If 1 I 1 ne Carolina Watchman. r POL XIV. THIRD SERIES . J . t a.i;i- -xnM ttir. ...a;,! ; . ;a ... J! " ' k ' . . - a t- mi t, SAUSBUEY. H. C MAY 24, 1883 - NO 32 The Carolina Watchman, i ggTVBLlSHEDpi THE sEAK18K2. PRICE, $l.fO IN ADVANCE. For Dyspepsia, Coatlreneii, Sick Headache, Chronic Liar rhcMt, Jaundice, Impurity of the i-io(l, FeTer and Arp.c, Malaria, and all Disease cntiMMl ly De- nn9,-meat of iier, Bowels and Kidneys. SYMPTOMS Of! A DTST5ASKO T.IVfcrt. Bad Breath; Fa In the SWe, sometimes the n-in is felt under th ShouWer-blade, mistaken for thcumati'sm ; Bene4l los of appctSe; Bowels eora!ly Costive, s Sinetimes alternating with lax; the head is trouUot'wilh pain, Utlull and heavy, considerale USss of memory, accompanied with a painful sensati n of leaving undone something which ought to have3ecn done: a slight, dry cough and flushed face is Joiaciia.cs an aticudaat, oftea uken lor cotiuipiion; me y.uicui uwiaun rinr! BCMItr :ry ; nervous, e.isily startled; feel cold or uurn;nt$rsometimes a prickly sensation of the skin exists; iMias. are low and despondent, and, although satislfcll fTiatTsercrse would be bene ficial, yet one can Jifircily summon up fortitude to try it in fact, dlsSusU every remedy. Several of the above.syrnpti attend the disease, but cases have occurred wbcaij but f:w of them existed, yet elimination after ijath has shown the. Liver to hiivc been extcftsiviy deranged. It should be usaii hy all prrsnns, old and young, wtM-impor any ,f tin uU. ve : i! yjom -i appear. Pers ies Tresjjjhng in TJn- araltl y .o-tt$', by tal.is. ; a .4- o. rasion aliy to I ! the lJwr : l.-al l.y : c.i -n; will ....id all Malaria, i::lfcjustl.rk, I iirrm -.s, luu sea, lr"si"eSj Ifeprts-ii" i f S;ira, m. It will iuv i-.iau. kkE:4.' ot iuc, but i iit ttAlepling 'fiff:iK-. tt If Yon haye-itf'i nnvlhliig hard ot digestion, or feel iheavy after meals, or sleep less at night, uke a dose and you will be relieved. Time and Honors' Bill, will be saved by always k-pi nj; the Regulator In tin- linage f For, whatever M -ailment may' be, a thoroughly safe puru-itivi-, all-r:i:iv- ami tonic can never Ik i ut of j, sf. The remedy is hamilrse and dors not if teriVre with buinea or pleasure. IT IS PFtjFXV VKfimm.l!, And ha- all the yi:v t untl f . y of Calomel or (Quinine, wtCbout sy of n- injurious aUer cScts. A f.otrfitior'it Testimony. Simmofis l.iver ; gulatnr has keen in use in my fcauly fur v.rne imf, ;uii I am satisfied it is a akuMe 'J!iti"frjlj Hit- medic.;! stleiv.e. J OI.L M iiioi: fr-.K, (governor of Ala. lion. AlexaSaer H. Stej liens, rf (la.. i-l liens, tat Irosn says: Have dcmu srme Deaeat lni the use ot ihmnions l.iver Efgulator, and wish to give it a further trial. "The onl Keliewe."- f alfe used many remniies for Uys- ly TJiIne: that never falls to ptpsia, ia, l. ver Affts- lion and ebiiity, but never Simmons liver Regulator has. 1 m-bi from Min-r- ta to Oorgij fi.i it . and would scisd fuftber for such a medicine, Hd would advise all ho are sim ilarly afltcted tove it a trial as it seems the only tiling ttial never aals to relieve. I' M Janney, Minneapolis, Minn. Dr. T. TV: llitson says: From actual ex perience in the itfrfjof Simmons I jver Regulator in ay practice I l.ayk- been and am satisfied to use sod prescribe it 43 purgative medicine. f"Talte ony the Genuine, which always has on the Wrapper the red Z Trade-Mark and Signature jqy sf. if . ZKILIN CO. FOR SALBIbV ALL DRUGGISTS. Iu ivc tMiii.i any amir to beniit are to the t ut HAVINQr PURCHASED OCK on WM. ISMITHDEAL, AS WELjj jKs THE INTEREST OP E. E Crkwford, of the firm of R. R. CRAWFORD ft CO., H llojiv are prepared' to supply our cnsttmiers f i i all kinds of URAL IMPLEMENTS, i )n addition to the ltttli Selected Stock of t ll H A t BD WARE in the S T A T E. I Wt-'alsojliandle ', J; ? Rifle and4Blasting Powder FUSE ii i and a full line ot Mining Supplies. i We will Duplicsi e Any rices m -am aaaaas. i Lilt? OUtMy. CALL AKI) SEE US. . f buckIervpaylor 1 ll . ' il THE sir II g-i0:1y '' i S7T7 a- OUMIg AWBT. . I? . . I : . . a mn Hi U . I Th sweetest flowers fade wr . lieanty blooms, bat mast decay : - Bright, indeed, is tlie dawning day, Even it) too, fades away. ft? Fading awatjbejwsji enes die, ? Severing tUe seppiess eSKIiJy.He' The power of man mast give way To fate's decree and fa.ie away. fSttt Spring time cemes, and Ufe's begun. And summer fotlowe wits its sun ; Tbe fall is o'er comes winter's flay With sad defeat all fades away. There is a gift that will not fatie, 'Mid day or night or endless shade, The glorious life that God'ffoljf cive In an eternity to'lNR ' -r s 1 - a A Poetic Widoi '.ma , TT , tt . , made a mash," to use the language ........ VJ ,,mu, i of the worldly. He incidentally be came acquainted with the Widow Mc Wjnzie at a church social last fall. She has now come to the conclusion that he is her natui ala trinity and w ants him for her fourth lnubaiut. Iler strong suit is poetry, or, as she ex presses it, "human (esthetic rhyme; the sweet responsive echo of' soul to soul." 'Dear Mr. Spykerw sighed the wi dow tbe other evening, puckering her mouth down to the size of a shirt button-hole, 'you have lived and lov ed. The mellifluous profundity of your sympathetic soul has always required that you should 'Ah, yes, Mrs. McWinzie, you bet, I ' 'Call me Hitty, dear ; my name is Mchi table, and those most endeared to me always call me Hitty.' -'All right ; Hitty, goes.' 'Well, as I was about remarking, my nature was aboriginally, poetic; away up among t he embarrassed clouds of Heaven's sublimated artillery. My first husband was a deaisgeniul spirit, uttu net! teJlfp'" ripmbut njpj ing could rhyme with his name. It was Tulkington. I used to weave it into poetic verse by abbreviating it to Tul ky, but even then it never would make a smooth rhyme with any other word. Two short years he loved and lan guished, and then sank to eternal rest as softly as though the springs of his couch had been the Springs of Par nassus.' 'Beautiful ! beautiful !' exclaimed Spykens, 'what a rattling good obitu ary you mtitet have written for him?' 'Ah, me,' sighed the.widow, 'I tried over a year to write seven verses suit able, and perhaps might Have sue ceeded had I not been wooed and won by Jason Babcock. My new married life was bright and hopeful until I tried to merge into poesy. The cul mination came when I composed twenty-seven verses, each one rhym ing his name, the best of which were mason, basin, lace-on. lhen heclos ed the doors of his heart, took his overcoat and valise, and bade me fare well forever. I never saw or heard of him more.' 'What a miserable, narrow-guage, unappi K reciative wretch he must have The widow gave a responsive roll of her dark gray eyes toward the sym pathetic Spykens, and she continued : 'Yes. the rythmatic music ot poetry did not abound, in his. worldly soul, and my own longing heart almost perished before I procured a divorce on the ground of desertion. Then 1 married, my old friend and school mate, Timothy McWinzie. He had a soul full of sympathy, and when he realized how my poetic soul was crush ed by the very idea of making rhymes of his name, or any part of it, he earn estly, yet rashly, attempted it himself. For days and weeks, he wrote, and went about the house muttering to himself binzle, crinzte, dinzle, finale, giuzle, hinzle, and his last words as he died in the insane asylum, were minzle, pinzle, stinzle, zinzle.' 'How dramatically sad, moaned Spykens, as he reflected upon the rhyming possibilities an4 calamities of his own name. Did von ever read Thaddeus off Washoe?' asked she, beaming her lov ing eyes, full of literary intelligence, full upon him as she gently laid her hand on his coat sleeve. Spy kens owned up that he hadn't, and tore himsell away from her sweet presence, pleading pressing business engagements. The widow had mon ey in bank, and a whole pile of stocks, and is looked u Don as a desirable matrimonial investment, but when Snvkens reflects, musingly, upon the sad fate of those three hustands, two killed and one driven away by her infernal noetry. assisted materially, no doubt, bv her large, cold, clammy feet, he concludes to remain single. . , . . . . Virginia Nev.) Enterprise. - Bdtler's Advice to the Ne groes. Xhe Vicksburg Herald of May 27th, publishes a letter from Governor Bottler, of Massachusetts, to a prominent colored politician ad vising negro voters to ignore party t linns nml simiioit lust and tried men for office, A Costly Night iu the City Experience of a Young in He 'akes in the Town, and Finds Him' -lt Lying m a Field, with Empty Pockets and a Bloody HeadRob a. i " ww i w -v -m - i doT$i5o. 1 Just as daylight was breaking on. Koo4,. attracted 4hither b; the city yesterday' ri'iornihg, Ponre- curiosity,. He jtqQd at the J.. fi..t.. t:ri.1 c : .: 'i 4. V!T" ' 1 1 . ' !L I v" down Trade StreeTih the direction 0 I aV I , rfy 1 rTalBll T. AS BB I of the Air LfneTdepot. He' was heal?- f tere. came fronyt t.He tender and headed, and his face was bloody frdrlsiipWeeT cfieA pf ap infant. He a wduntf over his left t'wmfcf carried it t Jlighf, and then after pot light enough for the potrce tfi'nV-1 removing ( the wrappings he saw a tice the latter, liowwrer. and thev al- mweA' littfeiiabe' lookine into his lowed-.hiu,,!teJ.pass or hist way. , A Uboxt wliila afterwards, wliila they were sr.ui udoui me square, uiey saw the.young man returning from the de pot, thisatime coming directly up to them. He told the officers that he had been knocked on the head and robbed of $150 in cash during the night just gone, and be did not know what to do with himself. Like many another innocent and thoughtless young man has done before him, he M a. a . a a I came to the city with a pocket full of money, and fell into the hands of the Philistines. After clinking glasses re peatedly with his friends, with the simplicity of a deluded youth, he sought out the "strange woman" whose lips only too truly "drop as an honeycomb and whose mouth is smo' fli er than oil," and from the house of whom, according to his story, he took his departure about midnight, in com pany with a friend. He was very drunk, and only remember- being bit on tbe head sometime after he left the house. When he regained conscious ness he found himself lying in a field to the east of the city, near the creek. He was dazed and weak from the loss of bjood by the cut ou his head, and in a half conscious condition made his way back to the city, and told his story to the police. His gold and greenbacks, with the exception of $10 that had been overlooked in one of his pockets, were gone. He was taken in charge until the hour arrived for the opening of the mayor's court, when he was arraign ed aud requested to relate the circum stances of his misfortunes. He stated that his home is iu Davidson College, but that for some time past he had been living out West. A short time ago he returned to his home in this county to visit his mother, and on last Tuesday he arrived in Charlotte on his way back to Texas. He had $160 in his pockets, five $20 gold pieces and the balance paper money. He drank a good deal during the after noon, and at night, in company with some of his friends, started out to take iu the town. He remembers leaving a certain house, but can give no ac count of himself after that. The na tural conclusion is that iu-his groggy condition he wandered about the lone ly streets to fall an easy victim to the highwayman's bludgeon. The friend who left the house with the unfortu nate young man was summoned be fore the court, but could not throw any light on the affair, as the two parted company immediately on leav ing the house. Both parties were bound over to the Iufenor Court, which meets next week, young Tor rence on the charge of carrying a con cealed weapon, which was found on his person, and the friend as a wit ness in the case. The victim of these misfortunes has always been regarded as a young man of moral worth and integrity, and was looked upon as one of the best young men of the county. One of our lead ing merchants went on his bond. His one night's experience in the city is a sad one, and is a double leaded sermon for all other young men who think that to "take in the town is the correct thing to do to have fun. It's the sort of fun that .turns to mourning at the last. i Rilled on His Wedding Tour. '-8unday afternoon Samuel D. Well ing, a young merchant ot Coschocton, Ohio, was married in Pittsburg. In the evening they started for home in the fast express. After traveling a few miles Welling left his bride to go in to the smoking car and did not return. After an hour the young wife became uneasy and caused the train to be searched. He could not be found. Monday morning his body was found on the track terribly mangled. He had evidently fallen between the cars in stepping from one to the other aud was instantly killed. Ex. Milk is declared by practical phy fsicians, vrtio have tried it thoroughly, i T . a M. f -4 fes, jS.. A K. a. ta WlL to De an a i most certain cure xor ty phoid fever. An old Virginia doctor, who, it is alleged, never loses a pa tient of typhoid, says his treatment is the simplest thing in the world.. "All you have to do is to get the patients' stomach in good order and then diet them on buttermilk." If it is good .. i ..ii i. ii . a cure it snouia oe excellent as a preventative. The Strawberry Mark. w , Tie CleveUaUJfsTaW gives cur rency to t lie following romantic inci deU Abftut thirty years ago a farm eiu, eaiding, Jo SRring6eld (Ohio) . - ...... U ; , tilTVVpll visit Pll A I dpsprted eoal baukJn the neiehbor- . . . S1 by sheer idle slope open- lor a , nme aM then started to (Jowp jfc'SftU .. 'y the entrance j dark and ftUrOroy place be saw , a buoL-Pt. He nicked it uu. and soon eves.'aaii' it wanted ih say : "flease take pity on me. lama poor little outcast without, a bpna Won t you take me out and fove and take care or me f Mr. Maxwell was a young married man, with a large, generous heart, and having no children of his own he took the little waif home with him, and he and Mrs. Maxwell took care of it and loved it as parents love 111 IUYCU It a3 uaicuio ivts, i hildren. Ttie fittle found - their own el line grew to be a beautiful and ac- O at comulished voune ladv, and she re- af r paid her foster parents with an abun dance of affection and tender devotion. Twenty years had come and gone when one day a young man called at the house of the Maxwells and de clared that the babe found in the coal bank was his sister, and that he had come from a pleasant home in Iowa to see her, and, if rjossible, per suade her te return with him. Their mother had died a few months ago, and on her deathbed she told how (she had hid the babe in the coal bank, of Mr. Maxwell finding it, and ii . . i i.. ... ail aoout ir. anu mane a uynig rc- iiiest that the family should hunt the child up and claim her. The Max- . . a a. a .1 wells were well pleased with tlie man, and lie remained with them several weeks. When he re turned to his western home he took his sister with him. He also took the promise of one of Mr. Maxwell's daughters that she, too, would share his home and fortune ere long. The promise was kept. A Destructive Cyclone. A despatch from Kansas City, Mo., relates that a destructive cyclone swept through that city on the eve ning of the 13th, unroofing and de molishing buildings for a distance of two miles. The track of the storm was from a half block to two blocks wide. A number of persons were in jured and some were killed. The storm seems to have started near the southwest of the city and touching the suburbs of Armstrong moved east ward ly. At the stock yards the ex change was unroofed and other build ings were destroyed or damaged. When it reached Main street it was diverted towards the northeast and at Seventh street near Oliver its advance was checked and its force seems to have been spent at that point. It was divided into three parts, following each other over the same course. Three deaths are reported and three were injured and are not likely to re - cover. The loss is about $3r00,000. The English Lutheran church at the corner of Oak and Fourteenth streets h completely wrecked. Keports are comiug in of heavy damage elsewhere iu tlie vicinity. .. Mickey's Fire Escape. The Winston Sentinel says that Mr. S. T. Mickey, of Salem, has been put ting his inventive genius to good use. Among ether things his patent im proved fire escape takes the lead. He claims that it is the only automatic, burglar-proof, life-saving fire-escape that shields persons from the burning building, and gives alarm with bell attachment in every store as it raises. Other fire escapes do not give satisfac tion as with statioi ary ladders children aud invalids must be carried by stout firemen, the small escapes fastened or let down from windows, are condemn ed, as so many people make their es cape at night without paying their bills. Mr. Mickey's escape can be raised by any child in a few seconds, aud is always free of ice and can be used before firemen arrive, and his fire-ladder can be raised without the tower any height and in any position as it is placed on a turn-table on a wagon with wheels, and can be raised by persons or horses at the building in one minute. AVe have examined the model and, in our judgment, pro nounce it all O. K. There's millions in it and we heartily wish Sam every success in getting his full share of them out of it, for the invention has cost him much time, labor and care ful study." A Tyrannical Employer UHICAGO, May l. the execu.- y-s . - . m mi tive committee of the cigar makers union yesterday afternoon heard the. testimony of six young girls cmploy- ed by one Benheim oh Kimsey street. It was shown that they work from 6 a. m. to 9 p. m., and three nights of the week till 11 p. m., making bunch es for cigars. Most of them receive three dollars per week, and in order to make' profit 'from this scanty pit tance,' he charges them one cent per minute for lost time. When the health inspector visits the place the proprietor manages to secrete such children as are nnder age. tHber lyranicai practices are auegea ana it a saiu itiw piBirc to'voiy a 3 pe 01 aib- other in t lie city. . P rogress of The Xegro. What Ez-Senatot JSRfgistrar the Treami Thinfo of his Efetkren. of Wwrtiingtbn Letter.' I J Us. ff i .a- sm i , I bnu a very interesting conversa tion torday with the Hon. B. K. Bruce, registrar of the treasury, who is acxnowieagea to oe one or the representative men of the colored r- n 1. . i ; U- Bruce was walking along F street, leading by the hand a very pretty little boy, with dark, wavy hair, and an olive complexion. "He is on"' his way to tlie kindergarten," said the proud father. "You are ex emplifying your faith in education for the race by an early start for the young man, Mr. Registrar," sugges ted your correspondent. "Yes, it is the great need of our race now," he said, and I wish that the Powers that lie c .u Id be brought to realize it as keenly as many of our own people do. Do you know that many of the colored people se thoroughly realize the necessity for education that they are willing to deprive themselves of almost anything else that this may be hadr In1 the course of conversation Mr. Bruce said, referring to the educa tion of race in the South : "The Na tional Government ought to appro priate a sum of money say $10,000-, 000 for school purposes there, mak ing available in case the States do a certain portion of the work. They plead that they are not able to keep up public schools for negro, or even, indeed, for the whites, sayiug that that the war impoverished them to such an extent. And that is doubt less true, for they lost greatly in other property in addition to their slaves. But the colored people are good citizens as a rule, orderly and diligent, and many of them are be coming property-owners and tax-payers, and it is right that they shall have educational advantages. Their position as tax-payers entitles them to it, and the power of. the ballot which they hold makes it the duty of the Government to itself as well as to them to make them intelligent." "Are the colored people of the South becoming land owners then ?" "Yes; many of them own their homos now. The progress in that direction has been slow and painful ; but they are upon a firm basis now, and will move forward more rapidly ! Tlie report of the comptroller-general ' of Georgia shows that one acre in fifty of the cultivated lands of that J State is owned by colored people; 1 and this, I think, is about a fair j average of the situation throughout ' the South cenerallv." i r.: . The colored people are accumula ting considerable wealth, then, are they not ?" ) "Yes ; there are a good matiy quite wealthy men among the colored pop ulation now. I don't know of more than one or two who could be coun ted millionaires; but there are a good 1 manv who run ud into the hundreds I .f iL.....J. n .A lama nnmliAN ttrlin Oi tllUUrHSIIUe, aim migc numuvio ..w are worth, say 25,000. The colored man,' as a rule, is great on real estate. Let him get possession of a few feet of ground a home aud he will never part with it if he cm help it. He will almost starve rather than do so ; and tnat is s gooa spin, x mm,. Mske him a tax payer and owner of the soil, and jou make him a good citizen." "From the standpoint of morality, do you think there is much to oe said ?" "Yes. a good deal. The Metho dist and Baptist Churches alone have nearly a million and a halt ol colored people, and tbe amount of church property they own is quite wonderful. The percentage of crime among them is not large, and the marital relation to-day is infinitely more sacred among the colored neoule as a class than it w I sr a was a few years ago ? "Yes?" , "Yes. And now I have said a good deal about the colored man," said Bruce with a laugh, "but I jnst want to add one more statement which I think will settle the ques tion as to our progress "Wellf "Well, we have the dude, the col ored dode, full fledged and as pro noanceu a - g duce " and his laugh rang out as he u 1 ' . nounced as the white race can pro cl imbed the treasury steps, "we have the dude." NEW SPRING GOODS! aa KLUTTZ & aasflPl BgaasBRaSPBaaaaaBvBM Have now received their entire stock of Spring and Summer Goods which have been selected with great care to suit the varied wants and tastes of their numerous customers, all ot which they qffer as cheap us the cheapest. They have now in Store the TA-RG-EST ASSORTMENT OF DRY GOODS NOTINB,LOrWING, FURNISHING GOODS, SHOES, Ladie&Uad Men's HATS AND FAMILY GROCERIES they have bought for many seasons. J3F"A FULL ASSORTMENT OF We still have the best FLOUR, OAT MEAL, MEATS. SUGARS, TE S COFFEES, RICE, CANNED FRUITS, JELLIES, PURE LARD, BRAN MEAL, New Orleans MOLASSES and SYRUPS, &e. A full assortment of FAMILY MEDICLNE3. Agents for Coats' vu.a..Lw, which is tagy r irsi ciass, ana wnicn we oner lor 400 lbs. off Lint Cotton. Come and See us before yon buy or sell, for we will do you goed. April 12, 1883 -i To aiake New Whiskey Old. A Boston physician has dicorcred a process by which newly distilled spirits can be made chemically pure in a few days, the product being even better than spirits of the best quality, which have been "aged" by storing them for many years in wooden casks. The liquor is washed with air. Two thousand gallons are poured into an airtight copper tank iu which there is a coil of pipes. The air to be used is first heated and purified by the ryudall process, and is then forced into the tank through small holes iu the pipes at the bottom of the coil. The inventor tries to get the greatest possible amount of air iu contact with every drop of the liquor in the shortest possible time It is said that by this process all the pois onous ethers and other deleterious sub stances are removed more effectually than they can be by "'aging" in the ordinary way, and the raw liquor, just distilled can be thoroughly puiiGed in short time. The proof is fully preserved by use of a scries of condensing and test tanks The process has been used for nearly a year aud the inventor intends to supply drug gists, physicians and families pure aud palatable spirits at a low price. This he cau afford to do, because he avoids the loss caused by evaporation aud the loug investment of capital in the ordinary pro cess of ''aging" by storage. The best Kentucky whisky is worth much less than the tax upon it just after it has been distilled. It becomes valuable ouly by age. It appears by this new process it is made valuable at once. New York Times. Girls First. The best husbaads I ever met came but of a family where the mother, a most heroic and self-denying woman, laid down the absolute law, "Girls first." Not iu any authority, but first to be thought of as to protection aud ten derness. Consequently, the chivalrous care which these lads were taught to show to their own sisters naturally extended itself to all women. They grew up true gentlemen gentlemen, generous, unex acting. courteous of speech and kiud of heart. In them was the protected strength of manhood, which scorns to use its strength except far protection; the proud honesty of manhood, which infinitely pre- fers being lovingly resisted to oeing "twisted round one's-finger," as mean The extent of many Mexican es men are twisted, and mean women will j8 airao8fc beyond realizatien, always be found ready to do it, but which The boundaries of one estate, on the I think, all honest men and brave women central table-lands in Mexico, extend would not merely dislike, but utterly de- over a hundred miles north and spise. Author of John Halifax. south. The mountains traversing it abound with mineral wealth, and The Highest Flat. Plans were fine farms and extensive towns filed in New Yrk, Monday, for a are met with at frequent intervals. building that, when completed, will Chicago Herald. 1 he the hit? best in that city, it is to be a flat house for thirty-eight fami - lies and is to stand on the northwest rorner Fiftv-seventh street and Sev- corner x my acso.s enU. avenue. The top of the lug, when the roof is on, w.l I be ,188 feet above tbe corb, fully 30 feet h,Kh- epthan any other house in iNew York. The walls of the first story will be 3 fttt thick, and taper to the top of the 0 tenth story ; tnat, wim an aurc uuuvc. itl Tnll be the iuii ueigiuui uiuiuhs. " -i i : i l : .... ... iiiii. .Tit... r. . . . t in the rear, however, me uuimmg f . ,. , t. will contain fifteen Tories It w 11 l-l . r-.,...-. ,r .L- inrl ii-, hi llirnnsrh- be of stone, brick and iron tnruugu- ... a .1 1 eit, and will cost JJ6o0,000. RENDLEMAN new stock of TABLE and GLA8SWAR1 FIVE CENT TINWARE. Spool Cotton. Agent for the EMPIRE W. W. TAYLOR D. J. BOSTTAH, Salesman. 3. R. KEEN, Salisbury, SVC. Apt for PHffiNIX IRON WORKS, Elines, Boilers, Sat Mills, AND TURBINE WHEELS , Contractor and Builder. Ja s, .-iy A GOOD COW ana CALF FOR SALE ! A good Cow, of medium age, and a jeua I can, win oe soin at s fair price. Cow giving milk. Apply at this Office. 30:3t-pd. Fob thb Sons of Massachusetts. The philanthropists of the State where corpses are sold and their skin tanned for shoeleatber will be glad to bear that Sit ting Bull and the remnant of his tribe have been supplied with agricultural it. pleinents and are to be enennraraH in j effort to become successful farmers. Ex. , R . w i fc improved by painting, , . r J. . . , . ,rM ",VH but fashion is doing a similar thing , fc , . 6 , new j drHBeg h .. (o Wu fc ,, ; Troni-the palest erean, and t b aj oliv Washington Post .- So long as England persists iu driving Ireland tit America cngiaua win nave enemies on this side - of the ocean. 3 saSA 3k P 5 a i t S i i o - s p 6 P S gs do pis 4 M 52g fl 5 1 ra ct, plryj r J f i