Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Oct. 30, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The Carolina Watchman. - Yni,-THIED;!SEEIES, SALISBURY. H. C. THUESD2LY, CCTOIEE, 30, 1890. K0. 0 I for Infants and Children. . .ori2 bso well adapted to children that . Sfflcnd itas superior to any prescripts 1 r-4 T ,1-1 TM 7" II. A. AUtuus iJ. i- ixrorU t., Brooklyn, of ' rostoria ' is so universal aril "15 Wit known that it seems a work merits s U) endorse it. Few are the 3 "SfSilies who Uo not keep Castoria WW-'1 CARLOS UlRTTM I D. New York City. uioomiao'dale Informed Church. Caatoria cores Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worm, gives Bleep, and promotes di pcstioh7 Without injurious medication. - " For several years I hare recommended your ' Castoria, ' and shall always continue to do so as it has invariably produced beneficial results." EnwtN F. Pardek, M. D., " The Winthrop," 1:2th Street and Tth Are., New York City. Thx CfarratTB Compawy, 77 M us rat Stbut, Kew York. BUY! t. w. w i i i . i i n mmm m u a i mr m mm m mm a m mm a n ' . ' i i i i mm i i r i r n r. i iiiiii iiiiiii.iiaini.i h i rr. ii u ui iRLUi u J- uuiui uliivi w uuvi iuu vi U liVWV'" I - - EN SALISBURY. -r 1 T . . . ,1 'C J . 1 C T.'' jo'ffcTiiifj-tmJ I. argent and J sent Assortea piot-K ui rurni- tmc ever brought to tins place. 6 H 02 V y S3 PAIil.OR SUITS! - Mid air Crush Th.sh at (( f CO. Foifl.tr prut $7.j.C0. Silk Tmsh nt iii CO. Fmmcf price, y piu-h at 'f"r.C0. Fkin.cr price, :?4.i.('.(). PIANOS iStI) orOANS. tn AVI.ru- Or.ar'n in ! Dt liT I5ris . Cirirktrin-.i: b' i:s wi ll Wlue'tx-k l'i; ht t. VXD VAWM SUiTS ! AiMiquc Oak, Aiijtique Ahlu-, Clierr snl Wiilnul at prir s M ai clvty n iiipitition. A I.AUGE STOcK Of Cl;tvrs,.Snft, JlnttusstS uf all Einil", Spiing lktls, "Work Tables for Latlic, I'icHiLis and Piturc Frames of every stle ainl quality alw a s in stock, or will Ins iiiiilc to oulir oil il.oil rotiee tit nason atHe prices. " A Fashionable Trajer. OlVC menn eve to other.' fUiltnoni hlttirl M i.ss Smith'." View bouiiet'it quite a fright aeiuuu. Wake in me charity for the suffering poor There eo ui os that contribution plate once morel Take from inv soul all foot hie- nf mmtMM I'll have a shawl like that, or make a IU. Lat love for all my kind my spirits stir Save Mrs. Jones I'll never speak to her! Let me in truth's fair pages take de light I'll read that other novel through to night! Make me contented with my earthly state I wish I had married rich. But it is to late! Give me a heart of faith in all my kind Miss Brown's as big a hypocrite as you'll liud! Help me to sec myself as others see This dress is quite becoming unio me! Let me act no falsehood, I appeal I wonder if they think these curls are reai! Make my heart of humility the fount How glad I am our pew's so near the front! . Fill me with piatience and strength to wait I kuow he'll preach until our dinner is later Take from my heart each grain of self conceit I'm sure tlje gentleman must think me sweet! Let saintly wisdom he mv daily footl I wonder what we will have for dinner gotsil! Let not my feet ache in the road to light Nobody knows ho.w these shoes pinch - and bite? In this world teach me to deserve the next Church out! Charles do you recollect the text. 1SABY CARRIAGES ! A hirge siotk of Baby Carriages with wire wheels at $7. SO. tilk Plush Scat .-intl Satin 1'ars.Fol Car rirtyes with wire u I. tils at only flO.50. Fountilv sob! loi - 2 CO. UNDERTAKING DXltAIIIKEKI ! Sptcial altti.th n givn to uitbrtakieg in all its branches, at all hours day and uighf. , '" ) PatCii-s wishing my services at night will tirll at niv residence on Bank street, in "Cr.oklvn." Tlianirhig my friends and Uie ptlldic ge-ueraliy for past mtroflftgc and i..king a continuant c ot the same, I am, Yours anxious to olease, G. W. WRiGHT, Leading Furniture Dealer. fed o hi o M Business Opportunity Laugh and Grow Fat. A littlegirl, while talking with her father ou a starry niglir, iibsorhttl in cou tern pi at ion tiftlie skies, being asked of what she was thinking, replied, k,I was thinking if the wrung side of heaven is so glorious, what must the right side be?M . The director who d e not "direct" is the worst kind of official, and he should be made to sutler equally with iJie de positor whose motiey is too often ob tained through the influence of his uauie. Edwin Booth sererly rebuked two sentimental Baltimore girls who b chtue fascinated with him as a singe heroas to call upon him, under assumed naries, at. his hotel. He advised them never to run after an actor again, mid to be more careful of their . good names. A little East Side school-girt" in Milwaukee was overheard telling her playmate that she had been seasick. "That is," she added to correct her self, "I never have been sea-sick, be cause I have never been on the sea, vou know; but been awfully lake sick." 1 Old lady, to grocer's boy: "Don't you know that it is very rude to whis tle w hen dealing jvith a lady?" Boy: "That's what the boss told me to do, i ill . m i mum. uiu may: "j oia you to whis tle?" Boy: Yes'm. He said if we ever sold yon anything, we'd have to whistle for the money' Wife, to husband in the grocery j business: "John, I do wish that you would join the church and become a Chnstaiu. o promised me vou (would." Husband: "I know I did, Maria, and I will but I've got to w r'c .off that stock of muple sugar first. I'm io hypocrite." j To obtain perfection, it is not neces sary to do singular things, but to do a ! common thing singularly well. YET OFFERED. It is not easy to put more truth iuto the same mini her of words than there it' i.HTI mTI-T-.-.- . illC III liri.'. " UCII IUU HIV UlliUJIl! P -imohl lrsL) JiAiM vAiiivi i unuis iui nous, yon must be a Uaniel." J WM-nimrtjer of its lots in North-West .Winston.. They ' After .i iPadei-s merely lea-l. Timv " 1 1 i i . i i i , a ii i j I i a. l . , , . w ,., ..- i .'- -is- t iiik nir ton v 1 1 ill i in ill t fiiii.i. ir.i-'ii i i ii T 1 iniiliues waiKOI Hie oest line ui oua-i vyuio en vuu j - ---- - - 1 1 il ' m k a . M fr f h I I. I ' MrtalaV W mi (It A T , . try. ti ... i - - i iiirrn i miiiiiv injun ass biiui uii lu -onenitut to K lioois, elllllTlieS ana Stores, snaoeo, muuu- In:,kc their leadershiosiiccessf.il. Thev ii fii-t- i y- i . rr f .1 ii fi iw. - l wiiii ... i-. .. - . r i .. i hltoniWl9rthfrt :Ht the H,int where the bud will ip near. Initil i - " i Z .-"M ana turee-quarters ot outsiue money lnvmw i, y w;ii ih mi f,u. anM,v in ns . hree mint red una iwenw-six uuuue- meniTt)tnH vmage, my ianr jur- mli!ivt .Vil 1 1 U31Vi;wx;v. 1Uk U I'HIIC Willi mm. ...i-o, " "''., "l.t.l llilO li;tIOJH S aim 11UI1IU UtlUUli:l.. v, tnAmn n' ttnn f ntnr 'V- inree railroads building into conntay inuutary w way. irri s i " ' ' 1 , I i.fcl) i ij 1 1 r Ar llior toll if nornorn 1 ,-.-,. - - M hre.ji , . -I ; w ii. ii i j: l.i 13 OH' ( st t inn in knv hns nneOS ailO terillS lVeU puuuumentr a, an ...u aqwn . i jr,,,i-.. . . J ' . don'Uknow, mjr son, for sure; but I 1 1 'oon to rkon it is because of the strines." P. M. "WILSON, Sec, inston, N. 0. I "What is the worst thing aotit ricijs?" asked a Sunday-school teacher. "T ieir scracitv," replied a lov. and he w w imuietliately awardetl a chrouio. P Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. The Tariff Trouble. IS THE MCI I nLEY BILL TOSTITUTIONAL OR NOT? By United Press. Nfav York, Oct. 23. Senator Mc- Pherson wry recently wrote as follows to a member of a permineat importing I houe in this city: "I beg to call your attention to the conference report and tariff bill sent you about ten days or two weeks ago, a quarto pamphlet of 414 pages. Un page 1 io you will find an amendment 440 and section 3 , the reading matter relating to draw backs on tobacco striken out. Turning over to page 170, sixth line from the top, you will rind the. following: "Confer ence reh r s section SO. Now in Ihe tariff biil before yon, von will find: "Section 30, that on "and after the first day of January," &c, ending with "six cents per pound" leaving all the rest of the original sec tion 30 out all together. This omission is fatal to the bill, and in the opinion of eminent lawyers here Senator Carlisle i.mong them, it vitiates the whole bill. It is an in ternal revenue section, but being a part of the tariff bill passed, it stands and falls together. x In accordance with this discovery a protest against Collector ErhardtV of ficial action under the McKinlev bill was last evenng forwarded to the hal ing importers in the city for signa ture. Under the law, protests against, the collectors' cannot be lodged until 4'ie liquidation of entry, and must be lodg ed within ten days alter that stage in the importer's business with the gov ernment. Washington, D. C, Oct. 23. Sen ator Carlisle, who was one of the con ferrees on the tariff hill, was asked what in his opinion would be the effect of the omission of section thirty from the tariff bill as signed by the President. "I have not" he said, "examined Ihe authorities on the subject, but it seems quite clear to me that the omission of one section is just as fatal to the bill as if all but one hid been omitted. If the President can sign pir of a bill passed lv both Houses,and make that a law.of course it m::k:.'s no diff encehowsm ill a part U is. Should the constitutionality of this law be testedJn the courts, the question would have to he determined bv the journals of the two Houses b-e.iuse they constitute the only leg I evidence of what was dona. . The two Houses nas .'d th tariff bill, hut in differ, nt forms. When it came back from the eonferenee committee there wis noth ing to act upon except its report, which I suppose wis entered upon tho jour nals of the houses as is usual iu such ca3"1 ;. Wash nston. Qzt. 2t, 189.1 The alleged fatal defects in the new tariff bill form-id an- interesting topic of discussion in official circles to-day. and while tin defect were not thought to invalidate the bill as a" whole, senti ment, was almost unanimous that sc tion 30, of the tobacco paragraph, which was omitted in it entirely, could not be enforced, where, by construc tion, referred to other paragraphs it might impair their strength. As to the law signed by the president not being the law passed by Congres, Private Secretary Hal ford said the bill signed by President Harrison was the same bill signed by the Speak er of the House and the President f the Senate. Thse officers, by thoir signatures, certified that the bill iad passed their respect ive branches of Con gress, and their attestation of that fact was the usual mode of proceed u re. and the only official notification the Presi dent ever received that a hi ft had pass ed. Whether the la w was ro situt oi al or not was a question for the courts to decide. Secretary Wiudom, when questioned on the subject, said it did not become him to question the constitutionality of legislation parsed by Congress. H was simply an executive officer to car ry out the will of Congress, and when laws were placed upon the statute hooks, all he had to do was to execute tl em. If doufs existed as to a given law being constitutional, those doubt ing it could have their doubts removed or confirmed by taking the matter to the propt r Jnliciul tribunal. An interest ing point le. ring on the subject was pointed out at the Treas ury department to-day. Under the tariff law of July 14th, 1S2, duties were increased on all brown or bleach ed 1 i ii ' ns ducks, canvass niddings, cot 1 bottoms, burlap, drills, coatings, brown ' Hollands, blay linens, damasks, drap cries, etc , five percent ad vol rem, mak ing the duty on the arlicle? named 35 percent., the former tariff having im posed a duty of 30 percent, ad valorem. In 1801. du ne 30th. another tariff law was passed imposing an additional duty of 5 per cent, en all the articles named above, but by a clerical error, a whole line was omitted, and drills, coating, brown Hollands, blay linens, and damasks, were left out of the par agraph altogether. At. first. t!ie treasury d part men t im-pos-d40 pr cent, duty on the omit ted articles the same as on Ih 1 enumer: uted, holding that such was the evident intention of Congress; but subtequent- ly-the department reversed itsrlf and refunded the five per cenf. increases ir the biil of IW ad flerw rdu rhw d'O v i... "drill c m m t ." at 30 cent, nd valorem. It whs ntd argued that the omission of "drills, coaling, etc.," from the paragraph applied to any other articles than the ones omit ted, or that the error in regard to the paragraph not being complete tended to make void the bill sis a whole or that the articles, iu Iteinsr omitted. Iielonged to the free list because they were not enumerated in the dutiable list. All f turner tariff acts contain more or less omissions or errors, and even so late as Febtistry 27, 1877, an act was passed to supply omissions in the revised statu tes. It is thought at the Treasury depart ment that the same course will be pur sued n regard to any deffects of the present tariff hiw, if they are of a character so serious to call for it.' Attacking the F aimers. Some one has sent us a marked copy of the Topeka, Kansas, Capital of Oct. 16th. which contains more than rive columns of editorial matter ridicul ing nii'J vilifying Cl. L. L. Polk, tntl the Farmers1 Alliance. The Capital is the Republican organ of the State of Kansas, and the same issue has column after column boosting up John J. In galls for the Senate, and containing one .of his recent speeches delivered in Topeka, the burden of which is an at tack on the South for displaying" Con federate flags at the unveiling of the Lee monument ill Richmond. Ingalls declared that he tok no stock "in t his blue and gray business" as he term ed the joint ivuuion of the Confederate and Union soldiers, and said it was treasonable to bring out the Confeder ate flag. We have seen nothing re cently so bitter against the South, if we except the oration delivered in the Alorganlon Republican Convention week before b st. We are not surpri rd at Ingalls for attacking the o'd Confederate soldiers, for it is bread and meat to him. If it were not for his attacks on the South he would have nothing to talk about? But the time has hardly come in Burke county when much poli ical capital can be made by attacking the old Confederate veterans or the cause for which they fought, though some of our local lie- publican orators seem to think to the An Able Appeal to iTen "Who Lore Their llottes. Special Cor. State Chronicle. Franklin, N. C, Oct, 20. I dere to express to you my heartfelt thanks for the manly stand yojl have taken in behalf of our beloved republic, and I feel espec.a'.Jy gratified sit the manly defence you have made for our State sovereignty. The perpetuity and use fulness to mankind of Republican gov ernment depends upon the sovereignly ot the Sstates. Ihe denial and stbsorji tiou ef the states is the first fatstl step towards the disfranchisement of the citizen. This accomplished and the ballot box lieconics a mockery. We have had recent verification of fins. The unseating of members of the low er House of Congress who were sent there by the certified voters of a large majority of a free constituency, with-' out the rtght of evidence and the priv ilege of counsel and a fair trial by an impartial jury, show most conclusively that the ruling dynasty at Washington have purposely ignored Ihe first great principle of a Republican form of gov ernment, the right of freemen to re presentation thiough the ballot box. Indeed, the exercise ef such power by the lower House of Congress the mere assertion of the will of a cabal is a palpable disregard of citizen rights and the substitution of the dictum of a "junto'1 for the voice of freemen. I use the word junto in -this connection because Clifford, Ashley, Buckingham, Arlington and Lauderdale with their master Charles II did not at any time exercise a more absolute and odious power than have our American junto j m their late revelings amidst the rums of the American franchise. Thank Heaven that we have one chance to recover what the Washington cabal has -.e zed in o der to entrench themsel ves as our masters, The Roman Sena tors thought themselves impregnable because they claimed to own the offices and carried the money bags-. Thev seemed to hae forgotten, however, that Roman blood flowed through ple Ix.'in viens. and ere they were aware of the impending danger the plebein blood asserted its nobility and swept them forever from-fiower. This chapter in history teaches us that we still have a chance to regain contrary. The Capital deno mces the our right of choice at the ballot brx Alliance as "a false and farcial order, and calls Col. Polk a "scoundrel' an "unprincipled trickster" and "an arrai t humbug and demagogue." The Alli tuce is very strong in Kansas, and we nave no doubt that its memlers will resent these insults to their President, as they should do till over the country. The Republican Congress has legislated igainst the interests of the farmer. It has heaped up taxes in the shape of a higher tariff than the country has ever seen, when the Farmers1 Alliance olead for low taxes, and has squander ed hundreds of millious iu worthless jobs when they demanded economy in the administration of the government. While the farmers were making a no ble fight against sectionalism the "Re inblicans were parsing the infamous Force Biil aud stirring up sectional feeling as it had not been stirred since the sixties. They have sneered at the representatives ot the farmers and ig nored their demands, aud now they are employing their organs iu calling the Alliance "a false and farcial ordsr," and its chosen leaders demagogues, tricksters and scoundrels. No true and consistent Alliance man can vote the Republican ticket ill this year of grace, jlorgatitim Star. Some Presidents Trousers. Some men are born for trousers, thers achieve trousers and others have trousers thrust upon them. Who that ever saw President Arthur can forget the beautiful folds of his trousers? Neither large nor small with no bag ging at the knee, but falling graceful ly upon his shoe they were indeed beautiful to behold. Such trousers were not simply due to the tailors art. i'hev showed his natural athmtv for ... i trousers, and while the experiment might have been attended with danger, there is, nevertheless, a strong probabil ity that Mr. Arthur would h.ive made a pair of Bowery "hand-me-downs" look quite respectable. Ot all the presidents of modern times he was the oast clothed as to his nether garments. His great predecessor, Gen. Garfield, achieved trousers. His tailor .vas good, the cloth was in good taste, but the earcr gave little attention to the matter, and even appeared in public once in trousers l raved at the heel. Hayes' trousers were barely respectable, while Gen. Grant was utterly indiffer ent to Ins. trousers were thrust upon nim. He really had no taste for them. President Harrison's trousers are re spectable and good always, but they are full of wrinkles and ot so conservative a color as to oe iioiieuiiiic in me t rouse r world, and President Cleveland's legs were iucaed in broadc oh of a stiffness an I newness of appearance that showed a woeful subordination of the wearer to the tender mercies of the tailor. This is a fatal mistake. A man's trousers should show the com bined tho ight of the wearer and Hie tailor. Neit her can accomplish them success! t.lly alone. Cor. A'. )'. Times. Animals as Earcmetcr-. I do not know of any surer war of predicting the charges in Ihe wesithtr than by observing the habits of the snail. Thfy do not drink, but imhil e moisture during a rain, ar.J exude it afterward. The animal is pevcr 5ccn , except Ijefore a rain, when you will, see it climbing Ihe bark" of tree- and getting oa the leaves. The tree-snail, as it is called, two days b fore rain will climb up the steins of plants, and if the rain is going to lie a hard and long one, then they get on the sheltered side of a leaf; but if a short rain, on the outside. Then there are other species that before a rain are yellow; after it, blue. Others indicate rin by holes and protuber ance. These will begin to show themselves ten days before it rain. At the end of each tubercle is a pore which opens when the rain comes, to absprb and draw in the moisture. In other snails indentations, beginning nt the head between the horns and end ing with the jointure of the taihT ap pear a few days before a storm. Every farmer-knows when swallows fly low that rain is coming; sailors, when the sea-gulls fly toward the land, when the stormy pet red appears, or "Mother Careys chickens," as they are called, predict foul weather. Take the ants; have you never noticed the ac tivity they display la-fore a storm hurry, scurry, Tush ing hither and yon, as if they were letter carriers making six trips a day, or expressman behind time? Dogs grow sleepy and dull, and like to lie before a tire as rain ap proaches; chickens pick up pebbles, fouls roll in the cust, flies sting and bite more viciously, frogs croak mora clamorously, gnat? assemble under Hit trees, and horses display restlessnex-i. When you see a swan flying against the wind, spiders crawling on the wall,, toads coming out of their holes in unusual numbers of an eveningrworms, slugs, and snails appearing, robin red breasts pecking at our windows, pig eons coming to the dovecote earlier than usual, peacocks squalling at night, mice squeaking at night, or geese washing, you can jhtt them down as rain signs. Nearly sdl the animals have some way of telling the weather in advance. It may La that the altered condition of tho at mosphere with regard to electricity,. which generally accompanies changes of weather, makes them feel disagree able or pleasant. The fact that a cat. licks herself before a storm is urged by some naturalists as proof of the special. influences of electrici.y. Man is not so sensitive. Yet many feel listless before a storm, to say nothing of ag gravating headaches, toothaches, rheu matic pains, and last, but not least co. ns. Ex. Ihen if the junto s es lit to set aside and trample upon th it right they must meet the consequences of the popular will. It must, howeve:-, le admitted that Caucasians some times, from stu pidity or some other worthy cause, submit to vassalage yield to fetters more hateful than the worst forms of African slavery, but when once arous ed Caucasian blood has never failed to assert itself and strike down thd usur pers. This it not the age f ( r kn'Slaved white men men who have not for gotten that they were born free. There may chance to be some who can not appreciate the blood fr.nu which they are descended -u sort of half breeds, who cannot rise to the man hood of tho noble meti of "70." I scoru the white man of North Car olina who has any recolhction of the Mecklenburg Declaration of 1775, who has-any knowledge of the history ot Alamance aud Guilford court house, and who will now with the present lights bt fo.e him, corneal to walk up on the proud soil of his mother State wearing a brass collar around his neck bearing this inscription "This is Tom Recti's dog." What tlo tire colored men of North Carolina think about it? It is vain for them to expect that the cabal will reduce white men to slavery aud al low them to remain free. W they imagine that in the end thev will fare any better than enslaved white man? Are they willing to entrust themselves to men who would enslave thcr own race? The whole hitoryof the past leaches us that tyranfes never feel safe as long as they are free in their do minions. It also teaches us that the promises of juntos are as fickle and unreliable as the winds of the desert, and wjosoerer relies upon them will sooner or later come to v,rn?f. Kor the colored man then there can be no well grounded hop.. that the Washington cabal will ever raise him permanently above the condition of a menial, im plicitr bound to do the will of his mas ters. If the negro is to be air Ameri can citiz'ii a tree man indeed aud to escape future slavery he must help main tain constitutional government. This alone can give him representation in a guaranteed suffrage and secure to him representation iu a constitutional republic. This is as eertaiu as cause and effect. Allow me to say iu conclusion I bat all cabalistic tamp iiiig with tree gov ernment has been in all ages the har binger of downfall, bloodshed and ruin. Threatened as we are with the most dire calamities, surrounded by "perils by sea, perils by land and jer ils among false brethren," it seems to mc that every man who' totes his home, loves his race, lutes bis wile and club ilreii and hopes to transmit to t hem the blessings of freedom, ought to i i tt.. ..i-.imii friiin Hivrv house too f.i.iii Cane Cod to the Rio Grande. ft u said by the iw-w I oi k J i thane May we hope that the sober, second io be a fact I bat seventy -live oat of. thotcht will arouse the slumbering every one. hundred peop(e chew Itla .r masses to come to the rescue, uol or f al on i..e;r tett s.uc. ny ui. rev. noon whose thigh aud upon wherefore? "Conceived in Sin and Born in Iniqui THE SHAMELESS OOCT.HNE OF TnE RAW CA LS. The following is taken from a recent, issue of the Xut tonal lU-paUkajty t he- organ of the Republican party. It is. a sample of the shameless doctrine 1 of the Republicans. Read it white men of the Suuth, whatever your political creed may be and ask yourself aud your neighbor, how any self respecting; white man can vote or work with n party that advocates such iufainotia and degrading doctrinesor measures. "When through the operation of the Lodge National Elect irn Law six or seven Southern States shall discard Democratic rule, we shall look confi dently to see some measure of jostle done the blacks w ho have been so"toi defrauded of their right. Heavy taxes should le laid upon the property of the whites to develop and extend the public school system in tht) e Stat"s, seix rale schools for the two races should la abolished, ami the plan of bringing the youth of bith colors into close and equal relations in schools and churche: given a fair trial as one of the most potent elements to break down the detestable Bourbonhmv of the South. The right of Hie black to bear anus should be guaranteed to him, as well as all the social rights in tended to lie secured tii.ii by the pa -sage of the I tth and loHi Amendments to the Constitution, i he State laws againt the intermarriage of the races should be repealed, ; and any discrtmi nations against the black ill the mat ters of learning trades or obtaining employment should be made a crinii iial off -nc w hile l he" colored niai right to hold dlice should be sacredly protected and 'recogniz-d. A few-years of this policy w.W o:ve therace pro' -lelll sat i -faetor:! . "The talk of Southern Democrat e Congressmen in t - ii me on L'd a National Elect.on L-w bill reuiu.ds one of tiie liery"iiairibes uf Southern RepresenUtivesju.it befere Hicw .r. But the plantation whip was cracked in vain then. It h is be.n a loi g tin e .i i.i i i ui..,, i. . since then ami ine ,wouu an u uw Southern section ol the United SMe has grown wiser.'' HI.U To clean straw nn.tling, Uil three ,o.,o ves hue is write, K, g of f- piarts of bren in t : . :.lu. f v :. r ' Lor' f j There ahT20o pup I n the 0rord . w,sb the nielli, g r ith t! e iraVr ,! rom the arch destroj er. I A vli.u.. Irving veh -f m -
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1890, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75