Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Dec. 4, 1890, edition 1 / Page 2
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
Carolina Watchman. THUKHDAY. DEC. 4 f8. 1- 'I'hamu Ditoii raisinsr tain i.c-i. y t ' ' " f ' . . . i denunciations places. and officials in UlgU BangHlist M ly h.n sigrtlfM his willingness to c nie t Chariot in the fall of 1891 t hdd a series of meet ings. Mr. Moody is probably the greatest ev.mgdist divin TtR.S. R It. is pushing along at a lively rate, Track laying is coiu- us far as Stoneville and regular trains are now being run from ftOn-Saleiu to that point. Win- A farmer in Forsyth county, Va., ha received the prize of $100, offered by a Philadelphia seeds nan, for the largest tomato of the Turner Hybird varity, raised in the United States. Iter. Simon P. Anderson, a colored divine of St. Louis has gone wrong. It is not chickens this time but hard cash belonging to his church, to ob tain which he forged the signature of the church clerk to the amount of $1,500. Two mnrdert rs in New York State are awaiting death hy electricity and ezperiiaents with horses and cattle are being made almost weekly to the effect that no bungling shall be done when the time comes to execute these brute.? in human form. A democratic caucus will probably be held this week for the purpose of definitely deci ding the coune of the pirty during the present session of Congress, although it is hardly neces sary, as the party in Congress is so nearly of one mind. The campaign for the Speakership Of ti e next House is practically at a stand-still, and will so remain until it is definitely known whether there is to ba as extri siMsi i i in t!i Spring. Everything nowipoints t halfway, but the democratic leaders would like to avoid it. A queer case comes from Hamiuou ton, N. J. A druggist living at that place; named pay, while on his death bed requested that his body should lie kept until his relatives were sure that he was dead and tint a dagger should then be thrust through his heart before he Was buried. The re quest wa carried out litterally. There are some mad doctors in liar iu just nww. Hundreds of physicians front all over the world have gone to Germany to study Ihe wonderful cure pf Dr. Koch's, but the government has taken the discovery in its own hands and has announced that it will be kept a secret. The Laughlin Nail Company at Martin's Ferry, VV. Va., is preparing a shipment of 1,000 kgs of nails assorted sizes to be sent to Spain. Six hundred kegs have been taken from the stock in the warehouse, and the keg stren gntened to withstand the rough usage On the trip. This is the first shipment Of cut nails made to a foreign norfc in long time. 1 - - - The crew of a West Virginia Ceutral freight train near Dobbin discovered a bear on the track in front of the en gHe. It was determined to capture the animal if possible, and as the bear did not s em inclined to leave the track the engine was uncou pled,and then be gan an exciting race for a quarter of a mile, when1 the bear was run over and killed. The animal was in good con dition, and weighed about 140 pound. Mr. Harrison, in fa uis uiessacp. has ronde a desperate attempt to etem the Blaine carrent in his party and secure a re-uomi nation, He recoguizes, as does every b.ly else, thaUf he is not nouiiuated in 1892 he will stand he- lore t lie country as rebuked bv the party which nominated 1 and elected him to the Presidency. This humil iating condition he" very naturally Would like to escape; hence his present efforts. UcpientHtive Dates, of Alabama IS at ork upon a bill, which he will shortly iiitmuuce iu the House, pro yidiag for an .income tax upon all annual incomes in excess of $10,000 in order to help raise the money needed to pay peusieu. tt,. Oates says his bill will probably be passed by this Congress, but it will be discussed, and if public sentiment favors it, nd he thinks it will, it may be pi ssed by the Fifty-seeo.rd Congress. It i3 olntely certain tliat iu the near future 'either the pension rolls of the Govern- '""Ul 4,111 ve 10 be revised and re-1 flucea or M,uie means of raising a are in York Citv bv bis ttacks iM.W Mr. Wum.nnuW devotes consider-- aJde pace ui im annual report to his! - r t I p.wtal telegraph nobby, lit also say , Hi at viif ceut letter pwtag wo Id be er..llv a mutter of grave political nu ! a good thing, mid then proceed to nient. co d w iter ou tii j suggestion t . ' . i i a rt , 1.. ...... V A I . iff . lT n fill' Tn ktl.i v nut a great big defhiency it would create iu the the postal revenues. In plain words he thinks to humbug the people by pretending to favor one cent letter postage, and then make an ' ar gument to influence Congress against giving it to us. If that isn't "cheap John" statesmanship we would like to hear a better name for it. Czar Reed could not hide the cha grin he felt last Monday when he arose to call the House to order and looked upon the numerous empty seats on the Republican side. The quorum of Re publicans, so necessary to enable him ty carry out his partisan, designs was not there. . The Republican bosses' say they will have a quorum in a day or two, and that when the members once get there they will compel th"eai to stay, but that remains to be seen Talk is cheap, but it will require the presence, of a quorum of Republicans to pass any measure tainted in the slightest degree political through the H uise This much has been fully de- terra ined by the Democrats. Durirtg a revival at a colored Meth odist church iu Birmingham, Alabama Mary Davis and Rhoda Wright became wildly excited by a kind of religions frenzy. They began shouting at a terrible rate and hugging each other with all their strength. This was kept up some time when the Wright woman fell to the floor exhnuscd. The other woman fell on her and continued shouting. In falling the Davis wo man's knees struck Rhoda in thechet la a few minutes the congregation noticed that Rhoda had ceased to shout and was .grasping for breath. Mary was pulled off, but too late. Rhoda had breathed her last in a few minu tes. . ' . , Senator Quay is back iu Washing ton aud before he had got the Florida mud off his boots he was waited upon by a delegation of republican moguls and asked how soon he iu tended to re sign his position as chairman of the republican national committee. He paralyzed his questioners by telling them that he had no present intention, of resigning, and then coolly asking them what they proposed doing about it. This leaves the aforesaid Moguls in a pickle. There is no way they can force Quay out until the next na tional couveMtion names a new com mittee, Quays friends, strange as it may appear he has some, say that lie was anxious to retire from the head of the com mi tee just after the Presidential election, and that the same men who now want t kick him out persuaded him to remain, and that he does not intend to be frozen out. Mr. Ha r Ktirric.in . - i , . ni a iiiCTsaw reaus more like a partisan political haranzae de livered from the stump in the -midst of a healed campaign than like the calm non-partisan dignified commnni citions the American people have a right to expect from the President of the United States. What it contains has been largely discounted ever since it was known that he had deeded to act upon the advice of the most radical members of his party. It pleases the Reed, McKinley, Hoar, Cannon and Lodge element in his party,, but it would be decidedly interesting to know just what such men as Senators Plumb, Paddock and Pettigrew, who voted against the McKinley abortion, which it so stoutly defends, think of it; and also to know whether they propose to continue acting with the Republican party, of which Mr. Harrison is the recognized official head, against the material interests of their constituents Interesting developments may be con fidently expected during the session of Congress which begun, Monday, not the least of which will be the action of the republicans who are opposed to he McKinley tariff- there are lots of them, Mb House and Senate, who voted for the bill under compulsion. A Side-Splitting Joke. LouisTillo Courier-Journal The k i -- -- me season is f iTr1 uireu,pt to crawl out " piorecrion reciproiitv hole. coop throuirh tl.o XT J 1 70 iNO O OU lit t llui-n L-ZT 'ong the Philist Hies. wwu uiat uiev had left larger opening for retreat. little This is an Ungrateful World, Senatcr. DenTcrXows. If Senator Quay now has any cham pions UBy where they are ktimig L ! He of the people m sun' iwrted him some tinL L. 0 SUP now kick a j Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Mr. Harrison' i Message. N y. HrW. , Tje messflire of a President is een- Al " ,s " VWP. , , tnrongn I i lie in 19 nuu i c?.-tu iu tue nuici n.iui jieople. It gives the Chief Magistrate an opportunity to defend his party's poli cy, by referring to its practical oper ation in the various interests of the country and to its influence on bur na tional prospe rity. Some of Jackson s messages were as full of thunder as a park of artillery They were equivalent to a social or financial revolution, not only set men to thinking, but filled tin m full of fight. He was blessed and damned for every paragraph, as his readers eagerly agreed or profanely disagreed with the opinions expressed. Lincoln messages also were an event. They were masterpieces d' statement, were gemmed with phrases which lin gered in men's minds for months, and with terse, sharp, succinct utterances which stirred the blood, sometimes piled the cheek, always described the situation and indicated the- next duty in a breatli.' Mr. Harriftoit's-message, on ilie. con trary, does not rise above the dull mo notony of j latitude. It lacks the merit of either rhotborie or logic, will be read from courtesy, but Without interest. As an exhibit of statesman ship it is a serious disappointment, for jt conveys an impression that the writer nas no convictions or hunks 11 impolitic to express them. ... On the silver qia?stion, which goes down to the bed roek of our financial system, Mr. Harrison has practically nothing to say. Two years ago he de clared that he had nut studied the mat ter sufficiently to formulate any defi nite policy, and we judge that the hor izon of his knowledge has not recently been widentd. He ventures no sug gestions and stands helpless between tiie single and doable siai.dard advo cates. It might be unfair to intimate that this shvei" problem is dangerously mixed up witti politics; that the poli ticians of the East and the Northwest are both laboring with the adminis tration lor its favor, and that which is called the harmony of the party might be disturbed even though the inter ests of the country should be subserv edby any decided atitude toward either of the two precious metals. It will be observed that Mr. Harri son glides over the topic with the speed aud airy lightness of a tubog- Kan. Wlien lie reaches the McKiulev bill he skates with, skill aud caution, as though on thin ice. He thinks the people have been stupidly, blind to the lieiietifence of that measure, though, of course, he puts the fact in diplo matic lermsi . Their verdict on No vember 4 was the result of crass igho rance, and they ought to eat tire whole egg before they can safely pronounce it add led v- Tlie high prices' of which the wage earners complain may be ti e result ol the cold heather, or of t he Gulf Stream or:tf professor Koch's lymph; or of the California raising crop, but tinder no circa instances eon Id thev re sult from the JVkKinley bill. 'This higic may seem defective, and the peo ple may still b silly enough to believe their eyes and ears, but high taxes are nevertheless a blessing, and the more a man pays for the necessaries of life the more he iikes it. Mr. Harrison casually remarks that "the enlargement -of our currency by the silver bill gave an upward tenden cy to trade aud had a marked effect on prices," forgetting that on a previous page he had declared that of the in crease of money in circulation we are Indebted to this same silver bill for but little more than but ten cents per cap ita of the population. No OHe wul therefore suspect Mr. Harrison of trying to urue. Aran- inent would destroy ins psition and show that the people are not fools af ter all. He therefore confines himself to vegue statements which car. stand on their. feet oiily when they are so crowded together that they can't fall. But Mr. Harrison in the latter part of his uie8ige shows himself to be the head of a rarty rather than the Presi dent of a people. He reminds Con gress that this is their short session and calls upon them to pah certain purely pafrisan bills which vigor and celerity. The Re-.ipDorlii innient and j Force bills must receiye immediate at tention, these are the intesest of the party and should not be neglected. He even refrains, lie says, from making many suggestions which occur to him in order teler the- wa pf s'ticji meas ures as these. r That wVsayvbie calls for the pas sage of albrce billcuy.a political par ty which was condemned at the last electiousand hedbesthhV because, the Iolitical party which received the peo ple's approval at the polls will be on hand at the next session and it will then be too late. Mr. Harrison-is an honest hii.n, but a thorough partrisan. We have never questioned his motives or his integritv, only his judgement. This last work of his pen will add nothing to his rep utation, and there is no reason why it should. It is cautious to the verge of timidity, and then-tore inconclusive. Ihe message is tediously loug, but per haps that way be attributed to the fact that the writer had very little to say. Climbing Over His Brethrsn. CIlH'Mgo Herald. McKinley, McKinleyism and Harri sou and Harrisonism are the children of James G. Blaine. They are what he made them. He bullied them into tneir present predicament. He is try ing to bully himself out of the scrape "t ti.eir exneu I e. Tha Western Aorta Carolina Confer eno3. Ou Saturday there w is q iite a large class of candidates net ore the conier ence. Aniuug other beautifal thoughts ia his uii irge to the candidates, the Bishop said, "My dear brethern, this is a m ttter of very great importance to al! of us, so much so that disicpliue ex pects that, in advance, we shall pray and fiist, Yu recollect the rfiviour took a great deal of pains, and I be lieve, if I recollect, he w is ont all wight at prayer, before selecting his disciples. These' men are to take the place of a good many men that 1 see about, whose hairs are. frosted. When we are gone, the young meu are to come, and stand up iu our stead, and a great deal de pends upon the religious character of our preachers, fully sis much as upon their iutelleetoai characters. Now we have to have a higher or ler of culti vation and intellect to hold the world steady for religious work. '! can teU you my brethren, there is no difficulty in finding small men in l he wor Id. thefe are pleuty of them inside of a place of confinement, and some tuits good men even thn nave very religious lUJii. wnat we raht is spirit ual liiia. G id uses won derful material to 'be sifre very un promisiiig juaterial; he does it that the excellency of the poWer m ty be mani fi'stly of liixl, and wot fr us. ? ''Keep'osit of deaf., DonVbe grasp irig or lo iliing aroiiid'for chances;., if the Lord wants you to lie rich, He will pour it'out upoH you without your ask ing." - - Miss E. WMt president of thje Woniau's par.sonagp and house mis sionary society, delivered a . UmgVnil' adniiriotdejitildressr Friday nig t.' - Most of the Hfirrnhig -Session was taken np'in considering reports from committees. IteV. A. G. Ganntwlio wassuspend-. ed at the last conference on a serious charge, has been restored. Dr. C rowel I, of Trinity college, read a lvport, showing the college in a flourishing and progressive condition. The svbject of a conference organ precipitated a warm and lengthy d;s cussi.tn. Maj. Bobbins was against the adoption of an organ, and Hon. l A. Gndger, speaking feelingly in reply to the major s remarks. The subject was made the order of Monday ruorn ing. ' L irg crowds attended every meet ing. The delegates are. loud iu their praises for Concord. Radical Dsviltr-. State Chpriclc. In the Federal court this week a true bill" was found against Wa I ker Taylor. K G. Pardiele, T. G. Pickett, -William Ulrich. J. M. McGowaii, E. W. Man ning, IJ. S. M jntfurd, and Will West, members of the lale canvassing board of New Hirtiover county 'for failing to canvass the vole of cape Fear Town ship for IJi'ltraseiitatives in Congress in the recent elect inn. This, it iv claimed, i in violation 5.510 of the evied Staines of the United States, which as f(Hlcrv: . ' Every. ftieer of an election at which Representative or delegate in Congress is voted for, whether such olScrr of the election be appointed or create! by or under any law or author ity of the United Slates, or by or :un der any States, territort il, district, or municipal law or authority, who neg lects or refuses to perform any duty in regard to him by any law of the United states, or ot any state, or territory 1hererf; or who violates anv so rm posscd;or who knowingly does anv acts thereby unauthorized, "with intent to affect any such elections, or the re sult thereof ;or who fraudulently makes any false certificate of the result of such election in regard to such Repre sentative or Delegate; or who withholds conceals or destroys, any certificates of record so required by law respecting the election of anv such Ri live or Delegate,oi: who aids, conceals, procnre?,or advised any votor.person, or officer, fo do any -net by this or any other preeeedrng section auule acrime, or to omit to do J any duly the emis sion of which is by this it anv of:!uch eettfoHS mare a oimet or attemntft t 'do so, shall be punished us 'prescribed lufection nny-nx'e hundred and ten." The nnnitthmrnt. on Pdnvintinn ia m firm f.F .iw. ( .1.11 1 I "lit 01 uiic uin a 1111 1 :i v. nr tw im. priwiimeiit not luore than one year, t?r bof.h Tlw Wilmington Slarsavs: hotkey isthe prosreu ling witness; se- the in dictnent isjed ex parte Ilepnlir licaii testimony and amounts to nothing,- Of courpe, fh gj and jnry was hot acciiratelj: jadviftfil s to all the far?!, or Hi 1 rne l would not have beeti found; Anfl5 fti ; this connection U'jnVn-lie Trigjeajthat it would 4 eminently proper fflr some grand jurv fb-'take cognizance of the acts of the Radical uegro who withheld the loo!cs from the legally appointed Register of Cape Fear township, and thus bv force and, as is currently reported, under the advice of white Republicans, prevented a legal election, .'- - This whole proceeding is a piece of Radical '-deviltry set on foot for the sole purpose of harrassing and intimidating the Democratic canvassers who had the nerve and honesty to reject the returns of a township in which a most out rageous violation of the election law was the salient feature. But the efforts of the Tom-Reed lawyers, whether adipofe or attenuated will utterly fail of their purpose, in both the States and Federal courts, in the present cafe. ! According lo the te'egram to the Star. Messers. George H. Ju kson, J. U. Home and Janus Cowan, all mem bers of the canvassing boiu are not included in the indict uuut. ode; but the thing is to hod 1 W, .. .. . -m ui , 11, u ICiltTS. I I .1. . c L il ' J ril til 1 i 1. -. tr . . I I v. . ..... I J O J ....i., .,4 .... " ; lut ni vyier: orwaiyii, ana .1 Their Hearts are Hardened. Nalioual Lic uiun at. W a runuur l.i Mui.ip t k i 1 1 1 .. t ll. ' . 1 V ' 1 -T assurances ot our most distiu guished cousiueraiion. rie nas returueu to :j 11 : ; : .. Washington and says he baa nothing i supervisor P"'1 W St to repeal of; there wilt be no n1" Vrl? JQ the ? r'C .1 1 u...u cs . 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 I vawtl I r t Im cation of the tariff, and the McKinley L uL. 1.., Ait, A i.ki law is tiie la t ditch and' there wilt the Republican party die. 1 ne only uneasiness we have felt about the tate election was the fear that the vastuess of the Republican de feat should lead the Republican lead ers to repent aud bring forth fruits f,. h..,,..!.,. I o. I JIUIIBI reirain the io.iHdea.,e of fch.ir nUi fnl- lowers, dih .major aiciviuiey, nae Ephrtam, is joiued to his idols; ne may as well be let alone. Like the Indian who could not find his way home, Ma jor McKinley announces that he is not lost; it's his wigwam that u last. Mc Kinley is allright;the people have goue astray. If Maj.w McKinley will keep 0:1 banging the peopie we are sale for 18U. He still insists upon it that the I O . i k M tf I II a tariff, bed a the Re publicans elected three more Represen tatives than the Democrats did. The fact that within a very few weeks, af ter hearing a good deal more thou they ever did before from Major McKiuley himself, the people have elected UMatf-ti-Republican majority of 100 in the next House, makes no impression 011 the Major and we hope it never will. The people have giveu M: . McKintev and his friends a hint, and if they in sist on oeiug kicked iu lbS'J the people will accommodate them. -The Water looed Napoleon observes innocently : "The people of this coun try, When the question lias been fairly .presented to tiiciu between protection aud a revenue taiitt, have always decid ed in favor of the loriuer, and they will do so again."' On the contrary, the people never ha mi fair a chance at tile tariff q test ion, free from all other complications, as 111 ltt'Jj, and the high 1. .Xing party was a ver su badly beat en. 1 wo years ago the tariff was an abstract question; a could nut be con crete whne thci was :i Republican - donate bet vv.ee n toe j ople aiiu the re presentatives t tue people. The Mills bill couldn't become a law. no matter what the people did. Even as an ab stract cpietiu the Rpublic.ais would not dtu.-s it. lusvcid of pointing ont the difference -between the Mills and the Senate bills they merely ac cused Mr. Mills of oeiug a Texan, aud cliai'ged" Colonel VV. C. f. UreuK in ridge Was from Kentucky, and Mr. C. LL Breckinridge froiu Arkansas, and Mr. McMillan, trout le nessev; that the chairman of tue naval committee was an iCxCoulederate bng..uKr, aim so 011. Although ('resident Cievei..nd ;i prov ed more private' pension ni.is than any Republican presideui, iiiid veiy neariy as many in lour ycihs us Republican presidents had in tweniv-lour years, vet ne was nuteriy uenoanced tor Ve toing private jiensiou bills, and lost the votes of a good many Deiuocrattc veterans, who did not know that nuue than 1,8 JO private pension bills ijec.au e laws oy Cievelaim s apprpv..t, tiiid on ly a little over 2,t(JU h.id become laws under all the Republican presidents iiom lbOl 1 1S85. But this year the Republieans had to talk tantl. Tiuy cou.dn't divert at tention from that to the veto of a bill to pension a deserter; they, couldn't oc c py the public atuntio.i with geo graphical accusations against Demo cratic members of the wnvsHibd means . . k . . .1 1 committee; the Mills bill was an ab stract proposition; the McKinley law was a concrete fact; the question of high or low tar.ff never beloie got be fore the jieople so free from other is sues, and the high taxers were never before so badly beaten. Weonlyhnpetb.it Mr. McKinWy will succeed iu holding his party just where it is now. If he does the tie publican party will be as dead after 1802 as the Federal and Whig parties are to-day. Northern Negro Vote. National Democrat. Langston, the mulatto, carpetbagger Wno, though not elected, was seated by the Reed Congress to represent the Po'fi'fth district of Virginia, aiid who .....a ...... i .l.r iJ . L 11. ' . as iiv.iin ut t; 11 lilt viuiir u U P )y nearly four thousand lnajoriiyj intends to contest the eilt of Mr. J F. Epes. He-sayli he expects justice. There is no doubt he will get it. Iu anajuerview published in the Post vi tli is city, he said:- General Mahone has taken infinite satisfaction in calling me a nigger, and in sayiog that no bigger shdnld repre sent the Fourtli Virginia district in Congi-e.'3- The latter feeling, Mr. Lungstoii says, is only expressed by every white Republican. They came to me," he said, speaking with an earn estness that fairly electrified his words, "and told me that Republicanism was all light, but that when it came to the race issue they coiild not vote for a negro. When it comes to the race question the Republicans in the South are all Denioc.ats. They are just aa ready to crush us and keep us from the rights guaranteed us by Jaw and from the responsibilities which a e our I rivileges as American citizens." "That is a strong ai-raigemeut of tin? Republican p. rty in the South." "I mean it as an arrangement. Let me give you some details from my dis trict. When 1 was nominated by the Republicans ot my district, a secret circular was isued by Mahone advis ing Republicans tj vote the Democrat ic ticket. White Republicans joined with Democrats in agreeing that I must be beaten because I was colored. '1 hey couJd i ot do it by fair means and t hey did it by unfair. I was entitled to the .elect,oii of a Repubticau supei-1 I i ........ . uM.k 1 km 1 . r . . . . . . . What happeMed? Not a white Re puoiicaii uuld act for ine. l W Unee at first consented, but the pres- sure brought to bear on them was too re uiuugfiv w irrear. ami invv imuiiv uwiiuw. 0 . " 5- . 1 iTO ,uan' i man who should have been the brav est, most experienced, least 111 mil Hint ed niau at tne polls was tin exact re verse. That was the hrst step of the Republicans t: secure my deleat." Mr. Laiigston says that the very men whom he had put iu office wom- eo Bipunw nun, aim 111c munn ne uau , , r .1 1 . . Pufc I1 W"S U3ed to defeut In 111. Mr. Laiigston laughed sarcas tically. "The elections bill!" he ex claimed; "it. isn't worth the paper on which it is written !" Mr. L.itigston has evidently learned the lesson long ago presented to hiini iu the National Democrat, viz: That the force bill wi:s not designed to pro duce negro or Republican Representa tives in the South, 'the Republican leaders know very well that should such a law be passed that it could net be enforced any more than the prohi bition taw is enforced in Maine. But it could be used to keep up sectional bitterness and to feol tue negro voters of the Northern States into the belief that ultimately 111 some States of the Union South Carolina, Mississippi and Louisiana the spectacle be again presented of the negroes ruling white men. To keep the negro vote solid for the Republican party in the North ern Statt s is the real problem of Lodge, Reed, McKinley & C . Without thn negro vote thee leaders know that they could never again carry Connecticut-, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, In diana or Illinois. Even such States as Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Michi gan aud Kansas .vouttT w it hunt the ne gro vete polled solidly every year ler tne Republican., be set doVn as doubt ful 111 the political table. The census h'gures of 18XJ are not just yet acces sible iu regard to race and sex, but ad ding 10 per cent, to the figures of the census 01 1880, on account of natural increase, we have the following table "showing the number ot negro Voters 111 the Northern States named: Negro males. States. voting age. Connecticut 3,8U4 Illinois 15,045 Indiana 11,812 Kansas 11,811 Massachusetts 0,551 Michigan 0,734 New Jersey 11,737 New Yoik 22,utt4 Ohio ' 23,870 Pennsylvania 20,281 Total iu 10 Kelt Urn States 138,844 It is to keep thoc 138,844 rotei-s solid for the Republican patty that the force bill has been framed, and it is to fool them into the belief that by its passage and enforcement, the negro jCnn rule mMie where in ibe world, that the Used rules will be tried upon the Senate at tint coming session ot the Senate in order 10 pass it. 'Ihe Republican party has ruled the rouatry v-r sua e ii.e var bec .u-e u coiitlo.i. d lie in l Vol,. h i;rt-;m tik f'AIlt lUl .l II. I'l -t l. 1 . 1 iw,,, ,,, , ,,. , r . , ,,, , ,lt. t.n I. r 1 V if civil VJil" Mlfillil l"i-, l.i .jo , act nn-iil Ol I ill ii i.l 1- Ou. 1 dutv ot Ihe i'i.io ..:..c .c.i, defe at l he p...-...r ..1 i., .1 o.jj means ab-A.u i u.r p, r.oi. nations Hie l. at .- a..:. ie Norm and Sou.li, mi mil o low in - 1 lit tor ti.e Vfl iaii MvlotV lailglil' that loi.s ij .o.v.i o . . 1 o j h coa.ivi'v ed by white uitL. Historians always stop to describe the dying of Woife aud Montcalm, the two opposing commanders in the battle of Quebec. But their deaths were simply heroic com pa tied With the Christum death of Stonewall Jack son. About 1:30 011 the day of his death he was told that he had about two hours to live, and he answentl feeblvv but firmly, '"Very good; it is all right. A few awmients before he died ,he cried out in his delirium: "Order A. P. Hill to prepare for action. Puss the infantry to the front rapidly. Tell Major Haw ksv then stopped, leaving the sentence unfinished. Presently a smile of ineffable sweet ness spread itself over his pale face and then he said quietly and with an ex pression of relief, ''Let us cross over the river and rest under the shade ot the trees." And then, without pain or the leasts truggle, his spirit passed. Messi-s. C. A. Snow & Co., Patent Sol;citers opposite U. S. Patent offiee, Washington, D. C, have no side-issues to detiact their attention; hence their success. If you wish to know any thiug about patents, trade-marks or copyrights, write to them. Read thoir advertisement in this pajier. POWDER Absolutely Pure. ( ream of inrtar baking nowder. nichm of all in leaving ktnmrta-ir. S. Gvrr.Hn . SUBSCRIBE FOR FALL OFIBBI AT WSI&e ?ftT- COST In order to redVe our stock wj will sell for the next slxjtf days a ny vehicle onigrtcal t tral implement, At Cost and Freight, p Below we giv u pari i at Ust. of a few of our clroicest jol Jump Seat'Surrev. lp-;i worth $135.0 ). S1 Top Grocers Wa wn Oil anl Varnish $100,00 worth 125.00. M CincinnattiOi.cn Hugev ?0C0 worth 90.00. Youngstown Open Buggv 17- 00 worth $85.00. Hamilton Open Jugg.v 65.H0 warth 85.00. Hani ilton Top Ruggy -3.aj worth $S5.0). e2 Chnrnr Cart 40.00. $33.(X) worth 12 Gem Carts 12.50 worth flV 00. - i B3TA lot of ehean wm-L- in Hnvr i , f iii 'i L . . h.i-.1-u f ....... Cdr.iuii. .. .... .. in,JU . oo.W IO COVi.OV. Allgo at (ACTUAL COS -with freight added. Ha is the time to secure a Bargain. 83s"We have a Full Line of Farm Wagons, they all go Ihe same wayl OSucli an opportuninty has never lieen -offered the public to secure a first classj veliicle at a very low price. JSTWe have tiie Bickford und Huffman Grain Drill. Ihe MtCormkk mower. Dutton Knife Grinder. Hay Rakes, Corn Shellers. Plows and Har rows. Our invoices are shown' in every instance. Call to see asj and (xrinine the work anchyou will he con viuced. We are now e n ll.e n ::iLet for cotton and cotton Kid, and will pay thehiVI.tM ca.h iiico. Our stock of seel wheat complete, and we have. some choice varieties, alsoagu d line tf Rust proof and Winter outsc Also a full 8uji Iv ul IJaggrag ies! f 81 V ry Rcf pect fu 1 ly, T5 TMT1I All I STtJ .Children Cry for Pitcher-, Ce 31 7m THE WATCHUA
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 4, 1890, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75