% t ;j Paper (•*' r j 2oC I •ary \,T? v... 20. x cry 1 «» r ,le, P- I'renf an] Carolinian. of mothers and wives, .-i country of ours, are cry- They are crying to the to the lawyers, to the 1 linisters, and to all good every name and order. i ' it appeal to thee, for we - vile world is not a friend Yes, crying for help; we ling from the great lienor \\Y are cijing for prohibi .stians, politicians, consid ior traffic, its great curse if, 1, us carefuily as you do and free trade question. »>-;««] i 1 y admit that Uquor ~t enemy to mankit.d on The thousands that die an ,. c ..it wives, the mothers, and that are suffering terribly j l lor traffic Look around i wiii see our nation is be to be a drunk# n nation. The i - sci'ii in foreign lands. Our l ines are struck to see Amer intoxicated in the Heathen Now carefully consider, so timid. L« t the ques !• bat* il around the fireside, i trior, on t lie streets and as other questions ! importance »re, and >ou • the • iai>py restib f d> n°t in poiuics. I was raised i'emocratie pflrents. I spook i t• se many suflaring women of ou»- tin. Let us nave prohibition. ♦ forsake religious duties for -.1 of party questions. Prohi niust come. It will come. I he if the good women, all with one • i Port, will go to God in earn IVI nt piayer for prohibition it come. The same (iod ti at .. the Isi[elites cry while under relieved them will hear • ir\ of the good women of to -1 see in ymr valuable paper, it valuable because it favors ihiiion, the good women of >rv have start'd to work. God i'ltss their labor, it is high I'here are many good peo iti Hickory, but the devil has got ! • iig hold on it. I hiii infoimed t: Cataw ba county oniy has two >ed bar-rooms, and both are ii li.caory. Now the good women of 1 temperance society can run him their town if they will work i ♦ nough. Lav aside your tim- Ho'id a prayermee t:ng ?n of the bar-room every Satur «\enmg. He was run from n f our Northern cities by that 1. I admit his strength. He »so ii possession of ail of oui impi teting grounds because •ivi' vav to him. I admit be is u r He will say we can t have ".i because be doesu t like j *n. N't ver mind, that would ;1 .1 g a little hold on him. have his head subdued: after we might get his forefeet. u ;ii il you we must have some cki.ess. We use a little or sickness, can do without it n, work on sisters. YN e are for help. Christ says: "Woe l.itu that putteth the bottle to hps. He also says : ■it is not for us is against us. i * that are agaiust us is help , .t the bottle to his i e gb .p.>, A Mother. furnishing window at the te I- iont will suggest the thing •> lor }our holiday presents. el. 4'.t i e Supreme Court of Kausas !t tided that eighteen delegates '■ Legislature, upon whom lu > *' ounlld for votes, are ineligi lt is said that this la\s Ingalls •t. sure pop. We hope so. Press m# Carolinian. ' O A THICK AND PKD. j I.x-Mayor I'rJtchard, of Windsor, .Mercile.Hsl) ri«»>{jjec| tjy Three Men. A telegram to the Herald from W indsor, X f \, says: A. J. Pritchard, | ex mayor of Windsor, was found this moi ning stripped and tied to a tree, about 2 miles from here. He wss . in an unconscious condition from a terrible whipping he had received, j His body was raw and bleeding from his neck to his feet, and his assail ants had shaved one side of his head and face Mr. Pritchard «ays that on his way to his farm this morning he met three unknown men. One of them walked up behind him and struck ; him with something and knocked him down, and when he recovered iit- stripped of all his clothing ami tied to a tree. The men tool; turns at the whipping He swooned away under the terrible ordeal and didn't recover conscious- | i.euntil brought to town. Mr. PiitcLrud w liile mayor was very hard on offenders who were brought before him, and ii is thought that somu paiiu a whom lie hud punished , had thus taken icvenge upau him C l or Strength. J. O. Foy, proprietor of the Twin- City Daily of v \ mston, has purchased I the W t stv rn .Sentinel, the second I oldest pap* r in North Caro'.ina, and i and will consolidate the two. The same has often b en done in our St»te. 100 many pipt-rs have been started. Many live a short while, and d«e. Some get stiong enough i to form a union with tiie older brother and thus tight the wolf of starvation from the door. Tt was so 1 here and it has been so m many 1 other places. Hut that doesn't keep j inexpt i ; nc« d ambition from launch ing out on the tempestuous sea of journalism. "Experience alone will keep some people out of dangerous places. ( lias. I>. I pchurtli Short. 1! il. Chioni l» i , !»♦' . 12" Ever since the last election re ports have been sent out from Kaleigh almost everv day concern * I iug the otlice of the clerk of the Superior court. As a samp'e of these rumors it may be stated thut the Ivichmontl Dispatch of yesterday printed a telegram to the etfect that tiie guardian account book of the office had been found, and it showed a deficit in at -ount of £ Hi.ooo on the part of (.'has D. I'pchurch, i 1 former clerk of f he court. Mr. I'pchurch is said to be in Washington City. _ Silk umbrellas and walking canes at the White Front. ad 4'.» It is said that Senator Quay, of Pennsylvania, is dead against the Force bill and is actively exerting himseif for its def. at. Thi> snows that while Mr Quay may be very crooked in some things he can t>e quite straight in others. He is a wise politician. He knows the 1 oice bill helped to defeat his party iu the late eieet'on. and ne wauts to Hvont such a result at his house. On Saturday, 2«lth. I will sell at auction my stock ot gXKis, tixtures, restaurant etpiipments, etc. adv ll C H. MARTIN. "Doctor'' Caldwell's excuses for his appointment to the Inter Siatt Immigration Convention are entire y • satisfactory to this part of the Ira . teruity, and we "demand no ex i planation why we were not even j tnought of. Ibickorp, "Worth Carolina, December is, 1890. I-trt l >»»t Suspert The Innocent Sta?«* ChroniHe. There ought net to be any dis trust of ether Alliancemen because Dr. Macune proved to be a railroad tool and fbtteulfou-e tried to sell out the Alliance to Secretary Blaine. I hese men were bail m« n before there was an Alliance, and their con nection with the Alliance only era bled them to (mislead for a season the honest Alliancemen who did uol know their elM»raf»t"r Hut happily Ibtteuhouse has b(-en oust ed and Dr. Macune exposed. It is true, by a vote of 15 to 10, he was not proven guilty of s«- ng out; an 1 the Alliance, in the ai -"nce i>f con vincing prorf, gave him a coat of whitewash. it t' e confidence of the people in Dr. Macune is de stroyed, and all the whitewash in America will not re tore it. He has been particularly denunciatory of public men who betiayed their fol lowers and preached a higher type of public life. His practice has not agreed with his preaching ami he . stands condemned oy Lis own words. Win n iie a In.'tted that he borrowed s2.(n>o r roiu I'at. Ca'houn while r(lvo^ati ,w ' t r«v'»- ft 1 fTicer ° and attorney for the L. S. Senate '*as the Alliance candidate" he made a fatal admission, and his explat a tions will never explain h's conbict. Cut tlit' treacher\ ihese Alli ancemen is no rt flection upon the Alliance, and ought not to subject other Alliancemen to suopiciou. Col. Polk, though in clos.) contact with these two lascals, comes out of the investigation without a suspi cion of nrong l o c , und with a comp etc vindication. In the Geor gia Senatorial contest stooil alooi from the "w.-; th are dark and the tricks that . are vain" that were chai acteristic of Macune and Livingston. In our own State the | Alliance has been led b\ honest men. l)Oth its Piesidents, (it has but two) —Capt, Alexander and Mr. Elias Carr—are gentlemen of tie highest person:.l integrity, a d the same is true of the other leading officers. C ot;p*«e of tlie 1" liroe «*ncl 11»* Construction Com pan v. i Dispatches f ?-vn Knosville, Tenn , to New York state that Samual T it-', of M nj| h:s, has been appoint ed receiver of the Charleston, Cin cinnatti and Chicago railway, and that tl e Ma—ad'usett- and Southern Construction Company, which was building the road, would go into the ban ils of a recti ver. The Farmers' Aiiiance has a metn bership which covers all parts of the contmet-1 One of it mis-ions is to take the b' od; i*' out p'^'tien and destrov sectionalism. Then poor Ingalls occupation is gone; Ed munds an 1 Hoar will j -:iive.y have nothing to talk about; I'oraker wiii ° drop into the so :j» with a sp a-h. and the ether Ke] übiiean h.-.-ses will ha: liy think life worth living. — N. V. Herald, Ind. I _ Low t'triff at the White F?ort Clothing Emporium. ad 41* Death ot i«. » - l.owHii s ;.. A . .ra. On Sunday night that gallant Conf*dtrate -o. ber au»i worthy citi zen, Maj. B- F. Logan, died of Leal l tn uUe witL dropsy as a se , ut nee, ufl« r a protracted il.ness. Nov, the 6ht-ib\ Aurora is tnreat ei.eii will, a because it di i no' suj port Mr. Faucette for Con 'Te-s. It is strange tnat men claim o * mg to be Democrat© —ftiiLd»of free governuitnt —v*nl t»e gui.ty ot sucL | conduct Strange. hiT-rixt; m i.i. Kii.UKn. A Herlo uh Melee With Bloody Re- HultS. NVws »n«l (>t»erv»-r. Sr. PAIL, Minn, Dec. 15. —Sitting Bud has l>een killed. Geu Milt** rece.iveii two dispatches this p. m First fro u Pierre, S P.. stating that S.tting Bull and his *on had been killed, but giving m/ further par ticulais The other was from Stand ing It cs* Agen. y aid stated ttnt the Indian police started out this morning to arrest Sittiug Bull, hiv- O iug understood tbat he proposed starting for the "Bad Land* at once. The police were followed by a troop of cavalry, under Capt. Picket, and the infantrv under Col. Duuu. When the police reached Sitting Bud's camp on Grand river, about forty miles from Standing Kock, they found that arrangements were being made for departure. The cavalr\ had not \et reached the camp when the police airested Sit ting Lull and staited back with him. Ilis followers (piickly ralhed to his tescue and tiied to retake him. In the melee that ensued Willy, an old chief, is said to have been killed, and live of the best of the Indian police were also killed. Hell is full of ''gentlemen' ro isting On ia collect form. D »nt taik shop to your wife nor religion to )our partner. St. Peter never yet issued a free pa.* s tn a dlmb'. Fevs ai.geis couid reu.ain ange.ie through a hay fever seance. To criticise enviously is to injure youtself more than the man criti cised "Truth crushed to earth will rise again," but t's l>a 1 polic\ to crusu i J it. Any man will bear watching who causelessly slurs another Piety is the topcoat of religion, and is often too shoit to cover up the tails of creed hanging down be hind The New York Herald persists in keeping Mr. Charles A. Dana, of the New York Sun, before the people of New York as a candidate foi the United States Senate Why the Democrats of New York should be ashed to eive their vot« s to Mr. Dana is past all comprehension. When a National D» mocratic Convention places Benjamin F. Butler in the lields as its Presidential candidate i ■ then Mr. Dana may expect the sup port of good Democrats, but not until then.— [News and Courier. Embroidery neck wear—just the thing for young men's holiday gifts a f •) C. Martin's. ad. I'J I Dr. Koch's hmph is now beine tritd in all the large cities trom Wa-ii'i gton, northward. It will be -on.e da\s t> fore re-ults can be sat " i!>factorii\ ol served, but in several :..sl i:,u If.* "i '-action ' which i» a notaole feature of the practice ha takeii j lace. It will be a great ble*s ing :f f«'Und to be successful. I*i oml tie nt i*eople. Kcv. Dr. C F. Dtem- ha- juhl pa-sed his three score and ten years Col K B. Creasy is the * e litor now in tne State, being 71 vears old on the l'.ttb in»*t. f Thad. Cherr%. a prominent lad o 1", accidentally .-not and killed him self wLile hunting near Tarboro ia» - Friday. B >th I arrel» of Hie gui i were discLaiged ainl the bo> a heat, was severed from hie body. >• i c: Many publican leaders favc* Li Blame and A ger fot iheir ticket ti , 1892. o YOUR f N C * ) 4 Etflrv- • ? * ?r> * ~fj2 WTj l»t» i»f*«*r rofr . OS .!•■ MoT* it kp., 1 J —»■*» Xrt>> Succt't cJs Huniplou. The political revolution in Soulh Carolina has retire! Gen. Wade Hampton. This* is only another in stance of the. ingratitude of Kepub lics. Fourteen yeais' ago South Carolina wtts under the worst sort of carpet-bag sud nejjro rule and Wade Hampton led in the revolution that restor» 4 d white supreriiHCV and bluest government. AH that ha* b«-fii forgotten in this last upheaval H'd. an old horse that lihs done good service, Hampton has been deserted oy his friends and h new man put in hin iace. Cot. .1 L. .M. Irby, who succeeds Hampton in the United States Senate, has just ntered h 37tti year, is an educated mall, a fine debater, and will t.O doubt very soon make a T ame in the Uuited States Senate The place lihs been | mi t on him b\ his Tillman friends, and when asked what ho hud to on the reMi't of the elec tion, said : "l am. of course, grate fui to my friends who have stood bv me in the tight. I don't think much can be said st this time. I would sav, however, that I am going to tie Senate hh a I democrat and in full accord with the national Democracy. I am in full sympathy with the Alli ance, but whatever may be obtained by me for the Alliance must be obtained through the National Democratic party." Life is full of turnings from the netting to the rising sun. Durham is the g'-t ur»»*st and goest city yet diseovered. The Knglish sj>arrow that loses his tail in tliat citj sits down in a pile of paj . r -crn| 1 and rigs «>n a papei tai', and when an editor thn w out a chunk cf blffld he Ind le f t over from dimer, two sparrows light on it and ride down to th« ground "chattf l ing .>ver the prospects of a hearty meal, say- the Sun. Kvery thing in Durham is alive and full of business. The service rendered the country bv Senator Vance app« ai > to l>e very geneiallv recognized ami appreciat id. Hie N-V \ ork N\ >i !d s i_\ - that "he is too able a man and too exper ieuced a legi-lator and debator to be spared from Congress. He may not i agree \Mth the farmers at nil points, , but he will do them more good in i the Senate than any new man whom 1 the\ can elect. \\ edo not believe • the farmers of this State want any - new man. They ar* widing to en t trust their interest to S'nator ance, and they have said HO. \ I lk in Wlille*\ anh. N»-ar!v evervbodv regards the '«tor •*». Mccone-l*o'k inr«»«ti gator as a gigantic whitewash, as far as 11.* report concerned, Jacksonville Times Union. Ti e whole committee exonerated j Col. I'o.k. but ten out of twenty five -aid Macunf wa« guilty. So it was a rati er tl in whitewash on Macune. When tou shop for holiday goods keep in mind the White Front show t windows. adv. 4'i ». A U'K of Chattanooga -ays R 1 I Cloud, the Sioux Chief, is Lei broth er. He wis stolen frou his Lome in W;-c »r.-iri when alitt>boj. Some , he revisited his home, but »oon tne'* of the dull plodding ways of Wiocousin civi.z*tion, and lit out it fui S.UUX Utud. n d A "Bunt" Ail) na). It'» going to be "B'a'.ne or bust r iu ~ Scran ton Vu.) t'eople. u Mor-> likely Blaine and bust. — _Voice Prohib.) number 50.