81 It IS J I iy A JXJ Ay a ms Paper is 43 Years Old CHARLOTTE, N. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1896. VOLUME XLIII. NUMBER 2234 THE CHARLOTTE DEMOCRAT PUBLISHED KVBEY VBIDAT Tebus One .Dollar and Ffty Cents in advance for 1 yeer Two Dollars on time. o Entered at the Post Office iu Charlotte, N. 0., as second class matter, according to the rules ot the P. O. Department. DRS. McCOMBS & GIBBON, DESIRE TO INFORM THE PUBLIC, That they have this day entered into a copart nersbip for the PRACTICE OF MEDICINE, AND SURGERY. March 1, 1895. March 15. 1895. JOHN PARRIOR, HO. 4 SOUTH TBYON STREET, CHARLOTTE, N. C. WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER. DEALER IN Diamonds, Watches, Clocks, -Jewelry, "Sil ver and Silver Plated Ware. ty Special attention given to Fine Watch Repairing. Jan 25, 1895. BURWELL, WALKER & CANSLER, Attorneys-At-Law, IEOOM8 NOB 5, 6, AND 13, LAW BUILDING, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Jan 4, 1895. DR. E. F. KEERANS, DENTIST, CHARLOTTE, N. C. 'Office 7 West Trade Street. Nov. 2, 1894 HUGH V. HARRIS, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Office, Nos. 14 and 16 Law Building, CHARLOTTE, N. C. July 6, 1895: , , - F. I. 08B0RNE, W. C. MAXWELL, J. W. KEERANS. OSBORNE, MAXWELL & KEERANS, Attorneys at Law. Oil ARLOTTE, N. C. t3f Offices 1 and 3 Law Building. Will practice in the State and Federal Courts. Oct 20, 1895. DRS. M. A. & C. A. BLAND, Dentists. CHARLOTTE, N. C. No. 21 Tryon Street. Jan. 3, 1896. ittRlOT CLARKSON. CBAS. H. DULS CLARKSON & DULS, Attorneys at Law, Charlotte, N. C. Prompt attention given to all business m . justed. Will practice in all Courts of the itate. Office No. 12 Law Building. Oct. 7. 1896. H. N. PHARR, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office No. 14. Law Building. Prompt attention to all business intrusted. Special attention given to claims. Practices in State and Federal Courts. Jan. 6, 1895. THE ACKNOWLEDGED ' Leading Seeds Are BUISTS! - BUISTSII We open ours today, fresh from the grower Plant only "Buist's Prire Medal Seeds," and you are sure or a crop. R. H. JORDAN & CO , Jan. 19. 1S95. Retail Druggists GO TO ALEXANDER'S DRUG STORE, NO. 216, NORTH TRYON STREET. Seeps a well assorted stock of all articles usualy kept in a Drug House J. B- ALEXANDER. The Poor prescribed for free. April, 8, 1895. FINEST LOT Ever brought to Charlotte. This is no idle boast We have the finest lotot PERFUMES in the city. Rick seeker's best in FANCY Bottles, Cases, Flasks, etc., in GOOD shape for an EL KG ANT PRESENT. It RECOMMENDS ITSELF. IT WILL PAY YOU TO SEE IT R H. JORDAN & CO., Druggists Dec. 28, 1896 E. NYE HUTCHISON. FIRE INSURANCE. Offices 16 East Trade Street ; 4 North Tyon Street, up stairs. Feb. 19. 1895. QUEEN CITY HOTEL. In visiting Charlotte, Don't fail to stop at the Queen City Hotel, Corner East Fifth and College 8ts, Everything first-class. RATES, $100 PER DAY. July 6, 1895. W J MOORE, Prop'r. Surgical Instruments. A full line of Surgical Instruments at Manufac turer's prices. Call and examine them. KT" Mail orders will be promptly attended to R. H. JORDAN & 00. Sent 20, 1895' The Use of Horseflesh in Paris. The statistical bulletin of the French Ministry of Agriculture, dealing with the consumption of horseflesh in Paris 1 tet year, gives the number of horses killtfi for consumption as food at 23,186 thi? be ng exclusive of 43 mules and 383 donkeys. The total weight of meat sold was 5,130 tons, and this was sold at 186 shops or stalls, which are not allowed to sell any other kind of meat. The maxi mum price ranged from 18 cents a pound for the fillet to 4 cents a pound for the necks and lower ribs. The report adds tbat not more than a third of the meat is sold at the stalls, the remainder going to make sausages. TRUSTEE'S SALE. Whereas John M. Hanna and Rosa J. Hanna did on the 10th day of i January, 1890. execute and deliver to Albert R. Shattuck, Trustee, a trust deed on certain lands in Mecklenburg County, State of North Carolina, therein vtscribed, to secure liie eum of $1,100, due by taid John M Hanna and Rosa J. Hanna to the British & American Mortgage Company, Limited, which said trust deed is recorded io Mecklenburg County, in Deed liook btf, .rage atw, to which reference is hereby made; and whereas default has been made in the payment of the moneys se cured by said trust deed; and whereas the under signed has been duly appointed substituted trus tee io the place of said Albert R. Sbattuck, as provided in said trust deed, and has been duly equested to execute the trust tnerein contained; Now therefore notice is hereby given, that un - der and by virtue of the power contained in said trust deed, 1, the undersigned substituted trustee, on Monday, the 6th day of April, 1896, at 12 o'clock M., at the Court House door, in the city of Charlotte, N. C, in Mecklenburg County, will by public auction sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described property, viz: One hundred (lOU) acres more or less adjoining the lands of Mary Barnett, George Elliott and others, and bounded as follows, to wit: Begin ning at a Spanish oak on the branch, and runs Dorth 44 dee E 43 poles to a stone, thence north 52 deg W 54 poles to a stone, thence north 61 deer W 5 poles to a stone pile, tnence south oi deg W 33 poles to a Black Jack, thence south 29 deg W 114 poles to a sour wood, thence south oo deg E 216 poles to a poplar stump on the branch, thence with the meanderings of the branch to the beginning. said land will be sold to satisty the debt se cured by said trust deed, and such title will be given as is vested in said trustee. a. m. t;AJNLiii;K, Substituted Trustee. Mch 7, 1896 5w TRUSTEE'S SALE. Utder and by virtue of a Deed of Trust ex ecuted to me by Isom and Jane Torrence. and registered in Book 86, page 512, etc , in the office ot the Register of Deeds for Mecklenburg county North Carolina, I will sell for cash at the County Court House Door, in the city oi Char lotte, North Carolina, on Monday, the 30th day of March. 1896. at 13 o'clock; M., that louowine lot of land in the city of Charlotte, bounded and described as follows : Commencing at a stake, B. Kerr s old corner, 300 feet from the inter section of Myers and Eighth streets on 8th street, and runs with Eighth street in an eastern direc tion fifty feet to a stake; thence parallel with Myers street in a northern direction nioety-nine feet to a stake; thence in a western direction fifty feet to a stake in Kerr s line; thence ninety-nine feet to the beginniDff same being part of the Englehard lot and same being house and lot now occupied by Isom and Jane Torrence and being conveyed by J. H Wearn and wife to them, deed dated November 2nd, 192. and duly re corded. HERIOT CLARKSON, Feb. 28, 1898. 5w Trustee. Administrator's Notice. Having duly qualified as administrator of the estate of John G. Miller, deceased, all persons having claims against the estate of said John G. Miller are hertby notined to present to me tor payment on or before the 1st day of March, 1897, or this notice will he pleaded in Dar oi tneir re covery. All persons indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payments to me. H. N. PHAKlt, Administstratcr, Estate, J G. Miller, dee'd. Feb. 28, 6w LOOK AT THIS. TABLES AT $8 50 8 50 $8 50 $8 50 ! Wnnld not he bad on & table. esDeciallv when you can get a $12 50 Table for oniy $8 50 ! That Is just what you get at a. ai. jxluij vv o . The grandest display of FURNITURE! ever shown in our history. The prices, not withstanding the advance in many lines, are lower than ever before in our history. Buying in such large quantities enables us to get THE BEST '-- PRICE ! We do not buy just one of a kind, but 10, 20, 40. 50 and 1,000, if the firm has MADE AN INDUCEMENT I -.o:- BEAUTIFUL -:o:- For the little folks. Useful, Ornamental, Ap propriate ! The display is ready. See them Doll Carriages. Doll Sets, Doll, Bedsteads Velocipedes, Express Wagons, Childrend's Desks Rocker?, Chairs, Music Racks and an endless variety that you must see OUR LEADER IS COUCHKS 10, 12, 22.75, 15, 18, 22.50. 25 and $50 They are WHIT YOU WANT 1 E. M. ANDREWS, Largest Furniture Dealer in the STATE. WARM OVER SHOES. Ladies wool lined plain rubber oveiohoe, price 50 cents, less than you can buy than any where in America; Ladies plain overshoe "gold seal" brand every pair warranted, PRICE 50c. This overshoe will wear longer than two pairs of any other, ever made, comes high up all round, affording more protection from mud, rain; or snow, than any of the fancy styles oust ing as much, and not near so good. LADIES RUBBER BOOTS, for working garden in early spring, every lad should have a pair With rubber boots you will not mind the weather "so the wind dont blow.' PRICE $2 00. Best stock of shoes in the State. Jan. 24, 1896 GILREATH & CO. Administrator's Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the es tate of W P Carpenter, deceased, this is to no tify all persons having claims against said estate to exhibit them to the under signed on or be fore the 8th day of January, 1897. or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make me payment. This the 8th day of January, 1898. JNO. W MILLER, Thy Wife. Companion ? counselor T most precious friend ? O vapid terms ! O blind or sordid man Reflect ! She lives tbv secret life with true. -The world beholds thy face and thinks it reads inmost thoughts. It studies well thine eyes And thicks it sees emotiocs mirrored there. It calls thee good and true, and praises thee; Or quick condems thee for thy seeming sins. It does not know thee. Therein only one (Beside thy Maker) to whosjsfme thine own Is like ah- open, book &adwith whose heart -Thine own"' isjoined as with a vital cord. Ay, more; to wrong her is to do thyself Most grievous wrong; and when thy fervent love Sends but its light through kindly acts and words, Her joy sweet smile completes thy happinses. Inspired by her thoul't stand the cruel test . And win the prize which thousands sought in vain; Or, following fast her siren urging, piunge Headlong, deep down into disgrace, despair, Ah, yes, she lives thy secret life with thee . Thy conscience she thy heaven or thy hell. Otto FPeder, in QreenvMe Reflector. Scientific Enthusiasts. It is a common error to think of science as opposed to all the poetry of life and scientists as the most cold and matter of fact men. In reality the true scientist is almost always a poet at heart, and the greater he is the more certain is he to be a pure enthusiast and of a deeply reverent spirit, Kepler, exclaiming in the moment of bis great discovery, "O God, I think thy thoughts after thee !" is a type of this. Professor Farrar, who occupied the chair of natural philosophy at Harvard University two thirds of a century ago, was a man possessed of this enthusiasm tor his work, and was beloved by his pupils, whom he inspired with something of his own spirit. One day the class entered the lecture room and found the professor walking backward and forward with kindled eye and working face, holding a ball in his band. Presently he stopped and con fronted ths class and exclaimed, suiting the action to the word : "I toss this ball into the air: the earth rises up to meet it and the stars bow down to do it reverence !'' Probably no meaiber of the class who heard these words ever forgot their absolutely accurate lesson that action and reaction are equal; that the apple which falls to the earth at the same time draws the earth to itself in the exact ratio of their relative weigh, and dis turbs even the course of the planets and stars. Still less could they torget tne grandeur and unity so vividly expressed in that brief imagery. Youth's Com panion. GET YOUR- H ARDW ARE HERE WE CARRY THE LARGEST Stock of Silver-Plated Knives and Forks, 'lea and Table Spoons, Carving Sets, Brass Dog Irons and Brass Fire SETS GUNS, AMMUNITION, AND ALL KINDS OF Kitchen UTENSILS, In The City ! . J. H. Weddington & Co. Dec. 20, 1895. OLD MAN'S WIDE, SOFT, EASY, CONGRESS SHOES, sewed ard warranted, best grade satin calf, fine Dongola top, good elastic, the best you ever saw at such a price-;- $2 00 Young Ladies, Married Ladies and Old Ladies extra fine kid. button. Philadelphia make, price $2.00; guaranteed the best grade ever offered at this price. The best of people make the great mistake of allowing themselves to be fooled into buying trashy shoes, thinking they are getting something for nothing. We are here to serve the people with eood value in footwear and will save you money. We have grown up In the business. Are young, yet old, and seem to Know what we are talking about, come to see us. Feb 13 If 96 GILREATH & CO. We Sell Buist's GARDEN SEED WARRANTED Fresh arid Pure. R TJ JORDAN & flQ . rl, Jordan & Vo., Prescription is ts. Feb. 7, 1896, ACROSTIC.. T homas & Maxwell for Furniture are renowned. H onest goods at their store are found. O riginators of novelties they are. It's true. M oney on Furniture they can save to you. A parlor, a bedroom, or a kitchen set; S myrna rugs and lambrequins you here can get A nd furniture, bric-a-brac, novelties, too. N ew styles Thomas & Maxwell have for you. D on't make a mistake on "The Hustlers" call. M ost for the least money they r ffer all. A n enviable reputation they have won. X celled in Charlotte they are by none. W ondr's bargains in all department bear in mind E very thing for a home you here wm nnd. L ooh where you will, go where you may. . If eaders Thomas & Maxwell are to-day. . We also keep stoves, Tbat wiU bake the finest loaves. Warm Over Shoes. Men's High Buckle overshoes, wool lined, bes in the worta. PRICE, $1.50. Ladies of : same make. , $1.25. ' These are eood. and will last longer than three pairs oi any other mane soia in juarioue. w e wiil stake our reputation on this. We know what we are talking about. Dec. 20, 1895. . GILREATH & CO. Attractions, of Moscow. St: Petersburg is of peculiar interest as the modern capital of Russia, and the place of residence of the imperial family; but from a picturesque -and historical point of view Moscow is the more strik ing of the two, with its marvelous Krem lin, the most curious building in the world,oontainirig under oue roof a magnifi cent palace, picture galleries, museum, catheirals, and chapels. The view, too, of the whole capita is beautiful, for it stands in an eminence, the frozen river below stretching as far as . the eye can see. Then there are the quaint buildings of purest white mingled with Oriental colors, golden dome and innumerable minarets, the Church of St Saviour's con spicuous among till in the center of the city, built of the whitest stone, shaped like a Greek cross, erci"ed in memory of the retreat cf the Grand - Army and the deliverance from Napoleon in 1812. The treasury is full of beautiful and interests ing objects, including the crowns used on all occasions in Russia, also the robes worn by the Czar and Empress at their coronation. From the treasury you pass on to a large museum containing gold and silver plate of all nations, rare porcelain, ancient carriages of state, and a great accumulation of gifts presented by rulers of all ages and countries ot the East and West to the Czars of Russia. Among these there was a wonderful chariot from Queen Elizabeth ot England, which was sent to the Emperor John the Terrible when he invited her to join with him in a war against France, an invitation which she declined to accept. History says that she refused an offer of marriage from him at the same time. Then there was a fine collection of armor and weapons and other relics of the past, Peter the Great's bed, Napoleon I.'s tent left behind him in his hurried retreat, innumerable relics of John the Terrible, and- among them more gifts from Queen Elizabeth. We visited the cathedral where corona tions take place; also another where the coffins of the Czars up to Peter the Great are arranged; and here we found two priests praying for the soul of John the Terrible, as there is a strong convic tion tbat bis soul must still be in purga tory, although he lived three centuries ago. Correspondent Boston Herald. -- Burdette's Sermon On Life. Man born of woman is of few days and no teeth, and indeed it would be money in his pocket sometimes if he had less of either. As for his teeth he bad convul sions when he cut them, and as the last one comes through, lo! the dentiBt is twisting the the first one out, and the last end of that man's jaw is worse than the first, being full of porcelain and a roof plate built to hold blackberry seeds. Stone bruises line his pathway to man hood: bis father boxes bis ears at home. the big boys cuff htm in the playground and the teacher whips him in tho school room. He buyeth Northwestern at 110, when be hath sold short at yb, ajia his neighbors unloadeth upon him Iron Mountain at ods and stragntway Drean- eth down to 52J. He riseth early and sitteth up late that he may fill his barns and storehouse, and lo 1 his children's lawyers divide the spoils among them, selves and say; 'Ha I ha !" He groweth and is in sore distress because it rainetb, and he beateth upon his breast and say- eth "My crop is lost ! because it ram alb not. The late rains blight his wheat ana the frost biteth his peaches. If it be so that the sun shineth, even among the nineties, he sayeth, "Woe is me, tor 1 perish !" and even if the north west wind sigheth down in 42 below he crietb, "Would I were dead I If be wears sackcloth and blue jeans, men say, "he is a tramp," and if he go shaven and clad in purple and fine linen, all the people cry "Shoot the dude !" He carrieth insurance for twenty years, until he had paid thrice over all his goods and then he letteth his policy lapse one day, and, that some night fire destroyeth his store. He buildeth hira a house in Jersey, and his firstborn is devoured by mosquitoes; he pitcheth his tents in New York, and tramps devour his substance. He moveth to Kansas and a cylone car rieth his house away over in Missouri, while a prairie fire and .10,000.000 acres of grasshoppers fight for his crop. He settles himself in Kentucky and is shot the next day "by a gentleman, a colenel and statesman, "because, sah, he res embles, sab, a man sab, he did no$k Ifke, sah." Verily, there is no rest for. the sole of his feet and if he had to do it over again he would not be born at all, for "the day of death is better than the aay of one's birth.". . Cure for Headache. Aa a remedv for all forms of Headache Elec tric Bitters has proved to be the very best. It effects a permanent cure ana the most areaaea ... . . . . . . . i . a liaDituai sick neaaacnes yieia io its wuueuce We uree all who are afflicted to procure a bot tle, and give this remedy a fair trial. In cases of habitual constipation Electric Bitters cures by giving the needed tone to the bowels, and few cases long resist the use of this medicine. Try it once. Fifty cents and $1,00, at Burwell Dunn s drug store FRESH MEATS, GAME. FINE GROCERIES. SEE ME Before Selling Your Choioe BEEP CATTLE. PORK. EGGS. CHICKENS, &c. Always in Market for - above. GEO. S. HALL. Feb 2& 1896 DIXIE TIE. c.. A Shoe for Farmers, neat, comfortable and dnrahlWitir nrnnf and sirm ni nil for 111. SO. These shoes are lined, no seams to rip, soles warranted the best ever put on. Superior in wearingiuality to anything ; SOLD IN CHARLOTTE AT EVEN $2.00 Oil your 8hoes with Shining Light leather preserver always ready for use whether cold or hot, price 10c GILREATH & CO. Feb. 22, 1895. Possibilities of the Peanut. The "Southern States" asks me to state the grounds upon which 1 have ventured to predict that there will be as great a development of the peanut oil and meal industry in the next fifteen years as has been witnessed in tbe development of the cottonseed oil industry in the last fifteen years. I can give nothing but some very genera' reflections and statements of fact upon that subject. The demand of the world for oils and also for cattle food appears to be practi cally unlimited. Tbe uses to which oils are put are very numerous. When ever a new source of oil is discovered tbe world seems to absorb tho additional pro duction without much effect on previous supplies from other sources, for which the demand continues unabated, subjeot to no greater variation in price than that which affects many other products. The peanut vine, known as the Ara chis, of different varieties,, belongs to the tribe of leguminous plants which , derive nitrogen from the atmosphere through the intervention of the bacteria, which, dwelling in tho little appendages between the stalk and fhe root, dissociates the nitrogen from the atmosphere, and living or dying there converts that nitrogen to the use of the plants, which, when turned under or fed to cattle, serve to renovate the soil. Moreover, the seeds of these leguminous plants beans, peas, lentils and peanuts supply the necessary nitrogenous element of nutrition in the food of man. kind in the oountries where meat is either very costly, or in hot countries where much meat would be unwholesome. Theee leguminous plants are produced in immense and numerous varities in the bos called "rice- fed" countries of the world India, China and Japan, since rice only would not supply complete nutrition. The oil of these countries is 'derived from these seeds, notably from the pea nut, which is distinguished from most other varieties in the great quantity of tbe oil which it contains. Peanut oil is the oil of China. The meal of peanuts and beans is one of the great articles of tbe coastwise and river commerce in China. These meals have been used to fertilize the sugar cane on the Island of Formosa for many centuries, yet until a very recent time tbe sugar planter of Lou isiana were wholly unaware of the ferti lizing properties of the cotton seed meal, which contains the same elements of nutrition which the soil requires. Regard being given to tbe fact that the peanut can be raised on land which is not commonly called very fertile, but which, when nourished with the proper proportion of alkaline fertilizers will make great crops, it may become one of the prime factors in the renovation of the soil of many States which have been ex hausted. by ignorant cultivation, while adding vastly to the product in the value of the plant and its seed. . Are not the people of the Southern States as intelligent and capable of den veloping their resources as the negroes of Senegambia in Central African ? If that question is answered in tbe affirmative, why should there not be as great a com-' merce in peanuts as there is between Senegambia arid Marseilles or Bordeaux. I cannot give an exact statement of tbat commerce but it is measured by hun dreds of thousands of tons and hundreds of passages of vessels to and from the ports of Africa. Assuming, then, that ther will be sufficient intelligence to develop this branch of inaustry, what are the facts ? So far as I can learn, intelligent cultiva tion in many States will develop an average crop of sixty bushels of peanuts to tbe acre. But these nuts, like the cotton seed, may become tbe second ary product of tbe plant. When the plant thrives sufficiently to yield - sixty bushels of nuts to the acre it also yields two tons of the most nutritious forage that can be discovered for the use of cattle. Again, when tbe oil has been ex tracted from the kernel the meal ground with the shell, as the cotton seed is now mixed with the hull, becomes one of the most nutritious and valuable foods for cattle tbat has ever been discovered. This food mixed with silage made from corn stalks may be so combined in a due proportion as to make a complete and perfect food for cattle, sheep and hogs. In 1880 I stated to my hearers in Atlanta that if the North possessed a cotton-plant producing no lint and only seed it would long since have been ene of the most valuable crops. Now I say tbat if the North could have produced peanuts that crop would longince have become one of the most valuable crops of the country. In fact, the peanut vine, could it be cultivated in the North at the rate of two tons to the acre, would be one of its most valuable forage crops, even discarding the nuts themselves as of no value. How more would ibis crop be raised in view of the fact that while it pays for itself as a forage plant its secondary pro duct, the peanuts, may become worth much much more as time goes on than tbe forage itself. The flax plant pro duces flaxseed or linseed. No invention has yet been made for saving the fibre of the stalk except by very costly and unpleasant methods of treating it by retting or rotting on the ground and deal ing with it by hand. This. worn can be done so wtll by the semi-pauper labor of other countries tbat we cannot afford to save fibre itself from the great crops of flax which are raised in this country. This plant is therefore raised simply for the value of what in other countries is the secondary product, to wit, the seed. It happens to be in the pow-ir of tbe North to produce flaxseed, since lebO tbe product oi flaxseed in the far North west has risen from 500,000 bushels to 16.000.000 bushels in 1895. Flaxseed oulture has largely supplanted wheat io tbe older countries ot Minnesota. See tbe recent report in Bradstreet's of Novem ber 23d. Its meal product is said to sur pass all other foods in the produetion of . rw 1 . . . 1 1 beet, mutton, pors, miis ana outter wane the value of fertilizers from animals fed on it is $20 a ton as against $7 a ton from corn fed animals. Such are the facts in regard to a plant Highest of all in Leavening i i xi v j j jt i 2 i n-rv AOZOZJUTTEVfJ DUDE which very rapidly exhausts tbe soil. When similar intelligence and energy are applied to the development of tbe peanut, which renovates tbe soil," what will be the effect? - Again the peanut oil may be treated for the separation of the stearine,correspond ing to the cotton seed Btearine, which is purer, cleaner and better than lard.. A farmer whose name I unfortunately mist placed and lost, whom I lately met at Atlanta, informed me that acting upon the suggestion which I made to him a year ago, he had raised peanuts, con verted them into oil and bad manufac tured stearineaat a cost not. exceeding three cents a pound, his intention being to develop tbe product as rapidly as possible. I can add nothing to this goneral treat ment of the subject. If these facts do not speak for themselves no argument would be of any value. Edward Atkinson in Southern States. March tbe Fourth. One year from yesterday, on Maroh 4, 1897, the twenty-fifth President of the United States will be inaugurated in' the city of Washington. On March 4, 1797, one hundred years previous, the second term of George Washington came to a close, and he was succeeded by John Ad ams. This date forever afterward was to be notable in American history as the one when the idea of a third term for any President of the United States was sealed with the disapproval of tbe first Ameri can Executive. Revived, furtively and tentatively from time to time since, the "third term'' notion, opposed by Wash ington, has never obtained any popular support since. Ot the twenty-nve .Presidents ot tbe United States, seven of the first twelve were born in tbe State of Virginia. Of tbo Presidents installed in office since the )se of the civil war, four were born in Ohio. President Cleveland is a native of New Jersey. Tyler who succeeded William 11 Har rison, was a native of Virginia. Fillmore who succeeded Taylor, was a native of New York. Johnson who succeeded Abraham Lincoln, was a native of North Carolina; and Arthur, who succeeded Garfield was a native of Vermont. . Tbe youngest of the Presidents in office when he died was Garfield. John Adams at the time of.hia death was ninety, Thomas Jefferson eisbtytbree, James Madison eighty-five and John Quincy Adams Presidents have all of them were eignty. iviobi oi iuo been lawyers, but not good lawyers. The liepublicans will convene to nom inate their oandidate for President in St. Louis on Juno 16, and the Democrats in Chicago on July 7. Already tbe rival ries of' the Republican candidates, of whom four are conspicuous, are becoming embarrassing to politicians; but on the Democratic side there appears to be no such rivalry, though we have a considers able number of statesmen who would not refuse the compliment. Tbe uncertainty of political contests in the United States has not diminished, as the number of electoral votes has been en largedi by the admission ot new States. As for the Democratic conventions, when they are attended by turmoil and acrU mony tbe Democrats are usually success ful; while the conventions are harmonious and cordial the candidates are usually defeated. March 4, 1897, just one year off. New York Sun. Tiny Oxen. One of the greatest curiosities among the domesticated animals of Ceylon is a breed of cattle known to the zoologists as the "sacred running oxen." They are the dwarfs of the whole ox family, the largest specimen of the species never exeoding thirty inches in height. One sent to the Marquis of Canterbury in tbe year 1891, which is still living, and is be lieved to be somewhere near ten years of age, is only twenty-two inches high, and weighs but one hundred and nine and a half pounds). In Ceylon they are used for quick trips across .country with express matter and other light loads, and it is said that four of them can pull a driver of a two-wheeled cart and a two hundred pound load of miscellaneous matter Bixty to seventy miles a day. They keep up a constant swinging trot or run, and have been known to travel one hundred mile in a day and night without either food or water. No one knows anything concerning the origin of this peculiar breed of minature cattle They have been known on tbe island of Ceylon and In other Buddhistic countries tor more than a thousand yearn. lu Hits. tSTNews comes to tbe Beauford Her. aid of the drowning of the assistant, light house keeper of tbe Gull Rock light house in Pamlico Sound during the re cent snow storm, lie started ashore in a small boat and when be was returning tbe wind disabled bis craft so that he drifted about in it. He stayed in the boat for two or three days until he be came exhausted and could not bail it out. The boat sank and the man was drowned. tThe average amount of sickness in human life is ten days per annum. Tbe Discovery Saved His Life. Mr Q Cailouette, Druggist, Beaversville, 111 , says : "To Dr King's New Discovery I owe my life. Was taken with La Grippe and tried all the physicians for miles about, bat of oo avail and was civen no and told 1 could not live. Hav- f ing Dr King's New Discovery in my store I sent for a bottie ana began its use ana rrom tne nm dose began to get better, and after using three botttea was op and about again It is worth its weight in gold. We won't keep store or house without it." Qet s 'ree trial at Harwell & Dunn's dng store. - - Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report rr ii ii tiif Goi. Oates' Suggestion Endorsed. Col. Oates' article in the Observer of tbe 4th instant for 'the improvement of the roads of Mecklenburg has the right ring. He has struck the key note and its coming from a successful financier and . one tbat na aone so mucn lor tbe pros- . penty of the country certainly entitles the article to our consideration. By adopting his suggestions of issuing $200, 000 worth of bonds we ean do the work in one half the time, thereby giving at tbe benefit and profitable returns so mucn m-m-m m sooner. ' we are now paving in taxes an nualiy about $20,000. One half of that amount will pay the interest on tbe bond and set apart tbe other as a sinking fand and in twenty years the bonds are paid, and our taxes not increased. Now we have two divisions or squads.' Let us double tbe force and work one in the northern portion of the county, one south, One east and west and complete one or two of the most important roads in each direction to the county lines as early at possible, so as to bring our people in closer contact and greatly improve trade. We might facilitate tbe work and reduce the cost per mile by reducing the width of the macadam from twelve to nine feet after we get five or six miles ' from the city and later the width could be increased from tbe nine feet to twelve without ma terially changing the original work, and wherever practicable straighten tbe roads, so as to shorten tbe distance, and it might be better to do some or all of tbe work bj contract. Mr. Clifton, an experienced iron bridge builder and representing a Pittsburg com pany, informed me tbe other day that he thought he could irive the countv a crood 0 o e iron bridge over the Catawba at Roszell'g terry, on the old pillars for $700. Col Oates' estimate was $10,000, which was a safe estimate. I am not in faver of increasing taxes.' and do not think Col. Oates' plan will, but I regard it as a good business investment . for our county, and one tbat will bring immediate returns. W. 22. Ardrey m Charlotte Observer. ; . The Housemaid and the Dustpan To those who know tbe true inwardness of things the sight of a housemaid brush ing a dusty carpet is suggestive of many evils. Tbe death of Pasteur has reminded the world of what is constantly present in the thoughts of medical men namely, that while micro organisms are the great producers of disease, dust is the great car- ner of micro-organisms. JNow that we know these things, it is distressing to find how little our knowledge is put to practical use, and to see old customs still unchanged old habits which we know to be destructive carried on, and to find the . housemaid on her knees, with brush and dustpan stirring up dust to detriment every one, and breathing germladden particles to her own destruction. . It needs but a small amount ot common sense to see that if carpets must continue an thing greatly to be deprecated, they be rubbed with adamp cloth rather than . brushed and that if.in deference to preju dice, they must be brushed, thia should . be done by a covered American sweeper with plenty of damp tea leaves. Of all ways of removing dirt from a carpet the worst is by the use of the ordinary short brush, which involves tbe housemaid kneeling down in the midst of the dust which she so needlessly creates, and drawing it into her lungs with every breath. For ordinary household use something like linoleum,sometbing which can be washed with a wet cloth every morning, would seem, to be tho best covering for floors; but if carpets must' be and it is imposible to teach ths present generation the evils of seeking present comfort at the expense of future risks, at least let us remember that carpets .may be washed even where they lie; that till the day. of washing comes, a closed sweeper is far better than a brush, and tbat the worst form of brush is on with a short handle. British Med, Jour nel. Bine and Gray Parade. A movement has been on foot for some ; time to have a joint parade of the Blue and Gray in new York City on the ap proaching Fourth of July. Owing, how ever, to the opposition of the Grand Army of the republic it has been abandoned. We are sincerely glad of it. No good can come of these dramatio demonstration! of fraternity. Our esteemed - contempo rary, tbe Memphis Commercial Appeal, bits the nail on the head in the following , paragraph: "When the blue and Gray fraternize it should be io citizens' clothes and there is no need 'parade their frater. nity. There is such a thing as protesU ing too much. There is alway an air of make believe about these ostenttatlous displays of brotherly love, these slop pings over of maudlin patriotism and -tbeatrial handshakes across the bloody chasm. If there has been a real ana genuine reconciliation between North and South, let us just take it for granted and say no more about it. If a senti ment of mutual respect and esteem hi ' sprung up, tbe proper thing is to just let it grow. In the meanwhile there is whole lot of bard work that may pro fitably engage our attention." ivasAt Christian Advocate. You Can't Get Bleb by gaining the $500 reward offered by Dr. R. Y. Pierce to any person finding ft mineral poison or injurious drug in his "Pleasant Pellet" for there's no such thing in them. But you ean get well and health is the first step towards for tuneby Uking the "Pellets" whenever troubled with biliousness, constipation, indigestion, jaundice and other derange ments of tho liver stomach and bowels.