O AS,X,: ' . . ,:xX:..: 1 " VOL IX. BOONE, TV ATAUGA COUNTS N. C, THUHSDA , SEPTEMBER, 2, 1897 no. 35: 'V. -1 ' . ft- : P. 0 Jtr, 41 raw on td Bern Problem. --f t i vi news aim uiwerver. ; ATr; John TemDle Graves ! and ex-Governor Bullock nae Deen engagea in a news y.j paperTontroversy in the At ' ' ; lantai Journal, growing out r.-l '.'of the declaration of Graves , tba(the' negro question has 'recntlVtinore than ever be- K forel)fome the line of politi oMivbion in the South and i y juVust continue in the taee of Q, rMcKihfey's policy. This sen ; ' tence from Mr. Giave's reply isflne, ... ' . '''icbelieve that the great 'mjtjority of this people know and.will record the judgment ;iuathe Dinghy tariff act, ''"invflever much it may free the 0 throataf the fortunate for n iitb'ilrint sonir. will nressthe wiia in aha a ricn. :..'.1v lihnn the hrow'" of the la- r, f borei and producer. And for thf light that is breaking up oa the lonjr desolate fields of .y'ngricQlture. I know, and the ex-'Joyernor knows, t h a t it comes straight ami direct from the Lord God Almighty who, melting the sunshine in to our harvests with the ten der rain, has kissed from the "solKft prosperous increase ' that the reoublican party '. cculd never have e7oked yea, though it cried aloud to its Baal of protection, or .hawlpri inppsanntlv to the xAshtafoth of trusts." , In discussing the raceques tion, North and South, Mr. Graves gives an incident that shows that even the leading ; abolitionists areunwilling to ncccept. the negro as their e qual: .'In Boston, at Harvard 4College, when a youngngro, ' WI dressed, well mannered jrtr,d well" prepared came. to matriculate, the committee if the faculty havingthe mat tir in charge, and after a cus tm which prevails with new students in that institution, plaied theyoung 'Afro-Amer ican' for a few weeks under the guidance and observa tion and chaneronaire of young George Wendell, the sUter'sson of Wendali Phil lips, to help his eailierstages of collfge lite,N and to make easy bis opening career. The next day. young Wendell hot with indignation, demanded of the committee "why they had placed that negro in as sociation with him."' "Be:ause." said the c o ni mittee, J'we thought it the nini)pr nn.l the onlv thintr to do. We thought in view of your birth and tradition -in 'view of the crreat life and great work of your great un cle, you would ueglad of the privilege ol doing anything to befriend a representative of this unfortunate race." "Now let ua understand each other," ssid IVendell. "Yon know'I am willing at flnv time to do rav Dart for these people. 1 am willing you know, to make a 'contri bution?' But I can't let this fe.'low. touch me. It makes mv flesh prowl.' "And this speech, mark you Governor, comes not trom a decendant of Calhoun, or Bob Toombs, or thet'avaliers, but fiom the scion ot tne biooci of IVendell PnilliDS. the etna ti cjpator, and is spoken not in Georgia, hut in Boston, un der the shadow of .the stat ues of Lloyd Garrison uod t'rispus Attucks! "The source of mv informa tion is absolutely unimpench flUlP. Treatment of Typhoid Ferer. ?orrFa.yettevijIe Observer. Mr. Editor: In the North Carolina University Maga zine for December, 1S53, is an extract from a Revoluo tiary Journal of Hugh Mc Donald. I send you a Jew sentences to t.how that the modern treatment of typhoid fever was discovered by him in 1776. "As sickness was prevail ing in the regiment we mov ed out of town (i. e., Wil mington) about eight miles to a place called Jumping Gully, where we encamped until about the middle of October and were drilled twice a day. In this camp "I was taken sick and was ig norant of everything that passed for five weeks. One evening, the brigade being on parade, I lelt a great desire for homeind thought I saw everything at my father's house before my eyes. I got out of my tent and went n way somfi distance to a fresh running branch. The water from falling over a large pop lar root, had made a deep hole below, and, getting into the hole, I laid my head on the root, which I believe was the sweetest bed 1 ever lay in. The water was so cool to my parched body, that I lay there until ten o'clock the next day, before they found me, when George Dudley, ser geant of our company, hav ing crossed within two eet of my head without seeing me, a Win. Carroll, who was in company with Dudley, dis covered me, and exclaimed, 'By here he is. turned to be an otter. He is under the water.' Dudley took me out of the wuter and carried me to camp. When the doctor came to see me, he said the water had cooled my fever, andthat I would recover. 1 did recover and recuited very fast every day after my im mersion. In addition to the advantage of my immersion, my good friend, Alilton, the fife player, hired a gig in Wil mington, and took ine outof camp, to the house of one Blulort, who has a bridge a- cross North East river, a- bout ten miles from AVil mington, where, from their kind attention and good wa ter and the salubrity of the air, f soon recovered my for mer strength and joined the brigade sooner than could have been expected." McD.onald belonged to, the Sixth Regiment of North Car olina Continental troops, of which at first Alexander Lil lington was Colonel, and af terwards Gideon Lamb. The first sugeon was Wm.McClue but on the 8th of June, 177G, Rohert Wilson was rom mis sioned, so I contend that Private Huh McDouald'and Dr. Robert Wilson was were the first discoverers of the cool water treatment for typhoid fever, which from the description was evidently McDonald's disease. Yours truly, . Kemp P. Battle. Evurrbodr Bsyi So, Caacareta C&ndv Cathartic, the most won derful medical discovery of tlie age, pleas ant and rerrnaliing to the taite, act gently and positively on kid tiers, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dlsiel colds, cure headaoliefever, babituul ronstlpation and blilousnW. Please buy and try a box of O. C. C. to-dry ; 10, its. M cent, bold and guaranteed to cure by all Cruggisla. BnUe.'ilTork. News and Observer. The Populist party is res ponsib'e for the state of af fairs. But for their co-opera tion with the negroes the present reign of terror, de bauchery and lawlessness would not curse the State. We state this as a fact, not by way of denunciation of those Populists who have been instruments in this un doing of virtne and honesty without realizing it. There are Populists who never in tended to give Oim Young and his allies tho control of the blind institutions of N, C; who never proposed to give negroes a yoice in t h e management of white schools and who never joined the Pop ulist part.v-to restore the 18 68 rule in the eastern coun ties; who never dreamed that ex Confederates would be tin nel out to starve so that im pudent negroes should live in luxury. And yet these men have liv ed to see these disgraceful things and worse, come a oout by virtue of the manip ulation of their votes. They have elevated to office m e n who have sold out to the gold bus, to the Southern railway, to the trusts, and to everything'else that had the money to pay for them They earnestly advocated reduction of salaries to i point that would be in keep ing with the reduction in the prices of agricultural prod ucts. Not a salary in the whole state has heen reduced. They urged a doingaway with any unnecessary offices. The men they voted for have multipli ed offices. They denounced ex travigance. The expenses ol the State and county govern iiient8 are greater than ever in the history of the State since he carpet-bug rule of 1 S68-69. For the first time since 1868-'69 the State treasury is bankrupt andth State cannot pay its just claims. Thev sought to make a judiciary in which no par ty should have the predom inance. They have given the negi o party control of o u r Stipremeand Superior courts. But why go on? We might fill columns to show how cm ell.v the honest men who join ed the Populist party have been deceived and how a 1 their wishes have been trod den under foot. To crown the whole, their votes were cast to elect a gold bug to the U nited States Senate, and they are, in all the eastern coun ties, in common with their white neighbors of all parties at the tnwrcy of the ignorant negroes and their base allies Lincoln Journal: The sk?p tics are now saying that the madstoneis a fake and humbug. Before long we ex pect to see some fellow hop up' and deny that turning your shoes bottom upwards under the bed at night will keep off cramp, or that waits can't be conjured away, both of which propositions we hold ourselves ready ti prove by well authenticated examples ffe Beap What We Sow." News and Observer. While so long there is a- a mongus a vicious and de- piaved class of negroes, there will be occasional commis sions of the nameless crime in the South, it is a tact that this crime was never known in days of slavery and is less frequent whtn the Democrats are in power lhan when the Republicans hold the reins This is, of course, not due to any sympathy withthecrime by the executive of either party, but is due to the fact thvt t when the Republicans are in power the ignorantne gro feels that he has license because his party is on top. We have taken the pains to go over the files of the News and Observer for sever al years to ascertain wheth er the present reign of terror is due to the belief on the part of the negro thntRepub lican rule gives him immun ity. The result is we find that the year 1889, the year succeeding Harrison's elec tion, the South was deluged with the same crime that now startle, the people. A list of the crimes shows that the spirit of lawlessness in the ignorant was rampant then as now, evidencing that the election of Harrison and McKinley made the negro brutes feel thut the bottom rail was on top. It would require much space to pub lish a list of all the assaults in iNorth Carolina alone in one week a negio was lynch ed in each Stanley and Burke county for nameless assaults, not to pro into the details elsewhere." The white man of the South who is true to his race will be deeply impressed by these conditions, am all who want to put an end to lynch ing and thecrime that invites it ought to band together in a league for "white suprem acy,'' for the time making it the supreme issue. -We have little question that they will do it, even though the office holders who pander to the negro vote declare that there is no necessity for such unit ed action to meet a solid ne gro phalanx and to prevent the assaults that white su premacy alone will put down. An Inflated Personage. Mrs. George Ruthman,- of Beaver Falls, heard a pecu liar noise on the back porch of her rewidence. She found her two sons, one t'ged seven and the other one year old in a corner. The habe was on his back. The elder brother had insert ed the tube of a bicycle pump into the l)Hbyt8 mouth and was filling him full of wind as fast as he could w o r k the pump handle. Theinfant was unconscious, and its little stomach was inflated like a balloon. The mother pul'ed tho t nbe fromlhe tube from the child's mouth, and the air followed with a sharp, whistling sounl like tne ex haust of an air brake on a train. The baby recovered consciousness.-Pittsburg'Fel egram. Ednrate Tonr Roircls With faitrarets. Candy Cn!'iirifc crre coniMlr.at1on fore er. 10c, 'Sz. it C. C. C. fall, druggists refund tnguey. . Strnpf ling loanr Ken. Take care of yourself. No body else will take care of you. i our neip win, not come up two or three or four flights of stairs; your help will come through the roof, down from heaven, from that God who in the six thousand yeareofthe world's history nevr betrayed a young man who tried to be good and a Christian. Let me say in re gard to your ndycrse world ly circumstances in passing that yog are on a level now with those who aie finally to succeed. Mark my words, and think of it thirty years from now. You will find that those who, thirty years from now, are the, millionaires of this country, who are the or ators of this country, who are the strong merchants of this country, who are the great philanthropists of the country mightiest in church and state are now on a level with you, not an inch abeve, and you in straitened circum stances now. Herschel earned his living by playing a violin at parties and in the interstice of his pli,ying he would go out and look up at the midnight hea vens, the field of his immor tnl conquests. GeorgeSteph ens rose from being the fore man of a colliery to the most renowned of the world'sengi neers. No outfit, no capital to start with lounir man go down to the library and get some books, and read of what wonderful mechanism God gave you in your hand, in your foDt, in your eye, in your ear, and then ask some doctor to take you into the dissecting room and illus trate to you what you have read about, and never again commit the blasphemy o f sayingyou have no 2apital to start with. Equipped! Why, the poorest young man is equipped as only the God of the whole uni vere cjuld afford t o equip him. Brotherh jod Star. Much dissatisfaction is be ing manifested amongschool men of the State oyer the way the election for an addi tional school tax went off Surry county is the only coun ty in the State that had two cownships to Vote for the tax. Several counties h a d only one township to vote for the tax. The oppoeition igainst the tax was very pro nounced all over the State, owing to the following condi tions: First, The change of estab lished school houses and dis tricts. Second, In many of the counties negro committee men were appointed to help supervise the white schools. Third, That the partisan spirit manifested by many of the County Boards to make the schools a part of poli tics by appointing many of the county supervisors on ac count of their politics more thau their fitness for the place. Fourth, The already increa sed t;ixes, both iu St9te and counties, has become already a burden to the tax-payers. Fifth, Last, but not least, the criminal law against the citizen vho fails to pay his taxes. Mr. James Ferrell.ot Burnt House . Va., has discarded , all other diarrhoea medicines and now handles only Cham berlain s colic, cholera and dialrhoea remedy. He has ustffit In his family and sold it to his customers for years, and bus no hesitation in sav ing that it is the best remedy or colic and diarrhoea, ho hns ever known. It not only givee relief, but effect! a ier manent cure. It ts also pleas ant and safe to take, making it an ideal remedy for bowel omplair.ts. tor sale by M. B. Blackburn. PROFESSIONAL. W. B. C0UNC1LL, Jr. Attorney at La. Boone, N. C. W. B. COUNCILL, M. D. BoQne, N. C. Resident Physician. Office on King Street north of Post Office. E. F. LOVILL. J. C. FLETCHEK LOViLU FLETCHER AnoilN!',YSATLAV, BOONE, N. C. tt&mSneciRl attention civeu to the colletion ofcIaim&.&l , T. C. Blackburn, M. D. Boon, 9. C. Dr. T. J. Profitt, Mart, N. C, Blackburn & Profitt Associated practicing physi cians. 8Calls promptW attend ed. 8-5, '97. WILLIAM R. LOVIL1V. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Sutherlande, N. C. . Practices in the State and Federal courts. Dr. J. M. HOGSHEAD, Cancer Specialist, BANNER'S ELK. N. C, Ao Knite No Burning Out. Highest reffereucea andindors Dients of prominent persons uc cessfully treated in Va., Tettto. and N. C. Remember that there is no time too soon to get rid ot a cancerous growth no matter how small. Examination free, letters answered promptly, and satisfaction fcui ran teed. W. L Douglas S3 SHOE FIT FOR A KINS. 3. CORDOVAN, FRfNCHfcCNANCUXO CALF. 43.,'FlNCCAl&,-KUKARin '3.&P0UCE.3SOLE9. ,tf2. WORKINSME,. ' EXTRA riNK 2. I.V BOYS'SCHOOLSHQtl 'LAD1CS' Over On Million Peopl wear tb W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Sine All our shoes are equally eatlsfactory They give the beat valu for (he memtr. They equal cuftem (hoMtaatylc end fit. hiifr wearing qualltl' ire uneurpaeaed. The prlcrf are uniform, 'ompea on ec'- FroT $i ti i tvt4 over other mekea. if..,,.. '..r -- .-'et.orlr yon wtan. So.dbv ROCKTntUtdJS. MADE UPON HONOR, SOLD UPON MERIT. FULL OP BEAUTY. GRACE i STRENGTH, EVERY WHEEL TARRANTEa RwpeaalMe Dealer iavtta to Car tfmi wlta a. MANUFACTURED V BBU.1S CYCLE CO., INDIANAPOLIS. jWP. .J f iL t