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the carolina watchman ol | j\)irtii series salisbury n c f thursday august 3 1893 washington leiter fr'roru our rp^uliv cotreajjlsbjlent secretary jchi lisle is the only mem her of the cabinet at present in vvjftth ington and helms been confined to his house for several days this week by rhetimatmm bu m-xt week president j cleveland anil the other members of the cabinet will be here us they hnve liei-ii notified that the president wishes to submit the first draft of bis message to congress to them and have m full and free discussion of its contents be fore it is finally completed attempts are numerous at trying to the nature of the president coming rarssage but it is nonsense for any one outside of the cabinet and a few close personal friends of mr cle veland — and they won't talk about it to pretend to know tire mere fact that he will send another message to congress at the opening of the regu lai sessiou even should the extra ses sion remain in session until then and the general belief id tint it will makes it presumable fiat his message 1 to the extra session wiil be confined to ; what it wilts called to legislate upon — finance and if this presumption be correct it will not indicate any change uf opinion as to t!ie necessity tor ur iff and other reforms advocated by the democratic party daring the last cam paign merely that circumstances i have m»de il necessary to take up fi nance fir»t speaking of reform commissioner i lochren is going right ahead in i.he i programme mapped out for the refor j mation of the pension roll iiotwith j standing ihe howl that is being raised by a few congressmen whose consti ; i tuents have been u.<peuded ir has ' already been discovered that in hddi i tion to th large number of pensions i grauted under the hist administration | without proper examination of lhe up plicanj and papers there were thou sands granted illegally knowingly md wilftiily only those granted under ' the act f 1890 iw.ve yet been exam in j ed and no others call be taken up for i a long time lhe suspensions up to date number nearly 0,000 aud if the same average be kept up in lhe en tire 370,000 pensions granted under that law the total number of suspen sions will be boniething like 75,000 the examination w very borough and systematic and only those cases show ! iu clearly some irregularity or doubt : of the ri;>ht of the pensioner to receive ; the amount he has been gettiug are suspended and few if anv of those who get restored to the roll upon a re examination will as large a ten sion as they have been receiving senator g inii in remarked a friend of the man who has proven his right by his ability on many occasions 1 to be classed a.s a democratic leader l uever announces through the news papers his future political intentions and that fact is so well known that he ' very seldom takes the trouble to eon tradict the newspaper stories which appear from time to time purporting i to give in detail what he intends to do in e.ise this or that happens in the senate it is safe to say however that his future actions like those of the p.ist will alw.ays be such as will meet the approval of a in jority of good democrats and to ay also that anv advance announcements of them which may appear may always be set down as merely guesses one of the most encouraging signs to those who expect financial relief from the legislation of the exlrasfs ! sion is the fact hut while most of the democratic senators and itepresen'a tiveshave ideas of their own as to the legislation needed a majority of them : express themselves as willing to hear i the arguments of those who advocate | other ideas and to be open to convic tion if the other fellow's argument be the best if this feeling be shared by a majority of the democrats in both ! house and senate the difficulty of reaching some satisfactory basis of compromise will be greatly lessened i lint it is going to take time to bring about that tesult and wise people will j not expect immediate concessional ac ' tion on this important subject good legislation is belter than hurried legis lation and 1 have yet to find the first democrat who does not firmly believe that good legislation will be one of the certainties of the fifty-third congress gen duncan s walker chairman of the committee on invitations af the ceiitenui.il celebration of the laying of the corner-stone of the capitol build ing to be held september 18 next this week sent invitations to the gov ernors of yll the states and their stalls to participate president cleveland has promised to introduce the p inci pnl spenker at the ceiehrat'on who will j be mr william wirt henry of vir ginia a dependent cf patrick henry some timsly instructions to commis sioners district attorney glenn has already itpproved about ouo warrants for cases j to come up at the next thrill of the ' federal courts in the di^tiiet many ! of the warrants have been standing for ! sometime the delay being occasioned by the transfer of the office capt grlenn has iss ied a circular to the united states commissioners of the western north carolina district iu whii.li he s*ays i am now ready to piss upon all ac i counts and approve or reject all war i rants that you may forward to me it < is my earnest desire to suppress all violations of the federal laws and it see that the gailty are punished still i do not wish the united stales district and circuit courts to be considered courts of oppressing and therefore ask you to comply with the following re quests dif'uot issue any warrants unless upon the affidavits of deputy i collectors and a<>i j uts upon informa i tion of personal knowledge or upon the personal knowledge of private in dividuals 1 will order no warrant to issue unless you shall certify that in your opinion the case should b prose | cured don't issue warrants in friro lous cased or where malice and not merit is the cause of the prosecution in small cases unless for good reasons never bind over more than two wit nesses for thu government and do not bind over at all unless you are satisfied that the case is such a one as would ! warraut a jury in finding a verdict of ! gi.iity i u all respects sate all the costs that you can and lei your object : always be imph to suppress eiiine i will gl.tdly give you ail the in forma j tion i can and hope you will aid me in ! my efforts to justly and economically ! dispose of ihe business thit accumu lates in the western district i'istrsss in kansas a special correspondent of the new york tidies writing from topeka gives distressing accounts of the eondi , tion of western kansas he has risit ed eleven counties and found every one of them a picture of gloom iu two of tluse counties it has not rained for ten j months many of the people have j left their homes in despair iu a town which a year ago had several hundred inhabitants there are i;o»v only three persons a cattle herder his wife aud cl.ikl in some parts of this unfortunate re gion the farmers haye worked ten years ; and only gathered one crop most of the people in this arid region were lured there by land boomers and spec ulators who g.tve glowing accounts of its fertility the deluded settlers are getting away as fast as th*y can but most of th lu have nothing left and are well niuh iu despair it is truly a pitiful story some difference there is a v.ist difference in the con duct of a man and woman in new clothe when a woman gnts a new suit she immediately prances down ' towu and for hours will walk con tentedly along a crowded thorough fare receiving fresh impulses of joy every tune another woman scans her wardrobe but a man is so different he won't put u his new clothes for the first innv ur til it is dark then he got down town so cautiously as to al most create the impression that he is sneaking along if he sees a crowd on a corner he wiil slip acr.-ss the way to avoid them and when he goes into his grocery he hies to get behind as many barrels aud boxes as he can all the time he is trying his level best to appear as if the suit was six months old and all the while realize that he is making an infernal fail an of it we hope the tune will couu when new pants will be so folded b the manufacturer that they won show a ridge along the front of eaci legwheu the wearer dons them examiner buxton reports to th comptroller ol the currency that th winston national bank is carrying on the conditions prescribed for its resto ration and will be able goon to reauni business six inches of twine it stopped an obstinate nose-bleed a physician could not stop pretty soon after the morning train on 1 lie consolidated road pulled out of new london station the other day westward bound the conductor bolted through the drawing room car door and naked is there a physician in this chi all tie passengers g.z^l at ii tall man who laid down his paper poke to ! the conductor and wentout witli him i a minute later twenty minutes after wlien tile conductor came in view every passenger asked him the same question and in reply he said oh its a man in the smoker lie's got nose j bleed nasal hemorrhage the doctor wills it his no.se has been bleeding i ever since we left east greenwich and it hasn't stopped yet wk»t is the doctor doing for it inquired a man he has just put in a tampon and we've all pooled in our handkerchiefs for the poor fellow he's getting aw fully while and weak in one of the rear chairs of the car sat a young woman who had flushed and paled itt rapid intervals itnthe con ductor talked and when she finally beckoned to him he quickly moved to her side 1 think 1 know something to stop the nose-bleed i never knew it to fail she timidly asserted but maybe i ought not to suggest it if the gentle man i in the doctor's care the doctor is about getting dis couraged and the packing in the man's nose don't seem to stanch the qow at all if you know anything i guess evtrybody would thank you to tell it a few moments later the conductor took the young woman into the smok er at thr physician request the medical man said pardon me but if you hare any knowledge of a remedy to lop nasal hemorrhage both thi patient and i would be intensely grate ful to yon have you a piece of twine — ordi nary wrapping twine said the girl off from a bundle quickly came a piecw the girl took it asked the loan of a knife and cutting a piece of the twine about 5 inches in length tied it very tightly around lh little finger of the left hand of the man with the nose bleed then she asked the conductor to escort htr back to her car it was not five minutes later when the doctor came through the car ioor and went straight for the place where j the young woman sat she was busi ! ly engaged in reading a magazine but looked up as bespoke to her your remedy has been perfectly successful he said and asked permis sion to take a vacant chair near her it is strange he continued how many times in a physician's life he j finds all his acquired scienca u>eless before the common sense of some non professional person why i might hare known it i had only stopped to think that your remedy couldn't fail just a 1 ; soon as you began tying that string around the little finger i knew it would slop the bleeding aud it could not have done otherwise of course you know the scientific reason for it the fact of the arteries passing through the little finger aud all about that no she said i only know my grand-mother told mother of it and she told me i am a teacher and quite often in the first warm days of spring the little cbildivn in my department in school haye nose-bleed 1 always get some twine from the boy pock ets and tie it tightly around the little finger of the child and it has never failed to stop he flow i was in a down town restaurant that evening when the physician was tell ing the story nd he said at the end if it she was * devilish pretty young woman with a mouth that said til ihe time kiss me 1 and eyes that no man ever had or would but her sweetheart when she had one new fork recorder we call em tramps l>rd english what this country ack miss americas is a leisure cl^-ss such as we haye in our country i nean the class we call gentlemen who o i.ot work for their living who take io part in business but devote their ime to observation and travel and r — miss americas oh yes we have | ja * lass in this country but we call cm tramps highest of all in leavening power-latest u s gov't report ae6o1jutely pure lips that touch liquor onng won !>«_.- attention to what i shall say 1 iiv not for ri be or pleasures g*j onng roeo a the vine cup however -.. l.r.-tv } i art slowly but surely beconiing a slaves tlien take it fur grunted howevtr so kind a young man with liquor enu oerer 1 mine there leatli in tuc wine eap v poi-on is ther , to rub you ofhappiness all that i fain i or ira from the l.u^oiu where beauty should shine a man of good tease will not mis u with wine then take it for granted and make up ronrmind rnehpsthat touch hqnor.can never touch min so you tliutar thinking of ninrrviog me abstain jrom the wine cup from al io be fret be loving affectionate gentle and true be faithful tojesns nud there,s liojwforyon fur if you love jesua i m sure yon love me and if should marry vou -.\ o coul i ngree be loving affectionat geutle and kind hut li].s t!ut touch liquor cm never touch mine why picnics are so called everybody knows what a picnic is but most fodka would find it hard to | say how it got that name and vet it is simple enough when you come to learn it when a picnic wa.s being arranged for the custom originally was th d those who intended to be present should supply tho eatabuw and ! drinktbles a list of those necessities ' having bean drawn up it was pissed round and each person picked out the article of food or drink that he or she was willing to furnish aiid the n im of the article wan nicked or ticked oil the list the open-aii entertainment thus become known as pick and dick the custom is said to have dated from 1802 s > th it thr picnic is vrhoily an institution of the nineteenth century how to select a postmaster the citizens of la grange this stair have struck upon a novel plan to set tle who shall be pust master there we refer our friends at albemarle to the new plan the aspirants have tried ihe virtue of petitions and their friends influeuce but there seems to be h hitch some where however to relieve congress niau woodard of the responsibility and settle the matter the shortest way they have agreed that when the old con federate veterans meet there on the 4th of august next to h..ve a shooting match and the man or woman who drivrs the cross is to have tli office mr woodiird and apt gminger chairman of the cennty executive cum mittee will be invited to attend and keen the score for the boys knew where to l<»ok for dead men j'ressaml printer a printer recently walked iutoacer fcaiu business house in n rounds lo know who desired anything in the way of advertisement and noticed a drum mer stood by the counter with his sam ple valise ready to open anything you want to say in the paper this week said the printer to the businessman be hind the coniker x said the bus iness man i don't believe in advertis ing the drummer waited until he was half way to the door t 1 1 • n slowly taking up his sample valise remarked well that lets me out i do not care to sell on time to any man who at this a<je does not believe in advertising i prefer to deil with live men when i want to strike up a trade with a dead man i'll go to th graveyard and swap business good day fruit and vegetables vs doctors grape fruit is almost as good as quinine for malarial troubles ami pine apple is a sure cure f«r sore throat tomatoes are perfect liver regulators — thev contain a very small portion of mercury oranges act on the kidneys very beneficially lemons an i grapes are effaciona in curing and preventing cancerous troubles water cresses act un the lungs and are said to be a cure for incipient consumption they cer taiuly have marvelous tonic power and refresh one after great fatigue a diet of grapes as a cure-all has be*>n proved valuable in hundreds of eases and if taken in time a cav <><; jaun dice can be cured by eating nothing butleltuce and lemon juice in the face of this can one not alnio3t dis peii e with doctors ex he committed suicide the cause and its lesson why did ho commit suicide oh l"ir the same reason that thousands of otben aro on the verge of tlie same sin ir in imme diate dimmer of insanity par.iiy>i idiocy or some other equally unfortunate result of anv nervous affection lie knew be m aliiietej with a nervous disorder but as careless apparently iodifierent to the out come ; or he in iv have if wnul his ohanom for reeovery by treating with phrskiam who had little or no knowledge of m.-li af fections or by deluging himself witli wo ili le>s so-called remedies his e.ise wav a i,l on but no worse than that of any other nervous sufferer who has nervous or sick headache biliousness dizziness irritability melancholy failing memory hot u.imiu -, fainting sleeplessness nervous d_i>ik - i»i • sexual debility epilepsy etc the same or similar consequences are likely to result 10 any one who has any of tbt*e adraoca symptoms of an awful end !>■» not hesitate in getting rid of them by intelligent treat ment dr franklin mi!e the celebrated specialist has stu lied ner?<xw diseases over 2't years and has discovered the only re liable remedy for them thousands sf vol untary testimonials prove the virtues of dr miles restorative nervine alouzo marker of clinton s y write i was so afflicted with exirismo ncnrmmmm that i was on the verve f insanity my imixli trem bled so hat i eoum scared feed uiy-elf i nted twelve bit tie<.»f ur iflw rakoratlre nervine and was enred u is with pleasure recommend this wonderful remedy for iierwuis tr.iul.le " i li;i 1 been a sufferer from clironio headache until i begun l nit tour months «<;.), ; to use dr miles restorative nervine ndptln i since which time 1 have not ha.1 a bcadadm several of my friends are usine l»r mile rem edies and flnd them a i did to l>e more than you claim for them — mia mury kimer ix>s anjjelcs c*l v il capwell e-litor tribune ru-month r . writes : " my wife was enroll i s-rk lieadat-be at many yean standing by the use of i>r miles restorutivo n't-rvine she has recommended it to her friends an«l tlwy all praise it hil-hiy " r miles restorative nervine it rvl t.y nil dnikki-ts in a positive guarantee or sent direct hy the dr miles uedieal co klkh.irt in.1 . on receipt of price si net b ittle ix liotilea i its i express prepaid it is pnaitively fr.-f from oniam ordangerons drags dr miles rill ■■■! o 3 cents free u*jk at drn^kisu or t>y moil a modern republican candidate the charleston neirs and courier the new york tr-i repori thai senator chandler of new hampshire lias a presidential bee in his hat lias , not commanded cretlence anywhere ; whatever lie maj be as one of the pa peri in ins section very pprtineutlv re i marks mr chandler is iiol a fool we confess that we do not see the , force of thid criticism wliy should not senator chandler aspire to the presidential humiliation j of his party even tin xetrs and courier henn , testimony t his ability and we ix-liere i it has never bei'ii questioned by any ' out who knows him si far as his principles sire coi cern fil thiv an tln>se of his p;trty the | itej)iil)iic;in parly does not n*present anything thai chnndlpr does no r j resent in a distingu shed degree he 1 stmiitl for i high rariff he i one of the champions of the force bill idea j hi believes in i reckless pension sys tem ami a centralized government his si*rvices to the party have been great he was one of ihp mosl effi cient agents r»f hip steal which gare the repnblicans i lie presi ency in 1 1876 whenever there has been any slick or dirty work tndof>rhw party he has invariably volunteered his ser ricps and proved hia eminent titiifsn for t he ]■what is t!i • matter with i»ill chan - her as a fcepubiican candidate tor president an eciitcrs mistake the editor f a weekly journal lately lost two of his subscribers through ac cidentallj departing from th iteaten truck in nnswers to correspondents twoof his # ub-*criljers wrote to k him nix remedy for iheir r rpectire trouble no 1 a happy fat he of t\tir wrote to inquire tlie l>est war to them safely over their teething and no 1 wanted to kno-.v bow to pro tect his orchards from the myraida of grasshoppers the editor framed lus answers n the orthodox lines but unfortunately trunsposed their t wo nauie with the result that so 1 who whs blessed with twins read in reply to !;;- j iery cover them carefully with straw and sft fire to them wild the little pests after j imping around in the fl.i nes a few minutes will speedily be settled whilst no 2 plagued with grass hoppers v i told to gii •• c»6 \ tor oil and rub their g inn g mtly with a b^ue i iii r . a texas j - : ■•■what is ikstoria castoria is 3>r samuel pitcher's prescription for infauts • i.l children et contains neither gyiuni morphine nor other karcotic substance it is a harmless substitute paregoric drops sootliing syrups and castor oil g pleasant its guarantee is thirty years use by millions of mothers castoria is the children's panacea the mother's friend castoria castoria cattoriaia • i to children that cantori cuifs colic constipation . . . ,;;..,., sour stomach diarrhasa erudition ...;:,;■!. d ; kills wonnfl s.vs slo-p c^d i-ruuiotes df .. ::. v gostion ; wiuuiu injurious niouicalion ■■. t ■;.:■■universal i'.jr several yi-arv i hnvt recommended i ]' w r t j-our castoria and shall always m:i»uj u . i s . ;..:; il has invariably produ^-a iwueiicu reeultb d d edwin f iv.udnn m d k v y-,r city 1j5i.1i street uml tui vc new york ciij tiit cknta.uk cojcpaky 77 jiuboay bts.net new yokk cm jkffm 5 ( -, r i 1 and monthly i eaor whites pain in b . the feeble builds u p : . : thousands a ul v . druggist3 have it sund tunp ' bit j 1 du igooijh .- ('.... i^nlstille ky ■- ■- ~ w \ ; ( li \ * o § j boianio biaod mm $ i iroc scrofula ulcers salt *? r 4 "• -^ rheum eczema every v d form o milignant skin ehuption be # j i ... in toning up the a system and restoring ihe constitution \ v * . fri m a cause its v f almo i healing properties » a justify u i.n guaranteeing a cure ii j \ directions ire fullui-tii * a ccwt cjre illustrated a f otnl rait h u u t w 1 t«r & f blood balm co atlanta ha a u in i every t wn . i iye agency of the world's columbian expo sition illustrated yih£nt >= j7tme fair ■s ii tirr.it opp rtunit to make money f.»r i!i n.\i year one chance in a limetime e idose 1 •'> cents in stamps lor ple copy ami full particulars j.b mp sl hlsr 159 dim , c:ilj\l j , ill m dl^9va r 0y gf body @ • mnni , r ,. be realized vrliezi tf bow ar^voict act 3 nataro intends i .»■:,-«- 3 9«lxmiri ifwtcad fu ro is hca.itwha.wes 1 atri farfbodinga of rt il au ucau^py but vi tfey owir pills trill r-lievo it and ivo health r.ndvj happun is tiicv iic nor h ? trial e e o o o © o © © © t japanese a v m 1 r-anipte trearruent oaosistiiig ol y i -- - , ( rales of ointment and two : . u.-vur-f-ullne cure eor fu s and d.'crroc it make un operation *„"' ■.- nf carlxilla odd which . pernisnent euro au t>5 no vf unnecessary why or.duro ho b « terr;b:9 tiiseaee ws guarantee 0 boxes to cur 3 p nv case you ouly pay for . h a box 6 for $. r i bv mail aunjlt const ' p at i oji'cu^d^piies pimm " ul ll !» i > j by japanese lfver poll g»c i « stomach begoxatokajul blo small mild and pleat at 1 liidxed'aofioa wuojea e3i88nodonlybj edwin cuthrell s.\!.i.-i uv x c h b i . ■■1 h ga v.riiv : • i was ] iu t nf uine different doctor but not one did me the good ih it bjtauic p'qod bulm has don tne dr lafferty's alarm rev dr john j laffertv in hii edi torial in the itichtnoiid christum ad cocfite concerning the future of the iif^nt iim'l white man says riiuce iht wai 1 the average southern white man 1ms not been able to his mm us jjond an education sisnorth eru philanthropists provide the negro a wfli-knowtj georgian is about f niarrj a innlatto \\ ho will say that t !:■ulive colored octoroons and q-iud \ oou the bright uuilaltoes the heir i>;<rs ul wealthy men of mixed bluod will ii'.t be sought in the next century iv impecunious thoughtless aud idl v iui)g men of 1 lie white r.tee joiibider the future of fixe friendless 1 fatherless boy i iik white mce in the south can he pay 300 to attend i he stevens usiitu'e in new york i 1 . n lie command money for board and r.iiui ut while a student at any other state chool with a small annex of io aud i shop 11 ; h isn't nioin-y enongli to buy l-ven a railroad ticket to si.cli a college " the grandchildren of warlike nn-n ith his oric n ines who mads the southern anny a synonym of d»unt less courage re drifting toward the uelol ela and in the century dawning viil coiiie to p is oc\a coaditious th it would stir the corpses in the j ickets of gray no man has seeu tne haryest truin ihe sowing after appom.itt.ox the statesmen among us rubbed the i x-soldiera of lee totdutate black competitors of his children then northern millionaires hi hatred of t lit parokd citizens have endowed colleges if tools anil machines to equip the ex slaves to surpass and subjugate the sous f the coufedttcite in the struggle for in best pay and position in t lie hkilful trades the article goes on to state that the writer has son a negro consulted in to tiie statutes of public education in virginia he has seen a while coach man open a door for a negro and stand with hat off until the hist of the ex jlave-'s children were seated he lias seen the son of a once distinguished uity preacher a servaut in the kitchen if a negro magnate and he asks is i.his shock a d shame euough to arouse ; i.c church ? what the local paper does an exchfciigt s a sensible min ister kas th j fu lowing to say of the ocki newspaper which will bear care ful perusal your local paper tells you when to go to church to county court and to send your children to school or anywhere you want to go t tells you who is dead who is sick who \* married and many other things | you would like to know it calls at tention to public enterprises advo cates the best law and order ill the town it records the marriage of your daughter the death of your son th illness of your wife free of charge it sets foith the advantages of your town invites immigration and is the first to welcome new comers yet in spite of all these benefits some people say the home paper is not half so good as some other paper that has no inter est in their business or success the home paper is too often neglected by those who are benefited by it children cry for pitcher's ca§tprv no 24
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-08-03 |
Month | 08 |
Day | 03 |
Year | 1893 |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 24 |
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 | J. W. McKenzie, Editor and Proprietor |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | J. W. McKenzie, Editor and Proprietor |
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, August 3, 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 | 601468808 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-08-03 |
Month | 08 |
Day | 03 |
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 5221165 Bytes |
FileName | sacw17_18930803-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:18:45 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 |
the carolina watchman ol | j\)irtii series salisbury n c f thursday august 3 1893 washington leiter fr'roru our rp^uliv cotreajjlsbjlent secretary jchi lisle is the only mem her of the cabinet at present in vvjftth ington and helms been confined to his house for several days this week by rhetimatmm bu m-xt week president j cleveland anil the other members of the cabinet will be here us they hnve liei-ii notified that the president wishes to submit the first draft of bis message to congress to them and have m full and free discussion of its contents be fore it is finally completed attempts are numerous at trying to the nature of the president coming rarssage but it is nonsense for any one outside of the cabinet and a few close personal friends of mr cle veland — and they won't talk about it to pretend to know tire mere fact that he will send another message to congress at the opening of the regu lai sessiou even should the extra ses sion remain in session until then and the general belief id tint it will makes it presumable fiat his message 1 to the extra session wiil be confined to ; what it wilts called to legislate upon — finance and if this presumption be correct it will not indicate any change uf opinion as to t!ie necessity tor ur iff and other reforms advocated by the democratic party daring the last cam paign merely that circumstances i have m»de il necessary to take up fi nance fir»t speaking of reform commissioner i lochren is going right ahead in i.he i programme mapped out for the refor j mation of the pension roll iiotwith j standing ihe howl that is being raised by a few congressmen whose consti ; i tuents have been u. |