Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Feb. 20, 1896, edition 1 / Page 2
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T. O. COBB, Publisher. C. F. McKESSON, J.fh 71 G. COBB, )orS- SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. $1.00 THURSDAY, FEB. 20, 1896. CONCEBNIUO RECRUITS. . The Fayetteville Observer seems to think it has found a panacea for Democratic woes. Here is what it says: "Recruits can only be se cured by opening the doors to those who were not with us in '92 and '94, upon terms that will at tract them." .Upon terms that will.attract, is good. There is a spice, a flavor, an odor, an aroma about that that is suggestive of a trade, a dicker, a sort of a tub to Butler's whale but it is only suggestive. Listen further to the Observer: "It is prob ohli that a reauirement that the new recruit should vote with us on State affairs, coupled with the un derstanding that he should be. at 'liberty to vote for a silver candi date for President, it we did not present such a candidate." There is no longer suggestion but the trade is made. You populists vote with us on State affairs and we will let you vote for a free, unlimi ted, Democratic 16 to 1 candidate for President, but if we don't give you that kind of a hair-pin, you are at liberty you are not forced or compelled to do so but you have the clear, undisputed, consti tutional right to vote for whom you please. Well, that's good, too, and if we can induce our populist friends to do that way and to make that sort of a '.'heads we win and tails you Jose," toss, we are for it and for it to the end of the chap ter. But where does the Pop come "in? Now if he will admit that he has left papa's house in a pet and has been a bad boy, and after a season of repentance and return ing love for the old home, will come back and vote with papa as he used to do, then that will be good, too. ' But the Populist aint built that way. In the first place, he left home in a huff and lis huffier now than when he left, and then he'hasaneye to biz and wants totart him a shop of his own preferring, however, to run it on the co-operative plan, but co- - operation with the Republicans and for the reason that he thinks he can get some meat on his meatless, bone. Again, he'knows, and every sane man knows, that the Democratic party does not in tend to put up a free silver candi date for President. When you : make that a condition precedent to a contract, he begins right away to doubt the integrity of the prop- osition. We are square with the - - Observer, howeAer, and if it can get the other fellow to come in on its terms, we will open all our doors and windows, too, for these return ' ing prodigals. We will do more than that. - We will put rings on their fingers, sandals on their feet and crovvns on their brows. This plan strikes us with great force and we suggest that the first meet ing' for these .penitents be held early in May in the editorial room of the Raleigh News and Observer, and, that in case it proves too small to hold the crowd, a commit tee get Gov. Jams to take charge of the overflow meeting in Spier Whittaker's room. We "heartily endorse" this plan and urge the brethren to press it. "Light, is breaking' rior the evening would have been a brilliant success; notwithstand-. ing Hoke's dullness would never have appreciated the sting of the occurrence, ' " Hoke, '"alone of all my eons is he Who stands confirmed in full stupid ity." . Perhaps it is best huwever . that it was not done, for it would have been "castine pearls before swine." . ' . . Wilkie Collins, in that matchless novel, "No Name," has immortal ized Capt. Wjag as a shifty dis sembler and 4 fluent dealer of Cheap John, hum buggery. : Hoke is his only living, ambi tious rival. '' i ... T&B SOUTH AND THE NOKTlJ. OUR EUROPEAN LETTER. GROTER GOES DUCKING IN HOKE SMITH'S DINING BOOH. President Cleveland went on another ducking trip to night. Mra. Cleveland accompanied him this time. They left the White House at an early hour and returned very late. It was enjoyed also by the entire Cabinet, for every one of the President's advisers saw him as he held 8 gun in his hand, and watched three ducks floating on the water. The gun was about seven inches long, and the ducks were of papier ma che. The water was in an artificial lake which had been built in the center of Secretary Hoke Smith's dining room table, and filled with not only ducks but small live fish of the kind which the President loves to catch. Beside the toy gun, there was at the Presi dent b plate a miniature fishing- rod in order that he might enjoy himself il the ducks got away. Everything was . planned to make him happy. Usually, Cabinet dinners are very formal affairs, but it was the Secretary of the Interior's turn to give one to night, and Mr. and Mrs. Hoke Smith decided to provide a few novelties. They designed a sure-enough lake, - which was ten feet long by five feet wide and several inches deep. A florist built a grotto in the center of Maryland rocks, covered it with ferns and orchids and carried out the humorous ideas of the Secretary very successfully. A 10-cent tin man-of-war was anchored in front of the Secretary of the Navy's plate. Penny cannons - frowned over breastworks of stones at - the Secretary of War, coils of red tape were strung along in front of the Secre tary oistate; agin witnher eyes ban- j A STRAIGHT FIGHT. Whether or not the Democrats shall carry the State this fall we do not pretend to know, but we do know that defeat- is sometimes more honorable than victory. This constant abandonment of the prin ciples of the party for temporary advantage discredits the party and invites disaster. Trie more con cessions we make to the Populists the more they demand; and when we come to agree with them their papers taunt us with insincerity. We believe in making an open. square Democratic fight, on Demo cratic principles, with unflinching Democrats in the saddle. There should be no turning aside to make trades and alliances with anybody. The "people of this State are hon est, brave, conservative. A ma jority of them may be led astray for a season, but when the time for reflection comes they will recall the fact that the Democratic party has given them the best administered, the most honest, the cheapest State government they ever.had, and they will regret their course of two years ago and come back'to the party of their love. Of course there are a few office-hunters who deserted it for spoils and hate it with all their zeal, but not so with the great maioTity ot them. The scales are beginning to fall from their eyes; they see that that they have been used as stepping stones, by which scheming politicians have been foisted to power, while them selves are forgotten and uncared for. It may not be to day or to morrow, but if the Democratic party is true to its traditions, true to the canons of its creed, the time will come when these men will again enlist under its banners. There is a general concensus of opinion that the Hon. Walter Clark wants something higher than a iudeeshiD. He has been considered very non-partisan, but his letters from Mexico seem to in dicate that he is very decidedly partisan. The Judge need not set his heart on the governorship, for while his letters are a sweet mor sel to our Populist friends, they don't set well on the coating of the average Republican stomach and the Republicans will control the nomination for Governor. If the Judge had taken a hand in the late lamented silver convention in Raleigh, he might have been in it on the silver ticket, but Judge Mc Rae was there first, and the eyes of a waiting country are looking to him to lead the embattled host. And then there is Ed. Chambers Smith who, though first in rank and command, is second in the hearts of his countrymen. The Southport Leader a few days since, undertook to adminis ter a rebuke to the daily demo cratic press for the manner in which it had derided Butler and its general lack of tact and judg ment in discussing- oublic mic n 1 -a tions. It is not our purpose to take up the cudgels for the daily press, but we had hoped that the iuc?, jucf ueiiiuing tne press and bemoaning the lack of leader ship in the Democratic "party, would have given us some idea how to proceed, would thrown sjme light on the surrounding darkness; but instead it gives us a jeremiade. The Leader's soul seems troubled because Butler, the Caucasian and the Progressive Farmer have been the objects of more or less Democratic animad version. We do uot believe in abuse, nor do we indulge in it, but we want to know of the Leader if it Iklnk. .tt.. r !' .1. -luc democratic press ought to decorate Bulter with paeans of praise, speak honeyed words of the Caucasian and the Progressive Farmer and strew flow ers in the paths of those who, with out cause, abandoned the party of their birth and aided in bring ing reproach on the fair fame and good name of the Slate. All tba Great Mataamaa. ud gtataaman- ship Claimed for the Sooth. Correspondence of the New York Sua. In the introductory commentary to theextractafronr the speech of the Hon. Benjamin Tillman deliv ered before the UnUed States Sen ategiven in your Washington dis patch ef January 29th, your corre spondent uses the expression "new and degenerate South", and in dulges in three other equally sar castio references to that section. A few remarks from a Bontuerner will not be juniss. Are not the Southerners of to-day fully the eqnals of their ancestors iu ora tory! Are they not their equals in sfatesmansnipl I may ask, what is a statesman! for I am sure. I do not know. -I fail to see the deereneracy. True, we havo no Platts, Quays, Boss this and Boss that, but we have numbers of Con gressmen and Senators who have the Chicago platform, who have intelligence enough to understand it and enough honor to defend it. The votes of the last Ho'use will bear this out. In the past thirty years of North ern ascendency (since the time of Lincoln) I can recall but oue name to which posterity will look up as that of a statesman James G. Blaine and at his death the high est encomiums passed upon him was that he was universally com pared to Henry Clay a South erner, though be it said to Clay's credit, his name was not tinctured with dishonor. - A few years ago theGovernorof Illinois, both United States Sena tors, the mayor of Chicago, four Congressmen, Our Only Adlai, and last and best, Mrs. Potter Palmer, all at one and tne same time prominent in Illinois, were natives of one Southern Common wealth Kentucky. Are they the degenerates! . On the stage are the Booths, Marie Prescott, Mary An derson. Have you brighter lights! Or peibaps the South is sup posed to have degenerated because it no longer rules. History will show that that section of a nation always 5 rules that possesses the greater wealth. It will no doubt surprise the readers of the Sun to learn that at the breaking out ot the war the South, with less than one-fourth of the white population of the country, contained nearly one-half of the wealth 44 per cent. After the two small Northern States of Connecticut and Rhode Islandfthe States stood as follows in per capita wealth: South Caro lina, Mississippi, Massachusetts, Louisiana, Georgia, Florida, Ken tucky, Alabama, Texas, New Jer m a - 1 . sey, Maryland, .rsansas, Vir ginia. Almost every one of the Southern States was in advance or such great Northern communities as New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio. Wheu the wealth was in the South she had the statesmen. Every man elected to the presi dency from the South got two terms up to the time of the civil war, while no Northerner was trusted with more thau oue, and we had over twice as many Presi dents at tbatand even one of your Northern Presidents was a Vir ginian by descent Harrison. The South has added every foot of territory to these United States, save Alaska, the North, always iu opposition, as the records of the votes in Congress will show. The two military heroes of the war of 1812 (which the North opposed, even to the point of holding a se cession convention the Hartford convention) were Southerners Winfield Scott, of Virginia, and Andrew Jackson, of Tennessee. Southerners colonized Texan, whipped a nation, and gave us mii empire. The North did not want to admit the State, butj the South outmanceuvered it. Then followed the Mexican war (I admit it was a crime), which the North again op posed; but Jf oik was a good juggler, and we got another empire. As The Gypsy Camp la the Oataklrts ot Gra- aada A Beat, Geaalae Gjpiy Dum. Correspondence of The Morzanton Herald. Geanada, Spain, Feb. -1. The one great charm ol travel in Spain is the absence of fellow toutists. The "Nectar of Romance and Ad venture" has not all been drained by curious Americans and disco 11 tented English, and one finds the pepple as musical, picturesque and nncleau as could be wished. The local color and life have withstood, the comparatively little invasion of travel, aud ibough- Granada with its incomparable) Al ham bra hasbeeu the goal of more curiosity and sight seeing than other Span ish cities, it retains many of its purely characteristic and delight ful features. One ot these is the gypsy camp in the outskirts of the city. We drove there late one af ternoon and saw the gypsy in his native lair. Gervautes alone de scribes these people as just as God made them 'aud oftentimes worse." Education has never laid her rule or ferule on them; hones ty and morality have-passed tbem in despair, aud if the proverb af firming the proximity of cleanli ness and godliuess Is true the gyp nies are wav off." It ' has. been enough for them that they live, aud they have never asked tbone enigmatical questions whence, why and whither. Their bouses ato caves aud we were allowed to go through one. The first room was the kitchen eud the last and choic est one the abode of tne pigs. There were many of these com parlments about the size of a steamer state room, aud as one groped his way by the aiJ ' of a small candle into the depths of the hill, the smell became painfully prominent. The pigs, though, like the gypsies, were, contented and the tact of being kept in the par lor or spare room added no arro gance to their amiable manners. Evidences of certain luxurious tastes were to be seen in the cave such as a piece of carpet before each bed on the earth floor, and a stovepipe running up from the kitchen fire place. -Indeed artistic taste was also manifest for hang ing over the bed in one of the rooms was a highly colored adver tisement of a German beer. When we left the cave we . were told that we could see the real and genuine gypsy dance for the mod est sum ot seven dollars, but we decliued. Our interpreters after a consultation with the gypsies told us that oureconouay would be re spected and the dance given for five dollars. As we drove regret fully away we were agaiu informed that though it was a great sacri fice and altogether unparalleled in aunals of history we might see it for three dollars. We accepted this proposition though it devei oped that we really paid four dol lars, the last one being in redemp tion of a counterfeit dollar that had been substituted for the good oue we had given. The coiu was probably a product of gypsy inge GraM aad Brala. Correspondence of The Uorgantoh Herald. By chemliuil an ilysi, foods are separated into six clasaea'of ub stances, viz.: Water, ash, rati, protiut, crude fiber and nitrogen free extract. In looking over a table. Blowing average composition or feeding stuff", the graces, I Hud, contain m higher jer cent, of the named nub stances than any other feed. It is none the lea -valueless its a noil improver. Wheu once the habit of grass growing is commenced it will uatnrally pet oue in a kind of crop rotation that will result In a speedy eurichlugof the oil. Gracs growing in not difllcuk to a practi cal man with a good agricultural paper, surh mm lWactical Farmer, unfolded iu his home w eekly. But it would be difliciilt to home, even with good paper", from the fact that tLeir tiaiuing has never gone beyond the dumb least : they drive; the beast, in rnauy caseM, acts with more discretion. There has been uo brain put luto the work. We see the unthiuking, nn educated man drive his little mule to a little plow, scratching the ex hausted surface of the laud, plant ing a crop without knowing or thinking why he plants it in jut such a way, cultivating it iu like manner, and at the end of bard, unintelligent toil, gathering a little crop, unable to tell, for the lifetf him, why it is so small, nor why lie aud his mule have cousumed more purchased food than the crop will pay for, ignorant all the while that under the scratch made by the little plow lies a virgiu noil wait ing to rr ward with bounteous crops the man with brain enough to sit upon a sulky plow and drive a team troug euough to bleak it. An old Scotch farmer who, stand ing by his field covered with a magnificent crop, was asked by a traveler what he manured that field witb,and replied: Wi' brains, sir." This is the great want in our agriculture to day educated brains. If the farmers would get to reading they would get aloug much better. The larger part of farmers in Burke to day don't know there is such a thing aa an agricul tuial paper printed, and-the ma jority of thone who do, rear back on their dignity' and swear they know how to farm, when the truth ot the matter is they don't know the alphabet of good farming. Then, who are our good farmers to ddjrl Not the men who Lave fol lowed a mnle in the same tracks their grandfather made, but read iug men, men of affairs, who see the grand possibilities of farming in me ooutn. -Any man can be a planter, but it takes brains and training to Im a farmer or gar dener." H. Brown. Cora, N. C, Feb. 5, 1S06. ' "Blight" costs cotton planters more than five million dollars an nually. This is an enormous waste, and can be prevented. Practical experiments at Ala bama Experiment Station show conclusively that the use of "Kainit" will prevent that dreaded plant disease. Oar mbcUm are el aJ unwise dreatacs fegspaaalWukaars-Bataranracticat works, eai Id taa Malta erf Hi imiawn la this Imr cwtoa fcia aaoaid aa a copy. IWy M eaat srev Sot lae aakia; CX&UAIT KALI WOK MluaMM.nTai o : 5 S Q. CO CD o 2 V a O P 2 o 3 Q 5 T -J - a o - w 2 M Si I 11 to t c Si 3 rr 5 - -gf -0 ill liA So a 5 5 H . n o o S3 52 TO W PATRONS. From and after January 1 st, iSci, a goods sold on time will be limited to sixty days strictly. At the expiration of iXt"v days all accounts will be rendered, ami. if if not paid at maturity, the account will 1 closed. With very few exceptions all in my lines are sold to me on 30 to 60 dnvs time by the jobbers. So you see, it is in possible for me to carry accounts lon.rtr than 60 days. - Thanking my patrons for past custom and feeling sure that this new arrangement will meet with their approval and co-operation, I am,- Very respectfully yours," 1. 1. DAVIS. Morganton, N. C, Jan, 22, 1806. FRSH MATS -AJSTD GROCERIES! We are Headquarters for thing in Our .Line. . ny- C AS ST O R E SPECIALTIES. nuity. and bo far as 1 know the transaction may be one of tueir established ways of making au bouest dollar, no to speak. Tne dance, however, was quite worth the experience. Accouipauted by our two guides and two policemen who, it was ezplaiued were neces sary for our safety and, who only added to our general feeling of in security, we went np a dark alley. a darker night or aieps ana mto a tiny room where the orchestra ttud daucers'were assembled. The or chestra consisted of three men who placed the guitar, mandolin and tambourine. The dancers were lour ujjly women and a pretty oue h11 gorgeously arrayed iu bright calicoes aud with artificial flowers in their coarse dark hair. The service.- opened with a frightful song that deafened the audience,) which on account of the size of the room was withiu two feet of the siugers. Then the women dauced Saved His Life BT T78IHQ ayer's Cherry pectoral "Whfn aiy adopt- 0i ea oa was serea o yemof afcbcaad aa severe a rough J m I ever knew any- o Olial tA an ffa f phi O ; aanllv. and atM nn blood. I tried every- couW think o the com taut- o ' woraa, aad X; I feared Um poor a; little fellow would aarelydl. At last. I oj rare him Ayera Cherry rectoral. belag reeommended to do to by the pfcyitelaa. o TliU medicine fae the chUd apeedy re- O llet and effeeted a permanent eure," Mrs. M. E. DebaT. Liberty, Teua. o I o o o o o n AT THE WORLD'S FAIR ooeoeoeeoeoeooooooeooooeJ Km thing If It Of, but h lli tyfre- Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Received Highest Awards Having purchased the gen eral merchandise stock of V. A. Ross &. Co., I am now of fering Dry Goods, Notions, urocenes in fact the entire stock carried by them, at GREATLY REDUCED " .PRICES, in order to get these goods out ot the way for an up-to-1 date and complete stock of ' Lad ies' Goods. 1 will carry Ladies' Goods ' only, and my terms will be cash, thereby enabling me to sell goods at a much lower price than if sold on time. Of course, I will take mar- Beef, Vegetables, Fruits, Canned Goods, Home Cured Hams. Flour and Grain. "Bread is llic Staff otlifa THTJXTOCI RXfT RGOG3L SOLE AGENTS roa B1LURDS OBELISK Mtt. Goods Dclitekcd Fat. 2Z3 Always Rzllzhlz FORNEY & CO. FLOUR. The Lenoir Milling Co. have just started KXdc".andTcc"gd their new flouS Lenoir, Tcn.. goods. F. P. GlLLAivi, and are Morganton, IM. C. BOOKS FOR SALE. poultry aipd 6gg asaal, the glory belonged to the together an active, spirited dance j Wit-u Unnl, QAt nrwl tIa. Kaii. I xnch a. Kimlfv lahorM in vain to I -1- ' u' To State of Ohio, City of Toledo, LUCC8 COCHTJL as. FkANK J . Chenkt mJkes oath that he ia the senior rmrtnAmf rvo a- daged was sleeping off a dock opposite J- Cheney & Co., doing business in th OTV":" i :i wuuij ana state aiore- aoutli Scott and Taylor, both na Jives of Virginia. The North has no Daniel Boone, no. David Crock ett, no Sam Houston. The nation's idols, as witness their familiar nicknames, were all Southerners by birth "Light-Horse Harry," "Great Scott," "Old Hickoiy," "Rough and Beady,'' "Houeat Abe." - And even in the civil war what an array we have, for the North, short in' military and governing geuins, imported it. Liucoln, great est of all, was from Kentucky; An drev Johnson, of Tennessee; Geoi H. Thomas, "the Bock of Chicka mauga," the one Union soldier who never made a mistake or lost a battle, was a Virginian. The man who really saved the nation iu gain ing Bussian support was a South erner Oassius M. Clay, minister. And the admiral there was but one, Farragut and be was from the South, toot I could go on much further. --. - On my first visit to Boston I was astonished on just stepping ont of the railroad station to face a statue to a Southern man Lincoln. At his feet was crouching a negro another Southerner, by .heavens! "I wandered about the city some time, hoping to find a mouumeut raised to some great mau Massa chusetts bad presented to the na tioo. Down on some street, sur veyed by a cow a couple of bun dred years ago, I encouuler-d a bronze statue of a woman iu bloomer! long hair and all,ihoogh the name was masnnliue. A great man, no doubt in Boston. . . L. S. Bedfokd. 192 West Tenth Street, New York, Jan. 30th. II for rash oa the third Moariav arch, at the coarthoaac door ia hi or. K an ton. aboat 1.2Qp booka. wrictra by Ar thur T. AbenKtBy; sold andrr cxecatioa ia favor of the Hickory Printing Compaa r. Thia 13th day of Prbraarr. 1M0. THOS. M. WEBB. Sherlflr. 1 Are gracefully-fitting corsets. The R. & G. Corsets add beauty and grace to any va riety of figures, and can be had as easily as the awkwark, unformable kind. They are made with five and six-hook clasps and in short, medium. in the room, and the little creature I long and extra long waistS." actuaiiy wavea its arms wheu the such as Ki rally labors in get. This was followed by a sort of dante du ventre. There were several graceful figure dauced by the women and then one, "La Ha- ta" by the tambourine plajer the pretty girl which was q the prettiest of all, and would com pare favorably with the dances on the American stage. During the performance I wonder ed that some enterprising Ameri ca n had not imported them all to America and made his fortune by putting them on the stage Oue does uot find such abandon, ant matiou aud natural grace iu the dancers who learn . on chalked 8quarea while they count one, two, three, one, two, three. The pietty womau had a four-months old baby now placing on the Morganton market the finest, purest and best flour the Hungarian system can produce. They guarantee every sack that hears their tmilc- CORPEKING cVLAXTQN, t L Laxton Building, mark to bc superior to other flour at the If You Want CASH for - same pnee. 1 ry this new system flour. HO MORE EYE-GLASSES, It makes' more bread and better bread than the old system. Call on our sole agent for Morganton, . JOHN 5a Kere Attorney General Harmon. Of Agriculture Morton gazed on a little wooden tarmer pouring seeds down a hole in the rocks instead of Into Con gressmen 'a districts, Postmaster Gen eral Wilson confronted a mermaid who seemed to want to deliver a letter from the deep. Little gold dollars studded an old Kentucky home in the cliffs which Secretary Carlisle faced. Over all blazed a huge maltese cross with 45 electric lights, emblaroatic of the 45 States. Washington Special, 15fA, to Pittsburg Dispatch. If soon ; of the guests bad fished 8 pearl of sincerity from the bot torn of the lake and presented it JO GroverY Secretary of the Inte- said, and that said firm will nav th suniof ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be curred by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. . ' FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this the 6th day of December, A. D. ; 1886. mother danced as though already interested in its future employ tuent. .The father had been .sent us a soldier to- Cuba, the mother cheerfully explained, aud the cares ol maternity aud widow hood t lightly on her mind. It was only another demonstration that wom en don't alwavs weep while their J husbands war, and her devotion a. a- 1 . a . t : I a a- iu mc tamoouriiie piaver leu me to (iiiuk sue ruigut be preparing lor tne luture Mit the worst should come to the worst" in Cuba. We escaped from thia place with our lives aud we were not robbed; the latter because we decided to give them all we had and save them the exertiou of tskiug it. As we drove away" I ' looked amoug the children - for soma of those that common report says the gipsies steal, but 1 saw none, and judging from the number that have ien sent iu the uamral aud ap proved way to the camp, I re no reasou for thinking that the gyp sies find it difficult to resist the temptation of stealing others. 1 .a. . suouiu oe giau to mink they ex FOR SALE AT mm Bros llEETCHEIX'S EYISAI.VE ACwtala tH aM tMtcii Mtmtti W SORE, WEAK and INFLAMED ETES, Cures Tear Drops, CrmsilatUa.Stjs -TasMn, B4 ye, Jlatte4 je Lashes, and FRonrxrrio qctck nruzr as o raanAirioiT ccaa. I1a. hirnn lada H-TlllKta. avAA. a SOLO 11 AU DSUCiilTS AT 2S COTS. Department Stores. tm. latta. far II Vr. mm Warm! I". lt U tnmpUtm SEAL A. W: GLEASON. Notary Public. '"""internally m wawu. UU 1. , OI tbe JBtem. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENKV fr TSold by Druggists, 75c. ' Buckleu's Arnica Salve. The best' salve in the world loi Cuts, Braises, Sores Ulcers, Salt Uheum, Fever Sore, Tetter, Chap ped Hands, Chilblains. Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively I perienced tbe same lack of temp- cures t-iies, or no pay required, tation about more portable and it is guaranteed m give peirect satisfaction, or money refunded. nce 25 cents iwr lox. For sale by John Tull, Druggist. " ' "r'l. rkMcnMir, Tm'llIlM aaj . Uajhl. lo.au cr(itl rda IWanted to Buy Old blue figured dishes, old pewter dishes, Confederate stamps, Confederate rnonc.- Address, fur three weeks a a M, ii. I UCKER, Cdunelly Springs, N. C desirable articles, with all their depravity though they are au in teresting, picturesque people. For Orar Mrtj Tear Mas. Winslow's Sootbino Svsop baa been uaed for over fifty years by millions of mota en for tbeir childrca whiJe teething, with per fect aucces. It soothes tbe child, aofteaa the gvms. allays aU pain, cares wind colic, and ia the best remedy lor Diurliira I. ai i. the poor httle snfiertr immediately. Sold by proggistsineTerypartofthewortd. Twentr Sre cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for - Airs. Winslow's Soothing Syrap." aad take iu 7aeraiaa. de30-lT .-vr U1 oar rr4st. -- f , , ,, , J f Im rr Umt trtfrm mm rant aa rbflm sviLaua a. smith. uskIwctqu. kt. S. J. ERVIN, Attoraeyt-Law. MORGANTON, - - - K. C Practices ia aU the coarta of tw a.. where his serrkes may be required, aad spa rial attention irca to aU basincss. fcb is It r . ' vANTFn AM inFAe-tbtn, thing to patent f Protect yocr Mra t hj m. Dnna; you waaUn. Wrlta JOHN WKriTEl. AN ASTONISHING TONIC FOR WOMEN. H. PEARSON, Cash Warehouse. Do You Want To Sell Your Farm? Ml It Strengthens the Weak, Quiets th Nerves, Kelieves Month! Suffering artd Cures ' FEMALE. DIGEAGEOa ASKTOUM OnUCCIST ABOUT IT. .eo pzn BOTTvc DUTTANOOCA Ita CO. faHaaT We arc in correspondence with many real estate agencies in the North and North West that want ROod farming lands in this section. If you want to sell your farm and are willing to take a reasonable price lor it. we atc wilhng to advertise it and try and find a purchaser for vou free or cost. We have inquiries now for farr .u iu scuion, ana win oe glad to try ard find a chaser for all good property placed in our hands. Call-in at our office and trive us descrinimn r,,; w - I "t t' '-'- terras of payment wanted. pur-anJ oeu The Morganton Land & impt Co., W. c. ERVIN, Manager. riBOMOKT BAXK. 6 RE AKF AST-SUPPER. Q 7 GKATtruL-ccf'.rc r.r.s c E.PP NoUcc of Sciz.rr. NOnCH l Wrrby rlrea of tW arUar of the fettowtag ptutmt, tor yVuatioa ad BURN; A CO., Paurnt Attorr.rs, WaabJiigUa. IX O, for tb2r IUX) prim ofl? ISTTas Hirald Ofl5ce for Job ors;. COG O As tSubscril e for Thb latcraal Irmw UatellW L'aiim a... Seiaed aea'r.tra Alpraa. ta ftth nay mt Pebraary 1 hit. oht package c ra wawaey. ow eopcwr aUU. cap aad orsa. Aay prraoa ciaiaatag aa4 property hereby sobtod to appear before mV tb kdcratcaed. at AsaeviiW N. C . t.t. darslroai the data Wreo. aad aaaka aacb tl orm aad attsrr preati bd hr Kdla cf Sdzsre. N OJ! CE Wrrby rtea of the artrarr t f f Oota proprrty for rioi.i .i latoraaJ Brrrm Laws c4 the t'mied to-wit; twtiwd at Moraaatoa. X. C- - Saddayo4Prtraary, aorw ' M.toaV t atari krn a4 aaAl aad brtdte aad arty aaltoa.ea t.t 7 TTT0 ci,m4 aaw pmvntr m a ta apprar Wfwre anc it a..--rad. at Asacvwie. ? C. wtiaia .rt date brrevfaad snake Mck la.ai for aad aaacr mrM t.. la. ' tae pmpnty w,!i drtarr4 fclrttrd to t Vaitrd atalra. KrO 4 (a. 19. . AA. L. K(crS C- 't- C, WAUUC. AHW Oolj $1.00 a j tr. , I SOGERS, Coltertor. .V-
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 20, 1896, edition 1
2
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