Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Aug. 17, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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n T T7S A TPtvT irHTTm ESTABLISH KI) 1881 GOLDSBOKO, N. C, TIIUKSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1893. VOL. VI. NO. 49. GOLDSBOko s Life Worth Living? That depends upon tho Liver. It the Liver h inactive the whole sys tem is out of order the Lreath is had, digestion poor, head dull or aching, energy and hopefulness pone, tho r-pirit is de pressed, a heavy "vrcight exiVts. ufter eatinpr, with general despondency and the Lines. Tho Liver is the housekeeper of tho liealtli; and a harmless, f-implc remedy that acts like Xuture, docs not constipate afterwards or require constant talcing, does not interfere with business or pleasure dur ing its use, makes Sim mons Liver Regulator a medical perfection. I have tf-(-'l it jeron.i!lv, ;nil know th.it for I'V i'l M .. Iiili.msiies an.I T hnibmnj; H.i.Uche, it i. llit! lest inviiicinr the world ever saw." U. H I M.icn, lia. Take only the Genuine, Y!m:h has on the Wrapper the red 53 Trade Uiaik ai.U Signature .! J. II. ZK1I.IN & CO. THE N. Y. RACKET STORE .1 i-I opened mi I ":r Walnut s! reel, next door 1 lr. II. A. Smith's cilice, makes the !" 1 1 . i 1 1 r l "t 1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 i:i pin Clothing ! Whole -ml- I'"!' men i'i,iiii.;-J.T"it.sl''J.o(l. l'aut I'm- men t" I " 1 ; l V. ami up. I'.oys" :iinl Youths" suits from s'.'Jo a:nl up. ( 'n:its I" r s 1 1 si. oil ;n,, up. Dry Goods! Cheeked 1 1. itn' .mi :.: : t n . I white. at pel- var.l - "(. I .pialit v. ( '..!',. oes. -l:i!,;!;inl. al -V. mm- va.'-.l. Ilamlkerehiel- W.. ho needle- I,-.. 1 ear. 11 1 I. i! -. for :: agate Mltton-- Cents' furnishing Goods and Shoes ! At prices II. er heo;v Nm!-, of. Men's n kite shirt, don!,.- mint ami hack, nijlv :i:!c. ( 'oloic.l shirts only l'.v. t'-' Highest market .rice paid for l'.ees Wax in a n v . i ua ii t i I v. A.M. SHRAGO & CO., Prop'rs. We Take the Lead! W e are ;,o,v handling t he very That has e er Keen brought to the city. Best Quality and Lowest Prices! l nt (oil, Pork and Sausage Always mi hand. We pay the highe-t market prices for catt le. S. Colin & Son, CITY lit "! IlKUs. ;oLlr. i;. N. c. A Positive and Absolute Cure Foa S t ri ctu re And I'ro-tatic Irritation. , I 'A IN Ol'KKATlON LOSS OF TIM 1". an;ki: ' FA 1 LI TIF. NO A Home Treatment. l'arlieiila:- free. Aililiv--li.Ml'lKK. MF.DICAL CO.. P. O. box no. lio-ton. Mass. Jl iJ v V7 1 1 vii l lui COMPOUND. A r-oent diiicftvory bv an old VHtlilllltJ t"l rlIIXUIliiS Of JAW ,.(..-. J.-t!u milv i iTl'ji-tly safe mjil relial l'S iii.-'iii':ii' ciicov- civd. J:uw:ir;uf inii.ri!icl;ilod drui.xlsts who otl.r Inferior Mnltolnfs In placoof tills. A-b for Cook'.- Cotton Uoui'CuMroi mi, take ?i fttbstii 'itc.or iucl-iuSiiwl ti cuts In postage In lett. r. ami veHill. inl.Keakil, .y return mail. Full si-alcd particulars in ,laia iivi'lnpc, to ialics only. ! stamp-. Auaiutd Iml Iiiy Company, :.'o. o 1- i-hur Diuck, liutrolt, ilith. Sold in iold.-horo ami e ervw here hv all re-poii-il,!,. druggists. Dental Prosthesis A Specialty! V i'ntors(xii)F.cA..TiiKii:KA'r- eM a:;ae-t hetie !' - oral -urgery kiiown. alu ays on hand. Charges iib eral. Dr. J. M. Parker. 1 Mi'n-e:-Centre S;.. We-t. ( iold-horo. A Happy Welcome i s ;('ai;antkki to tiiosk who l will call at my -aioon. u hich is stocked at all time- with the choicest of! 1 1. ine-l le and Imp. .ri ed Liquors and Winos ! i AH the laie-t ,iii,k- coinpoiimled and I manipulate.! by .skillful men. ! Domestic and Imported Cigars. 4 NT) A LAKOK LOT OF FINK TO- haceo. For Fun- North Carolina Corn Whiskev my place is head.piarters. Mr. Ciilleii Howell is with me ami would he pleased to see his friends. Mai Jas. L. Dickinson, At John (Jinn's Old Stand. I.ife. Li fe is a igoroiis tree In verdure exceedingly Tender ami precious its hioom lis blossoms ami fruitage rare. Life is a brilliant gem. in depths of a gloomy in i in: Freed from its jruriiionis of earth. In diadems it may shine. Life is a central spring. I n t!ie bowels of earth lies hi. I : Waiting till it shall le free.!. Till raised is tlie eartlily liii: Life is a motive power. II Hows from the Godhead's breath! Pulsing ami throbbing for age. On. on. thro- the vaults of Death! Never increased lior lessened. Life is perpetual, supernal! Kver ami only renewal! liven a- (Jod i elernal! CiiAi'K II. lloim. 'Haiti Times." These are "hard limes" ami no body is ever allowed to lose sight of the fact. Something happens to cause a stringency in money and everybody forthwith tries "hard times."' Then 1 hey get harder. The lianlc begins to hesitate about dis counting paper and next the gentle manly cashier says lie is sorry hut really he will have to decline to give up any money to the importunate customer all because the times are so hard. The clerk and the wage worker, whose pay is running right along at the old figures, wag their heads and declare they never saw such hard times. Shyloek puis on his glasses, looks over his notes and tells his hapless debtors that in con sequence of hard times he must have hi money. The rich man. with cash in the bank and no poor kin. stands oil' the dry goods merchant and the i-iHi'V. telling- them to call again. The man who is "good but slow" (you all know him) is in his very ele ment, for what better excuse could he hav, r biiiii -t ill than the I'Xcu-e that ""titiies are hard and nobody seems to have any money."' I nciJ.esnally a rot ten bank" here and : there, the heart of which was eaten ' out years ago and which was but a heil when times were at bet. avails , itself of the opportunity to let itself; down easy, and tacks on its door a ! little notice statiug that owing to the stringency of the times and ina- i biiity to realize on assets, etc.. etc. And so we go. The rich and the poor, the bond and the free, the white and the black 'ami those of neutral lints" ail howi calamity until ; it look's as if everybody had joined' the Farmer.-.' Alliance. The man : with his stomach full, with clothes on his back' a::u a good balance in bank', is making more fuss than any body. The man who is able and; rather disposed to help his neighbor; over the summer is rat tlvd by the talk' he hears and fakes a fresh hold on his dollars. The farmer has old ; corn in his crib, bacon in his smoke house and has threshed out the big gest wheat crop he has had in years, j and bank vaults are bursting with money, but everybody says '"hard times." The times are hard with those who do business on credit made so by fright of those who have ; the cash but they would become; vastly easier if those who have iinm- i ey would pay their debts, if those who can help their neighbors would, do o. and if all Kinds would quit talking so much. What A Dollar Did. : A correspondent or the Charlotte Observer, writing from Sali.-bury. ! says: "".Mr. 'm. II. Ilorah. an aged ; and highly respected cit i'en of this ! city, and one who is well known for his veracity, fells the following inci dent e.s occurring to his . knowledge regarding the payment of debts with a single dollar: While in business ; before Iho war he had occasion to at tend a sale in the county where some one in the crowd asked him for.l. i.eniembering- that he owed the man this amount, lie paid. him. whereupon ; the man at once paid it to another muii he owed, who in turn paid it to another and so on until it had reach ed the tifth man. The latter hap pening to owe Mr. Ilorah 1. now 'handed it to him. in payment of his ; account. Mr. I lorah ret urned home ; with, the same piece of money, liav ; 'mg paid a debt and collected a bill with it. The money, besides cancel ling a debt at d settling- an account 1 for Mr. Ilorah. had paid bills for five otlicr men the saniedav." This is a truo representation of the circulation of money, and if the peo ple who have money would pay their ; bills when presented it would make i this much required article more plentiful. A Ita.l I us.- of l lux nr.-.!. (I i:i;(. ' vii. i. k. ( 'Ai;.ii:iii s('n.. N. C. Mr. Allen Iilockw il.h-r had scut after the doctor, hut liewa-liot at home, hav ing been called otT on .-.ona- other case. The man u ho came for t he doctor said that Mr. lilockwilder was very sick, that he was passing Mood and vomiting. We gave him a small hollle of Chamber lain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrluea lleme.iy. and told him to go back ami tell Mr. I!, to try it. After using tluvc iiiarters of the medicine he was ell. WlKKMIol SK iV; SlIINX. Mess. Wideiihouse it Shinn arc prom inent merchants and are widely known in that part of the State. Their state ment can he relied upon. For sale by all Druggists. Fits, dizziness, hysteria, wakefulness, bad dreams ami softening of the brain quickly cured by Magnetic Nervine. Sold by M. K. Kobinsoii tV- l!ro. Aitr OX A FJ.lt A.. He Savs tin- True Solution is for Hie Ne gro lo (Jo In That Con u1 r.r. P.ishop Turner lectured here last Sunday night on '"Africa." TTe has been there and went for a purpose. It is on his mind and in his heart that his people in the South must sooner or later go back to the land of their fathers, and he went out to see what kind of a land it was. His narrative sounds like a Munchausen tale to those who have not read Liv ingston and Stanley. The "dark continent" is looming up and is now attracting the attention and the wonder of the civilized world. IJishop Berkeley said: ""Westward the tide of empire takes its way," and it did when he wrote, but now it is rolling back lo the East. Dr. Henry M. Field, the gifted editor of The New York Evangelist, is now in northern Africa and the weekly letters of his travels are full of interest. All that beautiful region on the coast of the Mediterranean is tilling up with the best class of French. (Senium and English civilization. The historic land, where Carthage was and w here Hannibal and Hamilcar marshaled their mighty armies, is m.w the peaceful, prosperous home of Prot estant Christians. After a thousand years of sleep, northern Africa has been awakened by a new birth and in the growing city of F.orie. that was the ancient Hippo, a magnificent cathedral is being erected in memo ry of St. Augustine, the last great man of Africa. Some years ago Dr. Field traveled over that country and rode hundreds of miles on camels and slept with the Arabs in the desert, but now he rides in palace t ars to Jerusalem and rests in hotels along his journey and all along the line are towns and villages and cultivated farms, and all this wonderful change is the fruit of I Christian civilization. The inscrip tion on the statue of the good St. Augustine in the new cathedral ex plains it all: "If 1 do not perish I owe it to my mother." His father was a pagan, but his mother was a Christian, ami her constant prayers and pleadings ami teachings made him the wonderful man that he was the most wonderful, perhaps, who ever lived, considering his life-work j dry. The patronage was doublet, and the result of his labors. j the tirst session, reaching within lei. Hut for the negro, the Congo re- j of the increased limit. It is to b. gioii seems to be designed by I'rovi- j noted that this school places such a dene for a permanent home. It is i restriction in the number of pupils described by all the travelers as the ! admitted, that the principals can most fertile basin in the world hav-j give due personal care to each pupil, ing Jiili.utio.oiMl of square miles as I It is probably just here that iho rep fertiie as the valley of the Mississip- j utatioii of the school for the highest pi. and the hnl country adjacent abounding in cupper, tin and iron mines. (Jeueral San ford says it is destined to become the granary of the world, and IJishop Turner de clared the climate to be exactly suit ed to his race. Well, now if is becoming more and more apparent that they must and will go somewhere. The conflict be tween them and us is irrepressible. It is widening and deepening as the years roll on. There is no rest, no abiding place, no security for the negro in the I nited States, neither North nor South. His idle to dis cuss whose fault it is. The duty of our thinking men. white and black, is to look the facts straight in the face and take some bold and decisive action. The a race trouble now! in North Carolina that has required I the militia to suppress. The negroes di., re. nf were sent from Uir- mingham to the the place of the lowed to stay. Northwest to, take strikers were not al Froiu several towns in Ohio and Indiana they have been j banished. Even in Atlanta, thecos j mop. ilitan. conservative city of the j South, complaint is made in the newspapers that the negroes monop j olize the sidewalks and will not give i wav. an-.1, are growingmore and more i insolent and aggressive. Everyday ! papers publish new outrages and the 1 usual lynchings that follow them. ! I have been re-reading "An Ap 1 ileal to Pharaoh" bv Carlvle Mc'Kin- I ley and am more than ever profound- j i ly impressed with its truth, its argu-! j incut, its philosophy. The author is j i one of the most advanced thinkers j ; of the age and deals with the race ! problem in such a fair, candid and j considerate way that until his name ! was disclosed it was impossible to ! surmise where he lived, whether ! North or South or in England or j I America. I am pleased to know! . : i that he is by birth and education a! (Seorgian. Uy some it was attribut- j ; ed to Hinton Powan Helper; byoth-j 1 crs. to Senator Morgan, of Alabama, j and by others to Pev. Josiah Strong. ! It is a book fit to be read and pond j ered by every patriot. Mr. McKin i ley j .roves every proposition as he goes along;, and does it so tenderly J and kindly and modestly that the j reader is obliged to fail in love with ! him. and if not convinced, he admits that he cannot answer it. The negro must go. go somewhere. ' not in a l.urrv or at the point of the! ; , ,4i I : bavonet as did the Chcrokees, but lit ; will go willingly and gladly when the ! ways and means are provided. It ; may take ten years or twenty years, i but it is no great matter so far as j the cost is concerned. During the ten years just passed, over tJ,0U0,00 of pauper foreigners have been brought here from Europe and it will be nearly as easy to take C.iMMUiU of negroes away. Ten millions of dollars a year will do it. and that ii but a trifle compared with the peace and prosperity of the races. Just let the ships be ready in the ports and the money be provided to plant the families in Africa, say ?d!i( per capita, and they will flock to the sea shore at every port. They are trou bled and so are we. We used to think that it was slavery that kept immigration awav from the South. but now we know that it was not. It j 110,11 llim: -Oiomas Creamer, an aged was the negro and is still the negro grocer of London. O., on Friday, shot and will continue to be the negro. ! dead. It is the negro that keeps up the) Oas ended the woes of 15. M. alienation between the North and Crownley. of Chicago. Tuesday night, the South, that makes a solid South, j who had speculated and lost his and a hostile North, and will perpet- clerkship. uate the estrangement as long as he j 'Yellow fever has broken out at isheie. Now, if he was not here, j lVnsaeola. Fla.. and Hrunswick. fSa. does any one suppose he would be j Two deaths have occurred at the fur allowed to come here? If they werej nier place. in Africa and wished to emigrate. While in a lit of desiondencv. Si would they be permitted to land at ! Sec,. Him..-:., -inn kilUl him Castle ( iarden? Of course not. Afri ca could not do what China cannot. 1 laces to be happy and prosperous must be homogeneous. Of course they will not all go. Th old and the decrepit will stay and be cared for. There will be no forcible separation of families. Certainly no more than is now. for thev scatter far and wide in their lion, but it is safe t sent condi-1 predict thati the majority will go wherever the means are provided and. the govern ment is at the head of the movement. The large planters in the black belt will perhaps be the chief objectors, for thev now fatten and grow rich oil' of the soon hav and in 1h bio. rm's labor, but they wiil ; white labor ill their stead end it will prove prolita-: J Si i.i. A i. Ilonu r .Military School. The catalogue of the Horner School. Oxford. N. ('.. shows a patronage extending over ten States. For years this school has been lull i'lid to meet the demand the principals two years ago put up a model school building with all the modern im provementselectric lights, scientif ic ventilating, and healing", a com plete gymnasium, and a steam lau:i- standard of scholarship and morals has been won and maintained. If you send your son to a school to be instructed by a certain teacher, it is desirable that no more pupils shall be admitted than can receive a large part of tho personal instrustion of that teacher. Secure the very best advantages for your son by engaging a room before it is too late. An F.dilor's .Mistake. The editor of a weekly journal late ly lost two of his subscribers through accidentally departing from the beat en track in his answers to corre spondents. Two of his subscribers wrote to ask him his remedy for their respective troubles. No. 1. a happy father of twins wrote to inquire the best way to get them safely over their teething ami No. '2. wanted to .mow how to pro- tect his orchard from the myriads of grasshoppers. The editor formed his answer upon the orthodox lines, but unfortunate ly transposed their names with the result that No. 1. who was blessed with th twins r.ad in reply to hi pier "Cover them carefully with straw and set lire to lliein ami the little pests, after jumping Ilames a few minute be settled." Whilst No. 2. plagued with grass hoppers, was told to "(live a little castor oil and rub their gums gently with a bone ring." Honied His Child. auf..rt Ik-rahl. Mr. Jas. W. Morris, Traffic Agent of the Atlantic Coast Line, and fam- ily. are now visiting his brother Mr. I Jno. II. Morris, who owns the pretty private resilience liere calico .Nep tune Court." While Jinimie. the S-year-old son of Mr. Jas. Morris was being handed by the nurse from the i skiff the nurse lost her balant and j she and child fell overboard. The father of the child leaped into the I water and rescued bot,h child and I nurse, who would otherwise have ! drowned. s T S.ak. Woman is wonderfully made! Such beauty, grace, delicacy 'and purity are ..1...... I.e.- .,ss..-si,,ns. So h.-is she weak- iiesses, irregularities, functional di- rangements. peculiar only to Iierseit. nlv to herself. To correct these and restore to health her w underfill organism requires a re storative especially' adapted to that pur- 1M,S'.'- ,V'"'" :-" ,",, ,s 1 ''" "'m' s fa" vi.rite Prescription possessing curative aml regulating pnmerties to a remark' able degree. Made for this purpose alone recommended for no other! Con tinually growing in favor, am number ing as its staunch friends thousands of the most intelligent and refined ladies of the hind. A positive guarantee ac companies each hot , :lt your drug gist's. Sold on trial! A NATION'S OI(SS. The News From Ever) where (Jatlieml a:il Condensed. Five cyclones struck Lamed. Ivan., Friday. No lives were lost but great damage was done. Insomnia drove Miss Mary T. Der by to shoot herself through the heart, Tuesday, while visiting in Chicago. A destructive cyclone struck Nan tieoke. Pa., Saturday. Three per sons were killed and many injured. Accusing his son Oliver of stealing self and his family in Cleveland. ().. Friday night. Temporary insanity, caused by loss of family, led Mrs. Lena Kriece. of New York, aged 40. to jump into East river. Friday, and drown. Uy the explosion of a boiler in a planing mill at Marhall. Tex.. Tues- tlav" three employes were instantly kIUi',! 1v' terribly scalded. the steamer Karamania. with eighteen cholera patients aboard, has been quarantined off New York. There have been two deaths thus far. Some unknown assassin shot uid S killed Uichard Muser. a wealth v New York lace imirter. while visiting! The helpful effect of the heavy pro his farm at SuM'ern. N. Y.. Thurs- ; duce exports and thecontinueil large day. ! imports of gold will be more quickly Struck by a locomotive on a Chi cairo crossing. Thursday, a police. pa trol wagon was smashed and James Skuz. a prisoner, and a policeman, were killed. Fire destroyed the Commercial Hotel, at North Port, Wash..Thurs- ; day night. Two guests were burned to death, and several others were ! badly scorched. Four horses attached to a reaper , cutting oats, ran away near Hunting-don. Pa.. Tuesday, throwing the owner. John S. Smith in front of 1he Hying knives, cutting his head off. Jealous of each other's attention to i woman. Joe Frame and Perry Las I son fought a duel at Lake Village, j Ark.. Tuesday, the latter being kill j ed and the former serious! v wound led. IJv the sudden starting of an ele- : valor. .lohn (S. Tavlor. a theat rical ; 1 man of Philadelphia, was crushed to i death Saturday, in the presence of ; his aged father, while attempting to I step nil'. j While stepping oil' a moving street car at Pottsville. Pa.. Thursday, in order to get his dog that had refused to follow him in the car. Philip Als i dorf fell beneath the wheels and was I crushed to death. i Despondency caused from ill health ; led Mrs. Jennie Schipammer, aged ' '27). of Patterson, N. J., to throw her : "J-nionths-ohl babv into the Passaic I j river, Friday, and then commit sui ci.li- by drowning. There were JKM bushies failures in ; miimUm jm..rtions in all branch the I nited States during the past j t.S- Under the conditions that have week, against Kill the corresponding j prevailed during the week no exoan- week last year. The West still con tributes the largest number. l'.U: tin East. 1 the South. 54. For being disappointed in love. Miss Jennie L. Loomis, aged lt. Uaighter of a wealthy Haltimoivan. committed suicide by shooting'-, at Tolland, Conn.. Monday, where she was spending the summer. C.,1 Charles C, Hd.lv h.1e vieo- I'ound in lhe; . . ., -,- p n ' i -o- . i president of the Norfolk and West will speedil V i -i i -i ' lorn !: . 1 1 l-i i: i , I . 11 mm I 1 1 ' siiu-'.lo in Chicago. Thursday, by shooting him self through the head in Washington park. No cause is assigned. The wife of Sebastian Pohrer com mitted suicide Thursday, near Slack water, Pa., by hanging herself. Poh rer married her some time ago after ins tirst wile. win. was tier sister. had taken her own life in a similar way. A freight train struck the carriage of James Emerson on a grade cross ing near Norwich, Conn.. Thursday, killing his two children and badly i injur his wife and visitors, the family of II. V. Stoll. a wealthy coal dealer of Fall River. Jealousy caused John II. Meister, a prosperous baker, of Ilrooklyn, N. Y., to kill his sleeping wife, Thurs dav night, bv firing six shots into j her body, and then commit suicide ! ly hanging, after a bullet and an j awful fall had failed to kill him. I Jack Chambers, colored. was i lynched near Waresboro. (la., on Wednesday night, for criminally as saulting Mrs. George Warren, re- it-en tlv, at Hoboken. Ga. Two other i negroes, who aided him. were promptly strung up. Another ne gro, named Dug Hastleton, was lynched near Carrollton. Ga., Friday, for attempting an assault ujmmi Mrs. Gul Hicks, while her husband was absent from home. Last Veek in Trade Circles. S'.iul ( orrvsiiunilem-e. New York, August It. lStKk The business eon jest ion during the last week has been increased by the scarcity of currency, which has re sulted from the locking up of money by financial institutions, speculators and panic-stricken individuals all over the country. The severe con traction of credits has shifted an un usually large percentage of the busi ness of the country from a credit to a cash basis, and the curious spec tacle has been presented of a lack of money facilities for a greatly re stricted volume of business, although the actual money circulation of the country is larger than ever. If re leased from its hiding places it would be. under ordinary conditions of con fidence in the commercial world, more than ample for the require ments of a vastly greater volume of trade. Husiness necessities have forced the payment of premiums ranging from 2 to 5 jier cent, for the use of currency, and these induce ments have attracted large sums from their places of concealment and restored them to the uses of the banks. This release of hoarded mon ey in the last few days has so greath" relieved the currency famine that ex treme rates can no longer be exacted for the use of ready cash. And now that the desire of profit has overmas tered fear, and people have begun to realize that their money is safer in the banks than about their persons or in hidden receptacles, it is proba ble that the substantial changes for the better which have occurred in the last fortnight will produce their legitimate results in reviving con fi donee and expanding- tradi felt, now that the work of repairing the silver mischief has actually been begun in Congress. Since the chief source of business disturbance has been the distrust engendered by the operation of the Silver Purchase law. the fact that the question of a repeal of that measure will come to a vote in the House within a fortnight will be hailed with satisfaction by all classes of business men. The period of further suspense and uncertainty is so brief, and the result already so well as.-ured by the demands of pub lic sentiment and the convincing logic of the President's message, that the return of confidence should pre cede formal legislation. Recovery from the effects of the .severe strain and tension of the last few months will be necessarily slow; but with the settlement of the currency ques- tion there will be no serious inipedi- ln,,nt to the gradual recuperation of business. The failures during the last week throughout the United States and Canada aggregated 4h. a decrease from the total of the pre vious week of 51. Cotton prices have declined -1 of a cent per Miund, owing to tho dull ness of trade and the crippling of speculation by the financial troubles. The Government crop report, though unfavorable, was not so bad as had been anticipated, and the market has received no stimulus from the crop news, liusincss in cotton goods, j as in woolens and all textile fabrics, has been much restricted by the in tlueiues which have reduced trade to ! sion of activity was iossible in the trade, either in raw material or fin- ished products. Yet the ,..o. r,v l oi eariy reiiei iroin money uinu-unies j has already induced some manufae- j turers whose works have been idle to resume operations: and while! others who have completed orders in j hand and have been handicap! .ed bv . down temporarily, the industrial sit uation as a whole is no worse than it was a week ago. Wheat prices have advanced I V to 'M cents per bushel the greater im- provement having been in Chicago, which had been the scene of the greatest previous depression. The rise has been the result of a growing hopefulness with regard to financial . i matters, which has encouraged buy- ing at ruling low prices. The price j to China and come back and ro ot corn has also risen i of a cent at P"' su'n 11 eondition of affairs there Chicago, and has been fairly main- as the jails of this State present, we tained in the ?:astern markets. The would all be ready to pass around crop outlook has been impaired by the hat to send missionaries to the the long continued dry weather in heathen. the West; but the Department of Agriculture points out the probabil ity of a great improvement in the event of a more general rainfall this mouth. Gallant liutus Clinate. On a pretty girl saying to Kufus Choate, "1 am very sad-yoii-see." he re plied, "O, no; you belong to the old Jewish sect: you are very fair-I-see!" Noili'mir adds so much to the beauty of :i fair girl, as a clear, bright, healthy complexion, and to secure tins, pure blood is indispensable. So many of the so-called l.lood-puriliei s sold to imprme a rough, pimply, muddy skin, only drive the scrofulous humors from tie surface to some internal vital organ, and disease and death is the inevitable result. On the contrary. Dr. Pierce's (Jolden Medical Discovery strikes di rictly at the root of the evil bv driving the impurities entirely out of the system, and with a fresh stream of pure blood flowing through the veins, nothing but the softest and fairest of complexions can result. ALL OVEK THE STATE. A Summary of Current Evenls for the Past Seven Iajs. The Cabarrus county fair will be held September 27th to 20th. States ville has raised its tax on re tail liquor dealers from $500 to 7.")0. "A handsome new Methodist church has just been completed at Wades ljoro. Several illicit distilleries were de stroyed' last week by revenutjollicers in Wilkes county. Albert Marley aged 18. was drown ed Saturday, while bathing in the Yadkin river, Wilkes county. A negro woman named Ueckie Wil son, was found drowned Monday in a creek in Mecklenburg county. For having two living wives. J. M. Hargett. of Charlotte, was sentenced there Tuesday to five years in the penitentiary. A demented colored woman named Hecky Carraway was killed Thurs day night by a train below Polloeks ville, Jones county. Two colored prisoners made good their escape from Louisburg jail Wednesday evening, while the jailor was feeding- the prisoners. F. S. Henderson, aged 25. of Jones jkn((WU as the "Tyrant of Pulaski, county, was drowned Tuesday night j Teim.," which came off recentlv at in White Oak river while floating j Tl.;u.iv"s. After the sjieaking Ihere logs against a strong current. j was a j,,,,,,... hall-shakmg. on Harrison Mitchell, col., of Wilkes! which the Democrat coimnonls as count v. was shot and killed bv his ! sou Saturday. The old man was remonstrating- with his son for abusing his wife. Three workmen, while repairing a building- in Greenslx.ro. Tuesday, were precipitated to the ground by the collapse of the scaffold and seri ously injured. The body of John T. Long, of For syth county.-was found dead in the public road Wednesday, with a pis tol ball in his heart. It is supivosed that he killed himself. The Oxford Ledger says two years ago there were MS sub-Alliances in Granville county, but at the last meeting of the county Alliance there were only 13 represented. " A little son of J. W. Iiailey, in Edgecombe county, Monday, fell through a hole in the ginhouse to the ground, a distance of about 15 feet, killing himself almost instantly. A young man named Morgan was committed to jail in Swain county last week charged with knocking his aunt down with brass knucks. She had previously beaten him with the ot -hooks. At Fayetteville. Friday afternoon. 15. C. Parker, a clothing merchant, was shot and killed by E. J. Fuller. A young lady to whom lotli were paying attention, is said to le the cause of the trouble. The Shelby .Aurora says that one night last week rats ate off one of the tK's of Geo. W. Hunt, confined in Rutherford jail, and a part of the ball of the foot. Hunt was shot some months ago while resisting arrest and has lost all sensation in that foot. J. F. Shoemaker, agent of the II. D. railroad at University Station, while temporarily deranged, Satur day, shot his wife, painfully, though not fatally, and attempted to burn his store and the dejiot. A Mormon preacher and a white man named Strayhorn. were shot at by Shoe maker and received slight flesh wounds. The State Farmers Alliance in ses- - C , . . ,,..,.,1- ul J. M. MewlM.rne, of Lenoir county, president a Third party pillar. W. S. Barnes, secretary and treasurer, and W. II. Worth, State business agent, are retained. Marvann Put- I , " i ler I icr was iiuuie cnairman oi tlie execu tive committee, conniosed of J. J. Long, of Columbus, and A. F. Hile man. of Cabarrus, all Thirdites. The Statesville Landmark savs the j Inain l,int in Ju1 Whitakers eharge to the grand jury of Iredell ' Su-ierior Court last Monday, was his condemnation of the jail system of j the State. He said the jails of North j Carolina were a disgrace to the civ- j illation ol the age. It one were to Pawned the liildcsfor Whiskey. Nurth WiIke.biro News. There is a man on the Hrushy Mountain who secured two bibles from Rev. Thad. L. Troy, who is re presenting the American HibleS. ciety in this country, and went to Wilkesboro and pawned them to a barkeeper for whiskey. Mr. Troy is doing a gxd work, but such as tin alxive is rather discouraging. Flax (url in Two l.ayx. Makknoo, Axsox Co., X. C. We have used ChainU'ilain's Colic, Cholera ami Diarrluea Kemedv in two cases of flux, and lind it speedy in effect- ing a cure. Thev were entirely well two .lavs after taking the first d..se. Wall & Scexcek, Merchants. For sal by all Druggists. We notice that when a man is econ omical, and saves up money for a rainy day, one generally comes. Third Party Picnics. Sanfonl Eij.ri.-s. The Third party leaders have in augurated a plan to visit and talk to their followers on the "issues of the day." They are holding picnics at different jxiints where the Populists assemble in large numbers to hear their speakers and abuse the late Legislature, and Cleveland for calling- an extra session of Congress. For a blind they call them Alliance picnics. It is certainly very amus ing to hear some of these self consti tuted Third party critics discuss fi nances. Some time since some of the followers of Maryann Hutler were discussing the merits and demerits of the Sherman act. In the mean time a Democrat walked up and ask ed one of them to define the Sherman act. This took the "refawmi,r"coin pletelv off his feet. Just there and then he discovered that he knew no thing alniut the Sherman act. Now what would the opinion of such a man be worth? Probably ho thought the Shcnnan act provided for an air ship to sail to the iiuh.ii. J rasping a Tyrant's Hand. The Samps hi Democrat, in its last issue, gives an account of the shak ing of Gen. Jas. 15. Weaver, better follow; "We saw :i federate sol diers. maimed ami scarred followers of Lee and Ids paladins, eagerly grasp the hand of (Sen. Weaver who is reputed to have said the bitterest, unkindest. ungodiiest things of the South, its manhood, and its woman hood that were ever uttered by ven oined tongue of the North. Can there be forgiveness for those crimes crimes against the living veteran and the memory of his dead com rades? Strange, but true, there seems to be: or is it forgetfulness?" Stole the Preacher's Clothes. Stat.'svillc' I-au.iu.ark. Sunday night while llev. Dr. II. F. Dixon, pastor of the Methodist church, was conducting services, a thief entered his study in the rear of the church and appropriated two suits of the doctor's g..Hd clothes. Dr. Dixon says he does not know who took his clothing. All of his own congregation were in church save one, a prominent member who is usually a regular attendant, but curiously enough was absent just at this critical period. Suspicion points to this memU'r but he claims he can prove an alibi. The doctor says if the party under suspicion took the clothes with a view to entering the ministry he has no objection: but if he took them to sport in he is going to kick. The (Jol.l.Icr Hatches. Otvruviik' Kefluctor. Mr. J. C. Dixon, of Ulack Jack, came in to tell us Monday that his setting gobbler had hatched. Two weeks ago he found that the gobbler wanted to set so he took a few eggs from under a turkey hen that was setting and put them under tlie gob bler. Last Saturday the gobbler came off with four young turkeys and seemed as proud of them as ever any hen did of her brood. In fact the gobbler made himself such a dunce over tne little ones, wanting to cluck them up and hover over them all the time, that they had to 1k taken away from him. This is the first time we ever knew a gob bler to set and hatch young turkeys. II Cure. I His WifVHml hillr-ii. Pri:cKri.is, Uoiikson ('., N.O We gave a bottle of ClianilH-ilain's Colic, Cholera and 1 )iarrlui'a lleiiu'.ly lo a gentleman whose wife was had olT with bowel complaint ami two loes of it cured her. His children were also tak en with bowel complaint and it cured them. It is certainly a good prcjM'ra tion. Ai.i.kkmax A: Ill ik. For sale by all Druggists. An untruth to save some jktsoii's feel ings is not without some virtue. lie sure and put a lx of Ayer's Pills in your satchel lie fore traveling, cither by'land or sea. You will find them con venient, efficacious, and safe. The licst remedy for cost'n cness, indigestion, and sick headache, and adapted to any cli mate. Opposition always inflames the enthu siast: never converts him. Bakincr Powder MPS0laWy Pure A cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of all in lea Veiling strength. Latest ,, , U. b. Government rood he port. Royal Baking Powder Co., KM; Wall St., X. Y.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 17, 1893, edition 1
1
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