VOL. III. wadesboro; C., USD AY, AUGUST 1G. 1883. NO. -to. t 4 "WtJ Succeeds The Pee Dee Herald. TERMS .CASH IN ADVANCE. li Year . $2.00 "" L Sue Months Three Months..,. . SO ADVERTISING RATES. One square, first insertion,... 1 0 ' Each subsequent insertion,. ........ Iwal n'ivertieiii-'3l, per lm...... W -,-- id ra- i- iTliti"11 or . -t ' -' " - -.iwri'w m l.t? 'hi '."-VX- v. ; . r.J tf- , -t i .1 ' '.'rtj l ; - :". I -if '""" "AtER VUHL.i. ' BY ION 'i HE FA1 i IF I Eh. .1 II' Fudeni i- SUit --iil . (j .V T A (J V E , AtteiBejat-Law, i uj o, - - N. C. Wliii buy and sell -real estate on coiumis- .ri rr III I lilt Kil l LUliVIV, M J JAS. A LOCKIIAKT, Att'y and Counsellor at Law, WADESBOKO, N. C. l Pratioes in all the Courts of the State. LJTTLK. Little V. L, PARSONS." & Parsons, A T T O R X 11 V S A T L A W, WADESBORO, N. C r Collections promptly attended to. SAMUEL T. ASHE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, JVADESBORO, N. C. Srwv-ia! attontion civen to the eoll.x-- m -V I " tiki; of cJai!' A. IC8WKLL. SAM J. PEMBERTON, ATTORNEY AT LAM', TlfiBKMAKLE, N. C. Attends tho Courts of Anson. Union. n"barrus, Stanly, Montgomery :uid Rovan, C a.rl the Federal Courts at . nar'otie ami tirotlisboro. Walker & Bur well, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Will attend regularly at Anson Court, and tit Wadesboro in vacation when requested. H. II. DcFE M ; D. IX S. SURGEON DENTIST, Wadesboro, N. C. CQce corner VTada and Morgan Streets, ..our rha Rank. 1-l.V uoM wuv . X HOTELS. YARBROUCH HOUSE, RALEIGH, N. C. . Prices Reduced to Suit the Times. CALL AND SPE US. CHARLOTTE CHARLOTTE HOTEL, N. C. Nowly Furnished and Entirely Renovated. Sample Room for Commercial Travelers. Terms, $2.00 pr day. i-.peei U rates oy the week op Alonta. r.' A RficNincIi, Prop'r. 20-tf JEWELLER, W ADESBORO, N.O. in Watches, Clocks, Jewelry J.jsi ;.v Instroments, Breech and Mi'z zle Loading Shot Gcns, Pistols, &c. lv-tf FLam & WITH Sc CO. WHOLESALE Druggists d Cliemistsiggfe. 5J:H JIarket St.. Pliilatlelphia. Wanting Anything in The , DRUG LIISTE Will do Well to Call on us Before Purchasing. ; j. . uiiui-nt t) tjvii . J i Anson Institute, WADESBORO. N. C. D. A. MsGresor, A. B., Principal. ; J AS. V: KTLGO, A. B., ) miss BESSIE V. MARTIN - Assistants. MRS. D. M. H ARGRAVJ, The next session bt-gius Monday, An,'- i tns 27th, l$So. Tuitio per inontli, $2,00 5.00 and -54.00 Music, extra, $3,00 per month. . -Board pr moutu. t Coutingeut fee 1 per year. For fui-ti-jr particulars, address thePrinc- ' si. ' dec2-lv ; "Wadesboro Coach Shop. H.D. PINKSTON, Proprietor. Manufacturer of Wagons and Buggies. Repairing done at short notice, ami cheaper than ever known. Call and see me, and save 25 cents on the dollar. Until lS'J you cm get your horse shod for 75 eents, all round. Shoes, nails and all sorts of iron for sale at my shops. Call and see. 18-ly. DARBYS; -T PROPHYLACTIC -FLUID. A Household Article Cor tTalrersal , j FamUy I'm. "Trr Scsrlr and Typhoia fere r, Diphtheria Ball ation, Clcratt Sore Throat, fcmaU Pox, Measles, and Eradicate ESS ail Con! a 300 Disease. Peraotti waiting om t.:e :iuk UiouU use it freely. Scarlet Fever has never be Mi luwrn to (piead where the Fluid was , t- i. Yellow Feve has been cored with it aft or Ink viit ttad taken place-- Tw wunt. c-w w ixpotberta yield 10 kT " ' Fevered and Sick Per. 8MAIX-POX and PrrXING of Small Pox PKEVEJITKD A member of my fam ily was taken with SmaU-pox. 1 used the Fluid ; the patient was not delirious, was not pitted, and was about the house again in three weeks, and no others had it. J. W. Park inson, Philadelphia. na refreshed and Il.'d Sore prevent ed by bathing wilh D rby Fluid. Impure Air made harml and p'ltiti For .Sre l'hrval U is a Jure cure. C -iitugrlon destroyed. i'or fronted " Teot, Chilblains, Piles, Chafing, ete. Ktirumatiiim cured. 8ft White Complex ions secured by its use. Ship Fever prevented. To jurify the lireath. Cleanse the Teotli, it can't be surpassed. Catarrh relieved and cured. Kryslpelas cured. It urns relieved instantly. Hears prevented. Iysentery euved. Wounds healed rapidly. Scurvy cured. An Antidote for Aninnl or Vegetable 1'oisons, The physicians here Use Darbys Fluid very successfully in the treat ment of Diphtheria. A. Stoi.lbnw brck, Greensboro, Ala. Stings, etc Tetter dried np. I used the Fluid durin? 1 "holera prevented. our present affliction with I'lcers purified and Scarlet Fever with de- healed. cUed aJvanuge. It is In cases of Death it indispensable to the sick- should be used about room. Wm. F. Sa.nd- the corpse it will FORD, Eyrie, Ala. I prevent any unpleas- 51 i''1;";': Scarlet Fever Curod. I a iic ruiiiiriu 1 fi- I sirian. J. MAllION ! SIMM, M. !., JSew Vork, says : "I am convim cd Prof. Darbys I Propliylactic Fluid is a I valuable disinfectant." landerbilt University, NashviUe, Tenn. 1 testify to the most excellent qualities of Prof Darbys Prophylactic Fluid. As a disinfectant and detergent it is both theoretically and practically superior to any preparation with which 1 am ac quainted. N. T. Lupton, Prof. Chemistry. Darbys Fluid is Itec-omtnended by Hon. Alrxanijeh H. Stephens, of Georiv Rev. Ciias F. Deems, D.D., Church of Ihc Strangers, N. Y.; os. LbContr, Columbia, Prof. , University , C Rev. A. J. Battle, Prof., Mercer University; Rev. Geo. F. Piekce, Bishop M. E. Cliurch. INDISPENSABLE TO EVERY HOME. Perfectly harmless. Used internally or externally for Man or Beast. The Fluid has been thoroughly tested, and we have abundant evidence that it has done everything here claimed. For fuller ii formation get of your Druggist a pamphlet or send to tne proprietors, J. H. ZEILIN CO.. Manufacturing Chemists, PH 1 1 -A DELPHI A. SCHEDULES. Carolina Central R. R. Comp'y. j CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. ! Office General Ritperintendext, j Wilmington, N. C, Nov. Vi, lss2. f I On and after Nov I'.i, lss-J. the following I schedule will le operated on this Railway: PASSENGER, MAIL AND EXPRESS TRAIN". No. 1. 1 Leave Wilmington, ' 15 p 111 ) Ai.Tive.at Charlotte, V 40 a m ) Leave Charlotte. ' 7 55 p m, Arrive at Wihnington, 'J 0J a m No. Trains Ns. 1 and 2 stop at regular stations onlv, ami points designated in the Company's Time Table. SHELBY DIVISION, PASSENGER. MAIL, EX PRESS and freight. Jjaily except Sundays. Leave Charlotte, 8.20 a. m. Arrive at Shelby at 12. 20 p. m. Ieave Shelby at 1.40 p. m. Arrive at Charlotte at 5.40 p. m. Trains No. 1 and 2 make close connection at Haniletwith R. & A Trains to and from Raleigh and at Charlotte with Shelby Divis ion Train. V. Q. JOHNSON, Gen. Superintendent. i Cneraw & Salisbury Railroad. I CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. Until further notice, the trains on this road ! will run as follows: j Leave. Arrive, j Wadesboro, 9.40 . m. Clieraw, 11.45 a. M. Cheraw, 5.23 p. m. Wadesboro, 7.30 p. m Makinrr clos connei'tion lmt.h wavs at Che raw. with Cheraw & Darlington train, and at f lorence with tne northeastern tram. B. D. TOWNSEND President. Cheraw & Darlington R. R. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. President's Office, Society Hill. S. C, May 30, 1883. f On and after Mondaj, the oOth iust., the train on this road will run as follows mak ing connection at Florence with trains to and from Charleston, Columbia and Wilmington both ways: " GOING DOWN. Leave Cheraw at Cash's, " Society Hill, ' ' Dove's, " Darlington, " Palmetto, Arrive at Florence, COMING UP. Leave Florence at Palmetto, " Darlington, " Dove's, " Society Hill, Cash's Arrive at Cheraw, 11 45 A. M. 12 3 P.M. 12 24 " 1251 " 1 15 " 1 HO " 1 45 " 25 P. M. 3 40 " 2 55 " 4 10 " 4 46 ' 5 07 4 5 40 " Close connection made at Florence with trains to and from Charleston tiid-Wilming- President. Raleigh & Augusta Air-Line Railroad. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. Superintendent's Office, Raleigh, N. C, June 5, 1879. f On and after Friday, June 6, 1879, trains on the Raleigh and Augusta Air-Line Rail road will run daily (Sundays excepted) as rouo0s: leavo 2 30 a. M 3 4 A. H 3 37 As u 3 54 a. M 4 3 a. m 4 5G a. M 5 4 A. M ti 02 A. M Raleigh, X (K) r. m. Hamlet, Hoffman, Kevser, Blue's, Manly, Cameron, Sanford, OsgtKMl, Cary, 8 3 p.m. Apex. 8 5.5 P. M. INew Hill, M P. M. Merry Oaks, 0 3fi p. m. Mont'iire 9 5f P. M. OsgHd, 17 P. M. S unfold, 44 p. M. Ca nienn. 27 P. M. Moncure, fi 25 A. M 11 St 5: Merrv Oaks, C, 42 a. m New Hill, 7 00 a. M Apex, 7 31 a. M C'arv, 7 50 a. m Kevser, 12 4S a. m. Hoffman, 1 14 a. m. Ar. Hamlet, 00 a. m. Ar. Raleigh. 8 30 a. m Train number 1 connects at Hamlet with C. C Pqilirrtv frtr Phflvlitt mul oil t u .int Train nunilier 2 connects at Raleigh with the Raleigh & north. Gaston n Railroad for all iwiuts JOHN C. WINDER Suneiiutendent. North Eastern Railroad Co. Charleston. S. C, July, 8,. 1S83. I On nr! nftr this lte the following Srrheul- i ill will be rnn, Sundays included: Lenn' Charleston. Ari-ice Florenee. f.;n V" P- m 7. 15 a. m 5.15 p. m Leave Florence. 1. n. m 12 50 p. m l!.5(lp in. I. No. 40 scops at Arrive Charleston, i 5.20 a. m 4 50 p. m . . 8.15 a. in. Kingstree and Monck's Diphtheria Prevented. t.orner. No. 5 and 8 Sundays excepted. P. L. CLEAPOR. General Ticket Agent. J. F. DIVINE, General Sup't. The Ladies' Sanitary Association, of London, gives the following simple rules for keeping health, which we find copied in the Sanitarian: , A a soon an you are np shake blanket and sheet " . - -B etter be without shoes than ait with wet feet; 7 C hildren, if healthy, are active, not still; D amp beds nnd damp clothes will both make you ill; at slowly and always chew your food well; - E reshen tb jir in the house where you liufwi, ' . .-. Q arments must never be made too tight; H omes should be healthy, airy, and light; I f yon wish to be well, as you do I've no doubt, J ust open the windows before you go out ; K eep the rooms always tidy and clean ; L et dust on the furniture never be seen ; M uch illness is caused by the want of pure air, N ow, to open the windows be ever your care ; O Id rags and old rabbiKh should never be kept; ' - v P eople should see that their floors are swept ; Q uick movements in children are healthy ' and right; Jf R emember the young: cann'ot thrive with out lifrht; S ee that the cistern is clean to the brim; T ake care that your dress is all tidy and trim ; U se your nose to find if there be a bad drain; V ery sad are the fevers that come in its train ; "W alk as much as you can without feeling fatigue ; xes could walk full many a league. Y- our health is vour wealth, which vour 1 j wisdom must keep; Z eal will help a good cause, and the good you will reap. Morality and Religion ia Fi nancial Affairs. The Rev. S. P. Richardson of the Tennessee Conference, publishes the : following article in the Nashville Christian Advocate, '-which we are j sure will meet the approbation of good men of all denominations and all politics: A DEBT PAYING RELIGION REVIVAL AND DEBT. Wejfre glad to pee M many of our Church papers the subject of bank rupt,cy, and other financial questions, and.their moral relations discussed. It is a fact that much of our legisla tion since the war has had the effect to cover up fraud rather than expose and punish. The Church in all ages has been more or less inclined to conform her morality to the moral standard of the government in which she lives, "Like people, like Priest." That Priest conformed his teachings to the standards of the people, and not the opinion of the people to the law of God. There is a sort of general prevail ing idea in the business world that there is a business morality, and a Bible morality, and yn-t all business men hold Churchmen, strictly in failures, to Bible morality. A very large proportion of the business men,. have soniehow gotten the impression that pulpit and Church, have HO right to interfere with financial matters. Any attempt on the part of the pul pit or press to enforce Christian mor ality, is regarded as wounding and bruising the unfortunate, and indif ferent feelings for the families of the bankrupt in their misfortunes. Is it not a fact that all statutes en acted by the State, in their last analy sis, o protect "men under any pre tenses from paying their just debts, are conceived in moral dishonesty, and all such enactments ought to be wiped out of all statute books in Christian countries? It may be replied by superficial thinkers fiat there ought to be laws to protect women and children from the cruel oppressions of the rich and avaricious. This is doing evil that good may come. I give only one case. A merchant in good standing borrowed several hundred dollars from a poor widow all she had. This he did about twp weeks before he went into bank ruptcy, to protect his wife and child ren. He went right on in business. He is a Steward in the Church, sup ports the ministry and missions, but has never paid the poor widow he borrowed the money from. This is morality and religion with a venge - ance. -inebanfcrupts wife and child ren may be kept up in. ease and com fort, but who is to keep up the wives and children of the. ruined creditor, I who sold his goods, in good faith ? The family of the distionest man is pro tected, while the family of the hon est man is left to suffer and get along i best they can, not Only robbed of ! their- hnrii nomm -.ar.,r cfo but dewive&by those they trusted But shall the state leave the inno ! cent ana; unsuspecting.totbelxuiued by thepttUJ.XMjistJiftsot be I protected from the baited "financial I dead-falls and traps? Innocent, hon- est persons-need no protection. Their ; own Vpersonal. Righteousness keeps i thqm froir mbblimj atuclbait. It is a dashoriest principle of heart that wants something for nothing a heart "that will be rich." This is the real principle that leads men to the gambling house, and under these financial dead-'alls, and into, those j traps. Arnan is demoralized at heart before he;' engages iu the Iraffic of become Ayanci$ar and take risks, and dare to speculate on other men roearrs-v' f they eu ceed they appropriate all tne pronwj 5ut if they, fail ther caJI for public,' mpathyd'jmed to wea.mAiia vnurc is cruel u pneooes nu dorse , hr ' legafreedonl by law frpX rill 111 W tr BWM j.i- 1 t.1 ." u '' i ''futures-"-,Men T ff'iclmfiirom the Scotch, and way oy. war, nre, or owu, ia not a margin for chai man stand-point! T FsTtMit T adubTif fKere a Bible stand-point. The Son of God urges his followers against laying up treasures on earth. He tells them that they could not love God and the world. St. Paal makes financial matters a specialty. He declares that the love of money Is the root of all evil he meant general evils. He says to the Church, owe no man any thing but love. Can a Christian man be guiltless when he deliberately goes in debt in the face of God's word and the world's experience of the evil of debt? But Buppose a man is hbpelessly in debt? Then it is both his fault and misfortune. In nine cases out of ten it is pride, avarice, and the indul gence of these unholy principles that influence men to "speculate beyond their means. ','What a man sows that shall he also reap,! But he did not intend to do it. A .fflan gives way to passion and shoots his neigh bor. He did not intend to kill him, but he did, intend to gratify his pas sion, and the death of his- neighbor was the result. It was both his fault and his misfortune. He is imprison ed for life, but Liu wife and children must suffer. The community cannot, without endangering the lives of her citizens, indorse his conduct, nor can the Church with all her sympathy indorse a man who has taken the ad vantage of corrupt legislation to keep from paying his just debts, without destroying the foundations upon which all true religion rests. If the foundations be moved what will or can the righteous dol ' , Some of our modern patent rexi valists preach to the people to get the blessing, and then work righteotia- ness. That is not God's order in a single instance as recorded in the Bible. "Let the wicked man forsake his way, and cease to do evil." Bring all the tithes into the storehouse and then the blessing shall be poured out. The Lord does not bless men much on a credit. I have seen some people seem to get very happy singing "Nothing but the blood o Jesus," living in style on other people's hard earnings; but their religion was not of the type that made them pay the old debts when able to do so. All religious excite ment which is not based on moral honesty as weft as f iith in Christ, is fanaticism and a fraud. A man can not begin to be scripturally honest until he begins to be religious, nor can he bein to be religious until he begins to be honest A man in debt ought to repent for disobedience to God's plain commands, and then live and dress plain and give his lie and energy exclusively to the pay ment of his debts. There are men in the church who live in easeand comfort, who owe debts they are able to pay, but debt's corrupt legislation has exonerated them from? paying. . They say they enjoy religion. This is a perversion of all the facts of the atonement which can only save a man by sav ing him frdmrhis sins, and notby im'm&fibn 'in but cin8. One of -the great needs in the church is to re store financial confidence among men. Let every member . of the church sell what he has and what he seems to have, who is -in debt, and pay ivhat he owes.: A man had bet ter" go to Heaven without a nickel m his .pecket than, to go to hell ivith .thousands which are not his own. .. There may be backbone enough in the pulpit and nerve enough in the authorities ofthe . church to work such a moral' -Yeforni ; 'to require church .members, to spay their just debt when able to do so as a condition of church membership would be a powerful strain on some of our churches yet it is. true that all revivals that don't make men mor- honest are a fraud upon Chris- tiariity-" One of the great needs of the church i is to restore financial con denee among.her - membership- It uveitxote;c1jariy than we gener ally have, for one member of the church uipbave confidence in the shoutso of another who owes him a just debt, and i3 able to pay it, and has already, pajd it by serving upon him ' a i bankrupt notice. When a man goes into bankruptcy he places himself under disabilities to be a lead er in the church, and the preacher and church tliat allows themselves to place such men in the front, allows their avarice or sympathy to get the setter of their judgment and Jhns tian propriety. , The proprietors of Kendalls Spavin Cure have hundreds of letters filed speaking in tne highest" terms of the irom i benefits derived from its use. When t gle it into the stomach you do wrong. ; you are a sufferer try it. you find one case where it has failed ; Tripe I Bab 1 A piece of Turkish tow- j to give releif, there are hundreds ' el cooked an axle grease would be Don't judge a man by the house he where it has proved a success. Read pie compared with tripe. -Burling- live in, for the lizard and the rat of advertisement. ton HawTcee, , ten inhabit the grandest structures. " . - O Id-Time Fan.,.. -V " . . -i.r l A friery recalls our attention to Batpa old fashioned anecdotes famil' iar to the elders " in the upper Cape . ,ri7 Wpublishil in 1866. a. Stolc '4arMMcIverwascieofthewor. thie8t of ihe Presbyterian clergemen ffl Uk0 hi8 i yery mncn set in bis own way. a m He it may be right, for thou knowest we are very decided." So with Father Mclver, he was very decided ; but it was not of this trait in his character that our correspondent writes, who says of him: "Sometimes he was remarkably absentminded, and the apostolic ben ediction which he used in dismissing the congregation, he would pro nounce wfcen sitting down to table, instead pt the customary bless ing. "Once he went into hi3 garden just as ttye beans were coming up, and was Surprised to see the old bean on the top of the young stems. For getting tliat this was the way in which hb had always seen them coming up ho took his hoe, and for two houik worked away most dilli gently among them. His wife now made her appearance, and astonish ed, as ske weH might be at his work, exclaimed : "My deprMr. Mac, what on earth are you doing!" "Why, you see, wife," he replied very innocently, "the beans have all come up bottom upward , and I was setting them right again!" "When he was stated clerk of Fay etteville Presbytery, and was calling the roll at the opening of the meeting, rhe came to his own name, and called it out louder and louder three times Receiving no answer, and not once thinking of himself as the person, he marked his own name, and recorded himself among the absentees." The same North Carolina corres- t pondent tells a very good story which has been related, however, long before this day, of others be si3e's Uncle Hector; but he tells it so well it. must be repeated. "Old Uncle Hector was famous for having the largest nose in all Cape Fear region. He could not help that, though, but unfortunately his habits gave it a bright rosy color or. which, with its size, made it a natural and artificial curiosity. One night he retired to rest after in dulging pretty freely all the evening, nd waking up in the course of the night with a raging thirst, he rose and setoff after something to drink. It was pitch dark, and for fear he would pitch against the door of his room, which was usually left stand ingopen, he groped along t'ok the door between his hands, and received the edge of it full tilt against the end of his nose. It knocked him over backward, and he screamed out wirh an oath and agony : "Well, I always thought I had a big nose, but I never thought it was longer than my arm before." Concerning Tripe. Occasionally you see a man order tripe at a hotel, but he always looks hard, as though he hated himself arfd eveybody else. He tries to look as though he enjoyed it, but he does not. Tripe is indigestable, and looks like an india rubber apron for a child to put on. When it is pickled it looka like dirty clothes put to soak, and when it is cooking it looks as though the cook was boiling the dish cloth. On the table it looks like glue and taste like a piece of oil silk umbrel la cover.. A stomache that is not lined with corrogated iron would be turned inside out by the smell of tripe. A man eating tripe at a hotel table looks like an Artie explorer dining on his boots or chewing pie. ces of frozen dog. You cannot look at a man eating tripe but he will blush and look as though he wanted to apoligize and convince you he is taking it to tone up his system. A woman never eats tripe. There is cot money enough in the world to hire a woman to take a corner of a tripe in her mouth and try to pull off apiece. Those who eat tripe are men who have had their stomachs play mean tricks on them, and they eat tripe to get even with their stom achs, and then go and take a Tur kish bath to sweat it out of the sys tem. Tripe is a superstition handed down from a former generation of butchers; who sold all the meat and 1 A . . f A 1 1 J 4.1 Kept me tripe ior tnemseives aim me dogs, but the dogs of the present day will not eat-trjpe. You throw a piece of tripe in frqn.t of a dog, and see if he does not put his tale between his legs and go off and hate you. Tripe may have a value, but it is not as food. It may be good to fill in to a burglar proof safe, with the cement and chilled steel, or it might answer to use as a breast plate in time of war, i?e cpgningof one ol VZ& ;-!.. 'SPtJJ.J or it would be good to use as bump- from the foundation by making the ers between care; or it would make a ; blood rich and pure. Leading Phys good face for the weight of a pile; icians and ministers use and recom driver. but when you came to smug-! mend it. It has cured many, and if Hiring: A King to Dance. - The round of amusements which Mr. Idackay-is providing for the American Colony since his. return from the great fetes at Moscow are the all eclipsing topic of the hour, says an alleged cable dispatch in the Carson (Nev.J Appeal. At the ball given last Saturday, Mr. Mackay hired the King of Sweden to dance with the American ladies, paying him $1,000 an hour for, -the work, Aoout mianignt be struck for higher raise with true American sangfroid, By 4 o'clock the King was completely blown with his social exercises and taken from the room in a fainting condition. Mr. Mackay offered to pay all his funeral expenses if he died, which generous offer made him many friends among the Swedes. The Prince of Wales telegraphed for an invitation to the ball, but the American millionaire, remarking that Wales Consolidated was a good short, declined to issue an invite. When his little bon mot was transla ted in the morning journals the city was convulsed with laughter. Several descendants of the Bonaparte family who attempted to climb in the win dows of the ball-room were thrown into the basin of the fountain by Mr. Mackayj who stands over six feet in his socks, and is called the "strong man of Nevada." This graceful act of courtesy to the straight Repubs is well appreciated. Although Mr. Muckay danced until daylight, and went off shift at 6 o'clock, he whipped two editort of the Royalist faction before breakfast for publishing an in correct description of some of the dresses worn at the blowout. When the bodies of the editors were borne away in an ambulance to the Hospi tal des Invalides, the crowds ap plauded in the streets. Sunday last Mr. Mackay was taken with a chill, and feeling that his hour was near, purchase the tomb of Na poleon for a family vault, and had it at once taken to his garden. On re covering in the afternoon, he sold it to the Czar at an advance of 50 per cent. The only incident which mar red the harmony of the grand ball was when the eldest daughter of the Comte de Chambord fell into one of the tanks of champagne, winch had carelessly been left in the corridor, and was drowned. The tank held 1,000 gallons, and the body was not discovered until the fljor managers had drank the tank nearly dry. r Editorial Enterprise. One day a year or two ago a Green ville, S. C, editor heard that a man was to be lynched in a locality about fifteen miles aw ay, and he put a new pencil m his pocket, hired the fastest horse in town and started for the scene. When he arrived he found a crowd under a tree, and in the circle was the prisoner a villianous chap, who had committed a heinous offense. The crowd had started to hang him, but several citizens had advanced such arguments in favor of permit ting thelaw to take its course that it had about been decided to take the rascal back to jail. Williams drove up, jumped down, and in a minute or two learned that the affair was off. He had driven fifteen miles to report a case of lynching, and his disgust was profound. Mounting a stump he began : "Gentlemen, look at that thar' boss. "I've founded him to get here and see this hanging. It will be $200 cut of my pocket, and the only return will be a three liner in the News, saying that you concluded not to hang. Gentlemen, ' has patrioism died out of this county?" "No! no! no!" yelled the crowd. "Does it make any particular dif ference to this man. whether ht is hung now now or three months later?" ' "No! no!" "Gentlemen, I beleive in law and order, but I've driven fifteen miles, founded a hoss, and feel a bit broke up. I don't say that I want to see this man hung, and I don't say that lynching is the best plan, but if he should be swung up and , I should be asked to sit on the coroner's jury and bring in a verdict of suicide I don't see how I could refuse. Gentlemen, look at ar' hoss !" "Swing him up!" yelled twenty men. "Look at that wreck of a once no ble hoss and tell " "Hoory !" shouted the crowd, and ud went the man to be left suspended untii dead .Detroit Free Press. ! . I - . - j "Oh, iny back ! is a common ex- clamation and expresses a world of misery and suffering. It is singu lar this pain arises from such various ; causes. Kidney disease, liver com plaint, wasting affections, . colds, rheumatism, dyspepsia, overwork and nervous debility are chief cau ses. When thus ailing seek prompt relief. It can be found best iu Brown's Iron Bitters. It builds up The Whirlpool. To one who has looked awe-struck upon the whirlpool at Niagria, the fool hardiness of the man who would deliberately commit himself to its deadly embrace is wholly incompre hensible if not incredible. Not even the cataract itself makes the specta-' tor feel his infinite littleness as does the grim and awful depth into which the swimmer Webb went to bis i denth. Mr. now!!, in th Wrl 1 ding Journey speaks of the whirlnoo the whole prodicious spectacle of Niagria," and his discription is worth quoting now : "Here within the com pass of a njile, those inland seas of the North, Superior, Huron. Michi gan, Erie and the multitude of smal ler lakes, all pour their floods' where they swirl in dreadful votiees, with resistless under currents boiling be neath the surface of the mighty ed dy. Abruptly from this scene of secret power, so different from the thunderous splenderors of the cata ract itself, rise lofty cliffs on every side to a height of two hundred feet clothed from the waters edge almost to their crests with dark cedars. Noiselessly, so far as your senses perceive, the l.iln s steal out of the whirlpool, tinii, drunk and wild, with brawling i.ipx!; roar away to Ontarioa through tin' narrow chan nel of the river Awful us the scene is, yon stand so far above it .that you do not know the half of its ter ribleness. foy those waters that look so smooth are great ridges and rings, forced by the impulse of the currents twelve feet higher in the centre than at the margin. Nothing can live there, fand with what is caught in its hold the maelstrom plays for days and whirls "and tosses round and round in its toils with a sad, mania cal patience. The guides tell ghas tly stories, which even their telling does not wholly rob of ghastiliness, about the bodies of drowned men carried into the whirlpool and made to enact upon its dizzy singes a.tra vcrsity of life, apparently floating there at their pleasure, diving and frolicking amid the waves or fran tically struggling to escape from the death that has long since befallen them." What Men Need Wives For. It is not to sweep the house, and make i p beds, and darn the socks, cook the meals, chiefly that a man wants a wife. If this is all he wants, 1 i i red servants can do it cheaper than d wife. If this is all, when, a j Oiing man calls to see a lady send him into the pantry to taste the bread and ca!es she lias ma le; send him to inspect the needle work and bed making; or put a broom into her hands and send him to witness its use. Such things are important, and the wise young man will quietly look after them. But w hat a true man most wants of a wife is her compan ionship, sympathy and love. The way of life has many dreary places m it. and man needs a compan ion to go with him. A man is some times overtaken by misfortune; he meets with failure and defeat; trials ami temptations beset him; and he needs one to stand by him and sym pathize. He has some stern battles to fiirht witli poverty, with enemies and with j sin, and needs a woman that, while I he puts his arm around her and feels that he has something to fight for, j will help him to fight; who will put j his lips to his ear and whisper words of counsel, and help add to his heart new inspirations. AH througli life through storm and through sunshine, conflict and victory, through ad verse and favorable winds man needs a woman's love. The heart yearns for it- A sister's and a mother's love will hardly supply the need. Yet many seek for noth ing rurther than success in house worn. i usliv eiioiign, nan oi in cue i get nothing more. The other half, surprised a1 ' measure, obtain more than t! v --tg!.f. Their vives surprise tin ui l a niging a nobler j ije;lof in irm a-ce, and disclosing a treasury of con nitre, .sympatny and love Market Journal. The Difference in Farmers. Why docs one man harvest forty or even fifty bushels of wheat per acre, ami hi neighbor but fifteen ( clover tubes before one grain of su Why d .e one man raise 200 biibhels j garcuu be obtained. There are 7,000 of potatoes of quality per acre, j grams in u pound, and as honey con and another but fifty of itiferiorqual j tains three fourths 'ot its weight oi lty ( Vhy can :: farmer fatten a jry sugar, each pound of honey rep pi which it s:- months old will raise ! resents 2,500,000 clover tubes sucked the bea oat 3 ) ) pound, and another. who thinks he feeds well, will iMily raise 100 at the same age? And how does one diaryman make his herd oi Cows average an income of .0 and $75 per annum, wltiht others will hardly return $30? These are ques tjons for the farmers to solve. Ex change. Tavares (Fla. ) fishermen have in stituted a new and novel method of catching fish, which seems however to be very successful. A fire is built orj a board laid across a long row boat, and tho fish attracted by the bright light, leap toward it, fall into the boat, and is easily captured. Kendall's Spavin Cure is used from Carrie, da jr.-.-.- o' U .. 1'. 'dat ive Atlantic to tho Pacific coast. i lis. -Slunlj Observer. far Health. "Fresh tir and iure water, con stant ventrUtionftnd thorough cleans- , ing, are nalral jbitaas of pre renting and di stroy the caases of mfcetioa and disease "V- The human body throws off, by the skin and the lung, every twenty four fc-iiirs, from three to four pounds of refuse, which la poisonous. "The excrement al action througli the pores Of the skin cover the body with filth, which, if not ro jrnpyedjberoraes of. disease i0vt at least once every twentyfour hours, and all clothes worn during the day should be thoroughly aired during the night. There cannot be sound health without pure air; and the air cannot be pure if it is contam inated exhalations from the lungs. Could the breath that has been ex haled by a person in a close room bo tined '"ith some coloring matter, and . made darker in proportion to its in creasing unfitness for re-inhalation, we should, in a crowded and ill-ven- dilated assembly, lind ourselves en veloped in a dense cloud, whose visi ble appearance would cause us to fly from danger so apparent. Bear in mind that cacti breath you exhalo contaminates a cubic loot of air, which must be replaced by pure air or else you re-inhale tho exhaled air and poison the blood. It is at night, in sleeping apartments, that the sys tem receives its greates detriment from impure air; for it is then that the bloods lays in its extra store for the day's consumption. "Suffocation in the foul air of an un ventilated tenement" is the provoking cause of manv adeath. Delivery of Newspapers. The special o-der of tho Postmas ter General requiring the prompt de livery of Newspapers as well as of letters is what has been needed for some time. Persons outside of tho newspaper business can scarcely realize the amount of inconvenient o publishers and subscribers have been subjected to for years by tho neglect on the part of postmasters in country towns, and occasionally iu citic-, failing to recognize the importunee f newspapers deli ery. instances u.o not infrequent where a newspapers has read by the postmaster and lis entire family, even "lent to tho neighbors ' before it reached tho hands of the person to whom it was directed. The order includes among other important matters, an express prohibition of such detention of news paper packages. There is no reason why a contract for carrying a news paper should not be as carefully filled by the government as a contract for letter carrying. It is a pleasure to note the recent very acceptable action of the department. Hartford Post. For Twenty-live Years. Even before the war Hon. Kenneth Rayner, Solictor of the Treasury, wrote: "I have found it to be a most capital remedy in bowel affections. It has acquired art extensive popular ity, so much so as to have become a regular famly medicine." For a quarter of a century with the most astounding results, Dr Worthington's Cholera and Diarrhoea Medicine ha.i been a standard cure for Diarrhoea, Dysentery. Cholera, cramps and Pains of 'the Stomach and Bowels, Dyspepsia, Sick Stomach, Indiges tion, Summer Complaint, Colic, ect Dr. Levi S.' Yates, of North Carolina, also endorses it. Sold lor 25 and iV) cents a bottle, by druggist and deal ers. The press of North Carolina, to tho number of some 80" representatives, has arranged to be among tho .visi tors at the great industrial exposi tion to be h,eld in Boston during the coming fall, under the auspices of the New England Manafacturt is' and Mecanics' Institute. Actmg iu this matter, says" tho Norforlk Vir ginia, Gen. V. 1. Gronei, agent in Norfolk of the M. & M. T. Co., Iro .'-informed Secretary Stone.- ol tho j North Carolina Press association, j that he will make a special rate 'Ci $5 each way - from Norfolk to Pro hdence by his steamers. The lare ! from Providence to Boston is .$1. Each head of clover contains about sixty distinct flower tubes, each oi which contains a portion of sugar not exceepiug the. iive-hundreth part of a grain. The proboscis of the bees must therefore be inserted into 500 by bees. Not Salilied with a Little. The Surgeon General of the C; S: A , ; Dr. S. P. Moore, writing frm head- quarters, Richmond, "a.. in 1SG2, I states offlcally that, "if Dr. Wortli I ington can furnish large quantities j of his Cholera and Diarrhoea Medi J'cine, we will place it in the Army, as a remedy in bowel affections. "' I Sold for 25 and 50 cents a bottle, by I druggists and dealers. & . A very- interesting event occurred in tiie SI. ill C'jiuiL.n. .iii i'ii.uiio N. C. Thursday evening. July 25t'i, 1883. Tne pa'rties conti ih itmg prin cipally to tins occasion were Mr. I LdUl." Du.iia I I'dUI.- -Du.iiau uL Alioull, il.iU

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view