Newspapers / North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, … / Feb. 18, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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i . - i . .- - - . . - -" . ' -.. v - - .(" -i 3 : .- ' - - .s : - --.-"- -- . - " ------ - - . - : . "I ; " 3 - - . ..... . . . i :."'. " ' i Jl- -iili I Gerald !; fine IIUUIU tniwM ..... . ' '"- . ; rUBLISilKl) KVKUY THt'MDAY, BUKIIBAU3I & K ABIES, v ED. A5D PftOPBlI !- ! Si.'V'w-.'JiXS TO ssrot? rsrs: S ' 3 3ETC fT a TT CS.Sir, SA.LIS33TJRY, 1ST. C, TirtJKSrtA.Y, EBBTmHYS, 1886. VKLLOW TOBACCO. Bcnsonr-riox bate Oae year 1 piJ jn advance, not pai'd in advance, Six moJitU, ' flu bribT will he called on or n rulirijjtkn!i ate due. . 1 . f 1 no - " , i t otifird wlin nion of every Carolina Jn addition, to our $ubnr we mail a larae ruaS'i' ittiifl in nil ittirt hf Sih'th hmiihfi f7niptf 'SluttA' Those having land f or kill find U to their advantage to aacen i Herald, an we have a lit of parlm vuikin'j inquiry for land, and to ihpm we ahull nd our pajwK iJkHir l"i itereie,henl3 are inserted. SALISBURY , I .Situated-in the veiy be-art of 'the husiness portion of North Carolina, ut the junction of the Western North (JHrolina ami Hichrnond and i)anville Uailroads. 8'00, et above the level of the $ca, 250 miles ni Und, in the centre of thb richest raineral and- granite beltj inthe S-jutTj, at the gateway, pf the Brae - Midge country, in the i mfast - or.a rich tobacco and cottoiu zonc, and rrith 'a population of'riea :-ly 4,000, Sftliuburv is-fast becoming a com wreial centre. There.1 arje at-present two banks, -eleven bhurchcB, fire tobact-o factories, four tobacco exehangos (warehouses), one woolen mi!L 'two tanneries, four machine shop, Uto.f onirics, hree hotel tlvrt'r. n.-wsnaocrs. the tlai chine Car and Locomjoti .ae ateajn sa.ili-door and tor ; about'.lO pusiness; hdunes, and gas work. New enterprises pro jectel are the building jof both North' and South, ,..,t,v.i f j(tir' am two to V.UI.VJU I j 1 tarie!; The "o)portunitieS for Yestfuent "arc real est'atd,. tinl man u feet uni. of tohaccd Rawlris; and mining. The business men have the reputation jof being the aafeit dealers in' the State. blind xac- & !road Ma- e Shops; a railroad 50.000 bacco fac- "ranne 31 A YOU E li rsE.vvE. ----- ' i TOWN C0MISK;t3H3 I) K Julian, I) A Atwell. P P Meroney, Ji? Uarreti. Vrm F Snider, G Wr Gates, Kerr Craic, K J Holme:. police : ..-IV 34 BnvringeT tmd C Ny Pool. TOWM TAX COLLECTOR Ge SUavcf. j COVSTT OFFICEK3 BUeriff. C 0 Krkicr; Kegister, II N Woodsoa: Clerk of tUe Court, J M Horah. RepreieaUtive, L 3 OTerman. Couereijlnan of 7th District lion J 8 Ikudenan, SalishuryN C POST OFFICE DIRECTORY. The lU't Method of Culthratlns and Curing. " Wrt'"n ixtr T perlK, by J. B- Uvhe. f "rM comity, H. C. ' TLA XT BEDS. ' the first work in preparing for a crop of tobacco, h to bnrn and eow in good time plenty of plant land, in warm moist situations. Select land that will not become sodden by too much rain, and, if possible, let the spot3 be on creeks or branches (far enough ol! tffguarl against overflow ing) with a south or southwest ex posure. 13urn the land well.-. My. plan is to put down on my bed, about four feet aprt, what we term "skids" poles the size of a man's arm. These are to keep the wood off the ground. When these skids are burned up one may, as a rule, know that the land is burned hard enough and that it is time to move the fire on further. This is the best guide I can give to the inex perienced as to the length of time the land should be -burned. The best time for burning, in the lati tude of North' Carolina and Vir ginia, is from the first of January to the first of March. Good, fine, stable manure, free from" seeds of grass, oats or clover, withsomegood commercial fertilizer, is what I think best on plant beds. After burning, rake off the ashes, cover the ground well with stable manure, hoe np thtf oed thoroughly and make it fine by repeated' hoeing and raking. Then rriix the tobacco seed, using one and a half table spoonfuls in every twenty-five pounds of fertilizer to every one hundred square yards 'in the bed, ana then tread in witli the leet or pat-with the hoe. Tobacco seed re quires but little covering, and i covered too deeply will fail to cqnie up. Cover the bed with fine brush (dogwood is best if convenient,) to protect the plants from frost and to keep the beds moist. Sometimes it becomes necessary to force the growth of plants in order that they may be large1 enough to transplant at the proper time; this is dono by using some quick, reliable fertilizer as a top-dressing, care being taken not to apply it when the1 plants arc wet with dew or rain. and causes it to ripen with a green color. W hf n tobacco bein n s to ripen rue neither plow aor hoc, as qnality is better than quantity iu INTERESTING NOTES. From Ef erywlicre. A waron load of FABHIXIS NOTES. fJinited nurabcr of fowU jay possums ira better than too manr. his easel. After being ; topped to-1 sold in AnnUton, Alabama, cue diy xrer ;triomenda from ex- ftbonld be keDt 9kSIn.r a tv.s. i lately. i 1 1 i-iJ. i . ' j j penence aimtea caruouc acia as a Push for either: milk or beef. 1 reded for chicken cholera, for bog There is no profit-in raising bones cholera, and for pinkeye in honti or niue?. bacco should be kept alear as pos sible,from worms and suckers. I ciniso. Let your tobacco stand on the hill until thoroughly ripe, bearing in Talking about bemgln coWorta mind not to cut any until a barn be ble circumstances, did you ever see filled with plants of uniform riie- two lovers occupying: one armchair? ness, color and quality. Put seven . - as a bee." mean, hit medium sized plants on a stick four . tu I - - I.-lIHMli. LUC 11:UV i li i iJk J. I1C ln 1 1 and a half feet long. Let the plants about thrtelioursa day and lie tio? CC0 Vovrxts. "v" " nlfU stavinsr firood time out of w ruu lauiiuc, suck in uie nanus oi-mo noiuer. other twentyne. After being filled the sticks should not toncK the around for an v lenirtli minister, naving taught his " U " . . H i 3 1 -. "V A nttimP! in fact it 1S betterfor them "c K'V v" rJt -' Va 4TK ttf tTknn(rTh;"minidirlnir to go directly from the holder to P:"B age and weight; He killed a pig the wagdn and from the wagon to Aouwiug,,auu. u which lacked! C days of being 7 the barn, where. they should be tied day our. daily or blscult3a months old jtlkt weighed 227 lba. hnnt ftiprhi incboa anart that is. PoncJ 11 Pu P' it- i Mr. Bost, at lleilig's MiU, killed ft hog that weighed COS pounds net. A. M.i Cruse j beats fcim by one pound - Both; carried thtse hogson their back to the barn. J. Iiowan Davis killed, the biggest One, net- Fat hogs seem as all above named farmers are related to each other. : : - '? -j - ' ' - ; Mr. C. F. Kail, Blackmer, . O., ri f 0 , sriXR thh west ano ciimrisT NACHINERY OF ALL KINDS ; TO BE !X)UND IN THE STATE. niYKlIlM ATRIAL BEFOKK BUY. INO'EtSEWHEBE. l:ly ' ; J. A L OIF1 DMIS, ROWAN if the tobacco is of medium size. BAEXS. Tho jWaterbury (Conn.) Wa tch. I factory makes about three thousand I think those that are seventeen iwaicues in one year. oioSt oi ine and a-half feet square are the best work re(luire3 thc fincst toudl nd for curing successfully; a. barn 0f tfte mosl aei,cai manipulations is th is s zel w th four firing tiers be- UOI,e u wgt-Huv.r low the joists, will hold about four aSe aboufc L50 a dav hundred and fifty sticks. - ' : CURIKG. ! . , " As flue curing has taken the place of. the older method of curing by charcoal, it is only necessary to give directions for that process. A dry South Ca no lixa Puosi'iiate Rock. There is among many farm ers a prejudice against the use of rock as a fertilizer, even when it is prefaced by the word phosphate. But the deposits of phosphate ma terial from South Carolina have in numerous practical tests shown "SEPERyVTE VEfDieT Fr0M E7CH !JUf0 No 1 and 2 We find thnt J, EOW AH DAVIS' STORE U the thttrea la U county. ; " 8 and 4 N c find that hU gooils are amo4g tno bct mtnum tumL 5 ami G 'We find that cverj-rustompr is ttrate1 well at Davia". 7 ani 8 We find thnt every one ptl their money's worth and U At!ficd at Patti's '9 and 10 W find that his store u the most iHvular one la the rnjnty for baraiaa. 11 and 12 We acroe with the other Jurymen, and addtbathecarrlcaUMi Lel tork. of BooU and Shoe all warranted solid leather or money refunded. j Opinion xf "tla.o aTixdcjo. ' Unon this verdict I find J Rowan IwU cullty of arllin? Pry Good. Notion. Boots, Slioes Hat. Crockery, Hardware, Groceries and General Mercuamile aacheap as Salishury. Concord or Mooreville, and aentence him to hard Ubur at hU VuAn John Wanamaker. the trreat Phil- rCnhD UitK 1,,. r1(,rln toupply the wants of the good people of btwle and eurroundng Townahip wjvn . , . , , . " .. 10S Pi " " "j first class goods at living deipnia merchant, is a devoted ban-, from bone. Where phosphate alone day bchool worker. Un one side of i3 requiretl, its source is not a mat the cards presented to hia class ter of importance, salong as analy- every Sunday morning is printed: 8i8 shows the phosphate to be pres "Praise the Lord," and on the ent. In the bone, if properly treat - curing heat is the principle of both other uy your clothing of John ed, there is a certain proportion of "nitrogenous matter,tbut the addition to I of sulphate of ammonia to phos- he Iphate rock makes it equal to bone- njr made phosphate showing the eame. prices. Feb 4lh 5m Wannamaker. methods. Flue curimr- has 'many ?. t-. - advantages over the primitive way. The Jewish Messenger appeals being gheaper, cleaner giving the the young men and women of tobacco a sweeter flavor, and it is old faith to abstain from publish attended by less danger of fire, in the newspapers their matrimonial analysis. We arc learning that the ts. No one is interested chemist's test of manures one of the best proofs of its , value.; My advice, right hereto the novice engagements is,, to see for himself the plan on in such announcements, it says, which a! tobacco barn is built and j cept a few near relations, and they j '9e Augusta, Me. arranged for curing. can be reached by mail. Meektafe 'Am Works TEMPERATUKE. Af ter: filling the' barn with ! ripe The I only surviving ex-members of the cabinet of ante-beUum diys of w I j. r-i i- t O 1 tobacco, start the heat at about arc eorSe ancroic, oecrecary .inotv nr on hnnrlrpd rlrrrc ' the Navy under President Polk; w . : : . - - 1 M. and A. H. BOTDSH, P. "Mail going north, closes 6 00 a: ra T Oi p. u. . . . . '! ; ! , Mil sin5 south, closes 10.40 a. m.l, and 9 00 p. m. j " Miil goins west, closes 9 Ou p. m. .-' - Msil for Mocksvillc, Jerusalem, Zcb, South IJiver and Fanniugton, Sunday cr ceoterl, leave 7 00 a m, nrrive G 00 p ra. Mail for Albemarle, Gol Hill, Rock-, well, Palmer3Yille, and all post ofttcea in Stanley county, Sunday excepted, leave 7 00 a ra, arrive. 6 00 p m. Mail for Yadkin - College. Tvro Shoos. Bridge, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, lemre 7 00 a in, arrive 6 00 p p. Mail for 3It Vernon,. Woodleaf, Verble, Tuesday, 'Thursday and ! Saturday, leave 7 00 a m. arrive 6 00 p m. j ! Mail for Harts and Watsonville, 3fon Qj and Friday, leave 7 00 a m, arrive 6 00 P j Mail for Jackson Hill, Bringlc, Pool, 31illedgevillc. Bain, Garneld, Healing 8prm?;s, Millertown. Rilevs Store. Ch jk-r'a Grove, leaves Monday and Friday at 7 00 a in. Arrive Tuesday knd Saturday CHURCH DIRECTORY. Bundav School at 3 MKT HOD 1 8T CHURCH. Rev. T-W Smith, Pastor. serTices at 11 a. ra.; Sunday p. a. Evening services at p. m. Pray er meeting v - ' : ST. JOIIX'8 LCTIIERAN CUCRCn. Rv. Wra. Stoudcnmire, Pastor: Sun dj Bsrrices at 11 a. m. Sunday School t p. tn. Evening Services at . 7 p. ; m. Iryer meeting eTery Wednesday at 7 'IttT PRE8BTTEKIAK CHURCH Rv J Rumple, D D, Pastor, y rTlces-morning eT 7 'dock- at J'CT. F. Murdoch R, semees-n morning at u nooi at A n ti r. 6un- 11 o'clock. clock." Evening Prayer' meeting GTicacn. . 4ter. Sundar 4- ra-; Sunday 'enurr! ti,., .. 5.80 n n, t T"rvices p ednesday at 't 7 30j C CIa-,S 5-sday even- 8BCRY BAPTIST Jamcu. Rev. J. 5 T . j i eerySund Pa"ttor- Services JXliY y Sci services at 7 n crvices at 7 n m -n 1 -""fe Thurgday at ?i ' J? meetinS every I 1'. iu. CCRCH OF THE SACRED n Mar. S. GrosC SOIL. Gray, friable soils' -fresh " from the forests, or long out of cultiva tion with a dry, porous subsoil, are the best adapted to the growth and' maturity of yellow tobacco. Plow your land and put it in good condition before . bedding; run the rows off 3 feet 4 inches each, way, using, according to the strength of the land, from ninety to one hun dred and ten pounds of good fer tilizer to every one thousand hills. Use farm-pen manure in the .drill with the fertilizer; it will be found of very great advantage, even if it is not convenient to use it except in small quantities. PLANTING. Plant iu bills a3 early after the first of May as the plants and sea son will admit. As soon as the plants take good root commence cultivation, whether in a grassy condition or not, and continue to stir the land with plow and. hoe until the tobacco begins to come in top, using short single trees, as the plants increase in size to prevent bruising and breaking. After;, the plant become too large to admit of the use of the plow use only the hoe to keep down grass. - topping. , J It is best to wait until a good number of plants button for seed before beginning to top, as these will then ripen together. A man must top according to the appear ance and promise of the plant, the strength of the land etc.; he must use his own judgment on topping", bearing in mind that a strong heal thy plant can bear higher topping than a small one. As a general thing the. first topping will bear ten to fifteen leaves, priming off the lower leaves neither too high nor too low, so that when the plant ripens the bottom leaves may be well oft. the ground. As the season ad vances continue' to top lower, so that the plants - may ripen before frost. . , CtJLTIVATJON AND TOPriXO. , - Kaolin. This mineral which results.! torn a decomposition of feldsparls found in large beds-in Macon county as Fahrenheit, and keep there for Jefferson Davis, Secretary of War well as in other localities of West thirty or thirty-six hours which cngth Of time is commonly re quired to yellow tobacco, some tak- ng a little longer or shorter time. Right here is where a man must unuer ; i-resiaeiu rierce; josepn crn Korth Carolina. .It is most Holt, Secretary of War, and Horatio " Yaiua in the manufacture of Kiucr, Postmaster General under President Buchanan. china-ware. With reference to this useful mineral Prof. Kerr tells One Dakota editor offers his paper Lthis story: exercise his judgment, as neither free for a year to every, couple mar- I f'A'curiousact may be mention- the best theory nor the most minute ried before July 1, 1886, and an- ediwhich I came upon recently, that directions wiil serve itJs practice other will send his paper a year for. the firsjt mineral export from .'North" - i ii - - - i - .. . that makes a good curer. every child bpru within twelve Carolina, if not from America, more After finding the best leaves in months, and, two or three years for than two hundred years ago, was the barn of a uniform yellow and twins or triplets respectively. - kaolin, from the mica mines of he others of a pea green, one can f Tn V741 Rnmft TirAUt ar,r,liod' to! Mitchell and Macon; for it happen- as K general rule, begin to raise the thc count court at Ne - Jerne ed that at that time all Europe was heat from tho yellowine: heat at the . m - . nn,rt wild in the search of the earth out of which china ware was fabricated, the Asiatics and Asiatic traders having carefully concealed their art from the outside barbarians of Europe. This permission to build a church. They re- . 'i . t r jt j raxe.oi nvo uegrees in every iwo - ft ' 1lWiM. wniA and i ii7i.- . .. j r its:- - uours. nucn one nunureu aim j a : i, j xa uuiruu liivts uuuus lur nicii t:uou ft 4. i . l uumi "W i rcucueu it.. Jb behavior. Now there are 200.000 to give the tobacco air by cracking B tistg in orth Carolina. a i i j -i i i . j- openine aoor ana - roasmg noies as a. in. evening Never ' plow tobacco later than the, first of August, after which 4" 1 T-v-, - t-i r- 1 1 r lr AO - 1 Q f" A Tl0WiniT large as a mail's hand on each side of the! barn, near the bottom logs, which treatment will be found to be of great advantage, as the tobacco will coinmeiice drying off and the tails will begin to turn up. Con tinue to increase the heat at . the -above rate until one. hundred; and thirty-five degrees is reached, where the heat must be kept for twelve hours ;which is the length of time required to cure the leaf. Raise the heat now five degreesvery hour and a half until it gets to one hundred and eighty degrees. This heat will in a short time cure both stem and stalk, j As a general rule, by fol lowing tbese'directions, tobacco will come put of the barn a pretty uni form yellow. To cure it a bright, clear yellow, it mnst have all the heat it will bear until it reaches one hundred and thirty-five degrees. ORDERIJTO AND HANDLING. After tobacco is thoroughly cured let it come in order enough to han dle. well; then "move - from curing barn to packing barn, or some tight house,! and bulk down so that it will retain its color, as exposure red dens it. : STRIPPING. When ready. fos tripping, take as much bulked tobacco as one wants, and hang at some damp - time in a curing barn, so as to bring it in order to handle. In stripping, se lect leaves of uniform size and col or, making about six or eight dif ferent grades, and ti& in. bundles of six leaves. After tying th bundles should be hung on a stick, putting about ; twenty-five - bundles on stick, and the sticks put, down in a bulk', perfectly straight. This will press the tobacco out flat and cause it to make a better appearance on the market. It should- remain m mineral, therefore, bore a high In England youn gentlemen value and there is none better speak of their fathers as "the fpov-j found jn Europe to-day' than that which the Indians "packcd,r from ernor,M "pater," "the overseer, j in America they say "aaa, the Smoky mountains to the coast, "f ath- name "for the Smokies, (meaning but hey are a long way behind stjii called in places, Unaka Leage. X. Y. Telegram. j in-Mitchell, and Unakoi in Chero- etc. "ihe boss' 'or the 'bid man. heathen countries they say er the A subscriber asks: "How pld must a person with a general talent be before you deem hint old enough to begin studying the art of music with success? The older the better. We have heard people sing who ought to have postponed their mus ical studies until three or four years after their death. : L. "Step into the parlor and' make yourself at home, ' said tue. nine-year-son of the editor to hia sister's best young man. 'Take the easy chair and help yourself to the album. Helen Louise is upstairs and won't be down'for some time yet has to make up her -form, you know, be fore going to press." ;; ' : " The assessed valuation of the pro perty in North. Carolina has increas ed from $150,208,241 in the census year 1880 to $222,300,000; for jthc present year, an increasa in ive years of icG,031,757. The farmers are getting out of , debt and saving money, and' the tobacco crop is in creasing greatly year by year. A'pound of .bananas, it - is said, contains more nutriment than three pounds of meat or many poundj of potatoes, while as a : food it iSj in every sense of the word far superior to the best wheaten bread. Al: though it grows spontaneously throughout the tropic when culti vated it yrelds prod igioo sly, for Ian acre of ground planted with, bananas will return, 'according t Humboldt; as much food matena1 as thirty, acres of vheat, or over 100 acres of potatoes . - - J - kec. Those Indians were not min ers, but this kaolin or white earth had been exposed like snow banks in huge dumps and open cuts by an ancient mining people," the Mound Builders, a thousand or two years ago, who obtained here the mica which is found so abundantly among the remaiDs of those people, all over the Northwest to the great lakes.1 XMda't like To B Ln-h4 XX. Over on State street one day; last week a man sliDDed la the slush and fell sprawling. His bundles f went flying through tSo air . and came down in a stato of confnsion. The.maa looked rery comical, and several hundred people itoorjed to' titter. A smflo spread over a sea of faces. But tho man' did not rise. A look, f.paln cams on hla face, and he raised his hand as If beseeching aid. A foKTi men rushed forward to help him, mnA th women exelalmed,Oh, he la hnrt " and looked oceans of sympathy. The man was helped to bis feet and his packages collected ana carerauy piacea in his anna, while two or three good ..Tnariians wiDed the slush from his clothing and nicely smoothed out his raffled silk hat. Then he staggered away, followed by many anxious eyes. But once around the corner he straightened up, smiled softly to himself and walked away as Spry as a spring colt, chuckling to himself: - . - . 4- -I alwaya did hate to be laughed at." Chieago. Herald.. AnrriM EnUrt Tltt Work. Tlie United States consumes tin-la vast ouantities, great use for Mil plates be Inir the raannfactnre of preserving cane. It is said that upward of fi2.000.000 per Annum are expended for wages alone in our Tarioos. tin-plate factorie, whIle tue sum paid for similar work in Great Brit ain does not amount . to much more than S3 000 000. American tin work is very much Uchter, and more graceful than that of Eneland. nd in England the art of press ing tin h nofe Tet- heen acquired. CUr eago Herald. . JOHN WILKES, Manager, CHARLOTTE, N. C. :o:- -IKES A'ND. BOILERS CF AI,Ii KIND. SAW' AND GRIST ' v, - . ' EjLS. A SPECIALTY.. It v WRITE FOR CIRCULARS AND ESTIMATES. RICHMOND & DANVILLE R. R. . -' '- ;: ' :" . : ! Coiacleiisecl Schedule. NORTHWARD. No. 53. Daily. Iso. 51. Daily. JAHUAEY 18th, 1886.. SOUTH WARD; . "NaT wri No."5a7 Dally. 1 Dally. 2 20 p. m. 6 20 A- M. Arrive. 12 25 " 3 00 10 03 A. M. 11 25 P. r. 8 45 8 20 4 30 , 2 10 .9 15 8 50 4 20 1 50 11 28 p. M. 10 36 Jl. m. New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Alexandria, Charloltesville, Lynchburg, Danville. Lcave.;i2 00 ni't 8 45 A. v. 0 50 " ill 40 " 8 45 r. X. 0 10 " 9 25 " 4 SO r. k. 6(0 9 43 11 00 M 1125 ' 2 65 A. U. 5 13 8 04 M 7 00 a. M.j.4 07 P. M. Itichmond, 9 35 P. M. 9 08 " 8 01 " : 7 25 " 6 25 V A AO V M. ! 1 20 " 12 IS " "8 30 A. M. 7 58 G39 ' 5 55 ' 5 00 " " Goldsboro, " .Raleigh, Durham, " Greenttboro, Hieh Point, " Safisbury, 44 Concord, " Charlotte, ) 3 25 11 45 A. M. 5 00 r. u. G07 " 200 11.21 " 1155 " 110 a. x. 157 " 800 " 9 50 A. Mt 10 39. " ! 1153 t J1W " 100 P.M. 3 41 ' 8 43 ' 2 30 4 12 57 11 07 A. 8 40 8 42 " . 133 " 1 45 p. M. 10 42 " 8 15 ; 5 45 " Leave Gaatonia, Bpartanburf, Greenville, Seneca, Lula. Atlanta, 44 Arrive.' 3 49 " ttU 714 " 85 " 11 08 " 140p, x. 142 8 84 4 49 12 8 25 10 40 r. v. u 44 NORTHWARD. No. 53. 1 No. 51. Daily. Daily. JAinJABY 18th, 1886. SOUTHWARD. 8 35 P. X.- 8 10 a. M, Arrive. 7 30 " : 718 J " 6 55 ' ! 6 50 " - Xeave. Greensboro' KernersvIlJe, Balero, Leave. Arrive. No. 50. j No. 52. Dally. ? Dally. Tl tir. M.slOOOa x. 12 09 a. xJll 05 M 1 17 111 40 i j TWTTilTV 10V TOQft SOVTllWAUU. DAILY EXf-HPT SCTfDAT. ORTIIWARD. t No. 8. j No- 1. 5 45 P. a. 11 10 a.m. Arrive. 4 55-'.',.." 10 20 Leave. L'niversitv, Chapel IfiU. Ixrare. 6 8.1 r. I U a. m. Arrive-1 7 V f!2 45 P. M. Sloopinc Oa Sorvloo. On trains 50 and 51 Pullman Bnffet Sleeper between New Tork and AtU bUl On trains 52 and 53 Pullman linnet Sleper between ashinston and ew Orleans. Pu Umari S!eep- between Grecnstorq ind Pachinond. Through tickets on sale at principal stations, to all points. . .. For rates and information apply to any aent of r A n j . E. B. THOMAS, Cen'l Manager. . , . c- CHEAJtS, A.U.A. A- 72XlXrVKS BKOWI3V If what too want to not in stock can order at . . hort notice. - - - : ,'norsE Eoonxc wd pcttekio mrtwtiaA In a ni)erirwTnaftB?r. Good workmen. .mi he toot in Urn : 111. VERNON HOTEL, . GAIaISBTJIIY'. 17. c. Situated near tho Junction of U.O It. & D. and W. IT. O. RaUroada. - GAS AND ELECTRIC BELLS MnfTro rmmt or cmaut. iiuitWM or coppbii work t .iomiink :-';x' ,"1 ; - ?n.K?Vrt.i r aiw.V, w aj.- p; A. FnQZ3, Owxcr a J Tr; V. rH r;,pr tken m exc tur work. . j Qt p. VeraCE, Cieik. 11- .cc3atYp.m. kceii3 thc tobacco green too long bulk for several days. :'.
North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 18, 1886, edition 1
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