Inriuuoni are Oat EVENING VISITOR Social -A High Tea Is out of orJer at the present season, but a Tea of high quality at a reasonable price ii w order. Wt U the best TEA. W. H. KING & CO., DDGGHTS. , To (he bwvert of TEA to ca9 it the Drur Store of W. H KING ft CO. They handle only the) Bti i TEA and it most reasonable prices. Remember this) VOL XXXI. PRESCRIPTIONS A 8PKCIALTY. THOMAS J. WATTS, Dbcw!t. RALEIGH, X. C, MONDAY, JUNE 4, 1894. PCRK DRUGS axo CHEMICALS aT WATTS', COB. WILMI.XoToS AJD HARUBTT aTH. NO. 37. 7 . FOR YOU AND FOR US. Oor t'yBl Dew WRITING PAPERS wbk we v Jat recived wei nunufec-tured EXPRESSLY TORUS ""FORYOU by the leading maker of An and fahionab)r odrty stationer. Ym cannot afford to iue In ywiv corra aond no any br.t the Try laU-st aud bt pater we want to show it to you Alfred Williams & Co Society Stationers, KiLKIGH, N C. Conjforts CotLawn Dresses! TMd Fashioned Palm Fans. Soft, Easy Fitting Slippers! Clean, fresh, smooth, dainty printed Mus- tins from 5 to 12 1-2 cents now have the call, with a wide range to select from. Values exceptionally good. fpsofallKipd? China Silk, Gauze, Feather, Jap and Satin, Palms. If successful shoe selling is the result of experienced buying and "Goods well bought are half sold," then simply the showing of Blacker, Gerstle & Co's Cin cinnati made Shoes and Slippers does the rest, for they win in every competive race, and OURS is the only PLACKat which you can get them. They are soft and easy. Portfolio No. 2, "Wonders of the World's Fair and Midway Plaisance," now ready. Each $2 purchase gets one. glimmer Goods. We have just received a nice line Ladies' and Children's Summer Hats, Ladies' Straw Sailors 10c, Men's and Boys' Hats 10c up, Cuffs, Collars and Ties, all prices; Gauze and Balbriggan Underwear, Slippers and Low Cut Shoes for ladies, men and chil dren.'. - This is the best bargain in shoes it hasever been our pleasure to offer 50c a pairl Just think of it. Umbrellas and Parasols, Fans of every de scription, Fire Screens, Fly Fans, Ham mocks, Straw Matting, Plain and Decorated . Chamber Sets, Watering Pots, 9c up; Bird Cages, Bats and Balls, Fish Hooks 2c doz; Lines 1C; Lap Robes, Buggy Whips 6c up; Sweet Soap lc cake. Hundreds of others but space forbids mention. Come to see us. That will settle the question at the LYON RACKET STORE. Administrator's Ne!i. Having thltdav qualified is administrator - nf thm aatit of Kunbral Kellv. drceased thia ia to notify all persona holding claims avainat the said estate to present the rame ' to ma on or before the 25th da of May, UK nr thia noli-a will be dead in bar of hir mmvenr: and all Df irons indebted to :taid eattte are br eby notlued to make im mediate payment J0MAK0OM, May 25th, 1894 6 Administrator icr. ' ' AM consumers of ine will please take notice that they can buy ice under the Central hotel from 5 a m toll pni t a very low price. Free delivery to any part of the city. Phone 125 19 6 .If you hare furniture to move call on Thomas ft Maxwell, . who Mill fur nish a large spring wagon and plenty of experienced help. Telephone No. 19. . . IDEAL 8TBAM' LAUNDRY. ; "' Tub Ralbioh Visitor celebrated its fifteenth birthday by appearing in a new suit, and enlarged to six columns, last Monday. We congratulate the Visitok on this evidence of prosperity 01 and wish it much more. Wilmington Ctsx. T Vi itf DOTS AND DASHES MADE ABOUT TODAY'S HAP PENINGS. Interesting Items fathered In and Around the City. Travel ia again quite heavy on the railways. There are now 45 inmates of the soldier's home. ( It is said there are 915 bicycles in use in this eity. You can get tickets for the excur sion as late as 11 o'clock tonight at MacRae's drugstore. At the Caraleigh cotton mills there are now 150 employees. The working time is at present eight honrs a day. The invitations to the commence ment exercises of St. Mary's school areout. The date is June 11 14. If you decide to go on the Baptist tabernacle excursion yon can get tickets at MacRae's as late as 11 o'clock tonight. An important meeting of Rescue Are company will be held this evening. Delegates to the State firemen's asso ciation are to be elected and other im portant business is to be atteuded to. Farmers from House's Creek say the frost there was qaite sharp, made corn white and blackened the leaves of the cotton plants. It is causing the latter plants to shed. The "block system" has been put in operation on the Seaboard Air Line in this city between the union pas senger station and the Johnson street station. At the University yesterday morn, ing Rev. Dr. F. J. Murdock, of Salis. bury, preached the baccalaureate ser mon. This evening the anniversary meetings of the Philanthropic and Dialectic Societies will be held. At New York papers have been served in the suit for divorce of John Houghton Harrell against Lizzie Tho net Harrell. The husband is a native of North Carolina and the Harrells have lived at Raleigh. The Garfield and Oberlin colored pub lic schools last evening held their clos ing exercises at Metropolitan hall. This evening at the same place the closing exercises of the Washinhton colored school will be held. There will be some changes in the working force of the postoffice July 1, Mr. Meade Lambeth succeeding Mr, Jenkins at the general delivery win dow and Mr. James Busbee succeeding Mr.Merritt in the registry department. Later news from the Are at James ville is tli.it it was of incendiary ori gin and t!iit eleven stores were burn ed, leaving only two in the town The fire b''ran in rear of S. L. Wal lace's store. The postoffice was burn, ed. The (ire broke out a midnight Haywood Williams, colored, for stealing a ham from CO. Ball's store was today sent to jail by the mayor in default of bail. Albert. Davis, alias "Toby Slick," colored, for striking colored woman, was sent to the roads for thirty days. The house committee on postoffices and postroads has agreed upon a bill inrceasing the pay of letter carriers. The bill provides that after J une 30, 1895, the pay of letter carriers in cities of population under 75,000, for the first year of service, shall be $600; for the second year $800; for the third year and thereafter, $1,000. On the 26th instant Miss' Lizzie Jackson, only daughter of Mrs. C. S, Jackson, of this city, and grand- daughter of the late Gov. Jonathan Worth, will lie married to Mr. Hay wood White, formerly of this city but now connected with the Southern As sociated Press . at Washington. . The marriage will be private and at Mrs Jackson's home here. Executive Department News Judge Armfleld has been commis sioned to hold the ' fall term superior eourtf Moore county, beginning Deo, 10, In lien of jndge Brown ,who has been appointed to hold superior court of Beaufort eounty in lieu of judg Armfleld, , Lead: THE MAGISTRATES MEET. They Re-Elect the Old Board of County Commissioners. Today the annnal meeting of the magistrates of Wake was held at the court house. The attendance -was very large. The old board of county commissioners, W. C. Stronach, J. D. Allen, W. H. Hood. W. H. H. Jones nd R. II. Jones, was re-elected. The magistrates unanimously adopt ed a resolution endorsing Mr. W. C. Stronach, chairman of the board of commissioners, and denouncing the unknown person who recently made a most malicious anonymous attack upon him. This action of the magis trates will be appreciated by lovers of fairness, not only here bnt all over the state. Mr. Stronach continues as chairman of the board; a position he has filled with marked ability and good judgment. The magistrates aod county com missioners met together and the tax rate was fixed at the same figures as heretofore, 20 1-3 cents. Schedules B. and C. taxes are the same as before. The county's credit is fine. Not an order has been discounted in ten years. The magistrates and commissioners re-elected Mr. H. A. Chappell county superintendent of public instruction. There were about 110 magistrates present. R. G. Dunn presided at their meeting and Millard Mial was secretary. W. C. Stronach presided at the joint meeting and Mr. Mial was secretary. A New Potato Pest Mr. Gerald McCarthy announces that several complaints have reached the station from Columbus county con cerning the ravages of a hitherto un noticed insect upon growing irish po tatoes. Thousands of these bugs sud denly appeared on potatoes, there be ing an average of 3 or 5 to each plant. They do not eat the leaves, but punct ure the growing tip, causing the plant to wither and soon die. Mr. McCarthy says the insect is leptoglossus phyllo pus, a true bug closely related to the predaceous soldier, bug. The insect has been considered beneficial because it feeds upon thistles and occasionally attacks the terrapin bug of the cab bage. In Florida it attacks the or ange; now that it has changed its diet from thistles- to potatoes it is likely to become a troublesome pest. As this bug does not gnaw the foliage it cannot be poisoned by arsenites, and the only remedies, remarks Mr. Mc Carthy, are the kerosene emulsion and hand picking. Tbe latter will prove upon the whole most satisfa- i jry . To Wilmington and the Sea- coast. The Baptist tabernacle Sunday school offers its friends the cheapest, and at the same time one of the most pleasant trips to Wilmington and the seashore, tomorrow. It will run two trains, one via the Seaboard Air Line and one via the R. & D. railroad, and will have the very best accommoda tions each road can furnish. One of the many pleasant features of this trip is, that by making arrangements with a friend, one can go via one route and return by the other, by exchang ing tickets at Wilmington. But this arrangement must be made before starting, so that parties who desire to take advantage of this will know with whom they are to make the exchange, so that both will not purchase tickets by the same route. Tickets can be had at J. M. Brough ton & Co's, John R.jTerrell's, Barbee & Pope's and John Y. MacRae's drug store. There will be no racing. . The May Weather. The mean temperature at the weather station here was 70 degrees, or 3 degrees above the average for May during 8 years past. The high est was 92 degrees, on the 17th, low est 45, on the 21st; the greatest daily range was 81 degrees, on the 2d. The rainfall was 7.50 inches, which is 2 inches greater than the May average! There were thunderstorms on 6 days. The prevailing wind was from the south. The greatest velocity was 30 miles an hour, from the, north, on the 2d. Rain fell 15 on days. PERSONAL POINTS. ABOUT PROMINENT NORTH CAROLINIANS. People Who Come, People Who go and People You Know. Capt. Thos, B. Howland, a former resident of Beaufort, is dead. Mjss Mollie Parish left today for Richmond on a visit to friends. Dr. John B. Beckwith died at his residence in Sraithfield Saturday. Mr. John T. Pullen returned today from a short visit to Richmond. A daughter of Prof. Jerome Dowd of the facnlty of Trinity college died at Chariot Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Broughton have returned from Raton, New Mexico, and Colorado Springs. Eaton Bledsoe, Esq., is very sick, of heart disease, on South Salisbury street, near the Rex hospital. Judge Walter Clark is prominently spoken of as the successor of Rev. Dr. J. F. Crowell "as president of Trinity college. Mrs. R. B. Haywood is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Carle A. Woodruff, at New York. Prof. E. W. Kennedy, principal of the graded school at Durham, sent in his resignation. C. W. Toms, assist ant superintend has been elected su perintendent. MR. WALTON BUSBEE DEAD, Bright Raleigh Man Dies in Baltimore Last night a telegram was received from Baltimore telling the sad news of the death of Walton M. Busbee, Esq. No particulars were then given Mr. Busbe; was 43 years old, and a son of the rate Quentin.itnsb- Esq. Of handsome presence and of fine mind, he was very popular here and wherever known. For a number of years he lived in Durham, practicing law and a part of the time attending to the difficult duties of clerk of the court. January 9, 1893, he was ap pointed a copyist in the department of the interior by secretary Hoke Smith and-, moved to Washington. Three weeks ago, in Baltimore, he married Miss Lelia Wall. The Balti more Herald of today says: "It is not known how long he had been in this city. A week ago he called on secretary Shriver, of the local Y. M. C. A. here, and went to the working men's residential club in company with Shriver. Last Thursday night he was again at the club, in company with J. J. Williams, a railroad man. He slept at the club on Friday night, but did not show . up on Saturday. At midnight on Saturday he was found on the steps. . Whether he committed suicide, or was addicted to the use of opium and succumbed to it in his weakened state, can only be surmised. He was sent to the Central station in a patrol wagon by patrolman Edrington, Lieut. Rowe there saw that he was suffering from something else than the effects of drink. He had him ta ken to the city hospital, and the phy sician found he had taken some opi ate. They worked on him all through the night, but he died despite their efforts. Coroner Hill did not deem an inquest necessary." Chapel Hill Notes. The early train (west from Raleigh) will put visitors in Chapel Hill at 8 o'clock, in time to see all the exercises of commencement. They can return the same night. Dr. Frank Reid speaks Tuesday and the senior class day exercises are Wednesday after noon. That night the representatives of the Di and Phi societies have their annual oratorial contests. The facnl ty reception is Tuesday and Wednesday night also is commencement day prop er. The graduates speak and degrees are conferred. Hon. Hoke Smith de livers the commencement oration Wed nesday at noon. Visitors may be as sured of a nice time. A picnic of 600 people spent the day in Chapel Hil Saturday Rooming by train from Oxford. Pol lows I School of Penmanship. Prof. W. L. Smith t here aud will teach peumauship. He brings recom mendations of the best character, not only of his ability as a teacher but also of his high standing as a man. He has been teaching at Henderson and the Gold Leaf speaks of him in a most complimentary style. He will canvass the city for pnpils. The Children's Service At the First Presbyterian church yesterday morning was highly at tended and greatly enjoyed. Rev. Eugene Daniel, the pastor, made an excellent address. There was a ser vice of song and also a responsive ser vice in which the tearliers and pupils took part. The U. S. Circuit Court. This court met this morning. Judges Charles H. Simonton and A. S. Seymour are on the bench. The mo tion docket was taken up today. The jury will be called tomorrow, tne sixty jurors having been ordered to report that day. The term will con tinue only this week, owing to the lack of funds. District attorney Ay cock andassistant attorney Sol C.Weill are present. Judge Simonton is from Charleston and succeeds Hugh L. Bond. It is his first visit here. Mrs. Simonton is with him and they are at the Yarboro house, having arrived Saturday evening. The Story of the Turtle. Mention was made in the Visitor and in other papers of the capture of a soft-shelled turtle at Milburnie. Mr. F. H. Busbee tells the Charlotte Ob server: "Several years ago my uncle brought from Georgia two soft-shell turtles, as perhaps you term them. I put them in a small pond made on a branch in my little farm near Garner, and prized them as the choicest pro duct of the place. A freshet came; the pond broke; the turtles disappeared. It would hardly seem probable, yet they must have gone down the brauch to Swift creek, down the creek to the river and up the river to Milburnie." iThe Weather Crop Bulletin The reports of correspondents indi cate continued unfavorable weather. The nights have been very cool and frost occurred June 1st in the western andj central districts. Although the damage by frost has been slight, the growth of crops has been checked and some cotton killed. The rainfall was badly distributed. There was plenty of rain in the eastern district and a few counties of the central; elsewhere it is becoming very dry, especially in the west. Some damage by hail was again reported last week. The last two days of last week were much warmer, and the prospects are for continued warm weather during the nei week. The State Board of Health. The May bulletin of the N. C. board of health was received today. It says there was held at Greensboro a con ference between Dr. Joseph J. Kin- youn, of the U. S. marine Hospital service, in regard to the quarantine station at Southport. Wilmington hav ing definitely declined to appropriate the $5,000 upon which was conditioned the appropriation by the state of $20,- 000 for the erection at Southport of a quarantine station with all the modern improvements, the unanimous passage of the following motion was the im mediate result of the conference: "Moved that, in view of the inability or unwillingness of the city of WiL mington to contribute its part towards carrying out the act of the last general assembly providing for the erection of a first-class quarantine station at Southport, the secretary be instructed to officially request the U. S. marine hospital service to take charge of and operate that station, and that the secretary be authorized to explain this action on the part of the board." Dr. James'McKee makes the follow ing report for Wake: Twenty-three cases of measles, one of diphtheria and one of scarlatina. Public build ings in good condition. The dockets -of the federal court, which began today, are a little heavier tUan uioaJL '. A BIC SHIPMENT THERE were ibi,pd from tbe Chicago factory of the Wertern Wheel Works one hundred machine a day by expw dining week before last. On Saturday fifteen of the largest trucks operated by the express companies were called in to carry off au order receive from the New . York branch office. Each wagon was loaded with twenty-five wheels, making a total of three hundred and seventy-five machines in. the lot. The Western Wheel o. ka make th BBSOEST Cyc'es, and t!-' apacity is foity thouKv) wheels each year. Oentlonwn's 0RRS:JiNT8 JV U'iies' -OXE8CENT8- 60. Oirls&Boyi'-CRliSOENXa 40. Thos. EBriflgs&Soiis. RALEIGH. NO.. 1 WooW like to state to my friends and customers that I have quite a nice and well selected stock of goods, consisting principally of Heavy and . N. C. and Virginia Bacon, Composed of Hams, Shoulders and Sides. Also Sugar-cured Hams and Small Break fast Bacon. The best grades of Four the Mitt of the Valley of Virginia can produce. Best ta ble Corn Meal. Salt Fish, Syrup and Molasses. Apple Vinegar, guaranteed to keep Pickle. Pepper and Spices. Teas, from 35c to f 1 per pound. Lunch Milk Biscuit, Cakes & Soda Crackers. Canned Fruits and Vegetables, ;j Potted Meats, Oat Flakes and Oat Meal, Pearl Hominy, Tapioca, &c. Dairy and Creamery Butter, Cream Cheese. Full line of Tobacco, Snuff, Cigars, Duke's Cigarettes, Old Va. Cheroots, wholesale and retail, and many other good things which I will sell at reasonable prices. . Free delivery to any point in the city. " Telphone No. 149. Co Wo Yoyigjj No. 1 1 Hargett street, Jordan Womble's old stand. m2S We have in store the most duraW e and convenient Trunk manufactured. ; It has six solid corners, the npper two corners protect the lid from being knocked off in rough handling ' Made in all sizes and styles. Con venient, and cost no more than any other trunk. alst Bags, Extensive assortments for both la dies and gentlemen. Irunk and Bag Department third floor. Reached by elevator. Wo IB TocH r (f (TV IV fn, t- ' m " 1 -1 . rr tv 0PCHURCH& s : LANCASTER Keep the Finest Carriages, Buggies and Best Horses in the oity. Accom modations at any hour, day or night. - ' Telephone 81. my28, , Thomas & Maxwell have a well sel ected stock of molding which they are - - -making up into pictures at half pric.j v, rhirft inv tip