Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Oct. 3, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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. . . JlL;:" am) ;. i u7 (A- o ; ' . VULI ,; UUUjNJi;,' V AI'UOAv. COUNT Y, N. Cm :-':-:' v 1 .'f'-n r"r 't-ll, . . ??r-r- ., r ... u- : ,. ,-, ,' WAsaiNatorti: letter, from ottr Refular'.Colrreipondent ThpflenfiationalistHnrcatit ngairij and with about s much foundation tor t h e i r fttorifig as uSrtnl.; On Satur day Secretary Carlisle went ' to Marion, MaRf. where ho "'Hfwht seVtMl weeks early in the summer. He. didn't tell the pevspajiers why he went. Marion is known to be in the Vicinity of Gray Gablea. That Was enough for the venders of -cheap ' sensations. The wires were kept hot with sto ries of Secretary. Carlisle hv ing bKn sent fdrby President Cleveland and ell the details of what and why hewas wan ted were telegraphed off with ho bstter foundation than a lively imagination. It is, aU together protNblethavSecre tary ("Jailisle went awey toes cape4he heat, which has been terrific in Washington since the middle of last week; also that he will combine business with comfort ,And rpb the President before he returns. It will be a long time be fore Secretary Lamont hears the last of his not attending the Chicamangn celebration. He was down for a speech, but instead tif going to Ten nessee he went to Maine, to bring Mrs. Lamont and the children home, he savs. His friends jokingly tell him that Would have attended the celebration if they had n o t pn him down for 'a speech, The one thing that he can't do is to make srwech. Senator Vest was natural ly much irritated at having his position on thesilverqueH tion misrepresented by t h wide publication of what pur ported to be an interview with him. In order that there may be no possible nrisondcr standing of the position he occupies he states it over his own signatur? as follows: "I have not changed my opin ion in the slightf st degree as tosilvfr, and must protest against being called upon to explain imaginary state m?ntff never mad. "and f:r which I am not responsible. I stand on the platforn of the Missouri democrats made in August last, and have nev er wkvered in my positjon. when the question of ' repeal ing the purchasing clause of the Sherman act was before the Senate I reported from the' finance committee on he half of my colleagues on the committee who fayored free coinage, and myself, a bill for the coinage of silver at the ratio ot 20 to 1, and I af terwards vote.l -with friends of silver in both houses, first for the ratio of 16 to 1, then .17 tol, then 17 to 1, then 19 tol, and th"en 20 to 1 and finally for the reenact Tnent of the Bland-Allison act. if called upon to vote again upon the question I should endeavor to seure fiee coinage for silver as re demption money at the old ratio, and it that could not be had. then at- some other ratio which would secure the requisite majority." Great is the"bffice of Comp trolerofthe Treasury. The Department of Justice, after investigation, huut-iiVed at 1 t j . , " 7 1 1 .in. mi- the con?rasion that the Dock ery reorganization act, which went into operation Aug. 1st 189 tf makes, he Comptroll er's authority. pn ta in ou n t in all matters involving t i e payment of money. froth the U. S. Treasury. The investi gation was made at the re quest of Secretary Morton, because of an opinion render ed by" Acting Comptroller 'on the power of the Secretary of Agriculture to expend certain money for the distribution of the Farmer's Bulletin, a De partment publication. Nobod y seems to know just what is going to be done a bout the Siigar bounty. Sec retary Carlisle notified Ex Senator Manderson the coun cil for the beet sugar men, that he would hear his argu ments against certifying the case of the Court of Claims, any time after the twentieth of this month. Since that time nothing has been heard from Mr.Manderson. Regard less of any argument that maybe 'presented it is not thought likely t hat Secreta ly Carlisle will send the case to the Court of Claims a gainst the wishes of the claim ent. It has Veeti stated that he might overrule or reverse the decision of Comptroller IU.wler, but that is some thing that Secretary Carlisle himself has p ositively stated that he had no authority to do. A democrat who has never been specially fi iendly toward Senator Hill has just return ed to New York, where he was iii touch With everything on inside democratic cirvles. Said he: "Senator Hill ha been doing a wondeiful work in his efforts to get the dem ocratic party in such shape that 1 will have a fighting chance to regain possession of.the State of New York. It matters not whether this work be done for one reason or another Senator Hill tie serves credit, ar.d I am quite sure thut he will gt i', too, not only fror.i the democrats of the state, but from those of the entire country." Dem ocrats here are much interes ted in thh New York state democratic convention to be held this week. They want to kno whether it will de clare in favor of any presided tial candidate. John G. M auger ed.it.01 of the Sunbeam, Seligmen, Mo., who named GroverCleveland for the Presidency in Novem ber, 1882 while he was May or of Buffalo. N; Y., is enthu siastic in his praise of Cham ber'.ain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. He says: "I have used it for the past five yea i-8 and consider it the best preparation ot the kind if. the market. Itisns sta ble as s'lgar and coffee in this section. It is an article Miner it and should be used in ev ery household. For sale by all druggists. 'My mother-in-law never understands a joke," says a correspondent. "So I wassur prised to receive a letter from her a few weeks after my lit tle boy had swallowed a far thing, in which the last words were: "Is Ernest over his financial difficulties vet ?" Tid iiits. '-: ' Control of ltalit. H Baltimore Sun. ' One Of the commonest sour ces of worriment to parents who have children approach ing maturity, Is tb? discov ery that 1 the young people have little, if any, control o ver their desires. They must have, what ''they' want ur they are dissatisfied and un happy; they have no capaci ty to make a , cheerful sacri fice partly, it may be assum ed, because in eailier life they have been too much Indulge ed. Yet every mature per son, however weak in churn c ter he may be, knows that much unhappiness lies befoie those who cannot regulate their desires by the means they possess for their gratifi cation. It is not enough to get a child to do certain things as a matter of duty. He trust do them with some degree of philosophical cheer fulness or he will lead an un happy life. It is therefore es sential to his wll being th it he should be trained early in life to keep guard 'Upon his desires, and that he should learn to make minor sacrifi ces cheei fully so that he may be prepared when he grows oldei to do his dntj manful ! and uncomplainingly whpti duty leads to greater sacrifi ces. The boy who is so fur indulged that he is allowed to neglect his school studies or home labors for the sake of a game of baM is not well equipped for the serious la bors o1 life. A tew years there after he will have just as much desire, perhaps, to wit ness or engage in field sports, but business will demand his attention and family oiiliga tions, pei haps, will so press upon him that he cannot spare a moment from h i s work. Then he will have to curb his desires and make sac rifices, but he cannot do so cheerfully if he has not had some experience in the mnt tor. It is better that he should have felt some child ish griefs than that he should ha v grown up unprepared for the uiDre serious disap pointments of matured life. Dtsire grows by what it feeds on; the youth who is allowed to spend all his time at field sports, to neglect his lessons, his sociul and home duties that he may indulge in sport suffers greatly when, having entered upon a business ca reer, he finds that there is no Isisure for any thing, and that for twenty years or in or he must attend strictly to busi ness if he would be success ful. If he should have enough strength of purpose to resist his desires, he cannot, with such training, do so cheerful ly, whereas .the youth who has been accustomed all his life to curb his desires has them under uch control he scarcely thinks ol the sacrifi ces he 8 also obliged. to make. It is scarcely possible to con vey to the young an ade quate impression of the free dom and opportunity for pleasure they enjoy while un der the watchful care of their parents, compared with the steady grind to which t hey will bo subjected when they oecome then own masters. THUKSDA Y , ; OCTOliER 3. 1895, The term seems almost iron ical, for though they may be masters of their own persons they are controlled by social forces more inexorable than the sternest parent. Their hours of coming and going are regulated; they cannot maintain their position tn the race ot life, much less ad vance, unless they attend strictly to their daily duties, and not until they ha ve serv ed their employers and the public lor many years will they be allowed such leieure hours as they enjoye 1 in their youth. But this drudgery to which all must submit will appear no great hardship to those who have schooled themselves to disappoint ments and have kept the growth of their desues under reasonable 'control. It will render very unhappy those who, through bad training, reach maturity with no more control over their appetites than have spoiled children. A. M. Bailey, u well known citizen of Eugene. Oregon, says. his wife has for years been troubled with chronic diarrhoea and used many remedies with little relief un til she tried Chambei Iain's Colic, ' 'holera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which has cured her sound and well. (Jive it a tri ul.and you will be surprised at the prompt relief it affords. 35 and 50 cent bottles for sale at all drug stores. Whole Tomatoes Fill a large stone jar with ripe, sound, whole tomatoes, add a few cloves mid a sprinkle of sugar between each layer, cover well one-half cold via egar and one half water. Put a piece of thick flannel over thejar,littingitfall rtell down into tiie vinegar, then tie down With cover of brown paper. Thest will keep all winter, and if mould collects on the flandel It will do no harm. Ex. V Irving W. Darrimore, phvs ical director of the Y. M. C. A. Des Moines, Iowa, says he can consistently recommend Chamberlain's Pain Balm to athletes, gymnasts, hicyiaV; ists, foot ball players and the pi ofessiou in general for bruls es, (iprains and dislocations also for sores and stiffness of the muscles. When applied before the parts become swol len, it will affect a cure in one half the time usually requir ed. For sale by all druggists. Salisbury World: Mr.Mor ris, living at the Tabe Saun ders mine in Montgomery sounty, was awakened Irotn slumber one night last week by a curious hojse. He could not discern from"?w hence the sound eminated but next morning to rhV horror he found in his bed a large rat tle snake. Twenty rattles were found on the" snake when it was killed. ' 4 Bnckleu' Arelea St're. The best salve In the world for cute, bruises, sores, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands chilblains, corns, ana all skin eruption, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satis faction or monev refunded. I Price 25 cents per box. : For sale by an druggists. ' J Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Press And Carolinian. VU the "New Woman" a myth or a reality ?" asks a metropolitan editor. And he says the question is asked in all seriousness. The world is Justnow hearing much of her. She is forming the t borne of sermons and lectures, aye, and of jokes without number.- But in real life, where is she ? Rev. Thos. ' Dixon de voted over on hour to her. In his eloquent lecture here last week. While headtnittedthat women are growing stronger both physically and mental ly, nnd more independent and self-reliant, he depreca ted the idea that they are growing less womanly. The Carolinian agrees with him. That the rather sudden ad vent of women into the prop er sphere of physical and in tellectuol freedom ft om which they were too long excluded has caused some extrava gance and absurdities, is tine, but a reaction will come, for human nature is not readily changed. Her higher education nnd hot ele vation from the legal status of n chattel to her place in so riety will net destroy her in ate womanhood, her domes tic, wifely, maternal spirit. She will remain a dutiful daughter, an affectionate sis ter, a loving wife, a devoted mother. While the "New Wo- l-man" does not propose to be a mnn s plaything or slave, in which she is entirely right, give her a manly man for a mate, and she will prove her self as womanly a woman as was any daughter of Eve. She is "new' in tunny things and it is well that she should be. But she is not new in the one dominant and consistent element of her sex, "the eter nal feminine." Amid all thas has been said about her both for and agninst her, perhaps nothing is at once more terse and comprehensive, and at the same time more entirely just, than the half-flippant, and halt-jesting remark that 'the new women is nothing after all, but the dear old tfirl.' White in Chicago, Mr. Chas L. Kahler, a prominent shoe merchant of Des Moints, Io wa, had quite a serious time of it. He took such a severe cold that he could hardly talk or navigate, but t he prompt use of Chamberluin's Cough Remedy cured him of his cold so quickly that oth ers at the hotel who had bad colds followed his example and a Intlf a dozen ersons ordered it from the nearest drugstore. They were pro fuse in their thanks to Mr. Kahler for telling them how to cure a bad cold so, quickly. For sale bv all druggists. An exchange sajs: ''One of the most remarkable de velopments of the automatic machine is a "Doctor Cure All" in Holland.. It is a wood en figumof tt' man. with eom- partmeuts all'o vcr jt labeled ill- .' '"Vi.-.k- ( ' . with the name r6f various ailments. If you havrtttfVn. y4' find its corresponding p5fittp uii ihtj uuir, uti'jr coia in iiie siot ana. tne prop f a 1 1 a I er pin or powder will conic i n i)Ul- ' '- HSjSfTllin "7o tvflps A... wv w.u. r.Vr.ni lur Fit roii a kino CORDOVAN'. ! rttNCHACNAMUUaeAUV , 3.UP0UCE,33OLW. Onr Om Million P-aala i W. L. Dongas $3 & $4 Stsa All our hoM u equally Mtiafactory Tky fclv M Utt Mlu lor th Mn, Thy equal catM tho In ityl art fit. TlMlr waarlnf .uI1Um arc mmifp m. Th prkM an aallafnatenpcd m Ml from $1 to $3 Hvfxl crtr ! makes, if jrouriWaloc cannot lupplyjmnncu. Soldbf Dealers everywhere, Wftte4, aeeit M take exclusive tale fur tbia vlclaity. Write at onoo. . . , 4HHMMMMlMtiMi The management of the J liquitaDie Lite Assurance Society in the Department of the Carolinas, wishes to se cure a few Special Resident Agents. Those who are fitted for this work will find this ARareOptenity It hwork, hoyever, &uJ those who succeed best in it pooso-s character, nature judgment, x tact, perseverance, and tne X . respect of their community. 2 Think this matter over care- x fully. There's an unusual J J opening for somebody. If i J J fits yon, it will pay you. Fur- J ther Information on request. J , W J. Roddey, Manager, ! I Rock Hut, s.c. PROFESSIONAL. W. B. C0UNC1LL, Jit. A'f TORNRY AT LAaT. Boone, N. C. W. B. COUNCILL, M. D. Boone, N. C. Resident Physician. x Office on King Street north of Post Office. J. F SIORPIHiiW, A710RNEYA7 LAW,' .f AltlON, N.C Will practice in the courts r Vataugn., Ashe, Mitclu II, McDovrf and all ther count! ts. in the weKtern district B"Spenal ntten Mori given to the collection o lalm6.- : W. B. t'ouncill 91. D. T. 0. Blackburn Boope, 9. C. ZIOHVille, K C Council! k Blackburn, Physician & Surgeons. VS-Catis attended at all June 1, '93. E. F. LOViLL. J. C. FLKTCHGH LOVILLl FLETCHER ATlORNhYSATLAW, B00NE, N. 0. v 8QT Special attention given to the colletion ocms."a Chamber lala'e Bye and BkLa Oiatmamt I a certain eon for Chroole Sore Ej-aa, Granulated Era Lkk Bora Nirplei Pile?', Eoema, Tetter, BaJt Bheum and BcaM Head, 25 eenta per box. . For ttl by droggicta. ' - TO BOMS OWWXBS. ' For nuttinit a bona In a fina baalttiv eon ditioo try Dr. CadT'i Condition Powders. Mrjtinrv wrcwi ana OixTor worraa, giving Fo7k br dn. Mm 1 oui m fhi A?nmv vnrt. i hnnia Jt von nrgpewiA. I ImJjBmifton. nnr St..ich Iir(1PT, Wt, DKOWN'M IRON Bl'lTKHS. All dlers keep ft, VI per lotllek (imutnebsn 1 i -'-rM 1 sfctir 1 Docs This HitYou? UVUIUL'VHI Oue Will. uiWuuu"acisake4roifflejcuwrorpeft
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 3, 1895, edition 1
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