f Tru r J j tu u n VOL 5 professional. W. B.C0UXC1LL, Jit. Attokxky at Lay. 1 5oom C. W. 15. COINCILL. M. I). IJooiio, N. C. Resident I'liyniriMn. Oilier on King Street nort h of Post Ofliee. DR. L. C. RKEVKS. PHYSICIAN AM) SURGEON Office at Residence. Boone, X. C. L. I). LOWE, Attornsy at Law -Axn- XOTARY PUBLIC, BANNER'S ELK, X. C. j. FJI8HPHEW, AUOllNLYAl LAW, MAUiOX, N.O -o)- - Will practice in the courts o Wutauga, Ashe, Mitchell, Mellow 11 ami all other counties in the .vestern listriet eHpecial at ti n tion given to the Collect ion of claims."" Dr. J. l B'itlcr. Tj Tna. Dr. t. C. Biaekburn. Butler & Blackburn, Physicians & Surgeons. tsCalls attended at all hours. Junt 1, S)o. K. V. LoVILL. J. C. 1'IiKTCUEK. LOYiLL & FLETSHE3, AT'lUnXi'ASATLA'i; boone, x. BiaT Si7eci.il attention given to the colletion of claims. L. L. GllEENE, & CO., REAL ESTATE AG'TS. 'iOONE,N.L n ill give special attention to abstracts of title, the gale of Real Estate in W. X. C. Those he vinm; farms, timber and mineial lands for Hale, will do well to cull on mud Co. at Boone. L. L. GREES & CO. March 1G, 1893. NOTICE. Hotel Property foi Sale. On account of failing health of myself and wife, I oner for Hale my hotel property in the town ot Hoone, North Carolina, and will ell low for cash and make terms o suit the buver, and will take real or personal property In ex change. Apply noon. W. h. Mryan. Notice. For fcale. 900 acres of land, on Rich Motmtain, Watauga County, on which is asbestos, and fine land for sheep ranch. Sales private. L D. Lowe & J. T. Furgerson, Ei'trS. of Mrs. A. P. Calloway, deed. Banner Elk, Nov. If. '90. - . NOTICE. Parties putting papers in my hand for execution will please advance the tees with the papers and they will re cei ve protu pt a tten tion , other wise they will be returned not executed for the want of fees. D. F. Baird Shkf. Many Persons an brokn flown front overwork or bouMbold etna, llmwn's Iron Bitters Reboiifeth yrtera, alda direction, remove ticest of bile, ted care malaria. Oct th RMVitns. 1JOOXK, WASHINGTON LETTER From our Regular Correpondent. The old story, started in the Hint month of thendmin 1 itfnn. Ht say he has no npol istration, nuout there bcingjogy to make nnd that Judge a disagreement bet .vivii Irert j Uoi:j: in making application idetit Cleveland and Secret a- ry Carlisle to the fln.iucial policy of the ndnmiitt ration, has heea revived ami given a new dreys, it being stated now mac me President in tends to use Tie vacancy in the Supreme Court to get rid of Secretary Carlisle. Your correspondent, can state on the authority of one who knows whereof bespeaks that there isn't the slightest fric tion between the President and Secretary Carlisle; on the contrary their relations have constantly grown closer as e;c!i en me to fully Understand the mind and disposition of the other, ho'h hnvingfound unexpected trails in the oth er to admire. KecretaryCur- lisle rightly declines to digni fy the story by denying it. It is easy to account for the re appearance of the story it this tinr Exciting political liews is very scereo thecalm Vief jre tlv? utorrn is now on nnd it was considered by the revamperof the story that Secretary Carlisle's appoint ment to the vacancy in the Supreme Court was possible, if not. very probable, nid in case h" should be appointed lie (tar writer) could clnln; credit for having the exclu sive advanec official informa tion, and if he wasn't appoin ted thestorv would soon be forgotten anyway. neakinir of the vacancr in the Supreme Court, I have just had a talk with a gentle, man who is as clos to Presi dent, Cleveland personally a any man in the world on the rumor which has at various times connected the names of three members of the cabinet with the vacancy. He said: "It is very easy for me to tell you why I feel certain mat Mr. Cleveland will not break into his cabinet to fill that vacancy, although Secreta ries (iresham nnd Carhsleand Attorney (eneral Olney, all of whom have been mention ed, would either of them make a model Justice on the bonch of the greatest Court in the world. But that does hot enter into the case at all. It should be remembered that Mr. Cleveland spent about 4 months in selecting the mem bers of his cabinet, and that each ruomber was stlected with specia1 reference to the work that Mr. Cleveland ex pected that particular depart ment over which he presides to do towards making hiead ministrai ion a success. Now theti. is it a reasonable sup position that before the new machine has fairly got togo ing Mr. Cleveland would even entertain the idea of chang ing any one of the men he had so carefully selected to another position, however much honor t ht re might be for the individual in the change? I think not. I should much sooner expect to see the Senate invaded than the cab inet, to fill the vacancy." Commissioner Lochrein is not worrying over the fins' AVATAUCi A COUNTY, th.it is being made because of the suspension of the ten sion of Justice Cliai Jes Long, jof the Supreme Court. of.Mieh for his eiisioii alleged that he as totally helpless, and mat he in now drawing a sal ory of 7,000 n. year, which shows that he is a I ng ways from being totally helpless, and that the case is a proper one for investigation. Secretary Carlisle nailed an other misstatement when be said that neither himselt nor any offi-.-ial of the Treasury Department was engaged in the preparation of a tariff bill, nnd that neither he nor the President had ever con templated such a thing. The Treasury officials are prepar ing information on the sub ject which will be placed at the disposal of thecommittee on Ways and Means when it begins work on the tai iff bill. An attempt was made to make it appear that the ac ting Director of theMint had done soinethingextraordina ry in refusing to pay moie than the London price f o r silver bullion and there was for a while a lot of wild talk about brii ging "'the usurpa tion of authority" to tin? at tention of Congress, indulged in mostly by republicans who didn't care a rap about sil ver, but thought they saw in me incident an opportunity to embarrass the adminislra tion. The talk was stopped as suddenly as it began, foi a lit Reinvestigation brought out the fact that in 1878. when John Sherman was Sec retary of the Treasury and under the Bland act, then just gone into effect, wascoin polled to buy 2,()i)0.000 worth of silver a month, for coinage, he not only refused to pay more than the Lon don price, but when Ameri can holders oi silver refused to sell at that price, he actu ally bought more than five miihon dollars worth of sil ver in I'onuon and nan it shipped to the Philadelphia mint. The Number of Pensioners Suspended. ASHINGTON, J 111 V 25. Tlie total number of pensioners underact of June 27, 1890, who have been notified since the incoming of the present administration that pay merit of their pensions has been suspended, is approxi mated 5,250. The wholenum ber of pensions granted un der this net is ascertained to be 370,000. Of this number 70,000 were to widows, mi nors und dependent relatives leaving 300.000 to be inves tigated. Up to this time a bout 25 per cent of the num ber being paid to soldics themselves are being suspen ded, pending the receipt of satisfactory proof of inabili ty to perform manuel labor. If the same ratio is mainthin ed through the entire list, a- boufc Yo.OOO have been sus pended; It is stated at the pension office that in none or these cases is fraud charged, the suspension being based upon an error of the pension office in misconstruing the a v . X. C, THUltSDAY, TInu' Hraliug Tower. I'ultimore Sun. Life would soon become in tolerable hut for the healing powers of time. When a great prief comes Upon u, such as the loss by death of a dear companion, relative or friend we seem to be inconsolable; even the church prayers and the lessor from the Bible fall upon deaf ears. But time, the great healer, comes to our relief. The poignance of our grief fades away and in Its place comes the sweet con solation of having been per mitiedfora time to live in Bvveet communion with the departed. Sorrow for the loss of one dearly loved will nev er cease, but the active af fairs of life permit no brood ing over grief nnd as time, pusses the sorrow becomes lessobstrusively present. The passion of grief yields to phi losophy, but not until it has spent its force. All who have known grief or have witness ed it knows its history. The wounds f the oul heal as do the wounds of the body. There may be much pain at first, which gradually disap pears, but the scar remains. As. one can scarceh realiz.'1 when looking at a b o d i 1 y wound how nature can ream struct the torn fibres, so to the man or Human bowed down with t hesiHlden loss of a loved friend recovery seems to be impossible. The pros pect is altogether dark, yet we know fiom analogy that time will bring relief. And when relief comes the chief consolation will be reflection upon the goodness of the de parted friend. One incentive to goodness, to uu avoidance of even temporary estrange ments, to a cultivation of kindly manners, should be the thought of their effect af ter one's death. The man whose mourners can truth fully recall his gentle spirit, kindly manner, his upright character, has left them a leg aey to comfort them duiing all their (fays upon earth Bitter muft be the anguish ol the survivor who has par feci in anger from a loved one suddenly stricken down and to whom earthly forgiveness has become impossible. Yet j i p . wuii me as nn-jeitam aw we know it to be, this anguish may come upon any one who fails to guard his temper and his tongue. A happy life and a pea .'-etui neatn can come only to those who are up right, sympathetic, consider ate and loving. While they live they will have the good will of all whom they meet and consoMng recollections of the friends who pass away before them, and when they die they will be sincerely mourned, yet leave a legacy of consolation behind them. It is something to have known and loved a great. masterful man ofsimple man ner and kindly heart. These qualities all may cultivate; they bring happiness to the man while living and when he is dead they afford endur ing consolation to his sor rowing friends and relatives and all who have known hiir. tWOne doihit pnys for the Dmoortit- one 4n.jr. . AUGUST 3 I WK), IlBnor tiy Mntlitr. A'ires,! Hveiiitir News. Here is an extract found on j those of our readers who can the desk oM'ditor William II. jse no other cauethi n thos Moore after his tenth, faodjof politics orthe prestnt busi and worn, but where he coul. lines- dt prtsr.Mi depre-ion of see it every duy. We do not j the country to look back just know that he did it, but :t twenty years. Th'.y will find reads like him. At a?v rate the country at that time mnt he hit that way, nnd he kept this little piece of paper nl- ways in sight. Read it, young man, and if you have a moth er love and honor her as he did. Here is the extract' Honor the dear old mother. Time has scattered the snowy flakes on her brow, plowed deep furrows on her checks, but is she not Bweetnnd beat! tiful now? The lips ore thin and shrunken, but those ar the lips which have kissed . t ... . t many a not rear irom tne childish chek. They are t he sweetest lips in a'.l the world. The eye is dim, yet it glows with the soft radiance of ho ly love which can never fade. Ah! yes, she is a dear old mother. Tne sands cf life a re nearly run out, but feeble as she is, she will go further, and reach down lower for you than any ether person upon earth. You cannot walk in to a midnight where she can not see you; cannot enter a prison whose bars will keep her out; you can never mount a scaffold too high for her to reach, that she may kiss and bless you in evidence of her deathless love. When the world shall despise and for sake you, when it leaves you by the way-side to die unno ticed, the dear old mother will gather you in her feeble arnM nid carry you homo, and tell you of your virtues, until you almost feel that j our soul is disfigured by hy- pocracy. Love her tenderly and cheer her closing years with holy devotion. The Fanner ami the Newspaper Han, National Labor Tribune. Many men think that news paper men a re persistant dun ners. By the way of compari son, let us suppose a farmer raises one thousand bushels of wheat a year, and sells it to one thousand persons in all parts of the country, a great portion of them ray ing, "I will hand you a dol lar in a short time." The far mer does not want to be small, and says all right. Soon the one thousand bush els are go:i:', but he has noth ing to show for it, and then he reniijjes that he has fooled nwe.y hi whole crop, and its value is due to him in a thou saud little driblets, conse quently he is seriously embar rassed in his business, be cause his debtors, each ow ing him one dollar, treats it as u small matter i,ird think it would not help Wai. Con tinue this kind of business year in and year out as the publisher does, how long would he stand it? A mo ment's thought would con vince any one that a publish er has cause for persistent dunning. After Itreakfast To purify, vitalize and enrich the oloou, and inve nerve, bodily and digestive strength, t ake Hood's Sarsapari'la. continue the medieiue otter every meal for a month or two and you will feel "like a new man." I'he merit of Hood's Sarsaparillais proven by its thousands oi wonderful cures. J ry it. NO. 45. Sot Ioc to Dfiorrr j. It may be of interest to feriug under a worse business depression than exit riow in fact in one of the ihem orable panics of our nation al history. They will find, too, that this state of affairg followed t'ie raot stunning defeat the democratic party bassiistnined for a genera tion befoie or since. Under such a condition of Affairs it would seem that the most obtuse might begin to sus pect that there is something more than democratic suc cess in politics in one flnan-i cial crisis. Host on Herald; Fayetteville Gazette: It is a little unfortunate for the democratic pn rty that its pub lie servants in high places at Washington arg so far fe'-' moved from the people as to' afford them hardly the remo test conception ot the feelingf of public sentiment that olU tains throughout the coun try on public matters and questions touchingtheaffairs of the administration. Inoiir opinion the snvironrnentf of Washington to-drty nr4 most deceptive nnd treacherous, and offer none of the incen tives to party work and znl for future succcsh. Ninety nine out of eveiy one hun dred of the public ofTicialsaie ' publicans irr civil service 'heelers, M and it matters not. low good and true a party man n ay be when he first en t ers the service there he lea run by association and imagina tion borr, of his surround' ings, that the whole country is in hearty accord with the condition and nicdas operari di of conducting the "affairs of State" with which hecomes in daily contact, whereas in not a few instances such a policy is abuost directly the opposite of the wishes and preference of the great mass of the peonie. iuix. A peculiarity common to rain in the Bermudas, the Bermudas, the Windward islands, the Hnwaiin group and the Alaskan waters it that if isn't very wet. hi none o? rhese regions do the natives fear the fain, and even foreigners soon dome to know that they take no harm from being caught out in the storms. It was noted by the men on the ships lately patrolling Behrina sea that a Dortioif of the deck slitrhtlv protected drod out white, even fn thd midst of a shower, and that wet clothing hung under a slight shelter on deck dried in an atmosphereabparentl.V saturated by a hard rain. Winston Republican: A sort of the Emerald Isle was stan ding upon the sidewalk at the court house square quite recently, wh a a funeral pro cession psed. A party st an ding near asked Pat who was dead, and to which he re pled: "Faith, the one within the coffin, I should suppose,' and proceeded to puff his pipg regardless of the chagrin of his interrogator-