Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / Nov. 23, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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U 7: EVENING VISITOR, VOL XXXII. RALEIGH, N. C, FRIDAY, N0VEI33!UJ. 183 i. NO. 2!. if 0 I. e i- e . 10 ooo ooo SOT TEN CENTS HUT TELEPHONE NO. 10. At any time of the day, from 7 a. m. t 10 p. m., this call will reach ALFRED WILLIANS & CO.'S BOOK AND STATIONERY STORE. And whatever you order will le promptly delivered at your residence or plaee of business. 8ch Rooks, tioueiy, lilank or Magazines, Plain and Fancy Sta liooks. Latest Novels all School Supplies, Business Office, Law anvthimr for Hooks and supplies, Writing Materials, Standard Hooks, or anything else in our line, and yu will receive the very be-i article at lowest possible prices. M11IEW SS MAGGIE REI Winter OF ALL KINDS. A FULL LINE OF AT ALL FANCY PRICES. NOVELTIES IN GOODS. Zephyr, 7 cents. Wool, 18 cents. SLIPPER SOLES 2,r). t8 , at SHOES, SHOES. Swindell's is the place to bay your Shoes, . Shoes, for lean men, Shoes for green men, ; SMoes for thick men, Shoes for slick men, Shoes for glad men, Shoes for mad men, Shoes for all kind of men in latest ahapes and size.-) to suit. Shoes for slim boys, . . : Shoes for grim boys, Shoes for sporting boys, Slioes fur courting boys, Shoes for dude boys, Shoes for rude boys, Sure to fit and please the nearer at Swindell's. Shoes for witty girls, Shoes for city girls; Shoes for talking girls, Shoes for walking girls, Shoes for lazy girls, Shoes for crazy girls, Cheap for cash at Swindell's. Shoes for bachelor's pet corn, Shoes for old maids all forlorn, Shoes for the kid that bawls, Shoes for the urchin that crawls Shoes For all That call This fall Ladies, we have just received this week a nice line of felt hats in the verv latent styles and Bhapes. Nice walking hats only 60 cents, worth 75 ents. These hats were bought this week with the spot cash. So they were bought right and after man ufac turer had taken the taritt on. Yes. the tariff is off, and If Mary's little lamb only lived still, How happy it would be, To know that by the Wilson Bill, Its wool would come in free. At Swindell's WHAT YOU NEED! PI I K HM OF ALL KINDS. a,l kI5ps PRESERVES, Raisins, Nuts, Oranges, Apples, Lemons, Qrits, Hominy, Eisb of all kinds, , Meats, Flour, Sugar, Coffee. CANNED GOODS In any sixe cans. 8-lb. Grated Pineapples 15 eta. Can. Sifters. Water Backets, Tabs, Brooms, Sweet and Irish Potatoes, Vinegar, Molasses, Syrup, Pig'a Feet, &c, And anything that is kept in a First- Class wrocery more, as W.P. & E. D. CLEMENTS, aadem l Mule Building. DOTS AND DASHES MADE ABOUT TODAY'S HAPPEN- 1NGS. Items Gathered In and Around the City. See notice of the horse sale. Cotton receipt today were light. The warm weather gives the sports- man a set dsck. There seems to be a decided lull in loal theatricals. Mr. Kd. Leach is building two large sales stables and severs! cottage. The deaf and dumb asylum, at Mor- ganton, has an electric light plant. John Allen, a moonshiner from Granville couuty, was released from jail on bond today. The sunreme court completed its work for the circuit yesterday. The court will meet agaiu next week. The sheriff of Pamlico yesterday brought two convicts to the peniten tiary and the sheriff of Lenoir, four. Sheriff Page declares that he will enforce the law in regard to taxing tax pavers with custs after December 1st. A party is being formed here to go to Richmond on Thanksgiving day to ' root" for the university. About 20 are to go. The revixal services still go on at Ceutral Methodist ehurch, Rev. D. H. Tuttle ureaubiutr. There have beeu professions at every service. Mr. Emmerson, of Baltimore, also of "Bromo-seltzer" fame, is building two handsome cottages on the proper ty recently sold to Mr. Simmons. Don't make any engagement for next Tuesday evening, except to go to the orphans concert at Metropolitan hall. Help on a good work. The pastors of the city are requested to meet at the 1. M. V. A. rooms to morrow' afternoon at two o'clock to arrange forThanksgivingday services. The quarterly tonference of the Methodists of Raleieh district will be held this evening at the Edenton Street Methodist church in the Bible class room. Mr.Thomas H. Briggs, commissioner for the Bale of the "Oakdale" lands. northeast of the city, will sell them December 10. The Bite is very at tractive. Prof. Chas. F. Meserve, president of Shaw university, delivered an educa tional address yesterday at Charlotte Phis evenintr he Bpeaks there on Friendship." Some advertisers were first led to advertise as a last desperate resort to get rid of a large stock of goods, lhe results proved so gratifying that they become regular advertisers It is said that the market house re ferees will be unable to agree. This will cause further delay about the matter. The whole business is getting to be absurd as well as provoking. A spirited animal hitched to a road cart tried to run away at the citizens bank corner this morning. An acci dent was only averted by the coolness of a colored man who stopped tne horse, Mr. Robert Little, who works at the Raleiffh cotton mills, had the misfor tune to have afingercaught aud badly crushed in the machinery there this morning. It is feared that the finger may have to be amputated. A human skull has been dug op in Charlotte. A pocket knife was found near the skull with the stain of blood still upon it. Fragments of wool still remain on parts of the bone, and tne person was evidently a negro. Last Wednesday evening Mr. Jones Fuller, of Raleigh, now a Horner's school cadet, went into the engine room of the school in the dark. He stepped into a boiler of not water up to his knees. A physician was sum moned and dressed the wound, which he said was not serious. Mr. Fuller will be well in ten days, the doctor says. A Charlotte man recently desired to kill some pigeons in his back yard. There is a law there against firing arms in the city limits so the law abiding citizen went to : a hardware man and asked him for some noiseless shells. When he fired, however, he was knoekbd down and the report alarmed the city. The News says he was arrested by six different police men and that the shell he fired was loaded with six drachms of giant pow der and four wads, covered by three ounces of shot. Mr. James M. Towles Dead. Mr. James M. Towles died at his home on East Lane street this morn- in? after a long and lingering illness. Mr. Towles was very well Known ana - . . a numbered his friends by the hundred. The funeral will be held tomorrow af ternoon at 3:30 o'clock from his resi I dence. Friends and relatives invited to attend. a beautiful German Was that Given by the Cotillion Club last Evening. The Carolina Cotillion club gave its second german last evening at the Park hotel. The dance was an un qualified success being one of the most enjoyable affairs of the kind ever given here. The club is to lie con gratulated on its success. Dancing commenced at about 0:30 o'clock and from that time, until " Home Sweet Home" came at 1 a. m.. the happy dancers kept up the rev elry. The german -was beautifully led by Mr. Arinistead Cowan who car ried the eighteen couples that partici pated through the intricate figures without a hitch. The couples who were present were as follows: Air. Armistead Cowan, leader, with M.ss Roberta Smith; Mr. Henjamin taker with Miss Kathrine Badger; Mr. James Litchford with Miss Sallie Cotten, of Falkland; Dr. Ayer with Miss Bessie Henderson, of Salisbury; W. W. Vass, Esq., with Miss Annie Busbee; Mr. Howard with Miss Ella Burwell; Mr. Guion Dewey with Miss Janet Badger; Mr. Sherwood Higgs with Miss Lathrop. of Balti more; l'errin Busbee, Esq., with Miss Kate Haywood. Mr. R. L. Gray with Miss Carrie Holt; Mr. Sam Hins. dale with Miss Nannie Jones; Mr. George Hill with Miss Annie Hill; Mr. Hunter with Miss Hamilton; Mr. Decker with Miss Stith; Mr. Stark Batchelor with Mrs. Plura- mer Batchelor; Mr. and Mrs S. F.Tel fair; Mr. and Mrs. Aldrick. The chaperones were Mrs. Armistead Jones and Miss Lizzie Lee. The german was a brilliant and charming affair. The next club dance will be given about December 20th. THE WEATHER. The Conditions and the Fore cast. Forecast for North Carolina : Show ers today and on the coast tonight; cooler in the western portion tonight; cooler in the interior Saturday. Local forecast for Raleigh and vicinity: Rain tonight and Saturday morning; clearing by Saturday even ing, becoming cooler. Local data for 24 hours ending 8 a. m. today: Maximum temperature 51; minimum temperature 50; rainfall, 0.08. The pressure continues high over the south Atlantic states. An area of low pressure is eential north of Lake Erie, with a trough of low pressure extending southwestward to Tennessee. Light rains have occurred during the past 24 hours at a large number of stations east of the Mississippi. It is cloudy and foggy today. The tem perature is high everywhere east of the Mississippi and is apparently somewhat above normal in the west. An area of high pressure is central over Texas and clear, tine weatner prevails in that section. Downed After a Hard Fight Frank Collins, the-colored man who this summer earned the name of "ham fiend" by presenting forged orders for that article at almost every grocery in town, went to the roads today. He must go to the roads for two years. Frank was awfully cute and for some time carried on his ham opera tions in peace. He knew that if he signed ladies names to his orders he would be unmolested, as it would be em barrassing to them to testify against him. Finally he tried major Vass s name and got caught. He was con victed and sentenced at the last term ofcourt but his counsel J. C. L. Har ris, took an appeal. Yesterday the decision of the lower court was confirm ed so Frank is downed. He made a hard fight for his liberty, though, The Baptist Female Seminary- Rev. 0. L. Stringfleld is meeting with excellent success in his effort to raise an endowment for the new cap tist female college to be started here i next fall. He has already raised an endowment of $60,000 and the pros pects are that the institution will open next fall with a hundred students and a hundred thousand endowment fund Raleigh wants another school. Suc cess to it. The Vote for Treasurer. The official vote for state treasurer is given for 62 counties, and is 103, 535 for Tate; 115,641 for Worth. The average for Tate in each of these ooun ties is 1,433, and for Worth 1,606. this is kept up in the remaining 24 counties, Tate's vote will be 130,000 and Worth's 154,000; a total of 293, 000. It may be smaller, as the larger counties appear to be included l the 72. Balelgh's New Dally. It is said here that Mr. Marion But ler will bring the plant of his newspa per, the Caucasian, here, and that this will be the name of the new dally organ which it seems, is to be popu list in politics. It has been many years since Raleigh has had a success ful republican paper. Of course th republican and populist organs will pull together, just as their parties do A Cape Colony, Seuth Africa, dust storm stops business and traffic. PERSONAL POINTS. ABOUT PROMINENT NORTH CAR0 UNA PEOPLE. Here And Elsewhere State. In the Mr. W. W. IMladay left for New York today. Mrs. F. H. Busbee left this afternoon for Scotlaud Ne. k. John Morgan Green Esq., arrived from Durham today. Col. F. A. Olds is confined to his room by a severe cold. Rev. Mr. McKanghan, of lWkford, was in the city today Mr. A. H. Andrews Jr., returned this afternoon from a visit to Char lotte. Mrs. O. H. Foster returned to the city today after au absence of several weeks. Mr. V. E. McHee, superintend ft of transportation of the S. A. L., i i d today. Dr. Duffy, of Newberne, wh- lias ned been here for some dnvs, re: .i omu this afternoon. Col. A. Q. lrdladay, hose anci ent was repoited in the Visitor several days ago, is getting on nicely. Mr. W. K. Christian, of the News nd Observer, is quite sick today. It is feared that he may hae typhoid fever. Mrs. J. N. Cole left this morning for Warrenton to attend the dedication of the new Methodist church there next Sunday. , Mr. E. R. Dodge returned from Ral eigh this morning after a stay of 10 days there. Everything is in good running order, he says, and the plant is one of the best in the south. The street light-i and the power house for the electric railway are all combined. The new company has 12 handsome cars and will run on a i: minute schedule, the Charlotte News says. The Courts- Mayor Badger had three cases to dispose of this morning, Joseph It. Perry, who was held for being drunk. Ben. Plnm'ier, colored, for robbery. and Norman Freeman, colored, for wife beating. The case against Perry was dismissed and he was sent on to a magistrate. Plumber, who robbed Manda s restaurant, was sent to jail in default of a $50 bond and Free man, the wife beater, was hned 45 and eosts. Joseph Perry, the white man who was arrested yesterday afternoon for maltreating his wife while drunk, was tried before justice Marcomthis morn ing on three charges. One for as sault, another for trespass and a third for abandonment. The first two cases were disposed of with a fine of $5 and costs in each caw. The abandonment case being beyond the magistrate's jurisdiction Perry was bound over to court in the sum of $50. It is likely that he will go to jail as he had not, at a late hour, succeeded in getting a bondsman. Perry is described by those who know him as a clever sort of fellow when sober. When drunk, as is often the case, he is a terror. Cotton Outlook Brighter. Cotton merchants, farmers and busi ness men generally wore a universal smile today. It all came from the en couraging cotton prospects. The re ceipts have been light and the staple has 'ris.' The New ork and Liverpool markets are both strongandpric.es are better than has been the case in months. Middling today was selling on the Raleigh exchange for 5 1-2 cents. Not long ago it was as low as 4 12 cents. The outlook is that the southern staple will in a short time bring a considerably better price than at present. The situation is indeed encouraging and farmers, merchants and people eeneraliy will have good cause to at tend church on Thursdry next. A Beautiful Church. On next Sundiy the- new Methodist church at Warrenton will be formally dedicated by Bishop - Wilson. The church, which has only just been completed, is described as a "thing of beauty." It is said to be one of the handsomest,if not the most handsome, place of worship in the state. The cost of the church was upwards of $40,000. Weekly Cotton Eeport- The receipts for the season to date are 19,407 bales, against 14,455 for the corresponding date last year. The receipts for the week are 2,719 against 1,625 the corresponding week la,st sea son; Shipments for the week were 2,494 bales. Stock on platform, 1,275 bales. Price of middling 5 1-8 to 5 1-4 cents. Japan the Centre of Interest. This evening at 7:30 o'clock at Eden ton street Sunday school room this country will be presented nnder vari ous aspects by members of the young woman's missionary society of that ehurch. The decorations will be Jap anesque in charaoter and will include I eontribation box at the door. . ... A Peculiar Accident Wednesday evening little Hate! Mitchell, a daughter of Mr. and Mr. Charles .Mitchell, accidrntly swallowed a grain of corn which she had absent mindedly placed in her mouth. The grain became lodged in the little one's windpipe, causing her to suffer ter ribly. Doctors were summoned and decided that an operation was neces sary. Before it could be performed, however, the obstruction passed down and lodged lower in the little girl's throat. She is at present much better and it is thought no serious operation will have to be performed. Football Tomorrow. Th is is what the Greensbor) Record says about the football game to be played between the A. & M. college and Oak Ridge at Greensboro tomor row: "They say the A. & M. boys play football from way back. All the same the Oak Ridge boys have an eye open for business and know bow to play too. So the game is likely to be of much interest." Our oysters at 25o per quart are better Hian others sell for 35c. N G. N. Ives & Co. Horses 1" r Sale. I will sell toinorm . at auction at 12 o clo, k ten well-: l ed horses: tood roadsters ana saddlers; young, sound andgeutle. Fkakk Stkonach. Wilmington Street. CLOTHING AND CLOTHING. Gentlemen, Men and Boys, why don't you all get clothing from Swin dell's. There is no better stock of cloth ing to be found in this city than is found at Swindell's and the styles are the very latestand the price is the very lowest. Now do use the common sense you are posstssed of and go to Swin dells for your clothing, lou can do well there. TF YOU WANT to know what promi 1 nent citizens, men and women who have died in the state during the year, with a brief biographical sketch of each, most valuable for reference, get Turner's North Carolina Almanac for 1895. Price only 10 cts. THE BARGAIN OP OUR LIFE We will have next Wednesday a special sale of it that our custom. -rs may benefit by it. It is ladies ru' b shoes. Wednesday next ladies Storm Rubkek Shoes 34c a pair. Croquets and' sandals 24s a pair. Now the price elsewhere is 50c and 60c. Our price 34 and 24a at D. T. Swindell's TF Y( lOF T! OU WANT A CHRONOLOGIC RECORD THE MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS, LOCAL AND GENERAL-, THAT HAVE TRANSPIRED IN THE STATE DORIXIt THE PAST YEAR M08T VALUABLE FOR REFERENCE GET TURNER'S N. 0. Almanac for 1895. Price only 10o., at John Y. MarRae'sdritg store We guarantee to jive better oysters and better measure than can be had of any other dealer in Raleigh. U. M.- Ives & Co. To show you our stock of sweet article new. Wr have the best CITRON, ALMONDS, WALNUTS, &c. Our PURITAN OATFLAKES in ex.-elled by any brand. Don't forget also that we keep constantly on hand ALL PORK KRKSll SAUSAGK put up for our trade especially. Only 12 1-2 cents per pound. We offer today a small lot of sugar cured hams for 11 1-2 cents perpound. Don't postpone your purchase as we have only about 800 pounds of thein left. J Gk ZBIiXi Sb CO. v" - CONNECT YOUK THOUGHTS w n i mi. rr n u uu U U UU vUu vjj u vyVJJUU Great Latitude of Choice in Styles and Pric3s. OUR TASTE : And judgment open to the : critical tests of Public Opinion and includes the pick of the market in Fresh Fall and Win ter, Staples and Novelty DRESS GOODS. COMPETITION OUR DELIGHT, STOCK AGAINST STOCK, DOLLAR AGAINST DOLLAR. A crowded store is our beat argument for the values we offer, r Cloaks anfl Capss. Splendid fitters, excellent styles, superior workmanship. Wide range for selection. Co A Stjarwood SvC THESE ARi OHLT k riw LEFT. F 4T- To make room for other goods. at (6 06 16 60 (6 75 $8 00 $6 85 $8 50 f9 RALEIGH, N. C. MEN'S FINDINGS -FOR- FULL DRESS. Our Department of Findings for Hen contains the newest and best styles for Ful) Eveiing Dress. The correct ideas in Manhat tan Shirts, E. & XV. Collars, Cuffs, Auerback's Neckwear, Irish Linen Cambric, noli finished, hemmed stitched Uaadkerculefg, French IJsle nil Silk Half Hose ami John ston & Murphy's Patent Leal her Shoes. The .American Hosiery t o. 'm full regular, close-Fitting, Fine Ribbed Woolen Underwear, the ideal Underwear to use with dress Suits, allowing tho most perfect freedom of motion, euno nd gracefulness. W.H.&R.S. TUCKERS Si U meats for Thanksgiving, Kvery CURRANTS, MINOR MEAT. 2-lb. cartoons or in bulk are not nil ma u Cassimeres, Kerseys, Cheviots, Tweeds and Jeans for men and boy's CLOTHING. GENT'S FURNISHINGS Shirts, Ties, Collars, et cetera, for business, Negligee and dress. STORM GOODS. Umbrellas, Mackintoshes and , Rubber Shoes. OURSHOESTOCK All Shoes bought from reputa. ble manufacturers are fully warranted in every respect and oar dealings are with no othej j r.- -W"N. . ."
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 23, 1894, edition 1
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