Newspapers / The Washington Gazette (Washington, … / May 7, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Washington Gazette (Washington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
J 7 E GAZETTE. The Gazette scircu lation out numbers all other papers in town Subscription Books open to all Advertis ers take note Keep up with th times. Take the Ga zette all the New everv week lor $1.50 a year. THE OLD NORTH STATE FOREVER. 7 VOL. XIII. WASHINGTON, BEAD FORT CO., N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1891, NO- 48. DIKECTOIIV. STATE AND OOVERIJJIEST. Governor, Daniel G. Fowle, of Wake. Lieutenant-Governor, ThoinasM. Holt of Alamance. Secretary of Slate;, of Wake. Tre.inier, Donald W Bain, of Wake. Auititor, George W. banderlin, Wayne. Superintendent of Public Instruction, Sidney M Finger, of Catawba. Attorney General, Theodore F David son, of Buncomle STATE BOAH1) OF AGRICULTURE. .Cowiriji' ricr, John Ilobinson. ,!''. my. ! K Bruner. Chemist,!:, ert li Battle. ' ' liv.i; .-ition, Jno Robb"ii3on ex- SUI'KEME COURT. Chief Justice, A S.i'-i eiriinon, of Wake Asso'te Justices, J J I wis, of Franklin .J.une- E. Shepherd, of Beamort aiiii Alfonzo C. Avery, -of Bute, Walter Clark, of Wake. JUDGES SUPKRIOU COURT. First District, George' II Brown, of lieauforf. Second Jis: ; ict, -Henry R Bryan of ( 'raeh. Third District, II G Connor, of Wilson. Fourth District, S. WliitaUer, of Wake. Fifth Ditri.' t, Boll W . M inttoi , (f Granviile. ' Sixth District, E 'l' Boykin, of Sampson. Scventli District, James U Mcliae, of Cumberland. KiKtit District 11 F Armfield, Irer Ninth uisirict, .1 i( uraves, of ll Tenth District. John G Bynum, Buike. Elevent h District, W M Shlpp, of Meck lenburg. Twelfth District, James II Merrinion. of Buncombe. - HKl'itKSENT ATI VEST IN CONGRESS. fcenate, Zebulon B Vance, of Mecklen burg;MHt w Ransom, of North munptor. House oi iiepresentatives, irst District W'-A Ii-Br.mch, of Beaufort. Second District, 11 F Cheatham, col., . of Vance, Third Di.trict, B F Grady of Duplin. Fourth District, li II Buhn, of Nash. Fiffh District, A A II Williams, of (infnville. Sixth District, S B Alexander, of Meek leiibury. Siiventh Iiistrlct, J S Henderson, Rowran hiu'htii District, v ii li cowies, Wilkes Ninth District, W T C r.-uvf ord, ofliay- wood. f COUNTY. Sheriff atid Treasurer, It T Hodges. Superior court clerk, G Wilkens. Kejjister of Deeds, M F Williamson. Surveyor, Mayo L Waters. Coroner, F 11 Lewis i Commissioners, Dr W J Bullock, ch'm .DM Gaskill. W B W'indley, Hen ry Hornier, C M Brown, J II Small Attorney. Board of Education, F P Wilkinson e!fm: P II Johnson, F B Guilford. Superintendent of Public Instruction i Rev. Nat Harding. -Supt ot Health, Dr D T Tayloe. CITY. Mayor, Jos. G, Chauncey. Clerk, J A Burgess. 1 Treasurer, J B .Sparrow. Chief of Police, W II McDevett. Ceuncilmen, J G Chauncey, Jno Hav ens, S II Williams, II B Mayo, J D Cordon, A J Brown, IF A Bridgers. VilT.S Northern due daily at 8p m. Closes a - bi p m. Greenville, due 12:30, closes 1:30 North and South side river due daily at tj 1 m; closes at 6 following mornings. Oilier Hours, 9 a m to 5 p in. 31 or ey Order and Registry Department, am to 5 p m. G E Uuckman, F M. T C Uuckman, Ass't. CHURCHES. Metirodist, Rev W S Davis, pastor. Ser vices every Sunday morning and evening. Sunday School at 4 pm, A W Thomas, Superintendent. I res'ty tcrian, Rev. E E Bigger Pastor. bervices every Sunday morniEg and night. Sunday School at 4 p m, Jas L Fowle, Superintendent. Episcopal,' Rev Nat Harding, Rector. Services every Sunday morning and .night. Sunday school at 4 p m, Ed . i mur.d Alexander, Superintendent. Baijtisi, licv. .1. F. Tuttle. Pastor. J Services 1st and 3rd Sundays in each month. Morning and even ing. Sunday school 9:30, a, m. W. W. Thonms,' Sup'ut. V.-M. ('. A. meets eyery Thursday night, l'rayer meettng everv Sunday Al l ..-clock; p. m. Y M C A Hall, form eily (tpera House.. ' . TEVl'ERAXCE MKETINGS. ,'W c T U Regular meeting every Thurs d:iy,4pni at Town Hall. Club and Union Piayer meeting' every Sunday, in Town Hall at 3 p m. Hand of Hope meets every Friday. LODGES. Orr Lodge, Mo 104, A F and A M meet . at Masonic Hall 1st and 3rd Tuesday nights of each month, E S Hoyt, W . -M; RT Hodges, Sec. I hal .nx Lodge, No 10, I O O F, meets every 1st and 3rd Friday night at their hall, C M Brown, N G; W J ; trumpler,Sec'y. . . Washington Lodge, No 1,490, Knigh of Honor, meets 1st and 3rd Thurs day nights at Odd Fellows' Hall, T J 'armalt, Dictator; Arthur Mayo, , . . reporter; J R Ross'. F Reporter. Llill'orH Council, No 350, American Le g i"iis of Honor, meets every 2nd and I h lhiirstlay nightsat Odd Fellows' it- 15rown, commander;) M Cherry, collector, i amin o Lodge, No 715, Knights and Ladies of Hoooi , meets 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Odd Fellows ' Hall, . , V Al Cherry, Protector ;TP Brown, Secretary. "v mander.Dr n SmH. Secretay. Manure only sufficient for one Te if half wasted if put on two acre. Highest of all in Leavening Powei. Hsior Lodge, No 31, O G C, meets 1st and 2nd Tuesday night at Odd lellows'HalLDr S.'T. Nicholson ABSOUUTELY PURE GL A.DSTONI AL VIEWS OF . WOMAN. The Stateman Has No Admira tioiiior the "Unsexed" Sister hood . At the fifty-first anniversary of their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Glad stone invited a lot of the Burling ton night school girls to have an ice with thera.on the laws. The girls went in their prettiest white frocks, their, brightest rlbWns and sweetest smiles, and after congratulations formed a circle about the venerable statesman and held him 'captive for a "school-girls speech. t( What those pretty British maid ens heard must have made a very deep impression. Mr. Gladstone reminded them that they belonged to: the favored half of the' human race; that they were sweet and lovely because they were women, and that their very pre sence was sunshine to the world, lie "ran over" the achievements of their sisters and their mothers, ad mitted the improvements their in dustry and earnestness had brought about, and predicted even greater and better changes. Then he be came" very emphatic, and jerking his right arm away back let fly a powerful blow at the strong minded grenadier women of the age. "I do not believe in the usexed women, and I am not in sympathy with the masculine woman is doubt ful. The blue stocking, the busi nesswoman and the female politician is a superfluity . lie referred to the saloon readers as unlovely , called the political re formers his" "shrieking sisters, ( and numbered the "female bull lighters and female leaguers, among the in tolerable evils of society. His ob servation led him to, believe that "the greatest need of the world is home womeh -and home girls to make that sacred spot beautiful, wholesome , lovely." He thought the world too big and too bad for any one club. one organization or one community to reform. Home is a little place, and there a good wo man can make a heaven, rear a throne and reign a goddess. In concluding this wise old parliamentarian said, shading his eyes with his hand and looking towards Mrs. Gladstone, who listened' at tentively and ' ap plauded with approving smiles: "I cannot think that anything which attempts or affects to alter funda mental Py the relation which the Al mighty himself has,, established, the deisgn of wdiich he has marked out inDur constitutions and capacities, or which draws women out of their own sphere, would ever succeed.'' Some of his views are most dis couraging. He has "the greatest admiration for the "woman who has done something in any line, provided he kept away from the public," but has .yet to meet the heroine of a career who is not brazen or tiresome. "It is not the fault," he says, "but the result ef contamination. No one enn elbow the sweetness we prize in woman." He thinks that the ga that comes from the outer world from the shop, the rostrum and the public procession is more than overpowered by the loss of modesty. gentleness, faith and womanly dig nity. ' .When asked what women .should do he said: "Marry, make homes, mind their children, keep the honey moon from eclipse and keep off the street. Any reforms they want to make should be made through the husband." When told that all women could not marry he said: "It is their own fault, then. A. sweet woman cannot be resisted," which means that too many of our girls are being educated and trained on a wrong basis. Lon don Letter. Frank Chambers, of Friendly Grove, in Clay county, Indiana, killed an otter in his orchard, which had made its way from Eel river, nearly two miles distant. It is the first-Otter seen in that lccali ty lor over twenty years. TJ. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. Origin of the Mafia. Crime-stained as it is to-day, and ghastly with murder every step of its jirtuous secret career, the "Mafii" sprang into being from an inspiration of patriotism, but its'yery-birth was heralded by a libation of blood. Many years ago we read its sto ry in an English magazine (if rec olfaction is faithful), and that rec ollectjoixis freHheuw4-yu recent communication in the St. Louis Republic, though our remembrance of the incidents differ - somewhat from the narrative of the -SU Louis correspondent. The "Mafia'' society is over six hundred years old, having its ori gin at the revolt of -Palermo, which took place during an Easter cere monial in the suburbs of that city in the year 1282. A beautiful young girl and her betrothed, in accordauce with the quaint and primitive customs of that people, approached the Church of the Holy Ghost to be united in mar riage at its altar; and, while the lover sought the venerable padre in the little room at the rear of the bui ding, his bride paused up on the thieshold. As she stood expectant graceful as a fawn, fair as a dream, her innocent heart throbbing with its new born hap piness a drunken sergeant of the French garrison, Druet by name, strode up behind her, threw his arms around her waist, and thrust a huge, brutal hand into her pure, snowy bosom. With a cry of horror and tear, the poor child tore herself from his pollut ing grasp, and turned to fly; but the heel of her dainty slipper caught in the coping of the stone pave ment, and she fell, striking her head aeainst a sharp projection of the church cornice. Atthat instant the returning lover's eyes fell upon his beautiful mistress lifeless, her white brow gaping with its cruel wound, her long long tresses dabbled with her blood. With the savage fury ot a wild beast he threw himself upon Druet, bore him to the earth, and drove his 8tilletto to the ,vietch's heart, saying: "Morte alla Fkancia P "Death to the French!" There was a morntnt, a pause of silence, and then that maddened cry became the roar of infuriated thousands. It swelled and deep ened; it took more solemn meaning oecaine nationalized and then burst forth, "Morte alla Fran cia Italia Anela !" -'Death to the French is Italy's cry !" For seventy two hours jt.be armed bands, headed by the father and betrothed of the hapleM girl, hunt ed down the hated French, and their search was as the Quest of the tiger and the bloodhound. But retribution was to come af ter this carnival of blood, and, in dread of the veugeuce ot the French nation, these unhappy peo pie formed themselves into secret organizations, with the password and name of the society made up of the initial letter of the words which compose that fateful death thus forming "Mafia." Its object was resistance to oppression, and as the lapse of years added to its power and influence, it stretched forth its hand against the rich and mighty in behalf of the poor and the downtrodden. Today it is but the hideous cloak of the the creep ing thug and the assassin of the n ight. Fayetteville Observer. A Suggestion to East Carolina. - As a stepping stone to Chicago, the foot of North Carolina must be firmly. planted here in Raleigh. The Southern Exposition to be held here will give promise of what the State can do, and whatever of deficiency may appear can readily be supplied in the interval between . the two expositions. Let it be understood that our county fairs, State fair, Southern exposition, are but parts of one whole to culminate in all their importance in the great World's Fair at Chicago. News fc Observer. The Ghost Dancers Enlisting. Omaho, April 28. The .news comes to Gen. Brooke, commander of the department of the Platte, that the Indians are rapidly enlist ing in the cavalry service. Troop L, Sixth Cavalry, has been organiz ed complete with Brule Sioux, in cluding the most war-like of the ghost dancers. FRATRICIDE NEAI1 WADES BOKO. Two Brothers Quarrel Over a Trace Chain, and One Kills the Other. Wadesboro, N. C Thos. Rickets, a white man who lived near the South Carolina line, about thirteen miles south of Wadesboro, was killed by his brother, Cr.iv in Rick ets, Thursday evening. They were disp uting abcut two feet of common trace chain , each claiming the chain to be his. A fight ensued when Calvin seized a board and struck TU$raas two licks , cne on the back and the other on the head. When the lick upon the head was struck Thomas fell to the ground with his skull broken. Their mother was present . and tried to get Calvin to help her car ry Thomas into the house, but he refused to do so and went about his plowing. The mother managed to get Thomas into the house where he lived a few hours and expired. Calvin Avas brought here last night and placed in jail. Too Much Ipecac. One of our North Carolina ex changes says: Mr. Frank Winston, of Bertie, who was the Republiean nominee for Superior Court Judge, has come out in a card declining the nomina tion and withdrawing from the Re publican party, giving as a reason therefor that it is high time all de cent white men had quit a party sec tional in its tendencies and inimical to the South . This reminds us of a very amus ing episode which -occurred at the well known, at the time, High School at Henderson, North Caroli na, which was conducted for a long time by Prof. Fetter, formerly of the University of North Carolina, and his two sons, Fred and Charles, all of them ripe scholars and good, clever gentlemen. At the time we were in attendance at this school, Mr. Frank Winston and another boy named Knight, from Tarboro, were among the boarders, and another named Rowland, a country boy, whose thoughtful mother pro vided him with delightful tarts, cakes and such like delicacies for his noon lunch, was among the "day scholars." Day after day Rowland had to go minus his lunch, the temp tation was too great for the fellows away from home, and so the lunch es Mysteriously disappeared, and the most industrious inquiries and the most vociferous threats never brought to light the offending boys or prevented a continuation of - the vexations. Finally Rowland lost all patience, and so he laid a trap that could hardly fail to bring out satisfactory developments. He was not disappointed in the result. . The satisfactory developments came out in due time, and under these circum stances': One afternoon young Winston veiy soon after recess left his seat, and with a face as pale as death walked to the Professor's desk and asked to be allowed to go home, as he wras quite ill. About five min utes afterward young Knight went through a similar performance. In a corner of the school room sat Rowland , several other students and this writer, all nearly convulsed with laughter. Rowland had put ipecac in the lunch that day and had let us into the secret. Winston and Knight had been gi eat teasers be fore this, but afterward 4Jieyr were decidedly- less "plagues," and Frank, we remember, was a particu larly bright , intelligent and popu lar fellow. It is evident that he has simply repeated his boyhood's experience, and we are glad that friend Frank, whose father was a distinguished Democrat, and who was reared as such, should have found out so soon that Republican principles contain two much politi cal ipec?c for a Southern gentleman to long stomach. Now that he is where he ought al ways to have been , we venture to predict that Mr. Winston's fine abilities will make him rise rapidly in his profession . We extend him a hearty welcome and bespeak for him a brilliant career. "Bye the bye, Mr. Winston married a very charm ing Portsmouth lady a few years jo. Portsmouth Progress. An animal that is not she ltered in cold wether will probably eat a third more than one that is, and not do nearly as well either. LATEST STATE NEWS. Oxford has voted $40,000 for Rail Road bonds. Horner's School at Oxford is to have new buildings. The Goldsboro fair is to be held August 4, 5, and 6, 189F. Blue fish are unusually plentiful at Morehead City this season- The next .State encampment opens at Wrightsville July 17, 1891 There is a prisoner or an in sane pe; in tue 11 tt county jail.'' TheWSre now 2,201 Alliances in theState. Four years ago there wa but one. Three negro men were drowned in Neuse river near La Grange on the night of April 15. Thos. Badger was nominated by the Democratic rimaries for the next mayor ot Raleigh. Wake Forest won over the TJni versify team in a match game of baseball at Raleigh. Score was 10 to 7. A fire in A. Branch's large dry goods store in Charlotte on Sun day morning, the 19, did several thousand dollars vorth of harm. The little five year old son of Mr. Ellis Medlin, who lives about two miles from Monroe,.: was drowned in Richardson creek on last Wed nesday. Henry Bradham, the negro who murdered John B. Mocca, the Ital iau, in Charlotte, on the 11 inst., ha& been convicted and sentenced to be hanged on May 21. Dr. T. R. Williams, who lives about a mile from Swepsonville, shot and killed a negro in his lot ouSunday night, the 19. The ne gro was after his horse. Mr. Sara u, runups aieu at ms residence near Concord, N. C; on last Wednesday in the 82 year of his age. He was one of the most esteemed citizens of the county. Maj. W. L. Faisou died at his home in Clinton on the night of the IS inst., in the fifty second year of his age. Lie was Major of the Second Regiment of the State Guard. The store of Messrs. VV. H. Las ley & Sous, at Mebaue, was bur glarized on Sunday night, April 19. The safe was blown open and about 200 in money and valua bles were stolen. All reports agree that the pros. pects lor a nne wheat crop were never.bettter at this seasou. The wheat crop is never safe till it is in the bin, but at this time it prooii ses an abundant yield. A fire on last Wednesday morn ing at the extensive saw and planing mills of Mr. Walter L Paisley in the northern part of Wilmington, did damage to the extent of about 8,000. Governor Holt made requisition today on Governor McKinney, cf Virginia, fo r George Albright, col ared, who is wanted for larceny in Rochiugham county, and who is under arrest at Danville. On last Wednesday night at Liberty on the C. P. Y. V. Rail road, the store of J. J. Busik & Co. was entered and the sate blowc open and robbed of between five and six thousand dollars Mr. Jonathan Havens has been appoiuted by the United States Census office to take statistics of the manufacturing productive in uustries oi jew uerne. ms pow ers are the same as given to the census enumerators. He will wait upon the people next week Sunday morning just after the Rev. R. A. Ricks, Christiau minis ter of Burlington, N. d had com meuced his sermon before a large congregation which had assembled at the Methodist church, in that place, he was stricken with apo plexy and died almost instantly. There is a growing belief that it was not a convict, but some other person who outraged the aged lady near Hope Mills, Cumberland couu ty, a few days ago. So far there appears to b8 no evidence against the convicts who have been ac cused. The investigation coatin ues. Mr. Silas W. Morris, a young white man who went from Raleigh to Goldsboro several months ago, died in that city on Tuesday even in?, the 21 inst., of hydrophobia. About three months ago Mr. Mor ris was bitten by a little fice dog, but it was thought to be nothing but a mere scratch, as it readily healed up? and he suffered no in convenience therefrom. Ex. State Auditor Sanderlin has ac cepted further invitations to deliv er the literary addresses at the commencements of Lexington Academy on June' 4; Judson Col lege, June II. and several others, beside a number of addresses of an agiicultural sort and at Soldiers' Re-Union. Thomasville has offerered a buU&tBg. or-SlO.OOO in cash for the location of the Normal and Indus trial. School for girls there. Ma rion has offered to give so much as 17,000 for its locatioa there, and Graham votes in a lew days upon the question of giving 120,000 for its location there. The value of this institution to any town is $ 15, 000 per year. The members of the Raleigh bar met last week and many of them delivered most touching and elo quent eulogies upon the greatly la rnented Dmiel G. Fowle. 'Twas fitting that such marks ot esteem should have been showu to the memory of the brilliant lawyer, el egant orator and true patriot. We were much impressed with the tributes paid to the the distin guished North Carolinian. Farm ers advocate. A telegram brought the sad news thatMajor Wm. A. Hearne had just died in Winston. Major Hearne was one of the ablest edi tors of the State and had more than a Statewide reputation. At the time of his death he resided in Winston and was connected with Twin City Daily Sentinel. He lived in New Berne a number of years and married Miss Sarah 13 Street, daughter of Mr. S. K. Street, sr. She survives him. Ma jor Hearne was a native of Wilson county and was about 49 years o age. TWINKLINGS. Client-Y-you a-a-are a-a sco- scoundrel, s-sir. Lawyer Take that word back this moment. Client N-no, s-sir, I-I-I'm t-t-oo gla-gia-glad to g-get it out. Phil. Times. Ambitious Writer Mr. Naggus will you oblige rae by putting a value on this manuscript. Editor of Magazine (after reading it) I can't do it, Mr. Borus. 13ut I will give you an estimate on it. Chicago Tribune. i Miss Gaustique 1 hear you won the 444-yards run. De Boaster Oh, easily. The other fellows weren't in it. Miss Caustique Ah, you were the only one entered, I presume. Harvard Lampoon. Ricker (to Fogg, who 'has just told a story) And you say that happened to you yourself? . Fogg Certainly; you don't doubt ny word, do you? Ricker Fogg, you ought to cul tivate your memory a great deal. That is the same story I told you about two years ago. Harper's Ba zar, f "Don t you favor this idea of cremation?" asked the old gentle man who sat next to him. "No, sir, I don't," said the other man emphatically. "Cremation and crime are synonymous terms with me. I have been in the grave stone business long enough to know that the old-fashioned method of bu rial is in every way the best." Somerville Journal. It happened at Springfield. Scene, barber's shop. Victim to barber: "Is this your establishment?" "No, only half of it is mine." "So you have a partner?" "The man at the next chair owns the other half." "Why don't you own his share?" "That's my b isiness." ' 4 Well , " if you own one-half and the other half's your business, why don't you own the shop?" Boston Commercial Bulletin. A .Little Girls Experience in a Lighthouse. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Trescott are keepers of the Gov. Lighthouse at Sand Beach, Mich., and are blessed with a daughter, four years old. Last April she was taken down with meales, followed with a dreadful cough and turning into a fever. Doc tors t home and at Detroit treated her, but in vain, she grew worse rapid ly, until she was a mere "handfnl of bone." men sne mea ir. .King s New Discovery and after the use of two and a half bottles, wan completely cured. They say Dr. King's New Discovery is worth its weight in gold, yet you may get a trial boitle free at Bogart's Drugstore. Grass seeds cannot be sown too early after the snow leaves, Short Hair Came Into Fashion. Charles the V. is said to have first brought short hair into fashion, when,, afflicted with severe headaches, he had his locks clipped as close as might be. The Cavaliers more than ever cherished their flowing curls' distinguishing them selves markedly from their opponents,- the Parlia mentarians, who shaved close, and earned the names of Crop-ears and Round-heads. Ex. Force of Character. Character is made up of small du ties faithfully performed of self denials, of self-sacrifices, of kindly acts of love and duty. The back bone of character is laid at home; and whether the constitutional ten dencies be good or bad, home influ ences will, as a rule, fan them into activity. "He that is faithful in little is faithful in much; and he that is unfaithful also in much." Ex. Re marks Derogatory to Orleans. New London, April 28. A Rome dis patch says that some stir has be en caeated there amonar visitors from the Southern part of the United States by derogatory remarks which J the United States Consul General Augustus Bourn is said to hare ut tered about New Orleans. The Southerners say that Bourn has some reason for being prejudiced, against that city. Truth and Honesty. Truth and honesty show them selves in various ways. They char acterize the men of just dealing, the faithful men of business, the men who will not deceive you to their own advantage. Honesty is the plainest and humblest manifestation of the principle of truth. Full measures, just weights true sam ples, full service, strict fulfillment of engagements, are all indispensa ble to men of character. Ex. First Seagoing Vessel. The first vessel, it is said, oi which we have any description is the ark built by Noah under the directions of the Almighty. Assuming a cubit to be about 18 inches of our meas ure, its length was about 450 feet, its breadth about 75 feet and its depth about 45 feet, with tan arch or round-up of the upper deck of about 18 inches. Selection. Semi- Transparent Robes. The Seriae Testes, or semi-trans parent robes, which the Roman la dies took so much pleasure in veil ing their forms with in the decline of the Empire, were most probably fine India muslins imported into Italy through the territory of Seres the Bochvra of modern times. Dry Goods Chronicle. National Airs of Various Coun tries. France has her 4 4 Marseilles;" Austria has her "Gotter halte Franz den Kaiser;" Prussia, her 44 Heil der im Siegerkranz;" Belgium, her "Branbanconne;" England her 4 4 God Save the Queen;' and Ameri ca her 4 4 Star Spangled Banner." Ex. Origin of Personal Property. Personal property first began to make itself felt as a power in the time of Licinii, the great Roman contractors. But it was only in modern times that it has become so enormously devoloped as to compete with realty in volum. Ex. The First Step. Perhaps you are run down , can't eat, can't sleep, can't think, can't do anything to your satisfaction, and you wonder What ails you. STou should heed the warning, you are taking the first step into Nervous Prostration. You need a nerve tonic and In Elec tric Bitters' you will find the exact remedy for restoring your nerves to its normal, healthy condition. Surpri sing results follow the use of this nerve tonic and alterative. Your appetite return, good digestion restored, and the; liver and kidneys resume healthy action At Bogart's drugstor e costs money to build good roafis, but such expenditure will be repaid in the lessened wear and tear J on lorses and wagons, and the dri vers good nature. - When Ml i t&wr-t SYMPTOMS OB IJVER DISEASE I thnMiif5 bd breath; bad to U SoM?: rain vmrt" & SSftJ" L ln thp side-: . ecu with flatulency and water-brash; ii. . yilTi wela lax and costive bV tnn? r.he "AdnH. heavy sen : SEte?"' Wlh Ben8a"n ot having 1& something undone which ought to h vtb been done; fUUness after satin ; ted S2555rirUW tlrd ling; yelloW ,? "otf htSklP and eyes' diziineM, etS! eat hb alT,ay some of these indi cate want of action of the Liver. For A Safe, Beliable Remedy kiJ?Jl0??h.armand bas never be Known to fall to do good Take Simmons lirer Regulator AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Malaris. Bowel Complaints. PP,iaVt Sick Headache. Constipation, . BUiousneM, ldne7ActlonB' Jaundice, mental Depression. CoUa. A PHYSICIAN'S OPINION. r.','i!'TL been PracvlicinB medicine for twe.ty yean-and hare never been able to put up a vegeta ble compound that would, like Simmons Livar Kegulator, promptly and effectually move the Ijver to action, and at the same time aid (instead of weakening) the digestive and assimilative powers of the system.". -uuauvo L. M. Hintow, u.d., Washington, Ark. ONLY GENUINE Has our Z Stamp in red on front of wrapper. J.H.Zcilin & Co., PhiladBlphia, Pa. Professional and Business Card gJAML'EL 31. BLOUNT, , ? ATTORN F.V. AT.T 'aw . WASHINGTON, N. O. Cjeymouk w. iiancock:, ATTORNEY-AT -LAW . - Washington, 0. S- 1 BECK WITH, , ATTORNEY-AT-! A W,- Wasuington, N. C. Feb. 6, '90. J H. SMALL, ATTORNEY - AT - Lis.W. WASHINGTON, N. 0. B A Is KING HOUSE -OF- O. M. BROWN MAIN STREET, WASHINGTON, N. O. Collections solicited and remit tanc ede promptly. Exchange bought aud sol a. J B. HOSS, TAILOR, WASHINGTON, N. C. Repairing and making suits in la test styles Work Guaranteed. A. full line of samples Olliee at V. B. Morton & Co"s. - AprilDtf; D R. II. SNELL, DENTIST, - WASHINGTON, N. C. Rooms over Brhlgmans, Main'St. Apniy,Jm. D R. R. O. SADLER, SURGEON DENTIST, - , WASHING TON,'N. a Over M. T. Archbell's store,' A B. PENDER, TONSORIAL ARTIST, MAIN ST., WASHINGTON, N. C. Dibble's Old Stand. H OTEL HOWARD. TARBORO, N. C. In business part of city. Polite and attentive servants. We cater to please. rjIHE McCLUER HOUSE, J. F, McCLUER, Tko'u. TERMS ?1 PER DAY. Renovated from top to bottom. Sit uated in business part of city. Every thing done for comfort of traveling public. At the Adams old stand . Dec . 18 tf . B AY VIEW HOTEL EDENTON, 8. (.). Terms Reasonable. Hack meets every tram and boat. No charge for convey ance. H OTEL NICHOLSON, WASHINGTON, N. C. SPENCER BROS., Proprietors. . New building, newly furnished, elec-tri- bells, gas lights, etc. Table sup plied with the best the market affords. Hack meets all boats and tiains. Sit uated in tbe business part of city. Geo. A. Spencer, General Manager. Feb. 12, tf. JJOTEL ME It 11 1 AM, WASHINGTON, N. 0. First class accommodations for La dies. Cars leave Hotel 0 :m.; arnv p. m. Through to New York la 34 hours. Up-river Steamers gto at the Hotel. ' . . . Headquarters for nuntet "sthv inff in North Carolina. Dogs and bona ,..:v, Timber. nfflfA n1 TCrnraft lumio'ivu. a 1 office in the Hotel. Telegram for roms. Mfcdfc 111!" IW
The Washington Gazette (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 7, 1891, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75