Newspapers / The North Carolinian (Elizabeth … / Oct. 2, 1889, edition 1 / Page 4
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TELEGRAPHIC TICKS. A Budget of News From Vari ous Parts' of the "World. A Woman Confesses to Murder After Being Strung Up. A few days since a farmer named Dudley, living near El Dorado, Kan,, engaged a Mr. and Mrs. Edwards to assist him in gathering his crops. While walking to the farm that afternoon they were joined by Mr. and Mrs. Bloomer, who were on the way home from Rosalie, accompanied by their three-year-old child. Arrivjng at the Dudley farm, Mrs Bloomer placed her child in . Mrs. Edwards' charge, while she accompanied her husbanc1 to the field to see Mr. Dudley. When they returned to the house the child was missing. The neighbors were summoned to institute a search, but the child could not be found. Mrs. Edwards's strange action? aroused suspicion, and she was finally charged with having murdered the child. .She denied the charge indignantly, and the search was continued. The child could not be found. Mr. and Mrs. Bloomer were satisfied that Mrs. Edwards had made away with it, auci to test their suspicions they proposed to ex tract a confession from her. Accordingly she was told that she was to be hanged, and had letter confess the crime. Khe obstinate ly maintained that sho knew nothing of the causw of the child's disap- pearance. A- rojie was found, one , end placed about her neck, and the other thrown over tho limb of a tree. Just as her Vfciy was about to leave the g-round she brokt down, and confessed that owing to her ex treme annoyance at the child's disobedienc of her commands, she had killed it, and given the body to her husband to dispose of it. H carried it to the creek near by and threw it into the water. Her husband denied any complicity in th crime and the same means were resorted to to force a confession from him. He was strung up for a minute or two and then cut down. He then confessed that he had seen his wife carry the body of the child to th creek and dispose of it there. He, himself, . he said, had nothing to do with the crime, ex-ct-pt to witness the disposal of the Ijody. The neighbors then began a systematic search of the premises and creek. If Mrs Edward's story is verified oth she and hei husband will doubtless be lynched, as great excitement prevails over the affair. i Death, of a NoteI Novelist. Wilkie Collins, the noted English novelist, who had been seriously ill for some time, died a few days ago. William Wilkie Collins was born in Lon don in January, 1824, and was the oldest sod of William Collins, R. A., the well-known rustic painter. His mother was a sister ot Mrs. Carpenter, a noted portrait painter. He was put in the tea trade, but left that tc study law. His first literary work was a bi ography, of his father, -published in 1848. From that time he devoted himself entirely to literature, and published "Antonina," 1850; ("Rambles Beyond Railways," 1851; "Basil," 1852; "Mr. Wray'i Cash Box,?' 1852; "Hide and Seek," 1854. Then in Household Words, "Af- tor Dark," 1850, and "The Dead Secret," 1K57. After that came '-The Queen oi Hearts," 1859; "The Woman in White," I860; lNo iName," ISO'S which appeared in All the Year Round; "My Miscellanies," 1863; -"Armadale," I860; "The Moonstone," 1868: "Man and Wife," 1870; "Poor Miss Finch," 1872; "Miss or Mrs. and Other Stories in Outline," 1873; "The New Magdalen." 1873; "The I.aw and the Lady," 1875; "Two Des tinies," 1870; 'tThe Haunted Hotel," 1878; "The Fallen Leaves," 1879; "A Rogue's Life, from His Birth to His Marriage," 1870; "The Black Robe," 1881; "Heart and Sci ence" 1883; "I Way No," 1884; "The EvU Genius," 1880, and several novels recently oi now current in the periodicals. This record of his stories is Wilkie Collins's life to Ameri cans. As a dramatist he was not successful. Tho novelist visited this country at the enH of 1873 and gave public readings. Storms and Land Slides in Mexico. Advices from different parts of Mexico say very heavy storms have been sweeping over that country since August 15. The latest storm was along the I'acific Coast, and the steamers Pdrfirio Diaz and Alata have prob ably been wrecked. After a five days' steady rain in th State of Vera Cruz, a cy clone passed over the town of Chicintepec, fusing groat destruction, and, to add to the terror of the inhabitants, a great land slide occurred on tho mountain back of the town, apart of (which passed directly through -th town, cutting a great swath through th buildings, and carrying away everything in its path. A torrent of water then poured down the pulley made by the land slide, and flooded that part of the place not already destroyed. There was no loss of life, however, as the people had warning and sufficient time to es cape, but the destruction in crops and loss oi cattle was very great. Two locomotives and ten freight cars on the Mexican Central Rail road were wrecked near Lagos, and Engineer Brandt, an American, was killed, and Engi neer Garcia and Firemen Bolina and Mar tinez fatally wounded. Minnesota's Great Discovery. A Bohemian stonecutter of St. Paul, Minn., named August Boorfried, has discovered a combination of chemicals by tho uss of -which tho hardest stone can be dissolved and cast into any .desired shape, the casting being as hard as flint, translucent and capable of taking on a brillant lustre. It varies in color according to the stone used, and can be had from a bright red to a, beautiful azuro blue. While in the fluid form it can be used for coating any thing having a stone or glassy surface. Mr. Boorfried claims that car wheels and rails can .he made in this way. Ho will start for the- East in! a few days to secure the backing of wealthy capitalists. The Proposed Glass Trnst. George F. Kimball, a Chicago dealer in window glass, says of the proposed glass "trust" that the works at Streator, Ottawa, Rock Isand and other places in the West have passed into the hands of the owners of New York concerns, the properties being bought outright. The purchaser is the United Glass Company of -New York, capitalized at $5,000,000. In some cases stockholders in the local companies have exchanged their holdings for stock in the "trus,t" company. - It is pur posed to placo tho fifty-five glass factories of the country under one management. The main office of the company is to be New York. Hopkins's Bloody Work. Beeley Hopkins, of Phillipsburg, Penn., while intoxicated, provoked a quarrel with his wife, , and becoming violently enraged, procured a revolver and shot . her dead. He then went up staii-s and shot his wife's mother dead, after which he proceeded to an adjoining livery stable, where he shot, him self twice in the head, but neither shot will provo even serious. He -was placed undor arrest immediately and will bo brought U Belief oute. Jealously and a belief in thofaithlessness of his wife are believed to have been the rea Kns that incited Hopkins to the crime. The Officials Apologized. The Governments of the United States and France have finally reached a settlement cf the diplomatic complications arising from the arrest and discourteous treatment of Mrs. Dorr, Miss Van Nostrand, and another New York lady by the French police authorities at Mentone because of a dispute over a dress maker's bill. The French Government has made an explanation and an apology, with notice that the offending officials have been rnnrimanded. J THE PATENT OFFICE. Summary of the Annual Report oi - , ; Commissioner Mitchell. i - : C. E Mitchell, the CommissioDer of Pat ents, has filed with the'Secretary of the In ' terior tho preliminary report of the opera T tions of his bureau for tho year ended June SO, 18S9. There were Teceived during the year 36,740 applications for patents, 808 ap plications for design patents, 101 applica tions for reissue patents, 1281 applications "for registration of trade marks, 772 applica tions for registration of labels, and 2345 cav atsj making a total of 42,047. The number of patents granted during the year, includ ing reissues and designs, was 21 , 518, the num ber of trade marks registered 1111, the num ber of labels registered 312, making a total of 23,941. The number of patents withheld for non payment of final fees was 2858, and the num ber of patents expired 11,1)10. The receipts from all sources during the year aggregated were $1,186,557, and the ex penditures, including printing and binding, stationery and contingent expenses, $999, 6OT, .leaving a surplus for the year of $186,860, which makes the total amount in the United States Treasury to the credit of the patent fund $3,524,526. A comparative statement shows that the receipts of the office were $63,563 in excess of those of last year, while the expenditures were $45,967 in excess -of those of 1883. At the close of the fiscal year 1888-1889, the business of the Patent Office, says the report, was in a satisfactory oondi- L tic$ ucoppartf wigi former jw&n. -THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Eastern and Middle State. Herrick Lapes, aged thirteen, of Wartv Lam, Mass., was killed by Joseph Lebarron, a boy nine years of aje, with a pocket knife. A heavy bridge near Danbury, Conn.,col lapsed. carrying down a wagon, horses and ten men a distance of twenty feet. One of the men was killed and four others badly in jured. Lzoxard & Ellis's oil refineries at Shadyside, N. J., have been burned. The total loss reaches to about $500,000. Thk World's Fair Committee on Site and Buildings have selected, the north end of Central Park, Morningside and Riverside Parks, and the Bloomingdale Asylum grounds, New York cityaa the place for holding the Exposition. At the Alaska Colliery, at Mount Carmel, Penn., two miners, Hugh Roberts and An thony Marchetty, were instantly killed by a fall of rock. " , Maggie Tobi.v, aged ten, of Philadelphia, shot and killed 'her six-year-old sister Ellen, while playing with a revolver that had been carelessly left within the children's reach. Mrs. Patrick Farrell, a boarding house keeper at Jrmyn, Penn., was stabbed to the heart while trying to separate two fighting boarders. Maxwell Stracb, who was arrested at Elmira for intoxication, has died in jail. Tht Coroner's examination reveals traces ol poison, and it is believed that he was drugged and robbed. A locomotive was thrown from the track near Ithaca, and Engineer Orlando Seelev was instantly killed. Jacob Fitzgerald, of Cayuga, dropped dead in Watkins. He was a delegate to the Republican State Convention and went to Watkins to take a train for Saratoga. Ex-Mayor P. D. Walter, of Ixxjkport, has died from the effects of a fall. " ' Delegates to the Republican. Stat Con vention and the meeting of the Republican State League gathered at Saratoga. - - By the upsetting of a boat in Boston Har bor E. G. HartweTl of AValtham and Arthur Taft of Dedham, Mass., were drowned. . There have been heavy frosts in Vermont and Northern New York; heavy snow fell on Mount Washington. The Boston Board of Aldermen have voted to erect statues to Generals Grant and Sheridan and Admiral Far ra gut. Sheriff Nicholas C. Demarest, of Ber gen County, N. J., was run over ""by an ex press train at Rutherford and instantly killed. The New York Daily Graphic, an illus trated paper, has ceased publication. Ax extraordinary plague of pleuro-pneu-monia has broken out among the cattle of Chester County of the adjoining counties of Montgomery and Berks, Penn. South and West. sTnE Cincinnati, Washington and Balti more Railroad has been sold under a foreclos ure for $5,000,000.' Mrs. Hiram S.vell, of Malad, Idaho, has just given birth to six children three boys and three girls. The survivors of the Northern and South ern armies at the battle of Chickamauga, at a meeting in Chattanooga, resolved to turn the battlefield into a National park. The residence of Mrs. A. Lenbower, near Deer Park, Md., was destroyed by fire dur ing her absence, and her two children, aged three and six years, were burned to death. Qne person has been killed and "several in jured by leaping from an electric car, which plunged down Mission Ridge, Chattanooga. Term. The current had failed it. Blackmas Brothers' saw mill and sash factory at Snohomish, AV. T., has been burned. Loss $150,000; no insurance. Joseph T. Raymond, aged twenty-six, was hanged at Moorhead, Minn., for the murder of a policeman. I - The Wyoming Constitutional Convention has adopted a chapter vesting ownership ol irrigating waters in the State and recog nizing rights of prior appropriation. In a riot which has taken place at Okla homa City, the soldiers charged the mot with fixed bayonets, and many persons were wounded. , A package containing over $40,000 be longing to the United States Express Com pany has been stolen from a bank vault it Hurley, Wis. An explosion of gas in a coal mine neai Dayton, Tenn., has badly injured nine men. two fatally. Lightning struck the house of Mr. Spauld ing, at Winona, Minn., killing his six-yeai daughter, and fatally injuring his wife, Onb passenger was killed and several in jured in a collision on the Northwester! Railroad at Blackberry, 111. At a cake walk at Culpeper, Va., James Fitzgerald shot and killed his wife for per mittinga handsomer man to kiss her. The President and ex-Senator Henry G Davis made a trip into West Virginia iron Deer Park, Md. The Corn Palace Exhibition at Sioux City Iowa., is opeu. The public schools have been closed a Marion, lud., owing to the prevalence o: diphtheria. The firm of Belford, Clarke & Co., promi nent Chicago book publishers, with branches at New York and San Francisco, has sus pended, and a receiver has been appointed. "Walter Ball, of West Point, Va., ant Jiis son have been been indicted by the Grand Jury for compelling B. T. Barham, at tht point of a pistol, to marry Mr. Ball's daugh ter. Washington. The American Consul at Kingston, Ja maica, has cabled that a riot has occurred al the island of Navassa, and several Ameri cans were killed. The man-of-war Galena has been ordered to the scene. The Coeur d'Alene Indians have agreed tc sell 250.000 acres from their reservation in Idaho to the Government for $500,000. The Secretary of. VV ar has decided to ac cept the offer of the Indian Rights Associa tion to purchase a tract of land in North Carolina for Geronimo's band of Indians, and to establish them there in a more civil ized mode of life. Major Theophilcs Gaines, of West Vir ginia, has been appointed Chief of the Pen sion Division of the Third Auditor's office, and E. L. Jordan Assistant Superintendent of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing., Superintendent Kimball, of the Life- saving Service,has recommended an increase in the number of life-saving stations on the Adantic Coast. At the rezular meetine of the Woman' National Industrial League at Washington, it was resolved that the women of America should insist on the right to be properly rep resented in the great Exposition of 18V. The United States ship Pensacola has been detailed to convey the members ol the Solar Eclipse Expedition to St. Paul de Loando. The Superintendent of the Census, has ap pointed Kicbard P. RothwelL of New York, chief special agent to take charge of the col lection of statistics ot gold and silver for the A.lth Census. Several of the South American delegates to the International Congress have arrived in this country. .- Colonel Switzler. Chief of the Bureau of Sati sties, at the request of Secretary Win doni, has tendered his resignation. orcijrn. A Hebrew family of six persons, at Szatmar, . Hungary, have been killed with hatchets and terribly mutilated by unknown persons. The motive of the crime was rob bery. Twenty students have been arrested at ists. , Lord Mayor Sexton, of Dublin, has de clared that Mr. Balfour's proposed. Catholic university, will not divert Irishmen from seeking home rule. A war fleet has been ordered to Tangiers, Morocco."by the Government of Spain, and 10,000 troops held in readiness to back its de mand for the release of Spaniards captured by Moors, The freedom of the city of Dublin has been conferred by Lord Mayor Sexton upon Lady Sandhurst Stamfield, the English Home Ruler, amid great enthusiasm Crops in Austria are greatly damaged by a heavy snowiaii. .feasant cottages are snowed under. , ' The British warship Lily has been wrecked on the Labrador coast with the loss of seven lives, and the steamer Florence foundered in the Irish Sea and nine persons perished. The result of the French elections has been a substantial victory for the Repub licans. - The Government of the South American Republic of Ecuador has prohibited , the im migration of Chinese. - William H. K. Redmond, an Irish Home Rule member of Parliament, has been sen tenced to three months'" imprisonment ;f or offenses under the Crimes act. : . J ' Captain Mtjngo and Lieutenant Cabura, two Mexican cavalry " officers, havebeen sentenced to ten' years' imprlsonmtent for crossing- into the. United States territory in search of deserters. j y The accounts published for the fiscal year of 1888 snow that the Ruisiaa Government receipts exceed t& expenditures by 30, W0,- 000 rubles. Thk business portion of Kensington, Prince Edward's Island, has been, burned. Another strike occurred of the stevedores employed in the East India docks, London. Wilkie Collins, the famous novelist, bss died of paralysir f the heart. The United States warship Enterprise arrived at Inverary, Scotland, and the Duke of Argyle entertained the officers of the vessel at his castle. Although General Boulanger has been personally successful in getting elected to the French Assembly, his followers have been overwhelmingly defeated. The Re publicans will have a majority of almost 150 members in the new Assembly. Boulangar having been declared ineligible by the High Court of Justice, his election is useless unless validated by the future Chamber. A chest of dynamite exploded at the sta gtion in St. Petersburg just before the Czar of Russia departed for Copenhagen. latee"news. Lx the case of Henry S. Ives, the young "Napoleon of Finance" charged with an over-issue of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Day ton Railroad stock, the jury at New York disagreed, ten standing for conviction and two for acquittal, j Deposits of gold said to be in paying quantities have just been discovered near Hanover, Penna. ; The Republican State Convention of Mas sachusetts has nominated J. Q. A; Brackett for Governor, and other officers. ' President Harrison and Senator Davis were present at the Centennial celebration at Cumberland, Md. The town of Fort Gay;W. Va:, is terrorized by a gang of roughs. A beating they gave to the Mayor and his marshals caused these officials to resign. The Republican State Convention of Mis sissippi has nominated General James R. Chalmers for Governor and W. C. Mathison (colored) for Secretary of State. The annual convention of the American Bankers' Association opened in Kansas City, fully 1000 delegates being present. Two hundred men entered the jail at Wi nona, Miss., captured Sol Purnell, a colored man, and hanged him to a railroad trestle. General Sherman presided at the meet ing of the Army of the Tennessee, in Cin cinnati, Ohio. Chicago was selected as the next meeting place. The Secretary of the Treasury has accept ed the resignation of Dr. James P. Kimball, of Pennsylvania, as Director of the Mint. Tani Kwo Ying, the new Chinese Min ister, with his retinue ol twenty-nve, arrived at! Washington. ; The commission appointed to select a site for a navy yard oh the Pacific coast north of the forty-second parallel has recommended the selection of a point on Puget Sound. Secretary Tracy will ask Congress to build ten new steel men-of-war and to leave their size, horse power and general design t the Navy Department. Eliza Cook, the noted English poetess, is dead in her seventy-second year. Joe Kemp, who was taken out from the Quebec ruins alive after one hundred hours' rrmrisonment. has died. ASLEEP MANY TEAES. Prolonged Stupor of a Minnesota Man Strange Effects of Ague. In the little village of Utica, Minn., lives Herman Harms, who has been sleeping soundly most of the time for the last twelve years. 1 housahds or people have been1 to visit the man. Doctors have come long distances to see him. What the secret of his long sleep is no one has been able to dis cover. The story is not a legend, neither is the sleeper a myth. He is sleeping still. The doctors say that he may live and sleep twenty years to come. Harms is a German about fifty-one years old. Twelve years ago he was seized with fever and ague. He had long spells of fe vered sleep for four years, Then the mysterious speii seemea to leave nini, ana tor three years ne was almost a wen man. Jiiay 13. 1884. Harms ate his morning meal as usual. Sud denly ne felt stupor coming over bun. He put down the cup that he held in his hand. rose ana cast nimseii neavuy upon the bed. Almost Deipre ne toucnea the bed ne was asleep. For three years he slumbered. He did not even dream. Ho lived, but it was a living death. Many remedies were tried, but xney aia no good. ine strangest thing about this mysterious man is mat in tins perioa ot three years iiarms woie every night ot his own accord aoout xz o'ciock, rose tarnished, ate his sup per and went back to bed. Once every day he emerged from oblivion and talked with his friends, entered for a few moments into the old family life and then supped away again. At the end of three years he aerain rose 'from his bed, but his limbs had grown weak from long disuse. He was able to ' totter about the house in a feeble way, in constant fear, that sleep would again overtake him. or a few days he walked out in the sunlight. For a few months he kept awake. Then he felt the stupor come upon him. His eyes grew heavy, his limbs leaden, and he sank down under the weight of sleep. This time he has been asleep for nearly two years, but he does not awake in the way he formerly did. He cannot rise in bed, and it is plain that he is Gradually sinkiner. Now ha waVt only when he is awakeued. It has been sug- gesteu uiai ne is in a nvpnotac condition: that while his body sleeps his mind is living FIVE PERSONS KILLED. A Freight Train Crashes Into a Pass ing Coach. A frightful disaster to a suburban passenger train has occurred in the southern outskirts of Chicago, 111. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific tram was crashed into by a freight train at the Lake Shore and Pan Handle crossing near Eighty-seventh street. Englewood. Five persons were killed and four seriously injured. The passenger train was at a stand-still, one coach pro jectihg over the crossing. Into this coach containing about sixty persons, plunged the freight tram. traveling rapidly at right angles to the Rock island tram. The wreck or the passenger coach was instant and complete. The acci dent was clearly due to the carelessness of the engineer. THE LABOR WORLD. Imported laborers in Alabama recently ;j jy t were paia nve cents per aay. England's Engineers' Union has 52,000 mamutsrs, ana nasspent fl4,iw3,o7& in bene- nts since 1853. ihe Amalgamated Machinists' Union of New York city is active in its efforts to form a national organization. InK convention of the International Cigarmakers' Union of America was recently m seasiuu 1U new x orK city. .Lord Randolph Churchill has become one of the foremost champions of the eight- uuiu uiuYemeut in i.ngiana. i Qivm, wui&men were aiscnargea dv a leather manufacturer in Newark, N. J., be cause mey aia not worK on .Labor Day. In some of the densely populated districts oi uouqod inre are Darbers wno suave cus tomers ior tjje moderate sum of one cent eacn. according to the news from Maine, all the sawmills oa the Penobscot River are now in full operation under the new adjustment oi wages. The greatest single industry in any city in the world is said to be the manufacture of carpets in Philadelphia. It employs 7850 mums ana it, ouu workmen. it is not likely that there will be another strike of the seamen on the ocean steamers at' the English ports for a long time again. The last striKe was a miserable failure. lhe .National Textile Workers' Union, wiucn noias a cnarter in the American Fede ration or Labor, now has a . membership of uuu iuuvea among nineteen branches. At the Convention of the National Brew ers' Union in Cincinnati, eighteen branches were represented. New York will continue to be . the . headquarters of the National union. . , . - There are limestone works at Glenarm in County Antrim, Ireland, where several hun dreds of people are employed at wages ave raging Hjper week for very liard work and long nours. 4 Miss Sallxe L. Bull, of Alaska, has bee appointed a copyist in the Interior Departmem at Washington, on certificate from the Civt Service Commission. Miss Bull is the first person ever appointed to the departmenf A DAMG ROBBERY. A Mail and Plundered Passenger Train by Desperadoes. The Expressman Made to Sur render at the Point of a Pistol. The Mobile and Ohio south bound mail and passenger train has been held np by train robbers at Buckatunna, Miss., a station sev enty miles north of Mobile, Ala. Just before the train left Buckatunna two men disguised mounted behind the tender of the train and covered Engineer Jack Terrell and Fireman Thomas Hust with revolvers. The leader ordered the engineer to pull out and stop at the bridge, two miles below Buckatunna, and to place the train so that the express and mail car should be on the furthur side of the bridge from the rest of the train, the bridge being a trestle over a deep creek. - "You obey instructions or it's death," he said.; " The engineer reluctantly obeyed and ran the train where the men with the pistols wanted it. Then there appeared a third robber, dis guised like the other two. These three made the engineer and fireman come with them to the express car and the engineer had to call out to Expressman J. W. Dunning to open the door of the car. Dunning, taking in the situation, opened the door and the chief robber jumped in, the other two remaining outside to guard the engineer and fireman. The leader made the messenger dump the contents of the safe into a canvas sack, but noticing that he was not closely watched, Dunning shoved some of the money aside, so that about $1000 was hidden, the robbers get ting $2700. All this money belonged to the Mobile and Ohio Railroad Company. Along side the expraes car door was a pile of $70,000 Government money, en route to Florida, which the robber failed to notice. Then the robbers made the expressman get out of the car and go with them to the mail car. W. C. Bell, the mail agent, had suspect ed that robbery was going on and tried to get into a baggage car with a number of regis tered mail packages. Just as he stepped to the end door of the . car he saw through a glass that the robbers had intercepted him: The leader, supposed to be Bunch, faced him, pistol in hand, and, finding Bell's arms full of packages, said : "Dump those Here on my leit arm." There were twenty-four packages in all, and Bell dumped them as requested, lhe robber then made Bell hand him a registered pouch and ordered the agent to open it, but Bell had no key, so the robber carried the pouch off with him. The pouch was made up at Meriden and the contents and value are unknown. Just then Billy Scholes, the conductor, who had been trying to find out what the trouble was and had armed himself with a W inch es ter, came out of the rear of the train, waved his lantern and shouted : "What's the matter?" . The robbers fired two shots at him, crying out: "Come up here and you'll see what s th matter." The ensrineer told the robber to let up on shooting, as the train hands would open fire and shoot their own men. There was no more shooting and the train . . . . . 1 " 1 . ' A. was ordered to puu out at once, wnicn iu did, the robbers disappearing in the under growth on the west side of the track. The train pulled down to Citronville and swapped time with the accommodation train, and the accommodation train engine and ear was sent back to the scene of the robbery with detectives and an armed nosss. The leader of the robbers is a man six ieet high, of about one! hundred and seventy pounds weight, dressed m common ciotaing and a siouca nat. ills assistants wore com-, mon clothing and nothing to distinguish them. When the handkerchief slipped down a little off of the leader's face the express messenger says he saw he had a black mus tache and he thinks he baa a oeara. The leader of the robbers is believed to be Rube Burrows, a noted desperado, the man for whom a search created so much excite ment in the northern part of Alabama- a few months ago. At that time it is believed he was organizing a gang to head up some train,: and the Mobile and Ohio company, anticpat ing an attack, armed all its train hands with Winchester rifles, lnis was maae puoiic, and was doubtless what the robber referred to when he said during the progress of rob bing the mail car: "The Mobile and Ohio dared me to hold up a train, and I wanted to show them I could do it." i Another Train Robbery in Texas. At a late hour in the night, as the north bound Santa Fe tram was pulling out of Crowley, ten miles south of Fort Worth, Texas, three ( men boarded the train and two others jumped on the locomotive. The two on the engine placed pistols to . the heads of the engineer and nremen ana tola tnem to stop. The robbers cut the engine, baggage, mail and express cars from the rest of the train and made the engineer pull half a mile further. One of the men then got into the express car and , ordered the messenger to show them the money. He pointed to three bags of Mexican silver dollars. One of the men ripped open a sack and shov elled the silver out of the door, while the oth er one threw out th"e other sacks. They took two packages, said to contain $5000 each, but overlooked three or four money packages for Fort Worth. The engineer was then made to couple up and move. y The tram reached r ort w ortn at mia- nightj, and a posse of twenty men started in pursuit at once. A YOUTHFUL MUKDEREE. Cut Hi Sister for Interfering "With Sis Amusement. While Frank Hollywood, aged ten years, of New Bedford, Mass., was playing with an old clock at the residence of his father his sister Mary kicked ths clock. Frank then stabbed his sister in the right limb with the jagged blade of an old knife, severing the femoral artery. The girl was picked up un conscious and dying. The boy was arrested. wniie being conveyed to the station nous he tried to break away from the officers, with the avowed intention of drowning himself in the bay. PROMINENT PEOPLE. . Lord Tennyson walks three mUes every day- - Kino Alfonso, of Soain. weighs thirtv- five pounds. Mrs. Cleveland writes a letter to her mother every day in the year. Mary Anderson is responsible for the popularity of English shoes among Ameri cans. Mb. Edison smokes a great deal: the more work he does," the more cigars he con sumes. vtEORGE W. WILLIAMS, the historian of tne colored race m America, is living at Worcester. . i Marshal Field is rated the wealthiest man in Chicago, with a fortune amounting LO UUUjWU. Ei-SemaTOR Pi.att nf Kpw his office by 8:30 everv momino nn'ri iw leaves ueiore o. Joaquin Miller contemplates purchasing - ja--m. iu leaving oan Francisco lor a cruise in the South Seas. - MHZ. CARNOT. Wif e of the French Prosf dent, is or medium height, with olive com plexion and Koman features.1 lHARLES t . I'ARRAR. SOT1 of Piinnn Farrar, of England, has come to this mnn. try to complete his education. xRince Bismarck now devotes a crest of time to playing solitaire. This was a f avor- iie cara gimeot JNapoleon 1. . I bENATOR Morrill, of Vermont, isseventv. mneyears old, and has represented his State k asmngron thirty-live years. Theodore Roosevelt, Civil Service Com. MIDCimiAI. -an C . 1 1 . mortality. His handwriting has been dis uivuci. is t:LLiLitf cunuonan v npjir im co verea to oe as bad as Horace Greeley's. Ex-President Cleveland is stilL un decided as to his European trip. Mrs. Cleve land is said to be anxious to go across and spend a few months in the south of France Mark Twain asks from SSOOtn sinon for a story or sketch and hn asks. Frank Stockton's nri for anno arr.Ac is $350. T. B. Aldrich charges S300 f or n few verses. Sir William McGstcnR fir. New Zealand, has recent! v made th oont of Mount Victoria, 13.121 feet high, the high est peak of the Owen Stanlev range. New Zealand. . .. Miss Helen Gould da Gould, is said to have always believed she had a mission to teach, and even now in structs four music pupils, members of her church, at her home. ? , H . ; ; Wilkte Collins, the novelist, ie chrtif on delicate looking,, -with ,vry small hands and feet and a cheerful face. His In and beard are snowy white, and he habitually wears spectacles.--He is an inveterate smoker. U The census of the- Citv of MaTim tir recently under the aireetion of Governor OebaUeros, shows a population of 839,535, . THE NATIONAL GAME. " J Eight straight victories is Columbus's best record for the season. Secretary of Agriculture Rcsr has become an admirer of baseball. Arthur IbwisSs playing a wonderfully brilliant game at Washington's short field. Thx Chicagos have no chance now for theJ cnampionsmp, out. mey juau nant winners, and never relax a bit in their efforts. 1 !' -f Wvrsisa the League and subsequently the World's championship means a division of seven or eight thousand dollars among the New York players. i Fog arty, of Philadelphia; is at the head of the lieague base-runners, with Brown, of Boston, second jKelly, of Boston, third, and Ward, of New York, fourth. New Haven, Hartford, Waterbnry, Provi dence, Fall River, AYorcester, Lowell and Manchester, is the circuit outlined for the proposed New England League of next season. Umpires McQuade and Curry agree that the double umpire system is the onlv proper one for the game, and that it would be wise economy in many ways for the League to adopt it next season. i When" Kelly signed a three year contract with the Bostons one of the provisions in it was that he was to captain the team during that period. Kelly says he will remain Cap tain until his contract expires. Ryan is Chicago's best base stealer. Brown has upheld Boston's honor : in that respect, McAleer for the Clevelands, Glasscock for Indianapolis, Ward for New York. Fogarty for Philadelphia, Hanlon for the Pittsburgs and Hoy for the Washingtons. , During the season there have been 19 ten inning games, 5 eleven-inning games, 8 twelve-inning games, .2.1 thu-teen-inning games, and 1 fifteen-inning game the one played at Chicago on Aug. 2, when Chicago finally won from Cleveland by a score of 8 to 7. -, . : The total number of tie games up to re cent date is eight. The Bostons have tied twice with New York and ! once with Chi cago. The Clevelands have tied once each wnth Indianapolis. Pittsburg and Washing ton. Chicago has tied once with Pittsburg, and Philadelphia once with Washington: The number of "whitewashes" to date is ihirty-three. Singularly enough, the Wash ngton tail enders have a better record, in re gard to this point, than any other club in the League, except the Chicagos, as these two ?lubs have been whitewashed only once each. fhiladelphia has suffered most with eight' n miewasnes. Cleveland and Pittsburg have been whitewaihed six times each. Boston five times, and New York and Indianapolis thrice sach. - . .j A recent Toledo-Detroit game at the former city was marked by two unusual in cidents. Pitcher Cushman had a bone in his pitching arm broken by a liner in the first inning, and afterward Shafer got into an iltercation with Umpire Brennan for calling him out, and in his anger .Shafer struck Brennan. No arrests were made, as Brennan manfully said he WDuld pot disgrace the Toledo grounds by h iving ;.to call upon the police for protection. ; t ' i - . LXAfiUE RECORD. 'Won. Lout. Percent m.ae IS aw xori 78 41 .655 Boston 77 t 42 .646 Philadelphia.......... 61 59 .508 Chicago. .'. 62 63 .496 Cleveland..-. ... 58 66 .463 Pittsburg... ..,56 68 , .453 Indianapolis ....... 55 71 .437 Washington....; . 39 76 ..339 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION RECORD. Won. . 83 .'78 . 68 . 65 . 66 . 54 . 51 . 26 , Lost. Percentage, Brooklyn. . St. Louis. ..... 41 .669 44 .639 50 .576 53 .551 59 ' .528 73 .425 72 .415 99 .2011 Athletic. . .'. .... Baltimore Cincinnati..... Columbus Kansas City. , . Louisville THE COUNTRY'S SCHOOLS. - H - Synopsis of the Commissioner of Edu i cation's Annual Report. : H. N. B. Dawson, the Commissioner of Education, has filed with the Secretary of the Interior his annual report for the year ended June 30, 1889. He says that from an analy sis 6f the statistics of public schools for the decade of 1876-77 to 1886-'87, it appears that the growth or. the system, considering the whole country, outstripped during that period the growth of population, the excess of the Increase oi enrolment over : the in crease in population, six to fourteen years of age, being 1.6 per cent. This gain. the Commissioner says, is due entirely to the progress of the public schools "in the two Southern sections, and more especially in the South Central division. The sentiment in favor of free schools supported ; by public funds, he says, is becoming i each year more universally prevalent. The public school sys tems o the Southern estates nave been un dergoing an unprecedented development L under laws adapted in eadh case to local cir cumstances, and are nowj practically all es tablished on a permanent basis. Colored chil dren are apportioned an equal share of the school f unds, unless in the State of Delaware, and their schools are kept open as long and under as well paid teachers as those of the white children. The funds for the support of these schools are furnished mainly by the white inhabitants. In the course of his remarks upon the pub lic schools in the principal cities, the Com missioner says: "In no department of city school work is improvement more manifest than in the primary schools, : and this for the reason, perhaps, that in them there was the greatest room tor improvement." The Commissioner regrets his inability to report a general adoption of physical train ng in the public schools. , . NEWSY i GLEANINGS. There are naav 170,000 Mormons ia Utah Territory. The Belgian Exhibition in London next year will open on April 15. . The gold export from the Cape and Natal. South Africa, during August amounted to $600,000. . ! There is building in a shipyard in Maine. what is said to be the largest clipper ship in tne world. A company has been organized at Daven port, Iowa, for the object ; of building a $1,000,000 union passenger depot. Stray dogs are seized in Birmingham, England, ana alter Deing poisoned are cre mated in a iurnace at tne rate or fifty & day.: The Parliament of Sweeden has passed a law prohibiting the importation of oleo margarine, and restricting its manufacture at home. I There are eleven grain elevators in St. Louis, with an aggregate value of $4:000,000. lhey nave all been consolidated under a sin gle management. A series of torrential rain storms and floods in the southern provinces of Russia has isolated several villages by making the roads impassable. i , A London journal states shirts of chain ar mor, which cost about $500, are now worn by more tnan one distinguished person on the continent of Europe. j The Disconte Gesellschaft, in coi Junction witn anotner innuentiai bans in Hamburg, are ' about to issue a Chinese loan to the amount of $40,000,000. i he nrst iov oi ivory tnat nas been im ported into Belgium direct from the Congo, Central Africa, has just been sold at Antwerp, suiu .re&uzsu very nign prices. Al. de Freyciset, the French statesman. has issued a commission to inquire into the feasibleness Of employing swallows to carry war messages in neu or earner pigeons. IN some parts of the West, hundreds of artesian wells have been sunk, each yielding a large flow of water at a depth of 1000 feet. The water is utilized to run mills and fac tories. ; . . ;.'!." The Czar has a new train of cars to travel in. j The cars are connected with each other by vestibules, so that he can pass from one to another without being seen ; from the out side, and they are covered with ' iron and cork. -j A Memphis policeman, who was called on to shoot a dog, managed to hit a boy in the leg, a man in the foot and i a horse in the neao, ana, wmie ne was . scattering two or three more bullets along the street, the dog iruLteu ou. ,i The colony of Pitcairn Island numbers 120 people, all related by blood or marriAEre. and the amount of money circulating among them has never been above $80. The one who gets hold of $20 of this is considered a millionaire. J . v The crews of the German men-of-war Adlar and Eber, which were wrecked in th Samoa hurricane have arrived at KieL Ger- many. ITince Henry, in an address, told them that they had nobly performed their duty in Samoa, showing themselves brave sons or. tne Fatherland. . Secretary Tracy lias finally decided to Duiia tne two 3000-ton cruisers in the Gov ernment navy yards. One vessel complete will be built at the New York Navy Yard, as well as the machinery for the other, while the hull and boilers of the second vessel will i coBstTucreq at tne jxonolU JSavy Yard, m& gTWJfc Fart' ot a Heights of Quebec Fall on the seg jjelow; Many Homes Demolished tuA People Killed and Injured A landslide occurred at Quebec 'from the face of Cape Diamond, below the Citadel, at twenty minutes past seven in the evening, crushing the houses beneath ft and imprison ing the inmates below the debris, which was piled to a height, in some cases, of twenty to thirty feet over the houses which were stand ing below, i Two fearful days of rain, and flood succeed ing a month of dry weather filled the crevi ces of the soil immediately below and beyond the southern extremity of Duff erin Terrace, and an enormous mass was detached from the cliff, and hurled as with the noise of many thunders, slowly and majestically at first, nut. r&nidlv increasing in momentum through its slide of a couple of hundred feet, over the retaining wall, pushing naif a dozen nouses out of its wa.v and crushing most of them beneath its weight as tnougn tney naa been so many paper boxes. Some of those who saw the slide were standing at the doors of their houses, and were too paralyzed to move out of its way. Others ran to a place of safety. . y . . . i .f ... The debris ol rocE niiea up tne. narrow street to the depth of some thirty feet and cut off all communication between the ; portions of the city north and south of it. On the wharves behind where the houses-had stood. scattered timbers and the earth and rock that partly covered them were mingled with huge piles of coal that left little passageway be tween them and the river. , The river policemen, whose station is close by, and the city police from Champlain Market were among the first to rush to the relief of the imprisoned, the wounded and the dying sufferers. As soon ! as an idea was ob tained of . the extent of : : the dis aster the whole" - force of municipal police was turned out to render assistance. and Chief Colonel Vohl applied to B Battery at the Citadel for assistance.4 A. strong rorce of the military, under command of Major Wilson, turned out to aid m tne removal or the debris. Fire broke out almost immediate ly in some of the ruins, but the brigade when . i i.i a I i summon ea soon exiinguisueu iu names auu set to work to assist in the search for the dead and dying. I ' ' : Nearly all the doctors of the city were in attendance and did all that was possible for the relief of the sufferers, for whom, va the absence of the Mayor from the city, stimu lants were promptly obtained' in the name of the city. ;v " Quebec's famous promenade, uufferm ler race, has been ieartuuy snaKen by tne suae. especially that portion or it lying nearest tne CitadeL which almost overhangs the cliff whence the land slide fell. Between the two last kiosks it has parted so much, from the rock to which it clings that it has been con demned and closed to traffic by order oi tne Citv Engineer, there being also a wide rent in the rocks Tetween it and the Citadel. The mass of rock detached from the cliffs' side left a vacant space of extraordinary di mensions, ine nouses in mat locanty were built of stone and brick, and inhabited by ship laborers, etc. The omcers and men of the Koyal school of Cavalry, and the Redemptorist Fathers went to the rescue vith ropes, picks and shovels. About 600 men were put to work. The damage is estimated fct $100,000, and j the killed and injured at about fiftjy. Later Details. With the break of day was started afresh the" work of removing the debris of the de molished houses, and willing' hands dexter ously wielded picks, axes and shovels ob- . t&ined for them by the City Engineer. The Koyal Canadian school of Cavalry, under command of Captain Howard and Lieuten ant Lessard, which, with B Battery, had done excellent service throughout the night and had retired at'a late hour in the morn ing for necessary repose, returned to. work in good time and continued the valuable aid given by them during the night. About twelve o'clock noon the spectators at the Morgue were horrified to, witness a procession of more dead bodies from the ruins and they came one atter another borne upon stretchers erected by the men of Champlain street: They were carried into the River Po lice Station. ' - Mrs. McCann, one of the victims, had been paying a visit to some friends. When found her position was as if she was about tying the strings of her bonnet. . Mrs. burke, one of the victims, met a most cruel death. When found she was lying' un der a cross-beam, terribly strained. At four o'ciock the crushed bodies of Mrs. Jamet Bradley and one of her children were . taken from the ruins of their home.. The body of Mrs. Martin Ready was also taken from the debris. Still another sad incident came to notice in the rescuingof Mr. Farrell at the time of the calamity. He had his babe in his arms. The two were found together, i The dead were all laid out in the Water roiice station, wnence about ten were re moved by friends. The Coroner reported de composition as having already set in; and said that the rats were swarming in immense numbers from the wharves, so that he had to have coffins constructed as rapidly as pos sible. Honore Mercier, Prime Minister of the province; Joseph Shebyn. Provincial Treas urer; Owen Murphy, M. P. Pi. and Mr. Fitz- patrick, Crown Prosecutor, went around and viewea tno Doaies in company with the Cor oner, tne bisters of Charity and many priests. AJtogetner between eighty and one hun dred people' were injured in one way or an- Sir A.: P. Caron and Sir Hector Langevin both telegraphed their sympathy with the Buuerers, and the former sent down a mili tary engineer from the Royal Military Col lege, Kingston, to inspect the cliff. A DISASTER AVERTED. Miraculous Escape From a Terrible Landslide at Milwaukee. The startling information' is made public that a great catastrophe during the recent National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic at Milwaukee was averted by a mere chance. The sloping hillside at Juneau Park, where 100,000 people were seated on the night of the sham naval battle, was moved six lnenes. ta.a it not been for the stone road-bed of the railway at the foot : of the hill, the whole side of the bluff would have slipped off ' into ?the lake, carrying the people with it. The ground at the. bottom of the bill is bulged, and at the top there is a deep fissure where the sod and earth have been torn apart. - Before the seats were erected many civil engineers . had doubts, about the safety of the bank, as much of it! consisted of made ground. ' i ; m - , j William J. Fry, a well-known young man in Allegheny, Penn:, committed suicide recently by plunging a lead pencil repeat dlv into bis breast; dimctlv over the hearfc THE MARKETS. 39 NEW (YORK. Beeves 3 57X6 4-60 Milch Cows, com. to good . 30 00 (45 00 2 60 3 50 Calves, common to prime. S heep 4 00 6 00 5 00 Lambs 7 25 5 00. Hoss Live. . . . 4 ." 4 . 4 80 25 Dressed "74 Flour City Mill Extra t 40 Patents...... S 50 85J 56 80 . 41K 35 28 80 75 6.00c 25 20 18 9 " 1A 9 22 "Wheat To. 2 Red. ......... 84 55 75 Rye rState . . . . ...... ... . Barley Two-rowed State. . . Corn Ungraded Mixed. .... Oats No. 1 White.......... 40 70 65 3 15 12 7K "I '8 & 21X Mixed Western Hay No. Straw Long. Rye. . ...... Lard City Steam .......... Butter Elgin Creamery. . Dairy, fair to good. West. Im. Creamery Factory....... Cheese State Factory Skims Light . . . . Western Eggs State and Penn.... ; . . , BUFFALO- Steers Western . .-r-. . . ... . Sheep Medium to Good. . . . 25 25 50 25 00 90 60 Lambs Fair to Good . . ...... Hogs Good to Choice Yorks Flour Family. . . . . . : . ...... Wheat No. 2 Northern. .... Corn No. 8, Yellow........ Oats No. 2, White. ........ 6 25 70 25 84 36 26 74 36J4 255i; Barley JN o. 1 Canada. ....... BOSTON. , Flour- Spring Wheat Pat's.. Corn Steamer Yellow, i. . . ; Oats No. 2 White. . J. 20 45 5,75 45 Rye State. . ;,:. 65 70 WATERTOWIT (MASS.) CATTLE MARKXT. Beef Dressed weight. . Sheep Live weight. ; . 6 5 Lambs. ........ .v. . Hogs Northern. ... , ... PHILADELPHIA. Flour Penn. family. . Wheat No. 2, Red, Sep... Corn No. 2, Mixed, Sep... Oats Ungraded White Potatoes Early Rose Butter Creamery Extra. . . Cheese Part skims, ....... , 3 90 fo. ; 81K 40 26 , 56 g 4 00 ;8i?4 40 26 60 24 The Caster Battle-Oronnd. General Dandy, who is on a tour of Inspection Vf the national cemeteries, has recently visited the Custer battle-ground and finds the spot in good condition. Aa the battle was fought on a high ridge, it has been cut into gullies by storms and many bodies have been exhumed. The nnnmant ia standiner. but has been -a gooa leal chipped ott Dy tourists wno annually overrun the ground. General Dandy will recommend a $15,000 appro priation for the' purpose of putting an iron fence about the memorable spot, where so. many of the Seventh Cavalry and its gallant Colonel laid down their . lives. venter Awn. The Sea Horse. A curious fish, sometimes found in the Gulf Stream, is the hippocampus, or sea horse. In an aquarium these are very interesting. They curl their tails about a stationary object, then assume an up right position. "When some smaller fish that wUl serve for food comes near they make a sudden dive, then resume the for mer stand. Popular Science Monthly. To-Xight and Te-Merrow Kis at, And each day and night during this week you can get at all druggist Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Luncs, acknowledged to be the most successful remedy ever sold for the cure of Coughs, Croup, Bronchitis, Whooping Conxrh ' Asthma and Consumption. Get a bot tle to-day and keep it always in the house, so you can check your cold at once. Price 60c. and $1. Sample bottles free. Thk tallest policeman In the United States Is Lieutenant Malln, ot Philadelphia, who is six feet five and large in proportion. No Care No Pay." i It Is a pretty severe test of any doctor's skill when the pavment of his fee is made condi tional upon ms curing nis patient, i et alter having, for many years, observed the thou r sands of marvelous cures effected in liver, blood and lung diseases, by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, its manufacturers feel warranted in selling it, as they are now doing, through all druggists, the world over, under a certificate of positive guarantee that it will either benefit or cure in every case of disease lor wnlcn they recommena it. lr taken In time and given a fair trial, or money paid for it will be promptly refunded. Torpid liver, or bil iousness," impure blood, skin eruptions, scrof ulous sor esand swellings, consumptlon.(whicli is scrofula of the lungs), all yield to this won derful. medicine, it la both tonic or strength- ' restoring, and alterative or biood-cleansing. Chronic Nasal Catarrh positively cured by Dr. Sage's Remedy. 50 cents, by druggists. At Waterville, W. T., squirrels are so plenti ful that they enter people's houses. and eat the crumbs from under the tables. " Died Like a Dog. i Such is the inscription written upon the tombstone of the average workingman. If he saves a little from his salary he deposits his taoneyin a bank at three per cent., and en riches local capitalists instead of making ju dicious investments for his own . benetit. lie fails to derive any assistance from his capital. If you can spare $1 a month you may become a rich man. Millions have been made In simi lar investments and there is no. possible tib'. Send for f;ill pa'tieulars to the Prudential Trust Co., 1305 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. A judge in Tennessee has instructed his grand jury "to indict all persons who publicly express Inhdel sentiments. lulnw'article that has outlived Zi peart of com petition and imitation, and sells more and more each year, mu$t have merit. Dohbins's Electric boap first made in lw is tun wai arti cle. Ask your grocer for it- He has it, or. will getit. " Over 400,000 patents have been- granted in .the United States. America's finest "Tansill's Punch" Cigar. Sick Headache Is a very distressing affection, generally arising from stomach troubles, biliousness and dyspepsia, and we frequently find persons of both sexes subject to periodic headaches for which they can ascribe no direct cause. But the headache is a sure indication that there is something wrong somewhere, anVi whatever the cause Hood's Sarsaparllla is a reliable remedy for headache, and for all troubles which seem to require a corrective and regulator. It cures dyspepsia, biliousness, malaria, tones the stomach, creates an appetite, and gives strength to the nerves N. B. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar Sill READY RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUERER OF PAIN, Applied ' externally) Instantly relieves !praiui, Kriilftea. Jtnckache. I'nin in the Cheat or Hides. Headache. Tooth ache, nr any other external nnlll, CONGESTIONS. INFLAMMATIONS. KliontnntUni. Neural- g-ia, Lumbago, Sciatica, Tains ia the Small of the Back, etc, CURES ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS, Cramps,' Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nausea, vomiting-. Heartburn, 1)1 A KRHIKA, colic, Cholera Morbus, Fainting- Spells. Inter nally, hall" to a teaspoonl'ul In half atum- uer ot water. 50c. a bottle. Ail Druggists. RAD.HAY. uu POLL 1 An excellent and mild Cathartic. - Pnrely Vegetable. The Hnfent and Beat Medicine in the world for the Cure of all Disorders of the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken according to direction they will restore health and renew vitality. . Price 25 cts. a Box. Sold bv all Druggists. N Y N U 39 . THE BEST REMEDY ' FOR CHILDREN (urmno from Cold in Head, SNUFFLES OR n Ja s A S7 a7 u 11,- rs. uva- A1 particle is aPTlied7LT?Z ' mm mm m m mm m into each nostril and is M flY "rbVLH agTeeable. Price SOcents11 . ""n at druggists : by mail, registered. CO cents. ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren St.. Kew York. AKE GHIGKENS PAY. If you know bow to properly care lor them. For25 cents in stamps yon can procure a 100-PAGE BOOK giving- the experience of a practi cal Poultry .Kaiser not aa ama teur, out. a man working- lor dol lars and cents during a period ef years. It teaches you how to Detect and Cure Diseases: to Feed torEgvs and also for Fattening-; which Fowls to Save for Breeding PurjxJsts: and evervthinu-. iiidwr ,i B"9nld. anow on this subject to mae it m a iak7 bb bj as n a . ior pro'it xi'iTafn Spau tor use. BOOK PUB y. City PEERLESS DYES Are taeSXXT. Sold by Druggists. auuress Xuse Dr. Kcehler's "Favorite Colic Mixture" right along with tucceu. His the best eolio medicine I have ever teen, ISAAC XOOO, Horte, JJeaier, - Brooklyn, Aetc Tork. pISO'S REMEDY FOR CATARRH. Best. Easiest X to use. Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For Cold in the Head it hsw nn.n9i It 13 an Ointment, of to tnenostnls. Price, by mail. Address, .1 lhe man who has invested from three to nvo dollars In a ltubber Coat, and at bis trshalf hour s experience in a storm finds to his sorrow that it is hardly a better protection than a mes jolto nettSnw n.,t only feels charrined at beinr so badly taken in, but also feels if he does nat loot exactly ilka Ask fertile "FISH BHvn- ,,.... AJLaS-j t i t V . ' Yn$ fSr irltlTe AjS. s nd etrUitlTe r Tor l ure or VITlinilTRETl:Kr4 JFEI&t. ktDhiIgcists jiD73EALEisHnrwriER TtlECHAS-A.'VDEELERCd'BMID'Mo- CIRCUS MONEY A aplendid Story for BOYS La n d GIRLS. - ! ttory is of a hero who workrj bard to earn bis pending money. rmeeunf with many F trials and triumphs. and how unselfishly he spent it. How deter, ruination overcame poverty. A boy who coold think bow to earn money in spite of obstatTfcs, and could act nobly, even at a loss of bis own pleasure. A pure story sent free to any boy or girl who will pay the postage only a a-cent stamp required. ' Ccans Publishing Co.,' Philadelphia, Pa, IF YOU WISH A liOOIt RKVOLTER purchase one of th cele brated SMITH & WKSSON arms. The finest small arms ever manufactured and the tlrst choice of all experts. Manufactured in calibres 32, S8 and U-100. Sln cln or rtimbli. fiction. Safety HanimerleM and Target models. Constructed entirely ot bent qual ity wrought ateel, carefully inspected for work manship and stock, they are unrivaled for liniah. durability and accuracy. lo not be deceived i.y cheap malleable cant-iron imitation whlrli are often sold for the genuine article and are n.-t only unreliable, but daiiKerous. The SMITH WESSON Revolvers are all stamped upon the bar rel with firm's name, address and date of patents and are guaranteed perfect In every, detail. In sist upou having the ceuutne article, and If Tour dealer cannot supply you an order sent to address below will receive prompt and careful attention. Descriptive catalogue and prices furnished uion ap plication. S 31 IT 11 & WESSON, tW Mention this paper. fpiingfield, Mana. EST LATEST IMPROVED Machines for THRESniNU AC iEANI U rain, also Machine forSAWINU W OOD with Circular and I rasa- Acknowledged i Cut lini Saws. bT all to ba rea-ardin- ssji&nkU EAST DRAFT. DURABILITY aCUINTITY OF WORK K pf pimpUat Free. Address A.W. GRAY'S SONS, PATXNTXXS ANP SOUS BLAJIxmCTtTUKa. MIDBLETOWN SPRINGS, VT. THE EDWARD- HARRISON MIIjXj oo.. Manufacturer, ol Harrison's Ktaadard Barr Htoae Wrladlag- mn4 Float-lag Mills of all sisea and vaneUM. possesilnr great capao Ity and durability. Mills sent on trial to responsible parties. J.w Irlce.' Write Aew Illustrated 'iU logue and mention this paper. Tim Edward Harrison Mill Co, Now Haven. Conn. $75 TO 9'ISO A 31 ON Til can be made working a horse and give tbelr whole time to the business. Spare moments may be profitably employed also. A few vacancies In towns and cities. B. h'. JOHN SON A. CO., KKtS Main St., Klchmond, Va. JV. Fleate ttate age and lysine experience. Xever mind about sending rtampfor reply. IS. F. J. t'a s ALESMEN WANTED. Fermo tirnt positions iruar- anteed with salary and exnenst's paid. Great advantage to betrlnnera. Fast-selling special ties. No experience needed with us. Outfit stint free. Write quick and got choice of territory, stating age, (Name this paper.) UookerNurserles.Hochester.N.Y. and "VThltfcey Hab it cured at home ttT.'i ontpaln. Book of pat tlcnlars sent FREE. B. M.WOOLLKY. MIX ftca i&i Whitehall Bt. AXLE GREASE !RV.ST TN THE WORLD ITT" Uettuo Genuine. Sold Krerywher. BASE BALL! I,;; Chadwick's Manual. x 5 in. 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Expend a few cents and you have a cure on hand, ready heir needed, and perhaps save a.vauable. horse. If notat your drugKibt's, en close 50 cents for sample bottle, sent prepaid. wit. hOKHLER V CO.. Rethlel.en.. P.. We cheerfully recommend Dr. Koehlrr' "Favorite Colic Mixture." Would not bt without it as long as we have horse. . ISAAC MOSES it ISRO., Sale and Exchange Stables, Eatton, TH n which a small particle is applied 60c. Sold by druggists or sent E. T. Hazeltixe, Warren, Pa. A WET we offer the man who wants service (not style) a rannent that wiU keep him dry ia the hardest storm. It Is l)mTOWEK'8 FISH BJBASD " SLICKEJt," a name fanigiar toevery Cow-boy all Ter the land. With thena the only perfect Wind and Waterprooi Coat is "Tower's Flan Brand-Slicker." HEN cataloroe. asd take no, ether. Ifrour storekeeper catalorae. A. J. TowKaJoetomeni tfu, Boswn. Mat.. ,,t . . - s i I ICO s.k' V i 'i; ---... sew
The North Carolinian (Elizabeth City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 2, 1889, edition 1
4
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