rff Y ,""r - ; "n rrr ' 1 ""r ' - " . . : . . - i , . , . - 1 i . - : , . ; ! 1l . r - .1 : .!.-'-!.'.: ... ! . I ESTABLISHED IN 1825. GREENSBORO,1 y. C, THURSDAY, JAXU ni' 31. 1884. 6jf3rfnisijorn Patriot LWEEKliY EDITION t hree month 50 mioi a .,ir.n . V-' T l'Per toppl at th expiration of subscrip tion in all ues. j r T, - -..A.??"181 Rates: One inch on insertion t.w; loreach rulequent insertion 50 cent, Ad e. n" contract for special rate in order to uoueui oi suca rate. Aaurees ' t 1 u 1 i JOHN B. HUSSEY. r i i ... i . ' r j:i - a ti :.. GREENSBORO. x7cV JANUARY 31. 18S4! S. S. Cox is to receive $75,- 000 from a Norwich publishing house for a slice of his ioitical rein infsctMiees. This is the atlvantasre of bciiiif a literary statesman. 1 i'M !-' I ! i , The New ork aSui says The Hptu William Eaffin Cox of Korth Carolina is adding to the re I pntatijn winch he earned in the r last Congress as- the ad rot-ate'-of .econciai. and the enemy of jobs.'.; The name-of Julian S. Cjiit, lofi Durham, is mentioned as the f P'shhnt; of tire North Carolina Exiiositibn Com pony, the stm-.k'fur ytii ich i-s iiov beiifg gotten up. M r. C:rr woitjd make a most energetic ana succsiui oincer. V . 1 Chicago is really making at) efltoit to stay, the tide of divorce! set kersr Uy a recent decision "of J u'dge Shepard it is held that where the husband's residence is, there . ii . ...:r . I- j H'gaiij ujc lie s is a iso I . i ,'Strsraiucu, in tl Thisjif will comidetely kmick The operations of the take projhet, Mahdi, in the Egyptian tluiuiiiiliiwv tf SrtMllum. in. rrivin , " -' - . j ' . . England and its pro ege the Khe dive their hands full. At last ac counts the Kartonni on the south ern frontier of Egypt, at the con fluence of the Blue and While Nile was in imminent danger from the hordes of the Soudain. The prophet made application to King John, of Abyssinia, to join forces and over run the fruitful plain of the Delta. Ilia majesty's "reply is a curiosity iu the way of diplomatic coi respou denco. L The following -is reported as his answer to the prophet's iu- vi tat ion : . "May the writing of John, the chosen of the - Lord, the King of Zion, the King of the Ethiopian Ki n rs, reach tiieJiaudsof him who is a prophet among the Turks. Dy the grace ot the God of Saints and the intercession of our Lady of Zion, I and my army are keeping well. Praised be the grace of the Highest I How, art thou f Thou iiast written to me; JI am a arreat prophet. will not seek strife with theeJ Peace be between us. I do not know whether it.be the will of God that we should fight against each other: but what does that matter! .Are we not enenies in our hearts T I am a Christian and thou v art a-Turk. Where I am there thou canst not be; where thori iart I cannot live in. peace Written in the 'camp of Michail Devri, the 10th Seuige of the year NEW SERIES, NO, 2 Impend In Outrage laCn;!ini'i , Tli t Virginia Oil Fields. T m. L' .1... -t -1 I I I rT-t TT A. corresponuent t iue l j. . ir. lihia Press states that a syndicate on saAs thex or wealthy I'ennsyivanians, a ma go- t.y ior mating that theuriusn liome tustic to the Standard uu compa- omce and the police hays been 113', has purchased 300,000 acres of warred that serious steps, are be land in the West Virginia oil belt, Ing aken to perpetrate outrages in . . . . - a and propose in the spring to begin sinking wells in scries of twenties, each experiment representing an Inrestment of 8100,000. If these experiments in the West Virginia fields should be successful, a radi cal chance would necessarily! fol low in thecoutri 1 of the oil market. This new field would hare thri ad vantage, especially in the Western trade, of cheap water transporta tion and a further saving in the cost of production, as compared With the thickly-drilled Pemisvlva -is.. .) nil l ' , - " I ma regions, xiie synuicaie nave already secured so much land, and if they strike, payiug wells thev Aynij practically control this new source of supple-, and in a short time build 'upfc an oil coriioratioii that might eclipse the Standard. A railroad running from 'Wheeling southward along, the' Ohio river is now tapping the region ot the pur chase inad by the Pennsylvania syndicate, which has not less than hall a dozen navigable streams emptying into the Ohio. Water as well as rail transportation is thus offered for the protlucts! of timber and soil. ! J nsr.aud in connection ; with the New York Irish Worlds 0'Don- ell renareauce fund.w It is stated that of 1,800 iMMinds, which hare been subscribed t" that fund, be tween COO and . 800 tiouuds were forwanled to London last week. The English detectives bare been working hard to trace the holders of the inoiier. lint . have hitherto faileil. .. . Accidental Kbootln. ' ' ; V Durham Plant. ; Some few weeks since, Mr. Jas. Fuller, a merchant at Berea, Gran ville county,' and a Mr. Albright were out rabbit hunting. A rifle was - carried by Mr. Fuller. 'iind during the day-it was accidenfallr dischargetl, the ball lodgiug in the uacK part of Albright's head. At first the wound was not thought to oe dangerous, the , ball was extracted and ( Albright' continued to improve, j A few days since he took relapse and died Monday even ing. . His remains were brought to this place Tuesday, and sent from here to Graham where the family of the unfortunate man lives. The Cave Cities f Arizona. Mr. James Btevensou. of the " j --it ukee Sloney ' LWashinrtnn Pnrf K . j Tim s r, 1 . "I' ' . i plains Slifw"f. KiSLffi1? logical Surrey, has reported to - 7 -a ivtw aiutru j ester- i niaj I 1 Jan. 23, day : . . ' -i I . i Washington, d. ni i l&Sl-Ur. D. W. fiushylead-SiT: xoxx are reported in thn Tv !vt Herald pt;bo ICth inst.. as saying that ill A tmontiAn' nf L or Powell, as one oi the results of his field operations last season!, the discovery of several more ruin ed care and cliff cities, differing in some respects from any he had fore examined. The most remark able was a village of sixty-five unf- Secretarv Teller uni tv " ,uie was a viage ot sixty-live un foot hills of the San Francisco Concress to th rht::i uiius m ine can juao region i3 4infauiou8' and that no nn in the Nation had erer heard the stn. ry that JSoudinot charged to Col. ,! i ,1 : Phillips.' charge was stolen from the appropriation of $300,000 made bv af- a m oi Arizona. The surface stratum of the hill had by exposure become hardened, and formed the common roof of the entire community. The i(Afiankn:n. LL ' t rn""uSs icre; cica Yawn alter B aoouiUIUU iVJJtflat a UU HIH mZM liiTPI. I a. a. . . ly reported, I have to saiihat no YrtL1 OIl Irnnir. I.." I lu U VUO WUOie thii QZwE had no Jnter commumcatiori i6u. vi juuis wuicu beneath the RurfacA. nn.l every accessible by means of square holes P Aram. I 1 . 1 a ' - m mon talk throughout the niipmtA aV l av A. 1 Arwa pva ' ? " V whs useu I room of the d well in e - Foot rests uiomjuicu all Ueiiei I tllft nnritnuiA nf a clalnra,. "-'i . he head the practice of graiVtU ot eraco 187a (August, 18S3)." women who have: ingjiivorces to, 'residetl.ih the State one year. 4 - Mr.Goffjj a repiesentative in Congress froth AVest Virgiuia,v has introduced, a bill iu the House ...which provides that whenever ther ordinarr "revenue of the Govern- fuert for any year shall exceed its ordinary expanses the surplus, not exceeding $."50,000,000 in any one years, shall be appropriated for the purpose of diminishing the burden of direct taxation m, the several States and -Territories. This makes the fourth scheme of distribution. -Ja , The Creation of Rlectrlc forces. A water wheel, by beiucr emplov- .1 4 . i . .... " eu to treneraio eiectncitr. mar i vi mr light our rooms, cook our dinnerr and ripen our peaches. We can 1 If I i m uare ngui irom ii w which we can work as easily at night as iu the day a light which will neither consume our Iresh air, l uor vitiate it with foul -gases, nor smoke our ceilings and destroy our curtaius : which can set fire to nothing ; the globe of which can be hooked to an invalid's bed-curtain without risk, or attached to flexible wires and taken into the most confined corner to give light to a workman with out danger ot nre. it would nil a volume to state at length all the ty. The law Peunsvlvania, on . is auip .uu nuun um. development of electricitv has at Pittsburg, Pa., for the murder of J openetl up already; and more than Dukes, the s Mincer of his sister and a volume to state all that it may slaver of his father, was acauitted P6 expected yet to accomplish. Let . , ? j. , . . it rdso be understootl xuursuuy uu tue grouuu oi insaui- the subject ' in very clear, and provides that iwhen a persoii is ac quitted of any offense by reason of insanityf the jury shall s6 declare, and thc court shall have power to order him kept in strict custody so long as tsueh person shall be of uii sound mind. -rHeT was released, ttp- alieariug yesterday. i. 9- X .if ! The treaty of reciprocity ne- :' ;otiated t'tweeirthe governments I of the United States and Mexico, is f lAire the Senate for ratification or J; rejection.';-. It admits4 sugar and some twenty other articles duty Tree; and in return some sixtyor iv ; seventy a riicles oi our exports are to go free of duty into Mexico. This taking the duty, off 3Iexican sugar has stirred up the sugar planters of Louisiana and the whole sugar,region of the south-west, and they, are bringing all their influ ence to bear upon, the Senate in op position to the ratification of the treaty. They say that the great railroad corporations, which are penetratinjg Mexico with their lines, and the large sugar refineries in our citie?, are looking forward to a profitable "increase of profits by bringing free sugar from Mexico, to the detriment of the , home interest in Louisiana. They argue that by liieaus of this industry they are . fast; recovering from the disasters of the war that the colored as well as 1 he white men are deeplj inter estecl ..in it,-r and that our govern lnent oughi to continue its protec- .tiohKlt iresents one ot those knot ty jioints in the tariff policy which our legislators are called upon to encounter. -: - .. it is not our xrovince to make rfuy great-to-do on the liquor ' Jiuestion, but we occasionally come across a paragraph couched in Ian .guage so strong and truthful as to iclaiiii i a little space. This, tor in. stance is true as' preaching: When it issiiiti of a youth that "He drinks! and it can be proven, what; store wants him for a clerk 1 ' WThat chnreh wants him for a uiiem- ucx i i iiuu win trust uiui i um dying man will apioiut bini as his executor V Letters of recommenda tion, the backing of business firms, a! brilliant ancestry I cannot save lu'ui. The I world shies, him off. Why i It is whispered all through . the community, 'IIe drinks ! he : driiiks!" That blasts him. Wrh'en a. young man losesH his reputation for sobriety, he might as well be at the bottom of the sea. !t -; Here is another little bit, from ah Engl.sh preacher : I venture to say,i from' my expe i ience, that driuk has ruined more $oung men starting in life, it has irobbedof their honor more fine wo men, it has brought down more gray hairs ; withr bitter sorrow to ,lhe grave, Lit .has! emptied more Churches aiid chapels, and I say it lias damned more souls than all of the sins'of the ten commandments rolled into one. .. : that while the foregoing illustrations have been fstated iu 'relation to-a-ater ower. thej' are equally true for the other powers, such as steam engine, gas engine, horse power, or human labor. The fixed engine on a Jarm cm do the plowing hun- dreds of yards-off. The ga engine that pumps water by day can light the house at . night. ; The horses that drag coal carts formally miles to work a steam engine iu outlying place can be used at home n stead to work an elec'nc ma chine, with no loss of time and iu main' eases with less waste of la bori The-convicts - on a treadmill can be doing work by it at any part of or even outside the prison. In a word, the jower for work can be generated by any ordinary menus, and at auv place where the means exist, and can be economically con veyed to the spot where it is to be usefully applied without loss of time and practically in full strength. The tide, on the shore can do work far inland ; the stream in the mountain gorge can do work on the hilltop; the wuid-mui on the eminence can do -.work iu the valley : the horse in 4the yard or the roan in the out house can do work inside the dwelling.. And with all its power and its univer sality of application, this 'new ser vant which science has supplied us with is the most docile of menials. A touch of a lady's finger will bring into action a'" power which a thou sand men could not resist; another touch I will stop its a-tion, or re verse it, in a moment. A Sew Use for Eggs. -,j Lveryoue is familiar with vuiue oi me ypiK or an ecrg as a hairjvasb, but perhaps mar not, be aware of its virture in clothing cleahsing, Beaten up with alcohol, eau de cologne, or ether, like ox gan, Keeps uenerkand is more powerful; or, in simpler cases; it may oe useu aione. or mereiv mixed with water, to be rubbed on with flannel for reniorincr from colored materials the stauisof mud, or of coffee and chocolate, when Iprepar ed to velvet collars and cuffs, &c. and proves a cleanser as well as a spot extractor.' When it has done itai work it is washed off with soap, and the material thoroughly rinseu in pure water, ligg nas a specially good effect on those an noying patches of wheel grease be longing to the compound class of stains, as they represent a mixture of stale grease, iron and other sub stances, vot removing stains not greasefrom white or light colored material, glycerine may be tried, especially with coffee stains. Milk, immediately applied, is the best re mover of ink. Sour milk is the best. Put the article into a saucer and let it soak in the milk. ' i A Strange SnIU A curicus law suit is now await ing trial in New jYork. Some ten months ago Miss- Annie Petti t, a lyoung girl of unusually large pro portions, was engaged by a dime museum manager to exhibit herself as "the largest young lady in the world." Miss Pettit was given to understand that her position wasla life one, and it probably would have been hadn't nature interferr- cd and reduced her size so much that she was no longer a cnriositV. The management promptly dis charged her. and ' she now sues for reinstatement. : i A Female Captain. Washington Special. The first fumale steamboat cap tain and pilot will shortly lie com missioned in the person of Mrs. Mary Miller. The lady is the wife of Capt. Miller, of Neu Orleans, who is a cripple, and the couple own their own steamer. AppIicu tioii tor a license was made for her some time ago, but under a hiis- some j 'apprehension of the Jaw it was re fused. Since then ex Gov. Kelloffff Louisianaj has been unremitting in hisjenorts to have the decision reversed, aud today the Solicitor of !the Treasury said there was Shooting Affair In Chester. - Charlotte Oboenrer. Parties who-arrived in the city on the Charlotte, Columbia & Au gust a train last night, brought the - '. t a! 9 I a news oi a suooung auair wuicu OC curred in Chester, S C. letween 11. M. Cross aud John Donnovant. Cross shot Donnovant in the wrist, inflicting a wound that is painful uut iu no way serious, uross is a hotel keeper in Chester, and Don novaut is a nephew of Qua Don no vant,l who killed Lagreo in a duel, several years ago. ; , . : h Keward for a Mnrderer. Raleigh Observer. Gor. Jarvis yesterday offered a reward of 250 for the apprehension of Aha A. Smith, colored, who on the 13th of October list murdered J. W. Hill, in Iirtinswick-county. The age of the murderer is 32. Ho is of light complexion, moves very quickly, is a good fiddler and dan cer, and has a bullet embedded in his IkmI.v, and also the scar of a wound made by a weight. These notes are given in the official de scription of Smith. : A Venerable Iady Paralixcd. ReidsTille Timea. j Mrs. Alfred S. Iteid. a venerahle nothing in the law to prevent her lady popularly known through all being licensed and he should so de- this seciion. the aunt of Mrs. J. T. cide. This will to iMiss Susan be B. other women's righters. welcome new s Anthony land Daltou, was paralized in her left side yesterday morning at Mrs. Dal ton's residence. Dr Smith call ed to her bedside. Her left arm and side are perfectly numb so. mueh that she catches bold of her left hand and asks whose hand it is. She is a lovely old lady and this is sad news to her many friends. Don't Go rjeblnd the Return New York 6un, Ind. " Senators will continue to call for bamboo, which oc- their cold tea and get it. Nobody can say that tea is an intoxicating bererage, and as for the question whether the crockery cups really contain cold tea, that is aliunde. When a Senator sends an order to the restaurant for cold tea and a this is followed by the 15 yearj o' crockery cup I is returned, what The Rat Demon. Portious of Central America are are! reported 'as being laid waste by an invasion of rats. This is au oc curence not uncommon in tropical climates. In portions of Brazil these incursions are ieriodicaI, oc curring about every 20 years. This is said to depend on the ripening of the seed of the curs at the age ot about 20 years. Seeding covers a period of four or five years, each bamboo producing about a peck of seed. During this period the rats in the forests multi ply in iucredible numbers. Put bamboo growth, when it ripens no seed. Then follows-fhe rat famine, and their emigration to the cultiv ated fields, destroying everything In t ivfiil inrr nf fill f?rl ll A Bloomington, Indiana, filial wl,b,e 111 tue,r atb a, .a . . ' w says: a nine over a year ago tias. Adams, a farm laborer, married a ,very young wife and set up house keeping in an old cabin on uiear creek, eight jniles South ot here. Yesterday a stranger passing the Adams cabin had This attention drawn to it by the sound of moan ing within. JUe opened the door and found James Adams, benumb ed and helpless with cold, lying on the naked floor beside a tireless stove. In the bed near; by, under a heap of rags, lay the child-mother, frozen to death. On her breast, wrapped in rags was a living in fant. The babe, less than a week old, and the father were i cared for by kind neighbors. Mr. Adams, .when able to speak, said he was sick and uuable to move when - the child was born, and so' could not s?nd for help j The ; neighbors. deeply i mortified that suffering should exist undiscovered in their midst, are doing al in their power for the babe aud its father. Telegrams Not Confidential Communi cations. : ; nnrin? the trial of oas U. Jiei- :villo for allegedj embezilement iu the Crimiual Court before Judge Hawes ; at Chicago, Jau. 23, the prosecution desired to prove that part of the money was sent to Mel ville through the Western IJniou ;Tclegraph Compauy. Ihe money order clerk of the telegraph com nanv decliued to produce the mes sage on the gronud that messages could not be made public property.) The court ruled that telegraph communications could not be con-j sidered more confidential than any; others, and that no communication could be excluded when the cause of justice renders its' production necessary. J.ue company iucu j-iu duced the-inessage. The Comet of 181. The Providence Jowrimlof Friday ravs : Jiiiiions oi observers are now watching for ja sight of the little comet that last made us a visit m 1812. They will easily pick it up if they take Venus for a guide for some nights to come. This evening, the 18th, the comet is about as tar south of the square in Pegasus' as thestarsin the square are from each other. It is about twenty deg rees east and six north of Venus. Oh the 22d, so swiftly does the comet travel that it will be found three decrees farther south and about twenty degrees east of Venus. Remedy for Tobacco Flies. Durham Reporter.! Take a tight, empty barrel with one head, set a bucket of water iu it, lihen take a'cup with an ounce of sulphur, set it on fire and place in the barrel beside the bucket of water and cover with blankets the head of the barrel so as to retain the-sulphur fumes. When the flies attack the young plants, sprinkle them with the sulphur water, and they will quit the plants. The sul phur is perfectly harmless to the plants. Let the farmers try it and if they find it works they will please communicate the fact to this paper, Jefferson j Davis' Health. - ; "I saw the old Confederate chief tain not long ago," said a Mississip pian to a reporter. "He is almost as feeble as a sick man can be i bent with cares and years. Ills voice is weak and his body bent. I might almost say that he is de cripit. You know he lost an eye years ago. : The sight , of the ref maining one is failing. He takes too little exercise, his frieuds say. I guess the old man is not long for this world.77 ; authority can be found in the Con stitution of the United States for going behind the returns? i Disastrous Dank Failure. ' The Firht National Bank of Lead ville, Col., closed its doors after a heavy run on the 23rd. Prepara tions were being made foradisastr ous run in the morning, but at mid night it was made public that the bank would not open this morning. To prevent attachments the bank has asked for the appointment of a receiver. It is thought that the de posits aggi ega te over 8300,000. The jeop!e are much excited. North Carolina FaUares In Business. Bradstreet's. Chapel Hill, Ruffiu Cheek; Char lotte, J M Miller, grocer; Fayette ville, John D Cook, grocer; Hert ford, W H Ward; Leesville, H B Collier & Co.: Monroe, J Stack & Co.; Seaboard, Long & Bro.; War renton, John M Waddill; Washing ton, G H Bailey, G M Brown; .Wil liamstou, Peal & Gurganus J-A Kober8on. I i , ! A Q,ueen Crowned. Advices from Madagascar state that the new Queen Kanavalana III. was crowned on the 2d Nov The Queen and Premier Taslora made speeches after the coronation ceremonies, in which they declared that they would not surrender one inch of the country to the French. Another Great Factory. Durham Reporter. Capt. Kichards,1 of Hillsboro, has a contract trom tiuke & Co., tor one million of brick. This enter prising firm .ntends building a fac tory equal in size to the mammoth establishment of the Black well to bacco company. I ; Caratarphen, Grant & Co one of the lamest firms in Garys- burg, N. C, haref Ifailed; liabilities are said to be f 20,000: assets not known. heretofore that such was the truth; if jt is in- uiuuun w ujuukiuii Lueir iiiunes in wnueciiou wun. me melt, vonr man x nwups is guilty of the infa my, and I hare rery cood authori ty for sajingthat Secretary Teller is oi ine same opinion. . jf . lcare nothing for v your state ment that I have mo" following in the. Nation; 1 thero are those less stupid than yourself who know that but for my exertions in your behalf you would have been ; de feated in the election last August. "You are very kiud to say Uhat I will not be molested if I risit that country. I hare interests in that couutry quite equal to yours, and go and corneas I please. ' "No one knows better than your self that I own one of the rery best places in the Cherokee Nation, and that I spend much of time on it when not engaged in profession al ' business. A . more ridiculous statement could not be invented even by you thau this sentence in your Herald interview : He has spread the story that we would shoot him.' I, i ! While I believe that the breed of cowardly assassins are not yet extinct in the Cherokee Nation, you know that this statement is a con temptible falsehood. J "Such letters as the following (which is a literal copy of one sent to me) I have ever treated with contempt ; they have never dis turbed or caused me anxiety : Cherokee Nation, "Sept. 14th, 1881. Mr. E. C. Boudinot : , SiE : You have been making 8ieeche8 and uttering sentiments for years that are not only treason able but very offensive to the Cher okee Nation aud people, you have advocated the Policy of sectioniz- ing and allotting our country, 'you have sided with Land grabbers and Railroad corporations and ; have stood side by side with the enemies of your race and people and have forfeited your rights in the common property and government of the Cherokee ieople by every act which defiues a traitor and an enemy of his race; you are therefore ordered to keep out of this couutry aud to remain away from it, as we do not intend that you shall ever enjoy one farthing of benefit from a coun try and fund that you have done so much to despoil, i You hare sold your birthright here for a mess ot pottage and that is all we ever in tend you to enjoy. If yon ever eiU ter this conntr' for the purpose of advocating your hellish policy you w;ll have to take your own j life m your baud in order to do t. ! e therefore respectfully ask you to stay away remember the rate of your ancestors ami otuers wuo hare gone before i yoi ? A hint to the wise should be sufficient. i Committee of Safety "Your wish that there will be an investigation shall be. gratined. These facts 1 charge to be capable of proof and in great measure by yourself. ' :'i . . . -!' '- -j; "When u. W.Liipe, as treasurer, receivel the 8300,000 you drew a warrant payable to youself for $22,500, and Lipe paid you the money on such warrant; you then delivered the $22,500 to tbef Chei o. kee delegation, It. B. Boss and It. n. Wolte: they turned the; money over to William A. Phillips, who made the contract with such dele gation. I assure you that au op portunity will be onemi you . ami vour co-consp-rator, .William A. PhilliDs. to tell under oath, both before a committee ; of j Congress seem to indicate recent inhabitan cy. On the other hand, however, the preservative qualities of the atmosphere of this region are re markable, and it is the belief of the explorers that centuries have elapsed since the last of the depart ed race or races occupied these old cities and vilates as houses.' ' The absence of weapons of war, of works of defence, other than such as are constituted by the se lection of almost inaccessible lo calities, of temples or? idols, of hieroglyphics or pictures together with the durability aud solidity . of the dwellings, so different from anything to be found of the handi work of existing civilized races of that region, and the wide extent of these ruins, indicating .the exist ence of allied races covering large Iortionsof the present territories of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah, as well as Northern Mexico, are the elements of the problems1 involved in the- origin, -history and- disap pearance of these races: problems which seem no nearer solution than when Coronado. nearlr four hnn. dred years aero, made a raid for tm purpose of conquest among these places,! and through his priests gav to the world the first meagre accounts of them then, las now, vacant and ruined. Ii jr - -d - Descending the shaft the nl plorers fouudl themselves at the side ' off an oval-shsped, arched roof room about twenty feet in its smallest diameter. At the t ends aud iu the side opposite the en! tratiRA 1 the main room with smaller rooms! fnd stlmaten slven. w par- the hole suite or dwelling cou, antee satlsractlon, and deltve sistingof four apartments. ' One of ' " fc - i ; 7 the smaller rooms had its floor exl Pac"e for over Ten Dollar cavated to a depth ot two or .three In apiount, ft-ee of Express or iccb uciuw iuose oi vue oiner rooms M f and is supposed to hare served then r SM purpose of a store room or cellar for the ancient occupant. The othi er smalt rooms may hare been bedJ rooms. Agroore eighteen iuches deep by fifteeu in width, extending irom me noor or the main room up one side of the shaft to the surface of the hilli-its bottom filled with ashes and its sides blackened by smokeformed the fire place anJ.I w lieei i:vii vihinr nint flii m nntr nf ttiA aQfaMiiilin.n - i I ,; il i i ... .. . . T. -: TleedetJ fodollie Men. Youths. i rou mi the mouth of the shaft a ! ! i f i u ? , ; I i stoue wall was found, tornifng by Says, ladles, 3alsne and cnil- iis enclosure a kind of door yard to dreuV Including; a Complete . A. stripof land about an inch wide on Fifty-fifth street, west of Third arenue, New York, . was recently sold for $C35.r---r- ? ; , j '" i A i' .. j; ; r -There is a difference between the lips of a young man and the lips of a young lady-but - some times it is r, ruighty small one.. . r -ThomisT BTolloway. the Kn glish pill-maker, left an estate val ued at $25,000,000, and it isalf bequeathed to charitable institu tions. ;- . "A h ii, ti ;;;'.!, ;, A Hoboken man. has asked for a divorce because a mustache is sprouting oh hi wife's lip: As a rule, it makes a man mad to have any mustache On his wife's lip but' Ilia UU II. - ."I have been married now." boasted a prosy old fellow. - "more than 30 years, and hare never giren my wife a cross word." ."That's be cause you nerer dared, uncle," said a little nephew, '.' V, ' '. ' ' . -.-'v iz: ..... t... .:;.-r .r 's . Mrs. B. 'Vhv. I thduirlit Washington was dead.7 Mr. B "And so he is; he died before the Centennial." H Mrs B"Whv HI see herein the paper a . heading : ueueral Washington Dispatches,? ; - r .- a i -' : -t - . J 1 la wal; pnr ne ol Ladies and itilsse XTA- Di:ill C ttl. and hu e the best URKSS MAKIXJ; :ST,tlL.ISII- I.V TUE SOI TH. iiTinvnir mirnirir n ninnnii mMm til l C 1 1 A RLOTTE, N.I C. and before the courts, an 3 ou, kuow . . e . - 0ther and i 11.:.. .i;..i.Anni1i rt 1 i,niitpfiii 1 " . . . mihiiil una uiauuucai auu transaction.. "E. C. BouDIOTr,, , i The New Orleans Exposition, . BalUmorc Snn.1 i j The New Orleans Times-Democrat is euthusiasticj over the outlo)k for the ! world's exposition to be open ed iu that city next November eavs that there is 410 Mrtion of the bontn not. acuveiy niwrrBiwi m the coming exio8itioH. Although it is nearly a year off, such ample preparations have already Deen made as will insure all the South ern i industries and resources full representation, and the Times-Democrat concludes that if the interest increases as the opening draws nearerj as there is every reason to expect the South will make an even better display than had been hoped for. A grand opportunity will be offered to Baltimore cnter prise to display itself at this exfiosi tion, and it is gratifying to know that some action is on foot with that object in view. Mr. F. C4 Morehead, commissioner-general,' was iu Baltimore yesterday, ac companied by Col. Staples, of North Carolina, to confer with the leading citizens ou the subject. It is understood that a meeting has been arranged for Thursday week for the purpose of taking united action in the matter of having Baltimore and Maryland industries properly represented. similar villages could be seen along the canon for a distance of five miles. F 1 I Amon f the relics found here was 1 the dwelling below. ? The doubtless served the double pose 01 guarding against snow Slides, which might otherwise fill i al. . . .' a a . up me rooms and bury the occu-i pant', and against the accidental fall of an iuhabitant into his own or his neighbor's dwelling, upsetl ting the dinner pot and possibly breaking his neck in the operation; (Considerable debris was found iu hese ancient dwellings, au exami-i nation of which led to the discove ry ofcui iosities, illustratingsomeof 11) R KOfifll anil 'finmcjttin rnalnmu tt the extinct race. Srone mauls and SCIld US a Trfal (Mei. axes, impiemenrs useu 111 excavat-' jing the tlwellings; iwttery. bearing I a great- variety of ornamentation, hone awls and needles of delicate workmanship, the metate or family;) grinding stone for grain,) its well- i worn surface indicating long use, shell and obsidian ornaments, and , a . - ja a 1 lmpiemenis oi wood; tne uses ot which were nndiscoverable, were among the trophies of the explora tion. Search was made for a water course or spring, but no appearance of the existence of water in the neighborhood during recent ccutn ries was discovered. , Tlwire were S'gns ot inter-communication lie tween this village and a cliff city some fifteen miles distant, also a new discorery, which indicated the contemporaneous inhabitancy of the two. This city, or rather clus ter of rillages, occupied the sides of a canon which has recently been christened Walnut canon. It is an immense fissure in the earth, with nothing abore the general lerel of the country to indicate its exist ence to the traveller until he stands upon the side of its almost precip itous brink. The sides hare been gullied by storms and! torrents, learing shallow care-like places of great length at. different heights, along the bottoms of which, wher ever the ledge. furnished sufficient area, dwellings iu groups or singly were built! The season was well adranced j when the place was reached, and only, little time was spent in its exploration. All the ancient methods of approach had leen long before worn away and access to the nearest of the groups of houses was a work of difficulty, i The croup or rillage which was most narrowly examined was about three-quarters of a mile iu length and consisted of a single row of houses, the common iear wall be ing the living rock, while the sides and fronts were made of large squared stones, laid iu t clay, A j narrow street or pathway extended A.. ltoger84. ; a,;iromiucnt young : citizen, was murdered-, in I Norfolk early on Sunday, moruing, . Ium uciw oeiug spncv opeii wiu ' au -axe. Four young nieu have been arrested and are in viail charced 7 with the crime. -4 i-Frauk liollum and d ward Peer, thef twO Orange boys who discovered the .body ' bf IHJharles Delmonico, have been paid the $500 reward by . Detective Healey, of Pinkerton's force." Ilollum put his money in the oank.V Peerput $150 in the bank and gave the other $100 to his parents. i ncreas- Ninety . - Germany is rapidly ing h;r beet-root , culture. new factories were started j last ye'ari and nearly as many more are in course ; of, construction, j Beet root sugar from, j France, and Ger many willoou be coming ; in com letition witlr.the ; Louisiana cane sugar, in spite of. the tariff. ; : Impure Water Found in a Holy! Well at . - Mecca. ; ' . '' : A terrible calamity has just hap lened which ought to shake the Mohammedan religion to its found ation. The distinguished analyst, Prof. Hcaton, has been making a Chemical examination of the water of the holy well of Zciu-zera at Mecca, and has discovered it to be nil of the .worst kinds of jmpuri ies. I Since! Hs rediscovery iu the i lixth centnry by the grandfather of the prophet Mohammed this well lav formed the chief supply of prater to the millions of pilgrims who have annually resorted to leci'a to pay their respects jto the" famous hlack stone that adorns the corner cf the Kaaba. There was and is no ailment for which; Zem 2em water is not a sovereign renie dy; and its effects upon the ineiifal powers are equally remarkable, so that a celebrated Moslem recorder of theological tradition traced his' wonderful memory entirely io his copious draughts from ' Hagar's Well.j It is a humiliating reflec tion that, owing to the carelessness of the iuhbitants of Mecca in sani tary matters, this miraculous water should Iks charged with all sorts of impurities. r But it is some consola tion to reflect that if the well water could work such wonders in so im pure it state there would probably be no limit to its owcrs if it were cleansed j j . 'Corn and Oata for Horaea . t An. I agricultural exchange says the value of corn and oats may be Jumnden snindle whirl similar to briefly stateil as follows: The for- those in nse bv the Pueblos of the I hier is deficient in many of the ele those nn.spnt. time, but unlike, them - in It the apparent manner of its manu- lacture. oiuiug- muiwuug use of metallic tools of any de scription was disco vei ed; The sur face of the wood of which the whirl was formed had apparent been charred and then grounu down to the required size aim shape by rubbing it upon isaiw stone. A shaft of reed j similar to bamboo, a species entirely uuknowii in that region at this time, still "re mained in the whirl. It had been broken by the ancieut j workman. mid neat v mended or winning about it a piece of fine twine, i T. e ends of this twine being lexamined under the microscope, disclosed the tact that its fibre was rery fine hu man hair. Articles of wood, Ooru cobs, ami even the perfect grams of cornr walnuts, bones of elk, an-, telope and wolf, portions of wear in" apparel of a fabric resembling the mummy cloth of Egypt but made from material unfamiliar U the explorers, and other perishable articles were found in abundance, bnried in the piles of debris, which .vrriallv filled . these i deserted homes! and would at first thought ' i ments of nutrition so necessary for recuperating the constant wear and tear which necessarily takes place in the body of a living animal. Oh this account horses which are fed Exclusively on corn and hay jdo not receive the nourishment which ap pears necessary for the due support and maintenance of the animal fab ric; hence, we must not be surpris ed that corn-fed horses show signs ot being languid, by sweating pro fusely i while being worked, jack of vitality, etc. Oats, ou the contrary, contain mom of" the essential ele ments of nutrition than anyr other article of food which can be fed withj impunity to horses. Oats are not only the most natural fojd for horses, but are decidedly the most nutritious. They are the cheapest, becausevthere is less risk in feeding them, and exierience has proved that horse-i properly fed on oats and timothy hay can, with regular excr cie, good grooming and jproper sanitary relations, be brought to the highest state of physical cul ture and can. perform a more work with less evidence of fatigue than when fed on ary other article of food. - j ; 'riui Aniiii TTifrKia rxf Tl. J. --- uiviv A'ttaf usk, N. J., whoser playful church festival hiarriage f jti st , declared , illegal Jy the courts, now enters a i suit torv divorce frOm ;a man who rt ho courts sayj she -never marriefl: ; Shemust wjiut Master, Vauirhau; . V aged 17, very badly or soine of his money, wedoirt know whiclu' ! "Ab,'.said the aiice young man -, with bangs, as the little boy let hiut in the other evening. , 4Alf, my. little inaiujsyour sister at home." "Yes, she's fat; home, but she isn't I expecting you.f 'And how do you ' nu" oiio i ion li.CAicvilll j ma "Cause 1 heard her tell ma that j ou are too mean to hire a horse aud sleii;l, and she; didn't expect to see lyou whde the snow lasted." 1 One of the most nMonishing suicides ever known has recently agitated Paris.j An unknown but well dressed man went after ! dark to the Bois de Boulogne and placed about his neck an irou flexible tube filled with K explosive ! matter, He then set tire to it, and was literally blown to pieces! A leg and an arm were projected to a great distance and shreds of bis flesh: were found hanging on branched of .trees. The method was tborougMy Parisia uT A writer who has made a' study of the mahogany , tree,; says that a peculiarity, W which few have knowledge is seen jn the nu merous spurs eliminated, "froiu the body of the tree at regular .inter vals, all of which grow downward, finally entering the earth and be coming roots. jTher jare-superior to any part of the trunk for beauty j ot texture and color.; Some of. ' themhave been sold for $250 per 1,000 feet, boaiil measure, While I the body of the tree brought only $40 at the port of exportation. Half an hour after the west bound train over the Detroit,Grand Haven and 3Iilwaukec railroad had steamed out a young man who Was engaged to be married and was be hind time arrived. "Hire a locomo tive P a policeman said. The youth on ascertaining that -the- Suieriii tendent would suiply him with a locomotive for $40, said hewould telegraph to thoTgiTjl's father about it, aud let the Superintendent know. Half an hour later the youth said he should not want the locomotive, as the girl's father had telegraph ed, "Busan changed her mind yes--terday, and was married to Frank." -. L-Strong rays of light are day by lay eating out more and more of the ink in the original parch menc jdraft of the Declaration of Independence", which is kept in a glass case in the SUte Department library. Few - ot the names are now legible. Nearlhe iirchnient is the original, ou ..foolscap . paper. The ink is as fresh as it was when it dropped from Jefferson's quill. TbeTnany, erasures and' interlinea tions by Franklin, John Adams, and others are! still 4eifect us to color. The paper is .yellow .with age, and worn j t iirougii wnere it has been folded; - , Dog$ ;' are again inakiiig a noise in the Great and (ieneral Court of Massachusetts J ust now there is a demand for long wool, and the few sheepr farmers that are left inthe old" J Commonwealth are complaining ,ofthe depredations of dogs; but the Legislature, au intel ligent meinlier says, is unlikely to enact 'the., lairs . that the sheep farmers wanfibr the sheep indns- j try in the Old Bay State has de t clined for forty i'ears past "aiid : iu I stead of 400,000 sheepMassachiu-! setts has only .about 05,000; where-r as of the 44,000 farmers, about 35, 000 own dogs,' andare Viot asking; the privilege of giving $50t) bonds each for them. 1 -. ' i , . ;-, V- i A.