Newspapers / The State Chronicle [188?-1893] … / June 20, 1893, edition 1 / Page 2
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I - mm f ",",,l,ss 8. A. ASHE Editor. JAITIBS A. 1IOLLO.TION, - Manager. RATIS Of SUBSCRIPTION IN ADTANCB t One rear 86 00 n gi a uu 1 50 50 Six months Three months One month Tlie editor will not be responslblaror tie opinions of correspondents. Correspondents ol the Chronicle will ploaoe bear in mind that no communica tion will tw published, except over the author's real name. Brief letters on cur rent topics will always receive attention, and, if found available, will be used with the condition above named. TUESDAY, - JUNE 20, 1893 The Economist-Falcon asks if A. A. Thompson, Esq , President of the Commercial and Industrial Associa tioD.had overlooked Elizabeth City. We suppose not. All that ia necessary is for the Mayor of that city to appoint representatives, as has been done in other places where thera is no Board of Trade, or oth er similar business organization. The Bank of New Hanover, at Wilmington, whose stock has been quoted all along at 140, Las been forced to the wall by its depositors, at a moment when it could not pro cure cash for its assets, and the bank closed yesterday morning. This matter is to be very much re gretted. The depositors will re ceive every cent of their money, and we suppose, from the value of the stock, that the stockholders may get a surplus over the par value of their stock. But in the meantime the business of the town of Wilmington will be seriously interfered with. The business of Wilmington is, however, largely local, and the in convenience will be local. It will not affect other towns of the State very much. For many years the bank at Uoids boro was a branch of the bank just closed, but more than a year ago, J J lU a separation was maue, wiu mo Goldsboro bank became a distinct institution standing on its own bot tom, and entirely disconnected from the one at Wilmington. We are pleased to know that the failure does not hurt our Raleigh banks, none of them having any money in the Wilmington bank. It is to be deplored that the de positors should have wrecked an in stitution which doubtless would The mountain fires in the far west have proved moie destructive even than the waters of the Missis- have been of great U3e to the peo- sippi which, breaking through pie, in these times, if the people had the levees, have inundated a rich and populous region near New Orleans. The accounts or the occurrences last Sunday found iDjour telegraph ic columns arc exciting enough. Whole towns were devoured by the insatiate dimes, and men, women and children had to flee for their lives. not wrecked it. While in the end not a cent will bo lost by any one, yet the business of Wilmington will bo greatly hurt by the trouble. TnE People's Party in Pennsylva nia have seen those out West and go them one better. They demand the government ownership of coal mines. This is travelling aloner the lines of We are entirely unable to appre- Bellamy the author of Looking ciate the difference between the tes timony which Col. Ainsworth could give in his capacity as an officer and that of a private citizen, and it seems to us that the Coroner stick led more than Col. Ainsworth, who not being present at the catastrophe could only tell what he knew in his official capacity. As a private man he knew nothing, what he knew was as an officer. Backwards at a perilous rate. We simply stand aghast at tlJe foolish ness of such people. The glory of America has been that our people stand individually in tneir own shoes, and each man is the archi tect of his own fortune, but if the government i3 to run the tele The Strongest Man In the World. New York Herald. PerhaDS the strongest man whom the world has seen since Samson de stroyed himself along with three thousand Philistines is in iNew xors just now. He is not slaying thou sands with the jawbone of an ass, carrying oil ponderous gates use those of Gaza on his shoulders, nor pulling down stone houses on him self and others, but he i3 doing feats in lifting dumb-bells, men and horses that make cold chills chase one another up and down the epine of the beholder. Ernest Sandow this modern m?rvel of physical power beside whom the average man is puny, made his American debut in the Casino be fore a-private gathering of about two hundred persons, many of whom were medical men, last Sunday. It was hard for the spectators when a calcium light was turned on the figure standing on a pedestal in the back of the darkened stage to be lieve that it was indeed flesh and blood that they beheld. Such knots and bunches and layers of muscle they had never before seen off the statue of an Achilles, a Discabolus or a fighting gladiator. SANDOW'S 0YI3H FACE The face was that oi little more tnan a boy smootn, witn rosy cheeks and a little blond mustache The chin, however, was square and heavy. The neck was massive, and about five seconds, while every mus cle of the giant underneath stands out like whipcord. Ine weignt oi the animals and apparatus is said to be 2,600 pounds. Sandow is under contract oi Henry E. Abbey. He will remain in this city as long a3 Mr. Abbey sees fit, and will then go to Chicago. m m The Federal Offices. Communicated. A very grave responsibility rests upon the eleven gentlemen who, by custom, control the distribution of the Federal patronage belonging to this State. I say by custom, for there is no law or party regulation that gives it to them, but a usage of the Departments at Washington rendered necessary by the very na ture of the case. Applicants are always numerous and unknown to the heads of the Departments, and it is natural that they should look to the Senators and members to say who should fill tho positions. The custom is all right and satisfactory to tho people, bul they watch care fully whom these gentlemen select. The dominant party, which is now the Democratic, is vitally inter ested, and while probably ninety five per cent of them want no office, it is a mistake to suppose they are not deeply interested as to who are selected. The 140,000 Democrats in State, who voted for Elias Carr last November, ask these gentlemen to mis the shoulders seemed a yard apart discard all personal interests that The arm looked as though hickory nuts and walnuts had somehow been forced under the skin, causing it to bulge out in abrupt lumps. Layers of muscles three inches thick covered the chest, and on the ab domen was a succession of rolls of muscle that one could tell even from a distance of several yards were hard as iron. Below the waist the development was no less remarkable. The thighs were "big around as beer kegs," some one said, and the calves were in proportion. The ankle and foot, however, were comparatively small. 'See how his ribs show!" I heard a physician who sat near me exclaim, as bandow suddenly chang ctatVIi. and tho r1fiTiinnp. and tho railroads, and the whiskey shops, ed his position and ficxed the mus and the coal mines., as well as the cles of the uPPer Part of the bodv- The Carr-lina Hotel is now being furnished, and although the excel lence of the interior work has often been referred to, yet it gives us pleasure to remark that the build ing is a credit to North Carolina and is a fine illustration of the taste of Col. Carr, the owner, and of Mr currency, why not let ua embrace all the fantastic ideas of the Social ists and have everything in com mon, thus blotting out all individ uality entirely. We clip the following from the proceedings of the . Alabama Preas Association: Tha following resolution was adopted: "That no newspaper is not S. F. Tomlinson, under whose direc- eligible to membership of the Asso tion the decoration has been done, ciation not printed in part in Ala- It is paid that the new Waldorf Ho tel in New York equals it, but that none surpasses it, in beauty of orna mentation. The furnishings are ex quisite, and we take occasion to comment on their beauty because it is evidence of a development in taste in North Carolina that is no less remarkable than commendable. barn a. I thought they were ribs too until I felt of them in Sandow's dressing room after his performance last Tuesday night. The ridges that stood out so plainly were of muscle and not of bone. "They are rudi mentary in most men and they don't know how to develop them. Sundow said. "That is the reason they are bo in frequently seen." OPINION OF AN EXPERT. The physician who made the re mark about Sandow's "rib3" was Dr. Ramon Guiteras. The Doctor was conflict with the selection of the most worthy, active and working Democrats. No man should be selected who gave grounds for the suspicion that he was hobnobbing with the Ihird party, who joined Gideon's band, and left it on the payment of his thirty pieces of sil ver, who demanded a promise of office and his campaign expenses before he would enlist in the cuse; who is a carpet-bagger of too re cent importation to have earned such reward; who was conspicuous at conventions and public speaking?, but absent when tne battle was on, and who did not pull off his coat and work for that success that has placed the offices at the disposal of our party. These persons the masses of the party do not wish recognized, but 140,000 strong they do demand that the real workers shall be re warded. Democrat. And we respectfully refer it to formerly much interested in ath letics. He is a member of the New York Athletic Club, and enjoys with "Charley" Mithell and "Jim" Ccr bett the proud distinction of having knocked down Mr. John Sullivan. That was before Sullivan became a jrofessional. I asked the Doctor our esteemed contemporaries at Asheville and Charlotte, who will please give it their undivided atten tion. Mr. Thos. it. Jerafgan. Charlotte Observer. We give cur cordial approbation to tne article copied in the Obser ver of yesterday from the Windsor edger concerning Thos. R. Jerni- gan, Esq. There ia no better Dem ocrat nor higher-minded gentleman tne &tate, and few who have rendered the party more devoted or efficient service within the past f o ar years. ihere will be much disap pointment if a position that is worthy of him is not offered him by the present administration. TnE work of firemen ia fall of peril, and although by their skill Breezes Ifrom Morchead. Communicated. Morehbad Citt, N. C, June 18, '93. Everything at the Atlantic begins thought about Sandow. what he to present a gay appearance. Weather lovely and the crowd rap- mm t I ao- tney manage generally to escape idly increasing. Gov. Jarvis and unharmsd, yet sometimes less of wife, Gen. Cnapin and family, life is the penalty paid for their dar- Messrs. Martin and Rogers andfam- ing. it is because tli6ir devotion to ; " T ; " duty leads them to brave danger, 6w, u oiuoiu and to put themeelves in jeopardy a?TfamiJy' Rnd J A' Bryan for the benefit of others and of their oi New Berne Mr. Hnlayson and iamny, oi uoiasDoro, Major uonivan and family, and Judge James towns, that their services receive such merited recognition. The fire departments are usually the pets of their respective communities. The other day when Wilmington had the misfortune to have one of her best young men, one who was most active in business as well as among the most faithful of her firemen, a bright man, of educa tion, intelligence, high character, and social connections, stricken down while bravely performing a hazardous service, the city paid him only proper respect by tendering to his bereaved family a public fu neral. The mournful occasion was a notable one, and it was one of the largost funerals ever held in that city. It was a fitting tribute to a gallant gentleman, who fell in the "Sandow," said he, "is about the most perfeetly developed specimen of a man I have ever seen. I have seen athletes with bigger muscles than li?, but never one with the all roand development Sandow possesses. "There is nothing abnormal in his development. The nearest approach to a deformity, if a natural muscu lar development may be termed a E Shepherd and family, and many deformity, is iu the abdominal mus others are here. cles. The like of these I have never Bearden's Orchestra of Augusta before seen on a human being. Ga , makes the music, and we risk nothing in saving that no band South and in fact, but few anywhere equal them; the band is composed of the four Bearden s and five others. The teachers will be with us to morrow and everj thing await3 their arrival. Mr. Perry has his house well equipped in every way. No better cooks, bakers and better servants cannot be found in any hotel, and persons visiting Morehead may reBt assured of the best attention. The feats which he performs are, so far a3 one could judge, were genuine. The three horses he sup ports, to be sure, are not of large size, but together, nevertheless, they make up a weight that would crush the life out of an ordinary athlete. getting stronger every year. Sandow says he is getting stronger every year and expects to keep in creasing in strength for years to come. Before he gives up profes sional work, he savs, he intends to write a book explaining his system He will also give personal instruc- Mr. Geo. Hartsell, eo long and so tions to those who want to become performance of a patriotic duty J11 kno.wa as a caterer, assisted by strong. even as Wyatt fell in the battle of Bethel. Mr. Billings, is a sufficient guaran tee tbat no one will have cause to find fault with the table Whatever agony was incident to filling the chief offices in the West ern District is now over. Col. Glenn will have the duty of prosecuting the moonshiners and of drawing "salaries and fees" to the extent of train. W. To Start for Gray Gables. By Southern Associated Press. Washington. J Bix thousand dollars a year, and he land, little daughter and a number deserves it too, for if he did not of household attendants will leave prosecute Marion Butler all summer in a manner to entitle him to the highest reward, the jurors of this State have been sadly mistaken. They rendered their verdict last November and found Butler guiltv. and decided that Glenn should con- The feats which Sandow performs on the stage seem nothing less than Tnarvpllnns. Ho Vinnrlloa fif tv-ciY Gov. Carr and other distinguish- povmd dumb-bells as a schoolboy ed people are expected on the next would handle weights of two pounds each. He is not in the least mueclebound and turns somersaults and handsprings with the ease of a professional acrobat One of his tricks is to turn a back somersault with his feet tied together, his eyes blindfolded and a fafty-six pound dura bell in each hand. In hia nightly performance at the Casino four men carry .on the stage an immense dumb bell, the bar of which is brass about four feet long and the bells, which are hollow, three feet in diameter. With great effort Sand ow raises the bell over his his head with one arm. then Washington at 9:40 tomorrow morn ing in a special car, No. 60, over the Pennsylvania Railroad, for Gray Gables, Massachusetts, the summer home of the chief magistrate. The President will not accompany Mrs. Cleveland as he at first intended. tinue his prosecutions of malefactors There are matters of public business for four years under the Cleveland te desires to dispose of before taking drono ! . I Vila on mmor raootirin or,A m4nnJ I IL -J J l .tr , . . t uiouuiuk iu Buuueiiiv. csrcnes regime. 1118 summer vacation, ana instead of -lC i Au u j j iTr. t..., . . m.v vJ :--A bth hands and places xu pieasani. JYope suaaa nas been TT'S ""rat "J S"K lu vaxay lihtlv on the flonr wlwrPimnii iho r,;u v, i : Gables and rAtnrnino- tr w..Wnn. "Snuy on tne. noor wnereupon tne ? r. iC? . "7.7 ""-r - attendants release a man from each duty of administering the Revenue ton 8nd tnen ging back to Massa- laws m the most difficult district in cnURetts, the President s present the United States. Mr. Elias will Purpose is to remain here till he can have the aDnointment of about 450 866 his way clear to join Mrs. Oleve- officera, his patronage being almost an? B Gray Gables, there to re- as great as that of a member of the Uiam uu lue eaa oi August. cabinet His position is therefore the most important in North Caro Una. That he will seek to faith fully execute the laws, firmly, im partially, but not oppressively, we fully believe, and we predict that he will make an excellent officer. The bell. The total weight of the appa rats and men is about three hun dred and twenty pounds. HOLDING UP THREE HORSES Another feat is that of support ing with his arms and legs the weight of three horses. Sandow rests on his hands and feet with his back toward the floor. A heavy wooden platform is then placed on him, resting on his shoulders, ches This platform is con Only bight to Tell. The Rev. Mark Guy Pearse, the emmem jngusn umne, writes: "Beword Place, Russell Squpre, London, December 10. 1888. "I think it only right that I should and knees. tell VOU OI hOW much USA T find All. I afrnniod fn fif oKrmt tUA U . . . m . ...... I . w v. wiv lvv uu UWUU ucij& bU Ul D noBitinn ia nnfi nf vftnt rfiRnnnfiihiliftr I nn' t ti l i I ...... . ? "rC :u " r. x u JJJ vent its supping or moving m any ' "v o w nuu amung mose 10 wnom i have I way, uiumuw wo onus ui ubucb aua oi I recommendod them. T firm tnm o I a in nAn : ffS?5-5?J ?TUi: ? B01 b?lg ry?r?8tPlate Zinst colds and Placed a the platform, and oblivious to the best interests of the couehs." fv -a i., n, ' 4l. wmwnw party. I bridge. Thav rmrmiT, W f. q - j v v That Terrible Scourge, Fever and ague, and Its congener, Ulloua re mitter; t, besides affectloiis of the stomach, liver and bowels, produced by masmatlc air ard water, are botli eradicated and prevented by the use ot Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, a purely veg etable elixir. Indorsed by physicians, and more extensively used as a remedy for the above class or disorders, as well as tor many others, thau any u. euione oi ma nge. A languid circulation, a torpid state of ttie Hver, a want oi vital stam ina, are conditions peculiarly favorable to ma larial diseases 1 hey are, however, surely rem edied by the great preventive, which, by Invigo rating the system and endowing it with regu- lMiiy ws'i hs vigor, provides it with a resist ing power which enables it to withstand disor ders, not only of a malarial type, but a host of others to which f3hle and ill regulated systems are subject. The Bitters are a safe as we 1 as searching eradicint, and have widely super- aoueu mai uungerous urug, quinine, which pal liates but doos not eradicate malaria tSuckleu'd Arnica Salve. i ne oesT, oaive m the worlu ior cuts. bruises, sores, ulcers' salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corna and all kinds eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guars., teed to give p-rfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by John Y Iac3ae druggist. There is evidence at band to show that the Virginia campaign in warm ing up At the Barry villa prima ries it is char men voted "regroe3, R gu. lutti, ma xyier pu nucans and a man with a patch on his eye live times and then bolted " No wonder they bolted. SUNDAY OPENERS WIN THE DE CISION. Justice Fuller Applauded. Xew York Herald. Chicago, June 17. The fair will be open on Sunday hereafter, as the United States Court of Appeals has reversed the decision of the Circuit Court Nothing can be done with the United States Supreme Court, as that body does not sit until Oc tober, and the only hopes of the Sunday closers is in the Wanamaker Buit on behalf of the stockholders asking that an injunction be issued to close the fair. In the decision given today the Court of Appealr. find that it had jurisdiction in tho case, that the United States has no such equity m the premises as to entitle it to the relief originally prayed for; that the local corporation by reasons of its greater financial interest in the fair has an equity surpassing that of the United States. IS ACCOBD OS EVERT POIXT. Chief Justice Fuller and his asso ciates on the Bench were in accord on every point The decision, which was written and read by Chief Jus tice Fuller, was brief. He prefaced the decision proper with the state ment that owning to the desire to have the case passed upon as soon as possible the court has decided to announce briefly its ccnclusiocs, leaving a more complete exposition of the reasons for the decision to be made later. Counsel for the government had contended that the Court of Appeals had no jurisdiction in the caea. The justices decided they had full au thority in tho premises. The gov ernment's motion to dismiss the ap peal on iLia ground was overruled. The government's contention that the World's Fair people had violated the contract implied in the act of Congress of March 3, 1893, was met by the Court with the judicial enunciation that the government, by withholding the $570,000 of souvenir coins, had disregarded its covenant with the fair. The decision pointed out that the government's money investment in the fair was but a trills compared with the expense borne by other parties, whose rights in the premues were coequal with those of the gov erument and should be considered and conserved by a court of equity. Finally the decision held that it had not been shown that the gov ernment could suffer any loss or damage by the openiug of the fair on Sunday, and for this reason the government could have no right or claim m equity to .the relief prayed for. EA5?or T1TH APPLAUSE. The judgment of the lower court wa3 reversed and the case remanded. When the Chief Justice had finished the court room rang with applause, which the Marshal d:d not endeavor to suppress. It was evident the de cision was to the taste of the great majority in the room. T t T mm i -m justice ruaer aid not reprove those who applauded. This action of the Court of Appeals leaves the status of the local directory where it was before the action by the gov ernment was taken. The rule made by the directory and approved by the National Commission opening tno fair on Sunday is now in fall operative force. No further action can be taken by the government till after the final hearing of the case, and en tering of the decree in tha lower court, when the government, if it bo elect, can appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, As the case must take its place on the cal endar of the Circuit Court the fair will be over long before the cause comes on for hearing. The court room never had such a crowd of people before. Not only were the chairs and wooden Bets usually in uso occupied, but every inch of Btanding room was utilized. The aisles were packed with inter ested auditors. Men climbed on the window Eilip, and lood iu fcil houette groups against tho light The space around and back of the bench, which is usually kept clear of all except oilicers of the court, was invaded by the crowd, which clambered on benches and pushed its way into all corners and points whence the Chief Justice could be heard. called ihe '-i-Vther cf Pismire? - is c-.v.v:"'! by r. Torpid Liver, 'id is generally accompanied with Cr flrrtiiit, o treat ur.y cm o-nslir.niion fuccossfulir itu ri CHI IK LU 3 7 :Ucr a mild laxative and atonic to -u or-i?'. j.y tak:.'. : ! Liver HoT.il:' 1 1 I ouy aim prevent ":k.- Luliirestion. CI li'il 1 :!!:; c;i a re: "..-. v fr ' .' ir:cd ith ContT ... f .:-'. c.-i wi;h Tilcii;ig 111:. . ,. 4 ;-imm.M:S l.iver Ke.'.-i' : . ..r'-r ly rclit-c!, gaining s-trer. ''." 1 cla arc, Ohio. '"." '. -.' ; ii'.c Genu ire, .".ii. h I a en t Wnr.per the rcj Tm.'r m.uU s-.il SijT .'-ure of .1. n. zr.JLXN & rt ON COMMISSION RICHMOND ROAD COMPV?- CoifXSCTS; """" ! P" H.. n VV ; I tvejST'.lie. -iin Red 5 (O A. M. Daily erttweittfra c- Greenvliie a. : i . 3-r, -,. Uu . i coes not cc-i-, 7 C" At DzrhaTii r f-.w ; North, ftM wts I No ia for w:;.:"eT2-:.: aai with m?&' Charlotte - poiat tvulh . : Ihlstrala lotte with Cc IV t WilK to Au-r1 COSSECT3: fAtSclma.f P. M. Dally. -do you snir- POULTRT. EGGS, BUTTER. PORK.U3ACON, nAMS.ITEA.XUTS. POTATOES. CABBAGE, FLOUR. I GRAIN, OR.rKODUCE OF AXY.KISD ? -THES WHITE TO- D. T. JOHNSON, Agent, For Trices aul SliippinglDirections. I am now receiving ahrost daily consignment NEW N. C. CUT HERRING and will make lowest prices tothe'trade. Connects S.45 Daily Wilson itm yrt -t cu, daily except "; '' e At GoM-i!-,i0 ": ,'' I cept SnadHys, fo":; w 'i ! and interin!'4'e ,.'7 l& WKK.d.illT ' At .V.ai f Mount, T.-.:1 ticrr cn Mcr: TRAINS AKHIVK ! i; v C ; ' . U.2Juw From Om,. : Daily. North Kad Sent h 6J0C a ra From (ir(f!1sl...-0 H-. . DMly. Nor. h r.iA s, ,;r h V ?revn-!-oro t 4.25 pm ' Dally. ' yrora R ! 11.10 pm , In Fv-tni i A y 111 f 2ix Sur. I MY STOCK OF Staple and Fancy Groceries is selected with the utmost care, believing "QUALITY" AS WELLTAS QUANTITY is true economy. Always iii Store Best Grades of ELOUR, LARD, IIAMS, SYRUT, MOLASSES. CANNED GOODS, CAKES, CRACKERS, SAUCES, KETCIIUr, 1COCOA, TOTTED IMEATS, &.C., Ac, Ac. . fFREE AND TROMmDELIYERY.j PHONE SB. Double daTly trim rv. :!-t'j(,.. E. BERKLKY, &up2nntar.c : . Grt?tnslxro, N ' W. U.GKEE.N. to m tea ton, n.O BOL. HAAH. Trtff r Minst A A G. BAUER flK( V hi S ! T RA I F'!MI, i CO; D. T. JOHNSON, Agent, RALEIGII.IN. C. 16 HARGETT STREET. 62-d Aw lv. Plans aud f FOR THROAT A'ND LUSMG complaints, the best remedy is AYER'S Cherry Pectoral In colds, bronchitis, la grippe, and croup, it is Prompt to Act sure to cure. itilcox's cojurousnm. AWSY O PILLS Perfectly fe ud bare wh.o all otbcrat'alL If your DrumrUi don't ktcp thm acrptno Airt tint tnd 4c. pcitcr for "WOMAN'S SAFE GUAkr ma4 rccuT thj oi.It Bbaolatrlr reliable rrncdr bj CapeFear & YadkinVailg) n f. H.-iCTU Bjvxv. So. 1 Conder.:! Scl . In etci J;-!,'i;tv ; UOyvm Arrive Kl.u 7 1? pm L&ve Kv-.tt.-vsl 720pm Arrive F.y(.u. v,; 6(l0pmLe"vc SriJnl. 413 pm On;!. 345 pm " Ctr, .; 240pm Arrive Ori.":r'- '257pm LefcT 'iv.kv'.. , Ni W Jnnct. -Mr:: 280pm " C-j.-f. Ni W Jnuft -.:.. 152 pin Arnv-j (j v L . 120Jm Lfc Mt. Airy, A." tz - fv- I 500 BOOKS, ETC., FREE! Your 500 Labels 10 Cts. 500 Firms Want Agents. R,EP,10 CT8- ar"l w" MIST ywr full aJdrc-Bi on 1,000 (2 coior) GUMMED LABEIJ?, &) p-)8tr.atl for you to stick on your letters, papers, ftc, au4 5J0 postpaid to 500 agency firms, pub'tehers and manufacturers, who will innll you 500 sample books, novelties, pictures. rrRgszinea. t.artri &c . Free with your printed ad lress on each ' G. P. CUKTias. of So. WU i lneton. Ot.. writes aa follows: .TheFliEE sample booksrpaperaV&" 1 received from the 500 firms mentioned If bought would -xst $5 o Wx Am dellehtel " THE FAST MAIL CO.. I'.4lelh, X C. A RETIRED BUSINESS WOMAN. A Page From Her History. . ri"!io important experlenoes of others nro : uerc.stiii,'. Tlie following is 110 exception l M id lu'L'ii troubled vith heart disease . 11 1UU:" 11 ! that time very seriously. r0 .1 . 0 yc.-u-s I rastreated by one physician ron iM-.nmsly. I was ia business, but obliged t 1 -ts u i account, or inv 1. 0-1 It Ii A u -:i 1 told my friends tbat I could not live a ; i -.H !i. Myiectnnd limbs vere badly fwoI- ' and 1 was indeed in aterious condition V" "t'-itleman directed my attention to i-:-. .uiies New Heart Cure, nua f-aid tbat his i who had been afflicted v.itu heart t!h r: i:a(1 eon cured by the remedy, and v. r : r im a si ron?, healthy v. oman. 1 purcliah d a ..e-oft bo Heart Care, and In less than ":i .-.;ar after taking tlie first dose 1 could 1 vi a ('t'caled Improvement in thecirculation or i.n- blood. When I had taken three dces 1 it. move my ankles, something I had nor ilcno for montLs.and my limbs had been wol- -. so Ions? that tliey teemed almost putr.tied. had taken one bottle of the New .'v-::n, Cure the swelling had all pone down ami l w as so much better that I did my own V Ol't On mv rpcnmmoiiflal Inn tlvnt li...a n -a - vaiuaDie remedy." .Mrs. Morgan ir. --lilos hew Heart Cure, a discovers ""n nnininnt . . ... nl . 1 ! a i i j . . ri'i i" in:tiaubi in neari uisease.is. muuKiMS on n. noitiv ennrnntf... . .. ..I- lilies lueaicai co.,tiKuart. receipt of price, gl per bottle, tlx be to. express prepaid. It is positively 1 1 u;i opiates or dangerous drugs. For Bale by all druggists. y t '..on i'rora Specimen Cases. S. II. Clifford, Xew Cassel, Yis., was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheuma tism, his Stomach was disordered his Liver was affected to an alarming de gree, appetite fell away, and he was ter ribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, ITarrisburg, I1L had a running sore on his leg of eight years standing. Used three bottles" of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. JohnSpeauer, Catawba, O., had five large Fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bot tle Electric Bitters and one box Buck len's Arnica Salve cured him entireily Sold by John Y. MacRae the drugts "An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure." An ounce of healthful food is better than a ton medicine. of USE Every man who is right vith God is a man on whom the devil k close watch eeps tTAPANE S S (CURB A V HLPPOSIIORIES, Capt-ules of Ointment end two tlZll 0la,aeni: A never-failW Cure for Piles f a ure a!id .dee- It male an operation ,eii6T Ejections of carboll0 acidT which aIL , j "fom permanent enre, and often resulting in death, unnecessary. Why endure terrible diseased We auarantee I boxea to cure any case. You only pay for neflte received. II a box. 6 for to. Sent by maU. Unaranteee Issued by our agents. CONSTIPATION u:ed- Pl,e Pvented, BLOOD PURIFIER. Small, mild and pleasant to 25 centeP dPted fur children'e use. 60 Uose GUABANTEE3 Ueued only by JOHN.,T. MACBAE, 'Druggist. Retail Agent, Balelgh, N. C. WLole3i'. ani Buckwheat, And throw away the medicine bottle. Hon a r-.o. 3. 10 15 pin Arrive Jm.i ivv :; , l.ii- 8 4'Jpm " Si' -j :-;ri: 8t5pm J 'ore .-, 747 pm Leave Iiyluv;.. . A". HOTJH Boufo. 5litl No )5 63pm Arrive K-if nr. 4 5 fm Leave l".sr.."., 4 00 pm Lf-ave Grt 1- -HorTH BocffD. ilixel Lkilj No. 15. xz iZ 3 20 pm Arrive Ortt urt ' r 2 10 pm Jtfcve at ' - U 115pmLrave J Train No. 2 coij?--cv board A'.r-Linf'-r point north aut with tbo yi.rfclt i..t i - weatof lioauoL-. Tram Ko. 1 ctnw'i t Norfolk aud W"?tr:i 1' B&lem, Uoikiioke ku4 all j : of lloanoke and ut .-.?'r i Line for Monroe, CLr Bad all r.cints .ont I. ! " lullman Tajac-Air-Line tra:ni wit'.L and on Norfolk i S': woetfrom 1vwik(-. 1'amjearere fr'ii Maxton, liennt-Ucvr: offtanford will arrive and Laye E bor? came day. Ample time i y;v fast and en;- ' r at r' yalLt:t rj,V'. . i -l i Complete Manhood and hov to attain it. At last a rneT:.-a! work t it tV.s th c-;cs w scientifically the i:V.--t a'aae In 1,; a half-tone rlustra-.i...:, m tin:,- Soi- c' the suojects treated c:e Xmoa ! hiiav I rr Husband, Those m-.c-.-im- Mnrrive et tvery man u ho wr.uhl know tht Rrar.d" truths! t.ie plain facts, the eld scrctv. ,.d u," t.c discoveries of jn;cal SCIt,,ce aas married life, who w.uM aton; f.,.- rA'.t -o;h' wondenul litt.e bk. It !! be sent f:ee. under seal. Address the p..b i.her ' Erie Me.'ic tl Co.. fcu'tTa'-. N. Y. W. L. DOUCLA5 S3 SHOE Bast Call ehoa la tt w-''1, VV.L. DounlasB-ces :- yon ows yourmell to pei . . .r: your money. Ecobooi t e tepreaant tba bast t1u Take No Su'jtitu!. -P Bewrf.offriid. N '-: ' . DoucUa name aud rice su.iJ tot It when you bur. ff.F.UKiUi, Bro.ktoo. is'
The State Chronicle [188?-1893] (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 20, 1893, edition 1
2
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