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0 twin VOL. XXX. RALEIGH, FRIDAY, APRIL 20. 1894. NO. 151 i I FOR YOU AND FOR US. ' " Out elegant new WRITING PAPERS which we have Just received were manufac tured EXPRESSLY FOR US iND.F0R YOU by the leading maker of fine and fashionable society stationery. iou cannot aaora to ase in your correa- pondenoe any but the very latest and beat want to show it to you. AlMWilliams&Co Society Stationers, RALEIGH, N 0. Your Mies FrauM Al We have a large lot of Moulding to select from and are prepared to frame in any at j le aesirea ior nan: tne regular price. We also have a Larger Stock of FURNITURE than we have ever had before, which we are eiiing at greatly reaucea prices. BABY CARRIAGES are a specialty. Thomas & Maxwell Reading Furniture Dealers, 9 and 12 Martin Street, RALEIGH, DT. O. febl IS THE TIB Don't hesitate, but come at onoo and get your mattings. We have them, and the prices are right; good quality and beautiful patterns. Moquet mats, bound edge, 49c, cheap at 75c; Smyrna mats and rags from 49c up. A beautiful line of pictures, 25 and 49c,l,t2 87,:$4. DON'T FORGET THE PLACE. THE LYOtl BACKET STORE Academy of Music. FRIDAY, - April 120th. T&e Mozart Spptioni Club, OP HEW YORK. Under the direction and management of Mr. Mario Blodeck and Herr Richard Stoelzer In Grand Concert Including the following well known artists: Mr Otto Land, violin soloist; Mr Theo Hoch, violin; Mr Richard Stoelzer, viola; Mr A O Mora, flute; Mr Mario Blodeok, violoncello. Assis ted by Miss Cecelia Breams, prima donna soprano; Herr Theodore Hoch, cornet virtuoso; Mr Alberto 0 Mora, basso profundo: Mr Richard Stoelzer, viola d' Amour; Mr Mario Blodeok, viol da samba soloist. Prices: 50 and 75 cents. Box sheet at W H King & Go's drug store. Fox Sale. One nice three (room house and lot for sale on West Gannon avenue.good well of water in yard; the house rents for il.B0 Der week: now occupied by a good tenant. One . small cash pay inert and good time on the balance bv paving 0 per cent on the other payments. For particulars apply to Jfi U KUttAiKB, apl8 1 w 584 West Gannon avenue. Have Tils & Maxwells. IW CITY INBRIEF. Items Picked Op and Boiled Down. Senator Jarvis ia 63 yeara old. The mayor had no eaaea to try thla morning. Last night's showers were very beneficial. Forepaugh'a circus ia now in Yir glnia, heading thla way. The revival at Brooklyn M. E ebarch increaaea in interest. At the academy of music thia even lng, the Mozart symphony clab. Strawberries are qaite cheap at Wilmington, bat extremely high here. Borne improvements in road way a are being made near Oakwood ceme tery. Work has begun on Mr Lnther N White's residence on South Bloant street. The seats and pavilion! at the Con federate cemetery have been re' painted. Two or three attempts have been made to atart incendiary fires in East Kalelgh. The North Carolinian thia week gives an admirable portrait of tor Vance. sena There are some assurances that the street railway will be again in opera' tionbyjunel. United States senator Stockbridge of Michigan is seriously ill at the res1 idence of relatives in Chicago. The condition of the small grain cropB is rapidly improving. They were of course damaged by the March freeze. Tbe work of building Epworth M E chapel will begin Monday, and by June 1 the chapel will be ready for occupancy. Next week rreetings in memory of the late national alliance president, li li folk, will be held In many coun ties in the state. Elder W G Stephenson will preach by appointment at the Primitive Baptist church Sunday at 11 o'clock. The public is invited to attend. Secure reserved seats at W H King & Co's drug store for the admirable performance of the Mozart symphony club at tne academy this evening. Mr W Dallas Haywood, who since soon after Christmas had not been able to leave his house, wan out yes' terday afternoon. He is quite weak. The white man named House who not long ego cut his throat in the southern part of the city has recovx ered from the Injury and gone to the country. Dr McKee says the health of the city is excellent, and that there is only one case of contagious disease at present; this being a case of scarlet fever on Hillsboro street. The circus parade this afternoon drew a great crowd to Fayetteville street. There was a regular crush around the big cage containing the lions and tiger. There was no ele phant in the parade. The other day the supreme court received a letter asking it to order Mr John Robinson, commissioner of j agriculture, to go to a certain county ana tase down some dams wmeh ob structed the passage of fish up stream. Mr xnomas Stevenson Has com pleted the box to be placed in the corner stone of the Confederate mon ument May SI, and makes a gift of it to tne monument association. Tbe box is of copper, two feet in length, a foot wide ana eight inches deep. The Confederate monument base will extend as far as the line of the sidewalk curbing at the west gate, The state owns to that line. Tbe foundation has been laid off. The foundation is to be of granite and at least two and a half feet deep. The following were the delegation of colored men who yesterday called on Gov Carr and asked him to ap point Mr Jams senator: Thomas Donaldson, president N 0 industrial association; W S Mitchell, assistant associate editor Gazette; Rev 0 H Williamson, Rev B P Peterson, Jas E Hamlin, Morris Watts and James H Young, editor of the Gazette. In today's Charlotte Observer its Washington correspondent says: "The final conference agreement be tween the houses of congress on the urgenoy deficiency bill today carries all the federal court items heretofore telegraphed, with important senate amendments. Chairman Bayers 'of ithe house appropriation committee says: 'There will be plenty of money to ran oar courts." Senator Jmli' appointment. Senator Jarvis is receiving a great many congratulations, and nls ap pointment gives mucn pleasure here. Hewss interviewed last night as to his views on the Wilson bill, the in come tax and the silver question, and said simply that he was a Chicago platform man with all that that Im plies. He will remain here until to morrow, then go to Greenville, and expects to be at Washington Wed nesday. His commission bears date yesterday and was issued to him to dav. Today's Charlotte Observer Bays editorially of the appointment, after paying a high tribute to aeuator Jar vls: "He Is an avowed candidate for the seat In the senate occupied by Ransom, whose term will expire on the 4th of next March. The next leg islature will have two senaters to elect and in reason both will not come from the east Ransom and Jaryls ill not both be elected, and the for mer's friends will regard this appoint ment of yesterday as a studied effort to preempt the eastern senatorship for governor Jarvis for the full term beginning March 4th, 1895. The west, too. will resent this appointment of an eantern man to a place which, by common consent, belongs west of Raleigh, and altogether, it is doubt ful if, after all. Jarvis has been helped in the senatorial race, how ever good the intentions of his friend, Gov Carr. may have been. But a bird In the hand is worth two in tne bush and Vance's successor has more than ten months to serve. Jarvis' letter, published this morning, so far from helping his cause, is apt to hurt It, for to say that he will not stand in January for the residue of Vance's term is a confession that he is not entitled to that part of it which he has just accepted." The Weather. For North Carolina: Fair Satur day. Slightly cooler tonight except near tbe coast. Cooler in eastern portion Saturday. Local forecast for Raleigh and vicinity: On Saturday Fair, cooler. Local data i hours ending 8am today: Maximum tern perature 81; Minimum temperature 62: rainfall. 0.80. Synopsis: The center or tne low pressure is over tne nortnern lase region It is causing southerly winds and cloudy weather, with rain at many places east of tbe Mississippi river. A clearing condition that is. high pressure and westerly winds appears in the southwest. The tem perature has fallen considerably in the west, .conditions are lavorarjie for fair, cooler, oa Saturday in North Carolina. The Epworth Entertainment. At Edenton street Sunday school rooms last evening was a most de lightful affair, and was thoroughly enjoyed by the large crowd in atten dance. A repetition would fill the room to overflowing. The recitations by little Mies Lena Whitfield, Misses Ella McGee, Birdie Lawrence and Eliza Moore, and the songs and ini strumental music by Mrs W H Bob bitt, Mrs Moeeley, Mrs Hal Bobbitt, Mrs Wilkinson and Misses Merrimon. Wynne, Pierce, Thelm, Kleuppleburg and Cole, were all charmingly ren dered, and in several instances showed talent of a very high order. The or chestra, composed of Messrs Womble, Cheek and Minn and Miss Kills, fur nished sweet music for the occasion, and added to the reputation it has long enjoyed. The Mozart Symphony Clab. The highest compliments are paid the performance of tbe Mazart sym phony club. A great musician says: "I am acquainted with the history of flerr Theodor Hooh, the oornetist, and know him to be the equal of any, and thought by some to be the great' est performer on tbe cornet In tbe world. I have had the pleasure of hearing Prof Stoelzer perform on the Viola d'Amour,and have no hesitation saying that this alone is worth the price of admission. It need not be feared that tbe music will be too ar tistio for the;uneultivated ear, as the greatest performers in music, as the speakers, know that the most pleaB- ant is tne simplest expression." The Cotton Market. The receipts for the week ending yesterday were 817 bales, against 162 the same week last year. The total recepts since Sept 1 are 86,197, against 31,847 to the same date last year. Tht stock on the platform is 850 bales. The shipments for the week were 867. There are 1,400 bales in warehouses. In order to extend the work of the Kings Daughters, a "St Luke's Home Circle" will be formed, and all desiring to pin tms circle win piease meet at the mission rooms next Monday af ternoon at 4:80 o'olock. PERSONAL MENTION 01 Pecple Who Came and Went Today. Miss Bessie Tucker left this morn lng for Baltimore. Dr George I Nowltzky arrived from Norfolk this afternoon. Mr L O Bagwell has a position in the U S census office. Judge Spier Wbitaker and R H Battle, Esq left for Chapel Bill today. Mrs John A Boyden. who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs T K Bru ner, returned to Salisbury this after noon. Col Doryea and family, of Glen Cove, Long Island, who had been at the Yarboro a couple of months, left lor home yesterday. Ool J E Vinton, late of the 11th Wisconsin Infantry, died a day or two ago at the Wake county house for the aged are infirm. Rev. Dr J B Brewer declines tbe position of president of the Baptist state female university, which was tendered him some weeks ago. Messrs Marshall Haywood and B O Beckwith have gone to Baltimore as delegates from this state to the nat ional convention of the "Sons of the Revolution." At Greenville, N O. last night at the residence of Mr Alfred Forbes, his daughter Miss Rosa W Forbes, was married to Mr Mark H Quinerly, of hunston. Judge Hoke, president Wlnfield S Chadwick, of the Atlantic & W C railway, and Mr Harry H Martin dale, of Baltimore, arrived this after noon and are at the Yarboro. Arrivals at the Park hotel today F O Hatoh.Pbcsnlx. Arizona: E Fay. N Y: W R Barkdale. Houston, Va; A L Biedler N Y;W H Norrls, Hickory ;RF Whitehorst, Balto; R D Blaoknall, Durham; H C ;Newton, Washington, DC; John Blue, Aberdeen; John B Cox, Boston; Paul D Howell, Rich mond; S A Henszey, Egypt; J H Nich ols, H (i Nichols, Massachusetts. Arrivals at the Yarboro today: Geo. F Bartram, Southern Pines; A Wheat field. Plymouth. Mass; W O Petty, Manly; L B Esohbach. N Y; V S Lusk. Asheville: S McD Tate, Mor ganton; Louis Levy, O E Barbour. N Y: Thos J B Watts. Baltimore; J A McMillan, Durham; Sheriff Jenkins, Ci C; John Kavenel, Atlanta, Ga; W ' Miller, Baltimore; A D Maler, iNastt ville; O H Smith, NY. The Capital club givea a german this evening. Out of 85 farmers who passed along a public road near nere and were asked who was their choice for sena tor, 83 said they wanted Jarvis. Isaac Gunter, colored, was jailed to day for breaking into a trunk and stealing property and for getting a letter with S money enclosed, ' the property of a negro woman. A special to the Richmond Dispatch from Wake Forest says Mr G W Cochrane, of Cumberland, Md, who is connected with the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company, has been there for a day or two with a view to Investing in Wake Forest property He has several sons whom he desires to educate at Wake Forest college, He is accompanied by his wife. M T E Holding, proprietor of the Wake Forest hotel, is preparing to have rooms annexed to the building. Woody, the man, charged with be lnar tbe leader in the Ailegnany coun ty lynching of Dan Slaughter, and for whom a reward of saw was onerea by governor Carr. has been captured in Tennessee. Requisitions have been sent to the governor of Virginia for all persons now in that state who are said to have taken part in the lynch lng. Professor Holmes, State geologist says three new . mines have been opened in Chatham county and are shipping coal rignt along, lie says that the coal from the new mines is superior to that from the old Egypt mine, lie also says tnat the Egypt mine, which caught fire some time ago, will soon be in working order again. . Persons who desire choice tomato Slants are advised to call on Mr O C oDonald and procure some of the choice varieties he is offering. Now is the time to set them out. He of. fers three dozen for 60 cents or. one dozen for 50 cents. He has also Pearl onions, (not the common sort of on ion) at 5 and 10 cents a bunch; nice crisp, tender lettuce at 5 cents a head. Persons desiring absolutely fresh veg etables should give him a call. He will deliver them free at residences, If desired. Hardware, &c. YOUMAYMOT WEED0WE BUT v WOULD LIKE EVERYBODY TO CALL AND 8KB THS STYLES 09 PRETrY BABY CARRIAGES Trimmedlin CARDINAL BLUE, POMEGRANATE, CORAL and other colors. The price is right. Thos. IBigs&Soiis, RALEIGH, N. O. Drr Goda. IVntlonn. Our Platform. We sell dry goods, notions, shoes, hats, ladies' and gents' furnishings. We want trade, the great trade of the present aui still greater trade of the future. Oar aim ia to serve you acceptably, that we miv merit your permanent custom. We see that our quarters are too small; we are pressed for the want of room; we must add to our stor age capajity; our increasing patronage de mand it. Rock is the foundation principle on wh'ch we build. We sell goodgocds and guarantee every time, and no trade is com plete until the customer is satisfied. This week we open a line of straw hats, every one a bargain, approved new ana nobby style. Oar shoe department is a shoe store ia itself. Good shoes at papular prices always sell, and we hive them at all times. Just now Kent)' furnishings ia attracting public attention. Low prices rule, and shirts, collars, cuff) and knit underwear deem to have the run, This is due largely to extra values. We retail a fine line of gents' scarfs, ties and bows at wholesale prices. Hemstitched, tape bordered hand kerchiefs at 5c. The wonder ia how we do it. See the quality. The people will not be deceived by gloss, nor are they entrapped by worthless articles at any price. Good goods satisfies, that is the kind we have but can not keep. C.A.M10DO. if, n. & r. s. TUCKER & CO. Special attractions this week in our -SHOE-DEPARTMENT. New and seasonable goods 1 - - Shoes that will attract buyers Bi Ladies' Oxford Ties, in black l.tJV and tan, co union sense and opera toes, all sizes and widths, at (1.50. $1.50 1.75 2.00 Misses' Oxford Ties, black and tan, full line of sizes, and in three erades, $1.50, $1.75 and $2.00 are the prices. $1.00 1-1.25 jfl.50 Children's Oxford Ties, black and tan, all sizes, $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50, and an additional line in black only at $1.25. $1 17 5 Misies' Tan Shoes, Spring heels, buttons and bals ac 11.75 Tha sizes for children are a.50. We have decided to continue this week the sale (heretofore advertised) of ladies' common sense, kid button shoei, redaoed from 13.60 to $3; also the balance of the lot of ladies' common sense and opera kid but ton shoes reduced from $2 50 to (2. W. H. & H S. Tucker fcCs, L
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 20, 1894, edition 1
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