-i v ! - vol r hooni:, watai:(;a corxTY, x. c, tiii:i:iay, skptkmukh. ir.. isoj. xo. PROFESSIONAL. W. B. COUXClLL,.Ii:. Attokxkv at La v. I. ' r.oopc, n. c. W. I!. COUXCILL. M. D. rooiv x. c. Resident IMiysiciiiii. Office bn King Street north of Tost Office. E. F. LOVILL Attouney At Law, Boone X. C. PR. L. C REEVES Physician and Sria;i-:o. Office at Residence. Roone, X. C. L. I). LOWE, Attornsy at Law A XI) NOTARY PUBLIC, RAXXERS ELK, N. C. J. Q. VILBAR, DENTIST, FI.K PAKK, NOItTH CAROLINA. Oflershis professional peniccs to the people of Mitchell, Watauga nml adjoining coun ties.WSrAo lad mateial used and all work guaranteed.". May 1 1 y. j, F.MORPIIRW, ATTORNEY Al LA W, MA1UON. -.N.C -(o)- , Will practice in the courts of Vh taugn , Aslie, Mitchell, McDow 1l oiul all other courties In the postern listrict US-Special nttpii Hon given to tho collection of fcluinis." Ed" Madron, I)Kxtat;surgeon, ioscoe. North Carolina. Offers his professional services to the people of this and ndjoin inp: counties. All work promptly one and satisfaction guaran teed. , Oct, 27, 3 mo. NOTICE. Hotel Property for Safe. On account of failing health of myself and wife, I oiTer for sale my hotel proport v in the town of Hoone, North Carolina, and will el1 low for cash and make terms o suit the buyer, nnd w ill, take real or personal property in ex change. Apply boou. ' W. L. P ii van. Notice. For sale. 900 acres of land, inn Rich Motwtnin, Watauga County, on which is asbestos, nnd fine land for sheep ranch. Salop private. L. D. Lowe & T. T. Furgerson, Ex'trs. of Mrs. A. P. Calloway, deed. Banner Elk, Nov. 1? '90.. NOT ICR Parties putting papers in my hand for execution will pleise advance the fees with the papers and they will re ceive prompt attention, other wise they will be returned not executed for the want of fees. D. F. lUinD Shff. NOTICE. The laws of the State re quire all weights and meas ures to be sealed, and I here by notify the people that I am prepared to do such work. You will find tne in Boone at the resideuce of D. B. Dough erty. J. II. Cook, Standard Keeper. WASHINGTON LETT Lit. Ficm car Bipolar Correspondent. Using the Executived'part metitof the government to obtain republican campaign material has been one of the sjwcialties of the g. o. p. ever since it controlled n national administration. Whenever it lias been possible to do so this woik lias been done un der the authority of a Senate or IIouc resolution, but the absence of any such nuthori ty has not prevented its be ing done during every nation al campaign There is scarce ly a single department of the government in which a large number of employees of the highest are not engaged up on work which would never have been considered neressa ry if the managers of- the re publican campaign had not ordered that it be done. Senator Sherman is. an a debt in this sort of thing, and hfs resolution, which was adopted during the closing hours of the I isi: session of Congress, calling upon the Secretary of the treasury for certain information concern ing banks, State nnd Nation al, since 1830, was for the two fold purpose of getting thf. republican party strong support of thenational banks and for obtaining statistics which might be used ns anar gnment against the plank in the democratic national plat form favoring the repeal of the prohibitory ta.v on the circulating notes of State banks. Under this rrsolutiriil all of the official machirinry of the United States Treasu ry has been put to work for the republican party. In send ing circulars to the National banks requesting demand ing would be nearer the truth them to assist ingathering these statistics, comptroller Hepburn felt that some rea son ought tc be given' f o r su.h an irri'iisunl proceeding, so the following note was en closed with each circular: "While it is admitted that calls of this character cre.itP unusual demands upon bank ers and their clerical force, still the vj we of the results will unquestionably be rccog nized and, therefore, the wil ling co-operation of nil na tional bank officers is confi dently anticipated." In addition to the circular sent to the national banks several thoroughly posted of ficials, including Henry II. Smith, assistant register of the treasury, ha ve been or dered to personally visit the n tional banks in the east wheie the information is most ly to be ii red, in order that there shall be no mistake con cerningthe precise informa tion wanted, Besides all of that, a large force of expert clerks are at work searching the old records of the Inter nal Revenue Bureau, hoping to find something detrimen tal to State banks, which may be Used in thecampaign. Meanwhile legitimate work of nil these officials remains un done and they draw their pay for hunting up republi can campaign material, to pay which, democratic tax payers have to contribute their share. Supers! it in;: dmncra's are very much pleased IwH-auie the first tdnop to arrive nt th National Capital thin fca son, with a car loaf", of oys ters, was the ':(Jrover Cleve land"; they regard it as nn om -n favorable to the elec tion of Cleveland andSteven son. For the first time in thehis tory of the country a score of United States ministers a -broad will come h rue to make stump speeches during. Ihe campaign, for the repub lican ticket. The ministers were not isked whether they wished to engage, in Ihi? sort of work, but were officially or dereil to do it by hisMajesty, Benjamin, through his man Foster, now at the head of theScatc Department. This sort of thing can only be ex cused on the ground thatdes lerate cases it quire heroi remedies. Mr. H arrison's letter of ac ceptance contains nothing new, startling; or f ven mild ly surprising; i t is about what democrats and republi cans alike expected it would be, except its enormous length, and its treat nent of the force bill plank of the re publican platf irm, that has disappointed a few republi cans. There is nf probabili ty that the letter will m a ke any republican recruits; it is loo heavy and too long to be generally read with care. Life is too short. The attendance promises to be phenomenal at the G. A. II. encampment, as may be judged from the fact that the citizen's committee has allotted free sleeping quar ters in the school houses, nnd in the barracks that have been erected for t'le occasion to fiftv-five thousand men. The committee officially an nounced on Saturday that no more applications for free quarters could be honored, because all the buildings at its disposal were filled, and there is not time enough left to build more. Officials here regard the precautions that, have been and are being taken against the entrance of cholera into the United States as necessa ry, not only to keep out chol era, but to prevent a panic among' the people, of the sea coast cities, by letting them see that all the weapons of medical science are being us ed in their defense'. No trou ble is expected between the national and St tc health an thoiities". Sampson Democrat: Any mail who knows anything a bout the situation knows that there is absolutely no chance for Weaver. Friend, if you have promised your self to vote for him, get you an auger nnd bore a hole in a log, and vote for him in that. This will do no harm, unless it spoils the log, and will do quite as much good, and besides it will be no dis grace to your children here after. Then on election day; walk up and vote tor an hon est man,' the Champion of true Reform, and the nominee of the democratic party for President. Lit. EXl (iifvn.l.oro Ilt-cord. A good one is told on Pat l.xiiTii, of Wayne county, the candidate for governor on the people' party ticket. Mr. Borden, a Wayne c mint y man. w as in High Point soon after the nomination, and there met another gentleman b orn OoM-horo. Asked who had been nominated, Mr. Bnr den told him to guess that it was a Wayne county man. The gentleman said he could form no idea. Mr. Borden re plied that the nominee had the reputation of IHng the biggest liar in Wayne onn ty. "Pat Exurn, by t hunder replied the gentleman. A special from (Johlsbrrd to the Raleigh News and Obser ver says: From the present outlook '-Governor" Exurn, of Weaver ite fame has every chance of 'doing" his politi cal canvass within thf. .vails nnd iron bars of our county jail, ns the criminal docket of Wayne superior court (Sep tember term) has nn indict ment against Dr. W. P. Ex urn for carrying a concea'ed weapon and threaten ing the life .if Mr. Arnold Borden, of this city, a lew weeks ago. How would such n quick-tern pered man like Exurn. w h o takes the law in his oun hands, befit fo occupy the gubernatorial chair of the good old North Htate? This is n question our citizens are asking themselves just now. And thennswer comes back that he'll never get there. As ;,a brag" and "a blower" Dr. Exurn has no equal. A gentleman in writing to the Goldsboro Argus in reply to a letter in the Progressive Farmer mys: "Did not Dr. Wooten know when he wrote to the P r o -gressive Farmer that the doe tor's nomination herein this county, Wayne, had increas ed the democratic vote at least 300; that throughout this county the doctor wa known as a brarrart and a nl w-hrird, and that he did not command the respect of our citizens? We would not assail a man's private char acter, we do not intend dor ing so now. but has Mr. Woo ten never heard of the doc tor's assertion that he had 2.r00 goats on his farm, whf n he only gave in 90 on the tax list?. That ihe fight in which the doctor is bound ovr r to court arose about, a bet that he had on hann' 1, 32:1 bales of cotton, that he made a wager that he had a yoke of oxen that could pull iG.000 pounds and that it is commonly reported that, he bought white western meat of a firm here in Goldsboro, smoked it on his farm and tried to sell it to the same firm for North Carolina ba con; that he asserts that he can raise 1,000 pounds with his own weight added to it; and did he not know that a jury of his own countrymen gave n verdict against him in a certain case in Wayne county, after he swore posi tively that he had paid the claim, nnd stated where and when it was paid ?" iMfPav ro'nV cnVsr-'irttion RK CCRus. W ihllillL'totl .f SM'lijfer. We will publish to-d y, or as soon ns we can obtain the necessary space, two docu ments that bear on the rec ords nf two Weavei'ites. line of the art ides is from the Sfntcsvill' Landmark, and gives nn insight into past conduct of R. A. Cobb, Wen veritenotnineofor Lieutenant Governor. Ti.is Mr. Cnbb is an old offender, and lris.boen a defendant time nnd again in Uncle Sam's ''ourts. He was not r-oniicted, and a nol pros w.is issued, nnd this would seem to indicate that he was innocent. But tbii might be r wrong conclusion as a careful reading of the Landmark's article would in dicate. This particular Cobb is an admirable seleeMor for the Weaverite ticket. Noth ing could be more appropri ate. Tne quartette in the Weaverite band of singers trying to charm the honest farmers of North Craolinato support them, and bind the State in the chains of negro domination again is c o in plete. Behold it! Exum,Cobb Long, Durham. By the way, what a fine set of farmers they are so close ly identified with the toilers of the country and the culti vators of the soil. Two of them are doctors, and "Kur nel" Long i a perennial teat sucker of thero'st pronounc ed "Radikil" kind. Cobb, of course, is, like Butler, tin gi ant head of the Alliance of farmers, so much given to farming. But whata magnificent hum bug is fhat tliird party thing anyway. At the head of the gang stands theSouth'sgrca testentmy and reviler, the persecutor and robber of its men and women in war, and its slanderer and would-be oppressor in peace the vile and ignominious Weaver late of the Xorthern army of in vasion. Here is what this Dugald D.ilgetty of the Northwest said at Bloomfield, 111., Sept. 2Gth, 18G9: "What is the use of further arraigning the defunct demo? racy, with al' its h o a r y crimes, at the bar of public opinion? We know that its acts comprise murder, treas on, theft, arson, fraud, perju ry, and all crimes possible for an organization to connive at. It would be a mercy to put its record a million miles deep in the pit that is men tioned in Holy Writ, and I may add that if a large and distinguished assortment of its alleged statesmen' were sent along 'A would only be common justice." Read that white men in the South brave confederates and their sons and respect the villain if. you can and vote for him if youwill. Then hide yourselves from the light of day. The other.record in that of one H. F. Hover. The Hick oro Press turns on the light. In a recent wild, crazy, blood and thunder screed he advo cates the deliberate murder of nil men who are not seoiin drels like himself. He is too corvtmr'tible. for a'ny notice but execration. But it is well to M the tropic r,f North Carolina read what a villain thinks and aims toeffei t. We copy it. Wh"n in vcstlga lion wad mn Je by the Senate in 1882, into certain Infernal revenue collections in theSixth Xortli Carolina District, Senator Z. B. Vance ask en: the post mo. ferat Statesville. Andrew D. Conies, if R. A. Cobb was in dicted, and the reply was af firmative. Then this occurr ed as slated by the Nortl) Carolinian which says it took it from pages 10 and 11 of ' I n vest iga tion of collections.' Senator Vance asked: Do you know what he was indicted for? f .ns. I think for complici ty in fraud of some kind. Examined by Senator Me I);II, of Iowa: , ., Ques. With regard to the indictment of Mr. Cobb, I urn derstand you that you have no knowledge about it, only a general impression? Ans. Just my Impression I have heard others say he was indicted in the United States Court, and Dr. Mctt in his list of those discharges put him doivn as discharged for complicacy in fiauds. Stand aside, Mr. Cowles, your evidence is sufficient to convict. Winston Sentinel: Wheri, R. B. Glerru, democratic can didate for Presdential elec tor, Was speaking at Macon, in Warren county,' a few days ago, an incident occurrcvi which sh iws the temper and determination of the Third party leaders. , During li i s. speech Mr. Glenn ashed, if any. onr in the crowd who belong ed to the Third party would, be willing to see the State once more turned to the re publican party. . Mr. Squire, h o ! i ves in the coun ty, re-, plied that f o r himself he would "rather see every of fice from President to consta ble, filleol with the blackest, lvgro-s in the State than to. see the present plutocratic democrats in power." Upon, this a lady arose and said:', "Mr. Glenn, do not notice, this man. He is unworthy of your notice." Asheville Citizen: Travel lers often boast of the excel-, lent municipal government of the old world cities. Ham burg cannot be one of them.. Its officials concealed the fact, that there was cholera in the city till it had an opportuni-. ty to be carried tD ot he r parts of the German empire and to England and Scot land, jeoperdizing- thousands of lii-es. This was done, too, inthefa?e of the fact that the Hamburg newspapers as serted that there were sus picions cases of sickness in the city and that the utmost publicity should be given to. the presence of cholera for the more com plete protection of ali. Emperor William has' taken this latter stand and if is to his credit, but. Ham burg should be held up to t he execration o f the civilized world. gfisSTOne dollar pays for Democrat one year.'