WOODS SPOKES MAY BE FOKOOTXEV.BUTTIIOSB WHICH AUG WRITTEN' OR PKlNTJ2I NTAXDS ItECOKD. VOL- 72. ' DURHAMNORTH CAROLINA. WEDNESDAY JUNE10. 1891. NO. 22 HijKest of all in Leavening Power. 1 1 ABSOULTTELY PURE W. A.SLATER &C0. NEW FIRM! NEW GOODS. ; FinsT In The Field WITH p:rirLfy CXponxxrxs: WE HAVE JUST OPENED A FINE! STOCK OP ' FINE CLOTHING, FURNISHING GOODS, HATS. Our line neck-wear is the prettiest you ever saw, and our line of HATS in all shapes will be sure to please you. Remember you have a special invitation to examine our stock. We trust by fair dealing to merit a share of your patronage. Be certain to give us a call when you come to Durham. W. A. ST ATKR & CO. WRIGHT BUILDING, ROBERT SLAUGHTER Insarance ani MTOe, LAWBmLDING.' ' HOOM NU.MliIl2. Lynchburg. Va FARTHING & DUKE. WHOLESALE Dealers in QrocoriBs, Dry G gqQs. Nations, Clothing, etc We carry is stock avcrjtbiag you ja find is bj general store. , We carry large stocks of w. l:douglass Shoes, Satter & Lewis & Co.'s Shoes. OLD HICKORY nd .Piedmont Wag ons anf1 Road Carts Obcr'a Fertilizer The Na tional and Durham Ball Fer tilizers. . The most ifHxIi for the Isl money FARTHING DUKE. DUailAM, N. (!. for Infants tiMMaat HaMpaitrlgurpnnih kMtn" H. A. inn, U. tK, ill Oxfari St, Brakl?, K, T. in t 'IWIt' h mmhmwt tm4 ft. mnm m nU know that tt " tmtfthfnt wk. . ant kmf Cvn tllUaaMliM," Cum wmi D. t.. K Tor rwf . U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. Next door to Post Offiff. ne Fan Given A war. ! In it. rwpivvA a new lot of 7.fn'. Ijulit-R' and Children's Shoes and Slippers, will be scld nt low prices, i win give a nue fan with every pair of shoes. .' S. Balkix, Main street, Durham, N. C. M. 1L JONES! DURHAM. N. C. DEALER IN Silver-Plated Ware, Jewelry, Eye Glassy and all kind of RE PAIRING DONE in First-Class Style. Orders by mail promptly attended to. apr-8 TOOTINE" Cure the distmse that cause t.he offenoive odor of the fret and arm pits, tonghni the akin snd ire viits chafing. Price 50 cts. For sule bv nil Durham Druggist DURHAM BOOKSTORE BUY YOUR HOOKS ANii STATIONERY AT THE Durham Book Store FROM W.H.' ROGERS, Llain Street. ..!,.' I ... l and Children. Hoar KtnraK Ittarrti'M. KruouuMi, MJM firm Hp, mi frmm nt ' (mows,' ori hU l7 wUw M x m m tec tatanaUjr (nduM Bwrm F. fuum, It D " 1h WWhRV," 1Mb SMl Mrf Tlk 4m, (TarkCKT tn Cmmm 0mm1 tf Knut Snunw, Kit Teas. Dill Southern Slavery ; Degrade ' . the African? Ul hmon4 V rhrltlu Adwet.) Our readers will recall the Stanley -Jameson controversy regarding an act or. cannibal ism, at which the latter is said to have connived. Following is the account of the tragedy as given in Jameson's book just published. "Tippu no, wno came in oe- fore it was ever, told me that they usually kill several people and have a grand feast, for the Wacusu are terrible cannibals. Then he told me, among other stories, that long ago, when nirhtinjrnevrMatela.they killed a great many of the enemy", end the natives who were witn mm being cannibals,5 there was not a body to be found the next ' 1 T . ill. i a - morning, iie ien me niui two men will easily eat one man in a night. Tippu Tib sent for water in the night to wish his hands and drink, the water be ing in a well near Dy. nppu Tiocoad not make out why, when it was brought j it stuck to his hands and was so oily and bad to drink. Next day Tippj Tib and several Arabs went to the well to see wnat was the matter. There he saw a most horrible sight. ; The water was covered with a thick layer of yellow fat, which was run ning over the side of the well. He found that the natives had taken all the human meat to the well to wash it before eating. "At th next place they halt ed, he made the natives . camp below him ion the stream. , I told him that the people at home generally consider such stories to be only 'travelers- tales as they are called in our country, or in other words, lies. He then said something to an Arab call ed Ali, who was seated next to him. Ah turned to me and said, Give nie bit cloth and you see.' I sent a boy for six handker chiefs, thinking it was all a joke, and they not in earnest V resently a man appeared, lead ing a young girl about ten years of age by the hand. Then I wit nessed the most horribly sick ening sight I am never likely to see in my life. A native plung ed a knife quickly into her breast twice. She then fell on her face, turning over on her side. Thre men then ran for ward and began to cut up the body, ending with the head, till not a particlo remained. Each man taking his piece away down the river to wash it. 'The most extraordinary thing was that the girl never uttered a Round nor strugged un til she fell. Until the last mo ment I could not believe that they were in earnest. I have heard many stories of this kind since I have been in ttiis coun try, but never could believe them. I should never have been such a beast as to witness this, but I could not bring myself to believe it anything save a ruse to get money out of me, until the last moment. The girl was a slave captured from a village close to this town. The canni bals were Wacusu slaves, na tives of this place, called Macu la." Ma. HarrjsoX, by the aid of boodle, President of the Repub lican party, is now being urged to appoint the nine judges for the Appellate Court. This court was created by the last Con gress. While not liking much what the President of his party does, we give him all due praise for the excellent appointments of a judicial kind lie lias made. If he had done as well in all other things his administration would have lieen most com mendable. We are gratified to learn that he refuses to appoint the now judges. 1 his is proper, and he is to be commended for it. We do not know as to his riirhtto appoint, but we give him credit for not attempting an unwise or an usurping act. It is even said that lie lavwrs giving the Democrats some of the judgeships. A Bin scandal in the high Ida 01 England is now occupy ing considerable space in the papers. It U the baccarat trial or in other words a sitae ies ol gambling, similar to the Amer ican Kumu vi iiuiftvr, in wim-11 cheating was discovered. The thing is tiresome rvading and the only thing we see in it is the corruption of the hnglmh an tocracy: and similar incidents can be found on this side of the water. "What makes you color your lemonade red?" asked the curt ous old gentleman of the circus merchant "Ureal Scott:" was the Indignant response; "you don t expect us to take money MlsKlNMippl's Confederate. Dead. To-day one week ago, at Jack son, Miss., at half-past 10 o'clock the procession began to move, while cheers issued from thous ands of strong livogs Behind the last company and drawn by ten white horses came a float carrying fifteen young 1 ladies representing the Sthern Con federacy and the different States which composed itS. Each bore aloft a beautiful banner with the names of the different States handsomely embroidered upon the centre. Every one was the daughter of a Confederate vet eran and every one was more than fair to look upon, being re garded as a belle tn her parti cular State. i " , It was a magnifiiient tableua, and cheers that greeted the float as it passed from block to block were deafening. These were the fair representatives? Miss Annie Stone, representing "the Confederacy;' Miss Kate Por ter, Maryland; Miss Courtney Walthall, Virginia; Miss Corin neH. Sykes, North ; Carolina; Miss Annie Howinsway, South Carolina; Miss Mary Lacy, Georgia; Miss Elsie Govan, Florida; Miss Nellie Fewell, Alabama; Miss Maria , Ixiwry, Mississ'ppi; Miss Mary Belle Morgan, Louisiana; Miss Caro- iine Martin, Texas; Miss Vir- ginia Hunt, Arkansas; Miss &auie uowen, Tennessee; Aliss Annabell Power, Kentucky; Miss Annie L. Stone, Missouri, Next to the float came the of- fleers of the Ladies' Monument tuiinn tko . under which the monument hasl,buch fi0"!0, been erected. They were hearti- worJlatflsf ly chered at every point Then : toTfn at li I8. tre;0 came the distinguish visitors ' Jf Durham county expects to from abroad an! the Weder-j attnM ani?ng 3ttX ate Veterans, in carriages, or- me iS ganized Posts . of Confederate ' sh! effort-throw j ,i ..lout the overtures. of Sons of ConfedeFat Veterans.! The procession was two imleataiwVSw "".F" length. The , sidewalks ' weretK tightly from a fear of mvest packed with people, and cheers men . Durham was in a good ran fwwri hnr.v hwir : ThJ condition to do the handsome Stars and Stripes ware carried j at the head of evert division, and likewise floated' from theL top of the Capitol. 3 by side! from showing to the assemoied with them were carried many,,maltltu,Je!j both atKaleigh and torn and tattered .Confederate battle flags, The bands played the Star- Spangled Banner, Yankee Doodle and Dixie. Twenty -one Mississippi military companies, and ten companies from other States figured in the procession. When the grand stand was reached the exercises were open ed with a fervent invocation by Father F. A. Picheret,of Vicks bur, a Confederate veteran who had served through the war as claplain. The monument was then un veiled by Mrs. Margaret Davis Daynes, a daughterof Jefferson Davis, amidst prolonged ap plause, while the combined bands rendered "Star-Spangled Banner" and "Dixie." The monument was formally pres ented by Miss Sallie C. Morgan,' the presentation speech being made by Hon. C. E. Hooker. It was accepted by Colonel J. R. Mcintosh. Senator E. E Walt hall, upon being introduced, was received with loud and pro longed applause. His oration unon "The Con- federacy"was a complete his tory of the war from inception to closo. He received close at tention and repeated applause. V hen he concluded Mrs. Luther Manship recited with stirring effect the poem by Rev. Father S. J. Ryan, entitled "Sentinel Songs.'5 Then Gov. Lowery followed with a brief oration on the life and charactar of Jeff erson Davis, in the course of which he said that when parti sanship had given place 10 sober reason and judgment, historians would accord the late President of the Confederate States the front rank among the great statesmen of his day, as well as those who had preceded him. At the coucl asion of Gov- ernor Lowery s oration the bands rendered "America" and "Maryland. My Maryland." and with the pronouncimr of the benediction by Rev. II. V, Sproles, pastor of the First Baptist church of tha city, the exercises were brought to a con clusion. Itach disappointment was felt at the absence of Mrs. Davis and Miss Winnie, who were in New York. A Tribute to Eloniienee. "Sir," said the prisoner to his eloquent counsel, "I was about to confess myself guilty of this crime, but I'll be hanged if you haven't made me believe that I'm innocent." Epoch. Congr-JM Wi'I Pas a Free Coin- . ape Bill. i Hon. George D. Wine was in terview in Washington oy a Post reporter last Tuesday, he said: "If the Alliance people can secure what is substantially their demands they will not in terfere with Democratic suc cess, 1 4 am certain they will support our ticket. They want the free .coinaga of silver. I don't like to speak for the whole party, but I believe the Dem ocratic Congress will pass a free coinage bill, that the , measure will bo agreed to in the Senate and that it will go to the Pre sident for his approval Or veto. "The farmers ask also for a lower tariff, v A H new tariff bill will be passed by the next House, and I believe that it will also pass the Senate and go to the President. As for the sub treasury scheme I can only Say that the Alliance platform in Virginia does not indorse it. ."I believe that the legislation in the next Congress will con vince them , that adhersion to Democratic principles will yield them all the benefits ' they de sire." Win We be In It? It is a matter of regret to those . . 1 - s wno. are cnaeayonng to piisn urnamcountyiorwara.inai ner magistrates ana ranui vuB- 'county by ever so small a sum -in making a display at the J JftlSSSS and then at the World's Fair. 18 D the P?rt of Tieiom Wn! 5ut. her Pount7 officials dida t do it-. . . ut Aa Iet t.hat st0P. Chicago, what we can do. See if you cannot turn over your money to your own, profit no less than that 01 your neignbor. If you have quite a sufficiency, vou wouldn't mind, presuma bly, aiding your fellowmen, especially if your own xche quer is increased thereby. De velop your section: -unearth the rich mineral deposits! Let the hum of machinery make music for your neighborhood! Let the smoke of factories us cend upward from every dir ection. Investors will be in our State; they will visit the Worlds Fair and seeing our products and display will seek to learn more of us. They will come with their capital. Will we not seek to reap the richest fruits of this golden harvet? Awake yet that look with dis favor upon this move and wash the scales from , your eyes! When capitalists come to in vest you'll want a big price for property, and yet you are afraid to risk a little to bring them here. Let Durham do something, by all means, in the way of a display- We ought n it to be out of the line of march. A traj;e vne of Dlwiplliie. One of the most rem irkuble ecclesiastical cases in mod;rn times is reported from Ameri- cus, Ga. Mr. J. J. Duke, a prominent member, of the Hani shell Baptist Church, recently put up a lightning rod on his 4:1 f u ul VnuiJmwiA netI uc vr ivvw a bciuvuvi:i uiii thereby deeply pained his re ligious brethren by his evident distrust of the beneficence of Providence. In ffonw f ?1r) bum's Find The monument to Leonard Calvert, the first Governor of Maryland, was unveiled at St. Mary's Wednesday. The cere mony began with an invocation by Cardinal Gibbons, road by the Rev. Joseph Cunnane of Upper Marlboro. Col. J. Thom as Scharf then delivered a his torical discourse, after which Miss JuliaStuart Calvert pulled the cord which caused the d rap. inif to fall from the monument. "Maryland, My Maryland." Natural philosophy Taking care ot number one. Now a tack combine is form ing. Who will be brave enough to 'sit down" on it? The manufacture of oleomar garine is largely on the increase Away With Sectioned Line". VWMblugtM ' In an interview with Hon. George D. Wise, of Virginia, this well-known gentleman ex pressed his unabated confidence m Mr. Cleveland, and doubtless represents the majority senti ment of his State in this respect. in Mr, a Wise's judgment the Cleveland administration was one of the, best the country ever had, and he calls special atten tion to the fact, as a great pomt m me late President's favor, that he made every effort to break down sectional lines and treated the people of the South as citizens of a common coun try rather; than a distinctive part of it to bo discriminated against. That was certainly very commendable on Mr. Clev. land's, part. It is high time that sectionalism were done away with. . let Mr. Wise, in talking a- bout the speakership, seems to think that it were better for the South to lay no claim to the hon or. He would be satisfied to see it go North or West. ,Why? Of coursa on sectional grounds j the very grounds that Presi-' dent Cleveland in such a, broad and liberal way sought to avoid. Is there not a little inconsis tency in the two positions? If the time has come for the obliteration of all sectional lines, wny make an exception m the case of the speakership? Whv raise the question anew?- What is the sense in brin2in2 out the old iolitical map of the country una urgumg mat oy the mere reason of uis geographical loca- tioo south of a certain imazi- nary but no longer existing line one man is less suitable or less available to preside over the de liberations of the House than some other m m who happens to live north ot that line.' If our Democratic friends are thoroughly honest in their a vowed ontagonism to sectional ism, if sectionalinm is really the dead thing that we are told it is, and as Mr. Cleveland undertook to demonstrate, the sooner they down the ghost the better. Its preenca in strangely out of 'place .ia the pokeriIiil) coa- test. A llurumjr S!i.iu. The more oue scrutinizes the proportions to which the pension business of this government has grown, the more one is impress ed with the enormity of the per version from its original de sign. Pension eaters, pension sharks and tieiinion otlice frauds are common things in Washington. The tiling has grown out of all reason under tin? present admin istration. It isaburuiugshame, a monumental disgrace, for a nation to barter and trade aw3v the provisions and "rewards of patriotism. Here is the branch of the gov ernment established to dispense material gratitude to honest sol diery, in a disabled condition, made the nursery of more cor rupt crookedness than all the ot her departments of the gov ernment combined. Shame it is and an outrage upon the pa triotic sentiment of the Repub lic that fraud after fraud should be disco ered in the pension office. Better that it should be abolished permanently than that the survivors of tlio mighty conlHct should In? made the ex cuse for the enrichment of a circle of conscienceless thieves. -- Ir is roport.il that a Western man has worked forty years on the problem ot tiurpeiuai motion, without solving it. If he were to visit Virginia per haps he might learn something of thin much vexed question. Some twenty six ve.ir. ago our neighbor tt:irb; I the State debt question. It h;m nver boon settled since aud is now running its slow length along equal to perpetual inotbu. Another con ference has been held, and like those proceeding it nothing accomplished, it i unfortun ate that Virginia does not set tle the matter mmn the host tonus possible and take 11 fr.'sh start. It is none of our business ns to what Virginii may do, but we feel a deep interest in her welfare and prosperity. Irinll ii i.liiorn:iU f. The Tribune doelares that ex- Senator Ing ills is to le associ ated with iilakelv Hall in the couditct of the New York Truth. Mr. Ingalls arrived in Chicago last Thursday, and although he said his mission to that city was tn connection wiui tin world fair matters, it is said that in reality lie was t!i rt for tha sole purpui Hall. H)e or meeting Blakvlv The Alliance Circular. " The following is a copy of a circular which is being sent to all the sub-Alliances by r the secretary of the State Alliance: "We fought a glorious fight and achieved a great victory last year, but the war is not over; the enemy to our order is strenghthening his strongholds an I entrenching himself in our territory. It behooves us to be more and more vigilant, to drill, equip and prepare ourselves for any attack upon our line. We ought not to sleep nor slumber until every Allianceman at least, and as many outsiders as possible, are induced to read and post themselves on all our demands, State and national, and are thoroughly furnished for the coming impending con flict. On the 20th day of May, in the city of Cincinnati, in the State of Ohio, a new political party was born. It is now a reality, a fixed fact, and what the effect of it is to be on this State and nation remains to be seen. It is more and more im portant that our order should remain intact, should decide and decide intelligently, what things are essential, and having de cided stand together for our homes and our firesides." Cackle With Envy. Millionaire W. K. Vander- bilt is preparing to go into the poultry business on a scale that will make the hens 01 ituther ford B. Hayes cackle with envy. He is having built at Oakdale, Long Island, a hennery 335 feet long and wide in proportion, 1 1 a A. v O . wuien wiu cosi $ ia,uw. 00 sa the Kansas City Times. The Insulted Saint. The Central Methodist says: "You insulted me by sending me a bill for my paper." "Clerk's fault. He mistook you for one who pays." "But I en joyed reading your paper, and wouia nave contmuea 10 uo so had you not sent me that bill." "Indeed! you enjoy the paper while you can read it at the publisher's expense; but when you are asked to pay for it, as every honest man should do, yourenjoymentis gone." Broth er, that is a counterfeit enjoy ment; it bears the stamp of dis honesty upon its face. If you want real enjoyment in reading a paper, pay for it like a man, and you will not be disappoint ed. Does Not Cure for State. We hear of a certain pajier outside of the State that has 9,000 weekly subscribers in the State, and this is to the neglect of faithful home papers. That paper is a good one, but it real ly cares nothing for North Car olina or its interests. It never defends the State or seeks to advance its interests. It really takes no more interest in the affairs of North Carolina than it does in those of Massachusetts, although published in the South. It is no more North Carolinian than the New York Herald or Tribune or World is North j Carolinian. Wilmington Mes senger. If the people of our State, in their resjiective sections, would give their home papers a more liberal support they enable their publishers to get out far better papers than they do. It is not an uncommon thing when you approach a man and ask him to take your pajier for him to say, oh, I am taking the New York Sun, or the Atlanta Con stitution, and 1 can not afford to take your paper. But when this man wants a personal puff, or a gratis advertisement be knows where to find his home paper; and when he wants to make damaging criticisms a- bout it, he knows where to find it, he has to liorrow it from his neighbor. Daily Sentinel. MiU'k Ti IU K'.Mto ttm ttrm. A small gathering of promin ent farmers in Kinstou a few days ago were discussing water melons, aod 31 r. 11. k. I'zzcll said hi had young melons on his vines. Another fanner re marked that he didn't have any melons but had blooms on his vines. Mr. Vi,M said the mel ons came In-fore the blooms and that the blooms grew vu the end of the melons. Some of the others neetned to question this statement but Mr. UJtell stuck to it that he was right. There are 59 women ?n New York city keeping butcher shops. Maud George told me last night that 1 was his little duck. Ethel He probably discovered that you were no chicken; or clear water, do you: