Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / July 26, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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3:- v If- VOL. "XII. , a I o w growt h of hai r com e s from lack of hair food. The hair has rto life. II it is starved. It keeps -t;uiniug oui, gets tiunner aiid thinner, M paw spois, appear, then actual baldness. The only good hair f rood ybu. can; buy is tne roots stops t (Starvation, and the L nair grows tnicn ana Ll (long. It : cures dan- M druffi also. Keep a N :hntt!ft ftf 4t ton vnur rJ dressing tdble.' It always restores color to faded or gray hair. Mind, we say "always', $1 .00 a bottla. ' AO drvnirtt. " I nave found yonr Hair Vigor . to bo the bait rental- I baro erer tried lor the tulr. My hair ni falling out tbtt bud, to I thought 1 would try a hottlo of it. I had DMtt only one bottle, and my hair topped falling out. and It 4s now real thick and tone.'' , July ?, 1808. K ANOV J. MOUXTflA-TLB. Yonkcrs,N.T. H will (end yu All book OB Th Hair and Scalp. Aik Mm any quf Una yotf wliU akoM'your hair. Koa will rMolve a prompt antwr fro. Addroaa, Da. J. C. AYER, .. i. ... IwU,kaM. k, s i 1 STi .Wia-Si Dyspepsia Cure Di'aests what you eat. It artificially digest the food and aids Nature In strengthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive ot gans. It Is the latest discovered digest ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It In rtantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea. Sick Headache,Ga8tralgia,Cramps,and all other results of Imperfectdigestlon. Prepared fry E. c DeWItt AC. Cfeleafl coffey Bros, Phillips & Son. PROFESSIONAL. W. B. COUNC1LL, Jb. Attorney at La r. - Boone, N. .C' Dr. J. M. HOGSHEAD, Cancer Specialist BANNER'S ELK. N. C No Knite; No Burning Out. Highest references and endors mtffits of prominent persons suc cessfully treated In Va., Tenn. and N. G. - Remember that there is no time too soon to get rid oi a cancerous growth no matter how small, Examination free, ; letters answered promptly, and satisfaction guaranteed. STATE NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE . "F NORTH CAROLINA. Offers to young women thor ough literary , classical, scientific and industrial education and special pedagogical traiuing. - Annual expenses $92 to $132, for non-retidents $ 152. Faculty of 30 members. More than 400 regular students. 'Has matric ulated about 2,000 students, re presenting every county In the State except one. Practice and Observation School of about 250 pupils. To secure board in dormi tones, all free, tuition opplica tions should b made before Aug. 1st.. . Correspondence invited from those desiring competent trained ! tear-here. , For catalogue and other Infor mation address until Aug. 15th V. -prof;j.y.joyner, . c - Dean of College CiJAS D. MciVER, President. hair ma mm BOONE, WATAUGA COUNTY, zN; "The N-frroes Will Get at the Throats - rtue White Men." ' The latent outbreak comes f ro m o negro' ed i to r, T. Hi os. FortuneTa nd one IV. Oi Mur phy, presumably a negro al so. . These two negroes were the chief orators at a negro meeting held in Brooklyn last Sunday to celebrate the one hundredth nnniversy 'of the birth of John Brown. The meeting was held under the auspices of the Society of the Sobs of North Carolina, which is composed of colored men who have cone from this State to live in New York. Here are a few extracts from Fortune's speech on the halcyon occasion, as report ed by the New, York Sun : '. It cost tons of blood to put the fifteenth amendment into the Constitution, and it will cost tens of tons to put iVout- You must organize and keep jour powder dry in order to demand an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth in the great crisis which will Boon be upon the negro, in which much blood muj be spilled. The first gun of the fight was fired at the Montgomery conference. If the negro wants his rights in the South, he must fight for them, or he must leave the South. I have for merly opposed Bishop Tur ner in his appeal to the ne groes to leave the South, but I shall myself start a crusade to have all the negroes to leave the South and come Noth, or go elsewhere, where rhey can be men. "There is no use living in the South and crying peace, whr n there is no peace. I be lieve in law and order, but wheiv the law does not pro tect yon, you should fight and die, if need be. You should demand an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. The negro will never com mand respect until he shall strike a blow that will win for himself the respect of the world, for evan God has no respect for a coward. The negro should be brave and follow his leaders, whether they lead to Calvary or to a scaffold in West Virginia. There is coming a greatcrisis for the negro, and the first gun was fired at Montgom ery, Ala., when it waspropos ed that the fifteenth amend ment to the - Constitution should be repealed. But there can be no settling of the ne gro problem with the negro out of it, it matters not how many conferences of white mm are held. "There is now 10,000,000 of us, with 2,000.000 fight ing men, and in eome great crisis in this country these 2,000,000 negroes will get at the throats of the white men who have wronged and out raged their citizenship." . The Washington . Post, commenting upon this re markable meeting, has this to say of Fortune and his pestiferous drivel: , He is well ed ucated , a good and forcible writer, and, un der ordinary circumstances, a very sensible and well-meaning person. We wonder whether he realizes ' that, m this frantic outburt, he has illustrated the most pessimis tic estimate of the negro char acterthe 1 proposition, for example, that no amount of scholastic training, or con tact with Caucasian civiliza tion will ever eradicate the savage instincts of his race. In recent speech in Brook lyn, N. YM a negro. W. O. Murphy, in referring to the campaign in this State, uses the following incendiary lan guage: - The negro has always been a peaceful man and has pnly fought when the issue was forced upon him. The trouble is that the negro was born in poverty and has not been able to secure the arms to resist the invasion of his home and his rights, but the negro should study, so as to learn how to manufacture dynamite, so that when be is attacked he can resist bis op pressors, as the Russians and Germans have dene." Such utterances should be a warning to the white peo ple of North Caroliua. Such harangues to ignorant and excitable crowds will bear frui', - And that fruit can be but a reehnctment of 'the Wil mington riot. The army of invasion suggested will not be raised, dynamite may not be used, but the negro will become more and moreinsol yent as a citizen and danger oils as a member oi society, and the ultimate result will be bloodshed on both sides unless something is done to check his growing iusolence, born of the idea that he is the equal in every riBpect of the white man. A Chearful Letter fro Home. 'Dear John : This is to in form you how we are all a gittin' on. John ol' boy, your father is no more; your brother has been run over by a switch engine, an' your cousin, Sarah, has run off with a sojer. Your two un clesis in jail, an' your fire boys is got the measles. This is all I know at the present. I will write more when it hap pens. Hoping you will spend next Christmas with what is left of your family, I remain yonr friend." IS IT EIGHT For aa Editor to Bceeommed Patfni Mediclaes! From Sjlvan Valley News, Brevrad, N. C: It may be a question whether the editor of a newspaper has the right to publicly recommend an of the various proprietary medicines which flood the market, yet as a preventive of suffering we feel it a duty to say a gooa word for Cham berlam's colic, cholera and diarrhoea remedy. We have known and used this mod icine in our family , for 20 years ana have a I ways found it reliable. In many cases a dose of this remedy would save hours of suffering while a physician is awaited. We do not believe in depending implicity on ony medicine for a cure, but we do believe that if a bottle cf Chamberlain's diarrhoea remedy were kept on hand and administered at the inception of an attack much suffering might be a voided and in very many cas es the presence of a physician would not ne required. At least this has . been our ex perience during the past 20 years. For sale bdruggiste. Cm JULY. 26, 1900. The Winston Registrar Case. etatanrUle tAudmack. Thecase of Registrar Thomp son, of Winston, who was nc cused of refusing to register negroes, and who was arrest ed by a United States depu ty marshal and tried before a TTnited States commission er, was concluded Friday by the registrar being bound o ver to the Federal Court in a bond of 2,000 which h e gave. When the case against Register Thompson had been concluded the Democrats took a hand in the arresting business and the four negroes who swore out warrants a gainst Thompson and Wall were arrested under the State law and held, for trial inn bond of $500 each. The Winston case is a great outrage. In the, first place the ablest lawyers in the State contend, and the same ap pears evident even to a lhy man, that the United States courts have no jurisdiction In the matter. In the second place there was no evidence inthis particular case that warranted binding the regis trar over. . There was no ev' dence that he had positively refused to register any voter, but that he had, in several in stances, required negroes to present other proof than their own word that they were bona fide residents of Winston and were otherwise qualified to vote. Because the name of every negro who ap pled was not promptly put on the registration book the registrar was arrested by a United States officer and held to court. The Republicans have shed many tears on account of the possible disfranchisement of the poor white man, whom they profess to love above all things, but all this row over the registration is solely on account of the negro. No white man has any difficulty in registering because bedoes not apply unless he is duly qualified. But it is the float ing negro population, excon victs and others who are not qualified by legal residence in the precinct, who are de manding to be allowed to register regardless of quali fications, and who, aided and abetted by their white allies, are endeavoiing to intimi date registrars throughout the State. A number of in stances of threats against registrars attempted Violenee have been reported. It is told elsewhere in this paper today how three white men and three negroes held up a registrar i n Montgomery county and forced him at the muzzles of their guns to en ter their names on the regis tratbn book, notwithstand ing he did not know any of Was It A Miracle! "The marvellous cure of Mrs. RenaJ. Stout of consumption has created intense excitement in Cammack. Iud." writes Marion Stuart, a leading druggist of Muncie, ind. one only weighed 90 pounds when her doctor in Ynrkt.nwn nniH aha rrmaf . onnn die. Then she began to use Dr. King's New Discovery and gain ed 37 pounds in weight and was completely cured." Jthas cured thousand i ol hopeless cases, and is positively guaranteed to cure all throat, chest and lung dis eases. 50c. and '$1. Free trial bottles at Blackburn's. them personally and did not know whether or not thev were entitled to register. , We ha ve said before and say again, that the free white men of North Carolina are not going to be intimi dated by negroes and the mean white men who are in citing them to deeds of vio lence. White men who are be hind them who are' inciting them to raise a disturbance are worse than the negroes, because the latter would not, except possibly in rare in stances, attempt to override the law if they were not put up to it. The course pursued by the Republican leaders in this matter will result in trouble if it is presisted in. We devoutly hope that trou ble may be avoided, but we as devoutly hope that if the trouble comes the ignorant negroes will not be made to suffer alone. But whether or not a difficulty ensues, we have faith in the honest white men to override them with a gang of negroes. J?ut returning to the Win ston registrar case, we have no idea that the registrar will be conduced in the Fed eral Court and we doubt if the case will ever be tried. It was to make a show of force by the minions of the Federal government and it possible to frighten somebody that the arrest was made. But it has bad the opposite effect. The white men of Winston and Forsyth and of the whole State are thoroughly arous ed and determined. Today at IV'inston an indignation meeting will be held to pro test against attempted Fed eral interferences in State elections. Senator Ransom will be the principal speaker, and referring to this fact the Raleigh Post fittingly says: When the same element, in 1870, undertook to overawe and trample down the honest white men of the State, when the fatner of the man whose pockets burn every day with the money that belongs to W. T. Crawford, declared the "judiciary was exhausted," it was this same Matt Ran som who hastened to the Fed eral judge, Brooks, and ob tained the order which open ed the prison doors, freed our people and scatteied our ene mies. It is fitting, therefore, that again, when the malicious hirelings of a degraded com bination are attempting to brow beat and overawe the honest people of our Sta.te, and basely abuse the prerog atives of their mad efforts, that the voice of the old man eloquent should again b e heard in tones that will shame our enemies and arouse to the highest degree of patriot ic endeavor the energies of a free and a brave people. An Epedemlo of Diarrhoea. Mr. A. Sanders, writing from Cocoanut Grove, Fla., says there has been quite an epidemic ot diarrhoea thare. He said he had a severe at tack and was ?uml by four doses of ChumberlHin's colic, cholera and diarrhoea reme dy. Hefay8he also recom mended it to others and they NO. 27. '.U Holtoa'i BInidert. Balelgh New and Ofawnrer. , ' ' ' v.. The Republicans are har ing no easy time just now. : . They hav found that it U not such an easy job to foist" negro tule upon a State aa they had imagined, And they ere Seeing lots of ) trouble keeping their folks itj line. The latest instance of defection is that of Governor Ru88ell. ' :-''..C He says that the amend ment will be adopted by a large majority, , He attributes the large ma jorityitwill receive to the bungling of Holton whom he styles as "that d n pigeon headed little fool." The Governor says thd ar. rest of the registrars at Win ston was a most egregious blunder. And not only that, it was fatal to any chance the Republicans might have . had of carrying the State in; August or November either, Said he: "The blundering of Holton and the other Fed era! officers in the matter of arresting the registrar at Winston and in other mat ters his made it so that Mc Kinley cannot possibly ca rry the State. They have killed everyjehance that he had. 1 think he would have rirried the State but for Holton's blundering, but he cannot hope to do so now. And it is all Holton's work." ' Now this did not come di , rect from the News and Ob server. The Governor has seen fit to honor this paper with bis abundant and ferv- ent hate, but it does come from a source that is reliable; and it may be depended up on, as statingtheGovrrnorV belief in the matter. Cleveland Star: The men who are remaining in the Populist party are fast los ing their identity and gradu ally being swallowed up by the Republicans. What are Butler, the Populist Senator, and Cy Thompson, the Popu list candidate for Governor, speaking before Republican county conventions for? Can't any man with a thira bleful of sense see that Butler, Thompson, Holton, Pritch nrd and the negro, Abe Mid dleton, are working hand in hand against the great white people in this State? They are all Radicals. Over -Work Weakens Your Kidneys Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood All the blood in your body puses through your kidneys once every three minutes. i ne Kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. K they are sick or out of order, they fall to de their work. Pains, aches and rheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the blood, due to aerlactatf kidney trouble. , . ' - Kidney trouble causes quick or 'unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as Sough they had heart trouble, because the heart la over-working In pumping thick, kidney, poisoned blood through veins and arteries. It used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin nine in kidney trouble. If you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy la soon realized. It stands the highest for Its wonderful cures of the most distressing case, antj is sold on its merits by all druggists in fifty ceni and one-dollar six es. You may have a samole bottle bv mail free, also pamphlet telling you how to find out If you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blnghamtoa, N. Y, ... V. - ' ...! , .. ', v. . . t.t V say it is the best medicine they ever used. Sold l drug gists. ; . . .'. . . ... ..'. .... V k . : '), . ...
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
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July 26, 1900, edition 1
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