that - shall be ' jJepsjted .VcoYSent SSi by to the skid, railroad to aw ic . railroad: etc ilroad Bail P When thfti Bstorsborg ,8W , . i- river and wanted to .cMss -over -the Jiver anu hi itatermihuaon the south side pf the Roanoke rir) jtheX. xlaimeiiM it waa for .thenblKsood, ;ath? State, at their .uesMextendee linetf road to the . .Weldon, Basin. - -The 5 charter as it.stan.aseompejs Ae railroad company iq.taup andvsp any produce or commodities that may be placed convenient to the said rail road The charter also does not say or imply that freight must be placed at their "toll gates' The incorpora. tors had no idei of a modern .railroad. The . steamboat, canal boat,, sailboat and turnpike .furnished . models for comparison and .thought, and because steamboats always stopped at land-: mm . (convenient places to - load) it was expected that railroad wagons would stop and take on freight. , ; -To prove this, statement to be true, without reciting cotemporaneous his tory I note from: their chatter itself: "They (the railroad company) shall have the right to purchase and place on the track, wagons vehicles, car riages and-teams, and - after, the .com? pletion of 10 mios pf the road, if the company fails , to. transport any com modities, which shall :be deposited con venient to the said ; railroad;, the.com- pany. shall, become; liable to prosecu tion for -damages," t : s" : The railroad companies . want their pound of flesh. . So do we, ; '. Our tram roads, to saw mills .gives you a perfect. fac simile of , the rail roads as our. fathersfirst saw them . If passenger -traffic was intended; the charter makes no provisions for iL. If :the railroad companies want to charge enormous rates because their ' charters say. they may do.so, let it be so; ljut let us demand all the privileges the charter gives ; us. Let us . see: they have no privileges their charter does not expressly grant them. The owners of produce were re quired to tender to the railroad com panies, at their toll gates, the toll due upon said produce. . , In a speech made on the subject by a (then) great authority, it was held " That unless such fender was made that the wagoners of the railroad com pany could not know where to stop or whether the shipper desired his com modities removed on that particular day." Hence the charter says' " Equal and impartial iustice to all," so that each citizen could deposit his freight' at the most conveniens piace.- It is a correct principle of interpre tation that all language; either words or sentences, shall be held to mean, as wad mednt atfthe' time 'the words or sentences were spoken or written. Follow up this " principle ' and how fares it with the Petersburg Railooad? Let us re-read the charter:. Cor porate powers granted for ; s&ly , years and no longer, without a .renewal of its charter. , xv ," ... Not that the company " has a "right to swallow another railroad company whose charter extends longer, but by renewal. V Let me cite a case , in point: A. rents of B. his farm for a term often years, and . at the expiration of ' the term A. is to give up the farm to B:, unless they again . contract. At the end of eight years A. comes to B. and says: "I have made sundry improve-, ments on your farm, and I would like to enjoy the" fruits of my labor for five years from xiate. . Should B.Tac-, ceed to the proposition,, would you not expect that he woula pay B. for the extra live , years ?.' In the yfcr '.190 the charter of the Petersburg ''Railroad Company ex pires by limitation.' Suppose for the sake of the argument that the absorb tion of the Greenville Company ex tends their charter, cannot the citizens along the line of road, 'over wfiose lands the railroad passes, compel the railroad in question' to pay them dam ages for the -further occupaiiy of their lands ? a J - Sj V- ' : - -' The charter was granted" for sixty years and no longer.- . rr; The land along the Kne of road was either given or concerned under the charter.' Those whose duty it was to assess damages had the charter only fqr their - guide. UThat instrument read sixty . years, not nine ty. They could not assess damages for a term of years other than the number stated in the charter. This applies to all roads whose time has been extended if to the one in question. - Passing over the various amend ments as not affecting the principles involved, we turn back to the 1883 '84. The Legislature, of North Caro lina granted the year just named a charter to the Greenville and Roan oke Company, giving-it the right to build, as they did from Hicksford to Gaston. The charter of this las named road was for 90 years, expir- u uuiiiauon tub roaa was built and ODerated. Tn 1852 ati amalgamating act was passed so that al n a i . . iue rewrsDurg railroad- and the Greenville and Roanoke railroad com panies should be under one manage ment. In the consoUdating act you may read as follows: If the Petersburg Roilroad Company's charter expires by failure to renew, the stockholders in that company may be stockholders m so much of the railroad as is now the Greenville and Roanoke Railroad Company," I In other wordsit the Legislature failed to . grant .-. the Petersburg.j rail road a: renewal- they could s till use the i Hicksford and Gaston branch to get their trainV-intq WBbij Carolina. So much 'f ot the . history as related in the charter. But,a. history, oX, the Greenville & RoanokX railroad is that for: nearly a quarter of a century it has been abandoned. The object of the rail road; was to give the railroad a direct line to 'Petersburg from the Raleigh & Gaston 'Railroadand the object of the State' in giving the charter was ly benefit her citizens, to give them facil1 ities for shipping, etc. " ; , Now it is clear to the most obtuse that when the State of North Carolina granted the original charter or when the roads in question were; consoli dated, the State .could not have known that one of the roads would be aban doned and to, the great loss and detri ment . of her citizens, both in time and money, for the act-?-the fact--oc-curred years afterwards. When the joint company aban doned one oi its. roads, when it re fused to run trains and ' to carry freight and passengers, it yiolated the charter, so far as it could it annulled it- The contract made between the railroad company and the State of North Carolina was broken by the railroad company and in doing so it deprived itself of the advantages of th& charter of the road abandoned. -VtFarmers ate: not supposed to know much c; law -but I would Ve'ttturia-' to quote from Pierce . on railroads.- He says: " Noniuser ormisuser; of its franchise . by a. corporation ot ' its breach jo! the conditions on which its duration Js, by .tbd lawi of, creation made -to-depend. ,isr a jcd&si ofcyfyr-, Red field on railroad , says 'L By virtue ;of their: compulsory. powers. iU taking, lands (the railroad company) can acquire no absolute fee .simple but only the right to use the lands for their purpose. It is even question- able whether they, are entitled to the uerDage growing rnereon. " I would further cite 3 Wood, 1711: "It is a' general principle, that where there has been a misuser or . a non user in regard to matters which are of the essence of the contract between corporations and the State, the acts or omissions complained of hive been repeated and wilful, they constitute just ground for forfeiture. But the r charter xf business corporations imply and require that they shall perform the business for which they were in stituted, and a substantial suspension of business after its commencement like an "entire omission to commence, is a violation of the charter?" ..: . rr , - ' : I submit in all good faith that 24 years of failure to run "a train over the line of railroad is a substantial suspension. - ' - . , I repeat jhesupremeissuein North Carolina vfy&BaXL railroadVi0 ns!or shall wo cpni.rihem? v . They claim cthat a charter is a Mede and Persian law. if tHey have the ad-: vantage of the people , but an india rubber devicelf its provisions failtb suitthem. .-.." . ' , , Briefly stated . the question is: Can one generation barter away the rights of another? Can a Legislature enact laws that will be more enduring than the law under which the' Legislatufe acted more permanent7 ihan" the con stitution itself ? . - ( -ri - We can change the sttpreme law "o the ' land, but not & railroad charter That -is1, their position. Wetvmayf ignore or annul State" ffgfitsf wema destroy millions-bf dollars wortHs of property, or take ft-fromr the;'owiier even when'-owned'.by'and 'fiid-' undr the Constitution, yet thodear raiiroaoT companies cannot ; be "compelled1 to loose one iota. ..Brethren ypu are the jury, - The facts are Jbefpre.you, I fcive vou -the charge. of. Chief Justice Miller in tho case of N. J. vs. Yard 95;nK s. 104. M The xight to amend or repeal Leer islatiye gran.ls to ; corporations,1 being itself but the; expression of the will of the Legislature . for - one particular session or term, cannot bind any sue ceedUng legislature. -To an Old. Fogy that sounds like good, sensible law. But as citizens as well as jurors you are sworn to obey the constitution of your Stated TT 1 , ... nearxen unio it, ana well ana truly try the case now submitted. "That all government of right originates from the people, and is founded on their will only and is insti tuted for the good not oV railroad. companies but for the good f the whole. That all political -poweris vested in and derived from the people." . Your Constitution clearlv lava down the broad principle that the will oj ine people shall determine what is for our good. And the Constitution provides a way of expressing your will w oy me oauot. . ' But as if our forefathers were afraid this were not enough, they added: "That the people of this State have the sole and exclusive right of regulating the internal government thereof and that perpetuaties and mo nopolies are contrary to the genius of a free State." Into your hands I sub mit the case and I feel, sure that when you return your verdict it will read: Ws, the people of : North Carolina, demand a railroad commis sion. Assumed virtue is false dignity. GENERAL, NEWS ITEHS. r . . , .. ...... - y "V- ' ' ' - ' jA. cloud burst, in I Spy fh'CatoIin a Ji3 damage 'over an1 'area .of n Ve m!est:By likij : ; - Rn6fnislr and VTef tphali $ 'nu'nrs nlite fdrriied a' union againstthe mine owners' union.'''' ' t-' f-iT.'.-iA i - - . Colonel Alfred Alyward a noted Irish American died.,, recently at West Little- It has been found that: 10,OOQ books have , been written by. .women in, the United States. . : - . ; v-'-v.-r. . Over-forty bishop have accepted invii tations to the Catholic hierarchy celebra-s tion in November, v The half century mark in the priesthood waa reached by Monsignor McColgan,- of Philadelphia, Saturday. . . ; v : -f The New York World? s new ; building is to be 183"feefcor ,13 stories high and is to cost one' million dollars. . - Duriiig a public concert in Rome a bomb wa exploded near the Austrian embassy. IJight people hurt. "Mrs. May brick is permitted by the prison, authorities to take exercise in tiie prison yard.-. Her health is improving,;. The Connellsville, Pa., coke producers contemplate getting rid of the Hungarians by employing.colored men in their places, Keep the pigs growing rapidly. The cheaper the animal the , less the cost of each pound of flesh made,eneraliy epeak- The corn crop is first rate, hut w.hear complaints about the .CQt.toji, ' rA big" yield of oornwill be Vgirekt lessing to our people.-1 J , " ; : Vfaijuclng in . the hill, , is -like heaping manure "about" thej.'stem of a fruit tree. Better ' spread-it oia It as far as the roo.ts extehdr v v y : ,-y-'-: '' - , -i.2- "The atmosphere'for. miles aroinq Jrortr, fand? Ore.; is thick with ilnoke and'eind 6rsj and' burning ' brands - are falling in shOWere. ' -: - " :"- ""Alexander Dumas,-the younger is 76 years old. He began writing at Yl and at 2G produced the famous " Dame' aux Camehas.' While 'ex-Governor Robie, of Maine, was walking near his farm the other day he was attacked - with a whip by two Frenchmen. The great shoe factory of Coborn Sons & Co., Hopkinton, Mass., was destroyed by fire the other day, causing $100,000 loss; full insured. Negotiations are in progress to pur chase the extensive woolen mills of J ames Lee & Sons, of Bridgeport, Pa., by an English syndicate. - The vicinity of Mammoth, Pa., has been visited by a snow storm lately. The white flakes feU until the ground was completely, covered. . . . . . "T 1 If TX . A. T I 11 i-IV ' i. i isaoeua rurnace, at xsaueiui, Aaesier county, Jfa., wnicn was aestroyea oy nre six months ago and then rebuilt, resumed, operations;Saurday -ri;.i ; i . The Atlanta Fair Association offers 'a prize of $3,000. for the best drilled milU tary. company in the United States, The fair opens October 7. ' , . i. vv-i ii" A St. Louis man wants a divorce be cause his wife .snores, whistles, smokea and swears. She evidently, made a mis take in being a woman. Sow two or three small boxe "with lettuce seed and set in the kitchen win dow, to have green food for, the early fall and winter broods; The resignation of the ruler of Cash mere hag been accepted by the Viceroy of India and the country has been placed under a native council. - Hoa' Welty McCulldugh, of rreens burgj Pa., ex-member of Congress f or tb.e twenty-first district of Pennsylvania, died Saturday, aged 42 years. .. When a man makes up his mind that hehas-got to economize, his first impulse always ;is to begin by . inquiring into his wjfe?s, personal expenses, ; i. Atbad break occurred. in the Erie canal two miles, east of Midcfleport, fX?l an navigation was Suspended, whije rSur- LWm?Emery, whp was' the Democratic candidate for Congress against Thos. B. Reed in the first Maine district last year, died Saturday at Alfred, Me. Jim McCoy, the " noted .. desperado of bouthwestern Texa&r was- hanged at ban Antonio Veben'tly lor.. the murder of Sheriff Colonel ELr JT, Hudson - died Friday, aged 70 years, at Terre Haute, Indiana xi o nau uen prommeni m puDnc anapo- jutiuai auiufs m xuuiaua xor Lvny years. Eighty years ago Tennyson,; Darwin, Gladstone, Lincoln, X)liver - ."Wendell Holmes, "" Edgar Allen Ppe . and Iord Houghton were born. 1809 was a great year. . The latest . fociety spoken of in Okla homa is the ,vIfay Nothing." It is said to be alarmingly prosperous. The pass word is, " Lend me a dollar ; the response, "Brdke." .. . A Brooklyn man has been sent to jail for kissing a girl good night. This should teach Brooklyn young men to remain a couple of hours longer, and kiss her good morning. - ' -: Robert Marvel, an 86-year old Indian, has Uved for sixty-six days without food except a little milk, less than a gallon in all. This is a marvelous performance for one so old. Four hundred white families and 8.000 negroes,. it is said, are under contract to go from the Carohnas and Georgia to Arkansas, where there is a lack of labor of all kinds. Albert Nicolet, an engraver, has con fessed to the authorship- of the anarchist manifesto recently circulated 'throughout Switzerland. He " Will be tried for the offense at Berne. . .. ." : American girls seem to have a weak- ness -tor uues, ana many oi mem give themselves and their fortunes away to ho account fellows just to get . a Count, or something of that sort. . x uumas itzpatticic. employed ' as a niirsejin therIejsjBpisopal;Pospi-H tai,.,'iNew ,Xxtic jeitjfeii. through ;the elevat r shaft" Saturday 'nhiand was. in stantly killed. r --:-, . AnivgJe measuring peven. feet-from f tip JoE i was saot on, Tuesday at E 'igle S. xtoswell Jtf, , J? lower, OC X ew 'Mr. Flowier intends to hreseht'the eagle'icf Tammany HalL I- HP-ftq-. Saturday evening. 31st ult no r settlement of the great' strike- in " London j had been made." The' dbclc coapaniesex: . pfeis "a -willingnesto concede " further proposals from the' men. - ' . ? Theorem ains of Pascal Oi Paoli, the famous Corsicari Datriot. who died in ; exile near London in 1807, have been ex- numed fromSC Pancras Church burymg ground and shipped to Corsica.' The wise young man copies his fervent love-letters befoie he sends them to his darling. Then by simply - changing the names he can make them do for several successive girls. Wilson Messenger. V Edith, a sixteen-year-old "daughter of Henry M. Elliott, of Chambersburg,'Pa.; had her arm? and hands badly burned Friday night by the explosion of a can of kerosene. She used it to Jtart a fire. ' The Rutherford Banner asks : Who is t there more noble, -more free and intelli cent than the r fanner who Owns his homestead, stocked with horses, 'cattle,' sneep, pigs, poultry, fruit trees, vines, and shrubs? ' r!, ' i" The Smithfield Herald says: So far we pTon't tHi'rife .aty'ard'ot Jutebagging has ben' shipped to' this market. The farmers say they are nothing toie i and the merchant'? will supply them with other bagging. ... , The Department of "State Has-been ic- : formed of the recent gift by iKe King of Siam. tor the use or the American f res byteyian MisKibn,sd)ithe, royal palaces, to gether with the,x!ensive grounds and bu'ldings., : " ,:r v-. . : . Kie persons boarding with Mrs. Med- : mini at Chattanooga," Tenn.,: were made H seriously ill the other day- after eating meat which she had purchased for dinner. MrsJ- Medmin's husband and child we,re also poisoned. Rocky Mount Plain 'Dealer : Nearly all of the tobacso in this section has been cured, and we have yet to hear of a single "bad icure. We suppose the crop this "year, as far as color goes, , is the finest ever raised in this section. The Sultan of Zanzabar has signed a concession giving" to the British East Africa Company the Lamu-Island and the Benagir coast-line from Kipini north ward, including Kismayu, Brawa, Merka, Magadish and Uruti. On September 1st The Household Com panion, New York, was enlarged to six teen,pages and .a guaranteed circulation of 100,000 copies each month. October, November and December numbers will 'consist of 200,000 each; - Russell flarrison says when he dined wi$ueen Victoria h, had four kinds 'oi pte'V.,He loves pie, and royal die. sdeh as Qu'een'Victoria builds, he fairly revels in. may xe a uuue uub no is ptuusij iriclihed; ' Wilson Mirror.' The" New Berne JourriB. savs. it is re- .ported1 that a large rattlesnake lives under j. the' old School building on the Academy Green. He has been t een coming ou t to the pump on the corner, where he regales himself on fresh water and frogs.- Schools, should not teach a mass of. knowledge, but how to acquire knowl edge. School' machinery is not for the purpose of exhibiting its beauty or per fection, but to train : pupil3 to became men and women, Wilson Messenger.;; '.j John Dudas and W'm. Fagan, two of ;the victims of Friday's accident at the I Bomestead (Pa.f Steel Works, died Sat urday,, making four deaths so far. Two more Isaac Lane and Joseph Durkes will probably die "Two "others -will re cover. ' The people. of this, country must.anni lilate the monopolies and trusts the whole' brood cf them, big ahd little. If they do not, it is only -a question of time when the monopolies and.trusts will de stroy the propertty and. Jiheriy of the people: 3qA - - - ; ; At Yalley City. D. T.. the oflice of the illmes-itecord was completely dembiished jby a whisky mob Tuesday night. - The 'editor is- a pronounced prohibitionist, and shas used his influence- in docaltaJfairsnd m ine recent btate convenuon. ne nas j been warned frequently. . i! - The latest scientific whim is a surgical operataotf f or th& benefit 6f prano-players l-r-clipping a cord between the third and fourth -fingers. What a long-suffering 1.1 " 3 , - , .l; , puiic aemanqs oi science ;is sometajug that. will benefit the entire neighborhood wucrcm me piayer resiaes. i- A branch of the Wilmington & Welr don Railroad has been completed to Greenville. : The passage of the first train was the occasion of much rejoicing among the citizeiis .on the 22d ult It is stated that the number of Smiles of railroad; in North Carolina has doubled since 1880. Another apprentice boy on the United States ship New Hampshire, at Newport, R. I., has died of typhoid fever. An in vestigation wa3 held by doctors Friday, and it was found that the ship is damp, and that deposits from the water closets are exposed at low water, resulting in a terrible stench.- . t Miss Loveleigh u I am afraid you are rather ; hard on my ' sex, Mr. SynicaL What comment have you to make on the fact that four-fifths of every church as semblage are women ?" - Mr. Syuical "I have but one comment to make, Miss LoreleigK There is always a man in the pulpit"-- Once a Week. : s The Fall3 of Niagara, which are partly in New York, form the most stupendous cataract in the world. They are divided by Goat Island into two divisions. . The American side is about 1,000 feet wide and, the Canadian 2,000, and both plunge over rocks to the depth of Ibis ieet. xne shock causes the earth to tremble for a considerable distance around, and a cloud of Vapor rises over the spot which is sometimes visible for sixty or seventy miles. . "! - r Mammoth Caye,v says the t,: Journal of Jadrication-, ;th, largest in the worldr near Grefi .riverKy.,. has been explored v ten miles: '' About twenty rooms have been discovered, and Here are found subterran ean' reams, waterfalls and pits of un- known, depth. ? Several of the rooms arb of great extent,; and have received appro priate namesr ;The Haunted Chamber is two. miles long,. twenty feet high and ten feet wide, the roof being supported by beautiful pillars. The grading on the road from William ston to, Plymouth has .all been completed and track loying is being done as rapidly as possible. All the trestles have not yet been built, but it is thought that the road will be finished and trains will be running on " it before October. . The terminus of this road will be at Roper City, six or eight miles below Plymouth, where there is plenty of water front,. and it is gener ally believed that a line of steamers will be put oh from this point to Baltimore., Wilson Mirror, - .The .Treasury, surplus is given at $70,r 800,000, the highest- point reached since last October. Adding thefractional silver, which is really an asset if hot " available," ithe surplus is nearly$IOOJOOO.OO0.'In ien. narnson S' campaign speeenes last year he pooh-poohed the surplus question as one of no importance. All the Gov ernment had to do, he said, to prevent an accumulation of money embarrassing . to business, was to buy bonds. Why.doesn't Secretary Windom Tuy them? Is .lie. saving the surplus for Congress to squan der? Mcchange. . That Canada is to have a direct cable to Great Britain is nearly a settled fact Its consummation however, depends dfn the Dominion Governments Application is being made to the Government to guarantee, bonds of the" Canadian Cable Company to tle extent of half a - milhon dollars. The .total capital required; is $1,W,000. ; Dobell,. of. Quebec, 'has al- readyecurea . oy,uvw .oi:ini' . in jng- land by private ; subscription. - It will be ithe sHertest ocean cable of : any. ; Enter- the water at Westport. Ireland, it Will run to 'Greenly Islands, iii the Gulf tot 'fiaenofiy a disUnde cibhlylOOO Witea. ' ZSKl u2&:.- ' ' '' i "The htiaint sayings Of children are al Mttfs more or less refreshing. "The young minds unhampered toy conventionality, take a fihortY and explicit cut'tm the jpressioniof a thought.. jA. Utile: girl who accpmpanied her .mother - into; itowh "the plhsT day was very much - interested in ithe speed with which she was . traveling TOWaref the city, and oh leaving the. train at the Fitchburg depot! and passing by the ffreat puffing' locomotive that had iborne the child sot rapidly over the Tails, ithe little one. turned: to her mother and !callin er the latter z attention to . the in- erine. said: "ee, mamma, it's all out- of , breath,n-JBb5ton Budget. u . . Everybody recalls the story of Ginevra the beautiful maiden who entrapped her self in ah oaken chest on her wedding mght, and whose bones and jewels Were L discovered long years after. .There was 'a beginning of that same kind of tragedy , in Bethlehem, ra., the other day. A Mr, Froxel'8 Uttle daughtere, aged 2 and 5. were accidentally shut in a chest in the garret. It closed with a spring lock, and the playmate who did it ran away and left. them. The mother, missing the children, besran .a search, which ended in the garret The feebje crises from the chest located the children. An axe spUt it open,- and just in time to save them. They were; both unconscious when res cued. ... " - ' " . .- ' A curious fact is that in France a man can will away his - title to anyone whom he may care to adopt, just as he can a ring or . a sum of money. Thus, some years ago, one of the proudest titles in France went a-begging. The old Due de Misromesnil was to poor that he offered to adopt and leave his ducal title to any man who would insure him for the rest of his days (and he was very old) the modest income of $2,000. ; Oddly enough, the poor old duke, whom ill luck would thus seem to have followed up ta . the last found no one to bid for-the proffered honor, and so he died in the most abject penury, were a similar transmission oi nobihty legal in Jbngland, there are twenty members of the House of Lords who would gladly, for a handsome-considerar tion in cash, adopt the most unsavory commercial " gentleman," 'and leave him all their honors. . A dispatch from Birmingham, ? Ala., says news has been'.rt.ceived of jth'e. whip ping of four Mormon elders by Whlte Caps oh-Friday night near that city f The better class -.of citizens denounce -the whipping as an. outrage.. "ney'piaTe" no sympathy with; the Mormons, but beheve in Upholding the law 'and opposing "vio lence. ? -I'-.'liT-vr. ' Greensboro North State- The C. F. & Y. V. railcoad had another accident last Saturday. The new trestle over Town Fork gave way and the engine and tender went 'in; injurrag engineer Shepherd and fireman McLoughlin. The latttr had-an arm broken. ? Both gentlemen are from Fayette ville, "and were carried home Saturday.- .r; '- "' One of the buildings of the American Wood Paper Company's works, at Spring City, Pa., Was burned Saturday; Oliver Monshower, aged 30 years, an employe, was instantly killed and William Robin son, Chas. Seifert, William Schaeffer and Henry Seaser were injured by a f ailing wall. .Tb loss will reach 90,000, cov ered by insurance. r Advices from Honolulu by steaner state that affairs have been quiet theri since the revolution July 30. ; Robert Wilcox, :leader of the insurgents,1 and others who were arrested were given a preliminary examination in the police court on the charge of treason, conspiracy riot and unlawful . assembly, ar d will be committed for trial at the next term of the Supreme Court. : Wyoming . is one of the few places where women are recognized as"' the equals of men before the law. They can vote, they can hold'qfiTce, they can sit on jiiries, and the latest advices from that Territory deserib 3'1 ho w ' Hhey Han ged a woman. on the same, limbof a big cotton wood tree: with" a .man, one : dangling at eaph end. pf Ithe rope provided -: for the occasion.- Wyoming scorns anysex dis- criminations. . " " ' . '.1 ?-" . -, The International American ; Confess ameetai -Wastrngton, D. CI, October - C1 CoT1gre5s adjoVrns a trip wiir be. taken through the South and Richmond, Norfolk, Charleston, Atlanta and other Southern, cities visited. The original plan was to take the party through the Southern States from.,(fincinnati and Louisville to New Orleans, by way of Nashville, Memphis And - VicksKurg; "and to return to" Washington by way of Bir mingham, Atlanta, Charleston and Rich mond, and it may yet be decided to do sor but in order, that more- time may be de voted to the South, it has been suggested by leading Southern men that the excur sion through that section be deferred un til later in the f eason, when the winter hotels are open and the famous resorts can be'seen at their -best; - An excessive amount of fruit, or, if. eaten either in the unripe or over . ripe' state, produces various disturbances in the system, chiefly, so because of its ten dency to ferment, and decompose within the digestive tract, and t6t produce .stom ach and bowel disorders! If these dis turbances are not too great, or too prolonged,- they need occasion no special anxiety. A d?se of ca3tor oil, to which a few; drops of laudanum 2 l)&ve "... been -added, .is usually sufificient to, clean out the irritating t( debris," and in a day or two the naturd equilibrium is restored. a . -. . -Jvvusicm I If there is much griping and pain with me .movements, jana tnese. pecome too nurnerous to be comfortable, the dose of oil should be followed .by-curtailing ac tivity by quiet and repose by a diet of meat broths, containing rice, barley cr sago; by rice and milk, milk toast, etc, ? Medical Classics. ' I - v .-' v ' The National Agricultural Society :p& France has awarded agold medal to Ar thur Brandin.of f'eine efMarne andto M. letard, of oamt et Oise, for the excel lent management and 'cultivation of their,; farms The .Brandin farm- has: been in Ithe family for upwards, of 200 years, and its ;re2ords since 1320 .. were produced. .'Just 100 years ago it grew an average of twenty- one bushels of wheat, or oats per ;acre, wnicn rose to zb Dusneis-in l.bou. Shortly after, commerciaimanure was for the first time employed, and the yield of wheat "went - up to 32 bushels per acre and of oits to 41 bushels. Subsequently the land was drained, guano was applied and artificial grasses were grown and fed down, but the average of the Yiheat crop dropped to 30 bushels, though the qual ity was better. This system was followed until 1870 without im provement in yield, when the soil was analyzed and found to be rich in pota?h but deficient in phosphoric acid and lime.- These elements were then supplied, tests were made to secure the varieties best adapted to the land, and the yield per acre for the last seven years has risen to 96$ bushels of wheat and 62 kbushels of oats. M. Tetard's farm of 812 acres, half way between Paris and Chan tilly, has 310 acres in sugar beets, the yield per acre of which, as well as their sugar content, has steadily increased. The average yield of wheat oh 250 acres in 1887 was 35 bushels' per acre. A large herd of cattle is kept during the winter to consume the beet pulp, in addi tion tb which the cattle get some cotton seed meal or cake, with about six pounds per head of wheat , straw, chaff or .corn fodder. American Agriculturist ; ; " f NOTICE. " A meeting of the officers of the Alliance Peanut Union, the advisory, board con sisting of. the vice-presidents, the com- mittees and statistician are requested to meet in Waverly, Sussex county, Ya., at 12 m. on Thursday, vthe 19th of Septem ber, 1889. Other brethren will be gladly welcomed. Immediate action concern ing factories and warehouses is impera tive. Each Alliance in the ; Union should send up' the amount of stock taken by the members in shares of $5 for building fac tories and .warehouses, and what induce-. ;iments offered by localities. : ;. ; - R. T. Barnes, Pres't I IIS,. Si BoYKrir, Sec'y. . ii " ' " ' " ' f By order of the Executive Committee Wake county Alliance, m conformity to a resolution passed in tne County Alh fance, - August 23d, 1889.' D. P. Meacham jjwill lecture at the fpllowrng Sub-Alli-:ances on the principles and purposes of jthe Alliance, the condition and depression of the producing' classes, and remedy, on ithe days as follow v: :' :.; Pleasant Springe,, r; Middle Creek, Enno, ; - Cary, Mount Pleasant, ' ;' Mineral Spring, (GriflUi's School House, iPJny Plains, Gre n Lerel, .r-" Swif Oreek (In wood). Farm Hill, r Wakefifid, ; Eagle Eock, Roeinborg, " Social Plains, Samaria, Uttle Eocki - ' . Monday, Sept 9,10 a.cu Tuesdar. " 10,10 , Wed'day, 11,10 " Thurfd'y 12, 10 Friday, ",13, la , " . Saturday,-" 14, 1 p m Monday, " 18, 11 a.m. Tuesday pir, 1 1 0 6 Wed'ady," 18.11 Thnredy, : 19, 11 " Friday, ," , 20, t p.m. Sat3irdly " 21f 12 M. r, Monday, 23 10 a.m. Tuead'y, u 24, 10 ." Wcd'dy, 25,11 Th'redy, 28, 1 p.m. Friday, ' " '27,1 s Saturdy ' 28, 11 a.ra. ; Timely notice will be given of other appointments, as all the Sub-Alliances in the county are to be visited. All farmers and laborers and the general public are" cordially invited to attend these meetings, and bring your- wives and - daughters. The brethren will "please secure house room - to be used in the : event of bad weather, as the appointments are to be. ;filled regardless of the weather. . BUFFALO, N. V., FAIR. The Richmond and DanviUe Kailro&d willell, tJuring the month of September, round-trip summer excursion tickets to Niagara Falls, K. Y., good to return un til Oct 31st, at the following rates : From Durham, - -Goldsboro, - - $32.50 33.50 31.75 31.50 33.50 33.50 u ' ( Henderson, ' -Oxford, -Raleigh, Selma, ' - . u Parties desirinar to attend the Great International Fair at Buffalo, N. Y., can avail themselves of these rates. ; W. Jl. Turk, D. P. A. L WANTED. Three good, active agents. Must 1 members of the Farmers' Alliance and be able to give good recommendations. Ag ricultural line. Address Box 185, Raleigh, N. C. : ' -au27