w IMA' THE OLD NORTH STATE FOREVER." V0L. 2. NO. 34, TAItBORO, N. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1890. SINGLE COPIES 5 CL GAROIL Only one county (Washoe) in Nevada fart an increase in population oyer vao eosaf tea years ago.. a..- " """""" gars the Boston Globe: The applies of electricity and tha overhead trol u. jjtem for prope'ling canal-boats pro pjjes an economy of fifty per cent. The jjusl-boat mule will soon take hi placa 0 innocuous desuetude along with the gf(t car horse. , ;- ' T5 Ibutwife exultantly exclaim jijjt "the college girls are walking tnj with t,ie nonor rapidly. It is no def the male colleges are chary of la&jg Uin to women students; the en would stand little chance, except in jjje field of athletics, if the women were paired to compete oa equal terms for The Mayor of Newport, Montana, de jjjred somc new baths open. He then itbdrew, and throwing aside his robes pf office, reappeared before the large ptberingof ladies and gcntlemed in a jhing suit. Plunging into' the water, be wam the full length of the bath, and hit example was followel by several rvn Councilors and policemen." The Supreme Court of Illinois has fait decided that a man cannot be ex cluded from the witness stand in that' State on occount of his religions disbe 5ef. The witness in the case under re new believed in a God and a hereafter, ind in punishment through th.3 courts if be more falsely, but he had formed no opinion about punishment in the next torld. The Supreme Court held that be was a competent witness. It is "ripe meat" that you must ask for now, if you wish to stamp yourself as I true disciple of epicureanism, says the Buffalo Commercial Advertiser. . "Ripe meat" is meat that lias been killed and kept from three to four months in an even temperature just above freezing. This softens the fibers and makes the coarse part luscious because of the absence of "full blood." Meat subjected to such a process is so tender that it melts in your mouth as easily as charlotte russe; so tender, in fact, that the fastidious epicure will eat no other kind. The Commercial Advertiser has coma to the conclusion that lovely woman is the same all the world over at Buda pest as well as in other places. The ether day six hundred females -forced their way into the palace, their object beinto inspect tho trousseau of the Archduchess Margaret. They fought toe police and lackeys with their para noial and then, tho. enemy being con quered, fought with each other. Of the parasol handles there were after ward taken up several basketsf ul. Good business for the local umbrella makers. Koble Sir Hundred I The Chicago Herald claims that "when typewriters become cheap a great change will occur in the education of children. There will bo littlo occasion for teaching them to write. Experi ments made with somo quite young chil dren show that by tho use of one of these instruments they will" learn to read, pell and write in le3s time than they learn to do one of these things under the present methods of instruction. All children delight in using a machine. Thj are fascinated with an instrument tiat enables them to print their own Mmes and those, of their companions They do not tire of using it for the rea oa that it enables them to do a great iety of things. It is pQsssible that tbc typewriter may accomplish more ia creasing intelligence than the printing press has done.' It will be a time and bw saving machine adapted to the ac laireaient and dissemination of knowl- J W. Brayley, one of the foremost merchants in Newfoundland, recently ''"ted ilontreal, Canada, it is said, on a 2ret mission in connection with tho knders' troubles. Ia an interview he ft that many of the people express Melves as strongly in favor of an wtion to the United States if is not a satisfactory aettle Blent of the question which is now iag so much anxiety oa the island, argue that if there is to be any of allegiance at all it is better to "t with the United States, which they ee will protect their interests and the same time they gain a market of millions of peoplo for what they produce, while if they joined with oada their gain would bo a market of "ty ix millions of people. It was an y;lisb. man-of-war and not a French .U-5Vht close UP Baird'a lobster facs V'fin the French coast, and English vsel5 are responsible for most of the ct which are causing the present tfouble. Ia connection with the ball terofore given annually to the officers f Her Majesty's ships, Mr. Brayley said llat if guch courtesy had been officially given this year it would have led to the - rerthrow of the Government. THE NEWS. The next farmers' congress will be held in a city In Missouri, to be selected by the Mis souri delegation.- Tristram Barges, past grand commander of the Calif rnia Knights Templar, U dead. William A. Quigley.a fruit farmer, living near Gjand Rapid,Mieh, was brutally murdered by two inknownmcn. -Councilman Michael J. Shprkey, of Wil mington, who challenged Chaj. W. Edward, of Wilmington, to fight a duel, has been held for trial. The stock yards Jtrike at Chi cago has been declared ofll- 'John Davis, . colored jockey, who was mysteriously shot at the West Side Driving Turk, In Chicago, in dead.- The Tunnel House, 4 large frame botLf the Sanda entrance tl tbv,f?f. rlair Kfver tunnel, was burned, and one of the female employees, unable to make her escape from the upper room, was buijried to death. ; Benjamin Carter, aged fifteen, fatally in jured Lis thirteen-year-old sister at Rosedale, Ks. Rug weavers in Bethlehem, Pa., went on a strike. Jennie Ed J r a burlesque actress, attempted suicide at Chicago. An English syndicate is after the menhaden fish ery basins in this country. I In the wreck of a freight train on the New fork Central Railroad a number of cars were lemoltshed and Albert II uck.j the engineer fatally injured. Lelan Beck, an' old man from St. Clair county. III., leaped from a train, bound from Philadelphia to New York, and was killed, and his little daughter jumped off the train after him, receiving jfatal injuries. The couple were on their way to Hamburg. John Meehan, who four years ago-robbed the Bank of England of 48,00ojhas been cap. tared in Chicago. Henry Da (field, aged seventeen years, died at Bridget n, N. J., from injuries inflicted by Harry Pierte with a whip. General Milledge ' L. Bonlhain, railroad commissioner of South Carolila, was found deal in his bed at Hawood, White Sulphur! Springs, N. C. -Ace Madison, a farmer of Edmondson county, Ky., shot and killed his sixte-.year-old daughter. The trial tripof the United States cruiser San Francisco was successful, making an average' speed of 19 knots. C. II. Nichols, C. ' Tideman and Charles Warriner, officials of the Nichols Banking Company, of Ka nsas City, were ar rested on the charge of fraud. Wilson N. Jones was elected governor o T the Choctaw Nation. - A fire in an electric fixtures fac tory, West Thirty-fourth street, New York, caused a damage of $25,000. t A, fourteen-year-old boy killed his father at; Nebo, III. Fire damaged the Eastern Manufacturing Company's plant at South Brewer, Me-, $30,- 000. -Seven Aldermen of Biadlefbrd, Me-,' wore arrested for irregularties inj Election mat ter. By theexplosion of a locomotive boiler on the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Railroad near Mansfield, O., Albert Graham and Joseph Murphy were killed and the train (oiJVet o Jre,- Jacoh Reed a wealthy re tired merchant of Philadelphia, is dead.- Peter Diehl's machine shops and McSweeny'a glove factory at Gloversyille, N. Y., injured $lt.000 by fire. T Mrs. Mary Wilson, with her! Infant In hen vms, was sitting in a cemeteryjat Carbonado, Washington, on the grave o? one of her chil dren, when a tree fell and killed both.- Three persons were killed nt M lllen, Neb., by On accident on the Burlington and Missouri Railroad. Two boys died at Knoxville, Tenn., from an overdose of m irphine, taken by mistake for quinine. The druggist made the mistake. The Dulufh i nd Winnipeg Railroad Company has ordered to stop work on the Winnebagoshish reservation. Scott Shoemaker, a hotel clerk, kil ed hinself at Scranton, Pav-7 Frank Roland, a real estate sharp of Topeka Kansas, was arrested in In dianapolis. A strange disease has appeared among cattle in Missouri. The Grangers National Exhibition was opened at Williams' Grove, Pa. Commodore Chubb, harbor mas ter at Galveston, Texas, died at PosJ Mills,Vt, aged eighty-four. The Amejrican Associa tion for the Advancement of Science, in session at Chicago, passed resolutions asking Congress to protect forests. McVicker's Theatre, In Chicago, was destroyed by fire. Loss about, f 200,000. Emil V. Koestner was arrested in Philadelphia, charged with empezzling $7,000 from societies in Philadelphia.-!- The Demo crats of the Twelfth Pennsylvania district nominated John B. Reynolds, of Kingston, for Congress. The Kansas Central express was aeraiiea in tns salt creen vauey. Nelson Morris, a packer, intends to build large slaughter and packing-houses on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. jCaptain Ihur ber and his daughter were drowned near Good speed, Ct.-r Congressman Hoar (Michigan) discussed the tariff before a large body of far mers at the Hudson county (N, Y.) fair. John Porter, of Buffalo, Was fatally injured by being thrown from a carriage. Fire in Bannister fe Lewis lumber yard at Bisbee, Yt, destroyed $15,000 worth of! property. Otto Schultz and Carl Skow were killed at New Brunswick, N. J., by timber falling on them. Frank Rogers, who r cently robbed a stage coach in Wyoming, has been arrested in the Blue Mountains or Utah.- William PJchter, ot Roxborough, a subu rb of Philadel phia, dropped dead after workii g hard to save his burning tarn. The pcai at crop about Norfolk, Ya promises to be a good one. John F. Broden, of Johnstown Pa., shot and instant'y killed his wife, whom he had ar rested on the charge of being c riminally inti mate with a policeman. -TLe New. York State Board of Arbitration has informed Vice President Webb, of the New York Central Railroad, and the master workman of the Dis trict Assembly, K. of L., that a investigation of the strike will be made, aad the strikers now think that Mr. Webb will iave to submit to arbitration. The railroad officials, however, declare the strike ended. William Fiamella, an Italian, stabbed and killed his brother-in-law, William Vrapp, and wasj subsequently detected by the finding of thi blood-stained dagger upon him. The latest thing in trusts ia a barber-shop combine, by which it is pro posed to establish barber shops in all barge cities, tickets of membership to be sold to travelers.- Moab Turner and Stephen Wannick fought a duel with knives ' toj the deaih at Middlesborough, Ky.- The London Invest ment Company has bought oui several Chi sago brewing com pan i es. M rs. Jjena Ma- thlas, the wife of Colonel Ad.tm Mathias, at Decatur, IB, was murdered by William Craw ford, with whom she was supposed to have been intimate, and who, when hunted down by a posse, committed suicide.' -The Nebraska Prohibition Convention nominated Dr. B. I Paine for governor and George "W. Woodby, ?oored, for li eu t e nan t-go v ernor. TITO EXILES SLAIN. Details of the Latest Horror in the Wilds of Siberia. A RwMtaa lat Sew Tvrk Tells tHw Avrfml' Story of lite Tlnmta Tramedy Traao; . . prt4 In Iron Cases." Fix weeks ago a cable dispatch from Berlin stated that another horror had been perpe trated on Russian exiles in Siberia, that a number of the so-called "political unfortu nates" had been slain by their guards at or near the town of Tinmen, in Western Siberia' People had already been so surfeited with horror in reading the heart-rending accounts of the flOAsaere at Jaktosh, when 3j "politi cals" were shot down, and of the flogging of Mme, Hihida at Kara, that the few ii lies about the Tinmen affair created only a moderate ex citement at the timeit was published. But de tails. have now been received that bring its horrors fully up to those perpetrated in the extreme northern Siberian capital. A Russian, Alexander Kwiatkowski. ar rived in New York direct from St. Petersburg and brought with him the first account of the Tinmen tragedy. He had rained his news almost at first hand from a relative of one of the victims, a beautiful young girl, the Prin cess Eleneoginska, 18 years of ze. From Prince Adam Oginska, Kwiatkowski learned the following details: The story begins with the exiles, 100 in num ber, who left Ekaterinburg about the end of May. They had been transported with a eteamer load ot exiles politicals and crimi nalsfrom Nijini-Novgorod to Perm, living in iron cages on deck, and were then sent by the railroad across the Ural mountains, 12 hours' journey to Ekaterinburg, where the real horrors of the Siberian journey began. From that point the exiles had to go on foot all the way to Tinmen, a distance of nearly 500 miles, where the rage steamer would be in readiness to transport them via the Jenessei and the Obi to Tomsk, where another 1,000 miles would have to be trodden by the weary exiles until Irkntsh was reached. According toOginska's account, as told to Kwiatkowski, the journey from Ekanerinburg to Tinmen was one of indescribable hardship. The heat during the day was intense, and for 15 days the exiles were compelled to walk under the burning sun along the roads half a foot deep in dust. They usually made 20 to 25 miles, and sometimes 00 miles in a day, resting at night in the prisons which line the great Siberian post road straight across the continent from the Urals to the Baikalas, then further to the Pacific Ocean. The letters re ceived by Prince Adam say the sufferings of the .beautiful Princess Elene was intense, arousing even the sympatny of the Cossack Guards at times. She was the youngest of the group of exiles, but much as she suffered her seFf she was never heard to complain. All her companions were in a similar pitiable condi tio of exhaustion, from the journey. Their feet were swollen to such an extent that some of ihem sat down by the roadside and declared it bras utterly impossible for them to move another step, and asked permission to ride in the wagons that always accompany an escort of exiles for the purpose of transporting the sick and the women unable to w alk. They ap pealed to the guard in vain, however, for as answer they were cruelly beaten by the soldiers with the stocks of their guns and ordered to get up and march on. These scenes happened frequently on the journey-always with the same results in cruelty. Bnt at last, when within only a few stations of Tinmen, : the small band of exiles, driven to despair, turned fiercely npon their guards and began to fight, for their freedom. But it was a very unequal fight, for the sol diers who made the journey with loaded rifles immediately began firing on the crowd. The result was horrifying. The first victim was the beautiful younjr princess. Her head was pierced by a bullet t and she fell dead without, uttering a word. Still the soldiers kept up the firiug, and out ot the band of po litical exiles who left Ekaterinbbnrg 20 were shot dead and 12 were wounded. As nearly all the exiles in the group participated in the "rebellion" to a greater or less degree, it is feared that the remainder will be severely punished, if not hanged. Such i3 the terrible story as told by Kwiat kowski. It sounds incredible, and would doubtless be considered so were it not that so many previous horrors of a like description have been reported and proven. M. Norralkow an old Siberian exile, who is now in New York, says that the ease of the princess has been followed with deep interest in the Russion colonies in Geneva, Paris, London and other cities. She belonged to an old and honorable Lithuanian family, several members of which spend the winter in St. Petersburg. How she came into the trouble originally is not known. She-was probably connected in some way with the societies in St. Petersburg for the bringing about of po litical reforms. M. Norralkow expects that still more complete accounts of the Tinmen horror will be published in Geneva shortly. POUND WITH HER THROAT CUT. An Illinois eandal Kndi its TJoobl Tragedy. - A sensation was caused at Decatur, Ills-, by the murder of a married woman and the at tempted suicide of the fleeing murderer. The body of Mrs. Lena Mathias, wife of Colonel Adam Mathias, was found with her throat cut from ear to ear. About the place there was every appearance of a strurgle. One stroke of a razor or sharp knife killed the woman. She had evidently been dead eight or nine hours. There were evidences of criminal outrage. Because of Mrs. Mathias' supposed intimacy with William Crawford, aged 27, son of W. H. Crawford, of Decatur.it was be lieved that he had committed the horrible crime, and officers were sent eight miles in the country to run him down. He wasdiscovered, and the officers gave chase through the tim ber. As they gained on him, Crawford cut his own throat. He cannot live. Crawford had worked for Colonel Mathias, who is in the hay and lightning rod business, and five years ago became acquainted with Mrs. Mathias, whose age was twenty-six, and whose maiden name was Lena Culver. She was born and reared at Rochester, Ind. What the rela tions of the couple were is not known. The husband was jealous of Crawford and let him go. Since his discharge the woman had at tempted to get Crawford to go away, as she feared a tragedy. MARKETS. BAT.T73TOM Flour City Mills. extra,v25 $i50l Wheat Southern Fultr, 1.02L05. Corn Southern White. 5S5)c. Yellow. ' 57i58c Oris Sou them and Pennsylvania I 24oe. Rye Maryland and Pennsylvania d66Se. Hay Maryland and Pennsylvania 11JXK$1X)0. Straw Wheat, 7-OUfcfcO0. j Butter Eastern Creamery, 2K$21e-, near-by ' receipts 1213c. Cheese Eastern Fancy Cream, 99lo, Western, 8(91c. Eggs 2Ua 21c. Tobacco, Leaf Interior, 1(J$Ut0, Good ', Common, 4(a.$5.0u, Middling, 6a.fS-00, Good t to fine red, 10.00. Fancy, 10((t$13.oa 5 NEW YORK Fiour Southern Good to choice extra, 2.60(&35. Wheat No. 1 White 10.71(5 l.OTle. Rye-State 58G0c Corn-Southern ellow, 5o56c Oats White, State 3c Butter State, 1219c Cheese State, 681e- Fgs 2021c Philadelphia Flour Pennsylvania fancy, 4-353$i85L Wheat, Pennsylvania and Southern Red, 10.4 UMJc. Rye- Pen usy 1 va-nia657e- Corn Southern Yellow, 4343ie. Oats 2434c Butter State, 2u21c. Cheese New York Factory, lOQIOie- Eggs - State, 19i20c CATTLE. ' - ' BaT-TTHOKE Beef l-25$4-37J. S-Wc.M.75. Hoes L25(u$43Q. Sheep Nkw Yorx Beef GoKXTjOO. Sheep UJOrLSS. Hogs 4.105$4.4a East Liberty Bcev 4.fHj'a Sheep SJOOioJtQ. Hess 4?G$t3jb . HOT-PIEST C0NGRESSL " SVsMtto eaBlo 191st DAT. The Senate renewed the rW sideratina of the tariff bill by paragraph, the pending question being on Paragraph 193L Prg 1 45, imposing a duty of 1 cents a nonad on lead ore and lead dross; provided that silver re and ail other ores containing lead shall pay a duty of 1 J cent a pound on the lead contained therein, according to sample snd assay at the port of entry. Mr. Cuke moved to amend by striking out the proviso and inserting a proviso that ores containing silver and lead i a which the lead is of lesa valoe than the silver shall be admitted free of duty. Mr. Plumb moved to amend the paragraph by reducing the duty on lead ore iroin H cents a pound to of a cent. These two amendments were the subject of debate for the rest of the semion. end no action was taken upon them. The HSusc resolution for the appointment of a committee of seven Rep resentatives and three Senators to take order for superintending the funeral of the late Representative Lewis F. Watson, of Pennsyl vania, was laid before the Senate. Senators Cameron, Cullom and Faulkner were appoint ed a committee on the part of the Senate, and then the Senate at 5.30 adjourned. 192D DAT. The Senate unanimously agreed to close debate and vote on the tariff bill Sep tember 8. The conference report on the sun dry civil appropriation bill was presented and read. After a long discussion on the paragraphs referine to reservoir sites and irri gation the report was agreed to. The tariff bill was then at 2 P. M. taken up, the ques tion being on the lead paragraph. Schedule E, relating to sugar, having been reached, Mr. Aldrich said that the committee proposed to let that schedule be passed over informally for the present, so that Schedule F., relating to tobacco and its manufactures would be the first thingto come up to-morrow. The Senate then adjourned. 193d Day. The resolution heretofore of fered by Mr. Plumb instructing the com-nit-tee on rules to issue such orders as will wholly prevent the sale of spirituous, vinous and malt liquors in the Senate wing or the Capital w as taken up by the Senate. Refered to the committee on rales. The tariff bill was then taken up and -discussed until six o'clock, when the Senate adjourned. - 194th DAy. The resolution heretofore offered by Mr. Bate for the suspension of the work in erecting the Lafayette statute on the site selected in Lafayette Square was taken up, and Mr Evarts, on the part of the library committee, stated reasons why, in his opinion, the r solution should not be agreed to and the work should be completed. After remarks by Messrs. Spooner and Bate the vote was taken and the resolution was adopted. The conference report on the railroad land for feiture bill was presented and ordered printed. The tariff bill was then taken up. The bill was laid aside after 10 or 11 pages had been disposed of. The House lard bill was present ed to the Senate and referred to the committee on agriculture. .The Senate at 6 P. M. ad journed. 195th DAT Mr. Blair presented a me morial of the Woman's National Industrial League for the suppression and punishment of the "armed assassins, known as Pinkerton detectives." Referred to the judiciary com mittee. Mr. Edmunds offered the following concurrent resolution, whieh went over for the present: - s Jtesolced, That when the two houses ad journ on the 19th of September, 1890, it be to meet on the 10th of November, 1890. M : Considerable progress was made on the tariff bill, the salt and spirits clauses being disposed of. - . - " " , Hobm Sesatonv ' 200th Day. The session of the House was very short, owing to the sudden death of Representative Watson, of Pennsylvania. The conlerence report on the sundry civil appropriation bill was presented and agreed to. On motion of Mr. McCreary, of Kentucky, Saturday, September 13, was set apart for the delivery of eulogies to the late Senator Beck, of Kentucky. Mr. O'Neill then formally an nounced the death ot his colleague, and offer ed resolutions of respect, which were unani mously adopted. The Speaker appointed aS the funeral committee Messrs. Culoertson of Pennsylvania, McAdeo, Craig, Townsend of Pennsylvania, Maish, Wallace of New York and Kerr of Pennsylvania. The House then as a mark of respect to the memory of the deceased, adjourned. 201st Day. The House spent the session over the lard bill, its opponents successfully filibustering against taking a vote on it. i 202D Day. In the House the filibustering against the lard bill was continued. During the proceedings Mr. Cannon, of Illinois, made an undignified attack on Mr.McAdoo, of New Jersey, which the latter sharply resented. Mr. Beckwith, of New Jersey, ana Mr. Wil son, of Washington, also passed hot words, and the latter struck the former. Finally a reso lution was adopted revoking all leaves of ab sence except those granted on account of ill ness. . 203d Day. Things moved along more smoothly in the House this morning. No op position was made totheapproval of the jour nal and immediately after the decision of the Speaker that the lard bill was unfinished business was sustained by the House and the lard bill passed. Finally the House proceed ed to business and resumed the consideration of the bill for the adjustment of claims of laborers under the eight-hour law. At the cl se of the morning hour this was laid aside an I the House, under the special order, pro ceeded to the consideration of the bill called up under the special order by Mr. Connell, of Nebraska, constituting eight hours a day's work for all laborers, workmen and mechan ics employed by or on behalf of the govern ment or by contractors who do work or fur nish material for the government, and pro viding penalties for violation of its provis ions. Brief remarks were made by Messrs. Connell, O'Dannell, Atkinson of West Vir ginia, Caldwell. Wade, Reilly, Cummings, McCoinas, Lawler, Farquhar and Mutchler. The bill was then passed. Mr. Henderson, of Iowa, tubmitted the conference report on the bill for the relief of the sufferers in Okla homa, and it was agreed to. Adjourned. 204th Day. Immediately after the reading of the Journal the House went into committee of the whole (Mr. Allen, of Michigan, in the chair) on the private calendar. The first bill to be considered was that which has been pend ing for Ibe past 1G weeks, the omnibus South ern war claims bill. The committee rose, the bill was passed and the committee resumed its session. When it again mee half a dozen private bills were passed. The House at 5 o'clock took a recess until 8 o'clock. The House at its evening session passed 72 private pension bills, and at 10:30 adjourned. A GREAT WORK FINISHED The Tanael U aider ike . Clat JU- The workmen engaged upon the two ends of the St- Clair river tunnel between Port Huron, Mich, and Sarnia, Out, shook hands with each other the other morning under the St. Clair river, and made the great subter anean highway echo with their cries. When but one hundred feet of the tunnel proper re mained to be completed, work was suspended, and an eight foot drift w as begun- Tnia was to enable tae engineers to adjust the soaasive shields so that tney will torm a perfect liain? for the tunnel when brought together. The tunnel is practically completed, and every one connected with it ia jubilant, for their iucces has surpassed the most sanguine an ticipations of it promoters. . - Tnis marks tne completion of the greatest river tunnel in the world, and poasioly the greatest piece of engineering in thi country. It ia eleven feet longer tnaa the Brooklyn bridge, and the difficulty of naderground wont compensates for the finer work neces sary on that structure. The tnnnel will not be in use until some months, as a thirteen thousand leet of spproacn is to be dag on the 1'anauian side, aixi one of nine thousand on the Michigi SOUTHERN 1TE2SL fTTKRKSTTJVa XKWI C09TPI1KD PBOW HAXT SOURCES. The Lawrence Iron Works, st I ronton, Ohio, will be removed to Glasgow, Va. George Nace a prosperous farmer, of Bote tourt county, Va, was thrown from a hay wagon and killed. The school population of Roanoke, Va Is 4.1 18- Eight years ago its entire population was less than sua A. large factory for the production of woolen, knit couds H to bo erected in Charlottesville, Va., by a Northern grm. Land "for a new hotel in Winston, N. C, to cost (00,000, has been selected, and wqrk will be commenced at an early day. While Benjawia A. Neal wne being tried at Port Deposit, ML,on thecharge of robbery he jumped through an open window ani ca rs ped. The peanut vines in Sonthside Virginia are looking very promising, and the indications are that a good crop of "goobers' will be made. . - ' Scott Pierce, of Alexander, Va a brakeman on the Virginia Midland Railroad, shot him self twice at his home in that city. Ilia wounds are fatal, .r - A wealthy northern gentleman has proposed to give 92 for every $1 subscribed in North Carolina, for the further endowment of Wake Forrist college. " W. P. Wyer, recently of New Windsor Col lege, Maryland, has been elected professor of ancient and modern language of Reachie Col lege, Louisiana. About $6,500 acres of coal land near the Monongalia river, in Marion and Monongalia counties, W. Va-. have been sold to a syndi cate for $23 per acre. There is more building going on at Roan oke, Va., than at any time in its history, and residences and business houses are rented before the foundations are completed. Frank Kale, a brake man and assistant yard conductor on the Norfolk and Western Road at Radford, Va., fell between two freight cars and was so terribly crushed and mangled that he lived only three hours. A big barn on the farm of Bedford Glass cock, near Rectortown, Va., was burned with, five hundred bushels of wheat and a large number of agricultural implements. The ay-roli of the Roanoke, (Va.) Machine Works shows 1,692 names. , The amount of money to be paid out this month will be over (63.000. The works are now running night and day. A large boiler and machine works, giving employment to eight hundred men is to be removed from Col uu bus, Ohio, to Buena Vista, Va-, the contract having been signed. With but finr dissenting votes the town of Fincastle, Va., has subscribed $10,000 to the proposed railroad from that place to Trout villu, on the Shenandoah Valley Railroad. - There is to be a Confederate reunion at Franklin, Pendleton county, W. Va, Sept. 5, Senator Faulkner, Congressman W. L. Wil son and ex-Senator Camden are expected to be present and make addresses. Nelson Villers, a brakeman on the B. and O., was instantly kilted at Moundsville, W. Va., on the Camp Ground switch, near the Moundsville Coal Works. J. H, Wiggin, of New York, who recently purchased tne ice plant in Raleigh, N. C, has .reorganized the same under the title of the Raleigh Plate Ice Company The operaVJn will be largely increased next season. Steve Jacobs, a celebrated outlaw of Robe son coutty, N. C, who was to have been .hanged some timcsince, but escaped, has been captured in Georgia and returned to the proper authorities. . At Fort Sprinjr, Greenbrier county, W. Vrn Elmer Manu and kelson Say lor, tbe latter of Cincinnati, were out hunting, when Mann's gun was accidentally discharge djtSaylor re ceiving tne Dail in tils heart, causing instant death. . J. W. Taylor, of Magnolia township, Samp- son county, N. C, has just finished a cart body on which lie used nails bought by his great grandfather one hundred and sixty years ago. They are .wrought iron, and cost twenty-five cents a pound. Mr. Taylor is over seventy years old. The Hamlin House, the principal hotel at Hamlin, the county seat of Lincoln county, W. Va., was totally destroyed by fire. Sev eral persons occupying rooms in the hotel were heavy loners in clothing and money. The building was insured. , Advices from Hon. Wn. A Anderson, who was sent to London short 4ime ' ago by the Rockbridge Company of Glasgow, va., to ne gotiate with a wealthy syndicate whieh pro poses to in vest $1,500,000 in industries in the city ot Glasgow, state that all arrangements have been made and the money assured. William T. Harriott, a farmer on Bohemia Manor, Cecil county, Md, lost two valuable heifers by lightning. A valuable gray Mor rell eolt, which took a $50 premium at tbe Cecil county fair a year ago, was found next morning in a gully with its leg broken. It is supposed it became frightened du ting the itorm. - . : i J. H. Coulter,-of Monroe county, W. Va weighed a few days ago from his flock of sheep one thoroughbred Cots wold buck, three prears old, which pulled the scales at 238 pounds. One average yearling ewe weighed 140 pounds. Twin lambs, five months old. Weighed 2-H pounds, an average of 120 pounds each. r-A desperate affray occurred at Cross Keys. Southampton county, Va-, John Doyle ana John Scott became involved in a quarrel, and the former grew so enraged that he procured a shotgun and discharged both barrels into the body of Scott, killing him almost instantly. Doyle was arrested and taken to the jail at Courtland. A woman was at the bottom of he quarrel. Walter Aves, a youth of Charlestown, W. Va, jumped off a train at Cumberland, MtL, jammed his thumbs into hi ears, and ran wildly up and down tbe station platform praying at the top of his voice. He was put under restraint and Dr. Braer summoned. He said that the young man1 was suffering with acute mania, caused by the immoderate ase of cigarettes. After the death of Hampton Langdon, near Rising Sun. Cecil county Md, bis house keeper, who' had been in his employ 22 years, while in tbe garret, removed a loose board ia the floor and brought to view two tin boxes containing greenbacks, gold coin and a cer tificate of deposit, the total value of the dis covery being $6,000. The secretary of the North Carolina Agri cultural society says that the coming fair will embrace new features of special interest to the farmer, the mechanic and educator. Amuse ments will not be neglected. Negotiations have already been completed for some of the best and most unique entertainments ever of fered to the pntdic os a similar occasion, and the grounds will be crowded with shows and curiosities. A Wheelingdispetch states that a syndicate, of which Stephen H. Elkins and ex-Senator Henry G- Davis are the pnxne movers, com pleted a deal for 7,000 acre of coal hud on tho llonongahela river, near Morgantown, paying $195,000 for it- Similar deals to tbe amount of half a million have been made in the same sec tion by the syndicate. They aie believed to foreshadow the extension of tbe West Virginia Cen'Tal Road to the Monoagahela Valley aad eventually to Pittsborx. - AT AJt KCEXT marriage in Boston, the bride groom, who is interested ia mining ia itii West, conceived a very pretty idea in regard to the wedding zing. Instead of parchasjaf a Hag in the' conventional way from some jew eler, he himself mined the quartz, panned it oat with his own hands, had it smelted under his own eyes and took it to a jeweler and had it made into a heavy gold hich hie wife THI most valuable metal in the world fa aid to be ralliam, which is worth $3,250 an nnee. Cakiura brings lUqpa pound a d ceri am SlCO per pound. Gol J xs worth ZU a, Bound. - ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE. Edoab Fawcett Is fascinated with the aa barbs of London. Senator Enjirxns is aaid to be much eon. emed about hU tailing health. George T. Beck, a son of the Kentucky Senator, is now canraasiag Wyoming lor Coo gress. Gexeeal Lew Wallace writes a amall and neat hand which is as clear snd legible as copper plate. Maktix Iboxr, who led the strike on the Iron Mountain Railroad, now sells peanuts ia depot at St. Louia. MtssAxxiB A-De Bark has receir d a license as mechanical engineer front the Chi cago Board of Engineerm. Sesatok George, of Mlaaieslppi. has a bead of long, flawing hair that waves pictur esquely about when he is excited. Mariox Ceawfoeo, the novelist, keeps himself in fine pbyaieal trios by fencing and indulging in other athletic exercise, . Miss Rachel Sherman has the reputa tion of being the best toast-mistress among (he politico-society circles at Washington. George Meredith has finished his novel The Journalist," and is taking a holiday. lie has been engaged upon this book for' several fears. . "Mose" Jacoba, a Des Moines, Iowa, new, boy, has a fortune of $10,000 invested in real estate. He is one of the best known persons tn Iowa. Colcmbus Delano, of Ohio, who Is presi lent of the Woolgrowers' Association was Grant's Secretary of the Interior. He is welt advanced in years, but active enough to visit Washington frequently. Miss Grace Kino, the Louisiana novelist, is described by one of her friends as a woman jf stately figure and striking features. Her aair and eyes are brown and she ia twenty even years old. Texxyso.Vs back yard is said to be strewn with clay pipes that he has used and discard ed. The poet is a prodigious smoker, and like Carlyle, be .prefers the humble clay pipe, rarely smoking a cigar. Professor Jakes D. Dana, tbe geologist, the only man I. ,-ing who assisted in forming' tbe American Association for the Advance ment of Science, fifty years ago, attended the Indianapolis meeting fast week. Elizabeth Comrtock, an aged Quaker preacher, living at Union Springs, N. has visited in her lifetime 122.000 persons, and nearly twice that many sick persons in and out of poor houses, battlefields, etc. Minister Pitkin is making a reputation in Buenos Ayres as a literary light. He re cently delivered a lecture on The Fools ol Shakespeare" before the cream of the Argen tine capital's society, and produced a strong impression on his audience. Senator Plumb is described as the very picture of a rough and ready farmer from the wild and woolly West. He is a tall, broad, stout man. with a big head and a big chest He is a lawyer by profession, despite his granger-like appearance. Robert P. Porter, the superintendent of the census, has the physique of an athlete. He is an active, clean-shaven man. dark com plexioned, with black eyes and black hair. Nearly 4000 clerks are employed in the Cen sus Bureau at present, though its normal stall of employees in off years consists of one clerk and one messenger. . Professor F. W. Newman, brother of the Cardinal, is now 85 years of aie. II easy that fie wad a practical abstainer from intoxicating liquors from boyhood when he dined alone. At 62 he turned vegetarian and since then he has needed no physician. He is as well now, be says, as any one of his agecaa expect to be, and he laments because vegetarianism makes no greater progress with the world. Hexby Savage La n dob, a gifted young artist, and grandson of Walter Savage Lan dor, the poet and critic, is now traveling and painting in the interior of Japan. Although only 24 years old, he has visited this country. Alaska, Egypt and much ot thecontinent,and hopes during the next three years to spend some time in Siberia, Cores, China, and Aus tralia. Then he will exhibit his work in Loo don. - DROWNING OP SEVENTY-SIX MEN.' Horrible Beenoa at tho Slaking of tne OaMala Alufcsa Watm. The first detailed story of the loss of the ship Oneida and the drowning of seventy-six Chi nese in Cooks's Inlet, Alaska, are given by John Ericsson, one of the crew of tbe wrecked vessel, who has just arrived in San Francisco on the schooner Campier. "We ssiled from here," said be, March 28 On April 26 a fog came down, and about nine o'clock at night, when we thought we were well out from land, the shock came. "The water was flowing into the ship at a furious rate and the order was given to getout the boats. The scene that followed that order was simply terribly. Two hundred Chinese fishermen, who were in the hold, came swarm ing up on deck, and it was as if the imps of hell were let loose- Tbey eursed and swore and cried and kicked and charged on the boats, and had to be driven off the deck by the crew. Some ran up into the rigging, then down to the deck again. They attempted to take posses sion of the hoata,wbich by this time were man- "It was necessary to push out from the side of the ship. To attempt to hold them in check wss impossible. They were like demons. Many of them leaped into the water and were drowned. None of the white men were lost "Twenty minutes after we struck there was nothing to be seen on the ship. She landed fairly en top of the rock and was broken in two. As the ship was settling three dories were washed oot of tbe davits. There was a scramble for them by the panic stricken Chi nese, but only four of them got into the boats. It was terrible to listen to the wails of tbe doomed creatures. We could give them no help. A number of them were caught like rats in a cage and went to the bottom en the Oneida. Thirty minutes after the ship struck we were all ia the boats, and not a sound eon Id be beard, except the oars in the row locks. Wo reached land aafely, and when day broke went out to see if we could find any survivors. We found twelve Chinamen floating on the wheel bonne two days later. ... Three of the Chinese had mana fed to reach the rock, but these were not foand until seven days later, and two of them in the meantime had perished from exposure. The third had found a keg of spirits and had kept himself alive on i to contents." HADE HAD BY LIQUOR, A Han-xas4 X4ves7nasua Create at Ftuato fat m Car. David A. Mills, a livery stable keeper of Smith ville.Gs boarded tbe south-bound train at Smith ville en route to Brunswick. He was drinking, and armed with a pair of pistols aad brass knuckle. As his liquor began to warm him ap he became violent, tbe violence taking the form of insanity. He drove the paenrers in bis ear out by firing off his ptstola. He then tried te getout of the ear, bat was so permit ted to do so by tho passengers, who held tha doors shut. The conductor endeavored to quiet him, bat be was evidently a raving maniac ' ' He kicked the glass out of nearly every win dow in the coach, cutting bis hands aad Iae rating bis leg in a moat horrible maaner.aad erering an artery above tbe ankle. U wee bleeding profwwiy from every gash, and fcal anon lost so much blood that be fell upon one f the seets exhausted. The railroad company despatched a physician to bis relief, bat cent bd enme before the doctor could reach hiss. 1 1 is friends who were with him were power less, and could not manage hint. Mills had been insane several years a r and had been is Inmate of the asylum at lliiledeville, and is iboegiit that fee became vk4eetly iota' aJUr boar&sg the trsia. TT0E2 AND TTOIUIIL. THERE Is much duaAUfetinsm Sockere at Southampton, England, t treat strike is iamiaeuL C8. Wn EATON .President of the Ir, pendent order of Railway Conductor. resigned his position. II is toengsg tnthr Bsaaeas. . Toe Executive Board of the Knights f Labor decided to call out every man on the New York Central Railroad who owed allc fhuee to the Order. NEARJ.Y all the yardmen employed by the Delaware and lludmn Railroad iVuipsn v, at Green Island, New York, have gone strike. The men refused to handle New York Crn tral freight at that point. IBS firemen and engineer of ihe I'nion Stockyards Snitching A uncial . ia t'iicr. have modified their demaad fr an iva-o ia wages. They now ak T cents an hour for engineers and eighteen rents fr firemen. The demand ia under coi Jerattwn by the toada. A DELEGATION of Illinois Centra) trainmen Called upon General Uaka ger Beck wUh the yew schedule of wae they akrd, Mr. Beck promised to givW them an answer tea days hence. The ajale provides fur an increase of wages all alokig the line of frwa flva to thirty per cent. AMONG the passenger on the steamer City of Peking, which sailed from San Francisco, was an attorney who goes to China to secure $,000 Chinese laborers, who will be employed tn the eonstruction of a railroad acrws the Isthmus of Tehnantepee, The mad is to bo built by Engliah capital, and work has been let to Mexican contractors." A PAPER is being circulated among the mill men in Fall Run, Mawachutettn, bind ing those who sign it to sell no print cloths under 3 5-16 cents during September. Over three fourth of the mill men have signed it. This wss considered the only chance fr bet tering the market except by a cut down or shutdown. P. M JkRTHCR,Chief Engineer of the Broth erhood of Locomotive Engineers, has written a letter in which he says that when tbe pres ent trouble on the New York Central first occurred he ordered the engineers to abstain from all participation ia it, and to attend strictly to their own business, lie holds that they are justified ia occupying a neutral po sition when others are engaged in a conflict with their employers. The joint conference of the Mine Workers' Association, representing 12.0UO miners of Blair. Cambria, Clearfield, Centre, Hunting don, Jefferson and Carbon counties, and the operators ia those counties, held in A I loon a, I'Sh, adjourned without agreement. Tha op erators claim that the scale was unreasonable and they could not accept without loss. Tho miners are firm and a general strike may b the final result. Another meeting Wilt bo held on September 12. WASHINGTON NOTES. Attorney-General Miller has returned to Washington from a short visit to Asbury Park. The cruiser San Francisco left the city of that name for Santa Barbara to begin her of ficial triaL . Secretary Wiodoro baa returned to Wash ington and resumed hisduticsat the Treasury Department. . Acting Admiral James ILGillis has Wen detached from tbe com t and of the South At lantic Station and placed on waiting orders. " Tie female eraplftjeea of the Government Printing Office scut a petition to the Senate asking that they be paid not less than 2 a day. Assistant Secretary Batcbeller has rrsunicd his duties at the Treasury Department, after a month's vacation at Block Island, Saratoga, and other places. Tho bankruptcy bill will be reported to the Senate favorably, with certain amendment, and it is understood that an e tit or will be made to pass it at this session of Congress. , Captain Allen V. Reed, who was recently investigated by a navsl court of inquiry on charges preferred by Admiral Gillis, has been res-ored to bis old command of the Richmond. The Senate Committee on Postal Affair de cided to make tbe bill to extend the free de livery systrnt apply to cities of 5,000 inhabi tants or to cities where the postal receipts amounts to 15,000. : Bill were passed by the Senate holding every bidder for carrying the mails to his contract obligation and requiring him to deposit with bis proposal a eheck for 6 per cent, of the amount of the bid, the check to be forfeited fur failure fo carry oot contract. The Committee on Railroad and Canals re ported to the House the bill to compel rail road companies engaged in interstate com. merce within a reasonable time to equip their cars with such safety or automatic safety couplers ss will not require trsinmen to go be tween the ends of the cars to couple or to un couple them, and with 'automatic brake so that tbe speed of the train can be controlled by the engineer. KILLED BY ELECTRICITY. Lie Wires Play Ilaeoo In a West Vir ginia To wss . . About seven o'clock in the evening two men one James Sullivan, ind the other an Italian were instantly kil ed by electricity In the south heading of thel Wheeling Bridge and Terminal Company's tunnel, nnder con struction in Wheeling, W. Va. As far as can be gathered from workmen who were ia the immediate vicinity at the time, the two unfortunates, together with bail a doren others, were standing in a group a, on ride of the tunnel talking, when a dang ling wire, from the electric light system Ujfht. ing the tunnel, came in contact with Sullivan. Tbe man fell dead at once, as did al his Italian neighbor standing next to him. Four others were badly shocked by the current, but recovered ia a short time. A similar accident occurred at Martin's Ferry an hour Utr. Albert A reaon, George Appelbarh, Mrs. Wil son and a boy being severely aod dsnrerposly shocked by a guy-wire ofaderrick which was charged with electricity from com in- in con tact with an electric light wire. Albert t il soa got hold of the roy line and could not let go. H ia so ran to bis aid and got in the sm fix, aad so oa with Appelbacb and Mrs. Wil eon. TWO DEATHS IN A DUEL Bsnast Irwsrnson Kill tne Man who Stans Sleroal Ills WMSs s4 DUm Illsnaetfc A desperate duel to the death took p!see at Rowland, Ky., the junction of tbe Loo is ill aad Nashville Railroad with the Kentucky Central, at nine o'clock tbe other more ing. Robert Ferguson, a fireman oa the Louis ville and Nashville road, w a recently msr ried to a pretty young woman, and Hamilton, another fireman, was reported to have told tales about her. Tbe trains of tbe two men met at Rowland. Ferguson walked ap to Hsmilum and in an excited manner exeisimed: "You hare hern talking about my wife, so I undersTand." "No I haven't," y I lamiltoa, "and the man who asy so telu a lie." "I say so," replied Ferjrnaon, aad at the same iaafnt both men drew pitof. Tbey fired almost simuitaneoasly, end ia lea thaa fifteen seconds each man bsd fired four times. Then both reeled and fdl, 0.-ir heads alls art touching as they drofped. Tbe train sue rasbed to them, only u find Loth dead. Each had three ballet holes ia his body. Aa eye-sritae aaid it was the gamest C;!it he ever aaw. Neither an a Cinched nor ut tered a sound alter the shooting emimenced. A wom. feature has derek?pJ la tho frsia market siaea trices Lavj trun ex port deallr s. At rrent f. srea. b.it caa ta l-m:' ksr trvr 1 zz'' m'-'-1 1 .