North B1TIOS " ; . v. OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE PROniBITlOWISTS IN NORTH CAROLINA.- . , VOL. V. ... GREENSBORO, N. C.y FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1887. " r NOi 43. i ;POMONA HILL CvIuirserie'sS POHONA, N. C. --These Nurseries are located 2$f miles west of Greensboro, on the Richmond & Danville and Salem Branch Raib ads. Th re you can find - One and a-Half Million o? TreeR artr Vines dwtvri. - - - W WW 4111 . Parties wanting Trees, &a, are respect, fully invited to call and examine sscck a d learn the exten of these Nurseries. Stock -consists o all the leading and new varieties of Apple, Pea h, Pear, (Stand nd and Dwarf,) Plums, Apricots, Grap.s, Cherries, Mulbeiri s, Nectarines, Figs, Quinces, Goo e terries, Raspberries, Currants, Pocans, Eng lish Walnuts, Jar&nese .Peisimnion, Straw berries, Shiubs, Roses' ; .Kvergreens, Shade rrees, &&, and in fact ev r thing of the hardy ' class usually ke t in a first-class Nursery, ; - -. - . -, ....... - :' j..- : , SUITABLE FOR NORTH CAROLINA 'AND THE SOUTHERN BORDER , " . '. STA'lES. : - New Fruits of special note are tue Tel o V; X ansparent Apple, Ladv lngold t each, the Laws Keiffer, Lucy Duke and Beaufo. t Pears, Lutie, Niagra, and the Georgia Grape, YVotlord's Winter. .. .. JDescriptive,Catalogue Jree. - EgT'Cor.spondence solicited. Special in ducements t j large PLnters. Address. J. VAN. LINDLEY, Pomona, Guilford Co. N. C ul9-6mo - INSURANCE AGENCY Tornada, Fire, Life. O. JV. GARB CO.. Greensboro, M, C. O. W. CARR, ' Trinity College and High Point, N, C ASSETS OVER $200,000,000. JilUllJj l nd return "te us, and we will send, you free, something of great value and importance to ?your that will start you in busines 5 which, will bring you in more money right awaythan anything else in the world. Any onetcan do" the work and live at home. I ither sex, all agesT " Some thing new, that just coi ns money for all workers. We will itr-ii you v capital-not needed. .This is one of thegenuine important chances of a life time. Those who are ambitious will nit delay. Grand outfit free. Address Tbvk & Co. .Augusta, tfair.e. A CONFLICT AVERTED. Troons Withdrawn in Californin, " Pending a Dacisionby the - Courts, : " The threatened conflict between the- civil and military forces at the Round Valley (Cal.) reservation, has been averted, by i structions sent by the Secretary of "War to General Howard, , to withdraw the United States troops now on" the reservation, pend ing a judical settlemant of the matter. " It is learned at the War departm ent that a com pany df soldiers, under command of Captain ShaWj was ordered to eject a number f squatters from the reservation, at the request of the Interior Department. An injunc ion was obtained by the squatters from a stats court, and as. the captain of the United States forces refused to obey it, the state militia was called upon to enforce the courts order, r At this juncture, the attorney gen eral appealed the case to the United States Court, and at his suggestion Captain Sha.v was directed to discontinue further proceed ings. It was while this appeal was pending that the sheriff began his movement looking to the arrast of the military force. The or der sent t- r 'reneral Howard to withdraw the military force is expected to prevent an : immediate conflict, but the question of juris diction involved is regarded at the depart ment as one of - the gravest importance. It has cropped out in one shape or another in all of the Indian outbreaks of the last, few years; -' whenever the state or territorial authorities have attempted to make arrests on Indian or military reservations, and a final settlement of tha conflicting rights of . state and federal authorities over! govern ment reservations is earnestly : desired by military officers. A JUDGE . USES HIS FISTS. He Resents the Publication and Black. ... ens the Pnblishers Eyes. . A personal encounter took place at Louis ville, Ky.f between Judge William B. Flem- jug and Biddorman Dupont. The latter is proprietor of the Post and the Commercial, both of which have been making editorial and local assaults upon Judge Fleming. The .climax" was reached when the Commercia published an article stating that Fleming and a number of other prominent citizens had raised money to spend during the Guber natorial campaign for Gov. Buckner." They did this it stated, by negotiating a one thou sand dollar note, which is now due, and which, it is alleged, they are trying to induce the Governor to pay, on the ground- that the money was for legitimate campaign expenses. The article proves to have been a falsehood and was resented accordingly by J udge Flem- ing- In a conversation some days ago Dupont had intimated to Fleming that no more as saults upon the latter should be printed. They met, and the judge upbraided t .e pub lisher for his want of -faith. ; Dupont made an evasive reply, and becoming infurated, Fleming struck him twice over the head with a cane, after which they clinched and had a short struggle. When separated Du pont had two black eyes, but Fleming was not hurt. --;- : ' ;- ' - - " - Botb the men are prominent, Judge lem ing having recentiv declined President Cleve land's appointment to the Chief Justiceship of Arizona. Dupon W very wealthy and is largely engaged in manufactures. The story that Gov. Buckner's name was affixed to the note and that the latter had allowed it to go to protest is w. oily without; foundation. dr: talmage; THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUNDAY I SERMON.- 8ubject: , r "Deftetose Of - Voung Men." TiXTv i "And thi Lord opened tlie eyes of CA youiigman." IL Kings vi, J7. . i - .-, One morning in Dothan a young thooiogl' cal student was scared by findfing himself and Ehsha the prophet, upon whom he waited, surrounded by a whole army of enemies. But venerable Elisha was not .scared at all, be cause he saw the mountains full of defense for him. in chariots made out of -fire whoek -of fire, dashboard of fire and cushions of fire, drawn by horses with nostrils of fire, and manes of fire, and haunches of fire, and hoofs of fire a supernatural appearance that could not be seen with the natural eye. .r So the old minister prayed that the young minister might see them also, and the prayer was an swered, and the Lord opened the eyes of the young man and he also saw the fiery proees s:on, looking somewhat, I suppose, like the Adu-ondacks or the Alleghanies in : this au tumnal resplendence. . . ; -; 4 Many young men, standing among the most tremendous realities, have their eyes half shut or entirely closed. May God grant that my sermon may open wide your eyes to your rafety, your opportunity and your des-' tiny, 1 . , A hiighty defense for a yowig man is a good home. Some of my hearers look back with tenderatisfaction to their early home. It may have been rude and rustic, hidden among the hills, and architect or up holsterer haver planned or adorned it. But all the fresco On: princely walls never looked so en ticing to- Vou as those rough hewn rafters. You can think of no park or -arbor of trees planted on fashionable country te-ti so at tractive as the plain brdbk that ran in front of the old farmhouses and ' sang under the weeping willows. No barred gateway, adorned wtth statue of bronze, and swung open by obsequious porter in full dres, has half, the glory of the swing gate. Many of you have a second dwelling place, your adopted home, that afeo is sacred forever. There you built the first family altar. There yom- children were born. All those trees jou planted, f That room is solemn, because m it, over the hot pillow, .flapped the wing of death-i - Under that roof you expect when your work is done to He down and die.- You try with many words to tell the excellency of the place, but you fail There is only one word in the language that can describe your meaning. It is home. : . ... r Now, 1 declare that a young plan is com paratively safe who grfss out into the world with a charm like thi3upon him. The mem ory of parental solicitude, watering, plan ning and praying, will be to him a shield and a shelter. I never knew a man faithful both to h.s early and adopted home, who at the same time Was given over to any gross form of dissipation or wickelnesi -1 He who seeks his enjoyment chieCy from outside associa tion, rather than f.om the more quiet and unp: esumlng . p!easu:-es of which I have spoken, may be suspectel to be on the broad road to ruin. ; Absalom despised his father's house, and you know his history of sin and his death of shame. - If you seem Unneces sarily isolated from yc ar kindred and former associates, is there not some room that you can call your own . Into it gather books and pictures and a harp. Have a portrait over the mantel. Make ungodly mirth stand back from the threshold . Consecrate some spot with the knee of prayer.- By -the memory of other days, a father's counsel and a mother' love, and a sistei s confidence, call it home. ; Another defense for a young man is indus trious habit. Many young men, in starting upon life in this age, expect to make theif. way through the world by the use of their wits rather than the toil or their bands. A child nov goes to the city and fails twice be fore he is as old as his father was when he first saw the spires of the great town." Sit ting in some office rented at $1,000 a year, he is waiting for the bank to declare its divi dend, or goes into the market expecting be fore night to be made rich by the rushing up of the stocks. " But Juck seemed so dull he re solved on some other tack. Perhaps he bor rows from hi3 employer's- money drawer,; and forgets to put it back, or for merely the purpose of improving his penmanship makes a copy plate of a merchant's signature. Never mind, all is right in trade. In some dark night there may come in his dreams a vision of Blackwell's Isla: d, or of Sing Sing, but it soon -vanishes. . In a short tame he will be ready to retire from the busy world, and amid his flocks and herds culture the domestic virtues. 3 Then those young men who once were his schoolmates, and knew no better than to engage. in honest work, will come with their ox teams to draw him logs and with their hard hands help heave up his castle, j This is no fancy picture. It is every day life. I should not wonder if there were some rotten beams in that beautiful palace. I should not wonder if dire sicknesses should smite through the young man, or if God should pour into his cup of life a draught that would thrill "him with unbearable agony. jsnouia not wonder if his children should become to him a living curse, making his home a pest and a disgrace. -1 should not wonder if he goes to a rdserable grave, and beyond it into the gnashing of teeth. The way of the ungodly shJl perish. - - ; v My young friends, there ine success except through toil either of the head or hand. At the battle of Crecy in 134S the Piince of Wales, finding himself heavily pressed by the enemy, sent word to his father for help. The father, watching the battle from a windmill and seeing that his son was not wounded and could gain the day if he would, sent word: "No; I will not come- Let the boy win bis spurs, for, if God will, 1 desire that this day be his with all its honors." Young man, fight your own tattle all through and you shall have the victory. Oh, it is a battle worth fighting. Twomonarchs of old fought a duel, Charles V.- and Francis, and the stakes were king doms Milan and Burgundy. .-You fight with sin and the stakes are heaven andlielL . f Do not get the fatal idea that you are a genius, and that therefore there is no need of close application. It is here where .multi tudes fail . The great curse of this age is the geniuses, men with enormous self couceit and egotism, and nothing elsel I had rather be an ox than an eagle; plain, anl plodding.ard useful, rather than high flying and good for" nothing but to pick out the eyes of carcasses Extraordinary capacity without u?e is extra ordinary failure. . There is no hope for tbat person who begins his life resolved to live by his wits, for the probability is he has hot any. - It t as not safe for Adam, even in his unf alien state, to have nothing to do, and, therefore, God . commanded - "him to , be a farmer j ? and ; horticulturist. He " . was to dress the garden and keep it, and had he and his wife obeyed the divine .n junction and teen at work, they would not have been sauntering under the trees and hungering after that fruit which destroyed them and their posterity ; proof positive for all ages to come that those who do not attend to their business are sure to get into mischief. I do not know that the prod igal in Scripture would ever have been re claimed had he not given up his idle habits and gone to feeding swine for a living. ; " Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways and be wise, which, havine ' no overseer or guide, provideth her food in the summer and gaineretn ner meat in cne narvesc- - a ue devil doe not so often attack the man who is busy with the pen and the book, and the trowel, - and the saw, and the hammer. He is afraid of those weanons. -But woe to that man whom this roaring lion moets with his hands in his pockets ; Do not demand that your ' toil always be ? elegant, and cleanly and refined. There is a - certain amount of drudgary througu which we must all pass, whatever be our occupation. - ? Again, profound respect for the Sabbath will be to the young man a powerful preserv ative against evil. God has thrust into the toil and fatigue of life a recreative dayr when the soul is especially to be fed. It is no new f angled notion of a wild brained reformer, but an institution established at the -begin-nin.T. God has made natural and moral law3 so harmonious that the body as well as the . 1 j i xi. L!i..iJ - t ' a . . huui ueuKiuua mis uisiiiuuon. ; uur uquies are seven day clocks,, that must be wound up as often as that, or they Will ian down. Failure must come sdoneror later to the man who breaks the Sabbath. -Inspiration has railed it the Lord's day, and he who devotas it to the WOrld is guilty of - robbery; God will nbt.let the sin gb unpunished, either in this world or the world to come. ' -. - - While the divine frown- must ret upon him who tramples upon this statute, G-d'i special favor will be upon that young m ,n who scmpu'ously observes it. This diy, properly observed, will throw a hallowed in fluence over all the week. The song and ser mon and sanctuary will hold back f o n pro sumptuous - sins., That yount . man. who begins the duties of life with either secret or open disrespect of ,the holy day, I venture to prophesy, will meet with no permanent suc cesses. God's curse will fall upon his ehip, his store, bis office, his studio, his body and his soul The way of the wicked he turneth upside down. In one of the old fables it was said that a wonderful child was born in Bag dad and a magician could hear his footsteps 6,000 miles away. But I can hearln the foat stepof that young man, on his way to the house of worship this mining, step not only of; a lifetime of usef il'ness, out the coming step of eternal joys of heaven yet millions of miles away. - - .-- - - -. .-There are magnificent possibilities before each of you young men of the stout heart, and the buoyant step ' and the" bounding spirit. 'I would marshal you for grand achievement. ; God flow provides for you the fleet and the armor and the fortifications. Who is on the Lord's side? The captain of the zouaveS in ancient times, to encourage theni against the immense odds on-the side of their enemies; said: "Come, my men, 00k these fellows in the face, f They are 6,000, you are 300. - Surely the match is even." .That speech gave them - the victory Be not, my h-arer, dismayed at any time by what sieais an immense odds against you. Is fortune, is want of education. . are r men," are devi!s against you? - Though the multitudes of earth and hell confix. t you,' sfaud up to the charge. , With 1,00:),000; against you the match is just even. Nay, you have a decided advantage. If God be for us, who esn be against us? '-. Thus protected, you need not spend much time in answering your assa 1 ants. . Many years ago word came to me that two Impostors, as temperance lecturers, had been, speaking in Ohioon- various places and giv ing their experience, and they told their audience that they had long been intimate "With me and had become drunkards by dining at my table, where I always had liquors of all sorts. Indignant to the last degree -1 went down to Patrick CampboU, chief of Brooklyn police, saying I was going to start that night to Ohio to have thtse vil lians arrested, and I wanted him " to tell me how to make the arrest. . He smiled and said: "Do not waste your time by chas ing these men. Go home and do your work, and they can do you no harm.'? I ! took his counsel and all was well.-; Long ago I made Up my mind that if ono will put his trust in God and be faithfurto duty he need n-1 fear any evfl. i Have God on your, side, young rain, and all the combined forces of earth and hell can do no damage. ' 4 - - And this leads me to say that the mighiret of all defense for a young' man is the posses sion of thorough religious principle. No'hing can take the place of it . He may have man ners that would put to shame the graceful ness and courtesy of a Lord Chesterfield. For eign languages may. drop from his tongue. He may be . able to discuss literatures and laws and foreign customs. He may wield a pen of unequaled polish and power. His quick ness and tact may qualify hjm for the high est salary of the counting ho is3. He may be as sharp as Herod and as strong as Sana son, with as fine locks as.thosewuich hung Absa lom, still he is :hotaf from contamina tion. The more elegant his manner, and the more fascinating his dress, the more periL Satan does not care much for the allegiance -Of a coward and illiterate being. - He cannot bring him into efficient service. BmVhe loves to storm that castle of character which has in it the most spoils and treasures. It we a not some crazy craft creeping along the coast with a valueless cargo that the pirate at tacked, but the ship, full winged and flagged, plying; between great ports, carrying its million of specie.,- The more your nature 1 and - acquired accomplishments, the more need of the religion of Jesus. . That doe3 not cut in ; upon or back up any smoothness of disposition or behavior. - It gives symmetry it arrests that in the soul ' which ought to be arrested, and propels that which ought to be propelled. It fills up the gulleys. It elevates and transforms. When the Holy Spirit: impresses the image of God on the heart he does not spoil the canvas. If in a 1 the multitudes of youngjnen :--on whom re ligion has acted you could fl id one nature that had been the least damaged, I would yield this proposition, You may now hive enough strength of character to reoel he various temptations to gross:, wkkddnes which: assail you, but I do not know in what strait you may be thrust at, s ine future time. Notb'ng short of the grace cf the cross may then be able to daiver you from the lions. ' You , are not meeker than Moses, nor -holier than David, nor more pa tient than Job, and you ought not to onsicler yourself invulnerable. -You may have some weak point of character that you have never discovered, and in some hour when yon are - assaulted the Philistines -will - be upon thee, Samson, i Trust not in your good babits, or x your early training, or your pride of chara -ter; nothing s'ioit of the arm of Almighty God will hi sufficient to uphold vou. . You look- forward to- the world sometimes with a chilling despondency. Cheer up! I will tell you how you all may make a fortune.. ; "Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness and all other things will be added unto you.t I know you do n-t want to be mean in this' matter. Give God the freshness of vour life. You will not have the heart to drink down the brimming cup of life and then pour ; the dreg's on God's altar. To a Saviour so infinitely generous you - have not - the heart to act : like that. i That is u- not brave, that is not honorable, that is not manly. Your greatest want in all the world is a new heart. In God's name I tell you that., t And the Blessed Spirit press3S tnrougn ; the solemnities ana privi leges of this holy hour. Put the cup of li eternal to your thirsty lips. Thrust it not back.: Mercy offers it, bleeding mercy, long sufferine mercyi Keiect all otner tnena- ships; be ungrateful for all other kindness, prove recreant to all other .. bargains, but despise God s love for: your immortal soul don't you do that : - . - f ; I would like to see some of you' this hour press out of the ranks of the , world and lay your conquerea spirit ai ine ieec 01 jesus This hour is no wandering vagabond stagger ing over the earth; it is a winged messenger of the skies whispering mercy-, to thy soul. Life is smooth now, but after a while it may be rough, wild and precipitate. There comes a crisis in the history of every man. - We ftsldoin understand that turning point untiH it is far oast. The road of life is forked and I read on two signboards: V. This is the way fco hanniness." " This is the way to rum. How aDt are we to pass the forks of the road without thinking whether it comes out at the door of biiss or the gates of darkness. - - Many years ago Istood on the anniversary platform with a minister of Christ who made MIS remarsaoie Biaueuieuw. "Thirrv vears aeo two vounar men started nnt in the evenine to attend the Park l"heatre. "New York, where a olav was to be acted m which the cause of religion was to be placed in a ridiculous and hvoocritical light. They came to the steos. The consciences of both umnte tham. One started to eo home, but returned again to the door, and yet bad not couraee to enter, and 1 finally do- parted. But the other young man -entered tne 01c or me meaire. wa m turuiiijs j point in the history of those two young men. whirl of temptation. He sank deeper and deeoer in infamy. He was losf. The other 'tf- stands vounar man was saved, and he now before you to bless God that for twenty years he has been permitted to preach the Gospel. Rejoice, O young man, in tny youco, ana . let thy heart cheer thee theday .of. thy things God will bring thee into judgment." - The late" King of Oude ruled with abso lute sway the 7,000 retainers within tuc JamaiWF This naloMi aid to him annually by the Anglo-Indian liOVBriUDcUl Uo VToa cuttiijo uwij TELEGRAPHIC SUMMARY. Eastern and Middle Stated. -: - Eight State tickets in all were nominated in New Yorfc- - . .. s - Henkt M. Jacksow, cashier at the United Ftate Sub-Treasury, is a defaulter for over -$10,000,and has fled to Canada. . . . . j : -i Two convicts were killed and three wounded, one mortally, while trying to escape from prison at Yuma,- Arizona. .' Superintendent Gateswas badly wounded. . - .xv, i. The Reading Railroad Com pany has ad vanced the price of coal twenty-five cents a ton. X,.;. , : . i;,; ' The fifteenthlfational Women's Congress has just bsen held in New York. Mrs.: Julia Ward Howe was re-electad President. :; 4 Teemeb beat Gaudaur half a mile in a boat race on Lake Mai-anacook, Me. : ,? 2Rkak Admiral J. W. A. Nicholson.', of the United States Navy, died at his home in New York a few mornings ago. He was sixty-seven years of age, and had been for four years on the retired list. Jay Gould, the noted New York financier. hna njln1 T7 utu soutu iur iiiiu opo. fx. ; . . South and West. , . - , There are 500 cases of typhoid fever in Cincinnati. - - ; The counties of Hidalgo and Starr, Texas, are overrun with Mexican banditti, who are ftealing horses and people, the latter held for ransom. . . ---'.--.rv--K-v; .:;.-.... ;.s;;-.-- Mayor Latrobe has been reflected in Baltimore after an exciting canvass by a ma- jority of 4,275over the Republican candidate, who was supported by Democrats opposed to Senator Gorman. . ... - Jefferson Davis reviewed n. Ttrmwiin rtt 5,000 Confederate veterans at Macon, Ga.. Governor McEnery. of Louisianal or dered militia - to Terrebonne to snnnmsa la. bor riots on sugar plantations in that parish, r The corner stone of an eauestrian statue of General Robert E. Lee was laid at Rich mond, Va., with exercises consisting of a procession or ex-Confederates led bv Gener als Fitshugh Lea and Wade Hampton, Ma sonic ; ceremonies, an ; oration by Colonel Charles Marsh and the reading of a poem by the late James Barron Hope. - 1 v ' . - Governor Semple, in his annual reoort. - estimates the population of Washington Terri tory at I4d,bb. 1 nere are about 16,631,003 : acres of agricultural lands in the Territory yet unsm-veyed. ' The completed miles -of -railroad number 1,060. A leading industry is the salmon fisheries. The taxable property is given at 50,600,000. ' . 1 . ; . . -A train Which arrived tn Chica&rd from New York a few davs since contained a closed carriage, that had been shipped from : the laltir city. In the 'carriage was found , the body of a young man who had evidently been murdered . - . . . J. E. SiirrH, the express messenger who recently killed two train robbers near El Paso, Texas, was paid $2,000 by order of Governor Ross as a reward for his act. ? Smith will probably get $2,000 more from the express company and $ 1,000 from the ' railroad company, making a total of $5,003. -W. H. Reynolds, an Ohio editor, was shot and killed in Orange Township by James Mason, brother of D. C. Mason, who. was plaintiff in a libel suit against Reynolds. .The murderer was arrested. Charleston, S. C, has been celebrating its recovery from the earthquake disaster of a little over a year ago. . -Since that time the city has been practically rebuilt, s Washington. The ex-Confederates bvinginWashington visited Richmond in a body to attend (he un veiling of the Lee monument f : The members of Lincoln (Post, G. A R-, of Newark, N. J., on a visit to Washington, were received by the iTesiuent in the .Uast Room of the White House. . President Cleveland has been selected as arbitrator to decide a boundary dispute between Nicaragua and Costa Rica. VUJUIAlWJUt A-T. lira X , UUlwl Ul JWJ National Bureau of Yards and Cocks, says in his annual report that the estimates for the next year which were submitted by the com mandants of . the different navy yards and stations aggregated $5,045,782, but after ex amination at the bureau this figure has been reduced to $1,770,783. : ? . , Foreign. The Scotch wlir send another yacht to America next year to compete for the Amer ica's Cup. : . - : - - ' : . - ; , ' :? In Paris five Englishmen : have been arrested chareed with foreine " securities of the'Southwest Railroad Company of Kansas. A Chinese transport was lost during a typhoon, and 280 Chinamen and five Euro peans were drowned. ; ' : j, : - - The village, of Cadiz, Spain, has been de stroyed by tire. . .. - Mr. Wilfred Blunt, arrested at Wood ford, Ireland, for speakiug at a proclaimed meeting, has been found guilty of - violating the Irish Crimes act and sentenced to -two. months' imprisonment. ' . ' : A "dynamite scare", prevails in London, and public buildings are closely watched. ;; President Grevy. of France, resigned his office, . but was induced to reconsider his resignation.- Attacks upon his sonn-Jaw, M. Wilson, led to this action on the part of the French President. .;. .:. ..... - . General NuR-MAHOSfED, companion , of the Afghan pretender, Ayoub Khan, in his flight from Teheran, has been captured and publicly hanged at Herat. . - - MODERN CRUS0ES: Castawavs Iilvina Four Months on : an Uninhabited Island. On March 20th last, the iron bark Deny Castle, belonging to Limerick, Ireland, left Geelong for Falmouth with wheat, ifo trace of her could be found at any port, and she was posted at Lloyds as missing. ' On Sep tamber 22 eight survivors "of the r Derry Castle's crew rreached" Melbourne on - the sealer Awarsa. - They stated that the missing bark had been cast away on Enderby Island, one of the -. Aukland group,; . eight days after commencing? the - homeward voyage. The Caotahi. both mates, . and ' twelve peamen were - di-ownea- in crying to. reach the reef,7' Seven of the crew and the only passenger, James McGhie, endured for five "months a series of privations and ad ventures which seldom occur in real life. .The --scene ; of the wreck is rare ly visited by vessels. The - survivors had no . food . except shell - fish, which were very scarce, and they had but little cov ering. ' The-island wa3 explored, and the party was much cheered by finding on the other side of thi harbor a small hut, which, it appears,- was formerly used as a depot for stores for shipwrecked " seamen. The place was r opened with the , ex pectation of find'n? food,: but' it -was a terrible d sappointme it to find that aU.it con tained was a nint bottle of salt. The New Zealand Government bad maintained four depots for: , relief - of - castaways, : but lately dispensed with all but one on the mainland at Port Ross.? To Port Ross, ' v which -was in. sight,- . the survivors - strained .their eyes in hopeless vearnine to reach it. but they had no means 1 of making a boat. " Fire was finally obtained 1 by discharging a - cartridge found j in one of the . men's pockets. Life Iwiis. mnintained bv parching .wheat which was washed ashore from the cargo . . uj v,T-b- - fin tVio ' ni'npf v-Pfifond ) day an old a-ehead was - discovered m - the - oflnn " nMnnir hnr nnikino- was done sand. xJy its means enorcs were umuo v wu.- , - 0asot?oWdJ 6riv- en into the seams with a- piece ot noop iron, " The boat was" eventually launched. Two of the party pushed off from the shore in hope of reaching Port Ross. The effort was success lu', and soon signal ores ac ore Ross told that help was at hand. On July 19 the shipwrecked men were transferred to the ijjamiaiuu v v - SHEEP MD POL. DETEtiOPM EK T OP SHEEP BUSING : ASD WOOLEN .MANUPACTUKES. Interesting Figures From . the Bureau ' ot Statistics. . ; T j printed : report of Colonel W. F. Switzier, Chief of tho United StaW Bureau of Statistics,--on wcr' and manufactures of wool is now ready for distribution, : and is considered by the Bureau to be one of the most ? valuable documents it has ever put fortlu-r-The report makes with -its appendix a volume of three hundred, - pages." : It give3 a history of the development of sheep raising and wool manufacturing in this coun trv. The reoort shows that the number of sheep in the United State? rose from 19,000, 00J in 1810 to 51,001,000 in 1884, but declined to 45,000,000 in 1887. This marked decline occurred mainly in the Southern and West ern States, notably in Texas, and is attributed in great part to the decline in the price of wool since 1884. :-:s'r"'- -V Great Britain, being the leading ; wool market of the world, has always bean, the report says, the principal market for pur chases of wooL .Turkey and Russia have also been Important sources of direct supply,? but the : Argentine Republic is now, next to Great ; Britain, the foreign source of supply, followed by-Australasia The imports of wool rose from 1, 715,(599 pounds id 1823 to 114,038,030 pound3 ins: 1887. The increase iu ivool imoorts has 'about kept pace with the growth of Ameri can wool ' products, both na ving aoouc doubled sinee 1800. A series of tables illustrates the ' Increase in : produQtis r and in Importations and the relations between the two, as for examp!e,f rom 1S64 to 1868, 18i. 030,000 pounds were, produced and 43,000,0 JO imported; fiom 1874 to 1878, 195,000,000 pro duced and 45,000,000 imported; from 1882 to 13-$:5, 207,001,000 werepro luced and 92,000, 030 imported. - Frcm 1823 to 1S31 the annual imports of wool in manufactures " averaged over $9,000,0JO in value, or" more" than sev enty-one cents per capita; while from 1832 to. to 1811. they reached over $14,000,000, or eighty-four cents per capita. - " The value of " the United States woolen product of 150 was $25,000,000 in -round numbers, and of imports $19,000,000. In 1880, the product had grown to $164,030,000, ; and imports were valued at $31,000,003, be ing; S3. 91 per capita. ' . . - Thus, while the product of woolens in the United States has increased since 1850 nearly sevenfold, the imports have increased about sixty -two pec cent; but the consumption per capita has doubled, - which the statistician says indicates in a striking manner the ad vancement of wealth and comfort in the style of living among the people of this country. The statistics of imports and exports of woolens in the - trade of foreign countries show that the United Kingdom is foremost in the foreign trade in woolens, : the imports during 1885 amouning in value to $49,000,000 and the exports to $115,000,000. France comes next with imports of $49,000,000 and exports amounting ' to . $78,000,000 ; - Germany next, with imports of $25,000,000, - and exports of $51,000,000. There has been a large decline in the' woolen trade of Great Britain since 1874. s This decline, the Royal Commission on the Depression of Trade attributes in part to the high foreign tariffs which, it is claimed, shut out the manufac turers of G-eat Britain from foreign markets. THANKSGIVING-DAY. President Cleveland Calls on the Peo ple to Offer the Usual Thanks' on Nov. SMr. ,.- ; The following proclamation has been issued by the President. , - ! By Ote President of the United States: The goodness and the mercy of God, which has followed the American people during all the days of the past year, claim their grate ful recognition and humble - acknowledge ment. By his omnipotent power - he has protected us rom war and pestilence, and from every national cala mity ; by his gracious favor the earth has yielded a generous return to the labor of the husbandman, and every path of honest toil has led to comfort and contentment; by his - loving ! kindness the hearts of our people have been replenished with fraternal sentiment and patriotic en deavor, a ud by his unerring guidance we have b en directed in tfce way of ; national prosperity. - - .:- . -- - -' -'. To the end that we may, with one accord, testify our gratitude for all- . these blessings, I, Grover Cleveland, President of the Unite I States, do hereby designate -and set apart Thursday, the 24th day of November next, as a day of thanksgiving and prayer, ta be observed by all the people of the land. On that day let all secular work and employ ment be suspended, . and ; let our people assemble in their accustomed - places of worship, and with prayerand songs of praise give thanks to our Heavenly Father "for all that he has done for us, while.we humbly implore the forgiveness of our sins and a continuance of his mercy 1" ... Let families and kindred be reunited on that ' day,-and let their hearts, filled with kindly cheer and affectionate reminisehces, be turned in thankfulness to the source of all their pleasures and the Giver of all that makes the day glad and joyous. And in the midst of our worship and our happiness let us remember the poor, the needy and the un fortunate, and, by Our gifts of charity and ready benevolence, let us increase the num ber of those who with grateful hearts shall join in our thanksgiving. In witness whereof I have set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be Hereunto affixed. . - - Done at the city-of '.Washington, this twenty-fifth day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven and of the Independence of the United States the one hundred and twelfth. - - - Grover Cleveland. - By the President: - Thomas F. Bayard, - . . Secretary of State. DEVOURED BY SHARKS. A Mail-Carrier's Horri ble Death-St rug " Rle with the Man-Eaters. - James E- Hamilton, the Mail-carrier be tween Miami and Lake .Worth, on the SouSh Atlantic coast, was devoured by .man-eaters at Hillsbbro Inlet- Florida. "lie was a stout, athletic young mah and carried the mail be tween the two places, a distance of seventy five miles on his back, walking on the beach most of the wav.: The inlet is a dangerous CTnssm?. the bariit-waters of the Everfflades ! meeting the tides and producing heavy and dangerous seas. Sharks of the most raven ousind abound there. An old fisherman who was in a half a mile of Hamilton when ihe began crossing, describes the tragedy as a horrible - occurrence.-" iWhsn Hamilton reached the middle of the inlet the sharks flocked about his boat, leaping ten feet or more out of the water in their eagerness to get at human flesh. .-. v ' - ; ' ' Hamilton fought them with his oars, but soon both were bitten off and dashed out of his hands. Then they assailed the boat tear ing huge pieces off the gunwale. Soon it began to sink, and Hamilton became stupe fied with fear. Another blow on the.frail boat and he was thrown headlong i lto the masses of fierce sea wolves. --One snriek of agony and all was over. - The sea j. was died for yards around with his life blood. Search ing parties were sent out, but nothing found. j that no mail earner over that route has yet Hamilton's aeaxn was sucn a : nornuio uuo wva owu wva. HORRORS -OF DIVE3. S - Stoty of Another Young Girl Who was -. - -:, "Abducted from Chicago. Blanche . Bonnevfflet etna fifteen-year- old girl who has been a prisonerin the Wisconsin dives for more than a year, reached her home at Chicago. Officers Were sent to rescue her and .. bring her as . a witness ""against the Cassidy woman, who isi to be tried for ab 'duction. v Before the " officers reached Marinette, however, Mike Leahy the keeper of the dive, got word from Mrs. Cassidy that there was trouble ahead, closed his dive and released his prisoners. Blanche is still a pretty girl, in spite of the terrible experien.e she suffered in the dives. She is the daugh ter of a respectable carpenter. ' She says she was abducted in July, 1886. She was but on the street in front of her father's house when af woman, who she afterwards found out was Florence Ripley, an alleged procuress, came by with a pitcher and asked Blanche where she could buy some milk. Blanche showed her and the womau struck up a conversation. She found, out that Blanche's father was poor and the girl anxious to earn her own living. Then she said she kept an intelli eence office and could get her a place where she would earn $12 a week and her- board. She was to work at a hotel table at Green Bay, Wis. Blanche got her father's consent to go. Instead of taking her to Green Bay the Ripley woman carried her to Marinette, where she was taken in a close carriage to Leahy's place. She has been a elose prisoner ever Since. She has-been moved around from one dive to another, but always under Close guard. . Her father , never knew what had become of her, and believed. she was dead until- the Howden woman escaped the. other nay and told her story of the-horrors of the place. . . - - . Blanche ;.- says that -while she was at Marinette, the Ripley woman brought there two innocent -i girls' from Chicago, named Lizzie Wilson and Katie Holland, who had been decoyed far a similar way. They were beaten, starved and threatened - with the bloodhounds if they did not yield to the de mands of their jailer. -While she was at Florence, Wis. . two young , girls " named - Annie Perry and Annie Howard, whom the Cassidy woman had kidnapped and brought there, tried- to escape. The keeper of the dive turned the bloodhounds loose upon th m.' The does cauzht them and tore and mangled them so frightfully that Blanche thought they were dead when they were : brought back. ;-"i;:ii y'T"-;-::--"y;:;r-'-: vr-:v-; - Three weeks ago she was taken back to Leahy's at Marinette. . In a few days the Cassidy woman appeared- with a little girl named Blanche. - She did not seem to be more than thirteen years old. She cried alt the time for her mother and all the beatings that Leahy could give her could -not make her: yield to the life - he wanted her to lead. She was locked up it a garret and only fed on scraps every other day. The . Cassidy Woman and others of her kind were contin ually bringing young girls to the dives. Most of them had been kidnapped from .re spectable homes. The lives they were forced to lead lulled most of tnem in a year or two. DIED IN A PULLMAN CAR. A Young Liady, While Merrily Coiv versing with Friends, Suddenly -- ' r " .- - - Expires. - . -A pathetic story Was related by the Pull man conductor of the Pan Handle limited from Cincinnati A beautiful and' refined young lady, travelling alon 3 from Cincinnati to her home at Xenia, O., had suddenly died during the night "A few minutes before the train . left Cincinnati she, with a bevy of young ladies, came to the train. She had been on a visit there for several .weeks and her" friends expres ed regret at seeing her leave. They kissed her farewell and wished her a safe and pleasant journey home, al' promising to return her visit in a short time The lady was provided with a seat in one of the parlor cars. She sat reading a magazine for an hour and then engaged in a conversa tion, with a number of the lady occupants of the car. : ; She : was . so - handsome and so pleasant and attractive in her manner that she soon drew the attention of almost every person in the car, and her journey was being made a very pleasant one. -';.-.-.!- ; " : . "It was a joliy crowd, Everybody seemed in a good humor,'' remarked the conductor, "and when I last passed through the car I noticed that the yeun lady was. having a gay time. " A moment later she threw :up her arms, gave a slight shudder, and - was dead. Her body fell from the chair before her fellow-passengers could realize what had happened. The scene of gavety was sud denly changed to one of mourning. The la .ies cried bitterly, some of them fainted, and the gentlemen wiped the tears trom their eyes.. The train sped on and the body of the young lady - was not cold when we ar rived at Xenia. " " : 'The young lady's father 7 as at the station to meet her. . One by one he watched the passengers stepping from the - toain, expect ing to see his daughter next He , then stepped up and asked if his daughter was aboard, giving her description. "I told the old gentleman that her body was in the car; that she had died while en route," said the conductor, . "The old father was horror-stricken and so prostrate i by grief that he had to be assisted into the sta tion. -The body was removed and our trail pulled out. I could not learn the . lady's name." ANARCHISTS INTERVIEWED. "Capitalists and Their Courts Demand Blood, and -They May Have It." . ."Oh, I have grown almost -indifferent to the result,' remarked Anarchist A. R. Parsons to - ex-Justice Barker. - who talked with the condemned men at Chicago. ."Hope and fear have almost worn " themselves-out and I have become callous. - :.'-'' :i;"" - 7- . "So have I,n murmered Mrs. Parsons, who was by his side. "The capitalists and .their courts demanded blood, and they will no doubt have it on Nov. U.w , "The workingmen and their friends will demand blood for bTood and they will, no doubt have it afterwards," continued Parsons, f-ii'- 'vrj-c-;- ffi'':- i';:'-;!, -A:: "Blood for blood," whispered Mrs. Parsons. -""What hope is there from a United States Supreme Court that sends for - State officers and consults with them an to the question of jurisdiction! That is ' what- oar Supreme Court has done in this case. Did it ever do so in any other case? The judges, with then solemn mummery, are put there to decide questions for themselves. But, bah!"- and, with a wave of his hand, Parsons signi fied that the interview was at an end. - ."Do you think the Supreme Court will interfere in the Anarchists' case'" a World reporter inquired of one of the most promi nent attorneys in the city this morning. "I do not. - Everything indicates that the judges have found nothing to warrant them in sending the case back. : Had it been at all clear or probablo that the court would find cause to interfere, Justice Harlan would have heard the application for the writ of error without hesitation. It has never hap pened but once ; before that the full Bench has heard an application of this kind,'; A book by Nina Van Zandton tje subject of anarchy was put upon the market some time ago. Parsons today announces that he has just finished a book on the same subject, PERISHED IN THE LalEi , .- ........ - . ... '....j J-i"-.. - - -...... ' - . T " "i? A NORTH MICHIGAN PROPELIiER COMPLETEIiY WKECKI3D. i A Passing Steamship Sees men Cling ing to Rafts But is Unable Owing , to the Rough Weather, to . - Reach Them Upward . - of a Score Drowned. The steamship Superior, arriving at MIT- -waukee, Wis., brought the first news of the total wreck of a large passenger propeller off Manitowoo, Wis. . That the wreck is that of the propeller Vernon, of the Northern Michigan line, is established almost beyond a doubt. She was due, and from the descrip tion of fragments seen by the crew of the Superior, her owners" consider her. identify fully established. She had on board a crew of twenty-two men and several passengers, the exact number not being known and it is supposed that all hands perished. Captain Moranbf the Superior, saw three or four rafts with men clinging to them, and also a sailboat containing a women and three men. Although he made an effort to rescue them,' the high sea prevented the rendering of any assistance, the Superior being herself dis abled, and requiring the crew's best efforts, -It was-about ten o'clock in the morning when the first signs of the wreck in the shape of floating cargo and furniture were seen." About an hour later the rafts were sighted.' On some the 7 occupants were , almost gone, while others signalled the Superior. ; P. J. Klein, of Klein & Kirk, who charter ed thoVernon to replace the Champlain, burned early in the season, received the first information from areporter. After hearing tne account as reported by Captain Moran he felt sure that the vessel-was the Vernon. 1 He did not know what passengers were on board, and of the crew could give only the following names: ' ' .- - : - - Captain George Thorpe, of Ogdensburg, N. Y, master. -. - . Captain Collins, mate, who formerly sailed the schooner Golden West, f . 4. ; - Captain Higgins, second mate, who sailed the barge Leland last year.- - v.-. - - j F. W. Burk, clerk, the. oldest son of Mr. Burk, one o the owners of the vessel, -; .--Charles Marcau, first engineer.. 1 Frank M. Hall, second engineer, a brother of Ed Hall of Chicago. v - . Martin Beau, steward. . - ! -" " The Vernon was owned by A. Booth, of Chicago and was valued at $75,000. : She was a year oldand was insured for $37,000. She ran between Chicago and, Mackinaw, and picked up freight at -the ports where she touched, carrying it at the sjrisk; of the own- ' ers. ''. 0:.... - 3-,-- ' Captain Moran, of the steamship Superior,"3 said: . ''To pass one man on a raft appealing s, forour te'p, another dying from exposure, and a small boat in which we could sej one women and three men, the latter hailing . with a coat stuck upon his oar, all being tossed about in & : terrible sea, without our , being"able to render them any - assistance, was heartrending in the extreme." "We were also lighting for our lives, our steamer havings become disabled in the sea. With " the exception of the cooks, our entire, crew of sixteen men, even the engineer were down below, some of them steering the vessel with a temporary tackle. With this we kept our vessel out of the trough of the sea and kept her before the gale. - . - . ' . ,:-,-: ' jf the Vernon foundered in the gale and no. one is left to tell the story of the disaster - -there will be many who will attribute her -: loss to overloading. Without cargo she was a deeper drait vessel tnan any on the Jakes. - and it was impossible to load her with profit to ner owners without maiang ner unsea- . worthy, In order to obtain great speed, her builder sacrificed buoyancy and stab lity, - and every - experienced vessleman who saw the Vernon after she was launched, predict- , ed t lat she would sooner or later meet with -disaster.. - . - - ". AN, EDITOR KILLED. ( Man's Revenge For an Alleged Libel Against His Brother. W, H. - Reynolds, editor of the Times, at Ashland, Ohio, was shot- and killed - in Orange township, Ashland county, by James Mason, a brother of C. D. Mason, of Ash land, who is plaintiff in a libel suit against Reynolds. The alleged libel was the publica-. tion of a statement concerning the leaning of $50 to an Ashland farmer named Lutz by C. D. Mason ani an undue severity of process adopted by Mason to etiforce the collection of a note. Following the institution of the suit Reynolds published an article criticising C. D. Mason and his brother James, f .. Reynolds was in Orange t ywnship collect ing evidence against the plaintiff in the libel case, when James Mason met him.: An al tercation occurred, and Mason . shot him twice, killing him instantly. " Mason is under arrest, v The - community is considerably excited over the affair. 1 Public opinion is divided; the people of Ashland seem to favor Reynolds, and the general verdict is that it was a cold-blooded murder Reynolds was 43 years old and a cr.pple from wounds re ceived during the war. , - ' - HEART RENDING DISTRESS: An Entire Family Found Prostrated Three Dead and Six 111 and V3 -Suffering., - . . v Coroner Beale of Camden, N, J., met , with ; a pitiiui case m tne course or nis cmcial duties. He was notified of a death without , medical attendance, at Eighth street - and Bridge avenue. Toere he found three child- -reh of Thomas Goldfinch, a poor and invalid,- ' shoemaker, dead frm diphtheria, four other - ; cmlareu apparently dying: from the conta gion, and the lather anr mother, both sick with other ' diseases. - r 'i here was scarcely ' anything to eat in the house, and the par- children. The Coroner took official action 9 in the case and gave certmcates of death. whiln r iftii rp,m en ts were made for intorrirnr " the bodies at the city's expense. The case was reported to the Board of Health, and the - , A X 1J1 -CB i ill 1 , . nouse luuugaieu, wuiia eu.orus win aiso oe made to ameliorate the . condition of - the surviving members of the stricken family.- ' . - BAiiTTMOBB Flour City Mflls, extra,$3.00 , a$3.62; Wheat Southern FultV 80a81ct; ,.: Corn Southern White, 48a49cts, Yellow, 49a 50 ct3. x Oats Southern and Pennsylvania 30a35cis. ; Rye Maryland and Pennsylvania 59aG0cts. ; Hay Maryland and Pennsylvania .. Eastern Creamery, 26a27cts., near-by receipts 19a30cts: Cheese Eastern Fancy Cream, 12 -al3cts., Western, 12al2jcts.; Eggs 21a22; Cattle $3.00a4.25; Swine 6ia6ct8. ; Sheep and Lamb 2a4Jicts; Tobacco Leaf Inferior, la$2.50, Good Common, 3 50a--, $4 50, Middling, 5a$6. 00 Good to fine red, 7a$9 Fancy, 10a$12. f ' v New York Flour Southern Common to T fair extra, 3.25a$4.00; Wheat No. 1 Whit ',82 - aSocts. ; Rye -State, 54a56: Corn soutnern Yellow, 51a52cts. ; Oats White State, S3a34 cts. ; Butter State, 17a28 eta. ; Cheese State, lOalOJcts.; Eggs 19a20 cts. Philadelphia Flour Pennsylvania, fancy, 8.50a$4: Wheat Pennsylvania ami Southern Red, 82a83ctn; Rye Pennsylvania 57a58cts. ; Corn Southern Yellow, 51a52 cts. Oats 36a37 ets -Butter State, 18al0 cts.; Cheese N. Y. Factory, Xlal2 cts. ; Es State, 17al8 cts.