Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 15, 1880, edition 1 / Page 2
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Carolina Watchman,; niuiisDAY; July 8, ipso. 2UTI0NAL DEKOCSATIO TICKET. - . FOR PRESIDENT: WINHELD SCOTT HANCOCK, Off Pe5XSYLVA5IA. - J " - FOR VICE-PRESIDENT : WILLIAM H ENGLISH, Of Ixdiana. ! DSiXOdltATIC STATE TlCSCETs FOR GOVERNOR, THOMAS J. JAKVT3, Of Pitt, FOR LlELTeNANT-GOTERKOIV JAMES I. ROBINSON, Of Iacon. -For Secretary of State, WILLIAM L. SAUNDERS, Of Wake. - Foit Attorn ey-General, THOMAS S. KENAN, ' Of Wilson. For Treasurer JOHN M. WORTH, Of Randolph. For Acditor, W. P. ROBERTS, ' . Of Gates. For SciT. Public Instruction, JOHN C. SCARBORO, ' Of Johnston. , Electors for jus Statet Large, JAMES MADISON LEACH, Of Davidson. FABIUS II. BL'SBEE, -Of Wake. Seventh District Congressional Convention. At a meeting of the Democratic Executive Committee of the Seventh District held at Statesville on Tuesday the 8th, a Conven-tioafto-nouiinate a candidate for Congress, was called to meet in YADKINVILLE on THURSDAY, the 5th of August. . DE J0$BAT1C COUNTY CONTENTION Meets Saturday the 28th of 'August, j830, 12 o'clock, M., at the- Court II ouse ; inSalisbury. - Democratic Township Conventions , will meet on Saturday 21st ql . August, 4 1880, at 12 o'clock M., at the respective , township voting precincts, except Gold jHl!i which wijl meet at Jesse Miller's, 'rthtr'Atwelf, which will meet at David -Earnhart's. - - ; Balloting for delegates to-tho County . CoHvention, and also balloting for candi (. dates for 4 the various nominations will begin at 12 o'clock, P. M., and continue - till sun down. All Democrat of Rowan are earnest ly called npon to attend the Township CoBTentious. Let our victory in the No vember elections be grand aud glorious! Rally, Democrats to your standard ! Prank Brown, i County J A. G.Halyburton, I Exe'tiv .Ixo. W. Mauney, ) Com 'tee. Gov. Vance's Vote in Rowan Coun ty in 1870. - the following is the. official vote of Rowan county, given by townships, for Got. Vance in 1876 . Salisbury Franklin , Unity .... ... ...... Scotch Irish , t Mount Ulht Locke f At well Li taker . Gold Hill " - Morgan Providence 422 220 84 144 167 157 281 18U 201 113 185 The Couury Executive Committee have ' taken this vote as the basis of reprensen tation for delegates to the County Conven tion, giving one delegate to every forty votes and fractions of tweuty votes. Dr. Tauuer is the name of aJ gentleman in Nw York, who proposes to fast forty days. On (flie 12th iust., he had accom plished RHjdays in fasting. Ve do not know exact y what his object is, unless to demonstrate the fact that the human sys- tern is capable of eudurfng much more in the' way of fastiug thau is generally ,nii posed.; 'Hp is described as being in good spiritTcairying on. conversations with persons who call. He is said j to bp very couftdcutof accomplishing this feat he is closely watched. x Death of ax Oritiax. We learn from the Columbus Timet that little Gertrude Hood, the 'jidopted daughter of Mr. and l Mrs; Josephtlied Monday at i the Warm Springs, in Merri wether county where Mrs, j Joseph had gone tospendthe summer. - 'She was one oftlie"orphans of Gen. J.B. Jloiwl, and who was given to Mr! and Mrs. ;r Joseph by their earnest solicitation whilo 1 Kew Orleans last winter. The attach t ment and devotiou of the foster parents could iiot have teen greater had the bright" : little girl been their own offspring. They watched over it with the tenderest care, und their hearts are made sore by the death of the sweet little babv. And not only th parents but many of their friends J-'lso formed a strong attachment forj nwvanfl many, eyes were wet with tears -yesterday as'they pl:iced the little flower in th cold grave. TiiB funuy political pfedicameut of the repulican lieVspaperi w their candidate for the Presidency la with those of them rJio denounced Garfield in 1873 for connection with the Credit Mobilier, the pavement swindle and. Sec. Then they had bo dream lie would ever be their candidate for the presidency or. nnvthinr else. I and I their indignation "" C7 w i ; against him and his dishonest acts boiled over, and they bespattered him with dis graceful "epithet, ontir they politically killed and buried him:, na they thought, forever. , But now the funny part ot liie business is in! unsaying all they said against him', and in , lifting him but of the ignominious grave into which they had plunged him with their own willing hands, and in their wUkHeartedyendeavors to breathe into hirji vitality enough for a Re publican president, O, it is a heavy job, and they go at jit with faces all awry. Some of them are working for party suc cess without calling the name of the can didate at all, like a fellow wln holds his breath when liftiug something tlwit dou't smell sweet. It is not a plasant thing to be driveu to tjie performance of hated work jobs wlijich offend the eyes and nostrils of men!; and: the fellows in this hard ease certainly hare a very hard time of it, especially when other fellows have the liberty to stand around and make re marks while the job is in hund. This is just what Democratic editors North and South are doing for the Garfield men who don't like the work they are doing. School boys were nevef tnore ingenious in plan ing or plotting; tormeuts on each other when there was a chance for fun. But if Garfield won the scorn and con tempt of his owii party friends seven years ago and has doiie nothing since to purge I himself, as all know he has not, there is a very -grave qnestiou 'underlying the "fun" alluded ito above, aud that is: Is it possible that the' Republican party with a notorious bad record of its own, has the audacity to present to the Ameri can people as a Candidate for the Presi dency a man whom they themselves have denounced for his political aud public vil- laiuiesl No amount of white-washing they can da will hide the marks of dis grace worn by their candidate. And when it is considered that their efforts in this direction are only for the sake of par ty success nod iiot for truth and patriot ism,' the insult to the American people as sumes a form and gravity which .should challenge their most unequivocal resent ment. The Congressional Candidate. A correspondent of the Winstou Sentinel proposes as a comjM-ouiise lietweeu the frieudsiof Hon. W M. Robbius and Hou R. P. Ariutieldtluit bot,l be dropped and Mr. J. M. Clement, of Duvie, be taken up. We have no objection to such talk iu the newspapers : Perhaps it does good. The Democratic party is absolutely rich iu material out of which to make Congress men, Governors, &c. We have some splendid stuff here in Salisbury our Kerr Craige, Chas Price and Jno. S. Heuder sou, for instance. If the pistrict Conveu tiou should be driven to take up a dark horse (which is hardly possible) in order to harmonize the party, without a word prejudicial to Mr. Clement, ofDavie, Rowan will claini to enter her fellow cit izen, Kerr Craige, Esq., as worthy of the honor. Cot. J. L Scales, who has for some time been under1 treatment In the Presby terian Hospital, in New York, died in that city on the; 12th. He was a native of Jiockiughntuicounty, N. C j and was aged about 43 yeats. He was an honor ed Son of the State, and his death will afflict numerous friends left behind to mourn his departure. A bad wouianjdied suddenly in Wyth ville, Ya., last Priday, and was buried. Afterwardsa very bad smell iu her apart ments lel to the discovery of five dead white . children,! Crammed down into a barrel in the corner of the room. L It is proposed-to have a reunion festival of the soldiers of the two armies at Gettys burg, sometime during this year. Why not ! It is a good ideal. It was there the two armies did their hardest fighting. There is rro more fitting place for them to renew their pledges to the union of our fathers. Dr. Tanner's voluntary, fast, in the inter est of science, it s said this morning can not be extended beyond 15 days. He in tended to make it 4Hlays if possible The Republicans must be on the ragged edge of despair, They are said to be laying Gartied in the President plans for putting tial chair as Hay alively time of i es went m. 1 hev will have if they try that game. Gen. Patrick H. Jones, of New York, heretofore a prominent and influential re publican, has declared in favor of Hancock and English. ." pep. . McLean, a greater military, man aud a better patriot,-than U. S. Grant, end,orscsu the nomination of Gen.; Han cock. ' Mr.' Garfield has formally accepted his nomination. t The First Gcx. Governor Ja'rvis fir- ea ine nrst gun of the campaign at Bur- gaw on the 5th Inst. A large crowd of both Republicans and Democrats were present. He d welt ' at length upon the sale of the . Western Rail road." A Star correspondent says : 5 "He satisfied every one here as to his action in the. Western North Carolini'jRailrbad niatter, and he really converted! many Republicans who spoke of him as one of the leudiug men of Nortlt-Carolina.i - , TO T22 EHOCHATIC PASTY OP "" . ; EOWAN COUNTY.'-.-.- . , . T, 7 ' - In obedience to the order of the State Central Executive Committee of the Demo cratic party, your County Executive Com mittee hereby calls a; County Convention to held in the Court' House in Salisbury on Saturday the 28th day of August, 1880, at 12 o'clock M. for thej purpose of nominating two candidates for the House of Represen tatives, one candidate each for Sheriff, Reg ister of Deeds, Coroner, County Surveyor and County Treasurer. The sakl cemven tion shall be composed of fifty-six delegates to be elected by the township conventions. The basis of representation shall be one delegate for every forty democratic votes, or fractions of twenty such votes. Each township shall elect (the fallowing number of delegates, to wit : 1 iJALISBCRY i. Fraski.ik j. Unity j. Scotch Irtsb; . . SfoDXT UlLA..... Locke. 11 6 2 4 4 4 7 5 5 3 5 56 Atwell Litakeb Gold II ill. MoncfAN PROVIDEKCE i . Total, Each township shall pc entitled to vote in tike County Convention as many votes as it is entitled to delegates ; and twenty-nine votes shall be necessary to a choice for any nomination. All democrats of the county are request ed to meet io convention in their respective townships at their accustomed voting pre cincts, (except Gold Hill which will meet at Jesse Miller's, and Atwell which will meet at David Earn hart's), on Saturday the 21st day of August 1880, at 12 o'clock M.. for the purpose of electing delegates to the County Convention. The township conven tions shall elect their delegates by ballot. The Township Executive Committees re specti vely shall open the polls at 12 o'clock P. M. and close the same at sun down, and allow all democrats to vote who have there tofore voted the democratic ticket or who will declare that they will vote the demo cratic ticket in the November elections. Each voter shall be entitled to vote on one ballot for as many persons for delegates as his township is entitled to delegates. The number of persons, equal to the number of delegates each township is entitled to, receiving the highest number of rotes in any towship convention shall be declared by the Township Executive Committee to be the delegates elerted to the County Con vention from said township and shall be so notified of their election by the Township Executive Committee. In case any town ship shall fail to hold a convention and elect delegates us herein directed, then the township executive conuiitteeof such town ship shall be authorized and requested to appoint the delegates for the said township The said delegates, or such of them as shall attend, shall represent their respective tovfli- ships in the County j Convention, and shall vote the democratic j strength of their said township as above stated on all questions that shall come before the County Conven tion. If any such delegate elected or appointed shall be unable to attend the said County Convention, he shall be authorized and re quested to appoint ; his own alternate in writing, approved by the chairman of his township convention, or by one of his Town ship Executive Committee, and none but delegates or alternates 6o provided for or ap)ointed, shall be entitled to seats in the County Convention. : If all the delegates Or their alternates froni any township shall attend the conn ty convention, each; delegate or alternate shall be entitled in the vote of his town ship to one vote ; aud in case of a division of opinion or preference in auy township, then the chairman of its delegation shall cast its vote according to the wish of its 1 individual members. If auy delegates or alternates of any township are absent from the county con vention, the delegates or alternates pres ent from such township shall be entitled to vote the full democratic strength of the townsh'p, and in case of a division of opinion or preference in such townshisp, 'then each delegate or alternate present from such township; shall be entitled to a pro rata part of th votes of the said ab sent delegates or alternates in addition to his own vote, and the chairman of such delegation shall thus cast Its vote accor ding to the wishes of Its individual mem bers present. j The person or persons receiving twenty-nine votes or upwards in the county com'ention, shall be declared by the chair man to be the nominee or nominees of the Democratic party fjr the office or offices for which he or they! shall be voted in the said convention. After the delegation of any township shall have enst its vpleiu theco,unry con vention, there shall be no change in such vote before the fiual; result of the ballot shall be announced by the chairman. 1 In order that youi? delegates may know jiui uirjgiviitLa im;iiio laimue imucuo iu i - he filled) each township is . requested to ballot at its convention for candidates for the various nominations, the balloting to be Ujiuler the supervision' of the executive committees resictiVety and governed by the same rules and regulations, as far as applicable, as are above prescribed for balloting for delegates. K Your cqmiittee iealls npon you all, j Democrats of Rowan, to attend the town ship conventions and give expression to your wishes and preferences. Your committee recogniziug the great im portance of nui ted effort aud harmonious action by our party iu the great political contest now upon us, take these steps thus early, to the end that when the No veniber election shall come the full Derat ocratic strength of he coanty shall -be brought out to the polls, and that the most brilliant snccess and the grandest victory i shall emblazen ottf noble old Democratic Banner. s Frank Browx, County Ex. Com. A. G. Haltbuktox Jno, W. Mauney vuiy jo, ioou. v-M-Democrat and Examintr please insert.! ... j j r . . Sherman's "Lack of Harmony, Tims' far the only disCorttant note which has beeu sounded in the Repnbli- can cianyass has leen caused by alleged movements iu the Sherman camp. Usnal- ly, defeated presidential candidates hide their jwound, if they haverthy, atrd dis- appointment try working j heartily for the successful competitor, unless Sec retary Sherman is misrepresented or is most unfortunate in his manner 'of: making removals, he has cherished the t fleeiing animosities of the' preliminary i canvass, lite abrupt removal of Com missioner Rauui's power of appointment, the trouble over the snpergednre of the United States district attorney for Ala bama and the late displacement of Col. Lewis, the colored naval officer at New Or leans, are all unfortunate, to say the ieasti These iucideuts are seized upon by Secretary Sherman's critics as evi dence of his long surviving vindictive- new. They give rise to rumors of a lack of harmony in the Republican pf.rty, And if they are defensible on ground of sound public policy, explanation cannot come, too soon. Xew York Times, Rej. i Hartj Run. The Republican organs having searched in vain for something againt Hon. William H. English, demo cratic nominee for vice-president, at last hit npon an old newspaper which had Mr. English's name down as a contributor to the amount of only $1 to the sufferer from the Chicago rlre. Much w made of thij evidence of illileraliiy and now It is discovered that the gentleman really gave $100, and an error on the part of the compositor reduced it as above. Is it hard to see what a person's contribution to the Chicago relief fund has to do with his qualifications for the office of vice president. When the Republicans are reduced to such straits in their anxiety to to attack a man's character,; it may be concluded that they are hard run indeed. It is worthy of note that the Democrats do not have to apply to the list of contribu tors to the Chicago sufferers to find ma terial upon which to base charges against Republican candidates for any office, from President down. Ex. : Supporting the Guns. Detroit Vree Press. . DiI you ever see a battery take posi tion 1 It hasn't tho thrill of a cavalry charge, nor the griiuuess of a line of bayonets moviug slowly aud determinedly on, but there is a peculiar excitement abont it that makes old veterans rise in the sad dle and cheer. We have been fighting at the edge of the Woods. Every cartridge box has been em tied once and more, and a fourth of the brigade has melted away iu dead and wounded aud missing. Not a cheer is heard in the whole brigade. We know that we are being driven foot l3 foot, and that when we break back once more the the liue will go to pieces ami the enemy will pour through the gap. Here comes help ! Down tho crowded highway gallops a battery, withdrawn from some other posi tion to save ours. The field fence is scat tered while you could count thirty, aud the gnus rush for the hill behind us. Six horses-to a piece--three riders to each guu. ; Over dry ditches where a farmer would not drive a wagon, through clumps of bushes, over loirs a foot thick, everv horse iu a gallop, every rider lash ing his team and yelling the sight be hind us niitkeH us forget the foe iu front. The irons jump two feet high as the heavy wheels strike rock or log, but not a horse slackens his pace, not a cannoueer loses I his seat. Six guns, six caissons sixty i hoists, eighty men race' tor the blow of the hill as if he who reached it first was to be knighted. A moment ago the battery was a con fused mob. We look again aud the six guns arc in position, the detached horses hurrying away, the ammunition chests open,! and aloug our line runs me com mand: "Give them one more volley aud fall back to support the guns !'' We have scarcelj" obeyed wheu boom ! boom ! boom ! oiKfus the battery and jets of tire jump! down ana scorcu tne green ireeB under which we fought and despaired. The shattered old brigade has a chance to breathe for the first time in three hours as we forma line of battle behind the guns and lie down. What grim, cool fellows those cannoneers are! Every mau is a perfect machine. Bullets splash dust iuto their faces, but they do not wince. Bullets sing over and around them,; but they do not dodge. There goes one to the earth, shot through the head as he sponged his gun. The machin ery loses just one beat misses one cog in the wheel, and then works away again as before. Every gu,n is using short; fuse shell. The ground reels and trembles the roar shuts out all sounds from a battle liue three utiles long, and the shells' go shrieking iuto the swamp to cut' heads short off to mow great gaps in. the bush es tot hunt out and shatter and tear men uutil her corpses cauuot be recognized as human. You would think a tornado was raging through the forest, followed by billows of Arei Hud yet men live through itaye J press forward to cap ture the battery ! We can hear their cheers as they form for the. rush. -The shells are changed for grape and canister, and the guns are served so fast that the reports blend into thr mighty ft.. -i...ttj 5 i..ii t !. iinir, i Alio nil lie ik. u sucii io n nu", edest sound in war, but nothing; makes the flesh crawl like demoniac singing, purring,' whistling grape shot and v the serpent like Ills of canister.' Men's legs and arms are not shot through but torn off. Heads are torn front bodies, and bodies Cut in two, A round shot or fthell takes ; two men out of the ranks as it Ctashes through. Grape and 'canister mow a swath and pile the dead on top each other.!1 -- - - -,( -, Through the smoke we see a swarm of men. ; It is not a battle line, but a mob of lueii despanite enough to bathe their bayouet in the flume of the guns. The guns leap from the ground, almost, as they are depressed on the foe, and shrieks ! and screams aud shouts blend into one awful ,um1 8twld cr Twenty men out . Rreuun,l ,u,u ..r i. .. i. . .i .i... ii..: ' lnierrniireu. nn iw sirciiiA it jik :i Hirn of wavering aud comes rushing on. Tjiey are not ten feet away when the guns give them a last shot. That discharge picks living ueu off their feet and throws them iuto the swamp, a blackened bloody mass. Up now, as the enemy are among the guns! There is a silence of teu seconds and tlten, tie flash and roar of more than 3,000 muskets and a rush forward with bayonets. For whatf Neither on the light, nor left, nor in front of us is a liv- i iu 61 There are corpses around ns which have been struck by three, four aud even six bullets, and nowhere on this acre of ground is a wounded man ! The wheels of the guns cannot move until the blockade of dead is removed. Meu can not pass from caisson to gun without climbing over winrows of dead. Every gun aud wheel is seared with blood every foot of crass has its horrible stain. Historians write of the glory of war. Burial parties saw murder where histo rians saw glory. The Impending Crisis of the East. One need not be a prophet or the son of a propnet to discern in such telegrams as have reached us from Constantinople, Athens, Scntari, Janina, .lorliaand Philip popolis the signs of a coming storm. The indication1 are multiplying on every hand that theerernal "Eastern Question" is about to le reopened, if indeed, it can be considered to have. ever been closed jw"1" Turkey openly decliu-d to fulfill the leading obligations imposed upon her by the Berlin Congress of 1878. The Ottoman Porte has acted since that date as if its sole object in life were to falsify all the promises it had ever made, and alienate a?I the friends-iipon whom it had relied. In this effort the Porte has lieen eminently successful. Even Sir Austen Lnyard, for n:i.y rears the most strenu ous apologist for Turkey, has lieen forced to acknowledge nothing but coercion can ever reform the Ottoman Empire. When the inevitable crisis comes, as it ina within a few days, Turkey will literally have no friends. The European concert recently established at Berlin and tin generally amicable nature of present re lations lietween all the powers forbid the idea that Turkey can liud any ally ready to fijrht against the reunion of tV.e two Bulgarians, the cession of Janina to Greece of Duloigno to Montenegro, or the ad vance of Austria upon Mitrovitza. This time the doom of the Turk will probably lie sealed by the "bag and baggage" pro cess so strongly in favor alike at Lon don and St. Petersburg. New York Herald. Texas Sparks. Galvestox, July 6. Professor N. A. Quin was drowned in. Galveston yester day. A special to the Xetcs says iu an af fray in Atlas, Cosa county, lietween two Dee brothers aud two McCoys, one of each was killed and the others badly wounded. While firing, a salute at Fort Ring gold yesterday, a man had his arm blown off aud was fatally injured. The sad intelligence of the death of two of Statesville's fairest flowers litis reached this place. Last Friday Morning at 3 o'clock1, Misses May McLelland and Ma mie Long, died. The former of consump tion, the latter of typhoid fever. The funeral services of each were conducted at the same time and place, and more than half the people in attendance were uuable to get iu the church. Sulitbitry Democrat. Miraculous Power. The Forest and Streayn has it : "To pre serve health use Warne's Safe Remedies. These are almost of liraculous power iu removing diseases for which recommend ed. The wonderful curative qualities they are possessed of are vouched for by tens of thousands." Chew Jackson's Best Sweet Kavy Tobacco IN IT3 17TH VOLUME, TH3 HALEIGH NEWS. P. M. Hale, Editor, L. L. Polk, Cotres. Editor. Edwards, Bkoughton & Co., Business Mauagers. A North Carolina Democratic Journal. DAILY AND WEEKLY. TSXLBXS: Daily, 1 rear, "$7.00 6 month, 3.50 Weeklv, 1 year, 2.0Q " - 6 reoa. i.OO " 3 M 1.7o Address, 39:80 THE RALEIGH NEWS, RaleiglilN. C. UNITY HIGH SCHOOL. The Fall term of this School will open, Tuesday, Angnst 3rd, 1880. ' For terms, &c, address, GEO. r. McNeill, , 30:1 ra Wood Leaf. N. C. NEW -ADVERTISEMENTS. : -fFRMLKAill; ;; This School, located In banttfiil arid healthy village, four miles north of Salis bury, will reopen on the 1st Monday in August, 1880. Rev. H. M. Bnowx. A.M., Principal II. C. FistiER, Assistant. r 3y-.lm-p North Carolina College, Mt. Pleasant, Cabrrns Ccmntyf. C. The next session of this Institution be gins the first Monday of Augusr, 180. Instruction is thorough, and tlw total expense for ten months average from $ 2o to SI 00. For further information, address, L. A. Bikle, D. D., Pres't. 39;4t" ' '; ' Notice! The Milk of one cow is reserved expressly for infant at. 38:tf MRS. D- L. BRINGLE'S ' wnTOipni II ilil lMJ l'Oue Hundred Bushels of Onions; also, One Hundred Bushels of Peach Stones, at ENNISS' Wesleyan Female Institute, STAUNTON, VIRGINIA. Opens its 31st Session September 20th, 1880. Among tire liist Schools for young ladies iu the United Mates. Climate un surpassed. Snrrotiuuings lreautiful. Pu pils from seventeen States. Among the lowest terms in the Union. TERMS: Board, Washing, Lights, EmrhVh Course. Latin, French, loi each half of the Scholastic year . SI 15 All extras verv low. For catalogue, hU dress Rev. Wm. A. HARRIS, D.D, Pres., ' 38:2m Staunton, Vs. FOR SALE! MacMnery anil Minii Materials : ' One new Morey & Sperry 10 Stamp Battery. . One new Agitator for same. One new 30 horne-powtr Return Tubular Boiler One new 30- horse-power Erie Company Sta tionery Engine. One J2 horse-power Horizmitc) HoUiinp Engine wiih vertical builer. AH the buve in ru n n i n ji ord ejr One BI:tekst J outfit. One large vice. Also. PicksViftovels, Drills, I J.irmners, Pipe ton;s, wrenches, ropes bunt-Is, barrow and raining apperte naiK'es. All the above are of superior quality and in first'-elasft condition. Fur mil m ol any or all of the above, siHilrs lv or tt'ere Jniv 15, 1880, L. BERTRAM CADY, Lock Box 410, fcalisburv, N. C It ' Wotice To Contractors. Proposals will be received by the un dersigned until 9 o'clock A. M. on Satur day; thelst inst., for Ixiihiingn parsonage near Thyatira Church. Plans and speci fications may be seen by npphiug to the undersigned Chairman of Building Com mittees. W. A. LlNGLt. July 6th, 1830. 3c : 4t. MARSH'S MA' SINE SS0P3. Administration, &c. 'The Machine Shops and Foundry of the late E. H. Marsh are FOS RENT. An experience l ni.-u liiri.t and rcmrctrnl man rto manage, will tin i here a very inviiiog op portunity for suceessiul. ln.fiii.Rs. 'U.t-iuj chinery is all in ood ri.innrj; ordr Hini will be kept in operation until rented. Orders will be rilled as UMial. N OTICE ! Having adiuiuixiered un mj late hushandV estate, all persons indebted to it are l.ereby noli tied to nmke early p;ij :nent. And thtmi (Hviii claims aaiimt the Oiime, are required to present theui for payinant within twelve months from this the 1st day of Jul v, 1880, or this notice will he plead in bar of recovery. m a urn a c. marsh, July 1, 18S0. Adroiuinitrix. , 37:Hw From one hundred and hundred acres of good half woodland, and balance (inelnding good meadow and new ground) under cultivation. Tract lies on the X. C. Rail road, two milex from stilt ion. Will be sold at a bargain. ..For further particulars call at this of fice. 37:2tn. Special Term of the Su perior Court of Rowan County. Notice is hereby given to all Parties to Suits, Witnesses, Attorneys, and to all j whom it may concern, that a Special! Term of the -Superior Court of Rowan County will be held at the Court House in Salisbury, on Monday, the ninth (9th) day of August, 1880, for the trial of civil oases, and continue until the business is hHsposed of. I). A. DAVIS, Chairman County Coinims is of Rowan. II. N- Woodson-, CTk Board of County Commissioners. 37KJw Administrator's Sale AND Notice of Settlement. Having qualified as Administrator de bnis no's with the will annexion the estate of Solo mon Eagle decrd, we will Fell all of hi entate both real and pernonal, at hi late residence, on the 20th day of July, florae, Cattle, Sheep, and Hog, with Farming tool of all Iti nd, and household and kitchen furniture wiilbesolri, with Three Fine Plantation of fund near Liberty Church, on Dutch Second Creek, comprixing about 700 acrtt, all in good repair. CgTerma of Sale, CUsn. 4 All person indebted to the estate are re quelled to make immediate settlement, and all person having claim against the estate are hereby notified that that they'muM present them to w on or. before the 20lh day of June, 1881, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. JOHN EAGLE, JOSEPH EAGLE, Admlnintors de bonis non of Solomon Eagle. Jane 19, 1830. 36:6w BALE fifty to two NE,y-ADyERTISgi: ttarntii anV (fannon -i wvvuuv ai-wr - OFFICE . v ir THE BUILDING ADJOIX150 THE Con. 1 Owners of Gold Mlnlnsr ijnrt communication. w "rit,! - AUMlnlni taterestj meet prompt atten., Noie"accoiratS,&c.coUecte(t ttUoa' -,k . Estates, and all .matters of Admiml. rU Executors, Ac settled AamlIlbUutoiS J. L4aBiaUoltleScarnnnv ,j ConTuftrnteatloa solldtea vrttt, .k,. bu or bell. " luU5e nonuj, itytas ami Minnesota atiat tttBlk tue promised Land). 1 ut Pan kjSJjj Land for ale la IlUnois. ami uw ; i rlverlo Virginia. . - ana SLUie Parties dslrln? to Uate, or tvme to vli L furnlstied fitu necessary tntormauoiu rC4fKi e.o. jjuus oougat ana sold iinr,.. - I road' u.k he buiST whettei 8 an counties receive outside aw or bot ,MEo2 of the day and the awakening eVJSi; J5PS Vlot these counties demand and S " andnfuep Atrangements being- pertected t n. C- tt . 8aUtury nd at other points in iMrK te a P.S. A market ready lor small desire t fy Call office, or address Lock Boi Hunting Creek! To Rext. I have a very property for Merehantile Bmnm ai U.J Creek Mills. Settle P. O., Wlell C I , .VftP wfck W 1 ill rent on favorbt uS'-ft a tood place for a Store and u well w,u7i mspeciion ol any aenve -man wirLiti ' T ( lish a country place for businew. Al, I want to ereei a FaetorilMiiM;,,."?"" Ilnntiiflt Creek, and Ui.de. .Vi nddress me for apecihvat2i.ii. An( ot,er nlarx. ' K ne'- I have also snitahle btdldinVp foriBJ i Hrnith and Shoe and Bool ML -. i " rented very low. The iJIaeksmith; ready furnwheil with tools. --. r " June 4. 1880. J. W. ELLIS 34:6t:Hi Settle, IredelJ ? 0nniy,K,ai THEMIS: HEADQUA3T:R3 I FOR " Frats, Z Candies Cigars, Books, Pictures, And ! Ficture-Frapvea s ' 32: h if z NOTICE! - NORTH C&RpLIHA SAIL ROAD C0.,v SECIiirTARY i TUEASL'KEH'S OPFIC1. M CoipKY Shops, N. t;., May 31, 1880. The liirty first Aimnaf; Meetinjr or the Stockholder .f tlie N..rth l arolinn KailroiJ Company will tie lield in (ireensbdm, a, (' ; on tise Se oud Thursday in Jnly, lSSO.mJ the Tran6r Bixki of mid irompairr U1 be i el.se! from thin d oe until 'd'ter tiicjQiertinit M 0l P. B. RUFITU, Sect j4 I Money Saved By Examining, Kluttz i BeflilA Large and Well SelectedStock of NEW GOODS. :'-o-: Just Read a few IihVh and judge the ) lialaiu e of our Stock aeeoidiugly : Lawns, nques, an.i rereus ai m cis. 1 wowuw: 1 Iiousarwl yr sof ;oKt t,'-ailo. bnus,'l t U.-t jnt. thatrwe offer at T eis. A KuU assertaent. ot iHj klQCtSOt LEY GOODS AND N0XIC171 - A complete Stock: ol shos a old prices. JLaistsS , Men s Hats fron"l2 cts n;-. A Full Aisoruieam ; Shirts at last, year's prtoos. Clothing Cboapt ('aiTsell a M vv Com ior ceau. r-lut or Tra kinds ot COFFEfcS, f rm U cts tc the llw Mocha. EiptiL varieties ol rups an?'. Kolas'- as can be U id la ttie place. Twelve kinds ot CZT&'S7XtfQ TOBACCO, Clifapetst to tlie best td be had in any martd. S.tlt. Leatticr. !eats Crockery, Potatoes andmuj 1 m.wiy articles not berflnAtentJoaed. ' - ' j We buy soil all kinksot t'onmry Prwlw f? will pay gotKl prices for Drted Frutts and Heme, i ' Be sare and see us betore you buy or seiL.jf May 2", ir.tf. 31:Sm GKEAT EXCITEMENT At Ho. 1, mM Granite te: MgCUBBIHS. BEALL & CO. . - Have just received their SPRING AND SUMMER STOCKtt NJiv GOODS. BOUGHT ETIBELT-OB CASS J at exceedingly low prices", which cannot frit to please. Thev have a full andeomp!fU stock of DKY GOODS. j - - " GROCERIES, ' QUEENSWABt HATS, OAPS. and STRAW GOODS, BOOTS and SHOES, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, " Fish, Bacon, Lard, Flour, Meal, 4c. They are agents for the sale of Job utmas & Co's. BONE DUST, admitted to be the very best cotttm and tohacco-FrVp'. zer in use. Also, for the French Burr M"1 Stones, Bolting Cloths,. Eureka bmui chine. &c. Don't fail to call ft't No. 1- March 26V 1880. a4:1y T tt rW. hr. foncHl nn a FstI b'&' in? Lot in rear of of our Warehouse, people can hitch and feed without !" annpved by cattle anl hogs. We intff. nuttinc nr Stalls. &jT No charge xr to hnt th rrntp. EXECUTOR'S SALE AND NOTICE FOB SETTLEMENT. IJavinj: qualified as Executor of tbr-bj Will and Testament of Alexander firowj deceased. I will have a Sale ofhi9PrwJJ property at his late residence on Wedocs the 14th da? of July next. ..- Horses, Cattle, Hogs, with and-KiTChEX Fuknitpre and Tools of all kinds will be soid: TERMS OF SALE CASH AH persons indelfel to the estate r quested to make rmmedirtfe wsit? all person- having claims against tM are notified that tbcy tnust present tae me, on r before the 12thrdy of JUD5t-her, or this notice will be plead in baror recovery, k -. G. Hexkt BjwV, Er June 11th; 188a - Alexander B" no.35;6w. BLAXJK ADMINIST SALE NOTICES nf ForSaleatthiiOfl fiOOD NEWS!
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 15, 1880, edition 1
2
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