Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / Oct. 8, 1892, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Dally Eoening Visitor. JTGFLISH ID EVIRT AvTCaVOQS, lEicept Bouiay, 1 US VISITOR is .served byoarrl la the city At 25 cents per month, payable to the carriers la advance. )rioes for mailing t per year, or o caats per in lath. Communications appearing in thane columns are bu. the expression of the opinion of the correspondent writing the tame, ana iney alone Mrs responsible. A cross mirk XJ after yoar uauie informs you that your tune is oat. Address all orders aul com uanicv Moas to x. n.. UIWW.V, Sr., Raleigh, N 0 Local notices in this paper wb b Five Cents per line each insertion LiR'iiCiT OiTI OlftGULATlO IIALUGII, OCT. 8, Destructive Fire. Ihe Wi'mingtoa Messenger gives the followiug particulars of a estru tlve Ore which took place in Clinton Simpson county, yesterd ty uioruin -The fire originated in a store occu pied by the Farmer's Alliance.though there were but few goods on hand This Alliance store having failed last spring, the stock of goods were being clsed out. from this the tire cross ed the street to the store occupied by- Mr. Hanstein, and it swept the whole solid block, known as Wall street, up to fjd inclding the store of Maj. W. A. Johnson, and a dwelli g back of his store. The dwelling of Mr. C. P. Johnson just across the street was a'bo damaged. Th9 office of the (Jancasian, run by Marion Butler, was burned, the prens and all materials being ruined. His subscription baoks were the only things saved. The county j lil was bum!, but no prisoners escaped. The prisoners in jail were the first to discover the fire, the Alliance store being near them The origin of the lire Is not posi tively known. Some claim it to be the work of an incendiary and of a political one too. It is all wrapt in mystery. The origin, be what it may, the re suit is a serious blow to the town. but plucky Clinton will not be downed Before the fire had ceased its work a contract was being made for a new building. The total loss will be between $75, 0D0 and $100,000. The principal los ers are; Maj. W. A. Johnson, M. Hanstein, J. H. Royal, T. M. Ferrell, Dr. H. Holliday, R. H. Hubbard, W. R. King & Co., Alex. Ferrell, Dr. J . A. Stevens.H. B. Giddens, W. H. Dun can, Warren Johnson, Dr. GL W Moseley, Marion Butler and J. F.. Howard. None of the parties had insurance except Mr. Hanstein. Tho American Homoeopathist says : A French physician contends that groaning and crying are two grand operations by which nature allays anguish, that those patients who give way to their natural feelings more speedily recover from accidents and operations than those who suppose it unworthy in a man to betray such symptoms of cowardice as either to groan or cry. He tells of a man who reduced his pulse from 126 to 60 in the course of a few hours by giving full vent to his emotion. If people are at all unhappy about anything, let them go into their rooms and comfort themselves with a loud boo hoo, and they will feel one hundred percent, better afterward In accor dance with this the crying of chil dren should not be too greatly dis couraged. What is natural is nearly always useful. The Maury Democrat, of Colum bia, Tenn , in urging the impotauce of sanitary precautions, says: 'There are some back yards in this town that a cholera germ would travel a thousand miles out of the way to find a lodging place in." There is a rath, er forcible way of calling attention to an evil that nneeds correction, not only in Columbia, but in all the oth er towns and cities of this blessed country. The fact that "a man's - house is his castle" does not justify him In bombarding his neighbors from his back yard in peace times. HOW TO ROLL AN UMBRELLA. N. Y. Sao. "No, not that way 1 I never knew opa man in a hundred to do it right," b iid the 1-rk in the umbrella store. Hid rriuark were directed at a ens to .ix., wh had proceeded to roll op .1 r. c-ittl) ;-ur;hased umbrella to re turn it to it case. He had done whatttO per cent, of persons who handle i uibreiias do wheo they at tempt to gather the folds of cloth in a neat root around .the stick He had grasoed the handle with his right hand uid was twisting the silk through with his left hand. "That will spoil that umbrella whpa jou heve repeated the opera Hon half a dozen times," the clerk continued, "and then you will be coming h-re and complaining that that $6 umbrella wasn't worth 50 ce its. No v, see what you were doing ! You were making a pretty roll, hut did you notice that you were twNtin-; the ribs and braces in a .lirl around the stick as well as the cloth? m may have noticed that -our umbrella sticks and catches when jou try to raise it. That's be cause you don't know how to roll it Ton twist the joints of the ribs and braces all out of shape. There, you see, you have twisted the ends of those ribs all around in a bunch on one side of tb3 handle. Now let me show you how an umbrella should Le rolled " The clerk took the maltreated ar ticle, shook out the folds of silk, and worked the spiral out of the ribs, and proceed d to demonstrate the proper method; of umbrella rolling. Grasp ing the ha idle in his right hand, he encircled th Bilk at the tip with his left, which he slipped down about half way of the cloth, pressing the ribs and traces firmly against the stick. The right hand was then shifted to the tips of the ribs, which were held firmly against the stick, while the left hand adjusted the roll of cloth around them By this meth od the ribs were kept straight along the stick and not partly twisted arouud it, as the customer's roll. A death blow the cyclone. Cbrlie Kahn, aged ten years, was killed yesterday by an electric car at Fortress Monre. The Venezuelan government forces have captured Maouto, the watering place near Laguayra. The melancholy days have come, Tne saddest vr the year. When your uncle has your overcoat And the winter winds draw near. Prof. Pickering, of the Harvard branch observatory at Arequipa,says that he has discovered forty small akes iu Mars. He also confirms Prof. Hold ens on the limits and measured altitudes of the planet. 'One thing is very noticeable in the pictures of public men, generals and statesmen during the. civil war," says the Boston Transcript, "and that is that they wore their hair in a fashion that seems to have passed away as completely as perakes. The present close clipped way of wearing the hair is one of the results of the war. It came from civilian imitation of mili tary manners." Mr. John Hungerford Proprietor of the fine livery stable at the West End hotel, Elmira, N. Y., says Hood's Sarsapa rilla goes way ahead ot anything he ever took for troubles with the . Liver and Kidneys with which he suffered for a long time, until he took Hood's Sarsaparilla and was completely cured. Other members ot his family also take Hood's Sarsaparilla and are highly gratified with the benefit from It. HOOD'8 PlLL8 are a mild, gentle, painless, 8f a and efficient cathartic. Always reliable, 2ftj. v0' V r. m 'ft 'for CNUFACTUREDONLYI P.WHITLOCKRICHMOND.VA Da'in&k dMteitfbiiiinui ILtdMa Win d en. FOR SALE BY J. HAL BOBBITT, SOLE AGENT FOR RALEIGH. On Draught at 5c a glass or 40 cents a gallon, delivered to any part of city. The WhwM AND BEST ASSORTED Line of Toilet -;- Articles IN RALEIGH. For Sale by J.Hal Bobfaitt Smoke Sabarosa and Reina Maria OIG-AES. STRICTLY 5 OENT8, AT J. HAL BOBBITT'S: BSgEEm3BBSgaBB3B5SSl IPjrescn'fiptfSoinis Filled promptly and accurately at a'l hours, day or night, at J HAL BOBBITT'S. The GREAT SO D A FO Winter For sale by GREAT SALE OF STANDARD-BRED HORSES. At mv third annual sale, at auction, of standard-bred trotting and harness horses, to take place on FRIDAY, NOVEMBER the 11th, there will be sold two grand daughters of Hambletonian 10 (40 in the 2:30 list), one of them in foal to Pamlico, 2:16, 4 of Daniel Lambert, (33 in the 2:30 list), 4 of Ben Franklin (23 in the 2:30 list), 2 of Aristos (12 in the 2:30 list), one of George Wilkes, record 2:22, sire of 80 in the 2:30 list, one of Baron Wilkes, record 2:18, sire of 12 in 2:30 list, one of Happy Medium, sire of Nancy Hanks, 2:05i. and 75 other 2:30 trot ters, one daughter of Pamlico, 2:16i, one daughter of Jerome Eddy, 2: 161, one of Charley B, sire of Alice Berlew, and 14 oth ers in 2:30 l;st, 2 daughters of Franklin Chief, and 5 standard-bred btallions, sons by him; one standard-bred grandson of Prin cep2, sire of Tnnket, 2:14 and 29 others in 2:30 list, out of a grand-daughter of Ham bletonian, 10, sire 40 in 2:30 list, and the the dams of 75 other 2:30 trotters. Other standard bred fillies and geldings will be sold, in all about 40 head. No horses so well bred and individually sO good were ever Been in North Carolina as will be sold at this sale- . A catalogue giving pedigree and descrip tions of each animal will be issued about October 25th, and may be had on applica tion in writing to BP WILLI aMSON, Fairview Farm, Sept 31, 1892 td Raleigh, N C." Barrels of Money ARB SAVED BY BUYINd OLD VIRGINIA CHEROOTS. THEY ARE 50LD Five for Ten Cents. SMOKE SWEET TO THE END. 9 TRY THEr. A FULL STOCK OF ALWAYS xON HAND, AT J. Hal Bobbin's. E3SS5SS UHTAIH B i YER AGE, Summer J. HAL BOBBITT. JALMIBHii QASTOX B 8 To take effect Sunday, Aug. 7th, 1803 Trains moving North. No 88, No 84, Stations. If All train. Fas & Mail. Le Raleigh. 1125 am 5 00 Dm Wake, 12 04 5 88 Frankllnton. 12 28 5 68 KittrelL 12 43 14 14 59 6 80 2 Or 7 85 p m 2 45 816 a to Henderson Littleton. Ar weidon, Train moving South. No 41, No 45. Stations. Mail train. Past &Mail. Le Weidon. 1215 pm 6 80am 12 52 7 09 216 814 2 43 8 29 8 00 8 45 8 21 9 06 4 05 p m 9 45a m Littleton, Henderson, KittrelL Frankllnton, Wake, Ar Raleigh. Louisburg Raroad. Trains moving North. No 88, Pass, No 8, Stations. Mail ft Express. Le Franklint'n, 810 pm 9 20am Ar Louisburg, 3 45pm 955 Trains moving Soath. No 41, Pass, No 9, Stations. Mail Express. Le Louisbnrg. 12 C5 a m 5 85pm Ar Franlint'n, 11 80 p m 5 00pm Mi u SMITH. Runt fibs in n ii TH CITY ! In the heart of the Iron and Coal Dis trict of Tennessee. Himate salubrious, never hot and Lever cold J-ond unequalled for agricultural puri-oaes, and mineral resources unlimited. 140 Lots at- $3 00 per Lot 2 COO " . ............... 8.CP 3,0 0 " . 4 CO " 4.000 " 8 00 " 4.IO0 " ............... 10.00 " 4,090 4 15.00 4jrX0 4 ......... . JO 00 ' lr,50) eoro " r blu " TUUUU WOOD WORTH CITY lies about 30 miles rorth of Cbattan-iOKii, within a few miles of altamonr, the county seat of Grundy coun ty, and between Xracey Cit and the cele brated Beersheba Bp iug, the Saratoga of tne Bou'h. It is in the centre of the rapidly developing coal and iron district of Tennes see, and within its borders are found coal, iron, zinc, marble and asbesto. with various hara woods, such as oak. chestnut, maple, heach, locubt, hickory, ash, pine, cherry and it ack walnut in abundance. The village of Oruetli, with several hundred inhabitants, i atains Cburchts. Kchcols, Stores, Poet otice and telegraph station, and a number Ov aianufacfuring industries, nil ot which a c located on the property and form part of Woodworth City. The proceeds of the sale of these lots will be used to develop the mineral resources of tlie property and build up a large and thriv ing city Quiik application for these lots should be made, as the right is reserved to advance the price withont notice. J 'or further particulars apply to R. C. LIVINGSTON, Agent, 712 DeKalb Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Parties desirous of visiting and inspecting this property can obtain special rates on the new and most comfoi table vessel afloat, of the Ocean Steamship Company. These steamers leave New York, Mondays, Wed lesdaya, Fridays and Saturdays, making a delightful sea trip of FIFTY HOURS TO SAVANNAH, Where immediate connections are made to Chattanooga and VO(JDWORTH CITY LIVINGSTON & SON, Agents, Ocean Steamship Co. of Savannah, No. 712 DeKalb Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. If You Waut Money. A took, A partner, A situation, A servant girl, To sell a farm, To soil a house, To buy or sell stock, Good boarding bouse. To sell plants or grain, b.ll groceries or drugs, 8eil household furniture, To make any farm loans. Sell or trade for anything, Find Custom firs fnr AnirtMno Rtad and advertise in the Raleigh EVENING VISITOR. Advertising obtains new customers. Advertising keeps old customers, Advertising liberally will pa v, Advertising makes succest Advertising exhibits pluck, Advertising means "biz." Advertise immediately Advertise constantly, Advertise regularly, Advertise alwaya, Advertise well, ADVERTISE, AT ONCE, . NOWil T ' J k ol. . . .. r . uui Lit UIJLiSt lor buttle of Biir ti. Th ' non-noisonntLM nmaHtt f.ll ' the unnaturul discharges and f private diseases of men and the debilitating weakness peculiar to women. It cures in a fair days without the aid or i puimciiy oi a doctor. i ymvmat jimcnam curt. Manufactured by k The ivani Chemical PoJ CINCINNATI, u. a. The oet thing In the Hnitfld States for ONE CENT ; ; is the Philadelphia RECORD i . $i per year. d.l! $8 pr year, omltt'ng 8un lay .For the Farmers bosiness man the Record haa r.o equal. Address ' The Record " PhllaJel phia, Pa. Pa. WOODWQH
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 8, 1892, edition 1
2
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