PEACE ON EARTH AXD GOOD WILL TO MEX. VOL, II. WADESBORO. N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1896. NO. 24. . '. . H .1111 .- ' :'-'F '-4 Ml ii ii hd . i "-T- .- 5 'S I t-' -i", V -.1 ioun -home .markets. 'ttNVADED BY PRODUCTS OF SIL VER COUNTRIES. W." Devlnc f-hawi How tho UeTOorie tlzutloa of Silver ,11a Oicraicl Against ft Our Heme Manufacturers Flooded y ltli I'rotlucts of.tlilua auU Japan. f; The recent invasion of t ir,.o market? fiif ithe United States', by 'the nnnufae-. j?;':u.r63 treat -Japan edto-fronts'-the; Araeri ;feannaiiufacturor of like articles -with 'J.-ll&e.. alternative- of solfms-fca cheap &3 .T?he Japanese articles are onYd ed or sur ;f:il?.Tilri4hi market to the. invaders. ' v' TLe advent of manufactures from V'i-'1'7'111 frcc the manufacturers Mnd laborers o the United States to iar Lre'stigate the cause and when discov ered, it will be a niost terrible awaken ing;. 'The fact- that through, their own Indifference and credulity they have .y. )ctn "committing industrial suicide, will X"4fr;o.t'. modify their wrath against the po lhicians and: presG that have deceived he nV or raltfsate the terrible concc- fSfue'rtc'es that 'mutt follow. . . . 'fc When the bimetallic standard of cljroofeey was destroyed by the dehionet' l-izaijou oi reiver m ioo iuuo ucv-amc "'fc.tvoo.' clone t-?ry. standards in the world; Ifthe gold 'standard for the more highly Jrdvilized,' manufacturing and commer cial nations of Europe and America, and the silver standard for the Orient. The Coinage ratio between silver and gold .urdertho 'biinetalli'c' standard fixed a r"Vgbar r ct exchange between gold coins ' llhd cilvOr coins, Uv all the world, 1 fti il nrti'tnrr.irl.Hrn lh pithPTV-hllf With he closing of theminta of America Europe to Ibe coinage of silver. 0wa standards werf created, a geld ; i tnnflqrrJ for the Wttern world J lilver e for the-rn wor n 'bo111 Cais by any one i t coiSsrci,al nations, afford g house through which ex change cn such nations as made their !rbih!j: of gold . alone, or silver alone, ligature was cut ' -ffild pass,, the legal I ,tvfc.t had hitherto estiablinhcd a par of i:rKchano between cobis of each metal wheresoever coined.' I Silver thus becahifj a commodity in ;jold standard countries, andi gold a llmiiiodity in silv.oP" standard countries. i;Thc ccmmodiiysilv4 in gold standard puntrio3 had its quotations in terms of liicliey units made oE gold. The com- i: ti'ioditv olfl in nil'ver standard coun- ;rtrie3 jMcf'iCS'. quotations in terms of rmb Ley. units made of 1 Silver., . i ; ' JJLbe adju5t,bec.isrnai!onal ' ! jfi'ade relations in go?J, stanAlard coun- Vftl-4"s.'' . silver '. cxchanjge' rises or falls' to ' Hi' ertespond.with the fluctuations of the I' I commodity' silver : anl in silver stand H Card-countries gold . exchange rises or I'i1'!-;;'tl1 'to ."correspond wih the fluctuations oT tie commodity gold. jt'-ft'litis' ii will be sten that the de- : IjKtiniction of the bimetallic standard, Mil 't'hougn the) derail cement ot;' the ex ' ';;f r liange "market, introduced new eco- nomic problems with which economists V xvero unfamiliar, and fraught with con- ;ccquencep' which we charitably assume t , I .i.-iriat.. ine- aumors oi uie crime oi ae- . monetlzation did not anticipate or im I Jlcrstahd.'i The Oriental nations 'J.-;'tiju't'-o:nj6 Jthousand millions of people f hae.from time immemorial been on the : filVer: etindard to which they still ud- : hQrc. The general price level in those n : countries, has undergone no change ;laion3, the demonetization of silver by 't hev Vrestern werld hjas had no per 'Cptibie effect. But not so in their in- jij. yViia-ilonal trade relations. Uhder a '"JgW policy oi exclusiveness, during -thousands , of years of over-population he Struggle for existence always at the niaxihium iof human endurance, the law -jllr . of flie survival 'oj the fittest, developed t ft. race capable of subsistence on a tithe V "rik-'2,a tne average worker of Europe - - :or Trka requires. But the Orientals, ' Y ,itf-rfxed habits, the .result of ages of ; ,XQlusiveness, did not share the spirit !' 'rf progress and invention that charac- erized the pec.rj.le of the Western world, J ;, whose onward career I? turbed, till now, by has been undis-f ompelltion from .j.fr.?iTi;at quarter, ; '''M ?Labof:saving machinery, telegraphy, - .If praitways and the ocean steamship til irr.iipfrf in f Vieir h-ain rifirnloviri o- r-rSi"!i- lems jo the more5. progressive nations, ;' ,whp now form integral parts 'of a gi gantic industrial system. rhe. solutions these problems were progressing v,i thout p. enace to a ' con stantly L advancing civilization and eachtep. in advancl continued to add to -the sum cf human happiness, 'when the creditor interests of the world, Peeking 'unjust gain? struck what may I : prove ;the fatal blow, by outlawing sil er . inus oesiroyjri,? standard of money. the bimetallic - .Under bimetallism all the gold and silver of the world coined and uncoined Was potentially monev at the legal 'ratio, and whenever exchange on coun tries eoining gold alone, 'or silver ftlone.departedfrom tlie coinage ratio sufficient to profitably transport coin to rr from countries confering equal mon etary rights on both metals, automatic adjustment took place. . . JBut with the destruction of the bi ir.etallic standard all this was changed. " The rapid and constant rise in the price ; Of gold exchange in silver stand ard countries soon doubled the price of cc'mmodities imported from gold stand ard countries. The effect of this was to force the Asiatic countries where the wages, of labor and prices in general have .been foivceniuries and still Con tinue at a lower. level than ever known among any other people, to manufac ture for themselves. The price of gold exchange having doubled had tho same efec.t In increasing tne price of im porta from gold standard countries that :,fcn import' of one hundred per cent 'would have. j I. ' WhllA lodlft tad Jan an u&der the " ' '- j ' V:-' I fW' '!' j : . ! ' "i ' . ; : -im :. . f sa a I - r i ; m ! ' kv .... & Cleveland- This blasted wheel wobbles too much. I never can catch that fellow ahead and you miht as -well eavl your breath. I am in a perp exing and stimulus thus afforded were developing! tneir cotton mills until tney now sup piy tho Asiatic demand for cotton yarnj England was purchasing the wheat and cotton of India paying the same price inj silver as, before 1873, and laving the same down in Liverpool at ai cost tq them in gold as much below the price! of 1873 as silver bullion had fallen be-j low the mintypjaMaefiVnlnnge. j It mjist fcfrIn tlie c0 oWii VA M tuyateriaU IabiTand.vTand intereon capi tal together with the profitsmust he reckoned in tho money of the country where the goods are produced, and that ttey are always pafd for in current money of the country where they are sold. If goods are produced in ths United States and sold in Japan sufficient sil vei must be received for taem, that when exchanged for gold it wjill cover the cost and the profits, likewise that if goods are produced in Japaniand sold in the United States, they can be sold for just sufficient .gold, that when ex changed for silver it will cover, the cost and the profits. ' 1 Under bimetallism it was shijjwn that neither country was benefited or In jured because of the metal comprising the current coin, but it will be readily seen that under existing conditions, the advantage is on the side of Japan' and pgainst the United States to the extent of the fall in silver .exchange below the late that prevailed prior to demoneti zation in 1873. With thousands Of years behind, us during which the Mongolian! nations manifested no 'disposition toward com mercial exploitation, but on the con trary resisted every innovation upon their long established modes j of life, . content with selling other nations the few articles of manufacture, peculiarly their own, and such products as soil and climate gave them a natural monopoly, there is no good reason lor believing that this sleeping Giant of the East could have been aroused from hjs'sluni bers by. conditions less extraordinary than were presented by the exchange after the ' manufacturing ' nations adopted the gold standard. Agriculture in - gold standard coun tries suffered first. The wheat and cot ton from India in the Liverpool ! market keeping step with the fall in Rupee ex change soon cut the price of theSworld'.s crop in two and destroyed the profits and depreciated the property of- the producers in all gold, standard coun tries. 1 The only reason. why the manufac turers and laborers in all gold standard countries- have not suffered aj worse fate than has overtaken the wheat and cotton growers, is. that the Asiatic na- ftions did not have competing articles to offer. -Ky I Silver in the Oriental nations con tinues' to purchase raw material and labor as cheaply; as at I any timei in the past. These over-populated ' Cations containing one-half the human family, perpetually, on the verge of famine, the frequency and fatalities of which have developed and intensified a universal system of hjoardingj constantly drench ing upon the, coin in circulation, has had for thousands, of years and still con tinues to have 'a wage rate barely per mitting continued existence to the teeming millions of toilers. Before silver was outlawed in the Western world fifteen and a half j ounces of silver in the Orient paid for com modities that cost an ounce of gold la the Occident, hut at . the present time it requires thirty-one ounces ot silver to purchase the product o an ounce of gold. . .-''-' ,'' '" J Upon a wage in silver barely suffi cient to continue life the alternative to tho toilers of Asia was to manufacture for themselves the articles formerly i imported from America and Europe or j forego their uae altogether. ; ' delicate predicament as a result of ill These extraordinary and exasperat ing conditions awoke the Japanese from the sleep of inactivity. The recent Invasion of our markets by manufac tures from Japan is perhaps the most threatening and direful in the chain of calamities resulting from that ill-conceived! and totally (wicked effort of the world's creditors to plunder and en- -I slave the world through the demoneti zation ;of silver. . j ' , Upon tv gold pkniH, the present, rate of exchange jgives Japan an ad- vantage over the j manufacturing na tions of America and Europe equivalent to a protective duty of one hundred per cent and-an expert bounty of the same amount. This is the premium that the devotees of the gold standard In the United States have! put upon the de struction of the civilization of the West ern world. Who among them will con tend that when factories are estab lished in Japan, bhina t and India, equipped with the latest improved labor saving machinery and operated by labor paid from two to three dollars per month that the era of colleges, schools and churches is not doomed? . I j J. M. DEVINE. NOTES AND COMMENT. Flashes of Thought , from independent Thinkers. During the past seven- years 134 American heiresses have, married for eign titles and hate practically trans ferred $200,000,000 of wealth td foreign lands. Mhcb of this wealth is in stocks and bonds, and draws dividends and interest from American enterprise. LWe are fast, being made the serfs nnd supporters of the j pauperized nobility of foreign lands, j The telegraphic imonopoly has made: $100,000,000 in twenty . years. In 185S the capital stock of the Western Union was only $358,700. It is now $150,000, 000. Its entire plant could be dupli cated for $30,000,000. The other $120, 000,000 is waten Yet there arehou sands and millions of people in this country who pretend to think that they would rather continue to pay prices for telegraphic service (that yielded mil lions of dollars In dividends on watered stock than for the. people to own and operate the wires as they do in England. . If Cleveland had; been as great a suc cess in managing the finances of the nation as he was in managing his own, the country would: be quite prosperous. But while making a fortune for himself "he has, bankrupted pretty much every body else. Perhaps the two things are counterparts of each other and if the first hadn't taken place the last would not 'have occurred Nonconformist. Of course to do j this 'he would have had to use some other nation to have skinned, and to come to think of it we would like to have had him try his hand on old John Bull's people. If Grover could have made as complete a success of skinning them, as they, with flis as sistance, have in skinning us, we would now be flying. '! . ;: The opinions of Grover Cleveland, who, with undisguised self-conceit, poses as" the' Moses of the financial ques tion, are entitled tp no more considera tion to-day than when, as sheriff, he acted as hangman at Buffalo, N. Y. Missouri World. That's a center shot. . A great peo ple seem to think the moment a man Is elected or appointed to a high position he becomes, in somemysterious man ner endowed with ja sagacity which he never possessed ; before. As a matter of fact he is not a bit smarter than he was, and In many 'instances It makes a fool out of a man, and he isn't as smart. Grover Cleveland seems to be of the latter class, and we are not inclined to think that he is as smart as he was - advised financial expedients. I when hanging men in Buffalo at $50 per hang. ' i , ! . v It has been left for an agricultural .paper to solve the vexing problem of living in a system of capitallqwnershijk of everything. It savr; if farmers' son will be satisfied with no! horse, no buggy, no good cloths and !no educa- tion, they can save uoney on a farm even to-day. Coming Nation. J AxVhy-nt course.' :, might 'also lee jj mucn thfct he eat. He might lryfe jfincipally on corn b'read and cow peas,-, with hickory or walnuts thrown in oc casionally for dessert. He might alsp reduce his hours of sleeping and hi crease the hours of labor. Why, most certainly, ho could give half the prod ucts of his labor to plutocracy and thett save money. But what we started out tp" say was that it Is not every Agricultrual paper that is the farmers' friend or" worthy the support of farmers. It was Buell's Bank Circular that announced,. the policy at buying up the religious and agricultural papers, and when yea see one of them dealing out such trash as that you may put it down safely that it has either solJ out, or don't knor enough about farm interests to haul out manure. : Henry Wattersoa says: "We have in fact, no democratic party at all. t is merely a'n agglomeration of quiddlr ties thrown together by the upheaval of the times. A, monster without ftij head, running wild through a wilder ness of political incertitude." Whoa, there.-Henry. Is ft that bad Well, then, take the thing "thrum" uf. If that's the kind of an individual it ii, it ought to be prohibited by! law from running at large. This, then, is the thing of great promise, a ("monster without a head,-running wild through a wilderness of incertitude," j Well, v?e , did not think it was so bad. We rl- member that Watterson told us the nomination of Cleveland would be j. "march through the slaughter house tp an open grave." Perhaps h.e meant the election of Cleveland, after all. In speaking of the President's message he said: "Nothing will come of it. Coqf gress will not do any thing at all, and if the republicans are wise they witl . simply pass the appropriation bill and go home." j - It is very plain to see that (Henry Is overcome with large gobs of gloom, anl that the "star-eyed goddess" seems tp have forsaken him for the time being But he'll get over it unless he has made it a profitable business transac tion. ! In a recent sermon Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage discussed the propensity Of the American people to indulge in cani paign lies and slanders, in the- follow ing picturesque style: At every yearly cr quadrennial ele-? tion we have In this country great man ufactories manufactories of lies; aiii they are run day and night, and they turn out half a dozen a day, ajl equipped and ready for full sailing. r Large lie3 and small lies. Lies private and lies public and lies prurient. Li3 cut bias and lies cut diagonal. Long- limbed lies and lies with double-bapc purpose toward men in the establish action. Lies complimentary iand lip', ment of thore social, political, Indus defamatory. Lies that some people be- trial and moral conditions expressed in lieve, and lies that all 'the people be- Jesus' words, "The kingdom of heaven Heve, and He3 that nobody j believes.; is at hand."' It is praying for the abo Lies with humps like camels and scalp: lltion of those self-seeking conditions like crocodiles, and neeks as long is that have bred our present competitive storks, and feet as swift as an ant- strife, strife that has brought us as a lope's, and stings like adders. Lip; nation to the verg of political, social raw and scalloped and panned and and- moral ruin, and for the e3tablish stewed. Crawling lies and t Jumpiest ment of that divine civilization based lies and soaring lies. Lies with at- tachment screws and rufflers at 3 i if braiders and ready-wound bobbin' Lies by Christian people who never lis except, during elections, and; lies 7 people who always lie, but beat th.eC.- selves in a presidential campaign, I ,; TRY KINGDOM COME. QYKOPSIS OF A PR4CTICAL SHR- j MON BY R. C. HARDIN. The Dlvln IaswgiTr Commtndi pent ace ead That TVo br Repentance Chnce the Selfish 6ygtm All Depends on Obedlenoe. Good i Text: Thy will be done on earth as It is fn heaven. lie first word that Jesus uttered ! when he began his public mlrfistry is , positive proof of the e'r of;ti'p then existing social and mornl condition?, and of the necessity Af reform. He s&ys ' to his hearers "Repent!" "Turn your , back upon the existing order; that has ; brought -you to the very verge j of political, social and moral ruin, i and accept the nfw order, for the king- I denj of heaven is at hand,"' We do, not need to go to the musty recor.U of pro- fane history to learn that the social and j moral conditions of the pcopic- a: that ; day were at war with the social and i moral welfare of society and had in- j curred the displeasure of Gorl. The ; words of the greatest of all rciormers j will convince you of that. i i Neither do we need to sei3r;;h the ; musty records of the past to understand j the" nature of the reformation intra- I duced by Jesus and carried forward by j bis apostles. Now he has told ua in i language not to be misunderstood "The kingdom of heaven is at hand." A. new sociology, of divine origin and birth, was to take the place of the old order a sociology wherein the will, of the father might be done in earth as in heaven. ; But, the objector to our vleV of the meaning of Christ in his announcement of the near approach of the; corning kingdom will say: "Ah, this was wholly a spiritual kingdom and would be set up in the hearts and would affect only the spiritual and religious life of the nation, and would have noth ing whatever to do with the political antTsocial life of the people. I answer: Certainly the kingdom of heaven set up in the earth, would, doubtless, greatly affect the religious or spiritual life of the people, but can a , people be morally right and at the same time politically and socially wrong? To my way of thinking there can be but one' kind of right, and a people' cannot be right and wrong both at the same time. You cannotbe socially wrong, or in wrong social relations with your fellows, and at the same time 'be re- ligiously rlaht In your relations with God.& You must not only love God, butIIslon on llnou that crrace the ma you must love your neighbor as your self," Neither can you be politically wrong and be socially right. There is so close a relation existing between ourj political duties that we dare not say we may go on from day to day in a life of political wrong doing, and yet have the approval of our social conscience. Hence, I agree that the coming king dom of heaven whoso near approach Jesus has heralded forth, calling upon the. people to repent and turn away from present customs and environment, was to affect and completely change not alone the religious life of that nation, but the social and political life as well. That, in its effects, the kingdom of heaven in earth was to do away, for ever, with the industrial, political, so cial and moral conditions that had u 1 ia i robbed the nation of its life and brought it to poverty and ruin, and was to build Up such political, industrial, social and moral conditions as are named, "the kingdom of heaven,"' in which the will of God should be done in earth, as in heaven. But what are we to understand by the "will" of God? Why the mind or inten tion of God expressed in the form of law. We call the ten commandments the law of God, but the real law existed before the writing of the command ments, the writing being simply the ex pression of His wiil cr intent. Really God has but one law. As there is only one kind of right, so, also, there is but one law. All. other statutes are but precepts of the one great law, and that is. the law of love. Thou shalt love Gbd. Thou sha'lt love thy neighbor. Hence, His will done in earth means nothing more nor less than that his love should rule on earth as in heaven. Not much has been revealed to .us of conditions in heaven, but enough to show us that all is harmony there ? that there is no sorrow nor tears, no break ing tip of families, no wounded hearts, no weary and aching heads; that jits "in habitants live in perfect accord.; And their principal occupation might be described in the sentence, "They are constantly dong the will of God." Now His will, done in earth i as in heaven, would be replacing our present social and moral relations in which we "are prompted bv a spirit of individual ism, with those social and moral rela tions prompted and emphasized by the spirit or law of love. And this. was what was.ln the mind ot Jesus to accomplish when he besan h:S public ministry. The angelic announcement of his ad- vent into our world was "Peace on earth and good will, or God's wilh-love to man;" hence when we pray, "Thy mil be done in earth as in heaven, we pray for the accomplishment of God's on Gods one and only law of love o tne .conditions under which wo continue to exist a? a nation in accord with this great law of God. Aro we, socially, morally or politically, actuated , in our conduct tov;ard each other by the VJT; of love? Ii so, we do not need to pray this prayer. But it is not so. Taks up any department of our national or i Focial life, and the spirit of competitive individualism will be found to bo th inspiration or err national or eociai ao- tions. In dine form or another the same selfish, competitive, industrial system under' whiph wo at present' live, has existed siate the history of men began. We have never had any other system, ; end whatever of industrial wrong i exists, and whatever is socially wrong i must be charged to that same industrial : system which it was the misson of Jtbus to ovtcrihrow. Since there is but cne kind of right, and lacking the prin- cipal cf moral right, cr. la other words. ; living in di.-O'l rdier.ee to the one great ; law, our moral --ns? must pronounce against the r :vii;z. i ion of the past and i present the verd'rt wholly wrong. It ; is a part of the same si'stem that des ! tioyed tho national life of the Jews; j that-overthrew th-- Roman government; that brought forth the terrors of tho french re vol -iliitirtn- V f tn-ia rl rPTl iViPil ; our own :aa - iii biood, and that fur- i nished the incentive for the cruelfixioa i of the Son . cif God.t , i I have no; sympathy with that class of preachers who counsel submission to the evils from which wei to-day aro suf j fering. with iour only hope of reward in tho life eternal., .leus exhorted his ! disciples to say. 'The kingdom of j heaven is ait hand" not a far away ; thing, to .the view of which distance i lends enchantment, but close by, near at ! hand. And !he tells them, "When you prrayysay, 'Omr Father, thy will be done ' in earth' not elsewhere 'as it is done I in heaven.' " i It Is evident to me that the only thing that stands in the way of the coming in of that time lis our own wills. He said to the Jew, Repent. Ho says to us, Re pent; the kingdom of heaven is at hand. But why must our present industrial and social system b? abolished before we can expect tho will of God to bo done in earth as in heaven? For the reason that there is but one kind of right. Before men will' obey the law the will of God they must re pent, must turn away from that which is wholly selfish and which- arrays brother against brother. As individ uals and as a nation we are socially and industrially wrong a id therefore mor ally wrong. We stand on the verge of ruin. Being socially and industrially wrong we cannot be morally right; and being morally wrong we are in no con dition to yield up our self love the love of Ego to th? unselfish love or will of God. Before tlJ; coming of tlie king dom of heaven, to earth,, there must be a great moral and social awakvting. . yrt 2 4 . .u. lucre muse Dp a-nationrii revlvarar re terial welfare ofVhe hurian race in this world, as well aa its spiritual welfare in the next. There m ift be bom w.'thln us a desire to ee the wni of God doco in tho earth as in heaven, that ex presses. Itself not only in the form of words, but in social actions as well. To little purpose do we pray, "Thy wiil be done on earth as in heaven," unless we also work for that end. Our part of the work that must be done be fore that much, desired time shall come, is as Important as God's part. God works through human instrumentali ties, and if the human part fails, Hia part wilLnot be done. What part have we to perform in ushering in the new heaven and tho new earth? Looking back along the ?!ream r.f nitr ntn fimo n-r -.. i ann.aa iUnt. i ' L "fA''co uiai uave ueea ai wont in 1 solving the problem of national ruin, j We can discover those political poli- cies that have brought the curse of j bankruptcy upon our nation and cx j treme poverty and destitution upon 1 those who have always been its brain j and brawn. We can trace the bearing ; of these policies upon our nation's pro ; gresa and prosperity. We can search. out those policies that have dethroned i the rights of a lare class of our eiti-, j zens to life, liberty and the pursuit of I happiness. And we can declare scl j emnly in the sight of God that wo will not longer support these policies. If each of us who are here to-day would : begin to do the will of God here as It i is done in heaven, we would soon S see such a revival of the religion-of ; love as would transform our part of 1 the earth into a garden of Eden. And i the influences of the Spirit would not stop with us, but would rpread its be nign and life-giving power to other communities until our state and na , tion might be set on fire with a zeal : whose outcome would be a new heaven ! and a new earth. A LIGHT DIFFERENCE. ringee's Towu Is Getting Cheap i::c i trie Ltarbt. Milwaukee Advance; Detroit's mu nicipal lighting plant has created great interest among ofncials of other largo cities, and many .delegations have in spected it. 'Everybody was curious to know what the saving over contract lighting would be. if anv. and City Elo ; trlcian Dow was asked that the plant : .when in complete operation be given a ; full month's trial before the figure?! be : given out. The result for October ; shows that there were 1,470'" arc lamps ju use ana incandescent lighting waa j done in many of the municipal build ings. The cost per lamp per month for. Etreet lighting.lccluding interest on tho $500,000 of bonds, is- $7.03, or $84. SC per lamp per year. ; Under the contract system the city paid $11.15 per lamp per month cr $133.0 per year. At the eame ratio the city will save $72,000 thi3 year over the contract system. The.quality of the lighting v;as far and away 'better than the old system. And yet we, have many honest pecplo. who think we! ought to pay tribute to nrivate cnrnHnnc who r-in our nublio utilities ! Tbe woods may be full of Dcmocratio candidates "for president, but they aro away back and won't come out. ALL OVER THE STATE . - - : Covington's Death Warrant. tiovernor: Carr has issued a wurran for the execution, Feb. 13, at Newton, of Ihotnas Covington for the murder of James Brown, superintendent of tho Log Island cotton mill. Brou n owned a f-ture rear the mill and, having !U-oer-taine-d that it had been rubbed, went one nigbt to watch for the thief! The following -morning his duhter found him ley in g on the tluor of the store dead. He had boon shot three time?. Covington confessed.' that . he" lml poue to the pt'oro to" stt.nl. and found Brown, who rus-hed at him with a pistol. He sprang uii- Brown, wrenching the pistvd from him, threw him, down and $hot him three titr.es. An cilort was maile to secure n verdict oi murder in the second decree. Cov ington was snporinteudeiit of' the Kj.in uintr room in the cotton mill. A Dividend of - IVr Cent. The regular annual me ting of the stockholders of tho Salisbury Cotton Mills was held at Salisbury, -Monday." The report of tho president was ruid and mude a very satisfactory Fhowii.. During the year the mill has manufac tured 1,000,000-yards of cloth and con sumed' 1,000, 33S pound' of cotton.. The present board ot . !ir-eto. s were re-elected with t lie exception of Mr. J. M.'Otkdl. who is no longer a stock holder. A quarterly dividend of 2 per ceut. was declared ptiyable.on demand. All the old o Sic era of the mill were re elected. , $200 Resvurd OfTered. Gov. Curr offers S200 reward lor the eonvictiou. of tho unknown persons who on the night of January '2, mur dored an. unknown man in. Warren, county. The victim was known onl.r as the "old umbrellii mender." . IFb' . had gme into cam;i that night quite near the l!aci.i .v (Jnston U.uilroad, and in. tlie eai ly morning sonic .persons who v,.( -re' on a passing train, saw Ins bodv Iviiii.' in tlie nshe of his tire, par tinlly t:urned and with-liis throat cut and :-kull e rushed. it wan tpiitu clear tint the oil .ia:i .hud been murdered nil-1 r.ibb.-d :i:el that then his body had been tht v,ti in the lire in order to 'destroy il aii l conceal tho awful crime). - A Tannery at MaiHm. Mr Sharpe, a Chicago cajutali. t, is in Marion looking for a location for a large . tannery to manufacturo lino leather for tho export trade. His company lutdies a Hpeeitdty of what is known in sli and leather cireb sas t',iiAfv tip".. if oyed Wnt the jeo pie of .Marion will encoiirago tiio-eil-terpiise as.it will ive employment n a fjreat manV ineii, besidcH opening a home market for white oak, chestnut' oak, hemlock and' other barks that' grow in abundance and profuMOii on the mountains and hill-ides lioar that' town. . . . The Flremeir.i I oiirnament. Tho Salisbury firemen . uro now at work raising u Kubseriptiou for the tournatu' iit t j be given there the com ing fall on tho occasion of the annual m-eting of the Statot-Firemen's Asso ciation, whi-dr willjjeheld in Salisbury thi -i year. i hey -arc meeting with splendid success, having so iar raised ui-out 8500. Salisbury's tiro laildies, . it is s.ittd, want about b'00 and aro iov (-ertiin of tins amount. They hope to the Sialo iiVernen a recejdion v.orts- of the town.- Went Di r vi lo Cuba. : N.-wt,- irom' Wil.niington fives the 'mi iP-iii'ars ol tho removal of ft!b the military stores iroia tlie. idb-ged ! hi -ti-n ir- steamer -('ommodore. 'lir-y v( ! -, it is said, pbtee.l on .. board- a schooner from the Bahamas, which had' biou-'ht fruit and which haib-d the day l.e.o;-..- Christ-ma", apparently only iu i;i:!a-,t,ui:d wliich v.en't direct to Cubs. The ' .t.'anfer CoWi l'' dore will be sold. Kii!. l in iijeir ,;iriagc. freight train in Hut herford eduuty si -e.-h a car riage in which . wore M r- . ; .uitib of Oi l Fort -and her two dau :h Mi Kaiiij i.i.d the ohb'-t filter, a.td if), .went hi i led. 'I'll- dragged from o i nrer u.i -.a d.t- lis ;. r l In"- . i ..Is i: I Ire r b to savoct i ,i.' emria"": as rj rushed and tie h,,;.M kili-'d. J'liH driver jumped and iir.v. (.': rr bus; appointed I), a. Maxw.il, oi (.hrrflo(e. an notary pub- iiv. ' - d i.. B'ts':r hasHie-'-'n electr-d chi'-f ,,i ih- Concord tire b p'Htraent lor tie eii-'ii ug Vear. - Blv. f. B. l'ruett has resigned as pt.stor 'A Olivet Baptist church, Char ; tt' . tr beco'me cijy missionary. J he jir-t "MonduV of next March an . -ctiO:i will be held in Mt. Airy for th... purpooe of voting i2o, 000 w;orth oi i -!i,.:.i to be used lb purchase iisyster-i w ater w oj ks. . . , ' "i Jpj, : t-jckholderH of the Carnleigh M'lli- Ci..memy held th ir annuil meet ing Muday, at llaki-'h, and re-elected the obi ofiieeifi The reports ehow cd t:i most gratifying year in the his tory ot the iiiSUtUtio'U. Messrs. Moore k McKenzie, cloth iers, of Greensboro, assigned to M. ss.r-. A. M. Scales, o. Greensboro, and O.o. S. Bradshaw, of Ashboro. '::e liaidlitie.-i aro taid to be about Sb',-' with assc ts about -83,000. mi. r. no ivouu men say they were losing money an I consequently decided to close. Post It Cp. The Treasury gold "reserve at the close ol bu-in"--- S .tur lay- stood at 56,029,533. Th j with Ira-.va!.: at New -York amounted to 55, ; 0'b - -.''.., The Treasury has cuiplrted seoding. out : to po.rt:na-f-r,s Secretary Carlisle's circular liiVitiag be'.-, l.r Solids. On tho top. signed by Postma-'ter General T'ta.. L. Wihoc, i? priut;-J thi.- notice: ' 4 .Tbe Postmaster is; hereby directed to post thi vcireuiar in a conspicuous plaea In hi oClce." ' As there are over 73,000 postofiloes ia tho Ci,it' l Su: .-, the priiitiu and distribution uf thij nuad or was no small matter. S8K . . . , . . 1 - - " S"" '-'".': !'' -,.