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jip cwm^iyi w wl * l salisbury n.c december 5 1872 rol iv thi ui series no 12 whole no 852 : t i v . j j bhu.n er two sidesof lite there is a shady side of life a nd a snuuy -!•!■as well a n d tis for • v ry cue to say ' ■;■which he'd choose tm dwell ; f r ,-\ ery one unto iiuiself ( n i it a gi ie u sin who hars the bh ssed sunshine out and shuts the shadi ws in the reigx of murder m«rder seems 1 .. . coromi n n.iy by day perl ■- anse maid an toe :•. a allowed ment i'i re are in ':. . ;. y thirty persons act nsed wle m exei pt i islt r :.. , uvi bo k murden r ai d su . -. i -] « , r f : eisk have been coi n ... i;l,t : seven months tl c mtains nearly ■- i,iimb r.ai d t prisons in othei . - ... -,;;!,.; v.-kl : t.eis ms charged « th the elu d ling of i l°od thi pistol :'. k if j bludgeon an fast bee ,.:; itra i meutof eveiy qnarri i and thi : remedy for i n ry i the frenzy t.-t driuk strik sive gentlem . . , . . .-.;,..., u|q provt tiii .:>. and th ugh | be stili asks for cl iwo years have pass d . crime was committed stokes case is loo fresh in x ■• c;iia is n iy wear their saddest robes the sun refuse to smile and sorrow with her troops of ills may threaten es t while : bi t still ti . ' ■••: :;.' heart has power a 6 • to provide ; and in iy ■• 1 ■'■sou s aie dark i cli on life's .-!. uly i-ije ss3s from lippiucott's magazine colma ali bate - j 1<'n kk " 2.00 six m'.ni - •■" '•"" s 0-00 r t . . t 4 " ■-■' ' um no head fo '. stom^&l . joh h a 0 beautiful bright brown woman with the oval moorish nice black i iir u eamiug purple in sunlight ai i a wumlrous eharm and a grace the public mia ■■bt th as a f as a m ■:::! to i quire et . ■. the scan • ! ti x ay is much i nl and even less justifiable latest on the list is ihe murder er d'xt i.i by 1 ; lor the off m ..; :, stifyii ; ■,.': rutal hus b.in's tri aim • -,,. \ -. th se cases mi n !, il .. 1 of i vil j : sjoi ; . mpl i i offence ; in ota rs il is the old s •■p and revenge tor tl remedy remains .. d certain pun ishment l is useless to bewail th pre valence of crime 1 till ciimc brings iis own retribution the b j , . the depraved will think lightly cl murder the indict ed murderers in tbe tombs — we say iu dieted murderers for .. my ef ihem are known to have i i . crimes with w hich they : re ch ' . ' living proofs of the wi aki ss of the a of justice in this city and a constant incen tive to murder by oil . men who are already criminal by v i il not in deed — x y.hei dd . m and manner and earriaga that natme not ait best ws ai i eyes that dai t ui the he older i , that flashes and burns and glows ■■' ■come 1 ither at d tell me the county ! ■season and the yr.-.r of grace if i en a i ake or but dn i i ing : 1 ell tne name and my lace ed for appraisers they shall view and examine the homestead laid off and make ! iheir report as required in section twenty ' two of this act it is mainly upon the construction to be given to the above quoted sectiou lhat the whole question turns from that section it will be seen that if the judgment j creditor or judgment debtor or person entitled to homestead exemption shall be dissatisfied with the valuation and allot ment ofthe sheriff's appraisers he may apply to the trustees of the township for a j re appiisement and allotment within ten days thercefter there is no mistaking the meaning of this language tiie par ties immediately interested in the first apprisement must if they are not content with i apply f»r a re appiisement with in ten days from the datetherof ifthey f'.iil to make such application within the specified ten days they must ever af terwards a'tiide by what has been done — this it is believed will uot be question ed by any law er "( r any other judgment creditor within six months " look.ut the relation which these words lear to those which immedi ately preceed them and 1 think it will clearly appear that ihey relate hack to tht date of tlie first allotment by the sheriff's appraisers 1 dc not gee how they can be cos trued to relate to the date of the judgment as coteuded for by some if there is any dohbt upon reading only thus far lhat they relate back to the first apprisement that doubt will be entirely removed by reading and giving full force !,> the words which immediately follow and before sale under execution ofthe ex cess from this it is peifcctly clear to my mind that no judgment creditor can demand a re appiisement on the grounds of disiiatisfactiou merely softer the lips of six mouths it is also char that he can only demand it tvithin six months pro ridfd lie dues so before sale main execu tion ofthe excess after the lapse of six months from the date of the first apprais ment such appraisment can only le va cated on the grounds of fraud complicity or other irregularity as provided for in section 24 ofthe same act which is as follows any appraisal or allotment by the trustees ofa township may bt set aside on the application of any party interested for fraud complicity or other irregularity the proceedings shall upon petition as in special proceedings and tlie applicanl shall give bond io t lie opposing parly for cos's and damages section 20 firsl quoted provides the only way in which the appraisal or al lotment ofthe sheriff's appraisers may be vacated section 24 last quoted provides j the only way i:i which the appraisal or allotment of the township riustees — ili • second appraisal or alloim"iit — m iy be set aside is not this clear fi"tn the plain reading and construction of the law i again it is admitted on all hands lhat th homestead provision of our constitu tion and he laws of th state passed for il e purpose of giving effc ct to ihe samq create an estate old if the lands oi ihe judgment debtor ur supreme court has ever desided that ihis estate is a de termiuable fee over which the home stead i may exercise all the rights and j powers of other land owners during the , continuance of llm estate how can this ibe unless ihere ix a way of ascertaning i and permanently fixing such estate 1 every subsequent judgment creditor for thirty years can within six months after ; obtaining his judgment have a re apprais j '' ment the great object of the law will be j defeated instead of a fixed estate for j the life of himself and wife and during '■■the minority of his child en or any one ' of ihem as provided by law be will have onlv an uncertain a id flucluating estate who supposes that any sensible man would make any improvements upon an esl ite held by snch an uncertain tenure i ir cannot be when ihe return of the township trustees setting apart and al j loiing to the judgment creditor a home stead with metes and bounds is duly [ registered as n quired iy si t tion 22 ol j tin act quoted it possesses all the attri ' butes ofa conveyance as much so as the j assessors appointed by a justice of the j ' peace on she pe.titi ni of the claiment in ! my liutiil.'lt opinion it changes the es tate and vests it in olher parties in like | manner and it can never afterwards be ! disturbed except for fraud sec as any ! other deid may i therefore conclude that in all cases ! where the return of the sheriff's apprais ' eis h.-s heen acquiesced in for six months land h all cases where tiie return of the t unship trusiees has been duly regiss i t.retl according to lav the bankrupt i courts will respect the homestead thus ! allotted unless fraud complicity oroth i er irregularity be shown in ail easts wlure the homestead has mu been laid off and a letted in pursuance ef the pro visions of tlm state laws i believe tie bandrupt courts wili direct it to be laid i nil and allotted bv appraisers under the j rules and regulations prescribed by the 1 stale law this brings me to tbe second point — | according to an important decision recent j iv mule by jude rives of the d trie court of the i'niten states for the south western district of virginia in re wyllip american law times for sep t niber 1s7 j page 330 homestead ex pmptions will nol be allowed by the bank j rnpi courts in any cases ui antecedenl debts should he supremi court of the united states decide it to be unennstitu | lional as applied to such debts and sup pose judge rives to be in error in the i conclusions at whicli he arrives ihe effect ! will be the same in till eases where there : are docketed judgments against the debtor ' for if the homestead law be decided to be i unconstitutional as applied to debts tbere ■tefore contracted then all docketed jndg : ii cuts obtained upon such debts are liens , upon the homestead and it must be sold to satisfy them unless the debtor avuile out of tiie war of secession in eng an 1 he pays them because so much goit is sowing into the country in france he pays them beeanse so much gold is flow ing in to pay tbe prnssions and even iu happy hamburg ihey tell him his en glish sovereigns are now depreciated in value on account of tie large quantities of french gold that have come to germauy a placid i'lioj'le tin hamburgers look like people who will always do a thorough day's woik certainly but never suffer business f.i iu trudi into the circle of pleasure and rpi e indeed all european populations ut-em alike in this it is only the american who never forgets to be anxious over business and never ceases to feel the spur of more extended enterprises when the iy is done the hamburger is the picto e of content with his wile aid children he repairs to the circus and laughs irh all his might at the nonsense of the clown or with the same domestic following the troops to the cool shade ofthe liner garten resplendent with many colored lights and listens with all his ears to good music while he quaffs complacently his foaming larger we read ihat plato found it hard to give a proper definition ofa man it bas occurred lo us lhat the german might be described as a harnessed in nation they systemize and centralize everything the boatman at the mouth of the elbe will tell yon that his fares are fi*ed at berlin ; and every man seems one in atom an aggregate mass which moves on in a national progression imperceptible but irresistible as the glacier's course the green-grocer women of hamburg weai across their patient shoulders a wood en yi ke from the ends of which immense baskets of vegetables and fruits are hung thus weighted they plod over the city as tn dies their taste in colors is very like that of the iish women of leigh ; but they look less brawny and more patient as if lacking somthing of the persjervi dum ingenium scotorum gambling is tiie east in the east gambling is a universal practice all classes delight in it from the king on his throne to ihe wretched begger that prowls about the gatps of tlie noble to find a scanty support not in the enn ihs tbat fall from the rich man's la id ." but in ih very garbage tb it is cast from his gate sn passionately dovoted in this despicable vice are many orientals thai when tbey have bartered off every thing i uc they possi ess rathi r than de sis they v il sell their wives and children into slavi ry and even pawn their own bodies to get money to gamble with li censed gaming houses are found in ail eastern cities and most oriental monarchs derive large revenue from his source sometimes dice are used and occasionally small cowries she hut cards are moct general tin ci mmon people male and female frequent the public saloons which are said to be perfect dens of crimes as they are often the theatres of the most hear sickening tragedies the garni ling ofthe higher classes is done in their own homes and they never fail to invite and even importune their visitors to partake of the sport while they often boast oi the large sm.is inv have ! st or won amoi g their ii lends but though husbands ar.d fathers deem it right thus to employ their owu lime their wives and daugters are strictly ordered to avoid all such im moral practices lest the well-filled nurse of pah rf nnil is should suffer detriment during the ri ign of the old usurper who sat upon tiie throne at the time of my ttrs \ i to siam il was one d^y rep rt d to his m iji sty tint some scores of bis six hundred wives had been indulging in the great sin of gambling the fair culprits 1 em si iiimoned i i the roval pr since made full en f .- ; m of iheir guilt but pie ... d i n mi as excus ■-, and praj i d lis majesty's forgiveness on the ground that ihey had ior t only twenty thous md titals twelve thousand dollars whicli they ar gued wad bu as a drop in tbe oc tan compared with the boundless resource of his en ;:(••-, infallible majesty tiie covetous old king who loved money bet ter than anything else in tlie word tho fair caie:i,s theiust ivee uot excepted had no bonner heard the sum of twenty thou sand ticals mentioned than losnig the small mo ileum of patience with which nature bad endowed h m be summoned tu bis presence several high ocieers of the royal harem and ordered tbem to inflict in his name the fatherly discipline of thirty btripes on the sides of tbe feet of each of the offending ladles to preseive them in future from the degarding vice of g imblin pected soim thing very fine in the wav of dancing their sensations may be iui agiued when the scoicb bag p;pes played by an old sailor stink up the only mu-ic which had ben found available and tbe european members of the company went whizzing and past s red ji and high land fling followed each other in quick | succession dumb with surprise and dis may the nobles rnshed ennmsse from the : house enten d their boats and ordered the oarsmen to pull furiously for the mission houses situated seme tivo miles lower d iwn the river it was verging toward m dnighr but some of the missionaries : were still busy in iheir libraries and ex ' citi d i i.i s first knocking furiously at the tloor and then ent ring without wait ing for a response called clamorously help help for yonr countrymen ! the foreigners at the biiii.-h godowna are all gone crazy ; they are dancing for them selves — irom oriental sports hy mr fannie r feudge i the december num ber of i ppincott's magazine the x c insane asylum we return thinks to dr grissom superintendent of the x c insane asy lum for a copy of his annual report and that ofthe board of directors we make some extrats from the report as follows the total number of admissions since the opening ofthe asylum ou the 22d day of february l^-'o is 993 the total number of discbarges for the same time is 7g0 ; of whom 244 were cured : 8 im proved : 1g7 unimproved and 2g7 died leaving now under treatment 233 l pon the whole number of admissions the per centage of discharges bas been 76 53 ; of cun .-, 24,77 ol improved s s6 ; of unimproved 13-81 ; of deaths 26.28 at the date of my last report there were in the asylum 127 males and 118 females of the nunnrous applications for admission we have been able to make room for only 24males and 19 females — the highest number at any one time was 130 males and 120 females ; lowesl num ber 118 males and 112 females the whole number under treatment during the year was 151 sales and 138 females mak i ing a total 289 there have been 7;2 males and 23 females discharged during the year of ; these 9 m les and 5 females wen cured ; i 8 mal s a d 1 ft male improi : d ; 9 m lies an i 5 fi ••. il s in :> .-. ition i y conditi in an : 6 mab - and 1 2 females di d i'e ;; the whole number in the institn ii in the pi r c tn : i this year of dischargi • - was 19.09 ; of recovt i s 4 v"i ; of improv i ed 3.12 ; of unimproved 4 s2 ; of deaths ' g 25 upon he number of admissions during the year the per centage of discharges was 127 90 ; ofenres 32 55 : of improvi d 20 93 ; of unimproved a2 bu ; of deaths j4186 upon the number of discharges tht per cent of cure3 was 25 45 ; of improved 16.36 of unimproved 25.45 of deaths 32 72 ( f admissions during the year tht can of di ise is reported to have been mental ic 12 eases physical in 22 and unknown in 9 the form was mania in 23 eases epileptic mania in 3 melan cholia in 9 and dementia in s i 2-w distemper ix horses some time ago i saw an article entitled treatmenl ol distemper in horses and knowing a very simple and effefctnal cure ft r the same 1 concluded to gave it to your readers the c ire is simply a lump of gum cimphor ab ut the size of a haz i nut given to the horse in bran — or anvthing in which he will eate il — on the first n i c lion of the disease if one dose doi s nol i ,'■c1 a cure in two days repeal the dose and 1 will warrant a cure the camphor , p ms the pores relieves respir ation etc and the horse is relieved al most as i by magic j cured a valuai e !. . .' - in two days aboul a year age that had it very bad ; resj iration was very difficult ; so much so thai a person could hear him wheezing several rods from the btal le 1 got the above from a c lebrati d horse man and i think the simplicity and ef ficacy of the remedy should give it the consideration of all owners of horse-flesh — ./. // palm in ohio larmer — 3 ■■— — raise your hoses and mules we have oftimes heard it announced in ante-bellum times that horses aud mule could no b • econi mically raised by tbe cotton planter some years before ihe war through the counsel ofa farmer who had succeeded better than most planters we procured three mares and from them we had young colts every spring with out hesitation do we assert that the mules we raised cere better a general thing than those we have purchased and we farther proclaim to raise those mules did not cost us as m tuh as those v/e bought because the mares did not perform two thirds as much work with as without there colts we admit that to rear these mulei and horses for we raised both did cost us something but by providing pasturage in spring and snmmer in connection with the i avings in stalls which the c ilts uek ej uj it was a gain of no small item o an '.'■' warning a man by -,) ■n;i:n . • ; . kt r w ho resii • s i ■■ir • qtiarryville n v owned a cat nl ho - s that bad the distemper in clean ing out thi m mgers the other day virus came in contact wiih a flesh wound on his hand in a short time bis hand and arm became eo terribly inflamed and swollen thai it bad to be amputated soon after the amputation he died per j 1 owni _' hor - cannot exercise too much prudence in ihis respect as the < maiter from this distemper is rank poison , to tbe human system i i hats r brtce sill whal is this swathed round bosom why d 1 thus breathe in pain .' y . ushes the bl od like a river ■u flame through my brain ? ; himself of the benefit ofthe bankrupt law and obtains bia dischaige before the deci sion be made the case will be carted up on a writ of error from the in x term of our state supreme court and in six months thereafter m in twelve mouths at furthest the decision may be made on the third point i do n t hesitate to advise all persons now having the b in li of the homestead and personal property exemptions that the only way by which they can scenic ihem against great almost certain danger is ro avail themselves of the benefit of the bankrupt law at once by going in promptly they can obtain their dischargi e i fore any decision affi ct ing the honn-stead tan lie made by the supreme court of the united stales — otherwise ihey may lose both homestead and personal proper y exemptions and see their families thrown upon the cold charities ot ihe world to starve this opinion and advice is given bv one who has devoted much attention to the subject and as an eviilcr.ee th tl lie has given i honestly and conscientiously ii is oi v necessary to state thii he bas himself sough that relit f which he com mends to others and in conclusion i would be glad to hear ihrough lie columns of the amki::i any criticism lhai davie or any other member nf the bar may have to make upon the legal points herein discussed dayiuso p s — as a matter of importance to bankrupts whose petitions were filed pre vious to the adoption of the amendment of june the 8ih 1s72 but whose cases are still pending i make the following quotation from the opinion of judge rives already referred to : another question is made as to llie application and operation of this ami nda tory act to lending cases of bankruptcy it is clearly prospective ; but as a reme dial act it may be availed oi in all pend ing casts wliie assets are undistributed and the enlarged exemption can be granted without prejudice to the interests already vested before the passage of the act this view i may add seems to me to be fully sustained by the learned judge's reasoning of course after the bankrupt has received his discharge he no longer has any status in the bankrnpt courts and cannot avail himself of the enlarged exemption that is the homestead ad ad ditional personal property exemptions of our state constitution and ! tv.s !> vtidson correspondence of the j\ew york post the great german seaport some sketches of hamburg hambi'ug september 1872 the elbe a run of thirty-one hours brings the traveler from london to the mouth ofthe elbe and five hours more sets him down in the port of hamburg even at the place where it empties into the sea the * widely spreading elbe gives promise of the vigorous commercial life of its chief city in every direction the black smoke of english behind the passanger steamers ihat have saih d from new y rk or lou j don or heligoland or hilling out irom plucky lugs hit drag great ships into the net which hamburg weaves to ca'c'ti its various commerce from tbe four corners of the earth this is to say nothing of the little river craft with those snuff-colored sails in which dutch mariuers rejoice such is the wide elbe for seventy miles • nf title water thai flow between tbe sleepy little lown of ctixhaven at its mouth and i sleepless hamburg at the head of whal : we ma call its ocean navigation bu tiis lalter phrase has to be qualified the trans al'anlic steamers debark iheii ;. . nge'.s and pri icipal frieghl al ihe distance of an hour in steaming below the cily in the adjective we used to describe cuxhavcn had in mind perhaps nothing more ban ! the perfect serenity of its life as it strikes • the stringer a 1 evening tne quairvj streets i are filled with children full of song and tossmg about many colored lanterns oj i paper the social click arises from bil '■hard tables ami bowling alleys of prodi i emus leneth reminding one of german i ■. i words give forth their reverberations on ' the stilly air and startle tbe echoes as the ten pins of mendrick hudson's men woke the thunders among the catskills in the legend of rip winkle the city wp may almost borrow macauley's de j script ion of london and call hambug the j cily oi len thousand masts ; fur nor only j are the river banks lined with ships but j clumps of lofty piles i.i mid-stream give | fastenings to as m n •• more tho ham burghers are evidently proud of being a j part of the new german empire audi ' equally pleased with remaning a free port trees here are delightfully low and it ought to st.'i m like an elysium in that e spect lo long-suffering americans who fly irom the aionop li s oi their own coun try only to encounter tbe exactions of j europe we observe that miss kate held has been writing hack her melancht ly j experience as an american buyer in the shops on this side of ilie waler much of this robbery of foreigners doubtless is due to the same instinct lhat has drawn wreckers to ihe coast of cornwall and to . the icei'sof florida but a greal deal of it has been owing to tbe inn cent and absurd habit of americans in tilling eu ropean shop-keepers bow ridiculously cheap their goods are hence these a mi r can tears ever this enhancement of prices aa such ; and our only hope of reform is that our fellow-countrymen may be made to see what donkeys the are their place is in the rear ; poople of better judg ment ought to travel in the van not we fail to recognize that fatality of high prici s which follows tbe traveler even apart from such shortcomings in the latter days high prices stick to him even as to her cules the poisoned shirt of nessos in america he pays enhanced prices arriving m . - .. ■- - -' ssas wl il name beareth youmler mountain whose summit with bre is aglow .' y hai do i here with the palm trei s waving over me to and fro ,-> r i * . . t:l s t f i j v '_ » »- — whal are those gray crumbling ruins ir stories of war and «'!' woe ? win i-t came that strange wild music like echoes from ages ago ? druggist & -' - tes axxsb -. c having purcl -.-■d the contents of the '■-\ dr i ... .,. - i v . , • fully call ihe at | ihe < i tens « f i b iry ai d ii j ci uiitry to the new ar • v . will continue to cany on tin business at the • i ! : 1 1 : way \.;,. .... :■-''., ji on hand all the vnii he p ['<•!' laii r line by airicl atteni ion to husim ss t . a lib run ige whose are yon stalwart soldiers w hite-clad and dark-browed and strong ? means thai blare of the trumpets and roll ofthe kettle-drums long ? a national coxvi nt o a pi t ition was presented t tin i . :- .:• of virgin ia ami perhaps of -■her states last winter and ii is s dd « i be j :• rented to the legislatures nf all ": .: a this year asking that a i '■nvention shall be called for thi purpose ■-! reform ing the conslitui ted states tl ij g ound tak .. i prac tical wi th the general . - ty ; that tht -• be bi ugbt dow n to the pn - lions w » k tht ir w iy to i w ith ml legal iec igi ition ; .■i - invisible iiifluenc \ i ulexi .- ; per-ple with a dou . • •-. an i this itir . . zed work ieg mai hi ery i : v run t il is sug gested that c.ipi - .. p rate con i'i e imj i • ,:. usly • ■■i . g ; , , a i _ : - ty i i • complica i r aliiug fi - cia live priucipli forel c lamity which can only 1 . ■stituiinn to the dem : ll i :.:.'. — j ' j , ib wl y . ovt they forth from the portal with the measured and he ivy tread ? who walks there in chain between them to the mournful larch ofthe dead ? ak low pobrecito she murmurs i ihe soft < astii iii toi gue ; • } .' . hero you fought .•■■• andidos ; i ... .-, ■ame iu time — you are young fh i ij !!•• .- ■• ng now to i.i .'• ath a volley : • - ii i fro ii the river he go •■!" and she bating her breath the o ■tin hi rs was taken : . ■-.- the i-iirn of the erosss and kneeling • - i pray i f ','"'■' tlies ml that has tied tl en rist • • on the living let the dt d past bury i s dead !" . ling besi le me she whispers •• w hen il j i nt nna is near ' ; .■. re best in it to call me .! nan it a : she'd watch ine nunc closy i fear dili \ h nt . who knoweth the h art of a woman ? 3 j >. .. ,. .. j s..-,i j v hy -: ould i hasten away .' tl re is balu iu tin . ir of c'olima : '; :..■, ■■.- of juanta said stay !" iosi yi ji ■t ; ; — i • i your issue of the | lih i m ice a oin inunication under the a ve c iption ovt r the signature oi da vie a.-king me lo discuss the following tints in i -.-.- i inmns : first whether the homesteads already all tl ■(] i y ;!■■sbei ift's n ho have execu i ,,- in iht ir h .: ds will be respected by ti e bankru i courts ; , secondly whether the homestead ex emptions will he allowed in any case of old debts should the supreme unit el the united slates decide il to le uncon stilutl e al as applh d io such debts as it piobably v iil in ihe case to be carried up i v the assignee ni the bank of cape fear for the purpose of testing the question j thirdly whether ihis icing the case ; persons now having the benefit of the j h mestead and personal properly eicmpi ' tions bad nol letter avail themselves of i b mkru i luw at once and save the , risk - i bi leg deprived a i hy the decis i n ,.| the supreme uourt ui the united ; s ii i i'i first point is one r.v ml whicli law i yers ii fl'i r a a en which there has been no decision i.i his slate by cither the : j stale er fedi ral < onrts a that i can : i is in discuss ihe question mid give my | n asons lor believing ihat ihe bankrupt j ■-. s v ;,] ,-. ...-■.• ci tbe homesteads allot i ted hv the shm.tis in ihe manlier ituiica j l , teil ; section 20 of the act of april the 7th i i860 for carrying inlo effect the home i mead provisions of our constitution is as ! oltows ll tht judgment creditor for whom the . -, jg ;: sdt . i j idgmenl debtor or per ■,,',-.:. io !.. mestead t x mption shall be diss itisfit d w itb the valu ition and j allotmesil t i tie aj j raisers or assessors .:. th c - may 1 i . he t i within tilt ,- it r ■r any othi r judgment , ,-, , | six n niths and bfjorcsale i n of the excess notify the clerk of tbe township tlureof and file with him a transcript of the return ofthe appraisi rs or assessors fas the case may be,j and thereupon the clerk shall notify j the other trustees of the township to meet him at a time specified within ten j days on tiie premises to re-assess ami al | lot said homestead at the time specified : the trustees shali meet on tbe premisses i a:;d having first taken the oath prescrib - '-.>*■when the rums i ..■r said i have lost a day he uttered a sadder troth than il be bad la mi d 1 have lost a kingd napoleon said the reason why he i ■' the austrians waa thai tin y did m - know the value of tive mi -.• s at tht . ted battle of uivi li ihe rnnfl the poinl of being led i h iw the critical state i ins utly took bis ii solntion ii • - ■' i a flag to the an ' . - is for an rmis tice the unwary a : . . he snai ■■; foi a (< ■■■:. i thunders of tbe battle w t . . - . t-ized ihe precious the em my wish i : is re arrar.gt d battle < his front i i few i i idy to rem nice ;!.,- t ■• for the arbitrament of tl \ ic tory of hi i i'l moral victories i ■i ' ■• ' ■• world often tin tied ou fit :.. . ."•' n '■. timt flies . . life aie sj ling . . .. ■i and s ..: tre id i ■'■■-'. .. \ so i li ,.'•.! i mtj in the tropics and still though with love i am dune h r in dreams in thy gardens t ' ilhna hi loved of the snu ! ai.nr.ict s evans commttaication n-i the s itesville mt tican the amended i vnkrupt law and the homestead upward if fifty first fin mium - ' hdtls t o.l fc ili'i'i petition with . tur tl c untry 0 on ' t • .. merits • i ■■■■. ;. >• ards . ■ire > . il and ■.. .' . io ! j allen broytn agent 2 - , n c i'i ir.rctilf.il re trospi ct of the ( . .' pa - i no ble tribute to south rnd ::: crats : many of th ■cxtn " ■i ra -" - ■he — whom 1 i . ■' iy disl ke : i ce 1856 emerged man i i k - . r stars through the d ki - with which i had ignorantly clouded sir philip sidney •• • i in ive would ac knowledge thi m ntl - men lie v filter into my n ind to occu py its highest d i.-es and i fit therein with tbat conclave of true - whom every man in his own « iy selects fir himself and v ■-.]. ■.'■■. . be holds perp tn il t arli imt ... ' mr 1 not only t la tl ' uth in this saperb sentence hut he tells it !■• iu ifully and eloquently — lot is c ur jo r ' kill j|!l m*l.t\|l 1011 l imlllmii l]i . nf mai ever nttered . ier truth than did john kerr wh i speaking of hi ri v xx rd beecht r w h ive b ei to beacher's * .. 5 d wi do not hesitate to say •!. uld - toner gi t , al bi itre or circas o • £ bb uh day tba i . to th ad henry waul beechei s chtircb . ; ich ers wl i try discharged by any t to s — • ■•' ur venn ci ti dancing by i>m>xy among tiie amusements of oriental na tions dancing is a general favorite but ift not the uninitiated suppose that by danci s are meant walz s ar cotillions ', round dances or quadrilles all of which involve an amount of muscular exertion quite inconsistent with eastern ideas of ', pleasure no ; the oriental has a fashion of bis own iu regard to the dance and v.'hei.ev r ie fet is inclined to indulge his terpsichorean proclivities he does so :-. t hy dancing himself hut hy having his slave du ;'. ior him kings and prii ces lords an ', idies ri clini at east upon cm h ious of velvet whi'ii g away the laggh g hours ia • nping rh i l.t-t from g i leu enj - sc iiting the a . h of frag ant l>wert cr a i chin g the cuiliug wreaths of em from still more fragrant cb ro is hie bands of d iu i x slaves exhibit their g ace and di xterity tor tbe entertainment oi ihe august company i remember a ball given by a vj ish m reliant at the c .: ital i f ";■,::: in honor of his queen's birthday when sevi ral simese nobles were am n g the gut 3 -, and in the early portion oflhe evening vii d with each other iu cumpli meating their host ua the i r lliancy ot bis entertainment kuowiug him to be wealthy c avivi.il aud fond of display they naturally ex ixsl're ix georgia home insurance co of columbus ga i'u'i'i ■■"■' .' rhod1 - ' wn . ' d f wili all l0ss6s el ij ! ':;:-- ! cl ami promptly i aid in full ■btaiti re.i le in ..! du wi ii in prou cl li.cv-i h ■- bv ... . • • ... in insurai .-< ul j r ...... nt points in all the - j allen brown agent what a nnisa • a gen tleman at a _ : j in froi t of him ke .. . _ in a ! id i oice to a lady ai his di 1 yon rcl . -:' ?" threaten ingly den and i i no : i meant llie nans 1 here wlni keep np sn .. ir in traments that i can'i heai your conver sation wa the st gii z reply ... - ,<-_,. e n'o 2 granite row april 2o 72 iy isbury n.c marriage certificates for sale here bul lli bestisiilways llie cheapest
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1872-12-05 |
Month | 12 |
Day | 05 |
Year | 1872 |
Volume | 4 |
Issue | 12 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | J. J. Bruner |
Date Digital | 2008-04-13 |
Publisher | J. J. Stewart |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The December 5, 1872 issue of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
OCLC number | 601567288 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1872-12-05 |
Month | 12 |
Day | 05 |
Year | 1872 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 4942759 Bytes |
FileName | sacw10_852_18721205-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 10:45:17 AM |
Publisher | Hamilton C. Jones |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | An archive of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
FullText | jip cwm^iyi w wl * l salisbury n.c december 5 1872 rol iv thi ui series no 12 whole no 852 : t i v . j j bhu.n er two sidesof lite there is a shady side of life a nd a snuuy -!•!■as well a n d tis for • v ry cue to say ' ■;■which he'd choose tm dwell ; f r ,-\ ery one unto iiuiself ( n i it a gi ie u sin who hars the bh ssed sunshine out and shuts the shadi ws in the reigx of murder m«rder seems 1 .. . coromi n n.iy by day perl ■- anse maid an toe :•. a allowed ment i'i re are in ':. . ;. y thirty persons act nsed wle m exei pt i islt r :.. , uvi bo k murden r ai d su . -. i -] « , r f : eisk have been coi n ... i;l,t : seven months tl c mtains nearly ■- i,iimb r.ai d t prisons in othei . - ... -,;;!,.; v.-kl : t.eis ms charged « th the elu d ling of i l°od thi pistol :'. k if j bludgeon an fast bee ,.:; itra i meutof eveiy qnarri i and thi : remedy for i n ry i the frenzy t.-t driuk strik sive gentlem . . , . . .-.;,..., u|q provt tiii .:>. and th ugh | be stili asks for cl iwo years have pass d . crime was committed stokes case is loo fresh in x ■• c;iia is n iy wear their saddest robes the sun refuse to smile and sorrow with her troops of ills may threaten es t while : bi t still ti . ' ■••: :;.' heart has power a 6 • to provide ; and in iy ■• 1 ■'■sou s aie dark i cli on life's .-!. uly i-ije ss3s from lippiucott's magazine colma ali bate - j 1<'n kk " 2.00 six m'.ni - •■" '•"" s 0-00 r t . . t 4 " ■-■' ' um no head fo '. stom^&l . joh h a 0 beautiful bright brown woman with the oval moorish nice black i iir u eamiug purple in sunlight ai i a wumlrous eharm and a grace the public mia ■■bt th as a f as a m ■:::! to i quire et . ■. the scan • ! ti x ay is much i nl and even less justifiable latest on the list is ihe murder er d'xt i.i by 1 ; lor the off m ..; :, stifyii ; ■,.': rutal hus b.in's tri aim • -,,. \ -. th se cases mi n !, il .. 1 of i vil j : sjoi ; . mpl i i offence ; in ota rs il is the old s •■p and revenge tor tl remedy remains .. d certain pun ishment l is useless to bewail th pre valence of crime 1 till ciimc brings iis own retribution the b j , . the depraved will think lightly cl murder the indict ed murderers in tbe tombs — we say iu dieted murderers for .. my ef ihem are known to have i i . crimes with w hich they : re ch ' . ' living proofs of the wi aki ss of the a of justice in this city and a constant incen tive to murder by oil . men who are already criminal by v i il not in deed — x y.hei dd . m and manner and earriaga that natme not ait best ws ai i eyes that dai t ui the he older i , that flashes and burns and glows ■■' ■come 1 ither at d tell me the county ! ■season and the yr.-.r of grace if i en a i ake or but dn i i ing : 1 ell tne name and my lace ed for appraisers they shall view and examine the homestead laid off and make ! iheir report as required in section twenty ' two of this act it is mainly upon the construction to be given to the above quoted sectiou lhat the whole question turns from that section it will be seen that if the judgment j creditor or judgment debtor or person entitled to homestead exemption shall be dissatisfied with the valuation and allot ment ofthe sheriff's appraisers he may apply to the trustees of the township for a j re appiisement and allotment within ten days thercefter there is no mistaking the meaning of this language tiie par ties immediately interested in the first apprisement must if they are not content with i apply f»r a re appiisement with in ten days from the datetherof ifthey f'.iil to make such application within the specified ten days they must ever af terwards a'tiide by what has been done — this it is believed will uot be question ed by any law er "( r any other judgment creditor within six months " look.ut the relation which these words lear to those which immedi ately preceed them and 1 think it will clearly appear that ihey relate hack to tht date of tlie first allotment by the sheriff's appraisers 1 dc not gee how they can be cos trued to relate to the date of the judgment as coteuded for by some if there is any dohbt upon reading only thus far lhat they relate back to the first apprisement that doubt will be entirely removed by reading and giving full force !,> the words which immediately follow and before sale under execution ofthe ex cess from this it is peifcctly clear to my mind that no judgment creditor can demand a re appiisement on the grounds of disiiatisfactiou merely softer the lips of six mouths it is also char that he can only demand it tvithin six months pro ridfd lie dues so before sale main execu tion ofthe excess after the lapse of six months from the date of the first apprais ment such appraisment can only le va cated on the grounds of fraud complicity or other irregularity as provided for in section 24 ofthe same act which is as follows any appraisal or allotment by the trustees ofa township may bt set aside on the application of any party interested for fraud complicity or other irregularity the proceedings shall upon petition as in special proceedings and tlie applicanl shall give bond io t lie opposing parly for cos's and damages section 20 firsl quoted provides the only way in which the appraisal or al lotment ofthe sheriff's appraisers may be vacated section 24 last quoted provides j the only way i:i which the appraisal or allotment of the township riustees — ili • second appraisal or alloim"iit — m iy be set aside is not this clear fi"tn the plain reading and construction of the law i again it is admitted on all hands lhat th homestead provision of our constitu tion and he laws of th state passed for il e purpose of giving effc ct to ihe samq create an estate old if the lands oi ihe judgment debtor ur supreme court has ever desided that ihis estate is a de termiuable fee over which the home stead i may exercise all the rights and j powers of other land owners during the , continuance of llm estate how can this ibe unless ihere ix a way of ascertaning i and permanently fixing such estate 1 every subsequent judgment creditor for thirty years can within six months after ; obtaining his judgment have a re apprais j '' ment the great object of the law will be j defeated instead of a fixed estate for j the life of himself and wife and during '■■the minority of his child en or any one ' of ihem as provided by law be will have onlv an uncertain a id flucluating estate who supposes that any sensible man would make any improvements upon an esl ite held by snch an uncertain tenure i ir cannot be when ihe return of the township trustees setting apart and al j loiing to the judgment creditor a home stead with metes and bounds is duly [ registered as n quired iy si t tion 22 ol j tin act quoted it possesses all the attri ' butes ofa conveyance as much so as the j assessors appointed by a justice of the j ' peace on she pe.titi ni of the claiment in ! my liutiil.'lt opinion it changes the es tate and vests it in olher parties in like | manner and it can never afterwards be ! disturbed except for fraud sec as any ! other deid may i therefore conclude that in all cases ! where the return of the sheriff's apprais ' eis h.-s heen acquiesced in for six months land h all cases where tiie return of the t unship trusiees has been duly regiss i t.retl according to lav the bankrupt i courts will respect the homestead thus ! allotted unless fraud complicity oroth i er irregularity be shown in ail easts wlure the homestead has mu been laid off and a letted in pursuance ef the pro visions of tlm state laws i believe tie bandrupt courts wili direct it to be laid i nil and allotted bv appraisers under the j rules and regulations prescribed by the 1 stale law this brings me to tbe second point — | according to an important decision recent j iv mule by jude rives of the d trie court of the i'niten states for the south western district of virginia in re wyllip american law times for sep t niber 1s7 j page 330 homestead ex pmptions will nol be allowed by the bank j rnpi courts in any cases ui antecedenl debts should he supremi court of the united states decide it to be unennstitu | lional as applied to such debts and sup pose judge rives to be in error in the i conclusions at whicli he arrives ihe effect ! will be the same in till eases where there : are docketed judgments against the debtor ' for if the homestead law be decided to be i unconstitutional as applied to debts tbere ■tefore contracted then all docketed jndg : ii cuts obtained upon such debts are liens , upon the homestead and it must be sold to satisfy them unless the debtor avuile out of tiie war of secession in eng an 1 he pays them because so much goit is sowing into the country in france he pays them beeanse so much gold is flow ing in to pay tbe prnssions and even iu happy hamburg ihey tell him his en glish sovereigns are now depreciated in value on account of tie large quantities of french gold that have come to germauy a placid i'lioj'le tin hamburgers look like people who will always do a thorough day's woik certainly but never suffer business f.i iu trudi into the circle of pleasure and rpi e indeed all european populations ut-em alike in this it is only the american who never forgets to be anxious over business and never ceases to feel the spur of more extended enterprises when the iy is done the hamburger is the picto e of content with his wile aid children he repairs to the circus and laughs irh all his might at the nonsense of the clown or with the same domestic following the troops to the cool shade ofthe liner garten resplendent with many colored lights and listens with all his ears to good music while he quaffs complacently his foaming larger we read ihat plato found it hard to give a proper definition ofa man it bas occurred lo us lhat the german might be described as a harnessed in nation they systemize and centralize everything the boatman at the mouth of the elbe will tell yon that his fares are fi*ed at berlin ; and every man seems one in atom an aggregate mass which moves on in a national progression imperceptible but irresistible as the glacier's course the green-grocer women of hamburg weai across their patient shoulders a wood en yi ke from the ends of which immense baskets of vegetables and fruits are hung thus weighted they plod over the city as tn dies their taste in colors is very like that of the iish women of leigh ; but they look less brawny and more patient as if lacking somthing of the persjervi dum ingenium scotorum gambling is tiie east in the east gambling is a universal practice all classes delight in it from the king on his throne to ihe wretched begger that prowls about the gatps of tlie noble to find a scanty support not in the enn ihs tbat fall from the rich man's la id ." but in ih very garbage tb it is cast from his gate sn passionately dovoted in this despicable vice are many orientals thai when tbey have bartered off every thing i uc they possi ess rathi r than de sis they v il sell their wives and children into slavi ry and even pawn their own bodies to get money to gamble with li censed gaming houses are found in ail eastern cities and most oriental monarchs derive large revenue from his source sometimes dice are used and occasionally small cowries she hut cards are moct general tin ci mmon people male and female frequent the public saloons which are said to be perfect dens of crimes as they are often the theatres of the most hear sickening tragedies the garni ling ofthe higher classes is done in their own homes and they never fail to invite and even importune their visitors to partake of the sport while they often boast oi the large sm.is inv have ! st or won amoi g their ii lends but though husbands ar.d fathers deem it right thus to employ their owu lime their wives and daugters are strictly ordered to avoid all such im moral practices lest the well-filled nurse of pah rf nnil is should suffer detriment during the ri ign of the old usurper who sat upon tiie throne at the time of my ttrs \ i to siam il was one d^y rep rt d to his m iji sty tint some scores of bis six hundred wives had been indulging in the great sin of gambling the fair culprits 1 em si iiimoned i i the roval pr since made full en f .- ; m of iheir guilt but pie ... d i n mi as excus ■-, and praj i d lis majesty's forgiveness on the ground that ihey had ior t only twenty thous md titals twelve thousand dollars whicli they ar gued wad bu as a drop in tbe oc tan compared with the boundless resource of his en ;:(••-, infallible majesty tiie covetous old king who loved money bet ter than anything else in tlie word tho fair caie:i,s theiust ivee uot excepted had no bonner heard the sum of twenty thou sand ticals mentioned than losnig the small mo ileum of patience with which nature bad endowed h m be summoned tu bis presence several high ocieers of the royal harem and ordered tbem to inflict in his name the fatherly discipline of thirty btripes on the sides of tbe feet of each of the offending ladles to preseive them in future from the degarding vice of g imblin pected soim thing very fine in the wav of dancing their sensations may be iui agiued when the scoicb bag p;pes played by an old sailor stink up the only mu-ic which had ben found available and tbe european members of the company went whizzing and past s red ji and high land fling followed each other in quick | succession dumb with surprise and dis may the nobles rnshed ennmsse from the : house enten d their boats and ordered the oarsmen to pull furiously for the mission houses situated seme tivo miles lower d iwn the river it was verging toward m dnighr but some of the missionaries : were still busy in iheir libraries and ex ' citi d i i.i s first knocking furiously at the tloor and then ent ring without wait ing for a response called clamorously help help for yonr countrymen ! the foreigners at the biiii.-h godowna are all gone crazy ; they are dancing for them selves — irom oriental sports hy mr fannie r feudge i the december num ber of i ppincott's magazine the x c insane asylum we return thinks to dr grissom superintendent of the x c insane asy lum for a copy of his annual report and that ofthe board of directors we make some extrats from the report as follows the total number of admissions since the opening ofthe asylum ou the 22d day of february l^-'o is 993 the total number of discbarges for the same time is 7g0 ; of whom 244 were cured : 8 im proved : 1g7 unimproved and 2g7 died leaving now under treatment 233 l pon the whole number of admissions the per centage of discharges bas been 76 53 ; of cun .-, 24,77 ol improved s s6 ; of unimproved 13-81 ; of deaths 26.28 at the date of my last report there were in the asylum 127 males and 118 females of the nunnrous applications for admission we have been able to make room for only 24males and 19 females — the highest number at any one time was 130 males and 120 females ; lowesl num ber 118 males and 112 females the whole number under treatment during the year was 151 sales and 138 females mak i ing a total 289 there have been 7;2 males and 23 females discharged during the year of ; these 9 m les and 5 females wen cured ; i 8 mal s a d 1 ft male improi : d ; 9 m lies an i 5 fi ••. il s in :> .-. ition i y conditi in an : 6 mab - and 1 2 females di d i'e ;; the whole number in the institn ii in the pi r c tn : i this year of dischargi • - was 19.09 ; of recovt i s 4 v"i ; of improv i ed 3.12 ; of unimproved 4 s2 ; of deaths ' g 25 upon he number of admissions during the year the per centage of discharges was 127 90 ; ofenres 32 55 : of improvi d 20 93 ; of unimproved a2 bu ; of deaths j4186 upon the number of discharges tht per cent of cure3 was 25 45 ; of improved 16.36 of unimproved 25.45 of deaths 32 72 ( f admissions during the year tht can of di ise is reported to have been mental ic 12 eases physical in 22 and unknown in 9 the form was mania in 23 eases epileptic mania in 3 melan cholia in 9 and dementia in s i 2-w distemper ix horses some time ago i saw an article entitled treatmenl ol distemper in horses and knowing a very simple and effefctnal cure ft r the same 1 concluded to gave it to your readers the c ire is simply a lump of gum cimphor ab ut the size of a haz i nut given to the horse in bran — or anvthing in which he will eate il — on the first n i c lion of the disease if one dose doi s nol i ,'■c1 a cure in two days repeal the dose and 1 will warrant a cure the camphor , p ms the pores relieves respir ation etc and the horse is relieved al most as i by magic j cured a valuai e !. . .' - in two days aboul a year age that had it very bad ; resj iration was very difficult ; so much so thai a person could hear him wheezing several rods from the btal le 1 got the above from a c lebrati d horse man and i think the simplicity and ef ficacy of the remedy should give it the consideration of all owners of horse-flesh — ./. // palm in ohio larmer — 3 ■■— — raise your hoses and mules we have oftimes heard it announced in ante-bellum times that horses aud mule could no b • econi mically raised by tbe cotton planter some years before ihe war through the counsel ofa farmer who had succeeded better than most planters we procured three mares and from them we had young colts every spring with out hesitation do we assert that the mules we raised cere better a general thing than those we have purchased and we farther proclaim to raise those mules did not cost us as m tuh as those v/e bought because the mares did not perform two thirds as much work with as without there colts we admit that to rear these mulei and horses for we raised both did cost us something but by providing pasturage in spring and snmmer in connection with the i avings in stalls which the c ilts uek ej uj it was a gain of no small item o an '.'■' warning a man by -,) ■n;i:n . • ; . kt r w ho resii • s i ■■ir • qtiarryville n v owned a cat nl ho - s that bad the distemper in clean ing out thi m mgers the other day virus came in contact wiih a flesh wound on his hand in a short time bis hand and arm became eo terribly inflamed and swollen thai it bad to be amputated soon after the amputation he died per j 1 owni _' hor - cannot exercise too much prudence in ihis respect as the < maiter from this distemper is rank poison , to tbe human system i i hats r brtce sill whal is this swathed round bosom why d 1 thus breathe in pain .' y . ushes the bl od like a river ■u flame through my brain ? ; himself of the benefit ofthe bankrupt law and obtains bia dischaige before the deci sion be made the case will be carted up on a writ of error from the in x term of our state supreme court and in six months thereafter m in twelve mouths at furthest the decision may be made on the third point i do n t hesitate to advise all persons now having the b in li of the homestead and personal property exemptions that the only way by which they can scenic ihem against great almost certain danger is ro avail themselves of the benefit of the bankrupt law at once by going in promptly they can obtain their dischargi e i fore any decision affi ct ing the honn-stead tan lie made by the supreme court of the united stales — otherwise ihey may lose both homestead and personal proper y exemptions and see their families thrown upon the cold charities ot ihe world to starve this opinion and advice is given bv one who has devoted much attention to the subject and as an eviilcr.ee th tl lie has given i honestly and conscientiously ii is oi v necessary to state thii he bas himself sough that relit f which he com mends to others and in conclusion i would be glad to hear ihrough lie columns of the amki::i any criticism lhai davie or any other member nf the bar may have to make upon the legal points herein discussed dayiuso p s — as a matter of importance to bankrupts whose petitions were filed pre vious to the adoption of the amendment of june the 8ih 1s72 but whose cases are still pending i make the following quotation from the opinion of judge rives already referred to : another question is made as to llie application and operation of this ami nda tory act to lending cases of bankruptcy it is clearly prospective ; but as a reme dial act it may be availed oi in all pend ing casts wliie assets are undistributed and the enlarged exemption can be granted without prejudice to the interests already vested before the passage of the act this view i may add seems to me to be fully sustained by the learned judge's reasoning of course after the bankrupt has received his discharge he no longer has any status in the bankrnpt courts and cannot avail himself of the enlarged exemption that is the homestead ad ad ditional personal property exemptions of our state constitution and ! tv.s !> vtidson correspondence of the j\ew york post the great german seaport some sketches of hamburg hambi'ug september 1872 the elbe a run of thirty-one hours brings the traveler from london to the mouth ofthe elbe and five hours more sets him down in the port of hamburg even at the place where it empties into the sea the * widely spreading elbe gives promise of the vigorous commercial life of its chief city in every direction the black smoke of english behind the passanger steamers ihat have saih d from new y rk or lou j don or heligoland or hilling out irom plucky lugs hit drag great ships into the net which hamburg weaves to ca'c'ti its various commerce from tbe four corners of the earth this is to say nothing of the little river craft with those snuff-colored sails in which dutch mariuers rejoice such is the wide elbe for seventy miles • nf title water thai flow between tbe sleepy little lown of ctixhaven at its mouth and i sleepless hamburg at the head of whal : we ma call its ocean navigation bu tiis lalter phrase has to be qualified the trans al'anlic steamers debark iheii ;. . nge'.s and pri icipal frieghl al ihe distance of an hour in steaming below the cily in the adjective we used to describe cuxhavcn had in mind perhaps nothing more ban ! the perfect serenity of its life as it strikes • the stringer a 1 evening tne quairvj streets i are filled with children full of song and tossmg about many colored lanterns oj i paper the social click arises from bil '■hard tables ami bowling alleys of prodi i emus leneth reminding one of german i ■. i words give forth their reverberations on ' the stilly air and startle tbe echoes as the ten pins of mendrick hudson's men woke the thunders among the catskills in the legend of rip winkle the city wp may almost borrow macauley's de j script ion of london and call hambug the j cily oi len thousand masts ; fur nor only j are the river banks lined with ships but j clumps of lofty piles i.i mid-stream give | fastenings to as m n •• more tho ham burghers are evidently proud of being a j part of the new german empire audi ' equally pleased with remaning a free port trees here are delightfully low and it ought to st.'i m like an elysium in that e spect lo long-suffering americans who fly irom the aionop li s oi their own coun try only to encounter tbe exactions of j europe we observe that miss kate held has been writing hack her melancht ly j experience as an american buyer in the shops on this side of ilie waler much of this robbery of foreigners doubtless is due to the same instinct lhat has drawn wreckers to ihe coast of cornwall and to . the icei'sof florida but a greal deal of it has been owing to tbe inn cent and absurd habit of americans in tilling eu ropean shop-keepers bow ridiculously cheap their goods are hence these a mi r can tears ever this enhancement of prices aa such ; and our only hope of reform is that our fellow-countrymen may be made to see what donkeys the are their place is in the rear ; poople of better judg ment ought to travel in the van not we fail to recognize that fatality of high prici s which follows tbe traveler even apart from such shortcomings in the latter days high prices stick to him even as to her cules the poisoned shirt of nessos in america he pays enhanced prices arriving m . - .. ■- - -' ssas wl il name beareth youmler mountain whose summit with bre is aglow .' y hai do i here with the palm trei s waving over me to and fro ,-> r i * . . t:l s t f i j v '_ » »- — whal are those gray crumbling ruins ir stories of war and «'!' woe ? win i-t came that strange wild music like echoes from ages ago ? druggist & -' - tes axxsb -. c having purcl -.-■d the contents of the '■-\ dr i ... .,. - i v . , • fully call ihe at | ihe < i tens « f i b iry ai d ii j ci uiitry to the new ar • v . will continue to cany on tin business at the • i ! : 1 1 : way \.;,. .... :■-''., ji on hand all the vnii he p ['<•!' laii r line by airicl atteni ion to husim ss t . a lib run ige whose are yon stalwart soldiers w hite-clad and dark-browed and strong ? means thai blare of the trumpets and roll ofthe kettle-drums long ? a national coxvi nt o a pi t ition was presented t tin i . :- .:• of virgin ia ami perhaps of -■her states last winter and ii is s dd « i be j :• rented to the legislatures nf all ": .: a this year asking that a i '■nvention shall be called for thi purpose ■-! reform ing the conslitui ted states tl ij g ound tak .. i prac tical wi th the general . - ty ; that tht -• be bi ugbt dow n to the pn - lions w » k tht ir w iy to i w ith ml legal iec igi ition ; .■i - invisible iiifluenc \ i ulexi .- ; per-ple with a dou . • •-. an i this itir . . zed work ieg mai hi ery i : v run t il is sug gested that c.ipi - .. p rate con i'i e imj i • ,:. usly • ■■i . g ; , , a i _ : - ty i i • complica i r aliiug fi - cia live priucipli forel c lamity which can only 1 . ■stituiinn to the dem : ll i :.:.'. — j ' j , ib wl y . ovt they forth from the portal with the measured and he ivy tread ? who walks there in chain between them to the mournful larch ofthe dead ? ak low pobrecito she murmurs i ihe soft < astii iii toi gue ; • } .' . hero you fought .•■■• andidos ; i ... .-, ■ame iu time — you are young fh i ij !!•• .- ■• ng now to i.i .'• ath a volley : • - ii i fro ii the river he go •■!" and she bating her breath the o ■tin hi rs was taken : . ■-.- the i-iirn of the erosss and kneeling • - i pray i f ','"'■' tlies ml that has tied tl en rist • • on the living let the dt d past bury i s dead !" . ling besi le me she whispers •• w hen il j i nt nna is near ' ; .■. re best in it to call me .! nan it a : she'd watch ine nunc closy i fear dili \ h nt . who knoweth the h art of a woman ? 3 j >. .. ,. .. j s..-,i j v hy -: ould i hasten away .' tl re is balu iu tin . ir of c'olima : '; :..■, ■■.- of juanta said stay !" iosi yi ji ■t ; ; — i • i your issue of the | lih i m ice a oin inunication under the a ve c iption ovt r the signature oi da vie a.-king me lo discuss the following tints in i -.-.- i inmns : first whether the homesteads already all tl ■(] i y ;!■■sbei ift's n ho have execu i ,,- in iht ir h .: ds will be respected by ti e bankru i courts ; , secondly whether the homestead ex emptions will he allowed in any case of old debts should the supreme unit el the united slates decide il to le uncon stilutl e al as applh d io such debts as it piobably v iil in ihe case to be carried up i v the assignee ni the bank of cape fear for the purpose of testing the question j thirdly whether ihis icing the case ; persons now having the benefit of the j h mestead and personal properly eicmpi ' tions bad nol letter avail themselves of i b mkru i luw at once and save the , risk - i bi leg deprived a i hy the decis i n ,.| the supreme uourt ui the united ; s ii i i'i first point is one r.v ml whicli law i yers ii fl'i r a a en which there has been no decision i.i his slate by cither the : j stale er fedi ral < onrts a that i can : i is in discuss ihe question mid give my | n asons lor believing ihat ihe bankrupt j ■-. s v ;,] ,-. ...-■.• ci tbe homesteads allot i ted hv the shm.tis in ihe manlier ituiica j l , teil ; section 20 of the act of april the 7th i i860 for carrying inlo effect the home i mead provisions of our constitution is as ! oltows ll tht judgment creditor for whom the . -, jg ;: sdt . i j idgmenl debtor or per ■,,',-.:. io !.. mestead t x mption shall be diss itisfit d w itb the valu ition and j allotmesil t i tie aj j raisers or assessors .:. th c - may 1 i . he t i within tilt ,- it r ■r any othi r judgment , ,-, , | six n niths and bfjorcsale i n of the excess notify the clerk of tbe township tlureof and file with him a transcript of the return ofthe appraisi rs or assessors fas the case may be,j and thereupon the clerk shall notify j the other trustees of the township to meet him at a time specified within ten j days on tiie premises to re-assess ami al | lot said homestead at the time specified : the trustees shali meet on tbe premisses i a:;d having first taken the oath prescrib - '-.>*■when the rums i ..■r said i have lost a day he uttered a sadder troth than il be bad la mi d 1 have lost a kingd napoleon said the reason why he i ■' the austrians waa thai tin y did m - know the value of tive mi -.• s at tht . ted battle of uivi li ihe rnnfl the poinl of being led i h iw the critical state i ins utly took bis ii solntion ii • - ■' i a flag to the an ' . - is for an rmis tice the unwary a : . . he snai ■■; foi a (< ■■■:. i thunders of tbe battle w t . . - . t-ized ihe precious the em my wish i : is re arrar.gt d battle < his front i i few i i idy to rem nice ;!.,- t ■• for the arbitrament of tl \ ic tory of hi i i'l moral victories i ■i ' ■• ' ■• world often tin tied ou fit :.. . ."•' n '■. timt flies . . life aie sj ling . . .. ■i and s ..: tre id i ■'■■-'. .. \ so i li ,.'•.! i mtj in the tropics and still though with love i am dune h r in dreams in thy gardens t ' ilhna hi loved of the snu ! ai.nr.ict s evans commttaication n-i the s itesville mt tican the amended i vnkrupt law and the homestead upward if fifty first fin mium - ' hdtls t o.l fc ili'i'i petition with . tur tl c untry 0 on ' t • .. merits • i ■■■■. ;. >• ards . ■ire > . il and ■.. .' . io ! j allen broytn agent 2 - , n c i'i ir.rctilf.il re trospi ct of the ( . .' pa - i no ble tribute to south rnd ::: crats : many of th ■cxtn " ■i ra -" - ■he — whom 1 i . ■' iy disl ke : i ce 1856 emerged man i i k - . r stars through the d ki - with which i had ignorantly clouded sir philip sidney •• • i in ive would ac knowledge thi m ntl - men lie v filter into my n ind to occu py its highest d i.-es and i fit therein with tbat conclave of true - whom every man in his own « iy selects fir himself and v ■-.]. ■.'■■. . be holds perp tn il t arli imt ... ' mr 1 not only t la tl ' uth in this saperb sentence hut he tells it !■• iu ifully and eloquently — lot is c ur jo r ' kill j|!l m*l.t\|l 1011 l imlllmii l]i . nf mai ever nttered . ier truth than did john kerr wh i speaking of hi ri v xx rd beecht r w h ive b ei to beacher's * .. 5 d wi do not hesitate to say •!. uld - toner gi t , al bi itre or circas o • £ bb uh day tba i . to th ad henry waul beechei s chtircb . ; ich ers wl i try discharged by any t to s — • ■•' ur venn ci ti dancing by i>m>xy among tiie amusements of oriental na tions dancing is a general favorite but ift not the uninitiated suppose that by danci s are meant walz s ar cotillions ', round dances or quadrilles all of which involve an amount of muscular exertion quite inconsistent with eastern ideas of ', pleasure no ; the oriental has a fashion of bis own iu regard to the dance and v.'hei.ev r ie fet is inclined to indulge his terpsichorean proclivities he does so :-. t hy dancing himself hut hy having his slave du ;'. ior him kings and prii ces lords an ', idies ri clini at east upon cm h ious of velvet whi'ii g away the laggh g hours ia • nping rh i l.t-t from g i leu enj - sc iiting the a . h of frag ant l>wert cr a i chin g the cuiliug wreaths of em from still more fragrant cb ro is hie bands of d iu i x slaves exhibit their g ace and di xterity tor tbe entertainment oi ihe august company i remember a ball given by a vj ish m reliant at the c .: ital i f ";■,::: in honor of his queen's birthday when sevi ral simese nobles were am n g the gut 3 -, and in the early portion oflhe evening vii d with each other iu cumpli meating their host ua the i r lliancy ot bis entertainment kuowiug him to be wealthy c avivi.il aud fond of display they naturally ex ixsl're ix georgia home insurance co of columbus ga i'u'i'i ■■"■' .' rhod1 - ' wn . ' d f wili all l0ss6s el ij ! ':;:-- ! cl ami promptly i aid in full ■btaiti re.i le in ..! du wi ii in prou cl li.cv-i h ■- bv ... . • • ... in insurai .-< ul j r ...... nt points in all the - j allen brown agent what a nnisa • a gen tleman at a _ : j in froi t of him ke .. . _ in a ! id i oice to a lady ai his di 1 yon rcl . -:' ?" threaten ingly den and i i no : i meant llie nans 1 here wlni keep np sn .. ir in traments that i can'i heai your conver sation wa the st gii z reply ... - ,<-_,. e n'o 2 granite row april 2o 72 iy isbury n.c marriage certificates for sale here bul lli bestisiilways llie cheapest |