j onesbomi Leaker
VOL.
JONESBORO, N. C. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1 89 I .
NO. 26
IV.
JONESBORO DIRECTORY
METHODIST EPISCOPAL
JONESIJOUO CHICOT.
Hf-v. J. K. Thorn rwm. 'Paster. rhru- - '
J,r .4ro. 2nd and 4 th Sundays at Ham?. 'And !
:;i..m.; Sunday Hchooi cvry Sunday at
ivt,iiuKcicn iuuniit) inirni &l
PHESliVTEltlAJC. ; important work here he spent the
uv n. K. McLauchiin, Pastor-Char.- summer at Havard University in the
.jnn.b.P. 1st .Sunday 11 a.m., and 7: p.m.! , , . . . , u lue
Muidny S.-hnol every Sunday at turn. Pray- ; school Of physical Culture. As one
i r iii'-. tiii every other Wednesday niirht, ut i ,
::.f. ' j evidence of his success up there in
77Z I Xew EnSland, won four medals in
K. v. w. t. Jonks, Pator.-.TonoSiKro, rvi- j atuletlc contests. He is now playing
r. vury M Sunday at li o'clock; a.m., and 8 ; the new men who wish to contest for
j iu. Sunday school every Sunday at Jfcl. a.m. ! cuiiieut ior
j a place on Trinity's first foot-ball
christian. itCam 11(3 is arranging for several
Hfv. P. T. Way. pastor Charges:-Poplar match games this season. He hopes
SVtl windaTl; ! t0 arran-e to ?lay games in Ral-
a.m. and i. p.m. eirh dnrin & trio FTnna;.;n tm
KKV.fl. It; Undwovood, Pastor. Charges:-1
'liriMiiui Lljfht, l-t Sunday nt 11, a.ni.; Eypt !
!I Stmdiiv ut 11. n.m Mnimt vi fin ?o n 'Idi Win.. '
(
L1 rMliUiaV Ul II. 11.111 Mdlint PUuiri 'M w.,..
.... . . . - .., .
-., - 1 - ...... . . ii tii it 'i nun
day at 11 a.m.; Shallow Well, 4th, Sunday at 11,
a.m.
............. t ... ... i
in riAi,u iiDi.f., .o. l,z, .. t. or A. M. I!r(r- !
id,ir mw'tin ,j5-i .M(,nday nirht, and tho Festi-j
ilri llf St. John tht ItsiT.ti'ef .n iJ T..1 1
..... --. - - . " s-aa. i'i inv
JivauKi'Mst.
iuu .r. jotin the if
JoNRiRoito Lodge, No. 127. 1. O. O. F.
ular mec'tiiiK, cvory Frhlay niKht.
T0WN OFFICER'S.
Mayor: J. It. Watson, Esq.
(oMMisioNKRS:-Ir. E. P. Snipe, s. If. Ihic
hanan. J. L. fiodfroy, J. A. Ilallentine,
Jumrs Dalrvraple.
Htkevt Commissiokkh: J. A. Mclver.
CI.EHK: W. E. Miirchlson.
Tiif-AHUREit: Kfdin Ilryun. '
Town Mahsiia'l: John W. Mawniore.
W. E. MURCHISON,
Lawyer 1 Notary Public,
i
Will attend to busiiH'Sf In tho Superior and
Siij.ivtm- Courtfi of tht State upon invitation
pn.tM rly supixirtcd und backed.
MU n.t tittt nd Justieo's courts (except in
Jori.sxm aixl Sanford), without CASH in ad-
1 MlllV.
Douglass & Shaw,
A ttorwyn-at-lMic.
CARTHAGE, N. C.
w. h. McNeill"
Attorney and Counsellor At-Law.
CARTHAGE, X. C
W. H. H UMBER,
UNDERTAKER and FUNERAL
Annni 1 nromnnf
- . . . ivwt i ioi i i..
fHAN
i in M
'KFUL to mv nunv frinntk :
loore and adjoining counties i
,l" "H-ireoniiaence ana liberal patron-1 .
- r . . ,
vu i
ir POnfli1orf0 nriil lihnrnl ivitf,i. i
uie past, 1 wish to say that I i
jm located in the rooms next door to 1
Vill nnniiVn in onv tf . ..e A ttiatfth f.imn nf TNcn.oU .1
of the State. AH business entrust- ; ed at High Point on last Saturday by i S ' , 7 f Janc- wel1
ed to l..m will reeoivo prompt : the Trinity and Guilford Collet clubs ! , , ? ? m mht"
and careful attent ou. . V V0,, I Jacobs it jest lifted mo bout 10 foot
Office . Court ouc Untitling. htood 18 t0 11 In ' i I hardly could set in the chare. John
k "r., V:"'. . i brings with it a season of han- ti , . . Lfw .i.s.... " ,
m. u i V . UI . un81 tasc11 m snl,u ffa-1 m x ,"uuu u.u-L-i mz ana fcailv Jane a ; t4 ic iuivri w uimsen ana omcr -v- .
nut and Imitation. Klos whit, and imitation piUCSS. Much SUCCCSS to VOU Mr."Eili. i- - UO al , ., . . . louh
"w,k,. Khu tuce-piates , highly mounted trtv j CWKlulf u may spect sumthing from 5 ,tcUiaiors- nuea member of the . , ,
ud trimuied. Common coffins also. Proles-: tor- II. i i.mi , . . & TT.,, 1 , v . . . , . ! neighbors
-iii jht vices rckdercd when doirod. I . IU,SU1U nuu mil, anu
. Promptly AttauUd To; nitfit r day.
' A. hionn & Co., in Jonesboro, j derson," "Tourist." There were four ! P are may bc sum trut" in tlie i " a slrect- 11 ls a Dit f retribu
horel can be found when not called j persons on the rt i. things. I has bin plunuintr ronn.l i tive justice that he should have lot his
professional or other important :
battels.
A. J. MONROK, M. D.
0
Bonitz Hotel,
129 Varied Street.
Wilmington, North Carolina.
Thi Hotel is located in the Business
Centre, of the City, convenient to all
the Boats and Street ltaihcays. .
I. OU per Uay. jWelUtoa Itw. of !.,, I)av:J IW, allcWsof invVnUo-. Thev T' I" "0t U"d ltom' ,ric Bh,t 4 Ik. ct
(,,,, , ofX..; also Jlrs. Rose, wife of Mr. a mcialtv r,f 1 " - ,nlake a"1 :t " not beard from jaia. not- remely focri-jtorinzvoariierroai t-
S"f. Jj K-e. They confer nJw York City ! 5 He effort, of iu author' tetn Jiu nonai,. Vl,b
m. . cu. I.. .their home, but .M the Uuitl States!, hat ha4 vioX rlT , ASfe BtUnrortb-1 SarprUiae malt, follow the w of
t4 rr""'-' i me i4e track at n.ght. ' umn, will be of interest to inventor- , wk Your apjute return., pood 4iReoa
J- H. wM. bonitz. Proprietor. ! Ti,e.v an? PW'-rs and proprietor i patentees, manufacturers and all u l' tV , Utln.BU,,bc1 iJ ll I ' restored, and the Liter and Kidney.
. -.wHj wv. ; of the Tourist, which they publUh at I have to do with r.-n-nt. American Conpreii t f Phyii-1 rt.nmc healthy action. Tn" a bottle.
. j atcuts. I c:4ns -n(l CfiM.. .V . : I - .... . .
. " niornMQ unc omc. at Jlclrer Ualrymple t. t
COMMUNICATIONS.
TRINITY COLLEGE.
Tir- it, T r. . t -
Auz rror. . . Uaniels I
has taken char nf athloti,. o.
, . x
. . .
r 1 t 1 , lVr
utallon ot a college IS somewhat at
j i
; stane when her students are engaged
j in athletic contests with other institu-
tions of learniner. For instane.fi t tven,
" "
years ago, Princeton beat Yale in a
M1U
j loot-uan matcn game, and as a result
i v i , ,
I Princeton's Freshman Class the next
j year was increased by one hundred
more new students than had former
ly matriculated. People who know
least about match games between insti
tutions are the ones who usually make
the most noise trying to show why
j such games should not be played.
Another game of Base-ball was play
j ed at High Point Saturday Sept. 10
between Trinity and Guilford, which
i resulted in 18 to 11 in favor of Trin-
i ity.
Mr J.A.B.Fry of Carthage is here
this year, and would like to add, he
is taking a prominent stand in his
class, (the Sophomore class). He is a
close student, and we have reason to
believe that Moore county will some
day be proud of him.
N,cw students are daily arrriving.
The future outjbok for Trinity is very
encouraging. '
The foot-ball seasion is here and!
: broken uoses and black eves are be-'
i coming iery popular.
rni . . - j
The corn crop in h.s section looks I
; v erv well indeed. Fodder has been
. dau.aged to .ue exteu, by wet weatb-1
: ;
rp, t i
1 lie LKADKR nnten n rrtirr r -nnn w .
..tv.. t.watrFvu. -
ence m its new form and to the homo
fil, n ?m
" it v-ujxics iiikt i rav or eipar
snnlit. n . -.u...... :
sunlight on a cloudv day and it al-
Tho Tourist.
T.nB n t. . tn-n. i
. lirnnr,l,r o ..w.. i . . !
. j .t. ..in.nuia
i 'vu.ui t c-l uit: car ,mt swt hf ;
it ntT fU , :
t;fi i.:t. .
ouviu wiata uie trees at tlie COt-
luc vvt
,
1 " xuu car was let-;
tere "Galveston, Houston & Hen-1
rr, .
ine car was let-
onft iniiv ffl.i . '
- -""-.t iue i'uiicr. w no are
they,'' was asked, but no one could
tell. Some iruessp,1 it .T-
or his sou George. Iome guessed !
j Vanderbuilt, but nobodv knew. Fi- i
? nally one eentleman sail Via tx-M
i - w --m VU1U i
! give a quarter to anv niw whn 5
. WA ll.it i. .
! go down and find out who they wore, j n.7 . .themes bett with bet respec
! The offer was accepted and the ! tlblIltl Uncle Jake.
writer went down and made known his
. ,
"uiii t., nuu i.
lie
rccivod a hearty
welcome.
The gentlemen's
(four different places in the United
States. They travel all the time, write !
i up a country through which a Railroad
runs, take view nf nVinrt in(ao
V. J .
"Favo and have printed in the Tour-
Met
en
-j' inn
days at Asheville, Greensboro, one at
inler City and one at Jonesboro.
They are particularly well pleased with
Jonesboro. After speaking fully of
their business, the conversation" was
continued about the products of the
soil, climate, etc.
The interview was very pleasant.
They know how to make any one feel
easy. Some people when in fine cir
cumstances have a tact of making in
feriors feel uncomfortable but there is
nothing of this sort in the make up of
.Messrs. Wellington Rose and David
Post and Mrs. Rose.
Mr. Rose talked freely on the politi
cal outlook, but as his mission was
not a political one, the writer does
not feel like he would do Mr. Rose
justice to mako public his private po
litical opinions.
The onlj slip-up our reporter made
wa in asking Mrs. Rose what was her
native state. She was born in Ger
many, and Illinois is her adopted state.
Jonesborp will have a write up in
the Tourist, and we expect something
as solid as a Post and sweet as a Rose,
ON THE WING.
Mister Edutur-. Senco ritin tu
yu afore menny ups and douns has
crossed mi paff, but that is what mi
sun John calls contrasity, for Ive bin
low in speret and broke in heart, and
Ive bin' elevated to theskys rapped up
in hallucinations John sesit is contras
ity contrasted, and I has most bin
made to say all is vanity and vexta
tion, but I is gitting sum better I has
had a time with mi -well she is tho
sweetest the prettiest and I bleve the
goodest gurl in all the world, do you
hear, eh, and if yu will jest keep one
year open and say nothing yu will ?it
sum news from these parts of the
10 t'VisevA tu it UUL 1 UOU t CaTC I UT that
fur he ;s a ,awk; w JQ'
work alld vu necdn? be 'ZlTlTe
turn np time afoi.0
thmks thar is a heap of monev in it
lw r-rvo..l f.x I I. T 1 l. ..
auu uis neau is mitv sot that w.iv nnA
... J
;vujest listen out now all them thin-s
i I , , mas
i restm ou nu d I haven't got the
'i-i-i
COmI'aslb,1,t - vtu eya mtch of a
i0lr Z ,
iJohn thinks if ho l, a
IJU1CK IU IUr
Iml.tc ne r..
. uiuun i ui ue ses ioKes (
will nav st ratiw nrr.nhn , - .u ....
...
I UmK lliem hOttr t ri n n Alilnnolnf. I
, , . - - -
I spect that am sn fnr if v j
v.u.iuoimcmes.
horse vu tend tn liim itAtt ai.
: j.i . . .
"vuC1 iuau iue
,
oiii (mac c... c i . .t
OIU Onf1??. firifl ctim fVL-c ca. : . !
. . . . ' . - c" wu apt ,
""
nk the most of a new wife eh I
mighty in times past an,? I
t v
SeDCe 1 sot my head to larn' a11 things I
bas changed bout, and now 2 aU u
oul 01 llle ais nxnff, O
thay had the raising of Sally Jane and
j r . tfttiAouu
j then thay would not vex one when his
mma w
- .
ruminating on hitrher and
h
Manv vr nf.!",..
;C. A. Sno. Co. Solicitor f
w -' I'lttvuvc UiX
given j
iMtsAtWi,;, . '
IV. DUt ll Kim rn t au CUireo 10 ino tloor In nnk-
:edfa mti::; -rpass-pe
j WASHINGTON LETTER.
I From our IlocuUr Corrv9pnndcnt.l
Washington. Sept. 25. 1S31.
Mr. Harrison has kept everybody
on the tiptoe of expectency all this
j week tut further than a few minor
appointments and the semi-official an
nouncement, that M. M. Estee, of
California is to enter tte Cabinet
when it is organized, no important
announcements have been made, al
though every day a number of impor
tant appointments are expected to be
made. There is a continuous stream
of prominent callers at the White
House every day, and few of them
leave without putting in an argnment
for some friend who is an applicant
for some one of the large number of
specially desirable places now at Mi-
Harrison' s disposal. It is probablo
tliat tue large number of advisers
many of whom are hero without being
sent for, are responsible for the delay
in making appointments.
There is a wide discrepancy between
statements made .by two prominent
citizens of North Carolina, both at
present in this city, as to the present
attitude of the Farmers' Alliance of
that State towards the third party
movement. Oneof them.SenatorRan
som, who is strongly opposed to both
the demands of tho Alliance and a
third party, says there is no third
party in the State and that there will
be none, because the members of the
Alliance, with the exception of a few
demagogues are all democrats and will
continue to be. Tho other gentleman,
Col- L. L. Polk, who is President of
National Farmers1 Alliance and pre
sumably acquainted with the inten
tions of the organization over which ho
presides, says that tho Alliance in
North Carolina as well as in the other
Southern States, is prepared in a cer
tain contingency to enter heartily into
the third party movement. The con
tingency is that both of the old
parties shall refuse to recognize the
demands of Alliance. Which of these
two men ought to be best posted on
this subject T
Ex-Representative("Deacon")White,
who was at the head of the New York
firm that went under this week on
account of its failure to corner Sept
ember corn, was well known in Wash
ington, where he served two years in
the House of Representatives, nom-
...
inally representing a Brooklyn dis-
trict, but in reality directly represen- lie wou'd be at rest. Thus panscd
ting the speculators of Wall Street. awav the oldest citizen of the comma
He has been charged, and his actions nitv vu,re he lived, passed into the
confirmed the charge, with haing pur-!
cnaseu a nomination and election to !
the House for the single purpose of j
mmu UUUl VX-
cdnt when there was Wi,i.t;AB m.
that afrtl inct. T,l i A
v iuuu nc ui-vtr
-
tailed in a sincrle instanr ctr,.l
UP Un UlUSllinCl V Anil Di1V.Va tihl '
..... . .
- - . - "uoi
would put monev in hi rwtt
his term expired ln lm u
I
rn turn n u n I t , ,. l. . I i
. ..... .
C.I TUT. II at ft. lnrriT"1uf n-1. An a... si. . 1 t
- ..."'.i'" s.
- - -
any likelihood of legislation affect
i ,. ..... .in i mm
large fortuno in crain s,,1,t;fln
- . ....... u vu,
aftefhe had instrumental in de-
feating the bill, which was before thi
last Congress to prohibit dealing in
"futures" and "options" on Agricultu
ral products. It was charged at the
time that ho was the disburser of a
large fund raised in Wall street to
"Hang up" the bill, which had Uen
I endorsed by the republican caeca
and which appeared certain to become
TZrT"0
mauems Doaattliat
had succeeded in putting the bill
"- ucit Tl- t-: y T
... ..... i trial, llr. KII17 S pir Ilt.vrr- a -..
Pomologica! Society. Tho Phy.:?ians
were the most numerous, tnt the po
mologists caught the popular favor by
reason of the handsome exhibit made
of nearly one thousand varietie of
improved fruit raised by thenwelves,
which was held in one wing of the Na
tional Museum building, and which
the public was permitted to tee and
admire.
In a room at tho Postofiice depart
ment there has been a small but ira-
jportant gathering holding sessions
every day since Tuesady, consisting
of the eleven District Railway Mail
Service Superintendents and tbe pea
era! Superintendent. Thy met here
under orders from Mr. Wanamaker
for the purpose of exchanging exper
iences and discussing wajt and means
of improving the railway mail service.
In a speech on the first day tho gen
eral Superintendent congratulated hi
colleagues that the past fiscal year had
shown the most eiUcient work in the
history of the service, tho number of
errors being smaller in propotion to
the number of pieces of mail matter
haudled, the complaints fewer and tho
complimentary letters more numerous.
It has been customary for thee Sup
erintendents to meet here once in two
years, but Mr. Wanamaker proposes
that they shall hereafter meet once a
year or oftener,as tho meetings are
found to bo of great benefit to the ser
vice. Obituary.
Edward Burns was born April the
14th 1798 and died July the 23rd 1891.
He joined tho Methodist Church at
Jones Chapel, about 1S54 under tho
ministry of Rev. N. A. Hooker, who
was pastor of Deep River circuit at
that time.
For the last 10 year his afflictions
were such that ho was not ablo to get
about much, and for two months before
his death he was a great suffererof heart
trouble, but he endured his suffering
patiently, and without murmuring.
Ho was concious tht his end was
approaching, and often spoke to thoe
about him of his faith and hope in Je
sus Christ.
A few hours before he died, ho told
his children that ho must go home,
and being told by his", son Joha that
ho was at home, he said he was talk-
lug about the home he hid bn nmr.
, j- J
i in to et to for RO many j ears, where
KPinl wO"d.
Wo trust to live with Ood forever.
B.
Tho Now Disovery.
ave heard vour friend .nA
talking about it. You mav
) 1 l .i . .
i ,uureu w one or l"c many wlo Jcnow
1 1 rom Personal experience just how
. . . ... . ,
I'tllMI II II ITIC ir li IT .'St.. I .
. ' " "aM-,!ur
intu 11 von a f
tuvu
it vou are one
of its ttauncit
. .
uwuse xue wonae"Ul tbing
hen once given a
i trial. 1
flr.r ,ir,1rf 0 . ,
' o -. -..
- - - -w - m 1.1 kuci iiuu m-
If
you have never used it and should bo
aClicted with a cough, cold or any
throat, lung or chest trouble, secure a
bottle at once and give it a fair trial.
It is guarnt-od every time, or money
refunded. Trial bottle free at McWer
& Dalrymple'a. C
Tho First Stop.
Perhaps you are run down, wia't
eat, can't iJec p, can't think, can't do
anything to your satisfaction, nd .u
wonder what ails you. You should
heed the warning, you are taking the
first step into Nervous Protration:
You need a Nerve Tonic and in Elee-