a Golds ' 1 TTT7 BOB, EABLIGHT ESTABLISHED 1887. GOLDSBOllO, N. C, THURSDAY, APHIL 26, 1894. VOL. VII. NO. 34. O The Old Frie An-l the lest friend, that r.over f.iii.-s vet, is (Simmons Liver Legu lutor, (the Ke-l Z) that's what von hcai- at the n.eiitioii o: this excellent Liver indie!,.-, a people, should not he j r.-n.. that anything else will do. It is the King of J.iver JlVcli ciacs; is hotter than pill?, and takes the :va of Quinine and Calomel. It tvts directly on the Liver, Kidneys and Bow. Is and gives n .'. life to th-j whole sys tem. This is the medicine you want. S'hlhvn'l I'iT.g-i?ts in Liquid, or in l'o'Aater to 1 taken dry or made into a I-m. hkvf.uy pack r; r: i IIai tin; Y. S-'iiinip in r il u mpper. j. 11. zku.i. it to., riui.k-'.i.hi.i, i. c 1 IFF makes tho liom oirrlp romr'ieto. This treat Tc-iiiperancu l'rink fives pleas ure a nil liialth to cvciv meiuiiir of tno ramily. A ' package makes 5 s;ai loas. l!e Mire Jiiul get the gfnuiiie. Sold everywhere. Mn.lo only by The Chas. E. Hires Co., Fhilada. S"o.i 20 wnmp r-r v-awif .l P!fnr nnd Bof . h OHO fl 4 u y n t FOR THIN PE0PL Arc You Thin? ,;1.i.-,.:.rts met i'.is ik:' tiiin fiuvs '..lump ithl. - s. Tii,-v Ihe f.L'i.r . 1 mia i:i 'KKii .Mi hlli.l. 1 I..' I.I TKI.V !! i; ,.,V. ti l"l-- '. I'll Tin- I 111 V l BREAKFAST -SUPPER. GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. BOILING WATER OR MILK PARKER'S WHJi H HAIR BALSAM. 1 autil.es till- hi Wntopi- ViiIs to Hrstore firav (,'"',. . -SAl Hair to its loutntut t-o V-' i.-' "'" ... M. I'l. Ib.'-ins.in 0; d-boro. . O. ;) o-j i V5 PUIS fe r.nil ro '; teat by J ! Ill :;'!!, ; iial'lo mail. m. i ,i-i X . ( '. A Happy Welcome I (.1 A! w id AN'i ilosi WHO ich is est of :h tl Dollle-t Lit jnors aim im ah t; X 1 ) ii ba ;r' fix;: to- I oi'ih j Carolina ith 'n.e .-uni j oi ti V! Mr. O Jas. -r -j JJlCirimSOIl At .John (on; nd i'.r . f. .,; s r..3 3 am Trcatn-piit I ;..;. - : iv .- .tn-n i -".rMili-f. hj atitliot- i. (. .- W.-iA Mciuor;.: I...ss ..I 1'n.irwu::! r. r; ..- ..i:,llli....l:.Mi.-Mll-SK; j.,, -i, .h I T.-iin-': ; a i; n C"i:li(iwu'; ;.-i-..i.i-:- : : ; . 1 1 Pi .in- ; I . -el !'.-.v.t rivr-ei,'r'! i'.u ': V;,i' iVrr'.i V..'r l"x' '.itlv'l'.-e of .'liii-oi, t ' i 1 . l .i ,:. :, . !ii. h t'.'ml to i er .-, '- .;: ; :..a. l-'-uni' . .. :! oweh. l!y mail, H li bi'.il ti t..i .: vr.lt:-'. tlti i -mi' .' Mcur or l .-funil ii.o!,,.-. . V, 1 eol i i,i VK1 1'. A cf 'rutin i nr.. f.-r Cm'K :-. A-!lnr:., JT-.i..liitisCroup, .ii""l'!':- (':: !. s 'hr..t. l'ifittiit to tub fiiunii mz- i)i- ''.!!:. ': ".1. in .w J.-.I-.; olj tl u .w .' o: A i; A.NTi.i :s i-.-ucd ouly by M. K. R.-bii.-oM ,V l,.",...;..;.!.-boro. X. ('. f ftr M 1 DR MILK. ! V.-nk I .m- -. P.'l.'. -.. c-aim. i'liiii.Ttiise intinicoui-M. HINDERCORNS. Th. mr-r. c.w. Sloe. "..ii.. lie ill l.e- -..-t.s or IUSCOJl CO.. X. . i s Old Stand. ! 1 :,;:,r.,,r.,?, Ager,t3. $75 1 f '"" s, I " " ' 1'ii-n, llin:-Mii.'doci V. . V. HXlllLl -ti'S iCO.. ll.rk tla. 11. l olumb.-fc U. HEXKY OWEN'S STOKY. A Full Art-oin.t ertlieSiif.'crinjrsaiMl He storatittii l" .Mr. anl Mrs. Henry C. Owen Related to a Hlatle Ilepiesciitulive. .Most KxerneiatiiiK i'ain i:mlur-;t-Physicians - i:imrksillf mid InU-r-stiii Narrr.tivr. I n. in Tin- T..I. .I... (., liluile. During ti:e last few months there have appeared in the newspapers of the comi ng , accounts of marvelous cures from the use of a medicine discovered by Dr. Daid Kennedy, of Koiidotit. X. Y., and Known as Dr. David Kennedy's Favor ite Remedy. These cases, many of ihein held by tlie medical prol'e-sioii to be iin-iirable. have been so freipiently di-cii eil in the news pancrs, that it ha's leil to many people iiMiig this preparation, and they invari ably have had a similar statement to i make. Many of these people have been told by their attending physician that there was no hope."' recovery was im possible." and a little later was an nounced their restoration to health and : strength through the i'-e or l ay.me , slK.vnie and one of the proprietors lb-medv. Kecenily the billowing letter! . 1 1 from a well known citi.en of Kat To- j f tho Citizen, of that place, publish ledo. attracted the attention of the j es in a recent issue of lii.s paper, over blade. 'No. PJS Euclid Ave.. K:lst Toledo. Dr. David Kennedy, .Dear Sir: 1 feelit a duly to write you of the benelit your medicine. Favorite Remedy, has been to mv wife ami invsclf. I suffered for wars with kidney trouble, complicated w ith gravel in the Madder, and gall stones: ' at times I endured the imt excrucial- ing pain, so bad that I would have to S be carried home from my business. My j physician did not help me in the least: I ! kept growing worse. Finally Dr. Dav- j id Kennedy's Favorite Remedy was brought to'mv notice, and I used it reg-! ularly, following the suggestions found j in the book u rapped about the bottle, j and in a short time after that I was a: well man: have never felt a return of; the old troubles .-iiiee. j '.My wife who had been a :i iTclvr from sickness ice.;liar to her .-e. found no relief from any niedieiue she had j ever u-cd. until .-he began the u-e of Fa- ; orite Remedy, and that cured her. 1 haven't language to express the high es- , I -fin in which we hold Favorite lieme- j dy: I have reeoinmended it to d.i.zens of people about here, and in no instance h:t it failed to benelit and cure. Yours truly. IIknky ( '. Owkx." i 'the above letter was so remarkable; a.- to be worthy of the fullest invotiga- I tion, and the Ulade determined to place the facts before the public for the bell. lit of other sufferer, and if unfounded. ; to let their readers know it. Willi these m-t ruction a reporter w as sent to the re-idenee of Mr. Owen. In response to a ring of the door-bell a lady appeared who pro vet to le Air-. Owen. When your reporter mane h M rs. )w ell said she about the good FaV been to their familv. inin O'lld te R, For now n. i!v tell !a ui.i i s Mr. I Owen had n the ictilll of ir;ii; stones. ' complicated with kidney trouble and gravel in the nlaill. r." sab Mrs. Owen. ' lu spite of the effort of physicians he , diil not improve in the least. I. too. had suffered for years w ith sickness peculiar to women, and one day I clipped from a newspaper, an article referring to Dr. David Kennedy' Favorite Remedy. I told my hfisbaiid that I thought it would help my trouble, and we immediately bought a bottle. I did hot take many doses before 1 noticed iiiipro . einent. and then I suggested to try the reine.lv for hi sje : 'IF did so.'and felt th like magic. Mr. Owen e i Favorite Remedy until permanently cured." He further detail, it might h mv -band t kness i' effects almost oiitilMieii to use lie ha become fere going into e well to give in Mr. Owen's own w ords, a statement as to what it did for him. Mr. Owen, j who is a man of about 4" years ot age. J with hair slightly tinged with gray, was j found at w ork as foreman for the 'lies- j broiigh J5ros." Lumber Company, an.l in response to an iiKptiry as to the merits; of Favorite F.eniedv and the genuine ness of the letter published. Mr. Owen : said: "1 have not the language to ex-, I'lcss t he high e-ti-em ju which 1 hold; Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy. 1 sstf- i fered for years with kidney trouble and , gall stoiu-s; at times I endured pains w hieh seemed almost unbearable. I Used ; various )rescl ipli-ns. an-l like e eryone I w hoissUk, took everything that my j friends suggested. At last my wife told , me of the good Dr. Kennedy's Favorite i Remedy had done her. and 1 concluded to trv it. I Used it and il cured me. and there is no mistake about that. 1 can relet- you to many or our neighbors w lio lave used it with the same result-;. One1 voting man. a friend of mine, had j 1 n ' sick for months and was doe- toting with one of these i:.") a week; lihvsicians. Thev did him no good, and rM Inn, i.b.,,1. V iv.n ili- Reoie.lv lie ! i,ad paid for a week's treatment, but left them, and f saw him some i was feeling bet I How eil mv directions. 1 mv advice. 'Mr. Owen has lived in Toledo, and ha been the liead man at ehesbrough !ros. for years, and is prominent !y con nected with the S-:ast Side M. F. church. !n communicating to the reporter in reference to his tro,:ble. Mr. Owen said tiirth"!' that tlie pain he had w as of a noiing. iniiMing. laci and radiated through ating character, the abdomen and chest. lie colepia'meil. tense nausea aeeonipan first, the food being tin selitly. after repeated some mucus acid am were expelled from hi: action of the heart was . w hen id. of in v'uig t he pain at own up but pre l'etchiiig. only I watery nialte'r - stomach. The feeble, and the circulation was correspondingly de pressed. The duration of the seizure varied from a few hours to several days. I am now," said Mr. Owen, "a perfect ly well man: if it had not been for Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy I don't know w hat my present condition would have been." Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy is an unfailing specific for l'.righi's disease, kidney, liver and urinary complaints, rheumatism. gra el. stone in the blad der am! sick-headache. It will cure the n,ost ,!,stinate case ,f constipation. In ! j nm,n)s, so foi-linglv, so hand eases ot neuralgia, or paintul diseases, i J ' . i inflammation of ihe liver, dyspepsia i somely, so sincerely, some so e.o sklu diseases, jaundice, gastritis loss of j quently, given by the State Press, appetite, sleeplessness, uer CMisness o blood diseases, ami female irregularities red w here all else failed. lief characteristics of Favoriti Remedy is its agreeable quality :;n mild operation on the liver and bowcl ahsohite freedom from irritating eaihar tie actio:!. Dr. Kennedy's Favorii Reined y can be purchased of any dea.le in medicine at one dollar a bottle or si bottles for live dollars. A benefit is a! ways experienced from the first b-.tih and it never fa i is to cure w hen tin- di lections are faithfully carried out. i-ii rspaviri Liniment renno es all ; liard, sot; or calloused lumps and iiten 1 Nl ;'s fl'"!" -,s- h!'",(I sP!lvi',s" '."rl 'I splints, swecnev. ring-bone. tit!e. se.l lumps and ntem- spraitis. swollen throats, coughs, etc. Sae 50 by the use of one bottle. War ranted tlie 'most wonderful blemish cure ever know n. Sold bv M. K. Robinson iV Bro.. druggists, Ool'dsboro, N. C. Itch on lunna'i, mange on horses, dogs and all stock, cured in 30 minutes, by W oolford's Sanitary Lotion. Tliisnefr fails. Sold bv M. K. Robinson & Rro., druggists, Ooldsboro, X. C. Zcl Vance is Dead. Zeb Vance is dead ! That good old man. Wo ne'er shall see him mure, Nor ever hear his voice again Upon the State House tloor. "Our Zeb" isdead. gone from earth, His loss We do deplore: Transported now, his moral wort!). To heaven's brightest shore. His days were many, from his birth. Full three-score years and four: And full of usefulness and mirth, Were two-score years, and more. He sleeps bevolid the Western hills Of his dear native State; Our losing his devotion tills Our hearts with sorrow great. Sw eet be his sleep, but sweeter still To say with one accord. And say sincerely: Xot our will, I'.ut thine be dime, Oh, bold: 1. 15. ItAIrOKl). A .Message From the Dead." J. P. Kerr, postmaster Mr at his own name, a very striking letter in which he narrates, with parlieu- larity. a lengthy conv(rsation he had I with Senator Vance at the lattor's home ill Washington on Wednesday, ho HUi jn!t f f()m. Mro J - bis death. It was manliest to Mr. Kerr from the moment he laid his t, ...,, 1b it tle Fitter J 1 " tlK bL iU!to1 lllat tlu 1Jlu would never leave his bed: yet his l,.m,l ,..Kn was stn.nc and his mind isp was unclouded. After inmnnii"; for friends at Asheville, about the dam age done the fruit crop by the re cent frot, etc.Jie asked. '"How is the Democracy in North Carolina?" lleing answered that political affairs were unset tied, he said: "The Democratic parly is immor tal. I have not recently arrived at this conclusion, but since I have been lying here on mv back I have thought profoundly on many things, and among them, this idea of my earlier manhood has become a steadfast con- viction. For thirty years of my life j fnuilt as a whi- ihe Democratic . . irty. imd sometimes v, nen it was overwhelmingly defeated. I thought it could rise no more, but from its wrecks and disasters it would come in; ire mighty than ever before and sweep away all opposition. The word Democrat stands for human liberty and human freedom and can not die Tl... neoi.le believe in it i , r , , i and when freedom is menaced and . - i . -i i . .1 . . liberty leopardizcd. at one blast of ; that magic name men will come from the mountains and from the valleys and place the Democratic party in power. ''In the ancient days the little gladiator, with his simp! bi. -Id :ind short sword, would step into the arena before the assembled thous ands. The fierce and raging lion would be turned in upon him. By his skill the mighty brute' would Vie slain. Another monster would be turned in to meet the same fate. Another and another would follow only to go down before the apparent ly puny strength of the gladiator, until the people would cry 'he is a gd: the supernatural is with him." In so me sort this represents the idea 1he American neoiile have of D.-m racv. There is attached to the name a kind of sup-.-rnatural power, and when all else fails the people will turn to it as an invincible champion, an unfailing friend." vii.. v(..f,. I-.-...c .... Vance. past when a the Press of M.w.u.vr. On no occasion in 1 he t . i i l,ul,llt' 1!! lU "1"1 !l;IS j Xoiih Carolina done so well in its d my directions. I artic!i-s upon the death of Senator everv one has friends. It is a pleas-dt'-rwar.ts. and he ! - . d thank--! me for ance. the great tribune of the peo- j tire to believe that we have friends I pie. The weekly papers particularly ! at home who will lovingly give us i .tw-l. mw.n tb. have surpassed themselves not only in the heartiness of encomium, the warmth of expression as to the loss sustained in the death of the greatest Xoi'th Carolinian, as he was held to be in and out of the Slate, but in the . ' excellence ami character 1 the trib- utes pai.l to his memory. They are very numerous, are in good taste, overflow with admiration for the de- parted, and are worthy of the hearts and heads of the writers. The Messenger only regrets that owing to the great number of trib- ities and the hick of space it is una- ble to print them serve to be preserv all, for they de- as the honest expressions of Xorth Carolina the newspapers of; the street as I approached the dwell as to the loss sus-! ing. Col. Frazer lives right oppo- tained in the death of Senator Vance. Generations to come seeing these would be able at once to put a proper estimate upon one of the great men of the pat who reflected such undy - ing glory upon his native Xorth Car- I olina. As one of the craft we are : indeed proud of these opinions of the newspapers of the State. They have : honored themselves in honoring the great Senator. ala! no more. 'Others inav hail the rising sun. We bow to him whose race is run." Iloi.ilnaiiiIOiiIvHoo.PS. revou weak and wearv. overworked at; 1 tired r Hood's Sarsaparill is just the medicine you need to pe.rifv and ..,,:,.! ,,,, Kl..,.. 1 ., ., I O. .rl... - .',11 ..- petite and strength.' If you decide' to ; mayor and the marshal will both find lake I iood's Sarsapai iila do not be in-j business. Railroads are great bless duce.l to buy any oilier. Any ertV.rt to : . b d t, j g j substitute another remedy is proof of , - ' J " the merit of Hood's. ' j bad mixed up with it and Clearwa Hood's Pill: pills, assist i 'i'rv a box. ligestion. cure headache, ...... .1... l,... i .. r-.... n., ...... A HI IS (O.MLMJ home. Itill Likes Florida's Climate but Thinks Home the l'est Place. Eleven men in buckram suits! Docs it follow that every man with an oleanginous eorjorosity is given to seeing double and treble like Jack Falstaff? Dr. Hunter Cooper, of Atlanta, came here the other clay with his friend. Murphy Candler. They have been fishing all over the State and wound up at Clearwater. They came from St. Petersburg last and the doctor alarmed us about the horrible sawfish that he helped to J c atch there at the end of the wharf, j He got excited with his narrative as he told how, when the monster was ! hooked, the alarm was given and ev j err man and boy in town ran down to see, and after the fishermen had tangled ropes and log chains all over it, it took every able bodied man in town to draw it to shore. ':It actu ally weighed," said he, "over at Ml pounds and its saw was the most venomous weapon I ever behcTd. It had been broken oJT a foot or two. but what was left measured Five feet and eight inches.' ''Oh, mercy," said my wife, ''isn't it awful, t'irls. you must not go in bathing any more. Every clay somerMidy would tell about these awful creatures devil fish and sharks and stingarees and saw fish. It is a wonder they have not got some of us before now." Dr. Cooper is a lirst-class gentle man and came from good, old I'aptist stock. He stands high in his pro fession and in his stockings, and is handsome and lie knows it. but I no ticed that everv time he told a big 1. , ...... .. 4.x ai.,..,.i,.. r..- I ' 1 1 " . . ',,',.,. 1 organized as good party men should hrmatioii. '"Isii t it so. Murph? ou;. m . "in . e 1 be. The attempt to saddle a part of saw that fish. I pledge you mv word , ... , . 1 " s the responsibility ft r this unfortim- it w;is the bitrgest monster I ever . . . - . . . .... , U'te state of anairs uixm President hud mv eve s oil. Murph simiIv , , , . , . nodded assent as the doctor branched - " o'Y on another narrative Muiphy lS ; a i i t'M t icriaii aim in iniiciai posi tion in 1h Agnes Scott institute is ever before him. but still lie would not go back on his friends, especially when so far away froni""bome. He affectionately calls t h e doctor Hunt," and the doctor calls him "Murph." and they coincide on ev erything, except that Murph says . i .. . ,i ... lit. ,.; : Hunt plavs too much croquet with 1 1 .1 ,,i..., 4i .,,,.1 i r 'ii'i i: u. aii'ii iiii-iemr. uiu 1 " . " . . ometimes thev miss a tram bv whic h is very provoking'. And Hunt said that when pretty girls pursue a man it is very bad manners to run away from them. My wife remark- ! ...1 4l,.. r,f4..m ..... ... ,u 111,11 1 "l " tired that she liked them both very much, very much, indeed, and after a pause she said it would Vie a right good law if every handsome married man when he went faraway from hoiue should have to wear a ribbon on his hat with ""family man" printed on it, just as a warning to foolish girls, you know. 1 didn't answer, but snored a little as if I heard her not. Another week will find us journey ing homeward, and that will bring another pleasure the reunion with kindred and friends. The poor, re- ! uuu mJ,xl,u ,H1""1 wu "",ul tosav: 'And what is friendship hut a name A charm that lulls to sleep, A shade that follows wealth or fame Fut leaves a wretch to weep." That is not so. That was but the : utterance of broken-hearted love. ! Friendship is a sweet, savory reality, and next to the dearest tie on earth, ' There are not many who are bound like Damon and Pythias, but almost : welcome, and we know there are i many there we will rejoice to see to look into their eyes and grasp their eyes ami gra.-p uieir ' hands and receive their greetings. Love and friendship are the best treasures of life better than fame or wealth. There are friends hen', j too, new found and new made friends I from whom we part not willingly, j for they have been kind and have 1 done so much to make our prolonged j visit pleasant. j This is a happy little town. I was i sitting in my daughter's pretty ver anda this evening and counted six squirrels in the trees nearby. I saw a pair of emails and two rabbits in I site, and there was an owl sitting j quietly on a limb near his veranda. A tall, venerable crane was wading in the water at the foot of the bluff. '"This solitary bird is nearly always there," said the colonel, "and when he straightens up full length looks as j solemn as a Presbyterian preacher." j Xobody dares to disturb these pets in Clear Water, for it law. Clear Water i peaceful little village. is against tin- i certainly a for there has not been a fight nor a quarrel since we have been here. Indeed, there are some good people here who favor giving uj the town charter, because tin Tiiavor and mnrshal have liothinc I ' . l0tl" Kut llie la,,1Pil 1'adroad is coming very soon and Tampa whiskey ill find its way, and maybe the ter will not escape. In less than six j mcmtlis I expect to be here again. Bill Ari National Capital Matters. Wabiiinoton, D. C, April 21, 1894. The more one studies the work of the Democ ratic Senators the more apparent it becomes that they need a leader. There is too much guerril la fighting. Single leadership is as necessary in politics as in an army, if results are to be accomplished. It mdy please the personal friends of a Senator for- him to strike out on his own hook and make a brilliant attack on a party measure, but the example is fatal to party harmony, as it is always followed by those who would never have attempted to lead suc h a movement. It is not necessa ry that a leader shall have more abil ity than any of his followers. All that is needed is that one man shall be recognized as leader. The full significance of this will be plain to any Democrat who will take the trouble to ask half a dozen Demo cratic Senators to name the Demo cratic leader of the Senate, and note the number named. Now, there may be a dozen leading Democratic Sena tors, but there should be and can be only one real leader at a time. If the Democratic Senators had one recognized leader the party would be spared the spectacle of the uncertainty now surrounding the tariff bill. Of course every Demo crat knows that the Senate is going to pass a taritf bill, but there is no man who can now say just what sort i of a bill it will be when it is passed. J This situation, with a clear Demo jcratic majority in the Senate, is hu jiniliating to every Democrat and I should not be possible and would not ie it me Democratic Senators were v ie cuiiiii ioois, no one w no is, con versant with Ihe attitude the Presi- . ,. ocemties towards the Solvate ' His skirt. are clear. Senator Smith, of Xew Jersey, added liis voice to that of Senator Hill, in attacking the income tax and other parts of tho taritf bill, in a set j moor. X. Y., Monday night, Hugo j Planting in the South is progressing speech delivered in the Senate this j Willis was killed by one of the firm, (favorably. Northern mill takings of week. After stating his reasons fori Three workmen were killed and cotton since September 1 now show opposing the income tax and other one badly injured by the explosion ; a comparative decrease of 2C.4.0O0 schedules of the bill, Mr. Smith said: of a boiler. Monday, at the Hutchin-: bales: and the difference is steadily ""Hut in justice to my party, my j son Electric Light plant, Keokuk. Ia. widening, as current purchases by State and myself. I cannot leave any J Thursday morning, while peace-' sPinnt?rs a,v not lu'dl to those of room for misapprehension. Thejfullv plowing in Ids field, Henrv the eoiTesnding period last year. Democratic party is under a distinct j Wo'rley, of Murray county. Oa.. wa's I The "neral demand for cotton goods obligation to confer the boon of tariff j fired upon from ambush and instant- j lvflocts 0Il5-v the actual wunts of con" refonn upon the American people, j v killed. verters and joblx-rs; and a curtail- We cannot hope to overcome the ' While asleep in their cabin. uear mont of prcKluction is proposed by present dissentions and fulfill this ;or.U(r s iVrry. Idaho. Saturday ' one of the large Xew England mills, obligation unless we beat clown all I n;,rht. P. E. Clarke, his wife and two j The wuo1 trade has btcn of fah' attempts to create discord within j t.Jiildren. were overwhelmed bv a ' volume, although less active than in the ranks and strive earnestly for j snowslide. ' : recent weeks, partly because many partv harmony." Mr. Smith has i: . t..., c .'i manufacturers had already covered doubtless heard th story of the eleven obstinate jurors. Jiis plea His for party harmony recalled it to many of his hearers. There has been lots of talk hero about the production of evidence showing that the Xavy Department did not find out all of the '"snide" business connected with the making of armor plates by the Carnegie company, but up to this time nothing new has been placed before Secreta ry Herbert, although he has been ready and even anxious to get hold of anything' new in that line. Forty-seven Democrats in the House stood out to the last and voted against the adoption of the rule for counting a quorum, but its adoption was inevitable, and. as long as it seemed impossible to keep a Demo cratic quorum on hand it is perhaps just as well. There will be no more dead-locks during this session. That is much to be thankful for. The Ile- publicans are pretending to be much . , , 4,, ..i.:..., r,c 4l. . , , . !W ,.,, ,lf f:l,.t .. ! not. It ends their ability to make j trouble whenever they pleased, and for that reason is disliked by them. It is not probable that the new rule will be put in force often. Its exist ence will be all that is needed to make a voting quorum, as a rule. It seems a little like putting the cart before the horse to follow the quorum-counting rule with the en forcement of the old law docking the pay of members of the House for the time they are absent without leave, except on account of sickness either of themselves or in their families, but it is to be done, l'erbaps it tms law had been enforced from the be ginning of the session Ihere would have been no necessity fora quorum counting rule. It might have kept a Democratic quorum on the floor of the House. There is a very large delegation of working men numbering about 4,000 here to-day to influence legislation in the Senate against the tariff bill. What the result will be no one can predict. The Democratic leaders in the Senate, however, have a plain kjji duty before them, viz.: to pass a of some sort and give certainty to the business interests of the country. linaiiiiy Anion; Women. The large increase in mental trouble among women is directly traceable to a diseased state of their peculiar and deli cate organism. Much of this is brought about by carelessness, late hours, thin shoes, tight corsets, overwork, anxiety and sometimes by excesses. When her delicate mechanism is disabled or d rang.nl nothing equals Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Prescription in restoring it to order. A NATION'S UOIXtiS. The News From Everywhere leathered and Condensed. Lynchers ended the lives of two horse thieves at Woodward, O. T., Friday. Heavy hailstorms in Kansas, on Thursday, did great damage to grow ing crops. A fall of rock in Pineridge Colliery at Wilksbarre, Pa., Thursday, crush ed to death two miners. Burglars looted the bank at Mont erey, Ind., Friday night, carrying off several thousand dollars. Fearing he was to lose his pension, Jefferson Kersey, of Lebanon, Ind., on Friday, cut his throat. Mistaking him for a turkey, Rich McGough shot and killed his son, near Jasper, Ala., Tuesday. City Collector Merrill, of El Paso, Tex., absconded Friday night, with $2:i,(M0 of the city's money. The entire business portion of Kent, la., was destroyed by fire, Thursday night. Loss $2."0.MI0. Fire destroyed Lee's Hotel at Oma ha, Xeb., Tuesday night. J. E. Smith, a guest, was burned to death. Continued ill health induced Mrs. Mary Cutler, of Philadelphia, to strangle herself Saturday with an umbrella cover. The gigantic soft coal war began in earnest Saturday, when 12:1.000 miners in the coal producing regions, went on a strike. While on the ir way to c hurch, on Sunday, Charles Collamer and wife, of Ilallston, X. Y., were killed by a train at a crossing. In a street duel at Favetteville, Ark., Saturday, J. J. Morgan and James Mason, business rivals, fatally wounded each other. Attempting to alight from a mov ing train at Scrantoe, Pa.. Tuesday nigtit. jumer iroo.is. a harber, toll and was mangled to death. . Vv'hile in the act of burglarizing the grocery of Smith Hros.. at Mont - At Indianapolis, Ind.. Sunday, Dr. Joe! McKinnie, and Rodney Mctzger, I ,n(.mi))rs of a suieid club, ended i...;.. i;,-,w i... .1, ....;.... ii.....,...!,.,. . . ' " through the head. iwo wee.is ago l.izzie Maugntcr was murdered mysteriously at I'ome- roy, ( t. .Monday a spiritual medium accused Claude Staple, who jmmedi- ateiv blew out ins Drains. Hrooding over the insanity of their mother. Samuel Hvatt. of Salem. Ia.. and his sister, Mrs. Edward Free man, went crazy Saturday, the latter drowning herself in a well. Deserted by her lover, Agnes Cav azzi, aged 21, of Hoboken, X. J., committed suicide, Friday, by pour ing kerosene oil upon her clothing, igniting the fluid and burning herself to death. Foiled in his lustful desires on his employer's wife, William Jackson, colored, brutally murdered George J. Laeger, near Chestertown, Md., Thursday, and probably fatally woundinl Laeger "s 14-year-old son. A rear-end collision near Penns - dal lale, Pa., Saturday, resulted in the death of Miss Miriam Welsh, daugh ter of the general manager of the road, and the man to whom she was to be married this week was mortal ly wounded. The Supreme Court of South Caro lina, on Thursday, declared the Till man State liquor dispensary law un constitutional, holding that the State has no right to engage in trade. In consequence of tho decision all dis- pensaries have been closed, At Washington. Friday, George Taylor, colored, alias "Jack the - ! Slasher," who, for months has been terrorizing the people ttiere by en tering houses and wantonly destroy ing articles of clothing, etc., was sentenced to thirty years in the Al- bany penitentiary the longest sen tence over imposed for burglary the Federal capital. Earthquakes Kill Hundreds. Cable reports received from Ath ens, Greece, indicate that the loss of life by the earthquake shocks on j Friday and Saturday throughout Greece was very heavy. I he tie-, and steel products is slowly broad struction to property was also great, j ening. In three villages alone 12'.) persons were killed by falling walls, most of whom were women and children in church. Already the death role has reached 238, although only a portion of the country is yet heard from. In dozens of towns the houses have been deserted, and the inhabitants are camping in the oK-n fields almost unfed. Iist Week in Trade Circles. SjxM'ial ( '..nvsTH.ridenw. New York, April 2:. 1S;4. Business improvement during tho past week has continued, but it has been less uniformly distributed and its pace has been slower. Spring wants in many lines have been pro vided for; and uncertainty alout fu ture conditions causes hositan.y and caution in the preparations for fall business. Lalior troubles in many industries restrict current opera tions, and uncertainty as to their duration and effect embarrasses cal culations for the future. Measured by bank clearings the volume of bus ness is about 27 per cent, below that of last year at the corresK)iiding pe riod, and railroad earnings continue to show a comparative decline of over 13 per cent., as they did in March. A better demand for money abroad than in Xew York has caused fur ther large shipments of gold; but the movement has had no disturbing effect uiMm the Stock Exchange mar kets. Exports of merchandise continue to compare favorably with those of last year. April f.gures at Xew York so far show a gain of $2,014. 182 in exports and a decline of $11. (o5,724 in imports. Treasury re turns for March showed an excess of exports of $4.727,8it;, which made the merchandise balance against Europe for nine months of the fiscal year aggregate $223,303, 885. Busi ness failures in the United States and Canada during the last week- numbered 2(4, as against 208 durin the corresponding week last year. The cotton markets have lacked strength. The port ward movement has continued to run ahead of last season's figures, exports have fallen off, and demand from spinners has been even less satisfactory than it was in previous weeks. The present rate of movement suggests the pro Labilit' of a crop yield of 7,.VKMKM( i,uios or ,nom Some of the trade 1 estimates are larger than this, and 1 few are now be-low 7.2 jt MUM) bales. their probable requirements in ad vance of the new clip season, and partly because seaboard stocks no i longer afford the opjxirtunitv for .. . , . . , , .. , S buyers to secure desirable selections. Tlie depletion of stocks has caused a j molv conndt.nt holding of supplies by ; Ut?aiers: i,ut prices, as a rule, show- no advance. The dress goods mills j are weu t.mployed, and there is a very fair demand in preparation for fall wants; but orders for heavy goods for men's wear have been compara tively small. Wheat prices have been depressed by speculative liquidation, continued indifference on the part of forc'gn buyers and much more encouraging crop reorts. Late investigations have disclosed the fact that the dam age from the March blizzards was less serious than had been appre hended. Favorable weather condi tions have caused considerable recu peration of the crop in many locali ties, and the general outlook has been much improved. Visible stoc ks of wheat have declined, but are still ; , c04;c;,..,i it;.,,, j d , pro spocts lmve discoura ged bullish sacculation. Prices of wheat are 1 J to 21 cents per bushel lower than they were a week ago, the greater decline having been in the Chicago market. Corn prices, on the other hand, have advanced I to ; of a cent ier bushel, locause the interior move ment has decreased. There has been a considerable reduction in visible supplies, and demand has been well ustained both for home consumption and for export. Values of hog pro ducts have been well maintained, and Chicago prices of lard are 30 cents per loo pounds higher than they were a week ago. Receipts of hogs at Western centres have con tinued large, and since March 1 pack - 1 ing operations have increased T per cent, as compared with those of the corresponding season last j"ear. Exports of provisions are large, the clearances of meats and lard last week having aggregated 23,310,000 j jxiunds, as against 9,720,000 pounds j for the corresponding week in April, j IS'Xi. The general demand for iron The Wish Gratified. Yu have often wished for something to take the pi cce of pills. Now try a "2.Vcent package Simmon Liver Regu lator powder. Take it dry n the tongue or make it into a tea. It is plea sant to take, and gives quick relief two good recommendations. The preacher who gets the biggest salary is not always the one who open the liible the widest. ALL OVER THE STATE. A Summary of Current Events for tlie Past Seven Hays. The Hank of Pocky Mount changed hands last Saturday. A destructive cyclone visited a jxirtion of Bladen county Tuesday. Unknown incendiaries have made several attempts to burn dwellings in East Raleigh. It is rumored that the Caje Fear and Yadkin Valley road is to bo ex tended to Southport. About thirty horses ami mules have died recently on the State farms of a strange disease. The Thirdites of Kinston called a meeting on citv elections Friday night, but failed in the project. The body of Henry F. Aberly, who recently disapjeared from Xewbern. was found Thursday in Xeuse river. Volney Parsons killed a negro named McMillan in Alleghany coun ty, Tuesday, in the act of self-defense. John llobinson, colored, of Rich mond county, was jailed Saturday, for beating to death his twelve-year-old grand-daughter. Ernest Moore, a negro trusty, em ployed in Fulp & Linville's store at Kernersville.opened the safe Wednes day night and stole $t!0. S. II. Conway, a section foreman, was killed near Greonslmro Thurs day by the south-iound vestibule, while rounding a curve on a lever car. An incendiary iire in Edgccomlie county, Sunday night, destroyed the stables of John S. Wiggins. Three horses and four mules were burned to death. Teague Carver, of Yancey county, murdered his wi and child, Satur day night, while intoxicated, and after committing the butchery made his escajH'. The three-year-old daughter of 11. C. Lanev was burned to death in Union county Saturday, while leing left alone for- a few moments near the fire-place. Owing to the general destruction of fruit buds by the recent freeze the officers of the State Horticultur al Society have concluded to hold no fair this year. Last Saturday, A. P. Collins and wife, of Union county, came to Mon roe to see the circus and when they returned home they found their barn and its contents in ashes. Two Mormon preachers who ar rived at Dcrita. Mecklenburg coun ty, Monday, were escorted out of town by citizens that night and most earnestly requested to return no more. The man Woody, who headed the mob which broke into Sparta jail and hanged Dan Slaughter, was captured in Tennessee last week, after a lively pursuit. There was a reward of :() out for his capture. Henry Anderson, a convicted mur derer, who broke out of the Bertie county jail last fall, was found Mon day near Plymouth, at work in the woods, by a deputy sheriff, and was shot dead as he ran. John Adkins was killed by a fall ing tree near Raleigh, Friday, which his two sons were engaged in cutting down. He thought the tree was go ing to fall the other way but it took the opposite direction, directly to ward Adkins. Tom Bailey who was recently found murdered at his home in Wake county, was killed by his brother-in-law, Wyatt Perry, as it hus since transpired. Perry called Bailey out of his house at night, and attacking him on the porch cut his throat, head ami back. (iauthliiiK Without Limit. '(), George!" she exclaimed, as they gazed seawaiil. "There seems to 1-c no limit to old ocean's broad expanse. And the waves, how they gamble along the shore." "The waves are very foolish, dear." "How, foolish?" "To gamble where there is no limit." Hut not half so foolish as are thousands who are dying with consumption are staking their last chance on this or that remedy which lias never yet been kn-wn to cure, and re fusing to trv that which certainly brings them back' to life and health lr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. In the earlier stages of this terrible disease it is a Msitive cure, while even in the last stages it gives great relief and pro longs life. For weak lungs spitting of blood, lingering coughs, asthma and kindred ailments, it is guaranteed to cure or In-nelit or money paid for it will Ik? returned. Three out of the first four president of the I'nitiil States married widow. Bakincr yawder Jibsolateiy Pure A cream of tartaf baking lewder. Highest -of all in leavening strength. Latest U. S. Government Food Ke lort. Royal Baking Powder Co., 10G Wall St., X. Y.