Watauga mocrat VOLG liOOXK, WATAUGA COUNTY, N. C. riLUHSDAY AUGUST. J), l8tH, SO. 43. Don't Kschange good thing for umelhiag of 1cm value. Don't Give op one insurance policy and taVe another. Always remember that an old policy iaof far greater intrinsic aluc than a new one. Don't Let the premium oil jrour policy lapse even for d.iy. You can't foresee the event of to-morrow. It may not be possible fur you to get another policy if the present one is dropped. Don't Consider any other form of insurance until you have thoroughly investi gated the JiI.t.'.j mid policies c f the EQUITABLE LIFE. You i:i per ceive their advantages nt once. W. J. RODDEY, Manager, FarthtCaroliaas. Kock Hill, 5. C. MOVESSIO.XAL. W. B.C0UNC1LL, Jit. Attou.':y at La a. Boone, N. C. W. B. COUNCILL, M I). Boone, N. C. Resident Physician. Office on King Street north of Post Office. J. V H08PIISW, AU011SEYA1 LA W, MARION, N.U -(o)- Will practice in fie courts ol Watauga., Ashe, Mitchell, McDow ell and all ther counties in the western district BaTSitei ial atten Mon iriven to the collection ot lainiK." W. B. Conncill X. P. T. C. Blackburn. Boetfr, N. C. Zlonrillo, X. C. Councill & Blackburn, Physicians & Surgeons. tSCa lis attended at all hours. June 1, '93. E. F. LOVILL. J. C. FLETCHER LOVILL & FLETCHER ATlORNliYSATLAW, BOONE, N.C. 8.S')ecw hit ten turn g i ven to the colletion ocii;J6."8 U, K L. GREENE, & CO., REAL ESTATE AG'TS. HOOSE, N. C. Will civs special attention to ybstracts of title, the sale of Real Estate in W. N. C. Those he vine; farms, timber and mineral lands for sale, will do well to cull on o id Co. at Boone. L. L. GREES & CO. March 16, 1803. NOTICE. Hotel Property for Saie. On account of failing health of myself and wife, I orFer for sale my hotel property in the town ot Boone, North Carolina, and will Jiell low for cash and make terms to suit the buyer, and will take reiil or personal property in ex change. Apply soon. W. L. PltVAN. NO 1 ICE. Parties putting papers in my hand for execution will pleise advance the tees with the papers and they will re cei ve prom pt a t ten tioti , other wise they will be returned not executed for the want of tees. D. F. Baird Shff. WASHINGTON LETTER. From our JUgnlir Correipondent. President Cleveland ha not i changed his mind about the i desirability of admitting free of duty such raw materials as coal and iron ore; nor have the Democratic major ity of the House which voted to tit them on the free list in the original Wilsou bill; nor have the Democratic vo ters of the country who ere under th impression when they a Democratic Congress and administration in power that free raw materials were assured. Notwithstanding i h i s overwhelming Demo cratie sentiment in favor of reeraw materials, coal and iron are not to go on the tree list. It is both unnecessary and unprofitable to enter in to any explanation at this time as to the why and wherefores of this. P. is suf fieient to say that the fact has been made plain that no bill putting iron and oal on the free list can pass the Sen ate. Therefore the Democrats of the House are orought face to face with the choice of leaving the Mckinley law stand or. of allowing the Sen ate to have its way about coal and iron, and getting a new tariff law on the Senate books, which contains many most excellent features and which is, even in the iron and cool schedules, a big reduc tion from the duties imposed by the McKinley law. This is the situation that emhonted the Democratic House conferees when they met the Senate conferees to day for their first foiinal meeting in their second effort to reach an agreement on the tariff bill. In addition they were met with the tie vote of the Senate refusing to iu stiuctits conferees to reced from the differential duty of one-eighth of a cent, a pound on refined sugar, thus indi cating, one might say official ly, that any change in th sugar schedule would not be accepted by the Senate. Notwithstanding all this chairman Wilson and the House conftiees are not dis posed to give up the fight; therefore a call ia being cir dilated for a caucus of the Democrats of the House, to be held it no agreement is reached on the bill by Tues day. It is believed that the conferees will endeoyor to reach nn agreement upon everything except the iron, sugar, and coal schedules of the bin betore the caucus is held, and that chairman Wil son will therask the caucus what shall be done abont those schedules. It is, of course, impossible to say ivhat actiou the caucus will take, but in view of the fact that the Democrats of the House arb practically unani mous in the opinion that a tariff bill must be passed at this session of Congress, and that a bill cannot, be passed unless those schedules are ac cepted in accordance with the demands of the Senate, it is believed that the caucus will instruct the conferees to agree, knowing that the re- hftonsihility has been placed, by President Cleveland's let ter, where it belongs. There has been much talk here nbout the probability t.f President Cleveland veto ing the bill u the House agrees to the Senate iron, coal and sugar schedules, but I do not think it at nil probable that he will. In fact, 1 have excellent reasons for the belief that he has ad vised chairman Wilson and other prominent Democrats of the House to get nil the reduct:on possible in theScn ate bill and then to accept it as the best that can be had. .Mind, 1 do not state it for a fact that President Cleveland has given such advice, but that I have excellent reasons, which cannot be told with out violating confidence, for believinu that he has. It is also known that prominent Democrats, outside of Con gress, have given Mr. Wilson and the other Democratic conferees similar advice. The commission appointed b President Cleveland to in vestigate the causes-of the recent railroad strike met for the first time, today, in the office of Hon. Cnrr.dl D. Wright, U. S. Commissioner of Labor, who is ex-officio chairman of theCornmifSion. No time is to be lost in mak ing the investigation. The House committee on Labor after -in extended ex amination of the various bills on the subject decided by an unanimous vote in fa vor of Representative Spring er's bill for the creation of a nation.il board of arbitra tion, which he has been favor ably reported to the House and will, if the committee can succeed in securing a day for its consideration, almost certainly be passed at the present session. The bill is drawn in accordance with the recommendation contain ed in President Cleveland's 1887 message to Congress. The Senate Investigating committee is having consid erable trouble in locating a wit ness Mr. Ba ttershall , who is alleged to be a walk ing encyclopedia on just the things the committee wishes to fin J out abouc the alleged dealing of Senators in stock of the sugar trust. There is little disposition ill either House or Senate to taks up any other general legislation of importance, as the belief is general that tin buisness of the session will be rushed to a close as soon as the tariff bill is finally djspos ed of. Landmark: An editor works 365 days per year to get out 52 issues of a papei; that's labor. Once and a while some body p.iys a year's subscrip tion; th!Jt'scapital. And once in a while Rome sun of a gun of a dead beat takes the pa per for years and vanishes without paying for it; that's anarchy. But later on jus tice will overtake the last named creature, tor there is a place where he will get his deserts: that's hell. npmmrut nnfi vnr FroM Hnr Ilk, X. C. Editor Ih-i norr.it: There are a number of peo ple in this country to whom Mr. Cleveland is nn idol. To them if is blasphemy to ques tior the infallibility of dro ver, or of the Grovtrian scrip tnre- It is never worth while to waste argument on a man who has got thetJrovers. My own opinion is tlu't. (Jrover is a morMl man with many robust, virtues, but nt the sametiine overburdened with human trailty. I even think that Mr. Cleveland betrays at times a singulai facility for blundering. But ( i rover is .1 cool man! Blundering; yes, to use no harsher term, that's the word. He blundered when he failed to call an extra ses sion of Congress when lie was inaugurated; be blundered when he assumed that the re peal of the purchasing clause of the Sherman act would re lievf. the finances of thecoun- ry; he blundered when he did not outline a policy to be pursued, in line with the Chi cago platlorm, in his mes sage to the regular session of Congress, when Congress and the people expec ted that he would: he blundered in making some of his appoint ments of ministers to foreign lands; he blundered in his hostly silence during the past weary moiithsof debate on the tariff, when he should have used his influent and patronage to have a proper tariff bill become a law; he blundered when he appointed a negro t o the office of Regis ter of Deeds for the district of Columbia; he blunderer when he vetoed the only silver measure that could have given the country any financial relief. But Grover is a very cool man I After all these blun ders, and as if to place a glitering tip to the icy .peak of hia towering exhibition of frozen impudence, he writes his letter to Mr. Wilson, Chairman of the House fi nance committee. In that he proved that, he was on record both for and ngainst tee income tax. But Grover is a very cool man. He did not hesitate to insult the Senate in That letter, and I he Senators did not fail to to re sent. it. The political muddle is without precedence, and all on the account, of drover's own action. As a specimen of what the Senators think and sav, here is one little paragraph from Mr. Gor man's speech. "Never be fore since the declaration ot independence, has a Presi dent of the United States been guilty of such a viola tion of the spirit of the con stitution, as has Mr. Cleve land in writing his letter to Chairman Wilson." Ittakes these Democratic Senators to bhow up to us Grover's "ways that ore dark and tricks that are vein." The whola true inward iess of the business is, that Grover is trying to auger his way into a third term as president and he very reasonably ex ists that the money power mere, in me mean nine what are the feople going to do about if? Ale the Gro- verian idoliti.rs going to block the wheels to Demo cratic success in the Intnre, or are they going to stand squarely upon the Chicago platform? As to a third term for Grover, the idea is preposterous, and unless the .ost unlooked-for changes take place, he stands no more chance for a third term as president thanSatau does for a second term in the ha py land. Our county and State con ventions will soon be called upon to place candidates in the field for the different of fices.' I-t us see that no u.an gets on the Democratic ticket who is not known to stnmt wholly upon i lie Chicago platform, as the people un derstand it. Let u s profit by the mistakes of oui erring brethren, and try to secure the support of every true American for our ticket. Put the right men out, and let favoriteism go to the winds. Phantom. WOMAN'S TUl'E Kl DLIXESS. It Is More Natural with Her Than with jiua. .. Among all nations, women are ever inclined to be cheer ful and modest." They (,w i not hesitate, like man, to perform a hospitable or gen erous action; not haughty, nor arrogant, nor supercil ious, but full of courtesy and affection', industrious, econ omical, ingenious; more vir tuous, and performing more good actions than aian. I never addressed myse'f in the language o f decency and friendship to a woman, whether civilized or savage, without receiving a decent and friendly nnswer. In wandering over the bar ren plains of inhospitable Denmark, through honest Sweden, frozen Lapland, rude and churlish Finland, un- irincipled Russia and th widespread regions of the wandering Tartar, if hungry. dry, cold, wet, or sick, wo man has ever boen fiiendly tome, and uniformly so! and, t-j add to this virtue, so wor thy the appellation of benev olenee. these actions have been performed in so free and kind a manner that, if I wa.- dry, I drank the sweet draught, and if hungry, ate the coarse morsel with a dou le relish. Ex. Morgaiiton Herald: Every body experts the Republicans co change the name under which they attack theDemoc racy of North Carolina at least once in two years, la fact, so heartily ashamed do they seem of the namerepub can, that they are constant ly conjuring up some new ti tle for their badly disorgan ized for?es. They have failed to get in under the name of 'Independents and Liberals.' This year they started out as 'Coalitionists,7 but they have already gotten tired of that and they are now call ing themselves 'Co operation ists.' What it will be next nobody can tell, and it don't make any difference. No ar my that was ashamed of its flag and uniform ever y e won a ba I tie either milTirnrv or political. THE DEMOCr AT1C PAITT RKiHT blDElP. SfntcM'ille Laiiilini ik. The Democratic State con vention nvetsnext wek,and in preparation for it the uostof the county con ven tions have already Ixen held. Such as have not been will ih this week. 1 he reports trom all that have leen held aie of lite H-itnt chaincter. 'the bovs" are all on hand as usual; their spirits are fine and their faith in the party of the people is undim inished. The dissatisfaction which was apparent through out almost all of the first year of the Cleveland admin istration is subsiding, b A, whether men are satisfied with national affairs or not, they ha ve come to a realiz ing sense of the fact that the welfare of North Carolina is at stake and that it is no time to be squabbling over free silver-and such things when home government is in any sort of peril. Pretty much all of our Supreme Court is to be elected this year our court of last re sort; the one which passes, finally, upon the lives and property of people. So, also, tlo ju lg;es who travel from ccunt to ccuntv and tulniiDisfcr iuftice. Likewise me men wno inane ana un make our laws; and last, but by no means least, the men who attend to the business of the people at the various court houses. Those enumerated t e judges, legislators and coun ty officers are the public ser vants with whom the people are most conc3rned after all, and when they come to look u round for the right men for these places they see that the Democratic party is the only one which can furnish them. The people want the State governed properly and the county business done right. and they are going to give the job to the Democratic party again this year, as u- sual. lf President. Cleveland should turn Republican to morrow and Congress ad journ without passing any tariff bill at all, North Caro lina would still go Democrat ic this year, upon the record of the party in the State and upon the character and ca pacity of the men whom it of fers the people as Congress men, judges solicitors, mem bers of the Legislature and co u my officers. A Warning. "Have you been reading the serial, 'The Scort of the Sierras,' that is running in my paper?" "Yes. lam very much in terested in it. Wl o is the author?" "I am the author." "You are, eh? Well, I want to tell you right now that unless the hard heated adventuress comes to grief and the brave scout rescues and marries the captive maid en pretty soon I'll stop my paper. -Texas Sittings. ANXOrSCEMEN'T. I hereby announce myself an Independent Anti administration t ""? ' i a x . ' Z 3 a. . . . I : 1 tor in tic I J. F. iM'Ai-)Kci;. Ill