5 - " . ""' uni.nrfrriitTir mm n ' - '' .- -.- J ! . : : : "BE SUBE IOC MOm AHPTHISK OO AmAJ.--DCT njam i ' - - ' ' ' t i YW' BPTlIKBTOBlttTOM. K. JANUARY fl). Htt?S. - . JW. 4. J WOFESSIONAL . CARDS, p5t J. A. PLEASANTS, IS A5D '! Dentist. BoTIIEIirOJlDTON, N. C. ! G. W1. LOGAN & SON, I ATTOnXKVS AT LAW, I , IUtiieufohdtox, N. C. I .iUonl to fiti y burtnei .intmate4 to Vir i-ire in tlif SfcilV of North Oaiolma, in -x lie Slate or Ft doral Courls. 35-tf j. w: HAItRIS, M. D. fliysiciim, Surt'bii aiul Obstctiiciim. ntVi rs liis professional wrviecw to lite ctli- i!(.t(( Riiuicroiauui nx vk-imty. i AHSt',1tr,h5lxl to Lis care will receive ,f,.ii!pt alU'ttii'Mi. i' e In.- (outidat Ws QGS'x or llesWU-ucc ifheii riot iirok-Hsionally alwcnt. I y iOLIVER HICKS, M. DM 1 Continues the practice of Medicine, ', Surgery and Midwifery; in Rather fordtou, and the smrroandiBg conn :irr. ' 30-ly. ' I?. OAlTilEi:- . JKO. GRAF BYXUil. ! GAlTIIKll k TYXUM, f ATTOliNKYS AT LAW, ifoiSU NTOK, X. C. : I'mcIk-o in tli Federal. Court, Supremo ruiiit U Xoiili Caiolltoi. ;itid iu the t'ounues ;Ctnwl.ii, OhMwi'U. Hullirlcrd, McDowell, "il.n lnson, Mitchell Yiuu-vy. i Culkt-iioits made iu auv part ol tlie Slate. DIL J."A. IIAGUH, ; Physician and burgeon, Hjvinsr Uicatcl s.t Kultwrordt, XL re :i;ttf!illy U'jul ts his i'Mes.Huml en iccM to iMuiitiy, ;jiuU Jjik l niia ian of their DK. J. L. RUClvER, rUVSlCIAN AND eUliOKON, ' rii'ilt ful lor ve lilTal VHti-oitdajre hereto lm rm'ivel. i; ty promot attention to ill c;ilis, to aietll a eoKliotwooe ot li e Kame. ; .-11 ', J. 15. CAltPKNTER, A1TOIIKKY AT IAW, IicmiKHFORin-ox, N. ColloetkniH ruij4l lt nood U. C. Iff :r. n, justice, VfTOKNKY AT IJLff, Will pnu-tice iu ihv .ui-i-ur Ton of th ihwid UtJuik-iai DMrirtf, in tlie So I'iftiii? Court ol Nnli Tiiiwiitt. nwl in th Kdiial Courl,' l tiJU'llk' a"l Alevilh'. HOTELS. CIipiNE Y - ROCK HOTEL. . Tli? uiKlersjtied having tnkeii full coiH rol l tliis old aixl avorally known Houet on tie Hickory Nut Guy TuruoikN 17 mi! ol Hutlierfortitou and 23 iniJ eftst ot Asln vilte. respectfully nlifis plwwai ek ; ix Mitd tlje travelr.f puw no m mnj frcpaml to accommodate them. It If unneeeu nrr loo tale tlmt Udiploe i la ttwiinuiKt ot lite finm Hcetiery in Wem xrUCn4inn, nJ Wtmn dcMrivx eitior lieokh or plensnrc. ill tiixl ik better ulace to while awHjr the unnnor montlw My lem rfiall lw reason 'lo. and no pains will feared to nj.nke !iitstnloiabl. e me h eao. 16-iC J. M. JUSTICK.- 1 THE BURNETT HOUSE, ETJTHEKFOBDTON, N. G. Is jeo fer the acffmjo!tio rf the travelhujf public, and with good fore, atteu tire wrviuiU, ax id pood ."tables and fed for re. 111 Prpric4x)r. B USINESS CA Rt& It. iTJ. ItOBlXSON, FASHIONABLE TA I LO R, Main St., OjpiU Out lUtneU lkme 1.UT1IKBF0BDT0K, X. O. All uork cut and made warranted to Fit Ckaninj; and repnirir tlimeat short notice, Latest Style- Fnahibn Platen always on hand. Orderu Irom a disUnco promptly at Glided to. 44-ly. SDES ! HIDES ! ! HIDES ! ! The hijHieRt market prices paid for Green and Dry Hides. -8-tr. D. MAY uu. WZSTEllN STAR LODGE No. Ol, A, F. IU.. , Meets regularly on the 1st Monday tight 11 each month, Tuesday of Superior Courts, nd on the FcsLivalg ot the St. John. G.M. WH1TK6IDB.W M. M H. JUSTICK, See. ' V " " ' .1 . 1. . .IIM II IM I I I - - !. - . M I II I 1 Ih - - - - - - - . , STAR & RECORD. L PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. J. B. CaRPENTEb! j" JRTfKTtS, RTJTHERFORDTON, N. a Terms of Subscbiption. 1 copy 1 year in advance, $2.00 LOO .05 10.00 16.00 80.00 l copy b months Single copy, 6 copies 1 year, 10 " 1 20 " 1 u u fi Specimen copies sent free. Rates of Advertising. I Z 3w In 2 hi 3n I ittch 1.06 I 50 2.U) 2J50 4,00 50 '2 iucho. 2.00 XO0 4.00 5,00 B.00 11.00 3 hicfee X00 40 6.00 7,50 1(10 4 itxke 4i)0 6.00 tMW lOjHO 16,00 5M.0O 5 htckpa 7,-Vi I0X) 20,00 37J50 l-S cI,U,(K) 15.00 30.00 85.00 4O.00 55.00 6m ' 9.M) 18.00 27,00 36,00 4S.W in. 32. 48, 64. I u au.ooai, 40,00 50.00 rfo.oo 110,00 ini.uo 300 9U.0O l.VJ Non-obj ectionabl e local notices 25 cents per line. Advertisements are payable quarterly, in advance. B" Agents procuring advertise ments, will ba allowed a reasonable commission. S)ecial arrangements, when electrotypes are furnished. 16 Objectionable advertisements, such as will injure our readers, or the character of the paper, as a high toned journal, will not be inserted. Any further information will be given on application to the pub lishers Stick to Your Buh. A rich man, in answer to the qu6stion how lc becanie so very r UtiVuoi'u 1, A - 4.1 x' 11 story : I will tell you how it was. One day when I was a lad, a party of boys and gir is were going to juck blackbcrrit. I wanted to go with them but was afraid father would not let me. When I told him what was going on, and he utt once gave nie permission to go with them, I could hardly contain invself. I rushed into the kitch en, jrot a bijr basket, and asked mother for a luncheon. I had the basket on my arm, and ,was just lif-ini: out at the gate, when my fsithi'T called me back, lie took ruy hand and said in a very gen th: voice: "Joseph, what arc voir going to do?" "To iick berries," I replied "Then, Jo- seph, I want to tell you one thing It isthiR : When you find a prct- ty gooi Inisti, no not leave 11 to seek a better one. The other novs and girls will run about pick ing a little here and a little there, wa-ting a great deal of time, and getting few berries." . - I went and had a capital time. Bat it was inst as my father said. No sooner had one found a good bush than he called all the rest, and they left their several places and ran off to the ne'vly-found treasure. Not content more than a minute or two in one place. they rambled over the whole pas ture, got very tired, and at night had very few berries. My fath er's words kept running m my ears, and I "stuck to mv bush.' When I haJ done with one I found another, and finished that ; then I tok another. When night came I had a large basketful of berries, more than all tlie others put together, and was not half so tired as they were. I went home happy. But when I entered I found niy tkthen had been taken ill. Helooked at my basketful of ripe blackberries, and said, Well done, Joseph. Was I not right when I told you to always stick to your bush V lie died a few days after, and I had to make my ! way in the world js best I could. But my fnthcr'a words sank deep into my mind, and I never forgot the experience of the blackberry party ; I "stuck to my bush.' . When 1 had a fair place, and Avas doing tolerably well, I did not leave i t and spend weeks and months seeking one a little better. When other young men said " Conic with ua, and we will make a fortune in a few weeks," I skook my hekd. and "stock to my bush." Presently my imployers offered to take me into busn.ess with them. I staid with the old house until the prin cipals died, and then I had every thing I wanttd. The habit of sticking to-ray business led peo ple to trust me, and gave me a character. I owe all I have and am to this piotto " Stick to your bush. Cora Stan ley. Tlie Old Love Story Set with New NamesThe Funeral of an Actress. She turned her face to the wall and simply said, "I want to die;" and as she spoke those words her life came to an eud. Yesterday she was -buried in OrpfinwonH Cemetery. Her career from the moment when, as Therese Ther- and, she captivated young Paris, until her death on Friday in this city, under the name ot Cora Stanley, is public property. On one occasion alone did she nearly betray her incognito. One of her friends heard her sing " Je Paime ! Jc Taime ! O Bretagne !'" He said, "Why, Therese, yon must be a Breton." Her eyes filled with tears, and she hasti ly left th 2 salon. When he sought her he found that she was crying bitter ly, and she said, "Dear friend, never speak to me in that way again ; you make me so sad." 8he was compelled to leave Pans, and decided to make her home on this continent. Before her de parture she gave to hor friends amPcornpanions in Paris a ;rand bade them farewell. Franco with 800,000 francs, $160,- 000. The next heard of her was at Havana, where she lived in magnificent style. In Havana a young and handsome-actor named Gomez fell deeply in love with her. She loved him with as much ainccrity. One night, after the performance in the Tacon Theatre, where he was playing, Gomez went with Thereto to her residence, and proposed to marry her. ' At first she laughed at him, but seeing that he meant .what he ud, she reasoned with 'him, and said that it she married- his prospects in life would be ruined, and site loved him too dearly to do Jhat. The infatuated young, man went A 'L? 1 ill 1 11 A, t - 10 ms noiei aim dicw out ms brains. He left a note addressed to Therese, saying that he found life unendurable without her, and that he would not forget her even in death. vVhen the news of his suicide was broken to her she was seized with brain fever, and for some weeks was at the door of death. She recovered to find her self almost a beggar. During her illness her maid had stolen all her jewelry, and fled to the mountains with another ser vant. She then sold her house in Havana, came to this city, and assumed the name of Cora Stan ley. She dispensed chanty with no niggard hand, and the poor and starving never went away hungry from her door. To the charitable societies she gave large ly, and to the shame of the offi cers of one be it said when she needed aid at their hands she found it not. At last her star be gait to set. Consumption seized upon her. The most emiuent physicians in the city could not avert her death, . For three, years she lingered on. Two years ago she found her wealth gone, and was compelled to take a room iu an obscure French hotel. She died in deceu t . poverty. New York T'mus. i'iu: and Coanc Uay, ; - Producers are sometimes p uz zled to know why , city buyers generally ask for coarse, well matured hay in preference to the more tender, and in reality more nutritious kinds. The Live Stock Joxirnal thus enlightens them : -" City. men feed hay, ( for a diftei ent purpose than the ' : far mer. The farmer feeds it for its nutri ment, and as a principal f food, whi le the city man regards gi ain as the cheapest food, and onlv gives sufficient hay to make bulk m the stomach, and for the pur pose of health. Coarse, well-matured timothy serves this purpose better than the early cut and fine grass. They do not desire such hay as will tempt the horses to eat too much of it Straw would answer this purpose, if cut and mixed with tne grain, about as well. But farmers should be contented with this practice . of the city customer, for it enables them to sell their poorest hay for the best' jrice, and to retain the best quality for home consump tion." . A Word to Farmers Girls. It wag intimated iu a former ar ticle addressed to the boys, that the girls might expect something especially for them. It is geuerally expected that the danghters of farmers will help their mothers. If they do riot, there are at least two reasons which may be given one is that the mothers prefer to do the work themselves, and let the gills do nothing, and the other, that the latter are unwilling to go into the kitchen or dai 1 y. "Now, there is wrong in both if it is true, as above stated. There is nothing more conductive to health, than the ordinary house-work upon a farm. I say ordinary, because anything that involves heavy lift ing should never be required of a woman. The art of making good anorequires as much good sense and application as the ability to play the guitar or piano forte. Again, after the house- work is done for the day, much can be done by the gills towards cultiva ting flowers in the door-yard. In a village or city, the lots are often so small that no room is af forded for flowers. On the farm there is always room enough, and no'excuse can be offered whv they should not be cultivated. There is not only the satisfaction of see- iiur the beautiful mounds and borders, but the care requisite in training them has a tendency to cultivate a corrrect taste in every thing else. If the front-yard looks nicely, the house will be apt to present the same appear ance. Flowers outside will stim ulate a taste for pictures inside the house. There is nothing which produces so favorable an impressiou on a passer by, as to see flowers growing in front of a farm house. There is no way iu which a farm house can be made to resemble a city residence better than to devote a space to cultiva tion of flowers and ornamental shrubs, Again, there is no bet ter, way tor the girls to render the farm home attractive to their brothers, than to secure their con currence in the cultivation of a flower garden. A taste for flow ers, will tend to render the boys more gentle, and fitter compan ions for their sisters. They will be less disposed to wander off up on the hill with gun , in hand, if the young ladies will seek to ren der their home attractive. Much might be added to the foregoing remarks, but this arti- cle is already too long for these columns. The subject may be resumed in a future number, and these curso ry, remarks will be closed by quoting the saying of some writer in addressing girls; "Love your father aud help your mother." Tlie Friendly Doff. A Boston paper relates that in Charlestown, recently, a large dog gave chase to a poor , little " black and tan' whose hind leg had been injured, but tailing to overtake him, turned about and trotted back. In a short time the small dog returned, followed by a large Newfoundland, who. upon reaching tlierner, seemed to be looking for something,T when the little dog' gave two or three sharp barks; a riiuch as to say, u Tha'ts the dog,'! at. the same time lnuicaxing oy ,nis actions xne large black, ' who was then, at some distance ;' whereupon tne little dog's1 -ally immediately at tacked and severely punished the aggressor; After this little' "affair the small dog and his. friend went down the street, apparently much pleased. '"; " ;i - - fi The big boy who bullies over a little boy, and especially over a lame boy, deserves the flogging given to the cowardly big ' dog. What is meaner than to hurt th ose w eaker than o u rsel ves ! A bullv is a contemptible fellow . S. S. Visitor. ; 11 Getting Angry. Getting angry never docs any good; it always does harm. The generous-hearted may compas sionate and pity, but they" never descend so low as to get mad. Anger debases always, unless there is strength - of character enongh to conceal it; but the misfortune is, the weakest-minded are the most passionate. If a man ever. feels himself ut terly contemptible, it is when he has been allowed to give expres sion to his feelings, in the excite ment of passion, in the presence of ladies and gentlemen ; there is a self-inflicted punishment, al most greater than he can bear, and gladlv would he hide himself m an auger-hole,, if possible, or slide away into the darkest cor ner. If you want to " heap coals of wlioisTn"a tearing aftoftf 3fta is expressing it in words, just simply say nothing, do nothing; only look at him 111 silence, and it will almost kill him, for he has a consciousness of the ' fact that every one who has heard him de spises him. No one can ever feel at home With a ehnrlhdi, crusty, ill-natured person, for there is no reliance to be placed on his moods; he may be in the best possible humor one instant, and the next be literally " raving." There is an instinctive aver sion against having anything to do with passionate people ; it is unpleasant to have any business engagements with them. We patronize the cheerful, the good hearted man the -man who is willing to .accommodate, and is ever ready to do a good turn. In a business : point of view, the touchy man is always at a disad vantage ; passiouateness does not invite custom, pays no debts, makes creditors more exacting and less' willing to wait It was pithily said, three thousand years ago, " Anger dwelleth in the bo som, of foole." If yoa must be angry, simply keep your mouth shut; you will be thankful .orit half au hour later, and will cer tainly feel yourself to be that much more of a man. HalCs Journal of Health. Wood Books. An exchange gives this descrip tion of a : curious library, and therein Jies what almost any one can carry out, partly at least : In the museum at Cassol, Germany, is a library made from five hundred European tree. The back of each volume is formed ot the bark of a tree, the sides of the perfect wood, the top of youn wood, and the bottom of old. When 'Opened, the back is found to be a box, containing the flower, seed, fruit, audieaves of the tree either dried or imitated in wax. At the . Melbourne Iuter-Coloiiial Exhibition, of 1866, Colonel Clamp exhibited specimens of Vic torian Wood converted into small boxes of book form,' according to a design suggested bv that gen tlemen at the Victorian .Exhibi tion of 1851, in 1 fhera saggested byBarorijFerd Alueller. I, othi ng could be more . convenient and more interesting than a library of i sucli ; imittipus books, reprenV in'g e different timber of .vari- ous1 countries,' which should be systematically, or alphabetically, or geographically arranged. Aus tralia alone could furnish of such a collection more than a thousand volumes. At the Paris Exhibi tion of 1867 Russia showed a aim ilar eollection of wooden books, cleverly designed, showing the: bark as the back binding, and let tered with popular and scientific names of the wood. Each book ' contained samples of the leaves' and fruit of the tree, and a sec tion and shaving, or veneer, of the wood." The Power of Clilldrcu. A man was loaning, much intoxi cated, against a tree some little children coming from school saw him there, and at once said to each other, "WHat shall we do to him ?" Presently, said one, "Oh ! IU tell you, let's sing him a temperance song." - - And so they did ; collecting around him, they sang "Away the bowl, away the bowl," and so on in beautiful tunes. The poor fellow enjoyed the sing ing, and when they had finished that song he said, "Sing again, little girls, sing again. "Ve will, they said, "if you will sing the temperance pledge." "No, no ; we are not at a temper ance metting, there are- r.o pledges here." "I have a pledge," cried one : and "I have a pencil," cried the other holding up the pledge and the pencil, they besought him to sing it "No, no ; I won t sing it now Sing for me," - So they sang agan "Th drthk that's in the drunk ard's bowl xj2, JJHA. T2X&Jfox.JO? , - as he wiped the tears from his eyes. "No, no more, they said, 4unlesa you'll sing the pledge ; sing and we will sing for you. He pleaded for the singing, but they were firm, and declared Ihey would go away if he would not sing. "But," said the poor fellow, striv ing for an excuse, 'there's no table here, how can I write without a table?" At this, a modest quiet, pretty lit tle creature with her finger on her lips, came and said, "Yes you can spread the pledge on the crown of your hat, and I will hold it for you." Off came the hat, the child held it, and the pledge was signed, and the little ones burst out with- "Oh water for me, bright water for me, . Give wine to the tremulous de bauchee." I heard that man in "Worcester Town Hall, with uplifted hands and" quivering hps say, "I thank God for the sympathy of those . children. I shall thank God to all eternity that He sent those little childred as mes sengers of mercy to yae."fohn J?. Gough. A ITIiiioral Explorer In :m Tgly If science does not come to the rescue of Mr. John Forsythe, mine, ral explorer, f New York city, he is in an ugly fix. On the 13th of No vemer he and a friend, Mr. Fhineas Barton; of Philadephia, visited Web ster county, West Virginia, to ascend Terror's Peak, a high, dreary looking knob, to examine some curious me teoric stones said to have fallen there. Next morning Mr. Forsythe reappeared, wildly incoherent and raving, and called for assistance. A party accompanied him, and he led them to the peak, where Barton was found with a wound in his bead, stone deadA Mr. Forsythe said a shower of -November meteors had come on, one of which exploded like a bomb shell and shattered Mr. Bar tons akulL He sat up with the corpse all night, and in the morning descended for assistance. Mr. For sythe's story is regarded as too thin, and from his cell in Webster county jail he calls on science to sustain his defense. 8 Almost Defeated. The people of Missouri have deci ded by the small majority of 283 votes out of an aggregate of 222,315 votes casts, that they-will have a Constitution d Convention, and in ac cordance with the decision the Gov ernor has ordered an election : for . delegates to be held on tho 2Gth ; of January. ;:: f in n II, i ,oyt 1,1 yn i4 nil lit i 1.- J - ,1n-