Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / March 29, 1894, edition 1 / Page 2
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Kdltor. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. $1.00 THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1894. BICHHOND'8 BATS A " POLITICAL PARABLE. "His Grace, the Duke of Rich mond, since his self-heralded entrv of the political arena, has con tributed some rich gems to con temporary political literature. Were this suzerain of Richmond Hill some - ignoble scribbler, scratching away in his. sooty den, trying to reform the world on a salary of six dollars a week, his emanations might with all pro priety be parsed by unheeded. But such is t y no means the case. This aristocratic personage, this -only living Carolinian Duke, has been chosen by the combined hosts of the Populists and Repub licans as the golden link that would bind them into one grand and indissoluble union. He is the self annointed Moses who proposes to lead the scattered hosts of both these noble orders from the wilderness into which Simmons has enticed them into' the political promised land : the land which the Duke's minions are already describing to. the "toiling masses" 'on Spill Corn and Shelton Laurel, as flowing with peach and honey. Whatever the Duke says goes. Whatever the Duke writes is forth , with flashed in the public eye through those monster electric search lights, the Asheville Register .and the HendersonviHe Times, and is worn in the hat bands of every truly loyal Coalitionist from the Tennessee, line in' the West to i Harry Skinner in' the East. Such facts give to these pub lished utterances, however trifling they may seem at first reading, a significance and potency that will warrant all Democrats in giving them careful and prayerful study. In a recent letter to the Hender sonviHe Times the Duke, who with that condescension . which" is the true mark of nobility, merely signs his name, Richmond' Pear son, says among other things more or less pertinent the follow ing: "It is said that when a rat finds that the preserves are too far for him to get them oat by himself, he does not fuse or coalesce with another rat, but simply locks paws or tails with him bo 1 as to reach the goods. Unless the Re publicans and Third party leaders dia 1 play less intelligence than the average rat is credited with they will make a joint effort and reacn the Democratic preserves this fall. It is now or never. " Democrats, read, ponder and in wardly digest. Read over and over again and then read between the lines. Each word is fraught with meaning. Each line, is por tentous. Each -sentence sounds the death knell of a thousand Democratic hopes. The edict has been issued. The decree, as changeless as the laws " of the Medes and Persians has. gone forth. It thunders from the castle on Richmond Hill and is whispered by the clansmen on Pogey and Potato Top. The breeze carries it down the French Broad to Pritchard and the early June bug has already buzzed it in the ears of the "Bull of the Brush ies Skinner and Butler have been waiting for it with their ears to the ground and Green of Wake is setting it to music. In castle and cottage, in manor house and hovel, in field and- forge and factory is heard the wild, soul stiring refrain : "Friends of coali tion, lock tails and move on the pre serve" : Close your eyes for an, instant and give play to your imagination. See the strange s'njht which the seer of Buncombe has conjured up. See a writhing, wriggling mass of political rats, their tails lovingly and inseparably locked, their noses high. in air, their nostrils distended, 'their teeth, shining, their mouths watering as they sniff from afar . the Democratic preserves. Lean and hungry rats there are, flabby and hollow look gaunt and grizzly and gray, many of them, that once lived in the public crib and fattened on the stores of the people and wasted and gamboled through it and spoiled it, as rats will, till the keeper came and ferretted them out and drove them helter skelter to the holes in the rocks. There are others, whiskered and old and thin, who have been gnawing away on the outside of t!je crib called Office for generations," until claws are worn away and teeth air most gone, and never yet a grain from within. There are fat. round bellied rats, with the taste of the public cheese still on thir fuzzy jowls, scampering along u ith the others to try and find . a hole to creep back through. B'jr rats and little rats, white - rats and black rats, gray rats and lite rat's -all gamboling along aft fth- pied ?Piper with never a thought of a cat or a catastrophe. Partners for the next set ! Bal ance all ! Forward on the head ! Swing corners ! Forward on the sides avd' dos a Jos I Steady all ! jAck Tails I Chasset all I On with v the dance, .ict j y be u neon fined." Look at the couples, in the thick- W. C. KBVIN, est of the fray and behold Pear son anU Butler, Skinner and Mott, Pritchard and Greene, Wilcox and Wakefield, Rom Linneyand Little Bill Teague, Edward Stanley Wal ton and Robert Alexander Cobb ! How thty wiggle and wabble and wallop! How they play aid prance and pirouette! How they scrape and scamper and scoot these pre cious specimens of the genus mus! A curious mode of attack you think, this tail locking business? And yet it has its advantages. By locking tails the Republican and Populist rats lxk in different di rections and can. thus-both look upon their widely divergent party platforms. The Republican . can look on the prosperity he men tioned at Minneapolis and the Populist can see the ruin he 'saw around him at Omaha. One can laud protection to the skies while the other denounces it, and upon any and all issues these wily rats are , in position to beguile the simpler rodents of the fields, both "going and a coming." The disadvantages of the situa tion will probably not be apparent until the preserve jar is reached and the question has to be decid ded which rats are to do the hold ing on andU which are to be let down to enjoy the sweets. When this question comes up we may expect to hear wailing and gnash ing of teeth, and many a tail will be untwisted and there will be many an old he rat fight in the larder that may bring the cat on t he-scene before the preserves are reached. Who knows ? But let us thank the Duke. He puts us all on guard. He tells us months in advance how we are to be attacked and he tells us what the foe is after. It is not the peo ple who are to get the preserves, mind you, but the leaders. We thank the Duke for his candor, for his frankness, for his honorable way of letting us know what he wants. He wants to lock tails with Butler and run his nose up to the muzzle in the choicest Dem ocratic preserves in all the larder. Let him ware of the cat that roams the hills of the ninth. Democrats, be on your guard ! The rats are after your preserves. For eighteen years you have been laying them aside until your pan try is well stocked. There . are the big jars of "Good. Govern ment," "Public Schools Restored." "State Hospitals for the Insane," Schools for the Deaf and Dumb," The University," "The Girls' Normal and Industrial School," Public Debt Settled," "Cheapest State Government in the Union," "A Pure Judiciary," "Free and Honest Elections," "Good and Economical County Government," "State Credit Restored," "State Name Respected," "State Treasu ry with a Surplus." No; wonder you are proud of the display. No wonder the hungry rats are want ing to spoil it all and are propos ing to lock tails to get at it. Don't let them do it. Drive the hungry horde away. Keep the good things your' economy and thrift have prepared for the peo ple forever out of the reach o ot ilf- Pearson and his lean and favored tail-locked rats. A few more speedy trials, con victions, and sentences like that in the homicide case last week, would render resorting to lynch law a great deal less frequent. Morrow and Williams, both harm less enough when sober, had little more than time to sober up fairly befbre they were dumped inside the penitentiary walls. That's the way that justice ought to be raeeted out swiftly and .cer tainly. Mr. Geo. E. McCook, of Penn sylvania, knowi a good thing when he sees it. His talk about Western North Carolina to the Washington News, published else where is about as enthusiastic as was that of Hon. W. D. Kelly trom the same State. Pennsyl vanians are already doing much to assist in building up Western North Carolina, and there is room for many more of the same kind. . ..At Durham yesterday ; ten people were convicted of gamb ling. Worn and Wan and Weak and Weary. Ho! ye women, worn and weary," with wan faces and so indescribably weak. Those distressing, d ragging down pains, and that constant weak ness an wornness and weariness can be cured. For all such sufferers. Dr. Fierce's Favorite Prescription is a pan acea of inestimable value. As an in vigorating tonic, it imptrts streoRth to the whole system. For "overworked " "worn-out,', debilitated teachers, dress makers, seamstresses, -shop girls " housekeepers, nursinc mothers, and feeble women generally. Dr. Pierce's 7fKVtFre8ci!?tioD i8 tbo greatest earthly boon, being unequaJed as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic ttJt 8hin ai "lengthening ner-' vine, "lavonte Prescription" i, u. equaled and invaluable in allaying aud U1 CltabUity' whWtion. prostration, hysteria, Hpasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms, com monly attendant upon functional and o086.8-80' Jt "duces refreshing dlndenr"' neDUl '" . ",5 . icawu wujr children should be allowed to suffer ttouhS- ... co nuu glandular swellings when such a pleasant? effect e. and economical medicine asAyer's Rapanll.vmay be procured ofthe nearest dm in rit- r.. "c Aver V. " ur" fou et PRESERVE THE FORESTS. We have received a very inter esting illustrated pamphlet telling of results at Biltmore Forest, on Mr. George W. Vanderbilt's estate near Asheville. The people of Western North Carolina should be particularly interested, in .'any experiments that go to show how a forest can be preserved and beau tified and at the same time yield a revenue. The axe of the woodman is not only removing from the forests the "merchantable" timber, but careless felling and reckless cutting away of the young growth, followed as it frequently is by the scourge ot fire, is rendering deso late large tracts which ought still be bearing a vigorous, healthy young growth. Mr. Vanderbilt's forester will be doubly entitled to the thanks of our people, if, after the interast he took inour dis play of timber at Chicago, he is instrumental in teaching our peo ple how to use the forest without blasting and destroying it for the future. A slip accompanying the pamphlet thus condenses its con tents i. Biltmore Forest annlHVttion nr fnri mann 1. 1 United States. . Biltmore estate, of " iub lores .is a part, lies near Asheville. Carolin. Before its purchase by Mr. ue aman xarmera to whom the land belonged had pastured their cattle in the forest, had h., to improve the pasturage, and had cut a large proportion of the trees which could be used or sold for fencing, fuel orsawlongs. At the time when the management was undertaken com paratively few large, sound trees of white, blar V anH sxarlot ,l ..J i leaf pine, which are the more im- opwien, were still standing in the forest, and the nnnrlitinn nf o lo- part of it was deplorable in the ex- JS1-? Prime.0bject of the management at Biltmore is to nav tha nmar v,;i l CUJO. fl J ww UUV improving the forest. To this end "im provement cuttings" were begun in some parts of the forest, to remove old trees which had reached a merchanta ble size and were standing over and in juring good young growth. In other places the only measures required were to exclude cattle and fire, and give the In the nrncma nt falling k 1 the trees to fall were first carefully "vlCTl u maiiea, tnen sawed down and reduced at once to cord wood or sawloes or both, rinut . 1 " -v-m. WOO UKU in selecting the place for each tree to jiuiaiiaininrowingitBOthat the top Ullht not Crush Ihn vminov. which it fell. The result was a gain of PJbably 95 per cent, in the condition U1 young growtn over that which usually follows ordinary lumbering, while the increase in cost was not more than 2 or 3 per cent. The output of the forest was sold at m,rvt open competition, but most was con sumed, by tne other departments of the estate I simply because the prices charged made it worth while for them to purchase of the forest rather than During the first year a great improve ment was effected in the condition of the forest at a verv small r a .total expenditure of nearly $10 000 the net cost of tha i a VfCUlCUf WB somewhat less than $400. During the J uuwever, witn woodsmen more fully trained and the whole force in better working order, the manage- ... j.v.ucu . uci pront or ratner GENERAL MEWS. . .The evidence in th Piio, crecKinridge suit is not. all in . - & vuaiu .It is estimated that th Ui. freezej destroyed early vegetables and melons alono- th 4tu-.:- , . r ouaiuiL Coast Line alone to the extent of 1,000,000. ..The reoorts from th v,.v. . ...w HUIlll- West say that the winter wheat crop has been greatlv damaged Reports from Nev York tov the enect mat. tne vinyards have been nearly wiped out by the cold. .Alfred Holt Col veteran. Confederate Mamr n. eral. Member of Congress, Gov ernor 01 vxeorgia, and since 1882 representing Georgia in the U. S Senate, died in Washington last Monday in his seventieth year William Fredrick's a nAi.j tough, walked into the San cisce Union Savings Bank.- at an cany; nour last triday morning, and demanded ninnrv nf ehi a- iu. nerriCK. His demand he. cashier dead. He was afterward a , ivuiilils mp captured by the police. - v .A crank named fnv . 1,,. been threatening for a month. to .udrcu on vv asnington with an army of 100,000 men, make a big dem onstration and demand that the government issue $soo,ooo,ooo in fiat money to be used in building roads and giving employment to the people. The army was booked to march from Massaliion, Ohio last Sunday, and it came to time.' but instead of 100,000 men, the procession-consisted of 75 tramps and ragamuffins. . The first night out, the thermometer dropped to zero and there was a considerable fall of snow. The whole army marched fT the police station at Canton O., and asked to be locked up. Monday . morning they re sumed their, march. They now number 1S9. : - J - I - i ' Falling OlT A Vug. "As easy as falling off a lo " i. an old saying. When it was first uttered pSJ ' k,ng of a dos of Dr. Pierce s Pleasant l.'elleU These act follows as la the case with theold- sSubtf tt,ita- , reiief Su&si, resemble the actiou of Nature in her happiest mood8; the impulse given to rVk7nTand?r U f- l'le n& ilS oj ine disappearance of all bilioua symptoms. Sick headache wind on -M 8t'?iaCKh' Pain throh the Lht side and houlder blade, wid yellow? ness of the skin and evehklt- illy remedied by thj eileia It May lo a. SrartlTon kH'!.11111"' of IrviK- HI writes 5ratm"ensS K ass 4 Mrwia cute of fl KW n! "Plly adapted to cure or ail Kidney and Liver tr. nhi. John Tull's Drug Store. 1 Simmon' gfet Circular. It has just tianspired that John B. Eaves, the lie publican chair man issned a secret circular from his headquarters two weeks before the circular prepared by Simmons were sent out. Eaves cautioned his henchmen to see that no Re publican voter failed to have his name recorded and his Hge, etc., sent forth in exact accordance with the decision of the . court in Harris vs. Scarborough. IIU ob ject evidently was to get the Re publican registration in good shape and then challenge Demo cratic voters for failure to comply with the law. When Simmons issued his letter Instructing his subordinates to have defective Democratic registrations corrected and to cause new eutries to be made correctly, a half dozen copies or it were delivered to Eaves in two days. It was mailed to no one but county chairman, who were the truest Democrats of the counties. Who sent the coitinn tn Earest Your correspondent thiuks it absurd to refleet on Eaves or Sim mons for giving information which was legitimate and h have been disseminated bv both among their respective assistants. But whether the Simmous circular was filched from the mail in transitu, stolen bv a (lamer iv trnm Democratic . headquarters or furnished Eaves bv k subordinate, there was a breach of r..it.i. i . .. .. laitu huu uoiiesty tnat ought to have been ex nosed and tinniKheri. If there had been anv moral or legnl turpitude in sending sucb in formation to political aides-de camp charged with the especial duty of bringing their respective ueighbors aud followers to the pons, it wouldn't lie in the month of the coalition to complain, be cause Simmons7 forces were under oetter tlisciDltue and obpvpl li commands more ltromntlv and universnllv. The complaint reminds one of a ... Kitme 01 poKer that was aid to have been played in Rutherfon in old times. A tmliW lm ucweu some veraant voung men i 1 . . . r very seriously. The boys, after arranging a game for tin next uikui, iouuu hd old bachelor friend who knew how tn Jundl. the "papers'7 and nretiared to et their, revenge. Th black -leg got the deal, the baehelor friend being imjiruou uis uumrtiiate left and the boys rauged still further to the left. As he distnh llt(lt tliA iaril the dealer slipied four ares aud a king into his Ian: hnt rl meiit did uot escae his neighlM.r, wuu put up a large uuna aud very adroitly exchanged his own hand. ouunng only a pair.or deuces, on . . . - . me uesuer-s Kuee. The bys passed "ui, out me two 01a stagers with out lookinc at their h audit nut tinned io taise each other on into the hundred. Finally the dealer cawtu. itaisinir na iiand deliiiei-utely but with a confident fm -w uhum HIT lit WHS at first HnmfnnnrloI wheu his eve fell noon th queens aud he heard his neighbor y, "iwo pairs or aces.77 Foreet- ting consequence, the black-leg extiaiined 111 terrible but impotent fge,"uiue a -a ir there ainl rascality around this board.7 The uoys were revenged. mt t.h dealer never explained the nature 01 uie rricK tnat was played npou uiiu. It is sa id that from that time forth he refused to throw an other Card, and ATtrr loarlincr o blameless life for the rest of bis days, died at last iu the order of siiuciuy. uutier and Skinner tried to steal control of the convention. Eaves and Ilussey undertook to run the registration huinefs. bimmona beat the whole board Hinc illas lachryma?.77 1 ue code nrovideM in wiinn 648 (7) that any one who publishes gios.sly iuaccurate account! nf Mia preceediugs ol a court with iutent t-o misrepresent or bring into con tempt the authority of such court can be punished for contempt. Butler has wilfully charged tLat me opinion iu uarris vs. Scarbor otigh was conrrarv tit lw and th. usual practice ol the court was withheld and not certified down to the court of Montgomery till after uiuimuMB circular was issued September, though it was filed March. The truth of history in IS mat ioi. Kenan certified it down as the law reamred. th la-t March, 1892. aud it wa i,nttii.u.i iu the Republic in organ, the Signal, by J. C. L. Harris, Hbout the miaaie ot March, 1892. That paper was circulated amoncr ti.o ita..nu licans of the State, as many as 200 vico utiug ue nt to one county. It was published in April in the ov.ncwsiern neporier, and in the summer ol the same year in the volume oj Reports. ' Butler kuew, or easily could have kuowu, that what he wrote was false. Believ ing that the misrepresentation Was Wilfoll. VOUr CUrrMnmwlant i,. sists that the court ought to teach lesson aud also haul Bichmond Pearsan over the eoal for making BUbstantially the same charge. Butler's ignorance may be pleaded iu "mitigation for him. But Mr. Pearson knows that hu uiiner, wnen thief Justice, dis- uiiirmaoomose bundled of ib leading lawyers of the State, win. Mr. Moore, Gov. Bragg and Judge "tiaa at tuts ueiui ol riiu r. coudeiuuing his conduct in Kendins Out. u .rlifi , w..i.v.. vnvuiar 111 looo Hd- tit:Miiiig me election or the Be publn an ticket over his uwu signa ture. Mr. le:iriii ii.ii ... the physic lhat his father admin is 1 e red. but shape of a fine out l thepieihoric purse, prepared for the campaign s it is 110 punishnjeiit to disbar a briefless barrister.- Ttv .r...... to (Mgo 41, C3 North Can.Iiua Be ports, Mr. Pearson will H...1 n.. among those who were disbarred for contempt were not only Mr Miore and (Jn- Tlr,. OCT Tt Utl est Joe Davis," whom he so justlr - - ...... (I llim It-IIMr U till T t vance.n withont iliimir. bV IMVIi.tr 1..,.. I... rit c--... ...... lo IUII name. xour corre8jonileut would smreest Hrgiiuiciit Tor Mr. l ear.-on's next letter towit.. ir our ilistine'iii.she.l Knoi,. be pmusbed for contempt by his Jlistingnished father, he ought to le permuted to retriati- ... same naine.-Vr. f;Aart Qburcer. There's No Choice in Bicycles. The Victor Pneumatic tire has no rival. -. It is more durable than any, other and the inner tube can be re moved in case of puncture in less than five minutes. - The only inner tube removable through the rim. All Victor improvements are abreast with the times and meet every requirement. OVERMAN OSTOM. Nt YOftK. PMOAOCLPMU. CMICaOOw AN ntAMCiacO. Bridswatra Badfat. Cormpondcsce of The Morfaatoa Herald. Beidoewateb, N. March 2V, 1894 We feel somewhat sad this morning as we look out on our wheat fields and the wheat looks as though there had been hot water pouted on it. We con sider our jieach crop entirely de stroyed, and a part or the apple crop also. I see ice sticks at my pump trough one foot long and as large a a chair post. But we are apt to look too much on the gloomy side of everything. We have the promise nfaeed time and ha nest and by the sweat of our brow we shall have bread. We are ready to plant corn, but owiDg to the cold snap we will put off plauting for a while. Mrs. Yarborougb and Miss Mary Kincaid are exacted to return from Knoxville in a Tew days. Mr. Gound and family will come with them. We notice that onrcorresoiid ent from Ourav. Colorado, is a believer in woman suffrage. How would it look here in N. CI I don't hardly think then is n res pectable lady m X. C. who would go to the polls, if she were allowed, to vote, for anything. But we are not surprised at anvtbiug Colora do does since it cast its electoral vote br Weaver. We are sorry to h-urn that yonr CoriesKudeiit. "Short Off" is hav ing affliction in Ids fainilv. The old fellow hiniKeir h.i.H just pulled through a spell ofthe Gripe, and has been so lm-y ou his farm that he would put off marrying 11 con pie till rest day came a round. Not many J. Ps. ever thought .r this plan to save time. V to hear from him soon. Dr. Giear seem to I hi busy near lv all the time, attending to his sick patients. Then he h otiie pa tients that are not nick ut all, hnt they require some attention and he is not slow to give ir. We are sorry to hear that your associate editor, Erwin Avery, has been called rroin n; but we con gratulate him and hoe he may have good health and In success ful iu his new field or labor. Col. Thornton ba been having a nic time catching fish at his pond near Bridgewatcr this Spring. B. K. VTie Buoy u Hck. we paTw W CWorla. "WTie. ! aa a chCJ. aba crtod f or C-toria. Wl. (bo became Him, ah clun to Caatoria. Wl aha had CbOdrea.aha ntbtn Caatoria For lonjr. time I suffered with stomach and liyer troubles, and could and no relief until I began to use Oyer's Pills. I took them regularly lor a few months mwA ww.- I i.u . . ..- u. j i.wibii waa completely restored." D. W. Baine, A Little Daughter rM -a . - . Of a Church of England minister cured of a distressing rash, by Ayer Sarsaparilla. Mr. Bichard Brass, the well-known Druggist, 207 McGill st, Montreal, Y. O. says: I have sold Ayers Family Medicines for 40 years, and hare heard nothing bat ood said ot ttem. I know of many Wonderful Cures performed ty Ayers Sarsaparilla, one la partiCTilar being that ot a litUe daughter of a Church of England minis ter. The child was literally corered from bead to foot with a red and ex ceedingly troublesome rash, from which he had suffered for two or three years, la spite of the best medical treatment aYallable. Her father was In great distress about the case, and, at my recommendation, at last began to ad minister Ayers Sarsaparilla, two hot ties ot which effected a complete core, much to her relief and her father's delight. I am sure, were he here to-day, he would testify in the strongest terms as to the merits of a , Ayer's Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayar Oa, Le wall, Utm. Cures other,wIM cure you t compound: parcUa. twMtuwnafny w4 fa. Unvta saprlncipiwl w1t. . . wao offr B ftor brrwtra miL rait aralaa parUoaiafa ,lo" Lily Caataavr. Solil ia Morgan ton by T. L. HempUU, r ra- ooi'sCottonRoo WW a ----- - m m Victors are BEST. WHEEL CO. ocmorr. THE RECORD BROKEN ! ON PBICKS OF CLOTHING AND . GENTS' FURNISHINGS ! Preparatory to new buying, we propose to sell . . . 1000 Cravats st 25c, woith 50c. 75 MEN'S FINK SUITS CORK-SCREWS AID CLAY WORSTIK, nt :tt rv'r tent. Ie thsn eot. - Underwear - at yonr on price. GENTS' HANDKKBCIIIF3 AND SILK MUFFLKUS A SPECIALTY. OVERCOATS AWAY DOWN. Just received, a large lot of Odd Pants, from 75c to tS.00. Ours is the only Clothing House in A v . 1 10 wn. miners ire mixed stocks. COLLETT & GILLAM, THE UABEROAaUEBa. ACCLIMATED GARDEN SEEDS I A NEW SUPPLY OF BEANS. PEAS. CORN AM ALL OTHKR KINDS OF UARMTEED FRESH SEEDS JUST AUUIVED. A Jew Petf TUUE HOSE Bull. at 8 cts. each. They are very flue. "Mr. W. It. li a iiri.'i ..t . 1 n 11 H rill a- cist (rcgisieimi) of ttccntt tXrte tears' poetical experience, will I ll ll . Stt I i A Sk....S 1 . rBESCBVPTIOX DEPARTMENT snl Kuaranteex accuracy, prompt neam -aid only pure good$. T. L HEMPHILL L:xton nailJiii. 1 O I o o eh O I I I CD a c 7 Or 71 D CO M O c r pa CO a n w Q Z 0 g 1 : 0 I5E5-TWHTT-G5HT nilS.- 'JOHN TULL (Gradnatr in iT-armar.., ' AJiew am! fieh li f Drugs. Chemicals AXD F ANCY GOODS just rtvritcl and to nUr JOHN TULL'S PHARHlcr. Alo a fall six I arj:t. mtri of all kin. Is of PATENT .Mi:i)lcip ami lirstMfs a full tin. 0f urU r. I idea of every day nar m comiounicatiiai:tic PILLS, CASTOU OIL, TUIIPKMlSi; 8WEETOIL,tOPPEHAs, KP.SOM SALTS AKD BLUE STONE. lor soaking Le4t. VHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Best assort met t of Toilet :-: Soap AJCD -: PERFUMERY :- ever bnmght Lerr. im tt i j-uxiuuseiieepers. 8PICE3 OP ALL KIXUS a-. as Gmcer, Natures, CinDao.., Clovea, Allspice, Dlack and 14 PlPVr F1' 8?ed. Tumerick, whole and groaod. Best varieties of Horse. Cat- tie, no and Chicken Pow ders and Bird Seed. Diamond Dyes. paas' Easter dyes. Jost think! G different .l..r lorrrcsforS cents! e-ithr .vA color or ranatM. SEEDS! SEEDS! SEEKS! IIATsDIT laAll fl-Illft- la. l.-IJ-a U onuecessarr to aay bt-y are rrau aim irne to nam, and e aTOarautee them to lw r.Mi any ever ofIerel in Mrjcantou. lieraembrr, peas, IIrn, lare ooprar Corn, Cahbar, Touiatje, "lJS xc, two papers for one nickel. We also m an n fact ore from nor own tried receipts and pnt up in conreoirnt form for family oithe followinjr elepsnt preparationa. tcttj :oda win. Both liquid and tahlrt form. A gatrful and efficient auUc id, calm at ire and siomachir. UteTuI in nausea, Kirk head ache, heartbarn, iudiestuiu, flat uleucr, or other symptoms ordyarpsia. It is erjaJii iineful in relieving tbe flafn Irnee, colic and nan-a of in fanta. IBU'JlEWFUESllTICOIHWSa. For cleansi op, -tQiiTiae and prt-M-ning the leeih ail gum. TUU'S ELYCERCU CF ECFJU i excellent for aoftenin and whitening the skin, and alo prrvrnta and cur chspjid handfc aud lij. TUtl'S CWI COLCSIL iAKtinff and fragrant. MaT from one ol th oldest and t-. receipts in ll is vutitn. For sale io any quantity. TUU'S WCIDEEFUL CURUU CIITKEIT. Fr cnta, lorti, lnnisra and aomr or all kindf howrter long tmuliDK. And in conrlainf h vin miJf a lifetime lud.v if Droics aid f .1 .1 i . t . . of 24 jear atn.huof the larpest cille:e of pharmacy io the United States, I fnllr appreciate the im portance ot nsiur only rure ana Frrh Drags, and pay particular atteutiou to filling physician's l'rtfrcripuons, day or night. Alcb. 13, yj rReniember we are neit to 'Post Office.
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 29, 1894, edition 1
2
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