I Jl K TIMES OITIC?: - il!y .Trrpired to Print Your Ti;u jihad-, note heads. ( DODGERS &C. JEMBF.i: Wi: DO ALL M.M ur JOB aNTING AT nAKD TIME rUICES. , , I,,..- an iiKreaing circulation, XVOID BulK Soda ! 5 Bad Pure soda the best soda, . bearing this trade mark- fff ' 1 1 costs no more than inferior package soda iJ( Us J-:.iver scoiis the flour always ;-re of imitation trade marks : insist on packages bearing theso vords CO.,Ke - ;c for Am ht.A 'Kjins w ! Town Directory-. ,; A. I'. Wil..ll. ,-iii:-.ii-rs E. F. Yoi.njr, J. IJ. In; i : I". Mre. I). If. Hood. h :- M. L. Wade. 1 .1. riliT.CIlES, Krv -e. W. Cain. Pas "i. t 7 p. in., every lirst Sun i. nu and 7 p. in., eveiy v.i;.-t- !ff! II :.i.i,v. l'raver-meeting every i w.l- " .,.,.1... .-rv Smi(!:ij' uiorning at 10 - T ' 1 I I ' S..i 1 .j-ik;-1.. iv. tjratiuiaui, otienin?ni ;.j M.ttin of Sn.uhiy school Mis s.itv Sf i' ty every fourth Sunday r'i : i . 1 oiii. Mn s prayer ineet- i'rl-""Vtri.m Tlcv. A. M. Jlassell, r. iy'ttr cvt-ry tirst and fifth v :.t U :i. in. ;ii.l 7 p. m. 8:mda3 .! t-vcrv Sunl:i v eve-uinar at if .1. A I'eursall Siiperiuten-' -i J. -f. Harper, l.itor wt - i-vcrv iiii:i !!tiay ai ii a. in . j. i). Simd;i3T -ehool at 4 oVloek K I - Uullanef, SnpeiinteiHlent, r iiH'ctinjj ever' Tliurday night Vtrk. ... ' . " NU-i!ia. v Il.ipt!t--Snnd:iv Mihoel Mi!nl.- morniii at .U o'clock. T;iv !r. .S ipi-rintcndeiit. Ir.i3-er, 'fn t ' rv lluirsaav nilit. Vj. Newton pa.' on. I'leaehincr every 1 il.k-Vi ijrnin and night. rii- Will ttaptUt.-1ty. 15. II. Jaek- P.i-ior. Services eveiy Fo.uith iv ,it Ha. m. Sunda3' ehof eT'c'r iv evening at 3 'clock, Krasnius ijK'.iiiUMident. , tiit'ne iiintit Elder W. O I r. Pastor; Servurs cvry tniinl iv at II a, ni., and Saturday before third Sun.133 at II a. iu. I.ODaiX. l'llc I.n'-know I.odire To. 115 I. O. O. i;ccts evci v ' Ti.cstlav nigltt at S k. 11 OS Taylor. N'. ti.: J. W. in;. V. "C.j . 0. 3iNeill," Sec re; 'tuyra l.ode. X. 1."7, A.F. &.A. ' -uhir roimnunication rverv- third ?unl every lir.t Friday', night, iiig Jla.-ous invited to attend. - J. Pkausaix, Secret an-. Professional Cards- e J. Best, Attoknet at Law; liUin, - N. C. !.-. in nil the courts. it to all tiiitiiie.. 4 r..--. ' - Prompt nttfn jan. 1. HJ H- McLean. ! Attu:.nky at Law, )! nest itoor to iotoffW, DUN'N, N. (3. .'. t:i1 I'raetioc. Will attend the court i li;irinTt t uuit'erland, JwlniHton and Sjinp- -;. ' t; -.i. HI R Ihri,e, A TTOTi Y'A T-JjA IF, " DUNN", - - X. C. f t . r.-a. in the Stote and Federal Courts. ottrntioit is assured to all sincss intrusted to him. DOTT, BORROW. i)oii contract the habit of bor It is ftal to the peace of rijwi!i' iijsu-l ni" jour'friencU and neighbors iJ in due tune is sure to. prove fa to.jnn;r own. liie thing you borrowed is sure to the thing you break or hue, yo ij Se.W: and th.r it. i onp nf tho cnn. rusof hfe tfiat the thing. lent ife su-e to be the thing wauted t the lender. i - . ... . .... ;V.a general principles 1 Hunk it;dearh. fcte u say that .borrowing is ' only) ' - i m-.s-iib'.e be;iveei id,pv- rpUtid l-eiuH rs nf i"i t.ilv & i thu t is i i- ' '! uue . eoimirv people ud to '1 k i o. ly a ueiihb rlv exehange jf -e.-.r.A borrow and lend V, rdua r. from &ix:ooihi ng irn t r v a horse ami" waon. lut after all ''(! ClK'(im 1. - i: . 1 . 1. . . I Y lr "4 idly dying a nat'unl death, i Lt but not least, i f you d.j h-jrr q w n,,t fail to return ss soon as p3 ille ami in as good conditi.uj Si f received. Failure to look oui 1( ,Iiese points is where m.ost of the ifuh!e e unes in. In short, in ' bor. rig. as in everything else, ob serve tli oiv.-ii fu c. ine Elavil w- er. . GRANTHAM & 1'ITTMAX Proprietors. VOL. IV. soda spoils-good flour. comes . aJiMf- 2 keeps soft. z$ and labels, Y.:.rk. rovers ever-- ' - NEWS ITEMS. News From all Parts of the World Gathered From our Exchanges. Near Blountsville. Imlf-mr saw mill employes were killed one day last week by the explosion of a boiler. Edwin P. lirown, a hermit, was found 3titf frozen in hi? last Sat urd iy at Wcstport. Mass. Arthur E.. Mead wis thrown from his sled and instant'y killed while coasting Iinoxville, Tenn. Tle elecrc light plant and the ice factory in Florence. S. C, were bothrleslruyed by fiie Mondaj. In IndiaO Territory last week, there were six people, an entire fam ily burned to death in a dwelling ituriiii: a blizzard, A few days' fig ) below Pittiburg, Pa., a lady and two children were drowned while crossing tBe Ohio rivs er on ice. At Danville, Va., Saturday night ypckti Madlin shot and killed nis wife on the street, tiaving accused her of infidelity. TM Crew of a schooner tfiat -wa wrecked tf Long Jslai.d took l the rigging, became exhausted and, it; .sight of rnen on shore unable to saiu tuein, one by one dropped into the sea, ' At Brooklyn, N. Y. Friday, Hen ry Havciueyer. aged 18, was killed by a trolley car funuiag iulo a cart he was driving, Tho saloon kept; by Joseph Cho post n -ki at Priceburg", Pa., was burn ed Friday night., aud his w fe and child perished in the fire. At Birmingham Ala.. Friday, Eu gene Byers, a d ;ttctiye, wa hanged for the murder of his cousin, the mo tive of which was robbery, . Domestic troubles t r.dueed Joseph Grant, agged 7. to kill his wife at Richland, Mich , ; Saturday uight, and to then lo blow out his brains. Fire destroyed Robbings general store and warehouse at Kookvliie, Md., Friday'. A falling chimney killed Frank Morgan, a tinner. Two masked. men held up F. li. i Westgate in his grocery store at 'Cleveland. O.. Saturday uiaht, and in a fierce fight fatally shot him. Two little daugbteis of Frank J, Boj-d were burned to death Sunday night at Adover Centre. N, H., while their pa ents were at church. Two outlaws named Johnson and Stratton held up the overland mail coach near Neyvkirk. O. T. Tuerday. and robbed it. Johnson was shot dead. 1 While out sleighing near Miles City, Mont.'. Saturday, Lee Parish and William M"ore got lost in a blizs zard and were probably fiozen to "WALTZ OR SCHOTTISCIfEr It has no doubt often ecurred to i yon wCiie walking on 'tBe street thai t .you have met a pedestrian goin in the opposite direction, and attempt I tn pass you bob from one s de At the ' 'I "I. a raan f ta i.oilorin i Imi .r three times 'from one side to the.' oth er". A young uSan well knowu in Maodan society-mev wi 1) that expe rience, and a gay ioong colored girl was the nedestrian coiuinv in ;thei , . ... " thiee dodges each qray in his endeay or to pass, the girl exe'aimed ; , Hl?u de Lawd's sake, honey, what islls a-wm to be a waltz o a phottischfcr MiroJ;n Times. DUNN,- N, A SLLF-MADE MAN. 1 France's New President Does Not Cvvc His Wealth to Politics. Tl lio new president ojT Uie Frenca uL!'C cicics not bcidn, like bis,, rep predecessor, to what has been called j the "irrar.de bourgeoisie parlemen- I cuu .xxe lb a wi.-u.aue u.au, auu bis bcinnms were humble enough. It is not. however, fromj politics that ' he has sought the meilns of exist-.' pneo, neither did politics -make hurt ! i : ti 1 1 . it Jj. i I vs social position thw merely in-'i creased it t. W. Felix- F(aure is from He was a merchant and a Havre ir'nrr.rr.nrr n r-hon tin t- c n oofnH r the chamber, and he isctltinued ii.HU ' quite recently, to dire'et his eon I rfieroiai affairs while pel-forming his i j duty a a !.;. uiy with sufiicient j e. to be -called upon as far back as ! - to form p;.rt of the government ; as under secretary. o state for the ; colonies. I ever Since then he has several times ; been elected' vice president of the j chamber, a post which he still oc.cu- pieu v.ncu ne.was cnasen, on tue i loiiiiuLiuu vi me cuoinei j.or iue .! t il. . r it - portfolio of the navy.- M. Felix Faure is wMl known in Paris, where he ha3 lived for many years. Before he was marine he occupied an minister of felesrant flat in the Rue de- Lisbonne, where he ave charming etes, the honors of which were done by Mmk Faure and her daughters, one of whom was married a few years ago. Without possessing a great fortupe, like that of M. Casimir-Perier, he is, never- less, fairly rich. I The new president of jthe republic j is very tall aud has a military bear- j ing. ' Elegant and distijigaiishod, Lc ( has a face which is at once piild and I energetic; ,it attracts sympathy at once, and this first impression- is confirmed by the cordiality and kinJ- ness of his address. A 'point vvhlch may be noted, M. Felix Faure is the only one of the republican politicians forming part of the government who is member of one of t the great Parisian clubs. He is a member of the Epatau. A few pi Parisian. also remember that he was their coi-1 leage m a little literary cenacle, which was formed about fifteen years 0'-o at the Restaurant B.rebant. and whicli was known under the name o "Les Pipards." Tj-sz fitness of Names.- Circumstances Amid -Wjilch it peers Pccuiiirly Sti-iking. ' An English physician writes to a London, newspaper to say that the common people in the rural districts in his neighborhood give their chil dren such names 'as Gladys -Irene Florence, Doris Alma play, Hilda 'Evelina' Clementina, Ealjeen Oer.idc, Dora Vinita, Winifred thnily, Olive Ruby, Margaretta Laviua, Gladys Elsie, etc.; Norman Archibald, Archibald Gordon Richmond, Cyril Granville, Douglas Dennis Rich mond, Stanley Vernon, Altcrt Vic tor,' Cecil Cjartde, C3'ril Dudle, etc. He opines that those toplofty names will sound very funny "in our future scullery and other rnaids,. grooms, gardeners, coachmen, and so forth." What of it? asks the Boston Pilot. Why should not a vfaitiijig maid or footman be just as good a servant if her or his name be Gladys or Cyril? Herein democratic America it is not uncommon to find an Earl Jones, a Baron Smith, Robinson, whose fond vested them at baptism pr a uuke j parents m- with these resounding forenames; arid James G Blaine used to tell witfy glee of a Bos ton mother who chr.stened her j out of a fashionable novel, V. de pon l" ,T , J?i.' ' 1 surely look quite aristocratic. N. Y. Sun. , The Pest of India. - 1 - , : ' . I That no less than twenty-three thousand people should have per ished last year in the Indian prov- ince of - Bengal from sbaka bites . shows how little progress has been made by science toward the discov erv of some antidote for the poison of these, reptiles. The trouble is ; that the poison of nearly each species i seems to affect a different organ of the body. Thus the bite of a cobra j seems to. paralyze the ungs, while; the roison of the dabola produces I terrible convulsions. From time im- ! ! memorial physicians of every clime. .: j and race have devoted thir energies : to the'diseovery of cure$ for these ! bites, out judging 1 rem ine ne.i-.;. list of casualties from tuts source alone in Bengal, the most highly civilized province and possessed of the best system of medical super vision of all English colonial depen- j'fi0I3cijs, It would seem Jtbat all ef- forts in this direction jhave been V V Trihnnf. ftDOrilVC. il. triuuiic Meaning of the Precrput Stent The meaning attached to the dif ferent precious stones are as fol- lows: Th garnet if. constancy; tr.e amethyst, siucerixy; meoioou rouo 'norrH'p- tho' snnibire, innocence; ihl. success; the urf-ie, uu- i - life- the caruciiau, couieui; ma nit, uiv. ia , pear V tears; the diamond, puntj , the opal, sorrow; the! turquoise, earn el hiti, hT.rrucess; the malacl actiite, prosper- jtv .Ladies' Home JournaL Ji i v PROVE ALL THINGS. AND HOLD FAST TO THAT, WHICH IS GOOD," G, WEDNESDAY, FEBBUARY 20,1895. CORN AND HOG IN THE SiWTIJ. .1 L i ' ' ' ThcRbility arovy all tlie ' of Southern States to corn Ihev need etablish ea l heir ability to grow all the hogs ii,e,. nG'.(i Heretofore the ability of the Snath . , ,j , . . .. tn, "e hogs receive! a setbaek from 1,10 supposed inabjht.y, on acconnt oP 119 wari" climate, to pack and cure Prk- arid bacon. This dimetTlty en-i lirely disappears vith the rPa.iy Application of cold cheap and storage to 'he packing of hogs,-s that it is, as a W,U ?rov as Profllabte to condtici pork-packing operations in ih-? South as it is any ti here- else in the country. 1 This 'fact brings us back to a con sideration of the corn crop. Data i";o'Ti the Agricnltiiri Department at W ul.ington give, the corn yield of the Southern States for 1894. This jyPar's Gr0p is compare,d with that of , . Pf1 it. will bejeeen that there is .... an increase of aboit 50,000,000 bush els. The figures giyen here are in ifiund Aiillions of bushels, and will be fouijd interestin cr Yield 1893, Yield 1894 bushels. bushels. Maryland V "trinia 15,000,000 3LOOO.O00 30,000.000 1 2,000,000 34.(id0,000 5.0tjo.pOO : 2.oK).eoo 2G.000.000 1 5,060.000 61,000,000 32,000,000' 64,000,000 14.odo.000 68,000.000 14,000,000 32,000,000 33,000,000 19,000,000 35,0' 0,000 5.000,000 35,000.000 36,000,000 ' 18,000,000 69,000,000 38 000,000 68,000,000 13,000,000 68.000,000 Georgia Fb..- il ... Alat.aiha Mi?si-i,i,pp Louisiana' Pi TCX:iS Arkansas Tennes-ee W Virginia Kentueky To'al 440.000,000 490.000,000 ; i . - It is certain that the Southern Staa fttp giving more attention to corn than ever before, and it is big money in the pocket of the Southern , I people to do so. When they shall u.ake .i heir own corn and " bacon. a3 they undoubtedly can, then they will be truly independent. Th3ir cotton, smrnrf nee and tabieeo will be nav a . c i crops,' because the expense of feeding laborers anil animals is one of the heaviest burdens which can fall -" on the boythern planters, Exchange. I WHY NOT ? i While the legislature is madly fTTsJiili s many bills through, we think it would be ah excellent idea if some enterprising- populist - would introduce the following: A b 11 to prevent water running down hill. This would be a great benehb to tarmers having crops on the Mil sides.- A bill to prevent lain rivers. fresulpt s m cer- A ibill to prevent fire places from smokingi j - Abill for the relief of sufferers frtimi cat -serenades. 1 I A bill to make money grow on trees -l.to 1. A bill to prevent snakes from run- ningat' large, a i-.:! lp.r.tliintr the marriage of Mr' ll0 to Miss I mies of mosquitoes' A bill for protection of bobtailed fcows in fly time. T J A "piM for t he relief of trie people wiK, re surTering from the wlulli8in.Wewln! News. blight of . Let us ad one more bill to protect editors and newspaper men from ueadhead subscribers. 1 ; - yj. ja3. W. Dvis, the county superintendent ot Public Instruction, dea(l - cj .. 1 . r , J- ormng. U e ,Icarn Irom a re liable source that .wo young men had a fight in the ubper part of the C(tl,n y some time ago. and In the j ,lfl one bit Ihe other. The bitten manf is now sick and shows pro uoujiced symptoms; of hydrophobia. -It was reported here this week that-the three cows bitten bv Mr. Jau.e McClure's dog. as we i.otcd at the Lime, bad 'died of hydrophobia, and that tbaheep and hogs on Mrs. Camp's place, 04 Greeu river, wliicb were bitieo by a dog supposed to hav jjeen ra0jdt had aU0 gone mad. Kulfierford Demrst. , .. In the United Sta es Court at Fort , Sm5th Ark n.ii Cook tLe notorious j ... outlaw, Has found guiliy of half doz , . f en enmes and sentenced to fifty years 1 1 orx peneieuiiary ai ioa i nv, J PIER ilJ Wonderfully Jhtere5tin ,ARE THE,, ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES ,A8 RELATED gT. CONAN DOYLE il ' "-" . ; - i he Sign of The Four. trrTrrYTvtTi-vTTtTVvvtVTTr i ' ; : ' - " ' - j This Story will begin srxin in this paper, and if .once you begin reading it, you will be sure to finish, it. Oorj't Aisg tbis Great SberlocK Hdlrqe? 5tpry WE ARi: ALL INTERESTED. It may eem like impertinence for person who are not engaged in farming to be advising farmers what to do, and perhaps some farmers so regard it, but where the genera! pros perity is m much dependent upon the potptritv of lb farmer as it is in the Sooth, every one is more or leas interested In what the fsrmer does, so that the opinions expressed asito the course that farmers should pursue, or the advice offered, is not altogether impertitent, Cotton is and will continue to be the staple crop of the South. Ttere are millions of people dependent upbn it directly or indirectly. The crops have for years been constantly increasing, and as they have increos ed the prices have decreased, until they have reached a figure that does not cover the cost of cultivation, so that the aver.al4p planter finds htm-elf worse off after his crop is marketed than he was even ' before it was planted. Tho only cotton-grows er in the South who could not stand this without being ruined is the one who raises his own supplies and coidd get along without cotton, and he could do it only by making o.ker crops carry his cotton tbrt) ugh. With the increase of production and the corresponding 'decrease in price it soon became apparent that soiethino- must be done to save the planters from the ruin which was in evitable if something was not done. The only remedy in sight seemed to be a reduction of acreage so as to bring the crop somewhere within the world's demand; but it took 'a great de?l of talking and of writing, and of Urging by conventions of planters and others to get planters to consid er this, and with all the talking and writing and resolutions no concerted action has yetdaeen taken in that di rection, and yet a sure as the sun's heat melts snow so sure will the price of cotton go under five cents next Fall if the crop planted this year be anything like as large as tha crop of last year was A reduction of the acreage; and a material redaction, to j, is not a matter of choice with tiits planters but a matter of absolute necessity unless thsy want to make cojt.m just to keep themselves em pl-ed. regardless of weather they role,- oat at the big end or the little cull of Ue horo. The Star was one of the firt pa pare in U South V advocate a re daction of the cotton acre-jg and di- versISed farming, and did so loigj . i" ' i be'ore tolUn touched ffre cents a pound. V e believed and held. ami CtUl bliW and bold that d vc sified farming i the true policy for 1 the Southern farmer, regardless of j thfe p ice of cotton, whether it be five! orj ten cents a ixiund, for no agricul tiiral country can be (. permanently i prosperous while it fs deieridenl upon one crop, no milter what tha crop my be. If it could be, the South would have gotten rich on cotton long ago, for sue has ocen he cotton-grower for the world, is $1.00 Per Year In Advance. NO. 49. yet majnly so, and cool I if feln would, if her planters acted wisely and in conci-t coAtrol the market. Bat this can never be done, while every planter acts for liirnsetf snd plants blindly witlmtit any regard to liow odirs ara plariUfg, or lo the world's demand ; and the world's supply. ; We have said in thase oolnmn and we repeat it, that it would be a blessing to the South if nut. a pound or cotton seed were planted for one or two years or if one or two crops were blighted and not a patid bar vested. It might look 1 ke a tern porary affliction, bat it vonld be a blessing and again eon,tinije a bless ing until folly had Increased the crop to exceed the world's demand We have just read a forcible article, ihe authorship of ! which we do noL knoy, but It is soms one who has made a study of the cotton situation and is familiar with it, in which the writer takes the position that instead of reducing the acreage twentyfive per cent., as has been recommended, (but which is very improbable, to siy the least) there should be a reduction of 8eventyfive per cent.. . planting the land t-iken from. cotton i some thing else, or even letting it run faj- j low, which woqld be better than put ling it in cotton,- He contends that a reduction of seventy .fivo per cent, I in the next crop would so reduce the world's supply that ten or eleven' cents a" pound a New York for the next fjcur or live years couid be ass surcd, ' '; - . . 1 ' ' . - Tlie idea has got"-e abrofi-l, he says, that because in some .limited eo ions cotton can be grown for ies than five cents a pound that tijerefo're a large crop will be planted to be ad ded to the suiplus tt:at may remain over from this 'crop.-and for" this rea son cotton speculators are already fixing the price of the next crop at a less figure than they are pa ng eow, and figures at which not one planter in a hundred cant sell without in curfing a loss on the cost of production, With such a disease there must be. a heroic remedy, no ordinary reduc tion of acreage, no trifling reduction, but a heroin one which will cut down the supply and make the buyer hunt the cotton and doff his hat to it in stead of the cotton hurting the buyer and begging to be taken in at any price. The planters can command the situation if they resolve to do so and slick to the resolve. A twenty five per cent i eduction would help, fifty would be better and seventy-five still better. But will theyt That's the question, which will be answered when planting time comes.--The Morning Star, 1 CRUELLY SURPRISED. When tke gentlewan at the desk bad attended to the cases of various applicants he turned to a pleasant faced wellsdressed man who was pa tiently awaiting his chance to get in. Well," he said to hin. with a smile, what can I do for -you to day?" "Nothing," was the quiet response. 'Ah, that's pleasant; everybody seems to want some sortxif a favor. Come in and sit down; bu are a relief."." . , The pleasantfaced man bowed and accepted the inyitation. "On the other hand," he said. hen he was comfortably fixed, "I want to give you something." , "That's nicer than ever." smiled the host. l've heard that it was better to give than lo receive, but I've never Ud much oh a ace to try both." The visitor took a boobut of his M,OCK"1 : ; ' wu,'' w ,RS 2ain- fn "VV"' t ul j Vur name doa fur .J finest work Jever ent-ut.b any puo ishing firm 1 in " but ne never tmisuea the sen1 tence- Excha' gf:. IT JUST CAN' T BE DID. I hear tbey have passed abill to abolish Christmas." said a citizen' of RhamkatU yesterday, ''Well, the thing just can't he did. We" ve been having Christmas and hog-killings too long to 1st any LcgisUtu re interiere with s" He wa i tdigna it at the i tea. We explaineil to him that the idea was to abolish Thanksgiving dsy, be cause, ain.ee the Bepoblicans had come back in power, the people had nothing to b3 thankful for. He was j app.a?ed. News an l! Obierver, T PUTi YOUR 'AD' THE CENTAXcmsS AND SEE j YOulTlIITsTN ESS mOSPKfi. ,j RATES REASONABLE. The energy of a business raati it judged by Ids home paper by tho world at large, ri ; j means so much more than - - you imagine f serious and trifling ailments neglected. von c piay witn iature s 1 . I " . T Mi li -T 'greatest lithealth. 11 ynnareieel.nj; out ot Sorts, weak , t!d pehetally et- haasted, tici votiit, y t'.iiv? no pietie a;id can't work, ilrnn begin at onceiaK- b1 strpnptheniinj n-cdickie.wliU-h U KrowTi'n Iran Kit. ftrs. A few hct- fitters t!es cure benefit conies I from th. very firt dose jt tnm't your , rffi, 11 11 li s It Dyspepsia, Neuralgia, Kidney and Liver Troubles, CcnsUpatiori. Bad Blood i - 1' Ma'crh; I Nervous allmcntJ Women's conirjlaints. I Get os.ly time 11 has crossed red r lines on ti, wriiiptK-r SHtutes :te'il of two k. stmiiiii i Fair View and Uook-sroe. BROWN CKEM;0AL.CO. BALTIMORE, M0i. STATE NEWS, The GoMsb oro Cotton Mill turned on steam and is running partial time. It will run under full time and capacity-as soon a'a the bad Weather breaks, Goldsboro Argus Governor Carr baa receivrK frprn L'ela May Gil a ten year old girj of Laarihburg. 4 30 for the Vanco monument fund. The little gtrl cjoU lected the money herself. HaleigU Visitor. j The Stanly county jail kt Albe ranrle, N. C, was destroyed by Thursday night;' four prisoners tiro in the jail set it ortufire and escaped but were captured i nuay ana lougeu; ii) the Salisbury jail.. Baleuh, N. CL has a cttizeu wh has drunk but three glasses of wa in three years. j-He drinks a glass er of milk once a week all bis other liquid refreshment is ' stron&er than either milk of water. The curious thing about it is that be is always ."pa n ftjlly sober," A 3'oiing boyish lad, only 17 years oldhas been pt :a jail at Italeigli on the charge of retailing whiskey without a license. He is sa d to be ' i M ad old offender and a hardened crim mel. His name is Jack Sikes. A. J. Lymari,. of Ashville, 1 m been arrested in! New York on sqit brought by administrators of Mrs. t'ouman, ' of Connecticut. on tiu charge of imbezzling $34,0001 placed in hio haf-ds to invest in property. Dr, C. G. McMai.away isi alwa; IVi good on a find. Yerterday he discoid ered the largest family on record in these part" j.'ts a family of ri;ev groes Tate by name. There are sixteen girls an fourteen boys, and the father and mother ate still liv ng. . ; y- The depot of the Carolina Central, railroad at Charloite, including tlie icket otfice and! a lot of goods, was ; destroyed by fire on Sunday night. Nothing but thei brick walls I of the building , wera j left standing j The loss is several thousand dcllurs. Sunday before lat in Anson con n ty, two negro women, Tempie Vnl and Ellen Allen, met in the public road and engaged in a fijbt, during which the former was almost - instant- ly killed, being U.ibbed to the heart with a knife in ter. Jt?abu9ly ha hand oi" tl If US inuroerer was,ain: Mr. Eujiu bhaw, rounaer ot oaw Uniyersity, broke Lis leg j-ist abuo the ankle last niht. He fell on the ice while walking near the Unirersi . tv, which resulteI in tfie br.ski'ig lot" his leg. Mi. Shaw is a ran adyanc i in jearA. b-dng about 70 years of a9 and js quite a &' ioas aocideot ! with ? him. He and Xr.' Sbaf arc from Massachusetts and h o been stop ping at 'die Yarb trough fr the past few weeks.-.;; j - -,.. ;-. n- -At Alerandda, Va. thj fireworks factorj- was destroyed by fir a fewr days ago. Wacii the fire roache l the fireworks department the scene was one of the most brilliant tint cck1 d h: itnagined, ! 'In :7.!:;: 'il-l' iBrowirs M