-41 70LXIH 'f:::tJ ipi ; : . QiTPA "H li'l 511 WAV ttP li Till D n - :i " if v.r:.-.-.:U.:- 1 f t! The Carolina Watchman, isTAJSnED IK THE YEAR 1832. j ; v ; PRICE, $1-60 IS ADVANCE. BElriOT DEOEIVED Rtr Plasters claiming to be an improvement on AIjXiCOCK'S POKOtrS PliASTEBS, ALliCOGK,S is the original and only ffciiuiiic Porous Plas ter; all pthero called Porous blas ters are Imitations. Beware of them. See! rthat" you get v an ALLGOOK'S PLASTER, which Afe guarantee lias eflectedjmore and .quicker cures than any other ex- , 4 i, - 1 .. . tern a 1 remely. , ' , ' SOED BY ALL DRUGGISTS. . 17:Gih-2t per in f I a ' I.- r .I CO 1 ' - , O O; o 5S 4-' a" s. SI: 'o a J o CO o V I. -3 H .00 O 1 1U j - EMBER THE DEAD Ji". C. Agricultural Experiment Station. I At How to Judge a Horse. ! The weak points of a lioreo can be bet ter discovered while standing than wliile moting. If he js sound ho will stand firnaly and 6qaarely on his limbs vrithont moving any of. theln, the feet 'planted cnlture and its extension into new fields . . 'TU7 711 "7. is the chief cause of the increase in the ana naturally po eu. xi ou , ouC ,s slinw tli-f. tlift rotfon nrmlnr.tion in North ,7T t-- r , , i e Carol fu a has more than doubled itself w wei. Ealeigii, Jan. 25th, 1882j Extension of Cottod Culture. v 'Therapid development! of the cotton ground and the heel raised, or, if the be lifted' from the ground and the during the last ten; yearsj The acreage .!?-; "ru "'T " 7;;. in cottbn increased 8 per cent, last year, pected, or at east tenderness which is a This is due almost entirely to the nse of prursor of disease. If e hoi se stonds - T :.!. !.: C.r.t- n b. a y I Anon' sfnoflillaa MIL 11 IllBircl) spicuu iljittll, ui Dwauuica ertilizers. In middle and. .Piedmont North Carolina, the regions recently - in vaded by cbttooj phophfttes ; are abso lutely. necessary to make a paying cotton Crop, for two reasons First, to make the cotton ripen early enough and regularly. ' These j regions are outside- the normal cotton country, but with the help of the superphosphates cotton has marched 40 or 50 miles fur ther up the country even j up the slopes of thev Blue Ridge itself. L H ' Second, to sustain the '-fertility of the lauds. 13y strengthening their lands the with the hiud legs, there is weakness, in oius apd the kidneys are disordered. Heavy pulliBg bends tlie knees.i Bluish or milky cast eyes iu horses 'indicate loon . blindness or something else.; A bad tempered horse keeps his cars thrown back. A kicking horse is apt to have scarred legs, A stumbling horse has blemished knees. When the skin is rough and harsh, and does not move ea sily and smoothly to the touch, the horse is a heavy eater and his disgestion is bad. Never uy a' horse whose - respiratory farmer of these regions are putting the orSan3 fe at ""Pred. Place your ear ut lie siuooi iiie ireari. .iiiu 11 wueez cotton culture upon a -permanent basis. Cotton has thus by artificial means been made a staple ofjth?e sections. Wheu these means are known, it is no longer a matter of surprise that Korth 'Carolina took the first premium on cotton at the Ciucinnatti Exposition and ranks third in the production of cotton per acre among the cotton states proper, next to Texas, the greatest cotton1 State,1 iu order of total production. COST OF INGREDIENTS Ot1 FERTILIZERS. The coudition of the markets is consid erably changed since last year, owing chiefly to the shortness of: the fish cntcli. Ammoniates: have steadily advanced. The slaughter houses of the West have fbeeu drained of all their 1 offal, i and ni trate of soda hitherto too: expensive for use as a source of introgen in low-grade fertilizers, has become generally used. A great majority of fertilizers next season will contain nitrate of sodaT" j While it is an excellent; application to spring crops, I doubt whether it will fake the place upon our worn, poms, Southern spoils of the animal nitrogen and ammonia salts. -I fear we shall see crops suffer late in season for nitrogen., Tho sources of nitrogeii have cost, at points like Bal timore ud Norfolk, about as follows; ing souid is heard, it is an indication of trouble let him go. if poverty and Disease. A Mother Suffering tciih Small-Pox Lying JZeticevi Dead Children. The Threat of a Cholera Visit. A Field of Battle. During the last Bix months, cholera lia4 I had rny letter to write and post, been - slowly but steadily spreading in and !tln3 involved a five-mile drive Asia until it has reached Japan on on by moonlight to the rear across the border and Arabia on the other. It ap-f . J. . 1 b0"! i wuicii can wen e imagined,, f I had some trouble in peared in Bangkop, Siam, in the latter' arrears bill. During the debate I which' followed several amendments designed to provide safeguards against the -payment of fraudulent claims were offered by ' Democratic Senatosl, but were defeated, ' and the original; House bill was passed by a vote of 44 itarL of June, and cases were reported in though itj did Hot take the form of ai a well-defined portion on Ihe battle- ' U,e 4 nays aI1 wc?era epidemic. Tlie 3 existence of cholera iu field of tlie dav before, but to reach CTtS' Twenty-ght Senators, chiefly Kagoshima was announced by; the Japat it I had lo walk for more than a mile Dera0CMl? among whom were Ran- ueso guvci uhiui, ij m ocmuci , ui i - - n; i elu iuernmon. -uia noi vote, ana m,i nA l.nrona nn ut are.marked as absent. Aeics-06cr- the iufected-district. ; j i ':-a -A J men and horses were not merelv ihiMc. warucu tu. aiuciihui ciiucu uui, I " I ' ' I VT i iy strewn out irozen into all sorts of a assiuglto tlie West, cholera appearcc at Aden,-n coaling station i on the south coast of Arabia, in July, and was ani nounced at Mecca in September, i Ii November there was a great increase of. the: disease at Mecca, producing auout one thousand deaths during the first I rades, had been frozen to death. I One week. The increase was attributed in man was stiff in a sitting position. fantastic 'attitudes. The thermometer had been 16 idcerees below the' freez- - ! . , --11 in e point on'tlie previous ni?ht: and I oest meri onlyj slightly wounded, who had nnusual vigor and ability, thus speaks TNashville TKordone pf onrlw h,. l ?atHed HiJ-0010" f st exchanges, and conducled . : with 1 He is careful, prudent, and With all so not been able to crawl to. their com- part to: the arrival ot a large nnmyer 01 witb both of his arms :j lifted straight pilgrims from India : iu. part to the foul i , . A , ' . .1 , , , . l' . , . f. above hif head, as though his last atmosplrere caused by the putrefyig re- ; ' 6 ;o maius of a ciiat nnmber .f sheen which moments had been 8Pet in an invo- Jerset Citr, N. J., Jan. 20. A sad case of poverty and sickness was brought to light this morning in the upper part of Second itreet. At No. 3G3 of that street is a frame tenement house sheltering four families. In the basement is! a family named Williams. The father, ' wh was a shoemiker, died last week of small -pox leaving a wife and children. The neigh bors willing enough to assist the widow, were afraid of 'the disease, and when. Deputy Sullivan came to fumfgflte the house they insisted that the bed the only one iu the room, should be burned. This morning the Deputy Health inspector visited the place and found the mother lying on a heap of rags and carpets and covered with the pustules of small-pox. On her right was the dead body of her little girl, and on her left that of her lit tle boy. Iu a corner of the I room "was great nnmber f sheen' had been slaughtered near the city. : The cation, and it gave one a shudder in pilgrims returning from Meeca I carried J the clear moonlight to approach him. the diseaso to Jedda, ou the Ked Sea, Others were crumpled up in death ag- auu to: Meuina. un ure , oi govern- on jQ , many-togeth- t ii a 4. . a er, t rench: and German, were imm- nmirnntinn nt .TmuIa. nnn tmntv.fira I - 1 if- . ; deaths from cholera had occurred among S,ef not tecause they had been at them. Medina i seems to have suffered clofe quarters, but because the I same more than Mecca. The international sanitary council in a special session : at Constantinople, has prepared a series of regulations intended to keep the disease at bay, and thus far it has not appeared in Egypt or Europe-. It appears that the disease existed at Aden a month before either the Egyptiali or Ottoman sanitary administration was aware of it. one; and intervals groiund had at first been occupied by then the othr, perhaps at of half a day. I think I was more comfortable with bullets ringing in my ears than walking amid thej distbred shadows of these dead and stiff jbien; and it was quite a re lief to see a haystack on fire, and a Congressional Miseries. regiment and my ! warming themselves at it, prudent coachman within comfortable distanceof the rudy blaze. A Congressman piteously complains Then comes the bard part-of the cor- that life is made a burden to him by the I respondent's life. I had still to; dine. lobbyists, office-seekers, strikers aiid oth- J j the raornin ffee eating a correct principle than it can er auventurers wno nangarouuutieuap- ; . l ... , , . , T Uflord to w n bv -advocating an erro ou u loai, ui ureau, which x iiau ueen i J of "a tariff for revenue only "AVe frequently hear it said that the tariff plank : in the Democratic platform was the cause of ' the party's defeat, and for that reason a few Democrats have said we should take out the tariff plank when we come to manu4 facture another platform.- We sub mit that if the platform is simply made to catch votes, and is simply a trick whereby Democrats want to get in power, the plank should be ripped out. This, however, is the question:" was ' Jjio taciff - for revenue only, a correct principle of government? If so, can the party afford to abandon the theory which is correct and'adopt one that is op pressive and wrong, simply because this action will give, the chance to win ? No party can ever hope to suc ceed by such action, and what is more it does not deserve, to succeed. The tariff plank in the last platform was correct and the Democratic party can better afford to be defeated in advo- V COTTON SEED. Atlanta Constitution. - j :.' In response fomany inquiries from ' parties who desire to investigate the mat- ter as to the cost of cottonseed mills the probable profit and methods, I submit ' ' the following. .. .1 p. . . r" '-h My former letter covered all generally points of interest and I propose this tuor4 j uing merely to give such detailsaslhave i gathered that may be useful to those in ' tending to build and that answer th i questious that - have -been asked most frequently .' . " - .Lr' In order to give the best "information -upon the subject I sought a gentleman in ; this city who has been counected with cotton seed mills for years, who is now : eugageu in selling potion 'seed oil and 1 modest that he forbids the use of his nnm. In reply to my question as to What would be the cost of , a mill witfi a capacity of "t one huudied barrels per day; lie said il? 4Thatj8 a very large mill," and larger '"' than most of the inqui ies that 1 have call for. A miirwith a capacitR fifty barV rels a day is vhat U usuall.wttnted..Sucu"f ?; a mill completely ; equipped would cost ' about $30,000., X This ! wduldT-give p four presses and twenty-four boxes; and?;, would have a' capacity of 'fifty- barrels of oil'per'day." C -VTT-TV j TS'J-l sive.7 , i i -is...; "Iu the first place the machinery is most of it built expressly for the purpose. ',' The hydrualic presses whichare used are tz; used are th ipost expensive outfit. A . great deal of ground and shed are needed' : iu order to keep the seed dry; j and these ;U must be fitted with elevators) on whicfy t tho seed is passed from one room to an othjr occasionally so tliat it'will get an " airing and prevent beating' or: fermenta- . lion. :: : ., -vj I ..; This is first process in making oil. I ; Thesecd having beeji aired and pot in ' the right condition for the mill. tbejar0: then passed to the 1 inters. This is are ry im poll a lit process, as an average of $ perceut. is taken horn the seed right: here. itol durin? a session!of Concrress aid ner- sist in calling him out of the House tweri- PCKing at aJl Uay ; then lo write ray ty or thirty times a day to listen to t lie letter a good two hours' task then story of their wants, misfortunes' arid to see that it is safely posted, either MONUMENTS TOMBS, GEE AT 'REDUCTION i jf INTHEPRICKS OF - MarblMbnttments and Grave-Stones of ; .jVivery Description". - I Corrdially invite the public generally lo an iiwspection of my Stock and Work. I feel jiistified in asserting thatniy past experiefice under first-class workmen iu all thenewest and modern styles, and that th workmanship is equal to any of the best iii-the. country.-1 I do not say ;thdt inl york is superior to all others. I ani reasonable, will not exazserate iu or- !' der to accomplish la sale, iy endeavor is to please ad give each customer the val ue of efery dollar they leave, with me.- . PJtlCES 35 to S6 Per Cent CHEAPER 4 than evCr offered in this town before. Call atfonce or sebd for price list and de ign8. $atisfactionlgaiaraut'dor no charge. The Irection of inarble is the last work of respect which ve pay to the . memory of departed friends. I f ! JOHN S. HUTCHINSON. . Saliibury, . C.t Nov. t, 1881. 1 ; t i - Bltoer ' aifl Hsateei, A.ttor5neys, Counselors , aal Solicitors. SALISBURY, N. C. Janay22 l79-tt. i ' n n tvAl- In' miir Ann trknrn K rkntft. D U.ySNo,rlslc. Everj thlnff new. Capital not re- qmreoi- iwc win lurnisn you eTerytning. Many are inalctng tortunes. Ladles make as mucn as men. and boy$ and girls make great pay. Keader, It you want a Uuslnesa at which you can make RTeat pay u wuw iou wors. wnie ior particulars to t ii. uallett & Co., Portland, Maine. Bictai & DaMle B. B. Co. - C6NDENSED SCHEDULES. TRAINS JGOIXG SOUTH j Date N0?r. 20, '81 I Ko 51 lly. No. 50 I '. No. 52 Daily Daily Lv.Kichmond Lv Bei$ Isae ArBurkgvlUe Lv Burkevllle Ar N. Dannili ' Ar. Danille Xv. 'A . Ar.; Grcffnsboro Lyj, ii -; Ar s Salfsury Ar.'-.A-LiJunctlon' Ar. Charlotte :10 35a.m'll25 PM '! '1143 PM ;l2S9pmr 335 AM 4 53 " , 7 9T sitting a little fellow on whose face were Sulphate of anlonia 5 cts. and nitrate of the shadows of death, while headlong soda 4i cts. per Tt., blood $4.00 per each close to the cold stove were the two re- per cent. per . ton, first scrap the same, j maining children. Mr. Pearson,, the dep- Theso prices are for ton lots for cash.To uty, at once lighted a fire and sent for get the value of these tilings iu North food for the unfortunate family at the Carolina, freight must be! added to these same time telegraphing for the ambulance figures. This makes ammonia cost 25 1 to remove theiu to the hospital. The cts. per lb., an advance of six cents over J two dead children will be buried to-day the price last year. With the sources -of I at the expense of the county. nitrogen at these prices, bur farmers afe very wisely turning their. attention to the utilization of all available nitrogen ous materials on their farms, buying simple- acid phosphates and potash salts, which are still reasonably cheap, and making composts. Tho sales of acid phosphats the foming season will be far it or the next morning early, give me time to get to the the tHIrd day's battle. ' And A Chinese Prediction. 'The Honff Kong merchant, King, sent as Commis sioner to Englaud, prophesies the dowufal 1 of English commerce within five and twenty years.' "The letting, loosed" he says, "of the Chinese people has given to the tforld a new obstacle against which a J consequences about election time. jSo neous one. it is always the case that w ideas must be developed. A princi pic which i absolutely corect of en has but few followers at first. As it is promulgated and begins to be un derstood it finds year by yeaT aiid day by day new followers until': at last those who adopted the correct theory have the satisfaction of seeing the right, as it always docs, triumph in the end. The people have never fully understood the question. The tariff is levied in such a way that they do not feel its burden. When, As the nensiou fraud is doubtless I however, they do come to understand do so. The late Mr. Sumner made it a j destined to enter. into campaign liter-1 the question, Democratic policy will rule never to receive a cam in me senate Chamber. ; Tho "-strikers" knew this aud never disturbed hifu. However, Sumuers are not sent to Washington iu these mod ern days, and the following of his exam ple might be attended with ua pleasant grievances He can not he says, properly tjia n anenu to wis uusiuess oecauso 01 u e ; . I sn n tr importunities of these pesf. Half - the J rt- j . . T . . . . 1 fipifL tnr time lie does not Know wnat is ueiore ine 1 Ilouse. Tho threads f debate are lost all: this alter having been on a s!ram and he is frequently compelled to vote iu of exertion and excitement since day complete ignorance of the exact phase of ngbt ; and tfien theentleman at ease tne question nnuer consiuerauon. ah ;n jndon reads ifc aH in h;s arm. 1IO lilll UU IB l IIU91 IU I lit IV illiU IUIIUH It p. I r M. P , . 4 . . Pn . icuair auer ureuKiusi ior a ueiiny, or, 4 . , , rience of more than half the members of ai I mo" lwo I,en aii-penny. the House. We coufess that we have no Blackwood's Magazine. sympathy with these gentlemen. If they wish to apply the remedy they can easily After a thorough trial of several ature, we present a statement :of its I triumph." Neica & Observer. course in Congress; It will be seen that it was a Republican measure, al though manv Democrats botR in the House and senate voted for it rather than be thought meanTnd niggardly greater thaw heretofore, vvhile, fortunate.- flgut .the x will soon be commenc- long as Congressmen have nobiglier am-4 toward.4 the soldiers. The statement ed. The Chinese are made for commerce bition than to do the chores of their con- J made by the leading promoters ly, the large importation of German pot ash, salts will supply the country with potash atjow prices. ... S. C Phosphate, rock has advanced slightly. As much as $9.25 has been paid for it in the crude state; This makes the .dissolved phosphate worth $22.50 per ton at the points named. Bone meal costs $40 and dissolved, new bone $42.50 per ton. The prices for North Carolina are thus not materially changed. The figures for available phosphoric acid remain, therefore, at 121;' cts. per lb. Kainitcean bo had, free on board," in sacks 250 lbs. each, iu Baltimore and Nor folk, at from $11 to $12 per ton. . The farmers will find it an admirable addi tion to the compost of cotton seed and acid phosphate for cotton. It contains common salt and sulphate of magnesia iu addition to about 25 jer cent, of sul phate of potash. It has-been, found to prevent the rust in cotton and to pro mote auarly and reguljir ripening. -- Muriate of potash is to be had iu the same markets "at 2 cts.;; per lh. Potash will be valued at six cents per RJ in our valuations of fertilizers this season. I ClIAS. W. Dabney, . ; ! "'" Director. only. Yon men of the West Will be light ing ere long, while we shall bo making commercial profit of the opportunity of superseding you peacably throughout the world. We mean to establish our coun ters iu every great commercial centre in Europe, in London, Liverpool, Belfast, Bristol, Havre, Hamburg, Marseilles and Genoa. Europe will for a while retain her financial supremacy, but wc shall seize that power in the course of time, aud the position of the English at Shang hai and Canton will, in a few years, be on a level with that of the Portuguese at Macao. The rich men will be driven out by Chinese competition, and none but the poor will remain to be hewers of wood and drawers of water to the nation, as the Portuguese at Macao." ... . . 1 1 C st.tuents.tney inns no compuuu . V,c 0f tlie bill that it, would cost some servitude. N. 1. Herrld. ..- . 1 ... , like $iy,uuv,uuu; u nas aireaoy cost "QuEiiv-IfR. M.Pearson, late Chief 00,000,000. On June 19, 1878, "Justice !of the Supreme Court pf North "Carolina, who, upon a memorable occa sion, when applied to for a writ of ha 'icrt corpus, declared, The judiciary is ot!i'i nciti.il ' In 1 1 si mnnnninl: thirtv fnr r y high erected to his memory, how high a years the Delaware Beet Sugar Com pany has ctnv.eMo the conclusion that the manufacture of bngar from beets in that iitatc can never be : ade a paying industry, and a few days ago nnulv. the announcement that itj work although fitted out with all of the most improved and expensive mat iiinery for beet suar making, would never again be optrated for ! t "interposed j between an infamous aud "blood thirstv executive aud the defence- "lnaa itiiTtn ' onl orniifrxl mill fnfirAil "that wlit', Durham Tobacco riant, Jan. 19th. ' j . ' o. The Subjoined table, compiled from Please Write Another Letter. the latest olnci.il reports, exhibits the The point is made by Mr. James E. Boyd strength and 'cost, of Europe's armies in his letter to Dr. Mott, that under the I on neace footing 1. Training a Heifer.-UA heifer . should be trained as soon as it lis weaned. She should then be haltered,! and made used to be tied up and handled and led by the new arrangements in Dr. Mott's district illicit distilling has ceased aud tho for mer moonshiners are all now running ! , 1 legalized stills. There were captured in the sixth district from July Ist 1876, to November 1st, 1877, 12G illicit distiller ies. .There were captured iiu that dis trict from July 1st, 1880, to November 1st, 1881 ; 245 illicit distilleries. Nearly two to one. The number of new distil leries legalized in the fiscal year 1880-81, second session Forty-fifth Congress- the day before the filial adjournment Mr. Haskell, a Republican IReure- lat imrpose. Qne 0f ti)e principal sentati ve trom Kansas, moveu to ens- rea80ll8 ossigued for the abandoning pend the rules ot the liouseot Kepre- of lh - in(uslry i8 t,at the soil and "monuutent ought to be erected in honor aeiuaiMw au i d M,e at Uie etate ol Delaware, is "of George W. Brooksrthe FederalJudge l pensions uui, wnicn naa ocen Hiiro- ot a8 the comnaur has proven to "who, upon the same occasion, fearlessly duced by Mr. Cummins, a Republi- ;fa nprfVt Katisfaction. adanted.to the . r I . . - I " I ''"I 7 : can Representative of Iowa. Air. erowine of beets of a nroper quality liaskell s motion was uoc aeoaiaoie; it cut off all discussion and all oppor tunity for the offering of amendments. The House was brought to an imme diate vote, without any understand ing 01 tne mil scope oi me 0111, or 01 fronl raolassCs. the enormous expenditure tp follow r A . w . rIK mniirtn A rilCIMlll) US IJaSSil Sit-. X IIC U1UIIU1I IV PUiJliVII I . ... . .; I' 7 . r I L- .: 1 1 I'll J VUC Jvululv vi oniiniuut earl,J t8t-1 the rules and wasa the bill was carried . . . . . 0 .l .. . J -nnfxiio jeaflOAnnn . : . I iari?c numuer 01 us victims are umse Austria - - fo,io s?uu,oov,uw n)y 3 to 61 nays, bixty-eight; l - m Belgium - - - 46,277 8,787,909 m JA f Ja nM who themselves would have no o .jec- 470,600 100,007,623 r r?rW7 " n: tions to swindling when opportunity 419,659 92,573,403. hUB.wJiw' " 1 TV offers. The latest scheme in Paris is 2 65SS f"d " ?eLi" "worke.1" by two confederate,, jwho " . I I VII Vhll I .11 . u n n tnr rnl wo n 1111 oil I navn llptr. I ia.ui a .tii.uuu mi were ieuiyviaw, nuu uu mvoi, uv& i , . , . 1ftO R?7 q-7 nco 7Kr: 1 i .i L make acquaintance with some Atner 199,o77 37,953,75o atiye Votes except three were cast by. i -.u a 61,S03 10,26,yyu K nT. trn DemocraL The names of ,can anu Y. " ' T T TT OK- TOO I O.IO ( )B . to be used iu the manufacture of susrar. The Wilmineton News of C5 w Monday statts that the company will now turn its attention to another in dustry that of .manufacturing sugar This lint, amounting to siitv noundi W J'VI 1 I.UII IM O CH, 1J OVJH a.ui . OlllllllU. and tho average price obtained for it this year was six and three-Iburth cents, ma- l i king about tour dollars worth of hut tax en from every ton of seed. j . I : "V After the seed .leaves the ) inters it is then put in the hulling j machine. The. '. hulls when taken olr are; nsed; for fuel. The hull furnishes: more fuel than is nec essary to work the seed. The residue oif - tho burned hulls is calledicottpu ash and contains sixteen percent. of pure potash L and las an lmmeuiato commercial and fertiliziag value. i s , . ' , I . ' The bulk of the Seeds, after beinz hull. ' ed, are rolledovera .scHes ofjiollers that press tiiem into a uat substance without expressing any of the oil,' This is then put into hair cloth boxes whicujiruiem- . selves very expensive, and pntin boilers. -They are not put in water but are sub jected to 8 team boiling, and after having been properly uouttit are then put in press , and the oil is expre'ssedV- 1 1 I " ( ' - "This is the crude oil is --it Wtn ' - ' "Yes, sir. and the process pf reSning is entirely distinct from the seed oil rail). ti The retinery is a distinct establishment, t calliug for a distinct set of uaehinery for -a distinct process, and is usually onder ,. ' another management. Ijt is ho more con- : i nected with a cotton seed j mill than k cotton factory is counected with a ginn - "The machiuery ami j outfit wilJo4t $30,000 you say f rr j h ; ;- ' . . "Yes, and you can see where the monl ey will go to-by running over the account- , of the process required.", . j ' . . -"Where can this machmery.be bought f "It can be bought piecemeal from va-' rious machine works that make it, or -jit; can be ordered in bulk from persons who - ' are prepared to till such orders. There are two or three such places! in tho Uni-, tel States, all of which a roJ reliable and ' aud have frequeutly filled orders for mills, l uey nnuerptanti wnere tne best machinery can be bo light and tho best combinations made." .. : . L;, . "What working capital Would it re- quite in addition to the $30,000 P 'ja "that depends upon circumstances. ,' If a company is properly., organ ized and uas nmcient creuir, out u woum oe oesc to put aside about $20000; as a work- " ing capital, making au outlay of $50,000 for a fifty barrel rnill. Xn' see the work is all done in winter, and itLis necessary to have the capital to command the tnW i .terial in sufficient "qnantityj wheneverLit ! is wanted to run the mill fpr, the atire ' six months.". , ( y;'Ti;i.'ify .'.:, "What .ire the profits of jhe bbsinesdf? "I am not willing to state. Indeed it would be ver- hard to state definitely - hwhat the profits would.be under any gjf eu circumstances, tuere are, so many con tiugences. This season it happens ttiat alt v the protlucts of the milts the cotton ash., 'iJ i mo cuiiuii ujcir i.iiu iiu t iiuu i no on, are .i .1 i t.: : . . r ' Soldiers. 910 915 1(1-4'" lfll54 6 50 " 9 25 7 05 l 9 so 9 00 :: n 14 9 02 " i 11 is li Warn 10 35 ' lnu p.m 1425 am 10 45 li 12 50 Date XxV.26, st Lv Chrlottj Lv a. L.;junction ' Ar Salisbury . iv - - ' Ar Greefesboro " . Lv ' ;h - ' : ArDanlie Lv' ' f " ij .y:.y. "Ar North Danville A.r Burtsevllle -"LV if-.r '-rr- . . ArltMitnoud. ' 1 :Ko. 53 ailjr TSro. 51 -Dally 3 10 A M S1J m 12 : SO 12;T XO. 53 Dally 4 40AM ; .,4iPM 4 41 5 51 P M I I 24 P M : T iT P M :915PM 9f5P M UI 59 P M Jll 31 P M "li:P XI : 6 0. A M : 5 MA M 7 43 A M i 8 00 A M 28 44 ao 8 2S " 8 41 " 10 53 - . ; J. ! -!'"" - . ' . .! -' .: . . ea. Pas Agefct, " ' .- " JilcJumoLd, Vi. halter. She.should be carded and brush- i ed, Hud her udder and teats handled fre- I appears to be 24, just one-tenth of the quently uutil she becomes used to it. A illicit distilleries captured as above. Will month or two before she calves she should be tied up and brushed; and the udder, rubbed, aud the teats phlled j taught to lift the leg and keep it out of the way of the milker and generally disciplined. All Col. Boyd please write another letter of explanation t Ilal. Observer. A Polyglot Famllt. There is living at Middletown a family in which nine Francei - - Germany - Great Britain Greece! - - Italv I - ! - Netherlands - Portugal - -Rou mania : -Russia! - Servia -i -Spain r - 1 -SwitzSrland Turkey -j - 130 158 3 310 198 Miesc 5? Southerners were, during the 787,910 144,000,000 last rresiueniiai campaign, pruncu 14.150 869.138 in bitr Iblaek letter in the New York --- ' I " o - I J30,000 a large sum of money left them by their uncle to be distributed in Afcer- t The American, tempted by the ica. this shouldbe dongradually and gently Ui8tinct languages arer spoken, namely : and the young animal made to under stand that there is nothing to fear by always exercising kindness to her. When she 'drops her calf no strarigef should at tend her, but one: she knows well, "and she will come to her duties as easily ras an old . cow. A newly , calved heifer shonld.alwajs be tied when she is milk ed, and she may be very nervous and not to be depended upon untiHier depo sition is bhown. Farm Journal.. English, German, .French, Spanish, Ital ian Portuguese, Greek, Arabic and Turk ish, besides number of dialects con nected with the Italian and Spanish. The bead of the familr, who is a native 49,140,991 Tribune and other Republican paiers 2,419,213 i t nimnniorn documents, and the s f"- T 4 e negative vote cast by these "rebel Totals 3,201,921 595,615,603 ungauiers against me ui nc arrears act was paraueu as eviueuce Tobacco mapufacturers at Durham are I pf t,e opposed to the aggitatien of reduction of tQ tjie ;U mo" It is worth remembering that nobody en 'disloyal hostility of the South payment of pensions j to the soldiers. j At the third session of the Forty- idea of handling a large sum of rkion ey for which no guarantceor respon sibility are required, places within reach of the rascals a comparatively small sum, which they demand as proof of his pecuniary standing. They malTe off with his moneyj and he never sees them again.- j of Zurich, Switzerland, is a musician of joys the nicest surroundings if in bad health, fifth Congress, anU on January 10, ! n wide accoranlishments and renutation. There are mserable people about tHday 1R7o jj, Tntralls. a Renublican Sen-! ' .!.!. ii A..vl ,'n tko.nraeii whmi mtt i ni l"'wl FT" " 'i. 'anHBH whfl. from a hiv nf t.rnv'fl. pn mat ""r.'V .u.u6""i' r." '.Zl ' . ' i'JJ- L'0., l,t f: . , . t r i Pdt-L-i.ri fiinnpr i onic wouia ao mem more i ator irwiu n-aiiou?,; v , I A friend at our elbow on hearing this promptly answered 3,000 feet. parts of tho world, having" resided for considerable periods in widely separated f they have ever con n tries. Middletoic n ( X. Y.J rress. 4 Oc 13 Nov 13. good than all i the doctors and medicines j I ong Pominiltee, callcl up for they have ever tried. See adv. I J , ,, .0 -.i' ir considferalion in the Senate the House MORTGAiGE SALE NOTICES FOR SALE AT THIS OFFICE iu demand, aud bring higb prices, con sequently the mills have ; made, , a great deal of money. Other years have not been So fortunate. It is fai- to say, however, that theSouthernliiiilUhnrt b enpiosper-ous- to a very great degree., and thej re sults achieved have been such as toin dnce the building of j new mills with great mpidity. There were fourteen new mills put up iu the South last year; A: significant fact is that throe of the new mills were pnt up at MiwphiATliere7 four were already running,! and where! in formation on the suhject was the fullest. Vithout going intokletailn, I will ay that there are few iovcstnients that ill ; pay better tlian this if ; it is properly managed." v. , ,j ;; - .v-.,VT?;:V "Will the increase ba very rapid in the juturel"- '; ," j -i -jf' ; : vf,;"!,. "Undoubtedly. There are two charters for mills in Atlauta. j Companies stand liehind each ready and anxious to bnild. Two will be built as soon as it is thought th. t enoucrh teed t an l e- m-oenred tn iustifv two mills in stsirtiusr v li ti '"Is tlie buying of seed a gieat troubljCl" L "That is the only trouble, and that is really the first, point that any one abbnt I to build should investigate. He Rhould ?; be certain that he can pfet a sufficient J siij ply of seed delivtred at t le pont at I which his mill is to, be located. There . is Jess troublenow abopt gcttipg seed j than formeVly, as the price has risen to ! about fifteen cents a bushel. When jthd : ' price was ten cen ts to twelve cent. Jthi furmcrs did not care to sc 1 bctufed it r f '1 j -r It' 1 fti'l i 4-1

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view