THE HERALD. OFFICIAL rti KK ;F JOmSTdN COUNTY, j sric r i n bath.--: $ One Year, w Ailiititr- ..51. fO. hix .i;nli. . . io. Advertising Kates made known on application While we arc alwaj's glad to icciivc In ight, newsy letters from difcrent sections of the count i y, we request contributors to write legibly and on one side of paper only. The name of writer must accompany all articled. Address correspondence to THE IIEHALD," Smithfield, N. C. NORTH CAROLINA NOTES. CHOICE ITEMS TAKEN FROM OUR EXCHANGES AND BOILED DOWN FOR THE HERA I,D READERS. Cotton blooms are now report ed from many counties in the State. 1 lie Hotel Albert, at New Bern, now has a Chinese laundry at tached. The Chronicle says that Char lotte is soon to have a tile-brick and sewer pipe factory. Durham Recorder: The Dur ham Morning Newsy for the second time, has suspended pub lication. A Chatham county manwas in dicted recently, says the Home, for gating geese, and was bound over to court. The Baptists of Durham have contributed $6,000 for the pur pose of building a church on Chapel Mill Street in that city. From the Monroe Enquirer we see that all the farmers agree that they will be compelled to stop trying to raise a wheat crop, .owing to the ravages of the chinch bugs. Maj. Charles B. Duffielcl, for merly of Norfolk, Va., and late a resident of Asheville, was found dead in his bed last week. Heart disease was his ailment. The deceased was about G8 years of age. From the Wilson Mirror wo see that a child of Amos Owens, about nine years of age, acci dently shot itself with a pistol which had been left within its reach. The ball entered behind the light ear and produced death instantly. Two men and two women re cently ran away from the poor house of Mecklenburg and mar ried. One of, the men was 70 years old and had not a tooth in his head. His partner was 68. This is Gretna Green with a ven gence. What fools "we mor tals be- Wilmington Star: Informa tion was brought to the city yesterday by the steamer "Hurt" that a Mr. Brennon, a passenger on the "Cape Fear," which left Tuesday afternoon for Fayette ville, fell from the lower deck of the steamer into the river and was drowned. Greensboro JVews : The annual meeting of the North Carolina Railroad Company takes place in this city on Thursday, July 14th. , Stockholders who want to attend in person, and with their families, must send their names to P. B. Ruflin, Secretary, Company Shops. New bern Jounial: A genuiue old time celebration of the Fourth of July is what we are going to have in New Bern this year. Other towns in the State are taking steps to celebrate, but Newbern must take the lead. Let every citizen contribute his mite to make it a success. Wilmington Review: While removing the material of the Messenger office from the car ta the Journal' building the horses took a notion to runaway sev eral cases with which the team was loaded were scattered pro miscuously about the street. No serious damage was done. Recently near Chapel Hill, a young farmer by the name of Luther Strowd, who had been cutting wheat, fell from the fence on which he was sitting, and was pierced through the body with his cradle which was lying in the fence corner. He died shortly from lockjaw. The body of Mr. Brennon, of Bladen county, who fell over board from the Steamer Cape Fear and was drowned near the "Devil's Elbow," while the boat was on lier trip up the river, last week, was discovered by officers, of the same steamer on the return of the boat Sunday before last. Temperence Reform Club held a very successful meeting at Oak Grove Church, in Perquimans county, Sunday. There wtre 123 signers to tin p udge of totul abstinence, and a Reform Club of 113 organized. In a Recent trial before a Justice of Chatham county involving t Ik property of a colt, the colt was brought into court as a witness. H Established 18S2. VOLUME 6. Slaxwell to lc Hanged. A St. Louis special says : Max well, alias Brooks, the murderer of Preller, is to be hanged. The Supreme Court refuses to reverse the decision of the court. The prisoner was unofficially notified by his attorneys yesterday and was very much dejected, saying that this trial was a farce. Hugh M. Brooks, alias Walter Lennox Maxwell, made the ac quaintance of C. Arthur Prellef on an Alantic steamer and de coyed him to Louis, where he murdered him with chloroform and then packed his body in a trunk. He robbed the remains and fled to Auckland,New Zealand where he was captured and brought back. The murder oc curred April 5, 1885, and was not discovered for eight days; Max well's defense was that it was an accident and the defense hope for a reversal on the ground that th(rstate introduced a detective, in the cell with Maxwell, who wormed a confession from him. Shoot i n g A flra y . Lexington, June 22. Infor mation has been recieved by the Transcript of another battle in Rowan county, which occurred this morning at 9 o'clock. In the fight Craig Tolliver, the des perado who has lorded it over that section, was killed. It is said that a large party of men, ostensible led by Dr. Logan, whose twoysons were murdered in cold blood by the Tolliver men about two weeks ago, and who was. in jail in this city at the time of the tragedy, had or ganized a bend of regulators for the purpose of ridding the coun ty of desperadoes. Rumors of this band being in the neighbor hood of Morehead have been fre quent. This morning at a littre after 9 o'clock, the regulators' being" concealed in close proxim ity to Morehead, opened fire on the streets?. Tolliver was killed in the engagement and the fight assumed a bushwhacking char acter, the men hiding behind houses and trees and shooting at any one that could be seen. Re ports differ as to the number killed : one placing the number at five, including Tolliver. An other state that Craig Tolliver, two of his brothers and thirteen others had been killed. There is great confusion in telegraphic reports coming and accurate news is out of the question. Star. The Whipping Post. Several of our State exchanges, we notice, are advocating a whip ping post for the punishment of minor offenca-3 in lieu of sending the criminal to the penitentiary for two or three years, to be sup ported at the expense of the State. The whipping post would, no doubt, have a salutary effect and save the tax payers of North Carolina several thousand dollars annually, but in some instances it would not be worth a cent. The lash did not always have the desired effect prior to the aboli tion of slavery, nor do Ave be lieve that it would now. In ca ses of petit larceny, where the offeuder is a minor, the lash vig orously applied by a stout and willing officer a few times, would doubtlessly have a good effect ; but where an old tough, hardened criminal, who has become accus tomed to it is found guilty of a crime, some other mode of pun ishment should be adopted. Ac cording to the way our peniten tiary is managed at present every one is forced to admit that it is an expense to the State, but it seems to us it could be so con ducted, as to make the convict, not only pay his expenses while there, but pay the cost of his trial. There is no doubt that both a whipping post and work house are needed in every county in the State, but there are crimes that a sufficient punishment could not lx inflicted at these places, and for such criminals we need a peni tentiary not a place Avhere they can lay up in idleness and fare better than they did at home, but where they can be made to defray their own expen ses and at the same time be a source of re verence to the State. Seaboard Reflector. in i r '- -fc n- " ' Mr. ParnelPrt health is so in firm that it is believed in London that he will be compelled to re tire from Parliament. Smithfi " CAKiOXISTA, CAROLINA, SEAVEJTS BLES3IKO When Spring Time Comes Again. ET J. K H. O dreary day, O fate unkind, That bids me far to roam, And leave the one I lore behind,. To pine in grict at home. Tho many times shall set the sun. Thy prayers shall not be vai ; For I wil' meet, thee, dearest one, When springtime comes again. For thee I leave my native land, And i'liends and kindred dear. To seek fur that- on foreigu at rand. Which is denied ire here ; And thorny though my path shall be In Fortune's eager train, Fear irt. I will return to thee. When springtime comes aain. Tim' lightnings flash and billows foam Around me as I stray, Sweet thoughts of thee and blis to come Shall cheer me day by day. The love with which our bosoms burn, Shall know a sweeter strain : Be true, and look for my return When springtime comes agaifa. Tho' far away from thy dear face, 1 gae on other's charms. This head shall know no resting phirc. But in thy loving arms; Tho' pleasure lures, I'll past her by, With conscience free from stain ; Turue my course, and to thee fly. When springtime emcs agvin Whcre'ei I rove on land or sea. Tin u ne'er slialt be forgot, But fortune gained. I'll welcome ihee . On this same hallowed s -at : And then, dear love, we'll name the day "V make one of in twain. And happy walk li c's rugged way, When springtime comes again. But if I feel death's chilly darts. In seeking br the prize, God grant we meet where loving hearts Miall know no broken tie: Ami even thoug!i thy h-art, should beat In bitter gri. f and pain. O .ing the song i iho.-tglit so sweet. When springtime cones again. l'ulilixhfti by RrqH,'f. THE STRIKE AT GEOTON Q0EG2. BY IIKI.KN FORK3T OKJIVF. Arethusa Allen was only eight een when she came to Groton Gorge to take charge of the dis trict school a sligat, dark-eyed slip of a thing, with a low voice, and such a shy, timid way, that the big girls and the rebellious boys at once jumped to the con clusion that she would be con quered at once in her capacity of "school-ma'am." -They discovered their mistake, however, in a very brief period of time. Miss Allen might be quiet, but she had the spirit of a Joan of Arc She reduced her little flock to order, and she kept them there, too. Mrs. Binns, who presided over the Gorge House, also bore testi mony in behalf of Arethusa Al len. "I didn't s'pose when I first see her, that she would amount to a row of pins," said Mrs. Binns, who weighed three hundred pounds, and stood five feet eight in her stockings. "A slim, school girl-lookin' creetur like that ! And I hadn't a room to spare and I didn't see how I could pos sibly accommodate her. But she spoke up so pretty-like, that she hadn't no friends and didn't know where to go, so says I : 'If you don't mind a room over the laundry, I can clear out some of the stores and put up a cot-bed till the season is over, it s a noisy place daytime says I, 'with them Chinese cackling and screechin but it's still and peace able of nights. And if you'll help me make out the bills and keep the accounts, Miss Allen says 1, I'll consiaer it in your board, for I ain't no scholar and never was.' " Mrs. Binns was an ungainly creature to look at, but she was as beautiful at heart as the Ve nus di Medici's self, and Arethu sa soon felt herself at home in the little room over the laundry, whose windows looked out at the thread-like fall of a silver cas cade and the unfanthomable gloom of the fir glens beyond. For Groton Gorge was as lovely a place as ever leaned from moun tain plateau over the misty val ley belew ; and the Groton House was full of city borders. Nor was the domestic staff con temptible. Mrs. Binns had all her servants from the city du ring the summer season, and to all appearances, everything went on velvet. Until one foggy August morn ing, when Mrs. Binns awakened to find herself racked in every joint by acute rheumatism, and utterly incapable of moving. She sent for Mrs. Mackenzie, the cook, to give the day's orders j but Mrs. Mackenzie did not wait to hear about roasting chickens and joints of spring lamb, before she began on her own account. "Sorry to inconvenience you, ma'am said Mrs. Mackenzie, with her arms akimbo ; "but we ladies and gentlemen down stairs have concluded to ask for an Increase t A 11 A 11 SMITHFIELD, N. C, JULY 2, of salary. And until you have conceded to our demands, we shall ttmallft tr TkO?af 4Pirtnr wtahIt " Mrs. Binns opened her eyes wide. "Ain't I payin' you good wages alrea.dy?" said she. "And I can't afford to pay no more not a cent !" Mrs. Mackenzie took a roll of paper out oi ner . apron-pocKet and opend it. "I have here, ma'am," said she, pursing up her thin lips, "the signatures of all the ladies and gents at present asaistin' in the mediterreneanegises down stairs including the four waiters of the colored gender and two Chinese washer-laundries ; and we won't none of us stay another hour without you'll agree in acumen tary writin ma'am, to raise our salaries." And Mrs. Mackenzie tossed her head in spiteful satisfaction. Mrs. Binns sank back on her pillows. 'J "I can't give no answer," said she "not with this pain in my bones. Send Miss Arethusa Al- Ian r-v in r v1aooa " "Oh, certainly, tainly!" said the ma'am- cer cook, rising. Sorry you feel so poorly. But you'll bear in mind, ma'am, that we shall expect an -answer "im mediate." , And Mrs. Mackenzie withdrew. Presently Arethusa Allen came in for, as it chanced, the dis trict school had closed a week previously, for the summer va cation and found Mrs. Binns disolved in tears. y 'What is it, dear Mrs. Binns ?" said Arethusa. "The help has all struck for higher wages !" cried Mrs. Binns. "And I'm payin' 'em more than I can afford now. And all the prices of provisions have riz, and I may as well close the place at once. Oh, Arethusa, my head aches so I can?t think! What shall I do ? Tell me there's a dear!"' Z vr -' "Nothing," sttid Arethusa, quietly. "Just lie down again and let me send for the doctor." "But the boarders and the dinner ?" "I'll see to that," said Arethu sa. "Trust me, and all shall be right. Those people down stairs have been growing idler, and more domineering and inefficient, eyery day ; and now they want you to pay them more money for doing less work. There must be an end to this. You will empower me with full authority !" Mrs. Binns sent for the cook. "Mrs. Mackenzie," said she, "I am too sick to parley with you, but Miss Allen will represent me fully. What she says I say !" And she Lay down and turned her face to the Avail, with shut eyes, as if she Avashed her hands of the whole concern ; while Mrs. Mackenzie bridled and turned to the slim young school teacher, Avho in her heart she secretly de spised "as no better than a ser vant herself, Avith all them airs and graces of hern." "Well, Miss Allen," said she, "what's your mind on the sub ject? The sooner the question is settled the better for all par ties. We ain't going to stand her imposition !" Whatever idea Arethusa might have entertained as to a compro mise Avas throughly banished by the cool insolence of this last re mark. - "You may go," said she. "Hey?" said. Mrs. Mackenzie, bristling up like a setting hen. "I decline to entertain your proposal," said Arethusa, calmy. "Pack up your things, all of you and leave the house at once. If you are expeditious, you may succeed in taking the noon-train, that stops at the Gorge." . And she paid their Avages, out of Mrs. Bi jiii'h cherry-wood sec retary, and discharged them, as the good lady afterward remark ed, "horse, foot and dragoons." Then she called a convention of the boarders, and told he tale. "If you Avon't mind a dinner of cold lamb and lettuce to-day," said she, "with a desert of snow puddsng that I can make myself, 1 Avill promise you something more elaborate to-morrow." And they all cheerfully consen ted. John, the stable-boy, Avas the only adherent left, and he har nessed up the horse and drove Miss Allen doAvn the "mountain side to a farm-house, where lived , - r -y : ATTESO nEB. 1887. Mrs. Beasley, the mother of the big boy who had been the school ma'am's worst enemy at first and her most faithful ally ever after ward. "Mrs. Beasley," said Arethusa, "I ""want to borrow your two daughters 1" "Bless me, Miss Arethusa!" said the good Avoman, "what for ?" ""To help me at the Gorge House !" and Arethusa told her story. "Joanna and Fanny are quick, smart girls. I'll pay them a dollar and a half a week to act as Avaitresses." "They'd oblige you, Miss Are thusa, cheerfully, without a cent." said Mrs. Beaslev. "They Avill oblige me more by accepting a suitable remunera tion," said Arethusa. "At this stage of the world, everything is worth its money value, you know. What say you, "girls ! Will you go ?" ' "And welcome," said Fanny. "If we can learn the business' said Joanna, who was shyer, and more distrustful of herself. "I'll make it my business to instruct you," said Arethusa, brightly. "Pack up your things. Be ready to jump into the wagon when I come back." "Can't I do nothing Miss Al len ?" said big Junius, wistfully. "I am going to get Susan Rich to do the washing," said Arethusa. "If you would turn the handle for her sometimes " "I'll turn it from now till dooms day, if it'll help you, Miss Allen," said Junius. "Susan ain't half a bad girl, neither, if she didn't chaff a fellow so." "Thank you, Junius," paid Miss Allen. "You will oblige me very much, indeed." Mrs. Ridley, who had once been housekeeper in a grand Pough keepsie family, and now lived on her interest money, volunteer ed as cook, Avith the assistence of Marian Seiver, the rector's daughter, Avho had. spent a winter in New York and taken lessons of Miss Parloa. "It will be such fun," said pret ty Marian, dancing up and down. "And Mark is to be Miss Allen's caterer, and send in. supplies to her." "Yes," said Mark Sevier a pro fessor Avho had just come home to the parsonage to spend his va cation "the Gorge House shall be liberally supplied, even if I have to turn highway robber for Miss Allen's benefit. But hope, Miss Allen, there need be no danger of our coming to that extremity. I know the farmers who raise lambs and calves, and tender young 'broilers.' I can put my finger on brooks Avhere trout do congregate, and boys who Avould like nothing better than to catch them. I know where the berry-pickers live, and there isn't a mellon-patch or a plum orchard that I can'f press into the service. You shall live like epicures at the Gorge House !" "Oh, Mr. Sevier, how can I ever thank you ?" said Arethusa, who had scarcely known how to manage this portion of her du ties. " "Do not try," said Mark gaily. Miss Euphrasia Boggs, the dressmaker, and Kitty Plume, who wove rag-carpets, swelled the ranks of waitresses, as soon as they learned that Miss Sevier was going into the kitchen, and that Arethusa herself Avas to give out the linen and help with the deserts ; old Mrs. Jen kins came as dishAvasher. "Anything to earn an honest penny," said she. And the Avaitresses, Avhen off meal-duty, Avere to act as cham bermaids, under Arethusa's own direction, so that by night-fall the new staff of atetndants were ail on service. "Well," cried Arethusa, gaily, to Mrs. Binns, what do you think now?" "I dunno Avhat to think," said the landlady with a sigh of in tense relief. "It does seem as if you had Avitches' blood in your veins, Miss Allen." The little band of industry Avorked Avell under its enthusi astic young leader. Of course there Avere some "hitches," some awkwardness, a few blunders. What housekeeping machinery was ever entirely devoid thereof ? But on the Avhole it Avas a.dis- ! tingnished success. Gorge House had never- known a better sea son. Mrs. Binns's treasury had never represented a more satis factory balance. And Avhen the Subscription $1.30. NUMBER 4. boarders, briven by keen Octo ber frosts, Aveut away, many of them had "engaged rooms for the ensuing season. Mrs. Binns hugged and kissed Arethusa, with the heartiest good will. "My dear," said shef "if ever a fat old woman as don't deserve it had a guardian angel, you're mine. And you'll be here next season to help me ? Promise now !" "Oh, I couldn't promise !" fal tered Arethusia. "I am eoiner to Europe next summer, Avith with Mr. Seiver." For one second, Mrsv- Uinas was struck dumb. "I might have known it," said she, recovering herself at last. "I here wasn't never any thins? going on, but Mark somehow al ways got mixed up Avith it. He's the handsomest fellow herea bouts, as you are the prettiest girl. I hate to lose you; but I can't find it in my heart to grudge your good luck ; and I must try and get along without you as best as I can next summer, but I do hope to gracious that I shan't have no more strikes." Commuted. Gov. Scales has commuted the sentence of Grant Best, the ne gro boy that was convicted at Wilmington and sentenced to be hung, for the unintentional shoot ing of five negro boys5 to impris onment for fifteen years in the penitentiary. John Sherman's Hard Time. The over zealous republican journals are having a hard time in booming Sherman in his dress of the bloody shirt. People are not hugging that garment to their bosoms. It has gone out of fashion. The people of the South Avant a harmonious union, and most of the northern people agree with them. Nothing Hew to Him. "Now, my boy," said a police man to a boot-black as he stood on the corner and saw the patrol wagon go past with a prisoner in in it, "you can' see what vice finally leads to. Look Avell at that picture." "Oh, rats!" exclaimed the boy, in deep disgust, "I've seen my old dad run in by that same wagon twenty times. That's no new chrorno to me!" Yon Can't Do It. "You can't make money so long as you scratch over thirty acres of land to get a yield which should be produced on ten acres. You can't make money on cot ton Avhich you are forced to seli at eight cents, if it costs you twelve cents to produce it. You can't make money by buy ing commercial fertilizers to use alone on poor laud. You can't make money by impovrishing your lands. You can't improve your lands by taking away from them every year and give them nothing in return. You can't make money if yoii bu all your meat, corn, flour hay and fertilizers; no matter how rich your land may be. You can't maintain your credit nor your own self-respect, if you become a slave of the chattel i mortgage or crop lien system, j You can't get relief from the i T-irAustiiA rf hjirri" t.imfis. fxr.pnt. through proper economy and in dustry. You can't buy on a credit as cheap as for cash. "Women in Mothers Hubbards are not allowed on the streets of Albuquererqe, N. M. Men in shirt sleeves, however, many be found "at any corner." Gentlemen who hereafter feel a desire to corner wheat will find it useful to measure the elevators in Chicago with a tape line and figure out the result. Perhaps they will then conclude to start a bunko shop instead. I It is stated that Sam Small, the I Southern evangelist, looks like ! Senator John James Ingalls ; but people should not be prejudiced against Mr. Small on that ac cannt. When Mr. Small begins to talk as badly asr" Senator In galls does it Avill bef.time for moral congregations to refuse to listen to him. JOB PRINTIHG. rsearr attotioii pub to esssss. We have one of the nxoet complete printing esiitrfi.xiiiurnls in this st-ctktn. and are pre pared to exvctiie aii iiid.-4 o Book and Job Printiajr in the nenst style and am eheap as good work can In: i'-e V- c pail all station ery in tablet lorm which luakes it more con venient for office iise. Place 3 our orders with Thr Ukvau and we will guarantee to give satisfaction. Address correspondence to MEKAIB rStXTMS ECMB. S2tnfe1, X. C. NEWSY ITEMS WHICH ABE GLEANED FROM MANY VARIOUS SOURCES FOR OUR READERS. A heavy storm visited Lynch burg, Va., on the 21st iust. Bernhardt bagged 1,000,000 by 252 performances in South Amer ica. President Cleveland's letter of congratulation to Queen Victoria is published. Further revolutionary movements- in Spain are expected by the government. Emma Vinton dropped dead as she rose to join her partner at a ball in Baltimore. The Massachusetts legislature refused to raise the governor's salary from $5,000 to 10,000. The New Hampshire Odd Fel lows' home, at Concord, was ded icated with impressive ceremo nies. W. W. Co co ran, a prominent citizen of Washington, D. C, has recovered from recent severe at tack of paralysis. Kentucky may not have as big a bonded debt as Virginia, bnt she has 39,000,000, gallons of bonded Avhiskey, and that's what she brags about. Giles S. Whittier, an old liquor dealer of Covington, Ga., hanged himself because of the insane fear that prohibitionists wonld physically torture him. Emperor Dom Pedro, of Brazil, favors a bill before the Chamber of Delegates to provide for the freeing of 1,200,000 slaves with in the next two years. Winfield Scott, a nephew of Gen. W. Scott, Avas stabbed sev eral times by a gambler named Levy, in a disorderly house in Richmond, Va. His condition is dangerous. Levy has fled. Governor Beaver, of Pennsyl vania, has signed a bill appro priating 110,500 to provide suit able memorial tablets for the Pennsylvania regiments at Get tysburg. The Canadian government is to enquire whether the act against foreign contract labor being ad mitted to the United States is to be enforced against the Canadi ans Avho cross the border to Avork in American cities. A Chico, Cal., father attempted to spank his tAvelve-year-old boy with a shingle, when the young ster Avhipped out a revolver and gave the old gentleman just two minutes to convert the shin gle into yelloAV chips. The time Avas sufficient. As the examination of the Fi delity National bank proceeds the deficit increases. It is now the common talk on the streets that the liabilities of the bank Avill reach the stupendous sum of six millous, Avhile the assets dwindle in proportion. There are 6,000,000 acres of public lauds illegally inclosed with wire fences by cattle syndi cates in the west and they have turned a deaf ear to all Avarnings to remove them. It is now pro posed to try the virtue of tAvo companies of cavalry on them. Surgeon General Hamilton, who has just returned to Washington from a visit to Chicago, express es the belief that all proper steps have been taken to check the yellow fever epidemic at Key West, and that a further spread has been well guarded against. Commissioner Miller has com pleted arrangements for the transfer of the several Internal Revenue districts 'consolidated under the recent executive order, so that the new order of things may go into effect on the first proximo, the beginning of the next fiscal year. A few years ago a tramp died near Wheeling, W. Va., and it now conies to light that he Avas Avorth 150,000. This man must have found something inherently attractive in "the romantic but rugged life he led. The tramp and the rich man, perhaps, find a sympathetic hand of tho Union in the circumstance that neither is compelled to Avork; and this excentric fellow doubtless be lieved that the largest measure of independence could be attain ed by becoming a Avealthy tramp with two separate defences against the necessity of Avork,