University of South Carolina Libraries
CAMDEN, S. C? FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1892 :8o/isc. : tweivci rvei th< ,xix, 8. i Spirit; lich w? ler# i?t, tbaton eivetbo Ethy wickaJ the thought ires the*-.1* (5 and merry . cxxx., 4, 7; Mice .;chaptae most befcr Uahness is sin art in tie ?? bond erf ia Sit would Mem Seal of bitter ynj oat of ill K- me that neon Be spoken cotie ?f Simon's to M Cat make* a* mm. He is nof; a Bi! be has m&3f Btn first to last k of the Lor i tab* .did Pater and P#na0?a. Tr ey mires, btatortja fce Jesoa knoim disci pie,? Le?<oi .^Hpowth of the coiin '? incident allj from a JM-ballitin on the op '|K companies. It itp ? investment in eafcir Rncieascd from *!?, ft 672,341,736 is lSr-0. ?bacribers in 1880 irss vO there were 227,3*7, i of conversations oT*er Bitter year was 453, p0 the mileage of wire p90 it had inenroed to. Tbare ^ere 467,356 t transmitters in me in iaa doable the namcer jard of t&n kind shawu a ich can&t .be matched :itrj oa the globe. Fisherman's iGSe on the Banks, fisherman's life on the Bonks and in winter is a very hard one, they live well on board ? better shore. They have to, that they stand the excessive cold ; and their is like their lives, a floating doabt. voyage is made on shares. From m profits of the catch are de tbe cost of bait and ice, and fourth of one per cent, for the Wid ' and Orphans' -Fund. One-half o! net 4 'stock," as itis called, goes to owners of the- vessels, the other hall the crew, from whieh in deducted h man's share of the crew's expenses; is, ?>ok*s wages, water, medicine etc. They sail away full of hope with a full larder. Arrived on the they anchor in about forty or fathom*, and set their trawls, are long lino, anchored on the and extending out from, the many hundreds of yard*. To at intervals of a fathom (the dis varies to different fish), are at shorterfcnes. These lines have be attended ia dories, each containing o men, who hayl, bait, and land the fish in the bofyfjtyb* transferred to the sehooaer. HifeinNie the danger and hardship, for the strong tides of the Banks ^md the shoal watei pile up great combing seas. The cold is cruel, and the work hard. Suddenly down comes a fog, not the soft mist ot summer or autumn, but a thizk, heavy bank, soaked through with the penetrating cold of the icebergs farther north. Horns are blown from the vessel, but every year many dories are lost One would think that 5 common sense, if not law, wohW make each dory carry a breaker of water and IpfeKT^read; but none do, and either /experience does not teach or the fisher* men like such chances, for year after year comes the same old story of a lost dory and two men starved or dead oi thirst. When the fog Jifts they are many ! miles from their schooner, and are car ' riedby -the swift tides they know not [ whither, fben come days of hanger end thirst; hands are froaen to the oars; %adness haunts them ; and then ? death. Sometimes they make land or are picked up by a passing vessel, in which case they often return_before their . own 1 schooner; but that great ~Tiapjfoin is 1 rare. Then their vessel, which Wgaily sailed out past the light, eomes horns with her flag at half-mast. ?Century. 8LAD8T0NES CABINET. :v The "Grand Old X an" Selects Hie Advisor* and Lieutenants. London Cablegram : Following isS^ . official list of Mr. Gladstone's cabinet; Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, EsriBoeeberry ; Lord Chancellor, Baron Hencbell: Chancellor of the Exchequer; Sr Wiiliam Verno* Sarcourt; Home 8ecretery, Herbert Henry A squith; Sec retary of 8tate for India, Earl of Kim beriy; Secretary of State for the Col onies, Marquis of Ripen; Secretary of State for War, Right Hon. H. Campbell Banuerman; First l ord of Admiralty, Earl Spencer; Chief Secretary of ?tate for Ireland, Right Hon. John Money; becretary of State for Scotland, Right Hon. Sir George Otto Trevelyn; Pres ident of the Jirarthaf Trade, Right Hon.; H. H. Fowler; Postmaster General, Ar nold Morley; President of the Council of Education, Arthuf Herbert DVke Actand. Lord Houghton ^ Viceroy for Irstand. Mr. Gladstone Jt s Prime Minister and First Lord <$ the Treasury. to Have Been 126 Years Old. THOxasviLLS.? The oldest woman in Georgia died at the poorhouse on Sun day morning . at will sound like fiction to state Aunt Peggy Slater's age, but all her acquaintances and her eld master bj that her age was 125. Auot Peggy did not date events from the civil war, as many do, but from the Revolution. Aunt Peggy had outlived all her chil dren except one, and there were quite a number of them. The one living is in her 97th year. Change For Cotton Pickets. 'ashisgton, D. C.? The Treasury ...artmentis in a p sition to furnish small currency for shipment South and West in exchange for deposits with the sub-T?easury at New York, at govern ment contract prices of 15 cents per thousand doliaw, thereby saving the or dinary banker's rates, which would be from 75 cents to $1.50. A great demand for small money is expected during the cotton picking season and rice harvesting. The latter crop is said to be very large this year, especially in Louisiana. Shot By His Clittoj* Forgs, Va.? Rucker Booze, s young man from Buchanan, Va., who has been here for the past few weeks in the employ of the Wi throw Lumber Company, was accldently shot and fatally wounded by a pistol in the hands of Carrie Moore, His mulatto mistr> ss, while they were in a vacant house about 11 o'clock last night. Booze is of good family. He will die. Tne woman has not been arrested. Oliver Springs Troubles. Nashville, Tshx? Scores of cit zens ami busii.ess men from here and Knox viile, armed with any sort of guns pro curable, have rushed forward with armed militia jfi$m all over the State to Oiirer Springs, Wfcere the coal miner% after their ncfetty ever the mi&Ia at Coal Creek, have b>e? begging the State treepe under Gen. Anderson. The mili tary is now in [Bristol, Tenn., Hews.] Three CT? road, sa# the attorneys for McDonald, Shea Co., will be co&pleted very soon. McDonald, Shea & Co. have the contract for tbe entire completioa of the road in Kentucky, Tennessee, Vir ginia and the Carolines, a four million dollar job The Jewish Tidings predic' s that with in te n years Sunday services will b held iiHhe American synagogue*. It says that the Jewish people of this country want to keep Sunday as a religious day, and that > "the delay in its universal adoption is due akoo t entirely to the rabbis? alLofl whom are not as progressive and up-to the rimes as they might be. I? Supreme Sitting iron Hall Su*d. r RichxoSD, Va.? Suit was instituted in the Circuit Court against the Supreme Sitting Iron Hall for $975 by J. L Bloomberg. Bloomberg's policy for #1000 in the institution fell due, and he has taken above steps in order to protect himself, i - 1 " THREE STATES' BRIEFS. Telegraphic Dispatches From Many Points of Interest. The Fields of Virgina, North and South Carolina Carefully . Gleaned For Hews. VIRGINIA- > A Ladies1 Bicycle Club has been or ganized in Salem. ' Rev. Sam Jones has begun a series of meetings in Harrisonburg. ,? Norfolk iron workers have a movement on foot looking to the reduction of the number of hours of a day's labor. The following appointments have been made to the West Point Military Acade my: David B. Powers, Jr., Port Royal, with Willard N. New hill, of Irvingtoo, alternate. , V v ' ? JL . : The Sulfation Army has lost their suit against the o&y of Salem. This case bas caused considerable excitement, as on the verdict rest the future action* of the "Salvation Army" in Roanoke county. An effort will made to get Governor M&inney to pardon~fhe nineteen-years oW girl? Octavia Hodges, who was com* mitted to the penitentiary last week for six years for the killing of a sewing machine agent named Cunningham. She claims that the shooting was done in self defense. NORTH CAROLINA. | Creameries have been completed at ? Statesville and Charlotte and are in oper- 1 tion^ ' The Wilmington alumni of the Keeley ! Institute ttive a "Keeley Bi Chloride of ' Gold Club." Thos. H. Hoke, of Lincoln ton, a prom inent merchant and chairman of the Dem ocratic county executive committee, died Thursday. The Comptroller of the Currency has declared a second dividend of 15 per cent, in favor of the creditors of the First National Bank of Wilmington, N. C., (Insolvent^ making in all 30 per cent, on claims proved amounting to $519,025.10. The Caraleigh Phosphate works st Raleigh burned last week. The leas is 127,000. ^ Fted Sherrill, the colored man shot at Winston Sunday night by Thomas Vin - son, died, and the murder "has escaped. T?e mayor of Winston-offered a reward of $100 for his arrest, and delivery to the citv authorities. ' SOUTH CAROLINA' An anti-high lie: nee municipal ticket has been elcctcd in Mt. Pleasant. The K. & D. shape at Colombia are again running full time, and payout |14,000 monthly. ? A. car load of mineral water was ship ped from the Btiisto Mineral Springs at Orangeburg to Baltimore, Md., last week. The safe of ShUivan^storeat WilliamiiR too was blown open by burglars Tuesday night and (60 in money ana valuable pa pers were stolen. Dr. Babco.k, Supt. of the State Insane Asylum was privately married Wednes day to Miss Katherine Guioo, one of me purses of the institution. The vacant scholarships for the Cita del Academy this year are Abbeville 2, Beaufort Z, Col let in 1, Jfarion 1, Union j 1, Charleston 1, Edgefield 1, Orangeburg i 2, Sumter, 1, York 1- 4 xne new vtueen oi tne Trotting Surf. Tjerbs Haxtts, Ine>. ?Nancy Hales, that won the title of queen of the trying turf at Chicago, going, a mile 2:07}, is a bay mare, six ye.rs old, 15f hands high. She was sired -by Happy Medium out of a Dictator mare. Abe Linpoln, the running hone who helped Nancy along to glory, is a bay horse with something of a history. He wa* formerly the property* of Adam Fore paugh. Jr., who used bin for many years about the circus, kfs good points being his perf" t gentleness and a fondness for the society of elephants, of which horses in general s aad in mortal terror. Be cau^qr of his?" level head, obedience and thorough relfibitity he was taken by Budd Doble, her teainer, as a peacemaker for Nancy Hsnfc in her trials agains4. time. Nancy Hanks is owned by J. Malcolm .Forbes, of 'Boston, who purchased her last year fdk $85,000. He is a man of . great wealth5 and for that reason it is doubtful if Mr. Robert Bonner, the own er of Maud S. and Sunol, will & able to accomplish his "well- known purpose of purchasing every trotter which beats his own. ; "'Love Laugh* at Locksmith*,'' But Hot at Scythe-Blade*. Shelby, N. C. ? A young citizen of Gaston county received a setious wound ?o a peculiar manner recently. He was engaged to a girl in the neighborhood, whose parents were opposed to hits visits. r.nve, hoover, is full of expedients and stra aj?ems, and the young man con&pued to viwtiis sweatheart surreptitiously at night. The girl's father discovered that ' hey were meeting and made bis arrange ments to stop it. When the young mai paid his next visit and proceeded to ?rawl into the window, he came in contact with a sharpened scythe blade which the old man had fixed in the window for* him a id received a serious cut in the abdo m ^j. He had to walk four miles before hi cookl receive medicaL altention. His cjndition was critical for some timet but he has recovered. DARED DBAtfe FOE (25. A Young Man Blown Up With Dyna Xite to Teat a Life-Saving1 Device. | Aiatmros, Aj.A.-*Capt. Jj. D. Blon | de'.l, who has been givfng exhibitions at Oxford Lake for several days, offered f 23 to any. one who would get into a l)oat and allow himself to be b'own up with dynamite in order ' that Blondell mighr show his method of saving 1 fe in such emergencies. Richard Neeley, ; a young white man, accepted the offer and was b'own forty or fifty feet into the air and fell back on some of the wreckage. His left leg was broken aad be was otherwise severely injured, but, he may recover, - . : i Big Fire in Norfolk. Norfolk, Va. ? Fire broke out at 7 o'clock in the carriage manufactory of A. Wrenn & Son on Union street and de stroyed all the work shops together with the shops of the agricultural implement house of Wrenn, Whitehnrst 6 C#. ad joining. - The snare ? re department wsa fa scrvice and aftet hours hard work subdued the Is estima ' V. : ' - J r-. !? ?? : POUTIOAIi PILLS. gwnllow and Asebsilate Them ftuickly. The Republicans of Delaware nominat ed lor Governor Rev. Jonathan Willis. Oklahoma Citt. ? N. A. : Ward- was nominated to Congress bj the People'# party in this city. Atlakva, Ga. ? The Fifth district Democratic Convention renominated L. F. Livingston for Congress. ? ' * Macon, G a. ?Congressman James IL Blount having declined renoualnationJ the Sixth district Democrstie Conv?tio?f nominated Thomas B. Cabinis as his sac? ecssor. ^ . The Wisconsin Republicans met at Milwaukee Wednesday in 8tste Conven tion. John C. Spooler was nominated! for, Governor and John OjJ Kochof Jfil* waukee for Lieut. Governoiv ; ' J? The Hard party has nominated A. C. Shuford, of Newton, K. C., for Coogrem 7th District, and Dr. J. A.Wilcox, of Jefferson, N. C., for CoDgress 8th Dis trict, North Carolina. V Buzzard's Bat, Mass.? Grover CU land, Joseph Jeftenon, William Hy and Richard Watson Gtkler s in the waters of Waketey and points down in the Indian settlement ' Mafhpee. The; are having fine S] Black bass, perch, and pike are well . Gov. Hogg was renominated, at Ham ton, Texas., by the Democratic Conven tion by an overwhelming majority. Their platform advocates free and unlimttOd coinage of silver; opposes issue of ficti tious stocks and bonds; favors an income fax and endorses the railway commission law. * ? \..] } The Democrats of the seventh Kansas district Tuesday endorsed and nominat ed Je;cy Simpson for Congr as.; A platform adopted at the Democratic State convention commending Sifnpson's eoir j gressional career was adopted without * i dissenting vote. Whit* Flams, N. Y.-Whil*WM*o- i| law Reid, MfK Reid, and D. O^Mfc1 Mj. Reid's father -in law, were oft way from Ophir farm to catch the 7:43 trai^for New York the carriage collided within ice wagdn. Those iathecarriMK ] narrowly -eecaped being throws mL They had a good shaking op and were much cxcited over the accident After the ice wagon and carriage wen disen- - tangled the party drove U the station in safety and caught the train fcr NewYOrk. New Orleans, La.? The fiepoblkan League has elected Andrew Hero, Captain - General for Louisiana. It has announced Hb intention to place no Republican can didate in the field in the First, Fpqrtb, and Fifth districts, but to support tbe Can didate of the People's party. It wilt ?P* port T. J. Grace in the Fourth and: any one who will run against the Hon. C. J, Boitner, the jitting member in the Itfth. The Hon. J. Yoise will be nominafci&ae a straight Republican csndljste in the Sixth and supported by both factions of the Republicans, Judge Taylor Beattie it the Third, and Andrew Hero in the Sec* ond. ? It Was A Mean Trick. That was a mean trick played, on a Southern stranger in a Vint street Saloon the other evening, says a write: in the Cin cinnati Times Star. The sa:d stranger float ed in and opening the aperture in the face of the knot on which he carried his hat and perfumed locks, ordered aVglasa of ale. His dudish appearance ana air of ineffable wisdom attracted the attention of a well known ward politiciari, who, slipping a chunk of ice from the lemon ade he was lipping, hastily dep sited a bright silver dollar on it. Keeping the dollar on ice out of sight be engaged in . conversation with ffce Southern ? gent Je man and finally led the talk to the coin age of silver. "And d-> you kqow,1' said the W. P., ' that the dollar* coined in the North are colder than those struck off at New Orleans?'* "No." repfted the S. G. '-Well, it's a fact. Look there,** and the cold and carefully dried dollar was placed in the Southerner's sweaty palm, where it felt lik? a chunk of ice. A look of wonder passed over his face, and all be sould say was : "By luckers, ain't that srrange?" Then commenced a dicker, which result- d in a brand new $3 bill being given for the cold dollar, and i he Southern Gentleman departed happy as a boy at the circus: Laughter long and loud filled the saloon as soon a? bis locklets vanished, and "Well, boys,\ exclaimed the politician ; "HI have to* set 'cm up on thrft." Ninety-five cents J worth of beer went by the board and the $3 bill was passed to the bartender, who was about to hand ba'k the change, when be seemed struck with a funny idea. "It's counterfeit, '' be giggled as he passed it back. Then followed more laughter, but in a more subdued tone than at first, and when the gang went out to look for the long-haired southern gentleman he could not be found any where. ' JNew boutfeern .Enterprises. In ihe list of new Southern enterprise $ for the past week mentioned in the Mat? ufacturers' Record of August ip, arc tbe following important items: |30,000 lumber manu'acturkig company at El Dorado, Ark. ; a fOT.OCO coal company at PhTlippii W. Ya. ; a $500,000 w**?r works and improvement comoany at Gray ton, W. Va ; a $20,000 publishing com pany at San Antonio, T<-xas; a $100,000 water, light and power company at Oak Cliff, Tnxas; a $200,000 ais illery at Louisville, '-Ky . ; a $900,000 brick works company at Waterloo, Va. ; a $100,000 quarry company at Vick*burg,_ Miss ; a $200,000 Jjshoc manufacturing company at Moundsville, W. Va. ; a $75 1500 ice, light and water company at Marble Falls, Texas ; a $40,000 manufacturing company at Weatherford, Texas; a $30,000 cotton oil company at Whitewrigfc, Texas; a $200,000 electrical manuwrturing com pany at Birmingham. Ala; a $25. <00 publishing company at Louisville, Ky.? and a $10,000 lumber mill company at fDayton, Ky. ^ Dr. Talmage As a Lion. Bikmjxgha*, Ehg. ? Dr. T- image Sun day eddresstd the largest assembly evn g?tbcred in Birmingham. The towc rnll was crammed with an audience of 3,000 persons, aodoutside there hovered C0,0>0 more people* whom Dr. $almage addressed from his carriage aftcxthe scr vkci in the hall. On bis way back to his hotel Dr. T^l mage was informed that 10,000 person} were still waiting on the other tnde of the town baH to near him. Beimmedi atcly turned andbriefty addressed them, * ad the imroena*, crowd, estimated at 20,000, sang "Praise Clod, fro? whom all blessings flow. n The main doors ni the hotel had toi be bolted agaiast thr i ?'rgiog crowd,.whkh rap ahead trf the doctor's : ' 2 iiisiwr1'" : QAU6HT THE DETECTIVE'S EYE ' : . ? i ! ? ' i '? ; ; ? \ " 11 ! - Xe Saw a^JPeculiar Chest and Found la It a Counterfeiting Outfit. Walhalla. 8. C.? Secret Service ^Agent Fojsjth noticed a suspicious-look fatg cbest at Anderson, S. C .several days ago. The chest weighed 190 pounds, and wa> addreied to Q. T. Baughman, Walhalla, B. C., consigned by J. H. 3. of IfcCormick. The secret service agent the box. and, after removing car\ til- ' * " " 5 and blacksmith to2>J% found in theS i of tit? cbest a walnut cabinet. In fU%/wf it found six sets of moulds, over on*huodred Coins, finished and untinish* ?3, u>a> ttick of "h?lf and h?lf," a metal used j by counterfeiters. There war* two moulds Jot standard uollars, one for Mexican dolkrs, two for quarters and one for* fire ccfit nickels. Baugh man is h:ghly connected. His wife is the only daughter of a highly respected citi v?en, and ais brother-in-law is a Govern 1 "official. > Delcctive Forsyth took with bim Dep. litjTFnikd States Marshal W E. Bailey, :?Sd came beta. Not receiving bis trunk, Baiighman became snsptcious and ran. awaf.Forsyth secured information uf bis Whereabout Baughman was arrest ed. He declared that *hile the cbest wap his be-knejF nothing about the wal nut box. He fine ly weakened and ! made a full conf' won . ; mmS^AA^. \ j Third Day's Seaaion? Beaolutioia oi Bespeot to. Cot Polk, j , V Richmond, Va.? Tto tilrd day's ses sion of the State Farmers' - Alliance con vention assembled at 9 a'cufck. ;George Jackson offered a report for the good of the order. Ii was unanimously adopted; J. B. Beverly offered a resolution of re spect to the late Col. Polk. It was unan imously adopted. The special committee on the lecturer system made its report, | Tbey recommended that the district 4ec turer be abolished; that one State and thr^e assistant lecturers be elected by <?be State Alliance. " This was also adopted^ A bnsin as exchange system was adopted and placed under the control of the ex ecutive committee. The constiution was amended and that part which says an of fkerahali hold office only twp terms was stricken out. Any officer is now eligible t for an unlimited number of terms . Tbe^j body then went into the election of offi cers and the following were the unani mous choiCe of the body: Msj. Mann Page waa re- elected presi dent, Dr W.E. Quescnbury vice presi dent and J. J. Silver re elected secretary and treasurer. ? Y. Allen, Robert Bev erly jmd ?. R. Cocke were electtd mem bers of the executive committee. N . ? - Clever Euae of a Caahier. Coal Cubee, Ala.? A bold attemtt to rob the cashier of Coal Creek Minidg Company was made, and one of the rob bers was killed. For a month past the company has been expecting such an effort, and Cash ier Mountcastle wa3 prepared tor it" Sam Chtog, Bill Jones and Fred j> Stonics were the men who made the attack. I It was the pay day of Ihe company. Mr. Mountcastle had been told the at tempt would be made to rob him, and hie had a bogus package sect instead of the money expected by express. This pack age was labeled ?4,00 ). Food after tl^e j train left, and when the cashier was sup posed to be fixing his pay-ro'l, the three rushed in on bim^ put a pi tol V his head an<f ordered him to open the safe, j At this, officers who were secreted in the strong room closed in on the robbers, ordering them to throw up their hands, but the robbers opened fire. Clang wis killed, but the ofners shaped. 8outhwwt Georgia has gflown so much tobacco this year that the people are anxious to secure a factory to work it up instead of shipping it away. The general opinion is that the leaf is of excellent quality, suitable for cither cigars or smoking tobacco. At Banyan, Fla.t L C. Oliver is clear |og fifteen acres of land, and will plant 65,000 pineapples. J. T. Stewart is planj*; ing 15,009 common pines and an equal number of fine varieties. J. D. Lams is planting 10,000, and P. A. McMillan is just finishing setting 50.000 in the ground. There will.be over 200,000 pin apple plants growing around that place by fall. The Branson (S. C ) Canning and Man ufacturing Co., which was or^auized last March, begin operations in June of this year,jmd h <<8 since been turning out ?bout 2,000 cans fer da^ Tomatoes, peaches, ' bet ries, pears, apples, okra and* pickles are the product 'and they have met with quick aud easy sale. ~~~ ? tmm ' . Gen. Prince Commits Suicide. London cablegram: It is now def initely known that the American goo Meman who committed suicide on Friday at Marley's Hotel was Brigadier- Gem.'**! Henry; Prince, aged 82, a retired officer j of the American aimy. Gen. Prince left a U tter addressed to "All mv friend?, in which he ssid that death was a iclief which physicians ought to bring about when a man's life becomes was'ed by nature. At the inquest a verdict of "temporary ^ insanity" was deliveied. Gen Prince "had shot himself with a revolver and wai f?,und dead. He is suppo.-cd to have become despondent on account of old age and lameness. Corsets Cause a Riot, War between two rival dry goods stores at Zantsviile, Ohio, Tues ^iy, led to mob of women taking posi store, breakiag showcases and compelling the proprietors to close their d*oras Tne rivalry has been going on for l^ks, ancta finally corsets were advertises for Tuesday at five; and then at one oent/ Ifnirly 1,000 women sur rounded each, store, and after the doors clotted, one^iealer threw out corsets from |]M second 4fory window, and the | wo men scrambled ia the street, for titem. Several in the crowd fainted, but hone were seriously Snjurfcd. Mining Suspects Arrested. Kj?oxville,Te]SK. ? Twenty-three men supposed to be in sympathy with the most notorious of the miners, were arrested near Coal Creek sod locked up. Several of them are suspected of holding up the , mail train between Clinton and Coal" | Ozeek last Thursday night VttmuuMBt Bocarrsra For the B. A J). 'TUchmqhd, Va. ? The United States Circuit Court appointed Messrs. Reuben Foster, and F. ^ Huidekoper, the pres ent receivers, permanent recei?cr? of the Richmond & Danville Railroad Ex Sen ator Mahone's friends failed to control the appointment amjance department. Re&ding irtUfl3"tta Orirt tow ? ,|My Pr?p?wl?;1 ! j The Great Honey ftuMtioa DiscoMed * by the National Ecooomiet. Wheel (Mtkam) injs. Kwbil before the people j Ithat it requim <nore than twlco Mi much labor to get a dollar today as1 ifc did *5 yeara agv but that dollar. whe* 1 you get it> *}?} pay no more debtor taxea than it would pay in 1867. ?% ? * * ? ? Bertie County, Norti Carolina, declarer that at the rights and liberties erf toal i &s&'AsSQj?? tatjives in Congress the repeal of prcsest la fs and direct election if the people. : ji | XS MOMST ArBOptjc* OF HaTUBBt j ?jj The Sigumeqt that government can't make (tfoifc, <reit?,) monCT, aloce tje veriest simpleton in! the land knows that tbfc individual who attempts to do so will bo ?*?*** to th^totiwffor r,: carries wiwittha impli cation that money is a prflju&bf - taXatt. j Outside of man, in^U MWdual or col- j tUiugs of' eart ji into >ifcctorall necessanr f($r tho continued advancement of civili* lotion i?; nature. Then, taking J* po- 1 sitlon that moeey isjnot created by law, , compels the belief that nature, instead ; of always being the fame staid, sdlemn, eternal, unchangeable force that have always believed her to be, jjjin.; the matter of money, at least* one of tfce most fickle and flighty creatures uaagm "able; for she not only creates a: different kind of money fereyery different gov ernment in tbo world, but. the ^eates^ many different kinds of money of differ eu t den ominations for each $o verumea t . Thus gold,. ? Hirer, copper, nickel, b?K 1 paper etc., art eachemployedby. *er ;? the manuTactuw"! of ^ money. In thit; ' country she gif es us dollars, dime* and cento; tn England fyt denominations are chauged into pounds, shilling^ and i pence; in Gertfany jnto kruetjser^gdd.f era, pfennings, etfr Such asaumptioni as these are calculnt|ed to make nature appear ridiculous.; The troth is, nature; ' has no more to do *itb the creation i of: money thaa shebaajtado with! the cre ation of a cotton gin or grain binder or say one of the thousands of things into which men have Changed the material provided for her, into things for. their own comfort: and ! advancement,: She provides the matter j from wh^h \very thing is made. But the fact that the governments have tor a long time assumed that tho! proper material from which to make ;< money is gold or silver, no more con kitutci ttee'nSJtala '?natural money than doe* the fact that Cain slew Abel j with a club constitute the manner | of Abel's death the "natural" wa? t* die. Upon the theory that "age and custom" justify the um 0! silver an d gold j as money, can bja justified the existence of crime' human slavery, corruption and skullduggery of every kind, because these thiugs are, all of them, older even thin the use of moaey of any kind. And jet, one of the strongest arguments, or, at least, one of the i strongest points al ways lingeringly and lovingly (iwelt upon by our 1*WJS2.<neu" in theiradvofiacy of these me'afeas the only proper meney material, is the fact that their use has been sanctioned by custom and made veacrable by age. To a mibd capable of consecutive, analytical think ng it would seem that the veiy fact the bare legged-barbarians of thousands df years ag ? used those metals for money mate* rials is of. itself sufficient to c -st a deep, dense shade of suspicion over, their real utility for that purjK>se The incontro vertible tiuth is that money, lawful money, the tender of which cannor be refused without prejudice to * one's claim, is a creature of man in his a2gre> gate or governmental cap icity, ami the only milk in the fiuancial cocoanut is in volved in the question as to how the wealth- producers of the nation will profitably avail themselvis of this gov ermental function. Mrs. Tom Woolfolk Remarried. Macon, JGU-? Mr*. Georgia Byrd Woolfolk, the widow of Tom Woolfolk, was married t<* George Lamb, superin tendent of a barrel factory here. Wool folk's crime isjwell known. Five years ago he killed nine members of his own family in order to gain possession of the farcily estate. For three year* he was in prison awaiting the final disposition of his case by the courts. During that time his wife kept up the appearance of constancy, but dressed flashily and be haved in a questionable manner. Geor gie Byrd'a marriage to Tom Woolfolk was a runaway allair, and the ccremony was performed on a moving train while it was passing through the principal ccmetery of the city of Macon. She has frequently ascribed her ill luck to the fact that she was married in a grave yard. \ t Other Southern State# Might Follow. The Board of World's Fair Manage re for Virginia propose to mqpe the collec tion of works of Virgin^ whore as com plete and representative to pass ble, cov ering a period of nearly three centuries, fiprn the establishment of the colony to ? the present time. For this end they are (iJseBmtg 1 contributions from publishers, authors, learned ilflelrfwi anil from all j sources of t^e warki of Virginia authors, j books a aid pamphlets relating to Vfeginia and ita titiiena, and magazines, newspa pers, etc., published in the State. The entire collection will be properly cata logued, and at the close of the exposition deposited in the Virginia State library. j T?NHJ?SS?E TH P^RTY. ' ' ' A The Omaha Ticket ani Baclr?naa'? Candidacy Endorsed. Nasuviu.e, Tkkn - The adjourned m etingofih*; Sta e People's party con. veution met here There were 400 or 500 delegates present, represeotiug nearly every county in tli* State. The conven tion adopted a resolution endorsing Gov ernor Buchanan as an independent can didate and pledging 'him support. The I Omaha plat for^n and nominations >were endorsed, and after listening to several enthusiastic speeches, the contention ad journtd. J i ; ^ Killed With ? Shot Gun. - * * J Ogeichm, Ga. ?Bob Crittenden was shot and fci led b? Frank Brown just; P! FORCE BILL. wsir oiuxmn it would 4 ciuss | TSB090K0QT TBI MITCH 5 SOUTH ITS X?1L XffBCT UF05 TH* WHOLf ?OOU*TKT. 4 Writing in the Forum about the dist ! Mtaw elect which a Forestall would ' hats if the ilepoblicaos were permitted to lathe it the law of the land, Hoke Smfth, President of the Atlanta (Ga.j Board of Iducatioo, m)i: TWs is a scheme to destroy home role awl'ttcal It is based either up^ oathe idea that the people cannot be tnated, a*d that one man is far better or it is a plan by which . one naaai may organise a set of partisans to work in all Sections, It is either "undemocratic and unre pubtican, a blow aft molar go? ernment, or Ifci is a daliberste jSa to use officers of Government as W electioneering In behalf of a particular party, to * than tneanrto prepare for a at olcetloit, awitben to complet^ work through a . board of canHaicrt, who aretodeelare the desired result an# cetfflyTo ft L Such sn invasion of 1 popular rights must be repulsive alike in jWery part of the land. [ H Indeed, tbo New York Codsreution ratified our National Constitution in f nil ufldeoce that until amendment might adgptqd "the Ctagrep'Wnrnot make alter anj i^gnuHr in the Sta^e re* ^ 1 the times, places and manner of elections for Senators or Repre sentatives, unless the Legislature of this 8tkte shall neglect or refuse to make lairs or r^gulatioae for the purpose, or from any circumstance be incapable of making the Aae; and that in those cans such power will only be exercised until the Legislature of the State shall atyce provision in the premises."' [The contentions of Xassashusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island also adopted Qm Constitution of the United with similar declarations <*n this Use debates upomthe Lodge ' the Hoose of Rep^sentatives conclusively that thsr framers of * Constitution never contemplated the ~ such; a bill as that which the < candidates now indorse. force Mil if put into operation throughout the entire country would ci>et uot MB than $10,000,000 for every election, and would Mag upon the peo* pie an additional force of about 850-,000 . office betters. It oertainlyhas the ap of being a scheme to enable a class, after collecting more money from the messes than the .wants . qf the Government require, to sfend;it tor the purpose of perpetuating/ them Seivoi in power. T \ j Such * lawooce in operation would bring# protest from all over tbf land, but once having been enacted t would be of little value, for the visors and canvassers could esslly per petuate fiw political power of those who Occupied the offices, despite the actions Of thfc voters at the polls. It cannot be posdole that the people of the North and * of Che West will suffer such a systemjf be thrust uoon then?. But the advocates of this mearare in sist that it is needed to protect the ne groes of! the South. In truth, no greater calamity could befall the negroa than such 'legislation. Their hope cf devel opment rests upon the kind feeling, which now exists between the tw*) races in the South, which is constantly in creasing to the benefit of. the negroes as outside interference decreases. An im partial student of the situation in the South must see the negro's progress, intellectual, moral and financial, during the past few years, has every where been dependent upon and proportioned to the lack,of friction between himseU and his whiti neighbor. The darkest hour of ?ry of the raoe was during the ben the negroes were controlled men who knew little abotft , who controlled them by p?ay their prejudices against the men who bad i>een their masters, practically no property was ' , by negroes ; to-day they #14,196,735 of property, the greater rfart ot which has .been ac Quired sincf 1880. Any honest inn,, knewingibt* facte, will admit thflt wfth complete freedom in this section from outside interference the race problem is solving itself by pleasanter relations, by the substantial effort on the part of the intelligent whites to do all possible, both ! personally and through legislation, to develop the negroes. Witlj an experience of nearly twenty years constantly in the courthouses of Georgia, I can truthfully say that in criminal as well as civil litigation tne negroes' rights are absolutely protected. This condition of affairs, desirable as it certainly is, can be maintained only where friction is avoided between the two races; for with the indication of au aggressive struggle between them,, the influence of those whites who might de sire to continue legislation favorable t:> the development of the negro would cease. 1 The mass of wnites, their prejudices reinfhmed, would not. follow tbe con servative! men of their owh race. It is by the inJhMHKe of the more intelligent whit? that the best legislation and the best oelp can be given. It is through the influence of the more intelligent of the negroes upon their own race that the best use can be made by them of this help. If the South be left alone, condition* i will continue to improve until ererj | right will be conceded to the negro and j all justice enforced in hU behalf. Nothing has been more common for * the past few jean in Georgia than to see the Governors of the State present at* negro colleges or churches, aiding b f word and counsel those negroes who are seeking to help develop their race. Ex Governor Gordon, the chivalrous soldier, for four years Worked enthusiastically to that end. The present executive, Governor Nortben. does Jhe sane thinr to-lar. TX?ey and severaflol their predecessors have bee* heartily supported bj many others, urging sympathy and aid from the whites toward the development of the negroes. . A public sentiment is being aroused by tboae high in office doing all possible ,t o develop the negro, upon whom, in pot, the National prosperity of the South favorable; made! I bui{ defend, for a higher and ?hip* . . , Erer jibing is pose* a Fores change would be Georgia ajxjutsi* ?isors, betides deputy ?using joardaj ' r&ose L _ bill would be to stir up tie proes, to aroirte in their breasts diets against their white fill their minds ' rith political ; in ii word to bu k thdfcnin a state * < ... content and. f< verjkh excitement ? make tbiom unwilling and unfit for "' Wj, ? (ivw? This conduct would not . negroes wtfo ba re succeeded latlog property it would not t_ best of the raoew -but It mM their inlluenoe >rer the nA. it check their eff< irti to mtfcel economical ant industrious* ditk>n would r suit? chlmge on the )ait of the whlwj people irould rosutL. , plan ot strict loaiaatioa* in - -as* ^ Jv^Vj '* i-TL-si vniZK< mantel Ml, vq :>&< en "wbuld s^aW be/Wf-... , by part! or coMftRne nomtnatioi ?, would < ixohide all local influx be on jthe part of the negroes^xcept ii a few counties i here they wouHTbe a >le to pelect their own oauiMdater* Olb 5e holders repre eating the consolidsed Srtete rote, bt ought together by m {to antagonism, ]i 'ould bo ? natural rev itt. the influen se of the most inCellig mt whites in far tr of negro schools i nd legislation loo Icing to the improrem mt of the negro rould'be iost la the bitt er nets which th j dMsrances would ttg m* der.'The neg -o himself wouldbe thrown bsck where hi wee in ii- j justices inspi ed would senoml/ ?$?$.' >r the labor of he South, The cottoi crop of Uul8o#1i :i| duccd large y by negro labor7, ' Force bill f ould materially ctf p is abunt antly shown ' to the cogda kion which i aad 1870, a id by seeing ho. ?? ? pfoduct of I be cotton fields was til ccmmercialjshock would be giren entire South. Bet! The , Phi complains t| to say diet wages, wbl claim, and triome questiefc). ielphia A North protectionist^ are protective duties -eM ?*fhat pro is all they*Ui?,n Is protection dauses a multitude terprises to: spring up whicli the wage vote u a tonic possible to inaintain high idea is somiswhat furtherV _ the statement that v 'without ; the tion we cotid not produoe ant staples pt all in compal k cheaper labor abitad*"<andi; vm+ ^yth0 imposition of, a; product ^ to " 7 tection is on the f ference in This quin laplee are produced in this* , c labor cost of which is jgream a 1 iKaf il/wf 'fll the labor ducefra of a doty the diffi difference of aimllar "staples Hotrdo^ltoJ^ foftign: products in wages if f k enable American ere^o pay jthe higher ? f. because the duty increases the pnoMjol^ the product f If so, what becomes of the assurances of protectioaSs^B^P^ tectiodHowcrs prices? Will not": manufacturers payf the* da" their goods here at the old prerenting the American m from getting such prices a* will ? him .to pay American wi-geet-JIf what becomes of the protection that the {foreigner pays tile American | manufacturers do: price for their goods,' wil them to pay higher wagesl ipcy higher wages, what ^workmen! from coming (since the North American [?'where the labor marlyt isi j wages invariably., decline, ? tariff") by orerstocking the! ? reducing j American wsge ; the laborers share of piog the hanfls ' of employer^, stead! Answers to these j consistent with the. North" j Editorial j to which we r?Wr, ao|l each other, woujdhdeserro to be and conspicuously exhibited at ixv^r - lumbian Exoositioo. ? ' Tno Btanjiwi^--^^ MaoWneFf 4 a Slio? asking The chief fpols ot the ^oeawke ij I' consisted, of his . hammer, lapstooe, hflPknivei, and bis1 "settingnup" hw boots or shoes,^ essentials of a shoe are the tt{ sole, the counter or beet the keeli These pvts arc divided into the "^amp", the front of the fopt, tho J small quirtcrs for encircling the button?piece, etc. Iwi1 shoemaker is to prepare find various parts of the,UDD?:*att the I together^ to b-ing ipjtfe til* desire * to fasten them to the sob) which i previously cut, to attack the he then to give the various parts the i finish and style. The** procei c ite the! line? along which the i had to be applied. All the oj have beeo subdivided to the miputelt f detail, and io the performance: alt et 'Ik# them mr.chioe?? more oc le?sati*4cte^ i: in their workings? have, been c Mist. The palrts of the upper are nos kew< together by machinery, and pegged, sewed or screwed -to the iOl? machinery. Instead1 ol t!Ut laptt< US V the hammer for condensing tie leatl are down swiftly rqjrolriig roll instead, of the patterns for cutting qUi sole j are dies or jw>lesbaped ka wcsi in machines. <~Pop*jta? Science " I Adftntage of DoaUift, Double* window*-? tta# - with double glass are tin ad van either printer or rtunmer. : W.tb season they pay for themselves in or twojby the diminution of since with their a&istanse not half tbe coal which is unitllj required to warm a dwelling* just asi great an advantage intbe season, for not only do kber, * dust, 1 mt by keeping tfiem the da* the temperate be kej k five or ten degi