i -M ! J!
iff:
1 f! v ! fin r, .
111 I
h
. -1: - -
4
VOL. XX VU
RALEIGH. N. C., SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 3. 1886.
NO119
i ,;(
News
Observeei
AMD
I,
1
Absolutely Pur.
rhu powder never varies. A oiurvel of
ijnritT, strength and wboleompcc$8.y More
'eonomlc&l than ordinary kind and. cannot Ik
ild in competition with the multitude -I lov,
! est, short weight, alum orphottphate powder
Sold only in cans. Rotal IUkino Powdk
Co., 108 Wall Street, New York. -
Sold by W C- A A B Stronaeh, Qeorpe T
Btronach and J R Femll Co.
ptET Sl'ORE
TUE BAR6IAIX UOVHE OF RAVKiUUt
ANGRY STRIKERS.
A 'n Adoexed A a d: dahceboi a hobi
4 I 'I Ml VIRTUAL POHHSEaftio I
Orth City of Fort WoVtb.Ta--Tia
(Mat n Fall to Diapers tho SUotarn.
at. . VI t I k
ft at .It
f mnhi A
d by the i
-
Oae more word to the people who are
hunting credit and buying, from I credit
houses The tax on credit is tat cn from
the producers of thirf country and ur just
about one-half of what they grow, .Tt
takes from them every other hill of oorn
or tobacco or cotton to keep up the1 bills
. , i .
Owed byjmen who never pay. Now how
- ' i i r':i A
do you like that system ? The facts!
. ' r I H ifi i
tha( any system that detracts from' th
' :' " t : '.k ' .-1
prosperity of the conn try u a curM . to
it, and iK'UivlniSwlIoN
of mortgaging a crop for Jjhe mean to
i ' ' " '', "1
raise it ia deleterious to the interest of
the masses, we say it is better to till a
mall crop with a hoe than to plow. p
great fields with mortgages. We .kay
s the credit syBtem is full of disaster sjand
defeats and you know it to your sorrow
nnninfit and come to the Backet
Store, We have all the advantages,
having buyers in the New York market
' s Fort Worth, Texas, April
Worth is in the hands of a
posso; of citizens snmnione
sherin to; assemble yesterday) morning
at the Missouri Pacific yards, met, gome
300 strong. Moat of the oitikens were
armed. ' About 400 armetl strikers,
desperate and ready for bloodshed, were
bfl the scene, fifty well armed officers
were, also on hand, j A freigbt train was
rokderup and a Missouri Pacific engine
came - alone to pull out the train. A
rush for the enegine'was made by f the
strikers, f Arms Were presented on both
sides-i The engine was not molested,
but" all tie cars were uncoupled land
even Abe ; bars were taken but of the
drawheads. Some of the Knights were
arrested ; The engine was sent back to
the round'house, and all' attempt! to
more trains were abandoned. ; The eiti
zins lacked organization. They had no
leaders, while the strikers were thor
. jgkly organized. Mayor Smith ad
dressed the mob, but the strikers cried,
'.Rata";! no' mote Peter Smith mayor
again.?' The sheriff has eumincned a
number of citizens to go armed to the
Mifisduri Pacific yards today. The
strikers' places are all filled jhere, and
they are hungry and bloodthirsty. The
most conseryative citizens inticipjute
grave trouble in their efforts to restore
:Orde. The soberness for which he
strikefi were commended at the begin
ning of the. contest is no longer percept
ible. 1 -.: . '- - j
I A Covvraor iddrtuw th btrUtcrs.
St.. ?Lodis, Mo., April 2 Gov.
tjglesby, of Illinois, spoke to: a crowd
or some z,w strikers and others in
Last St. Louis last evening and. was lis.
tened tS very attentively. The Bpeech
was' a general elaboration of hid remarks
to the representatives of the merchants'
exchange in the morning and; the em
phasizing of his purpose to preserve the
peace and to nut the wheels t of com-
merceh motion by the running of trains
ana ne moving pt the products or the
country; After this Governor concluded
Wartjn flrons, chairman of district as-
emDiy ui, ivnitthts ot iabor, was
called out and spoke briefly, ; lie denied
that the,present dimcult was on account
of the ' discharge of one manbut said
it was for a grand principle. ;- JJ it were
to
from New York and considered the sit
uation. ;It is the opinion of some that
this board will at once, upon their ar
rival, order the strike off and the
Kn'ghts be made to make individual
application for work. Others, however,
believe that after they, shall have be
come fully acquainted with the condi
tion, of ! affairs that some arrangement
will bft made whereby all Knights shall
e re-employed, an arbitration conimit-
ee appointed and a final' adjustment of
he difficulties arrived at.
PaiLaiawHiA, April 2. About' 2
'clock thU morning a mass-meeting of
Street car employes ratified the compro
mise entered into by the arbitration.
committee and board of presidents, and
cars are running as usual this morning.
1 his aatiotn ends all fears of a "tie-up,
and the men get about all they
iuanded in their bill of "grievances.
A FLOODED CIT Y
THE TtRKIBLE SITUATION OF THE
PEOPLE OF CUAlTlSOOflA.
de-
Haw Tork'i SMMtlOB.
THE GRAND JURY FINDING BRIBKRV ANI
CORRUPTION OS KVKRY HAND.
New York, April 2. When the
p-and.fury entered the court-room
Judge Cowing was on the bench and
the district attorney and his assistants
were present. The foreman handed up
Several indictments. One of these was
against Wm. P Kirk,; charging him
with bribery. It is 'similar to that
against Jaehne. Judge Cowing fixed
Kirk's bail at $25,000 and Andrew Mar
tin and Wm. II. Kinny offered them
selves as bondsmen. The late grand
lury.appeared in court and presented
Indictments, among them one against
ex-alderman Pearson. Inspector Byrnes
shortly afterwards entered the district
attorney's office with Pearson. The list
of arrested aldermen is now raised to
three. Jaehne, Kirk and Pearson,
Rumor has become busier than ever.
whispering the names of others to fol
low. i ;
THE SOUIIIEttH FLOODS.
Tb Swollen Stream Sabsldlna;.
Stauntom, Va , Aprils The wat. r.
are subsiding and by tomorrow wia
readh their normal condition. The de
struction of property is great, although
the loss is not as heavy as -it was in
1877, owing to the crops - not being in
the ground.
Montgomery, Ala., April 2.. The
river has fallen about sixteen incheB.
Boats have been distributing food all
day through the innundated parts of
the city, j . Several hundred persons,
mostly negroes, have been shut
up for two two days without
food. The convicts on the State
Basin Entirely Suspend cdlV!! or
th ri .da mt Otnnr Polnta Mtb.
Cuattanooua, April' 2 A colored
man was drowned at 10 a. m. Both the
gas works are inundated and there will
be no gas tonight. The water-works are
also under water. The supply in- the
reservoirs will be exhausted in twenty
four hours. The river is fifty-one feet
and rising. The water at 9 a. m.
reached" Market and Eighth streets
Business is entirely suspended. Relief
committees have been organized and
homes and goods are supplied to all the j
needy. Ihe damage to railroads is
great. No trains are running and none
are expected to move before Sunday.
Telegraphic communication is cut off in
many directions. Thcjjvers above. are
slowly falling. Floods are general
throughout east and middle Tennessee,
north Georgia and north Alabama.
Rome, Georgia, and Gadsden, Ala.,
have suffered great damage. The river
at Chattanooga at noon was four feet and
two inches lower than the highest point
of 1875, and rising an inch per hour.
Local rains are indicated,' At 10 a.1 m
the back-water reached the street gut
ter in front of the Times' office.
Montgomery, Ala., April 2 -A spe
cial to the Advertiser states that the
Warrior, Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers
are falling Thousands of horses, mules,
cattle and hogs have been swept away.
Corn, cotton, seed and provisions in
reach of the flood were destroyed, and
the planters in the overflowed region
will have difficulty in starting. A relief
boat brought in a large number of peo
ple who had been in peril and without
food for three days. On a farm 'employ
ing State convicts the water flooded tho
uarters. The president of the board
ot nippfctors made his way with boats to
tl'o imperiled place1 and got them off iu
Bufcty So far the reports of drowning
in various portions of the State foot hp
nine persons; all colored but one-, Four
of these were women and three children,
in. a cabin on Cohaba river, it floating
F off with them. Rail communication is
intact to New Orleans via Mobile, and
with New York and east via Macot).
There is no communication to
Louisville and Nashville or to
Atlanta., or Selma by the West
ern railroad. : Officials hope to
work through . By making transfers
today or tomorrow. The water is two
feet deep at the union 3epot and from
Hall m a job it would be better 1 tm ,,5. axA
for the JLnjghts themselves to ipay him I fl. enr . a c.roi. ..i.j i
. -f-. y ;,- I w a va. Auiav v paivi i tAwwa aaa
ma wages man to strixe. iie ,KOK is-l tu-ut 'v
the ies government .on ear In, inC fhfttv difftmJ' jaointa near- here today
declared; that the government ras per- drowned. A steam ferry-boat left here
vertea. Jay uouio ana ixqi.iv u today, going up tne river to pic uF johnBOn Bridgers, the engineer oi ne
liKe ran; it. ? ue ibico f " ,"V, pfirbpns in aanger ana m? upjij w coiutniction triin whicb wens aown in
the water-bound, it wm go i the Tallanooaa river, died after his leg
. . 1 Aft. a I tam vlvdV ' J , ( t "J A
1
there to the Alabama river bridge of
the South & North road is almost a ciu;
tinuoua sheet of water. Trains ' from
Mobile & Macon arrive and depart at
a . . .
What .Maud K. la Deioc. '
ROBERT BONNKR TALKS ABOUT tnR PRKSENT
AND KPTPRK OF THE PRETTY MARK.
From the New Yi.rk Times.
Maud S , the pride t)f the American
trottmg turf, is daily being jogged bv
John Murphy, the trotting trainer. After
achieving the great f.;at of trotting in
2L U8j last year she was brcnght to her
owner's city stable and almost any after
noon last autumn Mr Bonner could
have been seen taking a spin behind her
through the Park and along Seventh
avenue, as far as McCouib's dam bridge.
The last time-he drove her was Decem
ber 23. From then until February 22
she had only walking exercise. On that
day, however, Mr. Bonner concluded to
have Murphy drive her, and he has been
giving her good road work every fine
day. As soon as Mr. Bonner's private
track at his farm in Westchester is fit to
drive upon she will be Bent there,
though MuTphy will still train ber. To
a Tribune reporter who called at tho
Ledger office yesterday Mr. Bonner
said:
"Just what I will do with Maud S. I
have hot yet decided to my own satis
faction. She will be put in as good con
dition as possible, but whether she will
ever trot any more public trials I can
not say. Do I think she can lower her
record ? Well, it has never been my
policy to make predictions about my
own horses, but I will say that all good
judges who saw her trot in 2.08f have
told me that it was not the full measure
of her speed. One of the most difficult
things to do is to drive a horse against
time, especially a high-mettled one like
Maud, that trots on her courage. If
the driver hasn't an exceedingly fine
sense of the pace at which he is travel
ing he is likely to overdo it before he
reaches the critical part of the mile. The
horse's chance is often ruined before the
home-stretch is reached. In many in
stances horses hav"e been pumped out in
the early part of the journey. Now, if
twO horses about equally fast start out
to race one horse proves a gauge; for
the other. Just a little injudiciousnees
spoils all.V So far as Maud S,'s present
condition is concerned, I think she was
never better in fact, couldn't be. j As
a road horse I never had one that
pleased me more." !
c Murphy being such a fine judge of
"pace, a great many believe that Maud
S. will do better under his tuition than
she has ever done before. In her fast
trials under Blair's management her
quarters were a trifle irregular. Once
he let her trot the first quarter of a mile
in 39 seconds a 2 01 gait and this
in the face of the fact that she would
have to breast ahead wind coming down
the home-stretch. N
CONGRESSIONAL.
THE HOUSE AUAIX IIN I HNKN THE
LABOR Bt LI.
To toft I DlNputea by Arbitration M
ral Section Adoptied in Commit.
t of tb V'bol.
Gonldj or the bone and -iiicw of the land
that made tnis country, auu tneu u
inanded..of the Governor to answer if it
was tight that one man like Jiy Gould
should be permitted to run this country
and. hold the liberties a&d the destiny of
the neonle in his hands. It was the
thieving of such men as Gould that en
slaved all countries. He desired to coj--rnnt
Uhe ! imnression that had gotten
nhrnad Ithat the : Knights ? of Labbr
favored violence or lawlessness! ; Th&,
he declared, was nof true, I ut quite the
lb Complication of Mr. laatn'
Position. .
TvnoTj. England April. 2. "Mr.
Gladstone, is riding straight tor
a fall," the Pall Mall Gazette declares
this afternoon. "He refuses' , says the
Gazette, "to modify his Irish scheme and
the result will be that the country will
have neither home rule in " Ireland nor
Gladstone." The Gazette announced in
that Lord Salis-
ln
all the time with
hand, which
goods in many cases
can be manufactured
the almighty dollar
enables us to oner
. 'rka.a iVAra tn - rnmn aiuiH i tuc oaiuc t? ? lfawiowi.
aeainBt Jay Gould tor violating tne iawa. uurj
9 . . 1 , . . ju: 1 Ko tsirv nrawiiflr- was arraneine
which he was aoing every aYi b""H6 K , , i - "
t- - - w i r . - j.a4Vi-' i ha nn PBT.inn i nuv uwtuw& " .w
him for Meaning iornis owu - -7 - 1 T, . ";,,nmfiatlon -m the citv is by
gcuoij Xj - V5wa from the di
hnt t.hn tazetta 1 tuAco
the
wa
the
done
laws.
with
He filled uhe poorhouses
was amputated. Six hands on the same
train had already died or been drowned.
Hi-lma has no connection with the out
side world by rail. The flood through
out the State is unprecedented, reach
ing here six feet above the highest mark
ever known. The ice factory, water
works, soap works, and gas works, clec
light works, fertiliser works, iron
foundries, oil mills, railroad shops
and the freight depot of the
Western and Central railroad stock
trarrla fin A briek vards all have several
feet of water in them. In most of thetn.
the damage is confined to the machinery
Washi-naton, D. C, April 2- IIocsk:
Mr. Hatch, of Missouri,; from the com
mittee on agriculture, reported the
agricultural appropriation bill, and it
was referred to the committee of the
whole.
On motion of Mr. O'Neill, of Mis
souri, private business was dispensed
with; yeas 155, nays "li and the House
went into committee of the whole (Mr.
Springer in the chair) on the labor bill,
all debate on the first section beiDg
limited to thirty minutes, j ;
The debate on the bill lasted until 5
o'clock. Four sections: of the bill had
then been disposed of and the fifth was
under consideration for the purpose cf
limiting the debate, when a motion to
take recess until 7:30 was agreed to,
the evening session being for considera
tion of the pension bill.; Mr. O'Neill
gave notice that he would tomorrow ask
the House to set aside the special order
for that day (the consideration of the
report from the coinage ! committee),
and then proceed to a conclusion on
the arbitration bill. The third and
fourth sections of the bill were agreed
to without change. The first and Becond
sections as agreed upon are as follows:
Skctjon 1. That whenever differences
or controversies arise between railroad
companies engaged in the transportation
of.property or passengers between two
or more States of the United States, be
tween a Territory and a State, within
the Territories of. the United States or
within the District of Columbia, and
the employees of said railroad compa
nies, which differences or controversies
may hinder, impede, obstruct, inter
rupt or affect such transportation of
property or passengers, if upon written
proposition of either party to the con
troversy to submit their - differences to
arbitration the other party snail accept
the proposition; then, and in such event,
the railroad company is hereby au
thorized to select and -appoint one
person, and such employee or employees
to appoint another person, . the two
persons thus appointed and selected to
select' a third person, all three of whom
shall be citizens of the. United: States
and wholly impartial and disinterested
in respect to such differences or contro
versies ; the persona, thus selected and
appointed shall be, and they are' hereby
created and constituted, a ; board of ar
bitration, with the duties, powers and
privileges hereinafter set forth.
See. 2. That the .board 'of arbitration
provided for in the first section of this
oaths, subnoenainff winwS -rH --
pelling their attendance, : preserving
ordftr dnrinff the sittings of the board,
Day's Horse Powder in-prepared by A. C.
Meyer Co., ltaltinmre, Ml. Price 25 cent.
The best reform in domestic economy is tbe
introduction of J)r. HullV VtoUy Syrup, taud
Hnuin is no longer given to : babie. . Only 25
cents. .
Dr. Bull's Baltimore PSHs, tie tourWtV '
friend, should be kept by all travelinc tuen.
The strike is not yet ended.
Ad vie to Mot liars.
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup should al
ways be used when children are cutting tetb.
11 relieves tbe little suQerer at once, tt pro
duces natural, quiet aleep by relieving tbe
child from pain, and tbe little cherub awakes
is "bright as a button." It is very pleasant, to
taste; soothes the child, softens the gums, allay
all pain, relieves wind,1 regulates the bowel
and is the best known remedy for diarrhcea
w .ether rising from teething! or other causer.
'"ertv-flf ent a bottle. I
The dwelling house of Mr. 1fT. E.i
Yclverton, of Wilson county, was de
stroyed by fire Tuesday night. The loss
is estimated at $1,000. J
Cramp Financially
Has no speedy relief j but cramixd in the bow
els has a sure one in the use tof Dr. Ktggers'
Huckleberry Cordial, the Great Southern ltcin
edy for all bowel affections, and an undoubted
boon to parents who. have bee spending Kh-ep-less
nights in nursing the tittl one who had
Iteen gradually wasting away from, th rtrain
afre upon its system from the effect: of teething,
until Kiven the Great Southern; Remedy. For
wait by all druggists at 50 cent a bottle.
Mr. Walter Stilson Hatchins retires
from the editorship of the Washington
Post. I ii "
The Greatest Cnn mi Kaiah f. . wn,C
reUsT njor quick lr U1&11 tuir other! known n-nv I
rrweiungn. Kill Broiwa.
Buths, Scfckl, CuU Lamh
po, FimrtHT. ftore Krort-bltpn.
Uarkache. Quinsy, Bore IkmL
Sciatica. Wounds. Hexlarha.
Toothach-v Bpraina, eca. Price
Hflt. ftW MnlA Urn .11
sttdrtuKlfita. Caution. The mm
'iL'SSfLS buk SalvttHon Oil bean oar
recutered IrL-Mmrk. and nnr
fusatr:ila Blimatura.
Proij-iotcra, IfalUiDore, lti.
Board r Aldermeai.
iTheregnlar monthly meeting of the
.mnmitte reDorted ' advef6(BfY oU A
proposition of Mr. S. S. Jacksoafor the
lease of Metropolitan ball. Permission
was granted Mr. J. A. Uragassa ; to
.. t 1 u xir Af..;n i a I onil wn tinea relatine alorie
petition of a number of citizens , was ject under investigation now PP-sessed
Ubmittedi asking for the improvement and belonging to United States oom-
of East and Lane streets, at the point missioners appointed bv circuit courts
inown aa -Cray's gulley." Thilwas of the Unite! States, .t im no case
r- j .v.. -r iwiSkU - The shall anv witness be compelled to dis-
rdinanees in reirard to fines and penal- close secrets or produce records; or pro-
ties were amended to conform to the ae-
DR. BULL'S COUGH SYBOP,
Per the cure of Conghs, Colds, Hoarse
ness, Croup, Asthma, Bronchitis.
Whooping Cough, Incipient Con
sumption, and for the relief of con
sumptive persons la advanced stages
of the Disease. . Fox Sale by all Drag
gists. Price, 2S cents.
-Of COUCiH4 . .tuur AMD
, CONSUMPTION USE
TAYLOR'S
Cherokee Remedy
and requiring the production of papers !
w " -
at the time was
i.U.Af'init dnh tell vou;" con- was entirely accurate. 11 lsinougni.
r- i thaKei editor haspeciaUtowledge that Glad-
for less than hey JJto XuieUat: they' Ml law. stone, being convinced of AeT absolute
' .A i:L.i :ti - .Un iK' l.li instice and crood DOhcv of his Irish pro-
Viewed from the dome
of the capitol, the highest point in the
city, is a lake of water to the north and
west, fully ten miles square.
We are
. . itn-A Timaiw 1 1 mi 11 1 1 1 1:11 11 1 rz w ucu ,uv va 1 j o a
JQ"C 'UJ.A.. .:. .Ani.t A noaalft. and at the same time
, ut -r::.CX" iw the torT and radical
opening some tireat Bargains iff jFjrmts B arbitration. Thatifljnst have detennmed to defeat bim, m
' , A a Ti what we are battling for and there to force an issue and bring about a
-and Dress Goods; also Cottonades iiig .-ii-j ie io militia canftd oui against feat as som as possible. .
convinced
politicians
means
de-
Ooraparatlvt Cotton
8tatnnt.
Violin ftuitarandBanio Btrto, W wt- "7 W: ;:
iww n ' i r f : , l advises;us 5. to cemana. 1 ne :rwir
4 centa a knot; 48 sheets note paper for
- i - ' Hit
5cente;25 envelopes for three j cent;
Atb.r roods' in nrooortion. Cili nd
. 0 . ? J ..
examine our goods and ?avej "your
money.
i ,
VOLNK1T PUESELL & QO. ;
' Raleigh,
BEWARE
, OF
ADULTERATED LARDr
it looks well, but the odor irom
MAkiuir detects it.
it ;when
Examine tor yeuraelvea
and be sure you are not usIuk It.
fisSABD'B V8TAB BRAND
IB uUAIAJITBBV .ruu.
LARD
Ask y our
m treating with labor do so as an organ
- !.. . . -4 . ,1 . I 1 tl...
ized body and why snouia iney ueuy iu
sami. rights to labor interests ?" jle
closed by severeley criticisiig Iloie
aidS demanding 1 that the Knights
0.' Labor be recognized si body.
The Governor's visit and speech had a
mrkk effect and the sheriftlthinka! it
.in Aattao 1n1fBRneas to subside. The
general manager and superintendents
of the East St. Louis roads hold a meet-
;U iact niirbt and discussed the situa-.
tion iThey criticised Got. Oglesby.'
They finally conciuaea 10 wiv uaj j
wo lontrer to see what effect : the Gqv-
,ira. vinit would have, and iflby that
time; trains could not ne moveu wnuyuv
interference thev would take the matter
iii to their Own hands. Nothing can yet
h learned as to' what, if anjf further
wJAh Jum been- taken bv the joint exec-
-;-i nrnmittfl8 which have - been in
session' for the past few days; ' Lvery
bodv ik ahuouslv looking fdr the ar
riv4 of secretary Turner, of tegenea
executive committee, ana nis associawpp
T - . ... 1 i a w
SiVhWUffi AlUorts ofconjeeturesprevailasto what
viiiVmddres to B. H. WO VKLL, Kal- .cti0Q ther will take in viw ot the cop
sTocer
etgh. N. C, and you wiU U supplied, f
&. Caspar d &
Cureri of the Celebrated Star Brand Mild
Cured llanu and Breakfast Bacon. 1
'be Total Set Kteelpia f Cntton.
New York, April 2. The following
are the total net receipts of cot
ton at all the ports since September 1,
,885 : Galveston, t07,8yo; new kji-eans,l,610,622;Mobile,234,285;Savan-
oah, 739,950; Charleston, 404, iw;
Wilmington, 65,208; orlolk, oui,-
502; Baltimore, 90,0121; Wew xorK,
68,890;B6ston, 102,242; Newport News,
7 - . . . aA IA ITT 1 T"a ' 1
24,986;Pbiladelphia,y,14y;vvestroim,
9(h R8tr Brunswick.: 10. 14y; rori
Royal, 11,179; Fensacoia, ly.uiy; m
dianola,781. Total. 4,827,831.
New Yorli Cotton Fataros.
New York. Asrii 2,-0. L. Greene
& Co.'s report on cotton futures says:
The dealings have been largely local,
' T . . . . 1 I
with only a small advance earty, sudbb
quently lost, prices closing at about
I DHL KVKU1UU B Ilk IU CB WW
w " a - a '
simply dull and nominally unchanged.
The undertone, however, appeared to be
a trifle steadier and there was evident
ly a more hopeful feeling, based on im
proving private accounts from Manches
ter and t.iTerpool and an increased
spot business at the latter point.
' New Yobk, AprU The loUowing IB itko
comparative cotton statement lor the wetk
endine April 1: .
6 r 1886. 1885.
Net receipts at U. S. porta, , M,433
Total receipt to date, 4,i7Wl 4,040,881;
Exports lor the ween. ,ais
ToUl exports to date, 3.272,3 (8 3,341,6 li
Stock aU U.S. porta, 85,73 65o,3;
Stock at all Interior towns, 161,2t0 ',
Stock at Liverpool, . W0
For Great Britain, 126,000
70S,?00
iao,ooo
Great Activity In
cision of the supreme court m the case
of the Town of Durham vs. Alice Cren
shaw. The form of the ordinance in
regard to granting liquor licenses jfor
one vear was altered, so that licenses
may be issued for any shorter time the
board may see fit. Several mem
bers of the local option committee ap
peared and spoke , on this matter, and
there was quite an extended discussion.
A number of liquor licenses were
ted to Julv 1. The charge, for Met
ropolitan hall for charitable perform
ances was reduced to $10 an evening.
The session of the board was an e$po
niallv intercom? one and manV citi-
J Q . .
zens were present. Matters in 1 re
gard to the proposed industrial school
were discussed at length and remarks
on the subject were made by a number
of prominent citizens as well as by Sev
eral members of the board. It was 11
o'clock before the board adjourned. ; ,
In ttaa Brttlan oreiK
oniea.
London, April 2. There is a treat
and sudden activity in tbe British foreign
office. Gladstone nas Veu wuomvi- belonging to Col
.vi tnarti todav. conferring with P8"6 "eionging w
kUl aiasAAv w 4
Earl Roseberry, secretary; lor ioreigu
affairs.
ceedings of any labor organization of
which he may oe au ouiuci iuuv. ,
and said board of arbitration may ap
point a clerk and stenographer and pre
scribe all reasonable rules and j regula
tions not inconsistent with j the provis
ions of this act, looking to the Bpeedy
advancement of the differences and con
troversies submitted to them to a con
clusion and determination. Each of
said arbitrators shall take an oath to
honestly ,and faithfully perform his
duties and that he is not persouaiijr in
terested in the subject-matter in the
controversy; which oath! may be
administered by any I State or
Territorial officer authorized to admin
ister oaths. The third person so select
ed and appointed as aforesaid shall h
the president of said, board and an 3
ordet finding a conclusion or awr.r
made bv a majority of such arb'ruu r.
shall be of the same foroe and t fleet a:
if all three of such arbitratariMj6ucurre
therein or united in making the same.
OF SWEET GUM ASD MULLEIN.
S loroi off the fa ee cn" ,..f?ph5S
ie old Held, pret-euu a. TatiAH s
,nd 1 ,n. !n:ot on and bo M-"1; .l
?r?...i .., it. As Toor rudtBt for it.
-...1 ::ilse it.'
Se. and 11. It
Prtoa.
t.i.a nnlt AXDT
e duCG IMA Keep re, w win fmj.
axorej oaarcea on. ww?
aa5
8 Of
.a.
ill
plicatton, iut of course nothing definite
IS UIVWU. , : o
!: SWouis, March 2. The" viewsof
the-atriking Knightir of Labor on the
Gould and Soiithwest system and their
employers as to the means by which ne
strike; shall bo brought to a close, de
onite 'the annarbnt aereement arrived
8t ill few iork seem as far-apart as
ever and a final : adjustment j is still in
Iheiifiiture The Knighu demand that
.lliho struck be taken back in a
body "and the railroad officials have de
termined te re-employ only those actually
neeled, consequently the strike still
continues. KO nope is now euusnaiucu
GRANITES aNI) 8AJOJ8TOSKS.
6 in aH an Co
408 rayettevllle BL, Ealelgh, .
prepared to make
.KaEle Term, lor mwlfinf Gr SanO-
nadi rJaW4,Vih. most sanguine Ithat a final
ro?H. cfample facilities tor hwftfaT- settlement wiU be reached untU the gen
m iking emca taipmenH w - -
KpatIieau Caueaa.
Washinoton, April 2. The Repub
lican Senators held a caucuts meeting
from noon till 3 p. m. There was
.rnneral interchange of opinnn regarding
the policy to be pursued in considering
nominations. but no - action was
tnkfln Incidental to the discussion, more
than a majority expressed themselves
ia favor of open executive sessions.
eral executiTe bowd hall have arrifed
Baprcme Court.
. A..nola from the lUth district w
be called next Monday in the order fol
lowing:
393 Bird vs. Lytic
394:Goss vs. Gobs.
396 Sparks vs. Sparks.
396- 4Greenle3 vs. McCelvey.
397- State vs. Ray, ;
398- Sute vs. Callowajr.
399Phvpis vs. Pierce.
400 Brituin vs. Mull.
401 Little vs. Berry.
402 Scott vs. Queen.
403 Hardin vs. Ray.
404 Garrison tb. Cox.
405 Hendersonville vs. Price.
406 Lytle vb. Lytle.
407- Ripley tb. Arledge.
408 Hobson vs. Buchanan.
409 Taylor vb. Cranberry Company.
410 Taylor vs. Cranberry Company,
411 Sute vs. Fanning.
1 tread Baby. i
yesterday a negro boy, Anthony
Mangum by qame, while playing in a
the northeastern part of the ety,
found a cigar box. He opened the;box
o,,rl therein, wranned in rags, found a
baby. It was a mulatto as to color! and
was quite dead. The colored boy called
a white lad, Isaao Wilder, who saw the
ehild. Young Wilder and the negro
boy went to the station-house and told
of their discovery. Young Wilder,
when asked the age of the child, said
'ten minutes." It was a very tinall
baby,
biried
Mr. J. S; Stone, cashier; Delaware, Lacka
wanna & Western railroad, writes trom Bul
f alo that Red Star Cough Cure successfully n -moved
a severe cold under which he hatl
labored tor some time. Price 25 cents.
Paving Blocks ftc.
SEALED PROPOSALS will t receiTed by
th' Street Committee ttntU12n. Monday,
April Rtb, 1886. foi o.urrjing and delivering
ui M n.iino- lwb and BOO feet of curbing
tone out ot the quarry known aa the Beaver
lUa quarry. . , x,
Sjiecifiwtions for the Blocks and Curbing
can be seen at the City Clerk's Office.
All to be delivered not later, than August L
1SS6. Bond and security required. Tbe com-
... : .1 an KI1. Ttiria
11ut .ee reserve w i ig""- . . j . - .
hoiild le sealed, endorsed 'PropowU tor
Paving Blocks," and addressed to the Street
CommLtee. C. B. EDWARDS,. ,
Chairman Street Committee,
Italeigh, March 29, 1886.
n h 80 d6t.
THE BEST AND CHEAPDST
In Oregon they are buu Diowiug fi ll
up Chinese laundries with giant PH Q T 11 IV 1 3 M U TG
nam. rortnui Favors Poor Annia Smith
whe is a colored cook and washer, at
113 Liberty street, waathe lucky holder
of one- fifth of the ticket in The Louisi
ana State Lotterv which drew the first
It was taken charge of and capital priae.of $7-5,060, on Tuesday,
h I i- L n T . an alia aoi). "Mv
name is Annie Smith. I am 40 years of
age and a widow; born at Monroe, La.
My attention was attracted to a ticket
No. 57.705. The combination pleas
ed me, I purchased one-fifth for the sum
of $1. I called at the office ofthe com-
Sany and was told that I had, won $15,
00. She has na children livipg and is
alone in the world. New Orleans (;
Picayune, Feb. 13. j ;
N C Lime Phosphate
lbs Troth Aboat It.
8prlag," sang th-. poet, "budding spring."
.1 la I the doukus were o.re ;
was htmsett the oae green thing, ;
For ice lay every where.
. A Flaht at a Ball.
Ga.. AprU 2. During a
SW at Vigilant engine-house here last
night, Tom Kice cut W. X. Arcner, ot
Ihe Times, and seriously wounded him.
Returning to the ball-room, shot were
exchanged, without effect. The dispute;
was about positions in a quadrille. '
A- . M
Haw Advrtlemnt-
The axnual statement of the Manhat
tan life insurance company, of which
Col. W.K. Anderson is general agent,
appears in this issue and speaks for
itself. Ti . n
J. R Ferrall & Co. announce a spe
cially cloice lot of the most toothsome
dainties of the season.
Hail spring, with breezes soft and sweet."
The spring returned his hall; '
There came a shower of anow and sleet
Upon a wintry gate.
8in(r, merry birds, In bush and tree.'?
Ha read the alnianao;
The birds were wiser far than he, ,
And did not hurry back, t ,
'Spring, gentle" here he ceased to sing.
Let the ad truth be told;
Th while he sang of balmy spring
He caught an awtul cold.
Mrs. M. P. Handy, in A pril Century.
There are now
Forest college.
1&0 studenti at Wake
od Kealfa Fmnlalow o:
Liver Oil, with UypophoapM
Mr. Whitney is here to make
rangements for taking charge of
State experimental farm near here.
will visit the location today. '
Cheap theatricals are popular
Dr.
FOB WA8TIMO. CUlLDKJtN, .'
S. W. Cohen, of Waco, Texas;
Read the following formulas: .
A compost of Lime Phonphate, 1,000 pouada;
Kalnit, 20 1 pounds, and 80J pounds ot cow or
horse stable manure, makes as good a eaeral
manure aa can be louna. . '1 4,.
On land rich in vegetable matter, like bot- ?
torn or new land, nae 500 pound of Phosphate I
mixed with 200 pounds ot Kalnit r .
On thin, poor land, use 20 bushel cotton f
seed or eouivalent in stable maaure. 600 rounds '
of Phoophate and SOs pounds Kalnit compost-'
ed together on one acre. !i 1 j1
Fob Cloveb akd GaAssiS Lime Phesphate.
ta the ht nlover food known. It rives food 1
stands, corrects the sourness of rd lands of the is -middle,
and western eo unties. It will make t
clover grow on red hilUrtde galls, which we :
consider the greatest triumph Ue 800 to i,- .
000 pounuB yv wiiviCT uu a - -.y..-
ar-
the
He
On v? sindy land use KalnJt with It.
If
: . 1 ... . n . a I : .r r . . . .
savs : "1 have nsea your njnnision m 1 for topHJressing. w
TnfantUe wasting, with good reeults. IH f
notj only restores wasted tissue, bat
irives strength, and I heartily recom
mend it for dbeases attended by
Use it
trphy."
C. PHOSPHATE CO.,
RaieigbN.
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