I 81. TheStandard is Only One Dollar THE STANDARD. JO-TIUS 4-PAGEU HAS A BIG G Ell CIRCULATION AT EVE II Y TOSTOFFICE IN THE COUNTY, SAVE ONE, THAN ANY 0 fllER PAPER rCT WATER IXOCR EYES WITH 91 NTAK DA It IHS.M H. The free wool bill has passed the U. S. House of Representatives by a Tote of 103 to CO. This important measure which ha3 been the subject of a long debate is now in the hands of the senate and will in all pro1 aoimy oe ueieateu dv mat ooay or vetoed by President Harrieon. An exchange says: Mrs. Alice Shaw, fair widow of New York, is making a fortune by whistling in Europe. Then that old saying about "a whistling woman and crowing hen" has come to naught. A fine portrait of the late Gofer nor Haniel G Fowle has been placed in the Executive Mansion. It was presented by James L Fowle, Esq., of Washington, N. C. The Shelby Review says a young Cleveland man was married recdutly and when the minister named the fee the young man was so astounded at the amount he ejaculated, "The h 1 you say !" President Diaz has been elected president of Mexico for a third term. The vote was almost unanimous. Mexico surely does not have as many presidential aspirants as this "the best government under the sun." The New Orleans rice merchants have organized a stock company with $500,000 capital to fight the rice trust. A new rice mill will be erected, as all the present mills are in the trust It is thought the rice farmers will join issues with the new company to fight the trust. The Greensboro Patriot makes an ugly charge against us, just because the Patriot doesn't receive the 4 pager. My brother, let me give you a piece of advice : If you cau al ways have some good woman "to love you as a brother," you'll be for tunate. Some people make the mistake of calling the Third Party by the AU liance. It is not true. The Alli ance can not be a political party and , remain true to its constitution. There is an increase of twenty five per cent of troops in the State Guard but there has been no increase in the appropriation for the encampment. If we are going to have a State Guard it should be taken care of. It is estimated that if the 1,400, 000,000 people now living on the globe were located in Texas, divided into families of five, each family would have house room and a half acre lot, still leaving a garden patch of 35,000,000 acres. Judge Gober of the Georgia Sup erior Court has created quite a sen sation by putting in a bill of $18 for expenses whilst trying Steve Ryan in Atlanta. The commission er8 have opened wide their eyes as this is the first time they have ever been called on to pay extra expenses for a judge. An Atlanta lady, Miss G., has a cousin who has mada a discovery that will make the entire family rich. She say3 he has discovered a process to make eggs that have been "the least grain sot on" as fresh as a newly laid egg, and that in per forming this change the sulphur ex tracted from the eggs will go far to wards running a match factory. Atlanta Journal. Ve nave no lrmVt hnt that she will be able to realize a accent from each egg. York Herald looks at Senator Hill's dream thusly : "Me teoric and rockety was the flight of Senator Hill for the presidential nomination." Maryland is iu the column for the nomination of ex-President Cleveland. mm The number of foreign born sol diers in tha United States Army during the civil war wai according to Gen. Franz Sigel, who has made the subject a'atudy, about 500,000, Of these 144,221 were Irishmen and 176.767 were Germans. The color t-na nnmbprpd 186.017. of VVA HWj'O " ' whom 125.000 served at one time, And theu our northern brethren have the gall to Bay, "Just look what we did." It is now reported that Secretary Blaine has made arrangements with Billy Muldoon the famous trainer of Jno. L Sullivan, the pugilist, for u series of lessons in physica rnltnro. Are we to infer from this that physical ability is all that pre vents the "plumed knight" from entering the ring iu the coming YOL. V. NO. 15. Another Plan for Financial Belief. Hon. A II A Williams has a new scheme for the financial relief of the country. A Washington special to the Richmond Times explains it as follows: "Representative Williams, of North Carolina, introduced today a bill which, in his or inion, will, if it becomes a law, relieve the existing financial stress and distress and in part satisfy free silver sentiment. According to Mr. Williams there are now about $400,000,000 of silver, for which certificates have been is sued ; of treasury notes in circular tion there are $340,000,000. Oulyj $100,000,000 in gold is held in re serve to secure this circulation. Mr. Williams' bill proposes that one third of the government's silver be retained in the treasury to secure the outstanding silver circulation, and that the remaining two-thirds be deposited with the several States as they may need without interest in pursuance of a precedent set by the Jackson administration in 1830. lb silver deposited with the States may be invested as the respective State governments direct, and the principal to be returned to the gov ernment on demand of Congress." Free cotton Barging and Tien. The House on Saturday passed the bill to admit cotton bagging and ties free of duty. The vote was 107 to 40. Three Democrats voted with the Republicans against the bill. Otherwise it wa3 a strict party vote. The following is the text of the bill : That the following articles, when inmn-tol cl,U 1, f., .!. I .u... w cuut UUUi uuij, namely: Bagging tor cotton, gunny cloth and all similar material suita- ble for covering cotton, composed in wnole or in part ot flax, jute or jute butts, cords, roving frames, winding frames, softeners and other machine erypurcnasea abroad, ana used in tne manufacture of bagging for cot- ion, gunny ciom ana an similar ma terial suitable for covering cotton, co' ton gins and parts thereof ; also hoop or band iron, or hoop or band m I fp 1 I'M 1. rn inrrn rv ithniiu rvr- I , . .Q, ""v-j v. partially manufactured into hoops ur uee lor oaung coiron, wun or 1 without buckles or fastenings. ittTuieiif " " irom lleuieui. Charlotte Observer. Mr. Richard Capps, of Steel Creek, died in this city last evening at the advanced age of SI years. Mr. Capp3 was a witness in the Boyd-Young- blood case on trial yesterday. While in the mids- of his testimony in the court house, he was suddenly taken 111, and had to be carried out He was taken into the sheriffs office, and was aftei wards moved to Mr. II Chapman's office, where, although given every medical attention, ne ooutnern immigration, died at 7 o'clock. Heart disease was J R Wilson, Charlotte, N. C, Pub said to be the cause of his death. It lie Opinion and the Lottery. was brought on by the excitement of the trial. Mr. Capps wa3 appar- ently in his usual good health when drove into the citv yesterday lorning. Iii3 remains win oe taken ... - II 1 . A I to his home in Steel Creek to-day. Another FertUixer Tax t ac. State Chronicle. The question of the validity.of the present fertilizer tax law has been raised in the United States circuit court by the Patapsco guano com nanv. Two vears ago all fertilizer , i frt a tQT companies were required to pay a tax of $500 each. This law was declared by the Federal court to be unconsti tutional. The last legislature then levied a direct tax of 25c. on each on of guano sold or offered for sale in the State. It is claimed by the company that this is quite as uncon stitutional as the indirect tax under thft old law. The company further alleges I hat the money from the fer tilizer companies is not necessary for the support of those engaged in an alyzing fertilizers. And thU but a small proportion of the sum i3 re- nnirpd for this purpose and that much of it is disbursed for different M Of course the board of as- J rir.ulture w 11 take steps to sustain the law. Th Se will be anrued before Judge i,i . iioi. .LMJUU Ub uiccuouviu on May 7th. The company has em ployed as attorneys Messrs. T N Hill of Halifax and J W Hinsdale. "Some years ago," said he, "when I was teaching school in Leadville, T was the onlv Mr. Smith in that - - j city. Don't laugh hear me out. And when I had been there a month there wasn't a Mr. Smith in Lead ville." The Boston man looked mystified and began to intimate that this couldn't be quite true. "Xot so fast," answered Mr. Smith. "I will explain. There were Col. cmH Via .indpro Smiths. Gen. Smiths in T.pn.ilville. to be sure, but not one Mr Smith until I came. I was ' school teacher, as I said, and within o mnnth Mr. Smith became Prof, Cm:fi, t THE I'OI. ELIAN CARR. Repudiates the fit. Eoms Platform lie Will not be Put In a False Powi lion. To the Editor of the Tartxro Southerner: Mr. M J Battle in his communica tion to the Southerner of the 5th inst., states that "in no particular does the St. Louis platform differ from the Ocala platform," and fur therasks "if Elia3 Carr will repud iate his own handiwork?" I simply desire to call Mr. B's attention to two plauks from each platform as paralleled below: OCALA, 1S90. I (a) "Th;it our Na St. Louis, iS92- tional legislation shall be so framed in future as not to build up one industry at the expense of another." (b) "We further de mand a removal of the existing heavy tariff tax from the necessities of life, that the poor of our land must have." 1. Silent as thk "Transportation We demand the most riid, honest and i change and a imblic ne means ot ex governmental 'control' and 'supervision' of the means of public commu nication and transporta tion, and if this eontrol and supervision does not remove the abuse now existing, we de mand the government of such means of com munication and trans portation." just Male and r:ituma! cessny, tne government should 'own' and 'oper ate the railroads in the interest of the people. "The teleirratih and telephone, like the post- oince system, Deinir ; necessity for the trans mission of news, should re -owneii and 'opera- tec! ry tne government 111 the interest of the people Ihese (Ocala) demands were sub sequently engrafted into the State Democratic platform and re-enacted at Indianapolis. I had the honor to be upon the committee at Ocala that formulated them, reportiug unani mously upon these two planks. As yet I have seen no authority or reason for eliminating these planks from the Alliance platform, while on the contrary abundant reason for not en dorsing a party which is putting the Alliance in an inconsistent and false attltnd9 bj demanding ownership Lfter BL.eurinjT Vot;mi,, nml Rfnfo governmental control of railroads acti comoletelv imiorin ih tnriff 1 a j o n question, that most important of all reform lneaaure8 the present status of which miike3 nosfiibi,, Trnar and combine?, that mr-ir-h !, few an1 impoverish the many. Truly yours, Eli as Cakr. At naidon c ollege, ir 11 -m 1 t laiwen vnanioers uay was celebrated at Davidson College. Arril 6th, by the Senior class with the following programme : L E Boston. SffirpavHlP V O. Tda , 'ffjoi; 'inal. urvv.ii, wu'cusuuw, The Future of the Turk. II W Glasgow, Davidson, !N. C, The Making of Modern Italy. W L Lingle, Miil Bridge, X. C, The Monument of a Christian Phi- lauthropist. W E Minter, Laurens, S. C, Gro- ver Cleveland. C M b'ichards, Liberty Hill, S. C, The Love of Approbation. W L Walker, Huntersville, N. C, Seab Caldwell, Clear Creek, N. C, "Vox Populi." C L Grey, Huntersville, X. C, The Russian Jew. L G Henderson, Waterboro, S. C, Oratorial Culture. L A McLaurin, McCall, S. C, Turniiig-Poiiits of Civilization. W II Mills, Camden, S. C, Wos man s iniluence on iuouern l oliticc. W W Morns, Concord, X. C, A Lesson from the Tomb. J B Wharey, Mooresville, X. C, Three Types of Christian Soldier, j 11 L Wharton, McLeansville, X. C, The Conllict between Science aiid Poetry. JIODKU.V METHODISM. 'oil Hon to the General Conference lor an Unlimited I'aNtorate. Columbus, O., April 11. The Methodist preachers' meeting today adopted a memorial to the General Conference to enact euch legislation in May a3 will enable pastors to drop members who do not support the church according to their ability; to elect bishops for eight years without. 8 of re-election; that """" uv fnrofn. fViof - r eu wun l nomination uy the bishop, and that the caomct - shall have coordinate power with the bishop in making appointments. the majority of the presiding elders being sufficient to determine the ap pointment Died in Jail. Oxford Day. Dollie Thompson was found dead in her cell in the county lail this morning She had been seriously sick for some weeks, suffering with dropsy and was under medical treatment The woman was about forty years of sure, white, and of a degraded a ' character. She was put in jai a several months ago on the cnarge oi I . .-, i r infanticide, the body of her young child, horribly mutilated, having I been found concealed in tne woods Per Year. Largest Circulation of Any Paper in this CONCOIID, N. C, THURSDAY. APIUL 21. 1892 Hints from the American Farmer, The oldest twine combine the boy's pocket. The most expensive grinder of cow feed is the cow. The rooster that crows of his own fence must be ready to fence as well as crow. Compound interest is the interest you take in the mother whose daugh ter you are courting. The first political agitator begun by persuading the first farmer that he was "down trodden." A good farmer can discover more in a forty acre farm than Columbus got out of the whole continent. Tie the old plow handle with twine and buy a $20 willow baby carriage upholstered with plush and blue silk. A man who trie3 to steal foot of i the country road by moving fence out would rob Gabriel of trumpet for a dinner horn, if hi3 his he caught him napping. An hour a day at an old fashioned up-and-down churn dash, will neu tralize, in the bry's mind, all the idealistic stones about the beauties farm life. The Spartans cultivated to an ex treme physical endurance, but they never sent the boys to the well to wash their faces, iu softsoap on mornings frosty enough to paint the nail heads white. CLKVEUXn HAS norms. He Writes that H !!: Misfit in- as t tlio Wisdom 01. Mis lti-in;; a Can didate. Chattanooga, Tenn., April 11. The following letter from G rover Cleveland was received today by James II Bible, a prominent demo crat in this city : "Lakewcod, X. J., April 8 1S92. "My Dear Sir : I desire to thank you for the report of the meeting at Chattanooga, which vou so kindly ent me, and for the friendly words yon spoke of me on that occasion. 'I am exceedingly anxious to have our party do exactly the right thing at the Chicago convention, and I hope that the delegates will be guarded by judgment and actuated by true democratic spirit and the single desire to succeed 011 principle. '1 should not be frank if I did hot ueVtfflVAbjvt J.often fear I do friends as you say of me, and I ha -e j frequent misgivings as to the wis- dom of again putting me in nomi' uatiou. "I. therefore, am anxious that sentiment and too unmeasured per sonal devotion should be checked when the delegates to the convention reach the period of deliberation. In any event there will be no disaps pointment for me in the result. Yours very truly, "G itovEi: Cleveland." THE COST OF A I'OfSD OF COTTO.V Charlotte Observer. An article in the last Xorth Caro lira Bulletin, as to the cost of grow ing cotton, from the pen of C Mc- )o:iald, Esq., of Cabarrus, is well worth careful consideration, and the cotton planter will find interesting and perhaps profitable a comparison the figures which he tabulates with his own experience of necessary expenditures in making the crop. Whatever may be the result on this and subsequent years' production of cotton of the disastrous outcome of the crop of 1801, it is as desirable as t ever wa3 to know at just what price it can be planted, cultivated and put on the market. It would have been more satisfac tory, in availing ourselves ot -Mr. juc- donald's estimates prepared, as he tells us, from acconnt3 kept in care ful detail from planting the seed to the shipment of the staple if he had come a little closer to us ; as his calculations are of crops made in 1878 and 1S7'J. But we are justified in attributing to these calculations their original value, for the condi tions of labor, price of fertilizers, rate of interest and taxation, value of land, etc., arc much as tiny were 11 years ago. Mr. McDonald kept his cotton ac count for two vears with a view to his own individual benefit, of course. He wanted to know what it cost him to make a pound of cotton, and if anv who follow his estimates use them hereafter they will be actuated by the same motive. That i3 the main value of a practical experiment that it can be repeated anl per haps improved on. The debit account against 21,984 lbu seed cotton, grown in lbb on 22 acres of land including every item of expense from the preparation of the ground to the transportation 1 to market wa3 $412.03 ; less value of seed, $5G.25 ; net costj 35G.3S. This crop baled (7,0S7 lbs.) brought $037.83, leaving a net profit of 2S1.- 45. The cotton of 1878 cost to raise 05 8-100 cents. In 1879 Mr. McDonald employed an equal acreage, and the same acre age, gaining on the cost of produce tiou $10.48, the total being $393.15, and obtaining the same price for the seed. His yield was better, too 7,317 pounds baled cotton against 7,087 pounds the year before and his net profit was $470.29. The crop of 1S79 cost 04 3-5 cents. As will be seen, there is a material difference ia the figures piesented for the two years ; but by a careful study of the article in the Bulletin it will also be seen that this differs ence grew not ont of changed condi tion of labor, etc., but was the result of the planter's improved cultivation and i le excellent state to which he had brought his land. Everyone can accept the proposi tiou that Mr. McDonald lays down broadly. That the cost per pound in growing cotton must depend upon the yield per acre the product the measure of the planter's profit; that the cost of raising 500 pounds is the same as that of raising 1,000 pounds, and that there can be no appreciable profit when the farmer fails to alize $12 or more per acre. The Bulletin's article concludes with this significant expression on the part of its writer If every farmer or planter could be iully impressed with the truth that to secure better prices is to be fully prepared to encounter small returns, not many years would elapse before the average yield of lint per acre for the entire cotton belt would be 250 or 300 pounds instead of 170 as now. An Eastern Tow 11. Swansboro, X. C, April 13th, '92. Ed. Standard: Some time ago I sent you a short communication from our little place, "Swansboro." Xot seeing any notice of same, cons eluded I would send another, think ing perhaps you might not have re ceived the first, or received it, might not have liked it, etc. Our folks here don't take your paper much, and don't know of course what it is, in iact we don't all read as much as we ought to here, in newspapers or anything else. Sometimes some of us take a notion to read some in our "Blue Backs" or a novel, but a3 to roildil" thf nfws in p-cripr! nVirmf a anythingf we aiy aS ft ma. Swansboro is what wo wiou . vou and your readers about a little. We don't suppose your people up and around Concord, many of them, know that there is such a place as Swans boro. We want you to know it. Swansboro is a pleasant little vil lage on the sea coast at the mouth of White Oak river in Onslow county, with a population of about 250, all whites but 4. One of the oldest towns in the state, one of the pretti est places to live, the healthiest place to stay, easiest place to get along, that is for living, getting something to eat and wear etc. Fish, oysters, crabs, conch3, shrimps, escallops, clam?, lobsters and every other thing that comes out of the water. Then the ducks, geese, brant, turkeys, coons, 'possums, etc., makes it one of the best places lor sporting in the couutrv. Very healthy, nobody dies hardly ever, sometimes one blows away, then one gets so old he hasn't strength enough to breathe the last breath, and goes off that way. Well, you might ask, if all that is so, now comes it owansooru is uuiy . i o i i small place of 250, with 200 chil dren ? and so healthy, too, and so old a phoe, and so many children, what becomes of the children ? if they don't die, where do they go please explain. Well, you are right, Mr. Editor, it does look strange to a man up a tree, but I'll tell you, all have said about the place ia true to the word, and the reason we are not more nrosnerous 13 because we are a A L divided people. As fast a3 one gets 15 or IS years old, he or she strikes out for higher aspiratious, fays Swansboro is too corrupt a place, and I can't stay here divided, yes, we are awfully divided, not in poli tics, for we are nearly all (a3 the old darkey says) gimikrats no publi cins here, Massa. To speak on but divided in the Bible teachings, at least that's what some say. Eeligion of the Lord Jesus Christ is one thing, and like Xew York Tamany rings "Bossism' is another. Eespectfully, G. W. W. After a eecond reading, we deem it unwise to publish more of this man's letter. We do this, knowing that it will do no good and may prove of some injury, Ed. Stand ard. - A W Winecoff, whom reverses in business met at China Grove, has surmounted difficulties and opened out a grocery store in Salisbury. A Frog at Nineteen Feet. T C Cor k is boring a well at the cemetery. His is a unique and ex cellent machine, and he's penetra ting Mother earth rapidly. Every fifteen minutes he has to empty his auger bucket. While sitting there, Thursday evening, Dennis and this quiet plod der saw something it was a remark able something. When the bucket, loaded with dirt brought up from a depth of nine teen feet, was emptied out there was among it a toad about the size of fashionable biscuit That the frog came up out of Mother earth Mr. T C Cook and;Dennis will testify it could not have fallen in from the top, because it was not there to fall in . The frog had taken on the pecus liar color of the soil. It had some where and somehow lost one hind leg the wound already healed up. It had other scars that indicated rough journey. "How That Frog Got There," Was the question Mr. Dennis and Mr. Well Borer Cook began to dis CUS3. In the name of science we betray no confidence in publishing the theo ries advanced. The Well Borer thought it got in at Capt McDonald's spring and found its way through the current that furnished water for the Mc Donald spring. And when reaching that point, it became tired of under ground life and began boiing its slow way out. The Well Borer thought that the earthquake several years ago rent the ground and that had he not met the frog half way, his frogs ship would have reached the surface of terra fir ma by July 4th. Dennis wa3 pleased with this the ory and thought it very plausible. But, being of a searching mind and being a geological and scientific stu dent, he advanced a theory in sub stance as follows : "I think that frog a genuine toad, but of a sturdier and of more enduring strength than the common toad. It differs from our Guilford toads in more respects than one. it came out of the ground, be cause it came out of the bucket, which came out of the ground, there fore the frog came out of the ground. That we all know. Xow, years ago just how long I'm not able to say this ground where we now stand nnvprpd by the Atlantic ocean. estimate the age of this irog. j. ocean began to contract itself and the continent began to widen. This frosr was evidently near the water's edge. The tide coming in, caught him and being covered by shells and other sea life, he became imprisoned. When asked how it sustained life, Dennis took a bite of cheese and be gan again : "I can readily account for this. Live frogs have been found in large rocks. Besides that frog sustained ts life on the shells and oceanic life with which he was covered. See here, (and he picked up a white kind of soil) this is decomposed shells and sea products. I have made a study of geological life, and I'm glad to find such a splendid example of some geological teachings." Keeper Craven went off Bhaking his head and this quiet plodder was naralvzpd and very doubtful "to boot" A PoNtofliceRow. TTfrp ia a bit of news that is said to have occurred in Mt. Pleasant re cently : A man went into the postoffice of a neighboring town recently and told the postmaster that he desired thirteen two cent stamps for a cent and a quarter. The postmaster res fused to give them to him, stating that the cost would be twenty six cents. The man persisted in getting his order, claiming that he could o-pt- t.hPTn at anv office for that amount, and even threatened the government official if he continued to refuse him. Finally the post master ordered him out, but the man nothing daunted, took a cent and a twenty-five cent piece from his pock et, and laying them down on the counter he received his stamps for a cent and a quarter. The postmaster was a little discomfited for awhile; bat now enjoys the joke a3 well as any one. The snake liar has started on his summer tour. An exchange has it that Mike Green while blasting rnrlf on the Lehich Valley, Ba. railroad, on April 10th, uncoyered den of black snakes which to the number of over a hundred surround ed him, but in twenty minutes he killed 27 and succeeded ini getting away. We'll wager a month3 sub' scription to this 4 pager that it was too cold in Pennsylvania on the 10th for a snake to crawl. WHOLE NO. 222. Bl'TTEK AXD CHEESE FACTORY. AffltationTnat May Prove a Good En- terprine for In AllSome Points About the BuHiuesN. C M Gaylord, of Chicago, is here interviewing our people on the sub ject of a butter and cheese factory. In substance, the proposition ip this: Messrs. Davis and Eankin, manufacturers of cheese and butter machinery, will erect suitable build ings and equip them with the nec essary machinery for the manufac ture of butter and cheese. The cost of this will be $5,000, diyided up into shares of $100 each. The company proposes to erect the houses and equip and demonstrate what they claim, before a single cent is paid. If what they claim is not realized, then the stockholders are not to take it and are not to lose anything. Messrs. Davis and Eankin claim this and we take a basis of 200 cows for the sake of making their propo sition clear: "If 200 cows canjbe had in a radius of six miles of this point that will give us 2 J gallons of milk per day each, or 4,500 pounds for - which Bay we pay 90 cents per hundred : Which amounts to $40.50 For Expert Butter Maker. ... 2.00 " Helper 1.00 " Boxes," &c . 2.00 " Coal and Oil 1.25 " Insurance 0.10 " Ice 1.00 " Interest 12 per cent.... 1.48 $49.33 With our system we make 4 to 4 pounds of butter and 5 to 6 pounds of cheese to the hundred pounds of milk; therefore, 4,500 lbs. of milk will make 202 lbs. Butter at 25 amounts to $50.62 and 225 lbs. Cheese at 6 cts. amounts to 13.50 uross receipts irom xuu cows per day, $04.12. Our income per day is $64,12 Our expenses per day is 49.33 Our net gain per day is $14.79 And per month a Dividend on the Investment to Stockholders $443.85 From all the light we can get, tne standard believes this an important enterprise. That the best of butter made in the ordinary way, there is at least 30 per cent of water. By this machiaery the butter ia firmer and is higher in fv, market ana in ft i; a no rmi. . . factory m J developed. The at the ;farm lent proposes to call and pay from SO els0 the miik hundred pounds., p- Where factories have been estab- lished people sell their milk and buy their butter it being better and cheaper. Suppose some one says that there is no market for the products. That is not true when a moment's thought is given to the matter. Statesville has moved in the mat ter and will at an early date have a factory ; Mr. Hambley, of Rockwell Rowan connty, has himself gone into arrangements for the erection of a factory at his house. On this estimate, we neglected to say, each stockholder is entitled to pat in two hogs at the factory pen. The whey and other refuse of the milk is sufficient to raise and fatten 100 hogs. Mr. Gaylord will call upon our people and discuss this matter. A Nad Death. The Greenville Reflector says that on last Sunday night J J Moore, a white man confined in Pitt county jail, died in his cell. He had been sick more than a week, and realizing that his condition was becoming dangerous Sheriff Tucker on Satur day wrote to Gov. Holt setting forth the ciscumstances and petitioned tor rhp nardon of the prisoner. The Governor telegraphed Monday morn ing that the pardon had been mailed and that Moore could be released at once, but death had already released him. Monday the remains were taken home for burial. The prison er was serving a three month 3' sen tence from January term of Pitt Superior court for assault with dead" ly weapon. He had been postmaster at Farmville. Don't Like tbe Pension Idea. Mose Stirewalt, one of the Stand ard's best friends from South Rowan says that the political pot is boiling in Rrowan. The Alliance don't know which way to turn. They are true demociats and don't want to follow after false gods. He says The Ocala platform suited him, but he is "not in it" on the "pension soldiers" business and the leaving out of the Tariff platform in the St Louis fixup. Mose is a good farmer and pays as he goes. Section. 8.1 THE STANDARD. ONLY TWICE AS MUCH READING MATTER AS ANY PAPER EVER OR NOW PUB LISHED IN THE COUNTY. er TICKLE US WITH &7. I'anal Exaggeration. N. V. Sun. Why do so many writers rush to the boundless or the countless when a map or an arithmeiic is cheap? We see a string of such writers every day in looking over our ex changes, our magazines, and our new books. Take Mr. Edmund Yates's very last letter to the Trib-. une, in which he tells of an English visitor to southern Frauce, who gazed upon the Mediterranean Sea, "stretching countless miles from east to west" Xow, sir, the miles are not countless, and why say they are? They can, indeed, be very easily counted, without going np high in arithmetic. With any ordinary map of the world or of southern Europe, any urchin can in half a minute find out the number of miles between the eastern and western end3 of the Mediterranean Sea, or even between Gibraltar and the Syrian coast. Then what is the sense in saying that the miles are countless? It would not be worth while to refer to Mr. Yates's words if there were not a countless number of other writers who have the uuacs countable way of writing that he has, and who deserve to be censured for their boundless inaccuracy. The'exaggerater is a kind of a liar that is pretty common. Some men like to orate about little per sonal experiences and magnify them to such an extent that it is a reflect ion on the mental attainments and stock of forbearance on the part of their hearers. ! Grand JInslcr Powiltrly Wants the "Aonseiise Kfoiel." Milwaukee, Wi?., April 15. Sec retary Robert Schilling, of the na tional executive committee of the People's party, today received a pri vate letter from L V Powdcrly, Grand Master Workmam of the K of L in which the latter says : I have received several reform papers hav ing my name at the head for Presi dent, I ask you in all sincerity to uBe your influence to put a stop to that nonsense. We want as large a vote as possible, and for certain reas sons I do not believe my name would draw as that of some others. Besid es, I am not a member of any new party, and never intend to be, but will vote the St Louis platform whenever it comes up, no matter what the name of the party may be. This yei'.i the Democrats and Re pnoncaas will ignore that platform.' and the t'zovW r-.trtv w?,VtZ'. ' didates on it; consequently I -rTrl- ' and vo:B for that party this vwir. ami if we poll a large vote we will cause Pirtbof1theoJdPartiea to do justice to ouiandtllink of our we think." " "c Growth. "This "tL Rapid seems to be making rapid progress, said a visitor to a resident of Boom- yille, Oka. "You are just right, stranger. Why, we've had to enlarge the jail twice." Scott Brown, a graduate of the Keeley Institute, is travelling in the interest of the institution. The hands at the car shops, of Salisbury, work nine hours instead of eight. Ayer's Pills Are better known and more general ly used than any other cathartic Sugar-coated, purely vegetable, and free from mercury or any other inju rious drug, this is the ideal family medicine. Though prompt and ener getic in their action, the use of theso pills is attended with only the best results. Their effect is to strengthen and regulate the organic functions, being especially beneficial in tho various derangements of the stom ach, liver, and bowels. Ayer's Pills are recommended by all the leading physicians and druggists, as tho most prompt and effective remedy for biliousness, nausea, costiveness, indigestion, sluggishness of tho liver, jaundice, drowsiness, pain in the side, and sick headache ; also, to relieve colds, fevers, neuralgia, and rheumatism. They are taken with great benefit in chills and tho diseases peculiar to the South. For travelers, whether by land or sea, Ayer's Pills are the best, and should never bo omitted in the outfit. To preserve their medicinal integrity in all cli mates, they are put up in bottles as well as boxes. "I have used Ayer's Pills in my family for several years, and always found them to be a mild and excel lent purgative, having a good effect on the liver. It is the best pill used." Frank Spillman, Sulphur, Ky. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer ft Co., Lowell, Mmi. Sold by Druggist tvtry where. Every Dose Effective presidential contest ?