University of South Carolina Libraries
Ik J^jjjji y OL. VXXJ.?NEW SERIES. UNION C. H.. SOUTH nAWrkf^L^^. ' -^ BpSptB&?s -.. J^i?^<j?^l^/^*m^^E3&&C?SBB3&f**^,tm'mmmm'' wF Oily of Richmond. Th? People Turn Out Xn Mam# Along the Whole Route to Honor Hiui. The train bearing the body of Jefferson Davis, Ex President of the Confederate States, left New Orlcansjn solemn grandeur and state, attended by escorts from 1 Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi and Alabama. There were demonstrations nil long the route, via Mobile, Atlanta, Char lotte and Italeigh. At the !:>? ? __ 1'iuvr, iucsnay cvenin; the catafalque lay in s'ato in the Statu Capi'ol while the people (lid homage to < the great chieftain. The state colors wi re ' j^hj^jmjjsj^y^J^&capitol. The building was draped in miWuing and d?coittc-d with flowers. t e Raleigh had provided a hands >n a special funeral car. drawn by six bine* ti horses. At the siuth gate of the capital fi squre stood Governor Cirr and Rev. Dr. p M. M. Marsha!!, the chaplain, with th-' Governor's stuff in line. These receive the body, which, passing around, entcret uf..the north gito. . it The cntcry into the building was throu h the weit doorway. I i the port) ,C co above were sever ty live Indies and aC gcntlemnn, formi: g the choir, W. S. Primrose being musical director. Thn ^.a choir sang lMeyvl's hymn: _____________________ co JEKKF.1IS0N DAVIS. tha How sleep the brave who sink to rest un^ Hy all their country's wishes bhsscd I chi< \\ hen spring, with dewy fingers cold, thoi Kcturns to deck their hallowed mold, She there shall dress a sweeter sod 1 ban fancy's feet have ever trod. wjjC Si!? 'liisunfr- ? ? Ti.eir honor comes, a pilgrim gray, cxli T?? bless the turf that wraps their clay; o And freedom shall awhile repair, To dwell a weeping hermit there. 1 wati After prayers aud dirges the exercises unij( ended aud thrrc was a steady stream o' people. This was so dense that severb ladies fainted. Old soldiers by scores, nay by hundreds, passod through Ladies and children wire in the throng. The people were kept moving by the double guard of vetiraDS and military. The vidmnnQ \vl?n liitirfhiul niiftt. tlifi hfulv WCrC from 11 do/.cn States. While the casket was being replaced Miss Winuic Davis and Mrs. Hayes, uudcr # < escort of Mayor Ellyson, of ItichmoDd, ciiinc out on the platform of her private f* car and there held an inform.il reception. tj A thousand ptrsons, veterans, ladies and ? children, shook hands with these charm ing 1 nates, Trho rccci-roU tUcul III U glBf ful way. At 3 :05 Wednesday morning the fuuc? al train arrived at Richmond, where ti was greeted by thousands of peoplo/The cask el was b?r??> to tho door of the Sen ate chamber in the rotunda of the buil 1 Tli ing and placed in position under t." ~ guard uf the Lee camp of Veterans. | Among (lie throngs who crowded ?* , ? w I see the last of Mr. l).ivis' remains, tt ^ most beautiful aud notable incident was about 5,000 public school children pass ed hy the bier,each one dropping llowcr?, ?l ' " rc as a tribute of alTection until the ling.; . uiu s had a-suuied pioportions equal t r several wagon loads. ON TUB WAY TO HOLLYWOOD. At 3:30 p. m. the body was removed f, to the caisson drawn by six white horses ^ companioned in black and the line of march was taken up for Hollywood, h IIouoCS along the lino were, nimosi wuu- | f out exception, decorated in black and g wliitc. National, State and Confederate flag1, the latter predominating, were * either floating to the breeze or worked A in the funeral colors. The streets along 1 the route, yards and windows of diqpl- 1 lings were packed with people. Nothing ' of a tumultous or noisy character marked the day or progress of the cortege, and yet the scene was a most imposing one. the whole city seemed to be in mourning Flowers were strewn along the route in ' of the catafalque and the sight wai * " ,1 u beautiful one. Women and little MgHiam n performed n large part of this of the parade. The bells of the toll*. ^ progress. A number of old Confederate flag* were borne in the procession while a number of carriages were tilled with flowers. Arriving at the grave, the military formed in tno avenue to the light, over looking the blufT. The veterans asscm bled in the avenue to the, left. Tho La dies' Auxiliary Camps occupied tiie section cast of the grave. The family of the deceased, pall-bearers, escort of honor, officers and officiating clcrgymeu took HHHg services were over. As soon as everything vu iu rea< ncss the Stonewall Band of Staunt played a funeral dirge composed 1 Prof. Jacob Rinehart. Rev. Win. Mm ford then read a selection from trcri ture. Uishop "nompson, of Missitsipii waa to have taken part in the service but was ur able to come. Ritv. Dr. ? W. Land rim then read the hymn 4-Ho Firm a Foundation," which was sung li the asst>robl*c"? A* 41? av. U> IUO ClOSO Ol til hjmn, Dr. Moses D. Hodge stepped foi ward and said. "Let us pray," am BTery head in tho vast asseuiblag was bowed. DK. IIOOK'h BEAUTIFUL Pit AYKK. "O Qod most high, moal liolly, nos nerciful, with lowly revercnco of spirii ml with hearts subdued by the hnjlnw.fi ncmoiics of the past and the teudcr of ices of the hour, we invoke Thy ei iuivut rcscnce and benedict ion. "Beneath these quiet skies wh'cli bend ver us like tho hollow of thy sheltering aud, iu Thy good providence we gather i this consecrated place. Arouud us st all that is mortal of patriot HAges and ldiers whoso virtuo aud valor gave lnso to our historic auuals, and who at the ;ll of duty, having cousecratcd their ffls to the toils allotted them, dud, mmitting their souls to Qod and their emeries to us who survive them. By iy help, Lord God of truth aud justice, 5 will be faithful to our trust. We will rpetunte the story of nil who, by dis.erestcd service and licoric sacrifice, | ugglod to maintain the empire of inciple in tho world, and who with nor stainless and couscicuce in violated filled their task. 'Now numbered nmang tho immortal id they still live cusliriocd in the lis of those who love them ull the re for what they suffered aud who riscd their memories with undying deion. 'Accept ?ur thanks, gracious father, t we havo accomplished the sacred lartaking of giving to our honored ;f an appropriate resting place among Je who shared with him the joys of ' ory and the e&dncsa of defeat and 1 ? followed the banner, now forever t Aiprtitudc which no reverse i nguish. 1 -9j.9inucr_cQiliit- _ Here, on thia imperial hill, we have y him down beside the river whose , eis sing their perpetual requiem aud ( d the How era which speak of the < " I MISS WINNIE DAVIS, 10 uaughter oi iU Confederate States. iuricctioa of the just and of the land here death never witheia the affections hieh bloom in beauty and fragrance cr.nore. "We look up from the open grave to the ,)en hcivcn where Thou dost live and :ign and where all who have died in the ue'faith do live aud reign with Thee in lory everlasting. "In this, the hour of their freshly wakened sorrow, Father, most tender nd loving, in the ptcutitude of Thy coina-sion, remember and comfort Thine and-maiden and all dear to her. Tlioi usband to the widow and father to tin atherlc8s, be Tbou their strength, theii ong and their salvation. "Lord God of Hosts! "We beseech The o sustain and cheer the veteran survi of tlie w*r. who with ever diminish ng numbers and with ever increasiuj jurdena of ago and infirmity, await thci inal discharge cud final recompense. "Almiehtv God. author of neace an lover of concord, now that the sorrov and desolations of war have been for . many years exchanged for the blessinj of peace, may all animosities be buri< in the grave, and may all the inhabitan of this great land, from North to Sou' and from East to West, learn more ai more to cherish the relations which uni them as children of one father and citizens of one country. "May mutual regard for others' int< ests, happiness aud rights bfcdmc the n hie law of national life. May freed* founded on justice and guarded l>y cc stitutional law, with icligion pure a undefiled, secure to our whole peopn perpetual heritago of unity, prosper and peace, and to God most high, v wc give all honor and glory, cvermo Amen." lfev, O. S. Bartcn, of Norfolk, p . u- u?UT UUI BltOl World** Coin nounced (he benediction. Immediately the casket was lowered into tho grove. After the bugle signnl enmo taps and the infantry tired a salute wh<ch announced that the serrices were over. The column then moved to Gettysburg Hill, where the annual memorial services of the Ladies1 Hollywood Association took place, which consisted of the docoration of the graves of 10,000 Confederate soldieis, after which prayer was offered and a hymn sung. PALMETTO CHIPS. New* and Notes From Here, There A Evei ywehro in South Carolina. A company is being formed to build a cotton mill at Laurens. Mrs Mary Barnes Erwin, wife of Gen. John 11. Erwin, died st her home in Lan casttr of consumption. A special from Fort Madison, says 1 that a negro named Isnac Lincoln was 1 lynched there on Tuesday, for insulting 1 a white woman. Lincoln is a blacksmith * about 50 years of age, and camo from Ohio. f The supply already bought for the State c dispensary is said to be 1,050 barrels of ^ rye whiskey, 400 of corn and six carloads t of beer, the bill for those two items being ? $132,000. Altogether the State will in- 1 FOst from aaa a ? a-? ? :4; v. , ' lo,1YOt000 in "quor r with which to begin business. ! Henry Haesloop, of Charleoton, sent v in experimental cargo of flour from If- n tuny Ihrflinrhtfihirlwtni in fie>n t . g Mini. Mr. Hacsloop is so well satisfied a with the result ot his venture that he in* p ends to go into the business of exporting p Western flour on a large scale next fall. j, Mrs. Daniel Crawford, of McConnels- tl vllle, daughter of Rev. R. Z. Johnston, p pastor of the Presbyterian church iu Lin* p jolnton, N. C., was killed by lightning Thursday afternoon at her home in South ^ Carolina. A 60ti of Rev. Mr. Johnston was killed a few years ago in Penney l? vania during a blizzard. NORTH CAROLINA SQUIBS. < Newsy Gleanings from Cherokee to j Currituck. J. A. Spcncc & Co., big murchants of Raleigh, failed last week. Night trains are to he put on the Western North Carolina road a again, July 1st. ITrim ivm.g, ? lias applied for a license to mary a negro girl. Congressman G. W. Shell, of Soutu Carolina, delivered the annual address | at the Salem Female College commenccj uicnt 'Thursday. I ... mar * VX 1. ^ 1 1 ~ t M.i.v I llio fsiaycn remain \^onegu m mm.'reesboro was destroyed by tire Wednesday. Mu:ii of tho private property of the students und teachers is lost. All of the library and apparatus is a total loss. The magnificent building was insured for only $ 10,000. The sir ailed- child in North Carolina was horn to Mrs. James I)elap of Thomasvi le. It weighs only two pounds and is ' alive and doing well. A new cigarette machine lias been in) vented by a man in Winston, thnt, it is i said, will feed, roll, paste, and make 10,5 000 perfect cigarettes in ten hours, r ,i e V1KU1N1A HA?FENINu3. '* Tho Latest News Items in the Old Dominion. 'J, Tho Virginia Poultry and Pet Stock ir Association was organized at Richmond, The salt mines at Graham arc to hi u acveiopcn. ,a Ad annex to the shoe factoij in the ;0 State penitentiary at Richmond will hi built at once ut a cost of $18,000. ;il Northern capitalists have recure< ts sullicient land in Atlantic City ward, Nor th folk, and will build a ship yard and dr ul docks, arrangements having been mad to to push the work rapidly, as Tire city of Roanoke, with a populn tion of about 32.000, now has nearl jr- twenty-one miles of electric street rail 10- way in operation, which with the povr >m or and light station, will cost abou at- $200,000. Tiro same amount is Wein ud put into new business interests, j a The negro who attempted to rape ity young white girl of Gordonaville i rill cently, and was only prevented by t ire, timely arrival of rescuing friends, w tried last week and sent to the Penite ro- tiary for fifteen years. IKK IN MACH1NKBY DUX. a?biai Exposition. . THE NEWS UTBRIEF." The Latest Happening* Condensed and Printed Here. South Carolina is the largest producei of phosphates in the world, leading with her 000,000 tons-; Franco and Belgium next, each 450,000 tons; Florida next 200,000 tons; Russia, 75,000 tons; Spair and Germany, 50,000 ench; Dutch West Indies, 20,000; English West Indies, j 10,000; North Carolina, 7,500; Algeria 2,500. The Mexican Government has begun t? adopt the policy of taxing incomes, having levied a t?? ? tlm salaries of all Government employees and clerks ami employees of corporations and private firms. 1? is rumored that later in the year the income tax will be extended so us to take iu all persons receiving incomes above an amount that will exempt mechanics and agricultural laborers. In this way the just complaint that rich people scape the burden of taxation will be met. A Auspicious tig me in the ceremonies ittcmlant upon the removal of the body >f JtlTersou Davis to Richmond lust vcek was Gen. Georrm w-n-? * , o- """?VU OUUCB. I ho oldest living Kx-Unitod States , krnator. lie was rf classmate of Davis at ! ransjlvania University, Lexington, Ky. , rom 1821 to 1824,and his conirado in the Hack Hawk war. In 1839 Senator Jones . ' > lirgelj influential in securing the aa Secratay nf I ic was famous tifty art he had taken as prlj^^n^^econd j i "affairs of honor," ant? was esteemed | tie liaudsoracst and politest man in the j fational Capitol. Gen. Jones is now in lis 89th year. i The immigration agent of the Norfolk b Western Railroad has purchased u 1 mall farm at Cozany Springs, near toauoke, V*., and proposes establishing >n it some Ferman or Swiss truck frrm:rs who arc expected to arrive before nncr If (tin effort. in nurressf ill other farms will be purchased at desirable localities alone the line of the railroad. COI.ONEI. OEOJIOE ?. PAVIH. DJrector-Gonorul ot tlio World's Columbian Exposition. DESTITUTION IN LOUISIANA. Suffering and Privation Amongst HuiiicloiS ?OOp!c. Vicksbuuo, Mish.?There are at Icasl 10,000 homeless an<i hungry people it i East Carroll, Morehouse, Wc6t Carroll , and Madison parishes, La., and tin suffering and privations they are under going is appalling. With the exccptioi i of a few small elevations, the whole o e the northeastern portion of the State i under water. Forty-four negroes wer 1 rescued from a peiilous position nea - Swan Lake, cast of Cnrrollton parish y Sunday night. They were almost iusan e from hunger, having been without foo for four days. ^T"o children died Fr t- day from cxpostftV Their bodies wei y wrapped in blankets and thrown into tl I- raging waters, there being no dry grout r- in which to bury them and no iroplemen it with which to dig graves. An old herm g was rescued four miles from Swan Lak who had been without food for thr a days. When found be was sitting astrii g. | tho roof of his bouse inuuCuiu^ m. he from the bones of his dog, which be hi ag been compelled i: hi!!. Governor Foal !0. tent all the tents at his command to t luffercrs at Lake Providence. > ik Y, JUNE 9,1893. < Wonderful Mineral Deposits in So Carolina. And What is Bain? l>on? to Dnwa This Orsat Natural Wealth. A correspond* lit at tireenvillc, 8. prc&eu's au admirable summary of mineral resources of South Carolina, reproduce it herewith: While litis Btatc leads all tho otl Southern States in the number of spind now operating, ami has, besides, ux cotton factories iu course of erection th any of the others, she is also ahead of othtr Southern States in her mineral i sources, except, perhaps, Alabama a Tcnneeee. TK Carolina jjhoephat have bcenrnjnrdan^^oMiiufaptiired rv alnco 1807. Up to 1800 there has l>e< mined of laud aud river rock, as by U census r< port, 5,177,741 lone ton Upon the river rock the State gets royalty of fl. iter too, hihI up to 181 received $'J, 198,320. Iu the same tin 741,048 tons have been convtrtcd in jver 3.000,000 tons of supcrphosplmh or into ummonietc fertilizers, tho icniait der haviug been shipped to foreign an domestic, ports. 'I ho total value of roe tuincd to dato of report is $33,000,00( while the ueposits remaining yet to inin has been estimated by experts at fror 9,000,000 to over 5,000,000,000 tons. 2d. Kaolin has been extensively mine* tor over twenty years past, aud shippei to both f'/ruicsiic and foreign ports. N> data is at hand to give nn estimate of thi volume of this trade. The kaolin bel oa the upper tertiary formation rxtend: entirely across tho State from tho Savannah river at Augusta, <la., to Chcraw or the Pet dec. Richland county alone hai a world's supply for years to come, Valuable ochres also arc to bo found wltli these deposits of kaolin. One company now iu upper ltichlnud manufactures tire brick. Kaolin may aho be utilized for the proluctiun of aluminum. 8. The Diarl beds of the tertlnrv Hou have been utilized. They ' arc "of cat extent (400 to 000 feet thick), and will likely in process of time ho utilized or agricultural purposes. 4. Tha lirae.toim of P,ed , eg'on (dolomite), l?Dg p,? U|M] fof ped East, but lately to Detroit, Mich. Steps are now being taken to manufacture it on the spot. 0th. Granite from unlimited quarries it Rockton, in Fairfield county, from which shipments have been make as far us the Mississippi and Ohio rivers. The granite of South Carolina is of tbo best quality and boundless in extent. Enough of it could be spared to build a Chinese wall around the little State of New Hampshire. 7th. Gold and silver have been mined since tlic year 1H00. The United Statct census report" "how an annual averagr production of gold of $50,000; outputi of silver small. The Morgan mine, neai Gnlliiey City (argentiferous galena), wai formerly worked for both silver and Uad tMWtw?&dr.8i.,'eak8 these ores are fount Blacksburg. * 8th. Copper.?Both the Mary and tb Biatton mine of York nro well define lends of copper ore, and copper or uuubiicss uniicriiva the iron ores of Nnr nics mountain, in York county, Th formation is identical with tkcPucktow (Tenn.) formation. 1Kb. Corundum is now being mined i Vork county, where it exists in quai lilies. Crystalline corundum is found i the vicinity of Laurens C. H., and it he; exists in massive form, the mutrix bcin the country rock (gneiss). 10th. Feldspar exists in paying quaul tics, espaciallv in Grcenvillo county: 11th. Asbestos is found in Picket; Dconec and other counties. Ou itoic jiountaio, near the White Water rive die writer examined a lead of this scvei !eet in thickness, but twenty nules frc ;hc ""Treat railroad. - 12th. Mica has been mined cxtensivi I n upper part of the State. > 13th. The itacolumitic formation 5 ;he Piedmont belt may yet supply d * monds and other precious stones. A lot II side of this formation garnets arc eve f Nrbcre found. 3 14th. Millstones arc produced fr e he peculiar granite of Edgefield of 1 r rest kind, and the tertiary formati '? .fiords a good supply of burr stone. 6 15th. Coal does not exist. On I d {avanuah, near Bluftton, and on I i* (Vateree, near Acton, scant specimens r? an inferior lignite are met with, 10 apparently worthless for uny pracl purposes. 16th. Iron ore superior to the " Softndis and rcinnrknbly free from all ?? : purities has been extensively worke* ce ' the Hanks of the Broad river bet' GnlTuey City and Blacksburg. 1,000,000 tor.r. worn rained and uti here in the past, nnd from recent ' r plotutions these min1.s show over 20, 000 tons in sight. The irou from ,, mines is pcculiary adapted te the inc rr ? ? ? > - -?- .I in An iron, or rather a stael fndaatrtTwH *oon spring up at thia point, and aa Alabama now leada at tbc Kouth in the lop production of iron, ao will Bouth Carolina then lead in the produi lion of fine q atcel and ateel baaea. The beat quality of the co*c?I>oc?h?nU??^can now be delivered ^y0 at th?ao roinca at reaonable ratea. Coke, ore and liroeatnne cau hero bo assembled l,cr to make a ton of pig at leaa coat than can j |cs the aamc be done at any point eaat of the 9re Allegheny mouutaina I an 17th Small scams of pyrito have been aU opened, and mora may yet be found, re- which would prove of great value in the ud making of sulphuric acid, thoacid chambers of this State row innking from Silicas isn sulphur more acid than is made in -er M?y State cu 18th. Oil may be fouud by deep horiug M on the itacolumitio belt adjoining the is. dolomltlc limestone, but likely in pockn cts and not iu paying quantities. 90 19th. Oil stones of best quality are in io King's crcck, York county, to 20th. Manganese, wh'ch is shipped .'s from Edgofiotd and has betu extensively' , I- exploited near Hlacksburg. I DR. BRIGQS WAS SUSPENDED. >. Put out of the Presbyterian Ministry e Until He Recant*. ( n Wasiiinuton, D. (5.?When tho Pres- j bytcrian Oencrnl Assembly couvcucd aa j i a court at 9:80 o'clock thcro waa a j I notable decrease in tho nttcudauce, both f 0 on the floor and in the galleries, last p night's vote ? of JI8J1 (against 110) to sus- ^ t taiu tho appeal, out of a total voto east y s of 499 (to sustain 298; to sustain, in part, ^ . 85,(?having been the climax of the meet! ing of tho Assembly. , Tho members of the prosecnting com 8) mitteo were in their nccustomud places .j i but Prof. Hriggs' party was represented by Prof. Francis Drown alone. . i The moderator first announced tho committee, the appointment of which was authorised to formulate nn exnrrms. on of the Mnee of the Aoembl, to the 0f vote taken ?,,0? ,|I0 apj,0N, fn|m >.. judgement of New York Presbytery C0 At the request of Dr. linker, Professor ?# le??n B"?Ml" 'o"ow,"*,u'?*?pb * ?e>. Oeor^ p. m.kcr. cli,lfu,?o. e|? , J>? nnjU|Bifk ive responsibility for any futher action. * ^ (Signed) C. A. Bhioob. Whereupon Dr. Baker said tho com* ^ mitteo took tho action which Mr. Iloyt ^ would now repot t to the Assembly. 'JJho report, after reciting the pr. cecdi?gs"'iYl* m the case, proceeds: ' This judicatory finds that the said j i final judgment of tho Presbytery of Now York is erroneous and should be and h j hereby reversed; nnd thistlencral Assent ^ t bly, sitting as a judicatory in the said . i cau*c, coining now to enter judgement 01) the said amended charges, finds the np j pellcc, ChnriiM A. ihig:;?, has uttered, ^ r taught and propagated viewH, doctrines ^ i and teachings, as sot forth in the said ^ . charges, contiary to the essential doc c 1 tritics of Holy Scripture and tho stand- ^ I ards of the taid Presbyterian Church in ^ e I at ion ol fric'75VWrtrftfuxtiJjta ami in vio- ( J appellee, which said erroneous views and j doctrines strike at the vitals of religion ). nod have been industriously spread, is "Wherefore this General A-scsblj cf J u the Presbyterian Church of tho United Htntcs of Amcrics, sitting as a judicatory n in this care on appeal, docs hereby sua i- pend Charles A.Hriggs.tho said appellee, ju from the office of iniuister in tho Presbyrc terinn Church in tho United Htatcs of g America until such timo as ho shall give satisfactory evidenco of repentance to the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in America of the violation by p him of the said ordination vows as herel>( in and heretofore found." JUDGE DUBOSE CONVICTED. I ral Removed from the Bench by the Court of Impeachment. nasneville, Tenn.?The case of Judge Julius J. Dubose, of bnclby county, was disposed of by the court of im,?* peachment. The House of Representatives preferred }^" thirty charges against him, and the Senry" ate found him guilty of two of them. Judge Dubnsc was declared not guilty iu four of the charges. One of those on which ho was found 0Q guilty was thut which charges him with arresting one Henry Kennedy after hhad been released from jail on a writ oi ? habeas corpus before Judge Kates of the Criminal Court. In short he disregarded the habeas corpus. The other charge oc which he was convicted is that of tryiDf l ef(l to get Mrs. McBride to give up $10,001 I -m worth of property which had been do j ( creed to her by the Chancery Court di vorce proceedings The proof showo ()yer that Duboso was working in the interoi lized *be divorced husband. The derision of the court of impeach ment removes Judge Dubose from th . ' bench as judge of the Criminal Court c iking dhelby county, Thm ftooaace Tmomgthe^K^^ in VMHn Worth OuoUu. For mom time one of the teachers ia the Indian training reboot at Yellow Hill, Ofaerokn Oounty, N. C., bat bc?a MIm Mamie K. Dickson, of Jamestown, N. Y. 8000 after going to the school Miss Dickson became acquainted with Richard II. Smith and here the romance begins. Smith is a son of Chief Nirarod Smith of the Cherokee tribe, about tl 1 years old and in appearance eery pre posting young Indian. Mtaa Jackson ia nearly of Smiths an and ? - A~?w _ m uau^u* ter of a Baptist oltrgynu Id Jamestown. Despite the barriers that were between these young people a mnlim attachment sprang up and within two ing l(r. Smith and Miss Dickson were engaged to be married. * Not long ago Professor Andrew Speucer, government superintendent of tho Indian school and also Indian agcul, decided to dispense with Miss Diokson's services in the school, so inforuud her and notified the department, this step being taken, it is understood, hocsuso Miss Dickson was not thought kuitable o work among Indians. Tho suspenalon of Miss Dickson, of :ourte did not please her Locliinvar, and le began to investigate and take a hand n the matter, working with all his might, n truo love-like fashion, A number of rlends of the engsgod couple also took ii iulereat in tho case, the first of tho ind, perhaps ever known on the resor ntion, and the affair was reported to the treat Father at Washington. Tho ovemment at once sent a special ngent > look into the facts of Miss Dickson's nspension nud report to tho dopartmout. 'his agcut, Mr. Cooper, spent soinetimn ivesttgaMng as to facts and then went nek to Washington, whero he will mako report. The fact that Miss Dickson hsd become igaged to young Hmith (wl^gok the Indian tongue is irinunicited to her * most ly opposed * olr J-u,hlw ?? >/; cases.%%' ;^Skm7M 1 mi rdfii7^MiffCT Barber Drawa II Whafc Student Lfwii Asks for m Hair Out. ' An Associated Press special from'Com* idga Mnss.,iaya: W. II. Lewis, Harvard's urdy centre in last year'a fooball eleven, a nagro, but that fact has not deleted in the least from his popularity i the college. He ia a man of fine adiesa, nnd is a gentleman. He had an rpcriencs in Mark's barber shop, under ie shadow of the Hasty Pudding Club uilding, which has made him, for the uie being, the foremost man in the ollegc. lie entered the barber shop bersceu 6 and 7 o'clock and waited his urn to uo served. The barber to whose hair ho went declined to do anything or him. He waited and got into the next hair. Here he met with another reuaal. So it went nntil the shop was lepopulated and every employee had doilined to shave bim. -t?urmI5ia dud^itb this. .? llic mane-, nir. jmwu, m Messrs. Waiters, Union, and others of his iriends, agaiu called at the ebon and naked for attention. The proprietor re* fused, and gave aa an excuse that ho at * Bunded te special customers only. The Htery was at once noised about the college sod the action of the barber was severely criticised. Discrimination on account of color is regarded as a disgrace at Harvard. The Crimson will take up Mr. - Lewis's case ? and make mattars very interesting for Mr. Marks. Mr. Lewis has called on Lawyer Butler Wilaen to puah tho case In the courts, and salt will, be begsa ft once. ^ Damages will be fixed at |A,000. The LegUlatnre will also be called upea to take action. Either Representative Meyer or Harris will introduce a bill te allow persons oi coior the same rights in barber shops as they now have in places of public entertainment. Mr. ??r;i J Vf. T .?l. ..llorl nn Ortv W1IIUU BUU iiAli vItu&scll and acquainted him with the facta in the Case. The Governor ezpresied himself heartily in sympathy with the proposed legislation. The case is likely to make Mr. Lewis more popular than ever under the Cambridge elm*. THe Waldensee Arrive: I Salisbohy, N. C.?Twenty-six immigrants, part of the colony of Waldenses from Southern Italy, to settle in ? Burke county, arrived here on a special train behind the regular and passed on to Connelly Springs on the Western . North Carolina road. The special con* t listed of one passenger coach and a baggage car. Only one Waldensan could, ipeak English. :jj c TLu F* must have a ,f I hard time learning the names of hie I oountry'e OaWJM* Siitfftem ?Puok.