Newspapers / The Washington Gazette (Washington, … / Sept. 24, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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TUP WA8B A GAZETTE ADVERTISEMENT A China Egg won't Hatch out a -Chicken. Neither will Proc lamations on Dead Walls Re vivc Languishing Trade. News paper Advertising is the great Ink-ubator for Hatching out Business. A GAZETTE ADVERTISEMENT. IT IS A MATHEMATICAL FACT That the man who keeps his "Ai." out of the newspapers keeps the '"Aim" out. of. li is c:th lox. Therefore try a ; VZtCLTE ADVERTISEMENT. Subscription $1.50 Per Year, 'THE OLD NORTH STATE FOREVER.'' H. A. LATHAM, Editor. VOL. XIV. WASHINGTON, BEAD FORT CO., N. 0., THUSKDA 7, SEPIEBEB, 24, L89J. NO-16. uAZ. n 1 1 Pj. Highest of all in Leavening rowi. U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. 1 A ABSOLUTE! PURE (T..'AMEV. M'YV EU HOP KAN. HO TEL, OOLDSBORO, N. C. Am. -rieari and European Plan. Wait ing i.Mims free. Porters meet every t'-aiu. r.atrtrag 1 1 n 1 tl led free. TROUBLE IN NEW YORK. S WIXDKLL HOTEL, SWAN yUAUTHK, N. C. ItiiiNN IJiio.s, Proprietors. Celitted ami refurnished. lift llote' in II vle county, Table well supplier -t 1 ;tuts attentive. In every wa.N Let l r pictured ui accommodate th p'ililn: than ever before. niayUMtf rjiiiL Mlii.uli: house, .1. F. MeCLUEIi, Pko'k. TERMS $1 PER DAV. I', mvated from top to bottom. Sit h 1 . .1 in business i.ii t of ity. Every t h 1 ir ilVue for comfort of traveling I 1 1 lic. At the Ad.;iis o!l stand . Dee.lStf. P II E KINIi HOUSE, VjCKKNVILLfc, N. O. M ICS. SliUlUKF KINU, PUOP'TUKSS I'leiwmtly situated in hi siness pan tti- -ity. Large addition to building Kvi i) i-oiiifort the Traveling Public aui wis!i. The best table the market 'IJ atlind. Stop at the- Kin;; House, an y. will Stop Apiiiii. D li A. S. WELLS, SI KCKOX DENTIST, WASHINGTON, X. C. -Having permanently located in Wash- in4t.n1, and fu.ly equipped his otlice wiili all t he latest and b st insturments kiiuivu to tlie denial profession, lie in i t-stliH pttiiniaii of :i;atifoit and a j-'ivnt e.iuiiiii'.s. Oilioe at Hot el Nlfll'tlsO". T TIIK OUT ON, Wilmington, N. O. p- mted Hotel in the Stale mnn - cumin minim THIS ALLIANCE, THE THIRD PARTY, THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY, COL. POLK, COL SKINNER, COL. CltEECY," AND COL, CLEVELAND. BY A FARMER! SOUTHERN MEN ARRESTED ON SUSPICION AND , Lodged in Jail in Default Hond. of He Talks Talk That is Talk. It Makes Some Mad, Some Glad, And Puts All A-Thinking. H ul Kb IIOWA1UJ. TAKUOKO, a'. O. Ij tin.-'int'ss part of city. Polite am. utientive servants. We, cater to please. WILLIAMS & CALVERT, Props. J A V V I KV H 0 T-EL KDENTON, ttf. vJ. Terms Kensonable. Hack meet every train and boat. No charge lor convey enee. KICK FOR SALE. I I have again on in v vards a full sup- plv of tlie verv best brick, which I wil! se-ll at modi-rate priees Call on or address 'me at Hath, X. I ' , M. 1. OlBBS. W l N I KLL HOUSE, W. H. SWINDELL, Pko'k, NEW BERNE, N. C I lii- is unquestionably the most "pleasantly located boarding house in -w Iferiie, ami is equipped with neat, clem lictls and rooms. ami the best food that ean be ha1. The proprietor has Li years experience in holding and k tmwH j ' 1 st how to please Drummers and ;entlemeu. Mop at the Swindell House when 111 .New Heme, and you will be eoiuf oil able and happy. Notwithstanding the harmony icretofore existing between the North and South. We fear the key note of trouble has been touched and the old spirit of our late un pleasantness fully aroused.. What jre we living for? Is not this a free country ? Has not a Southern man the right to go to N. Y. without a written pass like the darkey before the war. Intelligence reached us Sept. 15th from N. Y., saying, "two young men from Washington, N. C, were arrested this morning.' They were arraigned before the Court under warrant, accusing the said parlies of monopolizing the mercantile belt of the city by a miraculous dis play of their hard dollars. Last week seems to have been set apaft by the Northern mercantile billion aires, to make the big lick ;i the season by playing havoc with the money borrowers, closing their places of business for immediate payment of notes that were due and pulling in those nice new goods at 60 per cent less than nothing. At each appointed auction hour they met those two North Carolin ians who apparently had plenty of y-. ' i the hard stuff, and seemed equally 1 as'well posted. The laws of N. Y. , allowed the arrest of those unknown parties but only- temporarily. The young men have been iden tified and prove to be D. M. and J M. Spencer, of the Racket Store, of Washington, N. C, and that they torted from his politcal enemies, no tably, James Russel Lowell and Chauncey Depew. " 'And who is Mr. Ben Terrel i ti 1".. 1 any wayr ms uisiory in uriei i this as given by the press. "He was a small farmer in Texas, and made tne cultivation of the natural gras- es indigenous to his land a specialty, but was not an eminent success as a producer of cotton and corn, he sold his farm and now perambulates the country at a good salary, making speeches to the Farmers' Alliauee and liviuft ou the fat of the land, and esDeciallv known as the patentee of t jat unique plan to amend the constitution ol his country when found too small to Euitok of the (jtazettk: 1 he I cover his wild cat schemes to bet i writer is no hero worshiper, any ter the condition of the farmers; it predisposition of his mind in that j3 to do like the ladies with their direction age has corrected, with dresses; cut a hole in it and insert a most of the illusions of youth, gusset " I O Experience has taught him to dis- Mr. L. L. Polk in a recent criminate the meretricious in char- Upeech said, using the language of acter from the true, pure gold from the slums, "He would take no dross; but he hopes and believes the Cleveland in his." Well, the writer sentiment of gratitude will ever find j3 suve jj r Cleveland would take an abiding place in his heart. no Polk in his. What a htteroge- The writer has noticed a disposi- Beous mixture that would make tion on the part of certain Alliance m Cleveland and Cleveland leaders, notably, Mr Ben lerrel and jn p0i. A combination of pure Mr. L. L. Polk to belittle Ex-Presi- ozone with sulphuretted hydrogen, dent Cleveland. And this article wiat the resultant compound would is inspired some word, however feebly done, to say , or to put it differently a cross recalling to the minds of those gen- between a jackass and a blooded-race tlemen some of the services rendered horse, that would be good for the the country, and especially the ass, but bad for the horse. or a Raphael; but do not compare th e age preferred truth to error as he brain-work of Colonel Harry Skin- understood it, and loved his coun- ncr with the intellectual productions tr- better than ottice. of John C. Calhoun, which a compe tent critic characterized as logic on fire. Colonel Creecy is "facile prin ceps"of the press, he touches nothing lie does not ornament." The writer reads with delight his editorials, a combination of varied learning, com mon sense and humor, flavored with attic wit. Colonel Creecy hag been called the Nestor of the North Car olina press; well it is said that Ho mer sometimes nodded, and th Nes tor of Greek History, although the 'Hi far s the land to hasten ing ills a prey. When wealth accumulates, and men decay." The currency question is con fessedly complex and ditlicult to solve, the writer by reason of his incompetency will not attempt to discuss i . It excites a smile, how ever, to hear the superficial sciolist with a seif-contideot air ventilate his crude opinions, on a subject that has perplexed learned and experi- ; pnp.ed snecial isl s . "But, fools stet) tmricoat- rf Ti-Aian I f r& if t!o ' domestic life was known, might disclose some act of folly. Is the bright, acute intellect of our modern Nestor feeling the effects, the sad effects of old age? The craze just now is to ostracise lawyers, and Polk, McCune, Pheffer, Simpson, Mrs. Lease "id omne genus," are alPturniug their guns hi where wise men dare not tread." It is conceded that a debased i currency is a curse to commerce, and none feel its ill effects sooner than the farmer or wage earner; as a specialist has said, it is like pois on in the human system, poisoning all the veins and arteries of trade. If wise councils could prevail, this question would be eliminated from van- a presumptuous one, the call attention to man,' who 'deserves charged to the muzzle on the legal j pai.ty poijtit.Sf and discussed in a calm, judicial spirit free from par- profession "Well, the good and the bad are , ty bias. mingled in all professions, and much j On the Sub-Treasury scheme, as of human nature in each. The j it is designated, the Alliance isdiv i writer has known farmers to can y Lted, if we may credit the statements many bad cases into court, but nev- ; Gf the j)ress L, North Carolina it er heard on& complain that his law- J woul(1 st.em lo j)e niore 0f a unit ver bv insrenuitv and eloouence !.., ; ' w, u.ciiWiuV.vu " mflfl his hfl! oases anoear the bet B A N iv 1 AN U HOUSE South by that eminent statesman. Mr. Ben Terrel asked in one of his speeches: "Who is O rover Cleveland any way?" And the wri ter, best as he can, Mr. Ben Terrel. But, to beserious, when wit and and ridicule are employed to sup press error, expose venality and vindicate trath, its use is to be corn- will answer Knended. but when designed (and 1 7 stale wit at that) as in this ease, to - . ... . e s-.nsr it- i t on inoi puti win t tei ones. it 13 t" iimnuviivu Ul : spciiis to hfl wdrkimr. I he lull in history, ancient and modern, that j lr0(iuced into the last Congrees was the legal profession have always pi.onounce(i by Senators Vance, championed the cause of freedom, ! jiorgaUi George, and others to be regulated by law, opposing alike 1 unconstitutional, impracticable and question, and even here the leaven the farmers, instilliug into theii this long article, perhaos too Ion minds the belief that all other pro- it is not the promptings of .voc.t.uc, o.d imicwucB iceuiug ou uy, thote who know Hie writer iutKV mat a speit uas best will acquit him of egotism; but been cast over the minds of perhaps it is inspired bv the hope, perhapi a-majority oi mem; . iu their esti mation be is the embodiment of the Alliance. Carrying its destines ou his Atlantian suoulders, to.criticise Col. L L. Polk" is to criticise the Alliance. Is he uot our Moses to lead us through the wilderness of financial embarrassment to the land which tloweth with milk and honey, is not Dr. McCune like unto Aarou the prophet of the Lord holdiug up his aim, and is uot Pheffer the Re publican, and Mrs. Lease the fe male suffragist, and Jerry the sock less, the negro equality man, all the way from Kansas, his horn blowers and fuglemen speak no evil of mv lo--d Polk and his diguataries lest faillilv, tllAl7 too, at a time i f life ye be consumed by the wrath of wll' ' needed most the comfort the Alliance. of home, and it may give additional Secret political societies are ex- emphasis to say that he has reached ctics. the free soil of America is no very nearly the limit allotted to place for them, their con creuial nian on the carta : vet in all that home is the laud of the Maria or time he never held an ollico, never me sou ot China where they solicited one, never was the recipi- are indigenous; here their preeuce cut of ten dollars of the public poisons the political atmosphere money, State, County or National, and mainly independence of thought, or had a litigated case in court. The and the spirit of freedom withers writer can and does sympathize beneath their shade. What do we with that noble band of men, the far- witness neie in North Carolina, au inors. the bone and sinew of the attempt has been made to silence ian(i. the bed-rock on which is rear- i : r ! . .. i a? I iue uice oi a iree uemocrauc press. e(, the pr0Sperity of all other pro- oysuspemuug over tne tieao ot fessions fllul occupations; in all ine euiior, a lureat oi witnorawai , andneri)lexities, bit he of patronage, and most of the edi- . . t,,.m ' .Id thev if thev could that it may merits of a well of his country, and to induce his farmer friends to piuise before thev lend the aid of their powerful influence to designing men for seltisli pur poses, to disorganize .the Democrat ic parly. And to give cinphatds to what he has uriten be will state tli At the writer is nothing if .not a farmer, three-fourths of his time for eighteen years. At the close of the war he lived on a swamp farm dwelling in a leaky-log hut ni'.h a. clav chimney, manv miles from his "Mr. Cleveland like many of our disparage the upright, wise and the Statesmen is a self-made man, it was great, the shaft rebounds from the rot on the rounds of a golden lad- Uarget and wounds the archer; igno- der he climbed to fame, his path to ble minds draw attention to their exalted position was strewn with want of moral ana intellectual defects thorns not with roses, made by his by assailing their superiors. What own right arm not blazed for him a contrast is here presented, to by loving friends and wealthy rela- compare small things with great! tions, and the fibre of his moral and Grover Cleveland exerts his corn- mental lakeup toupbened in rvanding influence to hea me the. scht! of 1 adversity, ur. vlxmds made by a cruel war, would the encroachment, of Kingly prerogative, and the lije:it'u,us ness of liberty. In England its influence for good, was illus crated by the learning and achiev ments of a Littleton, a Hale, a ok O. M. BROWN MAIN STUEET, WASHINGTON, ft. C : Ih;U im solicited-aui reuiittan e ninde promptly. ! xchange hoiiKht and solrt .1. 15. KOSS, TAILOR, WASH1N1T0N, N. C Repairing and making suits in la l.sl styles Work Guaranteed. A lull line of samples. Ollice at W. B. Morton A Co's. AprilOtf. L. JACKOWFSKY, F AS II I O X A II LE TAILOR, WASHINGTON, X. Siiits made in the latest styles, and ..rk done the best. Price moderate Long experience In 'New York. -Also ci..thes cleaned and repaired. Next lii.ur to J. A. Burgess, on Market St. A. B. PENDER, TONSORIAL' ARTIST, M1N ST.. W'ASUINGTON, N. C. Dibble's Old Stand. COOL OFF, The very best ICE COLD SODA .at Nicholsons Drug Store. Cream s. la and all the popular Syrups. Drug Store under the new Hotel , niay28tf have bought more goods than any three houses in this place and. can sell them cheaper than ssny man on earth can buy them unfess he get them like they did. They acually bought 973 suits of men's clothing from one house, 1104 youth's suits, 600 overcoats and pair of pants from another man which took ail he had. If they can manage to sell these goods for 10 per cent they will be satisfied and can save the customer about 40 per cent. 1000 pair sample shoes to be opened this week. Spot-cash has been the watchword by which we have been guided through the Northern markets, with an eye sin- igle to the discounts which is a spec ial relic to be divided between our customers and ourselves enabling us to live easy and be of mutual ben efit to each other. When you come to town call -at the Racket Store Cor. Market and Main St., or at Spencer Bios.' Dry Goods Empo rium next to Brown's Bank. We have the Racket Store filled from bottom to top and will have more than enough to till the Emporium. We expect to carry a line of fine Dress Goods pf the .latest styles with trimmings to match. You will also find in our new Brick Store the finest line of clothing, gents' furnishing and shoes ever kept in this or any other town South of Baltimore. Give us a call and com pare our goods and prices. We don't charge any thing , for showing them and assure you we won't get mad if you don't buy. Many thanks for past patronage Respectfully, Sr-ESCSR Jtyos, 6i Co. absurd. And if the writer under stands its provisions it would be paternalism run mad, and make of the Federal G overmen t a pawnbro kers shop. If the farmer may car ry his corn, his peas, his oats and Coke, a Bacon, a Holt, a Camden, a ; jjjs cotton to a government ware- Blackstone, a Mansfield, a Thurlow, i,ouse an(i draw his 80 per cent of an Eldon, an Erskinc, a Pitt and a tlieir market value, why may not Brougham; men who contributed holder of cotton rags, scrap iron much to the upbuilding and defend-' anc Gm ? ri0 the same? if not ing' that great monument of civil , whv not? But Colonel Polk says liberty, which John Adams pro nounced the greatest ever erected by the genius and wisdom of man kind. Tn America on its roll are the names of a Marshall, a Jay, a Ilam- ilton, an Adams, a Jefferson, a ; to bring foward some plan for the Madison, a Mason, a Henry, a Liv. rt'Iiet of the tmev, in the event or ingston, an Ames, a Gerry, an Otis. Men whose handiwork is impressed I speaking for the Alliance and as on the Constitution of their country , declared to be 13T the Earl of Chat am the greatest embodi ment of po litical wisdom ever penned by uninspired man. Nearer our times are the names of a Stoiy , a Kent, a Wright, a Webster, a Clay, a Calhoun, a Prentiss, a Loundes, our own Gaston and Badger and others too numerous to mention. Colonel Skinner has won laurels at the bar and in the political arena, the writer would not pluck one from his brow, but let him con secrate his talents and eloquent voice to conserving the Democratic party, not to aid Polk and his coadju tors, to disorganize and destroy it. This is not written, Mr. Editor, in the interest ofMr. Cleveland's candi dature for the Presidential nomina tion. By reason of his pronounced op- S of 1 idversity . Clevelam advrVe to distinction extinguish the fires of sectional is phenoiuinal: first, Sheriff of a hate, cement the ties of friendship county, mayor of a city , and elected which should bind all classes and Governor of the great State of Now professions, inculcate a reverence for York by an unprecedented majority the constitution, by illustrating it and culminating in the Presidency n practice and make more enduring of the United States, so unparalleled tiie foundations of the Republic, and rapid has been his rise, he is which has been the source of so called the man of destiny. In each many blessings in the past, and of these offices he has illustrated his gives promise of so many in the fu- own pithy aphorism, "A public of- ture. Whilst the other, this modern fice is a public trust. Cleon, this wily demagogue, travels 'When Mr. Cleveland was elec- the country distilling the venom ted President, the Democratic party 0f i,is poison into the minds of the rejoiced but trembled, the Republi- farmers, and sowing the seeds of can party was maddened and pre- discord among the different classes dieted evil to the country. of llis fellow citizens "What has been the sequel? it is thought Colonel Polk aspires "The Republican party had been to the Presidency, to wear the man in' power for a quarter of a century. He once worn by Cleveland; well, A party that precipitated a civilwar, the writer will not -run the com- which forits far reaching effects upon pirison 0nce made by James G the material and social condition of Blaine, when a member of the House thevanquished in the contest, was 0f Representatives, said, the mantle unparalleled in Ancient or Modern Qf Winster Davis had fallen on times; and whose subsequent recon- Roscoe Conk ling; he will not say struction, policy and treatment, of compare Hyperion to Satyr, an owl its-fallen foe, makes the partition of to an eagle, mud to marble, lead Poland, "that blackest chap- to diamond, but he will say, cover ter in the book of fate, fade to l l. pcik with the mantle of snowy whiteness." The fire of Cleveland and he would lie lost position to the free coinage ef sil- sectional hate was fanned -to a white physically, mentally and morally. ver, it may not be best for him to heat, to perpetuate its power the And Colonel Harry Skinner, .he head the ticket in the next cam race predjud ice of the impressible cannot endure Mr. Cleveland, the paign , and the element of availabil negro was intensified, and by its vi- mention of whose name in connec- ity must be considered; he simply cious class legislation, has enabled tion with the presidential nominal wishes to call attention to the lead the few under the forms of Uaw to tion calls forth from him an indig- ers of the Democratic party in and rob the many, and the trend of nant protest. The colonel is a po- outside of the Farmers' Alliance, to whose policy-has been to divide the litical annex of the Farmers' Alii- the debt of gratitude, due from the country into two classes the im- ance, with it but not of it. A bright whole country especially the South- mensely rich and the wretchedly hut small planet revolving about ern portion of it, to one of the pur poor, the periphery of that charmed est patriots and most extaordinary "Mr. Cleveland was made Presi- circle, of which L. L. Polk is the men this country has ever produced; dent, and not a year passed before central luminary. The Colonel you of which they appear oblivious, not the country realized that a wise know claims to be the fat her of the only oblivious to his services, but head and a patriotic heart was at SubrTreasury scheme; well , no one the charge of sub-serviency to Wall the head of the Government. His will dispute with him the parentage street and the creature of the gold strong personality was impressed of the rickety child, like father bugs passes unrebuked by the press, upon every branch of the Execu- like son, the offspring bears the like- if ithas been, it has not fallen Under tive Department, sectional hatred ness of its father. the notice of the writer. was in a measure abated, the fears of By the way, "mirabile dictu," Mr . Cleveland with the full knowl the negro for his freedom dispelled, Colonel Creecy has reproduced in edge of the fact, that that power harmony between the races restored, the person of Colonel Harry Skin- ful organization, the 'Farmers' Alii the South so long under the ban ner, John C. Calhoun; now let Col. ance, was a unit in favor of the un- was recognized in every branch of Creecyr publish in parallel columns limited coinage of silver, and the official life, and if Mr. Cleveland the display of oratorical pyrotech- Alliance was sustained by a accomplished no more it was because niCs which his North Carolina Cal- majority of the leaders of the he was handicapped by a hostile houn fired off in the last Legisla- Democratic party outside, yet Congress. His veto of the pen- ture, and the speech of the South taking no councill from his political sion grab bill is paralleled only Carolina Calhoun made in Senate on aspirations without equivocation or by Andrew Jackson's withdraw- the bill to repeal the Missouri mental reservation writes his silver al of the deposit from the Bank of Compromise, and let an intelligent letter, as it is called, thus cutting that scheme is dead, ai d will not be revived; but calls upon the leaders of the old parties, (and you can read between the lines the trend of his remarks is aimed at the leaders of the Democratic party particularly ) tors with a few notable exceptions, (which it would be invidious to mention) uot from fear, as the wri ter is confident, of personal cou sideratious, for no men in the State are more ready t follow their cou victiorjs of duty, when that duty is made plain to them; but the con ditions surrouiidiug them are so make their escape over the. wreck of the Constitution of their country. It is well to have the stiength of a giant, but it is not always best to' use it like a giant. Sampson pulled down the temple, but buried him self beneath the ruins. The writer thanks you, Mr . editor, I 4.1. ,. . . s-. 1 wl fin tlsl man tt and their situation so per- ,ul lllcaijav-c ventilate ms tnougnis, you aim your readers have concluded by thia time that the writer has as bad a their failing to do so, he (Col. Polk) one having authority, will wreck the old parties, and on their ruins build up a new party; these conspi rators have each tlieir different roles to play. Polk and his most trusted Alliance leaders is to inveigle as many of the Southern Alliance as they can and Peffe, Simpson and Mrs. Lease are to serve as decoy ducks for the Western members. If Col. Polk and the leaders of the Al liance who sympathize with him, have at heart the love for the Dem ocratic party w';ich they profess, why do they not formulate the plan of their new Sub-Treasury Scheme, let its details be discussed, if it seems to be a good thing and constitution al, there is not a Democrat inside or outside of the the Alliance, but will rejoice that a remedy has been found for all the ills of which the far mers complain and it will be incorpo- plexiug, for fear ot doiug harm to the party they do nothing follow iug the Fabian policy, make haste, slowly and await developments The writer believes this policy of inaction (although au honest one) ethes loquendi is not the best, to parley with error in most instances as it has proved ia thi is to invite aggression. The arms of this octopod must be clip ped or the party will perish in its cold embrace Polk aud his satellites, with ar rogiut and aggressive pre'eutious ness, demand the surrender of the Democratic parly to all the de mands of the Alliauce; m ike the penalty of refusal , a withdrawal of influence aud support. The writer predicts that an attempt will be made to capture the next Dem ocratic State convention, and fail ing in t he attempt, the conspirators will under the lead ot Polk ana his lieif euants withdraw, and turn their guns on their former political friends. The writer is confident they will fail to carry with them the best element in t h e Farmers' Alliance. The writer lurther predicts that all the dissatisfied elements with the old parties will fuse with the peo ple's patty or nationalists as they are called iu New Englaud, a party lounded by Edward Bellamy, auth. or of that unique production "Look ing Backward" a book which had its origen ou that soil where the case of the cacoethes scribendi, as Col. L. L. Polk lias of the caco- Fahmek." 1828 Xt Origlai.a.tsd. I ,111 I lfLZi, "' I 8SBS8W- DYSPEPSIA RESTLESSNESS, a araiCTLV viOfTii tfcULTkClS FAMILY MCDIOIHl. aw" ''&ZSILIB QA69II, 6A. PHILADELPHIA Price. ONE Dollar Renter There la no other genuine Simmons Liver Regulator. led in the platform of the Demo- p3ioie uas ueen emasculated, aud cratic party without a dissenting ienjs moral theological and, politi- voice, and the authors of this reme- ca? are indegelious to the soil. dy will be given credit for their a wave of unrest and dissatisfac discovery. Why these repeated de- tion vvith the existing social and po- mands upon the leaders for litical conditions is passiug over the pledges in advance to submit to all laud. Theori sts and political ein the demands of the Alliance, with piricslnot finding any constitutional the threat suspended over them, if warrant for their nostrums to cure thev are not given to disrupt the the evils of society, are appea.ing i . ... . .i j. : j. Democratic nartv? There fell un- to a law nig'ier .nau me cousum- i- -. L i ,W the eve of the writer recentelv tion. The power oi me reuera. o nrnfMnn of unshaken fidelity to government is uu.ueu uy iuc Wu , f thp nmnpri,t.in nartv bv a man Who stltUUOU, a disposition is uiauucsi ,.,;,,i i.o of t.i. founders ed to stretch it, aud make it the Ar J. .... a r.ri. bititer and regulator of the doniest a rt -nor ic arlairs of the people. Where is all lie Situ I tiicic nao wm vi a..i Professional and Business Carda. gAMUEL M. BLOt'T, l f ATTORNEV-AT Ll W, WASHINGTON N. C CEYMOUR W. HANCOCK ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Washington, ' N 0. Party; in the next sentence he said the Alliance will make no conces sions, the Ocala platfoim must be accepted in its entirety, thus antici pating the action of the Democrat ic convention. Is this Democratic, does it accord with the traditions of this to end, the writer may be something of a pessimist, but to him the political sky looks murky, and the future oi this Republic not inviting Let all true friends of the constit ution gather on the deck of the old ship Democracy, her keel was laid by Thomas Jefferson, she was launched at the birth of the Repub lic, she has borne'tbe flag of the con the party, -shall we believe Philip drunk, or Philio sober." "Under which King, Bezone." The Farmer's Alliance is an illus- gtitution safely through many gales tration of how a harmless and a and seen her rivals founder in the a good thing, may be perverted to storm,adverse winds have kept her a oad purpose by the designing from her harbor (or many years but ont tii selfish: organized for mu- Rhe will "fetch nort yet;" in the the United States, or John Tyler's nublic iud-e of the absurdity of the bridge behind him and political- veto of Henry Clay's bill to re-1 the comparison. - ly signing his death warrant. What- charter the same. "Let Colonel Creecy compare the ever may be Mr. Cleveland's polit- I ... I : l r. ,;u l. 4 i.: I . . n i i u "So clear was Mr. Cleveland in ! crude productions ot a lyro witn iulc, m go uu . bas Col. foia woiKtu upon m his high office, that praise was ex- j the immortal creations of a Rubens ' tory as the one man who in a venal .! uores, the fears, the selfiuterest of tnal benefit, in alegitimate way the Crys-alis has shed its skin aud now appears ae a lull fledged po litical organization. So persistent language of the Apostle to the sol diers aud Centurion, "ye all shal be saved but ye must abide in tb ship. " Now, Mr. Editor, one word person- J a to the writer, why has he written S- C BECK WITH, ATTORMEY-AT-LAW, Washington, N. C. Feb. 6. J H. SMALL, ATTORNEY-AT-La W, WASHINGTON, N. 0 Z. MORTON, JK., ATTORN Hi I - AT-Jj A W , WASHINGTON, N. O. W ill practice in the Court istrict and in Martin county, pecial attention given to the collec- n of claims aud conveyancing. -gTOdice formerly occupied by tne.; C. U. Hill. SNELL, DEN'TI.ST, WASHINGTON, N. G Rooms over Bridgmans, Main St. April9,3m JJ0TEL ALBERT. NEW BERNE, N. C. I AW the Modern Conveniences 17" i -l-ii in' niftn n-Mr "
The Washington Gazette (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 24, 1891, edition 1
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