Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / May 29, 1884, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
. !iiiui:1.as.--j-a-3fc t-v rr ii may rwm w iwiiin - - ...iJ.lltl,lll. , ,,.., .-.j ,. a. ' H. aj lULt, HOltoV n4 Proprietor TO DEMOORA-CY VE FIN QTTR FAITH. f 1.50 per Year, to AdTaace, Vr. V0L. It. NO. 22. rockingham; eichmond co.'N; a, Thursday, may 29;.i884. : WHOLE NO, : 5T2., sf-.- f . . ; .i - r r : TOTiKMnnT? a nv pttst our faith, f .- - . , , ; . -. - - l ATTOKNBYH. . : FRANKLIN MCNEIL, ATTORriEY AT LAVA : HOCKINCHAM, N.C. ' . Muac rrwintw. .'It! ' -ft' '4 v, Walter h.neal . ATTORNEY AT LAW, . LAURINBURCj N.C. . . iWill prmetioB in Riobaoaij ut W. JONStC A--.'" "7 T.axoHtoa. FIEW FI.J. ; HEW GOODS. CALL AHD BXV1 JONES & MOKTOK TOf YOU wimp GROCERIES AND-CONFECTIONERIES, , Mut CuantLGoada, .to., and full ock2 ' Heavy and Fancy Groceries, A4 ataa pnrpon kMpinc a aopply tt mh and aio BUTTER AND EGCO, Ami aUUnda of Mliblea, CHEAP FOR CASH, ia w DinWO. and waitaaU know bo other nil -. Call ud m ' I i ! i. . ! 8 ly HAflffiT THBIVES J -AND- 1 THE PEOPLE ARE HAPPY Jr. "W. M! Diy Goods, Grneom, Bhoaa. mtm., BO LOW I hat ibe natiras ara astoiubed- Before buTinc oall and M. HIJT KOCK ox BY GOODS- BOOTS,' SHOES, iFLOUK, MOLVS8ES. GROCEKIKt HATS, ctttlbbt; MEAL, ; BACOS, I SHIP STUTF, And almost .Tenrthinr low1d B. Ktim to cal and m. m. ImIoc. ioruar advantage) OH. J- ! by tb Mntla. barrac. It win b. J.W. PARK8. : Haattat, It. O. , ORDER YOUR; Coffins, Caskets, anl Bnrial Cases JAS. C. HUTCHINSON' WADESBORO, N. 0 ftin -stock, all slaw, and prlww, always on band. tW Ordare by tf'.snrapb A Jed on thirtjt aunta novo in MM ROCKINGHAM, N. C. MECKLENBURG IRON WORKS; OHAHLOTTB, O. , MANUFACTUEES AND KEEPS IN STOCK i Steam Engines and BoUert, - -: . . s ; Traction Enginoe. . : Saw MUla with Variable Fricticm Teed, . "VVheat Mill Outfits. ' Corn Milla PorUblo. . !p 'SeparaiorsTlureAera ? Keapors, Mowers and Bakes i Steam and Water Kpes-Brass Fitting REPAH3 PROIPTIsT ATTD1TOHD TO. Address,' JOHN WILKEG, Manager, E. M. ANDREWS, FURNITURE OF ALL HIS, AT BOTH WHOLESALE JKD ' V I have the largest stock of any house in the State, and WILL NOT J3E -UNDERSOLD. Can fill orders promptly for cheap Chairs, Bedsteads, snd anything in the Fnrni. te Sane ! SOoMnS, METAUO CASES AND BUBIaI SUITS Ale WAYd ON HAKD. Send for outs and prices. White Front, next to Wittkowsky & jJaruch, CHARLOTTE, N. O. WINTER YESTMENTS CUKBEST CoaXESTS. .Un thft operation of th flitfperbigh Beens. law - Chicago Km tert4 k,0)0 iquor BosowW thus ftf MriOx ngrg&t recaipU waouiitoit -t400,00O, i The majority of tti rMM.n for four aoonths, it la etima M ttia th yr'a yeoelpte will not be leas thaa 11,600,000. Aboat 900 stloont havo been fro aeaottt. ; - ?.? ?v Taa Bostoa Journal mjs that th wnikfy aiw of oleomargerine la ttaatvity ainooat to 100,000 or 150,000 pott&ds, that idl the reiiuUr Jobbing atorea down town keep it for Sal for Jnt what it in at prices ranging from twolte to tlreety cents per pound. A copies artioleean W bought for fifteen cants, and it is largely ttsad in, maanfaetnring commnnitiea. : ' Th silk enlture indostry is growing ia tin Catted BUte. There are atpreee&t tweltl is; oetation, aniaerone stecli eoiapaaiee, a oolony of Italians In Texas, a German eolony in North Carolina, a settlement ot Norwegians in Geor gia and setural colonies of Mennonitee In Kan aa Mgaged in feeding - ohopped mnlberry kTM to the dainty silk worm." ' ?. TBI establishment of a oanoer hospital in New lork was a magniflcent idea, and its soa. cess has been assured by a gift of 9300,000 from John Jaoob Astor. Other generons gifts have been receired, one if 125,000, one of S0, 000, another of 115,000, besides five amoants of f 5,000 each,' and four of tl,000 eadv-A Tacant lot worth $35,000 was presented by a ladr. Work will be bsgun as soon as plans can be drawn and the contracts made. : ; 4 ' . Tn French mode of executing criminals by the guillotine is rapid eumgh to satisfy any one. When the criminal's neck is fairly under the knife lerer is touched, the blade flashes downward, , the head falls into a sdae cash standing in readiness to receive it, the body is throwr. into a tomhiil, and the remains are galloped off to the Turnip Field, there to be buried with paupers and unclaimed inmates from the morgue. The spectator at these ex ecutions comprise dandies, loose women, jour neiute and the riff raff. Everything goes off quietly. to reatore &e bahaee of the lost forces' of na tew. Cm all the Wn-sideand slopes of the north and east and of the ficifls states, where the original forest growth hl been remoYod. it Is adrieabto to restore it Tery steep and high hillsides should bo permanently cotered with trees, and so should lowland tracts that are stuoer, sow, sandy r otherwie wsntm a ferolity... The Snswer to )!!Whal teplaftT WMt be.dBtcttninsd oUmate, .btth toess pOrposes and - other things. Sereral states bays established forestry departmeate, Jonrnala of forestry are now published, and the matter is discussed eten ia the publia schools. A great treeplantmg morement ie Ukely to sweep all orer the country, ..'''i:flVi:...i- ' Is the middle states since 1871 farming lands ! hare decreased ia value fully fifty per cent, The depreciatiott is not due to any general and , & pMiewt order of things heCatUe tares are uemrj imu. u tne prices oi larm proaucta. ine joW Kl esUte is adTancing, and a good class Tan future of ; wheat -rtisiht ft attractlBi attentioBv Within a few years American farm ers will have to meet strong competition fa the grain markctSof the old world, ;,We must now admit that Jndia can produce eaough wheat to sertousJr affect prices in America. Already with a crop of 85,000) 000 UaBfilsilibri tHe pries of wheat has ghe 11 scats below that oi the time when our wheat crop ' was the largest ever known. ' la future when Egypt, India and central Africa pour .their,' whet into the mar kets the farmers of thia oountry wili abandon all hope of profitable competitionJ The Amer. toaa farmer mast now adopt methods of farm ing Which Will make him comparatiTely inde pendent of the world's wheat market. The lesson taught by the East jZndia experiment, with wheat is enough to opettour eyes, and now that Knglahd ii preparing to open a short road to the rast fertile districts in Africa there is no estimating the outcome, J . - Gannrau is the pioneer temperance city of Iowa. Thirty yean ago a few families settled oa the drinnell traet and Went to work to btaild op a town, t The owner of the land incor porated a proTiaion in every deed to the effect that any lot on which liqudr fas sold should revert to the first owner or his heirs. There has never been, a reversion, and never a saloon in the place, aad no holder of real estate has been known to favor the tale of spirits. : The town has now between 8,000 and i, 00! people, three railways, aad manufacturing industries which employ several hundred men of various nationalities and every shade of religions and political belief. There is no; desire to change explanation given by a recent writer is that the taxes levied by the general government since the war are vastly heavier than they were before the war. As the burden of all taxat&m falls ultimately on try, it follows that land, which is the founda tion of that industry, muat fall ia value as the tax burden is made heavier, and rise ia price whenever this burden is made lighter. -MUST LAID ASIDE! AND ftATJtW ': T" le board Pv ith-;i - lliaxawna romp" in t a M 6 rd por ww3lufi...- k"""Ii St. SS n.arap - ' Bincnea....i Vfi"iiVBidirJl VmmMiW. . Snrcx the departure of Mr. Henry Irving the newspapers , are comparing his receipts with those of other talented dramatic artistes. Bernhardt1! total earnings here for' 26 seeks were. 390,000. Mrs. Langtry total was taaa,. 63. Irving's V receipts were $405,604, Mr. Irving's greatest suceese was in Boston. Them ia one week he played before 27,000 hearers. The week's receipts were $24,087 It mast be recollected that Mr. Irving began with quail fied success and ended by eclipsing all com of people come to the place: There are fire churches. Of the inhabitants' from first to last not oae Over went to jaiL to prison or to i the poor house. - 'The cyclone of 1882 destroyed productive indue-' U the collewes. 100 dwellings and 40 lives, but there has been a full recovery from the effects Of one of the most disastrous storms on record. Grinnell enjoys ' an enviable reputation for good Order, enterprise and . prosperity. . The temperance people may well be proud of it, and after thirty year it can hardly be called an ex periment. It u an aocomplished fact. ' JanlS t4 tf IX.. A. JLcCfREGOR, A. B., Principal. TJtajs has now 10,000 small farms averaging twenty-five acres, and the whole must be irri gated. There is only one large farm in the territory, aad it is owaed by a oompaav. The GretBalt Lake, according to Elder Cannon, cookuns enough salt to supply America for centuries. AH tat ia nereseary in TfepsTftjir ; u ' t toe market is .to drive to fbsFcviire at tha ia. with a wagon and a man with a pair o( rubber boeU can toad it with a shovel. The Btf taSliSrrSlHHiStota; Cf e lake ia small coarse crystals. After loading it is taken to a grinding machine and being ran through it is lit for the table. 1 raster tad Kiddle tts Dn. Weultard Pakksr, one of iho" mos' ra-mous surgeons in America, a native of New liampshire, but a rrsi lent of -New York fee 7. yw, died ia that city a few days susoe, m his eighty- jcand yeftr. ' V i OqivsrDfi&ABljr ei element' and one failure rtsstftel from aeu d3nairanc;.'fonr cents h-telel m the prl e ot wheat at ki Tlrii Massaehas ti CHrefcAacit Sts ton- venwa at Lynn e:e ted d Agates at 1 irge to the Ind ana -olis cstional convention, and adopted molttlaoasfavaiine: General Butler for President, declarin: . that ei trt hours should eonstatute a da m work, demanding a graduated incOm? tu aa i assef tiiiz that the Wlgls for greenback money weald fee cOn MAJOB-QxantaAt! filHfiseif QpfiiftSas di at his i eeidente in New York fro n t le efiectS of a wound recerrei ty'ihi acci '-enl di charge of a pistrr-whio x h as cli aning Gerei al OjcdyJke wa fifty-flTs jeMSoll,and bad bo m a promiaeht Federal o3icer fro a Ohio in.th bte war., v t --'Si-A is,--v I lCeviBJa MASctm L: WjiSfi) Bf NeW JeFiey, died at his 'home i3 New. ft, m other day, aged 71 years. He was elected governor of New Jerue -li 18U5, in 1W Wis chsirman of th Be ubli:an mtonal rom tnittee, and in 18J2 was elected to Coiigreu. GeobobE. Ewniol a p-ominent Philadel phia fculptor. came to New York for. the purpose of model ing at tb f .lievo models of Ugflry Irving, the English actorafl his principal support, Miss hllen Terry. A' few morning. ar;o, Mr. Ewin was found, tUrd in bed at his hoteL He had turned on the unl t ta and been asphyxiat d. Mr. ing cam' irbm Sootknd two yeafjao alitt jSd ac quired considerable reputation inrti aracltiv ! A Nation Al Conference of Colored Ken met in Pittsburg, with delegati :ns from all part of the country ia attendance The ob 3 ct of .the con'erence, as stated by a delegat waa to secure to the. crlored people. North and Foiith, the rt?oWorl under the laws to which they Are entitled. arious rapefa pef tinent to the occasion were read and dis cussed. ; - i . , : Grarles tTlrflsa, A ratired Jfe l Y8ril merchant, and Antonio Moreno, a metropoli tan com nfcsion merchant, were impelled a few days ago by physical suffering and in aomnii to shoot themselves to.deatbu - r A FiBKat Qlen's Falls. N. Y-, destroyed both pa houses, the Presbyterian ,rh y h, And Gi tid! Sleeve 8 Unidx hall building ,i en tai.ing a total loss ot about $0,(JOO. ( A firs in the gnat diy goods di tri.tof New York city testroyed property val ed at $250,0:0. During t ;e progress of the fire a ladder fell on a f rou of newspaper, re- Srters injuring one of teem Saipuel F. OtineUy,efflployed on the Sun dangerously. Tuk steamer Falmouth was burned at hef wharf ia Portland (Me.) h rbor. Three of the crew perished in the names.' The esti mated ks. i $175,000. - ; S; F. Don the New York reporter struck by a falling la-lder at a fire, died from the effects of his injuries. . JajiXs R. Kkkite. the treat New York Stock operator, has failed to meet his obliga tions after losing Bums 4,uco,otxj in tae past tlx months. Mr. Keene came Ifom ' an Fran cisco to New York about six Tears ago with a fortune estimated at from $!, 00,000 to $,0O),00J. Me went into vv a i screeo, specu lated heayly, and recently has been engaged in selling stock pmi'eges. A heavy fall in thsmaiket led to his downfa L JAMBS W. KIMK. m7rr nnsxiR W. M MBS. D. M. HaHQKATS, an rfAXTVX, The SprinntTai 1 Handsomer Than Ever . . if i , Wmula. JTanaarr T. ruitk. tq.iUi, S3, a, and i aw .ana, as. C3ontiiv(!nt tma, S1.S0 pfc' BW4-S10-SU1P" mown. T Tor nirtUat parUeulart ipplr te toe PrbMipel. NOW BEING Air. LITERAL ISTEBWIETATIOX. Beecher's Cewiweeta an the semes She Bl.nat. air. Beecher considered at the Sunday mominff service in Plymouth Church the Sermon on the' Mount, and pointed ont that many of its injunction were not to fee taken literally..- The following - thoughts ate taken from his discourse: 'The literal following of the Sermon on the Mount would destroy order, moral itv. law and human nature itself. ' 'If you terally accept the Sermon on the Mount vou have eot to ftive to every man who asks and lend to every man who wants to-nvrrow. ' I would Uke to see - Wall street act on this precept for about an hoar "i i . , - - "Ultimately the ideal man will come to a state in which animal forces won't Vw lutmarv. T .heliflvei but imnh md- ministration: of human life, and in all the eoonomiee of society, is this the meaning of the Sermon on the Mount, that good ness muBt lie down while badness walks over it?"; J ' ' The people who believe in a literal internretation of the Bible have no right to have one single oent ahead. They have no right to accumulate little prop arliM that can be used to meet the ex- iffencies of cominir days, let univerBal ' nmvArtv ia animalism. " I . - TI, Ittw rsf dAvnkmment ia the law of industry and of. propertjr acctunulation. There is morality in this: there is got- ' emmentinit; there is happiness in it, ! and everything else that builds it up." - "Take he flowers of the field. It is true that ihey don't weave or spinand God clotb'es them . with beauty. Very rood. A' flower has to develop. There isn't a flower m. all the wilderness, nor in all the zardenjlhat does not work for a living, j t -p P!r.' ly':-:--' I euppoee that more than one-half of the suffering of humanity is suffering on account of things that neyer happen.",: - "Ther are men who are good as or ganisers,! but who cannot handle the or , ganization." ' ;:.. ' :---":--. '?''' -a minion dollars, in human nature. j. nrrfbine- but veast set to raise five . 5The toan A who misinterprets Chris- - - lianity by going sadly rand morosely through Ufa ought to apologize to every . person wnom. news. Ky, iirrm't Vnur roaat 'beef, sah. said ' ine waiter;: aorvwa muiwmx -o . -Oh. indeed ? roast beef? Why so yon did. I thought all .the time A -was- . -i. t OrSAUL au ytmmt. Purchased by 1 Our Representative . in Hew M CRj, ! f i HI 4ND AEEIVINQ WEEKLI. RELIABLE GOODS, CORRECT STYLES ! Lowest Prices Guaranteed. CONSTANTLY IN STOCK A NICE ASSORTMENT OP mm ira fahcy GROCERIES i'y'.' Flour, Meal, Meat and Silt, Sugar, Coffee and Tea, Butter and LardVMolaiaet, bj the ear load; from New Orleans, and Canned Ooods in great Tariety, . "p'bne Bov" and Watt Plows. Steel Plows, Bloes and Shor- " . 'els, Hames, Traces and Collars, Bridles, Sad-"-; '-.', :. it dies, Line Backhands, ete., and .. . ; '."4j. ) ;": y; " , ., v .-. - y;'.: . . j;... ; ..T'."-;'": " Every thing Needed I by an A cr icu It u riot. "Eclipse" ObttotSeed Planters, Thomas Barrows, Jfee Dee riaias, Kocamgnam SheetlB "B(Miy Snnft; : P, Coa SpCVj rearstion at factoy prices yAj FT? V Lv U L I I U: A A I - -1 assay, ., ma- w m. m 'lj -. mm mm mm ? ..V- -' " 1' a- r .--.-t Si a-'-" WlM -:. aa B BS T BT . ' BB . J IV - -' a Ui.,'. . SB .-i - - - -. t r. - - i - m m s - i -: - -; .7'. w -w , m - ' ' SeVrTe bll i-lia;ier A'ooatrartto, 1 la six years Henry M. Stanley has snceeeded in establishing a chain ot international station, acrosS the African continent, In 1880 he foun ded Viva, the first of the series " of stations in western Africa. ; Before the end of the third year Leopoldville, a station on Stanley Pooh at the head of the lower cataracts, and the key of the npper Congo, was founded, and four steam- en were launched on the great river. In 1883 the station of Stanley Falls, 1,000 miles up the river, waa founded. About 3,600 miles of river transit of the Congo and its tributaries are opened to oommeroe by this chain of stations. The imports, to the west coast of Afrioe last year were over 22,000,000, while' the export were over t27,000,000. ; ': ,.. . ... ... . .. ' AocoaWHO to Mnlhall's' Dictionary of Btatia. tics murder is a cause of death In England. . . C. ,.... . . .to 237 per 10,000,000 In Belgium ...... ..to 240 " la France... .to 265 " In Scandinavia. :.to 266 " In Germany. ............. to 279 - In Ireland (1879) ..to 294 " In Anetria.. to 810 P M In JBussia...., ...... ...te 823 " Inltally.,..1;..... ...to 604 " In Spain.... ........ .....to 588 " In the United States. .... .to 820 " The exceedingly unfavorable- record of tb Cnlted States is the natural result of a low eon- dition of public sentiment on the subject of murder. - . - - The American climate ia not so much respon sible for disease as damp homes caused by bad drainage, the use of tobacco, the drinking of whiskey at all times and especially between meaJa, the excessive use of strong tea and otf- fee,the frying pah, the soda baking powdtr, and patent porgative pills. Overwork Is ranlj the disease. ;Tbe present hot water craw K capable of doing as much harm ; as good While hot water may be used with advantage in a limited number pf cases, it, has not besn ' without its disadvantages.' It has haloed iha strong tea and coffee drinkers whose nemos system will not stand the strong stimulant. A cap of hot water tinged with English breakfist tea and a little sugar makes a beverage tail cheers nut does not stimulate. : Some tine there will be a regular .system of scientific dfat xor oiseaae.-'v c .,- o - --."," iHths better days of ttis repoblie our grot statesmen were generally impecunious. Fr many years the friends of Daniel Webster pit f 100,000 at interest for him, and if it had mt twea for this provision of f,ooo year Wa ster would have retired from the senate, for ie declared he eoald not give his life to his cota kry for fg a day. The frieads of Tom Ctorma ante to his relief at least onoe aad paid U debts, Henry Clay was the recipient of a sia ilar Sestimoaisl from his friends. He spea-a whole generation ia congress, lived beyond lis ' snaSM, and the mortgage on his Ashland ohoe woun have been foreclosed if it had not bn privately eanoelled 1- his, whig friends fa after to. defeat for the uteaiaanev s Banvta I was thirty years congress hot hs nersr. be- came a rich man, and never,, while in. pfflcs, If oar oeosular reports are. to be believed, MeUoois noplaoefor imen of energy unless they have abundant capital. Enterprising Americans of large means can make mon&y ia Mexico, bat it is no country for poor nwn. Everything in Mejdoo is jlaWi. In a transition state and it is difficult to prediot the outcome. The government is autocratic, ' the president possessing greater power than any potentate in Europe. The governors of the several states Ire responsible to the central power whie h ex treises a preponderating influence in elections. Public education is now pushed fot all it is worth. There has been a great advance in the condition of the ci ties. Beal estate has doub led and in some instanoea treblM ia value. The wn- R. .ru,.rf.,-th mate rau ways leading out into the country tor miiee in every direction. Agriculture lands do not advance ia proportion. The gost of irrigation in almost Very section Is a big item and keeps agricul. tors in the backgr3UD.d.f One great drawback U the progress of the country is the condition of society. There are only jt wo. classes in Mex 0 the highest and, the lowcaa. There is no Middle class. The wealthy, educaUd non-pro-dacers never mingle in any j way with the com mon people, and it is not at alj surprising as the latter are .the lowest aad most degraded specimens of humanity to be found anywhere ia , the world.' : The Americans who have swarmed into the oountry are la the meina Vd lot, composed of border ruffians, ' flliburVers, sneculators. coarse adventurers aad broken down professional men. : The Mexicans fea. and suspect these new-comers and it must fa admitted that until ws send a better class of settlers there we eaa not expect oar flag, our WTIHWMW WW WW - w - - - , aahlngtoa. RaPFasgNTATivii. tirwai-, of Tex-ts, hts been dir. tad Ly im he House Couunit. tee on fo eieu ale'iri to pr parr a til pi ovid nr for the a? xthtuienfc o three com mi i nera to isit Aexico an I entral and to th nwri a to bs ure iaformaticn re a tivo to inc easing.: the cemmu-cia. interestt between thoa -untr es ., unl ha TJnitid Bta es. The bill is to lOntaia an approp.ia tionof $:0, 0. - Tkk ' 11 a e oominitteo on appropriations arrte 1 to tV(Knt Mr. Ell a's bill, with amend nents no it iz for a oan of $1,000,000 to the r ew I aas ex o it o l This sum is to te'ctu-nd o ho po rr men' a"1er the pay ment if cu e t eipenes -and tefo.e any div.ded is vlkl "o stosknoiders. Mr. PmiiO, chief of the burea i of stari tcs I'a'ioitf tbet. the t-6'a! valnrs.- of f uiovvis o. ji.',Joo were tm'iV.ee, nd for tte twelve montns tnied March '-81, 13V 9 87. "The w.l v-s of the export oi merctanai lor tin twelve months endtd March 31, 1884, we $T01;73S.4,til. r nd for the twelve months ended Mftreh 31, J fiowtn aaa tstt. t iJLr return put thS Vote to Louisiana about as follows: Democratic Stat ticket, 83,107; Republican State tloket, 42,fl8L THi legislature will stand 112 Democrats to thirty aJlotheray.v' : r f;:: H": .v '- Kssb In a Davis, a young lady of high so-1 tial stasdinif.wbile oUtridinx on horseback: in ' rCU-rar eounty. MiSS., -wtm attacked by John HenderOo, a colored man, dragrel from her hcrss and iasauUsd with probably fatal re suit HeTiaeTBon was caagnc ot .naignoors, 8 owly strangled, and wbstt nearly dead was ddled with shot and torn limb from limb. W. J. Br tmui ATI has bean nominated fer governor by the Ttnneiaea Ureenbackers. . llainr persons were .kal e 1, about 1C0 In jured, And an irnmen sm aint of damage to property Was don by a tcrn-ido in the v.e;n ity of Dayton, Oh 6V The town of Jamss- sown was ewareiy azurv wo. ; r PtTDT.Av FaAircts, of MoesrTle. BL, and tww of his children were drowned by the np etMng of a fowboat ' iC Mnrr Faaint." an SrWiSivS St Louh vpecahUor fa grafat. has failed f of abefit $1 w w,vm. or a snooan rise w .. TAW,wv m tss uoan aa aoor. ------ Tmas U&OMrtom and Daniel Jones fua-JiTnei WWIUtaWlkir (Cherokee), John 9, Davis (Choctaw') And J'wiHy Ecboia teefress ran-riitvd in tha TJnitad fiiaSBS Conrt of mat der in the Indian Territ ry, and Mat Muaid (nezro), convicted of erhxfnal assault ia tha Indiaa Territory, have beei sentaaced to be aangei on Tioayt juiy-ii. : : - k ! , Ex-GovEBjroa Hawav M. MArraawa, of toet Vhvinial died at his home in Lewhv tutf, W."Va. aged fifty yeara Ha had m-va4 In tn Confederate armv. was els ted I attorney-R. ne.al of Wei VirLoia, and gov ernorin io o-fVf-..- . ; .c;, -. Ax (XDhsion of dynamite at a stoaequafrV es-'x II etcsvilla, Ind., h-rled huge timber ami rtieceanf iron in everv direction, killed ens man ana injurea swuva, . several wnn fatal euex -: Oirxnisht recanUv Hh-am Jefferson waS takes from his home at Audobon, Ia, by turee men sni banged. Jin son, cicwro je Per son, hss tonfeeisd that he and his brothers-in-iaw, J. J. Wilson and J. A. Smyth, were tae murderers. : ; .4.. Wu.oav NAf thi laat of the three mn imp i atfld 1 1 the as a-tit srtd murder of three ciiiidien at Ash'and. Ky., has I s n sent h d to death. It wa the attempt to lynch th we thr-e men when led ta a.orlljdm wtta tav Kent c'ty militia and a (.rwi, snithe doath of f everal men. 'A FtRK at Hart'ord, Mich., destroyed the Van Bnran County poorhouse aad Hit en in mates lost their Uvea , ties, of taxation, disrezaras too iumesa; wants of the country, and. if adopted, would1 cripple many industries and at thesamatiam wouia prootttfir ukwi """Tl-""'rT TTMSTSyt M. VitTCf. Tit's nrAfAr.-once is exM-easad as to r-1 hi-tsucoessor, exoapt to dentuad tit the can-, PROMINENT PEOPLE. PATH, the singer, plays billiards almost as well a she warble. Th late duke of Buccleuch owned the greater part of three Scotch counties. : XfrrrrxD STaTXS Sznatob Looas'S fathel was aa Irish doctor, and came to America in 1&23. . . . Oxwraax. GonsoH is said to be the only Christian who ia prayed for in the mosquisat Aiecca. , . .;. . j.. Mrs. Fbajtcbs Honosoir Buawirrr, the novelist, is a tenant in Washington of Gener al urant. - 1 Enwano EoOLasTOW's dautrhter.'Alleirra, Is claimed to be the best woman wool carver InAJner.cai -! - .- Tsa empress of Austria sets type with the grace and siuu wntcn cuaraocarue aa mieui- gent compoauoT. , Don Pidbo, having arsnded tha throna of Bras 1 at the age of six, haa now reigned longer tnan any otner uvug sovereign. Pustdkot Jkwxtt. of the Erie road. Is a eonstant sufferer from rheu nati m, and hit affliction i said be telling on bis . otherwise ragged constitution. . Tkb Earl of Avleaford. who has paid $75, 000 for a ranch in Texas, and has bought a hotel at Big Springs, in that State, ia heir to an estate of vits,ouo,ouat r Vaani. the nomnoeer. is aa imnresaivw- look'ng old man, with snow-white hair end nms-ache. His spirits and health have been taUinz ever since tne aeaia ox n agner. . , ' NuTHxa" of the two living dauKhters of -r;v, th ir hmtoar. who suowwjit his father aa prfea-Ueahti.-ii' a .itogtoa adTerBity. Ex-8lKATOR DAVID AVnVl- -l. mar: riwaikand is siSSLdf Sb. rSliffJ riahtly- mors ilia JjJS- f 375 or thare- 'Pjrinw ffffiai OiMtnrmA Wwnn. P0L1TI0AL ': j Sjaecttott in Vnrlewe states r Mi., aw naatoMai i-ssnsusniii",-,!: Ai the Machusetts .lbph4ieiA'fW4if'l' convention, held in Norton, ;Measra. ,Hcai j Crarxi.-Xong and Lodge were chosen dele gatMto ta national xaxY0BtiP- They are- , for Edmunds ahd lincoln. Thw. tariff plana. f jof tha platform atv. wa as Xwwsiv, We advocate tariff laws.which, wniis.-: p . ; nishing necessary revenue, shall . favor ?;lpf' labor and Mustrial ententes try and riot asail them. Wteitan:. upon a reduction of cus.om duties becaatav,(s ;!( , the dangerous4 surplus ia the treasuryyra ceipts, at tae same line we aeeu ww tutl that this reduction should - be ; mada , with the least possible injury tfrtba laaoc, ; and manufacturing interest of the country, , and - wa cmdemu the arbitrary per-i centage reduitio i proposed, by th -present Democratic Housi of Rcprasenta-j , lives, because it fails to reform ativ ineqnali-t t , AtAm ahafl tv 4i man A? TYr-nTO i XUlaUtV ln publialife,and whes) relations 'W the partjl s are such that all of its members can hartuj unite in his supFOrt.,, - ; -' ' ' ine JiASsacnuseHa uernocraLii oaie ur vention, held in Worcester, balloted for dele-t r t sates at laree to the national . convent oss A with the following result: Benjamin F. Bu6-i J , jer, wtt Jos' a a jt. wo, forty,' S7arJan-es Delaaey, 853; and he - t Were declared elected. A motion was oJTrfed , f unanimously that it was the secss oi rus cow 4 ventioft that General Butter ' shonldl be . nominate 1 for President 'of &s United States at the national DeuiocratiY Smvention in Oiicago. Another- motioD - j, ttaat the delegates at large be instructor w vote at the Chioago conveutioa on every- ballot for General B, F. Buter tor ctndtdatef , for President, .waa ttftted The-platforn adopted deprecat-s all tflfldenciea to ciaas t distutrt'ons or toward tha croatiou ? j monopolies; advooates iraquent fliewaonH au, -limited tenures of office; retfflnns tharesolu- - , t one of the fast national Ee-nooratio coOTen tton; opposes. extravagance of itepublln fc expenditures, and denounces the accunrala non oi surplus revenue lrmn vuo of the people; demands 'the recognimon or.-. toe riKntB or XU3 woraune jfjui,iw i ments, both State and Federjd; uenonnce ; RepubUcan neglect of the fcber uH b-y and - commercial navigato-cK?'' bounces vthe , - ofBciat ouaea H patronage and ttt rolten (OTiunojoij -public service as demonstrated fcy the 1 route irauas, ana aemau miwu, ?1 t a reduction of the tariff, and declares tiial t ; the buraen or iamu;iu mrjuiu o V from -the neceesitiei of life, and w trcm whisky and tobacco: ranuer.i vuiuim ,w,vj"t j ernor Butler lor ni3 aiu " T,t Ltration, aad commends ha energy in Pwr life. . . ' ". '.l.ixiL-t-'o- - , 1 fill - 11 II. C t! mm v.w.wv- j twuioitwvu ui - ' -tr tt . at large: CarlesB. Pawyer,eurKo"w ell, Edward H. Rdllins and Joseph B- CUrfc , nZL- A'..ta an. lirtderstooa. tO DO --. X WO Ul UU3BS U-O-o.o-tw - " , - J 7 . . i i. Am,inria and fiT lot Blaine. The platform adopted Rongratwates . , k the Republi ana o? other States Wjtflb f t-nr, rwKwfi for. another triutupn rc , Republican : taincitila ; tommends AJ thur'a adniinistration, demanas r wun-j ercise of power Dvr iiawir s'. erwnent as will insure the enjoyment t WJ. v constitutional right, to every "3 5 South, condemca the nonzoniai iw""" "; duties and maintains the doctrine iof proteoj a r.wm rerlnct:on of duties on wie eo nn sssaries of life and in-reaae of jmoee pw . hxxuries. inwtba eredicAtion of TniJSWJ' ' i and A reform in the civil soro.demands We - susp melon ot the coinaEeof the sdver doUar.. . and improves the national education, btU Passed by theSenatei , i.' - ' The Maine Republican State conventionv b 11 u rooo t dn toe Hous v aVuropdt mA North Carohna, Is a graduate oi S.7,".T0 which 18 3 57.1 s-than V$"ZZ. mates, and aie,-y 1 than V&aJopr ton icr hepsen'-ye.r. ; .- Jacob Colk, boatswain gf Jaannt4, died the oth3r ;eUy .t iaizaeth Ho pits! for the Infs6i ,t Washinm. He haibec meinfSjg from hardships endured after th3 wrecj pf the Jeannette. ; : It t contested election case of Wallace vs. McKmiey - of Ohio, a sub-contniittee of the Aouse committee of elections, by a vote I Ji'three to two, decided to. report to the full ccnv.rni.tee in savor ot wi aubiug moujer, Mr. McKinJer. . " Tea work o! laying stone on the WasMng ton monument has be n renuned at a height of 41 ) feet, t.ie j oint reached at the rasp n rlon of wori .'ast lall. A course each day will MUSICAL AND ! DRAMAJICL Lord Ltttok intends to yte a play for Miss Mary Anderson. - - MjutAMX Paro, of Haplesonsopera troupe,, has sailed from Ks York to Europe. Hiitav Iavrifa's receipts durinr his Amer- I 'an engagement are eetamatcd at over giOO,- Saa not is at! work on a new play, the chief 'part of whl.h is in ten led for xtere- hardt, -" fts'-'! -!" .'' M rw.am.wriv Mivt Sot.oat is a -nooa'ar and accomplished proftisslonal violinat in Isr San Frandseo Gerster received a floral plae sixteen fee airh, ana trawi su-ver fmasee worth several thousand dollars. "uuaimif MawtS," a new opera, by Jao- euet a military bandmaster, has been wen nceived at the Theatre Royal, Antwerp. In Augd t the great spe:tacle of "Sieba,'' nowtheragam Paris will be presented by taeKiralfys,; at the Star theatre, Hew Yorlc Trxrk are flva versions of an old German rpe tao e called "The Seven RTeas," which are ia course -oi translation, to be p'ayednext season. - j;,.'.i';4 i i-'f, '- " "! Mathilda Cottmixt b to create the character of "We!! Gwynne" in tiiis country when that opera is produced at the New York Casina . :4 1 ''y'-'iP : Bsmovxn's and Schubert's remains are to be disinterred from th3 Wahring churcn yarti, and tranat erred tothe Central cemetery, Vienna. i Gounod k writhnT an important work to lemolish Wagner. 1 It will be divided toto three parts, "Thai Man," "The Artist." and Lawreno Barrxtt will return from Eng land July 1, opening la Denver exposition week. He Koasnc. to Salt Lake City aad SanFraniiasa .!?',''." w j''''---:,. 4.: RuBtNgniir, since his visit to thiscounUrr, Ka. lnaaKa naa nt am mi hv A cataract. Ine surgeonaear to operate upon it, as the other eye may be endanger i thereby. - , t x ' " Ma. Soroxamw, Widow of Kobwra bcqw- mann, is sixty-five, and she has been neirw the public as a pianist ior nny-i cieates as great enthusiasm as ever. . a wbknck Babbjett is playing beiore run but not eu owdedi hous e, m the Lyceum theatre, Lon on: All t e papers pra se Wa fate l gee, bat sav he cannot attain the higheBt effects.. -i,. ' I ; ."- 1 ' MAitAOXBS in New BrnnawlcK ana nova Scotia are lookier for an influx of good as- tnsfirmi imttk .Mr MinnfarV in the fad. Xn'-T 4hink the presidential election nthe States no. curve iaem -wuwierww.' iwny- Ive least stay end in famine. - . v . ' Joa Jarrxneoiv's next season will consia jf twenty weeks only, and mast of tae toe vm -toe spent to me-ai8ht towiA' He will - a . i . . . - -A V kwl.awwl held in Itangor, renoininai Frederick Boraa , i for governor, by accianwion- xra. '- a Casyrf Rockland and Weston Fyl&Uuw, . . t f Portiand, were chosen presidential fecf?1 . rhe followlns delegates f&lg&Jgl&S!?, v' were chosen: J.- R.Ttodwj f&&Gfr3 , Jos. 8. WheehightSwir'H. iiruood. A m w.ww .4-liai rWAotiw. '. 'wSt- X0 WAa-wuu a-, Kr wvu w -w i -- policy r'JPrrudent,. though firm, foreign , j policy; presents the name of James G. - Blaine is their, choice far the presidency; 9provt . . the present ; admiaisteutum C expresses severe diFapproval Of the action of- 1 the Democratis majority nv. Congrevt upon. , tha Wnrrianri Tariff bill and on the him)in . .1 . bills, and reaSrms approval of the policy of ; w prohibition. -.' ; . '"v; ' -:.V-- C-lL1 Wlr'Pww BJCTHS.--The new directory of Thila- at washi&Ktcm,hAsrublish4apaavl feiphia em tains, the !&arod of nearly be laid .during favoeWe wtbs'-. r ftone is prepared to raise the struct are to a heijiwo 4 Ofeet. : - Enoiukkr MeXiVille appeared before the House cominittoe of investigation and gxn his t ers 'on of the life on the Jeannette, re co .mting bavarljua little differences between the om era. He said he had never been in a vessel where there was less quarreling. ? Thb President has sent to Congress a com munication from the secretary of st&te ex plaining the need of taecoasular and diplo matic service and advising against any re duction of the appropriations. . . Duaiao the present Congries 8,858 bflls have besn introducxl in the House of Bepre resentative In the. last Congress during the same period the nuoiberof hllli intro duced was 6,0 1. ;C.? . .jf.---.,-.''.. . Iw the criminal court at Washington the case of th) United States against Willia-n Pitt Kellogg was begun. Mr, -i Kellogg was charged with having received money while a United Bta tea J&pator for ser vices rendered in relation to a contract with the United States in violation of section 1.783, revised statute, n Contractor: Price testiled that he had paid Kellogg 10,000 f or obfrvining the x edition of service upon his (Price's, nutes from the Dos offlte depart ment.. -V;'- , .. : .;4; . V "; ' " - .-.' ... PorelafB. . Tn. British government has adopted a w itii'? v o'.ky in the Soadaa, and will prob cb y no5 attempt to rescue ( eaeral Goid"k at KJiartnumKuntil the aatumn. v r . - KicvKHir. raranni weie killed and twenty injured by an accid nt through which a ra I way t ain was thrown from a bridge into the river near Cuid d a-SjI, Spain. , "t. ' Br the upsetting of a ya"ht at ICdland, Ontario, thrvO men were diownod. ;f ; " '.Fausin I ondon burned itWulian White ley, a large dealer in goods of every descrip tion, causing a loss 0181,000,000. ' - .Mast persons are dying continually of yello-v .fever on the sthmus of Panama. Tbi king snd queen of Italy opened the internatioaal exposition at Turin. , Anaa at Panama destroyed two blocks of houses, causing. Ijesbs which aggregate $530 000. During its progress a large mob of annul plunderers were fired upon by own ers of buildings and several killed. . , , TtrB ndnisterial party has been saocesaful in the e'.ec&cns m Spam. -; . u 4.-. ,Thititt con . lets were injured by the sud den fall of a par; of the new barracks in pro s cess of erection at Portsmouth, Knglaad. , ' A caxAVxn loss of hfe than was at first re-. ported rented from tbe tumbling of a train.. 1- o cars tnrougu a Dnao near vuioau-Aewt, Spa a, thirty-eight oorpirs having been taken, from the wr.ok. , Fifty soldiers were reported inawin& , " r- ' ' "X" rt S v t A FaaiccB fishing schooner-was run down by a tforwe -Iia bark t ie banka of ifew fmmdfond durr S foe. Twelve of the el ih- tan tsharmen on board; tbe schooner lost theUf ivea; r . ; .,.- - . i -;Two jmpowder 'msgadnfa at 'Havana; Were blown sp with terric alect. , A num- . her of artiUerymen and the men guvding the st-ck-were killed. .In Havana-Woomes, I windows and b at rs ra to o groium w Harvard aad a lawyer by profeiion.- - He lives in good style and has a - white tutor for his four chudren. , , f j .,..r FassroixT ASTHm favors ba lding a new mansion on Lafayette sinere, oppoai e the White House, for the Strictly private home of the chief magistrate, and etiiniTg the old White Hons i for the executive offl s and for holding odicial and pablia receptions, din ners, etc , - .--...t. i'.-r;;. f..' , r ;. Tmt poet Whittier has attempted Uttle lit erary work of late. At long intervals he stays for a day or two in Boston, but spen 's most of his time quieily in Danvera. : Hi has long been far from a roag. and anlew'.ae gains new strength during the sum nar he wiU cease writing altogelh r. ..Vp ';y -y Krwo Johk, of Abyssinia; is crneL 'On re turning from an toters'iew with, him General Gordon saw forty a nlan soldier mutilated together-and sent tCv Beg s, w th a awe a siV that if his hiirh-w jWantad enunhs IWvoa d i bvMjem: Two taouwA."j3Kyptians, t kea priso era, were rrdrel to march. Ben; noncr and faint, 1 hey re used. Tbe Abys- tnuans snoc at uiem as at largeia, . x The Maine Btraixhtout OreenbacK conven i tion at Augusta- nominated W. F. Baton, or - Cape Elizabeth, for governor. Delegates to, , ? the National Greenback convention and two S residential electors were chosan." . A motion, instruct the delegates for General Butler f & was defeated;:.-,;-.. u ,- -vv .v , At the Vermont Renubliian State conven , V iiorf in Montoeliar the followiast delegates at l large to the national conventijn wereclns.n; J. 6reTorySmrh, Felfleld proctor, 5wlwr- tJkiUUngs. xtrougnton u. turn :;ie ueiw.: ration's ch i-e is Edmunds.- The piatforntyi adopted reaffirm alliance' to -the ' grea party, and rer-ol , es that the party caaaott r . -on its pas, but mus-; be a party -of pror, - t It declares that Congressmen .ta&?W . holders most 1 relieved from the im . '; . t teitioa tional Whl h vhaafvdevwhf trN iH4nmL -.rwamm. m, and HjW-eu-pn approved, fJM eTpres a. xor isne - rei iswuMoavf s 1 at omdAQa IXow Fetearsitea ' SBenufcltcswa ; Premldentiwl Convewttwat Statnm. As a matter of genera Interest we give the fol ow ng estimats, made ia .Kew York, of the way in woeh most bf the delegates rent to th Bepub'foin Presidential convention in Cbicaco, will vote pa the first ballot:; For Arthur Alabama, 10; Arkansas, 14; Delaware. 1; Florida; 8; GeorgtvS4; Illinois, 6; Indiana, ; Kansas, 3 ; .Kentucky, 18 ; Ioaisiana, '10; Maryland, 8; ' Massa chusetts 13; Miarissippi, 17: Missouri, 10; ; ebraska, 2; New Hampshire, 8; Hew Jersay, ; New .York. 2b ; North Carolina, 19; Pennsylvania. 17: Rhode Island 4; South Carolina, 8 Tennetwee, 18; Texas, 11; Vir gialx. U; Wisconsin. 7; district of Columbia, I; Wyoming, 2; L tah. 2. Total, S2S. . For Blaine --California, 16; DeJaware, , Indiana, 7; Iowa, Jo: Kansas, 14; Kentucky, 4: M ine,. 12; Maryland, li; Micingaa, 18; Minnesota, 10; MisairaippC 1; - Miasouri, 11; . N h aska, 4: New Hampshire, 1; New Jeisey, 12; New York, 80: JJevada, Br'-. .North Carolina: li Oho, 27; Oregon; i 1 eansylvama, 43; Ithoti. isiana, ; 'iennesa3e,4; Texas. . 15; West Virginia, li: Wtconsin. 2; Artiona, 2; Dakota, 2 Wsahingtoiai Total, 311. . r : For ndni mds Massachusetts, 18 J Michi gan; 8; Minmeota, 4; New Hampshire, 4; New York, 14; RKoie Island, 2; Tenneasea, I: Vermont, 8; Wiscoafia, 6. Total, J. ; . ForXogan III nola, Si; Indiana, 7; Kan sas, 2; MMeouri, 7; Tennearse, J. Total, 5i For John Shennan Indiana, 4; Ohio, 19. Total, 4V. ' ' -" - For Joseph R. Hawley-Connectic-t, IX r For Oresham Indiana, o. J , For Fairchild-4. -k For Grant Maryland, 1. s 4 Doubtful Colorado. ; SZr 5 : '! V 1ft 4 T AU-m m wnl:nd woalom. am made or a reduction of toxa.ion j niunas is iresensea vjkW -j i what 14 nest m tn t rvepunuan paii one whose high and unset ian ptH.l..- tr - n aggreive mtrity, amucy, jagcwystrw. ; manahin and imblem'shcd record, fit hint above all otheri for t e ch ef mftgtarar of t the nation. The adminhtrAtion of PresinenS Arthur i heartily commended as free from reproa.h.- It in taracts tbe dal"gafe3 iiVot - for Edmunli avlong as he stands baforr uu -national c:n ent.on. ' " -'' 1 The Iowa Hepubli-.au Stmta ronventloTf a " Des Moines ebo e a solid Blaine delegat.cn for the national ton vent ion ; acd a lopted . resolutions which declare strongly in favor of t ie Republican positi m oi the i arit. demand thatCongrers shall halt in: the stMctive work pro x;e 1 by the Morrison t ill ni do-j -dare that Jam s G. Blaina iv the chow e ox the Republicans of Iowa for Premd lit. Kansaa Republicans, at fieir State conven- Hon in Topeka, ele-'ted four, deU,i? ai large favorable to.Blaina and chose twd , presidential ele:torA Theresoiutiom aiopd v atrongly -jcommerd' Arthurs aamirusa-alron -aedavor nati mod lag.s ot .on to reguatw ,-, tatter-State eommerte. , , .. , , ; ! -: The Wes" Virginia Republi can BUts conven- , tion at MarUnsb irg elecled four delegates at v large to the national convention and paed , ' arasolutkm instrje'tinz lh delegate t vote for Blaine as Jong as there was a rjcs mablf ;:. chance of bis nomination, ; - '" f . Virginia fc't aizlitMit Bp'iblicans, at their . convention in Richmond, tinted an unia-f " sru:tetl d Ijgeiton to -tee natmnal conven tion, but declared in their reso: otions t :at th? ihiniinationof Bliinfraad Lintln would ia-r 1 spire courage among the RtpubLcan of ti - tsouth. .:-v?v'-'- : .'-.- , ?, . The Michigan Greenback State convention, at Detroit waa attend by.Govrnor B g'e . and prominent Ore abactors. Te del3eacs , chosen t the nat onalc nvent:on;at Jndiano s., apolis were instm t d to' vote f oeAitler .for y Pretidwnt ''Jiimi-i-ii''1' si'.' ,r.9'p?!- , . 1 Arthur.., 333 n SifT M,f'SisVt:v;f jv'"' Blamr Sll n - 0tx WW-J Edmunds 63 U I, " ji a , Bherman. ., 3 jCW , -ttP2 t.i ' ' 1 ' T Total w..,...H. ! u ? tvti-vt , t'Ur'. ' Notreported.U Total Necejflary to a choice.... The 'ask doaLKnl delegates from Col r babeved to be for Ulalna. ine lopr? Kantacky are against Arthur. : , 4 truyxa vxaioaia sen nauu at the marriage of her gTand-dae eees Victoria, ot Ban, to JPrinoa, atinberr7 D-rmit-dt, Oerma, o 4l 1 " if w,v, -ft- hwuwms awtw w nearly ,' winaow ana mntn w w c " .,VT-.nfn HI ifwX r .r - ,V , i bw..-7.-,'?.ir. "y. terrv?tit).cu,h'. s.ventynei.Ji, -H'rffc.? ' t 11' Bf' r - 1 wrA w
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 29, 1884, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75