Published by J. H. & G. G. Myrover, Corner Anderson and Old Streets, Fayetteville, N. C. VOL.-:) NO. -20. North Carolina Gazette. .r. ii. .v (i. MYkovKU, Iulllsliera. TEL: MS OF.ti UMSCKll'TIOX: One year (in advance),. Si x month.- " 'J'liictr l an CLUli jbiTES: III rimieVfaeiit tu (tilt' uiltlres) witli an extra copy '22 50 '.. .. " - - 4i) om Jo " 75 on .i ,( " umi a premium of a tint' rlirouio, value 25 00 00 100 cupii H (.sent toiiiie'artilre) with an vxtm. eopy mitl u premium of a finu chionlo, value $M l.V) 00 HATES Of .Wl'EUTISIXG : On.' Kin.tr (' lines .lil nonpareil) one iurtertion f 1 00 .. " . two " 1 50 i. . " j ,. mouth 2 50 . ,.- '.. " " three 500 .. i- ' " Mix " 9 00 .... " ' " twelve ". , 15 00 I.u 'r advertisement.1 eharneil in proportion to the itliuvc ratiitt. Spt'ciiil notii-t'M -J5 per cent, more than r-"iilar HilvertinementM. I Home Circle. Jfcuii. is the Sacred Kefuge of Oar Life." " Jlrijdcn. T E E I) A R K: HOUR. A CIIIUSTMAS STORY. "I can't 'and it anv longer, Jane: I'll go out, Hint perhaps something will turn uj fur us." 'tV a cold night, Robert." '.".CoM, yes; hut it's not much colder out than in. It would have been much-better i.f,r voii if you had married John Tremain," 'he sa'nl, bitterly. 'lK.n't say that, -Robert,- I've never re gretted my choice." "Not even when there is not a loaf of bread iu the house for vou and the .chil dren?" "Not even now, Robert. Don't be dis couraged; God has not entirely forsaken tis. lVrhnps this. Christmas eve the tide will 1 1 it ili ; better tlays may daw n on us to-mor- Robert Btioe shook his head desponding- Lv 'on arc more hopeful than I, Jane. Day alter day 1 have been in search of .employment;" I have called at about fifty places' only to recei ve the same reply evpry w In re." ' j .lust then lit ire Jimmy, who had been asleep, woke Up. 'Motlicr," he pleaded, "won't you please trve 111 o a piece of. bread? 1 am so hiing- -There is no bread, .limiuy, my darling, ' s.iiil the poor mother, with-a sad, aching Iicrut. .... .!. , 9. 11 1 "W lien w ill there lie some; asKeu mo tjutlc child, pitoously. Fears came to the mother's eyes; .she knew not wlmt to do. "Jimmy, I'll bring you pome bread!-' said the agonized father. , ' ' I te seized his hat, and hurried to the door; his wife, alarmed, laid her hand on his sleeve. She saw the look in his eye, and .feared to what step desperation might lead him. ". 'Remember, Robert,' she said solemnly, "it is hard to starve, but there are thiugse yon worse." ' He shook offher detaining hand, and jwssed out. - ' Out -iu the cold streets! There woulil .be their onjy home next. For a brief pe riod longer they had -the shelter of a cheer less room in a cold lodging-house, but the rent would become-due at the end of the present month, and he had no money to meet it. Hubert Brice was a mechanic, compe tent and skillful. Three years before, he li ved in a country village w here his expen ses were moderate, and he found no diffi culty in meeting them. But in an evil hour hr grew tired of his village home, and mo ved to the city. Here he vainly hoped to do better. For a while lie' met with good success; but he found' the lodging house in wliiclMie had to live a poor substitute for the ntgSt cottage he had in the country. Tile saw his mistake, butrwas too proud to go back, although his Wife wished to do , SO. "'-.. j, .''' Hut a time of great dejiressimi came, and witlwit a suspension of tusuiess enterprise. " Ork ceased for Robert "Brice and inanv others. If he had been in his old home he could have turned his hand to some . thing else, and, at the worst, could have iiuimwou oi. ms jicignoors unui irigi.uer times. i. ' . "So day by day he-went out to seek work; only to return disaipointed. If he had been alone he could have got on in some w ay; but it was a sore trial to come to the cheerless room, and see his pale wife and hungry children, with no relief to offer to them. When Robert II rice w ent into the streets on that Christmas eve, lie hardly knew how he was going to redeem the "promise he had made to little Jimmy. Ue was absolutely-penniless, and hud been so for three or four days. There was no work thai he was liktdy to find to do on that - night. . 'Twill pawn my coat," he said; IT can ,not see niy.vvife and children starve." It was a well-worn coat,flnd that cold winter night he needed soniethincr more to keep him warm. Weakened by enforced tasung, he w as Qiore sensitne to the cold, and shiverca as he walkdd along the pave ment. "cs," he said, "my coat must go. I know noUiow I shall get on without it, but I can't see mv family starve before mv " f,y.-s." " " He was not in general an envious man; 'mt when he saw the sleek, well-fed citi ;zeuS, buttoned up to the throat in wtxrm wevcoats, come out of brilliant v liglited .ois, providexl with presents for liappv (l'iWren at home, while his own were star- ing he suffered some bitter thoughts upon the inequality of fortune's gifts to come to his mmd. Why should they bo so happy and he so miserable? There was a time, he remembered it well, when he, too, suffered not the Christ mas Eve to pass without bnying some lit tle gifts for Jimmy and Agnes. How lit tle he dreamed that they should ever want bread? i There was one man, shorter than him self, well clad, who passed him with hands thrust in the pockets of his overcoat. There was a pleasant smile upon his face. Doubt less he was thinking of the happy circle at home. . I f Robert knew iiim to be a rich cabinet-' maker and upholsterer, whose large ware house he often passed. He had applied to this man, only two days before for em ployment, and had been refused. It was, perhaps, the thought of the wide differ ence betw:een them, so far as outward cir cumstances went, that led Robert to follow him. " : - - .' After awhile the tradesman, Mr. Grimes, drew his handkerchief from his pocket. As he did so he did not perceive that his pocket-book came -with it, and fell on the pave ment. He did not perceive it, but Rob ert did. His heart leaped into his month, and a sudden thought entered his mind. He bout quickly .down, and picked up the pocket-book, raising his eyes to see if the movement had been noticed. It had not; Mr. Grimes walked on, unheeding his loss. "This w ill buy bread-for my wife and children," thought Robert, instantly. A vision of the comfort which the mon ey would carry to that cheerlessfroom light ed up Jiis heart for an instant, but then for he was not ilishoncst there came an other thought. The money was not his, much as he wanted it. ' "Rut I cannot see my wife aud children starve," he thought again; "even if it is wrong to keep the money, God will pard on the offense, for he understands1 mv mo live." ' - ;,; : All this was sophistry, and he knew it; in a moment he. felt it to be so. There were some things worse than starving his wife had said before lie came out. Could he meet her eve on.his return with food so got ten? " "I've ljv,ed honest so far; I won't- turn thief now." It was with a great effort that he came to. this decision, for all the w hile there was before his eyes that vision of a cheer less home, and he could hear little Jimmy vainly asking for food. It was with an effort tlrat he stepped forward and placed his hand upon the tradesman's shoulder, extending' the hand that held the pocket book. y- "Thank you," said Mr. "Grimes, "I had not perceived mv loss; ' I ain obliged to you." - ::" : , .: "You have reason" to be," said Robert,' in a low voice. "I was verv near keeping it." -, ' "Thatjwould have been dishonest," said Mr. (J rimes, his kind tone altering slight ly. "Yes, it would; but it is hard to be hon est when one is penniless, and his family without bread." "Surely you and your children are not in that conditionr' said the tradesman,- earn estly. ' V ' "Yes," sahl Robert, "it is only totftrne. J''or two months I have vainly sought for vork. I applied to you two or three days ago. '. , "I remember you now; I thought that I had seen vou before. And vou still want work?" "T should feel gratefuT for it." "My foreman left me yesterday. Y'ill vou take his place at twentv-liviaollars a week?" V : "ThankfuTlv sir; I would for onlv half that." ''Then come to-morrow morning, or, as to-morrow is holiday, the next day. In the meantime, accept of this for present neces sitk's." "Why, you have given me thirty dol lars!' said Robert, in amazement. "I know it the pocket-book contained five thousand dollars. Hut for vou I should have lost all. I wish vou a merry Christmas."- ,"It will, indeed, be a merry Christmas,' said Robert, fervently. "Heaven bless you! good night!" ' "Good night." Jennie waited for her husband in the cold and cheerless room which lor a few days longer she might call her home. An hour passed; there was a step on the stairs her husband's. It "coald not le, for this was a cheerful, elastic step, rapidly com ing up two steps at a time. She looked eagerly to the door, as it opened, l'es, it was he. Robert, his face radiant with joy, entered with a basket of substantial pro visions. ''Have you got some bread, father?" iu cpned Jimmy, hopefully. "Yes, Jimmy, some bread and meat from a cook's shop; and here's a little tea and sugar. There is a little coal left; let's have a blight fire and a comfortable meal,- for, please God, this shall be a merry Christ mas!'?. "How did this happen? Tell me, Rob ert." ' . ' - , So Robert told his wife; and soon a nice lire lit up the humble room, and there were four happy hearts' that waited in joyful hope for the daWn of a "merry Christmas' day. I .."'..' The next week they moved to better rooms, and have never since known want, Robert fount a, firm friend in Mr. Grimes; he now has a comfortable home, a surplus sum in the bank, and lias reason to remem ber, every da' of liis life, with a grateful heart, God's goodness on that Christmas eve. Love cmlurcth all things. A Legend of Servian Hospitality. The hospitality of the Servian is illus trated by the following legend: The day had just" departed, and the moon shone brightly over bare fields of snow-, when a stranger entered the hut of a poor Servian named Lagare. "You are welcome' said Lagare, and, turning to his wife, continued in a low tone: "Luibitga, make the fire blaze and get the supper ready." Luibit ga .replied: "The forest is vast and the faggot brums cheerily on the hearth, but where is the supper; have we not fasted for two days?" '"Are you Servians?" said the stranger, "and have nothing to give your guest?" Poor Lagare opened one cupboard, then another, but both were empty; not a morsel of bread, not a fruit did they contain. Shame and confusion took possession of him. "Here is food and fresh meat, too," said the stranger, laying his hand on the golden curls of Tanka, the only child of his host. "It shall never be said, then, that a Servian was wanting in hospitality!" cried Lagare, and, seizing Tanka, he cut her throat as if she had merely been, a iamb. After perforaning this a'wful deed, he swooned away, and Luibitga fell to the ground with a loud cry. 'Who could describe the supper of the stranger? Toward midnight Lagare1 woke to find his guest bending over him, who said.iu a loud tone: "Rise, Lagare, I am the Lord thy God; Servian hospitality has been tried and not found wanting." Thy daughter is 'restored. Abundance and peace shall reiu in your house evermore. Lagare, Luibitg a, Tan ka, live long and prosper!" A Real Pearl Xeckl ace. A vcry curious circumstance recently occurred here relative to a necklace, or rather a string of beads. One of the vacant shops on the Rue de Rivoli was occupied temporarily by one of those Arab venders of pipes, per fumes, imitation jewelry, shawls, ptc, wherewith the visitors to Long Branch'-and Newport. at home have become familiar. A gentleman j-esiding in the upper part of the city stopped at this stall the other day, and purchased a string of imitation beads, for which he paid ninety cents. This necklace he gave to his (laughter for one of her dolls. A celebrated jew;eler hap pened to call one evening while the child was engaged in amusing herself with her new toy. "How foolish you arc to let a child have so valuable an object to play with!" remarked -the" jeweler to the father. "Yalnable!" said the father, "I gave four francs and a half for it the oth er day." The jeweler took the necklace from the little girl, and examined it long and miniftely. "I do not care what you paid for it," he said at length, "but this much I do' know: the pearls are real, and the necklace is w orth ten thousand francs (82,000) at the very lowest computation. If you doubt. my sincerity, I will prove it bv giving vou eight thousand francs for it on the spot." The next morning thu-gentle1-man hurried totliefdaee where he had pun chased it, but the shop had in the mean time been rented, and the Arab had disap peared. How a string of' real pearls had got mixed up with his beads of wax and glass must, therefore, of course,' remain a mystery. Moral. Let us buy largely and contin uously of imitation jewels, in the hope that they may turn out real. Alas, the reverse is too often and far more frequently the case. l'uris Letter. Ax Apologue. One day the guardian genius of all who possess strong sensibili ty thus addressed Jupiter: "Father di vine! bestow on thy .poor human creatures a language more expressive than any they now possess, for they have only words signifying how they suffer, how they en joy, and how they love." "Have I not given them tears?" replied the deity "tears of pleasure, of pain, anil the softer ones that flow from tender passion!" The genius answered "O God of men! they do not sufliciently speak the overflow ing of the heart; give, I thee supplicate, to man a language that can more powerfully point "the languishing and impassioned wishes of a susceptible soul the recollections, so delightful, of infancy the soft dreams of youth, -and the hopes of another life, which nature oft indulges while contem plating the last rays of the sun as they sink in the ocean: give them, father of all! a new language of the heart." At this moment the celestial harmonies of the spheres announced to Jupiter the approach of the Muse of Song. To her the god immediately made a sign, and thus utter ed his behests: "Descend on earth, O muse, and teach mankind thy language." And the Muse of Song descended to earth, taught us her accents, and from that time the heart of man has been able to speak. John Randolph, of Roanoke, employed an excellent man named Clopton, to preach to his negroes in a chapel on his planta tion. One cold Sunday, while he was giv ing out his hymn, two lines at a time, he observed a negro put his foot with a new brogan on the red hot stove. Turning to him he said in a measured voice: "You rascal, you, you will burn your shoe." As this rhyme was in exact meter to the hymn, the negroes chimed in and sang it. The preacher smiled, and mildly explained: "My colored friends, indeed, you're wrong; I didn't intend that for the song." This being also in good measure, the negroes sang it with pious fervor. Turning quick ly to his congregation he said sharply; "I hope you will not sing again until I have had time to explain;" but this only aroused tbejn to repeat his last words with vigor. Mr. Clopton, then finding his tongue turned to rhyme, abandoned explanation and went on with the services. If anyone speaks evil of you let your life be so virtuous that none will ever be lieve him. , THURSDAY, DECEMBER Old Time Detectives. A New York paper, speaking of the inefficiency and cor ruption of the detectives of the present time, relates this anecdote of a detective of the last generation: One of our banks kept losing money, only in small sums, yet the loss was' constant and mysterious. A celebrated detective was called in. "Let everybody leave the directors' room," he said. "Send in everylwhy, one by one, who has had a chance to steal." Southe president, the cashier, the tellers, the book keepers and clerks had a private interview with the detective. Eveiyone irt the bank knew the purpose of the visit, and all but one were slightly nervous and uncomforta ble under the searching questions of the chief. The last who entered was the neph ew of the president. lie walked in cool, unembarrassed and indifferent, and with an air that said "proceed." He was dismiss ed as well as the rest. The detective said not a word, left the bank, and in. one week returned. He had been shadowing the president's nephew. In a clear, fair hand was written out the whereabouts of the young man for the past six days, the com pany he kept, what he drank, the hours he spent on the road, his night orgies, and all his movements by night and by day. No body in the bank knows to-day- that the president's nephew was the thief. That his health was not good, that he was trav eling in Europe, and that his place in the bank was filled by another, was well known. The bank was saved from rob bery, the family from" dishonor, the de tective commended for his skill and pi'u dence, and was all the happier for a check of $1,000. A DlVOKCK WITH A TKIUilBLE'OlUGIX. A New York letter to the Baltimore News says : There is in this city, h"ow?ever, one most amusing low comedian who has a reason for never smiling. In his youth he was the father of a little girl of a refractory, obstinate disposition. One day, to punish her for something, he locked her in the bed-room, and with his wife went down stairs-to dinner. Soon the child began to scream in a terrible manlier, which the parents consid ered was only temper; but, as the shrieks continued, the wife became alarmed, and desired to go to her. lie, however, for bade her doing so, as he said the child must be taught obedience, and that she should not gain her -end by screaming. They went on with their dinner; the fearful shrieks continued for a while and t-hen ceased. As tlnjy were about leav ing the table smoke began to pass through the house. There was lire soinew here. Rushing to release the poor little girl, they found her dead., Her clothes had evident ly caught fire from the grate, and while the parents were eating the child was dy ing. The comedian's wife took' a horror and hatred of her husband after this, as she be lieved that if he had allowed her to go to the poor child she might have saved her life. They were divorced; no wonder that man never smiles off the stage. ;k to It. Learn a trade, or cet in- to business, and go at it with a determin ation that defies failure, and you will suc ceed. Don't leave it because hard blows are to be struck, or disagreeable work to be performe1. Those w ho have worked their way up to wealth and usefulness do lot belong to the shiftless and unstable lass, and if yon do not work while a ,'oung man, as an" old man vou will be nothing. Work with a will and couoner your prejudice against labor, and man fully bear the heat and burden of the day. It may be hard the first week, but after that 1 assure yon it will become a pleas ure, and you w ill teel enough better satis fied with yourself to pay for all the trial of a beginning. 'Let preseverence and in dustry be vour motto, and with a steady application to business you need have" no fear for the future. Don't be ashamed of your plain clothes, provided you have earned them. They are far more beauti ful in the estimation of all honest men and women than the costly gewgaws sport ed by some people at the expense of the confiding tailor. The people who respect you only when well clad, will be the first to run from you in the hour of adversitv. Frx at Home. Don't be afraid of a little fun at home, good people; don't shut up your homes lest the sun should fade your carpets, and your hearts lest a hearty laugh should break down some of the mus ty cobwebs there. If you want to ruin your sons, let them think that all mirth and social enjoyment must be left on the threshold when they tome in . at night. When once a hotne is regarded as only a place to eat, drink and sleepJn, the work is begun that ends in gambling-houses and degradation. Y'oung people must have fun and relaxation somewhere. If they do not find i at their own hearthstones, it will be sought in other and perhaps less profitable places. Therefore, let the fire burn bright ly at night, and make the home delightful with all those little arts that parents so perfectly understand. Don't repress the buoyant spirits of your children;! half an hour around the lamp and firelight at home blotsout the remembrance of many a care and annoyance during the day, and the best safeguard that they can take with them into the w orld is the unseen influence of a Inight little domestic circle." "Some men," said a stone mason, "be come useful citizens, and others become vagabonds just as some slabs of marble become useful doorsteps and others be come lving tombstones." ' Never be idle. ,If -our hands cannot bo usefully employed attend to the cultiva tion of vour mind. 23, 1875. FOE CHARITY'S SAKE. "Now you just skip out of this, said a big, burly clock hand in the ladies' cabin of a Fulton ferry boat, as Jie caught a thin-ly-clad, shivering, barefooted boy by the ear and marched hini toward the door. "Get oat on the deck lively now." The little fellow had been asking the passen gers for cents, and the man had caught him at it. "Oh, please don't !" screamed the child, as the clock hand twisted his ear; "I'll go, I will!" A fashionably dressed woman stepped quickly forward, and her silks rustled and her eyes flashed fire, as ahe said: "What has he done! Why do you treat the child so harshly?'' . "He's a beggar, mum; and the rules doesn't allow beggars in the boats, mum." "Let him stay in here," said she. "It's cold outside5. He is barefooted, and so young, too why lie can't be more than five or six years old!" "He can stay in here if he behaves him self. He mustn't beg it's agin the rules, mum;" and the big man ? let go the little one's ear, and stood watching him. "Poor little fellow," mused the lady, scanning the boy's pale, pinched features closely. "You look tired and hungry. I've a mind to give von something." "Its ior mm, if you give him a cent, mum; his folks will take it all away from him before his foot's put ashore three min utes," answered the dock hand. But the kind lady handed the child one of Uncle Sam's crisp fifty-cent promises to pay hereafter, saving, "He certainly needs shoes and something to eat." "Mistaken ckarit'," persisted the valiant employee. "We know 'em all he'll get no good of the money." "He's welcome to the little I gave him," she answered, and, noticing that the pas sengers were regarding .her, with interest, she added : "Aud I beh?eve that every per son in the cabin thinks I am right and that most of them are willing poor child a penny or two.". to give the The passengers did agree with her, and they began dropping pennies into the boy's hat until the episode proved his bonanza. The boat touched the planking. The boy skipped to shore and across the street to Fulton market. The reporter followed him round into Beekman street, and saw him wait on the corner; two minutes after ward he saw the well dressed lady ap proach from the other side of the market; he saw the boy carefully empty the money into her gloved palm, and passing the pair heard her say cheerfully, "Well, Dick, I guess we'll try the Roosevelt boat." A WASHINGTON ASPASIA. One of the most remarkable women that ever trod the sinful paths of Washington life was the mistress of Ex-Congressman Bowen, of South Carolina. She was one of the loveliest women that ever had a mission to lure. Her mother was a Greek, her father a Scotchman. She inherited her mother's classic face and voluptuous swell of figure. .Her hair was a glossy, shimmering blue-black,' her eyes two stars. Her complexion and teeth were of a daz zling whiteness. Her mind was of a rare order, and, as she always studied, she pos sessed more than ordinary culture. I nave many interesting particulars concerning her from the physician who attended her onee when she had an attack of typhoid fever. She was very 'stately in her-manners, and as sweet tempered as a noonday sun. She lived with Bowen several years as his mis tress, and was as true to him as a wife could be. At the expiration of some time Bowen married for money and position, and dropped ""Sallie," as he called her. There was never an- woman less to blame for becoming a social outcast. Her father died early, and left her to the tender care of a step-mother. This stepmother sold Sallic in Baltimore, when only sixteen, to a very rich man. Under cover of a sup posed marriage she lived with . him several years, when ho deserted her. Bowen then came to her rescue. After Bowen she rented a house here, and gathered about her a few women of her class. She would have none that were by any possibility within the pale of being reclaimed. She kept this house but a short time. Strange as it may seem, she always had prayers at her house morning and evening, and she was a most diligent Bible x-eader. "I am in this life," she would say, "through no fault of my own. The way out does not exist. Let us make the best of it." La ter on she crave up her house. She said it was enough to carry her own sin, without having the thought of the responsibility of others. She went to Chicago with the brother of a former high official here. Ho went into business in Chicago, and at last accounts "Sallie" was serving him ' as a most faithful mistress. " Five years ago a conductor on a Hart ford and New Haven railroad was given a thousand dollar bill by.a sleepy passenger for fare. He took it into a baggage car to change it, and, upon returning, the passen ger denied having given it to him, claim ing to have handed him a ticket. The con ductor rout the money in a savings-bank, where jt still remains. The story has oft en been told in the newspapers, yet no claimant has been discovered. Money goes, no one knows. Where it goetli, no one showeth. Here and there, every where. Run, run; dun, dun; spend, spend; lend lend: send, send. Flush to day, short to-morrow. Notes to pay, bor row, borro'w. How it goes, no one knows; where it goeth, no one showeth. If you have great talents, industry will strengthen them; if moderate abilities, in dustry will supply the deficiency. From the Colojrwe Gazetted THE 1)EAD PRINCESS OP EGYPT. Magnificent Funeral of the Khedive's Favorite - ' Daughter. The Princess Hanem Zeinub, only fif teen years of age, a favorite daughter of the Khedive of Egypt, and wife of Ibrahim Pasha, died recently in Alexandria of ty phus fever, following shortly after her con finement. The Khedive and his family, as well as his guest, the Sultan of Zanzi bar, and the whole city of Alexandria, were much disturbed by the sad event, and the theatre was closed for three days. The body was taken to Cairo the same day, and placed in the Kasr-el-Nil palace. .? An im mense concourse followed the remains to the depot in Alexandria, and hundreds of lire were distributed among the poor peo ple. The interment took place iu the Ri lah mosque on the following morning. Twenty-four bullocks, thirty camels and forty wagons were in the funeral pro cession. These animals were laden with bread, dates, cooked meats and vegetables; the wagons carried casks of water and sy rup, and all along the route distributions of tho provisions were made to the poor. Eunuchs, meantime, threw 450,000 pieces of silver coin to the people who thronged the streets. Three thousand priests, some clad in rich vestments of gold and silk, others half naked, followed the wagons, repeating prayers as theyj marched, and clapping their hands. Aftler them came the family of the poor young princess and the high officials of State,i and then the coffin, borne by officers of rank. Behind this walked three eunuchs, bearing on gold en shovels copies of the Khoran, to be bu ried with the deceased. The coffin was of simple, rough hewn wood, and the corpse was sewn up in a linen cloth. Upon this coffin were placed the jew-els of. the prin- cess; worth a million and a half dollars. After the bnrial the priests slaughtered the twenty-four bullocks before the mosque, roasted them and ate them up. The priests remained for seven days in the neighbor hood of the grave to pray for the soul of the departed. The Khedive was so over come with, grief that he could not receive any visits of condolence. A Nevada Catamount Story. The St, Helena (Nev.) Star of Oct. 21 relates the following incident : "Last Thursday as a young child of an employe, living near Sugar Loaf Mountain, on W. W. Lyman's place, was playing in the yard, a daring attempt was made by a catamount to de vour it. The mother hearing a cry such as only a mother's ear can detect as fore boding evil rushed to the door and was horrified to see in mid-air a catamount, which had just sprung from the bushes, about to light upon her child. Coincident with her shrieks, a.faithful bull-dog, which by accident happened to be on the spot, had already placed himself in a position to defend the child. The fight .was short and the catamount took to a tree near by. No male person being iiv the bouse, the mother dispatched a little daughter down the road for help. The girl meeting Mr. Tally, of the seminary, 'informed him that the dog had a California lion treed. Leav ing his team with a Chinaman, ho repair ed to the spot and killed the animal, which proved to be a catamount of huge propor tions. -The animal without doubt was very hungry, but it is;not an uncommon thing for them to visit the heji roost any hour after dark. It was forteate indeed that the dog happened to be there." Correspondence. FOR THE GAZETm, , . REMINISCENCES OF EUROPEAN TRAVEL .i i. f - XUMBEIt xc. ; ; i Ehrati'M. "Vovaffinr" calls onr afteiitimi to the fact, that we mado" a slight mistake of 4.0,ooo in tho number of volumes 'toiniowiii tho pirolic library of Balse, which he spoke of in Ms S8th number. Instead of 500,000 there kve. only 50,000. We guess the cotiio8 itor whs thiukinsi of the Laities' Circulating Library of JTayetteville. Kiw. G azette. Messrs. Editors : Now that I leave Germany, and may not recur to that conn try or any of the countries composing it, I will say that I have strictly endeavored to keep the promise that I made .on my arri val in Holland, and that was to report what I should see; but really many things that I saw were so revolting,,! will not say to all morality, "but to all decency, that a proper sense of propriety forbids my speak ing of them. I have recently, understood that some of your German subscribers think I have borne rather hard upon the Germans. Whether I have appeared pre judiced against the Germans or not, I can say one thing that I have onlv told the truth, and on ly part of the truth at that, as it is not proper to bo too candid on all oc casions. But in confirmation of what I-have said, I will quote from one of the most a ble newspapers published in America, and that is the New' York Sunday limes, es tablished thirty-five years aero, by that good and noble old Jew, Major Noah. In No". 10 of a series of articles written by a lady who has spent some time in Germa ny, she says, nnder date of September 10, 1874, in regard to a daneo'which she had witnessed in Germany : f "The variety of eostnme w-as verv great, and some were verv odd. Such dancing J emeu vigor- ous flourishing of limbs and emphatic stamnhir of feet ! . And all this on Sun- dav a day which is universally set apart in "Germany by the common people for balls, pleasure" excursions, beer drinking and similar amusements, while by the bet ter classes it is observed as a day of feast ing and social enjoyment. Indeed, among the unaccustomed things which5 strike a stranger m this country, none is more re marked than tho slight reverence X in which tho Sabbath is here held by those accounted the most pious. In first class families iu which 1 have visited, the ladv of the house, herself esteemed as an WHOLE NO. 123. exemplary member of 'the church, invari ably on Sunday! afternoons sets forth a ta ble with coffee and cakes, in anticipation of the visitors who never fail to call or ? leave their cards, and around this table herself and female visiters sit chatting and knitting, through the afternoon. I bavc seen a pious old lady reading the Bible and knitting on a Sabbath; and the latter is the Sunday evening employment of all the respectable trademen's w ivesj and daughters, who sit outside" their front-feoiB thus employed, while the man hirasttf, if ho does not go to some beer gardenma'v, be seen at his back-shop window, Imsilv engaged at his usual avocation of shoe niaking, tailoring or sign-painting. I have been told of a very excellent and pious old lady, two of whose sons aro clergymen, who every Sabbath evening has her grand children collected at her house for a dance; raid I have myself been inyffed , to a Sunday croquet party at the house of a cler- . gyman." 1 Here, I close my quotations from this ve ry intelligent and interesting Southern (for such she is) lady correspondent of the Sun day Times. Yon will" notice-she uses the word "better classes" and "first-cjass fam ilies." But, then, think; of it what must a man see, who mixes up with all classes, and goes to all places of public amusement on Sunday, and especially if ho is located in various towns and cities for years, in stead of soendin a dav or two'herfi nn,l tuerei i went to Europe to see, and did see. Let tho authorities of Munich, Bava- ria, report the condition of things1 that at one .time existed at the Great Prater. Tho Prater is the great park. Things had as sumed in broad day, on Sundays, such a revolting condition to all chastity and del icacy, that those in charge of the convent on the ODUosite bank of the river Tser uwiV'' obliged to .report the establishment (Pra ter), when there was. someiittle reform made. - But let any one go now, and sit as a silent spectator, and he willsay perhaps that this is a place not frequented by genteel people. Par from it, for yiero aro hun dreds of gentlemen present with their fam ilies, who of course do not participate, nor do their daughters ever dance or notice this vast crowd of common people; but they can not help bat see. Some days since I met a gentleman a T..i: -1. T 11 : i .. ; n 1 r in j. ojisn ucw a. vl-ij luieingeui ana niguiy educated man, who resides in ypur midst. . While in conversation he remarked that he had traveled all over Europe, and had visited every place that I had spoken of, and he found every word correct, and that everything I had said of Germany and the Germans was perfectly true. But, after all, we can overlook the great faults of the Germans their lewdness and vice, then great lack of refinement and polish, the common appearance of the mass of tho people, their great disposition to malign and traduce other people -when we take . into consideration their great habits of in dustry, frugality, sobriety, feelings of hu manity for animals, and many other good qualities that they possess. Through all my travels for years . in the various king- doms of Germany I saw but one man who was really drunk, and I tlo not know that I saw any other person under the least i nfluence of liquor. In Germany they drink, but not to an excess. , Is it not. strange that in no country, on the conti nent of Europe, you often see any one drunk? But of all tho countries on earth where drinking is indulged iu to an alarm ing excess by all classes, the United States excels them all. But we will return to Ger-" many. It is very pleasant to dvelLin some countries in Germany. ' The old castlesj old churches, old cathedrals, old groves, old and beautiful parks, the fine galleries of paintings, the? splendid collections of statuary, the fine operas, the reat orches tras, the-mqwib Te Deums, and other grand performances in the way "of church music, the splendid brass bands of from 30 to 5j0 pieces that oiie can hear anywhero at any time, the fine roads, and many other caus es, conspire to render Germany encbant; ing to those who are fond of the fine arts, music, architecture, and any other' profes sion they may wish to pursue; while those; who are fond of the antiquated can be grat ified by. a hoary antiquity that is , more . strongly developed in Germany than in any other European country, ex.cept Italy. . As! regards the admittance ofAmericans, and especially gentlemen from the South ern States,' to tho higher circles of society in Germany if one has letters from per sons of note iiithe United States, conducts himself well, and is a centleman, he is not on ly taken notice of, but his society is sought by all tho elite. found it necessary to avoid society, as I saw that if I mixed in company I would ha vo no time for stur dy. The whole of winter and spring in Munich and other cities is. devoted to grand soirees of various kinds, w hich, together with the great operas, would not havo left much time for study. Besides, I wished to . mix up with the world, as well as to be with the refined and elite. . Now I. will ffiv-e vour readers somo idea of how much it costs a gentleman to live iu tliA cbennnst citv in (fennanr. ivldcli is Munich. To have rooms in a first-class house, or one of the most fashionable ho tels, where only wine, i$ drunk;, to keep a box at the opera, have a valet, a horse and vehicle -all this will cost him only about' 1,200 per annum. Then again, to live in common style to have rooms in a fino house, to take meashj at a good hotel, and go onco or twice a week to the opera will cost only about $400 to $600. Main tenant je fats mcs adieux a Allemagnc. Voyage UR. A laborer in one of the manufacturing districts of England recently- offered his wife for sale to the highest bidder. She was sold to a young man for the ' sura of fourpeuce, and the matter was 'duly set tled in a written agreement, signed, by at testing witnessses.