mfo&ifi'm if . W MR 1 II .111 .II 111 III VOL. V. MORGANTON, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1890. NO. 47. OLD NORTH STATE. Happenings of the Week from Highlands to Hatteras. Absolutely Pure. . .J.E. Johnson, of Forsythe, killed a hog which weighed 744X lbs. ne Chatham wagon carried 1800 rabbit skins into Raleigh last Saturday. - .. Virgil Larkins, an old neerro at Wilmington, has disappeared in a mysterious way. . .Suffering is reported among the poorer classes in Raleigh. They neea Dotn tood and clothing. ...Wild geese and ducks are now abundant in the sounds, but keep well from the shore and few are killed. ..There are four capital cases on the trial-docket at the present term of the Robeson county Super ior Court. This powder never varies. A marvel of puretv, strength and wholesomeness. .tlor1eoonomioal than the ordinary kinds ml cannot bo sold in competition with .he multitude o flow test, short weight glum or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans. IIoyal Baking Powdkr Co., 106 Will St-. N. Y S. C. W. TATE, ATTORNEY - AT .LAW, MORGASTOX, X. c: Business Generally, I. T. AVKKY. AVEKY W. O. Ekvin. & EKVIN, :Vt torneys - at-!L a w, MO K GAS TON, Tf . C. Practice in the courts of Burke, Cald well. McDowell, Mitchell and Catawba, and in the Supreme Court. . Collections a specialty. Office in Herald Building. THE PIEDMONT BANK OF MOKGAXTON, N. C. X. B. DILWORTH, President. S.T. PEARSON. Casliier. Conducts a general banking business. Inland and auJ sold. ' foreign. I exchange bought Banking hours 9 A. M. to 3 P. M. DB. I. IP. JETER, DENTIST, MORGANTON, - - N. C, (Graduate ol tbe University of Maryland) offers Ms professional services Jo the citizens ol Mnrgantoa and surrounding country as a flrst- Class lHMltiSt. charge for examinations. Satisfaction guaranteed. OFFICE AT MOUNTAIN HOUSE. JuneS'Mf. J. F. Eldridge, President. John F. Boyd, Gen1! Manager. ELDRIDGE. N. C. P. 0. Address : Morganton, N. C. V. C. Ervin, Pros. s. T. Pearson, Sec. &Treas. M. Silver, Att'y. MORGANTON BRANCH I C. BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF charlotte,"n. c. Authorized Capital, $5,000,000 Incorporated under and in conformity with the laws of North Carolina. A Chance for All to get Homes, "Farmors, Merchants, Clerks, Mechanics or Pro fessional Men. TIIEO. GORDON, Local Agt., Morganton, N; U. TlOY7-3m. KOTIOE PEOPLE- Rutherford College has been at work since 1853. It has given free tuition to over four thousand peo ple. It now fcksJVour-patron age. It has eight regular departments and one normal school. Its Curricula are unexcelled by any College in the South. A movement is on foot to endow it; and if you patronize us now, we will remember you then. Its Alumni are filling the most important posi tions of Church and State. We ask the brethren of the press to copy this at least once. For particulars address Rev. R. L- Aukrnethy, A. M., D. D., Presi dent, Rutherford College, N. C. claTemont college, HICKORY, N. C. : HIGHEST GRADE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS IN TOE SOUTH. . VSixty-two miles of the Wes tern Union's telegraph line be tween Fayetteville and Wilming ton is in operation. . .The capital stock of the Ral eigh cotton mills has been increas ed to $125,000. The mills begin operations July 1st. . .The Charlotte News says that two coffins were sold at auction in front of the court house by ex Sheriff Cooper for taxes. . .The Raleigh Call says that all the seats in the class-room of the Agricultural and Mechanical Col lege have been takefi and that arrangements are making for additional accommodation. . .Supervisors of the census for North Carolina have been nomi nated as follews: First District, G. W. Cobb; Second, M. W. Haw kins; Third, C. P. Lockey; Fourth, W. C. Webb; Fifth, H. Hard wick. ..the Charlotte News says two Mecklenburg doctors are threaten ed with indictment at the next term..of-thCriminal Court for practicing medicine without hav ing registered with" the clerk of the Superior Court in conformity with a law of the last Legislature. ..In Orange and Durham coun ties insects are doing great damage to the wheat and oats. The warm weather is said by the farmers to be the cause of the trouble. Very cold weather is needed to kill out the insects, which promise to rTe very numerous and troublesome this year. .The Raleigh News Mid Observer says that an emigrant agent while going through Durham with a train load of negroes the other day is reported to have stated there that the agents would take every single negro out of the counties of Craven, Johnson and Edgecombe before April. . .The Statesville Landmark says: A farmer who was in town Mon day closing up last year's affairs, placed in bank $375 to run his farm with this year, and has forty sacks of flour -and other produce for sale yet. He proposes to put one hundred acres in cotton this year, and he says he intends to pay-cash as he goes, so that what he has at the end of the year will be his. That's farming. . Ihe .Lenoir lopic says a man and hiywife, running from starva tion in Hyde county, where they were drowned out last year, were in Lenoir last week. I hey report a most deplorable state of affairs in Hyde. They say that poor peo ple are forced to leave or starve and that only those who own con siderable property can remain at all. The sheriff does not pretend to collect the taxes. About fodder pulling time the man went oyer his rented cornheld in a boat. Hon. Alphonso Calhoun Avery. Charlie McKesson In Statesville Landmark. The name of Calhoun, coupled with that of Avery, is an assurance that the subject of this sketch is a supporter of State sovereignty. un beptember nth, 1817. Al- phonso Calhoun Avery was born. His father, Col. Isaac T. Avery. an honored and useful citizen of Burke, for years president of the Morganton Bank, was a son of Col. Waightstill Avery, a signer of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independ.ence, a member pf the Colonial Congress and the first Attorney General of North Caro lina. He was the grandfather of Judge Avery and was a scion of an old English family, whose "coat of arms" I have seen. Judge Avery's mother, Harriet Erwin, was a daughter of Wm. Erwin, a prominent citizen of Burke, and a granddaughter of Col.. Wm. Sharpe, a Revolutionary soldier and th first representative in Con gress from the Rowan district. It will thus be seen that Judge Avery had bequeathed to him the prestige of an honored and patri otic name, and one which has lost none of its force or lustre under his guardianship. Of course he was at Chapel Hill, and- stood first in his class. Ex-Attorney General 'Kenan, the scholarly Robt. Bingham and the astute Hill, of Halifax, will testify as to how well he won his honors. He read law under North Car olina's great Chief Justice, Pear soq, and "Was licensed to practice in the county courts. Before he stood for his Superior Court li- he is in the trophies of legal lore, remarked to me that he was proud of Avery's legal force and his power of legal expression. He is wonderfully popular with the young men of his party, many regarding him as their strongest man. If he cannot conciliate, he will combat you; if he cannot per suade, he will defy you.' Political ly he might be called a tyrant, but his chain is silken. What he believes to be right, he pursues in calm defiance of all opposition; no popular clamor can divert his course. Brave to temerity, yet 'tis the courage of chivalry. Gen erous, kind, with a rich- fund of humor, he is a most agreeable companion. Handsome of person, splendid of physique, a heart full of sympathy for those in trouble, and touched with a glow of gen uine Christianity, I trust he may be spared many years to adorn the place he so worthily fills, or any other to which old North Car olina may call him. Very respectfully, Charlie McKesson. Best advantages in Higher English, Music, Art and Languages. A full Collegiate Course with De gree of A. B. Special Courses in all Departments. Higher in Grade, Superior in Scholar ship Better in Equipment, Abler in Faculty, and More Comfort able in Home Life than any School in the South. IBB BSQti MAT, M 90. Send for circular. Vi'L n- SANBOE2T, Pre, Jan 9-3mos . .There was a plnic in a Me thodist church in Stokes county Sunday, Jan. 26. While all the congregation were bowed in prayer the buildine causrht tire from a stove near the door, and before a dozen could pass out the flames had shut off the doorway. There were only a few windows to the church, and the men and women iumped out of tfrem in a hurry The fire was extinguished before the church was completely burned but it was greatly damaged. . . A Charlotte correspondent of the Richmond Dispatch, under date of Jan. 29, says : News of the horrible death of Miss Minnie Every, a fourteen-year-old daugh ter ot C. 1. livery, in uaiaweu county, is received here to-night. Some months ago Miss Every's mother died, and her father being a railroad employe she was left alone at the house the greater por tion of eyery'day. Yesterday she was preparing her father's dinner, when her clothing caught fire from the stove. The girl becoming thoroughly frightened rushed out of the house into the breezy air and soon she was completely enveloped in flames. 'Two young men Walter McCall and Felix Tilley hearing the pitiful screams nf the noor earl rushed to her rescue and were both badly burn ed in attempting to save her life, but the girl was burned fatally and died in two hours. cense, the tocsin of war had sound ed through the South and he rush ed to her defence with all the in trepidity of a veteran, with all the enthusiasm of the novice. In May, '6i, he joined the sixth North Car olina regiment, was commissioned first lieutena'nt of company E, and was fighting at Manassas when the brave Fisher fell. He and his brother, Capt. I. T. Avery,' were both complimented for gallant Gt &n -that-Moody held, in 62 tie was elected captain ot ins company, and in tne same year was commissioned major, assist ant adjutant general of Hill's di vision, army of Virginia.- When Hill was ordered to Richmond on account of some unpleasant rela tions with Bragg, Major Avery re mained and served on the staffs respectively of Breckenridge, Hindman and Hood. He was oi Hood's staff in the great retreat from Dalton to the Chattahoochie m i -l . 1 t river. 1 wo 01 nis Drotners naving been killed, he got "a permit to come to North Carolina, and was captured near Salisbury by Stone- man s bandit legions. He was kept a prisoner till August, 1865. In 1866 he was elected by a large majority to represent the counties of Burke, McDowell, Mitchell, Yancy and Caldwell in the State Senate, and served in that last legislative body elected exclusive ly by the white people of the State, In 68 he was again elected to the Senate, but Gov. Caldwell and the Republican Senate said he was barred, because in '61 he had been elected solicitor of Burke. In 187s Burke sent him as her representative to the constitutional convention and it is generally conceded that he organized that bodv and shaped its work. In . y . . . 76 he was a I uden elector tor the eighth North Carolina district. In 78 he was elected judge ot the eighth judicial district and in '86 was elected juoge 01 me ieni.11 judicial district. In '88 he was nominated tor Associate justice ot the Supreme Court of North Car olina and was elected by a large majority. As a North Carolinian I am proud of the name of Avery. C. M. Avery, the dashing colonel of the thirty-third North Carolina regiment, Isaac T. Avery, the gal lant colonel of the sixth North Carolina, and the Hon. W. W. Avery, brothers of Judge Avery, sealed their devotion to the South with their heart's best blood, while Willoughby, the youngest brother, received a terrible wound from which he never fully recovered. Five braver men were never spun from human clay; five braver men never followed the ill-fated des tinies of the "Southern cross." It Bridge-water Letter. Bridgewater, Jan. 29, 1890. To the Editor of The Herald: Thinking a few lines from this part of the county might be of some interest to your many read ers, I venture to give you a few dots. Our farmers are somewhat puz zled to know how to proceed. Almost ready to plant corn, and if we had consulted the -weather we would have been done plant ing. But one prophet tells us one thing another will tell something that will conflict with the other. But we don't think the time has come yet for the people of Burke to plant this year's crop. I hear some talk about Nantz's and Beck's poplar log moving up hill. It must be a bad place for reptiles under that log. One man says the next time we hear from it, it will, by some mysterious or miraculous power, be drawn up ,and stand erect and grow and flourish. ? - have no doubt but that many persons will" "vrsit... that log yet. I suppose my old friend B. H. Sisk has not taken 'time to visit the log yet. Hope to hear something from him about it, as he lives so near the place. Sup pose his time is taken up with the corps of engineers, as they are close to his place. Was pleased to read McKesson's letter on Grady; think it splendid. Now, Mr. Editor, as this is our 'first letter to The Herald we don't propose to make it too long, but rather short. But we can't close without saying that we hear your paper complimented by all. R. N. Kixcaid. OUR PARIS LETTER. Census Hen Strike a Snag-. H. T. Lyle, special agent of the Raleighjill United States Census Department, with his assistants, numbering five men, have been sent out. from Washington by the Census Depart ment for the purpose of ascertain ing the amount of the State's re corded indebtedness. They will have headquarters in the work is done. It is not all smooth sailing for Mr. Lyle there, as will be seen from the following: from the Ncivs and Observer; It was rumored yes terday that the census men had struck a snag when they went into the office of the clerk of the court over which Mr. Charles D. Up church presides. Mr. Upchurch was interviewed yesterday and stated that he declined to allow the census canvassers to have access to his records, and had also declined to srive them any assistance. His reason for this was that the work which was well paid for ought to be given to Wake county men and not to agents sent out by the red eral government, from Washington City. The History of Joan of Arc in Drama. Paris, Jan. 14, 1S90. To the Editor of The Herald: Living in Paris, the history of Joan of Arc, one of the greatest rrench patriots, was forcibly brought before me a short time ago. The poetic story of the Maid of Orleans has been dramatised, and the heroine's part taken by the greatest living French actress Madame Sarah Bernhardt. The first scene is laid in Domre my, Joan's birth-place, in her father's cottage-home. The grey stonework of the old-fashioned interior, and the iron-bound oaken door stand out,in strong contrast to the "crimson of the sunset sky" seen through the open window. Joan is discovered spinning, when a troop of peasants pass by, look ing unhappy and weary. With her father's leave, Joan invites them in, and offers them refresh ment and a night's lodging. In answer to many enquiries, the peasants join in a beautiful part song, stating as their reason for leaving the village so suddenly and so late, that the country is be ing over-run by their enemies, and they are abandoning their homes to find safer abodes for themselves and little ones. As soon as the visitors retire to rest, Joan re-commences her spinning. Hearing the "Angelus," or bell for evening prayer, she falls on her knees, when suddenly she hears voices from Heaven calling her, and her patron saints St. Margaret and St. Catherine appear in a vision. A beautiful song follows, summon ing Joan to go forth and deliver her country from the power of the English, promising her at the same time God's blessing on her work. The second scene opens in the King's palace at Reims. Iseult, the King's mistress, learns of the advent of a girF'to Reims on a mission from Heaven to save Or leans and France from destruction. Iseult begs the King to receive her,vwhich he does, and Joan makes such a favourable impression on ti'ifty, that-She is.. invested with the power 01 a general, aim given command Of the army. The scen ery this time is much more grand in its appointments. Rich tapes tries adorn the walls, and oaken chairs and tables set with jewels form the furniture of this sump tuous appartment, while pages and ladies-in-waiting are within call, all richly and beautifully dressed in the quaint costumes of four hundred years aero. The third scene leads us within the gates of Orleans, which is be sieged by the English. Joan is here seen at the height of her power and influence. The French consider her a miraculous girl, as she is said to bold conversation with the saints and to receive her instructions from above. In this scene her costume is magnificent : a white tunic, embroidered with fleur de lys, and on the breast a beautifully worked figure of St. Margaret, a white embroidered banner, sacred sword, and shining armour to protect her arms and legs complete this picturesque attire. The chief point of interest in this scene is the prayer offered by Joan before leading a sortie from the besieged town. All men, women and cniidren kneel, my courage." Her fortitude, how ever, soon returns, and she gives utterance to a now-celebrated speech beginning: "I know my country, she has given me her soul!" Nothing could give any idea of the pathos of this scene; the Woman strugRlmg with the Patriot to do all and endure all for her country. Scene six, and last, is the execu tion. In the centre of the stage is the pile of wood surrounding the stake where the heroic girl is to suffer behind is a crowd of the curious, always ready to assist at such scenes; in the foreground, are the clerical and secular judges facing each other on raised seats. A solemn funeral march is played as Joan appears, robed in white, and supported by a priest and sur rounded by a guard of soldiers. A short pause is made, while the sentence of death is again read; a last prayer, and she is lead with flatering stepso the funeral pile, and tied to the stake. She begs for a cross, which is hastily form ed from two faggots and held high in the air by a priest, while the smoke and fire rise around her and the curtain falls. The magnificent mounting of the play and superb acting of Madame Bernhardt impress one most strongly; she thoroughly enters into the spirit of the piece and identifies herself with the girl heroine. Her eyes flash indignant scorn on her accusers, while her voice breaks and her throat works convulsively when bidding a last adieu to parents and lover. In every scene the beautiful music of Charles Gounod accompanies solos and choruses, and the warlike marches, bright love-songs and funeral dirge all join in heighten ing the effect already produced on the spectator by scenery and acting. Mahrud. Thomas A. Edison's First Check. The other day a smooth-faced man, wearing handsome clothes and displaying a soiled collar and necktie all awry and shoes that that never experienced the skillful manipulations of a bootblack, and finger nails that never met a mani cure, leaned his elbow on a Wash ington counter and conversed in the jolliest way with a.cirete of newspaper friends. He looked like a tramp, but he really is one of the most famous men in the world, and his name is known in every part of the globe. His name is Thomas Alva Edison, and he was once a peanut boyand a news butcher on a jerkwater railroad in the Buckeye State. During a little luncheon Edison, between hearty drinks of beer, his favorite beverage, told his quaint way the story of his first acquain tance with any large sum of money. It was in the days when he was struggling along with his early inventions, and didn't haye any account himself, and hardly knew what one was. Bank checks were things he had never had occasion to use, and he had about as much idea of their value as the man in the moon. "Edison had finally sold his patent on the gold and stock indicator to the Western Union Telegraph Co. for $40,000, and was coming over to New York to get his money. He had heard of Wall street and its bulls and bears, and had been told it was full of "sharks" who would fleece a man very quick. So he made up his mind that Wall street was a very dangerous place, and that if he ever had occasion to go.there he would be very lucky if he got away without losing his overcoat and umbrella. At that time General Lcfferts was Presi dent of the Western Union. One morning Edison came into the company's general office to close up the sale of his patent. After a r iew preliminaries ne was given a check for $40,000. I le looked at it curiously for a moment or two and appeared to be puzzled . hat to do with it. lie knew that he had sold a patent to the Western Union company for $40,000, but he did pot sec any moncy,.Ou5thaig lus" Adulteration of Candy. National Drusslst. The Board of Trade fourta, of Portland, Me., is authority for the statement that about C.ooo tons of terra alba were recently imported through the port of New York alone. The only use for terra alba in any quantity is in the adultera tion of. r-"-"11'' npal J"l. trn. 'V j - v w, 11 1 . v l.w.I Calx V. two facts are put together they be- pcrpiexuy-General Lcfferts told come very significant. Ihe sub stance is mineral, utterly insoluble in the saliva or gastric juice, and the result of eating candies adul terated cannot be otherwise than excessively injurious. The devil ishness of the use of such stuff in candies is all the greater for the fact that most of the candies that are adulterated with "it are used by children of tender years. The extent to which it exists in cer tain candies may be surmised by an incident which occurred within the experience of the editor of the j.auonai uruggisi. i wnoiesaie grocery house of St. Louis made a claim against the South Shore Line for damages done a certain him that if he would cro to the Bank of America in Wall street, he could get the check cashed. So I started, said Edison, after carefully folding up the check, and went toward Wall street. So uncertain was I in regard to that way of do ing business that I thought while on the way that if any man should come up and offer me two crisp $1,000 bills for that piece of paper I should give him up the check very quick." On arriving at the Bank of America he hesitated about entering, fearing still that something might be wrong. At last, however, he mustered up courage and determined to try it. He knew that General Leflrets had lot of lozenges manufactured by a I told him he would get his money here, so he braced ahead and Boston house and shipped in bar rels over that line. The creneral agent of the line procured some of the "lozenges" and brought them to the writer for examina tion. The result of our investiga tion showed them to consist entire ly of terra bound together with a little gelatine or gum, (we have forgotten which.) Further inves tigation developed the fact that they were simply blocks or forms trembling shoved A Discreditable Showing-. Greensboro Workman. Under the head of "Correcting Abuses." the News and Observer gives some information as to mat ters in Durham county that are anything but pleasant. The grand jury has made a ugly report of matters, showine that there has been unmitierated rascality in the is said that the breast-plate of the treatment of the county poor, such Tewish High Priest looks forth as cruelty, the .use of spoilt meats, J . . . . ... 1 . 1 a I 1 1 - J a. f ! 1 ! a. from a polished setting, and that if one jewrel be wanted here and another there, the beauiy of the whole is marred. " Th& breast plate of the Avery- broth eVs looks from a setting of manly viHues, a cipttino- nolished with devotion to principle, touched with the gom are supposed to nave aieu ior iatK of honor and aelow with the blood, of attention. If these are true, the besides a degree 6f partiality shown. The superintendent has misappropriated supplies, sold liquor to one of the guards and received pay for the same. Two colored men, who died some time ago, were cruelly neglected, and of patriots. As an organizer Judge Avery was considered among the best in the State. His strong' character, his force of decision, made men turn to him as their leader. In Congress he would not have been a Rupert, nor a god on the stump, yet I have seen him, pressed and goaded, when he was really superb. As judge of the Superior Court he took high rank, and as Asso ciate Justice of .the Supreme Court he has infused new life into that highest State tribunal. The Hon. R. J Dick, rich in literary culture as penitentiary ought to be augment ed in the number ot convicts. Senator Ingalls has been thank ed for his "able and patriotic speech" by a number of colored Louisiana Republicans "now tern porarily in Washington." We'll wager a pint of ground peas against all the stock that Ingalls takes in the negro," which is big odds, that these colored Louisiana Republic- ans,!."now temporarily in v asning- ton 1 are living ou their politics and holcfine little positions in the Government Departments, 11. r rtA neon r rAr 1 1 n Vi n h. t 1 1 t a. x t . ' ImTv. u-svu lift uitvuaiiuc viivu vj ile she prays aloud for the safety loze c the metLd of use being of those committed to her care. c- ' f. t The scene in itself is beautiful and a , ... I 1CW lalialUlCS 111 IUU3 ildaUl CU 1 m nrcirtn'M rpnnprpn miirn T T l urn - - so by the very powerful acting of Madame Bernhardt. The most magnificent scene in the plav is the fourth, viz : the coronation of Charles VII. in the Cathedral at Reims.. The King and Queen, superbly dressed, advance to the High Altar and kneel, while the Archbishop invests Charles with the royal mantle and places the crown on his head and the sceptre in his hand. The solemn music of an organ is heard throughout the scene, which lasts but a few minutes, but all the in terest lies in the Patriot Maid, who stands aside all the time, speaking to herself in a kind of rhapsody. The scene in the Cathedral is cor rect in every historical detail; the ancient grey arches contrasting with the iroldcn candelabra and brilliant dresses of the assembled company. Scene five is by far the strongest in the play. Joan has been taken prisoner by the English, and is lying asleep on a rough straw pallet, surrounded by rude soldiers. The dungeon is dark and gloomy, and feebly lighted by a small oil lamp. Presently the clerical judges, who have presided at Joan's trial, enter to read her confession which she is to sign, and she is then roughly awakened by a soldier. Her confession has been vilely changed, and she refuses to sign, although she knows that only by signing can she escape death. The priests then declare they give up all authority in the matter, and one of them proceeds to read the sentence pronounced by the secular judges. When death by burning is mentioned, she breaks torth into piteous lament, exclaiming : "Ah ! they have counted too much on half his check out to the cashier. The latter scrutinized it closely, gave Edison a piercing glance and said something which Edison could not understand, as he was hard of hearing. That was enough. He was now more than ever convinced that his check was not worth $40,000, and again thought as he rushed out of the bank that any man who would give him $2,000 could walk away with the check. He hurried back .to the Western Union and said he could not get any money. General with peppermint, wintercrreen. etc. I Lcfferts then sent a man with him The agent, armed with these facts, to identify him. He said : "This refused to pay any damages, and the concern, rather than risk the exposure incident upon a lawsuit, dropped the claim. A Ghostly Priest Joined Them. N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. The ghost of the Rev. T. Stan King married a couple at San Francisco on Sunday night. The spirit of the once celebrated cler gyman and lecturer did not ap pear in person, but was represent ed by a spiritualist medium, who assured the lovers that they were as firmly tied together as if Mr. King had materialized and twisted the nuptial knot with his own hands. Marriage by proxy has hitherto been performed by rep resentatives of the principals to the Contract or by the representa tive of one of them. The San Francisco wedding is probably the first in which the officiating clergyman, and he a ghost, has been a proxy. 1 here has been at least one "spectre bridegroom." but never before, so far as we know, has a ghost projected itself into the flesh in order to make two lovers supremely blessed. If such a proceeding should turn out to be illegal no sheriff would ever be able to reach the offendintr ghost with a writ or an officer. Exposure to rough weather, getting wet, living in damp locali ties are tavorable to the contrac tion of diseases of the kidneys and bladder. As a preventive. man is .Mr. 1 nomas Ldison, to whose order the check is drawn. "Why certainly, Mr. Edison," said the cashier, very obsequiously. "How would you like your $40,000 in what shape?" "Oh, any way to suit the bank. It doesn't make any difference to me so long as I get the money." Edison was given $40,000 in large bi'ls. After dividing the roll in two wads of $20,000 each he stuffed one into each trousers pockets, buttoned up his coat as tightly as possible, and made a break to get out of Wall street as quick as he could. The next day Edison began work on his first laboratory, in New York. CharlotVs TabernacXa. Charlotte Democrrt. Mr. Walter Brem reports the Sam Jones tabernacle as practical ly an accomplished fact. It will cost about $Soo be a temporary building, and hold 5,000 people. Trains will be run in on excursion rates, and there will be a colossal crowd. We understand that the only expense of the building is the lumber, the contractor, taking the lumber in payment. . The com mercial possibilities of this venture are unfathomable, and during the festivities it Godly output keeps up with mamonly receipts, Chris tians the world over will have reason to rejoice exceeding much. The tubernacle will be open for business April 20th. Whek nature falters and re and for the cure of all kidney ar.d 1 quires help, recruit her enfeebled liver trouble, use that valuable remedy, Dr. J. II. McLean's Liver and Kidney Balm. $1.00 per bot tle. For sale at Tull's. energies with Dr. J. H. McLean's Strengthening Cordial and B.ood Purifier. $1.00 per bottle. For said at Tull's.