I Ths Messenger prints . the . Piews a ! i :i-'it nftflrbythu peo- , ..." I I' 'fll. Yancey, Bun t K'itiicrforil, Burks B: ! , h..t .unties In Western v, (nr. .ir.a, aid is there- Cooci Advertising Medium. Kit-- f-;rniph''l on application. ' " l HK MKSSENOEB. t Marlon, N. O. "JEST MAKE YER -. Vr-- t i:n it tak' a lot to . niiy to hani'ii mm, som ,t i!i'-"iirit.'-rii"Mt ami S'"-! in lii- own (jmoiI li'ni-i. :,' - Will eOIIif i. l Ii li.-ic f;o- .. . r ea-e fuel sociaine-s t ! :! - v.i-il to call to tii t ii 1 v : r 1 f..r higher hoard . .1 it -tn-uk that's well to havi the streak, determination, ;. ill.. tli. I.est yi-r -:iu . tV.u'i ficiig of starvation, -tv r-.uir. s es gnil., why, make the (.'nil. I. ill shorter; ... ...th'-M keep y-r credit up, t.'i'-n w.-ar 'em, as vi-r orter. r folk" than us have don., sonc- elosf. c..)icr:nisin', v I it did not keep t!i...a flown who had n will fi-r rhln', an' tl'-n h-t s f-all to what Franklin at dinner. rto his ho.-t".--' greed -"Jest ma;:f-yr frii'l thinnor:" Will T. Halt', in Nashville American. -- -' iio 060 o oii 1 'laintiff and Kv HELEN PORUEST GRAVES. 0 5"v tU"v r:,i:,''T A X ' " u X v.oul.l Lav.- 1.' !ff mi nrclit'-ol- IV. I 'r it win ' not ;i tow cr, never ( li;t'I I --: i it tow (, ' ',. v " !l" nii!ia- .-''V.i I'illty never lni'l .'..'.-;.;' ;' Ii. i ii intend. -fii l'i r :i tou cr. -: : toi ie.l, ttru- . lil'.le, witii a M'llli "i the front, which, '.i- . ; : 1 1.-;! iiuilal ion of u :i llillf CffVeKeil ; a - ff u f Mi.Mii ne ami ' oi r. y. I " t " lia 1 al ways lieen a : .-f- that luw-iii it ca Me I t of ce lel.rity IllJ-lel- : . I.: : II. I III .'. I Mi- -i hi.loni Ives, ; i. in.- ftill. iii"I ni- '!.!' I!'.. -yt!iin. else t!n-y .i v . : I lulu in", l-ei'iui-M- a l.-l ohl ancestor of ' h; 'k.'iic to a .Ice.l Molu. ... i-a 1 of MohnC. llol,- it leii.-r of tlit! itlpha- 1 ii. iii.y liiii'crciicc! J'vo 1 nil pic! The iiiajcsly . in !.!' JVitiiw!" ' ' ; ; ' of tie- property lie- ' ii - i ii I '! linsoii, si i i ." -I Mi's. Mit- . ' i e!p ihnt." sai.J MiH Isi !!' I am and here I mean Moh v opened hei- wenl; eyes. :. U:ii.. !i,-,s,.!f, ,,. colli, 1 i r. t : - i . ! siieh valiant ros- . .mother. ' :i tin -y come here w itli 1 ,ic I :t I1"1- . coniit.d fi, anil .1 1 .il ..!- corpnsV" she ialtercil. !." stii'l Mi-'s Isi.loiii, "thiy'll f-iear out ii'.'ain. Coiinuoii i ciniiiion sense. Tin1 house . iitel I ineall to kei p it. I've i."!t - iiml bars t.. ail the doors, ' ' :i Li ttle of hoiliii; witier on e uivht iiinl ilay, an.l inv lr .lell'rcys, who is a clerk ill . h.i ' i en i ne t he hint never ' i ' ::i 'i v. i! ii a l:i. " 1 w. w ii"! . ' I n eat h!eJly ipicst ioneil 1 ' o V . i oi! sec'.'" sai'l Miss Isiilorii. . "i:: aiisc it will l.e full of . i it s ami stuninoiises, at sort of thill'.;-." .u 1 Mrs. Milroy. aii'i' upon the hint. Miss ' i n '1 the plumper's man ! re olntelv flcclil.ol to have ! ' -ay to the l,ook-:i";e,it ami Ii ti ihiitor. She consi.lercil in i o. i mil tii" w i uilow w ii ii a'. I a chain, commuiiicateil ! a io--' pe. ple from lehin,l , i' iMches of doorway, and : .. I sii" di. I not know f, ,r I'h" Tower was hers, and h" meant to keep. And '.cr !i;t!c n aid, w as .-. rit hi i: admiration for her : s-i: it :i . ; ' ):r-, -. ti :.-!':,: 1 1 . " said l'.r ' ! ca-l s::nd :i-;airi -I the ' - t lo-r 1 hey can or no', '" I : iora I ves. i!e sure von well lillc.l. U.-li.-cc.i. ' !;. out. .!;- or er --ii" received ! hr.umh ' ' I w 1 1 h a h"-al appc.-i!-- :-ve!..p.- cc-tcd w nh the ! V.t --. Tai.e .V Stri'i!' ! ' i :n KoImiimiii's lawyers. ' ; l ok.- i it liei wect; the - . :i:id smiled M'ldic- H l.!a.-c. ' "" to do v. itli such a ::id Mr. Tape, w li.-n he .'! ill 's otaccf at otice." i. 'Tln w ic.ua n is a ' : i.a- ''ecu all her life.' ' said Mr. Tape. Maml- - liiillo No harsh Ji.CiW- - t 'ion Uohii.si.if s exv.ress .'. ad coiu tcsv he show n ' st ' W e"d fy soiaethttm proceed to et remit if'S. " ' 1 - .-a'lt ( ,:.. her ;!l"teril.oll. ail 1-liie mist, anil ' -! :oiie as ;t' through a ' ' : : -."Id. the lamllor.l ' ; '' !'cts came putliii'jr :ii :t -tout, pleasant-face. i i . 1 ram,' the l.ell. which i 'louliie chime throii.u'h l s ; ; , i ?,;', Isi. Iora. from ' ! .- oiu tile tops ,,f two s p;eaked Ke- "' M.oalder. shall ! ire! : i.la':i:l." said the ' 1 - i.v "' sternly reipeal-.'d ' s. K.dfivca. hriii": in I !::;vt, you 1 1 uu.h r ' ! ''"t t" he tl'llie l with." ' ' ' .! iiii.ii' ho-; ..f the - !.; 1 -i'MaitiUieoiisiy re ' .--ii an.i his presence of l.stertorously. ! s oidv lsfaci ated: healt!" said Miss v i;-!n't he say so 1 forcV e:e til flo Voll W a'.lt lll-lV, 'i . Mis- 1 ves." said .le'i i -.-': md M , . . iMdoraV 1 s, ,iaej, ,w . !; hiuiself to w ;ih the t'amdv icpeated Miss Ives. A:, J-: ; .. ! Map mwuwmmmp ' : - VOL.IL NO. 21 CRUEL THINNER. sat ify n Mlow p.,.. try to mellow. ii ;!. ik, t l.e corit'.nt".l. r ji t in oin" t'cu's r-:it"'l. n as p-r-ons out a-l.ikin', ""'i- well, Lton.; a-strikln '. int r'r.vii.iin suM at dinner i" day "Jest make v.t rruel thinner:1 atP, -a&a o6o-ifiSSfj i2VoMs.io'-&3-v''1 Defendant. H f5 "This in't a lodging-house, man alive;" "Yes'iu I'm ipnte aware of that," said Israel, meekly. "And where no o!Tense is intended, it's hoped us none w ill he took. Hut, knowing as you was alone and unprotected " 'J don't know what you call unpro tected," liiiis.piely interrupted Miss Tves. "I've got a loaded gun and a six-gallon kettleof I .oiling w uter here." "And," mildly went on Israel Jen kins, "this 'ere gentleman, a Mr. Mar shall, of Alabama, wanted a pleasant lodging in the neighborhood, which meals could be took at the Toplady Arm though our apartments is all oc cupied wtth the gentry as come to fish and shoot, through October and No vember ami it might be a consolation to you, Miss Ives, to have a gentleman about the premises; and I could par ticular recommend him as very quiet and decent." "(iood gracious;" said Miss Isidora. "Why don't the man speak up for himself? Is he deaf and dumb?" "It would be a great kindness, ma'am." sai.l Mr. Marshall, of Ala bama, at this direct appeal. Miss Ives hesitated,. "Well," she said at last, "I don't know that I've any objections. Ke becca, unbolt and unchain the door!" And so The Tower garrison was strengthened by an addition of one. Of course, Miss Isidora Ives told Mr. Marshall the whole story before hi! had dwelt twenty-four hours be hind tin! queer little wooden battle t!! -nts of The Tower. Mr. Marshall listened quietly. "Isn't it a clear case of swindling and extortion?" she demaifded, ex citedly, with her short curls (parted on one side, like a man's) all rumpled, her cheeks reddened, her plump little list unconsciously doubled. " should think so," said Mr. Mar shall. "Would von submit to it?" she asked. "No, I wouldn't," said Mr. Mar shall. ' And all because, my great-grandfather's name was written John ii., in-.- iead of John ('., in the deed," per sisted Miss Isidora. "Why, any schoolboy would be ashamed to avail hi iisclf of any equivocation like that!" Mr. Miii shall proved hir.iseif a quiet an 1 peaceable member of the little household. He liked dogs, and al lowed Miss Ives' King Charles spaniel to sleep, undisturbed, amid the papers on his table. He was partial to birds, and en tered, iit o:tci, into the most friendly of a'liaiices with the parrot tud the macaw. Jle grafted ?Miss lsidora's orange tree for her, and showed her a new way to train her wax plants. And at the end of four weeks Miss i ddo'-a put into execut ion a plan which she had long been funning. "Mr. Marsha!!," said she, "it's a -Teat deal of trouble for you to go three times a day tramping down that long hill to the Toplady Arms and back aaiii. You are no longer a stranger to us here. We have learned to respect and trust yoti. If you choose to take your meals with us here. I shall be quite w illing to admit y ,;i to my frugal table, as a friend. " Mr. Marshall's countenance changed oddly. Hem-idea curious sound in his throat as if he were swallowing soi, i. 'thing. "Miss hi lora," he said, "I can't." "Can't:" repeated the lady. 'Nothing could induce me to eat alt under this roof." said Mr. Mar shall, incohevently. l'.less and save us! Is the man mad?" cried ?fiss Isidora Ives. "I am. socially speaking, a fraud." sai'l the st linger --"a forgery." Miss Ives sat ilown on the sofa in a helpless way and stared at him. "Hi'.t your sweet gracionsness and kindness have conquered me." added Mr. Marshall. "What do you moan?" said Miss I ves. .lust this." said the stranger, "I a n here on false pretenses. I am v,ir,r cousin, the plaint ill". My name isn't Marshall, but Gideon Marshall ilobinson." Ma'am." whispered the heartless maid, who turned absolutely green on hearing the name of the family enemy, shall I bring the kettle of boiling water?"' "Rebecca." said Miss Ives, "hold vour tongue and go out and feed the young turkeys. 1 am fully compe tent to manage this matter myself." And llebecca. feeling herself put down, departed. "I came here." went on Mr. Rob inson, "io look into the facts of the case for myself. I have heard of your prejudices against me " "Yes. I think so."' interposed Miss lve. "Ami I do not blame you for them." said 3Ir. Robinson. "Now that I am -personally acquainted with you. Miss Ives, nothing could induce me to prosecute this -" "Iniquitous claim!" interposed Isi dora. "Iniquitous claim!" acceded Mr. ijobinson, with a repetition of the ! swallowing sound. "Just what you j please to call it. I respect yon as n ' lady, but I appreciate you as a rela tive; but. of course, knowing who I am, von cannot tolerate me any longer : as Vour friend. 1 "ill pack my bag 1 an 1 depart at once. I ean only feel ! regretful that I have deceived you so long. I feel myself to be a hypocrite ' and a swindler!" i He waited meeklr to receive the '. full tide of Miss lsidora's curbed wrath. She put out her pi urn p little hand, with four dimples in the four joint. "Don't go!" she Baid, in a low voice. "What!"' cried the incredulous plain tiff. "There's no reason why we should n't be friends," said Miss Ives, in her odd, Lrusk way. "Things seem so very different, now that we are acquainted with each other. Couldn't we compromise?" "Tsiflora," said Mr. Robinson, "we're cousins, you know, twice re moved. I may call you Isidora?" "Oli, certainly!" said Miss Ives. "Wo are the. two last seeming heirs." "Plaintiff and defendant," nodded Isidora. "Exactly so. Now it has just occurred to me I mean. I've been thinking of it for some time that if we were to unite our claims " "To get married, do you mean?" said Tsidora, bluntly. "Yes, precisely. It would put an end to all litigation," pleaded Mar shall Robinson. "So it would," observed Miss Isi dora, thoughtfully. "Would you be willing to marry me?" said Mr. Gideon Marshall Robin son. "Y-yes!" said Isidora. "I think I should. I'm not young; but then six-and-thirty is not absolutely old." "Yon are a rose in full bloom," said Mr. Robinson, enthusiastically, "and I myself am not a mere boy, it must be remembered." "And if people should laugh at us?" "Why, we'll let 'em laugh," said Isidora. "And we'll laugh, too," said the middle-aged lover, cheerfully. The fire was allowed to go down, the kettle cover taken off, the charges drawn from the gun, and The Tower pronounced to be no longer in a state of siege. And this was the way in which the famous case of Robinson vs. Ives, which had promised to swell the fees of lawyers innumerable for the next ten years, was removed from the court of records. And no one was sorry except the legal gentlemen afore said. Saturday Night. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. The perspiration from human heings, if injected into rabbits or dogs, causes death. A machine for registering the strokes made by the oarsmen in a rowboatwas recently exhibited in London. Dr. Weinek's great photographic atlas of the moon is to be made on scales of ten to thirteen feet for the moon's diameter. In the night illumination of tho British fleet of warships assembled for the Jubilee naval review 75,000 sixteen-candle power electric lamps were employed. A goldfish will die in ninety minutes if placed in water which contains one per cent, of alcohol. In water which contains twenty per cent, of alcohol it will die instantly. Common salt that is used daily in our food is needed in the body. It aids digestion ami the assimilation of tlin food, and helps in the composition of many of the tissues. A prize of i.t50) is offered for 1898 by 1 Industrie Elootrique for the best work done in the manufacture of per manent magnets. It is not stated whether or not the prize is open for international competition. A hospital has beeu opened in Lon don for the treatment of wounds, ulcers ami kindred ailments by oxygen gas. The new method of treatment was suggested by the Zulus. When they are wounded, they climb an eminence and expose their wounds to the pure air of the niouutain toj)s. What is called Fronde's Law of In crease in the Speed of Ships assumes, as an example, that an increase of one: i:i a hundred, or, as we may say, about four miles a day in tho swiftest trans-! Atlantic steamers, calls for two per cent, of added length, six per cent, of displacement, seven per cent, of horse power ami fuel. The bayonets of marines on board Rrilish ships-of-war having frequently become highly magnetized through oroximity to dynamos, and thus af fected tho- ships' compasses when the wearers passed them. Sentries have been ordered not to wear side-arms when on duty in the dynamo flats. This is expected to overcome the dif ficulty. A Canadian sea captain has invented an apparatus with which he thinks w hales can be killed by electric shock. A harpoon is fixed at the end of a long metallic cable, properly insulated, and which serves in place of the usual rope. Through this cable an electric current of l'U00 volts is to be sent by means of a dynamo carried in the whaleboat. An electric target, the invention of two Austrian military men, is reported to have given satisfactory results in a recent test at Gratz. The target is of tii ! usual form, but made of meshes of wire tolerably close together. It is connected with the stand by an elec tric cable, and when auy part of it is hit by a J'all the electric current is dosed, ringing a hell, and signaling on an indicator ut the statu! the por tion of the target struck. To Ireland by Tunnel. It is expected to erect a tunnel be tween Scotland and Ireland from the Mull of Cantire to Tor Point, in County Antrim, a distance of only thirteen miles. A tunnel between those two points will cost about 0, uiM.OOo. with an additional S5,000,fM)C for the grading. A novel suggestion has been put forward which will abolish tunneling altogether. It is tc construct a bridge enclosed in a con tinuous cylinder sunk some fifty feet below the surface and kept in position bv anchors and chains. Saveil the ISoy. An ohl man, eighty-eight years o: age, standing on the bridge at Strakonit;-.. near Pilson, in Bohemia, saw a schoolboy drowning in the rivet at Wattawa. He jumped in, got the boy to land, but sank back exhausted ami was being carried off' by the cur rent when an eighteen-year-old girl sw am to him and saved bini. MARION, N C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1807. I FIELD.! The Past Week Was Not a Very Fa- ; vorable One FOR CORN AND COTTON. Tobacco Crop Short la Kentucky and Tennessee Cotton Picking Pro gressing Rapidly. The United States "Weather Bureau, in its report of crop conditions for the week ended at 8 a. m. on Sept. nth, says: In the central valleys and Southern States the week has not been favorable, owing to the general absence of rain and prevalence of high temperature. Hot, dry winds have proved injurious in the States of the lower Missouri and central Mississippi valleys and rains unusually heavy for the season in Ore gon and Washington interfered with harvesting and threshing in those States, but caused no serious injury to grain. Corn has been unfavorably affected by the weather conditions prevailing for the past week in the corn producing States. High temperature and the ab sence of much -needed rain have check ed the growth ami caused iiremature ripening, while ihe prevalence of hot winds has caused injury particularly in the States of tho lower Missouri val ley. In Iowa ami Missouri much corn is past help ami will be cut for fod der. The conditions, however, have been more fovorable in the lake region, upper Ohio valley, and in New England, and the Middle Atlantic States the crop is generally doing well. The general condition of cotton is less favorable than in the previous week, and over portions of the middle and eastern sections of the cotton belt, there has been marked deterioration. Absence of rain has caused it to open rapidly and to some extent prematurely. In portions of south and southwest Texas, showers improved late cotton and the top crop, but over the northern portion of the State, and over the cen tral and eastern portion ot the cotton belt the conditions have been unfavor able, except for picking, which has progressed rapidly. The bulk of the tobacco crop has been cut and housed in generally good con dition, except in Kentucky and Tennes see, where the crop promises to be very short, particularly in the first named State. THK I'KVKK IX MISSISSIPPI. New Orleans Has None Hut Three New Cases at liiloxi. A New Orleans dispatch says there is no yellow fever there, and the house where Gil oi died and those who were in it have been quarantined. Four or lh doubtfnl cases were reported, but none showed a symptom of 3'ellow fever. One additional death is reported at Ocean Springs, Miss., and three new cases at Biloxi. This place has been absoluely cut offfrom the outside world, and the only means of reaching the town is by wire or mail. Ice, which is very necessary when fever rages, is very scarce. 1 hysieiaus at the Springs get but little rest, and it is not so certain that the medical supplies will not soon be exhausted, bt't in a day or two means will be found whereby relief can be had. Dr. Haralson, of the Mississippi board of health says: "The Gulf quarantine at Ship Island is a menace to the health of the people of Missis sippi and the people of the entire South. Ship Island harbor should either be devoted to quarantine or to shipping, and should not be used for both pur poses." At Mobile, Ala., every precaution has been taken to guard against the intro duction of fever. Atlanta, Ga., will not quarantine against the fever-stricken district. At New Orleans the board of health has withdrawn quarantine restrictions against all points on the gulf coast, upon certificate from its own health officers, of the non existence of suspi cious fever, except in Ocean Springs and Biloxi. Dr. Porter, Florida's State health officer, has taken official action in re gard to the yellow fever reported in Mississippi and Louisiana, and has placed an effective quarantine on per sons and baggage from infected ports. AliMOli PIj.VTK MAKIXC1. A Delegation to Wait on the Naval Committee. A Nashville, Tenn., special says: General Manager A. M. Shook, of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company, Congressman James and Congressman Enderwood, of Alabama, and Congressman Livingston, of Georgia, will go before the naval armory plate committee in a few days to urge the examination of the armor plate making facilities of the South. Col. Shook says his company stands ready to deliver steel plate at any Atlantic seaboard port, at a less cost than can be done by any company in the United States. Ho also said the iron made by his company was well adapted to making armor plate, for Carnegie uses it as a mixture in mak ing plates. Col. Cook claimed that the capacity of the blast furnaces at Bir mingham is more than sufficient to supply all the demands for plate. A Lizard Diet to Cure Cancer. An Aaustrian priest named Gentilini is said to have cured thirty patients ol cancer of the stomach by feeding them lizards. Both toads and lizards possess beneath their skins certain secretions which constitute an extremely powerful chemical agent. Died at the Age of 10G. Jack Fitzpatrick, aged 106 years, who was the bodyguard of an officer through the war of 1812, died at Bowling Green Ky. m Three Persons Killed. A Philadelphia and Reading wrack ing engine crashed into a wagon at a grade crossing at Fruslh ValUy, Pa. , a few miles above Reading, and three lives were lost. The dead are: Evan Helster, aged 45 years; Warren Faust, aged 10; Leon Faust, aged 7. All were iastantly killed. Nebraska Will sell Its Grain. As a result of investigation the State ; Board of Agriculture of Nebraska, has j issued a statement that 75n.OoO,'HN bushels of grain will be raised in Ne- j braska, of which 3"0,CK)0.XK) bushels . will be shipped out of the State. ! NEWS ITEMS. Southern Pick I'ps. The Nashville A- Knoxville Railway will ask subscription from the city of Nashville. Senator Morgan, of Alabama, has sailed on the steamer Australia for Hon olulu from San Francisco. In Mississippi a nesrro woman sun posed to have smallpox goes to chnrch; she is run off and the next day her dead Lodj- is found. . Ann Hughes, suspected of having smallpox, was brained with a bed slat by panic-stricken negroes at Columbus, Miss. Mrs. Richard Millikeu, of New Or leans, La., widow of a sugar planter, has presented the Charitv Hospital, at Saratoga, N. Y., with ST.-), 000. Tw o children of Joseph Creery, aboy and a girl, aged respectively 10 and 1 2, w ere burned to death at Fairmont, a suburb of Richmond, Ya. The schooner Wade Hampton, Wil mington, N. C, for Charleston, S. C, was wrecked on the north jetty, Charleston. The crew were rescued. Henry Wall, w ho was lynched by a mob &i Friends Mission, Ya. , on suspicion of having assaulted Mist Sadie Cook, is believed to have beer, innocent. At Charleston, S. C, Harry Nohrd ren, 15-years-old, was killed by being run over by a South Carolina and Geor gia railroad train. The boy was steal inc a ride on the train. Horace S. 1'erry was hanged at Deca tur, six miles from Atlanta, Ga., on the Kb, for the murder of Bely Lanier. His wife and live children were with him, and when he bid them farewell he com pletely broke down. The foil owing North Carolina fourth class postmasters were appointed on the Hth: D. P. Fergtidon, Brysou City; .!. D. Spiny, Gilbert; Amos Lain, Mul grove;J. H. Blalock, Old Fort; B. A. Jones, Richmond; J. T. Poindexter, tStouy Knoll. Little Johnnie Austin, aged 10 years, who, it will be remembered, killed Kell Caton, aged 10 years, in Charlotte, N. ('., w ith an ice pick in a iit of anger be cause Catou told on him for stealing ice cream, was arraigned in the criminal court last week and found guilty and sentenced to two years in the Mecklen burg county jail. " The sum of sio, 000 has been appro priated to put New Orleans in a clean condition, and 840,000 more will be forthcoming, if required; thestatement is made that there has been but one case of yellow fever there this sum mer. At liiloxi theie is a quarrel among the doctors. President Lewis, of the board of health, has resigned. There ure thirty-eight sick people at Ocean Springs, and J00 people who have not had the fever. AH About the North. White Caps have warned all worth less negroes to leave Bartlett, Texas. The coal strike in Western Pennsyl vania, Indiana and West Virginia is ended. W. D. Hirth, of Boston, is to be superintendent of the next United States census. David Pierce, of Toniona, Cal., is dy ing from blood poisoning that followed the bite of a mosquito. Five hundred cornice and skylight workers in New York struck for ;?. to .;'. .IO for an 8-hour day. Through the operations of the big packers in Chicago, 111., prices of meal on the Pacific slope are being forced up. Walter Kennedy, of Pittsburg, Pa., has been appointed minister of mines, railways ami waterworks of China. The Massachusetts Prohibitionists have nominated a State ticket, headed by Professor J. Bascom, of Williams tow n. In New York. George Mollinari, a laborer, drat k two flasks of whiskey one after the other and then fell to the floor a corpse. By actual count 10,000 people between July 1 and August 28 left the Pacific coast for the gold regions of Alaska and the Klondike region. Wild horses have become so much of a nuisance in Northern Arizona that Attorney General Frazier haB beeu asked if they may not legally be slaughtered. Criminal records of Greater New Y'ork show that 37.J persons committed suicide from January to June, the ma jority being men, and the popular methods shooting and poison. Twenty-one men dead and forty in jured is the result of the firing on the miners by the deputies in Pennsyl vania. Warrants have been issued for the arrest of the sheriff and his depu ties. The schooner Grace, of Bangor, Me., capsized and sunk twenty miles east southeast of Tybee Island, near Savan nah. Oa. She sailed from New l'ork with a cargo of salt for Savannah, and four sixteen-ton guns for the Tybee fortifications. The captain and crew of seven had to row twenty miles to reach land. Miscellaneous. Francis Aurelius Rulszky, the cele brated Hungarian literateur and phil osopher, is dead. Aged Hii years. A copy of Japan's formal reply to Hawaii's offer to ai bitrate the matter in dispute has been handed Secretary Sherman at Washington. It is stated that Consul-General Lee will not return to his po6t at Havana, and that ex-Congressmau Aldrich will be appointed to the position b v October 1st. There is talk of Anderson, the champion bicyclist, who made a race against a train up North last year, racing against a S. A. L. train between Charlotte and Monroe. Of Kentucky's 1 1,000, 000-bushel crop of wheat ' per cent, is still in the farmers' hands. The price of bread is rising slowly in London, and the ontlook for the winter is of the gloomiest kind. The city re quires 70, tHCj quarters of foreign wheat weekly, independent of flour. A oiblegram from Madrid, Spain, un der date of the loth, says the insurgents have captured Victoria de las Tunas, Cuba, a port defended by seven forts, and the Minister of War has called Caj-tain-General Weyler to task. A dispatch from Honolulu, via. Vic toria, B. C. ,says: Attempt to bring ne gro laborers to this country has failed. The matter was referred to some South ern Senators for an opinion. A telegram brought here on the 2;th by a eteamer knocks the scheme in the head. The Southerners, including Senator Mor gan, object to any attempt to take their labor from them. Price Met in a Collision on the Santa Fe at the Rate of 40 Miles an Hour. 12 KILLED; MANY INJURED. W. J. Bryan One of the Passengers, Hut Was Not Injured A Miscarri.ige of Orders. A special from Emioria, Kanas, ol the 8th says twelve men were killed and as many more badly hurt in a col lision on the Santa Fe road, near here. The Santa Fe fast mail train coming east, and the Mexican and California train going west, coll ded head on. All three of the locomotives exploded. W. J. Bryan was on the west-bound traiu, but is not hurt. A special to the Times from Emporia, Kaus. , says: Twelve or fifteen persons were killed and as many more badly hurt. The fast mail traiu going east and the Mexico and California express, bound west, collided head on. The Mexico and California express was pulled by two locomotives, and when they struck the engine drawing the fast mail all three engines exploited. The passengers in the smoking car es caped through the windows. The front end of this car was envelojwd iu c vol nme of smoke and steam, belching up from the wrecked engines, and the rear door was jammed tight in the w reck of the car beiiiml. The wreck caught tire from the engines. In climbing out of the smoking car several men fell through the rifts into the wreck below, and it is impossible to tell w hether they escaped or were burned to death. The westbound train carried seven or eight coaches, and its passengers in cluded many excursionists, who had beeu to hear Hon. W. J. Bryan speak at the county fair at Burlingame. lr. Bryitu himself was on the train, but was riding in the rear Pullman. He states that nothing but a heavy jolt w as experienced by the passengers in his coach. Mr. Bryan was one of the foremost in crowd oi rescuers, lie help ed to carry out the dead and wounded, anil gave the greatest attention to their care. One poor fellow who was badly maimed, called to Mr. Bryan and raid: "1 went to hear you speak to-day; 1 am now dying, and w ant to shake jour hand and say, 'God bless you.' If you possibly can, Mr. Bryan, get me a drink of water." Mr. Bryan went into the mail car, one end of which was burning, aud cuiuo out with the water, which he gave to the suffering passenger, lie brought out cushions for others of the injured, and was everywhere present to admin ister to the wants of the suffering, it is feared that nearly all of the seven mail clerks perished in the disaster, but so far only eight bodies have beeu taken from the wreck. it is stated that the wreck was caused by a miscarriage of orders from the trainmaster. At Emporia the eastbound fa-t mail received orders tc pass the California express at Lang, feven miles east. Another order was sent to Lamr for the California express to take tho siiling there, but this order was not de livered, aud the west-bound train pass ed on, the train men expecting to pass the fast mail at Emporia. NEW ORLEANS KEELING SAFE. The Number of Cases of Fever and Oca t lis l p to Date. The latest from the fever-stricken dis trict of Mississippi says a thorough canvass of tho wards of Ocean Springs, completed shows that there has been 748 cases of the prevailing fever since July 8th. There are now thirty-seven still sick. The total deaths have been nine, and in several instances physi jians certificates show that the fever .vas complicated with other diseases. Mail arrangements have been fixed for Biloxi and Ocean Springs. Dr. (Juit eras is at Ocean Springs, aud his re port to the U. S. government is awaited with much interest. New Or leans, La., is feeling safe. The cases it Biloxi are doing well. Strikers Still Holding Out. A special from Columbus, O. , of the the 8th says the Inter-State Miners' Convention adjourned until the lith svithout having taken a vote on the question of accepting or rejecting the proposed settlement of the strike. Tho prospects for accepting the propositions are doubiful, unless some change should be brought about. The greater part ,f the session of the convention was piiet, the delegates listening to speeches from National President Rutchford and Htate Presidents Farms, of Ohio; Knight, cf Indiana; Carson, of Illinois, and Dolan, of Pittsburg. All of tlute officials, with the exception of Mr. I aron, argued in favor of the accept ance of the Pittsburg operators' propos ition. One hundred and eighty dele gates were present. KILLED BY A FALL. Col. Isaac W. Avery Meets With a Fatal Accident. Col. Isaac W. Avery, at one time ed. itor of the Atlanta (Ga. ) Constitution, former minister to Mexico and com in is sioner of the South American republic? for the Cotton States and Internationa! Exposition, of IS'J-I, fell from the porch of his residence in Kirkwood, a suburb of Atlanta, and died from the effects ot the fall. (jeneral Longstreet Married. General James Longstreet, major general in the Confederate army, former United States minister to Turkey, and prospective commissoner ef railroads, to succeed General Wade Hamiton. of South Carolina, was married at Atlanta, Ga., on the 8th to Miss Ellen Dortch, assistant librarian of the State of Georgia. Negro Woman Lawyer. A negro woman has been adtnittf d to the bar of Tennessee, the only colored woman lawyer in the United States. Woild's Swimming Kecord lirokeif In a 500-yard swimming race for the championship of the world, at Don Caster, England, Nntal, the champion of England, defeated Cavil!, the Aus tralian champion, in the record-breaking time of i minutes, seconds. I Southern League Formed, i Last week at a meeting in Atlanta. I Ga., an eight club base ball league was I formed, ':ousistinsr of Atlanta, Saian j cab, Charleston, Mobile, Pir:uiiihu:n J ami New i rleaus. A number of oti.e; t clubs wants to come into the league. $1 Per Year, in Advance TO MARK TII El K GRAVES. t Monument to be Erected Over th Confederates Who Died in Varlou Northern Prisons. At Richmond, Va. , the preliminary arrangements toward marking the graves of Confederate soldiers who were buried from Northern rrisona, have been made by a joint committee from Lee Camp, the Daughters of the Confederacy and the Sons of Veterans. At a meeting of this society on the t'th, a committee was apoint"ed to select places at which monuments shall be erected at the follow ing: Alton, Ills. ; Camp Butler, Riverton, Ills.; Camp Morton, lndianaiol;a, Ind. ; Elmira, N. Y. ; Finns' Point Cemetery, Fort Delaware; Johnson's Island," Ohio; Hart's Island, New York ; Old Capitol Prison, Washington; Sanduskv, Ohio; Philadelphia, Pa, and Pea" Patch Island, Delaware. The report was unanimously adopted. IS CHATTANOOGA IN GEORC.IA? They Are Putting I'p the Claim In Atlanta That It Is. A question has been sprung in At lanta, Ga., which may result in Chat tanooga, which has long been known as one of the leading cities of Tennes see, becoming a Georgia town. Doubt has been thrown upon the accurracy of tha survey of the Ixmndary line be tween this State and Tennessee, and if the theory of eminent legal authorities is confirmed it may be found that Chat tanooga is on Georgia soil. This view is shared by Col. W. A. Wim bish, special commissioner of the State for the Western and Atlantic railroad, who has looked into the question in his official capacity, aud who expressed his strong belief that a correct survey would bring the city of Chattannooga within the confines "of this State. The publication of this fact has aroused much interest, and it is not unlikely that it may result in the next Legisla ture providing for a re-survey of the boundary. SUNK IN THE MISSISSIPPI. The Helle of Memphis Went Down With lOO Passengers All Rescued. Tho Memphis (Tenn.) Commercial. Appeal of the t'th has the following special from St. Louis, Mo. : News of the sinking of the Anchor Line steamer Belle of Memphis, last evening, near Grain's Island, in the Mississippi river iust below Chester, HI., was received lere last night by General Manager G. C. Missiomer, through the following telegram: "The Belle of Memphis sank at irain's Island at :i::J0 to-night, in nine feet of water at head, and seven and one-half feet a, stern. There is a 40-feet long rent through the keel. Will send the passengers forward on the Bluff City." In speaking of the wreck, Captain Missionier said: "There were about 100 passengers on board, many of them St. Louis people, all of whom got oil without accidnt. The Belle of Mem phs was built about two years ago, was worth $00, 000 and was insured for half her value. It is thought she will be a total wreck. " THE CUBAN TARIFF. American (Hoods Subjected to Lower Duties. Madrid, Sept. !). (By Cable.) -The official tazetto today publishes the new customs tariff of Cuba. Nearly all American goods are subjected to lower duties. The tariS prohibits the entry into Cuba of arms, projectiles, muni tions of war, dynamite, gunpowder, sugar (except Spanish sugar,) hone-, molasses, silver or bronze coins, secret pharmaceutical preparations, tobacco, (except snuff, ) chewing tobacco and ar tificial wines. ood Outlook for Cotton. Secretary Hester, of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange, recognized as the best authority or the cotton business in the South, tells us that tho number of mills and the number of spindles in this section have increased, that the visible supply of the staple is less this 3'ear than last and that the home consump tion is likely to be greater. This, coup led with the drought in India cutting off the crop there, and the prosperity of the Western wheat producers enlarging the demand here, ought to give our pro ducers a good price for their crop even if it proves a phenomenally large one, as now seems probable. Atlanta Jour nal. FJ oli tied the Mail Sacks. The latest from the wreck on the Santa Fe Railroad at Euqioria, Kan., says that twelve known are dead, one missing and fonrteen injured. Nothing remains of one express messenger but a handful of bones. Thieves taken the advantage of the situation and robbed tho mail sacks which were strewn oa the ground. ( )ne tried to snatch a dia mond from the breast ofan Emporia doctor, who, weak and nervous, was creeping slow ly out of the wreck. Ho hail strength enough Jeft to hit the brute a blow in the face, which made him turn away. Pronounced Yellow Fever. Several suspicious cases of fever Lave been reported in New Orleans, which were investigated immediately and Xroved untrne. The disease is prevail ing at Ocean Springs and Biloxi, Miss., according to Dr Guiteras, a govern ment expert. Disinfectants are being scattered in Biloxi, and New Orleans is undergoing a thorough cleaning to pre vent the fever from entering that citv. No Improvement In Cuba. Consul General Lee reached New York last week from Havana, Cuba. He says there is no sign of improvement in Cuba: he declined to talk aboutthewar. Mr. Fishback returned on the same steamer, and he fays the condition of the people is worse than when he was on the island with Mr. Calhoun. Rltch fiets Twelve Year. Chas. Pitch, of Charlotte, N. C, has been found guilty of murder at Knox ville. Tenn.. and sentenced to twelve years in the penitentiary. His at orneyt will make an appeal. A Printer iet Three Years. Charles R. Reid, a printer on the Ma con (Ga. ) Telegraph, who shot and killed L. W. Hal stead for insulting his wife at a circus performance several months ago, was found guilty of volun tary manslaughter by the jury and sen- j tenced to three years ia the peniten tiary. I Nine Members Accepted, j Nine cf the eleven members of the j monetary commission appointed by the i Indianapolis convention have accented and among them is J. W. Fries, of North Carolin, 0a -Bsjroouiuroa- JOB PRINTING J THE MESSENGER, Marion. H. C. Promptna, Accuracy, Neatness and Good Stock Guaranteed. Letter Heads, Note Heads, Bill Heads. Envelopes, Circular, Card. Poi ter, TamphleU, and any kind of I R.R. A Fast Passenger Train Collides With a Stock Train, 30 DEAD; 185 WOUNDED. The Wreck Set on Fire by a (las Lamp and Many Passengers Were Burned to Death. The worst wreck in the history of Colorado occurred on tho 10th on the Denver and Ki Grande, aud the Colo rado Midland Railway, one and a half miles wct of New Castle. After twelve hours' incessant work by wrecking crews in clearing away V.n debris aud recovering the bodies ol those who per ished, it is impossible to more than es timate the loss of life, aud not even those known to be dead have been identified. Many of the unfortunates will never bo known, and it is possible the number killed will alwavs be m doubt. It is now thought that fully thirty persons ietihed, while one hundred end eighty rive were taken out of the wreck, hutteriiig from serious iu juries. The w reek was caused by a collision betw een a Denver and Kiii Oraud pas senger train, ruuuiugat the rateof foitv miles an hour, aud a special Colorado Mifllaud and truck train, running at thirty miles an hour. So terrific w as the concussion that tho engine, baggage and express oars, smoker and day conches and two stock cars were totally demol ished, and the track torn up for rods in both directions. To add to the horror of the scene, the wreck cought lire from the explosion of a Piutsch gas lamp on the passenger tram, ami burned ho rap idly that many passengers pinned be neath the debris were roasted to death before help could reach them. The most generally accepted theory as to the cause of tl.e w reck seems to bo that Conductor Bui bunk, of tho stock traiu, was miming on tho time of tho passenger train. Bui hank escaid un injured, and upon orders lrom Coroner Clark has been placed under arreHtby the sheriff. Midland Engineer Ostran der is missing, and a thorough search about his engine fails to reveal auy vestige of his remains. It is thought that w hen he saw the threatened danger he jumped from his engine and, realiz ing the result of his negligence, took to the hills. Charred fragments of limbs and bodies of a number of persons have been taken out of the ruins, but it is not likely that any nn.ro bodies will be positively identified, ami it seems cer tain that the number of killed will re main iu doubt. Ten bodies were found in the ruins of one car ami four in another. The charred remains of two women, appar ently clasped iu each other's arum, were found. Their hands and lower limbs were burned oli". Three More Budien Found In the Santa Fe Wreck. It is nw believed that sixteen persons were killed in the Santa Fe wreck, and the charred remains of three more bodies have been found. Two of the bodies, a man ami a woman, were burned beyond recognition. Engineer Frisbee, who was injured, died. FEVER IN NEW ORLEANS. Twelve SucplcliMis Canes In One Square In the Above City. A New Orleans dispatch of the 10th says there are a number of suspicious cases, and the son of a Methodist preacher has been stricken ami a Miss Lewis declared to have black vomit. 'The house ami inmates have been quarantined ami the yellow flair is Hy ing. Mayor Howard has issued orders that the flags should be displayed wherever yellow fver was found. Mayor Howard has determined that all physicians shall promptly report cases, under severe penalties for failure. Now that the worst is know n, it is desired that no facts shall be concealed. One hundred ami forty people, white and black, in Ocean Springs, by actual count, are in distress, many being in extreme want of medicine ami provis ions. Not a morsel of food or an ouncij of medicine has been given to any 0110 except by private citizens, who already have been heavily taxed. Sisters of Charity havo appealed to the authori ties to be allowed to nurse tint sick. The fever has not spread west of i'.iloxi. The most effect ivo quarantine meas ures are iu force, and if thn disi-.f-e is not held in check at I'.iloxi, iceati Springs and Scranton, it will not be I e cauoe the authorities hate lacked 111 vigilance. I'.iloxi is appealing for iie-.li-cine, and the situation m tin- t,.'.va is apparently growing steadily worse. Ocean Springs, Miss., is head'putr f or tho Marine hospital r en ice, and the camp of detention has been establish- i. Natchez 1 at ipiareri titled against New Orleans. COTTON CROP SHORT. The liovernnient Report shows a De cline of H.t Point. The returns for cotton to the Depart ment of Agriculture at Washington in dicate an average condition of 78. '4 on September 1, as compared with 8.9 on August 1, a decline of 8.iJ j-oints. The average eoml.Cou September 1, l!it waj .'4.2, and the average condition September !, fur the last ten years is 7l. 2. There has been a marked decline in almost all the States of principal pro duction, the decline iu Georgia being 1" points, iu Arkansas ',, in Louisiana, 12 in Texas, Alabama ami South Caro lina ; iu Tenuesse 7; iu Missisnippiand North Carolina 2 points. The only exception to the rule is Oklahoma, where the condition shows aa improvement cf '.) jiointH. 'I he drought that so long prevailed through out the greater portion of the cotton belt has been followed in many sections i.v excessive rains, which have dono g: eat damage to the crop. Runt and 'bedding' are reported from hundreds of counties aud the tdateuient, "No top cro:" i very frequent. The average of the States are as fol io: Virginia, !0; North Carolina, 'j't; South Caro.ina. M; Georgia, 8o; Flor ida. ; Alabama, ); Mississippi, 81; 1 uiMana, ; Texas, 70; Arkansas, f!7; ' '.nensee. 7i; Missouri, 81; Indian "t-:r;tory, 'j'.',; Oklahoma, US. He who re'-klessly Injures I. is Ir.il'i does not thus prove hi tit:si !.;;. he simply eurt-ii'x I s pov. rs i f it good; ami be who Injures In !.:ir:i-!; i by welcoming evil influences is ll ! . Inflicting a still greater vil i:;,i: tl.. community.