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'I V. ,
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ERVE
Hi
4
VOi. XXVI.
RALEIGH N. C, FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUAKY 12, 1886.
J,
NO. 78
MM
Obs
AMD
1: "!'
Absolutely PMrf?
rhia
powdar never varies.; A aiml of
economical Uuui ordinary kin da and cannot be
aid In competition with the multitude'of low
itst, anort weight, alum or pboaphate powders
Sold onlr in cans. - Rotal Hauko Powds
Co lot Wall Street, New York.
i Sold by W C A B Stronach, George T
stronach aad J B Ferrall k Co. -
Will
STORE
NKW8 0K8KRV ATlO$8. 1
-Lula Hurst's father says Lula still
retains her. wonderful power.
rTbere seenis to be a scarcity of
bread in London as well as on the west
coast of Ireland, y
Although Chinamen are jnqt per
mitted to do io, it is to be hoped that
things generally will soon settle ' down
in Seattle.' - 5
-The secretary of war says ; that the
militia force of the United States num
bers something over 80,000 men and
officers ' '. . i
Who will not admit th.t the world
moves, and towards humanity? ' The
French crown jewels are to be sold to
found a poor fund, -
j4rFiilly 6,000 ' people, headed; by
brass bands, marched to the ' depot at
Hastings, Nebraska, to witness the simul
taneous arrival of delayed trains. Twenty-nine
passenger trains pulled infrrthe
Uhin depot ' inside of thirty : minutes.
The block had lasted ten days.: i
i-rSenatOr Stanford's dinner served in
Washington Monday evening on golden
plate is a beautiful, reminder of' the
ti u -ih Veriod of the ' Roman emoire. Mr.
CONGRESSIONAL
THE KEN ATE TAKEN
; RIM,
VP BLAIR THE
r. MergM Oerpla Much lira - la
i Combating 1J
WashUjoton, Feb. II.P-Sbnats.
In the beuate today, after the disposal
of the routine morning business, "'Mr.
Edmunds said as one of the important
committees of the ' Senate bad to go to
New Y ork today and other important
committees had considerable, work to do,
witnesses could be summoned who
would not be . recognized as old ac
quaintances. He could, therefore, only
lay down a few general propositions in
support of his views. He contended
that a commanding officer at a distance
front his superior must have some dis
cretion in obeying orders of that su
perior. The commander o( an isolated
corps, who would involve his command
in destruction, in blind obedience fo the
orders f a distant superior, would be
properly branded as incompetent and
unworthy. In 4is action Mr. Porter
had fulfilled the military requirements
of the situation. Whatever the condi
tion of his tredps might have been, the
he believed public business would be
best subserved bj the adjournment of condition of the road had been such that
the Senate: from this afternoon till Mon- no experienced officer would haveDlaced
day. He therefore moved! that when
the Senate adjourn today: it be till
Monday. Agreed to. .
Mr ('Teller t submitted an
to the 'Eustis resolution of
carding the refusal of the assistant
to
treasurer; aview Urleans
certificates in exchange for
amendment
inquiry re
issue silver
silver dol
lars. .'1 he amendment directs the com
mittee on -finance '.to inquire also into
the loss of money alleged to have oc
curred in the New Orleans sub-treasury.
anu wnemer euun loss occurrea in con
nection with the exchange of silver cer-
Iho amend-
The great bargain house of Raleigh.
The only housain the State having a
buyer always in the New York market.
We buy and sell all kinds of goods
l- 't '5 r i',-
- ' i ' '-' r;
hich can be bought and I sold for less
than their market value. - We a4d
! ' ' ; -l ', i T
small profit, regardless ! of cost, f and
- ' -;- : ;t
make our hundreds, of bargains.: make
j.-;-v-;T' .. " r-mmf
bur business. All are requested to call
and see us.
Sbaford is not an intellectual force, but tificatcs for silvet coin
he is as able to giye a fine dinner as any ment was ordered printed.
gentleman oi tne republic, in fact Mr.
Stanford Is a Republican. J
-rufas E; Dixon, an inventor, com
mitted suicide Sunday night Iftom; de
spair of appreciation. Among his neg
lected devices was; a patent ballot box
to make fraudulent voting impossible.
This, although in an age : of reform, the
public refused to patronise; jhenoe he
blew out the gas. i
. - ' . - ; e - , i ; i :
j-It U thought that about twfenty-five
naval cadets will be bilged, ibis year,
the largest number, as usual, coining
out of the fourth class. The failures in
the second and third classess - this' year
were very few as compared with former
etamwationsi All of the first class are
believed to hive passed successfully.
Boston has new agony, When
ever it young woman goes out walking
in the modern Athens, in slippery
weather, she carries with her a; snufl
bag filled; with 'ashes. When jside walk
is reachea that is slippery, a! corner of
. 1 - . f T
the baff is torn onen. and. as the Bos
ton Advertiser, with scriptural ambig
uity, puts it, Ypu may walk jacrossi as
triumphantly as the Israelites did over
the" lied Sea,?" 1 14
:;--A; wholesale house in.' Chidago
started k salesman out on the road, giv
ing himi 1Q0- for traveling expenses.
f-.f-M-MpSJCf ft sj A'.wowit ptusseu, apa notmngr was n?ara
1 - '.hil I I ftooi !J4ryiTrvele. Still another: week
The Senate yesterday passed without
amendment the House bill for the pay
ment of certain claims against the gov
ernment for property taken and used
by the army during the late war. The
bill is known as the fourth of July
claims-bill. r'
The Senate took up and passed, after
tome discussion, but without amend
ment, the' bill to regulate the promotion
of W est Point cadets. The effect of
the bill is that graduates become a part
of the army upon graduation, even
though no vacancies in the service may
exist.
At 2 o'clock. the education bill was
laid before the Senate and Mr. Morgan
took the floor on it. The bill, he said,
was a bill to create offices and elabor
ate machinery of government. It was a
bill to tax the honest, hard working man
in order to educate the children of the
drunken, loafing vagabond who would
not work for his family. If from the
60,000,000 people in the United States
were to be deducted all the dead-heads,
dead-beats - and j non-producers there
would be about 20,000,000 people
left who i would . have to pay
taxes to carry ; out the provisions
of 'this bill. The bill itself would be
equivalent to a ta of $3 per capita on
his force of 9000 men upon that road,
Mr. Steele, of Indiana,' opposed the
bill, beginning with the question. "What
inithunder are we here for? Why are
we discusainr Fiti-John Porter ?" He
held thafif iflwerehtdmitted that Gen.
Porter had not been disloyal to his
country, he had at least been disloyal
to Gen Pope, and hence his conviction
was deserved.: Mr. Bragg, of Wiscon
sin, defended Porter and supported the
bill. The speeches of these three gen
tlemen consumed the day's session. At
4.45 p. m. the committee rose and the
House adjourned.
Tli. Crowa Jewels mt Franc.
THI HISTORIC STONES TO BK SOU) FOR THE
BXNSFIT Of AOKD WORKMEN.
As heretofore stated the French cham
ber of deputies has agreed that tha crown
jewels should be sold to provide a fund
for aged workmen. The approval of the
senate is necessary before the sale al
luded to above can be proceeded with
A commission of jewelers and con
noisseur of jewels; appointed to
value the crown diamonds and to
say- which, if any, - should be re
tained, recommended that: a certain
number of jewels or7 jeweled- objects
should not 'be sold, and their advice is
to be complied with, save in ; regard to
the foreign decorations and the insignia
of the Legion of Honor worn by Nap.
leon III. "Those," says the; report on
the subject, '-recall no historical souve
nir." The gtrdlo in diamonds which
the Empress Eugenie caused to be made
on the model of the ode worn by Mile.
Derval in "LBicheau Boisj" possesses
less a historical than an anecdotal value.
Three objects, instead of being sold in
their present form, are first to be molted
down. . Of these two are swords which
belonged, one to the Dauphin," the other
to Louis AVIIL The third of the ob
those tax-payers and by the time all the j fait to be melted is the imperial crown
We are now opening a fine; aseortnieni PWi jwd Istilli no wordl from; Mr,
. -. ':l-flftHS( t ; TraVeler. Finally the house wired him
f Laees of aU kinds, boughtm the r-IfJif- firl7r
Li.,,i.i,fi.Mfi Muiit'' in W-Yr1f with .usr To which Mr. Traveler ro-
v 6 m,-'. I ; l plUfdj 'Youts this date actietvedii Have
'Li'-' 1 -:iiUUfmde draft on you for &!0U
at great 'bargains. Hamburg edgings
' land Insertings, Oriental Laces,
Torchon,
officers were: appointed for the adminis
. . . . .r j. 1 - , .
tration oi tnis scneme oi nenevoience
and all the clerks appointed that would
be necessary to investigate the accounts
of the thirty-eight States and ien Terri-
tones anectea Dy tne diu, it wouia ue
found that the ta? per capita would be
glO instead of ft3: If the United States
i I -La 1val Aalla I . ... , i . 1-
Am still I cru"wf w"w v! poieon in. never iounu nimseti in a p
with' vnti " i I wvraeimuiwo iuu wu wi i 81tion to induce tne iope to assist m nis
" . . J . : t a I. l I . mm
; J. '' ' I tne sweat oi vneir oruwi, iur. iuurgau
The. fashion of allowing; any nam- could have more respect for them when
ber of stray wisps of .hair io float away voting away the money of. one man to
from the fcides of the once smooth aud educate the children of¬her. The
made in- 1854 for the 1 corouatton
which never took place. It is described
as -'insignificant in workmanship and of
doubtful taste." Its. value is more than
doubtful, considered as a historical rulic.
Pius IX., it will be remembered, htf I
been counted upon to perform the cer
monv for which it was made. But N. -
Irish Trimmings, Pillow-case . laees m
all grades. We are also opening some
. ' ."' '' . '1m Mlhf-I
eat bargains in Cassimeres at 2& eehtsj
all wool, worth 60. Kentucky jeans at
21 cents, worth 35 cents. Choice prints
. ! ' "-I r ! ' . ' :V iBlAil
'at 5 cents. Two quires note, paper for
- - ', . ' ,; ,- i iiH&U
f cents. Envelopes for 3 centei t
k lead pencils 1 cent each' Pins 2
eents per paper. Needles 2 cents per
tidy French twist is, sad tu, relate, ob
the iicre4se the j "style" hiving even
reached to inanV of the silver locked
mothers in Ltrael, who wait abroad like
so many gray-haired Ophelias, with
heads j dishevelled, imagining them
selves ' perhaps as fit and ' agreeable
thenies' for poets and painters, wih their
very unspiriiual-looking and far from
tidy halos of straggling locks floating
about the lower part of tne - bead and
neck; s A more vmussy and uninter-
paper. '200 yards machine cotton at 2
f cents per kspool. Best 4-4 brown i
:tont at 6 cents per yard.. Call and see
us and save your money.
. VOLNEY PURSELL &:C05
y-- : ; ; ;;;f-
G. T.
JfAKKKT 8QUABE.
Before you buy jour
LlQXJOItS
Tor family .or other use call and aamplaour
itocaoi
PURE .BRANDIES. 0
HVblaktea, Pott and Sherry Win, Black
berry BiauUy. ke., &c We guarantee them
pure and thai we will kU lar Wow the pricw
attked in thu murku We sell thaw goJdi at
W hoiesale and are compelled to keep -ample
brril o( all kmtiHon tap and couaequeutly
to kep lrui waU reUil them at Whole-ale-pricee
; '-;'fi
eating' spectacle, however, than: a -dis
hevelled "French-twist" it. is difficult
to imagine.: But fashion Las decreed
that this crumpled stylet: of coiffure
shall : pass' muscer in- the first
ranks: of society, and I so we see
ba every hand the grotesque effects and
absolutely disfiguring arrangements of
my: lady's back hair. . Most of the; pres-:
ent Idas in hair-dressing hare. much to
commend them ,to ladies Of taste and
sense. There are no stuffy: rats or puffy
waterfall cushion, no great masses of
false hair or heavy chatelaine braids to
be looped up and pinned pl and the
arbitrary following of any idne si vie fr
au classes of face and feature u, happily
almost a tradition. This. Hire : fear, u.
hpwe'ver, the 'fact' s'mply because all
these torturing bead gears are "nottasn
ionable.' Flying locks are, and all the
ultrafashionabie people just now appear
every where looking as if they had either
neglected "woman's crowning" glory"
for a week past, or were on their way to
lunatic asylums.
-j-As to the laying of tile they should
be nlaced bo as to get a ' gradual fall,
f..r if few tiles sair or settle they will
fill with dirt unto a level! with the rest,
and so choke part of the sue of the tile,
and if there ia quick sand or soft Bpots
there, should be boards put under , the
tile to hold them in place, and some
au I) stance put on top to keep the drain
fitlihff with Band: muck is best.
P
constitutional ground for the bill, Mr.
Morgan continued, was said to be
found : in the general welfare clause
of the. preamble to the constitution.
Sach . an application of that clause
simply meant that you could pull down
a:r: - " '! " .
a man wno got up nis own exertions in
order: to put up a drunken loafer who
would not exert himself. Ine best peo
ple; in the : United States today were
those who in the; backwoods, in fear of
God and-having respect for the good or
der and morals of society, bad brought
up around: their own hearthstones hon
est, Binctre, diligent and faithful sons
and daughters. Following, this line of
argument Mr. Morgan spoke till 4.40
p. m., occasionally interrupted by
Messrs Blair, Pall and: George. At
that hour the Senate went into executive
session, and when the doors- were re
opened adjourned until Monday.
HOt'BX. ' :
Pone
coronation. .The two' royal swords aiid
the imperial Crown which was destined
never to be used are. after the. atones
have been taken out, to be melted and
sold aS so much metal,
The government does not, however.
propose to sell the famous: "Regcut,"
which was acquired by the regent of
Orleans, to whom it owes its name, for
over $675,000. A story was told of the
"Resent ' that it bad been: tlok-n by
French deserter from the eye of the
figure of Juggernaut, though according
to another version, it was stolen, not
from a god, Jbut from a slave who had
found it in a mine, and was in tne oabito
carrying it about ina wound which ho had
made expressly lor its reception in onu
Of his legs. ; This stone has the reputa
tion of being the purest, if not the largest
of famous diamonds. The. kings of
France wore it in their crown. Napo
leon, howeyer, carried it in the hilt of
his sword. Had he not done so it would
not for a time have been lost to France,
as it in fact was when, at Waterloo, it
fell into the hands of the Prussians.
PRECAUTIONS
rAUF.9 TO PJK EVENT THIS KLCl K
KEXCEOF THE LONDON KIOTB.
Apprltnioas In Blrmlngrnam fRJot.
: . V
. out Demoutttrationn.
IjOndoK, Feb. 11. Six hundred police
recruits have been engaged by the gov
ernment: for' service . in Loudon. The
new men will go on' duty at once, and
while waiting? for their uniforms will
wear plainclothes, with a distinguishing
badge on the : lelt arm. The socialist
Murray ,: who carried a red flag in Mon
day's procession, has been arrested. vHc
will be tried on a charge of inciting
the mob at Hyde Park. The crown-
awyers , have advised the government
that conviction: can probably be obtained
of the socialist leaders who took part in
the mob proceedings Monday. Con
viction would entail a sentence of two
years penal servitude. A mass meeting
of the unemployed of the southeastern
part of London, called to assemble in
Ueptford tonight, has been postponed
until baturday.
Birmingham, England, ieb 11.
The police profess to entertain fears that
a socialistic meeting which is to be held
here Monday next will be attended with
rioting.! lhey are taking all needful
precautions. It is stated that Burns
and Hyhdman, the London socialists
ho managed the lrafalgar square
meeting. Monday last, will epeak here
Monday next, i A number of unemployed
workniep paraded here today.
Gan. HanrMk'f Fune?al.
Washington, Feb. 11. The secretary
of war and several prominent army offi
cierswillgb to Philadelphia Saturday
to receive the Remains of Gen. Hancock,
and will accompany them to Norristown.
A detachment ot artillery with guns has
been ordered to proceed from Philadel
phia to, Norristown to fire a military
salute over Gen. Hancock's grave.
These will be ? the only military ceremo
nies on that eccasion, as the funeral is
to be aprivate pne;
New Vorh Cottoa Fatnrta.
Nkw Vokk, Feb. 11. The Post says:
Future deliveries opened at about yes
terday a closing prices, declined 2 points
and then advanced, February 5-10U, the
balance of the list 7 to 8-100 Part of
the advance was lost and at the third
call prices ranged 3 to 4-100 beyond
yesterday s closing quotations. Futures
closed steady. : ; ,
A Nttamcr But ued but Iter rw SatVed.
Nkw York, Feb. 11 The pilot boat
Edward Cooper today brought in the
captain and crew of the schooner G M.
Nevina ifrom 1 Wilmington, N. U , for
New York, with naval stores. :The
st-amer was burned at sea yesterday
tweiity-Buvcn iniles southeast of Barne-
luoinaa B. llura dominated.
I ' HI ' T , .
ViiiLTON, vjis., reo. ii. in tne
Democratic- congressional convention,
held to nominate a candidate for the
vacancy caused by the death of Con
trressruan llnnkiu, State senator Thos
. llurd was nominated on the 83d bal
lot last evening.
I CURRENCY.
A GEM FROM TOE MIKADO.
Vdait d froid 'lie PhlladelphU Call
A merchant fame forth In the dawn of the day,
MnginK "tsm owe: u, dui owei l dui owe!
I can t It mi a doll tr iny xtore rent to pay.
In my tUI, oh! my till, oh! my till, oh!"
MabiItBr and art. '
To the editor of the New York Evening
Postj:- '
Sir : In hard clay soils, subsoiling is
not only of great value, in both wet and
dry seasons, but in case of the latter it
is necessary in order to obtain any
crop in wet seasons it provides an es
cape from excess of water, which fre
quently injures the crop materially,
causing scalding in corn and much soft
corn. In dry seasons it loosens the earth
to enable the roots of the crop to pene
trate sufficiently deep to obtain mois
ture.
A FRIUHTFCL LONt or HOUSES.
F. P.
were
The Miotic At tloa wf Over.Xealaew
llremea.
r 8t. Louis, Mo., February 11.-4?
Mullis hvrry and sale stables
burned at an t arly hour this morning.
The fire i rigtnated in a hay loft, from
some linlnowu cause,' and spread so
rapidlyUhat it was well under way be
fore the fire department arrived, h The
employes of the'establishment who were
at the scene at the time turned attention
first to saving the horses, sixty-five in
number, and had taken seven of them
from the burning building when tvio po-
. Q " -.V - f "
In 1S53, and some years before and , " ' V116
nftn t n-nA - 'o, A( . suiywveai were tnieves ciuDbecL them
" - wa marmot vmim 1 ; . f. , ., , ...
upland and part richer bottoS land, t , IUCU8 0,"ty ana tnus uestroyed the
oKnnt R& r 1 R.V7 .AA PJ chance of saving the stock. The
. - "- "'v' i .- ce. t . i :.
the first premium for the best cultivated. tcullu u y-eignt nowes were nurned,
a ,
Mr Reed, of Maine, offered a reso- After the restoration it went back to
lution modifying the order making the France, and that it might not a
Fits John Porter bill -a continuing second time become the property of the
special order from today until next Prussians it was conveyed, in ! 1870,
Thursday; so as to provide that the bill when the capital was about to be m-
shall hot be considered until; after the vested, from Paris to Tours and from
second morning hour on each day. Tours to Bordeaux. It has has had
Mr. Randall endeavored to have the 1 strange adventures, too, in 1 ranee
order further amended so that the pie-I itself. Thus under the consulate and
vious question should be ordered on the empire, it remained in the
Tuesday instead of Thursday, but he possession of M. Vanderberghe, who
was unsuccessful and Sir. fteed s reso- held it as a guarantee. Tor the repayment
Never use straw. aiuck bog, or peet
is the beat material to use first over the
:lD ic tt,a viiur will Blbr through it.
G-iOO-t-EIJEIS. keeping out all of the dirt, aud if mixed
in with the dirt clear to the top pi ;tne
ditch, all the better, as & will actj as
a : manure, and pay I for : hauling,
o say nothing aboui v the ditch.
.Short suriaco uraius may be mad in.
ulay soils by filling the ditches half full
Uf muck, theu put on the clay. If our
lrains are to be long ones, it will pay
to sink a deep box in the centre of the
ditch; put it dowu two feet below the
tilej so the water will flow, at "on i one
dide and out ft the ther. That will
illow the dirt that comes down the tile
ihnve to drop in the hot, and saves its
ailing the tile below. The box should
Ka ;,.a.ia nf irreen. durable lumber and
imk bfiloW the reach of the plowi theu
tlie caver inav be removed at any time
(. ,. .
100 bbta Sugar, all grades. '..
& blU ot ire-h Alpi '. !
t& nciu ld Uoviniunt Jiv: Joe.
li eattkM l'rtuie Laguayra, 18c. , . ' ,
to tmikM Vi Uue Mo : ! lr
' a. taclw SedUik Coffee. isr
i'5 eack Mixed Laguay ra, Java and RiO M
cae BrandJ- Feacoea. !u
bwxea t;ir.at l 00. ' ' jtr -,.
lUldwifl Apple- one galioa can S5c
loo boxes W'iuner and B-auty Tobaoeo.
20 om SmokUig Xobaeoo. Vr'..
8000 MagoolU llama lie .
k.MAV Momiu. uriu. Hooiinr. si'-
'UDMtu. Superlative, and Orange Grove j
J aaaai i-oHe-a at retau. ;;p, i
i.X) eaueatinair,' ' -;'-'. .
am lha 8nutl.
Ail outer Uroctxiea. - i ..
lution was adopted
. ;Mr. Bingham, of Pennsylvania, asked
leave to introduce a bill granting a pen
sion of $2,000 per annum to the widow
of Gen. W o. Uancock, put Mr. Ueach,
of New York, objected.
Mr. Wellborn, of Texas, from the
committee on Indian affairs, reported
the Indian appropriation! bill and it was
reierred to the committee of the whole.
In the second morning hour Mr,
Adams, of llhnois, on behalf of the
committee., on ; banxing and currency
called up the bill to enable the national
banking association to increase their
capital stock and to change their names
Or locations, me dui was criticised by
Mr. Beaxsh, of New York,- because of its
- F 1 1
excessive verbiage, ana Dy Messrs.
Anderson, of Kansas Reagan, of Texas,
and Weaver, of Iowa, ipon the general
ground that it conferred; increased power
upon the national banks. The bill was
passed; yeas Vd, nays izu. jUr. Adams
entered a motion to reconsider and to
lay that motion on the .table, but the
morning hour "having expired, final ac
tion was not taken. Ine House at l
o'clock went into committee of the whole
on the Fits John Porter.
The 1 debate was opened by Mr.
llaynea, of New Hampshire,' in support
of the bill Nothing new, he thought,
could be brought forth in the disoussion.
The same old evidence!, io often sifted,
wu all (hat wm in the ease now. tfo
of a state loan, and meanwhile lent it to
his wife tolwcar at evening parties, re
nlacing it in his strong box by an ex
cellent imitation in chrystal, which: iS
said on more than one occasion to have
been exhibited as the original I to the
authorities charged with the duty of
visiting it. .
C,ait AlMDt Ktniatcd. :
IiONDO ., Feb. 11. Nooji Everything
is quiet iu the metropolis this morning.
Tradesmen have reopened their shops
and business , is proceeding as usual.
Considerable uneasiness,' however, is
still felt lest there should bet further
riotous demonstrations.! ' :
EzGv.
N'.uwl N
eymewr'a Condition
laprTtmaU
Unci, Ni Y., Feb U.Ex-Gov.
Seymour slept but little last night and
his condition shows no improvement this
morning. I ; .
The flow- of milk from cows can be
'largely increased by the use :of Day's
Horse powder.
Mothers should act wisely! and stop
dosing their babies with laudanum
whilt teething. Dr. Bull's Baby Syrup
answers the purpose and is harmless. .
fcverv woman that has once used Dr.
Bull's Baltimore Fills will not be with
out them. j
nit neighbor stood by with a smile in hi eye,
faying, "Uh foJLh merchant, why do you
cryr
rut an ad. in the N. & O. and the dollar will
fly? M ' .
AiJ will fill,' oh! your till, oh! your till, oh!"
A Bloouiington employer said to
his clerk: ' "You were absent yester
day."; "Yes: had. to bury my grand
mother. " 'f Don't let it occur again,
sir -if it does, eat more cloves I .smell
your secret." Bloomington Eye.
"A'civil engineer, is he?" said Mrs
Parvenue to her- daughter, who was
telling of a gentleman who paid rher
marked attention; "well, I'm glad he
was polite, . but f don't want you to
marry into a railroad family !" .New
York Mul and Expresss.
'My dearf don't you intend to invite
Mr. and Mrs. Green to your party?"
asked Mr. filler, "Certainly not."
"Why uot, pay dear? They are good
friends of ours." "What if they are? I
am going to invite Wr.and Mrs. Ur own.
"Well, can't you invite the Greens,
too?' "Why, John Biller, you -, appal
me with your shocking taste Brown
and Green in my parlors togethei!
Why, next you'll be asking me to wear
bluo and fellow. 1 declare, you men
have no idea of harmony." New York
bun. ; .
"I see 'that Greece refuses to comply
wita the demand of. the European
powers to disarm, she says she wil
faght " "Ycx, I noticed that," replied
Mr. BttlL "What efft-ct do you think
. . T 11 t . . .1 . . .
tuac win nave on tne market, Mr
Bull?" "It will send prices up boom
ing. i Ycfu feee, a war iu Europe is sure
to create a demand there for our pro
ducts. ; "ijut nora on! Mere
another report that says Greece ha
? t . t .-a i
promised te aisarm. "Ah, well so
much the better. If they don't have
war to kill the people off there will be
so many more of them to demand our
products, and the bigger, the demand!
the higher- the prices, of course."
Chicago News.
; Judge fjorn, of Illinois,' has been ap
pointed to the supreme bench of Wyom
ing.: The com-juice which he prepares
in the shape of judicial decisions will
hardly hardly be conrjuioive to temper
ance refonp.
managed, and productive farm of all the
competitors that year, by Jthe Franklin:
county agricultural society (Uhio). In
the spring of lood 1 purchased a Steel
plough (steel mould-board and chilled
iron point) and sent the same to my
tenant, with directions to plough a field
of the upland of eight acres seven inches
deep and sow in oats. Visiting the farm
when the ploughing was: nearly com
pleted, I found he bad only ploughed
to the depth of four inches, by reason of
the soil below being so hard that! the
plough would go no deeper. He sowed
that held in oats, and it bemg a good
season, reaped a fair crop.;- In the fall I
sent him a subsoil plough with, mv
home hired man and carriage horses. He
ploughed up the four inches, and my
team followed, loosening three inches
more. Next spring (1854) I again sent
out my team and subsoil plough, and!
the fine plough turned up the seven
inches while the subsoil plough loosened
three inches more that field and one
on the bottom land, were planted in corn,
and the season proved the: driest season
within my knowledge. In the fall
(1854) there was harvested on that. up-!
land field so subsoiled forty-five bushels
of shelled corn to the acre, and ! thirty-!
seven bushels in the botton land. That
subsoil plough was of iron, but I per-;
suaded one Mr. John L. Gill, the owner
of a foundry and an agricultual store,1 to
make steel subsoil ploughs, and used
one here eight years with great benefit
to my crops. ; - j
Professor Liebig, in his work on
agricultural chemistry, says that in
4,000. pounds of .stable manure : rotted
in the usual way there was only : 40U
pounds of real manure, the rest being
worthless, the ammonia (the real man
ure) having escaped with a bad odor in
the atmosphere, and that the application
of land piaster when the manure: was
fresh each time the stable was cleansed
would fix the ammonia into the: manure
heap and retain the fertilizing, qualities
and prevent the offensive odors M Lime
will also combine with the ammonia and
destroy the odor, but will form a gas
which - will escape( and the fertilising
qualities 'will be lost. Plaster has no
fertilizing qualities in itself. Its value
consists in its power to attract the am-
I monia from the atmosphere and the soil
and convey it to the plant. v It nas.
therefore been said that "plaster en
riches the father and impoverishes the
son." To the extent of its attraction
of the ammonia from the soil this say
ing is true, as the abstraction of the
fertilizing qualities from the soil into
the crops without the aid of plaster,
tends to impoverish the land. , j ' '
Professor Liebig. further accounts - for
tbo fertilizing of the soil by clover turn
ed in. He says clover has the capacity
of abstracting sixteen times as much am
monia from the air as any other crop,
and takes sixteen times less from,, the
m a it- f. . r 1
sou. xnereiore cioveri. wen covereu
with plaster, with its aid, holds an im
mense amount of fertility, and plough
ed into the soil is a cheap and very
valuable fertilizer. Deep ploughing,
fin tillage, and frequent change of crops
have been said to be the: three great se
cret of farming successfully. To these
must be added perfect drainage : and, a
conservative use of all manure made On
io death.
1 he Successor , to Gen. Hancock will
be Major-General John M. Schofield.l
There were three major-generals ranking;
next to Lieu tenant-General Sheridan
Gen. Hancock, Gen. Schofield and Gen.l
John Pope. Gen. Schofield was, born
in New York. He is a graduate of
West Point, which he entered July 1J
1849. j He was March 1, 18U5, breveted!
a major-general, and received l ii com
mission as major March 4, 1869. !
Tfeer la Kwtfainjr Surprising
in the fact that Benson' Capclne Piasters are
widely imitated; the heap and warthlen
posters with name of aimil tr sound and simi
lar appearance in typ-, are ireelv o ffened for
sale. Article of great and original, merit
always hve to compete with traxhv Imitations,
But as lhey become known tbey aid oiit
through deserved i eglct. Meanwhile we
warn the public against the to-called Opei
cum," fCapsiciu," ' Capucin" and HJapsK
tine" p!aster, ; whether Benton's".:: "Bur
onV or otherwise. They have no medicinal
or curative virtues whaUver, and are Bade to
sell on the reputation of Benson's. Wheq
purchasing ak for Benson's. Deal with respec
taMc'droeaisU only, and you cannot be de
ceived. The genuine has the "Three Seals"!
trademark on-the cloth and the word; "Can-
cine - cut in me centre. ;
Genl Hancock's
Saturday morning.
funeral takes!, place
is known everywhere, 1 and well merits
its reputation as the 4)1 People's lleme!
dy," and "Universal. Pain Destrbver.'f
For over forty years this, great vegeta
ble compound has proved its, emcacyi
and never failed to do its duty; when
brought into use. It has wo its greatest
renown as a subduer ot all pains and inf
flammations, and should be in ! every
household. Pond's Extract cures Sore
Throat, ; Quinsy, Inflamed Tonsils:,
it !i ' "W Wl .F
y ounas, uruises, j'lies, uatarrn, eto,
' Ghieago Knights of Labor are largely
engaged in the boycott business.:
r I Mlcttttti ro4l v
In th stomach develops an aeld which stings
the upper part of the throat and palate, raus-
Inflf MtiMThiirn'L' It aIba va1wm a m whl41
produoea '-wind on the stomach,." ani a feel' '
in and appearance of distension la that organ ,
after eating. For both thisacidity 4ml swell-ins-
Hoatetter's Stoma. U Bitters i a roach bet-
r remedy than alkaMnj atlta, like hart'horn
and carbonate of eda. ' A wineglasafulof the
Bitter after or before dinner wi l be lound to
act a a realiabie einninative or prrventlve.
Thi $ne speifie for dyipepsia, both in ita
acnte and cbronte form, lo prevehta and
cures malarial fejer, cunt-tipa'ion, liver com
plaint, kidney tronbiea, ncrvouaaess and de
bility. Persons who observe in tbrmaelvea
a decline of vigor should use Ik's fine
tonic without delay. i
John L. Sullivan hf s challenged Pad
dy Ryan. -;:.'. .: j
Advlra Msthan.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Srrup should aw
way be used when children are euttiiig teeth.
It relierei the little sufferer at onoe, it pro
duces natura, quiet sleep by rlinring the
child from pain, and the little cherub awakes
at "bright as a button." It is very pleasant, to'
taste; soothes the child, softens the gums, allay
all pain, relieves wind, regulates the bowels
and is the beet known remedy for diarrtaMu
whether rfcing from teething or otbr cause.
NtT-lI eau j:
the farm.
Gladstone (to Mrs. Wcttin)--,You
sent for mc, I believe, ma'amf" Mrs.
Wettin "Yes, I did. Here is! the key
of the pantry, but don't let those bad
Irish boys have any pe." Pittsburg
(Jhromcle. ii
is
No pain remains where- the affected
part is rubbed with St. Jacobs Oil.
The first knowledge of the use of earth
closets, according Ito Prescott 'His
tory of Peru,' was by the Incas in ah r
around Cusco, the capital, in .conie
quence of ihe great fertility of 'the soil
where used, come hfteen years since 1
learned that they were coming ih to gen-!
eral use in Europe on account of the
disinsection of the excreta, using the
contents for fertilizing land, as the earth
thrown on the deposits immediately con
fined all fertility, rendering the manure
very rich, one load thereof beitig worth
more than three or four of stable man
ure rotted in the usual way. ; I have
used such closets thirteen years, and
find them free from unpleasant 'odors
and the contents valuable as fertilizers.
I notice the State board of health have
required all closets of that, character ; to
be used near Hemlock Lake, from
whence the drinking water of the city
of Rochester is taken, to 1 prevent
the pollution of the water of the
lake. They - should be adopted in all
cities, villages, and farms, ! hotb for
sanitary reasons and for fertilizing.
Further, the garbage of all cities con
tains much fertility. If cemented re
servoirs were constructed in the neigh
borhood of the cities, using, say, Port
land cement, which will stand the ef
fects of winter, and Dlaster applied Ton
each removal, a manure would be
created of more value than all ; the cost
of removal, etc. We do uotneed toj go
to the expense of importing guano or
other fertilizers if we will only save bur
own by pioper management. ; : -
: S. B bcsb. j H
Canamdaigca, Ni Y. Deoeimber If. ',
t. i'l '
Why is a winter storm like a child
with a bad cold V It blow jit snows
(it blows its nose.) Cure it with Tay
lor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullein. j : ' ;
mm " - qaKK it wan UT vltwT anowa una.
St.?.
I . -a r-ii
Rheumatism. KaeTmlsia.
peex. grnwea,
CDU, Lmr.ba.
Bwninfcrs, Si
fHirna, ncauaa.
co, i iearlCT, Bona, Vrmt-bitt,
ScioUom. WotlH(!a. Haadacha.ii
looTiHtrim. nrnoia. no. met
"SScUl a bo. -a. Bold br all
MC$DimeetatS' Cautlon-Tba gear
tlrM' oine ticUvation Oil beam nu
P-a!m1! sfrr.atu-a. A. O. Krver at Cu, Seas
noonnan. Dojumuaa, aia., u.
-i
no crime rrnau
uni uvbh vuuwu wiuwrt
For the cure of Coughs, Colds, Hoarse
ness, Croup, Asthma, Bronchitis;
Whooping Conrh, Incipient Con
sumption, and for 'the rtiicf of con
snmptrve persons la advice etgea
of tha Disease. For Sale tj tvi l.Bg
gista. Price, 2S cents. '; !
SMOKE
KRAMER'S
CENT
PUG
KOKS BETTER m the mnHket. Mida
of Be'ectad leaf and eaanol ba excelled.
Samnel Kramer fiSCo
DURHAM. N. a
t
11
i 1
1
- ' -El