Letters fromjne People Continued From First Pae.l dear old Btate, are on the aide of the reformeis. And they are atill coming company by company, iMjaadroa by squadron, regiment by regiment, army by army And they are welcomed, or should b. But what I started out to Hay was that Cabarrus has been fortunate in get ting Mr. Morrison II. Caldwell, Esq., to locate here. We have long needed a good lawyer here to cham pion the reformers' side of law, and now that we have one, it will be only right that our people give him their encouragement. He cornea to as with a bright record and he will make a brighter one. He leaves very remunerative work to come here and we hope him Bucket. Only this month he delivered a great speech to a very large college in Columbus, Miss. The Daily Pica yune, of New Orleans, Hays of it: "The orator of the day was l'rof . Morrison Cildwr 11, of North arolir.a, who delivered a luottt heautifui address.'' Governor iStone on presenting the diplomas naid: "I deem it unneces sary, after all that has been said, to make any extended remarks. After the splendid addrens which you have heard from the gentleman who came to speak to you (referring to Mr. Caldwell) and the meneage of your president, there is little left for me to say. It has been suggested to my mind that I might say to you, ladies, that I, like the dintingubhed speaker, foci loyal tothe t-auae, &c." That Hound splendid, coming from the governor of Mississippi. The Journal, a high-toned legal journal, says of him: 'Many teachers tiecome lawyers, but few luwyera Income teachers. Mr. Morrison 11. ('uldwell, wliose name is familiar to many reudern of the Jotirnul, was formerly not only a practicing lawyer but also an editor of law rcorU. lie was born AugUMtZi, IflOO, on a farm in North ('arolinu. After three years',ntudy at layidson collee, he took a three yeum' course at the t University of Virginia, rvhere his renututioii as a writer and debater won for him the editorship of the Virginia (,'niversity Mniiine. In Octo ber, he. was licenm-d to practice! law by the Supreme court of Nortli Carolina. HaviiiH located at 'uncord, Jf. C, he enjoyed a fair practice, until he wan called toHt. 1'aul, Minn., in February, lHnrt, as one of the editors of the Nutional Reporter System. His name apiears us co-editor in two volumes of the American Indent. "In Heptember 181K), he took charge of College Hill institute, College Hill, Miss. Having determined to master the science and art of education he devoted himself to the study of psychology and pedaOKiss In Neptemher, ln!I, he becsme principal of the hitfh school at Moss I'oint, where his success is shown by the biennial report of Lieut. (ov. Kvans, secretary of the school board, declaring Unit 'us good work is being done as in any high school in our land.' "In an article contributed by him to the Journal on 'Meaning of Words, he culled at tention to the loss of energy resulting from the fiict that all common school text-books are written in language beyond the compre hension of the pupils. Iu a later article on 'Defects of Craded Hystenn,' he forcibly demonstrated the injustice and absurdity of classifying pupils in all studies by their stiindiim in arithmetic alone. In this issue will he found an article on 'Teaching Litera ture," which makes a strong plea for com mon sense text-books in literature. Mr. Caldwell is a man of common sense and high scholarship which, coupled with his knowledge of psychology and pedagogics render him equip! for the teaching pro- iession." With this short introduction I wish to add Mr. Caldwell's name to the long list of lawyers and speakers who give their splendid abilities to the advancement of our cause and to the championing of our men in the right ol law. E. Ed. Kestler. Hoping for the FallneM of Jefleraonian Democracy. For the Caucasian. Brasstown, N. C, July 8. lama farmer. I am taking seven different newspapers; well posted as any iarmer mat i knew of. 1 fully un derstand the immense good that your paper is uoing in mis time or Human suffering and destitution. Never read a paper in my life so full of im portant facts as is the Caucasian- everything of vital import to the toiling masses may be fully compre hended by the reading of its columns. No paper has so awakened the labor element to a sense of their danger and duty before. I have never met a well-disposed gentleman of any political aHilliation who reads the Caucasian who refuses to admit the facts it contains. Sweep from us such literature at this critical juncture, and you sweep from ns the prop of our freedom, and the stay of prosperity and happiness on this mundane sphere. Nine-tenths of the citizens of western North Carolina are for national reform. I have not a cent to pay for any thing at this time; have a large family, and not a bushel of bread stuff on hand. I once had plenty to eat ana wear ana some money to pay for newspapers. 01 when shall we realize the fullness of our hordes in the saving efficacy of the glorious Jefferson Democracy too late! too late!! J. II. BRA8ST0WN. A Kentucklon'a Opinion Col. Blanton Duncan being asked for his opinion relative to the Ken tucky convention, said: "It completes the utter disrnntinn of the Democratic party. The ad ministration sought the destruction of Senator Blackburn because of his honest and fearless course. In -a complishingthis very trick, venality, corruption and debauchery have been used. Tne convention has been sim ply the collection of all the federal officeholders, and the riffraff of every town; tne bankers, Doards of trade, Dothouse noliticiatis. and bvlmiro , MMj.vrvAO. It has not been a true representative body of the btate, as will be fonnd oat later on. "The triumph of Cleveland will suit in the election of the RpnnKi;n governor and State officers, and a Kepublican United States Senator. The Populists will put ont . fr.ii ticket and just as likely as not will poll more, votes than the administra tion ticket. "This convention was the pivotal affair to check uo anti-('lflvlr,r - watMVl movements, and no effort of money ana tuner mnuences nas been spared. The result will be a boomerang. Not a tate in tne union will elect an administration ticket. The Repub licans will carry Delaware, West Virginia, Maryland, Kentucky, Ten nessee. Missouri: the Ponnli at a mill have North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Ueorgia, leaving Virginia, Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisana doubtful. Mr. Cleveland will go down in history as having accom plished what the civil war could not do the utter destruction of the Dem ocratic party. U. O. Uavemever's salary an nr!. dent of the sugar trust is $100,000 a year, and his employes who labor in a temperature of lao degrees Fahrenheit get eignty cenis a uay. jur. ilavemey er's salary is $3333 a day for 300 uaya in wiejear,or over iJ3 more for one day than his employes receive In a year at eighty cents a day. Ex. tinnl 'am Pnvc I I V VI Ulil LetYFool 'em. (Continued from first page.) up. Be valiant, be strong, be as can ning as serpents and as harmless as doves. Work. Work the wires. Re member, "How some men creep in skittish fortune's hall, While others play the idiots in (blsj her eyes;" and "There is a tide in the affairs of many Which taken at the flood leads on to fort- one." Remember these things, boys. We must not have any financial issue between the Reps and Demies. They must confine themselves to the tariff and the nigger; then we will throw all the odium of this silver heresy on the Pops, and singing hallelujah we II go marching home. The high, resounding Matt Ransom will be down in a few days and he will give you an idea. Remember we must have a straddle; nothing definite on finance; same as '02. And to every gold man we can say we are for gold and to every silver man we are for silver. Keep 'em fooled, boys, fool 'em; its money foi us and your name will be kept OH THE ROLL OF HONOR subject to our beneficence. Another thing I will call your at- tion to, and it is this. You must HAVE NO POLITICAL MEETINGS except they be called by the proper committees. Your citizens meeting gave rue much pain because it smacked of sincerity. I hate such meetings and by the authority of Orovor Cleveland, our poor presi dent, I pronounce a curse on them, who hold them. May they be damned in their mouths, in their breasts, in their hearts and purtenances, down to their very stomachs. May the praiseworthy Matt Ran som, John Sherman and Joe Cald well curse them. May John Carlisle, Baron Roth schild and the patriotic lovers of "honest money" curse them. May they be cursed in all the fac ulties of their bodies May they be damned wherever they be, in the house or in the sta ble, in the garden or in the field, on the streets or in the woods, on water or on land, living or dying may they be cursed. May they be cursed inwardly and outwardly, in their brains and in their vertex, in their temples and in their eye-brows, in their cheeks and jawbones, in their nostrils and teeth, in their shoulders and bladebones, in their fingers and finger nails. May Josephus Daniels with all his intellectual grandeur towering above the blue mountains help curse them. May his majesty chairman Pou ueip curse tnem. May professional Simmons curse them. All the gold wingers come oh come and erive them fits- Come to think ofit, we commenced tne independent political meetings. Coin's Financial School - w MS MVU a scare we sent the Macedonian cry aown to tirover from Chicago to come up and help ns. Th en wa are every day sending our emissaries irom me iat sinecures in Washing ton to the call of the distressed in all of the States. We think this one of the greatest mistakes we ever maae. Wbile we are trying to pre vent a financial issue this is draw ing the people's attention to the ia. sue. It is as it were throwing down me gauntlet. We've eot the Demies in a. hol If they run on the same straddle a the Republicans it becomes a party wim no live principle and will be smotnered in '96. Their wisest men seeing this have tafcen up the silver heresy. Our interest is worth more 10 us THAN THE LIFE OP ANY PARTY and that party which stands in our way dies the death. But if it be haves itself nicelv and is obedient to the true interest of the people we win see to it tbat.it gets a plum the term come next. In '96 ia th tim for the Reps. Now, bovs of the roval hand ura have about ten millions (it npnnla in f w sav hV fool; though we have about two millions of this ten alraadv tW1a That leaves US eicht millions. PVrm two to three millions are on our side by their own interests. W ha about two millions orettv well Hn- cated if some wolf don't get in among them. Eight millions now to educate and drill to onr intnroata This seems to be a wonderful under taking; but when we know most nf these are born in some nartv anrl a soon deny their religion as their party, tne miner become aimn a enough. Get the nartv Ieadra all ngni ana ine sneep will follow. iL- 1 . .If - " " Oh it makes my heart laugh to see What fools these mortals be. The iA meric&n natinn ia nulla a . . . 4 U A k V. C uunwior naron notnscnild or any of his conspirators to ride hnt has a thousand strings reaching iioui venire 10 circumference. .Let the galled jade wince; she mustam- Her legs above her feet and gout Keep flopping in and flopping out As she scarce can bear the weight Oh she ambles such a way No theatre nor comic play Is half so crude a stent. Fool 'em bovs fool 'am. th minions in IS. HARRY. ttlNTON. A Bad Chicken. Atlanta Constitution. A man in Blakelv. who ately fond of game' chickens, hap pened to have inst many for the peace and harmony of uttuioiou uousenoia. inis con dition of affairs necessitated hi ting out "on a walk" a large, young, speu&ieu uauuy, in wnose royal veins coursed the invincible blood of Greene's sled ere-h A1TI ITlttT .Tama mintzled with that of Grist' renowned champions. For a while "Speck" kept himself Within tha nalA of barnyard civilization; but event ually the hens began to set upon their nests in silent anticipation of coming events, while he set his head to a high key of neighborhood devil ment. Over to a neero hnnan hA went, frailed out two roosters, got caught by the yard dog and sent back home. When he had alio-hti, lecovered, he put out a pig's eye and maae a young goat call for help in a fence corner. Then he taplricri yearling in tne front yard and a tur- xev eoopier nnaer tne crann vma had a clawinsr match with a Mn 8AAVV duck and killed a wild goose. That was enough He is now at his mas ter's home wearing big, sunburnt patches of raw skin, few ftta.Wra and a look of general bad manage ment. His bill is blackberry stained, but his eve is fierv and fnll of firht. If there's anything with feathers on that he's afraid of he doesn't know it. All Profits Eaten Up. 1 discriminating rates completely paralyzed the industry in its infancy. On this line he said: "Why is it that nearly every cross-roads hamlet in other fruit r rowing States has Its canning factories, which utilize ail the fruit tfcat is not marketed green and give employ ment to all the idle labor in their vicinity besides paying out hundreds of dollars daily for the fruit and vegetables they pack? Most men will say it is because we need the Yan kee energy and thrift that we are so often accused of lacking. Not so. You can read the answer if you will risit the few canning establishment in Ueorgia that have been erected by enterprising citizens in the hope that the southern railroads would give them proportionate rates as those enjoyed by other fruit packiag sections. Vain hope. Borne of them have not fired up in years, others have finally decided to abandon their plants. All this in the face of a crop that should enrich every section where a cannery is located. Y, by is it? Simply because of the grasping, cold-blooded, blood-sucking policy of the Southern Hallway and Steam ship association. We get car loads of baskets for green fruit from Petersburg, Va.. at t40 per car; for a car of empty fruit cans, weigh ing only 10,000 pounds, from Baltimore, a very little longer haul, we must pay f 144 freight. Maryland and Delaware can ship their canned goods through Atlanta to St. Louis for 28 cents Ker 100. We.' within less th an half the distance, must pay 42 cents yei iw i uee two items Knocas tne pronts out of the business." This is a pretty spectacle for the southern farmer who can't make any money on cotton and corn and who nas turned his efforts and limited capital to the fruit and trucking business. When the farmer is not bled to death by the monev trust. the transportation monopolies step in and try to finish the job. Why does not the inter-state com merce commission regulate these matters! But they never will. The great highways of commerce should be operated at cost for the conven ience and benefit of those who toil and labor to create wealth, and not by private corporations for the bene fit of a few people. Do the people want to be longer bled to make mil lionaires? If you want a change, vote for a change at the next election. Millions Given Away! During the hard times period our millionaires have donated immense sums of money to educational and charitable institutions. From the 1st of January to the middle ot June, this year, these gifts amounted to about $12,000,000. Since the beginning of 1890 the University o! Chicago has received nearly all of the splendid donations which have built it up, and its property and en dowments now amount to about $7, 000,000. In this period Mr. Fayer weather, the New York leather mer chant, has given between $3,000,000 and $4,000,000 to Yale college and as much more to Harvard. The Drexel institute for free education has been established in Philadelphia, and it would be easy to print a long list of other public benefactions. Atlanta Constitution. Good sounds very good. We do not wish to take from these liberal men one bit of credit or glory. But has the Constitution looked for a "nigger in the woodpile" in these transactions? For instance, the noted goldbug McLaughlin, who tried to down"Coin's School of Finance," is a professor in Chicago University. All these big institutions teach the law of greed and oppression. Their economics are for the rich in the interest of pelf. They educate many people. Therefore, it is not sur prising to see big donations going to them. See? KINDLY ASK A NEIGHBOR TO BECOME A SUBSCRIBER. IF HE WANTS TO KNOW FACTS HE CAN GET THEM, AND LOTS OF THEM DURING THE YEAR. THE THE GREAT REFORM A Monthly CvcloDedia of thft TW. Thought on the Absorbing Questions of me uaj. THE ARENA is the great representative mag azine of the Reform Movement. It stands at the head of the Journalism which is to-day battling for the rights of the people. It is the only magazine in the United Staf.j whinii ia not controlled by organized greed,and the only one through which LIVE, PROGRESSIVE THOUGHT can procure a hearing. The price of THE ARENA is $5.00 per year. We have made arrangements for clubbing with it, and will send THE CAUCASIAN and THE ARENA " BOTH, ONE YEAH. IFOR $-4.50 " t9ttMggggABgMga! The man whose mind craves food and he who is studying and think ing over the burning questions of the hour will find both publications a mine of wealth. ADDRESS The EVERY LADY IN Has a Pair of YOUR WHY WHEN in ft 17191717 This Sharpener will be sent tt J J.ifialCl free to every lady who will tt l 8end ua tw0 8UD8CriDera for one year each, l ) or it will be Bent for 25 cents and four two- cent 8 tamps. Address - j Nw OhioGold Bng. Continued from 1st page. Hill. ! was the intimate friend of a gold bag once, and he was from Dunaio, too. lhis gold bag was the hones test man I ever saw in my life. What did he do? He threw three- card monte, and was as square a man as ever Doardea a railway train, and stood in with the conductor. Oh! I'll get along with the gold bugs all right, once 1 learn their lingo. Bat, jou see, I've been a silver Democrat ever since the pilgrimage I made as a boy to the tomb of Audrew Jack son on tbe battlefield of New Or leans." "Jackson's tomb is in Tennessee," was suggested, cautiously. 'Not when 1 met it," replied Col. Hill. It was in Louisiana then, and I've been a silver Democrat ever since I bowed my boyish head and wept over the ashes of that great hero. It was then and there I dedi Cited myself to the Licking county Democracy, and I've kept my faith. When I addressed the committee in executive session I said " "Who will be the next candidate for Governor on the Democratic ticket in Ohio?" "Ex-Gov. Campbell." renlied Col. Hill. "Jim Camp ell will be named next August at Springfield, on th1 first Hullnr W.u t.,n "Will he be elected?" "lnatia a hard question, an swered Col. Hill. '-He's the most popular man we've eot as lone as we're going to deal a gold game. men tne Kepublicns with b oraker, jaciviniey, and John Sherman, all tied in a hard knot, are in bad shane. Campbell may go through like a 'possum through a hen coop, and just clean the perches. You can't ten. "Who will be the Democratic se lection for the Senate?" "Brice " renlied Col. Hill. "Cal vin S. Brice will be the Democratic name for the Senate, to succeed him self. ""And he'll win, too. We may easily lose the GovernorshiD in Ohio. and still hold the Legislature. Camp bell might get downed for Governor by 25,000 majority, and Brice go through the .Legislature for the Senate like a greased pig through a county fair. "You see," went on Col. Hill, his voice sinking to a whisper, deep and mysterious, "there are leeislative dis tricts in Ohio that are verv clos and enough of 'em to carry the legislature, too, it we win 'em. Here Col. Hill hesitated. The Post reporter urged him to proceed. "Well," resumed Col. Hill, "out at Columbus you see it was this wav: There was a gold bug got up; a sort or preacner ieilow, and he took a kind of text He said: " 'The bigger the coon, the more fur; and where the hen scratches tnere the worm is found also. "The gold bug then branched out irom that and insisted that the man to run for Senator was Calvin S. Brice. THE COLONEL MADE A SPEECH. "Then I made a speech. As started in two or three men came around and said: " 'Now, Ike, don't make a monkey 1 lit oi us ngnt nere. "i wmxea my eye at 'em, and slung them a little metanhor. ' 'Don't be alarmed gentlemen,' I MAGAZINE OF AMERICA. Caucasian, NORTH CAROLINA Bull Scissors. FINGERS ARE BLISTERED. SEW AND HACK WITH SUCH ! YOU CAN IN TEN SECONDS EMM SHARPEN THEM AS GOOD AS NEW? THE CAUCASIAN RALEIGH, n! C' DELICATE u5$? FELIALE REGULATOR IT IS ft SUPERB T0N!Gnd exerts a wonderful influence in strengthening her system by driving through the proper chan nel all impurities. Hedlttl and strenoth are Guaranteed to result from its use. Mf wife was bedridden for eirbteen month, after oinBBAIKIEL.D S FEMALE KEOU JLATOK fcr two months. 1 ret tin well. J M JOHNSON. Malvern. Ark. BK1BFIELB BECTUTOK CO., ATLXJTIa. A. WlriU Stwcsuto at LOO ft krttU. said 'I have hunted wild turkeys through the bills of Old Licking, and jugged for catfish in tne wan dering Scioto, too often as a boy to make an error now. I know under which thimble the gladsome pea is secluded. I don't hare to be caught in a land slide before I tumble; ai.d gentle men, talking about making monkeys of people, let me tell you right now, firdt card to fall from the box; I'm for gold. I'm a gold bug from fore- iocs to ietiock, ana you can t 6hift camp fust t-nough to lose me. I don't travel by the path, but by th smoke; and me and my Democracy will never get left out over night. "Ye?, geutlemeu,' I continued, striding down the fljor like Partrick Henry did in the Virginia llouse of Burgesses, 'yes, gentlemen, my Dem ocracy is founded not on sand, but rocks. I will neither bite at the Republican worm, nor rise to the Republican fly. I was a Democrat in Old Licking when they hunted them with dogs. Instead of hunt ing coons and turkeys, and other animals of chase, the Republicans hunted Democrats. I was a follower of Jefferson in a day when the issue upon which the candidates for sher- in oi ijicKing county always ran was 'Will vou kill Ike Hill?' "Gentlemen, those were trying a ? --r ... times, jno man s politics rests easier when the first plank of the opposi tion s piatiorm cnants of homicide, with him as the victim. I mention it only to show you that I am no oumiuci icuiwnii, uo Bunsmne omce holder, ephemera of politics, but mean business plain, unadulter ated Democratic business all the year round. Business with the bark 1 1 v - on is wnat l want. I'm a party man. I go with my party. In the silver Democratic' days now gone, John, forever, I was a silver man. In this golden season of our organization, when silver has sunk so low in the scale of respectable metallurgy that. a man of good political character is not saie in its company, I'm for gold. I'm a party man; always was and will be, and I've no hesitation in saying that should an hour arrive when the Democracy of this coun try declare for diamonds as the unit of value, I'll be a diamond man like old John Harper's race horses nsea to race, ana that 'from e-end to i e-ena." ' "Then," continued Col. Hill. "1 went on and told them what wm f Via fact, that practically I had been a 1 J 1 . ,w goiu oug ever since the extra ses- lit . . - ... sion; an out tne politics. "I used to watch the Senate in the extra session until I got scared. l am not always inclined to take chances on what you mierht call Democratic action. No panic was ever going to get a swipe at the nouse oi urn. bo one morning I drew out every dollar I had in bank, lugged home the gold, and put it in a COUDieOI lUfiTS. Ot Which .here aro always some empty specimens at my honse. and tipH a nlntkoa lino J ims mj CU1 and hung 'em in the well. They are there now, swinsrini? to their mm a refuge m the day of adversity. "That," concluded Col. Hill. i about all there is to say about the Democratic situation in Ohio. We will return Brice to the Senate; we will win the Legislature; we will be for gold, and we hone to carrv th State with Campbell for the Gover norship. While we hope all these things we are also ready for the worst. Every Democrat should al ways be ready for the worst, and a man who cannot be ready for the A t " worst cannot oe a democrat. Keep Cheering. The Omaha Dlatform. the first time, was cheered for tbe space of forty-five minutes, 10,000 voices and bands of music swelling uxo iuiijf munuers oi applause. There was never such thnsiasm, and its echoes shook the land from ocean to ocean. Tt felt to be a second declaration of independence, and it has drawn in two years nearly 2,000,000 voters to gether. And shall a small pait of it be declared create than th a and retire the whole! Can we be drawn aDart bv a stolon aw fcAVU. vi the things which drew us together? The Omaha platform and th Fnnn. list partv have knocked nt ). tariff humbug. The old parties are being shattered - .w.mivjicHU by the Populist blows which com pelled them to dron tho or-iff g- auu grapple with another dividing ques tion. All we have tn An ia tn our batteries booming and keep ikunii l.i vuwhuk uuinua piauorm. DR. HATHAWAY & CO. f. RBZTABLE SPECIALISTS Bailor s. . T . laaiS. "5"rf oth doctor, nsre uued. Can iw yoiST" Can sire yoi prSoST" nrauraasms"ScaOTCCtt TbetresssM fere, and pate fn JolntSt h K? &&tSE rZ a iw in joiam-a cure Is bound to take place. Send rt.tVmrn' frr.""". ttUllule book irtl4tS25jPS! -r'.. r. . w a honesty I DR. HATHAWAY 6 CO. I I I aaH SowTH Bttoarj gTHCKT. ATLA PTA,1A. ' POLK MONUMENT. t ucro TO UVtVD IT TakeC Th Caccasiax's fond for th mon ument now stands as follows: Total amount collected np to March 14th, 1895, $383 32 R B Kinaey 1 nam cuapel A inane?, xto how an ooaoty S3 Oak Rklgv Atliaccr. No. 24, Wak Co. 15 U) Forsyth county Alliance, 10 00 Naah County Alliance 00 Catawba 8ub-Alliance, No, 1367, Catawba county 2 30 Surry county Alliance 500 Ilobersonviile Sub Alliance. No. Martin county 1 25 WE DEMAND THE FUEK AND UNLIMITED COINAGE OF SILVER AND GOLD AT THE PRESENT LEGAL RATIO OF 16 TO 1. PEOPLE'S PARTY PLATFORM. DUKE Gigabytes (slGABCTTK 'A W.bunSonafcCa WCAMERKM T0MCC0CV DUNHAM. N.C HADE FROM High Grcdo Tofccsco ABSOLUTELY PURE What is Mffll Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Chil dren. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic sub stance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years use by Millions of Mother. . Castoria is the Children's Panacea the Mother's Friend. CASTORIA For Infanta and Children, Do not be Implied upon, bat insist Bpon baring Caetoria, and aee that tbe fac-aunlle signature of OBraelres and the pubic at -J. hazards. Tire Cktacb Comfakt, 77 Momj Street, W. T. 1 A 7-Horse Power Engine For Sale. A 7-horse power Watertown "Rn. gine, good as new, for sale. It was 3 ..... nsea ior a snort while to run The Caucasian press. A gas engine has been put in to get lower insurance rates. It is a bargain. Apply to JIABIOK I5UTLER, Kaleigh, N. C, or Dewey Bros., Goldsboro, N. C "NO HUMBUG." to give you. NO C O. D. FKAUD, R II X I aaj got a cure for Lost Man- . wit ixio uibi occom DfinV this niaoaao An1 o tki. -i . ....v. wis Buvrnise- have nnt.hinv in irin Tb product of pure North Carolina herbs. abuicus wmi rrox, vi.uu, Dy mail, sealed, postpaid. If you can be cured, this will cure. Write me stating your case, and if 11.00 is enclosed. I wiUsend medicine and full directions, and will (fuarantee a cure. If I can do no good, will say bo and retnrn JAS. A, SMITH, Druggist, NEWTON N. C. R.DIII'S Celebrated Female Powders aem fail. MOT CANCER Permanently Cured ! ! Home treatment pu to fA Send atmmp ftr honk, e. a. nABan. Port Faroe. ai NOTICE. . wiHi Tery man and woman la tbe United States interested in tne Opmm and WhickT babiu to hare one of my books oe these dit eaeea. Address B. M. Wooliey, AUaata. til Box SSand one will be ent roe free 'AHSY PILLS! e Wtuee 8ccipic Co,PmuCv : . . i'. , ' f -S f"" 4 4 "- OUKEfflUFjHAft L rae yoe at lor marriage. " - llngm. Sores. Oonorrbae A Ga aoSf PruS?mil!!! fSrnrriiM MHAanUr eared withaat oeuem dtoeseee peculiar lo Voar T WUflOBX UwttB,aa JUaj oaMd e7l WB,W",MHB niaeias. JUajoai. utseeeeat No. 4 tar cinr 400,000 10,M)0 GOING 1AI 1 4 J A , Co M It makes the subject so plain. DO YOU WANT MORE BONDS? onriE Anglo-Wall St. Is endearonng to precipitate upon tbe Natin A GOLD DEBT OF S500,000,000,oo! Which will entail fifty years of added labor, self-denial 1 1 ration. Ilad COIN'S FINANCIAL SCHOOL more generally some years ago the wie men of fiiiatxv -uU $ha to-day hope to carry their audacious and infamous tuMM. COIN'S FINANCIAL SCHOOL IS WAKING READ IT! STUDY second JUST OUT. Continuation of COIN'S SCHOOL covering events of ttt tii months, bnnging new characters, new authorities, tiopuUr foU- TTTf.m4t.m5di88ecteL AfUfr yn hw read the SclmJ rrt UV lO DATE. Same price. Popular edition. Sent hvtnsil to any address upon receipt of price 25 cents. ADDRESS ALL ORDERS Din TO Til llfll A TALE f TWO THE FIGHT IS OH National Polities the Battlefield In rder to fuflj undersUnd and appreciate ihe titnaiion. ri A TALE OF TlAJ0L?JATIOrJ OEjaiiai Bsiii ti -GUA ScieiiL lTthiM frJ 1 eem5,t htute nnder?tand; Vot. saius pbicc An Tim ccnooL. e Xo bttV. rr j. . such a rrtuarkat. wrrk. TtiJ t. v aation tlmuct iT : It i m rrt-ijt).. quotum, and i. . of million f .'. r I lie jrrrat ,. Ammrati ,. Administrate DP THE PEOPLE. IT ! il "VQXiTrnynE As"Ubcle Tom's 'ial.ii' r,uwdt tion t knowlifeof faiurii of fcs slarerj md irui-llei tuWm t et a criti. $ iwriol. so "A Tel i T V " "ay aruiiw lb j,j,U- to - of w.t it it Lk !i fualilife' rjl ). . Imli ilj Until NATIONS: THIS OFFICE

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