1H1 MEMBER! - TCKALI, SlSTES OF -JOB WOKK- v. SENUTOUEoEDEJik I-THE ADVANCE ,rOBOM- kflOLUROD FIFTY CEHTS WHEN PAID FOB "LET ALL THE ENDS THOU Alfll'ST AT, BJB TOT COUNTRY'S, THY GOD'S, AMD TRUTHS'. Cash in Advance. -TO THIS CFncE.'J VOLUME 20 WILSON. WORTH CAROLINA, APlilL 10. 1890. NUMBER 12 BILL ARFS LETTER II ELI' THE M OS, U MEN T FUNK. ' at A 1 Mi ,tbr of Love That the Old i Enthiisia.nicali Endornes. M last the graves 01 me m Ge i Soldier wno tell at , Fredericksburg are marked witn ' marble neaa stones, wun uauio and company and regi- nie 4t chiseled: deep into the k. Mrs. Barney is happy, anil so' are her noble compan- -the ladies of the Memori- fociety.. With them .it has peen a laoor ui iuyb-iuyi wuai, netr grows weary. Only a few mouths- ago they made thetr ape kl K) Getrjia, ana right well ha.a Georgia responded. Two hundred and three of her pat riot boys are sleeping there tar a way from home . and kin- kindred whose loving hail da would have brought et flowers in their season kept the turf green from their graves, and watered them with tears. But loving hearts weie there, and tb sa graves have not beeu neglected. Wo-. iu . ti can ever be trusted to per- f..rkn ihe sweetest, . tenderest, ho iest duties that belong to ut nature, tue poet says, Man's inhumanity to man Mrst;s countless thousands mourn." Hut woman's humanity makes a? many thousands rejoice, Mrs. 11 1 ruey is a nole Virginia wo ins one who wen through th -. war like a soldier, and was rtiimys on duty quick to the sici aud the wouuded and the dying duty in the hospital anil out .of it, duty in the sacri- lie a she made of personal com t aud personal security, duty Georgians and Texans, and , a well as to Vrrinians. d ever since the war she has fo to at an C Jutiuued on duty, duty to the ddad aud dying near her home. (t a soldier under the sod at tetlericksburg, but would say hi? spirit could speak to us, ie is my mother and my sis- tet.' That blood-stained soil As always, been very dear to for our Tom Cobb fell there. A . Oi bm Cobb, the best loved son Georgia ; the pride of all our op!e; the Christian" hero ; the I fr iend of huuiauity ;lhe learned and brilliaat and noble gentle- it an. He was in his prime, of anhood aud was my ideal of a ubole man. .- j - Mrs. Birney writes: "If I aid only see all these dear,' graves uiarsea wun maroie liead-stoiies, I wssld die happy.l We must hurry and get through this work before the veterans aire all dead, for I fear that the ijext generation may be too ou-iy to think of. them. There are 1,800 graven here, graves of Southern patriots, and none. are, J- nuaueiitly marked except i!i,wt.frih (Tnrlh. T fftftl Rural hat the 'other States would re-' pond if .here was some one tol move them. Virginia hasdonei. ktjry well. She has sent us; B450, Texas has ssnt ?142; :Idrylaud, 20 ; '.Florida, $8 Xortu Carolina, ?Q ; South Caro-' lina, $2; Arkansas, $2, audi Tennessee, 2. jl know that there is just as much patriotism in Lha liearts of those people; as there is in Geprgu, and alt tint is wasted id some good lii-Oi or woman to awaken to itif The marble head stones that jou seut us are beautiful, the work well doue and the letter?! iai perfect. They were escort ed from the depot to the camej tary by a guard of honor, the; Maury Cainp of Confederate A'eterans, uuder command of Captain Lee, a brother of Fits Hugh Lee aud a nephew of Itobart E Lee. With their own soldier hands they; took them from the wagons ; and placed thetn'in the graves. It was a silent, impre?sive ceremony, for "Xot a drum was heard or a funeral note." The band very kindly offered their services, but we thought best to dispense with it. Geor gia'a patriotism shall be knowp aud published, and perhapa the other States will : tioon awake and emulate her example.'' Yes, they will, I ; know they will ifl the' women will take hold of the work. There is not a town or village in any of those States that would not willingly send teu dollars if some good woman, would see two other good woman and say, Nqw, letls ko around this moruing and ask i' t a half-dollar or a quarte'r iroiu every man we meet. Let in b iu a hurry and be in i; truest. We are very late about this thing, but not toi lat:3. -We can raise ten dollars in an hour." If the ladies wili do this, they, can raise a thouar aud dollars in a week. It will not' take that much from eacn State. Perhaps five hundred will do, but tnoae trood ladies have long since laid the founda tion of a monument to the uir- knDwn and unrecorded dead, aud they would rejoice" to get money to complete it. Bat let ti' see to the graves of th3 ki.own aud the recorded dead, and if any money is left it will , not be lost or misspent. The city of Macon raised one hud dred and fifty dollars for the graves, at Johnston's Island, aad just so the cities of Nashville aud Chattanooga and Memphis and Birmingham and Annistoa and Montgomery and Merridaln aid Jackson and others, still farther west, would gladly do : ' - v jlikewise to preserve the graves ef their own soldiers. ' -Patriot- tsm demands it, and so does ;ratitude and State pride and Southern pride. Let every town and village send five or "ten dol lars and the good work , is done Get the editor to help, publish a notice that you are going to call next day on everybody for a half a dollar, and say yon are obliged to have it and will stay until yon get it. A man dunned me on the street the other day (for six dollars, and I told him I .would see him about it, but that I had to go to the barber's shop just then. Well, he said ihe was in no particular hurry and could wait that Ion?, and so e ioiiowu iub uu ;and watched until the barber i toe followed me and took a seat ;not through with me, and, I had to go and hunt up the money to get rid of him. That's the way to do some folks. Send the money to Mrs. J. N. Barney, she will find the marble and furnish the names of the dead!. We had so many marble companies in our State that we preferred to have Georgia marble over Georgia graves,' and so I interviewed them and found them more than liberal. They are all Northern men, but they have domesticated and officiated and acclimated with us, and they like us and we like them. I made a contract with George B. Sickjes & Co., of Tate, in Pick, ens county. Mr. Sickles fought us for four years just as hard as he could, but he won't do so any more. He gaye us a beau tiful polished marble thirty inches long, twelve inches wide and one and a half a half inch es thick for one dollar, and that is really less than its cost. His contribution amounted to over one hundred dol lars in the discount that was made upon the marble and the lettering. Now let every good man stop his work a minute and Bay, "I will go one dollar on the grave, I will sure," and if he cj,n't find any woman going around for the money let Mm send a money order or a dollar bill to Mrs. Barney. She will get it. The mail won't be rob bed ot a cent Of it will go to feed or fatten anybody. There are no salaries to pay. It is all woman's work, and it is all free work. Mrs. Barney received a letter from Philadelphia, in closing twenty dollars, and all that was written was : "A boy who fought in blue sends this to preserve the graves of the boys who fought in gray J' Wasn't that niee and kind ? I would like to nabdr with that man. Would God that we were a nation of friends. The Northern people who have come South will re-1 spoud willingly to this work. I know that they will. Why shouldn't they?. We are taxed everyday and have; been for twenty-fire years to preserve the graves of their dead sol diers, and to pension the survi vors of all their kindred. The annual pension bill of ninety eight millions have just passed, and not a dollar of it will come to our people. We foneht1 for our convictions and they fought for their'e, and that is all there is in It,or about it. ' We are exactly even in patriotism, and ought to be even in everything else, but we are not. r But they are coming down to live with us and are coming fastrx and we are harmonizing with them. In a, few years they will have as much to do with the race problem as we will, and then Mr. Ingalls, and Cooke, and all that , sort will have to stand aside. , Bat I am concerned for the dead now, the 'living can take care of themselves. Bill Abp. w nat The South Needs. The needs of the South, are organized or systematized labor capital, and less legislation. I dissent from those who class the negro as an inferior laborer. I regard him as the best and cheapest laborer that will ever be found for the cultiavtion of our chief product, cotton. His adaptability to the climate and the fact thai he is not a skilled laborer, together with his natu ral inclination, fit him for the cotton field. What bis ultimate fate may be is a dimcult pro blem, bat it will be no - easy task to find his epual or supply his place as a laborer : for the cultivation of cotton. When it is remembered that the annual value" of this one product alone in Mississippi is, in round num bers, fifty millions of dollars, and that it exceedes that -sum in one State and approximates it in others, the importance of well-organized and reliable la bor is apparent. It is one of the needs that cannot be over estimated! have -had occasion heretofore to say, and. I repeat the statement, that if the . Area protected1 from the floods, and every acre cultivated in cotton, it would produce more than is raised in the United States in any year previous , to the late war. ExGov. Lowhy, of Mis sissippi, . in North American Re Tie wf or April. Mrs. LiUBi. E. UlNBAia,. 155 Maraec ai. ban : jeranoisoo, ui writes that she bad been sick lor fifteen years with a complication of disease peculiar t ber sex, and took Kadam's MicrobeKiller ; now she is perfectly well; For sale by D. Herring. ! FOR THE FARM. MATTERS OF INTEREST TO TILLERS OF THE SOIL, . Original, Borrowed, Stolen and Communicated Articles Farming. on BIG HOGS. George Sugg says that the Wilson Advance has often spoken of large hogs raised in Wilson county, but he desires to inform the Advance that some of the farmers in Edge combe raise big hogs also. He says in his township (No. 14) that within the last few vears he has known farmers to raige hogs that weighed when ,., - a a He raised one himself' that weighed when killed 828 pounds and knows several farmers in the township who killed hogd last year and this year weighing over 500 pounds. He said the heaviest hogs rais ed in Wilson did not weigh much over 550 pounds. Mr, Sugg has been very suc cessful in raising hogs and has some very fine ones now. A correct estimate cannot be made as to the amount of mon ey paid by the farmers in this county for what meat they con sume. Instead of raising their, meat at home they content themselves with filling the cof fers . of the Westerners with money that should have been appropriated in purchasing that which could- be raised at home. . Let all the farmers do as Mr. Sugg and raise what, meat they consume at home. Tar boro Southerner. , CANNING VEGETABLES. There are many farmers in Wilson county who could es tablish such a factory as the one described below. The ar ticle is written for the New Berne Journal by Mr. J. E. Calhorne, of Baltimore, and is full and complete. The Ad vance is sure it will be read with interest,and it trusts with profit, by all our readers. Mr. Calhorne says : "As my pj-ticle on the can ning industry has awakened such interest, and your people solicit further information, I shall endeavor to be more ex plicit and give figures. I here with submit estimate of cost of outfit and the necessary arti cles of machinery for canning 1,000 3 1b. or 2,750 2 lb. cans per day to be used withsteam or set in brick : 1 scalding kettle, 1 exhaust kettle, 1 process kettle, 2 scald ing baskets, 2 cages, 2 process cages, r crane, 6 furnace doors, setts of grate bars, 2 gasoline firepots, 2 capping machines, 2 soldering cappers, 2 tipping cappers, 1 forging stake, 2 pair of can tongs, 1 vise,l hammer, 2 files, etc. This outfit can be purchased in Baltimore for $150 F. O. B. the purchaser can, by instructions sent with outfit, put up and operate it without the aid of skilled help. It would require 15 hands to suc cessfully operate it as follows : processor, 1 capper, 1 tipper, 12 peelers and packers the latter could be done by womt-n, boys and girls. In Maryland processors, cappers and tippers receive 82 to S2.50 per day. Peelers and packers $1 per day, but often farmers do their own processing which could be done in this case. Thus the farmer could supervise over the capper and tipper, this work being simple, it could be had for $1 per day. Thus the labor necessary for packing the above number of cans would consist of I processor (the farmer him self..... .'. $2 50 1 capper and tipper... 2.00 12 bauds (peelers andt packers) COO 10.50 We will now figure the cost of raw material, cans, cases labels, etc., required for pack ing z.uuu o id. cans, per aay, Tomatoes .will be taken for ex ample 100 bushels will be .re quired to fill these cans (3 lb.) Thns we have 100 bushels to matoes at 20 cents per bushel, 20,00: 2,000 caDB f45.00 Laber (in packing).. 10.50 Lbbels. solder, etc. 4.00 Cases (containing 24 cans,3 lb) 7.02 i '. : $87:42. Now $87.42 is what it costs lo pack 2,000 2 lb cans of to matoes per day (labor and ma terial) this includes pay for the farmer at $2.50 per day; also $2 is included tor his raw ma terial. We' now market . these 2,000 consisting of 83 cases and receive $1.65 per case, the pres ent market grice. Thus we have $135,95, or a profit $49,53, a pretty good showing for' one day's" work. Where , one has wood or coal to buy it would reduce "these figures, but a profit of $40 could be counted on, even where one haa to furn ish all labor and buy his raw material, wood or coal., I would advise farmers to plant their own crop and not depend en tirely on his neighbor for his canning supply. He can then realize a profit on his product in two ways. I would not ad vise farmers to pact corn; the labor and expense attached to packing this article is so much that they, could not compete with the Western packers. It requires expensive machinery or silking and removing the corn from the cob, and as they have every facility : and pack nothing else, there would not be much money in it as there would be in utilizing the same acreage in tomatoes or other vegetables. Now we will take the profits on one acre of tomatoes, grown for canning purposes. In the first place the plants can be put out after all danger of frost is passed. The farmer can now obtain-seed that will yield him from 300 to 700 .bushels per acre; for an average we will say 450. He disposes of his pro duct eitner by .packing it in cans himself, or selling to his neighbor at 20 cents per bush el. Thus he realizes ?90 per acre; runs no risk from early planting, and he is sure of get ting his money, quite different rom the present mode of dis posing of his product. Some times he does, and again . he does not, but more often finds himself in debt. Even so he can ship as long as he can . find it profitable; then when it doea not pay to ship, the surplus can be packed. As to the capi tal one has to have in order to undertake the canning business, I would say that the cost in the cans, not the outfit, we v will, figure on the amount necessary for on to have : I ' Cost of outfit 150 00 Freight (about). 8 00 Briek work, etc 50 00 25,000 labels (to scart) 45 00 $253 00 The cans can be purchased on six months time where parties can close account with approv ed paper, bearing six per" cent, interest. This allows one to dispose of his entire pack and pay his note without any in convenience whatever. I know of no other business where so small an investment will yield such satisfactory results. A GOOD SPEECH. Soma Seasons Why Ycung Men Leave The Farm One of the Sub-Alliances of Rowan county had a pic-nlc last Saturday; They had music, a big crowd, a big dinner and big speeches. jThe Charlotte Chronicle had a full account.as it always does of any matter of importance. Dr. D. ReldParkerof Trinity College was present and addressed the crowd. He spoke chiefly upon' the necessity of making the country life pleas ant for the children. He said speaking of the farmers, you think it strange when your boy runs away, from home, but you let that old front gate V rot and swing around on one hinge, and every ' time j your boy comes home he has to prop , it up to keep it from falling down. Thai miserable old gate drives Mm away, or perhaps at nigns wnen it was raining, and the barn yard is muddy and sticky and slimy, you tell your boy to go and cut the feed for the horses. He goes out and gets into the rickety old ; barn, with two sides about ready to fall down; he thinks about the hardship of climbing up into the loft and cutting the feed with the feed cutter one of these miserable, damnable, up and down feed cutters. Then he thinks of bis father sitting by the big, blaz ing fire, with his shoes , off, warming his feet. No wonder the boy throws a handful of hay into the rack, and grab s up a few hucks and pitches them into the trought and leaves. i "Well son, did you feed the horses ?" "Yes sir." "Did you cut ud the feed ?" "Yes sir." Well, the boy lied, and you taught him to do it ; and you'd have lied under the same cir cumstances. I think Capt. Fisher struck the key note when he said to you mothers "sweep your own floors." Kep your floors clean, make your home life pleasant for the children. The happi ness and prosperity of this country depends more than anything else, upon the count ry home.. Wherever I go I try to bring about harmony in the homes I visit. I saw a man hoeing in a field one day. : I saw him bring his hoe down and heard it hit the ground "ranker," and I knew from the way it hit, and from the way it sounded, that it had Btruck one of these sassafras sprouts. I saw him raise it up and bring it down again, "ranker" louder than ever. Then 1 saw the smoke rising from the back of his neck, and I knew he was cussing all in side. I'went up to him, and took him to the house, and helped him to sharpen his hoe and sent him on hisway re joicing. Now, young ladies, if any of these boys come around court ing you, the first chance you get you go and look at their woodpiles and their axes, and if the axe is dull, and has big dents in it, you give him tile go-by. " i ' . " You can always tell a self-made mau by finding the name of the maker blown, as it were, in the bottle. None are genuine without this mark. A REMINICENCE. GEN SICKLi ES TO i FRONT AGAIN JTHE Sow he ia Remembered in North Carolina . The Governor of New York has appointed Gen. Daniel E. Sickles Sheriff of New York city in plaoe of the disgraced and ; currupt Flack. The ap pointment was a great surprise to the politicians. While a democrat and a member of Tammany, Gen. Sickles had taken no active part in .politics for several years and his name had not been mentioned in connection with ' the , posi tion. The people of North Carolina will remember Gen. Sickles as the Military Commander , in charge of this State and South Carolina in 1867. He was in Raleigh in that year, the guest of Governor Worth, and was one of a party of distinguished visitois who atttend the com mencement exercises at the niversity with President ohnson. After his visit to Raleigh, where h was invited by the Governor in order, if possible, to secure pleasant and amicable relations between the civil and military authorities, he invited Governor Worth, of North Carolina, and Governor Orr, of South Carolina, to pay him a visit at Columbia where he had his headquarters. Anx ious to secure and preserve pleasant relations, the Governor of North Carolina said to the Governor of South Carolina ''Let's . accept the invitation." Accordingly it was accepted. The Chronicle has heard that General Sickles was a great stickler for all the ceremonies of fashionable life, and that every day during the visit of the Governors, four hours was the time required for dinner. Music played while the party dined. After a day or two Governor Orr whispered to the Governor of North Carolina: "Worth don't you wish you were at home eating jowl and greens ?" This is really whit the Governor of South Carolina said to the Governor of North Carolina. It was just after the war, and during Reconstruction and the Governors of the Caro- Unas had not been accustomed to "fare sumptously every day," and the great style did not win them as it might not have done in more peaceful days. They were too anxious about the future and too troubled , over the poverty and dejectment of their people to enjoy such high living and such display. Gen. Sickles is . remembered here as a great dude. He was as careful about tue set of his tie and the polish on his boots as a young girl is about the impression she will make on her first appearance, iu a train. He dresses three times a day and could not lounge in his room without his luxurious velvet dressing gown. Our people did not like him and it was not expected they should. He represented the mailea hand of military rule, and that rule was detestable tp our peo ple. He abolished civil rule at will and was dictorial. Withal he was better than Camby. But we have tried to forget those days and forgive the officers who were . over us . and who usurped power. The New York Hearld says that Uen. bicaies is "intolerant of injustice, open in his dealings and outspoken in his manner." . He was minister to Spain at ter the war and has also been civil service commissioner iu New York, and is an earnest belieyer in the principle and practice of Civil Service Re form;. It is likely he will put an end to the abuses which have'r brought the Sheriff and the Sheriffs office in that city into merited disgrace. His ex perience, in North Carolina will enable him to ran rough shod over and authority or deputies that oppose him. state Chron icle. THE HOLT FAMILY- All Making Money Manufacturing C"tt"n. Mr. Lawrence Holt, a'wealthy North Carolina cotton manu facturer, is living at the Metro litan Hotel. He is one of six brothers of a remarkable f ami-' ly. His elder brother is Lieu tenant Governor of North Caro Una, and the six brothers own, in severalty, a cotton factory in different, sections of the State. They are enterprising, tmblic-sDirited, successful busi ness men. Mr. Holt represents a Southern syndicate of cotton manufacturers, and is making Washington his headquarters. Washington Post. 1 Houston, Tex., Oct. 8th. 1889. Messrs. Wallace O'Leary & Co., Agents Wm. Radam's Microbe Killer; - Gentleman I bave been using the Microbe Killer for malarial fever and general debiliny, and write you a certify that t am again strong a nd healthy and am satis fied tbe Microbe Killer is a sure remedy for those diseases. R. E. Lewi . Prop. Capital Stablee. For Sale by V. Herring. HOW GEOVEB PEOPOSED. Mrs. Cleveland Beveals Some oi the Secrets of Their Courtship. I am able to give some inside information about ex-President Cleveland's romance. At the time ot the wedding the mouths of the President and his wife were as tight as that of a clam concerning their love affair. None of their friends knew much about their courtship, and they went on the priuciple of the great ! German proverb that 'speech is silver, but sil ence is golden." The wedding is still gossiped about here, and the women pronounce it a love match, while the men invaria bly take the ground that the White House had a good : deal to do with Mrs. Cleveland's acceptance. It seems- that the men are somewhat in the right, and a lady who lately returned from a wedding trip to the con tinent gives one of my friends conversation which she had with Mrs. Cleveland not long ajco. The story as it comes to me is quite spicy and I do not vouch that the repoit of the talk is verbatim. I give it as 1 hear it. iho lady said: "I met Mrs. Cleveland, shortly after I landed in New York and one of the first questions she asked me was to pray tell her how long I was engaged before was maried. "I answered her and told her the story of our courtship. She istened with interest and when I was through ! conclud ed that I would learn something from her in return. I asked: " 'Mrs. Cleveland, I have seen ?reat many stories about your marriage and the most that I have seen have been con tradicted by your friends. I have told you my story and now I want ycu to tell me yours. How 1' : r were you en gaged to the i'lident before you were married ?" 'Mrs. Cleveland laughed and blushed and said: '.'Oh, there are the most ridiculous stories to!d about us, but honestly thsj are hardly as funny as it really was. Uncle Grover proposed me five times before : I accepted him. First, when I was fourteen and I just aligned at the idea, for he seemed so much older. Then agaiu two years later, when I went to college; and the third time when he was elected Gov ernor of New York. I was by uo meaps ready to marry any one, ana ne let tnings go ior a year, or until he was nomina ted for the Presidency, lhen he asked me again, and again I refused. At last he was elect ed and I promised to marry in a year. Of course I always meant to marry him some day but I'll own the White House had something to do with hurrying it up." New York Letter. , THE CENSUS- The Supervisors and Their Territo- !' ' ries. First district orge vv Cobb, of Elizabet 7 v City super, visor, r ( Counties Beaufort, Bertie, Camden, Carteret, Chowan Craven, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Greene, Hertford, Hyde, Jones, Lenoir. Martin. Pamlico Pas- qudtauk, Perquimaus, Pitt, Tyrrell and Washington Second 'district Madison Hawkins, of Henderson super visor. Counties Chatham, Durham Edgecombe, Franklin Halifax, Johnston, Nash, Northampton, Orange; Vance, Wake, Warren, Wayne, and Wilson. Third district ' Caleb P. Lockey, of ; Wilmington super visor. :. ' - Counties Bladen, Brunswick Columbus, Cumberland, Duplin Harrnett, Moore, New Hanover Onslow, Pender, Roberson Rich mond and Sampson. Fourth district William E. Webb, of Roxborough, super visor. Counties Alamance, Anson, Cabarrus, , Caswell, Davidson, Davie, Forsyth, Granville, Guil ford, Iredell, Mecklenburg, Montgomery, Person, Randolph Rockingham, Rowan, Stanley, Stokes, Surry, Union and Yad kin. j " Fifth district Henry Hard wick, of Asheville, supbrvisor. Counties Alexander Alle ghany ,Ashe,-Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Catawba, Cherokee, Clay, Cleveland, Gaston, Gra ham, ! Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, - Lincoln Mc Dowell, Macon, Madison, Mit chell, Polk, Rutherford Swain Transylvania,' Watauga, Wilkes and Yancey. Powerful Freight Engircs. ' i : ' A very satisfactory test of a new engine on the Fort Wayne road was made last week. The engine pulled a train of eighty six cars, each car loaded with 63,000 pounds of iron ore, from Conway to Pittsburg, a distance of iwenty-flve miles. Consid ering the grades, tbe result is regarded as remarkable by railroad mer. Tl:e latest cars on the Peasyivania lines are very large, and the road has been prepared to carry tbem. New York Telegram. xe NEWS OF A WEEK. '.' :o:- - I WHAT IS UAPFENISG IN IHE WORLD AROUAD WS. Condensed Report of the New . From our Contemporaries. New Berne is' now lighted by electricity. There are 3,500 'domesticated" Judiau in tbe State. - Hon. F. H. Buabee will be Memo, rial Day orator at Raleigb. The congressional campaign in the State promises to be spicy. A negro is in the jail at Elizabeth Oily charged with rocking a train. A german corp weighing nine pounds was caugbt near Mor ganton last week. Alamance county has fifteen cot ton mills, consuming, in round nu mbers, 20,000 bates of cotton. A little son of Joseph Edwards was killed in Davidson county by a tree falling on him last week. Walter Murphy, ol Salisbury.has received from Hon. J. S. Henderson, an appointment to the. naval academy. ' It is proposed to to bave a public library in Lhelby of 20,000 books to cost $500. Tbe editor of the Aurora offers $50'. . The Newton Enterprise adverts to the fact that lor each oi three years past March has' been the coldest month of the year. Hon. G. W. Saunderlin, State Auditor, will deliver tbe commence ment address of Greenville Insti tute on Friday, June 6th. A repoit is in circulation that an English bynaieate has an agent traveling through this State mak ing arrangement to buy up all tbe cotton factories. The priest oftheCatholiccburch In Raleigh 'sys he believes ex- Boyle bas gone to Scotland . for tbe purpose of entering the TrapLiet Monastery there. v , - . Fayttteville has invested f 125,000 within tbe lust six months iu small industries. No wonder the old town ha9 taken on new life and growth. j A few days ago, during a thun der storm, a negro child, in Win ston, was struck by lightning while in its mother's arms and instantly killed. The child was on'y a few months old. a. It has again been decided - to locate the Bapti tFemaie Universi ty at Raleigb, but the city will be asked to ante op 150.000, which was the amount offered , by Dur ham. The Dm ham Med icated Cigar ette Counprny has been organized. with $10 000 stock capital with I Col. R. R. Bridgers president and Dr. R. F. W uitehurst secretary and treasuiy. j A large deposit of phosphate rock has bevun discovered in Cumberland county, not far frooS Fayetteville, and a specimen has been sent to the State Geological Department for examination. ' UuipuBOunty now enjoys the distinction of having the finest courthouse, in the State, put Cbero keufs getting her ambition up, and isaalking of , building a $50,000 courthouse, of native marble.which will eclipse Union. The Baptists of tbe State, aggre. gating about 130,000, give annually $30,000 to beuevolent purposes. Wake Forest, the Baptist College, had the largest representation at the Young Men's Christian Asso ciation Convention recently held at Goldsboro. ! . Mr. Emanuel Nifong, a citizen resident about ten miles South of Lexington, owns a mare which gave birth to twin colts last week a mule and horse. Was- the like ever beard of before 1 We pause for an answer. Can-Chatham beat it ! Lexington Ledger. A gentleman of Stokes county has- received letters from Gen. Thomas E. Ewing and Senator T. B Plumb, of Kansas, making in quiries after the mineral resources of that county and other counties through which the piesent roads and tbose projuected shall pass. Tub case of State vf. Mag Bash, a disreputable colored woman, for the abduction of Eloise Chisenhall, a little wt.ite girl tried before Jus tice Busbee last week in Durham; wps one of quick and swift justice. The defendant was bound over to court about noon.' and before tbe court adjourned in the afternoon she was tried, convicted and i sen- senced to the penttentiary for 12 years. : The railroad brxlge at Greenville has b en completetkand the trains are now running regularly into Greenville. The grading of the road i nearly H not quite com pleted between Kinsto'n j aud Greenville, and work will soon be commenced laying the track. ! Mr H. Walters, President of the A- C, Line, expects to have the road com' pleted and running regular sched ule to Kin ston by August. Tbe longest Height tratn, it is said, that has ever been pulled into Goldsboro, was brought in here, local, from Wilmington Thursday evening by Engineer Capt St;eve Merediththeonly originalSteve." The train numbered fifty-cars; and packing it away on ' the yard herjB, for the "lie over" Thursday night, was no email job. Goldsboro Argus. 1 1 : The Twin City Daily says : Dr. Ham Sullivan, of GermantOD, i warded the wesfernbound Y. F. & Y . V. trsin as it was leaving the depot at liiiii pl.ico Saturday even ing with a view of riding a short distance up the road When the train was crossing Buffalo creek trestle tbe Doctor concluded it was good place to jump off, mistaking the water for sand be walked down to the bottom nf the platform and made a jump, landing in . tbe mid dle of the creek about thirty feet below. The Doctor was painfully but not seriously hart, ' a -' The Morebead Banking Compa ny baa the youngest stoekholdor in the State. He is about nine years eld and his name is Ates. v Pinnix. He sold his pony some time ago and converted the pro ceeds into bank stock. He has an eye to business and seems destined to be another Durham millionaire Miss Elise V. Lee, a Presbyterian missionary, of Mills River, Hender son county, left the first day ot April for Matamora, I Mex. She speaks - Spanish and Italian j H i ently, and during her residence in Itlay translated inio English sever al Italian books. I She goes cuder the auspices of the Presbyterian Mjssion Board and wili jotii other missionaries in Mexico. Adam Brewer, quite an old am crewer, qnue an old mai. Saturday., This is the oM who wasstruckby the train died rf h.T, "f.r:"J '-"I ",u h 1. Bfi- " .if"!1 paid for it and took a receipt, j As it was his special ; request that no preacher shold be summoned at his death, he was buried on Sunday evening without any funeral ser vices. Concord Standard. FCSTAL CAES ST A Hecent Important Decision Leas than two years i ago Congress passed an act making it a criminal offence to mail a postal containing written or printed matter of a "libellous, scurrilous, . defamatory or threatening character or calcu lated and oblivoualy intended to reflect injuriously upon the character or conduct of anoth er." The penalty for a viola tion of the law is a fine not "exceeding five; thousand dollars, imprisonment! for not more than five years or both fine and imprisonment. Under this statute a St. Louis business man was indicted for maillnsr these two postals to a customer. - "Please call and settle ac count, which is long past due 3 m i. - 1 1 . y auu ior wuiuu; our collector lias been several' times." ) To this the customer evident ly paid no attention, asflie fol lowing. -was sent tchim six days later "You owe us $1.80. We have called Beveraltimes for the same. If nojpaid at once we shall placdthe same with oar law agency for collection." TheTJnited States District Court hold that the sendine of first was no, but that the I mailing of the second was- a criminal offence. The reason given for the distinction is that the second contained a treat to sue, which "both calculated and intended to humiliate and in jure the person addressed- in public estimation," while the first was not open to this ob jection. Of the first Judge TnAYEH says : 'The language employed is not of a threatening character, and, in my opinion, no injury would be warranted, in finding, in view of its com- v.s,- that . it was obliviously intended by the writer to refleci, injurioaly on the character or conduct of the person addressed, or to in jure or degrade him in the eyes of the public; It is true that it contains de mand for, the payment of a debt and says it is long past due and that a collector has called several times, but is couched in respectful terms and no intent is aparent to put it in such a form as to attract notice or to;, make it offensive to the person addressed." I ' ' . In view of this decision, which we think is carrying the law to an extreme hardly war ranted, business men will find it prudent either to enclose de mands' for money In sealed en velops or to be careful about what they write on postal cards. A Noval Advrtisempnf- The following story, which has never before appeared in print, is" told about the editor of one of Maine's most promin ent dailies: When a small boy, his father, now one of the most prominent men iu the State, was then running a printing and publishing a weekly paper in one of the 1 largest towns in Kennebec County. One day the advance agent of a show came along and ordered some posters printed on cotton cloth. His order was Allied, but for some reason he neglected to call for them, and they were thu3 left on the printers hands. The : printer's wife ran across them, and as cloth was, then high, she took the cloth home and used it to' line a pair of pants she. was then making for the editor above mentioned, then a boy about ten years of age. :' . j ! : As the-months-rolled by the 'pantaloons grew threadbare, and at school one day he ac cidently tore the Beat out, leav ing about one foot of lining ex posed to view. This in itself would have made the boys smile but they laughed till the tears came when they observed the following words, standing out boldly npon the lining in large type: j 1 "Doors open at 7:30 perform ance begins at 8." v ! It is needless ' to state- that the boy was sent home to hig mother in teara. Globe. 1 Lack never gets drop do wn. j ripe enough to HOME CHAtT 3vaTc?;B 01718 , A GOOD SCGGETIOM hlv.eeoIglmap3 of th ; waning every countv frnm mountain to s,v, rr "-l.ff001 If any in tins Luion cau aflonl fY uZr ,VU , W N6rrolinS Ivtter. -Danbury Reporter. . Tuey ought to. Jr? negroes ! hT...,Y;.V ', : are going to T'" "iter than its i ccr urawn before. tend to freeze nn 7h C. J lnH p Tader? i,te Ee" !,o,eJ lVT They ins U0US5:1 intention oul-v ,or mcn of their ovi viiuru IilV j t-TIIoLDs TEE LAW. 1 Let ns uphold the law but let us always omleuin any "cheering" of huertiues and anvthin tw r,... .r . maius a nero pf.jnan whose own confessions must for ever damn him in the esteem of all good men. This mawkish sens timentfthty has already gotton too strong ii bold ni bur country. Let all good citizens froirudown upon it, and treat a criminal as the na ture of his ciime deserves.- State Cnrouicle. SAME DOWN SHIS WAY. ' MI.",ifi1,ei newspaper' f.on.iu.uiu ui uoerty." uenrv m,v.uu leierreu 10 "It as -me wingfa encyclopjedia" and Chauncay M. Depew has Just characterized it as "the historian ot the hour.'' Moat -people eeem to regard it the free pack horse of the comuiunty something that may be ruid?u at pleasure by evrev individualwho has a nelflah end ,to acooiut lisU lienderson uoki ijeat. NOTE'OF.WAliXISO. cue, the Observer desires to n record as oimosinz in torn ie sale of hundreds and thousand of acres of lanil in Eastern North Carolina, the property of the school fund of the State, for a mere song. The fact that timber ed lands iu North Oaioliua are a good investment no one will doubt fop -a moment; that thev are beiher sold for less than their real value is shown :bv the fact that lari? bodies, have been recently disoosed of at less for less than one dol- lar an acre Favetteville Obser ver, ,! .. , THOSE GOVEKNIMNT WAREHOUSES There are not enough of rcspec tab'e white Republicans under a Republican adiniuistiation now to fill the pohtoflie.es and' revenue offices and the custodians of the bonded warehouses! iu the South would bav'ivto be negroes or North ern caipof begsen? m0re jjfceiy the latter., Imagine just for a moment another horde, of carpet baggers swooping down upon us from the North or that other and more sickeui'ug spectacle of negroes standing ui our market places, handling our money and cotton and grain. The, sig' the heart. iSurely farmers have not ser; ed what they are as!. th sicken 1 Southern i y consider , for. San lord bxpressi. ' - Mercurial Pcisan, Mercury Is fVeqaently injudis ciously used by quack doctors in cases of Mula.ria aud blood poison. Its after effect, is worse than the original disease, B. B. B. (Botanic Blood' Balm) contains no murcury pOison from this-'system. Write to ', Blood Balru Co., Atlanta, Ga., for : book of convincing proof of its cur? ative virtue. , A. F. Button, Jackson, Tenn4 writes; "1 caught malaria in Louis- ana, and wbeu tuie lever at last broke my'sysiem. was satured with poison, and l( had sores in my mouth Jand knots on my tongue. , I got two bottles of B, li. B., which healed my tongue-and mouth and niadifii new man of me." ' . Win. Richmond, Atlanfa, Ga., writes : "My wife could hardly see. Doctors called it syphilitic irita. Her e;,Q in a drediul condition. Her appetite filled. She has pains in her joiuts and bne.s- Ilerkld nes were deranged also, and no one thought s!xo could bo cured. Dr. Gillam recommended B. B. B., which she. used until her health was entirely restored." V It. P, li. Jones, Atlanta, Ga., writes; "I was troubled wi'.h copper colored eruptions loss of appetite ' pain iu back, achina joiuts, dehility- emaciatiou, loss of hair, sore throat aud .'great nervousness.'. B, B. B put my systefu in fine condition." ! A Kis'.aksn 'lMin. ,1 Some iui?guided people be lieve that slavery iu this coun- ' try was abolished at the end of tbe Civil War. Such people, have never seen a 2-year-old baby and h'u grandfather t0 g e the r . S u in ei s vi 1 1 e Jo urnal. ' ; Easy to Surf- .It is a Wetrn editor who remarks that a newspaper aHd a family are tha easiest things in this world to start. Bringing them up is where the rub comes. i ' The Chatham Kecord won't be ; "downed"'' on good stories as is attested by, tbe followed ; The oldest-rnaa that -we know of in this section of the State is Mr. Charles Cox, vho Jives near Moore aud Chatham line; Ilia age is 104 .years, as is recorded in his father's r. ."family Bible, which is still in tbe . possession of his Bister. His oldest son is now in Georgia, .and is 75 yearrf old. lie ia wonderfully prs . served both in body and mind. He is very fond of fishing and often walks three miles to go ' a fishing.. Ilis voice is so strong that be cau be heard to calf hogs three nu.es. He never needed the. use of spec taclea, -,