,i t,, Nir'1 5 LI- - JO Iiviqn ! 1 ERVEK. 2-- News E AND I I OL.XX1V1I. RMjEIGH. N. C. SUNDAY MOItNTNG, AUGUST 29,1188$. NO. 88 r ; ; row Absolutely Pure, f Thu powder never" varies. A marvel of i atrlty, strength and wbolAomtuw Mot. eoaomtctal than ordinary kinds and euaot be U In competition with the multitude of lojr tML short walght, alum or phjwpbate nowderjl r'old onlv la cans.- Royal, "Bktko uwva lOw, 108 Wll Str.pt, Nw York. dold bjW r ft A B 8toiiah, George ? wvh arfd J B Ferrmll AO., r DQOIVH'S -V uuu U ! BITTERU . -4 .. Craktala ISOK vttk rcfcX VBSKTABLB), TOXICS, ..alcair aaa eeaaatatalr CLKAHSKS ana THK BLOOD. OmtekMaJ UaettMrUUTwaaaKilaTm, Oeanth alaiea, autkea the Ala rtMeth. It toe art tajar. the tooth, eaaat aaa'iffca, ornreiaca aoa Uaatlea-AlX OTHKK IS01 EXBICIIKS DO tnita. tn Drogtotofii(aMm4 aj a. W. 8. femei. of Marfeo, llaoa, mm: "I eariebJncth. blood, and I antra's iroa BttMn as a Taiuaeia and reaaoatac all djrapaptil reptuaa. ttdoaaaotbart thetaath. hao W aa B I lBfCTirM1 boa Btttanra eaaa. of aaamna aad blood diaaaaaa, ala vhai a tenia waa aadad.aad a a proaad thoropchlj aaiafirry. Ma. Wat. Brim, M 8. Sba? l. IhwOriwa, lj am: "Brawa's boa Bittara imtitmi wait oasa i7boioatihi. aad I haattflr wnaand it t boaaaWincaUaodpaHaar. i fcaa. Moa Ma. W. W. MOMaiua, TaaomHa, Ala., an: " t Blood aad anptna aai mj t am laapaia Iiaaat baa Bitten aflaetad a 1 taakaaaaajwr at aai Taltiama Trado Mart cad TdMBtlki. Madaanfarbr Mewl chkhicaj. cav. ktia.TiMitc. mm. 1 U THE GREAT 1 BARGAIN STORE OF , lr7bodyU working lwih JmIght74ot 3; iv-' 'i' ! v I ' I J ' ar and but lew know how to w it alter ttey get It. Tbey lool it awaj U bad bajgaina iad does tben but Utile good. Buy your gooda ud aTerytning elae where, jon can get tSm he cheapest, aa theBaeket Itore doea. Big rloaa wlH not do In theae pertiliable times. The rich cannot afford to waste their money ' and the poor require every jdollar and efery ; - i t ,1: any Ife deal in good goeda and not trjuh, nd believe the maaaea will pronL the houae hat sella the beat goods tor the least money ' Who can telf the waste ol moo y when yot) get .1 . i i our goods from a house that buys and sells on . - I i ong time. What is the use tit wasting a dollar I i whan von can save one? We throw on our . . ounters day after day new arrivals at panic i ? ioea from house, that wlM go down toaor- row and are compelled to jsell t- xa at .such 5 t vAix as we are wiUuur to, pay. From such ; i f ources as these we get ' many of theoods a. we are pitting against th credit aystem, ?or money, reputation and the jpeopl.- Ourstock will be replenlsbed every few daya with special ' s i - bargains. This Week we will fffler yout some ..'.' !! . great bargains in suspendea and brace at 25 enU, worth 60 enta; big fob in hosiery ol all I iteaeripUoas; new style ol aloe bustles at 17 cU. ' i 't :l werth'W i shoea of all kinds ; cheap line of - ottonade pants new lot of our 78-cta. hirta, worth It ; lot Ilainillon prinbi at ft cto.;worth aatwbera. We wish an earlv and re- pasted visit and iwpectiott. f. lUspectf pQj submitted to the cash 1 raJe Oaiy by 5 - VOUiET PUBSELL 4 00., 10 Emi Marti. Btre-t. A r r A HACKBT STORE :f- - r-s, '. , . ,' i V , I , - " .' i i j ? r NEWS OBSERVATIONS. -; v : ' The Monte Carlo gaming tables ha,Te just aoored their BeTenty-si.th Bui cide for the seaaon a woman, wha had lost J60.000. - , t "There goea one white mn who never lied to an Indian.'' This, is the compliment paid by a red man tQibishop Whipple the other daj. I ' Russian military men havfe been experimenting with a new explosive in tended to supplant the ordinary gun powder. The substanoo, whose compo sition is as yet a secret, is said to have an explosive power greater thanfthat of black dynamite, and to generate neither smoke nor heat. I ' Purple pond lilies from Japan are the floral glories of the hour. Sfho Ja panese lily does not attach itself; to f any objeott but floats around in the, witer. The leaf springs from a little air bulb thatj sustains the plant on the surface and the roots find nourishment , in the watte. '- 1 ' "Chestnut annunciators" are1 now for sale. A small gong, attached to the outside of the vest, enables yoni to toll the dirge of every worn-out jie ;and give it Christian burial. Tennyson probably had them in mind wheQ he wrote: "Ring out the old; ring in. the new." ' '; ;; The fact that a woman's j bustle could be set on fire in a street ear and that she could be burned to death in an open street in broad daylight is 'strange indeed, but this is what happened to a Mrs. Desmonl in New York Wednesday last. The theory is that theVomln's clothing Was ignited by some careless cigar smoker. . j . 1 "Regardless of feet or Sands," j writes minister Cox, "the Turkish j women must cover their faces.. Then they are indeed secluded. No eckjfer any other part of the body. A is gen ii . i enuyme case, u tneir yasnmaxs are not handy they take hold of their skirts m a. 1 .vl i Lam IiiJa a,A$w Vlnali.a ' ' iuu wiiu wiiu uiuu ut&u uiuouia. The subject of women's1! name? seems to be growing in importance. Io the opinion of Charles Dudley Warner new "aystem is essential to tote cause of woman." When she marries sbe oses her identity, but th's can bo avoid ed bv a verv simnle device: not bv - re- f 4 - S .1 y -V maining single, aa the Ipresenv system. enoouraeea, but bv adding the eul s surname to the nan e of 'her husband. If each unmarried woman had two, names, and each married Woman three, ft wojild not be difficult to know whether "Miss" or "Mrs' should be the proper; form of address. Now some one should discuss the proper manner of ceremonious Ad dress in a letter to an nnmarried wo man, rear miss being hardly accepta ble. '' l ' ; I ' -The storv of Miss Helen Blinchard, of Portland, Me., as told by the Pres of that oi ty, deiervea wide loaention. 8he was the daughter of a wel known Portland merchant who was unfortunate in business. After tn unsuccsful;: at tempt at keeping a boarding Jouso- in Boston she obtained work in?a Phila delphia clothing. house ; Ope Jay, in a tit of desperation. she abandoned ibe shop to invent a . band In gentlemen's hats to prevent . perspiration, which proved highly successful. She has now returned to , Portland to buy back the old homestead where 'the family lived in their former days of prosperity. Her wealth was lareelv gained, through the sweat of (he brow, though of somebody else's brow. U -Velvet and plush by thej yard -will remain in high favor j as accessories to autumn toilets, io give tone 'to neutral and pale-tinted fabrics. For; instance, a visiting gown of dove-gray vigogne will have a long redingote polonaise of this fabric, which meets the front only at a single point in the corsage, and on this will be set every wide J re vera of dark green or golden-broWa velvet, with dog-collar and velvet 'revere on the cuffs of the same, and a-: belt with buckle matched to the handsome but toms whioht decorate ' the refers. The skirt will be of plush-striped vigogne, either in cuss or perpendicular stripes, according as the height of the wearer may require, and will be disposed in five very broad kilts set direotly down the front: the long sides or the polo naise hidingthe rest of the Iskirt, with the exception of the narrdws ioot-pleat- inar of vlvet at the extreme edge Liter off there will appear numberless striped polonaises, of vigogne overskirts of velvet or plain vigogne' kilted at the sides, with two plain straight breadths in the back. -1 -The Farm Journal sayf : To have 'fresh eggs the year round, keep v.hena that wul lay them fresh evefy day. To prevent fresh eggs from spoiling on your hands, eat them or sell them to some one else. We make no extra charge foi these two valuable lints! The usual inquiries abouS preserving eggs for several months have arrived ith the return or summer. in answer, we have, aa usual, to say that we kaow no art by means of which feggs can be made to retain the freshness o tneir youth for six months or more, hor do we know of any method of rejn vena tion them after they have reached their dotage. It has been profed that eggs will keep in fair condition ftwo oi three months, simply packed io salt; or in dry, sifted coal ashes. The common method of keeping them itf lime water is probably as good as any. The formula is two pounds of lime, onf pint of salt, and four gallons of waterS; blake the lime in hot water.: Put yi only fresh eggs, and keep them covered with the liquid. Eggs thus packed and placed in cold storage, when the temperature is between 35 and 40; jill probably eome out in edible condition six' months later : but thev will not be fresh eggs, and it will be prudent to make use of them soon' after they are taken from the piekle. .! I ' . RETURNING. PRINCE ALEXANDER EN ROUTE FOR BULGARIA. RCPSIA, WHICH piPOSl)aiM, SECLARKS HI SHALL NOT KSTURN. Sofia, Aug. 28. The trial by court martial of Zinkr ff and Greuff and the metropolitan Clement, the leaders of the revolutionists, who forced Prince Alex ander to abdicate, has been finished. Zankoff and Greuff were sentenced to death and Clement was sentenced to im prisonment for life. Lkmbiso, August 28. Prince Alex ander has returned Prince William of Wurtemberg's visit. M. Stambuloff his sent the following despatch to Prince Alexander ef Hesse : "In the name of the father and we beg your higbnes to telegraph to your son at Lemberg (our prince) and ask him to leave that city direct for Bucharest today, where W. Naohevics, the Bulgarian diplomatic agent, will explain to him everything. The Bulgarian nation and army long ingly await the Prince's return." London, August 28 The Russian papers hope that the interview between Prince Bismarck andJI. de Giers, the Russian foreign minister, will hasten' a settlement of the Bulgarian difficulty. The eventual return of Prince Alexander they say might increase the difficulty for Germany. The Gazette at St. Petersburg ad vises Prince Alexander not to resume the government of Bulgaria, as such a step would only result in a second and more decisive overthrow. The publica tion of reports of militry mat ten vers a! Wilna and Warsaw is forbidden. The newspapers are only allowed to copy offi cial reports. Paris, August 28.- A dispatch from J assy to the Ttmps says if the powers prevent Prince Alexander's return the Bulgarians willjrpclaim a republic. Con8Tantisopli, August 28. The governments of Germany and Austria consider that the recent events in Bui- "vvn.i garia impose on JSingiana cnicny tne duty to take the initiative in an for- eign action lor tne settlement 01 tne Bulgarian affairs. This opinion has been officially eommunioated to the Porte. Lzmbieg, August 28 Prince Alex ander started at 2 p. m. by a special train for Lompalanka, by way of Bu charest and Guirgevo. From Lompa lanka he will proceed to Sofia. It is not settled yet what route he will take to reach that eity. I Ttrk OntlM Tutmr. Nbw Yoax August 28. Green & Co. 's report on cotton futures says: Liverpool made a somewhat firmer show, especially on the early months, sup posed to be through inability to get cotton forwarded fast enough to satisfy contracts, and reflection here- put rates up some 4a5 points. Cover ing took place on the strengthening, but in general the May demand was a made rate and cautious, and before the close the gain had about all been lost, with the tone rather easier throughout. Baaxlk Statement. . Nxw York. Aug. 28. The weekly statement of the associated banks is as follows: -Reserve increase, $168,275; loans decrease,; $5,724,400; specie in crease, $2,416,200; legal tenders de crease, x,4dV,UUU ; deposits decrease; $8,728,300;: circulation increase, $67, 200. The banks, now hold $6,951,150 in excess of the 25 per cent. rule. ' A Ktrlk Enda at PltUbnra;. Riadimo, Pa., Aug 28. The oigar makers' strike, inaugurated a month ago, for an increase of 30 per cent, in wages, ended at a meeting last night. The manufacturers have successfully operated with non-union men. Of the 500 men involved a large number went elsewhere and the remainder are out of employment. The strikers ever sinoe the strike have received weekly pay ments from international unions. Old Mlugr.r BnUlvan rollMl. . Naw Yobk, Aug 28. The Sullivan -Herald fight is off, owing to the "hard he.rtedness and obduracy" of the sheriff of Queens county, Long Island, where the match was to be. The pugilists, their backers and friends, were on the spot and tickets had been sold in large numbers for reserved seats, but the sheriff was on hand with such a disDlav of force that Sullivan seemed glad to make haste from the neighborhood. , ; H .nrjr Ward Bchr III. London, August 27. Rev. Henry Ward Beecher is ill. He has canceled his lecture engagement at New Brighton for today, and has gone to the hydropathic institute at Moffatt, Dum friesshire, Scotland rouble In the Pnraelllte Camp. Dublin, August 27. The Eapress (conservative) says that serious trouble is brewing in the Parnell camp. The danger arises, the Express says, from the threatening attitude of a man who once was deep in the Becrets of the "Parnellite conclave," and his former associates "are now considering the question whether he can be silenoed." a A Fatal Aeeld.nt. Chicago, August 28. A special from Buchanan, W. Va., says: While number of workmen were erecting a saw mill on Trenoh creek, fourteen miles from this place, yesterday, the structure collapsed, fatally injuring David Burr, j. bcraas Debar, Floyd Brown and John Allman. A Bartlmr feliot t Iatn. St. Lcuib, Aug. 28. A special from Vicksburg, Miss., says that Mrs. Davis was murdered with a hoe by a negro boy, aged eighteen years, employed by her husband. The neighbors eaught tne murderer ana snot nun to death. A Or.at Kartaajak. DISTB.OYS TEBXI HTTSDRID PXSSONbV. Athens, Greece, August 28. Greece has again been visited by a earthquake, which has been most disastrous in the Mores, and in which the loss of life, according tojthebest information .reaches the enormous figure ofTOO.,The village of Pyrgos and the town of Pftflatra, :l?oth situated on the western oast4of the Morea, were the chief sufferers and these furnish, it is believed, all that have perished. In Pyrgos not a house is left standing, while Philatra is almost swept from the face of the earth, swallowed up in the convulsions of the earth. Shocks were experienced throughout Greece, in a greater or less degree. In the town of Seante every house! was damaged and the inhabitants fled in terror to the : open country. Several towns in Italy were also visited by the earthquake, but Hot tetany serious ex tent, Naples, Brindisi, oggi a, Cascrta and Faranto being of the number. ; ALexANDRiA, August 28. Violent shock 8 of earthquakes have beoa ex perienced here and in other parts of Egypt, causing terror among the natives,, but so far as known doing no serious damage. Charleston, S. O, August 28.--Another shock of earthquake was fell hero thi morning at 4 48 o'clock. It ex tended aa far north as Summerville, twenty-five miles from here. A uq u8ta , Ga , August 28 Two slight shocks of earthquate were felt here this morming at 4 o'clock. a i a ; . ForapaaglTa Oraat F.at j ON HORSEBACK ON A W1RB ROPS ACROSS NIAGARA f ALLS. .Bcffalo, Aug. 27. Now it in the great showman, Adam Forepaugh, Jr., who is to startle the world by his prow ess in dealing With the natural dangers of the great Niagara, as his manager announced here today for the first time. , He has decided to walk his horse Blon- din over a tight cable stretched on the brink of the great cataract September 13. I bad a long talk this afternoon with Forepaugh's representative, Thos. H. Davis, during which he said: 1 "Blondin is a Morgan colt by Adam, Jr., bought near West Chester,! Pa., three years ago. The animal was four years old last spring; it is fourteen and a half hands high, is compactly built and weighs 800 pounds. Adam began training the colt at Philadelphia! early last fail to walk the rope. At first the rope was placed but two feet from the ground, but. before the circus started out he could do a two and a half-inch rope thirty feet long and twenty feet from the ground. He goes backward as well as forward, and has never yet had a fall. He has no fear whatever ef fall ing, and I don't think there is any doubt but what he will go over the Niagara gorge all right on a still day. He wears a patent rubber shoe and is very careful and sure-footed. It will be a big expense, but we don't 'care about that, for it will be a big card for the Bhow, and a still bigger one for the Madison Square garden next winter if he does it. ' . "It is easier for a horse to valk a, rope than a man, after he knows how, for he has more legs to balanoe himself with., Animals are not credited with half the intelligence they possess. Blondin is of a mild and tractable dis position. I don't think be will be afraid at all, but if he should be, Leslie, who does the slack wire and tarns somer saults with boots and spurs on, will go with him. Cooke is at Niagara now, and aa soon as he gets the cable ar ranged we shall begin advertising for September 13. Blondin has been a great feature of the show and I we are going to make still more of him.f Saat to tha Haapltal. '' Nxw York, Aug. 28. At the belt line stables this morning . the old hands made a concerted attack upon the men who had been employed during the tie up, and five of the latter were beaten so badly that they had to he sent to the hospital. Total VlaJbl. Sajppljr of attoa. Nbw York, August 28. The total visible supply Of cotton for the world is 1,152.226 bales, of which 7441326 are American; against 1,176,974 and 796, 674 respectively last year; receipts at all interior towns 14,446; reoeipts rom tne plantations ; crop in sight . I Prime. Al.xandar an roata Bialsrarlav, Lbmbe&g. Austria, Aug 28.4-Prihce Alexander leaves here today for Bui garia. He will go via Giutegevo, Rou- mania, and expects te reach Bulgarian territory by tomorrow. His brothers, Francis and Ludwig, are with him and will be his traveling companions. Try aa Baeara Paaea. Paris, August 28. A cabinet ooun oil was held to-day at whioh it is as sorted pourparlers were issued to obtain the sense of the powers on tne aa visa- T . . . a Is LI it v of holding anew conference' for the n lrnose of restoring order! in Bui garia. Li ttmll'8 Living Ag. The numbers of The Living Age for August 21st and 28th oontain NativeTndia, Asiatic Quar terly; On the Study of 8cienoe, by Sir John Lnbbock. Contemporary: Letters and Letter-Writers, Nineteenth Century Christopher North, Macmillan; Parrots . n tMI 111 ti-- T I have met, uornnui; Xiiiiaoetn cry Blackwood; The Monks of Islam, Gen tlemen's: The Templars, Good Words A Tropical Calm and Snnse.,1 and The Chateanx of Touraine, Spectator: Ja- oobean Houses in the North,; Saturday Review: Beaoonefield, and The Men the Turkish Army, St. James': In Helt Poland. All the Year Round;? with in atalmenta of "Treasure TroTe" "A Garden of Memories,!' and Don An- 1 gelo's Stray Sheep," and poetry ANOTHER FOOL i 1 : f 1 - : .' JUMPS FROM THE HIGHEST POINT OF THE BROOK-; I? LYN BRIDGE. ! t iia i is unhurt and is ablb tq swim a, HUNDRED YARDS. Nbw York, August 28 Lawrence Donovan, a youDg pressman j jumped! from the Brooklyn bridge early this mofning, to win a bet of five : hundred dollars. He was picked tip uninjured. He; was taken in a covered wagon to the centre of the bridge, where the distance to the water is about twenty-eight feet greater than where Brodie jumped. . At the proper point he alighted, ran to the cable, to which he swung by his hands long enough to straighten out, let go,, went straight down to the Tffcter, came up and w ble to swim 100 yards. His friends awaited him : with a boat and took him ashore, where; he was arrested, mere were plenty oi bridge policemen at their posts, but Donovan was over on the Blue before they could lay their hands cn him, and was no use to follow him after that. The bet was made two weeks ago in the, course of a. discussion about the chances of escaping alive from the ven ture. Donovan had clothed himselt in a pair of well-padded drawers and can vas shoes, with two pounds of lead on the soles. Til. Botli.r. There is no human lovealike a mother's ove. . here is no other, such Human ten derness. And there is no suoh time for a mother's displaying her lovo and tend erness toward her child as in the child's earliest years of life. That tic;e neglect ed j and no future can nis&ke: good the oas to either mother or child That time well improved, and all tne years that follow it can profit by iti improve ment. JSven God Himself measures His fatherly love by a motherly j standard. 'As one wcom his mother cOmforteth, sol will comfort you," He -says: and what more than this could He say? And many a stroDg man who was first oomfort ed.by bis mother's loving and tender works and ways while he was; a helpless child, has never lost his grateful, trust ing dependence on that mother a minis- uv of affection and sympathy?; - . AY hen gruff old Dr. Johnson was bv years old bo wrote to his aged mother as if he were still her wayward but lov ing boy: "You have been the best mother, and I believe the best woman in the world. I thank you for all your indulgence to me, and beg forgiveness for all that I have done iU, and of all have omitted to do v. "11 " John Qaincy Adams did not part with his mother until he was nearly or quite as old as this; yet his cry even then was : P God, could she have been spared yet a little longer. Without her the world feels to me like a solitude.? When president Nott, of Union e llege. was more than ninety years old, and bad been for balf a century a college presi dent, as strength and sense failed him tin his dying hours, the memory of his mother's tenderness was fresh and po tent; and he could be hushed to nee ded sleep by a gentle patting on the shoulder and the singing to him of the old-time ttllabies, as if his mother was still sit- . V I I J . 1 1 j J . I ting Dy ma neasiae in laving ministry, as she had been well nigh a century be- ore. The true son never grows old io true mother. ' A Bratal Harder la Callambua roaatf. Chadbourn Times. The coroner was notified that a girl had been killed not far from filkinsvulie. They found a dead colored girl about twelve years old, whose body had been badly beaten and bruised, and whose bead showed that she had been severely hit with a hack that was lying near, from whioh death came; Her-name was Lalia Shaw. Her mother was working somewhere in the neighborhood aid left the girl at the bouso ' of Queeny Curry, colored. The latter has some children, among them one, Neil -by name, who is fourteen years old, who Was at Queeny's house,, she being away. Neil sent Lalia to a neighbor's house to borrow a needle and she stayed longer than he desired, tie beat! her wita:a switch. It ended in Neil striking her With a turpentine hack from which she fell dead. The jury decided that sue same to her death at the hands of Neil Curry, who was placed in jil -Heds said to be a desperate character. A Hanaa Pinriiabioa. : A special from York, I Pa. well-known York dressmaker , savs-a has no- dergone a number cf surgical opera tions in the last few dys for tho re moval of pins and needles from her hands, feet and other portions cf her body. About thirty of the little im piemen ts have been extracted, and it is doubtful -whether all have yet made their appearance. The young lady was made quite ill by her strange expe rience, but is now ahle to be about, and no serious consequences are feared. .It is said to have been the habit of the young lady to hold pins and needles in her mouth while engaged in her work, and it is supposed some of them slipped down her throat and made their way through her flesh to the parts; of her jdy at which they presented them seivs. Graansbaro Faaaala CoII.k. A special dispatch from Rev. T. M. JonessaysthatGreensborofemaleoollege hasooeaed with more trnDila than eVer before up to the icurth day. The pros- peot is bright for the largest attendance ; since the war. P lIoiLiT Soaps. Colgate's Toilet Soap? Pat- meal, nursery, uiveerine, ialm. Honey, Turkish Bath, &c, &c Close price by the Cozen. E, J. Hard in Th. Pr.aa on tba W.rk of tba Caavaa tloa. The State convention at Raleigh Wed nesday renominated the old ticket for the supreme court bench. It is con ceded by all that the affairs of tho court could not be placed in better hands, yet old age was urged as an objection to re nomination, and strong efforts were made to secure younger men. Had this idea prevailed it would have perhaps been better, both for the judges them selves and the State, yet no set of judges could have possibly been nominated who would have polled a larger voter in November, and who would have given more satisfaction in their court rulings, if health permits them to serve the eight years for which they will be re elected. Elisabeth City Falcon. In its wisdom a large 'convention of the democracy of North Carolina has nominated for re- election to the supreme court the eminent gentlemen, who so faithfully and ably filled that office the past several years. The will of the ma jority of the democracy is our will is the will of the people. Of chief justice Smith and justices Ashe and Merrunon we need not, speak. They have im pressed themselves upon the brightest pages of North Carolina history; they merit all the confidence and esteem a grateful people can confer upon distin guished and patriotic merit. The peo ple of North Carolina will endorse by a very large majority these gentlemen for re-election another term. Asheville Citizen. While the nominees are not our oho ice we bow in submission to the will of the party legally and in accordance with usage expressed. It is, we believe, the firet time in the history of our civilized world, that gentlemen of suoh advanced age were ever put forward as the ex ponents of the law in so exalted a posi tion. That these old gentlemen are all pure and incorruptible, and enjoy in an extraordinary manner the entire confi dence of the people, is evidenced by this action on the part of the convention. We will work unceasingly for their election, trusting that the good Lord will preserve their bodily and mental health until such time as they can re tire, in the language of Simeon of old, "Now let thy servants depart m peace; according to thy word." lhe court is composed of excellent lawyers and high toned Christian gen tlemen, and will doubtless have no op position. Warrenton Gazette. Tho democratic State ' convention, which met in Raleigh Wednesday, nom inated the old supreme court W. N. H. Smith for chief justice and A. S. Merrimon and Thos. S. Ashe for asso ciate justices. This is the result we ex pected and we are satisaed with it. The gentiem- n constitute a court whioh is an honor to the State, taking rank with their illustrious predecessors of bygone days. The democrats of the State can voto for these gentlemen with feelings of pride in the work of their convention, and not with feelings of self-abasement, as is too often the case. Monroe En quirer. The work done by the convention will be entirely satisfactory in this section of the state. There is one matter the next legislature should not fail to do, and that is increase the strength of the bench numerically. There , should be five members of the supreme court. Three cannot keep up with the work. Salis- rbnrv Watchman The democratic campaign book, pre pared under the auspices of the demo cratic congressional campaign oommittee. will Boon be ready for distribution. The committee ha3 not resorted to, the republican methods of levying assess ments upon officeholders for their cam paign expenses, nor has any officeholder in the United States been requested to contribute a cent. Suoh contributions have in no case been received. The book will oontain a spioy review of the past administration of the government under republican rule, and will discuss a number of subjects of contemporane ous importance. It will oontain an ex haustive history of former abuses of the pension omoe and of the prostitution to party ends of this bureau. It will oontain a discussion of the Squandering of the public domain by the republican party, and of the recent movements inaugurated by democrats to restore it to the original owners, the people. It will discuss past delinquenci of responsible offioers and agents of the government and indicate the oorrection of abuses ia that line. It will oontain a summary of the ao- tion of the last Congress touching mat ters of importance to the people, and make a fair exhibit of the results accom plished. It will give a history of the war on the President by the senate ana the surrender by that body of the false issue which it had raised for political endB. In short, the book will be a fair and truthful presentation of political matters. The committee is not in pos session of funds to enable it to distribute the book gratuitously. In order that the volume may be thoroughly distrib uted the committee has determined to Bend it ore paid bv mail to anv person who will make application therefor and transmit the sum of $1. To encourage the distribution eight copies will be sent for &5. All communications should be ad .-W a a a a: a dressed to Hon. John E. Kenna, chair man, 1408 H street, N. W., Washing ton, D. C. Country parson (to eity visitor) "Didn't I see vou at caureh today V City visitor-" Yes, and , if you will be- li . was the first time that 1 can remember when I didn't go to sleep be fore the sermon was half over." Coun try parson "Indeed ! but I am afraid you are trying to flatter me." City visitor "O dear no; it wasn't that; it was the flies." Country parson r"0! iMSton J-ranscripi. n . m . CURRENCY. Every evening a good-looking Mr. Cornea around!or to vii my r.; One night on the stairs, ' lie all unawares Put lis anna round her figure and Krs Thf Major (rocking Nelly on his knee for Aunt Mary's sake) "I suppose this iswhttyou like, Nelly!" "Yes, it's Tory, pice. But I rode on a real donley yesterday I mean one with four legs," you blow. "New York Sun. Keeper "Stand back there, gents! That Monkey is vicious and might claw you.'j De Twirliger "Ah! no fear, deah poy. The beggah won't claw me. " Keeper ' 'I don't believe he will. Them ) monkeys are very peaceful with their own kind." Philadelphia Call. "Who held up Moses' hands while Joshua fought the Philistines?'' asked the superintendent "Hur and Aaron", shouted the good boy. "She and Aaron," softly corrected the new sohooma'am, the strong point of whom was grammar. Burdctte. . ( ; . Bagley "What in thunder does'Pe terby always get into the last rowcf seats at the theatre far? I have noticed him there scores of times." Bailey "Peterby is a verv sensitive man, and is afraid he would interfere with peoplo who Bit behind him; ho has such a high forehead, you know." Tid-Bits. j -1 Arrlvala at tba Yaraara. J I B EzelL, Columbia; CharleB E . Straus, Baltimore; Ike Hirsohburg, DryfTown, Ga; W B Means, N 1; Maxfy L John, University , ot North f 4 T a mm - a w . Carolina; v A lay lor, Petersburg; xv Bdykin, Clinton; W B McKoy, H moLi urecn, j a luaaie, Wilmington; C E Straus, Philadelphia; S SMannic, c a ar w : y w m tra i a wt Hyde county; J P Petty, N Y; L D Ferkinsonand wife, .Berkley; Miss iiai rU, fJamesville, Va; G W Roberson, ohnR UutohiDgs, J B Boatwright, J W Smith, H A Perkinson, E Lewis, T L Robinson, G W Cutler, W H Carter. D Kaufman, W T Hughes, A Kling- winder, A Strause, S Seigel, C E Price, S.Whitestone, F F Withers, H B Wat- kins; and servant. T C Gates. HJLTerrel. Danville Grave: T E Jenkins. N Yi JF Thomson, Detioit; W Baruer, C B i ef Nelms, Baltimore; James Levy, Nor folk JJ) Bynum, Pittsboro; J E Valk, Baltimore; J S Grant, Garysburg; Lt ' 8 Waitt, Lt J T Ferrell, J J White- head, J!i u Bain, liovernor s uuara. a aaaw.-aa J a ! '. Il-J . T-!J- a. severe storm nrevauea at xweiaz- ville Thursday, and sheriff A. H GalL- way was slightly stunned by light it g- whi .e out in his back yard. AH OLD CIT1UUI BP BARB. air. 3. J. Norria, an eld resident i Ga., yi that he had been badly troubk Ksdney complaint lor a great many times could uareety.waiR and baa t remedies without ttenenu until be ing Ilectrio Bitters and anointing 1 with Bucklen'a Arnica salve, inlai afforded him rreat reliel and he atrongly ommenda Klectrio Bitters to all who suffer with Kidney Complaints, or need a Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggists. ! I : m ! Cutting wants $10,000 damages from Mexico. sForty years past a boon waa sent fThat carried healing where It went fTo Buffering humanity. ! V7e might relate It virtues great, Yet not be charged with vanity; For it is not by all conf ssd Ot remedi8 Pond's Extract a'bestr Beware, howerer, ye who buy, And never imitations try, insist on rond's .Extract alone. . Cbaral la Ion. take pleasure in announcing that alUr numerous tohcitatious I have consented to organize a chorus of mixed voices for the tudy ol Ordrio,Cadtata.Opera. and Selected Classical Music in connection a ith the Or chestta, which is now ia a flourishing condi tion. The Chorus will be organized Septem ber lt. Thosi who wish to Join will, please end their names (stating the part they wish to sing) to me, as soon as possible, f ahall be pleased to near from a'l who sing, either by note or by ear. " j Very respectfully, i S. 8. Jackson. Edward Fasnach. Jbweier M RALEIGH, N. Gold and Silver. Watches, American and Imported. Real and imitation Diamond Jew- 1 irpr. 18 karat Wedding and Engagement Rings, any size and weight. Sterling Silver Ware for Bridal Presents. 4 ' Optical Goods , A SPECIALTY. pectaclts and Eye-glasses in Gold, .Silver, Steel, Rubber and Shell Frames ! Lenses, white and tinted, in endless varieties. Seals for Lodges, Corporations, etc Also Badges and Medals tor Schools and Societies made to order. Mail orders promptly attended to. Goods sent on selection to any part of the State. iacg- Old Gold and Silver ha small and large quantities taken m cash. . dly. i i .. .. PUKITY! PURITY!! lis desirable in all things but demanded In articles of food. i Doat Impair 'your health by nsmg adultera tedUrd, even u it does aosta little lew. CASSARLVS- PUBS L A E;3D Is for sale by the following leading grocers and recommended bv them to be the best. Try it. W.H. Ellis. E. J. Hardin " I W. B. NewsomACc, Wyatt A Co., Grausmon It Rosenthal, Jno. B. Terrell. J. B. Fenall St Co.. W. B. Mann & Co Morris & Newman, w. C Upohurch. H. V. AJenton. v Also CASSARLVS MILD CUBED HAMS ind BREAKFAST STRIPS, wafc are Una oU-Thla list wiU be eorrecUd weekly. it Ra-b UisLv Lreatnh. -ai 0. i ' I : t I i? a v t -if 1 - E t - i f 1 . 7V