Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 17, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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- r Carolina Watchman. THUBSDAY, JULY, 17, IStt). Speaking from the Bock. j. REPUBLICAN ON JttIS PARTy. "I am old line republican, one of ;the fire-tried sort, and am a republican .to-day ; but I will confess $$utt I have jiever ?en the hour when I thought a southern trhite map could be a republi- fcan and be decent. 1 was a reppbl.ican for monejr." The above are tjie words of D. L. Bringle, Eq., fonnex postmaster ofl Salisbury. Judicial Convention. The Democratic Judicial Convention for the the Eighth Judicial District, is Hereby called to meet in lyexington, rn. 'is., on Thursday, the Zlst day of July, .8iK), for the purpose of nominating candidates for the offtees or uuge ana Solicitor for sajd district. Jor the Committer John C. Uebnhaic)t, June 14, 1S90. Chairman. The 7th District Convention. The democrats of the 7th Congres sional Convention are called to meet in (Convention at Salisbury, at 12 o'clock .on Friday .the 1st day of August 181M), to nominate a candidate for ejection to ihe House of. ieptrese!itatives of the JJnited States. iiy order of Frajsk Brow, Ch'm. Dein. Ex. Com. Papers in the district wjll please .copy. THE CALLS. JH1M ARIES AKD CONVENTION.! FOR 1800. Democrats will note that the boxes or the primaries will be opened at pach vvoting priucinct SATURDAY, the jlOTn DAY OF JULY, at 2 o'clock p. 111., and remain open until 5 o'clock. The following is a list of the judges fit poll holders : Locke VV. A.Urandon, Itufus Safrit, It. F. Graham. ,J Bostian X Roads Dr. M. A. J. Rofc nnn, P. A'. Sloop, Jeremiah Eddlenian. China Grove I. Frank Patterson, JL A. Thorn, J. M. Eddleman. Salisbury J. Allen Brown, J. Frank jVfeCubbilis, J. P. Gowan. ' Unity J. H. Gillian, M. S, Fraley, Jtichard Culbertson. Heilig's Mill A. W. Itu?her, J. D. A. Brown, J. Ilenrv Heilig. Enochville K. L. Smith, D. H. Kim mons, C. J. Deal. Rowan Academy II. G-. Peeler, Alex ander Peeler, Tobias Lyerly. Bradshaw's precinct J. L. Sloan, D. A. loop, J. F. McLean. Mt. Vernon San ford IIenlyf David Flemming, Wm. Steele. Mt. Ulla J. K. Graham, J. K. Good pnan, R. F. McConnell. Cleveland Dan Roscboro, Jas. Barber, Alex Moore. " Steele G. A. Hall, D. E. M. Summer rell, W. L. Kistler. Franklin H. C. Propst, B. F. Shuping, fi. L. Thomason. Gold Hill J. C. Snuggs, J. W. Noah, it. J. Shaver. Hatter Shop precinct S.A.Earnhardt, P. D. Linn, Geo. VV. Long. Morgau Paul Shaver, William Camp bell, Win. Kirk. 1 Bnrnhardt's precinct Moses A. Fes pormau, Crawford A. Miller, Uriah E. "Miller. The Con ven lion for the county of fidwnn will be called to order at the ourt House in Salisbury, at 12 o'clock ,ni., on Sat urday,tiie 20th day of Julv, jto which eonveirtion the primaries will elect delegates and return their vote. The delegates will be elected by the primaries jn the usual way, to-wit: by ,the Primaries, at or shortly after 2 clock. A full expression of opinion is in .every way desirable. Every democrat in good standing should report to his precinct and cast his vote for his .choice. By order of A. H. Bo v den, Ch. Dem. Ex. Com. Vance. Turning Ixion's wheel has always been regarded as an occupation that pys nothing, whether worked by the lay or by the job, and the Proyressiie Fanner s ludicrous haste to give it a whirl has resulted in a teaching along Ahe general line. Elitor Ramsay now represents a grotesque figure, a sort of absurdity. it ; were, in his nijsfortuius because of the oiiixotic imbecility of his attack on the one idol of North .Carolina. , He dipped ,in his pen and wrote him a Plullipic and the only result thus far apparent h.as been a storm of disap proval and protest to beat upon him self and a universal drawing and gathering to our white haired Senator's cause. Thus they stand in I.UUMWI., uie oiu wari governor of North Carolina, supreme IB the hearts of the people, and Mr. Ramsay, whose oiily claim to no toriety or notice is the stupendous na ture of his mistake, and like the man wbaopuUhe torch to the temnle of .of Diana, it is not an enviable sort of ' tame that is his. i .. i " nausjiy 0t mince terms ,wnen when he came to impeach the integrity and indulge in sentences ftuitamount to a charge of peTfic agunsL a venerable gentlemen who Ji i w spent every hour of his . .uaturer nre in serving hi state with a match le faith. Mr. Ramsay did not scrunle to "rh in where angels fear to tre:ul " ? - 1 1 ' it . - ' - tfl tne Kile Imp;? of a victorv over the II . XT-il i- .. . . fti. oriu varonnran ot this staee of the Cent ury. He did not hesitate to attempt to wanton with the character of a nian whom he himself, along with the .host of younger Carolines had be n taught to venerate as$ne incapable of an impulse or a thought not wholly in consonance with the well being of our j and aud its people. By implication and express terms, aud with a hair brained "folly whose only guerdon has been the absurdities of his present po sition, Mr. Ramsay has attempted a violence to the traditions and teach ings of a quarter of a century, to his own better kuowledge, aud therefore Jcnown and unquestioned facts, to the accepted rules of gentlemanly conduct and toward the wb,ite hairs bleached through ihe years of unfaltering ad herance to what we have always and with common acqord proclaimed to be our rights and the right. Mr. Ram say having lent himself to this, by what rule then are we held to the sup pression of the thought that he him self could have been so hopelessly ig norant as to have supposed that the mere introduction of a bill is a tacit .commission to its provisions, even if, as was not 1 he case here, the intro ducer had remained silent. When as wasihe case, the introducer expressly held the matter up for consideration, what other explanation is possible than wantoning with the known facts. In an interview with a State Chron icle's reporter the author of this pur poseless (?) diatribe attempts'to hedge and trim, having seen that his silly mistake has resulted solely to his own remediless damage,but his backing and fillingand begging his own language only serves to illustrate the fact that Mr. Ramsay has notven the courage of his own bad judgment. Years hence when the history of our times is writtenthe deeds and the faith of Zebulon Baird Vance will be cut as torso and relief upon the facade of the temple of State, long after the legend that once a wild, climbing weed attempted to reach and obscure it shall have passed from the memory of man. VVhy docs Mr. Ramsay wish to place Senator Vance on the dunce stool of the Senate? Has he reflected that if our Senator were to vote forthat bill his would be the onlv one it would receive? Why then should he, at his time of life, be asked to stultify him self and his state, in his advocacy of a treasure which Mr. Ramsav knows i regarded byevery grade of people who possess any acknowledged claim to statecraft, as a direct violation in terms of every healthy economic principle. AlKancemen and whole county Al liances are daily declaring against it as a class seeking affair most prejudicial and dangerous to the very class in whose behalf it was framed. Con ceived in demagogery, it had but fe ew friends at its inception and desertion s are of hourly occurrence. Zebulon Baird Vance; soldier of the Confederacy, loved War Governor of North Carolina, S acriflce to the Test Oath in the United States Senate in '63, leader and the forlorn hope of 7C,foun der of first dependence of White Su premacy in North Carolina, leader of Democratic assaults upon tariff op pression, trusts, combines, monopolies finance and currency questions in the benate of the United Shi ' vv" III ' ' " i faithful, and best loved son of North Carolina. Mr. Ramsay, , There is one man in North Carolina who will never hunch himself for a dash at Zeb Vance again, for if a man safely secured untohimself a hoist with hisawn petard it was that same will ingiJuTiuexperienced gentleman. Mother, who comes our wav so rIow .Say, mother, what's hit him and hurt in in so? Did somebody sorrow his min with a maul? Did a chimney reach for him, ma, in its Mil. That, my child, is an editor man; nu nas mm a paper to run as he can He s been being told of the size of his pants By the pi es of the State been foolin wun a nee. Barking at Vance. Besides the puerile attack of one Ramsey, connected with the Progres sive Farmer, upon the great Southern statesman, Hon. Z. B. Vance, a Mr. TomUuson, secretary of the Buncombe pmmfv liVjvmiiVa All: j ui.iK-ia .-nuance, in au in terview with the Asheyille Citizen re porter agrees with the Fanner and says he thinks the article will injure the Senator's chances for a re-election ! When i you W oyer the above, gen tle reader, listtn to this remark of Mr. Touilinson's aboqt Senator Vance: "If his, electi m depended upon a vote Wf the people be would not make it again.'-' If his electiou depended noon a vfp lof the people, he would go back to the suited states Senate, riding on a wave of votes, that rushed along towards IV ashinton. hke the wat ers of Cone- imaug h Lake rushed, when they broke j over South Fork dam. Your vote would be cast for him, would it not, farmer of Rowan? The Citizen says, "when asked if his opinion was Uiat ot a majority of. this county, he said it was." Perhaps, inaylie, but very . doubtful. God pity Buncombe county if it is so. God pity the mother that could fall so low as to spurn, her own son. In Buncombe was born one of the great est statesman North Carolina ever pro duced, and one of the greatest of the South, and his name was Zibulou Baird Vance, .ever the friend of the poor and the .oppressed, and the enemy of the unjust and the oppressor. Do you say farmer friends that Vanee has not ever been zealous for your interests, and the interest of the laboring classes? Why is that the railroads ami some of the railroad men in the state do not like Vance? Per haps it is because he has always op posed corporations, because they have no souls. Whatever you say against Vanse, friend farmer, and the Watchm ,vx does not believe you will say anything or lift a finger against him (you white haired ex-Confederate farmer, who i l i:.L r: i m lust uur iiuiu on a Virginia oaiiie field, and who lived through the dark days of reconstruction, yon are a -XT 1 l v ance man i wnacever you may sav against Senator Vance, remember that the light and lustrj of one of Vance's eyes has gone out. It watched itself out. Watching what? Your interests. farmer and laboring man. Your in terests. widov and orphan. Your in terests, poor and oppressed. Watch ing the tariff that was wrapping you in tax, unnecessary tax, tax that would make you poorer and the rich richer. And when that eye was tired, and the doctor said "rest," it still watched, that Argos eye. But tho strain was too much. It went oab, that ey , look ing out to t!i3 hut, for its oanbry's gooJ. And did fate dem md it, do you doubt the other would go the same way? But the farmers will stand by Vance. lie "Hath borne his faculties so ineek, hath been So clear in his great office, that his virtues Will plead like angles, trumpet-toogucd'5 for his re-seating at his old desk where he "watched till his eye went out; for this and against all attack his chryst.ll clear record, by the Alliance secretary of Buncombe county, the associate editor of the Projressire Fanner, net well enough informed of public affairs, to know how much a Senator's pay was, by the National Economist and all others. Now it is reported that Col. L. L. Polk, who is out west making speeches, and does not know of the attack upon Senator Vance, said that he (Col. Polk) would crawl on his hands and knees all the way from Washington to Raleigh to vote for Vance. Col. Polk can't do any good that way, for he is not in the Legislature aud therefore could not vote for Vance. But this attack upon the Colonel's friend, in the Colonel's absence, in the Colonel's paper, will give the Colonel a grand opportunity to do some craw ling. But the Watchman predicts that Col. Polk will crawl straight in this important matter, aud no backing all around himself like the crawfish he has left in charge of his paper, and in this week's Progressive Fanner is t ly ing to tone down his former rash and regretted utterances. A brainless idiot who signs himself "Pig Iron" is out with a communica tion in the Philadelphia Press. It needs no comment. It speaks for itself. It is as senseless as it could be and the blame should be divided equally be tween the fool who wrote it and the hair-brained editor who did not know enough to exclude it from his columns. In the writer's opinion the Lodge elec tion law is the me;isure that Will re lieve the-North and West from the troublesome competition of southern industries. The whole is as follows : "it is all very well to rejoice in the prosperity and growth of the new Northwest, for there sound views upon the tariff generally prevail, and their progress does not now interfere with ourselves; but the advance of the South is to a grei.t extent at our expense. Her cotton mills compete with those of the New England and Middle States, aud her furnaces are supplying pig iron at rates which make it impossible to run those of Pennsylvania. If the democrats had never been allowed to regain control of the State govern ments of the South, northern capital would iiever have embarked in the de velopment of southern coal and iron; and the surest and speediest way to put a stop to this competition from men who nre our political enemies, as our Commercial rivals, is to carry through and enforce measures like the Lodge election law. They won't like it, and some of them will be fools enough to make trouble about it; aud if we can once more get them into the condition they were liefore 1870 we won't hear any more about cheap iron and cheap cotton gools from the South Ihev will have other thing to think of." vV ashinjton Letter. (Frjm oar rojular orrwpon jent.) Washington, July 14, 1800. Sen ator Gorman has, by common consent, been put in charge of democratic in terests in the fight which is now evi dent will soon be engaged in upon the floor of the Senate. it will be a con solation to democrats throughout the country to know that under his skill ful leadership everything will be done which is possible to be done to prevent the consummation of the republican threat of throttling the minority in the Senate, as Speaker Reed has so ef fectually done in the House. The republ'can Senators who have been opposed to the new force bill, otherwise known as the federal elec tion bill, are slowly yielding to the pressure which has been brought to bear uporfffiem. Even Senator Evarts it is said has, under compulsion, prom ised the new republican boss Repre sentative Belden that he would vote for the bill. It now looks as though the bill-would become u law. It is re garded by republican as ;t-fast desper ate chance to gain enough congress men in the South to offset th Tosses which they are certain to have in other sections. In fact Mr. Belden openly uses this as an argument to convert republican opponents of the measure. Many of the more decent republi cans are disgusted with Mr. Belden 's attempt to manufacture sentiment in favor of the force bill, by sending that remarkable appeal to the republican editors to come to the rescue of the G. 0. P. Much indignation is expressed here over a rumor which has leaked out through British sources to the effect that Mr. Blaine has completely backed down in the Behring Sea negotiations, and that Great Britain is to have every thing her own way. Should it turn out to be true, good-bye to Mr. Blaine as a public man. The American peo ple forgive everything except cow ardice. The two subsidy shipping bills, about which, for certain reasons and promises, Mr. Harrison has been fret ting a great deal, have passed the Sen ate. Even such hide-bound republi cans as Senator Edmunds and Plumb could not stand this bill, -which will take millions just how many no one can say out or the treasury, all of which will go to a certain well known ring already formed in anticipation of the fe;;st at public expense which awaits them when the bills become laws. Only one democrat Senator Payne voted for these bill. ' Thanks to the solid republican vote of the Senate and of the House, it now only requires the signature of Mr. Har rison to complete the degradation of silver and put it on the same footing as coal and iron or any other com mercial commodity. Senator Sher man, the niiui who is responsible for demonetizing silver in lS7i3. is also re sponsible for this latest fraud upon the people, under the guise of friendship. an . onei man is auu nas always Ueeiljw the humble tool ot Wall street, and the provisions of this silver bill, with which he so adroitly bamboozled his colleagues of the conference commit tee, are all in the interest of those money sharks. No democrat stultified himself by supporting it. Speaker Reedjs as mad as a hornet over the article signed u X. M. C." which appears in the current number of the North American Review, slu w ing the mistakes which lie (Reel) has made since he became Speaker. What adds to his anger is the fact that the article is generally understood to have come from Mr. Blaine, who is madlv jealous of the prominence the Speaker has recently gained, although "Gail Hamilton" is the writer of it. The tariff bill is now the unfinished business" of the Senate, the majority having repented of the "ensse'dness" which made them refuse to tiike it. up last Mondav. How fast it will be pushed through wiTT defietid larnvlv upon the action ot t lie republican cau cus. It has been the bonst of Speaker Heed that the House was no longer a deliberative bod v. and now that the Senate seems no longer to adopt the ig rules ot the House, the question naturally arises, why not abolish Con gress, and nt those immaculate saints who now run reoublican party decide upon what shall became laws? There h one consolation, however. 1 he further the republicans ro in their en croachments upon liberty, the more certain it is that the people will rise in their might and thrust, them from the power which they have so trlariiiirlv misused. Gen. Sehofieid will soon bo Lieut. General of the army, unless the repub lican bosses shall decide that the bill reviving that grade hi the armv, which has been favorably reported from the House committee on militarv r.ff airs, shall not be passed, because the otiicer to be promoted under it is not a repub lican. A Solemn Warning. Durham Globe. Col. H. C. Jones, of Charlotte, who a few weeks ago announced himself a candidate for the democratic nomina tion for Congress in the sixth district, withdrew from the contest yesteidav, in view of the fact that it is apparent that Capt. S. B. Alexander will secure the nomination. It will be remember ed that CoF. .lone was the first public man who refused to sign the demands of the Farmers' Alliance; and that he did so not because the demands wore i cecded in remaining afloat aicaiu secured : i - i . i..'.-ui,i .. i i . j repugnant to nun, out because he did not intend to ida4 on any political platform except that of the democratic party. Col. Jones assertion of his manhood and spirit of independence has been the admiration of thousands of his fel lo.v citizens, who will jjive heed to the solemn warning contained in his letter an nouneing his withdrawal, of which the following us an extract : " In the brief campaign in which I have been engaged, my controversy has been not with Capt. Alexander personally,- but with .he political methods of the leaders of the Farmers' Alliance. In regard to them, iTepcat here what. I have said everywhere, that they tend to the disruption of the democratic party. To classify and array the white people of the State, according to occu pation, and to claim supremacy for any one clasiTto the exclusion of the others, is disruption itself, so obvious that he who does not see it is either blind or thoroughly heedless. 1 thank those of my fellow citizens who have kindly tendered me their support, and beg them to remember that what I have said in this connection is not in tended fco incite them to resentment. The consequences to the State are al together too serious to admit of the in dulgence of any hasty r intemperate action or speech. If evil comes wc will see to it that it is not charged to us. We will be faithful to the party, and humbly trust trust that the same good sense and sturdy patriotism which under God has carried our party safely through so maiiv dangers, will avert. too, this latest and greatest of all." them Kearly200 Drowned. AN" EXCLTSIO-N' IJOAT CVTSIZES M I X N ESOT A L A K E. ON A Lake City, Minn., July II. Last night just before Uark, a disastrous cy clone bore down upon this community, and in a few minutes nearly 200 people were k illcd. What appeared to be nn ordinary electric storinjvas noticed coming from the west, but in half an hour the whole heavens had been converted into a lightning-lined black canopy of death. A little before dark a terrific wind struck the village, every one being i-n doors. Trees were uprooted, buildings wrecked, and much damage done in the short time the storm lasted. In a few minutes, the news was abroad that an excursion boat, with over 1'Oi) people on it, was capsize ! in the middle of Lake Peppiu, and it was the Sea Wing, which came down the Lnkc from Diamond Bluff, a small place about 17 miles north of here, on an excursion to the encampment of the First Regi ment, X. H. 8. M., which is being held a mile below the city. The steamer start ed back on the homeward trip about S o'clock, and although there were signs of the approaching storm, it was not considered in any way serious, and no danger was anticipated. The boat w; a crowded to its fullest capacity, about K-0 men, women, and children from Red Wing aud Diamond Bluffbeiugon board, and about -!0 people on a barge which was attached to the side of the steamer. When about opposite Lake City, the boat began to feel the effects of the storm but the ollice: s kept on their way. The storm increased as the boat continued up iho lake, aud in fifteen minutes was at its height. Ncarhig Central Point, about two miles above Lake City, the steamer was at the mercy of the waves which were washing over the boat, and all was con fasion. The boat momentarily ran! on to a bar, and the barge was cat loose innd uic sic:ii:icr aurain nci norm in i lie utKC. A number of those on the bnrire jump ed and swam ashore. As the barge floated again into deep water, those on it saw the steamer as it was carried help lessly into the middle of the lake, and ai they were being tossed about on the rag ing wateis, were horrified a moment later to sec the steamer capsize and its cargo of 150 people preiipitatcd into the lake. Those on the barge remained these until they drifted near the shore, and. they were all rescued and swam ashore. Among tin m v. ne lvo ladies v 1 o were brought to the beach by strcug and will ing sw im mors, As soon as the storm bgan to affect the progress of the beat, Capt. V cat hern gave instructions to run the boat into Wisconsin shore, hut it was too late. The waves were runuing to high to per mit the helmsman to operate lae rudder, .iiui ii. e uoai was in uie complete mercy of the storm. A few moments nfter th barge was cut away, the si earner was carried to the centre of the lake, and the efforts of the boat's crew and the iaorx cool -headed passengers were devoted to preparations for the worst, A dozen or more secured the lew Hfe preservers that were to be found, and jumped into the water, preferred to take their chances. In live minutes waves began to wash into the boat, and lill the lower decks,, aud while hail-stones as large as hen's cgs came dowu en the Loads of the poor and helpless creatures who were huddled together oh the top, a huge wave struck the craft on the same moment that a ler riiic blast of wind, mere horribly forcible than the others, ca'iac up and carried the boat over. Ail of the people on board loO or more, were t how n into the water some being caught underneath and others thrown into the waves. The boat turned bottom upwards, and only about 25 people weic observed floating on the surface. These caught hold of the boat and climbed up on the upturned bottom, those first securing position as sisting the others. In 10 minutes more, 2o or so who obtained momentary safety on the boat couhl observe no others of the boat crew or passengers floating on the surface of the continuing high sea of wave's. Afterward, however, s a flash of lightning lighted up the surface of the lake, the sight of an occasional white dress of a drowning woman or child was observed, but itwasimpt si 1 for those who witnessed the horrible sight to lend any aid. Those remaining began calling for help from the shore, tfoon the storm began to abate, and in half nn hour lights were observed Hitting al cut the pier at Lake City, opposite which point the upturned steamer had now been driven. Before help could reach it, however, the .poor crcajurcs wh,o yet remained to tell the horrors of the night were again submited to another battle with the elements with no word of warning. As they were just beginning to hope that they would be taken off by the citizens of Lake City, the boat again turned over, this time on its side, and again the 25 remaining souls were hurled into the water. Of these, several were drowned before they could be brought to the boat. Those who sue a hold ou the boat's side. In a few momenta a dozen or more row boats were manned and put out from ,.! . t. . 1. i iiiut-, iiunuujiii mo nign sea oi waves l. . i ... upturned doat was at last diseovered. 1 he twenty or more remaining people clinging to the lcat wero rescued and brought to shore,most of lhe;n being men wlu couid swim. KLDTTZ DOUBLE STORES ! DRY GOODS CAPS SHOES . MATTlft The family supply side, like the other, is inexhai Tt ic niiv nnmilinr liiicinocci fn flIWSa nnd fiuul vah i you give us the slightest encouragement we will do it, sunny a greater variety 01 ingii cias yoous ai a smaller cost than it be done elsewhere. With every assurance DllY GOODS Ginghams, Law ns, Dress Goods, Plushes, White Goods, &e. Have the ImmUu. line of Seersuckers, in Solids, Stripes and Plaids in the city All colors. m can be found evervthinir good to eat : Hams, Breakfast Strips, Beef Toimues hj Beef, C'hiekens, Butter, ;r, Eggs, Pickles, etc., etc. Banannas. Ora: of country produce McCunnixs Corner. ThD CrrajiL Amsrican Choms. Sneezing, snufding and coughing.' This is the music all over Hie land just now. "I've got f-'uch an awful cold in my head." Cure k ith Ely's Cream Balm or it may e nd ia the toughest form of catarrh. Maybe you have catarrh now. Kothing is mure nauseous-and dreadful. This remedy masters it as no other ever did. Xot a snuff. Nor a liquid. Pleasant, certain, radical. Some Pitt county farmers have refused $100 an acre for their tobocco crop, just as it stands in the field. The prospect for a big crop is most glorious. i 8 1 M. IA I PIAHO k OiXMI DEALER !YOft. Chickcrii.fr. Mnthushok md Sterling Pianos are too w ell known to the people to require anv introduc tion from me. Every one of them are guaranteed; if they do not plCaFC you, you need not keep them. There are no lower ju ices, nor easier terms offered by any one than those offered by me. fiRCiiiiV$. What arc you going to j I do about that Organ you promised U your wife and daughter? 'Buy noth ing but the celebrated Mason & Hamlin or Sterling Organ, and you are not af-wa-vs havim: them repaired. Str-i-limr Organ t,r only $T,0.00, and Mason & Ham lin's lor only 98.00. Write me for des- j criptivc price list Fi IW I hav of Fm JRil'ITI'ft E Never before since e been in business was mv stock rniture so large and coinidetc in every line as it is to-day ,"Tmt prices were never lower. I keep right up with the styles, nnd represent every thing just as it is. If you buy anything from me and it is not as represented, return it and I will pay your money back. Who could do m o re ? W ho could ask more ? Y ri t e for my prices. f: ;r I sell 98-inch reversible frame MOS QUITO CAXOPIES with all the fixtures for hanging for onlv $2.00. E. M. All DREWS, Charlotte, N. C. 1G and 18 West Trade St. JMBIOSEIiTITUIEsiS This school is tiluatcd inorio of the mnt hcnhhful fcc!joi:s of the SoutU. It is Iho lamtt lYivatc Scliool . North CanJina. 2G7 stuck-ius dnrin year jtiM c-1kh. I i.tl Courier, for in.-ja ration r,,'r l.olle:,'i. TcHliius. ynslo. Hook keeping, lvttmaii : up. shorthal. Tclesrranhy. Tvpcwritinor. ScnJ J.r Ijcamiial lih:strakil CatatQguo Addraz: . PrdHCIPALS, OAK niDCG, H. 0. UALI3BURY.N. C. ITALIAN BEES, Ten stands for sab'. Enouire of Wm. Murdoch. Salisbury, X. C. C3:lia FMHITOR Q. TIT11T1T niaff w 01 nLnULMIAfl u MM m A 141 B M I 1118 B T A7TTT n rxrriv in f rv.v NOTIONS CARPETS CLOTHING HATS MATTS b. m w -m ni s-s KLUTTZ & RENDLEMAiff CK0CHUIK Mv spring stock is now in and I have an elegant assortment of SmkmL FIIUITS! rs. Lemons, Apples, and Cocoanuts. 1 buy and sell :ill V,j.J ltlMll'I'l fid I V .... - - v" n mi 1 Y OUNG. LVi: -o- i in- jiaiuu oi every wan m Western North ( 'aroffna k has timber land, improved aol uniniproved,nirm lands, ton bkfiJ 1nd lM-nnnvdno i .i. .r.l 11'. ifnist have bottom -prices, full clear and correct tloscriptiou Persons fishing to hnv, m or rent proiiprtics m ill lind it tt tneir interest to write to otl call on McCUBBINS & mm ESTATE AGENTS, SALTSI:ri:Y, x. c ) THE CEI.EllKATEI) Southern prize T Epeeip.lly p;ood for Winter use. greens. tSend 10 cents' in silver J stamps, to .the Oruhtins, and eetlH m I ' ounce, or 3 ounces lor 25 tcnis. U UA11ANTEE-D GEX CINE. Refer to J. S. Myers. S. K Aloxanfe ,ani McD. WatkinsJ SEV. E. At 03BOHNE, rsupt. ThoiKjisuii irphanape. j j 307 N. Graham St., Charlotte, X.C A SALE! Sm ckirg Tobacco Machinery, aH - cnines weeaea Jjiquorw .iB.oiler3af9. The above articles will be sold atp lie auction in Salisburv. on Satunhjj July 2Gth, 1890, unless .-old at priva salcr before date fixed. THEO. F. Kid TTZ.Attr. FallrTerm Opens Sept, 5. Tuition JW l-vnir regular courses of study, classical"! special courses in (3li( mlsin . ( Illaalfc!ffIW1 Eniftneehrig. ritaunacv.-aiui Ml.or iwin- s Htparatv bcIiooIh OI Law aid M-UIOW." aiuui'iub may aiit'ua uie lann1.1 Address. , . ...... . . r II n. HUN. KEMP P. BA I iLt. -v( 3T:4t -Prohldeiit. ( iiaUlWU,.'- SALE OF YalnaKe Cmton Press &.fin Ac ociiimnn . c Aiia.H !inl d'r"' w in sell at Cleveland ,1S.L. on ;""'TL the 23(1 dav of Aiioiki IS! l. to the W est bidder, for cash, the follow ing23l ..I n) Phin eottr.n iin nno 1?i--s ( alia A 7 ' - I 10 JlOlsn nnu-nr lw.iU r Mini II UlUC , bined. This property is ing6 used. W. A. U ' KM- Julv 7. 1890. At Assg, DrnollnrlrJ.vn Pnknll irmCflf I UICU UyC UdUC Hi V;.,iniaJ iiujiu xeeii a resuieni oi 17 veai-s. nnd tins an exten-ivej11 1- 1 1 1 . 1 '3W W ti - w ;l . . 11 l- 1 f With rariitsilivtt:. Wi ell "L lire tiinlaT. mineral and ; turul lands, and tmdevefened intu' WiU also Orcrtiiiiyn tipdf'Vi'lorC 1 m ties into eorroralions suid il -. J 0trifW KL-ilbi1 I ,l,r fiillll-ill dllstri:il ittt-tvaaa Hm ill ' WANTED ! j,. ... ... o'.Jt liroadway, N-w York, 'v
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 17, 1890, edition 1
2
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