Newspapers / The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, … / Feb. 16, 1892, edition 1 / Page 3
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) X f , ' 4 5. ? PROG-PASSIVE FARMER: FEBRUARY 16, 1892. STATE NEVS. 1. i farmer s havSTtUou Our local truck finished up their reiunf the state Pi ess-Drts of Turpentine ; pea planting operations. Bean plant (trains of Rice from tL3ast-ciusterb Sin? is next in order, a large crop c-f will be put in v n& Grains of Rice f rom tlii . -,f Urapes and Tobacco Stms from the Sorth Stalks of Corn 'ul Grains of . Wheat from the WesPeanuts and Cotton Seed from tie South organton will soon lave electric lights. A Cumberland county farmer last year raised 400 bushel of ice. J. II. Sanford, of Lsirinburg on Tuesdays made an assign nent. J. A. Privett, of wilsoi, r-aa made an assignment. The liabilities are small. Th citizens of Salisbiry are de terniiaed to develop the tobacco trade there. The iron bridge ovor Limber river cn tbe Atlantic Coast Line is being erected. professor W. R. Skinner, Seven Springs, will open a military school at. Clinton soon. ; Afie at Asheville Friday completely destroyed Mr. J. M. Carver's house, musing 2.0i'O loss. The Dunn Times reports that Geo. L e has a goose 30 years old, and liyn im is the oldest iu the State. Several squares in North Wilkesboro ere burned last week, everything on tuem being entirely consumed by the games. TJp to February 1st 91,000 bales of cotw-i na(l oeen compressed at the Char lotte compress, 101.000 to same date 1st year. Ihk rh&t regular train commenced , tjr'l'i over the Roanoke and Southrn rj;vlfrom Roanoke to Winston-Salem on 4th mst. P. B. Humphrey & Co. lost $2,000 by a fire at Wilson a few days ago. A loss of $1,000 was indicted on the John ston building. Mr. W. Robinson, of Martin county, vrtio recently died, bequeated $5,000 to tbe Oxford Qrphan Asylum, says the Yfik ii Mirror. Rutherford Banner: The farmers of this county almost altogether express determination to raise less cotton and more, home supplies. '.iishington Gazette: We have talked j t -iiany farmers is this section and Lev all say the acreaged in cotton this j tar will be greatly reduced. Tii boro Southerner : If Edgecombe nsi 2,000.000 pounds of tobacco last year, she will raise 10,000,000 this year even if the yield is no better. im Press: The parties who are brri'g for the oil near Walnut Cove i.rt mtched a depth of over one hun fc It iu the new location. The whoop: ng cough among the diloren, of which we have heard so each, has proven to be nothing but ctLenz x, s lys the Hickory Mercury. in Gertie county there are twenty ei&fr. candidates for county superin iteii'Vnt of public instruction. North around th ese which parts. Hard times can't hold Charlotte down, the Neics asserts. On a single block on South Tryon street, are resi dences, some almost completed and others under contract, to the extent of $50,000. , It is reported here that Robert Mac- jnair of Washington county, brother of E. D. Macnair or this place, had his house and everything in it destroyed by fire recently, says the Tarboro Advocate. , Carthage Blade: Deputy Marshal A. Kennedy had Ben Barbor before Commissioner A. W. Campbell last night, on a charge of illi ;it retailing. He was held in a $200 bond for the Federal Court. Scotland Neck Democrat: Just as we go to press news comes from Enfield that Mr. E T. Branch, a well known attorney of this county, jumped into a well yesterday. We have not learned the partictulars. The Messenger says that the Atlantic Coast Line wid not move their shops from Wilmington. There wi 1 bo two shops, one at Wilmington and one at Rocky Mount. The road was so long that this was necessary. Raleigh Visitor: Five negro prison ers made their escape from the jail at Henderson Thursday by knocking down and choking the jailer. Thay were pursued and captured. Coun terfeit silver dollars are still afloat. Winston Sentinel: Mr. C, A. Hege and others have invented a coffee h tiller which promises to pan out well for the invenors. Several prominent coffee dealers of Central America and else where are interested in the enterprise. Last Wednesday an extensive forest fire jrot out along the line of the L. & L. V. Railroad, doing considerable danicige to timber. It took some hard fighting to keep it from the house of Mr. A. V. Miller, sa s the Lenoir Topic. Durham Sun : At a meeting of the members of the First Baptist church last evening, a unanimous call was tended to Rev. H. W. Battle, of Wilson, to become pastor and fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Rev. J. L. Wine. Smithfield Herald: From what we can learn there will be a great deal less guano ued this year that any year for some time. We learn that s do not wanteffi e. Oh.no IiXi-'"rV' -With V c.4 ,1s ir.ve been afflicted inn-i around ut community is subsiding to a great extent, says the Lexingtiii Dispatch. . Pkui3 for the new iVi-esbyterian int-'h Statesville haY been ad pbd by the committee. The esti mated cost of the buildiusA is about 3,( 00. i In 'i short time the educatieitial board of she Methodist conferences! in this Hta;e, will hold its annual meeting. 3isaop3 Galloway and Duncan! will be pre at. I Joi.fr boro Leader: Mr. YYeidey Thomas au esteemed citizen tit this cci imunity, died at his home,! near Ba'It lo, on Friday morning Vjst,wged vcf.rs. in some sections of the county the grip has been so prevalent as to stop the schools. Professor Albert Bushnell Hart, Pro fessor of History in Harvard Uni versity, is now in Chapel Hill, and is delivering some lectures on American history. Dr. Hart is one of the most judicial and broad minded of our his torians. Asheville Citizen: A colored brake man on the Western North Carolina JJ-tan'oan, Joim Peterson, wnue poup-j nag y:ai yesterday au vjia r ort was c aig.it bet veen the ctrs and so seri ously injured that he died in the afternoon. At present there ere 135 orphans in the asylum at Thomisville. These children are all to be cared for by the good people of the Sta e, and they should do everything in their power to make them happy, says the Lexing ton Dirpatch. There were tw business failures in Halifax Fridav. One of Isaac Levy, f Enfield. Assets are about $10,000: im n ae of Peckham is making p'ans ;cr ; iv. uuuains: oi a nanusome nnr' at'h'hir 1 Hdl. for the accomodation !f rC'-t!K-,rn visitors. D.outv Sheriff nyaUe .hd Diarnor;dl ivtjlli.igton colored, got m?o a dignu ";r some taxes Monday evening an. nej exchanged a few blows, says the lari'.' ro javocaie. : The nrpsent enrollmnit ,nt TTonr.r vWq, 1; "c;f Oxford, is 134. The openf3 tyxt the spring term is lavger than! ? iTihctore known ia the his:orv off ! - ' x mo us school . s li i'i tells the Rockingham '4 '1'fd 30u raooits tni sea !. ' inail inland in Pee Dee and wl s i-f c tten the rest had not the freshet i them away. I h .lord Day : Died, at three o clock '1 .3 liori'ing, at his residence in Ox !x Ro iert H. Hobgood, of heart dis-4- i Tne deceased was proprietor of l ;il:chang3 hotel A liv iv -scrane" was Engaged in T - . -ti - - t fl'.-e Ijexinct-mians last riaayi Hi and as a result $39, was added to vn treastiry on Saturuay, says xington Dispatch. ;oro Courier: A tract of land ttirig 111 acres, lying u u,iccjr i ; train, was soi l nere rouuajf iw J t , liars and twenty five cents. This . . tbout five cents per acre. Favetteville & Albemarle Rail nniMf.t is not dead, as many peo m to think, but it is probable Mi i vr-ar will witness its comple- I' i r.m that nlace to Aberdeen. ins Nos. 9 and 10 on the Western Rii'road. between Salisbury and I ; R ck, and sleepers between "v tiboro and Knoxville were dis f iy-ed on the 7th of February. ir v foundation is nearly completed i- noLr t poke and hatdle factory s boro. This is being built by :l, I - iTerrimon, who had much k. I" v-iTq line, the Record r . itanKin, 1 - known liabilities greater. The other of Law rence & Edwards, of Scotland rseck. Asse-s are not known; liabilites esti mated at $15,000. Enueer Gates of the shifting engine had his arm painfully hurt while at tempting to couple a car Friday. There was no bone broken, but the flesh wound was very paiof ul. Automatic car coup lers would prevent such accidents, says the Farmers" Advocate. Last week twenty-five negroes fnom the surrounding country left Wei don oc the coal mines of Pennsylvania v. here they are promised good wages nid stead y work in the mines. A few lays later, the News s.iys twelve others ft for the same destination. I R xboro Courier: The Roxboro In Vtute is at last at home in its new vi spacious buildings and the entire Mhy bard at work training the .hearts and bodies of the pupils its cuarge. lhe combined ontain nine rooms. k of the electric street rail ig leveled in places where i needed, and tbe trolley ng everhauled. The road in thorough condition for rk ahead of it this spring , says the Charlotte News. zrald: The sale of hickory ckwell has amounted to lousand dollars this win- istry has brought a lot kcowan. ine timoer is us points in the State, iking spokes, nandles, ll' I 'IV w iv such. wires is behv aitd sui Sa'lsb neari n ter. Thi ot money shipped to and is used etc King's Mo our whol? Ill see i tier our to the use t f this season, already here, in a stock, received. colored i V fan noU W01 k n News: Never in -ae do we remember 'V so utterly opposed (Jrrcial fertilizers as ,'lVgh the season is , maeaiers snouia iay L'A Vir-lnad has been its named Hattie Mpbley, who comil;te a considerable theft in Chestery a Xew days ago and came to Charlotte, vvag last night arrested by the police- he had stolen two dresses, a fur clVak, . watch chain and charm and $50 Kfclh, says the Charlotte News. Capt. : Snow," of modem toSacco barn fame, -has jnst been elected a corres f '"'1 n g honorary memler w ith attri i of the first class dii ma and "rc.it gold metal of thdtlVirisin--i r" ociation. During he past ho Academy has elected only ' ? i a members in the United States, :f; :1 Diy. itatc's, of, whith Cap- Charlotte Neivs: Much excitement nas existea m tne western pari oi Lincoln and the lower edgec-f Catawba over mad dogs. Several hwe been recently killed in that sec ion. Two small children were bitten a few days ago. A war of extermination ag linst the dogs has commenced. Rockingham Spirit of the South: Mr. Colly, on account of the hard times, we suppose, has suspended the operation of his whiskey distillery a few miles above here. T. J. Bostick, Esq., accompanied by quite a crowd of upper Riemmond citizens, left for Mis sissippi last Monday night. The Dukes of Durham have estab lished on Clark creek, in Carteret county, about three miles from New port, on the North Carolina and At lantic Railroad, a splendid club house called the Catiral Lodge, with a pre serve of 3,600 acres of land. It is literally a sportsman's paradise. Franklin Press: James Mozeley, aged about 20 years, son of II. T. Moze ley, who resides in Smith's Bride town ship, accidently shot himself yesterday evening with a shot gun, while out hunting, the charges striking him in the side, killing him almost instantly. There were two other persons with him. Raleigh Visitor: We hear that there will be much building in operation here during the coming spring and summer months. It seems to be the understanding in Republican- cir cles here, that if that party makes a nomination for Governor, Jeter C. Pritchard, of Madison, will be the man. Wadesboro Intelligencer : From pres ent indications the sales of commercial fertilizers in this county this year will fall f ir below the sales for last year. From what we can learn we think it probable than there will bo consider able reduction in the acreage of cotton j seed planted is this county the present yea'.-. Murf reesboro Index: The people of Winton are hopeful of getting the proposed Norfolk, Wilmington and Charleston Railroad to pass that place. A n election will be held Tuesday, March 3th, in Winton township to subscribe twenty five thousand dollars as an inducement to bring the road by the town. The lumber trade of Lenoir is some thing big. Seldom a day passes when a dozen or more cars are not sent down loaded with valuable lumber. One day last week a large invoice for Liverpool was seat away. A great many pines, locust and oak, are being hauled into town, says the Lenoir Topic : Last Monday, John T. Duncan, who for several years was a fish shipper in New Berne, but who moved away from there about fifteen years ago, was shot and killed in a bar-room in Baltimore by a man named Charley Goodman, with whom he appears to have had some disagreement in business trans actions. The grand jury of Cumberland has county commissioners for failure to provide suitable accommodations for the public attending courts, and to provide vaults for the protection of the records, and generally for failure to put the court house in t presentable condition. Tarboro Southerner : Farmers have heltl their crops until they can hold them no longer, and as a consequence, although cotton is as low as ever, a great deal of it is being marketed. The increased price of peanuts has caused a npid selling of them. Thous ands of bushels are brought here every day. '' For a number of years the Wilhelm Burlys m case has' been in Cabarrus cour j. The controversy is over a little more than on -fourth acre of ground, probably worth $6 The costs will not be less than $2,000, besides the inci dental expenses incurred, the Standard says. The Supreme Court has granted a new trial. Char'otte Chronicle : There seems to be a settled determination among the farmers to stick to their agreement of planting less cotton this year than heret jfore. There is also a deteamina tion to use much le s fertilizers. 4 ' Fer tilizer bills," said a farmer, "is what keeps the farmers poor, and vre are going to quit buying it." The North Carolina bulletin of health gives the mortuary report for last month as follows: In eleven towns of the State, with an aggregate popu lation of 38;900 white and 35,000 col ored, a total of 73,900, the aggregate deaths were: White, 52; colored, 55, total, 1 07 ; represent in g an annual deat h rate per 1,000 of 16.0 white, 18 8 col ored, an average of 17.4 The chain gang gets only two re emits from this term of the court ; Ed. Johnson and Jim Carthau, both con victed of stealing and sentenced for two years. We believe that the chain gang has something to do with the decrease of crime in this county, and, if that is so, the county will more cheerfully bear the heavy expenses, sajrs the Lurhberton Robesonian. Charlotte Chronicle : The large ad dition to the Henrietta Mdl is about completed. It is 327 feet long and four stories high, making the mill one of the largest in this section. The mining industry seems to be at a stand still around Charlotte. From Mr. W. H. Clark, a mining expert of the city the reporter learned yesterday that not a single mine in Mecklenburg county is being worked at present. Southport Leader : On Friday night last, at 11 :30 o'ojock, Mr. A. C. Willard, prominent farmer of this county, died at his home at-whaisknown as Rich land Neck. His oalwai caused by pneumonia, resulting from" la grippe. Adrian " Mooro brought to this ofllco the paw, of what must have been an immenso wildcat." .- When ; spread' the ' paw"- covered a epace for. inches wide. I It. llooro killed the cr.t in it o vicini ty c f 1 " i i . r : .i r. : - -YTt.I l ' i "7"-. - , ,-1 1 -!?.,-, jtv,,,-T. 4 ,r i r .-i, i yen: j Tr. John Johnson, pf Paw Creek, yakci dentally kille yesterday after- j oon while ut hurling. The hammer j oHa gun ' )n a fence, discharg- j i ig tfteIoaaitb his right side. H" j was killeir -almost instantly, speaking j only once ater being shot. Deceased j was zo years oia, ana leaves a wiie ; and one ch id. He was a half brother of Deputy Sheriff Johns m, of this city, says the Charlotte Chronicle. Durham Sun : In the lower part of j tae grand stand, at Trinity Park, were stored away quite if collection of de ceased reptiles and other specimens, which had been collected with no little trouble by Dr. Cro well. They are being collected for the Trinity College rau putn. A day or two since, some med dlesome. prying boy s broke into the room and scattered the collection in every direction, rendei ing some totally unfit for the uses for which they were intended. Concord Standard : This morning t-ie back lots in Concord were crowded w ith wagons. They came from e istern Cabarrus and Stanly, and they were leaded with cotton, corn, cow peas, K-oobers, eggs, chickens ani so on. 'me people along that line live at home and board at the same place and when they come to town they have a diversity of salable articles that bring iie cash. They are old Dutch etock who will welcome you with a whole b.;ul honest welcome. The Kernersville News says that in the Bunker Hill neighborh ood a few d vys ago two young men. R. E I . Cobercson and E. A. Morgan, were walking along when the latter drew a pistol and commenced firing promis cuously. One ball hit a fence rail and g'anced, striking the former in the ifiouth, whi h went through his upper Ho and knOckeel out two teeth. Young Rooer:son is getting on all right and says it has never pained him very atuch. But it was a close call all the s-'.me, as it was a 32 calibre. Salisbury Watchmah : What might h.tve been a disastrous affair happened an the granite quarry, four miles east o- the city, last Wednesday. Three dynamite cartridges were placed before the furnace to thaw out, as is the custom. Mr. Thos. Byrd had just turned them over and walked several feet away when all three exploded. He was stunned, and incapacitated for several days. The boiler was jarred loose on its foundation, and the people in the neighborhood b idly scared. . Concord Standard: Miss Myrtie Brantly, a grown young lady, a pupil of the public school in No. 45, No. 5 township, had a narrow escape from a horrible death on Tuesday, Standing near the fire her dress caught. Had it not been for the efforts of the teacher, Miss Loula Barnhardt, and the pupils, Miss Brantly would surely have been burnt to death. Her dress was en tirely burnt from her, but the woollen underclothing served a good purpose in checking the flames. Miss Brantly was not painfully burnt. Asheville Citizen: The sheriff of Tnywood county has caught and jailed Vd-i:-cg-trct ' who aro Lhouac have set fire to the depot ar Waynes- ville about two weeks ago. R. L. White, who lives in Leicester town ship, sold some very fine tubers on the Asheville market to day. Of a cer tain variety Mr. White planted one peck as attest From this peck he raised nine bushels and three pecks When they were weighed it was found that they averaged one pound each. They are indeed beautiful specimens. Rocky Mount Argonaut: Mr. Ben nett Lindsey who lives at the Alley in Cooper's township met with a very serious if not fatal accident last Satur day' night. He was returning home from Wilson and as he had crossed Cockreh's bridge over Tar river and was going down the abutment he by some means pulled the wrong rein and he and the horse and cart fell down the steep embankment into i ditch He was speechless for sometime, is badly bruised in the upper portion of the body and is in a very critical con dition. Rocky Mount Argonaut: Mr. J. 0. W. 'gravely of the Farmers' warehouse, shipped to a Baltimore manufacturer on Monday last, 50,000 pounds of leaf tobacco. This is the largest single shipment ever made from Rocky Mt. The man who broke into the store ot Messrs. Griffin and Geo. Parker has b-ien found, tried and sent to the peni tentiary for fifteen year. He was a negro named Joe. Cobb who had just served a term in the penitentiary. He alt?o broke in stores in Goldsboro anel Mount Olive and was tried for th3 la.st offense. He is now safe in the ''pen." f Winston Sentinel: Preston Veach, a young white man of Salt m. is in trouble. Ho went to the office jf Brown's warehouse yesterday and se cured a check from the clerk tor $54 8j7, claiming that he was a son of Mr. U. V. Hicks, a farmer of Stokes countiy, who had sold tobicco there and Ito whom the check was payable. Veaph then went to the store of Frank Brown and drew the money. It was soon ascertained that the young man bad s icured the chech under false pretense. Veach was sent to jail in default of $500 bond. The young man at coart will have to face two charges, one for theft and the other for perjury. ! Asheville Citizen: E. G. Burrell, lhite, was brought to Asheville f on Sairday and lodged in jail, charged with an assault on Zeb. Vance, Jr., a son of Gen. R. B. Van je. The assault was committed on Friday. Thestory U that Mr. Vance entered Knykenqlall's store, at Alexanders and taking a rab bit's foot from his pocket, playfully rubbed it on Burrell. This, it is said, enraged Burrell, who picked up a four pound weig&t which was lying near, and burled- it at Mr. - Vance's ibeaeL Tho' missile struck its mark, V inflicting, a .fearful wound in his head." Bp was taken to his hem ?, and a phyiieian f ummcncd. Tho wound i3 not thought reus, but was a very, ugrr one, THE LATEST NEWS. ncverthe ft . liro. IT-.U, c! th Ro-.r'k ll i in t oi"! : " c - r. ': i J j Sparks from the Wires Most Important Events Throughout the World for a Week. Ohilbur, Neb. Feb. 9. The Chilbur opera hmse was burned last night. The los3 is $50,000. . Savannah will erect a $12,000 monu ment to Father Ryan, the Confed eracy's poet pHest. St Louis, Feb. 9. The Planters House is now burning. It has been unoccupied for some time. Mayor James G. Wyman, of Alle ghany, Penn., has been found guilty of extortion in two cases, and is now on trial for embezzlement. As soon as a native Alaskan gets a $5 gold piece or a $10 bill he immedi ately trades it for silver having no f uth in gold or paper money. It is said that the motion for divorce brought by Mrs. J. G. Blaine, Jr., which comes up in Deadwood, S. D., next week, will not be opposed. The re organization of the Richmond Terminal is said to be about complete, and it is stated that Albert Fink, trunkline commissioner, will be offered tbe presidency. The grip makes a mistake sometimes in tackling old folks. It did when it engaged a 107-year old df nizen of Fair port. N. Y., who, after a square rough and tumble fight, got away with it. In the city of Buenos Ayres it is said there are sixteen men for every woman, and that any decently good looking woman that goe3 there can have her pick out of fifty eager suitors. Cairo, in Egypt, not in Illinois, is a good town for tramps to strike when a Khedive dies. For forty days after his death free lunches are served, with coffee and cigaretts, to those who visit the tomb. General Meigs wrote a hand so un readable that General Sherman is said to have once indorsed an official paper from him to this effect: 44 1 concur in these recommendations, but don't know what they are." The legislative sub-committee of the Virginia Assembly appointed to pre pare a bill to carry out the State debt settlement have completed that labor and have presented a bill to the joint committee for their consideration. The U. S. steamer Tallapoosa, now at Montevideo, has been condemned as unfit for further naval service and will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder. All her officers and crew have been de; ached and s tiled for home on the 26th inst. Minneapolis, Minn., Feb. 8. A special to the Journal trom Morehead, Minn., says that the City of Merchants' Bank of that city closed its doors this morning with $175,000 on deposit, in cluding a considerable amount of county funds New York, Feb. 8.- Atthf adjourned meeting to day of t he trustees of the New York Life Insurance Company, Mr. Wm H. Beers, the President, ro rmftee aid was vbteu a pension rbr vife j of $25,00f a year. Denver, Cob, Feb. 10. The Navajo Indians, of New Mexico, have gone on the war-path, and threaten the lives of all white men. A battle between the redskins and cowboys is now in pro gress nine miles south Albuquerque, and great excitement prevails. New Yjjrk, Feb. 8 Mrs. Willis J. Payne, vjjfe of the city messenger of NewarkJ assaulted a Miss Elsie Lang on Broac street yesterday afternoon as they ; vere leaving the meeting of the Bible Hass of the First Presbyterian Church, c-f which both are members. Washington, D. C, Feb. 8. It is about settjledthat the first bill reported from the House Ways and Means Com mittee w .11 be that placing binding twine, ar.L agricultural necessity, on the free jlist No antagonism to the 1-11 i t r T-v . - I um ijs qxpecieu irora jemocranc sources. t O' : Saville had re&ii began to seieaVi. her by the thr i . p. iier. Alter a s r. , i - and ran his thurnl stop her cries & hard th t lit? had She grabbed hir.i b that he had tirotmd h ceeded in throwing hi picture was knock d crash startled tho ir his hold on the vc;:r succeeded in ODerlia out, slamming it after 1 a spring lock shofclt r Here she renewed h r and the house was f.c en : : while, the burglar hi ir HOTEL tlOYAL t:-. :7! ' Seventeen Bodies Recover. New York, Feb., 0. Z: body maki ng sevente e n 1 1, found in the ruins of tii? this afternoon. I It v...: ,7 V man. Three mota vl-V: been recognized by nice r found on them. One v. Blake, of Sheldonville. : " was Mrs. J. Cohn, of Tcj other Louis Levi, of Lei, war atcoaiTcree:: be stamped! Several Hundred Shots Fire Bloodshed. Knoxville, Feb. 8. Tiici: at Coal Creek Saturday ni-I, result in any bloodsheu. Sev dred shots were fired by tho and the troops returned the : miners evidently hoped to sold iers to fhgh but were d izc y The wires were lib cut "c here, but was simply JdGvxtr. . TO BE GARROTED TO-i: Appeals for Clemency for the Fc: ish Anarchists Denied. Madrid, Feb. 9. The autk Xeres, where, to-morrowy will licly garroted four of tho -who led the attack on that 0 are taking precautions agnir. break by the lawle3 tic: executions will take place in 1 directly in front of tho pri the doomed men are con tin , pt&l for clemency, by th ; Cadiz, has been denied. Tnree Anarchists have been at Barcelona. The troops V kept in their barracks in re aay emergency. WILL WANAMAKER TLZ7 Rumor Sends Him to Franc c;: Clarkson His Succec-;.. Philadelphia, Feb. .10, 'a i rumor of impending Cabinet in quiet circulation. --Vli'f 4 mas i-er General Wanamak , svrj -wb?Tv - n :few - da r .1 sent to Paris to succeed Min i -law Reid, who 'has -long dc turn to the United States. Its important sequel is th: James S. Clarkson is to . bo Postmaster General. These rrloves on the board are said. to have been on the o5casion of ;Mr. ' Yi. visit to Mr. Clarkson at tho V in New York last Sunday. S.V A. 1 per was poeted in the Sun ooms to day. The Sunday ontinue as heretofore. rtORK, Feb. 8. Carlyle W. ilio poisoned his wife on Feb- Detroit, Mich., Feb. 8. The. Morn ing Sun -w ill suspend publication after to morro v ' mornin g. The Ty pographi- cal Union) refused to sanction the use of plates and a notice of discontinuance of the pa editorial Sun will Nsw Harris. ruary 1st, 181, and' who on last Tues day was convicted of murder in the first degr- e, was this morning sentenced to death, the execution to occur during the weei beginning March 21st. A motion f a new trial was denied. ColtjmI :a, S. C, Feb. 8 Rev. Geo. W. Kild w, a student at the theologi cal semiii try, committed suicide there this morning by almost severing his head froii his body with a razor. The act was committed at 5 a. m., and his young wfe had just left the room. Kildow was married in Nashville six months ajro and developed insanity on his bridaltrip Atlantvc City, N. J., Feb 8. The stranded steamer Venezuela was doited at 3 o'clock yesterday morning and proceeded at once for New York. About 80Q tons of coffee was unloaded before she moved, .and at high water, about 2:3C o'clock a, m., tugs working jointly, succeeded in moving her, when she quickly slid into deep water. She is in good condition. 1 1, , VI A PLUCKY GIRL. She Engaged in a Desperate Struggle with a Burglar. Pittsburg, Feb. 9. At 3 :30 o'clock this morning Miss Mamie Saville, who- lives with her mother at 9:40 Pennsyl vania Avenue, was awakened by some one laying! his hand on her forehead. Shr jtxmptd up quickly and asked who it was. KJie tne a aw a man sianamg before her and was so frightened f he wrisspeccj less.. - ";' She had not timo to recover her senses when tho intruder eii J : 14 Don't bet afraid:; you're only'.' tho nirl'hcrc, and I ttch? t hr.rm ycu. " : ' r "y -: A FOUGHT TWENTY LI 11,,. Miners Supposed the Gatlir Gu Broken All Quiet Not, Coal Creek, Feb. 8. Com rr tion has been reestablished, tL being down in only two place?.. The attack was rna& frc: 1 J.: ; at long range and the tiri:.;frer about twenty minutes, with ro ties among the .troops. AU i now. The attack was made u; ' Eosition that thel ttgatlliv; roken, a rumor tolthat c. ground in Coal Creek yc. The mining pump wc.i ", the engineer esrri d a : Creek for repairs. WTh- n . it was, he said a part of t' gun," intending it for a j HOTEL ROYAL BUI ir: One Hundred Persons Mhz:::z Fire Searching for tho E New Yor.K, Feb, C " Royal, at the Southeast c: avenue andy Fortieth f.in.v., the ground early y estc rd 1 : ' and a large number ot ll : their lives in the ruins. When the fire started ih guests in the hotel. Tho numbered 55. Of this r. pie, 8 have thus far b- . six are in the hospital i :. '. counted for. It is r entire number of de:.d. . over 30 at the largest The lo?s on buildin g a:: . estimated at t250,C0J. had Eufliciently cooled commenced for tho de; have been recovered. . , . r DEATH AND DEST Frightful SufTerings frc::: ' in Oklahc Kansas City, Mo., IV to the Star from Gut! that the recent cold w c gre it suffering amorj g t 5 in the Indian country, have already occurred.; tiers are now in a pre ,r. -Mrs. Tolford an 1 ;:. in tent near Pur wattoraic ; cour. i r this mornin .7. cxpocura aci i'" " feed. 'L. . 4. r, 1 f CI 1 ; ir t ll 1 if II If J Hi
The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 16, 1892, edition 1
3
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