Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / Oct. 18, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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i t i i t ! ' ! BE8TOB Ymr Ama.Tn nn ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' TARBORCr. N. TTTTTP i "-TltMrm i - ' 1 1 " PiOSSEY BATTLE, Attorney and Cotmcallor at Law, f Offices: Tarteroir. C. I Rocky Mount, N. 0. la Tarboro office i fpr MnWrfmr ' Rocky Mount balance of week. 8- Adjustment ot claims a specialty. pAUL JONES, Wty and Councelor at Law TARBORO, N. C. , r .T MARTTN i J ,' Attorhet at Law j . Practices in the CourtB of Ed?- combe, Martin and Pitt. Office rear of Doodle Pender's Store. Tabboeo, N. C. j J'TOHN L. BKIDGER & SON, J Attorneys-at-Law. TARBORO - I - Jf. C- 14 It -J, ti. -A. (JILLIAlf . UOHHIU gilliam VILLI AM ' & SON ; Attbrneys-al-j-aw, ::.;V j TARBORO', N. C.j Wlii practice in the Counties of Edgecombe, Halifax and Pitt, and In the Courts of, the First Judicial District, and in the Circuit and Supreme Courts at Raleirh. i ianl8-lv. r p. iran, m. d. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Tarborolir.O- 1 Office next door to Hotel How ard. 5 j 30 ly VV 7 G EDWARDS, SICtN AND HOUSE PAINTEB, : Paper hanging !a specialty. 40tf. . TARBORO, N. C. 1 O THE PUBLIC. I am Prepared to do alt work in the v , : j - Undertaker's Business at the shortest notice. Having eon nected with mv shot) the rerjalrinff business. All work Lef at my shgp snail nave Jrrompt attention. PRICES MODERATE, Also a first-olass HEARSE for hire Thanking my friends for their 'ormer patronage, I hope ;o merit the same, should they n&el anything nthe : f . f . V Undertaking I Repairing Business My Place is on Pitt Street Three Dcors frcnktbe Corner jof Main. : Jt . Simmons. - J. I . WALLS, Fashionable :-: Tailor PHt St., one door-below LJ Widell& l Tarborojif O. Fine Full Drees and Evening Tailor Made Suits. , The term well dressed ex tends from the neck to he foot of the subject. " - WCutting, repairing and cleaning Cine at short notice. !' dti THE NEW YORK WEEKLY DEB ALD ?IPoy 1894- WILL BE WlfilOUT QUESTION AME PICA'S Leading Family Paper- Tbo reputation that the Weekly Herald has enjoyed for many years or being the best home newspaper in jthe; land will be materially added to during tbo year of 1891. No paiDS or expense will be spared to make it in every department the most -reliable, interesting and instruct! ye of all weekly newspaper publications. . It will be improved in many ways. A number of new features and departs ments will be added. The latest develop ment in all fields of contemporaneous hu man interest will be ably discussed Qpni week to week by accomp.isbed writers, THE NEWS OF THE WORLD will be given iu a concise but complete form. Every important or Interesting event, either at home or abroad, will be daly described in the columns of the Weekly Herald. '.' ! In politics the Herald is absolutely in dependent and sound, fit tells the rights and wrongs of all sides without fear. Farmers and stock raisers cannot afford to be without the Weekly Qerald during the ceming year. It wil contain a regular department each week 'devoted exclusive y to subjects of timely interest to them and giving many valuable suggestions and new idens. i f The women and children of the ' land will find in the Weekly Herald a welcome visitor. The household and children's pages will be both instructive and. enter taining. Thev will abound in hints and receipts wbich women so much value. A brilliant array of novels and short stories by the best writers id America and England has been secured, so that fiction will be one of the most attractive features in the Weekly Herald duripg J891. In fact, the Weekly Herald will be a magazine of the highest order, combined with a complete newspaper. NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE. Only $i.OO a Year tiBHP fob Sahflx Copt. - Address - . . THE WEEKLy HERALD, ' : Hkba!ld Squabb, : . j NEW YOKE. FOR FALLING HAIR, USE CULLEY'S- Bald Head Preparation jT desire to say to the public and the la dies especially that I now have my Hair preparation so that I can arrest the falling out of the hair within 12 to 15 dayB, and' this ycu will readily see if you will give it a trial. Hair also thickens from its use. It his no unpleasant odor and leaves no dneer contracting neuralgia, cold, &c . Mus taches easily thickened up by its use. Young men will please make a note of this. Nothing asked to show the troth fulness of the above except a fair trial of CtiLLKT'a Bald Hiad Pbipakatioh. Good references given to show that the hair is thick if not thicker than ever. . ALFRED CULLEY, i ' 3tI Tarboro. N. C AT THE GMDY STAND AT 10 Cents Per Ponnfl, ALL KINDS. THE BEST ARD IS THE SAFEST INVESTMENT I EVER MADE. f here are eingle reUil shoe stores In oar large cities which sell 2,000 pairs of shoes a day, making s net proBt of $250,000 a year. We sell shoes low. but we sell a great many pairs, the clear profit on oar ladies', mi a' and chUdraoa' shoes U at least ten cents a pair, and on o tns and boys' shoes 15 cents a pair. W'e ahail j haolUh shoe stores in each of the fifty largest cUte of the U. 8., and if they sell only 300 pairs of shoes a day they wonkl earn $525,000 a year. . We should be able to pay a yearly dividend of $5J5 a share, or over 50 per cent, a year on the investment. We sell the stock at S40 a share. The price mart inevitably be much more than (10 a share. No stock has ever been sold at less than this price, which is its par value. Stock non-assessable. Incorporated, Capital $1,000,000. "Vie have over 1, COO stockholders; and the number is increasing daily. Borne of the principal stock holders lire : T s. WaHhir. N. Y. i T. J. Potter, Bortoa , K. A. JUI. Jr.. Chicago, J.Tj. Campbell, Cbiearo, W. JL ' KTnDh Littl. Rock. Ark. 1. 1 CRiclw ChicWo , J. F. Turner, Fhlla.1 B. Harding, N. Y.t E. 1 Pirnt Suiti. Creek, Mich., F. V. HttllmeVAriade! nTy Write for s prospectus containing the names of our stockholders, eUv, or tend an order for ttock enetoting cathier'i check, eath or money order. Orders taken for one or more shares. Price. $10 s share. DEXTER SHOE CO., "sVolIIilr1 . , Agents IVatitmL SJE St-- r 1 - K ; OplnmEallia fiS Is: 5'? ' S ''tpain.Book of psr JE b . t ricularssent FREE. If r .' - a : i.woolley.m.d. Atlanta, Oi. v.LCiiK,WiUtehaUSfc THE SUN ! The first of American Xewspapert, CHARLES A. DANA, Editor. The American Constitation, the Amer ican Idea, the American Spirit.' These first, list aud all the time, foreyeM ' The Sunday Sun Is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in ti e world. - ; Price 5c. a cony. B mail. 2 a vear Daily, hy ma l. , - - - $6 a year Daily nd Sunday, by mail, - $8 a year The Wetkly - - . j . a year Address THE SUN, New Xork. Administrator's Notice. flavins qualified as administrator of Gracv C. Htallirir?. decssed. latarJ E1ita. Combe county, Korth Carolina, tbis is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to eihibit.them to the undersigned on or before the 12ih day of April, 1895, or this notice will be plead in bar of iheir recovery. ) All per sons indebted to said estate , will please make immediate payment. ; t . This lgth day of April, 1894. ! HENRY JQHNSTOH, Tt Adm'r of Oracy C. S'allings. Administrator's Notice, The undersigned having q-ialiQed as adm'r of T. B Barlow, deceased, this is to notify all persons owing the said deceased, to make immediate payment, and all per sons having claims against the said T. B. Barlow, to present them for payment within one year from date, or this notice win De p'eaa in bar oi ineir ; recovery, This 3rd day of May, 1894. I W. L BARLOW, Adm'r. 1 J. L. Bridgers & Son, Att'ys. ' 6t M a 0 FKESH CAHBYf i rrPHYS ? ' v -" s i m w-m -w mr - I KXaBH BV - I WW! HiUll CI nu UAL Vlf W I int itUKti OF The most effacUve tkia porlfytng tifyln soap to tbe world. It to tbe only prerentlTB of pimple, blackheads, id, toag a, and oily kln, red, rough buds with shaiw 1m naiU, -dry, thin, and railing hair, and simple baby blemishes. It U so becaaa It trikes at the cause of moat complex ional dijflgnraUotiB, Tlx., th x Clooo id, Ixarr atto, In.icxD, OvxBwoEKan, ob Slcqoisx FOR FACIAL BLEMISHES raabea, freckles, bitea and stints of Insects, Irritations, yellow, oUy, and mothy skins, ehanncs, and undue perspiration. CCTI CTKA. BOAP, because of Its delicate modi cation, U the most sootbing, eooUnc, purify ln. and healing applicaUon, as wU as being beyond an comparison tbe purest, sweetest, and most refreshing of toilet, bath, and nnrsery soaps. Sale greater than combined ales of aU other skin and complexion soaps. Bold throughout the world. PrletSe. Poms Xtaco and Chs. Co,, gota BcLmLw "Ail .boat the Skin. Balp. d kiyl TIN SHOP. I AM DOING ! and .13, BUSINESS as chean as anv. A J ' I do repairing ID Tin, Iron and Copper promptly. j.t. ward, Austin Buildirg. I make tbe mcst suDerior Cnffea Fot ever effered to the public 13tf Williams & Oulley, r5 VJVDER MOTEL tfARRAR i , TARBORO, N. 0. TASTELESS IS JUST AS CQOD FOP AntltTR WARRANTED. PRICE 50cts. Ail A saw a ffw sa ' ssi tesa Parts Medtotoe Co, Bt-Loala, Mo. wnueeoent snia uun yesr, euu DOeues of GaOTK'8 TASTBLKS8 CUILL TOiTIC sad havs Doosrnt tores gross aireaay uus year. Is all oar ex penenoe of 14 years. In th drug boaineaa, hnvs never suld an article that save saoh aaureraai satis. tOtWn a your Tonic Sours truly, AKNrr.CAJUt CC THE COUPER MAEBLE WOEXS, - 1 U , 118 and 115 Bank Street. ' NORFOLK, VA. J. UA.RaJE8TOCJCOFPiNI8HKr I Monuments, and Gravestcres.L Ready for I-nmedtate Delivery. March SI. 1 C0MHERC1AI C0LLE6E of KENTUCKY UNIVEBSITY r By theWerU OeleaiMsa Evsasltiev. (k ysBS T BwkAwaf mm Bulii LSMattM. ets. L la wpuia a Umiki Caara, aunt SM, taalaaias tatttoa. aaa sa4 kaai. Faaaorrapkr, Trpt WnUaf aaa Tflaararaa laafU Address, W. At, stMITH. LwistMs, tA. BEAUTY Slats rrt xs WW wmmm I I lill I H. ITTT7T7 Pr7TC Tke DwaaoeraUe Bhoald Be rre Trade rmrxj so says tb Ohio rree Tra4er. Fellow-democrata, on what; Issue and on what prom Lie are we to go be fore the people in the oomlnir election? a i. aim to d tans reform? Are we to hold np the emasculated bill that la the only thing now likely to get through as what we mean by tartS re form? Or are we to ask to be again riven power in order that we may re form our own tariff reform? To go in to the campaign in that way ia to go to defeat. The only hope is to raise openly and un equivocally the banner of free trade. . If the domoeratU party does not stand in opposition to the pro tec tire idea, it stands for nothing. And it must be swept aside by some party that does . not voice the damocratie principle. If the dsmocra tie party U to live It must cast" all protectionist out of its ranks. There la no room 1st xor a moderate protectionist, or a local protectionist, or any other kind of a protectionist. Masqnarad infcT as tariff-reform . democrats, they can only bring- the democratic party into contempt and defeat. One protectionist party is enough. That place is already filled by the republican party. Let the democrats who cannot stand free trade go there, and let us as sist them to go... The country wanta a free-trade party party, and so long1 as SrotectlonlsU control democratic pol :y and dictate democratic tariff sched ules, the rapidly growing body of free traders who care little for political names and much for political princi ples will refuse to jom our ranks or fol low our lead. And why should they? Why should the people, whom the last election showed were conscious of the robbery of the tariff, and who Kan in come more and more con scions every day since then, put further trust in the sincerity of , a party that can produce nothing better than the Wilson bill, and then not even stand np to that. The schoolmaster la iad.r! and such an economic edmvatinn nf tv, masses is going on as never before. By wounty on sugar ine AlcKlnley bill proved even to Drotectioniata that m. protective daly was the equivalent of a bounty. The Wilson bill tnrlrlw ing1 for trusts Is furniahinto honest 1 Protectionists another great object esson, which the republican papers are busy in explaining; to them the lesson that protection is never in the lnLreata of the workman, but always In the ln- vereais oi me monopolist. These papers are teaching: wiser than they know. In showing np the iniquity of the sugar trust they are ahowing- the iniquity of the steel-rail trust. In ahnwine . injustice and wrong of protecting dem ocratic sugar growers and coal barons tney are ahowlnsr the wranff of nm. tecUng a republican steel-rail pooL a wall paper trust and a combination t glass manufacturers. The honest nrotaailnnlal ana already begun to doubt, will, now that tus xrienas inns snow nun the evils of protection, berin to believe' that th Chicago platform was right when it de- V a a . . m - - ciarca protecuon too a rrand. The republican protest ajralnst th TPIlar, bill Is doing- free trade work in the re- yu oncan camp, mc tun ley, in his p ro ts Jt ion run mad, did more to educate the people on free trade lines than all the free trade omnixatinna In tVia country; and McKinley'a work is now being completed by the republican press.- : - Free trad el Why should we fear to announce it? Trade is. iU!u.tJnn The wider trade extends, the faatar and the higher the advance of human progress. Civilised men mnst trade. Without trade we should b amme. Why not, then, trade freely? A man's right to the fruit of hi toil la not com- i plete without the freedom to exehnm it. To abridge that freedom ia ta limit ' that right To hamper exchange, ' ueT tnut 10 abandonment of detn whether by a customs duty or a toll I ocratlo principle. gate, is, to that extent, to deny the ri?ht ot property the right of each There are many surprises in this man to hi own earning. If trade be ' world, and one thing that seems to be good, free trade must be good. "Freer' , the most productive of them U the pro The magio of that word haa cheered ' tec tire tariff system. Latfil we w it- mo poiaoeopner ana inspired the poet. It haa 'ever been the watchword of those who stood for rlirht airainst wrong. It haa ever stirred the heart of the masses. Why should those who proclaim the equality of human rights zesr xree iraoe. it is not an enemy to dread, but a friend to welcome. Tom I Johnson to the Iroquois Club ot Chi cago. WOULD NOT HELP THEM.- FaUnrs of Democrats to Adjsatt the Tart ST IXwe Hot Hla 1-r-VilTaae I Failure to pass a tariff bill dnrinir the present session of conrress wonld not help the republican partv in the least. The neoole wonld nlainlw bm tV. cause of the failure. They would see that tariff reform inch as thw A. manded in 1899 was defeated by the re- J publican, aided bv a lit tin band of a a. ' eistanta aitting on the democrat! aid oi toe senate cnamoer. All but nine or ten democratic senators are will hi o .Sal a a ...... and anxious to give the country tariff a . , t ... . rciorm on in lines taia aown in tne democratic platform of 1893. The republicans in a body And a few democratic renegade have destroyed the consistency ot the bill a it passed the house. They have Imported Into t A A A w s a . . . . outrageous oascruninationa and violations of principle.- They say, With Reneirade Gorman af Oiani. - - - - jority must accept these utterly Inde-, aenaiDie imporxauona ana violate prin- cipiea ana pieagea, or the McKlnley ZJ1 ,Una , i This Is no secret. The people under- stand It perfectly, and they Are not go- ,f Ter th PfT which, with the aid of a few repubUcan emissaries In the democratie camp, prevent the ao- complishment of the reform which ther imperatively demanded In 1893. They are not going to punish the democrat for not doing what the republicans and their assistants made it impossible to do- ! 1. t erwi iv. a. i . .. . am io uxsi jjruuooicea, tnciuatng not only the sugar trust but many other odious combinations for the practice of extortion, dominated the repudliean party and dictated the monstrous scheme of legalized robbery embodied in the McKlnley bill. , They mad the ufianl.. tA nit iVul- I it.. w am iii.iw i . vmw avana wi.u -w - - v. w. v. u.wa the republicans gave them more than elassl Why this ocstent suecession of even they had the Lmpndenoe to de strtloe and labor riots, eaased by re mand. : i duetiona of - wage, or efforts to sub The people saw. and understood all etltute foreign oontract . labor for this and they expressed their opinion of It with tremendrou emphasis In 1800 ; ana again in-1893.- They Jiave not changed their minds, as will be seen in due time. ; k The same malign influence prevail now . aafmntayTn-uiewpuoncaaj party i And to a limited extent Autonr men -cau mmseiTei democrat. The republicans of both houe,lalthfully erring the combinations' formed for purposes of spoliation, have foerkt "foT froriMlou ot the Wilson bill with the obstinacy f pld attor ys or men who are themMlvea bene IcUriea of the spoliation syaUax They ud their coadjutors On thoormocratw we of the ehamber have .Jctpt the country waiting for month while they have been applying themselves to the ak of emasculating the "Wilson bm ud eouTcrthig a measure ofireXorm Into a measure of spoliatton. ' v : The people under Und .this, , They have not changed their minds. They de not like to be robb4 any or thai they did two or four year agoi , Thsy prefer now, as they did lhn, the party which is least under the domination of Organised robber, not the party which Is wholly under that nd inMLtu. And which iA larnlv TaAMi.L eonrrea bv man t,v v . rlched by that system of licensed rob bery which ha been tolerated only be cause Its parent V J uam awa in false name of protection. ' That party rests under a popular condemnation whfefc will u v. less sever if it shall succeed, with th via ox me uormsn and Iiul renegades, in defeating the reform - whieh th. I have been commanded by the people to ar- - vvuivh sum aMaminiwri UOtl ami umniuMiiAn a effect. That rmrtr af rrai.J .. a.i r a. . m . e licensed plunder haa fallen never more to rise. Chicago lie raid. GOLDEN WORDS. Kaearpe tree Pr td-t rWrwUars Lwttsw tvery true democrat and every aln- eere tariff reformer know that this bill, In it present form and as It will be submitted to the conference, falls far abort of the which we have long labored, for which we have suffered defeat wUKasI fa. eourajrement, which in Its anticipation gave us a rallying- cry in our dar of triumph.and Which in its nmmtaa r complishment Is so lnUnras .itt. democratic pledgee and democratic sue www uui our abandonment of the cause or the principles upon which it rest means nrtr rjeHtdw nl -v a j J dishonor. It must be admitted that no tariff measure can accord with dmrwr.tu 'principles and promises or bear a rena- ane democratic oaoge that does not provide for free raw materials. In these circumstances it may well excite our wonder that democrat are willinr to depart from this tv,. Mn.t democratic of all tariff principle, and that th lueonalstent absurdity of such A proposed deoartnre ahonld h amv... aited by the sutrrestion that th wmi of the farmer be out on the free Ht and th protection of tariff taxation be placed around th Iron or and mat r. corporations and capitalist. r It U quil apparent that this question of free raw material doe not admit of adjustment on any middle ground. since their subjection to any rat of tariff taxation, arreat or small I. ai;i. Violative Of demoeratle nrintnla A democratic faith. In the conclusions Of the confmnM touching the numerous itms .KU will be considered the people are not Sf fa a. a ai surmwi ut tneir interest will be neg lected. They know that the general result, so-far as they are concerned, will be to place horn aeceasari and comfort more esvsily within , their reach and to insure better and sorer compensation to thoa who toll. Th democracy of . th land plead most earnestly for the speedy comple tion oi tariff lerialation which th al repreacntativea have undertaken; but they demand not leas earns stir that no atreas of necessity shall Umnt th. Rmsritiamt a.i.k mTL nessed President Barber, of the mond Match Co., La Washington beg ging the waya and means committee to allow the old tariff on matchea to re main. Now It la reported that the com pany haa decided to equip a factory in Liverpool with American match mv chlnery.with which the foreigners can not compete, according to th o nicer the Diamond company, if this last of statement Is true why should the United State government give the Diamond Match Co., a protective tariff duty on matches? Wooden and WU lowware. - Bwuaertal Anwfaaseb The house is fresh from the people. A good part ot the senate Is a remi niscence. The senate aeya to the peo ple'a representatives; Yrm . our bill or there ahall be no tariff lesia- UAf ess a la t ton. and thla en matter that th that hmiM ah all constitution declare have the sole power of originating. There is no Intent of free and fair con ference here of a compromise of dif ferences. It Is Autocratic dictation of the most arrogant and offensive char acter. It violates not only the plainest principles of legislative courtesy, but la at war with the spirit ot the consti tution. Pittsburgh Tost. f ... ... f There are thirty-Are democrat In 11.. !.-, . . . us usivev owns koiw woo iuna xor tariff reform. There are nine demo- crate who are traitor to their partv and to the people. Th nine traitors woxd "ot have the power to put on nickle in the treasury of a thieving tariff trust were it not for the fact that ' thirty-eight republloan senator stand in solid phalanx ia defense of the trusts. Yet the republican press la try ing to make party capital out of U ; aituAtion. Chicago Ilerald. I - j If the AmeJlcapTaoorer has ap- ' proximately reosived his share of th i prod net ohis labor through the oper- ,a.-. . . 4 ution ox ut tamr, way nave we th exhibitions of organised vagabondage under Coxey, Kelly and others, wbil th country s a, whole has grow richer?. What is th meanLng of th presence In this country of thousands of Ilaagurians. Italian, Poles and ther foreign laborer of the cheapest !; American labor; disturbanosa that ha v 'been most frequent and moat trouble- 1 a a . . some wnue tne party or protection waeln th full fhxah of -power? Why have wage been so steadily redneed U lad u trie atoat highly preteetedl- Louisville Couriar-Jourual. CRU3HINQ BUROEN. ise nisnisssM trtfe tVwvtMl m In his reeest tpeeeh en thTtariS bXU Eenator Voorhe adjnlrably presented the reason why the coo try abould be freed front th erohlg burden ot uclvlnleylsm. '. So conrindog were hto AiyumenU for the necessity of radical reform and so so thing his denuncia tion of th eyatem which brought, the ountry to th rr cf rain that ther we added hAaalUatlon U hlaiadmls elou that th aneasur reported by th" committee we not to his liking. Coo aIons had been mad to a powerful ead unscrupulous opposition In order to eaeur a psre of the bin. 1 Thoa men had their wy whom th loqmt aDtor ytra a strVdiag th corri dor of U er4toi;Wulag tat edlcU to the tone ct dieutors for or arainst th enactment cf peadlnr meisurvs la um nana or crrnrr. ! 1 wss a i wss a most significant admission the senator tLat nhnaa ( Of own and represent thee woolen in terest do not h salute to declare on what tonus a bill vitally affectias? seventy million of, people will be per muted to become a law and in default of what provisions for financial proflU to themselves they wfU iaaar It -feat It is coaoaded that th bQl doe not meet th popular demand which It alms tO tDDSaM.' . Is la m I. iv. 1 8 f.LrcUon'bai Bch shorter and k - - - aa m mwm"o la. uiai Maarm aiAmnfMiniiss . v . . -r -wvd isaa vat ttU sa.t1J m fl - pie called for In peo thsir the exercise of sovereign right, f But le there be no mis pprebenslon a to where the responsibility for this deplorable state of affaire belongs. It reet with that arrorant and grasping power which ha been protected ia the accumulation of a strength which dare to essay control of national legis lation. It wss demlneat and unques tioned In th Utter days of repubUcan supremacy. It owned legislstors and oletated thlr Ha of policy. It we a powerful In political a in financial ai falra. It ws platoeracy represeaUng but an inalgntacant fraction la th number of our population, yet it was la Absolute control of our national af fair, Th republlcaa party served It th entire coon try paid extortion ate tribute. . It la thla element which ha assorted itself la th senate and forced th rub mission of an unaeoepUbl tariff bfU. It has triumphed for the time but baa called attention to an laflueao that must be suprjresscd before th rule of th peopl can be asaured. In this lew of th case ; the present loss and humiliation ot th country may la th nd be it gain. It Is mad plainer than ever before to th arvrar dtixen that his wishes count aa nothing against thos who are rapidly absorbing th wealth aa wall a th power of th na tion. Senator Voecheee has pointed out th evil for which they ar raspoaai ble, and time will accomplish the t hangs which' th aaiety ot th eo try demands. Detroit Free Frees. ' COMMENTS j OF THE PRESS. 31 r. Ilarrisoa point with pride to th election returns from hi state, Oov. McKlaley doesn't X. T. World. When Geni Harrison ssys h doe not intend to become a presidential candidate In 18w he winks with th other eye Washington" Time (IntL Harrison ia not big enough to stand a two years' open campaign for the neminaUoo, but a still hunt may give It to him. L Louis Globe-Demo-erat(Rp.). . ; i The eternal fitaee of thing la admirably Illustrated in th selection ot McKlnley to advocate national baak ruptcy a a rpubU sneoea. Chi cago Herald. This U A great country. d eoa- aiderlng the fact that It Is still af flicted with Coxeylam and UKUly iam, twin rslioaof rspahlleaalam. It is doing remarkably wall N. T. World, Th faany repsblie edlton having had a teal good Urn ever the news that Louisville, Ky.. bad gone re publican. It may do ao harm now to tell them that LouiavtUe ha not hvd an eleetloa sine last November, at which time it west a democratic aa ssaaL LoulavUle Courter-Joara ai Tom Eeed a repute Uoa a a Jonah haa been well sustaised by th result la th Third Ohio die trie t. Bm4 ha elected more dessoerate to coagree than he ever put out of It by abuse of the power of speker. BU Louis S publla i l It Is easy to see that th repub lican nwsppar do not car anything about th deasoerati victory In Me-Klnley-B old district by th frequency and emphasis with which tby make the aaeertion. Boseoe Con VI leg said: "Th shallows murmur whU th deeps are dumb." Detroit Free Free. A doleful Chicago M cKinley or- gaa break out thust Th uaexpeeted strtks at Pullman Is a very foolish af fair and shake one's eoafidtAc la th Intelligence t;th expert mechanic who have been employed by that com pany." Iu eo fids no ia th latelil gene of the ; worktagmea has been shaken so seriously that it has already presumed to tell thm that they need monopoly tariff taxation to mas them prosperouA Chicago Herald, . Btsy tt Vf X tmg. It la a good time for the republican to pause and see how foolish they bar been In committing themselves to th position that any bCl th democrat might pa would ruin th. country. They have Veen Irreconcilable - all through, finding each revision, wore than th preceding, and growing shril ler a th evil day ot th passage of some bill approached. In this way they hav burned their bridge behind them. They eannot now fU back on the protective feature left la the bin and say that these have kept the coun try from going to th dogv where It will yet surely go f the wicked dem ocrats are allowed to do any more tariff revising. - They have so thoroughly orardoae the j bugaboo busiaeas, and staked their all on the Irredeemably bad character of tbe Wilson bill, that they will find It very hard to keep up their hysterics la the future, Even If they try to, they will find the business publieso sick of the thicr that they will e&n have to quit It k T. Feet. ' f Precaution. . 6he (whispering nervously) Now, Dick, I I hope you havru't lost the ring you Bj so Abeent-mlodci deiri ' J : Ile (ooafldeaUj) Eh? Oh, no; Dot upon this oocaiioa. I locked It la the time-lock tale At tbe Uak and 4 at if there jtrWo4e : I - ! ! ' Highest of afl ia Lwvcua .Vdfyrim i i - v -s DIDKT W0EK. Aa Inststno Wher tb Oood Bsv xaAxitaa Act Was Out of Flao. TrWWt7 Wees Atw. t Be Kras) uirs wa One of the most unfortunate) thlOaTS A rjeraon ran ait.-.-. Gotham U the indiscriminate prac- oa toeooa tsAmaritanact upon the ungrateful nloeteenth centurr public, says the New York Sun. A happy Illustration nf tv?. nlshed the other day on a crowded oomer In the Sixth avenue thorplBir ilia !.. A . w-mjcw a peramru;ator bad been wheeled tro In front of a .v. dow, with a rosy and brLrhtvMl bAby WTADDed Dn 111 flll-S InaMa - -i -....u.nio, auu A handsome little man of sir mUh lonff poMen curls iUndlng jruard And Alnjrlnir to the babv. A a people pAsaed by they turned to look ne cnuarea with a little sur prise. And then. Ilka thm r-t - - w a.va auu the Levile, wisely parsed by on tbo other tide. But pretty oon a nice) old lady with Q0w-whlto hair came Aionr And stormed by the c-rrin and Questioned th llttl f!!- topped his song for a minute And toea went on with It bravely. The old lady decMsd At-thoae chVren TTl Ti tt l sSsAt eASMwSaal4akl . . a . I must be protected, And so she took op her place by the carriage and waited ten minutes wh came Along and stopped a second to look At the pretty children end ask them some more questions About why they were left there Alone. Then toe old lady came Alongside end they talked It a!1 over tncmhr h.rm the little boy, whet a burning shame It was to leave th eMlir. v.M alone, and bow two tramn YibA lite stood there ever so long watching tbem. Then they told the little boy to tell his mamma that th nnr. girl left him there Alone. And flut tered Around, xhuckllog the baby under the chin And Asking questions And CAlllng them "poor little things," until the baby put up its grieved under lip And the little boy stopped Ms song sad begin to cry big tears. The old lady upon that decided that the other lady should stand guard while she went and found the nurse And bad this shAmeful thing stopped. Just then there Appeared on the scene a little, p'.Alnly dressed woman without Any glores. And though her garments were far from .being fine And dainty, like those cf the children, the baby's eye were jurt nk hers and the boy's lonjr curli Were the some tint as the tight little knob twisted up under her cheap hat When she found out what all the trouble was About she turned a pair of flashing ejes upon the old lady And said: "Jladam. wtU you kindly tell me how I should take care of my chil dren? If I leave them At home they set themselves on fire; If I do not bring them Along with me they do not get a breath of fresh air from one Sunday to the next j I cannot take my baby carriage Into the store because they will not allow It; If I leave It outside the door without the children It Is stolen; If I leave the Children with It no one barms It or tbem. They Are quite used to being left here end hve aIwavs enjoyed IL? Then she shook the boy And promised him a spanking when he got home for crying, straightened up tbe baby And trund'ed tbem off, leaving tbe gentle old lady a sadder and a wiser woman, and the other woman a new Idea to Incorporate In her philosophy on tbe benevolence of minding your own Affairs. Th Practical Joker Got a Shock. . The sportive young man who en joys playing tricks bad a shock the other day.' Tie had just come down the elevated stairs at Park place and had started In the direction of City Hall park, when his face light ed up with a pleased smile. It was erideat that he saw some one wbota he knew, and that he. saw some fan ahead. lie began to walk rapidly, and as he hurried alonxr It cou!d h seen that the person whom he knew ! wa young wrjmao, xor ne kept his eye on her, watching her carefully svs she - slipped In and out of the crowd, and all the while his smile grew broader And his eyes twinkled more merrily. Finally, when he was only a few feet behind her, he began to walk on tip toe. Then he stole quietly up to her and laid his hand on her shoulder. "Boohr he said la her ear, and the next laiUnt he wished that he hadn't, for A young woman looked at bin with eyea that were At first Startled, but which then Cashed Indignation. ' ''How dare you?" she gvped. but before she could say another ord he broke la with aa apology. His oonf uslon was so great and he looked so much the fool that no one could doubt that he was telHatr the rowfx Lxicst U. S GoReport 7iPs IX' tmln, tut tbe young woman ao-' ccpted LU Apology with a pale tmUe. a If she thought be wrre a lucAtic, o that he bowed hi head And dived i crowd mosi cmtillcn r In New York.N. Y. TribunA A CAMEL MARKET. new the Dealer Test the Anlmsls Strength. "I had occasion to visit Tartary -year ao," said a. O. Nor- rT w According to to the Globe Democrat, "and while there nothing Interested me more than watchicg tho catires trade la CAmels. The camel mArket U a Ure aquare la the center cf the. town. Here tbe Animals Are ar tAned la long rows, their front feet raised on a mud elevation construct ed for the purpose, the object beloff to show o3 the size And height cf the creatures. ."The uproar And confusion cf the market Is tremendous with the in cessant howling cf the buyers and sellers as they dispute; their ctAt terlngnrur the7 have agreed. And tbe horrible shrieking of the Axlmals At Laving their noaea puHed for tho purpose of making thera show their Agility la kneeling and rising. Ia order to. test the strcr.gih cf the camel and the burden it is capable of bearing they make It IneeLand upon fclTL S .... incn tu one thine? nfir nr,.t Car each Addition, until it can rise no longer. "Another expedient used to test the strength of tho Animal Is this: While the ramei Is kneeling a man gets upon his hind legs and holds on by. the long hair of Its bump. If a camel ean rise then It Is considered an animal of superior strength." HI "FIXED" THE PIANO."""" The Carpenter Wss Q!vn Job and He Okf HI Work Too WstL A XTtlca (N. Y.) family changed thalf residence from one street td another a few days since. Amoci? the household eSecU was a haki some square piano, tho cover cf which had la rrocess of trans porta-' Uoa been slightly cracked. Whca the tuner came be noticed the cracked ccrer, and told the lady of the bouse that he know of a xnani who could rsralr It so that It would not be noticed. There was a car. penter working about the house, and as the cost of moricg had bec4 Eitidcrtb'.e the lady decided to re the carpenter do the work. And oraed the tnser that he nd not lnd his expensive expert. Citing the carpenter, she showed him tL damaged cott, and informed Lira that he could easily fix It with K!ue The carpenter set about Lis task tud the lady paid no further Atten tion to him. A day or two ajjo she had pany, and was requested to play upon tbe piano. Ilavicg, found. It, she learned that her surmise was in correct. Falling, After repeated and strenuous effort to lift tbe lid, ' she was compelled to forego the pleasure cf entertaining Ler guests in this war. When her husband came Lome be exercised Li muscle, trot to no avail, .fter three or four trials he began aa examination and found that the carpenter had Ubored under the mlstakea notion that the lid ought not to rise, and Lad ao cordlnff! placed a tllck coating cl glue between it And that part of the piano upon which it touched. To make the Job tadenlaViy complete, he furtber secured it by driving a iea-penny nail throngh It. N. Y. Advertiser. Doot yen ukk it l'J ry yo to au tsch the clubbles rrrre!llra arJ nuts A special drive of uls crest tffat? BILIOUSNESS . Who has not suffered til misery caused by bCe in' the lomaca which aa inactive or shrggi&li liver tulcd to carry off. the rurrtuno" aa-d cure is i liquid or jowJcr, which gives quick action to ti'o liver arid carries ofT tho Lilo Ly a mild move ncnt of tho bowels. It is co pur gative or griping medicine, tut purely vegetable. Many ?of !e take pills- more lake i;':nimo&a Liver IlcgTilator.' I neve b rwi w s J yeara, aa aOsv tryta- varv kiraDla awvaas al lis IM - - - - - .i-ar art W, 4 Ktsa- to ratkr StA I t."V. rsssrj a, c aauiAJS a faiAwji. . ra. a "AC alA?btae?Ai4 el ! t . i ; t 4 r - 1 r t f Hi : HI i V i I - ' i : ;. i , i , i
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1894, edition 1
1
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