1 , . t ' - ' v. v " x- - - , : . J - t. ! y . The Carolina Watchmair. Publishers. EJHOr, ' ' : -:o: :nfD AT 8AUf rBY' Jf. c, ' 8LB8CB.IPWOS $1.00 R AJiSiTM 8TBJCTI.Y Xtkkjd XtSt! orriwt at 8ali3 CBV, K jc.t as ggroxp class mh. matter THU1RSJAy SEPTEMBER. 13, 1894. EEBUKIIJG IMPEETINENCE. J The South hasfor a long tirne leen the target h whjch jnisrepre aentatiofl nd iuipertinent interfer ence hs been ain?ed. It i3 refreshing Jri view of h fact to read the following from Gov, Northern of Georgia. There is no denying th fat that' .Governor Northern made an assf luwself over t)e Corbett Mitcnell fighr. eyen his vv A rir.es t ad jnirers must adm4t that, but such ut terances as the follQM jMg"wil! coyer a reat multitude ot short comings J lice the! prize flghtincident, . - Vy way oj preface and introduc tion we .wijl state that for some Months past a lying negres, Ida 'Well.", .has been gojng through the North au Is thrf ugii England, slaii jdering the South, .Southern people and Southern oficials, telling out rageous falsehoods fbout the lynch- ing of negroes in the South. She ieals in that.of pobulum which in cer tain markets iii the North finds eager luivprs anion certain classes who j are purveyors of .slanders and mis representation agonist our people and our section. A committee of smart Alec Englishmen it seems has taken it upon themselves to come over into J fills country ulo investigate aud' de nounce "southern lyncngs;" The New York World feut the follow ing telegram to Gov. Norihe. i : pov. W.. I. Northen Atlanta,. Oa. EngUshi cojjiinU.tee b;i s been sent here to In vesicate anrt denounce southern Jyi:ebiny. Will ou please telegrapli us what you IUIdk o . EniMsli uiedalln'r with our affairs. - I--., The World. And this is Gov. Northen's reply j! about as cutting a rebuke to imper tinence as we have ever read aud i richly merited. , Gov Northern says: The World, Ne.v York, N.. Y Sav to the "English ccmralf tee" who have i come to this country ' to Investigate, and de ! nounce lynchtngs at Uie south," that I uxn In poHl'lon to know that they have received their luio.inatlou Ir m ln-jSHoriblbie sources, and , that the Knlish people luve declined and re- 'fused to be properly lniormed about cur laws 5uid tne conduct of our 'government, 'the En- gilsh pacers, to my knowledge have dteilued time and agaln-lo publislfstatements made to them In dt tense oi the south by Englishmen who xt now residents of the south. Under these tondii ions we do-not want any runner .outside hypocritical catt upon fabe Ideas ot our kovemmcnt. - ; The ptnple of this state are quite able to ad-i s minHtertner own auairs. ana tney are aoing it In full Justice to the negro, ns our laws and our ; icondupt will attest. We have already pnduru :-mpre outside Interference rn our local matters tliup we will submissively tolerate In Jhe future, f Let these kindly disposed Englishmen return to f own ountry and prevent by law the Inhuman Bale of virtuous girls to lustful men In h!g:i places, hang all buch demons as Jack the Kip per, punish ns H deserves the barbai ions, wholesale slaughter of negroes In Africa by Enr 1 U3hnaen, w h o g o there to s t e : 1 1 tuelr gold: supply the neccessitles-to prevent H.bread and labor riots and sirikes, which are wholly unknown to tne people of tlfC south; feed and give employment to the poor, as do ihe peo ple of my section: give to the oppressed Ii ish ; Laeathe rights liumanlty demands; and vhen they shaU have pulled the bean out of their own eyes, they may then, with better grace, ap : point themselves a TOinmlttee to hunt for the moat that may be in oureye. While we have Irregularities at the south, and l negroes are sometimes lynched they -are never j slaughtered by wholesale, as Englishmen some- time destroy. J send you by mall the law and record of my State on these m ate s; ard 1 challenge cot ou f ly the English committee on l.vnchiuts at the s outh, bwt the civilized world, to show a bet- WJjy come, tofdre Invtstigatlcn, to "de pounce ' the south, iusrprtor to a contri essional election, when we hav e Just-had a negro lynch-J ea in Kans.is, Apm 20iinother In Ohio on the Sabbath, April lSlhand when wl lie Poles and Hungarians have recently been brutally -buich ered In Mlctlg.m nd Pennsylvania, and ne gioes runout of Eranklin Park, N J-,ln heros? We challenge Investigations bv all persons who have the right investigate these-charges, but any attempt upon the part ot Eug'ishmeri, tainted by thetr own national crimes, to ar raign, us for trial, must be considered as a ross Impertinence. Governor of Georgia. JIon. T. J. Jerome, editor of the Stanly News and Democratic candi date for. the. State senate from the djstriet composed jf Stanly and (Jabarues coun ties was here Monday on his way home from Concord where he attended the Cabarrus .o'lnty convention held Saturday. Mr. Jerome says that the conven tion auVptfd strong resolutions iu- structing the legislative candidate? to votejf or Hon T. J. Jarvis tor tT. p. Senator and ihfovor of electing JJ. S. STnators by a dopular vote, Mr, Jepme says there are very few t I - f in oituijy cuuiiiy auu inat tpe (Republicans will yote the Dem ocratic ticket in preference to the one nominated by the Confusionists. Jle also says that Hon. Jno. S. Hen derson's speech at Concord Saturday t was a powerful one and did great g?od for the icouse of Democracy. The Populist members of Con gress during the last session intro duced bills which if they hadtiecome laws would have eiitailedexpendi tures amounting annually to thirty billion, five hundi million dollars! Just let the people of North Caro lina allow the Populist to get con trol of theSlate and see how quick fuin;wjnl follow and, taxes shoot up. TftK Goldsboro Headlight, one of tKe State's liveliest and most'pros- perou weeklies, fTas-entered upon its eighth; vol uute. We yvisb itjeontin- p4 SUCCVSa. ' . j. v DpIOClU TIC LBtittiLATlOti. j .. It is a faetamaN reeopi that umkr Dertiocnitic ':a4ruinistmr rs. -r- Hon the expenditures if I be go.verp ment have already lletlucfd owr two hundred prUionsjl of dollars. Many pernicious -laijr.' ut upoir4 ie statiite. books by tlBjOepublican; designed for the opprefcion of A ie r eople of the South land havingf a boneful inflieiice upontlie busing interests of the coutr liaye ben repealed and thp godjdirk has Hst gotten fully undervtajif -AVJiat has len done iSySimpiy; jart earnest joi what is going to le dont, f But if tljs Democratic party hjad done nothing else, and IbouJil never lo anything more lUajtj repeal tie McKinlev tariff bill ;and substittre for it the bill recently enacted, it IS of entitled to the eternal gratitude the people of this country. The tariff bill is 1 not what he wanted, nor what we confidently ex pected to get, biit the Democralic r;irtv is not resnonsible tor tnis. tne . d a i rr i party cannot justly be held repAn ible for the treachery of the Gornian -Brice band of traitors'. But with all -its shortcomings he bill is a big step towardsjfariff refold and, compared with; McKinleyism a beneficent measure. The more is studied,' the better la it appehrs to be. . It makes a yerymarked Re duction in many articles, and will materially reduce the cost of livinjg, We are indebted to Mr. T. C. Liiin, the private secretary bfillon. Jnoi S. Henderson, for the following list, which will prove- a evalatiou to those who have not f closely studied the bill. The tariff on the follqwiug articles has been reduced obejlinndred per cent or in other words, the follow ing articles have been made free : s Paints, colors, etc., iui part. s Potash, caustic, refiheu;, i Burr stones, manufactured. Cotton ties of iron or Steele. Coiper- ore, and mtitiufuetures oif. Timber and L.uuil)er. I Salt. " . ; j ; Binding twine. j k Burlaps. j, Bags for grain made of burlaps Bagging tor cotton. I f Wool unmanufactured; Wool, tops, slubbipg.and other wajsts Wool, rags, iuungo,:aud flocks. Wool, noils. 1 1 - if; The tariff ou the folloviupr has been re (lno lt ttrrin 7T ai not nnnti Bar iron, and slabs, -blooms or lopps. Woolen cloths . i Woolen shawls. ; Common pipes of clay-j- The tariff on 114 articles' has been re I, of the duced betvvr eu 50 and Tp per cen wnicn articles m ionoMng are principal: H l Whiting ground in oil;(putty). Soap. i ii f Eiearbouate of sodai & Chains. ? Penknives. ; i Carving or cooking. kufves. Files. :f: Pistols, ' J Shotguns. Lead in ore or in pigs and bars. Jjead jupes, sheets,- shot, etc. Zinc in sheets. ! f Cotton cloth; y X Cables, cordage, etc. 't: Blankets, ' j , Hats ot wool. I , i Flannels for under ware Dress goods. ,; ;l Carpets.- j K T On 370 articles the! tariff has beenj re- duced between 25 and 50 per cent. Of these tne lollowing are some off the principal: ' i Spirit varnishes.; Sulphur. Brick. Bottles. ' -.j ' l - Window glass. ' j f Cylinder and crown glass, polished, unsilyered.- ! ,) I .Plate glass. jf j -Spectacles and eyeglasses. Freestone, sandstone,; granite, efc. iron ore.' Pig iron. Scrap iron. Bar iron, rolled or hanjitiered. bieel rails. Tin plate. Wire. Anchors. Anvils. Hammers aud si 'etc. Bolts. Cast iron vessels. i M Hollow ware. Razors. Nails. Needles. Screws. Leaf tobacco for cigar wrappers TI; t .i ' s UUISCS. i j Shirts and draws Stockings. j . , Oil clxtls. ; u ' Collars and eufTs. , Clothing, ready made. J Wood pulp. i ij - Printing' paper.; ir Pearl buttons. i Ivory buttousl ii Corks ' ! ! - ' "' Bituminous coal and shale. latches. " Hats of fur. Ladies' and children's gloves. . Jiea s gloves. SJate peucils. y 238 articles reduced jjunder 2 per cent. The rates are; I increased on .53 ar- tieles such as sawed boards of f ma ll ogtny ebotiy jlHog, lives, drlssed meats, precious s onesj'ctc. Ayer's Hair Vigpr tooes op the weak Jjftir- roots, stimulates the rebels and tissue which suj.plj thle stregthens the hail Itself, aSds the oil -hicli keeps the shafts s6ft, lusioust and Ik v. The most pojiular SkU taUable tnilAtl hr. I parntioam the woirlJ. . ! j-. " I: 'fir.' :- - hi- " ( jr.-- X Senator IVffer, th leader of the populists, the recognized exponent of Populist idea?, ptau and purposes. believes thai all ! he fax for the sup port of the ' government, iji all its branches, should be levied .on land and introduced a hill into Congress to thai effect. How. does tr.at suit he farmers of Rowan County?. Just such laws tuny be looked for. should the ropulists eter control the legis-j lation of4his conntry. It is well nbi'tj forget what the Democratic Congress has done, as recounted by SpeakerCrisp m his Atlanta speech: - x Ve have repealed the McKijiley law. .. We have greatly reduced taxation. We have made living cheaper. We have made all money taxable. We have taxed surpluslncomes. We have restored freedom of elec - tions. We have reduced public expendi tures. We have declared undying hostil ity to all trusts and m'o:opolies or ganized for , the oppression of the people. . x LEAVING THB WEST, The forest fires have broken, out a"ain m Minnesota, ana otner northwestern states are suffering from drawbacks more or less erioii!". In Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado and Oklahama the farmers are movin- -away by thousands. Naturally, these people are- com ing south. They cannot go to the middle and north Atlantic states be cause they are already overcrowded and the lands ate too high priced. The south offers them just such a home as they have been longing for. Our climatic conditions are favor able and we never have more than one partial crop failure in nine sea sons. The Boston Transcript says of the new movement: This is corroborated bydispatches from Nebraska that long trains of canvas-covered wagons are ecu stanlly passing through that place filled with disheartened settlers, who are anxious to find homes elsewhere, nd that as many as 10,000 of them have left since the failure of this year's crops. There is new of a sim ilar movement from Western Kan sas, ind also from eastern Colorado. The North Carolina papers offr a welcome to these people; tell them that Ib'ud can be bought or leased thereon easy terms, an(J declare that the Old North Staee is jti, the place for them. Other southern states are des-irous of attracting the fugitives fiom Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado and Oklahoma . The Worcester, Mass., Spy has the following on the same Hue:: Mony northwestern f -timers have become thoroughly' tired of enduring the trials to which their uncertain climate subjectg"them, and are turn ing heir eyes toward the south as the land of promise. A lare num ber of Nevaca stock farmers and lairom i are preparing to move lo North Carolina and pureha-e farms in localities suited to their avoca tions. Gov. Carr's Snggs&ticn. Columblo, S. c, State. The Governor of North Cnrolu.a suggests as one means of checking the resort to lynch law, that prison ers threatened shall be speedily tried, aud shall, awaiting trial, be confined in the penitentiary. The. latter ex pedient meets each particular case only. It would by no means oper ate to check the spirit which under lies the resort to lynch law. It is good only as a means or preventing the action rf the mob so that the accused may be brought to trial. What is admitted, on all hands, to be most calculated to induce people to let the law take its course, is the assurance of a speedy tiial. The law's delay is in no case so irritating as where a great crime has been com mitted and the courts seem slow to punish the criminal. Nowhere ehe in the United States is there so great need of reform in the criminal pro cedure so as to insure the prompt trial of accused persons as there is in South Carolina. Nowhere else can the skill of the well paid lawyer be more effectively employed to post pone the punishment of criminals. It is this state of law, known by the people, that has contributed perhaps more than any other cause to the frequent resort to lynch law in this Stale. The wonder is that so tla-. grant defects in our crimnal prece dure appear altogether to have es caped the notice of the Legislature. Mr. Butler, on going over to the Republican party, has? agreed to give as his initiation fee, the Populist vote of the State to the Republicans. But ler is gone. He has deserted the Populists as treacherously as he did the Democrats. He undertook to sell Democracy on the ISth of M;iy, 1S92, but he couldn't deliver the goods. In 1894 he undertook to gic? Populism to the Republicans in exchange for a seat in the United States Senate. Can he deliver the goods this time? There art good honest men m the Populist party. They are therefrom the best of mo tives. Will thej endorse this bae ach"on of their traitorous master, hud submit to it likft slaves? Clinton -, Democrat, WASHINGTON LETTER," rom ourH gular oorrespondu t : V At. Democratic headquarters, here, the managers aregetting campa 'jtu njatters in ffne shape for hard work. Investigation show? thafkin districts now democratic 131:have made I no ivination. Of tliinuuiler 7 are renoniirjatjons and! 31 are new uonv; inatioVsL Tliis gives a ratio of 74 per cent of old nominations and but 26 per cent of new nominations. I learn from the Navy." Depart ment that everything is in f readine for the itrial trip of the new cruiser Rtleighl. She has had. a successful tra' at Norfolk and can go to . sea whenever the date for her official test is set. Among the late acts of congress was one concerning the sale of leaf toljacco which all dealers may notice with much interest. The in- terrml revenue I iw as a whole re mainsabont the same as before with the exceptions of this change. In section G9 of the act of Ang. 2Sih, lc!'J4, entitled ".An,, act to reduce taxation to provide revenue for , the . 1 J .v ... government ana ior oi uer-purpnes, nro ides that :' "livery persoishall also be regarded as a manufactrtrer of tob.icco whose business it 13 to sell leaf tobacco :;in qnaiiities less than a hogshead; case or bah ; or who sells djrectly to con sumers or to persons other than duly registered manufactures of tou icco, suun or cigars, or to per sons who purchase in packages for export; and all tobacco so sold by such persons shall be regarded as tobacco and such manufactured tobacco shall be put up aud prepar ed only as the Commissioner of In ternal Revenue with the approval of the secretary shall provide." Pro vided that farmers and growers of tobacco who sell leaf tobacco of their own growth and raising shall not. be regarded as mauufrtcturers'of tobacco ,v Every bureau in the Treasury Department is in a strain to get the business arranged to -begin work in the different ollices u inter the new law known as the Dockery, -Bill which goes into eflcct Qcl 1. , This law makes a thorough re-organia-tion in all Ihebuieaiix of the Trea sury Department, the first since the das of Alexander Hamilton. ; Here tofore matters would come to one of theoiiicers dealing probably with three or four nifferent depart merts of the government. This has all been simplifiyd under tise Dockery Bill, which changes the mmies as well as the manner of work for the officers. Mrs. Burrvlt is-visiting her daugh ter Mrs. H.irrv i Mar! 111 at liom- Iroon. "Weekly Weather Crop Bulletin The reports of correspondents of the Weekly Weather Crop Bulletin, L-sued by the North Carolina State Weather Service, for the week ending Monday, September 10; h, ' 1 SI) !, indicate that the weather during pa.-t week has been above the uorinal in temperature, and rather dry except near the coast. The .hazy or t-mcky condition of the tky, which was probably due to" the great forest tires iu the northwest, . ended Saturday, autl Si;;:d:iy, "the Pth, was an unusually warm day for this season of the year. Cottou is opening rapidly. Farmers are busy pickug cotton, pul ling fodder, making hay, cutting and curing tobacco, and with their fall plowing where ground is-not too dry. Weather forecast for coming week: Rain probably Tuesday evening or Wedntsday, follow tin; latter part .of the week by a moderate cool wave, the first of the season. Westeun District. The woatlfer has been very warm for the season, with abundant sunshine; last two days of Aveek warm. Although very little rain has fallen, nqt much damage is reported by drought. Fodder-pulling is progessing rapidly. Hay-making is receiving plenty of attention. To bacco is being cut and housed aud cur ing has commenced. Cotton is open ing very fast. Turnips are doing very well. Farmers generrally are iu good gpirius everywhere. Women in Varied Tields. From tlio New York Mercury. But man nevr yen hired where the modern woman will not fearless ly jump in. There are two woman pilots ;md three woman, captains on the Mississippi and if a boiler should burst there need be no doubt that these women would, like Jim Bludso, Hold her n1uz7.lt atrainst the bank Till the last goloot's ashure. There is another captain navigat ing the Puget Sound. The Queen of Greece is an Admiral in the Rus sian Navy, appointed by her cousin, the Czar. And it is the same in a!? other fields of enterprise. A woman runs the dummy engine iii a log sawing mill in the State of Wash ington, another is-the engineer in a Chicago steam laundry, and in the same city a woman is the ' engineer-in-chief in a large business building, while a third' runs an elevator in one of the Windy City's sky-scr tping buildings. In -Nebraska a woman owns and personally" operates a steam threshing machine, moving with-it. from one part 6f State to another, making her own contracts and her ow n work. So woman, alii around, everywhere has got the steam up, and when she lets the whistle peVeani man would better get out of the way. ' l'j on les, boils apt! other humors of the blood Me liable to break out in the warm weather. Preveut it by tak ing Hood's Sarsapurillii. FOPITLISTrTJSITy: A Sample of Third Party Statcman- 6 hip. X The following from the Washing ton News show)? just how upure" and consistent the Populist is when hegets into office,' arid it is likewise a pittiyfair sample! of the states manship of the leaders of that crowd of misguided people; The iudicatioiisx'at present pre vailing in Washington, says the News, are "that Senator teffer has gotten himself into that delightful oosition known as being between the man-eating shark in the water and the man eating tiger on the land, and the prospects are that both will get him. When Congress con vened in pxtraordiuai j session on the 7th of August one year ago the Democrats gathered Senator Peffer into the majority fold and received him with more soda water efferves- ceue than is usually aceorded to new recruits. The party wanted to solid ify trreir votes beyond perad venture. Mr. Peffehwas given the chairman ship of the Committee to Examine the several branches of the Civil Service with a lustrious committee room in the Malthv Building. While Senators Hoar, Ha?. ley ind other veterans in the House of Lords were relegated to dipi-lighted and inaccessible locations, the new de butante from Kansas reveled in sumptuousnessr As his share of the Senate fund for the employment- of clerks and messengers he was al lowed $3,200 year. As chairman of a presumably active committcee he was granted a clerk at $2,250 per year. This position was filled by his daughter. Then the gentleman from Kansas settled .down to every day life in an atmosphere so thick with serenity that many tourist carried away chunks of it as souven irs, -14 11 1 the evil day came. It slipped, along like a policeman with cree oers on his feet, and its insidious advances were glamored over with the apparently m"ucih? smile of For tune. The tariff bill xs approach ing a crucial period. Questions of moment were becoming sothick that if -a Senator dodged one --be knocked his head' against a half d z;. One of Mr-. IVtl r's sons was "tiered a lucrative position by the ! Sugar trust to become- ' connrefed with one of their refineries iu the mosquito-beaiing regions ot New .Tersev. It was skc'i an offr that the young man turned up his nose at. $l.G00ayear, and, encasing him self in a wrought-ircm suit, he left f ;r his new situation. But a wiuk- ed aud unregeuerrde newspaper cor respondent thought h ;t he detected t!ie odor ot a rat when the younger Peffer entered the eipioy of the Sugar Trust. He did not do a thin-' but cause.'l the facts and suspicious to be proclaimed from every house top in Kansas, lie made it a re ligious duty to promulgate the tid ing. Then the Senator not only got both feet over the traces, but upet the cart by voting against the trust. In fact, it is alleged that his eccentric method of voting caused several of the Democratic managers in the-!Senate to pate the floor for many a night when the gentleman from Kansas slumbered peacefully m his bed. When. the agony end ed and the weury Senators disguised thenist lve and t;irted over various unfrequented routes for home Col. Dick Bright, Sergeant-at Arms, notified the junior Mr. Peffer that he would not be allowed compensation during recess. A very noisy rumor is prevalent to the effect that the perquisite of -82. 250 for a clerk will be withdrawn, and that all the odds and ends of comfort's and prerog atives heretofore given Mr. Peffer as a member of the majority will be taken from him. Meanwhile this same rumor asserts that the Suar Trust have not et recovered from a stroke of paralysis occasioned by Mr. Peffer's turning them down in the Senate, but w hen consciousness returns they will promptly request Mr. Peffer, jr., to pack up' hh wrought-iron outfit and retire from any connection with the New Jer sey refinery. State offhio. City of Toledo, ( Luca? County. f ss. Frank J. .Cheeney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chcncv cc Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and .State ai'ote-aid. and that ?aid firm will pay the stun .of One Hundred Dol. lars for each and every ease of Catarrh that cannot be, cared by the ue of Hall s Catarrh Curt. Frank J. CliPrieV. Tworn to bcfoie me and,.ubscrihel fn rnv ir"-enee, this 0th day of December, A D 18S4J. ' . SE SEAL A. V ULEASUi, Xotarv Piild!. Hall'd Catarrh Cure k taken internallr and acts directly on- the blood and rou:oiIs sur-f.ict-9 of the systfiu. .Send for le.-tiinoninls free. F. J. Cheney & .Co., Toledo. O. BsJold by "Druggists, lt . . J "Fohthnll will prove a paying gaure to Mr. Zb Andrews, of KaleighrHe weighs ?30 pounds, is strong in pro portion and while in Durham some time J ago - ' li build r'attra"itrd the 1 attention of the irin- itW football ''cranks. A dorres-- Dondence ensued with Mr.' Andrews 7 ill regard-to his playing the next season on the Trhiityjcarii. An of fer was made him of tuition nt the College, bojird and $700 in cold cash. The Wilnirhgtpn Messenger says that the caseag'ainst the director; of the suspended Bank of New Jlan over havebeeu moved fronv Duplin Superior court to Ienoir Superior court for trial, and wilj be heard at the ' November term. The court granted the change of venue ''upon motion of the counsel for the defend ants., There is nothing to prevent anyone con cocting a misiurc aud calling it "sarsapar Hla.rt and there is 'nothing tJ prevent aoyo-ie spending good mtooey testing the stuff; utJ prudent people, wno vi u to do sure 01 their remedy;' tale ouljr Ayer3 Sarsaparil la, and so get cured. Clarence W. Clark, a promineut member of the Brotherhool of Loco motive Engineers, was shot and seri- ously wounded on a Pennsylvania Railroad train at Newark, N. J., Sun day by his divorced wife. " When the traiu slowed up at Newark the woman entered the car and shotiiirn at short range with a pistol. The woman sud denly left the car and stepped off the train. The train had started before the Conductor knew onile fchooting and he brought the wounded man to tliia city. The divorce was granted in New York on Thursday last, and Clark was on his way toSan Francisco when attacked. Clark may recover Dr. Worth, ol Asbeooro, wnom it, was reported in last weeks Watchman had been robbed of a considerable amount of money, has recovered all the stolen property aud the robber is in jail. There was $475 in money and bonds arid property to the amount of $100,0 00 J Vl wO, :pr.- TRAOC rfARK Nortli rnvolinn. Ssipr-n-.c C'otirt r WATrEit CLAr.K, iSSOClATi: Jt'iTIv'E. Kal- kr. ::. C. Jan. W. 191. i .. ! t"..r otsii.'i.-cn. Ipr;i nr.c lui-t Jtay. f.nd.I a-n sure I .lies Its' r-'t ; lroa iy in do'..r.-' .in i i 'iiw r.':ft l lh tt: ..Tvutfoii. I can 5 .r. Ij iPf. nr.n-. uJ it. i Yov.rs truly. WjiTrn Clark. mm m r. mwm. run , ? ? petition. No room is complete Pictures. We have got State. TO!1 4 This departmenl is complete, C Will be held af the grounds of the Asocial ion 0C iOBER 2i 3, A, liberal PREMIUM LIST ha been rrabfehed aiilcomnetiia !- to the entire State. There will fc a fin3 exhibition of - Stock and and skilled Handiwork. ' The amusements will consist of Horse Racing) tide Tournament, &c. n -. .. f .. l- --.:i ! I- - J T .nnnln n'irl4 f)f ii' W uoon oruer win te maiuiaineu mm ijlii: The public is cordially invited to eniov a'dayi of recreation w - x Women far tliM -a-Wtroapreiian-d T t'ff way- .Sijmnin, , in fut-h fnvcr. It j3 , lTit and low.Wforti'' make a u a. A no?Iir r is thatSjmmiitM fjV(.r , th:,11:Pi!!5 fot ni!inmnp (onsfrnntiii ., 1 . "11 "Ml ' Vt . ,r.r ,, K T. . ames E. Sliephc. J, nf j. : Walter Olrko. r.r u ,. Fn rrnui. ... . 3 : m4 nr(i!f.. Cumberland; Aruus'.cuj r,l r1i t'nr ifllf'S f? FOR Sn-FKlOV. , TMiT 1 - oura uisrrict i.n ,,h u Fottnu Dlstrlrt-v.- p d, " f Elgmth Dlatiict-n.'p 1 ',-L tf Tae. Tenth DK-w ;.' ...j:, Twelfth DM.h, H. C FOIt CONGUF.ss.-s, John s. Henderson, or.i:. 1. of V VUl. J!raery E.Jiajer, cf n.v -n. .' A Bargain! A ( and Job Office out T f.,r oargiin. or part ion Jno. W. SleKenzie. :rrc; (:,r .r :,:;, . SDI?. W.M. A. ! 0 l!! hli . : i-, v .. .. crar.u:;jr:. !?i - e.s- ' : 1 ' -i- r"i P TiKOl'if.i.irv. ' - a etc. X -4.'ARif:::. t r' n Mi.? V Of tll(; Hit v. eu 1 A Of t!- I ! 1 t ,- o lh j. i k! t ' - !-'-- J: -A 4 i. tr., ii':. J literal 41 1 i' fill: or. I -if i - ' - . USES AND ENDORSES THE mi 5if - "Cures vlien all else fails." Invited. ), , 1 ; n;rr ' Elsctroii 34f5 f OUPTH J : r. ue . YC ' fsrn e s rf-r, , 0 k -te- i r ,5 1 if t l 1: r.-y i - 51?-1 To get Furniture" for Ihe nUiItitutle. Nothing like h ever belbreseen in Salis bury. Red Room and Parlor Hails; as pretty and as-cheap as was ever olTer ed on any market iiHhe Stale. ; You only have tQsee our line of Ta bles. Dining and-Parlor Chairs, Uockcrs: &c,7 to be pleased. We also lnunUe Baby Carriages, Musical InstrumeU? and in fact anything that voir- want in this line and at prieesjhat defy com without vmce them. Also the 'handsomest line of Frames ana Moulding that can be found in ! s . 1 R oners, ; ;ci Hearse's furnished for city or, county Embalming a Specialty. See me before guying. i eb-W-Wii&iat F r .i 5 Agricultui'1 T IH .1:1 i - . v t ! i '1