i I lMES . ' ENTRA ('. IVY; Editor and Publisher. Render Unto Caesar the Things that are Oaesar?s, Unto God, God-s. 1.00 Per Annum, in Advance. VOL. I. DUNN, HARNETT CO., N. C, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1891 NO. 42 i-1 A, A .(!,M!ilC AMI INDUSTRIAL. .; M ;-,., has t!ie largest fly- !.- I ,., v irc iri'lecfat lights are now made f..i .-.rSvul "-.. w.-rldio:; h ti been applied to ; -1; -,! iifac-ture of projectiles for v Mi-;'- vu-iicu have discovered aa i -:.v. i.l-echcs wood pulp designed t ;. .,. ,j in !:: ;ri muficture of paper. 1 . Cxi unet and Ilecla WorKS nave ;;:.!' v oiks in Buffalo, X. Y., the v A which will be 250 tons . von are floating through ice -i tii - ocean you 30 very slowly. .- 1:;.-1etre drifted through the Arctic ; ;''. nto of two miles a day. a mi an in Cap3 C d, Mas?., , ... s i-i.v: t be at the rate of 755, 7V i-i yt: li p r year, or aa annual ,A. . , i, f 'j". ;' tt t'l'iil to a distance of i ,. .ighL leu;. V. I) jau, the Califoraia naturalist, ; t 1 over 70,00'J insets belong- horn-winged family, 5000 of trib'j tiri 1 about 40J but ,i , I ituiu'jrouV rare plants aad if i. ! i'-ii nil Way sevea miles ia length i r .rs-.tructiou oa the Usai Mouat- L , 11, tV connect the termini of ml- r.iiKv iy at Yokoham aad .-t.i. 'There are twenty -one tua-. ! i. J "J leet in length iu all, aloag . . , ri l the steepest grade is one 1 . -:it improvement in making 1 ei-ists iu making each alternate 'hAl wool and soniewat thicker 1 b K !. :. t tL ' -' V.f- ! the jtLiLi.s. wuen tne staves are i.'. t'i' i and the hoops driven down, . ii I ao 1 staves are thus crowded tii-n sotter neighbor, makiag a A !!e-v si-Idle h us series of spring coa 1:. i i, tii-; ' upper saddle -tree, or seat, t-t ttiti. t:tc S i er, to relieve the ruler from oh -i t'll j ilting. The springs are Cone r-iru. , working within -each other, are i.f t.-tiiH-M-d steel, so as to work freely nil. r, vt I the motion of the horse may l.r.n; ti.e weight of the rider. . .Tli-j : h iii t i.it is ta'cea fro n hide au. t.-iiiu-nt-i his found a new use. Por.aorly .this li.iir-wa- of. little Vitlu:'. By a new j !- a--s it is taken from the hide by a iii, i:i!i' which at the same ti no cl-'iavi it, ;t 1 i it is t!i -:i bileJ and seat tj thi f:i. t ,ry, where it is utilized in mikiag tl'itii "all wool" an la yard wid3. A sixty-seven-ton gua on board the British ai.nored vessel Howe has de vi.! 1 a defect in the inner tu' 3 similar t' tint recently found in one of the big the English ironclad Auson, the tl-i-itji 'of the Channel Spiviroa. Til 3 A-hnirilty is greatly exercise 1 over tli3 Tv--vrAMiscovevic ot defects in British 1 a a'o-: j'r.i'e oavcrsion of tar into ;v ' in ti. v !e e lecte l without leiving iiny r -i'hi 1 in a retort. Tne pro2.ss ronsi-'T in ii.jectiug a soriy ot tir by ni'-:ui-i ot 'a Ivorting jet suppliel with 'ip:-! :i-atc 1 si.j.ini mtj a re l-hot retort halt tilled with coke. Tne gas ha- a high -a'ldhj-po a i-i -and does not uee I the Use f .pc:i-ive enriching material. Th- injury, of metallic sleepers fron ori i-iiji has Ujju greitly overbite 1. Kvt n in tiie d-vnp climate of the Nether li i i tin' ;.. fro u rjrroiion d)ei not, it 1- s ii l,"v.-oe i four per cent, in tweuty ' a--. Evpt-rieaee iu India sho.vs that Mft.iiii. - M rs wiiich are subjected to a ) - -i! ti .it meat bjforo leiving th-3 ,v"- ":'e thoroughly to be relied on for ; t v :i;id lasting we ir. ( n,,,v :U ti,iri;il quinine nrodiiced by M-: . f In u rax an I Am 11 1, of Paris, J !!!.!: I ;t Oi!C Of til'5 gl'-MtOSt diS- "v. iv 1 .joar. It is out line 1 by ti. : t;i- Ii ie cupreiii of a Ui-iziltaa -'il'' Noliu.n, theutreiting the ra mi l i t no oan 1 with chloride of ?!! ! ... t -r.w v p:i-, Ti:.- luol'jjt is ijuiniae abso !: ii with t"i-. sa'iia:i3 thit" n ' s fa uiliii- and so m 1U A Lo n ir Night Iiednc?d. lb ". l'olar night will be hence-. . 'ie iu arable te the 2000 'inhab i llammeifest, in Norway, the r::u:-si village of Europe. Electric 1 I c-c-n introduced into" every ia ti:i- hamlet. The power is ir.-i 1:1 h. , li !rom three mall streams a short -ci- tr.cn ll:i:nmerstein, whose cur o'.iroaif aud swift that the t i ,i j,,,r hee.e even in winter. . I lit- t, ,-. rlf tlwi (V.rn Vl.l tro VA.n lit t tLr ' t- l-.- uvateful to the inveutor of v-lt-f trie liirht. The lonir nisrht bes-ins H -i:niiu-rsteiu cn November 18 and lt u:nl January 23, so that the ar v 1 i- lil iminatioa will be of service for ;X -IX d IVS. On thf nthnr hand it p'-Kticaliy useless and unneces n .May If. to Julv 26, durins :i time the sun never ceases to shine. i!-i;ntvu-rstein lies in north latitude 70 r-..:5 minutes IS seconds. - At 67 "i --'-"i minutes, north latitude, the -est night lasts one month; at 69 : ' V",1 ,ninutes it lasts two months, : t -5 degree 40 minutes, thr The rolar night is shortened tsu- ,VM;r day is lengthened by the ;'Ult:"uo; Mt. The inhabitants of i.an-m. r-tnn. ja fact, have no real night i' m -:i Mau-h 30 and September 12. McSwlney'-s Gni. Near Ilorn Head, Countv Donegal, v '. ' ere ls a hole in the rocks called I,.wlneJ Sgua. Itis on the seacoa5t r"'' to have connection with a w-rn. When the nortn winds blows J'-'i the sea is at half flood, the wind and 'waves enter the cavern and send up ot water fom the t iOAheit .rnore than 100 feet. The -;etsof aier are accompanied bv explosions a:eh my be heard for mile . 1 ae W001 anrt manure fortne keep ol ' " sheeP a4 raiay flockraisters attest, Suu the lanb, r all xtu. a.ner c.-ns i;..-'. ..n -1 1 . wm snow a? fet a per cent, of Drofit? DECEMBER DOINGS. Thef Latest News From a Trio of States. Interesting News Items From Many Points in Our Own and Neighboring States. . VIRGINIA. The Lynchburg shoe factory has been sold to a local syndicate. A bakiDg powder factory is one of Portsmouth's new industries. A monument has been erected to the Confederate dead at Newport News. Fifty students were before the mayor of Lexington Thursday charged with singing on the street. Arrangements are being made to es tablish a steamship line between New port News and Glasgow. Colonel Colyar, one of the counsel in the State line controversy, thinks Ten nessee will win the suit. An effort is to be made in Greene county to pipe crude oil to tide water if found in paying quantities. The Richmond camps of Confederate veterans are making preparations to properly celebrate Gen. Hobt. E. Lee's birthday on Jan. 10. The census of Newport News has been completed bp the Board of Trade, and the population of this live young city is 5.618. Virginia has supplied a good many bishops to other States. There are Bish ops Wilmer, of Alabama; Peterkin, of West Virginia; Dudley, of Kentucky, besides Bishop Williams, of Japan. Some unknow person sent Julius ,Lie beit, of Petersburg, a water fowl of a species unknown. In body it is the size and shape of a Ptkin duck, dark gray in color, web footed and with a bill shaped like a crane's, though somewhat shorter. On the box containing the stranger wa3 written: '".Wheu I am thiisty give mo water; when I am hungry give me fresh fish.' Some of the Capitol officials think an effort will be made at this session of the Legislature to largely increase the ap propriation for pensions for disabled Confederate soldiers. That made by the last Legislature was $S5,000, exclusive of the $10,000 for the Confederate Sol diers' Home. An effort was made last year to put the figures at 150,000, but in the then financial condition of the Commonwealth the advocate of the in crease was induced not to press it. NORTH CAROLINA. An English syndicate is negotiating for the purchase of the asbestos mining property near Morganton. In the military contest at Wilmington, last week, the Hornet's Riflemen, of Charlotte, carried off the first prize, $100. In the United States Court, in Raleigh, Jesse Goodwin, a jqung mechanic, was convicted of counterfeiting, and sentenc ed to two years at hard labor in the pen itentiary at Albany. Rev. J. H. Barrett and ex-Rev. J. T. Ball, the parties concerned in the pugi listic encounter at Raleigh, in which Ball felled Barrett to the ground with a stick, were before his Honor Mayor Badger, and the evidence showing that it Wbs purely nu assault on the part of Ball he was bound over to court in the sum of of $200 and Barrett was discharg ed. Christopher Stephens, a leading farmer of Richland, Onslow county, died Sun day. He commenced life a poor youth, purchased a $25,000 farmand prospered until at the dale of his death he owned 11,000 acres of land. It is reported ia Savannah that the South Bound Railroad will be extended to Charlotte, N. C, where it would form a junction with the Seaboard Air Line system, thus creating a new route be tween the iSioith and the South. Itis also, it is said, intended that a connec tion shall be made by which the South Bound can reach the Roanoke & South ern Road, which would make a direct line from Savannah to Winston, Roanoke and all the country reached by the Nor folk & Western and the Shenandoah Valley Railroads. The noted Pickering-Wheeler land suit, in Stokes county, is being prepared for trial. Surveyors are now at work on the la-ids iu both Stokes and Surry counties. The land includes the proper ty of many citizens, and it is thought that it will require at least three months to complete the survey. The property holdeis are making a vigorous fight fo-' their rights and the su t promises to be one of the livlelest. aud most complicat ed suit ever brought before the American courts. SOUTH CAROLINA. An oyster canning factoiy is being built at Beaufort. J. II. Agnew, the Supt. of the South Carolina railway has resigned. An Alliance Publishing Co. has been formed with headquarters in Columbia. The Stono Phosphate Co , of Char leston, has been incorporated with a capi tal stock of $200,000. The General Assembly last welk elec ted Attorney-General Y. J. Pope asso ciate justice of the supreme court. The Presbyterian congregation of Spartanbutg has extended a call to Dr. Watkins. of Raleigh, N. C. They offer $1,800 and a parsonage worth $300 a year. Greenville has also called Dr. Watkins . The Columbia Water Power Co. will erect a $500,000 cotton mill; work on same will soon be commenced. ' The Charleston Water Works Co. has contracted for the sinking of an artesian well on Nassau street at a cost of about $50,000. Among the new bills introduced in the Legislature is one to create Tillman coun ty aud a bill to make Good Friday a legil holiday. A bill passed it third reading in the Leg shture which restricts the n.oitir igt given on cr ps to the ear in whici th crop is raised. The object of the biil is to prevent the giving of indefinite liens on crops. The f-lection ot Attorney-General Pope to tho bench makes the Attorney-Generalship vacant. Assistant Attorney General Townsend is a candidate to rill the place. It is said, though not on their authority, that Speaker Jonee, J. W. MecLaurin. Ernest Gary and John Gary Evans have been requested by friends to enter the race. OTHER STATES. The pecan crop in Texas is very large this year, and the nuts are of fine quality. In Atlanta there is a etrong movement in favor of the founding of a State re formatory for juvenile criminals. One night lat week, when a black man and his sou were asleep in their cabin under a tree ou a 3Iissisoippi plantation ou the banks of the Sunflower River, the tree fell,' crashed through the cabin's roof, and killed both of them.' It has been decided by a Florida court that dentists practising in that State do not need a diploma, aud many of the dental operators there are rejoicing that they can now pull, fill, or polish the people's teeth at their own sweet will. Friday of list week was 4 -Arbor Day"' iu Georgia, and a' holiday for the children in alhthe public schools of the State. In the schools the teachers read appropriate passages from the Scriptures, after which the children sang "My Country,' Tis of Thee." Dur ing the day tens of thousauds'of trees were planted by the youngteri iu the public highways, the town , lawns or parks, and the school and church grounds. The case of two colored Baptist- pi each ers w ho have entered suit against the city of Portsmouth for 100,000 each, be cause they, in 1S35, were ejected from the ladies' cabin of the Berkeley ferry steamer, is being tried in the United States court, Norfolk. SKIPPED WITH $10,0011. A County Treasurer Proves False to His Trust. Eliz abet Atovn,N.C, Special. J.M. Benson, treasurer of Bladen county, has absconded with $0,000 of the county's money. Uenson lias lor several years held the position of treasurer of his coun ty, and for the past two years has been largely engaged in the mercantile busi ness at Elizabethtowu. His store has been headquarters for the Alliance of Bladen county. Several davs ago it was learned that Benson wa3 short in his accounts, and in consequence of the rumors that -were afloat the county commissioners called a meetinsr. Benson was to appear before that body for a thorough investigation of his accounts. The commissioners met according to agreement, but found out soon afterwards that Benson had skipped during the night. It is thought by many that the money that the county will lose will be a comparatively small amount, when taking into consid eration the sum that he is due the farm ers of Hladen county. As he has always been highly respected and above suspi cion, the farmers would put whatever .1 ...1 iri x l" money mat inev cuu not not neeu in -111s hamls, he payiug them goo 1 interest, but svldoni paving the principal. In: this way quite a large sum must have been iu his hands at the time of his departure. There seems to be little doubt but what Benson has appropiiited at least $10,000 of other people s money to the exclusive benefit of hhnself. Much excitement exists over his sudden disappearance, but those mo.;t interested have not the least idea in which - direction Benson has pitched his tent. Tekirrams have been sent in every direction for the apprehen sion of the fleeing treasurer, but nothiug has been heard. - TO SEPARATE THE RACES. The Governor of Virginia Recom mends That Railroads be Re quired to Have Separate Cars and Waiting Rooms. Richmond, Va. The Legislature con vened Wednesday, in ins annual mcs Fjtre the Governor savs: "There is a very general demand for separate coaches aud separate waiting rooms at'passenger stations for the two laces throughout Virhinia and the South.' I would advise the enactment, of a statute requiring every railroad company to provide sepa rate coaches for the accommodation of white and colored passengers and sepa rate accommodations at passenger sta tions, all of equal convenience. When the travel on a road is not f umcient to require two coaches a single coach fehould be so dmaed by partitions as to secure separate accommodations. The law'should be enforced by suitable penalties. ihe Govercor also receinmeids legislation providing for the adequate representation of the State at the Chicago Fair. The State debt question and the ov.-ter inter est will be considered later bv the Gov ernor in a special message. EXTERMINATION OF SPARROWS The Bounty of Two Cents for Each Causes Hundreds to be Killed. Chicaoo, III., Special Under the new law which went mto effect Decern bc-r last, giving a bounty of 2 cents for the head of each English sparrow killed1 in the Srate, the slaughter of the little birds has been inaugurated with vigor. The sparrow man in the county clerk's othce took in 1,5.2 heads yesterday. One mau came in in the morning with 197 heads. Several objections have been raised to the method of "exterminating the pests, ihe most notable being that of the presidtnt of the Illinois Humane So ciety. 'The law is educationsllv vicious,'' he says. '-It sets a lot of child len to woik t-j devise the destruction of innocent living creatures. I don't care so much for the sparrows, though that is bad enough, but no one who has the in terests of the coming generation at heart can fail to view wit a alarm this new method of educating children to take pleasure in destruction and murder Moreover, it causes gret danger to life md property to arm children for this in human warfare. The exteimination onght to be in the hands of officials des ignated for the purpose. I am consid ering some plan by wnich to enjoin the city clerk from paying the bounty." HE TALKS TOO MUCH. Emperor William's Remarks to the Recruits. ; A cablegram from Berlin, say9 : The Freisinnige Zeitung asserts that Emperor llhams speech made a week ago on the occasion of the administration of the oath of allegiance to the recruits of the guard really contained the following: J "Kecruit3, you have before the priest and altar sworn fealty to me. ' You are too young to understand the true mean-! ing cf the words in which you have sworn; but be diligent in following the instructions which will be given you. You have, my children, sworn allegiance, that means that you have given your-; selves to me, body and soul. You have only one enemy. That ii mynemy. In the present socialistic agitation, I may or der you, which God forbid, to 6hoot down your relatives, your brothers, even your, parents, and you must obey without a murmur. ' WRECKERS DREW THE SPIKES.: Six Cars and a Locomotive Plunge. off The Track and Into a Swamp: Charleston, S. C. A south-bound passenger train on the South Carolina Railway, with 200 passengers on board, wa3 wrecked 20 miles north of this city. The fireman, named Parks, was buried under the tender and crushed to death,. Baggage Master Anderson, Express Mes senger ruerson, ana tnree passengers were seriously injured. The train was made up of the locomotive, four coaches, a Pullman, and a baggage car. All were thrown down a thirty-foot embankment into a swamp, and all except the Pullman were badly wrecked. .' The disaster was deliberately and skilk fully planned by train wreckers. One or tne nsn-uars loining tne rails were- loosened, the bolts having been drawn:! The fish-bar and a wrench wefe used- tor remove the bolts. All evidence points-i to the fact that it was the work of an ex- perienced railroad hand. . - The South's Steady Progress. The Manufacturers' Record, of Balti-; ore, of December 5, in reviewing 'the industrial progress of the South, says:- . "The general growth of the boutn goes on with no material change; but, taking a look over the whole held, ' it will be seen that the progress wmcn is made is of the most substantial character,1 and that it will add vastly to the wealth, and progress of this section. The indus- trial growth is being supplemented by a most astonishing rate of increase in for eign trade from Norfolk, Newport News, Charleston, Savannah, New Orleans' and Galveston. One after another of the great manufacturing plants that have been under construction for the last 12 or 15 months are being completed and going into operation. The iron-pipe work's at ; Radford, Va ,.vill commence work about December 15 with some 400 hands; a new furnace has just blown in at New Birhimgham, Texas, making the third; one there; the furnace company at Jef:j ferson, Texas, will build a cotton-tie and I rolling mill; work has been commenced on the construction of a 1,000,000-bushplj grain elevator at Galveston, Texas, and another of 5000,000 bushels capacity. will; probably be built; a company lias been! organized in London with a . reported, capital of $5,000,000 to purchase ancl de velop large mineral and timber propertie in the South; a $100,000 company ha purchased 8, COO acres of coal land ift; West Virginia, and will develop on a large scale; a factory to make 'fertilizer out of basic-steel slag is being built 19 Chattanooga. Among other enterprise! repoited for the week are a $30,000 com- Dies company at inomasvine, via. ; j m 1 "11 1 -. . 100,000 compress company at Montgom- ,.-.- i-v y-v -v 1 I t J i.... ry, Ala. ;a $"4b,uuu eieciricjngni nuu uuut nil company in Texas; a $10,UUU pnos-. phate company iu Florida; a $50,000 ice- factor j and machine-shop company an De Land, Fla. ; a $50,000 mining conv panv at Salisbury. N. C. ; water works at at Milledgeville,"Ga. ; a $50,000 ice and electric-light company at Velasco, Texas; $50,000 iime works at Chattanooga; Tenu. ; a $100,000 engine and machinery company at New Orleans; a $100,000 fertilizer company at Baltimore, etc." I j The Stevens Murder. ; Raleigii, N. C, Special, The pub lication by the State Chronicle of the mystery concerning the murder of 'Chicken Stevens, and its clearing up. bv the deathbed confession of Dr. Felix, Roan, a prominent physician 01 casweu, has created much comment here. Judge Tourgee, it will be remembered, intro duced this murder in the "Fool's Er rand, t . s Superstition of the Sea One of Machias's old sea Captains, while en route to the We3t Indies, had been becalmed for several day3 off Hat teras; he had prayed for wind, he had sworn for wind, bat the wind came not. I At last he thought he would try another scheme, so he kissed a silver twenty-nve-cent piece and threw it as far as he could out upon the sea. In a short time the wind blew a gale, and it drove his vessel to the coa3t of Africa. Leicuton (Me, Journal. 'it Wasn't Funny For Bill Kye. Jackson, Miss., Special. At the opera house last night, just after the cur tain rose for the Bill Nye-Burbank com bination entertainment, Nye fell out 'of the back door of the opera house, a dis tance of 15 feet, landing on a pile of lumber. He was so badly kurt tnat he could not appear and the audience was dismissed. 1 j Hernandez Captured. El Paso, Texas, Special. Francis co Hernandez, who robbed the paymas ter of the 11th batilion of the Mexican army in Chihuahua, Mexico, and kilted a policeman in escaping, has been cap tured here and extradited. He will be shot. A Colored Waiter Shot. Ashkville, ii. C. Special. Jaines Hayes, a colored waiter employed at ;the Kenilworth Inn, was shot by a colored woman, Roxie Hemphill, and dangerous ly wounded. Hayes and the woman were returning from a "Cakewalk", j ; OUR ALLIANCE COLUMN. The Farmers Discuss the Railroads In Missouri. Eight Crisp Reasons Alliance is Here "What For." the In the National Farmers' Congress at Sedalia, Mo., Congressman John T. Heard, of Missouri, delivered an address on railway transportation, which, he said, was a subject of supreme importance to the farmer. One of the solutions was found in State railway commissions. Missouri had been among the first of the States to deal with the question that way, and 3Iissouri's experience showed that the method had been successful. Another method of controlling a railroad corpora tion in the interests of the people was 'through the national railway commission. Some professed to believe that a railroad should be placed under Government man agement. Government, railroading, he believed, would be a gigantic failure. In the first place the Government would have to buy the railroads, and that would cost $10,000,000,000. That would be impossible and impracticable, because there was in circulation onlv $1,500,000, .00. ,11. C. Brown, of Georgia, endorsed everything that he had heard said. Georgia, he said, had tried State owner ship of railways. Georgia owned the Western and Atlantic Railway. Under State control the rates were high, the service was bad and deficits were extra ordinary. The State found that it had been too expensive to run its own railway, and the line was leased to private indi viduals. Under private control the road charged cheaper rates, gave better ser vice, paid a rental of $3,000 a month and made money for the lessees. Resolutions were introduced recom mending tint the President of the Uni ted States and United States Senators be elected by a direct popular vote; demand ing an extension of the signal service re ports issued by the agricultural depart ment; requesting the Federal Govern ment to aid the State in the irrigation of arid lands". The resolutions were all adopted with the exception of the latter, which the Congress defeated by 44 to 17. A resolution asking Congress to im prove the harbor of Savannah was loudly applauded and unanimously adopted. The committee on finance presented a report requesting the various State Leg islatures to make appropriations for the expenses of State delegations to future congresses of this character in order that each State may have full and proper rep resentation. The report was adopted. The administration of the department of agriculture by Secretary Rusk was highly commended in the resolution. The following additional resolutions were also adopted: Requesting the Sec reiary of Agriculture to increase the num ber of representatives in foreign countries to push the work of introducing Ameri can corn as food, believing that marked success in that direction attained already is warranted for such a request, and re questing Congress to appropriate suf ficiently to cover the expenses of this in creased representation abroad; demand ing a systematic and thorough improve ment by the Federal Government of the waterways and harbors of the United States; requesting the extension of the delivefy of the mails among farmers; de manding, the 'control of all trust and mo nopolies, so that they shall work no harm to the people. - WHAT TIIE ALI.IAJiCE IS HERE FOR. The Alliance is seeking to make the rich man pay his propoition of the taxes. It is seeking to pay up the bouds that have almost ruined the people and nation. It is seeking to forthwith reduce the salaries of officials to an equal of other salaries and prices. It is seeking to break up the specula tor's corner in grain and pork. It is seeking to make it possible for a poor man to get money as cheap as a banker can get it. It is seeking to have the government issue all money in sufficient quantity to do the business of the country. It is seeking;, to watch the Congress from the people's side for the next 25 years. It seeks to make a profit in fanning and industry and not in money-lending. It attacks th'e giant monopoly and it intends to follow him to his overthrow. Vindicator.;" The Raleigh Progressive Farmer says 'That the growth of the Alliance has been too rapid to keep track of during the p:ist month.' 'Ti.ere has been a net increase of 400 members in the Alliance iu Oklahoma, .62 Sub-Alliances have been formed in North Dakota with a net increase of 2,000 members, Iowa is said to be 'doing some glorious, aggressive and successful work' with 9,G00 new members of the Order, 14 counties have been organized in Cali fornia, an increase of 1,000 members is reported from South Dakota, West Vir ginia is credited with 10,000 new mem bers, and of Ohio it is said that 'the Buckeye State heads the list' with 13 new counties org-nized with 170 Sub-Alliances and an increased membership of 10.C00 Mississippi is credited with a net increase in membership of over 1,000 since December 1. 1S90, and the growth of the Order in Louisiana is put down at 500 members. The following statement is made in regard to the situation in South Carolina: 'Twentv two new Sub-Alliances have beta established; with about 1,000 new members, but a loss of nearly as many hive been sustained. This is the on'y State recently heard from in which an increase inf'membership is not reported." Jay Gould says he "can buy the vote of a farmer member of the legislature for the price of a bull calf." Again he says, 'I can hire one-half the farmers of the "sited States to shoot the other half to death." Upon four and one-half acres of land a colored planter near Fort Gaines, Ga., rai?ed five bales of cotton this Year, ne finds it profitable to raise cotton at five cents a pound, and his name is Henry Johnston. He is shrewd enough to hold his crop for a rise in the market. Oil from American corn is being used by German soap manufacturers. The farmers of this country have not only to feed Europe but to wash Europe's face. Grandson of Jefferson Davis. JEFFERSON IIAYES DA VI 8, Jefferson Addison Hayes, of Mississip pi, has been made Jefferson Hayes Davis, by act of the legislature. The president of the Southern Confederacy had sons, but they left no male issue. His daugh-, ter Margaret married a Mr. Hayes, and when it became certain that no male Da vis was to remain, they had the name of their first-born changed. Young Jeffer son Davis is a bright and healthy boy, with many of the characteristics of his grandfather and namesake. KEEP OLD COLLETON INTACT. A Mass Meeting in Waterloo to Protest Against Division. Waterloo, S. C, Special. News has just reached here that in addition to the effort to form Tillman county out of Col leton and Berkeley, making St. George's the county seat, another effort is on foot to form a second new county from other portions of Colleton and Berkeley, mak ing Summerville the county seat; and still auother effort to hitch the two up per townships of Colleton, Braxton and Warren on to Hampton. At the 6ame time we hear that many portions of Col leton sought to be detached are violently opposed to this division. A meeting was held here Thursday and Capt. C. C. Tracy sent as a delegate to Columbia to protest against this dis memberment of "Old Colleton." Petitions are being rapidly circulated, and on Monday, salesday, a large meeting was held and a large delegation sent to the Capital. It is generally understood that our entire delegation from- Colleton, in both the Senate and the Iloue, stands pledged against any d vii(.n of the county, and we will be greatly surprised if these pledges are not fulfilled. PICKED UP THE WRONG JAR. Mr. Anderson Intended to Take Qui nine But Got Morphine by Mistake. Greenville, S. C, Special. W. B. Anderson, a young man of Cedar Grove, Laurcn3 county, South Caroliua, died suddenly on Monday night last from the effects of a dose of morphine he had tak en through mist' ke. He had leen feel ing unwell for'feveial days, and after rising that morning thought he would take a dose of quinine. He s?cured a jar which he supposed contained the qui nine, but which proved to be morphine. After taking it he started on a journey, but had only gone about half a mile when he felt so sick he was compelled to' stop at the residence of Dr. John A. Westmoreland The doctor soon discov ed the cause of his illness and used every means in his power to relieve him, but after lingering unconscious nntilS o'clock that night Anderson died GEN. ROWLEY'S SON EMBEZZLES. Once Chief of Police in New Orleans. He is Now a Fugitive From Justice. Nnw Orleans, La , Special. The police here are looking for Richard B. Rowley, formerly chief of police of th s city, and at the time of his disappear ance cashier of the New Orleans Co operative Banking Association I Row ley has been missing several day, but that fact was kept secret until Tuesday night, when it was announced tht he had disappeared with all the cash of the bank. Rowley is a son of Gen . Rowley, of Mississippi, was chief of police of Ne Orleans, from 1660 to 1864 and had held many political end commercial po sitions. He was a grand chancellor of the Kn:ghts of Pythias, and it has been d'scovered that he is shoit with them also. He is married, of good habits and the police are aitoge. her unable to ex plain his embezzlement. National Debt Statement. Washiisotow, D. C, Special The debt statement sho s a net decrease in the interest bearing aod non interest bearing bonded debt during November was $2,570,139.50: aa aggregate of debt bearing no interest. $337,433,340.35; aggregate of certificates and treasury notes offset by cash in treasury,! 569,221, 709; aggregate of debt, including certifi cates and treasury notes, $1,546,061, 695,61 ; gg"egate cash ia treasury, $748, 356,750.15; net cash balance, exclusive cf gold reserve, $39,125,917.96. Pacific railroad bonds are not included in the above statement. BOMBS AND DEATH. Russel Sage's Office Wrecked by Dynamite. Four Persons, Including the Bomb Thrower, Blown to Atoms. New York City, Special. At 12:15 o'clock in the afternoon a poorly dressed miu, carrying a brown" satchel, entered the otficc of RusscljSage at 71 and 73 Broadway and demjanded a private inter view with Sage. ")V. R. Laidlaw, Sage's clerk, told him that Sage was busy and could not be seen. The man persisted and continued to talk in a loud tone. Sage was in an inner office and came to see what was the matter. He asked the maa what w?& wanted. The man said : "I demand a private interview with you." Sage replied that it would be impossible for him to see -the mau then, but he might do so later in the day. The man continued to demand a private interview, then and there, and Sage ordered him to leave the office. On this the man dropped a leather bag and a j explosion, which shook the entire hie k, instautly followed. Sage was thrown across the room and stunned. Laidlaw. who had turned away and was standing within a few feet of the two, was also thrown across the office an I had one leg badly larcerated Iu Sage's otfire at the time of the ex p'osiou were Col. J. J. Slocuin, F. C Osburn, D. W. Osburn, F. C. Menzies and B. C. Norton. Norton was badly hurt and was taken in an ambulance to St. Vincent's Hospital, where he died. Pieces of several bodies were picked up u the second floor of a building near the scene of the explosion and placed in (he fire department life-saving net. Humors are life a3 to the number of persons killed, but as far as can be learned only fvur are lost. One of the pieces of bodies picked up was dead with face in tact. Itis that of; a youg man with brown hair, growing thickly upon his . head. As both Menzies ami C. W. Os ,burn are missing" it is supposed they compose a portion of the tangled heap. Among the fragments of bodies found was a leg which the police think was that of a woman. Sage's woman typewriter is reported among the killed. The injured people were at once re moved to a drug store opposite and at tenledto. There it was found that Sage's injuries were not serious, but very extensive and painful. Sage was able to converse. He said the man with th. hand-bag was a total stranger to him. He insisted upon presenting Sage with his card, but l.e declined to accept it. Sage was com pletely covered with grime and dust and his clothing was blown into tatters and his hands, face and clothing were cover ed with blood. Sage's injuries mainly cousist of a cut and bruise upon his fore head, while his face and hands were fill ed with small cuts as if he had received a volley of gravel stones from a shot-gun. Both fire and ambulance calls were at once sent otit and a few. minutes after the explosion the building was surrounded by fire engines, ambulances and police men. The news spread through Wall street, and, in fact, all over town and ev ery street in the neighborhood was soon thronged with thousands of excited men. The wildest rumors prevailed that the number of killed and wounded reported was upward of j a hundred.' The police captain immediately took charge of the police arrangements and the search for the dead and wounded began. The three rooms, No. 35 and two adjoining were totally wrecked. All that remain ed unimpaired in the office of Sage was his desk and office chuir. The windows on the Rector street side of building were blown out, and those oa the other side sha'teicd. It . is said that the name of the bomb thrower is Lord. The safe in Sage'd office was broken open arid sccur iti:s were scattered over the building and streets. When the dynamiter entered Sage's of fice he handed the clerk n card which boie name II . D. Wilson. When the po lice examined ' the wic ked office there was found just inside of the door of the central office the trunk of a man, in n state that rendered recognition nearly impossible, ..head having been Revered from body. Pointed reddi.sU beard, 'gave appearance of an educated mau, which w as enhance 1 by brown cur Is of hair and hetvy mustache that adorned upper lip. This is the only person killed outright so far as known ana the body is 'supposed to be that of th: dynamiter. An investigation proceeds and it ap pears that Wilson had a companion when he entered the building and inquired for Sage's office. Late in the afternoon the firemen found among the debris a lejj which was thought, to be that of a wo man. If it is or not has not been learned but Russfll Sage never did cmploy-a wo-, man typewriter, and as this fact is well established the supposition is that if the leg is that 6f a woman's it is all that is left of one of his "put and call'" custom ers, who ws in the office at the time. Pays to Grow Vegetables. The South furnishes the North with a large percentage of its daily food and table delicacies. Besides fiih, oysters and sea fowl in their season, it forwards many kinds of fruits and vegetables. Just now New Orleans is supplying egg plant that retail at 50 cents each, while Norfolk's truck farmers are' shipp'ng green peas that command CO cents a peck, also butter and string beans that retail at 20 cents a quart. These last three ar ticles illustrate the favorable .climatic conditions that have made th truck f aimers of Norfolk prosperous. Begin ning shipments of garden ttuflbefcis the frst 3 out of Northern soil, they fcetp up a succession through the spring and summer, winding up their season by shipping iate in the fall second crops of beans and per.f , " The Cashier is Still Missing. WiLiUSGToN, N. C, Special. J No further news has been heard as to the whereabouts of Cashier Bowden, of the smashed First National Bank here His hastilv leaving at the time when he was to meet Bank Examiner A Men leads many to expect a sensation. Some are. now expressing the belief that he will not return. The bank examiser, when asked for information, compresses his lips,-shakes his head and says nothing. 3