IHE STANDARD. J. M. CROSS, - - Business Manager. Friday, October 5,1888. STOP, SIR. nr. Morton. Ion hall not Collect thin Inlqaitona tax' On the reverse side of this supple ment is a picture portraying the scene that would be witnessed in North Carolina if Levi P. Morton, the Radical candidate for Vice President, wins his snitjnow pending .against the State of North Carolina for the payment of the special tax bonds issued by the Radical Legis lature. Morton is the owner of these infamous Special Tax bonds, issued by the carpet-baggers, and he is seeking to force us to pay them through the Federal Courts. "Worse than Shylock of old he says : "I crave the penalty and forfeit of my boiuH Even though it costs the heart's; beet blood of North Carolinian. The picture is one that it presents is bold relief what would be the result in North Carolina if the Rad ical party has its way. They issued these bonds and sold them. They refused to repudiate them. Theyi are their offspring and the parent loves its own. J God forbid and the Chronicle saysil with all reverence that the! day shall ever come when the party that issued, these Special Tax bonds in defiance of the wishes of the tax- j ir jle w jjj 0!1 v t w nat tie ie. , ut perhaps our Northern breth-1 payers of the State and for purposes I pitl.Iioaii party promised him; if the j reu, and our Southern ou?s, too, of ; of personal profit shall be given con- j s;tatc doe3 1U)t ay jjr yi0tiii what j the Radical persuasion, think that j trol of the State government. If j he is stu.jng for, it W1 .0 because the as these bonds were written with the ; the Radicals are in power what as-j iVmocratsaim-nded the Constitution i bayonet tli-y should be collected j snrance have w that a tax will not ; (J luat tK, ioms cam,ot fce pajj 1 with the bayonet. The Chronicle ; be levied to pay the interest on these j n itMOllt tjK, consent of the people. ' doesn't t hink so. Statet Chronicle. bonds ? That would be equivalent j The ie,ulljiican partv in Xortli Cat- j ? to a confiscation of our property, for oliia tried to cwufl!?c.;te one-seventh i ,or ,he Bo loTh,nk Aboul North Carolinians are too poor to j, f ,h m (v o the ta( jR tie j Exchange. j give one seventh of all their proper-1 flu,h Ja of j, ftwil lf thJ o youm; rnan can be a rer-, ty to rich Mr. Morton, the Radical j r Wri;t3 have stc.pi,d in and saved ! lllar VW" Mk" wt I" candidate for Vice-Pre.ident, who lhe the paviuent U tUia j j 1 is sucing the. State no, to force pay- j it tWs I10t muke the erinie of , jlTlXn tlf I W,' , , the Rquiblioans less. Thiy did all i himself bevond recovery. It i A Cape rear correspondent j thev c-onkl to saddle this tax upon . is a common tliinlr t... asked the Chronicle the following! j, amj ,evk,d aml conecU,a ; liear (,f dentil resulting I questions ; . a ?pwiai (ax 0f -08,407 in 1870 to 'after a few months, or years, of I i. rov vivm purpose was me . special tax bonds issued ? 2. What is the correct amount of i these bonds? I ose bonds? I o. Are mere suns peuumg agtunsi n a ... a I i 1 . . tne Maw ior ine wnuie amount oi j these bonds ? i In view of the record nf M';tonij ine Jtepuoucan canuutate lor ice President, and Dockery, the Repub-; t: 1:1.1... . ... jiL-uii i-anuiuaie ior uuu-ruor, m re-i gard to thMA bonds, these questions ! - 1 i. . .A .L t ate vi .eeiai appuqu mienes ai mis time, ne.mswer tnem tneny a? follows t?.,. 'Pi. : .1 i... 1 i n"B1' AUC W1U1' were issued for the extensible pur- pose of building new raidroads and ! pvtnfliiiff lins nlrf !i(?v l.nilt , It i p, - ....v. i : wasproposedtythe llad:cal legis- latcrs to honey-comb thif State with ranroads and thus I ring prosperity j to the doors of the people. They I were to omid tUese roails bv taxius; ! an impoverished people, and for that purpose the special tax bonds were issued. They were called special tax bnds because a special tax of DC cents on the $100 was levied to pay the interest on them. (Second. The amount of the bonds authorized to be ittsued was between $25,000,000 and 20,000, 000. before they were all issued, however, several causes operated to prevent the issuance of the whole amount. The Supreme Court de cided that bonds issued to corpora tions not in existence were invalid. This prevented the issuing of bonds to tsoine of tho proposed corpora tions. They cair.e into disrepute in various ways and in fact, of the twenty-five millions authorized to be issv.ed, only $14,000,000 were actually issued. The iuterest on these bonds amounts co $10,000,000, making a total of $30,000,000 which tin Radical party put upon the State as a debt, and gave this debt priority over all others by levying a special tax to pay tho interest. In the Constitutional Convention of 1875 Gov. Jarvis offered au amend ment to the Constitution forbidding the Legislature to pay or adjust these bonds without iht ssibnuttinsr it to the people. The amendment was rejected. Oliver II. Doekery, present Republican candidate for Governor, voting against it. In 1880, by the Constitutional lesrisla- tive majority of three-lifihs of the! General Assembly, the following, forbidding the payiueut of these special tax bonds, was adopted. It is prrt of Article 1, Section , and reads : "Nor shall the General Assembly ossniue or pay, or authorize the col lection of any tax to pay, either dir ectly or indirectly, expressly or im- llluill HI1V il,.1,f .-. 1 1 1 r..-, ....j uwl vii uuiiu, incurred or rejucu, v) auuiomy ot the count es 1... .:..K. . .. . . ,,r . . . - . jea. xooci, nor any debt or, Wi,U?CUrrL;dMr kSUd by the Leg Mature of the year 1808, either at us special session of the -ear 1808, or at its re,m!r regu.ur sessions of the years 1 808 and 18C9, ai d 10, u except the bonds issued to fund the interest on the old debt of the State unless the proposing to pay the same shall have first been submitted to the people and by them ratified by the vote of the qualified voters of the State, at a regular election held for that purpose." If it is decided that these special taxes will have to be paid it will re quire that the people of the State shall give to the bondholders more than one-sixth oi all the personal and real property stocks and bonds in the State. The total valuation of all the property in North Caro lina is about two hundred million dollars. It would require that we give to Morton, Rliss & Co., every foot of land, and every piece of per sonal property, including skillets and rabbit dog, in twenty-five of our smalhr counties with Wake and Mecklenburg thrown in. To put it differently: Suppose the property in North Carolina was equally di vided. In order to pay these special tax bonds, Mr. Morton would say to e-ery seventh man in the State, "(Jive me everything you have. It belongs to me," and the, man would have to part with his all. Put every man would suffer, as more than one-seventh of all he has would go into the pockets of Mr. Levi P. Morton and his associates. ' The Chronicle asks everv man wlin i Umikin-r ,if vntinor the 1ft- 1 publican ticki-t to take an inventory ! of all he has and decide which one-! seventh of that property he will ! give to Mr. Morton. If Mr. Morton 1 ., thtM tuf.s f,.,!.. w I nav the interest on these fraudulent I lomh. It is not to the credit of tin- uan,.r,n..n f,- thn. iv,- ! iti iMoiivuii I'ai i ? unit UK i'.iiiov.liHC .. -, , .... j. iiroiioimceu mese uonus irauuuicm 1 t :uul repudiated them, and they can not escape the odium that attaches toej teitx was cue to con-! their beiiayal of th people because gestion of the hnxln from nai-; ( vq len:ocra.s have so tar ivj.;etci i the pavinent even of the interest. i THiKi.-There is a suit now nond-i jn to compcl he 8tafo to pav ,hege lonJ& In fa t th t ' it br0UJ?!lt l)V Morton. Bli & Co-, :he I'ueral court presided over ! Judge Pond, who is detested North Carolinians as is no other hv- ing man 0nc of tfa .ge h-ht 1(V the Hrnu of wlich the Renblican " . . candidate tor ice Presuhnt .s at I the heaJf u h u ju the,r own name in the C0Uft vhich hay. h Wn mmvoJ tQ theFt.deral court WM thrown out of court thev were not citizens. The other suit was in the name of A. II. Tem ple, a citizen of Wake county, and the case coining on to be heard in the Federal court, Judge Seymour, the District Judge, and Judge Pond, the Circuit Judge, both being on the bench, there was a division of opin ion, Seymour holding that the State could not be sued by a citizen of its own or any other State, and Pond holding that the State could be sued by one of its own citizens. The case was certified to the Supreme Court of the United States where it is now pending. The bonds bear on their face that they are genuine. They were issued by legislative enactment. They were given precedence over all other State indebtedness by the levy of a special tax with which to pay the interest The Republicans col lected from an impoverished people in one year $208,407 with which to pay this interest. These bonds were sold by agents thereto duty author ized by proper authorities. It is true that the Democrats all along declared that the bonds would never be paid, if they could help it. For tunately for the State up to this time the Democrats have saved the people. Thy will continue to do it at any huz:;rd. The decision of tho supreme Court is awaited in North Carolina with interest. If that tribunal should dec are the bonds genuine and order us to pay them it would be but en forcing Radical legislation. A Rad- icul administration would yiva nAVM to their former work. What a siht ' fur t3e coutents of th-fc whole shop, it would be to see a Federal -Marshal, ! so as 'ler vvn appetite is con backed up by a lot of bhie-coated ! cerued. The girl who bolted these Federal soldiers, selling the mules and plows of the men, and the bread trays of the women to get money to pay Mr. Vice-President Morton his accursed special tax bonds! Would i there be much sleep of nights in the ! I community while that sort of thins was going on I those circumstances does any man think it anuW k! t.art cf Vr.rth rw!:.,:- . 7 . . 77". "aus 10 P mn nna. ti... 1. 1 . z. r..v unu mc uai:us or Mp i ieu r. Norton than he now r,o,Sn9. I sos? Is it wise to ptit a stick in your enemy's hand to break your head with? Suppose Mr. Morton should be come Vice-President and Mr. Har rison President of these United States, who knows how soon the Supreme Court of the United StateB will be "watered" to carry this suit in favor of Mr. Morton ? The mil lions he would make out of it would be a big thing to reimburse him for his present campaign expenses and to create future campaign funds for the Radical party. It will not do to say that Radical Presidents will not ' water" the Supreme Court to suit their own views, for that very thing has been done, and a Radical President dRl it. It must bo re membered, too, that during the next administration there will be an un usual large number of vacancies on the Supreme Court bench to be filled, in all human probability. If Har rison be Piesident he will fill them, Think you Morton will have no in fluence in the matter, or that he will not use it with an eye to his own in terest? The man who does think so is assuredly very "green." If, therefore, the Federal Supreme Court should agree with the Circuit Judge rather than the District Judge, and should issue its process to its marshals, backed up by Fed eral bayonets, to colloct these bonds, there will be a li vel v time 1 n North Carolina, i?o lively that it is the part of the commonest prudence to do everything in our power to prevent its omiug. excessive excessive ci-rarette smoKin Untly young nian died ; in Philadelphia, lie was only . . sixteen. He was i in the habit . , , if cum .'inir TWAititv cigarrettes ; n ilnv Tliptrfut mm'tpm kIiiiw-' c-tlO prison. Another was at iioimlnr voiiny man of Trow He 1 was a constant smoker. An i effection of the heart was fol-1 lowed by dropsy. Several ; physicians agreed that cigar-j rette poisoning had shattered ; his system. After his death ; one of his veins burst, and the j blood was as black as ink. Business managers of large I commercial enterprises begin to understand that the habit incapacitates for business. A prominent business man in an Eestern city has a sign up over the head cashier's desk; "No cigarette smoking by our men," A couple of hundred clerks are said, as a result, to be su perior to those of other houses in the same line of business. The Illinois Legislature lias passed a bill prohibiting the sellinsr of cigarettes to boys under sixteen vears of age. A boy is as good as worthless who contracts beyond reforma tion this habit. Gtrln in Canity Store. In a confectionery establishment where half a dozen pretty young wUKMi are employed behind the counters I noticed one of the latter cram half a dozen caramels into her mouth at once and appear to enjoy them hugely. Shd stood in full view of the proprietor as she did so and I expected to see him administer a reproof. Instead of doing so he only looked at me and knowingly closed his left eye. "I shanld think terrible inroads must be made in your. stock if all your young women have appetites like that," observed I. "Not a bit of it," he responded, "when a young woman is engaged to sell candy for this house she receives permission to eat just as much as she likes; with the strict understand ing, however, that she is not to carry any out of the store. She avails herself of the permission readily enough, but she doesent devour half so much the second day as she does the first; on the third she gets awav ! with even less and at the end of a week she wouldn't give you ten cents caramels just now thinks see's the luckiest girl alive. In a week the won't care whether all thq candy 10P3 111 tau C0Uutl7 keep school or not so long as her own emplopment Us secure. Mv advice to a vnnth with a candy devouring girl is for him to feed her steadily with it for a week At the end of a week be ,LrA'i,:, i n ,, - 1 vn.,vo oain n nu?r uses. Chicaso Journal. THE TOMB Or THE TINKER. Where the Dust of John Banyan Lies. London Daily News. Two hundred years ago to morow i. e., on Friday, August 31, 1688 John Bun yan, the strange dreamer, en tered the land where there is "no night." In Bunhillfields, near the city road, may be seen any day by the passer-by, the tombstone, on which runs this inscription: Mr. John Bitnvan, Author of the "Pilgrim's Progres," Ob 31st, August, 1G88, Mt CO." Twelve other persons at the least were interred in the same vault, and their names will be found inscribed thereon. But it is JohnBunyan's tombstone, and thither pilgrimages are constantlybeing made, not only by English speaking people on this side of the sea, but by American divines, and others hardly divine who cross the Atlantic, and who, when here, pay homage to the man whose works are a household name with them as much as with us. Two hundred years to-day, in the house of his friend, John Strudewick, who kept a grocer's shop under the sign of the Star on Snow hill, John Buntan breathed his last. He had come up from Bedford to London that he might place in the.printer's hand his "Excel-1 leucy of a broken Heart." TheJ fame of his "Pilgrim" seems I to have made him popular, ; and his preaching services in ! the citv were often attended by thousands. Charles Doer itii "The Struggler," published j four years after Bunvan'sl death says: "When Mr. Bun-i van preached in London, if there were but one day's no tice given, there would be more : people come to gather to hear him preach than the meeting house could hold. I have seen to hear him preach, by my computation, about V2Oat a lecture by ? o'clock on a work ing day. in the dark winter time. I also computed about 3,00 that came to hear him (tne Lord's day at London at a town's end meeting house, so that half were fain to go back again for want of room, and then himself was fain, at a back door, to be pulled al most over the people to get up-stairs to his pnlpit." It is said that on one occasion King Charles II asked Dr. Owen how he, who had so much learning, could hear a tinker preach, to which the doetar replied: "May it please your Majesty, had I the tinkers abilities for preaching I would most gladly relinquish all mv learning. When, in August 10SS, Bunyan journeyed for the last time to London, lie road via Reading. Alas! drenching rain fell for the the closing forty miles of his journey,, and when he reached the house of "his very loving friend,. John Strudewick," (who later was buried by his side,) lie was throughly worn out. He had only strength to preach once, near Whitechaple, and his successor and biographer says that the last word he ever ut tered in a pulpit were proba bly those which closed his sermon on that eventful occa sion. They were these: con sider that the holy God is your Father, and let this oblige you to live like children of God, that you may look your father in the face with comfort an other day." That was on Au gust 19, 1G8S. Two days later he was seiael with fever and on the Friday week he died, having endured "with much constancy and patience" a season of severe suffering. The Rev. John Brown, D. D. the present minister of the church at Bunyan Meeting, Bedford, gives in his standard life of Bunyan the folio win ex tracts from the church book touching the effect of the news which told them of their pastor's death: "Wednesday, 4th of September, was kept in prayere and humilyation for his Heavy Stroak upon us, ye Death of dear Brother Bunyan. Apoynted also that Wednes day next be kept in praire and humiliation on the same Ac count." John Biinyau wrote sixty books and lived sixty years. His chief work. "The Pilgrim's Progress," has been translated into no less than seventy-two distinct languages and dialects, and thus has had a wider cir culation and been more read than any book next to the Scriptures. More than fifty years ago Macaulay spoke of it as "the only book of the kind that posessesses a strong human interest, that while other allegories only amuse the fancy, this has been read bv thousands with tears." What was true then is no less true bow. 1. . It is said that on the train yester day, during a conversation between Capt. Kitchiuand Col. Doekery, the former asked the Colonel to di vide time with him at his appoint ments, but Col. Doekery demurred. "Well," said Capt Kitchin, "I am in dead earnest. And I will tell you what, if you will divide time with us I will pay your expenses during the whole trip otit of my own pocket." The Colonel still " demurred and Capt. Kitchin pressed him to accept the offer but the Colonel was obdu rate and decline outright to agree to the proposition. Col. Doekery evi dently don't want to have any more joint discussions. Valuable Property FOE SALE. I will sell Thursday, November 1, 1888, to the highest bidder, 1 house and lot (1 acres of bind) situated in the town of Mt. Pleasant, known as the Mt. Pleasaut Hotel. A 2 story frame building, 9 large convenient rooms, all outside buildings neces sarj', 1 good well of water. 1 large b.iru, shedded all around, and a splendid orchard bearing choice fruit. This property is the most desirable in town. I will also sell some household and kitcken furni ture. Two good schools are in operation here, North Carolina College, aud a Female Seminary. So any one hav ing children to educate will do well to attend this bargain sale. I will sell the same day one small tract of land consisting of 40 acres, more or less, situated about one half mile from town. Any information desired will ad dress me at 3It. Holly, N. C. Terms reasonable. Respectfully, JNO. LENTZ. M. J. CORL'S CONCORD, X. C I have moved into the stable late ly occupied by Brown Bros., near the courthouse. The best accommo dations for drovers. Leave yc in orders at the stable or with J. L. Brown Porter for omnibus. Horses and mules for 1 ale. M. J. CORL, Proprietor. LADIESWy1! D Yomt Ovrn Dyeing, mt Home. Ti jf iil dye CTerythiny. They i.re sold every, where, Vrii-e IOC. a pneka.e. 'i'liry liavenoequal for Strength, Unghtue, Amount in Packages or for F-iitTif of Color, or noti-l:i iiujr Qualities. They do not crock er smut; 40o'.or. for lals by For sale at 12 FETZER'3 DRUG STORE, and D. D. JOHNSON'S DRUG STORE. NOTICE. As administrator of John J. Alli son, deceased, I will sell at public sale on the premises, on the first Monday in October, for assets to pay debts of said deceased, a valu able tract of land, containing fifty acres,, adjoining the lands of Stafford Goodman John P. Allison aud Davis Biumly. Terms of sale, one third cash, balance of purchase money to be seemed by good note at 8 per cent interest, payable twelve months after date. F. Davis Brtjmly. Admr. of J. J. Allison, deo'd. Aug. 31, ISSfl. it. A 32-ftliim Paw. Containing more reading mailer than any jxtfier eve?' published in Concord. Dyed-in-the-wool Demo cratic. llilf $1.25 a k Job "Work A SPECIALTY. Address THE STAND ARD, Concord, C. m ! m--r tsar 1 THE STANDARD mm t ln fas NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE. Next session begins, the - first Mon day of September. Location healthy. Terms Moderate. For catalougue or paiticulars, ad dress, Rev. J. G. SCO AID, IWt, Mt. 1'ieasant, N. f, August 3, 188, Mortgage Sale of Town Lot. By auth riiy of raortgsgp-deed ex ecuted to me by Wilson Icaid and his life, Vary Jane, on the 3id day of November, 1883 and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Cabarrus coin ty, in li' k 37, page 394. 1 will sell, by publ c aud ion, for cash, nt lhe court house door in Con cord, N. C. on Monday the 3rd day of September, '88, at 1 1 in, one fine lot in Coleburg, near Concord on Tourn ament Place street, fifty feet front, with good dwelling etc., being tbe same described in and conveyed, to me, by said murtgagedeed. ASA BOST, Trustee. Concord, N,U.,July. 26, -'88. Aug 3. '88 Concord Female Academy, The next session of this Institu tion opens Monday, Aug. 13th., 1888. Having secured the services of competent teachers, the Princi pals offer to the community the advantages of a first class school, and ask r. continuance of the same patrorage so liberally given in the past. Tuition in Literary Depart ments 1.50 to $3.50. Music $3.00 to 1.00. For further information ap ply to Misses Bessext. & Fetzeb Principals. THE ONLY SHOE POLISH FOK SALE UY Cannons & Fetzer. BIEDMONT AIR-LINE ROUTE I RICHMOND AND DANVILE RAILROAD. Condensed schedule in effect June 24th, 1887. Trains run by 75 Meridian limp. J )..!. . .".. .;i0 SOUTHBOUND. Daily .Xo. 52 Leave X,w Ytuk Philadelphia Baltimore Washington Ch:ultte.-viIIe Lynchburg Ar. Danvi.le Lv. Iik-lmiund IbnkeviPe Keysville Diak' "s Uiancli Dnvil!e Ar. Greensboro Lv. (lol Uboro Ualeigli Dai bam fr-apd lliil llibsboro Ar. Gieetisboro I v Salem (ireensb'Mo High Point Ar Salisbury State&vjUe Aslievillc Uot Springs Lv Salibbniy Ar Co cord . harlot !e Spartanburg Greenville Atlanta 4 30 pm T 20 am 9 4.3 am 11 24 am 3 40 1 ni i 5t pin 8 30 pm 3 10 pm 5 17 pm 5 57 pm 0 13 pm 8 50 pm 10 3G pm 2 40 pm 5 (JO p m 0 04 pm t 2.1 pm G 37 jnn S 35 pm 7 LO 1 in 10 45pm 11 15 nm 1-' 01 am 1 51 am 7 28 am 9 15 am 12 2fi am I 10 am 1 55 an 4 40 am 5 50 am 11 00 pm u oi 1 in 9 42 nm 1100 pm J fu am 5 10 am 7 45 am 2 30 am 4 24 am 5 V5 am 5 20 am 8 05 am 9 42 am f8 10 1 m 1 45 am 3 12 am 4 0g am 7 40 am C 30 am 9 50 am 10 10. am 11 18 am 12 12 pm 4 31 pm filO 1 m II 23 pm 1 2 pm 12 40 pm 3 37 pm 4 48 pm 9 40 pm Daily. No. 51, NOBTHBOUXD. Daily. No, 53. Leave Atlanta Arrive GreenviUo Spartanburg Charlotte Concord Salisbury 6 00 pm 7 40 am 1 0G am 313 am. 4 50 am 1 51 pm 3 53 pm 3 30) pm 6 30 pm 7 05 pm 11 40 am 1 25 pin 5 56 pm 6 38 pm 7 15 pm 8 15 pra 8 40 pm 12 34 am 10 50 pm 3 10 pm t4 30ani t6 55 am til 43 am 9 50 pm 10 20 pm 1 23 am 1 45 am 1 45 am 5 00 am 12 53 am 3 05 am 7 00 am 20 am 10 47 pm 1 20 pm 5 43 am G 22 am Lv. tHot Springs 8 P5 pm A6heville 9 55 pm btatesvilie Ar. Salisbury Lv. Salisbury Ar. High Point Greensboro. Salem Lv Greensboro Ar Hillsboro Chapel Hill Durham Raleigh Goldsboro Lv. Greensboro Danville Drake's Branch Keysville Burkeville Richmond 3 30 am 4 37 am 6 27 am 7 32 am 5 00 am 11 40 am 9 50 am 1 55 am tl 15 am 12 35 am 1 15 pm 4 10 pm 8 05 am 9 47 am 12 23 pra 12 40 pm 1 25. pm 3 30 pm 11 40 pm 2 25 pm 7 35 pm 8 50 am 3 00 am 6 20 am Lynonburg unariottesviiie Washington Baltimore Philadelphia New York Daily. tDaily, except Sunday. SLEEPING CAK SERVICE. On trains 50 and 51 Pullman Buffet sleeper between Atlanta and New York. ( On trains 52 an 1 ? Pullman Bullet Sleeper between Washington and Montgomery ; Washington aud Au gusta. Pullman sleeper between R'chmond and Greensboro. Pull man sleeper between Greensboro, and Raiaisfo. Pullxan vparlor car between Salisbury aud Knoxville. Through tickets on sale at pricipal stations to ail points. For rates and information apply to any agent of tne company, or to Sol Hass, J. S. Potts, Traffic Man'r, Div. pass. Ag't, W. A Tcbk, R chmond, Va, Div. Pass. Ag't, Jas, L. Tayloe, Raleigh, N.'C. Gen, Pass, Ag't, YORKE & WADSWQRTH, Hardware Headquarters. f;ERCHi ! S, MECHillCS, LUGliUERS, f.ilHERv Farmers and Everybody Else can be suited in Hardware at YORKE & WADSWORTUxS at bottom for tbe CASH. Our stock is full and complete. A splendid line of C.ju'k Stove? and cook:ng utensils in stock. Turning Plows, PIot Stock?, Harrows, Belting, Feed Cutter?, Cornshellers, Tinware, Guns, Pistols, Knives, PowdW Shot and Lead, Doors,Sash and Blinds, Shingles, Glass, Oils, White Lead' Paints and Patty a specialty ; Wire Screen, Oil Cloths, wroaght, cut and Uone Shoe Nails, and iu act everything usually kept iti a hardware st-ire. 'e will sell all these goods as cheap, quality considered, as any house in North Carolina. Our warehouse is Oiled with Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, Reapers, Mow ers, Hay Uakes, of the best make On the market, which must and will be sA at the lowest figures. Be sure to come to see us, wHether you buy or not. YORKE & WADSWORTH. P. S. We have always on hand at prices to 6uit. COME AND SEE US! YOU WilL SAVE f .1 0 ff E GREAT REDUCTION In Prices of Grose-ie to Uilats oar Im.n3)se Stock, we otfer 75 BBLS. OF SUGAR, 25 SACKS OF COFFEE, 25 BOXES OF TOBACCO, 10 GAIL AND AX SNUFF, 2,000 FLOUR SACKS, 25 BBLS BOB WHITE FLOUR. Our Goods a'e all bought duect from the Largest and Best Houses for CASH, And we can sell you groceries for less money thau youcan buy elsewhere. Wfe have a large stock of Tinware, Soap, Soda, Powder and Shot, And many other goods in our line, and you will always find our prices as low as the lowest. PATTERSON'S CHEAP CASH STORE. WE ARE NOW READY! HAS AIRIRI'XriEJlD. WITH A NEW JOB PRESS AND OUTFIT WE ARE NOW ALL KINDS OF PLAIN, COMMERCIAL, BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. Those needing anything in our us a call. Opposite : - Lister's and Waldo Guano and Wando Acid Y. & . AND Y BY SEEING 0(ft PRICES. PREPARED TO DO FANCY, line will find it to their interest to giv 6 : Postofifice.