Newspapers / Salisbury Daily Truth-Index (Salisbury, … / Nov. 28, 1899, edition 1 / Page 2
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-if V- -: I jr. r Cr r -4 4 T ... i jjfalfalmnj Sails gnilfx PotlLsteJ Ewj Eyeiing Except Sonlaj. And roterd In tb pontoffie at Pslisbnry, N. C., m second clss mail tastier. fit bw(i I4M pr Week, for four Wk. PtrYw, J. N. STAtUNGS. Sr Via II. STEWART. - EJitor. Tuesday Nov. 28, For President, .1900: Hon. W. J. Bryan, Of Nebrnaka. . OUR FARMERS' OPPORTUNITY. .The Raleigh Post, of Sun laf? gives a liet of the man ufacturing enterprises in North Carolina. It it a long Jlgt and bIiows a very large amount of money invented. The Post thinks that it shows general prosperity. We re joice at the proiect. If the " large number of thowe the , Post mentions materialize and others are inaugurated, as doubtless they will be, the material prosperity of the Htato will be greatly en Jianeed. Tlie farmers will change largely from cultiva ting fields of cotton and to baccoVw raising grain, the graepes, Htock, vegetables, fruits and dajry products. With a largo manufacturing' i population in almost every town in the State, the demand for such products will be . greatly increased and will in- ; duce farmers to change their crops. Thochange will bring -prosperity to the tillers of i the soil and make their busi- ness attractive and popular. It is in this way that the " manufacturing enterprises : will become great factors to bring about general prosper ity." The manufacturers will, Jn most cases, become weal- . thy: their capital will give employment to many thous ands and greatly and rapidly increase the population of v the towns, the operatives will make a living and will spend their earnings with-the mer chants and shopkeepers. Qf course, all tint t will be Very nice and seem' to be the pros perity we are looking for and desire. Hut if it w to to atop there and not revolutionize our system, of agriculture, the mid sought would not be -reached. Hie farmers 'must be so affected tint they will becouiu p:o:n'it.,iH We re joice that ,wry manufactu ring enterprise not only in vests capital and gives em ployment to many who need It, but causes a change in ag ricultural method which will pring prosperity to the far mers. No man can farm in North Carolina and make cotton and tobacco at present prices, rear and educate i family, and become mate rially better off in this world's goods. With the great change in crops, which manufactu ring enterprises will inaugu rate in every part of the State, . will come prosperity to the farmers. Then, aud not till then, will there be general prosperity. Jefferson Davis. one seemed (o know how or when In a life of unvarying action.an ora tor of no mean parts, as was often testified to by the most divers audi ences, he survived all his Contempo raries to write like Caesar a classic of his own great doing-. Thefli;t two hundred page of hin. history Is an example .vf clos knit logic the equal of which It will be hxrd to find in any literature. Not Jeffef on himself has so weldfni the links in vindicating the supremacy of the State, not alone as constitutionally warranted, but as jheedful to the charter'. existence. He had the is olation of many great men of Cae sar. Wellington and Washington; hut was a kindred spirit wilh Sid ney Johnson, Lucius Lamar and Dick Taylor; , while for men like Bedford Forest; I'at Cleburn and John P Hood he had the pride of a prccepto. He bowed to no man. but for Robert Lee ami Bishop Polk be felt a respect almost equaling rev erence. He wrote half a column one day on Ben Butler and made his in famy immortal. If he did uot hato Joe Johnson only his Christianity prevented; certainly there is an un derlying thread through all his book inducing one to believe that on Johnson's head was to fail the car dinal errors of the Confederacy, pre venting success. Theydid not fall, the reproach is uttered and yet one feels that it is withheld for -pride's sake pride in withholding from outsiders family troubles. He en dured vicissitudes rare in these let ter days of gentle manners and pub lic prints. Martydom was, imposed upon him. trial denied him, torture tried upon old and feeble limbs, all the hiied pens employed to defame, his very ! cournge, which hhown liked a fixed htar, lied about and weakness im puted to a nerve, which the Nutni dlan lion could not have faced with out slinking. Having carried through an event ful travail to the weight of an em pire, destimd to death inbirtlijhe held aloof from coiimioncoinpan- ionship in his later years.and per- sonifie'irthe dignity, self-respect and civil obedience of a thwarted, proud 12 o'clock? on November 15, there was a strong earth quake shock, but no celestial phenomena were observed. By the, falling of -an aerolite seven hiiles'south' of Crescent City, 111;,- a residence was partly wrecked, tearing away a portion of the upper story. The aerolite buried itself An the ground about three feet from the foundation" of the bouse. ' ' Iri England a .balloon made an ascension for the purpose of observing the Leonid shower. The observer saw only five meteors, and they were obliged to make a sud den descent,, as the balloon was drifting toward the sea. As a result two of the three occupants of the balloon were injured. Generally speaking the European observations proved a failure, except - in the Austrian Alp.-, where, bit November 15, no less than 300 Leonids were seen and photographed . One hundred were seen at Paris, and a fair display at Brussels. The most interesting report received from the observa tions in the United States on November 15 is a dispatch; unsubstantiated, as yet by as tronomical authorities, to the oifect that a large meteorite fell in the woods just east of Webster City, la. The dis patch said that the falling Dody came down with a ter rific roar aud, all seething and smoking, plowed out? a hole, in' -.the ground f6 feet square, it tne report is veri fied, the find will be more people pledged to peace and. lthin usually interesting, be nut-ii'i'Miiiit-iu. m iiifu u miyriuKinir GOAL! GOAL! Don't forget, when In need of Coal ;' to leave rour order at At well's Haulware.' As to quality there . .... if- -j NONE BETTER. 4 '".-' Any order left at PI u miner's "drug store will be attended to prnipt- . ly. Phone 118. R. L. CORNELISON. 5 by a thin thread of a promise, be hind which, however, was honor. It will be an ill day for decency in Reneral, and American decency in particular, when his name is suf fered to rust. Morganton Herald. ! The Meteor Display. r rlHn meteor display on No vrmber 14, 15 and 10 wes dis appointing. Unfavorable con ditions hampered the astron omers at the Naval Observa tory at Washington on the 14th; clouds prevented obser vations until 3 o'clock a. m.. and it was only partially clear at any time. Paths of ten Leonid meteors were plot ted on the star chart. One of these was as bright as a second magnitude star, "but the others were fainter. The conditions at the Harvard Observatory were very un favonihle for 'observing the meteoric display. . . Tire efforts of the observers met with some success, however. On November 10 twenty meteors were, seei about 5 o'clock a. m., at Chicago; the student watchers had an opportunity .which was denied to the as tronomers of the Yerkes Ob servatory. At the Flow er Observatory of jibe Uni veri ty of Pennsylvania, Philadel phia, the watclers recorded 102 meteors, 09 Uf which were Leonids. . Nearly all the meteors ob served were faint, only a few of them being of the second magnitude. Most of the non Lenoids were scarcely dis cernible. In no instance did a meteor leave a trail visible for more than a few seconds. The Jl?rvard Observatory counted.Gl but the display J hardly came up to the expec tations of the astronomers. cause, while meteorites at times fall to the earth, it is not known that any of the Leonids have '.hitherto pene trated through the earth's dense atmosphere without be ing entirely consumed. Scientific American.. That Throbbing -Headache 'Would quickly leive you,, if you used Dr. -King's . New l.i: Pills. Thoufand of sufferers have. "proved their matchless. merit for sick ami nervous headaches. They mak pure blood and strong nerves Mid imild up your health . Easy to take. Try them. Onlv 2" cents. Money hack if. not cured. SdUI hy TiiEo. F. KLUTTZ & Co., druggist. - XJw-'.-PfcV m ,0N w- CO . :& ? a - g a ; a a a H . O 3 ' co ' SAMPLE V-- SHOES n -! n m C30 P3 3 a : ra a CO ..3,000 . PAIRS. Men's, Women's and Children's ...Samnle Shoes... i .4 : INGLUDIHG ALL GRADES AND STYLES. Prices 25 to 50 per ccn less tlialn regular goods, ranging from TH PIR. V - A jrreat assortment f Women's fine 8hies in sizfs 3 nnd 4, and uie dium grades in 'sizes 3), 4, 4J and 5. In roan's shoes the sizs, run prin cipally 7 and 7J in the finest sh es aud 7, Sand 9 in the medium gtades. ! ' 1 . '" j Ool sssortment of sizes in chil dren'! misses' aad btya hoeM. ; If ou want a bargain in a irool wr Tsho( s, you can certainly net if in this line of samples. AT KINDLING WOOD! i ', .! . . ; I have jut opened a .wood yard at Finger tfe Anthony's electroplating works, where I will handle wood in quan tities and by retail of any de sired ki nd and legnth. Prices will be in accord yitU'the market. 1 - will also .handl? Cedar "PostK " Soliciting your patronage, I am, respectfully, ; J. il. SLOAN. WHITLCCK & RAIHEY, LEADING SHOE DEALRES: SALISBURY, N. C. If IT SHOGTStt, Main Street, EAUTIFUL uOM; Go; i ORGELAI Rli , .i . J. M G ood : ' .: ... ; ; . . Judgmeitit -." 'O . if' . hJ SALISBURY, N. 0. . A ft ' ' O V! arr ; ! in qna ii ;ti - 'of sfx' aiM'Ic d To deliver Tlid innHtlitL nf tho iTnkml iVuufh r of the Confederacy in iiichmond Professor Howe, of the Uni lecentiy with the verenionie-i ut- versity of Denver," reported ' tendantupon tho dedication or the that ho counted 18 Leonids - Mvera) memorials to members of koc,:.i0, - l-- 1i , Jem-nmo UavU' f.miiy ,IMKW.bebidw a large number ofme loned a certain reneual of interest teors in oilier lortions of the la the Creat chieftain iiiuis.df, and sky. OiiNovember 14 many comment U notieeably kindor In the ptudents of Princeton stayed "IivUm nTfT FeW Ten"out long -after midnight .to nave lived in the century now clo . Ai . , log,' u ho hi the ackno iedjred ele- f observe them, and m j order . went which constitute in the gax-, that all might have an oppor pa uiidertnndineof ureatness, haVo'tunity of observing themj the unsHi jeffem n Davis. He v bells in the town rang to wake to. begin with, a born soldier and A1 . , - , . , when anked lata in life by hlsd.iugl 11 n the etudQlts at ODOO clock, ter Winnie to ex pre the nuimuutii' pbotdgraphs were taken bonmnof hi amb tlun replied, "to of tho few stray meteors break Mjuare. with j cavalry. ' 11 wj jch wefe M M Gm iron liuena VtU in adopting Han- T i i r nlbal'- reuowm! of the wedffo University photographs of orVhjK.i movement. a scholar .150 meteors were obtained. pw "Uhlver-sil ranjre, acjuiro t np At Lima, Peru, at half past; ..to suit BUYF iS i - - ' ;-. Hest - quality lump eeal in v the -city. "rtll . at fvctory or T. A. Coujrheuour's lee llue. 'Phone 12. " 1 Salhcury " Ice and Fuel Co. "Our Native Herbs," , TnEORiaix.Lii:!:ucoMixv:vi, itGGieitB:jiPi!rii3r. Kitoj Ei Lifer Replator. OuarflnteM by onr Rfcl?teml Coarantoe to cure 11 dicifv rising Iithii Inipare Uloodtuid InactlThy f tbe Liver and K Marys. 200 Days Treatment $1.00, And the Dollar Back if Ya Are Not 1 ; ,v Cured. ; I HE ALONZO O. BLISS CO., ' Pole rropijftor. - J. F. rExuierji. city m tain isiits. Biilisbury. N. C. . Prompt aUratloQ gtTen o wall trJcrs, Not 9o'.d '1 housewife9 s delight A nicely arranged table" Buy your goods of us and get a set of this ware.-;. The following is a list of pieces from which to select: 1 ll-in platter with cash purehiH 1200 1 soup howl, free with cash", l'ieiiaoi. 1 12-ii, iiinlhT g- - 1 pie plate with cash purchases of 3 ,00 1 G-in round veg'hle dish " 1 breakfa-t iIate 1 dinner plate 1 handle tea and Vaucer 1 individual butler 1 aucedi:h 1 sujrar howl . 1 cream pieher 1 gravy tioat ."' 1 cvered butter j 1 8 in covered dish 1 9 in platter 4 00 4 00 4 00 00 200 1 7-in " 1 8-in 18-in " I 7rin obhmjr 1 S-in ' M 15 00 1 ldckledish 6 00 celery trty 10 00 1 cracker jnr . 20 00 1 larpe fruit dish n fwi 1 cake plaie 1 '7-pint pitcher 6 00 j tea j,t i t M ' . f 20 00 4 00 COO 10 00 12 00 G00 10 00 6 00 15 00 15 00 25 00 15 00 12 Ou 15 00 Remember we sell everythieg Jut as cheap and many things a great deal cfteaper than any one else In town. Remember, we handle nothing but the beat good for the least money. There ia no reason why you should not buy yoor dry good and shoes from one of our stores, You get me ihji ior ioe money ror the money wheu you buy of us. Ileepectfully. ; Ask for coupons either store. JJ-.-IHl 1 a Tells You to luv jiice Clothes! Good Clothes becoming Clothes Chothcs that will look1 well on you Clothes thVwill wear well Clothes thut have jnid outAvard index 14Tur goouvuisie - your good judgJTZSrtr" p Appearances go a good way B IBlaV fiVI 3hft Sn; S lICa IVirdlMl - - i 6 First impressions are the best the most lasting Clothes do it The right kind our Clothes will. MAM Gcotf Delifcred to Any Part of the City Free! Victor . ! I ?i w allace. . i i. : J. , C -.it. GoodL Of Salisbury or any other town, you can hiTe your andirons and Fender, etc, reburcmhed, laquered and made a :ood a new, laU lut ' as long. The Lacqaer prevent the -bra from turning dark. It ia true you can nave your ora cieanea at nome tnougn it wi nice at all, and will in a short time torn C ark. , Caanot be done without machinery. The Fingerf A Anthr factory hare the machinery, and will do the work at a ver Give them a trial and see what they can do-1 They will silver ware of their own make very cheap, and jroarantee . ; first-class, or they will replate your old silver at half what 1 guaranteed to be as ocd. Yours to please, I NHUfcll V, iltJl ii not look 1 VPlatior all cost. , Vm new to be j cost i A X) r .-. -4 n II n II
Salisbury Daily Truth-Index (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 28, 1899, edition 1
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