ELEVATOR VOL. 1. F.T,M CITY, N. C., FRIIAY, JULY 25,1902. NO. 60. an old favorit^ : -to am S34am 1 05 am 2 42 pm I 4'> pm 100 pm »35 pm 6 55 am i 45 am NO.S6 SOU am 3 50 pm rSOam n 40 pm 5 00 am tSJ am ! am 11 35 am 12 58 am 145 pm 4 07 pm 4 55 pm 8 36 am 11 25 pm 2 56 am 6 30 am 3 15 4 sa 6 00 9 30 m 11 05 - 12 20 PM »ves iay- A Sprinra inetjtovllle tad leaves Ives Scot- m.,KiiiB- noOa.ro.. L al 1105 ft. vt^h.ic- irmele ijeie 9 15 » 10 35 a. m. ;pt Sunday Inymoutb Plymqntb ud»7 9 00 a. j Goldboro ;S"f» .. _46p. ®- -a\‘^,fec‘Sy •r^anVIS. ■iiiii Amr>s UBnnu THE SEVEN AGES OF MAN THESE famous lbi«i frcoi Mt X scane 7. of “Aa Tou ZJlw It** an spoken by JaquM. son of Sir Rdaaa D* Bota and brother of Orlando^ the hero of the play. "Am Tou Uka IV* waa llrat printed aevan jreute after the death of. ShalceqMara. Soma of the incidenta of the ^ay are deriv^ from a romance by IlMnnaa l«dse printed in IBM. LL th« w^d*8 a stage And all tlie and women merely players; They hare tb^ exits and their entraneta. And »0 man in his time plays many parts. His acts beins seTW ages. Atllrst the inftt&t, MMrliac apd, poking In th« irarse's arms; Then thtf irUning sel»odtt>^ with his satdid And riiining morniBg fao^ creeping like snail UawilliBgly to school; and th«i the lOTW, Sighing like furnace, with a woefnl ballad Made to his mistress* eyibrow; tlmn a soldier, Foil of strange oaths and.bearded like a pard. Jealous in honmr, sodden and quick in quarrel. Seeking the b^blo r^itation Eren in the ^sannon’s month; and then the Jostles; In fair, round belly with go^ capm lined, ^th eyes severe and beard of formal cot. Fall of wise saws and modeni instances— And so he plays his paH; the rixth age shifts Into the lean and sUwered pantaloon. With ipectades « nose and pooch on side. His youthful hose, well sared, a world too wide For his shrank shsnk, and his big, manly Toice Taming again toward cbildisb treble, pipes And whistles in his soond. Last scene of all, That ends this strange, eventful history. Is second diildishness and m«e oblivion— Sans teetl^ sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything. THE BCBA;li nAll, DBLIVSBY . s^svsii.. Baltimore Sun.,\ ' - It baa been announced in the news columns of Sun^ thst an agent of the general pDstoffioe is in WafsUngton county, Maryland, itfranpng fp? ‘‘rural free delivery” of mail. In the neigh boring counties of Frederick and Car roll the system has already been estab lished and is. in qn^tion. It seems to be the determinanbn of the depart ment to extend it generally. The revenues of the Uiiited States Fostoffice Department fall several mil lion dollars short ,ol i^ing expenses, and the wisdom Of’ptltting: the enor mous cost of .thefree d^very system upon the taxpayers of the country, to be added to the teost of nedessaries of life, may well be doubted. JSven if the postal revenues^ere sufficient to jjostify the expenditiuw, it is hkely that the people would prefer to have them ap plied to a reduction iq letter postage. Every reduction which has ever been made,from the time the cost sending a letter was 25 cents, down to thereduc- tion from 8 cents to 2 cents, has short ly resulted in an increase ,of revenues. It is believed by some that 2 cents an ounce is the minimum which would afford a profit. But this is far from certain. A cent an ounce is 16 cents a pound, which seems to be a ve^ iair price for carrying matter. Or, if it » too low, the weight of letters to be car ried for 1 cent might be ^uced to a half ounce. At the premnt rate the carriage of .lettm is enormoudy profit able, and the surplus revenues coming from it are devot^ to paying for the transportation of mail matter which does not pay its own way. As far as 7/e have been able to see. there has never been any strong poptdar demand for rural free delivery. In some cases it has been forced upon communities against their own protest. There are instances where the mail reaches a village before 8 o’clock in the morning and the Cahi^ does not come along until 11. In ca^ like that, where the village postpffice has been closed, the free deliveiy is 'progressiDg backward. A glance at the map of Washington county shows that it is gndironed with railroads, every one of whiich brings an early mail from Baltimore. There is scarcely farmhouse in that fine county more than'a few miles from a railroad station or from a postoffice served quickly from a distributing office on the railroad, and the quickest Way to get the mail is to Bend to th^ nearest office for it. This has never been considered a hardship. The courtry poetoffice is usually located in the country store, to which the neighbors go for their sup plies. These country stores are great conveniences, and should the rural delivery systemi result in breiEUcing many of them up the people will find when too late that they have paid too dear for their whistle. But the great danger connected with the rural de livery system is one which the resident of the city finds it difficult to fully understand. That danger conrasts in the ease with which the s^tem can be converted into a gigantic and most effective political propaganda. Which ever party has possession (rf the Federal (iovernment will be enabled to employ a« carriers men belonging to that party, rfcommended.and appointed for politi cal reasons. These active and intelli gent man, visiting almost every house in the United States, brought, in d^y contract with the people—acting, it may be, as agents for the sale and dis tribution of partisan newspapers—these men working to rebun their job, can exercise a political power which may make it practically impoesi^ for the people to vote one party out and put the other in, even if the welfare of the country should demand it. In short, where the majority of the IxK>ple demand the free delivery of their letters and papers as a coQvenience, and not simply as a novelty or a “fad," and the conditions are favorable, then the free delivery should be established. But it should not be forced upon people who do not want it and to whom it will be an inconvenience and a step ba^- ward. The Poatmaster-Qenoal in his report two years ago, almost at the begmmng of the free deliveiy ment, said that the extension of the system had resulted in closing many postoffices, but upon the urgent re quest of the patrons a number of these offices'have been r&«staUished, and many m»e requests for re-establish- meat were on file in the departmwit Thir shows conclusively that after a fair ti^ these people preferred their poetoffices to mail carriers. Of course the system is popular among thousands who want the jdaces of carriers and among Congressmen who want the _ Kmage. But the whcde matter, be fore it goes any father, is well wo^y of a searching inquiry by a committee o|-Congprees. Tou di*8 Companion. The great and constantly increasing prevalence of deafness ^ould make parents and all those having charge-of the. young very careful in the tieatoient of the ears. M«njr cases of deafness in adult life could be traced back to one of sevc^ easily preventable causes, if sll were known; First, mistaken ideas as to cleanliness are fruitful of mischief. The old rule that while the outside ear must be kept clean, the inside ear will take care of itself is a good one. Nature provides a secretion—the natural wax—to this end. There are also tiny, fine Hairs at the entrance to the canal the work of which is-to act as sentinels against dust anddirt. : The wax itself is bitt^ in taste, and is a guard against insects. Only by rare accident would an insect enter the ear, and wnen in it would be quite as anxious for release as its unwilling host. When this accident does occur a Uttle sweet oil should be poured in to drive the insect out. The faithful but ignorant nurse should be instructed not to roll up oor- ners of wash-rags and towels and force them into the opening. Even if no further harm is done some water wU almost certainly find entrance, and this is not only dangerous in itself, tot tends to injure the protective qosUties of the wax. Another great fault is the i^oring of the dai^er signal of earache in chil dren. In former days, when less was known about the treatment of the ears and when there were no spedalists, the administration of some pain-reliever, such as hot applications or laudanum water, and the ignoring of the reason hfthind the sche were more excusable than they would be to-day. To te- lieve the pain is well so far as it goes ; but at the same time a specialist should be counted as to what lurks behind the pain. Many parents who wotild t-hinlr it a shame to let a littie child suffer from toothache and not take it to the dentist will watoh some poor littie helpless sufferer grow up on ear ache, as it were, and seem to regard it as some mysterious insult on the part of nature. Most of nature’s insults are patient, faithful warnings in disguise, ttnH thia is especially true of ear symp toms in the young. I don’t know whether I can write a letter or not. 1 will try. The effwt will kec^ me from thinking about my- sdf. F«r a month I have been play ing “Billy in the low grounds,” but 1 have a good doctor who has nursed me night and day and cheered me ap and oomforted me and I am on the up grade, though as the GecMgia cradcom ■ay, “I am powerful weak.” This doc- Ux is my son and he aays he has not f»gotten how his mothor aiRl I nursed him tor three long months in Florida and saved his life and now I shall noc die if he can hdp it I take all his medicine, quinine, strychnine, calomd, qpirits of nitre and capsules without number, and tonics, too, and if I get well l will never k»owwhat otved me, bot he will. Wl^ woald the wnffi do without docUnst Kiqg Sdmrd and I wmild have died last week. About twenty years ago I had a qtell like this one, tot I had been working in tlie water all day trying to dam up the l»anch in the meadow so that the children could go in bathing. That night I like to have died and old I>r. Kirk was sent for and worked on me for three or four days and got me u] again. My wife told me then that if didn't be more careful of myaelf wouldn’t live out half of my dajrs. She told me the same thing the other day, and she knows. Old Dr. Kirk is i trump. He was our family doctor an til he got old and tired and moved away to live with his children. Before hie moved to this place from South Caro* > had a love scrape over there, and he had a rival, too, and they fell out. The girl wouldn’t have either one of them and the other fellow heard that the doctor had told storim on him to the giri and so aftw the doctor had loctUted here his rival wrote to him and demanded a retraxit or else a fight. The doctor wrote him a stinger and refus ed to make a retraxit, but would accept his challenge and fight him until Hades froze over, and as the fighting code gave the challenged psr^ choice fd weapons and time and pl^ and dis tance he should choose rifles at long range and the next 29th day of Feb ruary as the time and the other fellow must stay whme he wss and shoot over this way and he (the doctor) would sUy here and shoot over that way and both must aim high so as not to hit anybody between them. 3at I must stop now and take breath A good long breath is what 1 The old woman was asked what this dis ease her husband died of and she said the doctors differed about it, but always believed he died for lack of breath. I don’t want to go that way. I was ruminating aboat these {^Tsidans, for doct(» is not the {Hoper name. Doc tor means a teacher of anything whether it be scienoe or art or law ot pharmacy or theology. Physician is the right word. It is a very ancient name for the prtrfeeaion. The ittUe tells how Joseph got the physioiAns to embalm his old fathw, tmt I do nMr think it wss a very po]^ar profession among the Jews, for it is mentioned only two or three times and with doubt ful favor. King Asa had a disease in iiis feet and would not call upon the Lord for relief, but sent for a physician, and he died and slept with his fathers Then there was a woman who had an issue of Uood for twdve yean and had suffered much from many physidans and spent all she had and was nothing better,but ra:her grew worse. The Jews unto this d*y do not give much patron- immune, Imt he wasn’t. He toidc the fever right away and died. Itis a curi ous coincidence that three doctors frcMn our town went to Savannah to fig^tthe fever and every oneof them took it and died. But I wss ruminatii^ aboat the aui- faring and agony that the advance in sorgeiy and physic has saved mankind and I r^(Hce that Crawford Long h« been given the first {dace in the Hail of Fame. I was at scho(^ in Athens when his discovery was made, bat the magnitade of it was not realised until long after. I was one of the first to have a tooth extracted by the use of his lethean. Let me rest a while, for i am weak and nervous and, as Byron said— My viaicms flit leas palpaUy twfoM me.*' I have just enjoyed a good, long lei: ter from my old sehobl mate, NAthsn Onwfnrd, of Ltnt^nton. He is the honored school commissioner of the county and will die in J>amess, i reckon. He is in his eightieth year, but we were classmates, for he was one of those sure and sk>w boys, while I was {wecocious and uncertain. ' Only three of as left now, tot Tom Alexan^ d» is living at Bome. Nathan writes good, old-fsshioned, cheerful letter, and says he never stole Frank Alex ander's watermelons, and hints that it #as Overton Young and a boy my name. The only reascm he didn’t ste^ I was that he boarded with Mr. Alexander and got (denty without steel ing. It is too late now for him to assume a sainty morality, for Tom and I still live to testify. But it was a good letter and the memory of Nat Oraw^ ford is always comforting and refresh ing. Now, for a good long rest. Biix Abp. Tke ConveBtloa anil Tlekeft Greensboro {teoord. The ticket nominated is, in the main, what was expected; that is to say, Hon. Walter Clark was nominaled for chief justice, which was known weeks ago. The associate justices were in some doubt, but the nominees are pure men, capable in every sense, and the voters of North Carolina will raify the nomi nations made.- That there are many Democrats in the State who will not vote for Judge Clark is well known. This itf" a right they have. But under the circumstances they are still go(^ Democrats. Men have a right to their opinions and while the vote for his nomination was practically overwhelm^ ing, these men are honest in thdr posi tion. We taJce it that there were few pn.ytifipR*'"C ^ convention who will fM.il to vote tar aim. Outside, however, there are no doubt some who will not support him, yet as for the balance of the ticket they will vote and work for it. Freddie—When do you call a woman a grasswider, dad? Cobwigger-^When the gtam i over her husband. age to phraiciaos or quack medicine I never knew but one Jew doctor, though there are a few very emioent ones in the large cities, for whatever a learned Jew does he does wdl. There is a doctor Jacobi in New York dty who stands at the head of the profes- non and is consulted by the rich and great men of the nation, Now, let me stop for another good long breath. When I was a boy we didn’t ^ve bat one doctw in the town and he weighed 800 pounds and was never in s hurry. He left little babies around ever and anon and when one came to our house our old cook told us where he got them and she slyly point ed to his oorporosity. He had a littie office on the street and a few shelves with botties on them containing calo mel, salts and castor oil, senna and cammomile and Peruvian bark, balsam of copaiba, and such simple things and in the corner was a skeleton in a box that stood upright, with • screw in the skull, and sometimes the little, long door was opraand we school diildren could peep in and then run for our lives. It wss an awfal dght But ^e old doctor got too old and fot to practice and sent to New York for his nei^ew. Dr. Phik> D. Wildman, a student Valentine Mott, the great New York physidan and surgeon. He was as smart as his tutor and went to cutting y.n«i alaahing OUT pwple just like kill ing hogs. He straightened cross ^es and sewed up hsir bps and cut stones out of bladders. The agcmizing screams of poOT little John Thompson, my school mate, still haunt me, for he was simply dying of stone in the Madder and the doctor cut it out. It was as large as a pigeon egg, and the littie boy got weU. My brother and Jim Craig studied under Wildman, and when they wanted a stiff they would go (mt to the •p^wllaniT grave ya^ in the night and dig up a fresh buried corpse and haul it to a littie room back of their office and cat it up and boil it down and' make a skBleton of the tones. I went wi& thgm one night and hdped them to dig up a negroTw somebody rocked us as we were taking it oat ai^ we had to run ftvoor lives, for they threatened to shoot. That satisfied me with the business and 1 never went again. But our little town wasn’t enough for Wldman and eo he moved to Columbus and made a great repatation. About that time the yellow fevervisited Savannah, and ?HUman b^eved he coold stamp it out and that he was an Poller After S4 Vewr^ An unusual case of insurance refund ment took place at Carbondale, 111., reeentiy, when a representative oi an old insurance company presented check to Philip Temple, a conducts on the Gale branch of the Illinois Cen tral, amounting to $674.73. The family had supposed since 1808 that nothing was coming to them and had not only forgotten ^e inddent but had lost the policy. Besides the Temple settiement the following former red- dents of this dty who carried policies at the same time will receive refund ments as soon as thdr present reddence is known: John Hessick, last heard from at Florence, Colo., $1,000; David Johnson, last known at Be^ord, Ind., $440.03; Frauds A. Yost, last known irt Louisville, Ky., $400, aod JiMnes Franks, last known at Houston, Mo. $927. GKoannOBO, N. C., July 16.—The North Carolina DemoenUie State Gem- vention met in the CSty Hall here at no(m today, every county m Uie State being represented. T& foUowiiq; tidEet was nominated: For Chief Jakiee of tl Coart—^Walter Cbtk, of Wake. For Assonate Jastice of the Supreme Court (representing western section) Platt D. Walker, of Mecklenbarg. For Associate Jastice /eastern section) H. G. Connor, of Wilson. mer lieuL-Gov. Chaites M. Stedman, in behatt oi Greensbtvo, made a fended addrew of wekiome. In calling the convention to order Senator F. M. Wgimope, .who u also chairman of the eseeutive committee and bead of 0M pioU in die State, made a fmeebii qieeoh, ^lelending the amendsoent to the Constitatacn reeentiy 9d whidi prevents ignorant negroes from voting. He said in pan: The justios and'wisdom of the amendment are no longer a question for debate, but have bera setti^ by a majority of 50,000, and white sni»em- a^ has been written in the oiganic law ' the State. The question which now confronts us is. Shall this decree ot the white pejt^le remain written in the Constitutitm, or shall it be expanged from the Conrtitation, and if exponged oy whom and how? We do not want anothw so-called n^ro eatadym io North Carolina. If our adversaries wiU accept the amendment in good faith we will not have another. “I hope tbia convention wUl invite and challenge the BepaUicans to de clare officially and unequivOfCi^y in thdr platform whether th^ accept the amendment aa a final settlement of the vexed and dangerous question of negro saffrage. We are told that the negro out of politics. We sre told that the Democrats have promiaed freedom of throught and action. If the negro is out of politics he Is out tbrongh the amendment. Whatever we have prom- » t*i independence was predicated upon the assamption of the permanency of that measure, and we cannot and wiU not permit Bq[>ublican party to ap peal to and use the amendment to divide the white ^ple so long as that party refuses to give the people a pos- tive and straightfoward assurance of bona fide acceptance of that Wadesboto Messenger and IntelUgencer. The fact that Senator Pritehard has succeeded ia gating a bill through Clongress providing for making eligible to the pension list soldiers who deserted from the Confederate army and pined the Union forces, should ^mn him in the estimation of every true Southern white man. In every age and country the deserter has received the just con tempt of all men. So heinous has the crime always been coosidered that the Minishmen of death has been universal- iy pronounced against the culprit when ^[>prehended. In having a law passed rewarding persons who have beon guilty of this, the greatest of all crimes, Seoat(Hr Pritchard has insulted eveiy soldier who worthily wore the gray and ev«y woman who toiled through f^ long years of extraordinary privation for the cause she loved. Slist !■ the momtu. CiUBLOTTB, July 18.—very pecu liar shooting scrape took place just south ot the dty t^y between J. A. Price and J. C. Cathey. Price called Cathey into his room and the door was dosed. Soon two instol shots were heard, and friends rushing in, found Price shot in the chest and mouth. Cathey cliums that Price got him into his room and said to him “Now d—^n you, I got you where I want you Cathey did not deny the deed but went to a ’phone and told the chief of police that he was coming up town to give himself up, which he did. Cathey waa latter rel^ised under a thousand dollar bond. No cause has yet been given for the affair. Price’s inju^ bdng in the mouth renders it imposnUe for him to talk. His injuries, however, are not veiy serious. CfviUxe« Coi Stranger—You Iwd a good many lynchings here in fwmerdays, I under stand. Western C5ti*en—That’s long, long ago. We are dvilixed now. Stranger—No more mob law, eh ? Western Citizen—^No, indeed. When a fdlow butehers a family now^ quietiy issue a warrant for him, arrest Mm if our police h^^n to stumble over him, put him into an extra com fortable mU, send him dainties and flowers, postpone tiie case until some of the witnesses die off, grant him new trials and so on until everybody fwgotton the crime and then we let him go. Tke BerakUMMS Mmj Oflfier liladaai PmtteraoB for OMel Jaattee. It is given out here today that the Republicans will offer .Mr. Lindsay Pattonon, a prominent lawyer here, the nominatian for Chief Justice of the North Candina Supreme Court When questioned aboat the rumor today Mr. Patterson admitted that he had heard such a rqxMTt bat stated that he knew nothing official. Mr. Pattnson was first a BepaUican, but became a Democrat when Preaidaai Oeveland was first nominated, waa a candidate for presidential elector on'thePahne^Badcner ticket in 1896. Better eat stale bread than be ill-fared. Judge Walter (Sark, who is tor Cbxei Justice, served sevoal terms on the Saperior Court bendi and is now serving his second term as Asso ciate Justice of the Sufneme Court, be ing dected the last time by the unuii- mous vote of all political par*ies. This is the fint time the Democratic State convention has ever met in any other town than Raleigh, the capital. A Soatkora Bov's Coasvlatatto Vosa* Postmastei^General Payne has re- cdved a letter from a youthful swain in far off Miasisdpiit who protests against the enforcement of thiU crud section ot the Postal Regulations whidi, abetted by parental objections, makes it impos- dble for him to «Mrrespoad with his bestgirL The letter fdkms: Dear Sir: I have aomethiog I wiab on wuU give me some information on. wrmted a call box No. 14 from a Postmaster’s clerk, June, the 21st, and told him I wanted it fMr my girl, as her parents won’t aUow me to go with her and I want to write t> her and I would address them to her in name box No. 14, and now Miss Peari Nasors comes up and says she can’t allow this, as it is against the Postal Laws and I wish you would tell me if she is safe in tdUng me this. The giri is not of i^, but it seems to me I could rent her a box and have the mail pot in it. I would ai^iredato anything yoa woold do for me in this matter and hoping you will answer in some way I will close. Respectfully, The lettw was typewritten in Uue, on yellow paper, and was signed in red ink. “Alltheworid loves a lover,” said Mr. Payne, after he had read the. above remarkaUe plea," “but I can't see just what 1 can do fbr Willy. I think I’ll write and tdl him to try and make a hit with his giri’s ‘prents.’ ” And Mr. Payne turned regretfully to more serious matters. The Observer is iafwij Repobiicm WiU nomiaaaa a ftdl 4 ticket in MeckleidNiif and will i ▼igoroas campaign. The Cooleemee OoCton MSI dooble the o^Mdty tiik swiw ing total equipment of 1.800 Im 40,000 spindka. Two of the foar Ctaviriar ludgea appointed by Gor. been tamed down by Hm OMaoinlie conventioas of their dis|Kiota, ««D have been nominated. Mr. M. D. Goodman, of TteolMMb k)st a valuable 400-poaiid horn m 1km nth. Itdied with agmSoMetf hydrophobia.. hog waa billan by a Unqr haft nothingwas thoogh* «C it uilB two days ago whes the hog hjwtm nddied. Mr. BaneaYoang. oneof OttviiM county's substantial ( near the river, lost hia while woridng at li bine. Mr. Young wm «—the threaher when he saddealy tnniM ia a dased manner and pat bii haad to hit L Partaes near him qaBBMoaed him and found that his aaiM was a ‘The refusal by the BepubUcans under the dcumstances to give such assurance discloses a sinister purpose with reference to that measure, which, for sepiet reasons, they are unwilling to admit. We have the right, and it is our duty, in myiudgment, under theee xizcomstances to say to' the Republican party, 'You are demanding a change of polidee and conditions in North Carolina on account of the amendment. We demand that your d^ne you at titude toward the meaaure. If you accept it, sav so. It you prc^Mse to attack the amendment, now or here after, say so in terms whioh means yes or no.’ An answer which means either yee or no^ or neither, as future expediengr may suggest, will not be accepted. Until this answer is forthcoming, until the amendment is accepted as a finality by all parties or until it is judicially edablished, if it is to be attacked it will be the duty of the people to continue to stand U^ether f(ff its protection and thdr {Mrotection.” Formor State Senator A. M. Scales waa pdected as temporvjr chairman and qmke brie^. Lieut.-Gov. W. D. Tamer, of Ireddl, was made permanent chairman, and F. B. Arendell, of Wake; George P. Pell, of Ashe, aod Walter Muii^y, of Rowan, aeoretarief. The State executive Committee, as dected, is as fdlows; W. G. Lamb, W. B. Rodman, L. L. Smith, George W. Ward, M. J. Haw kins, £. L. Travis, W. H. Powell, L. V. Morrow, E. M. Koonoe, J. A. Bryan, S, O. Middleton, Nathan O. Berry, J, R. Young, E. C. Beddingfield, R. H. Hayee, E. S. Abell, J. S. Manning, H. S. Royster, R. D. Reid, J. J. Nelson, J. B. Underwood, D. E. Cowan, A. W. McLean, D. H. MoLean,D. E. Mclver, W. L. Parsons, J. R. Blair, N. G. WU- liams, Paul B. Means, R. N. Hackett, T. C. linn, J. B. Lewrllyn, R. R. Hay, W. H. H. Williams, Heriot Clawson. W. C. Erwin, John C. Mills, M. L. Shipman, C. A. Webb and W. £. Moon. Congressman CSaude Kitchen pla^ in nomination for Chief Justice Walter Churk, of Wske, preeent iustice. This waa leconded by N. B. Broughton, of Wake. Qabamisooanty cast a number, of votes for Judge M. H. Justice, when Mr. Justice's son announced, that his &ther not a candidate, and dedred his friends to vote for Qark. The roll-call reeult ed in Clark recdviug 1>141 votes. Jus tice 28, James E. Shepherd 8, H. G. Conner 1, not voting 48. A motim was made to make the nomination unanimous, bot it waa ob jected to and was not pressed. A Utter fight had been made on Judge dark, on account of his alibied leamng toward P^Nilism and bis hos tility to corporations. Ilatt D. Walker, of Charlotte; Charles A. Moore, of Asheville; James A. Lock hart, of WadeslKm), sad 0. H. Arm field, of Statesville were placed in nomi nation tot Aasodate Justice, to fill the vacancy from the western part of the State. Walker was nominated on the third ballot recdving 714 votes. He is an able lawyer, but has never held pdUic office. For the Associate Justioeship to rep resent the Eastern seotlon of tiie State H. G. ConnoiTof ^niaon, and Gewge H. Brown, of Beaoftirt, were placed in nominatim. Mr. Connor faa nated on the first baUot by a majority of five'votes. Mr. Connor was formeriy i^peaker of theHooseand is regarded as one of the alilBst attorneys in the Slate. cap* ■ohMas Speaks a rroverk. Cliariotto Observer. There ought to be an ai^urobative response all over N(»tii Carolina .to the speech made by Ci^>t. F. C. Rc^bins, of Davidson, when he took the chair. Thursday, to predde over the seventii congresdonal district convention at Monroe. Under the stress of dream- stances, he said, some ot our beat men have in the pa^ been compelled to wink at certain dection methods which are no longer necessary and whioh should pass away with the necesnty for them. It is true, and one of the pleas from the east in behalf of the constitutional amendment was put upon the gi'ound that its men were tiaad of having to practice devious devices in the In an editorial in this paper yesterday Senatw Hanna was quoted as having said in his qteech in ta.yor of Cuban reoiprodty, that whether or not we oweCuba anything, we certainly owe acnnething to ourselves. The par- alld may be ai^lied and enJai;^. The white people certainly owe the iblican party of Nor^ Carcdina nothing, but they just as certainty, owe themsdves sometning; and that, som thing, applied to the esse in hand, is to promote parity in dections—to aee to it that hereafter these are without the taint fraud. It ia way haa secured, or wffl seeare, the Ohio River ft (%aiieston Bailraad and will extend it firom Wnnlsdals. N. CL, to Marum, N. C., to cooaect wift tta main line between AsheviHs and Balia- bury, in order to have a coal raad a«v> er its Washington aad CaroHaa «id« without the kmg haal fcom ttia JcBeo district throng Knoxville. The coiporstion nommisiion haa iMt to the Auditor its sssnssmMit oi taOmam pn^ierties for the correat year. This is aa foUows: Soathem. $16M«77; Atiantic Coast line, $18,978,410. Sea board Air line, $8,712,728; miaeaBa- neons roada, $4,195,526; total 4tS,70B»- 371, which is $160,715 men lhaa ift was last year. Thia doea railways, steamboat Baea, ele. oaon Weor Soepeoaere If Coat Io liofll or. New Tort Son. A man wearing both suqwnders and belt entered one of the mos> farh- ionable restaurants on Broadway on Wedneedaw evening with his coat thrown over his arm. He sat down at a table, shifted his coat to his other arm and looked aA>ond, aaw half a dosen men in shirt waists and without s. This decided him that he need not don his sack, but he aoon found that bis deddon waa all wrong. A waiter iq^noached him and told him p^tdy that he would have to wear his coat if he wanted to be served there. How is that?” heasked. “Do you make exceptions in favor of certain pmons? . Those fellows over there are eating without thdr coats.” Yes, but it is your suspenders,'’ said the waiter in a whispM. “If you will retire and remove your suqienden it wiU be aU right.” After a moment of thought the patron conduded to put on his coat, although it was the hottest nif^t in the year. One very cold day last winteraikMr eased woman pai^ in her aioraiaf walk along a Philadelphia slwet, anil gased sternly at an ice wagon that drawn up bedde the caib. She there for aome time. Apparendy a reporter lor the stood also, aind watched aad moved of comae not by eariosity, by a sentiment of dnty, aad of ntiHga tion to let the people at ttie dty hwNr what was going on. At att ^veata, ha reporto that the ieemaa mmm oat of the boose, and die said : “Driver, why don't yoa btaakatyow h(»aee?*’ “Becanse, lady, ttie ooiap’ay don’t furnish me no Uankela,** retamed Um driver. “Then yoa should cover them with with your coat I” the Mid, aa* verdy. “All right, ma'am,** lepBed the driver, with a smile. “Yoa fimaw yonr sealsltin coat for the nigh hsai, an' rnpntmyoveBooatoatheoaoae.** From all parte of Mimiasippi Saoad and the bays and bayooa ott the Looia* ianaandMiMiaiipia coaat ooom derful stcrieeof the nnprnnwlwlndaalii neas4}f the Gulf watera aad of the ap* pearance of deep-water fiah hllhTlo unknown there. At Horn Isiaad, Har- 0., annmber of devfl fish, one of them measuring thirty ImI from tip to tip, have been hot by fiahermen. There has aln I invasion of man-eating shaiks. A party of lasaslairaUon On tke Is Immigration to this country is on the increase, The total for the year 494,808 aa against 888,931 and 841,712 for the two fiscal yean preced ing. The Norfolk Virginia-Pilot, com menting upon theae statiatica, myn that the greater part of theee immigrants ire £dn’t want, they bdng largdy Polea, Hungarians, Italians and Rus sians, and notes farther that New YmIt and Penntylvania seem to catch, the greater part of them. Continues The Virginian-Pitot: The almoat anarchistic conditions that prevail in the coal r^ons are the direct product of the polity that permits tlua nndesitable class of immigrants to land in the country, because pauper laber is demanded by the coal ^iersr t«s. Ignorant, restless, susiadous and defiant of law, they are the raw mate rial out of which firebrand aptators create criminala. A half million in crease of that sort of dtisenship every year is putting a pretty tng strain on American institutions. It is for a fact. little Fkane—Ma, If I ever get mar^ ried will I get a huaband like pa? Mother—Yes, dear, little Flosde—And if I don't get married will I be an dd maid like Aunt Kate? Mother-Yea, Fkmie. little Flossie Creflectivdy). It's tou|^ world for as wmnen ain’t it, Ma? Orieana while fishing reeea^ at Bkfe Island faatened their three boats la. gether and steadied them with a haasy anch(v. A aharfc became entaaglgd |g the anchor, carried all three boiSi nait to sea and finally wreAed thcaa on dM shore. The fiahomen nanoi^ ( with their livea. They are aU nent socially and in dnbJlife ^ Keir Orieans. Dr. E. H. DiOard, thecUaepoaaa who created audi a swnsatioB hm asv* eral months ago, died in Daavihe laat week after a short illness Readsnof this paper win remember that this oM ro some time ago came heae ftnai Anatralia and by his ahreadnM Ml ^ dty with a gnat deal aaoia wmmm He claimed that he had a Mf talBM acroas the wateis and his aloay waa ha> Bd by not a few. He ftdtad weam ot people, bat aome of hia cradHow aaa of the (^linion that tiie fortnaa ia in Australia and wiU be forthooaaiac Mr. W. B. Troy infocoMaaOhaMTCr reporter of a fierce fight that oeeanad between two «npk)yea of the OharioMa Roof and Paving COmpaay a fsw 4^fs ago. Whileoneof themhyinahaary drnnken aleep the other acnaad a monkey wrendi tightly on has aoas. The nervea of the intoiicaled oaalla* man stampeded immediately after ha awaked and he wieatled wUh tha mam- key wrench for ten minutes bafon 1m succeeded in freeing his noaa. Tkaaha went for his tortarsr aad foMhthiaa hi a bkMd-tiiinty ftwhion antiliyalaadart The OomptroUer of the rendered a deeirion holdi^ Itet 1 the law of Congress the ~ Par- cdve any part of the i^ipraptlalioa by Coagreas for the ■xpotoioa aalS a contract Shan have heeadgaadly tha directora ot the eonpa^y, biadiK themaehea to doee Ibel*