j n hi hi iii hi II 111 III M I in hi ii j hi ii VOL. VII. LEXINGTON AND THC A.SVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 27,1897. NO. 31. I 1I8E1 SERMON.i The Noted Washington Divene's I Sunday Discourse. . ! -- ai C-oiI' trfecC' Harmony and the Dlcconl Jat "XVa Made by SinThe Time U t ornlnj When the World Will Again lifsouiid to Heavenly Tfarmonies. Test: "Who laid the cornerstnn. thinf v.lt-n the morning stars Bang together?" t..i. r. 7 . . . have all keen the ceremony at the lav fr' of tho cornerstone of ehuMh, asylum or M.l-oni? temple. Into the hollow of the -tr.o were placed scrolls of history and im- ,,rrfti:L (locomenis, to he suggestive if, 100 r years- after, the building should be ,1. strrtvu'l! by Are or torn down. We re. T.,.vr,, r thB silver trowel or iron hammer that smote the square piece of granite into Kii "tit.y.l We 'remember some venerable man wh presided wielding the trowel or amijjf r. We remember also the music as h i f lioir stood on. the scattered stones and tvnUT of the building about to be con .tr i -f-.i. The leaves! of the notebooks ilui'Tfit in the wind arid were turned over v.-itha grfat rustling, and we remember !khv th bass, baritone, tenor, contralto ;in 1 soprano voices commingled. They had for rii.'iny dayq been rehearsing the special r roarranirrxir'hat it might be worthy of the c-'irri'Tsone laying. . "u toy text the, poet of Uz oltlls us to a vr.-t'rvW- ceremony the laying of the ioun--l i'kn of this great temple of a world. Tiis forncrstone was a block of light, and t'i" trowfl was of celestial crystal. All a', out and on the embankments of clouds t .. I the angel io choristers unrolling their li'-r-ttos of overture, and other worlds !.;. pi'il shining cymbals while the cere .,rriiy'v'ent on, and God, the Architect,, by f of light latter stroke of light, dedi- at I this great cathedral of a world, with in', int;titis for pillars and Sky for frescoed iiin:-and flowering ilelds for a floor and sumi j and midnight aurora for uphol i. ry. ' Who laid the cornerstone thereof, whv.i f he morning stars sang together?" V!i" !a -t is that the whole universe was a roa!jK-tf cadence, an unbroken dithy ra:n!i, a musical portfolio.. The great sheet tit .immensity had been spread out, and vritt-iion ft were the stars, the smaller of thi'7nrminims, tho larger of them sustained iiotfs. The meteors marked the staccato .H.-sg.i, the whole heavens a gamu with Jill sounds, intonations, modulations, the spii-'e between, the worlds a musical in terval, trembling of stellar light a quaver, tl;o thunder a bass clef, the wind-rtnlong tn en a treble clef. That is the wly God uiHile all things a perfect harmony. " j P. it one day a harp string snapped in the jjrwtt orchestra. One day a voice sounded out of tune. One day a discord, harsh and terrific, grated upon the glorious antiphon. t was -sin that made- tho dissonance, and that harsh discord has been l sounding 'tiironjjh the centuries. All the work of liritians and philanthropists and reform ers of all ags is to stop that discord and '"yet all things. back into the perfect har mony whiiJi was heard at the laying of the fc.nii-rstono when the morning stars sang t"'tli"r. Before I get .through, if I am !ivinly helped, I will make it plain that rin is discord and righteousness harmony; that in general things are out of tune is as plain as to a musician's ear is1 the unhappy clash of clarinet and bassoon in an orches tra.! rendering. The world's health out of i tune; weak b.iiiK-s and the atmosphere in collision, dis- rtlereil eye and noonday light in quarrel, rheumatic limb and damp weather in strug glo; neuralgias, and pneumonias, and ctfn suniptioni, and epileptics in flocks sweep . tin neighborhoods and cities. Where you Jlinl one person with sound throat,and keen eyesight,' and alert ear, and easy respira tion, and regiilar pulsation, and supple liml, and prime digestion, and steady nerves, you And 100 who have to be very fateful because this or that or the other physical function is disordered. 'i lie human- intellect out of tune; the judgment wrongly swayed, or the memory leaky, or the will weak, or the temper in flammable, the well balanced mind excep tional. " J r domestic life out of tune; Only here and there a conjugal outbreak of lncompata I'ility of temper through the divorce courts or a illial outbreak about a father's will through the surrogate's court, or a case of wife heating or husband poisoning through the criminal courts, but thousands of fami lies with Juno outside and January within. Soci. ty out of tune; labor and capital, their hands on each' other's throat; spirit of caste keeping, those down in the social " f ale who are struggling to get up, and j utting those who are up' in anxiety lest they lmve to come down. No wonder the old pianoforte of society is all cut of tune, wlif-u hypocrisy, and lying, and subterfuge, an ! double dealing, and sycophancy, and 'harlatauism, and revenge have for 6000 Vl!llJ )....,.. 1 ..i n .-.I.. s ..... i . n . Ka .1 t f-1 1 . t sta-upinj? the pedal's. On ail sides there is a shipwreck of har fiioLics nations in discord without realiz iiii,' it. So wrong is the feeling of nation for nation that symbols chosen are fierce an 1 destructive. In this country, where our skies are full of robins and doves and Periling larks, we have our national sym J'l. the licree and filthy eagle, as cruel a 1 'ird as can bo found in all the ornithologi 'al' catalogues. In Great Britian, where they have : lambs and fallow deer, their sym- POl w t ht1 n lerei le linn Tn TliiRCin. wrliArA in.:., I'ctween her frozen north to her I doming south all kindly beasts dwell, they chose the growling bear, and in the , s iierautry a favorite Ilgure is the "ragon.the fabled winged serpent, fero oious and dreadful. And bo fond is the w rl.l ,-,f contention that we climb out t.irourth the heavens and baptize one of t.ie other planets with the spirit of battle and call it Mars, after the god of war, and give to the eighth sign of the zodiac i!io name of the scorpion, a creature which Mietly celebrated for its deadly sting, f ti,uft' r a11' tnese symbols are expressive the way nation feels toward nation dis- oii wide as the continent and bridging the (,;ls 1 Mll.oose Von Vin-PA nrflfA1 irktir trftrmlr in in lr, e dry goods stores are with other dry S'X'.is stores, and how hisrhlv srrocerv men jams of the sugars of the grocery man on 'i110 street;, and in what a eulogistic allopathic and homeopathic doctors s.-eak of each other and how ministers will m-tiiues put ministers on that beautiful ookuig instrument which the English call tn- U ran iron rollr with spikes on it and -th. - ' a crank before a hot fire and if he minister being roasted cries out gainst it, the. men who are turning him th'u m' brother; we are, turning of v 1 ll for tae Sory ' God and the good J"irr soul, and you must be quiet, while ciose the service with: Tdest be the tie that binds 'Our hearts in Christian love.' ' eir'i 0;rtn is diametered and circumfer , discord, and the music that was EAt 'r''d at tbe la?luS of the world's cor Jjton -when the morning stars sang to an.i 1S uot heard now, and though here tarVh a',"1 ?lom this and that Part 'Df the lev ,ll, ri comes up a thrilling solo of A-nl' f a marble of worship, or a sweet rd that shakes the earth. . 4 A,d while the nitrhtineale. and the so n ark' the canaryi and the plover have lI?'so. sweetly that their notes an "V'n written out in musical nota kev V, f'?und that the cuckoo sings ii in th and that the cormorant is a 1 iae Winged' choir vet fsnortsman'a in the basso for'' r' a?'1 ''le,tlinR or dead in meadow or fiatm.' , aul was right, for the groan in skv uwns out tne prima donnas of the fatin' tbe Kreat musical composer, W'th one night that he made a contract .itan the latter to be ever in the composer's serrice. '-But one night he handed to Satan a violin, on which Diabo lus played such sweet music that the com poser was awakened by the emotion and tried to reproduce the sounds; and there from was written Tartini's most famous piece, "The Devil's Sonata." a dream in genious, but faulty, for all melody de scends from heaven and only discords as cend from Bell. All hatreds, feuds, con troversies, backbitings and revenges are the.kdevil's sonata, are diabolic fugue, ar demoniac phantasy, are grand march of doom, are allegro of perdition. But if in this world things in general are out of tune to our frail ear, how much more so to brings angelic and deiflc! It takes a skilled artist to fully appreciate disagreement of Bound. Many have no ca pacity to detect a defect of musical execu tion, and though there were in one bar as many offenses against harmony as could crowd in betwren the lower F of the bass and the higher G of tho soprano it would give them no discomfort, while on the fore head of the educated artist beads of per spiration would stand out as a result of the harrowing dissonance. While an amateur was performing; on a piano and had just struck the wrong chord, John Sebastian Bach, the immortal composer, entered the room, and the amateur rose in embarrass- ment, and Bach rushed past the host, who stepped forward to greet him, and before the keyboard had stopped vibrating put his adroit hand upon the keys and changed the painful inharmony Into glorious cadence. Then Bach turned and gave salu tation to the host. But the worst of all discord is moral dis cord. If society and the world are pain fully discordant to imperfect man, what must they be to a perfect God? People try to define what siffls. It seems to me that Lsin is getting out of harmony with God, a disagreement with his holiness, with his purity, with his love, with his commands, our will clashing with his will, the finite dashing against the infinite, the frail against the puissant, the created against the creator. If 1000 musicians, with -flute and cornet-a-piston and trumpet and vio loncelly, the hantboy. and trombone and all the wind and stringed instruments that ever gathered in a Dus3eldorf jubilee should resolve that they would play out of tune and put concord to the rack and make the place wild with shrieking and grating and rasping sounds, they could not make such pandemonium as that which rages in a sin-; ful soul when God listens to the play of its thoughts, passions ana emotions discord, lifelong discord, maddening discord. . The world pays more for discord that it does for consonance. High prices have been paid for music. One man gave $225 to hear the Swedish songstress in New York, and another $625 to hear her in Bos ton, and another $650 to hear her in Provi dence. Fabulous prices have been paid for sweet sounds, but far more ' has been paid for discord. The Crimean War cost $1,700,- 000,000 and tho American Civil War over $9,500,000,000, and the war debts of pro fessed Christian nations are about flo.OOO,- 000,000. The world pays for this red ticket, which admits it to the saturnalia of broken bones and death agonies and destroyed cities ana piowea graves ana crusnea hearts, any amount of money sat an asks. Discordl Discord! i But I have to tell you that the Song that the morning stars sang together at the lay ing of the world s cornerstone is to resound again. Mozart's greatest overture was composed one night when he was several times overpowered with sleep, and artists say they can ' tell I the places in the music where he awakened. So the overture of the morning stars spoken of' in my text has been asleep, but it will! awaken and be more grandly rendered by the evening stars of the world's existence than by the morning stars, and the vesper3 will be' sweeter than the ,matins. The work of all good men and women and of all good churches and all reform associations help to bring the race back to the original har mony. The rebellions heart to be attuned, social life to be attuned, commercial ethics to be" attuned, internationality to be at tuned, hemispheres to be attuned. Tho whole world must also he attunea by the same power. I was in the Fair banks weighing scale manufactory of Ver mont. Six hundred hands, and they never had a strike! Complete harmony between labor and capital,' the operatives of scores of years in their beautiful homes near by the mansions of the manufacturers, whose invention and Christian behavior made the great enterprise. ) So, all tbe world over, labor and capital will be brought into euphony. You may have heard What is called the "Anvil; Chorus," composed by Verdi, a tune played by hammers, great and small, now with mighty stroke and now with heavy stroke, beating a great iron anvil. That is what the world has got to come toanvil chorus, yardstick chorus, shuttle chorus, trowel chorus, crowbar Chorus, pickax chorus, gold mine ononis, rail-track chorus, locomotive chorus. It can be done, and it will be done;' so all social life will be attuned by the gospel harp. ' I Heaven is to have a;newsong, an entirely new song. JJut 1 snouia not wonaer ii, as sometimes on earth, a tune is iasnionea out of many tunes, or it is one tune with the variations; so some of the songs of the re deemed may have been playing through them the sons? 3 of earth. And how thrill ing, as coming through the great anthem of the saved, accompanied by harpers with their harps and I trumpeters with their trumpets, it we snouia near some or tne strains of "Antioch" and "Mount Pisgah"" and "Coronation" and "Lenox" and "St. Martin's" and "Fountain" and "Ariel" and "Old Hundred!" How they would bring to mind the praying circles and communion days, and the Christmas , festivals, and the church worship in which on earth we min gled! I have no idea that when we bid farewell to earth we are to bid farewell to all these grand old gospel hymns which melted and rarjtured our souls for so many years. , Now, if sin is discord and righteous ness Is harmony, let us get out oi mo our and enter the other. O Lord, our God. auickly usher in the whole world's peace jubilee, and all islands of the sea join tne nve continents, sua " the musical instruments of all nations combine, and all the organs that ever sounded requiem of sorrow sound only a grand march of joy, and all the bells that tolled for burial ring for resurrection, and all the cannon that ever hurled death across the nations sound forth eternal vic tory. And over all aoclaim of earth and minstrelsy of heaven there will be heard one voice sweeter and. mightier than any human or angelic voice, a voice once full of tears, but now full of triumph, the voice of r!hrit savin iTv "I I am alpha and omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last." Then, at tne laying oi iuji stone of the world's history, the same voices shall be heard as when, at tne lay ing of the world's cornerstone, "the morn ing stars sang together." . CAUGHT A CHILD ON THE FLY. Hurled From Runaway Baggy Ba Saved by a Bystander. Tka mncf fnrtnnstfl cnteh ever witnessed in Elizabeth, N. J., was made a few after noons ago, by a young man wno reiuses to give his name. I John Conard, of Elizabeth avenue, was out driving with his three-year-old child. The horse took fright and ran away. In trying to stop the animal Mr. Conard was thrown out. He was cut and bruised but not seriously. The child remained in the buggy until the horse crashed into a lamp post.. The shock brought the runaway to a standstill and shot the child into the air as though thrown from a catapult. The little one was but a few feet from the win dows of Homing's drug, and was thrown straight at them, but, "While in the air, a young man who ) had been standing in front of the store, caught the child. The force with which the child was moving threw the young man against the window, but did not break it. The child, was badly scared but unhurt. DIPLOMATS NOV AT VORK. - : i ; i t I -if-- The Graeco-Turkfsh ! Controversy Reaches This Stage. i I I:'"!: NEGOTIATIONS EXPECTED TO Last for Some Time The Sultan's Policy In Acceding to the Czar's Re quest for an Armistice. ' London, May 22. (By Cable.) The Graeco-Turk trouble has now fairly en tered upon its diplomatic bargaining stage and the negotiations are expected to last for some time, j Many important differences have to be settled, and the Saltan of Turkey may be counted upon to drag the j affair along as much as possible, with the view of bringing out the latent jealousies of the pow ers. His prompt compliance with, the Czar's request to arrange for an armistice is not attributed entirely to the desire to please the Czar, but it is looked upon as a stroke of diplomacy intended to excite the resentment of some other power and thus weaken the concert. Thus far, everything tends to show that the powers remain in entire agreement on the question. An' Euro pean conference is discussed but it is not thought likely to (take place 'until the preliminaries of peace are arrange!. Then the ambassadors at Constanti nople, with the delegates of Turkey and Greece, may meet to settle upon the treaty of peace. There is a strong feeling in favor of international control of the Greek finances, without which the payment of the indemnity to Tur key and the interest on the Greek debt is declared to be impossible. The Greeks insist that if an indem nity is imposed upon them there will be a general cohapse and serious internal troubles wiy occur. They estimate tbe damage, done to Thessaly at 25,000,OOC drachms and they say another 10,000,000 drachms will be needed to supply th, peasants with food and tools. Moreover, they add, the revenue will be greatly re duced, owing to the immediate damage done to cultivation throughout the coun try, due to the absence of thousands of workers. This year's budget will proba bly leave a deficit of 00,000,000 drach mas. The Greek statements, however, are now received with a certain sceptic ism. It is pointed out that by the ad missions of the Greeks themselves 70 per cent, of the interest of the debt, which they have not paid, has been set aside in order that thev may have mon ey for the war and that consequently Greece is certainly in a position to con tinue paying 30 per cent. ; interest and probably considerably more if her finances are placed under international control. , . '.'!',! t ;j ! : Advices from the scenes of the recent fighting mention the possibility of a serious epidemio of disesse when the heat increases, owing to the putrifying carcases and horses left rotting in every ditch. - : ' i . M The popular feeling at Athens against the royal family of Greece does not di minish. The stories of. the "excessive prudence" of Crown Prince Constan tine at the front have done much to weaken the dynasty, j : DEMOCRATS CAUCUS And Decide to Fight Tariff Bill Down on Dear Beer. The Democratic Senators held a cau cus last Saturday and decided to in atigurate their fight upon the tariff bill as soon as the bill is taken up in the Senate by a motion to strike but the in ternal revenue features of the bill relat ing to beer and tobacco. This result was reached after a discussion in which practically all the Senators present par ticipated. The talk was based largely upon the proposition to ; increase the tax upon beer, which was generally criticised as an effort to increase the price of "the poor man's beverage," which was pronounced j wholly unjusti fiable in time of peace and with S120, 000,000 of idle money in the treasury. Senator Karle's Funeral. At Greenville, S. C.,1 Saturday, the grave closed over all that was mortal of Joseph Haynsworth Earle, South Car olina's late junior Senator. All the stores in the city were closed during the progress of the exercises. The -whole of Greenville mourned and the people made r no attempt to conceal their feelings. Rich and poor alike at tended the obsequies, ami prominent men from all over the State, as well as the Congressional committee, paid their last trilnte to South Carolina's lionored and j worthy son. I Handsome iioral tributes were sent from Washing ton, as well as from the townspeople. Governor Ellerbe did not attend, owing to illness in his family. The services were conducted at the First Baptist ohurchh by Dr. C. S. Gardner, the pas tor. I I i " Cuban-Americans Needing Relief. A telegram' received at the State De partment at Washington from Consul General Lee indicates that the number of Americans in need of relief in Cuba is much Iarerer than was supposed at first. The Consul-General says that the number I may reach Si, 200. The consul at Matanzas reports 250 there and the consul at Sagua 450. A Bust of Raleigh. A memorial ! bust of Sir Walter Ral eigh has been unveiled at Westminster Abbey, in London, England, by the Duke of Buooleuch, in the presence of a distinguished assemblage. Among the eulogies delivered was one by Col. John Hay, embassador of ; the United States. I i I : Which Will Win ? Tillman is pressing John Gary Evans for the Senate.! But Governor Ellerbe will probably, appoint Congressman McLaurin. Bad Blood Existed. At Charleston, S. C. J. W. Hyer, an employe of the State dispensary shot J. H. Doscher president of the Ger mania Brewing Company, wounding him in the leg. Bad blood has existed between the njfa tot months. T FIFTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. Report of the Proeeedlnjri from Day to Day SENATE s ! ! TcesdAT. Cuba again occupied the foreground in the Senate to-day. It drew large crowds to the galleries, and brought two notable speeches by Mr. Mason, of Illinois, in favor of the Mor gan resolution, and Mr. Hoar, of Mass achusetts, in opposition to it. lne Illi nois Senator pictured in fervid terms the distress in Cuba, dwelling particu larly on the starving condition of 800 United States citizens, as reported by the President, and called upon the Sen ate to throw off its lethargy and pass the , Morgan resolution. Poring the day a number of bills ware passed, among them one appropriating 825,000 to Richmond College, Richmond, Ya., for war losses. The Cuban discussion continued till 4:45 o'clock, when Bur rows yielded the floor lor executive session, saying he", would go on to morrow, p Weditesday A stirring debate on Cuba occurred in the Senate today. It was of the "give and take" order, with sharp parliamentary fencing. The - main speeches of the day were made by Sen ators Foraker of Ohio, Cannon of Utah, Lindsay of Kentucky, and Hoar of Massachusetts. It was the first speech of any length made by Mr. Foraker since ne entered the Senate and in ad dition to this the Ohio Senator is one of the Cuban sub-committee on for eign relations. He spoke in favor of a reference of the Cuban resoliion to the committee but on the general ques tion declared his purpose of supporting the resolution recognizing Cuban be ligerency when it shouhi be reported by the committee. Mr. Cannon was bitter in his denunciation of Spanish atroci ties, characterizing the captain general of Cuba as "that mad dog, Weyler." The debate occupied the entire day, Thurston, of Nebraska, giving notice that he would speak tomorrow. ; At 6 o'clock the Senate adjourned. j Thubsday. The long and exciting debate on the joint resolution recogniz ing the existence of a state of war in Cuba, declaring that strict neutrality shall be maintained by the United States, passed the Senate by the decis ive vote of 41 to 14, at a late hour this aftereoon. The announcement of the vote was jeceived with tumultuous ap- filause, which drew from Senator Haw ey an emphatio protest against "mob demonstration." Tha resolution as passed is as follows: "Resolved, etc.. That a condition of public war exists between the government of Spain and the government proclaimed and for some time maintained by force of arms by the people of Cuba, and that the United States of America shall main tain a strict neutrality between the con tending parties, according to each, all the rights of belligerents in the ports and territory of the United States. " Monday. The death of Senator Earle, of South Carolina, was referred to in. eloquent terms by Chaplain i Mil burn in his prayer in the Senate.1 ; Fol lowing this Mr. Tillman, of South Car olina made the formal announcement of Senator Earle's death, and offered a resolution expressing the profound sor row of the Senate. As a further mark of respect, the Senate, at 12:10 p. m. adjourned. j HOUSE. Thttbsday Cuban affairs furnished the House with a day of, bitter partisan debate. The Senate resolution appro priating $50,009 for the relief of Ameri can citizens was adopted without a dis senting vote, but the Democrats en deavored to force consideration also of the Morgan resolution for recognition of the belligerency of the insurgents. They, accused the Republicans of en deavoring to evade this issue, but the dominant party, through its spokes man, Mr. Hitt, made the important statement that the Republicans desired not to embarrass negotiations which were being projected by President Mo Kinleyio secure independence for Cuba. The House at 5:20 p. m. adjourned un til Monday. Monday. In the House Mr. Elliott, Democrat, of South Carolina, was rec ognized and announced the death of Senator Earle, which, he said, occurred under circumstances almost tragic in their nature. Later Mr. Elliott said he would ask the House to fix a day when suitable tribute could be paid to his memory. He then offered the cus tomary resolutions, which were adopt ed. Then, at 12:15, as a further mark of-respect, the House adjourned 1 until Thursday. i Iiomeyn Will Not be Dismissed. The Preeident has remitted the sen tence of : dismissal imposed by court martial pn Captain Romeyn, Fifth Infantry, who, after a sensational trial, was convicted recently of assault on Lieut. O'Brien, of the same regiment, at Fort McPherson, Ga In view of the fact that Capt. Romeyn will retire by operation of law on June 1st, the President believes that the ends of justice will be secured by his severe reprimand. Republican Organ Goes to the Wall. The Daily Tribune, the Republican organ of North Carolina, published at Raleigh, by the friends of Senator Pritchard, has been levied on by the Sheriff of Wake county. The stock holders refused to advance any more money, and it is said that they have already sunk $12,000. Several weeks salary is due the employees of the pa ' . " s " Visits Davidson College. Last Monday the members of the Southern General Assembly of Presby tery left on a special train for Davidson College on a tour of general inspection, to looK over the workings of the college. The train was chartered by the trustees f the college and was complimentary to the General Assembly The train consisted of six cars, ana it was esti mated that 850 people were aboard. SIcKInley Will Go to Nashville. The President has finally decided to go to the Nasheville Exposition next month. He has fixed upon the 12th as the date and will doubtless be accompa nied by some members of his cabinet. He will travel over the Southern road via. Asheville, Knoxville and Chatta nooga. ' Love is like a tailor-made dress if s mr.de by a man an4won ppi by QUEEN VICTORIA'S BIRTHDAY. Celebrated Throughout the British Empire Born In 1819. Last Monday was the birthday o! Victoria, Queen of England and Em press' of India. She was born May 24th, 1819. The anniversary was ob served with the usual artillery salutes, the ringing of the church bells and QDIU TXOTOBIA, military reviews at all the different naval and military stations of the empire through out the world. The celebration of the event in the city of London taken place Wednesday. President MoKinley sent a cable message to Queen Viotoria con-! gratulating her on the celebration of her 79th birthday. DEPLETED SPAIN. Miserable Condition of Finanoes Mortgaging Everything. Madrid, May 25. (By Table) Senoi J Nevarro Reverter, minister of finance, in the budget statement to the oortes estimates the revenue at 858,278.771 pesetas ($170,473,802) and the expendi tures at 873,865,877pesetas ($174,656, 115). In order to provide revenue to meet the extraordinary budget, the minister of finance proposed to raise a loan with ' the Almaden quicksilver mines as se curity and to obtain navigation dues to the amount of twelve millions. In order to meet the increased expenditures and the ninety-two millions required to meet the interest and for the redemption of the late loans guaranteed by the cus toms, a temporary surtax of 10 per cent, on all taxes exoept land has been proposed. By this means it is expect ed twenty millions will be obtained. The colonial department will contrib ute thirty-two millions and the balance of forty millions will be raised by a loan on the proposed petroleum monopoly, giving the exclusive privilege of dealing in this product during the next twenty years. Should the colonial department be unable to pay its share of the in creased expenditures, it is calculated that the portion of another loan can be obtained by a proposed monopoly on explosives. Armistice Will be Prolonged. Paris, May 25. (By Cable.) Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria had a long con ference today with M. Hanotaux, min ister of foreign affairs. It is under stood that the Greco -Turkish armistice will be prolonged, if,' at its expiration, the peace negotiations should not be finished. Canea, Island of Crete. (By Cable.) Colonel Staikos, with the last detach ment of the Greek expeditionary force, embarked for Grece this morning. A WHITE 91 AN LYNCHED. His Negro Accomplice Left to the Law. R. W. Stewart, a prominent mer chant of Tindale, Texas, was recently enticed from his home and murdered. Effie Jones, colored, was arrested for the murder and in a confession impli cates Will Jones, a white man, promi nent in the community. Jones was ar rested and placed in jail, and a mob ap peared at the county jail in Tyler and on the refusal of the sheriff to admit them, broke the doors, went to Will Jones' ceil and shot him to death as he sat on his cot. He told them they were killing an innocent man, but the lead ers answered they had proof of his guilt. They refused to kill Effie Jnnet, saying that as he did not have che means and influence to escape punish ment, they would let the law take its course. DOWN A WELL TO DEATH. A Lawyer's Wife Adopts an Awful Method to End Life. Advioes from Greenville, Ya. , states that Mrs. Herbert McGowan committed suicide by jumping into a well. Mr. McGowan had gone to his office, leav ing his wife and children at the house. She went out in the yard, removed her apron and shoes and jumped in the well. The children saw her, , and sum moning aid they hurried to the well, but the unfortunate woman was dead when taken out. Mrs. McGowan had been in poor health for some time and it is thought the act was due to mental trouble. ' Tbe Resolution Signed. Monday the President approved the resolution of relief for the starving Americans in Cuba within ten minutes after he received it. '"ice-President Hobart also signed tua joint resolu tion. " i BACKS GERMANY DOWN. Tried to Make an American Enter the Kaiser's Army. George Piepenbring, son of Freder ick Piepenbring, of V ilmington, DeL, while on a recent trip to Germany had trouble with the authorities of that country, who attempted to compel him to enter the German armjr for three years. Piepenbring, who is 20 years old, came to America 14 years ago. Armed with the naturalization papers of his father he appealed to the American Consul at Brunswick and the. German authorities released him. THE STATE PEHITEIITIflRY Has Existed Since 1868, and Pre sents a Most Difficult Problem. WHO THE FIRST CONVICT WAS. History of the Pen Counties, Under s New Law, May Have the Use of Convicts. There is no problem in North Caro-. lina greater than the penitentiary that is its maintenance without cost to the State. The incubus is the central prison with the life-time prisoners, the dregs of the State s criminal class, the aged prisoners, the sick and the in curables. ' The problem grows greater annually and less than 125 convicts are the prime cause. There are 80 "life" criminals, and of those only 60 can do heavy work. . The penitentiary maintains fiive farms; three on the Roanoke, one in Anson and two at Castle Hayne. Only four can in the broad sense be termed farms, and all are on lease land. There are today 153 convicts' in the penitenti ary, itself, 36 at Castle Hayne, 153 at the Anson farm, C55 on the farms on Roanoke river. The total is i97. Of these GO are women. The penitentiary was- established by the Legislature of 18G8. Uefore that the modes of punishment were death, the jail, the whipping iost and the branding iron. It was at first proposed that the location of the prison bhould be in Chatham county, on Deep river. But Raleigh was finally selected after land-sharks and carpet-baggers had made some money out of the State in the matter of land for the site in Chat ham. The penitentiary as first built here was primitive. Two long houses were built of logs as quarters. These were low and were like a set of houses fad ing each other with a roof coveriDg all and the corridor between. In each one of th rooms there were, ten or twelve convicts. The- 6tockade was of pine poles or small logs. Part of the origi nal penitentiary yet remains, and is used for stables. . January 6, 1870, the penitentiary was opened and forty convicts were placed in it. The first one was Charles Lewis, sentenced from Johnston county, for four years, for robbery. The oldest prisoner now within the walls is Andy Winecoff, who was received June lb, 1877, for burglarly, for life. The total number of convicts received is 11,990. The penitentiary building is of brick and granite, all made or quarried on the premises. In 'fact the granite for the foundation came from under the build ing. That from the immense wall came from a quarry within the stockade. First and last, the cost of construction approximates $i75,000. The main build ing has a front of 750 feet. It is a great shell, enclosing in the east wing "cell blocks," which are simply masses of brick' and cement in which are the cells, rising four tiers higH, like -burrows in a mountain. The wet wing has no cell blocks, but is a vast ' open space, available for manufacturing or other purposes. At each end is a building, higher and divided by a solid wall. One of these is a hospital and contains cells for the criminal insane (females) while in the west wing will be the criminal insane (males). In front is the administra tion building and in the rear the bakery, kitchen, laundry, etc., and in rear of these a separate building for the female prisoners. There are in all sixty female convicts, but most are on the farms. One of the long time female prisoners is Maria Hall, colored of Wilmington, who got twenty years for manslaughter. She has by uniform good conduct gain ed three years, and will leave next month with 395 she has earned. The females from the farms will probably all be brought to the central prison The women make all the clothing. Jv one year they make 6,000 pairs of troop ers, as many suits of underclothing and 2,000 coats. The goods are all purchased in Georgia. In the criminal insane ward there is as yet only one inmate, Abe llinson, a murderer, who is keot chained and has been so kept for ten years. His desire is to strangle. His striped clothing is removed now, and neither he nor any jf the cr'minal insane will wear the pri.oa garb. In former years the Legislature used to appropriate $125,000 annually for the penitentiary. During the past four rears, it cost the State only $74,000 for ;he entire period. This was the excess ver earnings. Last year there was no xpenre. This year there is a con tin -rent appropriation of $25,000, of which ;he new superintendent says not a dol lar will be needed if there is no damag ing freshet in the Roanoke. Last year freshet swept a away 1,000 acres of ;orn there. He says the best farm in ;he State is the "Caledonia," there, which is offered at $9 per acre for its 7, XK) acres. The State has an option at that figure. This year the new superintendent has old $20,000 of last year's cotton crop. He expects to make 2,000,000 brick within the penitentiary. There are many calls for convicts. In June they will build a ten-mile exten sion of the Carthage Railroad. The leg islature gave 50, without expense, to he Marion and Asheville turnpike, but these wi'l not be furnished unless they ire paid for. Under the new law the xmviots are available for road work to counties which pay for them, from tho latumn until the following spring. Vfsny will be thus used. It is a good law and will lighten the State's burden nd give good roads. Raleigh Corres pondence Charlottebserver. Horses Are Numerous. Horses are so numerous in the State of Washington that they can be bought for froni 50 cents to $1 a head. They run at large and nobody seems to care for them. Complaint is made that they eat the grass that cattle and sheep might feed on. , , To Give $1,000,000 to Charity. Andrew Carnegie, who usually pre faces his annual trip to Europe by a charitable or educational donation, has decided to give $1,000,000 to charity this spring: the exact object of tbe donation is not knows. Southorn tiaiiivay FIRST AND SECOND DIVISIONS. In effect May 2, 1897. This Condensed Schedule 1 puMUhed as Information only and is subject to change without notice to the public. RICHMOND TO CHARLOTTE. No. 17 Na No. 11 Ex Jio.M D'y. D'T. 8'nd'v D'ly. A-iL N'n. A.M. SL. r.sx. Eastern Time. It Richmond... ..... 1100 S 00 8 00 Amelia C H. 118 7 7 " BurkerUle ..No.87 1 81 8 Si 8 04 " KeysTlUe.... Dally 2 SO IS 89 8 48 "Bouth Boston..... 8 40 4 63 Dan rill iieidaTilie... " irDt)oro. " High Point.. " Salisbury.; Concord.... Ar. Charlotte... 660 7 08 8 17 (8 4S 9 28 468 8 40 6 48 7 11 8 18 9 02 6 08 60 7 S3 11 20 9 87 10 SO C 20 T 87 's'io 9 22 10 00 11 28 1 20 6 10 9 45111 13 8 16 4 20 980 Spartanburg 11 87 Greenville.. 13 23 Atlanta 8 88 Central Tim P.M. r.M T.IL P.M A.H. CHARLOTTE TO RICHMOND. No.18 No.86 D'y. D'y. . AM. .P.M. 1 Eastern Time. .v.Atlanta. 7 60 11 60 No. 88 No. 10 D y. D'y. N'n. A.M. 12 00 6 80 - cm A. II Central Time. v.ureenvllle.. 3 81 6 45 "Spartanburg 8 47 tZl Lv.l'liarlutie . H 40 J ai 7 22 10 07 .... . fa 02 8 18 10 47 . 9 3tJ 9 20(11 40 : 9 62 12 10 No.19 10 44 10 89 112 60 Ex 12 80 1 30 b u y. 12 00 1 43 6 4 1 6 17 7 10 8 20 860 9 80 1 45 2 48 8 64 4 88 6 0Z 0 25 P.M. Concord .... " Salisbury... . " High Point.. Greensboro. " Rfidvill. Danville.:.. 8o. Uo-'ton.. K-yViil. . . " Uufkeviliu. . Aeita C.H. Ar.llic-liinoud. . 306 3 18 436 000 A.M. . 0 00 6 83 ..... 7 10 6 25 8 40 r.M. A.M. 800 A IL " HIGH POINT AND AbHEDORO. No.4i N .11 No.I2 No.43 Ex..-ii. K..OOQ . Ex.SiinEx.Hun 10tV -0.4. . LT.IIigb Tolnt Ar. 11 80a 7 OOp 8 S-Jy oO...Ar..Ahebor-.l.v;.10 00 6 OOp ""THROUGH St HEDC LEbtuUtuUtnd.) Noll No 37 Noe85 No 9 Dully. Daily. Lv. Washington. ..... in 43p " Alux&odiitt. il IKip " CbariotU-b'rt 1 Lynchburg.. 8 v'.i "Danville. ttiOrfi tUi Ar.Oreonsboro. i Sit Tuoi A 15 Dally. Dally. 11 16a 8 00j 11 US H 2ix 2 27p 12 20p 4 05 p 2 17p i.G 20 p 4 5ft p 7 37p 6 25p " WJnston-S'm 9 60 9 to i 8 60p Italoigh 11 4 J i 11 7 10 " Salisbury. . . 91il 8l7 S60p " Asheville 2 2iuu 12 12. 8 ltp Lv Asheville... 2 8Up 2 SJp 2 17a ..... Ar. Hot Springs 8 62p 3 52p 1 2'Ja " KHOxvllle... 1 40p 7 40p 4 06 (JhHttauoogall 85 p 11 85p 7 40a Nashville.... C 43a 6 45a 1 60p Central Time. " Charlotte... flll 15a 925a 10 00p 9 45p "Columbia... ..... 12 60p 187a Blanding St. Station. Aiken. 3 5op Augusta.... " Savannah... " Jacksonville "Tampa. . StAug'etine , Central Time. , 4 15p 4 35p C 30 p 8 10a 8 00a . . . 6 00a . . . 9 10a ... 700p 4... 10 80a' .., Lv Atlanta. .... I Central Time. ,v Birmingham iCentral Time. Lv Memphis. . . Central Time. Ar New-Orleans Central Time. 9 80p 3 55p 6 10a .... 10 lOp 11 45a .... 7 25a 9 40p .... 7 40a 8 10p THROUGH SCHEDULES (Northbound.) No 12 Nos 86 No 88 No 10 Daily. 416 Dally. Dally. Daily. Lv New Orleans 7 55a 7 60p (Central Time. Lv Memphis 6 25a i 9 OOp ... . . I Central lime. .v Birmingham .... 4 20p 5 C5a .. .. (Central Time. Lv Atlanta 7 60a 11 COp 12 OOn Central Time. Lv Tarn pa 7 00a " SLAugUfltine 6 25p "Jacksonville 7 OOp ' Savannah. . .... 11 3jp " Augusta - 9 30p " Ai .h .... .... 7 80p 7 0o H 15a 12 00a '2 lOp "t2i:op" 520p 8 80p Columbia. .. 5 34 IBIandiDg ht. StaJ Lv Charlotte 0 10 p 9 80a 5 40a Central Time. Lv Nashville... 11 20p 12 26p Jl 20p ' Chattanooga 4 lia 6 20p 4 15a " Knox vllie...8 25a 9 65p ii 25a "Hot Springs. 11 46a 12 23a 1146a Ar Asheville . .. 1 15p 1 3!a 1 15p Lv Asheville .. 1 25p 141a 1 25p " Salisbury. .. 8 15 j 10 47a 9 86p 1 10a. Central Time. J Zt Raleigu 8 40 p 8 63a 8 40 p Winston S'm 5 20 p 10 30a 6 20p ..... ' " Greensboro. 9 62p 12 lOp 10 4lp 8 60a Ar Danville.... 11 25p 1 60p 12 10a ..... Lv Lynchburg 3 40p l 5a ..... ' Charl'tesv'io 6 85p 3 3a "Alexandria,. .... 9 0Up 8 17a Ar VVa8hingt.n .... 9 25 p 6 42 gMeal station. SLEEFI50 CAR KEB ICE. Km. S7 and , Washington and lou'hwttlcrr Limited. Solid VttnttMl train Iiwd X or and Atlaot. Comp'.aed of I'ullmao Drawing Hoofu &M-t.llij( Car (njluuumn y oilman rate fl( tut. Ira far). lrmt ciaaa VeatlbuW lty Oach Lrtwrcu ahlntn and Atlanta. Ibrouh rHH-vaw ar. ttru Nw Ynrm and w Orieatna, -w York an.l Meoipbla. tivw Tork, Aabevlil, 11. t l-prtua a. Knox vlit'. Ctiaxtaanotfa nnd aTl!l anl ew V -rK ai4 lamia, fcoutoera Kali way liolng Car between Cracaaboru nnl MutiUcutorry. and . I nitad iu- Faat Mall. Falitaan hleeplns Car tetweea Saw York. WaanHurtoa. At Uata, koa ucoif ttry arrl w Orkan. rw fork anl Jackaoavlile, Mid CharuHM and Auinurta. Cooawx. tlon at SaiUlwy with xfwik and CaatLaa Limited for tb Lan 1 of tha Kkr. Ctaunnoaja. NaabUJand inaTeaoeaaM CnU-ao!al Kipualttoa. TMOrlat KJerpUm Cra Waahlmrvm to ban fraorlatxv ' ew -Jr.eaxia and bosnaern Farllc Kattway. wltbool enanjr nee a . a, La-nvtaa vt aaninytu fcatordaa. arrtln Paa rradu 7 tiurmiar. horn. IS and is. Norfolk and Cnattannoem Limit. Between Snrfulk and l'hatutvfa. throufb Mima, Ha Grvroaboro, haJiafcurr, AatL.. H an.l k'nuXTliln. fa II man Irrawlas; Room "-klH an betwaen Kortoik and aabUi. 1 Kronen Ucketa on aala at principal cntiooa to an fM.ttii. fwr rata cr tnionuaka aptly U any nfebt of tba Company. . Ii. our, baneral Saperlsarndent. W. A. 1uK. General Faaaeacer A?at. T. M. Cri r. Trafflo Hanarer. uw PaTla., Vua lnSioa.D.C . LTfaUoa Ck. 'waj John .W. Gates, president of the" Chi cago Iron and SteeJ Company, recently dropped fcls pocket-book, containing nine hundred dollars. In the dining room of the Hotel Waldorf, in New York. Two Trailers found it and se creted tbe xnccey. aEd when arraigned in the police court, pealed guilty and delivered tip their spoil. Bat when Mr. Gates wanted his coney back, the magistrate refused to return It. "It Is not so long ago," te caid, that one of the old Justice was sued for five thou sand dollars for making such an order; and I am not going to lay myself liable to a suit for this money any time dur ing five year. The money must tield until tb case 9 tried." j