Daily Btasidard. JOHN D. BARRIER & SON, Editors and Proprietors. JAS. P. COOK, Editorial Correspondent. OFFICE IN BRICK ROW. Democratic Ticket. NATIONAL. FOR PRESIDENT, v WILLIAM. JENNINGS BRYAN. FOB VICE PRESIDENT. ARTHUR SEWALL 1ST ATE. J FOR GOVERNOR, . CYRUS B. WATSON ' OF FORSYTH, FOR'LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, THOS. W. MASON OF NORTHAMPTON. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE,- CHAS. M, COOKE OF FRANKLIN. FOR TREASURER, B. F. AYCOCK V . OF WAYNE. , FOR AUDITOR, ROBT. M, FUKMAN OF BUNCOMBE. EOR ATTORNEY GENERAL, FRANK ,1. OSBORNE OF MECKLENBURG, FOR J SUPERINTENDENT! OF PUBBIC INSTRUCTION, JOHN C. SCARBOROUGH 1 r OF JOHNSTON. FOR ASSOCIATE JUSTICES, :r A. C. AVERY, of Burke, . Geo. H. BROWN, of Beaufort. FOR CONGRESS FROM 7TH CONGEES- SIONAL DISTRICT. SAMUEL J. PEMBERTON. not devote due attention to and yet r-flRent hia own views as ne nas matured them. . CON-NT Y.. FOR THE STATE SENATE, C. D. BARRINGER. FOR THE HOUSE, M. F. NESBIT. . FOR SHERIFF, THOMAS J. WHITE. FOR REGISTER OF DEEDS, JOHN K. PATTERSON. FOR TREASURER, X CALEB W. SWINK, ' FOR COTTON, WEIGHER, .. w. h. bost; FOE SURVEYOR, JOHN H. LONG. V FOR CORONER, JOHN C. WAD3WORTH. FOR COMMISSIONERS, . L. J. FOIL, J. S. HARRIS, M. L. BROWN. . Major Guthrie told the negroes last Saturday to cultivate friendly relations with their white neigh bors and vote with them, but to watch both the old parties. Said he : "They will sell us out into slavery -worse than the slavery be fore the war." What condition could the old parties put the ne groes and the Populists into that the masses of those old parties would, not themselves be in ? We would like to know. By the way, if there is to be any buying j and selling Mr. Guthrie's party seems to be the only element on the market. It is an open secret that the Popu list leaders havf stood ready to fuse with either one of the old parties and the only dela.y was for the high, est bid in the sharing of candidates on the ticket. TheTopulistsin the main are as Mr. Watson said last Saturday the element of the Demo cratic party that got out of heart and left us just when we needed them most. Now they stand alooof from us while they agree with us on more essentials than they can get anywhere else and it is but natural that we would like to have them with us, and we are happy to say many of them are stepping across the line in that manly digni fied manner of following their con victions and would spurn the idea of purchase in any form. ! We tnink Mr. Guthrie made a dismal failure Saturday when he raised the expectation of our Populist friends sky .. high with his proposal to read the record against Mr. Watson about the Alli ance business. The record did not have one word of bearing against Mr. Watson, and only gave him a good chance to show that he had done all he was asked to do by Ma? rion Butler, Robert Vance and other leading Alliance men. If the fol lies of the leaders proved detriment tal to the Alliance, shame on a man that will try to lay the blame on him who helped them to get what they thought was for their advan tage. In this little thing we think Mr. Guthrie showed the spirit of an iDgrate and it must rebound against him in the minds of fair and rea sonable men. evening to a lu'i .auu house. We have heard many com-. plimentary remarks on Mr. Parker s able sermon. Mr. R L Rhjne," of Salisbury, spent Sunday in the city. He came down on his wheel. Mis Eihel Ward, who" has been visiting at Mr. T H Cook's for some i8bury Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Long spent Sunday with Mrs.' Long's brother, Mr John W flnnlr. keener of tfce county home; Mrs. Mary A Clayton and little rlftnorhfpr isn?.nfc Snndav in the country with Mr. John Clayton. Mr. W P Deaton left with his family for Mooresville this (Mon- dav mnrnin?. where thev Will re- j ' side in the future. 1 . . Mr. Cicero Mann, bookkeeper for the A therton cotton mill of Char lotte, spent Sunday in the city with his brothers, Messrs. Dock and A J Mann. Miss Hester Wilkinson nas re turned to the city, after spending the summer at Amitv Hill with , rf relatives. Mrs. J H Kimbrell, of Fort Mill, S. C, is visiting her sister, Mrs. L D Moore, on North Church street. Mr. and Mrs. J A Propst and Mr. and Mrs.' C O Lentz spent Sun day in the country. CONCORD, SEPT., 14, 1898. THE SITU AMOS. The discussions during last week ' were about all that the public mind ' could well take in. The hearing was unusually good and free from disturbances, while the enthusiasm was quite as much as intelligent voters usually display. The speeches were in a great degree courteous and unprovoking. It is a campaign peculiarly complicated in minor relations, with sharp lines only on . the one grand issue of finance. - This has assumed such . proportions as to justify electoral fusion in the minds of many whose superior knowledge, political sagacity, and unquestioned patriotism' make us - who denounced fusion two years ago and would have spurned such a proposition, now stand aghast and wonder what next While we have a feeling of gladness that the spirit of our opponents is not exasperating . there is much that should not go unnoticed that Mr. Watson could The speech Saturday night by Mr. Watson was one of unusual vehemence and power. We only wish that Mr. Pritchard would give him a chance to show up his errors and gauzy theories of last Thurs day night. If there is a tendency among our mill men, a3 we - have heard.' to accept Mr. Pntchard's statements as conclusive in favor of KcKinleyism, we beg that they sus- pend their judgment for due con 8icleration before they pledge their votes to McKinlev. Electric Bitters. Electric Bitters is a medicine suited for any season, but perhaps more generally needed, when the languid exhausted feeling prevails, when the liver is 'torpid and slug gish and the need of a tonic and alterative is felt. 'A prompt use of this medicine has often averted long an'1 perhaps fatal bilious fevers No medicine will act more surely in counteracting and freeing the system from the malarial poison. Headache indigestion, constipation, dizziness yields to Electric Bitters. 50c and $1.00 per bottle at Fetzer Drug tore. orest Hill Sews. r Rev R H Parker, pastor of Cen tral Methodist church, in the ab sence of Rev. M A Smith, preached in the Forest Hill church i Sunday Fifty Years Ago. Who could imagine that this should be The place where, in eighteen ninety-three That white world-wonder of arch and dome Should shadow the nations, polychrome . . . Here at the Fair was the prize conferred On Ayer's Pills, by tbe world preferred. Chicago-like, they a record show. Since they started 50 years ago. Ayer's Cathartic Pills have, from the time of their preparation, been a continuous success with the public. And that means that Ayer's Pills accomplish what is promised for them; they cure where others fail. It was fitting, therefore, that the world-wide popularity of these pills should be recognized by the World's Pair medal of 1893 a fact which emphasizes the record: 50 Years of Cures. DR. H. C. HERRING Is again at the old stand, where he will be pleased to see all who are in need' of his PROFESSIONAL - SERVICE S Mount Amoena SEMINARY A Flourishing School for Young Ladies. . TEN TEACHERS Ornamental Branches Receive Carefui Attention bev. 0. l. :t. :fisher, a m : PanrciPAL, . MOUNT PLEASNT. N O C. H. BARNHARDT, M. D, Physician and Surgeon , MT. PLEASANT, IX . C. Calls received and . promptly at tended to at all hours. Office at my resdence lately occupied by Dr. Moose s jl9, 91y CIIO ""'"J'u-Jit.j.i m 7 r 1 Off n 1 .. t-zf rs ci inti'tT- ".'"I D st i n. .... : - . r 1 n 1,1 mi 1 j fiV ii 1 ii.iiuw.miii.Mv : I" '-.-m'M (0) &2)

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view