. r ; 1 ; ' : . ' 1 UHatE SHILL THE PRES rumm richt mimn,iwa by rnimcE m wbribed by cm. j i ' ;V ' 'F'-NQ.,:' , ' I ' V DURHAM. N. G., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 186. i V ' . ($1:50 PER fuMi I' m. r : i ' - - i. m " a- village, Tf m. t i e, '? JW-ionse play IV ie, Tom, not that green, sjonie are-fobtel then, frith ieps upon "tlie with snow, iilia . nl:.l-i. some ivv 1 .jcu.l,ns,rtt!o ; dltered now I aes a: replaced 1 ;fbnea. v err like the same Otir , r i Mfn-' old bricks ftrMn tur ai , '6J l t the uui, rtefir mm" f" " ." year ago.' , fr-s v. .'rlaviDEr some bhl gam V Vs -n.l frv.. STB-tT:st now v ;.d the ia -witti me Vfc. : Tannine iH l i L-a on its side it I , I is less wide raie-vine swin; played with k hi therip. t still: tl . hr J thnli.M.rp loin: tnesiii'iiui I r if 3 once we r.lave.l the.bwm, lined uirf ini 'nt-nth i-li. th n - tang our fiweftlwii ts r- -t twentv years ,-:0- tit spring that bni.hlel jwiuwi uy ine sprf-aii'i'n fy'low-'tffus th.n so l.ifti ttt searcftjy rem-li. ti, "tt drin .1, U jtpiiu.. upon nt vour iirt.ui-. rt's J ust lin'ath it, Tdn, and ie the same; S3 wretch hus pt-rled tlile. liijfk. inK:snrc- Lnt slow, ied whisp imnw von cdt. Tears Ago. " wander up and down the beach, get ting vessels ashore in the nit, throw injf up false, lights in their presence and deceiving them, that .they might despoil and ransack them. All kinds rffffof infernal arts were used, to accom plish this. And one night, on ine Cor nish coast, when the sea was coming in fearfully, ome" villians took a lan tern ofldJied iVU o'horn', and led the horse up and down the- beach, the lantern staying to' the motion of the liorse, and "a sea-captain in the offing saw it, and mar'e up his mindS that he was not anywhere near the shore, for he-said: "There's a'vessel Jbat imist be a vessel, for it lias a movable light." and lie had no apprehension until he heard the roeksgratiug on the ship's bottom, and it went, to pieces, and jlhe villians on shore? gathered up ,'the packa'ges . and treasures that were washed to the land. And I have to tell you that there are a multitude-of souls rui lied by faLse lights on the beach. t " ! In the'dark night of man's danger, Universalism goes up an1 .down the shore, shaking: its lantern, and men look off and take' that flickering and expiring wick as 1 he signal of safety, and the ci-y is: "Heave the main top sail to thc'mast ! (A11 is well!" when entv the pen- twas l.o- on ve nives, I'rity b wil- now, iris hill, at we dear wetitv yihn lonfj lieen dry, Tom, lkit tears fame, torn i e.yes ; - ,1 tbonht of her I loved so well, thok. k-- broken ties; ; 1 " . " " I visited the old church-yard, and ti flowers to strow . Upon the graves of those we lovd twenty years ao. Some ftre m .the chnreri-vanl kn sleep beneath the sea; But few areleft of our old class, excepting von and me: : And when our time shall come, T - we are called to so, I hope they'll lay ns where we plnjyed, just twenty ;years ago. AsolM.r.s. ally k some d; some 1, some and MORAL WRECKS. A Sermon-by Dr. Talrrjage I "Lest that by. any means, wh.n l-have - nreai-hed to others, I mvself shqtild be a ,' coRUiway'-I pa. 9:2?. ' r--' llinisters ;of religion may hpally be mi H it - j " I - - -1 ost. ine apostie, in me text, men catea that possibility. Gown; and surplice, and cardinal's red hat are no . security. Cardinal W olsey, alter hav ing been petted by kings and Ijavinj entertained! foreign ambassadors at Hampton ,!ourt," died in darkness. 'One of the most eminent ministers o ' religion that this country has ever kfjawn plunged into sin and died, his Meaip)o-t-m orient examination found ". t Lave been not figuratively, but liberally, broken. Oh, ministers o Clvrist, because We have diplomas o graduation,' and hands of omination . on the head, ami address consecrated . assemblages, that is no reason wh we shall necessarily reach tlie realm r celestial 1 The clergyman .to ust go . through the same gate of pardon as the layman.- : 1 he preachw ma v tret his audience into heaven, and he him self miss itj There have .been - " Sl lIEN nrTHlCTION" coinetli upon theni, and thev shall not escape. So there, are all kiiuls of lan terns" swung on '-the beacli philo soihicaVlanterns,educational lanterns, humanitarian lanterns. Men. "look at them, and are 'deceived, when there is nothing bid Qod's eternal light-house of the Gospel that can keep them from ecoimng castaways. j . Once, on AVoir (1rag1 light-house, they tried to build a copper figure of a wolf with its' mouth open, so that the storms beating into t, the wolf would hoyyl forth the dawger to ma rir;ersthat might be coming" anyvhere near tne co:isr. mm eourse, n. was a failure.' And so alt-wew inventions for tlie .saving of man's, soul are una vailing. What Hie human race wants is .a light bursting forth from tlie cross standing on the reat head lands the "light of pardon, the light of comfort', the light of heaven. Yon might better go to-night, and destroy all the great light-houses on the )feu gerous coasts the Barnegat light house; tlie Fastnet Rock light-house, the Sherry vore light-house; the Long-: ship's light-house, the Holyhead light house than to put out God's great ocean lamp the -Gospel.' W oe to Aj those who swipg false lanterns on the beach tilljnieh crash in and perish. " II. y talking with sailors I have heard alnrv-tbat sometimes ships come to this ca-lanntv by the hooks of steej, and blindfold them, and make them "walk . the plank." They do not know what the next mo ment may bring .forth. Drifting in their theology. Drifting in their habits. Drifting in regard to all the future. No God, no Christ, no set tled anticipations of . eternal felicity; but all the time coming nearer'and fearer to !A DAXGEROrS COAST.' . Some of them are on fire with evil habit, and they will burn on the1 sea, the charred Jiulk tossed uj)" on the barren beach of the lost world. Many of them with great troubles, financial troubles, domestic troubles, socjal trouble,; but they never jpray for comfort. With an aggravation of sin that stirs up the ire of God, they pray for no pardon. They do not steer for the lightship-that dances in gladness at the mouth of heaven's 'harbor; reckless as to .where they come out, .d'-ifting . farther fa-ore t , ,'tJ ',rfy Tt-fcgr from early religious-influences, farther from their present happiness,' farther from heaven. ' .. And what is the worst thing about it is, that the'y are taking t,heir fami lies along with theni, and if one perish, perhaps they will all pe"risli, and the. yvav one goes; the probabili ty is hey yvill allgo.. "Yet no anxiety. As unconscious- of danger as the pas sengers on board the Arctic one mo ment before the iVest'a crashed into her. Wrapped upyin the business of the store, not remembering that soon they must quit all their earthly po pes si.ons. Absorbed in their social posi tion, not knowing that very soqif they will have attended, the hut lem and whirled in the. last schottische.' They do not deliberately choose fo be ruined; neither did the French frigate Medusa am for the Argnin Banks, but there-it went to pieces. Oil, ye reckless souls P I wish that to-night. I could wake you up with some great perturbation. The perils m e so augmented, ' SI DliKX SWOOP -OK A'TKMPKST. For-"instance, a vessel is sailing along in the East Indies, and there is not a sir.jxle- cluiid on the skv ; but the breeze freshens, and CHANCES OF ESCAPE you will die just THE ire so rew; you will die lust as cer tainl' as you sit thei'e, unless you beAi stir yourself. I fear, my brother, y ou are. becoming a castaway. You are making no effort, you are putting forth ho exertion for escape. . You throw out no oar. Y'ou take-no sound ings. You watch no ,cpmpass. You are not - calculating your bearings while the wind is abaft, and yonder is a long-line of foam bounding the hori zon, and you will be pushed on to ward it, and thousands have perished there, and you. are driving in the same direction, lieady about! Down helm! Hard down; or in the nest live min utes, or four minutes, or j three min utes, or two minutes, or one minute you may be a castaway Oh, unforgiyen' soul, if you-could see your peril "before God to night on account of your lifetime sin and Oh,-ye castaways, God is doing everything to save you! Did you ever hear of Lionel Luken? He was the inventor of the insubmergible lifedoat. All honor is due to his inemjry by sea-faring men. as well' as by landsmen. How many j lives he saved by his invention f In after days' that invention was improved, and one day there was A PERFECT LIFE BOT, the Northumberland, ready at Uims gafe. The life--boat being ready, to test it the crew came out and leaped on the gunwale on one side to 'see if the boat wpuld upset; it was impossible- to upset it. Then, amid the huzzas of excited thousands, that boat yvas launched, and it has gone and come, picking up a great many of the shipwrecked. But I have to tell you to-night of a grander launching, and from the dry-docks of heaven. Word cime.up that a world -wis :beai:iier on the rocks. In tb mM. ence of the potentates of heaven the life-boat of the world's redemption was launched. It 'shoved' off the golden sands ami 1 aDgelic - hosanna Tie purges of darkness beat against i's bow, but it sailed or, and it comes in sight to-night. It comes for yob, it comes for me. Soul! soul! get in to it Mai-e one leap fo heaveu. This is your last chance !or life. Lnt that boat go past, and th- re remain- nothing but fearful looking-for o judgment, and fiery indignation widen shall devour the adversary. I am expecting tbat there will be whole fmilies bere to-night who wir get into that life boat In 1833 tne "Isibella" came, ashore off Hastings, .England. .The air wa9 filled with sounds the hoarse se-trumpft, ttn crasfi of the axes, and the b l'owin of the tornado. A' HO AT FT.O.M THE SHORE ' came uuder the stern of the disabled ves3t;l. There were -women and chil dren on board that vessel. N Seme of the sailors j itnped iuto the small boat, said: "No .eive us the children.'' A father who stood on deck took hp-first-born and threw hioi to the boat. The sailors caugho . bun' safelv, and he next, and the next, to the last Still tbe sea rocking, the storm boil ing., ."Now,'' said the tailors, "now .the mother;" and che leaped, an(? was eaved. The b ;at went to the shore; but before it g it to the shore the lan Ismen were so impatient to help the suffering people tbat they waded cle ir down into the surf, yvith blankets and garments and promises o.f help and succor. L. hoe to num. tuat a great many of the families htre are goirg to be saved, and tavi-d ail to gether. Give us that child for Christ, tnat other child, that other. Give us the mother, give u3 the father, the whole family. They must all come in snddenlv there are swift feet on the ratlines, transgression, there would be fifty and the crv is: '"Way, haul away men who .wctuld .rush through thi there!", but before theVcaW square aisle crying for mercy, and there the booms nnd tarnaulin the hatch- would be. fifty yvho would rush wavs. the vessel is roamn and through that aisle cry'ibg.' for mercy-, creaking in tlie 'grip of a tornado, and and they would be as men are yvhen falls over into the trough of the sea, and broadside rolls on to the"beach and keels over, leaving the ere w to strufrle in the merciless surf. Cost away ! east away And so I have to tell. you that there are thousands of men' destroyed through the sudden swoop of 'temptations. Some great iiiducjcment'to worldlihess, pn to sen suality, or to high temper, or to some iorin oi Qissipaiion, comes upon tnem. IF THEY;. HAP TIME to examine i their Bibld, if the v had THEY RUSH ACROSS THE PECK of a foundering ship, and there would be thousands of arms tossed up from the galleries; and as these Christian men rose up- to help them, it would be as yvhen. a vessel drives on the i-ocks, ami on the shore the command is: "Man the lite-boat! .Full, mv lads, pull ! A steamer with two hun tiiea on ooani -maKinor me lasi plunge !'-' A hv. does your cheek turn pale and your heart pound until, listening time to consult with their friends, if you hear it? It is because, my dear they had time to dtli berate," they brother, you realize that because of could stand it: but the temntation vour lifetime' sin and rejection of vhere all on board escaped bxcepting the Meditenanean. a whirlwind of really believe there are thousands o r CASES OF SHIPWRECK th captain Alas I if, havimr "preach- ed to others, 1 myself should be a cast- God forbid it. have examined some of the com- ies to see what thev thoucrht word "castawav" ami T ti 1 that thev differ in regard to the f ure-used, while they agree in re- iFV-p tne meaning, bp i shall j I hav. m atari ;.t: this the Carribean. One awful surge of temptation, and thev perish. And so we often hear I fit; phi story : "I hadn't seen my. friend in a great many years. We were very glad to meet. He said I must -drink, and he took me bv.the arm and pressed me along, and filled 1 -.! it 1 111 ine cup uuui tne ououies ran over the edire. and in an evil moment all J fay own selection, aid take it my good resolutions were swept away, : autical and seafarino- tense, and' o..1 tn rw.iti-amnv n.nA nn,i.J,. r r ; . $ o i . I muii fcv im. "iili u -iii. v.-j. vji uu auu ill I f ' Vou tnat men may betome spir- own soul, I fell. v f"uai castaways, and how Mnally they Or the storv is. "I had hard work T.'- l-'ML X II . . . 1 : ' I ' aruxmio iuat calamity. - ; . : to support my family. T knew that e aie a beauoara town. lou by one false entry, by one deception, Diuuu uctiu;u. iAuii ny one eniDezziement. i mic it snnne ril 3n ye crossedtlie ocejin. Some out free from all my trouble; but the Vyi juu iiatu ixitiuu-eu vessels m gi-eat temptation came upon me so fiercely stress of weather. There is a sea- I could not think. I did wrong, and paptain, ana there is anbther, and having done yvrong Yonder is I another, and there- are a fxpodly number of you who, though Uehce you did not know thd difference pel ween a brigand a barque, and be tween a diamond knot and a sprit- ALI. UEAVtN WAPES IN" tb help you. I claim this wbole au dience li-r God.' I. pick not o .e man hre nor one man tt ere; I claim this whole1 audience fr God. There are some of. you wh , thirty years ao, we're cons-crated jo Chris1: by yonr pareqts in baptism. ' Certainly I am not -stepping over the rigtit bound whn I el im you for Je'u9. Then there are many here whertave b in seeking Go t r a gd d while, and am I not right in claiming you for Jsus? Then th-re are somn her who hdve been fa ther away.r I saw you come in to-nihtin clusters two, t' re-, and four men together an i ,ou dr Dk. n 1 ou sweur, and o.u ar b i"yirig up yur famili s without ny God 10 tak care of them when .- u are da i Ai-d 1 claim YOP, ther; I daim dl of you. people in tnis nouse tms moment, say inr within themselves: "What shall I ilo?" Do?Do? Why.' mv brother, do yvhat any. ship does yvhen it is in trouble. . LIFT A DISTRESS SIGNAL. There is a flash and a boom. You listen and vou look. A vessel is m trouble. The?distress gun is sounded, or a rocket is sent , up," or a blanket is lifted, or a bundle of rags anything to catch the; eye of the passing craft. So if you want to be taken off the wreck of your sin, you must lift a dis tress signal Rise. Lift 'your hand.' Cry out for mercy. The pibhcan lifted the distress signal when he cried: "God, be merciful to me, a sinner!" Peter lifted the dish-ess signal when he said: "Lord, save me, I perish !" The blind man lifted tlil distress signal when he said: "Lord, that mv eves may be opened." The gaoler lifted the distress signal when on ltd anxie uot com , n T -. 11 V mv Dr iner; 1 eiaim u 01 juu. x u wi 1 have to come to night t the thron-of in-rcy. Go.i's Holy Spirit i" s riving no with you .irresi-ti".- Altho ich there mav be a smil- y-mr ip, there is nfritvi n tv in your he-rt. You wi at my invititp-n; you w.ll come at G "t'H command. Y.uuwill have t prav some 'im-, why not begin n while all 'he rip and purple t bisters of Divine promise bend over into your cup, mner man postpone jour prayer until your chance is past a-.d tne night drops, and te sea wsh-s you out, and for ever, atd forever, yu become a cast away ? . ' ' State Elections For 1886. i . Alabama elects Congressmen No vembers. Arbausaa elects S'ate officers and Legislature, September; Congressmen November 2. - CaUfori ia elects State officer, Leg islate and Congressmen November 2. Colorado elects State officers, Leg islature and Congressmen Nov. 2 Connecticut electa State officers, Legislature and Congr samen Nov. 2. Delaware elects Governor, Legisla ture and Congressmen, Nov. 2. : Florida fleets Legislature and Con gressmen November 2, and vot"s up on the proposed new constitution of H e State, which waa framed by the convn ion which met in 1885. Georgia elects Stae officers and Legislature October 6; Congressmen N' vembe r 2d. Ilti ie elects minor Stat9 ofiicers, LegislaTure and Congressmen Npfeoi-b-r 2, anl votes upon a proposed amendment t the donetitutionof the State to abolish the contract system in the prisons of the State. -Indiana electa minor State officers and ConyrssmeL November 2. Iowa elects minor State officers and Congrt ssinen November 2. Kansis elects State offic-rs, Legis lature and Cong eesuien November 2. Kentucky tlects Congressmen No vember 2. L luisiana elects Copgressoien No vember 2. M iineelec's Govern ir, Legis'a'ure an l Congressmen 'November 2. I Maryknd elects. Congress nen No Vember 2. Mas ac insetts elects Satec-ffi -'r , L-gi3la;ure an t Co u ressaiu N ve u uer 2. . Ml higio elects Stat : oili .- s. Lg islature and C -ngressmeu N'-venioii 2. alioi esota e ect8 ot teomce s, Lif-g islature and Conresmeu N vemb 2, and voies upon a proposed am-n-i- ment to the c mstitut'ou of t'ie State to facilitate tte erecti n' of coiin y and school buildings. Mifs saippi elects C u'gressmen N - vember 2. Miss uri elects minor State officers and Congressmen Novemb r 2. , Nebraska elects State ofiic-rs, Leg isliture and Congressmen November 2- ' . Nevada elects State officers, Legis lature and Congressmen Nov mb- r 2 New Hampshire elects- Governor, Legislature and Congressmen Novem ber 2 . New Jr8 y elects Governor, Leg's leiture and Congressman November 2. New York eleuts a judge - of the Court of Appbals, Assemblyman and Congressmen Novemb r 2, and votes upon the question of holding a con vent.on to reTise the constitution 01 the Sta'e. North Carolina elec's justices of the Suprecne Court, Judges of Superior Court, legislature and Congressmen Nov.-2. Ohio elects minor State officer?, and Cbngn s men Nov 2. Oregon elected SUte officers, Legis lature and Cpngressm-n June 7. Ptn-sylTania lects State officers, Lp-'is'ature and Congressman N-ve u ber 2. Rhode Island electa -1 State offic-rs and Legislature April 7, an 1 ra ifie 1 the the propose 1 amen ments t the c -nsutut on of the State, on--' i f whicn or -ihibits tne na'e f intoxicating liq uor, Hii 1 th oh r a Pi j its tor-igu bo n Uni n ex--oldiers an 1 sailors to ci izenshio. E ecta C nsrre sm n No- vem'er 2. Suut'i Car lint electa Sta flic rs L -tfisltture and C-ngres-men Nvem- r 2. Mengcr. - then she was strong enough to be re moved. Before she ltjft she told as well as she could the whole story. She described her trip toHackettstown and her retiirn to Newark. She en gaged Sneede to take her to her hotel and paid him in advance. She was exhausted, and after getting into the hack asked Sneede to get her a glass of wine. She drank the-wine, and all that the remembers after that is the hack stopping and Saeede takiDg a seit beside p.er. She waa Ignite con fident that a long ri le followed, but she became so sleepy that finally she was oblinoua to everything. She next realized that 6he;;was- lying on a bed and some one was plyfng her with drinks. She ate nothing for 1 a faod was tortured with a burning thirst It was severatdaya bf jj-e the lady' fe covere l her rfca9oii. Her pocket-book was found under her .pillow, and the money wa just $170 short It sterns that Sneedg sent the woman's satchel to F. W, Chun's Ljv tr.-7-at No. 74 Chestnut street Tnis satchel con-tain-d the money received in the sale of the Arlington property. .Sneede dil njt kmjnv this atj the time. The satchel was! restore is to the brother. It had not been disturbed. Lessons of the Earthquake. 1 . 1. The lesson, impressed with sur-h fearful emphasis, of man's impotence, is present to the minds of all. There was no mau s brave-or so strong wh did cot leel utterly -helpless and im- p )tent. !ljan's strength yvas ehoyvu to bo on!- Weakuess There ws nev r a sens of greater need of depen dent on ft d brought homo fo every one. 2. Tbe uncertunty of life, by the Vud un ti iot; ff'1 of men and wo- nen in Cj ariea'on, ciused men to stop and thiak on tbe quest i n of iiaiid'iig-fice to fice with (od. Ther were, att jupts to shiike off the feeling by excessive le"?it?, but the impression cann t be e s.-ly effWd. 3. Tne ;iguoran?e of The Earthy Expected. Kes trTvmirer. Daring Abduction. . I COULD NOT STOP, Oil, it is the first step that costs; the second is easier; and the third; and ion to the last! Once havinsr broken loose from the anchrr. it is he said: "What must T do to be i 1 il 1 1 1 I T aM 1 1 1 1 1 1 v. aitam iatm r w,-nf f tha Iti". not so easy to tie tue paitea strands, saved t Ana neip win um omc V jack brace, arid though you could not ow often l Ls ,that men lish fo? Ptryqu fo"1 3'ou Suh a sig" maa the force ciue-garnels, now you : "i'u lcmi'uuluu wmea ucu twiumu. - - , - tamar. Ath o cnJ.. from some unexpected quarter! As demonstration, giye some sign, make with vour ri?ht hand, and if "it were vessels lie- 111 bargate Boads, safe some Heaven-piercing outcry for help, m , - ' the Mersey I tii-etiaL, tney tue uyuuicua jjirtjcx, "- . tnat jroa wouia have mercy urxm Jrrav I J.ne voice or tne j-ioru w 1 those, uixin "whom tliere comes the mcrht sonnds in your ears : "in aie is' A -AKlGHTixtouR MEMORYl sudden swoop of temptation, that Thv help." Too proud to raise such 'illzfwe sea. ! The vessel became ,1111- they perish not. becoming.- for this a signal too rroud to be saved. manageable. ,iou saw it was scud- world and the. world to come, cast There was an old sailor thumping amg towara tne snore. ) xou neardUyvay 1 cast away ! ' about in - the cry, greasers aneao;i JLand onf- HI. I have also heard from sailors me lee dovti . J-ne vessef strucK tne that some vessels come to this calami rock, and vou ielt the decK breakinff f i UM uuuc jum.ioouu juu ncica - SHEER RECKLESSNESS. SI'SS "of Crhe fta . -en who .-I took off my life-Wt ttatitadght ft Portncnieso briff yvent stkvinr,. mVit-? . soon De over, ana x tuougni suinewimt ri i- - 70 i-' . 1 i 7TL , simple fact that the average of human Mrirliatirietlvahontmv friends ori shore. "ting, gnnaing, crasiaug ou me wooa- . . , , - -j -.-- ... - . 0 P' - 0 . lifa nn H n 00a ia laoa than tmalva lkA T V. .1 lkAm vAAl.hirA lib-o the sea or not; you all understand the eax TMs comes from the fact that and 1 about sinking : back and men who br their sins and tempta- tjmf bome reckless-th captain, The clouds iwere brealong away, and A, ! f tJI the helmsman, the stoker, the man on there that blessed star shone down on I ; i , iiwI,i,J ;a,. . - the look-out become reckless, and in me, and it seemed to take right hold I 1 - irworlds 1 Cast awav cast awav 1 I mne out of ten P68 li 18 foud of me; and somehow, I cannot tell U i'T y- D'ii- Al - t I out that some one was airfuUy to blame. I how it was, but somehow, while I ,was 'tave found orX tht there' are toe uieix aouxa uuuuku cucci icv.uciuci i uj nciu 1110 ouu eeuicu. lv ixiii mc. mi ii i- r ' x : I m -, , 1 il. xnere are mouaanuii oi mj uibuub i uq, arownmg . soul, see you not uie in this nouse to-night who . do not l glimmer between the rifts of the storm care where they are m spiritual things. 1 cloud ? Would to Good that that They do riot know whether; they , are j light might lay hold . of you to-night ; New York. Sept.. 2. The Mail and E-rnresn publishes a sp cial T"uj N-w rk, N., -J., stating ta,t S'Veral weks ftjo a beiutitul Southern woman, ic- c mpini-d by h-r br tber, arrived i that c ty nnd tO'i r oms at tne Hot 1 Bristol. The si-tr was about 25 years id. i decided brue te ami a p rf ct typ" of womardv beauty The oroth- er was w 11 dressed n 1 gentium nly in his manner. They' came from ht- . ' i e v tnnan, , to se.i- piece oi proper ty iD Arlington which th-y -j-nhtly wned. The sal" was ma Ie an i the brotner and sister received $20 000 and divided the money, each taiug one-half, and in nlace of banking the E. Munch, a druggist - in Leipsic, fonda thev kept them iu their trnnks Saxony, published some time ago in xhe day following the sde the sister Pharmacist a me lica paper, a reme- to& her brother that she was goiny dy for diphtheria which has had sur- to Hackettstown on, a visit Tbe prising succevs,.bein; nothing moiv hro her agreed to remain at the. hotel bur wisest "c' qWa was manifested. " "What was the cause?!' is yet unanswed. There are theories and theories, but there is no aijeemnt among geologists. Tney know vvry little about it. The most lgnojra'it man in rsorth Car lina who tniuKs it was the warning oi uod to a sinning world may be as near the correct solution asPr f. McG1- or the other Jerned men who have given their opinions. 4. Charleston is no wors place in morals than Chicago, and the idea that God Isent the e'thq iake"to pun is'i t-in ciun t bei maoaain d wh-n such t-init-hules of i iouity hs Chicago and Newark, N. J., escaped without injury. ' There is danger in attribu ting the! earthquake to the direct baud of G an l not to natural causes which He has put in operation, that weraccusp Hira ofiaftlicfiog needlessly the people ot Charl ston. G d rules bu is never cru-t oi u ju-t 3loralits love to a-scnt upon the 8- fishness of mankind, of ' man's inhumanity to man." and to pr .ve, therefrom, that there is no g od in tbe world and that nil men are given t love of If arid to wrong doing The suffering and deprivation o Charleston aff r He 1 an opportunity for the pro f of t'ieir teaching. Ton lo iseni'-g of ih burse s ri"gs in hun dred cities, and the generous contri buti nsjto" relieve the sufferings of trios-r.ven . fr m tiieir homes, ha-emphaticali- n"g.tiv-d the mor list's c ncln-sious tu t shown th.it 't-ep town in every ma 's heart ih-re is a furr'-utj or d etne s mpat'iy auicu ne ds biit to te;fouc ed t cme t'eHu-f co F ve nu din t t'uous'U dolarsill e the a.gr gte of tne gi t- of hih pe p e o tne 0 nt d "tate-i. f "S-v.-et c laritv" s il exeit g- atihflie ce upon men' neart-. Cliroiiiile To the Editor of the Sia : In the auturaJkf 1881 bur sr iar system stood thus Kine west ward, commencing at thehsst with fun: Mercury, Venus, EaxthMar8, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune Mars were (almost) in line, and Mars was not far in advanqe, while' Uranus was not far in advance of Mars. . It was a marshaliDg of the planets never before seen on this continent since the diecovery of North America, and as it was not to be repeated till the end of a cycle too long to figure up, I first gazed in awe and admira tion, and then eet-abojft noting th wonderful phenomena incident t4 the changes of the mighty orbs from 1881 to 188G. The earth was my good. ship. '..I sailed tbe ether seas, around the sun, taking observations, not by stellar, but by planetary orbs In my -diary now recoraea ail oi tneeportea eaitn q'uakes round the glob'all the volcan ic eruptions, the great floods the red sunsets, and Various other celestial, ter restial and mete-rological phenomena which have marked a period that may well be called an earthquake cycle. The storms in the environment of the sunytne enormous rentio the side of Jupiter, the family of great comets, the summer days in winter and the fr'sta in summer have ben noted.and by the recori from 1881 to 1884 I was enabled to calculate the red sunsets and the earthquakes for the years 1885 G so well tnat if I were to retrace the recird and from it make the .pre dictions they would not be essentially change t I noted in advance th number of earthquakes f r each year and. month, always getting my infor mation Ironi tne,same sources noun the seasons when there would be the greater and the lesser, numbers, the times when the red 'sunsets would ap pear, disappear and reappear, how they, would fade out from year to year and when they will disappear fiaally as a phenomenon. '" ' I found in 1885 that the planetary . massing with Neptune. Saturn andlico. PEOPLE TALKED ABOUT Mme. Patti is to begin her Anierlc- 1 - IT " Henry George will likely Ike ' tbe" ft Working-man a candidate for the May All butPV OI rew xorK- Gen. Cliaton B. Fisk will run as Prohibition candidate - f or Govern of Knur .TnroAv f hia fall. " " rf- .- Gill ia a member of the mission, arid Drum is Acting ry of War. Is there anyi name? , t Galveston .reics, has been appointed i t Minister to Austria. He is a native- North Carolinian. Mr. Peirre Morgan, of New Yrfci and the Hon. W. "W. Corcoran, o: Washhfgtm, each sent the Charleston sufferers $5,000 in cash. Gen.Cbeatham. a prpminept-f;r'w-,jJ feAicrtoflf duriaathe war. nd . . late, Postmaster at Nashyille, T died Satorday morning. Hon. Geo. D. Wise of ' rerjominated tor Congre liichmond district against A faithful representatite. Bob Inger soli 1 while, Squire, said that "CSvilS was self denial run mad tion of absurbity and b; m if: -r- i f A V 4bina-" . Her. Dr. Talmage mal -5 iiVturing appeal for the Charlestof "Li-irers to. his Brook yn TabernacleVjiregation last Sunday when over $600 was con tributed by the congregation. ' Wm. W. Seymour, a son of George D. Seymour, of Ogdensburg, N. Y., hand a cousin of tbe late Horatio Sey mour, has been confined irr the insane asylum at Middleton on account of his love lor strong arms. . . 5 Judge ll CIannufg, whose por trait hangs in the PhuHall at Chapel Hill, a cbusin of Hod. John Mannirjg;" "i of'the University, and a native North ' Carolinian, baa been appointed to sue- j ceed Gen. Jackson as Minister to Mex- ; ; lupiter had so far changed that an jn1in Txn. Jr.. Ron of th Ttli- equilibrium might be not far in the noig Senator, has a real estate andrJ 4 .istauce; but just then (and-wbennX loan office in Washington. Builer really out of this massing with Nep- Mahone, s in of the Virginia celebrity, tune), wnde Saturn slowly hk 5ld is iQ tn6 banking business with aorn, Ajax, "s ill fignt.ng," left the field of o the late Henry D. Coote. Join ' Neptune, Jupiter, his greater son, was sjherman'a nephew ia in the real es -cl s upon old Uranus the father of- ;ute habinesB at the capitoL an. j.l 1 Lie u occurreu to me iuul ura nus ha.t, in 184G,'by hi-tperturbati ms, panted out, to thrue astronomers, in three coun'ries, th tnen unknown planet Neptune; and that the wander ings ot mercury out ot his or' it as it were, had couyincrd the great Lever rier that there was an iuter-Mercuaitl planet, wlr.ch was soon found by Dr Lesoarhault, and credited by him to Leyrrier. More VVork for Mr. Bayard. Harriet and Virginia Washington, of Berryvill, Clarke County, Va.j sTaid to be the nearest surTiving relatives of George Washington bearing his name, are in delicate health and in pressing need. They are. middle-aged, high- minded ladies, who enj ly the respect of the community in which they live. Rolfe S Saunders, of Teunessee, ter long waitiog, lately " secured a: This convinced me that Jupiter office worth $8 per day and expense would not piss Uranus without giving lojthe surprise of his friends he la ua some mention of the transit, and wees resigned the place he had Bought wh m I sw that Jupiter would have so long, and it turns out that it is Mars first 'on nis right arm and then cause he 1-arus thaf. he owes the go on his left, and wound repeat thegr-at ernment $51,tM)0 on an account ru acts of March in August, add that in ni 2 back to when he was revrn Aug 1st Mercury -who had told us of collector under President Johnsof Vulcan wm d fall i do tue line with To pay this he wculd "nav6";tQ"saf J t'ie earth, Mars, Jupitfcr and Uranus, 20 years iu his new office befpre ju-t wher the moon wiuld swim into could get any sa ary. t . e ao..,u linn u tinro tlm a. in a?lii - uus was not far belo the sun Saturn Senator B.ck, 9f K-ntucky, has ju, no- far from the line of Vnas and arnved home' ar . h8 . be.en lnt k w e not -ar from that of Saturn- 'ewea e!8,s tnat,.D.aine s speeci is not up toins stan lira ot nis ut erv nnces; tnat John Sherman is thje ablest stt'es'nan among the RepubE- .s ca s ot.tne Senate, and that rtee , oi vlairi", occupies a corresDoi ding posi- ti n in the House; that Speuer Car islc nd Col. M 'rrison are the lead- : ing Dnmocrat- in the House, but tbat ' wih a little more experience Brecken- ridge, of Kentuc y, will devel p ioto. f thiMb estmao on thi fl or, barring alwas the. Speaker; that President' . Cleveland is noueat and c mscientioua ar Th re appears to b or ot'ler :ises i on l a' another case s demaudi g I conf s-t 10 a fe ling of awe, wien the eartn Mtond, a- nr did, on Li e 27th. I'h n the E 'St was sn iken and Ita -mu nd G e ian t, wns topoled as Vesuvius pour forth anew a.'iii "h h- 31st, one wboie coun ry was shak n to ts 'o unlati ns on widen n stili trembles as I write. -.MA. Cure for Diphtheria. t'ie attenti"n of the6ta e Dep imnent It i. as ie-n brought to S cr tary tJytrl's atte tionthat for two y a s twenty Ameri-an citizens have b-e in pn'son .in dur cc ., Hn i that t-evera1 ' ave ied It ; is to be hoped tht th-re haa heen; some mistake in ti-is humihatieg "tai'ement, and yet Amer ican neBptp:rs make it. But the account is pr bably true. C ipt Rol leston of tbe 3riiish army, was trav elling in Moroco, and it is said that he waa tne discoverer of th coudi-. At. this mom-rit there is not a plu . t o ' the east f the e rt'i,and ith th iu all f'om Vuha i to Nep une -tne moon just iiO i ins to pu l up n the -ib for af ty, and sue is sfe, I an I ia growing stronger with tnero d ub" i o'.for thougo no' in un )reis p e,out has made i'iunars,anaiK ars rti 1 in tm- hundr ds o cclh many ot th-m, upon the. financial os she mu-t hav- b'f re Bailed question ; and that he would be-re- o .nd t r u.h the. simi groups of punets. I oca - .- I need attempt to tell no new tru'h, on y t poiut to tbe lavis of Keppler and 'he s stems ot Newtou-tn n re nind the reader thar, while the d b c ivery of Uranus.in 1781, by Herschelf w-is an accident (when be was qomet- huntnig), tne drawing f N-ptune n nominated if the Convention; was to ' j be held this year, but what wfll hap- v v. ueu lwu jeara tel from now ia . hard to Mrs. Cleveland at Church. nor less than spirits turpentine Dose, nnn teasnoonful in the morning and the sime at night. "The result is really marvelous. ThA . inflammation of the abnormal A SMALL BOAT IN A TEMPEST. The larger vessel had cone down; He felt he must die. The surf was breaking over the boat, and he said ) orvfour causes for such a calamity to a vessel, j I! have been- told that it sometimes comes from kindling " . ' ; . ' . TSLSB LIGHTS . te beaclL Ihia .was often so in sailing toward heaven or toward neu, i i.p atnek, I oeaaed'the tide to Btem, It i3 Hot many years andUher. sea ia black with piriucai 1 - when suddenly a st&r arose. hr.t vrjiboni used 'to hulk's vbat-would grapple the- intn ( It was the Star of Bethlehem P. ? until she returned The young woman spent but a diy in the country and reached Newark about sundown. She wanted a hack to take her to her hotel. She met a dinhtharitio spots in the throat grows hackman named Herjrv Sneede first lighter at the edges and in this way they andentered his hack. She displayed gradually shrink until io twenty four a well-filled Docket-book at the time hours they disappear jentirely, leaving arjf paid her fare befo-e she entered no sign. " " the vehicle: She did not reach the To quiet the inflamed tonsils the Bristol that night, bat was drug- thioat was gargled at first every two gud aod taken to another hotel, where hours, ana tnen every inree uuurB, sneede represented that she was nis with the following gargle: "One ounce wife and was ill. They were assigned chlorate potash to forty ounces of dis- to a room and for six days the woman died water.'' remained there, Sneede constantly This remedy has been used with carrying Ud mixed drinks from tbe perfect satisfaction both by adults and j bar and dosing her with them. The children, not one case ending fatally, nroorietor uf the hotel was sick until The Milwakee Volksblatt quoted thi axth day, and when he came down remedy from the German paper, ana he thought he recogmzed Sneede and afterward received a letter irom a sur fold nim so. Sneede denied his lden- scriber in Mitchell county, Ia, saying tity and the hotel keeper sent out for that a child in the writer's family was a hackman to qiia'ify his suspicions, attacked bv diphtheria, treated by lo- The hackman at once identified cal nhvsicians and. died; tnen ioor Snfiede. Just at this time tbe broth- members of the same family were erof the lad v came in, and, when tak similarly attacked, treated by this en t0 jhe r0om where the lady was remedy, and, I am happy to ten you, found in an unconscious condition, at au recoyereu. rr u. oiu. i once recognweu ucr. uiwusbu. brother flew at the scoundrel's throal "I - . i ii . . fm if. r A rvinrtnov. Mftvor- oi and naa almost cnoitea ku me out, pi CbHrieston, 0., arrived last Sunday him when others interferied. A sbr- in New York from Earope on board my scene iouoweu, uunug woicn the Cunard steamer Etruria, and re- Sneede slipped out of the roord in ceived bis first news on the-earth- Borne mysterious manner, and was not quake calamity at quarantine-Xtwa8 seen again till found in. Division street a gloomy greeting for a iK" , f yesterday, r The unfortunatef woman, done bq much, to make vTVJ? under a physician's care aA the ho- and prospcojiA . '-A for three days alter the exposure. tbouVn "When Mrs. Cleveland goes to" chur-h,'' nays a aldington ietter to to our system by fLeverrier, Adame the Memphis Avalanche, "as soon as and Galle. in 181b. was a cientihc la- ne enters tue pew at a taxes a aeai. ror, wrought out by an application of shd drops, her pretty head upon ner tion i.f tliewe nnfortunatrt. American thp h imfi laws tnut have enibled me taaintuv glovea nana and awe"". ... ,t. , -1. . . il ll I 3 I 4A ..'1..1 1 citizens, ine charge aiainsc inem is to not, iq aavance.tneeartnq iaKes anajmoiucun w ciieun yiaj--. debt.; Ul course secretary iJiyani thared suose'B it mere bad not been seines ueraeu ior m- -. . . . i i .1. ... X -r I 11 ; . kdA I wi.l kive the: matter nis eariy auu storms iu tne san, rents in j upper, upon iuu service, -f '-NVt nf V most earnest attention. If found to and visitations of comets daring these course, that she is thef rg' be triie then stern reparati n should vears of ntanetarv consolidation, as ye in the church, fd, ha dumunitnil na wall H.S the imrneili-1 well na t.ht-nA trrfstiMl nnl mt-teorri- tries to conceal her fembaxrassnt te liberation of the unfortarjates. If logical phenomena, I shall have lost true the utrage is high handed and faith in Newton, in Ken pier, and in inexcusable. LeTernef Cabtam llolleston represents the RKmv rrnnd shin Earth ia now American Consul as a sordid and uu- pas6mg tne last strait and escaping iteiing scamp, ii is cnargeu mat, ue thB CtiarTbdis of Nt-ntuna ,and uaes his office to fill bis own pockets. I Scyl'a of Uranus, not again to find the-" ine prisons in wuicu iueauienius greater and vexed . p auets (Jupiter are incarcerate ' ro B'"tl uo ul nnd Saturn) linked with them in draw mostloatnsome and unhealthy kind. ;n th earth from het course or rend By all means fret the alleged outrages ing ner weak pqjnts while she holds oe q.uigeniiy ana Bpseuiiy inquixeu on jjer way Before Mercury again swims into line with the moon and the great plan eta Mars will be far ahead of Jupiter, and Jupiter well away from Saturn m a few years. Saturn wiH soon be well 1 J - XT J 1 t, . i i ; ; j i. j aneau w ouiuuo, auu wuen oaiurn ::!.r11: shall swim in between the earth and hand?" he was asked. Taas.'-"Go rr,?"u. aujr tfm nce, uupiter f .VBa "RTnow the win oe m apposition. eitv!wn?" MTaaa." "That will do. I From this month the ueusual rhe don-t want you, said the merchanr. nomena wm aunmisn annually not ' But." I said when tbe boy had gone, monthly); the earthquake cycle is now I know that boy to be an honest, in- expiring, ana in a lew vearo tne oia dusirious boy, why don t you give oraers will return, lamreadytosup- into,! and let that disgraceful and avaricious Consul be recalled if he is guilty of abusiag his office as charged. - Wilmington War. i ' I stood id a store the other day 1 presentable orders will return. him a chance?" "Because ha basn t port these views by the daily notes m learned to i saj 'yes, but,' and 'rjo, my diary during the last six J"5 ti -rt 1 - nadram ma on Va A.A I and is nmn that no onetmOfiT COUId BIX. J-i ILU I f T." .11 thi timi when. applying for a situation, how nave been so correct in - will he answer customers kom a. month?" What con Id that Hii had fflllAn intn a hatiit -ennnor I Peared, aod tuation, how have been so correct in " ume. atterbeink Indeed, I so lodkJf qaak uld I say to ing of the ear" had not ap htTu l rJared, and at this time, I should not as he waa, whicn turned him away from the first situation he had appli ed sor. Uwget. now place before the public , this rec- ord , wj yours, 3 kr B. FaAior. Palmes, she ia not able to do so- entii When the pastor gives out the li she is glad to turn her atteptJO the hymn-book andlorgettne iortaoie ieeung wnicn i wJTj result of being stared at -,;.r?V ister leads in prayer bowed,, and it drops -fa- whn be prays-for the cL'c trate of the natiorjoidJNlr?tj tion for 'those that are deaf to b&l She does not fidget about and lean ij in the corner and rest her hdad npj her hand as Grover does, cntfc, straight and quiet; listening 1 sermon from begming , , course she fans herself coosttoUyy she would not be a woman if in J not When the basket goes A ste drops her contnbution moc mtoir,andwhenthfT; given out; finds only. the bat the- doxolo correspond metre with it, jd follows thee' ly to the end. When the servi every neck is cranedLto get a lo her face and figure.' She tries t! near unconcerned, bows to the c' people near her whom she t. talcs a Uttle to those nearest he! ib evidently relieved when the ca door bangs and she is hidden view of the crowd thatwp on the sidewalk toP00--' the church ' $'r Xhrbngt'-' 1 V I i "ir J