v 1:1. Ill if. lir ' 4 AMC 3 C. DOYLIN, Publisher. tIElV SERIES- VOL 1 1. -NO. 50. The Wadesboro Messenger and Vadesboro Intelligencer Consolidated July, IC83. Wadesboro, tL C. Thursday. June 23, 1898. PRICE, IV HOLE NUMBER 913 Your friends may smilV But that tired feeling ; Means danger. It Indicates impoverished And impure blood. This.condition may Leacl to serious illness." '. It should be promptly ; ' Overcome by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, Which purifies and Enriches the blood, Strengthens the nerves, Tones the stomach, Creates an appetite, And bnilds up, Energizes and vitalizes The whole system. Be sure to get Y Only Hood's. R. T. Bennett, Jtto. T. Bxnnktt Crawford D. Bennett. ... Dennett & Bennett Attorneys-at-Law, : WadeBboro, . . . N. C. Last room on the right in the court boose. Will practice in all the courts of the State. ' Special attention given to the examination and investigation of ' Titles to Real Estate, drawing Deeds and other instruments, Col lection of Claims, the Managing of Estates for Guardians, Administrators and Execu tors, and the Foreclosure of Mortgages. Will attend the courts of Stanly and Mont gomery counties. ; Prompt attention given to all business in trusted to them. ' Covington & Redwine, Monroe, N. C. T. L. Caudle, Wadesboro, N. C. Covington, Redwine & Caudle, ATTORNEYS - AT - LAW, WADESBORO, N. C. Practice in all the State, and United States Courts. . Special attention will be given toexami . nation and investigation of titles to Keal Estate, the drafting of deeds, mortgages, and- other legal instruments; the collect ion of claims, and mangementof estates for Guardians, Administrators, and Executors. Commercial, Railroad, Corporation and Insurance Law. -Continuous and painstaking attention will be given to all legal business. . Office in the. Smith building. W.A. INGRAM,M.D. SURGEON, "WADESBORO, - - - N. C. Rjfroad calls by wire promptly attended 5 , Office opposite National Hotel. SPANISH DISASTER. W. F. GRAY, I). ). (Office in Smith & Ldnlap Building. Wadesboro, North. Carolina. : ALL OPERATIONS WARRANTED. FIRST-GLASS , neat :: Market I am still conductng a first-class Jfeat JWarket at Wadesboro. The test of Beef and other Fresh jlfeats on hand at all times. T. J. INGRAM. I I A. I J are subject to peculiar Ills. The right remedy Cor babies' ills especially f worms and stomach disorders Is ; Frey's Vermifuge ) haa eared children for GO years. Bend for illua. book about the Ilia and tha remedy. Ooa feottl Mtiltd for IS oats. S. 8. rlifcT, Baltimore, Kd, A. S. MOEISON, DEALER IN or o o k S3 I 1 CO I . I CO "Watches, Clocks Eye-Glasses, Spec tacles and Jewelrv of all kinds re- i i i . paireu on snort nonce. Inspected Watcnes for S. A.L.R. B. four years. Fourteen years experience. Can be found in Caraway's store on Wade street. Notice. I will pay at my office in Wadesboro, N C, on and after April 27th. 188. a divi fiend of 7 per cent ou all claims against the Bank of New Hanover at Wadesboro, N. C , which shall have been peoven before me at mat uaie. .. j as. a. ijkak. Receiver, 1 PAHKEK'S I HAIR BALSAM ?IeanM4 aud beautiful to hall. iToautu a luxuriant rrowth. Haver Trnil to Baator Orayl Ciw aeai aniim a hair inula. Iler Reyerse on the Sea aud Many Defeats At The Hands or The Brlllsu. London Spectator. - : Of late Spanish statesmen, admirals and generals have been doinq a great deal of boasting in regard to the past glories won by their seamen. The im pression gained from reading their state ments is that Spain's career at sea has been one grand series of successes. In stead, the fact is, it has bten one grand series of disasters. And particulary so when her fleets met the men-of-war of the Anglo-Saxon. In Spain's early history there is little of a maritime nature. Most of her fighting was done on land and with well equip ped armies she won enough money to enable her to employ the best soldiery talent of the day. By a stroke of luck Spain found herself the ruling power over vast areas of land and with money enough on hand to employ men to ex plore the furthest ends of the earth for her. At one time Spain was really the first naval power. " But even when circumstances made her the first of naval powers Spam was never equal to the task she undertook. A great Italian sailor secured for her the empire of. the West. The fighting prow ess of two great military ' captains won for her Mexico and Peru. Her splendid armies conquered Portugal and brought her the widest colonial dominion ofthe age. . ; But it was not by sea that Spain won her supremacy-i and not by naval victor ies that she laid her grip on every quarter of the globe. Even , when her power and wealth seemed irresistible, when her military reputation was at its height, when the world was strewn with her ter ritories and the ocean laden with her argosies and fleets, her real naval power was utterly incommensurate with the astonishing pretensions which it made. As soon as England and Holland laid afiager on it her maritime empire crum bled into dust. The Armada only re vealed a fact which English sailors had long suspected, and the consciousness of which explains Drake's sublime con tempt for the menaces of Spain the fact that, even at the zenith of their lame, the Spaniards had no mastery of the arts by which the sea is held. Is there on record a battle which shows that Drake and Blake and Jervis and Nelson were mistaken ia their low esti mate of Spanish seamen? Can any ot us recall Ihe name of any great Spanish naval victory since Lepanto, which was won largely by Venitian crews. If we look at the history of Spain since the Armada we find only a succession of naval disasters, asuccession of triumphs for any State which has ventured to grapple with the Spaniards on the seas. ' Take the history of the seventeenth century and follow the career of the Dutchadmirals.audofthe greatest of Nel son's predecessors, Blake. Take the eighteenth century and notice how even Alberoni and Patino failed, with all their efforts, .to resuscitate the . fleets of Spain- Take the modern war iu Chili and mark how few antagonists Cochrane could find there worthy of his steel. Even in the days of her greatest power at sea Spain wa3 notoriously deficient in the capacity of her sailors and since those days she has steadily declined. Today Spanish gunners and Spanish engineers are confessedly among . the worst in Europe. It would be little short of a miracle if it should turn out that Spain within the last two decades hadf bred a race of seamen capable of re versing the unvarying misfortunes of the past.' ' . For proof of the foregoing it is only necessary to turn back a few pages of his tory to show just how incapable the Spanish seamen are. Not only are they weak in scieuce and discipline, but they have not shown the bravery of the Anglo- Saxon sailors, j A study of the records of the British navy of eyen recent years will show that for bravery and valor the Spaniards can give no points t the An glo-Saxon. Spam can show not a single engagement In which her men displayed the bravery -the English have on many occasions- ' ' , Every student of British history knows of the defeat of .the Spanish Armada. But that is too long ago. To come to a more recent date, 1770, is far enough back to show what is intended. At this time the Dons had built up -quite a formidable navyand become very insolent again Piracy was encouraged to such an extent that England had to interfere to teach a lesson. For a number of years there was con unuai ngnung ana engagements were very frequent The most important of these engagements are as follows: March 17,1794 The British brig Zebra, of sixteen guns, stormed aud captured Fort Royal, Martinique. This was a hot fight of many hours and the Spanish out numbered their adversaries almost four to one. ',: - . March 17, 1796 British frigate Dia mond and the Liberty, an eighteen-gun brig, destroyed the batteries of Port Sporgal . and nine warships. The Dia mond was in command of Sir Sydney Smith and the Liberty .in .command of George McKinley, an ancestor of our ii lustnous President, ; ; February 12, 1797 Admiral Sir John Jervis, in the old Victory amed afterward as Lord Nelson's flagship, had an -action with the Spanish fleet and destroyed near ly all of them aud captured four ships of the line. May 5, 1793 Two brigs, the Badger of ten guns, and the Sandfly, of eight guns, had an engagement with four Spanish frigates. It was a fierce battle, but one that did not last long, owing to the accuracy of the 4British gunners Three of the Spanish vessels were simk and the fourth, the Santa Doroten, was captured and after ward did good service fighting for England.. . November, 6, 1799 The- Speedy, a small brigantine, carrying eight four pounders, 'engaged twelve Spanish gunboats and successfully - defended a convoy of merchantmen at the same time. - May 6, 1801 Lord Cochrane, in the Speedy, ranged up alongside of the Span ish frigate Gamo, and after a hard fight, in which the Gamo was nearly wrecked, capturedjher. The crew of the Gamo was 455 all tola. The crew of the little Speedy was but 38. ; July 12, 1801 The Cocar, an English line-of-battle ship, and seven Braall gun boats met a large French and Spanish squadron in the Strata of Gibralter, and after a fierce fight destroyed all but one frigate, the San Antonia, of seventy-lonr guns, which was captured and put under the British colors. The English loss was trifling. February 3, 1805 The Arrow and the Acheron, both sixteen-guns brigs, protect ed a convoy of twenty-eight merchant men against two powerful Spanish frig ates and thrashed them off. August 23, 1806 Capt. C. Brisbane, in the Arethusa, a smallCorvette, captured the Spanish frigate Pomone. r January 1, 1807 Capt. Brisbane, in the Arethusa, assisted by four other vesspls, captured the port of Curacao. November 24, 1807 Lieutenant Mc Kenzie, in a small cutter, captured ten gunboats and a privateer. He destroyed thecn all. April 24, 1808 Capt. Searle, in a little gun brig, the Grasshopper, and a cutter under. command of Lieutenant Baugh, engaged all the Spanish gunboats at Faro. The engagement was a hot one, but as usual, the Anglo-Saxon . triumphed. Not a ship was left to fly the Spanish flag. The English loss was very small. The list could be lengthened con siderably, always with the same " re sult. Such victories as the Span iards may have gained tover the Eng lish were always done by vastly superior numbers. The same may be said of their "victo ries" in the new world. It was always a case of the rude implements of the sav age against the armor and guns of Eu rope." -When there has been anything like equality on both sides the Spaniards have invariably been defeated.. And so it must always be for the reason that tlie Anglo-Saxons are the the most resource ful race that ever lived. ' tator. ' A LYXHIN IN ALABAMA. TOE COTTON SITUATION. A Nob Tabes Charge of five Negroes Who Murdered Two Old Hen aud a Women For Money. . Montgomery; Ala., June 16. On Tues day night seven miles from Wetumka, Wm. Carden and his wife, an old couple, and Wm. Carlee, also an old man, were murdered and their house burned to con ceal the crime. Carden hoarded his money, and the parties were murdered to secure it. Yesterday Sol Jackson, Lewis Spier and three other negros were arrested for the crime. Late this afternoon a crowd of 500 men from the neighbor hood of the crime gathered at Wetumpka to mob the prisoners. Since they have been in jail two of the murderers, Jack son and Spier confessed and told where they buried the money $200. The mob broke lhto the jail about 5 o'clock, but were unable to get into the inner casre where the prisoners r were. The sheriff telegraphed the Governor for troops and at 8 o'clock tonight about 90 of the former members of the militia companies, left here on a special train . A few minutes after 8 o'clock word was received here that the mob succeeded in getting blacksmith tools, broke open the cage and secured the prisoners. The in tention of the mob, it is stated, is to take them to the scene of the crime and hang tbem. The military company will not reach Wetumpka in time to oppose the mob. Lynched Tor Ihe Usual Crime. Cincinnati, O., June 16. A Times-Star special irom lilasgowJiy, says mat Ua leb Grimes, colored, was taken from jail at 1 a. m. and hanged to a tree. A note pinned to the body directed, that it be not aisturDea uu noon ioaay. Lraines had assaulted a 4-year-old girl on Tues day and was then saved lrom deatn py the mercy ot tne victim's mother, fifty men on horseback were the lynchers .1 Mr. John Bevins, editor of the Press, Anthon, Iowa, says: "1 have ustd Cham berlam's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Retnedy in my family for fifteen, years, have recomended it to Hundreds of others, and nave never Known it to lau in a sin gle instance For sale by Jas. A. Hardi- son. FfrfT m pet ... .... f XJW are the chil dren this summer? Are they doing. . well? Do they all the benefit thev should from their food? Are their cheeks and lips' of good color? And are they hearty and robust in every way? If not, then give them . Scott's Ecnnlsicn of cod liver oil 'with hypo phosphites. It never fails to build up delicate boys and girls. , It gives them more flesh and better blood. It is just so with the baby also. A litds Scott's Emulsion three or four times a day, will make the thin baby plump and Frosperous. It urnishes the young body with just the material necessary for growing bones . nrl nir!. iJrnraHata. e. an a tr. SCOTT A Bowws. rhamtata. M. I fAofAaa4iay'giyjrf. aA ," al I The Present Position I, Per haps, The Most Cartons In lis History. New Orleans Times-Democrat. The present position of cotton is, per haps, the mos curious in its history. The season now drawing" to a close will never be forgotten by anybody who passed through its long and unbroken deprssion The commercial year of 1896-97 ended with the visible supply drawn down to the famine point, and the visible supplies were probably, the smallest ever known, if we except the period of the civil war. All eyes were fixed on the new crop, as it was perfectly well known that anything like a disaster would mean something like the excitement , that has lor many months prevailed in wheat. ; A large part of the delta had been everfiowed, and much land had to be replanted late in June. It was . generally thought that, under the circumstances, anything like a large crop was physically impos sible. As a mattter of fact, the overflowed lands gave a phenomenal yield, and a monster crop was produced everywhere outside of Texas. Mr. Neill was the first to sound the alarm when he announced his belief that a growth of 9,750,000 bales was beyond the hazard of the seasons. That well-known authority gradually in creased his estimate tmtil he rested in the neighborhood of 11,000,000 bales, which is now known to be approximately the true figure. Just as this monster crop began to move the disturbing influences of quaran tines in the 8outh made themselves felt, The condition of European politics was extremely unsettled, and the Cuban question was looming large on our own horizon. This combination of circum stances produced a silent panic in the South, and cottoa was persistently sold fro a the auction block. The public re membered that middling had sold at 4 7-8 cents a pound with a crop of 9,90t 0,000 bales. It seemed to the average man that the price must surely go to 4 with a crop of 11,000,000. But the event falsified the prediction, and 5 1-8 was found to be the price at which statistics and all other in fluencea of a bearish nature lost their force The demand for actual cotton has never slackened for a moment. It would, in deed, seem that the position of cotton at the beeinning of this season was some what similar to the position of wheat There was an enormous crop, but the world needed, or thought it needed, every pound of it If that view is correct, the South simply sold its birthright tor a mess of pottage. No cotton crop has ever been moved with such an utter absence of the verjJ semblance of speculation. The produceim. and the consumer have been broughf. more closely together than ever beforr The price was extremely, low becaTGul- pecuktion held aloof and the prod.-?""10 had a very poor opinion of the value o'uie his goods. If it had not been for the de- : pleted condition of the stocks in the out - set, prices would, undoubtedly, have sunk to a figure that would have astonished the most inveterate "bear." As we are now only three months from the close of the season, we can get a fairly clear idea of the general situation. Ac cording to Secretary Hester's report of Friday last, the world's visible supply of American cotton is now 2,712,833 bales, as against 3,301,353 at the corresponding date in 1895. The visible supply of all kinds is now 3,000,833 bales, as against 3,647,553 at the corresponding date in 1895. But, while there is a deficit of sup ply of 623,730 bales as compared with the last big crop year, the deficit In the price is much more striking still. At this date three years ago the quotation for mid dling on the spot was 6 7-8. The future market was quoted as follows: June, 6.97; uly, 7.03; August. 7.08; September, T.06; October, 7.04; November, 7.07; Decem ber, 7.10. So we see that with a dimin ished visible supply of nearly 700,000 bales, prices are approximately 1 cent per pound lower than in 1895. From this standpoint it is fortunate that the deficit in the supply is not twice as large as it ac tually is.Jbr in that ease we might logi cally expect record-breaking prices. There is another very curious fact to be noted in the present position of cotton While July contracts are selling slightly over 6 cents October deliveries are being done at about 10 points less. We find just this condition of things in the wheat market, in a more active lorm," for Sep tember contracts are selling for about one-half the price of May position. No body will deny that the current price of wheat is very high! The South has a interest in knowing whether , the same remark applies to the present price of cotton. . Only the future can solve the riddle. One of the strongest phenomena of the time is the tremendous change that seems o have come over the speculative tern perament , of the South. The "bear" seems 10 nave wings, an nis own wayi just as the "bull" used to have in the days of yore.. This change is the legiti mate result of bitter experience. WAR TARIFF AFFECTS ERYBODY. EV- CRCELTY IK THE CUBAN WAR. Far Reaching Effects Jnst Real . . iel A- War Stamp Mast be Had For Every Business Trans action Sou or the Details ol itbe Law Explained, Raleigh Post. The war tariff act passed by Congress is a subject ot much discussion now. People are just beginning to realize its effects. - The banks will have a heavy burden tobear. The new law prescribes a tax of (50 on the first 125,000 of their capital, and $2 ou each $1,000 additional. On every bank check or draft or certificate of deposit a 2-ceut stamp will have to be pasted. THE TAX ON LEASES. Leases on property must bear a 25-cent stamp if it is for one year; 50 cents for three years, and Si for leases for a longer term. : So on every mortgage executed here for more than $1,000 and less than t,500 there is a stamp-tax of 25 cents, and 2$ cents lor each addtional I500. If a note comes due and is not paid, and is pro tested, a 25-cent stamp must go on the protest notice. So, if a check or bill of exchange is protested. A power of attorney to sell or lease real estate also requires a 25-cent stamp, and incorporated companies or associa tipns 10 cents. . s Thousands of telegraph messages pas through the offices each week, and the tax will amount to a goodly sum in the course of two months. One of the most disappointing features of the bill is the tax on amusements. Every entertainment to which an admis sion fee is charged will be subject to $10, except where otherwise specified. This tax holds good for a year, so amuse ment managers may take out the licenses at the beginning of the season. Sales and agreements to sell securities of any kind, promissory notes, foreign certificates issued by notaries and other law officers, all thesecarry their share of taxation. An inheritance tax Is also claimed on all bequests of more than $10,000. Each druggiat who puts up a com pound of his own will have to buy stamps to put upon his bottles at the rate of one-quarter of I cent on a 5-cent arti cle; one-half of 1 cent on a 10-cent arti cle; 1 cent on a 25-cent article; 2 cents on 50-cent articles, and so on. The stock and share-brokers will pay $50 each as a license tax. Every time one of them sells id shares of stock it meaps $ 2. more, either out of his pocket nocket of the man who owned the A Horrible Custom Which Has .Been Praelieed Both by Insnr renlt and Spaaiards. New York Herald. To those familiar with the horror of Cuban warfare there is nothing startling in the reported mutilation of the bodies of the gallant marines who fell in the first night attack on the American camp at Guantanamo. Hardly a combat has oc curred between the Spaniards and insur gents which has not been attended by this revolting practice, of which, if all the stories can be believed, neither side has been guiltless. ' Tne hatred engendered by this mur derous conflict has been such that Cu bans and Spaniards alike seem to have been possessed of the demoniac passion of wreakinjr vengeance on the bodies . of the fallen enemy. ,To disfigure, , to mangle, to commit nameless indignities on the dead has been almost as variable a custom as it is among the most savage tribes. It has been a common custom among the Spaniards whenever a rebel chief was killed to drag his nude and mangled body into the nearest town at a horse's tail and parade it in triumph, nominally in order that the body might be fully identified. When Nestor Arangurea was killed his body, lterally covered with wounds inflicted by bullet, bayonet and machete, was taken into Havana and ex posed to the gaze of curious thousands The same fnehtful spectacle was seen when Castillo was killed a few months before. It excited no attention, being evidently regarded as a custom. The Cubans have always claimed that they lespected the bodies of the dead, but there are well-authenticated instances where thev have committed the most frightful mutilations on wounded Span iards who have fallen into their hands. I recall one instance when a soldier was sent back to Havana with his tongne cut out. Se The come money-lenders will under this same tax. "'as libers must tav 20o a vear to the . ... M. S j r?'8 Stable. when business documents are con sidered that it is made apparent how thoroughly the work of creating sources of revenue has been done by the Con gressional committees. There is not any form of business paper that will not be subject to a stamp .tax, ranging from 1 cent up to $5. Every time a bill of more than $5 is paid the creditor must put a 1- cent stamp on it, under a penalty oC a fine of $1,000, or five years at hard labor in a penitentiary, "Do yon remember," said Miss Ancient Oldgirl to Colonel Urabtree, "how when you .were a young man you proposed to me and I rejected your - "It is one of the happiest recol lectionB of my life," said the col onel, with au air of " gallantry. a. a - a a Ana miss oiagirl is stilt wondering. Pack. " The Chief Burgess of Milesburtr. Pa. says DeWitt's Little Early Risers are the best pills he ever used in his family dur ing forty years of bouse keeping. They cure constipation, sick headache and stomach and liver-troubles. Small in size but grett m results. J. A. Hardison. "I think DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve is the finest preparation on the market for piles. 60 writes John C. Dunn, of w neeung, w . v a. 117 it and you will tniBK the same. , it also, cures eczema ana au skin aiseases. J. A. Hardison. Murphy's Natural Mistake. Tid-Bits. - Officer (to new Bervant) Murphy, I have left my mess boots out this morning. I want them soled. Private Murphy V ery good, sor, Officer(later in the day) Did yon take those boots, Murphy." Private Ma rphy (feeling in his pockets and putting on the table 18 pence) xes, sor; and that s all could get for them. The corporal who bought them said he would have given 2 shillings had it been payday. (Col laps? omcer). Mr- P. Ketcham of Pike City, CaL, says: ''During my brother's late -sickness from sciatic rheumatism, Chamberlain's Pain Balm was the only remedy that gave him any relief. Many others have testi fied to the prompt relief from pain which this liniment attords. If or sale by Jas. A. Hardison. , UPor 1 TS. PjO 1 .-; 1 TEE EXCELLENCE OF SYEUP OF FI2S is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fio Sraup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. Aa the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the California Fiq Stktjp Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one. in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cali- . fokhia Fio Srxtrp Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the-Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives. as it acta on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing- them, and it does not gripe noc nauseate, in order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAX rBAXCISCO, Cai, TONGUES IX TREES. A Consumption Cure. Atlanta Journal. His said that pulmonary consumption has killed more human beings than all the wars ever waged, and there is good reason to believe that the statement is true. Anything, therefore, that promises to lessen the ravages of this dread disease must be received with deep interest "and lively hope. - Dr. J. B. Murphy, and eminent surgeon of Chicago, claims to have discovered a new and practically infallible cure for consumption. Simply stated, Dr. Mur phy's plan is to apply surgical science to lung treatment by iufusing nitrogen gas into the diseased member, quieting it to a state of collapse and trusting nature to do the rest. He would relieve the dis eased member from active service, as it were, and during its peroid of rest would treat it with a pleuritic effusion ac complished by a simple surgical opera tion. Dr. Murphy does not rely on eory as the foundation tor his faith in tL a treat ment He says he has effected several cures with his treatment in cases which seemed utterly hopeless. The Chicago Chronicle devotes much space to an ac count of the Murphy treatment aud seems to be greatly impressed by it. It says: "The evolution ot the diagnosis and treatment of tubercular diseases is oce of the most striking examples of genuine progress known to the scientific world. Countless experiments have been made along the line of inoculation and othcr alleged specifics, with the result that con sumption has at least been diagnosed as contagious but not hereditary. It has been amply proved that nature, receiving proper encouragement in the earlier stages of the disease, will Jthrow off . the dread destroyer. Villemin first began to inoculate animals with tuberculous mate.' rial in 1865 and Klebsand Aufrecht made futhex demonstrations on the same line that were accepted as most important by the medical world. Other German sci entists paved the way for the great dis covery of Koch, that ouly inoculated tu berculous mattrr can produce consump tion, although some persons are more re ceptive to the germs from hereditary lack ot resistance than others. The supreme effort of medical science has since been to discover the weapon that would kill the germs of the disease. The strength ening ot the entire body is still an im portant adjunct of modern treatment, but science has insisted that there must be some method of local treatment that will successfully grapple with the destroyer A pure atmosphere, wholesome food, eq uable temperature and a maximum of sunshiue are as essential as ever in the general treatment, but the specific treat mant is being mapped out on more ad vanced lines. "Dr. Murphy deserves the gratitude of the entire human family for increasing the hope that by a resort to simple surg ery this specific cure may be within easy reach." - How to Find The Points of The Compass la the Forest. The many different methods to deter minate the cardinal points while yn the mountains, ia both heavy timber and small brush, or upon the feature e ex- pause of a great marsh, are exceedingly numerous and reliable enough for all practical purposes darin an every -day life in the bush, unless a very long jour ney is to be made, which would make it necessary to hold on a very fine point while making a long distance. We will first take notes on the conifer ous trees pines, firs, spruce, cedars, hem locks, &c. The bark of these is always lighter in color, harder and dryer on the south side of the tree: while it is in color much darker, it is also damper and often rovered with mould and moss on the north side. The gum that oozes oat from wounds, knotholes, &c is usually hard and often of beautiful amber color on the south side, while on the northern side-it remains sticky longer and sets covered with insects and dirt, seldom drying out to more than a dirty gray in color. On large trees that have rough bark, especially dunng the fall and winter months, the nests and webs of insects, spiders. &.C will alwavs be found in the crevices on the south side. A preponder ance of the large branches will also be found on the wannest or southern side of the trees. Also, the needles of all the above-mentioned trees are shorter; dryer and of a yellowish green on the southern side, while they will be found longer, more slinder aud pliable, damper to the touch and darker green in color on the north side. The cedars and hemlocks, as if trying to outdi the others, always bend their slender tops of new' growth toward a southern sky. The hardwood trees are equally as communicative, and have all the charac teristics, as far as regards their trunks, of the coniferous trees, except the absence of gums; but this is more than made up by the fungus growth of mould and mos ses that is very noticeable on the north side of these trees. The edges of rocks, which may be part of stupendous mountains, or merely occa sional cropping out here and there in the woods, or, perhaps, some great bowlder alone by itself, a silent witness of the glacial period,"all alike testify to the effect of the light and shade. The sunny side will usually be bare, or at most, boast of a thin growth of harsh, dry kind of mosses, and that will grow only when having the light, while the northern side will be found damp aud mouldy and often covered with a luxuriant growth of soft, damp mosses that love the shade, while every crevice will bear aloof heauiifnl and gracefully waving ferns. - The forest floor on the sunny side of hills, ridges, clumps of tiees, bushes, big rocks, &c, is more noisy under the foot fall than on the northern side of such places, where the dead leaves and litter are soft and damp,, holding more moisture than in places exposed to the light of the sun. In an open country nearly void of tim ber, clumps of small bushes during the summei will furnish all the conditions found to exist among the leaves of the trees, being equally sensitive to light and shade as are the monarchs of the woods. The landscape, green with moving grasses and beautiful to the eye, which feasts on the countless number of wild flowers, rep resenting every from and hue known in the flowery kingdom, also furnishes a reliable guide for locating the cardinal points,' as most wild flowers, especially the long-stemmed varieties .hide their faces from the north, and, like the sunflower, turn toward a south sky. Forest and Stream. tbatMdpora, lO.1 Absolutely Pure WfWnA AaJflMQ PWWOFw CO. HW VOUnt BUTLER REM AIXS ( II AIRH AH. The Middle-of ine It oa tiers De featedA Convention to he Held Prior to the Democratic Convention In 1900.' Omaha, June 17. Shortly after 5 a. m. today, the conterence ot tne Populist national committee ad journed sine die. The final outcome was the practical route of the mid dle-of-the-road crowd, under the leadership of Miltou Part, although the liberal wing made some conces sions, lhere will be no conven tion in 1899 to outline the policy of the party. In 1900 there will be an early convention to nominate a na tional ticket, the same to be held prior to the Democratic convention. ; rto overture looking to fusion will emanate from the national commit tee, and none will be received or en tertained by it. The national com mittee is required to keep hands off in State campaigns; or. if its assist ance be invited, it may interfere only in behalf of the Populist ticket and not to assist in fusion. The effort to force Chairman Butler to resign proved futile, and he will continue to act until the next national con vention of 1900. Value of Expert Knowledge. A North Carolina hilltop ou which a fine house had been built proved to bav such an attraction for lightning that the owner, in fear for his life, moved ont at last and let the place go to rum. A Pittsburg'man read the newspaper stories of the "light-ning-haDnted" hill, meditated a while, finally bought the place for little or nothing, and in less than six weeks located an . almost inex haustible iron mine. For twelve years it has annually yielded iron enough to pay for whole plant four times over which tba purchaser probably consider reasonable re ward for the exercise of the gift which Yankees call "gnmption." Youth's Companion. v Scrofula, hip diseaf e, salt rheum, dys pepsia and other diseases due to impure blood are cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. As Others see I's. Atlanta Constitution. A New Yorker was surprised the other day by a letter from his sister in Ger many, urging him to leave the city before the Spaniards captured it. The ;lady's letter stated that the Ger man newspapers described the panic in New York among the people and report the suspension of all business, as a bom bardment from Spanish vessels was hour ly expected. According to these journals, the confusion was indescribable, and it was predicted that the inhabitants would favor the surrender of the city before the first Bhell was fired. It is quite likely that many Europeans are under the impression that we are get ting the worst of the present war, and if they rely upon news from Spanish sources they will go down to their graves with the belief that the dons licked us out of our boots in every engagement. American tourists in Mexico have fre quently complained that they found it impossible to convince the people down there that the United States whipped them in the conflict of in 1846. The Mexican historians stick to itthat their armies were victorius, and that Scott and Taylor were firally forced to retire from tbe country, the United states paying Mexico a large indemnity. Mr. Dlugley on the Revenue Bill. Baltimore Sun. In his 8Deech in the Honse last week on tbe conference committee's report, upon the revenue bill Chair man Dingley, of the ways aud means committee, sketched tne pro visions ef the bill in its final shape and presented an interesting esti mate of the amount of income to be derived from each item of taxa tion. The total reveneue the bill will produce in the next fiscal year is placed at from $149,480,000 to $150,000,000. The items, with 7 amounts expected of each, are aa follows: Fermented liquors, $58,- 906.000: tobacco and snuff, $43,840,- 560; cigars and cigaretta, $17,340, 382; manufactures and dealers in tobacco $307,102; tea, $10,000,000; bankers, $2,394,000; brokers, $1, 500.000: brokers, commercial, $213,- 094; theatres, circusses, &c, $1,820,- 447; bowling, alleys and billiard ta bles. $166,967. Stamn taxes are ex pected to produce on sales of stocks, bonds, merchandise, sc., sfciu.uw, 000; bank checks, $5,500,000; bills of exchange, &c, $1,500,000; ex press and freight, with all bills of lading. 510,000,000; life insuarance, $1,226,323; mortgages, $2,041,599; chewinar sum. 1,000,000; legacies, $9,275,475; proprietary preparations. etc., $15,000,000; miscellaneous, 418.000.000: adulterated flour. $25o,ooo. To be added is the .in come from internal taxes not cnang ed by the new law, aggregating over $84,000,000, as follows: Spirits, $S2,oo8,542; brewers, (special,) $16o,y27; retail dealers in malt liquors, $191,o71; whol3ale dealers in malt Honors. 191,8ol; oleomar garine, $l,o34,o29;filled ch"tese;$18,- 992; miscellaneous, $io,ooo. ine revenue derived last year from ar ticles mentioned m both of the fore going lists was $146,619,593, which figure is expected to be swollen by the new taxes to from $294,35o,ooo to $3oo,ooo,odo. The Republicans have nominated a nei'ro for Governor of Alabama. They have a negro-made Governor in North Carolina, and will elect Major Jim Yonng in 1900 if they think the white people would stand any more Knssellism. .News and Observer. Thousands of persons have been cured of piles by using DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. It heals promptly and cures ecze ma and all skin diseases. It gives imme diate relief. J. A. Hardison. Populist Papers Know Their Charges are False. - Monroe Enquirer. If we are to believe what the Populist papers say the Democratic State conven tion, which met in Raleigh.on May 26th, was composed of corporation lawyers, paid to grind the .people, professional politicians, tricksters, shysters and.in fact was a little political helL And yet, there was the Populist leaders hanging around that convention making proposi tions to that body for fusion. . And the self same editors who are painting that I convention as a seething pot of political corruption cu.ssed that convention be cause it refused to fuse with the Populists. How could the Populists in their purity offer to fuse with a body which they claim is so corrupt? Bob Moore, of LaFayette, Ind., that tor constipation he has found says De Witt's Li ttle Early Risers to be perfect. They never gripe. Try them for atom ach and liver troubles. J. A. Hardison. An much in little; always a B ready, efficient, aatlsfa. j J D a tory; prevent a cold or lever, I NQ eura all Bra 111a, aide kaad- U .HUH W ach. JU"U, eoatttpatioa, Ms. prk jj eanu. Tba aftly fUli.ts tax vttft &4'i rupity, X. The length of Mr. Gladstones' politi cal service can be measured by the fact that he entered Parliament at a time when Andrew Jackson was President of the United States, and retired from it when Mr. Cleveland had begun his second term. He held his first cabinet office when Daniel Webster was also first serv ing in a like capacity here. Weary William "Did you tell de ol girl back at de house dat ye was an escaped reconcentrado from Cuba?'" Wandering Tank "Yes; but it didnt do no good. She jest said dat she s'peeed I was so used ter goia wit'out anyt'ing ter eat dat I didn't cund it much." Puck.