University of South Carolina Libraries
^ '-rit> ? ~' 11 11 1 "" ? " ~ * -?-? ~?* ? ~ - ? - - , - : ^-,?xA 'tt*<r^*<a^^^^^r^^itH||BHBHBHHBM|[^yi|K!i^^'!itf|:j(j^.'||^^aB^M^y~j^' /^gffi-' -' " '"' ' ' ' ~""" " " s m-~- VOL. VXXI.~NEW SERIEST- rifl" " mill n^HJIIFIiff ?" a (.:m^ ' 71 i ' ~ ' " - ' in expedition will shortly bo equipped by Sir Thomas Elder to explore the interior of the Australian continent. Senator Mills says that for ten years the railroads of Texas hare boon operated at an actual loss of $1,000,000 a year to the railroads themselves. Our navy will rank # as the fifth In the world whon our now ships are afloat, being surpassed only by England, France, Russia and Italy. DocicrlVII. Iloskins uotos the fact, in the New York Tribune, that the rain laamo^ looiuanen nas oeen expioaed, hut not noon enough to prevent the waste of a big pile of the poople'e money. A syndicate of Milwaukee bachelors who undertook co-operative houiekeeping has failed. Ono of the four men is to bo married, and the otlforado notciro to keep up their establishment, which C09ts ?500 a month. The statement that a woman could be implicated in every com? of bomb throwing which lias taken placo in Paris has boon proved. Tho New York World facetiously averts that wotnon are employed almost exclusively in tho dyramito factories of France, and are equal upon provocation to blowing men up. i? In the latter part of October a good roads ccogress will be held under the auspices of tiie Agricultural Department of the Columbian Exposition Road machinery, taxation, legislation, tolls, free roads, repairs, and material for construction, will bo discussed. The object is to advauco tho cause of good road* in Anjferica, and to develop a more prncticufsystem of improving our highways, beJIf methods of construction, and to encourage the public and privato support for the same. The congress will be held in the permanent Memorial Art Palace iu tha Lake Front Park. T. ButterB-nrl.li of filiim-m in Hhaipmnn of i)i? cdttmitteo. The labor 'troubles iu Lancashire, .England, which ended by a compromise, LM r" tween capital and labor which the world bis seen. The campaign lasted twenty weeks, involved directly and indirectly 125,003 employes, and cost in loss of wages alone $10,000,000. Each side was equally willing at the outset to engage in a test of strength, and at last they wcro just as glad to call a truce with the honors even. Groat sacrifices have been endured, with no result, save that both partios to the conflict have had all desire for fight taken out of them, and the advantages of mutual compromise aro for the time being fully conceded. The operatives have in the terms of peace conceded just a shade more than tbo masters, but there has been really no victory for either side. The plans agreed upon for settling future disputes seem to be the best ever devised thus far. They assure the necessary stability in the cotton market by limiting all futuro changes to fivo per cent, at intervals of net less than odo year. A strange and grostesque figure disappears from tlio upper ranks of the British nobility with tho death of tbo Duke of Bedford. Succeeding to the dukedom on the suicido of his father only two years ago ho has, accor ling to the New * ,,, m _ Y?rlc Sua, exhibited in an intensified '' lo'rm tno'Russell family traits. He was practically a recluse and never had any intimate associates. Though enormously rich he was a miser. Scores of acros of the most valuable property in the heart of London belong to his estate. Ills pas* sion for saviog manifested itself when a boy at school and U remained with him till, the day of his death. Never a day passed without his saving something and reokoning how muoh he had saved. After his succession to the dukedom and vast property accompanying it the pas. sion increased. His one absorbing thought was to piiO up further hoards, to find new possibilities of retrenchment, to form ways of increasing the unneeded surplus, and every penny he continued to invest by the beet advice procurable in the soundest sccjrities. During the last few years he bad beoomo physically almost a monstrosity, lie was well proportioned and active as a young men, but indulgence of a most gluttonous appetite soon mode him corpulent. The very corpulence that made more exercisv exercise at all. Ol been most se deotary. For days together he would not go outside bis house. His appetits was huge, grots, enormous, Gargantuan Heats, as an eminent man who knew him better perhaps than any other do scribed it, like a Wolf. He was reputed to bo the largest and heaviest .feeder in England. Those who had seen him oat ing say it was a sight never to be forgotten. Heart disease of long standing was tbe immediate cause of death, bul be really died of gluttony. CAPITAL NEWS AND GOSSIP. < The President's Olear Statement has ^ a Quieting Effect on the Financial Agitation. Washington, D.O.?Tho au'hoiitativo } statement of Mr. Cleveland in which he announced the present and future policy of the Administration relative to the use of the gold reserve, has taken the edge j off the excitement that followed tho act c of the Socretary of tho Treasury in dip- B ping into the reserve fund. If thcro has ? bccu any da-iger of a financial flurry, that 8 dang r appears now to have passei. Un- t dor tho interpretation of Mr. Cleveland's t statement the reserve is to bo treated jj simply as so much cash in the treasury, and wh ther the aggregate rises or fnl's v, a few millions a day becomes a matter of 8 little concern. rirtna 'Annnilw Ifsal- ,-1 ' * w?.*> ^^vuuj TCIJF nine IlllcrCJC W'ljS f manifested at the department in regard ^ to the flnaocial situation. Some oilers of gold were received from tho West and accepted, and Treasurer Jordan, at New Yoik, it was r.ported, had nbo r.ceived a considerable amouot of gold ccrtitic.itcs. Mr. Leech, c director of the United Btates mint, and recognised authority on finances, said: "I look upon tho state meat by tho President as a plain and forcible announcement of tho determination of the Adminis ration to maintain gold payments at all hazards, and that ii the supply of gold nt the disposal of tho treasury should at any time bo insufficient for ?Uu , ll?* ydit^oL. the Government would be uaed to secure the accessary amount. As such it will go a long way towards restoring confidenco and aveiting any financial difficulty." the gold overplus $900,000.] The net gold in the Treasury, over and above the $100,000,000 gold reserve, is $900,000. This nccounts for the gold taken from tho Now York sub treasury I for export and also for gold oilcred and I accepted from Boston bankers. It doe*, t not, however, include tho gold which was offered to tho government from San <j Francisco nod Roanoke, Va. These i amounts will appear in tho Treusury fig- e urea whan the actual exchange is made. Secretary Carlisle is much encouraged at what he terms tho "patriotic position laxcn uy '.no uoston bankers He took ovor with him to the cabinet meeting a bundle of pipers, presumably bearing on &?&?&&&*&incomplete condition of that matt'r, tho Secretary did not deem it prudent to express an opinion. A HUNDRED LIVES LOST. And Five Times that Many Injured is Oklahoma's Story. Gi'Tiimn: O. T.?The list of futaltic3 by the cyclone of Tuesday night grows larger each hour. In the deva tnted districts near Norman thirty-four bodies have been prepare l for burial. Several inoro were found this moroiog. and hdf a score of people are still missing On) 1 hundred aud fifty people were injured, < sixty eight of whom will die. Near Pur- 1 cell eleven people, all numbers of one 1 Ca'.hol'c congregation, are dead. At the tosrn of Ca?c tho storm swept ' away netrly every building, aud eight I people were killed. At Lanstone two ' arc dead At Cimeron City four are 1 dead, two dying and twelvo injured, 1 East of there, two families, numbering 1 five and six, respectively, perished, and in tho extreme e stern part of Payne < county it is beloved tbat nearly a score ' were killed. Tho list of tho dead will surely aggregate one hundred, and that of tho injured five times that many. Colored Women Licensed to Practice Medicine in Virginia. Richmond, Va.?The second woman to be licensed to practice medicine in this State during the history of the Commonwealth is Sarah O. Jones, a mulatto of this city. She is a graduate of the . medical school of Howard College, Washington City. Doctress Jones was o .? of a class of Ave, who were before the State board of medical eiamioers for , examination. She stood well in ^oll branches, exept anatomy, and although | she did not make the minimum mark, < she was passed by the board. The first , lady doctor passed the b>ard three years { ' go. Doctress Jones expects to practice exclusively among colored people. Cotton Killed in XiaaiMippi. Jackson, Mia*,?From all portioos of the State comes tho roport that cotton is either killed or greatly injured by the i recent cold spell nod frost. There is time to replant but the great trouble is that in many sections there is no seed. This complaint Is almost general The rccont high prices paid for cotton seed had the effect of causing nearly all the surplus to bo carried to market. Deep Snow in the Bookies. Wsstmin&tbn, Nan.?The snowfall in the Rocky Mountains along the line of the Canadian Pacific Railroad during the past winter has been thirty-nino feet, which is only ten inches short of the unprecedented fall during tho winter of 1880. Tin depth at present is giren at thirteen feet on the level, and this is packed so hard as to bear the weighs of ahorta. A WONDERFUL FLOTILLA. Hie Culminating; Grandeur of the Naval Review. Witnessed by President Cleveland Who ia Saluted by Ships of Xany Nations. I Nbw YonK.?Although a rainy morung followed the snow and cold north- j ftht win (I? of Wtdn sdav the rendtzvous nd review in honor of Columbus culmiated Thursdny in n demonstration more pectaculnr, more noisy and more re nnrkab'c in many oth'.r ropccts thnrv inyihing of the kind recorded in modern nstory. i Thtre have boeo naral rev.ews of inernntional character before, but none so tiiking as this. Oving to the inclemency of the wcathr tbc hour for review wns deferred first a 1 o'clock, and then to 2 o'clock. IWITKD STATKS 6T1 >ost;)onement was ord-red by Secretary Icrb.rt. at the suggestion of President 'Icvelnnd. Aboard ship dress uniforms wcreabanloned for storm coats, and the Jack Tars nstend of being in holiday rig, were In ivcrv-day attire. Crowds above on the river front couti RCAR-ADUIRAL ORCHARD!. iot, of course, bo notified of the change if progranuuo, but all supposed that lomo hitch had occurred, and all settled themselves as comfortably as possiblo to await developments. The blowing of a hundred whistles, and the booming of guns at 1:15 announced that the President had embarked, and almost instantly the crews of the men of-wnr all along the line went to poiitiona facing the rail, ..A -? >1 1 - - - J * ?uu uv HIV IUMIUCKU9 (IIIU IU|)I. I\KIU Brazilian, and the cloud of smoke rose over tbc lower end of the line of the warihips. The Brozilians manned yards just before tiring, and the long lines of TBC VJCSUVlUrf, ni had ceased, and while the clouds hung low overhead there were indications that led the anxious spectators to hope for the appearance of the sun. At 1:30 the first boom of the ten-inch gun on tha Minn lonomoh announced that the Dolphin with the President on board was passing up between the two columns of war Teas-Is. The roar of the Miantonmoh's twenty-one gems was followed by a salute from the Brazilian ships Republics and Tiradentcs. The Dolphin replied to the blue jackets stood out against the whito background of smoke. The Dolphin moved at a alow and stately gait, and a salute of eaeh ship was distinct and sharp. The Aquidaben, flagship of the Brazilian fleet, finished saluting at 1:40, and the Nsuvo Espana took its return. The Dolphin was followed at a distance of about 500 feet by the Blake, and the in turn by the Miantonomoh. At 1.44 the Beadier, of the German fleet, firod her first sun. sho was followed a moment later by the Reina Regnte, of the Starboard column, and the two ships, one on each side of the Dolnliln m?H? fK* nlWIn fi? g , ?mUMlW * St4|f . IUO Kaiserin-Augusta joined the chorus, end the re echoes rolled up the palisades and down again, until one seemed to hear a long lino of artillery reaching for miles on the shore. The bands on the ships played the national air, but it was only at the intervals between the guns that the music The Van 'Ji. T Ifi** 'Wiil? Speyk and jjffantaVsabel salutes ran into each otttr. Than there wMavpause for a mioutqfand the Argentfhe cruiser belcbed fom a fl.sh t' at was responded lo by n bigjtthn on t|M Giovanni Bausan. It was 1 iSBywhcn the Concord spoko, and she spokdw rapidly that her salute was done in tW< minute*. ' The Etna paid her respAb next, then after a short pause, a I'gjht blue p*ft rose above the dj namitci^We on the Vesuvius, and a few secowpTatcr there was a din overhead, as!though the was made of sheet ir<jfc and a^ bomb had struck it. People at the foot, of Fifty-ninth street had not teqjevcreg. from their astonishment when.a sharp tongue or loo shot ouWrotrivfe sidu.tif.the Jean Burt, and there was ? report; that made women scream and windows rat len'ong the river fiont. At 2 o'clock the Yorktown and | the Arethcse (alutcd together gun for guu. CAMSIIIP HAl,TmO?K. _ Then thcrj was nn interval, during which the baud* tould be htnrd playing, and the cheers of the tni ors nached the shore. The Chicag > then opened Gre.and a moment lu'cr the Russian Iiyndn added her guus to the chorus. The Baltimore and the General Admiral followcl. At 2:08 the Tartar, the first of the British ships, saluted. The guns of the Bancroft and (he San Francisco were going at the same lime. 1 he British Mu^icienne and the Atlanta fired almost simultaneously. Tbo Dolphin lessened Dolphin's Dow came abreast. Tcu minutes later, after she h'nd passed, the Jack Tars cimc down fr .m their positions on the arms. ii> was jusi s:i? ns jbngivnu s crncK cruiser, the Blake, fired ber first gun. There was ft big puff of rmokc and a deep b om, entirely different fron the sharp sounds of the guus of the smaller tck cuani.vo, torpkoi no at. vessels. The Philadelphia saluted as the Dolphin reached the head of the line and came to atop just in the ronr of the esfffVels.-*^ t.tly^^flEflio tjpao sM the steamboats and p'ensure crafts' bfew their whistles, and made a din Almost as deaf ening as the sa'ut'ng. Tbcic wae cheeriug nud waving of bnts, handkerchiefs And umbrella*, and the triumphal procession of the prcsidcnM tl psrly was rxAUirs cnutssa. ended. The whistles sent up a cloud of steam, which, added to the smoke of the guns, obscured the view o' a large portion of the river. The admirsls of the different squ idrons then embarked in steam launches, and -proceeded to the Dolphin. At 2:30 the merchant marine w?s s!gnalted to get away. The Seabird, with the committee on board, rounded the head of the double column of the menof-war and started down the river on tho New York sido. The Al Poster followed, and the police patrol tugs fell into line two by two. Aft- r them came tugs, s eaiubosts and steam jachts, two and three abieast, and all wi h whittles blowing, men shouting and wom:n waving parasols as they passed each manof-war. Tho commotion that followed ha' never beep cqjuyeA. on the Hudson river. T - from the tugs an(T~s!itf)r\er(K? The men-of war. Tbe crewrof (ho men-of-war faced the rail and waved their hate and handkerchiefs at the noisy tugs and steamboats a they passed. Several steam yachts satu'ed tha men of-war with ono gun, which sounded like toy pistols after the big guns of the men-of-war. The whittles of the tugs and steam rs kept up a continu I tooth g and blowing from the t me they wore given pcrm'ssion to start until tha lower end of the long line of the squidron was reached. The monot ooy of (hQ poise of thq whist ?s was' A var'cd by alrcna of soveral tugs and the flrcboats. Passengers on the steamboats crowded ^ to the s'de towards the inou-of-war, and innny of the stcmera seemed in imminent danger of careening. They went down v\ the river with one paddle-wheel in the I" nir and tho guards under water and the ,n stntboard deck awash. In the procession 1' f local bo. ts were steamers from Albauy stl ml Troy, from Long Island Sound, from ^ Jtrcwsbury river and Newark, N. J., ' '' St.tlcn Island ferry boats and boats from l'' lllinit o/lc rtf wnrti ? ... I ... J ? v ........ v.>o vi iivui i?j jiuui's. v;nc occnn steamer, the Roanoke, of the CharUston ' 1 jn 8TKKI. rROTKCTKO CUUISKIl PIIILAOKI.rHI\ . , I lie, was even passed into service, and A light house tenders, custom house boats le and boges, tow.d by pulling lugs were m nuincous. si The rec pt on of the Admir?il) by the President lasted till 4:40 p. m. Then his ling was hauled down on the Dolphin and ho went ashoro at Niuety-sixth street f and at a signal from the Philadelphia, ^ the guns of the entire tl et belched foith hi simultaneously. ErcIi vessel fired twen- '? ty-ono shots, ajul tlui^ roar that ensued " smoke hung iu lieavv clouds over the hi river, and the Jersey shore was invisible ol for some minutes. The Admirnls returud ? in u. 1? - ?u uren oiii|io. UICUIIIUUUIS, WIllCll still 11 lingered with passengers desirous of seeing all of the great naval pageant, went '' to their piers, and the ceremonies were v? over. ol THE TAHADK OF THE M Alt INKS. tl Nicw York. ? Dense fog hung like a I* pall over the river and city Friday morn- ?' ing. At 8 o'clock the sun was visible, breaking through the mist, but it was half an hour later before the hulls of tho ^ war vessels were visible from the shire. t( Then the iog lift d and wi'li bright skiea overhead aud n warmer atmosphere than ^ the day before, the blue jtekcts from our own ships and foreigu vessels landed and ' marched to the place of .the rendezvous. C Remarkable as was tho fathering of 1 the foreign mon-of war in our * participate in tho naval review, still mo e 4 remarkable was the spectacle prcscntid c of the uniformid forces of tho foreign ^ nations, nrua.d and accoutred as for bat- * tie, as they marched in our streets. Not ^ since the British evacuated New York has such an occurancc been witnessed here, and in no couu'ry b it ours is such an occurancc possible. With mu-kets at ' their shoulders aud small arms by their " sides, the foreigners invaded our soil and ' marched dowu America's gre itcst street, * Broadway. Grim, tierce-look ng Rus- 11 sinns, sturdy Bri'oin, luddy faced Gcrinaos, trim, i| ii k moving Fit n eh men, ' and dark visigcd It tlia >s muclic l with their own officers eommasidi ><r end with meir own bands playing tho airs they 1 love best. But they were our optives. Our inn c rines and blue jackets precede! them ' and our national guardsmen followed in 11 ' theTr rTfff. The arts of pciee had superfflded the strategy of war and th> armed * forces of nine nations marched in our n streets as though our country and theirs ^ were one and they and we were brothers. The parade staitel from the c. rner of Fifth avenue and Forty second s'.rcet at ( 10:57 o'clock in the morning. Governor Flower and General llora e Porter rode ^ at the head of the lino. Th .y were fol- ( lowed by details from the Uni'ed Slates , Army and engineer corps. Then came ( the admirals in carriages. The foreign- ( era were escorted by officers of our own navy. Following tin carriages came United Statc3 sailors and innrii.es. These were followed by the sailors of the visit ing fleets and the marines of Great Brit- 1 ain and Holland. After the foreigners came the National Guard of New York. Finding an Infernal Machine. . London.?An infernal machine, tie signed apparently to be operated by electricity, was found in the garden of a house in Tottculiam Court rnu I. A < foreign couple who formerly lived iu tho j house behaved so suspiciously that they ( were watched by the police. Recently ( the couple disappeared. It is supposed ( that thev were, the nwnorii nf (tin mnnliina I Orangemen Drive Out Catholics. Naplba.?Orangemen employed in the Queen's Island ship yards refused to al low 1,000 of their fellow workingmeu who sre Roir an Catholics to resume work . at the yards and chased them away from the place. In the attack which attended the expulsion of the Roman Catholics, a number of per ons were hurt. Stats Armory Burned, Chicago, III.?Tho First regiment, armory, Sixteenth nnd Michigan avenue was totally destroyed by firo. Two men lost their lives. The loss to the Stato in arms nnd ammunition is not known. The ^ property wns insured for $40,000. The 1 loss on the building, which cost $130,000, ' is total. 1 ud H >tel Wa'dorf Waiters Were .. Granted 2 heir Demand. New Your.?It now transpire* tlini hile the distingui h< ?l nests now stop- ? ng at the Hotel Waldorf vcie linger | g oVer their cofTt c in the evening, the (> 0 waiters who. under ordinary circuit) 0 itnccs, would have been waiting on the .(| ukc of Ver.igua and his party, were j| Dieted with Manager Ilo'il', discussing |j e prob.bility of striking at o-ec. Th ait is were united in asserting their po ^ foil and de lated lhat u less i lit lit diale y crease of wages was agree 1 upon, they j nutd all leave i 1 a body. The manager tal'y acceded to their demands, thus * v eveutiug a stti'ic which would, no ?ubt, have catised e testeriialion among ' a ic guests as well us the pr pi let rs. ^ nc nuwireii ar?t iwentv waiters asked si > increase of $ "? per month. Their so'v was formerly $25 per month, while ic ictmindcr, who are classed as private ? >oin waiters, wi 1 receive $10 per month, committee of waiters is calling on ho I proprietors with an agreem nt to pay ? ore wagis, which tli-y demand shall he " gned. I1 i a, a Columbus Monument Unvjilrd. f Ohicaoi.?The bronze monument to * hiistoph r Columbus, cr. etc J l?y the ' r? Columbian Exposition on th: ' ke front, at tiie fo t of Cihuits' st eet. ' as been utmiled with appropriate cere I ionics. * -t ncrm tgttt ttt imrstnttir, nio-n ? croic size, is twenty feet; is pede till f Maine granite is thirty f et. 'I he lig rc h is 1 ad the. approval of many ar- ' sis and critics, and ia siid to bu the s irgest hron/.jstatue in the Un ted States, he moimmeiit cost $10,000, and will re :rt to the city of Chicago at the close T the World's Fair. It was ui.vcilc I l>\ io little dangli'er of F? rdinan I \V eek, Mayor Ilariis u and others speak S Itnt'j'r in Vf^sntngiOi. J The stauduig ti noer in the State of r ishingtou amounts in round n.ini'iars ^ > 413,000,0)0,00) feit. In order to rasp the inn ?nitu In of those ti jiitoi let I, ac reader, in his mind's eye, imigiuo a 1 olid train, 15,000 feet of lunboc to the | tr, stretching 151,033 miles, or six iir.es around the earth, an I tlien ouougU )i>m Utt to it t r ai i\ ftt.rot-i'ii |\ J frtVIl [Sicoirtfcacross the continent to the mMlie of taking fifty cars or a train, it would take"Bhv,^ 11 j o transport the standing timber Vashiuglou.?Chicago Tiuios. The Daughter of the Confederacy, Richmond, Va ?,J. Tayl< r Kilyson, incident of the Davis Association, will ;o to New York and cscott Miss Winnie )avis to Now Orleans and back h**rc on lie occasion of tlio removal of the reaains of her fath?r to this city for rciue.nient next month. It is not thought hat Mis. Davis will be a' le to come here c.) account of ill ho.ihh. Another Big Bank Smash. London.?The suspension is aniiouiicd of the London chartered 15.nk of tustrali, with a paid up cipi'a' of one aillion pounds, and a reserve fur.d of (20,000 pounds. The LoiuT >n ollice is at To. 2 Old Broad str?.ct, IS. (J. It has nany branches in Victoria, No v Sou li Vales and Queensland. Tho President Bumps His Head. A New York special says: The Presilent met with a slight accident as he startd enroute for Chicago. As he was jetting his cirriagc he struck his orelioal a^aiusttho door and the skin ivas raised. A doctor in the hotel fixed [lie wound and the party was delayed ten ininu'es. A Largo Lumber Fire in Virginia. Petersburg, Va :?News has been received of tho burning of the Surry Lumber Company's mills at Dendron, in 3urry County. The entire valuable plant A the company was destroyed and <5,000,)00 feet of lumber was burned. The loss is placed at fGOO.OOO. Dr. Smith, ofWofford, Dead. Columbia, S. C. ?Itev. Whitlford Smith, 1). D., (tied at Spartanburg in lis eightieth yea", lie was the professor >f English at Wofford College and one )f the most eloquent preachers in South Carolina. Patriotic Banks of Hoanoke. Roanoke, Ya.?All tlie banks in lloanokc united in offering the trensury dl the gold in their vaults in exchange 'or trensnrv union nl Nom A'"-!- a j ? ?? *?v?? a </ir\, DCf etnry Carlisle accepted the offer. The iloanokc banks are the first in the country ,o unite in such a movement. Carelessness With Firearms. Suwanbb, Ua.?While Mrs. Doby was landing a gun to hor husband from the ivindow the weapon was nccidcntly disihnrged, she being instantly killed. A Double Execution. Hknuam, Tkx,?Jim Burko and Sam Mnssey, both colored, were hanged here tt 2 o'clock Friday afternoon. Between ten and fifteen thousand people witnessed the double execution. rho Luteat Happenings Condensed * and Printed Here. Iiurette Murdock, ono of the sawyers t Gilbert Tuylor & Co's saw mill near 'routmao, Iredell county, N. C., dis-L overed soon thing the matter with ono f the saws while it was in motion a few ays since, and put his hand 011 it to sec [ it was hot. It was. He lost four ngcrs tin i his arm was broken. The contract for the erection of tho anted States public buildiug ut Itcidsillc, N. C., has been awarded at f 12,95. The business of coloni/.ing Africa with rliite people goes on apace. An exicdition lefc England some two weeks go for Mozambique as an advance party f settlers who are to colonize some 300 rpiare miKs of territory between the ivcrs Z imbed and 8abi. louthernors to Take Charge of tho "Rtbellion Records.". Washington, I). C.?A Mis? Allen, f Atlanta, Ins been appointed to a $l,00 job in the "Ktlx lliou Record" department of the War D.-par'tineat. This ppointinent has a sp rial t igtdticnnce or the South; In handing Col. Livington Miss Allen's commission Secretary jimont said that, as far as it was posstdo, he intended to ti I this department viih Southern people; the So them penile made the rccetds and limy should bo lie ones to tile tlicin aw iy. Congress ap his wor tc*'<1 urin^l\?o prel'mil MVa^' inasmuch as there is only o c half of one >cr cent of Southern p ople in the petition service, Secretary Lomotil intends to ipializo the distribution of the revenue n this way as far as possible bet wien the wo see ions. This deputilient is not mder the civil scivie', 1 ut will bo alter ruly 1st THE RICKS DECISION. \.n Appeal to The Supreme Court and Perhaps to Congress. Wasiiinoton, I). C.?Ex-Congressman Frank Hurd, of Toledo,Ohio , his reachid tho city, and with E. W. Harper, of Terrc llaute, Ind., will bring the recent decision of Judge Hick? iu the famous Ann Arbor llai'rotul case? before the Supremo Court for review. The proceedings will bo by habeas corpus to Boniiui the release .ot ... Eailinm' Leu who was convicted under ruling and sentenced to f-h.tko rW^fccsuff^ftho lover cjurt they will th n app?al to Cougrcss ou its reassembling for such n revision of the laws as will overcome the disastrous cfT cfs of the lu'iog upon nil labor organizations. A Columbia Baok This Time. A Columbia, Tenn., special says: At 0 o'clock Friday morning the doors of the See >inl National Bank, of Columbia, were el' sed and the following notice was pos'cd thereon: "Owing to continued withdrawals of deposits from this bank since the Nashville failures, it is dccmul l> st to suspend payment temporarily." Cashier Childress said tint sinco the run was made on the bank in October, which it stood without shaking, he hid (moot hand easy sailing until the recent failures in Nashville. No stateiuiut of the bauk's allairs has as yet been mide public. Liberty Bell to bo Sent to Chicago. I'iiii. voRi.rma.?The Liberty Boll was lowered from its position in Independence Hall and was placed 011 a tiuek sprciully constructed for the purpose and escorted by the Philadelphia contingent of the Pennsylvania Nati ?nal Gua d to the Penn ylvania Railroad depot, where a train bearing the b 11 and escort left for Chicago. James City Trouble. Newbrun, N. V.?The negro s have accepted Mr. Bryan's terms, unwillingly, and only beciusc thev knew tliey had to. His terms are to leas; the lots at 50 cents, 75 and one dollar foratcrmof two years, with the nrivilerre Itf mnvinrr tlipir t O - * "*0 at any time within that period. After that time the property rcverU to him entirely. Columbus Offers its Oold. Coi.l'Miius, Oa.?An important action was taken by the bankers of Columbus in the t tider of their entire gold reservo to Secretary Carlisle. The total amount of gold held by the banks isf54,000 and its tender is made upon terms heretofore granted by the Secretary of the Treasury. A telegram to this iffict was 6ent to Secretary Carlislo. Where the Oold ie Coming From. Washington, D. C.?Offers of gold in exchsngo for legal tender notos are still being received by the Treasury. During the week offers were received and ncfcep'.od from San Francisco, Roanoke, Va.; Pittsburg, Pa.; Washington, D. C.; 8t. Louis; Boston; Norfolk, Va ; Columbus, Qa.; Albany and Cumberland, Mo;; Philadelphia and New Orleans. The Strike Off. An Oinnho, Meb , dispatch aays all the st'.ikera on the lino of the Union Paciflo roads resumed work.] The strike was de clarcd off. Tho terms have not boon made public.