Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 18, 1876, edition 1 / Page 4
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i - r t. J X: ': : " . ' - ' 'l 1 mamlltBi 1 LINES Jf. -,- 1 . -a - j . v. Inscrib-J to tha oal iadiridual wh rer cmLiued the various functions of Judged JwrCustl. Witness and Sheriff in bim. V.f, the Chesterfield of the American Bar. bon. lwba mJklouM . x 1 1Vtck, fcrether. watch, watek wit eii, ' Watch for Ui judge with tbe high olUire, Watch him go fff th poor Uwyaire, Watch aim go for th peer jaraire, Waic him go forth miliUire, I Watch him pitch when the crowd bollalre.. Watch him spit end watehiim rlre, Hr him cum and hear him ewaire. Watch, brothers, watch, watch with eaire. . Wittk fr the presence of the high eellaiw. jiii. Wh.at-Jim ! Jim Bbine! Got him ? Great Cain! Jim lilaine Of the State of Main, Saiarteet eusi in out of the raia 7 - Gothiin? Our Jim. -jCMetjf Jim, Full to the brim Of brass aad saw. aud ploek and vim Got Jim? " Why bVa tW festive little pill That weat throe b eatawarapoua Hill And niade chivalry ill . r He stole UlyMee Jiule squirt. And put on Afertoa'a bhwdy shirt; Hzmvaarei CukUng'g butnp of gainptioD, Wallo'pped Hay oat of resumption, , Whitened BotWa gory locks. -, And put a blaek ye ou Sam Cox. Got hii4 ! ' i Our.iitn - . JTm Blaine ' Of the State of Maine ; Will somebody please explain ? COUNTRY GIRL. Up early in the morning, , Just at the peep of day, ' Straining the milk in the dairy. Turning, ihe cows away " Sweeping the floor ia the kitchen, Making Ihe bed up stairs, Washing the breakfast dinner. Dusfing" the parlor chairs. , Brassing the cromba from the paatry Hunting for eggs in the barn, Cleaning the turnips for dinner, Spinning the stocking yarn Spreading the whitening linen, Down on the bushes below, Ransacking every meadow, Where the red strawberries grow. Starch! jig the "fixings" for Sunday, Churning the snowy cream. Rinsing the pails and strainer. Down in the running stream Feeding the geese and turkeys, t Making the pumpkin pies, Jogging the little one's cradle, Driving away the flies. Grace in every motion, ! Music in every tone, Beauty in form and feature, Thousands might covet to own Cheeks that rival Spring roses, Teeth the whitest of pearls ; One of these count rv maids is worth . A scoire of your city girls. iQOTTW AS A UEKOVAriNG i ; CHOI. X'. W -r"':-' . - x r , Ju tte 'Matter part of this county 11 eek leabire) ere six acres that hare been in ealtoa lb- last ten. years. I IieU, first year, two bales; the last year, sis bales or! 1,459 pounds seed cotton per acre accurately weighed in. The land is 'tol erably Ievel,.ot . a enoeoiate eoiorf ana rather waxy'.' It bas Lad eaeVyearf from 12 to 18 two horse loads of stable man ure applied to the, poorer spot?; and ex; eeptine 1S66, '67. and 71 the remainder; ... . . . 3 " . t . ot tue neid nas oeen treaiea , wiib com- mercial fertilizers, at the lats of three, Cost) and sometimes five dollars worth j per ;acr. There has been, yearly, a gradual i2reae m tue yieta. Jast year the greatest of all, tuoagU not accounted a good year for cotton iu! this region. Year before last, after paying for fertili zers,' ginning, bagging, ties, transporta- tion to mantel ana cost oi eeuiug, lucre wasuettto the farmer something over forty dollars per acre; and last ye.-tr cm pite the low price, about forty-three dollars. These facts don't chime with the rota- tion ; theory aoout wuicu some are so clamorous. .They show, too.-that for the improvement of that kind of land there is nothing like King Cotton, as mueh as he has-been abused. On the same little farm, wheat, oats, corn, clover and millet have been grown: and every acre-cultivated is more produc tive now than it was ten years ago; but tbeiucreased productiveness of those fields has been far beltiud that of the cotton land. .'Commercial fertilizers have not yet paid near so well on anything else. Perhaps I should except clover. List spring I sowed on a clover patch plaster and Solaabls Pacific, leaving a rod or more space between them. The effect of the plaster is only perceivable, not more than; ten' per cent. -The Soluabfe Pacific increased tb yield at least one hundred per cent! Cor. Southern Home. ONLY- WAITING. . A vary a red man in an almshouse asked what he was doing now. He plied, "Oaly waiting."! ; was re- Only waiting till the shadows Are a little longer grown : Only waiting till the glimmer z Of the day's last beam is flown !! TiH the night of earth is faded ' From the heart onee full of day; tTill the stars of bean are breaking Thro the twilight soft and gray. Only waiting till the reapers Have the last sheaf gathered home; For the summer time i faded And the autumn winds have come, Quickly, reapers ! gather quickly The last rip hours of uiy heart, Fpr the bluou? of Ufa is withered, Aid I hasten to depart. - Only waiting till the ange's Open wide the mystic gate, By whese side I long have lingered, 1 Weary, poor, and desolate. Even now I hear their footseps. And their voiees far awav ; If they call me, I am waiting. Only waiting to ubey. Only waiting till the shadows Are a little longer grown ; Ouly waiting til) the glimmer Of the day! last beam is flown. Then fromout the gathering darkness Holy, deathless stars sha,ll rise, By whose light my soul shall gladly Tread its pathway to thejsjries. j For the Southern Planter and Farmer. ISOMETHING ABOUT CORN. i ' i As -'bread is ihe staff of life," I have thought that, perhaps, in the raising of corn and the peanut (the great elements for procuring bacon) tny little experi ence might benefit some of my fellow planters. In the outset, however, I promise that all successful agriculturalists must be governed by plimate and soil, as different latitudes aud different soils re quire a corresponding difference of man agement of even the same crops. My land, without fertilizing, will not produce more I nan from six to eight bushels per acre, lit tue application ot aucn material as I could procure at home, I have brought it up to fifteen bushels '"fo the w 1 a a . acre, i use no commercial rermizers. This is the outline of my mode of plant ing and culture. I lay off my rows three and a half feet distant, and check four feet.' I then plant every three-feet- row, so as to give the corn a distance of four by seven feet, Having taken some pains for the last three years for the improve ment of my corn by a careful selection of seed, I njow geuerally get two eirs to the stale. I plant the peanuts between eaebi hill of corn iu the row, and between the rows of corn, seven feet in width, 1 i il - a .1 punt, a tun row ot the peanuts., as tue peanut ts not detrimental to the growth, ot the; corn,! nor but slightly in the way in its culture, the pea crop is a clear gain of twenty-five or thirty bushels to the acre These fatten my hogs, with the assistance of very little corn. The peas do not attain such size as to be materially in the way; until corn is ready to lay by. I hoe eachrcrop twice .once at an early stage of the corn 8 growth, and azatn when J lay the corn by. As corn and bacon are what we of the South mostly need, I tli ink the method 1 pursue is the surest one to procure both. At least I know of none better. Occasionally I have planted speckled peas in the corn rows, as I think that to have a variety of food, causes the hog to take on fat more rap idly J. W. Wilson. Columbia, Ala. .American BhU Society. ?. New York, May H.The annual meeting of the American Bible Society reports receipts from alt sources for the year to be 527,103; expenditures (or the tame period; $539,231. Including tbe balanee on band May, 1875, there is still a balance left of $8,980. During the year 676,770 jbtbles were manofact-i ured and 650,470; distributed by the so ciety. They have circulated the 1 bible in twenty foreign couutnes during tue yeavabd bad Jt printed in nearly as many languages. The next anniversary will be held at Philadelphia on the 16th day of Kay, 1875. Nine members of the board of managers were elected. JUDGE SCHENCK A MARKED COMPLIMENT. j At the close of the late term of Anson Superior Court, the liar bad a meeting in which thoy passed resolutions compli mentary to Judge Schenck for the ener gy, legal ability and strict impartiality with which he had conducted the business m Jm rsnt 1 or tbe Uourt. i uis was eomewiiat an unusual proceeding, for the bar generally acts upon the orinciple that a iudire is doing all thi Las done nothing more than his duty, and can claim no merit for works of supererogation. Yet it was exceeding ly valuable testimony to the distinguished estimate in wuicu Judge bclieucic was held by tbe gentlemen of the legal pro fession. But what are we to think of that Judge who draws to him the sponta neous tribute of the people of a county over whose iuteresis he had just arbitra ted, and receives from them a compliment rarely bestowed upon such officials after Korh and labor done 1 The citizens of Wadesboro and county of Alison in pub ic meeting assembled, passed resolutions of a character similar to those adopted by the bar, and in addition teudered the compliment of a public dinner. Titere is significance in this. It means that Judge Schenck is worthy of these unusual honors. It means that a judge is found who commands the respect aud wins the confidence of the people. It means that that lh3 judiciary is being brought to its old standard when ability, purity and uprightness were inspperablv associated with its functions. It means that the unnatural alliance between law and politics, between venality and duty is broken upland that when the opportu nity is presented for contrast, the peopl will never more tolerate the accession of corrupt mages to pass upon their inter eats HaL Neics. Afei THE NAVAL EXPENDITURES. Reducing tJie Appropriations Over Millions of Dollars. Five NOETII CAROLINA FARMER. We bava received tbe first -number i this agricultural journal, and we think tbe far&eii of tbe State have reason to con gratulate themselvea npon its appearance 41 r bnniss is a practical, energetic, and avopderfully systematic man. the benefit of fvhieh latter quality Is seen in the ad mirable arrangements and classification of the subjects of rural industry. There is in the ' first1 number little of original uaatterj but as the existence of the Farmer becomes known it will become tbe medium of the dissemination of the views and ex perience of the intelligent planters of the State, and must grow up into' a recog nized standard of agricultural informa tion. I iThe Farmer is published monthly in the city of Raleigh by Jas. H. Enniss at one dollar a year. Every farmer should hare a copy. It is a neat and handsomely printed paper of sixteen pages. (-,;.; It was fonnd that there was a debt of ted dollars on a church tecenlly erected in Chicasro. but iust as it was about to be dedicated the people raised the money, paid off the debt, and started their church on 'a true business basis. In this city one tasinonable church is staggering un der a (Jebt of $200,000; another is pros trated before the auctioneer under a debt of pearly $300,000; another is groanin under a Still larger debt, and scores of others are miserably indebted in sums ranging from a hundred thousand to a half million. Ihe clergymen who occupy them have found them to be all vanity aud vexation of spirit, mortifying to the ainbiiiou which stimulated' their erection out of empty pockets. The best energies of these clergymen are spent in screwing money out of their members, to prevent the foreclosing of the mortgages, and their visits are, on this accounr, often dreaded by 'people who would otherwise welcome thein. Sell out these eburches to the highest bidder, and begin again iu a bet- ter.way. A. 1. Sun. i 5 . i ' m - J, w m .. ft x . m S . IT cr if rs o. 2.0 ans!i S.S-JL B . m a " s r i s s Z 00 a-a 3 C4 H 03 lb. 5d 2.C a . z : X IGLOUGH & WARREN 0 RGAN Go's 9 O 3 8 a. m m CD S CO CD 5 r (tatc SIMiTlONS! GliOUCIl ORGAN COM) lMruavrJu- SBBFaBBPV t - ; rf - AWU- 50 Piedmont Air Line Hallway Richmond & Sanrile. Eichmond & Danville E. W.. N. C. Divison. and North Western N. 0. B. W. C 0 !1 D E II SIF TIME-TABLE In Effect on and after Monday, March 13th, 1876. GOING NORTH. CO TIic Sicepson Case Moved to Wake. Vpon an affidavit made by the defen derit Swepson to the Court to move the trial from Orange county, Judge Sey moiir stated that he h-d received a letter from J6dge Kerr to the effect that he could not try the case. Judge Seymour then stated that there were ouly two counties to which he could send it, and they were Granville and Wake, and as the Sheriff of Granville county was an own cousin of the deceased, Moore, he had no choice in the matter bo he sent il to I Wake county. The defendant was then bailed in the sum of 810,000 as formerly, with Rufus Y. McAden and William F. Askew as bondsnten to appear at Spring Term of Wake county Supe rior Court. Hal. Netcs. STATIONS. Mail. Leave Charlotte .... 5.46 am Air-Line J'nct'n 6.2a Salisbury a 20 " " Ureenaboro 10.58, " Danville 1 34 r x " Dundee 1.49 UurkevilU 6.61' ' Arrive at EicLmond. 9.35 r m GOING SOUTH. STATIONS. Mail. Leave Ricbmnd 6.50 a m " Burkevi l. 9.00 . Dundee 1.39 r if " Danville U4Z " Greensboro 4.28 " " Salisbury.- .... 6.64 " Air-Line J'nct'n 8.62 " Arrive t Charlotte... 9.15 " uoTnh EAST. ' goIno WEST Ul J f: 23- t- ;vj ; if rfp n d: v m w i wi '. 3, "A. ; ' . a--:- m I GRAND COMBINATION ORGANS. FITTED WITH THE NEWLY IVKNTEp SCIlITJraXilS PATENT QTJALirTIWG TUBES, A i invention having a mont important le4ring on he future of Reed InKtrumenti, by mcirnt f I which the quantitv or Toljume of tone is veiy largely increased, and the quimty of tone rendered STATIONS. Ieave Greentiboro. " Co Shops Arr. Raleigh .... A rr. at (Joldsboro'. MAIL. 73 - 105 A M &12.14 r k 3,S r it 3 6.00 r m MAIL. Arr 4.20 ru Lv. 2.54 ' v Air. 11.43 I,'v9 15.Jf. SATIONS. Leave (ireensboro. . " Co. Shops Arrive at Raleigh. . . Arrive at Goldsboro Acconimdotttioii'i'rvm P O.O'J A M 10. 30 " 6.U7 AM 10.55 Air. 4-20 a a Lv. 2.54 ' Arr. 1143' L've 9.15 am Washington, Jlay 9. The snb com mitle reported the Naval Appropriation bill to the lull committee on Appronna tious to-day. Several unimportant chau ges were made, iome of vho items heiug cut down still more and others increased, making an increase in the total amount in the hill of $370,000. The bill a pre pared appropriates about Sl2.SO0.0O0. The bill last year appropriated 317,000, 000, and there was alao a deficiency bill for about $1,000,000 for expenditures in the Navy Department, making a total of $18,000000, or S5,200,000 more than the present bill. The reductions in this bill are general, and cover all branches ( f the service except the pay of officers and seamen, which is not touched. It pro vided for stopping enlistments until the number of seamen is reduced from 8,500 to 7, 500 in the navy and in the Marine Corps to 1,200 men and 70 officers. It provides that the bulk of all work for the coming year shall be done at the Navy Yard at Brooklyn, League Island, Nor folk, and Mare Inland, aud practically closes work at the KUlery, New London, Charlestown, Washington, and Pensacola Navy Yards, and calls upon the Secretary of the Navy to submit to Congress some plan for disposiug of the yards last tiamed. The Commissioner of the Western N. (. R K. Company have contracted with the Southern Union Telegraph Coinptny to construct a line of telegraph from Salisbury to Ashcville and Wolf Creek. NORTH WESTERN' N. C.B..H ( Salem Branch. Leave Greensboro 4.45 r V Arrive at Salem 6 45 " Leave .Salem 8.15 a u Arrive at Greensboro....... 10.33 ' 1 Epal to tlat of the Besti Pipe Orps of tie Saie Capacity. -; Oii celebrated "Vox CeleRte." "Vox llamana." Wilcox Patent," "Octave Conpler," tie chum inji ''Cello" or "Clarionet" Stops, "Gem Horn," "Cremona," "Vox Angelet," "Viola Ethtria t ALL. THE LATfeST IMPKOVEMNTS 1 " ; ; . - - . Can be obtained only in these Organs. Fifty Different Styles, . , , f J ror tlio IParlor and tho Cliiirch 1 THE BEST IN MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP, Quality and-Volume ot, Tone unequalled. - . j PEICES, 850 TO 8500. ! FACTORY AND WAREKOOMS, CORNER 6tl AND CONGRESS Ste, J DETROIT, MICHIGAN. (ESTABLISHED IU 1850.) AGENTS Wanted in Every County 1 Address GL0UG& WAflREN ORGAN CO., I DETROIT, MICH. May 20 1875. ly. 1 T Low.KLL, M.tss , Miy 9 A portion of ili e M.riiui4C Print VT ik wi.l aiw pend lor a fer d;ty., owing to au over stock iu certain dep.irtuifiiti. When a person ftrls disposed to over es timate his own importance, let him remem ber! that mankind got akug very before his birth, aud that in all probability they will get along very well after his death. pr. I. W. Jonea of Salisbury wlio was appointed on the Board of Directors for tbe Penitentiary in the place of J. M. Coffin, ia in the city attending to the meeting of the board. Hal. Xews. IK IS WORSHIP. BY UNA. . ToUiajr Ueatherg, are you weary Straggling 'neath WW bitter w'htl t pream nqt idleuess is h,oanr, JJavy not the proqi and raatj - Noble ia your hqinble lotf ' i - Work ia? worship, soorn it not. - - ' '- I . i Sigh not for the gilded glory! , 'i'hat the erowu or sceptre brings; . If ye-uW the fields of labor Ye are Qod created kings ; ' Oft a regal heart may rest Aeath a coarse and tattered vest. Though the worldly great may scorn you; i are ujsn wni more are they ? Ila. ve tbey not the iame Creator I re they .made of ftner clay ! Tis by noble deeds alone -Tha a, noble soql ia knowo. .. i f' -if. Jjei the voice of prayer and labor "k B'end in one hartuonoqs chinqa ; Jsefal works ara glnriqus anthemi, TU H prayer tire most sublime. , Thoagk y suffer seam and pain, .. Think ut tkat jr Uirts ia vmr! .1 - . - ! Think of Hiua. ike Meek ae4 ItuvU, When in Weariness ye croan : How He jlM.'aoitttiW, and auffered, roor, noaoBored ana unknown: ww L - . v n, i ne umvrsal Liord. 3 Wor?WPPed bul 4eel tni word. Hnred be the earfiatt worker i Blessed; fheroogh.toil-hardeneihand mi mf glorious ayntn of labor , pnwaTd floats front wv to land. T k. noble is yonr liH ; Work is worship, scorn it nt. f - I z - . ' : ranee has one man under arms for! w,w.j v citiu hi iuq ufipuiauon a lieri wtny, I iu 98 ; Jtalv, in 124 : Roma 1 1 127 ; Austria, 1 iu 160 : and ns land, I in 212, without counting the men tn ust inatan tervice. An Innocent Man Hanged. Kansas City Times. dayg ao tbe Times published a brief telegraphic dispateh from Dodge City, Kan., announced that a band of vig ilants hid banged two men near Fort Dodge for stealing horses in Summer county,! Kansas. Subsequent inquiries' manoj me Eriei sincsen lamer or prm of the men niiK4- yoang man &3med proved beyond a doubt than Calahan was gutttless of any connection with the crime, i He . was eifzazsd in ?atherln? buffalo bones on the nlains. and had hiti baoHgjsome Irora hia "dog out" to the raUroad when one of the horse thieves ame to hia place. He gave him shelter. While he was there the vieilanU from Summer county came up and. arrested both psrties, and notwithstanding Cala ban's protestations and bis endeavors to show that he lived there and had not befn to Summer county, took him with the guilty man and hanged him then and tber. (The Rev. Mr. Calahan says that bis murdered son was ia no way implica ted in this erime. DOM PEDRO AT SALT LAKE. SEED-THOUGHT. There; are strings in the harp of every mm .uu win wnu uusi. inm vu out music when the wraes of Truth t5r - mm tna ay. (tod's cranes of blesslucr are not rthAr umu me morns oi wrong, mr the figs of hit abiding peace from the thistles of l - -l - j ' . ' eaunui iires nave crown nn fri .v, Fc as pure wait UHiest, full of irajrance, nave iiioitomea QO slimy, ' Ht&e. Pain,; like a trusty sent! a el, guards very r . , , .vo0, w hw. ana we . autuocujaea ; wnenever daueec prtMbehea. a sincere word utterly lost, magnanimity fell to tha ground; tiler is .h iwaya to greet and accept it so expoctedly, - - . , - ana nest ways to ex- CS? ?.b"1 2 to hT, 8 lrg heart j . v w jif PtjiaM,S From the Salt Lake Tribune, April 25. At tbe theatre on Sunday evening Manager Ilarrif, who thought to do the handsome thing by Dom Pedro, stationed a tnooruinaiu- at -.18 ineatie aoor to give him (Harris) warning when h.SHH--peror arrived. No sooner had hia Maien ty entered than Manager Harris, with hat on, bowing and ; scraping, proceeded to usner Dom to Ins box. lint the EmDeror would not stand much of that sort of thing, and aaid in a very good-natured, pleasant manner. "That will do, young man, that will do ; put your hat on now, and show me to my box." beg your pardon' said Mr. Harris: "I intended no offence ; I am uot ranch accustomed to being in tbe company of Emperors." And he then led the wajr to the box. When bis Majesty was riding by thfe Pror bet's harem he asked the coachman what place it was. and wan told that Brigham Young lived there with all his wives. Hut he did not stop to visit King Brigham. He read aloud the sien on the office of the Woman's FxponenL as he passed and asked what kind of a thing it 'was. The coachman told him that it was a kind of a religious paper published by a class of Mormon women culled female roosters. The Emperor evidently did not nnW. stand the meaning of the term "female rooster," looked searchiugly at the P- choaebman, but pressed lurtuer, the inquiry no The clalr occupied by Oeoiga Wash ington as Worshipful Master of the Ma sonic lodge at Alexandria, Va.. is now in possession of Unanimity Lodfre of Fre and Accepted Masons at Edentan N. 0., wuitner it wa sent d urine the war of IS18 tor safe keeping. It is of massive maboganyj tlaborately carved, and a fine specimen ot antique furuitaro. An effort win oe made to luauce its custodians lo allow this memento of the illustrious man and llason" to be placed on exhi bition at Philadelphia. Sent to Edciitoo for' safe keeping 1812 ! Thai's food 'eafc keeping." in The Port Royal S. C. Standard nays : 'Pas senger by 'f ueud iy night' train from Charles ton; report detention of the car in the vicinity of Adara'.i Run, on the Savannih and Charles ton: K iilroad, by the encounter of an army of myriad of caterpillar that were wending their way upon the track, and in such number and tnanne.' an to impede the wheels oi the loco- motire (or miles. A Roman tomb was recently opened at York, England, and enclosed iu iu a stone coffiiu was found the body of a young gir, admirably preserved by the usn of gypsum, and furnished with what has been considered a modern device a chig- noi). 1 ins rested upon a pyramid ot pod?, plaits, and coil, and although many hundred years, old is a good speci men of the present fashion. The great steam engine of the Centenulal weighs 800 tons; will drive eight miles of shafting ; has a fly wheel : thirty teet in diameter and weighing seventy tons; is of 1,400 horse powtr, with a capicity f beiug forced 2,500 horse power; has two walking beams weighing twenty-two tons each; two forty-inch cyliuders. of ten foot stroke. .a crauk shaft uineteea inches in diameter and twelve feet in length; connecting rods twenty-four feet in length and piston rods four and cue-quarter iuches in diameter. Gen. Colquitt of Georgia, said : To remove stumps trom a held all tuit is necessary is to have one or mre sheet iron chimneys, some four or live feet high. Set fire to the stump aud place the chim ney over it, so as to give the requisite draft at the bottom. It will draw like a stove.. The stump will be consumed. With several such chimneys, of different size, the removal of stump may be ac complished at merely nominal labor and expense. ""' Webster said ; "If we work npon marble it will perish ; if npon brass, time will efface it ; if we rear temples they will crumble in dust ; but if we work npon our immortal minds if we imbue them with principles, with the just fear of God and love of our fellow.men we engrave on these tahlets something which will brighten through all eternity. Piaaenger trair tearing Utaleizli at 1':43am connect at Ureenaboro' witb the Southern bound train; making the quickest time to all Southern cities. Accomodation Train leaving Kaleigb at 8 00 r. m. connects with Northern bound Train at ;ret-ntoro for Uicliaond and all points Last. Price ot Ticket same as via other routes. Accommodation Train leaving Greensboro at 6.03 a. m . connect at (Joldsbore with Northern and Southern bound Trains on the Wilmington and W!don Railroad. Lynchburg Accommodation leave Richmond daily at 9 00 A n . anives at Dnrkeville 12. S6 r m, leave Burkeville 1 20 r m , arrive at Rich mond 4 34 rx No Change of Cars Between Charlotte and Richmond, 282 Miles. P.ip-T t'i it h ive arrangement to advertise the schedule of this company will please print as above and forwaid copies jto Uen'l. Passenger Agent. f'or further information addrens v JOHN Hi MACMURDO. (ien'l Passenger Agent. Richmond, Va Dec 19. '75. II : tf. Carolina Central Railway Co. It U a good time to recall some of the excellent advice long ago given by John Adams i ; Iut let us tak warning and give it to our children. Vbenever vani ty and gayety, a love of pomp and drees, furniture, equippage, buildings, great company, expensive diversion, and ele gant entertainments, get the better of tbe principles and judgments of men and wo men, there is no knowtpg 'where they will stop, nor into what evils, natriral, moral,or political, they will lead us" ; OFFICK GEXKRAL SCPBBIXTK51EST. Wilmington, X. C. April 14, 1675. Bf . U WW ir-,ajjaua,-acxagr Change of Schedule, On and after Friday, April 16th, 1875, the trains will run over this Railway as follows . PASSENGER TRAINS. Leave Wilmington at 7.15 A M. Arrive at Charlotte at 7.15 P. M. Leave Chariotte at ....7M A. M Ajive in Wilniington at ... 7.00 P. U FREIGHT TRAINS Leavs Wilmington at i 6.00 P II Arrive at Oharlotte at ..6.00 P M Leave Charlotte at i -.6.0'i A M Arrive In Wilmington at.... 6.00 A If MIXED TRAINS Leave Charlotte at - ....8.00 A II Arrive at Buffalo at........ 12 M Leave Buffalo at. 12 30PM Arrive in Charlotte at 4.30 P M No Trains on Sunday eocept one freight train that leaves Wilmington at ft p, it,, instead of on Saturday night. Connections. Connects at Wilmington with Wilmington Weldon, and Wilmington, Columbia t Augusta Railmads, Semi-weekly New York aud Tri weekly Baltimore and weekly Philadelphia. Steamers, and the Kiver Boats to Fayettey ille. Connect at Charlotte with its Wei tern Di vision, North Carolina Rail&ad, Cbarlotte fc Statesvile Railroad, Charlotte & Atlanta Air Line, and Charlotte, Columbia kugusta Rail road. Thus supplying the whole West, Northwe t and South vett with a short and cheap line to the Seaboard and Europe. S. Ii. FREMONT. Chief Engineer and Superintendent. May 6. 1875. tf. OMNIBUS & BAGGAGE WAGON ACCOMMODATIONS. ' i ACORN COOK. VYlth or without Portublc Hot Water Reservoir and Close?. ' Isa't tn? u eld-fi:ii:tii Store, tat get m ; With all latest improyements. argest Oven and Flues. Longest Fire Box for long wood, ymtilated Oven, Fire Back and Fire. ,Box Bottom In- sures a Quick, Sweet and Even Bake and Roast. wlng Hear h and Ash Catch. Wont soil flocr or carpet. Durable Double and BraceJ Centers and Ring Cover, purns but little wosd. Ha; Mici cr Solid Iron Frortt. fcarefully Fitted Smroth Castings. No 0U Scrap Irqn. (iicket Plated Trimmings. Tin Lined Ovea Doors.l prQund and Silver-like Polished Ed cs and Mouldings. leovy. Best New Iron. Won't crac. ManufacturcJ by ftATHBONE, SARD &. C0-, Albany, N.Y. i Sold by on EnUrpriHny Dealer ia er-v Towu L. V. BROWN, 1 Baliahury. S. C. Nov. 11. 1S75. 0noa. I I have-filtcd up an Omnilnm and B.ippajt . Wagon wltirh.are always ready to convey r- poiir in or from the depot, to and from parti, j wcd!in. &v. Leare rlrrl Mansion Hii or hi niy hivery A Sale Slablr, Fiilirr Mntt i near-liiiili'oail bridge. I M. A. BRINGLE- ' Aug. 19. tf. - r Chesapeake and Ohio E E ! THE GREAT CENTRAL ROT'TE BE TWEEN NORTH CAROLINA AND TUli INVEST. PASSENGER- TRAINS RUN AS FOLLOWS. - .- : t i EXPRESS, a in 10 pm filAG HI NE WORKS Conner of Fultox ic Council. Streets. I ; Salishury, N. C. f ' ' ' Having all my aew Haelwnery in opera- MAIL Leave Uicbinnnd 9 (Jharlotte.sville, 2.10 p m 2.15 a w White cipher, 10.20 " 8.42 i Huntington, 9.40 am 4.55 f m . ' Arrive Cincinnatti, 3.00, a i Cohnectinj closely - with all of the Grtat. 1'runk Lints for the .Wat, Xortk-Wett na 5 ! South-WeM. Thin ia the shortest, quietest ami cheapest Route, with less changes of cars than any other, and passes through the finest wentry ' in the world. ' Paaaensers taking thfiL Ex preaa tiain n the N. C. R. R. have no delay, hut connect clowiy, to any point in the West Virst rlns.4 nn 1 Emmierant Ticxeta at 1 tl I Ix)WEST Ratfs and Baggage checked. Em grants qo on Express Trains. TlMK, Dl8TA5C, andMbxEY saved hy taking the Chtiopeakt : and Ohio Route. I Ertight Rates to and from the West, alwiyi M I low an the lowest. - .;' Merc hants and others will find it to their in atiec, I am now prepared in connection with ' terest to get our Rate before shipping or or- theIron k Brats works to ! all kinds of wood work, such as Lumber Dressing, i ; ' - ' Topgire Ac Groving, making Sash, Biinds ic poors, making moulding from inch, to 6 inejies wide, also Turning & Pal tern mak iDg Rawing Bracketts, Arc.' Having the besi Machiuery aud first class work men , atsfaetiou is guaranteed. July 29, 1875. ly. HARDWARE. MO EE Buggies far aale. ALL GRADES A classes. I! hare, on hand. Buggies which I will sell at tha loweat cash price, and an low, or lower than any other establialiment in North Caro lina, according to grada; All kindsof repairing done, at short aotiae. Those wishing any thing lo my line, would do well to call and nee me, before purchaaiiig elsewhere an I am determined not lo be outdone either in price or qnality of work in the State; Call on me at Franklin Academy, 4 miles N. W. of Saliaburr, N, C, C L. KEEVES. 12 ; 6 oa. during. For Information and Rates apply to J- C. DAME, So. Agent, or G. M. McKENNIE, - Ticket Agent UreensboroN. C G. R, HOWARD, General Ticket Agtnt. W. M..DUNN, j Sujerintendent.' 1 Richmond Va. en y nn want Hardwaro at low figure, call on tho undersigned kt No. 2 Granite Row. ' i - D. A. ATWEll. Sal(aburj,N. C.Maj 13 tf.: ! i i i .i - - " HOUSE AND LOT JOB. iSALE, A i elegant new house with four rooms' on the ground floor and two mn tha upper, with kitcfeu, tc. nit oated in a debirable part of town i offered for iale. For farther f-nfarma- tionpply at this xBca, 655 ACRES ! . Best Tract in tbe Connty. One of the bej?t (if not therery best) Tract? of Ind in the County is for sale. It contain 655J acres, and will be sold at $6,000. There " land enough adjoiniug thii tract which may purchafedto accommodate a pretty large col ony. Its within 2 miles of a railroad depot 7 For further particulars addrssa box 32, 8u bury, N. C .25:tf HORATIO N. WOODSON S Eeal Estate and Insurance Agenti, Salisbury, N. O. OFFICE- -In the Court-Howf. Will sell and buy real etate: rent home and collect the rents. . - - FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE RISKS . a specialty. JOHN S. HENDEESpy, Attobkkt xu U . will transact the iegal fearfuess of tht itW- Patronage soliciUd aitdpr-mpt ton guarantied. . "
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 18, 1876, edition 1
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