Recorder he O wlaifi VOL. 76 NO. 38. DURHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1896. ESTABLISHED 1820 'I H.l. Highest of all in Leavening Power. -Latest U. S. Gov't Report MM i.w cy ABSOLUTELY PUCE Where the Ark of Gopher Rested .At 'act we Btood upon the summit of Ararat but the sud no longer pierced the white va pi r; a fierce gale drdve across the forbidden region and whip pod the ey straining to distin guish the limits of snow and c.cud. ; Vague forms hurried past on the wings of the whirl wind; is place of the 'and scape of the land of promise we search ed dense banks of fog. We were standing on the spot whera the A rk of Gopher rested, where first the patriarch ulight ed on the 'face of an earth re newed. Before him lay the val leys of six hundred years of sor row; the airiest pinniclo sup ported him, a boundless hope filled his eyes.' The pulse of life beat strong and fresh around him; the busy swarms thrilled with sweet freedom ', elect of all living things. In the settling exhalations stood the -bow of many colors, eternal token of God's covenant with man. The peaks which rose on the distant borderland where silence had first faltered iuto speech were wrapped about the wreaths of fancy, a palpable world of cloud. Did we fix our feet upon one of these solid landmarks to wish the vague away, to see the hard summits stark and naked and all the floating realm ot mystery flown? The truth is firm and it is well to truth trans figured as the snow distils in gend begins; but the legend it self is the truth transfigured as the suow distils into cloud. The reality of life speaks in every sylable of that solemn, stately tale; divine hope bursting the bonds of matter to compromise with despair. Ana the ancient : mountain summons the spirits about him and veils a futile frown as the rising sun illumines :he valleys of Asia and the life of man lies bare.- H. F. D. Lynch in Scribner'a. Comments on Congress. '.The free silver people who "have been in session at Wash jngtoa represent nobody but themselvee. and they do this with very little ability. Chica go Timed Herald. Vnor that the senate has shown that it is capable of do lag business by disposing of sixty five bills in one day, the country has a right to expect a eo-d deal more than it has been receiving from this venerable Jbody. Detroit Free Press. That Peffer funeral bill be- tfnt to have a startling resem blance to a corpse. Detroit Free Press. It is pretty hard for John Bull to see aright when some senator's fist Is thrust under bis nose every day. Indianapolis News. Surprised at Ransom. When ex-Senator Ransom was appointed minister to Mex ico, an old colored man in North Carolina who knew him said: "And sodeyhas p'inted Mars Matt minister, baa deyf Well, Pse 'stonished at dat. Ob cose do trtneral am a good man, and I ain't got nothin' to say aginst tiim.but still it beats roe to thin he'd turn preacher in hi ole .dars. But he is a powerru talkeri it. Matt Is, and I'll bet -.all de cotton 1 raise dis year dat hfl'll convert a wagon load dinners eber time be gits tntode pulpit." Greensboro Record. A 6t Louis man was present at his divorced wife's wedding and gave her away. It is no wonder she got a divorce from ucb a man. Woman Killed and Mutilated. I. Cincinnati,. Feb. 2. A trage dy, after the manner of Jack the Ripper occurred on , th Alexandria, road in a lonely part of the Kentucky higMands, about a mile south of Fort Thomas; about " midnight Inst night.. The victim was a wo man: . Her headless bod y was found this morning terribly mutilated. ? No one kno ws yet either murderer 'p. or victim. Bloodhounds are on the track of the fiend tonight.' All search today for the head of the wo man has proven fruitless. , It is conjectured she is an abandoned woraau from Cincinnati. - but efforts to discover absentees in that class have failed. The only clew to the persons in the tragedy is the fact that a Fort Thomas soldier saw a man and a woman trudging along the Alexandria pike last night, and a sergeant later heard the voice of a woman screaming about midnight.- Otherwise tae affair is wholly mysterious. The Clark Cssa Again. The Mast issue of the Chapel Hill News has another long ac count of the brutal and inhu man treatment of John Clark to Nancy Ivy, an account of which was copied from the News and appeared in the Her ald not long since. The News says the first ac count was not as bad as has since appeared, and gives addi tional particulars that, if true, are a blotto the fair pages of North Carolina history. , While the Ivy woman, it is said, had strayed from the patf s of virtue and fallen from the high pinni- cle on which woman is held. the treatment she is reported to have received at the hands of this man, belongs to the Dark Ages and not to this, the closing days of one of the moBt enlight ened century s the world ever saw. If C lark had treated a dumb brute as ho is reported to have treated this woman, who held life as dear as any of ns, he would have been arrested and fined. In this case a full inves tigation should be had and the perpetrator of such a heinous deed dealt with according to the crime he has committed. Appeal to the President. Nearly all of the Bishops of the Protestant Episcopal church in America have signed a peti tion and sent it to President Cleveland asking that theUnitcd States take action in the Arme nian matter. The last paragraph ot the appeal says: "We feel profoundly that our , nation should cease to recognize the Turkish government as a civi lized power so long as its bar barous treatment of the Arme nians continues, and that it should bring evety influence to bear upon the civilized nations of Europe which may cause them to present a united front in demanding that such atroci lies cease at once and forever." The Turkish government, who have sanctioned the slaughter Ingot the helpless Armenians by hundreds and thousands. does not deserve the name of nation. It should be blotted off the face of the earth. The Obstacle. In a horse talk an enthusiast expressed the belief that soon ft horse would trot a milo in two minutes. To this another re marked: "There ain't but one reason why a boss can't trot milnin two minute." "What Is that?"' "Why, the distance is too long for so short a time." Shoe aud Leather licportor. Peace Congresses. Half a century ago some hun dreds of good men aud women on both suits of the Atlantic believed that the dawn of universal' and perpetual peace had come, says the Washington t'ost. Arbitration was -to be substituted lor war. Swords were to be beaten into plowshares and spears into prun ing hooks, and the nations, instead of expending blood aud treasure in wars, were to dwell t cether in the bones of an all-embracing fratemi ty, devoting their energies and material resources to the arts ol peace, i Those excellent - people held peace congresses and K,rnm ate a comprehensive plan lor the amicable adjustment o! all interna tional' disputes. . They had the support of the press and the pulpit, and the good wishes of statesmen. The idea was so grandly beneficent that no one cared to oppose it. But the booming of field artillery and the broadsides of ships of wai broke in upon this beautiful dream and thoroughly demonstrated its mpracticabihty. Since then war has devastated all quarters of the globe, and the closing years of the nineteenth century . of the era of the Prince of Peace find all Europe an armed camp and all other coun tries depending "on war as the means of settling international dis agreements The only movement tnat . died out so disappointingly decades ago is now revived. Ve are assured by the Boston Traveler that "the movement for the constitution of a permanent to hear and decide all controversies between nations gains teadily in strength, and that 'eminent men, of all shades of be lief on other subjects, on both sides of the ocean, approve it, and sooner or later it must be an ac complished fact, or some existing nationalities must be crushed out of existence " The heart of the Hockies, as represented by the Denver Times, responds to the voice of the Atlantic coast with the declaration that "arbitration should be the only medium for set tlement of the present misunder standings and a permanent court or board should be agreed upon by all powers. Representatives of ail the leading nations of the world should be chosen to sit in conven tion or in a court before which all controversies should be brought. With such a body, formed of the men most eminent in the nations that they represent, the idea of li cecsed murder and bloodshed would become a thing of the past which has tolerated many cruel and brutal customs." The above is sll very nice, but something Is due to cold reason Hard facts have their place in the discussion also. In this connec tion we quote a very sensible arti cle from the Sioux City Journal "It is mere waste of time for those few zealous gentlemen who are beginning to concern them selves in the matter to be prating of getting around the Venezuelan difficulty by an agreement between Great Britain and United States to arbitrate all differences which do not yield to diplomacy. The pro position is useless. It is tmpossl lie. We Americans will not ar bitrate all differences with Great Britain. We would be idiots and fools to enter into such an agree mcnt. Take the Monroe doctrine. for example, how conld we arbi trate that? Why, we have decided that tor ourselAcs, just as we de cided on the Dccl iration of Inde pendence. There is noth icg to ar bitrate. The only thing lor Great Britain to do is to recognize the Monroe doctrine, to adjust itself to it, to obey it. If Great Britain will not do this, then it becomes a question of might. Thete is noth ing for it but toczbt. li we are mightier, the Monroe doctrine will stand, if Creat Britain, then that doctrine will fill. Besides, who would be the arbitrator ? Certainly none ol the European powers, for s sense it is antagonistic to all of them, at least in their notions of their interests." 15,000 Thrown out ef Work. Sbamokix, Pa. Feb. 2. Fif teen thousand men and boys In the western anthracite coal fields received orders today not to report for duty at the mines until further notice, as the Reading coilcrles have been shut down for an Indefinite period. It was stated tonight by a prominent official that three quarters time 'would be the order when work was resumed. . JUdicai. students at Athens do not like for women to bo ad mitted to the University. An Arcadian "recently shot stu dent from Asia Minor in a quar rel over the question. Our Forests, . . Tlio proceedings of tlio Amcii- enn 1 11 it Forewlry Appoeintion, which 111 annua convention in Wellington City J.t-t week, will bo of interest in U junta of the conntnv Excellent work tins al ready been done, by tin- society, for tlmmgh its efforts tin: reckless devastation of our great forests ha In en 1 nitlv cheeked and btens have been taken to rpak new. timber grow in place of that hewn down. Uy meat's of the dLemfi iiMon o literature beiiring upon the t-ub- jeet the association l.nf awakened and filtered interest 'iii the matter of forest culture. ;.. . Nature had endowed this couu- try with truly magnificent forests, and with "proper care; tle supply of timber from them would have lasted for an indefinite period. Hut the forests have teen debilcd with the ruth!esnes9 of-fandal-ism, and their store is perilously near the liuo of exhaustion.' The association has succeeded in caus ing the reservation of ..western tim ber lands and the enactment of laws looking to their preservation. In this it hasbeeu coinbated by the speculators and timber ban dit, but yet has done much, and one object of its annual gatherings is to make its efforts in this par ticular more effective. Aside from ' the immediately practical object of the preservation of forests, the, association devotes itself to encouraging the planting of trees of every description.. In this .it ought to have the active co-ojratiou of practical scientist aud sanitarian, who can appreci ate the importance of forest growth from a hvgicnic point view.; It might be a good idea to imitate the example of Germany, France, aud cither European countries in establishing -school where the science and art of forestry are taught both theoretically and prac tically They ought rto elaborate tho precept-that; for every tree hewn down another should Im planted. The institution of Arbor Day should 1 advocated in every state and every county of it. It has brought in vogue a custom as beautiful as it is useful. ',. The work and influence of the American Forestry Association, already potent in many dire lions, can and should be extended still further. The society has an al most unlimited field of uscfulne-f lcfore it , - About three years ago John Pearson, of liosark. W. Va., married Mies Anna Lewly. Af ter .ft honeymoon of ' three months Pearson went hunting one day, and failing to return in a reasonable time was mourn ed as dead. About three months 820 Mrs. Pearson was married again to Franklin Seals, a well to do young man living near her borne. j. They lived most happily till a few days since, when rearson put in hi appearance The wo man explained the situation to him and ordered him to leave and not annoy ber further, but Pearson was not to be put off that way and declared his in ten tion of relieving the blga- mot's aspect of the woman s situation by murdering the new husband on sight. Seals was wart ed and kept away til Pearson could ho persuaded to act reasonably. The two bus bands are to meet, both agree ing to see "his ife" In the meantime, and see if some ami cable arrangement cannot be devised to be acted upon. Bal tiraorc American. Little Mamie read on her Sun day school card: "God makes preserves and keeps u." Look big up suddenly, she said: "Mam ma. what do you s pose he docs with them all r" "With what, my dear?" "Why, ail those preserves." Philadelphia American. patient Doctor, ', why do my teeth decay o rapidly? Dentist Yoa have such a sweet voice. . j. Good Stories. The following is a good one told on'a rich Admiral in Washington, and a handsome young fellow who was seeking his daughters liana in marriage. The Admiral told him that he had nothing but a salary and could hardly Rupport himself, much less a wife,.' where upon the" young-fellow icj lied: ;. ''Well, Mr .-'Admiral,' what : vui say, is true. Put when you mar ried you vyerj only a midshipman h even a smaller salary than niin. How did you get along?'' asked the ensign, who believed he had made i be most diplomatic of defenses. But not so. The crafty old sea dog thundered forth: - "I lived on my father inlaw fcr the first ten years, but I'll be d d it you are going to do. it!" , The following story comes from the west which reads more like Arabian Nights tbaa it does a re ality The story goes on to say that fifty j ears ago W.' S. M. Sor rel saw the picture of an unknown young woman, and made a vow that be wonld marry her or no body. Years passed without bis being able to discover the original of the picture, but he kept his vow. lie went to Golden, Co'o., and became wealthy, and three years ago h" accidentally discovered that the lady was Mrs. Acken, of 4t. Augustine, Fla., and that her husband was living. Soon after ward, however, Tier husband left her, and she got a divorce from him a few days ago. Almost im mediately afterwards she was mar ried to the man who has been lov- ing her all these fifty years. He is 78 and she is 74. Not long ago a lady, calling on another, noticed the absence of a cherished parrot, and Jskcd what had become of it. "Oh, I had to give her away." '-Give ber away? And you thought so much of her!'' "Yes; but you know I taught ber to ask roe in the morning Did you sleep well?" and she was sucb a dear, laitlilul utile thing that she used to wake me up all night long asking me if I slept well. Nothing could cure ber of it she was so morbidly conscien ttous and so at last, I had to give her to a night editor of our acquaintance. The question aa to whether snakes have feet has always been a mooted one, but it seems to have been settled by a farm er near Sylvania, Ga. He was clearing up and burning off a piece of ground and killed medium size snake, which he threw into a burning brush heap. To his amazement four feet immediately came out from the under part of the snake's body. The feet were small, but the explain how it is that the reptiles are enabled to travel along so fast over the ground This phenomenon was reen by several persons, but, unfortu nately, the snake was consumed by the fire before the farmer thought of drawing it out for preservation. Atlanta Consti tution. A cojunlry rrinister tn a cer. tain town took permanent leave of his congregation in the fel lowing pathetic manner: - "Brethren and sisters, I come to say good by. I don't think God loves this church, because none of you ever die. 1 don t think you love each other, be cause I never marry any of you I don t thinlc yon love me, be came you nave not pam my salary. Your donations are moidly fruit and wormy apples and 'by fr rrtnts ye snai know them.' Brothers, l am trying away to a better place, I have been called to ne cnapiain of a penitentiary. Where I go ya cannot come, but I go to pre. pare a place for you, and may tli? Lord have mercy on your minis. Good by." Tiik improved Catling gun is hard to face. It is operated by an electric motor and Is capable of f ring 1,800 shots a minute It tins made its appearance just In time to be another argument against war. . GOTO THE RACKET HEADQUARTERS FOR ' LOW CASH PRICES. Uuy vour Dixie Plows Farming Tools from a man . T W 1 , x-nence Having eervea ins nppreniicesnip on uie iariu, :ie knows what suits the farmers. - ... . ' A dollar saved is a dollar and Black Seed Oats at rock - 1 00 barrels Seed Irish Potatoes going low down. " 700 barrels Flour libught before the advance. Come to see me ; before : you buy your goods. Your 'riend, . ' - W. H. PROCTOR, DURHAM, N. C. The Fee System. . The Raleigh News and Obser ver of yesterday morning, in speaking of the tee system now in rorceMn regard to revenue omcera, says that there ought ; to be ; no sympathy with that sentiment that regards'all enforcemenv or the penalties for violating the re venue laws as persecution. "Neith er ought there to be anything but condemnation, says the .News and Observer, "for ah enforcement of the law for the sole "purp08 of adding to the emoluments of the marshals, their deputies and the commissioners. Ail sucn prose cution is, in reality, persecution, and officials guilty of it are un worthy to hold positions ot trust. t case is now pending in Lmrham in which a inuu is accused of of fering a deputy marshal 5 if be would not give some certain wit nesses names to District Attorney Aycock, at the last term of the federal court "There is little doubt that in North Carolina there have been many frivolous prosecutions in spired by the desire to secure fees. The late Senator Vance thundered his severot phillipics against such unfaithful public servants." The Clint n Democrat of this week ays: - There are not a few instances in which deputy marshals abuse their office in order to obtain the lees allowed under the law. Men are jerked up upon slight 'pre texts and brought before tmted States commissioners, when if there were no fees for the mar shals such would not be the case. Commissioners have also been working the business for the fees. Recently three mcu were up be fore a commissioner for some vio lation of the revenue laws. The evidence' was identical against each of the three men and the whole matter could have beeu srttlcd in a trial ol less than an hour. The commissioner wanted to mnke t5 a 4ay for three days out of the cam, and so he gave three separate trials, on three se parate days, putting the govern mcnt to exnse and bringing scandal uiou the judicial function in order to make there have been other continuances al most a flagrant, and in some in stances marshals and commission era have seemed to bo working to incrftn-e prosecutions and increase their. fees. At the last term of the federal court, Judge Seymour and District Attorney Aycock is sued instructions to tho commis sioners sud marshals which sub stantially directed them to excr eta greater enre (0 avoid frivolous prosecutions, and to administer the duties of their ofhee with no regard to fees. This admonition is having a good effect, and e 61 sure if revenue omciais are guilty of continued activity hi in crease the emolument of their poj sitions, these officials, whose sole desire is to execute the law, wil tale stringent means to stop it. , The whole system is wrong. It hns not only worked badly in North Carolina, but in other states as well. All heeded officials ought and Plow Castings, Hoes and who knows good tools by ex- J ... 1 . ' A 1 . - made. 2,000 bushels JV hit bottom prices. . - , , 10 oe paia a salary, ana me in- -centive to frivolous prosecutions removea. . All Sorts. An Euglish judge decides that , throwing rice at a newly-married couple is an assault, whether the eyes of either of them are put out or not : A Missouri farmer figured it' out one rainy day, that be had - walked 300 miles in cultivating . one acre of corn. lie . thereupon sold his farm and -moved to a' town, where he walked 600 miles to find a job. A boy of fourteen and a girl of eleven were recently married iu Johnson county, Ga., -with the lull consent of their parents. - lb San Francisco a seventeen- year-old husband recently ob tained absolute divorce from his sixteen-year-old wife, lie was employed as a messenger boy. A Chicago man says he con tracted to , murder a reputable- citizen, whom he had never met, for (90. Such a fellow is too en terprising to be at large. A young man, fresh from col lege, wore as a scarfpin a jewelled gold potata bug. One day be called the attention of an old German bookseller to it, asking, "Isn't that pretty, Dutchy?" Ja, ja," was the reply. "Dot ih der piggee pug vu uer acuiuaiivsh botato I baf cfer tecn.n Muucie (Ind.) News." . ; - The following is a description by the late Eugene Field of Emma AbDou s singe mss: Ah, that k im that long, low, languishing, limpid, liquid, lin gering nisa! 'Twas not a tender kiss, nor a fervent kiss, nor a boisterous kiss, nor a paroxysmal . kiss, nor a nervous kiss, nor a fraternal kiss, nor a gingerly kiss, nor a diffuse kiss, nor a concen trated kiss, nor a diffident kixs, nor a popgun kiss 'twas a calm, holy, ecstatic outbreaking of two fond and trusting hearts, an in termingling of two gentle souls sanctified by love, a communion of the iutangible means, a blend ing of heart with heaven, in which the latter had a manifest preponderance. Atizona Is bragging about a natural bridge winch spans a, canyon five hundred feet wide. which bridge Is a marvel of proportion aud symmetry, and as level as a shell road on ton. ery will rely upon the healing of the wound in his head. He is internally injured also. I be lieve I can bring him around all right, but it will be a scratch' A sam pli of the northerners professed 'friendship" for the negro Is shown tn Fitzgerald, by northern men. There they do not tolerate negroes in any capacity. In a population of 6,000 there are but five negroes, and a committe has been ap pointed to ' leave. 'encourage" them to