Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Sept. 13, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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T "IT' . ' t4 vr is !T tiJbj KSTAHLISIIKI) 1887. GOLDSHOUO, N. C, TJ I. UK SI) AY, SIUTEM15KK 13, 1894. VOL. VIII. NO. !. - A y iTT rM . z ii ii mm ii n 25" ie Old Friend tiio Ut friend, tLat never 'O'l, (til, Simmons Liver llegu-llr-d Z) tin-it's what .; at the mention CI this it Liver in. lit-iii", ;rd -:t";iM iiot poi'stiac 1 ytning else will do. the King of Liver Medi is I- ivr than pills, ami p'.aeo ot Quinine ;-nl . h r. -ts directly on the Ki-in.-v-s aj.'l Ikv.-!.s and v.- ::'., to tho whole f-vs- This U ti Fold hv inedicine you ruggi?ts in f to le taken iuid, rin r.. Y'J Or !ia-10 !!:'.) a t--a. t,-KVF.riY PACK A: K ... linn Hit- '. Miimp ii ml " i J. II. r.ll.l.V A: . O., I'MUVlplii b I 5T jan ess 6- BEFOFiE AFi'EFv N Hue icne r.rrl S ain Treatment m,.iy; Loss a.f nui; a Juirkni'-; a I- . x, i-aiiHi-d by -. -OV.. ITSMof smiiu ll'ilal tn iiili. liy mail, li t to t:ur air 1 1'. A o.-rttiiu ii-iiiti, Cramp, a-Jiiit t. tiikd d ouly ly I ...r... N. C. oi'AU.v"iu:si-.-i ..! Hi-.... ;:.! PRICE 50 CENTS PER BOTTLE:. e:ss cf valuable ixforkatidx free. for sale by DRucjii.TS. 4 T H IN A CUR A FOR THIN PEOPLE Arc You Thin ? . r m.akii i: k ii i:i.v 1. 1 .lli-ilutl-lv IT,,-,.. , ,,-,,,!. 1 l':.l.l.:l.-l. -i!' W 'I'l . I ii I i i: .. .1 PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clrnn-.s and ijru:tt:t.e!j th,f hair. i'r..:.i,,ivs a luvmant (rr..wth. Ni'vcr Fails to Ifstore Gray Hair to lis Youthful Color. Cun.- s- aip ,1 -. :.-, s .v hairi:.i.g. l'ain. Take ill tilncVi nn!v snri- rurptWr Ci IIISLOX CO., N. V. f-a:R IITIIFlt srx. TM remedy .m: iii.fteil !irtclly to the scat uf -. ;s oi' liie an niti-L'i inary Or- n i-ir-5 110 chaniro of diet or 'iti'u'Uoii iutirually. NfL'-a A A PRLVt'riTIVr!: e,:i. r : -r it ib i;nj le tnconirarrt i.-ti. r. I 'liea.-; I'Ut'ui the case of 7 -a ' ' .'-.,.l.7lK7ai.Y A.F1JCTZD , I y i-,tJ(iilMi. , f.n rVs mi m. !:. i:..i.iii-Mi v, LADIES .. N.C. !, M)U KNOW LC ERUN'S ML m FEiYiYSL PILLS ift and to m'; tent by M .v br. -l.a.r... N. ('. SHOES! lin iHip s-.'.;,o to .- -i.nil ,!iv,- -!- -i-;,i-.l -! a:,.l .lural.iiitv. i.oopw i v l : best t ..iK i up: ,.!! i.. i . i:!:y! ds .v o. si.:,- sha, Si. (III. BEST & THOMPSON. A Happy Welcome w i l.i-.n t ) 11 lOsK WHO -t of iiKMlOI'S Ji!l(l Ml tha- :.:.-! .I:-'- ' - ,, v ii us ! Domestic and a i..i:;i importea Cigars, i .'i' or i i s i: to- i:v X..i ;!i ( ':!. liu.-i li.-ll-a- i- lll-.-lalqi:trtl-l-s. ii is wiili mo an.! -.-i- his friends. Jas. L. Dickinson, A ( .'nui'- )1. St:tii, Correct indiqzsticn lJ in 5 minutes ' proves -iNifevl ,c'cail. JQ True Manhood. It is not always tin- coat tliat ti-lis. Nor tin collar your friend may wear: It is not always- tin' shine of tin shoe. Nor the l'mislu-al touch of his hair. It is not all in a silken hat. Nor the lilt in;,' neat f his gloves: It is not merely his cult ureal air. Nor tha' circlf in which ha' moves. It is not his temper, his pr'ule nor smile. Nairyet his worshij)t'ul ml-n : It is nat even the name he hears In a world that is shallow and mean. Ah. no. after all. 'tis the man himself. As he stands with his (hid alone, "lis he heart t hat ba-ats l,eueat li t ha coat. The life that points to tin1 throne. Tin- eya' that cheers with its kindly glance. "I'is the arm " round a hrother cast : The lianal that points to a hope beyond. "I'is a lova- that endures to tha'-last. Advice of a Siirct'ssful Man. I think the habit of generosity may he cultivated like other habits. And I have felt that is is a great mistake to put oil' being generous i until you are dead. In the first place, you lose the pleasure of witnessing the raail that you may do; and ajain, no one can administer your drifts fur you as well as you can da) it yourself. It is a jreat pleasure ta be brought into jiersonal relations a.f that kind, and ta make people feel that you are nait a pliilanlhi'a.pist in the abstract, but that you are interested in them personally, and .-are for their wel fare, said Ceorev V. C'hilds. In that way you benefit them not merely in a natural way. but you make Iheui feel that men are really brothers, and that they were made to help a.na' another. Not only is that feel in aarreeabla' in iti'If. but it will be at 1o prampt tlu-m to car ry out the principle themselves. Put vourself into all vim da), and let others feel that you are there. lo not only contribute to a charitable object, but ,ro yourself and help. It may seem all inconvenience at first, but saan you will come to consider it worth an' inconvenience. Perhaps I ouht to say a word about the companions a ynuii; man should choose fair himself in lite. You hould 1rv o make companions of the best people you bavonie acquaint ed with. In a.rder to do this, yam must have somet hinir in that may be a return 1 what theV ilVC Va.li. It is youi'sei I them for l.ot Dee- essary for this pi:r.-se to be a ireni us. a.r 1a have a r.-markabh' inta-l-h'ct. or extra.. iv'i'.iary .-ru.iitioii. 1 u t be yourself and ba- a man. anal learn to think of others hofaire your self, and you will have friends ellaillirh. alul a.f 1 1 la- l.a'sl. To ba' ill- tmiati' with tin- niairnannnous anal tha- nobla'. aids ta form tha.se quali ties in a me's self. A man is know n by the company he keeps, and those who know what friends you have will be able to form a very correct ida-a of what yau your self are. You shouial sea' to it that this estimate be as hirh as your a.p portunily may seeuiv. 1 cannot b.-t-ter sum up my advice ta yoimir p1'" )Ie than ta. say that I have derived, anal still find the irivate-t pleasure in my life from doinx yood toothers. Po e-OO.l c. wisely and ta. say that livinr. tantly. patiently and i ou wiil never have cause, our life was not worth He Was Acciala nJall)" Mn.f. I 'liitrlailta- New-.. One day this week, a negro came to town and got a doctor to pick a lot of shot out of his hide. He had been accidentally peppered by a com panion while out hunting, he said, in Sharon township. The doctor pick ed and picked for an hour ami finally had the victim freed of lead. The next day. Mr. Isaac E. Weav er, a farmer, of Sharon, was in town anal heard about the shot picking. '"That's my darkey," he said. Then he ta.id how, tin' previous night, he had been awaka-ned by a naiia' in his yard. He went out to investigate and found a negro in his hog pen. Tha- negro had a pig under una- arm and was reaching for anoth.-r. when Mr. Weaver "accidentally shot " him. He dropped the pig and boumlcd away, and that's ha.w the Charlotte doctor got the shot picking job. l irly Conduct Almiil the ( lunch. It has been the practice of mall and half grown boys ; should be under the latch at night, j to go to church on Sunday nights ! anal, instead of going in. sit down be I hind the house and smoke cigarettes ! and ta'.k boisterously, j IVt.p'.a' in passing by have noticed them frequently, and they have been annoying ta. some in the church who I were sitting near the windows. This ! conduct is very rude. The boys who ; dai it. aif a nurse, have dame sa thoughtlessly. They should be put unoer hk-k ami Key at nigui, n gem- lor means will not" sulT.ee. until they learn that every church should themselves. body who and ,'oes to behave While in ( 'liia agai. Mr. Charles L. Kali-la-r, a prominent shoe ma-rch.int of Moines. Iowa, had quite a serious lima' "f it. lb- took sua ii a seven' cold that he a-oiild hardly talk or uaviffate. but i lie I'r.niipt use i.f Chamberlain's Cough Ka-ini-aly cured him of his cold so quick ly thai .t hers al t lie hotel who had bad a-..!d t'olioue.l his example and half a .h.t-n persons ordered it from the ua-ar-et all-tig store. They were profuse in I loir thanks to Mr. Kahler for telling t In-Ill hi.W la. cure a hail cailal sai quickly, l or sale by .1. II. Hill tVr Son. druggists. KILL A HP'S SYMPATHY With the Poor People Who Have Lost " All by the Forest Fires. Oh, the pity of it! It makes the ha'art bleed to read all the details of that terrible calamity in Minnesota. We have never heard of anything so dreadful. Over six hundred human souls in health and security sudden ly, without warning, burned to death. Poor men! Poor women and little children, Hying from the tlames in mortal fear and perishing in mortal agony! Charred corpses af mothers found face downwards as they tried to shield the babes under them! Oh, think of it and let pity till our hearts fair at least a little while. The ocean steamers can jf davn with all on board, but drowning is sweet, com pared with this whole families swept away by cruel llama's. None left. Nothing left. When pestilence conies there is anee lor some, and those who die linger awhile and are . comforted with last words and tears a if lan e. Some are taken and some are left, but here was no time for words ar tears: na ministers of hive, uai shroud, no ca.fVm. m flowers. va funeral, no nianirna-rs, na) grave. What is life but a peril? Who is Every no some lerribl and tha'ii visitation we read a f 1 imo where. Away down on the Pio Gi-ande a few ! days ago there was an awful flood , lli -it n-i.Tt ! imo ..1..fiiil v l'ii-, i 1 nui s a'pi sa oi a s miai t it i iin . n ; in one place and tlo...l in another, i and pestilence across the seas. .And j yet we hurl 'heed. We y n ami take no solemn ; do not stop even for a niainient to weep with tha.se who weep. 1 sat in the veranda of the j Pell house on Peachtive street in Atlanta. Beautiful Peach tree that is pa veal with asphalt and adorned with shade and grass anal flowers and palaces. For an hour I sat ahme anal watched the ceaseless trains of a-ari'iages and street cars and vehicles of all kinds, thronged with gay and happy people fair women and love ly ehililren. with nat a thought a.f pain or danger, while in another portion of God's vin'-yard there were hundreds of pea. pie huntirg for the tha'deaal- gathering up 1ha- blaa-ken-a'.i corpses .if those uh.i only a day or 1 Wo before Wef' and felt jil-t as ,vi peop'U' on l'eaahtr us stop a moment a the insecurity of thankful lhat no si; l.,-fa!i,-n 1-.. Well, il looks like ;s', as happy. IS thesa- gooal Friends, let ' ponder upon ; . Let us be calamity hath ' have seen tha- wair.s t of the financial crisis. We have been at the bottom and the sit uation is obliged tai improve. Some say that, then the miilst of j an In- starvation in ! nty. but 1 don't be-j lieve it. It taia.k all a.f the twai last ; rops to pay the people's debts ! wars and get them baa naiw. d. livn ha -re i abundant crop k to economy, and n Dixie is another that will scatter .money all over the South. - Three humlivd millions for cotton, and aim hundred millions for surplus cairn i :l h,.ap a.f ma.ney and it will come t stay. It won't go North to pay debts, and it will have to go into cot ton mills, oil mills, knitting mills, can ning factories or some other indus- tries that wiil give employment to : any walk of life, from the most ex labor. Here is my county, that is j alted to the most commonplace, re about out of debt, that will make at quires "push." "Push'' is a word al- least ten thousand bales of cotton, and have 2."o.ooo bushels a.f corn to sell. There is half a million dollars to spare. Our farmers are raising dorfully classic, but all its defini their own meat and the crop of pota-1 tions then' is this idea about it. To iocs is spn-naiiii. r.wryiniug i ney ."erythinj. except have to buy is cheap except cot! co. and the tarilf will make all woolen goods still cha-aper. A letter from my son who is in England, says ho bought a first-class suit of clothes fair 5-10. and they will be nearly as cheap here this winter, since the high tariff has been taken off. Blankets will be 'almost half price. Our wool factories are howl ing about this, but it will turn out all right in the long run. Powers & Wight man howled awfully when the duty was taken off af quinine and it dropped from .: an ounce to o cents. But they didn't apiit theldemn him unconditionally: when we .usiness. as they threatened, anal are , want to convoy the idea that he will Tlt, husim-ss men of Memphis, j ''' little change. The strength in j Sul,.,.nlt. Court, states now jmsi nakmg more money on quinine than ! never achieve success or be of an v I T..nn h.-hl an indignation nieotini' i the market for the next crop is at-j . , , , . r..i..o..i--.t -owl ; i ue e it iim. i acre is noimng like turning an infant industry loose to shift for itself. A son can lean upon tne old man unlil he thinks he can t go it alone, but he can. The old eagles have to push their young ones a hi t of the nest or they never would leave it. but would stay thi'iv just as long as the parents would feed them. Low prices stimulate industry and ' teach economy and cause new mcth- . ods tai be invented. When pig iron rono.'i from I a ton to si.) iron ,,. SWllIV thev couldn't -make it at that prici but they did. Then it dropped again to s?12 and thev are u,,u llu ,u" '-" "M "' ''';'"iv-makin-it'still. Fanners said' thev ! in 1,im -"-tween the shoulders. He could.it nor thev wouldn't grow vas -ot out uftor nulth 'vork aml I)r- i 4 4..,,.i ..1 i.:.., ii.. : . i... n.. i ..... ca.tton for t and will bo cents, but thev ket p on 1 rhultoget (i'. cents for!"' ' '-". this crop. Now, if we can all have j more gratitude and less politics we i will be better citizens and better. Christians. It is wry hard to enjoy religion on an empty stomach and almost impossible to get it. Hunger and misery makes atheists and an archists. Old Mrs. Job said: "Curse (!od and die," and most every man except Job would have done it. J lad luck anal trouble will shake the faith of the average Christian the Chris tian who has a kind of summer ivli tfion. Most every man can cnjaiy religion if he has a pocketful of money, or if he c an make a bargain with the Lord like old Jacob did when he was flee ing from Esau. "If the Lord will be with me ami jjive me bread to eat and raiment to put on so that I come to my father's house in peace, thus shall the Lord be my God.'" That would be a very popular religion. I would be willing to promise the Lord riirht now that if He would, in some way, let me ,vt hold of a hundred thousand d.Mlars, I would five half of it to charity and the church. That is what may be called personal reli gion. We have had a ;ood deal of jrood preaching in our town lately, and it helps everybody. It makes a nnin "do justly, love mercy and walk humbly" for awhile, anyhow. It makes us think less of ourselves and more of our neighbors, and our pray ers do us more good. -He prayelll best win. lovclll inot I All things great anal small: I l-'a.r tlia- aletir loal who lo a'tll lis. j Hi" lliaala- and iovetfl :ill." The kind, loving, temler preaching of the gospel will take the c-oncei; out of a man. Sensation and slang 1)KIV (ruw ;m,l imvA ;l,,d even fonn i,ut t,.llt. religion is not cai V ht i -i i ! ii t l )V ja ika's anal siiiiies. Heard a preach- j sav ,iat ., f(,u- vars a-ro th.-re W,.IV seventy-live persons joined a i church in Mississippi where he is' Hy cutting through the stone jail ,,w ,va-hin'. They joined during Av;i,!- s"Vl'n prisoners at Hillsdale, a .wival. Thev we Wave. and not one went in on a tidal ' l'''1-. made their escape. Wednes , . , ; .1.,,. ;,,i,t wave, and not one Kei.t wnai ne , thought ha' had got not one. The preacher found their names on the I ooks. but they had all relapsed, anal one of the women was selling whis- j ky behind a bar. It is said of low; that. 'Tis better to hava iveal and 1 lost than n-'ver to have loved at all." But that wc 't do for religion. It is better na.t 1ai vow than to vow and not pray. Bil.i. A hp. Ni Success 'iVitli.iMt "I'iisIi." Success is a big word, and one that may be variously defined. It means one thing to one man ami another to anolla-r. In one walk of life its in terpretation is entirely dilleivnt from that in some other, and that is success from one point of view is al most failure from another. But. there is this in common to all ki.ids of suc cess, it .-oni-'s as th- result a.f "iTa.rt. Whatever fails at one's fct. what ever is received by inheritance, what ever is natural endowment, or comes by request is iut success, however much of good then' may be about it. Success is that which is striven for that which coma's as a victory to the warrior, air that which is as a laurel on the poet's brow. Tai achieve success, tba-refoiv. effort must be put forth. Very generally it must be persistent, .aggressive, persevering effort, that kind of effort that is so happily summed up in tin little word "push." To be a pros perous merchant or manufacturer re quires "push." To be an accepta ble clerk or book keeper requires '"push." and to be really useful in j so with as many different shades of ! meaning as there are persons to whom it may be applied. It is won - ; unw rorwani. rttrengtii ami energy ; of whatever kind the individual may possess are to ba' used as he is able ta. use them as circumstances permit to drive something forward. Yery generally t Lis something is the work of duty in hand, air Ihe business venture upon which he is engaged, or the san-ial project hi-has in view. To ba' unsuccessful in this world for failure may conic, however hard we may strive, commands pity, but to be without "push" is to be con temptible. When we want to say something extremely severe about a i young man : when we want to con- particular usefulness in tne world j anywhere, wc I about him." ay, "He has no 'push' Without "push"' one floats willi the tide, driven hither and thither by the wind and cur rents. A Well Nisrsrer's ( lose Call. Uurliu;toi Nt's. Dudley Hobbs, a colored well dig ger well known: here, came near bt ing killed at Mr. J. P. Faucet te's, where he was digging a well. Dud ley was in the well and sent up a tub 1 1,ol,lin" :( "all,ms of w'nd mud, j - im ,ul"' UM,h ...,.1 41... 4.. I. I 1. IT. f . .4 tl. .-. ...i i .i i l. 1 "" "l' "Ul I 1 .,.t I.... 11,, 1 4 A (atl Sukk1 inn. UoeliKsTKi;, X. V. Ja.lui Davia-s. of this city, took a seerecolal anal sulfeieal pain through the hack and kidneys. 1 1 i physician pronounced his case grav el, anal failed to help him. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Heme, ly was rccoin-liii-iiala'd. anal after taking t wo bai(la-s hi-Ca.nsialal-a'al hiliis.'lf cllied. It cures rha-mnatisni and neuralgia alsa. A NATION'S DOIMiS. Tho News Fruiii liver) m here (iutliered ami Condensed. Over 1.000 acres of woodland are ablaze on Nantucket Island, in Mass. A fail of coal in a mine at Ilolly wihmI, Pa., Thursday, killed five em ployes. A thumlerbolt tore to pieces Thom as Herman's house at Wichita. Kan., Wednesday, killing two children. Neuralgia pains induced young Mrs. Annie Seidel. of Pottsville. Pa., to put a bullet in her brain Friday. A careful estimate of the number of lives la.st in the Western forest fires last week, places the total at A collision in the Hoosac tunnel betwe-en two freight trains at North A dans. Mass.. Tuesday, killed two men. Hoys at play near Church Hill, ()., Wednesday, set the grass afire, and the whole town hail to fight the tlames. Made insane by fever. William A.lams, of Anderson, hid., fatally beat his wife. Thursday, while nurs ing him. A cloudburst near Guthrie. O. T., Sunday, drowned Mrs. John Ma-Pike, twa) alaughters and Miss Mabel Hill, a visitor. The entire family of William Mach- I", a. I .-l a'll Oa'll 1 1 it'. , ttiTC llolson- 1 '" K,''"1:'y' l,-V 'aX'lnZ loorly-canned to!l,;lt0('s- Lightning caused fires in eight towns in Illinois Saturday night. The business jiortion of Malta was laid in ashes. ynr ha-ini disappointed in hive. Jac.ob Met.ler committed suicide in Atlanta. Saturday, by shooting him self in the head. The Toledo fast mail train on the Wabash Road was wrecked near Staunton. 111.. Tuesday night. Three men wore killed. Ra-t urning from a picnic at Lead ville. Col.. Friday, Hugh Porter, aged 2. suffering with brain trouble, shot himself death Ta) break out of the Iron wood (Mich.) jail. Tha. mas Gerrolal set the building on fire, Tuesday night, and was burned to death. Haimcstic troubles induced Mrs. Henry Bergenthal. aged :7. ta com mit suicide at Milwaukee. Wis.. Mon day, by gas suffocation. While rowing oil a pond near Pem broke, Mass.. Sunday. T. E. Blakely anal Jaihn E. Humphrey, of Boston, fa-II in anal were drowned. On the eve of marriage tai Miss Jane Jones. Charles Morris, of Wald ron. Mo., was shot dead Thursday by A. C. Yeach. his rival. Collision of a train ami a buggy at a Webster (Mass.) crossing. Thurs- . !day, killed J. A. and R. H. Arnold, brothers, who were driving'. At Seabrook. Conn., Saturday, Misses Marion Clendenning and Kit tie Kutz. both of Brooklyn. N. Y., wi re drowned while bathing. A masked mob lynched Link Wag goner in the jail at Minden. La., j Tuesday night. Waggoner was ac usetl of half a dozen murders. - i ; v,i,l.,.ilv ill ,m ihehi.rh way near Williamsport, Pa.. Mon day. Jacob Coffinnn fell, and. striking n;s j,,,. a stone, was killed. ! T! dead body of Dr. W. If. Sey mour, f New Market, Ya.. was found Saturday in the mountains near town. H- had starved to death. In a pitched battle between union and non-union colored longshoremen at Savannah. Friday, over loo shots were fired and Mark Cain, white. was shot da-ad. At Wilmington. Del., Thursday, Mrs. Geo. L. Watson, gave birth to ' triplets t wo baiys and a girl. The j united weight of the babies was but ; nine pounds. ! c,t,.,l-u- niirht ov.-r the r.ei nt night over lynching of six negroes near Milling- ton. and raiseal 1.000 for their wid- ows and orphans. While John Spain, a farmer, of Perry county, Ala., went to prayer meeting with his wife Saturday night, their house caught on fire and three small children who were locked in were burned to death. During a revival at Market, Tex., Friday, J. W. Ilrooks, a saloon keep- er, becoming converted, took his en - tire stock of liquors out into the, public square', poured the liquors oir- and set fire to the boxes, barrels and licenses. To prfvent the raiding of his melon patch, Clinton Thompson, a farmer; near Dykesville, La., put poison in some of the finest melons Monday. The next morning his- son .Felix, George Uridges, a neighbor's son and a man named Jacob Muir were found dead in the patch. When Uridges learned that Thompson had jioisained his son, he drew a revolver anal shot him death Last Week in Trade Circles. Siieciiil (.'triVfiaiiiiH'ncc. New York, Sept. 10. lS'14. Business during the past week has continued to improve. In nearly all branches of the distributing trade orders have been more numerous, and further important additions to working capacity are noted in the iron and textile industries. Rising prices and an active trade in cotton goods indicate the probability of an earl' termination of the labor trou bles at New Bedford and Fall River. Aggregate railroad earnings, after months of persistent and heavy shrinkage, increased 2 per cent, in August; and the enlarging tonnage movement gives promise 'of more im portant gains -during the present month. Measured by bank clearings the volume of trade is larger through out the country; but improvement is esjM'cially marked in the Southern cities. Exports of merchandise from New York in two weeks have been $3, 0i ;.". 871! smaller than for the correspond ing period last year, and imjiorts have continued to show a slight com parative gain. Foreign purchases in the share markets, which reflect the effect of restored confidence in the commercial and financial out look, and bills against future cotton shipments, have caused a decline in the exchange market almost to the gold shipping point, and some bank- ers anticipate an inflow of the yellow metal during the ensuing month Business failures in the United States and Canada during' the past week numbered 2ti2, as against .." for the corresponding week last year. According to returns to R. G. Dun .y Co., the aggregate liabilities of August failures were $lO,13y,477, of which $3,1 72. '5.10 were in manufac turing and $.",07S,iri:5 in trading con cerns. Cotton prices have declined l-ltlof a cent, as a result of an increasing crop movement and continued cau tious buying by home spinners. The Financial Chronicle's annual review of the cotton trade shows that the total production last year was . 211 bales, an increase of SlO.Otl'.Uiales over the yield of the previous year. Jsoine of the recent rejiorts camct-rn-ing the growing crop have been less favorable, owing to excess of nu,ist. ure in some sections, but. as tl.t-! ville railnKul. Tuesday, ws killwl by Chronicle jM.ints out. '-there is no a trai ,uar Winston. Being ex period in the whole growing season ' treinely deaf he could not hear the when so many unfavorable rumors ! tram. get afloat as during the last half of ; Governor Carr will recommend to August and the early part of Sep-j the next Legislature laws providing tember." The cot ton gaxds trade i for taking rapists to the penitentiary has maintained the recent improve ment. Demand for all descriptions has been more active, stocks in first hands have been much reduced and fractional ju ice alvances have leen realized on some makes, particular ly of low-grade goods, the market for which has Ih-cii strengthened by the recent rise in prices of print cloth Wheat prices show little net change for the week. The interior movement has continued of good vol ume, in comparison with that of last season; and, while there has been a j moderate foreign demand, it has not been sufficiently urgent to give an upward impulse to values. All the evidences at hand tend to confirm recently enlarged estimates of the domestic production; and the larger yield of Eurojean crops indicates that export requirements from the United States will not be so large as they were last year. The smaller outward movement and increased available supply will necessarily ad mit of a larger consumption of wheat for animal food. It is this view of the supply situation which operates to modify bullish anticipations of the effect upon wheat prices of the stead- Henry C. Whitehead was aeci-ily-increasing use of wheat for cattle . dentally killed in Chatham county, and hog feeding, although it would Tuesday, by the running away of his apix-ar reasonable to exinvt that this feeding movement, if it should extend, will eventually have a more stimulating influence ujion the niar- kets. Pri of far future deliveries of j corn have advanced about 2 cents! per bushel, but the old crop option? ! ii iouiaoie xo uiuaraoie ouiu- ciop reports, ana a growing oenei mac the prtHluction of corn will not even realize the moderate promise of the early August estimate. Very little corn has been sold fair foreign ship ment, as prices are aUive a parity with the English markets. Chicago prices have advanced 2S cents per barrel on pork and 3T cents per 100 pounds on lard, owing to a smaller movement of hogs to nut-king j centres, higher Western prices of 1 i0gs and a continued liberal ex'iort trade. J tK,t aiul shoe shipments from the . j-'ast. as compiled by the Shoe and i Leather Reporter, were larger last j week than any week in four years, - m "ih! stay, the muiati-n saial. und rent Thy wt'itry Ltnat uiMtn this breast." "I ran t" saial lie. "1 must climb the hills. The summer is .ast; 1 na.w m-ll jiills, Na.t ttie (.ills f altl-fashiaiieaj make That causeat a alreaatful stoiuaa-h ache Hut wee little things, that you e'en ran smile. As they gently reiua.tre their enemy bile. Who use tlia-iii amee, tha-reafter are xeala.ts. In praise of "Pierce's Pleasant Pellets." They regulate the bowels, and cure ick headache, the result of constipation j or biliousness, without disturbing the 1 diet r occupation of the patient. Su ! irar-coated a child can take tliein. ALL OVER THE STATE. A Sn miliary of Current Events for the Past Seve u Days. A colored woman is in Greensboro jail charged with arson. A Caldwell county preacher has gone into the butcher business at Lenoi r. A colored woman named Lucy Gilts, died at Wilmington Saturday, aged 110 years. . The academy at Norwood. Stanly county, was destroyed by an incen diary fire Tuesday night, A jiortion of Union county was visited by a very destructive hail storm, Saturday evening. Saturday, during a severe thunder storm, two mules and a cow were killed by lightning in Mecklenburg county. Two negroes have been arrested in Newbern on the charge of passing counterfeit coins - nickles, dimes and quarters. The 4oth annual meeting of the stockholders of the A. & N. C. R. R., will lie held at Morehead. Septem ber ''7th. A child, fourteen months old. fell into a deep well in Cleveland county, Wednesday, but. strange to say. it was unhurt. Persons from the North are buy- large tracts of land near Rich hinds. Onslow county, and will e; tablish a colon v on it. John Hampton, a negro rapist, tried for his life at Wilkesboro, Thursday, was sentenced to fifteen years in the jH'iiitentiary. Being disappointed in love, Miss Esther Crabtree, aged 17, of Raleigh, attempted to kill herself with lauda num, Thursday, but was discovered in time. F. P. Love, a well known citizen of Asheville, and a married man, left that city, Tuesday, accompanied by Miss Kelly Ramsey. Warrants are out for their arrest. ' Wyatt Perry, who last March in j Wake county during an altercation j with Thos. Bailey cut the latter's j throat and escaped, was capture! at I Durham. Tuesday night. Andrew Sappenfield, aged 7a, while waiK.ng on tne iracK 01 uie .mocks- for safe-keeping before trial and for all exec utions to take place in the penitentiary. There was to loa wedding at Dunn last Wednesday, but when the hour arrived the groom (a prominent young' business man) failed to show ; Up. Re couldn't face the music, and J fled to parts unknown. Edward J. Fuller, who is charged with the murder of Ben Parker at Fayetteville one year ago, and who was convicted, but appealed and was granted a new trial, will again be tried far his life at Rockingham next week. At the Democratic senatorial con vention of the 14th district, held at Parkersburg. Sampson county, Fri day, Danie 1 II. McLean, of Harnett count was nominated by acclama tion. Sampson county will name a Senator to-day. Six months ago a convict was, on the recommendation of prominent men, pardoned by Governor Carr. The latter, on Thursday, while watching a gang' of convicts at work at the exexutive mansion, found among them the very man. ! team. He was hauling some sills for a house, and his mules running away he was thrown from the wagon and crushed to death by some of the tim bers falling on him. F.v-.Tudtre Henrv G. Connor, who i i . i ...,.n , Has Ill.llllll.lll-H in till- UIUIl.Tin UUU Republicans for Associate Justice of i , he will not K'rmit the use of his name, and if he should be elected would not accept, qualify or serve. Mrs. Mary K. Cram, of Croc k way, Canada, is at Paleigh with her son, anal alleges that she is the real wife of William Cram, a prominent busi ness man there. She has sworn out warrants against Cram and his wife, with whom he has lived at Puileigh r,,r OV('r J't,ars- Mrs- -r-m num- ! er one alleges that Cram never j married number two and names her as Kittie Poe. Cram claims that it is a l'ase of b.ackmail. A special to the Asheville Citizen ! says that Sam E. Grant, wife and j child, of Philadelphia, Tenn., arrived j at IJryson City Tuesday morning to visit Mrs. Grant's brother. They; drove from the depot in a buggy. When 100 yards from the depot the jxjW'der. Highest of all ill horse became frightened, ran away leavening strength. J'ltest and crashed the buggy against a J y Government Food Ke tree, throwing all of the occupants j jor oui. iiit'ciiiiu was hwitti iiisianiiv, the mother died in a few minutes, while the father is unhurt. Snakes Were His i;tllVl!oN. In Concord there is a voting man who has for some nights past sicpt on a U'd the mattress of which con tained a nest of blaek snakes, says the Charlotte News. The house 'is loc ated in Allison's grane. and it was in a room on the second tlaiair that the snake's nest was discovered. It came about this wav: Last Wednesday moridng one of the young ladic's of the household went into her brother's room on some mission, and was terrified to sav a black snake coiled up on the bed. She fled, screaming, from the room, and slammed the da or after har. .V party of boys, armed with sticks, in vaded the room and killed the snake. In the melee the mattress was con siderably jumbled, and from a haile in its siale came another black snake. This one was killed and just then an other black snake wriggled from the mattress and it was alsai killed. Investigation showed hat a female black snake had brought forth a brood in the crack of the chimney by the hearth and she and some of her family had taken up quart. -rs in tha mattress of the bed in the room. The young man had l'e:i sleeping with them as companions f.r perhaps a week or more. a" lliirhnay ItolilM-rs Near l'.Ikin. Witivta.li Sentinel. Edmund Bobbins and Waller Cain ley, of Surry county, held a mortgage against a man named Shore in Yad kin county. Last Friday morning they went down -to get soma- inoncv on it. They failed tai get any money and were returning home late Satur day evening when aba.ut three mil.'s below Jonesville three men with cocked revolvers walked out of the woods before them and demanded the mortgage. They remonstrated with them but to no avail, so they forked over the mortgage. The rob bers wore white cloths over iheir faces, and Robbins says he dial nait know who they were. Two I -aiiics Kill a Di-rr. Purlium Sun. ' N cur 5ullfKk s St at ion. o;i 1 1n Ox ford & Clarksville road last Satur day morning alout 1! o'clock, a Mrs. Ball anal Miss Hattie Parrish went out to a ea patch to gather some peas. In going over the patch they walked up on a deer that was lying down among tin-pea vines and inak- itself at home. They dial nail be come excited and give an alarm, but is the deer made a leap to leave their company one of the ladies grabbed him by the hind leg and held on. The other procured a stick and soon had their game laid out dead. It was a fine one and the ladies are proud of their success. Hail an Arm Torn Off. Winst,ii l(a-!u!ilituti. A very painful accident occunvd at the South Side Dairy Farm of Dr. Bahnson, just below Salem. Satur da Mr. Jas. Smith, an employee, was feeding an ensilage machine when his fingers became caught anal iK-fore the machine could be stop-M-d the limb had been drawn in and shredded to the cIIkiw. Medical as sistance was suramin ed as quickly as possible, and the wound dressed. The shock to the physical manhood was considerable, but the patient is doing as well as could be expa-cta-d from the nature of his wound. The Scliniie Didn't Work. C harlotte OW-rver. Hutler's scheme for the appoint ment of his "reliables" is not likely to turn out very well. It is a reflec tion upani every Hoard of County Commissioners in the State and will, of course. Im resented as such. The "demand'' that the Pops, be ghen a part in the holding of the election is an implied statement that Democrat ic poll-holders cannot le trusted, anil the Democratic party as a whole will regard this suggestion with the c on tempt which it deserves. What is I'aliiiilrum-? A I'alilitlraiiiie is a sentence that re versed reads the same as when taken from beginning to end. This for ex ample. "Now Kve won.'" Ka-.-ul back wards or forwards it is the same, l'ut you cannot reverse tin- sentence of deal h that a neglected t-olal involves, unless yoll at once take I)r. Tierce's ('dali-u Medical Discovery. This is the great Ida mm I fooal ami I. looal purifier. It is a sovereign remedy for all diseases due to iinHivcrihel blood, such as consump tion, bronchitis weak lungs, scrofula, ami their kindred. Love makes more jicaq.le than it makes happy: unless love is one form of happiness iiiis4-ral.lt' misery in Baking Mpsomtcy Pure A cream of tartar bakiiiL' Royal Baking Powder Co., 1M Wall St., N. V.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1894, edition 1
1
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