Ji mmml r IPPIPP tl)t(!DIDNortI)0lote SALISBURY, FKIOAY, APRIL t, MM FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT. It Is not to certain that this amendment will speedily become a part of the Constitu tion. The election recently held in Indiana, to flit the vacancies in the legislature caused by the resignation of the Demoeratifl mem bers, ahow that the people of that 8tata are oppoeed to colored auffrage, in thair own State At least. And so, we a pprahend, it will probably be in other States. If the Northern States choose to defeat the amend ment let them do so, but the interest f the people of the South lies in supporting its rat -ideation. Colored suffrage baa been forced upon ct and it ia oar duty to make the best we Can of the situation. It ia useless to make the colored people oar enemies and keep them arrayed against nt aa a race. It Is not only useless it is wrong. Of 'the results of the rejection of thia amend ment we will only spank of one at this time. If the colored people are to hare the right to vote and hold office only in the Southern States it requires but little sagacity to as that the negroes of the other States will flock hither by the thousand. The colored popu lation of Kentucky and Missouri will soon poor down into Tennessee, Arkansas, Ala- . ud otbar malm more Northern States. Oa the other if this amendment is adopted, end. tbe nsgrass re granted equal privileges iu all the State,. it will have some tendency, sooner to later, to diffuse this population over the whole coun try. It is the probability of this that will prevent the ratjfleation of the amendment by the Northern States, if it la net ratified by UN- We leant from the Standard that at Craven Superior Court, last week, Hie Honor, Judge Thomas decided the second proviso of section 7 of the new stay law Is unconstitutional. The proviso referred to U that which provides that "all issues of law or feet which have been joined in pursuance of laws and ordinances hereto fore passed and known as 'Stay Laws hall be considered as baring been illegal ly joined, and all anch actions shall be placed upon the appearance docket of Spring term, 1869," etc. The ground ta ken by Judge Thomas is that if the Leg islature can postpone eases for one term it can postpone them indefinitely, which seems to us to be well taken. We also learn that at Iredell Superior Court, tbla week, His Honor, Judge Mitchel, disregarded the Stay Lav in toto, holding it to be unconstitutional. We hare net learned the grounds upon which Judge Mitchel made this decision, and consequently will not criticise it. THE STAT LAW DECIDED CONSTITUTIONAL. Last week we had a brief article on this abject in which we took the ground that io k. ail eases in which process was served by pub lication the notice must state distinctly the fists and place of filing the complaint. This opinion was based mainly upon the provis ions of section 85 of oar Code, and section 135 of the New York Code, and the ruling in the ease of Titus vs. Belyea. That this opinion was correct in a class of eases there can, we think, be no doubt. Our esteemed correspondent, "An Enquirer," who is an able and accurate lawyer and whose opinions weigh very greatly with us on all such ques t ions, thinks there is a distinction to be made between ordinary cases of civil action and eases of attachment, and his reasoning is plausible. As we have been absent for sev eral days we have no time to examine furth er into the subject in time for this week's paper. Next week we will give the result of the most thorough investigation which we may be able to make. We are inclined to think that our comspondent is correct in re lation to eases of attachment before a Justice of the Peace, if not in other cases of attach ment, and that la such eases it is not material that the time and place of filing the com plaint be stated in the published notice. We are glad that our correspondent .has instituted the enquiry, as it is important that this question be settled at the earliest possi ble tune. purity. While we had the Institution of slavery, immigrants shunned as. They settled: in the Northern and Western States, and their offspring by American intermarriages are remarkable more for vigor and robust, practical sense than for refinement. They brought not only new blood but fresh energy and progresssive ideas along with tbem. The consequence along with them. The consequence is that the North and West are filled with Urn, working people, who discard sub tleties and abstractions and pursue the re alities oi life. We want new political ideas, motion, progresslveness. We will nerer acquire them so long as we stay shot up in our shells, recoiling from what we regard a contact with the vulirar world. It is related of Lord Orf r I, a celebrat ed sporting nobelman oi England, that he had a very pure breed grayhouuds, that made bim the envy of the sport ing world. They bad bred in until they reached the perfection of delicacy, refinement and symmetry, but it became apparent, at length, to bis naWrienced eve. that tbev bad been brought to too fine a strain, and had lost iu rigor and endurance, what they bad gained in re finement. Ho cast about for a corrective and his audacity of invention at length supplied one that seemed like sacrilege and that brought down upon him the jeers of the whole sporting fraternity. He determined, horrible to relate, to cross his stoca with a Dure bull dog oi the rattail . . . - . . . i Mtnu rrwarn i we Ttrrwr-t ered and the consequence was that in a few feneration! the product was a splen did ammal. with all the external marks ol of the present pray hound, and yet with the strength and endurance of the baser breed. To this day this breed of gray- hounds is the moat notable in England. ' Liko the triant of old we must touch the earth oecaesionally if we would be re freshed and re-invigorated. We in Vir ginia must learn this lesson, and pet it in practice. Immigration will give us new blood, new ideas and new pursuits. The first generation oi Virginia that shall spring up under this new order of things win wrench a race of men and women as are not now known. They will exhibit i combination of refinement and strength There will be enough of the speculative conjoined with tbe practical to make them useful men and women, while, what is called bv a brilliant writer "tbe renins of the place" will impart to them the better characteristics of tbe Virginia people, which in plain language means that the soil, the air, the climate, the scenery . the associations, the traditions and the thousands indefinable infinen over and around them will mould and stomp their eharacters.-OT.iZMA, Whig. on that er tbe judgment can be avoided account f , I hope yon can see a reason for the die Unction I am trying to make. An EhqVIREK. thrice I'"' 1 1 CORRESPONDENCE. cide that iudexnents i 1 1 iBsssssssssa would beyvoid. VIRGINIA. Gov. Wells has been removed from his of fice by Gen. Stoneman. Tbe event creates considerable rejoicing Virginia, and will add thousands to the friends of (Jen. Grant. Tbe lata Governor has also been arrested for fel ony iu purloiuiug a letter from the mail lJ''"nt" This, it is thought, disposes of what little chance he had of being elected Governor by the people. Tbe Walker tieket is rapidly gaining ground, and will erentaaHy be sup ported by all classes of Conservatives. Wa, rv ft . . . r. a. since writing tne above we see that the CM e against Wells has been dismiss ed, bnt under such circumstances that it can not be regarded as an acquittal. The prose cutors were northern men and republicans. For the Old North State Mr. Editor : I see yon make a point of law, against tbe form of notices published for non-residents, (and with two excep tions which you cite and approve.) de- by default, in all Oik; ve come under your eye, Now if this is so, it is important -to be known, and, therefore, with the vtew to call for further examina- UBLICATrOrTT nonce, sent you in an attachment be fore a Justice ot the 1'eace, was used. The first question is : When does the Justice or Court acquire jurisdiction See. 90, of Code answers: "From the time of the service of the summons in civ il actions, or the allowance of a provisional the Court is deemed to have ac quired jurisdiction." A warrant of attachment issued upon proper affidavit filed in such a provisional reined v. o it has been adjudicated iu New York. "The Court acquires jurisdic tion from the time of the allowance of the attachment'" Burkbardt vs Sanford, How, 389. Next question is there any difference in the mode and form of publication, in case of attachments and the ordinary cases of civil actioi) in the Superior Court, wnere one or more ot the dciciidauta are non-residents 1 In the latter the law is found in see tions 04 ana d ot our code, and require puDiicatiqu tor at least sue weeks "in one or two p ipers designated as most likely to give notice to the person served." Section 198 which provides for publi cation when a warrant of attachment has issued, reads as follows : "The plaintiff obtaining a warrant ot attachment shall within the time above prescribed cause publication to be made at least once a week for four successive weeks in some newspaper published in tbe county in which the warrant is returnable, or, " (within the judicial district, C. "Said publication shall state the names of the parties, the amount, and in a brief way the nature, of the demand, the time and place to which the warrant is return able, and shall require tbe defendant to appear then and there to answer the com- OUT OF TOUR SHELLS. We of the South have lived in a little world of our own. Onr social intercourse oar business and onr intermarriages have been chilly among ourselves. This mode of life has left ite traces upon onr habits, manners, opinions and character. It baa imparted to as aa old-fashioned tenacity of opinion, a sturdy if not morose sim plicity of character, and quite a number prejudices, crotchets and peculiarities. We have stood still while all the world aroud ns has been in motion, and all of our energy has been expended in the en deavor to stand still, in resisting the pop ular tides and currents that have struck ns only to be diverted. Such a manner of life developes high traits of individual character, and brings out many stern but useless virtues. The feet is that we re ambh) blood stock that have been bred in an til they have reached too lefiaed slain, losing ia strength while they gained in Por tbe Old North State CoLrii bus, Texab, March 17, '69. Editor Old North State i Bin : There has been handed me to answer a great ninny letters of enquiry re lative to Texas, lieyond a few observations I beg leave to recommend all who wish full information upon Texas on all points, to purchase the " Texas Almanae, published by W. flc D. Richardson, Galveston. Tbe cost with a map will be $1, and without it 50 cts postage 4 eta. I will say 10 one will regret iu Enclosing the amount to them by mail will get tbe book. As to the class of men who will do well, it must be men who have industry and are accustomed to werk, or have means to employ labor; all such in my opinion will do much better in Texas than in any State, North or South and I have been in in every State of the United S'alea. Me chanics of all kinds will do well and in fact, any kind of trade pays well. I would sy there is plenty of land for sale or rent on any terms or time. Wild lands range (mm 12 J cts. to 9 100 j improved lands from 93 to 810; In share of crops one half is given, teams, tools and provis ions found. Beef ia worth one cent tier pound ; milch cows, five cents pork, five cents -stock cattle, two ccntastoc uor- ww, tllS tin-r saddle or harness, from 830 to 160. tbe same for mules ; sheep, $1 corn, fifty cents per bushel, and often a twenty-five cents. Every thing can bo raised in this otata that be grown in the 1 emperate one at half tbe labor, and with twice or the yield. Three ploughing is more I most crops usually get. I have seen bushels of com grown by one ploughing and it ia the general average cotton from one to one and a half bale to the acre, and so on with castor Leans, sorghum, etc This Texas Almanac will tell it all. There are but few negroes in this part of the state and they are rapidly growing less. White people are coming in rapid ly from eveiy State ; plenty from North Carolina aud all see here will be a white man's county our society is good, moral ly and intellectually,- and all immigrants will be treated with every kindness and hospitality, as they all will soon hear from those who have come out The people of your State who went to Indiana made a sad mistake, as I saw. As to what time to come to Texas, I would say by all means come between September and December. Those who want to buy or look around, come inline Spring. I could say much of Texas over which I have been again aud again could say I have been on the Colorado sixteen years and never sick. Here one only in eighty dies per year, while one dies iu fifty per year iu Massa chusetts. That statistically, aba is the third in health in the United States, Cal ifornia being first, Oregon next, and I be lieve west Texas is as healthy as nay part "t tbe world. Last year the ther mometer only rose to 93. We have no sun strokes no lakes, ponds, ran marsh, and less iosecta and reptiles than 1 have ever seen fa North Carolina in which my whole family was born and raised. Hut buy the Almanac and see for your selves. There are plenty of clerks or "in door ople." School-teachers in places cau o well, but erencrallv there are ulcasv. Those who come iu families can get plen ty of places, teams, tools aud provisions, by reaching here by the 1st of Oct. or Nov. the sooner the bi tter- all are anx ious to Have them all such if they will write me I will see they are not disap pointed. For the benefit of your patrons, and at the solicitation of a few such who have come, I heartily give the best ad I am able. Other papers will tell same account, as you win soon see m your State. iu baste, yours truly, R. R. Gar of UtflMMssds in this Sta the faHa are far ta high live, and that if lowered nau then present amount per mile, they would ment the average profits aud of the State i "Nothing," said Mr. S as 1 1 w. i . utaoie, Because notn My ang companies pro rdrantDorted I traffic of I v T' vevedibv by areca- i much great- Hit of that cost ruo, too weii ikm to It has been jers weigh - cur couvovwuii a inn a distance ofiL Jf itee, straw mile for 'the Coal a - " ayw i i 'hatever d s costly. II war ranui oonqphee beyond the BSB; WASBBBWf ... r road Wtlon ; bat pass en HBessives, and find thei Otst coat from the tciruinU are set down. It is true quire carriages of somewhat mere expen sive construction than those prepared for foods ; but this expense is compensated for by the circumstanco pableof running and do er number of miles ; thai passengers is small in pro m goods, and that coiisoO of locomotive power is less i Tr'iehown that 1 11,000,000 ana ini,..,,. ... i . l but o,vuu,uuu ions ii m Itii ins the year (1454) over 12 miles, vieldins? 4 revenue of 000,(81.0,000,000.1 Thisgi least 2s 48c. pet ton per weight of passenftrs conveyed. are conveyed the same distance for one cent per mile. Tk cost of running a train may be assmied, in most cases, to jMBMpHpTlgd. (30 t.) per uifie, therefore 100 paasengera at five-eighths' of a, penuf fier anm per passenger would give 5s. 2 a. about $1 24 per train per mile, which be taken as about the avereaa. trum ... .. SV .BBSSSH. , i UMr throughout toe yearn leaaamOD- thcrctoic, that anything beyond ths of a penny per passenger may red proutable, even ger train l IJ I,, it 6I! .1. 11 ijljllm should look to the maximum amount oi gross paaal ages traffic, which maximum amMul is only to be 'obtained by affording enlarged t icilities and temp tations to travel." jfl It is stated, in the Irndoa Quarterly Review for October 1868, ibat "where Railroad compiiics have had't lie courage mUL the wisdom to adopt tbe oolicyof low success. to believe charging of the old the success by year the Board ot priced m most 1 j we believe I Napoleon recently ordered the Duke ( remunero-i Hamilton to leave fans, for having I i uuvu uMiuroance as a mesne, passenger Kansas ia aaid to have a bettor i Lgjf railroads constructed and projt than any other State in tbe Uuiou. Wt Cornell University 'possesses a collec tion of shells numbering five million, representing twelve thousand species, which it took their collector thirty-five years to gather. , t It la estimated that the snow fa Tnek erman's ravine, iu tbe White Mountains, ia at least a thousand .feet deep. Hopes are entertained a magnificent snow arch there next August. A very sharp chap thinks that Colum bus is not entitled to much credit for dis covering America, aa the country is to huge he could not have missed it. The Boston Advertiser thinks It it queer that General Grant, with bis Wall known dislike of bares, promoted General Uhas toe tjef lephensflV "is so KH eon- os haudlior, and iiiUito ajBHW - ir own WAT Willi- a which they passengers re- Massacliusetts has what is call 'lager beer tempeerance party, Wm have, to that extent backslid from first principles. young I tlemen aoemai and called it her FT 4bTbVhSM' w'War--' a list of her gen kct diary lares it has mvaiiaoiy Directors have found that a line can moderate fare-. letter-CHreymt; of tha penny ajip AnOaT 1 1 1 1 i t but the cheap rally and E lllsaafmeiit : me riahlv proved a buud itfKjft PV hettor by is theaR ysiem did iu tl system post. publis it is traffic t capable of the largest de- h tenor priced class remains tiearly a fixed quantity, that rear bsf ineveai in of the lo there is i titude to Now, and act' same I Railroad this State ia most to the com one eent per trains are ev class is big that riTbi alesja wJkres fri A yonng lady of Springfield, at woman suffrage meeting, remarked, "Mr Foster said there wasn't a woman ha the ball who hadn't as much right to be called a man as he had ; and I think so tm" fee til gloomy accounts are given of the dition of tbe Lancashire cotton menu ng districts in England. A large (er of mills are idle, and the opera- are reduced to distress. t unlimited and ucc the mul- but lo are the bservation. Bid surelv the r . v be leatpd by our own tors. Tbe rate per mile in rly seven cents a charge to the people and ruiuous s. Very little more than He will pay expenses if the half filled; and the miss of the laboring classes are now excluded from the accommodation of the Railroads by the high eharecs. Who among our Railroad Director) will have "the courage and wisdom' to liwer his fares to two or three cents per niae T He will do credit to himself and ensure the prosperity of his road. llalcM Standard. Mise Liaaie Boynton, of Crawfords- Indiana, having lectured on the subject "Atier ttuttrage, WliatT received an answer the other day in the shape of an old pair of trowscrs, a jacket a dali razor The Winchester Times says that Gen. Mabone, "is like John W. Garrett. Neither of them have any more politics than tbe steam engiues oa their lieu Roads." The daughters of Andy Johnson left tbe mansion in better order than it has cv- rer been left in before by an outgoing rreaiueui. A three year old child, temporarily left in charge ot its infant brother in ( olum of experience, Dag Ohio, hut Saturday evening, got an gry with it and killed it by beating it over the bead with tbe naming bottle. Antidote to Strychnine. It is stated that animals that have been poisoaoslJM strychine may be saved by exciting arti ficial perspiration and maintaining it for two or three beam. An entire family was in hngland, by eating a p with suet that had Mam kept time, and .bad developed poisonous acid. nc m for a loaf kind of For the Old Xorth State. BOOK BINDERY. Now is there not two different rules requiring publication in diffi rlent papers for different periods of time and of dif ferent forms in the two classes of cases t If so, is not your scute. ice too sentence two sweeping ? Again, even in the class of cases to. which section 84 and 85 ap plies have you looked to see how far the authority cited by you has been overruled. You cite Titus vs." Relyea, 46 Howard, 371. Now my information is that this case has been overruled to some extent at least in New York by Cook vs. Kelsey, 19, N. Y : 8 Abb. 177. These cases I can not refer to, as I have not the reports a . . a a' a - r dui would lixe to hear from .you thereon. I am aware the case of Titus vs. Rel yea, 16 How., does not take the distinc tion I have endeavored to make, bat was the, New York Code the ! 98 section ofoirr code f If not, and with the examination I have had time to make I do not find i t. Perhaps our Code Commissioners, know ing the amount of trivial litigation, in at tachment cases endeavored to save costs. ft ft ... . a . Dy ahorcviating the notices. But if section 84 and 85, apply to all cases as you suppose, then notices must be published in those papers which ' the court designated as most likely to give no tice to tke defeddant. tor instance, if tho defendant resides in Ohio, in a Cincinnati paper, etc., and then the question becomes of interest and importance, if the paper has not been thus designated by the Court or Justice, wheth- gician, hi 1'arfs Bo lost his urse. tie Salisbury ought to have a book bindery. How many pamphlets of science, law, medicine, and religion " with agriculture, Vc, will be lost to the world for the want of it. If the business will not justifiy it, let it be connected wtb some other pursuit. pka xtm. Mr. Editor, will you give the people of Davie all tbe information you can get about raising pea nuts. Will yon not per suade some persons near 1-ayetteville and Wilmington who cultivate them to write about them in your paper ; wbbWtH hill them or drill them bow neaP rows are to be together; What are t best fertilizers for them ; what kind of soil will suit them, and whether the cli mate of Davie will suit them. How many will plant an acre and. how many bushels Will an acre produce 1- AlaQOis. RAILROAD MANAGEMENT. Ike Lotcest Kate of Fare Pays Best It is almost impossible to convince .tbel. hterary labor managers of- Railroads that they gain Among the officers nothing Dy charging nign iarcs ana ex travagant prices on the freight traffic, and yet the uniform experience of all countries is, that even extremely low charges will really increase the profits of a road, whilst an advance iu the cost of freight and trav el soon diraiehes the average income. The experiment of gradually lowering the fares has been tried with success in almost all the European railroads, and it ia found that the amount received from the third class travelers, although seldom more than one cent a mile each, often much less, is greater than that of all others, and that the profits of the companies are derived from this class alone, the first and second class travelers barely paying the cost of their transportation. On this most inter esting subject, the late Robert Stephen son, the greatest railroad engineer that ever lived, in his address to the Institu tion of Civil Engineers of England, main tained that anything over nve-eignta efia penny (a little more than one cent) per mile per passenger may be rendered proh table even if the passenger train beonly half filled. We earnestly recommend the following extract from the above named address to tbe attention of the managers MISCELLA V0 US ITEMS. Maggiefitchill is a nther. ed in Cincinnati. flP 1 J. J A sW. . IP rais srsii issan m : w j . vim x lie snip uuyuiog luinrfwm o .uaiue pr - . I : J . l. .... General Schoflcld aaAHB Louis for Kansas on Tuesday. e was irflLd for 100.000 j . . m n8 ftfl in Da Lamartine's francs, ia tavo Senator Grin found two scholarships lege. on o,oou to rtmoutb Col A pension of r.00 a year has been given Mia. S. C. Hall, the Irish author ess. A Paris paper terms Senator Sumner "the Don Quixote of the niggers. - W Washington" is now the cry of tbe grand army ot omce seekdrarm rant is tha-ynunges't man who has been elected ri-esnleut. lie will be en years old April 22WaW mm - iwi m Oueen Victoria wears her hair as she did 25 years ago. Coiffures, waterfalls, chignons, easts, and back hair are naught toher. "- ' Robert Hoiulin, the famous French ma- whole fortune at the makes a living new left Wi mands, by the consolidation of regiments, are uouueaay, mckics, ho xoonauu, Wager, Swayue aud ButterfieU Inq uisitiveness. An u p-eountry girl stepped lo the window of the post-otiiee aSsknSaT' . w t . a ' aa a -J... axroni? isiana village a sew aava siucc thouf eom- 6i "''was the inquiry "What name! inquired the damsel in a rage." "You're mighty inquistive, to be sure I" and onl she flouncd. Portland, Me.. sled up a h down. iR, gets e4 perm Gaa is not churches because hot fathers. The Chicago Tribune Pendleton, of Ohio, has hotel-buildiur boainees in Hundreds of statioaed ia ried to Indian and industrious has a dog tSmt drags a ou it, aud then slides tted in the Russian mentioned by the gone Eldore, Mr. Thorn Washington, in a dreadful President u not a says. Itb visitors Stratford-on BBS nited mLm HHtmh sre H aw Haam aven, wm ves. 1 lonJtlie Britis sai we in thi gendemmsFSo said Jhat fully osjBrd of the to ffhekspearr bVb-place; st Avon, are Americans. bbbbbbbt i Mfieorge H. into tbe 3owa." soldiers to be mar ks faithful h Minister at a SmnSy m the new Rumor A Washington despatch states that Prof. E. D. fiassett, Principal of the Colored High School, in Philadelphia, is a candidate (or Minister to Haytl. They have discovered the silver buck ler of the sword belt of Pepin, the father of Charlemagne, and deposited it in the Hnm of tbe Louver, runs. There are four hundred joint stock companies noW in process of liquidation in iudon. j tie total tosses by tnese spxculatiuns amount to about $10,000, 000. A lady in Lowell, Mass , who has kept crape on tbe knob of her house door since the assassination of President Lincoln, removed it on inauguration day. Tne Total value of church property in this city belonging to the Methodist hois copal Church South is $500,000, and the Bomber of enrolled communicants 5,000, St. Louis Dispatch. Twenty of Brigham Young's wives ar rived at Council Bluffs, Iowa, on I ues day, to vist their friends in that city and at Omaha. They will continue their journey to Washington. t. r'"A swindler went into an extensive jew wry establishment in Baltimore a fen days ago, pretending to have several bags ot gold dust or filings, lie exhibited genome bag as a sample, and the jeweller all by it, paying 68,700. The re- bags proved spurious. I beewm- dier escaped. 1st; ism People of tha Southern States, medicinal restorative, now so Wolfe's ohiiam BehnaiitiH, to tbe world under ths endorse. OSSOd leading inoiiitiur of tbe on some HO rears san. iu uro- pnetor was wall aware that it could not wholly escape the penalty attached to all new and use ful preparations. Us, therefore, endeavored to invest ft with strongest pokSlbls safeguard againsteouiiturfuiters.and to render all attempts to pit ate it dimoultanddaoaeroui. It was sub mitted to distinguished obeinlats for analyris, and pronounced by them the uarest spirit ever manufactured. Its purity and propertios hav ing been thus ascertained, samples of the arti cle were forwarded to ten thousand physicians, including all tbe leading practitioners in the United States, for purports of experiment. A circular, requesting a trial of the preparation and a report of the result, accompanied each specimen. Four thousand or tbe most eminent medical men in the Union promptly responded. Their opinions of the article were unanimously favorable. Such a preparation, they said, had long been wanted by the profession, as no reli ance, could be plaeed on the ordinary liquors of coinmeree, all of which were more or less adul terated, and therefore unfit for medical purposes. The BWeuluu-excellence aud strength of the oil of jumper, which formed one of tbe principle lu lls of tbe Schnapps, together ith an un 1 character of the alcoholic element, give it, in the estimation of the laenlty, a marked Superiority over every other diffusive stimulant as a diuretic, tonic aud restorative. These satisfactorv credentials from profes sional men of the highest rank were published in a condensed form, and enclosed with each bottle of the Schnapps, as one of the guarantees oi us genuineness, utoer precautious upiuusi fraud were also adopted; a patent was obtain ed for the article, too label was NEW AD VEIiTlSEM&NTSi NURSING BOTTLES. A GREAT IMPROVEMENT ON those beratofure sold; among other IS lag, they are iu. mi- m ,ii v kept perfectly cltsa, nd very satwtan' Oat. They are at Kng-llsh luaaavcUr. aaS sold st half the price of those usually sola bars, A 1H, ELASTIC SYRINGES; Very compact sod perfect, la esses, adopted either for Male or Female aae. Every badly should have ii aa; as they are of inestimable value aud very cheap lly c barged here lor r at SILL'S Drug Store. -about half the pi foe nasally charged ken oe aaa eai rior articles. I At Salisbury, X ia. 0. LiVI3J Superior Field Pumpkin At .TNO. aprll B ! St H. ENNIS8' Drug Store; CATARRH SNUFF. C REAP and SURE cure for Headache, Cold in tbe Head, Ac., at JNO. II. ENNISS' Drug Store, sprii s tarn Crockery at Cost f At JNO. H. ENNISS' Drug Store. aprfl9!S-St kerosene jjtuups I aver been sold "'a'ovn a wiuioii. i March 2-13 3t -....I..... , ia.,,, eV 1 his nrivate seal. No artlele bad in i his country under the name of richnapps prior to the iwredttction of Wifffet rkstriedain Aromatic- Schnapps, in IHSt; and the label was deposited, ashis trademark, in the I nited .states District Court for the Southern District of New York during that rear. It might be supposed by persons unacquaint ed Villi the daring character of the pirates who prey upon thcrcpuiatioBOT bouoraule merchants by vending deleterious trash under their name, that the protections so carefully thrown around these Schnapps would have precluded the intro ductions anil sale of counterfeits. They seem, however, only to hsve stimulated the rapacity of i in posters . Tbe trade marl of the proprietor has Mett stolen; the indorsement winch his Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps alone received from the medical profession has been claimed by mendacious humbugs ; his labels and bottles have oeen imitated, Sis aavertiseuietits para phrased, his circulars copied, aud worse than all, dishonorable retailers, after disposing of the genuine contents ot bis bottles, have lilted them Up with common gin, the most deleterious of all liquors, and thus made his name aud brand a cover ior poison. The public, tha medical profession and the sick, for whom the Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps is prescribed as a remedy, are equally interest ed with the proprietor iu the detection and sup pression of these nefarious practices. The gen nine article, manufactured at tho establishment of the undersigned. h Schiedam. Holland, its dtetjlled from a barley of the finest quality, aid flavored with an essential extract of tbe berry of the Italian juniper, of unequalled purity. By a process unknown in the preparation of any other liquor, it is freed from every acrimonious and corrosive element. Complaints have been received from tbe lead ing physicians and families in the Southern mates or tne sals of cheap imitations of the Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps in those markets ; and travellers, who are in the habit of using it as an antidote to tbe baneful influence of un wholesome river water, jasafjr that cheap gin, TO THE LADIES Of Rowan, DaThfoi, Da tie, Ire dt II. Catawba, Btrke aud Mc Dowell. WE ABE THE AUTHORIZED Agents for tbe sale of tbo GO a nut Hut in Schiedam b ed off unon the uaB dersfcasd have nm qniries on tbe subject, the names oi such to be engaged in men. is tree iryTiaftageuis reuuewea uunsniii and tat-forward the atrocious system aeutly palm- ol the u li te in to bim ascertain inauished i aswcrableoftHe erthe of in Ainer- medici- foatio thous- tees uld pro- udnlent bought mainWg The depth of snow in the woods of Maine is almost unprecendented at this season of tbe year. Ia many places it Ilea seven feet deep on a level. The Bangor Whig saja some of tbe gangs of lumucnusn, iu euaiuui: iu cuiuo vat, uiti found it necessary to put their horses up- Son large sleds, to be drawn over the lifts by men upon snow-shoes. General Grant on Southern Disfran chisements. M essrs . J. P. Beed and Wil liam P. Simpson, Democratic congress men from South Carolina, waited upon General Grant a few days since and de scribed to bim tbe restrictions and disa bilities under which tbe southern whites labored. The President listened to them attentively, and at the conclusion of their remarks said: "Gentlemen, the disclosures yon make ought to be known and understood aad considered by every Union man and ia tbo country." can; nal excellence of the Schnapps; that he has and dollars in su: and safeguards, which tectthe pubac and fcitnlsM against imitation.- ; thathtrbas shwn it to be the onlv liuuorin the wtarift, that can beunif'orinlv dcncii- ded upon as unadulterated! that he has chal lenged Investigation, analysis, comparison, and experiment in all its forms; and from every or- preparation which Dears ms name, seal n mark, has coine off triumphant. He therefore feels it a duty he owes to his fellow citizens generally, to the medical profession and the sick, to denounce and expose the charlatans who counterfeit these evidences of identity, and he calls upon the press and the public to aid him in his efforts to remedy so great an evil. The following letters and certlflcats from the leading physicians and chemists of this eitr will prove to the reader that all good sold bv the undersigned are all they are represented to oe. l iJuiji uo woiit'ti S5 Pink Smear, New York . MOV. 81, 1867. CnoLrao Woirs, Ran., Present: s '-' Dear Sir: I have made a chemical examination of a sample of your 'Schiedam Schnapps, with ths intent of determining if any foreign or injurious sub stance bad been added to the simple distilled spir its. '';.,-." " The examination hns resulted in the conch harmful TTe challenge a trial with any or all other machines. We propose to do more werk in the same time; more different kinds of work, and better than any other machine' known. Any one purchasing machines of us cau try them for turee mouths ana ll tney do not give entire sat isfaction tbe money will be refunded. bead ana get circulars M samples af work. MEKONET A BKO. Salisbury. H. 3. taw We are Agents for the sale of Vorter m Co's., Shoes manufactured at Salem, H. C-, fur nished at Factory Prices in qualities. Call and see them. If. A B. April 8, 1869. 13 9m $150 PREMIUM! TlTE North Carolina Land Company will pay $150 in premiums, for the beat sad richest sCeo,'. net at tbe Company's Office, Raleigh; Gold, 5; Silver, ; Copper. 116; Iron, 12.60, Marble. $12.50; Lead. $10; Mica. $10; Plum- bago and Soap Stone, $10; and all other min erals iu proportion. Shetland other Marl, $6. Tbe specimens will lie submitted to an experi enced Geologist, and premiums awarded by his report. ham ay Samples to be marked "N. C. Land Compa , Kaleigh." E. W. Best, Sec. & Trees!7 March 13, 1860. 13-lm asion that the sample contained no poisonous oi admixtar. I have been enable to discover any trace of the deleterious substances winch are em ployed in tHfe adulteration of limtdre. I would not hesitate to use myself or to recommend to others, for medicinal parposes, thi Schiedam Schnapps as sa excellent aad unobjectionable variety of gin. .Verv resnectrallv yours. (Shjaadal. . , CHA8. A. gOaV, Cbemka. Nbw York. 53 Cedar Street, November kHi, 1H67. UnotPHo WoLFe, Esn.. Present : -JH ?- IIkaksik: 1 have submitted to ehemieal analysis two bottles of "Schiedam .Schnapps," which 1 took from a fresh package in your bonded waronousc, aud find, as before, that the spirituous lidor is free from injurious ineredi- ents or falsification ; that it baa the marks of be iu sated "and not recently aneeauK by me cbaiiieaUdniixt lire of alcohol and aromatics. MsfetttWtfj PEED. P. MATER, Chemist. Important Trust Sale ! I I A VI NG been appinted by a decree of tho Superior Court of Montgomery County, Trustee, to sell tbe lands under a deed in trust executed by Parsons Harris, dee'd., for the purposes there in expressed, and also under another deed in trust executed by the said Parsons Harris, I shall sell for cash to the highest bidder at the late residence of the said Harris, on Wednesday, the 12a day of May next about Three Thousand A.cres of Land. consisting of Twelve or Ffteen different tracts. uola gold has been fo. making money tin two ol said tracts muc found, and the prospects from investing in said lands are fluttering. Tho lands are located in tbe heart of the gold regions pf Montgomery county. t Capitalists and miners are especially invited to attend the sale. THOMAS E. BROWK. Maroh 87,1869. 13 6t Trustee, 4c. New York, Tuesday, May 1 Udolpho Wolfs, Esq., - Dear. Sir: The want of pore Wines and Liquors for medicinal pnrnosea has been lone felt by the pro fession, and thousands of lives have been sacrificed by tbe ase of adulterated articles. Iieli.iuiu tre mens, and other diaeaaes of tbe brain and nerves, so rile in this country, are very rare In Europe, owinir. ia a great degree, to the difference in tbe parity of tbe spirits sold. we nave tested toe several articles imported and sold by you, including your Gin, which you sell un der the name oi aromatic iclnedam Schnapps, which we consider justly entitled to the hish repu tation it baa acquired in this country : and from your toast eausrisacs as a foreign importer, vour Hott'ed Wines and Lfquora should meet with the tame de mand. , We weald recommend yon to appoint boom of tbe respectable apoloecariee in diOerent parts of the city as agents for the sale of your Brandies and Wines, when the profession ean obtain tbe same when need ed for medicinal purposes. Wishing yon sacsbas ia year new enterprise, Ws remain4oar obedient sei vsnts. VALENTINE MOTT, St. D., Professor of Sanrery. D Diversity Wedical Oittem, New York. M. CAKNlM'HAN, M. I), Professor of Clinical in-Chief to the SUte Hospital, State of North Carolina, MONTGOMERY, COTJNTT. Attachment.! Publication for Defendants. Noah SmiUtenMB, pontiff, against -dames Lneas, defeadant. NOTICE is hereby given that a warrant at attachment has been issued against tbe proper ty of said defendant who is beyond tbe limits of the State, in favor of the plaintiff and returna ble before me, a Justice or the Peace, for the county of Montgomery, in Troy, on the 6th day of May 1H69, for tbe sum of forty-lour dollars with interest from the 19th of Oct 1866. The said defendant is hereby notified to appear at said lime and place and defend his suit or judg ment will be rendered against him. Witness. Jno Chisholm, a Justice of the Peace for the county of Montgomery, this 25th day of March 1869. i:t-4t-pi1u6 JOHN CHISHOLM, J. P. JOS. 11 0 RAH. II K N It V HoRAH. EST . Bnnreon etc.. No. 14 East Sixteenth Street. LEWIS A. HAYBK.lt. O., No. 79 Brosdwav. H. P. DEWEBH. M. a, Ne. 791 Broadway. JOSEPH WvBSTER. M. D., No. 199 Ninth street. NELMO.V STEELE, M. P.. No. 87 Bleecker street . JOSEPH O'REILLY, M.. P., No. 930 Fourth st B. L RAPHAEL. M. P.. Professor of the Principles aad Practice of Sorrery. New York Medical Col----JaaaaSj, Ve. tl Ninth street, aad others. TbstaaaiUlui also sfbrs fur sale BOTTLED WINES AND LIQUORS, imported and bottled by himself expressly for medicinal use. EaeQ bottle baa has certificate of imparity. UDOLPHO WULFS. J. & H, HORAH. JSK WATCH MAKERS PJEWELRl Having roit, ht the entire stoat of L. II. Davis; and added largely to it, we are now prepared to furnish anything usually kept in a first class Jewelry Store. We may be found in Cowan's Brick Bow, next door to F. U. Sprague's Office. All kinds of rename done at abort notice and satisfaction guaran teed. We return thanks to a generous public for past favors, and hope by strict attention to business to merit a com in nance of tbe same. P. 8. All persons havingjeft Watches and Jewelry with L. M. Davis or Wilson & Karris to be repaired are requested to call and get tnem or they win be sold lor repairs. san. jv, too m I f. a.

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