BEMOCBAT H 1A K. K. HIl LIARD. Kutor and Proprietor- ..., r I jilt ih .-. w-. , t .... : SCOTLAND NKCK.N.CTHUKSDAY. OCTOBER I. 1S01 vnf VI! V. IS. :::: r. - i n a l. ! I) .-. c. r:ui-'! :.vn, Scon. and ;k, (V r,- (.iU l;C found at If oflice New Hotel wl'U iit profes HI ;'((! clsewbcro 2 1" tf. D li. VV. . McOOWELL, DFFF'F North corner New Hotel ?.!niu Mrect. iS oti.and Neck, N. C. Always at bis ollicc when not profess AvxUy engaged che vhere. !' 26 If. U M A N, Oj-TM'K- Uor. Main and 'fVnth Streets 2 12 I V. ;( l LA N I N K( Is ,'N. C. rpllOM AS N. HILL, JL a ttoiiney at law, Halifax, N . C, I'racliees i: i J ;il sf;i x ami adjoining counties, ami the federal ami .Supreme Court.s. 'A H ly. x A VI 1) BELL, ATTORNEY AT TiAW, Enfield, X. C. Practices in all the Courts of Halifax r . I alioiniu ' counties and in e Su- l i i iikj and Federal Courts ('la n.s col- ted ::i all parts of the State. 'AH ly. J A. l)l;NX, y T A T T OR N E Y A V LAW, Scotland Neck, N, C, 'r;t -tiecs wherever his services are .-( .piired. fob!:! ly. T 11. KITCHEN', u . Attorn r.v ami Counselor, at Law, Scotland Neck, JS'. ('. tt& OCice; Corner Main and Tenth Streets, 1 ly- K. 1!i kt:n, -Ii:. K. 1., Travis, EUHTON Sz TRAVIS. A j ii:;.:;v.s and (i:'x.si;!.oks at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. S 1 I ly. v.i i. :. , v.'el i . i. it 1,'Ansmm, weldon. HA V, !;ANSiM. A ! '! ih'NKYS A I' LAW, Wt-1. 1. on, li. V. n !i i: iUI s o N ' .s : !'!.. A i A !.!. IIS 1 in gua rii u ee i to p:i ti on ; i ! i : i .M.-iin Si i et-t.-.. i' Ni'CK, - - i N C i:m 0 ly. i. J. M 4) 11 C K ii. N.-. I ':. lb :;h St, bet. Main A Cary Sis. KI'JIIMONiJ, VA. dumber Coniinissicn Dilcrcant, '"'.: persona! and prompl attentioii t ' c:!isitriiiiient.s of Lutiibifr. Si.in'.'los. I. '. K:-. i-lT ii:) l'v. S. FOR AvL mhm Bkiod !f rCRCFULA. ULCERS, SALT (" I'-S RHt'JM. ECZEMA, every ' T.-,:it;nant Rk'ifi ESCPTi0N.be- 0 -'J'is b . . efficacious in toning bp the a cvi.'.T-ti ,-estorinc the ccrsiilution, i iri-a'r:a trpm a r.v cause, its v alrnr.si rupernaUiial healing property ties 4 . if J j.io!i,y us in guaranteeing a cure iiir-jciions ars followed, 4 t A F!T 3 C u it i.t'STif ATn $ BL000 CALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. ! !). II I LL 1 ; A I I N C i U T C II E Ii ii np town fx his ol I ;nl on !'vet ni-iv the brick mill. - i ' : : -.- : :e i I ' T-., ,..L. . .. J , ! ! '. : '.1 -J. - ' .-' ' 7 . i i ! . t l", :: . id'e ;.!-.vav. on hand, it ? i r-,1 i 1-1 -fl ly k'l ;5 b..S "'': ' t l.o.ec wilt;- . . . --! ;. m a : !--v i ii .i.Kna)IU ..j;., , - i l iri-.l. II,. . fS iVrll "- h,b ""rt 1 rl" mm rl.,. !(. tl., na lYltQiAla COi BUFFALO fi Y, Bain! 3 iviftuG x.h ?. 11 or .I.;.-- Th fiVioPTirp Vfil yc-dcrday, in ynndir r. i Mi re eyes coul 1 rcjt upon thy face, And now there's but an empty space Wherein I seek and find thee not. All is the same, yet not the same! The liver il ws, the llowcrs bloom. The stars pierce through the darkling gloom. And nature tails aloud thy name. N'uw M ranger eye look into, thine, A ml stiauger lips their welcome fipeak; A stranger'.- kiss is on thy cheek; Hut none can be to thee as mine! For, north or south, or east or west, Come storm or sunshine, weal or woe, A truer heait tbouTt never know Than that which trembles in this breast! Xalnrdaij Lrcninj 1'oat. Too True. ( W i I Messenger). Wc were once fe it t i nr in an editor ial olllce. A very rich man carot in. He owed s,3G on the paper for years of subscription. The editor was very bard up as said rich man 'Lew. He took in tue situation and imoariiaiously handed over $20, in part payment leaving slG still due that ought to have been paid in advance. That rich man ha I probably an m coiue of ,000 a year. The ed itor lived on short commons acd was so poor be not long after wrs sold out . It is time for the no system cf North Carolina newspapers to be abandoned and some business sys tem sflbstitututed. Long credits will bankrupt any newspaper, We know a poor ex editor in North Carolina who was faithfully aervtd the Democratic party at a most critical time, and who has $15 000 owing him by the Democrats of the Slate who read his paper and never paid for it. This docs not include either some 1,100 subscribers he had previously cut olf and who never paid. We suppose the late Mr. IJor.it z had furnished more tbi.n $20,000 worth of paper to subssriborp, for which he was never paid a penny. It i-i as failure to get what is owin that keeps newspaper men poor. Whrnevtr the unwise credit system ii entirely abandoned a new era f proapcrity ill dawn upon the craff in North Carolina. It, will r.cver i'iiitu' tftit.hou!, th is ehanue , Lndi;K, b,(?i-?, think of the en ijaiintnt jui have broken and :(i liisaj j ointments consequent to others and perhaps also t.) yourselves -ill on account of head iche. lirad j -crotine will cure jou ia fifteen min ute-?. All our removes ia this world are from one wilderness to another M Henry. i:i-i-ti ic- HiitiTK. This remedy is becomiug so well known and go popular as to Deed no special mention. All who have used Electric Bitters sing the same song or praise. A purer medicine does not exist snd it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the Liver and kidneys, will remove Pimples BoilsSalt rheum and other atfect tions caused by impure blood. Will ('rive Malaria from the system and prevent as well as cure all Mai ritl fevers. For care of Headache, Con stipation and Indigestion try. Elec tric Hitters Entire satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded, Price 50 cts. and 1.00 per bottle at E. T. Whitehead a Co's Drugstore. No place can deprive a man of happiness unless he pleases, no more than of his virtue and prudence. 1'iutarch. A Womler Worker. Mr. Frank Huffman, a young man of Burlington, 0:no. states that he iia l been under the care of two fihf-ioianp, and used their treatment antil he was not able to get around. They pronounced his case to be Consumption and Incurable. He was persuadt d to try Dr. Kind's N:w Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds and at that time wa3 not able to walk across the street without resting. He fouod, before Le had used half of a dollar bottle, that he was much fce'.ter; he .....j..,,! , it. nml is to daV CU- I joying go.d health. If you have any Throat, Lun or Chest Trouble try it. We guarantee satisfaction. Trial "bottle free at E. T. Whitehead & Co's Drue fcdore. The virtue of a man ought to be measured, not by his evciy-day col doct. Paecal. A TEMPLE. THE ILLINOIS ODD FELLOW'S BUILDING TO BEAT THEM ALL. TIIIKTY-rOUII STOREP, ELEVEN HUN IKEI ROOMS TO RENT, TWENTY FOUR HALL'; ALL FOR A HOLT FOUI1 MILLION DOLLARS. And now the Illinois Odd Fel lows propose to out-do the Masons, aud, in fact, everybody else. They .ay their new Chicago temple is to be one ot the biggest, befet and mot oeantiful buildings in America. Plans and ppecifictions have been prepared, and all that is needed is to sele.:t one ot the many site8 which the building committee lias under consideration. The temple will be so constructed as to serve the purpose ofaa ollic building as well as a society rendezvous. It will be thirty-fonr stories bigb and will be so peculiarly constructed as to have wiudows in every apartment facing the light. The main portion ot the building will be twenty stories high, the tower constituting tin remaining fourteen stories .and rising to a height of 5,"G feet. Tbe area of the site will be 43,000 square teet, and the broad base 177 by 210 feet, will cover the entire tract to a height of thirty feet above the sidewalk. The '-breaks" and deep recesses of the long facades are OII FhLLuWS' TEMPLK. so foimel as to admit air and light to the building, ami also to irive a diversity of outbuo. The tower, it is said, will be easi ly visible from Michigan City, La Poite, Aurora, Elgin, Wankegau and points sixty miles distant. It will not be built merely as a curoisi ty. While its designs will bo ar ti3tie, busiuesslike consideration will not be lost sight of, foi within it will be run no less than eighteen elevators, in addition to four main staircases, which will lead to 192 offices, all in the tower proper aud above the root level of the building. Discontinuing the terminal bays above tbe tenth stroy will prevent the throwing of shadows into the lower ollices and will develop tbe element of progressive recessions from base to piunacle, which con stitutes and interesting feature of tbe design. Tbe terminals, as tbe plan sbow., serve as buttresses for the long arms of the cross, which is the typical characteristic of the plan. It is intended that twenty-four lodge rooms and public halls shall occupy the thiid, fontth, Ottb, sixth and tenth stories, the great drill hall occupying the whole of one end of the tenth story, aud measuring ueaily 8,000 square feet in area. The remainder of the building will be available for business purposes. The entire number of rooms availa ble for rental, exclusivo of the balls and lodge room, will be 1,100, and their aggiegate area will be ovei 2."0,000 square feet, while including lodge rooms and public halls, the aiea inclosed, exclusive of walls, partitions, corridor, etc., will be :;50,000 t-quare lect. The design of he superstructure involves the use ofiiveted steel pillars ami steel girders, immovably knit together at all joints, vertical as well as hor izontal, by steel or iron rivets, and a system ot diagonal wiud-braces oi steel so thorough and all-pei vading, that, re enforced by the masses of masonry which will suriound the pillars in the lower parts of the structure, thete will be attained that combination of masonary and skeleton construction required for successful resistance to the wind strains to which so high a building will necessarily be exposed. All the structural iron and steel will be surrouuded by uon conduct- ing, liro-resistiug mclosiue; tbe iPlr S jl t1MhU.l1 ilTLiTNLiI ti'lmgs between ii or beams and be tween pillar.- ill all be of won com bnstibie. materia', stair? and leva- j UiT i(les anfl iuclcMire, w,il be of metal, hall aud corridor il oi will be of mosaic, aud to tlin remotest de tail of the erection of this building it will imbodv, it is said, the best arcbitecural practice of the day and eveiy advance and improvement up on the same that cm be discovered before execution of the woik. William C. Mclintock, president of the Odd Fellows iu the state of Illinois, is personally supervising all the preparations for the big un dertaking. He was a newspaper man for over twenty-oue years', was tirst vice-president of the National Editorial association of 1880, and has been secretary of the Ohio Editorisl assr c ation for the past ten years. With Mr. McClin tock originated the idea of buildiug the temple, and he is enlhsiastio in regard to the success which is cer tain to result from the project. The cost of the building alone, without taking the site iuto con sideration, will reach, it is expected, uearly 1,000,000. 'Yoang America." (Concord Standard). The American youth has about taken this country into his own hand. Ho goes out in the mornlue, roams oat into th3 wide world , which is his, and returns home to be waited on by the servant. The American yoath has broken his mamma's apron string and gracefully bows to his vexed father, who knows not what to Jo. A little more home life and as ociation would do the American youth some good, A freq'icnt ap plication of strap oi!, in broken doses will renovate bis system, do bis skin joo I and be an antidote to the rag ing fury of his inner boyebip. American youth, generalij-, has the earth, and he has no string to Uirn in communication with home headquarters, A telephone from ome homes to the street corners md back lots might throw some iight on the way some kids are canoodling around on towards mid night. She Saved The Boys. Cave tfi km the prettiest room AND DIDN'T MIND CARPET. A mother growing anxious oyer the repeated absence of her three boys from home during the evenings and suspecting that thev were ac- rpnriug a love oi loaung at the stores , widely resolved to make for them a more attractive place, where thev would be under her own eve and influence. She savs : "Our parlor has hitherto been kept sacred to the use of visitors md for the Sabbatl : but after think ing the matter over very eeriouily, the next evening I started a fire. arranged everything with as much care as though expecting company and invited my boys in. "Fney did not go down town that evening, nor bat they ever been since, except when a legitimate erracd called them out. Tbey read write, sing and play (they are all muskial), and seem perfectly con lent. .No dour t they'll wear oat tbe carpet and furniture, but I mean, by God's help, to haye my boys grow up to become goof, pure men, and if it's goin to take my best and prettiest room to help do it, why I am very glad I have it to glye the boys.'7 LEMON ELIXIR. Pleasant, Elegcnt, Reliable. For biliousness and constipation, take Lemon Elixir. For lexers, chills and malaria, take Lemon Elixir. For sleeplessness, nerysusncss and palpitation of the heart, take Lemon Elixir. For indices'! on snd fonl stomach, taV e Lemon Elixir. For all sick and nervous headaches, take LuiDon Elixir. Ladies, lor natural an ! ihoronpjh or ganic regulation, take Lemon Elisor. Dr. Mnzley's Lemon Elixir wi!l not fail you in any of the above named dis eases, ail of which arise from a torpid or diseased liver, ttomach, kidneys or bowels. Piepared only by Dr. II. Mozley, Atlanta, Ga. 50c. and 1-00 per boitle, at druggists. LEMON HOT DROPS Cures all Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Hemorrhage and all throat and lung diseases. E!e gint. re'.iable. 2-i cents at druggists Prepared only by Dr. II. .Vczle, Atlanta, Ga. 4-30-01-ly. Itch on human and horses and all animals cured in 30 minutes by Y'ool fords Sanitary Lotion. Thn never fa Is. Sold b? E. T. Whitehead k Co's Drus j tsore, Scotland Neck, N. C. 8 21 ly SATURDAY NIGHT. THE THOUOIITS THAT 5TF.L OVKR HIE TIRED WOtKCK ON THE EVE OF THE S.UiBA Til. There is a restful sound about the mention of Siturdy niht. To the rich man who lolls around all tbr week, trying to make the slow hour pans soraebo-, it may not mean much ; hot to tLe man who works ten hours a day for fcix days out of sv en it has a feignili jancc. It mean rest. It means aoing to bed without setting the alarm clock so it will ring out and get the house astir at five o'clock. To the busy toilers in our factories and workshops Saturday night comes as a blessed relic r, a break in a weary monotony. The loose ends of the week's work are gathered ap. The honsc-wife sets her goodly array of eatables in the cupboard, ami thinks "Tomorrow I will rest." She draws her basket of mending toward ber with inward sat isfaction, and darns the stockings and tews on the buttons with a sense of relief. She will rest to morrow I The caildren will put away their toys ar d their school book?, and gather round the fire to read the weekly pa pers and look at the pictures. Sat urday night 1 No more work for thirty-six hours 1 Thirty-sis hours of sixty minutes each I No more money making, no fretting, no busi ness care?, no trying to make books balance, no scanning of Ptock re ports nothing but rest! Tbo far mer looks about his well filled barus and over his growing crops, and hangs up his scythe in the oppl tree by the grindstone, and pav hi hired man his week's wages, and con gratulates himself that another week is over. He is tired ; Le has worked hard, his brow is wet with the sweat by wLich it was said of old, mat should eat his bread. He has earn ed the rest which ia coming. He jiatn on a clean shirt, combs his wi lock", and sits down to tupper which labor has piven the right to eat, and the ability to eat without killing him with indirection. Ami the way t e viands disappear is a Mj;bt to make a dyspeptic- howl with envy. On Sunt day night ojt friends drop m and talk ovtr the news, and tell us what ii in the paper?, aud compart weather notts and give us a detailed history of the way Aunt .Jaria had the toothache, an I what the dentist said and Low U..c!e J.thn bail an at tack of cholera morbus, aid what cured hiir. And we urged them to etay longer, for it is Saturday night, we tell them ; and we walk down to the gate with them, remark on the beacty of the night, and wonder if it will rain o morrow. And we go to hed, tired, but happy, and reflect that we can lie in bul just as long as we please, for tomorrow is Sunday, and Sunday is the day of ret. The Tree of Knowledge. 1 II K Bihle con tains .Vi00,4Q( letters, SlOiOT words, :J1,175 ver ses, 1,180 chapters, and GO books. The longest chapter is the 110th Psalm; the shortest and middle chapter the 1 iVth Psalm. The middle verse is the Sth of thellSth Psalm. The longc.-t name is m th 3 Sth chapter of Isaiah. The word "and'' occurs 1,027 times; the word Lord 1,S05 times. The :J7th chapter cf Isaiah and the 10h chapter of the 2nd book wf Kings are alike The longest verse is the 0th of the Sth chapter of Esther; the snoitest verse is the .'J.Vh of the 11th chapter of John. In the 2lst verse of the 7th chap ter of Ezra is the alphabet. The finest piece of reading is che 'Jflih chapter of Acts. Th? nrnc uf COD is l.ot mentioned in book f.f Esther. 1 1 contains KNowr.r.r WISDOM; JI'M.INEKS AND MVE rmcsUMPTION CURED. An oia pTiycician, retired from pract ice, having had placed in Lis hands be an East li.da misionaiy the forinuiy of a similar vegel&hle remedy for tha speedv and pennament cure of consumpt ion, Bronchitis. Catarrh, Asthma and ad throat and Lun Aliction1, also a pos tiire and radical cure for Nervous De bility and ab Nerv. us Complaint, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in tnous&nds of esses, has felt it hi duty to make it known to his suf. fei in fellows- Acuated by this motive and e desire t relit ve human suffering' I will send free of charge, to all who desire it, this recipe, in German, French or English, with full directions for perparmg and usms. Sent by mail by addressing with t-timp, naming thi paper W. A, No yes -'J rowers' Llck Kochester.iY Y, 3-31-ly A 5IADST0NE. r 'K i n n r n . a ; u7 ok ii 1 . ; . k : t Hearing that lr 11. O. Cobb. who c?oved from Craven ounty u; Kinsto.i srveral month ag, j. Nested a madtotif, the writt r t led on him a few tl.4v ago to bam Mtmething about tt. Dr. Cobb stowed it to in and told part of its history. It i very am i!', ibout an inch long, hall an inch widt and fourth of an inch thick. It seems to be a piece brokt-n oil from a laiutr stone. The outride is a liubt color, but where it wa broken oil is almo.t jet black n c,lor. t)r. Cbb Keeps it in a u.l. pill box. which is niitketl "snake stone." There is c msnlcrub'o doubt in (he public mind that such a (hm as a stone t li.it will extract poison from a wouud exits, bat Dr. Cobb is perfectly lcliaable in ""what be says. This stone was bought by Dr. Cobbcs wife's father," Elder Win. P. Biddle, about M-veuty live 3e.it ago, who paid twenty-live dollar for it to someone living in tbe neigh borhood, the Ft. Barnwell section oi Craven county. 1 here i n trad 1 tioti that a peddler had gone through that section years previou to that time with a basket full ol such stones selling them. Dr. Cobb says the stone in his possession has been tried on at least 100 cases of snake ami spider bites and extracted the poison a"d gave relief 111 every instance, even to the bite of the deadly white oak snake. He said Mr. p.iddle once tried the stone ujtou a negro who had been bitten by a mad dog and it extracted the poison iu the same way as in snake bites, but h thought it only fair to state that the negro was kept thoroughly un der the inlliience of powcilut medi cines until the danger was oer. The dog that bit the negro also hit another dog, a hog ami a cow. all of which died ol hydrophobia. Dr. Cobb told in that only about one in ten persons bitten by mad dogs die ol the effects anyway. To apply t ln stone to a bite it is first put :n 4va 11 water lor a few minutes. Where there is poison it adheres so that it would net f-tll off even if turned downward until it takes all the poison it cm hold, when it be comes loose; then it is placet! in warm water again and as the poison comes cut of tiie stone small bub btes rise to the top; as soon as tbe bubbles cease to rise it is applied to the wound again. This operation is repeated until the stone will not adhere to the wound, when all the poison has been extracted. Dr. robb told ot cases of suane and spi ler bites that bail swolNe th face all out of rdiape, being u Iieved ty this stone .so that the swellim; went down in a few hours. Dr. Cobb told us that Harper's Magazine .seveial years ago corn tained an account of all the mad stones it could learn of after adver tising for same ami could only learn of ten or jwelve, whi';h were scat tered all over the eo'.iniry one be ing in some part of western Carobia. He failed to send an account of b K and therefore it was not !e.-rribedj among the others. j Dr. Cobb rigbtlj values this little! piece of stoutj very highly. It whs ! lost on t .vo occasions bv the lto-s carelessness of itersous to whom he band it, ami therefore he will not ' be very ready to loin it out bert - j after, btu w ll aj; ly it htinsclf whenever it is needled. Mr. Frank Cox suggest that this; w 'ild bea good thing ft r our lih-j eimeii ami hunte- to take n ith I (hem when they go out in-tetd of j the uual i-emedy they take v. il i i theii! for ';i. the 'dtt;" but thiti M imprHetical, a the stone can't be! seemed f.;; .ucb puti;o-e. I.-mJo! FURNITURE the fishermen ami l.unrer.- have g t j t r kinder used to tbe regulation ' snake i C O F F I N bite" lemedy and ha 1 rather have I jdc. Be in- a pructe-ai un iertaktr it than anything ebe. !my?eJf y(a vn iiU'iji rtly "tt ?' . t ! jjcttinz prorcpl wv. )-' order. HROVER FIFTY YEIF.C. j After .lanuarv !-:, I -!al! -u a Mrs, Wisn.w's Sooth I no Svrci- .s! H" Bil Ll',M ,,r been ucd lor ovr iifty v-rs hf inibii s lf II rl M I ri' TI Vt f of rcothers f.r tneir ehil iren whde lepih- L. 1 i a -JL IP ' Willi l"n MlfClS. 1 t tiWKur the chill, t-o't'-ns thv arums, il!ws all nain iu'ci vvi .d colic, and is the best remedy for Iburrh', a. if rr.!--f Hi nr.nr ht'le e.ufi-rer mi mliatelv. S.ld bv Dru'iri-t in every part of the woi M. Twenty-live cents a bottle. Be hure and ask lor -.Mrs. w in- low's Soc thing Svrup."and take no other kind. WA ij. Old papers for sale at this cftice."" HOW IT IM?VrLL OI.007! A?.D in t . t x - . li : ; : V Sit k I nil',; v, li t n f t . .,-' t . pr. f.r t or cv v. M, .., : vKtv i to i.t :.i, - t., 4, r f 41 eThtb'trste luc ! -.i IE r fur it 1 h i''ti:l:e ,1 jrii- tn o r. ; .-5 . ht l I- Hi t., ,.X.t'm tnkrs t . ti -.ij'i'ul !.i , 1 I . ' , ; n : . r . 1 m -,- 1 l - :... '( It "!. a..,, hr:i-.cV. !'., lalboi c iru r, 4-. 1 , w r v ! -v. r hn 1 id I,- t.a; : ... I tn-jkft i Iran t i f V an M f. "l-ou frtur nr.- r !.;, , ,t loe fin 1 ii'ur.i.t '!., i,,i,i hair n like epuu ;! . . , - rc l.kc tt'.nrr, i 1 ,, ii.uir i,n',. s.er f-c ii bright u ,u'...;!f f ;.,Uj the Miul. '1 hi- ti. ... Ure has detiird crc: t 1 : c u i -'. .-.,! Wrd si",- of b-, v ... "y by Its po5-."fl,i.,T. 1 . ;, j..,. wi'. Lou'. sj:.Liru- ? m. , shine, 1 mean. At Lome t -w -ny wo. nan ii.sk s b e .-4( j -t an 1 living wild Iht 11, To have a b-nt sunt'-i y ;'i r, vt! must li'sl ;.Mn u j, .1 !rn lu :.i, ior one i the it il eti m ol I o otlo r, u tl (hi Is 'J,i tt-i : i mnttuKrate of others nu I t lit ir 00 info 1 1. 'IhiLk the bi nt ofi'M-rv tun, in b til).', and do i:tit i:i p-jte evil n oliv to any toic. 15 tho-j-Ltr,,!. lit ltvllli. B-? gencro ji with wur.N of rme. All tiie cnlitvit'd 1 M boW tt.t mulveit ti'J o.,r hie' aid :n ' ke it h i id Mghi. JnoMc deeds tuid l!iu.i Hi"-t r:.-ikc wrinkle udc.iio 'li.'e,. 1., i(l-tra.-t. TUe f icit i i.tt'w',r. v 1 1 L ' i'i .f Iht ii.wird fj iri'utl h n d t !. - i r 1 h no v ; ri ; e to I 1 1 , ! 1 1 ! ; lic :ic 'hut tiftk" s o. t . r f ;od ifli in lli-' av o! ! rih' iii-h. V .lr prooTce ! Hr,n:u.' It'tiitfitl- 1 to o;:tUr h-jt.iio . I t e JllfPf, f 1 1 U T lo t Wn'illll n l,i 11 'It r f.Uhli V can 0! I. It !'. !l.y utvtr sW l. r u If. 11 or a ei,nsl on her tucc. B- mi eh . v.i.uts. ip, o thftt, tiioili" o'i in a 1 i. "I live a single p'ahiir cl.-iirii to My c pb? vv lil say of vom, St( it t-io-h i bright fact d oiD -I i! - - it i a! 1 1 a :dehure Joo'.- nt, h-r.'' Ananias iu Worth Carolina. the Wftfchi jlon (. ('. avs : We an lnfor:j. l t'mt wImI. (.'apt. S'rion w.-is don I' e imr ast week tir foutd a crriki V nt -1 whirl contained ii," ei!. and Di e n !i e'U was fouii I ft f;i;.k aeru:n frt.m eight to li'tj i Le -. 'in t.nv n,t ly beit :hi in t',:.A- It- ? i i . liubee, E -r , !; '( ,' in L .t iJurbarr, phmhf d up tin ii-d d Lho ttumrLcr to 'euk I to-.tr hy u striukt: was fo'iud .i.t men-'' red lit feft in tl lnrr;t tt-r. lljr'n trn J!-co-der. That is not hi inf. Wl.tn t . rd nig f the ('-traltib brf.clt railway hro j o h pit jri.U '.l'.'- a 4 in ,ro.;rJss lble-t whs n:ale and at tie i:r.''ki - dfcl,rf!i ay l'-c:' " -r8riilrf fl '',r,!'-, "'. IT b- f lo?g wdh a fj'-' d t.t! h. tbf.ly r'lind. He was .,. .;.t.-n jm! tie F (A ' I --'' 1 , r WH , '"' ,n " 1 1 s u"i V''""1 l" the coat of one of Corr.w a;';V sol- i . ' , . ' " , ) tfia.'i a hundrt i ,e.r- ...... . j ,.(a Jr? t x u j,,.,, i , .. ..Itt4. rn ETpooitson. S .r- . ' " N., .iUr :. "' ; c r:evt, , ,n.v mi !-. t ', ', T-.. . , - , , J.U. V v 1 L Jjlxi.-.VlO, j u.n prepart ti u: k r-i tor anything i;i tLe j j jn ljfjURe Ui ' Orders li He al r (lav or j njvht. : Address J ('. WILLIAM'S, U iLLlAU.-TO.".'. C, 1 24 ly.