V m Hi I UPWARD AND ONWARD. VOL.1. HERTFORD, PERQUIMANS CO., N C. JULY 11, 1895. NO. 24. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED- TVashington Item. Tiere will be twenty-six contested seats In the coining Congress. . The expenditures for the four years of civilian administration oi tne v earner Bureau, ending June 3U, are esumaiea ai ( 3 393,090. The appropriations for the same period' have been $3,632,953. The Belmont-Morgan syndicate made the last payment on the bond contract with the Government. Thft state Department received the gratify ing information that the Government of Honduras has at last taken positive acuon toward brinsring to justice the murderers of Charles W. Renton, an American citizen. Tha tiftnri svndinato completed its pav- Tnpnt for the last issue of Government bonds, making the gold reserve $107,392,355. SPrtret&rv Carlisle approved about six hun. pred changes in the Treasury to conform to : the new Appropriation Dins. me cnanges consist of removals, degradations and pro motions. President Cleveland decided to send Con sul-General Williams back to Cuba. Six Chinamen who reached New York from Cuba, claiming to have been residents of New Orleans, have been ordered deported py Secretary Carlisle. The cold reserve in the United States Treasury now exceeds $100,000,000. Rarnn von Thialman. the now German Ambassador, paid his first visit to Secretary of State Olney, accompanied by Baron Ketteler. late Charge d' Affaires of the Ger man Embassy. Hnhh.irrt Tnvlor Smith, of Indiana, made th highest percentage in the examination held at the State Department for Consular clerk, and has been recommended to the Secretary of State for appointment. The term oi tne omce is lor me. Domestic. EECOBD OT THE I.UA.GUK Pe- Clnbp. Won Boston 32 17 Baltimore 29 19 Pittsburg.. 33 22 Chicago... 31 24 Cleveland..32 23 Cincinnati 23 CX.T7BS. Per ct I Club, wo". Tt. ct. .653 ihiladel. . .27 24 . 529 .604 Bro6klvn..28 25 . 523 .600 Sew York.26 27 49l .586 Vash'n2'n.22 30 .423 .582 St. Louis.. 17 33 .309 .549 Louisville. 7 43 .140 Advances were made in the price of foun dry and bar irons and the wages of 10.000 miners were raised fourteen per cent, in Ala bama. "Jack" Fisher and Bill" Durham, moon shiners, in South Carolina, were killed by State liquor constables. Two constables were badly wounded. Governor Hastings, of Pennsylvania, was banged in effigy in Hazleton, Penn., because he vetoed a bill creating the new county of 'Quay. Secretary Carlisle visited President Cleve land at "Gray Gables," Buzzard's Bay. Mass. Alfred Stickwell and Edward Sutton were drowned in the Connecticut River, opposite Colts' Fire Arms factory, Hartford, by the capsizing of a boat. ' , The Austrian naval school ship Donau ar rived at the Port of New York with 367 schol ars aboard. Octavius O'Cottle, an aged and wealthy Buffalo (N. Y.) lawyer, was abducted by Grange men and held two days in an unoc cupied dwelling for ransom. Philip rhillips. the evangelist known as thSin'arinsr Pilgrim, died at the house of a friend in Delaware. Ohio. He was born in Chautauqua County, New York, on August : 13.1834. Commencement exercises were held at lale, Harvard, Amherst, Dartmouth, Wes leyan. Williams, Trinity and other New Eng land colleges. The Harvard Athletic Committee ha3 de cided to decline the Oxford-Cambridge track athletic challenge. ?X-Governor Beaver received notice from the Governor of Pennsylvania of his appoint ment as a Superior Court Judge. The Rev. J. J. Wilson, a well-known Cum-"-nand Tresbyterian minister, was killed r'ar Huston. La., bv Jame3 Howell, a gar-.. eaer. Trouble had been brewing between l-e two men for some time. The Committee on Platform in the Demo- ratv State Convention of Kentucky at ui5ville adopted three reports, that of i- 'majority being in favor of "sound Jnny." Senator Biackburn was defeated ior representation on the committee. Con- Kre.mfm Berry was made Permanent Chair man. A . eo,red man named Bill Stokes was jya-hM at Raysors, S. C. Stokes attempted aault a white woman. - 'ore W. Rouis. v?ho wa3 formerly a part ner with his cousin, Rphine, shot himself In New York City immediately after having hadj a souffle, during which one shot was fired, with a stranger, who escaped. The description- of the stranger answered to that of Bouis's cousin. Gretna, La., was the scene of a lynching. The victim was John Frye, twenty-two years old,.a white man. He was a firebug. The doors of the private banking house of Cowles & Eldridge, of Norfolk, Conn., were closed. The , notice tacked on the door caused muohsexcitement. It was said that depositors would lose nothing. John B. Specker, doing business as Speck er Brothers & Co., wholesale dry goods, Cin-' cinnati, Ohio, failed. The assets were placed at $730,000 and the liabilities at a lower figure. The application for the removal from New York City of Charles A. Dana, editor the Bun, to Washington for trial In the Noyes libel suit, was denied by Judge Brown, in the United States District Court, and the de fendant discharged. Foreign Note. Maso was chosen by Cuban patriots to suc ceed Marti. The new British Ministry was officially an nounced by Lord Salisbury. Sir Graham Bower has been, appointed to succeed Go vercor O'Brien as Newfoundland's Chief Executive. Captain-General Campos notifledthe Span ish Cabinet that he will require 14,000 addi tional soldiers to prosecute an offensive cam paign in Cuba. The New York brig Pearl was chased and Bearched by a British cruiser at Jamaica. The Prince of Wales opened the Interna tional Railway Congress in the Imperial In stitute, Kensington, London. The Belgium Government will send an of ficer to Canada this year to buy horses for remounts and the artillery. Violent thunder storms prevailed in Eng land and Ireland. Lightning struck a tree, adjacent to the Royal pavilion at the agri cultural show at Darlington. Two people were killed and three were injured. The Duke and Duchess of York had just departed from the pavilion. Minister Terrell, United States representa tive to Turkey, has made a vigorous demand upon the Porte for the punishment of the murderers of Lenz, the American bioylist. The first anniversary of the assassination of President Carnot was observed through Cut France. " r France" ha3 demanded redress from China for ill-treatment of missionaries. A Radical motion of want cf confidence in Premier: Crispi was defeated by an over whelming majority in the Italian Chamber of Deputies. ; Prince Emanuel, Duke of Aosta, was mar ried in St. Raphael's Catholic Church, at Kingston-on-Thames, England, to Princess Helene of Orleans, second daughter of the late Count of Paris. The Hon. Hetoert Gladstone told a press representative that his father, Hon. W. E. Gladstone, would take no further part in public life. -The revolt ! m Macedonia is said to be spreading rapi 41 y. t END OF DA CAMA. HUM LOST BY FIBEJ San Francisco Visited by the Greatest Conflagration in Twenty Years. A FATAL MINNEAPOLIS BLAZE.: The Insurgent Leader, Defeated, IUlli Himself In Brazil. . Insurgents under the command of Admiral Da Gama in the Province of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, have been defeated by the Gov ernment troops at Campo3. Admiral 03oriG was wounded and captured; he succumbed to his injuries. Admiral Da Gamn, finding himself overpowered, committed suicide. General Taveres assumed command of the rebels. Sal daub, a Da Gama was born in Rio de Ja neiro and was descended from the noble Portuguese family the most illustrious of whose members was the celebrated Yasco Da Gama. When the revolt against Peixoto occurred about two years ago, he remained neutral for some time, but decided at last to join the Insurgents. Rain-Making: a Humbug:. Frank Melbourne, whose services were in 'argent demand in the West two or three years ago as a rain-maker, is now in Cleve land, Ohio. In speaking of his experience as a rain-maker, Melbourne admitted that the whole; thing was a humbug, and that he never possessed any more power to bring rain than any other man. He says the Amer 1 lean people like to be humbugged, and the greater the fake the easier it is to work it Melbourne made a fortune in th business. without warning and fell "outward just where there was a long line of firemen at work. The crowd shrieked with horror and the other firemen rushed to extricate those buried in the! ruins. In a short time five bodies had been recovered and the Injured had been removed in ambulances. One Whole Block and Portions of Other In Bains at the Golden Gate The Loss Perhaps 81,750,000 Died at Their Post - FlTe Firemen Crushed by Falling; Walls Many Others Injured. Fire which started at 6 o'clock p. m. de stroyed four blocks in the heart of the man ufacturing district of San Francisco, CaU, Involving a loss of $1,750,000 in property) and sacrificing one life. The firemen battled in vain to make inroads on the advance of the flames until they were blocked by the big brick wineries and the Southern Paciflo Railroad offices, and chance given to do the first effective work. The burned area is bounded by Townsend, Bryant, Third and Fifth streets. It was the greatest conflagra tion In twenty years. A Miss Gilroy was burned to death while attempting to save some of her belongings, through the explosions of a lamp. A num ber of people received injuries from falling walls and flying timbers. The people in the burned district inhabit ed wooden houses scattered among the man ufacturing plants. The loss will be com plete in most cases, as, owing to the inflam mable nature of the materials, few of the firms were able to carry insurance. Probably 100 poor families have been made homeless, besides losing all their pos sessions. Another hundred or more of small manufacturing establishments, such as fur niture factories, machine shops, etc., were destroyed. Three wineries, containing mill ions of gallons of wine, wool warehouses, freight houses, railway yards, docks, lumber and coal yards had narrow escapes. The people who lost their homes are utterly destitute, and must be cared for by the city Until they can rebuild. The burned area is in that district known as "South of Market." the most densely populated district in the city. The buildings were mostly frame structures, two stories high, tenements and lodging houses occupied by the working classes. The fire depart ment has long regarded the district as a men ace to the city, owing to the inflammable nature of the buildings. During the progress of the fire a steam boiler exploded in a French laundry and sent about half a ton of boiler iron flying through the building. There was a thrilling scene while the convent and parochial school attached to St. Rose's Church were in flames. A few moments before the roof fell in a boy was seen at one of the upper windows. A blanket was held out. and as the roof fell with a crash, he jumped and escaped unin jured. When the water supply gave out the em- doyes of the Lachman winery attached a ong two-inch hose to an 18,000-gallon tank of claret wine that is perched upon a shed outside of the winery. Over an acre of lumber and dry roofs were drenched with wine. FIREMEN CRUSHED. Walls Falls on Them While Fighting Flames at Minneapolis. Five firemen lost their lives at Minneapo lis. Minn., in a fire which broke out at Nos. 240 and 242 First avenue, south. The men were buried under a fallinsr wall. Four others were seriously hurt. The damage to property is 8200,000. The dead are as follows: Joseph Hoy, pipeman; Christian Sande, truckman; John Horner, truckman; Walter Richardson, lieu tenant; Ed. Thielen, pipeman- The injured firemen are: Frank Grau, Frank Egan, Captain Caldwell. Fred. Thomas. I The building In which the fire broke out was a five-story brick structure. It was used by McDonald Brothers as a wholesale and retail crockery store. The building seemed to be full of straw used in packing and the flames gained a tremendous head way at the start. One alarm followed an other in rapid succession until the entire fire department was at work. At 11.30, just when it seemed as if the Are had been subdued, one of the side walls o! the McDonald building gave way almost PROFESSOR HUXLEY DEAD; The Famous Scientist Passes Away Peace-' fully in England. Proffissor Huxley died, after a brief illness,! at Eastbourne1, England. The end was peaceful, in keeping with the retirement he' sought when he took up his residence near Eastbourne, pis wife and daughter were at; his bedside when he breathed his last, but; his son arrived too late. During his dying moments Professor Huxley displayed forti tude and resignation. - I Thomas Henry Huxley was born in Ealing,' Middlesex, England, May 4, 1825. He spent about two years and a half at Ealing School, although he received most of his early edu- cation at hom6. At the age of seventeen he, entered the Charing Cross Hospital Medical) School, obtaining his degree of M. B. in' 1845. In the next year he was appointed assist-! ant surgeon to Her Majesty s ship Victory! and went afterward in the same office oj Her Majesty's ship Rattlesnake. From 184T to 1850, while on the Rattlesnake he passed most of the time off the coast of Australia,' and the fruits of his studies during this Eeriod appeared a few years later, a 1876 the J Professor visited thi3 coun try and delivered three addesses, in which, he illustrated the doctrine of the evolution of higher from lower animal forms by relat ing the growth of the modern horse from the ancient hipparion. In his later years Pro feasor Huxley devoted his attention more to the scientific jaspects of the political and social progress of man and the ethical ad vancement oi (Civilization. Tne last volume of the "Collected Essays" of 1894 is entitled "Evolution and Ethics." A man of many titles, he was always known simply as Pro fessor Huxleyj, He was privileged to write his name Thomas Henry Huxley, LL. D., Ph. D..D. C. L.t M. D.,F. C. 8 Ehg.,F. K. 8.. A CREAT SHOOTING "FESTIVAL The Largest Meeting or the Kind Eve Arranged. The first annual shooting festival of the National Schutzen Bund Of the United States of America was opened with a night "Com- " mers,"and on! the morning after a shooting tournament begun greater than any that had ever yet taken place In America or Europe. The; tournament with its attendant festivities, planned to last eight days, was held at Glendale Park, Long Island. The Schutzen Bund (National Sharp shooters Association) was organized in 1893. It is composed of fifty-four shooting clubs in different parts of the States, with a total membership of over 5000. Vhile a majority S of the promoters of the "Schutzenfest" are ' : Germans, it was a cosmopolitan event, and many American gun clubs joined the Ger man riflemeri in the festivities. With the single exception of t he honor target competi tion, the contests were open to all comers -t no club or marksman from any part of the United States; or Europe was debarred from competing fof the numerous prizes. The as sociation offered nearly $10,000 and about (25,000 in cash or valuables was contributed as honorary prizes. The shooting was at the Association tar gets, Columbia (ring target) and Germania (stick target), and at general prize targets ring, man, American standard, and point. All these targets were used at 203 yards distance. Each shooter had three shots, so tne highest possible score is 75. The plan was thdt the shooter making the most points in his first 200 shots should be declared King and be awarded the gold king's medal, value 100 and 50 cashJ Second, most points in 200! Shots, got $50. There were 18 more prizes for most points in 200 shots, ranging down from $40 to $2. Premiums were given of $5 each for first I bull's-eye at opening of the festival and fpr last bull's-eye at closing of the festival, and of $2 each for first and last bull's-eye every day. The Unusual Exodus to Europe. The figure of the Passport Bureau of the State Department at Washington show that more persons will leave the United States for Europe this summer than ever before, except during the Paris Exposition of 1889 and tha exceptionally prosperous year of 1801. The passports issued up to date number nearly 1700, and probably will reach 2300. The ma jority of the travelers are naturalized citizens, of the Unite! States.