Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / April 27, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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' ' 0: ... ' VOL. XXHV- THIRD SERIES. SALISBURY, N C, THURSDAY APRIL 27, 1893, A lit - WOLX lilllloL . V V What Castoria Is Ir. Sanmcl Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Children.-It contains neither Oium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing: Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of rXothers. Castoria is tho Children's Panacea ! -the ''Mother's Friend. ' . Castoria. . "Cattoria is so rill adapted to children thai I jipisiwid it-as superior to any pn-scription known t:-i;oe" A. ARcnsa, JL I)., l':! So. Oxford St., Krooklyn, N. Y. "Thr-ursf ' Cartoria ' is so universal and ) n;rrir ro well kr.or.-n that it so-taa a work '.f i:wr--i' ration tj nJwse it. Few arc the" fl,ai-ctTa:.:CI; v.-Z:o Io not keep 'Castoria C&j0S ZIahtyn, D. D., - New York City. CURES ALL SKIM AMD BLOOD OfiBB'E ' " ie-.w:r, it-foa, CK"., oc. Udtnwbw ijsttauf bix f.isoned aud wbot blood la la C COSES KBJSteta.LIppinan'aEiock, .153.411, Gl Will. Pl'IP IntluvlTln ln .....I. N?t Uirhsct;Uiea.i.nlhartl si. the u-e oT m SM nne rr fnr nlno ttan T tf -rings and i'to tried different octet ors,- hut found I'CUiTnn'll t trip I Itrtionlo Rlr. u.ir, 1. . p5ui4aiid well. I am well known here- 8avaniiAii, G A., April 2G, 1S89. Havineused three, bottles of IV P. I for impure blooit and trcneral wPiikness. ind having derived great benefits from "e same, having gamed 11 pounds in ihhl io four weeks. I take treat Dleas- d recotnaieuding it to unfortunates hie Yours trulv. r, JOHN MORRIS. - OfBce of J. N. "McElroy .Druggist, f Orlnd;i, Flu., April 20 1891. j Messrs. Lijtpuian Bros,, tvtvaiu.ah, Ga.. Dcir Si r I ilil th large Hce yesterday, and oue bottle "aii-size to-tlay. Tbe P. l p. cured my wife of rhctima iVo winter before last. It ca'.rebaek on prthe pat winter, and a half Itotlle, 'wsize, relieved tier aain, ana she has iiadia sviiiiitoin smee. Isold a bottle of V. V. 1 ton friend of Ull, Oia-tfliis turkevs, si !oo hick.and his wife gave it a teaspoon- -i tuai was in uie evening, ana tue lit ' fellow turned over like-he was dead, '.joextuioruiiig was: up hollering and 'L Yours respeetfullv. j. n. Mcelroy. I .Lippman Bros , Savannah.Ga.: I Sirs I have suffered from rhen- Fism for a long time, and did not find fre until ! foUud P. P. P.,which coru- cured me. Yours trulv. 16 Orange St., Savanuah. WANTED. A Helixble'llVrsou in Every Town to take the Exclusiye Agency I of tllP f'Ur. Li i, . . . - "ona sLoiumtnan txpo- smon llluslraled, WjHENTlDlOJlGAJt OF THE FAIR. : '- established 1S90. Opportnnity to 31akc 3Ioner for lae ext Year. 63 I ft. jt.' ian r.d-.rt k P. 1. a a spjdiii ooubm ailou. V swi twrib it wjth prnt satisfaction for th cure jof nil fw-ni iijij n 5-71 of P-imarv, fVenrdirT find TertlsrT fcvpUsii, Sypliiiiiic l.-oira.ui. Scrofuiout tjkm and Eorw, CiniaUT S--liiiiT RhcamarVm, B3&Un; old ja..ny iKi.rl.: (u u. oi,.,rrKa ia;0 U( 1,100,4. """J Pin f. I'. P., ftKily Ajh, Fo& Root One Chance in a Lifetime. cents in sta"uips for sampie Copy' and full particulars. J.B.CAMP3Ul,PRES., 153 AOAMSIST., CHICAGO, ILL 0 A St L m - Castoria. A Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stom-ich, Diarrhoea, Eruc Nation, Kills Vonns, ives sleep, t-:d promotes dJ -gestion. - Without injurious medication. "For KTTcral years I have recommended your 'Castoria,' and shall always continue tc do eo as it Uaa invariably produced benefida. results." Edtti F. P-iRnrx, II. D., 125th Street and 7th va., New York City Tkk Czmivu Company, 77 Mcuray Stcket, New York Crrr .3 IT IS A D C'TY T0 owe yotirself and turn 11 y to jret tiie bent value for your nroney. Kceiioniksx) in your footwear by part-basing beat valne for price aaked, a thousands v . Ms. iioagiu rnnes, wnira represent tno Ji testily. tarTAILE KO SUBSTITUTE. W. LU -DOUGLAS r.IE SST SHOS IS THE WOBU FOR The M0f&T. A sresaine seweoSsboe. ttf tm'J not rip, flno. calf, fitamU-Mi, emiootb in3ide, llexibJe, more com fortable, tt y 1 lsh and durable than any other shoe erer Hold at the r rice, EquaU cuatoui niudo aooeacostinz trom4to5. CJI aaa Hand-eewed, flnecnlf ehceo. The V1 tuost stvlisu, easy and durable eiioes ever sold at the price, i iiey ecual ne imported ahoea oostirur fromStofl2. . 5& I'oliee Shoe, worn by farmer and all oter who raut a frood heavy calf, three eoled, extension edT ahoe, easy to walk In, and will koep Uie fe-t dry r.nd T.irm, C3 50 Vine C If', g.5 and 62.00 Work- KtftLma i;, emeu's Saoes wilt give more wear for tba money tfaau any other make. They are made for er vice. The increasing bales ahow that workingmea cave found th Ib cut. e,?r: end Youth' 61.75 School yJ iioc-s are worn by the boys every-fc-here. Theairst per iceableehoessold atthepriee. fmpt?& ii.QO and SI. 75 Shoea for " t I nmcn nro made jf the best Dongola or fine Calf, aa desired. 7 be v ere very styliKh, comfortable and dura ble. TbefS.OOfiho'j eifUnLs custom aiadeaboeeeofstinr from ,vl.J0 to 6uio. Lad ies who wiali to economise la their loot wear eref ndins this out. 'aorion. W. L. Douglas' name and the price If stamped on the bottom of each shoe ; look for it when yon buy. Bewareof dealers attempting to sub stitute other inakee for them, tiuch substitutions are fraudulent and subject to prosecution by law for ob taining money under false pretences. XV. L. UOIGLAS, JUrociitou, Mass. Sold by S. .BROWRI. Cures all Pomaio Complaints and Monthly irregularity, Loucorrhoea or Whites, Pain in Back or Sides, strengthens the feeble, builds up tb.ewb.ole system. It has cured thousands and will cure you. Druggists have it. Send stamp for book. EU. J. P. DBOaaOOtS & CO LonlsTlUe, Ky. GOOO(50 OOG O aTo cnallest Fill in the Wcrld! VIiy do you suffer from Dyspcrtsia and Siek-Headache, rcnttering life mirerable, when Umw o 0 O ii. D 1L Tiny Liter Trill STHXKiriy remove all this troable, v enable ron to eat ana uiffest ytmr Sood, JJ fV enjoyment of lifo to which, Ton hare Sip been a strancrer. Dose small. Price, Issl i cents. Orice, Z9 Park Place, N. T. OOGGGOOOOO prevent neaaacne ana impart an YOUR CASE IS NOT HOPELESS AIDS NATURE IN NATURE'S OWN WAY. IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO INVESTIGATE. A 40-tgr Pamphlet MAILED - FREE ufion application. ATLANTIC ELECTROPOISE CO. 1405 New York At., Washington, 0. C. nfi'' ''' WASHINGTON LEiTEE. From our regular correspondent. Secretary Carlisle is daily proing himself to Le the right tuua ia the right place. He has not allowed him self to become anxious or excited dur ing the financial flurry of the week, brought about, as he firmly believes, by u combine of baikeis whoure seek ing by a renewed demand for gold for shipment abroad to force an issue of bonds. So firm is the Secretary in his belief that this is true that he politely, but'positively, declined to . accept au invitation extended him by New York city bankers U meet theni in that town for the purpose of discussing the gold problem; he also, when it was suggested to him that the bankers would come to Washington to dUcuss the matter if he would invite them, declined to do so. For the U. S. Treas ury to be run entirely independent of Wall Street men is something decided ly new, and compliments for Secretary Carlisle are heard on all sides, from Republicans" as well as from Demo crats. One gentleman, a personal friend said: "Secretary Carlisle be lieves that Wall Street bankers have had entirely too much to say io the conduct of the financial department of the Government in the past, and that they are largely responsible for the present situation. Consequently he has no idea of taking them into his confidence as to what he intends doing. He proposes gmngjj.ehi a needed les son by, showing them that all the financial ability is not congregated in Wall Street, and that they cannot dic tate the country X financial pro gramme." rfhe firmness of Secretary Carlisle against an issue of bonds has already brought about a letter condi tion of affairs, and it is believed tht if those who wish to compel an issue of bonds become convinced that none will be issued the dem.-md for gold for for eign shipment will soon resume its nor mal condition. The outlook is now considered much better tliaii it was at the beginning of this week. Attorney General Olnev has appar ently been selected as the target at which to fire every slander and lie that is hatched up by the uttersiiies of the opposition and the sensational press. One of the mot audacious of fiese was the one which purported to .give in detail the particulars of Repre sentative Wilson, of West Virginia, being snubbed by the Attorney Gen eral, in the office of the latter, which was published at a time whtn it was known that Mr. Wilson would be where he would not be likely to see the story until it had had about two day's publicity, and worse than that, some of the papers that printed the lie neg lected to print Mr. Wilson's unquali fied denial, which was telegraphed to them as soon as he read the article. The Atiorney Gener ;1, like the dignified gentleman that he is, quistly performs bis official duties, just as though the barking curs did not exist. Many statements, some of them ridic ulously absurd, have been made about President Cleveland's intentions con cerning Hawaii. The fact of the mat ter is that he will await the report of Commissioner Blount before deciding what to do. It was because he did not consider the information at hand suffi ciently definite to make up his mind what ought to be done-that he sent Col. Blount to Hawaii. All state ments to the contrary are merely guesswork, as neither the President nor Secretary Gresham will discuss the matter, that is, not for publication. , President Cleveland and Secretary Gieshara have been investigating the workiug of the much.-talked-about rec iprocity treaties made under the au thority of the McKinley tariff law, and it leoks now as if they were one and all failures, aad that they will have to go. Those with Brazil, and with Spain for Cuba and Porto Rico will probably be the first to be abolished, as there have been numerous com plaints about the manner in which the customs officials of these countries have violated the treatries. Tables prepared at the State Department show that the whole system has been a fail ure, and that instead of increasing the market for American products there has leen, in several countries, a mark ed falling off in our trade since the treaties went into effect. The Presi dent believes that a conciliatory policy towards our neighbors will result in much greater commercial benefit to us than the t.olicy of reciprocity by coer ci.m which was practiced by the Hai- : nson administration. ;- I ' Hon. James E. Eustis.'of Louisiana ihls week qualified as U.'S. Ambassa dor to France, and today he left for New York, whence he will start for Paris. Secretary Herbert left today for Hampton lloatls. He will fly his flag from the Dolphin during the Naval Review and will accompany ' the inter national fleet to New York, where it will be met by Presideut Cleveland and the rest of the Cabinet, and where the fiual exercises will, take place. Dif astroct;r octrine. Murat Hulstead,'a Republican, teach' e the doctrine that it is right for po litical art ies to formulate p'atf orms, simply to win votes and then after the elet tion ignore them. Mr. Halstead believes in a strong centralized government and has but little respect or concern for tire masses of the people. His views about party platforms may appear right from h s arbitrary, paternal government stand point, but theyf'i nevertheless .have a ernicious. disastrous,andjdishonest tendency. A party platform should bean hon est declaration of principles, and not something designed to deceive and mislead the people. No Jplank should be inserted in a platform simply to catch votes. To do so is dealing dis honestlv with the voters and totally com trary.to those grand and sublime priuciples'tipon which our freedomas A,merican citizens founded. National and political parties are simply aggregations of individuals. We have laws prescribing punishment for individual 'dishonesty. Why should it be right for an aggregation of individuals, and wrong for them separately, to act dishonestly ? Gone to Pieces. T Mr. Landmark. N. The utter demoralization of the Re publican party in this city is simply astonishing. It has gone all to pieces, and. despite the frantic appeals of its organs to ure-organiz can not get together. It frequently happens that a defeated party grows stronger affer election, but the Republican party is even veaker than it was lastfall. It has not a majority in a single one of the thirty assembly districts of the city. From the Battery to Harlem the town is solidly Democratic. Even in the darkey district, the eleventh,Jthere is a Democratic majority. Scores of old time Republicans have left the p irt. some of them having actually joined Tainnianv Hall; and every day brings more deserters to that arty of sound ideas and good morals which is called Democratic. And now the New York Times, which was once rabidly Republican, and tlien decidedly Mugwu apian, announces in clear new type that it too is Demo cratic. This is a valuable accession, for no newspaper in the land is more ably edited, and very few, if any. of the great dailies is as clean. The Times i beginning to print an occasional illus tration, but the paper is not at all sen sational and gives no indication that it will be. Though it is owned by new parties, its editorial management re mains the same, and the fact that its former and present editor in chief is now one of its principal stockholders is a guarantee that it will maintain its dignified place in the front rank of the journals of the world. But while the Times is to be a Dem ocratic newspaper, it will not necessa rily try to make the public believe that all Democrats are angels. No respect able journal North can do that. The leading Democratic papers in this sec tion do not attempt to defend the ras cals in the party. They are very much i broader iu this respect than the leading Republican journals, which do not hes itate to speak approvingly of Quay, for instance, and Davenport, and others like them, and to commend every act of a Republican administration, hojw ever rotten. And this is why ti e Democratic party North is constantly growing. It is the party of moral ideas iu contradistinction to the party of immoral ideas, that is, the Repub lican party.- In this city neither the Times nor the World is the servant of a faction; an t the readers of the two papers can carry this State in any election. These journals, like th? ma jority of the Democrats of the State, are opposed to one-inau power. That is why tbey d not hesitate to criticise i. rAor Tammanv Hall and Mr, ujnv st Machine. They are ranged .i,n ;a known to out- u ,ia.(,i,nj Democracy. ana sidcrs as the Cleveland democracy, that Democracy is the ha kfinn nf ib- Democratic party in New York State. It is the only part of the party that is going to keep growing stronger, for it rpn sjnts mora! ideas. Kansas Women in Polities. K. T. Bur, For some slays the Kansas naDers have been unusually interesting by reason of their report of the tceues of the late elections, when the women as well as the men of the State went (o t he polls to cast "their ballots for the candidates whom they favored. We can say that the voting women were treated with the utmost courtesy in every town of the State, and that they demeaned themselves with perfect pro priety everywhere. They seemed to be even more earnest than the men, and they voted according to their convic tions; they were familiar wrth the prin ciples involved in the elections, and they had a good knowledge of the rec ord and the character of the rival can didate who asked for thtir support. In their choice of tickets they were governed less by sentiment than by judgment, and they displayed com mendable independence in their choice. In the papers of a hundred towns we are told that wives voted against can didates supported by their husbands, and that even young ladies gave prac tical evidence that in politics they did not agree with their lovers. In oue case a populist lass lost her beau by re fusing to put a Republican ballot in the box; on the other hand, an old maid won a suitor by her enthusiasm for the Democratic party. There were plenty of incidents of this kind at the Kansas elections, and we gladly admit that not any of them has lessened our respect for the womanhood f the Sun flower State. In many places the re sult of the election was determined by the vote of the women. Nearly 20,000 of them went to the polls. The women did not give any special political favor 'o candidates of their own sex; ia fact, we can not ascertain that more than one feminine mayor was elected in all the State, though seventeen women were mayoralty candidates. Mrs. Pot tr, who ran for mayor of Kansas City, is a millionaire, of pleasing manners, and famed for benevolence; yet, though thre were nearly 4,000 voters ofe her sex, she got the ballots of only about 100 of them. Her politics did not suit her sisters. In several cities the vote of the women exceeded that of the men. It would be hard t explain why a maiority of the women in most places stood up for the Republican party. Seyeral women were elected to the office of Police Justice. A good many colored women were among the voters. Women stood around the polls electioneering. The election was held under the Australian system of voting, and the wr men knew how to mark and fold their tickets just about as well as the men. In some places the women went to the polls in sqads of four, six, ei'ht. or more. A woman's husband, brother, or son could often be seen ac companying her to the polls, both of them voters. We have read with pleasure a stack of the Kansas papers in which the ac counts of these elections have been printed. It would not now be an easy thing to take away from the Kansas women the great American privilege of voting. They hope to get full suf frage, so that they can vote at all State elections. When the late Gen. B. F. Butler was in command in New Orleans a woman in that city applied to him for a pass through the Union lines that she might see her son, wno was lying wounded in a house in the Fuburbs. Butler told her that she could have one if she would take the oath of alle giance. She refused to do this and argued long and earnestly against it, breaking into a flood of tears at length and exclaiming, "You do not know how I love my son.'1 uAh! ' cried Butler with scathing emphasis, "but you love secession better." The State capitol of Texas is the largest State building in the United Stales and the seventh in size among .. -1 it. tmtrrA ff. i a the buildings u. "" " rast Greek cross of red Texas granita with a central rotunda covered by a dome 311 feet high. It was begun in 18S1 and finished in 1888, having cost about $3,500,000. It was paid for with 3,000,000 acres of public land, deeded to the capitalists who executed the work. j Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report AESSlJlirEIX F2JE3E Storms and Cyclones on All Sides. Milwaukee, Wis., April 20. Lake Michigan is Jbeing swept by one of the worst easterly gales experienced in years. The sea is running very high, and tugs are upable to venture out of the harbor. A Small vessel i ashore at the head of Janeau avenue. The worst feature of the gale at this port is the probable loss f 20 lives by the washing away of a house over the crib at the termiuus of the new water works tunnel. No men were in sight at the time, but it is believed that they were swept away. Fayetteville, Ark., Apr. 20.r-At noon yesterday a cyclone passed through the valley just south of here, leaving a barren waste behind it. Many fami lies were in the storm last night with out shelter, their houses having been carried away. No lives are lost, as far as known, although a -number of per sons were injured. Little Rock, Ark., April 20. News was received here to-day of a fearfully destructive cyclone that swept down Fourche Valley a few days ago, leaving death aud havoc in its wake. The town of Boles, 16 miles north of Dal las, was almost swept off the earth. It is known that several persons were killed. Dennison, Tex.,April 20. A cyclone struck Kaney Hollows, 40 miles north of here, at midnight Tuesday night, tearing down several houses and injur ing several persons, some probably fa tally. Telegraphic communication was destroyed, and the Missouri, Kansas & Texas main line blocked by trees on the track. The storm cut a swath about 300 yards wide, laying big timbers to the ground. It is reported that one man was killed by hailstones. Meridian, Miss., April 20. Acyclone struck Pachuta, Miss.T at 7 o'clock last night. Great damage was done to property, and it is feared several lives were lost. The same tornado struck De Soto, a town of 500 inhabitants, ten minutes later. The extent of the damage at this place is reported very great. All wires are down. - Bostian's Bridge Disaster Cases. SUtesvllle Landmark. All the suits against the Richmond and Danville Railroad, growing out of the wreck at Bostian's bridge, near Statesville, on the 27th of August, 1891, in which 22 persons were killed aud 30 wounded, have been compro mised. There were 13 of these cases in Iredell Superior court, and the fol lowing amounts have been allowed in each case: Death claims J. C. Brodie, 1 5,000; W. M. Houston, $5,000; Chas. G.Web er, $5,000; Mis Ophelia Polk Moore, $2,000; Mrs. Susan Pool, $2,000; Hugh K. Linster, $2,000; A. Davis, $1,200; Rev. J. M. Sikes, $3,500. Claims for injuries J. F. Holler, $2,000; Mrs. Naomi Hayes Moore, $1, 500; Miss Louallie Pool, $1,500; O. W. Lawson, $1,000; G. W. Bowley, $1,000. A number of suits were entered at Asbeville, Salisbury, and other places. We understand that all of these have been compromised. It is said that A. L. Sink and wife, of Lexington, have been allowed $5,000. We have not learned what amounts have been al lowed in the other cases, but it is safe to say that the wreck, first and last, cost the company at least $100,000. An Underground Eiver of Iron Water- While prospecting for water for the oil and fertilizer works, Mr. Knox, the engineer, struck a great under ground stroam of strong fron water. th Charlotte Xeics. It is lo cated in the Bissell bottom landi,4.o the southwest of the city. By means of driven wells, it was found that tie stream is 700 feet wide and 5$ feet deep. It is 45 feet below the sui face. Considerable interest has been excited in the discovery. The water is strongly impregnated with iron, but the surprising part about it is the im mense volume of the stream. Very near this place is Dowd's iron spring. 1 Tne Waldenses. The Waldenses are a church or re jligious sect which arose under that j name (called also Valdenses and Vu- dois) iii northern Italy, in the twelfth century. They received the name Waldenses from Peter Waldus, thrir founder, a wealthy merchant of Lyon, who, about the year 1160, emi.Ioted a certaiu priest to translate portions of the Scriptures from Latininto French. After a careful study of these trans lations he saw how far the Romih Church had departed from the faith and practice 'of Christ and the Apos tles. Shocked at the glaring errors of Rome, aud led on by an ardent desire for his own salvation and that of oth ers, Peter Waldus abandoned his mer cantile puisuitsi, distributed his wealth among the poor, and forming an aso-. ciationj of persons like-minded with himself, began publicly to instruct the multitudes in the doctrines and pre cepts of Christianity. They were real Protestants, protesting against nearly every form of Romish corruption. The sect spread rapidly, and they soon had societies in France, Lombardy, and other proyiuces iu Europe. . The gov ernment of their church was in the beginning committed to bishops, pres byters, and deacons. They consider that the ministers should be poor, like the Saviour and his Apostles, and all followed some calling by which they secured a living. Their government has changed now more in accordance with the Reform ers, and they have a miuister for each parish; their synods are presidtd over by a moderator. They have suffered much persecu tion from the Romish Church on ac count of their pure faith. Many have fled into Bohemia and other parts of Europe for protection. They lay claim to a pure and unbroken succession from the Apostles. Their devotion to prin ciple and their endurance for their faith have given them great distinc tion. They now ocsupy the valleys and foothills of the Alps on the Italian side, and under the present Italian gov ernment enjoy full liberty of con science. They are an industrious, thrifty people, of god morals and generally, religious. As immigrants they are very desirable, and will be quite an ac quisition to our State. Burke county is fortunate in haying secured a large jsoiony of them. Exchange. Eclipse of the Sua. Wilmington HeseenRtr, The observations of the sun made at the Chilian observatory on Sunday is reported in the New York Herald to have been a splendid success. Prof. W. H. Pickering, an American astrono mer, made the observations and reports results in the Herald of Monday. Pho tography was freely used. The obser vations were takn from . the Andes mountains at the Harvard College sta tion on Hina Aris. All the phases of the sun were clearly seen, there being no clouds or haze to disturb the observ ers. Fine photographs of the corona wero taken. It was found that theun was disturbed and there were " bright torchlight streaks on the face of the great orb. Professor Pickering cables of the disturbances: "To be more explicit the outer corona was unusually extended and much larger than in 1878 or 1889, as was to have been expected daring the pres ent period f increasing solar activity. The eclipse observations showed -eon-el usively that the sun is now far from being quiescent, but is in a state of great disturbance. There were very distinct evidences of great spottedness and the presence of aculae or bright, torch-like streaks. The Color of the corona was rather whitish than red and of a pale or perly white hut." The lower house of the Kentucky Legislature has declared . against the marriage of cousins on the ground that children of sucrT marriages are fre quently weak-minded. Vr G Hi
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 27, 1893, edition 1
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