Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Sept. 19, 1895, edition 1 / Page 1
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..mM-iiimnmuimmiimiimrg J0B rm" A SPECIALTY. J r rWs - iff n. k Libr&ry J I A . on - - Note Heads, fUate- Knvelopes, i-ositra, ampniets, or inn, cxccuxca n - l"S"t-:,.r.. .'.riors. liy the si"11 i of the art, and at S MERAI rl-BLISHIKG CO.. MoKGANTON, N. C. VOL, XI. NO. run umnniuininminmnuniiiitn mi I SCHOOL I a Z2 H BOOKS BY 1 MAIL. Yon re a get mmy 2 book a IW ft! at hat by saaU frees 3 3 3 3 3 a MORGANTON, N. C. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 19. 1895. PRICE FIVE CENTS. Church Directory. Divine service every wifrt1 nml s P- ua- Prayer meeting 11 a- - 1" in. Sunday school every "I.,N,l:i ;U 1 ,n. sunt... anrt rv V'r 4:3u p. ::.". - hi-'at a n m .nun11 'h iivi .11 w"n k,v . sVKt s p. m. Prayer meeting ;i i a- ,v u s P- m. Suuday School Voiiu-;s-u ; j a. Clay well, supt. .ciliW'"" .. ,i.ir. . i. uiltierbrand, supu i ADJ01N1NGC0UNTY NEWS Interesting. Historv lars the fau for t of thfs r Cl -r I "s Utl II iltOlUl III iNHVPTl II'IVO 1 rnmm:...J . . .. n i, - J osuio I milieu 10 laii VU1UFIU ""I" me ieignD0rn00d . in,s ne s in jail two rr ess. Mns every Sabbath UUUU IjKIIkn WWDVUTHPTiti i"-- " V r meeting every - " ' " JlJMhl.. it4'-., i-i.ia.ui. .tu,w.rtT;cop0.-snnlay Ser TVi i a m ; Mens' Bible Class 4 ; at;;3l't, s" m. Sunday school at 930 a. i t-':-"-'!'"'. ,nni. services Wednesdays, 5 p. m. Kev. Church- ruv. rivW; (J0B winl,old services iei." " ? p tiu. itrst and third Sundays in lV,!l, ' " . I?f.,- . , , Caldwell Chat-CleveUMd Culling, Ca tawba Catches-lJncoln Wnic8-Mo- b uiuion UleanlnsB ff veiet-New Cotton and Corn rapier or Accident Marriages. r his rrnoH KK i .m O .IIOIIUI Ulllll next term of court, and in de- Doud he was also According to times. Lincoln. Lincoln Cornier, Sept. 12th. Capt. I. R. Self was the first to pay his taxes on the new tax lists just out for the vear iJW j - -yj- - . . are out announcintr th a r Kaiiiiittniutminmiiitumnnmnii Uomi sro. x. c. a mil Card: Month o! SaMnaf C " Tuesday, Sept. 24th, ; l Mrr Juus P. Cauble to Miss Mamie Eptine. of Chernlc. n Other Societies. Of t'OMMEKCK. I. 1. Da W. W 1ISOU, tr., octrciarjr. lib UU'enuga ai uisumw w j- t'H AMBEK Of 10 . i ,i W. Wilson -liar a. .i.u.ir n t.hn evf nlncr of the .t :.3 u v'- - . - .tl.i-iv in each nioniu. -1 , vaLEY Loduk. A. F. A.M.-Regu- .riWA ....... ..t ihulr lrvtvpi mnm In coniiiiuiJ". . . street, on the evenings 1 rv Dd i inlrd Monaay in eacu muuui. . , . mevilni: of Bume i-oage o. m SW'jar, ,? -tii'ai on second and Fourth Mon st I m s o'clock. Visiting brethren iuu'd to auena- Weak, Irritable,Tired I y as No Good on Earth." .i. vTi;l1a ii n tVi hmlrpn lie wcaK, uu - fcura constitution, ana permanently ,r fTerv kind ol nervous disease. Zxbout one year ago I tea afflUteA .i nerrouties, 8leejleanem, Slight palpitation of my heart, ntfractino com uxiimvM tirioutloti or lapse of memory. Kriahtea fi kh wnw inifelt mil nroiiiy wcunny vw fro frenJ:. irritable and tired, a a . . fy tttight wan reoce i ow . j orf I wo aood, on earth. i triead brougtii t0r. Miles' boole, het and Start- Ficts," and billy aeciaeu .. i . El S1ILZS "r stiTe Nervine. K;or I hid tuken ae iwttle I could keep " cl1 M a ;.jr.-old iy. 3i y lifjewe returnea Jisity lncrcasoa. KVm J had f akfn tne muetn ooxtie ll weight increased to 179 bm., Yetfnnation inttty leg teas gone; It nerves steadied completely; ii memory teas fully restored. If brain teemed clea rer than ever. If fit as good a any man on earth. Dr. Sites' Restorative Nervine im i treat medicine, I assure you." A-ita, Me. Walter R. Bubbahk. vim' Nerrino la sola on a rjosltlve Iraantee that the first bottle will benefit. S.. ...! Jl m 1 .1 M .Uonierisisseii itai t,o uuvtics iuru, ur .trilfesent. prepaid, on receipt of price tjueLr. Miies Medical Co Elkhart, Ind. Dr. Miles' Nervine Restores Health EVERT 4b . Caldwell. ' lnoir Topic, September 11th. , . ' The Farmers of Caldwell ard "in the swim." They have plenty to eat and their barns are filled with plenty. ..-Mr. Lee Sherrill brought to Lenoir from Watauga last Wednesday a fine drove of cattle. He shipped j: them South. ...:WeSearirthat ?Hon. W. H. Bower has let the contract for his new residence to Messrs Watson and Munday. Work will soon be begun on the building. ....Reg ister of Deeds Palmer has issued marriage license to the following parties: Columbus Coffey to Anne E. Barnett ; Chas. R. How ell to Elizabeth Austin, of Alexan der county. '....The first ship ment from Collettsville over thP Caldwell and Northern Railroad was made by W. C. Moore & Co., and consisted of lumber Rev. W. R. Beach, principal of King's Creek Academy, was mar ried last Wednesday to Miss Kate, the charming daughter of Mr. Smith Coffey Mr. Holifield's building on North Main street has been completed and a nice stock of clothing, gents' furnishings, &c, will be opened in it this week. . . . .Sheriff Boyd and Deputy Sher iff J. W. Abernethy captured Mun Helton and Ansi Pope Thursday and brought them to Lenoir and lodged them in jail. They had been dodging for some time. They were wanted for fighting ana "cutting up" in general Last Thursday, Sept. 5, at the res idence of Mrs. Anna A. Estes, the mother of the bride, Miss Cora Floster Estes was united in mar riage to Mr. John A. Courtney. ... Capt. O. A. Hamlin has" pur chased two lots from the Caldwell Land and Timber Company on Oakview, and will in the near-future build on them. Rev. H. C. Marley and Mr. T. W. Shell have also purchased lots from this company, and will erect dwellings on them. -...Last Thursday night from 8 to 12 o'clock Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Gwyn were "At Home" to their friends in the elegant and handsome home of Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Harper, at Patterson. ....The meeting at the Methodist church closed Friday night. Mr. Campbell is an excellent preacher and won many friends while here. . . . .Rev. J. A. Hoyle's meeting at ... Y' ove acnool House is still increasing in interest. He will baptize Saturday next at 10 a. m. and close the meeting At the residence of Mr. Samuel Lander, Tuesday evening, Sept. ?V8?5, Miss Bessie Jenkins and Mr. H. Burgin Ramseur were hap ly married. On Monday he 9th, the little and on ly son of D. P. Shuford was sud denly taken sick and on the fol lowing morning died Rev. J. f. Kogers, of Bellwood Insti tute brought.his class in history to Lincolnton Saturday to look over the battle ground of Ram saur's Mill Rev. Mr. Wil liamson of Mecklenburg preached some excellent sermons in the Presbyterian church last Satur day and Sunday. Sixteen mem- were received. ....A negro boy aged about twelve years was caught in the machinery at the Elm - Grove Cotton Mills brick yard last Friday and his arm was cut off at the elbow. YOU SPEND WITH KI0LE-R & CO. prints us lull return, purchase' made of .us" predated. Every is ap- Wc do not assume that you pnot buy elsewhere, but we 10 claim that you can save ROnev by hnvincr ' DRY GOODS, SHOES AND GROCERIES I ROM US. B. KIBLER & CO., The Cheap Store. Mortgage Sale of Land. Catawba. Hickory Press and Carolinian, Sept. 12th. There is a large number of foxes up at Bridgewa:er, and Mr. Julius Abernethy speaks of going up there before a great while and taking his pack of hounds along and having an old time fox hunt. ....The local freight, while switching in Hickory last Friday just in front of the Press and Carolinian office, jerked the draw headand end beams out of an empty feight box car. .Miss Norma Bonniwell went to Marion Monday in answer to a letter re questing her to do somedrawings. ....We saw Monday morn ing a very handsome basket of flowers from A. Mcintosh's green house. They were for Col. and Mrs. C. A. Cilley, that day being the 27th anniversary of their wed ding day The "Southern" has just put on three new passen ger engines. 604, 705, 606 are the numbers. ....Mr. Joseph Sea boch who lives five miles south east of Hickory, celebrated his seventieth birthday Sunday. The public school has 91 pupils enrolled. That is scholars enough to keep teachers busy, but they expect many more yet. Last year the roll was over one hundred. ....Mr. Oscar Yoder went to Morganton Wednesday to enter the Deaf and Dumb school Mrs. Thornton, or the Colonel did for her, sold a tree at Bridgewater for $30' cash in advance, ...Rev. K; T. Tsoong, a native Chinaman, came in on the vestibule Wednes- Gaaton. Gastonia Gazette, Sept. 12th. The Armstrong Furniture Com pany has moved into new quar ters The Gaston Iron Works are still running Another stalk of Messrs. Craie and Wil son's Mexican corn is on exhibi tion. They have a stalk &t the door of their store which meas ures 17 feet high and has two ears on it above the ground. The tas sel easily looks in over the window sills of the second story. The lateral spread of the blades is 7 feet. ... .The south-bound freight on the Narrow Guage yes- - 1 e - . teraay aiternoon struck the team of Milton Pegram, colored, on a crossing just this side of Crow der.s Creek. "O.ie mule was killed outright, the other probably fatal ly injured. Milton was coming to Oastonia, moving a family to town. The train was behind time. Esquire A. , R. Anders is among the early cotton raisers and will have a bale on the market to day We have information that young Cal Harman, who was so painfully wounded in the colo red shooting scrape, was the only dependence of a sick family and that he is now disabled at the home of a brother-in-law not able to care for him properly Suit has commenced by Mr. L. L. Jenkins against the county com missioners to recover 78 of - taxes paid by him under protest on his individual national, bank stock. . . . . At a colored festival near Lin colnton last Saturday night a strange negro from Monroe was shot and stabbed, from the effects of which treatment death resulted. gust 28, by Rev. M. L. Kaylor, at the residence of the bride's father, Mr. John Pyatt, Mr. A. S. Sim mons to Miss Jane Pyatt Mr. J. S. Dysart's family is sore ly afflicted with fever and whoop ing cough. His oldest son Sam and two little daughters are very ow George Bell, a native Chinaman, will lecture in the Methodist church Thursday night. Deputy Sheriff Tom Dale de serves credit for the improve ments he has made about the court house. The offices now present an appearance of extreme neatness The McDowell County Union Sabbath School Convention will meet in the Bap tist church at Old Fort, Saturday, October 12th, at 10 a. m. Speak ers will be selected for each sub ject Sheriff Garden went down to Raleigh Monday to take the negro McCombs, who was convicted of larceny at the last term of McDowell . Superior court. More complaint comes to us about the bad condition of the public roads in McDowell county. Watauga. Watauga Democrat, September" 1 2 th. The apple crop in the western part the county is immense .... In the absence of whiskey, pistols and knives, you hardly ever hear of any trouble among our people. ....Coffey Bros, are having a new porch put on the front of their hotel and store building Mr. George H.' Brown, of Poga, has a poplar tree cut down that con tains 10,145 et of marketable lumber. ....News reaches us that the Cranberry Iron and Coal Company at Cranberry, is making preparations to resume work at once. If this be true, it will be a great help to the laboring classes in this and surrounding counties. ....Solicitor Spainhour spont a part of last week at home. He has purchased a bicycle, and the most of his leisure time was spent in learning to ride the stubborn steed. He promises, however, to make an expert wheelman We are sorry to learn that Leonard Hodges got into a bad scrape last Sunday near Shull's Mills, by shooting at a young man by the name of Cook, and greatly en dat gering the lives of some Sun day school pupils near by Depuy Marshals Colvard and Councill, returned Tuesday from an official trip to Wilkes county As they came through Blowing Rock tlity captured two men charged with blockading, one of whom was a fusion magistrate. It seems that our J. rs are being very unfortunate at this day and time, especially the newly ap pointed ones In our last issue we failed to note the fact that Mr. A. A. Hampton, of Bam 000, lost his residence and entire contents by fire about two weeks ago. The family was from home when the fire started, and when discovered was too far advanced to be controlled. The family was left without even a change of clothing. It is thought that it was the work of an incendiary. PRKSS OPINIONS. Pithy Paragraphs oa Car rent Sahject Prom the Pens of North Stat ltd I tors. . .North Carolina now has 149 cotton mills in operation. Alle ghaiy Star. . .Life is too short, heaven is too high and hell is too deep for us to discusss theology and besides we don't know anything about it. Stateri'ille Landmark. . .The Courier is a democrat of the straightest sect, and we shall be with the Democratic party in the next campaign, if there is any of it tl..-Asheboro Courier. . .God pity the organized church, if after withstanding the attacks of hell and the devil, can not survive the attacks of a social ist, like Dr. Thompson. Concord Standard. . .The convention of negroes in Raleigh on Wednesday was re markable for the absence of poli ticians and the presence of young and intelligent educators. Nctes und Observer. . .There is a good deal of talk of the Populists and Republicans running Judge Russell, of Wil mington, for Governor, but they have too much sense for that. Monroe journal. . . Good schools, churches and good roads are three import in ducements to would-be settlers. We have the schools and churches but how about the roads? Hender son Gold Lea. . . E. C. Smith's non-partisan silver convention is called to meet in Raleigh, September 25th. The present indications are that it will be almost an entirely populist concern. Ketvton Enterprise. . .A paper ought sometimes to be prized lor what it doesn't print. In this connection our readers will kindly note that we haven't vexed their souls with anything about bloomers and the third term Gastonia Gazette. . .Has Mr. Henry bettered his position? He has left a party whose president appointed some colored men to office, and joined a paity that voted for and helped elect some ten or a dozen at the last election in this State. Meek- lenlui tr Times. . .The organization of every in dustry that will keep money at home, should be hailed with joy, ami patronized in preference to foreign concerns. It Is these that build up a county. We want to be sellers instead of buyers. Mt. Airy JVews. . .The rapid progress being made by North Carolina and the establishment of manufacuture, and the suddenness with which she has sprung to the front as a manufacturing State is exciting attention all over the country. Prankin Times. . Cleveland. Shelby Anrora, September 12th. " , The home cf Thomas Mclntire who resides eight miles above Shelby, was saddened bv the death of an infant, ten months old. It died last week of cholera infant um. . '. .The new Cherokee Falls cotton mill, J. C. Plonk superin tendent and R. P. Roberts secre tary, is now tunning and will soon be ready for the cotton crop. The machinery was put in "motion last week Work on the Baptist church steeple has commenced, D. Audibon Rudasill is the contract or. The steeple will be built with brick and about twenty feet higher and will be crowned with an iron finial, making the tower nearly 100 feet high The new owners of the Bessemer Cotton Mill have begun work on the un finished plant, for which they gave $24,000. The operatives, house and mill be completed and ma H'.'.1?;!" 1,1 " of sale contained in a ' tt-,71'''"1 --uted by N. L. Chap 5a. t-Ut'" June 18H9, and default ., j-dymtru, we will sell at nuhlic ittc 5 t r!rC ?urt "oust door in Morganton, . ..tn oil -.,r the nth and will lecture to : ' ... 1 r . I , mi u. : . u ..-o u night (Wednesday; at tne ivieino- cninery win u iuij(i6 di?t church. first part of next year. ....Mr. K. U. tiopper, 01 can s Mawuu, ay th e.rart e :ist day of Septem ber, i! Burke David and fully de- Ki near Sharpe's Ford, :a :, t ' tne lands of , . ',' .' '"! anil others. '"Tim:,; ' fr"m L. F. Warhck to N. L. '"'"kK , trt'1 in tne ReRisters office ?"" :ht s n,ty ln M""k N. page 159 and in Rrtnlr which reference s made 'maining 15C, acrcsmore or rw,': ls,; t., u ''iHM.n. ,'Y"-t 1 '.th isu.-. '"-NHl-.KT CIIASK Assiirnws N0RTH CAROLINA S5r.:t::sd Mm Arts, L... ,ul St 1 ioSctt 1 UUH onege wiu rw f"r'wr -nil. Examinations at Wft Saturday in Aueust. (1"sirir'K a technical educa- 1I tr, ""usually low cost will do jr catalogue to A Q. H0LLIDAY, Pres., Raleigh, N. C. l WantedVA 'J "Hi ': irau iy and Rap-1 -'Ik: I. FARQUHAR finable Friction f"I Feed Saw m;ii FS'Vi , r . . " '( ' MHcilv . r4 u Head lacitv ft.non ti '"1 I',., , ' . -Ktnes "Winn )! Kor from 12 to 40 fr.. v 1 'ri-.tive catalogue A' B' f ARQUHAR CO., Ltd., YOllK, PA. Newton Enterprise, Sept. 12th. The Newton Cotton Mills Com pany has ordered a new Corliss engine and twenty-five hundred new spindles. .... We are glad to learn that the first edition of Rev. t a WMton's book on Marshall Ney have all been sold, and the publishers will have a second edi tion readv in a short time. Mr. Weston is now receiving a small royalty on his work R. P- Reinhardt was arraigneu iasi o-t-urday before Esq. A. D. Shuford charged with "did falsely impris on and unlawfully restrain ot his liberty " one Monroe Lutz Farmers in this county have the best prospect for rough forage we ever saw. There are hundreds of acres in peas that are nearly ready to cut. The season has been just right for them and they are very fine. There is also a great crop of crab grass, which makes excel 1 tA BV.rtrir is about all saved. There will be no scarcity of feed for stock this winter. The . 11 , - rrfoot nnp. corn crop win uc -----. . .Will Watts, col , was arraigned before Esquires James McRee and A. D. Shuford, Monday, charged with assaulting Mary Teague, col. He was fined $5.00 and costs and in default of payment , was com mitted to jail. He was also ar rested on complaint of his wite, Ida Watts, and upon the. charge ot fear on her part was bound in a peace bond of one hundred dol- brought and sold in tjhelby on Tuesday the first bale of new cot ton, for which he received 8.65 cts. from A. C. Miller. This is nearly as early as last years' first bale. The Aurora two week ago said that an extension of the Caro lina Central spur from Henrietta to Spartanburg, a distance of twenty eight miles, is proposed. Mrs. Jane C. Latham, who has leased the Commercial Hotel for this year and now has charge of it, offers to sell the remainder of the lease until January 1896 the nice furniture in all the rooms .... Cotton is in demand at eight cents and the short crop promises re munerative prices for the South's snowy staple. Eight cents will be a potent factor in banishing hard times and in silencing the voice of the calamity howler It appears that Cleveland county intends to keep step to the music of the cotton spindles and will soon erect another mi l. It is pro posed to erect a $200,000 cotton mill at Durham shoals on Broad river, ten miles south-west of The Moon's Power Oyer the Weather. Nature. Fallacies about the moon are nomerous, such as that the full moon clears away the clouds; that you should only sow beans or cat down trees in the wane of the moon; that it is a bad sign if she changes. ou a Saturday orSanday ; that two fall moons in a month will canse a flood; that to see the 01a moon in tne arms 01 tne new brings on rain, and ulany others, of which a catalogue alone would take op a good deal of space. M. Flammarion says that "the moon's influence on the weather is neglig ible. The heat reaching us from the moon would only affect our temperature by twelve millionths of a degree; and the atmospheric tide caused by the moon would only affect the barometric presure a few hundredths of an inch a quantity far less than the changes which are always taking place from other causes." On the whole we are disposed to agree with the rhyme which thus sums up the subject: The moon and the weather May change together: But change of the moon Docs not change the weather. Even the halo round the moon has been discredited, for Mr. Lowe found that it was as oft on followed by fine wether as by rain, and Messrs. Marriott and Abercroiuby that the lunar halo immediately preceded rain in thirty four cases oat of sixty one. We always have a lingering hope that some future meteorologist will dist angle the overlapping influences, and arrive some day at a definite proof that onr satellite after nil has some thing to do with oar weather. Head It Again. Hickory Press and Carolinian, The Hickory Press and Carolini an states that the Waldenses who settled in Burke county are con templating returning to Italy their old home. Wilkesboro Chron icle. The Press and Carolinian faile I to make any such statement. Read it over again brother; read it again. . .It looks as if the Democratic State convention is the proper body to give out Democratic sil ver doctrine. We think for Dem ocratic silver advocate to stayout of such meetings. Wait for the Convention, and stand by the principles it lays down. Kind's Weekly. ..A contemporary asks why some men are poor and some rich. Reasons are as plentiful as Popu lists argument!. Some work and save; and others do nothing and wait for the government to coin money and pour it in their pock ets at a ratio of 16 dollars for one hour's work. Durham Daily Sun. ..Frank Ray was appointed as one of the P. D. B. Arrington com mittee by the last legislature, but when the old lady heard that he said her initials stood for Pretty Damn Bad Arrington she had him swapped off for one more appro priate to serve on the sweet-scented triumvirate. Franklin Press. ..Every newspaper, especially among its own State exchanges, is entitled to credit for what it gives to the public of its own orig inal work. This holds true wheth er it relates to editorial work, news items prepared in the office. or special telegrams and corres pondence which a paper pays for. Samson Democaat. ..Verily we believe office seek ers are the greatest burden with which our party has to contend, and the sooner we are rid of them the better it will be. Let Walter Henry, Dug Carter and all the rest of them bolt. The sooner the better. When the tares have been removed, only the wheat will re main. Brevard Hustler. . .Those people who say they are going to vote for the free coinage of silver at 16 to 1 next year may as well make up their minds right now that they will vote the Popu list ticket. No other party is go ing to declare for it. The Demo cratic party has always stood for a sound currency and will be found on the same line next year. Concord Times. governor, not even alluding to the Populists. It may be they have got their fill of Iwixoa. Alamance Gleaner. . .There has been no time in the history of our country when there were stronger reasons for gratitude to God than now. The land is litterlly loaded with the bounties of a smiling providence, and the christian peo ple will surely miss an opportuni if they do not set apart some spe cial day, -other than the usual thanksgiving, for general praise. Christian Advocate. ..The friends of higher educa tion will be pleased to hear of the unusually large attendance at the opening, last week, of the Univer sity and all the denominational colleges in this State. At Chapel Hill, Wake Forest, and Trinity the attendance of new students is lar ger now than ever before known in the history of those institutions of learning. This does not look like "the country is going to the dogs " after all. Chatham Record. ..Fusion is in the air. The la test is that there is a move on foot for the populists to fuse with the Democrats. Who is responsible for this we cannot say, but one thing we will say, and that'is, that if there is any fusing to be done with Democrats, the only way for it to be accomplished .is for the populists to support the ticket nominated by a regular Democrat ic State Convention. Lenoir Topic. ..Speaking of Demo-populist fusion, the Courier says : If there is such a movement it may die out; or the Populists may spurn it as we should expect them to. But it wants to be understood right now that there are yet a few Democrats in the State who hold principle above temporary expedi ency above the desire to get of fice and they will 'die in the last ditch" before they will con sent to this fusion. Waynesville Courier. ..We should concentrate our energies as much as possible on the establishment, not of one or two industries, but on diversified industries, which will give employ ment to our people, keep our money at home and bring in money from other sections and thus make this a money section as well as a producing section. When that day comes we will have less cause to complain of the exqual distribution of money than we now hive..11'ilminrtoit Star. ..General Ransom has a way of looking at matters which some people call visionary. He can see victory, they say when defeat is certain. Yet it is not to his dis credit. If we had more of his kind in the Democratic party, in stead of that variety of men who go around with their chins in their collars and their hands in their pockets preachiog all sorts of calamities for it, there would be brighter skies to greet us. Away with your pessimists and give us more of Ransom's optimist. Sal isbury World. ..The free silverites have con tented that silver acd cotton rise and fall together and the five cent cotton last year was alone due to the demonetization of silver. This rot has been proclaimed on every stump to the farmer and this idea helped to defeat democracy last year. Cotton was last Tear 5 cents, this year it is about 8 cents, about 3 cents higher, yet the price of silver is stationary and gold is still the standard of values. Yet they claimed that silver demonet ied (not the nearly ten million crop) made cotton bring only 5 ceats. Shelby Aurora. THE CUP STATS HERE. VALKTRIK WITHDRAW IDOK THK riXlL lUCC A5D THK DCrtilDCR HAS A SA I LOVER. WAT DOWH SOUTH. Exchange. How red the rosea are blooming 'Way dowa soatb ! How fast tbc rivers flowing 'Way dowa sooth I There's never any sowing To stop the rosea growing: Tbc Lord His love's bestowing 'Way down soata. How bright the eonatry'a stealing 'Way dowa soath! How free the flag is streaming 'Way dowa soatb t No splendor do they borrow ; Over the night of sorrow Rhine a bcnetifol " to-morrow l 'Way dowa so nth ! The sweet fields are enchanted Way dowa sooth ! For God tbc seed has ptaeted 'Way dowa soatb I And birds or woadrroas staging Their ways to heaven are winging, .And all I -ore's bells are ringing 'Way dowa soatb! God keep the country glorioas . Knights of the Maccabees. The State Commander writes ua from Lincoln, Neb., as follows : " After try ing other medicines for what seemed to be a very obstinate cough in our two Shelby and near the South Caroli- children we tried Dr. King's New Dis na line, , McDowell. Marion Record. September 12th. The pastor of the Presbyterian church will meeting in begin Marion a protraciea on Thursday covery and at the end of two days the cough entirely left them. We will not be without it hereafter, as our experi ence proves that it cures where all oth er remedies fail." Signed F. W. Ste- ! vens. State Cord. Why not give this great medicine a trial, as it is guaran- teed and trial bottles are tree at John c assist e I vvu auu A M sVVVI night before the 5m aaooain 01 1 TunB Drug store. Regular size 50c. September. . ....Married, Au-1 and ?1.00. . .We wish some one would tip up the plank and let fall into the branch the little knot of Eastern North Carolina politicians who are stirring up muddy water on the financial question. Of what earthly use is the contention? It points out differences in the party. 11 is true, dui 15 tnai goon pontics.' What does it effect? How will it win votes? Asheville Cititen. .. It looks very much like the Republicans proposed to side track their fusion allies, the Popu lists ; not that they have got all they want, but that, perhaps, they received strength enough to stand alone in the next campaign. They talk of Russell and Dockery for 'Way dowa soatb I The flags ofpeace victorious With charity for others Trnc sons of Sparta a mothers. And all mankind onr brothers 'Way dowa soatb I florae's Feet and Legs, Agricultural Bulletin. Few men who handle borse give proper attention to the feet and legs. Much time U spent in rubbing, brushing and smoothing the hair on sides and hips, bat at no time are the feet examined and properly cared for. 'ow, be it known that the feet of a horse re quire more attention than the body. They need ten times as much, for in one respect they are almost the entire borne. All the grooming that can be done will not avail anything if the home is forced to stand where his feet will become disordered aud I be leg will get badly oat of order, and with bad leet and bad leg, then is uot much rNe of the horse fit for anythii.g. Wanted A gentleman of stand ing to represent Combined Con tract comprising two of the largest investment and life insurance com panies in America. Address Thos. A. P. Champlin, Supt., First Floor, (Rooms 12 to 15), McGill Building, Washington, D. C. The Work. Herald office for Job Disntsa evrely Crttletasal. Daaartp-I llasi taw Laat Stae ot the IWrtea by aa Ers-ailim. Written lor The Herald. The last race between the De fender and alkyrie resnlted iu a walkover, or rather a aailover for for the former, ninre the Utter af ter formally eroding the line on September 12th, roanded to node r the stake boat and, lowering her sails took a tow aud ignominioolj proceeded bark to her anchor ace off Bay Ilidge. The Defender like a white-winged gall, contina ed over the court, and finished, under a pail, her solitary bat tn nmpbaot voyage amid a blast of w but lea and a boom of cannon just as wild and enthusiastic as if she bad been leading by a tufe margin the tall-sparred English yacht. This teries of races which was expected to be the moot exciting and closely contested in the histo ry of the great internat onal sires' gle for the o e sion of the Ami r. ct'i Cap, thas rnded in a most un satisfactory manner to all tree sportsmen on eitLer aide of the Atlantic The race of September 10, marred as it was by the unfor tunate foal committed by the En glish boat, was very projietly awarded by the committee to ti e Defender. Dunraveu npparentiy allowed this lact to influence him Urgely in the sobseqnent with drawal ol the Valkyrie when the two great yachts toed the mark on the 12th for their final straggle although he gave as an excose for bis oosportsmanlike act that the inordinate crowding of the excur sion fleet was, in his opinion, anch as to render ottetly impoible a fair trial of the relative swiftnes of the two stoops. Even bad the proximity of be excursion Ceet been so nar;ed as to affected matters, bis lordship might have borne in mind that the Defender was in no worse straits at any time than the Valkyrie The titled owner of the Uot nam ed vac lit bas come in for a good deal of adverse criticism on ac coautofbis crowing act on lat Thursday, and it seems to be the general opinion that like a drown ing man be caught at a straw to save himself from what would have been a third and conclusive defeat of bis beautiful while-balled racer. September 12th dawned cloud less. The wind freshened as the day grew older, and at 10 o'clock was fringing the wavrs in the low er bay with crests of fojm. An boor before this tbe great fleet of excursiou boats began to get un der way. Long before tbe aver age cosiness man sat down to breakfast scores of docks were crowded with eager landlubbers, pressing forward like stampeded cattle to b5 first across tbe gang ways and secure advantageous po sitions. One by one tbe ponder ous vessels pulled oat and pointed their blant noses down tbe harbor. Every boat was loaded to tbe rail. Aloft from flagstaff to flagstaff, was strong variegated bunting, iu pretty contrast to tbe sable smoke which poured from fanneU and was wafted away like black tbnn Jer clouds over tbe water. Brass bands brayed, and whistles tooted their notes of warning to the boats ahead. The steamer on which your correspondent was, left at balfpast nine tbc tan gled forest of masts and spars and ropes wbicb fringe tbe river front and as she did so tbe boarse vi brant voice of ber organ-pipe whistle signalized ber departure. On board was a merry crowd, a thousand or more light hearted in dividaals many of whom lived to wolully regret that they ever left tbe deep, solid rock foundations of Manhattan Island. Lverybodybad tried to look "yacbtie." Caps, doc: trousers, Llae coats and va rious nondescript nautical cos tames were much in evidence. Field glasses aod spy glasses were also conspicuous; bat these after wards werereplaced by other kinds of glasses. All went well on the sail don tbe harbor and oat into tbe bav. Tbe wind was blowing with an nn varying velocity which augured well for- a Clacking good race. Tbe flags stood out on the Matt as if they were made of tin. The smoke of a cigar was blown frtm tbe lips before it could be tatted. The steam from the whistle was disseminated before tbe sound was beard on shore. As Sandy Hook was passed and tbe veAsel plunged ber oose in tbe ocean proper, tbe much dreaded nndalatory motion wbicb is the bag ben r of all aeeptible to sra sickness began to be manifested, and corresponding looks of seri oosness and abstraction were no ticeable on many previously mer ry countenances. Oue very jtet ty and ingenuous young girl decked out in a bine duck stilor suit, and accompanied by a very galUnt escort, delighted maoy neighboring ears with ber prattle. Ob, isn't this josl too lovely for anything," she exclaimed as tbe big boat rocked to one side and then slowly recovered. MItis just like a bam mock, isn't it Ted dy r Teddy bad been smoking ciga rettes, bat for some time he bad been looking intently at tbe gov ernment building on Sandy Hook, lie looked aronnd when she poke and faltered. "Yes, only more so. Why I can't see why people get seasick at this, Teddy,n she exclaimed a momeot later, as tl.e boat's bow went down and then IS ; OTDER .Absolutely Pure. A rtvajae tartar baking pow. BirtMt at a:i-ia leaveaiasr rwit Larase I srraa ttws Oovtsaassy r'i Krf . Itojal lUklnc Powder Co., I Wall SC. . T. anaaswsa, alr,a,w,,V' Im Poor Health means so much more than fatal diseases result from trifling ailments neglected. Don't play with Nature's greatest Rift health. Browns r Iron Bitters u ye are 11 o4 aorta. saal geara-y - baa a 'ayV'atas 4 -1 . becta as are tab. a( the aaaat retaa Bie strsatftbaaatg an ijn an.bat is brown a ron) Sa verm. A Srw Son. lms ears aao.aa nan trees tbe very brat 1 jqi . aad fa ! at m Uka. It Cures Dyspepsia. tOlaey aa4 Liver riettrmJjrU, Trouble, Coftstlpatloa, Dai Bloo4 MalartA. Ncrrooa aUnseU Women's cooplalata. Get aafv the trastaa H boa nooa ow th ertaccw. A J oak. etitoie. Oa .; 4 c4 Im sr wiJ s-ad at a Tea fliooia Fair barwa sad boob tree. SaowK CCMGai CO. BLTtwoaf, wa 3 FIRE INSURANCE I We write policiea on all claaeen of deairabU risks In the foUowirg sued axd companies) : N. a HOME of Ralegh : CO.Vn.XLNTALof Sew York ; PENNSYLVANIA of PhUadelr, DELAWARF YA. F1RK AND MARINE of Rich mond; MECHANICS AND TRADERS' of New Orleans. AvnitY k i:itviN, IIuaLD Buildicjc. Morcanton, N. C Wanted Agents for tbe Harris Steam Dye Works UIeib, a Will dye sample free of charge, and let 3 oa deliver tbe work before pay. ing us. Yoa can easily make from five to ten dollar a week without one cent of capital. Prices bave been reduced one balf. Don't bay a new suit when yoa can bave your old suit made new for about one day's wages. Address all orders to The IIaubis Steam Dys WoBKK, lUleigb, N. C. jaoC-3m. F-W- TYLER, Photographic Artist, Union SU, OT-poaiu Cel. S. VcD. Tata's. M0ROAKTOX.N.C. Alicia of r-botgTapbJc. work at loweat r rice co&sUtect wiih Crst-cUaS work. Enlargements a free laity. JanlS-tf. ClitVyCAC Dir ARTMtNT ccPxcsAj sciUTinc sce::u Columbian University, WASHING TON, V. C. latroKtDO) to traoc aad tooeganor Cbroaattry. Vnteti. aad Ooaa ULa tirc Amtm 4 I'mioM Mrtata, IM aad boJUoa).CbraialTebaotogy aa4Cbaa kal hagiawrruag. AdJitoa. c it iR.Lt: r mo Kor. rK ik. a;27-U rrcfc.aoe o4 CWoktetry. V ClTv TSlrfc tn Mnnvniotivo -v iiuriruunto rn i owtiw a r M l 1 1 ar I 0 a ae aaanr tri la im i i i n I taw i ii. . roaoowa. ifeaMMal. A Hlito) la- of release aa as a Akoa a aau tfcfaa Mow a On. Ilraa SUM late l 1 mm fin a aa inn nop r mm , oa tarn Si i i y inliwnia, aio,tSe laiittw, oa taos are IhuM Mit oo-- . eoa ana o la oi Tk M in m. awoaa mlt. moaant, uwikm oaa rf for tae ban iot rtiwta e4 aaf own. So o-arfc as Uo ew. lliro. SaoTa ri..onftm boioTj WbOyVaiMf. (I JO a rao. asrta) trot"Voo. to out 7aTa -raeo o ao baooaa, t , a. oil o Vol t a i i o aao al Sato-irT. ASK YOUR Neighbors tbotl tbe rorra saade bry Cfmaaiafil on fonrtk pajt. TOC t Wot o ilolo. oe write bafacasatiooi Vmr. K- fuf Mlrsf ml LoroJ Wti omoiato. I JOIIW N. W l.l'lt.7; 1 1 tb a, rest. wo!a ta. IK l. atar i i -u 1 ( - ..- . - f ;. - ". - v , - ". ' -. . ' - - -
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1895, edition 1
1
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