VOl Xlfi THIRD SERIES . v 1 SALISBURY, iff. C.s APRIL 13, 1882. 1036 . ! The OarolinaWatchmah, 1 XSTABLISIIEp IN THE TEAR 1832.; ! " ... ; RjCK, $1.60 IN ADVANCE. J ! 1 1 Hands AH Bound. '. : j . . ' i" .-' - ' U i '" t mi X' Mr. TenUytws Latest j?oema. xorwy- Patriotic Ballad. Mrl TenDTsoi's Pem upon; the escape ir thm Oriewi from an attempted assassi- ; Nation hit jbeen telegraphed across the Atlantic it is as follows : , . - Firsfc'pledge ear Queen, my friends, and then 5 :.-7 : ! A health to England every guest - Hebest wi 1 serve the , race of men -, ; : ; j Who lores his native country Jbest ! If ay free( mVoak forever last, . i With larger life from aajLo uaJJ He lovesthe present and the past I . who lips the monlder'd branch away. Hands all-round ! God the traitor's hope ; confound! '."''.'. f-To the'gteat cause of Freedom drink, ; my friends, ; '. And the great . name of England round ana round. Tft all the roral hearts who lengf 1 To keep our English Empire whol T all oufjnoble sons, the strong 1 New England, of the Southern Pole ! To England' under Indian skies, " To thole dark millions of her realm 1 To Canada, whom we love and prize, : Whateter statesmen hold the helm. -: Hands all round ! Ged the traitor's hope ! ' confound! To the great cause ef Freedom drink, ' i . mylfriends, And the great name of England round ni and-round. Ml : k- :fJ ., '; To all ouf statesmen so they be i True leaders of the land's desinf ! To both our tiouses may they see i Beyondlthe borough and the shire. Wo sr.iledXwherever ship could sail, ii We founded many a mighty State. -Pray Godfour greatness may not fail . Throug)i craven fears of being great! Hands all; round ! God the traitor's hope confound ! ' To the great cause of Freedom drink, f . myr;friends, And the great name of England round andjronnd. ' A Jfcedless Shadow. LONG FELLOW. . j I said nnt6 myself, If I were dead .What trould befall these children t ' j Wbat would bo ihi wo I Their :" "- . " ! fate, who now are looking up to me l - - Fr hele and furtherance t Their lives, v I said, . i Would be :a volume wherein I have read i i i I f ' Hut tliift firat r!ijintpri nnil no 1nnrrr Toteadlthe rest of their dear history, So full of Beauty and so full of dread. Be comfetled ; the rorld is very old, And generations pass, us they have pass- A troop. of shadows moving with the r ifj f k "iunl; Thousands of times has the old tale been The jworjd belongs to those who come theiast, i i ; j v.. jl ncy wni noa nope ana strengtu as t ; we have doue. 'j- ,The pemocrats of Sotrih Carolina show - thiir faith! by their works. There are do J bicker jngs( there. Their party, they say i what it Ahoald be and they stand up j for it mafully. The ! best interests of the - people demand its" supremacy and ther nrnnrSftA tn Mimfnin if. hnth at thm t .pollsindjiu the courts. The Federal uniuiiLriiiionf preparatory to tiio ap proaclingcama)gn is preparing to wage war oa'thrf .election officers, of last year "and jht people touch elbows in their de fense.) Tle people are on trial. The civ ilization of the j State is at stake. And xiuocraiio commiuee steps to tne Jront andiurls back bold words of deb si nee at tho Federal Attorney General, $nd tho Governor directs the Attorney Geaeijal of; the State to attend the trial and appeal for tiiese State officers who hive dared to obey the laws ana brooked the ftgeir and raalace of J tho-talwarts. We cjmm4trd the South Carolinians for having principles and for. boldly living op tojtheif principles. They do hot take watee in their ni'ilk. News-Observer. It should be noted that tliA organs nearly all favor the introduction 6 the 'paper labor? from China tocom- l jwith American woikingmen, whose lUiereStS th nrntrtinniata profess to guard W sedulously. Zuwrirte Courier ourkal,'jDem. ; President Arth t is pat he ifears public opinion. Pub- lie vuiBiuu uever moiests anyone who uos well aud right. TMladclhia Time. Ind. I- ;T;ilTiis worth remembering thatnobody en JOJ8 the nicest SUrrmmrlinrra-if n Kwu . nere : are v mserable neoiile Jitl? one fo)t in the grave, when a bottle of marker s GniL'cr, Tonii wia a i . EoodhahpU the doctors and medicines ; nave ever irtu. bee ad v fni x'.'. " . Wr - Productions of the Old North wv . : W : SUUe. -;v j " ':& bt prop. SMrrn. North Carolina is the only State in the Union that produces the agricultural pro ducts of every State and Territory in the. Union, and two counties, Hyde and Car rituck, produce more cornihan the whole. State of New York. ft-., "i ' v- The largest tree this (side of California staadsjpn the bank of Nutbush Creek, in GranvilU county, on the land of Themaa Turner. ; It is fifteen feet in diameter ten feet from the ground. I ' P f f y j The largest cotton stalk ever raised in this country grev on the farm of lira. Cheek, near Warrenton, in 1864.1 It was twenty-oine?feet high, fonr inches In di ameter above the'groandj and waa on exhibition in John AVhlte's atoreTn Wiar- renton for some time, and .may be there 1 ",! - -i-- v-,-? - ' The largest garden cyrablin ever heard of, was was raised by Warren Duty, near Shatter, about six miles from Henderson. It was as' large as a flour barrel,, and weighed one hundred and ene pounds, and was , sold at Duty's sale to Green Warren for one cent a pound. This tras In 1845, and Joseph Allen, John Smith, Vincent Vaughn and ill the' neighbors were there to attend a public sale; of Warren Duty, who wis sellings out I to move to a better country than this. I rwas but a small boy at the time but it de a lasting impression on me that any one should wish for a better or more prolific country than where cymblins would grow to weigh oyer onei hundred pounds. ;' j Next to the largest lamp of pure gold ever dug out of the earth was mined in Cabarrus county, and is yet retained in its original form by an! English house, I believe. , j This is the very best (timbered State ill the Union, and in the variety of and ex cellence of its many species is unequalled. Wild locust, so valuable in ship building, is found in perfection near Asheville. in Buncombe county, aud boards of this rare timber are frequently seen twenty feet long, twenty inches wide, without knot or blemish ; and since the opening of the railroad quite a business has developed in sending Jthis with other valuable tim ber, to all parts of the country. Just before the war two ship loads of timber left Wilmington for Jerusalem, with which to rebuild Solomon's Temple, and since the recent revival of that pro ject by the Crown Prince of Austria, aid ed -by. the Sultan of Turkey, for the restor ation of the Temple in- all its ancient glory, we see it proposed not to send to Hy rant for the Cedars .of Lebanon this time but to the United States for the long leaf pine oT North Carolina. : The best whetstonesthis side of Tur key, are to be found in Orange county, near Chapel Hill, and before the war they were quarried and peddled by wagoners over the country and sold at ene dollar a pound. . ) i The highest priced raw silk in the world is, that raised in j North Carolina, and the Silk factory id Patterson, New Jersey, is offering special inducements for its production. The worms are healthier and spin a richer and I stronger thread than any where else. Mr. Fasnacb. in Raleigh, sells his extra! eggs in France w v i . and China at sixteen dollars announce, with freight and insurance added to this price. " j . . : ine nne goia ieat tobacco tliat grows at your doors, takes the premium where and whenever brought in -competition with tobacco from other parts of the world, and upon its rising fame and increasing demand the sun never sets. , . ' j In spite of these facts! North Carolini ans are leaving their native State daily for other parts where they "can do better." If all the people now living, that are na tives of the State, could 'be brought back to North Carolina, she would be the most prosperous section of our conntry. There is something radically Wrong, what is it f Hero is where the old land new flower comes close-together; the birds migrate not ; the harvest and the seed time mingle the year round; there is no pestilence in the thonsand-voiced windharps of the vales, the ! forests, and the storm. ' The cleud and the sky go floating over us to the music of health, comfort, and securi ty ; and besetting dangers and annoyances are reduced to house flies and wood ticks. Why do they i go, and so few strangers come to take their place t Henry W. Beecher, in his sermon last Sunday, discoursed on the Chinese, i and denounced the Congress which passed the act prohibiting the! immigration of the yellow heathen as a f'fool Congress." Be it known to all men that this is the same man who had the audacity to i pro claim from his xulpit a few years afio that the workingman ought to bV ' con tent to live on bread and water, support his family, pay doctors and grocery bills, et cetera," and wax opulent on $1 per day. For the purpose of leading his flock step by step into the broad field of atheism, Beecher receives somethiug like $20,000 a year.-aW. Oasette. i It is now complained of the President that he is more fond of pudding than pol itics, and thinks more of his cook than his country. Cin. Commercial Rep. Forty-Two Irishmen; TKeir WoTiderful Exploit at Sabine Pass in the Days of Jeff Davis N.Y.Sun.' . Sabine Pass, Texas, March 10. In looking from this -site of this town toward the , Gulf, the most conspicu ous object next to the lighthouse on the Louisiana shore, is the wreck of the steamship Clifton. She was btirn- ed while runnine: the blockade in 1865, loaded with 600 bales of Con- federate cotton; : ! - ; . Her tilted smokestacks and upper works are a guide to pilots seeking the dredee Channel through the soft blpe mud of the outer bar." ' jThe Clifton formerly belonged to the ' United States government, and formed part f the Franklin expedi tion which was dispersed in Septem ber, 1863, by forty-two Irishmen, fighting under the Confederate flag. It was one of the memorable incidents not only in the history of our late war. out in tne record ot all wars. At the North this achievement, is scarcely: known or remembered w while here it is dwelt upon and retold as though if were a feat surpassing that of Leonidas and his j 300 Spar tans, i ; Capt. Stuart, a venerable i coast pilot, while accompanying your cor respondent on a tour of inspection down the bay in the little tug-boat Fannie, circumstantially related, as an eye-witness, his recollection of the affair. 1 The pass is eight miles long and from three-quarters to a mile in width with a depth of water varying from twelve to forty-five feet. Its capacity as harbor has rerently been brought into prominence by the number of railways projected here. On the Louis iana side the shore is low and reedy, while on the Texas side there are sev eral shell ridges and an elevated plateau, upon which are the remains of what was. once Sabine City. 'About two mijes below this are the grass-grown parapets of a rude fort known as -Fort Griffith. It was in this earthwork that Lieutenant Dick Dowling, an Irishman, with two 12- ponnders and a command of forty-two men, all natives of Ireland, lay con cealed on the ,9th day of September, 1863, when: the Federal fleet, com posed of a large number of transports and gunboats, appeared off the mouth of the Pass. , j It is said that there" were 15,000 men in the expedition, while Dowl ing's was the only rebel force in th neighborhood nearer than Beaumont, on the N aches river, thirty-two miles above. The objects of the expedition were to co-operate with the move ment of,Gen. Banks up the Red Riv er and to secure the vast stores of cot ton collected in the vicinity of the Pass. During the afternoon a number of gunboats effected a passage over the bar, and, ascending the bay, vig orously shelled the shores in all di- .i i rections, at the same time making roundings and marking the main channel with long poles driven into the mud. During this reconneissance Dowling'8 guns were withdrawn from sight. Secure in the shelter of bomb proofs, his men whiled away the time chatting and playing cards. After the retirement of the gunboats, and un der cover of darkness, Dqwling's men explored the harbor in small boats, removing the poles and planting them in positions calculated to. mis lead. , On the following day the fleet ap proached in grand array, preceded by the gunboat Sachem on the Louisiai a side. and the: transport Clifton, with over 300 men on board, moving along the Texas shore. The formida ble appearance of the expedition and its destructive equipments produced no panic among the handful of Irish men in Fort: Griffith. When the Clifton arrived within point-blank range the 12 pounders were instantly brought forth, manned and fired. A shot struck the vessel amidships. In the flurry created by the sudden at tack she went aground. A second shot penetrated and disabled the ma chinery of the Sachem, and she drift ed helplessly ashore, using her guns without effect. .The engagement last- ed but a few moments ; the comnian- ders'of the Sachem and Clifton struck heir colors and the remainder of the fleet retired down the bay and beyond ho bar. V , - - - . 4 Bowling's uninjured command was still kept partly out of sight to con- ceal the , smallness of its numbers. The lieutenant himself .went aboard he Clifton to receive the formal sur render. Its commander wno was afc terward dismissed the service ap peared cm i the deck, swore) , in hand. He requested to be informed of Dowl- ing's rank. Learning that he was only a ; lieutenant j he said that be could not j hand him his sword. : jEIe threwr it toward nim on ithe deck. The lieutenant refused to pick it up and was about to go ashore, declaring he would blow up all on board in less than five minutes, when the sword was picked up and formally presen ted to him. He then retired to the fort, keeping his guns trained on the vessels all day while awaiting the ar rival of reinforcements to take charge of the prisoners, j About nightfall these arrived. It was not until the prisoners were safely landed that they were made aware of how small a force it was to whom they had surren dered. The Federal fleet did not reappear. Of course the report of this remarka ble exploit created great rejoicing throughout the Confederacy, and Dowling's company, known as the Davis Guards, were especially honor ed by the Confederate, Congress. An appropriate bronze medal was struck and distributed to each member of - !: - j the command. Jeff Davis was made l honorary member of the corps, and was likewise decorated with a commemorative medal. Dowling's career alter the war was that ot a popular saloon keeper in the city of Houston, where I his place was the common resort of ex-confederates aud boys in blue, many of whom accredi ted his great feat to the glory of old Ireland rather than to the cause of the Confederacy. , He died of yellow fever in 1868. j In 1874 Jeff Davis was a guest of the State Agricultural Fair in Hous ton, and was formally visited by the remnant, but five in number, of the Davis Guard. One of these was Mike Dowling a brother of the deceased hero. Davisreceived them jmpresive ly, and when he told the boys that his medal - had jbeen taken from him while a prisoner at Fortress Monroe Mike stepped forward and tearfully pinned his own' on the breast ef the ex-confederate chief. They separated after a glass of poteen all around aud many avowels of gratification that the bloody war was over. The Merietta Itmes, commenting on a suggestion of the Philadephia Record that farmers should pay more attention to fish culture, says : "There are hundreds of farmers in this State engaged in that business now. ! In this section many who have a pond or a stream of any size running thro' their farms have made application to the State Fishery Commission, near this place, and obtained a number of trout, carp or bass, -and stocked their streams or ponds. In most cases they have been successful, especially with carp, and in a few years they will de pend upon fish for a subsistence; as much as upon! any other farm pro ducts." I ! Last Friday Gen. Strelnikoff, who was the prosecuting officer before a military tribunal for the trial of Ni hilists, was assassinated and instantly killed. Some; of the assassins were caught. Th Czar ordered their itn mediate execution and they paid the penalty in a hurry. They will be tried hereafter. The Czar postponed that part of it. This might be called lynch law with a vengeance. It was somewhat different in Guiteau's Case. Wxlminatori Star. ' ' I r i $jfgff j ,. i - . .... Mr. Dunnell, of Minnesota, moved to suspend the rules and pass the bill to amend the! law relating to internal revenue. Agreed to yeas 123, nays (This is the bill which was some weeks aero reported from the commit tee On way and means, a synopsis of which was published at the time, t It extends the blond period for the reten tion in warehouses of distilled spirits on the same footing as snuff, tobacco, cigars and fermented spirits.) Elections this Tear. : Elections will be Held ; in twenty three States during the present year. In April Rhode' Island will elect State officers and Members of the Legislature, to be followed in June by Oregon. - In August Kentucky will elect! a clerk of its Court of Appeals, and Tennessee and. Alabama will choose Governors and Legislatures. ( 7 " In September Maine will elect a Gov ernor and Legislature, and the latter will i choose a successor to Senator Frye. In October Ohio and Iowa will j fill some of their minor offices. Colorado will provide herself with a Governor and -Legislature, and West Virginia will select an r Assembly which will choose a United States Senator to succeed Mr. Davis. In November Connecticut, Delaware Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Pennsyl vania, South Carolina, Texas and New York will elect Governor, while Illinois will elect a Legislature which will choose a successor to Senator David Davis. Wilmington Star. , We do Pol get the New York Mail and Express, but a friend has sent us acpy of the recent editorial in that is a very cordial and just notice ot our very gifted Senator, and confirms speech when we compared Vance to the greatest popular speaker the i North v U4u-xuu. ujtwiu. " e lUBm"fcWU paragraph ui iub juuu unu, jxupress euuuriai : i. ' t 1:1 - - l "Since the time when Tom Corwin covered with ridicule the criticisms of a Michigan militia general or the Whig generals of the Mexican war, few speeches have been made in Con gress in which great truths and gross errors were more clearly illustrated by flashing humor than that made re cently in the Senate by Mr. Vance, of North Carolina, whose reputation as a wit was largely increased by his humorous exposure of the more glar ing irrationalists of our fearfully and wonderfully made tariff. "We have received a full verbatim report of his speech, whose bristling epigrams and brilliant strokes of hu morous logic made what most people consider the dryest of topics as inter esting as a choice selection of bright and laughable paragraphs. We have seen no recent essay on the absurdi ties of our tariff that is so admirably adapted to induct the average reader pleasantly and unconsciously into the perception of some of the most funda mental truths of political economy." The New York paper concludes its article by saying: "Mr. Vance's illustrations of the old falacies are calculated to awaken an intelligent interst in a subject which has been neglected! by nearly all classes of our people for a genera tion or has been made tedious by the At the battle of Groveton Stone-1 wall Jackson tried an experiment which nearly frightened a Federal aivision om oi meir doocs. Dars oi up lengths and fired from some ef his heaviest guns, and the noise these mis siles made as they went sailing thro' the air was a sort of cross between the shriek of a woman; and the bray of a mule. The Federals listened in won-1 der at the first few which banned through the tree tops, and presently f. . . - one ol the pieces tell just m front ot a Pennsylvania regiment. A captain steppea iorwara 10 mspeci n, aiiu ai- ter turning it over he rushed to his col- onel with the news : "Colonel, them infernal rebs are firing railroad iron InrnftAf'f" 1 f J A X i 1 "captain, advance your company ,to i . . 1 ' A tjiat ridge and deploy, and the minute you find Jackson is getting ready to fire freight cars at us send me word. 0 I don't propose to have my regiment mashed into the ground whenft can just as well be decently exterminated ill iiie regular-wa i A 1 I" Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, who had a long talk with Mr. 'Arthur on Monday evening, said yesterday that the veto would be used in the matter of the Chi nese bill. Phil. Times, Ind. 8) . - i 7 - ' . i ' i ii i JJ. ! . municipal Elections. .; Cincinnati, April 4. The Demo crats will have 5,000 majority on city ticket in yesterday's election. They will also elect 12 out of 13 aldermen. Judge Force, Republican, for Inferior Court-judge, being on both tickets, is elected. - Columbus, Ohio, April 4.Tb Democratic city ticket is elected. The council stands 16 Republicans, 12 democrats. . Indianapolis ind., April jL victorv for the Dmrwrf 1 Jacksonville, Flay April 4.- Auo uuuiuipui eiecuou uere yesier- day v resulted in Che success of the Democratic Conservative s ticket by a larger majority than ever before. M. A. Dzialyneki, the- re-elected mayor, is strongly in. favor of the en-j fbrcement of the Sunday law. ' J The Charleston News & Courier is not an extreme paper, yet it says : "The object of the stalwart wing of the Republican party, as revealed in the letter of Attorney General Brew ster, is to Africanize South Carolina. They want to show the officers of flec tion?, appointed by the State, that ,h wiH be arre8tecl, prosecuted, and, if possible, convicted whenever the t. stfl ,w . offl . lln. flPA , -. . 1, nn,Wn. inlmA fft flrfn,piw;A nflRr, will at beck and noa0f the stalwart touters and rallyers who are appont- xt R. . , ; ' pervise our elections.'1 Beecher is rotten theologically but on the tariff he appears to be sound. Hear him : - "We had liberty of conscience, of speech, of thought ; now we want lib erty of commerce." But hear him yet again : "The Republicans came into powr because they advocated the rights of the common people. There was dan ger now that they were coming to yield up their love for the common people and run after monopoly and wealth. If they d id so, and the Dem- cratic party took up these . discarded common people, that 'moment the . - Democratic party would -come into power. A Belt Caxau The Kentucky I Legislature has passed a bill char-1 tenug' a company to build a canal around the eutire city of Louisville; a distance of over six miles. There will be a fall of thirty, feet the whole way, thus affording an unsurpassed water- power for the driving of ma-1 chinery which will afford superior advantage and safety for transporta tion purposes. The authorized capi tal of the company is $6,000,000, but 1,000,000 will be sufficient for an organization. Hon. E. D. Standford, Procter Knott and Isaac Caldwell, j and Mr. S. T. Suit are among the cororator8. We are almost afraid to print the fol- lowincr item for fear seme of the Terr rtm.rf. i. rr irAf. a;.. trict will insist that we are trvinir to read Col. Johnston out of the party. Bat neverless, here's a go. The Spirit of Vie South says: "In Charlotte we saw Col. William Johnston, bat had only time to exchange a few words with him. He looked well and'appeared jovial.' He is notacandi- date bcfore the PPle for office with' ,,e th.U I determination to canvass the State in the inUrpgt Qfthe .Libcrar Columbia, March 30.Tlie State Dem- ocratic Executive Committee, which has lieen in session since yesterday, consider- ing political matters generally, and the elections prosccntions now taking place . , t , address to the Demo I cratic party of Sooth Carolina, of which I the following is the opening paragraph : "After two years of the most profound peace our people are once more called to undergo the excitement of a political ti rade, instigated by Federal officeholders wlio seek the restoration to power of the corrupt men who . brought disgrace and well-nigh brought ruin upon this State." . ; The town of Emod, in Austria, was recently totally destroyed by fire not a house being left. U.iuioMBBowsE,pres't,! WK.c.coAET,seoju AEomo OompanyiScelanfJ StWC f Wilt 1 leLiieral! fiTena policies written onDwellinffa: 1: -I. . t.- x ICU1IUU13 pajBDiQ vite-tiaii cesq ana oav-m mcb iweire montat. i u- ; , . i 1 j J. A1IEH BBOWHAst REMEMBER THE DEAD! MONUMENTS TOMBS, GREAT REDUCTION IS THE PRICES bp ' . T Harbls Honttments and Grave-Stones ef ETery Description. . ?. I COnliftllv InritA fliA nnMf rnofnl1 ! to an fngpection of my Stock aud Work; 1 reel Ja8tltie" n a&serting tnat my pat experience nnaer nrsi-cmes: workmen in , all the newest and modern stvlet. and that the workmanship is equal to any of the best in the conntry. I do not say that my work is snperior to all others.: ,! am reasonable, will not exaggerate in or- j der to accomplish a Bale. My endeavor is ! U piwl8e &nA give each customer the val. oe of every dollar they leave with me. PRICES 35 to 50 Per Cent CHEAP? E than ever offered in this town before. , Call at once or send for; price list and de signs. Satisfaction guaraut'd or no charge, i l he erection of marble is the last work of respect which we pay to ; the memory f of departed friends. J " ". ' ; Tj JOHN S. HTJTCHHiSOI Salisbury, N. C. Nov. t, 1881. J I Blactmer aii A.ttorneys, Counselors and Solicitors. . SALISBURY, 2T. C. Jan oay22 1879 ti. I I TIME TABLE WESTERN N. C. Railroad Takes effect Sandaj JnU 17, issi, at 4.10, P. uS . PASSESGER TRAU. ' . ' ' - 1 1 XKKITX. LXATK. STATIONS. AXUTX. UUV. Oi- - : . I".' : r'rJ-V w bd ,..i g...?,5c3...:v:q:; CD Hf ' .-i : 9 U2 - ; ;.!, USOa.mSalisbari 4ULU Third creek 84 - Blmwood 8 0S - Statesrllle . 1 41 Catawba 141 Newton 18 48 Conors : 18 88 Hlckorr - USTpjn cart ills Moranton ior Olenn Alpine 10 08 Brtdirewater . 845 Marion 8 64 Old Fort ' - 80S T.07AJf Henrr - 'lit Bit Mountain 1ST cooper's T Swannanoe 84 , A&benue Ju'rt s sr Ushenii . s is - Frencn Broad n os a. m is so 11 5 J li 140 X 28 41 0T 13 i 445 600 11 ! 4 ST TT 8U St 850 900 45 T68 SlSftA. FREIGHT' tjuis. : ; t AKUTX. LXATX. STATIONS. iAXXXTX. IX&TX. j 8.00 .:Saiisbary loor,H kJAjf 4WAJIJ Tnlrd Creek Elmwood - , Statesrllle Catawba Newton Conover lllckorr i 8 41 sis S 48 184 883 888 T 60 8M 810 8 48 .08 IS 88 IX TO 11 81 A.XI no 40 jlcard i" 10X8 1180 orgranton Glen Alpine Brldewater Marlon i - told Fort i Henrr r . 8 40 8 0S 8 44 T48 1.1 8 8 8 0.1 40 483 18 88 A If A 100 SIT 8 41 4 08 888 8 80 880 :BlkoanUlni 8 SO r.n.;CooperB l Long's lAsbenneJnt Aabenue -iFrencn Broad seorx.; 4Ajt; tTralns run dallr, Sandays excepted. A.B.ANDREVVS.Oen.San t 'hi -" i- T I 't

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