The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, September 08, 1892, Image 1

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m FTH1 ' - ' ^ A IT he Chesterfimld Advertiser. ! ^JVOL. VIII. CHESTERFIELD C, H., 8, cJtl^jfciDAY, SEPTEMBER 8. 1892. NO. 35*. M BjpFof the University Hettlement jfcutfew York is to aid the aid* * U neighborhood, "without in* ' ,heir #e1f rMl>e?t/' and no i^^Hpnuung ?h* an assumed. Ml in i ^ f _-u -? m^MHousekeepers kfow "boneless ooa Kh," and now a nA*ab? ?* the TTMted Wes Fish OomrnisS^>a anaounoes that tflsbqtaoless shad is ir prooess of stoVaeloa and well adrand*1 toward completion. He does not l^8* his bones in the J .. . _U J..1L eryie way m sue coa,www, y^jut by careful bre^HHB^gSh**11?* | The Seeretary d^C^roMtiry has reV queitod tlid SSos^Hr of Stato to in' struct the United 3tft?? couiular o.1uh everywhere to refuse to oerllfy invoice* of goods oa lad aftet September 1st ae> less the m#rcWaudt?t is laroloei after the metric systeojy This aotloa ie taken ec Information rr?oelved from the ooasale at P*qi? end Lyoni, who say that the t 4tavino" sy?lom of measure meat now ie na? In ^ raace oa invoices of goals ie ' tended (or the United State j, facilitates j frauds on the Custom House, and thai / the metric system would greatly slraplly / ' commercial transactions and facilitati ? comparison of invoices and prices* ' A man up from Venezuela, when lbef hare beau cutting one another's throats in a revolutionary matinee, says of that unhappy country's warriorei "FalstafTs ragged regiment waia't in it with the soldier* down there. They are the hungriest looking creatures ytru over saw. I've given pennies to them on the | streot. They wear linen breeches and an undershirt, and whsn they come into town they wrap their blankets around them to cover their nakedness. They ^ carry old flint-lock muskets. There are a few Remingtons and Winchesters, but mighty few. They have maohetes. inflbhete is a sort of big butoherknife without a point. It is about three laches wide and thirty inchaa long, aad pretty heavy. hey out wood and kill snakes and enemies with machetes. Bomeof them have shoe), but the moat of them wear a leather tola with a strap \ across the heel and too. The bare heels and toes stick out." [ not LfTOOSTOH. KDWAIB Him ? Bennettsvilie, B, 0.? Cheraw, ft. C. Livingston M ?tva *, attorneys at Li-W. i Will practice in all the Courts of lhi<. Fourth circuit. W S. JACKS IN, ?Proprietor of? Uherfew Livery 1 Sale Stables > * \ . < ?ALSO DBALBHS IK? r wag&vs, bug a ibs, harness, road carts, Etc., Eta. er-*e an tilling the cheapest oneb?irae wagons on the market, and our road art* art the best in use for the money. Call on iuS for prices bofore buying elseI ' "* where. ' I " * , . 1 W. Is. TJP1UNCB. W. P. 8TKVKN8ON. PRINCE Sl STEVENSON Ittarneys-at-Laws \ CHERAW, 8. C. Prince ?fc Stevenson. partners in litigated cojurt practice in Chestci field and I Malboro; counties W. F. Stevenson will be dt tbe Chesterfield office the first Mondayt and Taoday thereafter, and he third .Thursday and Friday, thereafer ?f . ujjt month. flLoaka^lalJ IJm A! wnviivniviB niiioniior >. t _ a, _ ?. ^ ^ItOO Fmr Yttf j Lawest Unrfbh( Rata* , .y OIVKM OH APPLICATION. !/ > 1 f Professional arbs. 0. Allen Huggina, I OKM'AI. SUHGEON, < fiitiiiAW* m. c. O. L. Vlck, ' at*"- in' ITO NxlST, ANOTHER MONEY CROP. Jig Culture in the South Easy and Profitable. Rai.bioh, N. O.?The New York papers ay fresh figs are being shipped to New York from California If this is so why can not we here in North Carolina send them in much be'ter condition. To-day (July 22d) figs are retailing in Raleigh markets for twenty-five cents pec peck and the crop from now until frost will be very large. I am going to make an experimental shipment for the benefit of our growers and believe thu they can be shipped in strawberry boxes and crates just as well, or better, thAn strawberries are. Figs all over Eastern North Carolina can be grown as successfully and of as fine quality as anywhere in California, and if we once get our slow people stirred UD to their intercut in the mutter then are aure to "git there1' in the end. The interest in the flg crop is increasing here I hare distributed in the last thee years ovdr 0,000 fig trees from the North Caro Una 8'fttion of our thirty varieties of the choicest figs of Italy and the Levant, and am beginning to see some of the results. | We have had recently San Pearo figs, which weighed a quarter of a pound each. These were of the fir*t crop, which is always largo in size of fruit. Those early figs set in late autumn and remain dormant all winter and swell out i& spring when the winter is not so severe as to injure them. Many of them get nipped by frost and the early crop is never so large as the later ones. -The second i r main crop is now coming on, and is unusually abundant, and will be until frost I havo suggested to onr growers and wish to repeat it here, to take the figs when ripe, but not too soft, wtap each in tissue paper and pack snugly in strawberry boxes, and tnen pack in crates not longer than thirty-two in a crate, and I am sure they will reach the northern cities in good order. | A number of ftfrmers have written to ai^ for directions for drying figs. I have found the following the best plan : Take tfell-ripeued, figs, make a strong lye of hardwood ashes. diD the flora in the lv<*. rinsq nnd wipe dry with a soft cloth, and dry in any of the cheap, portable evaporators. When dry pack in boxes just as figs are packed aoroad. A lye made of washing soda will answer, but is not so good as wood ashes lye. The object is to removo the ucidity of the skins. The figs can also be treated in this way aud then instead of drying, fireserve them in the old-fashioned way, o syrup: Put them up in glass jars with neat lithograph labels and they will "sell like hot cukes." Many a southern lady could make money in tliis way. A little ginger root with theut is an improvement. Here it an industry whieh our Southern people ought surely todevelope. I met one of our leading farmers to day, a member of our Board of Agriculture. He said that our work here has brought ahout a wondHul enthusiasm tot-tlm Sure of cav P*5*"? T?e that jD , is section more ?re being sown than *e"ever knew. Formerly from his station a upml er of car loads were shipped annually to New Orleans for seed, but this year they were hard to get at any price, as the farmers were using the seed on the'.r own land. I had great difficulty in getting seed pease wanted for parties North wno are taking aa interest in the cr^p. Here is another open ing for our Soutl rn folks. Hundreds of farmer* are trying these pease in localities too far North to ripen them well. They are finding them valuable, and the demand will annually increase. Our farmers should grow them not only for the benefit of their soil, but for the sale of seed. You cin not go wrong in this matter. There will be a greater demai)d every year for this valuable crop and our growers should be prepared to meet it. At present the balance of the trade is against the South and many goes away from us northward, but it is in our power, with tbe wonderful variety of crops we can grow to change all this, get the balance on our side and thus make the money stay here. Qrow Kcase for sale of seed, grow pea<e to feed ogs and stop sending money North for bacon; and, finally, grow pease to prepare your land to grow more of everything else. All through tho upper Piedmont country of North Carolina, there is the finest wheat soil, naturally, in this country, and the people are attempting to grow cotton whei^ wheat oq pease fallow would bring them more mod'ey, and would enable them to keep stock and make manure and nil the products of the dairy. I ate to day chees&made at our experiment station by Prof. Emery, finer than can be bought to-day irt Haleigh at twenty cents per pbund. All of Piedmont N. C., can tnako good cheese even if they can not make a market for butter. It will be y happy daV for the hill country when the# nutf t An nn mrvafr ihnfr lan/la nnrl iui..m ...> "? w ...... -w ?* iM SiMiTtn for Iron ^^HRNrgioia. Richmond, Va ?I^^^^HE'ry Court Wo. P. McRae, of^^^H^, and S. 8. Patterson, of Richii^^Hwere appointed receivers for ail the *^Wof the Supreme Sitting of the Order of tjic Iron Hall and its local branches in this 8tate. The assets of the order consist of funds 6n deposit in banks and moneys in the hands of the officers of the local branches in the cities of Richmond, Norfolk and P$ tersburg aod at other points in the State. Bess and Clover Heads. Baeh olo /or head is a ootnpound aggregi tion of flower spikes or tubas, the whole number averaging about sixty-Ave. Each of these contain sugar hot to exceed the live-hundredth paft-of a grain. Therefore the proboeit of a honey bee must be inserted into 500 of theee clover tubes before one single grain of honey can be obtained. Think of the labor involved in the mighty task of oolieetiag one eound of soon sweets. There are 7000 grains in a pound, aod as honey cootains tbreeTowrtbs of its weight of i dan a tlL* m u al t i.tii m. m _ ' ' 4 j* ~ m i&wvbhj^i ALLIANCE BEADING. Prtiident Butter's Annual lessags. To tha Worth Carolina 8tat* Alliance in 8?ion at Qresnsboro. To the if. O. Farmer?' State AUia nee i Brbtqrkk:?Ono year ago you placed your banner in my hands. You placed me in the front of the N. C. division of the great national army of reformers. It was a position of tro>ne >dou% responsibility and I truit I felt in n large degree the gravity of the situation. It wai at a time when the organization was entering the most critical period of its existence, a time when wo and our principles were to be subjected to the supremest crucial test The year has boon a stormy one. Every day, Sundays cxclu led, the Are of the enemy has been poured npon us with mcrciKss force and in an unscrupulous manner. Tho money powei nu leit no stone unturned to crusb the movement and dowu the cry of the weak for mere/ and the dem tad of freeman fot ju tice Today we me t again. Let us set what has bee* accomplished; what the present status of the orga i/.ation is, and what is our duty in the future. Every reform movement has its various stages of growing and development.. Many of those movements sooner or later reach the stage of disintegration and decay. This has been the case when the cause has been slight or local or temporary ot when the people failed tr And the trur cause for a real wrong, and therefore could not apply the true remedy. Thi caose of ihe present movement is deep roo ed and wide spread. It is one that in a large degree affects nlike every laborer and wealth producer of the whole country A portion of those suffering from th? blighting effects of some great influence caused tnem to organize to study tbc situation. They formed themselvt s into a great vigilance committee to search for the cause, a cause that made them poorer while each worked harder created more weal h, a cause that has made poor the people whoso labor has made their country rich. Since this class of men and this cond tion existed in every quarter n.t a. ? ?i? '- .1? ?> tug WUUHJ, VI1C uignuiin'iou toon spread over the whole country. For vears the cause or rather the causes have been simultaneously searched for and studied from Maine to California and from tho lakes to the gulf. The cause or part of the causes were found. The whole organization agreed on them The ) U'llic generally agreed that the evil causes existed We then appealed to the law makers of the country for a rem cdy. Great sympathy was expressed for our condition, but no remedy was offered. The organization then formulated its own remedies for each cause and appea'ed to the la* ntakers to give us these remedies. They found fault with our remedies. We then demanded that they should give those demanded or l ciuuig belter. ' That waia 'fair." For if the wrongs exist, if unjust and oppressive laws are on the statute books, it is the duty of our law makers to give us relief, to give us our remedy or a better one. Up to date the demands of the people have been ignored, while every rcquat of the monopoly corporations and the ino.iey power has been promptly agreed to. We have just realized that the organization cirae too lato for justice to be gotten by petition. * * * THE RALEIGH CONFERENCE. On April 17ch I called a conference of me Aiiniuce oi tne State through one representative from each county. I did it in the interests of our principles and the cause .of r. forin. While at times during the year innny of us (though a unit in thought) have differed in judgements as to methods, yet today the organization t is practically a unit in action as well as thought.: 1 b lievo that the (guidance of * divine hand has turned whnt at times seemed to be mistakes, into blessiDgs. Our seeming error* have proved to be the essence of wis Won, for by what methods couid we have have been stronger than we are Sudsy} Therefore let us at all times have that chat i y of opinion for each brother, for we may honestly diffet, that we have a right to expect from each other brother. DBSTfl Or CO!.. POLK. During the year the organization. National as well as Slate, has suffered an irreparable loss, and each member lias felt a sore berea%pm nt by the untimely death of our great and beloved lender, Col. L. L. Polk Wo have never knowu a purer man, nor has any organization ever been blessed with a more ardent, devoted and loyal leader, yet his charity toward thoae ( who differed with him in opinion, and 1 his spiri . of fairness toward those who opposed him was almost superhuman. His urea', work and his magnificent example lives after him. and is today an inspiration to every informer havo (ho corn-age of his co ivictions and to carry on the work for humanity so grandly and heroically begun. Let us build a fitting montira nt to his memory, but bis greatest monument will be the olace ho noias in tue hearts of his people Let his Inst words ever be the motto of the hour, "Do jour duty." JUMPING FOE LIFE. The Big- Hotel st White Sulphur Springs Destroyed Ashkviixk, N. C.?The Belmont Hotel, st White Sulphur 8| ring?, Are miles from the city, was destroyed At midnight by a Are which broke out in the laun 'ry and spread with great rapid itv. There were nearly 200 guests in th? house a* the time, many of them jumped from the windows. Mis. Dr. Von Ruck, of Asheville, was badly injured, and died Thursday morning. Charles Urecn, of New Orleans, bad a leg d slocAted. Clerk Henderson nlso had a le< dislocat- I ed, aud a colored nurse a leg broken. A few others were slightly bruised, but none seriou'ly hurt. A<l the guests lost their baggage and some of them .other personal belongings. A good many diamonds and a goed deal of money were loet in the fire, numbers of those in the building ssosping only in their night clothes. The guest4 made their way, es best tney could, to Asbetille, where they were fhade Com| fortable. * The hotel property was owned by s ' corporation and leased to Dr. Von. Ruck The building w/? erected at a oust of I {oS'onitl1141 * inaorsucs of |W, THREE STAT^tSlEFa' Telegraphio Dispatched Fro* Many Points of Interest The Fields of Vitfial |?rth uM South O&roliM fcufMIl aiesnedFW There nre nbout cut on ft strike At Pocahontas at present. The nAtionnl archery toiToaracnt be. no at Old Point Comfort * Thursday, an nearly all the clubs la the United Suite hare representative* present. Col. John M. Brook en brough died ai bin residence in Richmond He w a 02 years of age ai.d a native of iiiebmond county. Ho commanded the 40th Virginia regiment in the war tip to Qettys Mrs Ye, wife of tha'Q^pan secretary, has cot-been well for son^^nonths | nst, and will leave WashinH^M^Ptemher 5th for a visit to her homevZiVrea, to v hich co'in'ty she will be accompanied by Miss Davis, of Abingdon, Va.,fwho will go as a missionary. they wi'l sail flcptembei 17th from San Fiancisco.. . v A fa al and sb gular accident occurred on board the train a ter it left Quantico for Frederi ksburg Saturday evening, by which a colored woman bad h- r neck broken Sbe wasou hrr v j?y fr in Washington to her home, acar 1 hooka stfition. After the train left Quantlco she Attempted to pass through the ?ar, when by a sudden lurch of the train she was thrown viol n'tIy agnindt the buch jof one The residence of R. 1). Ross at Asheboro was burned Tuesday. The Rowan CountT Fair will be held in Salisbury October 4-7. Guy Maxwell, ag?4 23, was drowned 10 Lake Fortyth atytMiavl.otie, Friday A you g lady, MJim Ka^ iPat'er, was killed by lightn'ng at F*nJUjrVi Turuout, Brunswick county. The aggregate valuation >vWU?e property in Forsyth coontv, is b?wa by th? taxlisters, is $?,ft?9,A% jfine property held by the whito cllt|$p*lto rated at 17,400,608, and the a^Srffl people at $122,723. Dr. Kemp P. Bailiff theVState Un irersity, has accented M invitation to deliver the historical a&cff&l at Raleigh's centennial celebration on October 19th 11 s tubject as assigned by the committee will bi "The Fiist Hundred Years of Ruleigh." The convention of oystsp' growets was held at Ocracoke last week. Resolutions were adopted and ordered to*be present d to the Legislature nety winter that tho oyaterman were opp^sd to scraping or dredging of any kind on oyster grounds. Two Second AdventAtV* man and his wife, havafbeen '"SP'r^S r"""*in(jat Christian chaple, in LCnoif county, for about three months past. I Their church now has * membership of al)out 140. The meetings are very seusatioiwl, the people fulling on the floor in ttancei, -.'in. Three young men of that sectioai hava been ordained ministers of this ehsreh. SOUTH OAROXdHAt Charleston has quarantined against tht cholera. jL.ieuc. uotntnanuer wml W. Hhodet has been ordered to dutjaf the Mftl ?Ution at Port Royal, SC.- ' The acreage of sea islanAcotton fas the State is 12 to 15 per csolUeM than las* A little boy named Joh^Jleldow was drowned in Colonial LskeiMOharl^teu, Thursday. W , Fairfield county fair wA be held at Winnsboro October 2T-28%Whe 'Rich* land fair will open at ColdBGia on Nov. The Geo getown Kice]f<Jt has recently put eleven Kngleburg rtce bullera i?i its mill at a coat of $4,000. Tho acreage in rice is increasing. ,?r ; OTHJBB "TAIflfr. N A coroner's jury at NsSlivitV, Teup , I Investigated the ldllicg of J Fl. Taylor, a horse thief, and returnees verdict that Sheriff Hill was justified in killing the man. A man at Macon, Gn., has a $10 note of the State of North Carolina, printed in 1788. While he is rather proud of his treasure ss a curiosity he cannot help cal cula'ing the compound iatcrest he tins lost by the money lying there uneinp ojyed. To Invite Senator Hill to Topeka. [From the Kansas City Titles.] Topbxa, Kan.?The Knisas Democratic Flambeau Club of TopeV* at a m?etI ing voted to invite Seuator David B. Hill | of New York to visitTopefcfthis fall and I > be their guest For. tbi^purpose the * following committee on Xvitatinn ? I appointed with order* to toport at the I next regular meeting: '.fudge John Mar in, Major R L. lk>fr<n, C. K. Hoiliday, Jr.. Eugene Hagan, lugeae Wolfe, S B. Isjohart, the Hoi M Tlccry, Rankin Mason, John Mileham/ and A. J. Arnold. ^ ja tndlan* Beanp in Bo^th Carolina. RocKTiLua. IkD ?Jan. H. Morrow, a well*known horae jockey elf Washington, waa arreated and lodged in jail here charged with producing abottio# upon a wo man at Columbia, 8. C., some maniha ago and from which it is reported alio died. A letter waa received by the au thoritiea bene aome weeka ago to keep a lookout foe him; as he had been indicted for the offenee at Columbia.. The South Carolina authorities have been notified by telegraph. l I f"*' Two Roads Didn'CT Sign. Ati*amta,Ga.?The SwUmo) Steamship and railway Association a^Krned after nearly all the roads of VirApia, the Carolinaa, Tennessee, Georj^^Aod Florida signing, the Cinciuna^^^^Mpr" and the Alabama Grnat South^^^Bigfailed to sign the agreement. ^^^^Mrink baa aevan days in which td^^^^Ahis mind The impress on am>ngl|^^^Ktatbert is that thaw will be a JjHflBooycitt of tbe*0 roads unless Major Flnlt givain. ? The Strika Bnded. BinrTAl.o. M. Y.?Tho switchmen's strike la officially fltolaiwd off. Effective At midnight ; " iv*. , [jr.. J* * . m %* smm-1 w A ROMAN^ BULL. The Pope Dismisses Cardinal 11 ug 1 giero in Disgrace. All Germany's Sons Must Learn the Art of War. Bays Xmperor William. Rotfs, Italy. - Great excitement 1ms been caused by the dismissal of Cardiunl , Ruggiero, Prefect of Financial Alfa:rs of 1 the Pro^ngnnda.nnd who has lteen looked upon as the probable sncces-or of PopLeo XIII. It is said tl at the Pope himself ordered Ruggiero's dismissal, being convinced, as a result of inquiry, that Ruggiero, and not Monaiguor Folchi, was the really guilty - putty in connection with the misinvestments, to use a mild term, for which Mo; signer Folchi was diunis ed from the Paunl service about a year ago. The diYUTOsnl of Folchi was brought about, it is said, by Cardinal PlfanrisSA ? ffrtlslll tsrae H t .. S .. **H6A,V'V & vivm i*i i?/?-v?ininuti iniu to the Pope, nod hnd con' rol of the Pupal unds. It was alleged that, io the winter < f 1890-91, Monsignor Folchi, supported by Prince Buotioompagni and B*ron Lszzarooi, resolved, in order to sa\c tinBanco di Roma, in which the Vatican held 10,000 out of 12.0C0 shares, besides other securitits, to establsh first iu Paris and London, nod afterward in Rome Berlin and New York, a syndicate of Catholic bank*. with the object of abso blng the iitinncinl societies of Rome tli t were known to be m a disastrous condition, and to icatore them to vitality, while at the same time laising the vnlmof the depreciated securities. Above all they wanted to save the Banco di Rotua. intending,as they eventually did, entirely to reconstruct It. The scandal arising out of the aftatr has already been made imblic. Later investigations appear to have exonerated Folchi and implicated Huggiero. There is great excitement in church circles, and it is generally bp icved that a tremendous scandal > awaiting disclosure. Bkrlin, Okiimany.?It is announced semi-ofllcially that the Emperor's speech at the Emperor Fran Josef's banquet liabeen misquoted and distorted, and that the declaration that he has been credited with making against Caprivi's military bill was ODly a conditional one What the Emperor really aaid was that the Oerman people could not expect to have the service-term reduced to two years un less they were willing to pay for it. The numerical increase of the army, in sccoid ancc with the two-year service pi n must be accompanied by increase of np propriations, otherwise the efficiency of urmy would be impaired. If the people refuse to grant such an increase the Emperor's preference was for an army of the present size, rath r th?n for one of more men yet with inferior equipment and discipline. A CLOUD-BURST AT ROANOKE " * Over $100,000 Damage Done and a Kan Drowned. Roanoke, Va.?A cloud burst over this city at 0.80 Monday night and rain fell in torrents over four houts,filling cellars and lower floors of business houses on Campbell and 8alem avenues and Nelson, Jefferson, Henry and Commerce streets. Doors were burst open, windows crushed in by floating debris and goods washed away. The loss in goods damaged will reach $100,000. Many buildings are seriously damaged by the un d rinining of foundations. Barney Smith in trying to cross Salem avenus stepped into au excavation for a sewer ana was drowned. Policeman Peck lost his fo iting there and fell in and was pulled out insensible. It is said that other people have been drowned, but the report cannot be verified. Men > nd horses travelling the flooded streets were compelled to swim. The electric light station was flooded. The electric cars are not running. and it will bo a week before light* ancT power for the operation of machinery in many establishments can be supplied. The storm was confine J principally to Roanoke. Six miles westward there was only a sprinkle. Farrae s two miles South of the city were nloughiug, and north and east the rainfall was very light Waa Afraid He'd Be Elected. Jackson, Mus. ?The Rev. J. H. Gambrell, the Baptist minister who was some weeks since nominated forCongiess in this district by the People's party, has withdiawn. He gives the strange reason that he thinks he will be elected if he remains a candidate He says he cannot afford to give up his chinch and go to Congr sj, and that his former ci ndidacy was foi tlu* purpose of assisting in the reform inovemci.t. His reason is tlu thenie of much diverse criticism. Richmond's Chamber of Commerce. tiiCiiMOND, Va.?The come--stoneof I lie chamber of committee was laid iu dti^ dasonio form at 3 o'clock. The grand ?>dge of Masons a* 3:30 proceeded to the ? U\ corner Main and Ninth streets, the K- iglits Templar actiug ns escorts. The address was delivered by Colonel John IV Purcell in behalf of the chamber. A Mountain Cave Hospital. Mrmpiiis, Tjcnn.?A special from Coal Prruili aiva 11 mnnntainnnr ovrtt'nrl lioro b inking information of the discovery of n ho pital in the mountains a few miles from Coal Creek which the miners have im rovised into a cave. He says he saw 21 deud bodies there and a large number wounded. _______ Used Her Dress to Take Her Idfis. New York, N. Y.?Mary Burns, aged /82, of 42 Christie street, was arrested on the Bowery last night for being drunk s* d dis rderly. She was locked up in 'the station house and this morning was found dead. She had torn her dress into sh i ds and hanged herself to the bars of the window. To Prison for Hugging Oirle. Nyack. N Y.- Ju-tice Matthews of this place seut John Lampkeof Brooklyn to Rockland county jail for two months for hugging girls on the street. .First Frost in New Hampshire. Concord, N U Aug. 23. ?The first frost of th ? season pro yd led it) thii laity this morning. / THE DBEAD CHOLERA. (J. S. Government Precautions to Prevent its Coming Here. People Dyini By the Thoueande in Oermany. Persia and Buaaia. Washington, D. C.?The State Dep rtment received further advices re'ativc to the cholera, of a very disquieting nature. The vice consul general at Teheran, Mr. Fox, son of a prominent newspaper man at Washington, D. (!.. na\s the esti mated deaths in Persia are 35,000; 5,000 in Mesched, IS,000 iu Tabriz., 8,000 in Teheran and 10,000in other'plnces His appeals for assistance to the American hospital in Teheran have already been maac public. * The consul at Hamberg telegraphs that A 1 iL tsl At. - A .fA_ 1 U A 1 L me ?um nuea 01 wai city uuiuu may i Asiatic cholera hu been prevalent therfb since August 18th, and t h jtf- <fp 10 Ab?uat 83d there were 891 cases and 75 deaths. Nevertheless, the fact of the existence of cholera thero was denied, u,> to August 28d, just as it is uow also denied at Havr.,*. The attempt to suppress accurate informs'ion occasions much uueasineis to health officers here. THE DREAD pestilence in hamburg. Hamburg, Germany. ? One hundred and sixty-nine bodies of cholera victims are awaiting burial in this city. So great is the terror caused by the cholera that it is d fficnlt to get men for the work of burying the dead and many assistants of undertakers have deserted* their places. Business is prostrate and shipping is going to other ports. So serious u the panic thnt Russian immigrants now in the city lind it ditli culty to procure food, as everybody tries to avoid them. At Altena the army surgeons have been ordered by their superiors to assist the civilian doctors in caring for the cholera victims. an! whip in a state of terror. Antwerp, Holland.?The excitement in this city over the outbreak of cholera is increasing. There little doubt that the dise- ec was brought here by vessels from eastern Europe. The first victims were dock laborers. They were taken to the hospitals, where the doctors stated that it was ordinary cholera nud th t nothing was to be dreaded from it. The disease, 1 1 At I I* 1 uumuTcr, aurcau nuu iin: (iiidih; uccjiiur alarmed. The first victims died almost immediately after entering the hospital and the appearance of the bodies showed the disease to be Asiatic choh ra. london moving against tiie ciiol.kra London.?The health commTtce of the municipality held a meeting to consider precautions against the cholera. It was announced that all the steamship lines proposed to suspend their immigration tiaffic until the danger from cholera: should be over. re MAS xkached Albion's sitobjcs. ' London.?The Asiatic cholera has arrived in England. The steamer Gemma from Hamburg has entered at Gravcsend bringing several cases of the plague. Two women on the steamer have died from the cholera and another victim, a man, is improving. The news causes great consternation at Gravescnd. Paris.?At Havre forty-eight fresh cases of cholera and 21 deaths are reported. RUSSIAN TRADE CUT OFF. Konigsbbho. ?The government has ordered the suspension of all traffic on the Russian frontier except at Eydtkumen and Prostken. A multitude of intending emigrants have been stopped at points on the frontier and driven back to Russia. FEARFUL CHOLERA MORTALITY IN RUSSIASr. Petersburg.?Thursday. ing to the official returns, Jjjfere were 0,822 now cases of cholenv^figainst 5,070 on Wednesday. Ycstvrd^ there were 2.077 deaths reported against 2,748 for Wednesday. In St. Petersburg there were N>nnrt/)d Ifl.t n?w oi r-- - ?uu ait deaths. steamship votaqk8 affected. London. ?1The Hamburg A nu-rican steamship Columbia will not proceed to Hamburg She is unloading here and will start for New York 011 Saturday The steamship Normandie, of the same line, will not be allowed to land, it is said, although she declined to take on board 400 emigrants who applied for pussage. "No Mormons Need Apply." Richmond, Va. ? Pursuant to adjournment a meeting of the citizens of Hanover county was held at Weaver Dam depot on Saturday to take into consideration the "Mormon settlement." It was re solv?d that no Mormonism would Ire tolerated and a committee was appointed t ? acort the Mormons to the border of the county which was promptly done, and upon promise of the elders not to return they were released. Ran Away With Hia Mother-in-Law. Salem, Va. ?A citizen of this place has been placed in a curious predicament by the nc'ion of his sou in law. The latter, who lives with his father-in law and works at the mines of the Snleiu Furoa- ce Company, returned 1 nine a few nights ngo and eloped with his motherin law. The 'ather in-tnw Ins ins ituted a silk for divorce on the gr..11...I <>i desertion. Mr. Cleveland Won't Oo Stumping. DC7.7.A IID'H MAY, MAS*. -KXPresident Cleveland has felt oblige.I to decline nil invita ions to jnnkc political speeches. from whaccr put of tlie country they come. He does not expect to make a political sp eeh (lMiinu the campaign. Charleston, 8 C., is tnak'ng soundings to d*epen its hnibor, so as to admit the biggest ocean ships. Dr. Le lie R. Keeler, of bi ch'oiidc of god fame, has sued the L itdon Ijancet for libel. Ih Louisiana Lotteiy w ill remai . New Orleans. One man out o.' every twenty-five copies hU own ho\m In Eaglto<l? i . PRETTY POLITICS. Interesting Events {from All Over The Field. Nominations For Congress and Stats Tickets Made at a Lively Rate. A convention of Ohio Democratic colored men will be held at Akron on September 15-10. Lynchburg, Va.?The Democratic nominating convention for the Sixth District nominated Hon. Paul C. Edmunds for rc-elcction by acclamation. At Richmond, Va., the Third party district met and nominated Walter E. \ Orant for Congress. ^ II jli'ilu inn illn, Yfl , iftf ^ ?|f| Poiigreasionarconvention for the Fifth nominated Claude A .Swansea of Pittsylvania county. ?' . , ^^5 Rat.eigii, N. C.?John S- Henderson was renominated for Congress by acclamation by Democrats of tb<* Seventh District. Frank Koonca is nominated for Congress by the Third party in the Third District. The number o! voters registered in Mississippi and entitled to take part in the November eleeticu is about 80,000, of whom 0,000 are negroes. It is estimated that 94 per cent. of the negroes -? failed to register. Col. \V. P. Ilreekcnridgc has Ajecu oflieially declared the Democratic nominee for Congress from Ashland district in Kentucky, no cundidate having appeared against him. Senator IIulc stated in nn interview that Mr. Hlainc will, If physically able, deliver two or three speeches during the cuinpsign in Maine; otherwise he will express his views in a letter. v~" The "Washington Democratic ( invention at Olympia nominated II.""?'? >'ntvelly of Yakima, for Governor; J. 1ft. Monday for Cougress; II. (\ Wi son for Lieutenant Governor, and II. K. Ilannn and II. W. Blinker for the Supreme bench. During the session of the Kentucky Legislature a Senator said that any man who said the journal was incorrect 'died from the tip of his ljing tongue to the bottom of his black, bribe-taking heart," and that he was astonished that the Senate would tolerate such a member who camo into tho Senate "bleary eyed and incapable of comprehending the business before it." When he was called to order ho "disclaimed any iutention of being personal." TWO PUGILISTS IN A ROW. Corbett and McCaffrey Nearly Coma txyBlows?The "Chip on the Shoulder." ? XT X' r..i T Tt -T \ J 1 flllK, n. J. JUUK'.t ?|. I belt. the California pugilist. and Domi- v neck McCaffrey, who is now acting as boxing instructor in the Manhattan Club, nearly came to blows at the Madison Square Garden. McCaffrey came to the garden to accept an offer that has appeared in several papers by which Corbctt was to stop McCaffrey in 4 rounds on September 12, at the Manhattan Club. Corbctt denied that he had made any such offer, whereupon McCaffrey exclaimed: "Why, it has been in all the papers." at the same time tapping Corbctt on the arm with a folded newspaper he was carrying. "Don't you touch me!" cried Corbctt, excitedly; "keep that paper off of me!" "Does it hurt you" asked Domineck sarcasti :ioij?JV7" At that Corbctt made a i$mrtig*fhrough'P draw back his right MSnd for a blow, bit' his better judment prevailed and he onlj remarked: "Don't try to monkey with me9r l'ff chuck you out of that window." \ "I guess I can protect mj^dV replied McCaffrey. v_ Curbctt flnully offered to ItoT^L-Caf n) | frcy four rounds before the Club giving the largest purse, the man having the " best of it to get the decision and would bet the amount of the nurse that he would knock Domincck out. McCaffrey unswcred that he only intended to accept Corbett'H original proposition and after a lot of talk it fell through. TILLMAN ELECTED. South CArolinas's Present Governor Carries the Primaries. Com .miua, S. C.? Returns are coming in slowly. The towns arc largely in the majority for the Shcppard or Conservative ticket: whereas Tillman and his ticket have their chief strength in the country districts. Iteports coming in from the towns put Shcppard in the lead. At the Democratic primaries in this Chester county Hemphill, for Congress, carried the county by 400. Tillman, for Governor. 500 majority. Returns indicate that Tillman has carried Greenville county by from '100 to 500 majority. The indications arc that Tillman will carry York county by not less than 700 majority. The race between Hemphill ami Strait is so close that it is impossible to my who will get the majority. Hemphill's friends are most hopeful. A feature of the balloting in Columbia was the refusal of the managers of the ..l.w*:.... nllnm 1 If I f?^l. I * 1111,111111 Ml Hliwt) I I). IU1>I\CII 111 vote. Col llaskcll is the mini who led the independent Democratic inovenicnt. ngainst Tillinnu two year* ago. When asked if he was entitled to vote he replied that he had been a Democrat nil his life and had been a member of a elub for ten years. Being asked if he would pledge himself to abide the result and support the nominee he replied ' [ decline to pledge myself to abide the result of the primary and to support the nominees of the party, such pledging at the primnry e'cctioiis being against the fundamental principles of a republican form of government, against the rights of free men and in violation of Bonn i Democracy." MacRne Associate Justice. Hai.kioii, N. C.?Gov. Holt has appointed James C. McRae, of Fayctteville to be Associate Juat'ce of the Supreme court, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Judge David Davit. Henry W. Grndy, only son of the la mooted Henry W. Grady, will enter the fniveraity iu Virgiuiu la October. ^ 49* ^