Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / Nov. 1, 1892, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE ASHEVILLE DAILY CITIZEN Tuesday Evening, November 1, 1802. ASHEVILLE DAILY CITIZEN Th DlIUT CITIZEN, Democratic, is published tray afternoon (cacept Sunday) at the ful lowing rates atrictty ctuh: OHK YBR.. 6 0O 8ix Months 3.00 Thieb Months. l oo On Month 50 One Week .. 1 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1892. EvEBVcitizen in this community know s that he can vote the straight Democratic ticket and thereby be protecting his best interests. "Jack" Cami-hki.l will be elected and Buncombe county will be represented as it should be in the State Setiate. In par ticular Asheville should ivt Campbell a heavy vote. Some oue is dhowing a lack of common sense in allowing the hook and ladder truck to be whirled through and around the square for the purpose, we suppose, of exercising the horses. It has hupiien ed lately that the truck has been hauled at a bieh rate of speed again and again around the court house at a time when the streets were needed tor traffic and not as a race track to display fast driv ing on. The fire horses should be exer cised at a low rate of speed, on side streets. Tub Joint Board knows that it should not let contracts without calling lor bids, so that the work may be done for the lowest possible figure; but in the case of Buxton street just what the Board did seemed to be necessary, and if the paving is done in time there will be no complaint in any quarter. But there should be somebody on the Board with a long enough look ahead to anticipate these necessities and advertise for bids in ample time. That is partly what we have a Board for. IT'S ALL, RIGHT. The Democratic county ticket deserves the heartiest support from every Demo crat and indeed from every man who has the good of the county at heart. All the candidates are either men tried in the public service and found capable, or else have such standing in the community that there can be no doubt of their fit ness and ability to serve the people. There is nothing in the record of the Re publican party in this State to suggest that the public affairs would be better administered if they were intrusted to them, and there is much in that record to warn us that they would probably be very much worse handled than they are now. There is not a Democrat in Buncombe county today that dues not, on reflection, know it to be his duty to work unceasingly from now till Novem ber 9th for the Democratic ticket. There is not in all that ticket a name that can give any excuse lor "scratching" or trad ing. It deserves to go in just as the nominating convention made it. THE FORCE HILL IS ALIVE. When through the operation of the Lodge National election law six or seven Southern States shall discard Dem ocratic rule we shall look confidently to see some measures ol justice done the blacks, who have so long been delrauded of their rights. Heavy taxes should be laid upon the property of the whites to develop and extend the public school system in these States. Separate schools lor the two races should be abolished, and the plan of bringing the vouth ol both colors into close andecuul relations in schools and churches given a lairtnal, as one of the most potent elements to break down the detestable Bourbonisui of the South. The right of the blacks to bear arms should be guaranteed to him as well as all the social rights intended to be secured him by the passage of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments to the constitution. The State laws against the intermarriage of the races should be repealed, and any discriminations against the black in the matters of learning trades or obtaining employment should be made a criminal oflencc, while the col ored man's right to hold office should be sacredly protected and recognized. A few years of this policy will solve the race problem satisfactorily. National Republican, Washington, D. (., July J 1891. "I give notice now that I shall con tinue to press my force bill, and I intend to pass it before I die too. I shall pass the force bill vet you see if I don t John I. Davenport, United States super visor of elections in New York Lity, and author ol the Lodge force bill. "1 believe that my Democratic friends say that there is a force bill issue in this campaign. I don't think there is, but I think there ought to lie This is the most important question in this campaign, and 1 would a good deal rather have negro domination in the South than the domination that prevails there at the present time. Lx-senator ohn G. Ingalls of Kansas, in n speech at Topeka, October 9, 1891i. "If the Democrats had never been al lowed to regain control of the State gov ernments of the South, Northern capital would never have embarked in the de velopment of Southern coal and iron; and the surest and speediest way to put a stop to this competition from men who are onr political enemies, as well as our commercial rivals, is to carry through and enforce measures like the Lodge election law And if we can once more get them in the condition they were before 1876 we won't hear any more about cheap iron and cheap cotton goods from the South. They will have other things to think about." Editorial in the Philadelphia Press, edited by one of President Harrison's closest friends, Hon. Emory Smith, late minister to Rus sia. Eacb a Kan of Influence. From the Mew York Time. The significance of the list of seceders to Cleveland is not in the number of names it contains, but in the high char acter of the persons mentioned, their prominence and their great political im portance. Bach of these persons is a roan of influence whose example will be followed by others, while some of them are men whose coarse will mark the way for hundreds of voters, not alone for those living in their sections of the coun- try, Dot tor cituens oi otner states, i dis list attests the declaration repeatedly made that this is a campaign of educa tion, and that the appeals that have been made to men's judgements end con sciences have not been thrown away. ' "40 Little Hop Pills, in glass bottles, 15 cents. Pelham's Pharmacy, sole agents. THE COLORED VOTER'S DUTY. The following open- letter taken . front the New York Vorld was ; written by one of the most prominent colored men in the country: To the Editor of the World: Many friends and comrades have u- (1 nested me to express my views as to how the colored man should vote at the coming election. I am free to say that 1 shall cast my vote for Orover Cleveland, and I cordially invite others of my race to do likewise. 1 fail to sec that the colored man has anything to lose in voting for Mr. Cleveland. In my judg ment his election will go very far In rec oncile the animosities and bridge the chasms of hostility between the two races in the South. 1 don't care where the negro lives- North, South, East or West lie cannot hone to llourisli unless his political course is directed by conscientious de votion to principle and unless lie thinks and acts as other men. u e all remcnuier how we were betrayed liv Haves and the men who were so anxious to squeeze him into the executive chair We have been deceived since by Harrison and his political friends. The State gov ernments in the South, where the great bulk of colored Hpulation is, are now safely in Democratic hands, and I sub mit that it is not wise for colored people to remain outside of the ruling party with nothing to prompt them to do so except tradition and the memory of con ditions which long since ceased to exist. 1 urge all good colored citiens, North and South, to vote for Mr. Cleveland, for if Harrison should win there will surely be no change for the better. It will be four years more of broken prom ises and the same passionate devotion to our interests at the cud of the four years only. 1 he colored people have nothing to fear on account of Mr. Cleveland's elec tion, because lie has been once tried and gave a faithful and honest administra tion to the country and 1 will further state that the black man's freedom was as secure as under Harrison. Then let the colored man vote 'or Cleveland. Then the time will hae come in the his tory of American polities when the col ored man's vote will not be relied upon on account of his color. 1 would say to my connades ;n In diana where 1 recruited most of the Twenty-eighth Colored Regiment, and enlisted in the same as a private in Com pany D, that when upon the uaule-hckl we promised eacli other that we would never again be slaves to any man nor to any party, but forever would vote Iree, live lice, walk free, talk free and die free; but in violation of this pledge we have been slaves to the Republican party for nearly twenty-seven years, and at a sac rifice ol more lives than were lost on manv of the battle-fields. Nothing has been done for us by the Republican party in all that time. If a solitary negro is nominated lor a res pectable office in the North he is slaugh tered at the polls. Harrison and his predecessors back to Hayes have been our warm friends before election, but have said afterwards that they could do nothing for us, be cause the constitution prohibited inter ference with States' rights After twentv-seven years of slavery to this tricky, false and ungrateful party, let us east oil the shackles and become in tact as well as in name free men. Let us vote lor a man who did as much, if not more, lor colored men during his one term as 'resident as anv Republican President since Grant has done, and who has never broken a promise to anv man. AVr. Garland II. White. Late Chaiuplain Twenty-eighth United States Colored Troops, Washington, D. C, (let. lo. An Important Amendment. From the Wilmington Star. The last legislature passed an amend ment to the Constitution, and an impor tant oue, which will be submitted to the people for ratification or rejection at the coniingclcction. Under the Constitution now, the Solicitors are elected by dis tricts, while the Judgesare clccUd by the people of the whole Slate. This amend ment provides for electing the Solicitors of the districts as the Judges arc elected, by the oters ol the w hole State instead ol by the voters ol the Judicial districts as now. The same reasons hold good for the election of the solicitors bv the State at large as fi.r the judges, ('mod solicitors are almost, if not quite as necessary as good judges, and there is not much doubt that the change proposed would risuk in good. It would make the solicitor ship less of a political office, and remove the temptations to evade duties or pros titute the office to make political capital in the district, with a viev to reelection. A IliHtortan on Cleveland. James Sehuulcr, in November Forum. There is no man in the whole Union who in person, speech, and example em bodies so thoroughly the ideal of a politi cal leader a man of the people who is not a flatterer of the people. He is n sound Democrat because he seeks the good of the Democracy; a sound Ameri can because his policy is to bind up the old wounds of civil strife and to unite the country. Under the oppressive discour agements of his former term of office he proved himself a wise, sagacious, and forbearing chief magistrate, and above all a courageous one. New to national experience, he made his chief appoint ments with rare discretion, and no sus picion of jobbery attached to his execu tive circle at the capital. They Remembered Mini. From the Winston Sentinel. Mrs. Adlai Stevenson has presented to Maj. William M. Robbins, of States ville, a handsome water pitcher in memory of the generous courtesy and cordial hospitality shown to the Vice Presidentinl purty by the Old North State, and Maj. Robbins' faithful attend ance upon them. How Do You Like Tula? Secretary Foster in Washington Post. I've been approached in almost every campaign by churches and asked to sub scribe to funds, on the assurance that it would help me politically. rlon't sec much difference between the saloon and the church in that. And it does help a man to cultivate the church. Tariff reform is still our purpose. Though we oppose the theory that tariff laws may be passed having for their object the granting of discriminat ing and unfair governmental aid to pri vate ventures, we wage no exterminat ing war against any American interest. Grovcr Cleveland's Letter of acceptance. GINGER ALE. Aids digestion, prevents dyspepsia, palatable and invigorating. Campbell's "QUEEN BRAND" is equal to the Im ported, at one-third the cost. Factory 217 Haywood street, Asheville, N. C. Fully 500 lamps 15 cents to $25.00. Our Bouquets and Pianos are beautiful this season. Thrash's,41 Pat ton avenue. FOR EVER AXD hOR EVER. 0 sweet and strange it seems to me, that ere this day is done The voice, that now is speaking, may lie beyond the sun For ever and for ever with those just souls and true And what is life, that we should moan ? why make we such ado ? I'or ever and (or ever, all in a blessed home And there to wait a tittle while till vou and Etlie come To lie within the light ol (iod, as I lie upon your bresat And the wicked case from troubling, and the weary arc at icsl. Tennyson. MKI.NNINi; "Or II ( IIAlMliV " A Lifelike lleNcrlntiou ol Ihv Cap and UetlH American. From the Washington lisf. New York has made much of "Our Chaunccy." The tendency of that ab sur I but infatuated metropolis to take an exaggerated vicwol everything it has produced, reveals it se It with more than cusl oiiHu. v ostentation in the inflated estimate it has put upon Mr. Dcpcw and his importance in the public affairs. Because lie presides gracefully at large municipal feeds and infuses into the cigar smoke that goes with the nut cracking the light ephemeral elixir of his playful wit, New York regards him as an indespcusihlc factor in the equation of onr National destinv. Because he knows just what to say over a salmi of uuck, and can choose the exact language in which to celebrate the apotheosis of a boned capon. New York concludes that he must be the man ol'all men to uphold the palladium of our common liberties. And so he goes lorth upon his mcrrv w ay, shaki.ig his cap and bells alike in the forum, the Senate, and the academic grove, and daunting his motley where solemn tribunes sit. While patriots pray and statesmen think, lie dances in the sunbeams and laughs and capers with bcribboiied legs a bit of gaudy, incon S'derable gossamer. A ;K14T IMCllII.. It Can Certainly be Averted Only In One Wuv Fruin th-r Hultimore Sun. line of the resolutii. ns adopted at the great outpouring of Cierman-Aniei ienns in New York city on Thursday night, after denouncing the Mckinley bill "as the corrupt outcome of the nl liancc" between the protected manufac turers and the Republican party, ami as meaning "nothing less than the control of the National Government by protect ing capital and the substitution ol pluto cratic for Dfinointic rule," proceeds as follows: "This unholy alliance seeks again to introduce the means and methods used in ltss into the present campaign. Unormoiis sums of money have been fur nished to the Republican National com mittee by protected manufacturers, and the pernicious influence of their disburse ment is already being felt throughout the entire country. It is no exaggera tion to say that the permanency of our Republican institutions is in danger. This peril can only he averted tlirmgh the success oft trover Clcvelaml. It is, therefore, the duty of every true patriot to suppoit him in this campaign. IN TIIK KKALTV WOHI.l),"" W lial 1m Truuspirlim In the Wav of lilrt Transactions. The following deeds have been fikd in Register Mackev's office: 11. II. Mcrrimon to Mrs. R.A. Merrimon, laud on Hent Creek.. $ i;iu . C. Gentry and wile to G. W. Ballard, lot on Staines avenue, f.'xS." feet !,''( Hi M. and D. Hall to L. M. Williams, lot on Senev street, UllxGo leet S 0 . M. McUcynolds to W.S. Strop, 10 acres on Haw deck -UNI Hotel ArrlvnlH. Glen A'ocA: L.Jarrell, Jarretts, N. C; 11. C. Martin, N. C; . K. Coble, Greens boro; C. K. Dickinson, J. D. Teiinant, Richmond; M. L. Gtidgcr, Cincinnati; I. W. Long, N. C; Thos. Wakefield, Lenoir, N. C; W. II. Close, Atlanta. Gn.; M. W. Wilkinson, Michigan; Luther Hunch, Murphy; James Worlcy Webster; il. V. Maxwell. C. M. Leuty, Isnoxville; II. S. Radelilfe, Richmond; R II. Mitchell, Statesville; Miss osie Har ri.ion, Walhalla, S. C; W. G. I'reston, Abingdon, 'a.; C. 1'. Camp, b. Iv. Deny, S. C; J. II. I'ayne, Wayncsville. After a long period of peace, w hen our overburdened countrymen ask for relief ami n restoration to a fuller enjoy ment of their incomes and earnings, they are met by the claim that tariff taxation for the sake of protection is an American system, the continuance of w hich is nec essary in order that high wages may be paid to our workingmcii and a home market be provided for our farm pro ducts. Thw pretenses should no longer deceive. Grover Cleveland's Letter ol acceptance. Waller Bridges, Athens. Tenn., writes: "For six years I had been afflicted with running sores, and an enlargement of the bone in my leg. I tried everything 1 heard without any permanent benefit until Botanic Blood Balm was recom mended to me. After using six bottles the sores healed, and I am now in better health than 1 have ever been. I send this testimonial unsolicited, because I want others to be benefitted." Just as the duties upon imported mer chandise have been increased so bus the grade of imported labor been low ered until now, under the McKinlcy bill, there arc coming here every month many thousands of more ignorant, and, there fore, less desirable, laborers than ever before. It is not easy to exaggerate the moral evils they are hktly to inflict upon our social order and our national life From Wayne MucVeagh's Letter. Good Cooking. Is one of the chief blessings of every home. To always insure good custards, puddings, sauces, etc., use Gail Borden "liagle" Brand Condensed Milk. Direc tions on the label. Sold by your grocer and druggist. To Advertisers. T' insure change of advertisements running on regular contract, copy must be handed in br 10 o'clock a. m. Mrs. Burr and Miss Miller have return ed from Europe and are now prepared to make gowns and wraps in the latest ap proved styles at 44 Orove street. The address of G. II. Mayer consulting opticion will be 108 South Eighth street, Philadelphia, Pa. Will promptly grind or repair prescription glasses. Everybody should see J. B. Worsley's museum of native animals, birds, fish, etc., in the tent, opposite postoftice. Hop Ointment the great skin cure Pelham's Pharmacy, sole agents. MALAGA GRAPES KROGER. Absolutely pure A cream of lai tor baking powder. Misti est of nil in leavening ptrcnRth. I.nti'M I'nitcd Stutcs liuvmimrnt Food Rcpoit. ROY At. MNO rUWIlFK CO , 100 Wull St , New Yolk. SOUVENIRS OF ASHEVILLE NATIYE NORTH CAROLINA GEMS, JEWELRY AND DIA MOND MOUNTINGS MADE TO ORDER IRTIIUR M. FIELD LEADING JEWELER. 18 South Main St., Asheville. COal AND Cord Wood Cheap AND HOT AT Carrington's Coal Yard Court Square. NO. 20. This ripate will he w rupird li.v i ho lU'tiiil (ii'occis' Association of Asheville. AUCTION AND COMMISSION HOUSE. 1 have leased the More north of City Hull building for six months and moved into it. I am oflcrinK a few nil wool CnrKt, Pur. niture, etc., etc., very cheap. scpU2dLw B. COFFIN. HEINITSH DRUGGISTS, SONDLEY BUILDING, FULL LISE DRUGS, CHEMICALS, DRUGGIST SUXDRlliS, SOAP, PERFUM ERY, BRUSHES, COM IIS, ETC, PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY. LOW PRICES. Call and inspect ui. ocU4ltf ARE YOU INTERESTED IN LOW PRICES? WE 0FFEU FOR THIS FALL AND WINTER MAGNIFICENT LINE OF MEN'S, YOUTHS rev Overcoats, Gents' Furnishing Goods. A hrgoihm of Staple and Fancy Diy Goods, Hoots and Shoes, famishing Goods, llats, Tmuks, Etc., at prices Lower than the lowest. Our Goods and 1'rices will prorelthatlitlwillj always' payyoutotradwith the BALTIMORE CLOTHING AND DRYJGOODS HOUSE, IVo. - IO - PATTON - AVENUE. WHAT'S THE USE Our Patent I -wither Shoes at clone and new-made prices has turned out a notalile ami quick advertisement. So much m that we're going to let them have the ohiefest part of the glory of bringing trade for Dress Footwear. LOOK AT TDK WINDOWS. We'll just pay that much and stop. Look at the Shoes and the prices. They're the talk of the street already. Too much for the money to wait long for buyers. FULENWIDER 18 Pattern Avenue. Always Sure ! Always Prompt!! All Heaachesd and Neuralgia. AT Raysor & Smith's, Wholesale and Retail. P.L.COWAN&BRO. JEWELERS, ALL KINDS OF WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY. W c make a Specialty of Fine Watch Repairing. Mr. W. V. Onlttsinith is our wnlchiiiuktT, nntl is always pleased to wc his customers. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. No. 9 YVesI Court Place, ASIlliVII.I li, N. C. GO TO THE B0NA1R, 74 BAILEY STREET, For excellent fare, good rooms und t lie best of accommodation. Priooa Reasonable. MRS. Ci. L. Rl'DONALDi & REA.Gr-A.ISr, PATTON AVENUE. IN Cl'UING mimnn school, SIIIS VILLK, IV. C Session : Commences : Sept. : 20. Recitations Commence Sept. 21. PKBPAKATOKY SCHOOL FOR HOYS. Board and Tuition, - . $300 Per Annum Tuition $ 80 Per Annum ::::::::"::::::::FACIJITY:::::::::::.:::::::::::: Hcndinatttcr-R. MacDonald, n. A., Oxford,. Assittfaut Mastcrs-H. XI. WaItc,B. A., Aniberst, and C. H. Bonncll, II. A., Rutgers. a Unlike Unsolublc Cocoas, which arc Indigestible, and Cocoas adulterated with Starch, tyan cHowteifo Qocoa BEST & GOES FARTHEST) leaves no Sediment 011 the bottom T. C. SMITH k CO., DRUGGISTS & Public Square, ritTd'.l Advance of Retreat of cs iiw 1 !.; ;. mc front r.s nevrr ifuro. '1 1;.; iii.H'ii pri.o c( (;"' I ciiv.rs i; l:.:lpiii drive tVcm r.-.:t of u;-. Millions of rmokcrs t::c Blackwell's Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco. It is the most pop'.ihr Bi ;uk1 in 1'pc market. Smoked for overtwenty five years its fair.c h ti!l growing Quality always the same. BLACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO., DURHAM, N. C. DRINK THE KNOXVILLE BEER The Best and Only the liucst Uuva rin 11 1 Hops mid Malt, used in its manufacture. A Trial is Earnestly Solicited. J. B. PITTMAN, WEEKLY CITIZEN IS ONLY $1.00 PER YEAR, strictly in advance: LBWia MADDUX, Trca II. T. COLLINS. Vlcc-Prti. Capital $50000. Surplus, $40,000. WESTERN CAROLINA BANK, State, County And City Depository. Organised ttaty, 188S DEPOSIT BOXES IN FIRE PROOF VAULTS RENTED AT REASONABLE RATES GENERAL BANKING BU8INE88 TRANSACTED. Interest Paid on Deposit In garlng Department. DIRECTORS! T-mirSa MfuMllT. IT T. fYllina M J. Fncc. J. M. Itd. Chaa. McNamee, J. E. Rankin, M. J. Bearden, S. 11. Reed. IANK OPEN FROM A. . TIU ft of the cup. PHARMACISTS, Asheville, N. C. 1 J li e ilz Purest on Earth. SOLE AGENT. L. P. M'LOUD, Cashier. 4 V. U. ON tATUADAT Til L 8 P. M.
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1892, edition 1
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