Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / April 27, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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The G OLBSBORO EADLIGH nn ESTABLISHED 1887. GOLDSBOEO, N. C, THURSDAY, ATOIL 27, 1893. VOL. VI. NO. 33. Is Lifi 3 Worth That depends upon tho Liver. If the Eiver h inactive the whole sys tem is out of order the lircath is bad, digestio poor, head dull or aching, energy and hopefulness pone, the spirit is de pressed, a heavy v-eiglit exists after eating, with peneral despondency and the blues. The Liver is the housekeeper of the health; and a harmless, pimple remedy that acts like Nature, docs not constipate afterwards or require constant taking, docs not interfere with business or pleasure dur ing its use, makes Sim mons Liver Regulator a medical perfection. " I have tested it personally, antl know that for I ysie;si:i, Uiliousnes and T hrobbins Headache, it is :he best medicine the world ever saw." H. II J;nhs, Macon, Ga. Take only the Genuine, Which has on the Wrapper the red 525 Trade in k and Signatnre of J. II. ZEILJC & CO. THE Jll-t n Y. t -. I K:l I.. Dr. th.' tvi: t Walnut stive!, next . A. Smith's olliec, iwini; revolution in Clothing ! i- ii. en i'l-'ini.T.'t.'SlvJ.iHl. men from fi.V. ami up. Youths" -U!i from s'.'.'J.") ( oat - f ri mi si. i i ami up. H a Alio Home ami lii'.e. at .iia I V. NT v:i Notions liamlke;, llee. 11-. Ml In for :!,-. ., 1 ear.l aixate :s. for :Ji-.. '.'oo. hut: uents rurnism Good: and Shoes ! At pr'n of. Men's ! ami I.aek, only I'.ie. : l ri s. . (' A. H. SHRAGO Pi A Happy Welcome I S ( ; I 'A l: ANTKKI TO TIIOSK WHO - will ..!! at my saloon, whieh is .-lot ;..,! at all times with the choicest of 1) 'iue-!;e ami Imported Liquors and Wines ! All th compound -kiilt'ul me and Domestic ant Imported Cigars, A Nl) A LAKCE LOT OF FINE TO- icco. For I'ure North Carolina 'orn Whiskey my iila.ee is headquarters. Mr. Cullen Howell is with me ami .mid oe pleased to sec his friends. Jas. L. Dickinson, At John (Jinn's Oh! Stand. We Take the Lead! handling th. TV I -est 3333 S3 3?" That n ln.umht t the cit Best Quality and Lowest Prices! Million, Pork si ii si N;ius;ije Always on hand. W. market prices V till' lilglll hest .! cattle. S. Cohn & Son, ( i i v i;: r iikks. ;oi.lsr.tu. N. C. ,. .-.3 Dental Prosthesis Specialty ! V rnjor oxiif.(;as,thi:;i;eat- est aaaesiliet known, alw avs on irgerv s' lih- C Dr. J. M. Parker. 0:iee:('eutie St.. West. ( Joldsl.oro. W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. s And oiher specialties fur Gi nt'.emen, Ladies, Boys and j Slices are t!ie k 1 Best in the World. fce desi-riptive advertise ment which will appear in this paper. Take no Substitute, but insist on having V. DO( CI.AS' SHOKS.with bottom. Bold by HOOD & BEITT, Goldsboro. DDUTK4I miner I 11. It i II. Hi IIUUOIj OlIULLVi, KKi'AlKlSO OK Buggies, Wagons, Carts, &c. K.-, "Everything in the Hlncksinith line done on short notice and at lowest liv iiej prices. Give me a call when in need to h:t , repairing done. L. K. JOHNSON, Opposite John Ginn's Store. ASNESS k HEA9 fMISES CURED ty Sim Ken s INVISIBLE TU6iJl- EAlt S CUSii'ONS- Whispers heard. Com livewm where u!i Kemcdies fMU UK book d1.lie.se It litsi ((X, 853 Brodwij. w lrt. tortai.ie. 6. J roofs free. Living? -safc 8 AFTER THE SPOILS. Rill Arp Has a Few Remarks to Make A hunt OfHce Seekers. Tluit man is to be pitied who is constrained to seek an ofiiee for a living. And yet there are some jood men who do it. I know some whom ofiiee iitsanc" adorns. General Youn for instance for he is a courtly gen tleman and will represent our gov ernment in a courtly and gracious manner, lie will keep the peace without humbling our national pride, lie would have kept it with Chile if he had been there, instead of Egan. T have great admiration for such men and am glad to see them get of fice. Ollice that exercises their grace and gentility ofiiee that does not require much work, but is n kind of genteel sinecure with abundant per quisites. We regret to lose him from Cartersville. to miss the genial wel come with which he greets his friends, but if he wants the ofiiee we want him to have it. He deserves anything that he will ask for, and Mr. Cleveland has made no mistake in this case. Now, if he will keep up his reputation for sagacity and appoint Eascom Myrick and John Temple Graves and Camilla Under wood to the places they seek, the good people of Georgia will approve it. I am no politician, but I know our prominent citizens and what they are worth. Suppose Mr. My rick was for Hill. He was not an offensive partisan, and if every Hill man is to be boycotted, then Mr. Cleveland will have to build up a ' party of his own. and a good many of us will be left out. Mr. Cleveland said that a public ofiiee is a public j trust, which means that the Presi dent should have no revenges no friends to reward or enemies to pun ', ish. If Mr. Cleveland refuses to ! nominate Mr. Myrick simply because : he was a Hill man it will mortify his friends in Georgia, of whom I was I one not the lirst one. perhaps, but ! one from the beginning. It already ' mortifies me that Mr. Cleveland has required Mr. Myrick to bring the 1 files of his paper for inspection. It ; is said. too. that John Temple Graves' I application hangs fire because Gen- oral Gordon is mad with Graves for ! supporting Pat Calhoun for the Sen jate. I do not believe it. General j Gordon is not that kind of a man 1111 , less he has greatly changed. He ; used to be large-hearted and liberal j in his charity to all of his fellow cit ; i.ens. He had no petty animosities j and never nursed his revenge to keep ! it warm. Newspaper reporters hunt ! up sensations and write many things l from rumor that are not true and ! their victims are kept busy denying their false accusations. May the ; good Lord deliver us all from their j gimlets and augers and insinuations, ! and hence I do not believe that Gen j oral Gordon is fighting Graves be cause (.raves preierreu Lamoun. w e would rejoice to see John Temple sent to Switzerland and I wish that I could go, too. and with him climb t he Materhorn and hear him apostro phize that historic and beautiful country in one of his sublimest lights of eloquence. Then there is my friend L'nderwood. who is the best all round man I ever knew, and I believe could fill an- place respect ably. He has filled many from the chaplain of a regiment down to the editor of a country newspaper and did it well. He is the loving hus band of one wife, the father of eleven children most girls the best Bap tist preacher I ever heard, the best farmer and gardner. and with all a most genial companion and yet he wants to go to Havana for what I don't know unless he needs the money that is in it or wants to con vert its sunburnt people to Christi anity and immerse the whole island to make sure of their salvation. I don't know whether he was a Hill man or a Cleveland man nor do I care. I do kn.nv that he is fit for the ofiiee. Neither of these men are professional politicians. They never degraded themselves by cavorting around and laying plans and schem ing for their own personal advant age. What a pitiful spectacle it is to see some of our Georgians wrang ling in the filth of crimination and recrimination in order to get ofiiee at Washington. The Atlanta papers are full of the strife that goes on from day to day and if I were Mr. Cleveland I would ; Gentlemen you are not for." and I the men I am looking wo ted select some good men who hav made no noise and kicked up no dust about this busi ness. There are plenty of good men in Atlanta who would till those offi ces but whose modesty and conser vatism forbid their asking for them. As a general tiling it is the loud mouthed, noisy politicians who seek the offices and get them. I was glad to read that Mr. Cleveland was going to break up the slates and take a hand in the appointments. Of course he can t do it all. but he can find out where the rings are and break them. These political rings that parcel out the offices in secret conclave are the curse of our Georgia politics. It is said that the ring is already formed, CAn i,e permanently cured by this reni that is to till all our offices from gov- j cdy,' as numberless grateful women will , , i I attest. Price refunded, if it fails to ernor down, and it includes the sue-j give satisfaction in every case. See cessor to Senator Colquitt. It was guarantee printed on bottle-wrapper. these rinys that became so odious to the people that they rose up and es tablished independentism in North Georgia for eight years. It was these rings that alienated Alexander Stephens from the Democratic party and that party had to offer him the gubernatorial chair to keep Lira from running as an Independent. It was these rings that made possible the success of the People's party on the basis of the Ocala platform. It was one of these rings that made machine politics so odious in New York. Now it is no comfort to know that in a city like Atlanta there are several rings and one ring can fight another and that the longest pole will knock down the persimmon. The trouble is that the best men the most deserving men are in no ring at all. They have got no pole and therefore will not reach the per simmon. A common citizen like my self has no more idea of the small machinations that are going on to fix the Rome postofiice or the Carters ville postoffice or any other little of fice than if I had no choice or voice in the matter. The rings will fix it upon the principle of i-I have tickled you, now you tickle me." We out siders are as helpless as a painted ship upon a painted ocean. And yet. I know, or think that I know, who rviuld be appointed if the quiet, conservative citizens had their choice. Politics is a hard road to travel. It is a mighty big thing to be Presi dent of this great nation, and to be chosen by honorable methods, but it must certainly belittle a noble mind to have to descend into the very slums and schemes of the small poli ticians to get into ofiiee. The wran gle, tne irypocricy. tne broken prom ises, the small revenges that arc necessary will certainly lower his self-respect and leave him clouded in his old age with. unhapp- memories. If his conscience does not get sear ed, how must a sensitive nature writhe under the cards that the dis appointed publish cards that ac cuse him of falsehood or a betrayal of trust or of ingratitude and broken pledges. Sheridan said that '"con science has no more to do with se duction than it has with poli tics." and Shakespeare said '"a politician is one who would cir cumvent God if he could." So, I reckon it is now just like it was a century or two ago no worse no better. And yet there are many good men in politics men whose very virtues have exalted them men like Lamar and Black and lilount and lurner. wlio have never been constrained to stoop that they might win. There are such men in every State and they are the leaven that give character to the whole body and make our national and State assemblies respectable. But the average politician's bed is a hard one. He makes it himself and must lie on it. But still, lie has our sympathy. Bill Arp. Items of Interest. Marshal Harris, of Forsythe, Ga., was shot and killed Tuesday by a negro, who is now in jail. To meet a government deficit in receipts, Mexico will probably estab lish an export duty on hides and ores. During the progress of the work on the World's Fair grounds in Chi cago eighteen men have been killed and G10 have been injured. Stephen Langford, an 80-year-old farmer in Madison county, Ky., has had constructed for his own use a ! coffin weighing 1500 pounds. Because her lover took another girl to the theatre, Miss Annie Gehriss, of Reading, Pa., Monday, jumped into the canal and drowned. Thomas Nelson, ex-mayor of Cape Charles City, Va., has been convict ed of embezzling church funds and sentenced to two years in the peni tentiary. The case against Lillie Johnson, charged with being Alice Mitchell's accomplice in the killing of Freda Ward in Memphis, Tenn., about a j-car ago, has been dismissed. During a severe thunder storm near Danville, Va., Monday, two brothers, Willie and George Crane, aged 13 and 17 years, were struck by lighning and instantly killed. The bodies of three women and five men were found packed in bar rels at the Newport News & Missis sipi Valley railroad depot in Louis ville, Ky. That a wholesale butch ery had been committed was evident from the mutilated condition of the bodies. Why Hi Wife is Fidgety." I have the best cook in town. Whose bread is delicious and white; II.t cofl'ee is fragrant and brown. Her pastry a perfect delight. 15ut she daily complains of the worry they bring She's m v own darling wife, but a fidgety thing! Your wife is worn out and needs Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, the only medicine guaranteed to cure debilitated women. How many overworked Amer ican ladies we see with lack-lustre eyes and hatrgai'd faces, growinar old iK-fore i their time, from those exhausting ail ments lhaf men know nntliinrr f Tlu-v A NATION'S DOIXUS. The News From Everywhere (Jiitlieml and Condensed. A portion of Pennsylvania was visited by a big snow storm Satur day. Falling under a train near Altoo na, Pa., Friday, C. L. Lloyd, a brakeman. was cut in two. A premature blast with dynamite, caused the death of three railroad workmen near Pittston, Pa., Satur day. George Ross, a 13-year-old boy, had both eyes knocked out by Wil liam Eckhardt in New York city, Friday. Gargling his throat with ammonia by mistake, Sunday night, caused the death of Chas. Firing at Cam den, N. J. For placing arsenic in the coffee of three relatives, Viola Thompson, aged 14, was jailed Monday at Cape May, N. J. By the explosion of a powder mag azine at Lima, O., Tuesday, Clark Robinson and Benjamin Dowe lost their lives. Emory Clark and Samuel Percy were killed Saturday in a boiler ex plosion at a twine mill near Provi dence, R. I. Despondent from ill health. Dr. J. W. Stafford, of Graham, W. Va., blew his brains out before a mirror on Saturday. While jumping from a train at St. Clair, Pa., Monday, John McKeon, was struck by another train and in stantly killed. In attempting to ford the Juniata river at Flowing Springs, Pa., Mon day, Hurray Jckes and his horse were drowned. Lewis Thomas, colored, killed Stephen Catchings. also colored, at Atlanta. Ga.. Sunday night, the re sult of jealous'. Dr. W. S. Cardwell. a prominent physician of Lebanon, Ky., com mitted suicide, Sunday night, by taking morphine. Harry Baring fatally shot Annie Kurtz at Allen, Pa., Thursday, be cause she refused to marry him and then shot himself. The explosion of a boiler in a saw j mill at Rossville, O.. Saturday, i caused the instant death of Harry Rex and Edward McClerg. Having confessed embezzlement of $700 from his employer, Ludwig Marsch, a New York clerk, shot himself at his desk Saturday. While playing in a lumber yard at Richmond. Va., Friday, Ollie Brown, aged 12, was crushed to death by a piece of timber falling on him. A mob of twenty-five lynched Han- nagan Thornton, colored, at Morrill town, Ark.. Tuesday night, for mur dering constable Charles F. Pate. At Centralia. W. Va., Thursday, by the falling of an engine tank. J. V. Dennison was instantly killed and four others were seriously injured. Crazed by grief over the recent death of her husband. Mrs. Frances Harris, committed suicide with pois on at New Haven. Conn., Saturday. While Mrs. James Doby was hand ing a gun to her husband from a window at Suawanee, Ga., Friday, it was discharged and she was killed. A cyclone passed through portions of Texas, Mississippi, Arkansas and Wisconsin. Thursday, destroying whole towns and killing many peo ple. In attempting to board a running passenger train at Bloomsburg, Pa., Friday, Walter Savage was thrown under the wheels and horribly man gled. Insane from illness, Rev. S. D. Roberts, of Lincoln, Neb., a promi nent Methodist divine, left home last week and was found Monday almost famished. Resenting a drunken cowloy's shot into the house, John Anderson, the groom, put fatal buckshot into three serenaders at Charivari. Kas., Mon day night. Andrew Campbell, a farmer at Bangor, Mich., Monday, shot and killed his former wife, from whom he was recently divorced andrthen took his own life. The clothing of Mr.-,. Claus Frahm, an invalid at Hastings, Neb., caught fire Friday and she jumped into a bath tub to quench the flames and was drowned. During a fit of mental derange ment, Tuesday, A. Kevins threw himself under a Southern Pacific train at Portland, Oregon, and was ground to death. Lee Newell and Leon Styles were burned to death Saturday in the cal aboose at Stanberry, Mo. They fired the building in the hope of gaining their liberty. Nine men were instantly killed and six others seriously injured on the line of the drainage canal at Romeo, 111., Monday, by the falling of a massive iron crane. John Driscoll, of Buffalo, N. Y., crawled into a freight car, and when found at Pittsburg. Pa., Tuesday, he was nearly dead, having been six days without food or water. There were 1S business failures in the United States during the past week. The town of Warden, Idaho, was almost entirely wiped out by fire Friday. . For a price of if 1,000 Miss Mollie Nealson, of Pittsburg, Pa., fasted 31 days. Hugo Wahler is wanted at Toledo, O., for poisoning' his wife to obtain $5,000 insurance. A passenger train near Shenan doah, Pa., struck William Cattaca vitch, Saturday, while walking the track, causing instant death. Speculating with his congrega tion's money Father VanDevan, a Catholic priest, of Butte, Mont., lost 43.000 and has skipped abroad. The watchman at the jail at Mays ville, Ky., was knocked down Satur day while giving tho prisoners their dinner and six of them made their escape. For attempting to murder Ray Stout, a railroad agent at Salina, Kan., Friday, Don Adams, colored, was taken from the officers by a mob and lynched. Charles E. Staples, aged 50. com mitted suicide at his home in Au gusta, (in.. Saturday morninir, bv shooting himself in the head. Busi ness trouble was the cause. A terrific cyclone passed over South Boston. Va., Friday, doing considerable damage. Alex Cumby, aged (0. while leaving town for his home in the country was killed. Two murderers made their escape from Sing Sing prison Thursday night. They threw red pepper in the eyes of the guards, overpowered them and locked them in their cells. William Williams, a Chicago pain t er. on Friday murdered his wife by cutting her throat because she re fused to live with him and then com mitted suicide in the same manner. For drugging and assaulting Mrs. John Benson, during treatment, Dr. C. O. Elliott, of Grantsville, Utah, was chased and shot by the woman's husband and brother last Thursday. A passenger train fell through a hi'di trestle near Huntington, W. Va.. Friday, causing the death of James McCrcery, the conductor and severe injuries to several passengers. Caught beneath a fire in the Silver Bow mine shaft near Butte, Mont., Saturday, started by an exploding lamp, nine miners were entombed and suffocated b- the smoke and gas. After being swindled out of all his possessions by sharpers, Isaac Rob erts, a yoi ng farmer near Hunting ton, Ind., went to the woods, Mon day, and scot his brains out with a ritie. George Snow and Arthur Gainer were shot and killed by Arthur Fields as they were going to church Sunday night at Livingstone, Tex. Jealousy over a young lady was the cause. Father Flaherty, a Catholic priest, was convicted at Mount Morris, N. Y., Saturday, on the charge of hav ing ruined Mary Sweeney, a girl under 10 years of age, a member of his Hock." At Chicago, Monday, a World's Fair gun, weighing 14 tons, flatten ed to a pulp Sergeant James M. Warwick, of the United States Army, and fatally crushed Corporal M. J. Kermes. Hounded by his vindictive brother-in-law. William Wilson, of North Memphis. Tenn., who eloped with handsome Ella Benson, was finally accused of attempted murder, and resisting arrest, Saturday, was shot dead. At Rosa, La., Saturday, Charlton W. Howard, in a quarrel, shot and wounded Owen Heath. Russell and John Heath pursued Howard with guns and were themselves shot, Rus sell being killed and John fatally wounded. Joseph Cook, clerk in the store of J. P. Clayton, at Scran ton, Miss., was killed Tuesday night, and the safe robbed ot l,JtMi. inree young men, connected with the best fami lies, have been arrested as the guilty parties. Lynching is feared. A wholesale poisoning occurred among negroes at a wedding near Holly Springs, Miss., Friday night, caused by eating lxnled custard which had been allowed to stand for several hours in a new tin can. Twenty-five of them are reported at the point of death. Thomas Morgan and his three sis ters. Jennie, Rebecca and Caroline, of Waynesboro, Pa., were placed in the penitentiary, Saturday, for the murder of their father. The sen tences imposed by the court are: Thomas, twelve years; Rebecca, ten years; Caroline, ten years, and Jen nie. three years. Hood ClH-fH. saying that Hood's Sarsaimrilla In cures, its proprietors make no idle or extravagant claim. Statements from thousands of reliable people of what Hood's Sarsaparilla has done for them, conclusively prove the fact Hood's Sar saparilla cures. Hood's Pills act especially upon the liver, rousing it from torpidity to its natural duties, cure constipation and as sist digestion. ALL OVEIi THE STATE. A Siiiiiiiuiry of Current Events for the Past Seven Days. The Guilford Greys, of Greensboro, have disbanded. A destructive cyclone visited Wrightsville, near Wilmington, Thursday night. Winston has a letter carrier who uses a horse in making his rounds and another a bicycle. A colored woman named Patterson was jailed at Hillsboro, Monday, on the charge of infanticide. An old ladj' of eighty years resides in Cabarrus county, who has never seen a town or a train of cars. Burlington will hold an election on the Cth of June to issue $20,000 sub scription to the Burlington and Southwestern railroad. J. W. Morgan, aged 70, of Bruns wick county, committed suicide Thursday by taking laudanum, caused by family troubles. For being '"tired of this world," Lawson Eagle killed himself in Ca barrus county, Sunday, by taking an overdose of laudanum. A colored employe at a saw mill in Pitt county was literally cut to death, Saturday, while attempting to step over a log in motion. A negro named Bullock, of Ala mance county, was jailed at Graham, Tuesday, charged with making a criminal assault on a white woman. In a dispute between two colored men in Yadkin county, Saturday evening, one named Martin was struck in the head with a hoe and killed. Rosetta Redwood, colored, of Hal ifax county, who had lxen missing from her home since March was found Tuesday by fishermen in the Roanoke river. In Asheville, Sunday, the three-year-old child of B. Burnet te was burned to death. It had Ik-cii left in the room alone for a short time and its clothing caught fire. Fire at Kinston, Thursday e ing. destroyed ten residences and a colored church within two hours. causing a loss of nearly $20.(H0. The fire originated in the church. Walter Taylor, a colored boy aged about 14 years, was jailed at Wades- boro. Tuesday, on the charge of com mitting an assault upon an old col ored woman in Anson county. Three stores at Conover, Catawba county, were broken into, Monday night, but all the thieves carried off was 17 cents from one store and a box of cartridges from another. William B. Puett. aged 35, com mitted suicide at his home in Cald well count', Sundaj morning, by blowing out his brains with a pistol. Too much whiskey was the cause. Beginning' to-morrow. Charlotte will be made a first-class money order office and will be made a de pository for the various money order offices in the surrounding country. Will Means, colored, was jailed at Concord, Saturday, for attempting a criminal assault upon a white lady, Mrs. Melton, after forcing an en trance into her bedroom Friday night. At Charlotte, Thursday, a difficul ty occurred between John R. Eddins and his clerk, Chas. Stone, in the former's book store, in which Eddins was severely wounded in the head by an ink stand hurled at him by Stone. A fight took place at Salisbury, Thursday, between Mayor T. C. Linn and Alderman D. M. Miller, result ing in bruised faces. No weapons were used, but Miller accuses the mayor of having drawn a pistol and a pair of brass knucks on him. The members and minister of the colored Methodist church at King's Mountain, were disturbed Sunday night by an intoxicated negro, Zeke Rhyne. His conduct was very bad, as he cursed the minister in the pul pit and interrupted the' services. All the suits against the R. & D. R. R., growing out of the wreck at Bostian's bridge, near Statesville, on August 27th, IS'Jl, in which 22 persons were killed and 30 wounded, have been compromised. This wreck cost the company at least $100,000. Gov. Carr has made requisition on Gov. Tillman, of South Carolina, for Sam Cannon, a negro who stands charged with the double crime of burglary and assault with intent to commit rape at the house of Mrs. Julia E. Brown, in Robeson county. Adjutant General F. H. Cameron states that the board of officers re cently ordered by the Governor to inspect the camp grounds at Wrights ville found them in such condition that they were forced to report ad versely as to the fitness and condi tion for occupancy during the pres ent year. At Kernersville, Saturday, Henry and Joe Dickens, two brothers, and Adrian Walker, engaged in a shoot ing match. They fell out about who was the best shot and Henry Dick ens shot Walker twice in the breast. Strange to say the wounded man disappeared and has not been seen since. The Dickens brothers have been arrested. A flour rolling mill is the latest enterprise for Durham. Burns Davenport, of Monroe, while dressing a piece of plank on a buzz planer, Wednesday, had his left hand cut off. Caterpillars have made their ap pearance in Ulauen county io an alarming extent, covering whole plantations and destroying every thing. Jim Veney, colored, was shot and seriously wounded while trying to escape arrest near Wilmington last Friday. He was wanted for several offences. Jack Brady, colored, was hanged at Hendersonville, Saturday, for the murder of L. D. Troy, Jr., a white man, last August. He confessed on the gallows. William Blajdock, a youth of 20, was fatally shot in Mitchell county, Tuesday, by Andy Green, aged 00, for being too intimate with the lat ter's young wife. A Mrs. Wilson, of Asheville, awoke Sunday morning to find her two months' old child dead by her side. It had been sick but its condition was not thought to be serious. The Oxford Ledger says there are 10 persons in the Granville county work house and last month it tixik 300 pounds of meat or 3(5 pounds to each inmate to run the institution. Samuel C. Sniies was jailed at Charlotte, Tuesday, charged with attempting to poison his wife, by sending her drugged vine. The couple were living apart for some time. An incendiary attempted to burn the residence of Mrs. Calvin, at Laurinburg, early last Friday morning-, but the fire was discovered and extinguished before much damage was doue. Isaac Hutchings, aged (10. a prom inent farmer and merchant of For bush, Yradkin county, committed sui cide Thursdav' night b' hanging him self with a rope. Financial trouble is the supposed cause. A man giving his name as H. J. Kennedy and claiming to be a watch maker, visited Boiling Springs. Cleveland county, last week and alter collecting several valuable watches for repair he disappeared. taking them with him. Picked up at I'aiidom. Enoch Davis, who murdered his wife at Ashley, Utah, in July, 1S02. will be shot by order of Judge Black burn in the courthouse 3'ard at Pro vo on the 9th day of June next. Furious over a gambling dispute with other negroes, Joe Williams rushed for an axe and, lifting it over Alf. Marshall, was about to brain him. Just then he staggered and fell dead to the floor himself, of heart disease. Frauds and conspiracies most gi gantic and far-reaching have just been unearthed by the Minnesota legislature in the metluxls of ap praising and selling State swamp lands for school, university, railroad and other State uses. At Chattanooga, while a hubsand was testifying against his wife in a justice court, the wife lost control of herself and gave the husband a beat ing in the presence of the justice, who, after looking on at the light discharged the woman. It has been discovered that alxmt twenty fraudulent insurance compa nies have been operating in the State of West Virginia and that one of them collected within the past six months over $G0.0oO in premiums without paying a single claim against it. A man in St. Petersburg, Russia, who was sentenced to death for mur der, but had his sentence commuted to ten years in Siberia, was recently married with his prison garb on him and his chains clanking as he went to the altar. His bride started with him next day to Siberia. Milwaukee, Wis., May IS, lsj-J. I think verv highly of vonr l'otnl" Extract Ointint'iit; have found it all it is claimed to he bm invaluable remedy for piles and all affections to which an oint ment is applicable. Pond's Extract is extra good fur dry catarrh of the n and throat. II. Huaio, No. 1111 Cold Spring Ave JIbsolatety Pure A cream of tartar baking powder. Hishest of all in leaveninz strength. Latest U. S. Government FimkI Report. Koyal linking 1'owiler C.,10 Wall St.,N.V. NX Powdet Gainefl IS Poifls. ! bare been a rrcat unfferer from Torpid Liver and Ivpepia. Every thine I ief!UarinltaiuenutUI I rail now digest any kind offoorit never have a ::c-i3a-ii.-,ai:l hnvegiiu ed fifteen oiinSt in weight." W. C. SCIi IXTZt, Columbia, S. C SOLD EVEETWEEEE. GRAND - DISPLAY -OF- 3STew Spring Goods AT THE HEW YORK BARGAIN STORE. Choicest aud Newest Shades DRESS GOODS. NEW NOVELTIES IN iilc (Jootls, Ixitcs & Eiiiljruiik'ii -AND- Wash -:- Fabrics ! Special Drives in Shoes and Hosiery. A NEW LINE -OF- HATS AND HUGS. Trunks and Valises AT Bed Rock Prices. (JOTS' Furnishing -:- Goods A SPECIALTY. Stationery Just One-Half the Regu lar Price. Come to See TJs ! We are headquarters for :- 1JAKGAINS -:- IN- General Merchandise Evmiliiii (Joes at One Price! ft'V'Polite attenl ion piveii to all and those who trade with ns one time will 1m sure to come again. Respectfully, JNO. F. SOLTIERLXD, Prtpr.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 27, 1893, edition 1
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