Newspapers / North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, … / Aug. 5, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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IWTiPTW (P (fW 7TRT& I - i nnTA T FT XvMJJi.llL ij.ll MOiinLMJJiJJiLLv iLLLiu JlvLiT' 1 M 1 LU o ' " " : . :e," I - : j ss-sro-rsna to. Tans ar3r ' zsTTfiaasTo or sroarxt' CAacxssrA. - f -'.::;"-rr-.-;-v s :.: " ; ;;. ......... . ")' -- .. ; ' ' 1 . '. . - ' ' - : ; . , . i ; v.'r. I," , ", , ' ' . -r, ' . , ,. r -. -r: ..... , ,. . . -- -l -" ; ; 1 r ..... i t i . ' 1 " " .!"",""".M 111,1 ' 1 1 1 11 : SLISBTJR jST. C, TITOHSDV Y,l XTJGUST 5,1886 3STO. 43. VOL. I. - i. COM THE RIGHT PRICES ON HARDWARE. Double and female Plow. Stocks. t he-celebrated fctuue uaKt v-,.v m-. Tbrehin Machines and Horse Powers, Osborne and Cbampjjn mg M, bines VAiain-r Reapers and 84f Hinders, the celebrated Thomas Hay Rakes, Telraph Itraw CuUerf Barbed Fence Wire. Buy and Wagon Material, Paint, and Oils for Painting Houses, Corn Shellers, Grain Drills. We carry one of the Largest Stock of Buggies in the State, v bought 150 more that will be here experience that a reafgood buggy-will sell grade will sell for a small sum, ana we nave ui to sell one of the ljest Buggies in existence - Our aim is to down the high prices on all kiads'of Farming Implements, Hardware, Buggies and Wagons, and. give the good old farmers,-who support us all a showing. TIJE GOLD TVTI NianS. We carry a full stocjc of Atlas, Giant Powder, Black Powder, Fuse, Caps, Steel &c, and will guarantee prices as cheap as anywhere in the State. We pay freight on all Powder to the nearest railroad station. ' IllSllli I SALISBURY. N. C. EAL ESTATE -FOR S 1 K . 'ANlMPitovED Mount a ik Farm for aK-80 acres under cuHivation, with a ood dwelling house and5 kitchen, with rick chimneys," anew bum, corn crib and ranary, and spring-house, church and chools near by, orchard and grazing' for j atue. - tST-A LARGE BED OFfAGNET C IRON ORE OX TJIE PROPERTY, pme quality as the Cranberry Iron Ore. t T." 11. . ' l .1 . BlTERBAUM & E AMES, Salisjjuky, N. C. NO. 41. A Farm of 215 Acrc sitnatcd on line ' Railroad, 140 acres under cultivation. 5 acres in clover and'TimotHy, 50 acres niDer lanu. warns, granaries and all the tecessary out houses. A well-built ten omed Irame house: every buildinor in ood repair. Good spring and well wa- r. Will be sold cheap for cash. Address, Bvebaum & Ea.mks, Salisbury, N C. NO. 42. An improved farm of 180 Acres 3 ,iles from 1 Salisbury, 100 acres under Itivation; an ordinary four roomed puse; barn, Stc. Uruit trees, grapes, tod tobacco and cotton land, i Will be Id at a bargain. Address - 13UERBAUM & EAMES. NO. 43. 500 cres of land oak" hickory chest- pt, poplar, maple ash and walnut: 75 Icres cleared and under cultivation : a Jaw and grist mill running; good water Fwer; house, barn, corn cribs, &c. Iron e bank on the land. 'For sale cheap. Address BUERBAUM & EAMES, , j- Salisbury, N C. Correspondents can h& placed in com unication icith the otc ners. PK. Elliott, "VVorth Elliott, lui Atlanta, Ga. Xliott -wi.i,Dariotte, N. C. ontractors and -Binders, HARPY HOME, N. C. . Do a Genera1. Building Business in fESTERN XQHTII CAROLINA. 4. SPECIALTY. - Buy VOUr sewin? marhinpa f rnm c pey & Bro. . They keep them in order ' Lyr9 free of cuarge, saving expenses of . fcnaiua: them to the. fnnlmnoa 'j1?.,8 attachments aud' needles for n kinds of machines r t wholesale and re Iu; win sell needles to ht trnHot. r a ry prices.. - r ' " , LAST! in a few days. We have learned from for a small sum much better than a cheap now maae arrangements which enables at about the same price as cheap grades. A NOVEL WITHIN ITSELF. DAVIS SEWING MACHINE, TJie LlghtesfRiinnlfls Sewing Machine Made Does all kinds of work without any bast ing. There has been $50 reward offered to any machine that will followT the Day's through its variety of. work witboiit bast ing. fOther agents will tell you they can do anything on. their machines the Davis can do. , Why don't they-' take in this re ward, why they can't-do it. We invite all to call and see our stock through and see "now ready we always are to give you low prices. C5 THE FINANCIAL AND MINING RECORD, 61 Broadway, New Yorlc. Subscription: $4 a Year; $2.50 Six Months. A WEEKL T NEWSPAPER BE VO TED TO THE FINANCIAL, MIN ING AND -PETROLEUM IN TERESTS OF NORTH AMERICA. It contains the latest reports from the Gold, Silver, Coal and Iron mining Dis tricts, and Oil Regions; able reviews of the Financial, Railway, mining, Petro leum, Coal, Iron, Bullion and Superior metals markets; : a- list of Incorporated Dividend-Paying mines; interesting" let ters from correspondents, etc, etc. SAMPLE COPIES FREE. Banner Tobacco Warehouse. Sales Daily. Bily SWINK & THOMPSON. Salisbury Woolen Mills. Manufacturers of Casimereiv Jeans, Sattlnets, unseys, KerseysjJianKets, i arns, itom, etc. 7-1 y - ' ' ' SALISBURY LODGE. . Knltthts of Honor. Meeting nights first awl third Monday In each month. 4-17 : .' ' , .. ... ;-.. - . - . JOHNSON & RAMSAY, Manufacturers of Plug and Twist Tobacco. FARMERS WAREHOUSE, ' SAUS DF TOBACCO EVERY DAY. : 7-ly BealL, Bost & Foard, Proprief'ora. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL - ....... , .: theo. r. zluttz & CO. ' For Mill Stones. Granite. Gold Grinders. and Hock Work of all kinds, address : J. T. WYATT, - , Successor to E. E. Phillips. 9-4y p P Box 140, Salisbury, C. H. C. BOST & CO., 0D3 Xioctf Tobacco. Fire Insurance Agency. J. SAM'L MeCUBBINS, : . . . f ' representing a - line of Fire, Insurance 'Companies equal to any in Wessern N. C. Can give as low rates and terms as can be obtained. ' . . 11-ly - : .JOHN A. RAMSAY, Attends to Railroad Constructibn.Surveys and Mapping of Real . Estate. Estimates of "Water Powers, Plans for the Erection rf TVTi-lls.-Dwellinffs. &c:i and1 attend- to the 'purchase of all kinds of Machinery, BuildiPg MatcrialsV.&c; &c. v ; 9-ly. COUGHEXOUR & SHIVER SUMMER and WINTER. We keep our cellar full of the clearest Kennebec Ice all the year round, which we sell at the lowest price. We want oui customers to know that we are the oaly ones thtl keep ice all the lime. In connection with our BEEF BUSINESS we will have a LARGE COOLING ROOM FOEBEEF,- and will be ready to erve our customers with BEEF ON ICE. We have always on Jiahd the necesl torn rjeei, reauy ior use. COUGIIENOUR & SHAVER 23 tf ..... .. .. Valuable Town Property or Sale, R. R. Crawford offers his Valuable -S'tore Room 33x80 feet with a erood Dwell ing House up stairs, built of brick, located on Main Street just two doors from Mur phy Corner, above Boyden Hotel. One new Brick two story Dwelling House witn nice snane, good kitchen, smoke house, wash house, wood house, large garden and stable, carriage and bug gy house; on Enniss Street adjoining Mrs. J erry Brown s residence. Also, one nice liuiiumg lot on same street 80x400 feet. . All this property will be sold cheap and nrivatolv. For any further information, callatthis olhce, or address . R R CRAWFORD, - 5-tf , Winston. N. C. Remember if you get asewring machine from Merocev & xro. and alter a '.week t trial you are not satisfied, you 'are"' at lib erty to return and exchange. Richmond & Danville Railroad Company, Western N.C. Division. G-eia.1- Passe.g:er Of5.ce. 'Salisbury, N, C, June 19, 18S6. Commencing Sunday, June 20th. the following Passenger schedule and train service will be operated by this Division : "EAST 1 "WEST- Train No 51i Train No 50 Main Line. Ary. i Lev. j JLty. j Lev. A. M.! 12 45;! ' Salisbury 11 20 11 23 Statesville A. M. 1 20 2 44 2 43 10 17 9 40 9 12 8 40 7 80 6 57 10 17 Newton 9 41 Hickory 9 12 Jcard 8 40 Morgantbn 7 30 Marion -6 57 Old Fort 3 56 4 33 5 09'i 5 44! 6 59f 3 56 4454 5 09 5 44 6 59 7 86 7 37 8 008 20. 9- 02! 9 02 9 55il0C0 10 40;10 40 11 2511 25 12 30i3 05 3 25 p. M. 6 15 6 35 Round Knob . 5 24 5 29 Black Mountain 4 21 4 81 Asheville 3 43 3 43 Alexanders . , a 0U 3X)1 Marshall 1C5 , 2 00 Warm Springs p. M. I 1 15 Paint Rock. EAST, WEST. Train No 53 Train No 52 Arv. Lev. Main Line. ' Arv- Lev. P. M. A. SI. 5 30 4 21 Salisbury. 1125 P. it. 12 29 1 32 518 2 40' 3 06 4 08' 4 87 t4 52 5 29 6 21 721 758 8 55 p. m: P. M. 12 28 1 32 4,23 Statesville. 3 15 Newton. 2 43 Hickory. : 2 21Icard. - 1 28 Morganton. 12 27 Marion. 11 57 Old Fort. 11 40 Round Ivnob. 10 52 Black Mountain. 10 01 ! Asheville. 9" 16 Alexanders. 8 4fr Marshall. .' 3 14 2 43 1 56 1 28 1 58 2 20 3 05 4 08 12 27 11 56 4 37 1140 4 52 5 29 6 16 6 56 7 57 8 52 9 15 10 52 950 9 16 8 40 7 20 7 47 70C Warm Springs. Paint Rock A. M EAST. WEST. , Q - - ' J? Train No. 8. Arv. Lev. -. 7 p- M i 3 20 2 13 215 1 48 153 12 26 100 .11 42 12 02 10 26 10 27 10 15 10 16 9 28 9 29 8 86 8 45 -7 34 7 34 705 600 A M Train Xo. MURPHY DiY. Arv, Lev. A. M. Asheville. -Turnpike . Pigeon River.. Waynesville. f Balsam Sylva. (Webster. : iWhittier. 10 10 11 10 11 38 11 08 11 33 12 3U12 40 1 15 235 2 4o 336 4 20 5 30 1 35 235 2 46 3 36 4 25 5 80 P 3X Charleston. Bushnell , - IJarrett's 705 Meal stations - Trains Kos 50 and 51 run "solid between Louisville and Salisbury, carrying Pull man Sleepers between Cincinnati and Louisville and Knoxville,, also between Hot Springs and Goldsboro. - Trains Nds 52 and 53 run solid between ATfu-Vistfi-wn & Salisbury, carrvin? Leisrh tori sleeping ears .between fcha'ttanooga and Asheville., ; : v ,..'-" C W Cheabs. W A Tunc. AGP A. AGP A Richmond Va. . -; - Salisbury N C. V. E. McBEE, Supt.r Asheville Time Table Chester and Leacir Rallrcad. Ko 20 Leaves Lenoir 12 A si - .. . . -Arrives Hickory 1 40 P m ; No" 19 -Leaves' Hickory. I 4 05 p m -' : v ; Arrives Lenoir ' 5 55 " " . ; Connects v.iih Ko 1 and 2 of-V Is C It R I From -Town and Country,-" htrnttm Usst 1 - DOGS DISCUSSED. IX TIIEEK CUAPTEES., ciiAPtEK r. "Dor, or no JogVia, an J has uec-n.a vexed question lor many vear3. 1 naw propose to settle it, to ray own satisfaction, at least. I think "every dog has had its day." and am in favor of their utter extir pation, with the questionable excep tion of pure breeds oi three kinds; namely, the Newfoundland, the Scotch terrier and the Scotch colley, whjch latter is tne best sheep or shepherd's dog: The existing pre valence of dogs, m sncn mulipnary multiplicity, of such anomalous genng and mongrel hreed, is a per petual horror, a perennial source of incalculable danger, waste and . de struction, and a sore reflection on humanity and a disgrace to modern civilization. , i Know inai ijieseoroaa asser tions, coupled with "an avowal of : DOG OSTRACISM, will gain for me misnomers,! snch as "doggon'd old hunks," "dogged curmudgeon" &o. from others; n'ioi2)orfe, read on. The Scotch proverb that hids you "beware o' them that- dogs ,and bairns dreeand tun I " is a good and true admonition, but it brings no gnalms to me; for, dogs and children take to me kindly and at once. 1 am not vindictive to wards dogs ; have no personal grudge,; so to speak, any more than 1 have against rats, bed-bugs, .house flics, snake3, garden weeds or Can ada thistles. They were made so. and cannot be other than, they are; but it they were created for any good lu. niunKJiJu, il is not generauy known; and all the appliances of ingenuity are used to destroy or abate them and all kindred nuisances except the Idog, which is cntHled4 to pre-eminence of rank amongihe animated, baneful pests inflicted on poor humanity. In my youth I was an enthusias tic admirer of dogs, and read, with avidity" all tales and anecdotes of the more than human sagacity, matchless fidelity and heroic self denial of dogs; gulping them down with simple; credulity, as I did school-book stories of the wisdom and gratitude of - which I now knoic to be the most treacherous and thankless animal extant. In extenuation of such pueril'e verdanacy, I may state that I knew then only "pure and half breeds of all kinds of dogs But even in early manhood, when I transplanted myself to where mongrel canines do most abound, I clung lon and" tenaciously to my eariy impressions in iavor ox uogs. 1 .1 mi.. :x ,i : i.: xiie necessiiy oi a toiai craciicaiion of them was a slow, reluctant, pain- nil and pieoc-meal conviction with me. var was then, as now,-waged anainst dogs by -newsnaners and other great factors in human en lighten ment and progress, which my instincts of early bias, resented as a senseless, unresrenerate hulla- halloo. I hotly palliated the al leged misdemeanors of dogs; What if they diet steal meat, worry chick ens and ehildrenl,and such Jike?- God mado them so; and men, whose legitimate inends and companions they are, shoulclkeep such tempta tions out of their way, and protect and feed them well. I even con sidered muzzling as barbarous, and the danger from - . HYDROPHOBIA inadequate to excuse such cruelty. As to their sheep-killing predilec tions, I considered it unjust and bloody-minded to let rich men s sheep live and kill off poor men's dogs. N (Sub rosa. I inclined to the mns-culotte school of politics then.) I further argued, that if farmers killed sheep, without any compunc- tion, merely for their pelts, why f a little con- genial amusement in doing such work for them ? W as a pelt worth any less because the sheep was killed by a dog? Besides a sheep's pelt brought more in market than a dog's pelt -ergo; why should the- dog be killed? Then there were the silly pretexts of city people for persecu ting the poor dogs and the ? DEM ONIACAL MALEDICTIONS with which - they - analhematizctl thpm fnr 1fetn'rbinr their sleep of nights, by their howling and yelping., I t.O fl snnh ma MTltPntS Hiat Hlir neighbor's "dps merely did so instinptivaitr and without malice wuv.u - prepense; and as to their "baying at the moon," they had always aonc so and have never 1iurt the moon. As t.n thpir frrnwiinfr against their - . 0 -- . neighbor's dogs for running across lots and lawns: pulling clothes off the lines, rolling on ... ..- '.-- - - 1 t rolling on llower-Dca3, playing havoc in cellars pantries, poultry coops and other character- istic canine gambols et hoc ymus omne ad injimluihi I-inet and rcbti ff-! ed to rho. hof of Vnv ability. Mv labored and defenses, I will not weary the reader by repeating; nor the stunning replies of the dog renudiatora. Let it Suffice; to shv. that I was on the diminuendo, while they " waxed crescendo. --"My ' uhiis flapped for vantof wind; I was .sen sibly weakening, and conscious f now dec ki ng victory raiuer tliau trutii Jlriren to extremes, I recurred to the15ible, as a dtrnier re a tort, and searched it for props and stars to mv side, I found the dog to be A niSTOItlC ANIMAL, to the extent of only a few mer raerjUons,' but occupying no pro nounced prominence in the Bible. It tells of dogs lapping the blood of the '-ungodly Ahab. Allusion is alsa made to the fact that "tbedog returns to his vomit; and, par parenthesis, I may Hazard the , re mark, that the dog is the only ani- inai of the present day, addicted to tha!t filthy and disgusting practice. It is als6 recorded that dogs licked thej sores of Lazarus; but whether frorn kindly commiseration, or to partally allay 4he pangs of hanger bv lickinar oft! the remains of, douI- tices, is left to conjecture. llHs well known that dogs in Asfa,' of the; present time, are savage, uncared-for outcasts, and were most likely so then. There are some other scriptural allusions- to dogs, more derogatory that the above, .to whjch I will refer iri the ensuing chapters; but 1 utterly failed to find, and could not recall, a single in stance of any meed of praise, en comium or benediction being be stowed on the dog by any 'one of th inspired writers. This failure discouraged me so much, that I at last wholly absolved myself from further vindication of this accursed race of PLEA GENERATORS. I have observed and studied the nature, habits, instincts, reasaSiZJg powers and, "so-called" fine traits of Inearly every variety of the doe tribe pretty closely and critically evr since. And now. in mature life. I feel imnelfcd to make publrcTT property of my unbiascuTlrferen- tiaa aeanctions; npprng tnereoy to start a train of thought, in the pub- lie! mind, that will tend to bring abWtthe utter extinction of this horrid race ofbrntes; and failing inlthat, at least initiate a movement haying a tendency to vastly dimin isn their numoer, oonterate an mbnscrel curs, and retain and foster oijly pure and improved breeds. - lhis closes the prelude. ' lhe ex position will begin in next chapter. Pain is Mental. The Scientific American thinks tUat the n.gi tati on i n regard to t fte cruelties practiced on animals has been rather overdone through ignpr ance of the nature of pain, which, it: insists, depends essentially upon the mind, and not upon the nerves. All animals of lower grade, than liii man suffer very much less pain . i 1 .... . . , , ! - irom pnysicai injuries man our sen- Tdy gee the iTOotot this in their hkhitnal otinn. ATanv nf ' th j?n,rinna o.rtnvov t.n na Wo rn 1 T ' - J starfishes detach Darts of .', their i - x . armR ftt lft vprv Rm!,i kI a ram;n r, ?,i k tu n, and remain uninjured by the change or loss. 'A fish, that has t(jrn away the hook from a linem escape wi uptake toe bait again as soon as its fright has passed off, and while the hook still remains in the jaw which i perforated." A fawn whose foreleg was,woundcd by a shot . had it am- putatea without anesthetics, atia gave scarcely a eign of pain. Cora mg still higher,"-we recognize the fact, which is perfectly well known; that savages of the human race pay small attention to their injuries. Algain, every surgeon sees -convinc-i rig proof in hi3 daily experience tlat the sensitiveness of his various patients varies so widely, that there rdust be some cause - for it beyond what is physical. There is no such L wjde diversity in the nerve tissue. of their systems as can account for the extreme differences with which they not only manifest pain, r but with which they doubtless feel it. The conclusion is that, thongh the transmission 01 jwm . is aepenaeni on nerve nores ouiy us seat aim origin are oeyona aim are truiy noi. Physical at an. rain is ineniai. vf . coaV irt.riMi Wives. ! Tlif nnnnlnr f nstfi over OTi the olher side of the water appears to be. growing nidre warm toward Ameri ca and Americans. The wealthy and titled men of the . Old World are seeking with, increased earnest ness American brides, and it is. er- roneous to suppose that all they aro i.tci-ia wwi.c... , . : .. .. . is a cnarm aoous American giris inas the English-do not have. The wo- men of GreatBritiiinarehroughtnp jirom mwi cam est. unaucj wmwu tain a submissive and meek regard for the other sex. Thev are taught that the only thing in life for them is to marry comfortably aud go into H sort of serfdom for the rest of their lives. .No American girl goes into tnatrtmouy witn any sucniaea. he is bound to get the upper hand 'it she can, and she has a sweet and brisk independence about her that h most attractive to men who have inct witli nothing but the other sort of thing. So.it is that American girls, who at first shocked foreign society, are in great demand ia-Ea- tope nowadays as ornaments to sa- 1 loons and drawing rooms ana as prospecuvesto naooo nauYes.-Liav tiuiofe A:aericaa. ,' :' : Centrailxln- Tendencies , ' tea nraclcu futslarr. - It is perhaps not altogttlfer strange that the people in thfsconrir ixr are uniting awy from inir original theory of governineut. It du oeen tne experience iu a greater or less degree with all ages and countries. W e began here about a century ago with trusting the indi vidual man to take care of himself. burdening him m little as poj-ib!e with taxes and laws. Little t.v lit tle we are getting away from . this theory. We are depending on cor porations and. organisation, and sinking individual and personal identity in combinations of united effort, iabor is organizing, capi tal is organizing, everything, in- iiaed, is now done by cumulative effort. Whether this is degeneracy or advancement we are nnable to say, but it is certainly not the way things onoe were done. . 1 he whole scope of tSese drif tings, however. has ,a centralizing tendency that is objectionable to old-fashioned Denv- ocratic. notions. The fault may be in the times, and not" with the peo ple. It is certain, for example that labor has been compelled to organize for its own defense, ihe condi tioira.wjuch led to this are wrong, but the question arises, had govern ment been kept to its proper sphere -had the4imitations of the Con stitution been respected- would the people now be organizing ; for Ue tense against one another? We think not: The mistake consists in drifting away from the good old fashioned principles of government It is the legfiy-f 24 years of ' Ife- pumican ascenaeno. Falthfol Christine. Christine Olsen was the daughter of a toy -maker in Stockholm , and she was lOTeu by Hansen, one oi her father a workmen. She loyed Han sen, bnt her father would not let the lovers marry, and so Hansen said he would go to " America and make a big fortune and then marry Christine. He landed at Castle Garden with about $200, and set about getting work. He did a lit tle at cigar making, but not much, and almost before he knew it his money was gone and he wa3' out of work. This was sixteen months asro. Un to that time he had writ- ten regularly and hopefully to the girl in Stockholm, and when "Ids letters stopped she was much trou bled. After waiting for several months she determined to seek for Hansen. Her father had'died 4and after the debts were all paid Chris tine liad'ii few hundred dollars left. When she reached thi3 city she found a man who had known Han gen, and who thought that he had gone to San Francisco. Christine bought a ticket forairPjancisco. At Chicago ajonfidenre man per suaded Jier to sell her ticket io San Francisco and buy one for Omaha. He said he knew Hansen well, and that he was in Omaha. The. girl did as advised, and then , the new friend robbed her of her money excepting 15. This was all she had when she reached Omaha eight months ago of course Hansen . was not there. Christine found a place to work, saved her wages, and still tried in all ways to learn of Hansen. Two weeks ago she heard from him. He was in Kansas City. She set out at once for that eity and a few days later her former ;mistres3, in Omaha received a letter from her saying that she arid Hansen were married and very happy .New York Sun. "JJarrled Across the Creek. Rockingham Couut IIouse, X. C, July 22, 1886. The high wa ter throughontJforth Carolina de- veiopoa &roinantic 1 marriage in Rockingham "county yesterday. ir. James Madison - Stout and Miss Polly Mickle, one of the most beau tiful jonng Jadie3 in the county, started '.together yesterday to, get married. They were accompanied by a small wedding party. When they reached Jones creek, they found that the water, was up and they could not cros3. They were going w ine parson s on xne oilier : II .11 . side to be married. 'l Il-'swira across," - said Tony 11 rush, the groom's best man,'and bring the preacher to the other bank, and he can marry you irom there. lie soon had Preacher Uazlett . on the opposite shore. lie gave him Jim's license and told him ; to proceed, which he did, and soon Miss Polly Mickle was Mrs. James Stout. ' Masonry in North Carolina. ; According to the Masonic Month ly, Masonry in North Carolina wiu first organized iu Halifax county, and it is well-known that Koyal White Heart Lodge of Ilalifax town is the oldest lodge in the State: . "Masonry was introduced in North Carolina in 177U- On te ISUi of January of ihat year Heury Svmerset, 4 Duke of : Beaufort aud grand master of 3Iasons in and for t-ngiana, tssuea a cnaracier.. 10 Joseph Montgomery, Esq.; of" Hal ifar in the province of North Carolina,- con sti tati ng an d appoi n ti ng him provincial grand master of and for America with authority to con- stitute lodges, &c." ".. ' " . ; STATE NKWH. Xfi- Lisette iHTnhtiml diaghtr of Uev. tl. H. lVmheiia. and editor of the magazine At Moxnt and Abroad -wa married lait Sundsr in rhillimturr, X. J. toi Mr. J. X. HooJ. I At a prohibition metUngin AiU . county on Jnly ;5, OMinin, ' Josh Aidnch, drci3THLJtotinu tu favor of prohibition if it would mak whiskty cheajer. . The old'ShoVr pajxr mills at J em. which were detred by nro about 13 year ago. Uave.iwn ree ablishtnl by a Northern firm. Thej were first established in The Un coin Press tavt tint cvc n IHrons live in Catawba 5pruit township whose aces aesreate o7C ytm. h9? iter. It. B. Morri son, 1. IK. the father of ilrs. 4Stoiiewair Jackson, i aged 88: 31 rs Wm. Norwood, 87; O. i. Aber nethy.80; John Thornpon. 8I4 t rank-Howard 81; Thomas Thom- son SO, and Shcrrod Little Sr , 80. Mess. O F. Huff and D. C. War ner, of Lexington, arrived in Cori cord Monday, and began yesterday at the depot on the burnt foundry place the erection of a spoke and, handle factory. The main build ing will be SO x 30; there will U storing and engine room. Thev ex pect to have it done by the middle of August, whenjtlieywill buy from; ouroiuilrypcople lunjo qfuantities of hickory, persimmon and dog wood,, using two aud a half to three cords a day. We hope jthat-'this en terprise will be profitable both I to these 'gentlemen, who are old hands at the business, and to fur farmers who have timber to dispose erf. Tfv will advertise when they are read y&ir the timber. Concord XI III co. uuij . INTKRESTINU NOTES1; . 1 The labor qnestion "Henry are y ow goj ng to get u p to mak e the ti re? " I A man fell from the Brooklyn Bridge cars into the cable machin ery, disabling that and seriously in juring the man. A young woman of Ashton, Dak., has a farm which she works all She has three horses, and las, year she raised 1,200 bushels of grain, and is breaking up more land. She averages about one offer of marri age a month. j Enraptured young lady, gazing upwards, and addressing a young newspaper man : ,Y hat a1 wouder- ful Vung isspace I Do you ever t feeioyrwTtelmed by its immensity V oung newspaper man : "1 should . ; rather tbink I doioiss; I' hare a col u m n of i t to fi 11 e veVj 4y- i ' - . An exchange says: OrdinaryiCt by the wayfarer would prevent mari.)- distressing accidents at railroad sta ": tions. A railway locomotive ..ha , just about. as much regard for jtbe man ox, woman on thetrack as a - j cannon shot would have. Always look carefully each way before yo pass over the rails, remembering meanwhile that ah ' express' train would travel abou 1 100 yards while" ' , you were crossing from one jxjiut of ' ; safety to another. The soul of a true Christian s oi- i ten like the sea, the surface of which is often so rough in storms that it ? seems all confugion, while yet at the same time, deep do wtf.Vthere are silent placid deeps, untouched and unuisiuruea nj 7 rpigy win ace troubles. So with the beliererj t 1 the eye of mere sense his outward life seems of tentprti to pieces, and his mind tossed to and fro like a , bark"at sea," but deep down ike peace of God reigns supreme iio Jiis heart. IIccannot hush the snrfttce commotion, but his faith is secretly i at rest in God. Y. Poole Balferu. While coming out of one of ar leading churches on a reccst Sun day night we noticed a htif-ddzen young fellows waiting at the door t 1 "qatch ori" and escort' their, girls j home. This is not only nauseating and outlandish, but it shows a lack f0f reprct which an v sensible ariri I . . - - V should: not tolerate. A boy who ha not the back-bone to be seen with a girl inside the church should not have tle niekel-plated bras to ask for her company home in the . dark ness, but should he do so he ought to be publkly 'bluffed by tbe'jocu. lady. A few gentle reminders this kind would soon teach ' ihe would-bebeaux some sen3a.--Ex. Vi orkf the rrtsloii Bureau. Iet the soldier hucksters make a note of the faet that Commissioner Black has during -the -year issued over HO.OO certifioates to pension ers si nee he assumed the duties of his office, being 10 per cent more than. bad. 'ever before been issued by any one of his predecessor "dur ing the same length of time. The payment to pensioners during the fiscal year just ended exceeded those of the previous fiscal year by 13,', " 600,oou. Aim I'res 1 dent cievclanc has signed six peajson bills' where he has vetoed one. .Yet this ad ministration, Republican paper say, sis pre-eminently the enemy cf t!:3 soldK-t.l"f Washington. Poit. .' 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North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 5, 1886, edition 1
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