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mm CAMDEN, S. C., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12 ?ATji school tONAL LESSON FOB fAPwY 14, 1892. I thf dnys conv. -aith the riH so v t *: .i-yi s ? ot Israel, and ?jlttdah, with the ?vA of man, seed of biast.** Jeremiah "in g th<; I.ist forty year^> of f*?re tbe two tribe* were cir idurin-^ the last eighteen yean? *ign an I th.i tw -aiy-t #o years igs following. Hh w>iK simply >#Eer ?pf;:kin4 Gyi's rn? sa^e. 1", chapter* xxx. an ! xxxi. "alie i --a book within a hoc*," i xi., and any kind of a careful *s its peculiar reference to re. Compare this verse with ,1-3, and tike Israel and Judah ' Israel and JuJah the ten tribes >f ail Israel. The Spirit's own npon this vera 3 is found iu Li 0-1 1 . suail corr.fi to pa?s, that Like bhed ovirr th m to pluck up, so ' over them to build and to e Lord.'' So one ean q^"st;on ttt? and scattering, and no more >ae question th* gathering and , Fat verso 10 with this and say can wore clearly or em ted with a "Trm* saith th? b "*!ir apd "shall." , J <lays they shall say uo more. I have eaten a soar grape an i the are net on edge.*' They dives as suffering tor their l arrj therefore u.sed this proverb. - T; Ejsek. xvii;., 3, *?Y one shad die for his ?wn man that eateth the sour tfhscail ee set on edge." Com teciv. I6} Ga!.*vi,. 5,7. Per Bbiiicv is taught every wherein '"Every oue of us shall give ac- " setrtoGo^. Rom. xiv.. Li> 1 ths days come, sajththe Lord, ie a new covenant with tha ami wjt'u the house of Jn aber that He is speaking not nor of the days in which we ? eraiJadah and Israel in the nestoratioB. yet future, "but now 5 according to the covenant that I | their father.^, which My covenant it? He refer* now to the Horeb rDeut- v , 2, :i to make them a pri-sts and a peculiar people " jjpple, upon conditions of their ? fflx. xix >. This was differ 1 the covenant with Abraham, Isaac ^ w'alcu was unconditional and to t.i?: letter; a covenant an oath, ana therefore eternal 'geable (Mic v.i., '?) . ? -those day*, ?aith the Lord, I _r law in their inward parts, and their hearts, and will be their shal lihaijgjp people."' "Those p? >b. L?tl) ij ref- ? ^ Mu piyeb. ;^Vi L^aljPH^T, Math. after the ) shall come deliverance _ ?5-28). Ob Entirety the Lor.fs I put, I will write, apare Jer. xxiv., ??. 7; Ezek. fey shall al! ?^w^J?e, from the tern unto the greatest 04!them,saitK for I will forgive their'- .iniquity, remember their sins no^TOore".'' is often quoted as if it referred to le on the wnole earth, aad/Wmil I be a result of the Gospel as now preached; Whereas it refers clearly f> Israel and Ju lab, ?ibetwetve trilxss, which snail be all right total', and the t:?ntr.il nation upon earth in frUleaaia! days (l>a. lx., 'Jl; Ixvi., $>, who 'ttAii aaitfe known the fume of the Lord to $U the world that so the earth may be tille'i ?^?ith Hia-fefcory (Num. xiv., 21; Isa. xi., 9: I Beb.il, I4>. But unt?i the new earth all th"^ i?orid shali not be righteous, for even in ^nflkenial <lars many shall yield only a idqbedienc3 IPs. ixvi.. 3 margin). "Tnussaith the I^rd, which giveth for a light by day. The Lord of is Ets name." However ^re.it a prom it is of no weight unless the isTibie to fulfill ic. The Lord of the creat-u- of all t'ikizs an I "He is those ordino&c&J depart from be ?Me, with the LofJ, th-?n the ^eed of aisoshail c2a-*> from being a nation He for?vcr."' R-\<d the parallel pas [ chapter xxxiii., T'J-'JO. Israel is not rand has not been tor over years a in the eyes of other nations; but Is s never ceased tobe a nation b.-fora , for "The I/Oiil y; ?et!i not as 'man se ifh," riie will be a nation, before all zrv admired, honore 1 an i sought unto, T of Jehov.il iK:r K. i rig. Thus south tne Lord, :t r.eavea above measure ' * I will also cast the se?<i Ol Israel, for all that they titone, saith the Lord." I* is often said wespeaU of I-raei?sfufcura glory, "Bat all that they have done, thoy have ed ever ytliin g" V es, truly, they have eJ edl thar was conditioned upon their >, but tiieuu?%>n htional pnxnisesof ^Isaao and Jacob. ' rod will keep and for His own qivat nane's sake (l=a. 25; Er;.'c. xxxvi., 22, 3vJ?. Note care it when Jerusalem siutll be rebuilt restoration ;t shall aayer be thrown again (versus 38-40; P3\ cii., 16). If iid see an 1 enjoy those day* of Is X7 you must now b-? redeea?d by Kmr. Then b?ing reJeerced. -re that you are raieeme I not simply to heaven when you die, bat toxlivo ; ? Ions: as the Lord sees to do yon ? rort in making Christ in ali^fhe world, that *so may bo gathered oWi u.: ignorant of the rays-"* ncss in part is happened the (alines of the (rentUes then all Isra-.d shall be . xi., 2>, 55>, the church lias be ited an 1 vainly imagines that her is to convert the whole world. Let >. pastor or naissionarv think that b&oaed to convert all withi^htS"' rash-. r to be a faithful witness in of the Spirit, "that he may by all ? some'' tl Cor. ix., '22: Ron:, xi., lea every preacher lay to h?art jitter ret . '.v.- 1 through I)r. A. T. that i pur r,arisa is not our Held, but of the n?dd, which is the world, ; We are to ^ai::er ani instruct a j^siih which we may do our part in Jag the fieid_.so as to gather ont the gSmd hfcstcn the tla> of Israel. ? Les jKabonCs in a Cliicfcea'is Crop, few tfeji ;igo C- Jacobsoo, of Hast Heb., roomed word from a flrin te City, Montana, that cno o# their irs. a -Mrs. White, ha 1 found iltfegk .diamonds in the cra\*! of a >U1 by tlicxn a lew flays jjefore Mr. .Jacobsoa is a ..laurcre iipper. iu ! supplies his "neanery irei from the Ixri of the BTSflt gcvea miles south of HastinjgC jglBriosity of sevtrra' mia ts in Butte - aras arouse < I by the di-eovery, aad >a ha$ receive. I many letters in aj5 to where h<c s scored the sand. YThite submitted the three rough pg to a jeweie^jtv Unite for inspec andhe pronr*|no?l them diamonds "ofiered i;ae.-sa*$ju :-i price for them, rg.iuit;V "> t has seat them East y^/fuu Slaves in Africa. ^ missionary, w$? has arrived on the pit frcto the ittferfor of Africa, says one of the Europeans who took part e uisastrme; baitie between the skf expedition aad the : is bo a- a prisoner in the haa^tioT l^gaaehe. 9eait?fcd through Afnc^ *w!hIia meTl tsjfcto Jtre la bondage or TOlun tariiy takoa up their resideace l)r. Kaitigars servant isaa ex .He deserted his * master ia the and at accounts he waslir tsear lako Tchad, the only white aaic Mt FEBRUARY FANCIES. Many Important Happenings That Get People Into Print, _ The Latest News Notes and Dis patches From the Potomac To the Gulf. VIRGINIA. . Richmond has a meat juice -works. At Radford Geo ^W. Miles wiill erect at once a large "St r AU^ans1" ~Wfr?ge for boys, at a cost of $20,6 iO Several cases of hydrophobia are rs ported in King George county. The National Government will estab lish a light bouse on the Shamrock shore, fifty miles below Washington, on the Po tomac. There are seventy theological students"' at Hampden-Sidney Seminary. Gilbert Brooks, a wealthy farmer" was kilted by a train near Lyochburg Thun day. . ? , It is said that the Richmond and Dan ville will get control of the Lynchburg avB*lT)urhain railroad. Charlesrlphntfon was sentenced to ten years ?rp?isonment at Staunton Thurs day fofr complicity in the murder of James P. Lots. *" Supreme Iisgent Loving, of :he Royal Arcanum, died at Norfolk and was buried Saturday. The Buena Vista Casaimere Mills have received from the United States Govern ment an order for 40,000 ya^da of cloth. President Harrison ha? pardoned L W. Baclcey, of Norfolk, now' confined in Albany prison. The motion for a new trial for >. Jeffer son Phillips, convicted at Alexandria for murtier, was overruled and he was sen tenced to hang Mardit 25th. new fire insurance, company was or ganized in Danville Wednesday. The sale of 3o,000 acr<?? of iron and timber lands near Covington to West Va. capitalist* have been consummated. Mrs. Annie Smith, of Dinville, wants to practice law, but can't. The courts say "no'' and the law's^ys l,;n>," and so Mrs. $mith has seV to work to g^?Vthe 'aw changed. 8he has so far suc^ded- that the committee on courts of justjfe in^ihe St*te Senate are consider ing her bill and arc likely to report it. What rhaRce it will have before the far mers ia^tfee^egislature is another ques tion. NOB TH CARC LIN A. The State Guard now numbers 1,578. Robert Pnipps mu dered Emmet Long in Ashe county. The Fisher gold miae near Greens boro, will be worked again. The street railway of Wilmington has been sold to an electric company. At Summerfield, near Greensboro, there are a number of hydrophobia cases. Nearly two hundred brands of fortili ers have been reported in the State. J. N. Norwood, of Greenville, S. C., is interested in a project to oreacize a new bank in Wilmington. The Hornets Nest Riflemen, of Char lotte, offered their services to the Govern-^ ment during the Chili war scare. The Secretary of the Nor*h Carolina Teachers' Assembly has arranged for sev eral teachers' excursions to the World's Fair. Dr. Edward Ashe, the oldest physician in Anson count", died at Wadesboro Thursday. ^ llis practice once extended ; over half a dozen counties. An effeK will be made by the chamber of ~ commerce of Winston to induce the Postal Telegraph Company to , build a line to that city. ] Lieutenant Shipp. of the Fifth Calv?Ty U. 9 A , ia detailed f r duty inspecting the State Gnarc's by the U. 8. War De partment, Governor Holt having applied | for such an officer. legal proceedings are to be instituted ; ngainst several preferred creditors of the defunct First^National Back of Wilming- , i ton. Mrs. Sallie Foard, a well-known lady of 'oenevolence, who died at Greeo?boro I recently, left in^her will ths sum of $200 to the King's Daughters' llospi al of that city. ; 6 '? 1 : . Yadkin county jail was destroyed t>v nre last week, originating from a basket of ashes which was left in the hall. All 1 the pris- sera in the ja-l- were safely res cued tnd prevented from escaping. , Borne beautiful specimens of kaolin have been taken from the deposits recent ly discovered at Walnut Cove. The de posits are said to be inexlwustible, and ; the kaolin is as white as thalk. It is | stated that a pottery will be estabiished at Greensboro to manufacture the finer r i waTes from the materiai. A posse of revenue officers have just completed an exciting raid in' Wilkes I county. They succeeded in destroying three distilleries on Roa:ing rivet, wJitch is the stronghold of the ??moonshiners.'" While the work of cutting up the stilts was going cn the t,moonshiueru*' had found the horses of the officers aad cut ! all their throats. As the officers were : leaving they were fired upon, but nobody j j was hurt. 1 SOUTH CAROLINA. Charleston now has a pawnbroker's ) shop. The Charleston Light Dragoons have donned a dark green and gold uniform, which is a revival of the old antebellum uniform. The ^ou^h Bound railroad company i has decided to erect its machine shops -at [ Grahams. Ml A R. II. Bigham of Florence county will ! erect a canning factory at Effingham. Plans have l>een?pre pared !>>r * he new [ buildings of Converse-Ccilcge, at Spwr | tanburg The Governor has appointed J. W. Ilalleman Muster for Oconee county, at Waihalla. "In Spartanburg county the oats and whea* have stood the winter well a^d are full oi p*o?iso. Many more acres of oats wlS bdlpflt in 4ur;ag this month. l .*? The 17. i &i*0te has cooSrmt'^^^e >' nomin^fc^t^JrPride, jostmaster aK The Republicans of the State will very likely put a full Sta'e ticket in the field next November says Chairtdan Wrbster. Sam'iel Jones, colored,; was cutting down a tree oa. Ed:slo Island when it fed and crushad the life out of bin. j Hon M. L. Donaldson, of Greenville, has resigued the position of manager of the State Exchange of the Farmere' Alliance. This gentleman is being mentioned for Governor. Mrs. Helen C. Bra; ton is in Darn well attending to the investment of the fund raised by her for the benefit of the widows of the eight negroes hncned therein 1890. The 10th annual sestion cf the W. C T. U. will be he!d in Columbia Feb. IS. Columbia will welcome and greet the guests wi h her accustomed warmth of roception. Mrs. Tillman has extended the courtesies and hospitalities of the Executive mansion to Mrs. Cfaapin, presi dent for South Carolina, and to Mrs. Sib ley, the president for Georg a Mrs. Mary Lathrop will attend the conven ior and deliver two addresses. OTHER STATES. Gainesville, Fia., has a lady lawyer, and is very proud of th3 fact. While ^some other towns cannot boast of a legal light of the feminine gender, yet almost all of them have women who occasional ly lay down thelaw,as many iqifnicd men will testify. f The committees of Jewish rabbis that has l>een in session in New Orleans pre paring a uniform and revised ritual fcr use in the United States has comp'tUd its work, and will present its report to a rabbinical conference to be held in New York. . Two ^eat great-grandchildren of Sir Francis Drake, the great English Ad miral of West Iudian, So.ith P-cific, and Spanish Armada fame, ?.re living in Sa vnnnah, Ga. At least Mr. James Hoctor and his sister, Mrs. Manjje Fitzpatrick. believe thejthave the distinction of that relationship, and they are claiming ;i share in a reput-d estate of Sir Francis Drake's estimated at 130,000,000. A few days ago they received a request from an English law firm for all the facts in connection with their claim. A Sa vannah lawyer is preparing the interest ing documents. CONFESSES ' HE *W RECKED TRAIN, The Man in Jail Who Caused The Statesville Wreck Where 20 Live* Were Losti Atlanta, Ga., [Special.] ?The Rich mond ?& Danville officials are happy over the arrest of a man who ha* confessed that he threw the heavily laden passen ger train of! the track of" the Western Railway of North Carolina in September last near StatesvHic. Twenty lives were lost in the wreck. At first it was thought that tramps had wrecked the train so as to rob the dead, and many of the detectives who went to ? ork on the mystery began on that line. Toe railroad offered $10,0^)0 for th? ar est of the wreckers. "Tom*' IIaney,once Marshal of Games- , v tile, Ga., went to work on the case. Without a day's interval, he kept up his search until trn days ago, wheu he at- I ested John Boyd, a convict who had 1 ?'.v aped fromrthe North Caroliua peni enftarv. Before arresting Boyd the de ective succeeded in finding where he liad left $1,600 and some jewelry which he t ad t .ken frc*A>ersons on the wreck. Through Boyd sfenee the detect'ves secured a completer tory of the wrecking work. In his confession Boyd gave a description of the too's he used, and told >f their hiding places so accurately that ilaney had no trouble in finding them. Ten days ago Boyd was put in j?il in a .North Carolina town. Boyd at first asserted that he did the work alone, but rhe < lfice.- believes that he had some help and is now working on that theory. Blaine Tells a Story on Hi* Health. Washington, D. C.? Blaine told a good story 4'to a jftomiuent citizcn who j for ccrtain reasons, does not want his f name-mentioned," illustrative of the sen sational reports of his sickness which are going about the country, and which he declares are and have been for a year largely imaginary. 4 I have told this story before," said Mr . Blaine, "but not with the present application It .is about a man who was r carrying something across the Fulton street ferry in a box. Every now nnd then he would open the box curiously, peep in, and then close it mysteriously. His action exciteu the attention of a nat uralist who wss seated near him, and who finall^touchfed^H^' on the elbow and 44 'I beg pardon, but I am curious to know what you have got in that box. What is it?' 44 'Oh, I don't want to tell," said the ; m8n. 44 'Well, let me look in' said the natu- j ralist. " Tm afraid to,' replied the stranger, 'it might get all over the boat.' 44 4Is it a savage animal }' 44 'Yes, kills everything.' Then th% , peeped in aga'n. Coming more curious ; tne naturalist begged him to tell its j uame. 44 'Its a >-al-ma-roo,' he said, 'from Central Atrica? a very savage beast; cats men and everything.' 44 -What do you feed it on?" inquired the naturalist. 44 'Snakes, sir; plain snakes.' 44 'But where do you get snakes enough to feed such a ravenous monsterT said the eager man of science. ^ 44 4 Well, sir, ray brother in B ooklyn j has the delirium tremens, and when he ?ecs snakes by the thousand we just ^atch 'em and ? 44 'Oh that won't do,' interrupted the > naturalist; 4you can't feed a beast on im aginary snakes.' vY 44 'Well, the fact is,' said the man, ; - opening the box and blowing in. it, 'don't ! give it awav,- but this] is an ima.inary tal-ma-roo^ ' When the lid was taken off and the box looked into," said Mr. Blaioe, 4 'the cor; espondent discovers thst my sickness ! % an imaginary kril-ma roo." Alliance Election. CfifACO, 111. ? election of officer* of the Farmers' Alwdfc^ook place, and : President Powers, of Nebraska, did not j i gel enough votes for a thfrd term. 1). f . ! Ravens, of Washington, hac^far superior ! strength. On the caucus ballot -the vote stood : Ravens 70, Powers 53. Nebraska thereupon conceded Power V defeat and moved tc make the caucus nomination unanimous.- tThis wa* done forthwith. There waa nothing to: prevent harmony in the rice-presidents" elections 'and the SyM was selected bv acclamation. ? . ^ J^eath of Bev. C. H. Spurge on, London. [Cablegram.] ? A dispatch jost rec^ved frorar Mentone announces the deUhS^Rev. Charles II. Bpurgeoa at 1145 at pign^^c^l |R 1:' JERRY AFTER JERRY. i ? Allianee News and Notes Merest ingly Arranged. V- j ! | '\ Kut? to Crack at the Fireside? Toprcs Of Conversation Throughout The Country. Washwoto*, D. C. -Jerry Simpson I 13 a brick, socks or no socks. He is I having lots of fun in Washington and doing some valuable work. JJe recently introduced a bill to have the agricultural department at Washington aired. Speak to# <>f )t, Jie said: l,I have been as much among the far mers as any man in fcfie country," said -v , "and I know that there is a wide spread opinion among them tb.it the agu cultural department is not conducted Z sqmre or solely in the inter tstsfcf tne farmers. Information from the department which should first reach the .armers are given in advance to nro- I pnetors of bucket shops. Th-m the seeds 1 purchased are old and worthless. The seed houses palm their old stock off -on the government. Th? department is simply the neit of a lotof politicians, who are kept there owing to their influence to htip the Republican party. Now Uncle Jerty Rusk is an old gentleman arid J Would htce to see him stand well with Ilhe,rU^his d Pertinent ! on tbe ieVei an*^Iy j^be interests of ihej. ko? ifc ^d I have confidence in lim.; Possibly the *nS*n TV* rUQ3a?the believe and Uncle Jerry doesn't know it He may be imposed up^o. That is the re* son I want an investigation. f hope 1t an' W4 the farm?rS are mis^e3 and , hat the agricultural d?par ment is run cn.y m their mteiest,for 1 want Uncle Jerry to stand well.1' ?-^ncie Jn California as well as in Kansas and the east he question confronts our peo ple-shall we own the railroads or are Nation - ?WD U3'~Bo3toa New TheFarmrrs' Alliance has never ro Ceded from any proposition. It is flot built that way. It has never been not Par,y-G? So called municipal governments co?t the people more than the Federal govern ment does and to sum it up, it is only to furnish a lot of bums and frauds a job.? Southern Mcrcurv. The great unterrified Democratic party now ba3 a chance to show its hand. The farmers are watching to see hofv long its platform and the pledges of its lexers Farm.U f?rCe-JDaliM (*??) Farm and The men or party who caa and will effectually put through Congress a bill to break the backbone of the money pow er, will merit the everlasting gratitude of the people of this country"-! St. LoUi, Journal of Agriculture. f ?. Jte A1!iance uas Oot come to destroy Punitive principles of the govern meut, but to coiTect abuses, rtjrify the government, and to re-establis? justice ?n<Lth:s, too, without becoming 1 partf 'outhr&.or politicai At the pre ent price of corn it would trains of cars, hoTS 400 oiiihels each reaching across thf State from Colorado to the Missouri riv er, to pay the lnter^st-^ our farm mort sages inr one year{ Oh/how pros ??? e are. ?Kansas Western Advocate. ,, 1 *s only one hope for relief for the laboring classes of tMs country and that is tnrough legislation. The pluto crats are condemn*^ the refJnn El but then tne reform press can stand it as the people are with it Terra n0,w (Ind.) Standard Farmer. "Ute n,,I!^Sr?"eSt,po!iticaI reJo!ution and "??0KO t0 this "-'ion wi.l be w.rifessed during the year 189* iveU'coH"!:3 w"! ! " ,his sayetn not, but we do say the very e\i< te nee of our government uud the freedom o. our people from the degraded servi tude depends upon the patriotic action of the 1 on eat masses at the ballot box. Hea der. you are one nf the peoj le and must Toiler 011 ' Part ? tLe rcsP?nsil;eT- -The We rejoice to announce that Postmas ter General Wanamker has recommended the owne ship and control of the tele graph telephone and express service of the United Stat;--?, and confidently looks to the time w hen we will have a 1 cent postage, 3 cent telephone and 10 cent messages. The new doctrine is spread ing like wild tire and it will continue to spread until monopolistic greed is swept from the face of the earth. Wanamaker has certa'nly been reading th? New Na tion.-* Alliance Echo. Kans is City. The fact that 20,000,000 of people are starving in Russia, where women sell the hair from their heads for small turns to devour foo 3, wjiere famished children devour raga and earth, where whole vil lages arc reduced to solitude, is, indeed, a terrible iucident in this wonderful y?ar but to us the fact t'< at in this city 150,000 p?o?le go to bed every night guests of chamy, cot knowing where a morning meal is to come from, with nothin? whatever to do, hope evtn being dead, 13 a much graver factor In the problem of our to day. --New York Kecoider. When it becomes thoroughly under stood. it will be sect* that the docwroe of Alliance is for a;l the people, and no de ception or trickery about it. It is a doc trine that must be pressed the front, to the end '.hat the old :de.iji, purposes and policy of party ism msy be overthrown peacefully at the ballot box. Bossism has done its work, and it is now time for the people ;o come to cbe lescue, and se cure good government for all. Let the Farmeis" Alliance and Industrial Union ?wake up and put on the whole people. ? The People's Aid. We note with pleasure the advance of the good work going on in Oregon. Less than a year ago the Sub-All ance organ ized in Eastern Oregon, siace then a wouderfifr change has token place, the laboring element of the State are not r?ih in their conclusions, but have givea the matter profound attention. It has been to them a subject of much study and premeditation. The principles of reform have Ixion carefully weighed and * in them a remedy found Whereby the wealth producers can unite and break down those section d lines which will be the means of destroying part? power and bUody shirt rackea. "Old things have pass%d away a^d all havei become new." ? The People's Xy\ . About f 2.000, 000 ware spent in North Carolina/or fertilizers last season. Wheth er this was a wise expenditure or not we j cannot say, but; anyhow raise your owii I supplies and buy legs of everything. VIRGINIA AND CAROLINA BILLS. A Number c? Them Introduced. Strength of ther States1 Militia. WasbixGtof, D. C., [Special.]? I^p resentative Grad$, of North Carolinarin troduced his bill providing for a genera] reduction of salaries of Federal officials] Among olher ; provisions it jiroposeij td reduce the salary of the President of the United State?, after March 4, 1893, to 125,000 a year. Mr. Grady also introduced a bill t<j ?apiend the Interstate Commerce act bo as tovpn)hibit citizens of one State froii ex? torting usurious iuterest froua citizens, of auother State. Mr. Grady says that re? ceutly an agent of a New York inonej lender loaned t. farmer of Nb(th Carolina $JC0 at 8 per cent, interest, and that /the trmsactiod wik so conducted ibaf' th* f irmer who gave the dote fof $800 got only $157 in money. He wants to btealc up this system if he can do it by Federal legislation. ? Mr. Branch introduced a bill to appro priate $7^000 for improving a tributary oi the Pamlico rirer. He also introduced a bill to increase the jurisdiction of Federal courts in re gard to questions of dispute between American sailors and officers of vessels. Mr. Branch says that under Ithe existing law, when sailors are discharged by offi cers of vessels at a port of destination thjs sailors have no recourse, even when in justice is done them; that eviea when the sailor is unjustly discharged or otherwise treated he has no recourse, Th* bift proposeSyto confer jurisdiction upon Federal cobcts of all such questions in volving less thin $100. VIRGINIA BILLS. Representative Upes introduced the following bills: |i?| To rep.al the limitations oa the coin age of silver bullion and to fully restore the siiver dollar to i s former Use and power. To re^al all iotenwi revenue taxes on brandjes^distilled from fruits and to re fund Ch^nroper rebate. To rcpcift-aU internal revenue taxes on tobacco ia all its forms and providing for rebate on unbroken packages. To appropriate $100,000 for the ctfii tinued improvement of the Appomattox river; $25,000 for the construction of ja roadway from Petersburg to Poplar Grove-National cein tery ; to appropriate $35,000 for a public building at Farm ville. * ? Representative Wise appeared before the River and Harbor Committee and made argument in behalf of liberal ap propriations for the James river and other navigable streams in his district STRENGTH OF THE MILITIA. G In accordance with a requirement Ot law, the Secretary of War traasmiltcd to Cong. ess the atnual report of the Adju tant-General, showing the strength of the militia of the different States. The document contains the following figures: Virginia ? Gienerals, 1; general staff, 8. Cavalry: Officers, regimental, field and staff, 11 ; company officers, 18; non-com missioned, GO; musicians, 7; privates, 207. ^>tal cavalr/, 280. Artillery: Regimental field and staff officers,! 7; company officers, 17; non-conynissioned, 56; musicia s, 2; privates, 240. Total artillery, 228. Infantry: Regimental, field an 1 staff oflicersv48; company offi ? cers, 130; non-commissioned, 468'. musi cians, 92; privates, 1,466. Total infan try, 2,026. Number of men available for military duty unorganized, 220,000. North Carolina ? Generals. 2; general staff, 26; cavalry officers, 3; non-com missioned officers, 11; musicitns, 2; pri vates, 21; total calvary, 37. Artillery Officers: Regimental, field and staff, 5; company offieei*^-S.; non-comin'ssioned, . 19; musicians, 2: privates, ST^jtotal artil lery officers and men, 101 Infaoirv: Regimental, field and staff, 39; company I officers, 96; non-commissioned, 295; mu j sicians, 110; privates, -878 ; total infantry, i 1,283. Number of .Lieu available lor | military duty unorganized, 235,000. An English View of th?? Cotton Question. 1 ! The Textile Mcrcurv, of Manchester, England, is afraid that if Southern cot ton planter? reduce the acreage in culti vation the English cotton mills will be able to get their raw material at' {he low prices now prevailing, and so it at* tempts to prove that there is no need to decrease the acreage. In its last issue it ! says: The cotton growers are reported to be in trouble owing to the superabundance of their crop*. We suspect this is a trouble that will be much easier to bear than a great defi iencj^ As an illustra tion take for instanceWhe grain famine in Russia, and th? sufferings this is in flicting upon the poor peasants. Sup pose the cotton crcp had failed in the American States as completely as the grain crop in Russia, what would have been the plight of the growers? We venture to say? a great deal worse than it is at present. Suppose that the cot ton crop and that of last year had been *ach a million bales less than they have been, whilst the same outlay had been made upon theui. Take it that the pres ent decline will represent an "average drop through the two seasons of 20 per cent.? it will certainly not be more? they have had a gain in the p:oduction of 23 per cent, which wjH have left thein a handsome profit. VFhere then is the necessity for the agricultural com missioners of the cotton States to have adopted a joint appeal to the those con cerned to rsduce the cotton acreags by 20 per cent., as v;e learn from Memphis that they have just done? Of course this appeal corresponds to appeals made to spinners and manufacturers in Lanca shire in timc3 of pressure, but is quite destitute of the like justification; and we don't expect ib will be any more success ful; therefore. :thetra^e on this side need not run down jto Liverpool to volunteer L*^d. per pounr. |inore for the raw material they may require We hardly think the motives or facilities for combination among cotton growers cxceed those to be found oa Akis .side, one that a more sue* cessfuf result will attend this appeal. j | ? Chased by Sixty Girls. Chattanooga, Texn., [Special.]? A. rather good looking girl entered the sec ond district schoolhouse and took soma hats. The teacher turnwisH of the girls out after the thief, and the?^itizens wit nessed the novel sight of $i*ty girls < basing a hat -rthief through the stieeta. The thief escaned. Over three htiadred * thousand pranga tr ecs were planted in Mexico last year by planters from California. i " r. ? > - GARZA IS EE EN FORCED. ? The Meiican Revolutionist Means* mpxi J' : Fight. Said to be at Tho Head of a Big* Arcj&y and Will Begin a De? porate War ^February. 1 V < A dispatch his been received from Del Uio, Tex., stating tliat Garza is now Di^the Mexican side of the river near that place and that he ii at the head of an army of from 4,500 to to 5,000 well-arm ed and mounted Mexican revolutionists.. Bands or from 25 to tOO men are join ing him every day. - ; : v 'V "It is futthcr stated in tbe dispatch that Garza means fight, and that the most desperate war Mexico has ever known will be opened by February with in attack by the Garza men on the town of LaS-Vegas, located just across the Hrer from Del Rio TETtSCI TO CAPTURE GARZA. ' ; # Camp Frrzsimtoss, Tex. ?Both the State rangers and tipopa of the United States army are ria^ing their yray in the vicinity ofPena It Is Onderstoood that Garza's rendezvous is located there, ind that the State ranger* wet^is first to discover it As soon as worfl was tele graphed to the A<? jutant-Genehd of Tex as, who is in tbe field that Grtza was lo cated, the entire forces, bgtn State and Federal^ received orders to break camp and march to the 'scene of actiotf. Sak Aktonia, Tnx.-KJa zahas anoth er band ia the Santa Rosa mountain country of from 1,800 to 2,000 men, W-cll ; armed and mounted, under command of I General Francisco Salos, and it fir-a well ! knowh fatt among all Mexicans who try to find 6ut anything about the troubte ; that Garza will hare at least twortfcirds j of the fntiie Mexican population on his iside wljca the matter comes to show up, which will be imnndiately after the tjrst fight will take place. Yesterday eighty five Mexicans in one band, well equipped for war, headed for the Rio Grande to join Garza, passed through Sonora, Sut ton county, Texas. There is great ex citemcnt all along the upper part of ih* border, not only among tfcr Mexicans but among the Americans a* Well Bands of revolutionists meet at Sonor* d^ily and organize. . They are not molested, aid are permitted to proceed on their way to Mexican territory. . AREFORM CONGRESS. . , Representatives of the Alliance, Prohibition and Labor in Chicago^ j Chicago. ? It is safe to aay that such a gathering as that which assembled here Wednesday morning has seldom, it ever, been seen before. It was the Na tional Conference of representatives of the various political reform movements now existing in this country, including prohibitionists, farmers, laborers, Green backers, general reformers, etc. ?ss Francis E. Willard presided and i the object of the Conference to be to devise ways and means of electiug a President of the United State* who will with one blow kill the rum traffic. Among t'-.ose present at the meeting were: Ladv Somerset; Geo. A. Wash burn, of Boston, secretary of the peo ple's party; Gilbert Delemator, of Ak ron, Ohio, a Grecnbacker; Mrs. Anna M. Riggs, of Kansas; Gen. Weaver, of Iowa; A. Wardell and H."L. Loucks, of Huron, South Dakota; Prof. Samuel Dickey, of Albion College, Albion, Mich., and Pres ident Powers, of the Farmers' Alliance. I Dunuelly was down for an open'ng. speech, but failed to appear. The cen tral j^ea is to unite all of these elements on one candidate for the Presidency, and their belief ii that they outnumber either of the regular parties. The meeting was held with closed doors. COLONIZING THEM IN THE SOUTH. 4*-, A New Orleans Committee Provides For 126 Russian Heljrews In Louisiana. New Orleans;' La.,* [Special .1? The families of twenty-seven Russian refugees, cosisting of 125 person arrived here from New York. A committee of leading Hebrews meeting them, secured accom modations for them, and will find work for them. The Hebrews of New Orleans organized the committee for the relief of Russian refugees about a mofcth ago, and have raised aud are still raising money to provide for the refugees. The committee will distribute the im migrants in the country parishes as it can find accommodation for them. As soon as all are provided for the committee wil 1 nnke a requisition on New York for an other party. ^ North Carolina and the World's Fair. The committee on collections, appoint ed by the Board of Agriculture, met in Raleigh. The preliminary arrangements for the educational exhibit were made and the committee will have the co-oper ation of the Supt. of -Public Education in making this exhibit, and the commit tee expects that the exhibit will be such as to represent the entire educational system of the-, State, the public and pri vate schools, the colleges and the Uni versity. The committee also made pre liminary arrangements for gathering to? gether the exhibits in agriculture, horti culture, forestry, mines aid mining, gen eral natural history and nsh and iisheiiee, and the details of this work were turned over to specialists .who will report at an adjourned meeting of the commiltoc on the 13th of next February. The mem bers of the committee present were Pres ident Peter 31. Wilson, Commissioners i John Robinson, T. K. Bruner, Prof. J. A Holmes and Dr#H B. Battle. : m ? - ? ? King- Kotton at Auguata. Augusta, Oa. ? Tue Carnival of Cot ton III. has begun If the expectations of the ardent citizcng arc realized, there is at^hTs moment "no gayer, no more joyous city in the universe thnn Augus ti.n The King was escorted into the city by th? First Georgia Bat'aliou and j by other military and semi military or- < ^'aoizations, amid the ringing of all the j hell, of all the factories, while the streets were crowded w?th ch'ldren in masks and fancy costumes, and the houses dec orated gayly with ibe royal colors,^ pur ple anil orange. Wednesday a great pageant parades on Broad street, and Thursday was the occasion of the King's ball. Great is King Cotton, amf long j may he reign! Great?pT5ikfovcritc city, Augusta, and long may sheiSjunshlj ^ (: V I PENNINGTON'S AIR 8HIP. To Build On* Thai Will Carry $0 Pas senger s Acroa* the Oceania ' One Night. | * . i ? ' t Kashuvqtov, D. C.. [ Special ]? E. -J. Pennington, the inventor <xf the fa mous air ship that beers his name, is io (he city, For the past nine years he has been engaged in stiidving the problem of aerial navigation, and is confident that he has t olved it. Mr. Pennington said ; bat a company comprising tome of the wealthiest! and most progressive citizens or Chicago had beein organized w ith a paid-up capital of $80, 000,000 to build be air ships. j 4 "We/aw/engj-ged io constructing sev c-taL*i!?Uptaes," ht said, 4 'at our works t MountCarmsl, 111., and e'er long will ?roceepKto manufacture a , ship with Jhi^htocross the Atlantic and capable of carrying fifty passengers. The last! vill Require about a year to complete. As* -oon nut lis finished I will cross th? ocean ii itr^rfacti it is perfectly feasible- to n avel iait all; over the globe. We will be able to go through the atmosphere at a rata 0 1 200 miles an hour. A man caii go to sleep 1 I New York and wake up in London. T <erc is hardfy any limit to the uses to xhich it can be put. A farmery living 100 milea from a city conld load up a lot of garden truck, cirry it to market, Ad. fly home? all in two hours time. The maila could be carried from New York to < hicago in five hours. Freight and ;dl kinds of articjes could be let down ii t o bui!d|ings by means of chutes con necting with the roofs. Carrying the mails will be one oft he prime uses of the a)r ship.'1 "And what is ybur ship to be built of?M ; H i "Alumnium, that marvellous metal whose peculiar properties make it espe cj&'ly adapted to aerial machines. It is as light afwater, or nearly so. A sheet of metal will float, though a solid chunk will sink. The botiyancy chamber, car, ^propeller, engine, and entire machine will be made of aluminium." Mr. Pennington's machine will fiy against the wind, and thereby solves a problem that has hitherto baffled all in ventors. The entire scientific world has become interested in his experiments, and he ban had correspondence^ wilh several leading Europ^&a Governments about his air ship. He says ithat Maxim, the fa mous inventor of improved guns, .is at work on a flying machine, in which he is essaying to imitate nature, taking a bird as a model. Mr. Pennington thinks that Maxim will succeed to a limited extent only, though he does not doubt his abili ty to produce a machine that will navi gate the air. So far from injuring the business of railroads, Mr. Pennington ii sure they will be called on Jlo do more traffic than ever. The telegraph did not cause people to cease writingjetters. He contends that his air ship willtrt indefi nitely safer from accidenta*$han the rail road or steamship locomotion, ? j will be greatly cheapened, peeing that no roadbed will have to be kept up and no wear and tear of machinery. TO CURTAIL THE CROP. i | * V ' A Meeting of Merchants and Farm ers to Reduce the Acreage t of Cotton in N. C. Kaleigh, N. C.p [Special ] -In pursu ance with a resolution of the Alliance of Wake couuty at a recent meeting a com mittee appointed by them nipt here with a number of the merchants of the city to consult concerning the cotton acr age question and to ascertain whether they could secure the co operation of tbr merchants in the reduction movement;. The merchants expressed themselves as being in entire harmony with the move ment, and a committee of five was ap pointed from the'r number to act with the Alliance committee1 in preparing resolutions calling for a reduction of the cotton acreage. These resolutions will ? r be submitted for the signatures of all the merchants and business men of Wake couutv. North. Caroling in Congress. ScnaLor Vance lus ^introduced a bill ia the Senate to pay the administratrix of Thomas C. Tatuam, of .Valley Tows, Cherokee county, N. C., $3,820.50? beinj principal and interest on a claim of the deceased for services rendered in 1842 as a surveyor iu surveying the pre-emption rights of the Cherokee Indians in North Carolina. Representative Alexander, of North Carolina, has introduced jn the House the following bills: Providing for tu? erection of a monument to i he memory of Brigadier-GcueriJ William Lee David son; for the construction of a macada mized road to th ; National Cemetery c ar Wilmington. N. C., and to continue the improvement of Town Creek river in Brunswick county, X. C. Representative Williams has presented a petition in the Hoyse for a mail route from Greensboro to Gle-iOua, N. C. Turning to Tobacco. e Many of the Georgia cotton growers, who have been groaning over the low price of their crop, nrc turning their at tention to the tobacco plant, which may possibly be raised in the State with profit. There is now a great demand j . for tobacco seed in Georgia, and the i State Commissioner of Agriculture says that a vast amount, of tobacco will be planted there this year. , The Georgia Commissioners' opinion is that the farmers of the State should raise more grain than they have been in the habit of raising, ajjxL. we guess that this is a se'jsibir <?pmibn. It is an opin ion tint w;h su.stairjed by the Cotton (.'towers' Ccnvcutiou jcceutlv held in Memphis. ) ! ' New Jersey's R R. Commissiofa, TAeston, N. J,, [Special.]-^ Among' the bills recently introduced into the New Jersey ass-mbly is one creating a railroad commission of three members, to be appointed by the Govertor, the j salary of the meiabprs to be$4?& () n year, with a secretary at 42,000, an! attorney at f'2.U>)0, a marshall it $1,000, *qd an "ac jcmrntaut and nn inspector ?dt $1,500 tach. and a clerical force of |3,000 a rear The commission shall have full power t? investigate railroads their freight rate?, etc. The railroads arc to bear the expenses of maintaining tUe com mission. AsmtwooD, Tkn.n. -Col. George W ; 4 F^olk, a brother of th* late Bishop Polk ?nd Mr. Kenneth .Ray tier, of Raleigh. | N. (\, died st his h?>me here Monday, j lii* age wits To and he was a native of ! North Carolina. - 1 THE IiABOl f WORLD, ^work ars. sfili strike has beep ?i rrp b cowtwdtag | Pranoeeost Hollaxb has 10,000 < Labor bureaus Stakes. Denver, Col., has a er?' Union. ft*ZBKJBO>a amicably adjusted^ The English Go?e steel plants in India. A home foraged t International Union The recent strike in 1650,000 in lost mm fifteen days. t - ? The coal induatrv fa utthw to 300,000 persons, to if ham $110,' paid in wage* | ? : * j M TtaiM an 20,000 wt an? in tfae {feitsd f 8tr HtJKDKO girls strook iirslml :tt? In* traduction of stnrchini ;i?e<Woss into the Troy (N. Y J lavndries. ,?!.? The Lancashire (En, iafxft 1 now in their Onion beta tan 41,009 minora The union mi^wwean* amu. Twelvbthocsaxd -imi'-il Sunderland, on , the ClYds, strnok against arednots iii[ofws ?f Is making lard paOs4 taaohias is by which one man wittyade boy; as csn produce as many duced by ten skilled i I* the coM, or whai ak call the temperate par a of lie on the high table Ims* and wages exceedingly oi Ia the southwestern wjirfs women are the {laborer fc rough and tanned wit i the t nen's are de&cate i nd eij the samiseo whih t it is considered* " to play. La.dt Carlisle, of in in homeibenevoleaoe, aid none of her people sb#H[ fifty-one hours days and six on pi^miH ^ series of , given oh her estate thiaw^tec There are among who get but 18.59 w< ___ of expensive education. will bo found to be the muneration for the o near. Of course there 4re> whose annual totals-go Tin conduoton of omnibusaa and other VLr. commodation in Wanar. _ ofJhe city betareen Ncjrsya suturb of fir to fulfil their ? , r,, the better satisfaction|o? '?tobb. NEWSY QLEWf lip a Oca railroads cover <71^000 mi^Cj ? The hroomoorn crop {is h Aort'onek'i : ^ Salvador is inabac why financially, ) S ^The tarpon is biting intoath f|orlda. ? v There are about 1000 Ir^eksin Vew.Tork Chicago's new libra ry building is to?oosf^ $1,750,000 s Micrjga* turned oat 5$ 10,000 battels .c<l salt last year. | Chicago. Ill, has JaBt;had ttja^. pnowfall in years. { ? Cou> weather in th?s $outb set back thsf ) r<y vegetable cropi. { i 4 ;.. ? Kv elevated railroad Is io be bftlfc la Bkf, Janeiro, Brasil, soon. A meteorite flecked with gold1 ha* tola f picked up in California4 |] ? Oxly citizen* who cah read and srfiW an allowed to vpte in Bolh iaj ] f : Nearly 5000 new bo >ks wars published In the United States last] eat*. ? The Baltimore and Ohio added lOQtmlfci of track to its systenfh ssyear. ;l ij {The postal card factory in Bheltoo,0o&tt., u turning out 2, 500, 000 cards ada f. Sta istics show ths t there Is an ot sheep in all the Northern Static Millions of dollars wets Yoi*5c City the other dajy it ? Tv,- kitty-three Httrnasn _ were built In the Unite 1 States d Duawo last year 19* pi " rested in New York Ci^f tor cide. . i Grass in Southern d&p by snow that of starvation. The production of srlvania fields in IMS: 1 <Vt ?(M f_i 1 ah agSUUt IW,IA In England during there were ninety- aix people were killed or inj 'J he spotted hyena biridngfag tral Park Menagerie, Neif Yor* QRy, birth to twins a few days (ago. I ; jyi . ?r ' The Judge of the Sdp^icr Diego County, Cal., has j just Mission Indians may vote, [girott in the fcSTO grow i \m gnm VIW zc-ns. The production of States in 1JJ91 was 2240 pound?, against 1&90. In 189LS5S persons ciied in the ages of 100 and 103 j i$0 139, while three were ities as baring died a years or more of age. Hordes of fbrei Pennsylvania, taking miners there. An o " tary Foster states labor law is cons tan - The annual report land) Fir* Brigade sho berof calls during nearly .nineteen a dart false alarm?. s are pouring into? e plac-*0f America^ report to Btcra-ij the alien contract? violated. the London (Eag4; that the total num- 1 i year ^as 6*15, or Of tha&KM) w?H' >f the lattsr wtra: Were sent through th?l and v4M of the latter w?H malicious calls which fire-alarm posts. The full-rigged saUijog ship bptnmodor^ T. H. Allen has just cSapleted if vsirtron( tliounnd-mile race frotn San Francisco, Cal J beating tbe full-rigged ship Occkwntant Tbe Allen arrive J oateide the Hook, Ne?r York Harbor, completing the voyage in ona? hundred and twelve dsprs. Fa no Yukg, a wealth? Chinaman of diasii; o!is, lud., and j Ida Norton, also Indianapolis, and daughter ^of rent.-, werte married in Chicago, U). Ida 3 nineteen years old, an< at?t i'roui high scho< l?run??ttc. The match I was a of aloS-' incut. All ttio weal^ *? ??* ? 'w werg present. Chineae of Chicago Other People^ Conrealm*. We ought to think of other people'! convenience more Uun soaa ofj|u?<1o. The home is the t?U thoughtfulness ou^lit toMje* J aftd b? cultivated . Qay >fhb cornw laio to breakfast admits that he is guiltf of aii Whiable se!f-in<fylgciice, hut forgets that tie has marred Vho liarmonious flow of the household life vid causcd confusiod and extra work. The other day an im-j kepi Urdu portant committer fifteen w as waiting for tt-n mintffres for one member wlio came ^aunterinjj in at last,! without even an rijjology for causing fifteen men a loss of time that to tbetn was very valuable, besides having put a re strain on their patience and good nature. Common life Is full of jirtt auch; thoughtlessness which causes untold per sonal inconvenience and ofttimes pro duces irritation an^ hurts the hearts of friends. We osght.to train onrselvatf ia all our life to think Hboof other people. ? f'tiijxf i'mfrirr The skin about $500.r7f,0^e o| recently sCearih Maini