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GOD AIVD OUR NATIVE LAND. S( I i< >< >L. L?sS05? FOB. Ba'/yior.. Vlalem, and tife't ' XXV. ? HVJ^?^w,7oCth*d.'. ?*:?:?!.' !i'? : l th?- H<-!v s ; 2*;^C0Td to t- written t ? Sw "ft o?rt>? s ' . "r 2^8 ami ?? for doin^ *>. Th; t?"i tri'-hat * captivity over i"4' vear-. an! ^ r ( * ?? Wv-11 .?*> for t phi onal ilk r* j^ars Mru- the death ??{ ftod had fc^n 1* arirg wi?l: tn?* r, *rith them and warning t . i ; i ?pttiiS?'* 'hey turne l to Hun - :i ? - - r --ly *ou>1 corn" ><?/ . ?:??? m ?? : Joti ... 5 A Rit^HfNcaptivity prophet-. evt-ryAii-r wf*. XXV).. 27-t.\ an I l-r ?i. a. "**rnin.? they bad. an ) b'.? '?? ? * - taught th - people to lau-Li at arid ?Inthe eleventh v^nr of Zekiali, :n the ?gfcnth, tbo ninth day of th'.- uvwitb. i Was broken up." L?u! hig a part oTr an a?:t.ial period ' f ? ?^?' '* -n . including the short interval of Ia?t le3?r;n. did the siege continue and ^city fel'. had -ai l. ::?? 'nay ~ and patiently -h <>vr Hi s !"n ; surTri WrtHis'Spint will not always strive. . . Aocl air the princes of the kin^ o' i 2W*?Bcam.? in and .*at in the mi-idle ^t.-. sits in the .rat" of tue holy city* ^^BpContrrt<?t to thM *P*e hand shall be in th* neck anil the promise t> V rah :m, ??cd shall pos^^ss the gate of his ene **?. xlix.. .J4: xxii., 17*. Ir. was to Israel that one should 'has.- a and two put tej? thousand to . *nd that no mau should stand l>efore &98MD?t. xxxii., 30; Jo?h. i.. 15), but un HPMwI turning away from <?od br.u^s t&s trouble upon them. JWnen Zedekiah, the king of Ju'lah,saw ; _ ?? *ad all the men of war, tti ;n rr. -y fl-d, y?Jt forth out of the city by ni^ht.*' t?as seen in ^.si<jn by the j.ro:ir.et Babylon, and was shown to the PWjfe Of Isjraei. who were ther.> in an object t fcfPOD by the prophet. (K/.ek. xii., !-! ">. > ji-J- ^But th?* <"hf.l deans" arrnv pursued -$hrthem, and overtook Ziilekjan in the ; piaiss of Jericho and brought hirn to Neb a^fea.i^zzar." It t>ein^ the purpo-*: ?>( <t*x1 ?tttttZedekiah should \y taken, it w.isthere ftnpossi We for him tu escape. Perfectly ? ?Isevan an:*ds:t the jjreatest dangers are ?Hwhom God promises to protect, 1 ut there is w> hiding place and no safety for any who rtfcd against Him , They may be sure that tteurtto will iind them out. CSvm. xxxii., sr.. t. "Toen the kinz of Babylon slow ;|*C|0f Zedekiah in Rib'ah before his ^ye>; ilisoth^ king of Babylon slew all the nobles i ..flCJodah.'* if th.> <mldren follow thesifi^ ? cither father anJ^^j!! h * llf'ffy jlriB jofTer punisS ConsfoW 'their lather; fettt who can d^g* elings of a father .. OMapelled to r _ / sufferings of his dull r en Ipi' into which he led !%?n? Let^r uci),irP'in-vnti' <"0U:,l'ler ta!4 ^-?itbet<x\' f' : ?! % *Tlore<*sa Pa^.ut out Zedekiah's eye; 1 *" 1 L " t witTi chains, to carry hi:n to "htis was Jer. xxxii.. 4, and literally fulfilled, although at it might seem <"i : rticult for them t<? Tiire a literal fulfillment. Z^lekiah went to Babylon, he saw. the kin^of Babylon, but ho iCwsaw Baby lop. it is always perfectly 'life to take fi.xi at His word, tnsn Mm ;A> mean just what lb- v\ys. As s?x>n a.s wa jftTTP to^ivo His word some other meanmg ? fain that conveyed by the plain -raejmati tjal sense of the word ??. we ar?? in danger of H$wrtlng it ixxiii., :W) ? i ^ "And the Chaldeans burne I the km:; > jfcewe.'a^d the houses of the people, with nre. Ikfcl brake down the wa'Ls of Jerusalem, iftasthe L.wd swallowe.1 up the habitations ?OfJaob. and cast.lvwu the beauty ot Israel; I Itos Hedid what He had de vised, an 1 tol (m His word command^l in the days i>C ( bid < Lai n 1. '''? Although it was a? fflJwtly the haul of the king ->t Baby .on, ftwas really the nandof the I?rd i.;>->n .lis -retethjK s people Nehemiah weakinx iStwtmv -nv of the Spirit of God t?; tho : fflrophets agaiust Israel, says that < ?o . ? r Sam into the eneniy's hands because they 1 Mild not h?*ar (Neh. ix., ? x 9 "Then Nelaizar-adan, the cap am ot TWeuar.l, carried away ciptive into Uio ItSoo the reuiniifU "i th*: peoole. ^Jvun ? uwl j ?? taken to Habyt.n Tor their ?oo .. -a-.i ' :tm Daniel Kzekiel and others, but th?*s.- ev |?W hurt. X'- reproach and a pr -verb, a taunt and a curs* in all places iJor. sXiV .. s vnri The same ev-nt may prove to some a tltittein" and t<> others a curse. "All things EStog^ther tor 1 to them tha: love Ifioff* iRoni. Viu.. 'JS, 'i'b \ io. "But Naimzar-adan, the cap. am ot itbe'cuaH. lett of the poor -of !thp ^le, iSrt^Sid cot bm- in tn ? land of Ju .ah, >^JJJ^ave them vineyards and hakfc at t'w tS? time " ? >r. as m the margin, in .bat U j? th?, that .h*? mir be a time when it is Wessetl to have i^ttUDic " We are reminde<I <A /epb. m., 1^1 will also lea*- m the mv?st of the-; an 'l ifft*teaand p-^r people, aad they saal pyfet m th^ name ot the I/>rd. v ^, ; ijQ^y \l . "JO, "Bltsstsl be ye p"or, ."t ) ur ! lithe kingdom of God." Though we may . Mir have this world's soods, if we have Jomis JS^b fort?meand etomity. ami ar " feeirs with Him . and when the unU rw ES?t out we shall inherit all. Even tue .imiain of the guard ( "chief e:ce?'utioa^r ' ' -j. T'-n- cruel to many, .-an oulv bring ^hlesang. Msv Jesu.-< be all i>? u>; thou ? e LsSftbrw^i content to wait an 1 -utT>-r ? ?tb Him this little while, proviui _our> ;.v.?? pi. \lrim ?nd strangers here. l.i;e A bra nam : 2Twai contentedly sojourn m the ia?d o_ - ? mi..- owning not a foot of it. ox.-epr per 'Stburial pbev. <vh,le ??? |.,>U for.th., ?iJSVwhich hath foundations, w.v> ? bunker ^KJSkerisUod. Or, like Mo^es, having -'-Sect unt> the recompense ot tn ? reward. ^SKSlUem the reproach of Cnr;st gre-tt H jriches than the treasures m hgyut -,Heo. '} 10 '&? Acts vi?? 5'. There H s :c i a i: Smsras laving up treasure m heaven whether feSShave or.httle here. and tnere issucu a l?Lr a# 'being rich here and awtu.iy lu-r m RSSv (Math. vi.. V.K 2>; Luke x :.. >>. !?T writer earnestly desires foi iaStao r-'X^ ' - :hiit th " " ?EIf>?ml9b and of lau!mayl?>m 'Co: or. better st for ttmt is the fu ?sn s THE PEOPLE'S PARTY. m jf;jL Convention Held and a Ticket ? $? ^ Nominated in Louisiana. J| j Ab?XA.NDRfA, F,a ? The State cinvn | ISOQ of the Pe >ple s p-.rty of LcuisiSa iciili 171 delegates present. The j - f^iowiog State ti -ket was nominated: J for uovern >r. G. W. Bruce; Lieutenant I ^^Erernur. .1. .i. >!:!!?. s<vretary >f State, | ft' V 34- McStrovick ; treasurer. Jo'in Ma- j IHpicp; auditor, John Ilcndricks; pu-v.t I^BfcBdent '->f tdueation. J. I). Pat; i 'attorney general. Judge Wade Haugh. j !.S jj? State executive committee was ap- I p Minted and the convention adjourned. Condition of the N. C. University. Raieigh. N. C . [Special. 1^'Tfce trus *,rZ 0f til- State untyef3itj?)?eld their aa r 5ijjiJ*i?eettn? today. Goveiaer Holt pre ? jidiog- They established a new chair of ?f jociai a^'i politics! science, and placed -j ftesidvtil Winston ia charge of jft. at his o?a request. It ?was officially reported tittt the cash value of the Mary South orebea<4 legacy vrss $37. COO. T:<\ ??. of Oxford, tv is elected chief Jhsd at the cammencejteat. There . 2-il sttrdeiits .pr vsenr. ar.a the ?can ,i shovriog is good. Many more im are to be made in the build GENERAL "STATE NEWS. ' I ? r ? Late Happenings of Importance By j Mail and Wire. ? The Giat of Thres Suites' Doing-3. Carefully Prepared For Our Busy Readers. VIRGINIA. ! The Statr: debt bid has finally passed j both I Ious< s of the liegislatiue. 1 The Farmers' Alliance is organizing a ' stuck company to establish a fertilizer factory at Bla- kstone. Black marble is being mined at Fin- . i castle. Mayer Lehman, of Ne%v Voi k. 1ms pur- I cha?e?l for |U^,SO?> wharves, docks, etc., | in Portsmouth, and other property in j j Norfolk, fi oi" tha ijeabourd Cotton Coin- ; ' press Co. A bill Ls.s been introduced in the leg j 1 islatia e to incorporate the Virginia Farm I in- Co. . | A well iu to be sunk a: T^zcwefl C. ; ? H. for petroleum oil. | > lJinwid<iie county wiil apply to the, I 'eg slat for authority to iasue flOO,- i j OtO of CTSsis f- r the improvements of its ! public roads. i The Virginia Mineral Belt Railroad has applied to the legislature for a ehar I ter. The road is to run from Danville | -through the intervening counties to Fred j ericksburg, and thence to deep water on ' , the; Potom ic river. i Gen. Thos. L. Kosser. ex-Confederate j I cavalry officer, in an open letter to Con- j i gressrnan f^Ferrall. announces himself a I I candidate :or Congre s i-: the seventh j j district, tc succeed that gentleman. The He use committee o-i finance i agreed to report favorably a bill appro- > propriating $3o.000 for Virginia's exhib- j i it at the V orld's Fair. Speaker Crisp was at Fof trass Monroe from Thursday until M?vn<iay nigh*. He ; ! has not fuliy recovered his strength since his tecent illnes? aoti: need? test; and ' ' quiet* * There is a rumor in Virginia that | Auiu!ia Rives-Chanler s pointing a picture j from the lovely model seen iu her own i full-sized mirror. The Grand Lodge of the Knight's of j Pythias of ^'frginia met at tees burg la-t i \ Thorsda^ Tv*o hundred Knights .sat i doxvr^6 the banquet at night. Colonel hi lip T. "Wood in, now gov ernor of the National Soldiers' Home at ' Hampton, Va., was the first enlisted | men to enter Faneuil Hall in April, 1861, j ' in response to the call of President Lin- , i co'u for 75,000 volunteers. The apple growers of Albemarle coin- j j K' have mot with heavy losses lately I , through the failure of a Liverpool com- j [ mission firm, ami. although they sent an attorney over to lo k after their interests, j they realized but 40 cents on the dollar j for their hist several cons gainents. The j The famous Alb'cir.arle pippins raised in j ; this vicinty have long been noted for j i their rich flavor, and are a special favor- I i*e abroad ^-bringing the extreme price j | of $1 j?eyJjyzen. Hsrdly one man in a | thousand in this country, outside of Vir- i j gioia. has ever seen one, and what won der if they brio;f such a- price in foreign j ! markets? No doubt the now sadder and j i w iser fruit- raisers of thin section will | look nearer home for a mr.rket for their | i juicy apples. KOBTH CAROLINA. "Work on Wilmington's electrical street car lino h:is commenced, Asheville his sold $340,000 of 20-year 5 per cent, bends cj Blair & Co., of New York city. The amount of the shortage of Charles Seagle, the young absconding railroad and express agent of Madison, is $800. The merchants' purcaa.se tax has been* declared constitutional by the supreme court. Calvin MeArtan. sheiiff of Harnett, made a complete htate tax settlement, pajiag in $1,780.13. The Department of Agriculture will make a new collection of the building stones of ' he State fur exhibition at the World's Fair. A littl girl was but tied to death near Charlotte last week while playing in a field i:i which her father wS^burning j brush. Figures just made u;? show that Wins- | ton Siden.'s plug tobacco output for 1891 was 11,513. 127 pounds, aga os: 8,437, 020 pounds for 1850. The Wilson Short-cut road reduces the distance north and soutl via the Atlan tic Coa?t Line l?v GO miles. The d>rect through line is now vi i W'ison and Fav ettevilie, leaving V. rtmington oil. The St >(.e chemist's force have thus far made anal y?is of about <>5 brands of fer tilisers. There are four chemists and three clerks at work. At Carbon ton. Moore county, the rev enue people made another capture of a moon shite distillery and the operator. It is developed that the moonshiners put concentrated lye in the liquor they make. A bright future is before Bessemer City. List week ground was broken for a $100,000 cotton factory, a 5C0 room hotel is to be built shortly, a stove works, furniture faetory. steel works nad many other new industries are booked. Fifty tons of I] esse me r ore are shipped daiiv. , A Wake co .nty sharper named Rogers Splayed a trick on a Ra.!ti<-h lawyer. He Se.xouatt-d Louis TTarri? a neighbor, and giving a land mortgage :,'ot $500. When ihetsontv fe 11 due tire lawyer sent the notice and this of course readied the xeai Harris. The bo^tr* H.1rj is is in jail. Governor Holt has ordered a special civil terra of B?rtie Superior Court, to begin 3Iny 9, Judge Brown presiding. A military company iias been formed at Rocky Mt. and commissions were is sued to ,T. L. Arlington, captain : J. D. Odom, first lieutenant, and ^L.Dough trirfge, second lieu'em.nt, ^fenpany D. assigned to the second regimetjt. SOUTH C ABC-UNA. J'l-.lge Kershaw has granted a manda mus in favor of the phosphate"' compa nies of south Carolina, ordering the au ditor of Charleston eonn'y to reduce the ass-?s>ed value of land phosphate rock from ^5 to $3 a ton. Governor Tillman was asked Thursday who was his preference for the Presiden tiai nominee of the Democratic part*. He said that he had no" yt t decided^ but that be was not in favor of Cleveland. The W. C. T. I". Aunual Convention assembi i under the aiu-t auspicious cir ^ c-^>a.aa ii^CoIuinbh> last week witii ~~r fifty delegates in attendance. The Secretary of State has issued com missions for the charter of the Thomas Gold Miain^ Company, with beadquar- i ters at Spartanburg. The Sumpter Guards have loaned Col. ' A R. Chisolm. of New York, president of the Southern Society of New York, j one of thefr most cherished reiics of se- 1 cession, viz. : the regimental battle flag that floated over Fort Sumpter during th-'j bombardment. Dr. Wm, St. C lair Symmers, a yourvc physician formerly of Columbia, but now studying under Dr. Pa.?teur, of the Pas teur Institute of Paris, France, has dis covered a "now chr oncogenic micro or ganism, found in i'r4e vehicles of herpes labra:es bacillus viridiaus." which will no doubt bring him suc< ess and fame in the new field open to him. Dr. Sym mers was graduated with first honors from the universities of Aberdeen and Edinburgh, and will soon end his studies in Paris. Bamberg lias given finely located prop erty. amounting in value to $5 OUO. and an additionawubscriptioQ. of $10,000, to Wofford College, for the purpose of es tablishing and fitting a school tliere. Led by eight or ten influential citizens, the entire c .mmunity joined in tho work Midi great unaninrmv- The building will be begun soon. and it is hoptsd they v ill be ready for use next fall. Bauberg never made a better investment, or one that will make richer returns. Wofford Co'lcgc lias adopted The wise policy of esrabi ishing fitting schools in different sc-ctions of the State ns feeders to the Colie.e. The great need of the State is is i^gii grade preparatory schools. The de mand fur higher education is fully met in the colleges already established. Renewed Confidence in Southern Investments. Tho Manufacturers' Kecord, of Baiti more, in its issue of February 20, says: ''There are many signs of a revival of confidence in Southern investments, and among them are the proposed reorganiza tion by the foremost financiers of the country of the Richmond & West Point Terminal, the large amount of money lately furnished for extensions of the Norfolk 6c Western Railroad, the great improvements involving an expenditure of some millions of dollars by the Chesa peake & Ohio, and the consummation of financial plans for carrying out many de velopment enterprises. The troubles, due in part to low-price cotton, in part to the natural effects of such a world wide panic as we had last year, are now seen to-be, as the Manufacturers' Record has steadily c'aimed, only of a temporary character, and while severe for a time, they in no way destroy the solid founda tion of wealth bised on the Soifth's in comparable natural resources. They may have retarded the development of these resources for a while, but they have only served to show the dangers to be avoid ed. and the result will be a more conser vative and more solid foundation for the gre.it industrial activities of the future. Among the new enterprises reported for tlre-wcek are important railroad exten sions and improvements and mining and manufacturing companies that cover a wide range of industry. In West Vir ginia a $500,000 coal' mining company and a ft, 000, 000 oil and gas company have been incorporated, also two lumber companies, one of $100,000 and one of $ 30,003 capital stock, respectively; Bir mingham, Ala t has a $15,000 company to manufacture wheelbarrows; Hunting ton, Ark , a $50.0(0 improvement com pany; at Llano, Texas, a $50,000 or $60, t/OO iron bridge is to l>e built; Dallas has a $30,000 improvement company; Flori da has a $50 'J. 00 i lumber company and a $150,000 phosph te company ; in Tennes see a now' furnace has just gone into blast ; Mobile has organized a company to build a drydock; Augusta, Ga., a $250,000 woodwork machinery companv; a large rolling mill is to be moved from New Jersey to Baltimore and a plate mill added; Queen City, Texas, has in corporated a $400,000 iron companv: Spartanburg. S C., a $100,000 mining company ; Knoxvillc, Tenn., a $250,000 construction and bridge company; Tex as. a $1,000,000 mining company and a $30, COO mid ar.d gin company, etc." Georgia, Carolina and Northern. A press dispatch from Atlanta, says : The Georgia. Carolina and Northern railroad has been completed to within two miles of Atlanta Trains are Icing run to a point twenty-two miles from Atlanta, and it is expected to complete and open the road by the middle of March. This road is intended as a link in the Seaboard Air Line, composed of the lines controlled by the Seaboard and Roanoke and the Raleigh and Gaston Railroad Companys. The company was organized in 1836 te build a standard gauge rail roa i from Monroe. N. C., to Atlanta. Ga , 280 miles. Work was commenced on the northern end of the line, and it was opened to Chester, S. C., a distance of forty-five miles, in October, 1888. On July 1. 1880, there were is sued $,">.360,00 > lirst mortgage 5 per cent forty-year $1 000 gould coupon bonds, which have become very popular aruoug investors, especially in Baltimore, being considered am.-ug the safest rail road bonds that can be obtained. The Mercantile Tru t and Deposit Company, of Baltimore, is the trustee named in the mortgage and :ntere>t on the bonds is made payable at the Trust Company's ot:ice The Seaboard Air Line is com posed of six railroads, which form a rail j ro.td system whose northern terminus is I at Portsmouth. Vs.. where connection is ! made with the steamers ot the Baltimore Steam Packet Company and the Old Do j minion Steamship Company, and whose i southern terminus wii' be Atlanta, Ga., j as soon a> the Georgia, Carolina and j Nor:fc<rn is completed. Through trains ? wili l>o run between these points via 1 Charlotte. Bobbed Him of Hia Little All. N. Y. C ry. [Special.] ?Charles Frank lin. ex-corvict. and three confederates ; assaulted and robbed Thomas Quiulan in Mott street on the night of the 7th icst., j and robbed him of his little all ? a collar : button and two keys. They then ran j away. Franklin was arrested, and he pleaded guilty in the General Sessions | before Judge Martine of robbery in the 1 first degree Judge Marline sentenced i him i > State prison for eleven yean and | i Gix months. 3 anfor d ? S anf or d. Sasford, Fla. ? The Hon. John San I Cora, member of Congress from the Sara j I toga district, in New York, and Miss < rV.hei Sanford.. daughter of the late Gen. J tl. S. Sanford. were umme&ibCJhe Epis- ! copal church by tlx Right Rev, 1L B. Whipple. Biahop ol }{iaa$5vt&. i FARMERS' ALLIANCE. \ j "Raise Something to Sell" From Ad other Standpoint. I 4 'Oil, It Would be Fun to See a. Con gressman Compelled to 'Raise Something to Stall' Besides Votes." J Washington, P. C.? The -National ; FarmtrfsT Alliance and Industrial Union > has petition^ Congress to remove all I I duty from cotton manufactures; and the ? Angora gott breeders of California want 1 the Government to negotiate wi* h Tur- j j key for a flock of these famous animals, j The Turks refuse to export them, and our j Western friends s.ck ti/tr interposition of Uncle Sain, feenatot'f'f ;bson, of ^ouis iann, Ins introduced a bill creating a : commission to in<juiix* in the present low ! price of agricultural/products? especially i cotton ? and suggest' a remedy. * * * * 4 * * Raleic.ii, N. C. ? The representative! of the county Alliances in this congres- I j sional distr ct who met here e!ected"Eu- j I gene C. Beduingfiold, of Wake, to repre- i | sent the distiict at the great convention at St Louis, in which the fanners" and la- j j borers unions are to participate. i ****** Washington, D. C. ? The Pepartment j Agriculture lias now in press Farmers' Bulletin Xo. 5, which treats in brief atul : practical manner of smut, in oats and I wheat especially, and of the means which , should be adopted by farmers in prcpar | ing the seed so as to avoid injurv to the crop from this c:t;jse. In order to avail [ themselves of lite suggestions therein contained, farmers will waut to receive j fiiis bulletin without anv dclav, and j Special urgency will bt: useil to get it out ^promptly. In the meantime app'iciuts i,should seni in their names and addresses and the bulletin will be mailed to them immediately vn its issue. * * * * ? * Washington, D. C.? Mr. Ot's, of Kan sas, an Alliance member, has introduced a bill to authorize the Secretary of the Treasury to have two billions dollars of paper money duly priuted in denomina tions ranging from $1 to $u03. each bill being absolute money and not iu the form of a promise, to be full 1- gal tender for both public aDd private debts and inter changeable^ par with any other kind of lawful money of the United States. It shad be known as the National Union Loan Fund, and placed in the United States Treasury, subject to the order of the Goyenors of the different Siatcs of the Union. Any State can draw on this fund by paying 1 per cent. 7nie;est per year, and the State can Iohu io its citizeus l on security at a rate of inteiest not to ex ceed 3 per cent, per annum. All draft* made upon the fund shall be made by the Governor and Secretary of the State, witl^ the great seai of the State attached, and i\ conformity with the laws of the I State chnl a full statement of the account j of the State with the National Union i Loan Fund, verified by the Treasurer of | the Sta'e, shall be rendered &emi-annual- j ly to the Secretary of the Treasury of the : United States, and the- interest due paid, i The Secretary of the Treasury shall honor ! all drafts made upon " the fund \ i -to the extent of 50 per cent, of the assessed value of the real es { tate in the State, audit shall be the duty of tho Secretary of the Treasury to rentier an annual report to Congress of the condition of the fund and | the net revenue derived therefrom bv the ? United States. "raise something to sell." In their complaints of hard times and i their petitions for legislative ltlief the i farmers a;.1, of:en met with the advice, "raise something to s-cil. This advice I comes of course, m most instances, from I tlio-SC who nevtr ";aise anything theai i selves, (unless it is 'he devil) but who, ! good, kind souls never think how it sounds, so great is their interest in the ; farmer's welfare. We t o\v rise to ask the question, who raises more than the farmers of the United States? If the amount raised was an u.dex to prosperi ty the farmers would not only be the wealthiest class in this nation but of the world. They not only raise enough for the sixtv-threc millions of people in this country, but uxpott more food thau any other nation in the world. Jf wealth produced remained in tiie hands of tha producers the farmer's name ^ould be Eli. with a big !?' Suppose we apply a a Htt'e of this advice to jsome of those who give it. Take the professional poli tician for instance. Let us all "agree to have him raise "something to sell." Tell him lie will be better of! and "nearer to that station in life to which it has pleased God tV-iU him.': Let^us^be generous and charitable hell) lijrn to "retire to the secluded shades of piivate life" by finding a substitute to Utke the burdeu soine and hocorous dr. lies of office from his shoulders. Poor fellow, he has been a martyr long enough. Then let us take the poor preacher at a salary of $25,000 a year. Advhe him to "raise mo:e to veil. ' Put him where he can raise it. for ' is not a dollar a day enough tn buy bread? Water costs noth ing and a man that cannot live on bread and water is not lit to live. A family may live, lniii;h. love and be happy that eats bread in the nv*r:dr.g with good wa ter. and water and g-?od bread at noon, and water and bread at n ght."' Let him mix a little sweat and brawn at a dollar a day. with his cogitations on the best road to Ileav n It won't hurt him It'll do him good. It may tan him a little' and make wki ts on the inside of his hands, but it will make Lin letter acquainted j with the environments- which surround i the men who "raise something to sell:"' besides God has or lamed tint "in the j sweat of his face he shall cat his bread," | and if he eats a "dollar a day's"' worth, j at the low price it brings at the farm, it j t ciU snake him sweat. Next let us take j the Congressman? the fellow* that don't j want any sub-Treasury and ' land loan ! schemes Give the poor fellow a chance j to "raise something to sell." Give hiiu j the chance in the sLnse manner that.Ietjy i Simpson and Ben ("lover and ethers kind- ' ly gave their opponents. Let them st-. how much of that five thousand dollar j salary thev can make in a yea" by "rais j ing to sell" such things as grow on the ? farm. p. or <i..vi';5. they woukf dream o n:ghts of introducing a bill to colouizr ; the grasshoppers or : i ? | chinch bugs. j They would. caii lustily in their sleep for the committee's :e:?ort of the bill for Gov ernment Build-0g of Mississippi Liver Sprays to Water t Farms in the Sllvsis- I sipoi Vailt-v: or for in? anpciiitiastt of t i * ? 4 - committee to examine in the price of American wheat in Liverpool with ca t of transportation, etc. Oh. it wcu!4 b fuu to see a Ccngraesman compelled to "raise something to sell" besides votes. But the very wealthy?" What shall we say of thq?? What has Jay Gould had to sell that he can count his wealth by millions? Did he raise it? Suppose we apply this advice to; hirn ! Go out upon the farm, Jay, and raise "something to sell."' Suppose he ate nothing. liisclothe? never wore out and he never paid anj taxes. How long would it take him tc Hccumulate a hundred mil'ion dollar#? Hut. what of the editor, the "able edi tor" who siys "there S' cins to be but one remedy, a class of land-owners on one hand, and of tenant farmers on the oth er ?' Come out and bask in the tum mer's sun while the heat is 1^0 in the shade. This is a hoe Take th:s row of cotton now and wojk along the side of me. We're "raising something to sell" at s>ix ceuts a pound. If our crops are not destroyed by breachy isiock, or are not too late or voo early, or blown down by wind, or devoured by bugs, or st ing by flies, or eaten by worms, or carried away by birds, or dug up by jophers or moles, or pulled up by crows, or dr cd up bv tTrfe sun, or drowned out by rain, or lotted iu the field or stack, or heated in the crib, or e.Ucn bv weevils, or they don t ail run to weed or vine or straw or smut or cob, or the rust destroy them, we Bcaa make just thirty-seven and a half cents a day, and with" that and whaS we've got and what we haven't g t and whit we can do without, we may be able to pay the inter est on the mortgage and barely squeeze through. Oh yes, we're "raiding some thing to seli" ? toiiic fellows who get jicb. somehow, after tliey buy it; and come to think these are tin pesky fellow# who are const inly adv'Hng us to "raise more to sell." Well, about the next thing we raise will be ''something to buy with,"? money. We'll kind o' averag* things up a little. . . ? Protection Reaches All. Bein" asked why he is a protectionist, Hon. Henry B. Metcalf, of Uhpde Isl and, replied as follows : "Because for fortv years I hri,ve been both an active business raan and. an ac tual observer of actual events. 1 have read and listened to the theories of *410 opponents of protection and ac.u.illy seen those theories refuted in living ex perience. I have studied the policy and promises of the advocates of protection, and actual evidence, on every hand, confirms those promises. "I have seen it to be an actual fact, abundantly sustained by evidence, that under the system of protection every hour of honest toil purchases more of material comfort for the toiler than is at tainable under any other system, the de gree of such advantage being contin gent upon the completeness and accuracy of the application of the protective sys tem. This advantage comes, directly or indirectly, to all class of toiler*, bo they weavers, spinners, carpenters, painters, machinists, farmers, doctors, editors or teachers. I am con\inced that the system of protection fosiers a spirit, of national self iu .lependencj, such as is indispensable to the highest stand ards of citizenship under a government of the people.'' Committee Program Mapped Out. Wa iiington, D. C. ? It is announced that the intention of the Ways and Means Committee i< to cali up the tariff ques tion in the House early next week. This program would to some ex'ent defer the consideration of the silver question. The silver bill, eivnot be taken up and got out of the way in advance of tkit time. The announcement of the p'ii pose to call up the taiiff ques? tion about the liiit of Match, was made in the Ways and Means Committee at a brief session <>{ the full committee. An agreement was reached among the mem bers of the Committee that the minority should have until a week from Saturday to prepare their report3 againse the three bills, wool, bindi-uj twine, and bagging measures, heretofore- ji'ideied favoiably repoited to the House by a party vote. Chairman Springer then announced that it was intended to call up one of the three bills on Monday following the sub mission of the reports to the House. No objection was manifest d upon the part of the Republicans to the course. The Lumber Hen in New Orleans. New Okleaxs, I,v ? Tiie Southern Lumber Manufactureis' Association ad journed f-ice die after an all day's ses*- ion. Resolutions were adopted against the evils of selling by face measure, preva lent in Alabama and Georgia. Tiie di directors were constituted as t ermaneut price list. The committee with power to change the prices only change in j grades of frtar lift sawed flooring. A memorial to Coi.'gress was adopted ' asking for additional ports on the Gulf . coast. The various virje-presidents were j appoin'ed a committer to solicit sub- | scriptions for the yellow pine exhibit at the World's Fair. Kansas City was named as the next place of me. ting. B B White, of Missouri, was re elected | president: Gee. S. Lac-y. of Louisiana, I vice-president, and M F. McLeocl, of j Jlfcouri, treasur r. A Preacher Whips an Editor. Kai,eigii, N. C., [Special.] ? News ! reached here of a fight between an editor i and a preacher at Tarboro. Two well- | known clergymen of Kccky Mount, near here, had an acrimonious discussion oa ! infant baptism, as a result < f which blows J parsed. J. C. Powell, editorof the Tar boro Southerner. published an account of it One of the revejcr.d gentiemea. Mr. j Love, of the Baptist chinch at Kocky i Mount, went to TarLoro, a :j d there met j editor Powell. lie ?>ked 1" r u correc 1 tion, which was emphatically refused. ; whereupon the preacher and the editor came t > blows i'he editor was knocked down and badly used. Hope it Will Succeed. It has been rumored in cotton rirclc3 for some weeks tii.it .Trhn II. In train h:s formed a very strong fisisr.< inl cmnbina- j tion to bull c tton. A dispat: h from i Liverpool to the New \ ork Jourcai cf . Finance pays: It is stated here upon the authority of one of the most important t'aders that the cc-'r syndicate iz d in New ! York to protect the rotten market lias over $15.000.<.<.;0 at :t> lurk, of which $'J,O01).0!j0 jubst;;ibed here And in J.ri: uon. Wentwcrih. of the London Colo nial Bank, i? said to represent ia Len der. intertets in the deal The manage ment will, however, be nested excia&he iy in John II. inry*u of Vor<. COMPELLING REPARATION. THE CHILEAN TROUBLE SUGGESTS OTHER CASES IN OUR HISTORY. Two Noted Instances? How the Hi njj of Naples Came Down? Captain lngraham and the Austrian \avr. Ia aa article suggested by the trouble with Chile the New York Sun instances., several cases where the United States Davy was called upon to take a tirm stand, against other countries. \\k' quote as folio tV8: - Oae of the most attractive citoi oc curred during Jackson's Administration in 1832. The trouble was with?ltaly, or tnat part of Italy known at that time as the kingdom of Naples. During the years from 1S09 to 1S12, the Neapolitan Government, under Joseph Bonaparte and Murat, the successive Kings or Naplef, had confiscated numerous Ameri can shi|?s and cargoes. The total amount of the Americau claims, as tiled in the State Department, against Naples when Jackson's Administration assumed con trol was $1,734,994. They were held by various insurance companies aud by citizens, principals of Baltimore. De mands for the payinent of these claims had from time to titie been made by o ir Government, but Naples had always re fused to settle them. Jackson's Administration took a de cided stand. The Hon. John Nelson, of Frederick, Md., was appointed AJiuister to Naples and ordered to insist u;>on a settlement. Commodore Dauiel Patter son, who aided in the defence of New Orleans in 1815, was put in command of the Mediterranean squadron and ordered to co-operate with Minister Nelson in en forcing his demands. When Naples persisted in her refusal, a warlike de monstration was decided upon, and Com modore Patterson laid liis plans. The entire force at his command consisted of three fifty-gun frigates aud three twenty gun corvettes. So as not topiecipitate matters too hastily the plan was for tpesfe vessels to appear in the Neapolitan waters one at a time, and instructions were given accordingly. The Braadywine with Minister Nelson on board went first. Mr. Nelson te peated the demands for a settlement, and they were refused. There was nothiug in the appearance of a Yankee envoy and a single ship to trouble King Bornba and his little kiugdom. \ The Brundywine cast anchor iu tac harbor ana the humbled env'oy waited patiently for a few days. Tiieu another American dag appeared on the liorizou, and the frigate United States floated into the harbor and ca*ne to anchor. - Mr. Nelson repeated his demands, and they were again refused. Four days slipped away, and the Stars and Stripe* again appeared on the horizon. King Bomba, looking out from his palace windows, s:iw the tifty-guu frigate Con cord sail into the harbor and drop her anchcr. Then 6igh3 of uneasiness and alarm begau to show themselves. Forts were repaired, troops drilled, and more canuon mouuted on the coast. The de mands were reiterated, but the Neapoli tan Government still refused. Two days later another war ship made her way. into the harbor. It was the John Adams. When the fifth ship sailed gallantly in, the Bourbon Government seemed almost on the point of yielding, but three days later Mr. Nelson sent word home that he was still unable to collect the bill. Just as the sixth sail showed itself on the blue waters, Kiujf B)mba and his Government announced that th.-y would accetlo to the American demands. The negotiations were closed, and interest was guaranteed on installments. The entire squadron remtiued iu the bay of Naples Irom Aug. 23 to Sept. 15. Then the ships sailed away and separated. Another demonstration, perhaps leis imposing than the one just referred to, but quite as spirited and equally success ful, occurred at Smyrna in 1853, when Captain Duncan Nathauiel Ingraham, with a single sloop-of-war, trained his broadsides on a fleet of Austrian war ships. The story was talked about last October, when Captain Ingraham died, but it cannot be too often repaatei. When the revolution of Hungary against Austria was put down, Kossuth, Koszta, and other leading revolutionist:* fled to Smyrna, uud the Turkey Govern ment, after long negotiations, refused to give them up. Koszta soon after came to the United States, and in July, 1X52, declared under oath his intention of be coming an American citizen. The next year Koszta went to Smyrna on business, where he remaiucd for a time undisturbed. He had so iufuuned the Austrian Government against him, however, that a plot wa3 formed to cap ture him. On June 2 J.st, l?53, a band of Greek mercenaries hired by the Aus trian Consul, seized him in Smyrna and carried him off to an Austrian ehip-of war, the Huzzar, then lying in the har bor. On board the vessel Archduke John, brother of the Emperor, was said to be in command. Koszta was put la irons and treated as a criminal. The next day an American slope-of war, the St. Louis, commanded by Cap tain Ingraham, sailed into the harbor. Learning what had happened Captain Ingraham immediately bent on bo n d tht Kuzz'ir and courteously a>ke<l permission to see Koszta. His request was irrante I. and Captain Ingraha a a >ured hinw .l t hat Ko>zta was entitled to the protec tion of the American fl tg. He demanded K<>=zta\s relea-e of the Austrian, commander. When it nns r< - fused he communicated with "the United States oflioia1. C-?n?ul Dnt vri, at Consi*ntino|f!e. \Vhi'?; !;?.* vv:ii wait rnsr tor an auswer six A a-' man war ship? sai.ed into tUe harbor and rame to anchor in positions near the Huzzar. < >.i June before Captain Ingraham iia I received any answer from the American Consul, he noticed unufuil n,'ns <>: ac tivity on board the Huzzar. an 1. before j long she began to get under war. The American Captain made up his j mind immediately. He put the St. j Louis straight m the lluzztr's course, j and cleared his guus for action, i The i Huzzar iiove to, anrl Captian Ingraham 1 went on board and deinmded the mem ing of the Huzzar's action. "We propose to tail f ho:nv," re plied the A'l-irian. " The (' insu! ; a- J ordered us t-< ta.se <?.;r ;?r;> ''.cr to Aui- ; tria." . ??Von *.v i S 1 pardon me," said Captaii Ingraham, "but it you attempt to leave ti.is port with tlut American on board i aLau be coaiptUu'i 10 rt^ort tu tstrctut i ; measures. The Austrian glanced around at the fleet of Austrian-war ships and tlK^sin^'.e American sloop-rtf.war. Then Re'smiled pleasantly, and intimated that the Iiuzzat would do as she i>lea?eJ. Captain In graham bowed and returned to the St. Louu?. lie hi I no sooner reached her deck than he called out: *kClear the guns for notion 1" The Archduke of Austria saw the bat l teries of the St. Louis turned oa him, and he realized that he was iu the wrong. The iiuzg^r was pul about and saile i Lack to ker old anchorage. Word was sent to Captain Iograham that the Aus trian would await the arrival of the iwtc from Mr. Brown. The Consul's note, which came on July 1st, commended Captain lograham's course. aud advised him to take whatever action ha thought the situition de manded. | I j Captain I n graham Wnt a note, to the commander of the lluzzar formally de manding the release of Mr. Ko*zta. Uu luss the prisoner was delivered on board the St. Louis before 4 o'clock the nest1 afternoon Captain Iugraham would take him from the Austrian* by forc?. The Archduke sent back a formal refusal. At 8 o'clock the next morning Captain Ingrahani once more ordered ihe decks cleared for action and trained his batter ies on the lluzzar. The seveu Austrian war vessuls cleared their decks au'd put their men at the ruus. At lrj o'clock. an Austrian officer came to Captain Iugraham and bj^tu to tem porize. Captain Ingraham refused to listen to him. 4 44To avoid the worst," he said, *vlI will agree to let the man be delivered to the French Cousul at Smyrna until you have opportunity to communicate with your Government. But he must be delivered there or I will take him. I have stated the time." At 12 o'clock a boat left the lfuzzir with Ko-zta in it, and aa hour later the French Cousul sent word that Koszta was in his keeping. Then several of the Xustriau war vejscls sailed out of the harbor. Long negotiations between the i two Governments followed, and in the | end Austria admitted that the United States was in the right, and apologize.!. It was just a year after Captain Ingra ham compelled Austria to recognizj?the rights of the United States that another occasion arose where our Government felt obliged to tormiimte negotiations by force of arms. WISE WOUDS. i People who hope arc generally p*opl e who help. A good way to lcara to taVJc is to Ilrst learn to listen. Unbelief never trie j to pull nay'oDly out of tiie ditcli. Backsliding seldom hipp3L.s in ti^nj of trial or adversity. Tue best medicine for self-conceit is to be well introduce 1 to yourself. The soldier who nearer make; any ; inarches or tights is always diss-itisdeJ. Throwing stones and bad word? at people are both prompted by the sami spirit. There are two sides to every qusstioa, but every min believes that his side is right. If the earth were overel with Hovers all the year rout) 1, the bess would bo come liizy. Any fool cm a-Ic questions, but it takes somebody who kuows sjjiethiug to answer them. The m in who is trying to make the world better, is willing that it should become worse. j People who are wrong in their think iu^' are sure to be wrong in their walk ing and talking. K you w.mt to fin I out how much dear do ' there is in a in m, lind oat hj.v he treats his wife. It won't do a bit of good to white wash the well curb, so loug as there is poison in the water. So:ne people's live* are like warm water on a hot (lay. Nice to ioik at, but ooe tnstc is enough. There isn't much good in a man who J tries to be good only because his heal tells him that he ought to. A true friend is one who will not say, HI told you so,*' every time you take a wrong step and feel sjrry for il after ward. Every time you find fault with a neighbor, you are telling somebody that the man wiio wears your ehoc3 is not a; good as he ought to be. Love never takes a sin of any kin 1 in to the house an I shakes binds with it, arid gives it a wricomc seat at her tab!;;, because it is a most influential churac U-r and highly respectable. ? Indianapo lis (lud.) Ram's Horn. IN THE BRITISH HOUSE. j T'ae Government's Irieh Bill Du- > nded. .1 London ob't'grarn says: In the ! i H ?iv of Commons 1,'ndcr Secretary j <?? F'on.ign office, replying j t.i Mf* Jc-nning- . M 1'. said the recip- I i, i ; y between the United . ? t -v and < d? in at Washington hj i ! ! ; ? ?/ in i-i/orinal character, and tlii? i ; <(i iirvu brought oflkinl'y to :he ; t, l- i : the Iirtidi (?Gvernment. >! lijlfi?nr. F ;rst Lord of the Ticks ? ? .!* i . . 1 1 d lived the Iri-ii local govern- i i) . ? : ? t . ill. ?-.d it as explained by hint ! w . i. . I jt (staLi:st e* ? 1 . - L : . ' ' ? well a# conn- i tv i i-i'j: v, i* ,v'fui:( lions solely admin- I i-:j . t i . o. <>{ "'Oh, Oh ' ) Grand j nk-" -.??{riri(jfote would perform judi cial or qu si judicial functions. (He ucwed cries or dissent an laughter among the Liberals and Nationalists j The councils would hava powers in sanitary matters, etc . ami could appoint mem | ? ers on lunatie imii boards, the Vice- ' Cpv appoinri/.'g m: counl number. ( l.'e- ! 'ri-r. c .a.j-btei among the Iriah members > ; '<! r :? j >i ?>? ton^h-s would be fccparate ; ;? 'in.- councils for admit'st-ativ.? uur i $10,000 for Pensacolu. I Washington, I). <;. The Senat' p s<ed h bill appropriating <"? f< r ; uie impioverii/ ut of the ro<d !<> the r.a- j tioual a-HittCry cear Fccsicoia, i'iu. GREAT FIRE IN NEW ORLEANS. 1 " I I j i ? " * 1 The Heaviest ia Tlfeji Years ? Loss, a i . Million and; a Quarter. New Oslevns, I,a1? The most disas trous fire of a decadejswcpt New Orleans Wednesday might, }lorc than $2,000, 000 worth of property is in ruins. At ? 10.30 the alarm was i sounded for a fir* that was discovered ih the immense dry goods house of A. 8. pkhwartz, on Canal' : i J street. By the time (lie Cretucn arrived the flames were bursting through tha roof. The Schwartz building was doomed and: all efforts were directed to saving adjoin ing buildings. At one time the firs i seemed to be under control, nod confined entirely to the buildiiig in which it start ed, but the flames burst through into the ? piyno house of P. !\Ver)ein, and : thfco across to liourbou street.; Kunklc's dry goods house was next, and was soon a. roaring furnace. User's beer garden and the variety theatfe adjoining Hun* ? , klo's were swept away as if u trader box.; The Bourbon street entrance of Holmes' large dry goods store! caught tiro and was. * also soon in ruins. Kreuger's dry goods, houKe ou Canal street burned next? tj' toti.l loss. The loss on stock, as near as can be estimated, are ss follows: A-. IS. Schwartz, dry goods, $500.000;j* # v.. P. Wcrleiu, piauos and musical instru ments, $30,000; Cluverius, drugs, $8,-i *200; itunklc, dry gooJs, $75,000; Ungery \ beer garden, stock Mid building, $32, -j ? ? 000; K. I>. S. Holmes, dry goods, $85, 000; Kuehn, dry goods, 75,000; Hoffman Bros., $18,000; Leonold Lovy, carpets and matting. $50,(1)0; Kreugtr, dr| goods, $30,000; 1 i. IfeUman, dry goods,' ; i $200,000. ? I \7; ' The total loss vriir exceed $1,250,000, ! insurance covered mostly by foreign companies. Local cbm panics will loso about $'.i00,000. Thousands of piopl^ visited the scene n<ixt dsy. Bourbon street is so blocked w|th debris that travel is iuipeded,. Street j-ars canuot pass. V ^ ^Krx lugenieus Kobbcr. Kuhn, the grcai German naturalist, informs that in the year 1799 soma monks who kept |>ce* observing thaii they made unusual noiio lifted up tin hive, when an arrimni llew out, which tt their great surprise ? for they At fir$l took it to be a bat ? proved to be death's head hawk moth, and ho re an bers that several, ssrne years before, been found dead in the hoo Hubcr also, in 1804, discovered tkat made its way iuto his hives and tl of his vicinity aojl tobbod thetn of honey. \4 ' : > ' In Africa, we arotold, if has the eat^i. propensity, which l\ic Hottentoto ol iug, in order to monopolize the honey 01 the wild bees, have in<$uced the colon isti to believe that itinllictea mortal wouo&v This moth has the faculty of oarittng!i remarkable sound,' which. Ruber tup- * poses may produce pn.effc<it on (ho beoi ( somewhat similar to> that produced by t|u ^ voice of their queen. As soon as lit tered, this strikes them motionless, aoc then the moth is ennbLcd to com&ftnuritfc ? impunity much devastation in ttie midfll of myriads of armed bands.*? Casscl'i Magazine. ~v~* 14 The Lacquer Tree. The juice of the lacquer treo is the aatural varnish upon which' depoudi the famous lacquer work of the Japaneso. Specimens of the tree were brought from jL Japan sixteen yam; ago and planted in / the Botanical Garden at Frankfort, Gor* J aiany, where they hare nourished an4~* lave yielded see Is from which thrifty foung trees have tprung. This plaoo aow has thirty-four healthy trees thirty feet high and two feet in circumfcreaoe ; lear the ground. To determine whether .he juice is affected by its changed cou? Jitions, Professor ijeiu has/sent hamplea to Japanese artists for tria^, and is hat-" ing comparative analyses made- by cnil lint chemists. If the reports arc favof. ible, it is expected that the lacquer true A-ill be quite extensively planted in Get* nany, and that Europeans will bo iii- 4 itructed ia the art of lacquering wood by some skilled worker from Japan.? Scientific American, a f. )Vure a 'Sfilrt of Mail. v J ? , i Sergeant Hurkc nnd posse arrested two suspicious looking Kongo's in Chinatown. At the central station it was found that one of the Chinese, Wong Chee, had on a heavy shirt of imtfl, reaching from bill neck to well down his &<ighs.^ His coht weighs about twenty -!ive' pounds, aud ia tnadeYjf double mushes of 6^o*cly woven sleel links. Though thus armored the . Mungal had no weapon. He i^a typical highbinder, and t!ic police thiitfc-taqibo . is a recent arrival from sons* inttfrjt)*? town, lie was clwrged with vagrancy, -is was hi? companion, Wah Chuclc, who is also a highbi?tder.*?-San Fraucisco Chronicle. rr.v-i "? f An English View bf the American Free Silver Agitation. A London cablegram says: Tht Times ijijs a 1 >ng article on the Jiland silver ; b 11. The writer H.iyB : ''Although elec I ti onccrit.g s have htrij cd if, that it I will become a law is improbable. The United (States must eventually choo#e ' bet v. ceii the tirj fcilvei bUtuUrdp, hut the tinyr is not favorable now. The ni^umet.t t\ it the bill will attract gold i ?? ? the price of cottun an/t" ^r.-iio i.iay Miiii <? f i : Southern an T Westeto farm' i*. but it ii i>j ?A:n$y to affect the North " A looted Case Settled. I >e.i M'?inAs. low a ? The Hyde- Hope ?(??' i iv.*. involving the civii tights of a colored man, has been settled in favor of the (iefendent Hopewell. Tiie court aelti that Iiopewel' iiail the ii*ht t?? tu fuse to serve Hyde in hi< re>taurant and that the fact that the latter being a col orejJ^ttian. did not enter into the In oilier words the rcMat;r;?u^ business i^ a-^ private one, like a groccrv or a dry goo-is store, and it differ i. oci a m ion aj.d the proprielor may sull cr not to any one who eutets h;? store. Tho Briceville Minos to Cc< Operative. K.voxvn.j.n, Tesx., -Special.) -Ths ?r.iuf-J of the Trnnfcisec Mining (jompaoy |-i Kriceville will be wotk<d upon the < ; ijH.'at ve j'lan. I hcdctai!1 have been \ijiOn and incorporated i:i a rt .vended ch trtci^ whi^h has b-.'ea lil?nf. 'i'lie mine rs are ;.;!cr.ed to t ike stock -.rid vc taken $10,QOQ. I!aclr B-ilMciil.HT hue twenty njontlis in wh?' J; to pay 'i ir ^l*)f'. The company v. ill ercct r<si dtnres and ni.ow ti.intrs to b'J>- ya hbtul term!.