Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 26, 1894, edition 1 / Page 4
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I -i. r St - -IT , " E . 1 - i : - - IS: - r J- y - . . . ; . ... .... . ' -- ' - . - - : - f . ii inGP WALTER 3 " USES AND ENDORSES THE f TAAOt TAK cures when all 4 . North Cat . ..-.it in r-1-iH.K. A . . . r,u icchtf Jrsxi';t. Butm. . c, wan. j. 4 ri.ill.v k,m.. i,t nlst May. and I ' WotlmYts cost airily In AocV' ana i w ,' una. Prom my experience with It. I ,. rnti-.n. I can wrfely recommend it. 4 , Y"iir truly. Wai.tkb 4 ;W Is Life Worth Living? - That dependa upon tho Liver. If the Liver is inactive the whole sys tem is out of order the ireaih is had, digestion poor, head dull or aching, energy and hopefulness gone, the spirit is de pressed, a heavy weight tx'ists after eating, with 'general 'despondency and the blues. The Liver is the housekeeper of the . health ; and a harmless, Eimplc remedy that acts like Nature, does not constipate afterwards or require1 constant taking, docs not interfere with business or pleasure dur ing its use, makea Sim mons Liver Regulator a ! medical perfection, i "1 have tested it personally, ana Know inai w Dyspepsia, biliousness and Throbbing Headache, tt is the best medicine the world ever saw. H. H. Jours, Mtwo.fi, Oa. Tithe only the Genuine, Which has cn the Wrapper the red SB Trad- i -i j. t l -os. lei life iiiy.t:r:4iire, V i I- 1 1-. . ',..1 t!.t: i" -1 J . -1 -1 1 . t thK I..,:, ; " J. .iro. V AV'i itcf.ir '.-f.-ui-i, . Ask alV' I the '!'.! -;! ' . .ii. The more 1 ' ( you l.iHuyrihi u; t'n - I'oittinc the belter j yon will s; .v :v U Vi. J. RO!)li:.Y, Alanager, Department of thw Carolina, For Veare Bap OAXIBIB E. 6T0CKWELL, Ol ChfiStON field. K. n. "X was afflicted witb an titxaaely severe pain la tna lower part 01 no ciiest. Xce feeling waa as tt a ton wight was laid on a spot the sizo ' oUnyfcand. Dur ing the attacks, the lierspiratloawould stand io drop3 oa my face, and Unas agony for me to make sufficient effort wen to wills per. They cans suddenly, at anj hour, ot the day or night, lasting uora thlrtv iKiInntea ta ban a day, leaving as suddenly; lut, lot several flays after. I was Quito proi trated and sore Sometimes the attacks were almost daily, then less frequent. After afcout four years of this suffering, I was: taien down with bilious typhoid fever, and wfieo I began to recover, X bad the wort attack otaiy old trouble I ever experienced. At me first of the fever, nay mother gave me Ayer'a Tills, toy doctor recommending them as being better than aoythlos bo could prepare. I continued taking tt38 Pills, aad so great washd benefit flerived Uat during uearty thirty years llitf ha but one atticici my torroM j; jyritfhjca yielded readily to the same remedy I LAYER'S PlUaS Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer ft Co., lAvaOJSUii Gvery Doso Effeottvo sens Pain, Insures Safety to Life of Mother and Child. FriL6' afte,;hiVving used MouW 2ied throgh the ordeal SS !?C Pain' STRONGER IN ONE Hot R than m a week after the birth . Mrs. L. m. Aherx, Cochran, Ga. hip. 4MTe by a" lr-r'-. - .. w.. iiaaw.oa. ' ' i 1 1 ' ' iiiTT" r-i-r-i- oenfuotq.eo3ipuijrcTq CLAFHC else falls." ; s . in veition i M "Tr -. y j nnnie FREE.! amure 4 I i Elefctrollbration CD, M "if -4 - r . 945 FOVT AVCNOt, if jl NEW VOAK. ant ob- 4 Clark. 4 MMirWlfyWWyy America llcfre te Flood and Aftea. ilSlfprlKEENER. I Tlie Aslley5cs of Soflth CaroHna indicate I?cy(n4 a doubt that the western hmipHere once aboutdcd in nnimaHifeM" every variety-; that if not originajbi yet it had come to he a great center of orgmic existence aTtlic peiTodjoflthe flotd. Ik is nof to" be expcctcfl that a single deposit should tontajn absolutely the fossil o every ;speies yel there are (few wanting tn the huge cemeter- of aiiiinatecrejltiojh, so few. as to nfake the suppositjjonfthat with more time and discovery all will be found. In Kuropees)eciany in Sortriern Siberia, in IFrance, Italy and Hn gland extelisiye beds have jbeen found and fjexpWed, whih deter- min tho chmmon destruction of animals'QiMl man sudden and tver- whtlmiii catastrophe. Intheniam, they arc larfd animals, amphibious. Hut they ilo not contain extinct saurians, sharks seals, in touch with ..vtitint mnrVim.-ils a vast fautii of l . ( :.nd w4ter in one; bel and in. -- close contnet. as we tiud irt the pliosplinte f)cdsi With such a history before: the flood, a large : continent crowded with life uij its most active xpres sion, the fvfonder arises, how tame it. that prlrfumbly nothing remain ed; that! Icth rpan and beast "the horse and ! his ndw disappeared That the stopeiof the Atlantic, the orairicsioJlKansas, the heights 41 the Rocky Molmtajns, the pampas of Brazil, theirange of the Cordileras, became asstill as death. How 1 was it this imtfieuse wealth of herds and Hocks, a m. fishes, andpuge mamalia disappeayfd, passed away, witjhout leaving their tracks to tell the sjjtory, or cause a suspicion-.of their having once been iherc Had tho inhabitants which usually attend sueh animals remained,-the story might have tome down to tis thdt the liorse and tlie ox and ihc sheep and goat! once browsed pon these great plain and aided tliepne ot: man. i l v. i i But 16afi3,S5Q years all remained quiet eeptinj only tho slow! ad vance toys the vay of the Ajetian Islands W whd beasts, and it ac cidental pcctipation by small cam panics of ncn, Iwho had been Wreck ttl or btqrn bjr adverse windsj out of theirj Irourse. It has been; but few yeaHs -since the' geologist ex humed i taces of the abounding life thatj uce i the opening of the Ashley peps is the lull statement dis closed ailii fauna, marine amli ter rene f qtu to i that of tlie greater hemisphefe of the easri Such a catastrophe as left nothing in life; as earchcd every naouutain valley, pline aiid crevico of a contin ent f o r ji tf victtnis, could only -have been accoltipVislled by a hugs jftood of waterjl In the language ol; Mr nowartUin the "Mammoth an! the riood, wnienmust e accepted as the latesjand highest authority in geology, 'Continental uniformity o results isi onv 'consistent with ri con tincntal :ausc. This displaces the view so often urged by the patrons of easy micthotls in science tftat the animals cif the pleistocene age, cjiiefly perished fy lieiug drowned in rivexs and werf buried, by their mud, a view upoii whjch we have alrfeady adverted Iwhcnf urged in rcgarkl to Siberia ipd Europe. Again, k de struction of life? so complete, st wide spread, s independent of climatic and physical consideration, sdTab- sol "II' ?" iitela. variance with cvtrv kind of n or ma I process of extinction fthat we can thpk p'4 is assuredly consist ent 6hly Iwith (one theory, namely, that whiefi appeals to catastrophe on a gigaitic scale. A huge ieca tomb, covfririgtlwo continents with the corpsexofj ja myriad hertM, can only be, intagmed as the result bf a sudden complete and wide-spread catastropfe aqd this is even nore ccrtaiu; wjfien we remember how eo;u'polian pin constitution ! and h;ila MK-p ai-ihials as the horse, the mastadon the: megatherium, I etc., must havebceri to have lived irt the extremely diversified terrestrial jpror. vinces wheye their remains occuir." "The dilieuly of meeting (hese lucessitiespf the ease by any tWeory of uniformrf hjjs beca felt even more by fuquirtfrs on South Ametican geology tan jin Europe or Asia Darwin lorjg ago said; "It is impos sible to reflect onhe changed state of the American continent without j the deepest pstbnishment. Fyrtner ( ly it must tfavef ronmed with gjreat "monsters; row ;we find more fpig ; mics oimpjfred yvith the antecejjent' ; allied races! t The rrrft number, ifl tjori; all quadrupeds lived at a period and were the contemporaries of the exist ing sea-shells. Since they lived no very great change in the form t the land can have taken place. What then has exterminated so many epe cits and whole general? The. mind at first is irresistibly hurried into rhe belief of some great catastrophe; but thus to destroy animals, both large and small, in Southern Patago nia, in Brazil, on the Cordillera of Peru, in North America, and up to Behring Straits, we must shake the entire frame-work of the globe. The great naturalist then faces the vari ous theories which have been sug gested to account for the facts, but discards them in turn and leaves the problem unsolved, proving how great a stumbling-block he the most ingenious of inquirers found, of t." P. 331. The opinion of Mr. Jeffries Wynwn on l ossu Aiammais ip. -j;, give as quoted by Mr. Howarth; still strongly confirmatory of the the abounding life and equally aboundingdeath.jlluetrnted in the fossil records of South America: From the various recentdiscoverics of the remains of mastodons i South America, it appears that they oce had a geographical range over nearly the whole of that continent since they were found by;Humboldt as far.north as Santa Be de Bogota, especially at the camp des gians, where they w5re collected in great numbers, and have also beefi dis covered as far south as Buenos Ayres, on the Atlantic, by Admiral Duootel, at Conception de Chili, on the Pacific, and at various inter mediate points in Peru, Chili, La Plata, Brazil and Columbia, by Dombay, Gay, Alcede D' Orbigny, Darwin and others. Thus their re mains extend from SO north to 370 south, and on south, and on both side of the great chain of the Cordil- eras from ocean to ocean. What is still more remarkable, the bones of mastodons haye been discovered at unusually great elevations, accord ing fo D'Obigny, come up to the bor ders of perpetual snow. One of the raolors described by Cuner, was ob tained by Humboldt on the volcano of Ibambura, at an elevation of 7,200 feet above the level of the sea." "It has been ereatly urged that they were killed off by the glacia cold. Can anything be produced more fantasic than such a view? I the glacial cold invaded the tropica regions of Brazil and Guiana, as Aeassiz has suggested, and took possession of the equatorial belt it self, how is it that any life sarviyed at all any where pa $he earth save those forms of it specially adapted to exclusively boreal conditions? 0 p What became of the myriad tropical products of the Valley of the Amazon while the coldwas so in tense there that it idled on not merely gigantic sloths, but horses and lamasail of which couhflive as far south as Patagonia? Thenotion is supremely ridiculous and affords another example of the crudities which take possession of scientific men when they offer incense to some metaphysical idol. This mixture of animals of different habits and habitats ol carnivorous and pachyderms, and herbivorous is most puzzling, especially when the remains show ap often a common freskness and an unwqrn ungnawct appearance Death certainly has no parasites, and Is singularly neutral in its methods, but it does not, in its normal moods at all events, collect great mylodons and thickly hided megatheriums, nimble opossums and softly-cuirassed glyptodons, caries and mastodons, and kill them to gether." These Jul! quotations from masters of the science of geology are enough to establish the overflowing life of the western hemisphere at one period in its history. Vet, strange to say, all of it has been obtained from the history of death written and grown in stones by the power of God, and distributed by Him over its entire surface of icld, mountain and flood. Until the arrival of the Spaniards near 400 years ago none of this mass of varied animal life existed nor was recognized as ever having been on the tontinent, or on any of the islands of the Americas. We can, now form some conception of the rapid productkm of fauna by what has been its progress since that period. It is not unlike the increase of the rabbit in Australia during tte last fifty years. To get a full idea of the destruction brought in an hoar by the Xoachic flood, we must suppose what was the sum of undisturbed animal life during a growth of 1,600 years. The sentence of death in the myriads of herds and flocks, of huge mammals, marine and terrene, that were hush ed in- a silence that continued un broken for 4,000 years. It is only or late that the cunous scientist has I scratched the moss and earth from the time.covpred tombstones of man and beast which the Creator Himself had set up in memory of the one great disaster that copsigned the whole world to an equal fate. This vast burial of creation at the hands of the Creator certifies to the truth of inspiration; that originally all had been called into existence out of nothing. For the flat that created all could alone destroy all. Sach a continent of life and then of death fully vindicated the wisdom which thereby confirmed to all ages the truth of the Pentateuch. The pick and the spade can now effect ually dissolve the higher criticism of unbelief. Had the western hemis phere appeared again full of life directly after the flood, as the eastern has been ever si ace that catastrophe, the whole truth might have failed for lack of-cvidence. In the face of inspiration there would have been placed the Hying masses of the fauna of Asia Europe and Africa, and the claim of an uninterrupted life since the memory of man. The caches of of petrified bones and tusks found here and there over the wide surface of continents would have been placed evidence of partial floods, or of fluvial action, distribueed through great reaches of time and at long intervals. Cle velaftd Vrf;e WUMim Washington, July 1J. The fol lowing is President Cleveland's letter to Representative Wilson Upon the tariff situation, which Mr. Wilson, read as a part of his remarks in the House - this after noon: Executive Mansion, i Washington, D. C, July 2, 1894, j personal.! Hok.-Wj. Jj. Wilson; My Dear Sir. The certainty that a conference will be ordered be tween the two houses of Congress for the purposed' adjusting differ ences on the subject of tariff legis lation, makes it almost certain that you will be again called od to do hard service in the cause of tariff reform. My public life has been so closely related to the sub lect, I have so longed for its ac complishment, audi have so often promised its realization to my fel low conutrymeu, as a result of their trust and confidence in the Democratic pajty, that I hope no excuse is necessary for my earnest anneal to you that in this crisis you strenuously insist upon party honest v and good faith and a sturdy adherence to Democratic principles. I believe these ab solutely necessary conditions to the continuation of Democratic existence. 1 cannot get rid of the feeliug that this conference present the best If not the ouly hope of true Democracy. Indica tions point to its action as the re liauce of thoserwho desire the cenuine fruition of Democratic effort 'the fullfillinent of Democra tie pledges and the redemption of Democratic promises to the peopie. To reconcile differences in the de tails comprised within the fixed and well-defined lines of principle will not be the sole task of the conference, but as it seems to me its members will also have in charge the question whether do mocratic principle themselves are to be saved or abandoned. There is no excuse for mistak ing or misapprehending the feel ing and the temper of the rank and tile of the Democracy. They are downcast under the assertion that their party fails in ability to inauage the government, and they are apprehensive that efforts to bring about tariff reform may fail; but they are muck more downcast- aud apprehensive in their fear that uemocratio principles may be surrendered. In these circum stances they cannot do otherwise than to look with confidence to you who have patriotically and sincere ly championed the cause of tariff reform within Democratic lines and been guided by Democratic princi ples This confidence is vastly augmented by the action under your leadership of the House of Representatives upon the bill now pending. Every true Democrat and every sincere tariff reformer knows that this bill in its present form as it will be submitted to conference falls far short of the consummation for which we have suff ered defeat without discourage ment; which, in its anticipation, gave us a rallying ory in our day of triumph, ana which in its pro mise of accamplishment is so in terwoven withperaocratic pledges and Democratic success thai our abandonment of the cause or the principles upon which it rests means party perfidy and party dis honor. One topic will be submitted to the conference which embodies Democratic principles so directly that it cannot be compromised. We have in our platform and in every way possible declared In favor of the free importation of raw materials. We have again promised that this should be ac corded to our people and our manufacturers as soon as the De mocratic party was invested with the power to determine the tariff policy of the country. The party now has that power. We are as certain to-day as we have ever been of the great benefit that would accrue to the, country from the inauguration bf this policy, and nothing has occurred to re lease us from our obligation to se cnre this advantage to our people. It must be said that no tariff mea sure can accord, wjtb Democrat Jo principles and ffromises. of bear a genuine Democratic badge, that does not provide for, -free raw materials. In the circumstances, it may well excite oar wonder that Democrats are willing to depart from this, the meat Demoeratio of all tariff principles, and that the inconsistent absurdity of snob a proposed departure should be emphasized by tb suggestion that the wool of the farmer be put on the free list and the protection of tariff taxation be placed aronnd the iron ore and coal of corpora tions and capitalists. How can we face the people after in dulging in such outrageous dis criminations and violations of principle! It is quite apparent that this question of free raw materials does not admit of ad justment on auy middle ground. fcince their subjection to any rate of tariff taxation great or small, is alike violation at democratic priucinles and Democratic good faith. 1 hope that you will not Consider it intrusive if I say something in re lation to another subject which can hardly fall to .be troublesome to the conlereace. I refer to the ad justment of tariff taxation on sugar. Under our party platform and in aocordauce with our de clared party purposes, sugar is a legitimate and logical article of revenue taxation. Unfortunately however, incidents nave accom panied certain stages of the legis lation which will be submitted to the conference, that have aroused, in connection with this subject, a nstural Democratic animosity to, the method and manipulations pf trusts and combinations. I con fess to sharing in this feeling; and yet it seems to me we ought if possible to sufficiently free oursel ves from pfejudiee to enable us coolly to weigh the considerations which in formulating tariff legis lation ought to guide our treat ment of sHgar as a taxable article. While no tenderness should be en tertained far trusts and while I am decidedly opposed to granting them, up tier the guise of tariff taxation, any opportunity to fur ther theirpeculiar methods, 1 sug gest that we ought not to be driven away from the Democratic principles and policy which lead to the taxation of sugar, by the fear, quite likely exaggerated, that in carrying out this principle and policy we may indirectly and inordinately encourage a coinbi nation of sugar refining interests. I know that in present conditions that is a delicate subject and I ap preciate the depth and strength of tho feeling which its treatment has aroused. I do not believe we should do evil that good may come but it seems that we should not forget that our aim is the com pletion of the toriff bill, and that m taxing sugar tor proper purpo ses and within reasonable hounds, whatever may be said of our ac tion, we are in no danger of run ning counter to Democratic prin ciples. With all there is at stake there must be in the treatment of this article some ground upon which we are all willing to stand, where conciliation may be allowed to solue the 'problem, without de manding the entire surrender of Sxea and conscientious conscien tious convictions. I ought not to prolong this let ter. If what I have written is un welcome, I beg you to believe in IUJ gUOU lUbUUlUit u iuo wu- elusions of tho conference touch ing tho numerous items which will be considered, the people are not afraid that their interests vill be to place home necessaries and comforts easier within their roach Steam, Air and Vacuum Pumps, zontal of every Variety and to insure better and sorer compensation to those who toil. We all know that a tanQ covering all the varied interests and condi tions of a country vast as ours must of a neccessity largely the re sult of an honorable compromise. 1 expect very few of us can say when our measure Is perfected that all its features are entirely as we would prefer. Yoa know how mueh I deprecated the incor poration into the proposed bilLof the income tax feature. In mat ters of this kind, however, which not violate a fixed and recognised Democratic doctrine, we re will- ing to defer to the judgment ol a majority of ojir Democratic breth eru. Ithink there is a general agreement that this is party duty. This Is more palpably 'apparent when we realize that the business of our country timidly stands and watohes for the result ol our efforts to perfect tariff legislation, that a quick and certain return of prosperitywaits upon a wise ad iustment and that a confiding peo pie still trust m our hands their prosperity-aiid well-being. The k Pemocracy of the land - pleads most earnestly for the speedy completion of the tariff legislation which their representatives have undertaken bnt they demand not less earnestly thgt no stress of ne cessity shall tempt those they trust to the abandonment of De mocratic principles. Signed Grover Cleveland. Hill Cleveia4 Letter. Washington, July lQl.Wheu asked sylit be thought of the let ter of the President. Senator Jim replied: "In the language of the novel, 'the plot thickens.' I prefer to say nothing at this tune as to the propriety or wisdom otthe let ter. It comes rather late, and may complicate the which situation and defeat all tariff legislation whatever. If the President, in stead of writing a letter, had ex ercised his influence to assist me in getting votes for free raw material when I was making the fight therefor in the Senate, the present unfortunate complication might have been avoided. I trust chat there will be more votes now for free raw material when I bring forward the proposition again iu the Senate, which I expect to dov The skies are brightening." PEilSVLVMin LEADING .TOR In all the attributes that snfttce to make a first class family Journal. TilS PUILADEIPIUA RECORD Spares no trouble or expense to gather and aud present to its readers all tho news of Old and New World. Its several Departments, each under the management of a competent alitor, treat fully of matters pertaining to THE HOUSEHOLD, THE FARM, WOMAN'S WORLD, SCIENCE, ART, LITERATURE, FINANCE, THE REAL ESTATE WOKLU. rreeeuung a orapiewj magazine every day SUBSCR1PTION.RATES. Daily, one year - - Daily and Sunday, one jar 13.00 14.00 UDRKSS : The Keeord Publishing Co., 017-019 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA. MIIBI1E(D)M;?5 Regular Horizontal IPiston. 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Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 26, 1894, edition 1
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