$1.50 A YEAR CASH IN ADVANCE LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM ST AT, BE THY COUNTRY S, THY GOD S, AND TRUTH S. THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ( VOLUME XXIII. Far-Seeirtff- 1 le Visit 'Sfr jit, - w This is Straw Hit Week with us. We are almost giv- them away.. We arry the inn do not intend , to c over one hat if price will 'move it. New lot of . Ladies Oxford Ties just re ceived. Also Holland Shades and Laces. The Cash Racket Stores, J M. LKATII, Manager. ' Nash and Goldsboro Streets, WILSON, N. C. Si:i THE WORLD'S FAIR FOR FIFTEEN CENTS. ,'Ujwm receipt of your address and fifteen cents' in postage stamps we will mail you prepaid our Sovenir PokTFULIO OF THE WORLD'S COL imi'.iax Exposition, the regular price is Fifty cents, but as we want you to have one, we make the price nominal. You will find it a work of art and a thing to be prized. It con tains full p:ie views of the great fniiidinos, with descriptions of same, ami is executed in highest style of art. If not satisfied with it alter you t;et it, we will refund the stamps and let you keep the book. Address H. E. Bucklf.n & Co., - Chicago; III TItlKlcr Joke's l-nst (aR. I-' 'Yes," she said with a merry lauoli, "we church fair are going to have You will come course. "Can I get something to eat ?" "Yes, yuu can have a lovely oys ier stew." . -. "But you can't serve Oysters now." "I know that.. We always leave the orsters out and only serve the Stew part after April." '. O. Kriliu-es lUn WiMr Fair lUU The Chespeake ' and Ohio has placed on sale a World's Fair ticket which is sold daily at one fare for the round trip, the rate being $19 from Richmond and $17 from Lynchburg. Thcsi; ticket:; are limited .to fifteen days from date sold and do not per mit holders to occupy sleeping cars. They are good, however, for first class passage in the handsome vesti bule coaches of that company. For full information pertaining to rates. World's Fair matter, &c., ad dress John D. Potts, Division Passen yti Ajjeht, Chesapeake and Ohio railway, Richmond, Y'a. A Test Insisted on. "Missouri has a new law, making it a penal offense for a husband to . desert his wife until he has lived with her ten years,", remarked Squildig. " What do you think of that ?" "I suppose the legist&lors think - that it a man's love hasn't decayed "1 ten years it will last a lifetime," replied McSwilliwn. Men That Jump ' :'t. conclusions,' are generally "off their, base." Because there are num ers ot patent medicines of question able value, it doesn't follow that all: ""'ire worthless. Don't class Dr. Safe's Catarrh Remedy with , the tisual rim of such remedies. It is . way above and beyond them ! It is .oiiig what others fail to do ! It- is curing- the worst cases of Chronic Nasal Catarrh. If you doubt it, try U. If you make a; thorough trial, you 11 be cured. $500 forfeit for an ' incurable case. This offer, by World's pispensary Medical Association, ouftah, N. Y. At all druggists 5 50 cents. The purch ising power of a dollar is not measured by the cents it con t;iins, but rather by the sense of its possessor. ' . Peopl Till! fell Racket Stores. CONSTIPATION Is called the "Father of Diseases." It is caused by a Torpid ..Liver, and is generally accompanied with LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, BAD BREATH, Etc. To treat constipation successfully It is a mild laxative and a tonic to the digestive organs. By taking Simmons Liver Eegulator you -promote digestion, bring on a reg ular habit of body and prevent Biliousness and Indigestion. "My wife was sorely distressed with Constipa tion and coughing, followed with Bleeding Piles. After four months use of Simmons Liver Regulator she is almost entirely relieved, gaining strength : and flesh." W. B. Lkkpkk, Delaware, Ohio. Take only the Genuine, Which has on the Wrapper the red 25 Trade, mark and Signature of POETRY. AFTKK A 1. 1.. She loves me now. She kneels beside ( my bed, . " Her precious kisses- bless my hands, j my brow ! . , There is no shame for such a passion j now, : For I am dead. The blinds are drawn ; the cross is at my head. And through the window, just two inches raised, There steals all sweets that ever birds have praised, But I am dead.. My ills are all forgiven, with faltering " tone, Love, where least looked tor, finds some good to say And are all kind, as on a child's birthday No faults are known. With streaming eyes and piteous bent head, She comes too late. Not even that word is sad. I do not know. I do not wish I had, ' i Now I am dead. I cannot answer to her agony. In this great space of peace it makes no stir. And in good time the Lord will com fort her Who comforts me. Atlvire tit Moliiern . Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup sl o i!d always be used foi children teething. It soothes the child, sof tens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for d:arrhoe. Twenty five cents a bottle Tom Anjery, a student, applied to the professor fjr pei mission to be absent. t I should like to be excused this af noon, as I want to take -my. sister out driving." "Want to take your sister out driving, do you ? Is she any rela tion to you ?" St to S peek. Woman is wonderfully made ! Such beauty, grace, delicacy and pur ity are alone her possessions. So has she weeknesses, irregularities, functional derangements, peculiar only to herself. To coirect these and restore to health,' her wonderful organism requires a restorative es pecially adapted to that purpose. Such an one is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription-r-possessing curative and regulating properties to a remarkable degree. Made for this purpose alone recommanded for no other 1 Continually growing in favor, and numbering as its staunch friends thousands ol the most intelligent and refined ladies ol the la id. A posi tive guarantee accompanies each bot ; tie.-- at vour druggists. Sold on trial! Frankiii-H Willi a Veiigeanre. Some ladies never, never can un derstand that a man of letters should sometimes be left alone in his den. Byron himself says that, however . much in love he might be at any mo- j ment, he always felt, even when with . the fair, a hankering to be back in i his untidy library. There is a story of Lady Byron's entering the den and asking : "Do I disturb you, Byron?" "Yes, damnably," an swered Childe Harold, in an intelligi ble, if not a pardonable, irritation. You feel faint and, week in the stom ach no appetite. Take Simmons Liver Regulatnr. C ATI S FACTION Is guaranteed to, every consumer of HOOD'S Sarsaparilla. One hundred doses in every bottle. No other does this. The idea of being questioned by a woman lawyer was a huge joke to the large burley Irishman, until she be gan to ques ion him on personal mat-1 ters, when, assuming a suspicious air, he remarked, "1 don't know your intentions, mum but I'm a mar ried man" ! WILSON, KILL ARP AND THE jiEEiS. A Higger Thinj Wli'u !im riigUl No Than Hiim-iaiiKiii or i'roe CViim.fra. (Atlanta Contitatiim.) There is one good thing about ret ting1 stung by a lee. It makes yoii forget all other troubles for a-little while. I have had lots of fun with these bumble bees for the last few days and it renewed my youth. Time was when I thought it a big- thing to light "yeller jackets" and take my chances with the other boys. The bravest boy was the biggest fool and would stay at the hole the. longest and thresh all the leaves off of his brush and get stung before he surrendered. I am not that brave now and I light with exceeding caution, but I have killed over two hundred in two days and fought fair and square. My weapon is a criim pan and I take "em coming and going, b.ut they crowd lac sometimes- a. rid. "my antics j attract' " attention among tha nabors,' for they can see me in the iip stairs piazza, and one good lady in quired if Major Arp was subject to fits. The bees .come out where, tha weatherboarding joins the floor and my repeated assaults have made them mad generally.,; Up . to this time they have slung even- .member of the family, even to the little grandchild who lives with us, and I'm going to exterminate thein if it takes all sum mer. We tried hot water, but it will not reach them.' .lust think of that poor little child going round with, one eye closed and afraid she will lose the other one; and Mrs. Arp's head all swelled up with two bumps . that a phrenologist couldn't diagnose. ! We can't sit in the downstairs piazza , with any security. It is a bigger i thing right now than bimetallism or 1 free coinage or the tabernacle meet ing. In fact, -it is a relief from poli ties to tight bees and- -Study them in ! the books. I wish the editors vpuld holdup awhile -"and go to the woods and fight yeller jackets or wasps or hornets and get. stung a few times. It would be a'Telief to the country and I have heard that such stings are good for rheumatism or any nervous affec tion and 1 know' that it takes the con ceit out of a ihan for a while. I My book says that the 'proper name j is "humbleb-je," but there is no hu- ! mility about these at- ray' house, j Thefe are from 70 to. :50ft in a colony j and so I know I have nearly whipped j the light. They live only- one summer I and never rebuild in the same place. The books sa3r there are three kinds ' the masons and the carpenters and the digsrers, but what they are good for I don't know unless it is to make a man more willing to quit this world and preuare himself for another. . If there were no snakes and tarantulas and stinging things and deadly con-, tagions and demagogues and thieves ' land fusses we woukieiii ..want another world. . I The little honey b is a trump and a wonder from stein to stern. It is good to ruminate about their wisdom and skill and their government. Just think of or. queen being the mother ; of 20,000 and controlling them all more .absolutely.- than ' any "-human mother controls her children. Just think, of 11,.")IX) workers ; and only 500 drones in a colony. These drones are the gentlemen, and remind you of our gentlemen loafers and swells who set about on the piazzas of the hotels and watch the girls go by. nt the drones don't enjoy themselves but a month or two. The queen gets tired of them and gives her orders and then tho massacre of St. Itartholomew begins. In an hour's time every one is slain stnng to death by the workers, and their puffy, bloated carcasses dragged out and tumbled on the ground: . There is no little thing in nature more wonderful than the h one y comb that these little workers make. Its .Mathematical construction gives the most space with the least enclosure, the arched top and lwttom of every cell, the exact and uniform thickness of every division, and the wisdom shown in shaping- the whole store house to suit the shape of the hive, is indeed, marvelous. Then there is the division of the workers into brigades and regiments and companies some to gather honey, some to make wax, some to build cells, some to stand guard, some to wait cn the queen and be hev escort as she moves around, and a whole regiment to keep their wings going like revolving fans and supply fresh air in the .hive.' That fan busi ness makes the humming that is heard in the hive day and niyht. It is the flutter of the wings of the fanners. How in the world they do everything in the dark is a wonder to me. I was talking to my friend, Mr. IJussey, about it on the train some time ago, and he told me confidentially that he was experimenting tcTsee if lie couldent cross honey bees with lightning bugs and get up a bee that could see .how to work at night or in the .dark. lie T.as applied for - a pateist on the idea, but whether he has succeeded or not in his experiment I have not heard. He was very sanguine, and the only trouble, he said, was about the cross finding room in the tail for. the fireworks and the sting too. Up Mr. Uussey is an engineer on the State road, and knows what he is about. The sting of the bee is said to be the most perfect war weapon ever invent ed. Itis exquisite in its -'mechanism. It is a hollow tube, and yet the point of the iinest cambric needle is immense when compared, with it. Under the microscope the sting is perfect in its shape and smoothness so much so that the point is almost invisible, whereas the point of the needle under the same glass looks like, a great rough crowbar with seams and ruts and ridges all over it. This is the differ ence between the works of (Jod and man. And yet the Almighty hand that made the little bee with his wonderful instincts and attachments made the universe the. boundless, limitless uni verse, where therer are stars to be seen by the Lord Ross telescope, whose li-ht takes tiO.oOO years to reach us. Contemplate that for a moment, ye lit tle conceited minds, who think it smart Fond Parent, match - pennies ? -"How Don't e. you know you that gambling is a crime ?' Bobby. 'What is , gambling, pop.' Fond Parent. "Indulging in a game of chance." Hobby. "Not "iiiltv, pop.' 1 have a penny with two head.-:." Don't take a summer girl on sight. WILSON COUNTY, N. C, SEPTEMBER 7 1893. o say, "Idou't brieve in Cod. I am an agnostlo." Sixty thousand ycau I e, JT ?, TSS : said that the star was m the near cage , of the universe. Ltght travels through j space at the rate of about 100,000 miles ! in a second of time, which is more than j ten bilious of miles in a day. Then ' count it for a year, and then for 60,000 j vears. and! give it up. We may well j exeiaim, "i-iora, wnat is man nun 1 , 1. ii . .. . . n ! , . i 1 r , , a a i liiuu art inmuiut 01 uuu. n is uu ; for us all to stop a little while now ; and then and ponder upon the works of creation, from .the little busy bee to the eonfines of that universe that we may some day occupy as spirits unfet tered by the tlesh. i But I must up and fight some more bumble1ees, for one has just stnng the dog, and he is rolling over in the grass . in a most tumultuous manner. DILL ARP. I SLEEP IS GOOD MEDICINE. Liberal In-Jnlcnoe Even Induces nesh. a,a Inventor Idiscn I'rovod. There in nothing like sleep to store tip nervous energy and put flenh on the bones, says the Phi ladelphia Pross. In an article "published f.ome years ago, and general jrcribed to Oliver Wen dell IlolmcS, it was recommended that nervous women be nut to bed anil com pelled to- day the while they wera fattenod with nutritious foods, jiv:t as a chicken ir, fattoucJ formarket. With the acquirement of fat and the Clling ipof the reservoirs of nervous strength the . Cdgety, emotional, whimsical woman will jjet tin froni her bed an other being. Thomas -A. Edison, the electrician, proved by, his own case now ucsn can oe acquirca ov sicen. ' One week he slept fourteen hours a day and the next week twenty-twc hours. The rccult was a gain of seven pounds in weight. A woman of only moderate physical strength was asked how she managed to attend to the large business f rxra which she gained support, and the answer was that she obtained it by sleeping ten hours sis days and spending the whole of the seventh day La bed. There has been a visible advance in the health of the American people during the past twen ty or thirty years. Their stock of vi tality has increased and they live longer. And while there are , other reasons for this change, the chief one Is that people sleep longer and rest more. The hours 'for work have grad ually grown fewer. Factory opera tives are no longer compelled to hurry to their work at five o'clock in the morning and ' work until seven o'clock In the evening. Business and professional men go to their counting-room 1 and offices an hour or more later and leave as much earlier in the -afternoon. The result ia more time for tdecp und heater health. But there is still more room for im provement in this way. .Walter Be sant, the English novelist, said a few weeks ago at Harvard university, when commenting on the 'graduating class: "A fine, noble looking lot of young men.. They are unlike our English university students physically. I think our young men, as a mIc, are bigger, heavier, stouter men. while yours have more nervous activity than ours. They are slighter and, perhaps, taller, but they seem to be more highly strung nervously." That is the trouble ivith a majority ot graduates. Not withstanding the growth of the athletic spirit in colleges, too many young men go out into life too "highly ' strung nervous'." There is no better medicine than good sleep and plenty of it, and many a boy and man is crippled in energy by an unwise habit of getting up too early in the morning. The American people would bo happier, there would be less crime committed if people slept longer. It is timo the so-called sluggard had his rights and the man who prefers his morning snooze to a morning cocktail is estimated at his proper value. ADMIRAL MELAIiOTHON SMITH. The Stirring- Career of a Keccntly De ceased Naval Veteran. Admiral Melancthon Smith, who died recently, came of an historic fam ily, for his grandfather was Alcxandjr Hamilton's chief opponent in the New York state convention which adopted the constitution, and his father, was a colonel in the war of 1812 and com manded Fort Moi'eau in the battle of Plattsburg, while an uncle was a cap tain in the navy and fought at Lake Champlain under HeDonough. The admiral entered the navy, in 1828 and saw all sorts of service on sea and on land, going round the world in 1S2S on board the Vincennes, commanding a fort in Florida during the Indian troubles, acting as executive ofjeer of the Pensacola navy yard, and serving as lighthouse inspector from Maine to Nantucket. When --the war broke out he received command of the steamer Massachusetts and helped to guard the passes of the Mississippi. October 25, 1801, ho had an engage ment with tho confederate steamer Florida and stopped her fire in an hour. At the passage of "the fort3 be low New Orleans ho commanded the ' Mississippi and ' destroyed the ram Manassas. At Port Hudson he lost hi3 ship, which grounded right under the fire of the enemy. He set her on fire and abandoned her. His nest ship wa3 the Monongaiicla, with which he par ticipated in the siege of Pert Hudson. In command of the Onondaga he co operated with Gen. Uutler at Dutch Gup. He had a hot engagement last ing two days at the mouth of the Hoanoke river with the ram Albemarle and two other boats, having a fleet of four small vcsscla besides the Onondaga under his command. During both at tacks 'of Fort Finher he commanded the frigate Wabash. v After the , war closed he was opmmander of the Wash ington and New -York navy yards and governor of the naval asylum at Phil adelphia. He was made a rear admiral In 1870 and retired the next year. - ' He had visited; very, port in the United States except that of California, been blown "up, had his ship burned and had had ' shots;, fired through his hat and. clothmg s without receiving a scratch. lie was a native of New York lity and was more than eighty-three pears old when he died. or. Malaria, Liver Trou ble. crIndigestion,usG -R0WN 1 S IRON BITTE3S Many people, not aware of the dangers of constipation, neglect the proper remedy till the habit becomes chronic, Cinflamation or stoppage results. A dose "or. two of Ayer's Pills in the beginning would have prevented all this Elder S. S. Beaver, of tycAllzMer- vill Juniatta Co., Pa., says bis wife subject to cramp in the stomach, T J . . , - lff summer she tried Chamberlains -9C, Cholera and Diarrhoea Reme- dy for it, and was much pleased with the needv relief it afforded. She has viirt.'e lmrrl if ivbnMTr noc fo ft j ... -f T" Mines. V TIQTJE BEAUTIESL Tha Marvelous Mountain Tributary of tho Colprcdo Ilivor. CIir.. and Howldcrs Which Bear th4 Trlnt of ArtUflo Hands of n Sly. ' tor:on:"nace tlotncB of Pro- Historic Cavo Owollcrs. Western newspaper correspondent hnvc for ycara, at irregular intervals, discoursed at some length upon the wonder.-; of the Rio . San Juan, and in the . 'category of the marvelous this mountain tributary of the great 'Col orado has taken its place by the side of the far-famed and mysterious Gila. The cliff ruins of tho San Juan valley have been the center of attraction, have been viewed from all sides, and their wonders have been told and retold to the world, time and time again. Scientific men have visited this region, have penetrated southeastern Utah, and have considered this valley a place cii osriRptrvl tntrivf.t Vfpn.ns t.h-K clifTs and cave dwellings are probably the oldest in this strange country, be ing the first built is that mysterious journey southward of a great and un known people. For twenty years the prospector has followed this bold little river and gazed with careless unconcern on the rough and broken walls, so full of in terest to the archaeologist; but tho mind of tho prospector has no room for curios, and be -Tias no time foi archreological investigation, 6ays a Phconix correspondent of the Cincin nati Tribune, lie sees only the glitter of the gold in the sand, and thinka only of the time when he shall have made his "stake." In November of 1SS2 hundreds bf gold hunters rushed mauly into the canyon north of the Nav ajo mountain, traveled three hundred miles over bleak, desert tablelands, suf fered terribly from cold, hunger, and the long, .wearisome journey; , in . a few days staked .oT all the available land for lifty miles up and down the river, and then returned homo without having obtained so much as color of gold, and to-day have nothing to show for t but the stakes. VJiethcr "this is a region that will ever sfior rich pay dirt the writer knows not, but he can say, without he.;ation, that it is one of the most wildly picturesque and beautiful re gions -in the world. The bleak old ?ajo mountain rises abruptly and f.riv'oVM li!rl rt rrvim fcfTlflnr.l rwry Vtrt surrounding pesa, while in a canyon gorge, more than 3,000 feet below its base, the Ilio San Juan appears like a Btk cr thread. The canyon is several miles wide, and a descent can be made to the river by a precipitous trail, but as the river apxroaches the great Col orado the canyon becomes more nar row." and the walls more perpendicular, and when it merges into tho grand canyon it is- scarcely more than a deep, dark channel. The' Navajo -mountain, the jutting buttes that l::ic the canyon's venre. the htge bowlders that are lodged on the canyon s si;ie, and t.ie straight walls 61 the canyon- proper are all points of wonderful interest, for they are tha canvas upon which are depicted soma of the meet r-trange and beautiful pic togrr.phs that have ever been discov ered in this, country. Nearly every bowlder a a picture gallery, and near ly every smooth .i.r.rfaco is covered with wyird ar.d fanta;'; tie figures. Oa the ciuantaht the-e continue to the very summit, and, as the crowning .piece, a huge tdoel: of sandstone stands on the top, the four tides presenting smooth surfaces. These faces are more than one hundred feet square, and on each face is a picture of the sun, with the figures of sevpn warriors bowed, as to tho earth, in prayer. Beneath tho warriors are- many hieroglyphic charac ters, probably a prr.j-cr to the sun god. On a bowlder, by the verge of the can yon, i.-i the picture of a woman-kneeling iii prayer to the sun. . . On one . of the canyon walls, micro than one hundred feet from anything that could have furnished the barbaric artist a foot or handhold, there is a weird ranoramic view in three scenes. Under a tree a child is sleeping. One little hand lies across its breast, while the other has fallen carelessly by its side. A few feet from the sleeping babe, a large snake, evidently a rattle snake, is coiled to strike. Down the canj-on, toward the west, is scene two. The snake is crawling away, and the limbs of the child are drawn as though in tho last convulsions of death. The snake has done its deadly work. Still further down the canon is- scene thrce. A jvarrior, evidently the father of the child, with one arm clasps his dead babe; with the other hand he holds a club. Upon his face the rude artist has depicted a look of mortal anguish and hate. . A snake lies dead at his feet. This is probably the most beau tiful picture: ever executed by savage hands. On one of the canyon 's walls a war rior and a maiden are represented, gayly tripping along, hand in hand, while two doves are circling around their heads. Pictographs of the bear in one place a bear followed by two cubs the dog, the mountain lion and the catamount are all to be found. Many of these are evidently of recent date, and have probably been executed by the Navajos. but here and there ona meets with a dim pictograph that bears evidence of great age. Emperor William and HU Gun. The German emperor, frequently has a week's retirement from the bustling world, and hides within the depths of the forest of Prockclwitz, where a small cottage is his abode, nestled be neath a splendid oak, with forest around him . for miles. There, while the dew is oh the forest, he starts forth gun in hand, with a brace of dogs and a sturdy forester, and at four o'clock he is at the best spot for" sport Then his majesty bangs away till eleven, when he wends his way homeward to his cot, eats and Bleeps awhile, after which he puts his signature to all the documents which require it, and have been duly forwarded to his lonely re treat from Berlin. Ambition is a loaded gun. A FATAL RIDE. The Brairds Refuse to Work and an Eleotrio Qax, Heavily Loaded, V MKES A WILD PLUXGE LOWS HILL Breaks a Telegraph Pole sad Craahea Into a Saloon Forty-Five People Injured Cincinnati the . Scene of (lie Disaster. Cincinnati, September 4, The most disastrous street car accident ever re corded took plaee in this city at 7 o'clock yesterday evenhrg. An electric ear dashed down a hill at frightful speed, left the track, broke a telegraph pole and shot into a saloon, wrecking bo,th it and tlie structure it struck. ' . - -. ' As a result of the collision two peo ple are dead, six injured beyond re covery and nearly forty more are hurt, many dangerously. It was soon after the Eden park Sun day afternoon concert had closed and Avondale electrie ear No. 644 was soon packed with' people, and Mot or man - George Divine ran without incident until he reached the grade a mile long that descends into the business part of the city. - Suddenly the brake,became unmanageable , and the heavy ear be gan to descend with perilous speed. 1 The frightened passengers were kept in their seats by force and persuasion while the car shot down the hill with awful velocity until it left the track, and smashing a telegraph pole which stood in its path into two : pieces, plunged into the saloon at 351 Broad way. . There were forty-five people in the car and not one of them escaped, in jury. The motor man claims that the car had attained 110 unusual momentum when the brake refused to do its office. Of the six fatally injured it is believed that not "one can survive for forty eight horirs, while others of the in jured may develop more dangerous wounds than appear at the first hasty examination. '. A PLUNGE TO DEATH. Caused by the Co.lap'n of a Railroad Rrldge In Mas:iehunttB. SrnixGriF.r.n: Mass.. September 1. A terrible accident to the Western ex press No. l'l, Boston and Albany rail road, due at Springfield at 1:14 o'clock, happened at the second raiload bridge east of Chester last mgh't. The bridge collapsed. '-..letting the - train through into the river below. Five cars went through. The train consisted of a buffet car, dining car, three, sleepers' and two Ordinary coaches. The bridge was over the west branch of the West field river. ' The train was runuiner at an ordina ry rate of speed-, as it left !Albany on time, and no danger was feared until the moment the b.-idge sank under the weight of the locomotive. The engine went through first and five palace ears were piled upon , it, one above another. The ill-fated train was one of the fastest expresses on the road, stopping only at Ppttslleld fi-6m Albany to Springfield. . 1 he buiTet car and two- sleepers arc a total wreck. The bridge was a two span lattice structure. 221 feet long. .Fifteen bodies have been taken out, two of them unidentified. It is be lieved that there are. two more in the wreck. . BOLD SCHEME OF ROYALISTS. They Again Planned to Keize the Goveru ' ment of Hawaii. San FnXxcisro, September 1. The Bteamer Alamede, just arrived trom Sidney, via Honolulu, brings news from, the latter place of a conspiracy of royalists having been arranged to restore the "queen on the 18th instant by forcing ; the city, dynamiting the public buildings and then in the panic rushing in and capturing the govern ment buildings. The government was apprised of the plot, and Admiral Skerret prepared to land his forces and assist in maintaining order. This frustrated the plans of the conspira tors who had enlisted . 300 natives as soldiers for the plan and had told them that the United states forces would help them. No public abarm was cre ated at the time and all continues quiet. - . RHE TREASURY DEPLETED. The Senlorase of Sliver in the Vaults to be Coined aa a Remedy. Washington, September 5. The United States treasury is depleted. But little over the -gold reserve re mains. Funds mvst, therefore, be raised at once. k President Cleveland and Secretary Carlisle had a conference yesterday and agreed that of all the plans pro posed the best was to coin the seijjnior age of silver now in the treasury. That amounts to S2".O0O,X)O. Mr. Car lisle talked with the leaders of both houses of congress about the matter today and found then) all in favor of the plan. - ' ' The Kpduciion Aeeepted. NASiiviia.K, Tens.- September 4. The Nashville. Chattanooga' and St. ."Louis employes presented to president Thom as a signed agreement accepting the 10 per cent reduction for ninety days, saying, among other things, "We are willing to bear our share of any bur-, dens falling .'on the railroad interests of the company, and in view of the present financial conditions, agree to receive for ninety days' 10 per cent less than our regular wages." A I-oujf K'd-5. . Sax Antonio, Tex. September 4. George Walter, the young bicyclist of this city, arrived home today from a trip to Chicago and Milwaukee and re turn, every mile ot w hich was made on his wheel. lie left here on Jnne 11th, The total distance traveled, as shown by the cyclometer, was 3,750 miles. Mr. J. C. Boswell, one of the best known and most respected citizens of lirownwood, Texas, suffered with diarrhcea for a long time and tried many different remedies without benefit, until Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diasrhcea Remedy was used; that relieved him at once. For sale by A.J.- Hines. Alcohol will grass Stains. effectually remove Highest of all in Leavenine THE NKWS OF THE WEEK. TneaUajr. August 9. ' Leonard Taylor, negro, was lynched at Newcastle, Ky., for the brutal mur der' of an Italian boy peddler. Colonel I.ouis J. Dupree, a prominent Journalist, died at Memphis, Tenn. Short crops in Europe will call for heavy shipments from this country. The public school fund for Georgia this year will amount to $1,055,532.52. Dr. John E. Wal ker, for many .years one of the most prominent physicians of middle Georgia, died at Greensboro. A Northern Pacific train was held up by robbers at Stillwater. Minn. Thiv were green hands at the business, and only got S52 On account of the failure of the wheat crop in western Kansas, an appeal has been issued for seed wheat for the an .fortanate farmers. It is reported that the striking min ers at Weir City, Kans., have 350 Win chesters stored at different places in the city, and. are expecting a shipment of 100 more this week. Wednesday, August 30. , Two Texas boys, fourteen years old, each, are walking for a wager to the world's fair. ;. " A party who claims to be a "conjurer" has so "bewitched" three negroes in Tennessee as to render them insane.. In one day at Bonham, Texas, the district court granted fourteen divorces and several . applications for divorce were dismissed. - At Castell, Texas, two strangers en tered the store of Theodore Buchaltz, put pistols to his head, and robbeilhim of $?00. A North Carolina girl was halted on the highway by three men. She whip ped out a pistol, ?and firing on the crowd, wounded one and put them all to flight. There lives near Charlestown, Md., an old woman who, is possessed of great natural healing powers, and who is said to have made remarkable cures of the most obstinate diseases by simply touching the patient with her hand: Thursday. August 31. On the stock exchange in New York a better feeling prevailed. A negro found a half dozen old Span ish silver dollars while plowing an old field in Terrell county, Ga. y Secretary Carlisle has called for the resignation of Internal Revenue Col lector Webster of South Carolina. Storm did great damage to crops all through North Carolina. - Tobacco, corn and cotton were severely injured. At Eudora, Miss., one of the gang of suspects has been identified - as, the bank robber who shot W. T. Ward at Greenville, Tex., in last January. . The commissioner of patents decided that Gov. Tillman's South Carolina liquors could not legally have a trade mark. President Cleveland telegraphed his thanks to Chairman Wilson and his as sociates for passing the bill repealing the Sherman law. . The possibility of serious trouble be tween France and England is again seriously talked of. V The understand ing between France and Iiussia is thoroughly established. " Friday, September 1, President Cleveland and family re turned to the capital. ' . A sixteen-year-old boy is in jail at Carrollton, Ga., for passing confederate money. ;'.''. j The net receipts of cotton for Savan nah for the season ending August 31 are 793,89 bales. John Price, the ravisher, who escaped from the officers of Fayette county, Georgia, was arrested at Cullman, Ala bama. ; Hon. "Marshall J. Clarke, for nine years judge of the Supreme Court at Atlanta, Georgia, has sent in his resig nation. The immense building of the Gray's Ferry Foundry and Boiler company, at Philadelphia, was destroyed . by fire. Loss $150,000. Gov. Tillman, of South Carolina, is sued a proclamation, calling upon the people to come to the relief of the suf ferers from the great storm in that state. - - - , , The machinists and shop men of the Louisville & 3 ash ville raij road at Bir mingham, Ala., went out on a strike, and say they will not submit to the re duction. Saturday, September 8. No new cases of fever reported at Brunswick, Ga., and the refugees are returning. ' Minister Blount left for Washington to confer with the President about Hawaiian affairs. There is talk of an extra session of the South Carolina legislature to enact a stay law. Savannah, Ga., is alarmed at the prospect of being invaded by 10,000 idle negroes thrown out of work in the tur pentine regions. Domino won the great $G5,000 Fu turity race at Sheepshead Bap, with Galilee as a close second. 12,000 wit nessed the race. ' South Carolina had six hangings yesterday among them the wealthy white man, George Turner, who killed his brother-in-law. " Monday. September 4. . 1 A heavy frost did considerable dam age in the northern part of New Hamp shire. The Emperor of Germany received a grand ovation at Metz, and the French papers speak bitterly of his visit. A train was held up near Mound Val ley, Kansas, the express Messenger killed, and all the passengers robbed. Despite the vigilance of customs offi cials along the Bio Grande border, the exodus of Chinamen from Mexico into this country continues unabated. The health officers announce that there is no probability of any more cholera at Jersey City, N. J. ' The last suspicious case turned out to be chol era morbus. Send us your job printing. NUMBER 36 Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report liinliiartgpajifion. September 23 rt . will be Knights of uonor riAv. roRKioN commissioners are to have ?? excursion as guests of the Greatf ioriuern into me wheat lields of the. northwest. If the fair is to pay its debts thcrd must be from now an average attendl ance of at least 100,000 people who pay1 their way. ' Daniel II. BrnNnAji, director of works of the world's fair, was elected president of the American institute of architects. 1 Anthony Comstock has filed a protest with President Higinbothnm , against continuance of the oriental dancing on Midway. 1 Hard times have served an injunc tion on the directors of the Columbian exposition, restraining them from all useless extravagance hereafter. . A r-REMMiNAUY organization has been effected by the committer of Irish American citizens of Chicago for tho reception of the lord mayor of Dublin September 10. j The council of administration is in-. vestigating the work of the secret service department, and jt is probable that a big cut will be made Jn the force ; of detectives. . The world's fair may be a financial failure, but Chicagoans will willingly sacrifice their contributions for tho knowledge that it is the Jhiatcst show . . i , ever on curio. A merchant on the Midway i'lais ance 'offers his store, stock, fixtures and good will to the man who will take them and pay the rent. This, may bo a bargain and then again it may not. Some newspapers still dwell on "tho projected visit" bf the emperor of Ger many to the United States and to tho Chicago exhibition. The time of the emperor is completely disposed of un-. til the end of October Possibly there may have been an intention on the' part of the kaiser in the beginning of the vear to visit theworld's fair, but for .some months that intention, if it ever existed, has been definitely abin- donecL , At a meeting of the board of lady managers it was voted that the board establish a building fund for the pur pose of erecting a permanent memorial building, commemorative of the work of woman at the world's fair in Chi ago. The resolution contemplates tho setting aside of the premium realized from the sale of the Isabella quarters, which will amount to . $:;o,oou, as a nucleus for the fund. To this Mrs.' Palmer will add her salary, about S'J.000. ! COLOMBIA BUILDING. Handsome World's Fair I'avlllor. of the Tropical ' Kepublie. . In some respects the pavilion of the republic of Colombia is one of the most interesting .to visitors. The structure is 50x00 feet and two stories high. The main floor is given up en tirely to exhibits, principally f an tiquities of . .'the aborigines, minerals and staple products. Among the relic to be seen are gold belts, breast plates, idols, earrings, noserings and the like found in Indian graves. In one case there is nothing but lones, skulls and a mummy, the: remains of some of the republic's " prehistoric inhabitants. ' COLOMBIA BUILDU80. Among the minerals are the finest.' specimens to be had in the country. A collection of unusual interest is that of natural history. That part attract ing the special attention of scientists is the collection of venomous snakes of South America. . Among the other interesting exhibits- are the product of Indian wood carvers, silks and samples of tobacco and coffee grown in Colombia. On tho first floor and scattered about the sec ond floor are a number of val aablo books, forming a library of 500 vol umes, which the United States of Co lombia has given to the. congressional library at Washington as a nucleus for a La tin-America section. A Picture with a History. -In the Woman's building in tho French exhibit can be seen one of tho last pictures painted by that strango child of genius, Marie Bashkirtseff, in 1883. It is a study of. street gamins, two boys w!ose faces she has idealized. They are fully dressed, even to shoes a.hd stockings. The larger one carries an umbrella thrust under his arm and a green leaf is between his lips. Tho great tragedy of ' life is suggested in the face of the older boy; that of tho younger is bolder and more confident. The picture is not one to make a deep Impression, but the name of the. artist painted by the brush that was even then dropping from her weary young hand gives it an interest which is be yond tho reach of a mere art criticism,' t I TT111 11 11 fVl -ihrntj