! ... .. 1" I - 3 .' -' .! 'l. '3 , If- i - i I : i' - ! S X j ? i 'i v - - r if-- " 4M'" ,fi-.:i. -r. 1 r 5- I : 5- " " j' - i k tV:- .i-'t i if i t i. it? " ' 4 i r," r . . ". vrr-.v.- t , , n.4 Pul. 't; 1 'TAra1 "P aIiValicm - fM Renulilicaii Tariff ISill. i I- w Carolina Watchman. THUKSDAY' OCT. 4, 18S8. rational Democratic Ticket fjb pbisidekt : X i GROVER CLEVELAND, Of New York. j FOB VICB PRESIDENT : tVLLEN G. THURMAN, r ' ; Of Ohio. jyoF odsroBEsa 7in district: JOHNS. HENDERSON, of Rowan. State Democratic Ticket ' ' ' 4"' ... " - I '': - ' !'' - - ! ' it FOB GOVERNOR : 7 DANIEL G. FOWLE, of Wake. jj . ' fj ; ! FOB LIEUTENANT GOVEBKOB I THOMAS M. HOLT, of Alamance. 1 FOB SECRETARY OF STATE T WILLIAM L. SAUNDERS, jj Of Wake County. Jj JOB. STATE TREASURER I ' DONALD W. BAIN, of Wake. v jl; FOB ATTORNEY GENERAL: - i ! - .4 TflEO. F. DAVIDSON, of Bumcombe. for auditor: - ' ' OEOl W. SANDKRLA1N, of Wayne : "4 fob supt. of pubIic instruction: p. M. FINGER, of Catawba. i i for Associate Justice of the Su preme: Court to fill the vacancy 1 i caused by the oeatii oi i nomas c Aerie JOSEPH J. DAVIS, 1 I of Frankliii County Tor Associate Justices of the Su- Kpreme Court under amendment to the Constitution: ! . 1 J AMES E. SHEPHERD, of Beaufort County. ALFHONSO C. AVERY, , of Burke County. FOB PBESIDENTIAL ELECTOR3 AT LARGE : ALFRED M. WADDELL, i of New Hanover County. FREDERICK N. STRUDWICK, j w of yOrange County. U-T 1 1" ' I - - The yellow fever in FlorkU Is on the decline J The Chronicle reports snow as falling In Charlotte TuesdayinorniiiK. has ratified a treaty of aranity and eoninierco with tl)o United Btatcs. Maji Bobbins is doing good .work this year, luVhe always doss that when ho gets a;chance. Mr. iiPearson, the Evangelist, is still preaching to large crowds in Winston, every night this week. The Morning Star, Wilmington, has Just entered its 22d year, and is still ris ing, with increasing brilliancy. Tho split in the Republican ranks ren- derc he election of a Democrat in-lheJ Petersburg (V.) district probable. The Asheville Citizen tells of a child being born near Haysvillc N. C.. with two tongues. Wonder if it is a girl. Fifteen aeoessioas wero made to the Centenary M, E, Churchj at Winston, !ati)Qday, as one of the results thus for of Mr. Pearson's labor t that place. The colored band of Raleigh serenaded pockety at the Yarborp House last week , jmd opened with "They say that you are false, but I still believe you're true, " &c. The frost did great damage to the to boooo icrop of Buncombe, Madison and Haywood counties, but a correspondent in the' Asheville Citizen says, "It did not hurt (democracy." Twp well dressed strangers went to Franklin, Ky., one day last week, and after digging in the vh'inity of an old mill, left A man t named Hendricks, wtos suspicions were aroused, went out next day and unearthed an old keg with 12,700 In gold. - .teauuiui snow," dui. ratner roo pre- y.ous. fell at Roanoke, Ya., Sept. 9th. Also J at Harrisburg, I Pa,, and, at Deer Parkjj Ud., and indeed at many other point North; but at no place to any ctn- siderable depth. The frost of the 29th did considerable damage to the tobacco crop, both in this State and Virginia. The Asheville Citizen U authority for i the reported reception oj $2,000 by the Republicans of Asheville, for political purposes. We suppose it is some of i Mort4n1s contribution to control the po litical fortunes of this State. T He has a l rgcj! pecuniary iutercgt in the politics 1 of thM State than any citizen in the State. If it were just J no, one could reasonably .eomplaiuLof any proper effort to contiol the StiitflpRut his claim was, and is, a fraud from the first to the last. It is no batterjtbanv forged note, and our people have declared jii all thejways they couh1, that th)eyj will not pay it. The white people who understand this matter should condemn it' most uuqiiu ifiedly. ti . Washington Letter. : From or regular currcspondent.) , ' WASHINGTON, October 1st, 1SS8. j r Representative Cam pbell, of New York, soys: w eare gotug to carry i ew x oric. The ltepublicans cau't do anything to prevent it. ' They can't stop it. They don't know wnat 1 am talking aoout when I say that rbot I know.. We don't intend that they shall know it. We will carry the state easy. I. will be more agreeable and pleasant if we can have a union candidate for mayor of .New lorit City. We can save about $200,000 by it, and that money can go into Indiana or somewhere else. 1 tnink we snail unite on the mayor, but I don't know who it will be.?' ' The Republicans are certainly liard up for campaign material when they attempt, as they are doing, to make ihu public be lieve that Gen. Benet,sC.iief ofOrdn'ance U. S. Army, has been Yiolating the civil service law by issuing a political ciroular The circular m question wa3 ten to the commandants of arsenals and armories in 1886, and was strictly in the line of civil service reform, as it instruct od the various commanders to so regu late emnlbvinff and discharging ofi em ployes as to divide them about equally between the two parties, in other words, Gen. Bcnet wanted the employes of the War Department to be non-partizan The armv officer in charge of the Washington aqueduct, which has been so fraudulently built is a hold-over from the Arthur administration, Mr. Cleve land had nothing to do with his assign raent to the duty which he has so shame fully nczucte I. Senator Gibson, of Lousiana, ably de fended his state from the aspersions cast by the resolution of "Little Billy" Chand ler Dronosincr an investicration into the Iatestato election. Mr. Gibson called attention to the fact that no citizen of Louisiana had ever petitioned to have this investigation made. He also allud ed to the fact, which ha3 become notor ious, of these investigation always being proposed just ;beforc an important Con gressional or Presidential election is to be held. In the last allusion the senator struck at the heart of the bloody shirt business. It is always brought to the rront just before election time in the hope that it will help to arouse sectional feel ing iu the North and make votes, for the Knrinhlircin nartv. i The House Judiciary Committee con sidering the subject of trusts with a view of taking all the various bills which have been introduced on the subject -and per fecting therefrom one bill so framed as to avoid Constitutional and other objec tions. It is a big task, but the members of the committee hope to be able to ac complish it. The House has had no quorum for a week, and it is extremely doubtful if tt has one again before election. No busi ness cau be done without unanimous con sent. Senator Sherman's Canadian resolution has been reported to the-Senate and placed on the calander, and a statement made that it would not be pushed to a vote at the present session. This state ment by Sherman will be made an excuse for choking off the House Canadian Re taliation Bill. Represenative Stahmeckcr, of New York, was honorably acquitted of the barges preferred against him by Kcprc- sentative Kelley in connection with the new Congressional Library Building. The vote of the committee was unani mous. A joint committee of the House and Senate will investigate the frauds in the building of the Washingtan aque duct, x Few pcoplcr have any idea of the enor mous growth ofthoRailwavMail Service. IJereare a few hgnresusedby Represent ative Blount, of Georgia, in a speech last week on a bill to increase the salery of the Superintendent and providing for an assistant-superintendent. In 1879 mails were carried over 9,000 miles of rail road; in 1887 they were carried over 107,- 000 miles. In 1879 the number of pieces of mail matter handled by postal corks was 2.6-9,000: in 18S7 it had increased to 5,851,000. The majority report of the litah com mission is against the admission of that Territory, until the Mormons shall give evidence by their acts that they have in good faith abandoned polygamy, and not then until an amendment shall have been added to the Constitution of the United States prohibiting the pratice of polygamy. Owing to the coutinued illness of Sen ator jBeck, there has been tome little delay in the preparation of the minority report which is to accompany the Repub lican tann bill when it is reported to the Senate. The report is being made up by Senators Harris and Vance, and they hope to have it completed by the middle of t he week. Chief Justice Fuller and family have arrived here and have taken possession of the house, he has leased for a year. The new Chief Justice will be sworn in next Monday and will take part in the opening of the fall session of the Su preme Court of that day. Tt tnolc thfi p.lprlc nf tht Spnoto TP! nnnf Committee four hours to read the Repub-1 ncan lariii oiu aioue. The Senate was only in session four days last week. Mrs. Sheriden's pension bill has been passed by the Senate. . Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland may attend the opening of the: Richmond exposition on the 24th instant. J , CiviUService commissioner John H. Oberly of Illinois, has been nominated Commissioner of Indian Affairs. The Oklahoma bill was discussed in the House for; a shoit ute this week. Its friends are getting somewhat discour aged, i . Ex-Congressman Ben LeFevre.of Ohio, ininics tne Liemocrats have a good fight ing chance in that State. Ex-Senator Camden, of West Virginia. says his State can be counted upon to give .. 1 T : . b im usuai isviuucruuc inayoruy. .The Way Boodle is Coming:. The Raleigh correspondent of the ttichmond Dispatch sends the following: "Ex-Marshal Joshua B. Hill, of this city, has oeen appointed the holder of the Republican moneybags-in this State, Money has been squandered In past eampaigns with no returns, an! the Protective League and the National Etecutirc Committee now wiskU nut their mnas in sate hands. Iu the but campaign $25000 was thrown away. . It U said that $30.0 10 luirbeen sent here. There U plenty of money a&a tne Kepubllcans propose, to buy men ana votes with it." Two white men were shot and killed by a negro man near MpmnTiia rw a - W " 19 The j ury of inquest exbonorated the ne gro, it being proven that he was defend hk house from assault. The firm of Bruncr & Allen, of Wadcs- ono, has made an assignment. Under Pemocratic Eule.'. -The State debt was settled. The effect upon the State was greaM Capital, which had shunned the Stato during the evil days of -Republican ascendency, once moresougnt and seess invesinicni. ner The debt for the North Carolina R.ul- road, was settled. The State has re- ca aed control oi tn3 roaa, aaa me sums paid for its lease, it win not . oo many years before the rents will have paid the debt, and will coutrilu e almost money enough prolably quite e nough to pay the expenses or the state government. The Western North Carolina R tilroad was rescued from final ruin. It is now in operation far beyond the Blue Ridge. One branch has reached tho Tennessee line at Paint Rock; another is rapidly nonriner the same lino at a point fir to . he south of Paint Rock. The Caoe Fear and Yadkin Valley Road was at its last irasp. It scratches now from Bcnnettsvillc to Mt. Airy Its mileage is 236 miles, reachiug from the extreme south est to the extreme northwest, and, pass'.ng through one ol the finest countries on the globe. The Atlantic an I North Carolina Rail road is increasing in importance and val ue, and as a part of the iine connecting the East and West, has a great future before it. Many other rjad h .vo 1 een b 'lt, and foreign capital largely embarked in tnenv as tne result oi conuuuiiw reswitu. c note tlie Milton and Sutherlin, Franklin- ten ond Louisburtr, the Clinton Warsaw, the Warrebton Railroad, the Oxford and Henderson, the Halifax and SiOt'and Neck, the Norfolk Southern, the Will- iamston and rarDoro, tne wasnington and Jain esville, theGoldsboroand Smith field. Moneure to Pittsburg, Murphey Railroad, the University Railroad, the Chester and Lenoir N. G., Wilson to Favetteville, Rocky Mount to Nashville, the Spartanburg and Asheville, the Wadesboro and Cheraw (the exten sion ot the Carolina Central), the Cran berry Mine Road, the Quaker Bridge Road, the road from Hamlet to Gibson's Store, that from Hamlet to Cheraw, the Clinton and Point Caswell, the Little Roek and Alma, the Bladen, Columbus and Floridn, that from Bogue to Waccamaw, the Danville, Mocksville and Southweste rn, and the Wilmington, Chndbourn and Con wayboro, and in contemplation, from Dur ham to Lynchburir, the Taylorsville exten- sion, the unsipw uounty noan, me uartu- age Road, the Durham and Nothcrn, the road from Oxford to Claiksvillc1 Vn., &c, &c. Our Eastsrn waterways have become not only sources of the greatest benefit to our own people, but of national impor tance. Our asylums are of the best and best managed in the Ui i in. The public school system was a farce. and the people held it iu contempt. To day it u a source ol just pride its superin tendence held in higher esteem than nnv office within the jii: t of the people. The Department of Agriculture has ien; dered incalculable service and is daily ex tending its usefulness. Thanks to the wisdom of Democratic counsels the course oi the state is now clear, And she is free and unincumbered to pursue her grand career. And she has liecn so freed without increasing ihc ;cn eral rate of taxation on property as it ex isted before the passage of the nets that set her free. Not only so, but the rate of taxation is much less than half what it was in the days of Republican tvisiule: has been materially reduced even since t he- passage of the acts settling the debt and the issue of the new bonds, and in 1884 theie was no State t x. The improvements that we sec every da around us, in men, manners and matt rial affairs, had their rise and have made the proirrress Ur.dcr Democratic rule. Will it be wise, then will it be prudent for us to change that rule? Lst conserv ative, thinking men throuuhcUk the State consider this question wcll. The electiorr-ts-approachin and the peo ple will soon be asked to turn over tin Legislature to the Hadical party, and elect nen from that party Mo the offices to b filled. A wixc people will make no change in the political ronjph xion of t,he govern ment i.nless substuiti.il reasons demand it. Can any such reason be urged now?. Will i Ridical Legislature give ns better laws than we now I nve? Are the Radical can didates lnitter men . than the Dcm'ocaatic andidatcs? Does amy public interest ol anv kin 1 call for a change? Would it not be rash to make any change -when our peo ple are enjoying such a large measure v prosperity and happiness? But again, does the business interest of any private citizen demand such a change? Every man lives, by his business; from it he supports his family, educates his children and makes provision for establishing them i i life. Would his business be promated iu any way by giving the government into the hands of the Radical party? If not. he would do gross injustice to hiiiis -lf. t - his family and society which must suffci bv giving his vote for or doing any act to bring about a change. These are questions involving considera tion which must be controlling ones wit I all sensible men. The decision rests wp.i the voters of the State. What the Radical party did, and the democratic party has done and is now doing, has been laid be tore them. Fatal Accident, Wadesboro, N. C, Sept. 29. Mr. Ben DeBerry of Stanley cot-nty left here yesterday morning in his buggy foi home. When a'out a mile from town his horre became frightened while cross ing the railroad tr ick and ran ayay. Mr. DeBerry fell out of the buggy on to tin front axle and got hit died between it and the spiing, and in this position, with lm head dangling and hitting the wheeh and the axle and shaft, was carried thre or more miles before the horse could be stopped. When this was done DeBerry was found to be quite dead, with' his head badly mangled nnd his leg bioken. Cotton is coming in freely at las . Most of it, however, classes below mid dling. A Horrible Outrage. West Chester, Pa., October. An eleven-year-old daughter of Isaa.. Heck, near Paoli, mis county, wa3 iorced nito a cornfield bv a negro named Jamos Miels. Her hands were tied behind her back and her person outraged, lue brute then, supposing-the child dead thrtw her body into a pond. The girl recover- ea 4 id. at midnight, crawUd to the residence of Dr. Reckenbaugh, to whom she related the story. A po3se baa started in search of Miel3. I suffered from aivery severe cold in my head for months and used everything recommended bnt conld get no relief. Was advised to use Ely's C renin Balm. It has worked like magic it its cure, I am free from my cold after using the Balm one week and I believe it is the hest remedy known Feeling grateful for what it has done for me I send this test'msnial. $air nel J. Harris, l o"?salc Grocer. 119 Froat St., New York. - Two bottles of Ely' Cream Balm cure I the wife of a weTl known U. S. A. General an ' also two armv officer in Arizona of catarrh, Federal Radicalise!. Colonel Dockeryfthouuh a Southern born man; defend aud justifies, or rathei attempts to defend and Justify, the5 Fed eral financial policy ot his party, . OjT course.' he is one of those Southern men with Northern principles that his friend Judge Russell, of civil rights odor, speak Colonel Dockery insists that the policy nf hia nWrt.v i n:itrlntii hoC:lllsn the Northl- cm manufacturers have flourished Under such taxes. Yes, the wnoio course ot tne Republican party has been to favor th rich men of the North who control it. First the bondholders, aud next the Northern manufacturers. He poiutfj with pride to them. He does not point with pride to the common people of the North or to the grangers of the North west, j These are suffering under the uuraens oi tne ltepuoncau measures. Nor does he point with pride to tho coii- dition of our people of the South, who have the oppressive ami tyrannous yokfc; of moneyed despotism choking thein down.? ' The Sjuthern cotton crop has yieldetl in clear cash since the war 6,0O0,O00,00Q; what his become of it? What has be come of this immense sum? It has gone in taxes and under the "depleting sys tem" pf the Republican party to the Northl Colonel Dockery cannot poii t with pride to the condition of our people here in -North Carolina, whose favor he now seeks. We are poor and have made n money, notwithstanding the twentyf three years of. honest toil and hard labor of the past. We arc crushed with poverf ty, which is due in large measure to th out rag ;ous sy.-tem of the Republican party a system which they refuse to modify or change, although it is absolute ly destroying tho people of the Southf. We asseit that this system called by Col. Dockery '"wise aud beneficient," pursued so persistently by the Republican party, exact i-ngas it does, high taxes unneces sarily from the people, is a tyranny and a despotic use of power. It has been particularly hurtful to the South ever since the war, but what is good for u the Republican party never cares to conl slder or regard. Wejinsist that the Republican party ought not to imposed such heavy taxes on the people, particularly on the peof pie of the South in our impoverished con? dition, so soon after tho war; that it was heartless to crush the life out of us it) that way, there being no necessity; and if taxesjcould be reduced in 1871 the tai ought to have been taken off the peopl aud not off the incomes of the million aires of the North who ha I amassed great wealth by plundering the people during the war. And we further insist that if ten or fifteen years ago the govi ernment could get along with $258,000,! 000, it is tyrannical and unjust to take trom the people now 371) ,000,000, foi one-fourth of which the government has no use. i- l The moid pavment of the bonds, the shif ting of taxation from the ineomes of the rich to the daily used and necessary articles of the poor, the degrcdation of the poor mans money, silver, were: heartless' and despotic discriminations; intended to favor the powerful and op- press the poor. They have done every thing that they should not have done and left mndonc everything that they should have done. The chief cause of depres.Mj'.i in money matters is the result ot Kndical legislation which 31r. Clcve4 land is compelled by law to see carried! into effect. The only relief from its baneful effects, temporary, at best, has" coine through the exercise of executive! power in the purchase of bonds and the issue of certificates by which panic and disaster was averted. Permanent relief can come only from the enforcement of the Democratic policy of reduction o taxes. That cuts the evil up by the! roots. "Two Souls with but a Single Thought."' "I want to sec the day come when 'placing my right hand on the head of a little white child, and my left hand on 'the head of a little colored child, I can pass them into Sunday school together.'' -Oliver If. Dockery, Republican candidate lor Gorcrnor. "D wn with the white man's party." "That the right of suffrage rests on no: nationality." Serevth plank of the Xa-i I 'tonal ': Prohibit ion pi 'ai 'form and alogan of the trfjan of the 1 rohibilion party in lorth( Carilinn. White or black it matters not where do you stand ? 1 Mor nons Moving to Mexico. El, Pabo, Texas, Oct. 2. The movement of Mormons toward Mexico is as uming def nite shape and large proportions. 1 The Murine ns have quietly bought from private parties larpe- tracts ol agricultural lands in Northern Chi liattha, principally in the valley of the Casa? Irandc River, and cy are negotiating j for, nor.i?. Several fiounshing villages exist 'in that! nairrhborhood already, the principal one being c die I . Porfirio Diaz. The colonists arc the precursors of larger holies in the future, and they are very quiet and unobtrusive. Sixty Feet Through a Trestle. - CoLrMBCP, October 2. A freight train on the Columbus & Western Railroad fell sixty-, t'irce feet t' r nigh Wild Cat Creek trestle herei killing cne white man and wonn ling a number of other?. Sixteen c.irs and an engine were sn a died. The Senate tariff bill, it is reported, will propose to take the tax entirely o l of tobacco. "In my opinion," said Sena tor Ifarrisbn in 1S82, "whisky and tobac co should be" the last on the list from which the hand of the tax-gatherer is lifted." Behold how beautiful and pleas ant it is for the rretectionist brethern to dwell together in unity,, while each one sings a different song; but how in the world arc the Republican Senators go ing to whoop up their candidate and their bill at the sa'ne time? Charleston News and Courier Dem. Talk about it as they may and sound its praises as they may, the advocates of a high protective tann cannot get away from the fact that such tariff is a tax put upon one man for the benefit of another. More accurately, it is a tax levied upon a great many people for the benefit of a few. That is the everlasting truth that is at the bottom cf all tariff discussion, and every intelligent man should face it fairly and ask himself why he should pay any such tax as that. Cleveland Plain Dealer, Dem. Col. Beal Ijaraes, one of the best known men of Davie, was found dead in his bed Thursday morning. Col. Ijames had been in bad health for some time, but "his friends thought that he was im proving, but nature had worn out and he passed away while asleep, in his 80th year. lie was court cryer lor a number p .1 . a i. : i- : i t : : of the people of this and adjoining conn-ics.--Davie Time Republican Tariff Bill j Thellepublicans have at last report ed to the Senate the bill they propose as a substitute for the Mills bill, which passed the House in July. It releases tobacco in the hands of the producer, c)its down rates on alcohol and sugar, and pnts up the tax on raw wool. No aTbatement of the " protective" system. hey still demand the right to tax the masses for the enrichment of the few. j A fuller report of this republican measure will be given in our next. Freight charges from Salisbury to helby on 100 lbs. paper, 50 cts. On same from Richmond to Shelby 40 ct On same from Lincoln ton to Salisbury 04 cts ; from Lincolnton -to Lexington, N. C, 23 cents. ! mi nr m i n i x ue vv ataugst leiegrapu co. is ex tending their line from Lenoir to Blow ing Rock. There are two lines aiming f jr Blowing Bock. The railroad will bring up the rear in this case. Beware of cotton gin accidents, their sje ison has come. I Absolutely Pure. Thlfpowdernever varies. A marvel of ur.tr strength, and wholesomeness. More conomtckl taan ineorainarv kinds, and cannot be sold In competition wilh the iniiltliuOf or low test, abort 'velght,alum or phosphate powders. Sold only In cans. Koyal Bakinu Powdkk Co..l06 Wall st. N V Forsale bv Bingham & Co ,, Young & Bos- tain, and N. P. Murphy. -THIS SPACE Belongs to Mr. V. Wallace, and will bfe filled next week by a notice of the largest Fall and Winter Stock lie lias ever o eiied in this market. NORTH CAROLINA 1 Superior Court ROWAN COUNTY i Before the Clerk. John D. Miller, Adm'rl of Wm. Litaker, dee'd, I'laintifl, vs. Albertine Miller, D. J. Brown and wife, Jose- fihine C. Brown, heirs at aw of Win. Litaker, Defendants. Petition to sell land to make assets. It appearing by affidavit to the Court that D. J; Brown and Josephine C. Brown are necessary parties defendant to the proper determination of this proceeding, and that they are non-residents of this State, now, therefore, this is to notify them to be and appear before John M. tlorah, Clerk of the Superior Court of Rowan county, at his office in Salisbury, N. C, on or before the 22d day of No vember, 1888, and answer or demur to, plaintiffs complaint which is now filed therein, or this proceeding will be heard ex-parte as to them. J)ated this the 2oth day of September, 1388, J. M. HORAH, - Cl'k Super. Court of Rowan county. iTheo. F. Kluttz, Plaintiff's Attorney. f 50:Gt. LAND SALE ! r- f ROYAL Ft&'fif XI j Bj virtue of a decree of the Superior Court ofSampson county, in the caw: of L. A. McKoj arid others, exparte, I will sell at the Court House door in the town of Salisbury, on Mon day, the 5th day of November, 1888, about 350 acres of ralnable land in Rowan conntyi about ten miles wert of Salisbury, known as the Mc Kay land. This land will be sold n tracts of 50; to 1"0 aeres. They are among the best lands in a section famed for the excellent qual ities of the soil; and furthermore there is suffi cient timber of fine quality to pay for the land ifjitwere worked up and Bold Pine, Oak, Ashe and Hickory being abundant, and situ ated withiu 2 miles of the Western North Carolina Rail Road. Terms: One-fourth cash and the balance in twelve months. Poirons desiring further in formation will please call on me or Col. W. A. Houck. J. W. MAUXEY, LWr. Sept. 22; 1888, 50: 1 BOOTS, SHOES. an3 flATSfeinS In the Latest Styles and of the ) BEST QUALITY, i jLadies fine hand sewed and opera toes. : Misses spring heel button boots. HE'Elegant variety of children's and infant's slioes. ana big supply of children's Seal Grain. SCHOOL SHOES. - f MEN'S HAND SEWED SHOES. $5l00 to S6.50. I Don't fail to see No nails or tacks to hurt tho feet. Just as smooth asV a hA sewed at one-half tho price. ' . - OA new and handsome lot of ladies' canvass dressing trunks. - - SOFT, CRUSH and STIFF HATS from $100 TO $5.00. -I FANCY .WOOD, GOLD AND SILVER TIP GLORIA SILK I $1.75, $2.00 & $2.50. H Orders Promptly and Carefully Filled. - - I SCHULTZ & VAN WYCK, WH01E3AIE AND RETAIL DEALERS IU BOOTS AND.' SHOES, X MAIN STREET - - - SALISBURY, N.C. Sicx or the inci Gold Boot. - ! OPENING OF At the Dry GockIs Admission Free Doors swing on hinges at G 8 Girls under 12 years entitled to a pretty picture. $3, Boys of all ages entitled to what tltey want at a very low figure. Ladies and Genis get the 1st The Laughable Farce of selling all wool Dress Goods below all com- , ! petition. " . '? 2d The serio Comic Production entitled Brussels at G5c. Other fine Cir pets will join the performance. ' 3d The touching drama of parting with Blankets, Blenchingsnd Bustles at such a sacrifice. - !j 4th The apt Tragedy, Oh ye Tears, wherein comes the trrand rush for i inem oc. nanaKercnieit. -Scenes from Ben liar Famous 5th- made,", showing, how Beautiful Trimmings to match. 6th Historical representation of King Louis QuatorW Reign, rcTiving the then worn Ruchings, Hosiery, Gloves, and Golden Trimmings. 7th Sketches from u Real Life in a Dining Room," giving a true but faint '! idea of the mat chles 5 bargains in Damask Table Linens and Doilers, - 8th-Glimpses from u Herod and Marlamne " by Amelia Rives, revealing an array of latest noveltks in Dress Gocds a:id Trimmings. 9th A short Recitation on Jersey, &c. J 10th The Fall of Rome 'Grand, Gloomy and Peculiar. Rome never fell half as fast as the Cloak Market of Salisbury wiirdo when ours icon' If you want to git to heaven and Goods of us and we will help you all Change of Programme every 30 days. i VAN I .1 i i walking boots, "common .sense - t our " New Process" 3'(V) THE SEASON ' Establishment of . No citm nhjirrrp fnr rpprvwl wats a. m., and hardly close at aQ. . : . 4-' Description " How the Beautiful was our -Dress Goods"look with our. Xe I f ir be able to pay vour debts come bu ' your we can. Come early ahd avoid the rush. ; i ' v - , . . J - - . WYCK & SCHULTZ. - i... : It - if- 6 s r . ' f '' J ' ?-' '"V""..- .' I' 4." " ':' ." .,- " j i, : ' -HP . i. i ; 'S

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