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Sift i'i-j;.. ; mm 4f EWB AND Ob i SERVE V)I. XXVI. RALEIGH. N. 0., THURSDAY MORNING MAY 20. 1886. NO. 155. . ': w;mm Absolutely Pure i raw powder never varies) A , marvel jot 4nrUT, strength and wholesomeness. , More oonomical than ordinary kinds and cannot $ I old In competition with the multitude of low 'teat, chert weight, alum or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans. Rotal. Buim P$wna CO., 108 Will Strteet, New York. ; I 8old by W C A B Stronach, George T rS'roBach asd J R Ferrall A Co. , B-l-B- CURIES ? LOOK OUT (he 7 j tbi couvniTkia flooded with ADULTERATED LAEBI Examine fsrefuliy what you are using; odor from it when cooking betrays it. J: CASSARD'S "aOTAR BRAND" LAlp. n. ruBx. EERT PACKAGE GUABANTjfD Try it ana you win use no otner. j B. H. WOODEIX, Balelgh, N.L CL Cr. Cacfcard dc Son, BALTIMORE, ltD., ; f- Curanof the Celebrated Star Brand Mild Owwxl Hama and Bacon. 3 i l - - - WW fcatabllafcsd FAY'S r.mtiiLLA Room. Tafcaa tha- laad: aoaa uiaiuJa hka-tta ar traa. a; aWaa Mkaahtna-Wor Wwaapoartioiiai aaay to andjl atraM n4 dwrabtej at half tM ena of at, U M riTLTISJ JCiiASTKK at uaii my B-I-B- CURES i 1 CURE FITS! :' thUnrwrtHm tanas mlft fcrfc aMaadtawaaaTatawarataraMaia. I awaa a radical , awra, Taaaa mm da iiimiiI FIT, IfBJWT ar WmUr ; MMUMtllMaM InmnMNr; I MM B) BR aaaaaS (Br Sad Saw TCMtrt a '""tj B- NJjWS OBSERVATIONS. Ranked the aged historian, is quite ill.;. j '. ' ; ' . Crop reports received in Chicago show excellent 'propecta generally for the wheat crop. -England owns 25,000,000 fowls, and 1.000.000 eetrs.were imported in 1885. This is a foul proceeding. j". -Canadians now complain that Ameri can .fishermenare not only buying but teaiine bait. The alternative ajlevia. tion would seem to be o abate the steal,. ingi ' ; ' " ; i It is ari accepted truism that there can be no - law without a law-giver. There oan be no bribe-taker without a bribe-eiver. - Who - bribed alderman Jaehne? IDr. Oliver Wendell Holme? is re oeiviDr a right royal -welcome in Eng land. Lord Tennyson. Robert Brown ing and Sir Theodore Martin are arrang- ing-for a grand: banquet of authors and artists to- do him honor. - A granddauifhter of Commodore Vanderbilt Miss Gracie Morse, aged 22, tall, lithe, blythe, willowy, grace ful bewitching and with a pretty face, and; wealthy,, too, has gone and married her coachman. -Mrs. Thompson baa been confirmed a" postmaster of Louisville, Ely. Sena tor clack burn opposed her confirmation with might', and mtin, bat old man TifiO.k cra.lla.ntlv nama ti tKf roaniiA ' TKpfa Pere only six opposing votes. ' . -4-Lieut. 0. C. Lemly, U. S. N., who left this country some time ago to act as judge-advocate of the court-martial convened pi the Asiatic station for the trial of paymaster Georee R. Watkins. has arrived at Yokohama, Japan. The young ladies in a Connecticut female seminary have written sealed let ters, to each other, sunder the solemn pledge that, they are not to be opened until the day the recipient is married. It is puppoBed that thef are fall of gush. j; --The race-hoTse known as Pure Rye won the Kentucky Oaks at Louisville. This seems to be something of a reflcct tion on a State that consumes . nothing, fcut' pare ; Boarboni Can't some old Cynthiana distiller develop a winning racer with ';the appetizing and locally appropriate name ot Soar Mash ? 1 A boy'down at San Juan gained an enviable religious religious reputation by committing to memory 1,000 verses of the Bible and was rewarded by the present of x shotgun. His reputation was somewhat smirched, however, when fooi days, after he shpt his grandmother in the right leg. Ti i ; -.Prof. Jonathan Emeriek, of Wil liam and Mary college, has discovered the aerolite which fell in Washington ooonty, P September 14th, 1885; Ue says it is the largest aerolite on re- eirj, 4nd weighs fnily 200 tons, j Its Composition ff is chj-ominium, nickel. alaminum, copper, magnesia and tin. i -4-That is an excellent atorv which domes from Pontiac. 111., to the effect that a train was chased for miles by a vindictive tornado, which finally over took it and : went on - ahead,, whereupon the engineer) opened the throttle and chased the tornado. That is an excel lent story hnt we don't believe it. if They fiahed logetber, he and abe, - ,Beside a shady mountain brook; How full it filled bis heart with glee A. single look I They left the noisy little spring At evenlag, in iu hazy glow ; . : He had not Caught a ulngle thing, ; Mut abe had, tnouga! . ;f ' ' .i'lH Tld-BiU. , :. --A correspondent of the Albany Journal draws attention to the fact that the' deposits in the savings banks of the Btate of New; York have increased from 58,0O0,00O, in 1860, to $437,000,000 in 1885. The depositors are largely working people. That is the reason these noor : workini? men who have $437,000,000 in bank need! so much tarltt protection, and think it derogatory to their manhood to work longer than CONGRESSIONAL. THE I if CREASED PEWniOlf PASSES THE SENATE, BILL foreign mail service members should not lr. Broun, r er-ta, Dtnaadi San. thlaa; far h Bfexleaai Vtraaa. 7. CURES PENNYRUVAI siILtS "CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH."; Tb Orimlnnt nad Onlj UfBBtB. j fUk Hitlnn Blll.w. ntmrnrt w mri k leM tataaiwi! ladiManbto LADIES. A.k fM Vrwai M -I'klofeestrr' KmelUiT ud uie m umm.t (oclatt - fMmnt) u iu particulars ta UUtr hj mtmwm JMBIE NAME PAP ER. 'J'TLTL-. gal a MmiIIw tOjara. falHlpliii f At Irnul.. 1 Mr raPflM W lUOar her. Haltxtelatilo. P i '. 1 StMMly fr Hbllln. ARMY R11DT TO AMD OIRXISON THS B- 1-B- CURES THRESHING MS! Nimplast. Hurt VoraUft, Kconomical, and Parfwt la uv wum no artvin; clevns it nvai fur narket. THRESHING ENGINES aawSnila. and nvmmr4 laBfleaaeaiftrMt rU7. Send (or lUuatratod eataloco. ' ; - i A . U . FARDUNAR.! Peaaarlraala AgiUmUmrl Wavka, i ULSTIR S VOXtJNTKBK. ' if arcs os ;dubxik London, May 17.- Three' thousand men belonging to 'the London volun teers, and one hundred officers of the same force; have offered to join any army put in the field by Ulster in rebel lion against home rale, lhe volunteers it is statedv oner to equip themselves and to fight in the Ulster cause without pay or reward so long as their t services may be needed. The orangemen - of Lurgan 1 county Armagh, are enrolling themselves in military associations or aranized for the -7 purpose of resisting borne rule govern ment. It is stated that in the event of an Ulster rebellion a loyalist expedition will be' ready to march on Dublin, leaving strong garrisons in Ulster and an army at observation on the "Shannon. Mr. John U. A. Macdonald. member for the Edinburg and 8t. Andrew's universities, presented in the house of commons: ? tonight a petition against granting .home rule to Ireland. The petition was signed by 106,894 Scotch men. It-was one and one-quarter mils long and; weighed -274 pounds, and was borne into the hoUBO on the shoulders of six staiwart attendants. Washinotos, May 19. ;Snatk. After routine; business in the Senate today, Mr. Hoar gave notice' that to morrow morning he would call up the bill disposing of the Alabama awards. The Staten island bridge bill Was taken up and Mr. McPherson addressed the Senate, upon it until 2 O'clock. The pension bill was placed before the Sen ate, the pending question being a motion of Mr. MoPherson to recommit the bill to the committee with instructions to submit to the Senate an estimate of the expense that' would be incurred by its passage. . Mr. Mcpherson's motion to recommit was rejected; 14 to 28. The question recurred on Mr Blair's amendment to Mr. Van Wyck s amendment. Mr. Van Wyck's amendment is to add to the bill a section providing that no soldier under this act should receive a pension of less than $8 a month. Mr. Blair's motion was to make the provision read: "No pension paid under any law to any sol dier hereafter shall be rated at less than $4 a month." . Mr. Blair modified his amendment so as to include sailors, marines, &c, and it was agreed; to. Mr. Logan moved to make the minimum pension $b Lost; 20 to 21. Mr. Van Wyck's amendment, as amended by Mr. Blair, was agreed to. Ah amendment offered by Mr. Logan, extending the provisions' of the bill to. men who had served three months, was agreed to. At Mr. Ingalla' suggestion the bill was amended so as; to apply to men depen dent upon their own ,'exertions" in stead of upon their own "labor," so that there might be no question as to its application to men who earned a liveli hood by intellectual labor: Mr. Brown said that inasmuch as the people of the Northern States had Bent here Senators and Representatives of both; politic! parties who favored the passing of laws increasing pensions, he did hot believe the people of the South would Object to it. Though some people of . the North thought Congress was going too far, yet the Senate saw that the Northern con stituencies of both parties sent : to Con gress men Who favored these pensions, and we must therefore conclude that the majority of the tai-payers of the North approved 'their action.; : It was to be iUDDOsed that if the neocle of the South had been in the Union at the time of the war,; and the army had been their army and the wax had been with a for eign nation, th people i of the south would have gone as far in granting pen sions as had the people of the North, He (Brown) would1 therefore vote- for the bill, bat pressed on the Debate the pro priety aha duty of passing as ssooh as possible the Mexican pension bill : and also a bill to pension the few surviving soldiers of the Indian wars, some of whom, -he said, resided; in Georgia. Unless something were done' for the Mexican soldiers, Mr. Brown would have to withhold his assent from future pension bills, i I The bill was passed: yeas S4,hays 14. The vote was as follows : yeas, Messrs. Aldrich, Allison, Blair, Bowen. Brown, Conger, Callom, Trye, George, Gibson, Hale,; Hampton, Harrison, Hawley, Hoar, Ingalls, Logan, McMillan. Ma- hone, Manderson, Junior,:, Mitchell, of Oregon, Morrill, Payne, - Plumb. Riddleberger, Sawyer, Sewell, Sher man, Spooner, Van Wyck, Voorhecs, Walthall and Wilson, of Maryland 34; nays, Messrs. -Beck, Berry,' Blackburn, all, Cockerell, hustis, Gorman, Gray, Jones, of Arkansas, McPherson, Mor gan, Saulsbury, Vest and Whitthorne -14- The bankruptcy bill was again laid before the Senate and after an ineffec tual attempt of Mr. Riddleberger to se cure an executive session, the Senate at 5.4.5 p. m.' adjourned.,. ' HOUSB. Mr. Diblbe, of South Carolina, from the committee on laws regulating the election of the rresidont, reported' a joint resolution proposing a .constitu and asked that have their atten tion diverted from the issue by the use of the term "subsidy." Mr. McAdoo, of New Jersey, opposed the proposition to subsidise American ships. Mr. Holmes, of Indiana, earn estly opposed the policy of subsidies and contended that Kthat policy would have the effect of building up Ameri can commerce. This closed the general debate and the committee rose and the House at 5 o'clock adjourned. HOMBUXK. The ExelUmnt la Eag-Iand and Irlaa Hourly IurravalnK-. London, May 19. In the house of commons this evening Timothy Har rington, home rule member for Dublin,, moved a second reading of the bill pro viding for the election by ballot of the poor-law guardians in Ireland. The Orange members bitterly opposed tbe motion. John Morley supported the motion and after a not delete it was carried by a vote of 207 U 105. The announcement of the result was received with, cheers. The conservatives have arranged -to hold a monster loyalist de monstration against the homo rule bill in the city of Gainsborough, Lincoln shire, tonight. Paroell has organized a counter-demonstration in the same place and has sent T. M. Healy there to take charge of it and make the principal speech. Lord Salisbury was accorded a perfect ovation when he appeared on the stage of Her Majesty's theatre this afternoon to address a conservative meeting assembled there under the auspices of the "Primrose league." All the auditors wore Lord Beaconsfield's favorite flower (the primrose.) In his address Salisbury declared that toryism was growing rapidly among all classes in the empire. He said he felt it to be his duty in these critical times to urge all loyal men to combine for the Bupport of religion and the empire. He denied that he had recommended as the best means of governing the Irish peo ple the adoption of a twenty years co ercion pol:oy. lie bad only advised the maintenance of law and order in Ireland. He reiterated his advice to the Irish to emigrate from . Ireland if they could not prosper and be contented under British rule, and urged the con servatives to support liberal unionist candidates in the coming election where conservatives could not certainly be chosen. laaaat tbr Slays Her Ttor Chlldrea aud Kills tenralf. Whmlinq.W Va.,May 19. A terrible murder and suicide occurred in Lincoln ooonty, this State. Monday night. Mrs. Margaret jDonaiu a wiiow.; became ' in sane from religious fanaticism and im agined she had been called upon by the Lord to sacrifice the lives of herself and her' three children to the Divine Wrath. Early in the evening she threw herself upon her knees and spent several hours in wild ravings. She arose and arming herself with a large, sharp carving knife made her way to a room ' occupied by her three daughters, aged 12, 10 and 8 years, cat their throats, and plunged the blade into her own heart. The bodies were discovered yesterday by neighbors, who state that the room was so bespattered with blood as to bear strong resemblance to a slaughter-house. BTw Tark Ctta Fntarat. Niw York, May 19. Green & Co.'s renoit on cotton futures says: lhe "short interest on the old crop con tinned anxious, and with a liberal spot business covering was lively.-: Prices were quite buoyant and the advance ef 8al0 points retained a good support up to the close. Less cheerful ; crop ac count later in the day and fair support from abroad assisted the upward turn, hile the movements of some of the nrincinal onerators revived the Lucres r. ' C r Z . .. . sion of an active market on the balance 01 the crop year, ine new crop sym pathised with the improving tone to some extent, but as a role continued to be handled with caution. COBBESPOSDMCE FROM THE VOCB,- TBI'S CAPITAL. Hatlcnal aad Carlla Vltaalaim Chicago, May 19. -After a fortnight's struggle the strike of the plaining mill employees here for eight hoars work at tional amendment creating and defining ten hoars pay has come to ao end. The tne omoe 01 second v joe rresiaeni i men nave torm&iiy aaeu w uc wea B- I-B- CURES 1 1 . Jak Snarp' Brailwar B. B, In m H tlvry Handi. Albany, May 17. Judge Alton B Parker, of the supreme court in this city, appointed Saturday as a receiv er of the; Broadway railway company John O Brieb. chairman of the demo cratio State committee, in a suit brought to wind ud the affairs. of that defunct corporation by the attorney general. Naturally widespread surprise and com ment followed tM announcement. Of the United States. House calendar The House then went into committee of the whole (Mr Hammond, of Geor gia, in the chair) on the Senate amend ments to the postoffice appropriation bill. . ; ; In the course of the discussion, which consumed the remainder of the session, Mr. Dockery, of Missouri, announced his opposition to the amendment because U was coercive legislation; because it assumed to aid commerce at the expense of the foreign postal service; because it held out he persuasive idea of cpmpe t ion, when in fact there was bo compe tition except on two lines ; because it would operate as a hindrance to the re storation . of American commerce ; be cause it was a positive violation of the international treaty of Borne ; because it was a gift of public money to private corporationsj the larger, part: of which would go to the , f acihC Mail steamship company, offioered, owned and controlled by Kasaell sage. Jay uould and Sidney Dillon.' .He commented severely upon the action of the Senate in adopting the amendment in violation of its own rules. He argued that a subsidy would not have the effect of building: np the com merce of the country, and in support of his argument be quoted scatistics to show that from 1866 to 1877 (which he termed the 'subsidy period") the ton nage of the couptry steadily Tell off. Mr. Bingham, of Pennsylvania, sup ported the: amendment, denying that there wm anything coercive in it or that there was any subsidy in it. Mr, Dingley, of Maine;l in a brief speech pointed oat the needs of the back at the old terms, stipultting only that their wages be paid weekly. This was agreed to. The mill owners Je clare they will discharge no one to make places for the strikers. LLEWXAM .ral T Special Cor. Nbws and Obsirvbr. I Washington, May 18. The friends of the Blair education bill, feeling assured that the best chances of its passage lie in a speedy consideration of the measure, will make an effort to have it taken up at an early day. Mr. Reid assures me that 11 is nis Deiiei me uui wiu pass tne House with little or no amendment and become a law before the end of the present session. The action of the loute Monday did not materially dam age its chances of consideration. tLKGI8LtTIVC LORX. Some time during the present week General Cox will call up for action the report of his committee on reform in the civil service on the Warder-Stealey in vestigation. The report recommends the dismissal of Warder from the em ploy of the House. If the banking and currency commit tee can secure the floor in the House to morrow (Tharday) according to assign ment an effort will be made to pass one of the bills providing for the issue of small silver certificates. THS FIGHT FOR TUB V1TTIKTH Congress will be a desperate one. TheJ tvepublicans will strain every fiber on their political being to capture the next House, and they openly assert that they expect ' to accomplish their purpose through the disatisfaction which is sup posed to exist in the Democratic ranks. t therefore behooves our people to be their guard and to ''immediately and at once'rsit down on all alleged "inde pendent" candidates for Congress. York's record in the last Congress ii a too recent illustration of "independent ism"! for uy intelligent voter to be caught with such bait this fall. There are only two parties in the national leg islature, and the man who comes here must co-operate with one orathe other of these,' or nis district might as well not be represented at all, for he will not accomplish anything in the way of leg islation. The Republican, of this city, states that it is probable that Senator Kenna will not except the chairmanship of the Democratic Congressional com mittee, but this, I learn from good au thorities, is untrue. I 1 A "SOCIXTT" 8CCCKS3. j The social event of the season occured ant Friday and Saturday. This was lhe grand performance of the Kirmes, under;; the ' patronage of the leading lOClOtt" ladies f WaekuiKiOB aod fnlr the benefit of the Homeopathic hospital .a i i rWl 1. in taw city, xne scene wu quo w gorgeous splendor, exceeding anytning of the kind ever before witnessed in Washington. The dance of the nations was representative of the characteristic grace and native movement 01 every race of people on the globe, mingling barbaric posturing with the latest mod ern figures of scientific terpsichore. Among the handsomet toilets shown was that worn by Mrs. Senator v ance, con sisting of a pearl tinted satin, pointed train, and V-shaped corsage, lhe re ceipts were large (it cost a V to see it) and everything went off "according to Hoyle," or, rather, the mesdames Uoyle, ; under whose management it was. And now "society" is shaking its right arm off in self-congratulation. 1 1 A SURFR1SBD SHBRITV. A one-legged negro named Frank Merritt stole a horse and buggy at Clinton a few days ago. He drove the animal the 400 miles to this city and sold the outfit to a Mr. Keith for $75. On Saturday he was arrested on infOT mation and looked op to await the ar rival of a North Carolina offioer. Sher iff Murphy, of Sampson, arrived here Monday and proceeded to police head-J quarters to take possession 01 tne pris oner. : He was rather astonisnea to learn that the bird had flown, having escaped the ' previous night, at what - a m 1 hour the lieutenant in charge 01 ine- station could not tell. The city is be in e Bcdured for his recapture, but at this writing he has not been, found Unless he is retaken . today sheriff empty hand rntt is a bad have gone . to ASHEVILLE EBTEBPBISB. Tfei PttpU Tat a B100.000 Dbt for StrMl lBnproTmnta, Llffbts aad Vf tr Wrk. Special to the Nbws and Obsbrvxr. - i AsHBViLLX, May 18, 1886- ; The election here in regard to the proposition submitted to the voters by the city council, as -to whether the city should incur a bonded debt ! of $100, 000 for water works, streets and lights, was carried. This oity is irrepressible and its brilliant future seems cei tain. All classes and political parties serened anxious for the success of the measure1. .Murphy will return homa ed. Xhe sheriff says Die lot and thinks he may Philadelphia, where he has friends. IiLRWXAH Tb Eplacpal ConTntlon. - THB FIRST SAY'S PROCIID1N08. : Special to the Nxwi and Obsbrvxr. . : Tarboro, May 19.: ! The regular annual convention of the Episcopal church for the diocese ef North Carolina met here at 11 o'clock, at Calvary church, and after divine ser vice organised by the election of Rev. Dr. A. S. Smith, of Ringwood, presi dent; Rev. Gilbert Higgs, of Warren ton, secretary. The convention sermon was preached by Rev. J. W. Murphy, of Hillsboro. It was a cogent, logical discourse on the duties of members of the church, clerical and lay. ; ;- ; Tw Strings tm bla Bow. Lynchbdro, Va., May 19. W. D. Hammond, of Richmond, wanted for embezzlement, was captured near this city last night. After a hearing before the police court he acknowledged that he had two wives living; one in Rich mond and one in Campbell county. He is held for the xtiohmond authorities. , A Fatal Explosion and Fir. Jirsxy City, N. J., May 19. A fire, preceded by a loud explosionoccurred in Franck's chemical factory at Hobokeh today. 1 hree men at work on the third floor were rescued after being badly burned and one was also injured by fall ing from a third story window, All these will probably die. JaVHAsTeDlavS ar Aa94B)aa.ar WRITES A TOBY CRANKY LBTTXR TO A CHI CAGO PAPXR. Chicago, May 19. -The editor of a leading daily paper here received a let ter last night from the anarchist Par sons, in reply to an article : which ap peared in the paper on the treatment of mobs. It is a very : incoherent docu ment and is literally as follows : "Mankind, mob or military, are sus tained in their actions by a majority of brain fitted at the time by the circum stances they appreciate to control. Thoroughly educate a community phys ically, morauy, mausirtauy, uolitivaUj. . a. i r . . correct instructions in ana ; metnoa tot application of righteously inculcated disposition will result in justice, multum m parvo. lhe lame, cured, will throw away their crutches. Men of enterprise and labor, many of your kind, wise and otnerwise, are sinxing in tne siuggisn current of the river of despair. The possessors of life-saving apparatus on shore are refusing to nse it because they own it and claim the only right to nse the same, and refuse to satisfy the brute force of no simply educated public sense of property rights. Brute force in the near future will be arbitration. The acceleration of its adoption will be hur ried probably by the dangerous brute force of despair dynamite. ' This world is a garden. We must keep hoeing oat the weeds proud,' powerful and other wise obnoxious so that useful plans will have a better chance to exalt their existence. This struggle will obtain and result that the fittest may survive.)" Aatbr Traaarr Goa Wroa. Harrisonburg, Va., May 19. The grand jury of the county court today found seventeen indictments against Samuel R. Sterling; late treasurer of this county, eleven for embezzlement and six for misusing and misappropri ating public money. Use Dr. Pierce's "PelleU" for all bilioui at tacks. Tat Aaarcttlsts. THB GRAND JURY TAKING CP THB CASKS. I Chicago, .May 19. The grand jury took up the hearing of cases of the an arch is ts this, morning. The first thing done Was the reading to the jury of the testimony which was raxon at tne in quests held on the remains ot officers Miller, Florin, Redden, Diegan, Sheo hon and Barrett, who died from the effects of wounds received iu tho Huy- marketriot. After thia tbe witnesses of the tragedy Were heard. Strlkars Glv In. Si Louis, May 19. The striking em ployees of the Southern barb were coni- nanv held a meeting yesterday ana re solved te return to work; on the plan of tea hoars. The president of the com-1 fiahy refused to received them back un ess they should promise to make up during the week all the time lost. The promise was given and today the com pany renewed operations. A Revival f lafSaatry. ; Sharon, Pai, May 19. The Sharon iron company's works at this place were lighted last night after au idleness of nearly a year, and are " running in fall blast. The indications point to a steady ran. Every furnace in SEaron is now w is blast. i r til A llat II as'. VOCR UTTUt CHILDREN BURNKD TO DBATH. Akron, Ohio, May 19. The house of a f widow, Mrs. Mary Mooney, was burned at midnight, with four of her children. The widow was awakened by the amos, and taking her youngest childl aged 2 years, in her arms, leaped from a window, telling the other chil dren to jump after her. They did not -do so and perished in the flames. Mrs Mooney and ner brother-in-law were badly burned in endeavoring to rescue the children. Her brother-in-law will Drobabry die. ' The child which Mrs Mooney had in her arms when she leaped front the window is the only one of the family unhurt. A :Wealdb Mardrrs saleld. Savannah, Ga., May 19. In a quar rel between Capt. Lowery, of the British bark Lydia, and steward Harritxman to- dar; Harritxman shot at Lzowerv. lhe ball grazed his head, causing a light ) m. . m li 1 n . r. wound, ine captain ien ana ttarnts man, thinking he had killed him, turned and shot himself through the heart, i ' l b Wrh tth.m Flam. Akbov, Ohio, May 19. A disastrous fire occurred here this morning, in which four lives were -lost and a number of persons injured. B-I-B- CURES F OB KENT. i ' " "" , , KTn -mna loriro.- will raUarainfflpa quickly Uian any othor known ma- aj: Rheumatism, AearaJirta, ifi1 M"rtE)r, Borca, Frotilrtrftea, Backache. Ontnsr.Sore Thiwrt, IgclaUca. Wuunda, Headacha, igouwai-i eprauia. eta. race cta. a bottle. Sold by all L . TT . regiawreg lTaa-jlarK, am I Proprieton, balUnxtra, XL, TS.&A. V--: DR. BULL'S COUGH SYRUP For the cure of Cougns, Colds, Hoarse ness, Croup, Asthma, Bronchitis, Whooping Cough, Indpiert Coo sumption, and for the relief of coo sumptive persons in advanced stages of the Disease. For Sale by all Drua gists. Price, 25 cent. B-I-B- CURES pffl. STORE The large front room and office. 2nd floor. ately occupied by J. P. Barrett, over: the tore Of J. iu. 8Sn. No. 218 Fatetterina ( For terms apply ti Wm. B. Grimea or F.; HvwonH. p mart )1m. B- B The Great Bargain House of Raleigh. We kicked up a racket last week and we are going to kick up a bigger one this week, as we are go.ng to open new goods and some great bargains. So look out! Big job in Violin, Banno and Guitar Et rings, at 4c a set; fresh from the manufacturers and a good article. Pins and needles 2c a paper. Twenty-four sheets N ote Paper for 5c Best Calico in the market, 4c a yard. Best 4-4 Sheeting for 6c a yard. Straw Hats for men atld boys from 6c up. Good Ticking 124 c a yard. Now if you want to save your money call and (see me. New and advanced ideal are crowding put the old ones; 'pluck" instead of luck; cash instead of .credit; brains instead of cheek; and science and ability are beating back and crushing into oblivion moonshine mer chants with their tough and tremendous long- time prices. Our Millinery Department will be filled this with new hats and flowers and such goods as are needed as tbe Bea8onadvances4These goods ' " f are bought in New York from first-class houses and the most fashionable in the city and not from auction houses, as I understand is re- ported by many persons in this city. They art bought for cash and at cost, so I can sell them cheaper than those houses who buy from drummers and on credit. The drummers are going all through the country at an expense of from $3 to 10 a day, besides paying heavy license fees. Who pays all these expenses f Wby you people who buy goods from houses who buy from drummers and on; credit. The consumer has all these expenses to pay. Come and buy your Millinerv from iia and save all these expenses. uespecuuuy submitted to the cash trade only. VOLNEY PUBSELL k CO. , ; No. 10 East Martin Street. . CUREfthreDEAF PECK'S PATIXT IMPROVED CUSHIONED EAR DRUMS 1-mufuti.t aaan ma auuM md fmkm ka work af ta utnral irmm. InrUM. aaaifenaM. aad alwajn fa 'poritioa. A'l oavmatioa aad ma whbpm kaH dbtiartiy. 8a4 forillaitrated bonk wttk l:iinoBlli, FREE. Addiwi ar call aa f. HISCOX. 849 Braadway, N' Tack. aUatloa tU papar. V CURES NTKNDINO ADVJCBTIPJERS should ad L dress GEO. P. ROWELL k CO., ' 10 Sprue Street, New York City, i Worn Bcr.avrr T.twt or- 1.nooTawwpiFa B B- CURES B-I-B- CURES coiMsur.iPTiorj. I aaTaapoaiTaraadwfortahoartUKriS f Mia want klaa and o( loaf a a Mwaaaaaaar y faith . . a. Taaxpriaa abOGDM, DM, W raarl Sk, Maw Tars B-I-B- CURES 1 1 1 1
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 20, 1886, edition 1
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