Smithfield Herald. CAROLINA CAROLINA, HEAVEN'S BLESSINGS ATTEND HER." VOLUME 5. SMITHFIELD, JOHNSTON COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA JUNE 4, 1557. NUMBER 51. The NORTH CAROLINA NOTES. ,, K ITEMS TAKKN FROM OlT R EX.CHAXGES AND ROIi.KD DOWN FOR THE HERALD READERS. There ace twelve prisoners in (raven county jail. Murderer MeCabe escaped from Wayne county jail, he was to be t,ung this week. Rev. T. A. Leslie, of Tarboro, has been elected Chaplain of the Edijecoiiibe Guards. An observant gentleman of this county says the erops are the est ever known at this season. Fire in Rockingham last week destroyed eight buildings, cntail i ig a loss of many thousand dollars. The Elizabeth City races will occur June 3d at the fair grounds at that place. Many noted horses are entered and will compete. The fishermen at Morehead and Beaufort are having a good catch of porpoises, the hides of which sell for three dollars each. A vein of gold was discovered last week on a tract of land near Col. J. W. Johnston's farm, about ten miles from Weldon, in Halifax county, belonging to Dr. W. M. Perkins. The Rev. Wm. B. North, A. M., of the North Carolina Oonfer ence,"Will deliver the literary ad dress at the commencement of the Mticvm School, in Warren county, 'June 2, 1887. The Lobdell Car Wheel Com pany, of Wilmington, Del., his recently purchased the iron pro perty near Gaston, Halifax coun ty, and have commenced to develop the mine. The iron is so id to be of fine quality. We learn that a negro, in Mitchell county, by the name of Tol Gardner was arrested last week at Rlakesville and locked up in jail upon suspicion of hav ing murdered another darkey by the name of Penlad for his mon ey, who it seems had about 400. The Danbury Reporter says a vein, or more properly speaking, a mil ledge of the richest mag netic iron ore has been discover ed a few miles from Danbury. The ledge breaks out along the side of a hill for 150 feet or more in some places, and stands from one to two feet above the surface. Miss Murfree, the famous Ten neseo novelist, is a grand daugh ter of North Carolina. The ld North State has many worthy descendents. Gov. Gordon, of Georgia, is of good North Caroli na stock. We think the same may be said of the two eminent Georgia Cobbs, Howell and Tli mas. Tire Visitor says the report of the Treasurer of Wake Forest College is a gratifying exhibit of the finances of the Institution. It shows the total investment of the endowment fund to be $153,- 6.44; of the Host wick Loan fund SI 1,356.60; of the General fund $8,000; grand total of in vestments $172,263.01. Grant Beat, the seventeen-year old negro boy who killed throe of his companions and wounded two others at one shot in Wil mington only a short while ago, was found guilty of murder in the Criminal Court on the 24th inst. At the time of the shooting there was a general impression that it was the result of carelessness. The new Edenton Street Meth odist church, at Raleigh, which was dedicated on the 22d inst., cost upAvard of $26,000 all of which has been paid. This con gregation has wrought nobly. t only have the male members manifested a commendable lib erality, but the ladies of the rdiureh have raised a little over :,000 of the above amount, since the building began. The Blade says the prospect of a railroad to Carthage this year is very gloomy. The peni tentiary authorities have about derided to remove the force of convicts now employed in grad ing to the Western part of the State. The cause of the removal is that they can get the cash from the railroad authorities there and here they have to take township bonds bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent. ii. The skeleton of a man was re cently found in a ruined hut on the banks of the Red river, near Caledonia, Dak., and in the pock ets of his tattered clothing were greenbacks and gold to the amount of nearly $3,000. Foreign Troops Will be Invited. Tlie commissioners aoDointed to go to Europe to secure the at tendance of foreign troops at the international encampment to be held in Chicago in October, left for Europe on the 25th inst. The commission confidently ex pect that many friendly powers will ascept the invitation, there by expressing their appreciation of the kindly feeling of the American government. But How 4oul Tlie Election ? There is no reason to doubt that Blaine can command the nominatiod next year if he wants it, and he can command the solid Pennsylvania delegation against any but Cameron ; but will Blaine decide to wield his admitted power to nominate himself ? He will be most earnestly advised against it by many sincere : friends, and we regard his decli nation as quite possible. Phila phia Times. A c;ood liaa. Mr. Editor As the time is near at haud for electing a board of education, let me suggest the name of a man qualified and suitable in every way to be a member of the County Board of Education. A man who has the common school interest of the State and county at heart. A A man, who as a teacher, has had more experience ?s such perhaps than any mm in the county. One who was on? of the first in the county to avail himself of j Normal training at Chapel Hill. i A man who holds forth that an old method if good, should never be discarded to take hold of new untried tangled methods. A man who if elected would add credit to the office as well as to the , educational interest of the coun ty. That man is B. W. Young, of Pleasant Grove Township. Let our J. P's consider well before they elect men to fill that im- ; portant office. J. P. I'rel!eiit i'leveiaml. It is pretty early yet for the friends of President Cleveland to begin booming him for a sec ond term; and yet it is not earli er than the friends of Grant be gan. Many of the solid, brainy men of the democratic party have declared :hemselves em phatically for Mr. Cleveland's renomi nation. They believe him a safe man in the President's chair. There is sound reason ; for this belief. President Cleve land has shown himself very . conservative in his make up. He ' lias conducted the business of the nation as a wise man would 1 look after his own affairs. He makes no pretention of being a brilliant statesman, yet he meets the questions which daily arise with dignity, candor and un ! swerving decision. He finds op ! position in his own ranks, be- cause he has not, turned out re publicans fast enough; yet he made more changes during the first two years than did" President Lincoln when lie was elevated to power. He Ins been criticised for appointing so many southern men to office, yt,t he could not but recognize t'iat country was now united, and that if the South was ever to be recognized as hav ing a share in the common gov ernment, it was time such rec ognition Avas made. He has not been more magnanimous to the South than was Grant, or even Hayes. In fact, none of his south ern appointees have met with such criticism as did those of Hayes. The financial affairs of the government have been con ducted with ability, and the pub lic debt has been greatly reduced. He hr.s kept peace with all na tions, although he has been giv en extraordinary power to stir up strife by the Fisheries bill. There is little to criticise in his recominendatio as to Congress that was not found in the mess ages of his predecessors. We be lieve that the conservative men A Fiirtunc in a Skeleto of the country are generally sat isfied with his administration, and fear less from his acts of Congress. President Cleveland may not be renominated, but certain it is that if such should prove to be the case, there would be far better reasons for his elec tion than in 1881. In making up the slates for 1888, it would be well for the leaders of the two great parties to bear these facts in mind. "Watertown Herald. Four Oaks Items. The farmer are very busy working their crops in this sec tion. They report crops in a very fine condition and have good stands'. The cotton crop is looking better this year than we noticed , for several years previ ous. The corn crop is in fine condition and generally clear of grass. Wheat and oats are bet ter than expected, more than an average crop is sure to gratif y the farmers. These splendid showers we have been having has made potato planting the or der of the day. Those of our friends who at tended the pic-nic at Hollowell's mill report having a very pleas ant time. One of our young men says he didn't get "mashed," for that was the case with him before he went. Messrs. Ford have received their stock of dry-goods and gro ceries. Their turpentine distil lery will be ready for operation shortly, and they are offering the highest cash prices for tur pentine. Rev. E.'Pope and lady are vis iting friends near here ; after which they will attend the M. E. Sunday School Convention at Clayton. He reports things as being lively at the Newton Grove Mission. The colored Diciples Church near here seems to be in a good condition ; one member was bap tized Sunday. Two more acces sions are reported ; may it last. Red B. A Poor ISefence. The Northern Republican pa pers have been trying to excuse the barbarism and vandalism of Gen. Sheridan by saying he act ed under orders and destroyed such property as would prevent "the Southern cavalry to raid Valley and support themselves on the contributions of the peo ple." According to these defend ers of the modern Alaric he only destroyed "stores of provisions and all uninhabited buildings." They even called the fellow who caused the slaughter of the old men and women and children of the Piegan tribe of Indians "a brave and humane soldier." God save the mark. Tt would be as truthful to call the Sioux or the Comanches merciful and humane when they were butchering the helpless victims, applying the scalping knife and the torch. If it is humane to murder, to de vast, to blast, to turn out of homes unprotected females and children, to burn flouring mills, to lay waste growing crops: if that be humane, then Sherman is splendid type of the good and the merciful and the tender hearted. But this defense set up for the mill burner and crop destroyer will not do. Tens of thousands of Virginians know it to be false. Sheridan outraged every princi ple of war. If Gen. Lee had been base and cruel enough to have ravaged and destroyed Pennsylvania as Sheridan did Virgina, there would not be enough words of malediction and detestation in the lexicon to meet their demands in beeping their curses upon him. Sheridan should go down in history as the remorseless and inhuman soldier, who carried on the war like a barbarian. He disgraced the very name of soldier, and he is only fit to fellowship with such creatures as Ben Butler, who insulted the women of New Orleans and stole their jewelry and silverware, and with Sher man who burned Atlanta, driv ing out the inhabitants, and then Columbia and denied it, trying to place the responsibility upon Gen. Hampton. Such men as these give countenance to the remark of Julius Hare "that the ultimate tendency of civilization is toward barbarism." Star. Yo More Assessuteiittt. The Republican organization will be able to dispense with a very large part of its clerical force in 1888. In former" cam paigns scores of clerks were kept busy at headquarters "making up" the assestment books. It is estimated that there are about 115,000 Government employees and under Republican rule each one of the 115,000 was assessed to rim the Republican campaign. The aggregate of salaries am outs to about fe'i 00,000,000. "Soft soap" was regarded as necessary, and the party managers levied without mercy upon the rank and file of the army of Federal em ployees. Two per cent, on the one hundred million of salaries brought in $2,000,000. In many cases the asses ment was larger. In Virginia, where Mahone de pended largely upon "soft soap," the assestment was very heavy, and bitter were the cries of the female postmasters, who were required to hand over to the fi nance committee a good portion of their stipends. Yes, at Republican headquar ters many clerks were employed in keeping the assestment books. The system was peculiarly Re publican. Every office-holder who did not remit promptly was blacklisted. A species blackmail was thus practiced, and all with the approval of the Republican candidate for the highest office in the land. The financial department of the Republican machine will have to be managed very differ ently next year. All soft soap will have to come from private sources. The Democrats are in power and the poor Government employees give a sigh of relief whenever they give the matter a thought. Richmond State. Lincoln and Emei-xon. The Century for May says that while Emerson did not write in verse of Lincoln, yet in prose he divides with Lowell the honor of early appreciation and rortu nale characterization. In "Mis cellanies" will be found an essay entitled "American Civilization," which, according to a note by Mr. Cabot, is "part of a lecture delivered at Washington, Janua ry 31st, 18G2, it is said, in the presence of President Lincoln and some of his Cabinet, some months before the issuing of the Emancipation Proclama t i o n." Mr. Lincoln may have been pres ent, but his secretaries have no memorandum showing the fact, Mr. Emerson's son now believes that Lincoln was probably not present. The lecturer praised the "angelic virtue" of the Ad ministration, but urged eman cipation ; and at the close of this essay, as printed, is a supplement commending the President for his proposal "to Congress that the Government shall co-operate with any State that shall enact a gradual abolishment of slavery." Next comes his address on the Emancipation Proclamation, in which the President is greatly praised for his moderation, fair ness of mind, reticence, and firm ness. "All these," Emerson says, "have bespoken such favor to the act, that, great as the popu larity of the President has been, we are beginning to think that we have underestimated the ca pacity and virtue wThich the Di vine Providence has made an in stilment of benefit so vast. He has been permitted to do more for America than any other American man," etc. After this, in the same volume, comes Em erson's brief but memorable es say on the death of Lincoln, in which he says : "He is the true history of the American histo ry in his time. Step by step he walked before them ; slow with their slowness, quickening his march by theirs, the true repre sentative of this continent ; an entirely public man ; father of his country, the pulse of twenty million throbbing in his heart, the thought of their minds artic ulated by his tongue." Again, in the essay on "Eloquence" "(Es says and Social Aims"), Emerson praises the Gettysburg speech, and in the essay volume he gives Lincoln as an example of the "great style of hero" who "draws equally all classes" "His heart was as great as the world, but there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong." The ( raw Assumes a New Form. Well, I shall call and see you tomorrow, Jessie. Thanks. I shall be delighted to have you come, Ella. , And I shall bring Fido with me. Oh ! please do not. ' No ? Why not ? Rover is not receiving at pres ent He is in mourning for a broth er who was run ove? by a South Boston car. Poor little 'fellow ! it wrings my heart to have him going around with a crape around his neck. But the rules of po lite society must be observed, my dear. Boston Courier. Couldn't llsnc Been Ills Wife. Has my wife been here ? asked a nervous man of a clerk in a Harlem dry goods store. Tall woman ? Yes. Red hair? Yes. Cross eyed ? Yes. Bonnet on sideways ? Yes. Bought ten yards of silk goods and paid cash for it? Did that woman do this ? Yes. Well, I don't think it could be Maria, and out he went. Tid Bits. Profitable Business Operation. A California farmer recently gave the refusal of his farm for a week at one hundred and twenty-five dollars per acre. He quickly regretted making the bargain and feared it would be taken. At the end of the week the purchaser informed him that he thought one hundred and twenty-five dollars per acre was to much and would not take the farm at that price, thinking to ob tain it for less. The farmer was delighted and immediately in creased the price to one hundred and seventy-five dollars per acre, which the purchaser agreed to, and bound the bargain with five hundred dollars down. A thou sand dollars made and twenty acres in one minute was a pretty good operation. lie Paid" : Cents Per Annum. "Boss, Ize a bit confused 'bout suthin'," said one of the negro whitewashers at the market to Detective Webb the other day. "Well, what is it?" "What does per annum mean ?" "Per year, of course." "A hull y'ar?" "Yes." "Can't there be no mistake?" "No, sir." "If I borrow $2 of Abram John ston an' agree to pay twenty cents per annum dat means twenty cents a y'ar, does it?" "It does." "Hu! Dar's gwine to be de biggist row in Kaintuck to-night you eber hearn tell of." "About what?" "About dat per annum. I borrowed $2 of de pusson men shuned at 20 per cent, per annum, an' fur de las' fo'teen month he's bin collecting twenty cents a week as regular as a clock. Stuck right to it, he did, dat per annum meant every Saturday night. Law! but when dese paws on on him won't per annum take a flop!" Detroit Free Press. The Living Earth. As another illustration of the life that dwells in nature, let us briefly consider earthquakes. The peculiar terror of an earth quake lies mainly in the sudden ness of its approach. Volcanic eruptions are usually preceded by vast rumblings, or jets of steam, or other unmistabable tokens. Hurricanes and cyclones in like manner have heralds that announce their coming. But with an earthquake there are no premonitory symptoms. The great earthquake which took place at Lisbon in the year 1755 found the people engaged in their or dinary occupations. All the shocks were over in about five minutes. The first shock lasted about six seconds. In that brief space oS. time most of the houses had been thrown down and thou sands of men, women, and chil dren crushed beneath the ruins. At times the ocean leads fresh terrors to the scene. Thus at Lisbon a wave of water over fif ty feet high rushed in among the houses, and covered what, still remained. In the island of Jamaica on a different occasion two thousand five hundred house es were buried in three minutes under thirty feet of water. Re cent delicate scientific experi ments have discovered the fact that the surface of the land is never absolutely at rest for more than thirty hours at a time. Thus those great earthquakes which make epochs in history are inere- ! ly extreme cases of force that seldom sleep. Scientific Ameri can. 'I lie Strange Fat llanN Joke. A practical joke on Manager Burnham, which, however, cost Briody $600, leaked out this week. When the league met in New York last March, Manager Burn ham told President Newberger that he had Briody's written agreement to play in Indianapo lis the season of 1887 for $1,400, but that owing to the catcher's corpulency he 'didn't believe he wanted him. So at New York Newberger said to Stearns : "I understand you are going to sign Briody for $2,000 on the strength of last year's record. Now, I I think I can save you some mon ey." "How so ?" asked Stearns- "Why, we have signed Briody for $1,400 and don't want him." Whereupon Stearns telepraph ed to Watkins : "Sign Briody for $1,4000 and no more." Bri ody fumed and fretted awhile, but finally signed for $1,4000 - When the Detroit club reached here this week Briody asked Newberger if he had said he had signed with Indianapolis for $1, 400. Newberger responded in the affirmative and referred him to Bunham for particulars, when they got together the whole story came out. A fat rascal, afterwards discovered to be one Fisher, had imposed himself on Burnham, who didn't know Briody, during the winter as the Kansas City catcher. He was in need of ready cash and upon Burnham advanc ing him a small loan, readily signed Briody's name to a con tract as Burnham's own figures and that is how Burnham is out $13.50 and Briody $600. Cleve land Plaindealer. item rotn A vera' .11 The negro's religion does not tell him not to steal, but it does tell him not to get caught. The negro glories in the bal lot, and if the law disfranchising them, when convicted of crime, was repealed, crime would rap idly increase. Cotton chopping is about over and the plant is looking unusu ally fine. Chicken thieves are plentiful in this section, and some report not a fowl left. A Sunday School was organ ized at the new church in Wal lace's neighborhood on Sunday last, and more than fifty scholars were enrolled. Elder R. A. John son was elected Superintendent and Mr. John Jones, Assistant. Mr. John Alford was elected sec retary and treasurer. The mon ey to purchase the necessary books was raised in a few min utes. The Elder preached a very impressive and pointed sermon after the school was organized. A Johnston county man once said every tobacco chewer was both a beggar and a liar, because said he, if they had no tobacco they would beg some, and if they had but a small piece they said they had none. The young negroes, those rais ed since the war, and who have had the advantages of freedom and education, are not morally equal to those raised before the war. If we have been correctly informed, a large per cent of those in the penitentiary are un der 35 years of age, the most of whom can read and write. It really seems that freedom and education is a curse instead of a blessing to them. The republican party furnish es the penitentiary and other penal institutions of the State with more than seventy-five per cent of their inmates. The moral law is not a barrier in the way to hinder the negro from committing crime. The civil law is the only thing they dread. Rustic. RANDOM RA KINGS. newsy items which are gleaned from many various sources for our readers. The Beecher monument fund exceeds $20,000. An incendiary in Savannah, Ga., destroyed thirteen dwellings; loss $30,000. There are 65,000 persons rer ported to be in Europe awaiting transportation to this country. There are 73,000,000 bushels of wheat in the United States that are in excess of home re quirements. The schooner Marietta Steel man was sunk in collision with the steamer Cherokee near Bar negat ; crew saved. Savannah Typoghaphical Union adopted resolutions dis approving of the New York Sun boycott by labor organizations. Four steerage passengers were killed in the collision between the steamers Celtic and Britan nic ; both vessels arrived in New York. Dynamite cartridges were ex ploded under a church at Spring field, Ky., where Rev. Mr. Dun can was delivering a prohibition address. Cotton MannfacU.ri.ri has reached great proportions in Rus sia, the annual imports of raw cotton being about $43,000,000 in value. ;Cleveland is considering an orjdihance requiring all screens to be removed from bar-rooms, so tha t whiskey must be public ly tipped. , . Eleven persons suicided in Berlin last Sunday, and Bismarck who has been studying the sui cide problem in Germany says it is due to beer-drinking. Norfolk has to record another death from kerosene oil, the vic tim this time being Miss Jennie Moore, who tried to rekindle a fire by pouring oil upon it. De Bensuade, husband of Vio let Cameron, the actress, received $1,950 damages against the Man chester Umpire for a libel con tained in an interview with Lord Lonsdale published in that pa per. The work of laying the new steel rails on the A. & N. C. Rail road has been completed, and all arrangements for the pleasant tranoportation of the large Sum mer travel that is expected are nearly finished. The latest official estimate of the revenues and expenses of the government, for the current fis cal year, places the receipts at $370,000,000 and the expenditu res at $266,000,000. The revised estimate of expenditures does not vary from that made by Secretary Manning, but his es timate of the recepts of the year is exceeded by $14,000,000. The Baptist Missionary Union has under care 785 preachers, ordained and unordained, 45 stations, and 975 out stations, with 56,439 comunicants, of whom 3,450 were baptized last year. The native Christians contributed $36,163,16. The re ceipts from all sources in this country were $384,996,73, or $22, 970 more than the year previous. A passenger train heated by steam from the engine has com menced running on the Northern Pacific between Brainard and Du luth. The coaches are heated by two radiators at each end of the car, and by pipes enclosed in metal boxes running through the cars, the heat being control led by registers. The steam is supplied direct from the locomo tive boiler, but with extra long trains or in very cold weather the plan contemplates the use of a special boiler on an iron car. It is not generally known that T. V. Powderly, head of the Knights of Labor, recently came very near joining the newspaper profession. Just before the Rich mond convention attention was called to the fact that $1,500 was a very small salary for such an organization as the Knights of Labor to such a man as Pow derly. Just at that time a syn dicate of prominent Western papers offered him the position of Erropean correspondent at a salary of $5,000. The tempta tion, of eourse, was great, but after reflection Powderly declin edthe offer. He is now receiv ing $5,000 from the Knights.