Published bt Koanoke Publishing Co. 'FOR GOD. FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH. ' C. V. xYusbon, Business Manager. VOL. II. PLYMOUTH, N. C.,TftriEtY, NOVEMBER 2?1890. NO. 29. EUl TALIIAGE; The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon. object t "Among the Bedoalns." T Tbxt: "Forhtmueh as thou knowest hoio tcs are to encamp in Vie uildernesi.nNim. ' X, 81. , 1 Night after night we have slept in tent in Palestine. There are large Tillages of Bedou ins without a house, and for three thousand Tears the people of those places hare lived in black tents, made out of dyed skins, and when the winds and storms wore out and tore loose those coverings others of the Bame kind took their places. ' Noah lived in a tent; Abraham in a tent. Jacob pitched his tent on the mountain. Isaac pitched his tent in the valley. Lot pitched his tent toward Sodora. In a tent the woman Jael nailed Sisera, the general, to, the pround, first having given him sour milk; called. Mlebin" as a soporific to make him eleep soundly, tbat being the effect of such nutrition, a modern travelers can testify. The Syrian army in a tent. The ancient battle shout was "To your tents, O Israel:" Paul was a tent maker. Indeed, Isaiah,mag. mCcentl? poetic, indicates that all the human race live under a blue tent when he savs God stretcheth out the heavens as a curtain and tpreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in, "and Hezekiah compares death to the striking of a tent, saying,.'My age is removed from me sashenherd'stent." In our tent in Palestine to-night I hear something X never heard before and hope' never to hear again. It is the voice of a hyena nmid the rocks hear bv. When you. may have seen this monster putting his! month between the iron bars of a menagarie . he is a captive, and he gives a humiliated, and suppressed cry. But yonder in the mid night on a throne of rocks he hns nothing to fear, and he utters himself in a loud, re Bounding, terriffic, almost supernatural sound, splitting up the darkness into a deeper midnight. It begins with a howl and ends with a sound something like a horse's whiuing. In the hyena's voice are defiance and strength and bloodthirstiness and crunch' of broken bones and death. ' 1 glad to say that for the most part Palestine is clear of beasts of prey. The leopards, : which Jeremiah says cannot, change their spots, have all disappeared, and. the lions that once were common all through this land, and used by all the prophets for; ..illustrations of cruelty and wrath, have re-, treated before the discharges of gunpowder, of which they have an indescribable fear. But for the most psrt Palestine is what it origi nally was. W ith the one exception of a wire thread reaching from Joppa to Jeru salem and from Jerusalem to Nazareth and from Nazareth to Tiberias and from Ti berias to Damascus, that cne nerve of civili zation, the telegraphic wire (for we found .ourselves only a few minutes oft from Brook lyn and New York while standing by Lake Galilee), with that ons exception Palestine just hs always was. t Nothing surprised me $o much as the per sistence of everything. A sheep or horse falls dead, and though the sky may ono min ute before be clear of all wing3 in five min utes after the skiaa are black with eagles cawing, screaming, plunging, fighting for room, contending for largest morsels of the extinct,quadruped. Ah, now I understand the force of Christ's illustration when He raid: "Wheresoever the carcass is there will the eagles be gathered together." The long evity of those eagles is wonderful. They, live fifty and sixty and sometimes a hundred years. An, that explains what David meant when ho said: "Thy youth isrenewei like the eagle's." 1 saw a shepherd with the folds of his coat far benj; outward, and I wondered what was contained in that amplitude of ap- arel, audi said to the dragoman: "What as that shepherd got under his coat?" And tbe dragoman saiif: "It is a very young Jamb he is carrying; it is too young and too weak and too cold to keep up with the flock." At that moment I saw the lainb put its head out from the shepherd's boeoni and I said: There it is now. Isaiah's description of the tender ness of God he shall gather tbe lambs with his arm and carry them in his bosom." Passing by a vi,lage home, in the Holy Lnnd, about noon I saw a great crowd in and around a private house, and I 6aid to the dragoman: "David, what is going on there?" He said: "Somebody has recently died there, and their neighbors go in for several days after to Bit down and weep with the be reaved." There it is, I said, the old scrip tural custom, "And many of the Jews came to Martha and Mary, to comfort them con cerning their brother." Early in the morn Jng passing by a cemetery in the Holy Land; I saw among the graves about fifty women; dressed in biack,and they were crving : ' Oh, j my child T "Oh, my husband Pr "Oh. my. father " "Ob, my mother 1" Our dragoman told us that every . morning, very early for' three mornings ai ter a burial, the women go, to the sepnlcher, and after that every week, very early for a year. As I saw this group just after daybreak I said : "There.it is again, the same old custom referred to in Luke, tbe evangelist, where he says, 'Certain women which were early in the sepulcher.' " But here we found ourselves at Jacob's well the most famous well in history, most distinguished for two things, because it be longed to the old patriarch after whom it was named, and for the wonderful things which Christ said, seated cn this well curb, to the Samaritan i woman.. -We dismount from our horses in a drizzling rain, and our dragoman, climbing up to the well over the slippery stones, stumbles and fright ens us all by nearly falling into it. I meas ured the well at the top and found it six feet from eiir tn ftclfA. Q v.a coram nl wi and thorny growths overhang it. In one place the roof is broken through. Large stones embnuk the wall on all sides. Our dragoman took pebbles and dropped them Id, and fom the time they left his hand to the. inswnt they clicked on the bot tom you could hear it was doep, though not as deep as once, for every day travelers are applying the same test, and -though in the time of Ms.unc!rell,,the traveler, the well was' a hundred and sixty-five feet deep, now it is enly seventy-five. So great is the curiosity of the world to know about that well tbat during the dry season & Captain Anderson descended into this well, at one place the sides so close he kadto.Dut.bi3 hands over hi head in oroer to get through, and then ha fainted away and lay at the bottom of the well as though dead, until hours after recov ery he came to the surface. It is not like other wells digged down to a fountain that fills it, but a reservoir to catch the falling rains, and to . that Christ refers when speaking to the Samaritan woman about a spiritual supply He said He would,if asked, havo given her "Jiving water." that is, water from a flowing spring in distinction from tb water of the well, which was rain water. But w h y di d Jacob make a reservoir there when there i plenty of water all around and abundance of springs and fountains and seein injrlyno need of that reservoir? Why did Jacob go to the vast expense of boring and digging a well perhaps two hundred fees deep as first Dompleted, when, by going a little way off, he could nave water from other fountains at little or no expense? Ab, Jacob was wise. Ke wanted hi own well. Quarrels und wars mi',-.ht oriaa with other tribes and ir..tf ff HT.fer mi?!tt be cut off, so the were ordered, and the well of nearly four thousand years ago was sunk through the solid rock. When Jacob thus wisely insisted on having his own well he taught us not to be unneces sarily dependent on others. Independence of business character, independence of moral character, independence of leligious. char acter. Have your own well of grace, your own well of courage, your own well of divine supply. If you are an invalid you have a right to be dependent on others. But if God has given you good health, common sense and two eyes and two ears and two hands .and two feet, He equipped you for independ ence of ail the universe except Himself, ll He had meant you to be dependent on other you would have been built with a cor. around your waist to tie fast to somebody :se. pro; yon are built with common sense to fashion your own opinions, with eyes to find your own way. with ears to select your owu music, with hands to fight your own battles. There is only one being in the uni verse who?e advice you need and that is God. Havo your own well and the Lord will fill it. Dig it if need be through two huadred feet of solid rock. Dig it with your pen. or dig it with your yard stick, or dig it with your Bhovel, or diss it with vour Bible. In my small way I never accomplished anything for God or the church.or the world, or my family, or myself, except in contradic tion to human advice and in obedience to divine counsel. God knows everything," and what is the use of going for advice to human beings who know so little that no one but the all seeing God can roalize how little it is I suppose that when Jacob began to dig this well on which we are sitting this noontide people gathered around and said, "What a us?less expense you are going to, when roll ing down from yonder Mount Gerizim and down from yonder Mount Ebal and out yonder in the va'loy is plenty of water F "Ob, replied Jacob, "that is all true, but suppose my neighbors should get angered against me and cut off my supply of mount am beverage, what would I do, and what would my family do, and what would my flocks and herds do? Forward, ye brigade of pickaxes and crowbars, and go down into the ueptosoi these rocks and make me independ ent of all except Him who fills the bottles of the clouds I I must have my own well !" Young man, drop cigars and cigarettes and wine cups and the Sunday excursions, and build your own house, and have your own wardrob?. and be your own capitalist "Why, I have only five hundred dollars in come a year F says some one. Than spend four hundred dollars of it in living, and ten Jer cent, of it, or fifty dollars, m benevo ence, and the other fifty in beginning, to dig your own well. Or if you have a thou sand dollars a year spend eight hundred dollars of it in living, ten per cent., or one hundred dollars, in benevolence, and the re maining one hundred in beginning to dig ycur own well. The largest bird that ever flew through the air was hatched out of one egg, and the greatest estate was brooded out of one dollar. I suppose when Jacob began to dig this well, on whose curb we are now, seated this December noon, it was a dry season then as now, and some one comes up and says: "Now Jacob, suppose you get the well fltty feet deep or two hundred feet deep and there should be no water to fill it, weuld you not feel silly?" People passing along the road and looking down from Mount Gerizim or Mount Ebal near by would laugh and say: "That is Jacob's well, a great hole in the rock, illustrating the man's folly." Jacob replied: "There never has been a well in Palestine or any other country that one-) thoroughly dug was not sooner or later filled from the clouds, and this will be no excep tion." - For months after Jacob had completed the well people went by, and out of respect for the deluded old man put tneir hand over their mouth to bide a snicker, and the well remained as dry as the bottom of a kettle that had been hanging over the fire for three hours. But one day the sun was drawing water, and the wind got round to the east and it began to drizzle, and then great drops splashed all over the well curb, and the heavens opened their reservoir and the rainy season poured its floods for six weeks,, and there came maidens to tbe well with empty pails and carried them away full, and the camels thrust their mouths into the troughs and were satisfied, aud the water was in the well three feet deep, and fifty fest deop, and two hundred feet deep, and all the Bedouins of the neighborhood and all the passersby realizad that Jacob was wise in having his own woll. My hearer, it is your part to dig your own well, and it is God's part to fill it. You do your cart and He will do His part. Much is said about "good luck," but peo ple who are industrious and self denying al most always have good luck. You can af ford to be laughed at because of your appli cation and economy, for when ou get your well dug and filled it will be your turn to laugh. But look up from this famous well and see two mountains and the plain betwean then, on which was gathered the largest religious audience that ever assembled on .earth, about five hundred thousand people. Mount Gerizim, about eight hundred feot higb, on one side, and on the other Mount Ebal, the former called the Mount of Bless ing and the latter called the Mount of Cursing. At Joshua's command six tribes stood on Mount Gorizim and read the blessings for keeping the law, and six tribes stood on Mount Ebal reading the curses for breaking the law, while the five hundred thousand people on the plain cried Amen with an emphasis that must have made the earth tremble. "I do not believe that," says some one, "for those mountain' tops are two miles apart, and how could a voice be heard from top to top?" My answer is tbat while the tops are two miles apart, the bases of the mountains are only half a mile apart, and tbe tribes stood on the sides, of the mountains, and tbe air is so clear cnd the acoustic qualities of this great natural: amphitheatre so perfect that voices can be' distinctly heard from mountain to mount-, ain, as has been demonstrated by travelers fifty times in the last fifty yeai-s. , Can you imagine anything more thrilling and sublinae and overwhelming than whaf transpired on those two mountain sides, and' in the plain between, when the responsive' service went on and thousands of voices on Mount Gerizim cried, "Blessed shalt thou be in the city, and blessed shalt thou be in tha fields, blessed shall be thy basket and thy store," and then from Mount Ebal, thousands of voices responded, crying: "Cursed be he that recsoveth his neighbor's landmark! Cursed be he that maketu the blind to wan der out of the way," and then there rolled up from all tho spaces between the mountains that one word with which the devout of earth close their prayers and the glorified of heaven finish their doxologies, "Amen! Amen!" tbat scene only to be surpassed by the times which aro coming, when the churches and the academies of music and the audi toriums of earth, no longer large enough to 'hold the worshipers of God; the parks, the mountainsides, the great natural amphithe atresof the valleys, shall be filled with the outpouring populations of .the earth and mountain shall reply to mountain, as Mount Gerizim to Mount Ebal, and all the people between shall ascribe riches and honor ani 'glory and dominion and victory to Uod the Lamb, nni there shall ariso an amen like tbe boomtug of the heavens mingling with thi tbuaderof the seas.1 , . 'Jt and -on we ride, until now wo have r-iiue to- ir-hiloh. a dead city oa a hill silv an I vineyards. Here good Eli fell backward and broke his neck, and lay dead at the news from his bad boys, Phineas andHophni; and life is not worth living after one's children have turned out badly, and more fortunate was Ell, instautly expiring under such tid ings, than those parents who, their children recreant and profligate, live on with broken hearts to see them going down into deeper and deeper plunge. There are fathers and mothers here to-day to whom death would be happy release because of their recreant sons. And if there be recreant sons here present, and your parents be far away, why not bow your head in repentance, and at the close of this service goto the telegraph office and put tit on the wing of the lightningthat you have turned from your evil ways? .Before another twenty-four hours have passed take your feet off the sad hearts of the old homestead. , Home to thy God, O prodigal! Many, many letters do I get in purport say ing: My son is in your cities; we have not heard from him for some time; we fear some thing is wrong; hunt him up and say a good word to him ;his mother is almost crazy about him; he is a child of many prayers. But how can I hunt him up unless he be in this audi ence? Where are you, my boy? On the main floor, or on this platform, or in these boxes, or in these great galleries? Where ore you? Lift your right hand. I have a message from home. Your father is anxious about you: your mother is praying for you. Your God is calling for you. Or will you wait until Eii falls back lifeless, and the heart against which you lay in infancy ceases to beat? What a story to tell in eternity that you killed her? My God! Avert that catastrophe! . But I turn from this Shiloh of Eli's red den decease under tad news from his boys and find close by what is called the "Meadow of the Feast." While this ancient city was in the height of its prosperity on this "Mea dow of the Feast" there was an .annual balL where the maidens of the city amid clapping cymbals and a blare of trumpets danced in glee, upon which thousands of spectators gazed. But no dance since the world stood ever broke ud in such a strange way as the one the Bible describes. One night while by the light of the lamps and torches these gayieties went on, two buudred Benjamites, wlio had been hidden behind the rocks and among iho trees, dashed upon the scene. They came not to injure or destroy, but wishing to set up household of their own. the women oi their own land having been slain in battle, by preconcerted arrangement each one of the two hundred Benjamites seized the. one whom he chose for the queen of his homo and carried her away to large estate and beautiful residence, for these two hundred Benjamites had inherited the wealth of a nation.' As to-day near Sbiloh we look at the "Meadow of the Feast," where the maidens danced that night, and at the mountain gorge up which the Benjamites carried their brides, we bethink ourselves of the better land and the better times in which we live, when such scenes are an impossibility, and amid orderly groups and with prayer and benediction, and breath of orange blossoms, and the roll qf the wedding march, marriags is solemnized end with oath recorded in heaven, two immortals start arm in arm on a journey to last until death do them part. Upon every 6uch marriage altar may there come the blessing of Him "who setteth the solitary in families !" Side by side on the path of life! Side by side in their graves 1 Side by side in heaven ! But we must this afternoon, our last day before reaching Nazareth, pitch our tent en the most famous battlefield of all time the plain of Esdraelon. What must have been the feelings of the Prince of Peace as He crossed it on the way from Jerusalem to Nazareth? Not a flower blooms there but has in its veius the inherited blood of flowers that drank the blood of fallen armies. Hardly a foot of ground that has not at some time been gul lied with war chariots or trampled with the hoofs of cavalry. It is a plain reaching from the Mediter ranean to the Jordan. Upon it look down the mountains of Tabor and Gilboa and Car mel. Throueh its rases at certain seasons the river Kishon, which swept down the nrmiss-of Sisera, the battle occurring in No vember when there is almost always a shower of meteor s, so that the "stars in their courses" were said to have fought against Sisera. Through this plain drove Jehu, and the iron chariots of the Canaanites, scythed at tbe hubs of the wheel.?, hewing down their awful swathes of death, thousands in a minute. The Syrian armies, the Turkish armies, the Egyptian armies again and again trampled it. Thero they career across it. David aud Joshua and Godfrey and Richard Coaur de Lion and Baldwin and Salarlin a plain not only famous for the past, but famous because the Bible says the great decisive battle of the world will be fought there the battle of Ar mageddon. To me the plain was the more absorbing because of the desperate battles here and in regions round in which the holy cr03S the very two pieces of wood on which Jesus was supposed to have been crucified was carried ns a standard at tbe head of the Christian host, and that night closing my eyes in my tent on the plain of Esdraelon for there are some things we can see better with eyes shut than open the scenes of that ancient war come bofore me. The twelfth century was closing and Saladin at the head of e'ghty thousand mounted troops was crying "Ho! for Jerusalem !" "Ho ! for all Palestine !"' and before them everything went down, but not without unparalleled resistance. In one place ono hundred and thirty Christians were surrounded by many thousands of furi ous Mohammedans. For one whole day the one hundred and thirty held out against these thousands. Tennyson's "six hundred," when "some one bad blundered," were eciipscd by these one hundred and thirty fighting for the holy cross. They took hold iof tho lances which had pierced them with death wounds, and pulling tbem out of their own breasts and sides hurled them back again at tbe enemy. On went the fight until all but one Chris tian bod fallen aud he. mounted on the last horse, wielded his battle ax right and left till his horso fell onder the plunge of tho jave lins, and the rider, making tbe sign of the cross toward the sky, gave ur his life on the point of a score of spears. But soon after the last battle came. History portrays it, poetry chant it, painting colors it, and all ages ad mire that last struggle to keop in possession the wooden cross on which Jesus was said to have expired. It was a battle in which min gled the fnry of devils and tbe grandeur of tingels. Thousands of dead Christians on 'this side. Thousands of dead Mohammedans on the other side. The battle was hot test close around ibe wooden cross upheld by .'the bishop of Ptolemais. himself wounded land dying. And when the bishop of Ptol 'emais dropped Jdead, the bishop of Lydda seized the crossand again lifted it, carrying 3t onward into a wilder and fiercer fight, and sword agains javelin, and battle ax upon .helmet, and p ercing spear against splinter ing shield. Morses and men tumbled into .heterogeneouh death. Now the wooded cross on whitfh the armies of Christians had kept their era begins to waver, begins to jdesceud. ub falls I and the wailing of. the Christian liist at its disappearance drowns the huzza Jf the victorious Moslemt. . r : But that standard of tho cross only seemel -to fall. If rides the sky to-dav in triumph; .Fiv hunjred million souls, the mightiest, a rosy of tf o ages. aVe following it, mod whor t!iatgoe hy will fro, aero?s the fcarth and tip. the. mi .-t v steejts of t!hav',is. In the th nineteenth century It is the mightiest symbol of glory and triumph, and means more than any other standard, whether in scribed with eagle, or lion, or bear, or star, or crescent. That which Saladin trampled on the plain of Esdraelon I lift to day for your marshaling. 1 The cross! The cross! The foot of it planted in the earth it saves, the top of it pointing to the heavens to which 'it will take you, and tbe outspread beams of it like outstretched arms of invitation to all nations. Kneel at its foot. Lift, your eye to its victim. Swear eternal allegiance to its power. And as that mirbty symbol of pain and triumph is kept before us. we will realize how insignificant are the little crosses we are called to bear, and will more cheu f uL'f carry them. Mast Jetas bear the croM alone. And the world so free? No, there's a crow for every o-e, And there's a crots for me. As I fall asleep to-night on my pillow f n the tent on the plain of Esdraelon reaching from tho Mediterranean to the Jordan, the waters of the river Kishon sooth'ng me as by a lul laby, I hear the gatheriug of the hosts for the last battle of all tbe earth. And bv tbeir representatives America is hero and Europe ,is here and Asia is here and Africa is here, and all heaven is here and all hell is here, and Apollyon on the block horse leads the armies of darkness, and Jesu on tho white horse leads the armies of light, and I hear the roll of the drums and the clear call of the clarions and tbe thunder of fio cannonades. And then I hear the wild rush as of million of troops in retreat, end then the shout of victory as from fourteen hundred million throats, and then a song as though aU tho armies of earth and heaven were joining it, clapping cymbals, beating the time "Tli3 kingdoms of this world r become thekinT doms of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign for ever and ever. ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE. Joseph WHHRtl so, of New Orleans, think he is the only surviving soMier of the Black' Hawk war. Queen Victoria is only four feet eight niches in height, yet she is said to be a regal sovereign in her bearing. Miss Isabella Thobtxrn, a sister of Bis nop Thoburn, of the Methodist Episcopal, Chur.-h, will return to India next month to resume her niissinnnry work there. CONGREfjjiMEjrMwKlNLRY is by no means a rich man. lie owns a small farm in Ohio, and a modest residence in Canton. Aside from this he is worth about $50,000. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward is said to be- so abnormally sensitive to noises that the gnawing of a mouse at the wainscot is sufficient almost to drive her distracted. Chief Justice and Mrs. Fuller will celebrate their silver wedding some time in January next, and their daugnter, Miss Mil dred, will be married the same day to Hugo Wallace. Dumas, the novelist, has aged greatly dur ing the last twelve months. Despite his years he bears himself gallantly, and at the recent wedding of his daughter he was the life of the company. Miss Rachel Sherman, the general's daughter, is so well posted in politics that she is an invaluable nsdstant to her father in supplying him wiib names and dat that have grown dim in his mind. Henry W. Sage has added $200,000 to his previous gift of f6Li,000 for the es ablishment of a department ot philosophy in Cornell Uni versity. This makes over (gl.OOtyWO which he bus given to this institution. The Maharajah Dhulkep Singh, who has recently begged to be received back in favor with the Queen, has petitioned her to restore him his grand cross of the Star of In dia, which he returned once in anger. Countess Elizabeth Koenigsmarck, said to be the handsomest woman in Ger many, wns recently wedded in a novel dress of red and white, the colors of her husband's regiment. The biidesraaids also wore gowns of scarlet and red. Justin II. McCarthy is just thirty years old. He has published eleven books and seven plays. He is tall und thin, with a very small head. He has traveled much in Persia, and has an intimate ncquainiance with the literature of that country. MRS. Jopling-Rowe is one of the most noted woman artists of England, as well as one of the hardest-working. She paints from morning till night, seldom leaving her studio until nightfall. She has a bright and open iace, an attractive manner, and is regarded as one of the best talkers in Loudon. The Queen of Italy is exhibiting a tenden cy toward stoutness, n 6tnte of things that is most unwelcome to ber. To ward ort this in-, creasing corpulence she spent the greaterpart of last summer in long and exhaustive moun tain tramps, which reduced her weight, but used up the royal ladies who attended her. The Duke of Portland, owner of the great racers of the English turf, is building a group of alms houses at his chief estate Welbeck, and with a nicely discriminated distribution of honors, inscribes the principal buildinir: "These houses were erected by the sixth Duke of Portland, at the request of his wife, for the benefit of the poor and to commemor ate victories of his race horses." Miss Mattie Thompson, daughter of ex Congressman Phil Thompson, i- accounted one of tho exceptionally pretty girls of the Blue Grass region. Miss Thompson was se lected as tho Queen of Beauty at the celebra tion of the Satellites of Mercury, held at Louisville, but choose rather to be one of the maids of honor, who ore Neleeteil from among the prettiest girls of the different towns throughout the state. MRa Emma E. Foksythe is an American woman who goes by the name of the White Queen, iier realm is an island in the South ern Pacific called New Britain, whose chief industry is the tale of mother-of pearl. Mrs. Forsythe was left a widow at the age of eighteen, and with very little money. She now owns one hundred and fifty thousand acres of fertile land, two steamers that ply between the islands and the port, ad she is preparing to close a contract tor the building of lour more vessels for the island trade. Mrs. Nicholson, of New Orleans, who owns and edits the Picayune, and who is the only woman in the country in such a posi tion, is o quiet, low-voiced and retiring in manner that one would never suspect her of holding the place she fills. When the Wom en's Club of New York gave her a reception, and it was announced that she had been made the young club's first honorary member, Mrs. Nicnolsou, quite like the sweet .woman who never saw a composing-stick or handled a blue pencil, deputed her husband to acknowl edge the compliment in her stead. She sat, meanwhile, blushing and listening. Mr. Nicholson, wno is the husband manager of his wife's paper, is a big, genial gentleman, with a memory lor politics that goes back forty years. Jame? LICK, the philanthropist, left $150,(MWto San Francisco free bath? a real wash-house for tbe working jpor who have n baths at home. The institution is now ready and open. It has sixty rooms for nien and forty tor women. The wall are of i)ite u the tabs are enameled. Thirty r, dilutes J.s '. ' - ' " Young Indians in Hiding Bent on Mischief. The Troopa Now Holding tbe Excited Reil Men In Check-The iot Dance Still Going On. frenernl HlYMltt.' frivinj nro nnu ni f tin Fin Ridge Agency, and the Indians have thus far j not attempted any disturbance. The ghost dances continue, and General Brooke has made no attempt to stop this diversion. Standixo Rock Agency, N. D. The news that troops have been ordered to the res ervation has spread rapidly among the savnges, and the general effect has been bad. Several hundred of the braves have disap peared, with whatobiect and in what direc tion caunot be learned. There is evident fright in some quarters, and it is the general impression that the bucks are ruuning away from what they regard as an impending catoniity. It may be, however, that t'.ieynre bent upon pillage and murder, or have gal loped across the country to incite the North ern Cheyenes, the most excitable, band of Indians in the West, to take arms against the whites. The aged warriors and women are frightened over the outlook, and profess the . wannest friendship for the piUetucos. Mojor McLaughlin, the agent here, has just returned from Sitting Hull's camp, on Grand river, and reports that the dances arc still going or, but Sitting Bull's influence has weakened greatly in the last week. Now he has no more than a hundrcl or so followers. He received Major McLaughlin rordntUy, but the young bucks serowled at the agent as though he were not welcome. He had a loog talk with Setting Bull, and is satisfied that the old chief's faith in the corning of the Messiah is on the decline, and unless something un foreseen occurs, there is no probability of trouble this winter, and possibly none next spring. General Ruger's presence had the effect of reducing Sitting Hull's followers by nearly one half, so that now he has not enough men to carry on a campaign if he wanted to. Fremont, Neb. Forty-five Indians, mem bers of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, passed through here on their way to the Pine Ridge aceucy. The leaders aid they had heard about the new Messiah from their friends be fore leaving Europe- Indians went crazy on religion just as white people did, they said, but they hoped there would be no trouble. One of tbe cheifs said they would do all they could among the Indians at Pine Ridge to restore quiet, and they believed the older heads were opposed toany outbreak. Settlers are much alarmed in the vicinity of Valen tine and Rosebud agencies, and are flocking to those points. It is believed that the pot traders are encouraging this alarm, eo as to iucrease their sales. DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES. Luna Mapel, 17 years old, walked off an open drawbridge in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, and was drowed. ! Frank Keller, of Linton, Indiana, acci dentally shot and killed his wife, while clean ing a revolver, which he thought was empty. A passenger train and a censtruction train collided near Yarmouth, Massachusetts. No one was killed, but about 15 persons were injured. William" Chablton, aged 8 years, shot and killed his sister C'ulisa, aged 6 years, at their home in St. Louis, while playing wit j a shotgun. A pbize herd of Berkshire hogs, owned by M. K. Price & Son, of Oskalooa, Iowa, has been nearly des'royed by choler.i within the last two weeks. One hundred hogs, valued ;at $1,000, have died. j An epidemic of typhoid fever is raging in Cleuientville, Ohio. There have beea 89 'cases, 25 of which have proved fatal. At .'present 40 persons are suffering. Business ih as been suspended. The place has a popu lation of 2Ua i THE boiler at the mill of M. J. Wright A 'Son, near Magnolia, Mississippi, exploded a few days since. Samuel Pritchard, Jr., and Nelson Andrews were killed, and Charles ,'1'ayior, Wiley Cook, William Miller and Joseph Douglass were scalded, Taylor and Cook, it is feared, fatally. A passenger train ran into a hand car on which were nve track rep timers, near Millers burg, Kentucky., James Finly was killed, John Garrudy had In ivgscuiott, and the other three received injuries that may termi nate fatally. The fog was so dense that the engineer did not see the hand ear until it was !'oo late. ' A sharp explosion in Judge GreshamJs court room in Cniuugorenteit a panic anion the people present and stopped the proceed, lings of court. An investigation disclosed tha' the wall of the northeast corner of the build Jing had separated, leaving a visible crack fot 30t'eet. The government recently investigated the safety ot the costly pile, and found it in a very bad condition. , Marian C. Jones, a young woman, died under the iufluficc cf chloroiorm while un dergoing a slight surgical operation in a bos. pital in Chicago. Her parents took her to the hospital to have a small mule removed from per right cheek- The mole was excised, but when the physician sought to revive the pati. ent she was seined with a convulsion and ex pired. The Board of Agriculture of Ohio has been advised of an epizooty or hog cholea in many counties ot that State, notably: Frank, liu, Darke, Butler, Preble and others, in which swine are dying in large numbers. . The State Health Department tins received no informa tion of the epizooty, althoinrhstories are afloat that large numbers of the diseased hos have been slaughtered and shipped to Philadel phia. While Martha Murphyrgged 13 years, was attending to some cooking ut her home in Cumberland, Maryland, her dress caught fire. Her mother, who was in an adjoining room with a three-months-old infant, rendered Irantic by the sight ot her touring child, at- . . . j . . : ? l . i a i . icuijneu vo exiiuguisn me names, in OOing so her own clothing and thai of the infant caught fire, burning both iu m horrJile man ner. Martna will die.. The mother and in fant Hitfi 1m. ft, 1 1 . Ii a ! ... 1 t L A.ma. ... I nHA. : ' critical nmlitio i. ' ; , v r THREE KILLED AND ONE DYING. Disregard of Order 4Mt a. WrecU oii the ll. & O i in Ohio. A-collision occurred on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad near Scott's Station, Ohio, the other morning, between eait and west bouu J; lrelght trains, killing John. Watson, engineer. and JamesFlCisher. areman.inMaiitK-: Jamrs Barrett, a fireman was scalded so badly that he died ait uour later. 1 nomas Burke, another employee, was seriously injured about the head and cannot recover.' v Watson and Fleisher lived at Newark, O., where their remains were conveyed. " Burke nd Ilarret were taken to their homes in Bel In ire. io!li eiijpnes aud cars wore co;t. pleteiy wrecked. Tli- r, M:',t rt causedlby disregarding r-rderi. - . . SOUTHERN ITEMS. IXTERKSTIPia WEWS COMPltVBD . FROM MANY SOURCES. t There is move on foat to establish a hrg . ! V)iit:)ern female college ot Lynchburg V a. More than $1,000,000 of outside capital has . 1een invested in Norfolk, Va.,during the past ., jiionth. Col. W. II. Harness, of Hardy county. W. iVft., uses a shot gun with which he has killed "l.'Odeer. . ' ' !It is proposed to build a belt line railroad from Glasgow to various points in Rockbridg county, v a. A Pennsylvania syndicate has purchased a large tract ot coal land in Harrison county, West Virginia. ' . - The South Atlantic and Ohio mnchine shops at Bristol, Va., with all their contents, were destroyed by fire. Kocky Mount has raised the required sub- ' script ion, and will be a point on the Roanoke and Southern Itailroad. . It is rumored that the Pennsylvania Rail- , road Company has purchased terminal fucili-' ties at Lynnhaven bay, Va. , .. Mr. C. B. Wood, of Rappahannock county, Va., has sold this fall about 800 barrels of ap ples, for which he received $2,00. A tract of land between Norfolk and Lnm bert's Point, which sold in May last for $43,-, 132, was resold last week for $107,830. " . A oka koini navfanfarl Kw VtrVl i fK Durham and Raleigh. N. C, will be connected l.v ppnhnne within the next ninetv davs. The Nolan Flouring Mill, at Brncetown, , together with a large quantity of grain and flour. -Application has been made by W. P. Irwin . and others, of Glasgow, Va.; for authority to organize the First National Bank of Glasgow, Virginia. ". .'. new Pi cabvterian church has befn con- vracieti lor iu vMiuru, x. v.. w.whiu,to'i . Rev. Joseph Renrie, of Chas? City, Vs., will ; be the pastor. Thos. B. Young, town sergeant of Charles town, W. Va., died of pneumonia recently. He served in the old Stonewall Brigade dur- ing the late war. James Stealey, a brakeman in the employ of the West Virginia Improvement Company, fell from his train in the yards at Weston, Wk Va., and was instantly killed. Isaae Morris, a young man employed on the -engineer corps of the Ohio Valley Rail road, was drowned at Moundsville, W. Va., while crossing the Ohio river in a skill. Statesville, N. (X, boasts of a little white girl only four years old who chews tooacco. dips snuff, smokes, plays cards, picks the banjo and swears. She had to be weaned by mum strength. Walter M. Hester, of Winton. N. C travel-. ing for J. Forest & Son, Baltimore, committed ' suicide on a train near Kernersville N. C. by shooting himself through the head. Melan choly is assigned as the cause. It is announced that the canning factory of H.J. McGrath & Co., at Washington, N. G, will be ready for operations by the let of December. It is estimated that 2,500 bushels of oysters will be canned daily. ,. - The board of trustees of the Shenandoah Baptist Association, comprising all the coun ties in the lower Valley in Virginiaand West Virginia, have decided to locate their new collegiate academv in Winchester. o In consequence of the chance made by the Eastern Field Trial Club from Amelia Court house', Va., to High Point, N. C, the meeting ' of the Virginia Field Sports Association, which had been announced to occur at the former place has been recalled. ? Many prominent Democratic leaders think that Gov. McKinney, of Virginia, should by all means call an extra session of the Legislature to receive the plan of debt settlement which the Olcott committee are expected to submit. : Information has been received at Louisville, Ky., that Deputy Sheriff J. P. Giles, of Har lan county, had been killed at Rose Hill, W. Va., on the day of November elections. Mr. Giles was trying to arrest two men and killed them both. No other particulars. Isaac McNabb, seventy-two years of age and unmarried, was found dead on the floor of his house, near Morton, Harford county, Md., in which he lived alone. . From ap pearances he was about to kindle a fire when stricken. A coroners inquest decided that death occurred from natural causes. Donations for the soldiers' home in Raleigh, N. C, continue to be receivtd and the institu- . tion is now pretty well provided with com forts. The fund lor enlargement, nowever is quite small and there is talk of asking the legislature for an appropriation. This seems to be the only resort for making a completo success of the scheme. temple in Raleigh, N.C., which hasslumbered for several months, has-been revived with a fair show of 6ucces. The lodges here now number over threa hundred members, among thero some of our wealthiest and most influ ential members. It is more than probable' that an imposing eaificewill be erected during the coming year. Tbe Massachusetts and Southern const-action company, which has the contract for the building of the first one hundred and fifty-six, miles of the Cape Fear and Cincinnati rail road, has sublet it to Leating A Co., of Colum bus, Ohio. The road is to run to Wilminston and Southport, N. and tbencc to Conway, S. C. It will then branch off in three direc tions, one line to Charleston, one to Salisburv, and the other to Greenville, S. C. ". A large barn on th farm of Messrs. George and Stephen Font, a short distance southwest ot Frederick, Md., was destroyed by tire of supposed incendiary origin at an early hour Saturday morning. About three hundred bushels of wheat, fifty tons of hay, bc vera I binders, lot of harness and various farming implements were consumed. AH the live stock was saved except one bull, which per ished in the flames. Loss, about $2,500. The Chalestown (W. Va.) Mining, Manu facturing and Improvement Company hns purchased the following land" adjacent to tUr.i town: The James M. Ranson tract, 334" sere, lor $65,800; 100 acres from John Burns,$l'ii; 106 acres from H. B. Davenport, for 4vJ,"e, John T. Gibson has sold his farm of 'M'l acreonemileand a-half westof Charleston to J. T. Colston for $21,200. Tho Rns las : , in Jefferson county,1 three miles from-Shcj-herdstown, has been sold to 4. W. Met.; a: j for $52 per acre. ; ' v- POISONING BY "WHOLESALE. Startling- Reports From Cltn1eft , On -ntt .Dead, Others, Dying. A startling report. comes from Clinton, 1 -to the effect that a we of wholesale ; - . ing has startled the tow n. It is said that eight persons liave been t anil him U.'lf cllil,!,, ..,,.! four brothers. . Particulars have not ye.t learned, but it is known that at least t is dead, while others are semvtt '- iil. Dr. J. T, Roth bock, of - i c, has been awarded atilvcr v-.-. a , graphs of American trees -e.xh -forestry division clti; l -