Newspapers / The Catawba County News … / Oct. 4, 1888, edition 1 / Page 1
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1HE EWTO WNTERF N "For us, Principle is Principle RietUt is Riht Yesterday, To-day, To-morrow. Forever." VOL. X. " NEWTON, CATAWBA COUNTY, N. C. THURSDAY v OCTOBER 4, 1888. NO. 34. mil to LQAIf QN IMPROVED FAKMS IN sums of $300 and upwards, on long time and easy terms. For par ticulars, apply to L. L. WITHERSPOON, Attorney-at-Law, NEWTON, - - - N. C. Dv J B LITTLE DENTIST. Il permanently located in Newton, N. C, and otfurs his professional services to the citizens el Cat-iwbn county. Work dune ttt reaaonaMe rto ml wrraiiUxl to Rive satisfaction. .WOJice in Youtl 4r Shrum's Huildtnf. A. P. LYNCH, Attorney at Law, NEWTON, - - - N. C jyL MoCORKLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, NEWTON. N. C. yOUNT HOlJSE, W. E. YOUNT, Proprietor, NEWTON, N. C. ell furnished rooms ; polite and attentive ser vants ; table supplied with the best the market affords. E. THORNTON, Keeps constantly on hand all sizes of Wood Coffins and different ual ities, as fine as can be bought any where for the same money. Burial robes kept on hand. Strangers sendiug for Collins r " send good security. WShop One Mile Korth of Com Mouse, NEWTON N. C. Dr P F LauGenour, DENTIST. COTTON COVERING. EXTRACT FBOM CIRCULAR LETTER. A Graduate of Baltimore Dental College, with sev eral "Scars Experience. Does everything pertaining to Denistrt in the bt Manser, at Reasonable Fkicf.s. Aching Teeth mtido easy, treated and rilled bo that they will never Ache again. Extracting done without pain by using gas. O .Tiers on Corner, hack of Yount's Newton, :i. U AWORDTO THE PUBLIC! Hoto THE XXHVTOX BARBS SHOP. We are prepared to do all kinds of work in our I ine in first class style. Soberness and cleanliness strictly observed. Will do our utmost to make onr shop a pleasant place to our customers. Careful attention given to Ladies and Children at residence or shop' Earnets Tj Moore, Trop. NOTICE. The undersigned will sell on tha 8th day dav of October next, at the court house in Newton, the house and lot near tho Spark liner Catawba Sorintrs. known ax the Wil- fong lot, adjoining the lands of E, O. El liott end others. Also tna grave yaru 101 in Newton, adjoining thb lands of Mrs Ford and others, on a credit of six months with interest. S. T. WILFONG, Ang30 4t Commissioner. WILD ORANGE SYRUP is truly nature's own remedy. It is just the thing for Dyspepsia, Rheumatism and Blood Poison. TESTIMONIALS. I sained 7 1-2 pounds in 7 days by using w. C 8. Z. V. ELLIOTT, Waco, N. C. It relieved me of Dyspepsia like masric. EMMA C. 1IOGAN. For sale by Abernethy & Williams, J.n. McBKAYEK. Shelby, K. C. Aug30 3m DR, NOTICE. Having been appointed, and having duly qualified as administratis ef J A Wike.dec.. I will sell at his late residence in Catawba county, on the 30th day of August, he fol lowing property, to wit: Some wheat, oats and five head of cattle, one wagon and harness, one baggy and harness, one good horse and household and kitchen furniture, Terms made known on day of sole. Notice is hereby given to all pereons hva inir claims aerainst said estate to present them on or before the 3rd day of August, 1889, or his notice will be plead against their recovery, and persons indebted to the estate mast make immediate payment. MRS ELL. A WIKE, Exutrix of J A WIKE, dec. u 3 .88 4 a 6 w NOTICE. Of the Committee apjyointed by the Farmers' State Union of Louis iana to Cnufer with all oigan izations interested in improving the present system of boxing and covering cotton bales. Progressiva Fanner. ! When the existing system of cov ering the cotton bale is considered, it is hard to see where it has one re deeming feature. Th jute bagging used afiords a most inadequate protection against damage by w-. t and dirt, and cgainst loss in veight iu handling, and it positively and considerably increases the risk of damage from fire, the fuzzy nature of the material making it specially liable to ignite from the slightest spark. The producer pays a high price for this bagging and gets absolutely nothing for it, as it is . practically of no commercial value when stripped from the bale by the spinner. It has been frequently stated it bas been maintained even in Con gress that Ine producer gets the same price for the jute bagging that he gets for bis cotton. Iu a certain sense this is true, but will any sensi ble man dispute that the price of the cotton is reduced in proportion to the quantity of jute bagging that has to be paid for ? Is it necessi ry to point out that European spinners much less American spinners are not so simple as to wish to pay us full market value for jute bagging that is to them of no use ? English buyers, in calculating the prices they can pay lor cotton in our markets, deduct 7 fts. per cwt. of 12 fbs. fer bagging and ties, and loss of weight in transit, so tbat for every bale of 500 ftis. tbat a farmer sells, he receives at most, the actual value of 468 lbs. of cotton, while he has to pay for the transportation and handling of the full 5t0 ft. There can be no question that the cnlv return the cottou producers of his country get for the jute bagging they purchase is the inadequate pro tection cf their cotton. Of money returned they get absolutely none at all and the same may be said of the iron ties. It takes to cover a bale of cotton of 500ft?. sav 7 yards of bagging, weighing 1 lbs. per jard, 12 lbs. To this add the weight of 6 iron ties, say 10 lbs., and we have 22 ftt. as the weight of the covering aud last eniug of the average bale of cotton as it goes through the purchaser s scales, in this country. The tare and oss of weight calculated by English buyers on each 500 lb. bale is as we hayc seen 31f fcs.,so that we have to stand a loss of 31.fftw.of actual cotton per bale, equal to one and 4 5 per cent, or about 90,000 bales of cotton actually lost to us on annual exports of 5,000,000 bales. This is surely sufficient commen tary on the protection anorded oy jute bagging, without proceeding to consider the waste during transpor tation, and handling in the interior, the increased risk of fire, and the consequently increased rates of fire insurance, and the liability to dam age on account of the open texture of the bagging. It may be argued that this loss of weight is caused to a great extent by the rough usage the bales meet with on board ship. To liis we would re ply, that a roughly and imperfectly covered package, like a cotton bale Indav. will be always roughly ban- - j 7 w - died, while a neatly and carefully covered package, even of less value, will meet with careful treatment wherever it goes. But it will be advisable to consid er the amount of money this jute bagging costs tho cotton producer Having qualified and filed my bond as adminis trator on the estate of R. L Bolch, dec., I will sell at his late residence, near Maiden, on the 5th A- f i-t.nhr ltfW. the followine personal prop. e'ty, to wit: One fine Jack, two milch Cows, one tine male stock ho, one brood sow and three pigs, one set of blacksmith tools, one four horse wagon mm hmxrv and harness, a double barrel shot gun one ritlRf.-irmini! implements and other property not named. All peasons indebted to said estate must make immediate payment. Kvery one rliiims airainst same is notified to presen them tn the undersigned administrator on or be fore the 5th day of September, !'!). -r this notice wiil be plead in bar oi their recovery. Term of sale to be made known on day of sale. F.I. SETZKK, administrator of Sep 6 4w R. ! Botch, dec. FOR GROCERIES -AND. mous expenditure ? - The bulk of tho jute is grown and reduced to fibre with British capitaL in British India, is sold to this coun try by British merchants, is brought here in British vessels; it pays a duty to the U S. Custom House, is manu factured into bagging in the New England, and Middle States, and is doled out at handsoin prices to the unfortunate cotton producers, paying further tribute on its way to their hands, to railroad?, steamboats, com mission merchants and others. Cotton raising would indeed be a lucrative industry, if it could afford to pay to aliens aud outsiders such a yearly tribute as this, in addition to sustaining the many other ex; enses and vidiasitvudes to which it is sub ject: but it is too well known that the cotton producer can hardly make both ends meet today, by practicing tbe utmost diligence, and the most rigorous individual economy, and it is Absolutely necessary that some concerted action should be taken to suppress this general extravagance, and to reduce, or at least to obtain some return for the present-enormous expenditure for covering our cotton bales. This committee does not presume to say what the remedy should be . whether it will be practicable to use an article of cotton ducking that can be manufactured in our midst, of such a texture as will afford ade quate protection against damage froc. wet, dirt and fire, and positive prevention of a runious loss of cot ton in transit, of such a weight as will reduce the present cost of trans porting our cotton to market, and of such a quality that it will be salable at a fair price, when stripped from the bales at tbe mills, to serve again as wrapping, or to be converted into paper sfock. ctoton waste, etc., while furnishing at the same time a fresh market for 125,000 to 175,000 bales of our lowest grades of cotton every year. This question of a better cover ing, and of a uniform size of bale. must be submitted to representatives of all those interested in the pros perity of the cottjn trade in this country; and a? it is now too late to adopt any measures of a general and permanent nature tbat can effect the present crop, yon are respectfully re quested to send a committee to rep resent you at Meridian, Miss, on the 12th. of October next, when the Na tsonal Convention of the Farmers Alliances and Co-operative Unions wi 1 be in session, and when commit tees from other bodies will assem ble there to discuss this matter, and if possible decide on remedial meas ures to be put in force for next year.. T. A. Claxton, A. Demmick, C. F. Staples, Of Committee, Washington, La , 15tp Aug., 18881 OUR NEXT SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. 'tew He is notoriously incompetent. He knows nothing about public schools and he hasn't sufficient capacity to learn anything about them. He has no single fitness for the position for which he has been named. We say this, net because he is a Republican. We say it because every man who knows J. B. Mason will agree with us that it is a correct estimate of the man. The election of Maj. Finger is more important than any other man tbe ticket, because of tbe gross ig nomnce and stupidity of his oppo nent. It would be a lasting disgrace upon the public school system to have so ignorant a man as J. B. ! Mason at the head of the education al system of the State. FREDERICK'S MEMOIRS. N. Y. Star. T:.e levelations in the diary of the ate Emperor Frederick are extreme A CLAIM TO HUMAN GRATI TUDE. Charlotte Corday, the sad-faced, tenderhearted peasant girl of Nors mandy made great history by one desperate act ! Sickened by the saturnalia of the French revolution, and moved to desperation as Robespierre and Marat were leading the flower of THE FATE OF STANLEY. 2i. Y.Sun. The murder of Major Barttelot by his Manyema porters, and the death of Mr, Jamieson at Stanley Falls, deplorable events as they are, afford no reasonable grounds for increased anxiety iu behalf of Mr. Stanley. If letters are received from Emin Pasha announcing that up to March or France to the guillotine, she detei f April of this year Stanley nas not mmo.1 4Vmt elm Tvnnlrl nnt an nl in loined him. there will be cause, in Marat's bloody reign. ! deed, for the gravest apprehension. MAJ. SIDNEY M-flSGER; OF CATAWBA. THE HEAD OF OUR SCHOOLS, j was reluctant to give up. ' i Just as he gave up work, much to his his school surprise, Maj. I public Finger was nominated for the House of Representatives of the General Assembly of North Carolina. Of course he was elected by a large ma jority. He was elected to the Senate from the counties tf Catawba and Lincoln in 1876, and was again elect ed to the Senate in 1881. As a leg islator he was conservative, wise and painstaking. He was especially inter ested in legislation that affected the school system, the set foment of the State debt, and railroad develop- MAJ. SIDNEY M. FLNGEB, SUPT. OF INSTRUCTION. State Ckrnide. Today we present to the readers of the State Chronicle a picture of Maj. Finger, present Superintendent of Public Instruction in North Car. olina, and nomineo of the Democratic party for re-election to the same office. Maj. Finger bad the compli ment Df being renominated by accla mation by the biggest Democratic Convention held in Raleigh since tho war. tie nas oeeu so gooa an omcer :r.enis. man more iaiLinui io nis that our readers doubtless desire to j duties ever had a eat in the Legisla- know something of his history. ture. In 1874, when Mai. Finger Sidney Michael Finger was born quit teaching, he engaged in mer in Lincoln county, N. C, on the 24th May, 1837, and is now fiftyone years old. His father was a farmer aud a tanner and in botb of these occupa tions he caused his son to engage until he was eighteen years old, sending him to school four months in each year. Ilia son -worked as siduously eight months and went to school four. This gave him physical and mental training, and gave him tbe foundation for future usefulness. His father was an earnest supporter of the public schools at d was nearly always a committeeman. He exert- in the course of a year, and the HARNESS GOTO G. W. Lowes, W HERE YGO WILL FIND SUGAR. OOFFEK, TfcA, MOLASSK3.I VINE CMR, HAMS, BACON, LAKI), PICKLES. FISH, OYSTERS, CANNK13 B KEF, SARDINES, GORN TOMATOES, TOB.vCCO, CIGARS, SNUFF, 80AP, FLOUR, MEAL, CAKES, CRACKERS, CONFECTIOXAKIES, tc. Qm For M Or Barter. bands into which the money passes, At the present date, jute bagging is selling in New Orleans at 12 1-4 cts. per yard, and it is safe to predict that this will be at Jetist the average cost to the cotton producer this year- At 6 yards to the bale, tbe covering will Cost 85 cents per bale, making $5,300,000 on a crop of six and a quarter million bales. The use of this covering will cause a loss, as we have shown, of 90,000 bales of cotton, say at $45 per bale $4,000,000, while tbe actual cost of carrying to Europe the covering of the 5,000,000 bales that will proba bly be shipped there can be reckon ed at aoout $400,000 (12 1-4 fbs, per bale, say, 61,250 000 lbs. at 5.8 cent per pound $400,000,) so that the jute bagging used this year will cost the cotton producers of the country about $9,700,000, will afford thtm no proper protection for tbeir cotton, and will have no market value when stripped from the bales at the cotton mills. And who benefits by this enor- NO MORE REFUGEES. Governor Scales yesterday, after careful consideration, wrote tne ap pended letter to the President of the Board of Health of Jacksonville. Fla. Tl e Governor has endeavored to ex ercise t'ie utmost wisdom and dis cretior n this matter, intending to protect !.he people of our own State and at tae s. me time extend to the stricken people of Florida tbe hos Dualities of our State. The Gover- . . . . ... nor s letter was as ioliows: State of North Carolina, Executive Department, Raleigh, N. C, Sept. 24, 1888. President of the Board of Health., Jacksonville, Fla. : Snt: In deep sympathy with your people, struggling with a terrible scourge, and anxious to aid you in every way possible, consistent ' with the safety of onr own people, many towns in the mountains oi JNorta Carolina invited the citizens of Jacksonville, under proper precau tions and restrictions, to take refuge with them. This arrangement bas been managed so loosaly and with eo little regard to tbe health interest of those of our people among whom your citizens have taken refuge that our physicians, many of whom be fore in tbeir humanity advised such action, now regard any similar colon ization of refugess in our midst as dangerous and earnestly advise asrainst it. This is, therefore, to notify you and all other persons from infected yellow fever districts in Florida and elsewhere, that in future such coloni zation will not be ul lowed in this State and every effort will be em ployed to prevent it. Yours very respectfully, A. M. ScaIes, Governor of North Carolina. ed himself to secure the best teacher that could be had by getting private j which devolved upon him. subscriptions . in aid of public , this position until he was chandising, and later, in cotton man ufacturing, devoting his personal attention to these branche-s of business. In 1S82 Gov. Jarvis appointed Maj. Finger a member of the Board of Directors of the Western Nl C. Insane Asylum. This was the first Board appointed ard upon it devolv ed the great work of making all pre- parat ons for opening that magnifi cent institution foi the reception of patients. Maj. Finger, during the last year of this service, was Presi dent of tbe Board, and gave much of his time and thought to the duties He held elected schools, and generally was successful j State Superintendent of Schools. IT WON'T BAKE BREAD, f n other words, Hocd's Sarsaparil la wi 1 not do impossibilities. Its proprietors tell plainly what it has done, submit proofs from sources w - 1 . in prolonging ine term to iour months. Fortunately for Maj. Finger good teachers were" secured from Catawba College and other in stitutions that sprang up in that section of the State about 1850; and under these teachers in the public schools, in addition to the common school branches, he studied Latin Greek and Algebra almost to the ex tent of a good preparation for the Freshman class in college. Having thus obtained bis preparation and training from the public schools he has good reason to be a friend to the Dublic schools. Apparently little things not unfrequently determine the course of a man's life. Maj. Finger says but for his father's pro viding, indeed at a very smalt cost, for his getting, in the public schools a taste of Latin, Greek and Algebra, he doubtless never would have found his way to a collegiate education. At the age of eighteen young Mr. Finger entered Catawba- College where he .remained as pupil and part of the time, instructor in some of the lower branches for four years. He then went to Bowdoin College, Maine, and graduated with A- B. in 1861 (A M. 1865.) He entered the Confederate army as a priyate in v,o. L 11th N. C. Reg iment (Col. "Leaventhrope.) At the . . . j j camp oi instruction ue was uuiub Quarter Master Sergeant After the battle of Gettysburg he was promot ed to Captain - (Assistant Quarter Master,) and assigned to collection of Tax in Kind with headquarters at Gharlotte, and in charge of that, the 6th Congressional District. In 1864 he was promoted to Major and put in charge of the collection of Tax in Kind for the whole State (in each Congressional District there was a Captain Quartermaster in charge.) He was serving in tlrs capacity, and making a faithful and effipient of ficer, when the war closed. After tbe war closed Maj. Finger in partnership Vitb Rev. J. C. Clapp, conducted Catawba High School at Newton, having charge of tbe prop- prtv nf Catawba College which had lost its endowment during the war. In brief this is the record of Maj Finger's life, with the most import ant event omitted, lms evens was his marriage in 1S66 to Miss Sarah Hoyl e Rhyne, of Gaston county, to whose practical common sense, genuine worth, and lovely christian character Mai. Finger at- tributes much of his success in life. They are both members of the Ger man Reformed church. Marat had demanded two hundred Unless news of this unwelcome interesting. It appears that both Bismarck and King William were at first opposed to tbe formation of an empire, and that the Grown Prince actually quarreled with the Minister in his effort to enforce his favorite idea. But when the principle of unification was once adopted, Bis marck was active and wily in pro moting it The famous letter of King . Louis of Bavaria, calling on King William to puthimself at the head of all the German people, was, it turns out, written by Bismarck, and the appear ance of spontaneity m the support of unifica ion was all false The memoirs have thrown German politis cal circles into a state of intense ex citement that must result in many heart burnings and jealousies. The loyalty of Bavarians to the empire will be weakened by the betrayal of theiusiguificant part their monarch played in the great historical event in which he was supposed to be a leading figure,and tbe c n umination of German unity will appear in the li"ht of a successful intrigue rather than of a grand patriotic movement. On the other hand, tbe evidence that the second German Emperor was a man of large views and film purpose will add to the glories of the House of Hohenzollern, and the pub lication of the records of the father's statesmanship will go to assuage the antagonisms against the Emperor William aroused by the idea that be was an undutif ul son. Taking both effects into account, the question of whether greater good or harm will come to imperial Germany by the disclosures is a close one. In the broadest sense it is well that the memoirs are made public. because it is for the interests of the world that the truth of history should be fully -known. thousand victims for the guillotine ! He pronosed to kill off the ene mies of the Revolution to make it perpetual ! Horrible thought No wonder it fired the blood of this patriotic peasant maid ! Gaining access to his closely guarded quarters by a subterfuge, she found him in his bath, even then inexorable and giving written direc tions for further slaughter ! He asked her the names of the inimical deputies who had taken refuge in Caen. She. told him, and he wrote them down. "That i? well ! Before a week is oyer they shall a 1 be brought to the guillotine." At these words, Charlotte drew from her bosom the knife, ; and plunged it with supernatural force up to the hilt in the heart of Marat. "Coma to me, my dear friend, come to me,n-cried Marat, and expir ed under the blow ! In the Corcoran gallery at Wash ington is a famous painting of Ghar lotte, represented as behind the prison bars the day before he exe cution. It is a thrilling, sad picture, full of sorrow for her suffering country. and of unconquerable hate for her country's enemies. What a lesson in this tragic story ! Two hundred, nay, five hundred thousand people would Marat have sacrificed to his unholy passion of power! Methods are quite as murderous and inexorable as men, and they number their victims by the millions. The page of history is full of murders by authority and by mistak en ideas ! In the practice of medi- . I 3 . 9 cine alone now many nunareas oi millions have been allowed to die and as many more killed by unjusti fiable bigotry and by bungling ! But the age is bettering. Men and methods are improving. A few years ago it was worth one's profes sional life to advise or permit the use of a proprietary medicine. To- of unquestioned reliability, and ask you frankly if you are suffering from j faealth necessitate4 hi3 abandon- In every issue in the present cam paign the Democrats have the advan of their opponents, but in none of them is the abTantage so great or so patent as on the public school ques -tion, The contrast is bharp and well defined. When the Republican party was in power it gave the people no schools, but squandered a large permanent achool fund. The Democrats have maintained a system of public schools which in creases in efficiency every year. This is the contrast squarely pre sented between the two parties in the campaign. The Republican at titude i3 : We favcr tbe education of the children, but v. heu we had an opportunity of educating them, we gave them no schools but stole part of the school fund, and paid part of it out to corn-field bands, termed legislators, at $7-00 per day. The Democratic attitude is : We favor educating all the children in the State. In proof, we are spend ing over $650,000 a year to educate them. " But the contrast OUT CF THE BREASTWORKS. Tate Springs, TeniL, July 4, 188S. 'JTie Swift Specific Co, Atlanta, Ga.: Gentlemen: Inclosed please fine an order for six bottles of your most valuable medicine. And in sending this order let me tell ycu why I do so. Seven years ago I contracted an exceedingly bad case of blood poi son. I tried physician, the best at at command, but secured no benefit. My throat began to get sore, and my body covered with sores and ulcers. Going from bad to worse, I felt that my grave must be reached in the near future. I gave up the doctors treatment and with a despairing hope I commenced taking yeur med icine. I began to improve from the first bottle, and in a short time the ulcers healed and my skin cleared off and was entirely welL One year aero case of catarrh developed in my system. The physician done his best, but could not cure me ; but two bottles of Swift's Specific gave me perlhanet relief. J. H. Koblnson. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. r- Tv The Swift specific jo., irawer a, Atlanta, Ga. is more striking if we have greed to tbe O men whom each of the parties have named as the head of the Public Schooi System. The Democratic party has named Maj. Sidney M. Fiuger, the subject of this sketch, who has held the t-ffice for four years. . A wise, discre t conservative, progressive man, he Las made so good an officer tl:a was renomi nated by .acclamation, and in the Re--rmhlifnn 'fnventioi; a speaker Faid f - nature is received, the most reason-, able conjture is that Stanley is . probably safe, and that the tribal disturbances of which we have heard are responsible for the long delay in getting news of him. This opinion is held by every Central African traveller without exception who has expressed any views on the matter. The latest let ters received from Emin Pasha and Mr. Casati express no solicitude for the fate of Stanley, though he was at tbat time six weeks or more overdue had he encountered no obstacles in following the direct route to WadeiaL Casati, in his letter dated Dec 5 said he would not be surpris ed, in view of the possible difficulties in the way, if Stanley did not reach Wadeiai before March this year. Neither will it be surprised if we hear that he reached his destination at a much earlier date. The fact that Barttelot met his death about thirty-nine days after he left Yambuga indicates the probabil ity, as Sir Francis De Winton has pointed out tbat he was somwhere near the Mabobe country, nearly half way on his journey to WadeiaL The unfortunate party evidently heard no rumors of ill fortune to' Stanley, and this is a favorable sign in a country where bad news travels v rapidly. The fresh charges of treachery against Tippu Tib seem to be brought forward by persons who are apparently not very well informed upon Central African affairs. To be sure Major Barttelot, weakened as it is known he was, by many months of great responsibility and terrible nervous tension, accused Tippu Tib in his last letter of having no heart for the Barttelot expedition. But in the same letter he admits that this distrusted person had brought him 400 porters a distance equal to that between this city and. Buffalo. For fifteen months Pippu Tib has been in command oi tne oianiey xaus district About four months ago Capt Yan Gele. one of the ablest ... 1 A. day there are not two pnyacians m i officers the service of the Congo any town m this country who do not staU?j was sent to Stanley Falls to regularly -prescribe some form of WDether Eippu Tib was faithful proprietary remedy! to his pledges. He has brought H. H- Warner, famed all over the Dacfc a favorable report, and Tippu jrorld as the discoverer of Warner s J lib is still in full charge of Belgian safe cure, began hunting up the old j interests in his district. remedies of the Log Cabin days ; Rrmnosea Tirmu Tib was after long and patient research he mOTed fcy benevolent impulses to succeeded in securing some of the uf w;th the whites. The most valuable, among family records, f . simDiT is that, having advanced and called them .Tamer's Log Cnbin . tre o the continent he remedies-the simple preparations fOUD the cost of transporting ivory of roots, leaves, balsams and herbs . ? Zanzibar was eating up his which were the successful standbys profits, and he chose to secure the of our grand mothers. These sim- CoDgo water route for his trade and pie, old-fashioned sarsaparilla, hops other ajTantages by identifying his and bucb, cougfc and consumption Crests with those of the white and other remedies' have struck a 55 Great difficulties beset popular chord and are in extraordi- n;m at the outset, and we have as narp demand all over the land. They yet QO conclusive evidence that he are not the untried and imaginary . . ffiUej his contract to the A conservative estimate of the loss to crops by the heavy rains of the last two weeks, and the continuous cloudv, wet weather between them, places it at 25 per cent Other esti mates are as high as 50 per cent The floods and wet weather will un doubtedly reduce the yeild of corn, cotton and tobacco very materially. In tho last rain the heavy damage was on the larger streams. Tne Cat a-vba was again out of its banks and much of the corn in its bottoms was destroyed. Bad news" also comes from the Yadkin valley, in Wilks. Tbe ladkin, too, got out of its banks ; and ovet flowed the corn, much of wlich is a total loss. - Pretty much remedies of some dabster chemist intent on making money, but the long-sought principles of the heal ing art which for generations kept our ancestors in perfect health, put forth for the Ood of humanity by one who is known all over the world as a philanthropist a lover of his fedow man, whose name is a guar antee of the highest excellence. The preparations are of decided and known influence over disease, and as in the hands of our grand mothers they raised up the sick, cured the lame, and bound up the wounds of death, so in their new form but olden power as Log Cabin remedies, they are sure to prove the "healing of the nations." Corday did tbe world an incalcu lable service in lidding France of the bigoted aud murderous Marat, just as this man is doing humanity a service by re-introducing to the world the simpler and better meth ods of our ancestors. best of his ability. He that knows nothing doubts of nothing. Do not let your doubts cause you to waver, for you may be assured that Warner's Log Cabin Liver Pills will cause the sluggish liver to resume its wonted functions standard of and P"6 tue results you desire. They are effective and harmless, be ing purely vegetable. that the State bad ut-ver Had a Detter 1 .wi,pre throughout this section . . . 1 - - - -J a officer aud he told the truth. Alaj. the fodder aud tons are destroyed, loss. Finger knows any disease or auecuoua touoou ; . trRcnn blood or low I . in 1874. This was a promoted by impure blood or low - nf tha neatest regret for . . r xl i . U r-LSi-i a NOT State 01 me syaiitsm, mj "a s: tate of the system, try llood s oar- , . rirjrer because of his fondness anarilla- The experience of others ! "J- ..Wl-nn is sumcieut assurance tuuu jru th3 vidue of public and this of itself is a serious 1 . . .,,- i schools, for in them i i received nis ? -taw"- training. But who is tho Republican nomi nee ? And what fitness has he for the place " Pimples, boil and other humors are liable to appear when the blood tlsem. take and be had made it a success and hi inee. Ha is a J. B. Mason is the nom- gets heated. 10 cure fourth-rate lawyer. Hood s fcursaparuia. SPEAKING APPOINTMENTS FOR CALDWELL. followin lff . ' o Caldwell, I hereby announce the annointments for L. C. Elector for 7th district : . Catawba October 15. Conover October 16. Coons' October 17. Keeversville October 18. A. A. Shttobd, JS0C3 Absolutely Pure. This ixnrder never Taries. A marvel or P"T strength nJ whclraomeneas. More e" .hrinn with the raKliitwie of tow ? mwders. Soil 73.- l'nr.i R,C!ffl fOWDEB CO 108 Chm. O. Dem. Ex. Ccm, waiist, s.t. uoi be disappointed in the result.
The Catawba County News (Newton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 4, 1888, edition 1
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