Head GXTm 1 N JUL 'A 15 L LSI I EI) 1887. GOLDSBOltO, X. C, TIIUltSDAY, MAY 10, 1895. VOL. VIII. NO. 37. . . 'd Friend t Irit-ji'l, t::nt r.ever 1 1 i u- : 1 Z :j.:tt's -w-i-at ' ! : 1 1 in :. V v! r f this i.;v. r j... aid ".M i.' t !' ::;. ( .1 King of Liver "UeJi i uun l'i".-, ami i Quinine r.nd directly en the - L...d jjuh ijis mid . t ) the Avliole svs : li.e l;:..'dichio vou : ' - a!! ! in V' to U: t;d:eu ' ' v. ri t ) PA('KAi;f. - i;ii ! re.l on v. i upper. I I ", A- CO., l,!ii'..w,;';I,!.ia, l'a. b Green '4 i4 ei 1 the r cf t. Ca tf . V8 L4 lr -i' J !,:all l.opput ioii;i.. . pound GET - OUR - PRICES J fore "iToui. Buy. ii; lenders in 1 1 it Paris G-reexiL. TELLER'S DRUG STORE i :.jsi!0Hi. N. A it ID 40 YEARS. O vJ 1 2 . . . . Dyspepsia, Cl.rcnic Diarrhcsa, Deb:! ty, .Thcu.-.iatlsn-. ID Years. I All Yield to Ccrmctuer. ol.l. a sul For eicr I Wil. DVLPZ SIA. l'mallr ,tomli'ii."l .CHR0.1IC D I A !7 R ! ! O C A . ! - r. to e '.. I::thip ate i ion, s ran t' f irreat Mill' t'.VH i usp Dr. O r .L CnWETUEirJ. !',. ;ivrp ii'-o'l than all tho -11: iv. pwr ta it-ii. I ran Ml Ttl G I L1K , . ;. :..! In-.iha is -op.1. I umatism 10 Years a:: I since tak is eiitlrelv l-.b-l UT- .v'l.o have L think lat I know v i- Miss. li. i'l v ()r-i-aers. 'UK An A Assortment . Not -..lis. Shoe,. iliinerv Goods BARGAIN s an. I make 0 ",,."r.;'?,'Agenis.$75 iisttXr.r."',;',;'.iaIlI I VO ?V; AM S WO R K'CA : llr. J. li. 31 .li. lil-i lu I lien, A. . j Fanner's Girls. l'i ia the early morning Just at tin- i,,f .lav, M nimbi"; the milk in Hi.- dairy. '1 nniing i hp p..vs awav. Sweei.mgthe lloor in the kitcliPn. Making thp beds upstairs, U a-hinirllip 1,-reakfaM dishes, Dii-tin tin- parloi chairs. liru-hinu-tlip pi-nnilx from thp pantrv, Hunting for eggs in thp barn. Koasiing the nipat for linncr, Spinning thp stocking yam; SMC;iiliiiL? the snow-white linen Down on thp hii-lics below, l!anaeking pvcrv meadow here the wild straw bprri s grow. Sunday, Slan-hinjr thi'ir "lixins" " for v nurning iiicir go:. ten prpam. ltiusing tlip ai!s ami strainer l)ow n in thp running stivaiti, I'pp.iing the gppean.l jxiultry. Making )iihling and ji'ips. logging tlip little chip's era.llp, Driving away the llies. f ira.-p in pvpi v motion, -Mu-ie in pciy tone; IJpMUty in form ami feature, 'I'housan.ls might eovet to own. Cheeks that rival ine roses. 'I'e. th the w hiteness ot jiearis )ne of thpsp count r.v maids is worth A score of your city girls. - It.- Ovcrmu Iiing Olio's Self. Tlic saving that all is fair in war is ol'ton use. to excuse the reed or inalicp of those who seek to jain un fairly or to injure an adversary by falsehood. Tho public man who fails to redeem his pledgvs to the people is a fit subject for attack from an in dignant press, but it often happens that public men. and private citizens, too. are made the victims of unde served invective, and those who in dulge in such a course are apt to overreach themselves. Partisan zeal ami personal spite often lead men to do that which should not be done and wdiich in calmer moments would not be done, but tiie excuses that may be made for a wrong committed, even though they should be accepted, do not make the wrong right. Those who pt the provem am!, acting upon traduce an adversary. luentlv mm thril tiioircoiiseior.ee- less zeal has defeated their purpose. : Kxamples are ..lite plentiful in the ; history of American politics. Very Soften an abused candidate is benefit i cil bv the assaults made upon him. especially if they an; o badly de ; signed as to arouse the sympathy of ! the iust and the resentment of partv j friends. ! Campaign orators and. newspaper i editors who are regarded with ad- miration during a campaign for their I boldness, their caustic utterances i I and powers of vilification, are not ; so highly eteemed when it isdiscov : ered after the election that instead of promoting the cause they espous j ed they only aroused resentments that defeated their aim. Zeal in I ueh enterprises is commendable and i substantial in its service only when it is wisely and justly guided. ' Nearly all men who com.? before the j public as candidates for public oflico are vulnerable at some point, but : li.ey can be uceossful!y attacked oiilv bv those who have control of . themselves that is to say. men who are not carried away by their feel ings, but act with judgment and 'conscience. Such men do not over reach themselves by making' false charges that can be disproved or : charges wdiich. though true, are i pressed beyond the point of fairness, for men. in the ma-sat least, like to see fair play and resent an unwar rantable assault against their fel lows, no matter what form it may take. It is because of th' tiee of the thing it d avoid this kind ,md the way to a v. regard for truth ; guided, zeal becem wrong and elf that one f overrcach d it is to nd fairness, s a virtue: Lave Tl.U: without such guidance it is a vice whoso evil influence is proportioned to its magnitude. We may and should give honor to zeahus reform ers, but only when they have shown tha. besides their good purposes, tliev have just minds and sincere hearts. Lacking these their zeal is misdirected, and is at least liable to do harm to the cause it espouses. The adjuration to be disputants and anta.i addressed to all ,'onists is. "Be just and fear not. l.Oidness and zeal will be of the highest service if guided by truth and justice: when not so guided they lead to overreach ing, which defeats its own purpose. An I nluiky l aiailv. A peculiar fatality has nded theJanvll family of High Point, four children were killed and the fifth very narrowly escaped death. One child, when a baby, was drop ped from its nurse's arms and re ceived injuries from which it died. Another fell down a flight of stairs: another fell from the balcony of the second story of the house: both were killed. The only son. a young man just 20 years of age. was drowned in a mill pond by falling' backwards out of a canoe in which he and a young lady were riding, and Mrs. Dyer be fore her marriage, fell from the up- per piazza ot the hotel toinegrounu, a distance of about 25 feet: but was not seriously injured. Ki-llabN- Mi .John Pike. sllecP--o OC- ( 'o.. general deal. '.. w riles as follow s: li.in-. i- to V. A. Deans rs. (liveiupaf, X. I can s iy that I'llent and 'think II hs V H s s-arsal arilla still hett. llood-s Pills chip all live ills Alt!' ON SILVER. Hill eems This All Absorbing Question a Political (Jaine. The p:)ct says that "misery' ac quaints us with strange bedfellows' so does polities. First thing I know I will be sleeping three in a bed with old Republicans. But I won't sleep in the middle. I've toted my Democratic habits too long to be smothered now under a blanket with Sibley on one side and Don Cameron on the other. And there's Ingall's. too. would be slipping around and want room, and maybe Mrs. Lease is a silver bug I don't know, I don't want so many folks using my tooth brush. If everybody is going to make a run on silver, it's a bad sign. 1 am afraid we can't reform and pur ify the Democratic party taking in so many furriners so many old stags who have always been side wiping around bunting the orthogra j.'hv of a little office. I like the way that old Uncle Simon Peter Rich ardson purilied his church. lie was telling w hat a glorious revival they had. over in South Carolina where he had been preaching. "How many converts did you take in, Uncle Si mon?" said I. "Take in, did you say? Take in why. my friend, we never took in nary one, but we turn ed seventeen out. Oh, it was a glo rious revival." Well, we are getting a big lot of literature now bv every mail, and every bit of it is alike, about one thing it all wants an honest dollar, j The goldbugs want it and so do the ! silver bugs and the bimetallic bugs, ; but how to get at it is the question. ! I never saw so much interest mani fested in any political question as : there is now on the subject of silver i and gold. It has overshadowed ev ; ervthing else. Even the Northern press has stopped abusing us for a little while and there hasn't been a 1 lynching ia Georgia for a mi nth cr ! two. Tho people are too busy stud ying silver. But we will have plen ty of time to settle this thing- down. It will be two years and more be fore any change can be made, and so the old ship must rock along on the billows storm or no storm. Every body is predicting better times and say they feel it in the air: and so maybe by the time another crop is made there will be a change for the better. If there isn't, the Republi cans will have to walk a plank in l-Hd and the silver party will take possession and run the machine. We old-time Democrats can afford to go slow and watch and wait. I'm not going to commit myself to any new party just because it has got a ! piety prevails, and devotional cus siiver lining. Democracy is mighty ! toms are maintained, the child grows sick. I know, but it is not dead. If to believe that religion is for Sun a man's wife is sick it doesn't be-i day only, and the absence of it fit come him to pick out another before ting for the other days of the week, she is dead and buried. I'm afraid j Parents who have grown careless or to mix up too intimately with these i indifferent in observance with age or Republicans anyway. We can't ev-j multiplying cares are apt to forget en trust a Democrat nowadays, and j so we are between Seylla and Char- vbdis. We bovs used to play a j game called bull pen. Two boys went behind a tree and juggled and then walked all round the ring with their right hands in their bosom. One of them had the ball, but we hoy one in the pen didn't know which j nought io iignt a secuon oi uie lev v;v so we had to watch both, i i'nu-' t1,at is violated daily, per and the first thing we knew while we had an eye on one. the other feller plugged us. Just so, we the people are in the pen and don't know wdio has got the ball. I've been reading a very scholarly pamphlet, written by Col. Ben Green, of Dalton. on the silver question, and it alarmed and depressed me more than Coin's book. Colonel Green is now nearly four score years, and this warning is like a farewell address from a patriot to his people. I knew his gifted father, General Duff Green, away back in the fifties a profound scholar and a states man. The son who writes this trea' tise has had good training' from his youth, and what he writes now he believes to be true. He is too old to practice deceit. Sincerity is the strongest inurnment of age. If Mr. Green's argument is founded on facts, and it seems to be. the money kings have got not only the govern ment by the leg but nations and kiiiL'doms are in their power. Thev combine to depress values when ,lt'.v u'isn to 'J-v ant to hitlate when they wish to sell. The Rothschilds made eight millions off of our gov ernment iu a few days and we the people have it to pay. New York banks are our dictators. Sir Ed mund Burke said: "The treasury is the State." and it is. It is the church. too. Monev rule the world. Cotton used to be the king just because it commanded money, and money was king. Is it not miliatmg to realize that a man 1U" lti0 Rothschild can sit in his office and I dictate terms to the United States j and make eight millions in a few days. Governments can stand that, but individuals can't. It is the debt- j or class in this country who are now ' - ! between the upper and the nether ; millstones. Their property won't ' ,, . i . , I pay their debts at present prices. ( But we still live and are out of jail, thank the good Lord for his I J . . .... , . ! mercies. e still have hope of the future, and hope is a good invention, as the schoolboy said in his composi tion. This delightful Spring weather cau't be cornered by bulls nor bears. The flowers are ours and so are the songs of the birds and the balm' air. The old Persian philosopher had but one maxim to live by "Even this shall pass away." If fortune was good this maxim kept him from be ing overjoyed. If it was bad it kept him from despair, and so in a year or two this trouble about the money will all be settled and we will look back and wonder that we became so excited over it. In the meantime it becomes us all to be tolerant of opin-1 ion and to have respect to those who diil'er with us. There are good men in all parties and good women in all the churches. When they are sin cere in their faith they are entitled to our respect. Then let the yan koes throw flowers on their soldiers' graves and we will throw flowers on ours and shake hands and be at peace. Dili, A up. The Home Life of ( hihlren. It behooves parents to give the public school teachers full authority over the children during school hours. Our public school teachers, as a class, are humane, considerate and well qualified for their supreme task. Standing as they do in the place of parents, they cannot sutler undue interference from the parents whose place the- take. Order, discipline, progress in study and habits of obe dience in school depend largely upon the pupil's conviction of 1h- authori ty in the class room. The home life of the child should emphasize the right lessons it learns abroad, and correct the wrong ones. Nowhere so easily and naturally can a child be taught correct habits, neatness, politeness, respect for age. modesty and gentleness as at home. Here, above everywhere else, a child h'arns to speak properly; to the meaning of words, the use now ' the voice, the grammar and possibilities of the English tongue. The voice of a child is almost a i sure indication of its home training and parents and all the elders of the ! home circle cannot too anxiously j strive to set examples of "living wells of English undefiled." Every well-trained child is sent to a Sun- day School, and here again is danger j suggested. The time has passed ; when religious habits were so unde- j viating and loveless and rigid as to! make their observance a terror and j an exasperation to the wandering i minds and restless limbs dren of the household. But unless a healthy. of thechil wholesoine the lasting miiuence ei cany lmpi sions on ehildre tit to walk alone Until they are it is the right of C hildren to be guided. Example J the best guide. A Much Violated Law. An up-to-date drummer to-day haps, by every cigar dealer in the city, says the Charlotte News. Call ing at a cigar stand he asked for three for a quarter. The clerk reached in the show case, picked up a handful of cigars and passed them out. $5o, and T could make that cost you 1 at .voco; i a.. .m.uui , ,ms said the drummer. -Whatdey and Arthur O Maaa, were whvfore?" asked the clerk. struck by a passing train and in- "Why, for handing out those ci gars," said the drummer. "Don't you know that it is against the law to hand out cigars, except by the box?"' It is, but the clerk didn't know it. The law requires that the seller shall not touch a cigar, but hand out the box containing them. The meaning of this law no one knows, but it is the law all the same, and the fine for its violation is $50. Accidentally Killed Himself. Shelhy Auroni. Mr. Thomas Manning, a clever and aired farmer three miles Southeast of Forest City, was cutting light wood from a pine stump last Wednesday morning, his axe slipped and he cut a severe and deep gash in his leg. He severed an artery in his leg, died in less than half an hour after the accident and was buried at Mt. Pleasant Baptist church next day. That morning his wife went into the pasture in search of a calf, when she heard in the distance the groans of a man as if in distress. She i UnA V,;c nt.l nnrl si. or-L-.VI to see her husband, full of blood and 'aspiuir for breath, while blood j rushed from his wounded leg. She ' raised his head into her arms, he ex- claimed. "Oh Lord, oh, Lord,' and died in her arms. ' ,T) .,, Mrrnstth anil Health. If you .m. not fot.im2 strong and healthy, trv Electric Hitters. If -La fr'ippf ' has Mt you weak and weary. usp hlecu ip Hittprs. 1 his reinp.h- acts ,pin.t.tiy ,,n iiv, r, stomaph and kidneys, gpntly aiding those organs to perform their functions. If vm are afflicted with k.k lH:l(lat.lu.. y;m will ,Ilul SH.,,lv :u'i permanent rplipf by taking Elpctric Hitters. One trial will convince .you that this is the rpme.lv you need. Largp 1((lttW u-.ip. at J. H. Hill & son's, (lohl.-horo, and J .11. .Smith's, .Mt. Olive. A NATION'S DOINtJS. The News From Every where (Jatliered a:nl Condensed. Fire destroyed the entire business portion of Cresco, Neb., Friday. A mine explosion near Blossburg, Pa., Thursday, killed Hugh Black. The first fatal sunstroke of the season occurred in New York Satur day. An epidemic of black erj-sipelas has caused thirty deaths in and near Gallatin, Mo. Two masked men held up a stage coach near Calistoga, Cah, Wednes day night, securing $1,200. In trying to cross a swollen stream near Emporia, Kan., Wednesday, M. C. Freeborn was drowned. A runaway horse at Mt. Joy, Pa., Surday, dragged Harry Frank and his wife, crushing their skulls. Every house in the village of Oak field, N. V., was destroyed by fire Saturday night. Loss, $75.0u0. An explosion at Kokomo, Ind., Wednesday, threw a boiler 500 feet, killing the engineer and a pedes trian. For being' too intimate with his wife, Albert Hall, of Lexington, Ky.. on Friday, shot and killed Volney Baird. An unknown robber decapitated J. E. Nelson, of Scioto county, O., in his store, Friday night, and es caped. Jumping from a passenger train at Lcwiston, l'a., Sunday, Frank Kinsely was struck by another train and killed. ; I Gas, ignited by lightning, explod ed in Michel's lodging house at j Chicago. Tuesday, instantly killing i three men. I : Finding Miss Annie Snodgrass in her husband's company, Sunday, i Mrs. Frank Collins, of Monett. Mo., ' shot her dead. 1 A terriilie fall of hailstones, as 'arre us hickory nuts, at Rochester, x .. . .., , v.... il.vuouuu., v,. , tl,,llars While viewing a circus parade at Newark, N. J.. Friday, Agnes Bu- chanan, ageil 12. was run over by an electric car and killed. i;v the bursting of a steam pipe in a Shenandoah (Pa.) colliery, Satur- day, Thomas Carroll and James Bre- num welv mortally scalded. six 1)0rsons woro burned to death , 10 t,xnlosion of a L'asoline stove. .,,,,1 4t. ti-i,;,.1. f.,M.,-..,t in i timore sweat-shop. Thursday. An eutire freight train on tin Pennsylvania railroad was buried by j a landslide at Mount Union, l'a., Saturday. No one was injured. j A blinding snow slorm raged Fri- j day night in Northwestern Kansas. A heavy frost visited sections in Io wa. South Dakota and Nebraska. A cyclone struck .neuioiu. Thursday night, wrecking the new Hotel Winchester and the Fair G rounds buildings. Loss, $1.0.000. The explosion of a locomotive steampipe at Hyde Park, Mass. Thursday, blew the engineer and fireman out of the cab with fatal re - suit. T i -n i t , r-., In a duel with shot-guns. Lonsta- , , T , , , , ble John Green, of ampoo. Ark., , , , . . and Mnt Harper, w hom he wa try- ing to arrest, shot each other dead, i Monday. I hue cm vssing the railroad tracks stantly knled. Three grooms and eighteen race horses from Mercer. Pa., were killed near Ilornellsville, N. Y., Tuesday, in a fast freight wreck, caused a broken wheel. Fire destroyed the Hotel Arling- ton at Montrose, Col., Thursday j njjrht. C. W. Nehrbrass, of Chica - ; go. was burned to death and several were injured by jumping. By the bursting of a lamp at her sick son's bedside, Sunday night, Mrs. Edward Driscoll, of North Ad ams, Mass., was burned to death i and six children were badly scorched i yor alienating her husband's af- feetions, Mrs. Clara Burton horse whipped Miss Mary Scott in the streets of Philadelphia, Monday, and afterwards dashed carbolic acid in her pretty face, disfiguring it for life. Crazed by jealousy, August Tep per killed Miss Clara Ilerkold and himself on a street of Philadelphia, Friday. Tepper was a married man, but his infatuation for the girl who posed as an artist's model, ruined him Thirteen suicides took place in Vr.ft- cinr r. Mnnibv 11 Hip victims were men. and with three ! exceptions business failure was the prime cause for inducing death. Winter he went up into W lseonsin ami j compelled to speak under pistol pro 1 ? in conse.iuenee has had another attack. I ' Domestic troubles led tiie oilier three to kill themselves. , Crazed by despondency, Ltiaries Dibble, of Sidney, N. ., knled him . u c. ..t.,.. t,; .i,n sen ouuuay uy iuuiuj; un .".uui with a razor. His wife committed suicide recently by drowning in a bath tub. Two years ago his brother took his own life by poisoning. Last Week in Trade Circles. Sjn-cial CorresriMiik-nee. New York, May 13, 1805. The tendency to business improve ment has continued during the past week, and in spite of some increase in labor disturbances there has been a further development of hopeful ness with regard to the outlook. Most encouraging features of the situation are the improved crop pros pects and the continued heavy sales of securities to European investors. Some bankers estimate that pur chases of bonds and securities abroad since February have exceeded $30, (MH,000; but while the exact extent of the movement cannot be definite ly known, it has clearly been very large. Its effects have been seen in a further rise in Stock Exchange values, a drop in the market for sterling exchange, and an accession of confidence in prospective immu nity from gold exports and in the steady recuperation of business. The bet'.erment of crop prospects evidenced by the Government grain estimates strengthens the favorable effect of the current trade reports. Industrial activity has been inter rupted to some extent by the work ingmen's movement for a restoration of wages, but the expansion of de mand for manufactured goods and the brighter business outlook have been attested by voluntary advances in the pay of labor in some fields and by the partial success of strikes in others. Nevertheless, the labor agitation is a disturbing factor, and there are indications that it may ex tend far enough to retard the growth of industrial recovery. Business measured by clearing house returns is more than a fourth larger than it was a year ago; and reports of railroad earnings tor the last wee,; oi .prii showed an increase of 10.8 per cent. Merchandise exports continue to fall below last year's totals for the cor- j responding period, and imports at j New York last month increased 1 j percent. The liabilities involved in j business lanures in rive weed's enaeu i ,v-- , .... .ler-nr. mrr To ir I Inn .VI, Co.. were $10,'J05.'J71, of which $4, lSS.Ot'l were of manufacturing and $11,552,110 of trading concerns. For the corresponding period last year the total was $14,75,47. The new demand for cotton goods has been less active, but there has been a large movement on account of back orders, and the" production of leading mills is still sold for weeks ahead. The raw staple shows little Change in price, anu siiecuauion nas been less active pending the intro - ductign of some new stimulus to in- tmeut. The Government returns for Auril show that planting has been delayed by unfavorable weath- j err and the proportion of the pro-; posed acreage seeded by May 1 was 7.5, w hich was 10 per cent. below the average for that date. No j official estimate of the acreage! . wui iv available for another month. , The total visible supply of cotton for tiie worid is 4.005.253 bales, of which ' sn.oSS bales are American, against V sl, bales and 3.1U0.01G bales j respectively last year. Receqits of cotton during last week at all inte- 1 rior towns were 23.314 bales; re - UUIU uu: l,ld,,ul,w,,s' i bales: crop in sight. 0.401, 0m bales, 1 . " ' , ,. heat prices show a net decline! 1 . i of one cent per bushel, and nuctua- . ... . , , I lll)li oi ui- i.f ii-.u nai- uL--.i of frequent occurence. Bullish sen timent has been encouraged by de creasing stocks of old wheat and by j uneasiness concerning the condition j of tho ,rrmvin omp. but oath a,, j vanceias btvn foHmvca j)V reanzir.g gales by spt,c.ulatorii; wiU(,h have jp. passed prices. Demand for export j,as continued unsatisfactory, as ! purchases in Russia, Argentina and j i cdsowliere have lurcdy satisfied the I j requirements of importing countries J i Visible stocks in this country have j j fallen off nearly 4.000,000 bushels ; since last week; but this rate of de- ; crease could be maintained until July 1 without reducing warehouse accumulations more than 50 per cent, from their present proportions. Corn prices in Chicago have ad vanced 1" cents owing to decreased stocks, a moderate interior move ment and a fair export demand for early shipment. For future clear ance there has been little inquiry, as new crop River Plate corn has been sold for shipment to Europe from July to September at prices 10 to 12 cents per bushel below a parity with domestic markets. Corn crop plant ing has been favored by dry weather and has made encouraging progress. Values of provisions have not varied materially a slight advance early ; in the week having been lost in the I later trading. j Persons who sympathize iVu te.1 will rejoice w ith I), KCarr of ! Harrison street, Kansas City He is an old sufferer from inflammatory rlieimeitism. but bus Hot beretofore ' iM-en troubled in this limate. Last j ..jt cumP ni,on me airain very acute and j severe," he said. -My joints swelled I anl l'came intlanied : sore to touch or j ai,uo,t t 0k at. I'pon the urgent n - imiest of my U'liani'M-rlaiti': mother-in-law I tried Pain Halm to reduce my agreeable? surjirise, it did both. I baveuseil three tiftv-ceiit bottles and !- lieve it to be the finest thin? for rheu mutism, pains and swcllingsextant. For sale ly J. 11. llill & on, tniffgit ALL 0VEK THE STATE. A Summary of Current Evenls for the Past Seven Days. Laurinburg is to have a wet and dry election next month. After trying the "no license"' sys tem for twenty years, Morganton has gone "wet."' Among the latest enterprises for Salisbury- is a rope factory, to be es tablished at once. Dunn's new furniture factory started up last week and is now run ning on full time. The fourteen-year-old son of Dan iel Airy, of Stanly county, was kicked to death, Saturday, by a two weeks old colt. The Commissioners of New Han over county have decided not to tax hotel and boarding house beds 50 cents a piece. In a drunken row between Daniel Shaw and Kilby Benton, in Colum bus county, Monday evening, the for mer was killed. A destructive hailstorm passed over the Stantonsburg section, Wil son count-, Thursday. Several buildings were demolished. According to the North Wilkes boro News, Rev. Richard Shew, of Ashe county, is charged with steal ing two oxen and is at large. A crate of North Carolina pine apples was on exhibition at Raleigh. Friday. They were raised by John Barringer, of Chatham county. Wiiile in the field planting corn, Friday, Joseph J. W. Jones, aged 74. who lived near Franklinton, was struck by 'ightning and instantly killed. Wat Byers, colored, was killed at the granite quarry in Iredell county, Friday, by a falling rock that had been thrown from the quarry by a blast Y,-lliIe i,einff left alone a si,ort while, Mrs. Asa Bishop, an aged and la,ly riviir near Scotland v.,,-'.- f,.il int.i flm Whlnv mul IT, TO (I1 in -i i . .1 Greenville has a quintette of young ladies that call themselves -The Sporty Five."' They meet every Friday afternoon and no man knows what Jun they have. Reddin Joyner, was found dead in his home, in Wilson county, Friday, stabbed in the breast. He lived all alone and it is thought that he was murdered for his money. The Charlotte Observer says that j James ii. u .iecKicnuuig J county, raised last year on 2J acres j ot iani:. oaies oi cox ion, me oa.es averaging over .km pounds. Three children of a negro named Black died in Mecklenburg county one day last week from eating wild onions. The mother and another child are in a dying condition, r;rnnm r.rown. n voun" white m:l,, W.1S killed in Cumberland i county. Tuesday, by a colored man j nanioj Hishop Holmes durim' a triv- jaj tp1SpUte about a wire fence. j j, o,,scrver savs that tllt. notos, j a(.t.ounts nd jU(ll?monts amounting j i0 ()ft0 of tho hit(, w w pram 1 wpv soM auction in Charlotte, Saturday, and "knocked down"' for i... ;5-l.. T A voung negro woman, Joe Grant , , , , i was found dead on the railroad track near Lexington. Sunday morning, with her throat cut. Sam Hairston, her lover, has been arrested on sus- pic ion. The Weldon News says that Moses Jones, colored, died near Enfield, Saturday, aged 1 IS years. At the age of 100 years he celebrated the event at which five generations were present. William Gadbury was sentenced in Yadkin court. Saturday, to be hanged on July Sth for the murder of Lessie Carter, his sister-in-law. This will be the first hanging in the , county's history. j The three-year-old child of James j Crandall. in Pitt county, fell head first into a spring, Thursday, and was drowned. The child was out with a nurse who had her attention directed elsewhere. A family of father, mother and lit children has just moved from Chero kee county to Bryson City. It is said that the windows of the house have been boarded up to keep the chaps from falling out. At noon on the 20th of May, the ladies of Raleigh will get out a spe cial monumental edition of the News and Observer. The ladies will do everything about the paper except set the type and run the press. Pilot Mountain had a big' sensa- ! principal of the High School there, 1 was tried before the church for im moral conduct with his ladv assis i tant. The professor's lawyer was tection the Kecord savs tnere are six children of the late Simon Bright, ' of Chatham, now living in the coun- 4 tr,a nwf r.t xt-hr. is nnnplv Kl years old and the youngest about 70, and they al'iow reside within three . ! miles of the oM homestead where thev were reared. THE BEST Family Medicine She Eas Ever Known. Words of Praise from a New York Lady for PILLS 1 S Lali. ' I would like to aU my testimony to that of ota.-rs who have use.l Ayer's Pills, ami to say that I have taken lliem for many years, ami always il. rive.l tin; best results from their use. For stom ach an. 1 ': t t roulih-., and fur the cure of head.i. Ue caused by these deraiij;. lucnts, A .t'.s Pills eanii"t le eijualed. "-"-i'J'lia - .V- Vh. n i iv f, l. r.ds a-4; mo what is tho best rem dy f'.r '.S..r.b-rs of the stom j.ch, Iiv. i. ln.i--!s, my invariable answer is, Ayr's Pills. Taken in sea son, they will break uj a cold, prevent la erip.,,., el,.-ek fever, and regulate tho di slive :: :. Th y are easy to Take, and are, indeed, 'he best all-round family me.iieia.' I have ever known." Mr. May Johnsov, ;;i;s Ui.ler Avenue, New York Citv. PiLLS Highest Honors at Vorld's Fair. A;;r's Sarsaparilia Cures all Blood Disorders. ' means so much more than 't'nii iminrinc cprmuc nnn ' trifling ailments neglected. Don t play with .Nature s 'greatest gift health. If you are feeling TL out cf sorts, weak I and generally ex- hausted, nervous, jf have tio appetite 4 bein at oncetak- X in the most re'.ia- J ble strengthening !ron brown's Iron tit ters. A few tjot ties cure benefit comes from the very first dose it fitters won't stain your M item, aim it's pleasant tit take. It Cures Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver ;euraiia, lrounies, Constipation, Cad Blood Malaria, lServous ailments Women's complaints. Get only the cenoinc it has crossed red lines on the wratmer. Aii others are sub stitutes. On receipt of two sc. stamps we wi:l send set ot I en Lnutilul World s l air iews and book Iree. BROWM CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO. 7r fK-ar 1. .Vnpam. t.ii.u. K. 1 1 iox, 35 3 I .7 New V'.rk., uie a. pot. SjrL J fur uuuk UiU iruula FREE. Cl.trhr.trr' Kngll.h Dlomoi.'t Rraal. 11 EMNYROYAL PILLS Original mna Only Crnalne. A. .re. alwrnv r .i&.Ue. udi ak . X lor r,. hntrr .'. " rnr in Krd Mid WJ nrlllcft7 Irti. f-miei .:!. Mnr ril.hr... TLe J7 no.lhrr. - rfano""' '..( f I "UtHrT for Laill.-o." " n-lmrn -rn.l,..."i..rl kri-i.l e...Mu'11- Smia aU bj ail Lou. 1'vii.u. I'hlludifc. 1 ;Mim, l'in. Tjkr in tii....nu. HINDERCORNS. ia.lu lc iu The ot-Tv mrf rurr f..r forrn Is, or lllsCOX k CO., N. V. There were 3. 134.934 Packages of :! Hires' Rootbeer sold in 1894, j which made 15,675,735 gallons, j or 313.454.700 glasses, sufa- I cient to give every man, wo man and child, in the United ( States, five glasses each did you get your share? Be sure and get some this year. A 25 etut pvkar. fnV- 5 gallo&a. buiilvttrjabcra, RES' Rootbeer THE CHAS. E. HIRES CO, Phlla. JI7are subject to oecnlior Ills. The "riL'ht remedy for babies' ills especially worms and stomach rLr disorders is Frev's Vermifuge has enred children for 50 years. Send 'for Ulus. book about the ills and tne i .- - Tor 15 ernu. US, flitl, lice.imnre, jio. ASTHMAXurEoS HH. TtfTS ASTSMaLEKI i-vrr liil-: sm.l u vjr OA. TAFT BHOS..KOCdiiaAa.Ii.X.r ft EC t rrn- " 1 a? Jin $Poor f Health ft m iPTl PARKER'S -l HAIR BALSAM hi-lte'CsJf 1 Owhi and b..t.f. th. hair. " &i Pr.,.,.. a !..T.ir:n..t (rr.,wth. KlN'v r Fails to Brstore Griy -ri! Hair to jta Youthful Co.or. TM&xWl : Mil AidiAliafeSi Wrak I. :...'-. IU "v. II-! fZj' ':i;lii,-i'"'"t" :::i'::n?jt5 IDYouGETli? til 'Vr" li y y.

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