Newspapers / The State Chronicle [188?-1893] … / Oct. 21, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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YOU HAVE ONLY FOUR MORE DAYS TO REGISTER. a " 30. RALEIGH, N. 0., TUESDAY, OOTOBEE 21, 1890. PBICE 5 CENTS. iEAT CONSPIRACY. , Senator Vance Sought to 1 Frustrate the Conspiracy Tin:nioSMosToERS of :s: .vlVANIA AND THE RE N,;!.I 'AN CONGRESS. r ,i ri. r ol Vance' Career-Ilis . i iiihis the Ilimlcn Irom ' n vi. Thc Old Man in , ;,.,Kr " ht? tn of Tin-It" Vsc in Solo- ''""'. i. iv the Phcrnicians 1 I'll: I ' ' ' ...loV f . illl.C'oriih li Mill' s to Tyre hv r IN ...iiiTt n TkJ tT mis :outk nnot lit: made rnis t una 1 1 . ,u'ini, iini'in in ' i.iivi'i'iri'i'n 1M ... nxip iirnu w ' ''- II ,l.1 'i.li Ml 11 "l KACY. T11ECONSPI- 1 t 1 uI1(in, M' alto the Republicans. . .it'or. State Chronicle.) NtMi;i:u one. ,..,,.,,;to, K. C, Oct. 20th.-Ihave ' . . i i j. i i ,,) fr.'l'K'ntiy during me pust v T.'.ri:t bill, aod a recent com- . .1 . Ti ll! fr in my pen 10 me liam- t-r. c fc. ( I h.cn wired to tne JNew .i by tho Associated Press Mh.-C'liti s -vcr:i! Southern pa 1'!,,. f-rthor fact tht Senator i-rjr v'rioai,l,oR to relevant t) bo printed in the , (1 tho specific clause I h;nl addressed ray I u v .1.' , rd my iiiVLstsguttocs, Ak- ij-j.'"f ion the ab'ii :')ii.ld entirely fresh ..per, (.lie preparation a. (, . ,. , .. f-.-.i at Lhe, request or ' ! i tair.y review any ;,c. U' r.v: i:T l-gihl.itiou r.f.m tao uiH'pir.ibility .c.c- :;.vri hura. Tho olli - i. . .!i t :aeH.'nate$ iro.n tne i ; . - ; i ili 1'ii'i, aro vital with his f r. ,t I'ix.v.n u I :i 1 1 i:iu iu'o a history of the I 1. 1 'ii'j'i "M' hjtwceu a H jpublicau I :. ia I th'i iron miki.rs of Pitts .i l'i , ;t tiib il which Var.co sought Im: -W -it", 1 v..-,h tu b distinctly un t - ul I ijri'iier dfsire nor need any i v f; iHthhu men. Soon after I:; m.j)!,ty y.jir 1 a?kcd to be appoiut ti Ta'tiic Librarian of North Carolina. 0. 1 I so llir. of Mr Vanca immediate- 1. a'N-r hus mdue'iou into the post bjl- liuwraorshij) from which he passed jl Ma- Senate, lie refused. With this V.ftM'.iciit, I trust that the reader who tuy b."i stranger to my pen will note la wh it I am about to say of Mr. Vanca .i:avrnv which those who know me 1''V Will not ipiostion. I As I have stu'irestpd. tharn can be no JinpinLd cou-ideratioa of tho recent tint! io'me in Congress without noting ti-ii-p;einuvu'Hs of Mr. Vance. Mr. pi' .K,.ny, of tho House, in his initial h i-iiur.-hii) and unrelimtini? advocacv of tail known by his name, was not Ji'ru ironcuncod than was Mr. Vance's lervt-rit and tireless opposition in the S 'ii ito. VVhfa the record of the in ii 'y shall have n vssed to the oases of f"iu il history, and history in later de ".t cr ioai of tradition and folk lore, shall KtM-rve to te remotest American pos ''ythe men o -la's of those days, when ? w i. duopoly sta king into the halls y'l Nation, foryr.'d fetters whose gall itio i )ti tho poor must endure, there tin .'ii stand forth the namo of Vance 7'Uiani: rver d.-sinatinj? a prophet of r, hurling the wrath of justice at of man. and from the very viivi'nm. nts 0f aa aristocracy of gold, :)i ic aloud f r 1 bsrty and rcfusiug to a '''l hu pi-acv. 1 hid tr. (piently heard Mr. Vance on hustings iu North Carolina, but, un U th,- ivc nt tariff debates in the Sen J l' 1 f iiuid no opportunity to esti "' 1 his al)ilitifs when surrounded by L"rt th;. u eighty of his Senatorial peers; 1 T 'ii ill . ,,f .i. . :...i ,i - n niiii iu lily luiuu wua industrial districts of the North. This was pecu'iarly gratifying to me who', from my childhood,bad followed his his' tory, whether its event was in heroism to press North Cirolina close to the great heart of his vital manhood when her garments were wet with the blood of her dying and her face was blanched with the rellected ghastliness of her, dead; or whethor in sacrifice, coerced from the light of freedom, he paid the penalty of that love in the gloom of a prison, in the very capital city where now his devotion to North Carolina is no less conspicuous in the forum of a Senate than was tho love that intensified in the confines of a prison. I am aware that I am touching a point in his history, the mentiou of which he has never encouraged. I trust that he and his family will pardon my reference to his prison life a reference which possibly, within the bounds of strict propriety, I ought not to indulge. But since beginning this article my en thusiasm, caught from the annals of his history, has brought me to the painful scene when peace had been declared, when the living soldiers had returned to their homes, but when he, in the night time, alone with his family in the town of Statesville, was apptised that his residence was environed by a troop of horsemen, and when he, the next morning, was started on a journey to the prison in Washing ton City. Jefferson Davis, in a dungeon in Fort Monroe, bore the consequences of each of the Southern States, Zebn'o 1 Vance stooped low, and lifted from "the old man in chains'' the glory and honor of North Carolina, which by the alien had been wrought into a burden of re proach. Transferring the burden to his own shoulders as a father clinging to a daughter reproached by the stranger, but whose stainlessness he ever believes, he walked into the gloom of a prison, at testing in the relinquishment of his lib erty, an imperishable faith in the integ rity of North Carolina. North Carolina, has he ever been un true to you? Let him who holds the re cord of his unfaithfulness arise and speak. Tho craves or our soldier-dead are settling to the common level of the soil. The fields whereon were wrought the miracles of blood no longer billowing with tho smoke of battle, now bflneath harvest moons, in undulation3 of rest lessness for the reapers garnering f-cythe, are attesting the triumphs of toil and symbolizing tne pertec'ions or peace. I know that nature and bus bandry i:t t hu biding the havoc of war would" te-.ch me tho philosophy of seren ity a philosophy abjuring all bitterness, bidding mo to turn trom the contempla tion of a turbulent past to a speechless communion with tho God of Pine;. Bat sacrifice, unselfish and uncomplaining, fov my fvtuer, ray mother, my sister, my brother and myself is a memory that Go l would u t and the rule of gov ciuoient shall not cause to perish from my heart. And, a f ;w weeks ago, while sitting in the gallery of the Senato and witnessing and hearing Vance's effjrts lor tho poor, of whom there are so mauy in North Carolina, I thought of tho time when he loved the Union and desired no war, but how,when it came, he wrought for the poor women and children at home and sought to keep nakedness and star vation from the soldiers in' the field, and how to this end, he bought ships which he sent on perilous vovaeros, from our blockaded ports to distant lands to return laden with the necessaries of life for the poor at home and the disttessed soldiers in Vir BUNN AND MC'IVER. WINSTON-SALEM NEWS. ASHEVILLE NEWS. The Discussion at The University Be tween The Congressional Candidates. (Special Cor. State Chronicle.) Chapel Hill, N. C, Oct. 20, 1890. On Saturday, the candidates of Fourth district, for a seat in the 52d Congress methere. The county candidates, being present, were permitted to announce themselves before the discussion began. it was nearly three before they weie done, and the crowd were anxiously waiting "to hear Bunn and Mclver." It was Captain Bunn's time to open the discussion. His voice was not in good trim, as he was very hoarse. He began by stating that nothing but stern duty could induce him to speak. That duty was twofold : To render an account of his stewardship, and to tell the people wny they should maintain the Demo cratic party. His opponent had charged him "with having done nothing." How could he do anything ? How could the Representatives of the Democratic party do anything in the last session of Con gress? Every right du8 them as Representatives of the American people had been abused. Deliberation rest being allowed by the Speaker, they could only serve their constituents bv breaking a quorum. This they did, and for six days prevented the passage of the Conger bill. Had it been in his power, iu the same way, would he have prevented the passage of the McKinley bill, and to-day "you farmers would not be paying forty cents more for cotton ties than you did a month ago." Of course he did everything in his power to prevent the passage of the Force bill, but the Dictator and his party willed it to become a law, and ii was passed by the House of Representatives. The party that favored these measures had delegated Prof. Mclver to represent it before the people of the Fourth dis trict. He had not, however, confined himself to that party. He was pretend ing to represent the Alliance I When or where did the Alliance give him his ere dentials i was it done in Kaleigh, W on a negro nominated him, and anor seconded that nomination ? Did those negroes and revenue officers represent the Alliance ? Did you, members of the Alliance, send them ? Prof. Mclver had been asked if Mr btrowd. his county-man, (ana orotner in the Alliance,) should be nominated by the Durham convention, and Dr. Gris- som by the Republicans, who would he support. His reply was: ' Oh; I'd have to siick to my party. ' i et he a-ks them to supocrt him regardless of party. Oapt. Bnnn denied that Prof. Mclver, or tuv other Republican could represent tho Alliance, for one is wedded to pro tection, the other is demanding tariff reform. Tho Democratic is the reform party, and to it tho Alliance must look for ai i and relief. Cap". Bunn spoke an hour, and was fodowed by Prof. Mclver. He camti ai the representative of the Republican party, and the Alliance or farmers movement." This movement was really a revolution, f.nd like all other revoiu'ions, had a deep seated cause. That cause was the corrupt leg islation which had been favored by men in both parties. The Alliance was after them. (Here he produced a copy ol last week's Progressive Farmer and showed the cartoon on the first page. ) He read some extracts from it. Among others the greetings of South Carolina, (the "hot-bed ' of secession, to bleeding Kansas, askinsr r3ace. and nromising the . . . . ... . i 1 7 O i - - ginia, and, how, attnat very moment, ne destruction of sectional prejudices. He stood, and, from his desk in the Senate, WAS anxious for this, and had joined appealed to the heartless protectionists tllQ Republicans after the war in hope it of the orth not to raise, Dy an unjust might bo accomplished. Capt. Bunn tariff, the price of seeks, woollens and had arraigned the Republican Senate for flannels beyond the ability of the poor f.Aymcr to uass the Blair bill. That bill man iu jxonu aronua iu luimau u nad not) heen passed oecause tne soutn wife and child against tne winter s coiu, ern Democratic Senators by their votes I thought that if there was a white man Qa(j sai(j the South did not want it. in North Carolina who did not love Prof. Mclver did not consume all his Vance and would not vote for a legisla- t;me for everybody, except some of the The Brower CampaignVance,-- Rev. Dr. Henderson a Negro Row. (Special Cor. of State Chronicle.) Winston, N. C Oct. 20. Saturday night John B rower's colored Lieutenant, R. H. W. Leak, editor of the Royal Knight, spoke here to a large audience of colored voters in the court house. This speech was calculated to counteract the ones made by Moore and Granderson An Increase of 460 Per Cent, in Popu lationPolitics in the West. (Special Cor. of State Chronicle.) Asheville, N. C, Oct. 19, 1890. I noticed in your letter from Winston Salem a few days since, a statement to the effect that the population of Winston Salem had increased more than that of any town in the State. Asheville is ever ready to give Winston Salem credit for ville justly claims the greatest increase, and the statistics of the two towns will show it. In 1880 the population of Asheville was 2,560. F.oni the census just taken by the ci'y authori ties, the population is eleven thousand nine hundred and twenty-five (11.925), giving an increase of 460 per cent. Winston's increase was 200 per cent. Asheville a'so has two suburbs West Asheville and Victoria if these were included the populati on would run up to 13,000. From these facts it is easily seen that Asheville's increase is the greater. here sometime ago, a full report of which her Push and .energy, but your corres- ttt o a ct- nT,r. . puuueuu ci i o iu sucu it statement. Asne- bet your proof roller that he by no means set everything straight for his boss. When he began speaking the same hissing was heard that Moore re ceived, showing the fact clearly that the audience was a divided one. Leak's speech was no such one as Granderson made, though some better than Moore's, judging by the wind that was wasted. He started out by an appeal to their batter natures and the same old songs of how the colored man was treated by the white man in slavery time3 was repeat ed. Then he branched off into every direction mostly in abuse of Moore, the colored man's candidate. Moore's whole effort was in exposing Brower's trickery, his bad treat ment of his colored consti tuency, but Leak evaded that subject and hardly touched upon Brower at all to uphold him. Moore did not abuse another republican save Brower, and in stead of Leak's trying to uphold him and his deeds in Congress, he kept whipping the devil around the stump by eulogizing all the dead republicans and what they did. His speech was no reply to Moore and Granderson's and no one would have ever imagined that it was unless it had been told him. Of course the Brower negroes cheered him, but still after the great effort of this lyiug preacher (for he told some whoppers) the colored voters went away yelling a they did before, some for Brow er and some for Moore. Oar people are very much put out bout not getting a speech from Vance this year. He is sent all around us, but we are not favored by the committee. It seems that they should know by thh time that Forsyth is tho most' doubtful county in the State, and that the records show that every campaigu that. Senator Vanco has spoken here, the Democrats won the majority of county officers. He would receive oae grand ovation such as Winston certainly can give, and I write this at the instigation of several good Democrats, who seo the situation. tor to return him to the Senate, perhaps that man did not love his wife and child as God intended that we should love the wives of our bosoms and the children of our loins. unday at the Catenary Methodist Church P-s'or Norman called fcr all those who desired to join to come for ward and take the vowt. of the churcn. Mr. L. L. Ilendren came forward ard was received. Mr. Hendren will be re membered by the thousand of minister. in North Carolina as having been ovc? an able presiding elder in the contei ence, but who was accused of violating a commandment ana wks expelled then- from. He has been leading an uprigot life ever since and has been genuinely converted. It will be a source of re jv x. a l . ni i. .. joicing to many tnrougnout tne oihu? to know the fact of his return to ioa. If the people of the State would work as hard as the Democrats of Buncombe and the remainder of the Ninth Dis trict, there would be no doubt about white supremacy and the abolition of Radicalism. The oldest men here say they have never seen such interest, and if "Tecumseh" Crawford is not elected there will be a great surprise. Craw ford is a second Zeb Vance on the stump. He has made Ewart so ashamed that he has tried in various ways to leave the canvass. They are out west now. In Swain county a few days ago they addressed the Indians. Chief Smith and almost all his tribe will vote the Democratic ticket. The entire In dian population of Swain voted for Ewart in 1888, but they are dissatisfied with the Republican administration of affairs at the reservation and will support Crawford. The Republicans in Mitchell county are becoming desperate. They can't arouse enthusiasm, so they issued a cir cular announcing tnat RichmondPearson 'would speak a number of times next week. Mr. Pearson deuies the state ment and says he wiil not fill the ap pointments; his position, as stated a few weeks ago is one of absolute political in dependence. The speech of Hon. R. B. Glenn, of Winston, to the Democrats of Asheville last week was one of the fi lest delivered in this part of the State during the cam paign. Mr. Glenn made numerous friends here. Every one was pleased. lion. U, A. tfudger is home again ifter canvassing eastern Carolina. He ivports good news and is much encour ag-'d. the departure of Rev. G C. Rankin, vho ruts b3en pastor of "ue Ceutral Methodist church here for the past three years was keenly felt by the entire city of Asheville. Dr. Rankin goes to Kan sas City, Mo. He is an abie, Christian man. The good he did here can never be told. He was loved by all. Too in praise of the GOING HOME TO VOTE. A Great Exodus of riprl I'm - avia ab v Various Departments to lhe Polls. By United Press. Washington, D. C, Oct. 20. There has been great political activity among . the department clerks here for the past twelve months, and the probability is that four or five thousand of them will go home to vote at the coming Novem- oer elections. A score or more Republi can State Associations have been organ ized and their members will probably go nomeen masse to vote. Never was great er activity and energy put forth in get ting every qualined Kepubhcan voter home for November elections, and the exodus promises to be something unu sual. Thousands of votes will b3 nolled in distant States that have not been cast before in years. So srreat does this exodus promise to be, that the rail roads have reduced the rates for one round trip to a half-fare rate to all points east of New York and west of Chicago, these rates being allowrd only to voters holding certificates of member ship in some State association. Mary- land oeing close to the national capital, will probably attract the greatest num ber of visitors of her native sons and voters on election day. Five hundred members of the Maryland State Asso ciation promise to eo home and vote. and probably as many more Maryland nepuoiicans, not memoers, will also go home. Th ; New York State Association promises to send 600, Pennsylvania 500, Ohio 300 Virginia 500 and other States proportionately as many. Supreme Court. mnfih can nnt hft said Saturday afternoon at a bar room on nrt(1 h flrnnmnlwhrtd amnnr tho noorer . 1 J - C i. ... -l I "5"" j - D 1 tne euge Ol iowu, u. row waautuscu un- claSges tween blacks and whites who were pres ent. Several were slashed up terribly, and Silas Riggs, a white man, was cut all to pieces by a negro named Scales, and is nov dying. Great in dignation is felt and a posse, I learn, is pursuing Scale3, who has fled. M. Victor. MUS.GOULD ACQUITTED AT MURPHY. Of Course She Will Now Stage. go on The IN THE SECOND. students, four white citizens, and twelve or fifteen negroes had lett the ground. I do not think any of the Allianeemen who were formerly supporters of Capt. Riinn will support Prof. Mclver. If Now, before entering into the history taeY jntend to do so, they did not show of an ecomomic question, I trust that it yesterday by their action. -i the reader has been able to perceive how I may unselfishly send to the people this tribute to him who served them so faith fully when his head was dark, and also serves them so faithfully since its hairs have enmeshed the white drift of the vear3. I possib'.y have failed to preserve the literary balances and measurements of this paper, but Senator Vance was so thoroughly identified by his opposition to the shameful but signal triumph of the wealthy iron masters over every man who lives under a tinned roof house, whose family uses a single package of canned g,ood8, or has an article of tinware in domestic service, that to consider the tariff without considering what manner of man 1 ;i u v.'Uiou, that ho was possibly rose so indignantly and sought so ve 1 ; for-iu,,,,! man iu America iu what hemently to drive the vandals from '. 'M ' vn ;u "running debate," also in the halls of legislation would ba as an "'Htwinu, which cigressing from exact attempt to write the history of the Rev- ! tti u- oy loft tho.e Senators with onlv olutionary war without recoguizmg Geo. ij tvtur;unn for the regular order Washington. 1 propose lO.SUUvV uiai me nu muusu v of tho world when history first dawns on delvers tfi mines and traffickers in merchandise was confined to Wales; and that all ancient nations repaired thither for their tin ; that the finding of ore in other parts of the world has tend- fi' rt, i "puh'.i luloless in a tournv with " af '01 Senators from constituencies ln'-'H m tho industrial arts. '-ir the recent debate and while I 'In'!t' r'" rmn was occupying the floor, ll.t' S !!'.. rw -III.. 1 . .4 1 "v , i , mil' hi i lit unreal, luemi r 1 Some of the white Republicans here will support Bunn, but the negro vote will be almost a unit for Mclver. After listening attentively to the two speeches yesterday, I am not surprised at this. I can see no reason why any Republi can should support him. In his speech, there was not one word in ravor or that party. He attempted no defense of any measure adooted or enactel oy it. l was more than an sentleman credit for out any prejudice, I cannot do it. He is on the Republican ticket, and it is his duty to sustain their principles. He does not even attempt it. He announces Mr. J. M. Mewborne Announces Him self as a Democratic Candidate for Congress. Special to State Chronicle. KinstOn, N. C, Oct 20. Mr. J. M. Mewborne, of Lenoir county has an nounced himself as a regular Demo cratic candidate for Congress in the Second District. He requests all Demo cratic papers to publish the same and ap peals to the voters ot the fcecond Dis trict to rally to his support. J W. GRAINGER. (Special to Asheville Citizen.) Murphy,N.C. ,Oct. 18 Mrs.Lillian M. Gould, on trial here, charged with the murder of her husband, has been acquit ted. She will now go on the stage. Gould wa3 an Englishman of good fami ly, who married beneath his station, and neglected his wife. For six years Gould had been in An ca, while his wife, who was in Eng 1 on a beggarly al lowance, was in Onorauce of his where abouts. She was permitted to come to him in Georgia last March, when the couole went to Murphy, N. C. , where th Cases from the 4th district were dis posed of as follows: Lassiter vs. Upchurch, argued by R, W. York for plaintiff and W. J. Peele for defendant. Hodge vs. Railroad, argued by Armi s'ead Jones and R. O. Burton for plaintiff, and Fuller, Battle, Hinsdale, Haywood, Busbee, Devereux and Strong for defendant. Appeals from the 5th district will be called on next Monday, October 27th, its follows : State vs. Martin; State vs. Newcombe; State vs. Peters; State vs. Carlton; State vs. Scoggins; Thompson vs. Telegraph Company; Herndon vs. Insurance Com pany; Follette vs. Insurance Company; Hawes vs. Bhckwell; Aiken vs. Gard ner; Tilley vs. Andrews; Herndon vs. Insurance Company Herndon vs. Insur ance Company; Cole vs. Laws; Carden vs. Carden; B kwt.U vs. Riil road ; Browning vs. Brry ; Bruiu- mett vs. McGuire; Wall r vs 15 - v'iug; Gay vs. Davi; AI u vs. R y -o ; Wil son VS. Chiches-er; Sail h . K Mg; Clement vs. t zu- ; s LmuAs sociation; B.i.k v B ' i - v Bown; Fti d)o.. v t; ; . Ward; B r y s e e The Sixth ;ii r.c a( p -!s are very few t this it-rm, ao1, at ;h iut4.icf of tn mOers f bur, wiii noi bee died before Thursday, the ixh ot X v-iu.er. Opinions were handed down as I olio was: State vs. Pritchard, from Bertie; error; new trial. Hobbs vs. Railroad, from Craven; er ror; demurrer sustained. Hinton vs. Pritchard, from Hertford, affirmed. Lawrence vs. Weeks, from Halifax ; error. State vs. Allen, from Pitt; no error. Reizenstein vs. Hahn, from Craven ; no error. Sugg vs. Farrar, from Edgecombe ; error. Godwin vs. Watford, from Bertie, no error. State vs. Fleming, from Pitt; no error. Myers vs. Rice, from Bertie; no error. Hornthall vs. Steamboat Co., from Bertie; error. New trial granted. Wooten vs. Fremont; error. Marriages. On Wednesday, Oct. 15th, 1890, at the residence of the bride's parents, by Rev. J. WT. Carter, D. D., Mr. Chas. II. Kayler to Miss Elizabeth H. Christo- ey lived in a houe in an isolated spot. puers the accomplished daughter of Mr. Crime of a Jealous and Woman. On the 7th of July the couple were drunk, and the wife in a drunken frenzy, stabbed her husband with a toy dagger, inflicting the fatal wound from which he Disreptuable died that night. (By TJnPed Press.) Ransom, Mich., Oct. 20. Mrs. John Gov. Hill, of New York, Going West. By United Pre s. Albany, N. Y., Oct. 20,-Gov. Hill Barber, who came here to prevail on her xious to give this old husband to return to hu home, was stab- accompanied by Assistant Adjutant Gen- yer of Onslow-represen lor honesty, but with bed to the heart by "B.g Sadie," the wo- eral McEen ieft on the 1:15 train this in tho House in 188S, at: afternoon for the man with whom he was living. The Bar bers lived at Lima, O. and a few days ago Barber de:erted his wife and 6 children nnA stnmn In tUio -vlora nrifVl "TUcr Slid in " himself as the Republican candidate, diarpntflhlA WfTman of Lima. He was then in the next sentence advocates the frtlwJ hv i -a w5fp who rPaChed here principles of the Alliance which are dis- yesterday she went t0 the house where uuewy icuiuwftuv. "i- , " her husband and the woman were stay ing and besought him to return with her Democratic. If his a what he savs thev are. he should be in tho Democratic r. nks supporting the regular nominee. PERSON AL AND SOCIAL. west. Before going he said to a United Press reporter : " I am going into Congressman McKinley's district in Ohio to tell the enthusiastic people over there what we in the east know to be the effect of the new tariff law, and what we know will be the eff-ct in the west. I go at. thfi rf onest of the managers of the and Mrs. C. D. Christophers of this city. The Chronicle extends its congratu lations to Thos. E. Gilman, Esq., of Jacksonville, Onslow county, who was" happily married to Mis3 Lena E. Mont ford, daughter of Dr. J. W. Montford. The ceremony took place iu the Mission ary Paptist church at Ward's Mill Sun-' day afternoon, Oct. 19th, at one o'clock. Mr. Oilman is a prominent young law- ted im county and 13 the Demo cratic nominee from his .Senatorial district. 20. Tho Degree of to their home. He seemed willing to do Democratic State campaign there, and I au, w lit: u me wuuiauiuicucucu, uuu fit of jealousy plunged a knife into Mrs. Barber's breast 1 1 at 'i uiufucmrevs in tKi- iVHintrv '1)1' h'.l i mm j fin.1 n rrL-in rcr t .la .. n i t ed to fociliz, in the middle ages, on to ' m Brvat peril because of the design making it there, instead of divertin L"nKN'H to tax the raw material nec to other parts of the world, and also, T)' for its existence and their em reason why it. should not be made h fl... . . -".w...W V' 11 wyond reason and to the de l!.x of . hitncy When Mr. Vanca "unurawn .'.tabur tho to his duties in the manufacturer remarked and into our times the industry of diverting it the here; also, the reason why it will not be made here, despite th gtalk of protectionists, and the reason why it can not be made here because of the villiany of the Great surprise at the Seua'or's familiarity Conspiracy. But I do not wish to tire , . no.t on,' ti e scope but the minutiae tne reader, and I will make the elabo- , v a yji lulS COUUtry aUU lantvu vii nuau x uai uuvuuvu . " v h exact, information regarding the ject of my second paper; promising that arts of Europe. The fact is, I will relieve the discussion of an eco- information reeardin? tbe nomic question of fiscal phrases and I ' ll . - O I j m il. .1 n ne himself is engaged technical terms, as rar as possiDie, tnat ine general reader may discover some thing of interest from the beautiful his torical romance of tin to the revelations of tho Great Conspiracy against the people. John R. Morris. We hear that Mrs. Chas. Price has been chosen as lady manaaer from Western North Carolina for the World's Fair at Chicago. A better selection could not have been made. Mrs. Price is a woman of rare gifts, culturad, refined, and with A Double Tragedy. hH0 hi, &lw... fa. in v, ' ipplemented hv tho or ie'dgi.tof Senator Vance, hesltatlUJv onnfrratnlo rt.. .uw.auam sendi to the Senate man wno was mpt wen lor tno Senator!! t iBy United Press.l Dansville, Ind., Oct. 20. Near Blairsville Co., some 13 miles from this good executive ability. Salisbury Her- citVj Henry Kron and his wife quarelled. aid. i rpVia lMiknn nnlr q rtmihlft hArrpllAn shot gun and shot his wife in the pres ence of their three children, who were powerless to interfere. Kron passed into the next room and with the remain ing load shot the top of his own head off. Kron was a well to do farmer. Your correspondent hears a great many compliments paid Mr. Eugene C. Beddingfield's work in the campaign. His speech at Raleigh durir6 the conven tion of the Young Men's Democratic clubs put him on a high plane, and his subsequent work has only added to the impression as regards his ability. He is one of the "coming men." W. II. & It. S. TUCKER & CO. than a rom the Shoulder Capes. These we are showing in great varie ty. Badger, Monkey, Gray Krimmer, Persianna, Astrachan, Wool, Seal, &c. Many of these in various combinations. W. H. & R. S. Tucker & Co. (1 A Disaster at Sea. By United Press. Port Huron, Mich., Oct. 20. The steam Barge Annie Young, caught fire at Lexington in Lake Huron at 9:45 this morning, and nine members of the crew who tried to escape in a small boat, were flrnwnAn Thirt-otr nfhora in ft boat were picked up and sayed. .A fcmall The Mother Supreme Council of ihe World. By United Press. Washington, D. C, Oct. Supreme Council of tho 33d the Ancient Scottish Kite or rreema- C 33pnr nrnh sc-nry for the southern jurisdiction of ake at least two speeches, prob- . fT.. . . u,. in regular biennial nession to day at noon in the house of the- temple, corner of Third and F kreet3. The allocution' Cfthe grand com mander, General Albert Pike, who pre sided, wa3 read after the opening cere monies had ended, and at the conclusion of the reading, the council took a recfe&H reciprocity, with the United States ha3 until to-night. At the evening session the Royal Order of Scotland was conferred on a number of prominent Masons, including among others, Rev. Canon Carmichael Henry Stockdell. raLm 3 A r-M t s aryrmo 'LJ Tariff Reciprocity. rj , By United Press. KHINGTON.'D. C, Oct. 20. An addCh and resolutions passed by the Havana chain bet of commerce favoring been received at the state department. It is addressed to the minister of tbe colonies and treats of the reform of the Spanish tariff laws. The financial con dition 'of ' Cuba is1 : referred to as one which far: from being prosperous and whiph. may becomje even worse than it now is if. the changes made in our tariffs are not such as" to correspond with that reform.-'" "' : The address urges upon the. minister Suicide in Washington. (By United Press.) Washington, D. C, Oct . 20. A. B. Mullet who was supervising architect of of colonics the importance of promptly the Treasury from 1862, until 1873, corn meeting the. situation by a reciprocity mitted suicide-at his home here about treaty with the United States. Espe- six o'clock this eveniLg by blowing his ciallyis this urged to keep abreast of brains out with a pistol. Melancholia Brazil a country. prompt to take advant- with suicidal intent, the result of busi age of tbe opening for a market in the ne.ss reverses, undoubtedly led to the United States. 1 rash and fatal act. 7
The State Chronicle [188?-1893] (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 21, 1890, edition 1
1
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