Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / April 4, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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) . v V !ffi a W&ttOK. jsro, 134 tig The BaiUj Evening Visitor Largest City Circulation. Index toNew Advertisements. Rebecca Rogers Notion. T W Blake Silversmith. T R Purnell Mortgage Sale. In and Around the City. Rev T 8 Clyce, of Columbia, S C, Mil preach in the Second Presbyte rian Church next Sunday morning. The rolling stock on the Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad is being repaired, and put in proper order for the anticipated heavy travel the com ing summer. A latch key has been found near the capitol and left at this office for identification. The owner can get it by calling and paying for this notice. The 12th of May has been fixed up on for another trial of the hose ree contest, which was held here last August, and the result of which has never been decided. Mrs J K Barney, the distinguished lady at the head of the Prison Reform Department of W C T D will deliver an address at the Union Miction on tomorrow.Saturday, night, beginning at S o'clock. The scheme of a Laud and Im provement Company to develop the tobacco interest of this county seems to have met with very general ap proval, and at the next meeting of the Chamber of Commerce steps looking to the organization of such a com pany will be expected. We do tmst such action may be taken as will benefit our people in this regard. The VISITOR cordially endorses the scheme and believes that prompt and decid ed ac1 ion will be had at once. Let The Ball Roll On. The proposition to organize a Land and Improvement Company is the best thing in the way of promoting nnr raoidlv crowing industries. The members of the Chamber of Com merce and Industry should turn out in a body at their next meeting and take the matter at once in hand. A company can be easily organized with sufficient capital, and the suggestion to put the stock at $1 per share is a good one. This will enable many more of our citizens to take stock. Let the ball roll on. The .phonograph which will be ex hibited at the fair given by the ladies to the Capital Hose Company has ar rived in the city and will be on exhi bition every. evening daring the fair. All those who have never seen or heard this wonderful machine would do well to call and examine same. There has also been received a full supply of musical phonograms. Mr Guy L Bunch, resident manager of the Old Dominion Phonograph Com pany has kindly offered the use of the phonograph also his services to exhibit same. Let everybody come and have a good time and at the same time help the boys. Renovating. Mr W W Parish is engaged in paint ing the outside of Messrs Williams & Haywood's drug store corner of Fay etteville and Hargett streets, and is, as usual making a first class job of it, The front on Fayetteville street is to be imitation brown stone, and the Hargett street side will be painted red and striped off. Mr Parish is one of the best painters in the State. Mr Williams informs as that he will soon have the interior of his store painted, whte washed and otherwise renova- ted. . ." ; -,j " :; Emin Pasha ' haV finally accepted the proposals made to him' by Major Wissmann and has entered the Ger man service. He will receive a salary of 1,000 a year. His decision meets Wltb Mtrong disfavor in Zanzibar. Weather Report. For Raleigh - fair weather, followed by rain, higher temperature. DIED. In Granville county, March 26th, at the residence of his parents, Ray Pearson, son of C Y and Sallie Man gum, aged one year and twenty days. The interment took place at the fam ily burial ground on the 28th, alt. Accident. Yesterday, while out driving in a carriage, Mr L D Womble was thrown to the ground and paiufnlly though not seriously hurt. The accident oc curred at the corner of Cabarrus and Blood worth streets. Mr Womble re ceived p-oper medical attention and was doing well at last accounts. Personal Mention. Miss Julia Dewey has gone? tj Phil adelphia to visit friends. J B Atwater, Esq.'of the J M Odell Manufacturing Company, Bynuni's, Chatham county, is in the city. Mr Atwater says his company is doing a good business, running on full time, and have not lost a day in t welve months. Tea Party. The tea party and sociable, giveD by the young ladies of the Tabernecle church in their Sunday school room last night, was 'i most, enjoyable oc casion in all respects, and the receipts were very satisfactory, the sum of thirty five or forty dollars being re alized as the net proceeds. All present seemed to enl er heartily into the enjoy ments afforded and a more pleasant social reuuicn is rarely seen in our city. xVew Advertisements Attention is directed to the notice of Rebecca Rogers, administratrix. Attention is directed to the adver tisement of Mr T W Blake, who is en gaged in thfi jeweler and silversmith business at 117 Fayetteville street. Mr Blake is an accomplished work man in all that pertains to his line of business, and all who give him their patronage can rely upon promptness and .fairness in all his dealings. We know Mr Blake to be a clever gentle man, and we know that his prices will, iu all respects, be acceptable to the public SISee notice of mortgage sale by T R Purnell, trustee. Oon'tTorget to call at the Raleigh shoe store for bargains. Remember the place No 7 East Hargett street. See advertisement. Removal. . The cause of the town of Durham vs the N C Railroad, and the R and D Railroad companies was held in Durham last Wednesday before Judge Armfleld, who had it removed to Chatham county for trial. The fol lowing is the order of court: "This cause coming on to be heard upon motion of the defendant, the R&D, for leave to file answer. It was order ed that defendant, the R & D, is al lowed to file answer upon payment of costs of this action for this term, and the clerk's office will recover of the plaintiffs and defendants the cost incurred by each party in his own behalf, prior to this term to be taxed in bill of cost and file judgment." Trinity College. The Durham Sun is authority for the announcement that the building committee of Trinity College has elected Mr W Duke, chairman, R E Lyon, secretary, and B N Duke, treasurer. Is was determined to erect a $50,000 building, including water and lighting apparatus. Presi dent Crowell was sent North to get plans, examine buildings etc. A com mittee consisting of Messrs J S Carr, J M Odell and E J Parrish was ap pointed to ascertain what they could get brown stone, granite, brick and other building material delivered on the college grounds ' for. The com mittee meets again on the 18th last. Expressions of Sympathy. We have been requested by Wesley Whitaker, Esq, to tender, on behalf of himself and family, their heartfelt thanks for the numerous letters of sympathy that have reached them from various sections of tlie State and for expressions of condo lence on the part of several of the newspapers, copies of which have been forwarded to him. Among the letters are many from prominent gen tlemen, some of whom occupy high official station. The feeling thus ex hibited evidently 6hows the tendency of public sentiment and must be a source cf much consolation to Mr Whitaker and his loved ones. It can be added, that several of the letters received, are expressive of indigna tion at the result of the recent trial. Report of Commissioner of La bor Statistics. We called at the office of the com missioner of labor statistics this morning and on enquiry found that the report of the commissioner is now in the hands of the printer. The report will contain some inter esting statistics on the condition of agriculture and agricultural laborers, reports from supervisors of public roads throughout the State, on condi tion of the roads and methods for working the same, reports, on the same subject by many of .the practic ing physicians in the State and their views as to the methods of working the roads, reports of these physi cians as to the condition educational ly, morally, l nancially, and socially of the laboring men and women and their families, in which they practice. Also the reports and views of me" chanics and other laborers in the State as to their prosperity, their ed -ucational and moral condition, the ills which beset them, and the reme dies to be applied. Altogether the report is a very important one, is filled with valuable information, which will be read with great interest by all classes of people of our State, It is a well known fact that whatever Commissioner Scarborough under takes is always done faithfully and well. i nis report fully sustains the reputation already made that, he is one of the most efficient and faithful of officers. Fashion Notes. Ball gown sleeves are as varied as ever, but the sleeveless ba'l gown is a thing of the past. Among the new tartans come also stripes in tartan colorings, and these are called Scotch stripes. The favorite colors for little girls' "coats," when they are not of tartans are green, drab and fawn. Broche silks, woolens, zephyrs, and ginghams come in novel shades of color and bold combinations. The visiting head gear for married women is the small capote and the toque, with strings or without. Bishop sleeves of velet are seen on cloth wraps. Leg of mutton sleeves in velvet are the style for gowns. Shepherds' checks of one color, with lines of black, white or red, come in soft twilled woolen for childrens dresses. Pompadour ribbons of various widths are stitched on evening dresses in rows from the neck to the hem of the toilet. A statement prepared at the Treas ury Department shows that during the month of March there was a net increase of $11,389,631 in the total cir culation and a net increase of $2,625, 227 in the money and bullion in the Treasury. The Supreme Court of Illinois de cided that the Young Men's Christian Association is not wholly a religious body, but is largely a charitable and benevolent organization, and that therefore the law restricting th amount of property to be held by re ligious corporations- did not apply vo SPECIAL NOTICES. Local notices in this paper will be Five Cei ts per line each insertion. Advertisements, communications, notices, &c, to insure prompt inser tions, should be handed in before 12: .0 o'clock each afternoon. Buy shoes from the Raleigh Shoe Store, No 7, East Hargett street. 2t W B Mann & Co have a small lot of last season's roe herrings, in half bar rel Is, in good order. Will sell them cheap to the trade. a3 2t Waktei Situation by young man. Can use "Remington" Typewriter. Good reference. Address, m272w "Jerojir" P O Box, 133, Raleigh, N C. A 4 room dwelling for rent on Saun ders street; a good neighborhood and healthy location. Apply to T T Hay. a pa Nice Virginia hams just received at C O Ball's, No 11 East Hargett street. Nice lot of fresh eggs at D T John son's, Phone 28. Student lamps and childrens' trays at reduced prices at Hughs'. The young man who last night at the Baptist Tabernacle, took by mis take a hat with initials "C G S" in large bronze letters, will do C G S a favor by leaving it at this office and getting his Everybody Can buy shad now, prices are low. Big lot ot fine fish to day and tomorrow. Orders left at my store promptly filled. D T Johnson. Phone 28 Just received a nice lot of North Carolina hams at C O Ball's. Did They Go? Were They Ap preciated? Did untrimmed hats aiid other mil linery goods go yesterday? We would modestly say they did to our heart's content. We were convinced yester day that Raleigh people did really appreciate a good thing; that they grasped an opportunity. If we knew nothing of Annanias and Saphira we would say that we sold more untrim med hats, mere flowers and wreaths, more plumes, more ribbons, more millinery goods of all kinds than most of the milliners in Raleigh keep in stock. We will venture to say this regardless of the fate of Annanias and Saphira, that if all the ladie3 in Raleigh really knew the true condi tion of our millinery department, how the goods are bought, and the quantities of goods we keep.the style, quality and quantity, and price of ribbons we keep, that all other mil liners in Raleigh would be closed up before the 4th day of July, and will admit that Mrs Sarah King is the finest and most tasty trimmer in Ral eigh. All must admit we would not get such a trimmer unless we kept the stocR fbrvher to work on. Now we say we can produce as fine a hat, as stylish a hat as can be had in the United States and for much less money than you would expect. Be sides all this, we can als furnish a dress to match any hat you may want; that we have secured the ser vices of Mr Hinton, who was dress goods man at Norris & Carter's; that we defy trny to show a nicer selection of dress goods than the Big Racket Store, and on all these things which you need you can save money by get ting them at the BIG RACKET STORE. A Hen. Mrs J Riley Davidson has a hen, just a plain ordinary hen, who has anticipated Easter by laying colored eggs. Yesterday, six of eight eggs were taken from the nest, of a light brownish tint, with large dark brown splotches and spots on them. Char lotte Chronicle A Daisy. Carthage Blade. The Raleigh Daily Evening Vis itor came out in a new dress last Wednesday. It is not only prettier to look at, but the improvement in its general make up and news ser ice is marked. It is a little daisv. The Stock Exchange, London, will be closed Friday, Saturday and Monday, Hardware, &c. THEY A HE HERE. The Nicest Line of CARRIAGES Ever offered in this Market. BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS. Trimmed iu Silk Goods, Satin Kusse, Cretonnes and Plush. PARASOLS IN COLORS with lace edges. We offer Carriages AT 7 S3 WORTH 10 00, K 0 " 11 50, it 2 ' 10 10 " 12 20 ' 13 12 " 15 10 " 15 87 " 16 12 " 18 22 " 18 72 " 19 62 " 20 43 21 48 12 00 12 50, 14 00 16 00 18 00, 19 00 20 00 22 00 23 00 21 00 25 00 2 00 Call and get a Bargain. TBOS. H. BRIG6S $ SONS, Dry Goods, Motions, &c. Special Spring ALDoancement! -OF- Gents' Furnishing Goods. This NEW DEPARTURE is loaded down with the latest styles in Collars anl Cuffs, Neckties, Dress Shirts, Negligee Shirts, Und er wear and Hosiery. Hat We represent the cele brated YOCMAN'S Hat and also carry a full lAdJdll- line of SILVERMAN'S ment. Hats. We waut every one to come and examine them, and do not expect you to purchase, though our goods speak for themselves and are sure to please. McKimmon, Moseley $ McGee, W. H. t R. S. Tucker & Co. Do You Want a New Hat Easter Sunday ? Until you have seen the genuine Dunlap styles for this spring, you are not ready to buy. Danlap's New Spring Shapes in Stiff Bats are sold at the following prices: $3.50, $4 and $5. The hats are in Rtnr nml riW fa delivery. ,w Don'r- fail to get the genuine Dun lap. They are not only the cheap est, consideriug the quality and fin ish, but they can be relied on as be ing the very latest ad only correct styles for the present Beason. v H, & ft. S. TUCKEB&CO, it.
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 4, 1890, edition 1
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