Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / May 3, 1889, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Franklin Times. j; A..THOiAS.Elitorand proprietor. Mi AY, -- - - - - - May 3, 1889. PATRONAGE IN THE SOUTH. As the New Berne Journal says, no admiriislration can succeed without a policy. There must be purpose, com manding the best efforts of statesman ship, pr the adtninistration will become aimless, nerveless, inefficient and con temptible. If the-Harrison administration has a policy, what is it? Upon the answer to this inquiry there may be disagree ment, but a large number of people be lieve that the party of. the present ad ministration involves the revolution of the South through the potential agency of political patronage. 4 I What is the cause of the present situ ation in the South? Whatever other causes may have had their influence, the prime cause is to be found in the enfranchisement of the negro before he had learned the principles of civil liberty, or even the meaning of government. Learned desertations on "the com mon brotherhood of . man," the dogma that "all men are mm equal,'! and the. nonsense that "one man is as good as another," may do for . the display of beautiful theories of political ethics, but they vanish in the light of experience and crumble in the crucible of. common sense;, The Republican party is responsible for having established a condition in the South that few white men of character and decency could tolerate, and when the revolution came that swept away the filth and rottenness of the recon struction period it left an atmosphere too pure to permit the return of negro domination and carpet-bag ascendency. It was not the freeing of the slave that made the South solid, but it was the tjTanical oppression of the white man, and the monstrous attempt to es tablish an empif e of barbarism on the ruins of Caucasian manhood in the South. Mr. Harrison may be wise and patriot ic but he makes an egregious blunder if he supposes that our young men can be drawn from the principles of their fathers and the party of the Constitu tion by the offer of the crumbs that fall from tables "enriched by Southern spoil ! Let Mr. Harrison come to us. If he t wants "the best men in the South," let him identify himself with the best men in the South. Men who cannot brook dishonor. Men who, earnestly desiring the elevation of all mankind, would not become aliens to tneir race, their coun try and their God, for "the half of his kingdom." We cannot doubt that some men will be bought. Everywhere there are imi tators of "that base Judean who for thirty pieces of silver threw away a pearl richer than all his tribe," but they are . floaters who are not worth the offer of a bribe. INCONSISTENCY. The opposition in the North of Re publican papers to the bills in' some of the State Legislatures excluding dressed meats, sent on ice by rail, is a curious illustration of the inconsistency of parti san organs. These papers favor a Chi nese wall in so far as American products are concerned, but they refuse to extend the principle to the States. They favor the free shipping of dressed .meats into other States. We agree with the New York Commercial Advertiser when it says that this "is the ultimate doctrine of the free trade school: and yet we chal- is the principle which lies at -the root of the opposition to the dressed meat bill." It is to the interest of Chicago that her meats shall be shipped into other States, j and this is enough to induce the High Protection advocates to favor practical . .free trade in the matter, and oppose all rtrip.t.ivA lawR. Th Star Hsu rwft-on insisted that if free trade between the States was right and proper that it was also rignt; and proper to extend the same principle to other countries; f The principle is eternally right that free- men should be allowed to. buy where ..they can buy cheapest, and sell . where they can sell highest. Whenever the farmers and laboring men of the coun - try shall awaken to their true interests IrlKT. nUI llJV DLVp OUUXIt KSl UCQ BUJU UU- restricted trade, in so far as it . can be , done with! due regard to raising revenues for the support of the.. Government. -- IUQU1H lillfi UUI Vllltf llllk CUnriJIiUII the principle5 just indicated. -WU. Star. - Judge Phillips was fully vindica ted in the lilel st suit againMr. D. F. St. Clair, of the Sanford Express, who filed a plea in which he said , that "he stated merely what he had been inform . ecL, believirg the same to be true. ; That ' since said publication he liad become ' aware of the incorrectness of the state ments made and admits that by such ' publication he has dgne non. Frederick Phillips great injustice.'- f OUR MAGISTRATES. As the Raleigh Visitor says, it is un fortunately the case, that there te not sufficient importance, in many instances attached to the office of a Justice of the Peace, and there Is an impression - In some quarters that with the title of a "Squire" all responsibility ceases. This is an erroneous view of the matter and the minds of our people should be dis abused of it. When r looked lit , ia its "proper light there is no more important official under our system of government than a magistrate, and when the duties are performed fully up to the require ments of law, it is an office not om v of dignity but one requiring much energy aud discretion to property nu., seen, m met was the dignity or the office, that we have ktown d ante hell mi times o :r most distinguished dozens acting in the capacity. Notably so, the case of the illustrious Badger, even after he had served in the United States Senate and had been Secretary of the Navy. We are led to these remarks .from .the fact, that in soma of the counties of the State, persons who were appointed Jus tices of the Peace at the last session of tne General Assenlbiy, Iteive not, thus far, qualified aajording to the Statutes It should be remembered, that all Jus tices are required to qualify within three months after their appointment, so thatj if such qualification is not made prior tq June 11th 1889, the duty of re-appointing them will devolve upon the Govern or, the Legislature having selected the magistrates on March 11th, last. We hope that our people will not look with levity upon so important a matter, and that those chosen will qual ify according to law, thereby relieving the Governor of a most arduous and, in many instances, arf unpleasant duty. THE. CATTLE SHOW I The Wake County Cattle Show will take place at Raleigh, May the 15th, and it promises to be Jhe best ever hetf. It Will pay any one to see it. A special train will be run from Louisburg, leav ing here at 5.15 a m., and returning about 9.50 p m. The fare has not yet been announced, but a reduction will be made, and will be published next week. Let'lll go, and the fine stock. The Centennial Celebration of Wash ington's inauguration at New York this week, was a tremendous afl'air. The New York papers size up the number of visitors at 2,000,000. Criminal Statistics. Attorney General's office. Raleigh, N. C, April 27, '89. To the Clerks of the Superior, Crim inal and Inferior Courts in North Carolina : Until I shall have bad time to prop erly prepare the forms prescribed by the Vecent statute requiring reports of Crim inal Statistics, I -request the clerks of, the courts having criminal jurisdiction! to transmit to this department certified copies of their criminal dockets of each term. vThey will enter thereon as brief ly as may be consistent with an intelli gent statement of the facts required, (1) the name, age, sex and race of the defen dant; (2d) the offence with which he or she was charged; (3) the judgment order disposing of the case. or These reports are required to be made within twenty days after the adjourn ment of each term. The forms are now being prepared, but as their printing and distribution may be delayed several weeks and the statute imposes severe penalties upon clerks for failure to make the reports within the period designated, the method I have here suggested will be accented as a compliance with the law until more an-. propnaie iorms are lurnisnea. a ... t . 1 I respectfully request the State news papers to print this notice. Theo. F. Davidson, Attorney General. PLAIN HISTORY. Swift's SpeciflcTs a simple vege table compound, prepared from roots gathered freshly from the for est, and contains nothing of the mineral kingdom, or any poison ous substance, or any article at all which comes from the chemists laboratory. The formulaof the remedy was obtained' from the Creek Iudians in Middle Georgia, by reliable white men, who had witnessed the wonderful cures made by that tribe of Indians, of blood diseases. Mr. i Hugh li. Dennard, of Houston county 3a., began using Swift's Specific in 1829, and continued its use all of his life, and asserted that he had never known K to fall to cure any case of scrofula.-v blood taint, or contagious blood poison. This testimony has been corrjobora ted every day for years. The pies ent Company was formed in . 1879,: and have since made known to the world the virtues of Swift's Se clBc, and to-day it i sold in every city, town and country - store all ovtr America, Great Britain, and many other portions Of the world. I have ued Swift's Specific and known of many cases ot the' worst t'uru of bltMid diseases which have been cured by ju 4 1 know, the pn prleiors to be . gentlemen of the highest type and utmost reliability. I recommend it as a great blood remedy, unequalled by auy thing that I know of, '. - . t ,. Vi,:hU,'AilL B. Whabtobp, ' i " Pastor 1st Baptist .Church, Mout gomery Ala. , , Treatise on blood and skla dis eases mailed free. ' ! THE SWI FT SPECIFIC CC. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.' The high license .law in Michigan taxes retailers of liquor $600 a year; wholesale liquor dealers 800; wholesale beer and wine dealers $500; distillers $1,000, and brewers $250. The New York Times commenting, says : - e- - "Thus the drink is taxed from the mo ment of production to that of consump tion. That the revenue will be greatly benefitted there can be no doubt and if the severe restrictions on druggists are enforced there will certainly be a very great advance in the check of crime and disorder." High taxes seem to be more favored in the North than Prohil ition. WD Star. ' " " WANTED. 50,000 pounds of early cored prim ings wanted in exchange ior tobac co sticks and baskets. The tobacco will be taken loose without grad ing, only the trash thrown out at 6 cents per pound if cured bright and delivered in High Point dur ing the month of August 1889. Ad dress, W. H. Snow. Supt. Modem Tobacco Barn, High Point, N. C. Having fully demonstrated dur ing the last two years that' tobacco leaves cured separate from the stalk poeess a marked superiority over the stalk cored leaves both for chewmg and smoking, the Modern Barn Company, of High Point, now propose to sell to planters the BEST WIRED STICK in the world and take the waste of their fields for pay. We will make the sticks the length to fit your log barns, which can be fitted op with a conduit and ventillator and direc tions given with each purchase how to cure your primings. We want only the EARLY GROWN mild leaves, from which we are now. manufacturing the - ' ' BEST SMQXIIJS TOBACCO : in the United States, not excepting say known brand. Oar Tobacco has 1cm Nitrates, less Nice-tine, less effensire properties then anything in the smoking line in this country; not by reasnn of onr knowledge of manufacture, hut by reason of the superior manner oy which the Tobacco i cured. The leares are CURED WHEN THEY ABE RIPE, they are eured in a continuous current of Rarified Air separate from the rtalk. Our biands are MODEBN BARN NO. 1, and NO- I, and DIXIE DARLIN. We hare large quantities of the Wire Cured Leaf Granu lated, and are new ready to supply the trade and challenge the worldfto produce its equal. Address W. H. SNOW, High Point, N. C. Notice. By virtue of a decree of the Superior l-ourt of JTranklin county made in the case of R. W. Lancaster t. A. W. Pearce we will sell at public auction for cash, at the court house door in Louisbure. on Monday, the 3rd dar of June next, that valuable tract of land in Cedar Rock township, adjoining the lands of W. B. Coppedfre, R. 'R. Boon and others, con taining 60 acres, on which A. W Pearce-. formerly resided. April 26, 1889. r C. IT. CootK. . E. W. Tim BKKitKE, Commissioners. Notice of Sale- By virtue of authority given in two certain mortgages executed by Peter Wil liamson to Beattie rearce, and recorded respectively in book 75. page 289. aad in book 76, page 10, 1 will sell at public auc tion ior casn, at toe court bouse door in the town of Louisburg, on Monday, the 13th day of May 1889. at 12 m., the fol lowing property, to-wit: The lot in Louis burg township, known as a par ot the James Hilliard tract, adjoining the lnd of Bryant Green on the west, Henderson. uazjewood on the north. JS.it Dunston on the East, and Main street on the south. containing by survey one aere. 2nd. On red much cow. . W. Timbbblakk, April, 9, 1889. Att'y for Mortgagee EXECUTOR'S NOTICE, Having this day qualified as Executrix upon the estate of Dr. W. L. Hardister, notice is nereoyriTen to au persons o ins the said estate to eome forward and pay me same at onee. ana ail persons holding claims against the estate will pre- seni utesn ior payment on or iefere tbe 1st day of April' 1890. or tbia notiee will be pleaded in bar of their recorery. This April 1st, 188. Elizabeth Hakdistkr, i Executrix. ' WEMEANYOD. Again tne pain to 1 duty oi re minding you of the fact that you owe us, and that we must have it right away, forces ttaeir upon ' us. we are compelled to dose up our business having sold out to King Bros; and, kind friend, unless you pay within the next ten days your account yes, even yours, will be placed In the hands of : a collector. We dislike to do this, and - would not ordinarily. Jf tease make us smile by coming forward and set tle your account at once. With great respect, Kino, Jones A Co. Koses, liesCKverbloomtng Sorts. GeraFdumsY tube-roses, and other .flowers for spring planting. Moan vines or evening glories. Also splendid vines for the varanda. Choice cutflowera, boquets, baskets and floral desians, bent varieties of tomato plants (once transplanted) egg plants, , cabbage . suid . celehr piants , Hon veveryming in ft nrt rlMt ffoiiat tin.' ......., . 1 ; H.ftrBiNiciTaLl:.! ?- r - rriuielgh, N. Vn MACHHfERY FPU SALE! The undersigned has for sale a good six horse power engine,? on -; whkkIsv Also a Cotton Gin, Feeder, . and cou eduser, (new.) ilr: . ' ,, ;v " ' V 40,000 feet - of lumber, such as weath- : er-boarding, flooring, scantung, Ac i I will Sell he machinery at a bargain, j J. P. TlMBEBtAKK, j Louisburg, N.C SIL f re mi l m s AWARDED iMMGiiAMi AT RKjlEf On thel888 Tobacco- TOR THE Finest Lemon Colored Wrappers, Finast Lemon Colored Cutters, Finest Lemon Colored Smokers. The above Tobacco was crown with O. ODER A SON'ti COMPANY'S SPKJtt G0SEP8WB FQU TOBACCO. . Trif BEST Fertilizer I always the cheapest. Certificates can b Pur pished by the thousand if desired. The To4rcco Display at the Virgin ia Exposition was the finest the World has ever semi. sW-FOR SALEIBY , W. L. McGHEE, FJ3KLIXTON, X. c. Listers a ad Fertilizers. ALWAYS ON HAND AND A FULL STOCK OF J E H E R A L M E R C H A M OTS E- DRY GDDDS CLOTHING HATS, BOOTS AND SHOES. &C-, &C- A large stock of Wagons and Buggies, Carts and mr.teiial for same. The "BOSS PLOW" is taking the day every whera. If you want a first-class "COOK STOVE," my store ia the place to get it. When you come to I-rankiiuton be sure to Rive me a call. ... Very Respectfully, 1 " W. L. McGHEE. LLR li li A. MANHATTAN COCKTAIL! FARO-JUNK COBBLERI SPANISH PUN GERMAN PUNCH mint j u l ; 8TONB FEN f. POOL RuQiHl a CIH i4 W u3 v. pi 1 ft3 Q O I Lemonade and Fine Cigars. P. 8. Calx. in. J. D. CHBISTIAN. B. 8. CHBI8TIAN. I J. B. CABY. CHR1STIAII & CARY . RICHMOND, Ya. 4 '? Prompt attrition to orders and rat BBS BbSW SSIW BSBHBil BB "SSSt is&ction GUARANTEED. . , BY THE EXPOSITION tOND, VA- Harvest Queen A LARGE STOCK OF SUPPLIES I 1 II i li, IN U NEW YORK PUNCH ISHEBRY CO B L E It ILK PUNCH I- N PHIZ BEER ON' DRAUGHT LARET PUNCH GOOD ORDER. .TSTOTIOie.- Sale of Land for Taxes. I will expose lor sale. to the highest bidder for cash, at the court house door in Louisburg on Monday the 6th day of May lew, as prescribed by law. tbe lot lowing bindA, situated in Franklin coun ty, for default hi payment of taxes due for the years 1887 and 1888. II. C. Kearney, ' - April 1, W. Sh'ff Franklin Co. T. G. Riley 30 acres, Rlleys x Roads. adjoining W. W. Perry, W.IL Perry and others - Presly White, 1 lot. In FranUlnton, adjoining J . 8. Joyner and others 6.45 Josh Williamson, 1 town lot, dog trot, Franklin ton township. 20 T. M. Martux, 2 acres. R. & G. R. R- adjoining Turner Medlin and others 2.99 E. 8. Fuller, 1 lot in town of Frank lin to a, on-Green street, adjoining J. IL Fuller and others -159 . Lt. Thomas, 4 acres near Grove Spring land, Franklinton T. 8. 43 Mrs. Mary A. Ury,. 79 acres ia Franklin ton T. 8. 4j22 Billiard Kalone, 4 acres on Warren ton road, Louisburg Township 1.48 Albert Ward, acre, Yarboro tract. Louisburg T. 8. , 4.1S Harriet Harris estate, 1 acre of land l I In BBBBBBBl BTVJi Catioa, TeUece, Cora. f"J) Now in atock and ready Tor delivery.- Pitch Forks, Rakes Shovel. Spades Dinners, Bow, Caiolina and Stonewall Plows and cast ings. Cotton King and Iron Aire Cultivators and steel ha men, tract, Back Bands Swinglc trees, plow liars, tmKue and brwst cliah.a. harness snap, buckles, well chains and buckets, halter chains, well rojKva, curry comNt home brushes, plow clevises, repair links, w-l! wheels, gate binges and latches, horse collars or every kind and canvst-s collars, pad, pluw bolts, harae strings, II am era lace, upper and sole leather We are now preparing to have 250 sets of sn perlor flues made ready for delivery by June 1st, and to insure promptness would advUe our, patrons to leave their orders as soon as possible to avoid any delsy. Remem ber they cost no core new hun they will later In the sea son. We havo left one or two of the Eclipse Cotton Planters which we Are offering low to close out; they do the nicest work of any planters made, to wnlch every man who has osed them will testify. Remember we carry a Tull tine of everything and all we ask Is to call and see us. Respectfully dc. CRENSHAW, HICKS A ALL.EX. uano EARLY ROSE SEED POTATOES I A S li li -OUR "MODD" FLOUR CANT BE BEAT.-! , A Beautiful Line of Neck Tics Just Received. Calicoes. Ginghams and Worsteds of the latest and prettiest styles. Be sure to give us a call be 'ore buying elsewhere. Yery Respectfully, LouIsburg.N. C. ; ' W. P. NEAL A. CO. ODD JilU'W Fulfille d BY LOW .on every thing that our friends and the public generaly needs. We are Bellincrtho new styles of Ginchams at 5 c. iW orth 8 o. some for 8 c. worth 10 c some for 10 c worth 12c. We have a few more of those CHEAP Ladiefs Hoes at 5 c worth 10 or purchasing, and you will JES"""''' Crub'Bg4GardenioK 2Jq ANL -FOR 01 I Ml I, AND SEED OATS- CHEAP- OUB PRICES 1 1 Jl 15 cte. Call and see us before be pleased Very Respectfully, W. J. NEAL & CO. on Kaietgn roadLouisburg T. 8. 2,33 LouUburg, N. C. Mch. 15th, 1889. n
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
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May 3, 1889, edition 1
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