Newspapers / Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, … / Aug. 13, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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if. '?fer?i , ii-iim Brings Success iiisii in! vert i.se in tlielioiui Li:.r, is shown by its well li!!nl advert ising;eolumiis '.V As an Advertising Medium The Uoi.n a:v stands at the lieuiLf newspapers in this section of the famous SENSIBLE BUSINESS MEN 1 1 i roil! to spend ooil money where no , -mIiIc n tui us are seen. The iihinI with -awake aii-1 Mim sxfal business men That is Proof that it Pays Them.! 0 u.-e its et.Iuimis with the highest j Satisfaction asd Profit to Themselfes.! I I I II XHAD R. MANNING, PablisLer. Carolina, OAHoiiiisrA , Heaven's Blessings .A-ttjsiid Her. 7) j SUBSCEIPIIOI $1.50 Cash. VOL. XV. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1890. NO. 35. m f w.-.v.,.-- Al Ik .i,d .cans sound health. With pure, ,,. t.. i!t!iy blood, the stomach and di- :. i ..rt'SMis will tie vigorous, and there :l i. i:o i!y.-ipf psiti. ftheumatism and .r;ilL.'i;i will he unknown. Scrofula and !i Kin will disappear. With pure ,:.r in-rves will be strong, and your . ;, w urid, sweet and refreshing. I'-i Sarsajiarilla makes pure blood. i-i why it cures so many diseases. ,,u is why ho many thousands take it i-urr i! incase, retain good health, pre nt mm kness and suffering, liemember Sarsaparilla I , ( in.- '1 1 1:- I;!ikm1 l'urifur. Si per bottle. ii-ii c,lr,; I.ivT Ills; easy to riOOU S I'll IS U!.c, easy to ouerute. . FRANCIS A. MACON, fSnrfjoon Dentist, i i m . i : i . s ) T , n ( ) i r n ( ; a r o l i n a !l."il in opt'i;itive and inccliaiiical ,1 ; No charge for examination. 'II : Ir. 1!iiviI' old rooms, over i . . j.. i ,V Mitelii-ll's tore. J. U. '.M D(:i:i:s, AI TOUVKV AT liAW, 1 1 1 ; v; i i: n ; . - - n. ' l.lic- I !i' In Harris' law I m t i 1 I i : 1 1; m-ai a- dec;',! -Hi i . s. n a iii:is. DENTIST, iii;hi:Kso', N. C. ; )i!icc : l.-i-t. K. Davis' stoic. Main San. 1-a. ALKX. T. IUUNES. Undertaker & Iimbalmcr. Burial Suits and Shoes ! r M-.n. Wmncn ar.d ('hildren. it cki;i; I'.t'ii.DiNc, IIKNDKRSOX. N. C. Ri-P-A;N-S 'I'hc way to stoji coii'tipa !i hi is t stait digesli.m. Tiie way to iri d.t;i:sti'Ti is to Uke "Ripans l .il.nlrs." This remedy is remaikably i !!' tive in rei;iiKitin disorders of the i'..m u ii. I sell "Ripans Talmles" I r -,oc a box. There are 36 (loses in ( 11 '1 lr, and one dose will give relief. 3ARKER The way to save money i : t buy at the right drug store. The i.ht drug store is Parker's. It's right ill alon; the line. It's a store for t vt i vbody. It's a store where 100 :-n!s buvs :i dollar's worth of goods n matter wh 1 brings in the dollar. Ka h .mi Ivie. .or alike get saiisfaction W. W. PARKER, iV!io!;,5.ilt: an l Kctail Drnauist, IIKNDKRSON, N. C. AHTISEPTli' HEALING Oil - - T-.r F.arb Wire Cuts, Scratches. Sd.'.i. ana Collar Calls, Cracked Heel -''to-.. 1.1 Sores, Cuts, Boils, Bruises, 1 . all kiiitis of inflammation on :'.iti Least. .Cures Itch and Mange. r3 c? r-ira k-UI sever iti:i !ter ti oil l ; r. ;rc,l for accident J bv kecpinp it inrour : --v . 1 t.'.ie. A'.'.CrugQtststelliton aguarantcc. N-)Car,?. t'OPav. Tri e 5 cts. and $!.oo. 1( yout I v.i-ni a,.ti'ii;-: ttcp it send us cts. in pos ! - ; Ij;:i;'s v. t will sei: J it to you by mail, rrt.TTn..Jall. SvWh. 1 ! tr.r:I hre n-J l'ottr- Atirpilc HiHo Oil 1 1! iiafMsri m ' i- (..,".. Srrtch.-naii'l IWrb Wire Cull T-i i-.-rf,-. t s:iti-;.,ci:.ni. aua I L-rt;'.v rcc--::;n:entl it ta C II. IKVINE. Lirery am! FccJ Stable. BABY BURNED. f. -.r'..-n cn I a: r".r-l to ialt a worj f.r Portw'i tntU-ftp 11,-sIIb oil. Mv l.al wis burned a few month i. r trvir.c all .-Cut r"iiinii I sppiit d your "Oil" Vir rt appliratura gave rrlirf. and in a tew days the - re n well. I also n-l the oil on mr stCH-k and fin. I that t . u,t nnv.:v forth:.- ' :ir;He that 1 lave t-vt-r ujeil. " Y.iui'. C. 1". LEWIS. I r". Tenn.. Jani:nrv - . I-'-1 . AMi itiruiin rt PARIS MEDICINE CO., ST. LOOS. MO all Driiiists. '.-t:r v. i;:: ji ctnts in sum; iu.:i.ta to our Head. ;as:tt.r. li . 'i. l Sr.. I'.l.B, a.. br:i j;u -i fe'.l line it rumpus, si.d ti-Us f,r silf-nK".iS-::emcn:, , otr jusity fa mous !i:5 ,-v.!s : ::;.i:-.. liT. ; t.K-rrci..::s ; 10.'J."V. ami up. Ci:5 t t rJci. Agents v.ir.tca every v.turL. New Piyiscuih Reck Co. Blood Hodl j c ---r'Tro. EDWIN A. ALDERMAN. ! SKETCH OF THE UNIVERSITY'S NEW PRESIDENT. An Eminently Fit Selection Prof. I Alderman's Whole Life Has Been ' i An Unconscious Training For the Work His Election Will Give Great Satisfaction to All, Sections, Parties i and Professions in North Carolina. I I Fayette vi lie Observer. The election of Edwin Anderson ... - T T . Alderman to the University will give ! great satisfaction to all sections, par ties ana prolessions in North Carolina. The trustees are to be congratulated upon their good work. Since the an nouncement of Dr. Winston's resigna tion public sentiment among the alumni, the teachers of the State, the students and friends of education everywhere has been surely crystalized about his name. Prof. Alderman's whole life has been an unconscious training for this work. Young and vigorous, a North Caro linian, a graduate of the University with distinguished honors, and con nected in one way or another with its life from early manhood, he lacks nothing which would give him sympa thy and zeal for its continued growth and expansion. His experience extends through : every phase of educational work in our State from ihe primary school to the University. His talents as an organizer and ex ecutive were first manifested when he made the Goldsboro Graded Schools take rank among ihibest in the South and moved the people of that city to increase their local school tax by pop ular vote afier a hotly contested cam paign. l'or three years he canvassed the State from the mountains to the sea, teaching teachers from district, city and private schools, and in public ad dresses pleading with power, the cause of popular education before large audi ences lrom both town and country. As co-worker with Dr. Chas. D. Mclver he successfully fought the bat lie for the establishment of the Normal and Industrial School at Greensboro and with him participated in its suc cesslul organization. Transferred to the chair of Peda gogy in the University, he has been a great power in carrying out Dr. Win ston's policy of getting the Univers ty closer to the needs of ihe people. His fine work in the teaching of Pedagogy in the University, his organ ization of the Univeisity Summer School, the best of the kind in the South, and the confidence reposed in him by leading educators and friends of education in the State, have bound ihe University in the closest of ties to the private and public school system of North Carolina. He has held successfully the posi tions of teacher in a public school, Su perintendent of City Schools and Sum mer Normal Schools, State Institute Conductor, Professor of English and j History in the Normal and Industrial School, Professor of Pedagogy in the University and Superintendent of the University Summer School. Each of these positions was a pro motion for services well done ana in every instance he has displayed not only great teaching power but very fine executive ability. In fact it is be lieved that no alumuus of our Univer sity can be found who has had greater training and successful experience in every department of our educational system than Mr. Alderman. As a scholar, student, writer, lectu rer and orator, he has impressed him self upon the life of the State and in our great national educational gather ings he has represented North Carolina and the South with such force and power as to give him an enviable reputation in all sections of our coun try. Professor Alderman stands as the representative of those forces that have created the educational awakening of the past two decades, ami the men who are doing the great work of the preparatory schools would rally to him as the head of our State system of education. In fact, he is, we believe, iKe fiafpy bFtakmg Hood's Sarsa the first choice ol the great body ofjparilla. school men in North Carolina. , 11()(rs riils are. the lvst family cathar- Edwin Anderson Alderman was tic and liver medicine. Harmless, reliable Wn in U'ilminotnn. r. (!.. Mav ir . sure. vj 1 ... a - - , j u 1S61. He was prepared for college! at Bethel Military Academy, near! Warrenton, Va. He entered the Uni- j versity of North Carolina in 1 S 7S, j ana grauucu ... oo,( b special honors in Latin and Anglian. 3 1 a 1 -CO nai ti r rw t the Willie P literature, and winning 1 Man gum medal for oratory. He f, T c J F q "u,u;,: ueuiu. 111c vj.a.. v..w in ,885-89. President of the North Carolina leachers' Assembly, 1SS5-S7 and supenntedent of the Ashevdle and Newton Normal Schools in iSS.-SS. From SS9-92. as State Institute con - ductor, he made an educational cam - plgn mlllc ui. .u uVu,wW 01 puunc cu utp 1... 6 ";:been a staunch Democrat. He is able teachers, and for the establishment of ; , ... , , ' , . .-iko ti and apt, and will soon master every the Normil and Industrial school. He , . ' ... , me iw"u 1 1 w detail of political management, was made professor of History and Lit- ; J m b erature, at the Normal and Industrial The Discovery Saved His Life. School in 1095. He was chosen a , , . t jo yir (, ( aillouette, Druggist, leavers- member and secretary of the board of viUe , gavs. ..To ,)r Kinv NewDis- visitors to West Point Military Acad- coverv I owe mv life. Was taken with La emy in 1S93. He was elected Profes-Uirippe and tried all the physicians for sor of Pedagogy of the University of '. about but of no avail and was given North Carolina in 1S93 and was su-; perintendent of the University Sum- tner School in 1S94-5-6. He is an honorary member of the Maryland 1 n . 1 c . j 1 f; Historical Society and a member of , the National Educational Association. ; He is the aulhor of ihe "Life f wniiam Hooper," and "A Brief History of North Carolina." He has been a con tributor to various periodicals and a lecturer on educational and historical subjects. He is a member of the Presbyterian church. He was married in 18S6 to Miss Emma Graves, daughter of the late Ralph H. Graves, Sr., and sister of the ale Ralph H. Graves, Jr., both of whom were once distinguished profes sors of mathematics in the University of North Carolina. She too died this wuiuilllU. .Jill. I KJ'J VJ i in: spring and joined the father and brother who had served so faithfully in the great institution over which het talented husband is now called to pre side. In the prime of life, ambitious, pop ular, studious a Christian, a thought ful brainy man he will, we predict, make our University not only hold its own, but do even greater work in car rying education to the masses. His election emphasized that our Univer- ; sity has sons of its own who can guide her destinies. It also emphasizes the fact that the people of the State be lieve in putting live, experienced edu cators at the head of its educational in stitutions. THE BATTLE SONG OF SILVER. HY KEY. MORTON BRYAN WARTON, T) . D. het sons of freedom now awake And smite the money-changer, Thft hopes of millions are at stake. The nation is in danger! "America can ne'er be sold." So speak the men who won it; The cross may be of burnished gold We'll not be nailed upon it. The ciown of thorns shall never press The brow of honest labor, The toiler's wrong's shall have redress, We'll greet him as our neighbor; All Europe may in anger threat And growl the British lion, The money kings of Gotham f ret We'll rout them all with Bryan! The products of our mighty land Must Haw to every nation, No tariff high between shall stand To court retaliation ; A surplus huge we do not need A bone of base contentions, To gratify a party's greed Or waste on bogus pensions. The giant trust shall never throw Around our neck his collars; But better far "In God we trust" We'll stamp on silver dollars; Silver and gold together run. To part them is a blunder, What the creator joins in one Let no man put asunder. Our chieftain speeds along the lines, 1 1 is silver tongue is calling, The golden gods in freedom's shrines From seats usurped are falling; Hlfch gleams his sword against the sky With splendor of Orion; We'll fight to conquer or to die Beneath the Hag of Bryan! Norfolk, Va. , July 14, 18!W. Atlanta Constitution, Just now everybody is beginning to take a Spring Medicine. And it is a good thing to do provided you take Simmons Liver Regulator the best Spring medicine. It's a sluggish liver that clogs the system and makes bad blood. A dose a day of Sim mons Liver Regulator will make a new man out of you, and a new woman too. lxok for the Bed Z. It is Simmons Liver Regulator you want. An Advertiser's Dream. (W.J. Lampton, in Fame.) A certain merchant, it doesn't make any difference what his name is, what his address is, is a man who be lieves thoroughly in advertising, and as a result has the biggest business in his town. So much, indeed, that he works so much in week days that when he goes to church on Sunday, as he al ways does, he generally goes to sleep as soon as the preacher t,ets well start ed into his sermon. Not long ago a visiting clergyman filled the pulpit, and our friend being unaccustomed to him slept rather un easily, starting up every now and then as the minister grew emphatic and al most shouted the words of truth at the congregation. . When the sermon was about two thirds over the preacher called out: ''Brethren, why stand ye here all the day idle?" "Because they don't advertise," su ig out the half awakened merchant, and the way his wife grabbed at him and shook him into a sense ot his situ ation, almost broke up the meeting. Vou can't buy happiness, but it you are suffering from dyspepsia, scrofula, salt Chairman Manley. 1 News and Observer. I Democratic State executive The committe made no mistake in electing iri r ,k,;,. ! Cle,nent ManIe'' of Forsyth, chair man of the executive commit'. He is in thorough accord with the State land national Democratic platforms; is intimate and warm friend of Hon. i j Watson; is an enthusiastic J j. B na3 ; H . J & , a honorab!e and high.toned ihe confidence ol , ' ewhole Sute He , ha(I1no"active connection wilh po. ; management, but has always I ing.s New 1,iscovery in my ;tore f ,ent for a bottle and began" its use' and from the first dose began to get better, and afterusing !hree b,ot.-les w?3, "F an'1, aint again It is worth its weight in gold. We wont keep t()re or ,iousc ithomrit r (Jct a free trial bottle at M. Doisey's drug store. William Jennings Bryan. Character Sketch of the Democratic Nominee For President. Extracts From an Article by Number of the "Review Gf Reviews" An Interesting and Conservative Estimate of the Man and Kis Abilities His Private Life and Public Services Briefly Reviewed The Wife of the Candidate Comes ia For a Share of the Credit For His Sucsessful Career as Lawyer and Politician. 11RYAN" S ANTECEDENTS. It would savor of platitude to de scribe William Jennings Bryan as the typical American. The American type is multifarious, ranging fiom Buffalo Bill to Chauncey M. Depew, each of whom is accepted beyond the seas as a fit personification of the American character. Mr. Bryan, however, may be recognized as a thoroughly typical young American of the Middle West a late development of that westward movement which filled the Western Reserve with New Englanders, whose descendants in turn went on to Illinois and thence to Iowa and Nebraska. The nominee's own family, however, sprung from Virginia the Mother of Presi dents where his father, Silas L. Bryan, was born in Culpeper County, near the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Be fore his father three generations of V. J. Bryan's ancestors abode in the Uni ted States, tilling the soil and pining in the movement westward from the coast as restlessness or interest impelled them. Not in any sense pioneers, for they followed rather than led the wave of settlement, the Bryans, even to the member of the family now so much in the notice of the public, have always been inclined to abandon the centers of population and seek their fortunes in the newer and ruder Western com munities. WILLIAM J. llUYAN's FATHER. Like many Americans Bryan inher ited his political beliefs. His father, going west to Illinois, carried with him the Democracy of the Old Dominion, and through long years of residence in a Republican State clung to me , convictions of his youth. The Demo- ! cratic nominee, too, comes naturally j by his inclination lor pusuc i f.-. u;s father sat for eight years in the Illinois Senate, made an unsuccetu! i ce : i Congress, was in 1870 a mvmber 1 the Constitutional Convention which gave to the State of Illinois the basic document by which its legislative acts are now controlled, and was for twelve years judge of the Circuit Court. In 1652 he married, at b-Uem, lu., Miss : Maria iUizanetn jennmgs, who ; vives him. L'ivc of their nine children are still living. The elder Brya.is led the life characteristic of the small Western towns. Educated to the de gree possible in Western colleges, deeply religious in life and sentiment, untravelled beyond the borders of their own country, provincial perhaps but patriotic with a patriotism fiercer than that off which cosmopolitanism takes the rough edges, they would pass un noticed among the hundreds of thous ands of like god-fearing, country-lov-househoids that make up the bone and sinew of sturdy Western Americanism. Aryan's school and college days. From the more primary grades of the public schools jbe went to Whipple Academv. at Tacksonville. and thence to Illinois College in the same city, in college vears as in his earlier days he manifested no qualities which promised o j for him a brilliant future, except per haps a certain facility in address which led his relatives to hope for him a cer tain measure of distinction at tiie bar. A friend of his boyhood days describes him before his matriculation at college as shy, diffident, little given to joining in the pastimes of the other lads, not over bright at his books, but always serious and inclined to be abstracted in manner. Men to-day wh 1 were with him in Illinois College deny t him any great distinction in ihe class room except in the department of mathematics. The college curriculum ; of those days, however, was not widely extended, not one from which the ambi tious student was able to select a wide variety of studies most suited to his own intellectual traits or most likely to prove available in the career he hid planned for himself. His skill in de bate and in oratory, however, won him some note early in his college course. It is tradition in Salem to-day that when the boy was twelve years old h.s father put him forward lo address a Democratic convention, and the laugh ter which the sight of the youngster rnns-pd was stilled bv the excellence of his effort. On the other hand, the professor of elocution in Illinois C1 lege declares that when he entered the freshman class Bryan had no grace cf oratory, but forced hi self to th front by earnestness, determination aj-d zeal. Winn in c a prize in a college content stimulated him. A summer spent the stump in advocacy of Wm bDrincer s Congressional candidacy gave him confidence, and his success just before graduating in winning a .-. . : prize in a btate contest w.tn an craiiou on "Justice" doubtless went far to de- termine his cnoice ot a proiession the law and an avocation politics. The part that the smaller Western col leges have played in developing citi izens of the type of Bryan and of G:.r field is too little recognized through out the nation. In proportion 'o their attendance thev seem to have proTi- 1 r r j . duced a greater number ofgraduates ;n telligently interested in public affairs Willis J. Abbot, in the August and able toctearly and onvin-cingiy expiess their views before an audience. LRYAN AS A "1'LAIN CITIZEN." He is an inveterate housekeeper and when unable to stay at Lincoln with his wife usually takes her wi;h him upon his political expeditions. For the rest he is a man of magnifi cent physifjue, the fruit of early firm work and constant practice of athletic sports. His face shows in its high fore head intellect; in its eyes kindliness; in he closely set mouth and promi nent chin determination. In dress he i? unassuming; in manner genial with out lack of dignity. Believing in him self, he respects himself without more egotism than is natural to a man wh has succeeded in great things. But even more than in himself he believes in the common people, in the farmers whom he thinks victims of a cruel wrong and who, he expects beyond a shadow of a doubt, will join him in righting it. His campaign will be in the main an agrarian one and his ad ministration, should he be elected, will be one of more simplicity than the capital has seen since Jefferson rode into town and tied his horse to the fence pailings. IIRYAN's Ol'l'OsITIDN TO CORI'ORA HONS. Tiie part of the farmer in the eco nomic structure of society is that which Ins most appealed to Bryan. He stands before the people to-day the representative rather of the agricultu ral interest than of any party. It was not unnatural that from advocacy of low tariff he should have turned to championship of the Anti-Option bill, xvhicll SOUJ,ht to stop gambling in grain. Coming from a community ;,)re! y burdened by the exaction ol railroad-companies, from a State the overnnient of which has been for de cades dominated by railroad influence, ,c quickly arrayed hiriu-elf in antago nism to these great corporations. lie strove to have the powers of the Inter state Comnieice Commission enlarged 1 s.ep, by ihe way, which is dmm- j , 'o..,! y the platform upon which he is .,;V a candidate for the presidency and lie insisted that m fixing "reason able rates" the commission should allow interest only on the cost of re producing the roads at the present time. And.it is proper here 10 note that in private action he has kept him self as wholly free from ihe influence of railroad corporations as his record in the Ilonse argues he should. Like most public men of strong personality and talent, he has had his opportuni ties to join with the great army of cor porations. In his Lincoln law prac tice he has systematically rehired re tainers from railway compainies, and at the close of his second term in Con gress, though practically penniless, lie declined a salary of $10,000 a year to act as general council for a railroad associated with the Standard Oil Corn- j l")'- probability the offer was not even a temptation to him, for con- tent with the simple life of an interior town, abstemious in habits, and almost ma(je by the administration to array an ascetic in tastes, he has little need those who arc under its influence for a large income. j against the Chicago platform and its iiryan in congress. ! nominees, all is not smooth sailing. Perhaps no better idea of the habits j An instance of this kind has just oc of thought and ihe animating political j curred in New Orleans, where ihe su conviciions of William J. Bryan could perserviceable administration people, j be. obtained than by merely noting the , measures with which he was identified durim T T his four years' service in the llJU-iC O, f I ? iMirpcen t .i f i ves There seems to be logical connection be t.veen all of them the list is tk; such a one as might drawn by public man toheritin. ne. UOiii jcracy of Thonns Jefferson, educated under ; the tutelage of the early apostle of per sonal liberty, Lyman Trumbull, and growing to ripe manhood in ihe agri cultural regions of the West. His firmest convictions and his sturdiest w.irk were for radical tariff reform. Protection he denounced a- a fraud and a robbery. His Nebraska home, far from the busy manufacturing cen ters, gave him no outlook upon smok ing chimneys and whirring wheels, and to him could come, no disquiet ing thought that great industries might suffer if the f jsterin hand cf the gov ernment by which they had been aided to reach maturity were suddenly v.;;h driwn. He sa v lie fore him the farms of his neighbors in Nel ra-ka. He saw the corn, the wheat, the cattle and live stock growing without the aid of the nation s taxing pows and selling at on prices fixed without reference to a pro M. tective tariff. lie saw, on the other hand, his neighbors taxed on their wire fencing for its makers protu, on thetr farm implements, on the lumber .C .U:-U .U. I ... O . Uni 1 ' . , 1 j 01 -au.i.u lvj.u mvn n..n i.uui, on their clothing, and 0:1 everything they had to buy. Looking upon 1 1 from a Nebraska outlook he could see nothing in the tariff but .1 device for the spoliation of his constituents that the Kist might protr. He was fona of ouoting tha famous obiter aicium of ihe Saorcme Court ol the Lnitcd e Saprcm State?: --To lay w::h o-ne hand the - ,p ver 01 thee .v.-rnnunt on tne ' to - erty of the c:tiz:n, and with the jtner t bestow it upon favored individuals to aid private enterprises and build up private fortunes, is none the Ie?s a rob bery because it is done under the favor of the law," and he gave it homely illustration well fitted to impress the ptople of his own district in this par able: "1 desire to say that no man on that (the Republican) side of the House ::itar.d u-, before you and jjstily a ; law thai lakes trom one man one cent and gives it to another man. Tak e in illu-.'-lawo:;: 'Here are ten men o.vnin tar n j side by side Suppose that nine of them should pass a resolution, ved I rut we mil take the lanttbe nm man ana uivule it amongst Uno wdd justify such a transaction? Suppose the nme men tell the tenth man that he mil get it back in some way, that it is a great advantage to live among nine men who will thus b better oft", and that indirectly he g-ts an advantage from Ihe transaction. Should you dare to justify that? Y 1 would not justify the taking of one Mpure foot of his lan 1. df you would not dare do that, h.nv will you justify the taking of that which a man raises on his land, all 1h.1t makes land valuable? How can you justify the one if not the other?" THE WIFE OF THE DEMOCRATIC CANDI DATE. Mrs. Bryan has been almost as d.vp a student of public questions as her husband. While his chief interest lay in the practice of the law she studied law and aided him in his office. When following the natural inclination of his mind, he turned to politics and state craft, she too took up the questions of the day, and investigated them intel ligently and exhaustively. Mr. Bryan frankly c mfesses the aid she has given him in preparing his addresses for, like most good speakers, he seldom goes before an audience on an occasion of importance without careful prcp aruion. During liis term in the House of Representatives she never failed to be in the gallery when he was to speak, and her presence stimulated as her aid before had prepared him. At the Chi cago convention she sat prominently on the platform throughout the ses sions, noting with a mind trained to grasp public affair.- ihe varying moods of the great gathering. She saw the wonderful . utburst of enthusiasm that followed his speech, and sat through the four ball its which ended in his nomination. Shicegthe c ivention she lias been constantly at his side, travel- ing r vn!i him and sitting on the plat- tonus trom wine ii lie makes his speeches. In ihe event of his election, she may be expected t be m te than merely mi-tress of the Wnite 1 1 use. Her impress already upon his public utterances is apparent to th).e who know her, and should her husband lie called to the first position in the re public American wounnkinl -might feel more than ever before that their sex had a positi v.-p m in the govern ment of the n it; n. Victims or y .iitlifai I'ollim suuvring from nervom debility, laoi; of self eona dence, impaired memory, and kindred symptoms, should send 1 1 C 'ats in stamps for large illustrated treati-f, giving means of certain cure, u ii'i mi i -rous testimon ials, sent in a p! tin -.'ale I I'livelopii. Ad dress Worlu's I); : -asarv Medical Assoj Ciation, 0.;:; Mail: ; . eet, litiffalo, X. Y. It is the People's Cans?. T Durham Sun.J Every day it is made plainer that the cause of free silver is the cause of the people. In the efforts '.fhich ari now bein ' 1 headed by Senator Don Caffery, called l a conference for the purpose of organ- ; izing against the Democracy. When til,- invited his gathered it was discov ered that,more than half of them had heard from the people, and they were not l.reiiared to act on the line r-ug- gested. j The time for timid ny has gone by, t and it is now the duty of every man j . , t . . ! . , wilt. tie neor.Ie. I he people, Inc whole people, are aroused, and that man who is standing in the way of their wi-hes 0 . ii courting political oblivion, fr rn , . , . 0 1 , w v:C 1 ne can never nope to escape. 1 1 1 . My little boy, whTt wo years" of age. was'taken very ill with ldoody Mux. I; was advised to use j . I 11 lie l A A 1111 1 I.l 1 l 1111 il IIITT.J , , (UKl 11. ctned part of a bottle. 1 carefully lead the directions and gave it siccordiiigly. lie was very low, but slowly and surelv In' bi-gan to"ini)rove, gradually recovered, and is now as stout and strong as i-ver. 1 feel sure it saved his life. 1 never can praise the Remedy halt its worth. I am sorry f-very one in 'the world does not know how "good it is, as I do. Mr. I.ina S. Mintoii, Graliamsville, Marion Co.. Fi;t. For sale' bv M. Dorsey, Druggist. Mr. Bryan condensed a great deal ; ;ng out of h s breast p,.-.kei. The e 1 cf solid Democracy in the following' iter, 'with much dignity, took ihe remark taken from his speech at Seda- j man's intellect in, and siid: "An 1:3,111: "I don't want any man to I opening? jes, sir: a kind and consider vote for me because he thinks if I am ! ate caroenter, foreseeing your visit, elected I will help mm to puvhts nand in somebody else's pocket. All I ex - . . - ..1,,.., A. pect 10 ao ia i-j picct:t somtuuuy cisu from putting his hand into your pock - et." Mr. Bryan is not indulging aI,v personalities in this campaign and consequently this remark had no direct reference lo Mr. McKinley, but if Mr. inlev had !een there he doubtless wo l-.n vi f,--!: ?h fo'c? n! it. (.bar i..t:: D-rtnoc tat. r IVmifiCn'oT V,.,., fiMi i" .r. o u s Lr nio ve.eit -ewr ia.iiii, cuiet r tiiei'seitn-and o.iera head iche. lllets, DANGEROUS PRECEDENT JUDGE SI.nrmON'S ACTION SEVERELY CRITICISED. Lifect of the Injunction I'pon the Peo pleThe Case a Remarkable One in the Respect that it is the Pirst of its Kind Ever Presented For Judicial Determination Will the Order Stand? I Chai Teuton News and Cornier, July ."l-t. ; We hive not s.-en tiie !a!S te-. of j tii-: petition 1" the Port K rival .ir.d i :, i ;;kv . ,,,,,., k:, ju f " S:m.m., n lus cd 'a 'tempo' Tt.;rv k-.iancti, restraining the Sea- b.;.ud Air Line and the Southe ; lUiU lro!U uuki ftmhcr rCl,Ut lions in tllcir ulcs , freight transpor- Ulll)n. mlcrin, thtfr ,., r C5 ro ern the rate prior to July 12, but we pub lish to-d iv a c irelully ptoptred sta'e- n i e i of w hii ihe b.U contains. L'n- Its 5 there is a great ileal more in 11k , ;.. .1.;. . .... t .l.-U 111 111 UlklL T -" HI lill- 5..UL- nient we do not sec how lue court can avoid discharging its inle. The case is very remarkable in the icsjac' that it is trie first of its ki:ul ever presented for jidicial determination, and is ex citing a great deal of inteiest in rail- ! road circles throughout the country. One ot the most viciou and danger ous planks iii the Chicago platform is that which de' lares against 'govern ment by Uij.metioii.' ' In his speech at Orangeburg on Wednesday Senator Tillman protested against the action of judge Sinionton in this case, and made ihe very strong p int I bat if the court had the power to say that 1 a ; 1 road companies shall not rut their tales, the court would abo have the power to say that ihey shall cut tiie rates, and that there was no limit to what the courts could not do in direct ing and managing the affairs of busi ness corporations. We have no sym pathy .villi the intemperance of Sena tor Tillman's speech, but it must be admitted that there is point and merit lo ins protest against judicial interfer ence with coiporate management. In the platform adopted at St. Louis I he Popuiists demand that the govern ment shall own and operate the rail road-; of the country. If Judge Simon ion's injunction in fhis case be made permanent, and be not :"et aside by the higher court?, whit the Populists have been aiming at n unely, govern ment ownership of the railroads will practically have been accomplished without their assistance. The power to make rates and cut rates is essential to proper railroad management and control, and if this power can be assumed by the courts, with or without the knowledge or con sent of 1 lie roads, any other of the les ser powers ot the directors and owners of the roads can also be assumed by the courts. The law gives the inter state railroad commission authority to say when a rate is loo high, but it does not give the commission authority to fix rates. The law gives the courts the tight to appoint receivers for insol vent corporations, but it does not authorize the court to interfere with the practical management and direc tion of corporations which are not fairly in court. Perhaps Judge Simon ton was compelled to grant the injunc tion in this case upon a purely ex parte showing, but the interests involved are so vast and the remedy applied for was s novel that it would have been well hail he heard argument from all sides before granting his injunction. Such a course would have been irregular doubtles.1, but ihe case is out of the ordinary, and a new rule might have been ina'le in so remarkable a cau-;e. Of course t lie petition fr a perma nent injunction will be resisted, and we hope that it will be succesfuily re sisted. While the petitioner manifests a most unusual and affectionate inter est in the welfare of ihe warring rail road corporations, and deprecates, as all good Samaritans must, the loss of revenue which will be sustained by them if the courts shall refuse lo inter pose, the plain people of the country who are engaged in business and those who buy and sell have not suffered any distress, but on the contrary hve been benefitted by li.c war of latts. 'I here is another and much more serious is-uc, ; however, involved in the uctcnnir.a. I ... . business welfare of every to.vn and i ' , . , , ' city on meoast from Norfolk down 1 ' , .... . .,1 10 Brunswick. 1 he lotsc-s iuslaiiicu , ,, , ,, , , . , by the Tort Royal and .vugusta rail - und'.T protection of the court) are a mere bagatelle compared wlth the losses which' w:li be sustained i by . iirtsofthe South not directly tributary t the Southern rait way and the por:s uieicr me nnmctl ;ate care l tiiat great sjtU.-ni if tiie present injunc lion is not 1 ischarged. "Is there an opening here for an in tellec;iu! writer?'' said a very red faced vouth, with the cork of a bi'tle stxk- : ,st an opening for you ; knob to the right. i l'urn the Cure Tor HeaJache. in; f,r all fors ,f ln..:lai he ; Electric Bilters b is prov.il to U- tie very ' l'- lrni.ii-t t-.re :u,d the ruo-t dreaded huhitual licadaehes yii-ld toils iiiliiK-nce. We urge all win nre nhlicteil to j unsure a btt!c. ::nd give tiiis iemeiy at - i .irtri i! In ::4-s ! i:ub:ttial toiistn-a-i ------ 1 ... l f lion Kieetrle Bitter u:es by givm the bowtts, aiel few cases t , ollg rt-si-l l.'ie use 01 uus mc...iiit. .' . iiui .. f iwir. 11 once, i my c ut. and -1.mi .,t M. lr - ! y's dru store. 1 -..1 .f.l.:....-.0..i..A Trtf AK. the iccovt4 1yrpticn, bilioui uf ferrr. victim, of fcvrl nd juc. the menuria! li.scavcd pilrnt. how tlicy rcvovcrrj health, checTlu! ;tr:t oJ rocj inii.tr; Ihcy .!) id u J.y ta-. Siuuox; x R 5ii a l1( a. The lieafctt. l urenl mi.l Vsl 1 amilr Mt'di.-tito In Il.f irld' For I V- IM I-M A. O N 1 !' 1 I. Jjunjl.. V--'---u- a:: W . M K H 1 .A 1 ' i l!l ; I icjm " -"'t K Sii..U 11. iin.ii! ian.ru. Ih: mimaii J rmc!y i i .,,t..,:: ,1 i...t i,. . niau a ;! ,.r:i. ;r , t Mutt ,-: . . : Mu.ru; .ul-staiu PURELY VEGETABLE. ' -r u; lu K .!'..! il-il l.i, h ai " '... v c i,.t, ; :...cl l.. .... wt.r hcn 1-m: i'.v.i ;i n4J lurr mL IM-ciKi ;. -.m-c.l l.v ;.-! :m .... .. r It... i h - SUi ! 1 1 1.".; . i !., I r ! ,iu M-lc i: tii. .;. -I iii.t arr x X ittct vi I Uhl, ln i i " ' t,:! !? "Zfr v,' 'Y'V' ' .. J ; ,Xr.jrll ... Il'l. Jtl.-Ui . Suul r vl ; a .it v v .1. S. uietiu.r :;i..t! . I si cliiCiv, .it 1 ititr.. cry It 111 iV I'oiiv. 1. c ir. vii i iiMini)iuti 11 i tii in! ihe l..c 1 ; n 1 tiie !i4 I 1T)a " :- j C'-Ziit-Na .ill 1 1 I P 1 in-: vi 11 : I!;.- ! ..Vi....;; ;.;:,;.. ,-; 11. ! j.. 1 ..1.. m t.. i,a l.i..UAWk: .en S 1 1:. v t u- 1 ' 5:";c. " MM.I..V. 1 j l,.;t I i.l 1 1 ..,!.; V .. 1 t .-. . Ail...n .t ;..- . Mm. v-H. I'.s ..S.tu.n.l U '.1 1 .,., I A I uti-.. IiiUi.-.je. i.i.: Kcv. I V. 1 ',i.- l. ... . , 1 . ' I Ni.t. i.i. s'. W. K. li. . 'l!, . ,H .iu.':.i II Sui lnui.' H c ha.. I -.1 .-.I i- 1 rit. . i'. ..I 1 j th.it f.a l..f.Ma. !'.,!i,.u-irs. ,,,! ll,r.ii,m i td. 1. lie, 11 i i!,c hm :.m!:. t;u- v ..i li r .i r v.tw W Imvc Uiiil f.nv ..lim n:,u,li,, iri..te Simiiioii I jrmr kivui.i!..r, am! noiu- . I in ,;.iir u m. lr tli.iu trow U. .1.11V li iu f ; the K. MuiaL.t n4 only 11 l.i 1, 111 , ,irv-4 1 l. I'l 1.1 l.K M II AMI Mtsi j., H u nyi M IM i i 1 ei:l 1 usl v l:V J. 11. . 1.1 I.I N A. CO.. l luUJciiilua. 1 4. VIRGINIA COLLEGE, F0 YOUNG LADIES, KOflNOKE, Vft Op.Mis Sept. 10. W. One of tin leading Schools for Young Ladies in the Smth. Magnificent building", all inudorii iniprovo iiieiits. Campus ten ncres. (land inouii tain scenery in Valley of Virginia, faim-il for health, lairopean and Ameiicau teach ers. Full course. Superior advantages in Ait and Music. Students from twentv States. For catalogue address the rii-si-dent. M.ViTIK V. 11AKK1S. Koauoke, Va. v PARKER'S CIKCER TONIO tilisti-B I-ung IrouliicH, Dcbllltr, d ixtrmlnir Moiiur,, ent 1. -male Hit. and ia noted tr lnakui( runs, nheii ail Ola i tn niiiM-nt filt rrr mothrrtn.l invalid thnuid ha,.- e. ITT ..PARKER'S.. I nMIK UAkSAm JClftTiK-t and brtitif tht hatr ' llrumtrf a luxuriant n.ilt I nwfp tali to Hrtiora Unji vurra aralp himm hair laiiiur. inic.ard $1 at lrugf. " "ir io aia xhuidtui 1. 0 .or. TT only ut Cnr 1 ,r Cu.-us. Stut ail pa.ii. Alaaes walking catjr. lie. at UlU;;i.. ri l.l.lM-.l.r. linen. h IlaasoBl llraa.4. fENYROYAL PILLS ttitriM ami imttatmn. Ai Urucirista. r , in rtnmia for iartiruira. i-ttimiiBia tvj4 I it .nut r . . ii- a- L - j..ITl ' .11 UII. 1 i'tWin 1 i-Mtiuiniiaia. nmmm g-mymr. Being Sick is largely a matter of choice. Sickness can usually be cured In cases of dyspepsia, heartburn and our stomach always take "Ripans Tabules." This good remedy Is com pounded largely of Rhubarb and Soda. The one acts gently on the bowels; the other sweetens the stomach. "Ri pans Tabules" are sold by me for 50c. a box. Being Well is impossible if the drugs you buy are not reliable ami pure. Besides coming here for "Ripans Tab tiles," you should come also when the doctor writes a prescription for you. The doctor's advice and my pur. drugs are pretty sure to make sick people well. Melville Dorsey, Wholesale and Retail Druff 1st, HKNDKKSOV, N. C. Nervous Debility. wtm 8RA1M TB:Tiitrt DR. Z. C. WCST'6 lM AiiO BRAIN TREATiflEfiT t:;.: cRi2::i;.t. all cruras iksiatioks. i l.v:. 1): 1 . : f.li : ii .-1t 5-f.ri!iv V rJ;irm ;5inrnn?ft, ' .. - I : --:t . .!,, f t i:r. V. it; W'-ii!iry, -f-iiutf- I :r. l;:" r:-. '. Jj. .';'!.'- iy.i. Kvil Jie'.:u-., I k ,t otiii . N-r-'iiiK':-w, Ijiu.Hit:ii.. nil limn:, Yoiilii Vrni.fii 17''-sm1v Ci" . 'l i.i. ir,, ( 11. 111111. r I.-.r.r.r. wiiir'i i'-nOn . Mimry. I in-uirii.ti'.i, i.i. l liiv.lli. At Mont .r l.y nihil, fl K .. -T. in 'it ': viiili written nrnlrr to - . rfpi money. faiaplt- finrk. fu'-' "' laii i-..; J,.,, cI.-h' rri:Tii .if. ill. full i'. rl,. t ir.iiH, Li'-itif. ():' r-!.Hiilo -iil' null t i- . - i t .. ,i Horo 01- h iii.i.l. l' .V ( i t m;-nry. Iy.i 'i... 'i-jr. x.. IVt JilUllllXxl. Hr-i litT or I Iarr.tilit . l I ni: eix for wifl, tiir-citc,., ;:-t:.Li Apt tP For sale ty PM1 H.TIioiaas.HsDtoii l 1 J'iu,iiit;a f LL " ' . ' .: . :' In-nU of 111 that i-v .y rl'.'i- ' v.orini, tr. i.iil.iu to and for wii.eu ia Tt Vermifuge yj ha been niir.-.-fi-fully ui-ed a lor a i.air niiiji - - r- t- PersonaL Fmi--i;i ri.-iTe medical reference book .11! to any w rson afflicted with ny special, t"e 1 -1 ,i..i. rr-nl ir tntbelr eillVlllt"! uriivaw, " t , , " t-.. 1.1 W at.. K Tlr Hytrin. hex. Address tli leauinu pliycian aim surgeons Ol Hie 1 iui-.i .'law.-., . i ...... t. 'j. -' simtb Ilroad Street At- i wa, A.. .-- 3 Nuitli l.roaa iree.. ai lanta, Oa. flVji'JjC'' ' 1ran.i ia rd an.l 4d BnallUV7 TVgiM.v, 1. ica nu Muc ribbon. Take if til - ft 1
Henderson Gold Leaf (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 13, 1896, edition 1
1
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