' . - " V i , -I , . ' ' . . . "... .---.-. flit Jw-fc . V r -;r .. : ,.-t. ' -. y. . c . ..... , ..... ..i . . V - r "... '. r ; (
$K50 Per Year.
INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS.
Single Copies 5 Cents.
VOL. XIV.
NEW BKRNK, CRAVEN COUNTY, N. C, MAY 28, 1801,
NO. 10.
for Infants
rRorEssioxi l.
DR. C K. BAG BY.
Surgeon Dentist,
CJict, Xliddk Srwi, eys. Ck-rcA,
IIIIIDI.IU.
ATTO R N E Y-AT- LAW.
AND MONEY BROKER.
Cm:: lti, T
Inaa. Ukdrt 111
DR. J. D. CLARK,
ZDIEOiTTISa?,
NCWDCRNE. N. C".
tkartXtiot m Okre Btrct, btren
TcuUick mad Croat!. .
The National Bank
OF NEWBERNE. N. C.
Capital, ' . . JtOO.000
Surplus ProSU, ..' - 86,700
DXRECTOR8L
CUIJl Ss. CT!. J. II. IICCU.
U. II. Eskt4. Auol. IXxtua.
L. IIattt.
GREEN. FOY & CO-
BANKERS,
It a Cuinl Illtx lum.
NtWOANKlNOHOUSt.
iLCg Sir-, pX W Um lie ASm.
HtW BCMft C. W. C
NEXT!
Prof. W. H. SHEPARD
MalrCutfor - - 30Cnta.
- amooo - 20
. . To
JOE K. -WILLIS.
PROPRIETOR Or
! r
1 1
Eastsia. Korli Garaltai
NEW BERNE, N. C.
ZiAM W A awiicitw Jfarkm itmi mU
QmStin VUrxL
""Trr-a CV Varr. Ibr rUava aaJ rWn
faraaaJ M iha f ay Iwarva rv
Ordart nlidtd and grvea promp at
teniieo, uh saiufactioa gnaraateod.
7"r7Pn"esT
HEAVY A5D LIGHT
GROCERIES.
tti-ul a4 f ail A lz Utt,
Soil ai X'awwirraiW Vfcaw.
Diy Goods & Notions.
fall StkaM4 Lar Aaao.
Prlw aa low a two Lowwat.
Call aaa) CaaaalaO aMy Sloaa.
" rtlaaalaa) Cai4a-aa1.
- "CWMttkil edaaeaa- teeaMraa Aaa
tU fce, Chunr el. fci'el yaflL T.
TV. m 'rim ia to es wnri h4
fca 'ta wml Ma i eao a i.i
rf mwmm. nli ii W tea
.im wee ee i fc e CaaOssaa
ni-'Ciwa .
tea BtaesatasrenJa sMsreaeAXtoiasiW
Mumi Otn... j
t
ruiBwoncs
m r maklnar apaKHarty tftta aoaaon of what
' TT PARACBH HARHESS.r
Mala of tKo puNUT STOCK and tho vary IVaV J
CC3T WOXMAXSMlP. Such a harnaaa l"VVaV
cannot b bouh for fcaaa tKan
at rwt0- t ara wtlllnc, -ek
In ordar to bHraduo K. to .O V
- StlX OMf 1T 0LY
PARAG8M HARNESS.
cannot b boaiaTht for
rtllInT
and Children
w Ys
MBS. J. M. HINES'
Boarding House
REOPENED.
Ma. J. M HUES hu reopened a
F. rat -lias Moa.-tling Houe in the ctj,
Op9 w Baptist Church.
Tls Pwn2or Darj Set in Maciing,
C ini ai tKe mime piacr.
J. M. HINES, Aent.
AQREATBABG-AJN!
327 ACRES
WILL aoUD AT A
GREAT SACRIFICE!
A VALUABLE PLAXTATION iitu
Lad oa :U South nd of th Neu.w
rrTT. thrr nd hIi nul from th
CSlyof Nw Bern, 5. C One hundred
tod tweatj-ATv mere cleared.
Tb Uilaac, two hundred nd two
trre. krilj Umbered with pine, ok,
eyrrt , aod biher kind of timber.
It m mio fine Gruang Lnd.
Good dwelirtic, outbuildior. nd
ftMorcWd. It hM fine FISHERY
f rooting half mil oa the beach, wbrre
th V high bAilka of mri that can
oarer b uhaad, from which rewJ
cma lnd with ee.
It i IWT beaa'iiu) and healthy lo-
cation, prcarating a near ticw to the
parsing rewei and Lh A. A N. C
Railroad. For yrmt apptr to
P. TRENWITH,
THE
NEW LEVER SAFETY
i TH rriCTION of SrMPLICrTY
i aod ECONOMY of POWER.
rfO CltJa-ITM, ?0 OEJk. I IN
VARIABLE STROKE, only two a.t.
of RovotvtnT Br1nc.
Bt HUI CllmblnaT and all around
Safety mad.
H. B. SMITH MACHINE CO.
SMITHVILLE,
N. J.
Cljis'sJ. C. FraiiM Line.
Slaien 8. B. Still, Defiance i 7es?er
On and after February 1ft, 1 SOI . thi
line will make regular
SEMI-WEEKLY TRIPS
Baltimore and New Berne
NTtit Baliar. fnr '-w nm, WED
NESDAY. 8ATL RD A V. at 6 P U.
'viae Saw Br fo lialtiinor, TUES
DAY, SATURDAY, at i V i.
trtkiiia ail Xklipen, Tik Ittiee.
Ta b Dir.FfT ln'otlof Nf.
PVm. r Bill wnhiat cot-. mpp n(
'Ij l Jfolrla. rrr iif. line . r fkwt.-n,
l'r.x lwc, Phi:a'lrlr-i P. trnnnj. a d all
p- i-t Snh. Kt ait Wnt. VaN elfv
ranMnxm tar atl Dint hy A. A N. C. Rail-
' mail f4 Rj r oat Ne Braa.
' A(aa ara a rollowK "
Rciraas Forrfa, 1T Manavr,
90 Lia-htriL, Bait I
Jak XT. c"AliaiCE, Afnt, Norfolk, Va.
W. P. Cljd A Co., Philad.lpkia, 11 Soatli
N'w York aad Calto. Trana. Li,inr ,
NavOt rirar.
rl Pl.pwa, BoMo., S3 Central wharf.
8. tl. lUekwail. ProTtdane, R. t.
Sklfa leara Boaton, TnMdajra ao4 Satardaa.
- Mt York rfalljr.
" Hallo., WaJawlar A SalnHara.
" PailadalpoU, Moadarm, Wda
iayt, Satgrdara.
PrcWiee. SUiord.ja.
Tara(a Wlla Urttac Pto. n J rat, raar
aataad a. all paiata at tha ditTrreot oHok ol
tka tnaaaaaW
WtfAtcid BrmJtagt of liu.'k and Shif
fa iV. C. Lhu
a. n. gray. Art, x.w iw.., v c
fW mml 7n I Wp. . hi
THE NEWi
It ia aaad that Snal ir Trumhnll, who n
rr1rd rrcrntly at San franriwn a the airnt
of the Chilim forertimtit, know aonirlliinu
about moorj drpoaitei in that city kit the u
of tke InanrjrnU agmlnrt nalmacdaa govi-rn
! mest. Th matter will be Invratifatrd.
, Tha Prohihitioa ?Ute tOnrcntinfl rtf Kentucky
' t Loaiartlle and Domtnati a full ticket,
Iti Joaiah HaTrU. of Padu -ah, for guvernor.
Taay reaffirmed thr nationai platform. About
hundred delegate from all parti of the
tat era present. The nmin vu harmon
tooa, and tlOO a
fcr Mate work. V dinirtive h s 1 1 t.rni
did rTrat ilamape n-a r . iii'-t i 1 T-n It
m hrlieTr-1 that the Imiv, - :hf cn' will
reach fV "'. Th. y.'.r.y !.-n.l.-r "f the
IodpDdeats innuunc fr ui t Unnha thst a
cooTenttiio will toon lie caJleil at which a
candidate fr ftfniot o( Nehraaka will N
oomhialrd, on the throrjr that aincr FIotiI n
. declare"! ioc'.ixibla. to eflkoa. Thaer ran hoM
aaJy aiitl! the (all election. They inUt at
j thai rime a full party rote will I- cast for
fflTfnwf, and prirtTrlir will r-.jnilm'.cly
in.t!tn'fJ aiinut ih pre.-nt inc-inih-nt t
obtain p.YM-a ion of the nuV-- - The Mer
eantile Trmt ( orapmtof Ne Yirk, tnntre
of the ranraTtlle. Mount Vernon ami Marion
Railway, ha. jjroncht uit at ZaneTille.)liio,
to forevU-Mr their roortirajf' for fVi.,'"" on "
coaot f the company's failure to pay the in-
tereaf. The proprrty will 1- 1J Ihe
town of Mount Vern-wi. county eai -"f rVan'k
h rwinty, Tea., w struct by rylone
and icirntl h'ojn '-empletely (Iemohheti.
The piiat.ri.-e, a lasr Jry more and
everal other lartr buildinsa were t"tnl!y
wrecke"!. trrc and fence- blown down. Ke
poru from all pirt r,( th- co inty h"w great
demtruction of property No 1 of life m re
porrel, but the jrowin croi will nuffer
heTily Th' H--ian fly hj made iu p-
Pnnr' in the wheat fi.-d. near .Tackaouril le,
III , in frrrt qnantitira, and i caumn con
iderahle alarm among the farni-ni The har
crop will be a total tail'ip- unb-i rin fall.
Tery .ion.-- By a p.iwd'r expliivi at a coal
niw near N-w Philadelphia, hio, John
tirnff and hi brother VArnxni were fatally in
j'irel H-nton A Collier's mii.ir store, -tf
Main strrct, BufTalo, N Y . u (ruttol by
8 re Iwi f.V..as innrcl Kev. T. M
llamiltfin, a Ilapciiti preacher of Homestead,
Pa-, wa. kille.1 in Cincinnati by a utone fall
ing frooi a bnildinff striking him on the head
He was attending the Kaptitt ioiienlion iu
mmmuya in that citr.
Uy aa esplomon of dynamite on a fliu car
ear Tarrytown, N. Y., eighteen or twenty
U borers, moat of them Italians, were killcl,
and twenty-fire Injured. Some were blown
into the llndsoo river, othen had their inrn
and lers torn ofTand were horribly matilatci
Ttw PaT Shoe Company, of licton. and
its peealdent. Joph lvis. hare ajwinol.
The company bad a capital of a quarter of a
, aiillioa- Private John lloamrr, of Battery
' O, Fourth United State Artillery, committed
anicide at Aajrustane, Florida, by taking
lairdanam. He bad tried it before. Prof,
nrifjra has made, to a committee appointed t y
lat directora of the Union Theological Semi
nary, anwwer to a number of categorical
queatKwta, whMch satisty the directors of bu
orthodoiy. J Sproul. Marhall. a prom-
ioot youojt man of GrrenTiIle, S. C, and a
member of one of the leading families of the
state, was nabbed by W. B. Jenniu, a a yooth
of eight pen years. Marshall's wound u very
arrtooa, and perhipa fatal. Simuel Pickle
a prominent emi-n of ttreynvilie. S. '., v.i
his throat wuh a pocket knife, and will prob
ably die of the woond One man was fatally
injared, and two others seriously, by an ri
ploaioo at th work of the Electrical Koririi-.g
Company of Boston. The striking plnnh
weavers at IVibrone Mills, in Philadelphia,
formed a Wearers' Protective Association,
aivi rwolred to continue the strike.
HonrinsM ara rivun more tr"i!'lf t
Ieith, Pa. The gra:i 1 jury it ( i- -ei:o ir.,
Pa-, in the ease of J. A. ...ar an 1 h.s d. pu
tiea, chanreil with murder at th' : ..-.- -1
riot, returned true bills liHinrt all. ex p:
f.T Cairna. Paring the f r th-
Florida srn.itor.hip a fiht t ..V j.! i.-.- I: .
Ileajeal that iXkj huahris of w h.-a: h.-vi b -n
stolen from the elerav-rs at Ii;li.th -Ito'-r.
Moore was hanre-l at Trenton, . , for in ,ir
denng Henry llsy la-t July Ily a h-.i-. t
fail of ool an-1 r-k in the i i .iy lorU nn:i- At
Plymouth. Pa . three Po.'i.h roin-n v r-
kifled. The pre-nt dr!i -i.-ncy of t)-- K -.. -
a.'one National Hink of Phila I'ip'u i i f ' 1
CO.. (Jitlccn W. M.rn an 1 hirles I i .-.
renee, offioers of the bank, irr pv-tia!!.. n
aminei bef've the l'nite-i State. r nn-ni ; hit.
All the driven and baidirrt of t o- A 1 i n .
F.iprns Cwnpsnr at I.on.viil'. Ky . f.- i k.
th caalt of the r"nt or ;.-r of the - ni;.i:n
rjuirinf their eniploye-n t - .n '
Korrat fire are lom c. .naid.-r.i! i bun a i i
Hamilton and I'jwet cou:n:--. in N-. -.v V rk
The blacLamtih shop t h '-ie a i !
stable, of Tbooiaa tiaunon, in fMul i l--.pl.ia.
were ifkatroyed by tire. I.oas Jln.m . r .-, er--l
by invurancc. Five small .Uril'.nc i" the
rear wer damsel ti the ei tent of $!, '': n t
linatil. tloaceter. M:l. flvher::i':i ay
they intead t i be frien lly w itn N if mi 1 ail
peopl.. The copi'ii; of th' l.ea H ril. v
School building, at K:rni: igiiam, Alt., f'll o.i
.me srh'iol rhiiiiren, an.l fi - of ih.-ni w.-re
woaodeil. --- - The centennial of Columbia. S.
('., rndel witii a rreat ltp'.y lro-i 1 t
Harrison an-1 prty roacli'ii W i.-.'i : :i ro i -t
time
.A t a tall end roJlioi.in on the Io'iisvilIe and
Naahville r-a.1, near Phelan, Ala . Kncin'er
P. F-linnnd and Fireman Leat. r Hmwn were
caMd t.i datb, and Itrakeman .1 M l "oetello
scalde-i and burned. The cars n ere oivb-l
with oil and roerchandu nnd w re burn-l
Mail advice from Valpari"o innnuncca
that Don nernan Vial Bello has been appoint
ed sH-re:ary of the Chilian Legation in Washington-
The Secretary of the Treasury ha
awarded ailver hfe-aving medal to Corporal
Cnrti llirnn. Troop P., FiOh Unit1
Stole. Cavalry, tor gullant conduct in rew-uin,-Captain
W. S Schuyler, Fifth Cavalry, and
Mrs. K P Thomaa and MLa Nelli Thoma ,
from imminent danger of drowning in the K'-d
River. Tea. November 23. lla Paniage
has Iwcn done by frot at points in Il!inoi, In
diana. New York and Connecticut.- -The
Albany. loliana. Kle.-tric Light. Heat nnd
Power Company, capital rt.Vk, $7o,iX', n
!gnel to t 'haa. A. S-wle. Intimated liabiii
ties, "'". s-t at-.iit th- mime. - A
aouth-lMind Miaanuri I'acitic freight train .
Hitched at Hall's Station. Mo. I ir- nmn
Thomss Wallace, of K ansaa l it y . was fatally
s. alde-1 The trax k was under water, and it
u M the wreck was causes! by the
spreading of the rails Lire at Chicago suf
focated Mrs Margaret Shay At a muss
meeting of Italians- held at ltoaton. amove
m'nt was start"! to rro-t and present to the
city of Itowion a statue of Christopher Colum
bus, to coat S 1 . to f i ne thousnnd
dollars was su r: h--l on the spot, and the
neceaaarv committe- to f irther the work ap
pointed -The Pn-si.ent has declined to in
terfere in the case of N. M. Page, convicted
id Iowa of violating postal laws; Michael Tor
re., convicted in New York of passing con n -terfeitooin,
John L. La y. con v icted in Illinois
of having omnlerfeit coin in his pw-xiaesaion .
Nst Whittum. rancher. in the Blue river,
fifty mile, from I'hfton. Am., was found dead
in hiaeaoin. H- was shot through the Iw-lv.
His .-.ton t a pillag.i, two horsea, guns and
addles stolen I: is believed the murder wa
.the ork of Vpa.-hes
ALT buainea. at Ashtabula Harbor, Ohio, is
.oppoi by the strike of the.-.) and ore hand
lers. Nearly 1X-' men are out. A few n ho
attempted to resume work were prevented by
the stri kers.
RUDINI IS AGAIN HEARD.
The New Orleans Lynching Affair
Purely a Legal Question.
Not One of Nation:,. DisnttT -AVhy He
IlaVrallcd Kara and "orl-A Sprrrh
In the Deputies.
The Marquis di Hu ::, in the i 'h.ini
rVptitioi. iliouin ihf Now Orleans
r of
The
kill thi
'iM ir w, i n. p I y a firnl q'ii'ti.i
depnrttir of iWirn l'.v fr Mil Wash i n u'l '"n ,
hr rnr.'iii'ir. 1 r-l i n :i pr i .'f-t
afAlliM th' nc":i t" th- 1 !.i:- 1 :. - ;j:
jectinj; r " j - : i i C i ! . t f-r t!" .T( :ir. 1 i. r;
sympsWhy, th'- I't-miii r H'i l-I, ;is nh l':ilv,
aJid ho hop-l fr t incn lly s-'!a:io:i ; tiif
qutntion mvtilvrH.
h? termfMJ the nlnct luluy uf Tr- uur ili
Rudfni'u action in Uio 'Iikuu u it h ihc I'liiCnl
Statt-a, and the ui(Y1( r:ile churaftor of J i do
niaul.s. aktl whether. 1 1 irw nf the verdi-'t
ff thr N"w Ot - i-i.s r.t:id j'ir . it vn.il.i not
re nictr'1 d:n -V. r-n mjuc,- the niMlt-r and
leave thr roptinsihi'iiy i--r l he iNiui.ius on
thoe tolvTLiting tliem.
Sinor l". vuletto epre-.- I hit rerrt at the
rupture in thr rrlmmnH tct.M-:i tiir I 'ir.ttHl
Statt and Iraiy . Hp t ii-nj k'hi t hat lit t h- should
! m nl a t t in a flair. a u a a cry dc Il
l's le matter. lie tH-kik,"',J F:'miiit ili Kndini
t U)-r rvcry endcair t
ni-nt 'f the di.putf. In
to if allowed t" li!!L''r.
I'renucr di Kudim e.tpi i.nd ili.it the I-t-fin
ptiliry gcii'TM 1 iy k the I'rili-uiid aimed
(I maintAiu the Kiinf.m m ! i hrui in. Il
tin undtniraMe. he s.i:d. tii-it tile I'm il'H rxd
iry o; a iifii i 1 1 1 1 r y h hi id he d isrus.scd
olten. Aliisv. ' - - ' iut ma io nj- renewed
fo the rnT! ! lh moment. On the enn
trary, the pr-inir i- i.irti it wm eMntial
that a tfT'-nt naiwiti slm.iid pursue a nuifitant
line of fnTinu :n 1 r iT m In aide mlit r t he
frui! nf i.a o . n pliey. h x.k era ted im
portance o i a ii. a t te t:i',fii tn the New
(.JTlrani atiVwr, irr a ciueti.in erisemially ju
dicial converted mr- one at nit:nna! diLznity.
The recal 1 n( 1 rnu Ka . a ;vs u pmtot h l' Hist
ilie rnn ii; t of the I tilted lAt-s kjwvernincnt
in deelarni uf,t i r rt p i:isi lle 1:1 th'- matter.
Th- quentin Hfiii'-I tn he t lit- t ;n,' a new
p 1 1 r. -.
"Judicial pr eciin::i had 1 -' n commcr.ced
acamt the lynch- rs, ' out 'iiuo 1 t tie pr .niT,
' nut I cannot ny tn what etteut the pr
reiirf are sericvi. N evert hele-sn, I am cer
tain, that Kurnp-- Hppriives o.ir actmn. . ur
roun,r nt Nevr ( rican, Iihs been recalled
partly tHc.nia- thi lto vm n nicnt wishes to nh
taan the fullest lntnrinatmn in rcar i to the
uiatter. a.: partly I'-cauv we li ar that -.ni
of the r m i ii i .i l c it inn lii'di the ennsu I
published r irmittol tn he published were
inopp-.rtu ne.
I'.ep:yin: to p qi-.c-tmn relann-z to the New
Orleans prand jury nnd Siirrmr 'nrte, the Ital
ian consul at New Orleniin, Premier di l.udtni
a ided that he had lear.ie i through the uews
papeni of the incident recardinv: the consul.
1 f thr newd ere true, tlie matter would, of it
Vlft BUiriee tn pi
of t. on. ill " rie.
ve til-- ii'trv;ty of the recall
The discu-si-m w as then ad-
jour nri.
WORK AND WORKERS.
TrtE oke oneratnn are slowly but ?t adiiy
increa--in their funic.
It IS thotlSrht ther-a will he a iTnrral strike
among the miner in Fulton comity. Ills.
TlIR Stone-cutters in Barre, Vermont, have
refued to giunaiu the striking quarry ui-n
there.
THE nmfherhor-d of Pa intern in St. Iyouis
htT3 decided io make their strike there Gen
eral. Nearly 100ft dock lafrrm at Ashtabula,
Ohio, ore on atri ke aaint a reduction of
wae.
r'ot'B bnndr-d journeynien stone c u tt r
and tool n-harpcm rs in .m. t iuud, Minne
are on strike.
The Order of Railway Conductors in St.
Luia ha decided to join the Pederutiou of
Railway Ktnployees.
The iron furnace at Pequest. N". J., owne1'
by Con per A Hewitt, han been shut down,
owing to the dullness of the market.
Tjif contractors and builders in Wilke-.-barre,
P..arc williu thnl lhir employ-.
should work bur v. n- h ur a day on and art, r
J Uiif 1 t.
A otvrr.wisK liaa been eflectesl between
the -striking qnarryinm nnd their rmployers
at St. Iu;., tiy which the men ure to receive
tru hour' piy for uiu hours' work.
TIK National I .r thcrh x 1 of I -i 1 r
Makrra, m tH. ion at Indianapolia, has
adopt-! a syst'-m of apprntic-slup, allowing
one apprentice t every f--ur bniler makers.
Al.L the taction mn lv-tween Chippewa
Fai U and Ste en P. : nt, is. , lia vc strue k
ffr on ad ranee nf 1" cents a day. As thcy
do receive i-nly fi 1"', it is thought the ad
vance will be grar.l'- 1.
THK supply of coal in Iowa is approaching
exhaustion, even in the railway sheds, in cm
equence of the l rr i k . f fhe 1 m l n ri
of the State, all but 7 are out. and it is said
they have the pr iini-e nf the Illinois miner";
that the otHT.it"rs be Irovcolted if they
attempt U ah p coal from Illinois to Iowa.
Tiif master builders nf St. Iuis, at a meet
ing, defeated by a large majority a lock-out
resolution. Another resolution waa adopted
approving thi- motion of the previous meeting
to pay 37$ cents an h -nr. with an amendment
that all builders now paying 4' eenU could
continue to d n. Tms actmn virtually ends
the flight in favor of th striker. The situa
tion among other striking orgati'-tntioiis re
mains practically nuchaiid.
r tkry union switchman in the employ "t
the 'hie igo A N-rth western Iw.ai!mH I. has
b-ren diaciiargel. Tfieir places wt-r-' ti!!c 1 by
non-uni ei men. Tins action was due to the
decision of th company not to allow ttie
witchnien t- interfere in the aflairs of the
road and dictate as to the discharge of yard
masters etc The company is supported in it-
position by the c -n .actor's, firemen'a and
hrakemen s unions. The Switchmen's L'nion
is n t included in the National Ffieration it
P-ailrond I ,ni phi vees.
PRE HISTORIC SKELETON'S.
titi-rt (airtxes nf t!n- Aiifient Imuid
Itllil. Ith I iici. ei e,l.
A dc.p:i'. h lr ti C iuciiin.it, ' mi", sa:
Mil'-'-n -;r:c w re n : i c-i -r - nt Port An
cient, ih. vif. .f 'ii- irre-ite-r "t i he e;i rt h works
nf pre hiMoric pe.-pb- kn-1 ii as the Mound
Huil'b r-. Ti:' . m n.iti"ii is under the aus
pice nf the .-Hd's Fair, and the direction of
pr,,f,-a,fc..r Putnam, of !lnrani. the tiej.l work
1 1 ing m eluirje ,t Wiirren K. Mordiend.
I'll' -keb-tnija d 1 m ' 1 - 1 w TC those nf eb'Ven
n-'ii, "iie e 1 1 1 1 . i n and four eh i Id n ri . Fi vo
were nt a Mate of preservation. The
kletnn w . re th"s.f of men av-crnging live
U ct twn incht in h iu'ht. t he tallevt bein- six
'. et twn inch'.
There ar. id en -( h t the men had died
1:1 eonfi:. r. A'anit the peek of one of the
children's vkeletnii wa. f.und a necklace of
bear's te- th. ai:d in m.. or three ..f the trraves
u ere f.-un.l toui.ihaw ks and stone hatchets,
but n- n lie .,f ,ni ewp,-eia! alue. The graves
Mill !h r -ii -f rne-.-d , x net ly h found fr the
Worlds l air rhibn of American antiquities-
ci pt that n - c-tr'h ill eovt r the skcleton.f
MARKETS.
II M TlM"l:l' Hour -( it v h N. knper f.;. , "",
C 1 : ' . Wn.':it Southern Fuilz. f! 1".. 1.1.17.
orn - Southern White. 7i' i. 7 4. . Y.ll.ov,
7'M,77e. ' Ht.v SouthT.i and IYnnvl ani:v
o7fa''--e. K .- M ar land and Pen usy I a u ia
xK-isr--. ll:i. - Marylimd and I'm n- 1 an in
fcCs'i 1. 1". Straw -Wheat, f .. '( l 1 '. ' i.
Butter K-at.-rn "reauiery, J l.-u J"-., ii.-ar-l.y
r.---eipt 'Jl '.'Je. I 'h.'ev1 IvlM-TH l-.lliev
ream. - . Western, l i'j.'. l.L- 1".
(!- l'oi.aeeo. I..af I ii tenor. i J " (.l 1 . V .( ,..o I
. oimnoti. $i r. Middling. $;.-.ci.n..i...
1. to rir.e r---!. 1 1 1 . r'aii. y, ? 1 J.' ' i
' i. ! C
Nkw Y..I.K I'lour Soutliern t;.-l to
. h..ire extra, ft. -oM.o.'i. Wllent -No. 1 White
1 l'..''tl.l7. Kyt State ,"f!i,fi ky C.-irn -Soiith'-rn
Yellow, 71M,72e. " ( uts -White,
State .V.f.i.V.-. hntter -State. 2'2'L-r.
t 'h-eae Mate, 7 '-t-"-. 1 ".'i.s 1 "( 1. 1
I'll II Ai'Kt put v - Flour - lVnnsvl vani.i
I 'anev. f-1 'J.")'.i. 4. " I lent. Penny 1 ania an I
Southern K.-i. 1 . 1 M x. 1 . 1 1. live r.nnyl
viii!;i, ww.i,".7e. t'oru -Southern Yello-.v. 7:1
mv. at eV 7.j,rti'ie. 11, itter -State, .Mt.t;
I'li'i-w New Y'ork Fartory, li '(i, '''Je.
Fs State, loC.tl-.
(ATT K.
H.triM'-Kl' Beef - fn.'Sini..;..",'. Phoep
$.'..;. i . H.-s --jM.'H'm. ..'.
N'K"' Y'.'KK -Beef jr.iifi4-.iK'. Sheep
,"....( u'i.'Sl. Hoi-s 4..'VU.oo.4.
I.IBF.RTV Beef $h.0it,-;.50. Sheep
f.'. . ' " 'fa 7) . .1 1. 1 1 ,ss $.). 1 mn, o. 20.
SOUTHERN' ITEMS.
SOhTK IMKKf:TlN(i M:VS ft "! l'l I.I'O
FIK11I MANV .H'K'l-:s.
- The Mr.-et of Far;:r. ill.-, 'a., are ;
li;;hted hy idectrieity.
Kdwi,rl Sheehan. Smunton, Vt.. ws
k 1 1 led I y a' t r,' i ii at B a llalu i i i p.
- Benjamin J. .Im; . i. of 1: nvell eon nty .
us. kill.-I l.y tin- a. . ;. 'n ni ,i .lisehai j- ..f ii -on
n.
eap'a'u .Toola-i Tay'or, of Btie k i n . m
eounty, Ya.. in 1:;-; :;;n- :y-ni:ith year, .m l
IS 1 1 1 i ot. te art i ve.
--From the promt indieatiorm, the wli.-u
crop of Barh-iiir cotintv, Y. Ya.,will be nearly
t ire ns larLre as ufiuai.
The Maeon i ia. . trades dis lay will le- h.-M
( letoher L7. during the Stale fair, and pro:tn-.e
t eclipse all previous efforts in that hue.
- Tlie l.e - i not. ,n ' 'a. '. I levelojune'it Coin pa n y
has let to c mtract n h'itr-1 t.) eo-t '.iHH.. It
is ti) he finish.-.! hy the first ot .March next.
The trip of the Cheat M"Utitsin, Han do!
eountv, M'. Yn.. is the hiLrli.-st peak i
. Yn..
3,7 X'
1 the
?ta te
l.eiii'.
feet above -".he.
A nf
the
sea.
-The ptv. roll of the R rth l .in ' V"r
- at
Pulaski 'city. 'a.. n nt ex.-.-.-Is
monthly, and th- ir capacity is to lie largely
; ncrensed.
An extensive chemical and fcrtil.m
works, which will iveeml .yn'.eiit In nvtiI
hitmlreil hands, will shortly he started at
Pulaski, City, Ya.
Fred. Davis, while drunk at Charlottesville,
Ya.. climbed up a tree and kit- to sleep on a
limb. The limb broke and he fell, breaking
his skull and dislocatini; his hip.
-The Maryland ( iranite ( ompany has been n
operations to dee ,.p t he I e.r t 'r.-ek quarries,
"here it is expected soon to set up new ma
chinery and cinpl.-y a hundr.-d hands.
-It is reported that a enth'iuati from New
Mexico has purchased rt.ivm acres of land up
the Shenandoah Yalley, and he will nt once
proeeed to st.ick it with she. p, which he will
ship from that territory.
In I'arkersbiirs, W. 'a.. M. V. Collins, six
feet seven inches in hcicht. was married to
Martha. I. Farnsworth. who is three f.-et one
inch in height. The groom is forty--ix years
old nnd the ttride ci";hte. n.
In Washington county, N. C. a day or two
iik" n ymine lady, Miss Annie Williams, was
accidentally burned to death while assisting in
extini.'iiisliing u barn at.d sttible which had
taken tire.
The Mountain State Oil Company ha- sold
its property, consisting of l.aniner-s, on which
thre are eiht wells, ppvlucine barrcN M
oil per day, in Harrison eounty, . a., to
the Standard Oil Company. Price, ,f;'i)ii,i.
Col. A. K. MeClure, editor of the Phi hi
del phia. Times, will deliver the annua! oration
before the literary soeiot ics of P.oanoke T'ol
lege nt the commencement ju ,lune. Mr. '.
IL. Keedy. of B.-.nslx.ro' Md., fi:l be tin
valedictorian of the senior class.
Hon. W. C. T. Breckinridge, of K-nttt-ky.
has nceepted an invitation to d iiv. ;' the an
niial address lefore the 'irginia State Bat
Association, on July 2--, at the (ireenbrier
AVhite Sulphur Springs.
The will of tlie late .lodge fiideon D. Cam
b -ii w as offered for probate nt Clarksburg. W.
a., and protest and notice of contest in behalf
of children nnd grandchildren were served on
the clerk. This probably opens the greatest
b-g.il battle over a w'ill ever occurring in
West Yircinin.
--.I. Polk Hiscr. of Knoxville. Md., e uiter.i-p!at'-s
starring a canning factory on his farm
near that village. The building has been con
structed, ami in the course of a few weeks Mr.
RiS.T hopes to r.pen up his business.
-All the carpenters and builders in Charles
ton, V. Ya., are on a strike for nine hours a
day. and work on all buildings U suspended.
Several ot the contractors have conceded the
demands, and it is believed that matters can
be amicably arranged.
Silver ha been discovered on the farm of
David Falls, seven miles from Union Falls,
Monroe eounty, W. Va. The ore essays $Jt5
in silver and $2 in gold per ton. An offer of
$.i.(KX for twelve acres has-b-.-'i'efiised.
Tlje horses attached to the carriage of Jas
per Smit h, a prominent farmer of Washington
county, Y'a., became frightened at a Iloek of
geese and ran away, upsetting the vehicle.
Mr. Smith was killed, his wife received in
juries which will probably prove fatal, and
three children were severely cut and bruised.
A branch observatory hns been located ot
Il.vkville, Md., by Mr". Fdwin Smith, of the
geodetic office in Washington, to help in the
solution of the question of the variations of
latitude, now o-.vupving attention among scien
tific men.
Ir I). W. Crowther. of Frederick. Md.,
has in his possession a curiosity in the snap -of
a hen's e:rg that is hard to beat. It is six
inches in length '.'nm tip tn tip, the huge part
leing a perfectly formed egg, atul had a mem
branous connection attached, which formed
two smaller eggs, and all three devoid of a
she:!.
-For some time :Lcr. has been a gr-a! deal
of animosity be-veen th" tailors in two -hops
in Charleston, W. Va. It culminated iu a
. halb-ncc to a prize-fight. The parties to the
fi.-ht were J. Kngle and II. Huffy. They left
t ie city for a point several miles in the country,
and at 4 n'ehx-k went int the ring, and fought
t-n rounds, bare knuckles.
Yiee President Axtcll, of the Chesapeake
and ' hin Railroad, has been authorized to
have prepared -peoi li.-ations for improvements
co-ting i-72 , t. x V " "'. which his road (reposes to
make in and nmr Richmond, Yn. These in
e lude a splendid passenger depot ami the belt
line around the city.
Victoria Hodges, who a year or more ago
shot and killed R. J. Cunningham, a sewing
machine agent, was tried iu the County t 'ourt
Franklin county, "a.. and was found guilty
of manslaughter. Her punishment wasfix -l
nt six years in the penitentiary.
Mr. .1. V.. NorwcH-xi, of Sykesville. M l., in
ventor of the Norwood ear replneer, says the
choice of site for his company '- malleable iron
works hns been narrowed down to two places.
Norfolk, Yn., and Charleston, W. Ya., the
former offering to subscribe for ."i,0ik of the
company's capital stock and th" bitter oft- ring
to t ike .f.'vo-.iKKi anil gi e free site.
A gcntb-imn from New .lersey conic-ophites
coming to Hager-towo, Ml., with seven vr.
pcrienceii glass-blowers and contributing
Jin.ixi to the capital stock of the g'assworks
The stockholders propose organizing the com
pany on his arrival with the capital already
subscribed, although 7,i "l worth of tlie stock
has not been taken yet. Work on th- engine
room will begin at once.
--.A terrible explosion occurred at Durham.
N. C. where several negroes were eneagvd in
blasting out a well. J unes Strudwick, who
was down in the well at the time, was blown
up several feet and fell hack, and was hauled
out unconscious. He was terribly mangled
and torn, and will probably die.
A man and woman calling tlieirselves
Second Adventists have been preaching at
fcoodson's Mill, in Duplin county, N.C. They
ilaim the power to heal the sick and cure all
manner of disease? and also to cause the Holy
Cho-t to descend upon people. Larse crowds
attend their services, and about fitly have been
bapti7.ed into the fellowship of their faith.
An itinerant "Indian-root doctor," who has
le-n at Greensboro, N. C, for .several weeks
haranguing a motley crowd at night and vend
ing his medicine, did some serious damage
there at lung range the other evening. Ac
cording to appointment he sent tip a balloon
w hich drifted northw ard. It was seen to settle.
S,vin after the farm bell of J. I.. Hawkins,
who lives atout seven miles north of town,
was heard to sound an alarm. The neighbors
gathered as soon a toy could and with diffi
culty succeeded ii: pulling out the tirethat the
burning ball, on had started in a pile of wood
shavings r bin about t wenty-nve feet of Haw
kins' dwelling. Hawkins was absent from
home at the time.
At Thomasville, X. C. Mr. Rintte. of Xew
York, a prominent miner ami capitalist, and
one of the owners of the ld I.ftive mine
near that place, met his death in a terrible
manner. The company runs a line of railway
to their mine. Kiottc had come out to look
after the mine and was riding on a dump car,
which was loaded with ore. By some means
the car was unfastened and derailed, and the
load of ore was dumped out on the ground and
Rintte mi fell as to be caught under th" pile of
ore, weighing several tons. He was extricated
as soon as possible and taken to Thomasville.
where he dh d in a few hours.
SCHOOL CHILDREN INJURED.
The Copins of a v School-H o use at
IJirininhii in Falls on Them.
The cping of the new Henley school build
ing in Birmingham. Ala., fell the other m .ru
ing "ti the schod children a- they were
rntering the old building adjoining.
It is supposed a workin :n lean" I ov.-r t!ii
wall to loo.c at the children below atl t!u
bricks gave way.
Five little boys were hurl: Jani-s i ' leu,
s-rions!y injured about the head and body;
Fd. Marks, only .i years old. skull fr.i -turcd;
Albert Mayer, aged 11, head seriously in
jured, Flaehcr Summers and (icorge Ilwuley,
slightlv hurt.
None of the children are dea l, btitOlen,
Marks and Mayer are in a critical condition
SLAIN BY DYNAMITE.
Twenty Men Killed and Many Injured
at Tarrytown, N. Y.
Many mown Into the Hudson Kix-er Torn
to Pieces in a Horrible Manner,
Cause of the Kxploslon.
By an explosion of dynamite on a flat car on
the New Y'ork Central and Hudson River
P.ailroad near H 'lines Point, midway between
Tarrytown and hvingtou, New York, from
eighteen to twenty laborers were killed, and
twenty-five wore seriously injured. Nearly
all of the victims w ere Italians. Among the
dead is Finnegan. the Irish boss of the work.
The Italians were on the fiat car with twenty
four cases of dvnam ite, and were going to a
section of road where a third track was being
laid. A coil of rope lay on the front of the
truck of the engine. As the train passed
Holmes Point a spark from the locomotive
ignited the coil of rope. The moving train
fanned the flames, and thy reached the first
package of dynamite. One of the Italians
saw this, and sprang off the flat car. He fell
under the wheels atul was killed. The next
moment there w as n rumbling noise, a dense
cloud of smoke, and a flying mass shot up into
the air. Before the explosion some of the Ital
ians had tumbled off, and a few saved their
lives by so doing. The train had just about
come to a stop. One man was blown fifty feet
in the air, and fell into the Hudson river.
Anothcr man was blown over into the bluff.
Others w re blown in various directions.
Several are supposed to have been blown into
the river.
The air was filled with flying debris and the
fragments of human bodies, winch soon came
down like a patter of hailstones. People a
block off were t hrown to the ground hy the
concussion. Glass was broken in the w indows
of houses two or three hundred yards away.
When thesmoke cleared away there was a
sickening spectacle. Thirty-one men, princi
pally Italians, lay upon the ground. The car
was nowhere io be seen. Portions of the
trucks w ere thrown a hundred feet away, part
of the (rack and the roadbed were blown away,
and a great, hole was dug in the ground.
Those who were killed were horribly multil
ftted. They were literally blown to pieces,
and the wounded men were shockingly in
jured. Some were minus their arms, others
had their legs blown away, and still others
were dismembered in an equally horrible
manner. ' Few of them could speak any En
glish, anil they were only known by numbers.
The dead men were removed to Vander
bilt's undertaking shops in Tarrytown. Some
of the wounded were taken in a special train
to Xew Y ork, where they were taken toBelle
vue Hospital. Two bodies have been taken
out of the river, and nobody knows how many
more are there. The two Italians who were
not killed by the explosion w ere so badly
frightened that they ran to the river wall and
jumped into the river. They have not been
een since.
The bodies of some of the victims lay in a
swamp alongside of the track, and when the
swam) w hs drained to recover the remains of
the unfortunate men, a number of the bodies
were found sticking in the mud, where they
. had been forced by the explosion.
Three of the Italians died in the Tarrytown
Hospital after being moved from the wreck.
Ten of the bodies were picked up along the
trick, while five were taken out of the water.
The force of the explosion was heard and
felt as far down the river a.s Yonkers and
Spuyten Duyvil and up the river as far as
Peekskil. Windows were broken in Irving
ton, Dobbs Ferry and villages surrounding
Tarrytown. The force nf the explosion was
also felt across the river at X'yrtck, where
buildings were shaken and windows broken.
In Tarrytown and Dobbs Ferry many clocks
in public and private buildings were stopped.
In the High School of Tarrytown a portion of
the ceiling was knocked down, and a panic
ensued among the pupils. The school build
ing was shaken violently, and the scholars
and teachers thought an earthquake had oc
curred. The pupils began to run out of their
oh:.-- rooms, and the teachers with difficulty
pre ented a stampede.
The scene of the accident is one of the
beautiful points of the bank of the Hudson.
THE PRESIDENT AT HOME.
the Long
Nine Thousand
Mile Trip
is Ended.
President Harrison and party arrived in
Washington at -3.20 o'clock P. M., exactly on
schedule time.
Several pleasant incidents occurred during
the run from Ilnrrishurg to Washington.
Soon after' leaving the former city the travel
ers were treated to an extra fine dinner on the
train, provided by the officers of the Pennsyl
vania Railroad (.ompany.
When the tran was Hearing the Xational
Capital, and th? journey was almost at an end
the President summoned to the observation car
every person who had accompanied him on
the trip, including the ladies and all the em
ployees of the railroad and the Pullman Car
Company, and made them ft short address.
He said he found that he had made just iH'J
speeches since they left Washington on the
14th of April last, and he thought this a good
occasion to make the number a round 140.
lie then referred to the unprecedented excell
ence and perfection of (he railroad service
throughout the entire trip, nnd said that the
fact that they had been able to travel over
in.iK.Ki miles of territory in a splendidly equipp
ed train w ithout an accide nt or mishap of any
kind and without one minuteV variance from
the pre-arranged schedule, must always be re
garded as a most remarkable achievement.
In addition to his kind words the President
gave all the employees a substantial token of
nis appreciation of their attention. The
Postmaster-General, the Secretary of Agricul
ture, and the other gentlemen of the party al
so remembered the employees iu the same
wny.
The arrival in Washington was unmarked
by any demonstration beyond the presence at
the station of a small knot of officials and
several hundred travelers. The President's
grandchildren were at the station and his first
greeting was to them. Secretary Proctor,
Attorney-General Miller, Secretary Foster,
Assistant Secretary Xettleton, Assistant Secre
tary Willets, and General Tyner, of the Post
office Department, then boarded the car and
welcomed the travel ers home. The company
broke up in a few- minutes, however, and the
President anil his family proceeded to the
White House.
TOUCHED A MAN'S HEART.
Wonderful Surgtery That Saved a Ijlfe
in Chicago.
Surgeons West and Bouffler have performed ,
a difficult operation on Lu'ie Branick at the
County Hospital. It consisted of sewing up a :
knife-wound that penetrated the outer cover
ing of the heart. Branick was brought to the
hospital in almost a dying condition. Dr.
Bouffler made an incision five inches long ex
tending in the median line through the peri
toneum. A gush of dark blood from the
previous internal hemorrhage flowed from the
incision. Silken sponges were placed between
the intestines, and the liver was pulled down
and tied.
The surgeon followed the course of the j
knife. His finger was passed upwards and
found an opening in the diaphragm. This j
settled the question of life and death with the j
nurses and attendants. The man may be dead. ,
But Dr. West's finger passed on through the !
opening when he looked up in surprise and
hastily withdrew his hand.
"This man is living. I touched hi6 heart.
I frit its pulsations," said he.
The opening into the diaphragm led into
the pericardial cavity. The heart was flut
tering and the patient was sinking rapidly.
Hastily a suture was passed through the edges
of the wound and the opening in the dia- '
phragm was closed. An "M" shaped stick .
was put into the liver and the upper part of
the abdominal cavity whs sponged out. The
abdominal incision was then closed with iodo- '
form gauze and occlusive dressing. The man
was still living and is still alive. The opera- :
tion was performed a fortnight ago, and
Branick is preparing to be removed to his
home. He is twenty-four years old, unmar
ried, and an engineer by trade.
HAIL DOES $50,000 DAMAGE.
A Cloudburst Almost Destroys the Wheat
Crop near Salina, Kansas.
A tremendous cloudburst of hail took place
about four miles west of Salina, Kas., the
other evening. The district covered by the
storm was two miles wide and eight to ten
long.
The hail was as large as hens' eggs, and
almost completely destroyed the wheat. One
farmer lost 330 acres and another 200. The
total damage will reach $50,000.
CABLE SPARKS.
Processor Becqterei, the French physl- .
cian and author, is dead. j
Thirty-four thousand fourtdrymcn in tlie, I
Charleroi district of Belgium are oi strike. !
There were H8 deaths in London last week
from the grip and o;4 deaths from lung '
diseases.
There are 41 members of the British
House of Commons ill with grip. The disease
is ravaging London.
The Chamber of Deputies of France hn
adopted a bill allowing the Paris mutua
system of betting on horse races, under a tax
A magazine at Donaghadee, county Down,
Ireland, exploded and shook the whole town.
It is supposed the explosion was the work of ;
an American dynamiter.
The organ of the McCarthyite wing of the
Irish Parliamentary party, and National
Press, of Dublin, says that Lord Wolscley,
commander of the British military forces in
Ireland, is a recent convert to home rule.
The British government has despatched a
man-of-war to the province of Xgan-Hooi, .
China, where natives burned the British con- j
sulate, the Catholic mission and other Euro- ;
pean buildings. j
Capt. KDM17SD H. Y'ERSEY, liberal mem
ber of Parliament for North Buckinghamshire, :
was expelled from the House of Commons in
consequence of his being sentenced to one
years' imprisonment for conspiracy to procure
a young governess for immoral purposes.
Signob Corti, the Italian consul at New
Orleans, has been notified to return home by
his government. At Washington it is sup
posed that Signor Corti has been recalled ,
because of indiscreet public utterances in con
nection with the lynching of the Italians in
New Orleans.
An :auti-European riot has broke I out at
Woo Hoo, a treaty port of China on the Yang-Tse-Kiang
river, about 50 miles from Nan
king. The natives attacked and burned the
Catholic mission and a number of European
dwellings. The Europeans took refuge upon
hulks anchored in the river. .
Coello, the well-known political economist, '.
says Portugal is confronted by monetary,
industrial and political crises of the most ,
threatening kind. A member of the Spanish
Chamber of Deputies says on the first attempt
to establish a republic in Portugal the Spanish
prime minister will interpose and assist the
monarchy to resist any such movement.
The electors of North Wexford, Ireland,
have resolved to stop payment of the salary of
John E. Redmond, their representative in
Parliament, who is now in the United States
in the interest of Mr. Paruell, and to devote
the money thus saved to the relief of the
evicted tenants of Ireland.
United Ireland, the Dublin organ of the '
Parnellite wing of the Irish party, has an
nounced the Paris fund, which the AicCarthy
ites contend was contributed tosupport evicted
tenants in Ireland, will be used by the Par- j
nellites as a fighting fund for the final struggle i
fur home rule. I
LOST IN THE SANDHILLS.
Terrible Suffering of Two Little Sisters
in Nebraska.
For a week the entire male population of
Thedford, Thomas county, Neb., has been
engaged in a search for the two little girls of
John Hammond, who were lost in the Band
hills surrounding that town. The children,
one eight years and the other four, went to
visit their sister, who lives about six miles
north of Thedford, and between four and five
o'clock they started home. They had gone
about a mile, and the road lead through the
sandhills. The children lost their way and
never reached home.
Their parents and the immediate neighbors
searehedthe hills all night. Then the citizens
of Thedford and the surrounding country
turned out. They took the trail and soon
found where the children had wandered from
the path to gather flowers. The search was
continued until dark, and the searchers
camped on the trail. A relief party went
after provisions, and couriers were kept in
communication with the searchers as they
went on over the dismal search of barren
sands. They came to a place, where the
youngest had lost one shoe, and could see
where the older one had carried her little
sister a short distance.
At noon the youngest child was found at the
foot of a high hill, half covered with sand,
where she had fallen, completely exhausted.
The little one was unconscious, and her tongue
was Bwollcn so that it protruded from her
mouth. She was soon restored, however, and
when asked where her sister was, she said:
"Sister went home." The youngest child was
found nearly fifteen miles from the point
where they left the road to pick flowers. The
search went on; itcontinued until the searchers
discovered the dead body of the older child
ten miles north of Running, Blaine county,
fully seventy-five miles from the place where
the children lost their way.
HUNDREDS ARE DESTITUTE.
The Forest Fires in Michigan Still Rag
ing in Every Direction.
A despatch from Grand Rapids, Mich., says:
The forest fires in the Lover Peninsula are
still burning from Manistee to Huron. The
loss from these conflagrations is already esti
mated at $2,000,000 or more, with a probabili
ty that it will be doubled, unless checked by
rain.
Baldwin, Mich. Over one hundred home
less, houseless women and children are here,
sheltered and fed by charity, while the men
have returned to their late homes, whence
they were driven by the fires, to see if any
thing remains worth saving.
Gayl-ORD, Mich. The home of Robert
Ducke, a farmer of Remington, Montmorency
Conuty, was burned and two of his children
perished.
Hart, Mich. Fully two score families are
here destitute, having walked twenty miles to
escape the fires, lea ving homes and everything
behind them.
Twin Lake, Mich. The fires are still rag
ing in almost every direction. Three families
have been bnrned out. The men who were
fighting the fire were nearly hemmed in and
came near suffocating."
White Cloud, Mich. Hundredsof families
are destitue within twenty-five miles of here,
and many hundreds have nothing to eat save
what charitable people give them. Some of
them are badly burned.
Escanaba, Mich. The forest fires are now
doing great damage in Delta and Menominee
counties, and are spread over a vast area.
YV"ith a high wind this city would be in great
danger.
Pusxsutawsey, Pa. A great fire is raging
along the mountains between Punxsutawney
and Bellwood, on the line of the Pennsylvania
and Northwestern. It is sixty miles in length
and is still burning. Many people have been
made homeless.
PLEASURE SEEKERS DROWNED.
Eight Go Sailing on the Schuylkill, Onlj
Five Return.
Three lives were lost by the upsetting of a
sailboat on the Schuylkill River, off Gibson's
Point, in the lower section of Philadelphia.
The victims were Mrs. Susan Pascoe and her
infant son, of No. 1722 Ward street, and Miss
Mary f'arr, of 1411 Tasker street. There were
also in the party Fred Tidman, Samuel Peltz,
Robert Chamberlain and Mrs. Mary Jones, a
twin sister of Mrs. Pascoe, and her four-ycar-son
Willie.
The party started out for a sail down the
river. Tidman, the ow ner of the boat, acting
as .sailing-master. In an attempt to "go
about" the ropes became tangled around
Chamberlain's feet and the boat up
set. The three men are all good sw immers
and they succeeded in getting the women and
children on to the bottom of the upturned
boat but they became hysterical and frequently
got back into the water. Finally Mrs. Pascoe
with her infant and Miss Carr sunk.
After drifting about for some time those
still clinging to the boat were rescued.
Mrs. Pascoe 's body was recovered about an
hour afterwards. She held her child tightly
clasped in her arms.
TRAMPS FIRE A TOWN.
After Applying a Torch an Attempt I.
Made to Loot the Tlaee.
The principal business block in the town of
Lnmonte, Missouri, was burned, the loss being
$35,000.
The fire was started by a gang of tramps,
who proceded to loot the town as soon as the
blaze was under way. A number of houses
were ransacked, and the citizens were terror
stricken. The explosion of a hundred pounds of blast
ing powder in a burning hardware store added
to the confusion.
The inarshall and armed posse succeeded in
puting the thieves to flight, capturing four ff
them.
TtMiit-B U a n if..
pi WWTS linMI w
B! HAINES UULUtH H'tUNU.
It e.B bo given In coffee, tea, or in aril oleeor food,
without tha knowledge of patient If necessary
it is absolutely harmless and will effect perma
".nt and speedy cure, w -nether the patient to.
moderate drinkeror an alcoholic wreck. IT KB V
ER FAILS. It operates so quietly and wltn eocti
eertalnty that the patient undergoes no incon
venience, and soon his complete reformation ia
.fleeted. i page boolt free. To be bad of
B. N. Duffy, druggirt. New Berne,
N.C. jylSdwr
WE k
r
THE
BEST
LIVER
MEDICINE
CHILL CURE.
CHEAPEST MEDICINE KNOWH
CONSIDERING QUALITY AND SIZE OF DOSE
IT WILL ALSO CUE-E
BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA,
AND CHROKW CONSTIPATION.
R. BERRY,
New Berne, - N. C.
mURHAM
THE
UJ rnNROI IDATFD
Land and
DURHAM, N.C.
J.S.CARR,
President.
A.B.ANDREWS,
Vice-President.
A MOST LIBERAL and REMARKABLE
ANNOUNCEMENT.
The "Consolidated" Controls
285 Acres
Of Land Immediately adjoining The Canpai rf Trinity OoUega, which kaa kM
urveyea Into t i -
LOTS 50 BY 140 FEET.
The Lots are well located and ara situated npoa ;
Streets 60 Feet Wide with a Rear Alley of 20 Feet.
The location is admirable for Stores, Restaurant, and DwalUnn. Peraoaa eMrtaf to
" buy or balld," In order to educate their boya can do do better - ,,.,
than buy one or more of theae lota. , ,.-.
IT IS THE PURPOSE OF THE CONSOLIDATED TO OFFER, far tke areeeat eal
800 OF THESE LOTS,
and to guarantee that when the 800 Lot are sold, to erect upon some ao liable port Van rf
the property, sufficiently far removed from the residential portlotv oe moaarnly-oull t,
well-equipped 3otton Factory, to cost. ftlOO.OOO, and to supply the Oetton Factory WtUt
a CASH WORKISO CAPITAL of taa.OOO, making total oullrVT for ...
COTTON FACTORY, $125,000
One Knitting Mill for the manufacture of Hoot, IJnlet-fF a, to jrt M0O,
and to supply the Knitting Mill with a CAH WORKING CAFTTAIa ...
of ta,OQO, making total outlay for - . .
KNITTING MILL, $75,000
A OKAUD TOTAL OF - '
$200,000 IN IMPROVEMENTS
yrlaf W W I W V W in the line of ladtrial aaterarlaea upon the ytwaet ly.
TO EVERY PURCHASER
of $400 of this magnificent property, the " CONSOLIDATED " wiU
( FIVE SHARES, PAR TALOE 9S3 FEB SHARE, - -
5 , I full paid and non-assessable In the fton Factory, ana
t, VdSBnt THREE SHARES, PAR VALUE KM PER SHARE, , ff
I full paid and
Making a return to each Purchaser of $400 of the
Property, of $200, well Invested In Good
Industrial Enterprises.
For every dollar Invested in West End Town Lots, adjoining the Trinity College
propertv, the purchaser realizes 60 per cent. In Firs W7 lass Industrial Enterprises, waloa
will enhance the value of his Investment.
The " CONSOLIDATED " confidently believes that the above U the most liberal and ,
at the same time the most legitimate offer that haa oome before the public, la Ibetahe ,
offer is so liberal that we do not hesitate to nay that In our opinion, the i opportunity will ,
be promptly taken advantage of by those who hare been waiting for the BBHT, or
persons desiring to ecure first-class educational advantages tor their Boys, oa the snoel , ,
BdVMaps e8hotrfng1Sthe property and Price List of the loU cheerfully tarnished fM "
application to R. H. WRIGtfT, Secretary, DURHAM, N. C. .
REMEMBER
that every purchase of S400 carries eight shares of Stook In two well Equipped Industrial
Enterprises par value of S200. POINTER. t
In buying a lot you are also making an Investment, the Dividends upon which wiU . .
most like'ly aid materially to educate your boys.
. A HINT.
The building of two large Industries upon the Property, and the completion of Trinity
College ought largely to enhance the value of the lots.
A SUGGESTION. ''
Now is the time to purchase. 71)6 lots may all be gone If you wait, and yon will mlea '
the opportunity of buying from first hands. ',. ,
m
Si i
WE ARE IN THE LEAD
FOR FINE QUALITY AND STYLE OF SPRINQ VEHICLES.
THE MOST FOR THE MONET IS OUR MOTTO.
BEST
MATERIAL
AND
WINS.
SMALL AND LARGE ORDERS RECEIVE BEST ATTENTION.
A SAMPLE JOB WILL CONVINCE YOU THAT OUK
WORK IS THE WORK TO BUY.
BRIDGEWATER CARRIAGE CO.
Boot and Shoe Maker,
All Style of Hoots and Sht mmdm
to order and on Short notto. '
REPAIRING A SPECIALTY.
N. ARPEN,
CBATEI ST., ppotltt JtlTKtl CCi
nvEniLL pfliriT i
OUTWEARS ALL OTHERS
Then tent It tha Ixal ani aiort wnmit-
emit V Mr. alow Day. m w
and auto paint fovtr UMK
aad ypa bur tie "Areriil" ,
inw, da you no av. 7 f
1 tt
Eaaea and Inoreaeee the veUia nf your m
llnaa. It kaa dm ItMrd t timJ, for
Men in ne M year. Baasple eara of m
jmmIMv. proof of tka
Fatat toay addraaa.
.MDartlac aMMUnr
duraMMtrof Avortll
8EBLKT BROTHER.
York. aota by
I H. CUT!., '
Hlw-SflW, X. Vt
J. Tt, CttOWN,
BARBER SHOP.
Naatly fitted np in (he best ef at 7U. ' BA
room, with hot and oold watar.
BRICK BLOCK, MIDDLE ST. ,
R. H.WRIGHT,
Sao-y aa4:
1MV
non-assessaoie in mi jLuiung aini.
Perfectly Simple - Simply Prf$ct
THB
IMPROVED WARM AIR FURLUCES
ami
APPARATUS
or TM
BENNETT 4 FECK
Heating and Ventilating; Co.
The only Manuf mtuiw a In this dry gtriag
entire attention to the
WARMING AND VENTILATION
or
Residences, Churches, Schools, Etc
REND roM PrUNTKO BfATTBM
BSTIHATBS OUIimU OITBOI
245, 247 and 24S W. RI St, CIbcIimU, 8.
ONE OF
OUR CATA
LOGUES FULLY IL
LUSTRATES OUR LINE.
abftof varto4,
uxi pafnt bat "7
Improvement Go
7
-