Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / June 11, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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ff3SKGE3 - tNTELUGEKCER. .J AS. G. .BOYLIN, Publisher. - The rprfrt' Ihftt Gen.: Longsireet awas in feeble nalh f denied. . Jt fa estimated that at least f 50, (000 000 of the CJAvemtnwt's pftpor 'nnty eitppoxed to be in circulation ha byi lost or destroyed. Sir Jofcn , Alexander Macrfonnld, premier of Ihe government of Canada, fyied Saturday night at Oilawa, in 'the seventy-fifth year of his ag&; t ; v . mmmm mm mmm mmmm United States Senator Daniel W. . Vonrhee. of Indiana, is the sixth or seventh democratic Senator who has .'recently expressed himself as. unfav orable' io- the" nomination of. . Mr. Cleveland for the presidency, the ex ' President J position on the silver question being the ostensible cause of Nippofition"'" 1 ', ; TThen Ex Senator Itigalls wan in Oueapo taut week he in paid to have '(lreed fo write about 1 ,200 words for New York " Troth each "'week upon olitirnl bjecta,','ani to allow bis 'name to appear as one of the editor 'in consideration of $25 000 a year. yHei baa once or twice contributed Jo this paper since leaving the,r Senate ' v " ' i i r.: - In the United Stales Oircuit Court at Raleigh N. 'C, the county canvas ' wng board "of 'Warren couuty. North ' Carolina;' were ind idled- for throwing iut the returns of one township in 'the last congressional election. " Ob 'the'triaf Saturday the jury rendered 'a verdict of notguijty. -The indict 'ment against the board of canvassers 'of Wilmington--Of rt : similar nature 'wan thereupon i'riolle pressed by the JQnite.d .States attorney. ' . 1 f : Tim AL.L.IANCI2 CAMPAIGN. A Vijroron Effort Throognont Forty iS tales to J JtlucHte tho Masses. ' . Washington, June 7. Cot. L L. Polk, 'president of the National Farm 'era" Alliance, " and Congressman . x Jeremiah Simpson left last bight for La Crosse, Wis.; to attend a conven "'lion of the different industrial organ 'jzations of that State, which meets next Tuesday,1 the Sih of the month, lor the ' purpose of uniting with the national ; aliianca as one working lody. 'After' the organization of the 'alliance is completed they will make 'several speeches in that State, and 4 then proceed to "Illinois: Indiana. .Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and vHew 'York ' where mass-meetings "have tieen arranged by the ulliaiice rIadet-H "of those States to discuss the . 'principles of the b order." - 1 ' , r President Polk says: ','E very State in i he' Uiiion will be actively . can 'vaead ty tho'best talent itj the alii aoce in the way of speakers, lecturer 'and tahvassrtrs,' who will fully ex- : ' plain the objects of the alliance and wiiat iir be ' asked in the way of Stare and national legislation." -; ;; ' President !' Polk ' had arranged through his f6rty .State alliance pres idents ! to have .mass-meetings, at 'wiVeral points in each of the forty 'Statin during" the next four months ' with aM View of accomplishing the greatest amount of work iii the'ehort' 'est ; possible ;. time. He ; jciU bave 'hundreds of speakers at work at the name 'time throughout ,i,ho entire 'Union, "educating, as " be ;ay8, the inasses to the 1 alliance cap.se before . Jhe meeting of the Fifty-second Con gress ;By the time the national' con tention meets in November President - Polk thiuks the alliance will be fully 'posted as to what strength the Order aviM have "as presidential arid con gressional factor in 1892., President ;polk hatf taken the; field in person. 'and will visit every State from Maine. 'to the Pacific coast." - - A PRIVATE SUJB-TUKASUIIY KiAN County Alliance Banks o Take Grain 4 V 'oirSitorojJeund: Iend Xtloney on it, " Topeka,Kan., June7. Thealliance " executive- committee of Kansas is considering a scheme which practi ,'cal!y plaices the Bub-treasury plan of .'the National Farmers" Alliance rn the hands of private capitalists. ' -.J. V. Hopkins,1 who was a delegate . from the New York " Economic Club 'at the'. Cincinnati convention,' is the 'origtna'toKof the - scheme. ' '..-The plan 'is to'estahlish'a bank in each cbiihty 'of the' StStB uhtfer the direction of 'the' local, rifliance excbangjs. The capital stock in ' to be furnished by 'private subscription. In connection with each battk an elevator ' or a Ptore-house is to be'buitt. A farmer may theh.'dTLimp bis i'grain or iotton-j TnWj the storehouses, receiyi'g for it a check for 0 per cent, of ha value of the grain deposited by paying a 'small percentage for stor age and in Vurance: ' Re will be Allowed to keep 'hit grain in the depository until such time s he my detm ,it best to plac it upon the market; Die amount, "of rodace deposited this -wav niut t exceed the amofhnt of stock ub ld for Hie bak. " ' t . ? v 'checks to he issued by these iir peculpriy deviled and are 't i cfl-re. Tnese checks are "yHbfe,j 0ldir nilver i anv 'Vrunan tin's itiqnni r. It ixt they shall' b.3 circu- 15rAOIY AVOillv IN HAY I. If'T Prnnti p;lfc to IptllT Presi!?e?t. J!yitlli Scenes of Horror 111 Ptirt ma iVinc-s. , V " . JNew YOHK, June 8. The srramer Oranje-NasMU, from Port au: Prince, Hayti, todav brings the first definite news of ib outbreak there on May TbofoSotrlng letter, dated Portnu Prince Xlfly SI, concerning the out bre-ak, was brought by the Rtearoer: "For the last two or three weeks there have been rumors that a revo lution against President Hyppolite was imminent in this capital," and these having reached the ears of tha chief executive he caused the . arrest of about 80 HU8pected. persons, drag ged them from their homes and put them in irons in prison. Amoung the suspected . w as General Sul I j, who, hoariug ho was "wanted," hid him self. Failing to secure the general himself, his wife was taken instead and thrown into prison. "Corpus Christ i, Thursday, May 28, was a nationallioliday, and it was reported. that on that date Hyppolite, ia order to effectually terrify the pop ulace, had ordered a Gatling gun to be taken down to the prison and the SO prisoners to be summarily execu ted-,'. : . ' . .-v''','-. ,:.'v; v- ".:. "The friends of the . prisoner?. among wbom was General Suliy.mei in council, and, while the Presi dent was in the Cathedral, they forced open they prison doorg ana freed all the prisoners, about-250 in all. ;: -':;-,,-V ,-u- :,"'; ',.'::- -'': A SEKIE OP ASSASSINATIONS. : "Then, by order of the President, began a series of assassinations per haps unequaled in the annals ofcivi lization, and to which the massacre of St. Bartholomews sinks into in- signitiCanca. . - ' "The first victim was llr. Ernest Rigaud, a respected merchant, a hard -working man, who occupied himself exclusively with his business and was'posiiively known to have been perfectly innocent of conspiracy of any kind. He was silting on the balcony with ; nis wife, vhen the President passed, ordered hirh out and sent bim to the cemetery to be shot. He asked to be allowed to take his hat (he wa uncovered) " and the . President's own words "were: 'You won't rf quire" a hat long.' His nephew, a boy of fifteen or sixteen, followed him him to the place of ex ecution and returned with the. news to theeSieted wife, who was still 'hoping to bring influence to bear to Bave her husband. He told her: 'It is useless ; my V poor uncle has been foully murdered. These words were reported to the President and twenty minutes later t he boy was brough bei fore him." Being asked if he had made the above statement he did not deny it, but said : 'President, I have never conupired against you by word or deed. The boy was shot at once. ; .'' SEVENTEEN SHOT AT ONCE. ' "AtJout the earne time Mr. Alexis' RoKsigno!, an inoffensive and much esteemed man, was exeexued in the streets. Another man was put up against the Cathedral wall and shot. Seventeen were executed in a batch, ana1 even at this date an occasional volley tells that another poor wretch has been sent to hi" doom. "There is no fighting in the "streets to excuse this massacre. Every ex ecution is carriedx out in the most cold blooded way, the. executioners being soldiers belonging to the most degraded type of nen, who seem to en joy the bloody task. . TiiKKr; (ivr.r.n WOMEN .EVAS- VICTIMS OF HYDROPHOBIA. The Terrible Fate of Two Brothers in - Atchiiisoa CoKiuy, Kansas," : Kansas City, Mo. Juno 7. Some two weeks ago a mad dog bit a steer. one of a herd of cattle belonging to the Vauderbuig brothers, living in tJ-se western portion of Atchinson (1 . : tT J. .'"".-mt. onumy, jvansas. ids steer was hfHicted with' hydrophobia, which spread to other members of the herd -Thero were three of the Vander. burg brothers, and each of them was bitten by one or another of the efSicled animals. They did not know the lerrible nature of the disease with which their cattle were afflicted and paid no particular attention : to the injuries until Friday, when one of the brothers became violently ill with hydrophobia, Lnst night he died in most excruciating agony. To day: another brother died and the third was brought to this city by the surgeon of the Missouri Pacific corps and was placed in the Missouri Pacific hospital; lie has all of the terrible symptoms of hydrophobia, and it is not believed that medical skill will avail him anything. Phy sicians say he can eurvive a day or Iwoonly at farthest. ' TVAKE FORES't GKXS $S3,O0O V A ve "nature ; of the women mirch n men to --those I vhich spring v r the ym. t'way. pwk v -vpetite 13 ".il'arjto ,.Vi'p 'for A. C Melke, of Ijumhenton. I,fai7f.s Iarge legacies to Different Institutions. Ralt-igh Chronicle. i- '. A, C. Melke. of Luroberton, who died recently in Asheville, bequeath ed large legacies to -several of the most prominent ' charitable institu tions in the State. "- .' In his will he leaves twenty-five thousand' dollars to Wake Forest College, it to be qsed at a part of the endowment fund. , 1 He left also fifteen thousand dollars for the establishment of a first class Baptist t-chool in Lumberton. Six thousand dollars goes to the endowment of. a home for the aged and infirm ministers. - - . Five hundred dollars was the pact left for the Baptist Female' Univer-ity.- . - - ' ; ' H also Joft f Inrgo wim't n t he Bap tist Orph'nnnge t Thomasville and I other charitable objects. ; v H wasa noble Ohristfan man - and dnigly phtWithropic. l,f?rfliw, nv ail pla. on n1 mii-r ll circti'nHai)t"j, laches, ue Brzidycrof m Stranjr B'vnn in a Country CInrch, and . Hvpnoiiin Said te be tlte Cause. -Conrier-JonmaL , ' "-"'." ' Oneof those strange religious crazes that at interval pass over 'certain sections of the country is now raging in Mt. Ebal, a little Indiana settle ment. Uuder the influence of hyp notism or fanaticism people are for saking.their homes to listen to the frenzied talk of three women, passing as they hear the wild harangues front mere interest at first into iniense ex citement, losing control over nerves and muscles, dancing and shaking like Indian dervishes,, and finally falling into trances hard to tell from death. The strange qraze has existed for weeks, and shows noeignof cessa tion. Jt resembles the wild work of the notorious Mrs. Wood worth in this .city a few years ago, but is so much more severe that a parallel must be sought for further back in the danc ing epidemic of the early years of the century. - About ten weeks ago three women, who said they came from Springfield, III., passed through Bloomiugton, Ind The oldest was apparently about 60 years of age, and gave her name as Mrs. Sarah JDaughlin.- Her compan ions were unmarried: Anna HufKin, about 25 years of age, and Mat tie Tomlinson. . about J8. The three moved on to Mt. E'oal, a country church, ten miles south of Blooming! ton, and about midway .between Smithville and Harrodsburg. There they settled down and began their meetings, which bave continued nightly ever, &uiee. From tha start familiar hypnotic experiments were made, both t he older women using the young girl as the subject. To the simp country people these mesmeric feats were very strange, and to them is due the first credence given to the claims 'of the women, that they were overpowered by Jehovah ; to make their miraculous manifestations, to beal the sick, and to cast out devils As their subject fell into the by? notic trance they cried out that she" was "one of the slain of the Lord; slain by Him to be saved ; to awake from the death purified and regenerated," Converts came to the women preach ers speedily. One by one the people became infected by.. their strange hallucinations, and now night after night aisles, . benches, pulpit, and rostrum in the little church are pack ed with "the slain." ' j. nose navmg tne meetings m charge say that the thing has only fairly started and that they will be kept up all summer. It was t hought one month ago, that there would be a subsidtnco of the interest and exciie mcnt when corn ploughing and plant ing time arrived, but instead of that, the meetings are still crowded every night, and the interest is unabated. The managers now say therr big tab ernacle a tented pavilion large enough to seat more than a thousand people will arrive early next week, when the campaign against tho "power of darkness" will be begun in earnest, with, increased zeal and valor. A few days ago the scne of the strange excitement was visited bv a representative of the Courier-Journal, and no exaggeration was found in the reports cf the craze. Many of the converts, from the time they name in tMght of the chapel, began to jerk and twitch their hands, which increased as the meeting progressed.- firt, n tremulous motion " sidewiae. then beating their hands more and more vehemently, up : and down", and finally describing an elliptical, or circular movement. When tbey lose consciousness in the trance many of them look as if they were dead, lying for twelve hours sometimes, with the motion of the heart eo faint that it can scarcely be discerned. It was impossible to find among all the convorts at thee meetings a eiugleone who has joined a church. It is not talked about. "Neither the managers nor any of their disciples ever indicate any denominational preference. The preaching consists of short, and at times incoherent and disjointed exhortation, harping al ways on the theme that the preachers are possessed of miraculoua "power, bestowed in the night time, by visions' Mies HuflSin stated before the meet ing that she had been informed in a vision, during the preceding night, that it might be that they would shortly have to leave these meetings and establish the Tabernacle othe Lord at Avoca, in Lawrence county, near Bedford. This woman is'the bestl preacher of the three, but her best exhibitions of oratory are fam ished during her loud, vehement, and very rapid prayers, during which she holds a handkerchief aloft in ono nana ana Fbakes and trills her voice in an e.m6tional way, well calculated to move and profoundly impress her illiterate followers. Among , the singular features'-of these meetings is the fact that this woman seems to "devote herself to persons schooling themselves acainck her,, and certainly not. yielding a willing .obedience to bor commands and exhortations.: These are mostly young men, one of whom, a lad 19 years old, was carried out of the church to a shady place near by, after ue naa rallen heavily to. the floo- about the centre of t.h it ' was in convulsion when jcarried to the outer air, frothing at the mouth, and asevere hemorrhage immediately following from his mouth. ,' Hia teeth were tirmly set together, and when yonng men about him were Shouting to him: v Bn. Ben Bsk'f.Ki'T.j .1 help you, and He will heln vonTT helped iH8,f the nooV fellow wo,n!,i fhakehishead; indicating fhat'tliou-h hii eyes were closed in sleep or trance, be jet had some sort of knowledge of whac was going on awtm-i -'bim. "Hn grnncrrather, V leaning on hickory".; uta. ' ."said : '- "Di y'.t'Ul. .He c-iii-?o,i - '!,.,- Ytt.iU-.rihiY, Jft -am tH'" jrorrtinjr ,ir:np', trA swore he would not yield obedience to the Lord. That's "what makes. it. go so hard with him." ' From others it was learned that for morn than a. week this 3'oung man had been equally af fected, after an equally utrong resist ance. Gatherd about him, as bo lay sleeping in the deep : shadows of the grove, his friends decided that after he came out of the slain condition, they would "-dismiade bim from further attendance upon the meet ings... . ';.-: .', ; ;-.-' ; Manysucb incidents occur at every meeting, and the spread of the crize if, becoming alarming. An explana tion of the excitement was sought, and Prof. William I. Byran; who bas ihe chair of mental ana moral phil osophy at the State University of Bloomington, was asked his opinion of the Mt. Ebal trance meeting.- - "No careful scientist will profess to give an ultimate explanation of any -thing," be replied . "He only tries to group facts. I saw nothing at Mt. Ebal Church in tho way of a 'trance' which could not be grouped with the relatively simpler cases of hypnotism. One does not need to be s specialist in this field I am not one myself to see these two things first, that the methods of the leaders are such as to induce hypnotism; and, second, that tho catalepsies, rigidities," motions, visions, &c, are all such as would be expected by a hypnotiseur unde the conditions present. As an illus tration of their method I saw one of the women approach a timid looking boy of perhaps 16 and exhort hini 'to come to- the Lord. At the tirna the congregation was singing, over and over, in slow but weird and intense tones, one line. " 'It's the very same power, it's the very same power, it's the very same poweri that came a Pentecost. Meanwhile the leader held before and somewhat above the boy's face an open hymn book in such a way that the light; fell upon it brightly. At this he stared for a few moments and 4hen fell away into the first stage of hypnosis. Inthis and other cases there was evidently direct hypnotization. Charcot could could not have done it better. . "Ibrougbout the time of meeting the conditions were such as a hypno tiseur would consider favorable. Many persons wish to pass into the 'trance.' Even more expect to do so ur ai jeass rear tnat tney will pass into that state. All have the atten tion powerfully directed in that way The long, metallic, rhythmical tones in preaching, prayer, and singing- characterized both by monotony and intensity, are under these conditions qtiitesufficient to induce the hypnotic btate. Ihe attention is further fixed by the spasmodically quivering right hand of the preacher, or by the open book held aloft m the light in her right band. Cases of anto-hypnosis also occur. "As to the phenomena of the 'trance,' besides the changes of circu iatiou, respiration, and the rigidity or tne ooav. wnicn are common phenomena of the cataleptic state, it ia significant that ail the actions per formed and all tho visions reported are such as tho actions or words of the leaders suggest. In the voudoo snake worship reported from Hayti, women wriggle and hiss like serpents Here they shake the right hand and walk about the church, and describe Satan, Sec. ', all which they have seen" and heard from the leaders. Those leaders could "perform far greater 'miracles,' if they knew what some of our hypnotiseurs could tell them to try. "As to tne err&cc ot au this upon the people who undergo it, I will say that I think two boys, who might have had some degree of sane life, are probably rendered idiolia in the way I have mentioned. Many others will doubtless suffer in a less degree, particularly some amonj; the women and young girls. Some will doubtless receive positivo benefit. I do not doubt tho sincerity of the people, nor that the life of tho community may be elevated. I believe one of the leaders shammed a trance. I do not know about the others." to thin -a sioiit n won't mooting O"1! : '; ;; EARTHQUAKE IN ITALY. Its Effects Widespread People Killed by Falling Walts.. BoAfE. June 7. Lombardy, Venetia and part of Tuscany were visited early . this morning by repeated rih'ocks. The wotst shock occurred about 2 o'clock in the morning. Shocks were also felt in Venice and Milan. ' " The centre of the disturbance was at Verona. A subterranean noise was heard like the roar of artillery, which was followed by three strong shocks. The inhabitants rushed. .into the streets in terror. At Alarcenigo three ve rsons were, killed, and at Bad ia CalaVena seventeen were bad- Iv iniured by falling houses and chimneys. At the latter place anoth er shock was felt at 6 o'clock in the morning, and much additional dam age was done. v .." The movements were undulating in character and were felt more or less over tho whole of the north of Italy." y-; -'' A; : , f : . Roys, June 8. Ad vices? from Bid ia Cala vena and Trognanjt', two of the towns in northern . Italy that were visited by the earthquakes yes terday, show that the inhabitants aro terror stricken, and that ' they have taken to the fields for safety. The authority ' have, a far as pos sible, sought to alleviate the distress amoiiK the people, and have furnish- ed a large number of tents to shelter those w ho have fled from their homes. : The subtrerranean rumblings Icoii-tinue,- - and occasionally , plighter shocks than those of. yeterdav re felu. The people are in: dread of mo mentarily seeing the earth open and swallow them. - : - : . ' . SUM 8 '- Jti. ' ' .. jJ ones' Kxfprienrv. .-'J-,. -;';';. -; ITbonght a pajnt."ai'd'' to ba ns dnrahn as the Avei ill Faint. jnl pp.inted FOUR times in a brief period. His ntihhor bought the ' AyeriiT mid ji&intwt but bxc in the fwime TK-riod. Jrmfs shrewd neightoi- saveel fthont Hpi-rnt. Uo thou nnddn likowi--... Averill pi.i".t has :ir hv t!-n ; '-pn i i -;-;. :- - -r.i. ir'i . i-riiir,-. .,1. . , , , NKWS XOTKS. Cl?e!and county . went dry by about 5X mjority, in the election held last Monday. -. "Twelve persons were killed in Vienna last week during the. light ning and thunderstorm thero. A clerk in the Dead Letter Office at Washington. D. C.-has been caught stealing money from letterp. ' ' Tho total of immigrants landed ot New York during the past week is 17.166, the largest ever known for the same period. , " In tbe eighty-two. national ceme teries in this county there are said to be 237,179 "graves, about o no-half of which art. marked "unknown." The last census of ' Ireland shows that of the religions practiced by the people the Methodists alone show a gain in membership. . The brigands who recently seized a number of Germans on a railway train between Constatinople and Adrianople, and held them for a ramsom, have liberated the captives. Richard 8. Bartine, the lawyer, of Asbury Park. N. J., who had been suffering from hydrophobia for several days, ied Saturday. Mr. Bartine was bitten in tntember. 1890, by a madcat. . v. js -.- ''-.- - ' ' -v -" A Rev. J. H. Kyle, elected Jjfs. Sen ator from South Dakota, eaya the people of the East sent him out to preach to the heathen at 5Q0 a year, and then the beatbens sent him'ack Eapt to do political missionery work at $5,000 a year. After preaching two hours and fif teen minutes in Chattanooga, one warm night recently, Rev. Sam Jones asked permission of his congre gation to take off-his coat, which was readily granted. The noted evange list then finished his discourse in his shirt sleeves. Benjamin Matthews, of New York, was shot and mortally wounded in Wilmington last Monday night, the ball striking bim in the forehead and lodging in the brain. II. R. Trask, a madman, did the shooting. Tho men wore strangers, having never seen each other before. Tra3k is in, jail. The Indianapolis and Louisville fast train ran into a tornado near Crothersville, Ind., Thursday night. The engine and train swayed fearful ly, and the passengers were panic stricken. Lehman Bush, the en gineer, could riot stop until the train had pierced the cloud, the train going at fifty miles an hour. Its speed was all that saved it. Christian Geiss, a German, and Miss Ellen Burke, of Irish birth. neither ef whom can epeak the oth er's language, were married in Pitts burg. The knot was tied in Latin, an interpreter aiding to secure the pro per responses. To the clergyman tho bride said that she and her husband managad to do their courting by signs. and no doubt they would be happy. now they were married. - The Weakest Spot. 'There is one thine about the ewin ' said Chappie, who wan jusc recover ing from it; 'it always attacks the weakest part.' bo 1 understand.' said Miss Shame: 'you bad it all in the head. I believe ' M. B. & C. B. MPOEIUI "Blow your horn, Bil ly," for if you do not, M. M. ' oia Doy, no body else will. $100 He ward. $lOO. The readers of tbe Messesoeh Aim Ivtvt LlGENCKR will be pleased U learu that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure juall jts stages and thr.t is Catarrh, Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only ixwitive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease requires a constitutional treatment, tiall s Catarrh Cure is tajcen internally, act mg directly upon the blood and mucous su& faces of the system, thereby dstroyine the foundation of tho rli'ciu patient strength by building up the coustitu- uu tus.isi.iug nature lu aojng its work, the proprietors havo so much faith in ir curative powers, that they offer One Hun, dred IJoJlars for any case that it fails to cure ...... Vi wrwiin.iiuu5. iiaiUvSS. J. CHKNEY & CO., Toledo, O. E3TTOid by Druggists, 75c. 1 "f am not much at blowing I mere ly wish to call your attention to few of our methods. Our goods and prices speak in more convincing lan guage than any we could use. In the first place our buyer lives in New York, watching the great auction sales there, two or threo times week, and when he soes anything going at a marvelous sacrifice, he scoops it in. In this way our stock is being constantly added to, with new attractive goods in all the de partments and nothing but BAR GAINS in each. f3HE old style of filling a store with A. gooa spring ana iraii as a man would his crib with a year's supply of corn, or his smoke houso with year's supply of provisions, bas about stopped ia this wide awake, progres sive ago. So, too, these long time Bills have yielded to the potency of ins unansweraoie tspot uasn argu mentand its concomitant discount "fljE 8e 11 goods for cash. Nocxedit business in mine, if you please. No books and their keeper, costiDg from nve 10 6ix nunarea aoiiars a year No estimate of bad debts in making up the cost of goods. No feeling of distrust or uneasiness ou the part of the seller. No dodging by tho cus tomer because bo owes you a bil and so on, with a thousand other evils of the Credit System, which "even to name would be unlawful.' "jTN addition to being a cash bar OE) ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing io the taste, and acts gently yet promptly orj the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, 'cleanses the sys tem eftectnallr, dispels colds, head aches, and fevers and cures habitual constipation. -Syrup of Figs js the only remedy of it3 kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in' it3 effects,, prepared only from tho most healthy pud agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have -made it the most popular remedy known." . Syrup of Fi is for sale in 50c and SI ' bottles by all leadings drug gists, t Any - reliable druggist who may not have -it on hand will rro- curo it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do net accept any substitute.- . CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. tOVISVIUZ, KK ;: , MEW YORK. N.I. NOTiCEI-NORTGAGEE'S SALE! Under the provisions of a roortenjre dvl executed to me by J. D. Austin and wife, M. A. Austin, dated l!3th day of May, ISSS, and recorded in tho o3ee of tbe Kecister of Dewla of Anson-county, S. C, in Trust Book No; , M, on page SO, &c., I shall, on Tuesday, 14th day pf Ju!y 1S9L sell, to the highest bidder at public auction, for cash, u the court bouse in hV nlucKxivi TVT 1 V. 1 i I ' uiiwuvii', ... V., lua JAriu H.ll V r V t. I in H-l mort'Mse deed, which is a town lot Fit- ; Bated in tne town of Polkton, Prison courvty, N. C-, adjoining the lanus of T.: K.- O'Neal, IV. .-K damp and others; known as J. J), j Austin's store hi.m-.-e lot, and for & more par- ' uinr !i'cripcion ot' the same jef-renceis iiinn.'rtg.'ge deed. Thi June gain house, wa are strictly a ONE PRICE HOUSE. We sell one dol lar's worth of goods as cheaply as we can sell ten dollar's worth and all are marked so closely and we value the one price principle so highly that even one penny would split the trade. There is no reason why a man with i . . . . . Hinau necessities snould pay more pro rata for one dollar's worth of goods than a man "Who has to buy ten to fifty dollars worth, or why certain lines of goods should bear a greater profit than other lines. Why not make the profit uniform, and tho same rate on every article in the house and let all share alike t It has been the habit of some merchants, and no doubt is to this day, in open mg up a bill of goods to select the most salable and attractive and put a larger per cent on them on that ac count. The true merchant or buyer will guard against anything high in price or unsuited to his trade and then this old fogy habit will be inei' cusable. put on a 6 mall uniform- tariff, in ad .3 : . T . .1 T "T 7- - 1 . ... . uiwuu vu tujuciiniey, ana "let em go." whether on a box of Sardines. at Cc, which cost 4Kc. in New York, or on a twelve dollar suit of. Clothes! These methods scrupulously enforced. with polite treatment to all, whether rich or poor, black or white, we be lieve will secure your patronage. On these terms we solicit it, carrying out in the smallest detail our maxim, "Cash Bargains and Mutual Benefit." Tuttlers Canvassed Hams X eta. . Cross Bar Muslin 4'cents. . A. N. & Co.'s straight Mocha and Java Coffee.. . Other goods in proportion. JOE CEOWDEE, THE HUSTLER. A ST0R "WaaoslDoro, 3T.O. i -.1. 4-5 INCI1 Flouncings embroidered all the way up, with Hem. stiched Cotton, 43c ; 47c ; 49c ; 53c ; 5Sc ; 63a If you want a Bargain in a NfCE WHITE DRESS see these goods. 12 yards LINEN TORCHON LACE IN BOLT, 13c; 15c; 19c; 24c. bolt of 12 yards. ORIENTAL LACES 6c ; 9c ; 12c ; 15c ; 18c. WHITE DRESS GOODS 4c ; Sc; 6 l-2c; 7c; 8c; 10c ; 12c; 13c. up The Best Halter you ever saw, with 10 feet rope for 25 cents. A good Je&ns Pant Cloth 8c; 9c; 10c; 12 1 2c; 14c; 16c; 19c; 21 cents. Men's Malaga Straw Hats, 7 inch brim, 8 cents. Same in Boys, 4 conta. Good Calicoes 4c, 5c. Colored Drees Lawns 3 1-2 cents. Bleached Domestics 5c; 6c; 7c ; 7 l-2c; 8 1 2 cents. A Beautiful line of Challies at 4 1-2 cents a yard worth 7. 2500 Wood Tooth Picks 4 cents. Suspenders 5c; 7c ; 8c ; 10c ; 12c ; 14c ; 16c; 18c ; 21c ; 24c. tSTNew goods coming in all tbe time. Come to see us when you want Bargains. Another lot Ladies Trimmed Hat3 43c; 49c; 56c; 63c; 67c; 73c; 79c; 82c; 89c; 93o. Hew York Eacket Store, Harris & Horton, Proprietors. New York Office 549, 551 and 553 Broadway. r m w ff j t m fy m w w &eneral lercliandise, JEJ "FvZ TT5 W. CHAS-DISON. DON'T BUY YOTJE Spring - and - Summer Until you examine pur Stock and &et Our Prices;: M o ney save d is mon ey m ad e --v 'V- ''-i- ''v' :
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 11, 1891, edition 1
2
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