Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Nov. 1, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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0 4- ,0 . 1 S3 VOL 7 IJOOXK. WATAUGA COUNTY, N. C. NO. o v v vvw wuil; j Til. v-.i. V:' a- ' v y . You Don't Have To Die To grt your insurance nmlr the Tantlai Han ci lia EQUITABLE LIFE. It is a sh.iplc aid a!iilnlcly f.ifc means of investing your earn infjs for future emergences and acquiring the benefit of Lifj insurant c r.t the same time. It insures you a lrcans of support in after year nd insures your family c.nainst w.wt in case of yuurdeith. T!ii canic of the Equitable Life alone is att ironclad nrcc-net'.t of r-..'cty. Its security ; its c ::'.rar'.s; its surplus nnd rciotm-cs are not excelled i:i the world. We v.ul make h!1 tlii c ; jl.-.:;j ns 1. y t.j you if you w ill t.-. :i 1 vi-nr ator.s t W. J. RGDDLT, Mr.naxer. Department of ths Cir?!inas, UCCK KILL, S. C. MOFUSSIOXAl. Y. B. COUNCIL!,, Jh. ATTOItX'.V AT L.". BoOUO. N. C. W. Ii. COUNCILL. M. 1). Boone, N.C, Resident Physician. Office tin King St reet north of Post Office. J. I 11T I s AllORXEYAl LAW, MAKION, N.C -(a)- Will practice in the eneits ol Wntauga.A.she, Mitel., li, M-Dow-pll ami till t her louiiii's in the western district B-"Sptcinl at ten ion Jven to the collection ol lainis. W. S. loi-.m-ill .1!. 1). T. C. Biatkbura. Hauiie, X. C. Zioatil'.c, X. C. Counsill & Blackburn, P!sj3icisn3 & Surgeons, fc&'Ctilis ntteuthd nt nil June 1, '03. E. P. LOV1LL. J. C. FLETCHER. LOVIL & FLETCHER ATJURSLYSAT.LAW, BOONIE, N. c fclT'SK'cinl Attention given to the collet ion ol claims.".. l. l. giu:i:x i:, & coT, REAL ESTATE AG'TS. HOUSE, A. . Will give special attention to abstracts of title, the sale of Real Estate in W. N. C. Those hi viny; farms, timber and mineial lands for Kale, wiil do well to call on said Co. at Bo 'j no. L. L. GliEM & CO. March 10, NOTICE. Hotel Property fox Snie. On account of failing health of myself and wife, 1 oiTer for sale my hotel property in the town ot lioone. North Carolina, and will 3e'l low for cash and make terms i to suit tho buyer, and will take real or j)ersonul property in ex ihange. Ajij.lv soon. W.L.HRVAN. AV1ICK Parties putting papers in my hand for execution wiil pleis ndvaiu e the tees with the pajK rs and they will re ceive prom pt attention, other wise they will be returned not executed for the want of ioos. D. F. Baikd Shff. WASHINGTON' LKTTKi: i From our UcguUr Correspoudeiit. Preii!.nt Cleveland will ie- turn to tli White House! this vii'k and iCis presumed, altlnaiirh not yt certain, that Mrs. ''l-'Vcland and thej children will accompany him. The White Houso has been cleaned from ci'll ir to garret, !a force of men having been1 working from the day Cue President and his family left ; j until Saturday night, to' biihten up things tor the ' winter season, j Secretary Carlisle has al jinost consented to deliver; 'seveial speeches in Indiana and New York and the pres. sure is so great that there is llittle doubt that he will in the end succumb. It was! ! not because he had anv ob- l iji'Ction to making speeches i c-doing anything else that is proper to aid tln Deaio ern tie party that hp a first declined to make flics e spreches. but because he is very busy and expects () continue so until after the meeting of Congress, and bo-j causi? ; was so modest as to be unable to sec the import ance that D moei-atsaU over the country will attach to his speeches. The last is the hardest to overcome. By woikiug overtime he can make up tor the time lost, but it is difficult to convince a man as free from anything approaching the big head as Secretary Carlisle is that any thing he may say or do will be a powerful factor towards the success of Ids party. Secretary Graslmn, who re turned from Chi rag") a few days ago, soys he f.mnd the Democrats of Illinois in bet ter shape than he expected fror.i newspaper accounts of the situation, and that, he thinks the party will hold its own in the Congressional dis tricts and will control the legislature, which will elect Senator Cnllem's successor. Now for a surprise. I have just learned from a trust worthy source that there is a strong probability that Secretary Gresham will speak, both in Illinois and Indiana, before the close of the ca mpaigtr Mr. T. (). Towles, a promi nent official of the House, has just returned from his home in Missouri. He has carefully investigated the po litical sit notion in the State and his judgment is regarded good by all who know of the accuracy of the predictions he has made in previous con tests. He says that the Dem oc rats are now working har moniously ail over the State and are certain to hold thei; own in Congressionall dis tricts, and have a good fight iiig chance, to send a solid Detnoi'.raticdeiegation to the iiext House. Missouri is oni of the States in which the !te publican campaign commit tee has been figuring, or at least claiming to figure, on big gaiiis. Every Democrat vho has been in Washington for the hst two or three days en dorses the action of Senator Hill, in allowing the' Demo cratic State ticket to be print ed on tic Ciiio'i or na'i L'amm.'.iiv municipal ticket, as well n-s nti tic Liia aanv ticket, as not rally good poli ties, but under the citeiia stances absolutely n .'cessnry politics. Tuey feel that Sen ator Hill was perfectly right in declining to make the suc cess of the State t ickct de pendent upon the election of the Tammany ticket, a-; it would have been hid the State tickf-t been printed on ly upon the Tammany ticket. While the rcjiorts from New York are far from satisfac tion most Democrats are still confident that Hill will win. In view of the action o f -fudge Larconihe, of N. Y., in denying the npplic-at i n for a writ of habeascorpusin tic case of Mr. Morton's Eng lish coachman, who has been ordered deported for having come to America in viola tion of the alien coat raet la tor law, and deciding 'hat the Sect etary ol the Tie isu ry alone had the authority to decide whether the claim made, that tin1 man was Mf. Motion's domestic servant and therefore e.ve'npt from the law in question was val id, Secretary Carlisle has di rected that the immigration board of review at Ellis Is land make a thorough inves tigation, and report, to him, in order that he may linail.y decide the case. There is no politics in it so far as Secre tary Carlisle is concerned. II 1 regrets the decision of Judge Laivumhe, believing t h a t puts more authority in the hands ot tin: Secretary of the Treasury than the Trainers of the law intended t h a t lie .should have, bur wiil, of course, make t he decision. The Congressional a m -paigu committee haa about completed its work, so far as t he sending out of democrat ic literature is concerned. Its work from now until the elec tion wiil be mostly of an ad visory nature, although it wiil also keep the democratic district managers posted as to any new schemes put out by republicans to catch votes. Members of the committee think th" Congressional situ ation in N'i-w York City ivhich has been awfully complicated in nearly all the districts be cause ot there being two dem ocratie candidates Ta i u ma ny and aiiti-Tanimany i n each, has been greatly helped hr the withdrawal of Straus and the substitution of e Mayoi Grunt as theTamma ny candidal ? for mayor. The 'ongressioiial c o in m i tte- wanis democrats elected to Congress and doesn't care a lig whether they are Tamma ny or anti-Tammany, ami it is working to prevent the t un ning of two democratic can didates in any one district, believing that it is foolish to thus give seats to republic-ins which rightly belong to democrats. Carlton Ibrnwell, foreman of the UiUette, Midaletown. N. J.. believes ihat Chamber lain's Cough Keuiedy should be; in every home. lie used it lor a cold and effected a spee dy cure. He says: "It is in deed a grand remedv, 1 can recommend it to all. I have1 also seen it used for whoop-j ing cough, with Hie. beat re- suits." 25 and 0 cent, bot-j ties for sale by VV. L. Bryan. I TVi Sili.llimi A To SM(T. Vji-.,.in-o mi l'.s'. Tic i are very few pi fsolis in th" Cuited States who are opooM' l to bimetallism. Tit" abno-t universal belief of th lv.pl" of this country that s'E'er should be u I fur inou ey to th" extre me limit of safety. The greatest d-'sid-eia'uai a '!d iiiixt urgent ic i a" the country is an eailyatai pernauent seitle mer.t of the silver question, and lie1 tiaanci't- who will suggest n pl.in inchi ling free coinage and the maintenance of the party wiil h" hailed as a b"iiefaetor of his oiiutn and of all mankind. Nootii er j'i' --t ion is s i urgently de manded adjust inent as t hat of t!i" main il relations a' gold and silver, the extent to which, and the condil ions on M-'uii-h. the hit tor shall be used fur men ey. . The oppoiieais of free cran age a i the rat iool 1 1) to 1 as sert, with undoubted sincer ity, that the adoption of such a policy would result in silver monometallism: that it would cut the purchasing power of the dohar in two: that it ould contract the volume of the .-Min-eney to the extent of the $000,000. 000 of gold we now have? in circuhition. and that, such a contraction would be ruin ous, would bring on ''haid times" '.incxampled in ourex perience. The .advocates of ui-!i:nited free coinage pro fess to disbelieve this fore cast, although some of them admit that their policy, un til it should be adopted in Europe, would make gold a commodity as it was prior ro resumption. But fhey contend that. England and Germany would he forced to follow oar lead, and that other European nations are already d 'sirous of the pro posal change. In France and the other counties of the Latin Union, both gold and silver are full legal tender to any amount, but the coinage of silver is limited. No addition to the legal tender silver coinage of France lias been made for years. Worn pieces are re placed by new ones, leaving the aggiegate unchanged. No country has unlimited free coinage and unlimited legar tender the conditions demanded by the advo"ates of tree coinage in the United Stair's. The opinion that the busi ness of the commercial world is too great to be successful ly maintained on a gold bas is, and that, therefore, both of the nione motals must be employed, i steadily gaining grounds in Europe, as if has always been the djnrnate sentiment in this country. Whether we musi wait: for the growth of this feeling on the other side of the Atlantic to bring about an interna tional agreement as to ratio, or go ahead along to adjust the money problem, is bound to be the great, issue in the next "Presidential campaign, It is a 'significant fact that many lenders in the two iat ties are manifesting an ear nest desire to conciliate the people of the silver Slates. WIi.il tl.c fcnivrratlt' (nsi'vfx !..!. 1 1 removed fro'n tin' stat ures t h" IVd i al ! -ct ion law. t ii;-:? idiitas ;. : I ocratie me i-air cv-t u i .and llc-rehv p a...-.- I t-. 'h people of 1 1. - -o vel'eigu .' . fit I ion! co nplefc c-in'rol o-vei- their cliK tions. tree froui the iuterxeution or Sum'tvis iouof Deputy Marshals wdias" sol - duties, under 15 -public an sanrcnacy, has been intimi ilate, arrest and imprison e e(tors I ii f ore they had cast tlcii ballot. t h is reilneed th1 expendi tures of tic (Jovemnient be low those of the last Repub lican Administration more than s-J(, ()i)i),000. thereby ; lieving the i"(iph from I hi pavmeat of that imnvMise sum into the Federal Treas ury to stimulate extravagant jobs. r It reformed abuse in the va rious departments, and by the aid of the howls of t h e same dispensed with useless positions, thereby reducing the salary list more t h a n 1.000,000 annually. It repealed that most ob noxious, ill-formed and op pressive measure called the Melvinley law, tun! substitu ted in its send a measure of revenue reform that will re vive trade and restore pros perity. It destroyed the policy of paying out of the public funds in the Treasury, deriv ed from taxes collected from the people, millions of dol lars annually in the way of bounties to aid private indi vidual in the prosecution of their private industries. It provided for taxation by States, counties and munici palities, more than three bun d.'ed millions of taxable val ues which had heretofore not only been exempt from taxa tion; but had enabled the un aided unscrupulous persons, by fraudulent practices, to es cape from their just share of the burdens of domestic gov ernment. It placed upon thft statute books the most drastic eras ure against coinhinalioi s, trusts, monopolies engaged in foreign commerce ever . u neted. It provided for an income tax upon the wealth of the country, thereby placing up on 1 he shoulders of the rich ii due share of the burdens of Government. It recognizes the dignity of Labor by providing by a law a ltitt ional holliday in t h e District of Columbia u p o n which the working people may const; from toil and u nite in a peaceful celebration of their achievement and tri umph. It enacted more than two hundred laws for the ben elit of the people in different sec-nous of the country. There is good reason forthe popularity of Chamberlin's Cough Remedy. Davis a n d Buzard, of West Montery, Clarion Co. Pa., says: "It hast cured people that our physi cians could do nothing for. We persuaded them to tiy a bottle of Chamberlains Cough Remedy and they now recom mend it with the rest of us." 23 and ."0 cnt bottles for sale by W. L. Bryan. Hood's Tills become the favor ite cathartic with every one who tries them. "2oe. I'ct Him in the Dork. - TIip great and good St. I.oais l! 'io discoursing M ! : t a i . !i:idi r .... ' -.ei. ; y ;i : ;Ti t . d.i.a !'.:1-y at:d I Kmc -.u-'m ..- !.i,-.'. ; .! Killley fu.ijiflg f e- ward f'ii" t iic .- ! Vationai Ih itiblicaii (uve'itifMi. Pa triotic Demof-rats can do good to the country by help ing Ids hackers to gpt him on the ticket. While McKinley does not possess any of the qualities which men associate with great reputations, his name his come to stand for th ultra-protective principle o taxation, and if he were nom united the country would settle forever the ciiniinality of McKir.leyisrn. For it is ii crime to destroy the right of a citizen to x 'v what and where he pie ces. To present an Ai-irican wife and mother from getting a dollar's worth of honest wool for her dollar is a crime. To throw harries across the path of American products to consuming markets is a crime. To corrupt legisla tion, a s protection always does with its bargains and bribery, is criminal, and hein ously criminal. It is a criminal falsehood to proclaim that the stand ard of American wages it fix ed by protection criminal because the b'e is invariably told by men who know its gross falseness to men who lack of information isexpect ed to render them liable to be deceived. It is a crime to pass a tar iff law whose title concealsits purpose. And a McKinley law does not dare to express anywhere the McKinley pur pose. If it told the truth, or e v e n repeated MeKinley's phrases, it would be declared unconstitutional. It is a crime to oppress the American people with trade interference, which all educa tion and all enlightenment declare to be unjust and re trogressive. There can be no npoi-'gy for politicians w!".: si rive to sJi o out rom the knuivedge of the poo ale the results of science uud thv:ght who would darken the; mind of their countrymen with the superstitions of the Middle Ages. Let McKinley and McKin leyism stand before the peo ple. Let Americans p r o -nounce upon the ciime of protec tion. ' Bristol Courier: Labor will be better employed and bet ter paid when good effects of the new tariff bill are fully rcalizQd. The lower prices of manufactured good. will enable all classed to buy more goods of all kinds, and this in turn will incrense the output of mills and factories and give labor more work. When labor has plenV of work wages advance. This is why denuorais are confi dent that good times are coming to f ny. 01) amber ain'a Ey and BUn Ointnri Is a certain cure for Chronic Bore Eyea, Granulated Eye Lids, Soro Nipples, Pilts, Eczema, Totter, Salt Rheum and Scald Head, 25 cents per box. For sale by drugista. TO H0aSB3W2R8. For putting a horse in a fine healthy con dition try Dr. Cady's Condition Powders. They tone up the system, aid digestion, euro loss of appet.te, relieve constipation, correct kidnev disorders and destroy worms, giving new life to an old or over worked horse. 25 j cents per package. For sale by druggists.
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1894, edition 1
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