State Library MARCH I4TH BIG ) ONE DOLLAR COMMISSION FOR SIX. NEW ISSUE! si: our diinn'ir.fiiMir r p tun amcriiiiPTa VOLUME 26. HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1 4, 1895. NUMBER 7 -fx rfIiTfiT nF M 111 111 I i OUH LNUND NAPLES, Iurlin?ton, " tlie- Queen City of Vermont State. MEAUQtARTERS OF THE GREAT FIRM OF 'WELLS. RICHARDSON & Co. whcre Paine'5 Celery Compound is Pre pared for the World. ViV,r ij.irl.nartont I bring a boiir to thee. Tiiou l .vnly Naples ofoor midland sea. The finest island sea in America is lake Ohaniplain; the finest city on its chores u Burlington. Hundreds of American cities could In named which have especial attrac tion of mountain, lake or river scenery, and each of which is deemed by its in habitants the prettiest and pleasantest of places: But it would not be easy to iuiion one which combines all these different elements of natural attrac , tiveue.M in greater, beauty and gran deur tlian Burlington, or one which lias won from strangers more enthu siastie admiration. Its site, sloping upward from the curved shore of the bay for a mile, rises to a ridge 300 feet above the water, crowned by the col lege bnildings and by handsome resi dences, which stand relieved against the 'background of the Green moun tains, rising into the peaks of Mans field and Camel's Hump, 4000 feet above the level of the lake. . Burlington in Brief," the title of a handsomely illustrated book just is sued by Chas. II. Possons, describes many of the features of the city. Looking westward from any of the hundred points of view along the slope lakeChamplain, here ten miles wide, stretches out to the mountain wall of Adiroudaeks. The prospect thus viewed embodies all the features in cluded in Wordsworth's famous de- scene oi rural .splendor. ; The valley of lake champlain is his toric ground. Events have taken place in it which have again and again shaded the destinies of large portions of the American continent. Before the foot of a white man had trodden its solirudes, it had been, for no one knows how long, the dark and bloody debatable ground on which the great rival tribes of North America fought for supremacy. Un the eastern side of this historic ' Like, iiiui iiiniil the scenes of these events, sits the city of Burlington. Its site wys selected 130 years ago, on the shore of the lovely bay which 'bears its name, nearly midway of the length of the lake, nearly midway be tweea the (ireeii mountain range on the east and the Adiroudaeks on the west,- and upon the bank arid near the mouth at One of the. largest rivers of .Vermont once called the French river h" ause its valley was the route of the French in their forages on the English . settlements on the Connetieut during the French and Indian wars. As a manufacturing and commercial point Burlington occupies today an important position. It would be diffi cult to name a city that has felt th " hard times"' less than Burlington. Its pub-lie buildings are handsome, suh-tantial st met ures.and its schools and charitable institutions are unsur passed by any city of equal size. The i!;e bmMing - of- tin Young Men's m-i-tian As-oeiation was largely the --t of t u. present mayor, .Mi. W. J. vhu P.uteu, of the tinn of Wells, Rieh-:ir'i- n A: 'o. ' 1 s.e ;:iost widely known concern in 1;:i!i.t:i s, of ooise, Wells, Rieh , ar-k ,n 'o , one of the largest and iuwm s lVt ul linns of manufacturing Ch.-t; ; - .f . ," . . ,1... ...... .. ... I . t 1... ' . " nn- a)UllU, WHICH IKtS IIS i uarters here, and den1- a tremen- '!! ss s'.iippiiig diamond dyes. U-'-.T.. v" :,t ' :,M Mh and Paine's celery com- ' 1 1 ' 'he four quarters of the ' ouuumgs : tins concern v.... t'Olaia Street and impress tor t. xbe city witli the. imnor- "' J prosperity of the establish About two acres of Uoor space lv ,.'!'-;,;'i''tly devoted to the interests v--;.:paUY. . .. Uichardson & Co. are known uun as of families. In the various pi v Vk " 1 -"OUIIS Cornell are em i Jr, I aiul a tour of tlle establishment to" u"1? interesting. In the var- luatlufacturing departments, such laboratories, shipping facilities and finely appointed offices are met with in no similar establishment. It is a great concern, and to one seeking the cause of uch success in this line, Burlington people will say that it is strict integrity, and the fact that every preparation bearing the firm's name is at least all that is claim ed for it. Another institution is the Vermont University, with its famed medical college, where the great Dr. Phelps was once a lecturer. The city is the home of Senator Ed munds, ex-Minister Phelps, Dr. W. Seward Webb, Lc Grand B. Cannon and many more men of national repute. It is well named the "queen city." OBITUARY E. H. flEAD. As Mr. Edwin H. Mead, who died in South Orange, N. J., Sunday night, Feb. 3, was the father of Mrs. Charles SV Graves of Hickory, who is his only daughter, and as he owned property here, the following obituary notice of Mr. Mead, taken fiom the N. Y. Trib une of Febuary 5th, will be interesting: Edwin H. Mead, one of the most prominent men in the coal trade of the United States, and the president of the Pennsylvania Coal Company, died at his home in South Orange on Sunday night from nervous prostration. He baa been in failing health for a long time, the result of excessive overwork, but had only been confined to his bed for about a month. Edwin Hiram Mead was a -native of this city and was born in Broadway in-1822, The next year t'le yellow fever broke out, and his parents removed to Berkshire county, Mass., where young Mead was brought up, receiving good common school education. His first business experience was when a very young man. He was for awhile in the office of the Harndrens Express, in Albany. In 1840 he entered the office of Belknap & Kcarcher, then the leaders of the coal trade in Albany, and after a year or so with them entered the employ of the Pennsylvania- Coal Company in New York. His energy- and ability soon brought him to the front, and in February, 1852, when only thirty years of age, he was elected the secretary of the company. He was re-elected and successively served as secretary and treasurer, and on the death of George Iloyt was chosen as the president of the company,, which place he had ever since then filled. He was also the managing directorof the Erie and Wy oming Valley Railway Company, a director of the Washington Life Insur ance Company, a member of the New York Chamber of Commerce and of the American Geographical Society. He was also a member of the New England Society of Orange. Mr. Mead married in January, 1845, Miss Laura A. Belknap, of Vermont, and she sur vives him with three children, two sons and a daughter. Mr. Mead lived in Brooklyn for some time after his marriage, and in 18GS went to South Orange, building a fine house in Ridge wood Road and making it his home ever since that time. From the-first he threw himself into the life of the village, and sought by every mean; in his power to build it up. He was one of the original men who se cured the charter for South Orange, and served two terms a president of the Board of Village Trustees and one term as Trustee, lie was influential in bringing about the drainage scheme that has reclaimed so much of the waste land -around South Orange. He was one. of the- principal members of tilt Meadowbrook Association anil an origin:-.! member of both the - Orange Athelt-tic Club and the South Orange Field C'ub, to both of which he con tributed largelv. Through wise real estate speculations he acquired a hand some fortune. He was above allthings a public spit ited mnu and ever ready to do all that he could to stimulate the -rowth of enterprises likely to benefit the place where tie lived. Po litically he was a Republican, but he held to the belief that the tet men should be voted for and did not draw the party ' lines strictly. He was h great student and his well-stocked librarv was his delight. He was es pecially fond of. languages and devoted much time to their study. He was in addition to this a thoroughly well in formed mau on almost any subject. Personally Mr. Mead -a a kind hearted, genial man. 'domestic in h-s tastes and ever ready to- help tho-e who needed help. He made friends every where anion: all classes of fUen witli whom he was brought into con tact, and telegrams and letters have poured into the home since the news of his serious illness. t Many deaths from the cold are re ported. More Whisky Trust rottenness has been unearthed, and Greenhut is in great trouble. Congress has voted the clerks of Congressmen a alary'of $100. per month during vacation of Congress. "The New Woman is the theme of a delightful satire by Miss Jean Wright In the Southern Magazine ior Febru ary. - - ' Threatened war with Mexico is caus ing Guatemalans to flee the country in droves tq escape being drafted into the army. Active preparations are in progress at the Treasury Department to carry out the bond contract with New York and foreign bankers.. Latest information from Breton in dicates that the recent storm was the most destructive that has been expe rienced there in thirty years. Fire iu a Chicago building in which forty families were quartered caused a panic. There were numerous narrow escapes, but only one was dangerously hurt. St. Petersburg, Feb. 9. Flags at the signal station here indicate that the mercury is fifty degrees below ze ro. The suffering among the poor is horrible. Reports have been received which state tha a hundred - houses were swept into the sea by a storm at Cape Bretou during the early part of last Friday morning. Col. Cody Bourne,aged tinety-three, and Miss Rose Brown, aged sixteen, were married in Anderson county, Ky. It is the frisky Colonel's seventh mat rimonial venture. President Helhnan. of the Nevada Bank, of San.Franciscot Was shot at on the street there Saturday by Wil liam Holland, who then inflicted a fa tal wound upon himself. "Student Life at Vauderbilt'' is the subject of an entertaining article ap pearing in the Southern Magazine for February. About twenty-five views and portraits add interest to the text. A tidal wave completely engulfed the wharf property of Gloucester, Mass., last Fridaj. Three vessels- are ashore, the crew of the Marblehead being rescued by life preservers. A large fleet of vessels are in imminent peril. The will of the late Samuel A. Mil ler, who flung himself under a train at AsheviWe, directs that his property shall be divided according to the laws of Kentucky. - The document is a hol ograph, and was written in a New York hotel by the decedent. A Georgia editor recently sent out letters to several farmers, requesting them to get up clubs of subscribers. One of the answers he received was a follows: "Esteemed Sir: My nearest neighbor,' who is a uigger, lives three miles away, and ho takes everything except a newspaper." Cardinal Richelieu hated children and loved cats; when he died his favor ite Angora pet refused t eat and, soon perished. I Daniel Webster was extremely fond of oxen, and all those on hi farm knew him by sight and would follow him like dogs. Scott w;ts fond of riding, and by daylight would be out with his ho:e and dogs. Most of his work was done before dinner. Virgil, during the summer season, filled his house with butterflies. Des Moine woman who has been troubled with frequent oohis.coiieluded .1 trv an old remedy in a new way. and accordingly took a tahlespoohful (four times the" usiinl dose) of Cham lM'ffaiu's Cough Homed y jut before ijoing to btl. The next morning she found that her cold had almost eutire lv dia;i-ard. During tlia day he tK-k a tew dose of the remedy (one teaMKxuiful at a time) and at night again took u tablesiMxmfu! befor go ing to IhhI, and on t he following morn ing uwoke free from nil symptoms of the cold. Since thm she has, on several occasions, used this remedy in like manner, with the same good, re sults, and is much elated over her dis covcrv of o quick a way of curing- a cold. For sale by O. M. Roytter Druggist. GENERAL NEWS. A Girl Makes$2I2.!6 in a Month I read in your valuable paper how one of your Mibscribers made money in the plating business, but I cii beat that and I am only a girl. -I t-ent and got the new Gray Plater and cleared $212.10 in a month. Can any of your readers beat this? You can get spoons, forks and jewelry to plate at every house. Some big articles sent and had platd at the factory. There is plenty of work to do both in the city and country, and why should any per son be poor and out of employment when such an opportunity is at hand. Anyone can get my plater by writing to Gray & Co'e. Plating Works, Colum bus, Ohio. They do all kinds of plat ing and will teach the art. My plater has a lathe, wheels, tools and mater ials for polishing a nice little work shop. I hope my experience will help others. President Cleveland's Gold Message. No man of sense believes for a mo ment that the message sent to Congress by the President on yesterday was ex pected or intended by him as an ap peal to that body. He knows that Congress would no more act favorably upon such recommendations as he makes in the message than they would undertake to substitute a monarchy for a republic. He demands authority to issue bonds payable in gold nd to deliver them to whoever will surrender greenbacks and treasury notes at par; in addition to which he also wants au thority to sell such bonds at all times when necessary to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to deliver gold to whomsoever may demand it and in whatever quantities. It would bo difficult to estimate the limit of such a debt as he proposes. If he could have bonds in exchange lor five hundred millions of treasury notes, gold must still be piled up.in the treasury for.the redemption by the millions of .the na tional bank notes, which would suc ceed the greenbacks. It is not true, as Mr. Cleveland ays, that we have "five hundred millions of currency notes of the Government for which gold may be demanded." It is not true, as he states, that the gold reserve is essential to the maintenance of our public credit. It is true, as he states, that under the false pretence of sustaining the public credit, the Presi dent has well nigh destroyed it, by paying out sixty-nine millions of gold within the last two months not in the ordinary way of business; not to maintain in this country the converti bility of paper with each kind of coin but to increase the substance of gold brokers, bond dealers and foreign gov ernments. The President has trilled with this great .subject, ami jierverted the law which he is sworn to execute. ) When agents of foreign banks ami for eign countries go iu the Subtrrasury i in New York v. ii h millions oi' grcen I backs, the President. instead of tender- ing them silver, so that the gold in the ; Tieasurv iuav be reserved for the re d:mpt:on of paper in the ordinary business ' n;etho!. iiis shoveled the gold it-serve just purchased into bar rels, to be exported as merchandise, it is. nut even counted when it is ex- poi i eJ , It is soid by weight like other J ju'g.metiil. A;uerier.n gold coin is not i',iij.i.!eivl ni'ttifV in England. It is merely a lump .' go'ti bullion. The Mainp of our Government uoer not de j tei inine its value. They weigh it just i as they do lead. It is for thi purport - and for no other that gold is needed j in the Treasury. To buy the gold i shoveled out during the hi -it MXty days, at the rate of more than a mil lion a day, the American ieople are saddled with a bonded indebtedness to a like amount. No law required this of Mr. Cleveland. No Law iermittcd this by Mr. Cleveland. It is an out rageous lnrtrayal of a great public trust. As lcfore remarked, the message was not intended for Congress. Congress will pay no heed to it. The next Con gress will give just as little hed. No gold -bond will be issued. No duties will be made iayable in gold. The gold now in the Treasury will be shoveled out by the President during the next week or ten days. There h plenty of good money in the Treasury. Greenbacks h-.ve to be left inexghange for the gold that goes. Mr. Cleveland J has not yet got far enough to deliver the gold to our foreign financial ene mies without receiving something in return for it. . The revenues only fall short of the expenditures seventy millions a year, and there is now near ly twice that amount in the Treasury only it is not in gold. The Govern ment can go right along and pay all its bills. It can also redeem in silver all the notes preseuted by Mr. Ickelheimer and Lazard Freres. But, while Mr. "Cleveland expect nothing from Congress in response to his absurd recommendations, he has accomplished the object he desired, aud that is to offer himself to the gold kings as the leader of the political gold party of the United States. He has now done what we predicted he would do at the opening of the session. He has cut loose from all Democrats who are not slaves to the gold power. He has made a bid for the support of the banks and of those they can control. He hopes to divide the Republican party as he has divided his own. He hopes that the gold wing of each party will beek consolation in the company of the other, and that by a marriage, between gold Republicans and gold Democrats he will form one grand gold party, which will have him for itsgokl leader and elect him for its gold Presi dent. He believes that money will buy. the people at the next Presidential election, and that the Rothschilds and their fellows in Europe will regard him as "the only original Jacobs." He thinks that the gold powsr can com mand gold Republicans to follow what ever leader it dictates. He will point to the presence in the Republican par ty of Teller, Wolcott, Dubois and all the Western Republican silver Sena tors as evidence that the Republican pirty cannot be trusted on the gold question. Only one thing remains for Mr. Cleveland to do, and that is to dis qualify from voting all who are op posed to him and his gold allies. If he can do that, he will be our first third term President. Failing in that, he will be a collapsed balloon. He will linger two years more on his political deathbed,at the end of which time the pallor of political death will rest upon his countenance; and when he finally leaves political life, his political re mains will be deposited in the political potters' field, to which are consigned the jmlitical servants of the people who have been unfaithful to them. The same resting place also awaits those cuckoos whose servility may prom pi "them to respond to his latest deliverance. Cincinnati Enquirer We think this is cold weather, but listen to this mild story as recorded by the Cincinnati Enquirer: "Talking about cold weather,M said T. L. Ma lone at the St. Nicholas, "reminds me of the winter of ' 1STS. Dakota was just opening up, and the town of Far go was lively, although iossessiug but a few hundred inhabitants.' It grew so cold theit- one night that the mercury froze iu the thermometers, and no one will ever know how cold it was. Amoug other damage done was the freezing of he whfoky in the saloons. It win impossible to secure enough heat to thaw it out, and the only course lelt was for the saloon keepers to it iu scales and tell it by the pound, customers putting cakes in their overcoat pockets and biting it i For M-veral days it was common for fr e.d to offer each other a chew of wijiky." . O. i la.-t Thursday, President C. A. Collif r, General Counsel J. J. Spald ing, Vice-Pie.-UJeiit H. H. Cabaniss, , Hon.Clark Howell, Chairman of the Committee on Legislation, Gov. R. B. Bullock and E- P. Black went to Ra leigh, by invitation, to address a joint session of the North Carolina General Assembly in behalf of the Cotton States and International Exposition. They were treated with distinguished courtesy, and received assurances from a number of leaders that the legislature would vote an appropria tion to make an exhibit. The repre sentatives of the Exposition also ad dressed, by invitation, the National Farmers" Alliance and the Negro Emancipation Society. The Farmers Alliance parsed a resolution endorsing' the Exo:tiou. and the negroes gave it a very hearty endorsement, saving that North Carolina would eclipe all other States In the negro exhibit. Next to money, Rembrandt loved nothing so well as his monkey. He ihed tears when the ape died and I situ ted a portrait of his pet from memory.