Newspapers / The State Chronicle [188?-1893] … / Dec. 23, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 i Fi ;nO. V " ' " ' "' " 1 - - ;i: i.:l. NT1RELY 1: Do 1 .ill- III'"- wtiiin OlU'il , to Inlruft StMiiitor v, .11 Fi.i. . CM Ai.' ft!. It ist C t;,t suh-Trt'iiKiiry ( ;in d . it. ,.-s v- Ft mercon i-crn Sou'ieuee be ;u, l'.vsideut of (bo ;l ;co und Senatoh r ;:t iutereft to ; .I'e, for it ob-olu-1,'y : ulof the Sena CunuuA. urN Lrttrr. yovr.MUF.il -0, 1890. AN r Hi.aik Mountain, , . c ire fully (vmsidpr j . i ;ttm in S:a':i, , , ,.,;if" you mil as!; the , vi: "If the Ijsji-dature (, :, lvocitf a; 1 1 voto for ,. i.Uii rf ti'i:iucial re- rv (nil run u j uv; i ' I ,i fha" Vimi J .1 if L III' - '.i I ) in)' reflect iu ; 1 1 ' tho ,;i v. ur tit votioa to the v',ip!;r.M, but tuero aro ir.-it (1 Son. dors An Ex-Confederate From North Caro lina on Trial An Ex-federal Comes to His Assistance. Nivr Yoijk, Dec. 22, 1890. Some per pon lately made charges against Capt. W. E. Pierce, of the custom house, who is a Confederate veteran, that he had boasted while in the employ of the gov ernment five years ago of having ill-used Union soldiers who had come under his charge. Commissioner Roosevelt, of tho civil service commission, came on here to-day to mate an investigation of the charge. Col Floyd Clarkson, com mander of the Grand Army of the Re public, Department of New Yoik, con ducted the prosecution. Commissioner Hiosevelt conducted tho investigation. It took ninety-five minutes to take all tho evidence. Captain Pierce was charg ed on the authority of Frank Collier, foimcrly it fellow-clerk of ex Capt. Pieice in the invoice bureau of the ap praiser's department, that he made the bo::st that while guarding Union prison ers ho had stripped many a Union sol dier and iven his clothes to his men, and then laughed "to see the d d Yan kees shiver." Collier failed to come forward and make the charge himself, and aftor other witnesses had testified Captain Pierce RALEIGH, K fj., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1890. lUfc flAIlUfliAL CONGRESS, the latest in Washington. PRICE 5 CENTS. 111' Till vnanurili Hll II IIOANTINC. fllTTn t . r . . : THE FORCE - - .v x c nr. i TING BREEZY. The Old Chestnut, "Negro Suppres sion," is Sprung Whereupon Messrs. X eagan and v oorhees State Some Un varnished Facts. By United Press. Washington, D. C, Dec. 22. In the Senate to day the federal elep.ti.m hill was taken up and Mr. Higgins spoke in support of the bill. lie said the pending measure did not in any way take the control of elections from THE INDIANS. No Financial LegislationThe Force Brl Again. Special Cor. State Chronicle. Washington, D. C, Dec. 22.-Senator Stewart's open revolt against the Repub lican caucus and his manly speech against the Force bill are the talk of,the town and likely to remain so for some time to come, notwithstanding the near ness of Christmas. That he voiced the real sentiments of a number of his Re publican colleagues cannot for a moment be doubted, but none of them are ex pected to display the "sand" AThihifrp.l the stato authoritie?,and all declarations by 1 h? YA Senator, ' and I under- biiuu iuai ue actea largely trom spite, .because Mr. Harriann against it were grouudletis and rested on nothing but bold wist presentation. He commented on Senator Stewart's objec- ncan leaders m both Senate and Hons have combined to prevent the passage of a free coinage bill. Whatever his mo tive, it has wonderfully stiffened the backbone of the Republican opponents of the Force bill. Senator Paddock, another Republican opponent of the bill, is growing restive and has given notice that if the bill i3 not aisposea ot very soon he intends up his pure 4 w:.fi rwru tioiif, ann aiso tli 'V tii-s: disregarded I r iv .:' y,-u will give roc aa .,t v'.ur afii.t convenience. '''ViTV iv-nvj' fully, Km as Caur, Pns.t N. C. F. S. A. I'Mrrn Statf.s Senate. l). C . J),'C. 0. 1890. ' . -,, i-::t N'. C. Farmers' Al- u ,r;,i, N. C : - J in sin jwvr to your oflieial -; ,n if t'u -0:h tilt., which . : I . 1 :. f i ..o f T 111.' U;.!U uu; isv uoi., 1 . . - . A. U .11 tlr.t 1 r'.eouizj m i 1 H-fiG ot tue riftht of tho mi!.-- tli'.r representatives lion to the bid. not thatf it was a forne bill, but that it was not a force bill. As to the claims of southern senators that they feared, and could not endure, negro denomination, Mr. margins assert ed his belief that there was a day when tne southern wnite leaders could not have the hearty support and .following askine the Senate to taka ot me soutn tor the askmer. He had food hill. considered that the one great service I The RenuWiean nnnnns vntt i W I E - V l Y A 1& 1Q1U1 which the Democratic party had render- of chanains the Senate rulfis in ordr fr took the stand and denied ever having !d, )vlt calIlDS and bringing into its cut off debate, but it is not certain that k .ta ..rt...i u ioia an me people who from nativity lier, and said that ho had never had any thing to do with either Libbv or Ander sonville prisons. The only Union pris oners who came under his attention were 10,000 who passed through Charlotte, to be exchanged, lie enlisted iu the r , 7 u gu iud vuie, wuieuisa mat- tor ui uuuui, a mo jLemocrais nave an- BIG FOOT'S BAND OF 150 HOS TILES CAPTURED. It. is Now Thought That the Indian Trouble May be Settled for the Win ter at Least. (By United Press.) Washington, D. C, Dec. 22. Maj. General Schofield this morning read the following dispatch dated Rapid City, Dakota, Dec. 22, from General Miles: "I believe all, or very nearly all of the followers of Sitting Bull have been cap tured. Col. Sumner reports to-day the capture of Big Foot's band of Sioux, numbering 150. Be has been one of the most defiant and threatening. The re sult so far has been satisfactory." commenting on Gen. Miles' telegram O V, .G 1 .1 : ,3 l . V l i . i MARRYING AND GIVING IN MAR RIAGE. Register Dunn's Rushing Business es Office is Equipped for Issuing ihe Papers and Tying The Knots. When Mr. S. M. Dunn, the new regis ter of deeds went into office, he announc ed that he was going to boom the.mat rimonial market. He found a lot of marriage licenses on hand and said he was going to sell 'em. They were made to sell. Well, he has made a terrifying success of the business. He has not disclosed the process by which he has worked up the boom, but he has been issuing from four to seven of those binding contracts per day, and yesterday he put ten of them out on the dazed public. First Gen. Schofield said he thought it would thing be knows he will be in a condition not be very long before all the Indians now iu revolt would be captured,and the Indian trouble for the winter at least, brought to an end. IT IS STILL "SCISSORS." '1 '! i ... r;.r: Mil 1 1 v to whicJi it ha ever irtli Carolina. I hold -f I In.4 5.v'i'l cleany ana xp: t rau-t bj o'uey ;;li.i'n would involve the ' n a raor.'l wrong, in . w -ild bi h'-s duty to re- v ' we to a representative . v (. Kid t.iith in thv ob- :' jVt rations atul pnblio ! U:eiy' cA.-o-iti-.il to a fe'0v , 1 u-i t:i prpu'ar will. V.iy r.sD.cti'r.lly your., Z B VAXC3. nFi 'v I arnn-r .speaks. t n: .r.)2 tl is correspondence v; i'v:ta--r j ays: :nt C.irr aiul Senator Eighteenth North Carolina, of Branch's brigade, A. P. Hill s corps. He partici pnted in the fighting about Richmond He was quartermaster afterward, sta tiooed at Raleigh. "And," said he, "I surrendered when Johnston surrendered me, and I haven't done any fighting since, but I am ready to fight again with my cucmies." Tnis created general ap plause. "Why didn't I deny the statements when I heard them" he asked Colonel CI irkson. "Why, Colonel, if I paid any attention to the guff I hear about tho custom-house I wouldn't have time to do auy work. I did not pay any atten tion to the charges against me until I saw them in black and whito in the col umns of tho daily press. Then I sent the clippings to the commissioner. I wrote an official letter to Mr. Collier de- and other circumstances were least fitted to discharge the functions of American citizens: and why. he asked. had not the southern white Democrats done the same with the blacks? Tna reason was, Mr. Reagan replied. that in the reconstruction period the freedmens' bureau and the carpet-baggers had made the blacks believe that the whites were their enemies, and had arrayed the blacks in an oath-bound league to vote the Republican ticket. Mr. Higgins denied that the problem of manho d suffrage had ever had a chance at the South, but it could not be killed and the pioblem would forevor come up and up, and up again, until it was settled and settled right. It could r ot be taken out of the hearts of liberty loving Americans. A Henchman of Monopoly Tries to Raise a Financial Fright And Tries to Present the McKinley Bill as a Reducer ot Taxes Read it, But Don't Belieye it. (By United Press). Washington, L. u., uec. 2. Henry everything may be executed with the A. Brown, of Massachusetts, the noted least possible delay, he has installed in sugar tariff expert, has been in Washing- ?ffice Mr-Harry Roberts, Justice of they can carry it through even if ton for several days conferring with lead- immediately tie the "Gorgon" knot for ing officials and members of Congress any fellow whose faith in his girl may about the great cut in sugar to go into I bave been made shaky by such events nativity they can succeed. Mr. Hoar and his associates in pushing of the Force bill are in a peck of trouble, and it is growing worse instead of better. They fear to make the attempt to change the rules because thev are not certain that something like that which the school books say Alexander was in. He will have married off everything in the county, and will then walk arround whooping and sniffling because there is nothing else to marry. Register Dunn has observed that when a fellow comes in for one of those indissoluble articles of agreement, he is generally in an unaccountable hurry not so unaccountable now either ;for some recent events have proved that there is danger in delay particularly in this particular business. And in order that nounced their determination to debate the proposed change, which must be made under the present rules, for the re mainder of the session. One thing is certain the change cannot be made without revolutionary rulings on the part of the presiding officer ot the Sen ate. The Republican bosses are believed to have secretly decided that no financial le gislation shall be passed at thi3 session, although they are making a great pre tense of considering the bill which the Mr. Voorhees addressed the Senate. Ihe opening part of his speech consisted Republican caucus went through the of a criticism of President Harrison for farce of endorsing, which provides for that portion of his message to Congress the purchase of $12,000,000 ounces of urging the passage of the election bill, silver in monthly instalments of 2,000,- If Mr. Harrison, he said, should under- 000 ounces, and for the recoining of the take to put on the stage, a "School for $25,000,000 of fractional coin and trade Hypocrisy" he could not do better than dollars now lying idle in the Treasury, dramatize that portion of his message They would have been willing to allow that related to fair and honest ekctiocs. this bill to pass, but it was no sooner re The rank corruption of the Presi- ported to the Senate than Senator Regan deutial election of 1888 was resting offered an amendment providing for free f.-lr!nil r. ccarr in 'KlnoL'fl nf fivrA1' and rva I nmnarro Thon it. wqQ Hcridod iha. if defence. I want Capt. Francis J. Menin- stm fregh and carefully preserved in the was risky to allow the bill to be voted on, ger called. minds of the American people. and so the matter stands at present. mandiug a retraction. I never heard from him. I have here a Union soldier who came all tho way from the moun tain . of North Carolina to testify in my ...-.! n'l;:nt U.in &!ld i v", ; r;u'"i u another column, it ,i b" .-.' t'lat t he Son:ttor agrees to Vy tii- i;ntrticii-''ns of thf Gi.ieral As lJ'y, it .xh.nl: "duiqutvo villy" di I'lrmt MMte l'-r t h Stii 1 heasuuY t n" f l'uiai;ii:il r. frM. It is now f! i iu'y o: t!if p. cpleof N tth Carolina i ft I; tl,cir strVfral townhip and .it- : their representatives in the nnl .Wt-mMy llwir will, as to M.er Sfii:iTor Y.iuco shall be instruct ro support the Sub-Treasury ) .an" or Lot. In these meet i thfrj should be the fullest it fni'.-t clUciifMon of tho merits tl -fits of t h- Nib Tri-iwirv"nUn " i i vi'W fo ascertaining its practici y, ;n a scheme of reform. It h?s m:1. :n iellia:i once, that the ma J f-f tin.' tarmrrs in Nonh Carolina .'!i"-il to tl.H Sib Treasury bill i'p"- tiu-i (xUts, now is the time f t- uu:;ifist it.-elf. The Alliance - North Carolina aro impreizuable u.m.urin iiiv reform. Captain Meninger, of the Fifty-third New York, said that after the war in North Carolina ho shot a thief who had assaulted him. The grand jury tried twice to indict him on the plea that he had shot tho man in a political quar rel. D was Pierce, the foreman of the irrand jury, who had cro-exaruiued the witnesses so that the bills were dismis sed, and . "I," said Captain Meniner, "was saved four years of torture m a pen itent iarp, and I was a Republican and "a Union soldier." Then the case was closed. s. I- 't! 1 to any special scheme of I i a better scheme devised than the one Sub-Treasury "plan," one. is m of the U-tter scheme. This is our n iiO.v : and this has been our PKBSONAL AND SOCIAL. Rev. O. F. Gregory, D. D., formerly of North Carolina, has been elected president of the Christian Endeavor so- cieties of the State ot Maryland. Last. Fridav evenme the bncTiTV in which Mr. T. C. Worth and a Mr. Wood ward were riding was overturned near town. Mr. Worth fell under the buggy nml was sevftrelv iniured. having his right arm dislocated at the shou.der. Greensboro Democrat. Mr. Hill E. Kiug, of Ouslow, who liut thev represented that county in the Legisla nun ah int. ; in the 1 T'.'"(4MVt' H.irm.ir fnr ture of 1885 and 1837, and was post master in tho last House, is a candidate for election as door-keeper of the liouse. He has sent the Chronicle a card which ia endorsed bv Senator-elect Gilman; torruAntnHv.1prr. Franck: Clerk of the Court Genock; Sheriff Spicer; C. Mr. Voorhees charged that within sixty days after the incoming of the present administration, an extensive, powerful and corrupt conspiracy was formed to import a certain class or vo- tesr from distant parts of the country in to the states of Indiana, W. Virginia and Connecticut, in order to secure majori ties iu those states for the Republican ticket in 1893. The proof of it had been published in tho New York vYorld last October, including a letter from Mr. Huston, treasurer of the United States, to Mr. Liudsay, the author of the plan, declaring himself heartily in favor ot the scheme," and saying that he would speak to the President about it. It was painful, Mr. vcornees remarKea, to reflect that the man who knew Ben- lamm Harrison oeiier iuau auy uiuer man in public lite Knew mm wno naa carried him and his fortunes through the stormy and corrupt campaign of 18S8 in Indiana, who had studied him and his political methods at close range, felt himself warranted in submitting for his consideration and approval a corrnpt project for the overthrow of honest res ident majorities, by the shameless im portation and colonization ot DiacK vot ers from the South. Referring to the condition of colored men at the south, Mr. Vorhees read ex- tracts from testimony taKen oetore a congressional committee in North Caro lina, showing positively that there was no discrimination maae against ine col ors! mpn in that state, that many cf MR. MORI ARTY'S TROUBLE. !e Married a Uirl Filteen Years Old While Another Wife Was Living She Raised a Row and She Made Threats Moriarty Took Laudnum. LBy United Press. Ashlanp, Wis , Dec. 22. Saturday H. J. Moriarty, a bar-tender, started across the bay with a pretty young girl, named Nelson, not yet 15 years of age, and were married. They had only been acquainted aa few days. Saturday night a woman with whom Moriarty bad been living and who claim ed to be his wife, called upon the couple and made threats. She claimed that Moriarty had other wives. There was another storm when the girl's parents learned of her marriage ped out of the back window, went to a drug store, took laudanum ana win aie. o A Xmas Present lor Prof. Moses. effect next April under tho new tariff law, and its effects on the revenue of the country. Mr. Brown insists that the loss from making sugar almost duty free, with the bounty to be paid to sugar producers in this country will amount to 170,000,000 a year. He is clearly of the opinion that it will be found advisable, and that it will be the duty of Congress to re store fully three-fourths of the present or old duty on sugar, and dis continue or repeal the bounty feature of the new law. He has no doubt that the rapid increase in pro duction cf sugar in this country will very soon cheapen permanently the price of that article to American consumers, and that a sustained duty on sugar would be a powerful factor in treating with sugar producing countries for re ciprocity. Mr. Brown says his opinion and views on this matter are shared by leading Re publicans in and out of Congress conver sant with the subject, who are not un mindful of the demands that are like ly to be made upon the treasury to meet the largely increased government expen ditures for pensions, the new navy, etc., in the near future. More money will have to be raised somehow to meet the increased govern ment expenditure, and it need not be looked for, he says, from customs reve nue, in view of the reduction of tariff taxes on many articles and the extended free list found in the McKinley bill tew. A BAD PREACHER MAN. He is Sentenced to Prison for Criminal Naughtiness His Little Girl's Fu neral is Held While He is in Jail. By United Press. Columbus. Mo., Dec. 22. The Rev. as above referred to. Register Dunn has good reason to congratulate himself on his profound sagacity in making this provision ;f or on ly two days since Justice Roberts was called on to tie up two couples who were afraid something might happen if they waited too long. Justice Roberts has a way of tying those knots so intricately and firmly that Alexander himself would not know how to go about cutting or nnloosing them. It is said that one of the men whom he bound up for life listened in paralyzed amazement at the questions and prom ises put to him, and after the matter had been closed, the new benedict, (being of the colored persuasion), drew (a long breath and said : "Fo de lawd, boss, nothin' 'cept a streak of thunder and lightnin' and sudden death can break loose dat unitement." There was one application recently in which the license was not issued. This was a highly colored case in which the would-be bride was only sixteen. The register told the groom aspirant that he must get the consent of his dulcina's parents, or uncle, or guardian or some body before thi license could ba deliv ered. The groom didn't exactly know whether there were any of these person ages extant or not, and he felt in such a hurry about the matter that he didn't want to make the investigations that might prove necessary; and to hasten the matter forward he confidentially offered Register Dunn a slight advance on the legal price of a marriage docu ment if he would "make it all right." But that incorruptible official scorned to accept the bribe of filthy lu-jre, (and in this case it was ever-more particularly and specially fil soiled),and dignifiedly waved the would-be briber away from him. The groom perambulated meditatively James Campbell, a Methodist preacher, to his waiting-to-be spouse and reported Moriarty sUp- was, Saturday, found guilty of commit- lh hurled a cycione of an. ting a criminal assault upon .auie athemasj at the official who inferred that Huntsman, and was sentenced to a term sne wa3 n0fc 0d enough to attend to her Sunday morning the Chronicle's of three years in the state prison. His child, a girl aged 6, died the day before he was sentenced to prison and the funeral was held yesterday. The court ordered that Campbell should be notice of the thoughtful Christmas pres- "ifcted to attend the funeral bufc the t- i: t i ir . I 1 ... . ,. i sheriff positively refused to ooey me order. A motion will be mada to-day for a new trial. ent to Prot. E. C. Moses, superintend ent of the city schools, was murdered. We intended to say that the teachers of the white graded schools had thought fully and generously presented Prof. Moses with a ticket to Tennessee and children SUPREME COURT. to tr-j while. Any other pos- Thompson, chairman Democratic execu tivo committee, ana J no. v. juius, chairman board of county commission ers. This is strong endorsement. LATE NEWS ITEMS. The Charlotte Chronicle announces that the street cars in that progressive town will soon be operated by electric power, and go riht to Idlewild park and the construction company's work. Same old story negro man and his wife went away from home locked up their children in the house returned found three year old daughter burned tn death. This happened in Mecklen- w - ' & burg county. The trustees and friends of Burling ton Academy hope shortly to erect two buildings suitable for a boarding depart mentone for bovs and one for girls. Under the principalship of W. E. - Or- . . , Tii : i mnn.1. the first session cf this academy ut ui anunce prjucmwa - nf 11ft nnnils ciiuweu uu cuiu.iiuwu. i i fr-nm rtinn PYMintiPS. This school is r- as it m i "ms to u.s, would be irra- biis azrvi rn-nt of Senator Vances' to f t'trucions of the General As j y V in the nutter of supporting the 'Mr-asnry p;iri" should, and, we f ,J' li t, will, nil iy all opposition to : i""H!i to the Senate, which arose I tu 1,h (.x pressed opposition to the ":ot rtfoiin, to which the Allian ":r? committed. The Alliances have ia th jr jiowcr to secure for their re r0Mli) support of Vance by issuing v!'i tions to him through the Legis IV ." 1 tuey neglect to secure I 'M- ill;tl UC Mann that Tint. Via th O 'uuntor Vanco. J I'nresfivo Farmer is delighted ' that a way to the composing of 'Winces between Vanco and the -'anu-tnen of North Carolina has been ';a i an 1 it we a splendid vista, lined ' " 'H'port unity to mako a careful and 'fuoixli LliM i.l ... . B m ... !I1V ' . i ri n .i 1 1 r ri.ir nri . iii ress. We rotnrn Mrs. Moses ana tno them were prosperous land owners, that nave been ja Tennessee with her mother thev had the same school advantages as n11 th fdll and wiQter. and the ticket to rim whites, and that tney were never m w "Ji'it b fro the next Congt , , ,W;ty ticar to the accomplishment i . . , i 1,1 i'lper naa ever couteuueu nccnoH an d managed bv the uurnam Methodist District Conference. vvo are content. PARNELL. interfered with at elections, and voted the Republican ticket without interference. He also read the testimony of colored Republicans of Mississippi to the same effect, and asserted that, in every one of the Southern States, negroes uau receiv ed more and higher political honors than in all the northern states put together, and that in the ownership ot real estate and in the acquirement of property of every description and in the possession and use of ready money, the colored people of the south bave, he taid, man for man, in comparison with the colored people in the north, beaten tha?r norr.hprn brethren ten times over in the great struggle of life. When Mr. Voorhees closed hi3 re The following cases were argued on yesterday by the Attorney-General. State vs. Howell, from Montgomery; State vs. Parks, from Randolph, and Tennessee was a most thoughtful gift, I state vs. Hoover, from Mecklenburg. In and is a slight evidence of the in which Prof. Moses is held teachers. esteem by his INSANITY'S AWFUL FREAK. A Crazy Man Splits upen a uycicie Hoover's case, Mr. E. T. Causler filed a printed brief for defendant. State vs. Oxendine, from Robeson; new trial. Bowers vs. Railroad, from Jackson; error. Hodges vs. Transit Co., New Hanover; no error. Board of Education case from Gran- ed out of the gate with an axe ana struck the bov on the back of the head marks, Mr. Hoar moved to take a recess the edge of the weapon, killing him nntil 8 d. m. lnstantlv. Morris is now under res House. traint. 7 a crrTvmiAM n n ifr 2. ine HiOUUlUiu.,, ' . I . 1 nra ovAtoH to.rlnv's KPsion to the a uoumerieii iua"--s'c 1 1 W UO J UV WWV -v -vfc- consideration of affairs pertaining to the ilisfcrii't nf Gnlnmbia. ajd at d:lo p. m. adjourned. Man Splits Open Riders' Head. 1 By United Press. 1 New Orleans, Dec. 25, 1890. Yes- - m . Kl-UAWU -rm 7 terday afternoon Edward uucKert, a motion to re-mstate allowed boy of nine years was murdered by an Ener vs. Worth's Heirs, from Ashe; insane man named Frank Morris, aged I no error. 26 years. The boy was passing Morris' I Sherrill vs. Connor, from Lincoln (two house on his bicycle, when Morns rusn-1 appeal?); decided in favor ot oeienuaui. State vs. Webber, irom .Duucomue; own business, and went up to see about the matter in person. But she couldn't change the situation, and then both re solved that they would walk to Weldon where the indignant and would-be spouse declared she could get all the marriage license she wanted for nothing. There was another case last week in which a colored man and a young color ed woman walked in and wanted the li cense and the knot tied all in a few min utes; for they said another woman who wanted to marry the man was coming behind them, and "de goodness only knowed what she would do if she got dar befo' dey was married." Bat this girl was too young by her own account. Then the man wanted her to swear she was nineteen, but the regis ter could'nt permit such a proceeding, though the woman was perfectly willing. To make the matter short, the man found he just could'nt get license on ac count of her age and both walked out. But within an hour the man came back with another woman, presumably the one he had been rnnuing from. To make ville: no error. Smith vs. Summerneid, irom wayne, e matter perfectly safe both swore she wa3 not less than forty, then the license was issued. Justice Roberts tied the knot and both went away ha-ha-hampered. Spartacus" To-night. R. D. McLean and Marie Prescott will appear in Spartacus, in Metropolitan from new trial. State vs. Nies, from Buncombe; error. Paddock vs. Davenport, from Clay; error. "I ll(-l:itlil Aulr Ifi.n tn HptlrP rfmr-B w I'roiu Public Idle. Wy Cable to the CnnoNlCLE.) '"N,"'a, Deo. i2.-The conservative -t..r. ... . lYl r i t ."''il h pram Mr. Parnell's final s ftioneerinir a thomost fffictive tho utmost tho election. ('V;.4(;!1tly believe that to-day is big The nterest nny. . tVnPv'ga. They betray for tho result ot th ,, J 'Utiiicjinco forthotory party. 'I ( ' Hrcdio taking a deep inter J' from Kilkenny. The Women Are Ahead. On the nuestion of tho admission of a the women to tho General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal church, the vote in one hundred and twelve districts is in favor of the women, by a majority of' 16,614. - A Double Tragedy. (By United Press.) Wheeling, W. Va. 22. Word has just been received of a terrible tragedy at Bramwell. Saturday night several men were gamb- By United Press. Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 22, 1890. Mr. Blanchard.of Loui3iana,introduced The mint authorities here have discov- Brown vs. Rickard, from Burke; no Hall to-night. Speaking of Mr. McLean in this play, the Louisville Courier-Journal says: His conception of the character was M.in? r 'vJiLS of Cork hvo signed an ling and became involved in a quarrel for presentation to Mr. Parnell A man named Budnck shot and fatally t. -uimug hm course, and asking, in wounded nve ot ms coinpamuu Z"1 Uatnu ft ,,,,. . i..-BV. ksmBflii,W AenA A man took Budrick s Ui J that bo retire from active public bod;, stood it up against a tree and nddl- ' J: C 1, rt a rfsomtion proviuing ior mo appointment of a committee of five mem- - - i i a bers ot the Mouse and directing tnem to inauire into and investigate the killing of SittiDgBull and the immediate causes leading to his death, and whether a state of war existed which rastihed his sum mary taking off; and if not what justifi cation there was, if any, for his violent death at the hands of the Indian police of the government St. Barnard's Catholic Church Burned. fBv United Press.l MVw York. Dec. 22. St. Barnard's Catholic church on Fourteenth street, near Ninth avenue, was totally destroy ed by fire this morning between 6 and 7 n'e ock. The less is estimated ai o, non Th n.hnrr.h -was built in 1875 at ered a counterfeit five dollar gold piece, designed and executed with such re markable skill that few of the experts can distinguish the spurious coins from the genuine. It diners irom ine irue coin only in size, being slightly larger in diameter. In order to retire ine bpu rinn p.nins from circulation, the mint error. State vs. Lewis, from Rockingham; er ror. Randall vs. Railroad, from Madison; former ruling affirmed. Woodard vs. Blue, from Bnrk; error. McFarland vs .Improvement Co., from Buncombe; error. The First Step. Perhaps vou are run down, can't eat, can't sleepcan't think, can't do any thing to your satisfaction, and you officers will purchase the bogus coins at wonder what ails you. You should heed their face-value and then destroy them, the warning; you are taking the first The counterfeits have an intrinsic value step towards Nervous Prostration, lou 1 1 art i . The W orld's Fair Proclamation. IBy United Press. Washington, D. C. 22. the State de partment is now engaged in preparing the World's Fair proclamation for the President's sicnature. and the proclama- jj xiiD vuuivu new w - o 1 - cost, including the ground, of $150,000. I tion will be issued probably tomorrow. adequate, and his delineation wa3 marked by intelligence and good judg ment. When he wa3 brought into the presence of his conquerors and master at the opening of the plae, he conveyed to the audience instantly the picture of the rngged but simple barbarian crushed by captivity and grief at the supposed destruction of his wife and child. There was a dignity and strength in his presence, however, which fore told the danger involved in goading the captive too far. He showed the ferocity and the recklessness of the animal which had been caged, but there was also the feeling and the intel ligence of the man, the gleams of the Rtrnner and lofty nature which great op- - . . - . . T A. I in me Bitters you will find the exact remedy for restoring vonr nervous system to its normal, healthy condition. Surprising ii i i thek nsp nf thia srreat X a uarat;va vTir ar- Tvrtnmties were to bring out. peUll Xrns, good dtion re- tender scene, of. the play Mr UacLean Ftored and the Liver and Kidneys re- showed that he is master of the softer snmf helby action. Try a Ltle. tJtSSS t- -IUn V A 1 nilfaa 1 1 fn U- I JVS well no DM av v Price 50c, store. j Hons. i f :"- i
The State Chronicle [188?-1893] (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 23, 1890, edition 1
1
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