Newspapers / Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.) / Nov. 3, 1888, edition 1 / Page 3
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CHARLOTTE MESSENGER. SATURDAY, - NOV. 3, 1888. OUR CHURCHES. St Michael’. (P. £T Church, Mint St Services it 10 a. ra. am]B„. m . Buni , ay ; school at 4 p.m. Rev. P. I>. Alston, raator . M. E. Church, Graham Street, Services at .Ip. in. audSp.m. Sunday school at 10 a in. Rev. E. M. Collett, pastor. First Baptist Church, South Church St Serv.oo.at 11 a. n,„ 3p. m.andSp. m.Sun da> -school at Ip. m . j{ ev A A Powell pastor. ’ Ehenewr Baptist Cl,urch, East Second St Service at 11 a. m .,3p. m.audgp. m . B um day-school at 1 p. m . Rev. Z. Haughton pastor, ’ Presbyterian Church, corner Seventh and (ollese Sts Services at 3p.m, audßp.,„. Sunday-school at 10 a. m. Rev. R. p. W L he pastor. J ’ < Union Chapel, (A. M. E. Z.) Mint St. Ser ucosat 11a. iii., 3 p. m. and 8 p. m. Sunday school at 1 p. m. Rev M. Slade, pastor. Little Rock, (A. M. E. Z. ) E St. Services at 11 a. in., 3p. ni. and Bp. ni. Rev. J. W Thomas, pastor. Grace Church, (A. M. E. Z.) South B, be tween 3<l and 4th. Services at 11 A. M. and s oolock P. M. Sunday-school at 3 P.M. Kev. G. K. Morris, Pastor. V H y° ur paper has a blue cross mark, it will be stopped till you pay up. Wc cannot continue to send it to you without some money. Please pay up and let us continue it to you. LOCAL. Wanted. We want a canvassing agent in every county in the State, to solicit subscribers for the Mbssenger. Lib eral commission will be paid active agents Let us hear from every town and county at once. Address W. C. SMITH, Charlotte, N. C. One Thousand More. W e want one thousand new sub scribers by the first of January. Let every lady and every gentlemen reader send us one now subscriber or send us a list of the reading colored people around you, with their postoffice ad dress, so wc may send them a copy of our paper Free to Preachers. We offer the following inducements to preachers of the gospel, for getting subscribers to the Messenger. To every preacher sending us three new cash subscribers between this and January, we will send the Messenger one year free. We will take chickens, eggs, butter, &c., when the money can’t be had. Go to work. (Jo Swear. It is necessary for every man to go back to the Registrar and be sworn. Attend to it to-day. If you have not registered do so to-day as this is the last day. Register and dont fail to vote for Dockery and Harrison. Remember W. G. Ford is our can didate for tax collector. Sec that you get bis ticket. They now say Cleveland lias made a fatal mistake by sending Saxille West back home New Hanover is all right. They have local differences, but all republi cans will vote for Harrison and Dockery. Now stop talking and go to wort. Solid, ijuict work from now till Tues day night is what every republcan wants to do. Read over the tickets in this paper and see that you vote the right tickets from President down. Don’t fail to vote lor C. I’. Lockcy for Congress. Re sure that your county ticket has on it: W. G. Ford for tax collector; M. A. Dulin for sheriff; R. H. W. Darker for Register of Deeds; D C. Flow for surveyor and C. A. Frnxies for coroner See that your Legislative ticket has! the names of R. E. McDonald, F. D. j Davis, J. M. Creighton and Kli. H. ! Hinson on it aud vote for every man j of them. Do wraith this miserable j county government. The report of a riot in Greensboro j last Thursday turns out to be false ■ Everything is quiet in old Guildford. . Senator Vance will be escorted to the country next Monday by horse-; men, music, Ac. A grand procession is expected and a grand torchlight, procession in town Monday night 1 lood otvll has ; ? h ' K Bts *.J"\ it i« earnestlyL,! • * w,n cont i n '\till the electioneer - There ,s no noVl of bad feel.A or ! words to other. 1 I „ The news come * in f(om everiart . of the State: t overrun by aceesstins from the d! 0 - • cratic party. Loo: out for a big to- 1 publican majority luesday. ] Simply because a „an has been n ' the chain gang or Lnjail is no reai n ' why he cannot v.oto. Don’t let ql- ’ ored men be fright e o( ] off ; n L way. .. 1 Registration books lre | general inspection to-da, Let CV I , man who chooses go ani sce who A ( marked “ challenged” aq have the, , matter fixed up before Tu H | ay ! ( Wouldn’t it be a good L to take ' out indictments against L locrats 1 who offer to buy votes ? ig a < national election and the casoLj~ ht < be taken to the Federal court, \yiiat * do the leaders think of the ideaA * Rehold a Democratic Burclub i Lord Sackvillc West has throwA bomb into the Democratic camp tlu. sickens the Hearts of all the They say he must go, for he h* ruined Cleveland’s chances. The Democratic papers are eagerly calling for money in all the counties for campaign. They say Raleigh has raised §I,OOO for the county canvass, yet they say it is.a crime for the Re publicans to use money. They say Democrats are going to buy votes on election day and are holding as much of their money as possible for that purpose. The M. E. conference which was in session at Lenoir, adjourned last Monday. Rev. E. M. Collet is re turned to Graham street church, Rev. Isaac Wells goes to Laurinburg and Rev. W. 11. Smith goes to Advance, Davidson county. Dr. R. M. Normcnt, one of the Republican electors, followed Col. Dockery on Monday night at the Mint yard. Dr. Normcnt now lives in Robeson County and practices medi cine, but he is well posted in politi cal affairs and is very popular around this city. His speech is well spoken of. Col. O. H. Dockery spoke in the Mint yard last Monday night to a yaifi full of people. There were about 3,000 voters out to hear our nexi governor and all left well pleased-vith what they heard. We will not at tempt to eulogize him here. He ex posed the fallacies of democracy ant fully convinced the doubting that the Republican party is the party for the laboring man. Col. Dockery says this great up heaval in politics is beyond the politi cian ; the people demand a chaugo of affairs. The democrats see the great danger they are in and the bosses are now laying whip and trying to drive the poor voters into line. Laboring men arc going to vote for Harrison, Dockery and the full Republican ticket. All prohibitionists should vote for judges who arc stiictly temperate and religiously inclined. Judge Buxton and Maj. Guthrie are temperance men in practice. The President has proclaimed the 20th of this month as the day set apart for general thanksgiving. A circular was sent out in Wil mington on Thursday with the names of seventy-two (72) white democrats, signed by their own hands, declaring they will no longer support the dem ocratic party. Rev. (J. K. Morris. Last week we said strange rumors were afloat concerning Rev. G. 11. j Morris, late pastor of Grace church. The rumor was that Rev. Morris had j gone to Lenoir to join the M. E. con i ference. It turns out to be true. • Rev. Morris has left Zion connection j and joined the M. E. church. He is ■ now stationed in Shelby. It was rather a suprise to his former charge, i but as Christians they should only wish him sueccas in his new field of 1 labor. Grace church is again without a pastor, hut she will not suffer on that account as the conference is only a ! few weeks off. Negro Supervisors. It is reported that two Federal Ne gro supervisors of election have been appointed for this county. Not un derstanding tho duties of this officer, we are unprepared to give an opinion upon tho need of them in this county. It seems all right for Mr. Cleveland to appoint Negroes to rule our white people, to advise mixed schools and all right for county commissioners to appoint Negro supervisors over white men and Negro judges of election, but when a Negro is appointed by a Re publican it then becomes a terrible crime and men’s has or passions are appealed ,to. What arc judges for but to watch the ballot and decide contests, and what more is a Negro supervisor than a Negro judge? Gen tlemen this stuff is too thin. Do white men in North Carolina think for themselves, or do they wait to be told everything they should do? This cry of Negro supervisors is all bun combe—all nonsense. How they Writhe and Squirm. The democrats of this State have never been so scared and demoralized as they are now. The papers and 'speakers appeal to passion and preju \ice in c\ery conceivable manner. Wilmington Star goes so far as to na H the democratic dealers in the mal At there, thus saying all others are reVb]| an j warns ; ts rea( j erg to spoty,,,. will white men tol erate a lurty vith such principles ? And can cohredyen think of joining in with thcm\ They see tic li-iting Oj the wall. They see their ociupation', is gone. They are mad and Vill soot he des troyed. Let sober, thinking), en do i their full duty till the lafc ba\|ot is i counted next Tuesday mat. Ivotc * the republican ticket and yo\ vote for as many white men a3 are on the democratic ticket. Vote edjy a ud vote straight. Vote the Republican Ticke North State. If you want American mafifac turers, American farm products and American labor protected from de grading and ruinous competition <th foreigners, vote the republican ticlt. If you wish to see the the country have the untold henefg of the Blair educational bill and an pie public schools for all classes, vot the republican ticket. If you desire to return to a system of self-government, under which the people can control their home affairs aud choose their local officers, vote the republican ticket. If you would do away with the odious and oppressive internal reve nue laws, and leave in the pockets of the people the immense sum which continually goes into the United States treasury under the laws, vote the re jiblican ticket. If you would relieve the people of Dt constant, irritating presence of the h°Re of revenue officers, such as d e Pty marshals, deputy collectors, revekje agents, detectives, spies, and inform rB , who draw big salaries from the gov rm „ cnt t 0 annoy md harrass the peop Cj vo te the republcan ticket. Muse tor Regret. •‘George, <-. ar ,” she said with “do you knowthat Mr. Sampson skc j me last night tot, c I,ls wife!” “Well, I like ha impudence. The i of proposing to an enaaged young lau. What did you say to him ?” “I told him that i,waa very sorry in deed, but he was too \te." —New Tort Sun. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Mbs. Winslow’s Soothing Sykup, for chil dren teething, is the prescription of olio of the best female nurses and physicians in the United States, and lias been used for forty years witli never-failing success by millions of mothers for their children. Dnringthe process of teething its value is incalculable. It relieves the child from pain, cures dysentery and diar rhoea, griping in the bowels, and wiml-eolic. By giving health to the child it rests the mother. Price 25c. a bottle. S. .1 ELLIOTT & CO. WATCHMAKERS 11 JEII1K, KKFAIIUNG A HPECIALTY. A Full Line of Cheap Watches, Clocks, SpcctacleH and Jewelry Spccialtic*. 21!IW(k1 Trade St. I’ll ARUITTE. S. C. LAW DEPARTMENT Shaw University, RALEIGH, N. C., The first session will open Monday, the 26th day of November, 1888. For further information, address Rev. Dii. Tuppeu, President Shaw Univer sity, Raleigh, N. C., or the under signed at Fayetteville, N. C. JOHN S. LEARY. Oct. 9th, 1888. WANTED ! ! ! RELIABLE and ACTIVE MEN to travel for an Established House during the summer months. Those who can furnish a iior.se and give security preferred. Money advanced monthly to pay expenses. A great chance for the right men! State age, busi ness experience, and to save time better send names and address of references. No atten tion paid to iKistal cards. Never mind about sending stamp for reply. Address ‘‘BUSINESS,” Box 11, Richmond, Va. VIRGINIA HOUSE, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Accommodations furnished travelers at reasonable rates. Comfortable beds and rooms. House located iu the central aud business part of the citv. Table furnished with the best of the market. Meals at all hours. J. M. GOODE, - Proprietor. CHARLOTTE. N. C. II B KENNEDY, DEALER IN Confectioneries, Fancy and ■ Staple Groceries. Chickens, Eggs, Butter, Vegeta- ' bles, and all kinds of Country Produce. ( Everything kept in a well regulated Grocery Store. Fine Fruits a speci- * alty. No. 303 South Graham street, 1 Charlotte, N. C. |THAT FIGHT W The Original Wins. £2 C. F. Simmons, St. Louis, Prop’r M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. Est’d f 1840, in the U. S. Court defeats J. JL H. Zcilfn, Prop’r A. Q. Simmons Liv* [[•Aod « r Regulator* Est’d by Zeilin 1868. I» M. A. S. L. M. has for 47 years 1 Wi curc ‘d Indigestion, Biliousness, I JoS*. Dyspepsia,Sick Headache,Lost ft/ArrETiTE, Sour Stomach, Etc. \ A Rev. T. B. Reams, Pastor M. E. \ o“1 Church, Adams, Tenn., writes: “1 -Jithink I should have been dead but ■fc 1 for your Genuine M. A. Sim- Jr"-—mons Liver Medicine. I have fIBWWO/S\ sometimes had to substitute |i!l “Beilin’s stuff” for your Mcdi- I /COltffr*/ c ‘ ne » but it don’t answer the 11**"® / Purpose.” MfgPIXl Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor The Baptist, Memphis, Tenn.. says: | 1 I received a package of your Liver A Vi Medicine, and have used half of it. A It works like a charm. I want no « better Liver Regulator and cer- JRft \ tainly no more of Zeilin’s mixture. THE LADIES’ FAVORITE. NEVER OUT OF ORDER. t you desire to purchase a sewing machine, dc our agent at your place for terras and ices. If you cannot find our agent, write -iajet to nearest address to you Ixilo w named. ftIIESEWING MACHINE C°.MGE*. < )' G ‘ -38 UNION SQUARE,N.VC- DALLAS, . I —-—^ Sonnercial College lexihotoh, k 1 ? l-.ii... , . au.lnMNhort-l.uml * True. Writlnc Ttlr»ru t l.y Cheapen Best Business College in the Worh' ! IBJBS!*P-VJ!' 1 Gobi 'l"lni o»T 111 olher Coll.r- S??£rfr.r.i"-.—.Erlm-.tlon. 10.IMJO tlrmfu.*. 1 Wilbur ll ‘iVk 'l K < kr » l ’*' 'V. Prl. I Wilbur llniltb, Lexington, K,. Haitian Hu. PRINTING in all its inches executed in the iM’td man- • i, at the very lowest rates. • New»pier Printing a S|><>cinlty. ! ] . E. BLAKE Y, i 207 KnumdeHt., (’HARLOTTK. .V. !.' QAROLINA CENTRAL R. R CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. Wilmington, N. C., June 10, 1888. WESTBOUND TRAINS. cm . No. 1. No. 3. Nos. 5& 7 SfATIONS. Daily ex. Daily ex. Tri- Sunday. Sunday, weekly. lv Raleigh, 8:05 a.m. 7:15 p.m. lvWilnrgton 7:30 0:10 lv Maxton, 11:21 lv Hamlet, 12:50 p.m. 2:30 a.m. lvWadesboro 2:00 lv Charlotte 4:07 0:55 lvLincolnt’n 5:51 lv Shelby, 7:03 arßutherf’n 8:15 EASTBOUND TRAINS. No. 2. No. 4. STATIONS. Daily ex. Daily ex. Sunday. Sunday. lvltutherf’n 7:20 a. in. lv Shelby 8:39 lvLincolnt’n 9:45 lv Charlotte 11:35 8:00 p.m. lvWadesboro 2:00 p.m. lv Hamlet 3:00 12:05 a.m. lv Maxton. 4:13 arWilm’gton 7:50 8:20 ar Raleigh, 7:15 9:00 Trains Nos. 1. and 2 make close connection at Wadesboro with trsdns to and from Che raw, Florence, Charleston and the South, a Trains No. 1,2, 3 and 4 make close connec tion at Hamlet with trains to and from Raleigh and Norfolk. Through sleeping cars between Wilming ton and Charlotte and Charlotte and Raleigh. Take train No. 1 for Statesville and stations on the W. N. C. R. R. and points west. Take traing Nos. 1 and 2 for Clieraw, Flo rence, Charleston, Savannah and Florida. Take train No. 3 for Spartanburg, Green ville, Athens, Atlanta and all points South west. Also for Asheville via Charlotte and Spartanburg. No. 2 connects at Wilmington with Sea coast train for Wrightsville. Also with At lantic Coast Line North and South. No. 4 connects with W. and W. northbound train. Also seacoast train for Wrightsville, Steamer Sylvan Grove for Carolina Beach and Steamer 1 ’assi>ort for Sin ithvilie. L° c Freight Nos. 5 and 6 daily between nilmmgton and Laurinburg. Local Freight Nos. 7 and 8 daily between Charlotte and Laurinburg. Local Freight Nos. 9 and 10 tri-weekly be tween Charlotte and Rutherfordton. • Nos. 5, G, 7,8, 9 and 10 will not take passengers. L. C. JONES, Superintendent* F. W. CLARK, General Passenger Agt. ’ pAPE FEAR AND vV YADKIN VALLEY HAIL \V A V COME ANY. Taking effect Monday, June 11th, 1888. Tbains Moving Nosih. Passenger Freight and , ~ and Mail. Passenger. Lvßennettsvillc U:(X)ani 1:15 pm Ar Maxton, 7:05 3:10 Lv Maxton, 7:15 3135 Ar Fayetteville, 9:00 7)5 Lv Fayetteville, 0:15 10:00 am Ar Sanford 11:15 110 i>m Lv Sanford, 11:27 2:30 * Ar Greensboro, 2:30 p m 7 : 25 Lv Greensboro, 3:00 p m 10:15 u 111 Ar Mt. Airy, 7:15 p m 5:15 p m Pass, and Mail No. I—dinner at Greensboro. Trains Movino Sooth. Lv Mi. Airy, 5:00 p ni 10:15 a ni Ar Greensboro, 0:25 5-40pii Lv Grgensboro, 10:05 a in 7:45 a m Ar Sanford 1:35 pm 2:00 p ni Lv Sanford, 1:55 2:30 p m Ar Fayetteville, 4:00 5-50 Lv Fayetteville, 4:15 0:25 a ni Ar Maxton, 0:15 9:50 Lv Maxton, 0:25 10:15 Ar Bennettsvillc 7:30 12:15 p m Pass, it Mail No. 2—breakfast Germantown. Passenger and Mail No. 2—dinner at Sanford. FACTORY BRANCH—FREIGHT AND ACCOM MOD ATION. Trains Moving North. Leave Millboro, 7:30 a. m. Arrive Greensboro, 9:00 Trains Moving Soura. Leave Greensboro, 3:30 p. m. Leave Factory June. 4:30 Arrive Millboro, 5:15 Passenger and Mail Trains run daily except Sunday. Freight and Accommodation Train run* from Fayetteville to Bennettsvillc and return on Mondays, Wednesday- and Fridays; from Fayetteville to Greensboro on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, and from Greens boro to Fayetteville on Mondays, Wednes days and Fridays. Trains on Factory Branch run daily except Sundays. W. E. KYLE, J- W. FRY. Gen'lSupL Cn ’ IPa,ja - A8 ’ t - Dr. J. T. Williams Oilers his professional services to the genera public. Office hours from 9 to 10 a. m. 2 to 3 p. ni. Office No. 24 West 4th street. Night calls from residence No. 508 South E. street, Charlotte, N. C. ijavi: ANI) DISAGREEABLE CONTROVERSIES l with agents who persuade you to send oft your little pictures to New York to have them enlarged and framed. You can have nil this sort of work done at home much letter and just ils cheap, notwithstanding the false nsser lions these agents make to you. by calling at H. BAUMGAItTEN’S Photograph : Gallery, Charlotte, N. C. -T—> I BBER STAMP, with yonr name in Fancy Type, 25 ‘ visiting cards, and India Ink to mark 1 Linen, 25 for 25 cents (stamps.) Rook of 2,000 styles free with each order. ! Agents wanted. Big Pay. Tiialma j ’ Manufacturing Co., Baltimore, Md. ! Boarding House, Monroe, N. C. I have opened a Boarding House for the accommodation of the travel ing public, and any person wishing good hoard and lodging will be ac commodated on depot street, near the station- Comfortable rooms, good beds, good cooks. Give me a call. Mrs. E. F. ALSORROOK. HENDERSON’S BARBER SHOP ! THE OLDEST AND BEST. Experienced and polite workmen always ready to wait on customers. Here you will get a neat HAIR CUT and clean SHAVE JOHN S. HENDERSON. 33 West Trade Street, Charlotte, N. C. ro advertisTrsT ’ P°b aeheck for S2O we will print a ten-line adver tisement In One Million Issues of leading Ameri can Newspapers and completo tho work within ten days. This is at tho rate of only ono-flfthof a cent a lino, for l.OOi' Circulation 1 The advertisement will appear In but a single Issue of any paper, and consequently will be placed before One Million different newspaper purchasers: or Frva Million Readers, if it Is true, as Is sometimes stated, that every newspaper Is looked at by five persons on an average. Ten lines will accommodate aboatTß words. Address with copy of Adv. and check, or •end 80 cents for Book of *6 pages. OKO.JP. ROWELL & CO..IQBFBUCR ST., NIW TORE. We*hare’jusMssued a new* Book callod Newspaper Advertising.” It has 236 pages, and among Its contents maybe named tho With their Advertising Rates. DAILY NEWSPAPERS 111 CITIES HAVING more advertise every section of tho country: being a choice selection made up with great care, guided by long experience. ONE rtE WSPAPER IN A STATE. The best 006 for an advertiser to use if he will use but one. * BARGAINS IN ADVERTISING IN DAILY News- Papers In many principal cities and towns, a List which offers peculiar inducements to some adver tisers. » LARGEST CIRCULATIONS. A complete list of an American papers Issuing regularly more than 2&000 copies. TTHE BEST LIST OF LOCAL NEWSPAPERS, OOW •ring every town of over 5,000 population and every Import ant county seat. W BELECTI.IST OP LOCAL '£ I NEWSPAPERS, In which A advertisements are InsertAgjWm ed at half price. PB-l) :If&filwH 6.A72 VILLAGE NEWS-Ww! t W PAPERS, In which adver- -I; J&J/9 tisemcnisaro inserted for •; •42.15 a lino and appear In j the whole lot-one half of tl]ok Saxes«”or Til IUT Y CENT. GRANITE IRONWARE. BROILING, BAKING, jAk f" S\ BOILING, PRESERVING. I O *^ lGiaT 5 HANDSOME, I IVHOLESORE) DURABLE, The Best Ware Made for the Kitchei*. Llr.nu sact ’j rod only 'ey St,LouisSiampingCo.St. Louis For Sale by all Stove, Hardware ami House Furnisliiiis Dealers. Cook Book and Price List Free an Application, Be Sure to Mention this Paper. ATTENTION TEACHERS ! WHITE MUL SCHOOL, liUinbcrtoii, X. C-, will begin its tiiiktekntii session for six months on Monday, April 9,1888. Having been educated in a New England Normal School, and having had sixteen years experience in the school-room, the Principal is prepared to do much for those who aro seeking a school where they may be aided during the summer Thorough drills given daily in all the branches re quired to be taught in the Public Schools, and written examinations on practical questions given weekly. For particulars, send for circulars to D. I*. ALLEN, Lumbcrton, N. C. ASK FOR IT! THE SELF-THREADING ELDREDGE “B” In it are com bined the fin est mechanic- UE3|I skill. the^KseCja^S^^^^- most usefu 1 ami practicalßmHßhT JQHRjJ elements, Vlra - all known IVW^ vantages that fcwWTa? tIGvM make a sew. ing machine desirable to •ell or use. ■LDRKDCC MFC. CO. factory and Wholesale Office, BelvUere, 111 295 Wabash Ave„ Chicago, v. 99 Broad Street, HTcur York,
Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 3, 1888, edition 1
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