Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Jan. 17, 1889, edition 1 / Page 2
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i - - . 1-1 t Carolina Watchman. -THURSDAY, JAN, 17, 1889, : sator axuo The man v friends of Senator" Kn- j ----- i - .-.- . , - i..- . . ..- :ia thiparlt ejf the State are pleased to Uiear of bis noraipation fof jthefonrth ;t mens senator from North Ciirolina. Senator Ransom i kBown among colleagues in the United States Sen ate as an able and accomplished stat.s , juan j and North Carolina honors her self by returning him. -We gi re a brief n'cetch of hw life from Dowd's sketches f prominent North Carolinians: - ; "Senator Ransom was born In Warren I county, this State in 1820. For more than half a life-time he has been a con- ' .sicuous personage, and a man of rec- ionized ability and pronounced influ ence in North Carolina. Shortly after pa graduation from the University, at Chapel Hill, in 1847, he was admitted -to the bar, andxfive years later he was fleeted Attorney Geueral of the State, IVw men have merited or on such - success so early in life, and fewer have i'ollowed it with so continuous -a public srvice. In 1855. he resigned the At torney Generalship, and was not again ill office until the year 1858, when he was a representative in the State Legis ature. Andagainin 1859 and 1800, lie filled that position. He was sent as a Peace Commissioner from the State of North Carolina to the Congress of . i Southern States at Montgomery, Ala., L i i 1801. On the breaking out of the I - civil' war h: entered the Confedentte j .'.nny, and rose successively through the i position of Lieutenant Colonel, Colonel and Bri 'adier General to that of Major -General; In the last nanied rank h - -jserved to the close of the war, and sur rendered with General Lees army at Ap pomattax. As a soldier Genenil Ran som showed himself to be a courag- . aous man and a brave and skillful of - i!c;r, and be endeared himself greatly jv his humane m niieement and cour- teous' bearing, to the men of his .com mand. T Returning to lib native Stale at the close of the war, Geneial R:n- som resunml Ijif practice" of. law, i;t the sjime tinvj beng engage.l extensively :.aa planter, and it was not until the i - year 1872 that he again entered public ' life. Then, for the first time, he was elected -.to the Senate of the United States, a position he has occupied con tinuously until the present time, hav wg been re-elected, in loto . ana in 1883. Senator Ransom is a man of marked ability and of broad culture. -- j . ' -i i Though he has seldom made set speech ta in the Senate yet his effjrts have beeii chamcterized by those qualities of C jns rvative good sense, elegance of ex- pje Jiioiiand grace of delivery that are peculiarly his own. "Speech is silvern, but silence is golden."' Perhaps it is owing to a wise , observance of this truth that Senator Ransom has wielded more than an ordinary influence in the - Senate and has i accomplished so much for his State; and the frequent and lib : ral appropriations he has been instru- ; meniai in pncuriug ior river ana nar bor improvements on our Eistern coast,, bear testimony to his success in v ihis regard." i 5 However n ticent-"SenatorxRansom nis'y have leen in Washington, he ha"h made many speeches in North Caro lina during his Senatorial career, and t RW4; P5ecne8 wherever de!i vered, have been exceptionally able and elegantly finished." ' v- - fStnator Ransom has resided for a fmmberj of in Northampton county, aboiight eight miles" from Weldon, IIl f ir comity, his post-office. .He is propretbr ofa large and welt-cultiva'el landed estate, nd he passes, his re:t time there with his family."- , Another horse car tieuup is threaten ed in Brooklyn, j ,The Rev, R. G. Pearson is holding a series of meetings in Gnenville South Carolina, X i ' For a body of new men unused to legislation, our Legislature is getting ' jlown to work handsomely. The indemnity deinandeil bv the pwnei-h of the Jla) tien Republic has een settlkl. It amounts to $120,000. y ' ' - ' - HA colowV woman was struck by the outh bound R. & D. freight tram near Charloite yesterday, and instantlv killed." I !. JThe nc-v dya-tmite cruiser Vesuvius (i.M att iiied a seed of nearly twepty Ao mils an hour. Who says we are n.t going to haje a navy g ' .; j By a fire inHew York city on tie J3th. 13 tprses wer burned to death, and two ; tttheire burnT'so b:idlv Uat they had to be killed; y ' , Sprae of te ading-ictinyj ofthe toroa:". dkiaUr were- buried Sunday. The f und for the relief of the stiffen rs 1 t Us ,v wacM nearly l(f000. ! i James Winter was beaten and-stab-1 bl in a very serious manner by strikjy ers becatise he refused to ..qalt work, iit a carjiet f;ictory in New York citv. J h:; Secretary Whitnejr keenly feels the wantof ftio'ii?h war shitw to look out for A merittsiirin terests just now'. They are badly needed in Hay ti, Samoa, and Central America. Trouble is brewing among , the inin- inir mar 1 n ircritiiti unrl i' , , . ..... Governor has , ordered the militia to hold themselves in readiness to go to the scene of trouble. Secretary Fairchild is in New York and will make a pretty ' clean sweep of the appraisers office m i hat city on account of alleged frauds perpetrated by some of the officers. The Democrats of the Massachusetts Legislature iu caucuss Tuesday nom inated Hon. P, A. Collins for H. S. Senator, and the Republicans nomina ted Hon. G. P. Hoar. An attempt has been made to blow jup the palace of the Archbishop of Valencia, Spain The weapon used was a dynamite petard. The damage caus ed by the explosion was slight, j There seems to be no objection in our State papers to the pensioning of our maimed and dependent veterans, and there will in all probability j be a bill passed during this session giving them all ihat our means will allow. The Anarchistic friends ol John Most have turned on him and in a cir cular they say "he has become a gree dy, self-seeking schemer, and incorri gible liar and a scoundrel, defaming everybody who refused to bow down at his dictation," At a public meeting at Uingharaton, New York, Mr. Powderly stated I that the orders of Knights of Labor ! were being used' for mercenary motives, "that a Philadelphia man who lately started a new order had offered to sell it out to him for 100, aifd Bid previ ously tried to sell .iftoJohn Wana maki r." The sudden spasm of enthusiasm on the part of Representative Weaver in favor of the Oklahomi bill, is thought to arise from his desire to be - electel delegate to rep resent that territory, in the House. Weaver is a chronic aspirant for 6fflce, and having been-left out in the cold by his Iowa constituents, he probably wants to catch on somewhere e!seL Thomas A. Stevens is now on his way to Zanzibar, under the auspices of the New York World, kT take charge of an expedition fitted out by that pa per for the purpose of finding Stanley and Emin Bey. In case Stanley and Emiu Bey return before he reaches where they are supposed to be he is to devote himself to an investigation of the African slave trade. There is a general feeling that the rules governing the House of Repre sentatives are entirely too complicated. Some rules are of course necessary to protect the rights of the minority, but there is jio necessity or reason for hav ing rules which enable one man to 4jlock all legislation whenever he may feel disposed for art. indefinite period, as Weaver did for four days last week. Such things as this will give theRe- publicans an excuse, when they control the House, for so changing the rules as to deprive th minority of all the rights to which they are entitled. An internal war is now f.oing on in Kansas. Two rival towns (Cimnron and Ingalls) are fighting over the county seat. Cimai oa had the Court House but the people of Ingalls came over and covered the county officers - with guns and told, them not to. move, while others carried off the county records. The two towns are in arms with breast works thrown no and the churches turned into arsenals, even the women were-enlisted and, given ) arms. The Governor has sent troops to quell the disturbance and -haH promised a searcbihg inquiry iuto the claims of the two towns. 'V Senator Morgari is still after Canada with a sharp stick. He proposes to offer the followiug amendmeut to the Senate tariff bill this week- I " laws and parts of laws iwhich exempt from; the payment of duties any articles of commerce upon "...I L 1 :i- . . which uuues are imposed in tlm act, when in1 trar.slt through the- United states t, or ffoiu the Djmfnion of , ... uvuuj vicviiweu 19 ue in- operative." There i 1,'itU --- iuuiiuimi : mat me repuoucans will support this 1 ft m . . mu54nni,as 11 would practically be mV p, , T IeSlslut,on I mlg1 4 4 . ".UU " Waddell & Pemberton. A Land of Lamentation. : Below we give the speeches of HonngpyoNE.OTRjpEj, beading,. pens- Alfred M. WuddeM' and Hon. Saml.j J. Pemberton lefore the the Electoral j n ii - f r ' Li r -ii ' College in R ileixh last Monday, placing . -m omin itiou Grover Cleveland and : Alio... n Ti,.n,nn fc. Dw.iJar,!- f Vice-President; t Mb. Pkepiuext: I have "the honor to nominate Grover Cleveland, of 'New York,' for President of the Uuited States. ; , I exnected another to Derforni this duty and to sav what is appropriate to this occasion jt ja not my ion until a few moments ago. uiy puipoee to make auy ex tended remarks, and least of all to in dulge in auy speculations as to the caus es of the disaster which recently over took the democratic iarty, but, having been recently confirmed in some opin ions on the. subject, I may bepardoued for saying a few words. The boldest-mariner is not always the safest navigator. If he miscalculates the condition and force of the wind and tide and steers straight for theJigyen where he would b?, with out regard tatl e u, or how his sails arc tri mined, he is apt to meet with disaster. x So it is in politics, and the result of the late election furnishes a striking illustra tion of it. Those who navigated the great ship Democracy tried to put her into port before the tide was full high, and when the wind, which would soon have swelled all her Fails had just begun to ripple the surface of the waters. They therefore drifted and went ashore, but not upon the rocks, thank iod. She is only 011 a sand shoal, and when the tide rises she will float again un harmed in hull or rigging and although this trip is lost, she will yet reach her destination. That the tide will rise is as certain as that the ship has struck, and when it rises it will ebb no more, Taiifi reduction ts as inevitable as it is just, and the faith of every true democrat iu it will remain unshaken until it comes. The democracy of North Carolina abide its coming with absolute confidence, and in the meantime they do not propose to crawl before their victorious adversaries or solicit charity at their hands. They expect no favors at the bauds of the administration and could not ask them without a sacrifice of st If respect. They expect justice to be administered, but they expect it to be uu.inisU'red through republican agencies, land with the selec tion ot tnose agencies iney win noi con cern themselves. - I do not fear any hostile action by Mr. Harrison towards our section of the country. The universal opiuiou Is that he is an honest man and personally in corruptible and for that very reason I anticipate that he will have some trouble iu his own political household. Indeed am sure. he will have a very warm time, and will be cordially, hated, not by his Southern countrymen, but by the corrupt and agressivc elements of his own party. Our duty is plain let us discharge it faithfully and feailessly. Let us keep our organization intact let us constant ly insist on reforms in legislation and in the methods of administration let us make no compromise of principle-, and cherish no unseemly yearning after the flesh-pots; but with loyalty to our coun try and to our political faith, le t us, pa tiently, but with unflagging devotion, await tbe coming of the next quadreuial struggle, and when it is upon , us let us quit ourselves like men and win a glor ous victory, The College proceeded to ballott for a candidate for President as follows: For Grover Cleveland, of New York, eleven (11) vote. While nuaiber ol votes cast eleveu. Nominations for a candidate for Vice- President of the United States being next 1 in order, lion. Samuel J. i'emberton, of the sixth district, placed in nomination the name-of Hen. Allen G. Thurman, ol Ohio. Mr. Pemberton said that as a Dem ocrat this noble old Roman needed no word of introduction in a college of dem ocratic electors nor did the great princi ples of democracy require any bolstering speech. The result of the last contest, though disastrous to the dcnix-ratie par ty, did not in any manner weaken the allegiance of t he party to its principles nor dampen the ardor of its supporters. This is not a lasting defeat, nor one ol principle, and the North Carolina de mocracy will be found four years hence more fully organized, stronger in battle for reform, wit'i no surrender of a single principal now advocated. It is the only hope of the people of this section and must be maintained. We can and will be once more placed i:i charge of the affairs of the nation if a firm and determined people will but stand should er to shoulder in support of the demo cratic doctrines and principles so dearly loved and proudly proclaimed by Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio. The College cast its eleven votes for Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio. l)r. Crafts, of New York, who is a strong advocate of "Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy,1 has a petition signed by 14,000,000 persons asking Congress to aid in making Sun day free from all work, which he will present at its next session. Senator Plumb struck the New England brethren in a sore spot whin (instated, in a short but vigorous speech ou the duty on fresh fish., pack ed hi ice, that New England was for either protection or free trade just as one or the other favored-her own in terests. The Senator certainly had a good right to complain of the fivsh fish schedule as jit was; it admitted fresh fish in their ordinary condition tree, giving New England the benefit of low prices; a duty was placed on fresh fish picked for long distance transportation, thus making the people of the interior p:iy large prices for them. The result of Mr. Plumbs re marks was the adoption of an amend ment making the duty on fresh fish of all kinds one-half cent per pound. I have been a sufferer from catarrh for the past eight years. Having tried a number of remedies advertised as "sure cures' without obtaining any relief, 1 niesovct never to take any other pat- eui ineuicin es, when a friend advised me f i Ivii f 1 r, .v. TV.!. T.l:.l ;.i,u v J jr uil 9 vimiu uuiiii. 1 IliU su Mini great reiuciance, out can now testify I witn pleasure that after using it for six weeks 1 believe my self cured. It is a the Islauds of Sigarga,-a -rorp 21 ' miles uiot agreeable ncmedy an invaluable ' northwest of Coruiiua.'tpmn: It is sup Balm. Joseph Stewart, C21 Grand A vv posed that oue hundred ' persons vi-H Bi-ookly.1. . " .' j . 'V tdrowucd. - 1 . ' - hylvania f " : Heading, Pa., J in. j lO.There is Iliourilillir ami sorrow in iuuiiv uuusvuuiun f . r" I " " a..J 'im.J! .in r .1-..1K hau-H over the city. Father. and uiotu- er.-. brothers and sisters, relative and fi-iemU are grief-stricken I over the work of last night.' Over one hundred voices are hushed forever iu death as the result of the wreck and ruin wrought in this city by the storm last night. The cyclone left theentirecity in dark ness, which was only relieved by electric : lights and huge fires, which shed their ; lurid glare 011 the scene of death. All uigut long urave anu willing nanus as sisted in the work of rescuing the dead. The disaster is fully us bad as reported in these dispatches last night. The list of fatal cases will fully reach one hun dred, and may be more. Hospitals and undertakers' establishments are filled with victims, physicians are all busy and many private houses have been opeued for tin accommodation of the injured. DAY BREAKS ON THESCHEXE. When the first gray streaks of early morning appeared it portended a beauti ful and happy day, but not for the grief stricken residents' of Reading.'" The smiling sun appeared, and everything was directly in contrast, with the fury of last night, i Then everything was dark, dismal and foreboding, and finally wound up in the sacrifice of 100 lives. To-day all is again bright and glorious in the heavens as though mocking the work of last night." THE RUINED SILK MILL presents a scene of desolation. The Pol ish Church disaster several mouths ago was one of the most terrible accidents that had startled the community, but the loss of life by the fatal cave in of the lloor when the dedication ceremonies - 1 m - were being conducted on a quiet Sunday afternoon sinks into comparative insig nificance when placed in a parallel with the awful visitatiou of last evening. Words of sympathy, heartfelt tokens of condolence, will doubtless not be want ing, but they will be meaningless ex pressions if unaccompanied with some substantia! offer of assistance to some of the families who have been so suddenly and heavily stricken. Washington letter. (From our regular correspondent.) Washington January 14th, 18S9. Evidently President Cleveland has no hard feelings towards Jlr. Calvin 8. Brice, who was the democratic manager in the recent disastrous campaign, what ever some people may say. Mr. and Mrs. Brice have been guests at the White House for several days, and at Mrs. Cleveland's brilliant reception Saturday afternoon, her first public reception of the season, Mrs. Brice assisted. Iu order to stop Representative Weaver from fillibustering, Speaker Carlisle has agreed to recognize him to-day for the purpose of making a, motion to suspend the rules and pass the Oklahoma I ill. The motion it is expected will be met by lillibustering on the part of the oppo nents of the bill. Mr. Carlisle's action in making a bargain with Mr. Weaver had shown what he could do by blocking the I louse for four entire days, and ex pressed his willingness to keep it up in definitely. There was only one other way of stopping him: that was to refuse to recognize him when he innde a mo tion, and that was a precedent which Mr. Carlisle considered entirely too dan gerous to make now of all other times. The National Wool growers Assoi ia tion which was in session here last week, don't want the earth, although it must be c infessed that they seemed to be wil ling to accept a large part thereof. Not satisfied with the protection given them by the Senate tariff bill, which is much greater than they need, they prepared a wool schedule of their own, un-1 ap pointed a committe to present it to the Senate finance committee, with the moK est request that it be incorporated in the tariff bill in place of the present sched ule. They will be left. The Senate will consider the wool schedule this week, but it won't be the one fixed up by the wool growers. The election is now over. I understand .that Representative An derson, of Kansas, proposes to lead the fillibustering against the Oklahoma billj -Kx-Senator Mahone sent a delegation of Virginia republicans to Indianapolis last week, to urge his claims upon Harri son for a eat in the cabinet. He is a schemer from way back, but the impres sion here is that Harrison knows him too well to take him into the Crbinet. Gigantic Frauds. New York, Jan. 12. Secretary Fair child has ordered that all the special Treasury agents iu the country who can oe spared from their posts of duty shall hesten at once to this city to assist in a thorough top-to-bottom investigation of the office of the appraiser of the port. This important step is the result of a conference at the custom house yester day afternoon in the collector's ofllcvj between Collector Magone and Appraiser A. B. Stearns, qf Bjston, who has tempo rarily taken charge of ihe office made vacant by Mr. McMullin's removal. Ev idence ofa startling nature as to the cor ruption and rottonncss of the appraiser's office under Mr. McMullii.'s uianagcineut was presented. There is not the slight est hint reflecting ujnin the personal in tegrity of Mr. McMulliu, whose unfortu nate position, after a long and faithful orvice of thirty-six years in the apprai ser's office, arouses general sympathy among the custom house officials. But there seems to be no doubt what ever that the most gigantic frauds have been perpetrated during the past three years in which he has been the head of that most important office. Certain 'merchants have been favored at the ex pense of the government and of honest importers, under valuations on an enor mous scale have been permitted and the Treasury Dcpartmentiiasbeen defrauded of millions of dollars. That may seem like a strong statement but it comes from no less a personage than Appraiser Stearns. According to the Nashville 'Argonaut Nash county in 1888 raised 16,021 bales cottony worth $640,000, i Of tobacco it says: Iu 1884 there were not twenty-fiw acres of tabacco planted in Nasn county, and only one tobacco barn iu the county. Our people knew nothing of the cultiva tion or curing of bright tobacco,- and have naturally gone low in the matter, still they planted about 600 acres the pa year, which has netted them, as near as can be estimated, about 100,000, or an average of $166 per acre. A large steamer has been wrecked off f ; : Our Rabbit Skin. Well, it is so and wo canprove it, that one firm in Winston has a 1 read j shipped this winter 28,320 rabbitskins. This is only one firm, reinetnler, and they don't make a specialty of dealing in - rabbit skins, , either. We have -several other merchants who -ship, perhaps, equally as many. We have got another surprising item in store that we wiHgive in a few days. We have many industries here iu Winston-Salem, a statement of whose business would prove a genuine surprise to many. AH of our industries have been hid under a bushel, so to speak. In a measure this 'could not be helped. Living at the end of a branch road it iso lated us from the worlds but the new railroads leading in here will soon open up this Eden of the West, so that the out side world may see our infinite resources for producing wealth.- Twia-Citif Daily. Tb.9 President and Vice-President. Raleigh, X. C, Jan. 14. The electo ral college met here at noon to-day and chose F. N. Strudwiek President, R. M. Furman, Secretary. Hon. A. M. Waddell nominated Grover Cleveland for President. Cleveland re ceived eleven votes and was declared the unanimous choice of the college. J. Pemberton nominated Allen Q Thurman for Vice-President, who in like manner received a unanimous vote. E. W. Pan, Jr., was chosen messenger to carry the returns of the vote to Washing ton. Richmond, Va., Jan. 14. The presi dential electors met at the Capitol here to-day and formally cast the State's ten votes for Grover Cleveland and Allen G. Thurman for President and Vice-President. Ed. Meredith, of Greene county, was elected messenger. Glorying in their Shame. Both the Republican organs in this city seem to think that it was a verv ' smart" thing in Quay, Clarkson audi Dudley, the officers of the National Com mittee of their party, to buy the stolen mailing lists ot the Voice, the Prohibition organ, knowing them to have beeu stolen, for the purpose of sending to its readers "counteracting" documents. Several Republican lenders, it is said, telegraphed their "congratulations" to this precious trio on its "fine work" in this matter. As a companiou-pifcee to this picture of current Republican campaign methods, two prominent members of the party in California have written a letter to Gen eral Harrison revealing to him the ident ity of the writter of the Murehisoii de coy letter, which they characterize as "an act transcendent iu its political ef forts." AVir lor&! World. Mahone Endorsed for the Cabinet. Columbia, S. C, Jan. 15. The Re publican State Executive Committe, at their meeting here to-day, unanimously endorsed Mahone, of Virginia, for the position of Postmaster General in Harri son's Cabinet, and recommended Ellery M. Brayton, Republican State Chairman, and late Collector of Internal Revenue, for appointments to one or the other ol the bureau positions by South Carolina Democrats, desiring him to be cither As sistant Secretary of the Treasury r Comptroller of the Currency. Brayton is a white man of northern birth ! Mrs. Cleveland's EeceptioD. Washinctox, Jan. 12. Mrs. "'Cleve land's tirst reception of the winter to the ladies of Washington ! this afternoon brought a large crowd to the President's mansion long before the doors were oiicn cd at 3 o'clock. The weather wag beautiful, and proba bly t wo thousand ladies, few of them ac companied by gentlemen, passed through tne imc Itoom and shook hands with the President's wife. Col. Wilson made the introductions. Swift Vengeance in Himtri. New Floukxck, Mo., Jan. 12. Isaac Willi, who escaped from the Pan ilk- jail, where he had been confined for an unsuccessful attempt to murder his wife. turned up here; yesterday and renewed his attempts. The city marshal proceed ed to arrest him, when Willi shot him through the heart. A nosse followed the murderer and killed him. Goff Elected. Charleston, W. Va.. Jan. 12. Th Supreme Court to-day rendered a deci sion squashing the writ of prohibition against Judge Guthrie. This virtually takes the election natter ofit of the hands of tie Courts and disposes, of all obstacles preventing the Kecrutary of State from certifying to the returns, from Kanawha, which elects Gofl by a major ity of 106. I Sweeping Ortt the Republicans. Richmond, Jan. 12. A clean sween ot all the Republicans employed ou the new City Hall building Mas made to-night. The action was taken by. direction of the Democratic committee on public grounds and buildings of the City Council, which issued the edict: "Put none but Demo crats on tard." Father and Son Arrested for Fraud. Topkka, Kan., Jan. 12. Ex-Treasurer Joseph Fields of Wauhausce county and Joseph Fields, Jr.; the present Treasurer, have beeu bound over to the District Court, for embezzlement, the former in the sum of $15l000 and the latter, $5,000. Both furnished the bail. Straining at a Gnat Why raise ft religious fuss about spend ing $100,000 on n Inaugural Ball and keep silent about the millions spent in buying votes? Have the days come again in which it is easier to swallow n camel than to get outside a gnat? San Francisco Alt. Maj. W. B. Clement and Rev. C. S. Cash well came near meeting with a very serious accident on last Saturdav, in their attempt to ford Ceda Creek, near Farmington, which was verv much swol len by the recent rains. Their buggy was washed down the creek, aud it was with difficulty that they succeeded in getting themselves and the horses out. Davie Timen. Gen. Harrison's "bugle note for a pure ballot" is interpreted by some of his sup porters as referring entirely to the South ern States and having no relation to the notorous bribery in Indiana and other Northern communities. Nete York World. . Xew York is about to select the design for her Grant monument. Hav ins pcr- formed that arduous task she will then sit down and kindly allow the restof the country' to put up money to ertct the structured Xntliinir mtn iIiahi Fowle's Majority 15,000. WE promised the people that ir Judge Fotwle was elected Governor of Nrth Cir olina, we would sell Goods 10 per cent, less than any House in Salisbury. Look at This: 1 $0.00 Suits reduced to $4.00 1 7.00 " " " 5.00 -10.00 " " " ' 00 20c. double-width Dress Goods 12Jer J White Blankets 1 1.00 fer pair. Gjy ft .jii 5I13J 51. ) le Cheapest limTof DRY GOODS, 1 NOTIONS, HAT3 & SHOES, GEOCEHIES ...... AMD.. CROCKERY in Salisbury. Do not take our word for it but come and see for yourselves, Respectfully, D. R. JULIAN Si GO. P. ti. THOMPSON & GO. MAXUFACTUREKS, Sashi Doors, Blinds, wS; Scroll Sawing, Wood Turning AND CASTINGS OF ALL KINDS- DEALERS IX Steam Engines and Boiler?, Steam and Water Pipe, Steam Fitting, Shafting. Pulley Hanger. . AI.80 Michinerv of all kin Is repaired orf SHORT NOTICE. Mar. 15, '88. If Ross & McCul)l)ins, COTTON BUYESS. Bays ftp Mills ai!u Exporters. Will Ity cc'ttcn bled in thcetii g Virlaps or an good bagging. SEE THEM BEFORE YOU SELL. AT WALLACE'S! FOR THIRTY DM. FINE sunv, ' - OVERCOATS, I & PANTS, At Slaughtering Prices ! Soots & Shoss reduced 1 0 p. cenf. HATS Reduced lSpJrojai. All woolen goods reilucod laryolj-. Tins is oxi.y for .'JO'.davs, i Call and ?ee and hear rates. VICTOR WALLACE. AND GIVING GREAT Bargains PRICES From One Cent up Call Mi price lis Gdi FIELD, REDUCTION Racket Store BROOK JN3. A. UOYDEX. 1S33 u A' i 1 -tofc! BSYII & DEALERS HI Gotion, Grain, 1 Fertilizers Agricultural Implements - ; .. i. . - " j Wagons, v ' i ? w r Buggies, Cariia-es - Road Carts, I - - ' i &c, &c. ILIZERS! WE ARE NOW Ri:CKIYlN( P GE1R ESTABLISHED - ' AND ' - I . 1 VALUABLE Bnflp, which we will ,ffvr to t he TrndL T ' mm Ficure AVD Easy Temis to Farmers. The entire .eatif;icl ion given bv ourGs- unos Inff Season jiistitioHs in sua in" fl.a there are nmie hetter than ur " Farmer's Fr AGBieULTURSL WE IMVE THE Icli Cultivator, For Corn, Cotton, Tobacco, &e. THE SYRACUSE IS NOW PERFECT. Call ax 1 see THE iEVSRSABLE HILL-SiQE PLOW AND CLAIlirS is something that every farnit iYtrft4 ils. -i-O We will jvivihel.'mlilVj. prices for Cottn,Ctt ami all kiiMls of tirain. JatCall ami ere i. . il KiMCt':ir, j ; i j . i j Oar SjriDff M ( Bffaso - j ! t COTAfAl -.. i s . y ' : - ! 1
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Jan. 17, 1889, edition 1
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