Headligh ? 51 "IT 4 ti iHE KSTAIUJSTIED 1887. GOLDSHOHO, N. C, T11UKSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1893. VOL. VII. NO. 12. n 2 r a fed 8 VJ fcrsSl b VI I.-1 ho Oriental salutation, knowing th.-it rood health c;:::Ti.-t cxi. t without a her. .hy Li vor. "When tlicj Liver is torpid tho Bov, cls nro pliiggith. con Ftipiitotl, tho food lioa in the stomach undi gested, poison in g th.3 Moo l; frequent headacho ensue?; a feeling cf lassi tude, dejpc ndonoy and Eervcmsnoss indicate hoT.7 the v.h-Io f-ystcm h de ranged. Shiunoiu Liver Kcgulator has been tho iix-ar.s ci" lcstonng moro people to health and happiness by giving them r, Lerlthv Liver than any ngeney kno-.rn on earth. It acts "with extraor dinary power and efficacy. K'V. I O. ViLiir.R, Prince '.on, X. J.. says: 1 t' . : !t :!-iri4 h !j-; so i:,-. h to kup me in -:'...!-.-; ' i hl.er. :i- -imni. ns Liver Keulalor." S c that iou .;' the Genuine, v ;;h red If. c.i fror.t i f wrerucr. .tlLIIi- & CO. I'liUaduluhia, Pu. J. e. ; man pay titty cents at tne entrance OUr PlirSe Closed lit0 Z in. and saw him mount the Keep THE V x I'n me t Y. RACKET STORE '11 V. Hi till! q.M. line Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes, i'k!ii!!ir. feits" Fnriibliiinr Hoods, bo I T C -l,t by 1!. and nirNew will be At Such Prices 'I'lbit vi!i :istotiish rvervlfodv! mall the !i Hi' We Giva Yon a Bargain i in Everything Ycu Buy ! Ai:'i Lr:i;ii!!;!'-' e !"" article as retire-; :ie- lor a van e.. i'J :..p a ilo.cll. DON'T FOIMiKT THE PLACE. Whv.i Coming 1o the City. make it 1 us liy our pun your interest to a ing you many a Ul-es. All you Heed hen voii Marl out A. M. SHRAGO & CO., Prop'rs. NOT, WHY HOT? ( i ) ,'i li'l M't' tilt ; 1 1 1 I jk ivt'lt it's i;i latost styles FALL AM) WMlJi UiLUNHRY. L;ulies Hats and Bonnets, a lso a I land soi ne line of head uvar l'or the little ones. A NICE LINE OF HOSIERY T Ladies, livn. Misses and Ch ' r Laaies tancv Handkerchiefs 11 ''in 1 it 1 iona ! '.-s vat IV lo'.V ii'ty and exeep- J. Henry Edwards. W.-.-l ( 'Mi! n St., Gold-boro, X. C Welcome .'iKANTi i;d to Tiiosi: who inv ;t'"oi!. which is - :. illi the choicest of e-led :.t ! t ne 'I illl Liquors and Wines ! AM t! compounded and skillful men. matiipt: iat Domestic 2 d Imported Cigars, A N!) A LAUGH LOT OF FINK TO- baeeo. For Pure Xortii Carolina Corn Whi-kev my place is headquarters. Mr. CuHeil Ilie.veM is with me and Would be plea-ed to his friends. Jas. L. Dickinson, At .John (Jinn's )M Stand. Dr. J, m. Parker, - DENTAL Sl'WJEOX. I llliee Poo ins over I 'e Centre Si reel. 1). Giddens Acrostic. I To Miss Kate II. lines these appropriate lines are most respe tfu!ly dedicated, liy a true friend. J Just :is thou :u-t, by (Jod atllicteil. Upon thee His love is unrestricted; Let His image be then depicted Into thy pure, unselfish heart. And He will His grace impart. Contentment, then, must In tliv lot. Ami angels will forget thee not, 'riioufjth thy afflictions arc sevens Heaven's pure blessings still are near. As yott near the Heavenly city, 'Round the throne of God. in" pity. Immortal souls will sweetly sing", "Nearer to Thee," their anthem ring. Even praises to God, our King. Here, may thy last days le thy best. On Jesus" bosom, mayst thou' rest, Lovely as the sweetest Mower, Mayst thy light shine every hour. Even in great niagie power. So tin m" it get a blessed slmwer. 15. i;. it. 'In Debt." A man who attempted to raise some money on a subscription paper I for a necessary church out West ro- j lates his experience as follows: '"The tirst man I went to said lie I was very sorry, but the fact was he I was so involved in his business that he couldn't give anything at the pre- I sent time. Very sorry indeed, but a ! man in debt as he was. owed his first I duty to his creditors. j '"He was smoking an expensive cigar and before I left the store he bought of a peddlar who came in. a pair of expensive Rocky Mountain cut? buttons. "The next man 1 went to was a young clerk in a banking establish ment. He read the paper over, ac knowledged that tin-church was very greatly needed, but said that he was owing tor his hoard, was bad! 111 lueuL oinerwise. ana ant not see now i be could give anything. "That afternoon as I went by the baseball grounds 1 saw this young rand stand where special seats were i -Id for a quarter of a dollar. j. ne uiii ij man lownom t present- ed the paper was a farmer living near the town. He- also was very sorry. but times were hard, his crops had been a partial failure, the mort gage on his farm was a heavy load, the interest was coming' due. and he really couldn't see his way clear to give to the church, although he free ly acknowledged it was ju.-t what the town needed. "A week from that time I saw the same farmer drive into town with his entire family, and go to the cir cus, afternoon and night, at an ex pense of at least four dollars. - "The Bible says:., "Judge not thatjK...n K.ft fol- commerce by infusing be not judged.' but it also says. ;ts iflUence into the bodv of local ve "By their fruit hall know them.' i And I really could not help thinking that the devil could use that old ex oiM1. 'in debt." to splendid advant age, especially when he had a selfish man to help him." The Meanest Trick Vet. j Mi. hp.' Kiiiiuirer. One of the meanest, lowest down, j despicable little tricks that is possi- j l!e for a man to do is to cheat and lie in a trade. What elo 3-ou think of a little hell hound who will tak ( i a good sample of cotton and sell a j sorry bale by it and thereby try to j cneai me ouve-i : naL eio you 111111K 1 of a man who. when caught 111 such a little trick, will protest that he is an honest man? Some one not a thousand miles from Monroe is guilty of just such a deed. The man who will stoop to such little tricks is no better than the common sheep thief who looks between the iron bars of a prison cell and deserves to have the same punishment meted out to him. mib . f Women Live Longer Than Men. M.-ilIc.il .Journal. In the 4!th registration report of Massachusetts, lsiio, the compiler presents the statistics of 2o:j persons who were reported as having died 'luring the 10 years, lssl-lio, at till age of lni) and over. Of this number ")'.'. or 75.4 per cent., were females. The greater exposure of men to ac cidents, to weather agencies, to the constant strain of business life, to the anxiety of providing for the fam ily all tend to shorten the life of men. The deaths by accident among men are more than three-fold greater than among women, and the men commit suicide in about a three-fold ratio as compared with women. William G. Parrish was jailed j dident join us. They dodged the Monday at Dallas, Tex., charged j war. They had no influence in bring with hiring a negro to kill his part-1 jnr it on and took no perilout part in ner, Y. M. Langdon, who was mur- Lu. conflict. They never do. dered recently after stepping from a ! 'i0 the bullies are that now have streetcar. Parrish held a $10,000 tl,yu. -list hold," as Mr. Page says, j policy on Langdon's life. The negro, John Harris, has been capturod and made a full confession. I In-I Mil Man Wotiltl llavr II in Joke. Two bovs who ow ned a cattle farm out West. Christened it -Tocits,' at their sire's reipiest : The old man thought it quite a good conceit , For there the sun's rays meet (the sons raise meal !) The lads prompt-red, and they and their families enjoyed the very best of health. Dr. Pierre's 'Pleasant Pellets were al ways found in their medicine-chest the' only positive cure for bilious and sick headache, dizziness, constipation, indigestion, and all disorders of the bowels and stomach. Strictly vegeta ble, small, sugar-coated; only one re quired for a dose, and their action is gentle and thorough. The best Liver piil on earth. AP.OUT THK "SOUTHERN BULLV." Bill Arp Takes Exceptions t Page' Ar ticle in 1 lie Forum. The Forum is a most excellent magazine. It has ever been fair and liberal in sentiment towards the South. It is a medium for advanced thought, a conservative educator, and is always welcome at my fire side. Hut I confess I am not pleased with tho editor's article on the ''Southern Bully" in the November number. Indeed. I did not know that we had such a professional in stitution in all our borders, and Mr. Page's twelve pages of philosophical anathema against him have failed to convince me of his existence or of our danger from his lawless conduct. Distance does not always lend en chantment to the view. If Mr. Page lived here in Cartersville he would soon be surprised to find that the bully was not in these parts but was, perhaps, a little lower down where the mosquitoes aggravate a man or some foul miliaria poisons his liver and disturbs his serenity. When I was a boy studying my first geogra phy. I found there a picture of a heathen Chinee carrying on a pole a long string of rats for sale, and so for forty years I believed that rats were the Chinaman's national food. Indeed. I was disappointed when I leariied that they did not eat rats. I had believed it so long I wanted to continue in the faith. In the same book there was a picture f a scene in Florida. It was a dark, slimy lagoon surrounded by a tangled I LH-OWth Of tl and vines covered with 1 moss, venomous smile es hung from the branches, greedy v tares nerched in the treetop and ; wide-mouthed alligators were sun ning themselves upon the logs. That hide ous vision of Florida lasted me ! fot years. - j Just so some of our Northern brethren have .I. ii no . mi mi mi n . that the South used to be full of des peradoes, and is even now spotted with bullies who are1 clinging to bar barism and brutality. They want to continue' in that faith. Mr. Page says "the bully is an old ance to those who know acquaint- j Southern ; life. He had much to do with the war. the penalty of which other men who had nothing to do with it. had to pay with his oaths and his honor: he has .-trutted through all the quiet ways of South'-rn life calling hinielf the South and he leads mobs to ave-nge 'our women' It lias pUb;r sentiment in the South to rid us at last of this historic red handed. deformed and swaggering villain." Well. 1 am glad he is gone, if lie was ever here, for he must have been an awful bad man. Strange I did not come across him in my youth stranger still that in the induction of the war "minima pass fui" I did not recognize him and now in my old j age' I do not see him with Ins last hold upon the throat of law and or der. It seems tome that Mr. Page has set tin the tenpins iust to have fun )f kn,(t.kh tlum lmvn . m T, If lie mean that those who voted for secession were the bullies, then I plead guilty along with many of our noblest Christian gentlemen, such as Howell Cobb and Tom Cobb and Joe Brown and General Evans and Col quitt and Gordon and Nisbett and a host of others whom the people of Georgia have delighted te honor. Sureh he is not making a fling at these men. The right to soce'de has long ago been settled. Settled when I the North did not dare to try Mr. I Davis for treason, their greatest I lawyers declaring that he ceiuld not be legally convicted. The South se cededthat was all. It was the North that made war about it. Then who does he mean by the bully who had much to do with the war? May be he means the common soldiers, the high privates, the '"hoi polloi" who mainly did the fighting. No. he cannot mean them, for they wore pa triots. Patriotism was their only motive for they owned no negroes whose slavery was in peril. And besides red-handed swaggering vil lains do not fight. They are cow ards. I remember but two or three town bullies in Home when we were ! makinir ur our companies, but they V(, ure at a loss to know. If he ; means the lynchers, we must defend them from ever-thing but lynching. Tho- are neither red-handed, de formed nor swaggering. Tlier are not villains. The' do not "pretend to the traditions ef the old Southern gentleman." The- are not a class. They are a communitv'. You cannot go into any town or settlement and pick them out and say this man will be a lyncher when the horrible crime is committed. Mr. Page professes the higlu-st respect for Bishop Ihu' good, as evcrybodT does who knows him, and j-et eloes not seem to re spect his assertion that "the South ern people are not cruel and never were. They are a kind-hearted peo- pie; good to one another and to all men. They are kind to dumb brutes. Whatever may be true or false about them, they were never cruel-hearted. They were kind to the negroes when they were slaves they are kind to them now." If this be true then where are the bullies that these sweeping reproach es are hurled at, for it was this same kind-hearted class of people who burned the negro at Paris; the same kind who slew the negro rapist at Port Jervis, in New York; the same kind that have avenged the purity of woman in Illinois and Michigan. The same red-handed, swaggering villains. The only difference be tween the North and the South is that the fe'inale victims here are hun dreds to every single one at the North. Over olio have been record ed within twelve months. The hu man nature that prompts the lynch ing is the same everywhere every where where the innocence and vir tue of woman is respected, and let me add that the greater the respect the more speedy and terrible the punishment. Bishop Ilaygood says '"the South has always been pecu liarly jealous of its women." Mr. Page throws a sneer at this when he says it is the swaggering villain who struts around and leads mobs to avenge "our women." Perhaps he is not aware that the marriage relation is much more "sac-red at the South than at the North, especially among our common peo ple, who have not much else to live fnl- JV ide wife and children. Di vorces are very rare in our courts, especially among tho country people, the very people who compose the I l lie v mobs when the outrage happens. but who in all other things are the best citizens the world ever f ,i: .are tin-in with tho North for i ob.-di.-e,-,. to la w- mid ord..r :md for ' vow white oonvVt for fohmv b t.eorgia i win snow ten in .Massa-! chusetts and twelve in New York in : an equal number of population, iiu.se are tne tatnes irom the last ; census. c liave Out two white te niale convicts in Georgia. There are hundreds in New York. And the state Board of Charities of Massa chusetts in summing up their report uses this language: '"And now we find that there is hardly a country in the civilized world where atrocious and llagrant crime is so common as in Massachusetts." Nor I am not arraigning any Northern State for its sad condition, bi t I am defending the South from slanderous assertions concerning its morals not'only its morals but its good, industrious citizenship. For pauper and every tram) that : can be found in Georgia I will show you'-flfty in New York and nearly as many in ain' Northern State. If idle ness is the parent of vii-e as Ben Franklin said, then our people are not idle, nor is "ovit the hills te the poorhou any song ef ours. No. the lvd-handed swaggering bullies are not elomiciled among our people, but woe be to the ne'gro or white man who violates the sanctity of the house-hold. How low down this sanctity can fall I know not. but Mr. Stetson, the statesman of Massachusetts, says in his report. ''Within the last ten years divorces have increased three times as fast as marriages, not ceumting the separa tions that elo not get into the courts and now it tated that not more than eight families in ten have 1 1 i 1 .i w .. ,.f 41... SCI I'll till' UOllOl alio, puiiiv 01 llll ( - marriage relation." j upil, aged 4 years, and both were This is enough on the subject of j burned to death, that myth called the Southern bully, j Deserting his wife and five child As to the lynchings for outrage and j "'n. Rev. Charles M. Bragg, pastor the murder of a child, Dr. Hay-! of Calvary M. E. church at Haiti good tenderly says: "It is an emo-' more, eloped Sunday night with the Clonal insanity, and if it was my j pretty 17-year-old organist of the child who had been thus dismember-1 church. Miss Ianthe Phelps. ed I, too, might have gone inU in- sanitv' that would have never ended." There it is in a nutshell. Does any one think that a father would say, '"No, let us wait; let the law take its course." Ceiuld he sa- it while looking upon the mutilated corpse ef j injured. a darling child? I confess that I ' localise their father was in the could not and would not. Let me j ia,-lt 0f taking their earnings Satur be classed with the bullies for this, i cuiy and get drunk. Herman but this only. In all other things j am otto Habeck, aged 1! and 17 re let the law reign supreme. spectiveh', crushed his skull with an Outrage and murder combined re-1 ax oarv Sunday morning, and then moves the brute at once from the j cut njs throat. human code and places him along j At W(,st rhin Mo ; William VMin vm.o oeasis. man oogs aim nye- nas. If a burglar enters my room in the night I mav shoot him before he takes my watch or while he is taking it. er as he jumps from the window to make his escape. I truly continue to shoot a-fliim and to kill him if I can, even though I do not know whether he has 1113' watch or not. What is that but a hmching lynching bv- one an execution with out trial by jury. But for a crime infinitely more horrible it is said that we must await the law's delay, even though caught in the act. I have ne patience with such theories, nor would I trust Mr. Page nor Judge BlexkW nor Governor North en to carry them out in a case that came home to his house and his 'heart. Bii.lArp. If you have sour stomach and feel bil ious, and your head aches, take a Jap anese Liver Pellet. It will relieve von. Sold by M. E. Robinson & Pro. A NATION'S DOINtiS. The News From Everywhere tiiitlieretl ami Condensed. The business section of Grand Ridge, 111, was wiped out by fire Friday. Excessive cigarette smoking caus ed the death of John B. Titus, one of the wealthiest men in Middleton, O., Saturday. Stepping in front of an express at Morrison, 111., Friday, Charles Andrews, manager of the Andrews OperaX'ompany, was cut in two. While walking on a railroad trestle near Minersville, Pa., Thursdaj', Patrick Houghney, of Greensburg, Pa., was cut to pieces by a train. Crazed by the recent death of an only child. Leo Keifer, jeweler, of Kansas City, Mo., committed sui cide, Friday, by swallowing carbolic acul. By mistake Miss Mabel, daughter of Dr. W. H. Hippie, of Allegheny City, Pa., on Tuesday, drank carlol ic acid for a medicine with fatal re sult. Hugh Brooking, a brakeman on the Hichmond and Petersburg rail road, was killed Saturday by being struck by an overhead bridge near Chester, Va. The home of Joseph Friek, near Venice, Mo., was entered by a negro Saturday, and Mrs. Prick, an aged woman, brutally beaten and Sloo in money stolen. Because her husband recently brought suit for a divorce, Mrs. George Yarns, of Carbondale, Pa., swallowed poison. Thursday, with suicidal intent. Because their parents scolded them Mamie Hippie and Jennie McDonald. two voung girls of Pittsburg, Pa. committed suicide. Tuesday, bv 1ak ing carbolic acid. While driving ; wiiilo drU-in.r ,.r,w n;;r,n,i track in East Baltimore, Monday, jwis Zirckel and Valentine Hax w,.,v struck bv an express train and an express horribly mangled. Fire destroyi-d Edgewood Semina ry, a Dominican school near Madison. Wis., Thursda night. Fifty, g-irls narrowly escaped alive, but two were sutfocatod in their beds. Thomas Prunt of Chicago, was shot and killed Tuesday night by burglars, v. ho broke into his house. Two other members of the famih' we-re seriously wounded. While in a fit of mental derange-i meat. Don Carlos Diaz, the Spanish consul at Baltimore, leaped from a fourth-stoiy window. Friday morn- ing. and was instantly killed. IJcv. Frede rick Howard is bein t. at Jack" tried in the Fe-de-ral com son. Tenn.. for using; the mails to swindle- by sending circulars to al h'getl heirs to English fortunes. Bobbers beat John A. Drake, treasurer of the Indiana. Illinois anel Iowa railroad, into insensibilit-. in his office at Chicago. Thursda-morning, and got away with over $20,000 in cash. Jealousy induced George Lear, an ex-pri!t fighter, to kill Irene Good, in a saloon at Bull Mountain, Col.. Thursday- night and was then himself shot and killed by Sam James, the bartender. During tho burning of the school- I 1 - Ml.. -N- V T I.... 1 v,mr-i m.u-, 1 ., im.ua,, : Miss Mav Porter, the te-ae her, was enciea vol lnir in rescue ner youngest j A passenger train 011 the Eastern Alabama road was derailed ami wrecked near Lafayette, Ala., Thurs day, causeel in- a broken rail. One colored passenge-r was burned to death and thirty-five were seriously tw( ,M)VS m TupS(lav 1)avod at hog killing, which they witnessed the day before. One got on his hands and kne'e-s while the other put a pistol to his head and fired. The little fellow lived but ashort time. At Tacoma, Wash., Mrs. John Peterson, who has been married but three months, was shot in the abdo men and arm on Tuesday, by Albert Lauren, a former admirer. Lauren then went into the woods near by and blew out his brains with a pis tol. At Parkersburg, W. Ya., Tuesday, David anel Bradford Amos, brothers, and well-to-do farmers, became in volved in an altercation over some trivial occurrence. Bradford attack ed David with a knife, inflicting ter rible wounds. David picked up a heav3T stone and struck his brother on the head, crushing his skull. Both will elie. Last Week in Trade Circles. SjiociiJ Corre'spondenee. New York, Nov. 20, ISttt. Business conditions during the last week have continued to improve. The progress toward a better state of affairs in the commercial and in dustrial world has been necessarily slow; but it is gratifying to know that the tendency to gradual recu perat ion has met with no setback. The effects of the severe depression of the summer and early fall months are still apparent in restricted con sumption, the partial idleness of many industries, and the enforced conservatism of merchants whose ability to make new purchase's or to liquidate ohl indebtedness has been impaired by the prolonged conges tion of trade. But mercantile set tlements are now progressing more satisfactory-, the volume of business is slowly expanding, and many mills and factories are starting up again after a long periexl tf suspension. The lateness of the season and the natural disposition to proceed cau tiously after the recent experiences in the business world combine to re tard the more rapid development of business activity; but there are no longer any monetary obstacles to the growth of trade, and confidence in the financial outlook is steadily in creasing. Speculation is compara tively inactive, and the smaller per centages of decline in bank clearings and in railroad earnings reported in rec-nt weeks indicate an improve ment in legitimate trade. The fail ures of the week have been 'Mi in the United States, against 20.") last year, and thirty-six in Canada, against thirty-live last year. Be' sides one bank in Ohio and theThur-ber-Whyland Company failure there were four of liabilities of over 100. ooit, and sixty-eight others over .YoM. The volume ef indebtedness of firms failing the previous week was $:.727.4t'.7. against :.4ii7,olt the wee'k before, being larger e-ast than south. Cotton prices have declined Il-lOof a cent per pound, owin to the con- tinned free movement of the crop from the South, and accumulating stocks. The ste-ady elownward ten-dotu-y of prices indicates the general disbelief in short crop estimates. Spinners' takings were larger last week than in the corresponding week last 3'ear: but for the season have been JKJ.ooo bales less than the'- were a year ago. Exports in five elavs of last wei-k have boe-n en!y half as lurr is thi'3" were during' the corre sponding period last year: but com parisons for the season since Septem- ber 1 show a slight increase over the totals for last year. Cotton goods have been in fair demand: but the j announcement that 10.000 packages, or about M..HNUNMI worm, will offered at auction in New York this wee 1c shows .that the reduction 01 ! stocks during the re-cent period of j restricted output has not made sat- j ! isfactoiw progress. The forced sale j is probabh' the application on a largo i scale of the usual trade policy tf I closing out stx-ks in hand at the e-lose of the manufacturing -ear. Prices of wheat are 21 to cents per bushel lower than then- were a wee'k ago. The persistent shrinkage of values is the result of stoadih- ac e utnulating stin ks and continueel in difference on the part of foreign buvers. Cable advice's to grain houses in this county- state that ten ders of Russian and East Indian wheat have been made in London for delive ry next spring on a basis of present prices. WefkH" exports from this count ly continue to fail be low those of the correspoiuling period last year: and Western receipts, al though slightly smaller than then were a year ago. are still averaging over 0.000.000 buslu-ls per week. The movement continues relatiwly small from winter wheat districts, where the tendency to feeel to cattle anel hogs is encourage'd by the low price of wheat in shipping centres, anel by the more profitable results tf marketing the grain in the form of beef anel Mrk. In a measure this is true also of corn, but the market price ef the latter cereal, although 2 to 2i cents lower than it was a week ago, is still relatively better than the price of wheat and the favorable progress of the corn harvest has encouraged i larger offerings of the new ere)) for future delivery. The latter fact is mainly responsible for the weakness in corn prices, as the current move ment is not heavj-, and the stocks at commercial centres are smaller than they were a year ago. There has been little speculative interest provisions, causing a general decline 111 prices. A I'liil(Mili4'r'n Opinion. Voltaire said to a beautiful young la dy with whom he was dining: '-Your rivals are the iM-i fe-ction of art : 3-011 are the perfection of nature." This could not have be-en said if the young lady was suffering from disease, ami pain had left its signs on the features. om en w ho want to keep leautiful. ami be the "perfection of nature," should use 'Favorite Prescription" to assist nature when needed, to correct irregularities, aid circulation and digestion, and there by clear up the skin, rendering it soft and beautiful. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the only medicine for woman's peculiar ills, sold through druggists, and guaranteed to give sat isfaction in every case-, r money re- flinileel. ALL OVEU THE STATE. A Summary of Current Events for the Past Seven Days. Another batch of Waldensian col onists have arrived in Burke county. T. B. Wyatt. of Salisbury, assign ed, Thursday. Liabilities aljout $11,000. It is reported that at least $1,000 worth of gems were' stolen from the North Carolina World's Fair exhibit. A crazy Chinaman is at large in the woods about Asheville, and is terrorizing the inhabitants. George Jones, a restaurant waiter in Greensboro, dropped de-ad Thurs day night without a moment's warn ing. Lula Iseley, a young mulatto wo man, is in Graham jail on the charge of strangling her newly lrn child at Burlington. Sheriff Allsbrook, of Halifax coun try, has made an assignment of all of jjs property to his lamdsmen. His liabilities are $3,500. After abandoning' her Welcome Week celebration, Wilmington has reconsidered and decided to have it. beginning Dei-ember 5th. John Simmons, age-d S3, the cham pion eater of Pitt county, was mar rien three weeks ago to Mrs. Nancy Briley, aged 5. and ilied last Satur day. ' Isaac A. Sugg. Jr., of Greenville, who last June killed his fellow news boy, M. A. Janie's, was trie'd for his life in Halifax Superior Court last week and acquitted. A three-year-old son of J. H. Mit chell, of Davidson count 3, was burn ed to death, Saturda-, while U-ing left alone, a spark from the fire-place igniting his ehUhes. John Parker, a voung white maii;,ln',kl'' dock, pipsisscwa. juniper U-rries , XT ' -mi ; and other well known renieilies. by a from Harnett county, was jailed at 1 ,K.,.uj:. combination, proportion and Favetteville. Fridav, em a charge of I process, givinit to Hood's Satsaparilhi stealing a bale of cotton from a gin ! ''-ti' l'-rs not possessed by other " ; iiii-ibi-Mies. It elieets remarkable euros at Little River Academy. j w i.n other preparations fail. Forsvth countv commissioners j .. . 1 1 looil s 1 ills cure bileiusni-s. I have brought suit against ex-Sheriti Teague', IU-publican, and his bonds I men, for taxe-s uncollected. Teague j is Whinel several thousand dollars, j W. N. Adams, a farmer of John ston count v, while on his way home Saturelav evening, was attacked bv unknown parties anel robbed of $12. all the money he had .011 Lis person. A colored boy named Murserla King', who was carrying the mail from Charlotte to Sheva. was placed in Mecklenburg count 3 jail. Satur-da-, charged with robbing a mail j pouch. j Au altercation between George j jrooks anel a negro. Te.m Worthy, in Moore countv. Thursday, resulted in j t sorioUS injury of Brooks, who Uvas kniK-ked in the head with an ax j m thtf hamls of "vorthy. The Washington Gazette telK of a man trying to sedl a hog to the butchers ef that town which, accord ing te his own statement, was sick when killeet anel which be)re evidence of having die'el with cholera. John Smith, of Stokes count 3 while intoxicated Saturda', accidental- eliscliargeel his gun in the house. The ball struck his sister, Mrs. Frances Manuel, in the left side', inflicting a very serious wound. A lmgro highwa3-man was caught b3' the sheriff of Cumberlanel count v, and his posse, Frida3', placed in Fa3' etteville jail, and in six hours was trie'd, convicted and sentenced to the ptMiitentiarj- for ten 3-ears. Swift justice! While squirrol hunting near Cam eron, Saturday, Rev. Mr. Newton, pastor of the Carthage Baptist church, accidentally shot William Rogers, ex-postniaster at Cameron, inflicting painful wounds in his shoulder and back. In the tenderloin district at Win ston. Frida3 Jen; Lewis, whose mor ality is rotten, stabU'el seriousby Ol lie Jenkins, a soiled dove, who looked uH)n Lewis both as a lover and pro tector. Lewis made his oscac but was capturi-el in Charlotte the next da3'. Rev. Eugene Siler, pastor of Shar on Presbyterian church, Mexklen burg count3", has be'en bounced by his flix-k because he made love to a I 3 ung lad3 member of his church, under promise of marriage, and when attending the S3nod at Tarboro re cently he founel a girl he liked bet ter, which fact he stated to his affi anceil. The Faith Cure in (uilford. Oni'nNbitro Kecurd. An interesting case comes to our notice from Summer-field. Mrs. Da- vis, the 3-oung wife of Dr. W. C. Da vis, of that place, was very ill with fever, and it seemed, as Ixith she and the famil3r thought, that she was at the ven' gate of death. Her relatives and friends were gathered around her bedside and she had bidden them good-bye. Just as they thought she was almost gone, as if by a miracle she rose from the bed and walked to the fire, saying she was cured cured by faith. This was over two weeks ago and she has since been rapidly regaining her health, and if she continues to improve will sih.ii be ierfectly well. Full Test of Hie Kepeal Bill. Ceimplying with the requests made by many of our subscribers, we pub lish below the full text of the silver purchase repeal bill, which recently became a law: "That so much of the act approved July. 11. IS'JO, entitled 'an act eli reeting the purchase of silver bullion anil issue of Tivasur' notes thereon, and for other purposes,' as directs the Secretary of the Treasury- to pur chase from time to time silver bul lion to the aggregate amount of 4.300,000 ounces, or so mue h thereof as may be offere-el in each month at the market price thereof, not exceed ing $1 for 371 25-100 grains of pure silver, and to issue in pa3'ment for such purchases, Treasury notes of the Uniteil States, be ami the same is hereby repeah-el. "And it is hereby doclaivd to le the polii-y of the Uniteel States to continue the use of both gold and silver as standard money, and to coin both golel and silver into money of equal intrinsic anel exchangeable value, such quality to be secured through international agreement or by such safeguards of legislation as will insure the maintenance of the parity in value of the coins of the two metals, ami the equal jxiwe-r of every dollar at all times in the mark ets and in the payment of debts. "And it is hereby further declared that the efforts of the government should be steaelily elirected to the es tablishment of such a safe syste-m of bi-mettallism as will maintain at all times the e-qual Mw-r of every dollar coined or issued 13-the Uniteel States in the markets and in the pament of debts." I!oo!m ami 0;ily Hood. Hood's S.irapai'ill:i is carcfulhy pre pared from sarsapai illa. dandelion. man- A soimd discretion is not so much In dicatcil by never making a mistake as by never reH-atiiig it. ltiicKUiirt Ariii-; Salve, The best Salve in the world for Cuts, bniises. Sores, Ulcers. Salt Khctim, lever Sores, Tetter, ('hupped Hands, ( liilblains Corns, and all Skin Krup tions. and positively e ures Tiles, or no pay required. Jt is uaranteiil to give perfect satisfaction, or money rcfundi-d. Price cents er bo. For Sale bv.J. II. Hille Soa. A Million Fritnls. A friend in need is a friend, in ili-el, and not less than one Million people have found just such a friend in Dr. King's Xew Discovery for( 'oiisiunpt ion. Coughs, anl Colds. If you hav e never usiil this Great Cough Medicine, one trial will convince you that it has wonderful cur ative powers in all diseases of Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each bottle is guar anteed to do all that is claimed or, money w ill lie refunded. Trial lmttles free at J. H. Hill & Son's Drug Store, barge botflies 50o. and $1.00. 1 DiHtTviii Irai. We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. Knur's Xew Discovery for Consumption. Dr. 'King's Xew Life Pills. Hiu-kleu's Arnica Salve and Elce-tric Hitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that hae given such univer sal satisfaction. We do not hesitate to guarantee them every time, ami we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satisfactory results do not follow their use. These reim-ilies have won their great popularity purely on their merits. J. H. Iliil iV- Son's Druggists. 1 Things don't turn up in the world un til somebody turns them up. Many people suffer for 3'ears from troublesome and repulsive sores, lioils, and eruptions without ever testing the marvelous curative properties of A3'er's Sarsapanlla. 1 lie experiment is, cer tainly worth trying. He sure 3-011 get Ayer's Sarsaparilla and no other. The 3-otith of nature is contagious, like the gladne-ss of a happy child. Ladies, if you want a pure, delicate snap for the complexion. M. E. Robin son & Hro.. druggi-ts. will always re commend Johnson's Oriental Medicinal Toilet Soap. Accent is the sottl of language: it gives to it both feeling ami truth. Hie MiKtak4- of life are many some great, others small. We classify them as we feettheir effect, and just in the same way 3-011 re1 eognize Simmons Liver Regulator when taken for indigestion, d-scpsia, con stipation and biliousness. There can lie. 110 mistake in taking the Regulator for these disorders. It quickly relieves. Don't make the mistake of getting .1113--thingelse for malaria. Man may doubt here and there, but mankind din's not doubt. The univer sal conscience is larger than the indi vidual conscience. JIbsoIaUly Pure A cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of all in leavening strength. Latest U. S. Government Food Re port. Royal Baking Powder Co., 10ti Wall St., X. Y. s c: I '.A K F j:l u 5 'ti 1 t h h I 1 ti