a T f T T ;V f r'TTw , ;j uxMVM l I f J ?s V -1 SEIO Ai I- ' - - - ; "t':.-- - ) . Trrrv Trrr tin if" tiii It, I ill It- f - n .. . . fit i -I I 4 f Ml :!. m -1 . k- : ' 35 v- 15 . m. if? I -I . - ".' -' PUBLISHED 'KYKUV TUEMDAT. Office on Fsyrtteyille Jkrect, over Williamson : A I'jiclmrch and oppneite Market MqUare. i ? - -'- ' I - 1 . " RAT EH OK KTBSCRIPTlON : S ( : . ; : - ." " . j One cony one year, mailed jfostpaid,. . 2 00 i !1 y '' aix mouth., J " . ',"! .1 00. ; t : Ten copies, o.e year, i" - ,f5,00 ; and aa extra copy fnre to tender of the club. Xu iuiiiic entered -without payment, and no "'.. vpaiHT nt after expiration of time paid for. P. , 1, First Lave aid IjiHt, i ! A. K., in "Time" for OUther. Tli-y lM me lyive would only hnatf me. ie, - .llmwonU all faUe, ki !i-tlt kiiiiIis til .Aniiinir, "t " 1 I jironiiws a client ; lut I, iltl;nniiiif Tf Urt-if a propliwy I hatel ho, 1' ,'tenuined for jnrat-lf to learn anlknow. live kaot'kin); at my lfwr, I let him in; i -naming angi-1 he, who enteral mnxiiip. -. I vave hiraa blithe- weK-nme, nHilly lirinif- - injr . ; V- - . " . l.'h;oH' yianlii, -wine theareitt ami the he, ; AikitHpread a feant lefore my glorious Vu-?t. , lie de!rnel to' eat, I humbly utairlini; by, ' . And vowed a hundred ro, and wore .lin -j ; oath j . Never to leave me; and. T, nothing Lith - - Vaa litfteouiM In ly wurilii with grrut ili-liif, . When Midden! li'xprnad bh wmgn fiirniirtit. -"Ah, t'reiteheronH 1 eried, in .wild diMiiay ; , Then wept in cilent 1iuMtent despair . - To find that nuliant ann--l, heavenly fair, ( An falte an an v fiend ; aiui threw awav .. fniirnu-ntt of my luiiUrt 011 that iLiv. - . nV Vnoekeil ai?ain'whoidiH name was Ixive,. Ijnf hnd no.winn; and, though bin voM-ewas It-sanjj 110 niS. Tbi'n 1 eanie dow-ii to- .JUifeet-,- i ' A :: . - TJuf wand Htranjrer, movini; Hlnw and son'r . . ' M i-dniiltiiii if Jie jwned -the name he liofe. ' -rf'-. i ' - ,- ;; : ' He-read iny doubt in my fondmduiK ev"S -'" 3ud:w(iuld have reassured ihe byihis inline, traihtway I told him blow another caHu' A iid saiif his name wan Love, and Vowed to nfcty, A ml even a he siKke had flown away. -' ; -K -j " :- V- . . i - ''That was FaJxe Ixive," he said, "and I am Tnie;". I he years to eome !lialr"irove me. - j-aen iis face . - Pi Ieameil Huddenly witlr such a wondrous jruV AthefaW, winded an.el never knewr" ' - . Anil liiadc him shine the bciuhter of 'tbe tw. I brjuifht uo wiiie,l made no dajn'ty feast 'lior tliis true lxve. .My. Ireal was salt with ri 'Mears, : ; . .. ; And- this he ate.; my 'eu'p was bitter too, Bt P.'M. hale. i ' I -" v e frank' trfim it, asket 110 other lare, . 'iU-ift with my poor jiortion for his share..; lli anwerinj eyes met mine at every look ; His ready, hand anticipated need ;' i' I.Iis willini; feet my servants were indeed ; TillJbakeu from the ehill res-rve nCjInubt In; ;raU'fiil wonls I told iiiy gladness out. X w 'ni!;s to fly, but arms to ebisp md. round. To raise inc. from the low-jjrouud wliere I hiy, . , iS5 . . -.iiiu j5Uiie .my'iaileriiijf..siejs a nejier way. Xo- vows, 110 aorixs ; but sneli sweet xiaily speeelt A.s no tnere music has the. Skill to 'reach. ,-v ' " . s ' - -. -- What.ean I.do, for whom so much Lsdone? . It seems so little to give heart ami brain, f ,WitU every pulse And every thought ; in vaiu , count iny trelisnres over ohe l-one : " hind all worthless, audTan ofler" none. LITERARY GOSSIP. )IRS MARY n.VyAKl) vCI,AnKK. KIUTfilt. ,; Ali 1hoV receivetl during the week will lie iiientiiaied by aaine- in the next sncceeding is n'e, aial, if worthy of receive-a longer no-' Vi-e after ean-ful reatli'nif. They may lie .sent eifher by mail, or' in packages of a dozen by express, hnd should alwayalie addressed to Mrs. Mary Bayard Clakii k, Newliern, X. t'. V , BOOKS RECEIVED. . AFPLETOjt k'0., NEW YORK. . V l'tA U SC'l KXCK MtlXTIt LY for "X.tvem- . .. In r. : ) i ; v --. rPLKTOXS iilCTION 'An Y OF NEW YOKK AND YK'IXlTY. .10 cents.. - A yry useful as well as interesting lok, ' is this: iJist named.-not only t persins vis-. iting.New, Yurk lut to those who lerer -j expet't to know the citv except from hejir- sav. LKU the public buildings, places; of 1 nsorx, jjrives, . ceine-ienes, roeieiies, -iuos, ; museums, art . 'galleriesv etc., an not only J ".iuuntioned. but .direetionagiveii for fiiidiiij; thilm, with the regular Tare for- hacks by . . . - . . - , . th! mile or by the hourr ana a great deal r of useful information to the stranger who wishes to -do New York. t Under the head of "Sight. Seeing," one -can find al ii S i most -ctery idaee likejy to be of interest to t'linen a lauy .or a jjeuueuiau uu ure ai.su told how to dress for the theatre,, a recep tion, dinner, or a ball, and informed where? and how they may -hire appropriate. oostuines .fob all oi-casions when the ward robe is not supplied. . In .short it is a rrioV vireiim fm the 'transient visitor to New. Ywrk and a great convenienee to the resi- dents. .. ', . ". ; " ; ! "TlieiGvntk Bclk; ' by Chrt'Munt AViV, JJ; Appb fon "- Col, received last week and jia-jsed with a mere mention for want of tinie, will be .welcome to most-North 'CartK; linians. as the'author is jdeservedly jiopiilar .1 'inkhLs her native State. Her present" Iioiik is of the same stamp as all she has publishetl. lady-like and . refined, a giinl noyel for young girls. . as it warns . them . agiiiust the sin of flirting. Butr as it ex emplifies the truth; 6rMrs. Blake's fable of ithe good grey, hens .and dashing little' Bantams, the first of whom '(.were praised and the last sought for by the" cay young cocks," it is not likely thai any incipient . i. .flirtationwill bejupped by its perusal; the moral drawn from itjxnng, doitt flirt and 1 : yoii'will be happy but ; you Won'. have a j . ? '-Som Afjx-cf nf JirHgtou' by- Jfhii j . W: VhiidtcickyJtuner Miller, 779 Btuinl l -ictiy contains sixteen essays or sermons, ! without texts, preached, by- the Rev.- Mr. Ohadwiek, author ofr"The Bible of To f "! Day a man of large braiu and liberal , j-' sentuiients, who is in the foremost rank of ! .the advanced'intellectual revivalists of ,to !.(." day, as opposed to the' Moody and Sankey ij sensation emotionalists. - Unlike -Matthew Arnold,' who only ; hears i:the melancholy long withdrawing roar" of the. "sea of faith! which once girdled The world but, ' now "retreating," leaves "bare its shingles;" and who fears that in the fall of traditional and supernatural - religion, which he - be- lieve to be inevitable, Christianity will also be dragged downy Mr. Chadwick W Jiei w in the simplicity of that true religion which, has ever lived, and - will ever live in the heart of humanity.- Traditional Chris- tianitf, wiih the five points' of Calvinism.- total oeprav" nu 11 .euirDai. neu,. is ei birig, but he believes that a new faith is flowing in, faith in the church, not as a su pernatural, auper-human: element, an au thorized guardian and an arbitrary keeper of men's conscience, but '4i a svnibol. r - - v ; ; ' : i "- .'.." ' - VOL. 1; ' : - ' ' :' ! , y :" ! : : . ....!:. l - s f - ,,- . fl v :-..... ' .!,-!. . - 1 lWtxiinrft-tt. of jnetual njdiuid . .1 i. 111 ... i loiifr 1! nix n as the LfV t all new 1 nil h j : K-:r i T arwl the friend of all ul aiuntf I "A with the ciuirch w with jt ai V Iw m ik :- rhm is an irxoiiJin jls veil -4 an outoiu tide of faith. 'I be faith tkit Irf f "niriL' out is faith io tlie I'lhle as a charm ! an annilet,a fetish. The laith tlik is f eomin" in-is faifh ia it m the natural hWjH-r t. . ..C ..... -;,.v Tbo !f;,itli A lilt IJIII nJl .w J"J - " i. that is froinjr out is faith that it ts a .sjijier ' natural; superhuman -Look.. The riMii; faitli that it is intiis ly natural, inteji.sely liuraan. The roii4r' faith is faith tliatl it i , a literal transerijit; of, the Divine 'Mind ; . the eomin:' faith i faith that-it is thk uu eonseious record of the development-of a rreat jteojJe'H ' .relajrioiu ideiis. fnnii the loweft feti.shiMn and mytlmlooj np Mi the 1 ... : ...i L Ui.. ,.e tr.,.-j 'i L.fi? iir.irifn:il liW)Tli,itlieisin of .Jct-lLS. V ' . . . , r r. ' r i4 ( OniTiarin-" .loay . ani SanKcv wun VA wards and Whaehcld he savs: rlJuI vou say tjie eonipariwh is not fair ; Moody and SankVy are not I'M wards iiiid AHiitt field. No, they are" not.'; liut and here i ! the ' iiKiin ryiint they ire -as ner an app'oat h to them as is jiossible in 1870. In 1740 KdwarVls, the first- thinker, Tn" .Ani -rica, . without a. H.nperior irt Eurojie, if iij. the modern world, wasj an -orthodox revivalist. That is tff sav. -tha Inst nmid ot the tune was enlisted on flrei wde of Oalvijnwtic 11 ' v. :., ' .i;ffi.-.nt v. iirisiiaiuiv . .ui ii 1-3- 11:11 ui"i rent. Thf Ethctrilstt ah' MUl iiml .Sortiivf."- Ttf An'j, V.Hotff is the title of tjne of tlie best of these jsennons; after .slniwing that Christianity' has of brought-" peace on earth" or " gntl will io men' he (says : " Because the. angjel-prophecy , has not yet been fulfilled is fid reason why it slia not be vet. I know! tliat' its vindicator iveth arth'. it is I ' and that he Will yrt stand nion the ' . if i...- - .V.,i ,.e '.in....,..i If if Jias failed .so far of, fulfillment only Ijecause it, was too grand, a piroi Jiecy 'fur eiirhteen uundreit years to r (iive it another thousand liefore you point. 1 uize. ' at it the slow uruerring finger of scorn Christianity is a" failure, says my firiend. Abbot-." '.Irhas never been tried,' ijetorts a .Iethixlist -minister . and 'has, it seems to me. the better of the argunieiit. Men praise' the .Sermoirfon tl9 Mxiunt. ' Lut do thoy take 110, tJumghi of -t he .morrow Alter snowinir that we uo not regulate our . lives by the prect'ptive teachings of the Sermon ou the Mkiut , hc asks irwe puirht to do so: Thennn ttod sname let lis do ; it bravely and manfully. - It we .ought Mot to, then Jet us cease' to talk about the Bible ' J as ' our only rule of faith and practhce. Peace Jpw.-iuiih : jTo estalijish the king . doin of heaven upon m rth. "1 cannot doubt that it Xvill Iconic 'one day, and that it jwill come a little sooner for every word if? truth we speak! for. every act of kind ness tjat we 4j lor every temptation that' we- Kpurn away, for every generous akpira : tion that we welcome to o'uf hearts. ; The sernion'. oiaih4-"".3Ipralwor Be-r lief" is' also verv'fine and verv ToK-ible. ) and contains a beautiful tribute to that I t-elebrateil quartette of brothers, Anthony and - Hurrelr-roude;' and Francis Wil liain and Johir' llenry Newman. a"nd bred under tlie same conditions brothers separated more iirid more- li or n' these, until they found the width of Chfisteiidoi 11 be t ween them, v Ilijrrell rFroude . was like John HsnryvNewHnuv mc of the haders tit' the'Tractarian or High Church niove- 'vMient, apd'only saved by his early jleath J trohgring over to jltome, while Anthony Froude, the historian," and Francis .iNew mair, author of "Phases of" Faith," are thiirnugh-going rationalists. The keynote of this sermon is a grand: one ands lould be the motive for all beliefs. A man may not be responsible directly i'or his opinions, hejniay hold them by heredity or the foree of 'environment, tut' he is respon.-ib e for liis mental attitude.' -The real question, ' the real touch-stone. of your character, so far as it concerns your various beliefs, ls not wliai aiu: your' beliefs," are they c mser vative or; radiesd, Airthodox or heterodox; but in the foriinUion of themsjia'vc you had a single eye to truth'' ... Hav easj. and 1 pleasure, comfort and: reputation, fi rtune aud pttsition, been as nothing lo' you, if so be you might -behold the bright icouh- tenance of Truth s . 1 i ; . Holding that belief in itself is nfcither ; moral nor immoral, so long it does not deal with purely Inoral relations, 31 i, Chad rwiik j maintains that "the conduct, Jf the intellect is a strictly "moral' affair," f rf the ,niorals of belief eohsLst in .the endea' -or to , resist nil influences, no flatter what, - yhich are manifestlyopposed to an uubiaseel is earth tin-truth. :". ' . , "-' . : "Milton says a man cnjyljb a- heretic . in the truth, if he believe things, only be cause his pastor says so. ior; the Asstmblv so determine, without knbwbig other, rea- , soiis'j though his belief be true:, yj?t the very truth becomes his' heresy."' "Some what less' moral.' says Mr. Cliadwick "and John Henry Ne"wman "would still be-'., an Anglican, and very likely an archlushop ; somewhht less mitral and Francis William would be in much the same position. " & v Roberts Brothers will pubhsh "shortly- a volume of Iecture-sernitns by . Joliki AY Chadwick, entitled "The Faith of lldasoir." ' It will be niade up of 'a connected series ''" discussions' on the leading topics' of re ligion: The subjects treated, will bd " Ag nostic Religion," -"The Nature of .'"Religion?" " (iod," " Fraver," " Inuuortalityi and " Rational Ethics.'' That 3Ir. ChaJwick's u Book"; of -Poems'" has reached allfourtli thousand, and his " Bible of To-l)liv " h jo 1 2.' ' , iW)iu fiew mom us,, is a gooib ,onien for the forthcoming volume. Roberts Brotliers have in jiress a new "No Name" novel with the takin ; ititle, 'Uis Majesty? Myself ;" and with tliis sig nificant key-niotto . from Coleridg. "' I once knew 4 man wio- had advanced to - BfiieMeem tnat not neverJ nientioiKHl himselt without takin" off his hat.'. - . . -, -; Charles. Scribner s Stvns expect t pub lish, before the end' of the season. 3Iiss Creorgina Hogarth's volume of ' Selections from the Correspondence of Charles' Dick ens." These letters will be entirely new, Mr. Forster, it is understood, havinsr used c i. i... 1. ,, t . ' limine in meui in nis - jiiKe ot JJickeJns. It is, understood that Prof. Pirk, of . AndoVer, has been engaged a long while I -on very careful life of President Edwards. . A he J-astern btates employ 1,7B4.863 nanus in manufacturing ; the Y estern :M4,ai : the Southern .58.389.. ffl A,1PW 1 ' ' i , ! V Ripple of Piety In Washington. ( 'orreKpoiideiK-e of II ai.k's TrF-F.KI.Y- ' .Wakhincton, !).(.'., Nov. 4. '7f i Mic Kiutok: Your -hxlo tfirres-'-jwiuiJent never intrudes with hiw own npin ijiiif hliould he hup ten to liave any in lithe coIubiuh of a reKtiet-table journal. He i ivonfiiies Lixnself to facta and to the opinions i f ' "w whom .the world has learned to : yonfule 111. f liearinj; this in mind it may not be uu Snterestinjr to mention that there is a riple lien; just now on the subject of "Holiness," however inappropriatd flic eve of important '-flections: may be as lo time and however fll adapted -Washington, not famed for jf-'iety, may be as to place:- The facts ap , jiear t le as follows: ' ' ' l I Sone fifteen years ago two rather elderly . Inaulen ladies, known here i as "Sisters I .Af ..1,,. .l M " I.,,: .1. v.t.u . wi uu m u.-mm- ukuui, instituted 3 clock '.devotional exercises "at iheir own house, so that they might enjoy Religious exercise without going to church 'o do ). . A gentleman named Ferguson, clerk in one of the" departments, a super- . jjinuateu jlcthedLst clergyman, verging on jseventy, if not more, has been! the favorite eader of thtee afternoon meetings. These jCxercises became an institution, of Wash !mgto'n. The lenders (fried aloud and spared iiot. They were! likti the old' preachers of ;lie deH'rt. j, They attacktd wickedness in jliigh places f -they laid stress on the fact : that fashionable,: church members went round:'druniming up ; recruits fiir the So ciety foir the Prevention of Cruelty to iAnimal?, and at hc same time wore bon- ficts ornamented with dwid canary-birds' nd ostj-ich feathers. They siiidhat the preachers were Sti longer the spokesmen of he living ( ;od,' but the cringing apologists of the -men in place irid power, with a iiew of securing to themselves a portion of $he filtfey lucre which has" liecome (as they laid) the God of this world. ". These meet- ings were repeaieunu, reaupucatea over own. iSome thought that' the old fires lvere g(iing to be rekindled on the old altar. ,v miracle was alleged to have been per- $ irmed through the pray el's of this society, ignd ltiseems to be "well j authenticated that Jtome weeks ago a lady who had been bed ridden' for. twelve years rose f up, perma nently! recovered. Such proceedings as these j made: a noise. .Sisters Mary and - Iarti!a being, niembeiei of the 3Ietlwdist iCtiurcn, ana j central ngures -.in the move iien.t, rw-ere enjoined tj proceed further. .ast- Monday morning all the Methodist ilergy! of the.ity: held a, meeting and took jt he matter imder 'consideration; The con luct of Mrj Ferguson Kwras , unanimously jtteiiouriced as " outrageous and revolution-J ry.'' : ' The following general resolution jwas then unanimously- adopted in totuTnn Wrbtyz.:' :". M l' j.' "' ''.-.-' '?. ll(Koli-iK That it is the sense of this ; ' 1 1' 1 i e . luieeting that no. member of the .Metliodist jreligious meetings within or outside of the u vuu1v.11 11.19 .me: lllll. Li.l iiinvi Hfharge to which he belongs without the -bnsent of the pastor within whose bouniis ;f aid meetings are proposed 'to le lield. . . 4 The rejKirt of, this preachers' meeting INiys, tliat " this' .action is all that is now (Jeemed necessarj-: '' There is a fatal signi ifieance in that italicized tunc," for Mr. "."Ferguson,' and 31 r. Ferguson - knows it. iIr. Hayes is a 3Iethodist-and it Ids denoni-' ination is all-powerful atcimrt. 31 r. Ferr jguson is in great distress lie thinks itis bis duty to go jm with these meetings, but jhen he fears that if he does "the props Swill be knocked from under him,-' by which lie means that the preachers will have. hiiri turned out of office to starve in his old, age. "ome say that the . question : of religious liberty is involved : but those1 who entertain ;ihis .opinion. and think that Sisters 3Iary jind Alartha and Bro! Ferguson should lie. fiermitted by the administration to worship jjitf they please, without trepidation and the fear of deeapitation on the part of Mr. iperguson, are hot:" an. influential' class,' and (lie better opinion Seems to bethat.Bro. I'ergusori nmst " cave " or lose' his official Icldp.' '."'..; .;.;'' . V . "'" Attuts. The Week's Waifs. I Boston preacher said : i"The little jod any .)f us can do must be done with iur hearts thumping" against the hearts of ;lur fellow-men." And every young woman .jjMi church looked at every 6ther young wo pifyn arid smiled approvingly." J ' ; I fFlbrence, the actor, tells this story of -the elder Booth ; "He .was flaying Ham-'li-e" in- Virginia one night, and had no ;k;ull. ' A little darkey. volunteered to get fine. When Booth was leaving the thea r he felt some one tugging, at his . eoatT fail. . lie looked around and saw the little ifirunette. 'What' will you have, sonny ?' ilrtease, sah, I want daddy's skull, sah.' Irtiddy s skull ?' ; Yes, sah. Datused ter be de ole man's head iiiece afore do mewel. licked him, an" mamniy'll lick me tor rags I f I lose it.' ';.:. it -1 gentleman goes to an arinorer's and asKs tor a revolver. . 4 . rllere's a real nice family weapon," says h clerk. : - ; 1 . J r-'w" . ,- ? es,' family weapon just the thing for loriiestie tragedies; six-shooter,' yen' see, ;irf-T-t wo bullets for your wife, two bullets destrover ot your happiness, two or yourself.; All the go. sir! Sell bun-. ilreds of 'em for Jbridal presents, sir." ; rj-sn tthat your friend, Aline. U.. who is dancing there?' : . .. : :, ....-i That's a fngtitfufly ul-niade dress slie -iial on.'l tA.'.f I- tYesW if it wasn't it wouldn't fit 'A ' An ExiUNEEaiNti Feat. A notable feaj'.in Engineering was brought to success ;Tul issue in the latter . part of September, fit t)inard; in the depdrtment ; of'Ille and jJYiiainei . France. In carrying a .railway jlicToss the river Ranee, the novel plan was , adopted of building the bridge-on shore ind boldly pushing it bodily across the :itream.l The bridge weighed 2,000,000 fpourids; its height above the river was 100 feet, and the length of the main span 314. Ifeeti' Twelve windlasses were used in roll--: jftng the1 bridge into position. It was calcu lated that four or five days would suffice. ;ifbrf the5 work of putting the' bridge in Iplace, but owing to the breakage. of chains, itifc ttHik two weeks.' . ' i !' ; ;- - '- " ' . HALEIGII, N. (p., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER atioaalklftj not National HappWat Sir,rlward Lyttou Bubrer.J 1 I passed more lingeringly through France than I did though the other jMrtions of my route. I had dwelt long enough in the capital tti be anxious to survey the country. It was then tha;i the last hcule which the magic of Iouisi'ua torze" and the luemory of his eor"4ons l. court had left-upon thei. moral eye, fiiloff, j and I saw the .real essence of that ijoh- arch's; greatness and the true relics (fJiis j : reign. I saw the jHX)Tj, and the deg ded, I and the racked, and the priest-rjdden f lers aim .peopiers :oi uie soil, wmcn maq. ttie substance beneath the frittering andfilie Hurface -the body of the vast empf f .if which I had hitherto beheld only thf .ote, and that darkly, and for the' moptait covered by a mask ! ' . f i' ; No man can look upjin France. lea rftd Francej her rich soil, i her te;n rat'"j-et maturing clime, the gallant and od sjiirits which she prodic.es, her bouriAs so indicated and protected by nature hjt'lf, her advantages of ocean and land, ofjf ih- merce and agriculture: and not wondefehat her prosperity should be so r bloatejOpd 1 ; ner reai state so wreteqeu ana aiseasaei;i Let England draw jthe moral, an bt ware not .onl of wafsi which exliaiiibut of governments which impoverish. A -"waste of the public wealth isl.the most lasting, of public afflictions; and the treasury, which is draitfed. by eitmvagc.iut.l)b'. retfOod by crime." I:t? . ' . f;,." '' "Al-''ii:.. I rememlej"' one beautiful evening! an acident to my carriage occasioned my so journ for !a "whole afternoon in -Tffinall village.' The cure honored me with a VHt, and we strolled, .after a slight repastfito the" hamlet. The priefct was complaining quiet in manner,' andjriot. iUnforme fo? his obscure station andseanty opportunities, of knowledge ; he did not seeui, "hoover, tWpossess the vivacity' of hiif eiiuntpjeij, but was rather nielaiiclioly and penve,r not only in his expression of countet.hce but his cast of thought. ; v" ' - ; ?;.'. " You have a I thaijning scene hef; "I almost feel as if it we're a sin to leave ft so sooni - ';1;4 -!;-,l. '",;!-.! v , We were, "indeed, j in a jilesisant ; juid alluring spot at the tiqie I addressed ?his oBservation to the good cure. A Utle rivulet emerged jfroni j a copse' to i he ift', , and; ran sparkling and diiujJing bei? ath our feet, to deck with! a more livingfc -ikr dure the village greenjwhichjt inters? "ted commanded the '"whole seene. The ytJ&se was a little in th(j rear,;ahd the 8niokcvjqm its fewt-himneys bosq slowly and beautef . tely ' to- the silent nd Rlecj; skjes, not illy unlike the humjin wishes which, thigi they spring from the ; crossness ''rap sloe fumes of earth, purify! themselves" ai,'ie f ascend tG heaveuT Afi'd from the v lg,' (when iother sounds, which I shallfeQfe; j presently, were for aii instanC still, :Wtte thei whoop of, children, mellowed b1dis j tance into a confused, yet thrilling , snip,r f which fell upon the- heart like the voJf Jf I our gone childhotod itself.. Before, triHe. far expanse, stretched; a', .chain of hi which the autumn sua sunk slowly, jar iin'g, its yellow beams on er groups of - fJal antry, which, pn-the ppposite side of lth'e rivulet and at wlme interval from us,itjere scattered, partly ovef the.greeli and pjify" gathered beneath the shade of a little' gf jve., The former were, of the: young, and thif fo i- whom youth's sports are. dear, arid were d 'nc : ing to tlie jneny music, which (eyend anon blended with the laugh and the tol-of a louder jest) fldated joyously on biir Jfaii The fathers ' and matrons of the ha; jiljt were inhaling a Jnore (juiet joy beneath,'the trees, arid I involuntarily gave a t'der interest i- to heiir converse by suppMrig' them to sanctirtn to each other the fistic loves which ; they miighf survey among : their children. j -'fi" 'V.-' . V'iftl ";''' " Will not riifinsieurj draw nearer : tthe dancers? said rjie cur ; (i there is a pjan Pi thrown i over the mulct a Jittfe 11' If. ' N - ' !. '' '- ex uown. No !" said tl. "' "perhaps they are jettp wtter advantasre wherei we are; what nrt ..:n 1 . '1 '.. . ... ,..,4:,. 9' ;?"! win oeax too eiose .an mspcuiioii i, " True, sir." remarked the priest, ajpt ,.:,.iv.i m ''..; 1 .. Yet." I resumedj musingj Ja T spoke .rather to mysett tnan to my pui-: 'naiiiori i " vet.;how hfippy do they - ffm what a revivaL of our Arcadian di are the flute and the dance, the glossy i ees all glowing in the autumn sunset, thefcen sod, and.the' murmuring rill, and the;h)o-yr ant laugh startling the satyr in his tify haunts j and the rural, loves which will sfow sweeter still, when 'thecsnn has set, antt thie twilight has ma.de the sigh more teller, and the blush of a mellower hue! 1 Ah. why is it only the; revival qf a dream'.why must it: be only an interval of -laborl. an& VWoe the brief saturnalia pf slaves-tlie nreen restinsr-snot in a drearvand lonsroail - of travail and toil?" f r ..'.' '. ; . Yoa are the first stranger I have-met . ,.oll ' ; said the cifre. " who sefems to pierce be-neath fthe thin veil of our (jillic gayety : th4 first - whom the scene we now su.Tray is wattgt - J i witn-otner ieenngstnan a oenei in uie jjap pmes of-our peasant rj. and an envy at 'its imagined extthQranee. j; But as it is riJ the happiest indivddifcds. so I fear it is nqi the happiest nations thararethe' gayest. i j I looked at ihe, curf withio-irie surmise. " Your remark: is deeper thanheirdary wisdomjot your tribe.' my lather, safel-j: ! "I liaVe traveled oyer three parts c ; globe." answered tha cure : " I was fnt ' always tintended for rthat I am ;' aril Itlje priest's mild eyes flashed jnth a " si3en light, that as kuddenly, diedwaj. -e I have traveled, over the greater -part.fle- known world," the repeated, in a morev iuet tones "and I have noted, that where 1 i . 1-- . : j j 2..;;L.714 has many comforts to guard, and rights to defend, he necessarily sharti he thought and the seriousness of thasrf 'fio feel thevalue!' of a' treasure whichey . . i-.. jiossess, ana wnpse most earnest meaiijns are'- intent upon providing against its? sa. I have rioted too, that the joy prpduc by a momentary suspense pf labor, is nat aally great, in proportion to the toil ; '..hencet $ is, that no European mirth is so wild alhat of the Indian slave. whcrra brief hotfday releases him ! from" .1:1 ' tas! . Alas! Alais! i-ihat "j VerV mir.r. 19 trie t.rrjiTfst eilence iff the ! Tacitus. ;r, u U J;!' ! ) llN V 1-11 A l-l r weight) of th4 previous' chains ; even as in ' ourselves we nnd the. happiest moment we 1 enjoj. iW that! immediately suc-ceeding the s cessation of Jeep fk rrow U the utinil. ir I violent t.irtnrv to tlie Lulv " t I was struck by this observation of-the priet.,' ."! . ." I ace now,'' said I, " that as an Eng lishman, I have n) reasou to repine at the proverbial gravity of my countrymen, or ta. ertvy the Oighter spirit of the sons of Italy and Fnuice." ' ( i "No," said the tine, "the hajij-iest na tions are those in whose jieople you witntws the least sensible reverses from gayety to floi.tinn- anil that iL,..Li xrhi.-h w h noblest characteristic of the isolated man, is also that jot a 'people, rreemen are serious, they jhave objects "at their heart worthy to engross at U-nt iriu. : It is reserved for slaves to indulge in groans at oue mo niofit and Liughter at another." At that rate," said I, 'ft he best sign for PraBce will be, when the gayety of her. sons islno longer a just proverb, and the laughing lip is succeeded by the thoughtful brow." ; . ' ' - - . "Thai daj' will Ixj the Hegira of ,011 r political happiness," s:iid tlie t vre. This-jrefleftjion, if true,'inay console us for the losi of tliome village daucs and pleasant holyda'f for wJiich'iuerry LiiKlaiid" was onee celebrated. Tie loss of tliem hiw lieeu ascrib .ed to the gUmmy intluenee of the Puritans; but it has never occurred to. the good poets who have so mourned oyer that loss, that is in also to be ascribed to the Illierty which those Puritans generaliredj'if j they did not introilnce'; . ' .-vr-J :'', -News "AND-SoT News At present! the United States Army con sists of ;11 Generals, 1,559 field and line officers, 20,5ft6 enlisted men, and 233 In dian scouts. j .. . ; - 'A !'.. Since 18fi() the growth in ioiulatioii is as follows: ! Eastern ' StaU, '3.808.7O0; Western' States, -7,i)02.(2: Southern States, 4,025.0811,' ; ! . . Stettauer IBi'others & Co.. wholesale dry goods merchants, failed 111 -Chicago last" week for t$1.500,l(Ml. New Ycrk s share or the doss is S75),(U( t. The number of . Jewish inhabitants. of Jerusalem since the beginning of the j ires- ent century has grown from three hundred to thirteen thousand. The Jews have bought up almost every old house that has become vacant, and have built a great many. new ones. . The Eastern States' hn al debts are $540. 155,048; Western States, $147,032,037 ; Southern States, ? 183,202, 183. If the State debts are added, the three regions owe as follows: Eastern States, population 14,300,000, (total debt, 8o2S,223.31'i ; Western States, - jnipulation 14,tJ0Oj0UO, total debt, $172,825,91t ;' Southern States, population 14.295.000. total debt, $3oT4 987,904. .. . ' The Actual .reduction made in the public f debt fom' Augu"?t,f?iri.5, when It reatliNt the highest pointto July 1st, 1879, is over $729,00(1,000. The amount required for the sinking fund since it Was establish ed on July 1st, 1802; to the close" of the last fiscal yeat, is about $540,000,000, j It will thus: be seen that the amount required, by the terms jof the law for the sinking fund to 'July list, 1S79. has been exceeded by about ?19p,O0O;0OO. The amount of the reduction; in thej?ublic debt represents the amount of the sinking fund. . i Prophets' days have passed. The rc monetizatiop p silver, we were told a year ago, was to result in the immediate disap pearance of all our gold in exchange for foreign' silver jcoin. The way it has work ed out is : thus : The net specie imports from January 1st to October 31st j jire $58,519,907 including 50,091,385 gold and 88,428,522 silver. During the three months from August 1st to October 31st inclusive, the . importations amount : to $52,340,994, consisting -of $50,000,597 gold and $1,740,397 siivef.:,; Of the total .since August 1st, (Jermany ;aml France supplied $31,014,171, and England $ 10, 020,885.1 ' Tlie- riuinihgj $4,705j!)38, came firom West "Indies and South'Ameri ,'ca. Since" November 1st, about $5,0(l, 000 more have been received.' t . Religious News I,tem8 : r. The Russian missionaries in Japan hav ing succeeded : in converting 4,O0 Japa nese to their faith, a bishop Is to be sent to Jeddo by the St. Petersburg Synod. - In three years uding 1870 the 3Ietho dists of the United States raised $92-2,050 for college endowments ; the Episcopal iansj $208,810. and tlie. Baptists. $1 .1195.- 970. :.'Y'"t''' ' .''! - A :J; "I , i'-' The Una versalists in the 1'nited Stak-s report ah increase the past year of eleven pansnes, seven ciiurciies, ann nine ?unaay schools, and al gain, of severi per cent, j in conimtfuicantsi. ; ., m ' , i ',!, ! ' Xhe Scottish Baptist '"churclu number about one . hundred, and. their members ten thousand, j They support missionaries at one hundred and forty stations i with some help from the English Baptists.! . ' - The Evangelical Church of North America reports 909 itinerant and 030 6-. cal preachers, with 109,773 members, j ,434 churches, and 1 18,040 scholars in Sunday school, showing in every item heayy.gaifts in the past four, years. I "'- ' A new Baptist church has just ( been opened at Bowdon. England, on a decided-, ly novel basis. . By a clause ! in the trust deed of the property provision is made for th6 admission' to membership of evangeli cal Christians. of all denominations. Such membersi-that they , may fully - preserve their own ; consistency, as Presbyterians, Episooiialians," Wesleyans, &c. are to be styled non-denominational membeBi,"' and order that the churt&Nmay maintain its d'af inetivt nriBeiriles intact thev are not to distinctive principles intact they are jaot to speak or vote (at church meetings upon matters affecting haptkm or -other- recog- tuzed points or diflerenee between ( them s4ved and the denomination. ' ; A Jittle boy in New Haven was saying his prayers the other night, when his httle brother teased him.- The boy struggled betweeri'ils sense of duty arid his inclina tion r.'a time, but ' finally compromised by saying, Please, Lord, excuse me while 1 puncn my orotner jonnnies neaa. Johnnie's head having been duly punched the prayer was finished. , . . 11, 1879. I St. PnT CliRrrhyard. tdeatoa. Ikarold St. 1 'a ul's, with its ancient churchyrard. in which the dead of six gn emtiotis lie under the shadow of the chun hA .The first church was a wooden building as early as 171-. Thejirert-nt building was finished about 17U, and ' is one of the. most solid of structurea ; its low heavy walls are over two feet thick of silid brick. The-earliest. Yemaining toiubstooe is of 17M ; the next Is one of 17"t. a third of l7'-' nnd another of 1771. Just to the left of 'tbe broad brick walk that leads up to the church aud Konientensteps off, lies a H iicavy.rcU slabi that has sunk almost to heavy red slab, that has sunk almost 1 .the level of the ground find is nearly Cfun- j; pieteiy niu ny ine grasa mat grows ran "'; about it! It is if more than ordinary in f terest for it covers the remains of a mn of old President Styles of , Yale College. :Tho tradition is that the son died of tfinsump. tion. near Edcntoii. wliile se'king a'lmhn ier climate than New".. England. ;The stately Iitin of the long inscription cannot covert-he touching grie' tf the berelived father, fciit rather bring. .its depths more prominently forward. It is well worth de- i cipiiennsr. t. , n. s.j. J'! I : .! I'.xuviae Mortah-s l ' '.!.' . ) 1..KAK Stii.es, AirmrJ. t i le cMmonastcrio.. Keiiii iron iihuiIiuiii ' tu t '' Iii , 'Novo Portll Help; Illiod. natus, lT-.V) In foil "1 al., et Harv. Uteris ' i" . liiiiiiiiiiioribiis emu esMct imliutui t j ira'liiiiie A M. exoruatUH i Juris, lA'uiiKpj Studiis ne dedfi. j .. i Juridiuiis extitU i(i ' i l.t eausis in Foro dieendis j ! KaenndiiH orator , ! i. K J'ratribns Architectonic"!) iiihls. j i Itincre die Carol.. Ilor petendo ' ' ' hie ml deciiiiuni ab Fidentonhr Ijiiiidetil i i . i Morho correptus fuit . i iiMleiii dieliiiH ipuinque laboraiiK. -, ' Sulinii (li'iiiiim fuit ct immatura perenijitiis I i ui?'t 22 17S4. -Ktat 26- J i I'norein binns. Kiliolas ainanlas ' : j I iiHTsiites orlnitas fjue 'rvliqirit. jf , , Pnter ejus ..! . Rev. Kara Miles, X. S.T. 1 oil Yiil Praeses, ' , Hoe a.iuni ', it : Mciiioriale sijnul atque lujfiibre ii -. : . . in Ss-pulchrum Filii denati I k deMini .curavit. i i It breathes even vet the sorrow of the liicreavcd family. We hope that the Yes hy of the iII church will repair the smk- nig irosi-nneo suio, n mey nave not al-, ready done so. for it (leserves it: j r Dear old St. Paul's ! no one wIiq evei woishipia-d there but has felt has sink deep into Iii must inspire. 'OHl the Siicrei reverence it X. inston.i j l-'r. 111 the Chatham Record. ' With the cxceptitn of Darliam "tlie growth of no town jri North Carolina can at all compare with hat of Winston, which sii late as 1870 contained jonly 470 inhab itants, r. It has now ,a population of 3,187. LikeJMrhaiu the cause of this growth has Jecn ' the great staple of tobacco., The , first sale Was made there in 1872, and the. attention of tobacconists jwas at once at tracted to the advantages there offered. There are rioiv three very large warehouses for the sale of' leaf tobacco,, which pld duriii; tlie past twelve months abont eight million pounds. There are thirteen facto ries, all of which manufacture plug. tobac co only; whereas at Durnu;m smoking to bacco is chiefly manufactured. The! num ber of pounds, of plug tobacco manufac tured by these factories and fur which stamps had been sold, amounted to nearly two millions during the past year. Rut Winston is also the market for a productive grain growing section and has an extensive back-country trade. In dried fruit alone, it annually, snips two or three iii ill ion pounds, which brings" back J no in-, considerable sum. The merchants do a large' wholesale as well as retail business. There are several firms that sell each from ftfty to one hundred and fifty thousand dol lars worth, of goods annually, i roduce is brought to Winston not only frm the but northwestern counties ot his htaje, also from the- adjoining counties jn ginta. .. .'...-- .. '': Yir- f : 31any handstmie residencies adorn Win ston, while the lame three land four sitory brick factories, tttofcx, etc. jgive itjquite a ,. cityike afipearancc. There are two Na 'tional. banks, six churches, three hotiels and four papers. The railroad! from ilreens boni , twenty-nine miles distant, coiincct Winston with the outer world. "This road dia the lnt jiaying business of any in North Carolina, as so large an amount of freight is transported over iL. The health of Winston Is excelject at! all seasoDa of the vear: the climate salubrious and the water pure. . ' A Pender Onntj Poetor. I Froin .the AYilntinirtnnjReview.lt' There is a practicing plnsician how iv-; I ing in Pender county who has had a some- ff what remarkable career. I lei is at.tfie pres ent time 57 years of age arid has never taken a cliew of tobacco and does not know one playing card from another . I He ;has beeii twice marri"d and both of hia wives were of the same Christian name,, i while his second wife,' who was aj wjidow i when he uiarrietl her, can say the same of.; ;lx)ih of her consorts. He - has .had two - teiinothers. and two mothers-in-laW, be- j sides his own rimther, which makes five j' women whom he has called imother. He vsaw his owp mother married I in 1831 and I in December 1 842, his father rrote to him to get him' a license to marry his sec I ond wifei, which he did, and, then waited ! pn his thither at his second Wedding. jTfiis man. had nine brothers-in-law present each i fjme he wa9 married, and at his last cburt- ing, there were about sixty nephews ana nieces who called him uhcle. He has six ij chihtren and two step-children three chil dren nTarricd, thirteen grandchildtenthir- , teen step-gfandchildren and one great-grand- i child. He-is a good citizen', a ihorough and uneoiupronusing - Democrat a good i; old Reb:; who went through three years of the war.!' ' He u now' one of the oldest : physicians in Pender county and a graduate of the Charleston School of Medicine, class of 1845. . NO. 0. KM AM) ( IRIIEN NttTlX NATION AI. AIRlrt LTl'RAL MH'irtT. I lie 22d lilt, a Ooiifi reiHV. prvlinii nary to tlie organiiit joti of a Nation AgrUultural S,a-ty, Was held in the Farmer' Club Rom, i Cooper Institute, New York. The neinif" wan orgnisl by the vWtioti of Hon: i K. liiHtr, 'of IViinslvani.it Frcfklentj; Dr. "A. S. Heath, of New York; and t'uvemur Hyde, otini,'ticit, Yiis'-Prcsidi'ntn. and Alern. Eira Whitman, of MartUnd, ami ", Wil son, of New Jersey, tvi-retariea. It in desigiHsl -to enlist ithe; iSMiperation of, the leading agricuhurists' throughout the whole inuiitry to have, an orgatila,ttion tlion.ughly. national in ijr character fur the Imiiiotinn aim IvanfM-mcnt of agriculture y prat-tu-al methyls, i Thev eck t -i.r- piuize a membership that siiall reprtW-ut every agricultural inUrwt f iJbtf uliulti, 'count ry and establish a.eiety that will lc to the iiidiistrial interest of our country what the Royal 'Agricultural Society ia . to r.ngian.i. . comuiitie ol ttnrt-n wan ...... . a aiMiint(M to issue a call and make prcia- niiions. nir a tinv-tittg in .cw j ork ity on the . 10th of next month: ' UARDEN. IVOIIK iy vovEMiirit. rhe garden shouM hU month 1h fixisl iip'lbr I he winter. The weed. gmv, dead vines, leaver, v'.t might t? Im coiWted, and, with mould, ashes and iw yard ma nure. ;ie all put in ai heap and eniiis(li using, liquid iVianurei and soap suds to in cnw dfs;tinyisifiti nnd add to the fer- fiiity. i-i''.;; ' ' "tiather those that Rare headtsl aisl act! them, root upward, enwa. "together i,n throe or four fows on iry, level ground and cover with three or f nir im hes.of earth, rounded; up sharp at the top and pidt-d firtnlw Those that are not lieabsl let stand until cold weather, "then put them in narrow trenches close togethtT- place over them, boards anfi (fiver ,th(w in yerycoM- sja-lls,1 .with litter or rtraw.Miry!iHl rirrtiier ' KKKTILI'JERH-'.KiiR WH KAT. ' -.. ... s . . It no tertuiwrs-were uj at the tinni the wheat was sown we 'would advise the) application, at oticw. per acre of thns hum dred pounds. of Kaioifs or sauie quantity of ljone flour, or, if such i-aiinot be afTordeil, rise four , bushels . of sidt well mixeil with tnie of gy psum. The ' great object s is tt force the early firowth of the whoitt ladiire winte'r.J .Fanner. ' j. J WIIKAT Ctl'bTfVATUiNi, " , I have learned . thut wheat ran Ik: hoeI with horses ai readily as coin, and as fast .as it can be drilled, (lie. implement fVecupy ing the same space and the number oft hoes being the same as a drill ; and when hoed it looks as much improved a a corn field drvsMud out with . a cultivator. It doe not Vhtrov atfy greater ierwntago t)f the plants than fs done? in cultivating corn Any man who can manage a plow well can manage a wheat hoe as readijy. -I can't' see any reason why it will not help wheat as much to hoe it as any other crop, ao a to let-in light, heat ami fertilizing gasn of the atmosphere, to. give vigor to the plants. Wrxfern Itnrah '.' , . ; ' " . CATTLE 8HEPS. Sec thaf gofxl wann catth sheds arc pro vided for the pnrtcction of Ktock againat! the inclemency t. of winter. - CAttJc well; housed - require less food than when ex-j jKised to the weather and keep in lK"tter condition. ! ' j FALL PlJifllHINii: -. J "Do not defJr your ploughing for the' next crop until (the next" spring, jiartieu-! larly on ymr clay mAU. On a large pro-t jMirtioii of our-, siils -the inost Valuable" ploughing that, a crop -can have ii that which can be Ione proja-rly during tfii' fall months. : j s " ; j -If HI If KATTENIMI. . i Root crofis, vi-getablcH, Mirn, A;e,, are; now plentiful and it is the best time to make jork rapidly aim cheaply, l oed your porkers iaiuntifully, give them pro per attention and have, theni filhsl out and realy to slaughteit lefore the severe weather of wimvmonthg comes in. .' KEEPINO V yWKTA"-.:"l I! "WINTER. j - There a few general. rules which should be well undT1ood, and by which vegcj tables may be kejit in gfaal condition for a; much longer time than is ordiunrily done; 1st. Keep them ccs 4 without freezing and without alternating change if tcniper ature. ' ' I i - 2d. If they dry rip and shrivel (as hoct and parsnijis) .apply, by external tiK-ans, a ! certain amount wf nwasture. . j 3d. If they. do not hhrivel .but rot (as 1 jiotatoes and sijuashes)1. let the air which j I surrounds them be drj 'and ond". j f . These rules may W ndily and easily ! j applied in varinfis cmaos l'otatoea, for cxf . j ample, dry very slowly, but are liable t j rot, and they may therefore lie subjccfiej I i to. moderate currents of air, in a cool place' ( ' Light should be kept out to prvit dwit :, becoming1 green and bitter. ' - Turnij, beets .and parsiu'i, unlike th'j ; potatne. ' dry up soon if cxjf! to air. .When intcndefl. for I'fchen 'use. and riot j for stock they may be jmcked in fine moati j j or damp sawdust. If sawdust be uod it i !, sliould .be in sm4ll loxes to prevent beat-- ' Iumpkins and squashes may be kept a long time in dry chaff, and . if oovered heavily with chaff tltcy will not freeze ia a 1 barn. " Apples niay also be kcj by Ohm method . Country GenUelft'iM. . A BICII ajMPOHT HEAP. , j Now that our fanner are beginning to prepare fr those large, 'blaring, comforta j ble fires that are to be found on all winter ' evenings, let them also begin to prepare j for making a cheap audi splendid fertilizer ! by utilizing the ashes obtained in their ! houses. Every farmer should have a pen i convenient to his house) in which to dej posit ashes, scraping, vegetable matter, &c. during -the winter. -Make the pen of pole say ten or twelve, feot square, haul trmb and mould, and piace it 'near by, put in the nen a -Liver about twelve inches deep; cover thw with ashes from your fire-plaocs throw in dish-water, soap-suds, Tand scrapf ings,'from your sriKike-houses and all avail able matter that may aid in clinching and assist in deomi)osing the matter i continue through the winter to throw fin your vegfj- A AIVEBTIIN) RATI ! . - ' Ailvrrtiwnts-atk w ill l tnm rtexl f f 1 1" per s-Jjnam i.e iarhi t tlu lr4 l fcnr rrtil for l k u'lrjrol lAibltrUMt. . ' ' I mmtim toe feUrrrtiM ar Me llmt niay ! Made a Ikk Ih, ,4 . ;j: ' ' layyttrvilU -4trrM, oey U iIIum. ( lurrh, opiwte V.tkrt H.,aare, -f lliblical e.Hlrr" Huildinf, T.4h"iK, .V. tV ' ' tlble matter fMdi the wiV and in upring, ih taking it otit f vmr field. vin at . thf tj ami cut down through the Urm ;. 'Vu hn.1 Mint much theaU r- Imt ijifi-rior tii many ni-a!Ul KutMit. Try it. tnm rUn rk lour pipt, rahr, and mh.vo t.hiMil.1 ljae the U ticfit of gnsi MtlnrWe throuuU the winU r . S.w ata and nejit y. u.havr rii otbcrain- i.rovid.sl f.n ihnn Allow I to kind of aim I 't run imjjmr UikU when I h.r ground thi alutuld atv iy at all was. tin ff the cr; 1 Hye nuLea winter crtting. and if the ,.1 ithdrawn in time i'r the pUht to c'mw off in the spring it nuke an admiraUc given crop with whiih to fiisl the land. . A M I I. Kip HI- it t. If the ilrinw' f I lie it hi fit I h.v pre vi'iittsl the iitig of full nti of twia it iiiay yet 1m doM to advantjv by tlie ,Um oy actKe.' Wifiniiiiiinf ffttUffrfi. hUt ujanure or paI nimtiM'Trid fi-rtiliTa arv' Uxt. With oat, aa itidd uh all cvrrtj ei..in4. the land MumiI I lie well piilvenKsi aid thiiroiighh umK r driinsl .'Many of otr farmer .inplaiti thaf their whewt mid sjls an vJiii,4T ttOef tr,tt,r killei (Lillil." fmt. lln-y re ot . . X f - i . .; I)T lnT.To.!f With our tuiiple, ulione t bildn n lllidiT- sllind the IHimI.h, ,,(" ban it I lii '11 lid Ming this aluul.le foot iMp, it w..iild U- J r Imps Mljs l tlnoll" to tnnke miy ailronilolia. Hut it may Im Wi ll to n niind nuj- niuli r 1 1 tat the Ion of thiii crop aKer if in gjth erjil atid who'll noiiiHitin j 13s un, i tiftattrr toj Ia ast rilxsl to a little can kxwncffji tlian tiJ any ss ufi.ir atatc nf the weather, lariu ! olU ti nelifi to attend to t Jif ir H4m-to.-a-at the very uioim tit they jniont ' iitd ft the first Jd "hftap .'' wA nnfrc m ilitly ha pens that ".lie k ' FmM" tils I if In- ' laiik' .iiiund very ligbtly'witU atraw, ai d tin1 inim hief U only iliiVcris Im, la c. Do not riL a Ins te, Iml eover the funk thoroughly an-I-wII. All nntt ri'vs,-pumpkins, Ac f hlimiH .tn w la- atonsj latetullv for winter u lU'iueiubcr that the- froW -of inter Imp mellowing inflitctitv on atifT day so Is, and the ppaesff of ilisintegralloli hbe r es the soluble suits which strong clay so Is usually fsintaiii in .large ' quant itiep. Plow your clay siU deop and tlioroUebly laf ore the winter rams conic, Our Fair ( It) by the iea. !."'. ''I' r I From the AVitniingloa Uctew , Tlie only pfirj of entry of aeriifiia ixhiac qiH-ncv U'twei'tk ) Norfolk, Ya and Char lestin, S. (, h WilSuiiigtoii.J Hitc we hak'u a harlatr capac ity for at least one bun- -drj-d and fitly sail, with a dejtli"' of waU-r that will allow viwnclm drawing fourteen or $ftTn feet to arrive anddcrt with safety and without inonnvenichce. j The ' larlir ia U landJockpd that VMtaJa inav hake aa'ly at their niooringa during the prrva ' Icrtce oC the severest stonnn. Three great railroads make- this ; one of their terminal point, aud the managciuont of thoae nwda, with a sagacity that has vtiticitaitcd our eomincn tab needs and., eoiivrtucmr, hsVe cnnatnictfl wharves and shisls and extended their track along the water front, so that freight ran be transfi rrud. directly from the cars to' vi-ssela .waiting for ar goea, witlmut any of tlnT cxta-nac, delay and inconvenienev incidcntt to drayagi and fp,n)nen', handling. ..Within the. past two. year very decided improvcmi-nta havn Ims-b , iiiile, by cxtetxling the linen of track to a doep water liin', fur better acsimiiiolaUoti of jvi-sHeU liaving cargmw to receive or din chilrge. .','; ' . I - : ' , .kS'ith all thcMc advantages oTi r ttut Ions fortunate ncihlam, the Magaeiiy and win 4I0111 of our ttierehaiits and ajiitaliatn' sin u Id be dire-tel to! cneouMgc, by every f MfeUil,It means (lie agriculturist and pro dnircra to seek the facilities which ,we are ' abl 1 to offer, by wbii b to find tyn-MS for their produU tii the market of the world. It is also wise fir, the producer to avail themselves of th oi jicirtuniliea, afforded by iur city, for the shipntent of their pro-dint.- Ry this mean, the city snd the . inU rior of the State bccom mora intimate- , ly icquaiiiUd arsl relntesl, and a mutual Is'in fit is th-rivisl. , ' The 11 i ko-y (troi'' 1 Am says: . ..'-, ' '4 '; Jr If our .trad'menV.'in buy goml at Wj mington on-f'aviifahle terms, it is to their intercut to Male their purth'aaes in pn-fcrcucu U cities uUilc of (he Slat.., Whatever buifd up Wilmington, builds up North Carolina, and that wliich build . np North Carolina cntributen ti tk wel fare of all her citiann. ..WJlmington"' Is, in ur opinion, our only available seaport,, ami a such should t? fxtcrcd in hr com- -,in 11 il interests .by all sections of the "OJ North.Statc;' It 11 hot, that the' effo ft now making t,o build up the trade of the '.'atr .bjf Uki aca, may N suotywtul l-ynid the tnoaf sanguine cxpoctat ions of -it jipjorii." " ' , j . Wotcrn Issaae Aaylnn.. ' . '.- ' t From 'the Itbrkc lHadip.J " The faV'fsl'K weatljer for the ut six ; month ha 1 nibl.st Mr, Walker to pr ! gross with the work la-vond his, mot san jroine"exrttioii. Ctfiidering. tlio lim j iusl moans, the work that has horn dona is real y astonishing: t.ho brick I and wood; ; wort of the uiti'nr south wing of the build- j 1 iiig is eompletcl and thecivering is nearly . ; m he rif i ! and prcucrtts, a hand-' ' srun? apj-earatx-c. Tlie centre buitling is ; ; up to the height if the fourth sUry. . The I , wor uien are now engaged in 'Cre'-ting the ' i iron front irtico of the centre building, which will le cmnplcted in two wwla and .. j will present a msgniflecnt - appearance. ! With favorable weather, the brick work of 1 the fntire cx ntre building will be completed : roaijy for the roof during the season. The i rear centre building which is intended for j kit hen, servants' rooms and t liapH js up ! in tie height of two stories. The mountain aiwiery from thi? olsierya ' toriiM (which sen ai Veiitilatora for tha. .. ayl mi building) surpaie8 anything of tie ' kim. wc have beheld. j Via,"' said a little boy, looking up from ( an i lust rated papiT.-l wish ,1 was a little ' Smh African. joy. "Wbv, George? ' askodhis ma. 'Whv, cauae their moth- ', ers don t wear siipia-r, ne icciingiy rc . . - o e. . i 1 plie r - i 1-'. ' : ii (A i'-V - Vi-; i . ; J. ' . : ' . ! . 1 '- il ' " - ' " ' " "' - :" ' r . . ,