- j r in frin m )BJSERY HE ol xxr. RALEIGH, N. C, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 25, 1883. NO 67. 1 - i - AND BAKING POWDERS. t PkOVal. su& i -. 1 111 ' PiUPER I Absolutely Pure Thl powder never varies. A mai ksi i or rength and whoIeeomnesF. rv ooOTic v-S-lthan the ordinary kind Ur nri i os boiu m oampeuiioo r; 14'' oia! . nde of low test, short weight -nj ftoval Bskine Powder tJoinpan . IP rnospnates p-jwuers. soiuodit fo Wall st., N. Y. SOLD ONLY iN CASES WHOLE SALE BY .'- 1 W 0. & A. B. Slfonacli; SOMETHING EVERY LADY OUGtiT TO KNOW. There exists a means Of se snrins a soft and brilliant Complexion, no matter how poor it may naturally be. Hasan's Magnolia Balm is a delicate and harmless arti cle, which instantly removes Freckles, Tan. Kdness, Souffhness, Eruptions, Jul car Flushings, etc., etc.i So ylicate and natural are its Effects that its use is; not suspected by anybody - . No lady has the right to present a disfigured face in society when the Magnolia Balm is sold by all druggists for 75 cents." ONE HUNDRED 1 3 BUQGlKb.CaRRIAOE?, PaAKTON, Spring Warons, do. We bavo on band the large t s tec It and greatest assort ment ci Vehicles that was ever in tow market for sale, consisting of the Daviu $ Co., the estern ManufaCuing Co , and Louis Cok Work. We sre prepared ip furnish tte trade with any clsoa f wo rjt they msv" ant e ling them lower than the lowest. VN'e se'l ibe b si bugtry- ms4j In tbs worhl (Davis, linu.d v o., tor llje money. 1 bis w rk baa ro tqual strength, durability ai d finish; made Decially for our irade and bin -led by nso other dealer n tbia market. We warrant the Pavt. Gruld' o. work lor twp years ann we k yon tb t are H notd Qf B"?Kies. Oar' Inters, Phaetois. mo , to cf m pare it with tuber work offered by us auli Other dea tr it thin mark t. VUW K - i Konai: -: O to:tir w i m iit' n an.! r.avie Mr. eis. "TTALU A B LE LAND FoP.S.L.i. I oner for sale niy New Hope tract of land, lying on New Hope and Little Creek. Itoonsiats o' 070 acrts itn a new abgl well construe ed dveniDj tberaop ana omer ounaing lmprcwiieou, several tenement bouses and two gokd we lis oi water, xue iti,u is prcuiiaiit adopted to cotton and tobacco, and as wel for corn, wheat an J oats. It is situated on the pnblic road leading frou Chapel Bif to Raleigh, and five miles fro n Chapel Bill. A bo my mountain tract situated op aid public road, two ant a ba f mi es from Cbapel Hill and on the Water of Lit tie Creek. It consists of 53 ) tore snd & adopted to the growtu of the same pi ducts. There are two dwel ings thereof and other tene Ji-nt home and improve monts. Both of said tracts of land lire well timbered and auppiied with watai Title good. I will sell to suit purchasers Terms easy. Ao. lyto FEN DAL HOG AN,! Cbapel Hill, N. C. . Sept. 23 d It. , Jvst Arrived! THE LAF.QES1 STOCK OF TRANSFER ORNAMENTS EVER SEEN IN RALEIGH, AND AT LQWER PRICE WE H&YE SAVED FOR TBE PEOPEOF NORTH CAR OLIttA 20 PJSKUEni T. UN " U o LIC SCHOOL BOOKS. OW LET C8 SERVE V C -J. yf. J1ENMAKK& tO. BooVfellers and rtatioiieis, U' fayttttvillefrtrtet, taltlfcb, N. C & p- : 8 dim. NEWS OBEBVATIO!. The new comet is very faint and far beyond the reach of the naked eye. It ia round and has no tail. There is a cesration of newspaper bos tilities in Cincinnati pending the invention of fiotne new and sulphurous adjectives. The old supply has been completely worn out The Boston Star says : The bigger' a newspaper is the more bustle there ia about it." What it means is, the bigger i- bustle is the more newppapcr there is tbout it. Mrs. A. B. Churchill; of Mont gomery, Alabama, has the original copy of the constitution of the Confederate States, the first communication ever addressed to the Congress by President Davis and the first bond for 850 issued by the Confed eracy. Have the Legislatures in the country become altogether degenerate ? Georgia furnishes the last proof of meanness and disability. After higgling for months about the cost of it,, her Representative have absolutely refused to pay the funeraF expenses of Governor Stephens. Fifteen of the women operators for merly employed in the Western Union Telegraph Company's offices in New York were not taken back after the str'ce. Operators at work aud trade unions con tribute to a fund for the relief of these women, against whom the doors of occu pation are cloted -; but the sum subscribed is insufficient to meet fheir absolute wants. No fewer than 2,200 trains leave the railway stations of London every twenty four hours. Of these 1,750 servo the suburbs and a suburban reg'.d'n of thirty miles around the city. Fifteen leave for Scotland aticL Ireland and sixteen for the continent. What a living tide thus surges daily in and out of the great heart of the empire, for as many trains arriye as de part, and the motion to and iro is never stilled. Probably the fasiist train iu Ameiica is the afternoon express on the Canada Atlantic railway, which leaves Coteau station at 5:35 and reaches Ottawa, dis tant 73.4 miles, at 7:09, having made one stop of three minutes at Alexandria. This is almost exactly fifty miles an hour. The fastest train in the world is probably the "Flying Dutchman," which runs without, stopping from London to Bristol, a dis tance 1181 milep, inljust two hturs a rata of 59J miles an tour. Forakcr's canvass in Ohio i being helped a'ong by the publication of a diary which He kept while a soldier. Little en tries such as the; following are supposed to touch the hearts of t he people: "Instead of the ring of the. church bell 1 htar tho drum and fife ;" "The longer I live the more I am impressed with the worth of character ; since I have been in the army I have lived right up to my duty." The man who fished up the soldier boy's diary and introduced it in .the campaign was a genius. The sul'jeots of King Ka'akaua, of the Sandwich Islands, do not believe to any, alarming extent "that a king can do no wrong." The merchants contemptuous ly ignore the royal orders for meats and groceries, unless accompanied with suf ficient coin to cover the value of the de sired supplies. Kalakaua's melancholy nre4icament will strike a responsive chord in the bosoms of impecunious citizens of 'it.' city who have (frequently undergone similar humiliation from local butchers and grocers. -The one publio official who has really acknowledged his position to be something of a sinecure is M. Deibler, the executioner of Paris. Although he receives 6,000 francs as a salary, he complains of a su perabundance of leisure, there having beon but -eight unfortunates assisted into the next world, under his directions, during the last half decade. If Mr. Deibler finds his present position insupportable because of a stagnation in his ghastly avocation he should apply tor the appointment of Com missaire. Suicides are frequent in Paris Inquests and autopsies might restore that peace of mind he has lost; To shave or not to Bhave on Sunday is the question which has been agitating a jury in a St Louis court during the paH few days, and the arguments pro and con nave certainly been unique if hot strong. The counsel tor the defense argued Ion" and laboriously that shaving was necessary tor the prolongation of lite and that, there fore, it should not be restricted on Sun- aay. in support, be declared that a man who did not shave could not live even an average length of time. One witness was of the opinion that shaving brightened he mind as well as tte face and declared that newly shaven faces had their brains in better order than tbeir more bairy brethren. The State counsel, however, insisted that men with long beards were stronger than those who shaved frequently, "Who was the strongest man in the world? ' he asked. Witness did not know. "Well,' thundered the prosecuting attorney, "it was Samson, and didn't he have a beard that extended to the ground?" The cae is still on. Uetsirable materials suitable for chil dren's autumn suits are mostly fine woolen stufu, such as tweed and camel s-hair cloth in plaids and stripes. There are also styluh cloths in fancy basket textures and clie -viots in tioy pin checks or thread stripes and also limousines in chene designs, and heather mixtures, which are particularly commendable for sch joI dresses. All these fabrics can be use 1 by themselves in the formation of a very pretty dress, but generally there ..are added i a waistcoat sasn, cutis ana collar ot some contrasting color and material, the rage this autumn being tor the many new shades of - red, Whers scarlet, red or-crimsm tritnmicm of this kind are employed, the novel little red toque, in exact imitation of the Ger man bandsman s cap, is added. MAYY SQUABBLES. THE or THE NORFOLK YARD ROW. NAVY Jla.yo and ITfcGletuter; Both Censured - Proposals for the Purchavse of Condemned Vessels Other Oeneral TclejrrapUlc News. A:c. 1 Washington, Septemoci 24. Secre tary Chandler said to-day he had con cluded pot to mako public the proceedings of the court cf inquiry which investigated the oounter charges made by Commodore Mayo and Commander McGlensey while on dttty at tho Norfolk navy yard. He regards the cases as a mere petty quarrel between tho two officers. The court cen sured McGle&ijey for having refused to de'iver to Lb superior officer the letter he demanded and also Mayo for his reckless charge as to the character of its contents. The Secretary says that McGlensey has already suflerred punishment enough in being detached and otherwise humiliated and that no further aotion will; be taken in his case. The charge of tyrannical con duct preferred against Mayo by McGlen sey was not sustained, as his aotion in calling the marine guard to his assistance in enforcing hia demand for the letter in question wad justified under the circum stances. Tne Seoretay said, however," that he must take notice of Mayo'S conduct in Laving made unsubstantiated charges against McGlensey with regard to the con tents ot the letter which was the origin cf the difficulty. Proposals for the purchase of the con demned naval vessels were opened at the Navy department to day. Tho following are the vessels located in the South, with appraised value and bids : Savannah, -at Norfolk, appraisal 810,600: JS. Stannard bid 12,463.! Sewanee, at Port Royal, S. C, appraisal $5,000; Wm. Culler, Jackson ville, Fla., bid 5,000, J. D. Kenney, Brunswick, Ga , $5,012. The other bids ranged from j say 600 ;to 650. Shaw- mut, at Norfolk, appraisal! $5,300: K. Stannard bid 88,113. Worcester, at Norfolk, appraisal 825,400; t. Stannard bid $27,611.; No bids were; received for the Pawnee,! located at Por Royal, S. C. New Ioek, September 24. Seiden bach, Schwab & Co., wholesale clotH is, have assigned, giving preferences amount- l tb lltS,Z97. Liabilities between $350,000 snd 8400,000. ,- Chicago, - September 24 Work was resumed at the rolling mills in South Chi cago; 1,800 ihen went in. Wages will be paid cn the Pittsburg poale. . ."New York Cotton Future. New York, September 24. The Posd cotton' report says : h uture aehvcrics at the first call began selling at a reduction of 4 to 5 100, and the call ended 6 to 8-100 lower than last Saturday's closing prices. The second call showed a recovery of 2-100; subsequently there was a further advance of 1 to 2 l()0. On the whole the market was i quiet and the tradiog in a great measure was confined to covering the near months, and selling the late months against such purchases of the former. Large operators were looking on. At the third call October brought 10.43, November 10.53; January 10.74. Septem ber was ottered at 10.43, December 10.53, February 10.88, March 11.02,Apnl 11.13, May 11.24, June 11.34, July 1145, Au gust U.bZ. The market closed barely steady 5 to 7-100 lower than lat Sat urday. Death of a Prominent .Lawyer. s Dikver, Col., September 23. A special to the Tribune from Silver City, New Mexico, says Andrew Sloan, a prom inent lawyer of this city, died yesterday morning irom malarial lever. lie was a native of Savannah, Ga., which district he represented in the 43rd Congress. Tennessee River the Lowest Ever Known. ; Chattanooga. Tesk.. Sntemher 24 -The Tennessee river tn-dav iia one-half an inch lower than ever before in the his tory of this eonntrv. There (a no record tince 1810, and it is one inch; lower than the low water mark ot that year. Ibis seotiun ia suffering from drought. Kxploklon of Rockets. ; Woolwich, Eng., September 24. lhe old soklicrs here declare that the ex plosions of rockets during the fire were as frightful as if occurring in an actual siege. Two bodies of the viotims of the explosion have been found. Some of the war rook ets were projected a distance of five miles. One of them went through the wall of the arsenal and another struck the artillery bamcis. Yellow Fever. Washington, September ;: 24 The Secretary of the Navy has received a tele grni from Commandant WeUh, of the Pensaoola navy yard, dated the 23d inst., as follows : Two new ces of yellow fever in Wamngtou both childr n.; The caso reported yc&terJsy j.iarcu iu be 'swamp fever, iaiciy ltuj Pcrdid bay. Oao death, a c'u.J, from uiUrial lev r, having ufot baii 'j&Ai'W lever. A Terrible Accident. V ll KisUARHE, Pa, September 23. A tc r-ble accident ocouned , this atter n4oti ti the Woodward bhalt of tho Uol. vire, Laakwmna aa i Wesu u Coal Cjjii p:vy at K ugston. The sauh h Sv hnn;',rc-d eet d-jep an-i hi- w .uty t . f water t tho b ci.-'a '.i ui.ro Bi!z, lon. J DwM, r. Jw . I'uiUj.s and Isa.'O '. vaa worn jraing on ti platform timb-ji'lr; tho shaft nixty ie-t from tho b)ttoai. A pitied oi UuiDet weighing ball a ton, while bsing lowered, foil on the p'atforfr!, which gave Wiy, and the ue.i were j r- cinLatcd to the bottom and dfywotjil. Phillip. Parry uud LiwU T. ! Jones Wore saved by haaitiog ' to a beam ' l'. . 1 1 7 t aster crying lor neip Foreign News. London, September 24. The rocket factories at the arsenal at oolwich ex ploded to-day. Many buildings were de stroyed. fThe loss of life :s serious. Rockets fell in Lrith, fclsham, Charlton and Ilford. One of them plunged into school for infants at Plumpstead, another entered a draper's shop at Wool wich, and stf' another wrecked ajgrocery store. There wrs the wildest panic in Woolwich, but there was no loss of life, with the exception of the two persons mentioned, who were employed ; in the . enal. The first . reports of fatalities were exaggerated. Tho principal damage was confined to the rocket factory, which will involve a loss of 2,000. A dispatch from Vienna states that Russia is making extensive military prepa rations along the Austrian and German frontiers. Tenders have been asked tor 36,000 military beds. All the, railways have been ordered to have ualitary cars in readiness. A list has been made of the private steamers in the Black sea and their captains have been ordered - to pre pare for the transportation of ammunition, troops and provisions. These vessels have ceased executing private orders and the carriage of corn is thus interrupted. Enormous provision depots have been established along the Iron tier and two army corps have been distributed between the Vistula and Bug rivers. A list has been made of all persons who, in the event of war, will be deported frpm Po land to the interior of Pistia. I -" Louisiana I utter j, Washington, September 23L Tho postmaster at New Orleans has notified the postoffioe authorities here that he has been ordered by the State Court to deliver the mail matter addressed to the New Orleans National Bank intended for the Louisiana Lattery Company, and has asked ; for in structions as to what he shall do. He has been directed to obey the order until it should be reversed or modified, and to consult with the United States District Attorney at New Orioans. The latter official has been directed to take necessary steps for the removal of the case from the State Court to the Federal Court and to move at once for a dissolution of the in- j unction. New York Stock in&rket. I Nev York, September 23, The week opened with renewed depression in the Villard shares and lower prices all around. Oregon and Transcontinental is down to 52, against 54 at the close on Saturday. Northern Pacific soldi down 21, to 32i,;and preferred 1 j , to 64. J he decline in the other stocks ranged from i to i per cent. It is said that the North ern Pacific company will isue $25,000 000 debenture bonds, 6 per cent., to com plete the road, furnish additional equip ment, take care of the floating debt, etc, etc. i The Louisville Exposition ! (CIRCULAR.) I' was at first proposed to make the exposition largely a cotton exhibition, but this idea was abandoned, and the exposi tion was planned to make it embrace all that pertained to the development of the South. From the first the idea that the exposition was a local enterprise was elim inated and it was given a truly national character. The exposition ia larger than any other ever held in America, except the centennial, and in some respects is more perfect than that was, as for instance, in tne maoninerj department. The main building is 900 by 600 feet, and covers thirteen acres of ground. The annexes are numerous and large. The saw mill annex is 400 by 75 feet, and the annex for the display ot wagons and carriages is 250 by 100. The art gallery is the most popular and remarkable of the annexes. The exhibition of machinery has never been equa'ed, the display of agricultural machinery being particularly perfect. In every branch ot mechanics the latest in- tenuona are exniDited. uae nail ot one ot the main aisles, that is nearly a sixth of the ground floor of the main building, is devoted to textile working machinery, and there every process of working cotton and weol may be seen. The display of j elec- trio lights is the largest ever made in the world. An electric railway is in operation on the grounds and carries passengers around the park. The park contains forty acres, eighteen of whic.i are planted with magnificent old trees, forming the finest park of its size in the wrld. Several acres of ground seuth of thtr Luildirg arejunder cultivation as a model farm, where not only all the farm products of Kentuoky are raised, but where ootton and! other southern crops are flourishing. The State displays of Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Missiaippi, Arkansas and Louisiana show very fully both the agricultural and mm eral resources of those sections. The; other aispiays ot individual exmoitors are no less interesting, and came from all sections of the United States. Some of the most attractive are in the galleries. Some of the finest art and decorative displays, as well ss many interesting novelties and manufactured products are in the galleries The art gallery is filled with the choicest works of foreign and American artists, loaned by prominent art collectors ot New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Cincinnati and Louisville, a collection as a whole, never equaled on thu continent i The Seventh Regiment baud, of New York, furnishes the music tor the hrst hhy days, and will be succeeded during the last fifty days by Gilmores band, ot New York. In the music hall in the building is the largest and finest organ in the Souih, and a well trained chorus of 500 voices gives a series of concerts together with the organ and band. Every luesday there) is competitive display of cat flowerjj Oq Thursday evenings th.re are magnificent displays of tire work. FiiJy evenings are d voted to clawic'. nmv.n Ou Satur days the price oi aduiisoion at'.cr I o'clock o only twenty-five cents, and tiiero are laborate horticultural displays. COURTESIES. NEW ENGLAND'S EINBLY GREET ING TO NORTH CAROLINA. The Attentions T aid Governor JarVls and Party Governor Batter's Hospitalities A , Hound of Pleasure and Sight Seeing, Etc. Cor. of Thx Naws axd Obskbvsk. Boston, Mass., Sept. 18, 1883. : In my previous letter I told you briefly of the opening of the exposition, of the leading part North Carolina bad taken and of the courtesies that had bepn extended to Governor Jarvis and the ladies and "gentlemen of hia party. In this letter I will attempt to give an account, somewhat more in detail, of those attentions and courtesies which have marked the past fortnight, and which are now renewed in the "Elm City" of Connecticut, where Governor Jarvis and the ladies of his party are by invitation of ex-Governor Bigelow and General E. S. Greeley. The preliminary notices of the exhibit which had been published by the press of Bston before opening day, and the fame of Governor Jarvis as a wise and patriotic man, had prepared not only the rulers of this old Puritan commonwealth and the officers of the In stitute, but also the people at large to meet him with a cordial greeting. Bat when it was known that Governor Jarvis would be accompanied by bis wife and by the widow and daughter of Stonewall Jackson the enthusiasm of all the intelligent people of Massachusetts was aroused, tor, strange as it may seem to some few ot your readers, the people of the North have learned from the precepts and practice of their Union veterans to hold the memories of Lee and Jackson in a regard second only to that which pervades the hearts and minds of us Southerners. Thjs is the age of steam and elec tricity. Ihoughts travel, ideas change, and hatreds are eliminated with rapidity that would have made the men of '76 marvel exceedingly. What it tok centuries of English history to complish has required but twenty years in this America ot ours. Henoe it is that Mrs. Jackson and her lovely child have received those courteous and delicate at tentions which made every day of their stay here a perpetual delight. The de scendants of English cavaliers and round heads meeting on the sou of New England in these latter years of the nineteenth oen tury have .ignored all past differences and learned to respect, appreciate and love each other. How truly this may be Baid, the story of these courtesies, when told by the ladies on their return to their homes will demonstrate. It happened unfortunate' ' that Mrs. Jackson was taken seiiouf'y il , and was compelled to slay over in New York several days before it was prudent tor her to come to this city. Governor and Mrs. Jarvis, Commissioner M Jehee, Col. P. B. Means and Major DRosset and others arrived here on the 4th and were' escorted to the Revere nouse ny omcers oi u over nor iu' er s staff, where rooms had been prepared for them by landlord Ferrin, whose accom plished wife and daughter, two most de lightful If dies, gave Mrs. Jarvis a hearty reception. Whatever else may bo said ot Governor Butler, this is true, that no man living can be more courtly, or make his guests more comfortable than he, and all this is done in a quiet and undemonstrative rtyle that makes his attentions the more pleasing to their recipients. All our Car olina friends here have found this out, and one of the many agreeable memories of their, visit will be the courtesy of Gover nor Butler, of Adjutant-General Dalton of Colonel Gilbert, and of other members of the executive staff. , . . . upening aay exercises nave been so fully reported and widely published that no repetion is necessary. On that day Mrs. Jarvis and Mrs. Judge himms, ot Colorado were plaoed in a carriage in care of Mr John Q. A. Griffin, a brother of the ef ficient secretary of the institute, and of Col. Pardee,: of Connecticut, whom you met at Atlanta, and subsequently at Raleigh. The gentlemen ordered their driver to take a position in the court-yard of the Providence depot, so that the ladies might see the procession, and after it had passed they drove at once to the exposuion and put the ladies in seats re served for their; distinguished gaests i no exercista - oi mat day, so far as the North Caiolina visitors were concerned wound up with an elegant de jeuner given them by Gov. Butler at he Revere house. Here let me say that the broadly national ground taken by Gov, Jarvis in his address on that day snd on all subsequent occasions, made a profound impression on the New England mind and that he now stands in the estimation ot these people head and shoulders above any other Southern statesman, and what is better than all he hns convinced the people that our good old 8: ate is the most progressive, so far as its people are con corned, of any, and that its boundless re sources offer a field f r capital and laoor unequaled by any other area of similar extent in all our broad laud. Gov. J Jki VIS has not repesented himself, as so many other mon do, but the commonwealth of North Carolina, and hi eU abnegation in this respect has not only ensured the coming of millions of capital to o jr State, but in addition has place 1 hiui m the front rank of Southern Btato 'uu -fi, because these shrewd New England t-j b-jlinve in the Scriptural idea that "Whoever humbleth hime'f shall be exalsod." Oj the 5th of Spteiuber G.v. Butler, hit staff fsavo two who were detached to receive lord Chief J ;i.v ice Coleridge) and a large party of lul;e-, gentlemen and military m-;j, went a-t thcuft to Governor J -.rvis and his party to the fair of the New KugUud Agricultural Society at Man chester, New Hampshire. There they met more than 20,000 of the sons and daughters of the old Granite State, and were introduced to them in most eloquent and flattering style by Commissioner Loring, of the United States Agricultural Bureau. The address ot Gov. Jarvis was what might have been expected. It was cheered to the cho by those hardy farm ers, and the evidences of the impression he then made may be found in all the news papers of that goodly State which produces granite and brainy men. While on this trip the North Carolinians were taken to the Amoekeag Mills, where tbey Saw 6,000 operatives employed, 6,000 looms in opera tion and an immense number of spindles in lively motion. After seeing mills and fair tht party was taken to the Hotel Windsor, where an elegant collection was served. Sea-food, came, fruit-ices. champagne and all other things that t:mpt the fastidious palate 'were on thej tablas. That day- Lord Chief Jus tice Coleridge arrived and Mrs. Ti J. Jack son and her daughter Miss Julia. The next morning all breakfasted together in the elegant private dining room of the Revere, Governor Butler presiding as host, and making Mrs. Jackson his moat highly honored guest. Since there have been excursions to' Cambridge and , Harvard College to Concord, where our revolution ary sires fired that shot which has rever berated throughout civilization; to Lowell, the greatest cotton muling city of New England, and to Taft's (down the bay) where a seaside dinner of eight! or nine courses awaited them. On Saturday, before leaving the city, Governor J arvis was the guest of the Middlesex Club and dined there, his lady lunching at the Hotef Vendome at the earnest request of Mrs. Woloott, the accomplished wife of its genial owner. What the people of New Haven, Connecticut, have done for them must be reserved for another letter. Calib. , ,S . DASHES. ! New troubles have arisen in Ireland. A Parnellite meeting has been prohibited by the government. Lieutenant Greely is reported dead at Littleton Island. Nilsson has sailed for America. Mary Churchill, the missing St. Louis ' girl, has not yet turned up. The Democratic can vass in Ohio is proceeding vigorously. Fourteen prisoners receive 180 lashes at the Delaware whippng post The first unabridged volnre of the census report has been printed and is now in the hands of the binders. It is a volume of 1,500 pa 'os, .and is the first of about fifteen which v M contain the work ot the census. The en, "re work will probably not be com pleted before 1885. The Republicans are making a desperate effort to gel all the Ohio clerks at Washington home to vote. An aged female recluse died in Erie, Pa., on Saturday leaving a packet of documents hat have been wanting in an English family for over a hundred and fifty years to prove certain claims against the British Crown. An unsuccessful attempt to lynch a Polish priest caused intense excite ment in East Buffalo Saturday. The President is being splendidly entertained at Newport The steamer Gem City was burned to the water's edge at her pier in St Louis Saturday. Of the poisoned prisoners in the Weathersfield (Conn.) State prison but thirteen have been un able to resume their tasks. Further tes timony in the Rose Ambler case looks bad for Lewis. The Stalwart element in New York is again looking to Conkling. No Bogus Distilleries in North Carolina. Charlotte Journal-Observer. Revenue agent Thomas' Powers, who is stationed in this city, returned home yes terday from his trip into South Corolina, where he has been investigating the alleged seizure of sham stills in Pickens; county. There wasjaothing crooked about the reve nue agents, but Mr. Powers found three oases where sham stills had been seized, and the "informers" paid just as they would have been in case the shams had been genuine blockade stills. I Agent Powers is a man of keen'foreeight, and is evidently well up to his business. He reports that there is but little illicit dis tilling going on in North Carolina, and there has been none of the sham fraud in praotice in the State. ; Tenting in the Summer Woods. Midges", Gnats, Flies, Ticks.Mosquitoes, Hornets, .Bees, Snakes. All these crea tures are more or less disagreeable. Some of them bite. Some of them sting. All leave their poison in your flesh when they have inflicted their wounds on you Perry Davis's Pain Killer is not only good to re move the effects of poisonous bites and stings, but to cure'stomach troubles caused by unripe fruit or overeating; to drive away diphtheria, and to make impure wa ter fit to drink. Don't forget to take it with you when you go into camp. Lor ell as the female impersonator, has been attacked by paraly si . No sensible man prefers wealth health. Some few nave both; many haven't either. Well, you msy have first choice. Whloh will you tak e ? "Health." Very well, what's yourailmant? 'A lit tle of every jtbing." Wbat's the: causT "Blood out of order, kidneys weak, di gestion bad,beart's action irregular," Yes, and every disease can be traced to to these same sources. Just take a few bottles of Brown's Iron Bitters, it will remove the causui of disease and restore you to robust health. Ask you- druggist tor and use Brown's Iron Bitters. Mr. Edwin F. Thome is sole owner of the "Black Flag," The glory of a man is bis strength. Il you sre weakened down through exces sive study,or by early indiscretions, Al len's Brain Food will permautly restore all lost vigor, and strengthen all the mus cles of brain axul body. SI, 6 for 15 at druggists- Dox't Do It! You had better; drink nothing mt water, and fery little of that, but if you must take anything stronger, examine the list in Mr. E. J. Hard's reg ular advertisement t"-day, and ! drink pure liquors and wines in moderation. For Sal. A brand new safe. Apply at Naws and Obskbveb office. CUTTING RATES. THE WAR BETWEEN RAILROADS IN TBE WEST, It Grows Dally Livelier Firs at ifeui. phis Another Postmaster Gone Wrong Heavy Failure in New York,&c- Chicaoo, September 24. The rail road war has drawn into it the Louisville, New Albany & Chicago road. Hitherto that road bis acted on the defensive, only meeting the outs of the other roads. To day it announces a rate of $1 to Indianap-. olis, a cut of 50 cents, with a schedule ono hour shorter than other roads are making, and cuts to Cincinnati and other points in competition with the pan-handle route ranging from $4 to $4.50. It also pro claims aggressive warfare. Mxmphis, Tknh., September 21. A fire last night destroyed building No. 318, Main street, occupied by S. Levy, trunk manufacturer. Loss about $15,000; in surance $10,000. VNatchiz, Miss, September 24 Postmaster H. H. Meng, of Vidalia, La., was arrested to-day by Inspector Ge . A. Dice, charged with stealing registered let ters from the mail. Meng acknowledged his guilt Columbus, Ohio, September 24. The report of the Auditor of the State, just completed, shows the collections under f,ie Scott liquor tax law to be nearly $2,000, 000 in the State, distributed in localities where collected to the police, poor and to the general revenue and township funds. Washington, September 24. xhe marine hospital service is cdvised that yel low fever prevails at Ponce, Porto Rico, especially among foreigners. Among the deaths was that of a British viee- consul on August 13th. Dr. J. M. Main, of the marine hospital servioo at Brownsville, Texas, in a letter to the surgeon general, transmits the following item of late news from Mexico: "So-ie of the coast jour nals advocate the suspension of the quar antine on account of the late norther, but ie government will maintain it until late ?t November." At Vera Cruz the cases fe fewer but the percentage of mortality is unchanged. There has been one ease of yellow fever in the city of Mexico, the second in the history of the city. Allintown, Pa., September 24. Twenty young women, engaged as warpers in Tie silk mill here, struck against a re duction of wages. They were paid four onta per hundred strings and made $1.66 ir day. A reduction of half a cent was made some time since, and last week a further reduction to three cents went into effect One young girl stopped work im mediately and the others have sinoe fol lowed her example. ONE CASE POPLINS, fall shades, 7 cents a yard. THE BEST DRESS GOODS for the money ever sold here. FromCi.50. i BOYS' ULSTERS AT $4.00. LADIES' WOOL SKIRT-?. large lot of WHITE COUNTERPANES at 75cte, $1.00, $U5, $1.50 and $1.75. RUBBER SHOES, All Sizes. HAND-MADE SHOES for Ladies, Gents and Misses. A FULL LINE OF GENTS' FUR HATS. Dress (Jinghams AT 10 CENTS A YARD. LADIES' AND MISSES' STRAW, FEIT AND i FUR HATS IN ALL THE NEW SHAPES. ALIj-WOOL PANTS CLOTH AT 50 CENTS A YARD. WARNER'S NUR8ING CORSETS AT $1.50. WARNER'S HEALTH CORSETS $1.00. ONE-PRICE wmma CASH STORE, IS E, HARGETTAND 208 WILMTNG. TON STREETS, RALEIGH,. 'N. C. -1 i y 1 f