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the carolina watchman ul xix.-third series salisbury n c thursday may 31 1888 no 32 l ii clement i craige & clement l)p james r campbell physician and surgeon sen-ices to the people of l i vicinity ■.-■• ■. m cole's iron front building :: a fisher streets it b councill m d ill jsrtlifiho-i-xr-y tst.c sessional services y the 1 surrounding communi ■promptly attended day i .. ' uun d at my office orthe drug 11 enniss respectfully i ~ 1 b council m 1 „ the heilig building 2nd s:gi new fiffl ;, ;■-;.,..,,, 1 have entevi d into a for the purpose of conduct likoceky and produce os business to hate from - - consignment especially jii nl.l.l.v & tyson ;,, | r,,ed takes this opportunity iis numerous friends ttronage and ask the con sc^'etothexewfirm tvsj i hand to serv lie of the xe>v firm j [). mrxeely n j rlijlnil3 is now receiving his fall and winter stock of goods direct from ike ftiiio fflartets ■groceries hood ki i1 in i p n . . ui priced to suit the call and examine m stock 1 bob white and crystal roller mill flour of the best quality . . ruin \ umk foil , ■■■iven me ■mi their cot llf \\. 1 holmes 1 milk milk lj k3esi1 mmencing abou ■.■. ish to engage . ui the home ofpatrons i art kor coin enience tick may wisli ti p w brown . . . i8s8 1 in i constipation is called ilio father of diseases,"be cause tlipro is no medium through which disease bo often attacks the system sis by the absorption ol poisonous gases in uie retention or decayed and effete matter in tin stomach and bowels it is itiim-d ty a torpid liver not enough bile be lag excreted from the blood to produce nuiuri-'s own cathartic and la generally accompanied with mich results as loss of appetite sick headache bad breath etc | t8fc treatment of constipation does not consist merely in unloadingthe bowels tin medicine must not onlyactasn purga tive but beatonicas well and not produce after its use greater costiveness tosecure i regular hni.it of body without rhaugiug the diet or disorganizing the system fetn my attention after suffering with con^tlpn t n i rtw i orthree years wascallcd to simmons i r regulator and having tried almost cvery n luded to try it i fir»t took a n ! afterwards reduced tlie dose to a pi r direction ftcr each meal i found thai it had done mesomuch good th:it i til i took two bottles sincetheni havenotex rienced any difficulty ikeepitin myhou ■• and would not be without it but have no use f.r it.it having cured me gko w 1-jv , ass't clerk superior court liibb co ga take only the genuine vlii ii has on the wrapper the reil !^% trade maik and signature of j h zeilin & co d r.julian co dealers in general merchandise salisbury x c i come and see the show t dave julian's new store i ['■has a full ami comph te line of entirely wmw grgobg which he is offering ciieapki than ever he i > ii fisher street near the stand pipe ; ■iv here his rents and other expenses are ",, low that he is selling one dollar's worth | of good's lor 90 ets l-ir lit lias the best i and cheapest line of fertilizers in the i count v and decidedly the best line of provisions in he market l!c sure to sec him before von iniy j3s^~iie wants to buy all the he can lit april 10 88 2(j:3m c8eam bm ipia cleanses the l^asalw c ur[s cou}l pas allay cb^sffg^adj pain andlnflamma-tof feverj jj l :: zz 3rcshf qs?fb ths senses of ta:::b b^v^ferb and smell ijp^^tj tkytiikcrkk.h^r-fever catarrh is a disease of the mucous membrane generally originating in the nasal pas sage and maintaining its stronghold in the head from this point it sends forth a poisonous virus into the stomach and thraugh the digestive organs corrupting ihe blood and producing other trouble some and dangerous symptoms \ particle is applicl into each nostril and is igreeuble price so cents at druggists by mail registered 60ccuts ely bros ■..;:, greenwich street . new york i3:ly home company a 4 ' strong company sefkifg <&&$:& j wk d '■nws^m prompt home patronage m'^mmm reliable liberal . ' j ." 7 j rhodes browne agents 40fr<i ' t ' rnt - total assets - s75o,ooo oo j allen brown resident agent salisbury n c the new birdsell cloyer holler monitor j l t ?« i o r . ■-\ . - and re-eleaias 2sr oci rpr.;7 i?z markrt • griie srotk i%".;l c ii;i»f.8<s hsretofcre uiikiio'wii t.r c prrio .• ... iea the'^ne^s birdeell is the-wsro-st iug efibrf of its inten ohn c biedsell wbc basiiec thirty-thrae years e7jderieuceinj3u:iuint cv q .. aerl . __ ., ,. : . tc c&e ctw ttoo first comtoined clover threshta . i;t , ■' r b ict wortt3 ol note hc ha eaad t successors have nan ..... , g hi past tbirty-ttaree ye^s binrtceu^rsreatlctlsb jd •. v . . a , t - e d sc ■-. v xing skat im c'.a factcrj if ty «"^ *- - jkes 01 : . v oj id send fc r ca ra.og ie ead i 1 coc.cc r.^lleuf c j boydef agt b'rdsell mfc co salisbury x c ot^3 r^r->:z ztsz>z z * ' june there through the long long summer hours the golden light should lie and thick young herb3 and groups f bowers stand in their beauty by th oriole should build and f-11 his love-tale close beside inv cell ; the idle butterfly should re.-t him there and there be heard the h;)u.-e wife-bee and humming bir 1 and what if cheerful shouts it noon ( ome from the village sent or songs of maids beneath the moon with fairy laughter blent and what it in the evening light betrothed lovers walk in sight of my low monument i would the lovely scene around mi^'lit know no sadder ight nor sound i knew — i know i should not eo the season's glorious how nor would its brightness shine for me nor its wild music flow : but if around my place of sleep the friends 1 love should come to weep they might not ha?te to go soft airs and song and light and gloom : should k<-,-j them lingering b my tomb these to their softened heart should bear the thought of what has been and speak of one who cannot share the gladness of the scene who part in all the pomp that tills the circuit of the summer hills is — that his grave is green ; and deeply would their hear rejoice to hear again his living-roii •. bryant senator vance his reviewed the tariff question in his letters to the baltimore s«/i more thor oughly we believe than any one who has yet made it a study he has inves tigated it in all its various bearings and his arguments have been clear and undeniable he has rendered i most valuable service to the consumers of manufactured products who are made through the operations of the tariff the burden bearers of the government will they see it will they look at it with the personal interest its impor tance demands ? wo subjoin the closing paragraphs of the senator's tenth letter and ask for them the perusal of all who read this paper who is injured by proteetiou to this question it may l>e answered every one who is not benefited protection can only benefit anybody as has been shown by increasing the prices of those things which they have to sell now if it increased likewise the price oi that which they had to buy the one would set off the other and there would be no benefit at all surely this is self evident to make protection a benefit to somebody therefore it must inlhe ne cessity of things either increase the price of their products leaving the price oi their purchases the same or it must maintain the price of their sales and lower that of their purchases if it does neither it does nothing it it does cither it injures somebody kvery man there fore in the united stales is injured who having by protection the cost raised oj all which he has to buy does not also by the same law have the price of all that in has to sell increased to the same ex tent first and foremost then it injur es all who only consume and do not pro duce as they have nothing to sell but all their transactions are purchase it is impossible to compensate them for their losses by the increase in prices this large class includes the professions mer chants all person's engaged in transpor tation personal and government service women orphan children and all who live on fixed incomes and the like per haps however their injury is not so great as that done to the fanners and planters for though the expenditure of the first named is increased by protection their incomes are not necessarily diminished but with the farmer both are douo the price of his purchases is increased and being compelled to sell his surplus pro ducts in the markets of nations who can not exchange with us on equal terms the prices are necessarily lowered and his income is thereby lessened he is wasting at both the spigot and the spile there is no proposition more obviously just than that when the farmer is forced to send for sale his wheat l.is meat and his cotton to europe when the price is fixed for him by the competition of the world he should be permit-to d to buy his supplies of wool and iron and the like in the self-same markets at prices regulated by the same competition ' i have seen it stated by reputable au thority that in many portions of india recently opened up by railroads wheat is profitably grown at a cost of live shill ings per quarter of eight bushels in competition wkh this pauper grown wheat our western farmers have to sell their wheat produced at a cost at least three timesa great british capital was put into tin se railroads and these cheap wheat lands ol india were d veloped be cause england could not get her bread from our prairies in exchange for her manufactured goods the tariff wail for bidding she would gladly iiave fed her people from the riches of our plains if she could but all foreign commerce is ex change and proteetiou forbids exchange the story of cotton is the same the plant m11 tih liverpool in competi tion with that grown in ail irt of the earth at the lowest figure for which human labor can be induced to grow it but he is not permitted to buy even the jute bagging and the iron ties which en velope it in the same market cheapened in tne same way the price of those thing is fixed by having tariff duties to snit the american manufacturer so it is with nearly everything produced by those who till the earth and create food or the material of raiment they are caade the patient victim of tariff ia - tion whose toil goes to enrich the few who control onr legislature in order to keep them in quiet submission the keeuost intollect of the land is employed and paid for with the farmers own money they are plied with a thousand false arguments and exploded theories their national pride is appealed to and n-.ear preju hc«3 are excited against for eicrn nations dimply bejansc they have ■■• -•'•' ; ' ■•-' l a*i??r : - applied to every laborer upon earth ex cept those employed in our protected country and british gold 1 is said by the slave-traders to bribe every man who refuses to help them steal revenue tariff men are called free-traders so bold has become robbery that honesty has thus become a reproach and political partisan hostility is freely and success fully invoked in this way these iniqui ties have been enacted and maintained until the task of removing them has become a revolution which it will require a generation of agitation to accomplish but it will be done to doubt it is to question the strength of justice and im pugn our civilization even the last appeal that against the disturbing vest ed interests which it soeffectually made will lose its power to stay the hand of reform for men will come to agree with bastiat that because wrong has been permitted to exist for a moment is no reason why it should endure to eter nity nor does the fact that wrong is profitable to its perpetrators give it any furl her or stronger sanction to immortal ity truth and justice are entitled to live foreyer the most feasible hope of this refor mation appears to me to lie in the west and south these sections of our coun try are natural allies who are only kept from co-operation by lingering war mem ories and the partisan political feeling which eastern protectionist republicans ho artfully invite the chief interest of each is agricult ural and their productions supplement each other their pursuits engender the same ideas and suggest the same conser vative policy if once the inconsiderable barriers which separate them could be broken down and unity of action secur ed their power would be sufficient to re form the evils of tariff legislation with ease and ceitainty in fact their might would only need to be seen it would scarcely be required to be exercised t is not a pleasant sounding thing to advise the combination of sections or classes against other sections or classes of a common country but as they are al ready formed for aggression it becomes not only excu-able but a positive duty to form them for defense the manufacturers are few in number they are persons ofgreat intelligence and energy and they are grouped together in the great business centres of the coun try with them therefore concert of action is easily effected and interets naturally prompts to these combination to regulate prices * smother competition and influence legislation those who are to be fleeced on the contrary are many in number they embrace all the poor and the ignorant are widely seat ered far and near throughout the broad land and with communication rare and most imperfect with them combina tion and unanimity faction is next thing to the impossible it is the case of a small but compactly and organized army destroying a great unarmed unorganiz ed moo the only possible way in which these incoherent victims of unjust and unequal taxation can make their united might felt in the legislation of their country is to align them on principle by indoctrinating them with the true theory of taxation such as is befitting a country that professes to be free and by disseminating those immutable principl es of political economy which have been established by the experience of man kind and which are as much god'.s laws as the law of gravitation for they are true and all truth is his an able man has said that our motto in this great fight should be sit lux let us give the people light indeed and especially the toiling masses of the great west and south who are furthest removed from those influences which obscure the light and good results will be seen let no man tire of talking tariff let nomaji weary of urging the vital necessity of re form in taxation on his neighbor until this last vestige of slavery shall be abol ished and the commerce of the great republic shall be free as the necessities of the government will permit and its laws look to no other interest under heaven save oulv that of the public z b vance the young democracy the state chronicle pays a high tribute to the young dtmuocracy of north carolina in these words while the chronicle would not unden ate iu any degree the long and effective service which was rendered by the older democracy in the trying years after the war when they so glori ou ly re leerued the state from radical rule nor during recent years when they have so steadfastly held the vic tory then gained we desire to pay a just tribute to the young democrats of north carolina who always throw them selves into the contest with an enthu siasm born of devotion to the princi ples of tin democratic party they love the party and its glorious history and burn with indignation when they recall the wrongs which were heaped upon us by the republican party in the day of its triumph they remember that when the peo ple of the south and particularly of our own state humiliated by defeat with poverty ami desolation staring them in the face and when we were bravely setting ourselves to work to !, iim iip our waste places and start again upon the race of life ami when ve were in need of sympathy and help this radical party instead of aiding in that vrork stole the hard earned taxes l.'viol upon a poverty stricken people and set its iron heel of oppression on oar bre.ist they eaa never forget the days of terror when no woman in the east wu safe from the hand of the ruffian negroes who prowled through the country and unrestrained by fear of punishment perpetrated outrages vliich male civilization pale and fear destnu-tiun was at hand they cannot forget that the h idical officials let srime run riot and encouraged and protected the violators of law while nr best and truest citizens were hunted r»y armed men and cast into dr.n^eoufi with th basest crimin ils and when rhc hf«rhe t court ui the lane a t ( at defiance by a brutal soldier upheld by 1 republican governor and com pelled to confess itself powerless to protect the citizens they cannot forget that era of de bauchery and theft when legislation was bought and sold and when made rich by illgotten gain the radical crew fared sumptuously and rioted extrava gantly at the expense of our stricken hind the young nitn of north carolina do not desire office they seldom ask a nomination but with an earnest ness born of intense conviction they fight radicalism and advocate the con tinuance of democratic supremacy as the only hope of preserving the good name of their state and the happiness of its people they feel in their in most hearts with the keenest encum brance of evils long ago inflicted but the memory of which can never d!e that the greatest disgrace which could come upon them would be the return of radical supremacy and its insepara ble concomitant of negro rule not that they entertain enmity to the ne gro as such but the experience of the past has taught that when ignorance rules the people mourn and that a party made up of negroes with now and then a white leader who uses them as he will to promote his own unscrupulous and ambitious schemes can never be successful but at the sac rifice of the best interests of the com munity the young white men of north carolina and one can seldom be found who is not a democrat cannot now nor can they ever consent that the republican party shall return to power until the rank and file of that party shall become as intelligent as virtuous and as capable of exercising the rights of citizens as are the demo cratic voters nor until there is more honesty and character exhibited by the leaders of that party they believe most earnestly that the legislation of such a party five-sixths of which consists of negroes managed and controlled by the leaders now at its head could not but be dangerous to the state and they have fears that such legislation would be reckless corrupt and ruinous to the interests of the people they have seen what radicalism did in the past and they will never trust it in the future hence it is the young men of north carolina will walk m their father's footstep and with all the energy earnestness and enthusi asm of their nature labor untiringly to prevent the disgrace which always threatens but which can never over whelm us as long as the brave and noble young manhood of north caro lina shall stand up in its invincible strength and do battle for the honor and safety and prosperity of the state senator blair's bill to promote the observance of the sabbath day washington may 21 — senator blair's bill introduced to-day to secure to the people the enjoyment of this first day of the week commonly called the lord's day as a day of rest and to provide its observance as a day of re ligious worship provides that no per son or corporation shall perform or authorize any secular work labor or business to the disturbance of others — work of necessity mercy and humani ty excepted — nor shall any person en gage in any play game amusement or recreation to the disturbance of others on the first day of the week in any place subject to the exclusive jurisdic tion of the unite^j states and it is made unlawful for any person or cor poration to receive pay for labor or ser vice rendered in violation of this pro vision mails shall not be transport ed in time of peace over any hind pos tal route nor shall matter be collected assorted handled or delivered during the first day of the week but it is pro vided that whenever any letter snail relate to a work of necessity or mercy or shall concern the health life or de cease of any person the fact sha'j be stated upon the face of the envelope the postmaster general shall provide for its transportation in package s sep arate from other mail matter and he shall make regulations for the delivery thereof the same having been received at its place of destination before the first day of the week during such limit ed portion of the day as shall best suit ' the public concern and least interfere with the clue observance of the lav as one of worship and rest and it is further provided that when there shall have been any interruption of the transmission of the mails it shall be lawful to so far examine them as is necessary to learn if there is mail to be lawfully delivered all military and naval drills and manoeuvres in time ' of peace and all unnecessary work in the army and navy are prohibited on sunday the transportation of per ' ishable food and other articles is per \ rait ted on sunday as a public neces ' sity we tell you plainly that simmon's liver regulator will rid you of dyspepsia headache con.-tipation and billiousncs it will break up chills am fever and prevent their return and in a • complete antidote for all malarial pouon — yet entirely free from quinine or cah mel try.it and*you will be astonished at the < rood results of the genuine simmon liver rc 3 ti!a • prepared '• j !! z-.iliu l i j a remaikable duel two mf.x at baldwin wfln y\a t afraid to face dkatk on the 12th day of june 1863 1 witnessed a duel between apt jones commanding a federal scout and capt fry commanding n confederate scout in ireen county east tennessee these two men had been fighting each other for six months with the fortunes of battle in favor of one and then the other their commands were camped on either side of lick creek a large and sluggish stream too deep to ford and to shallow for a ferry boat hut a bridge spanned the ' stream for the convenience of the traveling public each of them guarded this bridge that communication should go neither north nor south as the railroad track had been broken up months before after fighting each other several months and contesting the points as to which should hold the bridge they agreed to fight a duel the conqueror to hold the bridge undisputed for the time being jones gave the challenge and fry accepted the terms were that they should fight with navy pis tols at twenty yards apart deliberately walking toward each other and firing until the last chamber of their pistols were discharged unless 0110 or the other fell before all the discharges wore made they chose their secondh and agreed upon a confederate surgeon as he was the only one in either com mand to attend them in case of dan ger jones was certainly a fine looking fellow with light hair and blue eyes five feet ten inches in height looking every inch the military cheiftain ht was a man the soldiers would admire and ladies regarded with admiration i never saw a man more cool deter mined and heroic under such circum stances i have read of the deeds oi chivalry and knight errantly in the middle ages and brave men embalnv d in modern posey but when i saw jones come to the duelists scratch lighting not for real or supposed wrongs to himself but as he honestly thought fo his country and the glory of the flag i could not help admiring the man notwithstanding he fought for the freedom ot the negro which 1 was opposed to fry was a man full six feet high slender with long wavy curly hair jel black eyes wearing a slouched hat and gray suit and looking rather the dem on than the man ihere was nothing ferocious about him but he had that self-aufficien non-chalance that said 1 will kill you 1 without a doubt he was br.ive cool and collected aud although suffering from a terrible flesh wound 111 his left arm received a week before he manifested no symptoms of distress but seemed ready for the light the ground wa stepped off by the seconds pistols loaded and exchanged and the principals brought face to face i never shall forget that meet ing jones in his military boyish mood as they shook hands remarked that a soldier braves death for a fanciful wreath \\ hen in glory's romantic career fry caught up the rest of the sen tence and answered by sayincr : yet lie bends over the foe when in battle laid low nd bathes every wound with u tear they turned around and walked back to the point designated jones seco.'.d had the word jb ire 1 aud as he slowly said one two three fire i r they simultaneously turned at the word one and instantly fired nei ther was hurt they cocked their pis tols and deliberately walked toward each other firing as they went at the tiftn shot jones threw up u right hand and firing his pistol in the air sank down fry was in the act of tir ing his shot but seeing jones fall silently lowered his pistol dropj)ed 11 on the ground and sprang to jones side taking his head 111 his lap as he sat down and asked him if he was hurt 1 discovered that jones was shot through the region of the stomach the bullet glancing around the organ and coming out to the left 0 ti.p spinal column ; besides he had received three other frightful flesh wounds in tht-r portions of the body 1 dressed l'i wounds and gave him such stimulant as i had he afterwards got well fry received three wounds one breaking his right arm one in the left md the other in right side after months of suffering begot well and fought tlie war out to the bitter enu iind • to-day they are partner iu a wholesale grocery business and veri fying the sentiment of i3 ron ii it a ioldier braves death " etc trusting that the a.i>ove lruthi aurrative will be a lesson to so.«e pie north aud bosun that eitayed on the outside aud yelled seek clo^s !' iu are still not satisfied with t lie re sult of the war let fli • subscribe my self a reconstructed con federate su eos senator vance was a hotel clerk secretarv bayard was a clerk in n\'w york judge kel ley father of the house iv is a jeweller tom reed of miiin a .■• m tvr in v tu t an autograph mart i v»!ue at the mciuiurrt r • nurath>r at i hui.ui mrn and woman one of the new feds f the seasoa h the collection ot autograph l.-curs froa living men and women one any thi ( week i bi\i:idw:iv shopkeeper iiowod tue an .)<{,! collection ui.l u.ld me tb i prices that he hoped u pet for each j letter one fiv.m browning the poet j is marked $»..'.•». a humorou letter t president jartield sigu.-.l mark twain i held it j the great hunoriat sajs it seems to me t it 1 it i better !» j liave i jrn...l mao's fluttering ettiatau <>( my iiitlii.'ii vntl k.-fjj it th:iu to fool it away with trying to pet him an ofli.v a brief iiole signed by willie col lins the ii velnt i held a l.io another from sii charles kike the english statesman whose escapadea paused iu-n rv sensation a year r more ago l valued m 1 one from general john c fremont tin pathfinder and the first candidate ..[ i lie republican party for president u ticketed f2i aa autograph vn ■-.• and signature liv l>r oliver wendell holmes is f^sft i a short letter written by eloquent fcui ingersoll is not valued very uigw k may be purchased for t.'i iou one ■from the marquis «.[ loroo ex-gov . ernor-general of canada flmjt ho h.id , for 1 75 justin mccaxibj a auto , graph is valued m ihw mbm figure john raskin's « iuo.iv xl^l.iy j.ilml 1 it is held at 45a tlajtk itusseu ih 1 author v.f so man weird ui a ol the en has name 4 some pecuniar • moment it is narked f2.30 a s.^rap of paper stgne-d by general w t ; sherman will i ul for a letter . of spurgeon the famous english it [ vine in whieh he tnentiona the tory . press is bullying me very badly may be had for 1.2 a letter from charles algernon swinburne the poet apologizing for his illegible handwrit ing is rallied it ft one fiv.iu sir ; arthur sullivan of operatic fame iu.iv be had for 2 7 another from alma tadema i ho distinguished english ' artist is held at 1.7 a badly wiit ten note from edmund yau the kn ■glisl j 111-11:1 i 1 is quoted ii 1 •-'.'.. the signatnrt f alhani thn sweet iu ger may be had for 4.50 horatio alger jr the writer of boys 1 book is not so high priced his n.:iv u hatti for io cents lawrence barrett theae tor eaivjret 1 for his ( vn slgiiatiu •• ieorgc bancroft lio historian 1 james jillespit rjl.iiiie 1.2 benja min f butler .. > tti>t george william curtis 2 cents samuel sun set cox the witty niemberrftho house 50 rents james freemaa chirk tiio eminent boston tlivir>e $]; simon cameron the nestor f k.t -»:< i state politics 7 cents jeorgu w oiilds editor of the philadelphia ledger .» cent-j and ihc signature f bis old enemy < ha a dana editor of the new york s'iiii .<'. the same figure ruse eytingt the actress o cenu k«t i ~. . . .. . ,],,■m.-..1 ., r-u k wizard 50 i-t-iif : rmtl faithful the lnglish philanthropist an»l writer 1.^5 cyru w field 1 mary 1 uuliueji the novelist « r /<> e<*nts < \ j'r i.|.i,t haves 50 cents joel chaudl • harri uncle remus ■<" eents jamea russell low 11 1 i modjeaka the actress ."." cents l..\il morten ex-miniater to franw only 25 cent loufcc chandler moulton the boston writer 7 cent bill nye " rents edward e riee the tlieatrien manager 25 cents and stuart robson the comedian >■> • fin a poem l>y s pdman f»i 1 si^n.-i turc l.y carl schnra jo cents onr l.y john sherman ,:> contu richard a proctor ili astronomer 1.25 and zola the french novelist 6.50 three signatures by people of the stage may bo had for 50 cents they are fanny davenport mary auder«on and wil son barrett senator evarts roscoe conkling ex-senator mnlione senator chandler fretl douglass speaker car lilse steve horsey samuel j randall and senator y»t fi>r 1 ccnt each the nio-t im-:i signature i : 1 1 n r of ouida «■+)•■novelist f7.0 '. and the cheapest boston'ri only mike krllv th ball tosser 10 nt v }'. dr l hit qiqi democrat an accommodating cliniate pretty c«»m <■'!! yt mir way winters isn'i it m r nn twenty lielow and all that sorl of thi why yes 1 iiii t'i minneapolis man it is kiml ri cold imt ih<-u th fact i tli cold sorl ->' trik right i'i and lakes hold and stays here und yon r alh :::■n ! v mscious f it lill i h^^iii '■> :';.'.■i»ul nf your system in thr i'liii and then ihe weatlum * ivai'ul url j'ti : ■m vaul it 1 - /' . the col •!■•■(! sehool tt hawkinaville ii.u !■> l known as the deiupsey clarke institute waa named after deinpser clark who yean ago j sold a a slave on iho block by llm sheriff at ha>vkinsvillc lie ran away from hi nmv mr t.,.,v f ti.o swamps and ft<i \ . i ■... t»i aa a ruua way slave ii ••...» p.t length aptored by ii g but ngnin : .:: t.-.y e * owner sold him vviii yet i ho v.-oojt dempsey ■•:■■> pleased with h'3 new er and bc-cawo li3 mo?t tmsty servant aftei he war he oecf.rao a landownet prospered amlisnowom f i most romineut planton of houston county md his liberal gifti have n suited in the new sckool a rubber ball two inches aiallet than thi pipe was placed in one end of a new natural gas in tin in mc'k i 9port and tivo pounds preanura roddnty tnrn'.-d on j h-j hall turntil 5erernl sharp corners passt'l thrt.ngb two t joints up x feet t the top of the royv lator and lauded a the othei en-l a the m up 1 mile distant in fofty-$m •■• 1 . • i ! !..::.
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1888-05-31 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 31 |
Year | 1888 |
Volume | 19 |
Issue | 32 |
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. J. Bruner and T. K. Bruner] |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | [J. J. Bruner and T. K. Bruner] |
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, May 31, 1888 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 | 601555884 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1888-05-31 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 31 |
Year | 1888 |
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 5303189 Bytes |
FileName | sacw16_18880531-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:24:03 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 ul xix.-third series salisbury n c thursday may 31 1888 no 32 l ii clement i craige & clement l)p james r campbell physician and surgeon sen-ices to the people of l i vicinity ■.-■• ■. m cole's iron front building :: a fisher streets it b councill m d ill jsrtlifiho-i-xr-y tst.c sessional services y the 1 surrounding communi ■promptly attended day i .. ' uun d at my office orthe drug 11 enniss respectfully i ~ 1 b council m 1 „ the heilig building 2nd s:gi new fiffl ;, ;■-;.,..,,, 1 have entevi d into a for the purpose of conduct likoceky and produce os business to hate from - - consignment especially jii nl.l.l.v & tyson ;,, | r,,ed takes this opportunity iis numerous friends ttronage and ask the con sc^'etothexewfirm tvsj i hand to serv lie of the xe>v firm j [). mrxeely n j rlijlnil3 is now receiving his fall and winter stock of goods direct from ike ftiiio fflartets ■groceries hood ki i1 in i p n . . ui priced to suit the call and examine m stock 1 bob white and crystal roller mill flour of the best quality . . ruin \ umk foil , ■■■iven me ■mi their cot llf \\. 1 holmes 1 milk milk lj k3esi1 mmencing abou ■.■. ish to engage . ui the home ofpatrons i art kor coin enience tick may wisli ti p w brown . . . i8s8 1 in i constipation is called ilio father of diseases,"be cause tlipro is no medium through which disease bo often attacks the system sis by the absorption ol poisonous gases in uie retention or decayed and effete matter in tin stomach and bowels it is itiim-d ty a torpid liver not enough bile be lag excreted from the blood to produce nuiuri-'s own cathartic and la generally accompanied with mich results as loss of appetite sick headache bad breath etc | t8fc treatment of constipation does not consist merely in unloadingthe bowels tin medicine must not onlyactasn purga tive but beatonicas well and not produce after its use greater costiveness tosecure i regular hni.it of body without rhaugiug the diet or disorganizing the system fetn my attention after suffering with con^tlpn t n i rtw i orthree years wascallcd to simmons i r regulator and having tried almost cvery n luded to try it i fir»t took a n ! afterwards reduced tlie dose to a pi r direction ftcr each meal i found thai it had done mesomuch good th:it i til i took two bottles sincetheni havenotex rienced any difficulty ikeepitin myhou ■• and would not be without it but have no use f.r it.it having cured me gko w 1-jv , ass't clerk superior court liibb co ga take only the genuine vlii ii has on the wrapper the reil !^% trade maik and signature of j h zeilin & co d r.julian co dealers in general merchandise salisbury x c i come and see the show t dave julian's new store i ['■has a full ami comph te line of entirely wmw grgobg which he is offering ciieapki than ever he i > ii fisher street near the stand pipe ; ■iv here his rents and other expenses are ",, low that he is selling one dollar's worth | of good's lor 90 ets l-ir lit lias the best i and cheapest line of fertilizers in the i count v and decidedly the best line of provisions in he market l!c sure to sec him before von iniy j3s^~iie wants to buy all the he can lit april 10 88 2(j:3m c8eam bm ipia cleanses the l^asalw c ur[s cou}l pas allay cb^sffg^adj pain andlnflamma-tof feverj jj l :: zz 3rcshf qs?fb ths senses of ta:::b b^v^ferb and smell ijp^^tj tkytiikcrkk.h^r-fever catarrh is a disease of the mucous membrane generally originating in the nasal pas sage and maintaining its stronghold in the head from this point it sends forth a poisonous virus into the stomach and thraugh the digestive organs corrupting ihe blood and producing other trouble some and dangerous symptoms \ particle is applicl into each nostril and is igreeuble price so cents at druggists by mail registered 60ccuts ely bros ■..;:, greenwich street . new york i3:ly home company a 4 ' strong company sefkifg <&&$:& j wk d '■nws^m prompt home patronage m'^mmm reliable liberal . ' j ." 7 j rhodes browne agents 40fr:z ztsz>z z * ' june there through the long long summer hours the golden light should lie and thick young herb3 and groups f bowers stand in their beauty by th oriole should build and f-11 his love-tale close beside inv cell ; the idle butterfly should re.-t him there and there be heard the h;)u.-e wife-bee and humming bir 1 and what if cheerful shouts it noon ( ome from the village sent or songs of maids beneath the moon with fairy laughter blent and what it in the evening light betrothed lovers walk in sight of my low monument i would the lovely scene around mi^'lit know no sadder ight nor sound i knew — i know i should not eo the season's glorious how nor would its brightness shine for me nor its wild music flow : but if around my place of sleep the friends 1 love should come to weep they might not ha?te to go soft airs and song and light and gloom : should k<-,-j them lingering b my tomb these to their softened heart should bear the thought of what has been and speak of one who cannot share the gladness of the scene who part in all the pomp that tills the circuit of the summer hills is — that his grave is green ; and deeply would their hear rejoice to hear again his living-roii •. bryant senator vance his reviewed the tariff question in his letters to the baltimore s«/i more thor oughly we believe than any one who has yet made it a study he has inves tigated it in all its various bearings and his arguments have been clear and undeniable he has rendered i most valuable service to the consumers of manufactured products who are made through the operations of the tariff the burden bearers of the government will they see it will they look at it with the personal interest its impor tance demands ? wo subjoin the closing paragraphs of the senator's tenth letter and ask for them the perusal of all who read this paper who is injured by proteetiou to this question it may l>e answered every one who is not benefited protection can only benefit anybody as has been shown by increasing the prices of those things which they have to sell now if it increased likewise the price oi that which they had to buy the one would set off the other and there would be no benefit at all surely this is self evident to make protection a benefit to somebody therefore it must inlhe ne cessity of things either increase the price of their products leaving the price oi their purchases the same or it must maintain the price of their sales and lower that of their purchases if it does neither it does nothing it it does cither it injures somebody kvery man there fore in the united stales is injured who having by protection the cost raised oj all which he has to buy does not also by the same law have the price of all that in has to sell increased to the same ex tent first and foremost then it injur es all who only consume and do not pro duce as they have nothing to sell but all their transactions are purchase it is impossible to compensate them for their losses by the increase in prices this large class includes the professions mer chants all person's engaged in transpor tation personal and government service women orphan children and all who live on fixed incomes and the like per haps however their injury is not so great as that done to the fanners and planters for though the expenditure of the first named is increased by protection their incomes are not necessarily diminished but with the farmer both are douo the price of his purchases is increased and being compelled to sell his surplus pro ducts in the markets of nations who can not exchange with us on equal terms the prices are necessarily lowered and his income is thereby lessened he is wasting at both the spigot and the spile there is no proposition more obviously just than that when the farmer is forced to send for sale his wheat l.is meat and his cotton to europe when the price is fixed for him by the competition of the world he should be permit-to d to buy his supplies of wool and iron and the like in the self-same markets at prices regulated by the same competition ' i have seen it stated by reputable au thority that in many portions of india recently opened up by railroads wheat is profitably grown at a cost of live shill ings per quarter of eight bushels in competition wkh this pauper grown wheat our western farmers have to sell their wheat produced at a cost at least three timesa great british capital was put into tin se railroads and these cheap wheat lands ol india were d veloped be cause england could not get her bread from our prairies in exchange for her manufactured goods the tariff wail for bidding she would gladly iiave fed her people from the riches of our plains if she could but all foreign commerce is ex change and proteetiou forbids exchange the story of cotton is the same the plant m11 tih liverpool in competi tion with that grown in ail irt of the earth at the lowest figure for which human labor can be induced to grow it but he is not permitted to buy even the jute bagging and the iron ties which en velope it in the same market cheapened in tne same way the price of those thing is fixed by having tariff duties to snit the american manufacturer so it is with nearly everything produced by those who till the earth and create food or the material of raiment they are caade the patient victim of tariff ia - tion whose toil goes to enrich the few who control onr legislature in order to keep them in quiet submission the keeuost intollect of the land is employed and paid for with the farmers own money they are plied with a thousand false arguments and exploded theories their national pride is appealed to and n-.ear preju hc«3 are excited against for eicrn nations dimply bejansc they have ■■• -•'•' ; ' ■•-' l a*i??r : - applied to every laborer upon earth ex cept those employed in our protected country and british gold 1 is said by the slave-traders to bribe every man who refuses to help them steal revenue tariff men are called free-traders so bold has become robbery that honesty has thus become a reproach and political partisan hostility is freely and success fully invoked in this way these iniqui ties have been enacted and maintained until the task of removing them has become a revolution which it will require a generation of agitation to accomplish but it will be done to doubt it is to question the strength of justice and im pugn our civilization even the last appeal that against the disturbing vest ed interests which it soeffectually made will lose its power to stay the hand of reform for men will come to agree with bastiat that because wrong has been permitted to exist for a moment is no reason why it should endure to eter nity nor does the fact that wrong is profitable to its perpetrators give it any furl her or stronger sanction to immortal ity truth and justice are entitled to live foreyer the most feasible hope of this refor mation appears to me to lie in the west and south these sections of our coun try are natural allies who are only kept from co-operation by lingering war mem ories and the partisan political feeling which eastern protectionist republicans ho artfully invite the chief interest of each is agricult ural and their productions supplement each other their pursuits engender the same ideas and suggest the same conser vative policy if once the inconsiderable barriers which separate them could be broken down and unity of action secur ed their power would be sufficient to re form the evils of tariff legislation with ease and ceitainty in fact their might would only need to be seen it would scarcely be required to be exercised t is not a pleasant sounding thing to advise the combination of sections or classes against other sections or classes of a common country but as they are al ready formed for aggression it becomes not only excu-able but a positive duty to form them for defense the manufacturers are few in number they are persons ofgreat intelligence and energy and they are grouped together in the great business centres of the coun try with them therefore concert of action is easily effected and interets naturally prompts to these combination to regulate prices * smother competition and influence legislation those who are to be fleeced on the contrary are many in number they embrace all the poor and the ignorant are widely seat ered far and near throughout the broad land and with communication rare and most imperfect with them combina tion and unanimity faction is next thing to the impossible it is the case of a small but compactly and organized army destroying a great unarmed unorganiz ed moo the only possible way in which these incoherent victims of unjust and unequal taxation can make their united might felt in the legislation of their country is to align them on principle by indoctrinating them with the true theory of taxation such as is befitting a country that professes to be free and by disseminating those immutable principl es of political economy which have been established by the experience of man kind and which are as much god'.s laws as the law of gravitation for they are true and all truth is his an able man has said that our motto in this great fight should be sit lux let us give the people light indeed and especially the toiling masses of the great west and south who are furthest removed from those influences which obscure the light and good results will be seen let no man tire of talking tariff let nomaji weary of urging the vital necessity of re form in taxation on his neighbor until this last vestige of slavery shall be abol ished and the commerce of the great republic shall be free as the necessities of the government will permit and its laws look to no other interest under heaven save oulv that of the public z b vance the young democracy the state chronicle pays a high tribute to the young dtmuocracy of north carolina in these words while the chronicle would not unden ate iu any degree the long and effective service which was rendered by the older democracy in the trying years after the war when they so glori ou ly re leerued the state from radical rule nor during recent years when they have so steadfastly held the vic tory then gained we desire to pay a just tribute to the young democrats of north carolina who always throw them selves into the contest with an enthu siasm born of devotion to the princi ples of tin democratic party they love the party and its glorious history and burn with indignation when they recall the wrongs which were heaped upon us by the republican party in the day of its triumph they remember that when the peo ple of the south and particularly of our own state humiliated by defeat with poverty ami desolation staring them in the face and when we were bravely setting ourselves to work to !, iim iip our waste places and start again upon the race of life ami when ve were in need of sympathy and help this radical party instead of aiding in that vrork stole the hard earned taxes l.'viol upon a poverty stricken people and set its iron heel of oppression on oar bre.ist they eaa never forget the days of terror when no woman in the east wu safe from the hand of the ruffian negroes who prowled through the country and unrestrained by fear of punishment perpetrated outrages vliich male civilization pale and fear destnu-tiun was at hand they cannot forget that the h idical officials let srime run riot and encouraged and protected the violators of law while nr best and truest citizens were hunted r»y armed men and cast into dr.n^eoufi with th basest crimin ils and when rhc hf«rhe t court ui the lane a t ( at defiance by a brutal soldier upheld by 1 republican governor and com pelled to confess itself powerless to protect the citizens they cannot forget that era of de bauchery and theft when legislation was bought and sold and when made rich by illgotten gain the radical crew fared sumptuously and rioted extrava gantly at the expense of our stricken hind the young nitn of north carolina do not desire office they seldom ask a nomination but with an earnest ness born of intense conviction they fight radicalism and advocate the con tinuance of democratic supremacy as the only hope of preserving the good name of their state and the happiness of its people they feel in their in most hearts with the keenest encum brance of evils long ago inflicted but the memory of which can never d!e that the greatest disgrace which could come upon them would be the return of radical supremacy and its insepara ble concomitant of negro rule not that they entertain enmity to the ne gro as such but the experience of the past has taught that when ignorance rules the people mourn and that a party made up of negroes with now and then a white leader who uses them as he will to promote his own unscrupulous and ambitious schemes can never be successful but at the sac rifice of the best interests of the com munity the young white men of north carolina and one can seldom be found who is not a democrat cannot now nor can they ever consent that the republican party shall return to power until the rank and file of that party shall become as intelligent as virtuous and as capable of exercising the rights of citizens as are the demo cratic voters nor until there is more honesty and character exhibited by the leaders of that party they believe most earnestly that the legislation of such a party five-sixths of which consists of negroes managed and controlled by the leaders now at its head could not but be dangerous to the state and they have fears that such legislation would be reckless corrupt and ruinous to the interests of the people they have seen what radicalism did in the past and they will never trust it in the future hence it is the young men of north carolina will walk m their father's footstep and with all the energy earnestness and enthusi asm of their nature labor untiringly to prevent the disgrace which always threatens but which can never over whelm us as long as the brave and noble young manhood of north caro lina shall stand up in its invincible strength and do battle for the honor and safety and prosperity of the state senator blair's bill to promote the observance of the sabbath day washington may 21 — senator blair's bill introduced to-day to secure to the people the enjoyment of this first day of the week commonly called the lord's day as a day of rest and to provide its observance as a day of re ligious worship provides that no per son or corporation shall perform or authorize any secular work labor or business to the disturbance of others — work of necessity mercy and humani ty excepted — nor shall any person en gage in any play game amusement or recreation to the disturbance of others on the first day of the week in any place subject to the exclusive jurisdic tion of the unite^j states and it is made unlawful for any person or cor poration to receive pay for labor or ser vice rendered in violation of this pro vision mails shall not be transport ed in time of peace over any hind pos tal route nor shall matter be collected assorted handled or delivered during the first day of the week but it is pro vided that whenever any letter snail relate to a work of necessity or mercy or shall concern the health life or de cease of any person the fact sha'j be stated upon the face of the envelope the postmaster general shall provide for its transportation in package s sep arate from other mail matter and he shall make regulations for the delivery thereof the same having been received at its place of destination before the first day of the week during such limit ed portion of the day as shall best suit ' the public concern and least interfere with the clue observance of the lav as one of worship and rest and it is further provided that when there shall have been any interruption of the transmission of the mails it shall be lawful to so far examine them as is necessary to learn if there is mail to be lawfully delivered all military and naval drills and manoeuvres in time ' of peace and all unnecessary work in the army and navy are prohibited on sunday the transportation of per ' ishable food and other articles is per \ rait ted on sunday as a public neces ' sity we tell you plainly that simmon's liver regulator will rid you of dyspepsia headache con.-tipation and billiousncs it will break up chills am fever and prevent their return and in a • complete antidote for all malarial pouon — yet entirely free from quinine or cah mel try.it and*you will be astonished at the < rood results of the genuine simmon liver rc 3 ti!a • prepared '• j !! z-.iliu l i j a remaikable duel two mf.x at baldwin wfln y\a t afraid to face dkatk on the 12th day of june 1863 1 witnessed a duel between apt jones commanding a federal scout and capt fry commanding n confederate scout in ireen county east tennessee these two men had been fighting each other for six months with the fortunes of battle in favor of one and then the other their commands were camped on either side of lick creek a large and sluggish stream too deep to ford and to shallow for a ferry boat hut a bridge spanned the ' stream for the convenience of the traveling public each of them guarded this bridge that communication should go neither north nor south as the railroad track had been broken up months before after fighting each other several months and contesting the points as to which should hold the bridge they agreed to fight a duel the conqueror to hold the bridge undisputed for the time being jones gave the challenge and fry accepted the terms were that they should fight with navy pis tols at twenty yards apart deliberately walking toward each other and firing until the last chamber of their pistols were discharged unless 0110 or the other fell before all the discharges wore made they chose their secondh and agreed upon a confederate surgeon as he was the only one in either com mand to attend them in case of dan ger jones was certainly a fine looking fellow with light hair and blue eyes five feet ten inches in height looking every inch the military cheiftain ht was a man the soldiers would admire and ladies regarded with admiration i never saw a man more cool deter mined and heroic under such circum stances i have read of the deeds oi chivalry and knight errantly in the middle ages and brave men embalnv d in modern posey but when i saw jones come to the duelists scratch lighting not for real or supposed wrongs to himself but as he honestly thought fo his country and the glory of the flag i could not help admiring the man notwithstanding he fought for the freedom ot the negro which 1 was opposed to fry was a man full six feet high slender with long wavy curly hair jel black eyes wearing a slouched hat and gray suit and looking rather the dem on than the man ihere was nothing ferocious about him but he had that self-aufficien non-chalance that said 1 will kill you 1 without a doubt he was br.ive cool and collected aud although suffering from a terrible flesh wound 111 his left arm received a week before he manifested no symptoms of distress but seemed ready for the light the ground wa stepped off by the seconds pistols loaded and exchanged and the principals brought face to face i never shall forget that meet ing jones in his military boyish mood as they shook hands remarked that a soldier braves death for a fanciful wreath \\ hen in glory's romantic career fry caught up the rest of the sen tence and answered by sayincr : yet lie bends over the foe when in battle laid low nd bathes every wound with u tear they turned around and walked back to the point designated jones seco.'.d had the word jb ire 1 aud as he slowly said one two three fire i r they simultaneously turned at the word one and instantly fired nei ther was hurt they cocked their pis tols and deliberately walked toward each other firing as they went at the tiftn shot jones threw up u right hand and firing his pistol in the air sank down fry was in the act of tir ing his shot but seeing jones fall silently lowered his pistol dropj)ed 11 on the ground and sprang to jones side taking his head 111 his lap as he sat down and asked him if he was hurt 1 discovered that jones was shot through the region of the stomach the bullet glancing around the organ and coming out to the left 0 ti.p spinal column ; besides he had received three other frightful flesh wounds in tht-r portions of the body 1 dressed l'i wounds and gave him such stimulant as i had he afterwards got well fry received three wounds one breaking his right arm one in the left md the other in right side after months of suffering begot well and fought tlie war out to the bitter enu iind • to-day they are partner iu a wholesale grocery business and veri fying the sentiment of i3 ron ii it a ioldier braves death " etc trusting that the a.i>ove lruthi aurrative will be a lesson to so.«e pie north aud bosun that eitayed on the outside aud yelled seek clo^s !' iu are still not satisfied with t lie re sult of the war let fli • subscribe my self a reconstructed con federate su eos senator vance was a hotel clerk secretarv bayard was a clerk in n\'w york judge kel ley father of the house iv is a jeweller tom reed of miiin a .■• m tvr in v tu t an autograph mart i v»!ue at the mciuiurrt r • nurath>r at i hui.ui mrn and woman one of the new feds f the seasoa h the collection ot autograph l.-curs froa living men and women one any thi ( week i bi\i:idw:iv shopkeeper iiowod tue an .)<{,! collection ui.l u.ld me tb i prices that he hoped u pet for each j letter one fiv.m browning the poet j is marked $»..'.•». a humorou letter t president jartield sigu.-.l mark twain i held it j the great hunoriat sajs it seems to me t it 1 it i better !» j liave i jrn...l mao's fluttering ettiatau <>( my iiitlii.'ii vntl k.-fjj it th:iu to fool it away with trying to pet him an ofli.v a brief iiole signed by willie col lins the ii velnt i held a l.io another from sii charles kike the english statesman whose escapadea paused iu-n rv sensation a year r more ago l valued m 1 one from general john c fremont tin pathfinder and the first candidate ..[ i lie republican party for president u ticketed f2i aa autograph vn ■-.• and signature liv l>r oliver wendell holmes is f^sft i a short letter written by eloquent fcui ingersoll is not valued very uigw k may be purchased for t.'i iou one ■from the marquis «.[ loroo ex-gov . ernor-general of canada flmjt ho h.id , for 1 75 justin mccaxibj a auto , graph is valued m ihw mbm figure john raskin's « iuo.iv xl^l.iy j.ilml 1 it is held at 45a tlajtk itusseu ih 1 author v.f so man weird ui a ol the en has name 4 some pecuniar • moment it is narked f2.30 a s.^rap of paper stgne-d by general w t ; sherman will i ul for a letter . of spurgeon the famous english it [ vine in whieh he tnentiona the tory . press is bullying me very badly may be had for 1.2 a letter from charles algernon swinburne the poet apologizing for his illegible handwrit ing is rallied it ft one fiv.iu sir ; arthur sullivan of operatic fame iu.iv be had for 2 7 another from alma tadema i ho distinguished english ' artist is held at 1.7 a badly wiit ten note from edmund yau the kn ■glisl j 111-11:1 i 1 is quoted ii 1 •-'.'.. the signatnrt f alhani thn sweet iu ger may be had for 4.50 horatio alger jr the writer of boys 1 book is not so high priced his n.:iv u hatti for io cents lawrence barrett theae tor eaivjret 1 for his ( vn slgiiatiu •• ieorgc bancroft lio historian 1 james jillespit rjl.iiiie 1.2 benja min f butler .. > tti>t george william curtis 2 cents samuel sun set cox the witty niemberrftho house 50 rents james freemaa chirk tiio eminent boston tlivir>e $]; simon cameron the nestor f k.t -»:< i state politics 7 cents jeorgu w oiilds editor of the philadelphia ledger .» cent-j and ihc signature f bis old enemy < ha a dana editor of the new york s'iiii .<'. the same figure ruse eytingt the actress o cenu k«t i ~. . . .. . ,],,■m.-..1 ., r-u k wizard 50 i-t-iif : rmtl faithful the lnglish philanthropist an»l writer 1.^5 cyru w field 1 mary 1 uuliueji the novelist « r /<> e<*nts < \ j'r i.|.i,t haves 50 cents joel chaudl • harri uncle remus ■<" eents jamea russell low 11 1 i modjeaka the actress ."." cents l..\il morten ex-miniater to franw only 25 cent loufcc chandler moulton the boston writer 7 cent bill nye " rents edward e riee the tlieatrien manager 25 cents and stuart robson the comedian >■> • fin a poem l>y s pdman f»i 1 si^n.-i turc l.y carl schnra jo cents onr l.y john sherman ,:> contu richard a proctor ili astronomer 1.25 and zola the french novelist 6.50 three signatures by people of the stage may bo had for 50 cents they are fanny davenport mary auder«on and wil son barrett senator evarts roscoe conkling ex-senator mnlione senator chandler fretl douglass speaker car lilse steve horsey samuel j randall and senator y»t fi>r 1 ccnt each the nio-t im-:i signature i : 1 1 n r of ouida «■+)•■novelist f7.0 '. and the cheapest boston'ri only mike krllv th ball tosser 10 nt v }'. dr l hit qiqi democrat an accommodating cliniate pretty c«»m <■'!! yt mir way winters isn'i it m r nn twenty lielow and all that sorl of thi why yes 1 iiii t'i minneapolis man it is kiml ri cold imt ih<-u th fact i tli cold sorl ->' trik right i'i and lakes hold and stays here und yon r alh :::■n ! v mscious f it lill i h^^iii '■> :';.'.■i»ul nf your system in thr i'liii and then ihe weatlum * ivai'ul url j'ti : ■m vaul it 1 - /' . the col •!■•■(! sehool tt hawkinaville ii.u !■> l known as the deiupsey clarke institute waa named after deinpser clark who yean ago j sold a a slave on iho block by llm sheriff at ha>vkinsvillc lie ran away from hi nmv mr t.,.,v f ti.o swamps and ft pleased with h'3 new er and bc-cawo li3 mo?t tmsty servant aftei he war he oecf.rao a landownet prospered amlisnowom f i most romineut planton of houston county md his liberal gifti have n suited in the new sckool a rubber ball two inches aiallet than thi pipe was placed in one end of a new natural gas in tin in mc'k i 9port and tivo pounds preanura roddnty tnrn'.-d on j h-j hall turntil 5erernl sharp corners passt'l thrt.ngb two t joints up x feet t the top of the royv lator and lauded a the othei en-l a the m up 1 mile distant in fofty-$m •■• 1 . • i ! !..::. |