I 1 1 H I k I H' fl" ' n N V i ii ii b ii h i ii.ii.li si i 1 M fi jj . i iMMr , . . . , , " " " " 1 " 1 '' y 1 " 1 1 1 1 ." ' 1 111 1 G K GUAM HAM. Editor. Render Unto Caesar the Things that are Caesar, Unto God, God's $1.00 Ter Year, In Advance VOL. IIL DUNN, HARNETT CO., THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1893, NO. 3, f STATE L33ISLaTaaS- ISalkioh, Alaro'ti 2. senate. The Senate was called to order at 10 tiaclock this njorning. Mr. Aycook introdueen a bill to repeal section 250G of the Code, Mr. Olive presented memorial from the State Sunday School Asso ciation and from the KaleinU Cham foei of Cotnmcrcp, asking for ti e es tahlishmcnt of the State Heforni Schujd. -Bill to provide for working the public roads of lvlgecomhe county passed third reading. Also, bill to levy a special lax for Green count; to amend the charier of Dunn in liar nett county; also, bill to incorporate -tho Capts Fear and Raleigh Railroad Company; bill to incorporate the Hank of Commerce at Wilmington; bill to . promote the cultivation cf ihell Dh in O s!ow couuty; bill to regulate the acts of railroad in re lation to lot freight; bill to change the name of Davis School to Davis Military School; bill to amend th charterof Trinity College, TIIE MACHINERY BILL. The machinery bill was xext taken up as a special order and consisted by sections. Mr. MacRae, of Robeson, offered an amendment to section 12, that real property may be listed by agents ap pointed by females br non residents, which was adopted. ; Mr. Potter offered an amendment to prevent confusion in the number of list takers appointed, which was accepted. The reading of the bill was continued by sections, amend tncnts being ofTcrad and acted upon Without finishing the considera tion of the bill, the Senate at 2 o' clock p. m, adjourned till 8 p. ru. HOUSE. The House met at 10 o'clock;. Speaker Overman in the cha r, Df. Carter ottered praye. Few bi!ls were introduced.. The only one of a public nature was by Mr, Graves, to secure uuiufonnatorv of school icxt books. There was vuite a dii'ii?sioTi of a bill to repeal the act of 1891 forbid ding ticket-scalping. br, Vance poke in support of the bill. Mr, lYi'liaras, ot Henderson spoke earn estly against it. saying the bill was only designed to ivea job to certain ppeculators. The bill passed its sec ond and third reading. The following bill3 passed their final reading : To change certain courts in the Sixth district; to protect sheep in Buncombe county by taxing doge, the peoplo to vote on the question of tax or no tax; to give the Edgecombe Loan Association time banking priv ilege." As a special order the House took up the penitentiary bill. Mr. Harris, as ohirman of the Mouse CoSmitteo on 1'enal lpstitu tlons. spoke iu favor of the bill, which ha said had been prepared by himself and the chirman of tho Sen ate committee, aided by several other members of the committee. He said tbat t'ce present management of the penitentiary was the best tho instN fctutioo had ever had. . Yet there has always been dissatisfaction with the working of the institution. In 1891 a bill had been reported making changes in the management. He spoke of the time when the paniten tiary cost from $90,000 to $100,000 a year Now the directors have dele gated their powers almost entirely o one man, haying seeu the benefit of the arrangement. They haye done this without any specific law. Ho asserted thtit there was great need for a a; stem of government. Now none of the guard or employe sre under oath or bon 1. The old law requires the the steward to give bond. Dr. Crous asked whether or not the penitenti iry was self-sustaining, and what were its expense. Mr. Harris said no appropriation had been made for this year, but that, in 1889 an appropriation of Si 50,000 had mad? in order to rencc the pen itentiary frelf-ssstaining.. There is on the Calendar a bill making a con tingent appropriation of $75,000 for this year andT next -year, in case the crops fail or there is no railway work. Mr. Carraway offered an amend ment making the salary of the super intendent 12,000 instead of 2,500, This was abopted. Mr, Mooro' offered an amendment requiring the employment or leasing of convicts to be subject to the ap proval -of- the diaectors. This was i also abopted. ' ( Mr. Robertson offered an amend raent, making the superintendents bond $100,000.. Mr, Watson, of For syth, said this was excessive. Mr Robertson said the responsi bility of the superintendent was sec ond only to that of the Stato Tress urer. Ths amendment wa lost. . There was quite a discussion of an amendment by Mr. Kitchen to strike out the provision that surplus pro ducts be sold to the charitable insti tions. Mr, Harris said that the lat ter institutions had in some cases paid fancy prices for supplies, the Morganton asylum getting them at 25 per cent, less thaa the Raldgu asylum. Mr, Axley asked if the peniten tiary had not expended $40,000 in improvements on the farm. Mr, Harris said this was an esti mate of the value of the wvrk done; the actual cost to the Stale he under took to say was not over $3,000, the work being done by unemployed con v'cts. The State had not expended $40,000. It wa a mere estimate. Mr, Kitchens amendment was adopt ed, Ti.c bill passed second and third reading. . Another penitentiary bill was tak en up, this being to appropriate $75-, 000, conditionally, for the mainten ance d' the convicts; in case the crops or no remunerative railway work is secured. The bill was re ported without prejudice by the com mittee on penal institutions.. Mr. Harrell offered an amendment making the amount $25,000, Thia was accepted) and the bill passed its secoud reading. Mr. Crouse said if tho managers of the penitentiary cannot make 900 able-bodied convicts earn their own living, they ought to rctiro and give way to those who can, Mr. Ray and Mr. Robertson said they thought the penitentiary was self sustaining. Mr. Harris said it had been for the past four years, Mr. Robertson said it was heralded all over the State in the last campaign that the Democrats had made the penitentiary self-sustaining. If this bill passed tt was a flat contradiction of all those statements, He opposed the appropriation of a single dollar to an iustitu ion which boasts of be ing self-sustaining. Mr, Axley moved to table the bill. The motion prevailed overwhelming- The House next went into cocsid eration or the revenue bill, and held an afternoon session at which the same bill was under consideration. SFECIAi. Hale io ii, March 2. The Senate: t-nighi adopt id a resolution, which ha already parsed, the House." pro viding for adjournment of the Gnert al Assembly sine die on Monday at 12 o'clock noon, The taction uf jijtae of peace was take t up a? a special order! and the report of the committee was? adopted. i , . j The following were elected bv the Se-.ate members of the Stats Board of Agriculture to fill vacancies, viz : Dr. W. II. Capeheart, in the second dis'rict;J H. Gilmer, in the fifth district; J. A. McClellan. in the setenth district; H. E, Frie3, in the tight h district, 1! Bills passed third reading to pro vide for the milita and maintaig the State Guard, and a number of locatj bills passed. - The House tonight alo adopted the report of the committee on jusf tices of the peace and passed a nunl ber of local bills. 1 The event of interest in the Hou3c tonight was the consideration of the Southport quarantine bill, which af' ter a most interesting debate, passed both second and third readings by large majo.ity. It was amended sb as to rcquiie suspected vessels air riving from any foreign port to bje sent to Southport for fumigation, etj.; Strong speeches were made in favor of the bill by Messrs, Long, Joncgj. McNeill, Rucker and Gilmer. Dc. Graves closed the debate in a finV speech, winning much applause, aftftr; which the bill passed, j; The Governor todajT appointed H. R. Lacy, of this citv, Commissioer ojf Labor Statisticls. and the Senate has confirmed the appointment. j The following trustees of he Uni-ver-it3' were tonight elected by bodi! Houses of the General Assembly : 4.! W, Graham, M. H. Holt, R. L. Gra, N. A. Sinclair, N. J. Rv)ui J. x X. Patters m, C. R. Thomas. P. 0- Gold, C. H Ajcocsj, A. Le.'izar, S, C Wei!J, W. B, Allen. A, Ij. Aiidrew;, It. tl Battle, W. H, Day, J, S, Cscf, T. A AIcNeill. W. E. Hill, P D, Mcanj A, W, Haywood, R. E. Gilmer. J. , Caldwell, T. W. Mason, L. S. Ovi -man, Edmund Jones. Jacob Buttle, S. M. Finger, T. Ii, Pritehurd, D. Gr, Worth v.nd James. - Special. Raleigiu,N, C, March 2. Tile House of Representatives of tjie North Carolina General Assemcly t day passed a bill repealing the act 4f two years ago which prevents the rN selling of unused railroad tickets, and acts as a practical prohibition of ticket brokerage in thi9 State.The bil has also passed the Senate. Tle American Ticket Brokcruge Associa-: tion made a strong effort to have the prohibition law rcpealid- as they have done in other States, j . " " ' Ii A BILL FOR BFM0VAL. Lillihgton, Feb. 28th, '93 Messrs. Editors : A very im portant bill was introduced in our State Legislature which I' think should be watched with Angus eyes. This bill proposes a no less Hercu lean job than the removal of our Staje University to Apex, etc, Now al though the Bill has not met with much favor yet still it may be revive ed and passed verjT much to the dis satisfaction of other towns i in the State with equally high claims and points of attraction as Apex. Cary has already spoken out and non LU lington would modestly though firm ly offer her claims to the son? W Solomon now congregated in Capit. oban granite between Walnut and Crablree. : :h Apex indeed, Cary forsooth, Ral eigh either for that matter. No sir! No sir ! ' With all due respect these village I say and I emphasize it, sirs Li,!ington is Hie desderatum et con cogitaum que Lfcus in quo; sine qua non. no! us bolus. Now .who can ainsay these unbend ing gi'iratlerean fats. Now I must not be understood -a? being animosi lons to the places above named, but then lock at the eligibility of this place as a ieat of learning ty the placid and classic waters of the Cape Fear where tl)e Turkey Gobler gob bleth, and the Honeysuckle perfum eth asid the blended uotcs of the feathered songsters float out in soul solacing symphony' from every, hill and every grove. Well raoreoyer I think Apex and Dunn ought to fairly content to with draw their claims in fnvor of Liliing ton, - Why? Imprisnis; they are quasi Metropoli. . They are iu our Metropolitan county and under the shadow of the Capitol. Now sirs suppose the University should be removed to one of these Towns would the act not be too cum ulative in its effect Yea, yea, for if a cyclone, earthquake or great con flagration should come and demomol ish ,hen what a disaster it would bs. No sirs I No sirs I Let's have no such heapiug up either of Ossa upon Pelion. or Pelioii upon Ossa on the University upon either of the aforG mentioued Metropoli. No sirs. I hope 3 0U will aid me with pens and influence for it is indeed casus Belli que casus Populi que vere pro Bono Publico pro re nata hanpuillibvs de monstrandum. Now 1 am not so. much agitated about removal but that I couM be picificaled, but if removal and noth ing else will satisfy our Metropoli tans friends I say Lillington, for like the Greek who prefered his own Ithaca to immortality, I am wedded to LiBir.gion. Yet again . we have other places with strong claims if LilJinglon should not bo accep2ted. 1 iMd name Turners X Roads, Summer iile, Bunns -Level. Turling ton, Dunn and Averasboro, the 1st ter being the awjnpp edged Ancient seat of the Muse. If I succeed I think 1 may modestly hope to go resounding down the ages and may exclaim with Honace "Exegi Ah.ua mentum perennius aere," and with Ovid him of the lengthy nose aud fertile brain Exegi Opus, etc , etc. Yqurs agitatedly and sempiternally. J. A. S. A Maiden s Fjrst Love. Human nature has no essence more pure the world knows nothing more chaste Heaven has endowed' the heart with no feeling more holy, than the nascent effection of a young vir gin's soul. The warmest language of the sunny South is too cold to shadow forth even a faint ont line of that enthusiastic sentiment. And proyidence has made the richest lan guage poor in the same respect, be cause the depths of hearts that thrill with lovs emotion are to sacred for tho common contemplation The musical voice of loye stirs the source of the sweetest thoughts within the human breast, aud steals into the most profound recesses of the soul, touching chords which never vibrated before, and calling into gentle com panionship delicious hopes till then unknown. Ye?, the light of a maid en's first love breaks dimly but beaa tifally upon her as (tho silver luitre of a star glimmers through a thickly woven bower; and the first flash that m intlcs hor cheek, a she feels the primal influence, is fami and pur that whteh a rose leaf ratght out op en mr.rblc. Hut how rapidly does that, light grow stronger, and that blush deeper nntil the powerful cf fulence of the one irradiates ever corner of her heart, and the crimson glow of the other suffuses every fea ture- of, her countenance. Wilioo Mirror. ATLANTIC CQAST LINE. Wilmington & Weldon Bail Rtid and Branches. CpRDENSEO SCHEDULE- THIAINS GOING SOUTH. Dated Feb. 18 '82. X6. IS I No. IT I Wo. ii rut M All Dally Dally I Dallj. ex5d P M Leava Weldon...... , 12 SO Arr. Rocky Mt, 1 40 V 11 ft 43 as a u e m 7 t Arrive Tarboro. I 1 "if P M Lcay Tarboro.... I 12 It ( 00 P M Arrive Wilson...... S 18 7 00 I 7 40 Leave Wilsou - t 80 r.t Arr FayettevlUe... ft 28 .. Leave 'loldsboro- 3 1ft 7 40 '. 3"" Leave Warsaw-.... 4 14 t 39 t Leave Mag-nolla 4 27 8 40 8 44 Arr. Wilmington- I 00 I W 11 1 TRAINS GOING NORTH. No. 14 Dally. No. 78 Dally. No. 40 Dally x Sao Lea. Wilmington- Leave Magnolia.... Leave Warsaw Arrive aoldsboro- A M 13 35 1 54 2 55 AM 15 10 57 11 11 12 05 P M 4 20 8 OS 8 IS 7 10 Lea. Payetteville Arrive Selma... ...... Arrive ilson.... 0 SO 11 85 12 80 4 Leave Wilon... Arr. Rocky Mt.... A M 3 3 4 03 P M 12 58 1 SO P 8 04 8 St Arrive Tarboro-.. Leave Taboro.....". 8 SO .1 ! t 18 12 58 Arrive Woldon. I 05 f BO. 2 55 10 00 Daily except Sunday. TraiBS on Scotland Neck Branch Road leave Weldon 4 00 i m., Halifax 4 22 pm. arrive at Scotland Neck 5 15 p m, dreenvll! 8 52 p wa, Kinston 8 00 p na. Returning, leaves Klnto 7 10 a m. Greenville 8 25 am, Arriving1 at Hal ifax at 11 00 a m, Weldon 11 25 a m, dally x cepv Sunday. Local freight train leaves Weldon at 10 15 a m, arriving Scotland Neck 105 am, Gaeen ville 5 p m, Kinston 7 40 p m. KetarnJ&c leaves Kinston 7 SO a m, Greenville a 55 a. m, Scotland Neck 2 20 p m. arrive Weldom 8.1 p m, daily except Sunday. Trains on Southern Division, Wilson aad Fayetteville Branch leaves FayettevllU 70 a. in.,' arrive Rowland 12,15 p. nv Retaratas; leaves Rowland 1.15 p. m. arriva Fayatte villo 5.15 p. m. DaUy except Sunday. Train on Midland NC Branch leaves Golds Loro, N. C, daily except Sunday, 800 am; ar rive Smithfleld N C, 8 50 ft a. Retarniog leaves Binithneld, N. C. T S8 a. B. arrives GoJdsboro.N. c. 9 30 a.m. Taain on Nashville Branch leaves Bky Mount at II p m arrives NaahvilU ft It . m, pr'.og Hope 4 30 p, m. Retarnlnr, lavS Spring Hope 8 00 a. ru. Nashville 8 35 ft. m. arrive Rocky Monnt 9 15 ft. m.! dalty except Sunday. Train on Clinton Branch lerves Warsaw for Clinton, dally except Handay, at 8 00 p m and 1115 am. Returning, leave Clinton at 8 20 ft m and 3 10 pm connecting at Wrrsaw with No. -11,40, 2G and 76, Pouthbounvl train on wilMn Payettevllls Branch is No 51 Northbound la No 50. Daily except Sunday. Trin No B7 South and II North will stop only at Rocky Mount, wilson GOldsboro and Magnolia. Train No 73 make5 close sonncetlon at weldon for all points North dally. All rail via Richmond and da'ly except Sunday via Bav Line, also at aooky Mount dally except San day, with Norfolk and Carolina for Koflolk and alll points North via Norfolk. Train leaves Tarboro. N. C. via Albemarle 6 Raleigh R R. daily except Rundsy. 4 40 p m Hunday 3p m; arrive at Wllllamston. N. C. 7 18 p m and 4 SOpm; Plymouth 6 30 p m., aad 520 pm. Returning leaves Pirmouth. If. C. daily except Hunday 8 00 a rn.tfanday tot am Williamston 7 ?0 a- m, 9 58 a m. Arrive at Tarboro, N. C. 10 40 a m and 11 20 ft sa. JOHN P. DIVINE, Gn. 8ft. T. R. KENLY. General Uanager. T. M. EMMERSON. Trade Mam&ffsr A -niUIon Friends. A friend in need is a friend indeedj and not less than one million people have fouud just such a fried as in Dr. King's New Discovery for Consump tion, Ccuglis, and Colds. If you have never used this Great Cough Meeicine, one trial will convince you that it has wonderfnl curative pom era iu all diseases of Throat,' Cheat and Lungs. Each bottle ia guaran teed to do all that is claimed or mon ey refunded. Trial bottles free at Harper & Hood's Drug store. Largf bottles 50c. and $1.00. ,1