Newspapers / North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, … / June 11, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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,TH!E iXERAL,! UAS'TUK UKtiEST CIRCULATION I OF-ANf PAPER PUBLISHED IN SALISBTTBY, THE HERALD WW. (DmmiEA I I 7 1 M MIS ts; IS THE "LARGEST ALL HOME PRINT PAPER; Price only $1.50 a year. The Toledo floui mills at St. Louis were burned Thursday, eaus ing'a loss of $125,00&. ' 4 J. R. WHICH ABD, Proprietor. BETTOTED TO BEST INTERESTS OP CAJE50XX3SA TEEMS t $1.50 Per Tear in Advance. Vol. Tl-No. 36. Salisbury, UST. C, Wednesday, June 11, 1890. Whole ISTo. 2-44. GENERAL DIRECTORY. . CO UNT V 00 VERNMEN T. Superior Court Cle.k Jno M Borah. Sheriff Chas C Krider. Register of Deeds H N Woodson, .Treasurer J Samuel JfcCubbins Surveyor B C Arey. . Coroner D A Atwell. Commissioners T J Sumner chairman, Vr L Kluttz. C P Baker, Dr L W Cole man. Public School Sup't T C Linn. Sup't of Health Dr J J Summerell. Overseer of Poor -A M Brown. TOWN. ayor Cbas D Crawford ClerkD R Julian. Treasurer I H Foust. Police R W Price, chief ; JF Pace, C W Pool, R M Barringer and Beni Cauble -Commissioners North ward J A Ren idleman, D M Miller: South ward D R 'Julian, J A Barrett; East ward J B Gor don, T A Coughenour ; west ward R J Holmes, J TV Rumple - CHURCHES. I Baptut Services every Sunday morn ing and night. Prayer meeting every Wednesday night. Re.- J. F. Tuttle. pastor. -' Sunday school every Sunday, morning at 9i o'clock. Thos. L. Swink, Sup't. i Catholic Services every Second Sun day at 10$ a m and 7 p m. Rev Francis Jeyer, astor. , Sunday School every Sunday at 10 am. Episcopal Services every Sunday at 11am and 6:30 p. m, and Wednesday's at 6 :30 p m. Rev F J .Murdoch, Rector. Sunday School every Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. , Capt Theo Parker, Sup't. Lutheran Services every Sunday at 11 a m, and 7 p m. Prayer meeting every Wednesday at 7 p m. Rev Chas B King, Pastor. Sunday School every Sunday afternoon , at 3 o'clock. Prof R G Riser, Sup't. I - Methodist Services every Sunday at II a m; and 6:30 p m. Prayer meeting every Wednesday at 6:30 p m. Rev T W Guthrie, Pastor. Sunday School every Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. J W Jfauney, Sup't. Presbyterian Services every Sunday at 11 a m, and 8:30 pm. Prayer meeting every WedLesday at 8:30 p m. Rev J Rumple, D D, pastor. Sunday School every Sunday after noon at 4 o'clock. J Rumple, D D, Sup't Y JIT Cjs A Devotional Services at Hall every Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. Business meeting First Thurday night in e.very month. I H Foust, Prest. LODGES. Ful on Lodge, No 99, A F & A J., meets every 1st and 3rd Friday night in each month. E B Neave, W M Salisbury Lodge, No 24, K of P, meets every Tuesday night. A H Boyden. C C Salisbury Lodge, No 775, K of H, meets every 1st and 3rd Jonday night in each month, ;- Dictator. J Salisbury Council, No 272, Royal Arcanum, meets every 2nd and 4th Mon day night in each month. J A Ramsay, Regent. : POST OFFICE. Office Hours from 7:30 a m to 5:30 pm. Money, Order Hours 9 a m to 5 p m. Sunday HourB 11:30 a m to 12:30 p m. J II Ramsay, v m 1K90. ESTABLISHED 1868. 1890. INSURANCE AGENCY OF J. ALLEN BROWN" REPRESENTING AGGREGATE ASSETS OF OVER $180,000,000. One of Ike oldest as well as largest Agencies in the state. INSURES AGAINST- - - FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT, LIGHTNING, WIND-STORM AND TORNADO. The Leading American and Foreign Companies .are represented," amongst which are the largest AS WELL AS- Life Co.'s In the World. A 11 Classes of Risk Platted at Otue at Lowest Adequate Rates. A.XD SATISFACTORY SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES. . E3F" Don't fail to call be fore Insuring. -SI Office: West cor. Main and Fisher Sts., front room up stairs. 48 SALISBRUY BRANCH N.C, Building and Loan Association. AUTHORIZED CAPITAL, - $5,000,000. W. L. Kluttz. .President. D, R. Julian,. i .Vice-President. J. Sa.m'l McCcBBrss, Sec. and Treas. J. W. macney,.. Attorney. Makes Loans on Country as well as Town Property. A' CHANCE FOR ALL GET A Tor information and particulars, ap ply to J. SA1TL. ItcCTJBBDJS, Jan 15 3m " Local Agent. THE SWORD OF ROBERT L.EE. FATHER STAN. Forth from the scabbard, pure and bright. i Flashed the sword of Lee ! , Far in the front of the deadly fight. High o'er the brave, in the cause of right, Its stainless sheen, like a beacon-light, j Led us to victory. - . Oat of its scabbard, where full long - It slumbered peacefully Boused from its rest by the battle-song, Shielding the feeble, smiting the strong. Guarding the right, and avenging the wrong Gleamed thai sword of Lee '. Forth from its scabbard, high in air, Beneath Virginia's sKy And they who saw it gleaming there. And knew who bore it, knelt to swear. That where the sword led they would dare To follow and to die. Out of its scabbard ! Never hand Waved sword from stain as free, Nor purer sword led braver band, Nor braver bled for a brighter land. Nor brighter land had a cause as grand, l Nor cause, a ohief like Lee I Forth from its scabbard ! how we prayed That sword might victory bei, ' . And when our triumph was delayed And many a heart grew sore afraid. We still hoped on, while gleamed the blade Of noble Robert Lee ! Forth from its scabbard ! all in vain ! Forth flashed the sword of Lee ! 'Tis shrouded now in its sheath again. It sleeps the sleep of our noble slain. Defeated, yet without a stain. Proudly and peacefully. Comment on the Unveilin; ! New York Times. It is rather a pity that there were no organizedbudies of representa tives of the North at the unveiling Thursday of the monument of General Lee. The presence of Southern troops at the funeral of General Grant, was recognized as a tribute as honorable to the men who paid it, as to the memory of the hero to whom it was paid. A quar ter of a century after the close of the war ought to suffice to put all its figures in a historical perspec tive. Everybody now recognizes that Falkland and Hampden were both ' patriots according to their lights. Everybody -ought to re cognize now thafart here is no dan ger that the "issue'will arise again, that the soldiers of the Con federacy may have been as consci entious as the soldiers of the Union. Lee was the first of these. While j. he was no doubt doing what he be lieved to be - his duty in "going with the State," there is no ques-.! tion at all that his conduct throughout the war, and after it, was that of a brave" and honorable j man- His memory istherefore, aj possession of the American people, and the monument that recalls it is i itself a .national) possession. Rev. Thos. Dixon on Shepard. Rev. T. Dixon has been heard from again. He preached in New York-last Sunday on the "Sectional' Newspaper". He called Shepard a tin soldier, and says he is in league with the devil. Said Mr; Dixon : The Mail and Express so distorts and falsifies the facts as to make it appear that the only flag to be seen was the Confederate flag. This was done with the deliberate purpose of deception. It deals in viturperation, - abnse, epithets. The words traitor, rebel, and such are ever ready for nse ; they are iidden to death. Such is the re sort of small natures. Think of Abraham Lincoln, whose life meant "charity toward all and malice toward none." Think of him, and then th:uk,of this foul tirade of abuse. Think oi Gen. Grant. Hear the message that he j sends from Mount McGregor. "I have witnessed since my 'sickness just what I have wished to see ever since the war harmony and good feeling between the sections," Shall vandals descroy this harmo ny and good feeling? The man who would seek to destroy it in the face of this message of peace and of fraternity that comes to us from the lips of this great chiefton. is unworthy of the inheritance of such a man, and for such a reviler to dare to pay tribute to the grave of Grant is the height of sacrilege, i Such a paper" assumes a pious while, nauseating in the extreme, and poses as a representative of Christianity. It could not live without the assumption of gome moral force ; it would not be tolera ted, and so it steals the livery of heaven. In the name of God and of truth, of honesty and of integri ty, I, for one, repudiate this so- called newspaper as in any sense representative ., of Christianity. The God that prosides over .the editorial office of the Mall and Ex press and each papers is not my God. I do not know Him, I do not want to know Him. About as near as 1 can make it, ins Mod is the devil, whom I fight.an4 fear, with this exception, that the devil js shrewder and more artjEtc' in his methods. Appease. J Hear this quondam editor shriek for an army of a million men to march on Richmond ! For? what? To rob.the dying of the memory of the dead. Such1'1' men are neither brute nor human ; they are ghouls. Twenty-five years have rolled away since those awful days of the war. Peace and prosperity onward flow over mountain and plain and sea. And now in the midst of all these things this little tin soldier wakes up suddenly and wearies the ears of heaveii; an J earth with his little tin horn. Applause. Keep such papers from your homes as you would a pest. If you want vicious leterature use. the bald vulgarity of Swift or the naked realism of Zola.- It will be Jess dangerous than the hatred and bigotry and malice -and falsehood of such a sheet wrapped np in a Scripture text. Men of the JNorth, and men of the South, we are brethren. Let us hear to-day the voices of the heroic dead. They all speak for peace and for harmony. The brave and true never fight after the battle is closed. The time has come for na to take each othar by the hand and crush those influ ences that seek to perpetuate strife, for a base, ignoble purpose. God help us that we may have, in deed and truth, one glorious, united nation. Rev. Emory K. Young delivered a sermon before Meade Post No. 1, G. A. R., in Philadelphia, decora tion day, in which he referred to the men who bore the Confederate flag in the war as "criminals," and said he was 'sick of the maud lin sympathy which si rigs the prais es of' the lost cause and blends the Blue and Gray." The fool killer is overworked in this country, says the Wilmington Star, and is taking a rest, which will account for the presence of Kev. Mr. Young on this occasion, but chivalrous men who fought a chivalrous foe, will recognize the heroism which was displayed in defending the lost cause, and greet the blending of 'the Blue and the Gray when such spiders as Rev. Mr. Young have crawled into their webs and beerr forgotten Saw Their Old Flap. Charlotte News. While at Richmond last week Capt. John R. Erwiu and Mr.! L. J. Walker, of Charlotte, were watching the parade. "There goes my old flag," said Mr. Walker, as the battle flag of the 13th North Carolina Regiment was bornealong by the Rowan veterans. "So it is," said Capt, Erwio. Mr. Walker had good reason to remember the old flag. He was carrying itpn the field at Gettysburg, when a cannon ball took off one of his legs. Capt. Erwin served. daring the first year of the war under that same flg. Those Tarheels! Three thous and soldiers from North Carolina ! Those North Carolinians were splen did fighters. They liked the hot test places. They went in shouting the "Rebel yell'" and what execu tion they did! A gallant and manly set of fellows they are, and old Marse Bob loved them and knew he could rely on them. In the annals of glory so richly told in the Confederate Edition of the State, the North Carolinians had no small share. The history of the Confederacy could not be written without them., All hail, brave and true men I We honor you ! We greet you ! Richmond State, of Wednesday, Mag 28. A Beautiful Legend. Charleston Courier. After Stonewall Jackson's death, at Chancellorsville, a story became current in the Confederate army which the soldiers loved to repeat over their bivouac fire that, on account of his extreme piety, when their famous chieftain fell, a de tachment of angels left the heaven ly gates to view the battle field and escort the hero's soul into Paradise. Tho celestial squadron searched the close strewn plain, but without effect. He whom c;they sought could not be round, and tnev re turned mournfully to heaven to re port their wants of success. But lo, on arriving they found the spirit Of the immortal warrior there al ready. Stonewall Jackson had made j flank march and got to heaven before them. A girl tflft )?as golden hair need not have it painted. Liberty Last Wednesday and Thursday 28th and 29th ult., witnessed the closing exercises of this justly cele brated school. On Wednesday at 11 o'clock, A. M., the annual ser mon was preached to a large con conrse of people by 'Rev. Henry A. Brown, pastor of" the! Baptist church, Winston, N. C. Replete with practical thought, common sense, pathos and eloquence, it was a rare spiritual and intellecttal feast, something that broadened, ! widened and elevated the soul and quickened the mind to loftier and nobler aspirations. The discourse was founded upon Acts.. xxv'i cbapt 29th verse : "And PauTsaid. I would to- God that not" onlyhou but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether such as I - am, except these bonds." The sermon appealed di rectly with logic, force and elo quence to the hearts and minds of all, but especially to the young; impressing them with the grave importance of living a consecrated christian life. May this earnest and consecrated man of God live long to proclaim the glad tidings of salvatiotj to a lost world, y At 7:30 p. m., the. Academy bell called together the largest crowd ever seen in the pleasant and pros perous little town at night to wit ness the exereises of the children. These exerci&ei consisted of recita tions, declamations, songs &c.,.and were of the highest order, reflecting great credit upon Frol. Weatherly's faithful", efficient and popular as sistants Profs. Cole and Patter son and Misses Mamie Gibbous and , Mary Armfield. The night's exer cises closed with an address before the Literary Societies by Dr. J. K. Stockard which was highly enjoyed by all who heard it and was pro nounced a sound, full and complete success. Thursday, commencement day proper, dawned beautifully. The weather was most propitious, neith-: er too cold or too hot, but gave us that happy Mediciue which lends so much pleasure and comfort to' suoh occasions. 'At an arlv hwur the high-toned little town was ar rayed in all its glory and stood with outstretched arms and warm hearts to welcome the visitors. The an nouncement had gone forth that Prof. Weatheily was going to give an entertainment Worthy of him who gave it and that was enough. Nothing could keep the people away. They came in throngs from every direction, from every station in life, from all adjoining counties, from different parts of our own State and from other States until it was soon estimated that not less than 3,000 or 3,500 people were in town. At 10-20 o'clock, a. m., the exercises of the day were opened by music from the Liberty cornet band, directed by Prof. Lowry of Jonesboro, teacher; and Capt. Lilly Brower and we feel perfectly safe in saying right here, as we heard many competent judges say that there is not a better band in North Carolina for its practice. The music from the band was fol lowed by- an ,elegant and earnest prayer from Rev. J. W. Patton, pastor of Christian church of Liber ty, N. C. Then came the declama tions by the young men and the es says by the young ladies, inter spersed with music &c. And right herewe are strongly tern pted to make honorable mention of some of the young ladies and gentlemen, but when we undertake to decide upon whom this laurel should be placed, we. are entirely unable to do so, so well did they all do their parts, and we can but join in the verdict of public opinion and say that ev erything was so well done as to convince the most fastidious that Prof. Weatherly and his corps of efficient teachers have been doing work only of worth. Work of the lightest order. These exercises be ing over the Rev. Mr. Speight of the Biblical-Recorder fame, address ed the audience for a fewv moments in his own happy style in behalf of his excellent paper and did much good, we trust. Theu Prof Weath erly introduced to the audience the orator of the day. Rev. Dr. Rond thraler, President of Salem Fe male College. The writer sincere ly regrets his inability to give the reader auy conception of this most excellent address. We have listen ed to the silver tongued Ransom, in the Senatorial Halls of the. Unit ed Slates ; we have listened to the eloquent Hoge, of Richmond, at our University' commencement, and many other distinguished - and Closing Exercises iof Academy. gifted men, but never have we heard anything, oji any occasion, more appropriate, more soul stir ring or more replete with inspiring thought or more gratefully deliver ed than was the ornate oration of this erudite scholar, profound theologian and faithful edacator, as. he contrasted in patriotic and graceful utterances American ad vantages and progress with that of the Old country. The speaker also paid Prof. Weatherly a high, graceful and well deserved compli ment. Ue knew his work he had Unuch of it in his school before him it was of the highest order, in fact none came to him better pre pared, and few as well, as the stu dents sent him by Prof Weatherly. Indeed is Dr. Rondthaler a typical representative of the true American fgeinlejneni and we wonder not that the twin cities are proud of him. And in the siheerety of our hearts we would say Loag, oh long ; may he live in the full enjoyment of the people's confidence who love him so well ! long, oh long may he live to inspire, guide and teach the people he loves so well. An'd now kind reader, we would say to you, that if you desire to go to a first class school one that is thoroughly equipped in every par ticular and one that offers all the advantages to young people of lim ited means that any school offers, and a school that is situated among one of the most hospitable people in the world, you cannot do better than to write Prof. Weatherly for he is unconditionally one of the best teachers in North Carolina. M. L. P. Liberty N. C, June 4th 1890. lie II i tii? Breezes. The country through which we j passed this week has been so "roll-1 ing" that there is. for our breezes. very little , left SURRY COUNTY. This well may be called a moun tain county, for hefe may be seen eatthj on a thousand hills. Several s mar? rivers, the Aroat, lish and Yadkin, wind their way through the gorges found in this section. .greoba.ccjpounty and the farmers'aretrtbstl.Y egdged in cultivating thkt crbpT WCtold t.liat tlift wppri rrowrR werdr in money last spring, but ft Rowan cotton growers, the, spent all their cash buying stuff. Two railroads now inter? this county, one leading to Elkin, the other to Mt. Airy. Dobsop is the county seat a dull, .dreary looking place, containing a court house, one lonely store, two cheer less hotels and a post office with a womanjkeeping "hit." It is situ ated near the centre of the county, ten miles from any railroad point, reminding us, if we wished to hide from justice, this would be a good locality. Mount Airy is built in a manu facturing district, as its name im- plies. We find it full of push,j vigor and enterprise. . iney are really spreading themselves, having enlarged their incorporations until they now embrace a larger area than Danville, Va. They contemplate building five other railroads in the near future. STOKES COUNTY. Imagine yourself upstairs , in a rickety old stable erected on the top of Vesuvius, and you have Dan bury, the county seat of Stokes, to a T. You feel like you are going to fall off somewhere, with nothing to catch to unless it be Pepper & Son, the, editor of the Reporter- Post. We learned before our ad vent that the people here were "on their dignity,." and bless you, when we "got thar" we found it meant a hill. Bro. Pepper interested him self in showing us his collection of coal, iron, and magnesium, which he says is deposited in great quan tities near them. He had fine spici mens, which may yield a Yich har vest yet for Stokes. In wiping the dust of the city from our feet after examining its ores, we mentally ex claimed, Hurrah ! for North Caro lina. .' Situated at the terminus of a narrow guage railway, little known of in the mercantile world, with no banners flying to herald its doings, Ltak8ville is no slow coach. It is a rattling little town. We struck it in good time to witness the open ing exercises of. the Leaksville High School. Would like to give the programme, but it isJ too long. They have a splendid school, with Prof. Ray, principal. B. The chair factory at High Point, will begin operations by August l6t. r v v j V 1 pt i Pursued for Miles by a Mad Horse, f Biieeds, la, June 2. There is au epidemic of hydrophobia in this village and its Vicinity. Mad dogs are running loose .throughout the country and stock has suffered to a great extent John Ryno, a farmer, had a startling adventure the other day with a horse that had been bitten by a mad dog. Ryno was driving along a lonely road in a buckboard drawn oy one horse. He- heard the clatter of hoofs and saw a huge 'white horse pursuing him.. Flakes of green saliva flew from the jaws of "the mad brute, while its eyes were widely expanded. As the animal tore away along the road it gave yent to unearthly shrieks. Ryno realized itwas a race for his life and he lashed his own horae, novy whining with fear, into a terri6c run. The mad animal gained steadily, and was soon snapping and bitting at the buckboard wheels and at tho driver and horse. Ryno lashed the crazed animal con tinually with his whip, but it had no effect. When the horse of Ryno was about to fall from exhaustion, a passenger train appeared and attracted the mad horse's atten tion. After gazing at the train for a moment, the brute jumped a high fence and- ran across a field and began a race with the passenger train. ,The engineer put on steam and the passengers raised windows to see the race. Revolvers were drawn and the brute received a number of shots, but kept up the chate for a half a mile, when it dropped in a fit and was sub sequently killed by some section men. t, . ... The Pride of Matrimony. St. James's Oazette. In his recently published "Trials j of a Country Parson," Dr. Jessupp tells some amusing anecdotes pick ed up in Arcady. As thus : "It is very shocking to a sensitive per son to hear the way ire which the old people speak of their dead wives or husbands -exactly as if they'd been horses or dogs. They i are always proud of having been married more than once.; 'You ddn't think, Miss, as I'd had five! ,es, now did you? Ah, but I e, though leastways, I buried! on 'em in the churchyard, that did and three on 'em bewties !" n. another occasion I playfully UJisted. 'Dnn't vnn miv nn your htjbauds now and then, -Mrs. Page, whXyoa talk about them ?' j Well, to teh-you the truth, sir, I really du ! Bmy third husband, he was a man ! Xdon! mix him up. He got killed figtihgyou've beerd tell o that I mae no doubt. The others warn't nothing to him. He'd ha' mixed them' up quick enough if they'd interferred him. Lawk ha ! He'd 'a made nothing of them-' " If Yon Want to be Loved. D6n't find fault. . Don't contradict people, even if you're sure yon are right. Don't be inquisitive about the affairs of even your, most intimate friend . Don't underate anything because you don't possess it. Don't believe that everybody else in the world is happier than you. ' Don't believe all the evil you hear. Don't repeat gossip, even if it does interest a crowd, ' Don't go untidy on the plea that everybody knows you. Don't be rude to your inferiors or superiors. . DonH express a positive' opinion,! unless yuii perfectly understand what you are talking about. Don't get in the habit of vulgari zing life by making light of the sentiment of it. Don't jeer at anybody's religious belief. t Don't try to be- anything else but a gentleman and that means a man who has consideration for the whole world and whole life is governed by the Golden Rule, "Do unto others as you would . be done by." The New York people 'are grow ing very impatient over the delays in the Kemmler case, and there is a strong sentiment in favor of turn ing on the current and reserving the legal points for argument at legal points for argument at leisure hours. , Ground to Pieces Uiider a Train Early this morning the fragments of a negro man were found "strewn along the. track of the Richmond & Danville road near Gloss' siding, four miles north of Concord. The body was cut' all to pieces. The identity of the unfortunate man is unknown. Tt is believed that he was a Cabarrns iiegro who had been attending Federal decoration day in Salisbury. The coroner of Ca barrus is investigating this evening. Charlotte Xews. - r .The Lottery; a nil The Fools. The Louisiana Lottery has offer-' od the State of; Louisiana a cool million a year for twenty-live years for the privilege of selling lottery tickets to the fools. It is generally understood thai; this offer is a prop osition to divide the fool's money with the State -for. . privilege of fleecing the fools. ,Jh other words the lottery managers .in the light of their past experience ., expect to gather in 50,000,000 of fools' money during the next twenty-five years if the State of Louisiana will accept half the amount as a bribe, for allowing them to do it. Phil adelphia Times. The Girl that Works. God bless the girl who works, says the Mapleton, Mo., Disj)alch. We care not whether she is in the kitchen, counting room, factory, professional man's office, iu the printing office, or wherever honest industry demands her labor.': She is preparing herself for life's duties. Her hands may., be hard ,from cbn tact with the kitchen stove, or stained with factory grease or prin-; ters' ink, but they are honest hands moved by the impulse of" honest hearts. And in the future con flicts and misfortunes they will be able to shield and protect many an unfortunate but promising fam ily and save them from the alms house or poor asylum. A Good Remedy. Here is something ttyat : certain young men will do well o paste in their hats for reme be ranee Iti. part of a conversation between, a couple of old-fashioned merchants. Said one gi them : "I heard once of a clerk in a dry goods store who was smart and quick and a spleu- .-1 .' . I mnnnnn. mx r. A 1 4-U I- . .. f V.n yiu iiioiiagoi, nuu an uau , k'at lie f got uppity and bigoty, and put on consequential airs until he was verT disagreeable. He took occasion f say to his associates that the , c cern couldn't possibly get alt' without him. So the old gev man who wa3 the senior parf called him into the office J and sayshe : "Mr. jey have been very efficient preciato your service ih a I " y twv.h p'Te tharji you I couldn't Pi thi8,has wo1. you like all. i very unexpecj concjugg(j-tft. -are in health ,and-se will liveiin the eve.njl aster. You wiHhferiVv A .1 try it, . . . .V .. ... . .'.. "i . V xuu isi oi oniy lias oeen nxed as the date for unveiling the monn ment of. the late Vice-President Hendricks on i the- State . Uonu4 grounds at. Indianapolis. The ad dress will be delivered by United, States Senator Turpie. The Presi-. dent, ex-President, Vice-President and members of the -Cabinet and Governors of all the States will be invited to attend. The Committee of Arrangements extend a cordial invitation to societies, clubs and other organizations of the State and elsewere to be present and partici- pate in the ceremonies, and request' the attendance of the general pub lic. -' ' . ' A Correspondent of the Indiana Parmer, after describing how the government loans money to banks at 1 per cent., says :' "Again, the government builds warehouses, receipts for distillers' spirits, which command almost their face value in currency. Now, why can't the government be as good to the hard handed farmer as to the soft hand ed, banker and distiller ? Some people are never satisfied. Now that the days a.rev getting lon ger aurae oi.thx laboring men aro on a'et&ke to, mike them shorter.-" Light.', :H.r i ' . .4 v.- , "., A Florida truck farmer cleared $5,000 on twenty acre .of cucum bers. It is expected that the pro duct will make a', handsome show ing in the clearing houses of the physicians and undertakers. It is now discovered that Hon. Geo. F. Davidson, of , -Old Fort, McDowell county, is the oldest liv ing graduate of Chapel Hill Uni versity. He graduated in the class of 1823. The New York Tribune figures that 3600,000 quarts of cham pagne were consumed in this coun try last yeai't - No one has yet made an effort to compute" how "many misfit hats are represented in these figures. An Ohio embezzler who had not heard of the new extradition treaty had no more than settled in Cana da when he was brought back and put on trial for his offence. Hero is a strong argument for : another campaign of education.! There is a"man in Southern I11U nois who laughs at the idea that marriage is a failure. He has just married his sixth wife. Each suc cessive spouse has brought him a farm, and he is now one of . tho largest landowners in that paft of the country. - A Crippled Newspaper. , "Brethren," writes a Georgia ed itor, "bear with us yet awhile. We know that this issue is not ' what it should be ; but our printer is down with the measles; our devil is off on a fishing excursion;, we have not collected a cent in seven weeks, and our mother-in-law is still visiting us?" Atlanta Constitution. Democratic county in Indiana are h the Congressio Wm. D. B ed at th ged The De tt. the u facures?w Interstate. that a diversiv essential to sou, a diversity of croi stantial progress no more rest ury' alpne, ths " -crop. In ord; 1 .. ti,A i . JJ 111 vfUB price h&s L . . .i maiiBgemeni, oi ine paper expects A A fz AAA L T i auu vvyw iiew kuucioers during the present 'year. " j " . Address , . . -Farmer Publishuto Co. . Raleigh, N. p. ? Is Consumption Incurable ? Read the following : Mr. C. H. Morris, Newark, Ark., says : "Was down with Abscess of Lunga, and friends and physi cians pronounced me an incurable Con sumptive. , Began taking Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, am now on my third bottle and able to oversee the work on my farm, it is the finast medicine ever made." - " : I Jesse Middlewart," Decatur, Ohio, says : i "TTH it Tint houn tnr T Vi' KT Ui uv i,vii wi . lung a iicn Discovery for Consumption I would have died oi Lung Troubles. Am now iu best I or health. .... 'iry it. Sample bottles free at Theo. F. Kluttz & Co's. Drue Store. For Rent. -The large store on Inniss street, formerly occupied by J. A. Clodfeltcr as a fnrnitoie store. 24) Apply to P. N-. Hbiug. ear YJr r f sef po ho coil BvJ
North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 11, 1890, edition 1
1
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