in i! i II i hi iti iii iii 1 1 1 ni in VOL. VII. . ; - . . ; LEXINGTON AND THOMASVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1897. NO. 11. I WORK OF H. Review of the Legislation of the " Session Just Closed. POi!R APPROPRIATION BILLS. ew Provisions Added of Interest and Imijortance Cost of Armor Plate 1 hf Arbitration Treaty Defeated. Tho extraordinary cession of Con pres j t i t closed was called by Presi dent McKinley two days after he took theo'a of office on the steps of the (iij itoL It met in pursuance to his ; roelaiaation at noon March 15. The : ; ( ciai nYessage transmitted by him to h 1 1 Houses on the opening day was I rit f !t explained the deficiencies in rrwinioa, reviewed the bond issues i f ; , !!i-t administration and urged iCf fi promptly to correct the exist iv ... '..ilition by parsing a tariff bill t ,7.! s a ! I supply ample revenues for t:..; Mi p yi t of the government and the ii-pii lati' n -of the public debt. No other s;: ci f legislation was mentioned iu t ie message . and the tariff bill was tL?-' -;i!i:-orbing feature of the session, i ho Republican members of the ways 'ant i:i!Hiis committee of the preceding Jlcii ha l been at work throughout . thv r;"rt sesniou, which ended March 4. t,':iijg bearings and preparing tthe n, '.yli it'll was" to be submitted at the cx1ri session. Three days after the e-..-.i-im opened the tariff bill was re Hjituil to the House by the ways and mft;i!iH committee, and thirteen dayn Inter, oii .March 31, it passed the House. r 1 1 . it to the Senate, was referred to the e..::!!nitlee on finance, and the Re- 'u! lirti.-T 'member's of that- committee . sj cut ii'iiionth. and three days in its consideration and in preparing its ii!LiL!id:.;eutt-, which, were submitted to the Senary on May 4. Its considera tion Viis-bcgfarTin.the Senate on May 7, ;:!! i exactly two months later, July i! pas el the Senate with 872 amend ment:!. ' ' ' ' ' li e bill then went to conference, !:'! e, after a, ten days' struggle, on July IT a complete agreement was reached I. fviiK'h the Senate preceedeel from lhjiiatsniluient and rthe House from u I. i ho otliers (243 in number) were "oinproinised. The conference reiort ih n lupted-by the House July 10 at the conclusion of twelve hoilrs of con-tiunaiL- debate-7. The report was taken up to .'ho Senate July 20 and adopted ou u-.lay, the 24th. . Cuii:t!s3 did not devote its attention entirely tu the, tarift though it did sub o?.li:t:i. everything else to this one h.eii i i . 'i he four appropriation bills whu-u : .t ile-i on' March 4th last in them sehi s would have compelled President l . 4 ...A. -lt fi L - niiviif) io can congress iu eiua ses sion, een if the necessity of a revision of the tariff had not existed. Those ap 1'1,mii la'riiin bills were the sundry civil', the agricultural, the Indian and the - eiiei a! deficiency. These bills were liitiiAluee l and passed by the House in ,il.e identical form in which they exist ed at the time of their failure of enact ment into law at tho preceding Centres;-;, but they were amended in some inirui t,i:it particulars by the Senate, fiui when they finally became laws eon tuine t mure or less new legislation of iiitere.-i umt importance. - 1 he i: iieral deficiency carried a pro vii'i!! aecejiting the invitation- to take i!t ti;i the I'aris exposition in 11)00, and K'l i"'i i -iat.il ..'), 000 to defray prehmi-u;i'- v expenses and appropriated v?i ri0, '' '';!( r a new immigrant station at New leikto leplueo the one destroyed by !:ie. ', i,iv the inost important piece ofiiew h4;iIation in the bill, however, as that limiting the cost of armor ! late h r the three new battleships to p. r ton. In case the Secretary t Uie avy should find it impossible to i-iiike contracts for armor within 'J'ts pru e tixed, he was authorized by nus pr ision to take steps to establish I . -.--( i :i neni armor iaciory oi sum ' :' : t e.ji; ueity to make the armor. In r -nt h this authority he must pre l;i ' a ih -ei iption and plans and speci i:c.i!i..us yi the land, buildings and ma-' c:n:u-. suitable for the factory adver ,tse lor proposals and report to Con Pess at. its next session. bi the huliau bill, after a ! severe stfru-ule m both Hotfses, the question -m etanan schools was settled by the I' i.vs i;.- declaration of the policy of t-ie t i ument: 1 'J hat the Secretary of tho Interior m.pv ,1I1!,kf contracits with contract h.u,n, apportioning as near as may bo "J'C'i!ii so contracted .lor among S'.'L m:,.s of various denominations, for ' c e ;i, ;!th)U Df Jxullan puiils during J--c ycu! year 181-8, but shall only make -en , tracts at places where noi.- ' , , -'ools cannot be provided tor 'ica ii! "nan children and to an amount e ,, ,Kig 4(j per centum of the v-i'u; 'x used . for the fiscal year 4 ae t .; :;e- t ion of niipnin rr in pntrr thrt ric " i ' r J ite deposit in the Uiicora ie:ervAtioh in Utah was. also ;ed by opening such agricul as ime not been allotted to ti;f S ' ahgro Indians on April 1, try, but reserving to the j.;';' ''' ' .'" ;i cs tit'e in all lauds eontain- fe ' aspuan or ottier tiKesuD- , ! '; : udry civil bill the most im--,' ; ' tw provision- was that sus i ;' ' y:: -- ; e oi -dr of President Clave - a-i.le about 21,000,010 as rvations; The law. also in ' '"ieral scheme of legislation !j t ament and -protection of r ' ' ; ! f vvations of the country. 1 . :.'"'-blie:m leaders of the House P " ' t e oj euiug of the session to i, " iu y of . inaction in order to ip ; ' i t ponsibUity for delaying ( bin upin the Senate, and .. "';'.'"' ' - tue committees were not an ,' ' '' the close of the session, Y Li.' ;ient matters were consid . ! ' thousand dollars were a.p- 1' 'r .tue'-relief of American t.. - 1 uba at the solicitation of !.' ": ';!lt- .2!)0,000 was appropri .1 ', ' ! ' e relief -of the Mississippi a, ' ''. ,!'-!'ers; a resolution was passed t , ! i !-,g the Secretary of the Navy , :t supplies contributed for p ; 1 the ioor and famishing in f. ".".''' M ' -(, yoO' were .appropriated y ;'1 rtainuient and expeutes of tcs to the universal postal con vention, who met in this .city. T he only extensive pieces" of "general legislation enacted by this Congress, except the tariff bill, were the laws to prevent collisions at sea.and to place in foTce regulations to prevent collisions upon certain harbors, rivers and inland waters of the United States, and th bill authorizing the President to sus pend discriminating duties on foreign vessels and commerce. The Senate, notbein confined as to the scope of its legislation, dealt with a luainber of important subjects both in and out of executive session. One of these, which attracted world-tvide at tention, was the !; general arbitra tion treaty negotiated by President Cleveland with (Jreat Britain. After exhaustive consideration, despite the great irressure brought tq bear upon the Senate by religious and commercial bodies throughout! the country, the Senate rejected the; treaty. The Ha waiian treaty of annexation negotiated by President McKinley, vas still un acted upon when Congress adjourned. In open session, after much debate, the Senate passed the Cuban belliger ency resolution a bankruptcy , bill, in cluding both voluntary and involunta ry features, and the; ''free homes" bill. Jint noue of these important questions leceived consideration in the House. BUYING COTTOnI IN NEW YORK. Cotton Sent From! the South Being Shipped Bnelc to Southern Mills. Mr. A. P. Ilhyne, the .Mt Holly (N. C.) cotton manufacturer, was in Char lotte last week and in an interview with a News reporter said his mill work ing cotton that was shipped from Geor gia to New York, and in now shipped from New York back to North Carolina. A great rmtny of 48 North Carolina mills are now buying their cotton in the New York market, and the Goldsboro (N. C. ) mill last wCek had shipped to them from New York cotton that was last fall sold on the Joldsboro market; it still had the Goldsboro tag on it after traveling to New Y'ork and back. it costs now only ten centstoship from Galveston to New York and ten cents from New York1 to Norfolk. The rate war between the- ocean steamship lineH has so demoralized rates that one can ship from Galveston to New York via Norfolk to Charlotte for less than half the cost of shipping from Galves ton to Charlotte direct. THIS VIKGIXIA POPULISTS. One Nomination Made Five 'Men to Iix Up the Balance of the Ticket. At the Populist State convention as sembled at' Roanake, Ya., Major Gaines withdrew from. the race for the nomination of Lieutenant Governor, and Capt. Edmund Iii Cocke was nom inated by acclamation. Capt. Cocke accepted the honor and thanked the convention, for conferring it upon him. It was decided to make no further nominations for the other two places on the State ticket, but to ex pedite matters a committee, consisting cf General James G.l Shield, of Fau quier, chairman;. J. Haskin Hobson, Lr. T. W. Evans, of Campbell; Sena tor W. H. Hale, of Franklin, and W. II. Graverly, of Henry, was appointed with full power to add or to take from as deemed best. In short their duties are to look after the interests of the party, in case the Democratic conven tion decides to endorse their candidate. There was a hot speech by General Field. The convention adjourned sine die. 1 , - AMERICANS IN CUBAN PRISONS. i . . -a Consul General Lee Gives State De partment Their Names. Consul General Lee has informed the Stafe Department at Washington that in the event .of the release of the Amer ican, Louis Snielian, now confined in jail at Havana, there will remain of American citizens imprisoned in Cuba in addition to the five Competitor pris- nnorq rvn 1 xr tVio f nl Inwinfl1 ! : Manuel Feenandez, confined in Fort Cabanas fPafael Fernandez Y Diaz, at Sagua La Giande; Julio Thomas Sainz and Frauk Agramont, at Santiago. All of1 these prisoners are charged with rebellion with arms in hand and are held subject to the ordinary milita ry jurisdiction. Thej United States consul at Manzauiilo has cabled the secretary of State a contradiction of the story that Albert Slusser, an American, has been captured by (Spanish troopa and taken to that place. : INTERN At. JliEVENUE RECEIPTS. Report of the Commissioner Shows a Decrease From the Previous Year. The preliminary report of the Com missioner of Internal Revenue for the year ended June 30; 1837, shows that the total receipts during the period were $14G,GU),5, a decrease as com pared with the jprevious year of $211, 10i) The receipts for the several sources of revejiue, with the increase or decrease, as compared with the fiscal year IS-Jii, are stated as fol lows: Spirits S82,00S,55S, an in crease of s1.:k;S, 4S7; tobacco $3,710,207; a decrease of $l,S3t; fermented liquors 892,472, 1(52, a decrease of 1,312,073; oleomargarine 1,034,129, a decrease of s:s-,::o: tilled cheese $18,093 ".(law not in force in ltfh;-); miscellaneous $337, 2S.?, a !cerease of $t9,S3J. Banks and bankers $8-j, a decrease of $49. The amount of -withdrawals j for consump tion during the last year is , given as follows: Fruit brandy l,14v, 131 gallons, a decrease of 2;!4,07y; whiskey JJ8,S33rr 24") gallons, an increase of 1,793,331; beer, porter and ail 24,-23,U94 barrels.a decrease of l,4o:;,(04. j i .Number of cigars and cheroots weighing over 3 pounds per 1,000, 4,(SJ,U9,0V7? number ;of cigarettes, 4,153,222, : 47 v an increase of 109, 453,723, tobacco, chewing and smoking, 2G0, 784.812 pounds, an increase of 7,087, 5t7; oleomargarine, 42, 534, 550 pounds, a decrease of 5,089,214. The States froni which the larger col lections were made during the year are given as follows: Illinois $32, 115.922; 154,7tfo. iew iorK, is, ttw; iveniucity, cio, i57,957; Ohio, $12,748,8f;8; Pennsylva nia, $11,44(5,3 17; Indiaoa, $8,5(54,303; Missouri, $7,3(54, G62: Maryland, $5,- Bill Wl WIEKLY lEIIlt BUELESQUE OX A POEM BRINGS OX A DISCUSSIOXj MRS. ARP EXPRESSES HERSELF. William Realizes That He I OrJr Plain, Unrefined Specimen mt liio Genus Homo.' 1 The last letter I had about the poem was anonymous. Of course I it was, for it read. j j "Man wants but little here below. So Young and Goldsmith say; But woman wants it all, you know And wants it right away.' j Mrs. Arp was sewing on some infan tile garment as I quietly laid the mis sive on her lap. I She neither smiled nor frowned nor stopped the play of her needle as she remarked "Maybe they do, but they don't -get it nor ex pect." .- .) j , - "I reckon," said I, "that some stingy old benedict wrote that; some fellow who would. spend more money on his horse than. on his wife." "No," said Mrs. Arp, ''it was some old bachelor whose rejected addresses have made him cynical and like Byron he vents his . revenge in doggerel. When you go down town ! wish tou would see Mr. Hicks about that dining room chair. Maybe he can put a new cane bottom to it. We need it some times when we have company, and that old sideboard ought to be revar nished and have hew knobs. (Do you know how old that sideboard is?" "Yes," said I, 'Jim Sumter made it in 1852. He was one of the best men and best . workmen I ever knew. I paid him $50 for the sideboard. He was a well-read, well-bred man, a good neighbor and a good citizen, and I have respect for the sideboaril. j It is like an epitaph on his tombstone and seems to read, 'Sacred to the memory of ' Yes, I will see Mr. Hicks about the sideboard. Is there anything else in his line that you want?"; j "No," said shej "but you know we are obliged to have another extension table. We gave burs to Jesse when she was married, and have been using one that was left here three years ago, and now the owner has settled down and wants itj Yo had better attend to this right away." "Eight away, right away," I mused. "But woman wants it all you know, i And wants it. right away." t I 1 ! - - I i ' ' Mrs. ' Arp looked ot me and re marked, "I want these things for you and the children. It's precious little that I want for myself now. " j ' ; I don't think she admires the song or the sentiment, i j "I know it, I know it, my dear," said I. ! "There was a time when you wanted a good deal for yourself j and it pleased me to gratify your every wish and more than you asked for. Nothing was too good for you when I had the money. Silks and sables, lawns and muslins, a carriage and horses, Wilton carpets and damask curtains, and so forth, and so on, et cetera, e pluribus unum. But anno domini kept rolling on and the war cam 9 and I discovered that you were gradually losing your concern for yourself, and all your care was for your children. I was rumi nating about - this while you were stitching away so earnestly upon that little garment, for now your love and care have lapped over to another generation. The little grandchildren have come in fori a share of your maternal! love, and your j personal wants have come down to a minimum. Of course you -must be clothed as becomes the maternal head of nu merous and lovely offspring, for if you are not a queen you have reigned in pur home nearly as long as Queen Victoria has in England and" i "Well, that will do now," Jsaid my wife. "You had better go to town. Aunt Ann says the rice is out and the cowf eed too. " j i I s "I was ruminating," said I, "how fortunate it was that your ! ambition surrendered about the time my money did. You ceased to crave as fine things as I used to get you. You j adapted your wants' to our misfortunes. Why, forty years ago I would not have let you go about in that grizzly gray, mus lin. I had a contempt for cheap things, especially for you; didn't I, my dear?" "You certainly did," she sai l with a kind of sad, i reminiscent Jsmile in her tone of vdice, "but this muslin U good enough now. But you had bet ter go to town. There are four little grandchildren hereto dinner, and Aunt Ann wants the rice right away.' j "And wants it right away,' I hum med to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne." Somehow I can't get that refrain out of my mind "And wants it right away." ' ! - ' . Sometimes I think that men don't understand nor appreciate woman' nature. She was created with a love for the beautiful, for ornament,! for gems, jewels and gold and silverware and damask anl fine linen. ! She can't help her nature,' and this very oat are proves that she is nearer heaven than we are. What do I care for diamonds? Not a cent. I wouldn't 'give a dollar for a bushel of them.! An old-fashioned tin waiter with flowers painted on it is as good as a silver one to me. I wouldn t wash tne wiuaow class more ihan ov.ee a rear, and a wash-pan Miits me as well as a china basin. But I recoguize the fact that I am a" man with an unrefined nature. The twelve gates of the new'Jerusalem that are made of precious stones are no attraction to me; neithe- are the gold -paved streets thai St. John saw in his vision. But still I have hope of getting there and becoming more refined, for I do love flowers and pretty birds! and orauge trees and luscious fruits and beautiful sce nery and mountain s and the great waters '. of the mighty sea. My wife and my daughte-s can spend half a day in looking a the beautiful things in the show win lows in Alban ia, but I never stop to gaze or to ad mire, cicept, perhaps, to look at the photographer's display or the life-like models of lovely women that seem smiling at my three-score and ten. Beading and observation teach me that all good men have reverence for womankind and are conscious of her better nature, her better morals and emotions. Shakespeare and Scott write of women as ministering angels. Wads worth says of her creation: "A perfect woman nol !v Planned, j To warn, to comfort ai: command." No great poet save such a rake as Byron would have w tien: "As well believe a vror aa. or an epitaph, Or any other thing that's false." , ; Even Solomon in all his glory with his wives and concubines said: "Young man, rejoice with tho wife of thy youth, and be thou always ravished with her love." j Edward W. Bok says in The Ladies' Home Journal, "No economy is so false and misguided' as that which seeks to withhold one pleasnre from the life of a good woman, a true wife or a loving mother. The best home a man can give her becomes tiresome if she is asked to live in it and stay in it 3G5 days in a year. The Lord knot s that woman's life is hard enough. She travels a path of endurance and suf fering to which the average man is an entire stranger. Then let us make that path as pleasant, as easy and as bright as possible. Every dollar that a man spends on his home for tho happiness and comfort of his wife will come back to him four-fold." That is true -all true. Better mend the broken pane or that sash cord or that gate latch and sometimes take an hour off from business and take her to ride. The Odd Fellows and Masons and Knights of Pythias are good insti tutions, but should not come in between a man and his wife. The mother wants help with the children, for I tell you, my brethren, there is no care nor anxiety like nursing and caring for a little- child, and nobody but a mother will do it willingly. A mother. who has reared eight or ten children from infancy to maturity, and four years of the time during a pitiless war, when she had to flee from the foul invader with her little ones and hide them, half clad and ; always hungry, can say with Paul, "I have fought a good fight; I have finished my course." Yes, PauUsaid that, but he was an old bachelor, and knew nothing of what a mother suffers. The most pathetic line in all poetry is that of Fitz-Greene Halleck, where he apostrophizes death: "Come to the mother when she feels For the first time her first-born's breath." The death of a young mother in child birth is the saddest "of all nature's calamities. ! Maternal love maternal interest! What is it that so inspires a woman to bear her fate to suffer and be strong? Bill Akp in Atlanta Constitution. I TRADE AS VIEWED BY JOBBERS. 27 States Indicate an Increase In the Volume of Business. The Wholesale Grocer, of Chicago, 111., published answers from jobbers all over the country, to questions re garding trade. The replies were from jobbers in twenty-sevea States and fifty per cent, show an increase in the volume of businesp for the first half of 1897, as compared with the same period last year ; 30 per cent, report the vol iim'e'about the same, and 20" per cent, note a decrease. The question of definite improvement in conditions was answered affirmatively by 10 per cent, fiectionally, G4 per cent, of the jobbers in the Southern Ststes, 65 in the East ern, 70 from the Western.,' and 95 per cent, from the Central States, said "yes"to the question. A PREACHER'S PROPHECY. West Virginia Minister Says .God Sent Prosperity Is Coming, Rev. Chas. Ghiselin, a Presbyterian minister at Shepardstown, W. Va. , has published an open letter to the farmers of this country prophesying that wheat is soon to go to $1 a bushel, and urges them to form a combination among themselves, helping to tide eaoh other over until this propesy is realized. He says prosperity has come as a gift from God, and not from any political party or measure. He bases his prediction on the 75, 000,000 bushels supply and the appar ent Eastern demand. He figures a profit to the United States of $200,000, 000 on the crop. THE COMING ISSUE. Senator Butler Says it Is Government Ownership of Monopolies. A special to the Wilmington, X. C, Messenger from Raleigh: Populist National Chairman Marion Butler says in a signed editorial: "Public owner ship of national monopolies is the com ing issue. Conditions are daily creat ing stronger public sentiment in every quarter of the countrv for this solution of the -gravest problem before the American people. The greatest issue of modern times is now squarely drawn. This and the money question will be the two overshadowing issues in the campaign of 1600. "Mrs. Saver must fel that she was very extravagant In buying that new gown." "What makes you think so?" he's begun to argue that It will be tht cheapest In the end." Chicago -lournlL fTraham and rye- brad and fresh fruit in plenty, pariicukny oranges, be fore breakfast, are of great benefit to persons of eontlDatpd hahits- R.R COMMISSION CIRCULARS A Magistrate Convicted of Com pounding a Felony. OLD NORTH STATE CULLINGS. Blg Revenues Soldier Pays an Old War Debt Making Money Out of Poultry. The railroad commission on the 27th issued the following circular: From and after the 1st day of Sep tember, 1897, the Western Union' Tele graph Company shall not charge of collect more than" l."i cents for ti an s- j mitting- any message of ten words or under, exclusive of date, . address and signature, beween any two points with in the limits of this State on its lines, nor more than one cent for each addi tional word. Whenever a message is sent over two or more telegraph lines owned, con trolled and operated by separate and distinct corporations or individuals, the joint rate shall not exceed 30 cents for each message of ten body words or less, exclusive of date, address and signa ture, between any two points within the limits of this State and one cent i or each additiional word. Effective Sep tember 1st. Telegraph companies other than the Western Union Telegraph Compauy shall be allowed to charge and collect 20 cents tor a message of ten body words or under, exclusive of date, ad dress and signature, between any two points within the limits of this State, on their respective lines and not more than one cent for each additional word. Effective September 1, 1S97. The foflowing figures give some idea of the great volume of business done m the Asheville office of the internal revenue. The statement covers from July 1, 189(5, to June 30, '97: Lists 29,853 4 Spirits 581,25144 Cigars and cigarettes. ... . 4,848 30 Snuff 601 80 Tobacco 1,055,872 39 Special tax " 15,059 01 Total The amounts by July, 189G August, 1896 September, 1896 .. .... $1,6S7,592 48 months follows: ...$......8121,172 28 126,400 33 ...1 152,414 83 October, 1836 November, 1896.. December, 18')6.. January, 14 J.... February, 1897... March, 1897...... i .... 147,283 83 135,668 01 161,211 2.j .... 106,003 07 148,465 2!i 144,949 17 v-. 120.831 9: .... 131.657 05 .... 13,424 52 April, 1897. May, 1897 June, 1897.. Total $1,687,592 4S The collections at the various offices for the year were-: Winston. . . .. . i. . . . . .$130, 114 60 Statesville U. 469,330 91 Asheville . 216,070 61 Mt. Airv 122,066 36 F. E. Hege, chief of the poultry de partment of th State Experiment Sta tion, is arousing much interest in "fowl culture," in the State. He says the chickens and eggs produced are now worth more in cash than any agricul tural product. The raising of chickens for the Northern markets is a profitable and growing industry. In one day re cently 40,000 chickens were shipped from two points to the Northern mark ets. Several county; poultry associ ations have lately been formeff and the Buncombe Association has just been incorporated. Poultry fairs are to bo held at Shelby, Asheville aud Char lotte. ' In the Superior Court at Concord, I). M. Widenhouse and M.. M. Furr, both of No. 9 township, r Cabarrus county, have been convicted of compounding a felony. Mr. Furr is oneof the Populist magistrates. He ihas been deposed from office of justice of the peace and is to be deprived of any "office of honor or public trust in the State of North Caro lirxt and to pay a fine of 50 and the costs. Mr. Widenhouse was fined $20 and the costs. Both have been given notice of appeal. Never in the history of Cabarrus ha.s such charges been brought against her officers. Charlotte Observer. - During the war Jesse Snatherly, a Confederate soldier from Montgomery conutjv saved the life of a New York soldier who was wounded. The woods had caught fire and the Federal sol dier called for help. Snatherly took him to a safe distance and provided him with water. He has sent Snatheriy 8800. - The railway commission increases the valuation of all the divisions of the Atlantic Coast Line, the Southern and tLe Seaboard Air Line; it decreases the valuation of the Atlantic and Danville; the others remain the Fame; the in crease on lailways, steamboat and tel egraph lines is about $3,OW.000. While Deputy Revenue Collector Hill and a posse were making a raid on moonshiners in Lenoir county they were fired on by ambushed moonshin ers. F. T. . Harper was hit by four buckshot and seriously injured. Arrests will follow. The moonshiners are known. The still was destroyed. It is f-aid that under the new law no pictures or coupons can be put in cigarette boxes or in j smoking tobacco packages and the statement is made that thi will throw a lot of people out emlovment. The truck crop in the eastern part cj the State has proven very remunerative this seasou, and the GoMsboro-Ariras savs that a'oag the line of railroad be tween that place and Wilmington large quantities of strawberry plants are be ing planted. The "gold fever" has spread from StaaU-v countv into Rowan. Some good finds are being made. Representative Linnev'ha intro-lno- ed a bill to reduce the tax on distilleJ spirits to 70 cents per tal Ion- JEWS IN PALESTINE. Scheme for an Independent State ia Favored By Hebrews. A cablegram from London says 1 he representatives of the Baron Hirsch charities seem to take very seriously the scheme of Dr. Theodore Hertzl, of Vienna, for the formation of an inde pendent Jewish State in Falet:ne. It is said that the Hebrews are organizing in all parts of the world. ' The Doctor intends first to send an exploring- expedition to thoroughly) overhaul the land from end to end. -and to establish telephones, telegraph ami other modern l scientific conveniences before opening the territorj' to general settlement. To obtain sovereignty over Palestine, he fays, will be easy, as tho Turks will be glad to let it go. He joints to his decoration to the' Turkish government as evidence Jhat he thinks favorably of his scheciA. It Turkey should refuse to give Palestine up, he says the Otto man empire will disintegrate, and then a Jewish company can.' obtain Pales tine when the powers divide up Turki?k territory. . If it proves impossible to' get Pales tine he will turn to Argentina. To confer on this point a congress will be held at Bastle on tho 2Mb.. The Doctor says there is no doubt that this congress will be the redeemer of the Hebrews. There is no intention to follow socialistic lines. He proposes a limited monarchy like that of Great Britain. The capital of the Jewish company is to be 8250,000,000. NO SEIZURES TO BIO MADE The Order About Coupons or Articles Attached to Smoking Tobacco, Cigarettes, Ktc, -Modified. A modification of the receut circular of instructions to collectors of internal revenue has been made. Theso in structions declare that all packages of smoking tobacco, fine cut, chewing to bacco, or cirarette8, containing articles prohibited by section 1') of the new turilfact, or having stich article at tached or connected therewith, or ad vertising any promise or oner or gift, reward or prize, contrary to the pro visions of the new act, are subject to seizure. r The new order directs that all viola tions of this section of tho act be re ported to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, but no Feizurfe" shall be made without specific instructions from him. Some Question has arisen as to the pow er of the department, in the premises. The contention is made that Congress has no power to fix by law regulations governing the packing of articles sub ject to internal revenue, unless in 8oiue way the power gr convenience of the government in the collection is allected; also that this provision is in restraint of trade, and interfered with legitimate business. Until the department has determined the question no seizures will be made under this provision of the law. RACE WAR. IN. T E X A S. Two Negroes Killed and a Number of Others .Shot at u Stone Quary. A squad of negroes who had been working on' the Kansas City, Houston and Galveston railroad, near West Lake, La., were recently transferred to the stone quary near Thornbeek, Texas. Whites of the neighborhood objected to the negroes beiug employed in the quarry and a pitched battleroe curred between the whites and negroes. Two" of the negroes were mortally wounded, and several others were less seriously shot. Knives, guns and pis tols were used in the melee. I ROUSEK-MAKERS 'STRIKE. Three Thousand Walk Out In Sew York. In New York three thousand trouser makers have struck to enforce the in crease of piece-work prices, m as to en able them to earn about $10 weekly each. The week's work is fifty-nine hours. Nearly all the stukers are mem bers of Pants-Makers' Union No! 1. Since last fall the prices for making trousers have been reduced so that the operators who work steadily every day make only about 86 a wex-k. They claim that they cannot sup tort them selves and families on this pittance. BAD CROI XKH'S.'. The Kansas Corn Crop KIate by Hot Winds Not Over Half ;i Crop. A special to theTojeka (Kans. ) Capi tol from every corn producing county in the State show that this year's Kan sas crop of corn will not be over 5o per cent, of last year's. Hot winds have withered the product in the southern half of the State, and few fields will average over fifteen bushels to the acre. In the sonthern portion, except iu the far east, there will be no corn. In the northern belt, north of the Kansas river, though needing rain, corn, has not shown the least sigu of dronght, and will make a full crop if relief cornea within a week. No hot winds have blown there, - ' FOUGHT IN A CIICRCH. The Pator Said It Was a Church and Community of Liar. There was almost a riot in the Mem orial Methodist Protestant Church at Camden, N. J., caused by Pastor I'et titt declaring that, "there are liars in this church, and the whole communitv is a setof liars." to which Trustee Mor gan took exception, rising to protest Another trustee started to put Morgan out, and Morgan showed light, the prompt interference of others prevented a serious not. ti Collapse of Boom Properly. A Fitecial'telegraiu from Florence, Ala. , to the St. Louis Pos.t-Dispatch, njs : All the proiterty of the Floi-ecre Land, Mining and-' Manufacturing Comi-any. and the Florence Kdacation- r.l and Development Company, has! been cold at auction to X. t. Ltlin- agent for creditors, for 8tO,ow. The property was once thought to be w orth .um.tfio, and was bonght up by the land company prior to the lJoxu " 13. - ' NEWS ITEMS Southern Penril Painters. In court at Winchester, Va , t o law yers had a dispute, and one struck the other with an mkeUnd iullicting a dan gerous wound. Albert II. Heitz, a well-known phos phate miner at Charleston, ace deutally shot and killed himself. The national association of Dental Examiners and representatives of the chief dental colleges met at Old Point, Va. Before the Tennessee liar Associa tion Justice Walter Clark, of North Carolina, delivered en address; head-' vocated many changes in the federal constitution," which he says is now un democratic. A cotton mill at Natchez, Miss., sus pends w ork for want of raw cotton. s At Starke, Fla., Henry Crosby killed himself with ioisou; his wife also took loisou, but her life was saved. 'In Charlotte, N. C. during the pant year 240 new buildings have been erected, and there are now being built 112. Besides this, two cotton factories, the Louise mill and the webbing factory of Mr. A. C. Smumerville have been built, the tine new courthouse ha been completed, and a large number of business buildings have been remodeled until they are practically new build ings? Tho News. (Joyernor Atkinson, of Oeorgia, has refused fo interfere iu theease of John Tyler Cooier, former Mayor of Atlanta, and later clerk of the county commis sioners, convicted of embezzling; funds of the county, aud Coojter w ill have to serve three month's imprisonment, to which he was sentenced by tho court. A syndicate is about to close the pur chase of most cf the coal mines of Fast Tennessee; the price is about 85,ooo, 000, and if, successful over 3,000 miners will be given employment. There isj a rumor in Laurens, S. C, that Ex-Hejnator Irby is to draw out of the Congressional race and help Ex Governor Evans. The Virginia, Populists may tender the nomination of Governor to Tyler. Prof. 1. H. Patterson, an educated aud influential negro, was murdered iu a church iu Montgomery, Ala. The IJanister Baptist Association (colored) in session at Houston, Va , adopts resolutions denouncing criminal assaults on white women, and the class of negroes who commit them. The attendance at the Tennesee Cen tennial Exposition last week numbered 45,398. Governor's Guards, of Austin, won the interstate drill at Han Antonio, Tex. Neeley Zouaves won tho Zouave prize. Dr. Scott, brother-in-law of Governor Bradley, sujteriutendent of the Eastern Kentucky Lunatic Asylum, has been declared unfit for the place by tho grand jury, and his removal demanded. An insurance company has withdraw n its business from Greenville, X. C. , Pitt count-, because it did not deem it 6afe to continue its business iu a town controlled by negroes. General Lafayette McLaws, the old-, est surviving Confederate major gen eral, died .Sunday at Savannah, Ga , aged 76 j-ears. v . The stewards in the Methodist church at Albettsville, Ala., finding' their church revenue insufficient, have levied an annual tax of 810 on each tobacco chewing member of the congregation. The plan is raid to work admirably and to bring in a goodly revenue. It is reported that Florida will get some relief from the hated water hy acinth. A red spider is said to be rap idly destroying the plants. The erection of a twenty-ton cotton seed oil mill w ill be commenced at La vonia, (iu., at once. - Savannah's first new bale of cotton was sold at 10 cents, and classed at ful ly middling, Florian Biudewald, of the Augusta (Ga. ) Brewing Company, w as drowned while iu bathing. Charles Walsh was shot and killed by a j.olieemau in Atlanta, Ga., while resitting arrest. All About the North. Schlatter, the "divine healder" found dead in Arizona! has "reappeared" in Canton, O. In the 16 to 1 saloon at Texarkana. Ark.. J. W. Foster shot and in stantly "killed Kiley Balthrop, a mer chant. The Democrats of Maryland held held their State convention; Iianuouy prevaih-d and everything went as Gor man dictate! ; it declared for bimetal lism without specifying any ratio. At Vonkers, X. Y. , -fire destroys a factory in w hich were working Wj men and girls; there were no casnalities." William ll. Valentine, a well-knpwn Brooklyn newspaperman, who claimed to Ite the author of "Casey at the Uat," died at Oyster Bay, L. I., aged 3 year?, of abscess of the brain. The Brooklyn Jockey Club announces the Junior Champion Stake of 815,0"l for 2-year-olds, to be run iu ''j. A lodging honse that will cost 350.- 000, where working people can find comfortable homes at cheap rates will soon be completed in Xew Yok. M iceltaneou. y Floods in (iermany are doing gi eat 3ama.'. A cyclone at San Jose, 1 11., killed five people. - - , President McKinley is having a good time at Lake Cnplaia. United States is Vrotesticg against Canada's copyright policy.- A bride and groom comruitleoj aicid at Hous-ton, Tex., because the latter could not find work. Forty steamers have ben chartered in Atlantic i-orts to load grain for Eu rope. The i-artial eclipse of the sun, which was vii-ible in thfs part of the United States, on the -'-th, is the last solar eclipse that will'be visible in this part until May 27. 1X. " ' . i -)