' .-''!'' ' v . ; i 1 - - - -' ' 'i - 1 i 1 1 i . 1 1 MM M ii 0Lp SEU1ES-V0L. LII-NO. 2,685. FAYETTE VILLE, N. 0., THURSDAY JULY 21, 1887. NEW SERIES-VOL. IV NO. 229. i t . . jS COKTKHT. i-rilmer's Magushte. iau, 1 tw, dwelt in far Jap j . ' since, a mn 1 i l.v hammering stone his daily food. Content and dole on his soul, riches as the only good. hi'11 Tj,v heavy I ... AnJ so the gods on high, lio sometimes bitterly by granting all his prayer, ....Hands to have and hold, " . i: !..: j i)v ureeu icuui nuivs But oon he, murmuring, Twdtolneaking; . . VI! I ruk ah, tuai were jn-rivct onus; 1 V ..el ak.i.l Q If With his incessant prayer, . i . :..,ln .nd him e eu in iuu. ;!tilUlfgl,u, His courtiers fawned aud lied,' in.1 rival powers, outside wsailM his peace with fierce debate, And heaviness buu BU-ached gray his youthful hair, Ljiudehiui.weary ol nis regai "0 change me to a rock!" He 'cried, "That no rude shock U stir, nor any w- -"- And lo: he sroou, ere ivug. A hoWer fixed and strong. Lt.ntK could not move, nor tempests IliKI'" brent. In v.iu the burning heat Of fiereest sunshine beat I art liii" head; in vaiu the storm-wind smote 1 Jlw rugged sides; in'vain Great rivers, swell d by rains, wtriiig from their mountain caves re mote. He ws at rest ; and lie Kfjoieed exceedingly. Will there W change ana woe, And wavering to and fro ' f ....1 ... uluviial But on a summer day A workman brought that way Lkimim-r and a chisel these alone. He measured here aud there, j Ami then, with patient earo. 1 8rj3ii to ut away the stubbonnrtonc. "AliT said the bowlder-king. 'Wliat means this wondrous thing f Tiii i'!"diliiig worknian smites and conquers lie cuts, as suits liiiu best, Hnge blo4-ks from out my breast I Hr v niore xtronc than I ! Would I were her - And h! the' powers aloft. Who had so long and oft Liu::Wat his follies, eravel and then grown. Again his pleading heard : lie. tak-n at his word. ?riiuee more a hammerer of stone! So, liser than before, : And asking nothing more, I .1 i.: . . i i . a i a. I,uhimii uix uiiif ii ion ue went. Until lie died of age He toiled for scant v wage. levtrsiK.ke a word of discontent! way, nor ont- Emudpation of Southern Whites. W.TIMORE, Mr.., July 7, 1S87. Under Mns "llie Lmaneination of the hitiiorn Whites and Its EffWr on Roth the Hon. .Iihn W. Jobnston. of swimoiMi, for manv years .1 member of diluted Stages Snate from Virginia, IjnintiHv m the Manufacturer' L'econl UlV 9 an PXeodilKrlv inlonxitiniT anil NiuUe article, tliat is sure to command attention. All the world, savs Mr. Won, knew that the black man in the a a slave, but none recognized or 'wwmstious of the fact that the wbite m wa a slave also. It is true he could P ue lKn?it nnd c.hl ur im bo it! 'J )jwt to the ordere of a master, evwtlielei he vj a bondsman, and I iir !,.... . il l . . . . i v vuaui) I liar ntl mtuiraH Itinrr vaii oa as those that bound the colored ihe negro was a slave to him, and 7-Mave io the situation, lie was TOI with bein an indolent lover of "ire, lai-kll)L' in indntr' rnrTT xnil Iwprise, follow hi'' vear aftor vear and mtioii after generation, the same old J traek, wiili no apparent wish to it ami ir i was reproached for persisting f nu tenaeiously in one uniform course : ' ne wax Uiiid to the vast resources and i-uuesot the country he lived in; that Li r'i umn,Dded mines of wealth, I"? Hl not ran 1 . A tWra but "never," says Mr. John- n,!. mure iuisiaxeu iut, I never we i - mcic n pvupio bu lime uii- 'Xl Or en i t iL. hwls-m u,: niisjuogea as me An, . ulcr anuaarmer." S.JTtho cviid world, even in the .-'oiaitK, with another, as tW r, . v - uuu nu iiasxern la- KTKf-'S!- Rnd slave were, thTi'rwlu'y were couplel, and "ie ligament was a strontr on. WbV it at bnbo,u g Class had Work aftd had ii at norae. H wiiMct.n.i i i , ".wiiuicu io one ciasj of laborers and one locality. And he was obliged to, conform his LsWc, tlio sort of work his men could do and what waa most profitable. w liiusthe persistence of tho Sr. man in adhering year after year to the same course of life did not arise from in 2Cf UL -f"e ccessfully in some w" i , """X irom nis surroundings. coum not abandon it without disas tnous results to himself, to the negro, to the ptate and the world. If ever men were impelled by an irresistible force, it was the Southern white man. What did it matter to him if the earth beneath his feet was loaded with all the mineral n-KUb tribute to the wealth, convenient r en joyment ot mankind, or that the stream i uuiuri'T ov nis aoor hnl enough to .turn a thousand wheels? He could not utilize them; he was bound hand and foot bound to his slaves, bound to his plantation, bound to cotton, to his hab its or nte, to the exigencies of the situa tion, to the necessity of providing for his slaves, so many of whom were non-producers. There raav have bean than one elsewhere to answer the question: How to find work for the laboring class es? and more latitude in solving it; but to him there was only one answer labor in the neiu. He saw no other has the world seen any other. The Southern planter, says the -writer, did his work well. He had a hard and what would seem to have been an almost impossible task. He was brought into contact with a race who, in their own country and in their native condition were all savage, with scarcely a redeeming vir tue. Out of such material he made men who 1ecame docilr, industrious, kind and faithful; whose work reduced a vast wil derness to a state of cultivation. The in- A a 1 . uurnce, coniroi ami icaenings tnai am tins must have been judicious and prudent; no other course of conduct could have ac complished so much. More than twenty years have passed. writes Mr. Johnston, since the negro was made free, and that period affords us some means of judging 'the effect on both, races. This he rightly says is a momentous, a vi tal matter to the American people, and one that it behooves them to look into closely. The question is repeatedly asked why. if the South has such vast mineral wealth as is now claimed, was so little done to de velop it prior to the war! Why did the Southern people with all this wealth be neath their feet leave it comparatively un touched 7 lo these questions Mr. John ston gives an answer, the correctness of which cannot be questioned. To compare the work of the white man of the South with that of the negro, Mr. Johnston presents some very striking statistics as to the main agricultural pro- ductsof the Southern States, such as to bacco, cotton, nce-and sugar, prior to the war and at the present time. He ssiys: I will offer further on what 1 .consider the proper explanation of this seemingly anomalous result of a decline in a number of industries to which the soil and climate of the South are suited and a marvellous growth in others, and in the meantime will present the reader with some account of industry, entenmse and energy and their, results more agreeable than the pic ture of decline heretofore drawn. It can no longer be said, even by the enemies of the Southern white man, that he i not now at least making good use of the bounties which nature has bestowed unon his country, for there is scarcely any thing in the way of a natural resource or of an industry suitable or practicable that is not recognized and developed or put in the process of development. From rail roads, mines, manufactures, commerce and education down to trucking and the growth of small fruits, everything is active. Materials once thrown away are husbanded and. made profitable, and it is not extravasrant to say that no five years in the history of any people, ancient . or modern, exceeds in material advancement the past five years in the South, notwith standing the decline already noted1 - He then points out a few facts in this marvellous growth, showing that in 1880 the South had 180 cotton mills, win e rit now has 353. In 1880 there were 34..G2 manufactories in the South, producing .$315,924,794, against 51,419 now, produc- ing $505,'J,WU. in low me k"1" ed 6,000,000 tons of coal and in 18S6 over 13.000.000, while during me same $000,000,000 have .beeu spent in building new railroads ami improving THE LONELY LITTLE GRAVE. A Sad Story from the Plaina of the Wild, Tntamed West. Did Dakota llel!. VOU ever come suddenlv' nnnn n. grave off on a prairie, far from any human habitation t Nothing can seem more sad aud lonely than such a grave', with the summer wind bending and waving the tall grass with a low, murmuring harmony, which you can just hear, if you listen close ly, like far-off music. 1 remember finding such from the sun, and he is so smfcll that he is generally quenched, for an earthly obser ver, in the rays of the setting sun. Venus, our nearest neighbor and the most glorious ornament of the evening skies, is now in her glory. She is at about the end of the invisible rope that ties her to the sun, and will get no further away from him. From now until Sept. 21 she will perform the rocess known as backing up. It is need ess to say she will do it gracefully. This is a fine opportunity for watching the backward progress of a planet. It was from this apparent erratic wandering backward and forward that the planets n fvrflva o lit tie one a number of years ago, in a then I pot their name, the word for "wandering" almost unsettled portion of Dakota. It was m Greek being 4,planao.n Mars cuts a ten miles to the nearest house. But there was a board at the head and foot it was less than three feet long and an attempt at a fence around it. It was not an eld grave, and there was a little wild rose bush growing on it, but the soil was so dry that it was not flourishing, and it had but one little, withered bud, while on the surround ing prairie the roses were all in bloom, making it seem almost like a garden. I rode twenty miles beyond before I came to a house. Here a man was work ing near a Kttle new board ''shack." I got into conversation with him, and asked if tie knew anything about the little grave. "'Bout flftfvn milna bJa mo atuv v vw iii nigh a little the town is started now, an' mound V "Yes." f 'Our little boy is buried there the only child we had. He died there when we were movin' into the country a month ago, and I buried him there with my own ban's an' nobody with me 'cept my wife an' the hosses, the hosses looked on an' we come away an7 left him. I m goin' back after him soon, an' we'll make him n littl here near our new home, where it won't be so lonesome Tor the little feller." "Was he sick longt" Liess n a week. He was took sick one af ternoou, an' the next day it hurt him to ride in the wagon, an' so we stopped there with him. He crew worse, an nothin' mv wife or me could do seemed to heln him. so I took one of the hosses an' rode fiftv miles to the nearest town. The doctor couldn't go out, but he sent some medicine, an' I went back as fast as I could. My wife was all alone there on the prairie in the cov- erea wagon, an' the little feller crrowur worse. He seemed to know he was croin' i to die, an' all day he kept askin' when pa pa was comin'. My wife set an' heUl his head in her lap an' kept tellin him that papa would come pretty soon. Sometimes ho would drop into a feverish sleep, an' then he would start up an' say: 'Mamma, ain't papa turn yetf I wan't to see him.' An she roothed him the best she could, an' tried to hide her tears. "I got there jes 'fore sunrise. The sky was all red an' mighty fine lookin an' the wind was still an' the grass an' little spring flowers all wet with dew. My wife heard me outside, an' I heard her say that papa had come. Aa 1 stepped up an' crawled into the front of the wagon, an' he 'raised up his head a little, and his great big eyes were opened awful wide, an' he held out his hand to me an' said : I's waitin for oo, papa; oo was gone awful long. I knelt by his side, where his mother was holdin' his headin her lap, an' his eyes wandered an' looked out the front o' the wagon at the bootiful red sky, an' once he stretched out his arms a little an' then the sun come up an' he shut his eyes, an my wife took holt o' my hand, an' we both "knowed he was gone, jes as the sun come up. "We did the best we could, burying him there in a rough box 1 made, not Know now tur we might go, an iom you, I'm groin' uacic pretty soon an bring him where it won't be so lonsomc for the poor little feller." cause l did . T 19 A "Gombroon. Dr.j 7 ' un onmea variety , "8 Public lands and its insti J hich open any life to any of its Pfeemwr . m 18 : w to pro- u -r-:J ior me laboring classes T" milu h heen disturbed, loss . uL'nitn i . . . I jy the L T "vurreu, and society. shaKen "uicn nave become so ire- "i and i . .. . . . i 7 " ,upread. so easily induced PftdTk mUe' The PwMer has men ntioa mo8t Pfound, of lin.'it1! elitists and govern terLm j L,peaa "ation; hut no ad- iet y 043611 yet found, nor a at- ."answer to th nnostinn vet fcatk o 8ame problem existed in SdS t8' .ou?h in different New P leaning elsewhere. Ogland farm in nr.. Bra a ist. fe nPju?uit'beeai" th fraA lacked tin a ol that ieetiori nat i. J ,urnei to ma jf. i wwwm r lieu uePresed and the market over- ii ., ue lnannfa...,. iA 'llenii . 'tuict wan vviiicpniw ,kW l0,n ot what to Jo with those d DO forlr Uttmm - SonSj ?dit.ion of "lavery itself kept Cto l!d 10 their e. They were t er i. i .QOeeaWy. The ne- TirJ,,pi0?ment had to be found for Raleigh "Seven iiikI Olwvrvcr.J This name of Senator Vance's new home, at' which he received the survivors of the Bough and Beady Gnards last Thursday, has for some time been a source of specu lation among the friends of the Senator as to where he got it. why he chose it for his new home, &c. The Asheville correspond ent of the Wilmington Messenger has ex plained it beautifully and concisely in the following language: "Gombroon, the name of the Senator's residence, has been a -stumbling-block to many and a case of sport to many, as it was to Ocecv, of the Economist, who rung all possible changes on name and sound Gambroon, Brombone, Gamboge, Ham bone. All sorts of queer suggestions enme to his tongue as he tried to master the un known word and sound. But the Senator is a reader of wide range, outside of poli- and the problems of statesmanship, very small figure nowadays. He is on the other side of tho sun from us, and being so far away he is scarcely equal in brilliancy to one of the first magnitude of "fixed" stars. When he is nearest ns he looks as big as Jupiter, and is a very fine sight through a telescope. Jupiter is now in excellent position' for observation. Ho has been backing up for some time, and his motions can be very accurately meas ured, because he is so close to the first magnitude star Spica. A week's watching of him will show which way he is going. He is going forward again now, aud has passed Spica to the eastward. Jupiter is as near the zenith as he ever gets, and di rectly to the southward, about 8:30. Tho other planets are out of sight now, and Uranus and Wept line are never m sight to the ordinary observer at any time. oat urn would be worm looKing at, ii you could find him, because he is nearer the earth now than he will be in seventeen years, and is tipped up so that his rings are clearly exposed. One Who Xeprcients the Days of 1776. A correspondent of the Concord Times, giving an account of the 4th of July cele- d ration, savs mai me nay wasmaae mem oraoie to tnem oy tne presence oi a gen tleman who was born, it is said, in 1770, one year before the Declaration of Inde pendence. This gentlemen is old Billy Whitley, of Stanley county. For him Rev. Mr. Martin, of Rocky River Springs, spoke in a very interesting wav. ine iamiiy record has been lost and so was not at hand to speak for itself, but the proofs wero pretty conclusive that this old man is now 112 years old. He remem bers distinctly seeing tne soldiers coming home from the Revolutionary ar. He married at 33 years old and lived with his wife t J years, who died at the age of 101 in 1881. He has in possession a gun used at the fight of lorktown by a gentlemen who heard the conversation between Corn wallis and Washington at the surrender. With this gun uncle Billy has probably killed more deers than any other man in N. C. He has also a pocket book which belonged to his father and is possibly 125 or 150 years old. He has his third set of teeth not from the dentist, but from God. He cut liis last set at the youthful age of 109. To show the strength of his man hood vet,' it is enough to state that last winter he cut wood, cut up and split into I fire wood a large dead tree, and last vear sprouted 14 acres of ground. He has lived a member of the Old School Baptist church for more than GO. years. Never was known to tell a lie; never had a law suit, never took a dose of medicine, aud never paid a doctor's bill. He fired off the old musket over the heads of the immense crowd after which a tremendous shout of three cheers was given him. One felt like taking off his hat in the presence of this venerable man of four generations back. The writer shook hands with him and talked with him. He has now but little wind. Think of this man who has lived co-ex tensive with all the wonderful history of this most wonderful nation! It makes one feel nearer to the Revolutionary times to sec and talk with one who saw the light before that great event. THE BLXHS TXGE2. The Wheel Devioe Taed by Liquor SaniM. Sealer ia Popek Letter. In several cities in the State what is known as the "blind tiger" is the scheme which is being nsed to; sell beer and whis ky. A description of this novel little ap paratus, given by a gentleman who inves tigated it, is given as follows: 1 he other day when I was out in west ern Kansas, in a town of not over "00 peo ple, I asked the hot,el ' proprietor if there was any place where I could obtain some beer. He pointed significantly to a little dug-out in the rear of the hotel, and mo tioned me to go ahead.' " 1 did, and passing five or six steps I entered a room about five feet below the surface of the earth, ten feet long by six ieei wiae. "And tho steers can't do-it t" "No, nor any other yoke in these parts. ! Itll take a pound of gun-powder to lift that stump." "Shoo! now, but take off your cattle. I'm something on the pull myself." "You! Say, do I look like a fool! You j can drive on, stranger," But Joe jumped down, slipped the chain off the yoke, drove the steers one side, and then walked over to the stump and said : "Sometimes the dirt flies over half an With that he spit on his hands, clasped nis arms around the stump, and without a bulge of his eyes he lifted the whole thing out of the earth and flung it aside with the remark: "Shouldn't like any better fan than to I pull those steers backwards over the fence. but we must be going ,now. So long, old man." Racket Store, Backed by the LITE GASH DOLLARS, Having gained in a few months a patron age which others hare straggled for years to obtain. Aw-I 14 itliiMhAil a Atns-fl fwwvA mt1t Ik. 9 tm jooKing arourm on eitner side of ml Vnd in the road half a mile away they was the dirt wall, but cazinsr ahead was a partition di viding the room. In the centre of this partition, midmay from the floor to ine ceiling, was a revolving cylinder di vided into compartments. Above the 'wheel,' as it was called, -rere printed the following words on a placard: looked back. The farmer stood there, I mouth open and e.res as big as Bermuda onions, and when they waved their hats at him he never moved a hair. He couldn't. He was paralyzed. Zaaks sad Private Bankers. : PUT YOCR MOXEY I '. On the wheel. '. Your change will : i '. Come back ; ; I Beer, 40c. per bottle. : I Beer 5c. per glass. ; : Blackberry brandy, : I Two drisks for 2m. '. "I went down into mv pocket and find ing among the ruins a fifty-cent piece, I placed it on the wheel in one of the com partments. In a clear and distinct tone pf voice I said: "'One bottle of beer, please.' "For a second silence reigned supreme in the cave-like saloon. I soon heard a creaking sound, the wheel revolved, and my fifty -cent piece disappeared from view. "For the space of several minutes I heard nothing. Then' the wheel revolved once more, and before my astonished gaze rested a bottle of beer, a glass and a ten cent piece, the glass being in one compart ment and the beer in the other. I drank tho forbidden fluid in silence, and. placing the empty glaw and bottle back in the compartments of the wheel, saw them whisked from my sight, and then I with drew. "Now, at no time was the party who sold me the liquor visible, and it would be impossible for me "to swear who or what he was. .The partition which divided the cave and behind which the unknown seller transacted his business was very tight, having but one crack in it. I looked through this, striving to see what was be hind this mysterious partition, but I could see but one thing and that was a govern ment license from the Internal Revenue office at Leavenworth.; (Rulelgh XewB-Olwerrw. A new law passed by the last legislature provides: "That all incorporated banking institutions now organized or that may hereafter be organized, under the laws of this state, whether savings or general, and all private bankers, shall be required to make to the state treasurer statements of their financial condition, at such times as the treasurer may call for them, not less then twice in each and every year, and also shall publish such statements in con densed form as published by the national banks, in some newspaper published and printed in the city or town where such banking business is carried on,and if none there, then in a newspaper pubiisnea in the town nearest thereto." "That any banking institution failing to comply with the provisions of this act tor a period longer than ten days after being called upon by the state treasurer lor a statement shall be subjected to a penalty of three hundred dollar. &.. &e." In compliance with this law Treasurer Bain is looking np the various banking institutions of the State and calling for statements. On account of the great num ber of private banking institutions in the state he is experiencing some difficulty in nnuing in em out. i nereis no proiiou for a systematic "looking them np" and the treasurer is wBolly dependent up on replies to enquiries sent to county offi cers for his information of them. Indivi- tiuais operating sucn insiiiniions wpum u well to examine the law and prepare their returns. From these returns the condi tion of the lanking interest of the State may be fully learned, and irresponsible 5arties, if there ho any, shown np. So Below yon will find a Price List which A CASH SYSTEU enables ns to adopt. Read it carefully and note the advantages that are thereby of fered: Xi-oms GoodH, 3cc Figured Lawn 31c. up, Victoria Lawn 5rc np. Crinkled Seersucker Cc. np. Pique 7c, Cross barred Muslin, Apron and Dress Ginghams. Prints, Shirting, Sheetings, Ticking, Curtain Net 10c a vard up. Mos quito Net, Jeans 10c np. Towels 4c np. Handkerchiefs lc np, Laces. Edging and Inserting lc. a yard np. Tabic Linens, &c IVotioiiM. Pins 2c, Best Brass Pin 3c, Thread 2c. (200 yards). Silk Thread 4c, Dressing Combs 2c np, Tucking Combe 4c np. Hair pins 2c per bunch (43), Toilet Soap 2c np. Garters 3c np. Garter Elastic 3c y'd np. Parses 4c np. Hand Bags, Baskets, Per fumery 5c np. Face Paw-lcr 4c n p. Dress Shields 10c, Ladies Gauze Vests 23c op, Bass Balls 4c np, Whalebone 4c per pc. Featherhone 14c. y'd. Pant Buttons 8c per gross. Dress Buttons white and smoked pevrl. pearl, agate, Ac, lc doz. np. Fine S.Ik Jersey Gloves 33c, others from Cc np, Ladies, Misses and Gents, 5c np. MM Umbrellas, Fans. Parasol, Whins, Cor sets 25c np. The Racket Corset 47c FiHliiiier Tnoldo. nooks 5c doz., Hooks and Lines 4c up. 47c up; a Fast Black. Coat Back, EUstie Scams, 61c; an all wool Die. Ooods. 3 and 4 ply Linen Collar 7, 8, 9, 10 and 12c, 3 and 4 ply Linen Cuffs 14c on. 100 rar. retnrns have been received from over I dozen Ties and Means, beautiful styles, " Point About Rattlesnakes. tics nMCAt trvIWo-p in the Southern States and beseems to be fond of De Quincy, both beim 33 767 miles, against 20,042 in 1880. in his fantastical reveries and in his more sane prouuviious, aa x unu wcnsiuii if learn in a recent conversation with him), and somewhere he came across De Quin cy's brilliant history of his imaginary king dom, with its splendid castles, and its glo rious mountains, and its deep forests, and its grand, roaring torrents. Of this kingdom Gombroon was the capital; and what more appropriate that real local hab itation, as well as name, should be fixed for it among the majestic masses that have the name so little worthy of their height and grandeur the Black and thus Gom- Tie Elections the Coining TsXL r.opntto' the extent that the Legisla ture chosen this fall in Virginia, Kentucky Jrl. t navti'AtnAtfl in the election ol aim j. . .w, ..i tt:.1 Ctotoa Senators, tlie elections ui iuc UUireu ..v. , l .! present year can uardiy De consmcrcu . rot national iiuyunuw W V T , 1 AL-- Massachusetts, Kentucky.-lowa ana vm will elect Governors, and these States, with Virginia, New York nd New Jersey, will choose new Legislatures, wholly or in part. i-ennayt "--" - nnaaata TVxns broon cot its name whether to sanction proniuiwijr tiorial amendments. The elections m sev eral of the States named will possess ex- Nexfc to the 8un an(j the earth 'ltset, in v . m 4.1 A r,.mh that T nOV I ... . . ceotional interest ior.merKi"" a8tronomieal importance to us, is tne moon, will afford indications of the voting Her majesty rose on the 6th at 5 o'clock The Xoon and f tars this Month. strength of new political movements. iNew and ftt in the morning. Her "day," York politicians are curious w it wjjj een, ls very short now only ab- whether Mr. Henry lieorge anu r. Glynn are factor to be taken; much into amount in 1888, and whether .in that ad ta Mr Powderlv will throw nis influent unifoVmly for the meparh;. In Virginia the condition of the .Repubh 1U "JL... ; mV. Ahafed bv its oppo- "ry--r Zn; A Srer on the point Xther it b weaker or stronger than it i vvpmber. when it dereaieaai good many Democratic aspirants for con gressional honors.- Sneculator (enthusiastically) I tell you. pn&Sm?n there is wealth in the Great Ar EtfSSnV conntry. Rock fairly ghtter- lDRi Mer-I can testify to that. There is a fortune there, gentlemen. Sp -Have you been prospecting m th& MJ& came back. I left my for tune therej out nine hours and she rides low in the sky throughout her course. .She was full on the 5th at half-past three o'clock in the mornincr. Her last quarter .was on the 13th. and she disappeared in the sun's glo ry on the 19th, emerging from her bath of light on the 21st (to-day) modest, fresh and new, a tiny silver rim. The moon is moving away from the earth now. She was 227.000 miles away on the 5th. On ha 12th day of July unconsciously eel abrating the battle of Boynewater she was over 250,000 miles away, at her apogee. Then she comes back again, and is in per igree, or nearest the earth, again on the 24th. , . . Of the planets. Mercury was at his fur thest eloncration from the sun on the 5th, a lit tle south of the Bun's setting point and very near the horizon. It takes a good eye to catch this elusive little fellow. His.t ether is so short that he never gets very far away Canning Fruit. rtiilanolpliia TYra. First of the jars, which should always be of glass, with glass or porcelain lined tops. Ureat cure must bo used to have them in perfect order. No matter how clean they little I half the counties of the taV and others are daily beinir made. The returns will also be of matnrial nse in adjusting the bank tax. It should be remembered, that while the Treasurer has no authority to compel the publication of the statement, the law requires it. np, colored blurts 39c up. wlutennlann dried Shirts 33c np, the N. Y. Mills cele brated Shirt GTc latmdried Shirts 53c np. Jeans Drawers 23c np, Balbriggan Suits, Suspenders, work Shirts. Overalls, Seersucker Coats and Vests $1.31 Montgomery (Ala) Advertiser. , A gentleman who has had some experi ence with rattlesnakes was speaking a day or two ago about the habits of the reptile. "rew people, said tue gentleman, "un derstood the habits of 'rattlesnakes, .con sequently there is a good deal of unneces sary fear -regarding them". In the first place, o rattlesnake will not chase yon and in the second place, it will not attack you unless you come uponnt in sucn a way that it cannot escape without attacking, If a rattlesnake is disturbed it usually sounds its rattle and makes off, but' if j-ou come upon it suddenly aud it has to fight. it will coil itself up, poise its head and strike at you downward. The fang is turned up under the upper jaw, and as it stnkes this is thrown out and cuts into the flesh. It is as sharp as a razor, and goes through1 a thin boot like a steel blade. .What is the best antidote? v Whiskey. The man who is bitten by a rattlesnake should have whiskey poured into him until he is too drunk to stand, and he should be kept drunk for two or three days. The one poi son conteracts the other. If ho can't be made druuk there is lit t tie hope for him. 1 have seen it stated that a bottle of tur pentine turned np on the bile will draw the poison out in the shape ot a greenish cloud that will float up into the white fluid, but I have never seen a test made of that. Live flesh will also draw ont the poison, it is said, and I know that in some places, where a person is bitten by a rattlesnake, the first thing done is to kill a chicken, cut it in half, aud while the flesh is still quivering put it warm to the bite. The Work of Some Lasy If an. Abbeville Medium. J A man who has more time than money has taken the trouble to find out how far a farmer has to cultivate forty acres of corn. To plow the ground wdh a sixteen- mch plough he walks dot) miles; to harrow the ground thoroughly before planting he walks 60 miles; to cultivate it afterwards he walks 300 miles; making a grand total of 700 miles, besides the gathering. Brood ing over information like this U one of the things which makes farmers sons too tired to stay on the farm. Af a set-off some body ought to find out bow many miles a dry roods clerk walks in a day. may have been when pnt away, a carelessness at the time of nsing will not only ruin the flavor of the preserves, bnt will prevent the fruit from keeping. A jar that has been tightly covered for some time will be found to have a close odor which will taint the fruit and particularly so, it by any mistake the rubber rine has been shut up inside it. Therefore, when rpady to use scald each jar thoroughly, then partly fill with fresh boiling water, and stand in a pan of hot water on the back of the range nntil ready for use, first using the precaution to put a folded towel on the bottom of the pan to prevent the jar from cracking or breaking. When the fruit is done pour tho" water from the jar slowlv,- then through' a wide mouth fun nel fill with the boiling fruit to overflow ing, in order to exclude every particle of air; cover quickly and screw down the tops, it.. , oianu ixmom nnwarus in a warm piace, where the wind wilt: not blow on them. When entirely cold, .tighten the screws, which the shrinkage of cooling will have left a little loose. The next day label plainly and put nwaj in a dry, cool and dark place. Jellies should never be kept in a cellar, but if the cellar is very dry canned fruit may be kept there safely. Next of fruit. Iu selecting fruit for put ting np great care should be nsed to have it perfectly sound and fresh, and not too ripe, particularly for jellies, as any amount of boiling will not make the juice or over ripe small fruits to jelly. In canning fruits they should only be cooked until thoroughly scalded through, for overcook ing destroys the natural flavor, and, in case of small fruits, long cooking with su gar not only renders the seeds very hard and indigestible, but destroys the delicate flavor of tho fruits. Nearly all the small fruits are much letter to be sufficiently cooked first, and to have the sugar put in hot just before they are taken off the stove. The added flavor imparted by tins mode of treatment is surprising. To heat the sugar, put it into the ovens in pans, but do not allow it to brown. Granulated su gar is the only sugar which should be used for putting up fruit in any form, especial ly for jellies. Careful skimming, too, is of great importance. Do not stir the fruit af ter it commences to boil, but, spoon in hand, watch carefully the rising scum un til it is ready to break; then scum quickly and thoroughly, and continue to skim until done If this rising scum is allowed to boil nnder as it breaks it will not rise to the top again, and so will not only cause the fruit to be cloudy,' but will prevent its keeping well. A ratal Start. With 7,858 money order post offices in the country, including 353 new ones estab lished this week, it is plain that the postal transfer bank business is assuming the proportions of an almost universal public convenience. KrtNN the Charlotte Chronicle. Information was brought to the city yes terday of a fatal explosion at the camp of A. & C. right, contractors on the Caroli na ami Geonria and Midland road, at 6 o'clock last Friday afternoon, whieh re sulted in the desth of one white man, eight colored men and two mules. The scene of the accident is near the banks of the Catawba river, about 30 miles from Charlotte.. Wnirht Brothers have a contract on Gen. R. F. Hoke's new road, which is to connect Monroe or Charlotte with Atlanta, and they work a large force of hands. A squad of twelve colored men were engaged in blasting through a rocky cnt nnder the supervision of a white man named Agio. One of the dynamite cart ridges used in firing the blast became fas tened in the drill hole before it could be driven home, and Agio, the boss of tho gang, seized an iron erowoar anu went io work in an effort to drive the cartridge to its proper place. It was an immense blast, charged with ten kegs of powder. 1 As soon as the bar i struck the cartridge it exploded and fired the blast with dreadful effect. Three of the twelve men escaped unhurt, but the others were either blown to pieces or buried nnder tho immense mass of earth and rock that was thrown up by the explosion. Some of the unfortunate men were horribly mu tilated, fragments of their bodies Wing scattered around the scene of the accident. Three of the men whoscaped being killed outright were caught nnder the mass of falling debris and suffocated to death, and it was not until nine o'clock that night. three hours after the explosion occurred,! that the last body was dug from the debris. Agio, the foreman, was badly lacerated by the explosion and lingered until 12 o' clock vesterdav, when he died. In addi tion to all this loss of human life, two mules that were hitched to carts in the vi cinity of the accident were killed. dfarettee Xajvinf the Zjes. A great many medical men claim that the nse of tobacco in its various forms is very injurious to health, while others say it affects the health of men to no percepti ble extent, and still another class claim that it is actually beneficial to most con sumers. The latest charge brought against the weed is by ad optician of New York. He says: "Cigarette smoking is doing Note Paper, 3, 4, 5 and 7c quire. Envelopes 3 and 4c. pack, 2. in pack. Legal and Fools Cap 8, !), 10c. quire. Memorandum Books 3c np Order Books 5 and 7c Writing Tablets 3c up. Copy Books 2c np.! Lead Pencils 10. 20 and 25c dozen. Slate Pencils 2c dozen. Slates 2 cents each. Ink 3c Falcon and Stub Pens 5c dozen Penholders lc dozen np. Beautiful Scrap Books 17 eents np. Scrap Pictures lc. dozen up. Autograph and Photo Albums. Playing Cards .V. pack. Photo Frames, Easels, Plaques, Ac. Lead for Automatic Pencil. School Satchels. SllOON, Examine our new lot of Shoes, which we ltought at the late failure of Clutman & Bingham, Manufacturers of fine Shoes. Men's Buttons, Congress and English Balmorals and Brogans. Boys fine Bal morals and Brogans. L-idies and Misses fine Kid and Goat Bntton and Lace Shoes and Slippers. Gents' Patent Leather hand sewed Pumps. Infant Shoes, &c All at 25 per cent, below current prices. Handsaws 29 to 3Sc Hammers lie np. Hatchets 38c np. Wrenches 10c np. Braces 35c Chisels 17c np. Drawing. Knives 33c Spirit Levels 8 cents. Curry Combs 4c. np. Pocket Cutlery 4c up. Padlocks 7c np. Clone t and Door Locks 14c np. Scissors and Shears 4c up. Razors 23c np. Wade& Batcher's fine Razors 51c. Carpet Tacks 2c Tack Claws, Screws lc dozen np. Pliers. Can Openers, Oar den Tools, Hoe, Rake and Sonde 23c. Lemon Squeezers 23c Paint Brushes Razor Strops 14c un. Pipes, Gun Caps, Moeilage 4c, French Shoe Dressing 5c bottle. Rules 5c np, Sliaving Brashes 4c np. Table Spoons 17c set np, Toothpicks, Coffee Mills, Blacking lc and 2c box. Brushes, &e. TiiiAvnre. A Faralrsed Tamer. ' Detroit Free Prete. A Detroit butcher named Joe Wiilets. was np in Mecosia county a few days ago to see some relatives. . Joe is built after the old style architecture one story and a basement and auy man who picks him np for a consumptive is bound to feel sad over 'the mistake. While out ridieg one day with a friend he came across a farmer who was trying to "yank", a stump out of the ground with a yoke of feeble looking steers.. The stump had begun to "give," but the steers strained and twisted and pulled and couldn't budge it another inch. "What are von trviuc to dot" said Joe. as he stopped "his horse. " Trying to pull out this stump, sir," was .the reply. . . . Always on hand a large assortment at Racket prices; besides many other lines too nnmerons to mention. Cll n.1 ma more injury to the eyes than anything I us and secure your bargains while they are know of. Smoking pipes or cigars is bad J here. enough , but t here is somet h i u g i n t he paper with whieh the cigarette is rolled that is very injurious to the eyesight. There are more men and boys wearing glasses now than I have ever known before, and I at tribute it all to excess in tobacco smoking:. Nine of ten Germans wear spectacles. They are inveterate smokers." ' Xememhers tke Goof 014 Times. Our stock has been largely increased within the last few days, and yon will find it toyoar best inters to examine it before furchasing elsewhere. You will find many ines which space wUl not permit us to mention, l&a early and avail yourself o an excellent opportunity to secure - Respect fully. Darlington Free Pirn rtannila. lmaat wl. nnntpp 1 ftt vmm rAA He remembers having seen a clean office I MORRlSt CARNEY & CO.i ivr tv a vi u h v v r A straight line can be drawn through seventy-five miles of the Indian river. Fla.. without touching shore. It is called the straightcfct nver in the world. HAY STREET, Fayetteville, N. C. New York ofilce, 4GC Broadway. tf :une2 I U I I t I