Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / Oct. 29, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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Sailing Upon lie Nile. I Continued fro n First Page. J pass ngnt oat upon tme worxJroai tenter and btwvn th bank crowded with the torr of rinpirc. According t f V l"iul perrtl uxu-k In my Bible it wa Thanksgiving day rooming, Nov. 28, IS3, tluit with my family arid tf r .ids we atpppod aboard the steoninr on tlm Nilo. The Moham medan call to p.viyers had been ound d by the prie it of that religion, the Maezilna, from tl) four hundred mosques of O.iro its tho cry went oat: "(frA la gnat. I bear witness tliat there b no Ood but Owl. I boar wlt- nem that Mohammed ht the apontle of Ood. Come to prayers. Como to sal vation. CJ(xl Is great. Thoru Is no other but Ood. Prayers are better than sleep." The sky and the ixihn groves and rirer shipping were bathed in the light, it was not much ox a erart that we boarded. It would not be hailed on any c our rivers with any rapture of adml-ation. It fortunately had but lit tle speed, for twice we ran aground and the sailors jumped Into the water and on their shoulders pushed her out. tint what yacht of gayest sportsman. what deck of swilteet ocean queen could give such thrill of rapture as rail on the Nile? The pyramids In sight, tho remains of cities that are now only a name, the villages thronged with population. Both banks crowded with historical deeds of forty or sixty centuries. Oh, what a book the Bible b when read on the Nile! As we slowly move up the majeetio river I see on each bank the wheels, the pumps, the buckets for irrigation, and see a man with his foot on the treadle of a wheel that fetches up the water for a garden, and then for the first time I understand that passage in Deuterono ny which says of the Israel ites after they had got back from Egypt, "The land whither thou goest In to possess it is not as the land of Egypt from whence ye came out, where thou vowedst thy seed and wateredst It with thy foot" Then 1 understood how the land could be watered with the foot. How do you suppose I felt when on the deck of that steamer on the Nile I looked off upon the canals and ditches and sluices through which the fields are irrigated by that river, and then read in Isaiah, ''Tlie burden of Egypt; the river shall be wasted and dried up and they shall turn the rivers far away and tho brooks ol defonse shall bo emptied and dried op; and they shall be broken in the purposes thereof, all that make sluices and ponds for fish." That Thanksgiv ing morning on the Nile I found my text, of today. Pharaoh in this chapter is compared to thd. dragon or hippopotamus sug gested by the crocodiles that used to line the banks of this river: '"Thus salth the Lord Ood, Behold I am against thee, Pharaoh, king of Egypt, the great dragon that lieth in the midst of his rivers, which hath said ray river b mine own, ard I have made it for myself. But I vill put hooks In thy Jaws and I will oause the fish of thy rivers to stick unto thy scales, and 1 will bring thee up out of the midst of thy rivers, and all the fish of thy rivers shall stick unto thy scales, and the land of Egypt shall be desolate and waste ; and they shall know that I am the Lord, because he hath said tho river is mine and I have made it." AS IX DIBLK TIMES. While sailing on this river or stopping at one of the villages, we see people on the banks who verify the Bible descrip tion, for they are now as they were in Bible times. Shoes are now taken off in reverence to sacred places. Chil dren carried astride the mother's shoul der a In Hogar's time. Women with profusion of Jewelry as when Rebecca . tvn afflaneed. Lentils shelled Into the pottage, as when Esau sold his birth right to get such a dish. The same habits of salutation as when Joseph and his brethren fell on each others' necks. Uouns ol law held under big trees as In olden tlma. People making bricks without straw, compelled by clrcum stances to use stubble instead of straw. Flying over or standing on the banks, as in Scripture days, are flamingoes, os preys, eagles, pelicans, herons, cuckoos and bullfinches. On all sides of this i river sepulchers. Villages of sepulchers. j Cities of sepulchers. Nations of sepul chers. And one is tempted to call it an empire of tombs. I never saw such a place as Egypt is for graves. And now we understand the complaining sarcasm of the Israelites when they were on the way from Egypt to Canaan, "Because there are no graves in Egypt bast thoa taken us away to die In the wilderness P Down the river bank come the buffalo and the cattle or kino to drink, and it rua the ascestors of these cattle that inspired Pharaoh's dream of the lean klne and the fat klne. Here we disembark a little while for Memphis, oft from the Nile to the right Memphis founded by the first king of Egypt and for a long while the, capital. A city of marble and gold. Home of tbe Pharaohs. City nineteen miles In cir cumference. Vast colonnades through ''' which' imposing processions marched. Here stood the Temple of the San, ffc . ueltin brilliancy a son shone on by an other sun. Thebes in power over a thousand ons hundred years, or nearly ten times as long as the United States have existed. Here is a recumbent fetatoa seventy-five feet long. Bronzed gateways. A necropolis called "the haven Of the blest." Here Joseph was prime minister. Here Pharaoh received Jacob. AH possible splendors were toilt up into this royal city. Hosea, JCreJdel, Jeremiah and Isaiah speak Of It 8 something wonderful Never did I v.slt a city with such ex alted anticipati ns and never did my. anticipations drop so flat. Not a pillar Ktands. Not a wall is unbsoken. Not a fountain tosses in the son. Even the rains have been ruined, and all that remains are chips of marble, small pieces of fractured sculpture and splin tered human bones. Here and there a t x.x . m . m ... letter oi some eiaDorate inscription, a foe or ear of a statue that once stood in niche of palace wall. Eiekiel nronh- esied its blotting out, and the prophecy nas Deen luuuieo. ' kkib on," l said to our party, "and don't wait for me." And as I stood there alone the city of Memphis in the glory of past centuries returned. And I heard the rush of her chariots, and tho dnsh of her fountains, and the eon- - viviauty of her palaces, and saw the . - m ; oniusen nooies rou on uio noors oi mo saic, while In startling contrast amid all the regalitieeoX the place I saw Pha- Kaoh look up Into the face of aged. Tim cm of sa But back to the Nile and on and up till you reach Thebes, in Scripture called the City of No. Hundred gated Thebes. A quadrangular city four miles from limit to limit. Four great temples, two of them Karnao and Luxor, once mountains of exquisite sculpture and gorgeous dreams solidified in stone. Statue of Rameses II, eight hundred and eighty-seven tons in weight and seventy-five feet high but now fallen and scattered. Walls abloom with the battlefields of cen turies. The surrounding hills of rock hol lowed into sepulchers on the wall of which are chiseled in picture and hier oglyphics the confirmation of Bible story In regard to tho treatment of the Israelites in Egypt, so that as explore tlons go on with the work the walls of the sepulchers become commentaries of the Bible, tho Scriptures' originally written upon parchnient here cut into everlasting stone. Thebes mighty and dominant five hundred yean. Then she went down in fulfillment of EzekieTs prophecy concerning tho City of No, which was another name for Thebes: "I will execute judgment in No. I wDl cut oft the multitudes of No." Jere miah also prophesied, "Thus salth the Lord, I will punish the multitudes of No." This city of Thebes and all the ether dead cities of Egypt iterate and reiter ate the veracity of the Scriptures, tell ing the same story which Moses and tho prophets told. Have you noticed how Ood kept back these archaeological confirmations of the Bible until our time, when the air is full of unbelief about the truthfulness of the dear old bookt He waited until the printing press bstfl been set up in its perfected sliape, and the submarine cable was laid, and tho world was intelligent enough to appreciate the testimony, and then be resurrected the dead cities of the earth and commands them, say ing: "Open your long sealed ljpsnnd speak I Memphis and Thebes, Is the Bible truer "Truer respond Mem phis and Thebes. "Babylon, is tho book of Daniel truer "True!" re sponds Babylon. "Ruins of Palestine and Syria, is the New Testament trueT "Truer respond the ruins all tho way from Joppa to the Dead sea, and from Jerusalem to Damascus. What a mercy that this testimony of the dead cities should come at a time when the Biblo is especially assailed. And this work will go on until tho ve racity and divinity of tho Scriptures will be as certain to all sensible men and women as that two and two make four, as that an isosceles triangle is one which has two of its sides equal, as that the diAmeter of a circle is a line drawn through the center and ter minated by the circumference as cer tain as any mathematical demonstra tion. Never did I feel more encouraged than when after preaching a sermon evidences of the truth of the Biole drawn from oriental lands. A distin guished senator of the United States, known and honored everywhere, but now deceased, came up to the plat form and said. "I was brought np in the faith of Christianity, but I got speculating on all these subjects and had given up my faith in tho Bible, but those facts and arguments archsoloer- lcal take me back to my old faith in the Bible, which my father and mother taught me." The tears rolling down his cheeks evinced the depth of his emotion. When I read of the senator's death I was comforted to think thai perhaps I may have' helped him a little in the struggle of his life, and perhaps given him an easier pillow oh which to die. A VALUABLE BOOS. Two great nations, Egypt and Greece, diplomatized and almost came to bat tle for one book, a copy of "JEschytus.' Ptolemy, the Egyptian king, discovered that in the great library at Alexandria there was no copy of "JEschyrus." The Egyptian king sent up to Athens, Greece, to borrow the book and make a copy of ft. Athens demanded a de posit of seventeen thousand seven hun dred dollars as security. The Egyptian king received the book, but refused to return that which he had borrowed, and so forfeited the seventeen thousand even hundred dollars. The two nations rose m contention concerning that one ' book, beautiful and mighty book, Indeed! But it Is a book of horrors, the dominant idea that we are the victims of hereditary Influences from which there is no escape, and that fate rules the world, and although the author does tell of Prometheus who was .crucified on the rooks for sympathy for mankind, a powerful suggestion of the sacrifice of Christ In later years, it is a very poor book compared with that book which we hug to our hearts, because it eon tains our only guide in life, our only eomfbrt in death and our only hope or a blissful immortality. If two na tions could afford to struggle for one copy of "JEschylus," how much more oan all nations afford to struggle for the possession and triumph of the Holy Scriptures I Bat the dead cities strung along the Nile not only demolish infidelity, but thunder down the absurdity of the modern doctrine of evolution which says the world started with nothing and then rose, and human nature be gan with nothing but evolved into splended manhood and womanhood of tselt Nay; the sculpture of tlie world was more wonderful in the days of Memphis and Thebes and Carthage than In the days of Boston and New York. Those blocks of stosve, weighing three hundred tons, high up In the wall at Kamac, Imply machinery equal to If not surpassing the machinery of the Nineteenth century. . How was that statue of Barneses, weighing eight hun dred and eighty-seven tons, transport ed from the quarries, two hundred miles away, and how was It lifted f Tell us, modern machinists. How were those galleries of rock, still standing at Thebes, filled with paintings surpassed by no artist's pencil of the present day f Tell us, artists of the Nineteenth cen tury. The dead cities of Egypt, so far as they have left enough oillars or statues or sepulchsrs or temple ruins to tell the story Memphis, Mlgdol, Hier opolis, Zoan, Thebes, Goshen, Carthage cui oi them developing downward in stead of upward. The have evoluted from magnificence into destruction. The go5pel of Jesus Christ is the only elevator of individual and social na tional character. Let all the Ihrlrw oities know that pomp and opulence and temporal prosperity are no security: Those ancient eittes lacked nothing but good morals. Dissipation and sin slew them, and unless dissipation and sin arejalsed they will some day slay our I nwiAnvn atHoi xv " 1 A mercnanaise, ana oar gauenes ox an, and our city halls as fiat in the dost as we found Memphis on the afternoon of that Thanksgiving day. And If the cities go down the nation will go down. "Ob," you say, "that is Impossible; we have stood so long yea, over a hun dred years as a nation." Why, what of that? Thebes stood five hundred years; Memphis stood a thousand years. God does not forget. One day with the Lord is as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day. Ram and debauchery and bad poli tics are more rapidly working the de struction of our American cities than sin of any kind and all kinds worked for the destruction of ihe cities of Afri ca, once so mighty and now so pros trate. But their gods were idols, and could do nothing except for debase ment Our Ood made the heavens and sent his Son to redeem the nations. And our cities will not go down, and our nation will not perish, because the Gospel is going to triumph. Fowardt all schools and colleges and churches! Forward ! all reformatory and mission ary organizations. Forward ! all the influences marshaled to bless the world. Let oar modern European and American cities listen to the voice of those ancient cfties resurrected, and by hammer and chisel and crowbar be compelled to speak. VTJTCK3 FROM TUB PAST. I notice the voice of those ancient cities is hoarse from the exposure of forty centuries, and they accentuate slowly with lips that were palsied for ages, but all together those cities along the Nile intone these words: "Hear us for we are very old, and it is hard for us to speak. We were wise long before Athens learned her first lesson. We sailed our ships while yet navigation was unborn. These obelisks, these pyr amids, these fallen pillars, these wrecked temples, these colossi of black granite, these wrecked sarcophagi under the brow of the hills, tell you of what I was In grandeur and of what I am coming down to be. We sinned and we felL Our learning could not save us. See those half obliterated hieroglyphics on yon der wall. Our architecture could not save us: See the painted columns of Phils) and the shattered temple of Es neh. Our heroes could not save us : Witness Menes, Diodorus, Rameses and Ptolemy. Our gods, Ammon and Osiris, could not save us. See their fallen temples all along tho four thou sand miles of Nile. Oh, ye modern cities, get some other God a God who can help, a God who can pardon, a God who can save. Called up as we are for a little while to give testimony, again the sands of the desert will bury ub. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust!" And as these voices of porphyry and granite ceased, all the sarcophagi under the hills responded, "Ashes to ashes!" and the capital of a lefty column 4ell, grind ing Itself to powder undfer the rocks, and responding, "Dust to dost!" NEW A DVERT13E Nf ENTS. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. a it It Cost You Nothing TO Read r a no. Don't miss, when you have a chance to make a strike, and that's just the kind of chance we are putting in your way. The Increase in traffic on the Suez canal causes serious delays. The com pany has begun to widen tho canal and the work will be eomplsted in about two years. British ships and cargoes lost every year at sea are valued at about $100,-000,000 THE EASTERN ASSOCIATION. (Special Correspondent.) The Eastern Association was held at Dobson's Chapel, Duplin county, week before last. The attendance was very large, and the meeting ex eeedingly interesting. The hospital ity of the people deserve the high Let s Be F mk fii Ion NEW ADVERTISEMENTS Notice. TVJORTn CAnOLlNA.-SAMi- X 1 SOX COUXTT. J. C.SLocnjin, vs. J. J Jackson To J. J. Jackson: Take notieu that the above en title I action ha been this day com menced before me for the pu:pos ol obtaining a judgment in lavor of the aic plaintiff and against the said defendant, J. J. Jackson, for the sum of fifty dollars doe by ac count to the said plaintiff from the said defendant, and let the said J. J. Jackson further take notice that he is required to appear bofore me at my oniee in Clinton, in said State and county, on the 2Sth day of No vember, 1891. and answer or demur to the complaint of ihe s ld vlaintiff. II. B. (JIDDENS, J. P. Thii Oct. 13th, 1S91. 22-6t Notice of Sale. BY VIRTUE OF A DECREE of the Superior Court, made t the October term, 1891, in case of I. McPhail vs. B. O. E. Daujihtrv. administrator of Hardy Dauehtrv and others, the undersiened com missioner, appointed by said de cree to make the sale of the binds will, on the 21st day of November, 1891, at the courthouse door in the town ot Clinton, at public auction. for cash, sell the following describee tract of land, known as the "Hardy Daughtry Mill Tract," and bounded by the lands of B. O. E. Daugh try, Joseph Williams, John Fraiier and others, and containing about sixty acres. WM. DAUGHTRY, Com. Tliis October 19, 1891. 22-4t Notice of Sale. N DEC. 4TH. AT 12 C- Vclock M. at the residence of the late Mrs. E. T. Fennell. Will be sold the farm I'nown as the Owen Fennell placf in Franklin tovvnship on Black River, 4 miles from C. F. & Y. V. R. R. adj ining the lands of J. M. Fennell, A. J. Johnson and others containing 325 acres. A fine residence of eleven noms, and all necessary out houses, cotton gin and grist mill, fine lands adapted to the rai.-intr of corn, cotton, notatoes &c. Good water, pleasant neighborhood. Terms, part cash balance in 12 months. Title reserved until pur chase money is paid. For further information apply to J. N. Fennell or N. G. Shaw, administrator. H. E. Faison, Att'y. Oct. 22, 1891-4t. 5L POPPLE OOLUMy A pVEilTISKM K The Alliance Store Is now prepared to serve the public all branches of And will sell CHEAP FOR CASH. All we ask is your patronage and wo will save you money, as We Propose to Sell Cheap! Now those who owe us on account. aon t lorget tnat your account but come forward and settle, are in need of money. Yours Truly, C. A. CLUTE, Manager of Alliance Store. is ri Vill as we A Grand Display ! Nothing like it ever seen in Clinton. Our NVw St, c ,.f Ready-Made Clofcliiu, Bought from manufacturers, will be mM at 1 1 - t i Prices! We hav used our iwt judgment in m!-':' Jl r i a . ... joous aim are comment .oi our ai uiiv to im-;l- QUALITY and PRICE. r . 1 1 . lou win inane nomistsKe in making your purchases. lie low u v in examining wh tfive ho:uo I. I t! M VI 1) .t, Rock-Bottom Figures i r yoir ron-iider.itinn Children's Suits from Boy's Suits Men's Suits from from - u: We keep a first-. lann stock rf I)ry-(iood, Shawls, Boots and Shoes of all kinds of tlm Notice. By order of the Board of Direc tors of the Clinton Loan Association the stockholders of said Association are hereby called to meet In the Court House in Clinton at 11 a, in. on Thursday, Nov. the 5ih 1891, on very important business. A full attendance is urgently requested. J. L. Stewart. Pres. D. B. Nicholson, Sect'y. Oct. 21st 1891. td. We know perfectly well that it takes two to make a bargain and est praise. They cared for the veiy that'S jUgt where We COHie in. We largo crowd, and did it well. Th , . " ' maKe u, an oojeci: xo aeai wren us. following ministers wete present: Revs. J. L. Stewart, T. H. Pritch a-d, D. D., J. T. Albritton, ( . Dur ham, D. D., M.L.Kesler, C.F. Hop per, It. E. Pe le, 8. D. Swain, H. J. Duncan, G. S. Best, E. J. Edwards J. D. Newton, R. C. Sandling. V. L Bilbrow, J. B. Barlow, J. H. Dob- eon, M. C. Walton, F. T. Wooten, J. H.Hildreth. Tho next Association will be held at Emma's Chapel, Richland, On low county.- The officers elected were J. L. Stewart, Moderator: Oli ver Blackburn. Clerk : 8. M. Carl ton, Treasurer. O. B. GEORGIA FOR FINANCIAL REFORM AND LOWER TAXES. Notice to Creditors, THE UNDERSIGNED AS administrator of Jas. Shipp. deceased, hereby gives notice to ali the creditors of said estate to pre sent their claims, duly proven ac cording to law, within ! 2 months or this notice will be plead In bar ot their recovery. All persons indebt ed to 6aid estate, by note or account, win please come iorward and make settlement. W. J. SHIPP, Adm'r Per Att'y, Henry E. Faison. Oct 21, 1891. 22-6t The following resolutions were passed by the Georgia Legislature a few weeks ago : Reeolved, By the House of Rep resentatives, the Senate concurring. that our Senators and Represents tives in Congress be ana they are hereby requested to use their influ ence and votes to secure legislation which will correct the evils com plained of by the National Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union in convention at Ocala, Fla., and the evils complained of by the Demo cratic party, especially those that relate to the present financial con dition and taxation!" the govern ment. Resolved, That his Excellency the BAMS FOR EVERYBODY IS OUR MOTTO ! You all know we keep Clothing, Shoes and Hats, but those who have not seen our new Goods can't form any idea how large our Fall Stock is. Immense does not express it. Again we claim and we will convince any judge of goods that we sell cheaper Governor be requested to transmit tlian any hOUS6 111 thlS State, sentatives in .Congress a certified copy of the foregoing resolution. A Gold Watch and $204. That Is what every Agent receives who gets up a club on our $1 per week plan, Oar 14-karat gold-fllkd cases are warranted for 20 years. Fine Elin ar Waltham movement. Stem wind and set. Lady's or Grm's size. Equal to any $50 watch. To secure agents where we have none, we sell one of the Hunting Case Watches for tho Club price 123 and send C O. D. by express with privilege of ex amination betore paying forame. Our agent at Durham, N.C writes: Out Jewelers haveconlessed they don't know how vo J can furnish such work for the money." One good reliable agent wanted for each place. Write for particiars. Empire Watch Co., 48 and 50 Maiden Lane, oc29-lynrnav , New York. ' Blood diseases are terrible on ac count of their loathesome nature, and the fact that they wreck the con stitution bo completely unless the proper antidote is applied. B.B.B. (Botanic Bloou Balm) i composed of the true antidote for blood poison. Its use never fails to give sat isl ac tion.' ity. Try HITTMRK. IT YOVlt ttACK ACBTKS Ot you are all worn out, remti ; - mnowma iron i It good ftppottfe yf- :Mi& - I By calling on us you can readily see that we are not at all boasting in our claim to be the cheapest Clothing Shoe and Hat dealer. We buy cheap and sell cheap King: Clothier and Hatter. Land Sale. A tract of land in McDaniel's township lying on eastern side of Little Coharle, known as the H. J. Ht'bbs tract, now ownrd by Mrs. S. A. Hobbs, containing 113 acres. J? or further information apply to 15. B. HOBES, 4t Clinton, N. C. Hemorhoides or Piles. Having discovered a remedy for Hemorhoides or Piles, will furnish a limited supply to suf ferers. Cures vine cut of everv ten cases mves relief to n.H. Frice 30 cents per box, by mail. Address, B. L. BLACKMORE, nuiiZU 3m Warsaw, N. C. GOSHEN HIGH SCHOOL Tho Fall Sessiou of this SMinnl will open on the First Monday in Aucrust. 181. The management will be in the hands of tho rresent prin cipal, J. D. Ezzell. Tuition from 5.00 to 812.50 for a term of twenty week?. ii j -i . jDuaru, in gooa iamines near school building, at from R6.00 to $7.50 per month. For any further information write to the principal. J. D. EZZELL, jyl6 tf Hob ton, N. C. Hats of all kind., iu Call and see inc. octl tf Notions, vr:v l 1!1 CI 1 men and J-oys :-iz-s; Valises ni;l T. unli very Uospeetfiilly, W. G. RACKLEY, ' Clinton, N. WE HAVE G OT 'EI! Yes, Our Fall Goods Are Here, Every Department is Full of N-E-W Pronounced G-O-O-D-S-! BAR AINS Throughout the Establishment Thos5 are ALWAYS to be found at our fctore. We -t o ever on the alert for them, for what helps you is ?ool for us So if you vant much variety and style with little expense call and n-e ns. Very Itespectfully, A. F. JOHNSON $c CO. 9S ca Let Every One Go at Once to W. S. PartrM'sj ua 33 The Only Exclusive Dry Goods and Shoe House in Clinton. And see the large and complete stock of DRY GOODS. DKESS GOODS, FANCY GOODS, SHOES and NOTIONS now on exhi bition. - A full line of Castors ni i nun In Add i ion to my Rpgular Stock of WATCHES AND CLOCKS, And my Repairing Business and and agency for sewing Machines, J have accepted tho agency for the Great Southern Music House of Lud- in & Bates?, of Savannah.Ga.. lor the sale of PIANOS AND ORGANS I sell the follow in? well-known an J reliable makes: Mathushek, Ster ling, Mason A Hamlin and Chick-ering. A sample Sterling Piaro and a Sterling Organ can be seen on exhi- Dition at ray pi ace pi Dusinesa 10 Clinton. Call in and. get our terms. Yours truly, JyS-tf H. B. GIDDENS. For Sale or Rent! A desirable small Farm, with good two story dwelling and all necessary outrhouses, conveniently located for church ana school privileges. Jjo, cated near Swain High School on the C. F. & Y. V. Kailroad. Will be sold on reasonable terms, with part casn ana gooa paper tor the balance. For intormation apply to R. B. STRICKLAND. Slbble, O. Or call on . H.STRICKLAICD, JyWMm Btedmao, N. 0. 1 HP ' U Ul" VIII'IIUY 1 Mil 1-1 1 nuiiiiuiiuu uuiuj umi nauuuj In all the new and "desirable shades, withthej very latsst and prettiest Trimming: for eacn pitca. My Ginghams have nover been equaled in their pretty, plaid and stripe effects. A bargain for all in Calicoes; from 5 cents to 7 cents. Anything you may call for in Staple and Domestic Dry Goods . Let no one fail to see my stock of-:'--. cy For I have these to flt the most fastidious young ledy as well as th dear old mother, whose feet always hurt. And in addition have Just received a large and very full supply of Mens' Shoes, m cheap, medium and fine grades. ' My Stock of Shoes are to be rold like everything else. The very best shoes for the least possible money. Audnext comes ray handsome out-fit for men you and nlrl The only place in town to get the latest styles and best qualities Terms always strictly CASH. ' . Messrs. jasper uair ana - xiay wooa IJenion ar with ana would be pieasea to see an their old friends. W.-: S. me now octl tf PABTRIOK Sell Out ! Haying decided to go out of the Li quor Business, we will sell On reason able terms, our entire stock of Bar Fixtures, &c. We will rent niir Tvni"M ing. As every one knows, who has been to jDlinton, it is decidedly one of the best stands in town. Writ0 to as at Clinton N; C, or call at tho store - s Uespectfully, - Jyw-tf- ' "WATSON. & PETERSON. 7
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
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Oct. 29, 1891, edition 1
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