l - " ' - ' - - ' - ' - 7Y! t i r . 1 - VOL. IV: N0;205. ASHEVILLE, m C, SUNDAY 3I0ENING, OCTOBEE 8, 1890. PRICE 5 CENTS. ,' - . - t T" : ; j . -. .. ..- r ;- I : , , , , . . M - - - - - i-1 niniirnHinnPRiv ! m t m m m m m m Nut and Fruit BROMOSL A PredlgeKted Food. It is especially intended for Dersons who need an . and those whp are nna- ble to digest Starch, or who become bilious from -J eating milk or cream. Iff iff iff iff iff Iff iff iff iff iff iff 50cPprBox. YOU'LL FIND IT AT GREER'S iff iff iff iff iff Iff Iff iff m m iff i w Patton Ave V f OOOOOOOQOO NO DRUGS. NO KNIFE C. Jtt. CASE arid w.e. swAN OSTEOPATHS Graduates American School at Kirksville, Mo. , Telephone 525, 18 Ghurch Strejet me ail Tac Treatmeot for: NERVOUS, RHEU MATIC AND OTHEl DISEASES 2r Special: THURE BRANDT MAS SAGE for Female Diseiases; also Face Massage. PROF. EDW. GRUNER, (Graduate of Chemnitz College, Germany. 'Formerly with Oak land HedgMa Sanitarium..) 65 SOUTH MAIN ST. PHONE 206. Home or office treatment., I Grant's No. 24 1 To Cure a Cold Quick Take 4 1 Grant's No. 24 1 Price 25c. 1 Grants Pharmacy; i 24 S, Main Street, Asheville . - Norh CJarolina 53 'S i b-bm mi- in iiri hi OUVCnNliiCN FOREIGN POLICY Senator Fairbanks Speaks in Defense of Republican . Position. Address Before Marquette Club Last .Evening. At Which McKinley, Koot -and Boyd also Spoke. "Flag Must be Protected Wherever It is Lawfully Raised. " PRESENT WtAJt NOT A QUESTION OF IMPERIALISM OR EXPAN SION, BUT OF NATIONAL DUTY THOSE WHO COUNSEL THE FILI PINOS TO RESIST ARE NOT THEIR FRIENDS. V Chicag-o, Oct. 7. The great celebra tion began tonig-ht in connection with the laying- of theoorner stone for the postoffi.ce. The presence of President McKinley and members of the cabinet has made the occasion one of great magnitude. Public buildings are dec orated and the streets within ten blocks of the Auditorium hotel, where Mc Kinley is stopping, were jammed wtfth peupie. xonignt a great bicycle pa rade, was 'held. The Marquette club listened to speeches from McKinley, Root and others. WELCOME TO M'KINLEY. When the train bearing the president arrived a large orowd was awaiting ito greet him. He was enthusiastically cheered and escorted by ithe reception committee and) mounted police and troops to the Auditorium. He was loudly cheered on the way. A i A J -L IT. - iue Auuuonum me presiaenx. lunched and held a reception. He sub sequently attended a banquet at the Auditorium, given! by the, Marquette club. Among- the toasts drank was The American Soldier," to which Secretary Root responded. Senator Fairbanks, of Indiana, responded to the toast of "The Present Administra tion," and James E. Boyd, of North Carolina to the toast "Republicanism in the South." - President McKinley made a few. remarks. FAIRBANKS' ADDRESS. Senator Fairbanks' speech, which Was regarded as the chief address .of the evening, was in part as follows: The present , administration! needs neither an apologist nor a eulogist. Its imperishable record is written and is before the world. It is an adminis traJtion of arduous deeds done, which lift it above the dead level of history. It has been confronted with great ques tions of domestic policy"; it has solved them. It allso has encountered grave foreign problems, k-nd well it has met them. No emergency has been so great, or exigency so severe that it has not been met on the high plane of national duty and national honor. "Few administrations ever succeeded to power with more weighty responsi bilities or of which there were more exMted - expectations. . There were years of distress, ,yeaim of' Hopelessness and crippled enterprise hack of us. There was a Macedonia cry from all sections of the land 'for relief for de liverance . . i. 'The administration was essentially pledged to the maintenance of the pub lic credit, the public faith. Public cred it is preserved, yes, it was never so high at home and abroad as it is in this historic hour." f " "Were ihe present administration committed to a debased free silver cur rency and free trade, the . splendid transformation we have witnessed would have been an utter and abso lute impossibility, and the calamities ; firom which we have, successfully and happily escaped would have been but multiplied." . JUSTICE OF OUR WAR.. Mr. Fairbanks reviewed -the causes tihat (led to the war with Spain and said: "A crisis was at hand, as sharp and severe as could possibly confront, the government; a crisis which comes but seldom in the life of a nation, and yet too oft. The administration with one hand delayed the oncoming" torm, while with the other it pushed with all possible despatch the coaist defenses, the purchase of munitions of war, and the enlargement of the navy, which was Ito give such spTendid report of it self. The crisis was, supreme," and it was superbly .met.' When the order for 'action jcamey "She congress of the United States, interpreting the heart and conscience and the inexorable de termination, of the .American people, declared f or war. Spain's fatal hour had om'e. "The administration was prepared to execute the decree of con gress; it was ready to strike. .The thunderbolt of war feM, first in the' qfb scure harbor o? Manila, today the best known, harbor on earth, v "The supreme demand of the Ameri can people was voiced in. the order of the ' administration, which! flashed to jHong Kongrf Fina the spamsn neex Haw well this order and executed, fti PEACE VS. WAR. "But it has been said with some unction that the adminisitjration did not desiire war. Be it so. it is a grave matter to start the enginery of 75,000, 000 people, brave and proud, though just they are. Finite mind can com pass the beginning; but omniscience alone can set the boundaries of ite ending. . "It will indeed be a fatal hour for the republic when the president'' of the United States shall love peace less than war. "The administration sought no sordid ends no territorial aggrandizement. It sought no Napoleonic extension of em pire; it desired only peace, with her boundless joys, ner limi'aess possibili ties; peace, of which the country had been so long enamored. It had added Hawaii to our domain through the in strumentality of diplomacy, and from the dictates of the highest statesman ship in the national interest; but it coveted no other lands and no other people. Hawaii was, indeed, rttrophy enough to signalize an administration. "The congress, with due deliberation and with exceptioniafl. unanimity, de clared war, and the senate of the United States, after protracted de bate, ratified the treaty of peace. "With the treaty came new and re mote lands, new peoples,, new and un expected responsibiliities; but they earne as the logical sequence of war, and not as the fruit of its supreme purpose. FOR HUMANITY'S SAKE. "The sword was drawn in ithe high and fholy cause of v humanity, it was drawn to liberate peoples from bar barous, tyrannical mile, from horrors which disgraced savagery: "By the articles of peace Porto Rico is ours, to be administered as an ex alted sense of justice ..shall require. "Cuba is committed to us in trust, and is to be given stable and suitable government, according to our pledge. "The Philippines are ours, by title absolute, unassailable. They have come to us, and are ours by right uni versally recognized among the nations of the earth. They passed to the juris diction of the United States by the cession of the treaty of peace, duly ratified and exchanged by the two powers engaged in the war. With the extension of our sovereignty there came, the duties which American sov ereignty implies the enforcement of law and order, the . preservation of the peace. A portion of the inhabitants of ithe islands' denied the supremacy of the United States in the archipelago. They challenged the exalted purpose of the government; they wantonly fir ed upon the American troops pending the ratification of the treaty of peace. Without the pretense of provocation or the shadow of justification, they have assailed the flag1 whose mission is mer ciful. ' ' 1 "The administration! resisted the at tack and did what the 'people of th TTnBted States idesirekl it should; it did lits tdiuty by assenting the supremacy of the national authority by force of arms RESPECT FOR THE FLAG. "We are not now concerned with que tions of imperialism,, lor of expansion.- We are occupied with! . the paramount (Continued on. Sixth Page.) MASSING OF TROOPS American Forces Concentrating South of Manila Under Gen3ral Lawton. Manila, Oct. 7. The Americans are concentrating south of Manila. Gen eral Schwan with a brigade joined General Lawton at Bacoor this morn ing and Lowe's scouts were brought down from San Fernando, in the north ern part of the island, and sent to Bacoor. The insurgents are very numerous in the neighborhood of Imus, on the south. I MORMON CHURCH WORK. ,. The officials at' the Mormon head quarters, in Ohatfanooga on Friday completed the report of the work done in the southern mission during the week that ended oh October 3. In the North Carolina conference it states that forty-four elders are preaching. They wailk during the week nine hundred and-seventy-eight' miles and rode nine'ty-nine miles. Eighty-one families were visited and the Ciders were refused entertainment seventeen times. Fifty-six, meetings were held. In the South Carolina conference' are forty-two elders preaching. They walked one thousand and thirty-two miles and rode 'thirty-five miles. They visited one hundred and thirteen fam ilies, and were refused entertainment by thirty-nine of these. Ninety-nine meetings were 5ie!d, and they blessed eight' children and 'baptized three per sons. When the Olsmpia steamed into the port of New York she foia'cl $55,00 lfn gold aboard, abouit a months supply oi mon pv. Since she hasi been' away she dis bursed the vast! sum of $1,800,000 in coin. For the. year at Manila she 'acted pup. mv isihio for the fleet. "While We lav to Mamlila bay." saM Paymaster'a Clerk Harvey,' "we spent 250,000 Mexicai dollars a month, or $125,000 in our money It. oasts $50,000 to rue the Olympia Cacti moTwth. amid we! always cfarry ftfhat amount in gold This tindludes what we expend for pay, for. stores1 onld! all expenses. I tell you, It's no cheap' thing to rum a war ship. After shaving close, use Camphorline Heal? and sof tens rough skin. Delight f ul 'and fragrant. , 25c . Good 'aiight!' Use Oamphorline; have soft White bands In the morning. .25c, All druggists i 200 naira boy' shoes t at cost, u v want to change; our line of hoes. Q. A Hears Shoe Store. and destroy it.' was interpreted world knows. THIRQ ATTEMPT! IS A FAILURE Breeze Died Out When the Big Yachts Were Beat ing Home. Lively and Sportive Contest feile Wind Lasted. Britishers Very x Clever Gaining Advantages, in Honora Were About Even When the Time Limit Elaosed. INDICATIONS OP- SPLSNIID RACB AT THE START THE FIN ISH Left the yachts drift- ING I WITH THREE MILES YET TO GO TO THE MARK. New York, Oct. 7. The third attempt to sail the first of the series or races between rtihe Columbia and the Sham rock today resulted in another fluke. It was (almost a repetition of the two previous" attempts. The time limit within which the race should be sailed expired when the yachts were abmif- three miles from the finish, and at that time both were on nracticallv even terms. Although Iselin em phatically declared the Columbia was leading when the signiaO;' sounded from the judge's boat, declaring the race off, Lipton was eauallv PTrmhntiV tiiar the Shamrock was in the lead. The course was the same as on the be- preceding day's run, fifteen miles fore the wind -and beat home. x EARLY INDICATIONS. There wias every indication at the' start or a splendid race, if the wind held, for it was then blowing at the rate, cf -twelve to fifteen knots, -but after the race had been on half an hour it had dwindled to six to eight knots. The yachts presented a pretty sighr as they jockeyed for the start. The Columbia was to the leeward, but ahead of the challenger when the start ing gun boomed, and with Uie wind abeam she , sped across the starting line at 11:21.02. The Shamrock came thundering along close behind, cross ing at 11:21.19. Immediately after crossing the Sbam- icck endeavored to luff up to windward of the Columbia, and for. a time she drew up on almost even terms. STOLE COLUMBIA'S'. WIND. At 11:39 the Sham roc k got her5 lival ctvered and the Columbia's sails Ve gan to bag. A minute after the Co lumbia broke out her spinnaker, and 1he Shamrock tried to imitate her out, but her tackling beann entangled, and while two of the crew were en deavoring to get it cle'ir the Columbia chew away. By noon she had a lead cf fully four lengths. The sails of both yachts were drawing well, and it was a merry race at hig'h speed for the mark . i 'Shortly after this the wind dropped a bit, but the yachts were making fine headway. The 3harn.- :k's fii!. seemed fuller, and she was drawing up on her rival, and at 12:15 was on most even terms. A LIVELY RACE. They raced along in this posit) m f c r many minutes, when finaMy at 12:45 the Shamrock quickly hauled down her spinnaker and gybed her mniri boom to starboard, and with her big sail drawing full came along at a rap id rate. The Columbia, in following the ex ample of her rival, lost considerable Of her headway, while hauling in her spinnaker, and the ShamrojK not ony overhauled but passed her. Sne soon- had a clear lead of two lengths and edged over into the Yankee boat's wa iter until the Columbia wae almost in her wake. NEARlNG THE TURN. , By superior handling of her sails, the Shamrock steadily increased her So Many Wear Glasses? The advance of civilization imposes increased labors upon our eyes. Peddlers and reckless methods employed by people in fitting their own eyes cause much of the trouble. Eye xlefects that were once, thought to be Incurable are now entirely relieved by the timely use of glasses, Examination free. S. L McKEEp ( SCIENTIFIC OPTICIAN, 45 Patton Ave. . lead to a quarter of a mile. The yachts were now only two milesi from vhe turning mark, and the Columbia, get ting her sails in better trim, began to draw up. As they ploughed their way twaid the mark the Columbia showed 'iie greater speed and cut down a laree part of the Shamrock's lead. It was a pretty race to the end of the fis leg. The Shamrock turned the mark at 1:36.25 and the Columbia -at 1:26.34. She had gained nine seconds, which, added to uhe seventeen she was behind at the start, gave her a gain of iwen-ty-six seconds. A TACKING CONTEST. After rounding the mark a tacking duel followed, during which the Sham rock crossed the Columbia's bows twice. The Columbia finding .rhe was being1 worsted at tacking stood to ea where she got a stronger wind and was able to point higher. 'She gained con- Isiderably, but about this time the wind oegan to die out, and it was apparent that the race could not be finished in the prescribed time. The breeze became flifkey. First one boat got a slant which sent her ahrad and then the other. Then the Wind would die out and both drifted along, until 4:30, when the time expired and the judge's "boat signalled the race off. At that time they were practically .n even term. THE SPANISH FLAG Spaniards in Havana Incensed at Ore e: Prohibiting its Display. " Havana, Oct. 7. The order of the mayor, prohibiting the display of the Spanish flag, except on the Spanish consulate, is the absorbing topic here. Spaniards denounce it as another of the many persecutions to which they have been subjected since the Ameri cans took control. The Cubans de clare the order just. Opinion is di vided among the Americans, the ma jority regarding the order as ill ad vised. While the order bears the mayor's name,, it was issued only atter consul tation with General Ludlow, and it, therefore, appears to bear the stamp of American approval. SPANISH INDIGNATION. The Spanish consul general is in censed, and declares he will not dis play the flag over the consulate. He says if the assertion is true ithat the display of the flag has caused disor ders in various parts of Havana, it would create more trouble if displayed over his official residence. He says the flag should be allowed to be dis played as an evidence of friendly re lations between Spain and the United States, 'and intends to protest to the United States. He has already in formed the Spanish ambassador at Washington of the recent demonstra tion of anti-Spanish feeling here. THE FEVER AT JACKSON. Jackson, Miss., Oct. 7. There was one death from yellow fever today; no new cases. One case was reported from Rancin county. DISORDERLY MILITIAMEN' TO BE DISCHARGED Georeria Condemns Their Conduct at Hamlet Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 7. The members of the state militlia who oiaided a store and barber sihop at Hamlet, N. C, on their return from the Dewey celebration in New York, will be dismissed from the service. The guilty ones will be dihon- orablv discharged by nine governor. The igovenntor says: All state and mili tary officers condemn such conduct, and am earnest effort will be made to find and punish t!he culprits to the full ex tent of tber law. Georgia soldiery are gentlemen, and no man who has been guilty of t!he conduct charged can re main lim: a. Georgia military organiza 'tibo and thereby bring reproach upon his aomnades who are gent'emen." To the Public: I desire to lin'form my patrons and public generally that I have sold to Mr. Clarance Sawyer my grocery business at No. 6 Court Square. I also want to extend my most grateful thanks to the kind and generous citizens of Aahsville for their liberal patronage which for the past l years has made my business a success. Mr. Sawyer1 was born and raised In thla community, and I cam s'afe- ly say has the confidenoe of all, J I am sure hlia greatest endeavor J! will be to maintain the business He S' tut ales yi catriiiu iusu ijiaaiuuuv., . will have many advantages that should commerid him to the thoughtful buyer, his own busi- nesB experience, experienced help, $ buying in large quantities, buy- s ing for cash, and in many in- J etaiLCes direct from the manUfac- turer. I trust my Mends will favor (Mm wiith their patronage. Again thianklng you most cor- iially far all pat favors, I . gratefully, W. F. SNIDER. PARLIAMENT ED And an Order Promulgated For Mobilizing an - Army Corps- Great Britain's Policy of Gaining Time. Military Preparations Con tinue in Transvaal. British and Boer Forces Cose Toge th er on Frontier. THE RESERVE BATTALIONS SUM MONED TO REPORT BEFORE OC TOBER 17 TO BE ENLISTED UP TO 1,000 MEN EACH DUTCHMEN DESERTING) THE ' CAPE. i London, Oct. 7. The government to day summoned parliament in special session, and ordered the mobilization of an army corps without even present ing the demands on the Transvaal, which will constitute the British casus belli. ' There is no longer any doubt that England hopes that circumstances will arise which will precipitate war without the necessity of delivering the threatened Ultimatum. England's convenience will be best suited by the maintenance of the present situation! for a fortnight, to enable her to further prepare, and then some aggressive action on the part of the Boers on the Natal frontier, which she would be able to stigmatize as an act of war. England hopes by maintaining a de fensive policy during the first few weeks of the war and enabling the Boers to win minor successes to in flame public opinion into a unanimous demand for a cirushing of the two South African republics. British forces by that time being ready to undertake aiv overwhelming1 " campaign and the ' real war will begin. SUMMONS TO THE-SiBSSRVES. The Gazette announces -that sum monses will be..is.sued for the number of reserves necessary to bring every j battalion ordered to South Africa- to its full strength of 1,000 men, and the men must be present themselves be fore October 17. This forward move ment here is fully counterbalanced by stories of military preparations in the Transvaal and Orange Free .State. The British and Boers are so close together" along the western frontiers' of the Transvaal the patrols meet night ly. The appearance of many sufferers is said Ito be deplorable. The exodus of Cape Dutchmen toward the Trans vaal increases . All seem to be smug gling arms across the frontier. BIG IRON DEAL. Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 7. Improvements I costing almost $8,000,000 have oeen agreed upon by the board of managers of the Carnegie Steel company. They include the erection at Rankin of two blast furnaces, each having a capacity of 700 tons of pig iron every working day, a double track steel bridge ac-- the Monortgahela river, to connect the Rankin furnaces and the Momesteaa works, a new open-hearth pliant and a reversible blooming mill at Duquesne. The two new blast furnaces will be the largest in the world . Mrs. F. R. Dtarby days: "Camphor line is not only (gookl for chapped tuamos, but for burns and inflamed surfaces also.. My husband would have been badly (burned the ot)her day haidi I not . used Camphorline quickly ajnid freely. Tour choice of our entire wtock of Ox ford Ties at $1.75, for this week. G. A Mears. Money Saved is Money Made If there is anything you can use la the lot of NovelUai we are Closing Out . It will certainly eave you money, to buy them. Arthur M. Field. Cbraar Church Bttfeet and ' Patton 'Aver SUMMON - i - t i . .. i 4 Hi K r , 1 ; - i 'A i if v -v 1 1 ft, f J - v i