Newspapers / The News & Observer … / April 29, 1886, edition 1 / Page 2
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k r f t I 1 i SI tl ':rf ., V i Mi. v mi .-: i . ! - t-.v r - 1 - t ! .X-'.;,::j' ;-'sn The News ahdO WEE THE brKp AJS GRADED SCHOOL. By The News ana Obseryer Ca dut m rr;i BsstBetd stxi Weekly, year. - s o Ns-Baassrter4 wttkoat payveat, u4 M paper Mat after tke explratte of Ala fsasY THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 886.1 ; The regular annual rebellion, has broken out in Mexico. It comes with, ''the flowers that bloom in the springs" if notoftener, and blooms and dies as .quickly as any spring flower ever did. ; - Our North Caroling delegati otf seem to have taken a strong underhold of the internal revenue iniquities and are is bound to come of such honest, patri- P8chool andhall . not be apphn ... , - , , f, ; . priated or expended for any other pur- ouo, untiring wors ana nonor to the pose." . , f wuraers. f Sqction three is in these words: "The special taxesthus levied and collected from the taxable property and polls! of white rifirsona Khali hp flTnwndtd in ktir has made a ten -strike, NoWL if his I intr on & crraid mihlin iwhnnl fnr whitn - j - - -, . . 0 rr - o-t r - ." -j faithful efforts shall be crowned wjth a I persons of both sexes, between the ages Tat orisnoM OF thi toprwoi cockt is? thi ! V : CASEj. n Rigsbee vs. Durham. V- At its session in 1881 the general as sembly passed an act f'to establish a gradedsphool in tho towia of Durham". chapter .231, the provisions of which, so rar as they relate to the present coniro tcrsy are in substance these: . j -The first section directs the , subihis siba to the voters of the town of the qfes- tjon whether an annual tax shall! be levied for the support of a eraded sctioo in tho town; and prescribes the modi in which the popular will' shall be ascer tkinbd. 1 . ;The second section, in case of ani af firmative vote, authorizes the imposition and collection by. the town authorises of a tax upon property ; and polls, hot exceeding one-hftn of one per cent upon the value of the former and seventy-ive cenis upon the latter, within the t$Wn aad subject to taxation," the proceeds of which, it is declared, "shall be applied exclusively for the support of a grad Congressman . Reid, in seoitriag-i ia place on the calendar for the Blair bili, prompt consideration of the measure and its enactment into Law, his triumph will indeed be great. His most commenda ble course in this ' matter has dot 'been: unobserved by the people of North .Car olina and will npt fail of its 'due re ward. 1 y : . . , : Li ; ji". THE CODE DUELLO. : News, of a warlike nature comes to us from Asheville. There is another Richmond in ; the field ! Andfthe cry for blood ascends to Heaven from the top of Asheville'a loveliest mounfcaio; . But yet we shall hope that neither ibf ,two very valuable lives will be Jost oh the field of honor. S A The Niwa and OBSiivKB.ia not a friend to the Code. It deprecates personalities, it deprecates personal encouiterl," it de- precates a resort to the duel i lit urires: moderation in language -a ! high eour4 J in be general division of the counter tesy a manly forbearance a courigei into; separate school districts for the ed- ous seu-controi m dinicult matters of personal dispute. I S : :- j As for the duel, the law forbids it; and we preach that it is. inoumbent oh , all men to observe the law because it is t a law ; no man or set of men' should as- . . -. . sume to, themselves that they ar4'abovei; the fact: disregarded in imposing th the law and that the law was! no made limitations, and a tax list was made ou tor them. It is made for all.f . Atid yet and delivered to the town tax cOlkctoi caes hare, arisen and doubtless Will who was proceeding to levy and collect hereafter arise wherein right -thinking when the present action was instituted men and women find excuses fori those I by tae issue of i summon against him U1U Ull) UU1CI UC1CUUUUU) UU LUt) XOllf day of February of the present year I The; purpose of the suit is to have a perpetual injunction against the cn4 for cement of the tax, preliminary to the-' final; hearing of which the plaintiffs lothidav of the same month, for an in termediate restraining order to prevent of; six I and twenty-one years; and th special taxes thus levied and collected frOm; the taxable property and polls sof colored persons shall be expended for the benefit of the public schools iof th colored' children between the agies of six and twenty-one yeafs." The other sections of the act regulate the management of the school and- the administration of the funds and are n important in the present exieencv.' N is th& principle involved affected by tie subsequent amendments. Acts 18815, chapter 377; acts 1883, private, chapter 106; sacts 1885. chapter 87, private. An election was held and a favorable vote taken, : pursuant to which a graded school 'was set up for tho education bf white children only, to support whiqh the- taxes derived from white tax-pavers we?re! appropriated, while those from colored persons were distributed among the: colored 'districts which entered within the corporate .limits of the towp ucation, of both classes of children. Thle County . authorities accordingly fixed Upon the maximum allowed by the en actment upon property and .upon sutjr cents on the poll, preserving the consti tutional equation between the two which who violate the law. There are some matters that touch, a man's honor, and a man's honoris or ought to be dearer to him than hfa life, When he feels himself sorely wounded in this ; tend erest part, he puta' aside thought of life. That must needs? be . an agonising frame of mind which) leads .J one to prefer death rather than ekdbra . Hfo an unfortunate, unhappynditibfll ( the collection 'caUiug for generous sympathy; instead of I Itiwas in evidence in support of the li, 2?? hrBtSS ftoah Uia "ton oo not appreciate thSuntfllhe untoward Tot colored children ; that the town con - wsue eventuatea in deplorable calamity J tains' over two thousand inhabitants : It is the better part to. hold in view Chtf .that the territory embraced! in the cor i?!! of wh matters and to -tioratie limits of Durham constitutes parts ueariuy wisn the persons concerned an of three colored districts into which the amicable and sensible settlement their county il divided and the school houses differences. 5 ' . in eaish t on taAa t, i;TO;ti. T wwwasw .MV nf ITU; tUUlli. Uidk -.1. --l t. ., . . there are no' school houses therein for educating colored children, or into which thfy are allowed to enter; : and that the taxes collected from that race are distributed among the- county col ored districts, enuring as irell to' the (J(.i r . 1 '. . S v. wiuiuu vuuuicu mciwu WUU IW uucaonai purposes without reside without as to those who reside , THE BLAIR BILL. It is said that the committee on labor has determbed by a .vote of ten to three' to offer a substitute for the Blair; bijl, .making the distribution direct to the V) Wfe do not lay Qy stress upon uje omidfion . to designate the schools to which the money chllec.ted;from colored tax-payers as "graded' as is done jin directing the application of the money -. derived from j white tax payers,; but it is (juite laauifest that the statute means to furnish the in creased educational facilities resulting from the local assessment ;to the chil dren of both classes resident in the town and to confine the bencfits to them The doparture from this requirement in the distribution of the I taxes drawn from colored persons is, in out opinion, at variance with the language and intent of the enactment. Moreover the sanc tion of the voters, on which its efficacy depended, was given to the act in the form in which it came, from the hands of the; law-making power, and not as in terpreted and acted s on by those who are charged with the, disbursement of the fund i " i ! The judge ruled that the third sec tion of the act so fariai it discriminates between the races in the apportionment of the;fund was repugnant to the con stitution, and that it, was not allowable to use it for any Other than graded school? in Durham. But he declared that there (was no iriegultority or ille gality in the mode of levying and col lectii'g the tax, and refused to issue a rcstairiing order to this effect. The ruling; as. to the discriminative features of the aet is fully sustained by the de cision of this court, in Pntt vs com missioners, made at the present term, and fro, do not 'propose to re enter 'upon the discussion of the same matter in the nreaent. nnininn If the only purposes for which the taxes are to be levied and used are condemned by the; paramount lay of the constitu tion, and they cannot when collected be expended as the statute directs, ..why should they be raised at all? The moneys thus obtained. are but the means by which some supposed orTeal useful end is -to be attained; and;if the pro posed expenditure is forbidden, 80 must be the provision for raising- the money to be thus used. Te one is an insepa rable incident of the other add an essen tial and controlling elemeut in the enl actment..1 It matters .not however reg ular and free from objection may be jthe prescribed method of levying the taxes;, rif, when collected, , those paid by one race are to be separated and applied ex clusivejyi to the support of schools ip. which the; childrenj of that, race are taught,; the same discrimination in the dispos tion of the fund is made as if the taxes had been raised by Mparate and distinct assessments upon the races. It is true,; as was ruled j by the judge, the present; assessment is uniform and not obnoxious to one of the objections con sidered; in the case referred to, but the essential objection remains that there is a "discrimination in jfavor of or to the prejudice of", one of the races. Const. art. 9, tec.- 2, which j renders the en forcement of the tax for such purposes illegal. . . - j ; - H j The judge held that while the moneys could not be used in the manner pointed out and commanded in, the statute, they could nevertheless be collected, acting upon the proposition; that while some provisions of an enactment : might be void, others might remain ind be en forced, j The proposition is correct to a i;n5A - -"-"M"" u-numerous cases: Jtferrf vs, Uainei, 2 Car. L. Rep.i 428; McCubbins vs. Barrincer. PhSl! li., 654; Johnson vs. Winslow. 63 NJ 0.. 552.' : f ? Attend to it Uow. Many'snfferinjr people dm? th melf ps aboiit with failing strength, fct'lSng that tbej;'are steadily sinking Into the grave, when by "mini Parker- Tonic they would find a c-itre Goftv mencmg with the tirnt dose, and vitality iund str'iigth surely coming back to thenr. ; "I tm 63 year old;-have been sick uenrW all niy lite, and ought to know something aimut niedkine by this time. I have used rai ker' Tonie freely for moru than a year, and onHidi r it the liest" remedy 1 haVo ever kno.ti.; In fact I now lind no other medic-ine nceirY. For weakness, dehility, r!iouiHati"Ui, and tJif di.streHHing all-gonene and jain from which I suffered so long, it ha noTequal. I drt not s-e how any one ean afford to; do without io -alu-ahlc a medicine." 3IuSj.'liArnE X. (Skatks. cor. Eait and Front utreet, rrovidente, K. 1. Parker's Tonic Prepared by fltecox & Co., N. T. Sold by all Drugglsta la large bottle at One Dollar. " ; ;; G. T. STHOUACH MAltKKT SQUARE. TIMOTHY HAY, WHITE CORN. New Mackerel In Barrels. ; New Mackerel, 10, 12 and 15 lbs. New Herring. v New MoUvwes. Fresh Patapsco and Orange Grove Flour, Fresh Montrose Flour. . Early Rose Irish Potatoes. : New Champagne Cider; .Barrels or iJottlea. PeaA, White, Black and Bed. Hweet Potatoes. -! Eeroaena Oil, Safety OiL : Butter by keg, cas or pound. ; Hams? Hams. ; Canned Goods, Canned Goods. : , Crackers -and Cakes. ROSE VALLEY AND NECTAR ETB Pure from Distillery; no Perfume or glycer ine used to make Age, i ; Pure Norili Carolina: Corn fifty . Sherry, Tort and Blackbprry Champagne Cider; Barrels pr Bottles Table Luxuries 1 . 5 " ; names Food ACENOWLEDGED ZXCELLENCE I . R . FERRALL & Qd. AlUi KECKIVEHO i Extra Xew Spring Butter : ; ; Choice Carolina Rice. Finest Queen Olives and Baby Olives. ; X Extra Pickled Oysters. I s t Fine Pickled Lobster iii glass. -' CranleiTy Sauce in glass jars. . . ; Digby Chicks in one-pound oval tins. J Dandicole Gaudier's. Patent Self-Open t j : 1 1 -131 o is A L'yVJA'i'lavoHi,FlSxtracts, all Kiversiae lomato catsup, ucie. : granges, Lemons and Bananas. flavors, i first-vlass av We guarantee to consumers purchas- But it is otherwise wJien tho parts of JJn Irom aouse j . v 7UF",TOM or00(J(, will rimte T.li, . ..ao.-.J r. f . v T X CUX CBCULKU . Z J any oflhose provisions which rendered the Blair bill objectionable to States rights and, secondly, basing the distti- the town, It wast insisted for the the statute are so interlaced and de Den- dent one- on the other! as uhitinsr and constituting the whole, necessarilv conducive to one and j the sanae object, bo that jthe dislocation of the illegal part would so affect its operation as that the act would fail of its essential object and could not be supposed in its mutilate ed form to effect the end intended bv the enacting power. . Vfhen iuch rela tions exist among the parts aa that thev tmake one' consistent whole, and eaeh n this basis we ask for a liberal share of your orders. J. R. FEBBALL & CO. men : bution on the number of school children and not on the proportion of illiterates. jh jaintifl that the act in its essential pro- material to the efficacy of the Statute in visions and purposes is in Violation of SsubservinK ita general! bbiecti it . must re constitutions of the United States nat-ano, as a unity or fail altofiretaer. ttd pif this State, in makice unwar- Judge Cooley BtateB! ihe iroDOsition ranted distinctions between ; the white h0 be that the unconstitutional do not Believing in the wisdom in keeping up 'art equilibrium in t-mperature and relieving dis-i tress from heat a4 well as cold, nA kavto"! been for a long time engaged in supplying fuel for winter use, we hive taken the exclusive sale in Kalgigh of We prefer the proposed measure to f a colored races, and that it is inoper- ffect the constitutional parts of a sUtute ute iJiair bUl, which, while we we?e quite ready to accept it; contained (wine objectionable features, and we 5 hope it Will pass. I ' . 4 V " The position of our educational pat ters is this: The bulk of our people have,no,t been educated up to I proper pra;iuuu 01 eaucauon, out tnere has been a great advance made in that di rection and there is a very" widespread interest manifested in the matter The ability of our people to pay taxes is per haps tfniy a tithe of the ability of an equal number of people in the Northern States, and we haye taxed ourselves: ta the utmost for this purpose. Yet ur school fund is insufficient to maintain our common schools more than two months in the year, with the effect: of unless all the nrovisiocs are cnnnAntpd an suoject matter, other, depending on each operating together for the same purpose or otherwise so connected to gether in meaning that if cannot be pre sumed that the legislature would have passed the one without the ; other." Const. Liuj.j 178, 215, wth cages cited in notes 2 and 3. . i J . ' Such isn clearly the relation to each other of the Boveral sections which con- ntlva anil vi1 1 he court rendered ludfirnient as fol lows :- i k ;. - J A. M." Riesbee -and othnfa' va Tnn - A U - . m. w f, U o JJarbam and others. W cause coming on to be heard uron a motion, by the plaintiff for an iniuue- uvu, uwstca 01 motion had been d c served I upon the defendants and both parties - bemi? present, the eomrJam (which is read as an Affidavit and f. ULiaviL 111 niainrirr onri ion . u; j ii . i mi ,, , ;-r-- - iiiiiitui Buiutn loiiD cuauiiueui. jj.ne money is -j.v vm6 , wu, auu u ue,Dg agrcea rusea ior.a specinc oDjoct the main ujr .uutu paruea mai tne statements m tenance of one or more graded i school fiaid comDiaint and affidavit akall k ttiiin 1;; e : , ; 5 ' , 7 n .uu iiiuiv ui uic; wwur ana 11 iaeu as jaets admitted, (ana tbev re 1 chmc in addition tn ntcr tki; v. uuu OJ im8 courj; -and upon dens, from! tne resident tax-payers and x--v vvuudci, mu wsuri oeing laxapie property therein The ereat Of nninirin i , - . . ri-rrmi?r" i .; ': i cpiaor n is appropriated to a . graded . . w c 1 1 1 iiar. rn aia 1 a a . 1 r a t 1 j. m. 1 . . keeping the schools very inefficient and UlaUtinnw, f,vl&Illl 7 Vi 1Q5 wf T CnVdren' the re8lduo to eada1nr Ai.oJf.: j vi "i?8allt?'ia h.e of levying ofjcol- shch a school for colored flhildrn Tl,. Tf X-COI?Plained of. 1 find ia divided by races, distinctions de- xuuutiiBD 001 in i act f chanter InMiriin nn thtt or.n..n f., V,:k 4L. f'V) 18 unconsutuional and njoneys are derived. This as the judge Void an far ui if. Hirsnfo - I 1 1 . , 4 , :. i. 1 Ti T uiovTfuiiuauon i: ueciaes is iorpiauen Dy the constitution between the races in the anDortionmertt liA M : t.KA -t v.. or appropriation of the fund raised hv amr.i.ar. v. w uj. ,ja4T 5 ' J il r-- j-.." j mu mo uuuus aa of authorizes the appropriation of the cltarly ought not to be taken from the mOQCTTUiied hT amd dt n tda V. ,.C.l -i--ll i .... . . - , " - c:T f , - UCBl1", la-pujfcrB at iu, oecauBe mis is Out a vc puuiio Bcnoois or to any other fmfcans of effecting an illegal nA w FROM THE RALEIGH ICE FACTORY causing great dissatisfaction persons of good - judgment hold the; opinion that the schools as at present maintained are nearly worthless and are w not Worth the;! cost. An increase of the fund- now will En able us to extend the school svstem four months, which would give a differ--ent aspect to the matter. Our schools; would then be practically efficient; the disaffection would disappear; theorising generation would e educated, and be- fore the lapse of another decade M tXofi&Sa g 6cho9Kfor the dln? advert the actual misappro leaven would leaven of I)urham. ; It was ordered by the court: 1 ; That upon the plaintifl's executing a bond in the sum of RlOff" non,i; twhel a jrecfuired by law, a notice Bha'll X' - I I 5 1 iae wnoie iniiir.: , . . . : :r ana when we consider the material progress the South is making, Ut tho' . end of that time, with the adilitWnl ifirimillna r Aw..t: 11 . ' I . lbe in a condition to td 1 n"H" defend J -k let the people feel the full effects, of a four months' term and they will never abandon it. No finer spectacle has ever been presented in the history of the"world than that of the borythern people jji v"v-"" -.vi" luaiiers. 11 nas won words of admiration from every North ern educator who has come among us To belittle our earnest endeavors in this' behalf by characterizing our wuh f(jr tempbrarv assistance- as a revolting ppe cies -of mendicacy comes with very bad graoe frem any resident of the North where the children of three hnndr 01 tias superior court of Durham, that theyj thenr agents and attorneys are, en joined and, forbidden, till thai further iimer 01 me court, , irom appropriating anyof the proceeds of said tax, for the uso aiid behht of any object other than tho graded School of the town of Diir- am. And they are further enioined and forbidden ip apportioning said fund to make ant discrimination on account of race, or! to apportion it in any 'other1 rttoitoeato rw manner than as . provided by section fu zhii!P 2605 of the Code. 1 I The proprietom of .2. The motion for Kl'. t.. . -6 thousand families are fed. clothed aWrf W collecting of said tax ia educated at the public extense, tntail. 1 , - Tn A WAHLT" P"' pration of the tax from colored persons to; county school district, since this is thfe wrongful act of aeenta emnldved in diebursipff it. and mav c.ttrrpotA with. oUt impairing the. force of the enact juivnt. But the statute itself directs an illfgal and unauthorized disposition of ne iunu, ana this the popular vote ap pro ves, and . therefore the restraining prer lugbt to T have issued upon the facts Bhown. In - this refnsftl thorn ia rror. Let this be certified to the (inn rt telow. j Smith, C. J. i The (loTernor of Missouri hu Wiinia u.i. , - . 7... -ii..- vu v me Liuvion given 10 outlaws: but he rewnunena ute uunooa lr. 1 or coughs and eolda. Balration Oil. th cmt. cm. ij-uii mauui iw puo, wiu pay a large re- -ward if any wrtifiiate published bv t.hm i. ivuu uu. scuuiHVt A. OOra QUIT 2b Qmntm a ! From date, and we are now rearivtit liver to all who wish it, from our wagon, our ijwiv vu f ajrruvijiB nmvii anu our wares nouae - the entral depvt. Thom who hjd tl kets from the lee Co.,caii cjLcuauge mem xor ours 01 me ame denoml-Sajtion,- by presenting them at eitl' er pl- e. V - ' ' ; PRICE OF TICKETS Ag F0I4X)WS : I : 100as,75; 5 ft or more delivered at a time. ! BOO f V.10 5 ; i. i 1 600 " 3.0025 " " ' : ,000 10.0060 " " ' ! Ia barrels for sbiDnin?. carefully oaAkod.H 5c p r 100 Is; h rrels nd packing includid. ineiu ior uasu Utderg retK!ct. fully solicited and promptly filled; - L , JONES & POWELL. j . Raleigh, N. 0. i THE BEST 'AND CHEAPDST Corn Manure IS N G Lime Phosphate AT- u I5 Just from t'.e i.ring-, Llely and sparkling, ; ALLEGHANY, CGXT6BSSS. HUKYADI-JiKOS. HATHOBII. BUFFALO LITHIA, AND. FRIED HICllSIJ ALL 1 Another Supply of the Celebrated Prize Medal : Buist's Gavuen Seeds, PEAS, ONIO SETS SNAP BEANS AND CORN. A ull Stock of Fresh and Ture Drugs and JOHN . Medicines. PESCUD WHOLESALE AND KETAIL DRUGGIST AND PHARMACIST, No. 118 Fayetteville street, Raleigh, N. C. Orders have careful and prompt attention. AND MEDIC I1MES. mm BTJIST'S WARRANTED - GARDEN SEEDS m IE CIGARS -AND BAH.UOADS. i iiuaui u AAii r ttAiLiiiiAu, CON1EXii:D SCHEy.1 K. i NUUTH. January 18, - fOt'Tll. ; i; LuJy. lily4 N"o.ft3. Ko..V2. I'aily. Daily. .vrr. . in. 3 -J 12 2.i ii. in. 10 03 8 46 p. m. 11 a. in. 7 00 p. m. 9 STt 8 01 6 26 3 43 8 40 Arr.l a. ni. fi "JO a (h I. III. 11 !t 15 II. 111. io a, p. 111. 4 07: 4 40; 1 20; 12 13 a. m.l 8 30, 6 oo! 1 33 5 46 Niw Yolk, l'hiladt-iplii: ; naltimorcii Washingtoiii. Dauviuc. Richmond. ; GoldNlioro.--, Kaleigh. j Iurh:tm. Ofeensboro; Salisbury, j Charlotte, -j Siuii-tanliurg; Atlanta 1 !Lt. Night, l'i IM ! 3 45 a. in. I 3 50 II 15 p. m. i V 26 3 26 11 45 f 00 6 07 11 21 1 10 6 00 6 56 1 '40 Je p. Hi. 4 80 0 6Q 9 43 12 00" a. m. . 8 04 2 00 a. m. 9 60 11 23 1 00 3 84 10 40 SALEM BRA3PCH. Northward. Jan. 18, 1886.; Southward. No.53. No.51. Daily. Daily Arr. Arr. p. m. a. m. 8 36 8 10 Lve. Lve. 6 56 (i 50 Greensboro.;; ' Salem, 'j No.50.No.62. DaUy, Daily, lv. Lye. ?. iu. a. m, 1 85 10 00 Arr. Arr. 1 17 11 40 gTATE UNIVERSITY RAILROAD. Northward. v Jan. 18, 1886V; ' Southward. No. 3. Arr. p. m. 4 55 Lve. 5 46 No. 1. Arr. a. in. 10 -20 Lve. 11 10 Dally exceptj Sunday. ' University. Chanel Hill. tfo. 4. No. 2. Lve. Lve. p. in. a. m. 6 85 11 55 Arr. Arr. 7 25 12 45 R A LEIGH & GASTON R. tt. CONDFNSK SCHKBlpT.t. Trains going North. TOBACCO, Nov, 15, 1885i No 47 !1" extrit Suuciay. AND - " MINERAL ; WATERS. Digest, Sixth North Carolina h jcwik aco, -- ssyuocb. J5 CO. lUJSBEE'S NORTH CAlROLlA JLrt.TldE AND FORU BOOK, 3rd Revised! Edition i. V.- ..j ... $2 50 r'TT(MU. H7STOT?v voiith CAnpr.TiTA, &tti Revised edition, 30thl thousand ...i; i..... 1 . j... ...... siU I a SCHOOL AND BUSINESS MAP OF NOETH CAROLINA, ; by Collier Cobb I We have for sale the following new: Law fcooks: ONUS PROBANDI, by Hon. W . H. Jiailey L 6 00 iixAL.a ur iiri. iu L.AJSV, by Sedgwick and Wait, Ntw Edition f 6 50. FARM LAW, by Henry Austin 2 50 SOME POINTS IN LAW OF EVERY DAY USE.hy Judge Walter Clark, 25e. ' SEND ORDERS TO I ' ALFRED WILLIAMS & CO PUBLISHERS AND BOOKSELLERS, I ' ' ' ' ?: ; i . . ; : : lift TAYETTEVILLE STREET AND 8 EXCHANGE PLACE, RALEIGH,N. cJ & lost m&,'mEsiD. 'But A - r : t .4 i v ji ; . Aivui. junuiru can i in: iimra iii'-octnL. now can iu. irhm T .v 1. -. liicjc Miiouiit(miw wMK, uiiu Jirs. jiorrence nanal with anatwniori 1 1 Ull ffvu.Ug .u. ,,.y. u ever anything lay in a straight 1 ne it ia the evidence against that girl," shecontmued. "The fother day when the rine fell on the floor sne was in the room, and die asked me what a stone like that Was worth, and then gave sucli! mgitt bmiu : -isupjxse you mink u s wrong for me, to wear a thousand dol i Lot minting or ine ring; 1 was only r O 7 , v VlUV.l UttJ sue was in tne room, ana sue asKeo me What a stone like that Was worth, and then irave sue sight that I said : "I suppose you think it's wrong for" me. to wear a thousand dol Iars ou my finsrer)'" and she s id "1 was not thinkinc nf thp rina- 1 o-ia nnii-" . i It you Wish to read the balam of this story send for a copy of the Alabastine Ace. It will be mailed free to any address dt . " Thomas ;H. Briggs & Sons . J. Briqgs' BirrLDiNG, Ralmqu, Nr C. HARD WAKE, STOVES. ; BLRT AND CHEAPEST BARY uARRTAO x CO BIG KARGAIN AT li EDUCED : PRICE OF 2.00 3 3- Leave Raleigh, Wake, Franklin ton. Kittrell, Hendcraoh, Warrenton, Littleton, Arrive at Weldon, Train going South, Nov. 15, 1883. 9 45 a n) 10 31 10 56 11 171 u ai , 12 '20 12 55 1 45 P o 3 D'y except Sunday in B 15 a 1 42 8 24 8 55 9 2 i 10 87 11 31 12 50 a m No 4S D' y No 3 D'y exofpt j except , Sunday, j Sunday.) Leave Weldon, , Littleton, Warrenton, Henderson, Kittrell, yranklihton, Wake, Arrive at ltaleigh, 2 40 p m 3 31 4 08 ; 4 60 6 09 6 30'.: : 5 65 6 40 Wm: 1 16 a m 2-47 . 3 43 4 56 5 30 09 L 6i ; 8 00 - Smith. . Sujjerintendent. pALEIGH & AUGUSTA AIR-MXE. CONDENSKD SCUKhtsLK. Trains going South. Nov. 15, 1885. iNo t D'y except Simony. Leave Raleigh, Moncurc, . . Sanford, Arrive Hamlet, Trains going North Nov. 15, 1885. Leave Hamlet, Sanford, Moucure, Arrive Raleigh, 7 1)0 H m V 'i i ' I 10 16 is 1 35 AO 2 U'v excefjt Sundy. No 6 D'y ; except Sunday. 2 4o W 6 05 B 50 9 00 Wm 00 a m; 12 25 p m J 45 7 20 ---H- No 4 D'y; except Sunday. 6 00 a m U 15 12 00 3 30 BMltH, Superintendent. AROLINA CENTRAL 11, . Passenger, mail except Sundays. 1 Leave Wilmington at -j No. 1 v Leave Raleigh at ) Arrive, at Charlotte at I 1 Leave Charlotte at No 2. V Arrive at Raleigh tit ';i ) Arrive at Wilmington at ! anxLBT division dailt KXcir siAOArs. No. 3 ) Leave Charlotte at ' iii,-. J S Arrive athelhv at A m No. 4 i Leave Shelbv at i m 5 Arrive at Charlotte at 6 0 p m and express tmin. Daily i 7 00 p. m 7 33 p. m 7 3o a. m 8 15 p. m 00 a. m 8 35 a. m APE i'E AR & YADKIN VALLEY R. s4 TBAIN KOKTU, AKJilTE. Bennettaville, Shoe Heel. 40 a m Fayetteville, 12.00 m Sanford, 2 15 p m Greensboro, hjm) 26 muiutes at Fayetteville for dinner, - LEAVE. 8 20 am 9 50 12 25 pm 225 Greensboro, Sanford, Fayetteville, Shoe Heel Bennettaville, TSaIN SOUTH. ajuuvs. 1 20 pm 8 50 605 7 30 lxaVb. 60 am X 46 pa 4 00 016 yriLMLNGTON & WELDON R, R. TEAIN8 GOUiQ SOUTH. ; Nov. 15, 1835.. PLOW CASTINGS Leave Weldon. Arrive Rocky Mount, Arrive at Tarboro, Loave Tarbora, Leave .v llson, Arrive Goldsboro, Wilmington, No. 48 . DaUy. 2 15 p m 3 38 4 55 11 80 4 05"pm A 64 7 60 TKAIN8 GOING NOaTH. NO. 40 laily. 6 38pm' Nov. 15, 1885. CASTINGS. ; Send for prices. Quality guaranteed. RALEIGH TURNING AND COTTON PLOWS, andotteEg'g's J. H. GILL, Sole Manufacturer, RALEIGH, N. 0 Leave VVilmingtori, Arrive Goldboro, Leave Wilson, Arrive Rocky Mount Arrive Tarboro, Leave Tarboro, No. 47 Daily. 8 45 a m 11 36 12 26 pm 2 68 45 11 30 am No. 43 Daily, 9 60 p m 11 58 a m 12 50 21 1 ArriveWeldon, aiSnm rp JoHi l)mjij!, Supt. M WEESOK.Gen'I IWner Agent. FOR SALE. Headquarters 'Read the following formulas: A compost Of Lime Phoanhate. 1.000 Donndu Kinit, 20 1 pounds d 800 pounds: of cowfor At the latctate Fair my WT ANDOTTE.S made. ch-un sweep winnjngUie ukand special ,i-izk, snu stamp for mv beautifullv illn. hon-e stable manure, makes as food a general tratd lecriptive price list' manure as can be found. On land rich la vegetable matter, like bot tom or new land, use 600 pounds of Phosphate mueu wna zoo pounds ol Kainit on thin, poor land, use 20 bushels cotton seed or equivalent in stable manure,'00 pounds of Phosphate and 30e pounds Kainit compost- eu togemer on one acre. Foa CIOtkb ind Grabs s Lime Phosphate is the best clover food known. It gives good stands, corrects tbe siurnessof red lands of the middle and western counties. It will make clover grow on red hillside galls, which We cuuuucr we greatest triumph, . use 000 to 000 pounds per acre on elvr: and erasses. Ob very sandy land use Kaintt with it. Use U tor top-dressing. - Address '- N. C. PHOSPHATE CO., (JOHN D HAYWOOD, Raleigh. N. C. j j AU Sorts of fanrrs aad many sorts ct ails of I Pisn tad beast need a cooling sbdbaj ; Mastang Uxusrot COAL! Anthracite and Bituminous Oak, Hickory and Pine; lmg or Short Orders left at the drug stores of Loe, Jka on a Co, Cupown or down-to wa) wll r eaive prompt attention. , ) 1 -' PHLL . H ANDREWS & ftO tviAnawusill III. filHntf iWiiL 10 OftotM Mil. ORSK3 AND MULES. I will have eighteen rise Horses aad ooo Fine Pahr Mules to arrive April 21st, Wrdaee I I". ' w. JlOJUCXln'i BtabHK Sal DINNER, TEA AND TOILET SETS, ! REFRIQERATOBS, AND A YARIETy W EASTER , i w.Ci a,b. 4 '. 'I Mi fatfliaiH, t igh,M. i r - H
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 29, 1886, edition 1
2
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