Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / Sept. 17, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE WORLD'S NEWS BIXIJE L ST THURSDAY, CAUL FULLY AH SORTED AND CONDENSED FOR BUSY PEOPLE. delivery off, A Ty&e of Bifii Lo?e. KTATK. Wins! on will 1'ivvo Cm ytcni. Th Chip! ( rland Fair i me Nov. art!, 4ili, 5th, 6Cli. ami 7th. r!,.v Hr!i Ihm )-mi inviifil to take apart ' lh' )hl" campaign this fall. Editor Covington f the Scottish Chief lial Hftioke ol parulyM- laH week. We wi.-h him xjwly re 3 very. A bank Una been organized i Klizateth city, authorized CBpital $50,000. ProHidt ut Chan. II. Robin son; cashier, S. A. Orahaun. The effort to remove Mr. Chad wick from the presidency of the A. and N. C. E. R. has pro c d a failure. Nr. Chad wick will remain as presi dent. Hon. OcfaviiM Cohen, managing editor of the Charleston World, will deliver an addrew on the opening clny of the ExpOHition. 1 li subject will bo "The Ileal New .South." The frixttK n pages industrial i-tsue of the Ilocky Mount Argonant is first rate in every i expect. It shows ful editorial and statistical work. We congratulate our Brother in his success. A dastardly outrage was commit ted by a negro wretch on a defence less white girl near Charlotte, last week. He has not been caught up with yet. If lie i-, ho will proba bly be lynched. The Stale Chrouicleaays: The de partment of agriculture has rtceived a machine known ad the compto meter. It is on the older of a type writer but is adapted to all kinds of commercial and scientific computa tions. It. is operated by keys like i typewriter and is the only machine ever invented which will perform duplication, division, square root, interest, etc., by" the simple operation of automatic keys. With his machine twice as much work .r.n te accomplished as without it. t lie machine id indeed a necessity in the statistical work of the depart loeut, as the work of tabulating ngrieultural statistics, crop reports, rtc, is enormous during a twelve .nonths. NATIONAL. receives $S;),03l Georgia fclure of tho direct tax, funded. as her which is ro The United Slates through Mas ter Eagan, has recognized the new Government In Chili. Garfield's son was defeated for State Senator before a Republican convention the other day. The cast? against the Chilian, Vessel Itatn, has been postponed The damages claimed are over 1100, 000. Tho Democrats acjieived a great victary in the municipal eiccaon in Newport, It. I. This the first elec tion in this city in many years, in which the Democrats were successful. An arrangement has been made . between the United States and Ger many by which American pork. he con and other hog product may be sent to Germany, and our duty on Germany best sugir be removed. Attorney General Garland has written a letter to his son, saying that he would not accept the vacancy on the Inter-State Comnierco Com mission if offered him. lie says he is out of politics for goo 1. Bynuni of Indiana and Faulkner of Wtst Virginia will take uart in tho Ohio campaign this fall. Gov Campbell, who has been sick wll commence the 17th. Vance, Breckin ridge, Voorhees and Uurlile wil also speak during tho campaign. FOREIGN. Ex-President Grevy died last week. of Franco An out-break is reported in China. V rioteous mob have destroyed an establishment of American Mis sionaries. There was a terible earthquake in San Salvador last week. Millions dollars of property and many lives were lost. There is mucti talk of war in Europe. It also seems that Russia will soon bo in possession of Con stantinople. It is telatod as a curious fact that P.iris, with a population of nearly 2,500,000 souls, has less Ih.oi 100 negroes within its limits. Statisti cians say that the. whole of France vaunot muster a negro population exceeding 500. Ex. CUMBERLAND COUNTY. Continued from First Page.L j louM hinder roe prai:ting him a fa vol Koine other time.'' Now, I want yoa to kno'? that kindness is a royal flower, and MvsMjd t God. t!w K!n of mercy aod r.iC( thai hy 'livi-i" fjit iind not by piirloinhix wv n:ay tlii royftJ flower nod rmt wor.r it oj the outside of our natiirt- hut wts-.r r :;i f.ur jjouI and wr.-.r it f.r-vi r i rIi;ufe ari aroma not more u.:.! fur time than wofi'lful Us; - t...iy. , itt.vkzi ok v:;k ioSgtk. Still .'jrthcr, I :uoi-t vf'u!if kindium of word WIk.-ii y- t uuy one do you ny u plr:is.ii it 'Wiu or a:t iiripli-as-antf Do you MI lam of airrHuMe thinr you I.'ivo liwird alx":t it'in or tho disa greeable? When by leaves you does ho feel bet trr or d' he f-I worse! Oh, tho power of tho tongue for the production f . hnpplnchs or misery! One would think from the way the tongue is ca'cxl in we iniht take Hie hint that it baa a dangerous power. First it is chained to the back part oi the mouth by strong muscle. Then it Li surrounded by tho teeth of tho lowet jaw, so many ivory burs; aixl then by the teeth of tho upper Jaw, more Ivory bars. - Then outcide of all are the two lips, with the power of compression and arrest. And yet, notwithstanding these four Imprisonments or limitations, how many ta.Se no hint In regard to tho dan gerous power of the tongue, and the ro suits ore laceration, Haerifieation and damnation. There are those If they know a grxxj thing about you and a bad thing, will mention the bad thing and act af though they had never heard tho good thing. Now, there ore two s!Jes to almost every one's character, and wo havo tho choice of overhauling the virtue or tho vice. Wo can greet Paul and tho ship a crew a they come up tho beach of Malta with tho words "What a sorry looking set you are I How little of navigation you must know to run on thesa rocks! Didn't you know better than to put out on tho Mediterranean this wintry month? It was not much of a ship anyhow, or it would not havo gone to pieces so soon as that. Weil, what do you want! We have hard enough work to make a living for ourselves without having thrust on 113 two hundred and seventy six raganmlfins." Not so said tho Maltose. I think they said: "Conio in! Sit down by the flra and warm yourselves! Glad that you all got off with your lives. juaKo yourselves at home. lou are weleomo to all wo have until some ship comes in sight and you resume your voyage. Here, let me put a bandage on your forehead, tor that is an ugly gosh you got from tho floating timbers, and here Is a man with broken arm. Wo will have a doctor come to attend to this fracture." And though for three months tho kindness went on, we have but littlo more than it i I t mm i mis rjriet recoru, "ine oaroarou3 peo ple showed us no little kindness." Oh, snv tho cordial thing! Say the useful thing! Say the hospitable thing! Say tho helpful thing 1 Say the Chris tian thing! Say the kind thing! I ad- tKof Kia a antiar for cnmA liiiniaii.- aments than for other3. Some are born pessimists, and some are born optimists, and that demonstrates itself all through everything. It is a cloudy morning. You meet a pessimist and you say. "What weather today ?" Ho answers, "It's going to storm," and umbrella under arm and a waterproof overcoat show that he la honest in that utter anee. On tho same block, a minute after, you meet an optimist, and you say : "What weather today?" "Good weath er; this is only a fog and wdll soon scat ter." Tho absence of umbrella and ab sence of waterproof overcoat show it is an honest utterance. On your way at noon to luncheon you meet an opti mistic merchant, and you say, "What do you think of the commercial pros pects?" and ho says: "Glorious. Great crops must bring great business. W e are going to have such an autumn and winter of prosperity as we have never seen." On your way back to your store you meet a pessimistic merchant. "What ao you iiiinK oi tne commercial pros pect?" you ask. And he answers: "Well, I don't know. So much grain will surfeit the country. Farmers have more bushels but less prices, and the grain gamblers will get tlieir tist in. There is the McKInley bill ; and the hay crop is short in some places, and in the southern part of Wisconsin they had a hailstorm and our business is as dull as it ever was." IOOK up! look lp! trust in god! You will find the same dtilerenco in judgment of character. A man of good reputation is assailed and charged with some evil deed. At the first storv the pessimist will be'ieve in guilt. "The papers said so, and that's enough. Down with bin) !" The optimist will say: "Idont believe a word of it I don't think that- a man that has been as -oselul and seeminclv honest for twenty years could have got off the track like that. There aro two side3 to this story, and I will wait to hear the other side bofo're I condemn him." My hearer, if you aro by nature a pessimist, make a special effort by the grace of Gcd to extirpate the dolorous and the hypercritical from your dispo sition. Bo'deve nothing against any i.xly until the wrong is established by at least two witnesses of integrity. And if guilt be proved, find out tho extenuat ing circumstances if there are any. And then commit to memory so that you" can quote . for yourself and quote for others that exquisite thirteenth chapter of First Corinthians about char ity that suffers long and is kind and hopeth all things and endureth all things. By pen, by voice, in public and in private, say all the good about people you can think of, and if there be nothing gooV, then tighten the chain of muscle on the back end of I portunltlea 14 lotng gixAi after yoa are dead. All toy life has been affected by the letter of introduction tliat tho Rev. Dr. Van Vranken, of 'ew Brunswick The ological acndriary, wrote for me, a boy nndcr hhn, when I wa seeking a set tlement in which to preach the GospeL Tho letter gave ine my first pulpit. Dr. Van Vranken lias been dead more than thirty years, yet I feel the touch of that m.'grufleent old professor. Strange sensation was It when I received a kind message from I2ev Thomas Guard, of Baltimore, the great Methodist orator, six weeks after his death. By way of the eternal world ? OL. no. by way of this world. I did not meet tho friend to whom lie "gave the messago until nearly two months after Thomas Guard had as cended. So you an start a word about some one that will be on its travels and vigorous long after the funeral psalm has been sung at your obsequies. Kind ness I Why, If fifty men all aglow with it should walk through the lost world, mothinks they would almost abolish perdition. ISSPIR1"Q EXAMPLES OK KES'DXESS. Furthermore, there is kindness of no tion. That is what Joseph showed to his outrageous brothers. That is what David bhowed to Mephibosheth for his Special Correspondent.! HICKORY KEWS. Mr. T. J. Bullard killed ten rattle -tiakes last week. Nine of them were only half grown. This makes twelve rattle snakes that havo been 'silled on his placa in tho last three weeks Mr. J. R. Slelvln and son, of Red Spring, aro visiting friends near their old home in this section. On the 7th inst . the first -session t.r the memory uign school was -opened, under the management of Mr. Jch E. I'owlcr. The people of i his commnmty aro - to be congratu lated in securing Jur. Fowler as a .teacher.' Ho comes with the high tst recommendation. Ilviog spent hree years at Wake Forest College ni .having some experience in - '-i nli 1 ri tf witiio Weill onniniioil Much success to The Caucasian, ff, tonge f d heef V bare of which ii so popular in Cumberland i eeth " low!T Jaw ivor? couniy. imp. : v.. . 1 DUPLIN COUNTY. Special to Tiik Caucasian. 'WARSAW NOTES. Mr. O. P. Middleton, cotton buy er for Warsaw and- Faison, tells us t'lat up to to-chy one year ago he h d bought 154 bales of cotton, and t iid 9J, cents. ' So far he has not ln ight A bale, and the prices are 7. V,-i Y. - nofi'maDv editor Times, Ilocky Munt Va., writes: "I am pleased to s v that botanic Blood Balm is the best . . . r- i i j. i . appetiser ana touic jorueucawj people i ..jri... Tf opforl UlrA a rhnrm in m v ever ea." It acted like a charm in my J and the gate of your lips tightly closed I and your tonsrae shut ud. What a place Brooklyn would be to live in, and all the other cities and neighborhoods to live in, if charity dominated 1 What if all the young and old gossipers -were dead. . The Lord hasten their funerals I What if tittle- r tattle and whispering were out of fash ion I What if in ciphering out the value of other people's character in our moral arithmetic we stuck to addition instead of subtraction 1 Kindness! Let us, morning, noon and night, pray for it until -we get it When you can speak a good word for some one, speak it. If you can conscientiously give a letter of father Jonathan's sake. That is wlutt Onestphorus showed to Paul in tho Ito man penitentiary. That is what Wil liam Cowper recognized when ho said lie would not trust a man who would with his foot needlessly crush a worm. This Is what our assays! nated Presi dent Lincoln demonstrated when his private secretary found hhn in tha Capitol grounds trying to get a bird back to tha nest from which it had fallen, and which quality the illustrious man exhibited years before which hav ing some lawyers In the carriage on tho way to court passed on the road a swlno fast in tho' mire, after awhile cried to his horses, "Ho!" and said to tho gentlemen, "I must go back ana help that hog out of the mire." And he did go back, and put on solid ground that most uninteresting quad ruped. That was the spirit that was mani fested by my departed friend, Honor able Alexander II. StefJicns, of Georgia (and lovelier man never exchanged earth for heaven), when at Washing ton. A senator's wife, who told my wife of the circumstances, said to him, "Mr. Stephens, come and see my dead canary bird." And ho answered, "No, I could not look at the poor thing without crying." That is tho spirit that Grant showed when at tho surrender at Appomattox he said to General Lee, "As many of your soldiers are farmers and will need the horses and mules to raise the crops to keep their families from suffering next winter, let each Confederate who can claim a horse or a mule take it along with him. ' That is the spirit which last night ten thousand mothera showed to their sick children coming to give the drink at tho twentieth call as cheerfully and as tenderly m at the first call. S poso all this assemblage, and all to whom these words shall come by print er's type, should resolve to make kind ness an overarching, underglrdinf? and all pervading principle of their life, and then carry out the resolution, why, in six months the v.holp earth u-nnltl feel it. l'eople would suy: 4 'What is the mutter ? It seems to me that the world is getting to be a better place to live in. Why, life after all is worth living. Why, there is Shylock, my neighbor, has withdrawn his law suit of foreclosure against that man, and because be has had so much sick ness in his family, he Is going to have the house for one year rent free. There is an old lawyer in that young lawyer's office, and do you know what he Ra3 gone In there for? Why, he is helping Ox up a case which h too big for the young man to handlo, and the white haired attorney Is hunting up previous decisions and making out a lirief for tho boy. "Down at the bank I heard yester uay a note was one, and the young merchant could not meet it, and an old merchant wect in and got for him three months' extension, which for the young merchant is the difference between bankruptcy and success In business. And In our street is an artist who ha a fine picture of the 'Rapids of Niagara, and ho could not sell it, and his family were suffering, and they wore them selves in the rapids; and a lady heard of it and said, 'I do not need the picture, but for the encouragement art and helping you out of your dis tress I will take it,' and on the drawing room wall are the 'Rapids of Niagara. "Do you know that a strange thing has taken place in the pulpit and all the old ministers are helping the young ministers, and all the old doctors are helping tho young doctors, and the farmers are assisting each other in gathering the harvest, and for that farmer who is sick the neighbors have made a 'bee,' as they call it, and they have all turned in to help 1dm get his crops Into the garner? AN ALMOST IXC11KDII3LU LXSTANCK. "And they tell me that the older and more skillful reporters who hav9 perma nent positions on papers are helping the youna fellows who are - just besin- ingHo try and don't know exactly how to do it. And after a few erasures and interpolations on the reporter's pad they say: 'Now, here is a readable account of that tragedy. Hand It In and I &m sure the managing editor will take it' And I heard this morn ing of a poor old man whose three chil dren were In hot debate as to who should take care of him In his declining days. "The oldest son declared it was his right because he was the oldest, and -the youngest son said it was his right because he was the youngest, and Mary said it was her right because she better understood father's vertigo and rheu matism and poor spells, and knew bet ter how to nurse liim, and the only way the difficulty could be settled was by the old man's promise that he would divide the year into three parts, and spend a third of his time with each one of them. And neighboring stores In the same line of goods on the same block are act ing kindly to each other, and when one is a little short of a certain .kind ol goods, his neighbor says, T will help jou uii&u you can repiemsn youi shelves. It seems to me that those words of Isaiah are being fulfilled when he says, The carpenter encouraged tha goldsmith, and he that smooths with the hammer, him that smote the anvil- Baying, it. is ready for the soldering.' What is the matterj It seems to m our old world is picking up.-. -Why, th millennium must be coming in. , Kind ness has gotten the victory.' My hearers, you know and I know we are far from that' state of thlnfrsi. saaon n gemauty r II we cannot Jet ; have a millenniuui on a Urge scale, let us have it on a small scale, and under : our own vestment. Kindnesf 1 If thia j wtrld U ever brought to God that It j the thing Uiut will do it. You cannot j fret the world up, although you may! fret the world down. Too cannot scold j it into ercellenc or reformation or god-! linens. j The eat wind and the west wind: wera one day talking with each other, ! and the east wind sail to the west1 wind: "Don't you wish yoa had my! power? Why, when I start they bail mo by toi in signals all along the coast, i I can twist off a ship's uiat as easily a a cow's hoof cracks an alder. With one sweep of my wing I liave strewn tho coast from Jfewfoundland to Key West w ith parted hip timber. I can lift and have lifted the Atlantic ocean, I am the terror of all invalidism, and to fight me buck forests must be cut down for fires, and tho mines of con tinentjs are called on to feed the fur naces. Under my breath the nation crouch into sepulchers. Don't you wish you had my power T said the east wind. Tho west wind made no answer, but started on its mission, coming some where out of the rosy .bowers of tb sky, and all tho river3 and lakes and seas smiled at its coming. The gardens bloomed, and tho orchards ripened, and the wheat fields turned their silvei into gold, and health clapped its hands, and joy shouted from the hilltops, and the nations lifted their foreheads into the light, and the earth had a doxol- ogy for the sky, and the sky an anthem for the earth, and the warmth, and th sparkle, and the gladness, and th bliage, and tho flowers, and the fruits. and the beauty, and the life were th only answer the west wind made to tho insolence of the east wind's inter rogation. JOHN HOWARD, FLOKEXCK N1GOTIN OALK AND IDA LKWIS. Kindness to all I Surely it ought not to bo a difficult grace to culture when we see towerinsr above the centuries such an example that one glimpse of it ought to melt and transform all na tions. Kindness brought our Lord from heaven. Kindness to miscreants, kindness to persecutors, kindness to tha crippled, and the blind, and the cata leptic, and tho leprous, and the drop sical, and the demoniacal characterized him all the way, and on tho cross. kindnessto the the bandits suffering on the side of him, and kindness to the executioners while yet they .pushed the spear, and hammered the spikes, and howled the blasphemies. All the stories of the John Howards, and the Florence Nightingales, and the Grace Darlings, and the Ida Lewises pate- before the transcendent example of him whose birth and life and death are the greatest story that the world ever heard, and the theme of the mightiest hosanna that heaven ever NEW DOUBLE COLUMy ADVERTlSEM KNT? This Space Belongs to A. F. Johnson & Co LEADERS IN ow Prices! They are offering special bargains on Spring and Summer Good to prepare stock for FALL TRADE. Our Cask Price to all Buyers Al- vxtc TTO a o T .riTxr c a Vi o T .nnroof AT COST FOR CASIH Contemplating a change iu our business we now offer our ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS .W TO COST J HI lifted. Yea, the very kindness that allowed both hands to be nailed to the horizontal timber of tho cross with that cruel thump I thump! now stretches down from the skies those same hands filled with balm for all our wounds, forgiveness . : : . 'i-.,.4.-.- i..-i:e for all our h ; And while kindness from that we have word, written matchless be found last bitter felt This is 2 opportunity to buy ne4v and desirable good very cheap. . Keepecttully, WM. A. JOHNSON. N. B. Positively no goods will be charged to any account. auo20 1 DEMOREST BATH-TUB CO., DEMOKEST, GA. Hole manufacturers for the Southern States of the NEW A PV ERT13EM KNTg X jgV ! AD V KRT1SKM KMX HAMSTEINS M. New Advertisement will occupy this space next week. Watch for It, :o take this God, may it uttered our our last cutting para our last revengeful heart throb. And it would not be a bad eplfcaph for any of us if by the grace ot God from this time forth we lived such beneficent lives that the tombstone's chisel could appropriately cut upon the plain slab that marks our grave a suggestion from the text, "He showed us no little kindness.' But not until the last child of God has got ashore from the earthly storms that drove him on the rocks like Medi terranean Euroclydons, not until all the thrones of heaven are mounted, and all the conquerors crowned, and all the harps and trumpets and organs of heaven are thrummed or blown or sounded, and the ransomed of all climes and ages are in full chorus under the jubilant swing of angelic baton, and we shall for thousands of years have seen the river from under the throne rolling into the "sea of glass mingled with fire," and tnis woria we now innaoit snail De so far in the past that only a stretch of celestial memory can recall that it ever existea at an. xxoc until tnen wiu -we understand what Nehemiah calls "the great kindness," and David calls "the marvelous kindness," and Isaiah calls "the everlasting kindness" of God! FREE COIXAGIi IX OHIO. "If Gov. Campbell," says the Bel leientaine hxammor, "is unuer the impression, as fie is reported to be, that the proportion of Ohio Demo crats on the question of free silver coinage is as four in favor to three against, tie misapprehends the situa tion, and snould revise his estimate. The true proposition is much nearer beini? ten in favor to one arainst. rVnd we may add tnat th.s prepon deranee of free silver Democrats are quite as earnestly intent upon the accomplishment of that object as they are upon the accomplishment of tariff reduction and reform. Thev believt, ad they are right In be lieving, that tho wrong of tariff rob bery, and the wrong ot gold monop oly are alike the offsprms of a com mon despotism a despotism of which they are each naturally and equally the active agent and efficient instrumentality. Good Looks. " Good looks are more than skin deep, depending upon a healthy, condition of all the vital organs. If the Liver be inactive, you have a Bilious Look, if our stomach be dis- oruered you have a Dyspeptic Look and if your Kidneys be affected you have a rinchea Look. Secure srood health and you will have good looks. Electric Bitters is the great altera ti ve and Tonic acts directly on these vital organs. Cures Pimples, Blotch es, Boils and gives a good complex ion. Sold at Dr. B. W. Holiday's drugstore, Clinton, N. C, and John It. Smith, druggist, ML Olive, N. C at 50 cents per bottle. mo m , 1 There ia trouble in Nicaragua. Several very prominent citizens. among the number are two ex-presi dents nave been exiled. They will be shot if tkey return. -; The war in Chili has been ended. The insurgents have been successful and the president has fled. He will probably come to the United States, it he Euceeeds in escaping. adationf give it Watcborop- But whynot Jugur XF TOXTB HACK ACHES Ot yoa are all worn out, really good for nothing - it is general aebilitv. Try- - nnojvjsrs iron mttjkxs.- fX will care yoa. and give a jrooi appetite." 8old vj au ae&iers in saiciae. . Hi Goodrich Folding and Self-Heating Bath-Tub. It excel anything in the market. please every one. Dou't put in a alogue and prices. The latest novelty out. Sure to Bath-Tub until you write usforCat- jy30-4m . 2 o I III 1 J : : WATSON & FITE When you como to Clinton be sure to call on uh. We aro At the Same Old Stand With a full line of Family Groceries, Tobacco, Ciar, Wince, Urandie Whiskies, Beer, Ac. Call on us and WE WILL SERVE YOU To your pleasure aud satisfaction. Respectfully, jyiG-if WATSON & PETERSON. NEW ADVERTISEMENT?. 1 NEW A DV EUTISEM KNTS. New aid Eula Facmiies AT W. T. WILLIAMSON'S BUGGY AND CARRIAGE FACTORY SALEiVl HIGH SCHOOL, ESTABLISHED IN" 1874. Huntley, Sampson County, N. C. FALL TERM OPENS AUGUST 3rd, 1891. Unequaled Advantages for Same Expense. FIVE DEPARTMENTS: Primary, Intermediate, Academic Preparatory, Music. .Tuition varies from 1.00 to $3.50 per month. Board in best families, near the School, everything furnished, at from 5.00 to $7.00per month. The School is ell suppliedjwith teachers. Music will be in charge of a competent teacher, in a beparate building from, the other department? of the School. The School occupies torcev buildings, including the Society Hall, but the rapid growth of the School, with wia j and increas patronage, has called for an additional building, which will bt erected very soon. SPECIAL FEATURES of the School are the Youug Mens' and Young Ladies' Literacy Societies. - Write lor Catalogue and get fnll particulars. Address, r GEO, E. BUTLER, Principal,' Huntley, N. o: OS 1081111! My Factory is now rcn at full ca- Eacity. My heavy work is now clone y steam power. I am turning out a large number of new stylo Buggies and Pheatons. We make to order, bat always keep a few styles on hand for examination. - I will keep on hand a large lot oi Western Buggies (open and top) and Roads Carts. They will equal in quality and are sold as low as any like goods In Goldsboro, Fayetteviile or "Wilmington. 1-Round Shaves, Hacks aud all Edge Tools made, and Repahing done on short notice. harness, wnirs; COLLARS AND ALL HARNESS HARDWARE. I w ill hereafter keep in slock. My IIarnes3 Department la under The Caucasian Office, on Fayetteviile Street, near my Factory. tr Be sure to see mvntvloM nri get my prices before buying. itespecttuiiy, Jul8-tf W.T. WILLIAMSON. unient for and POR For Sale or Rent ! ! - A llMtnMu small tA.. - -"v! duiwi x m uj. w tin coou (am afnnr lmni. J . .nvwA7 un5uiu5 sou mi necessary out-houses, conveniently located for church and school privileges. Lo cated near Swain i xligh School on the if Y V ,Rail'oad. Will be sold on reasonable terms, with part wh and good paper for the balance. For information apply to , . It. R. STRICKLAND, Or call on THE 8TAHDMD For Sale Jy.304m Fentress, Oa. U.STillckLAND, 1 Stedman, X. C. BY ALL 3Q)ElDriEHSlSt;
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 17, 1891, edition 1
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