Newspapers / The Times-Democrat (Charlotte, N.C.) / Nov. 2, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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0 :'" Charlotte. CHARLOTTE NEW& Largest circulation nJCliarloSfc IMECKLENBVRG TIMES. Largest circulation in Meckp burg. Put your advertisemex& where it will reach the most.c your customers. 1' .: ; .n .rit'cn.icii OTF1 IFir if nmikiirtr Tin VOL VIII rt;;.e "t Constancy. 1KUS-COLUMN jt-,. . :i or women to aMished house ..!.; expenses, fcn-j.- ! i !ivelope. The V. ;-r Chicago. 'JiHOt. Two g d laree '. :le horse Habb '- It. . . ,iv. Pont want : W a' kins. "J9-1 1 j , - vl at J M. I m at ! And ehiMrens ! !, Mission chartr- ; (i rabani, (. har- hi tf. ' to -IX' aores of improvements, . . Apply at onee 8 it v c ::irjutte call at :; r Al'KANT, No. v. wuere wc guar ; ;!. Best Meal iu . Give lis a trial. 3 Hamilton, Prop. A R, P. SYNOD. John ! tr.aiiiici iiiivi ui me ."Weting in Texas. Teh:. T. Chalmers, pastor of v v i .. ::. p. has returned n, J r tne Associate . -e;ir i ans, Tex., -: meeting in the ?aid -Mr. Chal- T.:- v.uance was uns ; m thousand miles. i tenon m o;: worK is m a For the first time V-.-rn Presbyteries r witli men. :. miiiion work is L? i'.'.r.. : :, -- :.:-.:y in Mexico, I'. K. 1 ?':v. was a class mate i. and went out ;i":hr vr..;d owns over $25, r:.. ; r ii-nv in Mexico," ("luj. "and raised near- ' : 'r :.. - w .rk. ::r; : ; vratiou with the v ; ..in Church was : by the Synod, . . T-ud del more -mission work of , - : 'a: motion to se- . -..ni-nt at an early .. -.are worth over - --...s !i:au-chairman orange for the - iru-r centennial : v f Kev. W. M. : .. --kiue. College, in ' .. -' :':? is the oldest . f anv of the and it is pro - ' -v-Dt the most . -tf the institu :h year. But '. ci'Ieiit, Dr. Grier i j'-'nvj about 50 vcar Erskine . .;;e record" both i ients and the - i.Iowment, now ' . ". mark. y-ur the college i irifts from one , ; 12,000. 'A'-.-nt f om here to : " " personal super A. . (iullagher, who :.. party with a Hi : iys T..'ie crops along but not so bad from reports. t( Utt L'sed to Guns. News. k, Oct. 30. A us;:-: last night by the "Marmora." It caused r n merit to urge f'tiicu Kmbassv that the Fr Practice ,p KllrJ fnrfVipr F? erv. To "Pr-onnVl 0ri'el;-td that he regret-,.ftf:ir- UiT the people should r-tomfcd to the sound of Bank Statement. Urease .-,r--':' '. ' -Lit L I- ,- , i 1 ' . f. 2,502,325 3,869,100 2,545,800 552,700 2,036,900 14,800 fer Urease, grease, HANNA'S HIRED MEN. s Y AR TRYING TO SELL OUT B0T4 POPULISTS AND DEMO CRATS. lickets Printed Here in Charlotte Bearing the Names of Only Five Electors Scheme to Steal the State for McKinley. Mark Han na's money is at work in this State, in this county, in this city of Charlotte. ! Chairman Faulkner, of the Demo- I cratic National Campaign Commit tee, wired yesterday to Chairman ! Manly of thp Democratic State com mittee, that $25,000 in cash has just been sent into the State by Mark Hanna to be used at once. All this is to be used in an at tempt to make Populists scratch the Democratic electors and Dempcrats scratch the Populist electors. This is the only chance on earth for Mc Kinley to carry the State, and it is at this point the attack of the Re publicans is directed. Mark Hanna's hired men in all parties are operating this scheme. This week a number of tickets bear ing only the names of the Populist electors were printed here in Char lotte and will be sent out over the State in small packages to be dis tributed to Populist voters, who will be urged both by Kepublicans and traitors to the Populist party to vote for only half the electors on the joint electoral ticket. Then they hope to persuade enough Democrats to scratch the other half of the electors to cut down the total vote for Mr. Bryan one half. But neither honest Democrats (nor honest Populists will be deceiv ed by these traitors these hired men of Mark Hanna. Every honest Populist and every honest Democrat who believes sin cerely in free silver and the Chicago platform will vote for every elector on the joint electoral ticket. For he knows that this is the only way his'vote will count for Bryan. They will not be sold out by the hirelings of Hanna. Look at Your Ticket. The Republicans have concocted a number of schemes :o rob the voters of this State of their franchise and turn North Carolina over to McKiniey. Thy have had printed thousanbs of bogus Democratic tickets more than eleven electors on them, changed in some particular. Watch your ballot! Take only the regular tickets giv en out by the Democrats at the polls! NICOLL VS. CARLISLE. Mr. DeLancey Nicoll, of New York, suid in his speech at the opera house last night: "What makes the United States silver dollar that has in it only fifty cents worth of silver, pass for one hundred cents? It is because the government stands ready to redeem it in goid. Mr. John G. Carlisle, Secretary of the Treasusy, says in his special report issued July 1, 1896, (circular No. 123) on page 11: "Neither silver certificates nor silver dollars are redeemed in gold. Has Left the Populists. Mr. Harry Taylor, of Long Creek township, was in the city today. He came into the News office and publicly announced that he could not stand the Populist fusion with negroes and their pandering to the negro, and he has left the Populists and will vote the Democratic ticket from Bryan clear down. Cotton 8 to 10 Points Lower. By Telegraph to The News. New York, Oct 30. Cotton is eight to ten points lower today, in consequence of disapproving Liver pool advices. CHARLOTTE. N, C. MONDAY. NOV 2 1896 ' - t WHAT BOLTERS SAY "The finance which they teach is entirely Confederate fiat. In the J y Southern Confederacy the same leaders who now are in command ofM the picket guards for free silver at 16 to 1 were leading financiers.., ;,And Harris, Pugh, Morgan, and the other Confederate generals now., , in command of the Bryan campaign seek to accomplish, by. false fi-. nance, that which they failed to bring about by arms national dis-., ..grace." J. Sterling Morton, Secretary of Agriculture, (Bolting Gold. .Democrat.) I, "Will you submit to this conspiracy between the profes Clonal farmer, the farmers who cultivate the quarrels of their, neigh- . bors, farmers who labor with their jaws, Populist agitators of the.; ..West and the unreconciled slave holders of the South? This is a., . conspiracy between professional farmers, who want to pay low wages,., .,and the unreconciled slave-holders, who would like to pay no wages , .at all." Burke Cockran, (Bolting Gold Democrat) in New York, , i, August 18th, 1890. "To Union Soldiers: 'Vote as you shot!' "New York Sun (gold , .standard.) . In an editorial a few days ago the New York World (gold standard),; ..said that the West advocated free silver because of self-interest, the , . South because half the ignorauce of the county was found here, and., ..added that "repudiation became popular in the South in the years fol-., ..lowing the war," arguing that the people of the South are dishonest,, y "But, when one of these speakers forgets the courtesy due from him , i,.to his audience and hurls insult at an intelligent, honest, conscientious , pauiouc element in tne community, as did tlie Husband of Mis. , Burton Harrison last night we think the mark has been reached., where forbearance ceases to be a virtue, and we consider that any , journalist would be recreant to his duty who failed to lesent and de- J nonnce such an insult as an infamous slander. This man Harrison, 1 who has attained some notority from the fact that he was private sec- J retary to Jefferson Davis and from the further fact that he is the, ..husband of a gifted writer, stood up before an audience, composed in j part oi wnite uemocrats, and made l fuee silver mex ake HONEST,' and ones, who favor the free coinage of r pose, or words to this enect. Winston (A. (J.) Sentinel, Oct. 27. 1 i 2. . 2. 2. - L 1. 2. - 2. 1. 2. 2. 2 2 ' " vv.- FRAUDULENT NEGRO VOTERS. Mark Hanna Depending On Them. How the (ioldbug Sun Figures It. A telegram from Charlotte appears in the New York Sun of the 19th. It claims that the stockholders and owners of mills were sound mon ey Democrats but now are working for McKinley, and says: "They are in a quiet but effective way advising their operatives to ?ote for McKin lev. Sound money literature and McKinley buttons are being distri buted." It goes on thus: "All the mill supply concerns and banking establishments are for McKinley. The legal fraternity is in the main for sound money, and many votes will be cast for McKin ley by them. The preachers are ad vising the people from the pulpit to follow the dictates of their consci ences about voting. Many of the mill men are for Palmer, but fearing the loss of their vote, will vote for McKinley. "The State, to sum it up, is liiled with McKinley Democrats. The Northern population in the State will vote for McKinley. This State has a new election law, made by the Republican-Populist fusion Legisla ture of two years ago, that will make a great difference in the coming election. It allows every man to re gister and then be challenged, but there is not much chance to keep away many who should not vote. "More negroes will vote this year than have voted for years They are thoroughly organized and en thusiastic with the hope of victory. All over the State they are out re gistering with the whites, and this year they will vote solid for McKin ley. They even threaten to cowhide any negro that votes the Popocratic ticket, so the solid black vote will go for McKinley." The special says that it is further more claimed that 500 "Popocrats" (whether that may be) in Mecklen burg county will vote for McKinley. It is apparent that Mark Hanna and the Republicans are banking on "the enormous registration of un qualified negro voters" that Holton boasts of, to turn the State over to McKinley and negro rule. They hope to retain on the registration books the names of these thousands who are illegally registered and by this fraud to carry the State. But the Democrats will see to it that they do not Tote all the negroes they have hauled in from South Carolina and Virginia, and all the convicts who are out of the penitentiary. ABOUT THE SOUTH.i tne assertion that '-very few that all, except a few deluded silver do so from a dishonest pur- j FINAL CALL TO PATRIOTS. It is Their Duty to See That Every Democrat Casts His Ballot. Chairman James K. Jones, of the Democratic National Executive Com mittee; President Chauucey F. Black, of the National Association of Dem ocratic Clubs, and Secretary Law rence Gardner issued the following address last night: "To the voters of the United States: "In the preliminary battle of the people against the plutocracy the people have already won. In spite of an expenditure of money so large that the civiiizeu world stands ap- palled at it smasrnitude, the lame majority of the people of the Unit ed States are in onen revolt against the merciless gold standard and the domination or the country by the syndicated wealth of Europe and America in preventing legislation and in controlling the execution of laws in their interest. All that is necessary to secure the will of the people is that every voter come to the polls and cast an unpurchased ballot. Many of the millions col lected by the syndicates have been reserved for election dar. Beaten at every point, the last resort of money is to buy the ballot of the voter by purchasing his absence from the polls, or to coerce his vote by in timidation. To prevent this is pos sible, for every patriot will do his duty. Every member of the club must go to the polls early in the morning of election day, cast his ballot and remain there until the polls close and the result is an nounced. Take care that every voter gets to the polls and casts his vote. Note down the names of every absent voter. Let it be known that the citizen who fails to vote, unless prevented by extreme illness, has either been purchased by the money of the corruptionists, or is otherwise unworthy to be called a citizen. All signs indicate the overwhelming triumph of the people, and to no or ganizations is more credit due for this than to the clubs, the people's organizations, created for no selfish purpose and battling for the liber ties of the people as in the days of their founder, the illustrious author of the Declaration of Independ ence. Jean DeReske Harried. By Telegraph to The News. Paris, Oct. 30. Jean DeReske, the famous opera singer, will be married to the Countess DeMailly Nesle todaj. RUSSELL FOR MIXED SCHOOLS? Scheme to Compel Social Equality What the Greenville Reflector Says. Do you favor mixed schools? Do you want the white children to be compelled to associate on equal terms with the black pickanninnies? The Greenvillle Reflector calls at tention to this great danger. It says: "There is good reason to think that Eussell, the Republican candi date for governor of good old North Carolina, will be elected unless every Democrat and every true patriot who desires a white man's government, shall do his duty on the 3d of No vember. "Do white men know that Russell is in favor of mixed schools in North Carolina? "What does Mixed Schools mean? It means that it shall be compul sory for white children and colored children to attend the same school at the same time, and study from the same books. "The school fund will be so ap portioned that the mixed school on lv shall be maintained from the j fund. This is Russell's scheme to win the negro vote. He promises their children equal advantages with white children. "But how do white men regard this? Do they want their children to go to school with colored chil dren? "A vote for Russell means that. We call on all true North Carolin ians to vote for no man who thua seeks to humiliate the white peo ple." FODAY'S NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. The Dutch steamer, the Pacific steamer ".tna i "Cordelia," from Montevideo, were in collision in Hamburg harbor last night; the "Cordelia" was sunk. A telegram from a Liverpool grain firm to Minneapolis dealers says: "We are now practically dependent upon America for our grain sup plies for the next month and the price will be fixed by America." It is telegraphed from Washing ton today that Postmaster General Wilson does not want his name con sidered in connection with the chief judgeship of the Court of Claims. Progress is favorable in negotia tions for holding a conference on the Turkish question proposed to the powers by Prime Minister Salisbury. A dispatch today from Fargo. North Dakota, says that M'lle B.au veit, the soprano concert singer who recently went there for a divorce, has returned east, because her iden titv became Known At Cleveland, Ohio, the American Wire Worke started up today on double time. General Joseph T. Torrence, on of Chicago's wealthiest men, died last night Georgia Cayvan, the noted actress, gives her farewell performance in New York tonight. Flag Day in New York. By Telegraph to The News. New York, Oct. 31. Never be fore w7as flag day so generally cele brated as todavr. This added much to the spirit of patriotism, flags being hoisted by both silver and gold ad vocates. The marches in the parades are chiefly employees of business houses, the heads of which are tak ing a strong stand for gold. The day is generally observed as a holi day. Dynamite Schooner Blown Up. By Telegraph tc The News. Salem, Mass., Oct. 31. The schooner "Emma G. Mott," laden with dynamite, was blown up in Salem harbor this morning by an explosion of a portion of the cargo. The captain's son and several mem bers of the crew were injured ser iously. - Bryan's Campaign to Date. Number of speeches deliver ed 543 Cities and towns spoken in . 435 States spoken in 29 Miles travelled since the nomination 17,831 Number of words spoken on the stump (estimated) . . . 815,000 Bryan a Pythian. Wm. J. Bryan, Democratic Presi dential candidate, has been a Pythian since July, 1886, then a charter mem ber of Jacksonville Lodge, No. 156, Jacksonville, Illinois. NO 419. TO THE . RESCUE, TEN NEW YORK BANKS COME TO RELIEF OF MONEY MARKET. On Their Offer to Loan Any Amount Up to $10,000,000 Honey Fell to 36. By Telegraph to The News. "'I New York, Oct. 30. (2 p. m.) Late this morning ten leading banka. with a surplus of $50,000,000 came. somewhat to the relief of the money market, causing the rate to decline to? thirty six per cent , by sending aii agent to the stock exchange prepared: to iend any amount up to ten mil lions. The banks in the syndicates aret: The Fourth National, Gallatin, Han over, American, Exchange," First Na tional, Third National, Park, Mer chants and Continental. All ara National Banks. They will endeavor to avoid the necessity of issuing; clearing house certificates. Thi measure will probably be resorted to in the event that the money market continues to advance. Money Sixty Per Cent. By Telegraph to The News. ' New York, Oct. 30. The first loans of money . this morning wem made at fifty, but immediately jump--ed to sixty and brokers scurried: everywhere in efforts to make quick; renewals. The stress is pressing; hard; the stock market is slightly higher. SU!HS CORBIN S ESTATE. Miss Nelson, a Handsome Blonde. Wants $50,000 of the Honey 11c Left. By Telegraph to The News. New York, Oct. 30. Miss Mat hilde Nlson, a prepossessing blonde about twenty -four years old, called at the office of Howe & Hummel this morning and announced that she was r ady to proceed in a sensa tional suit for $50,000 against the estate of the late Austin Corbin. She has been traveling a great deal ov.'-v the Corbin railways on annual fr passes, and was also supplied by Corbin with funds to visit Sweden. The basis of the suit is the claim that Corbi;1 if: tended to invest fifty thousand i'o: iier support after his. death. Messrs. Howe & Hummel say the trial, which begins this afternoon in the Supreme court, will be quite sensational. Blizzard Sweeps the West. By Telog-iaph to The News. Chicago, Oct. 30. A snow storm prevails throughout th wvst. Trains are blockaded, and ships delayed. Heavy winds prevail here and down the Mississippi valley. Nebraska is covered with ten menes ot snow. Inere will be a severe loss 01 range cattle in the blizzard. Union Pacific trains are snow bound. Promises Higher Price Later. Cy Telegraph to The News. ' New York, Oct. 30. Wheat both here and in Chicago is slightly lower than last night's closings The surprising strength of wheat in the face of the money s?rengency shows that its statiscal position here and abroad is tavorable to a higher price later on. . Cardinal Von Hohenlohe. By TelegTaph to The News. 1 Rome, Oct. 30. Cardinal Gustav Adolf von Hohenlohe Schieling furst, brother of the Chancellor of the German Empire, arch-priest and Librarian of the Basilica, died this morning of apoplexy. m Negroes Killed in a Tornado. By Telegraph to The News. Vicksburg, Miss., Oct. 30. A tornado passed through Tensaa parish, La , last night Six negroea were killed and there is widespread destruction of property. Wheat in Baltic Harket Unchanged. By Telegraph to The News. London, Oct. 30. At the Baltic today California wheat was held at yesterday's prices. One mark hold ers asked for higher prices bat there were no buyers to test values.
The Times-Democrat (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Nov. 2, 1896, edition 1
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