Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / March 26, 1885, edition 1 / Page 4
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1 i I . If .1 3 ' w iMHiir : - nhinft vi h Uant. sir l nomas fllalt-1 rt i - . g : . iHtrf Mrn iimm"i - i SI i - : 1 1 h-H v & C5 & PS I H " Q W Ml f -5 . tn o : o o s-t PL, 'T3 8 o a o c a, a a 0) -4 a o a? O O P C3 P o "K - H 3 a T3 O CO o O New Advertisements. Si Aro you failing, try Weixs1 Health K- & pure, chxlii. w uuicaumtj For Brain, Nerrea, Stomach, I Aver, Kid nays. Lungs. An unequaieu invig-orajit. -uro Headache. Fever. Acrue, Chills, DEBILITY & WEAKNESS. Nice to take, true merit, unequnled for I TORPID LIVER and Night Sweats, Nervous Weakness, wiaia S1.MI 1 e. a ill II ! . 1!-.: .. -t - , 3 -, :, - I -i ft - . jt ,1 t la I V' lb . ; ';.;:.. . c3 -.,.-1: , H ' 5 'V:.1 U - ' Ml , 2 ; 5 VII a a MILLINERY. I j . ... . 'Irs. isseyj Battle I-, Buchu-Paiba Beraarlcable Cures of Catarrh of the Blaildpr, Inflammation, Irritation of Kid neys juiil ljladder. Stone or Gravel Iis cnscs of the Prostate Gland. Dropsical S-vcliinsrs, Female Diseases. 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Imx .i;44. 12-4t. 7 IS 1 i MANILLA larboro' gonttrntr. Thubsdat. .March 26, 1885. UJITCD.DDnnr e f 2 Htft?i.,V",V f,r?TiTrT wIplaStkS r:AV.H.FAYCO.CAMDEN.NJ. lMt. MORE EYE-GLASSES, No MOBE ZJ? (9?A? FirTt-Class IlLUKil STORE IX TtiHBdRO, i -:o:- V. c. Itisrepie th the. Latest ajid most Fa?h onable Designs pertainiu? to ttat branch. Selected in person iin New York, in October. Bought for cash and will be sold at living fig ares. Each patron j will be fitted and suited according to contour, complexion and tictc. . She solicits the orders from this commnnity. Orders for portraits in Oilorfprayon solici ted. 8tore on Main ft.,, one dour above Bank Oct 18 1883 tf. U . If, M ASON & HAMLIN 100 ; 7 i i4' Ft- 5f Highest honois a all grta wot Id's exhi bitions lor seven' eeiK yettr. Otitly Amer.can Organ aworded,Bubh at any.i For casht easy payment oij rented. f -. t;!.:? - I'- Upright Piahos - . " :- if' ;i ;" J .- presenting very bisnest;excelletce yet a t iin elin suciSnstiUment-; addirgiio all previ' oqs improvemeBtn tlee of greater value il an any; tecnreitig nj.Bti pure reflled, musxal tones and mciepsed. aurabilit; especially avoidine liabilitjj toiget out of.tone. Illus- iratea catalogue free ft? a J n m w . . J ' MAOUJN a 11AJIL1N OKQAN & PIANO CO Boston, 154j Ttebo.M 8t; f. Tr.rk. 46 : E. 14th 8t: ObicBsro. 14! Wabash A, r - -- I' - It 'If:-: An Independent hlewspapei of Dem ocratic Principles, bur riot Controlled bv any Set of Polijiciansjor Ma'tpulators Devoted to Collecting and Publ ishing aid the News of the' Day In the most Inter esting Shape and wjth the grlatest pos sible Promptness, Accuracy aid Impar tiality, and to the Promotion fof Demo cratic Ideas and PoHcy in th affairs of Government, Sxietyl&nd Industry. Bale, by MaO, ToitpaiA: DAILY, per Year - . . DAILY, per Menth j-1- - , -SUNDAY, par Year . . DAILY and SUNDAY per hrewr -WEEKLY, per Year j i . I - $6 00 - 50 I 1 00 4 - 7 00 - 1 00 ork CUu. ' EVE3. MITCHELL'S EYE-SALVE A Certain. Safe and Effective P.emedv for - Sore, leal aEUntoefi Eyes Producing Long-Sightedness and Restoring the Sight of the Old. Cures Tear Drops, Gran ulation,, Stye Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes, and producing quick felie and perma nent cure. Also, equally efficacious when used in other maladies, such as Ulcers. Fever Sores, Tumors. Salt Rheum. Burns, Piles, or wher ever intlamatiou exists, Mitchell's Salve may be used to advantMge. P.J-4t Sold bv all Druirgistf at 2Acetts. . PARKER'S TONIC. ..4. , PURE FAMILY MEDICINE THAT KEVEB INTOXICATE". If you are a mechnie or tanner, worn on with over-work, or a mother run dou-u with family- pr bonschold duties try Parker's Tonic. If you are lawyer, minister or business man exhaus ed by mental strain or atmou cires do no' t ke intokicating stimulants, but use Parker's Tonic. If you have Dyspepsia, Rheumatism. Kid ney or Urinary Complaint, or if you are trwubled with " any disorder of the lungs, ttomache, bowels blood or nerves, you can be cured by Parker's Tonic. CAUTION ! heluse all substitutes. Park ers Tonic is compoted of the b st remedial ageuts in the world, and is entirely different from preparations of ginger alone. Send for circular. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM, The best, eleanest and moet ec oraical hair dressing. Never fails to re re the youthful color to gray hair. This elegant dressing is preferred bv. those who n-tve Uiied it, to any similar article, on account of its superior cleanliness and purity. It contains materials only that are beneficial to the scalp and hair. Parker's Hair Balsam is finely perfumed and is warranted to prevent falling of the hair and to remove dandruff and itching. HISCOX & CO., 163 William St., New York. 'Oc. and l sizes, at all dealers Great saving in hurW dollar bottle. ' iu!2-4t J7URNITURE, UNDERTAKING B. C. CAKL1LE, Main St." just above e Pamlico Banking Co HAS ON HAND NEW, FRESH STOCK OW FURNITURE, Bought for Cash, whlcii be llerj at 111 o.!,.-fate ri:ts. . Fnita of. all Eiais Eipairei C0FFlS. CASHED KM) t i iiKBTAIilAK 0EEKALl. . ; lroi:age solicited. B. C. CARLILE. Trboro,Peb. 26, 1882: . The Iow 3Seliel Society and legal circles have been much agitated during the last week by a suit, the like of which no lawyer can find recorded in any of the musty vol umes of his library. The circumstan ces which gave rise to this unique con troversy are admirably Bet forth in the declaration filled by Octavius A. Law, Esq, counsel for the youog lady plain tiff in the case: C. P. 4 M.f 1885, No. 434. City of Philadelphia, ss : Mabel L. Hearne, single woman, residing at 247 South Fifteenth street, maketh oath and sayeth that at the invitation of a prominent member of the bar, and himself a lawyer, depooent,in his com pany, attended the masquerade ball held at the academy of music by the Young Mannercler association the night of the 17 th inst; that she way dressed in a black velvet evening dress, after the style of the court of London, being :ut square-necked back and front, short sleeves, with long kid gloves to shoulders, covering both arms. While it is true said dress was cut back and front according to fash ion, it was not lower than is seen in as semblies and at fashionable gatherings. Nor was there any even the slightest indecent exposure of deponent's perr on. Deponent's bosom was cov ered with lace, with the addition of flowers in corsage; that there was noth ing in deponent's dress, its mode, cut or shape, that should offend the most fastidious, or that was not fully allow ed by lashion. Deponent also asserts that her conduct, manners and deport ment were modest, quiet and unassum ing during the entire evening; that while deponent was quietly leaning on the arm of said escort, promenading the parquet, Joseph L. Stackhausen, the defendant, an entire stranger, of fensively, wilfully, and maliciously, without any probable cause, in a l. ud, insulting and threatening tone of vice and manner, exclaimed that deponent would not be permitted to go on the floor or remain in the building; that she had not sufficient clothes on. Feeling the injustice of this treat ment and its untruth, ar.d goaded by defendant's ungentlemanly and uncall ed for conduct, d-ponent, under the advice of ker escort did go upon the floor to waltz, when defenant made an assault on her by violently laying hold of her shoulders and making a loud out cry, t'.us attracting a crowd, bringing depontnt into public notice, and as serting that unless deponent left the building he would call an -officer; that deponent before this had removed a small mask she had worn to enable de fendant to fully observe her features that fro oi this and other facts she be neves nd expects to prove thatf the defendant's said conductwas specially malicious toward deponent. ruat defendant's conduct ciu-ed deponent to undergo a seveie nervous shock, from which she has not yet en- t rely recovered; thit she was confined to Ler room for several days, and was compe led to call in tha services of a physician; that by it she has been' in jured and disgraced and held up to public scandal and calumny, and been offensively pointed at when appearing in public,, and has there oy suffered a large pecuniary loss, whereby she claims she is entitled to recover from defendant such damages as a jury may assess. Mabil L. Heakne. t Sworn and subscribed before m this 28th day of February, A. D. 1885 Jas. W. Fxetcheb, Deputy Prothoaotary. An "Item" reporter called upon Miss Hearne at he reaidence,Nor 1 47 South Fifteeth street, and was ushered into a neat and unpretentious sitting room. After waiting for several minutes Miss Hearneentered. She is a spirituelle, lithe and willowy demi-blonde, and the fortunate posses pr of sparkling hazel eyes, shided by fcng drooping lashes. Every lineament f her beautiful coun tenance denotes(modesty, refinement and intelligence. . Her beauty is such, everv-v&ea attired in the ordinary dress of domestic duty, that the reporter rea dily believed the assertion of her friends that the trouble was cause by tha envy of other women, who could not aVide in qu:et the presence of a beauty who diminished their; oppor tunities for conquest. "It all came from woman's spite,' said one. "There was nothing immod est m the dresp," said another. , If Miss Hearne had been the unhap py possessor of a scrawny ' neck or a bili ous skin paople would have said "O what a fright," but she . would not have been rudely "deprived of the pleas ure of the evening. It is only when the neck is, in the language v of Solo mon, like a "tower of ivory," and the shoulders like alabaster, that modesty is shocked At the reporter's suggestion Miss Hearne went out, and presently re turned wearing the offending garment. It was simply a trained dress of black velvet which by color and texture en hanced the beauty of thfoat andnhoul ders, white as statuary marble At hi earnest persuasion Miss Heirne allow ed the "Item" artist to make the sketch which is reproduced in this article. While it indicates the features of the dress to which objection was ma'le, it conveys no idea of the beautitul fea tures of the lady who wore it While there is no doubt that a jury of prudes woud condem the garment, those accustomed tb the usages of society make no criticism upon it. nor see aught in it to- which objection can be made. ' . dent dent in fl in th was The Preside Beeeifes The following as an account of President Cleveland's first reception. It will be we doubt not very inters ting to the female readers of the SOCTHKBNEH : "President Cleveland s first recep tion 0 Confess and the high official circles of the capital was given Tues day evening 17th from 9 to 11. The Executive Mansion was prepared for the ient with all the brilliancy inci- o similar receptions by T6i- rthur, and several new envois a 3 Jj 1 decoration wete mnoauceu lue parlor, where the reception Id. The President wore piam evenifg dre6s, without gloves, trie army apd navy officers their full uni forms, wi'h swords,ana ine aipioroai ic corps their court costumes. Mis Cleveland and the ladies of the Cabi net stood in line with the President, the former weariDg a cream white Ottoman silk, exquisitely made, with apron front of point lace, and the moderately low co. sage finished with a width of the same c mfiaed by a narrow satin ribbon. A black velvet hand encircled her neck and long, light gloves reached nearly to the end of the short Bleeve. She carried a bouquet of Cormelia Cook roses and a white ostrich feather fan. Miss Bayard stood next, representing the social side of the State Department, and wearing a delicate pink satin veiled with pink tulle. ' Mrs. Man ning, a bride, wore her diinty bridal dress of rick while satin, with front of point lace, and superb diamonds. Mrs. Endicott, wife of the Secretary of War, was attired in ruby satin, with front of cloth of gold, and tcar 1 ried an immense toiqiiet of jacque minots and lilies of the valley. Mrs. Whitney, whose first appearance it was in Washington official life, wore black siik overlaid with, black tu le. Her beautifully moulded arms and ueck were bare, and she enrried a cluster of English vio'ets. Mrs. Vilas wore dark ted satin. - The Attorney-Generalship and the Secretaryship of the Interior had no feminine representave , but Secreta ry Lamar and Attorney-General Gar Und were in the group of Cabinet officers at the vear. The Vice-President and Mrp. Hoyt.' Col. and Mrs Lsmount, and Miss Nanie Bayard were al?o among the representative of the new Administration' circle in the blue p irlor.the ladies all elegant lyjattired. Marshal McMicbael mad the pre sentations of civilians and diplomats to the Presidont Col. Rockwell the army officers, and Lieut. Mason those of the navy. The procession of guesis, except the diplomatic corps, passed down the main stairway of state from thu upper dressing rooms, and were joined by the latter in tbe red parlor. Every one remarked the ease and courtesy with which the Pre-i lent avd his staff of lad'es dis charged their new duties. The leading diplomat were all present, a uuuibergoiug first t the diauer given by the German Minister The new Swedish Mi uister and his wife were much observsd. Gen. and Mrc Sheridan. Genp. Schofield Terry, Wright, jMeigs, Holabird and Rochester were eminent among? army officers present and admirals W or den, Franklin, Temple, and Quackenbu-h, with many of the grades next these, represented the navy. Senators Warner Mi ler and J. F. Miller, Blackburn, Grckrell, Jones of Florida, Teller, Secretary of the sati ate McCook, ex-Senator Pendieton, Representatives Beluiout Curtin. Butterwortb, Rmdall, Cox, Spriggs Hopkins, Lefever, oeney,and Eroien trout were a few of the large Con gressional circle present. N- arly all tbe above were accompanied by their wives and daughters iu handsoma evening dress. It w-s as brilliant a scene as the White Hoa-ie has known in years. The Marine Bnd played a fine selection of music throughout tbe reception. Tbe east room at hilf pas: 10 o'clock was a picture of gorgeous color and moveoieut- Th corridors aud cocserva ory aho were thronged. Succeeded Too Well. "No-r, said the bride. "Henry, I want you to. understand distinctly thai I do not wish to b taken for a bride. I am going to behave exactly as if I were an old manied woman. So, dearest, do not thrnk me cold and unloving if I treat you vry t.ractical 1 . ,t. ly wuen mere is anyooay oy. "I don't believe I c.n pass for an old married man. I am so fond of you that I am bound to show it. am sure to crive the sn ip away.' "Lo, you mustn t. it a eisy enough. And I insist th it yott be have just like all old married men do. Do you hear?" "Well, darling, I'll frjbutkuow I will not succeed." The first evening of their arrival the bride retired to her chamber and the grom fell in with a poker purty, with whom he sat playing cards until 4 o'clock iu the morniug. His wife spent tbe weary houra Waiting. At last he turned up aod met bis grief stricken bride with the 1 llarious question: "Well, ain't I doing the old mar ried man like a dais ?" She never referred to the tubject agaiD, and everybody knew after that that they bad just been married. A mesmerist Lamed Townftond has hired "subjects ' who presented them selves at his lectures in Chicago, und. under the supposed influence of tnes- imrism, underwent painful tests. One of them failed to get his wages, and exposed tbe fraud, declaring that the endurance was due s'mply to practice and nerve. In the presence of physician 3, and without any "mej merisin," tins uian was prodded with needles, burned with lighted cigars, and had cayenne ptpper thrown in his eyes. He swallowed tbe bitter eat. drugs and submitted to nil sorts of torture without the slightest per ceptible tremor, and allowed nexUeg to be inserted under the finger nails n...wtftlBr of the rrwi-- In the executive office of the Sen ate there are preserved all the execu tive messages of Presidents of the United States from tbe foundation of tbe Government Though not often referred to some of these documents tumminff worn and recently Gen. ,McCook, the Secretary of the Senate caused selections to pe maae irom the files, with a view to preserving some of the interesting autograps in a cabinet by themselves. It appears from this collection thtt none of the Presidents, with the exception of Washington and Jefferson, would be marked above 50 for penmanship by a Civil Service Comiuission. Wash ington's fiit contribution to the col lection embodies ! nominations for Judges, Marshals and Attorneys for the districts of New York and New Jersey; and at the end of the same documents are the nominations of 4 v,fta ' .Tftfferson. Edmund Ran dolph, ard Samuel Osgood for Secre-1 tary ot State, fl-itorney wuoioi, Postmaster General respectively. Tlte signature is written in a fair legi ble hand which woild pass to day for that of a man not eutirely care less of appearances, yet having confi dence enough in his own work to let tbe details of penmanship take care of themselves. ; Mr. Jefferson penned his signature with caey gVaoe, but hit economy of space was such that his documents as a whole fJl below the present stan dard of clerical excellence. "He wrote most of his messages with his own hand. InaUofJuhQ Adam's signatures the small letters are more than half an inch long. In his message of J uly 2. 1798, i nominating Washington to be Lieutenant-General, an unsuccees ful attempt appeals to have been made to write the whole docum'Ut on the same ample scale. " Mr. Midison wrote an irregular hand, devoid of marked peculiarities. Mr. Mooroe used a coarse pen and wrote he.Htatingly. Andrew Jackson's first inessig-r dited March 6, i829,is an autograph document throughout, and more tlan any other one of the series its style seems characteristic of its' author. Its lelt"r8 are angular and unsymmc tricil, "but they are legib e, and there is an air of self-assertion about tbe document which 'culminates in the emphatic undescoring of the signa ur'. Martin Van Bureri's hand was un stealy when he pennel bis first lue-sage, but he wrote better the ntxt day. Janus K. Polk's 'Contribution to the co.loction is an aa ograph mre sage penned in what, would be t iken for a feminine hand, yet with f-sw of the graces of penmanship. His aut 1-g-aph is rather pretentious, wi h a row of dots and 6everal cramped flourishes beneath it. Harrison's and Tyler's signatures h ive no distinguishing ch irac eris ici Taylor and Lincoln each wr le firm ly a id legibly, but wi'h extreme t-im plicity and without any oupeifluou mtrkp. . Millard Filla ore's signature is very similar to theirs In character, bat rather smoother.' , James Buchanan's hand trembled when he signed hU first mpistge. and be made a failure of the elaborate scroil-woik at achmeht to his first initial , Frankling, schoolboy signa ture. Andrew Johnson started fairly upon tbedine, then fell a little below it, but lecovered himself at the end. lie rat. Hera, thi present bone of conten tioi bet wee a Eaglind and Rus-ii, is comparatively small for a place of such para no int importance, contain ing barely 50,000 inhabitants It is situated in a slight depression on the summit cf a rocky ridge 2,650 feet high forming one of the westernmost spurs of the great Safeid Koh( White Mountains) rang . which run9 anross Northern Afghanistan frooi west to ei8t It is surrounded by a wal which measured from the base of the earthern mound on which it stands. attains a height of 75 ; feet, which U considerably exceeded by several of tbe 150 towers that strength in it But these defenses, though seeming ly formidable, are now, like those of most Afghan fortresses, fast crum bling to decay from! long neglect. The citilel, like that of Cairo, stands on a steep rock ia thi centre of the town. There ; are four bazaats which lie just within the four princi pji to The place has a consid erable trade with Persia, India, Tur kestan, and Western China, the chief local rod acts being saffron, assiscet- ida, saddlery, caps, cloaks, shoes, car pets, saMes and , dressed sheepskins. The nam- of the town is said to be derived from Heii "Bud," or river, which flovft along the southern base of th 1 ridge upon which Herat stands. Decreased ImmiTtIn; fin far as the price of a steerage passage from Europe is . concerned, this is a remarkably farorable time for foreign immigration . The Con tinental steamship lines are engaged in a war over- rates for emigrants which has resulted .n bringingMJie charge down to an extraordinarily low figure. The small price of seven dollars is; charged for passage j in some cases. Meantime land travel here is very cheap, and the Pennsyl vania Railroad has reduced its rate tj Chicago for immigrants to one dol lar. ' ' Yet the number of immigrants landed at Castle Garden since the first of the year is more than a third less than in the corresponding period of. 1884, which showed a considerable falling off as compared with 1883. The decrease is most maiked in Ger min immigration, and the prospect is that it will continue duiing the or dinarily busy season for the steam ships bringing emigrants, which is now beginning. . It is plain enough why the foreign ers refuse to take advantage of. the exceptionally low rates, which enable them to cross' the ocean and get as far west as Cuicago for a sain , so small tbat even the very p.or cAn raise the money. They aro warned not to come by the reports sent back by Jbeir countrymen alieady here, who tell their friends in Europe that the labor market is over supplied, that trade is dull, and that at present prices for grain the profits of agri culture are small. When we were passing through the long period of business depres sion which ended in 1879 there was alike decrease in foreign immigra tion. In 1873 the number of immi grants received wan 459,803.or more tban'n any previous ye r; in 1874 it fell to 313,339r and. in 1878 it was down to 138 469, or less than in any year since 1862, when we were in the midst of war. In 1880, tbe revival of prosperity having bern assured, the total again went .up to 457,25?' and since then the Dumber has been much greater. Some of thi speakers at meetings of labor unirns have of late years gone so for as to fry out against our traditional policy of we 1 coming im migration: They say that it invites a competition injurious to the work ingmen already here . But we see that iu the ordinary course of things the number of immigrants falls off greatly whenever the competition would be seriously felt. In bad times it is small; aad only in goodtimes is it large, and then we are enjoying such prosperity that everybody has a hospitable feeling for the newcomers,' looking on them as desirable recruits added to our grt at army of produc ers. deria of fabulous age, labelled 'Brought home by Sir. A. Maitland from the West Indies in the Pique frigate.' There are some very fine old ports and clarets between thirty and forty years in bottles, and a splendid collection of sheeriee, begin ning with thirty bottles' removed to Thirleetane Castle from Dunbar, hav ing been bo. tied in 1770 in London: also ten dozen of old Rhenish, 'which came home from, Malta having been purchased by Lord Sydney Osborne at Franklort for Sir Thomas Mait land." . ; Destiny f Earthly Things. Speak only two tetter and thus Dame the destiny of all earthly Ihlng? D. K. But many have died too, early from a neglected cough or cold. If the had taken Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet tinm and Mullein a long life would have ensued. 13 4t The Oldest Tree. ; Wh'ch is the oldest tree? Tke elder, btrt-f the old mnlieia plant U the oldest In worth, for it is now recognized of nr're value than cod liver oil in eonsumpt:on. Taylo- 'a Cher okee Remedy of Sweet Gum sud Mullein will cure coughs, Colds and consumption Sons If ever gang. "How does that verse run? Something like 'hie, isn't it? 'There are who touch the magic trlng, And noisy fame ii pruuJ to win them; Alas! for thoe ho never sine;.. - . But die with all their music in them." "Yes, that's beautiful, pathetic and true, said your representative, "The poet allndss to people who are somehow su press, d, and nevtr gettoeir full allowance o I joy and air, Which reminds me of a letter shown me the, other day by Hiscock A Co.. of New York, signed 'by Mr. E. C. Wl liams, of Chapman, Snyder Co., Pa., a prominent business man of th t place. He writes: "I suffered with asth aa f j' over, forty years and had a terrible attack in D. cember and January, 1883 1 hardly snow what prompt ed me to take Parker's Tonic. I did so, and the firt day I took four d scs. The effect as' tooished me Tbat night I slept as if nothing was the with me, aud have ever since. 1 h ve bad colds since, but no asthmi. My breath' ing is now as perfect as if I had never known that disease, If you know of any one who has asthma tell him in my name that Parker's Tonic will cure it even after forty yea-s. Ther was a nan who escaped t ;e fate of th sc whom the poet l iments. . ThU preparation, which has heretofore been kniwn as Parker's Oi jger Tonic, wUl hereaf ter be advertise 1 and so d u der the name of Parker's Tonic. Inasmuch as ginger is rea 1 an unimportant ingredient, and unprincipled dealers are constantly deceiving the r cuftom ere by substitutiug inferior prepar tions u - der file name of giazer, we drop th ' misleading word. 1 Tht-'re is no change, however, in the pr pa ration itself, and all bottles remai ing in tbe hapds of deal rs, wrapped und. r the name of Parker Gin ,er Tonic contain the genuine medlcne ir the facsimile signature of Hiscox & Co. is at the bottom of th : outside wrapper. 13 4t. N ISCELAHEO US. ?E SAY! The, Cost or (he White House. Most people believe that the $50, 000 a year which the President gets as his salary is t he sum tota1. This is a mistake. The estimate of the amount whijh C ngresS is to appro priate this year lies before me open at the page relating to the. President. I see that $36,061 is asked for him in addition to his Balary of $50,000, to pay the salaries of his subordinates and clerks. '. His private secretary is paid $d.250, his assistant private secretary $2,250, his stenographer $1.8U0U, live messengers each $1,200 a steward $1,800 two ; doorkeepers who each get $1,200 four other clerks at good salaries, one telegraph oper ator, two ushers getting $1,200 and $1,400, a night usher getting $1,200, a watchman who gets $900 and a man to take care of fire who receives $864 a year. In addition to this there is set down $8,000 for incidental ex penses, such as stationery, carpets and the cate of the : Presidential stables. And -' further on, under another heading, thei e is a demand for nearly $40,000 more. Of this, $12,500 is for repairs and refuruiih- ing the White H mse; $2,500 is for fuel, $4,000 for the green house and $15,000 is for gas,: matches and the stables. . The White House, all iold. coster the coyntrj in . connection wi h or through the tongue without wine- 000 a 3ear.-Wahingtou Ler VJ Cleveland Leader. insr. Work and Tfstsres. After ascertaining last. December the number of industrial workers throwa out of employment in the pas t two and one-half years in this country, Bradstreet's has now col lected data to determine the extent to which workers' wages have been reduced in the same period. The invdstiga tion was conducted in sixty cities, but the returns from seven prominent cities were made the basis of tb e wages tables as fairly ty pical of the rates paid to three fourths of the industrial workers of the conn try. There has been in the period named an enforced reduction iff the number of employees by the closing of mills and factories and by tbe strikes and lockouts of workmen. The number thus thrown oat of work is estimated at 14 percent, of the to tal employed in 1832. And in vari ous establishments work has been re stricted by shortened hours or few er days in the week, and in many ia stances employees have bjea givsn piecework in place of fixed day or week wiag.js. But it it shown that this displace ment of labor has helped to main tain the rate of wages of thosa re maining at work. So, too, some of the strikes have prevented the reduc tion of . wages, and frequently- have gained an advance. - Iron and stesl si workers and coal miners have suf fered the greatest reduction opera tors in textiles next; glassmakers have suffered less; .the building trades have been only slightly de pressed; workers 11 leather, paper makers and printers have hid but a molerate reduction, aid food pro! ucts least of all. Taking all togeth er it is shown that ihe redactions in rates of wages are less than the itr jss reductions in amounts re3ivd in the period spe ji fi . id. And what will seem singular to some, especially those who are study ing the effects of Government foster ing of manufactures, Bradstreet's sho,vs that, the more highly protect- j , . eu luuusines nave sneered most ae ve:ely from strikes, reduced waces ana snortened working tim9, though in many of theso industries the em ployees have the best organized and most ac'ive trade unions. SCIIEDI Lks -r' WUMSE1, S HF.I ,.E, JRAINS GOING SOI TH. Dated March 8, 1885. Leave WelHi.n Arrive Kocky Mou'iit" Arrive Tarboro.... Lave Tarbiro. . . Leave Wilson.. Arrive Goldsbero.. Leave Warsaw ave Bnrgaw .' ArriveWiTmingtoB" ' No. 48 1 I'uilv. I 5 18 33pm l6': TRAINS GOING .V Leave Wilmington L- ave Burgaw Leave Warsaw Arrive Goldsboro.. Leave Arrive : 0' ,m j 'HTll. I No. 47 C - i ' a in. ! ! 10 IU am. I I' a am 850 niii!: Rocky Mount I Tarboro.... 4 KTiV.Tr2 Arrive Leave Tarboro Arrive Weldon t 1 r-j. n .iu a in 3 05 D in 2 ST mm ocuuana Week Brami. p,"tt Halifax fo-Sco' land Neck at mT turning leaves Scotland Neck at 8Sn . ' - Train No 43 North will stoi . at fn Goldsboro and Masnolia. '"JatWfl: Train No 47 makes close connection don for all noints nrth ".SM. ' Richmond, and daily except 8und., Liner -Trains make close connw.iL .h points North via Richmond and aLli All train- run solid between Wilmi Washington, and have Pullman PalaJpHt1 erstta hed.. jno F. T. M. EMERSON ! r ' ': Gen. Pass. Asjcnt. L tMTlSI ALBE1VTARLE mm On and after this date, trams will ,, this Boad by the following Schedo1. Tlme-Tablo, VXMrNG larboro, leaves 6 00 turrell's 6 15 Warren's, 6 25 Litle Creek, 6 30 tirlhel, 50 Bbbmonville 15 Everett's, 35 yilllamrfn arr 8 05 Moiwnu, Tarboro. an-i. a a Ha-rell's Warren's, Little Creek, tu Bethel, u RobersonTille ( Everett's, jjj Uii'mBt'o 1 vs Wi Piag Stations. Stop on signal only ROANOKE Norfolk & Baltimore STEAMBOAT CO StfflFS METEOR anfl CONOHfi Are making REGULAR TRIPS from Xo O'DONXELL'8 WHARF. Baltimore, JU, to the ROANOKE RIVER, connecting s WUliamston, N. C, with Albemarle & Raleigk Railroad for EVERETTS, ROBERSONVIUI HEL and TARBORO. N. C. T,ie Company also run a Steamer 0AIL1 between EDENTON and WTLLIAM8T0N, H, C. -TO INSURE THROUGH RATES ui DISPATCH, ship all freight from Baltimore from 15 O'Douneil's Wharf. ROBT. TT80N, Agent, Baltimore, Mi W. H. CAR8TARPHEN, Art Hard) 23 Iv. WUliamston, N Should we not feel proud, . after many days of honest, toil, selecting goods,' and the various details that nave to do gone enrougn wirn o iore they can be put on the counters for sale ? jo Laces, Silks, Velvets, Trimmings, Ribbons, DRESS-GOODS, , the most difficult tastes can be suitj ted. Shoes, I have in variety and Dealers are fespeciallv informed thi abundance, aod beautiful in their I make Mattresses to order. All in shapeliness. My sample shoes are need of Good Work will do well to at manufacturers nrW call or order of me, as I manufactun MATTRBS8-MAKII This is what tbe London Troth says of the contents of the Thirles tane C tst e cellars, which are to be sold by order of the trustees of the late Erl of Lauderdale: "There are over 600 dozen of old wines, all of the highest class. The great special ty is some sixty dozen of 1820 Mader- ia, bottled in 1844, with the follow ing seductive label in the cellar book: This wine Went out to India aud Main St. TARBORO, N. C. Sept 25 tf. than any Establishment in the state. Merchants will please note this fact My work and my prices are mj references. IF THERE Is no Local dealer to mi t.x. ,i , . . . - t'fj I arHoRelKPHTm H. A. WilliaiTlS, -iiu uu ome scnoot oooks or the Unveraitv I m i series, we will maU them to you. Send as tbe larboro, N. C. icgumr price ana ine dook wUl come to yon by return mail. Price lists, circulars and the fiSJjlVS.01 to a11 wbo ask for them, UNIVERSITY PUBLlaHNCi HO ia us wm, Aun . .- , 1 F YOTJ WANT HAVE YOU A fftOUAVE YOU WUl NEED GARDEN?' And will wut Ihr BrM at the least Vn.r.' The' where v, h.re hn d,yinc ft Irill lm.. Ui t JJARTIN & BRYAN, Manufacturer of UUJfiAF CIGARS. Wilson, X. C. For sale at factory prices by W.E. COBB. W lm Buecessorto COBB 4 DAWSOB LIQUORS, THEN GO TO BROWH'S SALOON, Vert Soar to St a ton t Zottler'. BcstflUed up Bar in Tovtd. J J. Brown,- Prop'r. Jl O. WOODWARD, v with K B. BLAM1RE, . - Norfolk, Va. Will mail samples of DRT QOOD8 WHEN REQUESTED, P1a m?w ? 0ret- Correspondence so- ... ...,sub ul raiierng mailed ay aaaresa. ud tocusUVlasTvSr Itil ? ALL? 11 m3 J WILL PAT $2 50 PER DAY To many ItilOllt dmoiiiSuZ .u . u illustrations, price. vSSiK?1 directions for piLit I To all who v or f or ine at home. fir-HTEAI T B PLTMENT.Liirbt. PW iiv.j nr v ' w V, W. K1DOTJT, Work. Sei V Pom Louisville. K. J. .m.FERPVA rr Ds:TR&r - - - a m av- auak. . r I H.L.8TATON, Ja.,... M, WEDDldLL,.'."...".'.! ....President. . V. Pbbstdcht. ...... Ca&hixb. CO IXKU K. ?TJ.-. tt'lIT f w tt.- . .liV uiutsu. lis Pamlico team i EanKa? Cot i ffllNVimi nESlBiFUnirni Basx open from ... . . .9 A. M. to 3 P. M. : ansoount iay, VumtSDAr. DlBEOTORS ; GENTS Make 100 pbb Cht. profit introducint; the cheapest albums ever sold. ' Contain111 places for , 75 cabinet and cabd photo- gb&phs, bandsio'ely bound inmorroccoleam erettc, "with Kilt side and edges, 0 x 11 iuchet Iu size. Retail price, $2.50 wortt 5 00 Com- tt n w n. au airj. ruwiii nrino aTli W I in.i v. 1 HI "- nowaro. a. L. Htaton. Jr.. W. 8. fnrfc I 7Z T1V . ti 9S, T T . arm ' - ' - vaaaBM I llin tW J. I T111VT1 UTaT mr tfXSIIIIIIIILIIIII 1UI ur. J-.U. m,Hn. Med. Philips Ellas The earn jShSsi tni In Silk Plnsh sent for Deo. 18-iV. ti. Addreso Foshen A McMakin, CInclnna i.O lin Bilk rinsii sem ALBUMS.
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 26, 1885, edition 1
4
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