Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 19, 1888, edition 1 / Page 2
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I -... ;1? I fu- J ti ' Pi Hi I! V . :t 5 Carolina Watchman. 'THDBSDAr. JULY. 19, 1888. Vationai Democratic Ticket. L FOB PRESIDENT : GROVE It CLEVELAND, ' Of New York. K)E VICE PRESIDENT : ALLEN 0. THUItMAN, , Of Ohio. roF coxoress 7th district: JOHN S. HENDERSON, of Itowan. State Democratic Ticket j ' for governor : DANIEL G. FOYVLE, of Wake. T i FOR UEtTTENANT OOVERNOR : THOMAS AI. HOLT, of Alamance! FOR SECRETARY OF STATE: ' WILLI A M L. S A U N DE 115, Of Wake County. FOB . 8TAT& TREASURES I DONAp W. BAIN, of Wake. "A - 1 FOB ATTOBSET GENERAL: frHEO;.F. DAVIDSON, of Bumcorabe. f . for auditor; GEO. W. SANDEULAIN, of Wayne. fob aprpT. of public instkuction: S.ii; FINGER, of Catawba. - fOB ASSOCIATE JU8TICES JOF SUPR. COURT . . JOSEPH J. DAVIS, -' of Franklin County. J AMES E. SHEPHERD, j of Beaufort County. y ALPHONSO C. AVERY, of Burke County. " fOB PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS AT LARGE ! ALiFRED M. WADDELL, of New Hanover"County. FREDERICK N. STRUDWICK, V of Orange County. Tkt Situation ia Naw Jctsij, ITortli Cor- olina and West Virginia. Washington Cor. Biltimore Sun. Senator. Vance has returned to fWasbington from Newark, Nl J., rbere he addressed a meeting of man bfacturers. and operatives last Friday eyenin on me iarm quesiion. ne (tea that a very Jarge .crowd gather- to bear him, apd ltidging from their nthusiastic applause they "were in sym tby witb him on the subject. "He afterwards discussed the political pitn- itioi) with m ny of the leading Jersey fianufaeturenv and ; while they may ot airhay been Democratg, they as- J! ured hiitf that Cleveland and Thur . aan, with tariff reform as the issne. rould carry the State iu epite of Re publican claims ta thecontrary. The Jfemey men are fully aroused on!thi lubject and they will probabl v consider artfully the proposition which now Confronts them, whether it will be teat for their interests to contribute large snms of money to carry on the protection campaign or to submit to a moderate reduction in their profits. This is the problem which is presented to thrmannfacturer in t he three East ern States where the hardest fighting hi expected, New York, New Jersey and vonneciicut. ; 3TO FEAR FOR NORTH CAROLINA. In reDlv to the claim made hv rpr- tjam enthusiastic Republicans that! there a probability of Btirrisou and Horton carrying the Old North State on the internal revenue issue; Senator Vance aays that he has no foars ou that score. , He predicts that at the jjroper timaj an amendment will be made to the Mills bill providing for the abolitioh of the tob.iccu tax and a ttibtiUntial reJuction in the tax on fjruii bran hr, It U njji.?ury torn lin tain asra ilUt ix o.i tie latter article tj allow tho Jutannl. revenue ouli'ers to h ire supervisioa over ft to, prevent tjraud. If the tax was wholfy rcmov i few Dersons miht bs tempted to jjistill wieyii i cill itfruit brandy. The honest farmers of Nortb Calolm.i have their little stillv hundreds of 4hjniwit,a caauity of less than teu gallons, whiclf-ihey . use to work up ineir snpernuons fruit into hmndv ther than have it rot on their hands. o$t as people . in other sections put up rres. Much of this fruit hnmrlv manufactured for the individual con. nmption of the tarmers making it. If inch an amendment is not insrtd aue uiii oeiore it leaves the Hiinu if l-'ll I f -.1 fwm certainly oe lntrodnceu and prob- ! !! l . .. . . . t 'yMopW when the measure reaches toe senate. - fri Senator Run son concurs in the onin- fju pn!a wy-jns colleague tht . i i r ... i . lina going Republican at the MOD. He says t hat State isTsafely Dent- pcrnc,.9ui win not dolor the par X l hecorae over-confident and quietly xoia ineir nanas and uuMMt ku ... . - uc IVOUIk. ttirfwwknind plenty of it will be re qai North Carolina, Virginia na west, irginiu and all along the 'iTST TlROjsiA 8AFELT DI1IOCBATIC. 1 1 Senator KVniva aaysin this connec-J lion that West Virginia is snfelv Demo. ' an an ua.,fyu vote wi.-I le Uied ITpt He iayt furtiier that he bdieves i :-m ..j . , . . . : Califoraw will be curried by Cleveland if Tl ? xwbbins, v Jmd Thurmin if the campaign': is judi. oponat' Maj. Robbiua pnjtlj m waged, afhe is. confident it! 10 nrest n audience w -1 Washikotox, JulylCth.Senate The House bill autboming the Rich mond arid Daimlle Railroad Company to hty tracks ia the District of Colum bia was reported and placed on the cal endar. ;f ' - C " ' Two Tetoei of ension bills were pre sented, read and referred to the com mittee on pension?.' - In oue case the President declares himself entirely satisfied that the cise had been, properly determined by the pension buresiu. In the other case no application hd been made to the re gion bureau,rwhich was accounted or by the fact the husband of the propos ed pensioner who had himself been drawing a pension for a wound! had been killed by a pistol ball in a person al encounter. HOC8B. ' j The call of States for the introduc tion of bills having been dispensed with the House went into committee of the whole (Mr. Springer in the chair) on the tariff bill, the woolen schedule. bein z Vending. On motion ot Mr. Mills an amend ment i was adopted fixing October 1, 1888, as the date upon which j the re peal of the taxes on manufactured chewing tobacco, smoking tobacco and 8uuff shall go Into effect. . Mr. Wise, of Virginia, moved to in- elude in tne repeal tne taxes on cigars, cheroots aud citrarettes. If the Mills bill were passed, he said: the reduction of the surplus would hot be as large as - .1 l iT some srentiemen suppoaeo. in no other way could there be so sure a re duction of the surplus as by the repeal of the tobacco tax. Br lowering the tariff it might be that the revenue would be increased, and he believed that in many instances it would be. (Applause on the Republican side.) Jefferson had denounced the internal revenue system but the American cit izen of today saw the collector armed with revolver, carbine, rifle and shot gun. The question presented was whether the government would secure its necessary revenue. He wanted it distinctly understood that he was in favor of deriving the revenue for the government by taxation en foreign products imported. Mr. Nelson, of Minnesota, in oppos ing the motion, sent to the clerk's aesk and had read an article written by Prof. R. M. Smith, of Columbia Col lege, in which be declares that it would be a serious financial mistake , for the government 10 give up tne revenue derived from internal taxation; Mr. Johnston.' of North Carolina, moved to amend Mr. -Wise s motion by providing for the repeal of all internal taxes on spirits distilled from Brain oi any kind. He did not want, he said, free brandy or free whisky, j but he wanted to see his people free from the oppression of the almost military law. . Mr. McMillin said that this year the internal system would yield about $120,000,000. The entire surplus did not amount to more thn $70,000,000 per annum, bo that if the govern men t embarked on a total repeal of. the internal revenue system it would be faceu on the threshold with a deficiency of 850,000,000 per annum. Hence the question was presented whether Con gress would aiolish the internal revenue system or reduce the duty on clothing. ;He spoke his voice and the voice of his side of ti e House when he said that in the content between whisky and cioth ing he was on the clothing side. r Mr. Johnson's motion was lost, 27 to 15. The vote was announced. Mr. Johnston inquired in an aston ished tone of voice, which caused much laughter, "what has become of the Re publican party? 1 thought it was go nig to vote with me? Mr. Yost of Virginia, offered an amendment similar in effect .to that offered by Mr. Wise, and he said that if Virginia stood as solidly against all assaults of the Mills bill as it did in re gard to the tobacco feature of it, it would Ins a great benefit to that Stat Tob acco was as much a product of the soilas corn or grain, and why there should be a restriction on the sale of an agricultural product was something beyond his understanding. - Mr. Yost's amendment was defeated 64 to 85. Mr, Sowden. of Pennsvlvania. offer ed an amend meat abolishing the tax on spirits distilled from apples, peaches ana oiner iruitj f Pending a. tote, the .committee rpse. The Speaker announced the. select committee to investigate the irapruia iiou oi contract laoor as Messrs, . Ford, Oates. Spinota, Guenther and i Morrow. The Q icen of Svelen U andcrVoioi; peiunar treatment to reatore her nerves to a normal co.duiofi. Her doctors hava or dere.l lu r to rieearh . nakchcr nm i .i uus idu iwei p me room. She nas to lake a walk is the gat den before breakfast, work anions the flowers afterwards and icau an net ire oaWloor existence all da? I ft I 1 . v . . - ""?- Airraay ne ueea has I teen bene fitted by this.arious -cure," the hamber- raaui tieaunent " a it m called. ! The same raiKie ol lite nnht benefit many a woman in tins country who has lost her her nerve. ; grip on Naughty editors! to talk after that a 1 - . y iash ion toj delicate women! i And yet mere may be truth in it. ; Let the weakly ones try it. Pat oq thick soled shoes, go into the garden and with light but sharp hoe and cut and weeds before breakfast! up grass It is fits cinating,and fills the lungs With good iresa air. It cots nothing but a little resolution, whereas a borjb.ick ride is both dangerous and expend ve. Vm. .T. Walker, prohibition1 cimdi we. iot wTfroor, . made a speech at Concord, Monday niaht. and wua plied io bj W. 5L itobbini, n ho i a . , ' - neTer whatever ltlie?Ttbjet. v. (From put regular correspondent X Washington, July 16,188. nnmniiKioner Colman. of the f Agricultu ral dentmcnt,haA receired ah i ."earljTand complete vind leaf itw irrnn Hie rnarge cer. to the Senate committee on AgriculUf uare. to theeffact that Mr. Colman was work- imrioan underhanded manner. to get tne w rat her bureau irnierreti i ma uipi - ment. Gen. Greelev lias wnuen a nwuij latter to Senator Palmer of that committee in which he apolonnea r hrng mal the charge, naring iemer wnre . information upon which he had bs-d it was erroneous; he also as Senator raimer :--. C l!, ..... u to asHura cue comiuiitcv .wi i that he should unintentionally have place ed a high official in a very wrong light. To those who knpw Mr. Colman, no vindi cation of anything he has dona since he be came Commissioner of Agriculture is neces sary. It i far thatc who are not fortunate enough to know the man Jn all his rugged straightforwardness and hanesty, that this .written. No subsidies for pet steamship lines this year. The House haa again crushed the Senate amendment to the mil appm- priating $800,000 to increase the mail lu- cilities between this country anu &oum America. The d mve vote 14 1 to a by which the Houc for the second time, reiected this amendment, will probably cause the Senate to see the wisdom of with drawing it. Cl. Lamont baa gone to New.: York to visit his family. He will rtcum this week. The House is now considering the wool claa of the tariff bill, and unless there is aome uaexpacted delay in dispofliug ut it, the bill will bepaaaed'tbis week. Senator Pngb to-day maue a strong speech in favor of the ratification of the ffsherie treaty. Friday Senator (teorge did likewise. A delegation of the Patrons of Industry of Pennsylrania called on Mr Clevelni.d Friday, ta invite turn to attend their exhi bition and picnic on August 2-4 The Pres ident said that his duties are now u h as to require his strictest attention, but when Congress adjourns, he wauld have niore time. i The next trust ta be investigated by the House committee oa manufactures will bt wtihriccy. 'GranBy" Blair, who is one of the most blatant demagogues who ever occupied a scat in the United States Senate, rec ived a dressing down on Thursday last at th hands of Senator Butlerof South CsroIiiiH, which he ia not likely to forget lor souu time to come. The subject under iiiseuf sion was tie presidential vetoes of pirate pension bills. Blair said that takn as a whole, the vetoed caea were ot alwointe merit, and the vetoes were outraj.es of the riht1 of American citixens. Mr. Bi I -r in reply said that the greatest bleing thnt ould oTertake the Senate and the toi n r would be for the Senator from New tittup shire to oe leta faitblul to the line of duty which he had narked out for himself.- 1 there has ba ni-a. incumbraB. e, u inc.il s oa the sensible repertaile. orderly tiia charge of the duties of the Sennte, it hail been in the person of the Senator from New Hampshire, and in the meusuro which he had introduced Mr. Butler al so truthfully stated thnt Blair was like a dcinagojrne,-trying to appeal to the so diet rote of the country. Kef-rring to a re mark af Mr. Blair, that the langui e some of the message was uneiit email I. Mr. Butler eaid: -Ood save the maik! What a terrible calamity it wwuld be t. this coantry if the standard of vcntliniei. had to be established by the Senator from New Hampshire. It would undermine ami destroy every ru!e on the puhject rt conized among civilized pplt." Mr. O'Neill, of Misaoun, wao is ehair man of the House committee on Labor. says, that the most important bill in the House is that p;ohi biting the ciirrjii g o eonrict made goods from one State to ano ther. It is expected that an ert nin; ses sion of the House will be held for the pus sti;e of this and other labor bills. The Hause has pnssed a bill, providing for the taking of the eleventh and sub-e- quent crcuep. Judge Lynch disposed of Humphries, a mulatto of about 10 years, at Abbe ville, July 10, between 2 and 4 a. m. Humphreys had brutish ly assaulted a 13 year old girl of respectable charac ter, whom he came up with while pass ing from the city through a piece of woods to her home in the surburbs, He left her in a critical condition, was soon after arrested, identified, and jailed! But his case was summarily disposed of, notwithstanding the stout resistance of the jailor, who fired into the mob was himself fired at and over powered, and his prisoner carried oil and hun Through the grossest negligence of an operator at Asheville Junction twef freight cars collided on the W. N. C. It. it. on oanday morning, killing a brakeman, injuring both engineers and S a a m both conductors, and making a wreck of fourteen cars and two locomotives. The operator who made this fatat blunder was a man of experience, having been at one time chi f train dispatcher of the Richmond & Danville road. It is not likely that we shall hare any Mctarianism in thii Presidential campaign m in the last. As Mr. Cleveland ia the son of a Presbyterian minister, aud Mr. Harrison is a Pres byterian elder, there will be no oc sion to choose between them on reli gious grounds. Fifteen thousand miles of railroad were laid last year in thw eountry, and from present indications, says the Kai!v?y Age," it will not be less this jear. - The and i tori urn of the Hepnblican Convention in Chicago was decorated with the portraits of -alt the Republican. Presidents. When Fred Douglas mule hit eloquent appeal in benalf .of the "Biocxk Sfttn.M the Pnideutalr:fldi winked audiblv at ne another. vTbt-v m a " TtCQ be chestnut. Cata are the poets of the .lower ani ' Tfeey almt cultirat the roews. PaWiirri2iax7-als8epa Jfr. KdiorIt is strange to heai? the false reports that often get tafloat.dijiring a heated contest in elections, especially for the pffice of Sheriff; Already U is noised abroad, that there; wn vnfctSrneu in the proceedings;of 4he .Fri nkliuji prir The tacts are these, soon aiw?r inp or- rnnizntion was ctfectcd. and fler the chairman had announced - the-convention's readiness to - proceed to- Jjusijicss, Mr. W. TGheen moved that the conven tion f4hoM on" for half an- hour, a he Was satisfied aX "many more persons were coming." It.was argired howe vcr, that the hour xippointed by the chairman of the county Executive Commiitetjjbe 2 o'clock, and us it was then, pastj- the hmir. 2:15 P. M. that the convention! had no authority to Mispeud.v'hold on.) :.. Aiwtnv t r nirn full Kiitislaction. & But ivote was taken and the motion was lost py a very large majority, whereupon, tbefcon ventiu, Without excitement, and with the utmost fairness proceeded to make its nominations, . . . The above are the oxact facts ii the case, ail rU mors to the contrary notwith standing, and eafhrcandidate ltominiiled by this cou.vettun;BeceiveAl a large iua.r jority of the voles, cast. j - July 16 18fc8 - I K Yeeitas. 4ii v . . . w . t y The Pi or JStfttor Watchfttan: As tlicre issosjUich talk about the-dear little pig iu towjn, I thiuk some one-oaht to reply tojMr. Cleanlibess on the pig. Mr. Gleaulmess.must. be of a recently, imported stocks r else he has never uoed. around -thjc .ba k lots as much as he haa around Ue dtv.i little rig'!icu, or he would noKhave: thought that tne dear little- nie wiws , the only source of filth ia town, nd afr the ost of rai' . inar the dear little niics. vl wonder M no has ever tried, to rajse one. Mr. Clcanhf : nes ought to know, that a poor family can raise one or two Uijrs witn very 111- tie more cost than the waste of thenkit chen slops which would be cntfrely wasted if not for the benefit derived from the pork they would make out of the dear little pigs, and as to his reference as to cost of raising a pig here in towu (no insult to Mr. Parker whatever) but ' Mr. Cleanliness certainly ought to bavo known that Mr. Parker is no better cal culated to figure it out to heart's content than he would be himself, and as toi this being a sickly lime of the year, we all admit that, but as to pig pens that! are properly eleaued and limed two or three times a week being the cause of sick.jaes, what would be tha result if all the lops and tilth was allowed to be thrown5 out iu back yards and lots; aud strange to say there has been pigs raised and kept Salisbury we might say for the last iiin died years, and no ore was smart enough 10 fijiihout that tlve. pens oi the den if.' lit tle pigs was the id i reel cau.-e ol" death oelure Mr. Cleanliness figured the jinat ter out to his own satisfnvtion. As to the majority of the people being in ftivor of the dear little pig gomg w e thii.k he is sadly mistaken. B A Lover of PoiIk. Announcements. We arc authorized to announce t". t", Krider a a candidate for re-eleetiqti t' the office of Sheriff 'of Rowan cotjjnt subject to the action: of tho Deniocjj-utie County Convention. j; We arc authorized to announce J. Saml. McCubbins as aandldaic Air relief tion to the office, of .Treasurer of Kuwait county, Bubjcct to the notion of the )em ocratic County Convention. I - We are authoriied to announce It. N. Woodson as a candidate for re-cleft ion to the office of Register of Deeds wf Row an county, subject, to the action of the Democratic County Convention. We are authorized to announce B. C. Arey for re-election to the office ol jS-ur-vevor of Rowan county, subject td the action of til'- Democratic County Conven tion. lf SALISBURY MARKET, j JuifE 14. ' I Cotton market corrected weekly by BOYDEN & QUINN. ? Cotton, good middling, " middling, Market dull. Country produce market corrected by D. R. JULIAN & CO. I Corn, I 02 Flour, country family, $2.25 $2.30 Wheat. Country bacon, Butter, Ejp, Irish potatoes, good, do. do. do seed,. Sweet potatoes Peas, - ; - Lard, country,'- in i jQ 15 20 10 (ifi1 VZ I 7 nr to 50 10 THE I . ? - ri'. m i . - ii H KLUTTZ & jRENDLEMAN'S, WHERE YOU Largest and Best Selected. Stock of Goods xrr is-XaxatBixEiir. AnS thej arc goiri off at .prices thjt , defy competition. Be sore to call and see us. WE are headquarter for th BEST GOODS at the LEAST money. . New supply of India Ltncns at 7, 8, 10, 12 and 15 cents. --v-.v Gross-barred tansooks at all prices. Big assortment of DBESS, kinds at micei derfesrjenoils- .Men? Shoes. We are. ajenrsp for COAT'S a ft m, a.vauiviij u 1 tttuvj .QX all kinds at pxiceAfwS Jrom $t.teAl pet vardr . Bhlrts, Colors. Cravats-tin- . tropnlitan FASHION PATTERNS. We still keep the'best FLOUR fn BababurT Bis ssoi-rnURnstatrWBdsTJtire andrstclass EATABLES. Coffee -frohi '1. nh angar, P "fT V ;We codiallyolicit a cal ;y. ft. a7IEIa to taking our I Absolutely Pure. " Tills powdernever varies. A raarrfl ot -nr tr irenilj,rtn(i Uolesoineness. More coDomka! man taeorJlnirv Winds, and cannot b sold In competition wltb the multitude of low lest, rhprt weiffUt, Ium ontio9pbate oowders. 'Sold onlj ia cans. cotl Hikinu Pownit CO..10R Wall st. Nj Foriile bv 8inihini & Go.. Yminjr & Ba tam. and N. P. Murphy. BIHS31H SCHOJ with a wholc- d. some HOBAL 1 etnti ut, offers thebe.it PHYICA t apd the tK.-t jXKTAL culture, a -innpulsOTV (' 13 iC it ICULU.1I with E N F4 ft C.rA STUUV. a reii-scnuhle but strict DI- CIP-. LI M E, an 1 a luc;tiun entirely free from MAL.IKIA. No tune or money spent intending AGKI? ULTCRAL FAIRS. For catalogue adIres. TVZaj. H. SZ?70ZZA.SX, Bingham school. Orange Co. N. C. A GOOD HOME. Any one wishing to buy a pood home place, if invited to call on Mrs. II. E, Johnson or Miss Victoria JohnsonfNorth. Ward, corner Fulton "and Kerr streets. June -.1, 1888. tf. ' i HEALTH! HEALTH ! ! A New Discovery, ! AND , j Great Southern Remedy. TTavir.jr been from ,hildhoul n prrt sa'crvr.thc result of -protracted chills .iiid in-liirestton, tt rmina insr in discuses of L'ver, Kidney and Urinary Orgrn and having trie! many reinedics known to tho- profession with -only temporary relief, I have finally sm-ceede'd in discov ering u combination of veiretw.ble reme dies, which combination has proven a . remedy for diseases of all the internal ovi'ans superior to any known in a life of -ufTerinjj: and practice of nearly fifty vears. As bj- it I have been restored from what seemed to 1k inevittil l"1 death to perfect health without takinc a d.-se of any other medicine in nearly- two years past. Kor further pirticnlars npjdv to vour druggist, or JNO. F. FOARD, M. D. Olin, Iredell county, X. C. ' Julv V, 1SS8. am. Land Sale ! 0 .Monday. Au-Conrt-houe door i' n tin- hour if J2 higln'st biddT. for ut 20-h, 1888. nt the the town ote!ishurv. m . I will sell to the cish. thnt part of the lot now oecupted bv A L ioun;, in the.i town of Sali-burv. not included in his honie-tenil .heretofore Inirl off ind design ed to him. it b'inr tin half of the add It known n the lorth-west half, ndjoininsr the lot of. Mrs.. J. M MeCnrkle. on Innin street i'i tlie.oid town. The lot to be sold inHir-'e one-half of the dw-llin house on the siime. This si?e is by order of thrU S.'Diftnct Court. n to-satisfy certain jn.l mentu in favor of M." -I. tIolms and C. F. Baker, docketed iu the county of Iinwnn. -CHAS. PRICE. Aignee in Ixinl rvptry nnd Commitoioner. Salisbury N. C.. July 16. 188. 33:ts Administratrix Notice. : of my ,ate nushand Mr Rrt A. Knox, dee'd., this is to notify thoaa having j claitn.s against his estate to present them to me or pavment on or before the 10th ; day of July, 1889, or this notice will ba picaa in oar 01 recovery, .inu inose in debted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment. j :. iiakuim kj. , July. 19, 188S.-t. Administratrix. PLACE FOR FIND THE GOOD &POOL COTTON: and HuitiriZrst tm . .(11 . . . . j . . - " Ij ' ' . : B, ....... 'I PP.Ic cider VINEGAR. 4 veartf M ih&l a VU13 uioat ooemcnii v. Ktvrn to:kdlkman. SEMI-ANNUAL INVENTORY "Hit I- . . - M AIT -S-S ,S sba M ALL ' j. . , i '-( . This is done in ordej much as SIS Carpets, Oil Cloilis,- ml Will q Cost LITTMANN & LICHTENSTEIN. June 8th. WE ARE BLOWING GOOD NEW0. TO That we arc Headquarters oirLow Prices &nb moo mos Our largely increasing sales testify I i Will cut prices 011 some WHEN YOU Silksr Ratios, Bnrahs, French Satines, Wool Dress Goods. -it T Percales, American Satines, Zephyr Ginghams, White Goods in Stripe, Check, and Plain. Scrim, all col's. Lace bed sets, i Wooi Dress Goods. . Cotton Voos, Calicos, Ginghams, mm & HI Tooth Brushes, Face Powder, AHD TH0USAIID8 OF THIHOSWE HAVE NOT SPACE TO flEflTIOM. ' Don't Fail tolSec " t j OUR POOR FOLKS POCKET-BOOK, .... " 2 fect Zm2l -CnmC i Th" mooI -way! 'no longer shed its f fflaljrt fiM int,tjnrirray wander from their accu-tomed course-' The earth mar deuart fro nsual eotirse; The tides may cease to ebb and flow hot - " ! . " !AT,i ! VAN WYCK- "t i WILL BT'A tvara welcome awaits jou with ICUlll JUA. to reduce our Stock 1 . "'! possitjj e. -'Tf "TO, OUR LONG WHISTLE! of our Leading Goods. ' Madras Lace Curtain. Theiargest stock r Laces in tows. . . r - ' - I'. EmbroiJeri ih endfess Tariety. Ne w lot Torchon Lacr : New lot " ; -V " JledcciLacP, r :d seta, - 1 long or less! Cs SCHULTZ j II " OJST Til ERE ALL THE SAME! oat-stretched hands and smlliig facv" leader Latest. Styles ami I Pffit Mm WEED t- i- m i i t -
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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July 19, 1888, edition 1
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