Newspapers / The Day (Oxford, N.C.) / June 20, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE 13, W ! 1IASTHK i! L::rt;est City Circulation of any paper published in Oxford. j THE DAY GIVES All the News of the day and is furnished at lOcts. per week. VolcukM. Ni'miieu S3 OXFORD, N. C, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1890. Single Copies: 5 Cts vvj R fci N T o !ioubi:Ki:i:ri;Rs. .'raokars! Crackers! Grackerelj u func j jm rictivo! tJ iy anther shij-1 Xi-,vtxlcvlclr.xv JUUvardCliir LJJ., lkcr-a.Ilhc-:.u..ir vancti-s. i, -i.i . . t f;ip p Cm-1 !r;t Waicrs. Biscuit, Kntck Knars, XXX Soda, Gin ger Saaps, Scotch Cakes, Hon cv fumbles, etc. ,11 lMcii uciiioas r.o i)c suui at . t . A 1 . .. 1 1 X cost. Call todav; thev arc uo- i:r rapid! v. THAT ICB COLDSTREAM fror.i our fountain. And the -.tut i.itrun.t is KiIy as'iiniing larger ir'; :ss.. Cleanest Fountain, Det Every washed in clean well T. V. JACKSOX & CO., !! No. J. Oxford, N. C. .,U,W,J. r. . l I - vJUl j Drinks That IIUT- h Xot Intoxicate. ;.i W.i'tr, l.inrvadc. Lcraonndes. Milk m Mmif, Micrlnrrl, Ice Cream Si, Acid rho;h.ue, .vc- the twt-st 4 nil ihe jwH!lnr Minur.er .!: Nrvvrai-s fmrn !;e Snla Water Fo:ntuincf 1 s v.N -HAlTHg05K&60 rt'.b'v.- pc.i: and tvee and inviting. :Ktv r::iei in ctvau w.m r, anu :.if tiLll-IcH-nt lo ret while !riiiV.5n. Weiisconiv fb f jst Rock Sniy Syrups l-LAYOKHD WITH- :LFREFRUITJUICES, . . . . . ..... n-t "ori'-u. N artif'.ci.d extracts in m :r driiik. 5yr: i:i.n!e fleh .ty day. We rtco.nmend lorsford's Acid Fhosphate, c : i lu rvt tote and jePt-ral inv'oi :. t cT dij.cii-el fruv.i any fwiri;iiu. I; .x t..f endorse it. If ttl feel trI r exruuMeii Jnati worry i f the beat, t: ut tiew iifc in )ki. VK INYITK YOU MOST COKUIALLV io l'Viv a Cm 11, I f-"! a v-trvI yu -will Km! everything j I v; i - ).ti and nerit yir kUrn J V- cvi.trally Nc tetl. ttexl c 1- jt i.;ce, i'ar fountain i t'f. r.y' ct'nveiietly u.i ,r vd tor the eeiur-I j'-ullo of -viy in the city, IIAITHCOCK.& CO. ; : c!;cckts are Uothcrctl Just -v A Lout l:intlinir Some-: to Hat. "':,v: : Ferri' I a Krcikfnst Hams. J;nj5. iWcf Tonut andj Ilricd fiecf. New Orleans Mol.iscs very i";nv5t ukIi. Ptate. Kite, Oatmeal, Ilonjiny. Ca ::. J Fruit- r.ml Ycjjeta- bleH. Fakles, Sauces, v:c. - -v; attention called to another- W.Jones X: Co., IV 1 ;.l ksTo k .f7k bT-c la ss -lcclric Door Bell. rcr vr r.v II. D. WHITE, ac;knt for the i'nl'in PUrfrtVal Cnnntr!mnny friends here. He still teeis a -.-vuiUll LieanGdl WUppij .icd, itcrtst inalTairs of the Fourth fpany, of New York. . !:;n:cn of the votk can be seen at NOTES OF THE DAY. THE LOCAL HAPPENINGS SERVED IN SH0.1T PARAGRAPHS. T,,e M,llor auoui mc my - !,n!.rr1 u l"B "" i I lie imv. -Mr. w. K- uvior yicruay sun- i ... .-, . - -; P ' I rils tanie wi:n ripr tomatoes his table with from his garden. ir in varr prracmcu u.- uns morning with a fine, large fully-ripe fig, "rowii in. the qarden of the Irwin pjJCJ M-. Irin Carr presented us this The literary society meets tonight at the residence of Mr. J. H. Horner. It is expected to add a number of new names to the membership roll. The fellow working out a fine on the street gang, who slipped his chains votcrd.iv and took to his heels, was not recaptured. ed a heavy mail yesterday afternoon with large orucrs lor stock in the Ox- ford Iand, Improvement and Manu facturing Co. Mr. J. M. CurrinV tobacco crop, on his farm near the city, isan unusual - v f,nc onc 'phc earliest plants set out are now over four leet hitih. He has two hundred thousand hills. Mr. J. V. Xelson, a water works expert, was in the city yesterday. He a ill be here next w.'ck to meet the city commissioners in reference to making a preliminary survey to ascertain the ast of i-uttmi: in a system of water works in Oxford. It is not the sunset of life that srives to, th.. fair editress ot the Orphans' J'r:::J mt'cal lore, for our talented iter it, in the heyday of golden- ciowiud youth; but that she can peer into the future and write glowingly cf the co ning events her paper tin's week Uiraishes com-incing evidence. I hat account of the german, you know. Deputy Sh.rifi" J. F. Rogers received notice this morning that Governor I'owie lias nude nuisttton on the Governor of S.vith Carolina fjr IJjb . liwell, the convict who escaped from the sheriff of tins county several years ; go while leu g taken to Raleigh Mr. Roiiers will await to hear from Gov. Richsrdion before starting for Ins priso-cr. PURELY PERSONAL. Tlr mid lVlirrvahoul of Souk I'cople Von Iviiow. Mr. A. W. (rah;i'n went to Raleigh tcstcrd.ty afternoon. . Mr. R. S. Parb)ur, of South Roston, a., is in the city. . Mr. b. L.Adams returned to the city yet;rd.iy afternoon. Prof. G. A. Wauchope c ame back to the city xesterday afterjoou Miss Annie Jones, of the Orphan, Asylum, left yesterday afternoon for Morehead City and ILaufort. Miss HUa Tho ins, of Washington, N C.t arrived in the city yesterday a:umoo:i, and is the guests of her brother, Mr. L. Thomas. Mrs. S. P. Couch, wh ho has lxen on visit to Danville, Ya., returned to Oxford yesterday evening. Mr. U. A. Davis got back home this morning (roni a successful trip in Western N rth Carolina for the Oxford Lvul, Improvement and Manufactur ing Co. Hon. A. H. A. William in response to a cordial invitation, w ill deliver a a public id dress at the installatHjiiof oliicers ot the Reidsvilb Masonic Lcxleon June 24th. Oxonians seem to be .in demand lor these occasions t.v.s ear. Mr. K. K. Paschall, formerly of the ! AV.vs cf. Oxfttr1., but now in the in surance business at Richmond, Ya., arrived in the city yesterday afternoon and is being Warmly greeted by his Esta e." RuhlMrr Dcltinsftnd Packing at J. F. Edwards. THE GERMAN LAST NIGHT. The Intrusive Sun Surprises the Danc er in "Wain's Entrancing "Whirl The King of Day was peeping over the eastern horizon with a bright, smil- mg lace when the last strain or ; sweet miuir Hied iumv and the mrticinants i , t in tlw wnmn nf l.iit nidit r'raswl nav i j i: .. .1., ..: r n" "g tuuu ai uic buuuc ui itiiiuic. The dance was delightfully delisht- fnl so the enthusiastic devotees of the iui, so the enthusiastic devotees o! ,u fantastic pronounced it, and . , : .... tainly a more brilliant and succe: cer- successful afiair of the kind has not -been i given here this season. . j There were some twenty Couples on the floor a notable gathering of most lovely women, richly costumed, and manly, graceful young meii. It was an occasion of entrancing, unalloyed enjoyment, and will; linger in the memory of everyone present. A meed of praise is due the splendid management, and the fine music dis coursed by the Raleigh orchestra. Assessing the xiailroads. The chairman ot the Grinville coun ty commissioners, Mr. T. D. Waller, returned to the city last night. fHe was in Raleigh Tuesday, where he met the chairmen of the Durham and Vaice boards for the purpose of assessing the Durham & Northern Railroad for taxa- Hon. lhe amount hxed upon tor the roadbed and track-was $4,000 a mile, the s.ime as last year. - - J Wednesday, Mr. 'Walter was "in Durham to list the Oxford & Clarks- viile Railroad in conjunction with the rhnl-mnn nr tht Dnrham rommis'sion- T , f ., , , oiucers they adjourned to meet in ux- ord "ext 1 hursday. Next Tuesday that xrtion of the Atlantic & Danville Railroad in North Carolina will be assessed here by the chairmen of the Person, Cas well and Granville boards Next Wednesday, at Henderson, the Oxford & Henderson Railroad .will be n,.-rl Krhoes from Jlorelitntl City. (Correspondent of This Day.) Morehead Citv, N. C., Junc-iS. Less than four hundred of us tired, d,Jsty, hungry, but cheerful reached the Atlantic Hotel last evening at 7:70, r .. ... for once on time. A heariy supper r r ' , , , 01 sou crao, escaiop nsn, etc., was eaten, and then came the renewing of old acquaintances and the forming of new ones. This annual convention is really a smiling oasis .in the teacher's life.: There is a heartiness of hand grasp, a cordiality of greetingf a sincerity of r .. - , . ' feeling, a frankness of' interchange of exj)erience that make these meetings truly helpful and inspiring. One notici able leature of the present gathering is the small jer cent of distinguished teachers in it. A 1 irge.' number of new faces is seen this year than usual. Our cpuhty has a good' representa tion a tf numbers. Some fellow whis pered to me thatSranville was repre sen ted bv the handsomest ladies and the homeliest men of any county. Today the teachers enjoyed a com plimentary sail given them by the ! boatmen of the viilaire. Tomorrow the Assembly, will get regularly .down to work. Only one mail a' day is a serious inconvenience to. us who are ' use J to several. ' f t. Wm, Deering's Mowers, and Reapers Cinders for sale by J. F. Edwards. . . Buy the Excelsior Cook Stove. The best in use, at J..F. Edwards'. OVER THE WIRES. A RAILROAD ACCIDENT. ATTEND ED WITH FATAL RESULTS." Three Persons Killed and Twenty OOiers Injured hy the Wreck of a Bal timore & Ohio train. , By telegraph to Thk Day. New York Tune 2C1 A Baltimore & Ohio passenger train was wrecked at Child's Station, a short distance from this city, this morning.. Three per sons were killed outright, and twenty probably more received severe injuries. All were brought here. . -. - A Terrible Brute Hanged. By telegraph to The Day. Quebec, June, 20. Rudolf Dubers was hanged this morning. He mur dered his wife, mother-in-law . and two children at Stalbons. last February. He made a full confession of his ter rible crime on the scaffold. . . - Disastrous Kail road Wreck. Of the accident on the Asheville and Spartanburg Railroad Teusday night, a later dispatch says: JPerhaps the most destructive wreck, both in life and property, ever known in the his tory, of the Western North Carolina Railroad occurred at Melrose station at the southern ' side of the Saluda mountain about thirty-two miles from this city on the Asheville and Spartan burg, S..C, division last night. The dead are Engineer!. J. Smyr"a,of Ches- terT'S. C, Engineer Lewis Teenstall, of Yorkown, Va., Fireman A.. G. lay-lor,-.'.:;Of. Morristowa, -Tejin-.son xjl W. P. Taylor, for twenty years con ductor on' the East Tennessee, Yirgi nia and Georgia Railroad. The in jured are C. Bowcock, flagman thigh broken; George Ricketts, conductor, injuries not serious, escaptd by jamp- iner: Wm. Hoe, fireman, slight injuries, escaped by jumping; two colored brake-- men, named Foster and Greenlee, painful but not; dangerous wounds. From "the apex of Saluda mountain to Melrose, the scene of the accident, a distance of less than three miles, there is a fall of fully six hundred feet. This fact has made the railroad authori ties specially careful at this point, and an engine is kept constantly there to help-all trains-up and down the moun tain. The track was very wet last night when a coal train started down, and soon alter beginning the descent it became evident that twelve loaded cars were to much for both engines to hold, with all breaks down, and the speed gradually quickened under the heavy pressure until a speed of seventy-five miles an hour was reached when the track spread; and the entire train plunge headlong down the . mountain with a'terrible crash; burying beneath the broken cars, cross ties and earth the brave men who had stood to their posts. ,. ' THE TRAINS. OXFORD & CLARKSVILLE R. R. Northbound trains arrive 10:46 A. M., and 8:05 p. m. . - Southbound tramslmve 1:50, p.m., and 4:13, p. m. OXFORD & HENDERSON R. R Trains arrive io:oo,jv. m., and y.Z P. M. " ""' ' Trains depart 1 1:00, a. m,, and -4:4c p. m ' -. , ' ; : ' Cash for Ice. It Is impossi&Ie.for us to keep ice accounts. The amounts are smallund require too much time to keep the books. . - : ' After this date purchasers must pay cash or buj' tickets. The tickets are $i.ob, $2.00 or $3.00; Any portion of the ticket not punchedwill.be redeemed- with cash any time before Oct. 1st, 1S90, at ' ' V J, G. IIallX Double price will be charged for ice ajj-er the electric lights are turned 011. .Dwelllnj; House for Rent. Six iarge rooms. On Main street Con- venientlyjocated. Apply to , " J. F. Royster. I t ' " , . ' ." Brewster, Soule, King. Rice Coil, Spiral, Thomas Coil and Boughton spring buggies' prices ffom 35 to $135 each, at ' . OwKN,"BARiiouK & Smith. FRESH FROM THE PRESS. State and General Items of. Interest from Today's Papers. Raleigh is kicking against the cen sus, for that city. The News- Observer says.- "If the census enumerators have completed their work, and the Neios-Observer understands that to be the case, the thing is a complete farce. There are scores of," people who have never yet seen a census man." A dispatch from Houston, Tex., says that the Houston Light Guards are under arms, by order of Gen. King, being in readiness to respond to a call from Sheriff Harmond,of Polk coun ty, in which trouble is expected. The negro, at Livingston, who cut the throat of a white ntan named Morris a few days ago, was lynched by a posse of armed men. In revenge a band of negroes killed two of the men alleged to be implicated. A bloody race war is feared. The Greensboro Patriot . says: "Just after 'the match-game of base ball at Warnersville, in the southern suburbs of the city, between the Graham and Greensboro nines, all colored, in which the Grahams were badly beaten, on Monday evening, Doc Watson, the -captain of the Graham nine, assaulted Bob. Edwell, a colored spec tator, with a bat break! ng- it over his head. A free fight then took place, a number of the participants being bad ly used up. Edwell died this morn ing, his skull having - been fractured." Watson has skipped. It is said that the Scithern Repub licans in the House will oppose the Federal Election bill. President Har Vison " is getting scared. Speaker Reed called at the White House and in the course of a conversation with the President the latter very bluntly declared . that the course of the House in .regard to the Federal Election bill was entirely too rapid, and ''smacked too much of a disposition to coerce legislation." It is not that President Harrison is so much a friend of the South; it is that he loves Harrison, and his ambition for a reiiomination more. He realizes that, Reed is making a bold stroke for the Presidential nomination. In pursuing the conversation, tha President said he deemed it unwise on the part of the House to press legisla tion that? was apparently, antagonized, by the Senate! He thought there was antagonism enough already, and that the House; had better proceed with more deliberation and make an eflort to get in line with the Republicans of the Senate.' Speaker Reed, took the President's advice in high dudgeon. Hotel Granville for sale or rent. Pos session given at ronce. Apply to R. V. Minor. ' - . ,' ; , . Nice lot fishing tackle at J. F. Edwards' : .' ' . . 1 - A dwelling house, with garden,, for rent at $5.00 per month. Apply at this office. - Ladies Phaetons, Sufries and Jump-scats. Carload of wagons, one and two horseJitavy and light. Prices to suit the closest buyers. Come in and see them. V Owen, Barbour & Sjuth. ; . ; 1 ' ' An agent of a yealthy English syn dicate is negotiating for the purchase of nearly all the largest tobacco facto ries in -Lynchburg, Ya. ; ; ' Large stock Paints and Oils at J. K. ."Ed wards'. ; , f ' . ,.' . ' - Large stock of Iron Age Cultivatoxa- and Double Shovel Plows for sale by J..F Ed wards. . . ! -s " ' " Parties wishing to uurchase Iron S; ;fes will save money by calling on J. F- i Ed wards. He is agent for Macneal ' Ur band's Iron Sales. v " . : ; : ; Large stock Vagon and Buggy matxa ial for sale at J. F-. Edwards'. .i. Harvesters, Mowers and Hay Rakes,, tthe best made1 sold by ' :: . Owen, Barbour & Smitjc' ' , . - rtefiTig your orders for tobacco flues, to J. F. Edwards. . J". ; " BiV -RfVHik of Carts, lo difTereht styls i Stude f?i"er Frasie's warranted one y fz. - fT. OWFN, JLJARUqUU. bMlTH..
The Day (Oxford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 20, 1890, edition 1
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