Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / May 28, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE CAUCASIAN Kntercd according to i'oia. : ut Clinton, N. C. as h'ciiik! !. matter. CLINTON, N. U., .MAY 3S, 1MJI. The Il.ilIroiKl Oiintm-v-Toii of X. ('.on I;-.- Monday I out tin; lax li.t lo l!if ;!- ir-. I'tnli-r the new law lite Couiiiiis-ioii li.i- lull charge of all Hit- :i.-H-iini;nts of railways. Th; l. Uliituri? of Klorid.iy ox-1-t llctl ;t certain iK-vi;iper reporter, or lather lolii-ed to allow him long er !o t iitt r tlm IIoum-, bi'cau-e lie criticised ,-ome of the members, and now all the ncv.-p;pers of America in-'- i itit i-in all tin: members. Wonder what they will lo about it? Wi.' ::i l.Jj.wh tli'i- iht; r.-- ipt 1' pi -gi; iMiiin. oi" ihe Mi'l.th Animal N:bi n of ll.f '1 t-:i( Ik i. tol; iiel-I at Monlnail C'ily. N..itl Carolina. .Jui: H'.th -loth, y'.. The .eivi: w ill be i Le most intt r.-rtiir' il' any ev. r held, and tlioii. Baii'Ks'l visitor. will In- in -ilti-mlance. Dr. T;.lm. .'.: wid in- l!. iv ami with hi n otlics equally as notable. All shoulti "oain! i'i"V Hii- ' l'ea-t ot reason." The A'MicuUural Kxperlmont Sta. tioa at lli'leitfh has just ismkmI, at considerable eos-t, a very valuable bunk on di.-ean-.s of tin; hor.-o, pn; prrtl by lr. Salmon lor the United 5Slti.es Department of Agriculture. It will be distributed mainly through the Alliances, as in that way one copy will serve lor an entire Sub Alliance and will confer the great est b.Mielit. Xeai 'u all the railroad oHkials in tin; State (anions them the W. A-V. road) w ere before the Kailroad Com mission last vcok protesting against the red net ion of passenger and freight rat(s, specially on their brimch roads. The final decision of the ommii-sions has not yet been an nounced. It s-ems to us that we heard somebody say last summer that this Commission could not af fect the Wilmington A: Weldon rail raad in fact the ten old roadschar tored before the Convention of 'OS. Did ym fear anybody say it? The Conference in session lust week at Cincinnati, contrary to our expectations, formed a new party. We fear this action is ill timed; not that the grievances of the parties in the Conference were not real, but when we strike we should be sun; that the iron is hot and strike in a way to be effective. This new party will be represented by a Central Committee- at the (jeneral Confer ence, oilicially called, to meet next I'uiuiunv. We trust that harmmiu . i m-.. ....... t, i i ; i-.v 4 ......... l. .. .... I IIV I I . V. If If II I. I Jlll ,W.V till. ,4, i 'ions organizations where they can and as long as possible work and act as a leven on both of the existing parties. Is it not economy and pol itic to use, if possible, the machinery already in existence to do our bid ding for justice and good g( vern ment. A lew months since nearly every Southern Democratic paper was out spoken for free coinage of silver. ThN, with tariff reduction, was to be th e Democratic slogan with which to bombard the strongholds o" plu tocracy and monopoly. Cleveland bobs up says you don't know what yen are talking about. You can preach about the tariff (for I he party has already got its foot into that to the extent of " percent, out of 50 per cent.) but you musn't change our little financial scheme, for we are all agreed on that. Certain pol iticians and newspapers "drop to the rat kef ami change their tune. One of the papers that was for free coinage a few months ago contained the following editorial paragraph on last Friday. Comment in..' up m the free coinage plank in the Kentucky State platform, it says: Thus Kentucky leads off in giv ing the endorsement of n Slate tt) a measure that divides the party at large, anil is opposed by much of the wisdom and true statesmanship of the Democracy. It may be u right measure, but it will not be a safe measure for next year." Xow who is dividing tlie people, is It the free silver advocates cr is Cleveland and his followers? ut the last sentence of the above para graph is the most remarkable. "It may be right, but will not be safe in the next campaign." Not safe, in deed? Who are we afraid of? Yes it is right and just and the people ought to have it, but It is not sale because it would displease the New Kngland and New York gold bugs.. Head over the alove paragraph araiu, it is rather curious and re markahle: "It may be right but it is opposed by much of tl.e visdom and true statesmanship of the De mocracy." lint her bad on the wis dom and statesmanship! It would be best to label it expediency for party spoils, liut who constitute much of the wisdom and true states ship? Is it a few politicians or is it " the petiole? Unless we read incor rectly the signs of the times, the next National Convention will throw some light on this question. A SAD AFFAIIt. Two Children Burned to Death. Special Correspondence. Delta, May 25th, 91. We had a very sad accident to-day, Sir. Thomas Cashwelllost by fire all of his household furniture and pro visions but the sad parf, two child ren, on3 x years anil the other i fm:?, a son and daughter, were burn- ym, , tt depth. AGUE AT WEEK'S WORK j ; Continued from f.r-t Jai;e. trotmfiwj iy of the world's eii.steiice. I take a tasto of one of the apples thi Wednesday morning, and I tell you it mingles in iu juices all tlie llavors of HU'l .n:.ii4.ui j, i( ...... i-. j Ultode Island reeiiin and JJanvers winter nwet and IUibury russet and IIubb.trd.-ton nonesuch, but added tc, all and overpowering all other flavor? is the nar.idi.viieal ju:.-' that all the or- eharjof the Xin.-te,t.h m fury fail tc (i, j n"i't't'ke a taste of tie- p.-ar, and it has all the luxury of the thro thousand varieties of the Xinete -nth exutury; all thj isfckt l and tin.- Uartlett of the T.,,Mi.iI,,.-.-Ll iirlenH -f lator tiimsi an i atriJity cornparetl witii crates! Whv, this otm it. And th! elubti-r has in it the richness of whole vineyards ol ,'atawbas and Concords and Isabellas. I-'niit-s of all colors, of all triors, of all ll.tvtrs. Xo hand tf j.ian yet made to nluek it or tomjue to t.'Lsfe it. The banquet for the human race is being ! spread In-fore the arrival of the first j euest. In the fruit of that garden was ! the heed for the orchards and gardens of the hemispheres. Xoticu that the first thing that (od made for food was fruit, and plenty of it. Slaughter houses are of later invention. Far ain I from being a vegetarian, but an al most exclusive meat diet is depraving. Savages confine themselves almost ex clusively to animal food, and that ia one reason that they are savages. Give your children isoro apples and less mutton. Tlie world will have to give dominance to the fruit diet of Par adise before it gets back to the morals of Paradise. May God's blessing come down on the orchards and vineyards of America, and keep back the frosts and tho curculio. 15ut wc must not forget that it is Wednesday evening in Eden, and upon that perfect fruit of those perfect trees let the curtain drop. "And tho evening ami the morning were tho third day." THK SUN AM) MOON AI'iHAlt. Xow it is Thursday morning of the world's first week. Xothing will be created today. Tlie houra will be passed in scattering fogs and mists and vapors. Tho atmosphere must bo swept clean. Other worlds are to hove in sight. This little ship of the earth has seemed to have all tlie ocean of im mensity to itself. Hut mightier craft are to bo hailed today on the high seas of space. Tirst the moon's white sail appears and does very well until tho sun bursts upon tho scene. The light that on the provious three mornings was struck from an especial word now gathers in the sun, moon and stars. Ono lor tho day, the others for the night. It seemed tis if they had all within twenty-four hours boen created. All, this is a great time in the world's first week. The moon, the nearest neighbor to our earth, appears, her photograph to bo taken in tho Nine teenth century, when tho telescope shall bring her within one hundred and twenty mile3 of New York. And the sun now appears, afterward to bo found eight hundred and eighty- to weigh nearly four hundred thousand times heavier than our earth; a mighty furnace, its heat kept up by meteors Iouring into it as fuel, a world devour ing other worlds with its jaws of flame. And the stars come out, those street lamps of heaven, those keys of pearl, upon whieh God's fingers play the music of the spheres. How bright tliey look in this oriental evening! Constella tions! Galaxies! What a twenty-four hours of this first week solar, lunar, stellar appearances. All this Thursday and the adjoining nights employed in pulling aside tlie curtain of vapor from these flushed or pale faced worlds. Enough! "And the evening and the morning were the fourth day." FLYING AND SWIMMING CRKATCIiES. Now it is Friday morning in tbe first week of the world's existence. Water, but not a fin swuximing it; air, but not a wing flying it. It is a silent world. Can it bo that it was made only for vegetables? But hark! There is a swirl and a splashing in all the four rivers of Pison, Gihon, Hiddekel and Euphrates. They aro all aswim with life, some darting like arrows through split crystal, and others quiet in dark pools liko shadows. Everything from spotted trout to behemoth ; all colored, all shaped, the ancestors of linny tribes that shall by their wonder of construc tion confound tho Agassizes, the Cuviers and the Linnseuses and the ichthyolo gists of the more than six thousand years following this Friday the first week. And while I stand on tho banks of these paradisaical rivers watching these finny tribes I liear a whirr in the air, and I look up and behold wings wings of larks, robins, doves, eagles, tlammgoes, albatrosses, brown thresh ers. Creatures of all color blue as if dipped in the skies, fiery as if they had tlown out of tho sunsets, golden as if they had taken their morning bath in buttercups. And wh;lo I am studying the colors they begin to carol and chirp and coo and twitter and run up and down tlie scales of a music that they must have heard at heaven's gate. Yes. I find them, in Paradise on this tho first Friday afternoon of tho world's existence. And I fit down on the bank of the Euphrates, and the murmur of the river, togeth.-r with the t lwcit of birds in the sky, puts me into a stato of somnolence. "And the evening and the morning were-the fifth day." THK LAST DAY'S WOHK. Now it is Saturday morning of the world's first week, and with this day the week closes. But oh, what a cli macteric day! The air has its popula tion and the water its population. Yet the land has not one inhabitant. But hero they come, by the voice of God created! Horses grander than those which in.after time Job will describe as having nock clothed with thunder. Cattle erioughrto cover a thousand hills. Sheep shepherded by him who made for them tho green pastures. Cattle superior to theAlderneys and Ayrshires and Devonshiresof sifter times. Leop ards so beautiful we-are glad they can not change their-spots. Lions without their fierceness, andlall tho quadruped world so gentle, so fv-k, so ierfect Look out how you treat this animal creation, whether they walk tho earth or swim the watervor fly the air. s Do you not notice thut God gave them precedence of the human race? They were created Friday and Saturday morning, as man was-created Saturday afternoon. Thoy hstve a right to be here. He who gaHsadiorse, or exposes a cow to the storm, .or beats a dog, or mauls a cat, op camblea at th snooting, or tortures andnsect will hav ; You may console yoorseli taat these J creatures are not immortal and they j cannot appear against you, but the j God who made those creatures and ; who saw tin wron- you did them will j be there. j pj, m tne never turn out It lietter look oat. you htock raisers and , -mCt m wkh inans Uo railroad companies who bring the cat- j dock3 wm1 watf!,rt. they mav run well tie on trains without food or water for : f(jr aw Iiile but ,jM.v out of fll JU1,i three or four days in hot weather, a ; stjinJ -4;tiU ij..t the Imd long Kro:in of uony from Omaha to JDOfm un1 kUin ky,.p f ,n tUU wav Xe w York. Hotter lk out, yoii farm- j the Ml. Th(. heaveriS declare the er riding behind that liming horse j gIory of fiod.- Yea, I preach this be with a nail that th bla:ksmiUi tlrove j w:u,t you to waIk ia appretda. into the quick. Iietter hk out, you ; Uou of A-l lion sublime Msntimenc l.-v.r,, fy.r.iinv t it 1 1 ! ft.- .rfj ftiiM 1 1 1 rr ! n rr T n r. ' ties uide down and robbing birds' nAts. liut sfwnething is wanting in ranidi;, and the week is almost done, Who u there to pluck the tlowers of tliia lilenie Lawn? Who U there to command these worlds of quadruped and fish and bird? For whom lias (iod put back the curtain from the face of sun and moon and star? The world wants an emperor and empress. It ia Saturday afternoon. Xo one but the Lord Almighty can originate a human beint?. In the world where there are in the latter jart of the Xineteenth century over fourteen hundred million people, a human being is not a curios- lty But how about the first human eye that was ever kindled, the first human ear that was ever opened, the first human lung that ever breathed, the first human heart that ever beat, the first human life ever constructed? Tliat needed the origination of a God. lie had no model to work by. What stupendoustwork for a Saturday after noon! lie inu.st originate a style of human heart through which all the blood in the body must pass every three minutes. He must make that heart so strong that it can during each day lift what would be equal to ono hundred and twenty tons of weight, and it must 1x3 so arranged as to beat over thi.ty-six million times every year. About live hundred muscles must be strung in the right place, and at least two hundred and fifty bones con structed. Into this body must be put at least nine million nerves. Over three thousand perspiring pores must be made for every inch of fleshly sur face. The human voice must be so con structed it shall bo capable of produc ing seventeen trillion five hundred and ninety-two billion one hundred and eighty-six million forty-four thousand four hundred and fifteen sounds. But all this the most insignificant part of the human being. The soul ! All, the construction of that God himself would not bo equal to if he were any the less of a God. Its understanding, its will, its memory, its conscience, its capaci ties of enjoyment or suffering, its im mortality ! What a work for a Satur day afternoon! Aye! Before night there were to be two such human and yet immortal beings constructed. The woman as well as tho man was formed Saturday .afternoon. Because a deep sleep fell upon Adam, and by divine surgery a portion of Ins side was re moved for the nucleus of another ere ation, it has been supposed that per haps days and nights passed between the masculine and feminine creations, But no! Adam was not three hours '-vi'sfwi., - -j-v. iiictiea put one into a deep sleep in threo minutes, God certainly could have put Adam into a profound sleep in a short while that Saturday afternoon, and made the deep and radical excision without caus ing distress. By a manipulation of the dust, the same hand that molded the mountains molded tho features, and molded tho limbs of the father of the human race. But his eyes did not see, and his nerves did not feel, and his muscles did not move, and his lungs did not breathe, and his heart did not pulsate. A perfect form lie lay along the earth, symmetrical and of godlike countenance. Magnificent piece of di vine carpentry and omnipotent sculpt uring, but no vitality. A body with out a soul. Then the source of all life stooped to the inanimate nostril and lip, and, as many a skillful and earnest physician has put his lips to a patient in comatose state and breathed into his mouth and nostril, and at the same time compressed the lungs, until that which was artificial respiration became natural respiration, bo methinks God breathed into this cold Bculpture of a man tiie breath of life, and the heart begins to tramp, and the lungs to inhale, and the eyes to open and the entire form to thrill, and with the rapture of a ' life just come the prostrate being leaps to his feet a man ! But the scene of this Saturday is not yet done, and In the atmosphere, drowsy with tho breatli,of flowers, and tho song of bobolinks and robin red breasts, the man slumbers, and by anajsthetics, divinely administered, the slumber deepens until, without the ooz ing of one drop of blood at the time or the faintest scar afterward, that portion is removed from his side which is to be built up the Queen of Paradise, the daughter of the great God, the mother i of the human race,the benediction of all ages, woman the wife, afterward wom an the mother. And as the two join hands and stroll down along the banks of the Euphrates toward a bower of mignonette and wild rose and honey suckle, and are listening to the call of the whip-poor-will from tlie aromatic thickets, the sun sinks beneath the hori zon. "And. the evening and the morning were the sixth day." THK WOItKS OK THK LOUD. What do you think of that one week's work? I review it not for entertain- ment, but because I would have you ' join in David's doxolopry, "Great and f marvelous are thy works, Lord God i Almighty;" because I want you to' know what a homestead our Father) built for his children at the start, though sin has despoiled it, and be- j cause I want you to kino-.- how the world will look again when Christ shall ; have restored it, swinging now between j two Edons; because I want you to! realize something of what a mightv God he is, end the utter folly of trying 1 to war against him; because I want I you to make peace with this chief of j the umverso through the Christ who mediates between offended Omnipo tence and huuian rebellion ; because I want you to know how fearfully and wonderfully you ere made, your body as well as your soul an Omnipotent achievement; because I want you to realize that order reigns throughout the -universe, and that God's watches tick to the second, and that his clocks strike regularly, though tliey strike once in a thousand years. A learned man once asked an old Christian man who had no advantages of schooling why he believed there was a God, and the good old man, whoi probably had never heard an argument on tho subject in all his life, made thlj povbg liani upon fifty years. Every tince j ia tbij worjl i the SUQ riw t in tbe uct The north fctar ttarids where it the flrst time J taw it; tha seven etafs a:iJ j0s kit p on tLe same when he writes: The iar:fca f.rfut.TMut on A,;lu NVith the blue tthtrt-al eky Au'l 'TtfLaskil Li av'r.s, a hhiuin frame, Thvir jri-.j.t Original .reclaim. Ia reiusulj' r.ir they all rejoice. And utter fr"Ji a trloriou-t voice, Kftrevcr sifliIn. thfyjbhine. The liantl that mjAe ma Ls rliiine. Kai: Cattle Doomed. Joseph II. Jfoore, of Fort "Worth, Tex., whoso cattle interests exceed those of any man in the southwest, was among the guests at trie LacK, wnere m conversation with, a reporter he said: 'You have heard a great deal, no doubt, or tlid, a few years ago, at least, f the famous 'Cattle Kings' of the west, who were supposed to reckon their wealth by the millions. The bus iness of raising cattle was conducted on a grand scale, and at one time the rotits were simply enormous. This naturally attracted capital in large amounts, and wealthy men from all parts of the world rushed eagerly into the business of breeding and raising cat tle. The result was overproduction and a serious decline in prices. "Three years ago it became evident to those who studied closely the course of events that cattle raising would soon change from large herds on the range to small herds on the farm. Those who were shrewd enough to foresee this took prompt advantage of it, and today have before them the pleasant prospect of good prices and a ready market. As a consequence, however, the days of the cowboy are numbered, and lie is doomed to extinction just as certainly as was tlie buffalo and the Indian. The small farm is crowding them slowly but surely to tho wall, and in a few years they will be gone." San Francisco CalL An Interlude. It was in the choir loft of a fasliion able church on Sunday. The organist was dreaming over a voluntary. Sud denly the organ blower got tired, or something gavo out, for the thunder ous peals came to a full stop, and high soprano voice was heard shrieking to the contralto, "How did you like the eircus?" Philadelphia Record. Auotber l'oint of View. Mr. Fudge So you wish to marry my daughter, do ypu? May I ask how much you are worth? Mr. Broke Yes, sir; I wish to marry jrour daughter. May I ask how much you aro worth ? Once a Week. Some of our people who experience bo much difficulty in keeping up ap pearances should try a hand at keep ing down expenses. BtfADFIELD'S I DCLLAKS DOCTORS' BILL. paid 31 dollars doc-V-Ws bill for my wife in ono ypar. and one bottle of Bradfield'a Female Regulator dia hei" mora (jood than ell tho medicine siio had taken before. JAJ1E3 T. GOTT, Carmi, 171. liave putfrcd periodically for years been treated by thy Iwit physicians without re lief Eradfield's Fema'e Regulator did me more qood thsn all 1 he other remedies. Mrs. ELIZA DAVIS, Charlotte, N. C. Have ueed Bradfit-Id's Female Regulator and can recommend it to 11 my friends. Miss C. S. WIEM E YEB, Denver, Col. r.K.MJKinLi) Regulator Co., Atlanta. Oa. feoM hy nil Druggists. Price, $1.00 per bottle. a el. s 3 9 a i & Pis a X O m U O hr. Lri 3 p 3 S S S 5 O B !J - 41 H Si? S;a 5 5 2 g S 5 sf S4 IB -U it S O E - E - -m 5 t. a - i: J" . a o a o a Z H Z V S m . z a o a I!il A 5 fa ft SZ mt - C S V r, A 5 i- w g m 3 " e"cuS;.a e?C 2 th s. 2 I i : cs rs ex k- r "2 S g "IS A Household Remedy BLOOD and SKI IM DISEASES L2)n Botanic Blood Balm UTiire SCRCFULft, ULCERS, SALT VUrgS RHEUH. ECZEMA, every form of malignant SKIN ERUPTION, be sides being efficacious in toning up the system and restoring the constitution. when Impaired from any cause. Its almost supernatural healing properties justify us in guaranteeing a cure, H uirecuons are ioiioea. SENT FREE -bSU.. BL000 BALM CO., Atlanta. Ga. m mum Tar LOST or TAILI2TQ KAHEOOBt auniiUAUfUUB m I TTYT eaknsuof BodT and Sirol EWi lloW.lODfll KeMerr. Bww fc l(m mi tMecr nCaUlair MOIK 1 UITUlST ia a day. O H - a S3 a e5 o o e rf L ill ' g ' ill 52 .!& ."5 3 w 5oj m if?! SO? fo) fo) NEW noUBLE COLUMN FOR For Cash at Lowest Cash Prices, OH ON TIME AT TIME PRICES FOR GOOD PAPER, THE LARGEST STOCK &F Dry Goods, Notion.-?, Hat;, Shoe, vc, ever ottered In Clintm. Trunks, Handbags and Valises. Furniture and Ma tresses, Spriiiir Ileds. Glass, Crockery and Tin Ware, Stove are. Heady Mixed I'aints, Stains and Oil, Sash and Doors, Lime and anteed. Hardware, Cutlery and Guns; Shades, Arc. 1,000 bushels prime Wiiite Corn, at market price . Meat, Lard, Flour, Meal, Sugars, Coffee. Molasses and Syrups. Tobacco and Snuff, and Cigars, at J. E. ROYAIS. We Have A FUM, Groceries and In general. Wc always lead in BUT AT ALL T Have just received a new line of CALICOES, which we are selling at 5 cents, will cost 8 cents at other places. We pay at all times full prices for COUNTRY PRODUCE. Don't forget the place, ALLIANCE HEADQUARTERS In tho OLD MOSELEY STORE, CORNER FAYETTEVILL AND JAIL STREETS. Yours Fraternally, G. A. Chite, April 12th, 1891, N E W ADVERT ISEM ENTS. BETTON'S. A POSITIVE CURE FOR IN USE PILES. OVER 40 YEARS 50c. SIMPLE. EFFECTIVE. WONDERFUL. Highest TESTIMONIALS. At DrnuslHU or Mailed on Kecelpt of 1'rioc WINKELMANN & BROWN Drug Co. Prop. Baltimore. Md. KOPFALIPJt f ho Great German Headache Cure will cure iiervoud, sick, malarial and all I'Miple lio have Fiifferel, Eay It is a God's blesKiiir CT to mankind. Pleag- ant to use. o bail ' " enecin. uuretcuiuii and quick. For nslc lv drnireUt, or by mailgScentg. HEADACHE BROWN DKI U CO.. BAI.TI 9IOBK. 3U. CHAS. A. GOODWIN & CO, ritOPItlETOKS FayfittBfille MarWe Worts f LA UTEli'.S OLD STAND, FAY ETTEVILLE, N. C. Manufacturer? of and dealers- in i t f i . r a iuanue aim wraiure Aionumeius, Wrought Iron and Woven Wire Fencing. BEST WOHK ! LOWEST PRICES ! Guarantee Satisfaction! feh-5 tf THE AWiUFATJUnLS'AND PRODUCTS ? J PFjnE UNITED STAJESi J comprises EvdryArticle made in this Country -indexed and Classified -and . oindeLeach articiejhejianies.aQd aiJxssas THE'BEST MANUFAOTU RER5;.! ,tfxnp!cte in One Royal OdavoVol.roverlOOOpp; nice inGoth.J5. in Leather57.' ' , INDISPENSABLE To Buyers of Articles in all Imfrj and o Invaluable as a Statistical work. o Orders received at office of this Paper. TATE OF NORTH CAIIO- IN.V, IlLADEX CO. Jl-- TICE S LOURT. U. It. Ilan.loii. 1 Before v.. II. 15. Croiu.'ini'. lVoodberry I fmioii J J. P. .i ate of North Carolina : To any Constable or other Lawful Officer, Greeting: You are hereby commanded to summons Woodbery Lenuon to appear before me at my of fice in Elizabetlitowu, county of Bladen, on tlie 15tli day of June. 1891, at 16 o'clock a. m., to an swer the complaint of M. It. Hendonlor the non-payment of the sum of on hundred dollars. Herein fail not and make due return of this summons. IL B. CROM ARTIE, J. P. This 25th April, 1891. my7-4t C3 and "Vniiskcy HjU:! 1 oat pain. Book of tr- ttiOlsraaent FKU. rzs w . M DCS BO, XI W r u. X3 o m. mm r-iB.M.Wl,LKlt,K.D ADVERTISEMENTS SALE, Wooden Ware, Cool; :ttves and Colors, White Load, Linseed Hail. Prices and quality guar Plow-i, Plow Castings, Shovels,! on Hand LINE OF Farm Supplies prices, AVE DO NOT FOLLOW LEAD. MANAGER. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. exican mm and i FOR Yi THF For Sale BY ALL DRUGGISTS. HOLLIDAY'2 ' "A STITCH IN TIME NINE!" SAVES Don't wait to get sick, but when you begin to let-1 bad onie and 2vt uux ut iiieuH-me anu prevent sick ness. This is the roer u.se of ined icine. If you will do this you wiJi scarcely ever have a doctor's bill to pay or lose months of time, and put your friends and relatives to such a deal of trouble. In addition to my complete line of pure and reliable Drugs. I carry struer-s juog i aum Jiemedies, li. B. B., the S. S. S., Quinine in small and large quantities; Simmon's Liv er Regulator, Famous Specific Or ange Blossom, Cuticura Remedies, Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription, the Golden Mediral T)i Horse and Cattle Powder (1 pound packages prepared by the Herb Co. of W. Va, Quaker brand.) Prescriptions carefully compound ed. Local and office practice upon re quest. Respectfully, augl tf DR. R. H. IIOLLIDAY. Many Persons Am broke a down frara overwork or household fahnfMa tlia ...im. .m. . I Mustang LB X iniinBH! for Forty JSEW ADVEKTliKMEXTS. SEW VDVEKTISEMEST). THE OLD SAYING! Goods Well Bought ARE Hcdf Sold OUR STOCK 8 1 ILLS WKI WV are selling : Pants Goods at 10 cents per yard and upward. Coats at 50 cents and upward. Coats and Vests at 75 cents and upward. Pants at 50 cents and upward. Childrens' Shoes 35 cents and up ward, Straw Hats at 5 cents and upward. Wool Hats 35 cents and upward. Fur Hats $1.00 and upward. Whole Suits $2.00 and upward Ladies' Shoes $1.00 and upward, Mens' Shoes $1.00 and upward. These prices are not for common jroods, tl-y r.-prt'-nt m(N wortli double the price. We mean to seil even if tiim.Hiuv Sianl. We know our customers will need iro .ls, and tlny will lny if tliey can buy them cheap, and iu our .store is tin? pluv to uiiy. COME evj:ryik)dy. COME. Yours Very Friendly, ) Jei. eyGA 3) S 0 Dtb X tKT King Clothier and Hatter. i Q P in 13 PS O o O o o fl iH r I VI I I rfl r r- : r OJ '3 9, 0' (D O XII o cm r5 O U fl O rH i I H O Everybody Needs Also a fuj line of fine wines, mmm and whiskies. lor your FAMILY GROCERIES, Call on WATSON & PETEHSON, NEH' A D VERTIdKMKXTS." Caveats. rA Trado-ilarki! ohtainM. and ail Pat ent rrafinw tomiuctefl for UoHtn't f et Our 0ce Oopctite U. S. Patent OfSce. and we on -ef-i.re patent in lees time than thoe remote froci W aciiinton. Send Tntxiel. (irawinf or photo., with do-'ntv tkm. WesilTioe. if t.atutble .r not. tr.;! of char?c. Our t-v. not due till i,atf-nt i t-emred Pamohifet. "Ho to Obtain I'stem.- jth r.aroe of actual ciii-?itg in jcxu State, county, or town, sect free. AdUrew, O.A.SNOW&CO. pposit Patent 0c, Waahinjioii. o. C. Xotice Ao CreditoiTs. HAVING QUALIFIED AS EX ecutor of the estate of Juli an A. Killett's estate, I hereby notify all persons holding claims a trains l said estate to exhibit the same, duly proven accord ing to law, to the undersigned on or before April 22nd, J892 or their claims will be barred from collection. All person indebted to - said estate are requested to make mmediate payment. M. M. ICILLETT. IS V F.LL LOFGHT AND THFUFFOIIlI IT L. WHO CAN IHIlT'Si: Tt) i'.l-Y AT Ol'll PIHISKNT PI H CMS? 7. jj - .: ij 3 J ZD m cs a r.j 3 ' CQ -r 2 t- ''J a. . 'Jj Urn - " 1 r- !' T. si . f CQ C3 OX o CeS r; o ci rt ci O 9 CLINTOX, N.C. ru Eon8nc". Sick Headache, Constl. PMtaD. Malaria, Llrcr Com plain u! take tae safe and certain remedy. bMUe) Ttar ahSi" (40,ittle r-n tO thC 2L'nRY ARB THE MOST CimsiKT jHeofj either i fflElEBotU. J.r.SMtTM UAUMrorj tNotice to Creditors. XTAVING QUALIFIED AS J - aaminisfraf r t.i . mil mm tea cm l. Sm? ejtate to Pent the same, duly proven .iccor.iing to law on or before Ap,il 20th, 1892, or thil notice will be pleaded in bar of their Z8VF; indebted I to said estate, either by noteoracemmt? will Please come forward 5$ WP- . AUTRY BAGGETT Per Att'y, IlEXRv jaurlpUTS w,RiaMiMMi praon a.l' ftnr trr, 444rm CRiit&lCAb OOm HUfFALQ, N.V. : . -ecuior.
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 28, 1891, edition 1
2
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