7Al) iF6 "Ill O9 V vOi vUdSllJ i, JLtz (Oil i TfWXi rf f Tj'S VOL 4 rnuvEsswxAL. UOOXE, WATAUGA COUNTY, X. C, TIlUltSDA Y, AUGUST. H7. ltl. W. B. COUXCILL, Jit. Attokxky at Lay. Boone, N. C. W. B. COUXCILL. M. I). Boone, N. C. Resident Physician. Ofllci on King Street north of Post Office. E.F. LOYILL Attohxey At Law, Boone N. C. DR. L. C. REEVES. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office at Residence. Boone, N. C. L. D. LOWE, Attorney at Law -AND- XOTARY public, BANNER'S ELK. X. C. J. ft. WILBAR, DENTIST, ELK PAItK, NORTH CAROLINA. Otters his professional ncrviccs to the people ot Alitctiell, Wtitanira ana adjoining coun ties. A o la d mnteial used and ,i 11 work g nn ra n f t Muy lly J. F. Morphew. E. S. BtarkbHrn Marlon, X. C. JwrflV.011, X.C. MORPHEW & BLACKBURN Atttouxeys at Law. V i 1 1 practice in the courts ol Ashe, ntnuga and Mitch ell counties, also in the Fed- ral courts of the Dist.. and Supreme Court of the State. f ollection ot claims solicited. Aprl, 10. Notice. For sale. 900 acres of land, on Rich Mountain, Watauga County, on which is asbestos, and fine land for sheep ranch. Sales private. L. I). Lowe & J. T. Furirerson, Ex'trs. of Mrs. A. P. Calloway, deed. Banner Elk, Nov. 1? '90.. Money to loan. Persons wishing to boi row money, who can secure it by mortgage on good real estate, ean be accommodated by applying to J.F. Spainhour, Boone N. C. or A. J. Critcher, Horton N. C. 4. 24. NOTICE. Parties putting papers in my hand for execution will please advance the fees with the papers and they will re cei ve prom pt a ttention, other wise they will be returned not executed for the want of fees. D. F. Baird Shff. MILLINERY. -0 I would like to say tomyfriendfl in Wnta.itra and surrmmdinp: counties, that I have now on hand and am receiving every week, a nice line of SPRING AXDSUMMFR MILLINER I A ND NO TIOSS When you come to JiCnoir, I would be pleased for you to call and see me. I solicit your cus tom. Orders filled promptly by mail. Most Ilesp., M RS. M. N. HORTON. Lenoir. N. ft, May 21. W A SHI XG TON L ETT ER. From our Regular Correspondent The Xationa1 Association of democratic clubs will la tin Mi a decided political novelty on the 12 Mi of Sep tcmlMr, when a sje-ial oar under the control of that As sociation will ptart from Washington on a forty days missionary tour. The car will go direct to Chicago and from there to St. Paul and .Minneapolis, where special meetings will be addressed by the speakers who will compose the crew of mission aries; and it will go by easy stages along the Noithern Pacific railway, stopping at all important points to al low the educational work to be done. The car will be due ait Spokane Falls on the 23rd of Septemberj "jpon which date a convention of the democratic clubs will be in session there, and a grand reception w ill be held. The journey will then be continued around Puget Sound in Oregon: thence through Calafornia, Utah and Colorado, and returning to Iowa about the time the State campaign has reached its warmest period. There the missionaries are to take off their coats and take in hand in re-electing Govern or Boies. Thecal will be in ch a rge of M r. Lawrence G a rd ner Secretary of the Associa tion, and among those who have already volunteered as working missionaries are Sen ntor Kenna, Representative Bynum, ex-Representative McAdoo and Hon. Chaucey F. Black President of the As sociation. A number of prom irent democrats have the in vitation under consideration and if they can so arrange their business affairs will also become missionaries for the dissemination of sound dem ocratic doctrine. Some of them who cannot spare tre entire forty days may join the party temporarily either coming or going or both. Success to the idea and to the missonaries. Secretary Foster, who has returned to Washington, is very much put out because of the publication of the met that the continuation of the maturing 4 percent bonds at 2 per cent is already prac tically a failure. Less than Jf2.000.000 of the $21,000. 000 of these bonds out stand- when the offer was made have been presented for con tinuance and only two weeks remain in which they may be continued. What remains out after that time must be redeemed and that is what is worrying the estute Secreta ry of the Treasury. If any huge amount of these bonds are to be redeemed and it seems certain now fiat there will be, it will be necessary to make a considerable hole in the $100,000,000 gold re serve fund, and although Mr. Foster says that he will not hesitate to use this fund if it becomes necessary, it is known that he would much prefer not having to do so as he is well aware that he has no legal right to pay out one dollar of that money. Representative Mills, who has been doing a little cam paigning in Iowa, is back in Washington hard at. work on his book on the tariff. Mr. Mills says he found the greatest enthusiasm existing among the Iowa democrats and from his own observa tions he is of the opinion that Boies will be re-elected and that the entire ticket and leg islature will also be carried by the democrats. Mr. Mills expect to make Washington his headquarters until Octo ber, when he is under ?n gage men t to make a number of speeches in the Ohio cam paign. He is a warm admir er of Governor Cambell and expects to see him defeat the high priest of protection; he is also confident that the next Ohio legislature will cer tainly be anti-republican, if it is not controlled by demo crats exclusively. It begins to look very much like Mr. Harrison w ould have a first class negro revolt on his hands if he dares to send a white man to Hayti, as minister in place of Fred. Douglass whose resignation has been accepted. Promi nent, negroes here say that they will do everything in their power to keep the negro voters of Ohio at home on lection day if Mr. Harrison does not appoint a negro to the vacancy or promise to do so before theOhio election takes place. On the other hand those who profess to be familiar with Mr. Blaine's in tention say that he is deter mined that a. white man shall be bent to Hayti to assist in carrying out hib policy with regard to that country. President Polk of the Na tional Farmer's Alliance is out in a longinterviewclaim ing the earth so as to speak, and taking special occasion to make attacks upon Sena tors, Vance, Ransom, Gor don, Morgan, Pugh,Gorraon and Sherman, as well as Rep resentative Oatesof Alabam an, and stating positively that the Alliance would have a National ticket in the field next" year. Mr. Polk is said to be very much offended be cause the Maryland Alliance convention was friendly to waids Senatar Gorman in spite of his efforts to make it otherwise. Washington has already secured pledges of six votes ia the National Democratic Committee which will next February decide where the next National Convention is to be held, and efforts are be ing made to secure others. Six hundred clerks were dis missed from the Census Office Saturday. The Alabama Mirror says: "A negi o woman 70 years of age living about 13 miles from Selina, in Autauga coun ty is turning white in spots, and the spots are growing larger find increasing in nam her. Both arms are already as white as the whitest Cau casian, and strange to say tnenesn is tinted, lull and firm as a young child's. While the natural complexion of the old woman is a little dar ker than tho majority of her race, she is not atall pleased at the idea of becoming a "white 'oman." '? row for California. A dispatch from San Fran cisco to the New York Times 'says: Senator Leland Stan ford is giving aid and etieour agemeiit to thousand ol i Southern negroes, who are establishing large eolonits in California. It is ex jutted that r0.00() negroes will ! come residents of thw State within the next twelve months. In view of these facts Ihe politicians nrea larmed, ns the colonist are quite lilely to bewilder the shrewdest political manager on the coast. The Rev. R. C. 0. Benjaman, a prominent and wealthy colored man of this city, is at the head of the movement. In an interview-to-day he said: Our object in bringing ne groes to California is to sup plant the Chinese. Tl ie celes tials unknot citizens or vo ters, and the eoloied people are both. We hwve already signed contracts in our pos session, which will guarantee employment to all the people we bring here. We have se cured 50,000 acres of excel lent land, situated in Fresno and Shasta counties, and all of it. may be inigated. This will provide homes for an im mense number of colonists. Our people are now arriving from the Southern States at the rate of five families a week. Within the next twelve months I expect I will have situated in California 8,000 families. See how rapidly it will increase the population forty thousand more indus trious people. "It has been arranged, so, continued the enterprising young colonist, "that the people will be given employ" ment when they get here, and they will be provided with small tracts of land which they will be given from five to eight years time to pay for, and a portion of the pay ments can be made by work ing for the owners. They will raise vines and fruit trees principally. The managers of the Southern Pacific rail road have agreed to give us the very lowest rnes on which to travel, avoiding, of course the violation of the inter state commerce laws. Sena tor Lei and Stanford is favor bly impressed with our scheme, and has lent us much encouragement. The colo nists will come principally from Alabama, Texas, North and South Carolina." Mr. Benjaman leaves for the South in afew days to arrange to send out a large number of colored people. Large numbers are sacrificing their homes to secure money to pay their way. In the meanwhile, leading Democratic newspapers are making loud protestations against this influx of colored colonist, The Oakland Times in an editorial to day, says: "California has now in the Chinese as close an approach to the servile class as is eith er safe or desirable. The ne groes already here came without assistance and are a self-sustaining, self respect ing part of the community. The bringing of vast num- i bt-rs of ignorant hla ks i; m ! the (Iiilf Stales j.s an t rail, iv different mattt r, and Cilif.-i-j nia shotdd nt invite tin j r ice in -ubus tb it now a de.id wti;;!it u;i:i tl.e 'South. W'r want u-iih-r '.cheap labor nor f In ; p labor ers, if I'.i iij in, .hi !ocs in j tend, as he h ivs. to i.s'.t lie South for the purpose of ma king up colonies, we venture th prediction that there wiil follow in his train one long, wailing cry of distress, and that if Benjaman makes more than one trip he will not go over, the same ground twice. As to his eclonist, they will become, for a time at least, charges upon communities that may be a filleted with their piv-eaee. Mr. Benja min's sst-heme should l.o nip ped in 1 lie bud." I ir.' i. r I'ii'.I ( , :. Few ot the cili.cii-j of .ho vi'ie, and in j.ict of vr-.it :n North Carolina, know that there waa once incucuUtion, gold coin, made without the sanction of tho government, but accepted by the people and the banks as freely as the present gold coin. Such is the fact. This gold was coined by a German by the name of Bechler, who lived in Rutherford ton, and some of his golc". pieces are preserv ed. Judge E. J. Aston has one of these coins, a two dol lar and a half piece, and oth er gentlemen of Asheville, have, it is believed, specimens of the Bechler one dollar piece. On one side of Judge Aston's gold piece appears in raised letters, "North Car olina gold,2,20," on the oth erside, "Bechler, Rutherford,' and the number of grains and carets fine. It Is said that Bechler w as an expert metal worker and gold beat er; a man of great intel ligence, highly respected by all who knew him. The sea. i city of a circulating medium gave rise to the Bechler coin. There is no date on any of the Bechler coins, and none on Judge Aston's piece, but it was coined for several years, from about 1337 to 1845 or IS.jO. Col. Clayton, of this county, tellsan amus ing story about this coin, and the way business was done in the old days. His father. Col. Clayton theelder, who is sUll hale and hearty, had a contract to build a court house in one of the Blue R'dgo counties. As fast as the sheriff collected the taxes, he paid over to Col. Clayton certain sums. It consisted almost entirely of Bechler coin and old Spanish dollars, and at last Col. C. had on a bushel box full. The late Bacchus Smith dealt largely in yiriseng.goingll'.rongh the country to collect it from t lie mountaineers. Learning of the amount; of coin in Col. C.,s possession, he visited aim and effected an exchange for State Bank, or Bank of Cape Fear notes, giving a check for the money. When he filled his leathern saddle bags and rode away from Col. Clayton's, his son was in great, distress, ihat all the wealth, so rare, in those days, was irrecoverably gone. Ashevilh Citizen. NO. I. -" I ('apt. Foil f J t'.o -:vt s l V .. ra :,,e ii:'o n.:cl ;of a a con. .. . ;l-?d.iy. l! "A.i a ; .'!..'! ;::. "'' p. lit hes i'ioiu ..'Vi ; :i '!a" ' r (cnt !.ol. s of ti: "- oce (!!! ,u , iii.. I :on. Ti I'M i'u iv-i (--. c! skillfully paiciie.l tog'-i !i t with .-drip.-; of ..?! i pi t .1 , 1 but they t onstiUiT 1 a whole bid, which :; pp',:.i i-1 n t :V; i !;. go.uj. Any tiauiiativj n.ii n redeemable at Suit-Treasury, provided three filths jfihc t ill is present, the maker f this note th-Mvfop' wm!. 'd ;i very real scheme by taking .seven twenty-dollar bills and !t carina enough from each to in.'.!-." another hill. The muti- jlated f.cl'CS ! i 1'ei h.-Clluf -: 1 1 he cashed t!;. ::t I'-argond ;'. ' jnt ub-Trensnry, ;!:;! ak';,g jth.e portions h;; !u.d torn !'.', 1 ;. :;;!. a. vi ry pi";-''1 able ; ! w.r.iy-dohu bii'. The uuui j b.;x i.i '.-aei: .'orn-r w.-te dif- !' rent . bi' the in a'1 nfli er respects, even upon close investigation, appeared to be good. Capt. Porter, in en deavoring to trace the bill to its maker, found that it had been paid into the Sub Treaturybya post master. The latter had recieved it from Ji woman who had ta ken it it in change for u$l00 bill at a large business house iti this city. The firm was u:i able to trace it to any of ita customers, aud the 6earch was abandoned. Ch ic a go Herald. The Married Mnu. A married man a 1 way scar ries his condition with him, like a trade-mark. Any body of average discernment can detect him at a glance. He doey not pinch his toes with tight boots. He does not scent himself with violets. He never parts his hair in the middle. He keeps his seat ia the horse car when the pretty girl, laden with bundles, comes in: he knows that his wife wouldn't approve of his rising. He does not get up flirtations, with the good looking saleswoman where he buys his gloves; he remeni hers that little birds are liv ing till around telling tales, and he has a honor of cur tain lectures; somehow, mar ried men never seem to ar rive at that state of beati tude where they appreciate the kind of performances known as curtain lectures. The married man has come to that stage when he in con vinced that the way his, neck tie hangs may not be any more important than his soul's salvation. He knows to a certainty that true hap piness does not depend on the amount ol starch in his shirt-bosom, but he will have to have been at least three times wedded before he will be able to be reconciled to a collar-band two sizes .small oronenze large. Th man who can smile at fate w hen it swoops down upon him in the shape of an ill-fiting collar-band i.s ready for canon ization. N. Y. Weekly. ForMalaria, Liver Trou ble, or Indigestion, use BROWN'S IRON BITTERS