;. " ;v. 'o j NOELL ropnetors HOME - FIRST: ABROAD' NEXT'' 8 1 .00 Per. Year in Advance. Vol. XIII. R0XB0R0, . KORTH CAROLINA, WednESd Evig, Oct. 28 1896 No-9.: i R (TBI I few I S 6 ? -3 a P-J k n m - r , . . v , t . ' ' . , . , H O W - . WILL 3 PEA K AT-: : ;-. ,' . . Mori ah, Friday; October soth, is'ge Everybody-who can do so . should; go out: and' Hear Mr. Kitchin. He. wiU discuss tissues of .the nam paign in -a clear, conservative, and able manner: Go and , hear hin'i. C. B.; WATSON TO THE PEOPLE. ISSUES A RINGING AND " SUPERB APPEAL v FROM HIS SICK BED. .Will Not Be Able to Enter the Campaign--' Expresses His Regrets At not.Eeinq Able to Canvass aoain. ' Hon. C. B Watson, 'Democratic nominee for Governor, has issued from his sick bedside an - eloduent and ringing appeal to the people' of North Carolina. It is a- clarion call and every, good citizen ' should re- ; spond. Though unabie to meet them face to face the fearless champion of Democracy has. made an appeals characteristic of the man that will not fall on---dear:-.earsOwins.;:Ho tne lateness of the- hour when 'the letter was given out Wef are not able to give the full text. Most of ; it' was reproduced. Mr. Watson will not appear in the campaign again unless it is at Winston on the day preceed ing the election.- .. - :. -.. My Fellow Citzens: ' . - On the 25th of July, in the city of Raleigh, the Democratic'party in con vention assembled, called me from its ranks and told me I, must ' be its can didate for Governor. I asked no man for the commission. The vote of the convention came to me unsoaght and unbidden. Many stronger and abler hands might have received the party's banner and car ried it to victory. Heeding the earn est solicitations of my lifelong friends, and hearing the expressed will of that great convention, and being ac customed to obey, I accepted the trust, and with an eager longing to have the honor of being " the chief executive of the million and a- half and more North Carolinians, whom I esteem as the perfect bloom of the earth's people, I tookjny position on the front of the "battle deck. Al- though mindful of the arduous and incessant labors of the campaign to be undertaken, I was not deterred by its promise of unceasing. toil, and fts manifold exactions, because I' have known eyen from childhood and through all the years ef iny.life't that the highest honor that could: be "at-" tained by a North Carolinian was to obtain the s liff rages', of the ' freemen of his native State for this high and responsible office. ' ' ' . According to the custom" esteemed for its usefulness, as welt as its antiq uity in Iorth Carolina, I desired to meet my opponent, ;lMr. Russell in joint debate upon all -the questions in this cajnpaign. but he rejected bay challenge and declined to stand up in the field with me before the people. A joint discussion with mesa's sought by Major -Guthrie .of rthe" People's party.: I cheerfully accepted the J re quest, and after filling some appoint ments of my own, we entered togeth er on a canvass Of some of the wes tern counties. By mutual agreement we parted at Wilkesboro, and-1 con tinued my regular appointments through ,the state. - From exposure and fatigue I have , been, stricken down with sickness, and am now con fined to my home.. Though much improved and feeling myself growing daily stronger, I am advised that I H'. E. WEBB, Oh'm'n. Dem.. Co'." Ex:. 0om. may not be able to again enter the campaign.. Fearing.'that this may be true, I write tliis letter that the vot ers in those sections of North Caroli na that I have not been able to reach inay k,now that my hearths with them; that I wish I was able to speak to them in every county, in the State to ask their suffrages for the gre"at party that has presented my name for con-sideratioo,-and to - meet ' the" "people face to face and talk with them in re gard to their necessities and the pol icy ot the Government. There has been no time since the establishment of our Government when issues have been presented for the' consideration of the plain people of the land which more strongly involve their rights, their liberties and their homes, v it was my most heartfelt w sh tn , present to the, good, people of North Caroling my views on the great issues 1 presented by the Democratic party to the American people, and to speak to Jthem of the burdens which; they have borne so - long and patiently, and to rejoice with them in the glad hopes of returning life and -prosperity. , j - ' .J1-t, : dejLietJ abovelain'thiugs'to speak to the peopfe of the trusts and un lawful combinations which, are threat ening the destruction of v'the com merce and business of the country-r-Combinations of menby which the very necessities of Jife ; were placed undei their absolute control to be dealt out, to the consumer at prices fixed by illegal means andunder the operations of which small dealers with limited capital are being driven from business. ' ' - - ' . In my speech to the July conven-r tion, I declared then that the situa ' tion tendered the issue as to whether the people should be left free to : ex ercise their own choice, or whether the power of Hannaism would not in a stealthy and deceptive' manner hood-wink them through trusted leaders and endeavor to defeat their aims. v -. - My declaration has been verified, for Hannaism has entered the rooms of our opposing committees and sub committee in Nation, State. V county and township, and has at' least be clouded the minds of our opponents, and they warted them in their ex pressed purpose to - see the people united in securing 'the' control "of L their financial system, which they so much desire. - " , -' f - Bryan like the Chevalier "Bayard approaches likethe grey-hound, - de-, fends himself like the Iioh, and. like the wolf retreats only with -his face towards his, foes-1 ' 7 Hanna carries a dark lantern., J should feeUmy fallow citizens, in my present weakness a great despair if L thought that' these, vital - ques tions were to be presented to you by me alone; if Tfelt . that the us&ues of this battle developed upon any man and that man was myself. But I feel that the cause is above any one man of set of men. . It is the cause of the people. : They know their needs. The plain people of the land haye studied j out these ! questions, for themselves-. They have felt penury and want. In to the homes of the professional man and merchant 'have come the shadows of want - and . poverty... The - people need no messenger to bear to them the story of. their present condition, Or to tell them the history of legisla tion which has brought ruin and dis aster to their business', and f which is constantly and ever increasing with each day and follows the night : Ne cessity : has . made; them study, and they have found out lor- themselves the terrible cause.,. .They found it in i egisiation w t ich struck d own half of the money of the country, : thus doubliug .in Rvalue '-the- other hal which -was founjl'in the coffers of the J .V. j T . ' -. . rf , ... j fellow citizens, to enter every county ln iNorth Carolina and. see' you ier so n a I J y. h ai I migh li no vv, y o u n d that jou might know me, that in' the viuaui 4uu - i lit . respuusi uie duties of Governor of North Carolina I could represent the interest of every section, knowing no man' above an ' t ' i ' t :'. . . ..-... . "-3- - v.. . otner, out aoiug justice to all. And now from my be.d of sickness X send yvu iuv j-'rreung,' ana rne iuu assur ance, that i I should , be by ' your suffrage elevated, to the high position tor .-.-which. the Democratic iparty.i has presented ore as its candidate, I 'would ask'no greater honor. th'an to so. ad minister the duties of, my high office that my Conduct woul d- 'mee if w i t h approval of. you all." V. I write to you because'! cari not come.to speak' to you. T wish that every letter in every word, of this might be a tongue to- shout in your ears? the warning that comes from the surging depths of thse anxious days a warning against the blow to the liberty of the masses of the peo pie that hreaetns us in the cjenched fist of Mark Hanna. vMv own vctice cannot be raised in your hearingj.but let the voice of this letter plead with you; not for,myself, but for my name on the ticket and for the names Of my comrades not for myself or for them for our own sakes, but for us and our names only because the canse we represent is the righteous cause of a, righteous, .long-suffering, people yourselves who cry for 'deliverence and the gold of the palace," but who seek only to, dwell, as : their fathers intended they shouldsunder their own vine and fig tree,- where none dare to molest or mak afraid.'? ". : ' C. B. Watson. CRISP IS 'DEAD. s Georgia's G reatest -. Statesman Pases y - ' Away. . ; Atlanta, Ga., Oet:23. Hon. Chas.;- F. Chrisp, late Speaker of the U. S. House of Representative, and.present (ypngressman; died here 'at three o'clock this afternoons Heart failure was the cause of his death. He had been quite sick , for some time, but his. death was sudden and unexspected. - v ' ' Mr. Crisp was the leading man in public life in Georgia, and one of ; the .most popular men in the State, - He would have undoubtedly : been elected to the Senate by'the Legisla ture at its next session had he lived Horrors of the Massacre in Eastern Turkey. Boston Mass., Oct. ' 26. Advices from Harpoot, Eastern Turkey, re ceived here" con firms the dispatches to the Associate Press' in - regard to the extent and barbari'ty of - the re cent massacre at JSgin. These advices state .that many of the dead were left in the streets for days as theiood for dogs, and large numbers were thrown into the Euphrafer. :, The bodies. were seen floating down the river forty or fifty miles below, he city. In - some cases whole families were obliterated; Exact statistics of course, cannot be given nowV'but it is feared that 2,000 is an under-estimate. ' All the testi mony at hand concurs' in showing that the massacre was official and that was wholly without reason. .' - t . it ; - He x)ects a Revolution. . Washington,: Oct. 28 The regis; tration of SecondLieiitenant Jos:j Binns, Second infantry; has been ac cepted : to take . effect .immediately. This officer tendered his : resignation in a long letter setting out his belief that a collision between the people and theUnited States army will fol low the election in which case he wrote that he cannot conscientiously serve against the former.. - - Dr. Tanner Burned fa Death.. i Akron, O., Oct. .23. Doctor Tanr ner,. the ' famous long ' faster was burned to death at Whitmore Robin son Company Wednesday. - - ; Highestqf an in Leavenmg Fower. Latest, TJ.;S. Gov't Report. IN; BRYAN'S FAVOR. Great Jumpcf Odds in Setting Circles in New . ' -!- ' York. '. v , ' . ew York, Oct. 26. Betting- about the Hoffman and Gilsey house,vwhich has been generally, two Or three to one on McKihley, has changed in favor of Bryan, . :who is now brining even moneys Also" bets are. even , that he will now .'carry JNew . tYork.- They have-been as laigi as: five to one.' " . ,'. t ' - r i v - ' Old Hustler Agairr. V . : Dear, (Courier . , : . x ' "Under ,the circum stances I think you ' will agree' that "Hustler's snrvip.HS nr -iiru i n A ed. 1 -, .... . ' .'; . C: . ' .... . I euu8 informed . that ; thV yourig mail who lost his -collar, last " week happened to the accident by it3 slip 1 ping over his" head. I' think I ,can saf ely say that he hasirt got the bTg h'eadi as I have heard said, of 'some fellows. ' V , ' ..-V. "'". ' I know yon have heard about the riot at Winstead on the 22nd between the whites and the negroes and of the damage' that was done: but T ner- hapff you did not hear of .the'fuunV part of it;;. .I;wili;givyknSQjmet.'of ffiS Jioifif'dne .of ; iWborb'sex- j7cxii uiujunoiis wuo uaupeneu to oe present when the fight began, moun t- ea ms wneei ana rode off about -a hundred yards and looked "on until a pistol; was. fired, then he .mounted again, and on his way he passed school madam,: and as he; passed he began to say 43 men" killed . at Win- stead." He. was travellins: -at ' 'such rapid speed it is said he was a,, hun dred jards away, before he could 'fin ish, the sentence. ; Seeing: an account or the" trouble next morniusr in the xt4ieigu iMBwa auuv voserver it - was supposed, that vthe expert - rider ran inrougn to itaieign and carried the ucwo.-, . j.u io feaiu mat, tne , tires on his wheel got so lot by fast running that'you could smell ..burn t rubber tor a' mile. -: - - lJwp of . the tallest men in ;tbe crowd crawled under the : store "and did not make their appearance .any more 'until about dark, wtien one of them poked out his head and ' asked if the negroes hadall gone and if kuc iwuao nau. quit nyinsr.; , xney cameout after being 'assured -there was no danger. -; V: . ' One fellow locked himself "un . in the. back room of the store: another got nhder a goods - box: ;a deputy u r.:jse -i ii. -i.---i siikiill goc so ciose oenina a- large pine tree if you had . seen ; bim per haps you would r haye thought he was a part of the ree; so,me-hid be hind a corn crib, and a certain miller who happened; to;lLve close, by ran in his house, locked the door aad era wl jed up the chimheyv -X Wh?n the pistol fired oue of . our county candidates jumped l oyer" ' a buggy and" ran c, off, and, the next time I heard from him he was at Bushy-Fork asking the people for their support on the 3rd day of Nov, V- .Barbecue The " Bryan,' Kitchin and Free Silver clubs of Person county ; will give an pld fashioned bar b e cue in JRoxb oro on Mon day No v.. 2nd.. Hon. John W;: Daniel, .of: Virginia, and :Hon. W.r A. &j th erie have , been : invited and will deliver addresses. ; Let every silver man make it a point to be pres ent at that grand rally; it t ' i it t i . Populist Candidates Resign to Form a Fusion Ticket ln"West Virginia. ; Wheeling, AV. Va-, Oct, 24-Three of the.men.on the Populist State tick et have formally resigned and it'.is' supposed the others will soon', follow. The three who resigned are; - " Kolenitz Gerald,', candidate" for Governor; W. C. Miller, candidate for Auditor, and I. H. OfTner candidate for treasurer. . AlLresign . in favor , of the Democratic nominees and for the good. of the cause of free and unlimi ted coinage of, silver. " - '-s, - - ' ' ' . - : .;-:' Fine : Dress Goods; & r.' ' t'r Notions.. ; 7 :Faate this in jour bonnet short . sentence, ''plain chat, .butv all ' r . naked truth, aad ahdut hot styl : , ish stuff. Digest; jt and you'll 7 y ; purely profit .thereby. - ; ' . ' - VVe haye a, nice s line of ' . ' DRESS GOODS : : - :";Orthetest'eVrtheiiev- v ' ; . nobby Freitch" patterns, ' in- all ; the new 'ahades. Blue and black'- ' : Serges, and, Henriettas. . . V I Cashmere, 36 ihcheop'; V only 20 eents. , : ; Good IVorsted at I Gets.; :J- . We have'a full line of t v J ; " TRIMMINGS .V. S : : ';'"-vV: - : Consisting of all the ne w Gimps' I l, - : ? .small, and .large V buttons ' to ' , .match, silks,. velvets; etc. " ' ' Our heavy . , , ' "; ; ; S ; ' dry goods " v ;;v Department is complete in . . ' C .which vou will .'find-'-some'- real 'I c bargains .'in Percals, ; Outings, "":: 1 . CalicoesCheviots Plaids, Pant c ' ' ;;' Goods, and Domestics. tfJn flan- . ; S nels, don't, say a word, .'but -: come and see our prices. ' They - s are regulag Cold Qtahd- : a fd prices - : ; . , ; ;, vWe have a big line of ' - - ' . CAPES AND JACKETS for ladies aad misses in Astra ' can. Seal; Plush and Ladies Cloth. : Also a line, of children's cloaks cheap. , V - Call, and see our stockbefore -. buying, and. we - will save yori - - some money. . . - r , . ? -. v ' ' Miss-Pallie - rancey is' still- with 'i ; us with a full line of Millinery aiid . will be glad ' to have, "her frieods to call." YOURS TO SERVE, . ! A. R. FOUSflEE & CO. At Woody & Yancey's old stand. MY MILLINERY IS . STILL AT. MY,; ' OLD stand: - "I Have just returned, from the : Northern markets where I have bought , a big line of Milliner3r, consisting of imported hats of the nevyest designs. ; I- have t a big line of Misses hats, also baby caps ; for all the kids . ? Come and see me when "you need any heard gear. - Dresses made to order in the. latest style by an experienced dress maker. - , - MISS PAELIE YAITCEY, " AtVccdy & Yancey's Old Slsnd, ' tlQvi A. R. Fcashss & -. Co . t I--.