. . . - - - . ; , ---'7: r-.'::' 1 -" V ' ' . ...... .... .'. . ' :, .. i ' .' - r it i VOL. IV. CHARLOTTE, N. C. FRIDAY FEBRUARY 12. 1892: NO. 165 V v - j 1 1 "II 1 1' ti i . ' - '.in I hi . - ; . v"7 A l V II V X II V -X Jl I II I III III II I J II I -1 hi .'Hi rs 'r v vvyAvyjv I GOOD FJJIMING DOES PJLY. The Real Truth Fairij Told Light Breaking1 and Hope Ahead. fr the Mecklenburg Times. Iu former articles I named raanj persons who make money farming, de spite all drawbacks. But ! also show ed that most of our cotton growers realized no net profits even when cot ton was high 10 cents and upwards: That as a whole the South was not ad vancing in wealth, beyond that inci dental to her 'increase of population and the sub-division of land and the diversification of her industries. In point of fact, the larger share of pro fits of our 'cotton crops, go North and West; still the South clings to cotton; and there ia,a devotion .to it, that has heretofore defied all reason. Else where agriculture is able to sustain itself mainly on the cereals, hay, and itock, shipping largely to us. We have all these, and the great money crop cotton in addition thereto, and yet remain poor. Here Ms a bundle of contradictions hard to explain; but a lose analysis will show certain facts each tending to apparent good results in mere theory, and yet ending in dis aster, as a Jinanctal tcude . COTTON A GOOD CROP. The verv best in the world; requir ing no special skill and little capital; always a money crop ana tnc easiest kept and handled of all great staples. Betterlstill, it is the one crop on which the merchant and tertilizer man win risk their money. It is, moreover, limited in the extent of country natu rallv irrowinsr the plant; and yet ev ery part of this royal plant can now be used for products in demana, me wide world over. . No wonder our people once thought it a "King. They know better now. ITS DAGGERS. Its very excellencies have beset it with temptations and risks the aver age farmer is powerless to resist. Hence the crop, though limited to ter ritory, is always subject to an eay and rapid increase in prod uction. The ilightest rise stimulates greed, pride, and wild speculation. While, on the other band, it is" a' purely sectional crop, outside of the sympathy and pro tection of national legislation, and so. only the more exposed to the insid ious attack of all "other interests. This makes it the most dangerous of all pro ducts to deal in; and yet it is the one on which the South has for oyer 50 etentful years, time and again, staked A N D H. HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS MD HATS ARE BEING SOLD EVERY ( THE ENTIRE BANKRUPT STOCK OF THE M'DOWELL CLOTHING " Are 3ou taking advantage of if? Remember vou save 50 cents on every dollar's worth buy. It is not our loss but your gain if you "get on to it." FOR SPOT CASH we b cufht hp woods so cheap that we can sell them at half price'and make money. If you will need Clothing or Hats in the next twelve months now is the time to buy. Twenty Dollar Suits for 10; Fifteen Dollar Suits for $7; Twelve Dollar Suits for $G. Ten Dollar Suits for 5: Eight Dollar Suits for $4: Six Dollar Suits for $3; Five Dollar Suits for 2.50 BOYS AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING AT HALF PRICE. Hats for Men and Boysat 25 cents each. Hats for McDowell Clothin- Co was in business only a few Good Wool Welse ever offered in Charlotte. Kemember the number, 21 her all, and failed. It is difficult to explain this strange infatuation, es peoially since the terrible lessons of the war. But we will never see any relief until we look our danger squarely in the face. COTTON A GREAT GAMBLING CROP. It is the only field crop, our South ern laborer, the average negro labor, fully understands. If it chances to hit all round, the apparent proGts are simply marvellous. This, with its ready cash value, easy handling, and speculative deuiaud, tempts all classes to the most desperate risks. But a cold or wet spring, a long drought, or rainy spell in summer, an early J frost, or a fall in the price, may blight J still alive and at work; the crop of all these hopes, and leaves the gam- j 1890 a million bales larger than any bling cotton farmer, and the great ' ever made, and chiefly by the darkeys cotton section utterly bankrupt. The in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkan averago cotton farmer and planter, sas, where you can hardly kill them and especially the small farmer, and more the plantors beg fur more. Worse tban especially still, the negro cropper, is all. we now wake up to find that they not to be blamed for the passion for not only raise the "grand mbuoply" cotton, for it is his "all in all." Q IQdia, and in Egypt, but that Rus- Since the years 1831-2-3, when,8Uia and China are taking their the South set out to resist and resent the unjust Abolition movement then fully started against her, she ceased to study all else except cotton and the negro. This led ,to the fatal error and delusiou, that We had a "grand monopoly of cotton," and thkt the darkey could only survive as a slavv, and was only fit for cotton vork. This master ilea developed the old planter class of the Southern white man into the most daring, bold, and adventurous race of soldiers and states men the world has ever produced. We made a heroic fight, and only failed in battle, because the fates were against us on this one vital iwhr.atri;:! prohhtm. Th world was ngainst us on cotton and the nt irro. The world was riht and and we went down in defeat and disaster. Ou the abstract questions of home defence, and State. Tights, we .might hfave won. But cot- ton "and the darkey led us to ruin. But even defeat m battle, failed to open an eyes oa this great delusion. When in 18G5-G, we foUtfil jott0tt cents a pound we svvWe harder than ever that "cotton was after all a king," 'the negro would not work, and a Raleigh paper has published the race would soon die out, and that J SOiue 100 answsrs to about the same the South would vet get the yankee." simple questions. No two agree; and From that day to this the whole in-: not a single one attempls even a fair dustrial South has been gambling on analji-is of the subj-ct. a "rise in cotton." Under this' de- ) X think the Farmers Alliance is do lusion, a frieud of mine at Concord, ng aa excellent work i arousing our who came out of the war with 100,-, people and our public men to a fair 000 in cotton, would not sell at 50 j disouion of such topics. Will any cents (!) but went iu debt for more, 0ne of the nac or old leaders frankly A yotjtb:s: l . : ' . . and finally died insolvent. This ood man was a Christian farmer: so far asf I know, and believe did not speculate in "futures," but it was, none the less, nothing short of down right "farmer gambling. Ten years ago, a tenant agent of mine here near Charlotte, lost his WDole estate of $4,000 in "cotton fu tures." And for more than 25 years the South has been periodically bet ting on a "rise," involving all classes of people and interests, and losing u? hundreds of millions that ought have been made and kept right here at home. Meantime, we now find the "king" on a steady decline, and low- er than ever known before: the neff'ro chances Now cast up the other side of the account. North Carolina pays out annually 2,500,000 for farm horses and mules, many from Kansis and Wyoming (!) which owing to cheaper labor aud capital here than there, could be actually raised here in Meek lenburg for less than they cost in Kansas and Missouri. So, too, we get corn, flour, forage and meats from all the West; potatoes from Scotland, and cabbage from Germany, and turkeys from Richmond. tarm ers of Mecklenburg, tell me if you can. why these things are ro't Wo know, as s fact, that all these imported til tides can be easily pro duced rirht here, or near around us. I If we could save one-half of what wo . so annually pay out, it would soon make our fanners easy. If we could j ave by real agriculture (oiixod J growth) one-third or ooe-four'h of , what wo year after pay out tor truck and plain fruit crof.s, t. eso sauie fur- ers.;wonld become nca aud live muou eabicr. v uy uon i uiey uo n ; Now it is easy to talk acd guess; At 50 cents werth $1; for 75 cents worth $1.50; for $1 worth $2; months. These goods are going fast at half price. Your size West Trade Street- ROGERS AND COMPANY - - aHARL ottb, nT- O- tell us why the good people of Meck lenburg don't raise horses and mules, cattle, hogs and sheep, corn, wheat, oats, hay, potatoes and cabbage, tur keys and other poultry, just as they did 50 or 25 years ago? The market is now at their very doors, and better than it ever was? I want no talk about the general decline of agiicul ture, "Si Plunkard" took that off, and farmers and all laughed heartily. Cotton has not paid the mass of the farmers here for 5 or 10 jears past Why don't they try these other things? I showd that my tenant John Osborne; made money on corn, the bad crop year just past ('91); why don't others try it? - Some 40 years ago Mecklenburg shipped 30,000 bushels of wheat to a single house in South Carolina? Cotton was then a fair price, and wheat rather down, but yet wheat paid? Now it can scarcely be raised here at all. Explain why and there fore? Rufus Barringer. Livingston's Policy. Lenoir Topic. Congressman Livingston, of Geor gia is one of the foremost Alliauce men in the United Sates and one of the truest, best Democrats as well He is the impassioned orator whom Col. Polk brought iuto North Caro lina in the campaign of 1800, at which time he delighted imtneuse au diences at three or four appoint ments. He is a statesman of whom the Alliauce is proud and whom the Democracy delights to honor. He is the type of man who binds together, iu ono indissoluble bond of affection aud common interest, these tvi o grand organizations, the one political and the other non-political. Last week ! an informal meeting or caucus of Al- liance Congressmen was held iu Wash ington. Their number was 25, of whom 18 followed the lead of Mr. Livingston aud 8 flocked with Mr. Simpson. Mr. Simpsou made a speech in reference to the corruptioti in "both old parties" and was particu larly severe upon the Democratic par ty, This brought Col. Livingston to his feet immediately. "The Democratic party is not op posed to us, he cried. "It is will ing and anxiou3 to work for the re lief of our people, and tho gentleman is doing us great harm by talk ing of a third party and insinuating that the Democratic part' is corrupt." ' A Catholic priest of Toledo, Ohio, S has been arrested upon charge of as-" sault on a little girl. m L A-IsTID BOY EE -A- T Will Gold Core Drunkenness I Notes on theKeelej Institute at Greens boro. Stato Chronicle. 1 Greensboro. Feb. 2. There seems to be a lot of mystery and self-mystification regarding the Keeley gold treatment for the cure of druukenness. This is a repetition and reproduction of vaccination when first discovered. Men doubted it because they did not understand how small-pox virus by being engrafted on a heifer and then the matter taken from the heifer and placed in the arm of a human being should fortify against the disease. Yet its efficacy is assured and the practice of vaccination pursued where ever civilization exists. , Many avow their infidelity because they cannot reasou out and explain and reconcile all parts and passages of Holy Writ. With many this is the condition somewhat of the bi-chloride of gold cure. No one of the seventy-five pa tients who have been treated for drunkenness at the Greensboro Keeley Institute can explain -why, after a days' treatment, he lost all taste and desire for strong drink; yet, without a solitary exception, this is the evideoce that has been related to the writer, who adds his own testimony. Both habitual and periodic drinkers of many years' indulgence and in all stages and phases of suffering, from nausea and painful nervousness to the "jiin jams," after a dav or two of the treatment appear comparatively cheerful in the club room circle, or walk about the st, eels without an at tendant. - Tho Greensboro Institute was opened on the 30th of October, 1891, and seventy-five ptticuts have been ! graduated and returned to their homes and business, not only cured of their drinking habit, but with their more less broken down systems built up, and iu good condition. The Chilian court hs at last ren dered a decision in the case of the as sault on the Baltimore in which several citizens of Chili are convicted and"' imprisoned for assaulting the sailors cf the Baltimore. State Chronicle says: It is suggest ed in Baptist circles in Baltimore that Rev. A. C. Dixoo, a former Baltimo rean, now pastor of Hanson Place Baptist Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.t may be called to succeed the late Rev ; C. II. Spurgeon, of London. k - " Si WORTH G ft CLO DAT at half price CO. GOING AT HALF YALTJE. for $1.50 worth 3; for $1,75 is here if you come at once, and Settle Up Your Note or -A.OOOTJISJ T AS IT IS PAST DUE. We take this occasiou to thank our patrons, one and all, for their patron age in the past, and ask for a continu ance of the same. We shall by strict attention to business, courteous and prompt attention, fair and honorable dealing, selling only good goods at legitimate profit, merit your patron age. January the First is pay day. The settlement of accounts is an im portant one. All who owe us a note or, -an account will please call and set tlcat once. We shall put all accounts and notes in the hands of a collector as we must have a settlement in order to close our books for 1891. If you eant pay us all, we want part, and you will do us a favor to come in at once and see us about it; we have now waited a year and must have money, and our friends who owe us are the ones we look to for it. Don't delay this matter as it is uagent and important. If you don't call on us our collector is apt to call on you, so step up and let us hear from you. Our shelves and counters are filled with good honest goods at the very lowest possible prices. Come in and see us. T. L. SEIGLE & CO. -:-t Charlotte, N. C The Leading Dry Goods House of North Carolina. 1 I A r n r G! 0 OF worth more $3.50. This is real value than not an old we or anj 1 I i s t t) K M ft TV