1 , . S l 4 4 i ifr n ESTABLISHED 1867 WII.MLNGTON, N. C. THUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1891- SI. 00 PER Yt Alt. - i COMMISSIONS ISSUED T osliecrs of Wilmington Naval lie ' .rW.iogition or oar State Troop located at Gct tjourg -p. i ttke Me3ener. I-.H. N. C, Aug. 14. Governor i .r ,.-;i-s commissions toL. F. Pearsall v, -.nin-ton. lieutenant junior grade ' r, . , : u,t .x-i.-t:tnt engineer of the Naval JV' .-rv.- aii-i John T. Scott, of Wilraing . ..-im and assistant engineer. , :?-nan and Tate and Gen. Gaston - r. turned this afternoon from Get ,r The position of the Sixth and ... .w:,l rumtnonfa A iiri n tr pafh of I.. -A tv,1. . 1 ,. J ,(n -II11IU HTf,l"".m-J v- " o tj .. three (lays of the battle were ac , : i-t I" located and markers placed. jV gentlemen were hand.-omely en-t-r:-iind by Governor Pattison at the r-iiup of the National Guard of- Penn v.Ivmii at Gettysburg. Three Human Uvea for a Iog. V."-;i!NiTON, Aug. 14. A special to i',.st from Montgomery, Ala., pays: tr.; 1- for a pointer dog. made last ;ir. -;iu-d a tragedy in I:tohotchie, !, i-'aft rnoon, whicii re-ulted in the. i ith of one man and the fatal wound ir two others. Laniar Sanderson, t ? i I'J vears, traded dogs with Robert j." ...iag-d l yearn, and some dis . . t, tt- n resulted from the trade, w :.i h culminated this afternoon in a , -ro 1 U-tween the parties. After . i - h i 1 .ii.-sed, John Sanderson, aged V .ir-s father of Lamar, interfered, it -ui I. to separate the combatants; but . k-on, uiosing the two Sandersons attacking him, pulled his gun and -l. kiili.M' the elder Sanderson almost a. -'. .tntlv. Young Sanderson then pulled -un'and tired on Dickson, the latter r-1 .nun- the tire, and b jth fell. Young s,:. !. is..ii being shot through the abdo- nc-n. while Dickson was shot tnrougn tl." t-odv. ! a--. Tl he ball passing through both e doctors say neither of the " MSB 1 it ' Ini'! i em recover, I he eluer san- "h r-n wan a prominent man and post-rfi.-i.-l' r of L tohotchie. M f. Airy Notes (.rrtHpou.Jfni e of trie .Messenger. 31 t. Airy, Aug. 14. Tii" uninterrupted growth and con :::. .i i-r..-pTiTy of Mt. Airy and her apparent immunity from the panic are matters of comment by almost every one whu comes to our town. There are tjuite a number of buildings in proee-s of construction in various part-- of the city. The foundation of the Methodic church presents a very attractive ap-j-arance and the work on the super tni -ture goes rapidly on. On Monday r.i'it tlw cornerstone' will be laid with appropriate ceremonies. Rev. F. L. K"i.l and Rev. W. C. Willson will assist tifir minister, Mr. Blair, in the cere monies. Koek for the foundation of the manse is lying delivered on the lot just in rear of the Presbyterian church, and work on the walls will begin in a few lavs. Rev. F. A. Fetter, an Episcopal minis ter, held services in the Presbyterian hurch last night. - The wire are all up and most of the 'phones are in position and our exchange will soon le completed. Our contingent of summer visitors has u largely increased during the past werk air. and Mrs. Charles Polvogt and ;r. T. Wright ileares. ot w nmingion. :ire nt the Renfro All Free. Thee w ho have used Dr. King's New ! im -overy know its value, and those who Siave not, have now the opportunity-to ir it Free. Call on the advertised dntg-iri-t and get a Trial Bottle, Free. Send your name and address to II. E. Bucklen V Co.. Chicago, and get a sample box of Dr. King's New Life Pills Free, as well ae a e,,py of Guide to Health and Houie 1"M "instructor, Free. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost yoa n ihing at R. R. Bellamy's drugstore. The Disastrous Drought. C' ili Mf.rs, O., Aug. 14. The Stati 'up bulletin issued to-day shows that, -vpt in a few central districts, there i been nc relief from the terrible ir. '.:;; and the effect upon growing r.-;. is di-astrous. Corn is shriveling pan.: or. the uplands is a total failure.. KNew here, half a crop nvy be' secured r.vier favorable conditions from now on. ' v' n ireec. are eying, an 1 wells and i niu are drying up. Pastures are l" oi. an 1 iarmers are let ding their cat- Tiie potato cro is certainly ruined, k wheat ;s poor r.nd tobao?i is tiring ---'. Apjtes are falling .and grapes - promise a fair vieid. . ' !: Workl's Fair for l 'ifte.-ii Cents. i : rei eijc of yoir address and fif-r- ( . ::t in postage stamps, we will il prepiJ.d our .Sol'Vknif. 1okt- - ,-F THF. WoRLlS COLUMUIN EX- -.'i :. the re-, liar jrite is Fifty cents, a we want you to have one. we I' the price nominal. You will find work cf art and a tiling to be prized. .tains full page view of the great hngs, with descriptions ot same, nd x.N-uted in highest style of art. If sitL-!ied with it, after you get it, we J refund the stamps and let you kee.p i. i w;i the "."OK. Address H. E Bucklen & Co., Chicago, 111. .More Cotton Than They Can PicJc. ..rt Worth, Tex., Aug. 13. The re yxnitf sent out from this section of Texas, to tco effect that the boll worm had ap-l-earec? in large numbers and threatened the destruction of the cotton crop, were 'vithout foundation. A few worms haye siKared in gome localities, but not in lumbers to create any alarm. Hie cot ton crop all over Northern Texas is bet ter than it h&& been for years, the only fear being that help cannot be had to Sather it all. SENATE PROCEEDINGS THE FOUR HOUSE TARIFF BILLS ANNOUNCED. i Senator Vest Denfres Them Taken Up at Once rhey jro Oyer L'pon em ator Mantlerson'H Olijectlor Senator Hill's Notice of Anti-Income jTax Aruend mcnifl to be Offered to Them SENATE. Washington, Aug. 14. The Senate had early official notification to-day of the passage by the House last evening of four hills placing on the free list sugar, bituminous coal, iron ore and barbed i wire. As soon as the reading of yester day's journal was finished a message, announcing the passage of those bills and making no reference to the Tariff bill, was delivered by the chief clerk. Subse quently the bills were laid before the Senate, one after another, were read a first time and went over until to morrow, on an objection by Senator Manderson, Republican, of Nebraska, to their second reading. j Senator Vest indicated a desire to have them taken up at onjre for consideration, but that was prevented by Senator Man derson's objection, j In connection with these bills notice was given by Senator Hill that he would otrer an amendment to each of them re pealing all provisions of law iu regard to an income tax. An objection to the third reading of the House joint resolution, extending the general appropriations to August 24th was made by Senator Aldrich, and that measure al-o went o.tr till to-morrow. Senator Call, in connection with a reso lution olfered by lim lat week as to United States citizens held as political prisoners in Cuba, presented and read a letter from J. M. NUrnez, a prisoner in the Carcel Real, neai- Santa Clara, Cuba, soliciting his aid. j Senator Hale offered a resolution to unnt 5.000 cooies of the Tarifl bill as passed, tobe know - h as the Sugar Trust TarilT bill." Senator Cockrell Senator Vest, in Let that lie over, a bellicose tone Is that the title of the bill, or does the Senator give it that title himself.-' Senator Halt Of course it is not the regular title of the rjill; but it is the title which it will receive in popular accept ance. Public sentiment will settle that. Senator Vest I question the right of the Senator from Maine to say what will be the popular acceptance of the bill. He has no right togive it.such an appella tion. It is an outrage on the Senate to do it. I Senator Mills I move to lay the reso lution on the table, and let us have the yeas and nays upon; it. The Vice-President The present con sideration of the resolution having been objected to, it goes) over under the rule. It is not before the j Senate for considera tion at this time. Senator Chandler s resolution as t) the Alabama election was taken up, but was, in the absence of Senator Morgan, laid over till to morrow.) Then unanimous Consent was aiked by Senator Chandler to take up for consid eration the resoluti6n heretofore offered by him as to the Dominion Coal com pany, but objection iwas made by Senator j Berrv. After an attempt to transact other business, which failed for lack of a quorum, the Senate, at 2:15 o'clock ad journed till to-morrow. THE GOODMAN TRIAL. The Defendant on the Witness Stand His Graphic Account of the Killing of Col. Parsons. Richmond, Va., Aug. 14. When Good man,tlie Chesapeake:and Ohio conductor, charged with ihe murder of Col. H. C! Parsons, went on the stand at Covington this morning there was a ripple of excite ment in the court room and the judge warned the crowd to be in order. He told his. story in a simple, straightfor ward manner and was the best witness yet on the stand, lie began by telling when the Parsons letter was first pur. in his nossession. lie! took a day to con- ider,soughttheadviceof LawverCrump, j and Mr. Crump wrote the re ply to Parsons' j k; i - charges. On bis way to Clifton rorge he did inquire lor I a rsons. lie arrived at Clifton Forge and went to Gladj-s inn, where lie w.is avcdstonied to stop. He took a toddy at nigjit ami asked the bar tender if Parsons had been along lately. In answer to a question the witness liere said it was his! habit as an officer to J carry a pstol while! on duty. He had a pistol as usual when he retired. He arose next morning and went down stairs, putting his pistol in his pocket. The train would le.ve at :o0 o'clock. He brought down stJrs a small satchel he always carried, put the satchel on the hat racic went mio ine aimng room auu ordered breakfast. I He heard some one i clear his throat in the vobby, looked and saw n irLan. he took to ie Parsons. ask-el thf head waiter, who said it was Parsons. Witness said he would go out and see the colonel: jwentand saw Par sons at the partition in the lobby Witness took the hat rack, .went satchel from the into the read ing room and took a copy of Parsons letter from the satchel and retired to the lobby. Parsons was then standing with hk back to the fire place. The witness walked up to him, but Parsons did not Sc"eni to see him, and to attract his atten tion, he took the lapel of his coat and said: "Come out to the front." Just before ve got to the door, I said: "Are you the author of this ruinous letter, not only calculated to ruin me, but to de stroy the peace of my family?" When they got to the door both step- mi on the torch and faced each other Parsons held the letter up, looked at it, threw it on the floor and said: .ir vou noryour family are considered " Parson then started in. but the wit ness put hi hand on him and said: "ou must retract that letter '? " Parsons said: -Whatr and at once threw his liand to his hip pocket (witness here left the chair and gave a graphic description of Parsons attitude and how the shooting occurred.) When Parsons threw his hand behind, the witness pulled hi pistol with the right hand, and being left handed, fired with the left hand four shots in rapid succession. After the fourth Parsons grabbed with the right hand the left hand of the witness, in which was the pistol. He held it eo firmly the witness had to wrench the pistol from Parsons grasp and the weapon was accidentally discharged. The fifth shot, which Good man says was accidental, took effect in Parsons' head, producing the wound-that Dr. Miller pronounced the immediate cause of death. ! In shooting ducks on the river it was the habit of the witness to break the pistol and empty the shells, and in his excitement, he involuntarily did the eame thing after shooting Parsons. He did not snap the pistol at Parsons after the pistol was empty. - He went to see Col. Bryant, the station master and told him to get another man to take out the train, as he had killed Parsons. He did not tell Bryant: "I collared Parsons and gave him all I had." After seeing Bryant he went down town and surrendered himself. In answer to a question, he said he en quired for Parsons because he wanted to see him and ask a retraction. If Parsons would not grant it he intended to go before the Rockbridge grand jury and have him indicted for criminal libel. He had already consulted Mr. Crump as to a civil suit for damages. He was informed that a judgment against Parsons would be worthless, but he wanted, not money, but vindication. I When the witness left the dining room he had no other purpose than to ask a retraction and believed he would make it. With much emotion the witness here said: "I cannot explain the deep sorrow I felt that he should try to destroy my family relations, the sunshine of my life." He thought Parsons would give him satisfaction, and did not expect to shoot, even after Pars jns had thrown the letter down. The idea of shooting first came into his head when Parsons threw his hand behind him. Witness then thought he w ould be killed. He would not have drawn the pistol but for this. He stonned shootinir as soon as he saw Pna' nVhr hanri. Thf last shot was accidental. After the shooting he picked j pation and place of residence in China of up the letter where Parsons had thrown j all American citizens, including mission :t I aries. The apparent objection to these He was then questioned as; to the charges in Parsons letter and isaid all were false, tne letter ana its suosiance. Goodman's eldest daughters very at tractive girl of 17 years, was in court to day for the first time. The impression at Covington to day is that Goodman will be convicted of mur- der in the second degree and that his punishment will be fixed at from five to ten years in the penitentiary. Senator Walsh's Views on the Tariff. Washington, Aug. 14. Senator Patrick Walsh, of Georgia, said to a re porter of the Southern Associated Press to-day: "The Senate bill is essentially a com promise measure.' It represents the best that could be attained! during the pres ent session, and the attainable should alwayg be accepted by conservative men in matters of legislation. Ihis bill is such an improvement on the McKinley law that there ought to be no question among tariff reformers as to its bene ficial effects upon the business interests of the country. The Senate bill is a long step in the direction of the removal of protective duties It is the beginning of the end of the fight for tariff reform. It is a compliance with the spirit of the pledges of the Democratic party and the contest will go on until the letter is also fulfilled. No Democrat should fail to accept the Senate bill as the very best thing in the shape of tariff legislation that could be obtained from the Senate as at present constituted, with the parties so evenly divided in the Senate. Democrats should rejoice that even such substantial pro gress should have been made in the re duction of duties and the removal of commercial restrictions. Had the Dem ocrats been united.it was possible that the Republicans could have filibustered indefinitely and thus have prevented tariff legislation duriug the present sts sion. In pi ace of damning the Senate bill with faint praise, and bringing it into ri iicult and contempt, the Democratic press should use its intluence to create a just public opinion as to the real merits of the Senate bill. When properly pre sented as the best measure of tariff re form attainable, the conservative senti ment of the countrv will settle down to i the conviction that very substantial ' progress has been m ule in the direction - e i : .r r . 1 r i , : . v. oi real uuim uriuiui auu ueei li ctue uu all the nations. "Those who have been denouncing the Senate oill as McKirJeyism in a modi .ied form should bear in mind that it was impossible for the Democratic ma- jonty to do otherwise than adopt a compromise measure. Great reforms are nd accompiisueu iu a ur . x roieciiou has been in existence thirty-three years, ani it will take time to remove it, " The tree has been lopped of its branches and limbB. The trunk and the roots will be cut down and uprooted before the ad ministration of I President Cleveland draws to a close. The Democratic party will go before the country on the record it has made, and it is 1 confidently be lieved that it will be triumphantly en dorsed by the popular verdict at the polls in th? elections this fall for mem bers of Congress." Johnson's Oriental Soap is the most delicate facial 03p for ladies' use in ex istence, absolutely pure and highly medi cated. J. Hicds Bunting and J. H. Hardin, Wilmington, N, C, THE CHINESE TREATY. ALMOST THE SAME AS NEGO TIATED BY MB. BAYARD. Aynopfts of It Term No Co nceC tlons Made to China aa to Immi grationSenator Allen's SrTlce Pension Kill AdTersely Re ported The National Bank and Treasury Note Bill Signed. Washington, Aug. 14. The new Chinese tre-:. to the ratification of which the Senate agreed yesterday with out amendment, is practically the same convention as that negotiated during President Cleveland's first administration by Mr. Bayard, and which the Senate at that time so loaded down with modifica tions as to render it obnoxious to the Chinese Government and caused its fail ure. The action of the Senate yesterday is, therefore, regarded by the Department of. State as a complete vindication of Mr. Bayard's attempt to provide a fair basis of understanding between this Govern ment and the Chinese, and is taken as fairly indicative of the advanced stand the American people have taken on the Mongolian question. The important point about the treaty is that it takes the place of the one sided exclusion laws adopted by Congress, and in satisfying China, inaugurates a better feeling between the two interested coun tries. While it avoids the sting of ex clusion, it really accomplishes more se clusion than existing laws, in that it se cures the cordial cooperation of China to the end of absolutely prohibiting all immigration of Chinese laborers for ten years, and in the second artice gives the United States Treasury Department au thority to make restrictive resolutions for the future, which will permantently prevent undesirable immigration and specifically prohibits the naturalization of Chinese. The only clause of the treaty not con tained in the Bayard draft and the one that has aroused the greatest opposition is the fifth article, in which the United States recognizes the right of China to enforce laws Bimilar to our own exclusion acts against United States laborers m China, and provides that the United States shall furnish the Chinese Govern- i ment reports giving me name, age, occu- ; provisions reaauy disappear wnenii is known that this information has been regularly furnished to the Chinese Gov ernment for many years, it being the custom of Americans to register at " our consulates, and of consuls to furnish these lists to the local authorities in order that ! protection might be afforded such mis- i cmnorico anil traw prsin nasf of necessitr. OIUUUA A VJ Uiuu ' - When such lists are furnished the Chinese authorities assume full responsi bility for the safety of such persons. There is nothing humiliating about this registration, as all American travelers well know. Under the Swiss laws an 1 alien can reside only a fortnight in the ! country except in public hotels, with j Governmental permission, and the laws of Germany and France are extremely ! stringent in the same direction, every alien being under survei lance continually in those countries. I It is a maxim of international law that an alien is amenable to the laws of the country in which be resides, and by the present treaty the United States has, by apparent concessions to China, secured that country's friendly assistance to the enforcement of our Chinese exclusion laws and to the protection of Americans in China, without making a single prac tical concession. The fact that the Senate agreed to the treaty without amendment and by an overwhelming "majority, in dicates the confidence of that body that the interests of the United States are fully protected. The President has approved the act to subject to State taxation national bank notes and United States treasury notes The bill introduced by Senator Allen, Populist, of Nebraska, granting a service pension to soldiers, sailors, marines and their widows and orphans, was reported to the Senate to-day adversely from the Committee on Pensions. Representative Clifton B. Breckin ridge, of Arkansas, who was nominated several weeks ago by the President a3 Minister to Russia, will to-day telegraph his resignation to the Congressional con vention which met in his district this afternoon. Mr. Breckinridge also to-day qualified as the diplomatic representa tive of the united States at bt. reters burg. l Hushing;. Whiskey Out of Bonded Warehouses. Louisville, Aug. 14. The passage of the tariff bill caused wonderful activity in the whiskey trade. For months the distillers and the deah rs have been on nettles. It was after banking hours when the news was received, yet in the remaining hour in which the office of collector of internal revenue was open nearly 170,0CX) gallons of whiskey were taken cut of bond here, and the cash re ceipts between 3 and 4 o'clock were f 150, 000. . Cincinnati, Aug. 14. The decisive action of Congress on the tariff started active operations in taking whiskey out of bond here last night. The receipts in this office average $13,000 a day and yes day they exceeded 00,000. In Covington, Ky., the increase was nuch greater. To Petltloa the Senate, i Savannah, Ga., Aug. U. The Savan nah Board of Trade to-day called a meeting for Monday, August 20th, for adoption of resolutions urging the Senate to pass the bills for free sugar, iron ore, coal and barbed wire. The board asks all commercial bodies throughout the United States to hare meetings on the same day for the same purpose and tele graph their action to the Senate, ; JHE NiV TARIFF BILLS. Determined Effort to lw Madr io Ir imt thftr rAMUi by Hip frnalc Thelr Paauer Improbable. Wakiunto.n, Aug. II There some "?2 of a flurry at -out the Senate to d f ricg the earlier hours of tiw e . when the four eparau Tan:! bills iae over from the Houe, for it was feared that in some way action might be forced and a showing of hand cornp U'd to Ke made. rpocially vu Uus true .( the bill to put ugar on the free list. There appears, howtver, to le no hope for any of these bills to bwome laws, as there is a disposition on the rart of the leaders to smother them in com mittee. The Sugar bill of course po seases the most political iignilicano and it cannot be doubted but that there an very many Democrats who would hkv the opportunity to vote on the question of free sugar as an independent proju-i- tion. The Republicans can be depended upon to do all they can to prevent the Demo crats from carrying out any deire thi y may have in this direction, and th'y base their intention upon the statement that it would be tyad politic. One of the leaders said to-night that the Repub licans made free sugar and give the growers a bounty and that the Demo crats repealed that law. Now the Dem ocrats wanted the Republicans to asr-it them in putting sugar back on the free list without the bounty. This the Repub licans will not do. It is believed that all these bills will be sent to the Finance committee without much trouble, this being the usual course. Should there be any effort on the part of those anxious for free silver to attempt to prevent this and secure immediate action, as Senator Vest suggested to day, then the bills will be called up one at a time and made the basis for the forma tion of another new Tariff bill. Senator Hill began that work to day when he gave notice of an amendment providing for the repeal of the income tax. Senator Stewart is ready to lay before the Senate a free coinage amendment for each of the independent bills. Senator Allen will offer as an amend ment, the Peffer Tariff bill, and Senator Aldrich will offer an amendment that repeals the enacting clause of the bills to which the House agreed yesterday.. A most determined fight will Ik com menced, should there be any di-tposition shown to treat these inde;pendent meas ures with any degree of seriousness. In yiew of the anxiety of members of Congress to get away and secure the close of all business, it does not apiear how a quorum can be maintained to keep up this sort of thing, for the. Republicans would insist that the Democrats provide the quorum with which the Senate should do business. Already Senators are preparing to leave the city. Senators Teller and Dixon having taken their departure. In the House a number of members have gone and the prediction is made in the Senate by both Democrats and Republicans that the end of this week will find the Senate without a quorum. The only thing that now keeps the Senate is the Sundry Civil bill and the Tariff bill, which will reach the President to-morrow. With these two things out of the way there would be no reason why an adjournment should not follow. Senators do not place much faith in the story that the House will re fuse to adjourn until the Senate acts uion the bills mentioned, but as soon as mat ters now attracting the attention of the Senate are out of the way the House will be put to the test by the passage on the part of the Senate of a joint resolution providing for a time for adjournment. sine die. Any attempt to irustrate an adjournment means the inauguration of a period of filibustering and the con sumption of time by the Senate with the inevitable result that nothing will be ac complished. Politics in Tennessee. NASiiviLLEjTenn. , Aug. 14. The Demo cratic State convention will meet here to-morrow to nominate a candidate for Governor. There is no opposition to the re-nomination of Governor Peter Turney. which will doubtless be made by acclama tion. There is much division among Tennessee Democrats on the silver question, but the disposition among the delegates who have .so far arrived is towards compromise ratner tban conten tion. This makes it probable that the financial piank in the platform will de clare for the coinage of both gold ana silver at such a ratio as will preserve the parity of the two metaIr,or some other indefinite phrase that both factions can claim as an expret-sion of their views. The Democratic majority in the recentSu- preme court judge '-' election over the Renublican and Populists' fu -ion was only about 16,j0U and the Republicans claim that they could have won if their forces had been thoroughly aroused. They will make a determined effort to elect the Populist nominee for Governor in November and this staU of affairs has awakened the Democrat to the ne cessity of preserving prty harmony. Hun's Cotton Itevlew. New York, Aug 14. The Sun's cotton review says: Cotton advanced j to 3 points then receded and closed quiet at a net advance for the day of 3 to point. Sales 82,000 bales. Liverpool advanced l-32d on the spot and 3 to 3T points for future delivery, closing steady, with spot sales of 12,000 bales. In Manchester yarns were in moderate demand, cloths quiet, i New Orleans was 4 to fi points higher. Spot cotton wa? steady with sales of 300 for export and 9 IS for spin ning. ; Southern spot markets as a rule were steady and unaltered with very little business. To-day's features were: An advance in Liverpool and the news that the dis turbing tariff agitatien bad ceased, together with a demand for spot cotton and some buying by the shorts, caused a moderate advance, part of which was lost before the close. The speculation continued very light. A POPULIST'S VIEWS. - HE COUNTS ON 1 a : MA JORITY NHXT FLLC;;ON. K fleet of t'oalli M.e iir n CUtt CYrip ltep.rt nfu' t t ttn llertrrt and U iJm Itv tltet to Hut bprt htate Omcial t tim ing Io n. -- i Mcsr..orii IU'arAt. ( lULXJott. Au,:. 14. The August r.fop retort, I iw turns 'from our l,2vO rTepvr.lrnn, wjl umniArir-d to-dAj. It i;jr th prnt rendition t f crvp a f Ilow: III v Vox. corn 100, t'l'tu ii i.'Uirft n. fit-Id lea 9.1. ti J J "a! VI , j anuti .t, turnip '.!. !. tt 44, late lri.h olAtow - A; .-vre -M, achf 1", gri"- t. The re;rtri of correp.r.! i.t f H weekly' w eatht-r crop uU tin, iw i y the North Carolina Stat t rvir, f t tlo wet k ending Velerdtt indicate tl-a a the e.-tn adar.r- tl tt;. ft .-f .crop ! Incoming more hrir.'l. ri the pro-q-TtH continue ery fine. lr th Houthern and raMcm p.irt of the MaU where there' ha tw-en too mu- h r:un the land U lr ng out nic !v. Th- a generally very warm, with -i.e of the h jtU-l i:i of the iisriunrr n the .'th. ' Se.tttcred -li'iwi rw occurred, thietly in th e.t't Since' the U-iniiif. of the publication of the cr p bull-tin in the spring of 1V" there h.ie iii r l rn few i -port of phed.hng cotton lmlb. Sp'-vial rejKirt.- concerning the hay crop from U over the Stat indicate in gen eral, f ir t. thiit the early crp a inf rior ia yield to the w a- n f !'..! . The late frMt ,and huiju nt droiig hi rut the clover crop thort in the north rn p'lrtj of the Weftemnn 1 Central district of the State. The crp w a vcd in 1 t ter condition thin in l'.' . Sevond. Tl. fall crop of meadow hay will ! hoiiM-d early in Se;-P mb -r. Owing to .-nerou rami in August the con litt-i ( tin lelown is now on the average very p"!. atnl the pro.ieci for the lull c rop are that it will be lar r than ft the prodding year. . The rop of corn nnd fodder ill be large, and a very large crop of Held, field jeas hive been sown f r cutting in the fall. Hay i not one of the princi pal crops-of North Carolina, but It probable' that lens than umal will t' brought in from other stu:- tf i year. At the Kgvpt coal mines HJ men are now at work. The output of c.al in now about 100 urn daily." It u to 1j liv creased to 400 tons daily SeptemlT Int. A grape and blackU-rry grower 1 rr tells mo that with only one-third of n crop this reason he has netted fl, on thirty acres. There are thirty entrien of hor- for next week's races here. S.rne of lle' are the iimut trotters in the Stat. Deputy Collectors W. K. (Jin unl Wiley Jones last night made a raid i ar Holly Springs and captured a 4 ' gallon illicit distillery. It is ai 1 to hve bo longed to a negro, who was not iup tured. The Kill was loaded," that in ready to make corn whi-key to-day. One of the largent firm- of brick wcrk contractors here says that more work t now in progress in this ci'.y than at any on time in the past live or i yearn. Governor Carr and family, accom panied by (Jen. Cameron and PriTatn Secretary Telfair and i-rhai two ot three other officers, will leave here to morrow afternoon for Suthprt. to m the naval reserves. Secretary HrrUrt and Ahsi.stant Secn-tary McAdoo haro been Hpecially invited to be nt Smth port, j If either goes there the ( i v-rnor may remain several uay; :i m. ne ujh o party will return here Kri-My. There i but little talk aKut the Dem ocratic Congressional c.n.rjt;,n U U held here to morrow. It i a furef(.ni conclusion that Charhs M. Vw.ke will get the nomination on the first h.ilIoL There U to a large gathering of farmers at liand- mill, in tliit county, next Friday. Dr. H H Batl-and lYo feesor W. K. 5Iavy are Ait--U"l to 8 peak there. A larl u- ' til l erv"i. Your com-pondert h.u hal a talk with some of the leading I'opuluit-, with' a view of obtaining their -idea t to fusion, the vote, ef . and herr what the principal one uaid: "Our Suite Kxecntive ornnatte- rxxs Id at iUleigh next Thunvlay. It ii hardly probable that it will put tip any one in Judge Connor's place. II w name will I,.- kept on the ticket. You will Omkcvo that he did not decline to be the r.orni r o on account of biwimw reann, but niin ply said he could not be. Yew. v ne I our eople do not understand our plaji f putting in the held a non-partisan tick t. We et Iett-rst from heme of tli'e let Xi4 say kickers." But we know we fjir done just the right thing. You a-k aa to whether the Republicans will fuw with u, co-operaU with u.-. vote wit) um. I do not think they will put up any ticket. All I have to cay w that th re u ill be a great many votes ca.-t fr our ticket. For tii at one ticket the- whoare oppol to Democracy will vote. A a rule, tAy one ticket will be put up. You ak tun 1 to tiie colored vote. We m. ill get a lot of colored vot-, whether there u ftwiorj or not. Tlie ItepubUcanj) cannot )jold tIo colore! votea hA against the Democrat. I estimate tlie fusion majority at 5J,0CO. Not over 30X) voU- can be counteU at, ao that will leave ua WX)," Senator Itanaom on the. Tariff BUI. WA.iH5fiTOS. Aug. 14. Senator Iiaa som, of North Carolina, ay: ""nie tariir bill b far better than no bill at all. Ii might ttili be improved, but we ehouJtl not forget that it reduce taxation and. raises sufficient reTenue to meet the needs of the Government- It do uoi carry out the idea of free raw material,, which is an important part of the Demo cratic doctrine, but much, may be done hereafter to remedy theae defects."