Newspapers / Siler City Leader (Siler … / Feb. 18, 1888, edition 1 / Page 1
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ADOPTED. VOL. 2. SOUTHERN PINES, N. C, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1B88. NO. 2 I . LIGHTED FOR THE ILLUMINATION OF TAR HEELS, BOTH NATIVE AND Rubber Stamp ff&ssr?; 2d Visiting Cards and INDIA INK to mark lin en, only AS cts. (stamps.) Book of 2000 stvles iree with each order. Agents wanted. Biir Pay. TRAINMAN M'K'G CO. BALTIMORE, MD. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF best Ever-blooming Roses, Evergreens, Magnolias, Greenhousq and out door bedding plant. BOUQUETS and FLORAL DESIGNS, SEEDS and EVERYTHING FOR THE GARDEN. Send for Catalogue. H. STEINMETZ. Raleigh, N. C. Eagles field's Seut-bepn ines G. M. Allen. Wm Cham. ..... Allen & -Cram. MACHINISTS AND FOUNDRYMEN, Ralfjgh, N. C. ! Orders for SPECIAL MACHINERY of every description solicited, Engines, Boilers, Shaft i ngs, Pulleys and Hangers constantly on hand ur made to order. Repairs of ajl kinds prompt, ly attended to at short notice. MANUFACTURERS OF The Lone Star Pump, the best made, double-acting', anti-freezing, anti-packing, with no rubber, gum or leather. Used for wells, cisterns, irrigation or snpply ing towns with water. 2tW . P 6 m o "n a Hill Nurseries. Cheap Nursery Stock. For Winter and Spring: Sales 1 887-8. I have a large stock of Apple Trees,. Two and three years old, good varie ties, that I will Close Out Cheap. ALSO Plum, Cherry, Grape, &c If you want anything in the Nur sery line CHEAP, especially Apple, send for my Illustrated Descriptive ' " ! BfUGI Catalogue and Special Price List of j 1 V lUIM the world during the i . v' -rTT . , c, . : last half century Not least among: the wonders XUTplU.4 Stock tor W inter and fcpring j of inventive poeress is a method and systetnCof nf IWSmilr work that can be performed all over the country Nnes OL LOOi-O OIIIJ . i without separating the workers from their . j homes Pay liberal; any one can do the work; Auuress either sex;young or old; no special ability re- i quired Capital not needed; you are started free, i Cut thisout and return to us and we will send J, Van LindlSV PrOOrietOr i 'ou free something of great value and impor VU t3y' r ru r,t3 10 rV S tance to you, that will start vou in business j which will bring you in more money right POMONA, X. C. R. E. B. RANKIN, i Homoeopathic Physician, Halifax St. (op. Cotton Platform.) I Raleigh, N. C. Special attention paid to' all forms of chronic disease, diseases of women and children. Patients treated by mail, and visits made to neighboring towns when desired, " 39t91 G TIFFIN & TEMPLE, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, , , 4 9 M ELIZABETH CITY, N. C. Vrno.tiof in t.VmKiirwtrinr nnrl Vml.rj 1 rViiivfa rf the First Judicial District and in the Supreme A. WT 1 - 1 ' . . . yuuri oi norm carouna. special attention given to conveyancing and collections. W. J. grifmn. v. Q. Temple 26t52 . " ' WILL H. SUITS, ' RxVNDLEMAN, N. C. Practical Tin and Copper Smith. Roofing, Guttering, & Spouting a Specialty. Give Him a Trial. G. N. Walters, FASHIONABLE. MERCHANT TfiLUH, RALEIGH. N. C. !' "' Hasj the largest stock of Foreign, Cloths, Cassimeres, Cheviots, plain and fancy Silk mixed Suitings, i Shark skin Suitings in all shades. The latest New York styles ! 1 for full dress i Suits. Dress suits from $40 to $85. Business suits $30 to $60. Samples furnished on application. 26t52 For 1888 is better than erer, and iboald be In the hands of every person contemplating buying f)FPI A PLANTS or mil nl 5 1 1 D o i rLHIl IO ut UULUOs tains S Colored Plate thousands of Illustrations, and nearly 150 pares, telling what to buy, and wber to et It, and namlnc lowest Price, for booest goods. Pric of GUIDK only lOccnta. lacladiac Certiacat food for 10 cents w.rtb of Seeds. j JA2XES TICK SEEDSMAN, Rochester, N. Y. m t v r- t w m. . away than anything else in the world. Grand outfit free. Address True & Co., Augusta. Maine D The Southern Protectionist is out and we hereby extend the hand of welcome. It contains twenty-eight columns, is neatly printed and has something in it. It says as good words as can toe said for the bad cause of protection, and beyond that (above it, we think) aims to be a good county newspaper. We wish it abundant success. j The Manufacturers'1 Record has just entered upon its thirteenth year and celebrated the event by a magnificent sixty page issue devoted to the cotton manufacturing industry in the South. While we do not agree with this jour nal on its tariff ideas, we do agree with its energetic and wise method of advertising the splendid resources of the South. It deseryes the heartiest support of all who desire to see these states move on to their high place of wealth and power. i Feeling rather disturbed in mind rjy delay in receiving the outfit for our i newspaper and job office at JouesborA, we sent out on Tuesday a circular ex- plaining matters to our friends anid bespeaking their kind forbearance. Since then the material has come to band and we believe we can promise to do a little better than our circular stated. At any rate we shall endeavor to present the first issue of the Jon ei- boro Leader on the 21st or 22nd inst. We think you will admit, when s you see it, that it was worth waiting for. Some of our friends have shaken their heads at us for starting to pub lish another newspaper in Moore County. '-Four already, and yours will make five and another one threat ening" they say dolefully. We view the situation with the utmost cheerful ness, however. We know as certainly now as we shall three months or six months hence just what can be done with .this enterprise. It is not a veti ture. It starts in response to a defiri ite call. Its subscription list is as sured its advertising patronage is assured. It has a sure field of its own and will work that field thorough ly. There will be no putting" down 2 and waiting for the other 2 to come along. The 2 and 2 are here and together they'll make 4, sure. Those who have time may figure on the problem of paying business for five newspapers in Moore County. We hope there is, for we like plenty of newspap ers. They make things lively. But that is a problem that doesn't concern us. We are at work on the problepi of furnishing our subscribers a 12.00 newspaper for $1.00 and snail keep at that right along. i A FRIGHTFUL EXAMPLE. England is held tip by the protec tionists as a frightful example of th.v effcts of free trade. See!" they erv "free trade England has no surplus in its treasury, but gets deeper in debt every year. She has millions of pau pers; her poor people are poorer than ours; her facilities for education an not so good. See what free trade has done!" It doesn't seem possible, does it, tnat free trade could do such disas trous things. We had supposed flint the maintaining of an enormously expensive royal family might have the effect of depleting the treasury to some extent. In our ignorance, we thought that England's standing armb and expensive navy might still furth er drain that treasury. We had like wise labored under the impression that some, of the English colonies wer rather costly luxuries. So far as the making of paupets goes, it was our idea that the wretcDed land system of England, and her mistaken Irish pol icy had something to do with that. It seems, however, that free trade has done it, is doing it, all. What a mon ster this free trade is! THE COLUMBIA ANNEX. - Columbia College; seems likely to establish, an Annex " for . young women. This is a good sign. The growth of the movement for higher education is shown by the increasing tendency to set up a branch establish ment for girls by the side of each big college that still excludes them. Nev ertheless, the annex system can be only temporary. It is lop-sided and illogical. So long as the branch es tablishment is distinctly an annex, an offshoot and an afterthought, afford ing less conveniences and facilities than the college proper, it is unfair to the girls. .And when it is proposed to make the annex an independent col lege, with advantages equal to those enjoyed by the young men, in the way of grounds, laboratories; library, etc.. why then, as the New York Independent says: 'The financiering which calls for two equal institutions, equally expen sive to do the same work, one for yoijng men and the other for young women, who could perfectly well he educated together, appeals for approv al to prejudice more than to reason." The reductio ad absurdum of the sys tem is to be found in such a case as occurred a few years ago at Harvard. The elective class in Sanskrit at the university consisted of one young manj the elective class at the annex of one young woman. The Sansktit professor had to give every lecture twice over, each time to an audience of one, because the traditions of the ven erable university did not admit of those two students listening to a lec ture together. Human common sense is not going to stand that sort of thing forever. Every college that says A -Annex will sooner or later have to say B Both sexes admitted. Mean while, an annex for girls is vastly U t ter than nothing. Woman's Journal.
Siler City Leader (Siler City, N.C.)
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Feb. 18, 1888, edition 1
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