Newspapers / North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, … / Sept. 14, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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c c v 1 it r-i. J li it i i J 13. i i i 5 - V. - r J r. i I i i Vol. T L 5s"o-. 50. MILLER & SMITH, CJci.Xlsl:vi.x-y, KX.O. RESTAURANT. -J We take boarders by the day, week or month . and furnixh meal at all hour, and alio sleeping apartments without meat If ileatred. Our table I utn4ied with the het to tie had. Including oyter. frenh nih, wild garae, Ac, A?.. prepared in the mutt apirovl style. Our room '' are neatly fnrnUhed arid kept clean and bom. : fortahle. Our servant are polite and at tentive I Charge miderute. .Seclal accommodation j commercial traveler. .' t' Connected with oar Honne 1 a fi rot-Hi"" linL' f! where nothing but the purest wine aJ i are kept, with fine tobacco and , T , JT alo a uplendid billiard saloon with t"1 AMt' IM. I THE ! ROCHESl ER GERMAN Fire Insurance Company has the largest Assets to its Liabil ities of any Company represented in the State. Don't forget it when you want reliable Insurance. ' J. S. McCUBBINS, Jr., Agt. l-tf Salisbury, N. C ar. -INSURANCE AGKNCY - J. JILL EN NE OF THE OLDEST AS WELL AS ' - - RE, LIFE,1 ACCIDENT, LIGHTNING, WIND-STORMS AMD TORNADO. LGGREGUTE ASSETS f ' i Representing the leading American and Foreign Companies among which the rsest Fire Ins. Co., ("Liv. & Los. &, Globe"), as well as the.lanrest Life Ins. Co., EouiTABbE" of N. Y.,) in the world. All classes of risks placed at once at lowest equate rates Losses adjusted promptly and satisfactorily. OFFICE i West Cor. Main and Fisher Sta., Up Stairs Front Room, I ' . . SALISBURY, N. C. Oly t"P0?5T FAIL TO. CALL MECKLENBURG mow wo JOHN WILKES, Manager, CHK.RLOTTE.NiGj MGINES AND BOILERS OF AIX SAW AND 15 usei idp.pjiipte A SPECIALTY. WRITE FOR CIRCULAR AND ESTIMATES. Unfailing Specific for Liier Disease. vM 3Tftfte$i Blttf" or bad tat In OltVlr I mouth; ton:;oe citd whiter covered witu a l.rown fur; pain In ' the t-a' hte. or jotnta ofu-n DimUkea or Kheumatisra ; war utoiuach: 1 ot appetit; aoinettriica nmiM-a and water t,rth, or Indljreatlon ; tlatnleorv and acid eructations; bowel al;ernately costive and lax; headache lo.iof memory, with a painful heuhation of hning failed to do aorncthins which ought to have been done ; debility; low apirit; a th!-2t, yrlluw ap IArance of the akin and eyea; a dry cough; fever; rUer.t as ; the urine la scanty and hi;jh colored, and, If allowed to stand, deposit a Kedlment. , SIHMONS LIvEIi, REGULATOR (PURELY VEGETABLE) I Knerally ued In the Kouth to arouse the Torpid Liver lo a healthy action. It acts with extraordinary efficacy tha IIVER, ipWEYS, ; -a and Bowels. k trricTuu. specific roil Malaria, Dowel Complaint, lypepba, Kick Headache, Constipation, UiUoosneaa, Kidney Affection. Jaundice, Mental Iepralon, Co lie. Endorsed by the use of 1 Million of Bottles, as THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE lor Children, for Adulta, aad for the Aged. ONLY GENUINE hat our Z Sump in red oa front of Wrapper. J.H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa., sots raoraiBTOiis. Price, Sl.OO. U 1887. .X- BROWN, LARGEST AGENCIES IN THE STATE. . PVER - $150,000,000. 'V BEFORE INSLIiING.J :o:- KIND. GRIST MILLS. J. R. KEEN, -o SELLS THE BEST AND CHEAPEST MACHINERY OF ALL KINDS ,TO BE FOUND IN THE STATE. GIVE HIM A TEIAL BEFORE BUY TTSTG ELSEWHERE. - Salisbury, 1ST. O., StUSEUP.Y EUSlKESS EiSECTOBY. Attorney t. lion. CTim. Price, L S Overman, Thco. F. Kluttz, TCLino. Hon J S Henderson, Chas D Crwford, J W Humplc. L & W C Blackmer, J W JIauney, Craige & Clement. Agricultural Implements. Smithdeal & Rltchi. Boarding Houtes Mrs. Crawford, 31 re. Lowery, Butchers. RW Price, ('ouhenour & Shaver. J F Smith & Co. Bakers. A Pr.rker, O G Seyffert. Barbers. B B McNeely, Geo Anderson. , Bankers. Davis A "Wiley, . Books and Stationery. Theo F Kluttz & Co.,. Theo Buerbaum, Boots and Shoes. ,. Kluttz & Rendleman, M S Brown, , J Z Setiultz, Whitlock & Wright. Broom and Mattress Manufactory : John Berry Watson. Cement, Lim'e and Plaster Dealers: J. Allen -Brown. Cotton Dealers. J F Ross,' M CQuinn, J D Gaskill. , Clothing. Kluttz &. Rendleman, ' II S Brown. , Carriages and Wagons. " Smithdeal & RitehieT ... t . Cigar Manufactory. Geo P Ilellcr. Drugs. Theo F Kluttz & Co., J II Enniss. Distiller. J B Lanier. Dry Goods. Kluttz & Rendleman, -Meroney & Bro., . R J Holmes, V Wallace, Young & Bostian. Fertilizers : ' J Allen Brown, T C Bernhardt. Flour Mills. P M Brown. Furniture. J A Clodfelter, It M Davis, j , Granite Works. i Dr R MEames. i Groceries. A Parker. EC Miller, W W Reid & Son, Binsham & Co., . G TMowery, Wfight & Heilig, AC Harris, W-A Eagle, II & L Wright, Galli more & Co., Young & Bostian, C J Bingham. Julius A Peeler, Kluttz & Rendleman, Hardware. Smithdeal & Ritchie, D A Atwell. , Hats. M,S Brown, J Schultz. Ricket Store. Hotels. National Hotel Mt. Vernon Hotel, Davis House. Insurance Agents. J D Gaskill, J S McCubbins, Jr., J Allen Brown, Ice Dealers. , Coughenour & Shaver, Jewelry. J & H Horah, W II Reisner, C P Abbott. Lumber and Timber. J R Keen. - ' Millinery. Mrs W R Barker, Misses Jones. Machine Shops and Foundries. J D Small, Meroney & Bro., ' ' P A Frercks. P II Thompson. J R Keen,. Picture Frames. Theo Buerbaum, Real Estate Agents. Buerbaum & Eames, Racket Start. Jno Brookfield, : Sash, Doors and Blinds. 4 J D Small. Smithdeal & Ritchie, Meroney & Bro. r f , , . ' Tin Ware and Stove Dealers : . Wms. Brown. 1 Tobacco Warehouses. Farmer's , ' Iron Clad " Tobacco Factories Smoking. ' " Foard & Rice Beall & Co. " Tobacco Factories Plug and Twist. J D Gaskill, Foard & Rice, . Johnsou & Ramsay, - ' v Wednesdriy ; 8 AUTUMNAL TWHJOHT. I To the horizon dak the tuo. While o'er hU,fce, when Cmj U dose. " Uoy m the vail o er tiu&iBr Baa, llanga toe autumnal twwiit. The curlinr mist He o'er the rtreant. iiazy ana aim a a iwingiu arram. And like the mist round ft?rneVa belm liOTers the autumn twtllrht. The mountain shade the Talley wjje. Xlght sbadowy nnri the distance hide Uut glowing ami ongbt on the uunst side Glimmers the autumn twilight. - -? A Now aits September 'ceath the trcTi Wooing the coy autumnal hrt-eze. l nrougn tue aim toresi auies be sets The bright autumnal twlllgtt. Then cornea Cctober to pluck ml leaves; While ior the aying nowers he grieves. A crown oi yenow lerns ne weaves For the pale autumnal twilight. Nature's gay songsters tune their throats. Far through the lading iorest iinati S The music of wild birds' farewell notea To the sad autumnal twilight. Loud moans the wind on-the wintry'shore, l he sparkling irost is white and hbar, And hitting at eve is seen no more The lost autumnal twilight TREASON VS. LOYALTY. We clip the following from Wheeli ng, V . Va. , Register : the In 1861 when Fori Sumter was fired upon the cry spread likje wild fire among the loyal -people of the land "treason !" ; A hlow waa Rtrnok ' hv tbo Snntr em Ctfufederacy at PresidentlAbra- ham t.innnln' anthrJtir tt nraa ui a - a-a u u u waaw a a v v a u n treason. In 1887, nearly a quarter of a . century after the seal of Union had been stamped upon the laud in characters of blood, nearly a quar ter of a century after, when the people, the bone and sinew, the real upholders of the Union! had, in spite of politicians' efforts to the contrary, forgotten the bitterness of the war and clasped hands with their former foes nearly a quarter oia century after, we see the grand old flag trailed in the dust by men, who. without moral right, wear, or more properly, disgrace, the univ form of the Grand Army of -the Republic trailed in the dust while passing under a banner inscribed : GOD BLESS OUR PRESIDENT, COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF OF THE ARMY AND NAYiY OF TITE UNITED STATES. In 1861 this was treason blackest dye. of the In 1887 it is treason not one whit the less black, though 'the effects be insignificant. And the men who disgrace the uniform of the Grand Army) of the Republic and trail the Unite States flag in the dust, in token th at they do not recognize the Presi 1 "1 T , 1 t 1 , i ent of tne united estates, are n bt - the soldiers who bore the sacred old flag throughout the war and guard- ed it with the musket, they are not the real veteran "ooys in bine." They are traitors in sentiment black as was General Beauregard, when he refused to recogrnize the President and ordered the Siring on Fort Sumter in 1861. The veterans, the loyal soldiers not the three and nine month men the real '"boys in blue' who fought and bled in campaign after campaign? from 1861 to 186b, these real defenders of the Union brush- ing aside the knot of malicious local politicians who never saw a musket except as a relic, wh o would have crowded them from under the banner stretched overhead i ,n honor of the President of ' the United States the Union Veteran the noblest appearing body in the parade, marched Lesion, m- -. of men straight under the banner and raised their caps in graceiui aoanowiedgraent ! of the respect due the Chief Magis trate and Representative American people. of the They were not a body of rDemo- crats. They were not a body of Republicans. They were old soldiers They fought under command of the Pres ident of the United States obce, and would do it again. The Kegtster-has not yet seen cause to recede from- its original position that the Grand Arrjiy of the Republic, as at present organized, is a political macmne, is oeingpros tituted for political .purposes by seinsn, uisioyai puiiuuai procurers. 1 i 3-i 1 : 4.: l The National Tribune, the G. A. n . nrru. r l l organ, says : xue uarieston News and Courier says 'the G. R. must be made to understand that it must behave or disband. Think of the impudence of this! One mile from , Tarboro, N. C.r talk from an organ of nnrfepentant rebels. A few rears ago the men nW composing the G. A. gave this platan t editor and the men 1 1 blates for everything that a mag nanimons victor could give a. con quered foe gave them thejir politi Cat privileges SUuJ V4ua the government, xmow vujs iugrte insolently turns upon ni Ke"eroa oTjnonfinta and assumes v dictatorial airs. Think of the impudfence I United States Minister Roberts, atFantiasro. Chili, telegraphs the department of the State oh the 8th mst.' that cholera has appeared in several sections' of that codntry and in some places has. assumed alarm mar proportions. I eptember 14-, 18S7. How to AboIKh Porerty. MaTor Hewitt, of New York: "Forty yean ago, beginning life as a . . ., ... roo I inoasrni l.woaia 10m . society." I focsd rnei ready made to mr band. I aiuVt hafc to so o search for it. Curiously enoogh, the object of that society was exact ly the same as that which I hear froclaimeti no as something new. t was a society for the abolition of porerty. I'-was-'poor. I said : 'I'll do what I can to abolish poverty; and what poverty did I set about to abolish." 31y own. The whole object of the social organization. the whole constitution of societr, has no object but that of abolish ing poverty. If every man will set to abolish poverty m his own case it will disappear, from the face of society.- 1 he reason why poverty does not disappear from there is be cause there are a great number of tramps and bummers and lazy fel lows, called in the old ' law 'beggars' and vagabonds, who do not want to abolish poverty. Ibey live by pov erty. They could abolish it quick ly it they would go to work as you or l work." 1 Chauncey M. Depew : -'The country is getting full of fellows who are riot worth: saving. "-They come from the parlors of the rich, the houses of the great business men of the country, from the homes of the farmers, mechanics -and la borers young men whoso whole I Idea IS tO get Oil WltUOUt WOrK Or i . "r v IK. by somebody else s work. Thev are not worth saving. The two main elements this world, of this world, are ot success in anti-poverty in sobriety arid in- dustry. , I have kept a record of all the boys who started with me in life, and as I' look back, standing now 50 "years of age, every one of those men who was sober and did not squander his money owns home and independance. ' Every one of them who drank is dead. 1 he gen tlemen who are seeking to abolish poverty just now are most honora ble men and theorisis, but you can pass resolutions in all the meetings in the united estates that-, there must be no small-pox, but small pox there will be all the same. i Colored Democrats Rally. A dispatch from Washington says : "An organization of colored men temporarily residing here, but retaining a legal residence in Vir ginia, and therefore entitled to vote in that State, has been effected, and resolutions have been adopted friendly to the Democratic party over there. One of the resolutions recites that the aim of the Demo- crane party is to oonterate race prejudice and teach the colored man the, true worth and dignity of American citizenship, while that of the Republican party,- through an irresponsible committee, or, what is worse, through the whims and am- bition of one man, would strike at as all that is dear to the freeman, be' he white or colored. The movement promises to em barrass Mahone in. his fight this fall. It is certain to spread and in the State proper will have the coy- ert sympathy, if not indeed the ac- tive support of ex-Congressman Brady and General Wickham, and otherness prominent white Repub- hcans who also are in public revolt against Mahone and his methods. Chairman John S. Barbour, of the Democratic State Committee, was in town to-day, and said that the party organization throughout the State was being brought rapidly I . . m t war to a satisiactory condition, lie is confident of beating the Bepubli caDS in -November." Giving Support to the Anarchists. New York, Sept. 7. District Assembly of 49 Knights of Labor, at its last meeting voted on the question of giving financial and moral support to the condemned Chicago anarchists by a majority of but seven or eight "votes. It was carried. The resolution of sur- port was introduced by Thomas B. McGuire, of the Home Club. The action of the District Assembly, it is said, is liable to cause its suspen sion as it is in direct opposition to the order of Grand Master Work man Powderly. Death of Ex-Governor Aiken. Cuarleston. S. C SeDt. 7. A telegram received this afternoon I - w - .-- from JMat Rock, JM . U., annonnces A. I the death there to-day of ex-Gov wm. Aiken, of South Carolina. there is a boiling well on the farm of Mr. S. E. Speight which for the last fire days has been,, boiling like ne i a poi. uuring tne wei weatnerana - until now this well, 22 feet deep, - has oeen unaffected by the rains, - J the water not increasing appreciably u I " wiuuic auu icuiaiinug as clear as crystal. When all is quiet there abouts the noise from the well can be heard at least a hundred yards. Mr. Speight thought the tempera ture had risen, but drew up a buck-et-ful of the water and found it as cool as ever. It is said the well im itates those at Charleston. The greatest embarrassment over - our up-country farming is the ais I inclination to work. 1SJXL ARr A Ira oa t Too Simple, pt.T.IUfmttl General Butler is a political cu riosity, lie u decidedly a man of ideas, and thev are alwajs notcl. lie ha lately invented a way to get rid of OG" nqlas which if adopted will achievethe rcaiL II the surplus should groT size ana double lUrif, or even quadruple itself, the General would not be at all dismayed, tor such i emergencv be is calmly and se- rcntly preared. Indeed no, sur plus, however big. could get away with him, for his plan the sim plest thing in the world, by the war would dispose of it all. You ask what this plan is ? Well, it is to divide'among the soldiers iu the' Union aYmy whatever monev there is in the Treasury, and if it so happened that thev should be Converted into millionaires and request the government not to give them any more, why, we could then begin to distribute the excess among the soldiers in the lato Confederate army. In this way we could get on for a few years more without be ting burdened by this perplexing question," W hat shall we do with our big revenue? j It is a very brilliant idea,- but what specially commends it to our consideration is its remarkable and childlike simplicity. fcpeakmg oi the general improve ment in the South, a correspondent of the Cincinnati Times-Star refers to the marked change to be noticed in the condition of the farms and the railroads. The cleanliness xf cultivation observed by the traveler as he passes through the country is something to delight tho eye, prov ing the wrongness of the - notion that southern agriculturists are not workers. Smooth roads, good cars and excellent service and 1 running are, becoming the rule rather than the exception with the railroads. The evidence of the attractiveness that the South has for capitalists, was observed in the number of Northern men ou the train going South on business trips. They were evidently men of means, and their talk of railroad building and mines and furnaces showed, that they were going to put hundreds of thousands into permanent enter prises there. The eyes of all capi talists in the North seem to be turned to the South. , Night Air; ' There are those who ridicule the idea that there can be any thing hurtful in the night air at this sea son. Experience has long since shown this to be a fallacy, and the sooner the fact "is recognized the better. Night air, properly"" enf countered, is not hurtful, but it is not safe to sit at the' front door in your shirt sleeves or in a gauzy dress, with uncovered heads, etc. Far better to errf the other way, and be a little too warmly clad for comfort. We have had what might be regarded a wet summer; vegeta tion has been more luxuriant than usual, and this is the season when it begins to decay and impregnate the atmosphere with malarial agents, which are always, most active at nights. It is for this reason that such exposure to the night air as that to which we have referred is injudicious," if not absolutely dan- gerous. juany an attack oi miliaria, if carefully traced to its source, would be found to have its origin in the disregard of the simple cau tion given. . During a long storm, persons who are well rersed in weather-lore are often heard to console themselves with the prediction that there will be a change of weather when the moon changes. Nasmy th and Car penter characterize as a popular er ror in its most absurd form, this belief that the gradual turning of the moon's face, towards and away from the sun, could, at certain points, upset the existing condition of our atmosphere, generate clouds, and pour dowh rains. In England (and the samej may be said of much of America) the weather changes about every three days, and there is a change of the moon every seven days, so that many coincidences must occur. Those who believe that "the moon rules the weather, alwavg credit such coincidences to lunar influence. But the theory is untenable unless it applies to every case, and unless the same effect is always produced by the same cause. To suppose that a , change of the moon will turn dry wether to wet, or wet to dry, indiscriminately, is the merest childishness and con trary to all meteorlogical records v The Weatherwise Spider. Country-folks have a weather in dication in the spider. Although the morning clojwfs . may be threat eningif he spreads his web oat to the breeze it shows that the pros pects for a fair day are good. The other morning., in tho suburban towns, observers noted an unusual number of these flimsy structures, and a prophecy of a pleasant day wa3 unhesitatingly made, though the clouds seemed to thicken till 8 or nine o'clock. But the spiders came out ahead. Hartford Times. "Wholo jSTo. 102. Surrey lag the Cranberry Hoote. t--t--1 art irs irora mjciot vcsieruav in formed a CnaoMcut rrporttr that- iMsj. Ik) man is now engaged in sarveving the route of th railroad to be built frm MHlbyto the! ran Urry minn-aad that greater portion of the ditanc had already been survevcl. The new road will frtthrjOttgh' Morganton, and still 'aivno cne of the richest sections o? KoTth (VrofvS3 orkLWill tt commenced shortly auVl.p0 ff00 . . is surveyed, nd will be poia? la. ' a rapid, completion, im corapai. has ample means to prosnte lh ... work, and the railroad is au ajsarc4' fact;7 '-: It has been said of Andrew Car negie, the great iron manufacturer of Pittsburgh, and safid wilrvsort of glow, that he is mora American if . r than the Americans. Mr. Carnec 1 misled the good fortune through no fault oj. his own surelj vof being born in America, bat had what ht esteems the nearest to it of being born in Scotland.1 This gentleman is distinguished for American-push' and energy in business, which has ' " 1 1 ' , r - . 1 J maue mm imncreisejj weauny j as ;. well as for intense loyalty , to hit V adopted country. Men of this stamp sometimes take the liberty of ; saying things that a nation .jmigh't hesitate to sav, lest ho should bo , misunderstood or have his motive falsely judged. Thus auothrr Penn sy Iranian, a German by birth this 1 time, says that no language should bo taught, in our public schools save the 'American0 language. He puts it on the. same ground that Carnegie teok, when ho refused to participate in toadyingto royal ju bilees in the United States, llere is one more opening for the new American party, which they seem ; to hare orerlooked. ' A verfy practical gentleman was . looking a valuable painting. "How much is that worth ': he in-, quired of a friend. "About $10, OOO.'was the reply. "And how muchwastthe paint worth before it r was put on the canrass V "Per-, haps five, dollars." ''Then, for spreading jt over that little piece of cloth, the man gets 0,99'5. Paint ing must be a good business. This illustrates the enormous in crease of valine which almost any substance acquirees from being manipulated by human hands. It is said that seventy-five cents worth of iron ore is worth, whe made into bar iron, 15; horseshoes $10.50; table knives, 180;.-fine" needles, G, 800; shirt buttons, 129, 480; watch springs, f 200,000; hair springs, 400,00; and jpallet arbors $2,577,595. r - j "What's the reason there are so many divorces noWadays?" asked Mrs. 1'erger, who was reading the morning paper. , 'U have studied the subject thoroughly from every possible standpoint, and I think I can point out the true cause, and as long as that cause lasts there- will be divorces," replied Colonel Yer ger. " What j is that cause?" "Matrimony." -Charlotte Chronicle: One of our neighbors across the line in South Carolina is determined to save his oats field from depredation by cat tle. He has posted this notice to a tree on his farm : "If any mans or womans cows or oxens gits into these here Oats, his or her tail will be cut off, as the case niay be. I am a christian man and pays my taxes; but durnta man who lets his critterirun loose, scz I." , "Did yon enjoy yourself at the reception?" asked Miss Fussan feather of you ng Cri msonbeak, when they had returned from a social gathering in the neighbor hood. "Oh, very much," was the reply. "Which do you think were the prettiest features of the even ing?" "Ob, yours, by all means," was the response which made the lady blush to the-end of her bonnet stnngs. 1 i Perfect Hair Indicates a natural and healthy conTV tion of the scalp, and of the glands through which nourishment ia obtained. When, in eonseqaenea of agt and dia ease, the hair beconvis weak, thin, and gnj, Ayer's Hair Vigor will strengthen it, restore iti original color, pronaoSe its rapid and rigorous growth, and impart to it tha lustre and fresbneaa of youth. I have osed Ayer's TlSr Vijror for a long tinvi, and am convinced of its ralae. Wbea I waa 17 jeara of age mr bair began to turn gray. -1 commence! using' th- Vigor, and was surprised at the gooi effects it produced. It not only restored the color to my hair, bat mo stimulated It rrowth that I have . now ' more hair than ever before. -J. W. Kdwards, Coldwater, Mia. Ayer 8 Hair Vigor; uoia y au unniat aad Frfi " Ir to ask scrreaixo from debility and low of appetite; if your stomach is . bnt of order, or your mind confused; take Ayer's Sanaparilhv This medicine will restore physical force and elasticity to the system, more surely and speedily than aajr tonie yet discovered. - H ; For afic month 1 suffered from liver and stomach trottbie. My food did not nourish me, and I berame weak aad. very mnch emaciated. I took six botthrs ot Ayer's Sarsanaiilla, and waa cured, Julius M. I'almer, Springfield, SIaas. Ayer's SarsapariHa, Prrparcd ty Dr. J. C. A yr Ce, Lewell, If aaa. Bold by VntMUts. trie $1; six -bottle, a. - r . C (i 1 t fir J ' A.
North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 14, 1887, edition 1
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