Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Dec. 17, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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JKA A -L i S I 11 W. II KITCHIN, OWNER WE MUST WORK FOR THE PEOPLE'S WELFARE. SUBSCRIPriON 81.50 PER YE Alt- VOL 3. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. FRIDAY DECEMBER 17, 1886. NO 7. A PEKPECT DAV. I. F. M. Along: the reek-bound shore the sun shine crept; Our little boat upon the'summer sea Hocked Hjhtly, and a merry crew were we, Tet eyes were there which bitter "tears had wept, And hearts were hre that lonely secrets kpt, Even as on the reefs lay winter wrecks Of riven masts and ruined quarter decks. While in the sunny sea the , dead men slept; And tears will fall again, and sterros will break, Hearts will beat low, and faces will grow pale; - And yet new dawns will blush and sea birds wake. Our God was with our gladness. Come what may, Kothing can rob us of a perfect day. Nor of the faith that such days shall not fail. The Oji'vit. Hofooily EiDWN but Jloiber. Nobody knows f the work it makes To keep th home together; Xbody knaws of the steps it takes, Nobody knows but mother. Nobody listens to childish woes, "Which kisses only smother; N'ibodt; pained by naughty blows, Nobody only mother. i Nobody knows of the sleepless care Bestowed en baby brother; Nobody knows of the tender pray'r Nobody only mother. Nobody knows of the lessens taught Of leving cue another; Nt-body knows of the pa ;e;?ce sought. Nobody on! y mother. Nobod; knows of the a:i::ious fears, Les daviinjs may not weather. The storm of life in after years" Nobody knows bat mother. Nobody kneels at the throne above To thank t!i- ilea.e'ily father, For the sweetest gi't a mother's lOTe. Nobody knows but mother. -H. C. DoJae. in Pciio' Free rress. Like music heard on the still water. Lme pines when the wind passeih by, Like pearls in the deph of the ocean, Like stars that enamel the sky, Li June and the odor of resses, Like dew and the freshness ot morn. L'fe sunshme thai kisse?the do ver, Liite lasse's of sUfc on the corn, Like notes of the thrush m ihe wood land. Like brooks where the violets grow, Like rainbows that arch the blue heav ens, Like clouds when the sun dippeth lew, Like dream" ef Acalian pleasures. Like colors that gratefully blend, Like every ihingbreaihing of puieness Lite these is the ioye of a friend. Josephine Canning in Good Ibusekeep ing. A HAPPY HOttl? A Happy Home is the brightest spot ca earl?; tait the eye of God poks dona an. Love and peace in j Lis koine send a suasliaa ?oundaj man nhrevtr h aes; but disorder j and trouble I';og misery every-j where. Tbe"e a-e few wo-.ri?sof life which a man caoaot now and j then shake o-T, but who can shake j hiine'f f-ee f-om the. skelton in the! closet, f;oxa the wor'-y in the house-j hold, and the MisUr on the bea-t ! j A day will tell how many a man car ried that with him w;i;hcut wincing, down lo the grave. When husband and wife are helps ates to each other in the best sause. when oider and love and goodness prevail in the Louse, then the man who has a hard battle ifl life to fight can leave his struggle behind him when he c li ters there. With all our faults, we are the most Lemeloving of people and th it n the ii: so i wkv we are the jzre-ate'-t of peo; le. Whoever helps homelife i-s a national bless ing whatever buits hoiif-life is a national cures, and th greatfst curs thtt can loucli these b'esigs is what wuii'd tausper with the peace and biesse iticss tf our homps- It is iii the family life that man's p'ety gets tested. Lei the husband b cross an 1 eurt v giving a snap here . and a cuff there, and se how out of sorts evertliing gets? The wife graws c dd and uoafele too. Both are turned on one kej They vi brate in unison, give tone for tn. risinj in fearmony or discord to gether. The cildren grow up saucy, and savage as young bears. The father becomes calioue, peevLb, bard, a kind of two legged brute with clothes on. The wife bristles in self deienee. They develop un natural grawth and sharpness of teeth, and the bouse is haunted by ugliness and domestic brawl?. Battle boro HeudU(jht, GOOD ADVICE. TO THE RISING GENERATION .IIpr.OF YOUNG MEN. CJC 'v??v-- PHILOSOPHER MONFOET INDUL GES IN A BIT OF FATHERLY COUNCIL FOR THE BENEFIT OFniS HOPEFUL OFFSPRING. My boy," first of all things learn to know what you know. That is. don't make pretentions to knowl edge, when really you have none. If you are ignorast of a thing, do not be ashamed to own it. If you fail to coraprebeud a point do not be too stiff, too a arrow nQiaded to say io. Many people los a great deal of the chance to leara by knowing too much by a refusal to listen to those who sue wiser than they. Bc '"aefiil not to form too great an vpiaion f you! 5 jlf. Do not gft the idea irio your head that you know all that is worth ksewiug. Theiv no persons who do this , and their lives are checkered all the waj through by failures and blunders. No man knows everything no man ever gets too wise to learu a 2re.1t deal mor;. You will realize this -xfier a while this is one of the valuable loso!)5 you will learn as you grow abler. And we can learn freui those who do not know half so much as we do. The wisest roan can learu a great deal from unlet-1 tcrc-tl. Tieis may seem strange to ytu iny coy, cut when, you grow; ol tcr you wiil realize it. j ihtfie are thouetinds tf l:ttle le?- sns lo he lesrned small in them-j ire?, lo be s :re but gicat in the ! aii'-rregnt" Mid if you are mindful ' yciti tin Ige along lit: pathway of life yen will find many of them, 'i'hi-y spring up a'ong the way, and ' an be culled iVcm IK ruvbis'i of a flowers are picked fiom the wilderness of briar. As you walk do A' a the unkKOvn channels of time lowu through the ia ling dark no 3 of the future, vou want to keen VMir eves oeu for the beauties a! veil a the snares. If you do this ! snd gathes all th flowets and the frmts, you will find life worth liying. You wiil fiad more pleasure than sorrow more of afe than of death. Do you knsw that life is what we make it ! Do you know we are all t'ae architects of your own charac ters? And iu the end, my boy, if we fail we cannot blame our failures te others. Whatever be ths results of life, be they good or bad, we are comptlled to stand by them. Then it behooves us to bt careful. It is our duty to so live that is the ead we can stand by our record and face the world calmly , and without fear or shame. Of course we cannot live perfectly. Every life has eome flaws, but we can live eo that our iOfd ded our cood intentioas wiil cover up a!! th bad ones. We can so live th tt when Our character are weighed ia the balance, the scale wiil turn in car favor, and that is a great deal, aiy boy. It is more than a great many do. The r, mv boy, strive to learn all t'r;t is g od strive to learn the va'ue of time th value of incidents the valie of knon'edge. When you karn these facts you will find it easy lo make use of them. But b i very careful that ycu know what vou th'u'v you kiow. Those who know everything nver leara auy fh'mg. Those who will not lit-tea never succeed. Yhvl want to live for some Wj?et rr whuh it is giorioss to strive. You have your ere fixed upon som tiling away up above th? Ibing3 of to-day. Thru you must strive to 1 f : h it. Ycu mu.t learu this. Yoa 1 -.rii pa tie uoo. Loani to labor on in the fa(; of opposition. Learn to iU fO a hi n t ?i . a stout heart and i a deteriuina: ion to succeed. .Learn to cave nothing for failures ltarn to n ver jiriere over loes leara to laugh at dissappointments. Lea' u to do your part and trust to God for 1 he lest. There is a ;ound of life awav ah ve the medium round of exist er:ce, my boy. and in that sphe none but those willing to learn and labor ever walk. You caa altrds 10 as much as any other, if you wish and will try. But it requires ener gy, grit, and a disposition to keep up a wa-fare ; a disposition to never give up ; a disposition to make ths most of life, of opportunN ties , of the lossons that caa erery day be learned. The boy wao will not take advics will never be abl to get the good things out of life. Even the wisest persons do not know much of the great thiags that are to be learned of the great problems of this life , much less those younger persons who know nothisg. Ono cf our hardest lessons, aad one of the first lssons to learn is to know how !ittle we knew. A great many miads fail to comprehend this fact and as a consequence, fail all the way through life. My boj, too must ltana reu matt learn thou sands of things that you do not think of, but which will in tun com to you as a natural following of your efforts to make) the best of what you haTe. Tbos. P. Menfort in Sqoib. BE WHAT YOU CAN BE. Boys, be whatever you attempt to be, and be it all over. Make a full hand at whatever you tackle. Strike something of your eiz3 something that you can make a success of. One grot trousle witli some peo ple is they attempt to fly too high, and their intellectual wings net be mg strong enough lb bearthem up they suddenly collapse with sucb force as to break them all up. It is belter to venture a little captiously at first, but all the time keep venturing a little farther up inthe pursuit of high entertain ments But be careful to always keep within the limits of safety. Don't attempt too much. Great attempts do not couub anything for us except they result in success, and besides every failure to a great degree de stroys our self-conn leace. Jt is better to he a living mouse thun a dea1 elephant. Belter to he a successful blackstaith than t broken down statesman. Better to make an independent livins 0:1 the farm thaa to go through life a half starved pref- s-5'onal man. Jitter to be a succeSi iu little things than a failure in tjj ones. There are thousands of men now trying to eke out a miserable exist ence in the various professions, wlo would find it better for their own 2"d to tackle something a little lower in the sea. e of duties some thing that requires more muscle and consequently brings more of a ' re compense. Brain work i good, akd to it the world is iadebled ftr many of it-s great advancements. But brains will not keep the - world mov ing. Braits aloie will not build machinery. Brains alone will no construct bridges, erect foundries. Brain may plan but it is muscle that mut do the work. The world is full of people nbo j are trying to live by their wits, and while a few make a grand success, there are p'estr ef then who lire, it is true, but who merely live and no thing.more. Except one is possess ed of veiy extraordinary ability, he had better rely chiefly oo muscle. While the b"ain market may be full, there is always room and opportun ity lor a profitable display of mus cle. Of course there must be men to fill the professions, and of the toys now growiug up, a certain piopor tion of them mast beewmo profes sional men. It is not our object to cry dewn the piofessiots. But we wuuld merely impress it on th minds of the youth that except one has extraordinary abilities, he would succeed better in life by following a vocation wherein he is net so entire ly dependent o the public. A man can raise just as good corm without fiiecds as with them, but when it comes to a professional life, if he has no friends he will find it an up hill work indeed to atlain success, and he will find further that only those who aie possessed of strong nerve and a disposition to push for ward even under the ni jt adverse circumstances are able to coiae to the front S'jxib, at last. Kansas City TE COWA.ND THE RftCBIT- The mail carrier frem the Court house to Powell's Ft., is responsible for the following : A gentleman along the line of his route had a very fine cow, and suddenly, and with no apparent canse, it was noticed that the cow came up and had the appearance of having been tnilkod. Her owner, thinking this exceedingly strange , began to no tice her movements, and he discover ed that every night she ealled at the samo place as if for her calf. He went nearer and discovered that it was a large buck rabbit which she had adopted that was the cause of the trouble. He caught aad killed the rabbit, snd since then his cow has given her uaoal amount of milk, Elizabeth city JSctnomist. THE ETHICS OF HUGGING- DIFFKRENCE BETWEEN THE EMBRACE AND THE HUG, AND WHERE THE ONE IS PROPER AND THE OTHER POSSIBLE. A few days ago a yonng gentle men residing on Polk street, Sacra mento, bugged his grandmother with sucb terror that three of the old lady's ribs ware dislocated, and she now lies in a precarious coudi tioo. Thin, I may add, is an un precedented case. Mtn have hog ged the opposite sex with such feroc. ity as to endanger their live. but the the operation was sot perform ed upon their grandmother. About a year ago a young man in the East embraced his sweetheart, asd when the hug was over he found she was dead. But she had long suffered from disease of the heait, go he was only in part responsible for this melancholy occuirance. HuggiBg is a comparative y modern institu tion. Our ancestors uever bug. d. They calmly and df murely embrac ed. Xuw, here I pause to draw the line between the bug and the em brace. The hug is an earnest, quick, impetuous contraction of the mus cles of the arms and chest when the object to be hugged lies within the circle bounded by those arms, while the chest is the goal or final point of the hug. The warmth of the hug is determined by the extent of the muscular contraction. But the hug is net. a3 some anatomists assert, terminated when the object is brought in contact with the ciiest. On the contrary, th3 sweeping in is but the shell of the operation. The kernel is reached when the space bctweeu the hugger and ttehnggeeis annibd ated , and the blade of a knife could scarcely be inserted between both surfaces. That is, perhaps, the most dangerous stage of the opera tion. A pound, nay a few ounces, of extra pressure may result, if not in the displacement of a rib, at loast in the bursting of a corset string with the almest inevitable destruc tion of bangs, raontagues and such like headgear. Ihe release, if not skilfully managed, is also attended with danger, and should be as grad ual as the elementary pressure. Impressions of anguish en the part of the buggee may, as a rule, be regarded as hypocritical, and should have no effect ia inducing the hug ger to diminish the pressure. In like manner all danger signals ia regard to the arrival of a third party on the scene should be investigated by the party of ths first part before receiving the attention the genuiue arrival of a parent or guardian might command. This may be done by a quick glaace over the shoulder, and this rapid change of ths direction of the head may be accomplished by a little practice without making any relaxation of pressure necessary. If the warning should prove to he without foundation the deceit may 'e punished oy from two or three pounds additional pressure, but so gradual that none of the adornments of the person hugged mfy suffer. For these little accidents ruffle the temper a .d cmb'tter the memory of the operation. The small affairs of the toilet are not accomplished easi ly, and the female mind is ruffled by the destruction of the laborious em- belishments of the morning hou:. Near relatives shoald b embraced and r.ot hugged. The embrace is merely the throwing out and partial contraction of the arms without any special attention to an objective point. An especial! v young aad pretty aunt may be excepted, and I have known cases where an extreme ly juvenile and good-looking step mother has been the occasion of the merging of the embrace into the huir. But this i? rarely done, and is at tended with much danger, particular ly if the embracer is depenien. on the purse of he old man for the necessities, as well as the luxuries of life. To emliraee mother-ia-l:iw is a bo' low-mocks ry , and should ba attempt a only wsen some lui- portant abject has to be attained, and even then we uoufet if it is . tx- cusable. A cousin may be either hugged or embraced , as the fancy of the nperatnr may dictate, the choice depoading solely on the age and good looks of this most con veiient and Ex. delightful relation. IOO.OOO.OOO Per Annum. Tin withdrawl of $100,000,000 per annum trom the people and board ing it in the Treasury injuries com merce, cripplies industries and op presses evear branch of trade. If continued it will cause a geseral panic aad incalculable losses and failures. Therefore, stop it by re ducing the taxes. New York Star. sTBOO MM. It is not the loud talking, boiste rous Man of rant and racket who is the strong man. It is not the man who deals blow for blow, and is ever warring about his maahcoi's rights, and challenges the world to wrest them from bisa, who is the strong man. Did you ever see a man stand un moved and unawed amid the world's bnnVts aid wrongs, aad with a calm majesty of bearing maintain his foot hold , and bravely do his duty witfe no word of cheer fro a his fellows aud no nop of reward from the world? Thia is the man spirilnally strong, standing erect as if carved out ef adamant when conquering himself and his will to measure out naersy to others as it has been sieted cut to him. Did yeu ever see n mtn hopeletfly bearing hs bure'en ot toil and trial, his dumb lips bravely teeping his secret from the world and giving no sign what has broken his peace aad caakered his happiness. This is the traly strong man who under tempta tion keeps himself pure fiota all taint, who though painfully sensi tive to intuit ind indignity refrains himself and leaves the retribution wilh God. Calmness and composure mid life's conflicts an 1 wrongs caa only bo the result of strength of charac ter. You cannot rob the 6tron man of hia tenderness by your cru elty; your insult an;2 calumny can not harden his heart; there is no such thing as destiny driving him to axcesses of angei and revenge . It is the weak man who argues thus the strong man conquers his cir eumttasecs, and we iao Imt admire and respect him who holds his tongue and controls his hand when strong provocation would urge Lim to speak or deal ti e blowtkat would Ell ell his after life with wo unut terable. This strong msn is never undulv depressed or elated br the world's bad or good opinion of him. II sees how ,5onors are bestowed w th cruel and ludicrous injustice upoa the unworthy aid how the accident el hero enjoys the worship cf the populaee when the man who has spent years in aoi lc deeds and lofty sacrifices is left to perish in obscur ity, and even his name forgotten amongst me. Bat Le has that in ner strength which enables him to triumph over the earth-bora desire for norldly honor and distinction and laoks beyond acd above these fleeting things for joys unalloyed and imutriahable. Battleboro Headlight. WChO,WED. we JttO. We love to look into the witckory deeps of their soulful e)e?, and bathe our vision in those waves of radiance which seam brighter ind more beautiful thaa the twinkling gleams of trembling tars which thread with luster the darkness of the night. We lore to hear their TOicos, for a woman's vice always has a melody as swet as the ntes which slip trom the inusie lined throats of tuneful robins, when they pour out to each other their feeling in the delightful ripple of their own entrasciag songwave. Wilfon Mir ror. RYE FEED- In lookiag for cheap grain feed rye is not so likely to be fo; gotten. It i lmo-t the only nutritious con cen ''.rated fed that can be bought for less than ono cent per pousd. The drawback ou rve is that it nay bo affected with ergotf and thus be usuitable to aniaaals bearing vouiag. Bot it is excellent fcr almost evoiy ofc'aer kiad sf slock, and especially for young a.iirnals v kieh it ssay be desired t gt into heat ftr the pur pose of irducing earlier breed'ng. The action of the ergot in stimulat ing the gereifctife organs it to activ ity is then just what is wished, Ex. A MISNOMER. Protection n a misnomer, It im plies" superiority elsewhere. Superi ority over any great industry of ours does not exist o the face of the globe. It implies infants here and adults elsewhere. Such is not our reputation. It implies thai, amid cornpetitiop, universal where the fit test survive, we shall perish. But wbeDOver we shall release ourselves fiom bad laws and enter that eom petition uu Manacled rivals will be distanced and our primacy establish ed in fhe maikets and commerce of the world. Secretary Manning. 13 ow I lie I"rridl E'VrjjSstess Senators and i'mngrznen. WasiiIngtox, Dec. The Presi dent is set up on too high a. l-i. lie hsR too much power. Any cs it -ei-m of the President, anv cm, Ali son of hiin w t'i or lisary eficiui-. dnripg Lis term of offic-, is regarded as cruel and ma'ioirns. Of sixty or seventy members who h.e !ivr.dv j arrived here thtire in rmt os who does not criticise tr e P e dent ani his policj'. There is hot a sinI; Dentocrat member who does not thitik that theDoaiocratic losses in the next llousu have been eccasior. ed by the Pres'dent's policy. Tber is not oue of them who will sot ssj o privately, but when it comes to a question of saying so publiclv tke turn pale and protest. Mr. Clee Iand has good reason to believe that these public men are friendly to him VTith the exception, not ono of them who have ne to ihe White-Houd t 'bis fall has told the President th truth concerning his own opinio; lien who will stand about the bote! lobbies and say every mean, unk' a taing they can about Mr. Cleveland will go cringing up to him at h White House, snd say: "You un doing just riifht. Your policy is th correct oue. Now give us a smal'. Post Office, please." Senator Eu lis.of L'lui-iiana. is the only purl it man who has toll the Preside n?. sinca his return to Washington th t the Democratic lot-ses are to to dii -c-ctlv chared to the policy of the Administration, but it is proroble the Pieido-it will think that Seoul- Eu-tis is mistaken, as all the o f ! 1 e : public men who v; to see hisa pre sent differcst vies. One of the most prominent Dsoaocralic Sena tors in the South said to vae yrt r da: "I never went iete the chuifc rooms of the SeiutV, last ppriag t. ngaue in conversation with ant ,f my Democratic colleagues withoir the censure of Cleveland at on began. Y"et not one of those gentle men would go to the White H"use and say to thi President one wo-d of anything but praise." New Yoik World. T. C, Crawford. Husband and Wives. It lias beent remarked that there are six 'I by any of which r. stranger may know a man aad wo man to be husband and wife. The rules, it is said, -ire infallible iu jufi; interpretation. They may be res in to with confidence as they a e de duced from every day experience; 1. If yog see a gentleman and lady disagree upon trifling ecc -ion., or correcting each other in compaay, you may be assured they have tied the matrimonial noose. 2. If you see a silent pair in hackney or anr other coach lolling carelessly, one at each window, with out seeming to know theT have companion, the sign is iufa'liblc. 3. If you sea a ladv drop her glove acd a genlhnun bv th.: side ofherk'nll' U-ll-uj; her to pick '.i up, you need lsot hesitate in form ing your opinion; or 4. If you see a lady preserdiu a gentleman with anything c re.-lv--sly, the head iuclinel another wy, aEd speaking to him " wit h indiffer ence; or, 5. Jfyou meet a couple in the fields, the gentleinsn twenty 3-sfd in advance of the Jady, who perhaps is getting oyer a stile with difficul ty, or picking hei way th-ough a muddy path; or, 6. If yru see a sentlemin pai ticularly coarleous, ob a:ning and good-natu -eed, re-axing into sau'ea, saving einsrt things to every pretty woman in the room excptiu one. to whom he appears particularly re served, cold a d formal, and is un reasonable cross who that on is abod- can b ? at a los to d?sc jvur. DEFICIERCtS IPi RaNURE- It is customary to speak of manure fiom the brfrnyard or stable as the staiid rd. and maev good farmers av i''they cauld get plenty of that th?v would use u elber . But there is nre'at variation in stable maaure. It generally contains somethiug of everything that the plant neds ; but the fact that with it graii. grow enormous yields of straw with deficient hoads show 1 hat it ometicses lscks ia the nrncral elo ment most essential to successful production ot grain.Tbis is very apt to be th case where grain or nails have been sold frooi the farm for a long series of y-ars, aud only straw and hay used as food for stck. Clover hay makes rich aaaure alou. Other hay needs grain feed with it. THE !ViL SLRIMCE QUESTiOH- WHY THE DEMOCUACY A HE OPPOSED TO Mil. CLEVELAND'S PECULIAR . NOTIONS. '4Jt is exceedingly strange' says the President, referring to the civil service, that the sc ne and nature of this reform are so httte under stood, and that so many things not included within Ins plan are called by its name." Doe? Mr, Cleveland not sea that he himself is larger reponsible for the misun derstanding that exciter his won der: AY hat were the suspensions of Benton and Stone but -so many taings not 'inciudol within his pla:i !" Bv.what other th m ' its name are we to ca 1 Exec dive oi lers'' leveilel at ihe very foiinda- io of th American's birthiijbt of free thought, five speech, and free election, and ca c;itat:d, it not designed, to replace our coniitut- iinal system of politic d govera- meut, based on party' accountabili ty with the revolutionary importa tion of the politic ,1 pastry cooks, and entitle 1 a non-partisan civil service has .ed on bus n- ss princi ples, which is omy anothe - form of uescri'dng a perpetual office-holding class, abho.-rant to all our in stitutions? The Civil Servict act relating to a few chikswas no great matter. It is as an entering wedge thit though fu! people b.-gi 1 to ques tion t a d as int-jrpi'tfted by the Presid nt. to em bra- e "a so-ipe and nature" not coutemp at d by those who o ed f-.-r its passage that it cearCi tob- the sim-de refrm of an -.buse, and becomes the ihrcit ened x-volut on of a system. e confess that wc arc at :i io.i.-; to imdoistand just what the dent ni;a.;svlu'ii be describo. ' the undyriving puu-ij):" of f ho civil service tbeoiy a -the sites t guar antee f American inst 'itution-'." What ' undei lying piiicif 1 '" is here specified-the pr nciplc iba bcc.iuso a man becomes a'"iover;;ment odicer he sh-dl cease to be a .citizen tho principles that would exclude Hi mi from oilice because 01' th-ir aci.ive interest in 1 ctions ; (he piinoiple that w -u,d so d. voice office from pol.tics as will exchange party res ponsibility fsr personal responsi bility? We know of no iHicii indis pensal:e con lit ion to American ii svitntions. O11 the contrary, exact ly the reverse. It is the President's assertion of it. and ihe danger aris ing thoiice to old aid es abiisiicd principles of Goverom nt, which inspire the protest of the rauk and fife of the party, whttsi oly hope of esc -pe from the cons-.?qu- nas of this perversity of judgement in their Ch ef Magistiate, after tho hope fcnat he will nban-.lon it. lies m the very. p or conso at ou that the Ke;;ub!icaus. if tney should come into power, will make short work c-f it. undoing whatever he ha done, and all ar, the expense 0? Democ ats. II -rein lie at! the cri'icisms ve have passed u on the lJr s dent's utterances a 1 acti n-in this re gard and is Qonstnuted be whole ol the case of the party against hi-ti olicy. it nvoUes a-i. oiganic difference of opinion, a..d, to some ex'ent, a party disappointment. The latter is. the course, icmedia ble ; for slowly.bir. suTely. the Presi dent is ''turn ng the rascals out." But to the extent that English and French bureaucratic ideas are en grailed upon on- way of Iran-acting the public business hss a fa-sa acA m.slead 11 g j.hiiosophy take a root in JemoerarU: America, to ivr-.i g forth what fruit the fiituro a'one can toll. -Ciri-r-Jic:tul. We will bet the marble top of the 'Vasbi gton nionume itngaiust the bro tdack lurr of the Siatu-? of L'bety th.it t'sere is not one of those gent em who will not admit tnat, of all tic legislative sham? and frauds tint ever g'.u through C egress, the Civ?i vSc -vice act is the most tianspai. nt. fJo ivic r-Jo u raitl. PAPER FOU WAll.M III There is no eloper mole cf keep ins out cold than by the us of pas p;r, provided it is kept dry. It is impervieus to wind and two or three thicknesses placed between two blank ets or eve sheet, will preserve ars many spaces of confined air, which U even a belter shield from cold. Tarred paper can be obtained quite cheapley, and is better for fatten in: sheds and stables than are the boards generally nsed for. ttiis purpose.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 17, 1886, edition 1
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