I have come to the con clusion that there are more considera tion and sympathy for colored labor at tho south to-day than there are consid eration and sympathy for somo of the employes in somo of the dry goods stores on Fulton avenue, Brooklyn; Broadway, New York; Washington street, Boston; Chestnut street, Phila delphia. In all the land and in all the earth there are tyranieal employers, and their maltreatment of Fubordiniite-s, white or black, deserves execration. But in the work of reformation let us begin at home. Another impression in regard to the sonth that I wish to correct h, that tht-y are antagonistic to having northerners come down there and settle. Tho whole impression given here at tbe north has been that if not therners go down south they are knkluxcd, kept out of society, or gettiug into society thrown out again, and in every way made uuoomfortable. From the states where I visited the cry comes, and I bring it to-day to their name, "Send down your capitalists tend down your northern farming ma chines, come and buy onr plantations, open stores, buiU cotton factories aud rice mills come by the hundreds, liy the thousands, by tbemillionti, and come right away." I declare here that that is the sentiment of the south. Of course there is no more admiration at tho sonth for northern fools aud northeru brag garts than there is hero. If a mau going south shall put his valise at tho depot, then go up ou tho neurest plantation and say, by his mauner or by words: "We have come down here to show you southern people how to farm, wo whip ped you iu tbe war, now we are going to whip yon in agriculture; lam from Bos ton, I am; that's the 'hub'; how mnehyou look like a man I shot at SjiHIi moun tain; I believe it was yonr brother; I marched right through here iu tLi Fourteenth regiment of volunteers, I killed and quartered a heifer on your stoop; what a poor, miserable raoe of people you southerners are, didn't we give it to you? hal hal" such a man as that, to say the least, will not make a favorable impressiou! And he will not be very soon elected as elder of one of their churches, and if ho should open a ptore he would not get many customers, and if such a man as that should get a free and rapid ride cn that part of a fenre which is most easily rcmovod, and be set down without much refereueo to the desirability of (be landing-place, you and I would not bo protestonts. If a moral mm go south, and he exercises just ordinary common sense, he will be welcome, he will be made at home, and, coming from Brooklyn, he will be just as well treated as though he came from Mobile. A southern gent leman (in the audience) noc's his head, as much as to fay, "That's 60." I could give many illustrations. I give ono. There went from this oburch, seven or eight years ago, a member to reside in Charleston, S. C. Ho took no fortune. By mer cantile assidu;ty he toiled on up. Was he received well? Was ho treated well? Judge for yourselves, when I tell you a few days ago, when his lifeless body was carried into tho Episcopal church of Charleston, where he was a vestryman, the momhers of the board of trade aisem bled in tbe church, the children aud tha patrons of the orphan asvlum of which ho was a director, and a great throng of the best citizens, amid a wealth of floral and musical tribute that the Charleston CowretT doFc-.ibes as making an occasion almost unparalleled in tbo history of private obsequies. Why, this side of heaven there is not a more hospitable people than the people of tbe south, and I bring you from those states which I had tho pleasure of visiting, I bring yon to-day an invitation of immigration tba way. The sonth is to rival the west as an opening field for American enter prise. Horace Greeley's advice of "go west" is to havo its n Idenda in "go south." The first avalanche of popula tion that way will make their for tunes It is a national absurdity that such a large proportion of tho cotton of the south, at great expense, should be sent north in order to be transferred into use ful fabrics. The few factories at tbe south are the pioncersof innumerable spindles which are soon to begin the hum of the grand march on tke bunksof theHavannah and the App.daehicola and tbe Tombig bee. There is Georgia, with i ts C8.000 square miles; there is Aiubarua with its 50, 722 square miles; there is South Carolina with its 34,000 square miles; there is North Carolina with its 50,704 square miles, anil other states, not ten per cent, of their ros:mrces yet devel oped. When will our over-crowded population in these northern cities take the wings of the morning and fly to those regions where they may have room to turn around, and plenty of place to take a full breath aud expand, and be masters of their own cornfields, their own rice swamps, their own cotton plantations, their own lumber forests? Liud to bo had there from 81 to $20 tin acre. Travel from here to that region $15, if you are Dot too particular about the way you go. Afraid of tbe heat ? Why, the thermometer in New York every summer, rises to a higher point than in Georgia or North Carolina, al though in those states the heat is more protracted. Afraid of tbe fever ? The death-rate in Georgia just equals tho dtath-rate iu Michigan. The death-rate in Georgia, according to tbe nnmber of the population, is less ihan tho doath rate in Connecticut oud Maine. Giiug either west or south you will probably have one acclimating attack. It will ouly be a different stylo of shake I There is no nioro need that England, Ireland and Scotland want room or wont bread. I re joice that there is such a vast population cimiug from foreign louds here 21,Cti8 people arriving in New York in one month, to make their residi-nce in this country. And, let mo tell you, many of them tbo very best peoplo of Europe. What do I mean by "bent ?" I mean industrious and moral. Five thousand peoplo last Tuesday in and aronud Castle Garden waiting for transportation. While yon put on extra trains to carry them west over the Pennsylvania and the Erie and tho New York Central, put on extra trains on tbe Baltimore and Ohio, and all tho great routei to Charleston and Atlanta and Chattanooga, ti.r.t they may go sonth. Vast opportunities opening. Stop cursing tho sonth, aud stop lying about the sonth, and go south and test the cordiality of their welcome, and their reaonrces of mine and plantation and forest. Why, my friends, that is the way this national difficulty is to be settled. Tens of thousands of young men from the north, moral young men, intelligent yonng men from the north, are to go south and make their resi-de-neo tber , an t they will invito their (laughters of the south to help them build houses amid the magnolias and orange groves, aud their children will bo half north and half south, half S Mith C irolina and half Vermont, half Georgia aud half New York, and then to divide tho country you will havo to divide the chil.lri n with eome such sword as Solo mon sarcastically proposed for the di-v'-iou of a contested child, and the northern father will say to the fouthern mother: "Como, my dear, let ns put our peditical fend to sleep in this cradle I" Tho statement so long rampant at the north that southern pe.iple do not waut ni.irnl and in dnetrions people to eome frontiie north to the sonth I brand that statement as a falnehool, gotten up aud kept up for base political pnrposesi Another wrong impression in regard to the south thst 1 want to correct is, that the people there are antagonistic to tbe United Htatesgovernmeut. Those people submitted to tho settlement of the sword certain questions, and now they aro submissive to the decision. There is no fight in them. We talk abo.it the fire-eaters of the south. If they cat fire, they have a private platter of coals in a private room. I sat at many of their tables, and I saw no such style of diet. Neither could I find a spoon or a forK or a knife that seemod to have been used in eating fire. Why, sirs, they are the most placid peoplo you ever saw. Some of them, their prop erty all gone, at forty or sixty years of go, starting life with oue arm and one foot end oue eye, the missing members RKcrificrd in battle. It is simply miracu lous, and tbe work of the Lord Al mighty, that those people ore as amiable and r.s checr'ul as they are, and it is dastardly tuesn in us to keep spe aking of them as waspish, and nerid and astu riue, and malevolent. I have traveled as n-ucb as most people Lave iu this and other lands, and 1 um yet to fiud a more affable, more delicately sympa thetic, more whole son'ed peoplo than the people of the south. The people of the south are loyal to-day, aud if a for -eign foe should try to set its foot on this country by way of intimidation or conquest. I believe the forces of M2 Clellun and Beauregard, Bragg nud Geary, Grant and Lee, would come sbonhl'T to shoulder, the blue aud the gray, aud the gims of Forts Hamilton and Pickens ond Sumter would join iu ono great chorus of thuuder Riid flume. The fact it that iu this country wo have had a big family fight, and if a neigh bor should eome iu aud try to interfere, you know what the result would be. Husband and wife in enntest, the ono with a cane oud the other with a broom sticklet an iutermeddler conio in and he gets all the advantage of both cane and braomstiek. I have sometimes thought that the north and south will never understand each other until tbe approach of a common enemy makes a common cause. God forbid that that day should ctmt, Bnt if foreign despot isms think there is in onr government no cohesion, no centripetal f irce, they have only to test it. Iustcad of the thirteen original colonic?, we own from ccean to oceniu; but that is no sign of lack of governmental grip. By steam and electricity the government is uuder more speedy ond easy control now than it was at tbe start. At the foundation of the government it took ou ofn )iul document two weeks to cross the conn try; now it takes two minutes. San Francises and Galveston and D.s Moinei are to-day nearer Washington than Richmond was then. There never has been a day of more thorough con solidation and unity tbnn now. Would thut the people nil appreciated it. You see tho whole impression of my soath- ru journey wan one of c ucanragemeut. Tbo great mosses of the people are right. If half a dozen politicians at tl e north and half a dozen politic!ans at tho south would only consent to die, there would be no more Fictional acrimony. Yon see it is a mere case for under takers! If they will bury out of sight these few demagogues wo will pay all the expeures of catafalque and epitaph, and of a brass baud to play tbe "Rogue's March 1" la time, under Gjd, this will all bo settled. Tbe generation that follows ns will not share in the antipa thies and the bellicose spirit of their ancestors, and they will stand iu amaze ment at the state of things which made tbe national cemeteries at Murfreesboro and Gettysburg and Richmond an awful possibility. Week boforo last I took a carriage aad wound up Lookout mountain. Up, up, up! Standing there on tho tip-top rock, I saw five states of tho Union. Scenes stnpendons aud overwhelming ! Oue almost is disposed to take off his bat in the presence of v. hat seems to be the grandest prospect of this continent. There is Missionary Ridge, the beach against which the billows of Federal aud Confederate conrege surged snd broke. There are the Blue mountains of North and South Carolina. With strain of vision, there is Ken'u"ky, there is Virgiuis. At our feet Cbatta nooga and Chickamaugn, tbe pronun ciation of which proper names will thrill ages to eome with thoughts of valor and desperation and ogony. Lniliinrj each way and any way from tho top of that mountain, earthworks, earth nrks the beautiful Tennessee winding through tho valley, making letter "S" after let ter "S," as if that le'tter stood for shame, that brothers should have goue iuto massacre with e.ch other, while God aud nations looked ou. I have stood ou M'puiit Washington, and em the Siorra NVva lns, and on tbe Alps, but I never saw fo far as from Lookout mountain. Why, sirs, I looked back seventeen years, and I saw rolling up the nide of that mountain the smoke of Hooker's storming party, while tho foundations ef eternal rock quaked with tbe cannonade. Four years of interne cine strife seemed to come back, and without any chronological order 1 saw the events: Norfolk navy-yard on tire, Fort Sumter ou fire, Charleston ou fire, Chamberabnrg out! re, Columbia, S imh Ctroliua, on flro. IVchmoud on fire. And I saw Edswortu full, and Lyon fall, fiud MePbersou fall, and Bishop Polk fall, snd Stonewall Jackson fall. And I saw hundreds of gravo-trenches afterwards cut into two great gashes across the land, the one for the dead men of tbo north, the other for Ihe dead men of the south. And my ear as well as my eye was quickened, and I he ard the tramp, tramp of enlisting armies, aud I heard the explosion of mines and cnupowder mogizines. and the crash of fortification walls, and the "swamp an gel," and the groan of dying Hosts ren ins across the pu'seless heart of other dying hosts; and I saw etill further ont, and I saw on the banks of the 1'enoD scot, oud the Oregon, and the Ohio, and tbe Hudson, aud the Roanoke, and the Yazoo, and tbo Alabama, widowbooil, andorphauage aud childlessness some exhausted in grief and others stark mad, and 1 said: "Enough, enough hove I seen into tbe past from the top of Lookout r. ountttiu. Ob ! Goel, show ine tbe future." And stauding there, it was reveale d to me. Aid I looked out, sml I saw great populations from the north moving fonth, and groat popula tions from the south moving north, and I found that their footsteps obliterated the Ij'iof-raarks of tlio war-chargers. And I saw the angel or the Lord ol Hosts standing in the national cemete ries, trumpet in hand, as much ns to sav. "I will wake these soldiers from their long encampme'ut." Aud I looked, and I saw such snowy harvests of cot ton. and such eolden harvests of corn as I never imagined; and I found that tbe earthworks wire down, and tlie gun carriages down, and the war-barracks were, all down; anl I saw the rivers windiug through tbe valley, making letter "A" after letter "S" no more "S" for shame, bnt S" for salvation. And as I sow that all the weipons of war wire turned into agricultural im plements. I was alarmed, ODd I said, "Is this safe ?" And standing there on the tip-top rock of Lookout mountain, I was so near Heaven that I heard two voices which somo way slipped from tbe gate, and they sang. "N-ition shall not. lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more." And I recognized the two vr ices. They were the voices of two Christian soldiers who fell at Shilib the f.ne t "leral, the other a Cjnfe.ierttn. A ' y ware brothers I ITEMS OF LMEEEST. ( I.iiii se .-oiiili v srt three ei nls ad;iy, m l win n the war is over very few ol 'hi in invent their savings in twenty-five thousand eUiiiars' worth of government )."utU. XvrrUtvtrn Herald. ror u. li.tn foot U'alkev has not had liis h'et eovered. He was diiplo.w l us :i hum ht.nd near L'oliitiiii.i.-, (':!.. nitii'iui'li in his 'Jtith year. On a reei-m Sunday hi' apparently ilii il. an I at hi? liiei iMi. when tiirsons wi re bentiin.: over his ei Hi u, he sat up and asked why he was tiiUs lieated. il. sliil lives. The "dark days" in Atii'ina com mtmvd at ith.iul 10 A. M.. May I'd. HSU, ami i-oTiiiiiiied until til'- middle o! the .;i"l day. T!i" Art- .ti i Min r s:is that a woman living on th" i.tilie I'oloia :o sa- twi nl y-e ii! lit yi ais of aue a! that linn" aa.l remembers ihe eiremtistaiiee. She is now ICS years ol inc. The dni'k-ties'- ereaid ':n at eonsti'i nai ion anions her pivpie, tin Spanish "in i I he Indians. I'.,e S; aaia'. d hit; ii d I le ii" sai ills all 1 '!: Indians tool: 'o I. i-ting. It is a curious fact brought out in the statistics of insurance experts that in all of tlii1 preat eities ot the civilized world the (ieaih rale is decreasing. The ieienee of right living causes an in-erras- d longevity. From 1873 to 1878 the devrrns" in the London death rate, as eonipareil wilh the preceding six year.-, w as lour per cent. Since IhU new translations of the Hilih" have I oen mad" in 23B luneuages. i'ae British and Foreign Bible society bas iu1ms!ii'iI IS of these versions; the Anipi iear. Bible such ty, 41 ; the National Bible soeii-tyof Scotland. 5; the Bible Translation society. 14; the society for Promoting Chii-uati Knowledge, 17; he Trinitarian Bible society, 3; the Xi therlands Bible society, 11; the so cieties of Germany, 0; of Switzerland, i; ami of Denmark, Sweden and Nor way, fi. Cyi lones still race in the West, ana no v.-L'ion can feel sate from their rav I'lTcs. In Iiiiuois and Mississippi ths destruction of life and the wasting of crops thai promised to come to maturity have been great, and man has been able to do nothing in his defense. Wears yet in the infancy ef science, but when ,-eieiiee shall have reached manhood i lu re it no siy ins that means will not he found to break these diabolical mael stroms if tbe nir, whose mission is to torlure, wound Mid slay. Thus man in lime will leurn to protect himself per iretiy from the attac ks of nature. His prosress in thatresueet will co-ordinate i.i his progress in protecting himself lii ui the outrages of bis leliow man. The San Francisco Chronicle has as certained that Chinamen dec'ine to be ci in." naturalized because the Chinese P"iial code declares that all persons who renounce their country and allegiance shall be beheaded. Tin; properly of eil such criminals is to be confiscated, and their wives and children distributed as slaves to the great oftleers of state.' Their parents, grandparents, brothers nnd grandchildren, whether habitually living with them under the same roof or not, are to be banished to the distance of 2,'Hiii leagues. All who cone;eal or connive at the crime are to be strangled. Those w lio inform against the criminals me rewarded with the whole of their property. i