Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Jan. 29, 1880, edition 1 / Page 4
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MISCELLANEOUS. A RAILWAY EXPERIENCE. I Bunlette, the hitroorou lecturer of the Burlington Uawkne, narrates this little episode aspccuriDg to him while journeying up in Massachusetts At South Action a man got on the train, walked down the aisle until he tame to me, and then he passed and glared it a valise on the floor. .'Take away that valise he said gruffly, 'or Til pat my feet on it.' 'Put your feet on it if you wish I Uid, 'it won't hurt your feet, 'I don't recdn.' ' - Down he went into the seat beside me and up went his feet on the valise. Presently the mud and snow on his arctics' began to melt and run down the sides of the valise in ugly little Mtreaks. The man from South Acton seemed to take a savage delight in scraping his feet around and making t the havoc as great as possible; ITojlabie nioe valise,' he presently growled ;1 'should think ye'd rather put it away than have it tramped onto.' . I 'Good land,' I said, a little testitly, 'I can't take charge of all the bag iratte in the car. It's all I can do to looi after ray own.' The man from South Acton stared at rae with a changing countenance "as he half lifted his feet. 'Ye ain't going to tell me this ain't your valise, be ye?' he asked, anx- j iously. 'Of course it wasn't,' I said ; 'would i I let any body ruin my valise in that i way ?' f 'Well, then,' he wanted to know, 'whose in thunder was it?' 'Belonged to a gentleman who had gone forward into the smoking car,' said. 'And if he doesn't thump you when he comes out,' said the fat passenger, cheerfully, 'I'm most awfully fooled.' The South Acton man took his feet off the valise and looked at it - ruefully. 'Who U he f he asked with visible anxiety. 'College chap,' said the tall, thin passenger, 'Boss kicker in the Harvard foot- ! baH team,' said the sad passenger ; 'has a. leg like a boom derrick.' 'I know him.' said the Dassenirer - .- - t - op with the sandy goatee ; 'he's a raging i tornado f of wrath when he's waked up.' 'Bad man said the fat passenger ; i 'I don't .want no business with him.' The man from South Acton looked and apprehension, and then turned on me somewhat indignantly. 'Gaul durn ye he said, with a subdued sniffle, while he took out his handkerchief and -began repairs on the valise, gaul durn ye, why didn't i ye tell me this seat was occupied?' Not possessing the physical pow ers of the Harvard chap, I meekly said, 'Because he didn't ask me. He onlyid if I didn't move that valise he would . put his feet on it, and I tojd him I didn't care and I didn't.' it ; . He growled and whirled alternate ly while lie ruined every handker chiefs hecduld find in his pockets, cleansing and polishing that valise, and f?verytimethe car door opened, he started nervously and looked up to .the "kicker was coming in. By-and-bye, when the valise was res tored io its primitive neatness, the fat passenger laughed a smothered : kind of laugh. I bent over my tablet and ecribled away like mad. The passenger with the saudy goatee, said, 'Oh -dear, oh dear The tall, thin passenger whistled a bar from The i babes on or block,' and the sad pas senger looked out of the window and i igh$n though his heart would breaj : -" The man fronr Soiitli Acton glared around the car, aud a light dawned iu ins (ace. i hi 'By gol he said, 'you fellers hex been lyin' to me, and I know it. I Arid then the genial howl went up along the line, reaching the climax as the man from South Acton gave' a savage kick at my innocent valise and "slammed the door after him like A fit of wooden profanity as he got off Me cars at Waltham. ' i" "" - Anecdote of Alexandre Dumas. . v ) . - . '- The following auecdote of the cele brated) French author is told by a Pans paper: Some years ago a roer- i . - . . - - p"-V,V- J n' wan returning troui rans o bis natal city. In the same compartment with him sat a tall fel low, lively, talkative and full of oonnade: but on the whole the gas- best and amusing traveling companion one could wish for. t On alighting at Lyons the met chant, charmed by the talking man ner and by the gaiety of his neighbor exclaimed: 'I 'By Jove, sir, I am glad to have made your acquaintance 1 You are a good fellow, a charming fellow! Can't you talk, though ! Come, let us make a trade, will you?' 'Well, what sortof a trade?' 'Come and dine with me: at the dessert we will speak about it. I have an idea will you come ?' 'Very well but I will pay my share. I insist upon it.' 'As yon please; what an araax- j . !-- . T 1 I ing leilow he is: au, dui i line you r "J. i r 1 Accordingly they took dinner to gether, during winch the merchant of- ferred the tall fellow a position as commercial, traveler for his house; that was th eidea. j "You have just the qualities re quired said he; 'you will make your wa7- ! . I 'But, my dear eif- ' 'Come, kiowfco do your live ?' 'Pooh I j on very j little 1' 'Well, j how much do you get a year in your branch ?' 'From $4,000 td $6,000.' 'Goodness sakes alive! but what do you do? asked the other disap pointed. 1 j - 'Oh, I scribble pn sheets of paper with a pen !' 'Ah, bah you are joking again, you rogue But what is your name ?' 'Alexandre Dumas!' Tableau. Sad Result of a Practical Juke. Brooks Gould was perhaps the most popular young man in Chicago. Gen eral J. M. Waite, a middle-aged man of the same disposition, set Gould down as his first friend and the two were together a great deal. When they entered the apartments of the gen eral ou a Saturday afternoon not long ago, Gould, who. had about him the sparkle of Mercutio, proposed that they should disarrange the furniture to make the negro servant, Joe, fancy that the rooms had been robbed. The joke was carried out. Valuables were removed, the bed turned topny turvy a la burglar, the wags retiring to the bathroom at Joe's foot-fall in the hall way. Joe reached the door and stood aghast. With mouth agape and eyes. wide open he scrutinized iuone glance the innermost corners and then straightway walked to the door of the bathroom. This he found locked from within. He put his ear to the i 9 keyhole. Faint ((sounds breathing reached him. He pulled out a revolv er and instantly emptied every cham ber into the panels of the door. Gen eral Waite felt his young friend's body quiver at the first shot and threw his arms around him. Death fol lowed instantly. "Where is our American navy ?" shrieks an exchange. If this excited editor is ; laboring under the impres sion that it is concealed in this town, he is mistaken. -We haven't seen anything of the American navy, and we are In the vicinity of the Schuyl kill canal a good deal, too. If the na- . a- a vy- is lost, the price of it should be deducted from Secretary Tbomason's salary. We told him six months ago that if he did not put bells on the necks of two steam rams, the entire navy would wander away and Ipse it self. He said he could get up another one just as good inside of two weeks, and now let's see bin do it. Norru toum Herald, 1 Killed by a Meteor. t J 4 The Bueyrus (O). Journal says that as .David Meiseothaler. the well- 1 u known stock man of Whitestone township, was driving his cows to the barn about davlieht this morn ing, he was struck by au serolite and instantly killed. It appears as if the meteor had come from a direction a little west or sonth and fell obli- quely at an angle ot about sixty de - m ' - - grees, for it first passed through a tall maple, cutting the limbs as clean as if it had been a cannon ball, and then struck him apparently ou or un der the shoulder, passing clean through him obliquely from below the right shoulder j to above the left hip, aud and buried itself about two feet in il j A i I I t ' a m uie sou i oiacK grounu. me poor man's head and leg are uninjured, but the greater part of his body seems to have been crushed into the earth be neath . the terrino aerolite, which is about the size of a common pateut bucket, and apparently of a roughly round shape. It appears to be form ed of,what is called iron pyrites. I Advice to Girls., ' Do not estimate the worth of a jroang man by his ability to talk soft nonsense nor by the leugth of his moustache. . w Do not imagine that an extra ribbon tied about the neck can remedy the de feet of a-jftoiled collar and untidy dress. . If your hands are brown by labor do not envy the4ily fingers of Miss Fuss and Feathers, whose mother works In the kitchen while the daughter lounges in the parlor. - - - T1" f If a dandy, with a cigar between his fingers, asks yon if smoking is offensive to j ou, tell him emphatically "Yes." The habit should be, even though the odor may not. , J Do.not waste your tears on the imagi nary sorrows of Alouza and Melissa nor the trials of the dime novels heroines. Seek rather to alleviate offering ones of earth. the woes of the If you am a Friend ax no questions. At Bowling Green, Ky., the trim stopped for dinner, boon tnere entered, the car a colored man somewhat advanced in years, bearing a waiter upon which was displayed a large chicken, probably equally advanced in yean, and the passenger were invited to invest : h "Oh yes, gentlemen, here's your nice bril- ed chicken right hot sells him very cheap P One of the passengers, in a spirit of in sufferable curiosity, called out : f "Say, uacle, where did you get that chicken !" -s The old man passed along taking no no tice of the question, but offering his chick en first to one and then another in the same monotone: "Oh yes, gentlemen, here's your nice briled chicken right hot sells him cheap " Again, the question came: "Say, uncle, where Uid you get that chicken!" f Still the old man took no notice of the question or questioner but paasedn, offer ing his chicken for sale, yet in a somewhat altered tone, indicating that he was not the best pleased at the repetition of the ques tion. The passenger, determined on an an swer of some kind, again called put louder than ever : r "Say, uncle, where did you get that chicken t" The old man turned around, poised his waiter on the arm of a car seat, and draw ing himself up to his full height, said : "Look'ee here, boss, is you from de Norf?" "Yes," replied the traveler. "Well, is you a friend to de cullud man ?" . "Yes, I'm a friend to the colored man ; I am from Boston, and people who are from Boston are all friends to the colored man." "Well, now boss, if you is a friend to de cullud man, don't you be so busy tryin' to find out whar dis chicken come from." And he passed on calling out: "Oh yes, gentlemen, here's your niced briled chicken right hot sell him cheap." ; Horseshoe over the Door. Mrs. Abner Herbine of Berks county. Pa., recently celebrated her birthday by giving an enjoyable party, on which occasion Sen ator Daniel Ermentrout was chosen the ora tor. Overhajrins the banquet table was a large horseshoe made of candy, to which the Senator referred in the following words: "Hundreds and hundreds of years ago, in the distant land of Norsemen, before they had come down and overrun all Europe, the horseshoe was regarded as a charm against the spell of witchcraft; it was a belief that had been perpetuated for ages that when people wished to keep away harm from cat- tic the horseshoe was hung over the stable door, and from the house, it was hung over the house door. It as hunr un- to brine good luck.w Its deeper meaning was thatfhe people believed in a power above and beyond them ; that, although for generations men had been arguing against the belief in the supernatural, against the existence of some thing above us and a hereafter, yet despite it all, if we would to-day go into the home of the most refined in the land. We would find the old horseshoe in burnished steel, or bright silver or shining gold, illuminated sometimes with beautiful flowers, some times with the German word "Cluck" en graved on it, banging over the door, on the mantlepiece, or connected with some useful ornament, or shaped into the most costly jewelry. What does it mean ? It means that the highest civilization of the age is paying the same silent homage to the supernatural that the uncultured heathen did in the far back time. This belief was an element of human progress and human strength and went far to nreve our hardy ancestors for the priva tions, dangers and toils, whose ripened fruits we see in the comforts around us on every hand, and in the happiness of the" present occasion. They believed in the something, of which the horseshoe was a symbol ; in a power above them able and wilting to pro tect, and thus they made real progress. So long as we nave the same belief, so long wilt society stick together and we make genuine progress. W hen we depart from from this belief, society will-lapse into bar Dansm. It is heaven itelf that points out a hereafter, aud intimates an eternity to man. Addison. I r p Humanity is never so beautiful as when praying for forgiveness, or else forgiving another. -Michler. I He who receives a good turn should never forget ; he who does one should never remember it. Charrdtn. It is necessary to repent For years in order to efface a fault in the eyes of men ; a single tear suffices With God. Chatcaiibriand. The man who at the end of this life has a receipt in full of all demands from men, will have more than an or dinary amount of credit to begin the next life with. lw-r-Saatl II Ml I II I IW.'V- M'Sl IRON BITTERS, AGreatTouta. IROH BtTTERS, Sure Appetizer. IRO'I BTTTERS, t A C wpWt. Stnaftbcaar. iro:i bItters, to the pnMkt tatr nil 1i nw requiring a rvrtn'a BlKblr recotnmwded "pwijtl'jr In M Mil intern - rfM. Mtpmprpmim, Intermittent r. 11 mHt.mf A p petit 9, jLmmm mf titrettgth ZeJk mf Mnrov, . It rlebvtt tbe blood, tRKthrna the niu !. ltd gire new life to t U nerrM. To toe Med. ladle.! and chil dren rvuiiing recuper ation, ibta i i valuable remedy ran not be too highly recommended. it metm Uitm m rtwia on tbe digestive organs. A tcMpoooflal beforo me) will remove all djrayepcte symptoms. Twv It. Sold by all Druggists, TKBEOWICEECiLCl. BALTIMORE. Md. AVtlwbUMrticiB. IRON BITTERS, Wt Mm Scvanga. IROH BITTERS, if fm Dtlicatt rawlM. D D It la the beat Blood Purifier, and stlmolataa every function to more healthful acUoa, and la thus a benefit la oil diseases. In eliminating the Impurities of tbe blood, tbe natural and necessary result is tbe careof Scrof ulous and other Mkin Eruptions and Diseases, Including Cancers, Ulcers and other Sores. Dyxpepnia, Weakness of the Stomach, Consti. potion. Dizziness. General Debility, etc, are cored by the Hmim Bitten. It la; on equaled as an appetiser and regular tonic. It is a medicine which should be In every fain Uy, and which, wherever used, will save tbe payment of many doctors' bills. Bottles of two sixes; prices, SO cents and $1X0. ""Warner's Safe Reme dies are sold by Druggists find Dealers n Medicine everywhere EEWASHER&CU, Proprietors, Hoei eater, H. Y. SHTSend for Pamphlet aud Testimonials. YELLOW FEYER--BLAOE VOMIT. It is too soon to forget tbe ravages of. tbis terrible disease, which will no doubt return in a more malig nant and virulent form in tbe fall months of lsia. MKRRELL'S HKPATINE, a Remedy discovered In Southern Nubia and used with such wonderful re sults In South America where the most aggravated cases of fever are found, causes from i one to two ounces of bile to be filtered or strained from the blood each time it passes through the jLiver, as long as an excess of bile exists. By its wonderful action on the Liver and stomach the HKPATINE not xnly prevents to a certainty any kind cf 1- ever and Black Vomit, but also cures Headache, Constipation of the Bowels, Dyspepsia and all Malarial diseases. No one need fear Yellow Fever who vlll expel the Malarial Poison and excess of bile from tbe blood by using MKRRELL'S HKPATINE, which Is sold by all Druggists In 85 cent and 1.00 bottles, or will be sent by express by the Proprietors, A. F. MERUELL & CO.,; PUH.A. Pa. Or. Pcmbcrton Stillingia or Queen's Delight. ryThe reports of wonderful cures lot Rheuma tism, Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Syphilis Cancer, I'lcers and Sores, that come from all parts of the couutr) , are not only remarkable but so miraculous as to be doubted was it not for the abundance of proof. Remarkable Cure of Scrofula, &c CASE OF OOL. J. C. BRANSON. Kingston, a a., September 15, 1671. Gents : For sixteen years 1 have been a great suf ferer from Scrofula in Its most distressing forms. 1 have been conllned to my room and bed for fifteen years with scrofulous ulcerations, 'l lie most ap proved remeoies lor sucn cases naa oeen usea, ana the most eminent phy sicians consulted, without any decided benefit. Thus prostrated, distressed, de sponding, 1 was advised by Dr. Ayer of Floyd coun- tv nt tnpnmmonpArha ntuihf vnnrilnntiuiiiiwl Ky. tract StuUngla. Language is as lnsuiQcieut to de scribe tbe relief I obtained from the use of the Stil- Unirla as it is to convey an adauuate idea of the in tensity of my suffering before using your medicine; sufficient to say, I abandoned all other remedies and continued the use of your Extract of stUllngla, until eases, with nothing to obstruct the active pursuit of my profession. More than eight months have elapsed since this remarkable cure, without any le turn of tbe disease. I can say truly. I am cured or an pain," oi ail ais- any gentleman In Bartow County, Ga., and to the members of the bar of Cherokee circuit, who are ac- Sualnted with me. I shall ever remain, with the eepest gratitude, Your obedient servant. For tbe trutn of the above statement, I reier to al. Is. DUAJSUA, ai Wkst Point, Ga sept. 16, 1870. fjrvrx! Mt daughter was taken On the 25th day of June, 1S7S, with what watt supposed to be Acute Rheumatism, and was treated ior ine same wun no success. In March, following, pieces or Done began to work out of the right arm, and continued to ap pear till all the bone from the elbow to the shoulder Joint came out. Many pieces of bone came out of the right foot and , leg. The case was then pro nounced one of White Swelling. After having been confined about six years to her bed, and the case considered hopeless' I was Induced to try Dr. Pem- berton s compound Extract or suiungia. ana was so well satisfied with its effects that I have continued the use of it until the present, i My daughter was confined to her bed about six years before she sat up or even turned over without help. She now sits up all day, and ews most of her time has walked across the room. Her general health Is now good, and I believe she will, as her limbs araln strenffth. walk well. I attribute her re covery, with the blessing of God, to the use of your invaluable medicine. With gratitude, I am, yours truly, V. BJ BLAXTOX. Wkst Point, Ga., Sept. 1, 18T0. Gknts: The above certificate of Mr. W. B. Blan- ton we know and certify to as being true. The thing is so ; hundreds of the most respected citizens will certify to It. As much reference can be given as may be required. Yours truly, . HON. H. D. WILLIAMS. "T)R. PEMBERTOX'S STILLTWGIA Is pre pared by A. F. MERP.ELL CO.. Phlla., Pa. express. Agent wanted to canvass every worre. Send for Book 'Curious story" free to all. Medi cines sent to poor people, payable in installments. HOia By ail UnigglSW IU mnucs, i uj HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS Xe 8os will die of Colic, Bots or hXTMm F Tbb. If Pontzs Powders are osed la t line. Footss Powders will cure and proven t Hoa Cbouka, Fonts's Powders will prevent Gapes in Fowls. Foots Powders will Increase the quantity of milk and cream twenty per cent, and make the butter firm and sweet. Fonts's Powders will core r prevent almost tbt Disxasb to which Horses and Cattle ars abject. Foctx's Pownaas will itx BATisrACTiox. Bold tveryyhere. AVIO Z. rotrra, Proprietor, BAX.TIKOSS. Kd. Theo. F. Klutts, Agent, 2:6m Salisbury, N. C. GRAY'S SPECIFIG MEDICINE. win tun a nr nranBt Disease. TRAOK MARKThe Great EnglLsbTRADK MARK remedy; An un failing cure for Seminal Weakness,: Spermatorrhea. Impotency, and all diseases that follow as a sequence of Self-Abuse; as Loss of Memory, cniver sal Lassitude. Pain BEFOIE TACIXLth the Back, Dim-AFTE! TAKtBS. ness of Vision, f remature Old Age, and many other Diseases that lead to insanity or i-unsunipuon, ana a Premature Grave. J. . . Hy-Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send tree br mall to every one. tSTThe specific Medicine la sold by aU druggist at $1 per paCKOge, OT SUE pacs-ayeo iur ur nui ik kuv uw by mail ou receipt oi we muuev vj auuraauig CRAY MEDICINE CO.. ; Mechanics1 Block. Dbtroit, Mich. rtf-sold in Salisbury and everywhere by aU pi i iiBHfriajiir rusglst. "AT tos Agency, SALISBURY, N. C 1 R 1 1 1 0 1 D 1 1 1 C I A 1 1. 1 tt 0)0 oeo iiiitiMtMtt Illflstratei Pajers, k. I RESprCTFTJLLY inform the public that I have made arrangement to furnish regularly any or all of the lllustrattd papers, Koveu, Magazines, oec., &c., at nUBUSHERS' W i Mr .1 I will deliver them regularly to customers and subscriber, and can procure promptly any Novel. library, Paper, &c, which may-be wanted. Make known your wants in this lice, and they shall be supphed..4Sf G. C. MOfiGAN. SPOOL COTTON. ESTABLISHED ISIS. GEORGE A. CLARK. SOLE AGENT, 400 BBOADWAY NEW YORK. The distinctive features of this spool cotton are that it is made from the very Anet SEA ISLAND COTTON. It Is finished soft as the cotton from which it 1? made: It has no waxing or artitlcial finish to deceive the eyes; it is the strongest, smoothest and most elastic sewlnj? thread In the market : for maehlno sewing It has no equal; it Is wound on WHITE SPOOlJs. The Black Is the most perfect JET BLACK ever produced In spoolcotton. being: dyed by a system patented by ourselves. The colors are dyed by the NEW ANILINE PROCESS rendering them so perfect and brilliant that dress- makerseverywnere useineminstean oi HewiugsuKS. Wo Invite riimmiisnn and resnectfullvi ask ladlea to give it a fair trial and convince themselves of Its superiority over all others. TO oe naa at wnoicnate ri4ui iruut J. U. O ASK ILL 5:m Salisbury Ci X&ason and Hamlin Organs. En dorsed by over 100,000 delighted purchasers. XJot lowest priced, poorest antl dearest. Snt highest priced, best and cheapest. Cost but little uiore thau inferior organs. Give five times the satisfaction. Last twice as long. Victors at alt world's ex hibitions. Acknowledged best by all dis interested and competent mnsiciaus. Solid facts, indisputable, such afj no other organ maker in, the world can snhstantiate. Gloi ions news for purchasers. Graud In troduction Sale. New Prices. 6 Stops El egant Case ISO; Sttperb Mirror Top Case, 10 Stops only $100. 15 days trial. Freight paid both ways if Orgau don't suit. Sold on easy terms. Rented until paid for. Delivered anywhere iu the South for $4 extra. For full particulars, address Lnd den dL Bates, Savannah, Ga., Mana gers Wholesale Soutbren Depot. Prices same as at Factory. j NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE FOR THE WATCfiMAN Mea up your Clubs and send them in. Two Dollars a year. 3 II Icq ef a U E-i 1 g - 1ST. a gi mM g o g -g a m dn OS 03 Q odS i ! o s , 53j O O X I 5 j o g ? I 5 H si a I 2 O g s I e QTRADEtt a .v a a itft aw aw , av sva - n a siz-r m rm mwm r, . . Tho Best Family Sewing lasfe! The "NEW AMERICAN" is easily learned, does not get out o' oder and wilt more work with iess labor tha. any other machine. Illustrated Ci.cu'ar lurn.siievi application. AGENTS WANTED, i J. S. DOVEY, Manarer. CI "X. Charlca Street. Ilaltimore, ItO. MERONEYS & ROGERS, Agents, Salisbury, N. C, Price iVoni $25 to 45. CEirriFIOATES : I do not hesitate to say the American Machine surnasses all other machines, j Besides do i inu all the work that other machines can, it from Swiss Muslin to Beaver clotlu J have find the ruerican is superior to them all. I have uned the Singer and other machines, MeboneyA Bro., Agents American Sewing Macliine : i Sirs: 1 have ud the Howe, Singer, Wheeler & Wilson, Wilcox & Gibba, Sewinn M chines, and would not give the American for in the circular. I consider it superior to all Very respectfully, DEEDS & MORTGAGES. Fee Simple Deeds, Deeds in Trust, Mortgage Deeds, Commission crsf Deeds, Sheriffs Deeds, Cliattle .Mortgages, f arm vJoniracis, Jiarriage anu connrnumon JcriincHle, Iistillcrs, Entries, and various other forms for sale at the hi . WATCHMAN OFFICEr SALE NOTICES. dministrftrnre executors, commissioners, call on us for printed sale notices. It is .. . i t tllCir property at pUUUC UUCIIUU vllinut uisi miirrmpntii nt' th law on the subicct everv often sacrificed from this cause when a dollar or two spent in advertisingjnight fcsn saved it and made it bring its value, w e NOTICSS POP. POSTING - PAMPHLETS, SCHOOL CIRCULARS, BILL-HEADS, LETTER - HEADS, Monthly Statements, CARDS, Posters, all kinds, NATIONAL HOTEL, Cortlandt Street, NEAR BROADWAY, NEW YOKE. HOTCIIKISS & POND, Proprietors On The European Plan. The lestaurant. cafe and lunch room, attach ed. are unrturpasned lor c heainus and ex . l lence of service. Rooms 50 1 is. to $2 ier day $3 to 10 per week-. Convenient to all ft-rrie !tiul citv lailroads. New Furniture, New Management 13: lv. On and Off Slick as Grease ! BOOTS, GAITERS, SHOES, SLIPPERS, &c. W. M. EAGLE, Respectfully announces his continuance at his old stand in his old line, on Main Street, opposite Enniss' Drug Store. He is always ready and anxious to accommodate customers iu his line in the best manner possible. Lie is prepared to do first, class work and can com pete with an' northern Shop or Hand made work. His machines, lasts, dc. are of tbe latest ard beat pat erns. He works the verj best materia) and keeps on hand ready made work, and stock eqnal to any special order. Repairingneatl r and promptly done at rea sonable prices. Satisfection gnaranteed or no charge. Prices to .Suit the Times. Cash orders by mail promptly filled. 34.6mos. W. M. EAGLE. BONDS To make Title to Land, and Laborer and Mechanics Liens, for gale at this Office Practical Blacksmith - HORSESHOER. SHOP connected with Brown Verbles Livery I .stables. ST14 designs of shoes, to suit aiiy ! shape of toot. All shoeing on strictly scientific pftn ctplesand WARRANTED. AU kinds biacksmlthing promptly done. l:iy j Snbscribofor the Watchman orIj 2 Mnrteraere Deeds for sale here 0"0 Also various other blans. i Buy only the NEW . MLEBICAI It u tbs j- Only Sewing Machine The Stmplrsi, the Must Dur able, and in iery Resist o- oveiheaioa and works button holes in any fabric used Singer, Howe and Weed Machines, audi ' i MISS AI . li U 1 LEDG E. and j would not exchange the American fori M 1L' I 1 X.' ! U I X- . 1 I. Ss iisbury, N. C.. May 22d: 1872. all of ihein. JT will do aTl that is claimed for others l nave ever seen. n Miw. tiiu. v, UAKiSUA. sheriffs, constables, agents. &c. arc advised to certainly great injustice to owners to put up i,tUi nf ... i f;iiu aiujuc iiuirc ui iuc buiu i uc rir-i body know s are insufficient.! ProDertvii iurmsit sale nonces promptly ana ciieap.. LAND P.SADT PP.INTSD4. . -1. :- : tT-.- i WIIEi YOBJ WAIVT H A RD WAR E At Low Figures Onll on the undersignedT at No. 2, Granite How; j Dt A. AT WELL. Salisbury .N. C..TJune S U. EXJjTISS' CHICKEN CHOLERA CURE or hioney refunded if directions are strictly followed. j : PRICE 25 CENTSi at mtt. EN'ISS' Drug store. Farmer, DON'T-BE SWINDLED , f- -i - out of ' , BALE OP COTTON ; TIIEO. F. KLUTTZ uHll ooll xrnn rhino trr ff ! 3 Boykin, Carmer m CELEBRATED u; Home Fertilizer ! lor 200 IlOottoii, ij FA7ABX.X3 ZZ7 CTO VEMBCII I ; I - ' j -1 y y It is the best in use. Easy to minipuht. ; Requires no cotton seed nor 8tablemnur Jfo charge for recipe or right lo ne. Equl to any $50 guano. Ha Ibeen teted for yr" 1 Call! and get particulars jand-see I ef tinaonil : w . a mm -. m . i Don't be numbaggea bj cneap lmiuuon. . Youca get the genuine only froin ; 1 ! THEO. F. KLUTTZ, pau co it. No20:lj ; Side Agent fbiroanj SS?' Ver Slips Sitcies. ' . . , , , . HARDWARE. Warrantefl to Cure! . i1
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 29, 1880, edition 1
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