Newspapers / North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, … / Aug. 5, 1886, edition 1 / Page 2
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---t "-- 1 'if U I t -;!:. '.I - . -I ." U .. ' : ii : KORTH CAROLINA- HERALD PUBLISHED EVEJIY THURSDAY BY lUIERBAUH & EAHES, Editors and Proprietors. THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 13S(f DEilOCKATlC NOMINEES. i'.O WAN COUNTY'S choice ! Tor Congress, IIok. J. S. IIexdeesox. ; For State Senator, ' JIox. F. E. Siiober. For Legislature, " " I. EES. OVEIIJIAX. For Sheriff, . C. C. Krider, For Register of Deeds, II. N. Woodson, For Superior Court Clerk", J no. M. Hon ah. '- IT For bounty Treasurer, J. S, 3f;CiiBiX3, Jr. For .Coroner, 1 J). A. At well, For County Survey or B. C-Arey. ' For Jutlge, Gtla District, For Solicitor, Gtb District . J. V. JMauxey. BltlEFS. President Clcveland lias signed the Oleomargarine Bill. ! AbbeLiszt, the celebrated pianist, died "last Saturday at Bayreuth G erman v. . JMaj. W. ll.Malonc has announc cd himself an lrtdeperidant candi date for Congress from the ninth district. . Cleveland more priva some Tension .claims; more howl ;ne nepauncan press ana &iore evidences of approval by j the . Mathews., the colored lawyer of Albany, and the President's ap pointee as Recorder of Deeds, Dis trict of Columbia, was last Satur day rejected. by the Senate. The Times, speaking as the or- of 4lie administration, puts forth the theory that when a man ?:;n been elected Freiidet,m he ought to torn his bacli on. the party that c-lected hini and have no more concern about it. So "that is the administration theory ? . ' The following is the Democr&tfc -State ticket for Geopgta : For Governor, Gen. JBr Gordon: for Secretary oJJSVac, Kathaii Crawford BcHivcJtcV; for. Attorney-lrcneral, CHfiord Andcrsoji: for State -Treas urer. Robt. U. Hardeman, and for Comptroller, Gcu.'AV. A. Wrigh't. There appears to be some ignor .';nee on the question of the election of solicitors and judges of the va iois districts; The solicitors are; -voted ior only in their districts, and ln& solicitors of .all districts are to Iim elected at the comi ng election. - The judges of the Svpxior. court rrc nominated by their drsU'ictSj, yet niJe vested oi by tike people of -the . ( ii tire State. Six of these judges are to be elected in November. " Mississippi is havi n'g a heated prohibition campaign. A;? j the Prohibitionists have meddled con siderably in politics, to which the 3 'cmocrats arc opposed, they have Jost'sevefal cou u tics. 1 1 is a strange fuct that prohibiton has gained in every state in the Souths where they hard made thq campaigri a purely prohibition caiupaign; ; ,wlicBcyer .1 ty have -la ed d led hi. o.li tics ..they IJi ve not only lost the campaign ba.t i jiT.-o tlie respect of the liberal voter. ' They had a good sized riot in the , mrict, quaint and slow going Dutch city of Amsterdam Because the .Govern nie.nj for.badejhe splaying of . .ames'on .Sunday, the slow going " tJ-od of the Dutch boiled, aatd ith the same fierce and nncouquerable spirit of tle ohl burghers, who fought Snaiii, the then mo.H powerful na fi jn'.of the world,, .they gave battle td police and soldiery for free play, I'ree guines-and free Sundays. The V, w is not at hand yet, and we m.ay . - at any day hear of more riot, nre righting and more bloodshed. - ?i:he Asiuevijle Citizen gaid in one of its latest i -editions that jat the then sitting -term of court two jur iVs had "lnrtig' , aiid that", if the .1 in to ana -a ic w la w ui s wcic nus t no wmnlrv would .be -better off. Whether the Citizen' r wa3 right or wroiig people of that section are only1 able -'ia judge. LThis '-"remark 'fti'sViI the 'ire' of lie sifeti ng- J u dge 'K!vifnrf3. lie had the editors -of parjer inJ.lCtea IOr COUieilipt f'XnxTt una iney werejonefci iwy auu J y.)zt$. '.each . .' - the " -d ef or$an. ts took - 'in '.-''appeal.-- As, a - general ; thing,; ;jevg"':;ners -.vojcv ific Hcuniiieiii vi i 1 GEN. JOHN By OORDON, , the Democratic candidate for Gov ernor of Georgia, was born in Yal ker county, Ga., February C, 1832, anu 13 oi scotch descent. A stu dent at the University of Georgia, he studied law, but turned his at tention to mining and politics. At the outbreak of the secession war he raised an infantry company, which soon became Dart of the sixth Alabama regiment, in which Captain Gordon was subsequently elected maior. lieutenant-colonel and colonel. His matchless bravery aocl soldierly qualities made him beloved by his soldiers, who fallow ed him wherever he led. At Sharps- burg he received four bullets into his body, and although bleeding profusely, he refused to leave the field. A fifth bullet lodged in his head and'robbed him of his senses. It took, several months- of careful nursing before he cpuhi take the field again, which he did as Briga diers-General. There was no more orave soiuier, aasmne, leader or careful strategist on either side than General Gordon. After the war he retired to private life, but was nom inated in 1868 for Governor, and although elected, was "counted out." Elected U. S. Senator in 1873, and re-elected in 1879, he re signed his seat in 1880 to engage in railroad business. WHAT THE BOSTON HERALD SAYS OF THE SOUTH. The Boston (Mass.) Herald of July 14th and 19th has " dev much space to the D&tfe of the T-'Trfr present resources. vieo. T. Stearns, of New York, is president of a company organized .31 r for the purpose of development ofluMill is the most natural . outlet be the timber and mineral resources of the South, lie has seen and real ized the magnitude of its richness. He las demonstrated the fact that iron and steel, the great key notes to wealth, can be manufactured nbpjinpr in ihn RfintK thiin anv mrt that every mineral known to science is to 00 louiia within rue Doruers of North Carolina,' and t further more he says ; . , ; r x "The remrcrkable develogment brought aboijl in the past few years ft tbe natural wealth of the Southern States has very larfrelj drawn the attention of capitalists in Europe and America to what there ex ists and the means of its development. Pfttsburg, upon the north, occupies one extreme corner of what is known as the great Appalachian basin. Birmingham, upon the other extremity, nas-snown a development in the past live or six years which has created wonder and surprise. The great body of the basin remains en tirely undeveloped, antrw believed to con tain a nalural wealth unequalled on this continent. In fact, tho late Prof essoi William B. Rogers of the Institute" of Technology in Boston, once said, 'than this is norach combination exists iri the known , world The coal basin runs throughout the entire length, along the flank of the Alleghany mountains. From Pittsburg to Birmingham lies a metallifer ous deposit almost beyond the credence of belief. The great body 01 tnis oasin is embraced in the 'State' of "West ' Virginiaf the southwest portion of Virginia, W es- tern North Carolina, eastern Tennessee HBtT eastern Kentucky. ; This region will be the great iron, steel and coal prouue- teg centre of tbe wwhL : Such facts as these must, - and will make the f ntnre bright and prosperous. And wnen we see such high and woithy authority as the Boston Herald ; parading these tituths, we know it is for no mer- cenary. object, but for - the good of the country at large. THE ADVANCING SOUTH, We take the following from a Memphis paper. It proves our 'as sertions are, and always hay.e "been correct in regard to the progress Afie South is making, because she is tell ing the truth of her varied resources, in her agricultural, timber and mih- eral productions ; J " ' "More and more, as the spirit of enterprise arouses, is aitennoni turning to the South as offering the greatest inauccmenta to enort andi capital. . 1 he JNew lorK maicatpr, a wide awake Wall street paper. said in last Jtriday s issue: ,,ie find there is much interest felt herej in the Soutli for 'the South is fast becoming the Mecca toward which many people are turnings Both capital and labor are looking toward the South a3 the most promising and least crowded . field of ent r prise' while 'few have an intelligent idea how rapid i this growth. - A most notable - feature of the progress of the Soutk is in the in crease In diversity of its products It is no longer. the land , of cotton exclusively or nearly so. Cotton production has not decreased, but other industries have been created or their development boen iucrear cd.' The Indicator then gives its readers so 'nip;'.. Seat thern acts . and figures and in onekistQti. remarks : iThis rapid growth is iboth -the re sult of the advent of - nejv - capital and the inducement for. additional vl I tajjuai. mm .iuo uuutu,;l;Hc;JK;- lieve the next, live ycars wiil - show greater progress than the Jasl; five years have wi tnessed.'r Do we,"wha are m the Southy. always v estiinate j our advantages highly a'stheyd.e- serve, and as they appear to unbias ed lookers on? Let us take cour age and boldly avail" ourselves of the opportunities within our grasp' .The Tribune speaking as the Re publican organ, finds fault with the Democrats in Congress, that at this session they have not reformed all abuses which have got fastend, like barnacles, on the Government, dur ing the long Republican misrule. Well, .the Democrats have done something! iot so much a3 they ought, that we grant; not so much as they would have' done had "not the Republicans in House and Sen ate so vigorously opposed every re form. But considering that the need for Democratic reform comes from the persistent piling up of abuses by the Republicans, ought not the Tribune to be a little more modest? N. Y. Herald, July 29. A Bridge Across South Biver. To the Editors of the IIebald : I noticed some timei&ffoan article in the Herald a bridge over- with reference to South- River, at Rencher's ford. You seemed to think a bridge at that point would be of great advantage to both counties.. It might be' of some, but I don't see the necessity of building a bridge at Bencher's ford when there is a bridge across the river about three miles above that ford; besides, there are very few of the people in that part of Davie who- haul their produce to Salisbury, Statesville being a nearer point. Ken cher s ford can lifiLcr&g ed when no oth'erjcaijy reason of its shallowne.' and jf 'those neo- Tj-c ODlged to go to market dur- mg hign water, let them cross at the bridge already built rather than put the county to the expense of building a bridge which- is not absolutely necessa'rv - f ftr thoir r.on- venience. South' River or Foard's tween Davie and liowan, and where one wagon crosses at iieneher s there are 100 that cross at Foard's Mill. Then, for the convenience of the people of Davie, that - is the best plaoe to build a bridge. . The upper . part of the county seeks Winston and Statesvilleas markets, and as Salisbury is rapidly building" una tobaeco market, it is 'drawinsr more and more from the other por tions of the county, and as the road that passes Poard's Mill is travelled more than any other, that seems to me, at present, the . most desirable point for a bridge between our county and. Rowan, and a& bridges are, built for tbe good of the people, the convenience of the citizen at large, then build it where it will do tho most good to the. greatest num ber. I have no objection to Rowan building a- bridge ai ,Rencber's ford, but I do think it wrong for Davie to be taxed to build a bridge over the best ford on the river' and fn sight' of - another bridge, but 1 am in favor of encouraging the erection of a bridge at Foard's Mill, for 1 beleve it will be useful to our people at large; and will pay for, itself, in a short while. ''Those who datice should pay the fiddler," and as Rowan expects to be greatly benefitted, and . 1 think more so than Davie, she should do more to wards building this bridge than we. We had rather put up a Railroad bridge, but Salisbury is not as anx ions lor that as we, so lets nave a bridge for wagons until we get the Railroad. Stir up your people and lets see whjit you are willing to do. We feel sreatly interested .in all projects which tend to the-best in terest of otfr eonle. and the de velopment of our county, and are always ready to do our part of the work. "Onward is the language of Creation, and means prosperity. '.Tiiilemox." Mocksville, July 30, 18S6. , Third Creek Items The Messrs. Alison & iro's are preparing their fine crop of tobacco. for market. " . Mrs.. Lin a Clement, of Mocks ville, as visiting relatives near Third Creek. - - - The funeral services of Mr. Thos larger took inace yesteraay a f TJnitv-Churcii, Eev. R. W. Boyer officiating. The .deceased leaves a wife and two small children mourn their loss. ' The farmers are wanting it to rain as bad as they did for it to stop The neonlc wish the Heeald success. - ... PHYSICIANS RECOMMEND SHRI- ner's Indian Vermrfu2re in their practice i as a superior - article for destroying and expelung worms.. Unly 2j cents a rxaue. Nortli Carolina College, 21 Pleasant Cabarrus Co.,1S,C. : .The. Next Session Begins August SCtk, LOCATION HEALTHY. Total Expense for Term of 20 Week : Academic Department, , $50 to $60 Collegiate " - - $60 to $T3 For particulars or catalogue; address -" . n. L. J. LUDWIG, A. M., 43-2 w ? - Mt. Pleasant, N. C. r.RAIN-DRIliTiS; mot perfect Forc Tefcd Fertilizer Drifl.ihi4- Kiaio SAWfilfflf stMa Engines, Oin Fcts, Ciiar Mills, ?& C Jens standard Asricultoral Iraplcments gen- rallv. ' Send for illustrate-! eataloeuc. - -- io-lt - - At It. FAUOLUAB, . Petnsijlvanii Agricultural porks, fork. Pa, '- ,' - . : -- : . ,-'. .:, ' 1 :- ''..- U. . . " -. - . V-'i:.-:-;' '.- - - :-' '-.r-'- ': v f - --' - ' "" ': ' - ' '. '." ' -'" v"- -: - V v - ;V-" ' - - -- ' " -' CV'vt -' - '.- : ', . ' ..i?.';--;"' i : '" :'.v-1; ;'"';; ' ' . " V -"''. V ' ' i '. ; . T ;- 7 . ..- 7'- I. 'j " -..11; y ' . . : r .; ' ' ' :fsS - - ' ''' ' : 't: ' I '; ? "! ' - '- l"'-" ' ' " ' - ,'! - ' rn A' (TTT'TTTT T7 : . ' ' ' " ' ; Vv ' ' ' ' - " ::: ; '" " - , . 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North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Aug. 5, 1886, edition 1
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