The Carolina Watchman. . - - VOX. XXI. THIRD SERIES, SALISBURY, H. ft. THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1890. NO. 82. GENERAL DIRECTORY CbVSTifGOVSmUSHT. Clerk Superior Court, J M Ilorah. horitr. 0 CKriler. s Hecister of Deeds, H Woodsoh. Treasurer. J SamM McCubbins ftirveyor, B C Arey. Coroner, D A Atvyell. i?imtiouers, T J Sumner chiOrrrmn, W i. Kfcttti C r Maker, Ir L W Cole mnii Cornelius Kcstler. " j-Lip't Fttbllc School. T C Linn. Ihip't of Health, Dr J J KuromcreU, Overseer of 1'oof , A M Brown, 1 TOWX. ' Mayor. Cba 1 Crawford. Clerk, i K Jllllatl. "-Treasurer. I ll-Foust. police, U W Price, Chief, J F Pace, C V Pool, R M Bur ringer, Benj Cnuble. ("omini-vioiiers--North word, J A Ren- 4nenan.. P M Milter; South ward, D It "Julian, J- A Barrett; East ward, J B (ior-do,-TA Coughenour; West ward, It J Uo!ui, J VV Rumple. cnvRciim. . Methodist Services, every Sunday at 11 in and (ii p in. Prayer meeting rvry Wednesday at G p in. Rev T W Guthrie, -pastor, , .iunday school every Sunday afternoon nf : o'clock. J W Mauuey, sup't. Presbyterian Services every Sunday at 11 a iii and 8:3ftp-Bi7 ,Prnyer meeting every Wednesday at 8:30 p m.. Rev J Burople, D I), pastor. Sunday school every Sunday afternoon at 4 p m. i Rumple, sup't. 1. : - c? i x i JjUlllCllll iLi VIWS C?CIJ .-llllllil ill; 11 jpoaudtp m. Prayer meeting every Wednesday at 7 n m. Rev Chas B King, pasture Sunday school every Sunday afternoon at 3 pin. R (r Kiater, sup't. Episcopal Services every Sunday at 11 a m and toiO p m and Wednesday at 0:30 1 ni. Kev F J Murdoch, rector. Sunday school every Sunday afternoon it .'! p in. Capt Theo Parker, sup't. Baptist Services every Sunday morn inf and night. Prayer meeting every Wednesday night. Rev pastor. v -Sunday school every Sunday.at-Oj a.m. T4ios LSwink, sup't. Catholic Services every second Sun day at lOi.a m and 7 p in. Rev Francis Meyer, pastor. "Sunday school every Sunday at 10 a m. Y M (' A Devotionaf services at Hall every Sunday at 10 a m. Business meet ing first Thursday night in every month. 1 H Foust, pres't. LODGES, . Fulton Lodges No 99 A F & AM, meets everv first and third Friday night in each laoutli. E B Xeave, W M. Salisbury Lodge, No 24. K of P, meets every Tuesday night. A II Boyden, C C. Salisbury Lodge, No 77o, K of II, meets every Island 3d Monday night hi each mouth. , Dictator. - Salisbury Council, No 272, Royal Ar canum, meets every 2d and 4th Monday Bight jn each month. J A Ramsay, Regent. " i POST OFFICE Office hours from 7:.'0 a nrlo o:30 p m. Money order hours-9 um too p m. . Sunday hours 11:30 a in to 12:30 p m J 11, Raiushy,!1 M. POWDER Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvelof purity rogtn,&nd vimlesomeness. More economical uiiii, ,ii;dlnarv kinds, and cannot be sold In ! tit inn wiuuiioinullltudeoflow test, short i ,5 ,,llm r Phosphate powders. Seldonly In Kotal Baking Powder Co. .106 Wall st. N s ale by Bingham & Co. , Young & Bos V :n; agd N. p. Murphy. PATTTTnaT Take no ihn unlet.; IjM If I 1 1 I iM W. I.. DomcIm wnif and 1" If tlir' ilrili i umiI supply you. ww direct to factory. cncloninK atlvertia W. L. DOUGLAS cuac for GENTLEMEN. Calf, Heavy not,r WZ&222& Laced Grain and Creed- t.'V iu t,,p world. Examine lib '(H ICK AM) FAltMKRK SlTOE. .OO and l.tB ItOYS' SCHOOL SHOES. An uialt in iVtnjrreas. Button and Luce. $3&$2SHOESlaf51s. ttl unnv vnv nivki v JNpt . Material. Bent Style. Bet FittinC. Uoula, Brockton, Mans. Sold Ij S. BROWN. mm r f ROYAL JSSKI J TARIFF BILL ADOPTED. Mr. EcKinley's "Crazy Quilt" Meas ure Passed by the House. ONLY ONE RBPCBUCAN HAD THE COUR AGE TO VOTB AGAINST IT. BlT SEVERAL 9-ORE ARE PREPARING TO KNIFE IT IN THE SEN ATE BITTER FEELING AGAINST THR' AUTHOR. New York Star. Washington, May 21. The tariff bill ftassed the House Recording to piMgrsunme, although on three minor details jute yams, woolen yarns, and woolen goods-Uie democrats made their points and defeated the Mr-Kin- Ljey combine amendments by a small margin. At least forty of the republi cans who voted for the 'Trill in the House are preparing to knife it in the Senate. Each has a particular griev ance which the newjuse rules would not allow him to air, or to properly present in the Hons1, and he is work ing on his Senator to secure its consid eration in t.he Senate. ,! When "Ben" Butierworth made his ringing little speech in the House this morning, declaring that the Com mittee on Ways and Means was riding over the consciences of members by forcing the passage of the bill without opportunity for decent and orderly dis cussion of its provisions, thirty-nine other r. publicans agreed with him, though only one had the courage to express his opinion by his vote. But- terworth declared the prevailing senti ment when he said that he would vote for the bill not because part' obligations compelled him to do so, but he would Giily vote for it because he believed, aid in fact lie knew, that it would be "keelhauled" in the Senate. This w;is the controlling motive of J the republicans who had opposed the bill in its details, and vet who voted for it in the aggregate. Represent atives Niedringhans of Missouri, Briggs of Colorado and a . Iialf dozen leadins republican members repeated this statement tt-uight to the Star corres pondent,' The republican policy is to rmake a record by passing the bill in the House, and then to kill. it by amendment in the Senate. There is no one of experience in congressional leg islation who believes that the measure will became a law. It has goiie. to the Senate. It will lie there, subject to the orders of the Committee on Fi nance, of which Mr. Morrill f Ver mont is chairman. Mr. Morrill is the author of the preseut "tariff law, and he believes that any effort to interfere with- that in spired production is sacrilegious. Next in command to him on that committee is John Sherman, who sees in Mr. McKinley a dangerous political rival, both in Ohio airrl in national politics. Locnl political issues from Ohio have had a good deaHo do with the progress of the bill in the House, and account for many strange changes of front. These causes tire not less operative in the -Senate. Allison of Iowa is another of the Senate Committee on Finance. The Iowa delegation in the House has been opposed to the McKinley bill in many of its leading features. Mr. Aldrich of Rhode Island is another member of the committee: Rhode Island has voted against some of the material provisions of the bill in tire Home. John Gr. Carlisle will, in all probabil ity, be appointed to succeed Senator Beck on tiie same committee, and his accession will imply a tower of strength to those who regard the bill as illogical and inconsistent, and injurious to American commerce. The Massachu setts delegation are dead against it. The lead ore men will fight it from the newly admitted States. The silver question and many other matters held by the Senate in abeyance, many think, for this express purpose, will occupy the time of the Senate for weeks to come. It is believed that the McKin ley tariff bill is.dead, so far as any ac tion by the Senate is concerned. The only probable outcome is a bill of such a nature that irreconcilable differences will arise between the' House and; the Senatejajid-all action wilt accordingly be postponed for this Congress. McMiltin of Tennesse gave the best epitome of the McKinley " What-is-it" in a few minutes' sfeceh at Hie end of the debate. He said : "There are more than one hundred items in this bill which increase the rate of duty, yet the committee can give us no data to justify these in creases. There are two hundred amendments which members desired to have considered which cannot be called up under the rules. They have put sugar on the free list, but overridden the Constitution by placing taxpayers uirder bonds for fifteen years to pay a bounty of between oiie and three nun dr.'d niiljmn dollars to sugar producers. Thev havepioreased the duty on chem icals' $24ftGX)6;'oii earthernware, So26 000: metals, 9,000,000; cotton goods. $1,500,000; flax and jute. 86,8000tr)00. The increases not set out in the com mittee's schedules altogether amount to :7,0tX),000. The net increase by this bill, in the shape of taxation, of the people of the United States, will amount to $73,500,000, inelud,ing the sugar bounties. More than one hun- dred of the 156 pages composing this stnjiendous bill have had no projer cousideratio:i of the- House.'' .. 13x -Speaker Carli -le'sparticipatiou in the tariff debate to-day brought buoy- J ancy, logic and order into the discus sion, and emphasized the fact of the loss which the democratic party in the House sustains by his removal to the Senate. He secured, under instruc tions of the caucus, a record showing that the democratic party was in favor of reducing taxation, not of increasing. On every provision which involved an increase of the burdens of the people he had a yea4ind a nay vote taken, and put every man on record These votes will be of immense service in the next campaign. Mr. Carlisle will to-morrow pass over to the Senate side and take his seat as Senator. His credentials,vhich ar rived to-night, read that he has been elected for the unexpired term of the late Senator, James B. Beck. Under ordinary rules Mr. Carlisle's salary as Senator will commence at the date of Mr. Bpckr$ death. His salary as Rep resentative is still running. Account ing officers say there is no provision of law to dehne when one salary stops and the other begius under such cir cumstances. A similar point arose in the lifetime of the late S. S. Cox, when he was elected member of Congress, while still holding the commission of Minister to Turkey. Mr. Cox himself offered a bill prohibiting himself from drawing the two salaries, but. it was never pushed .to passage. As a matter of fact, Mr. Cox did not draw the two salaries, bnt his estate stands accredited . .vith the amount he did not draw as Minister to Turkey while serving as! member of the House, and it is likely that a similar duplication of credits may arise in the case of Mr. Carlisle. THE DEBATE IN DETAIL. T, . . r. ... . Hie Hotise went into Committee of , . . . f. i K.. ,V i . . .-. .t- . AlliA ..ff..l I.. .1,1.1- ! Lilt: II IllMC 1 1 1 1 M - I ill Willi ill li i ijl-iii called to order, Mr. Grosvenor of Ohio in the chair. For fully half an hour before noon the House was in the greatest con fusion, and and when, one minute Ira- fore 12 o'clock, Mr. McKinly yielded roreizociQcK , nr. mcAimy yieiuea pirty that isnotfouudeclstrictlvon the the remaining time to Mr. trank of of the Constitution . will stand Missouri, the excitement became so1MlMrfaf'ii. au.m rri,,. Missouri, t ie exciiemenc oeeame so , great mat tne noise was almost iear- enuif;, and Mr. r rank s voice could not be heard six feet from whert; he stood. Suddenly, out of the hubbub arose the clear, loud voice of Mr. McKinley, calltnor - "Mr Chairman Mr. Chairman !' vvii.iu man, im.1. vii, in iiiuii. Quiet reigned in a moment, and the republican leader called the attention of the ! chairman to the fact that 1 J o clock, the hour nzreed unon for the first vote upon the bill to be taken, had . 7. . i mi , I . i i . arrived. He moved that the commit tee, rise and report the bill to the House. 1 n is ceremony naving oeen pertormeu by the Chairman, the bpeaker recogmz- rt- . r l r 1 ed Mr. McKinley who, in deliberate tones, aeoHiiiueu uie uicyiuus 4cn.,.. . t he repnbi,Cflll nnrty. It has compelled and moved the third reading theiii to sell their surplus products in grossment of the bill. Division was . the ciie!ipest market iu the world and rlomnnilpfl liv Mr. Ivhind or Missouri.1. n . i.i. and the Speaker, after counting, de clined that 138 had voted iu the affirm ative and 128 in the negative. Then tho yeas and nays were demanded by Mr. McKinley. Theu Speaker announced that the yeas were 101, the flays 143. Mr. Coleman of Lousiana and Featherstone of Arkansas, republicans, voted with the democrats .against the adoption of the motion. Mr. Butter worth of Ohio and Mr. Adams of Illi nois refrain ins from voting. ' When tlie result of the ballot had been announced, Mr. McKinley arose and asked the geutlemen of the minor ity to name the amendment's offered by the Ways and Means Committee as they were read on which the ballots were desired. Mr. Carlisle said the the minority desired votes only on those amendments which made increases of duty. When the Ways and Means amend ment making yarn made of jute duti able at 35 instead of 30 per cent, was read, Mr. Carlisle asked for a vote. It was explained that by a typographical error jute yarn was made dutiable in the bill at 30 per cent,, when the Ways and Means Committee had in tended that it should be dutiable at 35 per cent. The democrats however di -cided to take advantage of the error and called for a vote. ' Mr. McKinley called for the yeas and nays. On this amendment the yeas were 143, nays 144, the first democratic victory. Denis ocratic applause greeted the announce ment of the vote. The republicans who voted against the amendment were: nderson (Kan.); Feather stone, Kelley, Lind, Taylor (III.); De Haven, Flick, Henderson (la,).; Lacey. Snider, Kerr, and Dunnell. A yea and nay vote was taken on an amendment to the wool schedule to provide- that bn woolen or Worsted cloths, knit fabrics and manufactures made wholly or part of wool, the hair of animals, etc., valued at not more than 30 cents per pound, the duty per pound shall be 4hree times the duty imposed by the bill on a pound of un washed wool of the third class, and in addition 40 cents ad valorem. The bill, as amended, provides that twice the duty shall be imposed. This ballot resulted in another victory for the democrats, who, with the votes of the several republicans to aid them, polled 140 votes on tin? negative and 143 iu the affirmative. The republicans vot ing against the amendment were Messrs. Anderson of KaiVsasCouistck, Dylliver, Daauell, Flick, Henderson of Iowa, Lacey,' Lind, Owen of Indiana, Struble, Taylor of Illinois, Waddill, and VVilsoli oi Kentucky. A number of republicans sat in their seats and re fused to vote. The vinegar amendment adoptedtasT night in Committee of the Whole was agreed toyeas, 104; nays, 138. This was the last amendment, and the engrossment and third reading of the bill having been ordered, Mr. Car lisle offered the following amendment: Kesolced, That the pending bill be re-committed to the Committee on Ways and Means, with instructions to leport the same back to the House, so amended by substitute or otherwise as to reduce the revenues of the govern ment Jiy reducing the burdens of tax ation on the people, instead of reduc ing theHuties by imposiug prohibitory rates of taxation upon imported goods. Democratic applause. The resolution was defeated yeas, 140; hays, 104. Republican ap plause. The bill wjis then passed, yeas, 104; nays, 142, amid applause on both sides of the House, the democratic applause being derisivein its character. Mr. Coleman of Lousiana being the only republican who voted in the negative. Read It, Farmers. VANCE SPEAKS TO YOU HE SENDS YOU A MESSAGE OF LOVE AND A CAUTION. At ljfnui Contltutl3P. "And now, Senator, what do yon think of the future of the democratic pjw.- - "Well, 1 don t see but one little cUmd on the horikon. I think it is by the greatest party that ever existed American politics, and that it has l Tltol, "m! ftOWer of en- durance and persistence than any party ... , unaunA rii..nW,w I IIIIL , ll'l' IKIU, L' 'I Dill., ill III .IV Uil'i'll - r : . . 1 that it has stuck inside of the strict letter of the Constitution, the bond of the union. As no religious sect ever flourished at any time in our country that was not founded on the strict let- fr... rf f li ii Wrkivl .P l-ii.il ca ti a ,wi!i,tiM,t liCl Ul lilt 'J. VI l J l JI VII, JVI HVI UUI I .'I Vy'l -' - ' successfully in our politics rpi ' ' 1 lit ie i fillU. ,Uf, -i..j Hl iw.:(lll j nnA khnt lUa ;nurr.nnM with Mr .....1 fliof H.o i.fo.. orgiUliz:lt.ion that may beeffected . b (men' movements. The farm- I e h.ive sujferea from republican finan- i i- i n n l , 1 V J "" jT '"TJ Z h:LViiiLr ttiriifil now Mini lieirmi t) stnii? - l f " thp:p Hhts Ulp f tht wi, MQe about Ucm r:lth,r blindly and hit the party that has been i ii.: ,i i.t: ' h i iiicn liR-im an nic vuuv w wen their enemies. mi -i i- c1 ics. - Hie hnancial policv ot . . Ji :- ralic party h;w afl the tune w L n.;-fin., able to the farmer. It is the the democn been favor; iiuvjMivriv ' Lit" mi invi j Qm's truth that all these evils under w, r. Wl e..rma i141Vtt ttA nnd , Rroane(V have lfieQ frora the lMjlicy of to buy the necessaries of life in the dearest market in the world. They have so hedged our country about with a protective tariff that the farmer now cannot sell his beef, wheat or bacon in Europe because Europe cannot sell us anything in exchange for them, and therefore he is burning his corn in stead of feeding it to hogs and sending his bacon abroad. The same thing would have taken ulace with our cot ton but for the fact that the God of filature has given us a sort of monopoly in the crop, bo far as England could, she has fostered the growth of cotton elsewhere with the view to relieve her sjlf of her dependence on our s utl:e ii cotton field.?, and she is now getting the hulk of "her wheat from India, Austra lia, and New Zealand, and she is get ting all her wool from Australia; and whenever she can, by building railroads and stimulating native production, get her supplies of cotton from India, there is no telling what on the face of the earth will liecome of the southern peo ple. The policy of the republican party has leen to destroy, so far as it could, the profits of cotton growing in the South, just as it has destroyed the pro fits on corn and wheat in the West. Now when a man has loen driven to desperation as has the farmer, and gets a change to redress his wrongs he don t look at things as nicely as- the Lord Chancellor or lay down his rules and regulations according to the strict square. He hits back and retaliates on those who have oppressed him. He strikes blindly at. everybody that conies in his way and like a man on the court green whois spoiling for a fight, he will. strike one of his friends rather than not have a fight at all; and now o:i the eve of congressional election when we need the utmost unanimity in the enweratic party. I am very much afraid that the Alliance people will damage the party. I don't know- how it is in vour country, out i suppose it is the same as it is in North Carol i- na. The men who are in these Al liances are just the best, men and demo crats in our State, and I hope there are men of consideration amongj.theni who will see that they don't do their friends a damage in trying to defeat their enemies, and punish them for the. in -j iries they have suffered for so-long. ' Congressman Ewart, of Asheville, says he is opposed to the national elec tion law, but adds: "If our caucus decides to pass it, of course I shall not desert my party' PSYCHO TRAIN BEATS PffifflEASTOGG. Remarkable Journey to New York from iacomi, Wash,, by Way of the Antipodes. AROUND THE WORLD IN 66 DAYS New York Herald. Psycho has arrived! It only took him fifty-nine days to go from Tacoma to the? City by way of the Antipodes. He says he says he is still George Francis Train, that he feels twenty years younger, ' that he lost his birthday, March 2 1, at the 182d degree, meridian, and that he in tends to make the grand circuit in sixty-four days. Then the smash will come! Citizen Train has a story to toil, and he told it yesterday with a verve and a snap whieli made his hearers tingle for some of the same electric experience. He arrived at two o'clock vesterdav morning by the steamship Etnria, andl.1"'""' ' "aR,n "V J ' l 11 i i ii fTishment when I found a band of found the tug.F. W. Devoe bobbing in the bay with a party of his friends alioard, waiting to take him ashore. He gave a whoop of appreciation, and clad in the same brown suit of clothes he wore when he left Tacoma behind him, March I8,;with a fez struck jaunt ily upon his silver hair and a red silken sash about his waist, he rushel down the side gangway and leaped ten feet into the arms of his friends. "Just in time to see the granl smash !" he ejaculated. "Who's dictator?" When informed that the country was still safe he shook his ' own hands with everybody, a la Chi noise, and fell a chatting with a half dozen newspaper men, and with H. A. Gross, General Passenger Agent of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad; Mr. Harring ton his aide, and Miltoy C. Roach, of the Ni?w York Central. So busy was the citizen of Madison .square telling thins that his secretary, S. W. Wall, couldn't get a word in edgewise. "You know all about inv leaving m ., - , ' I .1..: ,111.1 I 1 l"l O ,1.1 i l:,lC( "e T 1 Su ! whole country knew of it -The psychic I force liitormed the world. Well, llett Of course the I force informed the world. Well, I left !!,., r i . o i -ii i il uil-i mere Marcn 10 ov a special ooar. tne ri :.. i ? .. i i i wiyiimia, iu v.uieouivei , wiitrrr i uicl I Ulv ! the Abyssinia. It was known I was cofa,nf! Jf,,a, we off . i,"u fah which showed how great the West is. lut it was an awtn v slow boat. She was so old that she didn't feel the t .. .. .. . i psychic force, so it rwpure 10 days to ; get t.oham; 1 1 'f 'l"!1 'ff ! I tended to take tl ilJl' lyr i ' ' l '.. ' lli.Llli,. my ad ven turns. I i li the General Werder for . , .... i noiuc ivoiii; out i ;py un ine liihl i , , J i ;WiA1-1 had missed her bv two days. 'Where . , ' . r , , J. , . u'l is she? tasked. lbhe sat Kobe, they . . T ., i i said. I saw it was special tram or nothrng, and so I went to our Consul, Mr. Greithouse, and said look here. Greathoe.se, I must have a special train and yet a passport right away! Must!' He laughed at me and told me it wjts impossible to get one in less than theedays. 'Who can give it to me?' I asked. 'The Mikado,' he re plied. 'All right. I said, shooting out the door, 'I'm off for TokuV "T!ire I ran against General Swift, our Minister. I said: 'Swift, get me a passport! I wantjt in twenty min utes.'' 'Can't do it.' he, too, said. 'Get shouted, 'oi I'll bust your d d old empire!' That set them agoing! They sent messengers everywhere for for the Minister of Foreign Affairs, ami before twenty minutes were up I had my passport and I w ass off. You'd have thought that I owned the whole shebang! THOUGHT? HE WAS THE EM PER OH. "Whiz, we went back to Yokohama, and there I found that my friends had got a big dinner ready at the Grand Hotel. Phew, what speeches I made, and the next Yokohama I'resi printed a page and a half of them. That was fame. ' Then we were off for Kole. It was on a special train with a vengence, too. You see that day had "be 'a set apart for the grand review of the imperial troops and all the lines were held by the government to transport soldiers. But my train went through, and what do you think! We were right ahead of the Emperer's train. Well, I wore niv double decker ecru hat,with "Geo. Francis Train. Around the world in Sixty j)ays.' painted on it, and I was dressed as ajiurope.tii, and I'll be hang ed if at every station we come to the people d4tlif't whoop an 1 , cheer and prostrate themselves. TJiey took me for the Emperor! Well, I went out and bowed and Hie troops presented arms and there was the deuce to pay all around. "Even the newsboys seemed to catch on, for half a dozen little chaps came about th ear shouted what in Japanese sounded like 'He'll do it! HeUdoitf 1 'l i 1 L f!...l ....I ...l-inl- if iiwimt and I men i iniu "nu num. m . ....... bnt I couldn't, so t shouted back Of Why the devil COurse I'll do it C l All l.ln'r. IV W hereupon the multi tude shouted. They seemed to think I liadgiven them a speech! Ah.thepsy chic force is great. r"Well, when-wc got to Kole, by get ting hpldof a launch, we were set aboard the. General Werder, and she started off with us on Ap ril 5. We went through the Island sea,iTd whom 4o you suppose I met on the Werder. Why, the pilot was iny old . friend Captain Taylor, who was commander of the shipjiiltou in 1818. IIj had been. for twenty -two yearj in Nagasaki. He told be he was coming back home very soon. But he won't, you k now. You see, those old fellows get out there, and the women.' O'.i, the women1. Well they are so pretty the men can't leave them, They simply court them, and court them, until they have noth ing else to do but come home and die! WALL ALMOST MISSED THE BOAT. uAt Nagasaki 1 saw some of these women. And Wall! Well, he came near missing the steamer. The natives there have erected a commemorative tablet at the place where Grant landed. We boarded the Werder again and we made good time to Hong Kong to catch the Prenssen. We got there April 11, but were delayed two days by an awful fog. The Prenssen got through, though, and waited one day. 1 erected my psychic . power again and she couldn'tget abroad. It was the most astonishing display of psychic power I ever heard of. Hut when I finally got aboa.id imagine my aston- mus- ic awaiting me, playing the 'Star Spangled Banner.' 1 tell you, these Germans are wonderful fellows! They have got a cordon of steamships around the world, all subsidized and all capable of being turned into men-of-war with- 1 J I w in a week! Look out, I tell things are going to smash! 'We got away from I long Kong on April 13 and got to Singapore a dis tance of 1,4S0 miles, on April 7. There some of those dude planters put aboard 1 ,200 tons of Sumatra tobacco, and th,en a cyclone sprang up which kept us thirty hours. "While at Colombo I heard that Ariibi Pacha was there and I made up nrfvmindto see him. Sol port on a fezaudwound this red silk scarf around my waist and looked like a regular Egptian 'rebel.1 I went to his house and they told me that 'His Higness Arabi Pacha Pacha was at his prayers.' Bring him up and let me lookat him or I'll smash you!" They wouldn't do it and I didn't want to smash the poor devils out of mere curiositv. THE TRUTH AT LAST. "I found that the steamship Area-, dia, the fastest boat off the Atlantic, was starting about the same time as the Prenssen for Aden, and that it would subsequently meet the Brindisi mail for Calais. I tried to get a berth on her, but there was no room. It was necessary to catch that mail or I should miss the Etruria. Something must be done. I went to the agents and they couldn't help me, and I went aboard and asked for the purser. They told me that he was in his bath. 'First class!' said I, 'Here's a chance to get at the naked truth!' But he sent out word that he couldn't see me 'that way.' 'Pshaw!1 I answered 'why not? I've just come through a country where full dress consists of a stovepipe hat. and a piece of t inc.' This knocked him and he promised to fix me up. "Here, however, my travelling ex perience came into plav. I figured it up and found that I could continue in the Prenssen to Suez and then taking a special steam launch to Port said I iii iii & i ii i i cou-iu beat tne Arcadia tnrongii tne canal, Pretty close calculation, I tell von, but I did it, . I beat the fast steamer nnd on May, 5 sailed from Port Said to Brindisi on the Arcadia I saved $700 bv this little calculation of mine, for though I had paid my fare to Brindisi on the Prenssen I didn't have to pay it over again by by the Ar cadia except' from Port Said to Brin disi. On the Arcadia I met bOS Aus tralians, and what a timo we had! "The Arcadia made wonderful time and we read e 1 Brindisi May 8, a week ahead of the Preussueu's advestised time. When we stepped ashore wo found the nival mail, out nere was another rnqkle. I learned that th mails would arrive in Calais of a Sat urday 'morning and that people in Lon don had declared that a holiday so far as the Dover boat was concerned. "Then I telegraphed and found ojut that a special boat would cost forty pounds, .and 1 said send it over at once I sent the money, and got to Calais early on the morning of May 10 I here I found the boat. it wouldn't io, you know. "Mean while the L jrds of the Admir alty telegraphed to the tiiigUshmen: y.l . ' 'If 1 'Charge seventeen swiinngs ana six pence to the passengers. it would never do to take them on Train's spec ial boat. We would never hear the last of it, don't you know.' So they gave me back my forty pounds, and the poor fellows who I invited to come over with me for nothing had to spend all their beer money for fare to Dover. " I had telegraphed over to have a special train ready to take me to Lon don at two o'clock in the afternoon. I had dinner with a. lot of friends who knew me many years ago and who know me still, I have amused the chil d red for a dzui years in Midison Square. I caught t.he 'Flying Irish man1 on time and was aboard the Etru ria when she started Sunday morning, just a week ago. H id a line voyage, though people 1 id object, to my wearing mv fez at the dinner table. I informed them that it wasn't a hat an 1 kept it on. "Hy the way," and here Citizen Train looked tolly proud, "I've got a fine col lection of hats here. B wight one in every p ut. We took more th in three hundred photograph! while we- were away, and I appear iaall sorts of po sitions. "I'm as psychical as ever, and when I get back to Tacoma I'm going to begin a. series of tours around the world in behalf of the world's fair in Chicago, simply to show the -people who squat on .Plymouth llock that they don't own the whole world." Citizen Train went with Mr. Wall and a party of friends to the Continen tal Hotel, where he will remain until this afternoon the delay being neces sary to accomplish some very important business here. At six o'clock to-night he and his party vill start on a special train fmiu the Central station for Chieao. which he will reach Tuesday. -Then he wilt continue to Omaha and Toeoma by the Chicago and Northwestern Uailroad. He declares that he will make the com plete trip in sixty-four days, though : even should to makeJTooma in 5C days he will surpass all previous- re- -cords in globe trotting and make tho journey of Jules Verne's Fogg appear very insignuiQant. llis cars will bear the inscription: GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN Around the World in B0 Days. TACOMA TACUM.v. Orders to the Bear. TO PROCEED TO BEHRINO SEA AND SEIZE ALL VESSELS EN'UAOEM IN UN LAWFUL ACTS. Washington, May 21, 1890. Sec retary Windon to-day signed the sail ing orders of the re venue cutter Bear, now at Seattle, VV ashington-directinir that she sail immediately to Onunlaka- and then to cruise diligently in Behring Sea for the purpose Of warning all per sons against entering such waters for the purpose of violating section l,w5ti of the ltevised Statutes, and arresting all persous and seizing all vessels found to le or have been engaged iu any vio- 1 ition of the laws of the United StaUs therein. Section 1,53, Revised Statute?, re ferred to above, provides that "No person shall kill any ottejniink, mar ten, sable or fur seal, or other fnr-k;r-ing animal within the limits af Alaska Territory or in the waters thereof, and every person guilty thereof shall, for c ich offense, be fined not Its; tlnyi 200 nor more than 1,00 oiL impris- oned not more than six months or bot h, ami all vessels, their tackles apparel. fnrmture, mid cargo, found en gage I in violating this section, shall be forfeited; but the Secretary of the Treasury shall have power to authorize-the killing of any such otter, mink, martin, sable, or other fur-bearing , ani mal, except fur seals, under such regulations as he may prescribe, and it shall b: the duty of the Secretary to prevent the killing of any fur seal and to provide for the execution of theju'o visions of the section u-ntil it is other wise provided by law, nor saall ho grant any special privileges under this section. The commander of the Hear is also' furnished with copies of the President's last proclamation on this subject and the'vict of M arch 2, bSS(.), reg irding tho seal awt sill nun fisheries oil Alaska. , Bring; the Lesson Homo. A LIVE TOWN FOR LIVE MEASURES WIN STON 's lSONIEl) DEIST. As will be seen from Hie notice of election published in another column, the citi.eusof Winston are called on to vote on Tuesday, June 1,7th, on the question of a bonded indebtedness of ?2),MM). - This appropriation is for the purpose of improving the streets, building a a market house, a mayor's office, n town prison, providing a sufficient and more extended water supply and other neces sary public improvements' of the town to preserve the health of- its citizens and promote its growth andjirositerity. These bonds are to run twenty years at a rate ofjnterest not exceeding 5 per cent., and are to be sold as the money is needed for t lie-proposed work. It goes without saying thai,. the .SV titirl is hi fitvor of this proposition, just as it always favors every movement of good to our city. .- The' town .of Winston has now reached a point where it can ih longer ben Village with village ways. 14 lias grown until it isn't a kid of a town any longer. Then-fore it ought to throw away its swaddling clothes and its bandages. We mea:rby this that ft must have good streets instead of road:--, pavements instead of mud, ptenty of jxuter, a sewerage system and proper buildings for the transaction Of town business. Winston Sentinel. Sillavaa'3 Twj atl33. New York, May. 22. -Col. J M. Bailcp of V irginia, held a consultation with rlohu L. Sullivan yesterday mnru ing. The result of the conference Was that Sullivan agrees to fight Joe. McAuliffe for 10,000 '.in July, and Ja.-.ks, n for 221)00 in August. Each battle will take place i;j Virginia under the auspices of the V irginia Atheletic Club. Salisbury, Lexington, High Poirf, and Thomasvillc are working hard t secure the Roanoke & Southern IJai' road. Each l.ee seems lo realize t hat Monroe will be the1 tei tiiinus. Hourm i:jih r. i" r ii r l

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