Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Aug. 9, 1894, edition 1 / Page 2
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7 I THE CAEOLINAJATOHMAN'. SUBSCRIPTION7 tt 00 PER - jgR O, E. CROWSON. Manager. k mtrn rTJTT7 CftTTTtT" judge Connor felines. V A a " ; witimore Sun. - rfl l ;T inMirofl f rATTi 17 Hon. tienn u. n i THURSDAY AUG. 9, sy4. FOR CONG HESS. John' S. Henderson, of Rowan, For Judg"-8th Judicial Districe, BEN J. -F. LONG, ' of Iredell. For Solicitor8th Judicial Disk, EMERY E. UAPiUi, , of Davidson, Whither are we Driftig. 1 . . : If m . i O I lk Wilson under date fpt we u mj Raleigh News as follows -"I ask here to say to. the public, through your columns; that the ac tion of the convention of the Popu late, on yesterday, io presenting my name for justice of the Supreme Court, was without my consent. Those, who know me well; would not i it . : M.iw tin I ul. need tlw assurance, m, t u TWland e.nocrai, i.r . .k;k n iiiv-ii f Heaktfort, Conn. A feature of tjie commeacenieni exercises at f rinity College today was the grad uating address of Shirley Carter, a son of Mr. Bernard Carter, of Balti more. Carter had prepared his ad tjress and submitted it to the faculty (or their approval. There was nolh- i - .1 JJ i A n n cr m tue aauress iu wcuu uj v.v, lthough it was some what bold to Within the last month three mnr- Qts have been committed in this S.ate by boys under the age of 15. Our opinion is that parents will have to answer to a great extent for the untimely death of their children and also for the act of the murderer. We are sorry that such is t4ie case, but it is the truth nevertheless that boys of 12 and 15 are allowed their own way, jtheir own boss, arid allowed to roam on the strees ot towns at hours .of night when grown men sheuld be at home with their parents aud fam ilies. It is a serious question and if parents are not more careful with their children we may expect more murderers of that age in the future than in the past. We copy the fol lowing that parents who allow their children on the streets in all kind of company may read and degest: , Sanforn Express, 2d: A murder was conimitteed here to-night about 9 o'clock and tire town is in af state ot exciiement. The parties to the bloody traged were Edgar, 13-year-old son Archie Hart, and Theodore, 3.2-year-old son of William Mclver, colored. While engaged in a fight just in front of Watson's store, the white boy was stabbed to death by the negro. The knife used in doing the bloody work was handed tliie negro by another small negro boy. When the Express reporter arrived on: the scene of the tragedy he found the young murderer in Watson's store asleep in charge of a squad of armed men. and his victim lying on the piazza cold in death. Upon ex amining the murdered boy he found . that he had been stabbed ia three different places. First, just above the left eye, on the left arm and abbut two inches above the heart After being stabbed the boy made a few steps, fell and expired almost instantly. A physician was hastily summoned, but to no avail. Is seems that the wounds were made by a snlall . btaded knife and in making the one just above the heart the blade was sent straight in The bipod flowed profusely and saturated the victim's clothes. Some blood wa-sTounl on the murderer. He is Temarkably clever in handling the knife, and has the appearance of a vicious, bad negro. He and his ac cotnplice will be given a preliminary hearing to-morro w. ( Friday. ) It is certainly an unfortunate and deplor able affair, and much sympathy is expressed for the mother of the mur dered boy, who is lying on a bed of sickness. wavs having been, a cannot giye my consent to the use of my uame4n opposition to a nomi nee of my party. 9 - ' "While, of course, I appreciate the confideuce and good will j implied in the action of those who have thus honored me, I am not a candidate for office, even at the hands of my party, havingfor personal reasons, but re cently laid down, an office which was in many respects congenial to my if taste. - "H. G. Connor Mr, Henderson fie-Nominoted. Charlotte Observer. ," The people of the State wUl re ceive with satisfaction tlie news of the re-nomination iofcjiHon. John S. Henderson for , Congress ; from the seventh district: by the Democratic convention at Salisbury .last week. At ti e end of the term for which he as just been nominated, Mr. Hen derson will have served twelv? suc cessive years in the House. . He has made bis people a splendid Represen tative and they show-their sense by lolding on to him, A learned law yer and a man of sterling ability, he is, moreover, a- tireless w'orker and there was never a mote single-hearted or conscientious servaut of the peo- le. He js, as he deserves to. be, a man of Influence in Washington, and his standing in the House is evidenc ed bv the fact that athe beginning of his fouth terni he was placed at the head of one of tjie most impor tant committees pi the body that on the postofSee .-and' post roads- chairmanship which he still holds and the duties of ; which he has dis charged with ability and acceptabil ity. Not ouly tjie seventh district but the fetate is fortunate ia him. It is not every people which is represen ted in Congress by a, man of such peculiar qualifications for his duties, and not every Congressman who has constituents as appreciative as his of labors in their behalf, Wecongratu ate not him so much as tjie conven tion which met ai Salisbury last week and the district lorjjwhich it .acted. It did a good day's work and one which will be handsbmejy ratified in November. ; : It ' From all the utterances of Sena X I . " " 1 i 1 I " . lor jarvis oi late sen interest crops out too plain and will do his . candi dacy barm. e have been kindly disposed towards Senator Jarvis but when be or any other man comes to the conclusion that the Democratic party is dependent on him and that the main issue in the state is wheth er "1 or the other fellow must be elected to save thepraty we for one are io favor of dropping him. If Senator Jarvis will take the advice of one who wants to be his friend he will place himself "in the bands of life friends" aud write no more let ters, but watch the States interests at Washingeon. , With all due respect to any one who may be an aspirant for legisla ture honors we think Walter Mur phy to le a suitable man for the place. He is a good speaker, wel posted and is "Such a man as the Democrat party . will need on th stump in county cauvass this fall and if given the Democratic nomin ation he wjll make a record in the ifeislature thatod iRowan may have reason, to be proud of. Never Spoke but Married. . Charlotte News. 11 It not often that young folks fall in love with eaOh other and never tell about it. It is nbt often either that getting married js robbed of the sublime pleasure! of courtship, and 1 1 a -at - should never be. Jiut rrovidencei township furnishes a' case- out of thel usual order. ll T. T-k ri l ixir. uuncan , uoraon, a voung white man, lived; in fthat township and did all he could , to prosper and be happy. The only social drawback! he had was an extreme bashfulness; which he seemed powerless to over-l come. - But in going about in the neighborhood, He !saw Miss Bettie Cooper, an attractive but bashf uj you ug lady. Duncan fell in love! He fell in deepj too IJe told his heartaches to an old; hegro woman; who communicated theur to Bettie and reported herjaQstver to Duncan Thus the thing vj?entlong. Fin all j the old colored woman ! planned a runaway for the. couple. They met in the night and skipped to South Carolina by the light of the moon! A squire at Culps po.itoffice marrierji them, and they returned home. The were both so scared that they did not speak on their way lo or from Culps but after their return home they made up. They are getting along nicely now. They i can both talk, and always could, bu owing to their bashf ulness never spoke to each other prior to their marriage ceremony, f - r) Ui- L Audience, The committee was to pass upon it was in some loubt of its propriety, for, as one of them expressed it, he had no notion hi having secession made to- appear lonstitutional. However, he de cision was favorable and the address Ivas delivered today. To the surprise pf some Southerners who were pres ent it was received with manifest jfavor by the New England audience land the applause was enthusiastic. Among those present was Mr. Henry Dnderdonk, head master of the Col lege of St. James, Washington coun y, Md., where young Carter went to school for a number of years before going to Trinity. Mr. Onderdonk was evideutly much gratified at the success of a young man in whom he had taken a deep interest. The subject of Mr. Carter's address was "The New South' He claimed the privilage of setting forth in their true light facts relating to the South, which facts for the last quarter of a century have been obscured by mis representation of sectional antago- i nism. At the same time he did not like the sound of the phrase "New South" unless understood in the same way in which we speak of the uew moon, meaning therel)' that it has passed through a period of dark ness and gloom, and in coming ou not a new in the sense of changed but the same old South that gave Washington to immortality and Jef ferson to humanity. That in those troublous times preceding and dur ing the revolution it was that those "Dead but sceptured sovereigns, who still rule our actions from their tombs," arose in the South, viz Randolph, Henry, Lee, Madison Gadsden and Rutledge, The young speaker then went on to recount the deeds of the statesmeu and soldier; of the Southern States. To the constitution, he contended the South nas ever been loyal. The South felt that liberty and indepen deuce depended for perpetuity upon constitutional limitations. It is the nature of power to grow with wha it feeds upon. Power unregulated overthrows constitutional law, and when that perishes political corrupts ion is supreme and peace and pros perity vanishes. By the cession of the northwest territory and the compromise meas ures from 1820 to 1850, by her sub mission to a protective tariiT for the benefit of a part and not for the wel fare of all, the South placed the bal ance of power in the hands of her political opponents.. Her voice once so powerful in the councils of the republic, had become less audible than a whisper; peace and the Union as it was made and for which she had made the sacrifices -that showed themselves on every battlefield from Boston to New Orleans, were to be overthrown by the policy of those who held the power then, and not till then, did she strive to withdraw from a union no longer one of the heart. After picturing the ruin worked by the war, Mr. Carter said: "In thirty years, with untold labor, in her poverty she has borne her share of the debt contracted to subdueber. Receiving no pensions, with no share in government contracts, with no profits from the tariff, without a murmur she has re-established civil order, rebuilt her towns, re-stocked her farms, turned her stables into school houses, her barns into church es, ha-s educated her children, white and colored, and her railroads are carrying the products of her soil to all markets." There will probably be a lame at- 1 Georgia for Silver. tendance of Southern business men 1 Georena is for silver. The State and others interested in Southern J Qonveution met on 2nd at Atlanta industrial department, at the meet -1 The Committee on platform was ing which has been calledto convene j composed of the extreme men on in Washington on Thursday and both sides. A dispatch to the Wash Fridav, the last two day of the pre-J ington Post says: sent month. Tiie Star sats: The 4Thev certainly had a fight. The all fnr(h mpot.mor rump frnm I umimsirauuu ueu uecuuieimru iui uantinm: lha SAnrn jnH r n a train- I ' "v: ! . r dent financial policy, while the anti crai sniuwcHi. Kavuci - con tended-ihat such an act would ing should take place in Washington lose the State to the Populists, and as, besides other reasons, several mat- on their side contended strongly for p i . Vitt. J, ' , a fr fiilvor rl-nL- ters or lmponanpe to ; yy asnington 17 r -. The result was the adoption of a Hull l.lv; S lobl w w n M vu uivniiu iii i : for consideration. Over a thousand ilver PJank that demanded the im nitatious have beeii sent to1 leading mediate passage of such legislation l 1 1 . . .'1 business mep, boards of trade and W111 restore silver to its constitu other commercial bodies, and there tional position as a raouey metal and will secure at once the free and un - . - full representative gathering will in attendance. . limited coinage of gold and silver on a parity ana give to every aouar in . 11 . 11 -Mi. I circulation, whether coin or paper, Among the subjects which will be I , ' , lA . , 1 Ml I brought up tor discussion win oe a government building in Washington for the permanent exhibit of the resources of the United' States as proposed in .the bill introduced by Senator Walsh. The relations of railroad-transportation to the devel opruent of the South will be consid ered by prominent officials. Lead ing scientists and experts will out- . , . A The Georgia JJemocrats status or tne mineral resources 01 this section, Various other topics of an equally interesting character will be talked about, and the objects aimed at being to secure short, con densed and carefully prepared papers on these subjects from a business standpoint, which may lerve as a basis of discussion by the cohven tion. Short speeches will be insist- the same debt-paying and pur chasing power. The President was eulogized in a resolution for his l,uuiaC niauuui) iiuucouj nuu patriotism," but a strong effort was made to indorse him unqualifiedly. It came too late. The compromise work had been completed. We hope the Democrats who will meet at Raleigh on 8th inst., will go there in a true Democratic spirii1 re-affirmed the Chicago phttform. The North Carolina Democrats cannot, afford to do less. They cannot afford to in dorse anything that antagonizes that law of the party. Wilmington Messeuger. BRICK and TILE WORKS Prices Per Thousand : Select Hard Brick, - - Rtin 01" Kiln Brick, ' - - " Salmon, , - Culls, - . ' ' . Repressed Brick, First Grade, i v ' . Repressed Brick, Second Grade, - Repressed Brick, Third Grade, ' 0,2 5.75 150 3.50 20,00 18.00 15,00 Liberal Discount on Orders of z -., .... j Low Prices on Farmers-Drain Tile IT Charlotte News : Attorney General Frank I. Osborne is making tiue prog ress in his race for the United States ed upon, aud 110 politicial discussion Senate. It may be put down as a fact will be allowed. Arrangements that he will be solidly endorsed by have been made with the railroad this, the Eleventh Judicial district, and . . . . 1 1 J .3? companies 'bv which tickets on all tnat win oe a very souu , 1 ,". , ,j , , f. build upon. The district is composed railroads will be sold at one half 01 T , , , v, . T. 01 union, iuecKienuurg, vjusiuu, uul- the round trip from Augusts to 28, ln cleveIand. Rutherford, Tolk, good to return from uiitil September Q Washington Stanly and Henderson counties With but lfttle'carc arad no trouble, the beard and mustache can be kept a unil'orirt brown or black color by using Bucking ham's Dve lor the Whisksrs. Railway Commission has assessed A Weekly Weather 'Crop Bulletin The reports of' Weekly WeathV Cron Bulletin, issued bv the North Carolina State Weather Service, for Uhe orth Carolina railway at $1,802.- 867, this being the same as last yeur- This is on the capital stock audits property. The roadbed is exempt from taxation as yet. The commission has placed in the hands of the. State Treasurer and. Auditor its assessment of all the railway, steamboat aud tele graph property in the State, the tola) being $24,565,611.58. Nervous debility is a common complaint; especially among women. The best medi cal treatment for this disorder is a pcrsis tent course of Ayer's Sarsapariila to cleanse and lnvitrorate me uioou. inis bein? ac ditions prevail to a much less extent comnlUhed, nature will do the rest in a few of the western counties. A telegram received Monday by So- Over all Ihe rest of the State the licitor Eug. D. Carter announced the weather conditions have been verv death at Syracuse, N. Y., of Thos. D. the week ending Mouday August 6, 1894, are favorable with some ex ceptions. There has beeu altogether too much ra.n in the southern por tions of the Eastern and Central Districts, especially in p irts of John ston, Auson, Richmond, Wake, Miintgomery and Cumberland coun tiesi In consequence, lowlands are flooded and crops damaged. Cotton j 1 m t is growing to weed. 1 he same con- o 1 i mi 1 . , iavora,oie. i ne temperature nas been above normal until Sunday, and enough rain has fallen every where. Except at the few places above mentioned the outlook con tinues very bright. Carter, father of Solicitor Carter and Justice Frank Carter of this city. His death occurred last night. Mr. Carter was in his 61st year.-Aheville Citizer. FOB COTTON WEIGHER. cratic nominating convention. 11. A. Fisher. The remarks of the senator from South Casolina to the governor of South Carolina not nearlv so vacmp and mysterious as the oft-referred-tof W!le thiJf T1 remarks of the governor of North Carolina to the governor of South Carolina, Neither are they so po lite, ' The Why and, Wherefores Thereis nothiug marveious in the fact that Hood's I SaflapaHlla shoul cure so many disejises. When yoi remember that a majority of the dis orders "flesh is held o" fire due to impure or poisonous condition of the blood, and that Hopd?s Saraaparilla ijs an eflective an radical blood purifiet. Raleigh Press. BobUarris, colored who lives lust south of the Raleigh cot ton mille, has a mule Si years old. The mule was born on the plantation of Mr. Henry Modfrcai, before the war. After the war he was such a runt the Yan kees refused to have him and "Bob" bought him. ThemUl0 jg 40ing. fc00 Besides its bloc! purifying qualities, Hood's Sarsaparilla, also contains the best known vegetable stomach tonics diureties, kidney remedies and liver invigorants and U thtis an excellent specific for all disorders of these ori gans, as well as for jpiy condition of the system or Thatipred Feeling, Subscnbe for Ih'e Watchman 4 from now until ;Pecember Jst fqr only J&cU, I herefcy announce myself as a candidate WkstERK DISTRICT.- Reports from Kr 'Cotton Weigher subject to the Demi this district also continue to be very favorable. The rains of Saturday evening and Sunday were1(KtrV;ral and there are no longer any places suffering' for lack of rain. Five correspondents report too much rain, namely in Macon, Wautauga, Mc Dowell and Macfison counties. ; Some ui tne lowest oottom laud crops re- ported damaged by overflowing streams in parts of Mecklenburg and Cabarrus Counties. All crops con tinue to make splendid progress. Not much land has been turned for wheat yet. Sowing turnips going on. rial ns reported do not include rain ot Saturday' evening and Sundav Bryson City, 0.47 inch: Maiden, 1.2o: Concord, 0.80: Charlotte, 0.35: Soap stoue Mount, 0.53; Rutherford Col lege, 0.75; Mocksville, 0.02; Salis bury, 0.70; Saluda, 025; Catawba, Only a Scar Remains fffe Wilmington Messenger: We re gret to announce the death of Pro fessor Edward Graham Daves, of Baltimore, who died at Boston on Wednesday after a brief illness. Professor Daves was in the 02d year of his age aud ;vas the second son and third child of the late Hon John Pugh Daves, of Newbern. He is well remembered in Wilmington, and lectured here some months ago iu the interest of the memorial fund for the purchase of Roanoke Island with a view to the preservation of of old Fort Raleigh. 6crofula Cured Blood Purified by - Hood's Sarsaparilla. "CI. Hood Si Co., Lowell, Mass. : " " It Is with pleasure that I send a testimonial concerning what Hood's Sarsaparilla has don 1.12; China Grove, 1,00: Dell wood, tormr daughter, it is a wonderful medicmo nai) ana 1 cannot recommend it wo aignly. Sarah, 1 - 1 . . 1 . . who u iojirieen years oia, nas Deea f Afflicted With Scrofula n i. n I icmuwttuu vuiunjr iQflveauon. ever since she was one year old. For Ato years' There will be held in the court house the has had ronalng sore on one side of her "" " """v I t&cm. Wn tried pvptt rempriv rwnnimpndKrf hut n I 1 1 . . . . . - . . . in oansoury, J. on oaturuay i?ep- nouun oia ner any gooa until we commencea u if ioih 10 ti 1 using Hood's Sarsaparilla. My married daughter tember 1st, lbSH, at IS o clock, M., a adTised me to use Hood's Sarsaparilla because convention of the Democrats of Rowan TT fTVi TlTarfri tTVn n county, for the purpose of nominating ttOOCL S P will wS two canaiaates lor the House of Kepre- It had cured her of dyspepsia. She had been sentative's a Clerk of the Superior troubled with tha$ complaint since childhood. Court, Sheriff,. Register of Deeds, County Treasurer, Surveyor, Coroner 11 IS THE III s55 josser x siK Wrights Furniture Store 3ES3 2BE3SS -3E3LA-CS3a To get Furniture for the multitude. Nothing like it everbeforeseen in Salis bury. Bed Room and Parlor Suits as pretty and as cheap as was ever offer ed on any market in the State, f . You only have to see our line of Ta bles, Dining arid Parlor Chairs, Rockers &c,, to be pleased. We also handle Baby Carriages, Musical Instrumehts and in fact anything that you want in this line and at prices that deiy comr petition. - No room is complete without nice Pictures. We have got them. : Also the handsomest line of Frames and Moulding that can be found in tlie State. This department is complete, . Coffins, Caskets, Buri&l Robes, Slippers, etc., Hearse's furnished for city or country. Embalming a Specialty. : See me before buying. Geo. W. Wright,. Cotton Seed Meal' and Hute 0- 'Canst thou ministre to a mind diseased?' asks Macbeth. Certainly my lord; the condition of the mind depnds largely, if not solely, pn the condition of the stomach, liver, and bowels, for 11 of which com- piainis Ajers nils are "the sorereignes and Cotton Weigher, and for the trans action of such other business as may come before it. ' ; The Democrats of the various town ships will hold primaries Ft their usual place of meeting, on Saturday, August 25th, 1894, at 2 o'clock,p. m. to select delegates to the county convention, to nominate a candidate far township constable and to select a township executive committee consisting of five active Democrats. A. H, BOYDEX, ; CU'm. Demi Co. Ex. Com. Sick people don't want to bothered: with preparing the medicine ;they take.: Bad enough we must' take it, Yoa don't need to make a tea of Sim mons Liver Regula te, it is already prepared. You take a dose of liquid or powder to-nigbt. and awake in the free from your Biliousness, Sick Head ache, or Canstipation and Indigestion. No purgative medicine. - Sample package pow- ! Qcr. is (cents. and since her cure she has never been without a bottle 01 Hood's sarsaparilla m the house, we commenced giving it to Sarah about one year ago, and it has conquered the running sore, Only A Scar Remaining as a trace, of the dreadful disease. Previous to taking the medicine her eyesight was affected but now sh-caa see perfect! v. In connection h Hood's SarsaDarilla we have used Hoori'a wit Vegetable Pills, and find them the best." Majua GsiFrix, Xenia, Illinois. Mss. Hood's Pills cure nausea, sick headache, tad&estfoOr biliousness. Sold by all druggist. VITAL TO MANHOOD. llUTl 3 falla. Headache, Nervous Prostratkm caused by Xf?' Wttne, Mental Depriion, Aotttntett of Brain, causing insanity. miMrr dc dUU, Premature Old w r PoT. Leuoorrbtea and all ?h!TOifJr?.I 6Prma. 6 for $3, by mail. With eca order for 6boSfwl SiLt1 """P.iruarantee to refund if .tirld Guarantee lamed by acrent. WEST'S MVVRPiiiu ewes Sick Headachy BUlSiiSS JUv ,JSmt OUAAKT3 lamed only by Edwlu Cuthrell Salisbury, N. IT IS THE CHEAPEST AND BEST FEED KNOWN F02 CATTLE AND SHEEP: ; Cotton Seed Meal is a hitrlilv concentrated M,: one poptf A-liirli hfis more feedinsr value than three nounds of corn mtt. .. o , and it will be found more economical to use than any of the & rious grain feeds. " J .1 COTTON SEED HULLS take the place of hay or am'Otit kind of long or rouglrfeed, and has been proven by analysis, if the practical tc&ts of thousands of feeders, to be vorth as (pound for pound) as any of the forage feeds in general usej nc ihP nnt nf TTT7LLS is tlmn hnv. and can be led wu waste, it is' far more economical to us than any feed now m ft nnd fpod in nnnnectinn with Cotton Seed Meal this ieedcanflt be equalled when costs and benefits are considered. Write tor prices and other intormatiori uesinu. Correspondence solicited bv North CaoHna Cotton Oil Company T. J. DAVIS. Manner. CHARLOTTE. . 7 O ' in- The Watchman OFF! JOB fieOLTCITS YOUR PATRONAGE. NOTHING T J rr am wmpi: tith VTn httt vhom tuts OFFICE. ,rRICln SON ABLE. Salisbury Marble Works, T1MK WEBB f RJIBE, Proprietory . 1 UA - . - ., ir.f 1 . Dealers m Monuments, Head-Stones and every thing i 1 v line, and at the very lowest prices consistant with 13et niai . . tnanship. Be sure to cive us a call, or write for prices ueio pun 1 t- 1- ix. L.. . e if action gu I wiiere. Jjurge variety on iihhu 10 select iruiu Fisher Street, next to Stand Pipe, i I-
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Aug. 9, 1894, edition 1
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