Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / June 16, 1892, edition 1 / Page 2
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ACTUALLY AW AYI $200 mwm ' - I : I"'''''"'" ! A , I; Too Early for Melons, - Bat not for the grand bargains given .daily to our numerous customers. -We liave'goods at the right price.?! and are -moving them right along while our competitors on the high price-side of the-fence, watch us leave them out of sight. , . 4'.- Our immense stock of , , DRESS & NEGLIGEE SHI R TS hns any kind that eye or heart can ..covet, from 25c. tip. r Our 50-cent Shirt . Beats the world. Made of NcwJY'ork MusIhi, re-inf dreed Backs and Fronts - i . ' i continuous facings, patent stays, French yoke, with fine bosom and one-half cuffs, is claimed by numerous customers tb be -! equal to any one dollar .shirt they ever bought. V . : ' , . Our SI Shirts, Made to olirlSpecial Order, of the best Nonpariel Muslin and finest ..Linen, with all the latest improvements "for fit, finish and durability, we claim, jhave never had an equal in this market. Open front,, or both back and frjont Handsome display of narrow and broadlaited, puff or fancy bosom shirts. WE ARE WOW GIVING AW Accident Insurance Policy for Two Hundred Dollars i - - ' i ' ? TO EACH PURCHASER OF A SUIT. Besides this we are cutting prices right and left to reduce our immense stock of Clothing. Severed styles, with but ono or two suits of a kind, are going at almost half price to close. A rare chance to invest a few dollars at a great saving. You can afford to wear GOOD CLOTHES at these prices. Will 3rou do it ? A complete lino of , Hot Weather Garments. Men's plain and crinkled Seersucker coats 50c7; men's black and colored Alpacas, Mohairs, Drab d' Etcs, worth 50 per cent, more than our prices. Fine Serge suits at $8 and $10, worth $12.50, in several colors. Boys' coats at 25c, 50c. and up. Boys' and children's suits at prices LO WEE TH AN EVER. Big lot oLBoys' Knee Pants, for 4 to 15 years, cheaper than you can make them, from 25c. up. Men's working Pants at 50c, 75c, $1 and up. Boys' long Paiits 35c up. -Lowest prices on all kinds of staple and fancy UNDERWEAR AND NECKWEAR. Other Bealsrs Kay KICK til Because i we sell for ch. nrnfits? Tint rmr n7flfr wii' ..... .,mi.. .uara C I and Less Profits," has put , ... Hi ahead rfor them to do i J,f . '") narg .Tiist keen with in in IL f... I and we guarantee money s. worth. .11 tv- HA If U s rp. i-S :-f You want, we are styles -of with 4, i 3 STRAW, WOOL AND EUR. STRAW HATS, WOOL HATS, FUR HATS, r cents lr - cents if, I cents iir 13 "VALISES 13 i Lo.it! f J All kinds of Trunks from a Packer to a fine Zinc, -Caiivas m covered. Valises from tin Imitation Leather, at 40 cents, to ;i L::ilf' lined one. . UMBRELLAS. i - Umbrellas p.t 50 and 73 cents in Cambrics and Ginghams., (iuod (il 1 and 81.25. Ol US i Have you seen our pretty FRUIT SOUVENIRS? A few arc yet left to be given away with Suits. If you want good value for the powerful hard earned DOLLAR leave it with the . H 3 i yv Hi h l7Jjii 111 OQ, 11 u Nearly Opposite Postofflce, Carolina Watchman. J. L. RAE13EY, Editor and Prop. SUBSCRIPTION HATES. ,One! year in advance - $1.50 ISix months ' .75 TERMS STRICTLY CASn. . The Watchman is organ of the Alli ance in tho 5tb and 7th Coagiesisioual Districts. - ThoWATcnMAN has 50 perycer.fc more circulation than any paper published in palishury. - ' TEnterod asaepond-class mall av Salisbury, N. G. anywhere that were not curried away with him. He was a jvriler of I rare ability, having absolute control oi the English language and an easy flowing style that made anything he wrote pleasant reading and convincing to the reader. -Col. Polk never struck below the belt.. His speeches and writings ten contained short sentences, but nothing that vwould' offend the most fastidious. Of his career as a public man jit jis unnecessary- to speak, lhe public generally ;ire familiar with his history. No other nian in the Alliance had the THURSDAY. JUNE 16, 1892. DEATH OF COL. L. L. POlik. ' - Col. L. L. Polk, owner and editor of ihe Progressive. Fanner and President of th.e National AJliance, died! hi ; Washington City, Saturday, June lltli, at 11:15, a. m., aged a,bout 55 years. He had been troubled with hemor-plinge-of .the bladder at various times for severaT ypars.. This disease, to gqther with heart failure, was the pjcause of his untimely death. ' ! A large party of Senators, Congress- rnen and other distinguished people ac companied the remains to -Kaigigh, ; where Hie funeral took place fiom the -First Baptist church -at '4 o'clock p. in. ;" J3anday. For good reason not neces sary to state, it was thought best to have the funeral over as soon as possi ble, hence hundmis of friends who youM have paid their last respects to , ;;; their great leader could, not be notified in time to reach Raleigh. " H In the death of Col. Polk the reform rnovement has sustained an irreparable Joss. He was to the movement what ' Stonewall Jackson was to the. Sou th- ;? army. He- was loved and trusted ris few men have been by his friends, jr-dicu auu respecieii ny nis enemies. He had no personal encmips. lmf ; K r - " " 1 vi.iv uiuil f political ones. Unt his friends and idnnrers were, almot countless.- Like the lamented Henry Grady, Col. Polk was cut off in the prime of life, at a irae when it seemed that, as leader of the greatest industrial organization on .earth, his brilliant leadership was about (b place Iiis name as high on the scroll of lame as- mortal can go. CoJ. Polk vas an eloquent orator. Within Ihe past few years he has jiroven himself the equal of Demos ihonce, Patrick Henry J. C. Calhoun, Jlenry Grady or any of Ihe great or ators of ancient . or modern" history. He has seldom spoken to an audience aged to leave his family in comfortable 1. At SALISBURY, N. i! Si! me circumstances, while he might have left them millions. He even sacrificed THE REPUBLICAN TICKET. The National Republican Conven vention, which met at Minncajtolis, Till: NUWsi. SJaU'. The late Col. L. L. P.dk had anisur- ance of 10,00' on his lif - have been derived from his paper to nighL Benjamin Harrison was re- i Donald hasnUed 12,000 i )o.uif;sof earlv nominated' for jtresident on the first j cabbage. On this itiu alone he-will ballot. The others placed in notnina- ! realiz; over $3 )0r This does not ia- - .i.i. 1 1 much of his salary as president of the j Minnesota, lat Tuesday, lasted! four!. Alliance and the profits that might ; days, adjourning at 10 o'clock Friday I confidence of the people to the extent. ISo other man in Aineriea had as many devoted followers.:! Ow ing to the peculiar state of affairs ex isting in North Carolina and the South generally and the unrelenting assaults of newspapers" and politicians, he was unpoplar in towns and cities, hut even that was disappearing and the people of all classes were l-aHviii? tn him j ---r Not so in the North and West.' .His admirers in towns and cities thpn ... , ii i i I cuumeu m great numiiers. win,;,, Ani.a xr.naoy uuasoniy to De Known h.ls been called nnon to n.onrn h iu uu luveu. ins no i ip:i anptm .J-"i'V Vii. Ill .J noisoned th minds nf i i w . vuu i'vi'iiv iu s hi en The flowers had hardly withered in the good of the cause he had espoused His life work is the best monument that could be erected, but his friends will never stop until they erect a mag nificent monument of stone to mark the spot where their -noble friend and leader now rests. If we would make our lives more like his all the world would grow betUr. The reform move ment will never stop. While his death is an irreparable loss, still his in fluence, his work, will be felt for hun dreds of years. "George Washington never told a lie," but, he hal other faults. Col. Polk had his faults, but he could not be bought. Their lives were different. They did not livl in the same century, but each died with names that shall be everlasting. : ANOTHER SAD DEATH. "Death loves a shining mark." tion were James G. Blaine, of Man, aud William McKinley, of Ohio. Har rison came out far ahead of the others. At the night session Whitelaw, Reid, editor of the New York Tribune was nominated for the vice-presidency. The platform adopted was similar to former ones. It contains planks on protection, reciprocity, fair ballots, outrages to Southern negroes, etc. some extent. against him public to Those who led the! fight were unfit to death of two of its brightest and best wipe leet. But they were great in nuinbfrs J l l p0uc bef, ajtid had some influence. Hence the minds of maiiygood people were: pois oned by them, Which led thein to op- pose .mm in some places. . jj He wit a Christian. In his private life there was. nothing that- the: most the scorching sun on the grave of Col. An many FREE COINAGE. exchange complains because people have money loaned, among them thousands of working people, and says if the free coinage bill had passed these people could not collect a hundred con's on the dollar. As a misleading article this takes the cke. F-roni 1SGG to 1873 such a thing, as a dollar that w;:s not worth a hundred cents was unheard of. In 1873 silver was demonetized and other steps taken to contract the quantity of money. Prices have gone down steadily since that time for all pro ducts of the farm, mill or shop have gone down, down, until there is no Not so with the price of That has gone up just as in years. He was at one time President of the South Carolina State Alliance, was elected to Congress tvv.o years ago and has served with conspicuous tbility. pcruuuzngcou IIe seemed l0 bo cnjoyi112 to be made-capital of. As president perfect health, though quite advanced wt -- "'ii'iute ui jootsreps were con-: stantly followed by detectives. They investigated his life from his youth up. If they could have found anything oV rogatory it would have made them ricn; men. lint they could -not. His f public life was not always, a brilliai.t success, biit waf innrked with energetic efforts and manly courage! He was honest. A prominent rail roach official remarked . hist Saturday when he heard of his death thai (joL 1 oik is an honest man. He had more Und better opportunities to becono a- millionaire than any North Carolinilin, -. but he died imor " TN .f , Politicians- would, have paid him I im-j rtiensesumsforhissigualuieorpyrsolnil! influence. Corporation? , woultt havjej done lhe sarne many times in tire past icw 3 ears, out. he could not be put-! p'lfiQnl I! i. ..f ' .Ill i ciuse eef)iioniy. ne man-i ore the news flashed over the wires that "Congressman Stack- house, of South Carolina, '.is dead." j Prour He dierl in Washington Tuesd.iv 2 mouey. o'clock, a. m.t suddenly. Ho was one reSu,arl nnd is stiU SoinS UP- U' of the pall bearers at the funeral of les somo stfePs taken soon there Col. Polk and came with the nartv to ! not very ncu. will be no chance tor those that are few weeks ago the Charlotte Xeics remarked that the Watchman" was not publishing the ticket recently nominatexKat Raleigh. If that is an evidence of disloyalty, the editor ot the News must be iKRepublican or Peo ples party man, for ie does not pub lish the ticket either, H. L. Loucks, of Huon, South Da kota, who is the first vice-president of the National -Farmers' Alliance, will fill out Colonel Polk's unexpired term. .The Minneapolis convention decided on Benjamin Harrrison and Whitelaw Reid. Many candidates were called but few were chosen. Last week the House passed the anti-option bill by a vote of 108 to 46. It has the Senate and president to con tend with vet. A Chattanooga dispatch tellsKof Judge , in that town who grant eighty -two divorces in two hours aud a half. It is a rotten law that allows such. . A movement has been inaugurated in Maine to sendTJlaitie to the Senate; A bitter struggle between capital and labor is expected to begin at the Tomestead Steel Works of Carnegie. Phrpps & Co., at Pittsburg, owing to a proposed reduction of from ten to forty- per cent. inVuges. The Carnegie firm is preparing to put-ipn-union 'men in the workmen's places, and are making preparations for a long siege. elude other truck. Prof. C. D. Mclver, president of the Girls' Industrial and Normal School of Greensboro, thinks that the school upon its opening will be so crowded that ad ditional accomhiodation's will be neces sary. As a result of the Fife meetings in Godsboro, 316 persons have handed in their names for church membership. Of these 144 go to the Methodist church, 80 to the Baptist, 55 to the Presby terian, and 14 to the Episcopal. Many from the country will join churches in their own neighborhood. ; Asheville Gazette: Few people have ever seen a rainbow at ni.bt, from the fact that such occurrences are very rare. Quite a mini her of the citizens of Asheville, however, .Thursday night witnessed one of these rare" phemom ena. At 10:15 a beautiful rainbow ap peared across the western heavens, spanning about one-fourth of the hori zon. It was as clearly cut, with the colofs all distinct and nearly as bright, as when produced by the direct rays of the sun. t weiitv-e'gbt seriously inj in'f Mucc-en'es, in the province of Va'balo- ii ye w Elsewhere, Riice troubles have arisen between the whites and blacks in Guthrie, Oklahoma. Sidney Dillon, a Union Pacific Rail road millionaire, died in New York hist Thursday morning. It is thought that the president will offer the office o Secretary of State to Chauncey M. Depew. Senator Carlisle's name is being used as a probable candidate for the presi dency on the democratic ticket. ; th G. Gilreatfi, an 'alderman of Green Villej S. C, was foully murdered Tues day morning by Mims Sullivan, a man of unenviable reputation. j The trial of Weems, a negro rapist in Ch;ittanooga,Tenn.,on the 13th inst., lasted just ten minutes. He plead guilty find was sentenced to twenty years in the penitentiary. j The Assembly met at Baton Rogue, La., Tuesday, and for the sixteenth time; balloted for United States Senator without result. The ballot was as fol lows: Jonrs 31; Gib?on 25; Adams 22; I'd, a c'nircb was sh'siek aim killed aud ten injured. A colore 1 evangelist in Virginia has orgauizsd a church of "No Me ;t. EaU ers."' He tells his people 'that if tie y wilt abstain from bating nieat thy will live on earth for 800 years and then be translated to lie riven. And a Bap tist missionary in Georgia is creating a religious furor by declaring that he is personally informed as to the date fixed for the end of the world. This divine who claims 'obe in direct communica tion with the Almigh ty is Rev. J. K. Pos tell. low For Your Jewelry We arc still at our old stand on Main, street, where we have a select stock of Watches, Clocks, Spectacles, and all kinds of fine Jewelry on hand at the lowest V prices. Watch repairing a specialty. All wor.K cu ran teed. 12 months. D.I0HIE1! PhilitdelpLia, Pa., (Factory nl.AiHAiru, N' -York ) Southern Ditot for Iacii;ni;?,1 Il im . a. c: Lightest in Weight, Ivies Attrictiv?, Best-Material; . Handie:t; 2 S il ill J. & H. HOEAH. Tbe?e are thft-essential rrquiroiiir n. rnn mnfiiLup si ml tlifv ,'irt nil i- " r - -' b ciatel in the Osr.ouxi-: u-oods. want the best Mower, Reaper, all ''J Hay Hake or steel s.prin-tooi h II i" in (existence lo not mclu!e !' f lit - in' the OsjIJOUNK. I'aW oii uur imx Aeiit, or write for U'sci -lpiiycl aiaio OWEN II. "bishop, ih (Ofticc with J. M. IIa.l.in. Is! -W -.r ' ofjictt, .Sitli.MHirv. N.-r i N. B.Address letter? taYoon- N f A large, liinnher of Macl.iii'f.isi" 1 41 pairs constantly kept on'bii'l. Mention the Watct'imn when you m!p tii mhmmg backet TOES Jl in 4 NEW SPUING GO ODS. . Tf yon will take a look'-through our M AMMO HI EST AH LI 3 .it the stacks and piles of new goods, with, 53 employees kept btiay, )'uU soon see that it KNOWS NO DULL SEASON, fl The?ontiiiued grow Hi of our business and the ;reat inerease ii-"5ry.j for the.pat three and a half montIi3 over the eorrjespondm titu oi Jiiu ,l,!'t ous year m our history, we are constrained to believe tliut dull seu.sc.irs wnlu'jl Encouraged by cur fast growing trade we have bought ti;i - rwl llVff periainius to tive latest issues in wearing apparel, troni a inettv Bourgeois 4; Bolton 1. I A terrinc thunder storm prevailed in various parts of Spain Sunday, and tieavj loss f life and injury by" light ning is 'reported. At Medias" in the province of Ortenses, the parish church was struck while the worshipper wen i I Vi I- tl t,'-"'- 1 ( t'ilL t l op to nie iniest Mih.s niaue. ino prt-rrier lines orrrprm i. a.-ynii'o , than you will find m oil r selections for this spring, enibra 1 u l' 'JS shades, .hpjrinriiiijr at 25 cents on up to 78 cents per vard. r M that Oll naV Si .2 nPl1 vsifil fnr in Vow Yni-L- rul.iil Iwuitiu Villi Wjli our counters at only 80 cents. All wool Challies 20 -cents, s.nd tin 1"-' , evT offered in Ciiarlotte. Woolen Bedford cords 25 cents per-yai'l- the greatest variety ever offered. ' t HAMILTON CASUMEltES 12i cents. It will please you t offering in fine Dress Ginghams at 7"and 8 cent; no prettier p;it"rn J .f found. Only 10 cts yard for a beautiful iine of Cheviots, worth l'-' r'! , ', IP ." . 1 t !- . . ... n 1 I 1 I I It'l irn . m .iiui.i i ii i s. ftnr np v. ivh ii iii. ' it ii i . . ... n a. :. Dl !.l...rnn i n r , iru Liwra uuum.un l iiui, CrMi l. - 1 e 1 1 1 ' -li e lit L' 1 11:1 1111111 it i s.s.m n iTi-otr i i .. ii .,-, i.l . . . . . .. . ... - l i 7':. ux,l,IU"cy JrniHl unbeachal slieBtniir. Terr-casiM. b oac h iroui u.V to 1 1 . i ril r-. e waul id, worth 0 ( 11 Two hut drrd dczen fine , Silk Mitts, any Un t at o'nlv 25 cents per "pairs-- - In. overhauling our shoa stock we find 200 p iirs ia Tes1 line r ivu and Gondola h-ather any 'mz s and lasts wanted, worth "2 0 to 'i.C'' will be clo-ed out at Sl.75. 'See them in our'noiTh wiudow. W. I. DAVIS 8c CO., . V CIIAKLOTiK. I if Li i j I & itbtruuiiiK ma s. icn were kii ea am. i .t if
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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June 16, 1892, edition 1
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