VOL. 1. THIRD SERIES. SALISBURY, N. C, MONDAY, AUGUST G, ISM. NO. -5 1 WHOLE NO. 172. TERMS : WiKiT, 1 jrev,'. . . .' . 6 months,. ...v. a On In advance; NATES OF AOyiRTWHOl (nil Soi.n.(-soon2 limy) first iiuwttion $1 20, 3 J, wid 4 th insertion, t-adi for each additional publication, $3 00 .1 60 Krom ilia Manner. NOKTUEUN iflJMDlIGOEUV. ... Mr. Editor: 1 want the ne of the Jwws-esSr fc?M-eff-a-4it tie j tkain. If yon Bliould oeny me. its bm, nUiM have merer on a fellow creatine, audjpjt step over to the shops and have me a band forget, that toy hiltr don't burst wide open. . Of all the liuiubuerjr thut overdid humbug any people thin a:de of pandc monism, the North generally is the hiy- l Lj, linmbu!r. There ia no more similar ! jty between them and the Southern poo- vln n non this j'Oiiit, than tliere is between ice and boiling water. Their newspapers : Lre crammed full of all kinds of buuibiirf gery, from steam engines down to fancy ! watch keys; and from ipso facto mortals to artificial dolls. And our Southern prefses aid these grand schemes of impo sition and roguery, by publishing the 'cards nnd advertisements of these skin ners. 1 suppose editors do it for pay, as they have a civil right to do; but 1 should hate, were I an editor, to become zparticeps criminis to soch a scheme ol deviltry for the sake of a few dollars. Although I am a good Union man, and don't blame the Government for the ras cality of its individual member, yet I woiildn t care this morning it there was us great a gulph between the North and South as there was between the rich man and La7arus- Why f Because the Radi ces are sawing away upon our Consntu tional rights and privileges until they have reduced them to the little end of . Mithiuy : and because the inaseesat the Xotth, generally, are engaged in s wind ing our boutlu-rn people out of what lit tle we do possess. We never can, and never will be one people, though the sym bol of our Uovc rnmcut float trotn ocean !o ocean. lte very piiysiognoimny ot our people North and South is different. The cold, speculative disposition of North urn men, shows itself in that stiff and re jmlfive manner peculiar to tlioee whose 'oJ id mammon, elmke nanus with such luen, and yoh feol asif you were grasp- ng a pump hanole no warmth no fympathetie heait tbete to beat iu unison ?ith your own. Hut I have digressed. I ' have been Iragoeu out of a considerable Bum by Itheee N snores, and all suck ! tores defend ust From the landlord's band, a greedy band, now inCestlng oqr landprescrvo ua! From a 'solid take,' which is onr. fate sometimes to partake henceforth deljv er ds I From, mak Ing , ty. , which does annoy, and ,ouf tempers try prevent e. , - I- , TU QreatSatUs of&uIoukiQZs Ilu. drea Thousand Men Killed and xcoun adSlm M,iUs of iHaughicf Etfj, ivn the season," was connected with the same star, and these animals were butch ered without merer. At Argos there was a dog killing festival ',' " ,', V . . ! ,:, 15y the precession of, fho equinoxes, say the astronomers, Ibo heliacal ruing of Sirius in the morning has been chang. ed,to the 15th of August, and In a few thousand years tuore ft will occur in the deoth of winter. Those happy dogs whoso days are to come five or six rhons and years hence' will be Justified hi V . w ToCd:iio):nuk -w. preside of I tAeJVttmoerwnd 4ap Uailroad f.om- , iSik;, 'The position joq oceopy as the chief executive officer f ne of the most iinpertant internal improvement corpora tions if the Com;noii wealth, and at a die liuguistied member! the Senate of Vir gilds, will justify ir.o in addressing you m a subject direllj n mulcted until your duties in both official positions. " According to mr viows, the internal ... I Fw U Loo Job Times July 18 Evert tin or that i caches ua confirm the belief that Jn the Shadowa the Aus trian army has ..been nearly , reined a a military force for tli present campaign Ihe bravery of the men shows forth clearly in every narrative. They held their positions with obstinacy ; they ad vauced against Uio deadly are of the neo die gun with all the devotion of ilu soldier. As long as they preserved a hope of victory, they fought with a spirit worthy of better leaders and a better cause. Our correspondent, writing three days after the battlo, when the confusiou was be ginning to subside, when tho men were finding their way back to their regiments, and regiments, or what was left of them, were again being united into brigades and divisions, gives the loss of the beaten army as probably more than two-fifths of its whole number. "It may bo true, he says, "that 80,000 men were killed, wounded, and taken prisoners, or drown ed, and that 150 guna were taken, aban doiieo, or thrown into the river on the retreat." Add.ng to these losses tho number of men who must have thrown away their arms in .the retreat, we inu6t doubt whether 100,000 effective men I were Jo be found iu the Army of the rtortu three days alter the battle. 1 The retreat was, indeed, melancholy and disastrous As at Leipsic, we hear of pontoons laden with hundreds swept down the river and overturned with their living cargoes of artillery and horsemen crashing down upon and through the struggling inf.mtry, jamming them into the narrow roads and hustling them over the bridges into the waters. In about all that is moft horrfblo in warfare was con cent rated into this contest. A long strug gle, lasting the entire day, the mowing down, of whole regiments by the firing f northern traps, and I wanted to Sell my Southern brethren to heioare ot jtheir schemes. O yes, 'its a purejirticle, i)ure gold-patten, full jewelled &e., fcc,' and when they have got olyour monei Perfectly secured, you'll recieve a dozen pr two of old brass watches, galvanised kith gold or silver, worth in reality two It tune dollars amece. but co-tins von from thirty to fifty dollars per thing I loll you all, gentlemen and ladies, to have nothing to do with tbeee .Northern traps, Iidverti8ed iu the papers ; for there is, in ay humblo opinion, not an honest man imong them. A SUFFERER. JIIE CHOLERA IN NEW YORK AND BROOLYN. jFrom the New York Post.) -It seems that we most recognize the xi8tence of the cholera as an epidemic a this city and Brooklyn. -There iano cason, as yet, for a general alarm ; but n the number of cases, and especially in beuiorked malignity of many of the Net, there ia enough to inspire a gencr conviction of the necessity of using prudence and forethought, and avoiding, 18 far as possible, all exposures and all provocatives of cholera. ' No less than eleven new cases were eported in Iroooklyn on Saturday - in ne ward alone, six of which were already ead and two or three others in the col ipsed stage. J. ' Precautions against Cholera. Every individual should see to himself, knd every householder to his dwelling, and every merchant and manufacturer to le premises he ocenpic. lo this end lere should be in every bail ling a free Ji ia it cUolot ide. iifJi octants- Privies, water closets, cees- FoulnewTnay'TTOssiMy collectslie-eld-be Claried-anti disinfected jtroriartnwiehij Miet, and all excesses should be correct 'ud. Destrov a noxious smell wherever yoVhidirnderrrce-th.oeii8e- It brings death into your boose. All this should be done calmly and without pan lc. Keep about yonr ordinary employ Snent. Avoid all nn wholesome diet, such Jas stah?" fish, indigestible ort putrifjjng fruits. Let yonr food be taken regu larly , 4 in . good condition, and ' with ' thankful ihearhv ' " ' " oi irosi anu snow, cinus is uiu nearvsi yrtaid. Is ch to us of anr of tho fixed stars, and yet it would tako half a million of years for tho transiniaion of a ray-of light tliere from to this earth, supofl?ng the light 19 move at tho sped of a cannon ball. . It ia rather too far off to bo the cauVo of a geueral combustion of the eaith. The meteorologists say that the heat dn- presiuv, is charged witn the exeeutlHt 01 a work that will inoro uiMterially innu cnctthe commerci il and politicnl inter esta ff tlitt entire Luion, than .any o'her in progress of cofulrudin nn this eoiir neut. We Iihvo now in this country two great rival systems of railway :oue south, the other north, of tlio Ohio river. The northern sy.tem may bo regarded ring dog days cnltninates to its maximnm M completed -iu connectituM be ng nil HI I WO O ClUCK, L . lU. IB . IH IIUUI when people feel feverish aud thirsty ; when weariness and lassitude take pos session of the frame, and when the only pleasant or snfferablo place, is "some boundless contiguity of shade," or the cooling precincts of an icehonse, with an "anKeldiviiiity" bound in hoops, creating around one gentle aephyrs from a palm iest fan, or a turkey wing. Death of a ItemarkahU Colored Man. -Tony Nelson an old colored man, died fg3 l near Suffolk, Va.v and was buried o th L, . , . ' . ... . . . . . 1 . I t 1 . Hill 1,'UIUUiVllvO I l UIV tin insc, 111 me ifiii yenr 01 uia ugv. This old man was formerly a 6ervant in the Washington family, and helped to cut what is known as tho "Wa&hiugton ditch," a caual leading from tho western margin of the .Dismal bwamp to JJrnm mond's lake, an enterprise which was 1 iiV 1 m E rejected, uy uenerai ivasJiington. lony ad never lived during hie life two miles trom the Dismal Swamp, and inoel ot his time in the Swamp. lie had been the husband of twenty-one wives, six of whom are now liviutr. and vet in his ex treme' old aze and last sickness, no one of them would nurse him. Being freed by the proclamation of the President and subsequent faction of the State, he died in extreme poverty. "j AorjofA; Wtrgtman. Ccoklno Cabbage Cabbage is a enp- tal vegetable, and coining so generally the enemy, the btirnin,, of' vil'ages, the ! no favor that tlie hah heathen practice horrible incidents of atiilit through an inundated country, agd, finally, jhe long sufferings of the disorganized march that formed with the great coiuiucrciul iiititi of the middle and eastern Sine; ami, with the aid f the Canals of New York, is monopolizing tho commerce of the mighty empire extending trom the north ern bank of the Rocky Muiitaiju ! The influence of the great northern System is best appreciated when we 1 4k to the growth cf tl e northveslerii States, as compared with other sections of the Union. Thivwill bo shown by u com parison of the proKruos of populaioii troui the trie (Jan a I tract Wustei 11 ton nage' hi winch nmu cinigrnii.ni coin mertced its march Ninth wevtwHi'dly.) In 1830, the population cf the nrthw st em States was 1400,218 In 1S40, 2.8(7,65 In 1850, 4.721,501 In 1857, 7,200,000 Tie estimate f'r 1857 is formed from data nfforded by the census of Inwa, Ik linois, Wisconsin and Michignti, taken iu 1855, and that of Minnesota Ukui in 1857. Thar we find that one third of tho en tiio white population of the United Stated, iu 1S57, was in the North westeni.StaUs, and that tins a-tt increase has a ft occur red wlihiir ouo generation. Let us first compare this growth with New England and New York, mid the old Sou Lei 11 States. 1820 New England and N. York hd 3,032.024 The original South 3.62S.037 TheNoithwes', 792.719 finished in loor years, provided Virgin-. la and Kentucky shall extend such aid as the importunes of the interest involved demands. When this work shall have been finished, ' wo wit) have from the Ohio river, at a point of great concentra tion of the trade of the" Northwest, aline of railway of unbroken guags to conduct that immense trade to the best harbors on the Atlantic co.irf; and in addition, 1 , line of canal ami lido-water- rhvIxu'umi for esual targes for 390 miles f the di- Umgiywbti h nvl tin wil 1837 to 620 mile-:" This w II bo of vast ttortantu in the competition which ex'st between the through line in Ken tacky and Virginia, and thote tq New I ik, our priiu-iiMl rival for ihe'lrade Tlio next imiuiry is, can wo of the Southwest, with our water line and rail way combined, successfully contend for the mngnihcciit prize T grand enough, 1 considered in nil its aspects, to cal forth (he united energies of both Coin inon wealths, though "Miey should bo tax ed to their utmost over of endurance but, in tiuth, their can be no such do inands upon our resource; because al that is vet to be dme can only require from tour and a half to five millions of money for its accomplishment. But to return to the question :can we success fill I v compete with the ISorth tor the trade of the Northwestern States' say we may, nnd I will now proceed to oner the reasons tor this opinion It is one of the unalterable verning .the movement of fonngc from he proJncers to the consumers! that it will avail itself of the.mrwt direct and cheapest line of transit. It then, we possess such a route, we must command tho ereatest part of the 'Ton najre that now hods its way from tlvc vast produ cing plams.of the Northwest to the com tnercial marts ef t ha Atlantic, for dis tribution to the 'consumers of our own country ant! those ot all other countries with whom we have e-tablisln.-l com mercial intercourse. It is, then, only necessary to Jiow, that when our line is completed to Lou isville we will present to tho tonnage seeking tho AHi"' for distribution, a more direct and cheaper line of transit than is now used. To establish my posi tion, that we can successfully compete with Northern cities for the vast tradc of the Northwestern States, I will now 5.080,000 .200,000 ! Iu the last tliirty-eeveu eaitttlit-S uili I I The Printcri Litany. From want of 'gold, from wives that scold, from maid :eos old, by sharpers 'soldi preserve us ! jFrom foppish sneers, mock auctioneers, (and woman's tears deliver ne I From stinging, flies, coal Uaektyes, babies' cries protect us I From seedy t coats, froisswa notes, and leaky ooota protect .''e'. -Krom creakin? 'doors, a wife that of mnrdering it in the cooking, in the majority of coses, ought to subject the cabbage cook to an indictment for veg ...I I. -I MM J-. . .1. succeeded, firm a combination, at which o.e s.Hugmer. in.uuH.ig nuo h , 1 hil8 illciea8ed 07 per cent.. tl. North 35 theimagi..aMoni8 8hockedatrtsa"dd'e..ed.0iaw,7ie"cau0: nnwasneu, por cent., and the, Northwest 800 per It is difficult to bring one's elf to be- nnscarched, uncut . hoding halt an hour, vent. lieve that such horrors have been enact- a.nd 8erv,,,S "P Imlf ra"' 18 a" abomma- Socndly, I will institute a comparison UOII HIOBl ItllllOUB. IV CMUUHO- Ilt'UU ...tii-,.,.,. I , S-utHA ill A Uhillllu VIlAHiill. ought always to be thoroughly Mashed, rit Lou. sian.1, Texas, Kentucky, Terne . then severely searched for lurking lice, ,ee Misitsippi and Aikata. bngs, and vonns,- then cut through farm fiie South west had, in 1530, a popula- tlie fop towards the 6tump part, leaving r ,;ol, vf 1,424,065 enough to hold the head together put n 1857, 5,'y47,0OO the head into a net, and then into a etea- lIlcri.a80, 315 per cent. ; not one-half mer, and steam two hours with a piece ,i. ini-ioa., ..1 tin, N,.rti. 4'Hst. til kt with A 1 A 1 1 .!... I . A I I . ' 01 nice, iai sail poiK ooiiing unuerneaui Utaiidiuir thu advai.tes of milder cli uie siuuuwr. vuuuagu uiiu voukuu is uii abominable, unwholesome cow fodder : properly cooked, it is palpable, nntri tfo'uB,aud -wholesome.- . "i"1 ran noo. c'1'0'' tho proof ; first, our line terinin 1S0 imm! : a,c3 at Norfolk, the best port on the ed in our own time and in a region so. near and so fa miliar. We had beard and 1 cad of such fields of slaughter, but they seemed to belong to an age and a state of human character which couH never be revived. Nine miles of slaughter, ending With the drowing of a mass of terror-stricken fugitives, .JnVah event which a few years since the wisest would bare pronounced impossible in the Eu rope of to-day j -- Unless the course of bostilith-e be stay ed, there is reason to fear that Shadowa' will not be the last, though ir rrrsy ft main the most deadly, ot the Austrian battles. The Prussians are flushed with victory, and they know that the Army of ixnemia, nnaiaea, ib iu no conumou 10 oppose tbera. That army must have Io6t nearly half its guns, and by tar inegrear er oart of its rnilitarv stores. If they have no otherifoe before therrYi they may drive it from point to point until they foce it to try its fortune in the very suburbs of tlve capital perhaps ui the fields which the campaign of 1809 made so deplorably faraoos. ' Tlie rmtsians nave lost no tune in roi- lowinir up tlieir victory! Tney would probably have displayed even greater ardor in the pursuit bad it not been for tlieir own heavy' losses and the want of f rovisions from which all armies suner. t is said that the Prussians fonaht the ba'tle of Sadowa without having tasted food since 11 o'clock' in the forenoon of the day before, ant the Generals were loud iu their remonstrances against the commissariat, lheee ditncuitieswe may assume, still continue. The victualing of so- enormons air army -u a kak iinosv-W4 voud eoneeptioTi, snd. insuracieucy 01 means slowness 01 aavance.- Ireadjp, lies Mcj!iiOM-ieoji To a w Mlliirili bBIALLLI ' it;renygattft.vtfij tie u. in .o p injf -,,npT f,f the friends ot pei and the lni; must be measured by their means of sub sistence. - THE DOG DAYS. , From die Lynchburg Xew Tlie 3d of July is the day fixed in the calender for the beginning of dog days, and they terminate th llth of Anguet. Tlie dog days precede and follow the heliacal rising of the star Sirius, in the constellation of the Greater ( Dog, in the morning, which, in Pliny's time, was the LISth of Julv. Tlie extreme heat of this roar, although jhe effect of. the con tinned JiighJpositipn of tlie sun, was connected by the ancients with the appearance of this star .in the morning. They considered: the dog star as raging, and gave to the time the appellation of dies conieaiorus. The liability of dogs to rabies, in consejuence of the heat of mate, andlgrcatri verts navigated by steam era of the largest etas used in internal navigation. - This view of the subject shows, at a glance,' "wwre tho pobtiOMi ;t rr- . I power of the Union must, In a very tew A Crooked Jliver. Speaking of the years, exist. The rapid growth of the Rio Grande, a recent writer says : ' great Norihwe4faiii ot be ane-tted "Imagine four of the crookedest things ueh her should it tc : and hence tho grea in the world, then imagine four morel importance that ihe euuunercial and so twice as crooked, and fancy yonrselt a I cisl intercourse of that almost bonnJIes' large river three times as crooked as all region should be ch'snged. Now, as I these put together, and yon have a faint have briefly stated, its commerce is mo idea of the" crooked disposition of this nom4 zed by the eastern and northern crooked river. Tliere is no draft in if, cities, through the agency c f tlieir rail from the fact that it is , so crooked that ways and canals: and thereby an iden- tiinber can't find . its way far enough tit r of interest induced which creates io- down to lodge two sticks together; but litieal affinities, snd Mill soon, jf they do few snakes because it is not straight not now, overshadow and overpower all enongb to ewin in, and the fish are all in other sections and intcrwu .f ibo con 11- the whirlpools in the bends, because they try. How ca'i this great evil be averted I can't find their way out. Uirds frequent-Jig tbe problem to which I would invite ly attempt-to fly accross the river and your attention, and thai 'of' ot nets hke light on the same side they started trom, yourser, who are placed 111 positions lo being deceived by tho different crooks! render important services to "the nation Indeed. Von mar be deceived when yon I In h-v humble iudirme it. we. the be tlmik you are across it ; aud some of the pie of Virgiuia and Kentucky, have it in b'hoys say it is so twisting there is but our power to .build up a rival system of Z'.ji- Z : n , . . . 1 . . , ... .... 1. ne Biue iv iu - intercominutiKation, that will give to the South a full share of th commerce ol the Northwest, and by that ; means regain il.A nAlililiAul iiifluaaau tekk 1 . tr aa. fa run r v t V .9 .1 " ty Tl Hits uuilHUWll muHsiivo wvei'i 'ivi nviu t001!? Uma!A the A"?' 1 the formation of the, KOeiii..,t till it From the Enquirer of yesterly; ncaw w a 1 ioni nv irm rt iiinrr ntftiii f ttmm 1 . . 7 r vurv ..m. . y .... v v. . I was wrested worn uslv the more set ive iliacallfustiiaJiiiidel a n a .hvidi.ltf mi 1. 11 DbPIMI ll T I . V . ailliiuf.in " ... .. orsttstarn: coustriicttoii ot a railway to the Uiuo nv r, and then look to wh it is yet to be d no. The-d istance from- Ivorfolkr- ta Louisville, by line of railway already completed and ihoso in progress, is 722 miles; ofthislir.e 520 miles are in Vir ginia, of which 33 J miles are finished, with the exception of laying the rails on 30 miles between Norfolk and Peters burg. This will be dono by the 1st ot Aogo&t next. This leaves bat 130 miles lo I e constructed, which work is coun' Ji ed to yor caie. In Kentucky, thtrs are 202 miles vf this great UnetMpeake and Ohio line, of which 1 understand, 100 miles are fiuished thus leaving Lthe knU Una ivn linnrlmi anii ihirt two I j I WW""' - j - A w6man In New .York.Vver 56. lias I miles lo be coostrueted- The whole of sued for a divorce from 1 her hTusand, Jthis work ia now hi progress, and can be near v 70. Ther "vouth" has been DarW - : I tug his addresses to a young girl nir simt.lv of the menus or pence, re union, the supremacy of tike Constitution, aaiUhanAyjghfr it. In no single instance nave we seen any "endorsement" of the dogmas of the call, thoosrh cordial sympathy and con currence is invariably expressed as to the oVrf.TJiis is piwf tht the. present a tion ef ihcso '! is universally flt to be very faulty and onliappy ; and henec, by general consent, the call is re-written, or sabetituted by simple declaration of the aims and sentiments' above stated, and sach as will allow all good men ! gettogelher without hindrance or enu barrassmcnt The road ha bwn comrlrtt. Atlantic coast, being always open and accessible, perfectly laud-locked and se cure and with four feet more water than New York.- Secondly, it affords the shortest line of communication with the lower valley of the Ohio, assuming the mouth of the Hudson, the capes of the Delaware and tho mouth of the Chesa peake as the points of comparison. Xllirdlyj it gives to the Ohio dJejLaili tho great 'Lake ulism a line to the West Indies and to the South American lie publics 500 miles neaier than N. Y.,and 200 miles nearer than that by New Or leans. Fourthly, the Atlantic terminus of this line, Norfolk presents the best point for tho .distribution .of Westeni produce along;! ho seaboard of our own country, as well as For luieign exporta tion ; espocially to South America- I liHve.HHM-rteil that oar line of communica tion with tliw Ohio valley and the great L ike batin is the HborUwt that can Ihs stf inld to the lonnnjre of this region. I now .r.-eil tliepiW: From Louwvills to New Voi k tiy iIim - ' ErUs lUilruad is . - - - -934 mile. From Loui8vill9 it Noif .Ik, - - .122 Difference in favor of Norfolk, 21? Tho Erie Knilroad iiri-seuts iho shortest line of railwsy eoininuiiication with Xvw Vork dial it common to the products of th Ohio valley and lbs Lake basin ; that by the New-York Ceatral Road bw'ng 103-1 niilf, which giveiour hue lo Nortotk the adauMo of uistauce py 3J1 miles. - " ,'; ' . If we mo wure lo St. Lmis or Chicago w still have an advanlajru hi oimaiice eo'islly onulu Rive. The queniion of relative dHtanoe being esiablislied m our favor, it toll.tws tbal oars must be tho clieaeet railway couimanicanon, because if we will take any tale of trananortatioa oom mon to both lines, we have s ditfereitoe in the cost of transit lliat mutoontrol the in vmeiit of touaage. A short jualeulaliort will d-'iioii-slrate the troth of this rMilion. We will as. tuipe ,3c per ton fwr rnile as tlie average on tlie .NorloJk strd -wlyrsli!ie,JowvJl has been mouth of the Chnmneake bay, should be with held: nay, that all Ike energies of the Stan of Kentucky aad Virginia should Le devoted to tbo great otect, as I lie best means of perpetaat-. ing our (Umkhm Union, tlis existence of wh'ch is so serioealy threatened by those who are mJ ly contendiiijt tot political ascendancy, beeed 0oa j,he intemperate adrocaey of seetiooal supremacy. ... I herevareTnaifyjeluer Important views of litis ipT"t,tinelioir wfiich I desire to present lo yotti fOiin1ilcrttort. fu( will Mem ihsm for another " time. - Your, very respect fully, A' Fint Watertnehn.Wc are again indebted to Mr. W. C. Handy of Phoenix (Jail for the finest watermelon we have seen this seaaon. Mr. Handy has ar rnngctnonts by M hicli he is enabled to keep constantly on hand a fresh supply of melons of all sizes And at nil prices to suit purchasers. NEW FOUNDRY & MACHINE SHOP Obstrlotte, X.O. M. MAETIN & CO., IIAVINU remoTad llirir Works, from 8iowiPr, (iwuio cusutrito Chsrlotte.re.peetfully lufurmlhrir old pal runt ami the public feneniDy, lbt thry have wnrd a roundry and Machiue shop at Ihe old na vy rare hti, ia Hie eily or cnartou. wnrrs inrj arc prepared lo make all aurti of CASTINGS for SUavi f.ngines, Mills, Factories, Water Wltfel-s, Can Mills, Fanning Implements, dee. KRPAIKINU Particular alleuoon will be said lo r-"pairinf of all kiiidn. All wirk hnH be done in the very niceat atyls.and the beet wf malerial aaed M. MARTIN. JOHN WILKES. , June 25. 16C6. 2G:Ut Charloita, N. C. llartlj Carolina Hail llanb (la. Cngioerr fc Saptrmlcadeot'i Office, ) Company Shops, Jane 7th, 18G6. J CHANGE OF TIME. Os aid arter Jaae 10th, I86, TItAlNS WILL RUN AS FOLLOWS: obiNO xxruetT i mil. THAIll. UTe Ouktalwru'. . . . 1S.30 p. , Raleigh . ...",. Hillilioro' 6:tS . " Oreenrtwro'.. T.Sil " SalitlMir.. ,..m.l " tuiu At CkAfluUt.a.11 m.lOHT AND .CGOXKOD.TlOa. ' Lekvc Ooldalwro' li.iM) r.a , Kaleieh, SWjt.a ( Hllliboro 8.I " j ' Oraentboro'... .010. MO 1 " Bnliaborr IU" Se Arrive at Charlotte, . 9M shown, that we have a line shorter hy 212 mil- thairtligshuttwMtnetoNtrw-Yotlrrf 4he-ateof enterprise, anu, iiinai ay suiwrior a- ..... , ... ,. lllir);, .i. r it iiiliittt txmr-t , d. . will the gradee of our rol to Norfolk from Ws wiBpes B.Bptatiejlioaii.orHani LOaUviJIe enable us to carry it at as low ratei aa the &rrxm(l7wliaii the-BWty -Sffrripetiu)! line Hhs enee wntfaSa($.V)er saw al ihsf. lo N'ew York. 1 answer, titer nrtsneut no ilifu cully, beoaaae the maximum grade,oii JirotU Jiue is ike same ay 60 feet to the mile, goiiijf east or I be dirertioa ia which tho aa-rical'.u'al, or heavy toonag, is to be moved. I itow claim that our ability to compete wills the gr-at Nor ihern system of railways for the tortnajo of the Northwest tas bot;n proven t and nren tiiede moostralioo of this fact I' claim that the view I ex pressed j0 ihe smmeneement of this eoraroe- DicalKXi, as to the vaal mi porlawest eotn rirt;il 15 and polilieally, of tbS CembeirlaB.1 Gap Kailroad, are .well foanded, and should be so jegarJed bj all t e people f this Commawalik as well as oj ie people 01 iveaiucaj i aae was bo cun repaired 10 bring about the imporunt resuhs ehioh mosi follow epoa the esublishmat of a line of eominDnieaUoa with the. north weslsrm Rial, which has iu AlUnlie terminal at the, m.iii. Tail. ' ra.ioHT did .oconeoniTMa. Leave Ch.rlittte, II. 1.1p.m. 1-ave Charlotte,.. .. 4 8H1.M. slibury, .... I.SHa.m " SaH.bnrjr,. . . . 6 M " " OrMti.hor.1' . . I " i " Oreenaboro'.. l.lllr. a. 11 llillabnro'.t.. S.l " ' " Mlllilmro &.S5 - Raleigh 8JMI M I Ralelirl t.SS ' Ai ri.r ut Ooldnburu, ll.iU " Arrive at Uoklahwu' S.IS A. a. Mail Tram cnnutcti al Ruleili with Raleib & Ganti.n Trains fir Ihs North At GoMiboro' with Wilmiiigion A Weldoo.and Ailaniic A N C. Trains. ' ArHXiiiinvodalioa Train runs daily, (Sundays ex cepted,) connectiug wilh Wilmington & Weldoo fiaina. There ia no Sunday Train foing North from Wel doa 1 Portaii.oalh ; paaaengeri arriving at Weldon on that day can fo immediately through via Peters Wif aud RkhuMiud. ' - :. v E. WII.KES. 7;M;dJtwtf Eng. d Si -. COTTON GINS, , Manufactured by . W. G. Cl-nions, Brotrn 4 Co, COLUMBUS.' OA. WE huee resnmed Uie Maaafaolare of Cotton Giiw in thieeity, and will be prepared lo fin orders. ' b 1st of June nest. ' As w thai) uH be, a kareto. (ire, repreeented hy trselin( agents, parties wishing our gins, sltl eonrerX f(r by sendisg in their or rlerS al aa early day. As owiaf lo the demaad, ws shall be enable lo keep a stock ia the hands of oar heal agent, as it waa our practice be tire the war. All baaiaeaa transactions being now redored to cash, oa anlee will be Mads on ths basis of ready pay. ,.Oor Gins are too well kauin lo require any epe niat nntioe or commendation we believe they are BiiriValled in the chief points of eseelleace which g t make up a aupertof machine, namely : tyeeaf, Itgkl imugkt aad greed mmtie. Our DOUBLE CYLINDER GINS will be fiaiad auperior to the' aiugle cylinder, whea parties have etnam r food water power,, lo give them Ihe aecea- ssry speed. - la arl eaaaa whan taiseaa be doa we rreiimimed the t ifl prefereaee t4-e.SPf!S-rSit'rI If. howeeer. iBdiffi-reat or 7aeaeaii power ll Seed" tfcV"wW rl drr- weS ae theiwrh MiWff JIOSSKT A GO. Wainiaroa. W. C, are ur ee ne rat aats"rSHhi3ta ieof Cae.liaa. Bitoflrxarrri a hi r e eelebrawd Gins from ear part ut rLie the Stale. aud fire dujlars f. eacn Uia will only bechirjeo to purch-er --T" CO WiluNaftoa. N. May I, M dlawimo3s7 FISH! FISH!! JUST received and for safe 35 half barrels Roe Herring. MIOI1 A tL . tiKU W . Salisb7, July 81, 1800 dlw Wlsao NOTICE. A APPLICATION win be made ta the President aad Directors of the No. Ca. B. R. Co., to Weoa eertiSoats) for two shares stock, in said ooenpany, tbe orifioal oarbtkste hariog been loat .ARCHIBALD BAKER. ' . June SO. WA. 3t -in- 'TV- r