THE HERALD. JOB PRINT! HG; IFFI(li. PAPEI! OK JOHXSTOX (OIXTV. rm Bmi . 11 Hera I 1 V I t 4 f i I Lf v i r :u i 'l i o x I. a t e. : One Y ;.!":. ('('-'.i yi' A'lr-rner, fix M-.ih. " . I.-jO : i -. j i Auvei u.-uig I.ates raaue Known on application While we arc always glad to lective bright, ew?y 1 -tiers from liTerer.t sections of the ount v. we request contributors to write legiMy and on one side of paper only. The Biirite -f writer must accompany all articles. AJ-lre? correspondence to -Till: II KHALI)," Sinithfield, X. C. " NORTH CAROLINA NOTES. Choice Items Taken From Our Ex changes And Boiled Down For The Herald Readers. The Plant : Our clever towns wan, Mr. B. X. Duke, although a young" man, is alive to the educational interests of North Carolina, and lias given 1,000 to the endowment fund of Trinity College. Who will be the next? Mr. II. C. Davidson, of Mt. Monroe, met with a painful though not serious accident hist Friday morning. lie was in the act of mounting his mule and was smoking. Just as he reached the saddle the animal threw up its. head, striking the pipe and driving the stem nearly through his jawbone. Statesville Land mark. Jackson M. Bass, of Duplin county, was brought here yes terday and committed to the county jail, as a United States prisoner. He is el'arged with illicit distilling and selling whiskey without a license. The warrant for his arrest and commitment was issued by D. Cogdell, U. S. Commissioner at Goldsboro. liass says that he was betrayed by a man who visited his still and to whom he gave a jug of whiskey. Wil. Star. Another Cotton mill, making the fifteenth for that county, is soon to be erected at Big Falls, Alamance county. The purcher, who will reconstruct the mill that has been in a dilapidated condition for some years, is Mr. J. V. Pomeroy, well known as a former resident of Greensboro, but now of Charlotte. The new company, consisting of Mr. Pom eroy and Messrs P. R. and J. II. Hardin, of Graham, Avill push forward the work with vigor, having already begun in earnest. Raleigh JVezcs-Obserrer: From a letter" dated July ISth, to a gentlemen in this city, we learn, that Governor Jarvis has been seriously ill at his distant post of duty. For a week he was crit ically ill. He was a great deal better however, when the letter was written was sitting' up again. He says he met witli the greatest kindness and attention in his illness at the hands of' the people among whom his lot is cast. The news of his recovery will be heard with great pleasure throughout the State. The Pittsboro Record says. There .will also be t wo cases on the State docket against- two Magistrates of this county, 'they having been bound over to court after a preliminary hearing last Thursday, upon the charge of practicing law as attorneys." The Legislature of 1870-'71 made it unlawful for a Magistrate to practice law as an attorney, and these are the first cases under that law that we have heard of it the State. The punishment is a fine of not less than 200, and at discretion of the Judge, removal from office. We honor every son of the Old North State and would not pluck one laurel from the brow of our honored sons wherever they may be or dim the smallest ray of their illustrious fame, lint the idea is this: Those who are standing by North Car olina; those wlio are engaged to-day in using every exertion to push the State forward, who are unkown to fame, demand and deserve our encouragement and hearty support. They labor with us. Their fortunes are bound up in North Carolina. They are the men to honor. Let us do it. C7 ronicle. Aslteville Citizen : Dr. J. K. Hardwifke, of Marshall, called lo mc us yesterday afternoon. He informs us of a fatal occur rence on the railroad track four Utiles west of Marshall on Monday night. Two men employed as track walkers or watchmen, while on their beat, waited for s. train expected to pass at a fixed time. The train did not arrive when expected, and the men went to. sleep, from which they were oidy aroused by the train being upon them. One, a while man, was knocked from the track, a distance of forty feet :.!.;! killed. The other, a negro, !i ju'.l. Dr. Ilardwicke, does know the names of the I1 IE 1A Established 13S2. VOLUME 6. Served Tliem It i gut. (Elizabeth City Economist.) . Three of the uproarious riot ers of the Norfolk excursion were tried before Mayor Scott on Tuesday morning after their ar rest on Monday evening and a so bering experience in jail on Mon day night. Edward Foreman and J. F. Hall were convicted of the riot and placed under a bail of 500 each for their appearance at the Superior Court in September, in default of which they were sent to jail. Geo. Reed was con victed of selling liquor without license and admitted to bail in 150. Foreman is defended by Messrs. Lamb & Riddle. . A flrave Girl. (Warrenton Gazette.) Our friend and neighbor Mr. W. G. Plummer escaped a horri ble death the other day by the presence of mind and bravery of his fifteen-year-old daughter, Miss Sue. She was milking one of the cows and her father was standing by her. In the pen was a fine three -year old Jersey bull. Before he was aware of what had happened the bull had knocked Mr. Pullman down from behind and when Miss Sue saw him, the enraged animal Avas standing over her father with one of his horns on his throat, prepared to goad him. Without a" moments hesitation she s ized him by the horns, and with supernatural strength, managed to pull the animal's head a little to one side, when Mr. Plummer seized him by the nose. With nose and horn holt they managed to stop him until his son Walter, (who was in an adjoining lot,) ran and beat him o!f with a stick. It was a narrow escape and Miss Sue is a heroine. Mr. Plummer was badly bruised. One Cent Postage. (Albany Express.) A peculiar plan, by which a potion of the government's sur plus money may be used, is pro posed in the suggestion that let ter postage should be reduced to onne cent. The postal depart ment of the government has never produced a surplus of reve nue, and has never been run for such a purpose. The policy has been to reduce postage as soon as the revenue began to ap proximate expenditures. The pol icy proposed of one cent postage would be the most extreme yet pursued by the Post Office De partment. The part which cheap postage has played in the devel opment of the past twenty-five years is not generally realized. There can be no harm in contin uing in the same direction still further. One of the chief ad vantages to be derived . from a change to one cent postage would be to largely do away with pos tal cards. The extent to which these are used tX present shows that one cent postage would be appreciated. A Safe Guard Against Insects. ( Londc n Lancet.) Many people do not know how easily they can protect them selves and their children against the bites of gnats and other in sects. Weak carbolic" acid spong ed on the skin and hair, and in some cases the clothing, will drive away the whole tribe. A. great many children and not a few adul ts are tormented through out the whole summer by min ute enemies. We know persons who are afraid of picnics and even their own gardens on this account. Clothing is an imper fect protection, for we have seen a child whose foot and ankle had been stung through the stocking so seriously that for days she could not wear a leather shoe. All this can be averted according j to our experience, and that, we believe, of many others, by car- j bolic acid judiciously used. The .safest plan is to keep a saturated solution of the acid. The solu tion cannot contain more than (i or 7 per cent., and it may be added to water until the latter smells strong. This may readily and with perfect safety, be ap plied with a sponge. We have no doubt that horses and cattle could be protected in the same way from the lies, which some- ' times nearly madden them, and it even seems possible that terri ble scourage, the African tsetse I fly, might be kept off in the same manner "CAEQLINA, Dear Lit tic Sister. PUBLISH EB BY KEQrEST. Thou wast mild and lovely. Gentle as the Summer's breeze. Pleasant as the air cf evening, When it floats an:ong the tree?. Peaceful be thy silent slumber, Peaceful in the grave so low, Thou no more will join our number, Thou no mere our tears shall know. Dearest sister, thou hist left us. Here thy loss we deeply teel, But 'tis God that hath bereft u, He can all our sorrows heal. Vet again v; c hope to meet thee, When the cares of life have fled, Then in heaven with joy to greet thee, Where no farewell tear is shed. She loved her Savior and to him Her costliest present brought, To crown His head or grace His name, . No gift too rare she thought. She had two little hands to work for Jesus, Ore little tongue His praise to tell. Two little ears to hear His counsel, One little voice a song to swell. She had two little feet to tread the path way. Up to the heavenly courts above, Telling of Jesus wonuerous love, lint now she is with Christ above. She had one little heart to give to Jesus, One little soul for Him to wivo, One little life for His dear service. One little self that he did take topl.Yce her in that heavenly world So farewell, dear little sister. 1 hope again with you to meet, And see your smiling tacc once more, Aud hear year voice that sounds so sweet. Then take you by that little hand, Again as in days gone by, There forever and forcer. May we all abide. A precious one from us has gone, A voice we loved is stilled, A place is vacant in our home, Which never can be filled. God in His wisdom has recalled, The boon His love has given, And though the body moulders here, The soul is safe in heaven. Farewell dear, but not lorevcr, There will be a glorious dawn, We sbal! meet to part no never, On the resurrection morn. In memory of Julia E. Tittman, byCariie Lane, Dunn, N. ('. Utes on tUe Warpath. Denver, Col., Aug. 12. The White River Utes are reported to have gone on the warpath again, under the lead of Colorow, and to be slaughtering citizens. The Mayor of Meeker, together with the county Commissioner and the secretary of the Stock Grower's Association at that place telegraphed Govenor Adams to-day from Greenwood Springs that the Utes have been firing on the citizens above Meeker, and have sent runners to Min tah agency to call out the war party. The citizens are flocking into Meeker from the ranches. An appeal is made for troops and for arms and ammunition. Gover nor Adams at once telegraphed to Washington, asking what the War Department could do. He also replied to the Mayor of Greenwood Springs asking to be kept informed of events at Meek er. lie Rose From the Dead. - (Chicago Herald.) The W. H. Upham who is at the head of the Upham Manu facturing Company, which lost 8800J000 by the great fire at Mansfield, Wris., was the hero of a singular adventure when a young man. He was a member of a Wisconsin regiment which participated in the first battle of Bull Run, and was- thought to have been killed. His comrades saw him fall, and none of thein made any doubt of his death. Being the first victim of the strife in his own neighborhood, there was great public mourning for him. A memorial service was was held in which thousands par ticipated, and many eloquent eulogies-were passed upon him. Six months later Upham ap peared in Washington with a party of exchanged prisoners. He had been desperately wound ed and taken prisoner, but the Confederates had attended to his wants, and when the exchange took place he was sent home. When in Washington he was ta ken to the "White House by Judge Doolittle, then a Senator, and introduced to President Lincoln as a soldier who had come back from the grave. As Upham was on all the records as dead, Mr. Lincoln, ordered a correct entry to be made, and then gave the boy an honorable discharge from the service. When he reached his home in Rachine he was the lion of the hour, and the people who had participated in the me morial meeting in his honor got up a jubilee which wa3 hardly, less numerously attended. Later on in the struggle the fortunes j of individuals were not so cloely watched. CAROLINA, HEAVEN'S BLESSINGS SMITHFIELD, N, C, AUGUST THE Th S. S. RIDDLEBERGER. Put on The . Dry Dock by a Judge, But Taken Out by a Mob.-Ex- citing Times in Virginia. A Woodstock (Va.) special to the New York World of the 13 th, says : Senator Riddleberger got himself into a pretty scrape here to-day, and is spending the night amid the squalid discomforts of a county jail as a consequence of his folly. The Senator was in terested in a case on trial in the County Court which had some local political significance. Judge Newmanwho tried the case, was no friend of Senator Riddleber ger. In fact, some of the papers hereabouts have often referred to the two men as "bitter per sonal enemies." No one was surprised, therefore, when the verdict in the case on trial was exactly the reverse of what Rid dleberger desired it should be. But everybody was very much surprised, and, moreover, very much excited at the spirit in which the Senator took the ver dict, and his peculiar manner of claling public, attention to his anger. At Riddleberger's sug gestion the prisoner in the case was hauled through the streets of the town with a placard arond his neck containing some pretty severe and caustic reflections on the judge. Troops of people fol lowed the prisoner on the travels, most of thejn highly amused at the curious turn an old personal quarrel had taken, but many of them very indignant at the as persion put upon the judge. Fi nally one of the judge's friends went to tell him what was going on. Ten minutes afterwards police men were running around look ing for Senator Riddleberger. He was found and summoned before his old enemy, the justice, to an swer for contempt of court. There was a tumult in the streets around the court-house, and excited peo ple clamored at the doors for admission. After he had given Mr. Riddleberger an opportuni ty to make an explanation, which did not appear to be satisfactory, the judge fined the Senator $25 and committed him to jail for five days. Protests and further attempts at explanation were in vain. Judge Newman left the bench in anger, and Riddleber ger was hurried off to a cell. The excitement was tremendous as the news spread around town, and partisanship ran rampant. Riddleberger's friends swore that they would get him out before midnight if they had to burn the jail to do it. Upon hearing their threats, Judge Newman's friends vowed they would defend the jail by force if necessary, and many of them volunteered their services to the sheriff. All Rid dleberger's influence availed him nothing in his efforts for release. As darkness setted down on the town the Senator was making a fair meal off prison rations and preparing to make himself comfortable for the night. He was very anxiotfs that his friends should not step beyond bounds of the law in manifesting their sympathy for him, and there seems little prospect at this hour (11 p. m. ) that threats of rescue will be carried out. But it is impossible to tell. There are plenty of people on the streets spoiling for a row, and they would like to improve this opportunity for making one. LATER THE SENATOR RELEASED. Winchester, Va., August 13. A telephone message from Wood stock, Va., says that United States Senator Riddleberger, who was yesterday sentenced by Judge Newman of the County Court, to pay a fine of $25 and be impris oned for five days for contempt of court, was released from jail last night by a mob. The jailer made but slight resistence. Slow to Iteducc the Surplus. ( Philadelphia Record. The net surplus in the Treasury on Aug. 1 was $45,698,594. Since there is no portion of the public debt to which the surplus may be applied its . volume must rapidly increase before the close of the current fiscal year uuless Congress shall make provision for its abatement. The legit imate and practical means of reducing surplus revenues are to be found in lessening surplus tax ation upon raw materials of in dustry and necessities of living. ATTEND HEE.' 27, 1887. The Anti-Tax War in Kentucky. Chicago, Aug. 13. The limes, of Lexington, Ky., says : A letter from Morehead gives the following particulars about the seizure of guns yesterday. The insecurity and uneasiness which have been felt since the departure of Andy and Willy Tolliver and their friends receiv ed a fresh impetus yesterday af ternoon, when Adjutant Wil liams with a squad of men, filed into the depot and seized a case of rifles and 2,000 rounds of am munition that had just been ta ken off -the--train and hurried them into camp. These are the same guns that were shipped to Z. T. Young, Mt. Sterling, from Lexington some weeks ago. Major McKee, fearing a collis ion between the factions, imme diatly sent out half-a-dozcn squads of men, searching suspec ted houses for arms, and must have captured several wagon loads. In one house alone they secured ten Winchester rifles, three shot-guns, two muskets and several muzzle-loading rifles. The raid created quite a stir in the town, and it is the general belief that if Maj. I. Wr. Lee had not taken decisive steps, a fight would have taken place. Xo Need of Catching Colds. (The American Magazine.) Speaking of colds, I have a theory that no one need have unless he chooses ; in other words, that it is quite possible so to train the skin, that wonderful organ which is generally looked upon as the paper wrapper to our human bundle, as to render it non-susceptible to sudden changes of temperature or at mospheric moisture, whence colds come. And as this is exactly the sea son to commence such a system of pellar education, as it has proved effective in many instan ces within my knowledge, and as it is within easy reach of every one to try, I write it here. The theory is that no skin that has been exposed freely for half an hour at the beginning of a day to a temperature lower than it will encounter during the day, will note small changes or be af fected thereby. A cold is simply a nervous shock, received by the myriads of minute nerve terminals that bristle over the surface . of the human body, transmitted to the centers and so back again to mu cous membrane, the peculiar seat of this special irritation. Let us then so train these sensitive fibres that they will pass by, un noticed, changes of atmospheric condition, and the matter is ac complished. The Chatsworth Horror. (Richmond Whig.) The damages on account of the accident will be little short of $1 ,000,000. Probably eighty per sons will die, and 5,000 is the limit that can be collected for a dead person. This one item will figure up 400,000. The serious ly wounded may collect $10,000 or $15,000 each, and add to this the loss of business and the dam age to property and the disaster will cost the company a round sum. A dispatch from Kentland, In diana, says that the men arrested there Saturday were charged with carrying concealed weapons, and not with burning the bridge through which the Niagara ex cursion went, east of Chatsworth, Illinois, on the line of the Tole do, Peoria and Western Railroad, on the 10th inst. Superintendent Armstrong, of Peoria and Western Road, who was on the ill-fated excursion train at the time of the accident, testified, in his own opinion, the bridge caught fire from passing freight trains which passed up several hours ahead. He scout ed the idea of incendiaries. Eloped With a. Xcgro. Miss Jennie Winter, the pret ty sixteen year old daughter of farmer Winter, of Oakland, N. Y., eloped a few days ago with a negro named Edward Mann, to whom she was united in marri age by the Rev. R. P. Mansfield, an Episcopal clergyman. D is said the girl stained her face and hid her blond hair so as to pass for a mulatto, and thus deceive the clergyman about her race. Subscription $1.50. NUMBER 12. Our Confederate Dead. (Richmond Dispatch.) North Carolina is moving in regard to erecting a monument to the memory of her 40,000 Con federate dead. "The papers have taken hold of the matter with great earnestness, and their edi torial advocacy of it being sup plemented by strong letters from other citizens. One gentleman offers to contribute $1,000 to the monument if it be erected at Raleigh, or $2,500 if it shall be placed at Durham. The move ment is one that every true man should rejoice to see take practi cal shape. No State made a more glorious record in the late war than North Carolina. Her name appears in imperishable letters in the story of everv bat tle from Bethel to Appomattox. And the monument should be of a design and character that would typify especially what was known as the staying qualities of North Carolinians. While the North Carolina soldiers were in all oth er things the peers of any South ern soldiers, some of the com mands from the Old North State gained for her a distinctive repu tation for bulldog tenactity in holding a position. Only a few nights ago we heard a Virginian who was on A. P. Hill's staff du ring the war, and who is a man of careful and most intelligent observation, and not given to idle words, speak in glowing terms of the valor of the North Carolina troops and comment particularly on the North Caro lina "grip." Referring especially to the brigades of Cook, Scales, Lane, and McRae, he remarked that you could place either of the three in a position and go away with absolute confidence that it would stay there so long as there was a man left How to Save ISoya. Women who have sons to rear, and dread the demoralizing in fluences of bad associates, ought to understand the nature of young manhood. It is excessive ly restless. It is disturbed by vague ambitious, by thirst for action, by longings for excite ment, by irrepressible desires to touch life in manifold ways. If you, mothers, rear your sons so that their homes are associated with the repression of natural instincts, you will be sure to throw them in the society that in some measure can supply the need of the hearts. They will not go to. the public houses at first for love of liquor very few people like the taste of liquor ; they go for the animated and hil arious companionship they find there which they discover does so much to repress the disturbing restlessness in their breasts. See to it, that their homes compete with public places in attractive ness. Open your blinds by day and light bright fires at night. Illuminate your rooms. Hang pictures upon the wall. Put books and newspapers upon your tables. Have music and enter taining games. Banish demons of dullness and apathy that have so long ruled in your household, and bring in mirth and good cheer. Invent occupations for your sons. Stimulate ambitions in worthy directions. While you make home their delight, fill them with higher purposes than mere pleasure. Whether they shall pass boyhood and enter upon manhood with refined tastes and noble, ambitions depends on you. Believe it possible that, with exertion and right means, a mother may have more control over the destiny of her boys than any other influence whatever. Ex. ' ' Parental Authority. There is one thing I wish to speak of, and that is in regard to interfearing between a parent's authority and the child. How often have I seen a child crying for something the mother saw best to deny it, when some one present would say, "Oh, do let the child . have it," and the mother would yield rather than offend the friend. The next time the company came the child I was ready to try the same experi ! ment, and soon it understood that j when company was present it could do as it pleased, ana ine same visitors that helped break the mother's authority will say they do not like to go there, for the children behave so badly. PROMPT ATTKNT10X PAID TO ORDERS. We have one of the inot complete printing establishments in this section. and are pre pared lo execute all ;-iti:ls o IJook and Job Piinting in the neatest style and as cheap as good work can bo done. We pail all station ery in tablet form which makes' it more coa venient for office use. IMace j our orders v,i:h The Herald and we will jrnaraiitec to give satisfaction. Address correspondence to HERALD PRIMIXJi HOI SE, SmUh.'ielfl, X. I'. WHAT THE WORLD IS DOING. Newsy Items Which Are Gleaned From Various Sources And Pre pared For Our Readers. An entire family was poisoned at Mabile last week from eating ice cream. Thos. J. Croghau was murdered and robbed in Charleston, S. C, on Monday night. The government receipts since August 1st were 13,31G,350 in excess of .expenditure's. The contract has been awarded for the building, of two new crusiers for the Government. The British Government is still undetermined as to the suppress ion of the Irish National League. Six men have been sentenced to the penitentiary in Mexico, for murdering an American citizen. A book-keeper in Montreal .ab sconded with 25,000 obtained by raising a check for a small amount. The U. S. Treasurer annonees his readiness to issue all demands for one and two dollar silver certificates. Prince Ferdinand has assumed the government of Bulgaria ; he was enthusiastically welcomed by the Sobranje and the people. The Utes are driving the Avhite settlers from their homes, and there is great excitement among the people generally ; troops are moving against the savages. An exyjert, who has made dili gent enquiry, says there is no foundation whatever for the in cendiary theory in connection with the Illinois railroad disas ter. Adolph Zenneck, editor and proprietor of the New Orleans Mascot, a weekly newspaper, was shot and fatally wounded in his. office last week by Daniel Brown a mechanic. Mr. Jas. B. Davis, superintend ent of the Ordinance Foundry, Washington Xavy yard, has been dismissed. John A. Burton, of Laurel, Md., has been promoted to the vacancy. The body of a young molder was found in an oven at Albany, New York after having baked for forty hours. lie.- fell asleep in the oven and was not discov ered until he had been roasted. Detroit Free Press : So far as can be ascertained by a careful canvass, there are onlv two women in the State of New York who stutter. As they stutter ff.ster than any other women can talk they don't look upon it as an affliction. The Signal Office bulletin for the past week reports general rains throughout the country, but too late iti the northwest to cause a marked improvement; the weather has been genrally favor able for all crops' on the entire Atlantic coast. A statement prepared at the Treasury Department to show the status of the three per cent, loan, makes the following exhibit : Total amount of the lo.an. S3(.., 581,250; redeemed under calls, $299,475,850 ; purc.Ii.ased, $.'3,322, 250; called and outstanding, 2, 783,150. The Acting Commissioner of the Internal Revenue hao in structed collectors to accertain and report to his -office the quan tity of taxiaid spirits of differ ent kind known to the trade, held by wholesale liquor "deal ers and rectifiers, on tlie first of October, 1887. New York Times : I t is ques tionable whether Mr. Riddleber ger's contempt should be constru ed as anything but a compliment to any one upon whom it is bestowed, but we should say that it was the duty of any court that committed him to see that the penalty was executed if it took two jaiis to hold him. There are 141 Senators and Representatives elected to tho Fiftieth Congress who were not in the Forty-ninth. About twen ty of these have served in previous Congresses. Mr. Phe lan, of the Tenth Tennessee District, is the youngest mem ber. Gen. Yandever, of Califor nia, is f he'oloest member, Im ving passed three score and ten. JJx.