Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / Nov. 1, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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BE STJBE YQTJ ABE RIGHT ; THEN-GO BGffi AjD.-jD ? Crockett. VOL. 72. NO. 14. PROFESSIONAL CARDS! TARBORQV N. C J THURSDAY, NOVEMBER K 1894. SEY BATTLE, Attorney and Councallor at Law, J VTarboro. N. O.-'f ! FlCKS: C Rockv Mount. N. C. ta Tarboro office every Monday, Ufickv AIuut balance of week. S ' li Adjustment ot cliims a specialty. and FOR FALLING HAIR, USE CULLEY'S Bald Head Preparation piUL JONES, " tt y and Coicncelor at Law nair ,i80 ibickens from iu use. TARBORO, N. C J. martin, Attobjjet at Law, Practices in the Courts of i Edge combe, Martin acd Pitt. Office rear of Doodle Pender? Store. Tarbolo, N. C.j I jOllN 'i3 ;1 I 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 days, and this yon will readily see if you will give it a trial. It hw o unpleasant odor and leaves no danger contracting neuralgia, cold, &c. Mus taches easily thickened up by its use. Young men will please make a note of this. Nothing asked to abow the troth fulness of the above except a fair trial of Ctixk'b Bali 4Jiad Pkxp.btion. Good references given to st-ow that .the hair is thick if not thicker than ever. ALFRED CDLUEY, 43lf Tarboro. N. C. L. BtflDGEU' & BON, ! -3 Attorneys-at-I-aw, 7 A RBQRO 14 IV WILLIAM & SON t 1anl8-lv. ttornfoys-at-J-.aw, TAKBORO',, N. CJ f iVlttpracticein the Counties of Edgecombe, K ill fak and Pitt, and In tne wuru w fir t" Judicial District, and in itte;v,m;uii. an- s?nrem Courts at Raleurh. ij, 6, HOWARD, jitt 'n, A- 'Counsellor 1 at Law TARBORO, N. C; -r Prompt aueaiion given to business JEST Office over B.C. Brown's Store. H 3 4 si 0s FRESH CM PRICE FIVE CENTS ITCHING SKIN DISEASES PROTECTION . EXPENSES. Traau and Are Instantly Relieved And Speedily Cured By Cuticura .Remedies . A wirm bath with t CXJTICURA SOAP, and a single -ijlication of CUTICURA, the great skin cure, will afford instant relief .permit rest and sleep, and -point to a speedy, economical, and permanent cure; of tne most aistressing ot itching, burn ing, bleeding, scaly, and crusted skin and scalp diseases, after physicians, hospitals, and all other methods fail. Cuticura Works Wonders, and its cures of torturing, disfiguring, humiliating humors are the" most wonderful ever recorded in this or any age. Cvtkusa Rhinu u. toU duoatbOMl tk world. Price, CtmcvmA, 50c: Soat, .jc: Kkeoltikt, $i. Pott Daco w Cmm. Cost., Sal Prop... Bouao. , "AU about tkc Blood. Skin. Scalp, and Uu." fra. PIM JfK At, ad cand red mai ofly akin a. bj ConcvBA Sor. ' MUSCULAR STRAINS, PA1XS aad wriHw, tack acha. woak kidarya, rhaoautum. aad cacat paia. rattrrad is. on mlant by tbo Catlcnra AmtU raJn Flaatar. . U G. EDWARDS. V Y "..:' $ISN AND HOUSE PAIN-TEE, Paper hanging a specialty. 40tf. : AT TBE CANDY TARBORO. N. C. OTHEPTJBLIO. I am Prepared to do all work i the i Undertaker's Business, atthe shortest notice. Having eon nected with iny shop th repairing- business. All work Jjeftfat mysnop ehall have Prompt attention.' PRICES SODEBATE, ! Also a first-class HEARSE for hire Thanking my friend i for their former patronage, I hope .0 merif the same, should they need anything ' ri the'' ;; - . .1 ' lr - : " Undertaking r t i: OR X Repairlng Business i: " "t '1 ." J Mv Place is on Pitt Street Three Dcors frc - tVe Corner of Main .HI, J - inxijrioii. STAND AT 10 Cents Per Pound, ALL KINDS. THE BEST AfD IS THE SUFtSJ INVESTMENT 1 ever Mini. J. i. WALLS. Fashionable :-: Tailor. Pitt St., one door below L..Weidell & t Tar'boroJN'O. Pin.. Uhill Dreta and Evening Tailor . Marin Suits' The term well dressed ex tonH.fmm the neck to the foot of the ' . enhifict. . ' S rcutting, repairing and cleaning dvne at short notice, r dW rr psys 1 1 .w m amy v - TIN SHOP. iyj as 1 AM DOING A BUSINESS clieap as any. I do reDairin in a ' MoaaaalbU rtUMd KcKlXar Tariff. Howr mocU may be collected by the protected tariff rinjr o! manufacturer, and how much actually is collected, are two different questions. One trua will collect all lt protection, another trust will eoUeet only se-half, or per haps only one-quarteri-iThe. amount collected depends upon the nvmber'of people in the trust, ' and kow thor oughly they hanff together. Y7' often a memberto make a. fortune at' once, will break all fcla ainreementa,' tell under the trnat prioe and the trnat will be broken and nave to reoranUe. For example, tbe atiffar treat oollecU the whole amount of it proteetloa. The salt trust eoUecUd the whole amount until broke. .Then. It.' re formed, and now t i collectlno; about M per cent The woolen men have altogether about twenty private aell Insr airreemeuta. or truata. ' To anma of these trasta; they collect all their pro tection, and tn others only 10 per cent.' ,i.ne epuectioa t the projection U a .matter sf oriraniaailnn.. In all the United States there are about 18,000 'protected mill-owners. wno , re,.ararenjfdd iUto 430 to 40 private trusta. The par valae of their. -proteotlon before t the McKlnley bai "went Int effect' waan,830,0QD, 000 year ly. .That waa the 'amount that the trusts were authorized . b la.tr ta eol. lect from the people in taxes annually if they could. Tte amount'that they aid collect from Ihe people' In the year 1990 was very carefully Aatftneted. The ""lo.Irj. many " mbnlha, and the lowest possible Igure Uta4 repreaented their .actual )CoUeetloa o! taxes was tOSp.OOO.OOO. Iae JtfnKlnley bill raised tha par value of thel .-protection, in other -wodA, the amount of faxes that they werenuthoriied to levy upon the people' and compel them to pay year ly, from W.M0,000,00p to l,0dp,ooo,ooo. How much, T tie y collect, how. much they pocVetnIhowmu'ch th people pay ,is, asIr. JTriolc tajs, the Ibuslnass of nbbgdy. but these who eotleet the meueir. . -. . Tn l8M the people paid at the custom hpnse ttWiifci taxes that went la to the JedereV treasury -WtMr-ton.andvtrtnrdedto fheTnln,! form of services' rendered. ' Ttat same year they paid to S0 trusts tOeOOO.OOO taxes, not one cent of whloh was re turned to them in the form of any serv ice whatever. The tariff taxes Paid by tbe people for 1890 exceeded 000, 000, of which one-quarter was for the public rood, and three-quarters of which was "bald, aad ualced robbery. mat tne treasury go rv, ooo,ooe was fortunate, for the McKlnley bill put a stop to suoh a large proportion dom ing Into the treasury. While it In creased the potential tax on the n What of THt consumer? ni Bjftts jgnmti ay retacitoii raa- uerers te U hWiair. Ve were prepared for almost an v re sult of the cuatomarr hvBUrlca'of the New York Press, but we hardly looked for it to stumble upon such an honest condemnation ot protection as this: fttfO: measure er&tos eisarliaiMtes aalnt one aecUou la tavor of ucim. aad talchcOTrferafaBmaBaatanaeta invn'm klairla lnere at tbe sxpeaee ot s waste seoew bos pwtecUos. but aDoUsOou.1 , i .there never waa a tariff measure eon- eeived "that "failed to do this ' v4r There never 'will ' be',' one, as one section differs from ' an other In Its HS.ttrra.1 aofatatOkn'vf tain-Industries. Tbe tndustry with the strongest pull gets tee. aHgvus !aro4ee- tiop aad he Ida tt udU soia:-mher lp- terest fomes and eotdpalns that it has been Injured by . the proteotloa of the other. . Then another attempt is made at an equal dUtrtbullon of the stolsn cheese, to be followed 'by "more eosiplalata, with Ihe result that the average ol pro tee lion Is pushed higher and higher la the effort to satisfy ai. If there U suoh a thtdg as ."gsDnioe protection, n under which, as the ?nesa avers, "all American producers posse as equal rights and enjoy equal 'privileges,- wbst of the eonsumerl His very existence Is forgotten. He Is not so much as mentioned while those who despoil him are trying to 'divide the booty. .And when an attempt Is made to ease the .crushing weight ot taxa tion whleh rests upon his ; bending SQouiders and to place a UtUe of It upon the possessors of lsrge Incomes, a try goes up mai aucn a measure is com munism and sectionalism. There Is no better answer to this folly and no better 'defense of the rights of . the eonsumer than certain words of Hon. John Sherman, which were quoted .wilnost caauenge no longer than last November by lion. C. h. usu, or Missouri, In a Speech before the ways and means committee of the house as follows: "The pebUe lolad la sot vet ereesret to A SYSTEM T Cerrese OF atUaa AAveeel BRIBERY. e Bla Tmrts? sputj the key ot s rasutBe; MWJ rp x ,1 P. a I creased tae potential tax on the peo- 1 ID, lrOIl aDU I Opper ple,ltdeeressed the amount they paid promptly. J. T. WARD, Austin Bnildirg. I make tie mcst superior Coffee Pot ever efftred to the public 13tl THE NEW YORK WEEKLY DEBALD -For 1894- WILL i BE WITHOUT QUESTION WITHOUT AMERICA'! Williams & pulley, i .11 most of all Leading Family Paper. The reputation that the Weekly Uerald has enjoyed for wan years of being the best home newspaper in the laud will be lEaterlaliy added to during thft y ear of 1 894. No oaics or expecEe ; will be spared to make it in every department the reliable, interesting and instructive weekly newspaper publications. Tt will be imoroved in many ways A number of new features arid departs mpntk w ill be added. The latest develop ment in all fields of contemporaneous hu sntoroet will he ablv discussed froni week to week by accomplished writers THE XEWS OF THE WORLD wiii'he iVen iu a concise but complete f rm. ! F.verv important or interesting vpnt 'fither at home orV abroad, will the columns icf the . Wanllv Ttprald.' i .' Tn iiitirs the Herald ? is absolutely iu dt-oendent and sound. It tells the rights unrt wr.mas of all sides without fear. Bnrmera and stock raisers cannot efford to be without the Weekjy Herald during the ceming year.' It will contain a regular lpnn.rt merit each week devoted exclusive y to subjects of timely, interest to them and giving many valuable suggestions and; new ideas. : ! z . . ' ' , The women and children of the land will find in the Weekly Herald a welcome visitor. The household i and ;, children's pages will be both instructive and enter taining. They will abound in hints and reraints which women bo much value. a hriiiinnt nrrav of novels and short stories y the best writers in America and ! England has been secured, so that fiction will be one of the most attractive features in the Weeklv Herald during 1894. H In fact, the Weekly j Herald will be a mAaiine of the highest order, combined t with a complete newspaper.! ! NOW IS THE TIME TO BUBSCRIBE. j Only a "Sear ? . BEND FOB 8 A MPLS COPY. There are single retail shoe store in our large cltlea which sell 2,000 pairs of shoes a day, making a nat profit ol 260,000 a year. We sell shoes low, but we sell a great many pairs, the clear profit on our ladies', rn'iaaca and childrens' shoes is at least ten cents a pair, and on on 'T? and boys' shoe 15 cents a pair. a snail ii inoe urei m each of the fifty largest etilysof theU. 8., and if -they sell only 800 pairs of shoes a day they woald earn $525,000 a year. We should be able to pay a yearly dividend of $5.25 a share, orover 50 per cent. a year on the rrrVestmcnt. We sell the stock at S40 a share. The price must inevitably be much mora than $10a share. No etock ha ever been sold at less than this prioe, which U i;s par value. Slock jion-ascsabl". Incorporated, Capital $1,000,000. AVe have over 1,000 stockholders, and the number is Increasing daily. 6ome of the principal stock holders are : T. S. V."!lir j. N. Y. i I. J. Fottr. Boston ; N. A. Rctd, Jr.. Chicago t J. B. Cami b. 11. ChirRO i W. M. KaraiiauJh. Littl Ro:k. Arlu: I. II. Kich. ChicanotJ. F. . Tuner, -PhilA. : H. Karding, N. Y.( K. J. Fame, Btttl Creek, Mich. ; F. P. Hullrtt. Aiwfc, N. V. Write for a prospectus containing the names of our stockholders, etc, or tend an order for ttock, eneloting cathier' check,eah or money order. Orders taken (or one or nso.-e shares. Price, $10 DEXTER SHOE CO., i:iSlV.EX , Afjenls iV anted. J .to he government, and Increased the amount they paid to the trusts. for example the MeKinley bUl added f8 to the previous duties on'erery gun costing tit. Not a cent of tflfc d would go into the . treasury: foe 1 made the duty on foreign guns 100 per cent,, ena oerrea voem out. a; nta who wanted a $13 shotgun had To, buy from one of the four American makers and pay J1S $6 more , than it ' was . a-v . 1 s w or tit. protection guvs aim more UNDER HOTEL FARRAR TARBOEO, N. C ill workv He had to work overtime , to earn this extra S. I But he was .fork ing for the gun, and he 'bud , to pay nine days' wages for It under!, protec tion, against six days wages .without. The four gnnmakers took from him three days' labor, or . gave him three days' extra labor, as rou like. The object of the McKlnley bill was to Increase the tariff tajc'esleviedunon the people, but decrease the amount they paid "to the treasury, and Indresse tha amount- taey paid to tae-trusts. All this was done by the Waoer fa which the. takes were letted. "3 was not done through the amount or the percentage. The McKlnley tariff was lower . than that which It auooeeded. .It might have been the lowest Of low tariffs; H Jalght not nave rurnsA any. money i to tne treasury, and yet it might have' been of even more benefit thus; tt to the trusts, . Imposhig . harder . .burdens of taxation npon the people. : Under the McKlnley bill the pubUo ' leers ot rVtser enerteaoe wul eeertace ts wuoie body tr our people ut s sysuss ot anneal lazae wssoa ravta tae waote oeroeu Of tsxsuoe oa eoesuaptica, sa4 o sue eeut ea property sou loeome, ta IstrtasJoeUy sajast. WaiJe tae aipeaeas of th -national woiasSeas are largely esaaeA syiae proaeouou et ptoe- erty. ltu but rich! to call oa property o 4 trlbeie to tts peyrnoac It wQI sot do to tut each perse oocsnanee to sreperUou to lus Tais is aot tree. Sverr eee aa .t&et tha ronsumpcioa of ttte rich does aot tear fae seme ret sum to tbe rotnuvpooa et tae poor a tbe. taooBae eC tbe rata nose to wages of tbe poor. As woaltb secmnnlat. this tnoatlcU la tbe faaVlajDeatai beaU of oar system mi be Hit ssa toreed epea tse stsra- Uoa of ooocreaa,' The Injuatlce has been felt, and the first attempt toward righting it finds arrayed In opposition all the forces of protection and privilege which have thrived upon It. It Is denounoed as "a fine upon thrift," a "eoafiaeatfioa of the savings of the Industrious; a some thing, that will discourage economy. Does aarone who applies these "epl thets to It know of anybody who would pot rather have an Income of four thousand dollars a year, with a S per cent, tax on it, than not to have seen Sn tneopad to taxf Loulrrtlle Courier-ournaL DEMOCRAqY, AND .THE TARIFF. BBanrlai surer ObetrwcSod by FTrats "Uoet-red Maa-npallats. The . conseo,uenees of nearly thirty f ear! Of robbery by protected monopo fsts are not sally overcome. The demoeratie party has .a great and seri ous task. It has undertaken to reform the tariff aad to tarn baek the princi ple of tariff legislation to the right method, the, method that prevailed in framing ihe t Walker . tariff and, the tariff of 153T But It Is met on the threshold Of its ."reform work by a'gi gantlo combfoatron of interest that have beeh built vp by the republicans who. have taxed the people to enrich monopolute In consideration of gen erous contributions to campaign funds. Bsck of the men who have invested their wealth In industries for the sske of securing tariff bounties, wbo here bought lews and corrupted congresses and who are entitled to no sympathy. are thousands of innocent persons who muat not be Injured by sudden chsnges of laws. ' It Is a bard task, but the democratic party Is making an effort to reform - It is not at all strange that direct bribery has been attempted as one of the means to influence) the votes of sees tors oa ths tariff MIL r Of course the attempts at bribery are directed against democratic senators.' The votes of republican senators have oeen secure from the beginning against any chsnge that would ( reduce the enormous rates of monopoly tariff tax ation. Corrupt influences would 'be used, naturally, only to affect the ao- Uou of democratie congressmen. It was to be expected thst, sooner or Uter.'s scene stage of the Issue, ihe tariff eorrupUoulsU would offer dlreet ly to purchase Totes. - .. ';'."'' The entire MoKlnley tariff arsteta la bribery. Xot a member - of congresd can vote to Impose a Jxlgn tariff tax for purpocee of protection except from some snotlve of sordid selfishness and greed corrupt political greed or greed lor gain. ; IYo taction bribes the popular vote. The farmer Is bribed by the false promises of a nearer market and bet ter prices for his prod acts. Labor Is bribed by false ' promises of hlrber wages. Commercial da nee are bribed by false promises of flush times and big profits In trade. The panic and wreck la financial af faire, in labor affairs aad in agricul tural affairs, show now false was fbe corrupt procaine which Ue protection ists made to the. people. The bribe thst they offered was illtslve. But the corruption was real. The offer was like thst of the being who promised "all the kmgdotna ot the world for the service aad worship of tne person to whom 'the temptation was addressed. The be mg who made the offer could not fulfill one of Its conditions. It waa a false offer. .But It waa equally corrupt aad criminal aa If he j could have paid the price which he had promised. Experience shows that tbe prosper. Ity promised by the protectionist Is a disastrous lUssion. The offered bribe wss not a reality. But the corruption, the crime of the transection, taodga the consideration failed. Is the same. Failure to pay a bribe docs not alle viate the guilt involved in a pledge' of payment. The entire process Is a system ef bribes. by which votes are manufac tured against such a tariff as the dem oeratVe -party pledged its faith that it would give to the people. . Kothlng la more corrupt In the history of legisla tion than tie aeU of which tha setn torial gamblers In trust eartt'losies were guilty when they framed the sugar schedule after raking off their profits tn buying and selling sugar se curities, j 5 The same Impeachment holds In re gard to every other feature of the tariff on which se bed sloe have been manipu lated by congressional dabblers ta bucket-shop manipulation. Chicago TTrral4l IlijheU cf all b Ltxjtahg Po-rcrv Laicat U.S. Cert Report :-lBj!sfe ?3 lGi.Sir A BIT OF ROHAltCE. Cnd Bachelor's peouiiar Of PropoeiniT. Vay A BUnSe? ! TTasS U flatty LUUe Wsttraae .rteeebly Ajseuie llt Tbaty aboebad tbe riegstsle aT tbe aVMtaaraJU. lie was a rich old bachelor. . Not too old, either, but just old enough; and he was a nice old bachelor, loo, who deemed happiest when he was making other people happy. The pretty, waiter girl at the restaurant where he took his meals liked Lira Immensely, but she would have to do that to like him cue half as well as he liked her. - Indeed, he liked her so that his friends Insisted that he ate seven meali a day. not to mention lunches between meals. Cut he didn't care for their, talk. He laughed cheerily to aid his di gestion, and went there as often ,as he wished. One' day after he had finished a meal he hurried out, and In a minute or leas he hurried tack again. "Didnt I leave something here?' he asked her as he began looking around. "I thUk not," aha replied as she Joined la the search. To sure I did," he Insisted, pok ing around among the tables and chairs. v NORTHMEN AND VI N ELAN FX aBSBSBSBBBBBBBBk rVets ef an Ancient Norse Ooiew : Near Beetosw The 1st Prof. Hon ford published several books In which be under took to fix the .spot oa which the Northmen landed, says the Phila delphia Ledger, and identified their Ylaeiaod - srltb locality on tha Charles river, rear Boston. Hit daughter, Uss Cornelia Horsford, tas followed la her father's foot steps, and has recently published. through Damrea & TJpLaca Boston. her proofs of the site of Lelp's house la Ylaeland, aad her results of the opening of the graves ot the North men oa the banks of the Charles) river, pear the city ot Norumbega, where her father proved to his own satllactloa and to hers that North men founded a colony. Miss Hon ford gives the steps of the process Of reasoning by which the reaches the results set down la her attract ive publication. Illustrated by repro ductions from Du CtaUhi'a "Viking Age," and from other archaeological authorities, largely from tha eolleo tloas la tha Peabody taustcza at Hnrrard, and other sources ol knowledge. Doth Prof. Horsford and his daughter bve gone to work ao tbor outly, have mattered eTery detail of the subject, have studied It oa tbo prt and gathered evidence as well as from the results ot the best explorers In other fields of 1 f . J S , - .fc? d 5x-r i3plum Habits . .i-vi ui tiume wltn-oulr.aiu.bookolper-; ii"ilar3ent FREE. : : !. M.WOOILKV,M.n. iiKaWmteUailfifc THE SUN The first of American Newspaper, CHARLES A. DANA, Editor. The American Constitution, the Ameiv lem Idea, the American Spirit. These first, 1-iBt and all the tim, foreycrl The Sunday Is the ereatett r-ucday Newspaper in tie , world. : ' Price 5o. a copy. B. maik $2 a year Daily, by mail, - - - 46 a yesr Daily -nd Sunday, by mail, - $8 a year The Wetkly - - - f l a year - AddrebS THE SUN, New York. tsxea naid Into the treasnrr fell from abusea. It tne party could nave lis $229,000,000 in 180, to flT7.000.000 in way. If It could be Hd of some of Its mot lena hI imum, ' own burdens, it would make a de cidedly stronger effort. As it Is, the Wilson bill attempted to give the country cheaper clothes, cheaper fuel. TAB TELESB DLL 1893, and for 184 WIU probably go rower yet At the same, time, the amount of taxes paid to the trusts hss risen from "SO 30,000, 000 to S500.000.000, as near as ean be estimated. N. Y. World. The KX-Csar Qreare CaUss. Another pull ot the protection lata all together and Tom Reed's alarm at the "omnivorous west" will be calmed. The trusts will be able to command the home market and hurl their power against the building of ' new manufac tories nearer the markets and sources of supply. Shut out Iron ores and Du luth'a hopes of becoming a manufactur ing center are chilled. Shut out woolen goods and New England ean by under selling cut down Investments of manu facturing capital In osa section of the' west and make up its profits in an- Every time the WUsoa chesper homes, chesper tools and a larger market for the products of the soiL In steading In the way of. this effort the republicans and their allies are inviting much more radioed legis lation than haa yet been attempted. The people hare determined to be rid of the odious system which wrings millions of dollars from them through tariff taxes tor the benefit of million aires, and the democratie party is pledged to help them. It there Is too much resistance there may be more destruction than waa con templated. Carnegie, with his pock ets buhrlnsr with the loot thst had been stolen for him by the republican party, wvs the wisest protectionist of them all when he advised bis aceom- other section. bill Is HcKlnleyised the omnivorous-, Ucft4 upt tha Wilson blU. . IS S UAKat BuMSa U Sva SB. 1 - - - . . a There are men calling tnemseives v AddreBS THE WEEKLY HERALD, Hebald Square, NEW YORK. Administrator's Notice. Havinff Qualified as administrator of firarv C. Stallires. deCw-ssed, latet.f Edge combe county, North Carolina, this is to notifv all Bcrsons havinjr Claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before tbe ISSin day of-April, 1895, or this notice win ne ulead in bar of iheir reoo rery. All per- . . . . . .,, , boos indebted o said tsiaio win pieaae make immediate payment. This 12th day of April, 1894. ; HENRY. JOHNSTON, 7t Adm'r of Gracy C. Siallings. TOM IS JUST AS C000 FOR ADULTS. WARRAriTED. PRICE OOcts. CAUATLsItXS.. Nov. W. iS99. Paris Medicine Co- W.Urul, ido. Gentlemen:-We e4 VJ.W bottles of GBOVSVS TS8TB1KSS .CHILI. TOUO ik1 t.-.a booeht Utrea sro lready Uils year. I t all our . Mrtenea ot U ears, the drop boslncs. hr.o SeTer aoM an arMela tharae nci noiTersal salU- faotiou a your TonlC " Sours trnlr. ' ' - Anxrr, Caar. ft CP ness of the west Is kept nearer to pen soup and corn bread. St. Louis Ke public. POINTS AND OPINIONS. democrats who hold and practice re publican principles, but the heart and mind of the party are right, the real leaders Of the party are right and tha -Perhaps the "great emergency atruevle siralnat the system of proteo- an. at w a S fa 1 A - F t i m . itoi. Harrison is waiung xor wiu ki , tlon, whlco is a struggle I err larger nu Administrator's Notice, The undersigned having qualified as adm'r of T. B Barlow, deceased, this is to notify ail persona owing the said deceased, to make immediate payment, and all per sons baying claims against the said T. B. Barlow; to present them for payment withid one year from date, or this notice wilrbe p'ead tn bar of their recovery. This 3rd day of May, 1894. W. L. BAKLOWY Adm'r. J. L. Bridgers & Son, AtVys. 6t THE COUPEE MARBLE WORKS, 111, tlS and 115 BaBk Btrect. v.tAnTSAT TT TT A largs Stock or iimship I l Monumsnts, aai Oravestoaes, Ready for Immediate Delivery. March SI, t ' about the time lion. John C. New be gins to feel bound to save the country by getting back Into " office. N. x. World. i. The evidence of republican sen ators concerning trust Influence , In legislation Is entitled to considerable weight. They hare had wide experi ence in onvtng Dargains wixn tae agents of monopoly. N. Y. World. A republican newspaper under takes to convince the greet American nublia that the Wilson "bill threstens man liberty and for leas governmental paternalism, wOl be camed oa try tne democracy of the country. - The repub Boan party Is tha kervaat and slave of monopolists. It is built oa ill -gained wealth. The democratie party is the party ot the people and It will redeem its pledges to break down MoKlnley ism. What the democratie majority la I the house accomplished In tbe face of republican power In the senate Is a guarantee of the party's good faith. It may be obliged to go slow, but it will I the destruction 61 the mackintosh la- 1 go In the right direction. N. Y. World. dustry, as If the people didn't know enough to come In out of the rain. Louisville Courier-Journal. The number of fraudulent pen? aioners on ' the rolls is certainly not less thsn a hundred thousand out of the total of near a InilllOn, and no amount of protest from' the' Supporters of fraud should be owed lnum lesTM form a l0Tely deooraUon, but . '"" ' T.'ruT1,ruv lilliUHi: rty I U,H vt , -rtT r . V K1aa nsvpossarilv ClumSY. I COMMERCIAL tuLLttocoi - I restore aomethlotr like 4 eeYaTWenee 01 . ' "', MEDTi:ANDmPl.QJA lhoneatT.-N.Y:Wor!d,- i J cut loal sugar into acy.ixoa Accessory for the Tes Table- Sugar scissors 1 Strong and not unlike a nut cracker la appearance la this new aDDolntment for the "five o'clock." Tbe handles are all ter and the chased sugar canes and STONE-OARVINO. Te Methods Employed In Londew j and Paris Compared. The London carrcr of stone rarely works from a model, more often from a sketch, and not Infrequen try without either;' the Parisian always has a model. .The Londoner, wnh plum-bob. rule i and compasses, gen erally makes an approximate copy of his model wheu he has one; the Parisian, by means of a mechanical ecntrivance called a poiattfr-pia- chlne, makes aa exact copy. The Parisian system no doubt has Its advantages, but from the English workman s and from aa artlstlo point ot rlew, the Londoner's meth od Is far from the best, throwing the workman. on. his own resources and developing whatever Individual ity 'and artistic feeling he may pos sess. Tt has also the not Important merit of being the' quicker 'method. The material 'used, la Paris Is a cream-colored soft stone, somewhat I resemhlhig' Bath stoire, hut 'appar ently freer In working, in London, as Is well knon, every variety of stone is used, from the toft Cor bins to ttbe. hardest .of Portland ainrsxg the, limes tones, 'and from the softest of red grits 16 the hard yellow grit stones of the north of England. This has developed l more useful pattern rjf tdcrls t&uu those In use la Paris. The bard stone and marble tools are similar la both countries!, but the French soft-stone tools would be thought useless la Eng land. ' The block cf stone Is chopped with axes as near to the she re quired as can safely be done, and the earring Is produced wlUt wood en-handled tools and mm hammers, the English pattern of wooden mal let and mallet4ieaded tools being unknown.4 It Is then scraped of er with tools known la England aa scrapers, and finally finished with a rarlety of rasps called "rlSers, or "riffloeur rapes." These tifflers are. though seldom, required, unobtain able in England of native make com parable with the French, being gen erally so badly shaped as to be al most useless, and this applies not only to the rifiter rasps as made for as . AM . V.,t ft. 4Tak aa made tor marble, a foreign rarlety known as Roman rasps being far superior. London Architect. -In defiance ef aa overwhelming public opinion aad of the latent seaU- meat la the republican party in isvor of tariff re vision the republican sc an ion resist every effort to make the slightest reduction la tha scale of duties. While they Imagine that they are nromoting the interests ot party ta severing the tariff-ted monopolise they are preparing for a repetition of the ttooular demonstrations bt IBM and lsn. Whether this reaction from thS tariff cerate of 1S9S shall coma this fall or two veers hence may depend upon the degree of republican resistance ts the present effort to enforce the posa- lar wtlL PhBadslphm Beeord. "What was It like?" she Inquire!. l!.Jiira?. archax,Kncal and ethnological In- realisation, that there Is a special interest in seeing the results an nounced by the father thus, after his death, csr.flrrncd by the daughter, t It Is an example of filial piety that well docrves recognition, and Is ao purely a labor of love that it Is en titled to the gratitude of all who like to see continued' Sort to solve s problem which haa puzzled stu dents at home and abroad for many Jeers. Miss Hots ford's share la her liner's investigations and her own are marked by scholarly ability, seal and eascastness, aad her example may well Inspire others to pursue archsDologlcal research la other sec tions of this coca try, rich la fields that hare sot jet been exhausted, and thus , reap IU own exceeding great rttrard. say, be said, holding up bis bands la measurement. . - She looked at him curiously and tried to remember how many- glasses of wine he had taken at lunch. Tm lore you didn't leare Itbere," she ssld. "Perhaps you left it some where else." 1 hop not." ""Weli," she suggested reassuring-' ly, "If I come across It 111 keep It for you." - "Are you sure you will?" be asked In a tone so strongly Implying doubt that the girl's face fiushed. "You "know I will," she answered warmly. "Ha vent you known me long enough to trust me?. ' '. "But this was Valuable," be said, still searching for it ' Tor the fl rst time In their acquala t- aace the girl dida't like him. . - ''Suppose you speak to the pro prietor about It. . then, and let btna keep It ( for jroo," she said, half angrily. ''-.' "Gracious, no," he exclaimed, "I don't want him to hare it." "Tell me what it U." she Insisted and ni return U to you." "But X, don't want you to," he Ukqghea sof Uy. 1 Thfliis pretty face grew pret tier, for was not the feext dsy to to herUrthdayT : . "Ob- -she chirruped, ? "was It something for msT" He nodded laughingly. "What wis 11?" she asked, coax Ingly, as i, child might. ' He looked into her dancing eyes, and it made him ao happy that he fairly flutUred. "X think It was my heart, my dear," he said, becoming serlmis and tender at the same time, and the pretty girl was so greatly em barrassed that she put both her hands la his right there before the proprietor and shocked him ex tremely, until they told him what had loappened.2t..Y. Advertiser. A FemDy of" Early 'Risers. WerV'for ChrHtfan' Ulty In Engt'sed. The conference of clergymen whloh met lately at Grindelwald for the purpose of securing greater unity of . Some of the cottagers on one the less thkkl isttled Islaads ta f the harbor report the peculiar rait .torn of sY&aUYe farmer's family that, lives close by. Until they got V: customed to It, the were awakened every morning between four and fira o'clock by this farmer and Lis family of four children, who begin the daVs labors at that time. The father Is troubled with lnsomnU and cinnot ileep si Ut two p. ra. There fore he has established tbe custom ot beginning the day at U.is time of year just as soon as It 'is light enough to see. Ills 'two boys are about eleren and thirteen years old. and the eldest girl is about fourteen year. He gets up and gets break fast for them, but his wife doesn't get up until she wints to, xhich Is much later. The chCdrea help their father In milking the cows, of which there are about a. dozen, and driving them to pasture, and then carrying the mils: about the Island.. Tbe other morning the cottagers heard the father calling to his children to get up. They heard distinctly: Here, It is M o'clock and the day most gone, and we ain't done a stroke of work yet." The children take a nap during tbe day. The other morning one. feeling among English Protestants lot the UtUe boys went off shooting' has issued aa appeal signed by the btshoD of Worcester. Archdeacon Fairer and other prominent clergy men of the Church of England, as well as Presbyterian, Congregation al, Baptist and Methodist ministers. They . urge upon the churches "of Great Britain and Ireland, first, the Importance of continuing -to pray for unity on Whltsuoday; second. the further forms tlon of social unions with the object ot concerted action on the part ot the churches for the solution of the great problems hkh con front Christians every where, on principles common to the whole brotherhood of bellenrr; third, the adoption of periodical con ferences between all Christian min isters In giTeq dUtricts" for covnsel aad enctnirtgrcisnt, with the object ci prerentlcg the wasteful oTeriap- ttlnsrof CbxiiUan agencies; ipuna. the eultlratlon of the belief that by brotherly conferences differences may be overcome, mutual' : conces sions made aad a desire far real unity cultivated among Christians that all the disciple of the Lord may be one, Chicago Post necessarUr clumsy. I Tux mikado ot Japan w 1 e ' . we t .VJ. After McKlnley the deluge ha. 'rrTTr.r.rrV- ff heen a popular notion iaJPfunSyi- ddresa. w. w 7T'T ' TaiOa LoulxTUle Conrier-Jourpa. : cubes desired, and are not only K norelty but a convenience. N. Y, I Adrertlser. , recently Jspanasd woman Wtead, If she thooaes, a single life. Hitherto. It found unmsrrWSd after a certain age, a husband teeted tor her hr law. Cholly and Kits 8urreundlns. ChoUy says ttat text year he U going, to .a sriniiaeT ; resort where there are only men. It he can find one." ' . "Dear mr sighed the other girl. Cholly does so lor to be tfalqe," Washinrton Star. crows between . three ana tour o'clock. Portland Press. New 0s for Natural Gas. The possibilities of natural gaj erVdenUy bare not y.-t been et-; hausted. 'The latett ue would aeea to hate beeu loand f of, It U the making cf toe, the Idea be-. Ing simply to expand the cas from' Its usually high Initial pressure Jowfi' to or near that of the atmosphere, nature having done iU Um irliml nary work of cxaprrs doa and cool-' log, making the jtm readv to ah sort) heat trorn IU surruundings lm- mediately trpoo being rrleased. from, confinement. - All that would be necessary would be suitable coils or( chambers lato which the gas could; to allowed to expand. It has been' calculated out quite plausibly, la: fact, that with an ordinary g well, furnishing 1,500,000 cubic feet per day, something like fifty tons of Ice could be turned out daily at aa ex pense of about fifty cvota a Uo Tbe gas loses nothing but its press- ore, retaining ail its caionnc and hence all its Tlrtue lor rwiiug mill and glass works use, for beat ing brick, llrae and pottery kilns and the endless number of other furnaces to which It Is adapted. In a cerUln way, therefore, the gas taay be regarded as affording soene tMnir for nothing a deslderatom to thing for nothing which many la this world are con stantly looking tarwtrd. 1 if. 1
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1894, edition 1
1
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