.-publish: .d lvebt- THIJB8D AY by X. L fiTE WABT, Editor f ad Pxoprieto--.. SALISBURY, H. O. rnicE or SUBSCRIPTION. One Tear Six Months Three Mont, u j-Advei lisiug rat? nabl3. 41 , l-on by contract re. flXgj-QFFICE 0F THE TRUTH is o.i Vaia Street, two doors below the old M kei Home, up stains, steps leading up from the Entered in the Post Office t,i Salisboiy p second class matter. Thursday Noveeuee 1 'j Persons living In the dbunlry who wish to have the Truth conlin uedto their address, will please come prepared to .settle for it when they 4Com to towa. In blasting out obstructions In the way of -area which the company is construct in? in the Swaunanoa ttin nel, on the Western N. C. Railroad, a caving in was caused, last week. that has completely blockaded the travel in that direction. It is tem porarily forced around by the way of the Spartanburg road to Ashe v Hie. Prince William of Germany is cly log fxotn cancer of the throat, r "1' The Anniston Hot Bla.t, referring to Judge Thurman's personally abu Bive assault upon Gen. Jackson of Georgia, hits him hard and con cludes .by saying-: "A aian fis fund o, fody as Judge T-ur-mn and wao has i'era accounts dwtin- gnished hiae!f i lkmor not infrequently, , hould be cuFf m. of a?pn-: nv a Bobere mai) , than b unset f.,: I We clip the above from the Wil mington Siar, which has done more extravagant puffing of Judge Thur fenan than any paper in North Caro lina; and yet it allows the indecent and ungentlemanly fiing from the Hot Blast to pass without a protest. Thurman is par exjcllen., the purest Democrat, ami one of the most liber al and patriotic citizensof the North, and because he takes issue with Cen. Jackson, and prrperly denounces his foolish aiid reckless speech at Macon, iie is attacked as inougn he were a blackguard, -and no protest is offered by the organs. Shame on such un fairness and consistency! MEWS SUMMARY. The loss by the late floods in Nash And Edgecombe is estimated at oD- 000. A party of prospectors from Mich igan bought six acres of land in Mad ison county last week for which they . paid says the Citizen, $13,000 cash. Mr. George Miller of Waynsville choked to death last week from ton eilitis. The foundation of the New Cotton factory at Shelby, N. C, has been laid and It is lbo x 4 leet, witn a large lapper and engine room at tached. A rich gold mine has been discov ered in McDowell county. Fiends derailed a train near Hud eonville, N. C. last Monday. . At a soldiers re-union at Tayiors ville, Alexander comity, a few days ago, the curious fact was reporter: that of one family in that county namea ltooinette, sixteen were in the Norrh Carolina service during the late war. Thirteen were killed by the explosion of one shell in one Of the great battles in Virginia. . senator vance wasnrown irom a wagon Saturday last, near his resi dence in the mountains, and pain fully, bat not seriously hurt. , JK3Nov is the time for the friends fo the Truth to pay up, and exert themselves to get other cash paying subscribers. We are having a des perate struggle to give our people a good paper. Both the old parties are crowing over the result of the late elections. Easily satisfied! Kay we tninK our Dusiness men will find our paper an excellent me dium throngh which to present their business to our people. When they take into consideration the price o advertising and number of circula tion, we know that we offer as favor able facilities as any other paper here or elsewhere. Many of the bast men in thecountry are taking the paper, and are pleased with it, and are as sisting in giving it ft good circula tion. It will continue to be just what it has been as long as our friends respond promptly to our terms. We ask nothing that we do not give value received for. FALSE PARTY SPIRIT. True party rpirit seeks to make the party an agency for promoting the public good. False party spirit seeks to make voters sustain the party when it is wrong, Tha hahlf nf vntinnf fnr tVia -rrt -f it "right or wrong," offers a powerful Inducement to selfish and corrupt leaders to use it for their own ad vantage. In the sermon of Rev. Chr.iies F, "nAvwn e "X ' -7-l 1 J. rl ,iwius, ui mew i oris, on iasc oun 'day, the eminent divine said he re- garueu me ooiioc as "tne sacrment of liberty." Republicans in North Carolina are just now particularly active. When ever you see two of them together you may be certain that they are talking politics. With Democrats they talk of business, farming, and sometimes even of religion, but whenever they get off together they drift into politics- Politics is their business, and they pursue it with an earnestness which would win them success in any other line of activity. Their conception of politics is, how ever, with all of their talk andstudy, a very narrow one. How to beat the Demmocrats and get the office is the extent of their enquiry. Goldsboro Argus. That is exactly a eorreet descrip tion of what is called the Democratic parly. Never did a party exist so bent on getting the offices, if possi ble. The record of the last four years is an . accumulative evidence of the truth of this assertion What a pitty that some people and some papers can't see themselves as oth ers see them. What the Argus says is about true of 4he Republican party. But, is it truthful and honest to say by impli cation even that one party is worse than the other when the facts do not justify it? The sin of lying is, just as great when done by implication or omission as when done without attempted disguise. Tno Anarhists have at last been disposed of. One, Engel, cheated the gallows by blowing off the top of his own head with a dynamite candle before the day of execution. Spies, Parsons, Fischer, and Liugg were hanged, and Schwab and Field en were imprisoned for life at hard labor. The country will npw breathe freer since these foreign tramps have been justly punished for their crimes. ud tn e wovld ha3 been shown that . , ... , the judgments of our courts will be executed. But the question now is, why ai- low these scoundrels, fresh from the despotisms of Europe, to come here and eo on, step by step, in their ef forts to revolutionize our free insti tutions, teach sedition, anarchy, in cendiarism, and murder until the lives, and liberty, and property of crood citizens have been placed in jeopardy, before steps are taken to suppress them? No man, uuder the plea of personal liberty, or the constitutional right of free speech, has the right to do wrong wrong to others. Personal liberty does not mean the 'right of any, person to do anything that would conflict with the inalieable rights and privileges of his neighbor. or any other person. Neither does the right of .free speech carry with it the right to teach treason, anarchy, arson, or murder. Personal liberty and the right of free speech both end where crime beerins. Whatever is a public nuisauce or common evil may be prohibited by thecommuni ty for the best good of all if it so de sires. First determine what is p nuisance, after which, a majority may abate it, if they will. This is an underlying principle of Republi can government, which "must be obeyed or good order cannot be maintained. Society is organized, or is professed to be, for the protec tion and best good of all concerned, and as it is not expected or even pos sible for all to perfectly agree, it is consented that a'majority shall de termine all questions. Tf the "ma jority" becomes unjust and oppress ive, discussion and exposure are ex pected to bring reform and relief. If this should fail, then a resort to revolution is deemed justifiable len der the law, or rule of nations. But in no case can a handful of reckless, bad men he justified in uttering1 incendiary language and in advocating murder for supposed or e:u lirjeya nces ; nor suuum mey oe , - i , 1 t n I Uowed to do so. Much less should such conduct be permitted in those ho are unacquainted with our laws and institutions. Native born citi- s must be 21 years of age before ey are all owed to vote; but a foreign er, ivesii irom tne despotism oi tne old world, and as ignore nt of our free institutions as a baby, may come here and in a few years, vote, hold office, and force his crude notions of government and liberty down our people's throats. Reforms are badly, needed in these matters. A DISAPPOINTED PEOPL.E - WHO WILL SUFFER? Nevr-Berue Journal, Dein. The New York World, in reading a lesson to tne political Dosses and machines that control the nomina- A A A M t m tions oi tnai city, says: "The more independence there is on the part of tne people, tne greater safety there will oe against bad nominations for public offices." We take this as lit erally true not only in New York but elsewhere and we embrace the opportunity now of informing the Democratic party of JNorth Carolina that this spirit of independence is growing in the Eastern section. If we are asked why this is so, we answer unhesitatingly that they are sorely disappointed in their present Governor. The fact might as well be known now as at any time that there are thousands of Democrtts in Eastern North Carolina who regard the development of this section, the success of their business and the ad vancement of their material interest as paramount to the success of any party. e are not giving this as a "threat," but simply stating facts. Editor-in-Chief Howell, of the At lanta Constitution, has a two column letter in his paper over his own sig nature showing wny prohibition is a funmp. ". :np ndi-hvmp- inmni are filled with Manl v EditorGra- uy speecu to prove cai Prohibition is a success. Washington Post. I : The Baltimore Sun says and w ith truth: "It is rare that Providence be stows on one woman both an angel ie voice and an angelic heart, but it is no exaggeration to say that -Madame Goldschmit was as richly endow-; eu m ner moral mature as she was as a vocalist and musician." THREE THINGS SETTLED. The result of the election in this State settles three points as thor ough ty as any political event can be , nciiicu lu auvbiiue; President Cleveland wHl be re nominated by his party. Mr. Blaine will not be renominated by the Republicans. Mr. George will not control the election next year. New York is , the pivotal State. Mr. Cleveland's friends have had a complete triumph. They are enti tled to the fruits of the victory. Gi'over Clevelaand is indeed a lucky man; and Jamqs G, Blaine may belaid to be a dead cock in the pit. New York World. The Advance is firmly convicted that success in North Carolina next year is involved in more doubt than has been the case in mauv a vear. The people have expected bis: thinsrs of National Democratic success and they have in a measure been disap pointed. They expected that the whole Jnterual.Iievenue would be repealed immediately. That has not been done. Wilson Advance. THE ANARCHISTS' CASES. It is impossible to imagine any- thiug more atrocious than the doc trines of these vagabonds or any thing more deliberately fiendish than the crime for which they are under sentence of death. Idle, beer-guz- zling ruffians, they hold that nobody has a right to have any more than they have, and thev proceed to defy the laws of this country, which guarantee a citizen peacable possession of his honest earnings, and to murder the execu tors of these law3. They assemble in a populous part of a great city and through their orators . pronounce curses upon the laws of the land and upon its officers. Policemen, having knowledge that it is an armed gath ering, interfere to stop the inflam matory harangues before the igno rant and vicious mob is worked into a fury which will result in fire, riot and bloodshed, when, by a prear ai t i ranged plan, at tne given signal, a dynamite bomb is thrown into the midst of these guardians of the pub lic peace, carrying sudden death with it. And now, as our correspondent says, instead of regarding then selves, as in all consistency they should, martvrs in a glorious cause, they exhaust every technicality of the laws they despise and trample under foot, in the effort to avert their penalties, and cower be fore the Governor of Illinoise beg ging for that mercy they denied to others. What guarantee have we of the continued reign of law and order in mis country 11 tnese "vulgar mur derers" are not hanged? The crim inal code may as well be repealed if a crime as cruel as this one is not visited with condign punishment, it is noteworthy that only one of these ruffians is a native-born American. Our ports are open to the people of all the world except the most orderly in the world, the Chinese. It was an early boast that America was "the haven for the op pressed of every clime." It has come to this, as our able New York correspondence felicituously put it in a letter a few months ago, that a class of foreigners come to our shores from the midst of poverty, slavish ness and degradation unspeakable, and no sooner they land than they want the earth. They never before knew what liberty means, and as eoon as they begin to enjoy it they begin to abuse it. Before they can speaktthd language or have even been naturalized they set up in bus iness as champions of "labor," and seek to put the whole country under contribution. They despise the laws under which they enjoy a liberty they do not deserve and cannot ap preciate and set them at defiance. It is time this vicious class were made tc feel the rigors of those laws. , ume ior aiieiampeio oe :m aue Tj J " . . 1 A. 1 1 J-111 JOOVI.4 OIIUU1U A 1 kj w iiittt nuti: ty does not mean unbridled license, even in free America, otherwise it will have to be taught at a later day when the cost of learning will be greater. A TERRIBLE CRIME. An outrageous assult. was perpe trated last Wednesday night by two negro ruffians on Mrs. Ada Sellers, respectable white womau living on Thirteenth between Market and Mea'dow streets. Mrs. Sellers lives alone her husband being in Savan nah,Ga. She was aroused late in the night by the negroes, who demanded with oaths and threats that the door should be opened. The frightened woman ordered them to leave and threatened to shoot them if they did not go, but the men laughed at her threats, and finally broke the door down, dragged Mrs. Sellers out of the hosue and assaulted her. She fought her assailants and cried out for as sistance but her cries were soon hush ed by one of the black brutes who choked her until she was nearly un conscious. As soon as she escaped from their clutches she mnde her way to a neighbor's house where she remained until daylight. When she returned to her home in the early dawn. Mrs. Sellers found that the place had been plundered and what little money she had was stolen. Mrs. Sellers was severly bruised in her struggle with the 'two negros. Her neck and throat were swollen and livid with the imprints of their ringers. The men were strangers to her and there is no clue to their idenity. Wilmington Star 12th. From a list of the Protestant pas tors in active service in New York city, drawn up by the secretary of the Cily Mission, it appears that the Protestant Episcopalians lead, with TZ the Presbyterians come next with 62; the Methodists have 51; the Bap tists, ol; tne Reformed, (Duich) I the Lutiierans, 21; the Independents; : iz: tne uoa5uegaiionaJists, .anatnei Reformed Episcopalians and the ! -wAO:viaus, a eacu. ius tumtea a. total of 286, I 0 n ffl n ran In the front as usual with low prices in Leading Goods. BOOTS, OVERCOATS, HATS AM TRUNKS MUST GO We are selling all of our HEAVY BOOTS at ten 10 per cent, on actual cost, ranging from $1.75 to $3.30, worth $2.00 to 4.00 Youths SI. 25 to $2.00 worth $1.75 t o $3.00 Childs for $1.00 These are all good, solid OUR line of OVERCOATS is too LARGE and must be RE DUCED so every one who buys one gets advantage of the low prices, and we will give you real and not im aginary value for your hard earned dol lars, and you will save enough to buy a good HAT, which is an ever essential to a man's good So come to see us, and SAVE nun IP? ISr -o- bottom goods and must go. looks. -o- MONEY. M. S. Brown. Raise everything that you need that can be grown ou your farms, look after all the leaks, buy less gu ano, and save every dollar that you can, and soon you will be securely established on solid financial ground. -Milton Advertiser. TS3PAPEn Tnay 1m found tn file at Geo, P. llnwifti. Jt fVa Newspaper Advertising Bnreao (10 Spnca Street), where adver- Rareess llAnpr an contracts mayiifc K J VlifiK r t in JOHN A. RAMSAY, CIVIL ENGINEER. G ' c-s (a -O- GIVES ATTENTION To Railroad construction, Survevs and Mapping of Mining properties a I specialty; Surveys and Estimates of Water Powers; prepares plans for Drainage of Swamp lands by both open and covered Drains; Plans for the erection of Mills, Dwellings, &c; i and attends to the purchase of all kinds of MACHINERY, Building Materials, &c, &c. ROSS & McCUBBINS, FOR MILLS AND EXPORT, SALISBURY, N. C. J. A. BOTDEN. M. C. QUINN. ..Ml BOYDEtf & amNN. Cotton and Cotton Seed Buyers. DEALDRSIN CARRIAGES, PHAETONS, BUGGIES, ROAD CARTS, &c, AGRI CULTURAL IM PLEMENTS. A line of Corn Shellers, the very best ever offered in this market. We make a specialty of the celebrated "0R- CHILLA." Guano, an unmanipulated and unadulterated Guano, equal to the Old Pe ruvian, at less than one half the cost. No rock ground up with brimstone acid that barns up your land, and available only for one crop, but a Guano that Fteadily enrich es your land, year alter year. Those who have used it once never tail to try it again and again-. We also have on hand The "Nation al," a Fertilizer which gives quick results on Corn, Wheai, Clover, To bacco, &c. Some thing equal to any ammoniated goods ever offered to this market. Prices and terms to suit the times. Give us a call. Res pectf oily, B0YDEN & QUINN. ' ' '' SALISBURY N. C., Near First National Bank, hit Fubxiture. Repairing. R. M. DAVIS. Mattresses. Undertaking. S A T..TSB U ItT; 2nT. O. Mattresses made to order and all kinds of eabinet work and Uptmirinn. done at R. M. Davis' fun iture room! E. X JAM E S . Lively Stable. Fronting First National Bank where you can hire first class vehe cles cheapest. MOYLE BROS' Pan Wins, Lijwrs Ad fars, MAIN STREET. One door below the Opera House. SAX.ISBURY MARKETS TOBACCO MARKET Coroi,;T weekly by Hanking Bros. & Co Damaged & Frosted. 1 50 to 3 0C Lugs. . Common, . " Medium, . " Good, . . . M Fine, . . . . Leaf. Common, . " - Medium, . " Good, . . . Wrappers. Common, " Medium,- " Good, . . " Fine, . . $ 3 00 to 4 (W . . 4 00 to 6 00 . 6 50 to 11 00 . - .14 to 20 . . 4.50 to 6 50 7 to 10 . 12 50 t o 18 00 15 00 to 18 00 -20 00 to 25 50 26 00 to 35 00 . 40 00 to GO 00 PRODUCE , MARKET. CoiTOt-teA weekly Bacon. Butter. . . Chickens. Eggs. . . . .. Cotton. Corn. Flour. . Feathers. Fodder. Hay. Meal. . . Oats. . . Wheat, Wool. . . ty McNeely k Tyson. . . 10 to 12 . .12 to 20 . 10 "20 . 12 "15 , . . 9 " 9i . 40 " 50 2.25 to 325 25 to 50 . . . 55 " GO i 35 "40 . . 50 " 60. . . 30 " 40 80 to 100 . . 15 to 30 GO TO THE STORE NEAR THE To Buy Cheap Goods. JULIAN & WATSON Are decidedly in the lead with their low pri ces aud : honest goods. Their retail I dppartfnent is - FULL OF BARGAINS, and their line of Dress Goods, Shoes, Domestics, Hats and Motions, ABE COMPLETE - Also. Laces Gloves. Hosiery Embroider ies, Handkerchiefs, Keck Wear, Blankets, Comforts, Counterpins. Flannel Table Liu ens, Houne Furnishing Goods, &c. &c. Bacon, Lard, Sugar and i;onee, bait na Flonr, in short a full line of GROCERIES. The above and a dozen others befides are the Stocks they ofler at figures which make every article a baj-gain. They buy ana sell uountry rroauce, Hides, Bones, Wool Old Iron, Loose Cotton &c, &c. They aie also agents for the most popular brands oi In short, at their Store you cun gtrt what- ever you want at bottom prices. All they i ask is a chance to prove what they say. JULIAN & WATSON. THE NORTH CAROL! J A HOME INSURANCE COMPAJNY. Of Raleigh, N. C. -Against-" Loss by FEE, This Company has been in Success- ful Operation for Sixteen Years. V. S. Primrose, Pres. Ciias. Root, Sec. d ircas. W. G. Upciiurcii, Vice-Pres.- P. Cowpek, Adjuster. J. ALLEN .BROWN AGT. .Nov. 24. tf. 88. J R.-KEEN, Agent for all kinds of MANUFACTURING 3IACIIIN KRY-, o Prices Rock Bottom, and Terms as liberal as any. Salisbury, N. C. Oct. 1st 1887. THE WILMINGTON STAR. Reduction in Price. Attention is called to the following reducd rates of subscription, cash in T1IP1 T1ATT.V CT T One Year . . fcix Months, Three Monthg, One Month, . THE WEEKLY STAB. Oie year, . . Six Months, ."." Three Months. . 1 a $6 00 3 00 1 50 50 $1 00 60 . 80 . Oar telegraph News service has recently been largely increased, and it is onr dW- standard of newspaper ekcelfence. Address, WM. H. BERNARD, Wilmin--n, N. C. .1. . ....