GOLDSBORO I! its- ?? Tl 3 I XI In1 I 11 II J DUGI GOLDSBOllO, N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1891. ESTABLISHED 188T. VOL. VII. NO. 19. i S" The Old Friend And tho best friend, that never fails von, is Simmons Liver llegu Litor, (tlio Red Z) that's vluit you hear at the mention cf this 'excellent Liver medioine, nd people, should not he pemuu t that anything else will do. It is the King of Liver Medicine-.-; is L'tter than pills, and takes the place of Quinine and Calomel. It a-ts directly on the Liver, Kidneys and Bowels and gives now life to tlio whole sys tem. This is the medicine you want. Sold Ly all Linguists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made into a tea. WEVERY PACKA(iR :.a lias the 'I. Slamp In red on vinper. J. II. 7.KIL.1S Se CO., l'ljilaUL-lphia, la.. VITAL TO KiANHGQD. PH. F.. 0. WEST'S NF.RVE AND P.RAI.n TREAT MENT, h -:'-ci:ie for Iltriit, 1 'izzin.-.-s, I'its, Niu-ruli-'in, 11" id.-irin'. Nervous l'v. istrntlim caused ly uU'olin! or t"i i.ui'n, Waki-fiilnt'", Mi-Iita! I 'cures, iuu, K'ifit nil!,.- of l.rnin, causing iiisi nitv, misery, di-ciiy, tii, l'ri-n.:itur Old Ai.'f, Jiarnunws, Loss of l'owor in cithi-r sci, Inipoteucy, Leucorrhaa and all FemaUj Weaknesses, Involuntary Eorses, Spermn t'lrrhiea caused by mor-exertiun ot lirain, Se'f-cibu-. ovi'i-lii(luli.'i'rf('0. A month's tre'itii!i'i.t, II, C for?"), Iiy mail. With each order forC boi-s, witii fc will written iruaraiitee to refund if not cured. Gunraefesi-sued by wKt. WEST'S Kit PILES Sick Headache, Biliou-ness, Liver Coui;jlaiut, fourStomiM'h, lj! pepsia and CoustipaUou. OUAKANitES Issued ouly by M. I'.. Hwliil.s.Mi oV l'.l o.. Ooldsboro. N. C. -TEE NEW YORK- ItACKET - STORE! The ;lf !..( When im dicy ami p: pilCC. l.'l! ! 111.' t t 111' pil- lilos tin- New 1 nl'ii backet More, i liiali lias his j k k-kct s full of if will trade almost anywhere '. very little a'Jciititiii to the N'.d .'. w lint Money is Scarce And Hard to Get f,.r I In douhil u ays. great ever; -ll-eli loliar to do ami t a long j is the r man-h'in th. our V3 Giva You a Bargain in Everything You Buy! And giiaranlee c senteil. We give :j ami 1'.' for a dozen, irive u- a call whesi ry article as rcpre i iiclics for a vard All yon need 'is to on start out having. A. M. SHRAGO & CO, Prop'rs. tTAPANESB A TCew mid Complete Treatment, consiftiirj of RTT'1'OSlTOliII'.s, Capsules of ointment mid two !oxesof ointment. A never-fuilinsr Cure for Tiles ef every nnt ui e and (Vuree. It nnikcs uu operation v ith Hi" knif" or injections of ci.ri-olic acid, which are painful and seldom a permi'iieut cure, t-nd often r;-sulti:.i; in ('.oath, imiiece;in y. Why enouro this tarribla cliseaoo? V'n tuirantoo 6 boxes to cure any cise. You only iny f jr I'eneiits received, il a box. 0 for ?3. Sent by mail. Ouarantees Issued bv owr agents. CONSTIPATION by Jar'?" iso Liver Pellets the ereat I.TVER and STOMACH UKct I'LATOit and Jil.oOli i'l Hll'lEU. Sim il, mild and plea-ant to take, especially adapted for children's uu. 5J Doses y e.-nts. OUAR.VNTEES iasuoJ only by M. K. Ko'.iin-on ov: P.ro.. ( lold-'ooro. N. ('. vt;iHttt-Lriniiry Or-cliaiit-d of di't or Wiea VNTIVE inu'ov -it.ictoconirnct : -e; l.ut in the case i" t.rriiTLT Afflictto l l'lo- lltl v -..-.V.!:,! K-clKir-es. :i"A sin-,. ivev. ;,ve ,; all Vem-real Hisen.ses. At l'rnir-ists. or sent to any address for tl.OO. Injection ,.. is - TII f. .1! V.ST " of all imilar remedies. la. HENBYKEKI. Biddeford, Me. M:i!j it.e --S fsr. .. S.:iieat r. nltio. r. ;. A . Sri KM ITOKIIICKA PILLS o ami ro noiit by Jit. iiai,w!;rc mail, lie: ;:ity;i:::'.;:ot. J'ri-.'c M. K. Kol.insou oc r,r. ... ; X. V. A Happy Welcome 1 s CTAKAM VAA) T() TJIOsK i ah is' v-,1 ca',1 at niv sa'n.i'i!. wlii, stocked at all iinu-s uilh the choict Domestic and le.ii.ortcil t ()f ijiquors All tin- latest . niaviptila and Wines ioaiidetl :;1 men. and ii i. Ci3TS, ill "01 li J A Xli A 1. I.:,-. Coi n Wh Mr. C; wonl.l he l-'o! piartt v: ith lis fl ic me and Jas. L. Dickinson, At John Chin's Old Stand. Hp. DENTAL SLMJEON. t:- otli :oi-e, W, is ove e Su-i'i L 1). Giihlens' I Pin S I -ii. USm VtiWItf Wth.Kll!e..el.i.t V.. I-'.. KoK'wi.son vv I'ro.. Coldshoro. N. ('. JgluB THHiSiaaBISfHEiD' i Xo M;i:ii. ; 5:i'r?. Vnonln ti; i-lure. Kree syrniL-e. . I t.. 4 i'av dire for OoNoiiuii.K.v, . anil all A Sons of Hope. If earthly ills were fewer. We eo'nliln't then complain: Ami if the skies were bluer, Perhaps we'll have no rain! It takes a little sorrow To lead our lines aright; The sun that gilds the morrow Is sweeter tor the night. When winter winds are Hinging The snow against the pane, Somewhere the liirdsaresinging They'll sing for us again! Tell not thy mournful story Sing not thy solemn song. While in God's grace and glory The glad world rolls along! Frank L. Stanton. About (idling Married. Extracts from a recent sermon of Rev. ('. A. Ful ton, of llultiiuore. J Love, courtship, marriage are of ten made the objects of mirth, yet all are sacred, since their origin is in the act of God that gave the woman to be helper to the man. When mar riage is, as we say, "unfortunate," it is generally because God's thought about it has been overlooked. Too many marriages are thoughtless, blundered into no one quite knows how. Some miserable marriages are made by the pitiful ambition of father or mother to secure for son or daugh ter a ''distinguished" match, regard less of adaptability or love. I have known one young woman murdered so. It is a noticeable fact that many of our best young women do not marry. One day in a mixed class of young men and women the course of the remarks led a young man with an 03-e glass to inquire of the professor what was the cause of old maids. The professor turned the question over to a voung womau, who pronipt- I ly answered, "Dudes." There is no I doubt but that one reason whv so i - many excellent young women remain j single is the great scarcity of niar- ! ria "cable voung men. Even a for- t j tune with a good-for-nothing man m j separably attached is no sutneient i compensation for the sacrifice in ! volved. -- j It is better that there should be no wedding than that the soul should I fling itself away on one unworthy, j It rarely, if ever, pays a woman to I marry a man with the Lope of re forming him. Men do not purposely attempt that sort of thing with a woman. Yet God made men and women for each other because the life of neither is perfect alone. They should toil side by side, each one bet ter for the other's help. Let us have more men and women both of high thoughts and noble lives, and there will be more chance of happy unions. Make yourself fit, young man, to have a wife, and then get one if -ou can persuade a fitting- woman that you would be a fitting husband for her. Look in the right place for a wife. In general be not unequally yoked with an unbeliever or a mis believer that is dangerous. Don't think that the best wife for you is one who will adore you blindly. She will get her eyes open sometime, and there is nothing so hopeless as a fall en idol. You want a wife who will have sense for you sometimes when you haven't any for yourself. Yet you want one who will sympathize with you in all your best endeavors. Now, shall I tell young women to get married? Another voice than mine, with personal appeal, will have to do that office. But I will say, make yourselves fit to grace a home or do without one furnished with a man. But do not talk too much about "wo man's sphere," as if she had formI a better place for herself than God made for her. If love is offered by a worthy man accept it. knowing that to make a true home is a destiny not unworthy of the best. If there should be a wedding, be sure you have Christ there. After Your Marriage. Never taunt with a past mistake. Never meet without a loving wel come. Never allow a request to be re peated. j Never let the sun go down upon j and anger or grievance. ! Neglect the whole world beside j rather than one another. Never make a remark at the ex- j pense of the other it is meanness. j Never part for a day without lov- ing words to think of during absence. One of the daintiest of the New Year calendars is that issued by the proprietors of Hood's Sarsaparilla. ,4 ..... , ,, .. , . : -ii w in iuny saiisiy every expecta- tion as to beauty and utility. ' "Sweet Sixteen" is the head of a beautiful girl, the lovely picture being litho graphed in many delicate colors. The pad harmonizes with the exqui- site array of color above, while the ! dates are easily read. Hood's calen- I (iT or kixf TO iarma3 he obtained of your drug l'la c Xoi i'a rarolina ' oist or hy sending (! cents in stamps ! for one or 10 cents for two. to C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. The Advertising Of Hood's Sarsaparilla is always within the bounds of reason because it is true; it always appeals to the sober, common sense of thinking people because it is true; ami it is always fully substantiat ed by endorsements which, in the li.'ian cial world would be accepted without a moment's hesitation. Hood's Pills cure liver ills, tion, biliousness, jaundice, s ache, indigestion. constipa ick head- AUP'S FISH STORIES. Xot His Own Experience, Hut What Others Told Him. Clear Water, Fla., Jan. 8. We had mullet for breakfast. - They are a good fish when fresh caught, but get stale and tasteless when shipped far away. I saw our host buy these on the wharf three good large ones4r a nickel, and he seemed to think he was cheated said he generally got them for a cent apiece, but these cool mornings there wasn't much fishing going on. Next day the weather was more amiable, and two of the bin-s made ready to go out on a night's frolic with their nets. About sunrise we went down on the wharf to see them come in. The boat was loaded to the guards with mullet, speckled trout, red fish, groupers and flounders, numbering 7'J3 in all, and measuring from one to two feet in length. One of the girls rigged up her tackle and caught twenty- three fine ones in half an hour right near the wharf. The way to tell a fish story is to let the other fellow tell his first- then beat him if you can; but I haven't had experience in that line, and so have to confine myself to the truth. I have listened with amaze ment at the other fellows down here. Our host was regarded as a truthful man as long as he lived in Cartcrs- ville. Tie is a member of the church, and savs rraee at the table, but he told me that he had laid awake at nights listening to the roar of the mullet as they splashed over one an other in cruising through the waters of the harbor. He said it was like the sound of many waters, and that he had seea-them in schools a mile long and a quarter of a mile wide, and so thick there wasn't room for them in the water, and they had to leap out of it, and it was this leaping and splashing that made the roaring noise. He said that boatmen didn't dare to cross their pathway when they were on a scursion for so many would jump into the boat that it would sink it. "Waren't that before the war?" said I. "Oh, no,"' said he, "though I don't believe there are as raanv now as there used to bo. for when I first moved here, about ten years ago. I saw women go down and wade out a piece towards the channel and let the mullet jump into their aprons and petticoats. There's a creek or bayou a few miles down the coast where t"hcy run up some times in high tide and when the tide goes down they are left on the sandy banks by the thousand and are haul ed off by the wagon load for fertiliz ing the orange groves and the gar dens." How's that for fishing? The boys have killed eight tarpons here in a few weeks. They have to kill them when found in their nets or they would tear the net all to pieces. They use a little harpoon that is called a grain. It has a long pole in the socket and a strong cord attach ed and so when th fish is struck the pole bounces out of the socket and ! the fish is caught with the line. I am just in my A B C's yet and haven't fished any, but I am listening and watching and in a day or two will try my hand and. in course of time, will be able to tell my yarn. The little girl has a little spade and digs in the sandy beach 'for fiddlers and sand crabs and runs away from every one she throws up. These people seem to have more time to frolic than to do anything else, but it beats baseball or football and a frolic that brings in fish and oysters and sun burnt checks is a good thing. No fear of perishing in this region with fish at a cent apiece or cheaper still if you are not too lazy to catch them, and with oyster banks near by and sweet potatoes for 10 cents a peck and oranges and bananas for a des sert. But all is not gold that glitters, nor is there perfect serenity for any good thing iu this world. Last even ing we called on Mrs. Tate in her beautiful home on the bluff, the most charming of all the lovely residences 1 medicine almanac, where the mcr that overlook the waters of the gulf. : chant pastes his ads. on tin cans and I had known Colonel Samuel Tate, of j to get a large circulation, ties the Memphis, in his life time, and was j pleased to learn that his widow was 1 living here with her son. It seemed to me that she had everything that heart could wish. A gem of a house, that was embowered in shade, flow ers and fruits, and a fine orange grove near by. After a brief visit we took a sail across to the island and on our return saw her sitting on the veranda looking off dreamily upon the waters. Soon we reached our home and found tea was waiting for us. While we were enjoying it and telling of our evening's pleasure, we heard the cry of fa-e that wild, weird cry that always brings alarm and breaks up everything in a little town. We hurried from the room to find that Mrs. Tate's house was on fire, and the flames were leaping from the windows. Everybody ran who could run, but it was too late, too late. A whole ocean of water within a fewT steps, but no way to use it and that beautiful house with nearly all of its furniture was burned to the ground in an hour, and the trees that had shaded it were charred and ruined. It was the old story of a lamp, a cur tain and a gentle breeze. The poor wo man was led silently away, sobbing her grief as she leaned upon the arm of a friend. Somebody said that it was a comfort to know that she was able to lose it; but there are some things about a home that when it is destroyed can't be restored or replac ed with money, and this was such a case. Col. Tate was much beloved by the people of this hamlet, for he had done much for it. I find that most of the wealthy people herc arc Southerners. Mr. Kerr and Mr. Phillips are from Win chester, Ky. Colonel Frasjer is a prominent lawyer of Memphis, and his daughter, Mrs. Boyle, a well known contributor to magazine liter ature. With perhaps two excep tions, the Northerners do not seem to have found this place. The tide, the swim has all been on the other side the Atlantic coast and Indian river. This little peninsula that ex tends down to St. Petersburg was almost unknown and inaccessible un til the Orangebelt railroad was built four years ago. It is a little narrow gauge road that has had its troubles, but is getting out of them and is fast bringing this lovely gulf coast into notice. I intend to see more of it while in Florida. With good boued-and lodging for $4 a week and boating and fishing for nothing and fish sto ries thrown in, I can afford to try it a few weeks. Bill Arp. Took the .Money Instead of the (Jirl. Greensboro Uecord. "Just like a man." women will say when this is read. He hails from Rockingham. He courted a girl, got ready to be spliced, didn't have the money to buy a license, so the "party of the second part," to-wit: the girl gave him S3.U0 to buy it. He took the boodle and ran away. Sat down and cried did she? Not much. She got a "hump on herself."' She ascertained whither he had gone and followed him. He came to this county in Deep River township where she found him, had him arrested, put in jail, and this morning an officer took him back to Wentworth to answer a charge of eloping with $3.00 in stead of with a girl. He went away singing "the girl I left behind me," but about the time he faces State's prison he will sing another tune. He will be indicted for obtaiuing money under false pre tenses. Alliance Stores Decadence. I'ittsboro Kccord. Merchandizing is not such a money making business as some people seem to think. The frequent fail ures of merchants all over the coun try is convincing proof, and this is confirmed by the experience of the Alliance stores. When the Alliance was first organized, one of its prom ised benefits was cheaper goods, and quite a war was waged against mer- chants and their alleged high prices Accordingly it was determined to do away with these "middle men" and to save the profits made by them, and thus Alliance stores sprung up all over the country. In this county several began business and for awhile seemed to be doing well, but one by one they quit business until now there are only two in Chatham. And this seems to have been the ex perience of Alliance stores generally in this State. The latest failure is the Alliance store at Durham. Ed. Headlight. A Sad rare well. The following is the valedictory of an Alabama paper that flourished(?) in a town where talent was not ap preciated. It is something in the na ture of a tale of woe: "We this morning print our last paper. Our heart is not broken but our pocket is. It is. an impossibility to print a high grade paper in a vil lage where the people's literary tastes do not rise above the patent cans to the tails of dogs, and the bond bloated servants tick their teeth with the tail of a dried herring. The "Screamer" has labored assidu ously to overcome these customs of the dark past, but, alas, in vain. William Merritt, a white boy 18 years of age, of Orange county, was arrested Friday, charged with at tempting to wreck a R. & D. passen ger train near Hillsboro, on the 14th of last month, by placing several ties across the track. Other arrests will follow. "Your Money or Your Life!" Such a demand, at the mouth of a ".sjx-si looter." sets a man thinkingprct ty lively! With a little more thinking, there would le less suffering. Think of the terrible results of neg lected consumption! which might easily he averted by the timely use of Nature's great specific. Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery. Consumption, which is lung-scrofula, is a constitutional disuse, and requires just such a thorough and effectual con stitutional remedy! Taken in time, be fore the lung-tissues are wasted, it is guaranteed a radical cure! Equally cer tain in all scrofulous affections and blood disorders. I.arte bottles, one dollar, of any di uggi-t. A NATION'S DOINGS. The News From Everywhere Gathered and Condensed. Smoke in a blazing New York ten ement house, Thursday, suffocated three inmates. With 52 murderers and 500 other prisoners aw aiting trial the Chicago jail is overcrowded. Fire in the Albany Theatre at Al tr."y, N. Y., Saturday, caused a to tal damage of $100,000. By a premature blast in a colliery at Wilkesbarre, Pa., Thursday, Geo. Ward was blown to atoms. A fall of coal in a mine near Wil liamstowu, Pa., Tuesday, crushed to death William Schuttlesworth, a miner. A crash between a passenger and freight train near Lawrence, Kan., Tuesday, caused the death of six" persons. A thief entered the Perkins Insti tution, of Boston, Tuesday, grabbed a J 1,300 package from a desk and escaped. The cotton mills of Emprey's Son & Young, near Florence, Ala., were destroyed by fire Sunday night. Loss $20,000. Burglars invaded the bank at Franklin Grove, HI., Thursday night, and succeeded in getting away with nearly $23,000. While crazy with the grip. Mrs. Joseph Wantz, of Muimisburg, O., drowned herself in a canal with her babe, on Friday. Attempting to shoot Geo. Sturgis in a quarrel, Thursday, John Levicks, of Glasgow, la., fatally wounded his ten-year-old son. Found short nearly $50,000 in his accounts, Treasurer F. A. Nelson, of Brunswick, Ga., was removed from office and has fled. Continued illness led George Win chester, a prominent business man of New Orleans, to kill himself with a pistol, Saturday. Caught in the flames of their blaz ing house, Thomas and Kate Kinney, an aged couple, were cremated, Fri day night, at West Haven, Conn. Fire swept awav several of the largest building blocks at Toledo, O., Thursday, causing a loss of $1,300,' 000. Two firemen lost their lives. Fighting for a woman's hand, L W . iowler, ol bpnng lull, ivv., on Thursday, fatally shot 1'. C.'Yonsen who in turn fatalh- stabbed Fowler. The entire family of Edward King, consisting of husband, wife and son were arrested at Springfield, Mo. Monday,charged with counterfeiting. A boiler explosion in the round house of the Cincinnati Southern Railroad, at Chattanooga, Tenn., Tuesday, scalded alive two employes. At Tuscumbia, Ala., Friday night, John Kilroy went home drunk and to bed with his lighted pipe, and burned himself and two children to death. At Omaha, Neb., Saturday, Louis de France was sentenced to impris onment for life for stealing one cent from a mail carrier whom he recent ly held up. The bursting of the boiler of an engine used to run a cotton gin, near Columbia, S. C, Thursday, killed three persons and seriously injured five others. For being interrupted during his religious services at Lima, O., Sun day, Rev. G. B. Chambers fatally beat Alexander Rogers with a poker on the head. Inspired by jealousy, Mrs. Maud Bond, shot and killed Mrs. Mary Gardner at the latter's home in Chi cago, Sunday, for alienating the af fections of her husband. Masked robbers entered the dwell ing of Mrs. Wilhelmina Millitzer, near St. Clairsville, O., Saturday night, beat her into insensibility and robbed her of all the money in jkis session. While in the act of examining his gun, Friday morning, Michael Miller, of Romney, W. Va., accidentally shot and killed his mother-in-law, Mrs. Joseph Loatherman, by its sudden explosion. Angered because his wife had left him, owing to his brutal treatment of her, John Hurd, of Philadelphia, fatally shot her upon meeting her, Tuesday, and then put a bullet in his own head. A disagreement over a settlement involving only 80 cents, between two well-to-do young farmers, John and William Clowers, brothers, near Frisco, Ala., Friday, resulted in the death of "William, who was clubbed and shot by John. For being the direct cause of the discharge of several railroad men C. C. Brown, train dispatcher of the Georgia Pacific Railroad, was taken into the woods by five "white caps," near Columbus, Miss., Saturday night, and severely flogged. "Rev." George F. Howard, the noted foreign claim swindler, who under the aliases of E. Ross, William Lord Moore, and Joseph Leger, de frauded the American people out of $03,000, was convicted at Jackson, Tenn., Friday, and sentenced to nine 3-ears in the Columbus penitentiary. Finance and Trade. Sjiecial Correspondence. New York, Jan. 8, 1S94. The new year has brought some increase of hopefulness, but as yet not much expansion of activity in the business world. On the Stock Exchange values have risen an aver age of one dollar per share, and there has been a moderate advance in prices of cotton, grain and hog pro ducts. Speculation has not been greatly stimulated, however, by the enormous accumulation of idle capi tal and the low rates for money; and in all branches of legitimate trade current operations continue to re flect immjcdiate requirements. Stocks of manufactured goods in distribut ers' hands are steadily decreasing, in spite of the restriction of consump tion by enforced economies resulting from, the prolonged depression of business. This fact has already encouraged partial resumptions of work in many industries; and the further develop ment of spring trade wants will pro bably result in a gradual enlarge ment of industrial output in the near future. The recovery in manufac tures and in general trade, however, would be greatly facilitated by an early settlement of the tariff ques tion; and the business interests, which are now groping in uncertain ty as to the conditions which will govern their future, imperatively de mand prompt action by Congress. Business failures in the United States, and Canada during the last week ag gregated 532, as against 403 for the corresponding period last year. Cotton prices have advanced I of a cent per pound. The rise has been the result of a quickening of specula tive interest by the long-expected falling off in receipts from the South. The movement has continued to ex ceed that of last season at the cor responding period; but it has shown considerable shrinkage as contrasted with that of immediately preceding weeks. The smaller shipments from the interior have encouraged wider acceptance of the theories that the previous marketing of cotton had been hastened by unfavorable finan cial conditions and the needs of planters; and that the movement hereafter is likely to be more in har monj' with the reports of a moderate crop yield. Home spinners have bought moderately, as a rule; but while receipts in five days have been 72,000 bales less, exports in the same time have been 52,000 bales larger than they were during the corre sponding period last week. Speculation in wheat has broaden ed slightly, and there has been a net gain in prices for the week of 1 to 1J cents per bushel. Weather condi tions in the West have been favora ble for the marketing of wheat; but the movement has been unusuall' light, and as exports have been of good volume, the indications point to some reduction in the accumula tion of warehouse stocks. The belief that stocks will now beg-in to run down, and the cable reports of unus ually rigorous weather in Europe, which may have an injurious effect upon next season's harvests, have contributed to strengthen confidence among holders of wheat, and to in duce some covering of contracts by speculators who have been "short" of the market. Corn prices have advanced J of a cent, partly from sj'mpathy with the strength in wheat. There has been a good export demand for corn, and shipments, which are now running ahead of those of the corresponding period last year, promise considera ble further enlargement during the present month. The Cincinnati Price Current says that there are indications that the offerings of com are likely to be enlarged from the falling off in the demand from West ern feeders, whose necessities had been covered by earlier purchases Chicago prices of pork have advanc ed 22 J cents per barrel; and the gen eral range of values of pork products has been well maintained, owing to the continued moderate receipts of hogs at Western packing centres, and the light stocks of meat and lard in all markets. Trices of sugar have further de clined I of a cent for raw and to I of a cent for refined, and are now at the lowest point on record. The de pression is due to the increased Cuba cron and the recent restriction of trade in refined. The prices, how ever, have stimulated a more active demand from both jobbers and re tailers. The iron trade continues dull. . 1 at Doctor Kills Make Lean Will,' hut Dr. Sage's Catarrh. Remedy cost less than one doctor's vir-it. Catarrh is a loathsome, dangerous disease, and the time has come w hen to suffer from it is a disgrace. No person of culture and relinement cares to lntlict upon hi friends his offensive breath, disgusting hawkine and spitting anil tlisasreealle efforts to breathe freel"- and clear the throat and nose hence the cultured and refined use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Rem edv. And no wise and prudent man cares to run the risk of leaving his fam ily without a protector, by letting his "slight catarrh run into serious or fa tal throat and lung troubles, hence the wise and prudent use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. The proprietors of this reme dy are "so confident of its curative j)rop erties, that they have made r standing offer of a reward of $500 for a case they cannot cure. ALL OVER THE STATE. A Summary of Current Events for the Past Seven Days. A" Cleveland' county farmer, named Hezekiah Dedmon, made an assign ment last week. Mrs. Jane ' Stanley, of Yadkin count', was fatally gored by a vi cious bull on Saturday. Wadesboro will soon have a new bank with a capital of $50,000. It will be called the Bank of Anson. Ida Morrow, a colored girl 17 years old, was outraged and murdered in Granville county, Wednesday night. Chatham county is infested with barn burners, and great excitement prevails there in consequence there of. It is announced that Secretary Hoke Smith will deliver the annual oration at the next State University commencemen t . Several negroes from Durham county who belonged to an organized band of cow thieves, were arrested Thursday and jailed. the Masonic Grand Lodge, it its annual session at Wilmington last week, appropriated $3,500 for the Oxford Orphan Asylum. An incendiary fire destroyed the barn and stables, with all contents, belonging to Aaron Mauney, in Cleveland county, Friday night. In a row over a dog between some colored men near Fayetteville, Fri day night, Frank Newell, aged 23, was shot in the head and almost in stantly killed. Mrs. Wm. Hogan, of Chapel Hill, whose custom it has been to spend her winters in Philadelphia, was run over and killed by an engine in that city a few days ago. Business reverses induced Robert S. Simpson, a prominent merchant of Rutherfordton, to end his life Tuesday, by shooting himself through the heart with a pistol. The number of convicts in the pen itentiary at present is 124. There are seven white females, one of whom is serving a life sentence, and two sisters from Iredell county are in for twenty years. J. T. Ward, proprietor of "Ward's Hotel," at Wilson, made an assign ment Friday, his wife being a pre ferred creditor and his son assignee. An attempt is now being made to upset the "family assignment." J. Abner Harrell, of Weldon, died on Wednesday at Henderson of heart disease, aged 53 years. He was an aspirant for Public Printer and was known as the "Cheap John" printer of North Carolina. Peace to his ashes. While Ed Simons, of Lilesville, Anson county, was at church Sun day night, his store was broken into and about $100 in money stolen therefrom. A young vrhite man, J. E. Gilmer has been arrested on sus picion. It is now a settled fact that the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Rail road has been sold to a foreign syn dicate for one million dollars. The road will change hands the first of next month, when the purchase money is to be paid. While Cicero Jackson, a young farmer of Randolph county, was driv ing along the road Monday, his cart was overturned. The head of the young man came in contact with a rock and he received injuries from which he died soon after. William Goetchins, aged 19, a stu dent of Davidson College, fell over the balusters of the stairway from the third story to the first, on Thurs day, and received injuries from which he died the next day. He was the son of Rev. G. T. Goetchins, pastor of the Presbyterian church at Rome, Ga. Mrs. Rebecca Garvin, an aged lady of Marion, was run over by a freight train Tuesday, and her feet and an kles crushed so badly as to require amputation. She was endeavoring to crawl through while the train was blockading the crossing when the engine began to move with the above result. Her recovery is doubtful. There were two executions in the State last Friday. At Rockingham, Daniel Gilchrist, colored, was hanged for murdering his father-in-law, and at Plymouth, Ben Hill, also colored, was hanged for the murder of James Andrews. The next legal execution is that of Peter De-Graff, white, who, for killing his sweetheart, Ellen Smith, will pay the death penalty on February 8th, at Winston. A Valuable Rook. T. W. Wood & Sons' new Seed Book for 1894 is now read. This is a most useful publication to all gard eners and farmers. It not only tells all about the best seeds, but also y-hen to flant, how to cultivate, and gives much useful and valuable in formation about profitable crops for the garden and farm. Two articles in it which are particularly timely and valuable about the new forage plant, Lathyrus Sylvestris, and the growing of beets for sugar making. This publication will be mailed free on application to T. W. Wood & Sons, Richmond, Va. A MIRACLE INDEED. AN INTERESTING STORY TOLD RV KADER CREECH OF MICRO. A (ireat Sufferer For Years. Under Constant Treatment by Physicians Without Success. How He Was Relieved. One of the most resjH'cted citizens of Johnston County, X. C, is Kader Creech of Micro, where he has lived for a long w hile. Mr. Creech's word is as i?ood as his bond, so say W. Ii. Oliver, and li. Crocker, Merchants of Pine I-vel, X. C, and many others who know him well. Kader Creech has Itcen for years past a great sufferer from a disease that seemed to bailie the K-st medical talent, and it has only Ix'en recently that he has at all enjoyed life. Through the aid of Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Reme dy, made at Rondout. X. Y.. a medicine that is nowlx'ing prescrilx'd by the most noted physicians everywhere for the diseases for which it is prepared. Mr. Creech liegan to improve, and with hardly a spark of life left in him, Favor ite Remedy built him right up. Mr. Creech, in w riting to Dr. Kenne-. dy of his case, says: " In the Fall of lssji, I was taken down with a severe pain in my back and hip. and remained in that condition for over four months. The physician who attended me, called the disease Sciatica, up till the time my hip began to break ami run. which con tinued for about ten months, the sore then healed, leaving the Uesh wasted away, and my hip bone sticking out against the skin. All this time 1 suffer ed the most excruciating pain and was reduced to a mere skeleton. One day Mr. II. Ii. Pcarce, of Sehna. X. C, call ed upon me and spoke so highly of your preparation. Favorite Remedy. I pn cured it and commenced to take it. I must say I had little hopes of ever get ting better, for I could not raise my head off i,iy pillow. After using Favorite Remedy about twenty days, I discovered I was gaining in strength, and was able to sit up nearly a half a day tit a time, 1 finally improved so 1 could go about on crutches, and feel that Favorite Reniiily will iM-rmanently cure me. The great good it has done me (a hopeless ease it seemed ) has gained for this valuable medicine a powerful reputation." Yours truly. Kadkk Ckekcii. P. O. Micro. X. C. Appended to Mr. Creech's letter is the following: "We hereby certify that Ka der Creech is a reliable man and that the above statement is true. (Seal) J. X. Olive it. Johnston Register Deeds. Superior Court, W. S. Stkvens. (State) X. C. Clerk SiqM-rior Court. The above statement, coining from such a reliable source, lead us to inquire, a little further about this remarkable medicine, and we found that Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy was in no sense a patent medicine, as many sup pose, but is the result of the patient toil and experiment of David Kennedy, M. I)., of Rondout, N. Y.. w ho was a mem ber of the Electoral College of New York State, which cast their vote for President ('rover Cleveland. Dr. Ken nedy has recently Im-cii re-elected Mayor of the City of Kingston, (Rondout), X. Y., where he resides and prepares his medicine. In sjK'aking of Dr. Kennedy's Favor ite Remedy, one of our physicians says: "It ranks with the medical profession as the most perfect of all blood and nerve medicines. It will cure all dis eases of the skin, liver and kidneys. It restores the liver to a healthy condition, and effectually cures the worst cases of habitual constipation. It is a certain cure for all diseases and weaknesses pe culiar to females, and affords great pro tection from attacks that originate in change of life. It cures scrofula, tetter, salt rheum, boils, scald head, ulcers, tu mors, rheumatism, dyspepsia, all kid ney, I (ladder and urinary diseases, grav el, diabetis and Rright's Disease. In this last disease it has made many cures where all else has failed. Evi dences of its great curative power are daily brought to the notice of physic ians, from private and hospital practice, where it has entirely supplanted the old time methods in the treatment of the alxive mentioned diseases. It is also particularly effective in all rases arising from mental worry or over-work, ner vousness, or loss of sleep." Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Reme dy is for sale bv all dealers in medicine at $1 a bottle, or six lnittles for fc. Full directions accompany each bottle, so that any one can readily understand just how to take it for the different com plaints. f Doetorw l)inrouraf;eil, lleli f Fonnil. Mr. C. E. Ilartholomew, Kalkaska, Mich., writes: "I am as certain as I now live, that Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy saved my life when I was a vic tim of l'right's disease." If vou are suffering from liright's disease, diabetes, or any urinary trouble, you should use this only cure. 'T had leen troubled since 1K(J'J," writes S. X. Arnold, of Rochester, X.Y., "with gravel and catarrh of the bladder. Tricjl several doctors, but got no relief. Upon advice, I ummI Dr. David Kenne dy's Favorite Remedy. The result was marvelous; a few bottles entirely cured me." t Xo man who lndievcs wrong will do right. Provide yourself with a ljottle of AV er's Cherry Pectoral, ami so have the means at hand for contending success fully with a sudden cold. As an emer gency medicine, it has no equal, and leading physicians everywhere recom mend it. There are gracious, serene, hopeful and happy old women who are more Iteautiful in their wrinkles than they were in their maiden roses, Msoltttefy Pure A cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of all iu leavening strength. Latest U. S. Government Food Re port. Royal Baking Powder Co., 10G Wall St., N. Y. V