Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 6, 1876, edition 1 / Page 4
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: ! - - ' - " - I I ' 1 . . : - . - - - -. 1 . . V X i. i.i-r" , ...... , i . : : .x . , 'I,": I i i If. . . i .. - ' - i ! IV . f,-iL I 1-.' m :ir 1.-1-'' J- ,. .. l Ik) f . . . K I I - . f. tf ' 1 ' . . . -. - , - ,- , w v B . . JB J V M . 1 n liru I f j)K. 1 DeWITT talmag v -WHniihgton; Journal. There arc few persons who do not form: in their oV'u minds an idea of the personal apcaraiice of any man who stands prom inIforward amongst his felloar-raen.! We reiotml-er the idea we had qf the preat etaiesinati i' Henry- Clay. TIow- we thouebt he was a slender 'light-weight''; . 1 - .1 . . .U k THE BIGGEST EAR STORY, .-- i r- : ' ;-. !.. - q?he Jleno N"e?.) - Gacite repeats it thus i ''l re fousbt em standm' anq njn nln'i but the toa'zbest titizen I ever, lit 1 onto was a black 'an. TUE. MOBMOS'S HKGIBAj ftrure. dressed in the up of the style, t,b nlftVefl it Dh 'd oi)ked at 'the trade ProPse eayiog uiao ana .n5 .;tW .t filling r5rmftntn. smooth 'crloTes J L .t r -A : -w residence in Mexico. nitu.niii ni-0 t j-- ; . i maJV. UIIU 4. OCC III a UJIUUkO kuk w,"iw r , erect fisnre. uoman nose ana epariuiug it I The correspond entf.the petrolt Press has been interviewing Brlngham Tonng, e was sittnr to nd t'rom hiu) op tajued the ; great : reaAon cuappanu eauu ..wbohuiw uh, -mb.. fof tne f-ontemplated Ajorman evacnanon mv dnc meh Lim ana went borne. ; I L Lf. J . J - . ' ,i . 1 i r .? i- sneaked op and begun Dy snooiin at ms ears auu ictsi. ucu i ... , i ,i -.... . . . T . . . . I voraatinn iit.anpd between tne interviewer nnlr ornnnrl him nrt with three ft lint 9 cut I . " . T r s off his tail. Qld blacky heerd me shootio' 4 ' or,a tnmin mnn,1. .fhi tail lvin there. ! Uorreapondent. MUM V w j w f - - T I understand that yon and takir Js it eo? a nmin . 1 utoDLiura tree, wun ouiv blue eyee, with bushy hair briatling ' UPJ two ca rtridees left and him a comiu all over his head.' Dut when we saw iim Wejlf tQ malje jong gory short, I hot with his large six feet two inches fr4me,j twjce hittin bim both times, and he be sloping shouiac-rs, uaxen luiu ujrr lyug, gUn tQ git hot, so he ook np tlje tree arms, plain clothes, soft hat genial smile, afr meand I kuocked him down three and wide mouth, we could not realise thM ,:mea tefoie iny can broke. He started lie was the man of aur youthful enthusn oq. fonnh !trjp anu J &tfnt fcuow what nsm-the great American orator. 1 to ?db Itill l thooght of riiy derringer which Hct, ot all ute great men we ever w, shot a four-ounce ball, 1 I drew her out, John CL Calhoun, of South " Carolina, ia tied a 8tring tQ tjie trigger, and as old tfce only one who ever came np to; the fall fcy Came ap with his mouth wide open realization of our imaginings. . . I T drooned her in. Ile'hadu't time to spit - So of Di. T.j DeWitt Talmase, the great preacher and Doctor of Diviuity 0 Xew lork. Ve had expected a grave Bteru-looking, reservea, rather repelling man, who looked dowii on common morf tals from a standpoint almost among th angels, and near whom common humanity approach with awe and with head bent down in deep humility and reverence. her out, and so he swallowed and I pull ed the string. Off went the gun, and so help me, I never see anything of bear or pistol sjnee," - : I A NOVEL LAWSUIT. London Daily Telegraph, May 31. Mr. Young. It is. I O. What are your reasons for leaving 1 Mr.,Y. The fact that in si years! at the longest Salt Lake Valley will be sub merged in water. U. Will yon please state your reason for this belief 7 J j Mr. Y.' It is a well known fact ihat Salt Lake has no vissible outlet fori ts waters, thongh ja number of streams of oonsiderable volume are contiuually dis charging their waters into it. It has! al ways been conceded that there was some subterranean outlet through which 1 the surplus waters have been discharged, t In the past few years the waters of the lake have been rising, on an average, I ten inches per yearj Now, through my powers of divination I have discovered -that' the outlet is beincr closed up on accouut of the vast quantities of sodium and chloride e-atberintr at iU mouth. Five years at A curious case came up in the second Wo nroru t .ir.nin awain anil n after division of the Quarter Sessions in ijdui- the loncrest will! be sufficient to close it reading his rem itks abdiit liis late visit burgh to-day on appeal from the Lord entirely, and then Salt Like Valley will to -Trinity College Commencement, wle Ordinary, Lord OraigbiJJ. A gentleman be one vast ocean and Salt Lake City a . fWt -a-desire to" 'introduce liim to North of means named Gardner, residing near city in the ocean. Carolina aa whole thousands saw him and Melrose, brought an action for the pur- C. Do you think all the Mormons? will heard him at Trinity, But those whjo pose of having a young woman named be willing to leave on ibis bare supposi were not there may like to know how hie Mary Gardner prohibited from calling tion ? wta m him her fathers rom the evidence it I Mr. Y. All true Mormons will do as Dr. Talmas ia in height about 5 feet appeared that Gardner, while courting their prophet directs, and those that j will 10 inches, straight dti to the nane of his! the lady who afterwards-became his wife, not w&are better off without. ' r . i. ..II..- ...... j I .T. . . ' t wnattime ao you propose ieav- ... iIia KenH nednliar discovered that she was eneitntev riot to the student and writer that slight withstanding this he married her, and a droop forward which long habit at the week or two afterwards she gave birth to desk forms. He weighs somewhere about a child, the defendant in the case. The one hundred and thirty vfive pounds. HSs fact was kept a secret, and Mr. Gardner arms and legs are long; his head is high, denies that he is the father of the child, not very wide, and it is partly covered though till the present trial he made no with coarsa sandy hair which he carefully public avowal to this effect. The Lord trains over the "dome to cover certain J Ordinary found for the pursuer, but the of New Mexico, is at present looking up soots where thpre is an evident tendency second division have now reversed the J a place for us. to grow through." His nose is long and decision, holding that Mr. (jardner, by Blightly -'rctrovssc." Standing in front marrying the lady, knowing her condi oi him and takinjr a view you are struck tiou, took upon himself the burden of be- with the great protiiineace which the bubp ling the reputed father, and that he is not 01 comparison h is. It mast be the pee ing? Mr. Y. As soon as possible, but; per haps not for a year. U. To what part of Mexico do you pro pose going ?! Mr. Y. That is not decided, but prob ably in the northern part. Gov. Axlell comment Dump in hij head, liis eye Jbrowa are pak-sandy and very; busby, his eyes is bine-grey and wheji he; dr4aws down his eyebio Wd nearly hiding the eye, as he frequentjy does in speaking, ,ypu can see the sparkle of the eye, the dja mond glitter but it appears so deep that you could not teach it with your fiogerj if you weie to thrust it into the aperture. When in conversation, his eyes come open and theu you see what large pupils lie has and. you can almost feel their lengthy But the speaking feature of Jiis face is his mouth; Jt is eimply j tremen dous. When he lays it open, as he fre quently does, yon look at.it, or into it, in A a 1 . . . I 1 now alter twenty years silence, eutitiea to deny the penalty. CHINESE LABOR ABANDONED. The Boston Globe of Monday says : "Mr. Sampson, the North Adams shoe manufacturer, who employs Chinese work men, has decided to discharge them, or rather not re-engage them, preferring to give employment to other residents of the town, who are suffering severely from the stoppage of several mills and workshops. Mr. Sampson has hired Chinese shoema kers for six years. In 1870, having suf fered much from the strikes of the Cris pins, and being unwilling tq cornply with ntnniRhmpnt 1 Ti An nnt ntiml'l v.rpah Uheir demands, he" sent hi3 agent, Mr. T : ,-. . - "r--"X-"v.'"i : .it . G : : r- nu: trom ear to ear, but it might he clasied u.aoc lu rtU ' "l.,"imcu' mainly for the purpose of breaking up the order, between which and himself a bitter warfare was waging. The first importation consisted of seventy-five men or boys, for most of them were between the ages of sixteen and twenty years. Si nee that time several lots have come 1 a that cJass, if mouths are classed at all Qf his voice nojdea can be givenj on! pa ,per. When he begins it will strike you as being very harsh,-grating on tbje nertjee; asbe advances, warms up, or yoju becopae more accustomed1 to it, there is a softening in the tone, .mil when he enmea in th pathetic part of 1 his discourse it softens returned, the number employed in the luve nQ ilUerest for lhe geiier4l reaJer, 1 no wn 'and is sweeter and clearer. iis manner cannot be described, but a famil C. Will it not be a great los to ; leave here after you j have expended so j much time and money iu building up an empire here 1 Mr. Y. Of course it will; but everything in this world is all for the best. VVhei in Mexico we jwill be free from piiosecu tions of the government of the Unite States, which will be one point gained for the better. ! I C. Do you propose founding an fempire in Mexico independent of Mexican rule 1 Mr. Y. We do, and in thirty years from now the Mormon sect will be the strongest in the world, j We propose to have the best government on the face of the globe. There will be no treasury grabs orj Belk nap affairs to disgrace the government or to bring down shame ou the administra" tiou. Every one will be equal, a iChiua man will have as'many privilege as a Caucasian. C. Will the government be moriarchial or republicaii 7 ? Mr, Y. We have not yet decided, but probably monarchial. The larger mass of Mortnns would be belter satisfied with this than with a republican form of gov ernment. I After a few more rematks which would Grant has gone into the' Senate for a f accessor to Pen. Jkietow,, as Secretary d . m m ! ii "it .ii.ir ' '' . oti tne .t reasury, jumrw oi Jiiaine was Chairman of the Senate "Committee on Appropriations, is a humdrum party man, arid has been a faithful upholder of a faith less Administration. Under ? him the Treasury will fall back into the old ruts, arid thp energetic work of Bristow, which has given Grant so much trouble, will be brought to an end. He will r be a far more seryiceablerman to the party during a I Presidential campaign than .Bristow could have been. He will use his depart ment as an electioneering machine ; he will observe tbe interests of the party at the expense of the public service ; and be will notour op the opposition of the rogues by interfering with their opera tions, Morrill is no reformer, He has not sought that kind of a name during bis ong period of service in the Senate. 1 he whiskey thieves and the other Rings of revenue plunderers will enjoy a period of rest during the remainder of Grant's ad ministration. Nor will Morrill borrow any tiouble from the cry for retrenchment and economy. 1 hese are not matters in which he has concerned himself as a Senator, or as Chairman of the Commit tee on Appropriations. Nor will Mor rill have anything of consequence to put out or suggest in the way of financial pol icy. In short, the machine, as a whole, Will run iu his hands very much as it ran ih those of Boutwell. With the Treasury Department under Monill, the Interior under Zach. Chand ler, the Post Office under Jewell, and the War and Navy Departments under Cam eron and Ilobeson, Gram has a working Cabinet for the election, and all the pow er of the Administration can now be turned, without obstruction, into the ser vice of the party of corrupiion. Briotow was ao obstructionist ; he irritated theX President; he attacked his friends; befell foul of the Rings which he set up; he en dangered the party, and refused to sac rifice everything for its sake; he attended to his proper business, and tried to per form it in a creditable way. Morrill will be a safer man. lie will suit Grant bet ter than Bristow did ; he will suit his col leagues in the Cabinet better; andhe will suit the UeDUblicau party better: but as for reform and the professions of the Cin pinnati platform, we shall see about them Y. Sun. BY BET. WltLtAM ABKOf. ig, -x THE LANGUAGE OF FOWLS. factory during the past six years ranging from seventy-five to upward of one hun- iar sresture of hii seems to he with hhth drea, a ne present number is eigbty-hve, hand raised, elbows at right angles, and of whom fortv lhe latest arrivals, were fcand pointing upward. He finished his imported a year ago. Some of the first etmont Trinity and backed down from importation remained tour years, and then -tha-desk wit i hir-hAndR in thia! nrwitS.m leiurnea to unma, ana nave eince come thanked him for the interview aud with drew. X spent the remainder of the lime at my command looking over the doomed city, an( bound trembling on heard , two sermion. you like the way and the word ''Judgment his lip's. Shortly after, we farmers comparing .notes on the One asked, "What paif did best ?" The reply was, "I liked -, lie ended, best-he seemed to want to &ay mbre and yet he was done!" Tha effect of some passages of his sefmon was very great, his illustrations very striking L find the overruling .power of comparison apparent through both, sermon j and ec- back to this country and are now work ing at Belleville, N. J. The Chinamen here all work by the month, on contracts for three years or longer. The prices paid them have never been made known to the public, though they are supposed to re ceive from $20 to S25 per month. Over forty of tbem are at liberty to go at any time, the term for which they were hired having expired. They are in no hurry to return, and would undoubtedly be glad to renew their contracts, but the' 1 -v eveuing round me at J where I boarded the westward train ou the Pacific Railroad, which laud ed me at ray destination from which I iudite this letter. 1 am confident Bringham means every word he says. It is to be hoped that the whole tribe of Mormons will do as! he di rects and leave for Mexico and staiy there, after which our government can wash it- sen clean trom tne stain wiucu lias so long rested upon it, and thereafter see to it that no such curse is ever allowed to get root in the land. Yankee Bldtk, -ture As a companion Dr.' Tajmage is very opportunity to'do so will probably not be DIRECTIONS pleasant and interesting. He. seemed! at en them. - PERSONS A i unity like a schoolboy w vaj:aitionT (He was up with the sun and scarrpering $ver ICE IN LAKE SUPERIOR. ... uuia Lux Hums uuni urea&iask wuen i rni r-i t rr i- i Le came in and .ftp, d,.i -The Milwaukee Sentinel prints a letter FOR RESTORING APPARENTLY DEAD FROM DROWNING. Came in and after a hasty ideal made ,' US a" f B , V ash for his nenl Tn fitXViZ!S 'froBl Wis., dated June 5, which ' rnall fnr Lis n&nin'l T f.-t . Il - ' :t .. - M'a tiivu. --u.iacfciia4K pencil . ((rnL, i l r t i o -n Bmed to be intruding alJ.. i After K WfS'P""' ?" nvfrw .n-nvaNn:u .1 :u J i oituiw; it kwcuiy miieu iowd. TO,ii; -,i j ;..rL .tJ J.5?TtVr of a thickness often to twenty feet, and No iniana are ' walk, meal and interview, the pencil. volummious. : Good-bye, Doctor. We llkfe whole-souled Northern man, jj rhj came to look at us with and unprejudiced jeye, ana ve would nso to see thousands jrou if there were any more. Jlintk to Young Gcntlen. en: for miles it is anchored along the shores. Circulated by the humane Society of the Commonwealth ot Massachusett3,a87o.J I. Lose no! time. Carry out these dis rections on the spot. II. Remove the froth and mucus from the mouth and nostrils. III. Hold the body, for a few seconds r : ii .i i i . I . ycionany me wina arives it .a short o, with the head hanging down, so that fyou fpr al , .:Vu i 3 i i. "peuioga io the water may run out of the lungs and LUjJ.-.! admitthebody of the ice, and then closed the winoWJ f l .1 ji i r i t uF8o as., nom tuem tn ere tor days, and IV. Loosen all tight articles df cloth- ,r. ouulB lur or more, Derore ,nff about the neck and chest. uC iiiucu aamage y. See that the tongue is pulled for- T oeen uonu to evey cratt that has ward, if it falls back into the throat. B .c.jr uay tafciug hold ot it with a handkerchief wuio mttu mito several steam- ill not slipJ like It wind can move it from the ahnrea ) .Our young friend W. has banded us I it is anchored until it thawa nfflf.5oti tbe following bit of advice to vouoa Wn- so that it will rise, and if the- weihor nemen, witn tne request to publish; for aeeps as cool as it has been thus far this tne Denellt Ot Others, he having rprdiveA lonrino'- them ia hnfc lWtlo m-ncn..i !,- .k- i w 7- ---"O , wv. i - ! ol -- ..w.v u.vEUWk kuak fcUB - r.i l . . r i i r . I i .... . , . t lUAicnai ueneunpererrom ; lase win be clear ot ice for twenty davs fHTM yet. At present it is hazardous to attempt e mo.t ipant step ofall .Jrkn.you spend the evening with a bret- a passage through it." F T1 wIa i tep,aU ty friend -the wisest and wTttit L 5 - 6 . - 0 do 1 ad. y, lay the p .Christendom becomes a bore after Uh at Hour. 1 - - - Uoa t bel'Dve any woman to te a an gei. xi you teel any symptoms of that aisease, iaae a aose ot sa?e teA nd tn, pox, VI. If tho breathing has ceased, or nearly so, it must be stimulated by pres sure of the chest with the hands, in imiu- tion ot the natural breathing ; foicibly-ex pelling the air. from the lungs, and a!low mgit to re-enter and expand them by ihe elasticity of the ribs. Remember this is person on hi back, with a cushion, nillnwr. nr nnme firm Awful Uardmer was onoe a well- substance under the shoulders ; then press known, pugilist and sporting character in with the back of the hands over the loicer gew York. Onone occasion he went to part of the breasl-bomand the upper part of Newark with "a select party" to give a the abdomen keeping up a regulkr rep- YeA it is ii mnrh mA r .u Ti T i6 uuiuihHii. 4. ne negro wno dad utiorr and relaxation ot pressure twenty .mUcUam.a,aeRa charge of the ball where the show was to or thirtu times a minnt A J.. K 1 '-T- - vV V unariimrivvQunas may be applied w th safety i - - . Is there any one who keeps fowls who tas not noticed the great variety of sounds hey make, expressive of their feelings? It amounts almost, if not quite, to a lan guage ; probably moie so than any other creature except man. Lven the modula tion Of noises made is very significant of meaning. First, there is piping of the ittle chick, calling for the care of its stately mother who continually keeps an swering with the assuriug "cluck, cluck.' As tho chick grows a I'tlle older, the piping is succeeded by a chirrup ; then ihere is the thrilling soup of pleasure they make under their mother's wings when sitting down to rest ; but just put your land under the mother and null out one of the little chicks, and hear its cry if terror, mingled with the d'-finance and abase of its pareut. Throw a large beetle iuto their coop, and hear the consternation uttered by all the little family, mingled with the warning voice of their matron. Xow, throw them some dainty bit, - and jear how eoon her voice changes ; her children understand there is something extra nice for them by her peculiar de clamaMon, which brings in all stagglers in a jrreat hurry. How-well the little things comprehended the peculiar cry of their mother in case of danger, such as the approach ot the cats or hawks ; or let a little straggling waif peep into the coop, and hear her timely warning to keep out. In the course of time the mother tires of her charge, and gives her children the slip, who express their forlorn feelings by a whinnmg cry, while hunting around for her. In due time the young genilemau chjck tries his voice at a crow. Could any one ever believe that such stammer ing, such straining and croaking, would 111 i i ever reach the clear, rich song, that lias been celebrated in the history aud poetry of jail the great nations of the earth, and cause so many great "awakening3" in all classes of society ? Soon he begins to feel gallant, aud if, by chance, he finds some rare bit, hecalls some of the nearest belles to partake of it, but they frequently arrive just in time to see him bolt it him self. One of the next musical strains is the prating of bullets when they feel hap py and well j then there is - the alarm, when startled by anything etrange ; also tbe shrill cry raised by all, should a hawk appear. Another peculiar noise is made when you approach their roosts at night, uttered and answered all round, a slight, thrilling noise, as much as to say, hawk ! what's that strange noise ! which ia deepened into a sharp tut-tut, if danger is suspected, and into a shrill, piercing cry, if taking from their perches, evidently suspecting that you may be thinking of Irl 1 -. 1 cnicaen pot pie f i ilnnfe there is no domestic animal that has a let,? offensive voice than tbe domestic fowl. It will compare favorably with the voice of the duck, turkey, guinea fowl, goose, or pea fowl. Their loudest noise has a charm for many a fancier, when they set up the cry, "(Jome ! Come ! Come 1 Take the r I confess I have learned, to love - fa divine sovereignty., J am not ashamed of it 1 I do not explain it away ; I delight to own thai I am indebted to sovereign free mercy both for Christ to believe in and for my believing in Christ. The ob ject to look upon, and the look upou that object, are both the gifts of God. - ' , Conspiracies , have at. various times sprang up in the world to deprive the Supreme of this peculiar glory to deny Him a will. Men would fain substitute s law of nature for the living God They conceive of an unthinking principle like gravitation ; they think of a power like the sea, lashing itself, and raging, and ad vancing without a purpose or a plan, floating a ship and sinking a stone with equal indifference, and continuing after wards its unmeaning roar. I love the ninth chapter, of the Epistle to the Ro mans : it is a sublime Drotest against an atheistic human philosophy, and a trans parent assertion of the doctrine that tbe potter has power over the clay, and puts it forth too. I can have no communion with a mere ly mechanical omnipoieuce, a sort of in fiuiie ocean that heaves eternally by laws to which it is subject ; saving me it I con tinue to make myself sufficiently, buoy aut before I am cast on its cold, uncaring bosom ; and swallowing me up with the same relentless regularity if 1 make the eap before I be light euougb. I his om nipotent principle is not my Saviour i I need as my Saviour the living ijrod vrhjt loves me, aud whom I may love in return, the God who looked on me when I was lost, and loved me when 1 was worthless, who saved me from hell, and made me his child. I need from my God not mere ly a general aspect of benevolence towards the world, under which some of the most irous agonizera may struggle into heaven ; I need not only permission to save myself, but a hope that the Infinite sees me, knows me, pities me, loves me, crasL8 me, and holds ine in the hollow of lib hand, safe against all dangers, until He bring me to his eternal rest. My God is He who, after giving Christ for my-re demption, gives the Spirit to quicken me and unite me to Christ. If there were a true viue growing in the ground beside, me, and I were a branch severed, root-i less, fruitless, ready to die, and sure wheu dead to be burned, what would the living vine be to me, unless a kind and skillful hand should graft me in and give me life! The gospel is nothing to me unless I am permitied to attribute a will to my God, unless I am indebted to that free-will for all mv salvation first and last. for the pardon-price and for the renewing power, Bichmond & Baavile, pHclmona Northwestern Nj CB. W. j j COHDEHSED TinE-TABLE In EfTectj on and after Sunday, June 4, 1876. ! PiecUnont Air I4n 'Hallway GOING NORTH. STATIONS. Leave Charlotte ' Air-Line Juntion Salisbury Greensboro Danville Dundee Burkeviile Arrive at Richmond M tl it ii maIlJ 5.55 !am 6.121" r 10.58 1.36 1.49 649 9.36 t. GOING SOUTH. Express. 2.15 AM 2.40 4.19 6.17 $.54 9L01 il2.45 PM $.19 STATIONS. MAIL. Leave Richmond 5.50 am Burkeviile 9 00! " Dundee 1.39pm Danville 1.431 " Greenborough 4.35j " Salisbury 7.01? ' Air-Line Junction 9.06; " Arrive at Charlotte 9.03j " u It I. GOING EAST STATIONS. Xieave Greensboro Lo. bhops Anvat Raleigh Arr. at Goldsboro STATIONS. Leave Greensboro . " Co. Shops Arrive at Raleigh Arrive at GokUboro WlMAl 1035am 12.14pm 3.22" 6.00pm P4 a CS C EtPBESS. L1Q pm ?.54 " $.05 " 8.10 " l6.25 " 12.32 am 8.29 " M2 " going West Arris 4.20pm tv.i 2.54' Arrill.43 " Lv.l 9.15am SiAccoMMpAtioilt Train 5 6.30AM 10.30 J" 6.07 pm 10.55!" To the Working Class.-We n you employmeat at which you can maie V iaree pay, in your own locaiuieff. wili... t . away from home over night. Agent wan 2 in every town and county to tike suto-riu4. for The Centeniual Record, the lark i Ji? 7 cation in the United States-16 oafl rSUT umns; Elegantly Illustrated; TerraJX per year.; The Record is devoted tp whtWti wot interest connected with the (W0 -year. ..The Great Exhibition at rhUrieSf'1 f.illv illnslraleil in .lot.tt V ""Oelphia J - VCITIUUIV ..... f . it. The whole people feel ere&t their Country's Centennial Birthday and." toknowairaboot it. An eleganl crayon drawing premium picture ia weJrt tree to each subcriber It is entitled U - of the Independence of the United Ru.J? Sue,-23 by 30 inches. Any one can bS-" successful agent, for but show the iorX .! picture and hundreds of Kuhscribera obtained everywhere. There is, no Wwi that will pay like this at present. We y many asrenta who are matinw Te 1 per uay and upward Kow is the time- doK delay. Remember it cdta nothing t0 rite ft1 business a trial. Send for our eirnl.i .. e and sample copy of paper, which are nt to all who apply; do it to-dav. Cnm,.u, .7 free to those who decide to" engage." Fanw and mechanic, and their sonsand' dauCC make the very best of agents. Audrey " - thecen; 33:Ty.pd AL RECORD,' " Portland laiB' Arril0 30AM I - a in it V4 ' q Xm tf.OOpM trji 3.00 pm PJOB.TH WESTERW Zf.C.ZL.B. J. ( Salem Branch.) Leave Greensboro 4.45 rM Arrive at Salem 6.45 - " Leave Salem ! 8.15 Arrive at Greensboro: lO-SS" I" . Ben Butler fears that the wicked demo crats will elect the next president. Time is the vehicle which carries every thing into nothing. (Joe who is sharp in business is apt to be bluut in manners. Kings and authors should be very care tul how they treat their subjects. The bachelor has to look out for uuol ber one the married tnao number two. ; When a young mau begins to go down hill he finds his former friends greasing the way for him. T 1 I .1 ueaitn aocs not always improve us. A man, as he gets to be worth more, may become worthless. rut i. .1 it x nere is no wuet to too appetite nice 11 .1 .1 1 1 eariy uew, noining ror tne stomacii uae grass aud wild flowers, taken with a fast ing eye at five iu the morning. A husbaud telegraphed to his wife : "What have you tor breikfast, and how is the baby The tujs-wer camCj 'Buck wheat cakes and the measles.' i- icfimond same a Passenger Trains leaving Baleigjh at 11.43 A. M. connects at Greensboro with the Southern bound train ; making the quickest time to all Southern cities. Accommodation! Train leav ing Raleigh at 8.00 p: m., connects with North ern bound Train at Greensboro for Ki and all points East. Price of Tick via other routes. i 1 Accommodation Train leaving Grefnsboro at 6.30 A M, connecteat Gnldsboro with'jNerthern and Southern bound Trains pn the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad. ' - Lynchburg Accommodation leave Richmond daily at 10 25 a m, arrive at Burkeviile 1.45 P M ; leave Burkeviile 5.20 A M, arrive at Rich mond 8.30 AM. A JgExpress Trains will only make, the fol lowing stops between Richmond apd Charlotte, viz: Chula, Burkeviile, Clover, Wolf Trap, Ringgold, Dundee, Danville, Greensboro, Thouiasville, Salisbury and! C una Grove. Tickets will therefore, in no case be sold to pas sengers by. this train to other .thsjn the points mentioned above. E. H. MARSH'S MACHINE WORKS Corner of Fultox & Council, Streets,! ' Salishury, X.C, f Having all my new Machinery h opml ation, I am now prepared in connectiou WhS' the Iron oC Brass works to do all kini of wood work, sucn as Lninber Uressing,"1 tongue Groving, making Sash, Blind. & Doors, making moulding from ilnchtofi -iuches wide, also Turning cv'attern mak? ing, Sawing Bracketts, o;c. Having th best Machinery aud first class workmen satisfaction is guaranteed. July21), 1875. ly. T- No Change of Cars Between Charlotte and Richmond, 282 Miles. Papers lhat have-arrangiementi to; advertise the schedule of this company wilj ptease print as above and forward copief to Gen 1. Passenger Agent. : , i f r For further information address JOHN R. MAt'MURDO, Geril. Passenger Agent, JuneO, ib - Ricliniior.u, a - P i' w J - O U ' ' ' '- v - 52 2 : e : : : ant in X n 3 . . . P "J 5B co 7 i 1 C -r 1 I . little girl hearing it remarked that all people had once been children, artless- essiy mquirca. " iio iook care ot Uie babies V "My dear lady, your daughter is lovely t perfect little pearl. "And pray, sir, and iti is your business to! get orer it t.lrAi... r :. njsmy fa3 possioie. , An i angeL m- one of the nartv ,WrA .hnttU .:L. " . ' deed ! If you don'rfind put ifrettvl that she lacks considerably" more thin the wings we are mistaken. ' J ; "Ho not make up ypur mind about any creature inja belt, ribbon and velvet ro Bette'without first 'asking your fijster'a advice. jlJjepend upon it, one woman can read another better in five minutes ttyan jou can innvo years. A m A ariAtfa nil ' J-v' noon tbat "Awtnl ttardiner, iniih! nnt tn.vl VIT nk .u. i. j . ' - r . - " uuv,i M.a., mum me litmus wnu tqo nanus, or f he negro down wjth his fist. They all with dry cloths, constantly, to 1 aid the waited jn the hall for the coming of the circulation and keep tbe body warm i sable janitor with lights. IJe approached VII J. As soon as the person can swal- with a candle shaded in his hands, and. low. Vive a tarda cnnnnfnt of .;t;- ; i,U as be came withm arms reach, the f'Aw. water, or eoflfee. . fit. 1 ' . "I" I , -- T i ii I in m rx rfn ii l m orti di.i..i. 1 1 x nr 1 i l , , . rr- -T---T 7" ouutt iuuare u or& ueuoeraieiy. JJo not give iron? tup pnouiaer. the negrQ bardjy ap too quickly. Success Juts rewarded n in iv. mi . 1 m Him n w . . inmAi i j i i - t And. above all. don't thint' tUt 'iTr.S'Ti ,s. Wuris l Trr'ri-'--.--ri-Tf - y w yiiuiuu to war a a toe nn?ulmt. and nust keep yoar lady-talk and! your hreo-1 'f5emmAn nlfl vtil i.r i 'v , 4 - asm i iw: tw 'bwuiw mj w u iiii.ir. I'Mr- 1111 rin leman-talkj in separate budgeje, Impelled yer e)bows,w ? " ' Bishop Verot, auu aaaut Lt!ii liiiit's vitu w z ri L.Lftfl triri Bin' : - - ; , . . ) r"rr ".t, . T i T ?v . , -- : ; ght Uev. Lisbon Aauat n?VArnt Uf on was jaugti n tueir. sieeves at your wisuyI 4u exenange asks : "If there's wasuy fcniimeutatism. taiK to ifmip in or everything, where is the pla i iranK. maniv wav as vouwouia 10 anlDOiu ' it baa been .nH tht intelligent (gentleman. because they are women anything. a place St. Augustine. Florida, died noM-nlir ce for. a Monday of anoDlerv Dr. Vt , the best I consecrated lAnril 25 ir.s v;a tii r ..ij', '1.' '.;t rr-. tne see appoin egg.'' Henry Hales in Poultry Bulletin. Saving Monet. A woman was about t,o move, and conviuced her husband lhat they couldn't do better than sell their furniture at auction, and buy some more at auction, and maintaining thus the ap parently irreconcilable theses that (1) you can always get things at auction for lees than their worth, and (2) that you can ialwayg get more at auction for things than they aie worth. Accordingly she aisposea ot ner household enects on .fc riday. Saturday she went to another auction and bought back for $19 75 the girls bedroom set that on the day nreced iug she had sold for $10 60, less charges (u vuiuiuiooiuu. ,i ugh ucr uuiuaQQ re i minded her of it she burs t into a flood Hears, and asked bim if that was all the thanks she got for trying to save his mon ey. oo; & 1 3030.O So Ota;- j3 o it 7& t CD 5 & t S. W ri to y 3 i.--:-"-.'5 o , - CD s tn 3 C-f- g- CD 9 OMNIBUS & BAGGAGE WAGON ACCOHMODATIOKS. I have fitted up an Omnihtis and Bagpgt Wagon which -are always ready to convey per sons to or from the depot, to and from parties weddings. &c. Leave orders at Jlansioii Hon or at ray Livery & Sale Stable, Fisher street near Railroad bridge. - M. A. CRINGLE1 : Aug. 19t tf. ; - r Chesapeake and Ohio SB THE GREAT CENTRAL ROUTE BE TWEEN NORTH CAROLINA ANU THE WEST. , ' PASSENGER U ' TRAINS RUN AS F0LL0VS. ! MAIL ' EXPBES8. Leave Richmond . . 8.45. Ohariottesyille, " IjsJo White Supplier, 10 lluntington, U.30 Arrive Uincinnatti, Connecting closely Trunk Lines for the am 0fB pm i.l5o XAi " a ui 5.tS I : 6.( 0 with all of the j? West, Xovth-West iK m what am I ?" Oh, you are the mother ol pearl." when pretended dueiiists caii for "pi- Carolina Central Railway tols aud coffee" they probably want the pistols to inane a show ol fight, and the coffee to settle. Co.; A youn g woman can have no excuse than he . is, or it there s any nonsense in him, he is sure to talk it to her. Office General ScPERiNTisnENT. ) Wilmington. N. C; April! 14, le!75. $ for thinking her lover wiser Let others do as they please; but do thou always act according to the dictates of thy own judgment, aud take heed! of being self-coudemued. "Hans, where do you live?" "Acrost de river mit de turnpikes by der school as you go up mit der odder side." 1 r Change of Schedule, On and after Friday, April 1 lih,lS75, the trains will run over this Railway! as follows ; PASSENGER TRAINS. right hand on der ! A colored brother, Mr. Demosthenes Turner, ot tieorgia, made a speech at Cincinnati, in which he pictured Blaine bending over the republican party ike the good Sarqaiitan as it lajr'all dver this land, thunderstruck, paralyzed, dead and bleeding, The Carolina Watchman SALISBURY, N. C. PJilCE $2 IN ADVANCE. ESTABLISHED IN THE YEAR Alitayi Conservative, CONTRACT ADVERTISING RATES: . : Inches. Rates by the Month. Leave Wilmington at.... Arrive at Charlotte at Leave Charlotte at Arrive in Wilmington at FREIGHT Leave Wilmington at... Arrive at Charlotte at... Leave Charlotte at Arrive in Wilmington at. --f i i - - r - ..715 A M. ..7.15 P.M. ...7.00 A. M ...7.00 P. M TRAINS ..1.6.00 P M .J..0.0O P M .J.. J 60 A M ... .6.00 A Al f MIXED TRAINS- 1 i t ' . Leave Charlotte at J...,...4....;.8 00 A Al A rrive at Buffalo at i... 12 M Leave Buffalo at. ..i... ,12 30 P M Arrive in Charlotte at ..4. JO P AI i i No Trains on Sunday eccept ope freight train tliat. leaves Wilmineton at 4p. St-t instead of on Saturday night. ' ! j . i. (' I One Inca for Two Inches for Three Inches for Four laches for U Column for do for One do for Iff finnneetj at Wilmineton withlWilmineton t Weldon. and WilminetoniColumbiat Aucnsta R ail roads. Semi-weeklr 2Pew York" aud Tn weekly Baltimore au weekly Philadelphia Steamers, and the River Boats tp Fayetterille vision, North Carolina' Railroad, Cbarlotte & 12 S G 12 Statosvire Railroad. Charlotte & AUsnta Air $2.00 $3.50 . $5.00 $T.OO $18.00 ifae, and Charlotte, Columbia fe Augusta Eail- 4.oo .oo loo 10.00 i.oo uoad. ! : i 6.oo 8.oo 10.00 15.00 20.00 Thus supplying the wuoie 4 tsi, iorinet, 8.00 10.00 12.00 18.00 1 25.00 anil South vet with a short aud cheap line to 10.00 13.00 15.00 22.00 35.00 the Seaboard and i.uropot. i S. U. tatEAlUiT, Chief Engineer aaid Superintendent. Mayo. IK7S. ti. South-West. This is the -shortest,, qwtkettv cheapest Route, with less changes ot crs thtf any other, and passes through tlie Jinests KtK in the world,, ; , "Passengers taking the Express tiain on w N. C R. R. have no delay, but connect cli5 tn nnv noint in the Wst. I irst class and hjnmigrant lickeis ; u Lowest Rates and Baggage checked.; l grante go on Express Trains. TlMF, DiSTA5 and Money saved by taking the Lut nrtiJ Ohin Hniltr... '. Freight Hates toindfronrthe West, am"! low aathe lowest.. . . Merchants and others will find it touWfl" terest to get our Rates before hinningor during. For Information and Kates apply to J. C. DAME, So. Agent., or G. M. McKENXlE, , Ticket Agent. UreensboroS.G C. R. HOWARD, f J . General Ticket A gfoL - W. M.S. DUKN, ; rj " Superintendent. . J ; Richmond Va. , I 655 ACRES ! Best Tract in tie Zm . One of tho host (if not the vcry-uest) Tr of Land in the County is for .sale. It 6554 acres, and will be sold at$G.0(Kt. Tber laud enough adjoining thii tract which maj purchased to accomuaodale a pretty 'rEt-, t. . a n .it rrnA Of D"' J 111 I l M . " 1 U V For further particulars address hary, A . C. 2.'Stf 15.00 21.00 2T.00 54.00 55.00 23.00 35.00 45.00 65.00 100.Q0 ALL KINDS JOB PRINTING; -V rEI4L&CQ.,New rvi : lend 25c. io G. P. ROWE I York, for Pamphlet olj 100 pages, containing 3,000 newspapeny and (estimates enow- HORATIO 11 WOODSON & Ci Eeal Estate and Insurance Agents L r :i Salisbury, N. CU OFFICE In the Conrt-HooK Will selTand buy real estate : rent and collect the rents. FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE RIS .... . . . . f - ft snftrialtv. : ! II IM . II H. II l-v'll ii irn will transact the legal fcusiness ol tne . ratrona're sonciieu f j 1 .yi gajo toa guarantied. . . : : . " r : j "Attention FABME fiRAss seed! t.-- r 1 f,ltK ennn V Oi. . Seed. Orchard" Grass. Blue Grass, and Timothy, which I will sell J-js JJOn't suDDOse. i Riace tor each an ornament !a on BnmA i - - . t I r . i . - wwmjv I UMV V X.' lUllUiL. Uint IM f rt llm Baa. i nl KJtl.;. . - I. . J -. r T w T n- TT I kj , therdon'toowjpther fellow. ; And we dont think a-beulfliVannih iA .fslv Trri H j t,T:Il -1st j ..T:" ? " onr Ppt UtS flCliN 1 11NU Q : ter location rnn ha AismvoraA l ' ' Ji ' Z'l ' c mi1 "ear anomer express an intca- m,, - - lists f -t. - 1 ! . , , -jr v , 1 v nun us Line iiiHrpn. mn i 1 imn . trta m a ntn.. 1.:. i- - i . - j? . r .j.i;oin i i.Mh u vn f v
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 6, 1876, edition 1
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