A Mr M r 4 TV 1 f 1 A U- a f 1 I VOL1 A Pkmo uatic family revq,.i I Vca: -. children of Mr. Jno. ! of X. C, lms created an f-1 smiting right olT from that l-r -otcd to the ir.t. r ts-of Cottle, v.lm lives near Rich-jn'-e tliat no christian man grocery that our eommiss if ' "VV-". .'ir1,. v.S uk-'ki'v a t I'Huls, on TlmrMlr.y evening lean Wl without la inging j ion-is planted there for the r 1 !!.''v'.-'r ',H,o 'ij.tvN.'C "ore ont out to the wood.;! down the nnathamasof h;av-1 neeom nodation of a Wilkes j. r.si'AiNHorn, r.i:voit. .TOHNSAYIIdJANbU'i ii.Hm:it. Kt rwini'TioN Ratks. 1 copy 1 year 1 " 1) lIlOllll'H 1 " 'I months ....:rc AnvKKTisra; Uatks. 1 iu li 1 week 1 ' 1 month 1 : 1 " 0 1 1 vein 1 column 1 Week 1 " llilOiiti! ;( ...1.7". 9:. ", S' S' .$i:t.0 ;-jr 1 " :$ " 1 " ( " 1 4 1 yea;- ,0 For i:it.'nr.e.!,iiii" rates corres ond willi tlie I'.! lit or. bora! i!oTc rf ' ce:as a li.:. Hal s Ti:tioii :i!vn. i.i't'y i;; A ". VAxn; t a :v;i.-.uj.t.- iili i"1i:Ui PHALKJ A Mf nil reliable remortT tat TIKADACHK, TOOIHACHK and KM KAl.t.lA. A fow drop pamnd over tha painful aurfice j?lvea lm. mediate relief, with termination of lh ' attack Price 5c. and 60c. per buttle. rOU BAX.JI 1 "Prepared only bT the KEPHALINE DRUQ CO. !!1;,s((M. (3(.!;, ,()1, WalM I eitAiF. iiArni Carolina. J MUKc TESliMHI- lii-'vte Mr. A. C forpetang North Catawba Caldwell Co. C. says, "1 write this to say tliat the little ottto of medi cine called Kephnlino is tplemiid reme!y forheadac'ae my whole family use it and all say thai it relieves them." Mr. Wilson Enu ton, Kings Civok, C'nldwoll Co. N. C.says "I have used Kephaline for headache, toothathc and neuralgia add have novel la iied to be relieved. I have also used it for Colic in doses of one and two drops with great benefit." the swop.d or soieht Lir. l.Y I A'I Mi K liYA.V. ForHi from itsscabl'O.ni ,uivaiul liviirbt, Flashed the sword of bx! Far in the front of the deadly iviht, High o'er Cue Irive in tlie ern.-o of right, light. Its stainless' sheen li!;o a bem-on IiCtl i:s to victory. Out of its s-.-abbard, where full siumbercd pencefullv Roiiheil from its rest by the bat tle song, Miielding the teeble, sniitiag the strong. wrong (iuai-fling the right, a vcnii! the U learned the swora til iee. Foilh from its scabbard high in beneath Virginia sky air And they who saw it gleaming ,the'-f, sv.ear And knew who bore it knelt to That where that sword led they would dare To follow and to die. Out of its scabbard 1 never baud Waved sword from stain as free, N"or purer sword led braver band, Nor braver bled for a brighter land, grand, Nor brighter land had a cause so Nor a cause a. chief like Lee. Forth from its scabbard ! how we prayed That sword might victor be; And when our triumph was de layed, And many a heart gi-cw soro afraid'. the blade We still hoped on while gleamed Of noble Robert Leo. Forth from its scabbard! all in vain Lee. Bright flashed th sword of Tis shrouded now in its sheath again; slain, It sleeps the sleep of our noble Proudly and eaeefu ly. Frozen to Death in OmIow. Two boj's, aged 11 and 13 liOONK, WATAl'dA COUNTY, N, to feed the hogs, lost their j way in the snow storm ami j froze to death. Their bodies j were lound Saturday morn-j iug, far away from home, j both sitting together snlo Ity i side and M one dead. i Harrison's Cabinet FORAMLY ANNOUNCED j TO Tltr t.'v vti-' i r,y Tel-.-raph to the Xews and Observer. If 1 t X f . . .1. " I u asninivrou, .Maien o. President Harrison to day S'lit to the Sena to thpfliow nomiimTions: For Sec ret arv of State, dames (!.' IJlaino, of Maine; Secretary of the Treasury, Vm. Win dom. ol Minnesota; Sec ro tary of War, Uedtield I:ioc :or, of Vermont; Seiretaiy i f t lio Navy, Uenjamin F. Traoy, ol New York; St-ero-vary ot the interior, John X. Xoble of Missouri ; Fos'r- Attorney (h iierid, W. 11. II. Miller, of Indiana; Secre tary of Agriculture. Joremiah Husk, of Wisconsin. The nominations were confirmed in a ton minutes' session of of the Senate. HrMou only springs in simple, unaffected characters. You find it in the Scotch. It oversows in the well bred American, who is th? prince of good fellows. The Ameri cans are so good at taking a joke, so good tempered that, even in public, they enjoy to banter each other and servo as butts lor each other's sar casms that American humor i s allowed free play. Cdis and Ends. Many people dig then graves with their teeth. Ho w ho reforms himself has done something towards the reformation of the crowd. China has not been with out a rebellion in some por tion of the empire for 120 years. A codfish spawns about 5 000,000 eggs in a season, and a single pair of herrings will produce lo -1,000,000 her rings in three years. Archibald Cambell, while outdriving, near Cincinnati, pulled out his handkerchief to wipe his nose. Mt. Os borne was at her gate, and thought he meant to flirt With her. and she followed him up and shot him in the arm. Zionville, X. March 1st. 1889. Watauga Democrat: I wish to say something more in your paper about our CountyCommissioneis grant ing liquor license to men of good moral character. It is sa id t h at t he Con n Ly Co m m i s sionors are sworn to obey the laws of N. C. Do the laws of the State require our offi cers to plant holes of iniqui ty among the people whether the people want them ornot, at instance of some Shylock? If that be the case the State en on his head. Men of easy oonciencos, may holatofoster j public iniquity for tic sakoj of gain, and dodge behind! ihe law to s!i:ld themselves ! !rom putilur it asure. !uc .Mar ! tyrs were not made of su h i material. j If christian churches are j bound under the laws of thei Xew Testament to discip-. wjj a ,-om.anion in '88 line t!;eir members who aid,i.id ''.) w lun t!.e hisNirv of tin- ji!i: t thii iinnor tr.iffie mv j n (.unrll(is mW ob:i L. . ...... I tinirs to diseio line tier mem j hers who as public officers of i ' State, plant saloons in oar i I count v that will bring a sure harvest of crime, shame a.nd poverty, will increase our taxes becaiu;'' of the increase of crime ami derrem-v the value of real estate. It the State creates an ollice whose work is so iniquitous that ; teen Hundred and Starve to no conscientious christian j I),tii." Snow fell in Xovem man can till it. Soon the j Ui,r () lSio, but there wa.s Legislature wii! b: forced to noiiein'Deoeinberor January repeal il. All the powers of J to spak of. Christmas and earth and bell ought not be j New Year's were "warm, open aide to swear a man to sup-1 and green," and faithful to port iniquity. If the liquor the old saw that "a green trab'ic, is not iniquitous there : Chris! mas makes a fat church is none in this old sin-cursed world of ours. Are our Leg islatures run by whiskey lob bies? It looks a little like it since our present Legislature pigeon-holed petitions by tho whole-sale. Those petitions came from the good, sober in dustrious people of the St ate. They want protection a gainst those whiskey-shops, shy-locks and blood-suckers but they can't get it now. Are there not 400.000 chris tians in the old North State? Are they asleep? How long will the rulers of oar State i ice use crime of every hue by licensing whiskey selling and send a man to the penitentia ry for stealing a chicken or a peck of potato- ? Truly las is fitraniug at a gnat and swallowing- a camel. The legs of the lame are not equal. Our old North State is very lame. Now, render, you may think that some cranky hob- by-rider is writing this, but. I you go and locate on Cove Creek, near our county gro cery, and if you are not on a hobby or trying to buy a shot gun in a month, I'll think you love a noise. How long has it been since there was a shooting concert on nearly tho same grounds? And all caused by whiskey. Every tax-payer will have to put his hand in his pocket and heip to pay for it. I be lieve there are men who will be in their graves in 12 months, if that grocery stays there.- There are men that irili drink if it is convenient for them to get whiskey but there is a chance to reform thorn if it is out of their reach. They are men that I feed an iii'.eiest in. They struggle to get 1oo.m of the ?. loader drink, but our ; uthoniies say v.o uil! fasten his 'grips on your very vit e.ls. Young men and boys are now taki.r;-up the.r march to tlk' ;.;!, pen;tent i.o-y, gal lows and hell, and they are WKINl - :s)AY. MAKCH IF, It-i. county whiskey man Yours, against high wicked ness in stronghold, Ji:a; 2; ,weiTneud-ed and Sta-veto Death ,s,, the fanners failed the or,Ml winter of 1HKJ, when there was no summer, says tlt Omaha World, Ti onm winter" of 1810 the century is writtai. TIk year 1. Si 0 enjoyed an "opni wilder'' during tlu eniii-f twelve months, being fre- quently referred toby con temporaneous writers as ''the year wit lion t a summer." All through the settled portion of the Failed States there was a. frost in every month; crops were ruined and farm ers called itthoyear of "Eigh yard." The old people pre dicted all sorts of dire calam ities, and the results se?med to justify it. January was a very nuiu mourn, mere w.is sunshine every day, and the tittle snow that fell hardly covered the earth and it very soon melted. People prepared for groat storms and extreme cold weather in February, but wore disappointed, as it was even milder than January. Toward theendof the month and during the first days of March, a terrible storm rag ed and gave place to cold and boisterous winds. The woa fil er in January was repeated in April, but grew colder as the days passed, ending with snow and Feand a very low temperature. In May ice formed an inch thick on the rivers and streams, buds and flowers were frozen, nnd-the entire corn crop was killed. Frost , ic:' and snow were com mon in June, and all at tempts to raise vegetable products failed. The condi tion of the farmers is describ ed as being desperate, and they were compel led to hoard their crops of the year pre i ceding and nocesitatcd a big- increase in prices. Almost everything was killed, and the fruit was nearly all de stroyed. July was accompanied with frost and ice. The fourth was cold, and a blus tering wind, raw and uncom fortable, swept the entire At antic const On the follow ing day ice was formed of the thickness of window glass in New York City, all through New England and in Penu. In Auuust ice half an inch thkh was frequently seen September and October pre sented the nearest approach to summer weather than any other mouth in the year, but in November extreme cold weather began, and a severe winter continued up to April, when su minor began and per - initted farmers to r'al-and rel oak, cherry, birch, ize h,,m;t' jus crops. ash and sugar maple, oil in The same condition of nf-1 abundance, while of thesoft fairs exist ed in England as in ; ?r kimls the pines an? found, this country, only it was not ! together with hemlock, buck so severe. In -entral New eye. chestnut, poplar, and York, it is stated, corn was j others. Someof thehemlock so badly frozen in the sum-jand poplar logsarefro:a four mer that it was cut down , to six feet in diameter, and dried for fodder. Thej In the interview referred to warm weather in .lanuaiy ho: (Jon. Ilosseroallsattentjon to encouraged a Vermont farm-j tho fact that all the groat or that he planted corn, and in fact some of it was in good ; tin? southwest from the At cotidition during March. J lantic seaboard. The line of Farmers wort- compelled to ; which this new sts.'tion is a pay ?i or S?."i a bushel for the, corn of 181 ij for feeding pur poses. Tha Color line. lint in a government of the peo le it is the theory, and in the beginning it was the practice, thai the fittest should rule. When Gov. Lee said of the Southern States that the white men should govern he probaly referred less ta color than to charac ter. He meant that the in telligence, the trained e-pne-ity and the ability to govern wisely should control public affairs. These qualities hap pen to be possessed in incom parably the larger degree by the white race at the South. And there is no Northern man settled in that section to live and to conduct busi ness who does not agree with (lev. Lee. lie may think that governing whin; men should be republicans, but he stands on the color line with all the intelligent, just and patriotic natives of tho South. A RICH COUNTRY, The lett ing of the big con tract for building the 230 miles section of the Charles-' ton, Cincinnati and Chicago railroad is attracting wide - spread attention with those interested in the industrial development of the South. The section will extend from Uutherfordton, X. C.,to Min neapolis, on the Clinch river, and wid open up one of the richest mineral regions in tho world. An idea of the rich ness of the iron deposits is given in a romantic story told bv (Jon. Thomas L. Rosserin in interview The story is that unprincipled white men bought this wonderful min eral country from the Chero kee Nation for a considera tion of pots, pans and kettles. The whites then took from the sides of one hill enough iron to make all the necessa ry pots, pans and kettles to pay the Indians the ju ice of t he purchase, and t he ore was of such purity that it was oeaten int o the required uten sils without so much as put ting fire to it. Gen. Kosser says he knows it to be a fact that at Wilder's Forge, in Mitchell county, (Jen. Wilder takes out ores so pure that they require no treatment. The road is to run on the line between North Carolina and Tennessee, through the Great Cranberry iron beds, which form the largest body of ma gn et ic s teel -1 n ak ing o res on the continent is taken. The hard woods found in 'this section are walnut, white NO 36. trunk lines of railroad run to link, will run southeast to northwest, cutting across other great lines and soopen ing up a vast territory hith erto impenetrated and at the same time securing connec tions with Xew York. The road proposes to run from Ashland, Ky., (which is on the Ohio river, opposite I ronton, Ohio,) to Charles ton, S. C, using the South Carolina railroad from Sum ter to Charleston. It is an enterprise groat in import ance to Western North Caro lina. Charlotte Chronicle. Death cf Prof. V. G. Simmons. Prof. YY. (i. Simmons, LL. D., died at his residence in Wake Forest at 3 o'clock, a. m., on Sunday morning. He had been in a low state of health for the past t wo years, during which time he severed his official connection with Wake Forest College. He taught in this institution for more than thirty consecutive years, and during allot' these years ho was absent from his dutiesonly thirty days. Prof. Simmons has written his own epitaph upon the hearts and brains of the men who are now among the ablest and most influential citizens of oiu' State. The funeral service was held N the Co q 10:30 a. m., Monday, and a large audience was present, among them a good number of Prof. Simmons' friends from Raleigh. It was espe cially fittingthat Dr. "William Royal, who is now the only surviving member of the fir? o faculty of the college, should conduct the exercise1--. The" text for tho occasion was. ' if in tin's life only, '.t haveaop in Christ we are of all men most lniseran;-' " The sen . .n f.-om the begin ning was .'uvt of that pathetic tenderness i, a-which Dr. Roy- all's sermons are much liked. At the close of the sermon other remarks were made by Dr. Skinner, of Raleigh, Dr. John Mitchell (a olassmateof the deceased) and Prof. W. IX. Rovall. The Rev. Dr. Car ter led the congregation in a most earnest and touching prayer, at the conclusion of which the remains were car ried from the chapel and in terred in the college cemetery. The pallbearers, Profs. Mills, Michael, Potest, Bet k with, Mr. W. R. Dunn and Mr. W. C. Powell. Congress has passed and the president has signed an act enabling South Dakota, North Dakota. Montana ami Washington Territories to adopt Statehood, and their eight Senators and five Rep resentatives will probably take seats Tin the Fifty-first Congress,