Carolina Watchman |
Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
tfujffi iviemi — ■*> il / - r r l.xxiiv third series sxvlisbury n c thursday march 9 1893 no 17 general news the old new york hotel a famous resort for southerners has been dosed earthquakes we shaking the whole territory of the grout yellowstone park strawberries covereil with falling kaon were recently on sale in el paso | tex a telephone lin 350 milt>s long j lias been opened between chicago and | detroit tiip john s bnrbour club of xor folk va has chartered tho steamer louise for their trip to the inaugura tion ex-congressman b irksdale of vlisri^.sij)jii died at his yazoo planta tion of heart failure aged 70 year owiii'jj to the luck of appropriation a number of square in washington i will lie without li o r hls at night in the future there is said to lie a two-headed woman in louisiana who sin s in a chinch choir and has two distinct voices — tenor and soprano a texas man has applied for a di vorce on the ground that he is in poor health and his wife is unable to sup purt him a youth of ninety-one married a girl of ninety-six summers th j other clay in indiana and it is reporter they di i not ask con-ent of their parents a n h _ « castoria :: 1 ritclicr's prescription for infanta . ins neither opium r.lorpliina nor mce it is a harmless substitute - , drops soothing syrups and castor oil t its guarantee is thirty years use by s ca^torl-i is tiic cliiulrcn's panacea castoria ■that ! caatoria eu . . i i ' : it . '*:,'•- telation }.:.',.:■worms gjvc6 sleep c 1 r,,:.::>t-!s d .' ; : . ■; bra fclya k y without injurious medj ".'.:<>::. - ■■-.': tn ' tuown th&t it ire tosaircrk for eereral years i h*vo recommended • i ■' ■- few ere the tout castoi '.•..' ;.. ! sha 1 alwaya <■. ■' ■'- i^'i j c«stori dinob it l»s iiitui r produced boueacia ' ' rediltb 1 <. > -. m hakttw d d edttki f pa»iies if d y u ,- y r i , ■••; r 135th street ruvi .'•.:- a . ■•., new york c.uy tttx cestacr o-'krjlxr tv kmutay stesst 2:sw yors crrt rille marble works iij . j <. ijlwy w-i www atliuiluiilollui)j 1 uhlusuuiichjj h&w ai of vermont marble to arrive in a few days weguarantee • . . and positively will no(|bej|undersold g rariite monuments < • ' all t a sj.l-i 1 ::'' \' j c b v v iibti o l ■-...-, ivoprietor la the united states and canada to-day there are ouu young men in every 1,000 who have reached the age oi thirty and who are still uu married washington letter i'rem our regular corrcspon'.ent the united states senate has been jcredited with never doing anything hastily but unless tl'.cse usually well informed are entirely wrong there lu-.s been a lightning change in the senti ment of qu»te a nuniber of senators toward the treaty for the annexation of hawaii ten days ago the oppos ition to the ratification of the treaty appeared to be insignificant to-day it is regarded as having sufficient strength to have hung up the treaty for this session it requires two-thirds of the senate to ratify and muny believe that it would be jmposfllfeiite if a tote was taken to get even a majority iu favor of ratification politics have appar ently nothing to do with the oppos ition although with the exception of senator morgan of alabama who is one of the bebring sea arbitrators and who consequently had to l?ave for europe before the matter was settled no democrat is strongly in furor ■f immediate iction on the treaty sen ator allison of lonra beads the re publican opposition which includes some of those senators popularly known as anti-harrison men only a small fraction of the opposition is based upon dislike to annexation the most of it appears to come from those who be lieve that it will be better to go a little slow in this matter now that it is in such a shape that there is little danger of a foreign country pickiu.u up hawaii it therefore is doubtful whether the treaty will be acted on at this session the populists reprt sen ta tires are right in the tight made in the house against the she man amendment to the sundry civil bill authorizing the j secretary of the treasury to issue 150,000,000 in 8 per cent gold bonds to which they and many of the silver men are unalterably opposed the greatest interot is entered in this light because if there is no comprom ise or backdown on either side it is bound to result in the failure of the sundry civil hill and consequently an ! early extra session of congress the re ! suit of which no man is m a position o predict with even the remotest de gree of certainty a good bit of misinformation said a citizen of atlanta gn t pres ; snt in whslnuph m has been k v h ! the country concerning my fellow townsman hoke smith lie is con i stantlv referred t as an editor lie is 1 no more an editor than he is a printer or a blacksmith he is first a lawyer i and next a politician several years ago he became the owner of the plant ot an unsuccessful daily paper which liv a liberal expenditure of salaries to j men possessed of the know-how faculty has been placed upon a self sustaining basis his only connection with the paper has been that of financial back l r mil i am quote sure he never wrote a paragraph for it although he has of i course dictat d its general political policy smith is a delightful fellow to nice and will i think become very popular in washington ir is not of ten that an office holder declines a proffered promt tibn which carries an increase of salary and high honor but that is just what assistant secretary yvharton now acting secre tary ot state has done i resident 11 irri-on was willing to nominate mr wharton to the vacancy made by the resignation of secretary of state fos ter v no has gons to paris to take charge of the case of the united states before the liehring sea arbitration tri bunal but mr whartori said no his action is not remarkable however un der the circumstances if he became secretary of slate he would be out of office the moment that judge gresham qualified whereas he may continue to be assistant secretary for a long time to come as no precipitate changes are ever made in the department of state a great head has brother wharton he considers a 5,000 salary preferable to the empty honor of ex-secretary many or the prominent populists who attended the meeting of the bi metallic league and of the reform press association held here last week are still in washington and some of them will remain to the inauguration getting pointers for 1897 when gen weaver says they expect to inaugurate a populist president president harrison has issued a proclamation calling an extra session of the sen tie of the fifty-third con fess to meet at noon on march 4 to acton the nominations made by pres ident cleveland : 1 tu ir.ui.saet such other business as he may present i lie opposition to judge gresham,which atone time threatens to ranch such proportions as to mike a turn on ins confirmation probable has entirely died out and il is now certain that no objection will be male to the continua tion of his no.n'.n ition the usual exciting rush and general hurly-burly of the closing h-»urs of m'rw has b*gan it is now the seas of stiady congressional jobs and the corridors of the capitol are full i,f u xio,h men and here are women l i..t rested in that little bill which they p recently prw upon the attention of congressmen at every op portm.ity the great majority oi shew people are d-omed to disappoint ! t l andi though it seems almost i"n,el to svv it few of them deserve ■anything else employer aa<l employe why is it that v hud so many i men out of employment and why is it | that some mud it so difficult to retain j it po-hion when ouce secured tuel reasons are many in t lie first instance there is not suf ficeut employment for the unem ployed and we aie uot overlooking the • fact that a great portion of tlie idle ! class are so from preference in the second case which is very important aud deserving the mosi careful consideration the employe is most often at fault it is strictly the ; duiy or the salaried person to take the same itit rest in the business in which he is engaged as though it was his own aud not be afraid that he will do a little more than tue amount of bis wages we once knew a cotton mill super intendent win seemed to have an easy time or it a woolen mill-superin tendent who envied him his position asked him what was the must difficult i thing about cotton mill superintend j ing when he dryly answered getting j the position from our observation we should say that keeping a position alter it was obtained was the most difficult part oi the undertaking few people deliver in the shape of service what they bar gained to deliver hence we see good men secure good positions and keep them for a year or two and lose them they wer not discharged and they d:d not leave tfig heads is sometimes the cause big head seldom gives one dollar's worth for one dollar hence dis sntisractioa follows big head gets so important that he thinks time tables were not made for him in fact lie sometimes gets more important than his employer when he gets to tins stage he is ripe and should quit and get a position as an oil drummer there is another class of men who are smart enough but they have al ways ome business outside of the mill to attend to in fact they are trying to serve two masters equally well and no one has yet succeeded iu/ioing it the result is/the time table is neglected and pay day looked for as it it was the most important thing in life all of which is noticed by the euip.oyer and the employe is put in the balance and ton nd wanting and a change of posi tion is the result bringing a loss to both parties a great many good men lose posi j tions because they do not give a dol lar's worth for a dollar this may come about in many different ways but no matter what the cause em ployer and employe suffer alike both in mind and finances and there is a breaking up of homes and changes to new localities all of which could be i avoided by a proper understanding of what constitutes thine and mine — netcbern journal .«»-. the kijut kind of tteliffion in a recent lecture on the power ! of the holy ghost mr moody said when the holy ghost is working i in a man and through him then comes the conviction a great many chris tians want forgive ness for their ins but are not willing to forgive their i neighbors i'll trll you right here that if your religion isn't strong enough to m ike you forgive a man you've got a i counterfeit and nor the real holy ghost religion and that's all there is i about it but if your heart is filled | with love for your fellows you can get , \ a lot in them you won't go around ' backbiting your neighbors and swin ; diitig people you won't work off an i old lame horse ou a man for a sound i ix yl'.ir old when christ comes he gives you liberty di any of you preachers know what it is to preach j without liberty you know wh.it it i is to have a grumbling criticising j backbiting fault-finding congregation ! and do you know a great many j preachers are fond of this sort of work almost every preacher who can't j preach goes to writing editorials in religious pipers telling other preach ers tmw they ought to preach what would the day of penticost have amounted to it james had said to john 1 tell yon what it is john i don't think peter is up to the mirk to | ( j lv ? lj e isn't : is logical as he might i be and his delivery isn't very good j an 1 litfre lie's got tlie m t infl-ienual ! congregation he ever had in his life 1 " smiles t the sunny south a georgia man said that his reason fornoc joining church was that the ed tor had just whipped the devil out of him . . ., . inquiring child-what is a bour bon pa intelligent parent a bourbon my child is one who does not cha g hi opinions promptly euough to suit lib opn mfiils a bi sqnad ' lf newspapers corre spondents left sun francisco for hmi iln recently perhaps this was win minister steven established the pi'u tectorate . , . the proper study of mankind i nian 1 yet man persists in thinking al most all the limn about woman ex-secretary wh tnirj who ha bee i much prostrated since his wife's j , r \ w i go ho jacksonville fl -.. and eroni there take a cruise in the s utb ern s^a-s with ii m banna the cleveland iron m later in his steam yacht cornanche cleveland's cabinet the new cabinet is now completed and is as follows secretary of state walter q gresbam illinois secretary of tre&snry john g carlisle kentucky secretary of war daniel s lamont new york secretary of navy hilary a her bert alabama postmaster general wils mi s !> < - sell new york secretary of interior hoke smith georgia attorney general richard olney massachusetts secretary of agriculture j s mor ton nebraska political notes the alabama legislature has passed an lection law that will disfranchise illiterate eolored^votera to the number of about 40,000 the t>xas legislature adopted a ' pint resolution to take ten days recess ' from feb is to enable the members ' to attend the cleveland inauguration judge hazen decided in favor of the republican house of topeka kan saturday granting an injunction re straining the state treasurer from pay ing out'money under t iie salary bill passed by the populist liou.^e and esi ate gov osborne of wyoming has decided on the advice of his attorneys to postpone the appointment of a united states senator until the vacancy actually exists bv the expiratiou of the term of v e warren republican the story told in topeka kan that got leweiling was about to letract his action in signing the agreement with the republican house but was dissuaded by mr cubbi^on who told him that if he did so a thousand men would be kiiied literary relic of the confederacy the winston sentinel has been shown by cheap john beard a pamphlet containing 212 pages en titled scriptural views of national trials or the true road to the inde pendence aud peace oi the confederate states of america the work wji written by the late rev c 11 vviley d d in 18(53 who was at that time state superintendent of public ch the pamphlet was printed by sterling campbell & albright ot greensboro u.i the inside of the cover page is the following entered according to act of congress in the year of 1863 by calvin il wiley in the clerk's of fice of the di-tiict court of the confed erate states for the district of p.«m iico n c one of dcpetrs political slorios one of cnauncey m depew'd polit ical stories is us follows i'ne testcher of the district school up atpeek»hiil called up the time brightest boys in his class oue da and sa:d turn you are a republican ' yes sir v and jim yon are a prohibitionist yes ir and sam you are ;; democrat yes sir 1 we'll now the one of you that can give m the^best reason why he be longs to his party can have tbw wood chuck i caught on my way to school tins morning now tom why are you a republican i am a repub lican said the boy because the rr i publican party saved the country in ! the war abolished slavery and brought about ttie resumption uf specie pay ments and has dune everything for the gj<j'l of the country th it'n very jood sail the teacher i aiu a prohibitionist s^id the pro hibition boy glibly because ruin is u'li i ig ;:,, j iiis aud filling the | rhousea and ultimately it wiilram ttiw country and if we coul i h ive proiiibitiou v.e would ii t 1 any bnson orpoor b mites everybody would b well oil " „ ., 4 . that is a good reason said the teaciier now what is the reason you are a democrat s tm ' well s»r : was tli-r reply 1 am a democrat because i waut tbe wo«jd ciiuck — new york world a doable story hea4 the henry county ga weekly is responsi'ile tor this it/';n : l'i •■oth r dav the writer met a very suiill eufw 1 carrying a very large armful ot book-s^which broi r il m i ullg to scll ' ? ■• v.i.s sai , boss , r-i l i you study all those 1 oks no,"s.ir dey's i y bri i erv i'se a i/a trance kiii 1 er aij^er side lira ;/,.;,. er j si ough'er fee dat n _ e j . .,, ..-";:,/ il r-oiie ; • * a;i cle.»n y red thw u ■iinui . ■- ■suiictiou ab : . d iti . j ■■'': . . n wii . ion n d ■•■■;:; n ••■i . - fiou'a tnii ■. wh le n.ui j a l , ler er mine is sli i ..• er i . | ,,..-. i . he a ii iiu w en it c ter c ickil liin \ boy named sam v>o only v ' tears old m ii w rviv a s ten<;e ci nevear in the kentucky p-nitentury hayiqg been eo^ricted of raod lai pretij llic men these tne cleveland cabinet averages up pretty well in avoirdupois th com bined weight of the eight member is according to the most reliable data at lihini ].:,".". pounds or nn average of about 193 pounds mr bi««ell is the hear v weight tipping the beam at 7 rioke smith is the next heaviest with 225 pounds col herl r is •: mr olnev 165 mr carlisle 160 judge greshara 160 mr morton 17 and col lnmont ir the average weight uf the previous cabinet was 165 pounds i be two cabinets are verv similar iu ne important particular the diemben are persona friegda ol the president as well m his political allies mr cleve land w;,s very much at home in the company of hi former cabinet minis ters n fact they were us so many of hia family there was not the same form ihty about cabinet meetings that baa characterized nearly every other administration a member f the arthur cabinet who served with judge lin slii.in is very curious to know if the ramu familiarity will exi-t between gresharu and cleveland ns ua tlie ease with messrs bayard ami cleveland stop abusisg the fanner if is strange to us t!ut so many gifted writers and kre.it men 1 ' rit leaot in their own estimation make so many attacks upon the farmers w«mi,i that they could get through some dav and m>l always be kicking against the fanners the farmers jtre ii r the driving wheel bu he is the wheel driver he does not maka the laws but he labors for himself and those who do make the laws and they eoul i uot aloug without him so away with this nonsense and if you think it *••> easy and pleasant to farm o to work put younelf in their ince and show them how to live by your great farniiug which seems to be so much like doing nothing what the fanners ne^d is not advice all the time and abuse because they do not do any bett.-r ijr.r they need somebody ta take bold ami help them up not tear them down giveiuem an example by going to work yourselves and by and by thing will change and all will re j ice together as friends and co-work ers.—ii e.-inn free liner in the l.(-sr!>«luliii tuesday the house tabled the senate bill to make 6 per cent ih legal rate of intere&t the debate on il began asl night and was coutiuuvd today l he house also tabled the bill to al low tiie governor to order special court for speedy trials of murder ami outrage cases the intention being to preveut lyuchings r bill to make n appropriation for the completion of the school for deaf-mutes at morgan ton of 35,000 w;is increased to 40,000 tiie school is to be ready for u^e in eighteen months with accommodations for u00 pupils a lull passed it final reading incor porating the atlantic reidsville and i'ancej vilje railway the insurance i>i ! l al e n passed its final reading it giyps the secretary of state complete jurisdiction of insur ance companies and als ■> prescribe a standard firm of fire insurance policy it does not attempt to prescribe forms of life insurance policies rich men the richest man in ihe world it is staled is han quay a chinese banker wortb the almost inconceivable sura of one bill on dollars a number if the largest banks in the chinese empire an believed t lie under his control fohn i r ■> kefeller who i without a dollar has amassed an enormous fortune estimated at .'. one hundred and titty million dollars ii'i he fieiids only one hundred thou sai;d dollars per nnum so that his wealth k-^fj.s piling up at a lr men tions rate mr ftockem er i about fiftv-«ix years of age if he lives mi ni be is seven t his wealth it is esti mated will amount to nearly three hundred million dollars viscount uelgrave grandson of the duke of westminster it he lives to inherit his patrimony will be one of lite richest men in the world as by the tin he attains his majority the n of th westminster estates will have run out n<i th income of ihe property now estimated at about ive thousan i dollars a day will then ben»arh twen ty times that amount among«i mon arch the shah of !'■■:-. . nd the cj-ar of russia ar the most we » - their :•■-. active incomes being estimated t tetwecn ten a 1 fifteen mtllious of dollars a year dead blan c l.iiiii dead man claim the nninp given to a rich mine in l*adviile w.ta dis ■i.vr-''i v a broken i«'*n miner while . _■_• g i grave a r i when ersd :••• t of i ow on the i ■- a r ;••- laid ii * . i i sn iw l>ank aad bin ii • '■•■i keiitji i llafn to u i ... r?x ,■._■the corpse and . nn 1 i 1 i ..•_■'. r i ;■• ol ti ;.!■l 1 1 ■.: . struck it r ci chi i \ ler.ild southwest geurgia cowex 1 t;,e!i . . ■. with u hf th it has two pai oped i.e.-.ds it is said to b j erty of a m ro in schiey countj . gov william mckinley of ohio has arranged to turn all his property over to trustees to be applied to the payment of the walker stamping company of i"oungstown,01iio which railed recently it is reported thut a lamb was born m forsytli couuty hist week that hut ; lie head and neck of a pointer dog and ii ii.-mir csiv.-iv i with h;»ir the balance of the body with wool the curiosity was accidentally killed but will b pre served in alcohol charlotte ne\vs slrs.marv muson vvms arraigned before e~q ire u ix<veil li;i.s luoniiuir on h;:i .;-.■; of p'ljipjng itw;iv tt v011u14 i/ui scott with a re volver ti j ca.-e was i plain one i>:n lliii n>a^istmte required u bund of - : 2 : > f-.-r n-r s«pnearaiicti for trial before judge mtiures d.iii w;.s t»ot hurt tii 1 ia mine of this country will not produce enough foaj^ent ayer re cmiu iuis til repeal of duty nil tin which is one of the remaining repub lican iniquities and burdens davidson college is to have a lake — a really truly hike — nii'df to order the name of it will be lake vvilev in honor of ilr s ii wiley of salis bury who contributed 500 toward the work — jhorganton herald green-boro record mr ii jacobs has a bed spread made by a friend of his containing 5,000 pieces it is hand sewed every seam pressed and then tross-at.it c lied lie worked on it at odd times for three years it is valued at 500 and will be sent to the world's fair . ' l5kin an ' pry c f't r -^ '- ' n — . rt " - i — ■ra f~sj i ■. illll . . . ■' •■: blood is a .... ■■. j tv-t root 31 . .. e '.':. bscs frjptletors draoistb eippman^i bkx g ivalhli diu v na ■, mo wi f 1 -: i w is af pfl 1 i i - m i f - use it my -• . • rs 1 weut io li • ■- toun 1 . ■,. u made mes . : i r,o.vn hi re s > . n i i \\.. april 26 iss9 havin s us j three buttles of p p p fvi impui i ■'•.-.■.■. ai m eakness ami bavin derived grent benefits from ihe sun ■. . ; i i pounds in weight in lour woeks i take tr?at treas ure ia recommeudiii it to unfortunates like yours truly john morris office ofj.n mi-ehoy,drupgi.-t i orlandu l'la april 20 1s91 j m man b '''"•• ~>' m till ga 1 ear sirs 1 sold i liree but l 3 of 1 p p large si s yesterday aud one bottle small size to-day the p 1 p < un 3 i wife • f rheuma tism winter before last it catr.ehack on her the past winter and a half bottle 1.00 size reli ve 1 h v again and bhe lias i t id a -> mptom si ■e 1 sold a bottle ol p p i v . ton friend of mine on of his turkeys i small one took siek,s n i his « if gave it a teaspoi n n as in the e enii tr and the i - urned over like iip wa«5 deari but nest morn i ', anu well yuui " j n mcelkoy savannah ga 17 ls93 bi os . si . .■i nah ta ! have suffere 1 fr nu rheu me an ! did uoi qnd .. i i p.,v inch couq \ i y "■irnly im.iz.a i jones 18 < range st suva mab gal a st louis paper says if yon want to get rid of rats don't try lo poison them for they are too smart to be fooled with poison hut fix up a nice dish for them seasoned with tartar em etic they eat heartily and then tii'-v feel like a land lubber on his first trip on sea the world h.is no cbarras for them they would rather lie dead than alive and in their deep disgust with the surroundings as soon as r.ln j y are able to toddle they take fieir families and move to some of your neighbors who don't feed them that way allen w thur.nan of ohio son of tin old roman thought out a plan to solve t financial problem which he savs with the free coiuage of both metals would put gold and silver nt parity in twenty-four hours ami end the strife between them his proposi tion is that silver shall be tl)p ba^is for national bank circulation the banks are t.o be 1 required to deposit in tin united states treat ury 90 per cent in such dollars upon which they art to be permitted to issue 100 per cent of ixit.es this mr thurman savs would always insure specie payments it t s3 a jjt y ••--• c"/o yourself and ajt fly ta el riict bei r li e ! .- . '- r iiionfey i . . cr.sjej in y.j t iwl . • . ■mr w ii aoaitl shoes - tirji « bpresedt th«i f . " o tor pncj a-;'.t is iiiciis&ncia csr-iilis no r't t k3titi;xa.w£3 w l douglas 63 b£iijs centcemen tke best shoe inthey/orldforthewoher a ccnufrp sewed shop tkar vdll not rfp.tea cflif s^amlor-s t,nn.-(-."i in'ldo flexible nnre ccm fortable stylish as i duralielbsnrny other shoo over s id at tt price equals custom uikjo siioss costing r»vs and 5 han«!-bewe«l,flnocblf shoes th i 5 tlj > n'.o.--ts'.v!:.ii>,r.ist mi l.ira'ole shoes ever bold : at the price tlicy equal fins imported sliooo costing s 5o police sfcoe.trorn by fanners ar.d tl o others who want a good heavy cair jhrc bsled rxi i-.-i r ■b.i », easy to walk to aad will jrej 1 3 i-'ics t;p : f?fz : z5 aril e-2.cc worfc *£»*£:■i"-ncu's ■i 11 -' in j ■■(■:: '•>:•« wear for the b i r vv'l s-.y <■ho .-.:,•. they are made for ser \ ice ' the increasing sales show tlict trorkiagincn hare found this cut »».,,„! ?•.».«(> av.a tenths 1.fh fcliocl eloys bbees are worn by the boys every raeref iheino6tsertlcocw i shoe''=i:iuf tii prices lad9€s ?,;..-:» bl-.i sl.vs shoe to missea are n?dr jf t ■■• : -\--. i % or oia or dne calf ?.« i c^.-jircd theypre'-eryftxi unfortable and dura ble "', s 1 . > w i >-;, ,-[.■.; .• ni-.!ia',le8hoescosung f r irj p too to 86j 0 ladies n bo wish to ecunoaiixe la tii i outwear krer.n.li-.if.v 1 ::* out c-anrion.-v.-.l douglas 1 name ftni tho price is 1 ft.iiupod on the bottom at each shoe look for it ' v her you buy bewareof dealer^att nptinctosub ! btitate other makes fi.rth:?m such suhstlti ions are i fraudulent and subject to prosecution by law lor ob i taiuing moiiev under false pretences v t liolgliasj urocktou jiass sold by m s.3 i own i ( ii fa pk -% k p ■: | o cures .. ' nthly irregularity lt ■• or hites painia back cr s . - stbefw we builds up the whole : ■;. - scured thousanda i and will cun you druggists have it emi ! btamp fl r i bk-'j p.bb - -•• loajsrillo ky o©ooo000q0 i ■i — i ■.,— f^k rocttroconstipafteapirrjinfjthebow _. elssboaldbeavtudedjitwcafceiistheir _^ power of motion a gentle aperient a effect <; only require i tv'.t » xiny : autwfilts&j 1 with speciiu /< sv i news to tho jx ■. iroof y cc"-.t tdache ; uniniko sy*-fl tc::i n it ver cause c natural gv :: ol bile and tli jir tonia / ~ propi ■., rrerto the bow 63 els to rem , v:r tlons «... . •;« .. -. iija-j resull ■. '. o 7 i fc trice 85c ( i k place «. y editor dana hurls this paragraph at the head of the vegetarians what in the mischief are we to eat nowa days after listening to the vegetar ians who say we shouldn't tat meats ana to the sun ripeners who warn hs i^;a:iifst eating underground growths lik potatoes tnd turnips we hear the voice of another food reformer who says we must uot ear anything made of grain such us wheat bread corn dodgers flapjacks oat cakes peas meal bannocks or macaroni all of which are hard of digestion and bad for the health go to grass he hum bugs all and herds with nebuchadnez zar give u all things that are good wholesome non.ri.4nng tasteful and hightoned such things a make a white person or even a colored person feel happv and brave give us a show let folks loose in the animal vegetable gramnivorous cocoanut chestnut aud apple s ss kingdoms
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-03-09 |
Month | 03 |
Day | 09 |
Year | 1893 |
Volume | 24 |
Issue | 17 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | McKenzie and Bruner, Publishers |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | McKenzie and Bruner, Publishers |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The Thursday, March 9, 1893 issue of the Carolina Watchman a weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
OCLC number | 601559182 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-03-09 |
Month | 03 |
Day | 09 |
Year | 1893 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 5195157 Bytes |
FileName | sacw17_18930309-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:16:53 AM |
Publisher | Hamilton C. Jones |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | An archive of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
FullText |
tfujffi iviemi — ■*> il / - r r l.xxiiv third series sxvlisbury n c thursday march 9 1893 no 17 general news the old new york hotel a famous resort for southerners has been dosed earthquakes we shaking the whole territory of the grout yellowstone park strawberries covereil with falling kaon were recently on sale in el paso | tex a telephone lin 350 milt>s long j lias been opened between chicago and | detroit tiip john s bnrbour club of xor folk va has chartered tho steamer louise for their trip to the inaugura tion ex-congressman b irksdale of vlisri^.sij)jii died at his yazoo planta tion of heart failure aged 70 year owiii'jj to the luck of appropriation a number of square in washington i will lie without li o r hls at night in the future there is said to lie a two-headed woman in louisiana who sin s in a chinch choir and has two distinct voices — tenor and soprano a texas man has applied for a di vorce on the ground that he is in poor health and his wife is unable to sup purt him a youth of ninety-one married a girl of ninety-six summers th j other clay in indiana and it is reporter they di i not ask con-ent of their parents a n h _ « castoria :: 1 ritclicr's prescription for infanta . ins neither opium r.lorpliina nor mce it is a harmless substitute - , drops soothing syrups and castor oil t its guarantee is thirty years use by s ca^torl-i is tiic cliiulrcn's panacea castoria ■that ! caatoria eu . . i i ' : it . '*:,'•- telation }.:.',.:■worms gjvc6 sleep c 1 r,,:.::>t-!s d .' ; : . ■; bra fclya k y without injurious medj ".'.:<>::. - ■■-.': tn ' tuown th&t it ire tosaircrk for eereral years i h*vo recommended • i ■' ■- few ere the tout castoi '.•..' ;.. ! sha 1 alwaya <■. ■' ■'- i^'i j c«stori dinob it l»s iiitui r produced boueacia ' ' rediltb 1 <. > -. m hakttw d d edttki f pa»iies if d y u ,- y r i , ■••; r 135th street ruvi .'•.:- a . ■•., new york c.uy tttx cestacr o-'krjlxr tv kmutay stesst 2:sw yors crrt rille marble works iij . j <. ijlwy w-i www atliuiluiilollui)j 1 uhlusuuiichjj h&w ai of vermont marble to arrive in a few days weguarantee • . . and positively will no(|bej|undersold g rariite monuments < • ' all t a sj.l-i 1 ::'' \' j c b v v iibti o l ■-...-, ivoprietor la the united states and canada to-day there are ouu young men in every 1,000 who have reached the age oi thirty and who are still uu married washington letter i'rem our regular corrcspon'.ent the united states senate has been jcredited with never doing anything hastily but unless tl'.cse usually well informed are entirely wrong there lu-.s been a lightning change in the senti ment of qu»te a nuniber of senators toward the treaty for the annexation of hawaii ten days ago the oppos ition to the ratification of the treaty appeared to be insignificant to-day it is regarded as having sufficient strength to have hung up the treaty for this session it requires two-thirds of the senate to ratify and muny believe that it would be jmposfllfeiite if a tote was taken to get even a majority iu favor of ratification politics have appar ently nothing to do with the oppos ition although with the exception of senator morgan of alabama who is one of the bebring sea arbitrators and who consequently had to l?ave for europe before the matter was settled no democrat is strongly in furor ■f immediate iction on the treaty sen ator allison of lonra beads the re publican opposition which includes some of those senators popularly known as anti-harrison men only a small fraction of the opposition is based upon dislike to annexation the most of it appears to come from those who be lieve that it will be better to go a little slow in this matter now that it is in such a shape that there is little danger of a foreign country pickiu.u up hawaii it therefore is doubtful whether the treaty will be acted on at this session the populists reprt sen ta tires are right in the tight made in the house against the she man amendment to the sundry civil bill authorizing the j secretary of the treasury to issue 150,000,000 in 8 per cent gold bonds to which they and many of the silver men are unalterably opposed the greatest interot is entered in this light because if there is no comprom ise or backdown on either side it is bound to result in the failure of the sundry civil hill and consequently an ! early extra session of congress the re ! suit of which no man is m a position o predict with even the remotest de gree of certainty a good bit of misinformation said a citizen of atlanta gn t pres ; snt in whslnuph m has been k v h ! the country concerning my fellow townsman hoke smith lie is con i stantlv referred t as an editor lie is 1 no more an editor than he is a printer or a blacksmith he is first a lawyer i and next a politician several years ago he became the owner of the plant ot an unsuccessful daily paper which liv a liberal expenditure of salaries to j men possessed of the know-how faculty has been placed upon a self sustaining basis his only connection with the paper has been that of financial back l r mil i am quote sure he never wrote a paragraph for it although he has of i course dictat d its general political policy smith is a delightful fellow to nice and will i think become very popular in washington ir is not of ten that an office holder declines a proffered promt tibn which carries an increase of salary and high honor but that is just what assistant secretary yvharton now acting secre tary ot state has done i resident 11 irri-on was willing to nominate mr wharton to the vacancy made by the resignation of secretary of state fos ter v no has gons to paris to take charge of the case of the united states before the liehring sea arbitration tri bunal but mr whartori said no his action is not remarkable however un der the circumstances if he became secretary of slate he would be out of office the moment that judge gresham qualified whereas he may continue to be assistant secretary for a long time to come as no precipitate changes are ever made in the department of state a great head has brother wharton he considers a 5,000 salary preferable to the empty honor of ex-secretary many or the prominent populists who attended the meeting of the bi metallic league and of the reform press association held here last week are still in washington and some of them will remain to the inauguration getting pointers for 1897 when gen weaver says they expect to inaugurate a populist president president harrison has issued a proclamation calling an extra session of the sen tie of the fifty-third con fess to meet at noon on march 4 to acton the nominations made by pres ident cleveland : 1 tu ir.ui.saet such other business as he may present i lie opposition to judge gresham,which atone time threatens to ranch such proportions as to mike a turn on ins confirmation probable has entirely died out and il is now certain that no objection will be male to the continua tion of his no.n'.n ition the usual exciting rush and general hurly-burly of the closing h-»urs of m'rw has b*gan it is now the seas of stiady congressional jobs and the corridors of the capitol are full i,f u xio,h men and here are women l i..t rested in that little bill which they p recently prw upon the attention of congressmen at every op portm.ity the great majority oi shew people are d-omed to disappoint ! t l andi though it seems almost i"n,el to svv it few of them deserve ■anything else employer aa |