Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Oct. 28, 1880, edition 1 / Page 2
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!Jty dfiaiham Record THURSDAY, OCy. ?8,1$80. H. A. LONDON. Jr Editor. FOR l'RESIDENT: VINFIELD S. HANCOCK, Of Pennsylvania. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT: WILLIAM H. ENGLISH, 0 Indiana. FOR OO.VEKNOK .: THOMAS J. JARVIS, oi Pitt tOti LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, JAMES L. KOBLXSON, f Macon. FOR SECIiET ART OF STATS I WILLIAM L SAUNDERS, Of Wake. FOB TREASFREB 1 JOHN M. WjOJJTH, of Randolph. TOR ATTORUr? GENERAL : fTHOMS $. KENAN, of Wilson. FOR AUDITOR : WILLIAM P. ROBERTS, of Gates. FOB SCPEEIJCTEWPEXT OF PTBLIC INSTUCCTIOK : JOHN C. SCARBOROUGH, of Johnston. J01 JUDGE OF THE 4'fH JUDICIAL DIST., RISDEN T. BENNETT, MR JCD9K OF TJIE 6tH JUDICIAL DIST , JOHN A. GILMER, of Guilford. FOR CONGRESS JO.URTH DISTRICT: WILLIAM R. COX. of Wake. At the election next Tuesday the voters of North Carolina will decide i point to the cstc;n jj q. tp which party they prefer entrust , Raiiroac that now pierces the Blue infc tfce management of their pub- j Ridge and is completedjo Asheville ; lie affairs. The democratic and they can point c Cape Feai the republican party are each striv- and ya(jkin Yallcy Railroad, seven ing for snpremacy. The one or the j tj m les of 11,3 ve been grad. .other will succeed there is no third j edgince Jamiary 1879. tlcy can party pr of course the so-called point to that gl.;nd ciiaritj the In. ."Independent?" amount to nothing, j pane Agvlum at Morganton. they There is no doubt whatever tliat, int t0 fhe L Asylum .1 .1 . t 1. 1. VI! pituer inc uemocrau ui uw nTuim- .cans wilj rule in this S ate, and this .question is to be settled next Tues day. Jn view ot tins tact we cie- , sire to address a few simple state-jthe mcnts to our readers. All voters should desire the suc cess of the part" .that will best pro mote their interest?, that will best protect tli em in their lives, liber- tics aiul property, and that will most economically expend their money. Jom panics promise an this, but will they fulfill their promi ses? . The best way of judging the future u-bv the past. If an indi- vidual solicits your confidence, that p03eonlv thirty ciirlit thousand del ta lias once before betrayed, you hrS and squan(ieml tie reraa;mk.r. arc not so apt to confide in him as The democratic party re-opened the in another who has always fulfilled doors of tj,e TJnive:sitv and arc H piuuiwc.. mi rortioa Tt-ktl rkrfioc horn lnn in parties. Both parties have been in power in North Carol ipa: both have been thoroughly tested : and the people have had ample oppor tunity of realizing the rule of both. JjTow, which has done the best X If the republican party has done bet ter than the democratic then vote for that party, but if the democratic party has done better than the re publican pirty then vote for the democratic party. Let us therefore draw a comparison between the two : let us turn to the official re cords of the two parties : and let us recall the well known acts and do ings of the two. The republican party held abso lute control of every department of pur Sate government from the adoption of the new Constitution in fhe Spring of 18C8 until th fall of 1870, when the legislative depart ment became democratic. They continued in control of the Execu tive until the first of January 1877, and of the Supreme Court until the first of January 1879. The democratic party liave therefore hell control of every department of our State government for just two years, about the 6ame length of time 'aa tfie republican. Compare then Jie rule of the two parties during the two years that each had abso lute control of the Stte govern jnent. First, lefc us compare their expenses. From the Auditors Rcr ports we learn that the expenditures during the two years of republican rule were as follows; Tor flecal P1- , lflw. $776,47C.6 : ,4r-7 .. 1870, 1,117,180.41, A total Ot 1.8M.M7.08. For the last two years when the democratic party has had absolute control the expenses have been: - j.., T4r eudlng Sept. SO. 1879, tK4.Ml.9S. atouioi Wir8i. So that the two years of the re publican rule cost $854,695.27 more thau two years of democratic rule ; i tingences" $91,190.00, while the i democrats spent on! v 34,637.23! 1 With these facts and figures that cannot be contradicted we ak the taxpayers of North Carolina which rule do you prefer republican or democratic ? Do you wish to drive the democratic party fio.n parry and re-instate the republican 2 The rate of taxation for State purposes in 1870 under republican rule was 77 cents on the hundred dollars val uation ; but this year under demo cratic rule it is only 32 cents a saving to every taxpayer of 45 cents on every hundred dollars worth of property. "Which of the two parties, then, should taxpayers desire to have in power? Answer by your votes ! What is there to show for all the money that was expended by the republicans when they were in pow er ? Absolutely nothing. But the democrats, though they have spent nearlv a million dollars less than did the republicans, can point with riridn tr tlin rwrtmiinnf rwnnfa if f neon at GoldahW- tbnv pnn point to the Normal school at Chap - , j el Hill for the whites and to the Normal school at Favetteville for iwiinoi auuvi ai x t cut; lilt; 1UI ncgiwg . they point tQ a, these as some of the proofs of the beneficence of their rule, and as ar guments for a continuance of their supremacy. Under repuHican rule the educn- uonai inreresis 01 the State were !gadiv neglected. They wcll-niirl ruined our University, and although they collected about three hun dred thousand dollais for public ' oiuwuio tin.) MliinUU IU ui;ii DUI- Bpcnding for public schools over I.. . - - . Xl 1 1 A.J 1 1 mree nunurra mousana dollars a year. Which party then has proven i! self the friend of education ? A n Bwer at the polls ! Under the rule of which party were the people of North arolina better protected in their lives, liber ty and property ? Recall the 1 1 olden-Kirk war, and answer. No man will deny that our people have been happier and more prosperous under democratic rule in 1879 and 1880 than under repul lie in rule in 1869 and 1S70. Then whv vof. ..j vote for a continuance of democratic rule? It cannot be denied that, during the two years of republican rule (in 1869 &70,) our taxes were exorbitantly and oppressively high; that the p:oples money was squan dered and stolen : th;:t fraud and corruption pervaded our Legisla tive Hall-, where mcmbere were bought at:d bribed : and that peace ful citizens were arrested without warrant and wrongfully imprison ed. These things arc fresh in the memory of our people and on ac count of tWe things the people arose in their might and hurled the republican party from place and power. Why then should any man desire to return that party t power? The two parties solicit the votes of the people, and we ask that each voter make a full, fair and impar tial investigation into the claims and merits of the two parties and then cast his liallot as his judgment decides, fhe so-called "Independ ents" reprent np party, no princi ples, and nobody but their individ ual selves. A yota for them is thrown away. The two parties are before the pepplc; choose ye between them ! "Tmt ARMY SHOULD HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH THE SELECTION OR INAUGURATION of Pmsidents." Hancock's Letter to Sherman. nearly twice ns much ! If we will take 3oie of the items of these ex penditures tho comparison will b,e still more favorable to the 4einocrat ic party. The republican Legisla ture of 138 &'C9, cost $430,958,70; whereas jthe democratic Legislature of 1870 oVSO cost only $71,293,80,a difference of 8359,664.801 The public printing cost during the two years of republican rule 71,091.95; but for the last two years under democratic rule only $21,109.i2 : more than three times as little! The republicans spent on "Con- MOSES A. BLEDSOE. As long as the republicans had any hope of electing a Congressman in this District they nominated as their candidates men of some respectability, but when they at Ltst gave up all hope they nominated such a man as Moses A Bledsoe. They have selected him as their candidate this year not with any expectation of electing him, but as one peculiarly fitted to do their dirty work, and his canvass has justi fied the fitness of their selection. His harangues have been of the most inflammatory character and calculated not only toexcitojthe bitterest ill feel ing between the two parties, but also to arouse the worst passions of the negroes against the whites. They are more like the incendiary appeals of Denia Kearney upon the sand-lots of San Francisco, than like the speech es of a candidate for Congress among respectable people. He appeals, not to the reason und judgment of his hearers, but to their prejudices and passions. Tbatthe republican lead ers should ask the decent men of then party to vote for such a demagogue, is an insult to them, which they should not hesitate to repel by rtfus ing to give him their votes. The same spirit that prompted him to favor the ''black flag" during the late war still animates his vindictive na ture and stamps him as an incendiary agitator, and his election to Congress would be a disgrace of the deepest dye. The man who has always prostitu ted his office to his personal profit i unfit for office, and it can be easily proven that Bledsoe is such a man. In the year 1864 he iras a director of the Insane Asylum, and uned that office to make money by selling wood at an exorbitantly high price, for which our Supreme Court (through Judge Beade, a republican) severely rebuked him. The facts of this are officially recorded in the 04th volume of our Supreme Court Beports and cannot be disputed. Again, as Chair man of the Board of directors of the Penitentiary he abused his high office by supplying from his mill musty meal that was totally unfit for food. Thi3 is sworn to by credible witness es, one of whom (W. A. Johnson, an overseer) testified as follows : "I have complained and iown the rations to Mr. Blodsoe, especially the bread ; he insisted it was gootl and left it to the baker to decide : the ba ker decided it was bad and for the reason that the meal w as ground from musty roin : Mr. Bledsoe' a-dced the baker if he knew where it was ground, ami the baker replied at his (Hied soe's ) mill : .Mr. Bledsoe imide no reply. I have frequently seen cracks in the bread in the morning that von could lay a goose quill in, ami "the cracks chock ptt.i. ok ciiix hk. The men absolutely could not eat it," Now xre ask. ought such a man to be elected ? That lie w.is in favor of raisins tbo black flag" during tho war is un doubtedly true. The term "raising the black flag",raeant that both armies should kill all prisoners and show no quarter, and urge a war of extermin ation. This was publicly charged upon him by the Raleigh Standard during the war. and is proven by the certificate of four respectable citizens of Wake county as follows : "The undersigned, citizens of the northern part of Wake county, do hereby certify that, during tho war, v. hen we were conscripted and car ried to Raleigh, that Moses A. Bled soe, then in a bombproof position, came where we were and voluntarily insulted us, by declaring that he was not only for the black flag, but was opposed to any one who was not for the war ; that he wanted the black flag raised, and to neither ask nor give any quarter. He used other ex pressions calculated to browbeat us in our then depressed condition. He said any man that was not for tho war was not his man, and he was not for that man. All this was said publiclv, at the mar! et house in Raleigh, oa the 15th o, July, 1862. He was well acquainted with us, and knew at the time we were Union men." We ask honest republicans, can they vote for such a man? How can any old Union man vote for him ? No colored man ought to vote for Bledsoe because he has been their bitterest enemy. In a speech that he made at Gulley's Mill, in Johnson coun;y, in th year 1868 it is proven by some of the best citizens of that county (and not denied by Bledsoe) that he advised the land-owners "neither to sell nor rent a foot of land to the negroes, but rather let it grow up in briars ; that by so. doing they would force the colored man to work for wages, and upon the terms they (the land-owners),niight impose." In other words he wished to slM-ve the colored people into submission! He was opposed to their renting or buying an acre of land! How then can c dored men vote for him ? Of course there is no fear of this District being disgraced by the elec tion of Bledsoe, but his defeat should be so overwhelming and such a re buke given him, as to show the world that the decent people of theMetroD- olitai District are not to be again j insulted by such a man even eolicit-j ing then: votes. LET Y0TEUS REMEMBER. 1. That under th.e two years of Republican rule the expenses of car State Government were $2;893,036. 08. 2. That under the two years of democratic rule the expenses were 61,038,941,81. 3. That in two years the Republi cans paid for public schools only thirty eight thousand dollars. 4. That the Democrats paid every year for public schools over three hundred thousand dollars. 5. That under Republican rule State taxes were nearly 80 cents on the hundred dollars valuation. 6. That under Democratic rule Stafe taxes are ouly 32 cents on the hundred dollars valuation. 7. That under Republican rule "the power of the Judiciary was ex hausted." 8. That under Republican rule peaceful eitizeus were illegally arrest ed and the civil law made to yield to the military. 9. That under Republican rule the State, debt was increased fifteen mil lion dollars. 10. That under Democratic rule the State debt has been decreased nine millions of dollars. Let the voters of North Carolina remember these facts and decile wtiicn party is entitled to their sap port ! connssposjDZSxicxs For The Rzoocd. OUR SEW YORK LETTER. Nkw York, Oct., 25, 1880. Ed. Record: Politicians und peo ple alike are buckling on their ar mor in anticipation of the coming: battle which now promises to be one of the most hotly contested engage ments in the annals of political war fare. Since the Democratic picket 1 line was driven in at the West, the ! leaders of the campaign have found ; out that there is something to be done besides sittm? down and pro phesying victory. Tho best inform ed person 8 assert that Indiana two weeks before the late election would have gone from fire to ten thousand Democratic, acd that her sudden change of front was due to a panic among the mechanics and mill oper atives whose fears of direful conse quences of free trade were terribly excited by the hullabooloo raised by Republican orators. The Radical leaders having faihd to make an im pression with the bloodly shirt issue dropped it, and turned their atten tion to the ''tariff for revenne onl" clause. They prophesied all sorts of calamities if the democrats- should come into power mills would be t-hut up, factories shut down and all ! trade.biuinesa and employment be at an end. Such a rumpus did they j raise, that woiting men, who had vo ; red the De:uocr:ttic ticket ail their livos. got friy litem d and desert d ii! regiments to the llepublicau camp. Tlie lMnocialic local lead, rs seenud . to be either incompetent, or too slow, i for while ignring, or leaving the j Tariff question to explain itslf and j spending their precious time ii bat ! tering away at what seemed to them ! graver issues, tho damage was done. Since the tariff question has been thoroughly ventilated, the panic sticken working men have recovered their equanimity and are begininjj to see what fools they have made of themselves. Like each successive is-sue taken up by the Republican, the tariff issue has been proven to be a false one ; and there will be no more senseless panics. Indiana will go for Hancock in November. The Republicans here have been feeling particularly "good" of late, and, delighted at the success of their ruse on the working classes of In diana, have been adopting the same mode of attack in New York. To catch the votes of mechanics and other laboring men, they have been holding up Garfield as the great Apostle of labor und the defender ef laboring humanity, lint, to use a homely expression, they have lately been "knocked higher than a kite." The Democaats luckily came into the possession of an autograph letter of Mr. Garfield written to a Mr. Morey of Lynr, Mass., in which he shows himself to be in favor of coolie hoe-makers and the consequent de grada'i m of American Crispins to the level of coolies. Fac similes cf the document have been printed and are beintr distributed by the hundred thousand. Ten thousand photo graphic copies of it have been dis iributed in California aud Oregon, aud the storm of indignation which it is producing wi l effectually squelch and claims of Carfield as to bis being the friend of working men. It has been well named, "Garfieli's Death "Warraut"! and certainly a more heartless, hearty concurrence in the schemes of men who would reduce white men to a .st ate of servitude could not have beeu written. The New York Sun, which seems to have a penchant for raking up nan lorgoutm documents and ferret- out antiquated frauds, is at present engaged in . hauling Judge Tourgee over some very hot coals. The Au thor of "A Fool's Errand" in com pany with a good many other carpet baggers who understood "Addition, Division and Silence," were no doubt dissatisfied with their share of the bribe money that was paid for the issuance of the four million dollar bonds to the Western N. C. R. R., and may. have been dfsappointed in other kindred steals ; but if t he docu ments now brought to light do not lie, J udge Tourgee ought to have been satisfied with his share. But perhaps he came South thinking and expecting that there "was millions in it," and when he rec ived only a pal try four thousand dollars out of that particular steal, he was disappointed, HUU VHIJcU 1119 111 o j: o jutiuuv A Knaves Errand" would nave been a better titfe to his book, and misnomer. It would appear from the numbers of high Government Officials now doing "stump duty," that the Gov ernment at Washington has been left to run itself. Secretaries Evarts Sherman, Schurz and even Fred Douglass are flyfng around over the country, making radical speeches and drawing their salaries at the saue time. Secretary Schurz delivered a two hours speech at the Cooper In stitute last Thursday night, and no doubt the stalwart Rtpiblican aud ience were well pleased with the en tertainment but as the Utes are mak ing trouble among the defenceless set tiers of Colorado aud things are going wrong on other portions of the frontier, it looks as though Mr. Schurz might better earn his salary by attending to the business of fhe Department of the Interior, and es pecially the quite unsettled Indian affairs, than by electioneering for Garfield in New York. Tao mem bers of the cabinet are paid by the people to do public service, not par tizan service something they just now seem to forget. JL cruel aud inhuman "sell" in much iu vogue here at the prosevt time. Sevtral Stalwart Garfield men on whom it has been perpetrated are now prostrated with cere brospinal meningitis, occasioned by xi i i j. ii. the severe shock to their nervous sys tems. This is how it is done: Jons, who is a Democrat mvets Brown v h is a republican, bids hiuV'good morn ing" at the same time holding hi hand over his eye, as if in great pain. "What's the matter wih your eye;" sympathizing. ly inquires Brown. "I think there is HOtnethmg in it, says Jones, "would ycu be so kiud a iu io& iniu ii :m m- 11 you can see what's the matter V" Jones leans up against a lamp pott, and Brown prying open his eyelid? proceeds to examine the ailing optic. "Why, I can't see anything iu your eye," says Brown. "Well, there's something in it, and it hurta awful,' says J ones. Brown looking again very carefully ays, viones, i cam see anyiumg in youi e3'f ! , Jones .v m ..Uww, u;m.i, j-'jo "What is it?" asks Brown. 329!" Says Jone, and vamoses. Brown seeks the nearest drug store for smelling salts. J. G. D. WASHINGTON LETTER. t Washington Oct. 25th 18-0. j There is now a more buoyant feel ing among the DeinocrnlR here than j existed riht after the October elect- ' i-ns. This in not only the case here, I but renoits reeeiv d at the Congress-1 ional Committee headquarters indi ' cate sanguine hopes und energetic ! work among tlie supporter of Han-! eock mil English nil over the Unior, It must be admitted that the n suit in Indiana was a disappointment. vet I think some of the W-Mt inf ! m vd Democrats here wcr let s?in - guine than the majority of them else-j where, for the reason that we here ! knew better thnn anybody- else the scheming and unscrupulous obarac j ter of the men in ehaige of the Re- j publican cunvaas there, and the full j extent of the appliances and resour ! . ... r - . . ! ces at tneir command. We knew al abeut the systematic nerrro eolonia-' Hon bepun last winter and continued gradually up to within a few days or the election. No less thnn live thou sand of the nrgroes pnssed through this city from time to time. Wash ington Democrats also knew the pow er exerted by the administration iu Iv half of the radical ticket and the fabulous Minis of money amounting to over one million of dollars sen' into the state and distributed through every district for the pur chase of votes. It was said that the Rep-iblicans greatl missed S"nalor Morton in this campaign, but I thi ik not. WashingtO'iians know tha ---c, Senator Dorsey f the National Com-! mittee, who was in charge, ha, with - out ny of the higher abili i s of Mor-1 ton, just as much cnnnini? and more ' J , . . Unscrupulous; 111 fact IS a greater Schemer and political S.COlindrel thai! aiorton ever aarea IO DO, WUlCU IS JU81 wnat tUe raulCtl party OI tO-dav demands, But for the November contest things are very different. Victory for Hancock is in the air, and all the shouting of radical clans over a dear ly bought triumph in October can not avert it. From New York, New Jersey, California, Nevada, Maine and even Indiana come the most cheering repc ts. There is scarcely a reasonablo donbt of the four states first named, Vale in Indiana the con ditions that existed in October can not possibly exist, in November. The funds wiil not hold out for another such exhibition of wholesale bi ibei y. Department clerks and other em ployees are complaining bitterly be cause another assessment has been levied apon them. After the Ohio and Indiana election, they came out of the "cave of gloom" into which Maine cast them, but ktill they do not like to pay too muc'i for the whis'lA, especially as it is a mighty uncertain case yet. The radical or gan here in publishing a notice of the new levy says: Thi will be a good opportunity for those who have as yet paid nothing to put them selves on reco d as rf publicans. Those, too, who have endeavored to make friends cf the mammon of unrighteousness by contributing to both political committees can get down on the right side of the fence. A carefully prepared lit has been made of all the various grades of contributor! for future re ference." That s mods a good deal like a contemptible sort of bull-do zing. And while the administration and the party is thus engaged let them prepare for another surprise. This has been a ;Camaagu jo&qax prises. First came Maine and then Indiana. The next state that will create a sensation will be Pennsylva nia or Illinois or it may be that sev eral states will take a hand. The situation in Virginia is now the only source of concern in the Democratic council and it is believed that some way out of the posstble danger there will be speedily found. It is unfor tunate that a demagogue anywhere should have power to thwart the in-tc-refct of a whole state if not a na tion. The tariff question, sprung at the last moment, was more or less effect ive iE October, but it promises to re-! act. Protected manufacturers arej begining to see not only that the dan-; ger they were made to fear was a ; sham, but that there is after all, a real one likely to come out of forcing tl e tatiff info fhe whirlpool of party politics. Should they appeal to the country iu the Lex C-moi esgi. n 1 e lections upon the issue of protection or noi:-prot. crion, the result would b- au overwhelming majori-.v in op position to them. More tban half tho RepnbHca'j party and Republi can press is frv five trade, nnd at ha t two-thirds of the- Deinocn t r Htrenct-h would be wiyed t n tlia 4de ii it were the to e isne, Tb welfare of the agricultural ch.sses, the m irchantile intere t and the carry ing trade is antapfoidstie to protection. If they are solidly arrayed against the manufacturers protection must ... go to the wall. It begins to dawn upon the minds of these man that bull-dozing their employers in the in terests of any pirty will i:ot pay, but ihiit what they want is a careful re vision and a :justinut of our tariff lav s by the co-operation of both parties, as contftnpLtttd bv Senator E .ton's bill. Mr. Abram S. Hewitt, of -New Yoik, one of the most exten- i dve manufacturers iu tho couutrv finpluying 4,000 men, hit the nail on i he head when he said the other night in a sppech, that if the parties w i fi .vrfettsw 1.1 1 .t J f ! rviuu lujuiu issue on me larm question they might to exchange candidates, for Hancock is a Peun sylyanian r.nd opposed to fteo-trade, tvbi'e Garfield is an out an 1 out free trader in 1 be theory and a member! ol the Cobden CInb. f Ti.mdon ! ; free-trade organ izat on Ores'ts j head ofj Cleveland, of New Jr,-. y, uubw iub largest COlU'ei'lls in State, says tba if aDv ecabiirdimcnt n the Statu is elo ed because o' Hancock's election Le will ripen it next morning with a f uU t, . V re- I thining all the old hands. Tuis is j ue wiil have to be taken in by the j Republicans, as was the bloody shirt ; and the Southern claims bugbear. Phono. new Advertisements. Business Location. Moxcure, Chatham Cocxtt X. C. A tteidi ion is caiieii io tlie j.dot. e m- vitiug location for busii ess of uilFer cut kinds : and espeeiallv for a whole- ! sale and barteiiag store, 1 waggon ana camaegti inctory oi j "i'1 ire. M --uciue is tho j I central Depot in Chatham coun- j ! ty on the lx. Sc A. L.' Railroad, and is ! wont eligible shipping point for j an extensive back country. It is be j tweeu Haw and Deep Rivers, is heal- j thy aid has line water. Lots can be 1 -1 !! i in , . ! naa on iioerni terms ootii as to price and time. J. II. 'Whisslfr, Oct 15th 1880 lm J3. 1. Howzf. Moncure,N. C. m OMR! If HR! PITT 4 vn WTX'fii t(mr(T' I ALL AND W INTER STOCK TI.TST RECEIVFI) 1 i n,,Acl, , , , i Our larjfo store House is now filled to Its utmost j capacity with the choicest selections of Dreaa Goods, dark Goods, Silks, Cloths, Cassimers, Salt- i inp, Doeskins, Kentucky Jeans, Flannels. Boots, ! Hats, Notions of :tll kinds. Our stock of CARPETS Includes Fine Frame Body Brussels, Tapestry, j two and three ply Ingrains, all of Uio best make j and none but new patterns, j Imported Zephyr Shawls Very attractive and cheap. Blea?hod, and Unbleached and colored TABLE DAMASKS, Napkins and Doylies to match. sp cial attention is called to our very attractive assortment of HOSIERY, au sizes, ine nest varioty ever offered here. Our i UNDER VESTS for men, ladies, misses and children are unsur passed for quality and variety. We buy all ot our goods from first hands and make a profit thereby. Those who buy of us will save money. Our Wholesale trade having largely Increased, we offer the most liberal Inducements to Mer chants to patronize us. YEARGAN, PETTY, & Co, oct 10 Sm Raleigh X. C. 13. 1 WOODELL, No. 3 Martin St. Raleigh N. C !s:ils Iter ani Commission Msrckal, Orders, correspondence and con signments solicited. J6Mr. F. O. Newby is one of our salesmen. W.B, ATAM& (To No. 4 Hargctt St., U RALEIGH N. C. Dealers in BOOTS, SHOES, GROCErjXS HATS, WOOD AKD WILLOW WARE, AC. "SaW.T.Haml of Chatham Is one of r,nr man, and will be pleawed to wait on his 1 m. T. E BRIGGS & SOnS, BRIGGS BUTLDIWQ, BXAXJCB8 IK HARDWARE, WAGON AJTD BUGGY MATEBIAI SASH, DOORS, AND BLINDS, PAINTB, OILS, AND GLASS, LIME, GEUENP, AND PLASTER. Stoves, Nails and Iron, Children's Carriages, SPOUTING GOODS AND FISHING TACKLE. Send for a Sample Card of "Town & Country" BEADY MIXED PAIKTS. It is the Best. We offer Beat Goode at Lowest Prices. SQUARE DJEALING Tie IfM Belli New Hois I reiivstii'l ! the Public as th.l;i!fV. prwlar tin oi s :ipii'-e. ir.P-'iiHiilra! rihI sk!i! l w rktnc 3hii In the iiiftnuianure of SwL'. Muchiur. Simplicity, Durability and Capacity. It Is lhe Perfection ot Ueeliani&m for HEMMING, FF.LLINf:, UIXTUXO, C01WW., IJHAIDIaG, SKAMINO, Qririixr;, titklvg, dauxinu. imXGINO, lU'l'FMNTr, G ATM MKiNri, HKM-STnrilTXG, ifcc. B"Evry 31arlilne Warranted. J. L. STONE, State Agent, r.u!fcij;b, X. C. Alsn denier in Organ an J rianott. w. r. nr:r:flis. Agent at Columbia F.-u-irr. octOtt T II ;Tf you wish to know who sells j the best goods for ! the least money. I W"T TATT. n Mil A o n. a- i Wo carry a full and complete stock of nil kinds of ; goods of the latest variety and style for everybody. i We raake a 8Peclaity r ova tremendous stik of C1(ltnlngf j Our Grocery Department Is filled with tho v7 ! quality of Groceries of every description, for j we have found it does not pay to keep infrir ; goods. j We can guarantee our goods to be what we rep resent them, and can compete with any Uousa la the State on low prices. Satisfaction guaranteed In every sale. So- llclting a ;call, we are, respectfully, COOrR & 37NVBI, DURHAM, X. C. W. L. COOPER, of Caswell. July20 JAS. W. BTXTTM. of CnaUiitiu. Inventors and Patentees should send for instructions, term, referem. &.c, to Edaon Brothers, Solicitor of l'aient, Washington, D. C, who furnish the same without charge. Idson Brothers is a well known m4 auc cessful firm ot largo experience, having been tablished in 1866. W. C. DOUGLASS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ASHEUOHO. 3V..C PPractlces In the Courts of Randolph, Chatham and Montgomery. July M ly 14 I D yurselvc y making money when a nhLl golden chance isoffore I, thereby 1whm keeping iovnriy from your door. TIiohc who al ways tako advantage of the gu.nl chari'-cs for ma king money that are offered generally become wealthy, while those who do not Improve such chances remain in poverty. We want many raeu. women, boys and girls lo work for us right in their own localities. The businexs will pay more than ten times ordinary wages, We furnish an expensive outfit and all ihat you need free, no one who engages tails to make money very rapidly You can devote your whole time to the work, r only your spare moments. Fu II information and all that ls needcd sent free. Address stiksos Co., Portland, Maine. business now before the pnbJie. You can make money faster at work for us than at anything else. Canital not required. w Will start you. $12 a day and upward made at home by the Industrious. Men. woman, boys an hirts wanted everywhere to work for us. Kw i he time. You can devote your whle time to the work, or only your spare mmenis. Ke ether absihesfl will pay you nearlj well. No ene wullng to work can fall to make snormous pay by elglaglng at once. Costly outfit and terms free. A neat opportunity for making money easily and SmoroaMy. Address Tkue Cf., Augusta. Mal
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1880, edition 1
2
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