THE DAILY CITIZEN. The Citimh Is the most extensively drcn Intcd and widely read newspaper in Western North Carolina. Its discussion of public men and measures la in the interest of public integrity, honest government, and prosperous industry, and it knows no personal allcgiuncein treating pub lic issues. , , The Citiibn publishes the dispatches of the Associated Press, which now covers the whole world in its scoie. It has other fncili tivS of advanced journalism tor Knthennffi news from all quarters, with evcrvthinKCare tully edited to occupy the smallest space. Specimen copies of any edition will be sent f -ee to any one sending their address. TKBys Daily, $0 for one year; $:l for six months; 80 cents for one month; 15 cents for one week. Carriers will deliver the pajier in every part of the city to subscribers, ami par ties wanting it will please eall at the Citizkn Advertising Ratrs Reasonable, and made known on application at this othee. All transient advertisements must be puid in ad- Keading notices ten cents per line. Obitu ary, marriage and society notices fifty cents ch (not exceeding ten lines) or fifty cents per inch. THURSDAY, SEPT. 12. 1S89. RAILROAD Sl'BSlKIPTIOSSc The iK'onle of Danville, Va., for a loiif; time in possession of railroad facilities by the use of them magiiifyiiif; the limit ble county town into a populous and ex ccedingly active eitv, one of the greatest tobacco manufacturing centres in the United States, and selling on its mari ets upwards of thirty million pounds of leal tobacco, have long ceased to be content with one line ot road, or tlcpcml upon one avenue for her supplies or the exten sion of her business. Ambition for ex pansinn has been united with dissatislac tion with the mnmiuitnent of raibnad matters in relation to Danville itse which seems unnatural in view of tin fact ot the inception and perfection ol an enterprise, which, in the comparatively early days of railroads, brought the im portant eitv of Richmond in connection with the then obscure village of Dan ville. Hut the latter was in the centre of a rich agricultural country; and with a water power little inferior to that ol Richmond, and environed with condi tions very similar to those of that city it hardly required the gift of prophecy ti predict, when the impulse was once judi ciously applied, a future for the country town almost as brilliant as that which had awarded the energies and intelligence of the capital. Danville therefore was notcoutent will. one road ; first, she resented the alleged oppressions of a eompanv transformed from a friend and protector to an enemy and oppressor; secondly, with increased growth and prosjierity, she soughtjwide: fields for her increasing business, lar sources of supply for her varied nianufac turing industries. The first outstrctcl towards new territory was the construc tion of the New River road up the Dan and to the heads of its tributaries. And this was followed bv the connection witli Lynchburg, which has ctVectcd, as the Midland route, a complete revolution in course of travel between North anil which once followed the course, and has now resumed the practice, of the old riedinont stage route. Hut the most important of all the moves ot Danville towards indeiendciice and consequence is the construction ofthe Atlantic and Danville railroad. The line from Norfolk or Portsmouth to Danville is provided for. and a large portion ol'it constructed, and the whole under contract. What re mains to lie done is the extension of the line from Danville to the coal fields ol Southwest Virginia; and to this end tin people of Danville will be called upon or. thelfithof October to vote a corporate subscripts m of $ 1 oO.OOi I. Thus it npiK-ais that while Danville with enviable ambition and enterprise that stimulates to imitation, is niakng efforts to increase her railroad facilities, she is moving, in this hist enterprise to extend the Atlantic and Danville road upon the very point Asheville is uricd to seek, and which it is its vital interest to attain. Danville seeks it for the interme diate business to spring up along a line S ) long and through such productive ter ritory; but she seeks it for the more solid and permanent advantages to be drawn from ready access to the exhaustless coal and other mineral tieldsoi southwest Vir ginia, and the enormous influence to be applied from thence upon her manufac turing industries. Danville is not able to advertise herself as a health resort; she can tempt with no charms of scenery ; she can make no boast of hotels of continental fame ;. she ilas to deal with hard practical condi tions; she has to put her own shoulders to the wheel ; she has to buckle down to hard work; and she does so. Now Asheville may not always be fa mous as a health resort ; it is possible in a country of universal healthfuluess, and where each turn ol the landscnjH.' brings into view something more beautiful still, places eventually may come into being as formidable rivals. This is a possibility ; hardly a probability. But wisdom coun sels a prudent foresight. Nothing can ever take away from Asheville her natu ral advantages of position. And that position is so remarkable that to neglect it would seem blind fatuity. To drift along with these advantages unapplied amused with what has cost nothing to attain, is as unmanly as the childish glee of the boy who stands on the brink of the foaming torrent watching the many flakes of foam as they dash by, delighted with the tossing waves and the flashes of the bright sunshine as glinted back from the dancing waters, and going away with the profitless pleasure of a fleeting vision of beauty. The people of Asheville are impelled by grave and substantial considerations to more manly and permanent purpose. They must utilize as a matter of business conscience what nature has given them in such marked and exceptional degree their peculiar property as a railroad cen tre; they must use it as a great manufac turing and distributing centre ; and they must reach out their arms to those coal fields of southwest Virginia towards which Danville is directing its aim They must make the effort for that con nection with Bristol to which we have directed their attention more than once. And, to make theifpurpose available, they must do as Danvilleis about to do, au thorize a corporate suascription or issue of bonds to an extent sufficient for sub stantial aid to the enterprise, and to evince proper interest in its perfection. It is a burden small for the present genera tion to carry in view of the direct im mense returns of the investment. But the great burden falls upon posterity, not upon the present generation. This one enjoys all the direct immediate benefits; the one to come receives its inheritance vastly increased in value it they will receive the incumbrance of the obli gation laid upon it for the redemption ofthe debt incurred as a blessing, not as burden. We do hope to sec some awakening here to the importance ol additional railroad facilities. The work of building now going on nere soexiciiMvciy,i.uciiiipi "it- incuts being made in every direction, the enterprises conceived and undertaken, rcditable and gratilyiug as they are, ;u-i' itii-rc iiatc iwoi K coiuiuireu iu ttiiiu , i i... will be done, what must follow, when in ill directions nre stretched out the great long radiating arms ot the railroad reach- into the great treasure houses of the minerals, into the great store houses of commerce, into the busy hives of popula tion intent on the movements of pleasure iir business travel. Let our business men do something to emulate the energy and ambition of Dan dle. The friends of high education will be grieved to hear of the trouble which be set Johns Hopkins l uiversity mid threat en to close its doors completely, or at least, curtail its usefulness. The l uiver sity owes its existence to the liberality ol the rich Baltimore merchant, lohns Hop kins, who devised nearly the whole of a large property to the creation of an in stitution of learning which should com bine the breadth and thoroughness ofthe lUrmau system with the practi.al char acter of the American college. The devise was so large and the proceeds of the es- tale so mimic, thai the 1 nivcisitv was it once enabled toaltain a rank, in some particulars, higher than that of any in the I'uited States. The most prolific re source was in lot 11 1 shares of the Balti more and Ohio railroad, at the time of lIic devise, and for a long time after wards, paying ten per cent, dividend. Sow the stock isbclow par and payingno dividends and the l uiversity is largely kept up bv private subscriptions. It is a most unexpected reverse, and to the cause of education, a most calamitous one. It illustrates how really and truly riches have wings, and how perishable are the propcrticsof even the most favor ed of fortune. The constantly increasing dainagedonc bv the waves to the watering places along the New Jersey and Long Island .-oasts seems to prove the correctness ol those observations which point to a gradual subsidence of those coasts. The encroachment ol me waves nas now reached points which hall a century ago were safe from the fury ofthe fiercest norms. Kockuway. Coney Island, Long Branch, Atlantic City, within the past few years have in turn witnessed the sub mergence of piers, the inundation of ho ids. the crumbling away of cliffs, until all of them are threatened wilh the fx linctiun of their fame as watering places. because of the destruction of their prop el tics and the alteration ot tneir marine topography. We are called sensi bly to witness in our day whal geology teaches us is the inevita ble routine of the forces of nature; In our day slow and stealthy, in past ages qirck, violent and revolutionary, the sea beach of to-day the mountain top of lo-morrow, and the peak that yesterday pierced the sky, the next day imcriling the ship in the ocean as the submerged rock that impedes the path of naviga tion. The brilliant life otS. S. Cox has ended. There was so much of the buoyancy of life in him, such perennial How of a vivac ity unchanged by time, that it was hard to connect his name wilh the idea of death, or measure his age by the usual mileinarks of time, and therefore we were surprised to find that he had reach ed the age of sixty-five. He died as he had lived with a smile upon his lips and a witticism upon his tongue. We might have wished that as he descended into the sunset of this life with eyes about to open upon the sunrise ot another wccould Ijave had the expression of his soul lit up with the splendors of the approaching change rather than learned that his last fading earthly expression was beaming wilh that genial, but earthly, spirit which fixed upon him his memorable soubricpiet. Hut we look onlv upon the surface; and the sunset of the now dead man may have been a bright prelude to the glorious sunrise awaiting him, and no more for him a selting sun. The scramble for Dr. Grissom's place is becoming active, not apparantly by ap plicants themselves, but by their friends. Among those named are two gentlemen, both of whom we deem eminently quali fied Dr. Thomas D. Haigh, of Fayette ville, and Dr. Hines, of Raleigh. Dr. Forte, of Wnrrenton, is also urged. His professional and persouul qualifica tions may lie equal to those ofthe others. His relations to Dr. Grissom and the ac tive part he took in the prosecution of that gentleman would suggest we think very clearly the impropriety of his nspi- Dr. Parker Frays cream Vun-Ola Rosa line, Ongaline and Diamond nail powder having now become the ladies' favorites, at F. L.Jacob's drug-store, these popular manicure articles may always be found, together with pocket emery board, or ange wood sticks, nail scissors, files and other such requisites. Also a complete line of drugs and toilet articles, in addi tion to the Hebe Soda Fountain from which ice cold drinks are dispensed. Cor ner Main street and Patton avenue. ' Speaking of agents who serve to task The powers of patient endurance. How far should we lift the one who asks "Are you carrying any insurance ?" "he Ladles Delighted The pleasant effect and the perfect safety with which ladies may use the liquid fruit laxative. Syrup of Figs, under all condi tions make it their favorite remedy. It is pleasing to the eye and to the taste, gentle, yet effectual in acting on the kid neys, liver and bowels. FALL GOODS ROLLING IN , AT Rustic Bros. & Wright's. GRAND DISPLAY. Large assortment of Dry Goods just arrived. A full line of Prints. A full line of Sa tines. A full lino of dinghams. A full line of Tricots. All kinds of Flannels. A niee assortment of Tap- stry Plush. Cashmeres and Henriettas in all colors. Turner Goods in stripes find plaids. Our Jubilee I lot h is some thing new . and very pretty. Come and see it. Ladies' Fauntleroy Sets. A big line of Ladies' and Gents' II. S. Handkerchiefs, all prices. And in the Gents' Furnish ing Goods Line any thing you want. A good line of Gents' Grips and Valises just in In fact we have any von want in the Dry (Joods and Shoe lines. To inaugu rate, we have a special leader in every department. Respectfully, ISOSTICBUOS. & WIWJHT. IfOOKS AND STATIONERY ARTISTS' MATKRUI.S.I UNUINKIiKrV Sl'I'l'LlliS, I'ICTl'KliS AND l-'KAMUS, FANCY GOODS, HI.ANK hoks,kvi:rvgbadk, IIOI.I.S, TOYS AND GAM US. WKSTKRN IX. C. 8CENK8, :'1I(1T MIKAI'IIIC TAINTED, AT AND HAND- ESTABROOK'S, aa f. Main Street. 1N0KDEK TO MAKIvSOMKCIIANGliS IX OI K M'SINESS, WE OFFER AT COST, OUR STOCK OF SILVER-PLATED WARE, INCLUDING KNIVES, FORKS, SPOONS, CASTERS, BUTTERS, PICKLES, ETC. ARTHUR 31. FIELD, treading Jeweler. THE GREATEST ATTRACTION: la that fine lot of ENGLISH BRIDLES and THREB-HORN CHAMOIS BEAT SADDLB8 St J. 91. ALEXANDER'S And the low prices at which he to selling all goods tn hi line. He hat increased his force and Intends to meet the demand. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. Mr. Jas. Carter Arrington, of Ring wood, N. C, was cured by Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy, of a sore on but lace, which had been troubling bim for years. In size and appearance it resembled strawberrv. and was perfectly raw. For full particulars of bis case send for mpblet, to Mrs. joe reraon, Kittrai, the RACKET COLUMN. Lots of people come into our store and see things that thev have iust purchased at other places and exclaim, "Why, I didn t know you kept this," etc., and upon comparing prices find that they have paid too much for their purchase. They say, also, "'We knew you were the heancst, but had no idea vou kept so and so. lor two years we have been try ing to impress upon the poo- pie the fact that we handle goods hi nil linos EXCEPT GROCERIES AND DRUGS, If a new thing in household using things or conveniences is announced we hasten to secure it , and we a re frequent ly told by visitors from large cities tluit the variety am completeness of our line o goods is perfectly astonishing for acity the size of Asheville The mom I of whit h is BUY NOTHING until you have visited our store, do to others and get prices. We luul ruthur you wouW.-but DON'T BUY until you have seen whether we have wha t you want or not if we have it weare willing to match prices and quality, feeling assured that in every case we Khali save you money. He leave Monday to buy a large stock, and we have facilities for getting it low, frequently under the cost of manufacture. We sen at a close prom; ana we propose to do some business or know the reason why. Do not buy ANYTHING until you have visited the "Racket Store." Respectfully, och'.T in"co pnn IULU. IiJUuCOUUUi MISCELLANEOUS. Elegant Pharmaceuticals ! Beet Wine and Iron! Fer- rated Wine of Wild Cherry, Cod Liver Oil with Hypo- hos flutes and Pure Pepsin, Elixir Valerianate of Ammo nia,, Tasteless Lastor un anu Calisaya Tonic, prepared in our own laboratory by an experienced Pharmacist. T. C. Smith & Co., Dispensing Druggists. Milestone for soaking Wheat at T. C. Smith &Co.'s Drug Store. Oriental Dentifrice, for cleansing deleterious deposits from the Teeth, and neutral izing acid secretions of the Mouth price 25 cents, at T. C. Smith & (Vs Drugstore Attention experts in smok ing! T. C. Smith & Co. have another lot of "Five Elev ens'' just in the finest Five Cent Cijra-r in Asheville. Cu ban hand made.. All inedicinescarefully com pounded at T. C. Smith & Co.'s Drug Store. Prescrip tions prepared with scrupu lous care by experienced and educated Pharmacists. Home-made! T. C. Smith & Co., arc General Agents for all Tobacco and Cigars madt in Asheville, especially Por ter's Warrantee Cigars and Hull's Fine Tobaccos. J.W.SCIIAR-IXE, MERCHANT TAILOR 42 N. Main St. fcb20dlv JAMES FRANK, DKA1.ER IN FAMILY GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS Agent for Recms Creek Woolen Mills. North Main - Asheville, N. C. feblodlv WM. R. PENNIMAN, PKOPK1ETOR OF THE ASHEVILLE BRICK WORKS, Asheville, N. C. P.O. BOX I. murKldly A NEW ENTERPRISE. The Hand Laundry will open on Momlny, at the foot of Mrs. Wilson's hill, under the management of G. V. HiKKins. All work done neatly by hand. The Best are the Cheapest. RING'S PARENT CHAMPION SAFES, Farrell & Co., Philadelphia. auiio d&wem GEO. KINDER, GENERAL CONTRACTOR AND B'JILDER Mosaic Tile and Cement work a specialty . Orates, Ranges and Boilers set. Buildings mOTed and repaired In first doss manner. Sewerage, Drainage and traps fur the same thoroughly anderstood and promptly at tended to. 4) Office: Wolfe Building, Court House Square, Asmrrille, M. C. maySOdly . FOR RENT. A large eterc room Brick House, together WIU aitcnca anu serranw wr wu bim. Lot contains 2V, acres. Sewerage and mni hatb HUHII. CommCtelV fUTTtlnh d in evcrr Dart. Likewise, a good . Piano, if needed. Apply to . auiia dtf NATT ATKINSON SON. GIIAS. D. BLAI1T0N & CO,, MEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHING Our aim is to fill a long felt and we will open about September 1, with the most com plete line of Clothing for Men section. Our Mr. (JH AS. I5LANT0N ern markets with the ready business fl FlNANCIAI THE YOUTHS', BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT Will receive our special attention, and to this we will call the esperialjatteiition of Mothers, Sisters and Aunts. OUR GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS Will be re flete with all the Novelties of the season in the way of Neckwear. OUR HAT DEPARTMENT Will receive due attention, and in it can be found from the conventional High Hat down to the Soft Knock-about. We have already placed our order for a line of MEN'S FINE SHOES With one of the most popular makers. Our mode of business shall be STRICTLY ONE MICE, and all goods warranted as represented or money refunded. Our opening will be announced in due time. ; CHAS. D. BLANTON & CO., One Price Clothier, Patton Avenue, OUTFITTERS. want in the city of Asheville, and Boys ever shown in this goes to Northern and East cash which insures to the new Asheville, N C.