Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Nov. 29, 1877, edition 1 / Page 4
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'I h it i! I- u t J J ! -. Si I u-r, J1 ! I f rv - ,: 'I ! ... K I "I It .1 .' '. J linan Jtlntlia doth declare that it is the intent of this Court that there shall be nn oriler setueu 'about it, and therefore dotli require the Magistrates ana uepurics 01 me I Towns to ac quaint the towns-men there with, and to make enquiry vuat eeu w i in every Town, what men and women are Lt;i!f.it in th lireakiii!?. sninniug and heaving, what 'means for the providing of wheel.; and to consider wnu muso cvm I ful in that manufacture, and what course mav be taken for teaching the boy a ana gills in all Towns the spinning of the yam, and to return to the next Court tout this The number of useful plants has been . . The like consideration to be had . - 1 1 a 1 I f . - w s 1 - ,1 established at i:f,UWl ; and how nst-iui wiej for the spinning and weavingol corxou auu o wo .nn finn no oninion. unless w&di' Wool. th..i into irrouns. Thus, 50 are In 1GG2 the laws of Virginia required known as cereals, lWield us a supply of everyone who paid tithes to produce frmt, nnd Wies. VjQ vegetables and sal. yearly two rounds of dressed flax or ads, 31 sugar, and 33 arrow-root. If the hemp. Dent .say s or the " , I mill niaius ui icu iimiviiioiiu, 7 Pcbushkd WintT-J. J. BRtTNKR. Ed. and Prop T. K. BKUXER, Associate Ed. SUBsf RIPTIOX KATES t Fer Tear, navable In advance, f Six months, 1 25 ADVERTISIXO RATES ; nn inch. oneDUbllcatton.... two pubUcatlons, Contract rates for montlis or a rear. 1 50 (From the New York Observer. THE MCST USEFUL PLANT" 11Y EHW-lX RATTLEV. tea and coffee plants should fail, 129 oth er plants will provide a substitute. The arts and manufacturers are largely indeb ted to many a strange-looking plant. In , dia rubber is f6und in 90; gutta percha in 71 ; gums, resins, and balsams, in 380 ; 10 yield wax ; grease and essential oils can be extracted from J0 ; 88 plants contain potash and soda, and 47 snap. The dyers can chose from C50, and the makers of perfumery from 2Cn ; while paper-makers, builders and roofers can command the ser vices of hundreds of plants grown iu all parts of the world. Scattered here and there, in various places, trees and plants are found suitable" to the want of "the in habitants. The South Sea Islander rests under the shade of the thread fruit tree," caring but little for the future; the na tives in some parts of Asia and Africa de in 1070 : "Every one make their own linen, and a great part of their woolen cloth for theiivordinary wearing." to re coxcu:iki. SAVING 15EED CORN. to 300 chickens, kept at night in a mink proof and negro-proof hen-house. We also had many hives of bees. Mr. Editor, did you ever tire of milk and honey, or butter and eggs ? If I ever did, I do not now, for in an evil hour I left my farm and removed to town, and the farm and all thiugs felt the change. Do you know a thrifty farmer who lives in town ? 1 don't. From that 100 bead, my cattle fell to less than 40. Hons, from mi to 100. Sheep from 85 to 7, chiefly by dogs (yet Says a Boston physician, has no equal a a 1 blood m v r-t x 1 tvnnnpr npiiririw 01 its iumv nuimvi.- - " - we cannot get a dog law,, ueese 1. 0... had j vis;ted the 45 to 3 or 4 desolate old ganders, too T . . orv nd convince! mvselfof itsgcnuine fiirli fixv rnffw-'a toeth. Bee hives from merit. It i ni'enared from barks, roots, and 'v 1 . "... ... 1 r: i 15 to 20 down to 3 or 4, and they, saved herbs, each of which n.jn y e g , v I thev are compounded in ncn a manner a 10 iu a inuv ihhc pt-u, uuu. . .j . produce astonishing resiuia Thp. npfrroes said the overseers wite ate mnzr slS. o , ... 1 p- a - and sold all the chickens, and she said the U &U darkies devoured them: and so on of 1 l8 the great Blood Purifier. everyuiing. ic iMusjiLti ukik R Ui . y 1 1 j. i.;,- oil B HattMUB tivator neineu imc s hiucu i ukk. , . 0 r , , 1 I 111 cure IIIC v-v- . . w Now regretful memories crow d " .o... Buti WE KB- Is recommended by physicians and apotheca gone. The lwst time to save seed , corn is at husking, or while the com is yet hanging on the stalk. Select the best ears, those that are bright and plump and weirfilled to the tips. Then leivve on three or four husks to each ear by which to braid the cars into a "trail," whieh should be hung in a dry place. An ear that has been heated by being in the middle of a largo stack, or one that has been wet by rain ?,;.lx tbft husk is unfit for seed; its vital- itv has been impaired. Henry Batavia, writes to the llurcd Jlomethnte noon me in mv moody moments t, will never again be troubled in seeing the sills of my barn bondiug under the weight of 800 or 1,000 bushels of wheat. I am in town, however, tremendously respectable (if it was a negotiable comraondity, I would exchange some respectability for bread and butter) I wear "store clothes," liiut-brmvn home made ieaus, as formerly, and I eat "town victu als." such as it is. But let me whisper a word in your ear, and don't let it get out, to kill a chicken is as great an event now oo i trw clMlifrlifPV nil OX wllCl! I lived at the plantation. I have ceased to won - - V . 1 Ives, of der at Jacob's children longing lor ine ii-a nrwl himi nf E'jrvnt. It 1 could M. V ' " t M. ries. VEGET1HE Has effected some marvelous cures in cases 01 Cancer. "VEGETIHE Cures the worst cases of Canker. VEGETINE Meets with wonderful success in Mercurial dis - CRAIPTOii'S IMPERIAL SOAP IS THE BEST. Crarnpton's Imperial Soap is "the Best. Cranipton's Imperial Soap is the Best. Crarnpton's Imperial Soap is the Best. Crarnpton's Imperial Soap is the Best. Crampton s Imperial boap is the leet, CramDtoh'a Imperial Soap is the Best. Crarnpton's Imperial Soap is the Best. Crarnpton's Imperial Soap is the Best. Crarnpton's Imperial Soap is the Best, Crarnpton's Imperial Soap is the Best. This Soap is manufactured from pure material; ami as 11 contains a large per crniae oi Vegetable Oil, is warranted fully equal to the best imported Castile Soap, and at -the same lime con tains all the cleansing properties of the cele brated German and French Laundry Sonps. It is therefore re commended for the use in the Laundry, Kitchen and Bath Room, and for general household purposes; also for Printers, Painters, Engineers and Machinist, it will remove snots of Ink, Tar, Grease. Oil. Paint, etc.. from the hands. eases. VEGETINI Will eradicate Salt Khenm from the system. 1 TIM pend almost entirely on the palm for food J V'j, otlly thc upper ear. He shake off a few years from my shoulders Renl0ves Pimples and Humors from the face. vEGETIhE orld stands. Cures Constipation and regulates the bowels. und clothing; the Chinese-thinks himself fortunate in having the Bniubooivliicli supplies him with a certain kind of food as well as material for his chairs, tables and bridges. Some plants arc only found in certain portions of thc globe where the climate is favorable to their production, Those most essential to our comfort we find in every quarter of the globe, where they gecra to flourish and "bring forth abundant ly." Of. this latter kind is the flax plant, vhicli is met with, not in one solitary spot, but iii Russia, India, Egypt, New Zealand, 51s well as in the more temperate climate of Europe. When we think of the compar ative ease with which it may be cultiva ted, its value to the farmer and manufac turer, we are quite -prepared to endorse . all that was said by a writer years ago , , .1 f t .,ii,l fli- fn mv furiii nnd nrosner anain saj'si 1 nave jui ciuuiucu i"cvd tiuum w ... - 1 1 cverTeen sweet corn which" was planted js I did while on it, for 2 and 2 will at ftPftd-ftlocted bv usinffonly the uiiper ways wake four while the w of..lL- lcf rrav nr firmpr will) IS WllllUS tO llVC IKlnl ear where two grew on a The result is that nearly every stnlk has for a year or two, then buy for each, pay two ears on: even five stalks in one Inli no interest or credit prices, win mint, w a-vc ten good cars, and I think there was he works and mauages well.' as many single stalks with three ears 011 as there were with only one, but the two ears to the stalk was almost universal. Now, aswe are so often reminded that we can improve our corn by selecting seed, let us take the more pains thus to improve this most noble American product, COMMON SENSE IN PLOWING. Teams drawing loads 011 thc roads get a breathing spell on the descending ground, when in plowing the draft is the same from morning Till night. There is ;0ETENE Is a valuable remedy for Headache. Will cure Dyspepsia. VEGETIBE Restores the entire system to a healthy condi- The Iluntinsrton. Pa.. Monitor of April 5th, 1ST", pronounces this soap the-' best in the market, as follows : Render, we don't want yon to suppose that this is an advertisement, and pass it over un heeded. Read it. We want to direct your at tention to the advertisement of "Crarnpton's Imperiiil Soap." Having used it in our office for the last yenr, we can recommend it as the best quality" of soap in use. It is a rare thing to get a soap that will thoroughly cleanse print ing ink from the hands, as also from linen; but Crarnpton's laundry soap will do it, and we know whereof we speak. It is especially adapt ed for printers, painters, engineers and ma chinist, and it will remove grease of all de scription from the hands as well as clothes, with little lanor. ror general nousenoia pur poses it cannot be excelled. A On sale and constantly arriving, mm iton. VEGE7IHE a certain number of pounds that a team can draw day after day and not worry them, but if more be added, even as little as fifteen pounds, they walk unsteadily, The Country Gentleman, m an article f,et mid soon tire. No amount of feeding BEET SUGAR, Removes the cause of Dizziness. VEGETINE Relieves Faintness in the Stomach. V E G E T 1 1! E Cures Pains in the Rack. VEGETIHE Effectually cures Kidney Complaint. VEGETINE Is effective in its cure of Female Weakness. VEGETINE on beet sugar, iu which it correctly states i-ce,, them in condition. 1 have many when he affirmed it to be, for a plant not the disabilities in its manufacture in the piOWs in use, on which it has been an to produce food, "the iiost useful plant United States, concludes as follows : easv matter to decrease the draft twenty in the world," The truth of this asser- The manufacture was originally com- fIVC pounds, and if men had been draw tion we shall endeavor to prove, by draw- pelled-in France by the interdiction of i them instead of horses it would in " attention to some facts connected with cane sugar, and was long held under the have been done. It must be plain to the ilnf nvorv 1 will ml tilkpH off tllO ,xj vtu inniui jf uiif, uuuMviii vm ivu.i...0 o uuuKi tutii. v v i'" IT t 1 f r "Micrfll lability rlmif tl.fi vain of its fibre, nnd the val- comnarativclv recent nerioil it has be- Li.off nf his ilow is so much jrained for ls l,,e grea '.eml' 5 ( ''e" e 11 xxe of its seed. . " J come self-maintaining, and indeed capa- his horses. It may be done in this wap itis about two pr three- feet high, has ble ot yielding a considerable tax. Jiut for any soil except sand or gravel, use a a slender straisrht stem, branching only if we are not mistaken, it is because large steci ,iow. Their cost is but little, and at the top, with small leaves and bright capital is employed at the works produ blue flowers : it blossoms in Ju no and July From thc fibres of its inner bark when produced by the neighboring peasantry, separated from the woody portion of the at the smallest possible cost; maintaium the draft enough less to pay the difference in Ttlowinc twentv acres. In nlowinjr sod 1 o - v the coulter does a great deal of tho work, VEGETHiE Is acknowledged by all classes of people to be the best and most reliable blood punher in the world. Prepared by Manufactured only by Crampton Brothers, 2, 4, 8 and 10, Rutgers Place, and 66 and 60, Jefferson St., New York- For sale by . ill. 15UIS, 4f, SALISBURY, NC. EUGENE L. HARRIS, ilrlist in Cray on f Sassafras Fork, N. C in the most finished style of crayon drawing from PHOTOGRAPHS, FEREOTYPES, D AG 15 ERR EOT YPES, MINIATURES, ETC. 14xl7S10.00. Framed $13.00. 18x22 $15.00. Framed $20.00. - - Send for circular. 51: TYRE IRON 1 to 2i inches at 3 cents per lb. ! Do round and square, from 3-IG to 3 inches, 3 t jfj cen' Do Band, I to G inches from 3 to 10 cents, ; PLOW MOULDS and irons, all shapes and sizes, j WIRE CLOTH for screens, of various sizesT -BUGGY and Garriage Material of all qualities, ' if SPRINGS and AXLES, for Wagon?, Carriages, lluggi. & Svnki i, PRESERVING KETTLES, brass and lined, from 1 to 5 g;ul,ns, i ' . APPLE PEELERS 100 doz. retail 75 cents. ' ' WHITE LEAD and prepared paints, all colors, OILS, linseed and machine, best brands. VARNISHES, alMiiuih COOKING Utensils, all sorts, sizes and styles, ? - Wc could saw off the north pole if we could get at it. DISSTOX'S 4 Great Aintrican " has uever beeu excelled : saws of all siziTs and for all purposes. WELL BUCKETS, puleys, chains and. ropes, GLASS, window, frum 8x 10 to 3t x-14. Blue Glass to order; . NAILS, cut, from 10-penny up 8fi per 100 lbs. From 10-pentiy; to 4, to 4 cents, Wrought and horse-shoe nails, variable. : . SCREWS, tacks and brads of all sizes and for all uses. Blacksmith Tools, all sorts ; a patent drill, uew and splendid. ROPE, jute, ceisal, manilla, hemp and cotton, from J to 2 inches. BELTING, rubber and leather, from 1 to 14 inches. Horse Collars, horse and mule shoes, haines, and traces." Edge Tools and boring implements in endless variety. FARM TOOLS and MACHINERY ! For all purposes of superior quality and equal to any demand; Straw Cutters, Cradles, Plows. -Rakes. Hoes and Shovels. House furnish stock (in my line) complete! Saddlers' hardware and tools, full assortment. Table and Pocket cutlery elegant and abundant. Pistols from 25 cents to 820 plated revolvers. Guns from children's 62 to $40 sporting. ; UfJ IRON GATES and FENCES, aud gate latches. BRUSHES paint, varnislu white wash, horse, scrub and all other kinds-fiueuuid-CMwei. -UVine and Cider Mills. Caue Mills and Evaporators. ; Carpenters' Tools, splendid and more complete than ever and .' Still a few more of them Machines left! Come one come all, aud see Sam Tayloii, the paragon of R, 11. Crawioiso's Centennial Hardware Store.. 13;ly j COME TO CRAWFORD'S. . -:. I IT JOSHUA THOfIAS, T; 53 Lhjht Street, BAIiTIMOBB, MD. Buckeye Mower and Reaper. Sweepstake's Threasher & Cleaner. and should be kept, sharp by forging at H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. stem we have flax or lint, of which linen very large stables of fattening cattle to the blacksmith's and grinding every day , , iTT- All "n thread and cloth aremado. and from its consume the residue of thc roots after if necessary. Of course it will wear out Yegetme IS Sold by All Druggists, seetls when crushed we obtain that impor- the juice has been expressed, and depend- the sooner, but new coulters are cheaper t int, fli tirlo of linseed oil. That the flax inff about as much for profit upon sales than new teams. Set the coulter in the plant is a very old one, wc have abundant of these to the butcher as upon sales of line with the plow, and edge square in evidence in the Bible, and that linen was sugar. The price obtained for beef must front, with au angle of 45 degrees from made in those early days is equally evi- be considerably higher than ltere possi- the point to where it is attached to the dent, for weaving is mentioned in time of bly a difference iu itself sufficient to de- beam. When the share gets worn out, it Abram, who said to the kmc of Sodom : tenuine the questsou of profit or loss. js pOOV economy to use it any longer, but 'I will not take from a thread to a shoe Beet sugar is inferior in sweetening replace it with a new one. Let the traces latchet," &c. ; Rebecca covered herself capacity to cane sugar, and to compete be as short as will allow the horses to with a vail when she saw Isaac; Pharaoh, with it, should be therefore sold at a lower wvc without hitting their heels against . - - irii 1.-1. 1 - X- ... . . king ot Kgypt, "arrayea Josepn in vest- price, w line cane sugar can ne oougui, the wliUiletrces, ami have .pist pressure ures of fine linen," and Job says ; "My granulated for example, dry and white, enough of the wheels on the ground to days are swifter than a weaver's shuttle." at 12 to 13 cents per poimd, we see but make the plow run steady. If the hnn- These illustrations prove that weaving little opening for the attempt to raise ,ues crowd continually one way, the draft and woof was of great antiquity, and not beet sugar. is not right, and if the plow is a good one of modern invention.- . : it can be easily remedied at the clevis. In the time of Moses the land of Egypt POTATOES. To prevent the horses stepping over the grew not only corn in abundance, but flax . " traces in turning, fasten a weight of about aa well; and the flax was used for the fe three-fourths of a pound to each single- tree that is. on the right end when you Engines. E:lips3 Portable Far: Iliori Wheel Horse Kakes. inanufacturc of linen. An . examination f tho cloth in which llie mummies of Egypt were enveloped, was made ome years ago, and proved by the microscope to bo not only linen, bat somo of it linen of the very finest kind. Rahab in Jericho, covered the spies over with Tlax, which 'she had laid ou tho roof of her house to dry. Five hundred years after thc death of Moses, Solomon imported linen yarn from Egypt. The prophet Ezekiel in 'speaking, of the riches of the merchants of Tyre, says: "Fine lineu with broidered work from Egypt, was that which thou spreadest forth to be thy sail." In the prophet's time sails made of matting were common, hence sails mado of linen must have been rare aud costly. Moses was told to make curtains for the Tabernacle of "fine twined linen, and blue, and pur- most-profitable way of growiug potatoes, the experiments extending over a series of four voars. From these it results that v potatoes with a rough surface are both in quantity ami quality the most recom mendable. They contain less water and more starch. If the potatoes used as seed have been air-dried, 4ind withered, the re sult has been a harvest of especially large -tubers, not less in number on the average than if the seed had been in the usual condition. Prof. IIoHay believes further to have reasons to conclude that as to the position of tho tuber in the earth, it is best to 'lay the tuber navel uppermost. The reason is said to lie that in this posi tion the germs spread wide apart, and are deeper in" the ground. The same has been observed with potatoes cut in pieces, when the cut surface should alwavs be turn to the left, and vice versa. Every farmer knows that horses are susceptible to kindness, and equally so to Hiikiudness. I have seen horses that were working steadily, made reeking with sweat in a short time by a sharp word or a jerk on the bit. 1-et your horses do their work as you do yours, as easily as possible, and be as willing to overlook their mis takes as you would be the mistakes of a human being. Continental Feed Cutter. Rail Steel aud Cast Plows. Watt Cast Plows. JIill Stonss, Smut Machines. HARDWAR 9W 9 rV 8 A ? t. v. ?. ?. .? ? 'Y Y" fS-v- ri, li riv r&: wJt f. 1U A-' fi ti V? MmmmmMMmmmmmmmm DHEArElv THAiN EVrSit. WHAT IS HIGH FAUMIXG. Tilf .and wnrlftt i" n.nd the vnil ofthi Tm . . T , M t a q i . I uppermost. Thc Gulich method of allot ple at Jerusalem was made by Solomon .l pf "blue, and purple, and crimson, "and fine linen." Alexander the Great is said to have had 'sails or linen flags, that were dyed with colors." The priests who ruin istcred in the Temple wore linen garr nients, probably because they were cooler than cotton or silk. Egyptian priests al ways, wore linen, Wool was so much dis liked that the very lb west, of the peoplei never used it, or allowed ic to be employ -r even in their burials. Tins hatred of wool extended to the flocks and to the shepherds. who attended them ; so we read that "every shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians." ting to every plant a hill for itself, hilling Crosswise and givkfg space freely has been surpassed by the common Silesian method, with tho plaut sixteen inches apart, laid in groove six inches deep and thirty inches apart. The former method is said to foster the best seed potatoes, but equaling-the latter in quan tity. As to hilling, tho sooner this is dono tho better. German Corresjxnt-tlcnee, i v An American farmer of note, after vis iting England and examining with the critical eye of a practiced and experienced agriculturalist the system pursued there, says: "I am thoroughly confirmed in my old faith that the only good farmer of our future is to be the 'high farmer.' There is a widely prevailing antipathy among the common farmers of our country against not only the practice of high farming, but against the use of the phrase by agricult ural writers. This is all wrong, and should be at once corrected. Through some misconception of the meaning of the phrase, and its application, they have come to believe it synonymous with theo retical 'book-fangled notions,' boasted progress, followed by disappointment and final failure. This is ail an error. High farming simply means thorough cultiva- The following article which recently tion, liberal manuring, bountiful crops, How they inanaged appeared in the Southern Cultivator, we good feed, and paying profits therefrom. to dyelhe linen in such beautiful colors commend to the consideration of all town It is not strange that misconceptions have with drugs, which, we aro told, had nq farmers in our State, and especially to arisen in the minds of doubting farmers color, we know not, but it is certain that those in the country who think of moving who have been eye witnesses to some of the color was permanent. These old t town. the spread-eagle experiments of enthusi- Egyptians who lived some three thousand "When I lived on iny farm, I attended astic farmers, better supplied with mouey yeaTS ago, had a knowledge of chemistry tp my own business in person overseer- obtained in a business they knew how to which, we who live in m odera times do i"g ?y overseer and everything else, and manage than with practical experience on not possess. " " I prospered at it in everything and in the farm. Bountiful crops and paying Coming down to these times and our every j ear. I had plenty for man and profits, of course are what farmers who country, it appears that Massachnsetts beflst and sold more of other things than are depending upon tho farm for an in- .intreduccd the linen manufacture into the I did of cot tou. I sold corn and fodder, come are striving to obtain; and every United States. In 1640 the Assembly and wheat and oats, and barley and pota- year as it passes is reconfirming the opin -took the mutter in hand and decreed that: toes, togetljer with beef, bacon, lard, mut- ion that profits are small, and will grow The eourt takin" into serious consider- tou wool etc-' I raaJ add we had geese, beautifully less where high fanning is not athui the'absolute necessity for the rais- ducks, pea-fowls, turkeys, with from 150 t practiced." 7omc tf- Farm. TOWN FARMERS, Bolting Cloths, Belting.- MilMachinery in General. Seii for Catalope aid Price List. (2C:Gmo.) Cjjc JSontjj-tlaittic, A Monthly Noyazine derated to Litera ture, Science and Arl, pnhhshed in -mintton, Xorllt Carolina. The Corp of C-ontrihntora includes several of the most Distinguished Authors of the pres ent day. A Serial Story, Poem, Sketches, Re vies, Scieptific and Historical Articles will appear in every number. This Magazine will contain onlv Original Literature. SUBSCRIPTION ONE YEAR $3.uo. SINGLE COPY 25 Cents. ADVERTISING TERMS WIIKIV YOU WANT HA R D JVA R E At Low Figures Call on the undersigned at No. 2, Granite Row, D. A. AT WELL. Salisbury , N. C. June S tf. Greensboro Female College. The Fall Session of 1S77 will begin on the fourth Wednesday in August. Charges Per Session of 20 "Weeks : Board, (exclusive of washing & lights,) S7-" 00 Tuition in regular English course, 2o OU Moderate charges for extra studies. For full particulars, apply to Pres. T. M. Jones for catalogue. K. H.T). WILSON, 37:Gt. pd. Pres. Board of Trustees TIME TABLE WESTERN N. C. RAILROAD. To take effect June 12d, 1S77. 3? 1 i i sf. t page tme year f l-2i oo, : " " ' 75 iki l " " " fill (M) I . " " " 3("i Oil l pao one Insertion $25 on '., ' " " 13 041 io m ., 44 " " 5 00 All connniniicalions nhnnld be addrewd to Mus. CK'EKO W. HARRIS, Editor and Proprietor. KERR CRAIGE, To the Working Class. We are now prepared to furnish all classes with constant employment at home, the whole of the time, or for their spare moments. Business new, light and profitable. Persons of either sx easily earn from 50 cents to $5 per evening, and a proportional sum by devoting their whole time to the business. Boys and girls earn nearly as much as men. That all who see ihis notice may sen'd their address, and test the business we make this unpar alleled offer ; To such as are not well sat isfied we will send ore dollar to pay for the trouhle of writing. Fuii particulars, sam ples worth several dollars to commence work on, and a copy of Home and Fireside, cn of the largest aud best Illustrated Publications, all sent free by mail. Reader, if you want permanent, profitable work, address"GEORGE STIKfsov V "!.. Portland. MxinP. GOING WEST. STATIONS. Akuive. ' Leave. Salisbury " " 8 55 A .' M . Third Creek 0 04 A.M. ) 45 " Statesville ,o 30 " 10 3o " Plotts 11 07 " 11 07 " Catawba U 27 " 111 30 ' Newton 2 IS P. M. 12 20 P. M. Canova ,12 33 ' ;12 38 " Hickory ; j Q5 25 " Icurd 2 Oo " 2 10 " Morganton 2 50 " 2 53 ' " P.ridgewater 3 37 " 3 40 P. M. Marion 4 25 " 4 30 " Old Fort I 5 is " 1 5 20 " Henry 5 30 " j GOING EAST. STATIONS. Arrive. Leave. Henry 7.. .. IG00 AM. Old Fort G -12 A.M. 6 15 ' Marion 7 07 " ! 7 10 " Bridgewater 7 52 " 7 55 " Morganton ; 8 22 " j 8 28 " hard 1 1) u". " 9 10 " Hickory 9 50 " 9 52 " Canova 10 20 " 10 23 " Newton 10 35 " 10 37 " Catawba 11 25 ,; 11 35 " Plotts 11 55 u 12 00 P. M Statesville 12 3SP.M.12 52 " Third Creek 1 40 " j 1 45 " Salisbury . 2 30 " i ORDERS FOR PRINTING FROM Responsible persons, or on cash remittances,, shall receive PR01PT AND DIREFUL ATTENTION. COURT AND JUSTICES' BLANKS KEPT ON HAND. 1?? i rRICES STRICTLY LOW. t 3Wtcss AVATCnMAN, SALISBURY, N. C. r- v.' v a1 r- ? a? f 'V W s-VKt ft A . A A A 03. DEEDS & MORTGAGES. Foe Simple Deetls. Deeds in. Trust. Mortgage Deeds, -Commissioners' Deeds, SherifFi Deeds. Chattlc Mortgages, Farm Contracts. Iarriajre and Continuation Certificate, Distillers' Entries, and various other forms for sale at the WATCHMAN OFFICE- GOLD Great cnance to make money. If you can't srt f,'(ll you can get greenbacks. We need a person in every town to take subscriptions for the largest, cheapest nnrl IlWt Tlllll-t'lt ill I f.llYlUff . 1 1 . 1 ( . . . . I . in the world. Any one can become a successful agent. Tnc most elegant work of art given free to subscribers. The price is so low that almost every body subscribes. One agent reports making over $150 a week. A lady agent -reports taking over -mmi subscribers In ten days. All who engage make mon ey fast. ou can devote all your time to the busi ness, or only vour spare time. You need not be away from home over night. You can do It as well as otuers. FuU particulars, directions and terms free. Elfgaut and expensive Outfit free. If you want pro fitable work send us your address at once. It costs nothing to try the business. No one who engages falls to make great pay. Address "The People's Journal," Portland, Maine. 42:ly. Cheap Chattel Mortgages, and various other thinks for sale here Hotel ds. Richard h. lewis, National - R ALEIGH T. C. (Late Professor of Bisen?e of the Kye and Ear in the hdvannah .Medical (.ollep e.) Practice limited to thc EYE ma EAR, RALEIGH, N. C. Kofcrs to the State Medicil Societv and to the Georgia Medical Society. 47:ly. OMNIBUS & JBAGGAGE WAGON ACOMMODATIOH. I have fitted up an Omnibus and Eaggag Wagon which are always ready to convey per sons to or from the depot, to and from parties, weddings. &c. Leave ordersat Mansion House or at my Livery & Sale Stable, Fisher street near Ilailroad bridge. M. A.BRINGLE- Aug. 19. tf. NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCKIKE. FOR THE WATCHMAN Board lv thc Day. 2.00. Col. C. S. BROWN, Propr GET THE BEST. The Raleigh News. DAILY, one year, -WEEKLY, one year, $5M y'Send Postal Card for Sample W Kaleigk Address- THE RALEIGH Blactier and Heiflersra, Attorneys, Counselors and Solicitors. , SALISBURY, f l .Iaiiuay2 S7" 1. i t
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 29, 1877, edition 1
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