I I Thomas Huson, BcsiifEss Mjoiaqer v . Publisiisd bt Roanoke Publishing Co." TOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND Foil TRUTH." NO. 12. VOL. 1. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1889. , THE NEWS, Kobort Dalton, a deputy UulUd States tuarsbal in Oklahoma,' was killed ', by Lef West, a niroiishinor, who in turn was shot , by Dalton , before the--. latter expired.- Charles It. Bolimau, of the .National Flsli Commission, died in theswampsof Southern worgla, Toni Condor, a Mormon mur dorer, was hanged in'Jftirbjefor killing Jack Riley- -At a grade crossing in South Amboy, Francis Mulligan and Neils Nlolson , 'were killed.- Henry iTbornhilL a tougb character, shot and killed William Barrett, a well-to-do farmer fn Aurora. Nobruska. Horace Lebring, of Three O.ikH, Mich., wai wrested charged with attempting to poison fiis father, mother and sister in order to get , possession of tne farm. It is reputed that the wheat crop 'of Dakota is 3,1,000 bushels , bliort. Michael Bolak, the murderer ' of Michael Beilinshlre, was hanged, in Belvf- dere, N. J.- Ex-Stata Senator D. J.Creigh f-Sin r9 Cnn 17.... l 4.. .. VTft. uail Mr K alll.inl;!). mill W MIZl VI I III i. 1 II I V . bribing, and who escaped, has given himself up, i-The nailers of the Brooks Iron Com. . pany at Birdsboro, Pa., have decided not to , accept the reduction proposed by the com 1 K. C "Jordan, proprietor of the Jordan White Sulphur Spriugs, Va., died of blood poisoning, tho result of a squirrel bite. In a collision between two freight trains on the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad, near Boonville, Mo., one" hundred and fifty Lead of cattle were killed. A wagon con taining five persons was struck by a railroad train near Clinton, : Iowa. ' Mra. Frederick Burkenshaw and Miss May Beokman were killed and the others in jured.Siran Bures, colored, charged with the murder of a whito man named Whiteburso at Iuka. Miss., was lynched, Henry Kellar, a deputy sheriff of Columbus, Ind., was fatally beaten by William Henry, beeausa Kellar went walk ing with Henry's daughter. -The new cen sus of the city of St. Paul, Minn.', shows a population "of .193,247. '7 -A ' sheriff's posse charged upon a lot of striking miners near Braidwood, 111.,' aud several men were shot. .-. Secretary Blaine denies the rumors of his resignation. - At a picnic at Rea's Run, . ou the Ohio, river a fight occurred, in which Jacob Francis was fatally stabbed and two : other men in jured.-The scarcity of cattle In Euro'ps has led to arrangements being made in Chicago for enormous shipments of cattle during the next three months. A runaway .couple named Robert Smuthwaite, aged twenty-two years, and , Anna Stevens, aged fifteen years, of Steubenville, 0. j were arrested in Philadelphia, the girl being charged with stealing $5,000 from her father. "Several Iron manufacturers of Coates ville, Pa., have increased the wages of their employes ; - ,., v . Fire at Lancaster Pa., destroyed valuable storehouse property, causing losses aggra vating . fJ0a,000.-r Augustus - Rosenberg, aged, forty-five years, at Somerville, Mass., murdered Mrs. Catherine Smith, with whom ' be had . boon living, and her fourteen-year-old son, and also shot and seriously injured tho woman's two other children, completing the terrible tragedy by leaping from a win dow himself and dying. Frequent earth quake shocks, have been felt about Obispo couaty, Cal.- CL L. Gillespie, late door keeper of the Nebraska Senate, is under : arrest ' irr fsburg, charged by his wife iiaWiarceny.- Three' . prispuers were siiiTocatetf 1n a fire that destroyed the jail at Jacksonville, Oregon. Joseph Web ber, a prominent citizen of. Chicago, com mitted suicide,' -Frank H. Tiernan, a Chi cago sport in bad luck, killed himself, A letter from Panama states that the steamer Ropel, from Valparaiso, was ' wrecked at Castro and eleven of her crew lost. The. Otis Iron and Steel Works,' at Cleveland, Ohio, have been sold to English capitalists for Jl,5O0,O0O.; Alfred Greene, an insane Swede .in the Michigan State .Asylum, stabKX James T. Jackson to the heart with a f etcher knife. -breorgeDe Weight fatally stabbed a man named - Meaney in the Michi gan State House of Correction, in ' mistake for Charles Stanley, another inmate, with whom be had quarreled.- C, B. Fulton and Miss Mary Ault, were instantly killed by a cart in which they were riding being struck by a train near Bellaire, Ohio. Levi tSbrhart, a young "man, was killed on the Northern Central Railroad near York, Pa. John Daly and Andrew. McGregor - were killed, and several other men injured by a dam breaking at' Pittsburg. Tbe tanks of the Consolidated Oil Company, at St. Joseph, Mo. , werj struck by lightning and- destroyed, .: Loss $75,000. Thomas Jefforsori, colored, was hanged at Memphis, Tenn.. for tbe murder of William Razland. THE GREAT SALT TRUST. A Capliil of Twenty-Million What lh Coin M ho Proposes to Do " . E. D. Wheeler, of Manistee, Mich., one ot the most prominent salt manufacturers in the West, i ves an outline of the plans of the propo Id international suit trust. The associutic i will be organized with a capital of f S0.0IX p0O, and will he inocrporated under tbe laws of New York. . . '. "There has been a disastrous war waged betweon producers in Michigan and Kansas and New York." Mr. Wheeler said. "We have been shipping Silt from Chicago, the distributing point, to places in Kansas, pay ingjlper tiarrel. freight and selling it at t We have also shipped 16 Kast at the tame exorbitant rates. , The Kansas and New York producers have been sending salt into our territory with like results loss both to tbt'tn and to us. After the association is formed euch manufacturing point will be apportioned its own dixtrict. , The loss on tlie long freight haul will be adjusted, and prics will go up ten cents a barrel." , The Hssociatloa will begin business on Jan nary 1 next. Of the stock, $5,0U(,0W) wjll be held by English capitahwt. mai t""t the nowlt atwa) neri.H a i wifj ding present a ropy of "Tiu'ir WovJJinjf Jour- J," bou;!i in white velvet. MM OF THE WEEK. Business Inactive, but the Fall Outlook Excellent. , v Prices Reported Firm in Commission Dry Goods, Building MuU;rials, Farniturj,. and . Curiet TI16 . Stock Mar k t.t r :v . Special telegrams torowstrccrs in.''ca!jj that tbe volume of general trade through. out the country, while a little more active In special localities, docs not on the whole, show much increase. The outlook for tbe Autumn businrs is generally considered ex cellent, and good crop prospects have already bad an influence on the country demand at New Orleans, Kansas City and St. Joseph, Lumber proves an excep: ion, In that It is weaker at Western centres. ' . . v 1 1 , A satisfactory increase in trade, accom panying increased firmuess In prices, is re port xi in dry doods (commission), building materials, furniture and carpet trades. - The New York stock market is active and Bxclted, but the recovering tendency of prices on the Western and Trunk Line Rail roads' settlements have been arrested by fur ther unfavorable symptoms and by a sudden break in the Lead Trust .Bonds are firm, and good demand is shown, for high grade issues. Money on call is easy at 3 and 4 per cent, but time loans are higher, and tbe market it becoming sensitive to the influence of approaching Westward drain. :. About $l,50tf,000 gold was engaged for shipment to France, though the condition of exchange shows it to be a spoctal transaction. , Demand sterling is 4 87a4.8S. Money at other lluaucial centers is k J most uniformly firmer than at New York. Our report of gross railway earnings for June last shows a relatively lighter gain than in Moy over 1&S8 For six. months o: 1S3U tho report, while favorable, is less than for five months of the year. '. ' . '. ... : ' Breadstutfs have been very Irregular, starting with a quick advance early in the week on damage 10 tbe Spring .wheat crop and higher cables, aud declining on better weather reports, heavier receipts of now Winter, slacking export request aud " free speculative sales. Wheat advanced to '9 Jo., and closed over 3o lower, ljc oil on the week. Flour gained 10nl5c. on free move ment, but lost most of it. Corn lost a o. gain over last week, and closed heavy with wheat; oats were off 1 Vc. Exports of wheat (and flour as wheat), both : coasts, aggregate 1,553,055 bushels, against 1,404.710 bushels last week, and I,592,?7S bushels in tbe second week of July, ISSN. Our Melbourne cable states that there were 2,891,000 bushels of wheat -'-'"in sight" in .Australia and New Zealand July 1. v.y ...'.;--..--- Raw sugars have; declined at New York 1-lOgC. on cable advices of a heavy specu lative decline at Loudon from 27b. 9d, to 24s. for July. Holders are conservative. ' Ex- pert opinion inclines to the belief that "our refiners will naturally take advantage of the reaction abroad to buy sugar, and the reac tion will be "short-lived. n . The demand for refined is light. ; Prices are barely steady. . Speculation in-coffee has been more confi dent and an advance of fully la per pound is a result. Consumption of coffee in Europe nuu w uniiuu out auring iu past twelve months is placed at 9,247,90S bags, against 8,0.52,130 bags in the preceding year. Our advices from San Francisco are that an attempt is being made to bull the salmon market 011 estimates of only half the expected pack in Alaska. or 1 a . Fall-wear cotton and light-weight clothing woolens are more active and prices are tirni. Raw wool is strong and active at the interior and la fair sale at the seaboard on free ar rivals. Rawcottou isc higher at New York and Liverpool on good demand and Btnall stocks. - - -s NEWS NOTES? , The Earl of Zetland, the new viceroy ot Ireland, enjoys an income(salary included) of about $375,000 a year. - - Wisconsin takes the lead in public school "nawuess," at least, and now educators and newspapers in that State are discussing a proposition to establish baths in publio schools. - .5 ? Mr. Parish, of Berrien county, Ga., it doubtless the youngest sheriff in the State. When elected he had to wait three months to become of age before he could be sworn Into office. - , John Shootsman, Tennesseean, republican and able-bodied citizen, has named his re cently arrived triplet infants two boys and acid after the President and the Presi dent's wife. . - ' A .Mnsselraan woman has just died in Meean Meer. India, credited with one hun dred and fifty years of age. She was blind, deaf and dumb, and almost Inanimate. She died in the house of a grandson, who is over eighty. . - v The Paris Journal des Debats has just cel ebrated its one bundreth anniversary. At- tacnea to its stair have been Chateaubriand, Thieos, Renan, Taine and Jules Simon. Berlioz was its musical critic. . v James Edwin Vardeman, who died last week near Sparta. Go., could repeat the names of all tbe .Senators and Representa tives iu Congress from tha beginniug of the government. A Connecticut man who died the other day left nearly all of his property to a widow who bad refused to marry him. An exchange suggests that this was a very substantial way of showing bis gratitude.. The burglars who went through John Mar tin's bouse at Wesc Buxton, Me. , tbe other uight were both hungry and thirsty, ' Mrs. Martin says she is out a barrel of pork, part of another barrel and thirty gallons of cider. An old couple named Thompson, living in s filthy hut in Allegheny,- Pa., had thirteen dogs aud some cati. ; The man has been sent to a hospital, ana the- woman refused to go to tbe poorhouse. The dogs have been killed. The Cherokee .Indians support over one hundred common schools, with an aggregate of 4,05!) pupils, and a high school for boys,' with 211 students. They are just completing a seminary that will accommodate ltRJ stu dents. 1 . - . 1 The leading candidate for meanest man lives in tbe United States Jives in Milton, Pa. , He refused to give up some timber which floated on bis loc, and which belonged to a man who bad rescued him from his Hood-wrecked house, , r ' Tho schooner Golden Hind, from Grand Banks, arri ved at Gloucester, Massachusetts. She had on 'jboard two men of the French schooner GoWges, picked up June 13 in a dory. , Captain Hoppoll reports that ou June 12, on the wVtera part f Bank Quero, full in with the Franca flsbrng schooner Georges, of St. Pierre, Wt anchor and Hying signals of distress. HarWptain reported ttiut all his crew of eight nie.il had got astray, und asked assidtariire to gc;t his veswl umlor way. Nothiu-' was tior heard of the missing moil. 1 hose pictt'.'d up wtrt forwardcJ to the Frc cou:..'.o at Coalyu. 5 ' THREE SCORE AND TEN, V - ' 1 M f . . .? - ' . 'A,; : - IV ,. , . - - . - Mrs. Julia . Ward Howe, who sometime since celebrated, at her home in Boston, the seventieth anniversary of her birthday, was the recipient of many gifts and letters from tbe leading authors and reformers. Among J these was a beautiful chocolate pot in re- -v pousse silver. Upon the bottom was tbe following inscription: "Presented to Julia Ward Howe on her seventieth birthday by the Fortnightly Club of Chicago, May 27, 1889."- - - The letters contained congratulations from Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, George William Curtis, Richard Watson Gilder, Mrs. Mac Veigh, of the Chicago Fortnightly Club, Sculptor Story of Rome and others. Mr. Gilder dropped into poetry with this senti ment: '.'-. ' , ' :, How few have rounded out so full a life, ; , - Priestess of righteous war and holy peace; Poet and sage, friend, sister, mother, wife, Long be it ere that nobie heart shall cease. ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE. ' John Wanamaker's life ' is insured for 11,000,000.. . - 'W ,- - ! T: c: . - Young Kaiser Wllhelra will not permit his army officers to go to the Paris Exhibi tion. . , . . ' . Mrs. Hearst wife of Senator Hearst, has gone to Europe, to visit Franoe, Norway and Sweden, .. . . . y ., : Andrew Carnegie admits that be in writing his memoirs, but they are be says, intended for posthumous publication. I Professor Blackle asserts that a century ago was a time of miserable humbug, awl says he is thankful for better days. v --. John Randolph Tucker has abandoned politics to become professor of law in the Washington and Lee University at Lexing ton, Va. " ' J. Stanley Brown, Garfield's private sem tary, who married Miss Mollis Garfield, is to settle down in Washington, and intends to practice law there. t Tbe postmaster general of Slain Is nimed Domdeteh Phra Chow Nong Ya Thor Chow Fa Bhanuvanqsi Swanguonqse Kooma Phra Bhanubhandawouqsee Varadey. ' . Mr. Robert Garrett and party have arrived at Long Braach, and are stopping at. the West End Hotel. Mr. ' Garrett is accom panied by his physician. Dr. Jacobs, aud is looking very well. V- . - : Congressman Laird, uf Nebraska, who was so seriously ill last winter that his life was despaired of,' is now convalescing at Atlantic. City. . He is slowly improving in health and strength, and is able to walk sev eral miles every day. , ; . Samuel P. Avery has purchased of Dr. ;W. F. Charming the famout Gibbs-Chanuing portrait of Washington, by Gilbert Stuart, which was seen at the recent Centennial ex hibition, and has added it to his own private collection. r , . '' Mark Twain aud Mr. Deew furnished the fun for the Yale alumni at the New Haven commencement. Mr. Clemens complained that though President Oilman, of - Johns Hopkins, University, spoke most elegant English, be couldn't spell "John" correctly. A law school for women is to be estab lished in New York next fall by Mrs, Emily Kompin, I.L. 1). The system of teaching will be that of European universities, all the instruction being given in the form of lec tures. Mrs. Kempin: is a graduate of the University of Kunoh, Switzerland, and is a lawyer of note. . , -. -,'. - . ; .. ; . " Representative Shively, of Indiana, who was married to Mum Emma Jenks, one of the prettiest young women of Washington, is noted in congressional circles for his ready wit and genial manners. He is one of the youngest men in Congress, being only thirty two years of age. ' He first appeared in Con gress to fill the unexpired term of Repre sentative Calkins, and then went back to Ann Arbor in time to get his degree from tho University Of Michigan. Autonia Aste. the prince of the New York bootblacks, was married in great style in that city. He owns a number of the most valuable stands in town, and is the propri etor of several tenement houses all pur chased by money raised in blacking shoes. Ills undo is a pretty young Italian girl named Annie lWhiorl, who wore on the occasion a white silk dress trimmed with valuable laca They will go' to Europe for their bridal tour. ' -- SIX THOUSAND . WERE LOST. A "Waterspont Dursts in a District in China Villains Flooded. Tbe steamer City of New York arrived at San Francisco from Hong Kong aud Yoko hama. ' Tbe Japan Gazette of the 30th ult, contains the following: 1 "Intelligence has been received at H0112 Kong from Klaying Chan prefecture, in the Northeast of KwaugTung, that early on tbe morning of tbe 2d of June the Chan Ping and Ping Yuen districts were flooded by the bursting of ,a.- waterspout or tornado, de scribed by tbe . Chinese as a water dragon, aud the level country was flooded with nearly thirty-sir feet of water. The"; villages of Chae Kon and Ha Kb Haul in trie Ping Yuen district, and Cueong'fan, Hop Lui, Ngai Ku, Sam Chan Klu and Ban t'o iiui, in the Chan Ping district, were overflowed, many houses being wholly swept away, while others were inundated. Upwards ot sit thousand lives were ioac" . King Humbert, of Italy, squandered more thfwj $100,000 'luring bi 1 four dim" visit to l!crlia. . . JOLIA WAKD BOWB. . CABLE SPARKS. Two thousand bakers in Berlin are on a strike, . The prlco of flour has been advanced in London.: -' -; -. Herr Weber, lately German consul to Samoa, died at Hamburg. ' Russia bat declined to take part In the In ternational Labor Congress at Kerue. Queen Victoria has donated 50 to the suf ferers by tbe railroad accident near Ar magh,. Ireland. : The Prince of Mlngrella, formerly a can didate for tbe Bulgarian throne, has died in the Caucasus. , . . Count Merveldt has been appointed Gov ernor of Upper Anstiia In place of Baron Wober, retired. ', In a re-ballot for municipal officers at .Cette, France, the socialists gained a victory overvii5lv'u'"isa"' Th FiifJ.h Chamber of Deputies has adopted a bill pKJvid,,,8 for the purchase of telephones by tbe StatS ' ; . v Thirty-seven more bodied fea,re bmn taken from tbe coal pit at St. Etieni Fraooo lo which an explosion occurred. .. " - ; Evictions continue on the Clanrioard2fr tate in Gal way,, Ireland. The Uousoa evicted tenants are demolished. - y Whaling vessels which have arrived at Dundee report that sealing and whaling ves sels in Greenland waters are meeting with phenomenal success this season. 1 The Clyde shipbuilders have given notice of a lock-out. t Their object is to force the striking riveters to return to work. , . ' Mr. Bates, one of the American commis sioners to the Samoa conference, has gone to Ems, where he will remain two weeks. : The London St. James Gaxette, in order to avert further scandals, has paid the claim of Frederick Greenwood, its former editor, for breach of contract , - ; U Representatives of the cotton manufac turers of Lancashire and Yorkshire met at Manchester, England, and decided to run on half time for one month. 7 " The yield of gold in Queensland during the past half year amounted to iftO.lMJ ounces, an increase of Kio.oOO ounces over the preceding half year. . t , v., a : 7 Four thousand weavers Jaegernsdorf, Austria, have struck work. An otlicial pro clamation has been issued warning the strikers against committing excesses. - "; The amount of 'the loan to be negotiated by the Bundesrath of Switzerland for the purchase of rifles for the army is $'25,000,0(10 francs. The rate of interest to bw paid is 3) percent. , , : '.' M. Goblet, formerly minister of foreign affairs of L. France, in an address at - Liile declared that Boutangism in no way endan gered the republic. He said it was ouly necessary to destroy the movement. ;. The ixtudon Pall Mall Ga9ttu says that the blockade ot tlaytieu ports is plainly In effective, and that Great Britain has, there fore, notified Hay ti not to molest British vessels visiting insurgent port. T3 testimony before the Parnell commis sion showp l that the London Times' articles on "Paruellism and Crima" were an elab orated reprint of "Parnellism Unmasked, compiled hy lucnara rlgott, the informer, who committed suicide in Madrid. The French steamer Anadyr, bound from Marseilles for Yokohama, has been sunk outside of Aden Bar by collsiion with the French steamer Oxus, from Yokohama for Marseilles. The Oxus was only slightly damaged. r : r !: -. ; ' . It is reported at Vienna that fifty Russian offioera have passed Bralia, Roumania, on tbeir way to Servia. There are also rumors that the Russian government has been send ing material of war and pontoons to Reni, in Besarabia, and to the mouths of . tbe Danube, WORK AND WORKERS: Chicago has 40,000 people out of work. Albany barbers demand Sunday closing. The sash, door and blind men are all doing a good business. San Francisco's 1,300 shoe-workers tai 01 getting into one union. : v - Grand Rapids. Mich. , makes 13,000 pairs of wooden shoos yearly. Sweden has a machine that makes 1,003,- 000 boxes of matches daily. Iron bricks are being successfully used in Germany for paving purposes. Germanv has last secured its first railway construction job in Australia. . Farmers at Grass Valley, CaL , offered $3. 25 per day and board for laborers. v ; ( In April over 310,000,000 cigars were made five for each inhabitant of tbe united States. ' tv. ' .';, v :,' . - '..'."-?'' . In the Northwest farm laborers are hold ing mass-meetings in the fields to discuss tho wage question. , ; , : . . ' There are eleven grain elevators in St. Louis, with an aggregate value of 14,000,000. They have all been consolidated under a tingle management. , India cotton workers put in fourteen hours per day, including eunuay. J.ny are al lowed to enjoy five of tbe fifteen holidays in a year. They make about $5 a month. - ; The ' movement to units . the various branches of railway employes projressed so far at Chicago ss to combine tbe firemen, brakemenand switchmen into one federa tion..,'.:: i f, ' : ' ." f : Durins the oast week the fires have been put out in all the flint-glass manufactories in the country, according to custom. Some of them willl be start.-d agaiu in August and others in Septembers - A railroad official estimates that the Penn sylvania Company bos lost $3,000,000 in bridges alone. That company has already purchased 4,000,000 feet of lumber for re construction purposes. .. ' ".. The managers of the London and North western Railway Company have issued an order by which every man in the company's service is entitled to a week's holiday on full pay every year.-: It is reported that other British railway companies will follow this example. ..'-' One of the growing industries of San Diego county, Colo., is the manufacture of asbestos goods. An extensive plant it erected at Pacific Beach, which cost several thousand dollars, at which cement and roof and bouse paint are manufactured. Mors machinery is being added to increase facili ties, and a new kiln is being built to make asbestos brick. . Tbe works will use a c" load of raw asbestos every week. The United States has lS.SOO.OOO cotton spindles and the number of looms nfht be placed at oUO.000. European statistics are unsatisfactory for any exact information. KUlson, estimate of spindles for 1888 was as follows for the world: Great Britain, 42, 7!i),000r Continental Europe 33,:80,00(); United States, 13.525.00J, aud E-t India, 2 -100,000, making a total of SJ, 133,000 apin dus, against 8t,fji0i"0i for Th pres. t nuiiiter f'f l.oopi in Great JirUfUn U -, !.W0, - 'SOUTHERN ITEMS; INTERESTING NEWS COMPILED PROM MANY SOURCE 4. ' - A new building and loan association has just been organised in Durham, N. C ' -William Sbelton.a young railroad man, committed suicide at Atlanta. Ga.. by taking morphine. ; - .. ' .' , Tbe Lynchburg (Va.) Industrial Society will hold their annual fair 00 tbe 8th, 9th, 10th and lith of October next. - -A regular waterspout struck Lyncbbnrg, Va.. flooding stores and residences, and causing a loss of nearly $10,000. , ; ; ".'; - ': - Wm. Garson and Captain W. A. Lloyd," while fishing off Wrigbtsville. N. C., were drowned by their boat capsizing. - i. Kr a noes Cooper, colored, of Mt. Pleasant, Flo., has confessed to poisoning three colored women whom be invited to dinner. . .. .' Prof. Ralph Hi Graves died at Raleigh, N. C, from the effect ot the wounds inflicted upon himself in his recent attempt to com mit guicide. d,; There was a slight shock of -earthquake at Charleston, S. C, lasting about ten sec onds. Buildings were shaken, but no dam age wasjdone. - ' .. :;" - It is estimated that the orobable 'mort- J gage indebtedness in Frederick county, Md. " rkjS nrocant. Mnu will rnflnh Kit AITfjrAfmtft amivi;r . of morUe0000 1 V prnlr flan and Sam Cronln got Into r.2 J.:virl at a picnic near Horse M'Aiuntv. W. Va.. and Cronin shot Millan dei -Tbe Riverside Iron Swks Out the contract for buildineJf "Jlblasl f nrnace of greater capacity thai? their pres ent one at lien wood, W. Va. Mr. G. Kline, of Hagerstown, Md.,' ex hibits a bunco of wheat, consisting of ninety six stalks of fully developed beads, the pro duct of a single grain of wheat. -, They hay crop in Frederick county. Md., will be large, and in many places where the wheat bos been thrashed tbe yield has been found better than was expected. Lewis Koontz, aged .17 yenrsr a son of Charles Koontz, of Huntiugton, W. Va was drowned In the Ohio river about 4 o'clock,, while in tbe water bathing. Carroll Division, Sons of Temperance. of Westminister, Md., have decided to tear down their building and rebuild at once, replacing by a substantial and handsome building. . ' . '''!:: : Yv'-., Near - Tunnel Hill, Ga.. Martin Love. colored, attempted a felonious assault on Miss Addie Rogers, a white girl. He was caught late in tbe day ana lynched by a masked mob. ' ' v'oV: '' !:i--v. "v-- ' A. B. Privett, while erased with drink, committed suicide in Goldsboro', N. C, by takine laudanum. Prompt medical attention was summoned but could only prolong his life a few hours. John Dinkleman, an aged German ped dler, was struck by a train on the Ohio River railroad in Parkersburg, W. Va., and sustained injuries from which be died In two hours. ' '"..'. A'summarv of one hundred and thirtv- five replies to inquiries sent out by the Au gusta (Ga.) Exchange through seventeen counties in Georgia and Carolina, indicate the cotton crop to be from five to twenty days late. - Mr. Steiner, of Frederick, Md., who re cently discovered ochre beds on one.of his farms, is still meeting with great success. He opened the earth to the depth of nine feet and finds the quality of ochre superior to the first found. - . Young Whitebursf, book-keeper for Branch, Cone & Co., of Spring Hope, Nasb county, N. C, committed suicide by shooting himself through the heart. It is thought that irregularities in his books caused him to commit the act. . -While a passenger traiu was standing at Oakdale, Tenn., at 5.30 a. ra., it was run into by a south-bound train on tbe Cincin nati Southern,, wrecking - tbe engine and potsal car of the south-bound train. Nobody was hurt beyond bruises. The outline for tbe programme for Alle ghany county, Md., centennial celebration has been agreed upon. September 24 will be literary day, tbe 25th trades display and tbe 26th civic and Military parade. Each day is to have minor features. ' :; A horse driven by Mrs. Troxell, of Ha gerstown, Md.,' ran away and collided with the team of Mr. Bankert. This animal also became frightened and started another horse driven by Mr. Teigley. Matters became exciting for a little while, but the only damage done was the breaking of Mr. Bonkert's buggy. ; Tbe warehouses occupied by J. W. Tem- le & Co., furniture, cotton and rice straw; lores Bros., pianos and organs, and Charles Kolshorn & Co., beer bottlers, at Savannah, Ga., were destroyed by fire. Tbe total loss is $30,000, with $4,000 insurance. The State treasurer of North Carolina has just decided that boards of county com missioners have no right to change valuation of property where no improvements or de preciation have occurred since- the last; assessment. Willie Bodensteln, near Wheeling, W. Va., dropped bis bat on the track of the B. & a, and taking a stick was trying to re cover it when the train passed, and be was drawn under the wheels, which crushed the life out of bim. , Mr. Gibbons, of Barnesville, W. Va .has a brood of domestic patridges. They were batched by an old hen, who takes kindly to tier nimble little flock, and is evidently not aware of the deception. . . ; y Work has been discontinued at the Vir ginia ore bank, between Shepberdstown and Harper's Ferry, W. Va., tbe Sa very Com pany having had it stopped on account of the washing of the ore discoloring the water so that tbe pulp mill could not be operated. John Wright, one of tbe most prominent farmers of Washington county, Va', had bis barn destroyed by lightning. The barn and its entire contents, consisting of a thou sand bushels of wheat, grain drill, barness, &&, and two very valuable horses. Loss between $2,000 and $2,500; no Insurance -Mrs. E. W. Barber, an' old lady living near Lafayette, Ala., was bitten by a rattle snake a few1 days ago. She became very ill for a few hours and afterwards became totally blind. Otherwise she has entirely recovered from the effects of the bite. - Her physicians do not know bow to account for tbe circumstance. A youth while at work In tbe harvest field of Mr. John Bastorday, near Petersville, Md., fell m f rout of a self-binder while it was in operation and bad one of his arms caught in the binding section. ' Before he could be extricated Lis arras were badly lacerated, two knots having; been tied in his flesh. - ., V- -'' - j - MrsrClayton, of Cumber buid.Md. .during a thunderstorm, went to close a window up stairs, when she was stunned by a flash of hgbtuing. ' Her cheek wasi singel by the flash, the mark left having the appearance of a severe sunburn. In tbe room below whre 8 he stood a rouna hole one inch in diameter is seen in the plastering. ' The Wheeling Bridge Company, who propose to build a bridge betweon Wheeling una' the is I. -ind and from the iland to JItua viro, W, Va., iia!( ' t men published, of its fnteniion to apply to the secretary of war for his approval of its plans and permission to construct the bridges. Charles Walker, an employe at Wood's saw mill, at Rush Run, Fayette county, W. Va., was killed in a drunkeu row with an unknown negro, who escaped after tho shoot ing. Four shots were fired, two of which took effect in Walkers' breast, inflicting a fatal wound. The farmers of Frederick, Md. complain that a small block fly is proving particular troublesome to tbe cows this summer. The flies settle ia great numbers about too base of the horn and on top of the bead between the horns, and are a serious torment, , Tbe Luray (Va.) Mills Company hav disposed of their property at public sale for $10,000; Messrs. W. M. FieMiug, T, B. lien aids, John Jr. Grove, John W. Rothgeb aud A. J. Huffman becomine the purchasers at that price, it is tbe purpose of the new company to run the mill at a much' larger capacity than heretofore. ; - The planing mills and sash and blind factory of Parsley and Wiggins, at Wil mington, ' N. C, were destroyed by fire. Two saw mills were sa veil The loss is from $10,000 to $15,000; partially covered by In surance. Tbe schooner Vrooman, lying at the wharf loading with lumber, wm ahm burned. The total loss is about $30,000. . v Last Spring many of tbe farmers in . Chatham and Moore counties, ri. v., in view of the scarcity of aeed corn, planted their fields with western corn, received in most cases, from tbe department at Washing ton, D. C Tbe general complaint now ia that the corn has tassled at the height of three feet and produces very little grain. : The work of constructing the roadbead of be Baltimore and Eastern onore Katlroad Sin nrncrrvsa. trround was broken at K as ton " & How, of New York, are the con- , UodetruSNgy uave difficulty in getting tractors. --s:,m8 at Eaatou. and will pro laborers and tAimore. iV cure tbem in BalUv . , . 1 ng of the county com At the Iasmeet. erftl amouat for missioners to adjust 'heVu Q COUQt the various expenses of Mo. . tJll Md., for the previous fiscal yCl" $87,277 24 was appropriated. Th 't chiso tax of $443 5f on tho Sandy SpT-"6 Savings Bank. 4 Tbe county rate of taxat! is on tbe $100. This added to the Stat . tax will make tne tax 1 10 on toe iuu. ; ; The large steamer Queen of St John's burned to the water's edge at her wharf just above tbe city. She waa owned by J. C. Christopher, and was brought here from St. John's river, Fia., last summer to run as an : excursion steamer. She was an immense boat, with a capacity for 1,200 passengers. Tbe origin of tbe lire is unknown. Tne steamer had been tied up since last season. ' She is said to have been partially insured. The late rains have caused all the re maining Irish potato crop around Norfolk, Va., to rot in the. ground. Cabbage are worthless to ship, and a large crop of tho finest, ever raised are now left to rot in the fields. The heavy fall- ot 'water beat tbe corn flat to tha ground, which - will causa great injury, and the peanuts ou maoy farms have been washed up by tbe roots. . Jake Morris, janitorof the City Hall, and who belonged to every secret order In tbe city of Atlanta, Ga., laughed himself to death a few days ago. lie attended ths Masonic loage ot wuicu ue wm memoer. When he left the lodge room he was accom- . panied by Professor Otto Spahr, who bad 1 lost bis bat and was compelled to go bare headed until they reached Morris's room. Prof. Spahr noticed that his friend laughed immoderately, a thing which seldom hap pened. Next morning Morris was found dead by the servant. The theory is that ha laughed so immoderately as to bring on pal- Siitation of the heart, to which be was bub ect. ' ' ; '"...1,' , TO DISCUSS EDUCATION. Session of the National; Council In Nashville Subjects to be Discussed. The National Council of the Educational Association opened its four days' session in . Nashville, Tenn, The general meetings of the association . were opened ' at Cherokee Park with a barbecue. Governor Taylor, the mayor of Nashville, and the State super intendent of instruction, extended words ot welcome, to which the officers and others of the association responded in appropriate words, each section of tha country being represented in a response, About 4,500 delegates have arrived. Many are absent at Lookout Mountain and on ex cursions. Nearly every state and territory Is represented, and delegates are pre seat from Canada. . . : Fifteen hundred delegates assembled in the Theater Vendome. After tbe presenta tion of a gaval from tbe Alabama delega tion, tbe meeting proceeded to consider the subject of manual training. Prof. Wood ward, of St Louis, earnestly advocated manual training. The subject of manual training was assailed and defended, and its future place in public instruction is unset tled, so far as the convention considered the subject. v ... LIGHTNING'S QUEER HAVOC. Playinar About a llonw and Stunning ' the Occupants. ., .'. During a storm at Fredericksburg, Va., lightning struck the bouse of IL A. Carner, almost completely wrecking it. Tbe light ning first struck the north end of the house at the top, ' and ; passing , down : tort off every vestige of weather boarding. It then ran down the stove pipe into the parlor, where Mrs. Carner was sitting with a young child in her lap, both of whom where stun ned. ? From the parlor it ran to the dming room, completely demolishing the table, set ting the curtain on fire, aud destroying a number of household articles, v From , tbe dining-room it proceeded on Its way to tha kitchen, and passing a small table, on which wereasetot knitting k needles, completely melted them. In . tbe kitchen were five laborers, all of whom were severely stanned, but otherwise uninjured. Leaving tto house the electric fluid ran on a wire ciothes-lme which was attached from the bouse to a cherry tree, and demolished both. Nearly allot the window glass in the house wai shivered. There were eight people ia tb house at the time, but none were killed, although all were stnnned. , . Db. Shakp has made a communication to the Smithsonian Institute on tlu iish eatini bats of Trinidad. On examiua ttonhe found tho remrvins of fish in their stomachs. It was buM, they catch their food by means of the membranti whioh extends between the lower limbs, Roforrinff to tho report tlmt (vrtain bat of tho region stick the bUxid of aiiimftU he stated that.-1 hoy lert.-inly LiU IV" toos or tl - ' u-f of hum"," Iv hiul. ' 0 c f til- K