$EWS AND OBSEBVEB. prjBUBHBB DAILT (KIOTO M6BTAT) A lif TilK NVVS AND OBSKttViuttT. j. 1. McREE, Editor. Dally one year, mall postpaid, " six month, " : " " three " "Veekly, one year, " ' -at-r mnnthi 1 t7 00 8 50 1 75 3 00 1 00 , No name entered without payment, and no aper sent after the expiration of time paid (or UNDAyTEHKR l'im. ' AEMOCBAT1U TllUKT. :... for congress ; -1-t DiHt., Louis C Latham, of Pitt; lid " F. M. Simmons, of Craven. Srd " Charles W. MeClamniy; of Tender 4th John w. Graham, of Orange. 6th " Jas.. W. Reid,' of ItocVittrham. 6th " Alfred Rowltjid, of Robeson. 7th John Henderson, of Kowan. 8th " W. H. H. Cowlea, of Wilkes. Oth " Thos p. Johnston, of Hunoombe. . FOR THE eL'I'RKMt COCRT BNCU : : For Chief Justice.- Hon. W. N. B. Smith. For Associate Just'cea, Hon. Thos. S. Aahc and Hon. A. S. Merrimon. ron tux bupiriob! coukt binoh: 3rd Dial, II. Q. Connor, of Wilson. 4th " Walter Clark; of Wake. 6th " F. T. Boykin; of Sampson 8th " W. J. Montgomery, of Cabarrus. 9th " J. F. Graves, of Surry.' lth " A. C. Avery, of Burke. 12th " J. U. Merrimon, of tiuAcombe. Fot tub b Lie no Hcim : 1st Dirt., J. H. Blount, of Perquitnan-.. 8d " D. Worth ingtbn, of MaHn. 4th " bwift O llowaj. of Wayne. 6th " .1. Long, of DnrhHjn.' 6th " O. II. Alh-n, of Duplin 7th " Frank McNeil,' of Rockingham. 8th B. F. Long, of Iredell. : ih " B B. Glen, ut Forsyth. 10th ' W. H. Bowery of aid well. 11th" F. L O8bome,.of Mecklenburg. 14th Q. S. Ferguson, of Haywood. j Wb shall now probably begin to hoar about earthquake insurance. ; ! Thi San Francisoo Call'eajs there "appears to have been" an earthquake at Charleston and elsewhere, and it seems to us that we Qurselveahave re cently heard a rumor 'of some snob, oc earreooe. I : Thb State of Maine; baa ; election! to i iat morrow for a Governor; members of the legislature and ongresraieti. "it is "all torn up" between Blaine, prohibi tion and republicanism and- 'the demo crats look on the wrangle with compla cency. - j Ors Yankee cousins' seem to be able to sail all around the : Britishers in all sorts of weather, even-in the sort that the flatter say. thoy want , most.. Now we want 10 see them arrange that race around tie Bermuda and beat the foreigners clean out of their hoots. The indention of the American centre-board was a great thing. ; jOwa result of the earthquake will be the substitution as far -as posiil on the South Atlantic coast of frame;building for buildings of brick and stone. The ' proportion of wooden houses destroyed in. Charleston was insignificant as com pared to the proportion of, houses of brick thrown down, i As the wooden houses are the more'heathful in the climate of, the South the change will be one thing at least foe which Wo may be. thankful to the earthquake; ; . - . , 1 4- Thiri should be no doubt about the election of our whole ticket in Novem ber cipe iallj should the people ratify at the polls the nomination of our worthy fellow-citixen Mr. Tom Badger. When . Wake county turns its back; on Tom Badger, it will be time enough to be lieve it we don't believe it? possible now. Whatever come, Ton) Badger will be elected. If not; it may as well be! declared by legislative j enactment that Charley ifpchurchJ has a olean fee simple in the t ffiee he has so long- held. Leit it in that case be n tailed forever on him and bis posterity, so that it may be understood thai no man need hereafter apply I ! Ji I Thi legislative ticket nominated yes terday is in the line which we observe has 'been pursued very generally throughout the State of bringing out strong men for the assembly. Mr. Rutus Jones is a man of strong sense, thoroughly practical "and pos sessing as eood a knowledge of the re- qoirements of the people of North Car olina and of Wake county as I any man , in either. Messrs. Stamps and Mordecai need no farther introduction to ojar readers. The former is a lawyer of ability and char- . acter who has distinguished himself as the worthy successor of Col. Carter as president of the penitentiary board and has won for himself in that position a title to the highest consideration of. the peo ple of the 8tate. Mr: Sam F. Mordecai is justly esteemed as the best lawyer ii the State whoso hair has' not been whit ened by sge, and he ha ehown his ca pacity in every undertaking in which he has engaged. For some years he hat been chairman of the county committee , and he has earned hearty encomruma for the ; admirable mannor in which he has conducted that business. Messrs. Strickland an4 Blaiehard ,arc most- excellent representatives of tht best sentiment of the county, fully con- ' versant with the netds, of our peoph ad sterling democrats who will worth ily represent Wake in ihe cdming as sombly. - : IHK UtS Vf ajOMIBKKM. The county convention titd :its wor well. The nominations Tor ihp vricu: county offices, for the senate and forthc house are all excellent and indicate th viotory will surely perch! upon; the ban nor of the Wake democracy this year ii victory be within the range pf poasi bility, and wo know it s. No bottei men than Nowell, Badgef, Jones, Pae Dunn ani Blake could hve befn cboaeu to lead the demtoratio J column. No better men than JoiivS again andStriok laud, tSUmpe, Blanchard - and Mordecai could bae ben selected to chamion democracy or '0"reprei7t OttT p'Op'ein the halls of il e leiaiattlre. ' They are All good mei und j true (bj $g9 of ft Tory beet people of good old Wike, and. they are of. the soundest democracy. That they will redeem the! oounty wholly from republicinism and keep it from falling Into the hands of those who are the direct heirs oft that dying politi cal faith we confidently believe There is now undoubtedly such a possibility of success as we; have jnot had for years, and we believe that the men whom the convention in its wisdom has nominated are the men to turn that possibility into an assured reality. -To that end, how ever, the hearty eupprt of evory dem ocrat in Wake is fcoos8ary. Shall this be withheld ? Nobody; could make, us believe such a thing. Lot us then agree at ono4 to ivo:; a long pull, a strong poll and a pull altogether, and elect the; men whq. were soi wisely nominated yesterday. ' . ? EKCOIBAUE TUX MILITAKT. The business men of Raleigh should cnoourage the mtlitari companv recent ly formed in oui niidt ul they should do this positively and not negatively only. It is hardly necessary o argue the importance to the community of a well equipped, well 'disciplined, body of the sort. This is pretty generally ad mitted. It does seetji to be neceafary however to ask thatthe organization wh ifh has beun- formed, which- is coin- fioacd of first rate material and which is ikely therefore to bo a credit to. the oity on all occasions at wel as a permanent protection, shill rcaiTe the active en couragement of employers. The com pany in necessarily composed- in the main of employees and if these are made to feel that their absences from business for the purpose of attending drills and parades are viewed wjth disfavor they are not likely to ask; for such; leaves. Yet the drills and certain regular though infrequent parades are essential to the efficiency of. thoi company. Or busi ness men, realizing thej importahoe of a respectable military organization to all the interests of the city, and certainly not least to the bosmesa; interests, should in the first place encourage thf young men in their emloymejjat who can afford to do so to join the mpany and then they should in every way make known their willingness to accord all reasona ble liberty to those who may have joined, to the end that the efficiency of the com pany may be promoted M far as ossible. So. only can; Raleigh have a company of which it may be prou and on which it may rely for military aid, should such ail ever become neoebsary. Bo only can the I city; have a body the moral effect of whose simple ex istence will be a cons cant safe guard about all the interests of the com munity. Let the business men: take the active interest in the new orginization which the importance of the ljitter de mands; let this interest be "made un mistakable to the youn men who must form our citiz n soldiery, and Our word for it Raleigh will soonbave a Company as una in every respe as any town in the country- can poast. B. Kl(HOia ADDBIJUk Looking further at Mr. Nichols' ad dress, we find some other things that are wcrthy of comment. We showed the otcr day that Mr. Nichols has been cne of the most down right republicans in th practical nature of his politics we have ever hid in this community. In the light of 'this re- membranoes the following extract reads somewhat oddly; 1 "An intelligent observer is bound "to be convinced that- party divisions "are of name only when he reviews the actions of 'the representatives of the people' during the past twelve; months or more 'f &o.j j "T$e tariff, the internal revenue, nter-Stjfct6 com merce, silver currency, &c, 4c, and every other vital matter of legislation of any importance to the people demon strates a lack of unity of purpose on the part of both parties.'' I Now, we are 'not going to tike issue with Mr. Niohola.on that; we Only pro pose to fee what it iaean. JDoes he not mean that the right of individual jud gment is largely Exercised by the "representatives of the people," who seek to refket the wishes of their con stituents in casting voles in Congress t Does Mr. Nichols complain of that? it so, how inconsistent k proves:; himself to be r Ha cites- as anjevil that demo cratic and 'republican niembers are not controlled by the genei 1 policy of their respective parties but vote independ ently, and then announces himself as an independent and proposes to ; do the same thing. That MrNichola-r is a re publican no one doubu and yet he re viles other republican! for having the manhood to vote according to their oonviotions, while making a little ; platfoim for 3 himself If it be an evil that republicans do uot fctand fquarely together in Congress, Mr. Nichols should propose to let them a good example.: If if ia, right-for him to lay down a platform for himself, it is right for other republicans tot do the same thing. There is'nn inoosistency in his reviliog others about not being governed by general party policy while claiming an exemption for himself. But perhaps he has called-in some Superior power to absolve him from doing what he thinks other people ought to do. I "3. The ntxt extract cof tains a powerful arraignment of his ol party frienda, who have administered the affairs ol this government now ver since 1865 until Mr: Cleveland was elected. Ht says : "Ti e intelligent laborer cannot believe but that there is something rad ically wrong when hug monopolies are permitted to agf ran diz I privileges that result in the reduction of wagca and the oppression of the working ra ani where colossal fortunes amounting to tens ol millions and hundred! of millions are accumulated by individuals in a brief period of t me, while the toilers : are be coming pooter and poorer evcrjr day." Accepting this arraignment as well founded, the question Irises who is re sponsible for this statf of affairs? It cannot be the democrats, for they have not heretofore had control of the gov ernment; it must necessarily e those who have been thi parly associates and : party f needs o Mr. fNich ds Thev Mr. fNichds; j inaugurate tha poLovj they put the . vtola a n ptWDj tad tho ttMfa am ft -Hr ? been going on for a quarter of a oen tury. Mr. Nichols has never before complained, but has stood by the G. O. P. with all his might, holding. high of fioe as its favored representative, and applauding all! its acts of commission and omission. But we rejoice to see that ho has " 'pented hisself" and how ho' da up the ruthless policy of his old a -aooiates for the condemnation of man kind. But in this connection Mr. Nichols makes a mistake and speaks too plainly. Mentioning the "Wheel" party in Arkansas, he says it is com posed of farmers who "have revolted at the present party domination," aud "So, too, r.ll other organizations of la bor throughout the land have had their origin and development in the distrust and want of confidence in parties and politicians, past and present, that have had control of the destinies of the nation " It is understood that Mr. Niohols early joined the Knights of Labor here and procured himself to be elected its president. lie might then bo supposed to be speaking by the book, and that ho is divulging a secret of his organization in affirming that its purpose is of a political nature. Bat we shall suppose no such thing. We shall Buppose that the organization accurately asserts the : whole matter when it declares that its purposes are non political, and that its objects are to advance the interests of the toilers of our land financially, ' sooially and morally. With these laudable objects in view, the general purposes of the order commend themselves to the hearty sympathy of every statesman, every patriot, every lover of humanity. Bu- Mr. Nichols' would have it other wise. ' lie would havo the Knights of Labor turned into a political marVne to make him its local head; a pr-jpoli- tician. and send him to ion? 03 : 1 lie would prostitute his order to the purpose of his own , advancement. He would make this purely industrial organization minister to the gratification of his indi vidual ambition. We submit that he speaks too plainly, and that he gives himself away. The Knights of Labor are not going to dance to any tune Mr. .Nichols may choose to pip. They are not going to subordinate their organization and be subservient to the gratification of his personal ambition. They do not belong to Mr. Nicho.'s and never will. Mr. Nichols touches on a variety of subjects in ' his address, among them "Business Depression," - about the remedies for which he talks as learnedly as editors do about the cause of the re- recent earthquake. The gist of his patent remedy is "that production shall be regulated by the demand, and not by the desire of men to do the best they can. By this we suppose he means that where there is a falling; off in j demand there shall, under force of some! govern ment regulation, be a falling off in pro duction, and where there is no demand, there shall be no production. So that, if a factory has no orders in band, it is to stop work. Eh, Mr. i Nichols? That miifht be well enough for the capital ists, but it would be death to the opera tives. We submit that Mr. Nichols is not an entire success as a political econ oniist from the standpoint of labor de pendent on wages for its daily suppsrt. Suppose, for instance, that the South and India should make a good crop of ootton this season, enough for two years, which in a good season all around would be the case, should all the plantations stop operations for a year? if so what would the millions engaged in ootton do for a livelihood Our new philosopher would, we fear, get things awfully mixed; freedom from government regu lation is better than that. About the internal revenue Mr. Niohols is eloquent. ; "It is one of the lingering relics of the war." Yes, and Mr. Nichols' old friends, the republi oins, established it and maintain it The only representatives favoring its repeal are bouthern democrats and a few Northern democrats. The republi cans will never consent to its repeal On the subiect of the tariff our inde pendent candidate is very pronounced. His notion is ttut "we oould build a Chinese wall around this country a be the happiest people on the earth And the way to accomplish this he points out as folio we: When any goods arc imported into this country raise the tariff and stop the importation. That would be one effect of tie Chinese wall; but then the Chinese wall would-prevent our exporting any b tuff as well as our im porting any. If the other fellow couldn't set over it. neither could we. And then what would we d with our im mense surplus wheat crops, and im mense ootton crops and tobacco; our provisions and surplus manufactures? Foreign countries cannot buy unless they can sell. We could not ,soll our surplus. : Have the ; toiling millions who make wheat and ootton and tobacco and provisions for sale abroad no right to work and livr r Is their work to be taken from themV We fear very much that Mr. Niohols is a dead future as a humanitarian and philosophical states man. He may have made a very good republican postmaster, but he would play the wild as a political economist. On the question of civil servioe reform he indicates that he favors the principle, but bo is '.'constrained to disfavor the rules for its operation. They are al most exclusively theoretioal and smack strongly of class supromaoy. And here again Mr. Niohols hits his old associates a hard lick. The principle is of democratic ; origin, the bill having been introduced and pressed by Senator Pendletin, a democrat, seme years ago, with the hope of getting some demo crats into effioe, notwithstanding the uct that the administration was republi can; while the rulis were made by President Arthur and commissioners two republicans and one democrat. The rules are the work of tho republicans. They were made by the very President who appointed Mr. Nioh Is to four ears term in tre pesteffice ! Mr. Nichols closis h s uddress wi h a refert nco 'o the fact that he is simply a workingman. Weil, B' mo years ago, be was a printer, tnd a very good printer, too; but he qu t that long ago. He will be iecollected as art r ffioo-holder the principal of the asy lums for tho deaf and dumb and th blind, and then later ra the postmaster. and now having bee me used to being k politician he wants to follow the trade I pfyJitifi g0 to Wahjjjtojj. ; EartbqnafcM tlilr CaM. imcTs or BiKTiiQoaats on mix akd ANIVALS. ; , E-ttracts flora Humboldt's Coxmos. "Kirthuuakcs manifest; themselves by qtkick and successive vertical, horizontal or rotary vibrations The two first- named motions have often appeared to occur to me simultaneously. The vertical action from below upvard was strikingly manifested in the over throw of the town of Riobamba in 1797, when the bodies of many;of the inhabi tants were found to have boen hurled to Cullca, a hill several hundred feet in height, and on the opposite side ot the river Licftu. ; ; "The propagation is most generally effected by undulations1 in a linear direction, with a velocity bf from twenty to twenty -eight miles in a minute, but partly in circles of commotion, in which the vibrations are propagatod with de creasing intensity from a centre toward the circumference; this latter circular motion is the most uncommon, but the most dangerous walls were observed to be twisted, but hot thrown down; rows of trees turned from their previous par allel direction, and field covered with different kinds of plants, found to be displaced, in the great 'earthquake of Riobamba, in the province of Quito, in which 40,000 people perished, and else where. The phenomenon of the dis placement of fields and picoes of land, by whioh one is made to ocoupy the place of another, is connected with 1 trahslatory motion or penetration of rep arate terrestrial strata. i "When I made the plan of the ruined town of Riobamba, one particular spot was pointed out to me where all the furniture of one house had .been f under, the ruins of another. The loose earth had evidently moved like a fluid, in currents, which must be assumed to have been directed first downward, then horizontally and lastly upward. It was found necessary to appeal to the audi- encia or council of justice to decide upon the contentions that arose regard ing the proprietorship of objects that h; d been moved to a distance of many hundred toi&es (A toise is 6J English feet.) The opinion that a calm and op pre&eive heat and a misty horizon are always the forerunners Of earthquakes is erroneous. They do not cause, but are the results . often of earthquakes. But it. cannot be denied from the observations of cen turies, but that they most frequently occur during the vernal and autumnal equinoxes. 1 have felt them in fair as well as in cloudy weather. The inten sity of the hollow noise which generally acoom panics an earthquake does not in crease in the same degree ai the foree of the oscillations. The most terrible phenomenon above mentioned at Rio was unaccompanied by any noises what ever. These noises are heard twenty or thirty minutes after the shock, and sometimes a muoh longer period elapses before they are heard ; the nature of the noise varies also very much, being eith er rolling or rustling, or clanking like chains when maved, or like near thun der. As solid bodies are excellent con ductors of sounds (burned elay for in stance conducting sound ten or twelve ttmos quicker than the air), the subter ranean noino can be heard at a great disL.c3 from the plaoe of its origin. In Caraccas a tremendously loud noise was heard, unaccompanied by an earth quake.onthe 30 h of April, 1812, whil-t at a distance of 6 J2 miles to the north east the volcano of St. Vinoont in the small Antilles poured forth a copious stream of lava. ; "Elsewhere the same facts occur The sounds were certainly not propa gated through the air, but through the earth, and at a great depth. These phe nomena of sound, even1 when unat tended by any perceptible shocks, pro duoe. a peculiarly deep impression, even on persons, who have lived in countries where the earth has frequently been exposed to. such shocks. : "A striking and unparalleled instance of this kind is the phenomenon known in the Mexican elevated plateau, by tha name of the 'roaring and subterranean thunder' of Guanaxuato It seemed to the inhabitants as if heavy clouds lay beneath their feet, from whioh issued alternate slow, rolling sounds, and short, quick olaps of thunder. Neither on the surface of the earth nor in the mines located there, 1,600 feet in depth, was the slightest shock, to be perceived. Thus clefts are opened or closed in the interior of 'the earth, by whioh wavis of sound penetrate to us or are impeded in their propagation. In the great earthquake at Lisbon in 1755, the earth was simultaneously shaken over a spaoe of its surface four times larger than all Europe ; also at the Barbados islands, in the West Indies, the tides, usually two feet in height, roBe to an altitude of twenty feet, and the shock was felt in the takes of Switzerland and in lake Ontario, N. A. There axe many instances where the earth has been shaken for many successive days in the Andes, - oc curring almost hourly, far from any volcano." He here mentions severaland says, "also between vcr, Madrid and Little Prairie, north of Cincinnati, in the United States of Am. ioa, in De cember, 1811, as well as through the whole winter of 1812." There Reel- foot lake was formed by an immense de pression, in which were seen the trees of the forest . standing in an right position years afterwards, and onvulsion was said for a moment oause the Mississippi river to run up stream. "If we could obtain information re garding the daily oondition of all the earth's surfaoe we should probably dis cover that the earth is almost constantly undergoing shocks somewhere, and is continually influenced by the reaction of the interior on the exterior. The advance from south to north was most striking in the almost unintfcreepted un dulations in the Oi ia and Mississippi and Arkansas valleys in 1811 to 1813, Shocks proceeding from the south west appeared to advance gradually north ward, the strata of obstruction being slowly removed, at the sanio time Cara cas felt first those shocks agitated by tho same centre of oommotion, whilst the volcano on the sland of St. V moout was in eruption. ' In the tropical regions of Huuth Amtiioa, whsre sometimes a drop of does not Cal l in ton months tgeihtr th? ntiTei eo&fuUr tbe rea4 Acts geihsr, 1 of aartkquaies, which do not endanger thelow reed huts they inhabit, as auspi cious harbinger of fruitfnlne&s , and abtndant rain. The danger from earth- quakea increases when the openings of the volcano are closed, but tho;: des truction of Lisbon and Caracas, in 1812, (March 16,) Lima, Cashuiir and many other cities, shows on the whole that the force of the shock is not always the greatest in the neighborhood of aotivo volcanoes. ' 'A eolumnlof smoke which had been observed to rise for months together from the volcano of Pasto, in South America, suddenly disappeared, when the 4th of February, 1797, the province of Ruiijto, 102 miles to the Bouth, suffer ed from the great ear hquake of ltio bambo. An old geologist writes : " 'Since the craters of Ktna have bees opened the country on the sea shore has not been so mush shaken, as at the time previous to the separation of Bioily from Italy, when all communica tions with the external surface were closed.' ,. "Before we leave the important phe nomena whioh we have considered, I would advert to the deep and peculiar imprMsion left on the mind by the first earthquake whioh we experience, even where it is not attended by any sub terranean noise. This impression i n-t. in my opinion, the result of a recollec tion of those fearful pictures of devia tion presented to our imaginations by the historical narratives of the past, but is rather due to the sudden realization of the delusive' nature of , the inherent faiih by which we had clung to the-be lief of the immobility of the solid parts of the earth. "We are accustomed from early child hood to draw a contrast between the mobility of water and the immobility of the soil on which we tread, and this feeling is confirmed by the evidence of our senses. When therefor we sud denly feel the earth move beneath our feet, a mysterious and natural force with which we are previously unacquainted is revealed to us as an active disturbance of stability. A momeut destroys the illusion ot a whole life ; our deceptive faith in the repose of nature vanishes, and we feel transported as it were into a realm of ULknown destructive forces. Every sound the faintest motion in the air arrests our attention, and we no longer trust the ground on whioh we stand. Animals, especially dogs and swine, participate in the same anxfcus disquietude, and oven the crocodiles of the Orinoco, which are at other times as dumb as our little lizards, leave the trembling bed of the river and run with loud cries to the adjacent forests. "To man the earthquake conveys an idea of some universal and unlimited danger. We may flee from the crater of a voloano in active eruption, or from the dwelling whose de struction is threatened by the approach of the lava stream, but in an earthquake, direct our flight whithersoever we will, we still feel as if wo trod upon the very foous of deetraetien. This condition of tha mind is not of long duration, al though it takes its origin in the; deepest recesses of our nature, and when a se ries of faint shocks succeed one another the inhabitants of the country soon lose every trace of fear. ' 'On the coasts of Peru, where'rain and 11 a . h nau are unxnown, no less than the roll ing thunder and the flashing lightning, these luminous explosions ar& replaoed by the subterranean noises which accom pany earthquakes. "Long habit and the very prevalent opinion that dangerous shocks are only to be apprehended two or three times in the course of a century, cause faint oscillations of the soil to be regarded in Lima with scarcely more attention than a hailstorm in the temperate ones " We have here, Mr. editor, given the views of the greatest geognoscist the world has ever known, and who was an eye-witness to many of these phenome na. The view of the News and Courier that its cause was located in Greece may be true. Our view is that the cause is located in Yucatan, Mexioo or the An des of South America, as w judged the course of its motion to be from west of south, or perhaps, as far as from southwest, and these countries are located in that direction. A few days ought to suffice to give us the desired information. . We have shortened the article above quoted, only giving some of the main facts, leaving out many matters of much interest and importance. It is necessary here to state that only between the Rocky and the Alleghany mountains was the earthquake of ,1811 '12 felt, and not on the Atlantic coast, according to the same great authority. M F. B. AN END TO BONB PCRAPINO. Edward Shepherd, of Harriaburg, 111., says. Having received so much benefit from Elec tric Bitters, 1 feel it my duty to let suffering humanity know it. Have had; a running sore on my leg for eight years; my doctors lold me I would nave to have the bone scraped or leg amputated. ' 1 used, instead, three bottles ol Electric Bitters and seven boxes Bucklen's A mica Salve, aod my leg is now sound and well." .Electric Bitters are sold at fifty cents a bot tie and Buklen's Arnica Salve at 26c per box by all druggists. THE NORTH CAROLINA HOME INSURANCE COMPANY OF RALEIGH, N. C. (VrfanlKd In IMS. Has beea insuring property in North Caro lina for eighteen years. With t geoU In neaily everv town in the State accessible to rail roads and eat ot the mountalcr, THE HOME Sollcitnthe patronage of property owners in the State, .offering Uem safe indemnity for losses at rates aa low cs ttoa of any com pany working in Nrth Carolina, Classes, of Property Insured : Dwellings in town and country, mercantile risk, church, school, court-bouses, society loug, private barns and stables, farm pro duce aud live stock, cotton gins. Insure in the orth C arolina Home Insur ant C niij y. W. 8. Pjii&b, Chaf. RocT, 1'raa.debt. S c'y and '1 reaa. W. . IfrCHCTKW, T. ( C.WPBF, Vkwrnld-nt. AJuatr. Office in Brigs.' Bi ili'la?. No. 210 raTette- Tclcpcone No. t& i EDUATIONAL. FOUNDED 1803. SALEM FEMALE ACADEMY, Salbm, N. U. Eighty-third Annual Sewtion begins Sept. id, 1886. For catalogue app'y to Rev. K. Ropthaljcb, D. D , Rev. .lamr H. Ci BWELX. July 13-d'2m Principal. FOUNDED IN 1842. St. lYIary'o School. balxigb, m. o. - Thb Rev. BENNETT j SMEDES, A. M. BBOTOB AMD raiNCfP tL. A corps of fourteen efficirnt instructors. Thorough teaching guaranteed. French taught Dy a native; uerman oy an a iif rican educa ted in Germany. Latin a requudto for a fall Diploma. Great attention is pud to Mathe matics and Composition. Elocution a specialty. uneoi me oesi equippea scnoois 01 Music in the Sonth. Separate building; five teachers one from the Stuttgart, one trvva the Leipsk Conservatory; a tine Vocalist; -sixteen pianos for dally practice two new.C'oncert Grands for concert use, a Cabinet Organ; a tne Pipe Organ, with two j manuals and twenty stops, and the only l'edal Piano south of Nw Ybrk. The Art Department under the charge of able and enthusiastic! artints. The Course comprises Drawing- In Peaeil, Crayon and Charcoal; Painting in Oil, Water Colors and Pastel, and Decorating China in Mineral. The Physical Development of the pupils thor oughly carea tor. The 1 Ninety-first term begins Septem ber yth, 1886. For circulars containing full particulars apply to tne uector. 'Mens Bans in Corpora Nano." B1NCH1M SCHOOL Established in 1793. The 3d yearly Term begins September 8th, 1886. For Catalogue giving ful particulars, address I Vaj. R. BINGHAM, Sunt, Bingham School P, O. Orange Co., N. C SELiCT BOARDlS&lSD DAIhQ(3L (rotraniD 1869.) For Young Ladies and Little ! Girls HlLLSBOBO, N. C. The Scholastic year of the Misses Nash and Miss Kotlock's school will commence Sept 8d, 1886, and end June 9, 1887. Circulars on ap plication. I , JJALEIGH MALC ACADEMY, Hugh Morso, , . , C. B. Dkxsom, Principals. The next a nnual Session opens August 30, 1886. Boys and young men prepared for Col lege or for business pursuits. Full Classical, Scientific and Commercial Courses. The Teachers have had long and successful ex perience. Board in the cjty at reasonable rates. For catalogue and references, with full into mation, address either of the principals. Johns Hopkins University BALTIMORE. rMvsR&mr aid collkoiatx oorasBa. The programmes for the next academic year will be sent on amplication. NOTPE DAME OF MARYLAND, Collegiate Institute for Young Ladies and Preparatory School tor Little Girls. EMBLA P. O. Three miles from Baltimore, Md. Con ducted by the Slaters of; Notre Dane. Send foi Catalogue. I Jvly 16 eod Mon. Wed. & Pat. 2m. PEACE INSTITUTE, RALEIGH, N.C. For T0uB Ladies, anil Small Girls, Fall session commences first Wednesday in September and closes corresponding time in June following. An experienced and highly accomplished corps of teachers In all branches usually taught in first-class Seminaries lor young ladies and girls. Advantage for in struction In Music. Art and Modern Languages unsurpassed.- Building heated, by steam and lighted by gas and electricity. Expenses less than any Female Seminary offering same' ad vantages. Special arrangement for ' small girls- Deduction for two or more from same family or neighborhood. Correspondence solicited. For Catalogue address Rev. R. BURWELL A SON, j Raleigh, N.q UVIL, MECHANICAL AN6 MINING V ENGINEERING at the Rensselaer Polv t chnlc Institute, Troy, N- T. The oldest en gineerlag school in America. Next term be i ins September 15th. Tb Register for 1886 contains a 11st 01 the graduates for the past 61 years, with thir positions ; sis evurseof study, requirements, expenses, etc Candidates from a dtotmee, or those living in distant States, by special examinations at their homes, or at such schools as they may be attending, may deter mine the question of admission without visiting Troy. For register and full information, ad dress Davtd M. Gkxkkb, Director. deod,f.. w.&wlm. We bare moved fron Fayetteville street to the DODD BUILDING Coa. Wilmington and Makttji Btrkbts, Where we w.ll be pleased to have our friends call to see us and and leave their or ders tor Grain, Forage, ICE, COAL WOOD, Shingles, Loths Lumber. &c JONES & POWELL, TlaJeiarh. N O August 24, 1886. i RICHARD &IERSCH RALEIGH AGENT FOR C. W. GABRETT k CO.'B NATIVE WINES. Mr Garrett's Scuppenong, Champagne, Mlsh, Port, Claret and othar wines are well known for superior excelb nce, and are offered for sale in wcod or glasii, i;ot to t e drank on the premises) at prices charged bythe manu facturers. 8PE IAL DISCOUNT TO THE TRAM, For pr pply or writ- to HO IAKDG KfSfCH, Ntxt door to the Yarboro House, ILleigh,! Jf. aug UHiia, Removal Horns & Carter Will make this a NOTABLE week for' Low Prices In every department. Bargain Hunters Will find it to th'lr advantage to visit our establishment during this week. Special Bargains Will be offered In Dress Goods Hosiery, Table Linen., Toweln, Nark inn. flhftfttintrii. An.. p 7 cialty, Jorris Sf Partkh Phil H Andrews & Co CHANGE OP Headquarers is. iMR OF 'i Agricultural Building Halifax and Salisbury St. FIRST SQUARE NORTH 0 CAPITOL Having moved our wood and coal yard from the N. C Depot (tha extreme western portion of .the city) to within ONE SQUARE OF THE CAPITOL We are now prepared to furnish fuel at short notice. HAED AND SOFT LONG AND C UT Prices guaranteed. Telephone No. 108. Jend in your orders. Call and see us; w 1 chow ti brtw w Art bnstw JAMES McKIMMON & CO. W have bought the business of Win. Simpson, Agent, No 133 Fayettevilie street, and will keep a full line of Pure 3 Drugs, Chemicals, Toilet Articles and everything to be be bad in a complete Drug Store. We so'ici the patronage of our frienda and the public generally. - i Mr. William Simpson, so long aad favorablv known in the State as an accomplished Phar macist, will have charge of the Preacriptioa Department. . JAMES McKIMMON & CO. Raliioh, Sept 1st, 1886. As will be seen frvm the above announce ment, I have disposed of my entire interest in the stock ot Drugs, Chemicals, &c, in the drug store 133 Fayetteville street, to Messrs. James McKlmmon & Co. I shall remain with the new firm in charge of the prescription de partment, and ask for them a continuance ot th! D&tron&ra so liherallv bestowed 11 n. n ma Fin the past. Verp respectfully, - WM. SIMPSON. Don't Put it Off. I ND 10 1 R OLDIES IN AT ONCE JOB NORTH CAROLINA Limo FliOsVphate Tha Cheaj eat and BEST .MANURE ever used for Peas, Turnips, And allfthe root and forage oops. Xvery farmer needs it, and iu low price puts it in the reach ot all. Write for circulars and for mulas. Refer to anybody who hasusrd it. N. CL PHOttl'HATE CO, RaWeh. V. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Having qualified as administrator d. b. n. of the estatof Dolly Uuater, Utca-U la'e of Wake county, N. C, this is in uo lfy al persons having claims againkt said eUte tu present them tor payment to the undersigW.l t Mayj N. C., or tu my attornr s, Me . Pace & Holding, Raleigh, N. C, ort or Ufi r the Pth day ef August, 1M7, or tbU mW will be Dlead in ir nt tK.i r ..i... sons indebted to said est ill plw ulaia lmmauuuc payment. A. B. HUNTER. Adm'r d. b . Ratetgh, N. C, Angus 7. 1. dJtwt D Ml ISTRATOR'S NOTlcfi. a. Havlrar QU llfled aa aitmlniar.l.- nt Ik. JMfm' 1 1 nun.. k . . . . l " 1 u. vu county, N. C, I hereoy notify all wmuw hav uig ruiu amiar MHi tHw Q xnMM4 lh)u fox payment to the undrtdd y. N. iv, or to BiV atturnava. ftl mi IS. ti.. . at Ral a, M. 0., 00 or before lh nh um Zi August,; 17, or thU 4 v tU biOti w bar at their recover. All tl.it .... to said ttaW will ptvaa aU Hiauiw it lUk'ryM.C-Auju.! UaV It