i BE SURE YOU ARE RIG II T, TIIENGO AHIJAD.-D CrocUott. VOL. .75. NO. 27. TARB0110', N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1897. 5UIUH UN S If ASE RFminN - J NE Sfinrautm w i ii i ii iiiiii ill a r s s v -i a v i i ra a UUILlUllllLlU UUUl iLI Villi PRICE FIVE CENTS. WARNING, '11 nH Af UimmAMa to caution au uk uioiuiu i .tii.. j t . Relator on a suDjectoi iue uwuai. Jt-',' ..j,.tn fhoir health r oti,i m wuaui-o - Jill. . We Wl: liver i:. TV, a oaIo nmnritnr . ikmr i r-. i uu wv.w r- - ; of Simmon. Liver Regulator L rtat customer are often deceived by warn .lu ti-;n2 gome medicine of a "bU2aSti-e or taste, believing to 8-'ml,lar 5L t .ivpf . Reeulator. We warn te rtat unless the word Regulator- is on r."u " tae or bottle, that it is not Simmons r Emulator. No oue else makes, or !:!!r has made Simmons Liver Regulator or vJthin? called Simmons Liver Regulator, t jf Zeilin & Co., and no medicine made ''fan'vone else is the same lWe alone can Vup.'and we cannot be responsible, if l..-dic;nes represented as the same do ' t help 'voi as you are led to expect they !'l Bear this fact well in mind, if you have VT. in the habit of using a medicine wbicn Z 3UProsed to be Simmons Liver Regula-i- because the name was somewhat like knd the package did not have the word ''Water on it, you have been imposed '1 on and havei not been taking SimmonB liver Regulatofcat alL 3 The Regulator has favorably known (or many years, and who use it know how necessary it is for v.ver and'Aaue, Bilious Fever, Constipa m, Headache, Dyspepsia, and all disorders .-r-srnc a Diseased Liver. . that- Simmons Liver Regulator, which :ii can rt.v;;lv distinguish by the Red Z -.n wrapper- an' bv our name, is the only uisiiciue cailid Simmons Liver Regulator. J. H. ZEILTV & CO. To Him Is Referred the Third Issue, As to Whether THERE WAS FRAUD IN THE The Execution of the Lease of the N. C. R. R. to the Southern It. R. The Road Could Lease. V Simmons ' Take Lirer Rreulatorl Van Iiih'ior't Renevolence. Van lVliU r. ilu favorite hero of. Mr. vi. ti inl H.-ir.iiiisj Davis, now aud then turn hi adu.-it'.o;!. 'Bt.sioii Tr OKI iVli'ii ITOini't. V :u !' fts'iili:ll rroiviW cjv f'" lookins pay h's " met w iT! of his chronicler's 1m- Ui i viit'.y, according to the ;jn lipt. lie appeared at the ,v st-uUm, hi the form of a Hfvt lmt young man, hurry- i U l:is i:r:iiu. ... . .ii;h-1uh1 by one. of the pro- :i':ii'ortuuates who haunt l'!:;res. atul have a practiced w t tli essed and substantial it i-'.riis. lie wanted enough to fr.iv t Quincy. The appeal 1 an instniit response. aid the gentleman, "I -t ouincy myself, and the trting now," and taking the ii.'miiclary by the shoulder r. l:'a;i on board, and the" cars ; A special from Greensboro.' N.C.ta the Charlotte Observer, of June 80th, says: "The decree in the case of the Southern Ealliray vs. the North Caro Una Railroad et "als. , was handed down today by Judge Simonton and filed here by the clerk of the court The decree goes over the evidence, and is contained in eighteen typewritten ISes. ; To the three aneatinnic "fat A whether the North Carolina Railroad could lease; 2nd, was the lease execut ed in contormity with the requirements of the charter? 3rd, was the lease exe cuted bona fide, -with on t fmnri n1 malpractice?" Judge Simonton an swers: xirst. the North (larnHna. Tt.-tlrmil had the right to lease. jsecond, the lease was executed in con formity with the requirements of the charter. A bird, as to whether thar the question is referred to Hon. Kerr Craige, as special master, to take testi mony ana report. State Attorney General Z. V. "Walser, Governor D. L. Russell and the new board of directors are given 60 davs to file testimony. The complainant and the old board of directors additional 60 days to file testimony, af ter which Attorney General Walser and uovcrnor Kusseu are given twenty days to reply. The special master shall then report to the court as soon as possible. In tne meantime the restraining order remains in force. TWO BAD COLLISIONS. or Thirty - "Certainly.' am 'soii: train, i i -astonish he dois'"t;l:'.u! whirled . a".'. . -But I : n"t want to go to Quincy," 'said tlie-r.ihu. .ji's soon as he had recov ered h: 1'ivath and his senses, "I want ed onoi-is'-i to buy a drink vrith." Can t lii'ip it. tins is an express train and d-K'-n't srtp this side of Quincy.' Th'. captured fraud had no help for it. He had just what he asked for, and ivas hndt'd'on schedule time In that no lieen.se i-:ty; jeight miles from a drink, cursms In 'luck and the too prompt Itenevolfiitc- and superior strength of his txnt-taetor, outimpressed by a dawning conviction that even In his line of business a little honesty" would be the 'ln,st iolicy. i Taxes. The Dutou nave an (original way of cnlltH'iiii.' die taxes. If, ajter due no ticf has lit'v-n given,' the money la not sent, Mie "authorities place one or two hunsry militiamen in the Tioose,- to be Msl and maintained at the expanse . of the defaulter until the amount of the tax is paid. "i " Vho Can Measure The influence of the mother I : It sliapes the course of to,c.bom gen erationsgoes sounding through all coming ages and i enters the confines cf Eternity !. - u ith what care, i therefore stouii the Expectant Mother be guarded, and How great the ef fort be to "ssz-ard "off danger and 'maliei.ter life happy. : " Mother s Friend" Allays nervous ness, re-lie-B"es the Headache, .Cramp3 and Hau sea, and c a n r a - o.i' ... pares the system that Cbild-Blrtli ia,made easy aiid . the time , of recovery aacrtenei many say "stronger aiter thn before confinement, lnoures safety to life of both aicther- and child. H All "who have usea Mother's Friend" say they will never be, without it again q. ether remedy rob3 "confine ment c: its pain. - Three Killed and Twenty lnjnred. Three persons were killed outright and twenty or thirty injured in a rear end collision on . the Chicago k North western early on the morning . of June 30th, at West Chicago, thirty miles out from Chicago, on the Galena division. The killed are: Mrs. John G odd in a:. of Appleton, Wis.; Miss R. Shiftman, of Appleton, Wis. ; an unidentified man, supposed to be a tramp. Ihe injured passengers number twenty or thirty. All -were Christian raideavor dele gates who left Chicago en routo for Han francisco. Ibe trains were sections four and five of the Christian Endeavor siiecial sent ont in nine sections. Sec tion five ran into section four, which left Chicago fifteen minutes ahead. No. 4 carried the Wisconsin deM-ates twenty-five hundred strong. No.'jjjiad to stop where the x reeport line diverges from the main line. No. 5 came up be hind at a great speed and the shock of the collision was terrific. - THB VANDALU. WBBCK. . A dispatch from J. J. Turner, gen eral manager of the Vandal ia Kail road line, dated Xerre Haute, lnd., says one of the Christian Endeavor excursion trains was wrecked at West Terra Saute. The dispatch says nobody was injured except three postal clerks, and their injuries are not serious, it is learned that R T. Bherman, of In dianapolis, a mail ' clerk on the St. Louis train, was killed and that W. if. Conn, of Indianapolis, baggage-master on the west-bound train, was fatally injured. Sam Parkinson, mail clerk. and Frank Gwens, fireman, were fatally injured. OHIO DEMOCRATS NOMINATE. Southern Pencil Pointers. . Atrnp 0608118 -a being taken by the w.uB uuougnout Indiana. . Mormon missionaries have been ex pelled from Meridian, Miss. There is talk of the Virginia Prokibi- uonists hording a State convention at Lynchburg August 20th. xTe . to1 P-id attendance at the -NahydleExposition for the first two uiomns u very near 500,000. More than inn nnn ' nannl, naauii through the gates 'of tne Tennessee Ex position last week. " Government engineers say an imme diate appropriation of $500, OOT is need- ' ior um berland tiound, 1 la. A cloudburst in tVia riinitr nf ITan. derson, Ky., washed away about a mile uu a naii oi railroad track. The Federal and State officials will unite to protect the Florida coast from importation of infectious diseases. Slight earihanaka thnrkti w f1t in Charlotte, N. C, and neighboring towns on the night of the 28th of June. Several people were awakened from their sleep by the disturbance. The Grand View, one of the leading hotels at Tallulah Falls, Ga., has been burned. Miss Hattre Higgins and her mother, of Atlanta, bearly escaped with their lives from the burning structure. Much damage was done by a wind and rain storm throughout Central Georgia. A great deal of timber was blown down, aud the telephone wires are all down. There was some hail, but it did very little damage. At Tampa, Fla., James Davis, - col ored, entered the house of Mrs. Bipard Knowles, white, and assaulted her lie wss frightened away by her screams and fled without bat, coat or shoes. He was captured and jailed without any de monstration of violence. . Governor Ellerbe, of South Carolina, has issued an order on the basis of the finding of the Court of Inquiry upon the recent riot among students and po- iice ana muiua on outn Carolina cam pus. He did not have anything to say as to Watts, as he will report his ease to the General Assembly. Hot Winds and Drought Has Given Crops a Set Back. THE WOELD OF BUSINESS. FURTHER IMPROVMENT IN CORN ocal Storms Have Caused Injury to Crops la Kentucky and MUssurl, Bat Damage Comparatively Light. The Tennessee Exposition . which is attracting so much attention through out the country, and which is being at tended by thousands from both the Northern and Southern States, is beautifullT illustrated in the July number of the Oriole, which is pub lished monthly by the Baltimore Steam Packet Company. The illustrations were sent the Oriole specially by the board of managers of the exposition. The same number also contains maps of the famous James river route of the Baltimore Steam Packet Company be tween Baltimore and Kichmond, and a large amount of other information of value to the general public as well as travelers. "A castome tiiut : f'n, n.! obuincl r-- Would hi'veitam.x whose wife naed 'Mother's Friend. Lhc had to go through the ordeal Uern wern bnt fonr bottles to bs I t.;c (wl wax tlOO.OO per bottle, he TO '!;, niHLiz ir.f i r.ript nfprir-, ft .00 PER BOTTLE. Bonk, AST MOTHERS" mailed fre containing .u Twiuniary Wfumoanu. THtSRty-ieLDflEGULATOR CO-.aTLAHTS.Oa. O.Q BY ALL DKUUCCISTS. Silvrr Kepuhllcans, Populists and Prohibitionists Will Also Put Out Ticket. . At Columbus, O., on June 30th, the following Democratic State ticket was nominated: For Governor Horace L. Chapman; Lieutenant Governor Mel ville D." Shaw; Supreme Court Judge J. P. Spriggs; Attorney General W. H. Dore; State Treasurer James A. Wilson: Board of Public Works Peter H. Degan; School Commissioner JJy- ron H. Hurd. The convention was one of the most memorable political associations in the history cf Ohio. Everything was for free silver, aud every speaker drew cheers by some mention of Bryan. A motion was made to endorse v. J. Bryan for the presidential nomination in 1800. Three cheers for Bryan were then given. ' . The silver Republicans neia a con ference and expressed great indigna tion. Thev said it was true that they hid announced that they aid not want a place on the State ticket, but the an nouncement was not made until they were told that they could not have it. They appointed a State committee to call a fctateconvention vo nominate a separate ticket. The Populists also agreed that they would hold a State convention and'have a separate ticket. 'Ihe Prohibitionists Will have at least two separate tickets, so there will be six State tickets in the neia. Bicycles Come Down. The Pope Manufacturing Company, the oldest bicycle builders in thi country, iand who make high grade wheels, of which the price has been heretofore held at $100, announce thai slter Jnly 1st their 18U7 standard will be sold at $75. AH About the North. Arthur Oaidiner, of Chicago, broke the world's one mile bicycle handicap record, his time being 2 :05L Wm. F. Hoey, known to the genera tion of play-goers as "OldHoss," died at his home in New York with acute paralysis. Fonr armed robbers looted an Oma ha, tN'eb. ) bank, and were pursued and captured. The cashier and one of the robbers were shot. The Pan-American Exposition Com pany, just incorporated at Albany, baa arranged for a six months' exhibit on Cavuga Island, N. Y., in 18U9. Congressman Edward Dean Coke, of Chicago, was found dead in his room at the Cochran Hotel, Washington, from a clot on the heart. The jury in the conspiracy case of the American Tobacco Company, on trial in New York, has fai eel to asrree. Ten were for conviction and two for ac quittal. The publishers of the city directory of Chicago, now in press and to be is sued soon, have made what they claim is a conservative estimate of the popu lation of the city. They put the fig ures at one million, eixht hundred and twenty-eight thousand. The Department of Agriculture, in its weekly crop bulletin issued last Tuesday, says in iart: While some what too cool for the best results oTer the more northerly . districts, with excessive heat in the Southern State' the week has, upon the whole, been favorable for the growth and cultiva tion of crops' ia harvesting of grain. Local storms have caused injury to crops in portions of New Jersey, Ala bama, Kentucky and Missouri, but the Damage has been comparatively light. Portions of the Ohio valley, Oalf States, Western Kansas and Colorado are need ing rain. Cotton has made rapid growth, in 01 lahoma and Texas and a general im provement ia reported elsewhere. In the central and eastern portions of the cotton belt, however, the reports gen erally indicate that the plant is small and backward. A general rain is much needed over the central aud western portions of the cotton belt Corn haa made further improvement during the week in the principal corn oiaies, naving made rapm growth in Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma. In the more northerly sections me crop nas generally un proved, bnt continues backward. In the Southern States the general outlook is less tavorable than previous ly reported, having been damaged by hot winds in Texas, and by drought in Arkansas, and in the East Gulf States. Bains have retarded cultivation in por tions of Iowa, where the crop has made fair growth, but its condition and the stand are vanable. iue wiuter wneat hsrvest bas con- tinned under eenerallv favorable condi tionc . East of the Mississippi harvest ing is now in progress as fsr north as the southern portions of Illinois, Indi ana ana uino, and the crop is matnr ing rapm iy in tne more northerly sec tions. Some damage has been done by excessive rains to wheat in shock in Missouri Harvesting in California haa been somewhat retarded by cool weath er and showers over the northern part of the State. Pains in Oresron aud Washington have been beneficial. Spring wheat has generally made favor able progress. The early sown is bead ing and the reports generally indicate that the straw is short. Tobacco is more prombinsr than pre viously reported in Virginia. Tennessee and Kentucky, and the crop is growing nicely in Indiana, and alaryland. oome nas been out in t loruia and it is ripening in South Carolina. In Georgia and isew l or k it is suffering from drought. Messrs. K, G. Dee & Co.'s Weekly Report of Traasactlons. T f Tm n. . t I " VI. MfAU A. VJL HMI T Review of Trade for the weekending Saturday, July 8d, aays: Midsummer vacations have commenced in many works, with a decrease of orders usual at this season. This customary vaca tion ia called a strike where agree ments regarding wages for the coming year baTe not been reached, and the extensive strike of the Amalgamated Iron Workers announced July 1 is of ,thu nature, but the strike of coal miners in Illinois and other Central etern 8tates is nut. and m costly. In some iron and cot Lou works LOCAL 8H001 TfiXflliOH Items of Interest Throughourthe Old North State. JSORTH STATE ITEMS. I FUNERAL OF COL S. McD. TATE. Agree to Curtail Production J. II. rortuae Appointed Clerk -Reward of MOO Onr4.' C. 1L Mebaae, super iiti&dent of wages have been reduced, owing to low Public instruction, haa mailed to 100 prices, one cotton mill ia Virginia' selected men the following letter: closing because the reduction u ' "W iK-Vr.-,.;,.! ..,.annni.u.l not aoMtitiwi . k. .i i theemplovers will seek Ih. . executive eommitUe by ritnation is distinctly of a midsummer cuaracier. iarge Dopes ae built on tbe BUSINESS BLOCK BLOWN UP Terrific at Miscellaneous. Our 18Q7 wheels are stronger handsomer easier running than ever before the prices are U'!7 STERN IVHEFl. WORKS, CHICAGO NHT YOHK C-W-W-Ini : . Acnl. .vrrvnM Nine children killed and many others injured by the collapse of a church in the province of Clndad Real, Spain. xne degree oi IxLj. it. nas been con ferred on President McKinley by the Western Reserve University. Seven hundred and sixty soldiers were returned from Havana, Cuba, jto Spain Jane 80th, who were on the in valid list. Many of the passengers and crew of the steamer City of Paris, Panama for San Francisco, died of yellow fever on the voysge. , Yellow fever is reported by the Ma" rine Hdssital at Washington to be at Vera Craiz, Mexico, and to be epidemic at Panama, Columbia. A severance of "fraternal relations among Boyal Arch Masons of Virginia and Pennsvlnania has been ordered by . a"-i .aa tbe autnorities oi tne iormer. Explosion of Dyaaaalte South Scrantoa, Pa. An explosion of dynamite Tnesdsy in South Scranton, Pa., seriously damsged the business block of Leon Olchefeski, a double dwelling, block and single bouses. The bussiness blo:k was blown to pieces. In twenty-one bouses a! I tbe windows were blown out aud the plaster shaken from the walls. The shock was felt all over the city. Cuba'a Yellow Fever Scours. The reports received from Cuba by Surgeon General Wyinea,- of the Ma rine Hospital Service at Washington show- that yellow fever is spreading. The United States sanitary inspector at Havana reports th-t during tbe week there were in that city 40 deaths from yollow fever with approximately 211 new cases, and SO new cases of amall pox, with three deaths. The United States Consul it Sagua La Grande re ports that during the week there were in that city 21 new cases rctwrted from yellow fever and 83 cases from small- HX. prospective demand after the tariff bill lias passed, but the pressure in the mar ket of large importing stocks may defer It The general belief ia that a removal of uncertainty will in any case increase uuBinesa. Since much of the future deoaada on crops the brightening prospects are of ine nignest importance. Estimates by persons usually most pessimistic now far exceed any made a month ago, on the promise of 559,000,000 bushels of wheat, of lower condition, but a Israel v in. creased acreage of corn. Cotton pros pect are brighter aa the crop appears to be rather early, rather than Uur ia the regions which were not flooded. The movement of wheat is smalL. Western receipts for the week being only l.o30.77tt bushels against 2,041,719 last year, and Atlantic exports nour included, against 2.- 162,1.2 last year, bnt a strong effort to lift prices failed, and tha oIom i 11 cents lower for the week, with corn half a cent lower, cotton rose i. with small lea. . The iron and atael in.lm.trv halts at midsummer, although the de mand for finished products still in creases and disappointment is due only to toe tact iuat tne increase is not yet enough to keep all mills at work and thus to bring better prices, which now average sugnuy lower than ever before, though not 1 per cent below those of March, 1835. The export trade is in creasing, and a large order for India has just been taken at a price said to be S3 below British bids. Coke pro duction is increasing again, as more iron f nrnaces are going into blast and an addition of 2. ceaU Las been order ed in anthracite coal. Tin ia h.iW. with larger consumption, and copper at 101 for Lake, with heavy export, while lead has advanced to 3.6 cents. Amer can makers are i ling tin ola'a lar e!v at$:k20for full weight against for foreign. Textile manufacturers are wsitiog and cotton mills curtailing production, with large stocks on hand, and prices scarcely changed, while woolen mills are gradually increasing work with better orders, and prices incline to ad vance a shade. Enormous buying of wool, K6. 000, 000 pounds this year, against 102,000.000 last year, reflects speculation mainly, and some larger lots have been sold three to five times since arrival. lricee are somewhat stronger at seaboard markets, and so high in the interior thst dealings in domestics are restricted, amounting for two months to leas than tl.OOU.WO pounds, against 55,000,000 pounds foreign. m Failures for the week have been til inthe Lnited Slates, against 2 -57 last year, and 30 in Canada, against 22 last year. a central executive Committee by tle North Carolina Teachers' Asseotbty. to conduct the campaign for local taxation for public schools, to be voted upon Aug. 10 ia every township ia North Car olina, Upon this election the educa tional future of North Carolina de pends. We must carry it for scboo!a, ' Without local taxation no gsoexal school system has ever been built up. This committee haa been charged with the duty of selecting a larger commit tee to co-operste with the Teachers' Assembly iu this great movement. Yoa have been chosen a member of this larger committee. We desire aad crave your sympathy and influence. If yoa have not studied the matter, please give it your attention, aod see what great things the election, if favorable, will cerrT for North Carolina. Signed C II. Mebaae, chairman; J. O. Atkin son, secretary; L. L. Uobba, II. L. Smith, Josephue Daniel', K. A. Aldor man, C. E. Taylor, W. 1L Ttegedele, Hugh Morson, Charles D. Mclver, J. ('. Scarborough. J. W. Bailey, It I. Flowers, Alexsnder Graham, L. V. UowelL D. 1L HilL" The largest concourse of people tver assembled at a faneral in thst Bake roanly was present when the body of CoL K. McD. Tate was laid to rest ia Uorganton cemetery. The . services a ere held ia the First Presbyterian church, and aa the body was carried from the church to the cemetery there was a rroceasion nearly a mile ia length. - The surviving members of the Sixth North Carolina Regiment walked on either side of the hearse, acting as the guard of honor. This was the regi ment CoL Tate command! when be aiade the famous and gallant charge at Gettysburg, when he passed through a cap in the famous stone wall and with nis revolver killed six men. Ue told this himself aad his statement was con tinued. He bal flanked a line of men lying down, and emptied every cham ber of his revolver as antcktr as tbe wesi-on could be tired. The Masons at tended in a body. Tbe services were soodocte-1 by 1. J. M. Rom, of the I'resbyteriaa church, assisted by Dr. W. 1L Leilh of the Methodist church. A Munificent Coutrlbutloa. James C. Carter, the New York law yer, has contributed $5,000 to the Bsu dblph Tncker Memorial Hall to be erected at Washington and Lee Univer Mtv. Lexington. Ya.. at a cost of 150.- (XX , for the accommodation of the law school. Turning of the Tide. After being idle for some weeks, the tube department and the sheet mill of the Beading (Pa.) Iron Works has re- umed operation. Tbe former gives employment to over two hands, while the latter will give work to 'av. THE STRIKE IN TENNESSEE. rwo Hundred Thousand Hen Idle In the Jelllco District. The situation in the East Tennessee and Southern Kentucky coal mining fields is rapidly becoming very serious. There are 200,000 idle men in the Jel lico district and nearly the same num ber along the line of the Cincinnati Southern Bailroad. These men struck on May 1, and have done no work Bince. Few of them had any money saved up and the majority are now bui c tr.. fha nAARsities of life. All efforts to settle the strike have proved unavailing and it is now admitted that none of the mines can be operated for several months. The strikers have so far made no attempt at viol enoe, but as the suffering among them increases it .is feared that some trouble will come. A GENBBAIi BTBIKX ORDEBKD. A general strike -of ; miners ol the United Mine Workers of America has been ordered for July eth by the na tional executive board, whose head quarters are in Columbus, O., and also by the district officials at a meeting held recently. A cablegram from London says fate of' the Pacific steamer "Aden. which left Yokohoma June 1st for Lon don, is at last a certainty, and it is thought that 100 have been drowned. Short Stop Jennings of Baltimore, who was bit on the head by a ball thrown by Pitcher Busie in a baseball game, is said to bo suffering from con cussion of tbe brain. The suspension of work in the steel mills, with the addition of the coming big coal strike, will be the biggest sus pension oi business at one time for years past I Washington Echoes. . Col. W. J. Calhoun has decided to decline the position of comj.troller of the treasury.- ' The Secretary of the Interior will dis tribute 1,104,000 among the State agri cultural colleges. Tho Senate committee on finance haa fixed tbe duty on coal at 67 cents per ton. The rate applies only to coal shipped from countries which do not impose a higher rate on American coal. It therefore affects only Canada. A bill has been introduced in Con gress to give the Fish Cocmission pro tection over game birds. The Postmaster- General says he will not appoint negroes as postmasters al large Southern cities where they have not had such before. J The Senate has confirmed ' the nom ination of H. S. Harkins, to be collec tor of internal revenue for the Fifth district of North Carolina. The rector of the Bomau Catholic -: u. TV. .v. ;.nUT. i- Thin.., 1 . . linn ViAAn AIAvnfAil liw Pnni Leo XII t to be a domestic prelate to tin Holy See, with the title of Bight Rev trend. Debs Scheme Abandoned. Eugene V. Debs socialist colony scheme has been abandoned and there ha I will be emigration of unemployed men n I to the htate of Washington in its stead. The exien6 of their traniortation will be paid through a per capita tax of 15 ceuts a month on members of the So cial Democracy, Debs' new party. a Two of a Kind. Representative King, of Utah, has introduced iu the Hou.-e a bill identical with that introduced by Senator Mor gau iu the Senate, providing for the an nexatiou of Hawaii under the condi tions of the treaty negotiated by the resident. Change la Freight Traaspoi tstlon. An important change, ia the freight transportation service beta em New York, Philadelphia and the South has been msde by frame agreement ar ranged between the Baltimore and Philadelphia Steamboat Company aad the Baltimore Steam Packet Company by which a through freight lina haa been formed for handling goods to all Gints reached by the Seaboard Air ne and its connections. The Balti more A- Philadelphia Steamboat Com pany maintains a daily service from New York and Philadelphia to Balti more by way of the Deleware and Ches apeake canal and Chesapeake Bay. The freight will be carried from Balti more to Portsmodth. Ya., the tide water terminus of the Seaboard Air Line, by the steamers of the Old Bay Line, and thence transferred by rail to ita destination. The new Iaoe will give added facilities to Philadelphia merchants for doing business ia tie South, and it will receive a huge pat ronage on account of the shortness of of the route, and the quick dispatch of freight which it enables. Tbe Vessels We BUt Last Year. During the fiscal year ended Jnne 80th, there were built ia the United States and officially-numbered 729 ves sels, of 177.C41 gross tons, compared with 709 vessels of 203,977 tons for the previous year. The deer ease is almost wholly in wooden tonnage, which for 187 amounts to 64,940 tons, compared with 94,750 tons for 1996. Of the total construction 547 vessels of 118.0Utons were steam vessels, compared with 822 oi is4.ih tons lor tne previous year. Steel steamers built on the great lake s number l'j. witn a.vmxj tons, compared with 24 cf 58,020 tons for the previous Jer - Bequeathed 975,000, -It haa been found by the board of trustees of the Mary Baldwin Semi nary, at Staunton, Ya.. that the will of the late principal. Miss Mary Julia Baldwin, had endowed the seminary with a bequest of $75,000. Ate meeting held ia Greenboro of the cotton mill man of Randolph county. ali the mills being represented, it was unanimously agresl to curtail product ion one-third time itnUl the new cotton crop is oa the market These mills formed themselves into a permanent or ganization, with Mr. 0. 1. Cox. of tbe Cedar Falls Manufacturing eoupaay. as president, and Mr. Hal M. Worth, of the Woith Manufacturing company, as secretary. '1 be next meeting of the ae sorialioa will be held subject to the I call of the preaideat Judge Pnrnell has appointed J. It Fortune clerk of the Fed. el Court for the Pattern district, rice X. J. Ki-Lixi, acting c!etk. who is removed. The ap pointment deles from July 1st RiJJick was appointed Msy 21, ISM. by Judge 1 rnoks and was later re-appoiaUd by Jude eymonr. Fortune is act yet appointed circuit court clerk, bat ne doubt will hold both offices, as Rjddick has done for some years. Tbe pay ol both otQcee last year waa S3, Too, For tune is from Shelby. The Black Monntsia correspondent of the Asheville Citixea says: Iht smouldering Are kindled a year age among tbe pertisiaas of "hog or "nc bog" has broken out ia a new spot by hanging Mayor A. Li. Kobiasoa ia effigy. Soon after daylight oa dsj last week a figure with ! i4ecerd fastened oa it was discovered sarend ed from a tree near the postoffice. The dummy was removed aad is being beM as evideoce ia legal proceedings which are to follow. At Cannonville, ia Cabarrus county, a 4 -year-old twin daughter of Mr. aad Mrs. J. W. Bernhardt was playing with a match and an oil caa. The match was struck and at the same in stant aa exptoeion occurred, which re suited ia the child's eye being burned out and its body roasted, resulting ia its dea'.h ia a few minutes. The mother was badly burned ia trying to rescue her chili Big Reward For the Merdeeer ef Mrs. A. A. apria;s L slag torn. There is talk of a new DesnocraUe daily ia Baleigh. A charter baa bea issued to the Sal isbury Hosiery Mills. There ia talk of a Missouri man bund ing a handsome hotel at Carthage. The Wake Foreat summer school opened oa Jane 3c?th with a good at tendance. The Secretary cf Slate ha greeted a charter to the Roaaoke Underwear Company. Tbe eeosns of W las to a. eompfstad June Wth show there are 2,949 school ehddraa la that city, 1,41? whitae aad 1,522 blacks. The Attoraey-Oeoeral declares the sections cf the rereaae act providing imprisonment for Bosvpaocaeat ef taxee to b eonrutatioaaL Joba C Scarborough, of Raleigh, aa tepted the preideecy of Chowaa Bap tist female institute, to which be was elected in May. Governor Russell Las pardoned B. B. Snow, a citixM of South Carolina, who was serving a five-year sentence ia the penitentiary for stealing a horse ia GaUford county. The State Treasurer brings two suits against Stewart Proa.' former State printers, to recover the everchsrgse they made against the Bute during their two years' tana, said to amount to over flu. OuO. The Ooveraor effsre a reward ef $400 for the appreheeaiosi aad delivery of aa unknown person or pet sows who sm the Z. rd in it., mar dared ilra. a. a. Springs la bed at Letiugtoa, the re ward to be paid upoa eoavicttoa. The Farmers' AUiaaee is at a low ebb. It baa lose thaa $10,000 in iu basiaeae assecy (and, while last August there was $40,000. The most earnest Sorts are being made to revive iatereet ia the alliance aad increase iu membership. Wilmington Messenger. The penitentiary under its new saaa azemeet ia ia flnancisl straits. It of ficials ear that oa the first day of Jose thera waa aot a real of money oa that it thea owed over $ia,ouj aad going ia debt at the rate of $15,000 month. Wilmington Messenger. The Governor appoiaU to repr this SUU at the national eoeierence of charities and correctioas st H I aai, Minnesota, Charles Daffy. rtHDraae, W. V. F.aaaiey. I). W.C. ttanbew. Bea ts oiin P. (irigsbee, Thomas W. I at to a. Virgil KLusa. A. 1J, Noble, A.McAuiey and C B. De&eoa. . The Commisaioaar of Agriculture ao cepta Ibe following list of farmers' insti tutes to be held bv Dr. D. Uetd Parker this month: Guilford College, "th aad Mb; East Salem. 9th aad Kth; Fast Bead. 12th and 13th; Slat villa, 1 4 lb andl'th'.Saliaburv. leth aad i:th:Coa- cord, lyth aad 20th; Charlotte, Stvt and Cd. Mr. SoL J. J ansa, ef WUmtngtoe, has the largest Chinese balsam tar ss la the world, containing about fire acree, from which he ships to the large eaUee Fast aad West end. obtaias for this balsam from 10 to 21 eeaU a pound. He has a Chinaman with him tocaltivaU this track, w ho is well experienced ia the basin ee. Tbe revenue rsoaipt at the Winstoa oSIce for the fiscal year ending Jaae 2Tth aggregated $3Ui 1 1 4. &. Daring the year Winston has shaped 14.G61.S71 pooada of saaawfactared tobaero Thss t the beat year's baaiaea ia Wiastoa's history. Ihe stamp salee this ao&tb were fyl.Stn.43. eaowiag the anipanaat of manufactured tobacco to have been 1.52-1. 1 40 pounds. With oneetreptioa this is the beet mouth of the year. The deciaioa of the Attoraey Geaaral that the expenses of the Aagast pabiie school election mast be be met oat of the geaaral fund aad aot oat of the school fund u very imperUat The fca perinUndeut of Iublio Iastractioa says the electioa will coat $50,000. I a ether words it is lii sir to cost snore thaa the amount to be voted. Yetitsaestbeeetd aad the people of esveh tow a ship ought to see that the extra tax propoetUoa is carried. The following Is the eSdal Cruree of the receipts, expenditures aad daily at teadeace ef the Wosmb's ilxpeaattoa of the Carolina, which was held at Char lotte: Borrowed by maoaTara,$',X00, reretpu at door, $3,17X40 receipt f rota sale. $3,1-4. 40; si pans, (shout) ft, 5ml 00; daily ettandaisca. laver ace) 500. oee aaooaaUd iiocne of expeasee aot yet la. It eosU the Lx real boa 451.t7 la bring ing the single picture, "Breaking Home Tiee" to Charlotte, evTylog it back to iu owner aad keeping in sax ad for $70,000. - Absolutely Pure Celsbrslcd for its great Icetctic strength aau beeJUfsUeaa, Aaaeres the food egaiasi el a at aad a3 forme of adalUratioa rossesosi to the cheap bread a Boyal Baking Tewder Co.. Nse York. A tVeaatortal Coat rssC Senator Samaer aad WUaoa frequent guests at "The OW1 Elm" -Ihe country eeet of ex -Co v. OaCla la Newtoarne ead whea they met there, the family foaad tt latrrrstlag to eb rrre the coatrast ta the two taea. ( "Sumner was slwar siatety aad A s- ' alfied." writes Mrs. Cla&la ta her lit tle book. Tadcr the E'.ma.- -wh3e Mr. WUaoa was caret ta his Isorasge la ordinary reaveraattoa. tie eftra eatd, Tonorr Is ta area 7 warn I rise te speak la the Kraate for fear alaaaecha setts will be disgraced by my bad gram mar.' "But, strange to say. carrtees as Mr. . WUaoa waa la every -day Ufa. and for getful ae he was ef social etiquette aad requirements, be rarely made a gram ma ileal error ta hie pubUc and he eoeamaaded as am atteatloQ la the Senate ae aay ma a who UTted his voice la that august as-' sera My. ' "It mast be maecDbered that Mr.' Wllsoa had ao advsatsgwe ef family, aad la ate youth Boo ef society er ede catloa. He never weal to arhoel sad he had only the light of a ptae-kaot to read by until after he was 21 years ef are. HI tweaty-first birthday o rarred cat a Saturday, aad tbe hard- fisted aid man with whoca he had ar-et most of his Uf e, aad whom he had f eltb fuQy served, told hint that he could re saala over Booday ta hie howee by pay lag SO oral a. -Mr. Sumner had had every advaa Uge ef family and posit loo, rd oral Via aod trawl, and hie mind was snored with kaowWJgv oa almost all aub Jects." Sooe after the wer Mr. WUaoa wa etrtcks with paralyaU. Ae he rallied froca the first attack the Barret wklco aaaaCy follows la such eesee took poe cssloa of him, and he waadrred from place to place, eoeklag rest aad fiadlag oooe. The rod came, and a aaUam mourned the loae of a etatcamaa true te he latcreata aad s4X-acnartag ta his pat riot Um- Yeerth'e CosepaaJoa. , Ft aft Isssl Ixersiiii. Mrs. rrVeUey-l thlak that a a.lo t:ers wife his snore rauae lo be ;eal ocs thaa almost aay ether womaa, Pricad-IIow u that? Mrs. Priestly-Why. every w-k Mr. PrkeCy begtas hie addrese at the nvnt lag fee ladles only with "Dearly be lo Ted.- New Terr Trfhaae. -Aad hour did be dicT asked the Udy k.t mim Wrat le tn-rtiire ifVf th husband she had Vomt. P.r-by rw quret, saa'am." aald th rrhtl bny. as mildly aad rCTrtfl?y aa poasi-IV.-lBdisaapol. JournaL STRAY a HOTS. NO FURTHER LEGISLATION. A Quorum Cannot be Held la thi Senate After the Tariff BUI Is Oul of the Way. 1 The prospects are that there will bt no other . legislation of importance al this session of Congress, except thi tariff bill. It has been stated befort that neither the Hawaiian annexation treaty, aor any currency legislation will come up in the Senate. It is also knows that a quorum cannot be maintained in the Seuate after the tariff bill ia out oi the wav. As soon as the bill is sent tc the House the t'enate will take up the general deficiency bill, and it is expec ted that considerable time will be occu pied by it. The Senate will consider s number of nominations over which there is someontention. It has been sug gested that the Alaskan boundary treaty may be called up, but as it will provokt considerable discussion it will be al lowed to go over until next r-ession. - - f 1 as Stern father I bear you were ont rambling last night Is It true? Gay yooth No, sir; I was ahead. Ne I York Journal. A Giant Sewlag Machine. A giant sewing machine has been fin ished at Leeds, England. Tbe machine, which ia to be used for attaching cotton belting, weighs five and a quarter tons. Indians Die From Drtaklag. Five Indians are dead and several others are expected to die at Mslone's Point, Minn., as the result of excessive drinking of pain-killer, hair oU and other preparations containing alcohoL The contract of the TUte with Guy V. I'arnea as public printer.' baa been made. Ilia bond ia $5,000. He ia gtvea charge of the SUU paper and sUtioa - ery which be is to isue to contractors lor any special work under a tree lion ot the council of SUU. He is required to keep a list of all job work and file with each bill the cost of composition aad ol every part of work done. Governor Russell offers a reward ol $400. which is the limit for the arrjal of the unknown person or persons wbc on the night of Jane 23 murdered Mr A. A. Springs at Lexington. The re ward ia payable upoa eoovictioa. Th offer of so large a reward ia unusual, but it is recognized that this is aa exUem case. The Governor has appointed a dale rates from this SUteto the National Conference ot Charities and Correc tiona. at St Paul. Charles Duffy. It It Drana. W. F. Beaalev. D. W. t:. eu- bow. Benjamin P. Urigsby, Thomas W. Ration, V. 8. Luk. A. B. oble. A. McCauley and C. Deasoo. Tne Vaae snoaajaeat, to be erected la Asheville, will bo a aim pie shaft of maaaive greaite, Ralph IL Oravee has bee a elected 1 brariaaof theSUle Uaiveraity; he is the fourth ganeralioa of thai name to serve the university. The last Legislature chartered the "Mountain Kstraat Asxo- This is nndar the enapsciee of the lateraa- tiooal Christian Worker Asaocutioa. It will hold iu first aaeetnblr a Black Mounuia July Sfcth to 14th. Rev. Wee- Ion It Galee 1 one of the prime mov ers. The State baa granted a charter to the Claude Yernet Nursery and Frail Company. lSmT'r tors being K. O. tt MeNeUI, t- r. Partraa aad George a Lion. It also has power to deal ia reel saUle, operate a distillery aad preserve, caa or evapo rate fruit Only One ; Standard Yoa and arc may differ ax ta . raoocy stitvlards ana out ox . . . our Terr caicreaoa rooa but axau But we won't iMtt vt ta tb tnrritx of ozc tUaiard' cxnakloa of ccxLVrrtr cd. SOOTTS U.VJIS'JOU La roa Ani iuli tts wy for ccArfr 25 tcam la tbe world" cf fTW" votil to-day it I ai- mott ai much the itkodari fa all casca of lunp trout 1c, And . . 1 , crxry coodruoo ox wuunr wLctbcr ia cht or adult as quinine is ta mala.' Lai frrcrs. LXiUr oa Xhc mocry quo- tioo' if yoa wC, tut when (t ooexsts to A qucxtjon of bcxhii. perhaps cf life fi4 dAth, git the stirvaifd. YoafswUsA Scotfl ro sixes, S3 cv aad L0Q SCOTT A SOaXt, I V-. I Tw SBBBBBssaBBI rr.MaaliasM.6rr. one of Char- I fwt ii DStlc? tte most venerable and -tsd 1 Utt S rlllS Cure All ! Liver His. citiaena, died at hi home oa Fast atruoe. Dr. orr baa Been ja jauing bcaUh for several years. He had a slight stroke ef paralysie abcwltwo year ago, aad after that suffered with rkcuiaeusm, but be bad bo rpecial ma'ady a the time of Lis dealh. Bank Wrecker Seateaeed. Louis Gallot, the convicted Union Bank wrecker, of New Orleans, has been sentenced by Judge Parian ge to eight years iu the penitentiary at bard'i labor, ine case wut oe appealed. Wins a Thousand-Dollar Race At Philadelphia, Ta , Earl Riser, of Dayton, defeated Eddie Bald, of Buf falo, and Tom Cooper, of Detroit, la a match race for $1,000 beat two ia three beats at a mile. Only two hesU were run, and the Dayton youth woa both handily. Found Dead la Bed. J. IL Bible, United 8tatee district ttnrnev for Fast Tennessee, and one of the most active politicians in the Ute, was found dead in bed at his noma in Chattanooga. His death is ascribed to appoplexy. Twantv three persons will constitute the faculty of the new Presbyterian college at Chartrtte. J. F. South erland. of Goldeboro, re signs as airecior o ia lwiu 4i ti for the insane. AGAIJIST VASDERBILT. J. K. II untt. Injured By a Stioe Free a lUast. Awarded $8.fiOO Dene;re. " A specisl to the Charlotte (Jf. CI Ob-1 server from Asheville. say the U ailed State Court jury, ia the caa of J. Ed ward Uaattra. Chas. McN'aaeo ha return ed a verdict awardiag the plain US 1 f,500 damage. Haatt waa injured la State Treasurer Worth ears be he letters from the various sheriffs whom he has selected to lead off ia the d teens sioB of subiecU at the sheriffs' institute. saying that they will tackle the subjects I bT s ai0M froca a blast oa Market assigned them. Father w orth leeis 1 fctret as . , . : 1 are the convention or lnsuiuio im w a big success. The secretary of StaU haa completed tbe count of the Snpveme Court reports, eld aad new, oa band aad finds thera aie 1S.51L SUtesville, U e-orkA IroL , a survey. preparing for L. Ludlow haa wsUr t&sde street m he stood ta front of the Swaa- aanoaHoUL The sloae came iron aa excavation and waa throw a several hundred yard, paaaiar over a three story building and failing oa South Main street breakiag hi leg. Thejx cavatioa waa fcr tho Yenag Mea e la st it ate, whwh Georg W. Yeadblt erecled for colored roopie. " The verdict issraxastMr. McNsmee, VeaderUlfs scent The case will Court of ArpaaiA Twenty Years Proof. Tutt's Li vcr PiUs keep the bow els in natural motion and cleanse the system of all impuriucs An absolute cure for sick headache, dyspepsia, sour stomach, con stipation and kindred diseases. "Can't c!o without them" R. P.Smith, Oulesburg. Va. writes 1 don't know how I could do without them. I hare had Liver disease for over twenty vears. Am now enarely cured. uukeatoih. Tutt's Uyer Pill 1