vy - ; . 9 ! - ' 5 V ... -.1 . ny .v y i 61 (0 O 1 t r- VOL XIII.THIRB, SERIES i-- f - , g " - ; - if SALISBURY. IT. C., JTJIIE 8, 1882. -.-r.KO.'M1 I. . r : - ' ' . i . - y - . . . j 2 - - - N , -i - -- - - -. , . -- i - sr-" . - r . - J - . 1 ' , , I " . . , ." . - i - . ' . . I ;H;TP: 11 Til 511'' ! - . f - : . . ,:- - - ... :, r -Jit'.'.:' II I! ! ESTABLISHED INTpE YEAR 1832.; -! ikJCtr; F 1 ea a itoiUb ti ! . Whoerreya-greatnessnociire jw-, digging to , digging, j-al PfrflierpraTseuorpeir;, J . bimself on tbo brink! Xt. in h!n,af i while he.reveled in golden dreams the- wholoja nuuelf. 4 , i , - '.--i '' xCU v-i 1 "? :t:" . , . J wtnfejflrudged and! toiled to procure for trociVtliatinanf he only strong, t.-' herself and her rojaC4reamerlthe sub- Strong To vbose -rdered trilt belong, V! For serf ice nud delight, All"3?6wers that iu face of Wrong Establish Kight. " ' "" If such a man there be, where'er Beneath the nun and moon he fare, j lie cannot fare amiss ; Great Nature hath him in her care, L ifer cause is his. i - pusen Meredith. ed 12th carbed Uattie . G. f ' ti I rr twenty-iour rears of flire.The disease of-wuicli sue die wasjclearly of a consumptive ua- iturf. i Many of the circumstances follow- i sr.i,i oninn rii , - , i : - cuuuii i us iii luscu t ui i ni n m n i wouiu uirect me oeri;vai-av-f.rms 10 1 . . Ana free he is, and only he, .. - b4 yvi-derful rate, and is now iconsidered onef , . . : ,f Vu, m M"7fc c4i,r b drecrcs VI11 from bis tvrant-Dassionff freo, . , , - 1 - r . r -tl - tJ earnest discussion of the allegation of nrnrvp nnlrr. 4Yt.- rpnlifd Mill Ulbrtane ondiimayed.- neeain.ies5mei. jio , iu,d r :1 "I'ST 7 ' until the: ituffr r nnon binelft to Ue L hi , wife' petition says WTB 9lO,OW,:irauu aim - orgeiy 111 ie .icsinuuu, : me opeuKer can , preserve orueranu ,, L ltir Mniawlf n!wprpL trpKintpd' bipftlris '. tbiW! committee' on " amiro flip rnms. -lints hip jnnn nov. 1 .. . " , " I ; , "T -T ' . -fr-1. 1 - --1 " " r - i : ' , f - -: I . , e r . - - , s u-j'j. - " , T -" " - " 7 f f ; . - , 3 . - , : ; aosenieu niraseii iromi uome .ior, weesa temper, ana tne manner . in vvmcn and Alackey a uero l vciy ; iraus;o nwrj Mk- unit rnnnthn. u nn one occasion : he of- 5 .L.. . ''" .1 1 . " s . I J rt. ,1 rorojrJisHHpsiu yu i xjmjyr, to c ire hern noirtionof his larce .. . .. 1 . . .. y i ,1. .1 , l . -- - , -. - t " r v7 t . a r norifin iirHNHniPii i.iih iiiii iumi iiiiiui rnoi nn lm niui -. : . . . 1. i. -.'-".. .-iiii ins s minnrtiv rA mi Pimiinri 1 ma ttraa runn instant, mere, uieu a young wuy tw.n if au1i nWt.w for n. nnri. . v ing-the death and preceding the burial receive all the sympathy growing aut of of tie young lady are of a peculiarly in-; the caRe Both sides of the story will .tcrsting.if riot of a ' distressing" nature. ;Tycome out on trial. I What iseertain Onthe morning of the I2tlf the long suf-j now js that their domestic happiuess took fer)g patient seemed to be rapidly near- .wiDg8 thd'moment wesilth rolled itf npen jngthe eiid and at 11 o'clock she appear- j thtm ; that as soon as they ceased tight jed o havb breathed her last. the. eyes u poverty they began fighting eajch iof I,e yjuug ladywcre, tenderly, closed j other. Their happiest days were? wlijen jO)y Jier sorrowing grandmother (and the j tl,ey were poor, aud a4 they now sit iin body was left alone with - the ; weeping . father.- He remained for about iau' hour j jiaio chamber of ,deatlfnd then took I Shislearej with reluctance. Just as he Jha4 turned, his back upon the; beloved form he was startled by a movement of thebedy ;and an exclamation simulta nQoiisly f "Papa papa, please don't leave me." When he turned around he saVi with delight and jistouislmieLit, that his daughter was not a corpse, but an ac tual living and conscious being, endowed with as ninch intellect and strength as at any? time during the hist part of her tick-nes.i- Of coarse there was now great joy an consternation throughout the house hold.! When, she had become somewhat I j cali Miss "Craig-with a smile and courf- t lenance angenc ueyouu aesenpuou, saiu: 0f papa dear, do you know ; where I have been T" "No, Hattie; tell me where , you liave- been ; let me know all about it,' answered the oveijdyed father. "Oh papa, I have seen heaven, nd I am to JhaVe my health restored to me on certain conditions," she answered in great glee. "What are these conditions, and me you willing to submit to them t" asked the father; Yes, papa j . certainly I am. "Bdt what are they, dear ! still queried thciparent. "I cannot revealtthein toyou DDf , papp. ' But, oh, I saw such beauti- 1 fill -'ill hi rrO In Imaran V 'Toll ni unnt yodj, all about who and what you saw J Come, now that's a good girl," Oh, I saw them ; I saw them all, papa, and I'm goifg to heaven again, and when I go dorit let them put me into the ground until. you; are sure I am dead."; During th erest of the day, up to six o'clock in the'ev-ening, the poor girl was alternate ly in a conscious condition. At six o'clock she seemed to have died. There was no chaigo in the body for' three days and sevral- physicians counseled that the 1 bo((y be kept" from tho tomb.! On ihe .fou-th day, however, there were unmis takable signs of death and the iBternient tool place. From Poverty to Wealth . li t - - F - Ml t . - - -- JIow a yAcutenantsGorernor Became Weal- yMcht8 and Domestic Unhappine$. j TiediVorce suit that has been institu ted:iiy Mr. Tabor, wif of the lieutenant governor 'of .Colorado, Is another illustra tibuj thaflvrealth tloes Tnbtalways bring jhappjness'with itMrs.fTabor asks for 1 divorce and" $50,000 alimony per year, j jThl facts are thus related br th - rt. yhp auhappy couple were married at Augusta, Me., iu 1857. and their caree'r- I linih period has been marked by h transitions fronTdoniestic felicity to the i jmest viobsnt family jars; from absolute j j poverty to princely wealth j from the rude f ihovel of lie frontier to the most luxurious home that the purse of a millionaire could eoiiraan4. ,y Inl859 - they started for j lakln a parlor car drawn, by two ? oxeb? taking all their proierty with them aad! after diifiing about the -couitry, for 1 1 ne years iliey settled down in the place I ;hre Denver now stands- He searched jf !in 1aia fr "Pay gravel ," and! while lie wai prospecting she cooked bacon, made I bre an(1 kept up tlie household ex r peiifees by boarding miners. Finallv Ta- borbuilt a log hut and started a store andj boarding-house combined, which waa general rendervoos for the rniners. Alljthe hard work if 4 the establishment ffcnupoaMrs. TaboryShe walthe only woihau within one hundred land sixtv iuus, ana sne uul thecooking iud wasli--ingfor the miners, attended to f all their 'wanls in the store, .weighed : their gold ! and dradgof c?f J in theimeaa- time tbe basband yielded to the irresis J w t...4- V!iUmii hw,: and continued bis warcb for , gold. - IU , moved from prospect to 'prospect, from ways. vbelieviog of fortune, and - stantials of life. In 1876 . he began to 'and he TrasBoon knowii as a millionaire. surrounded his wife with every luxury that money could buy ; but adds the Jjeader: si, ar that he ntftw hard liparted k proportion a8 j,0 became rich ; that he A11 he iiaRtosav iBtuati Leeaveber 8100.-; . V i M 1IV a. w . nm -.' -i.;.i. ...otki ' and wbich no yields her $14,000 a yearj that gbe ia a pQjan amj hehopes she Will tho miAft 0f luxury and plenty it isprl able that their memory holds no pleasau- I ter period than .when they Silt together behind the ox-team and were btiug drag ged out iu to tire Western wilds to seek their fortune nearer to the setting sun. A Testtpor Insanity. Dr. La in son, will not have died in vain if the sugges tion made by one of the British authori ties on insanity is hereafter applied to test the perceptive faculties of alleged insane murderers. ; The suggestion is that a red hot poker be handed to the said alleged insane person ; if-be takes it he is to be adjudged as 'really unable to distinguish between kight aud wrong; but if he refuses it, then he is to bo con sidered as responsible and be made to sutler accordingly. The test is a very simple one, aud there seems to be no rea son why it should not be accepted as sat isfactory. He who caii remember .that a red hot poker burns can also remember Hiat to kill another is ajrrinie. London Graphic. ' I ' "' ':: T J - - . --j .1 I ' Tub Comet. Tlie lomet can now bo seen between 10 and 11 IM. with the nak ed eye in the northerniheavens, about hlf way between the hoiizon , and the pqle star, and a little to the east. It will dis appear about the 4th of June, and then reappear about the jl5thL of June. U passes the perihelion June 11th, 10 mi utes'past midnight,, i'he distance, from the sun is 5,785,000 miles, land its veloci ty at that time will b 118 miles per sec ond. Its velocity at present is nearly 39 miles per second. iThe anticipations formed of its brilliancy are doomed to disappointment. This is on account of its smallness. . It has hot enough materi al to make a display. ! A FataiAccident News of a fatal accident comes to us from Kendall's Tan yard. On Tuesday of last week Mr. Co lumbus Broadaway; was hauling logs totliii saw mill, when the fastenings to the pole which swung the log. gave way, aud the pole struck him ta the head with" full w.o.c-o nmeunga woumt irom winch he! cnea tne next day. , Mr. Broadawav was rnnA .ui ,i , y i a good citizen, and his untimely death ' will IxTa loss to, the community ife j leaves a wife and three small children tb mourn his sudden departure. Wadetboro Tt-.,.. - ! i ' i 1 I : Something New ht the Moox.r-Jehn G. Jackson, an astronomer of forty years', experience, writes thaUn Uie evening ir TIlA Ui I lnit trliila ihi!. il.. . through a six inch reflecting telescopo, he saw, jnst oyer tlie"westerly' mare trit ium, a peculiar cloud not less than 100 miles in length and 40i or 50 miles wide presenting a misty, feathery appearance, unmistably different from the other por- tions of the, lunar surface. He advises astronomers to examine the same spot about two days after the next new. moon; i; In' the House iof Representatives on Monday, there were ninety-eiglit fabawsni tees, while in the Senate on the same day there were thirty members absent, Tht f-rktfim says, it affords nnmerous opportunities for ringsters and jobbers to push their schemes through the Federal Legislature. Thee success of these classes is doubtless, in a ! great measure, ; to be attributed to the absence of those sent to Congress to guard the interests of the people.CAflr. Home and Democrats i n n iuiv vyovi I lUg. IUO UigUU X It ia worth remembering that nobody en joys the nicest surroundings ifin bad beilth! There are mserable people about to-day Avith one foot in the grave, when a bottle of Parker's Ginger Tonic would do them moT good than all the doctors and medicine! they have ever tried.' Seqndv, ! ' IK'I-AOVIU."-. . ! - i - i ! m . w w -"- w ui u r iiiiim. ww i iir-111 i v i 11 1 r i uv rum i wt iim iiikiihv i imiii lis Frauti Triumphs Agnin.' : WASHlNaTdx.May 31.HoUSE. mmcdHltaft;r the reading t,f hhe jojarttallra. Houses resumed, the ,cotw siUeratioii frf the Alaokejr-libbie coii- tested election casefand, Athertoo, of oiij0 a meniber of the committee on -- ,;tpfl fhfi ' nfj ,iie ... i minority upon the cae, premising ,v Vi,,-- nis remarks jwith rfdenial of thestate- ment that the Democratic jside He gpke for nearly Vtwo hour? I rpnu'prttl V infPP- runted bv the Remiblicansl of that 1 r , -. I. -. j ,-! . I committee arid a good deal of con fu- - sion ensued, but the debate was -throughout conducted in perfect good I i I I A I - " I " m ins . . iwrtv flSRowafpi:- - ! I i Rauney, of M Massachusetts, a mem ber of the committee on elections, spoke in support of ihe majority re port, characterizing as a subterfuge the allegations of forgery in tfie tes timony. If lie believed in that alle gation he would not sacrifices his hon or and manhood by, consenting to smother its investigation. He re vie w- 1 ed the circumstances of the case sta- i ting that iu the election there had beenxfraud refined, and cheating re duced to a science, and then proceed ed amid much laughter aud applause to detail the labors of the committee on elections in consideration of the whole subject. Moultoti j followed with an argu ment is support of the claims of Dib ble fb be retained in his seatt Jones, ofTexas, spoke in advocacy of the claims of Mackey, and then at 5 o'clock Calkins demanded the pre vious question. Pending iwhicli Randall meved to recommit the report of the committee on elections with instructions to in quire as to authenticity and integrity of all depositions, returns and evi dence of whatever character produ ced in the crtse of Mackey vs O'Con nor, y Motion was lost ; yeas 97 ; nays, 137. The previous question was then or dered; yeas, 151 ; nays, 1 , After a brief speech by Evins, of South Carolina, in opposition to (he majority report, contestce Dibble was accorded the floor to close the debate in his own behalf. He reviewed in detail the historyof the case,! criticised severely the action of the committee ou elections in . declining to investi gate the allegations of forgery made by him and quoted extensively from the testimony iu order to sustaiu the truth of these allegations. ! lie was frequently "j applauded by the Demo cratic side. ! Calkins, - of Indiana, in a brief ! speech closed the discussion. He had 8ur)rised at. the manner in , , lV- ... , i. . , which he committee on electious had . . been abused and . tnal igned. ; I With the fear of God before his eyes and the fear of no man in his . . . . . . . : htart, He declared that if there had ever been an election case fairly and honorably tried by.any committee it wa8 the now considered. . . .o . . . (Applause on the Republican side.) In conclusion, Calkins delivered a 'peroration upon the necessity of pre serving the purity of the ballon box, which was j greeted with a round of applause from the Republican side. In the midst of this applause Spring er, of Illinois, rose and called atten tion to the maimer in which the Re- publ ican party had preserved the punty" of the ballot box ; in 1876. When it had iuauguratedi as presi dent a y. mao , whi v neverv had- been elected.! He was called to; order by several 'members on the Republican side, but he continued to speak, al though his I remark's were inaudible several rounus 01 app.ause imm ni3iuou 01 a resolution uy . iucieao.w - . . .1.1 I - . j a. .1 on account of - confusion, until called ; when the ground is puddly. If traris to order by the -Speaker. i - (plauted when it is warm and mello w The point was rnad$ that the re- marks made by Springer should not go on the record. , ; - The Speaker sustained the" point, but Springer stated that if they did not go into the" record, they Avould at ieas eo 10 ine couniry.v ,u H ii t i V i : i i I ardly had he taken his seat when l Mills, of Texas, appearctl in the main 1 aisle jesticnlating excitedly and ch ed the - Republican party , jvitfi "hay i ng d ef ra ad ed t h e people in 1 876 . Again cries for order went up p i ' r i . i i r ' from the Repulican tfide vhicli min- gled with shouts of ' see how th squirm," and derisive Jioghter -yen- dered the scene a' noisy one. :H ifii - , Iri-- J Mills continued with his . remarks until - the ;' Speaker stajed that he w Hint frnm tliA hiKtnrv trv that treason as-ainst the poveru- 1 ' 7 nieht." I T The resolution seating Mackey was then adopted.- Yeas,' 150; nays, 3; ppeared at tne bar of was sworn in , , A, i : . " , I - I i ' I .) I wet . ' I- - 1 I 1 I fl . i . !' . . Alsirvlflnn ' tlf-nonnrinc the fiartisan I Maryland,; denouncing iich the J rulings ot tne cnair, to w Republican side objected, and which led to a wild scene of disorderyell ingj, jesticulating and a general np- roar prevailing, which still contin ued when this dispatches closed. L The Democratic Protest. The pretest presented by Gongress man Cox in the House of Represent- toes on Monday, when Speaker Keifer aunounced his ruling on Mr. Reed's point of order, is as follows : I Whereas, the minority ! of the House have heretofore, under the rules nf the House, successfully resis- ted the efforts of the majority to con- sider the case of Mackey ! against O'Connor, because a proper hearing has not been granted to the contestee lwifh- mmmittPP on pWtlnti ns tn the allegations of forgery and fraud iu the evidence submitted by the con- testant; and J Whereas, the majorilv, in order to prevent and avoid such investigation have proceed to change the rules in a manner not provided for in the rub s, by which alone they can or ought to be changed ; and i Whereas, the Speaker has: made a ruling which justifies a proceeding unknown to the principles of consti- tutional ami parliamentary law and subversive of the rights of the rainori- ty ; therefore, i The undersigned, representati ves of the people, hereby protest against the proceeding of the majority and the rulings of the Speaker as unjuitifia- ble, arbitrary, and revolutionary, and expressly designed to deprive the minority of that protection which has been established as one of the great monuments of the representative sys- tern of parliamentary privileges-and civil liberty. Samuel J Randall, John F House, Abram S Hewitt, J CS Blackburn, Dau'l Ermentrout, Jordon E; Craven, J Fred'k CTalbott, H G Turner, Morgan B Wise, Gibson Athertoo, L C Latham, Miles Ross, , Henry S Harris, H A berbert, G W Hewitt, Oscar Turner, J S HoblitzellJ J White, j Wm S Holman, ) G H Oury, Martin L Clardy, M E Post, 1 B Thompson, Jr, R F Armfield, John B Clark, Jr, Clement Dowd,' Oliver Welborn, And others. j S SCox, p ' . - ,j There is no better and surer way of killing young trees' than to expose the roots to the wind, which dris them out very rapidly.: Make a note'of this, and if you have any trees i to transport, be sure to have the rctots thoroughly covered with blankets or ! something as effectual. This precau- tlon may save you the life of scores of trees. -- - -j i. It is immaterial at what time veg etables are transplanted, provided they-are not too largo and the ground is warm and mellow ; but they should never be transplanted in a rainstorm, .'.I "... a . 11 '. .-. 1 ! . If . .Y . f ; root action begins at on pear trees wi endure a goodly quantity of ashes and cinders at their roots. The sweepings the black- smith shop arc. excel lent. Farming: in'tlie South. 4 . i i ,J.ne Jiconomw says tnare is tor ev- a --,,;-. J- .'i icit uuuiuern lanuer a n an n iamu f rjr lit flll mOnn fi.rma U '.t:;. . . - , four fields, one to be ' . t - sown iu grass . , , , ( ;y. tL.y. . ,S . ' and llie lourtu in cotton. 1 he next . . - i - I . . 1 mni'P is tn nrnnnro oinnmhtr M c hann r i i . i. i - l ; lour iiunqreu neaa ior lour nun- -graze them in the gras3, naia . - - , . , -J , u " " . nation is vearlv arniiutt li'"ti' nM! ,mr "'S"i.v nni naractcr, ami in do ar;. mg perfectly practicable n the South , S-"7 ii 1 r lhU"r k" tli0 -. that will solve the labor question; en-r ,CS! f some noble oak or elm, J ; - y , -,,;;, 4 la- rich the land and enrich Ihe farmed and wa. .f the whitc lehc , pri THTi taq a ara rirtn (rtun tnt 4- tr miuuunns iue wimer , , . rich enough to grow! col manure, and if this rotation is kept up, soon all the-land will be rich and the profits off the j sheep will pay family expenses, or; the sheep mav be sold as fat sheep after, Jautr- A WT A wl TII n . rs. rk. liitmlHArl ham 1l V- JllltJ 1. II. XtO. V II1IK 1 1 1 1 I I I 1 9 M I It I - . Lt t0.. Jl r " " - ' - i - 4 on e cotton Potations would in ten years enncn every larmer in the South. If the above proposition were to be worked up to five fields giving the first field to cotton, the second to corn and peas, the third to oats- followed by speckled or whippoorwill peas in June when the oats are harvested, the peavines plowed in in the fall the 4th and 5th to Irish and eweet pota toes, fodder corn, German millet and other forage crops, and a "truck'-arti chokes, chufas, sugar cane, etc., aud fields at the properjseason sheep-pen e cow-penned, applying all the barnyard and stable manure made on the place, and there is nd doubt that the soil would be rapidly enriched and would never wear put. As to the Bermuda grass, that '(ought to be in a pasture or meadow by itself. It takes several years to establish a turt of Bermuda, and cotton planters will inform the Economist that it takes several years of pretty cfose work to get rid ot it. Sad Fatalitj. Liule Rock Gazette. The intelligence of a sadWair, which occurred near Mount Ida, last week, reached here to-day May the 3d. The community in which ihV parties cou- cerned reside is infested with panthers, bears, and other wijd animals. Chas Lord and wife, a highly respectable COuple, had been annoyed recently by nightly visits from the grim denizens 0f the wilds, and determined to use the utmost vigilance to apprehend and slay the intruders- One night hast week Mrs. Lord was aroused from her slumber by a .noise iu the yard and immediately sought to dis jcover iie cause. She stole quietly to ihe back door, and sobn after Lord himself awakened andj revolver in hand, he repaired jto the back prem ises. He fired at the first object in view and then, ignorant of the fact that his wife had proeded him, be gan calling her out of bed. A few moments later groans issued from the spot to where he had fired, and on I approaching he was thrown into the wildest paroxysm of grief, on discov of killing the sup- erin? that instead posed wild animal, he had shot his wife. He gave vent to loud shrieks and lamentations which? attracted the neighbors, who, upon examination found that Mrs. Lord had been mor tally injured. She lingered a few hours and died in -great agony The Greensboro! Patriot tells a mar velous story about a 2ew Garden hen that hatched out a brood of ducks, was very much disturbed at the little chaps dashing into! the, water, but see ing no barm came to them got over her scare and then regularly took them to the pond fpr their daily bath. Afterwards she hatched ut a brood of chickens and as (she did with the ducks led them to the pond to indulge in aquatic exercises, but the little chickens didn't take to it, and she got mad and drowned Jhe' last one of them. The singular part of this is that it all happened! at lew Garden, a neighborhood w.here! veracity is ranked among the virtues. Have patience with all thii gs, but chiefly have patience with yourself. T . : s.'vi;.'" '.- "7.' S,. kj LLlkfeLLDlIien pfaced his body ia' the-rent j In a letter declining an invilatii , : J the poet Whittier write ?'?Mv indii ' ; e.. b. - uUWi, im in our woocis. whitli A.woum not exchansre for Or ont.il f . - - o . . ; iiauiiB.: auv inauKS Willi ue no to the public school which is to nluut a group of trees in my honor. I cftuJd ask no better mnmnrlnl T i - - . . . - . wars admired tlm imorl ct nf Sakokislndi - .. ians, around Sebago Lake; who, when' their chief .died, dng i around a beech tree, swaying it down Vi . back Willi make iandt!" " ."'g,naI PIaceTa rten n,d . v beautiful .monument fur the son of cotton without - , i , the forest." of GliOUNDPEAS.--Thesc shoutd be kept clean and dirt, thrown up under the advancing branches. 'Loose soil for the young fruit stems to penetrate, is the point to be secured, dirt on the stems is objectionable, .though it is de sirable for the latter to be near the ground that the fruit stems may pen etrate it. The Richmond, Va. papers are appeal ing for nut fn roliava tliA nnn. nf Tn4-.A... county in that State. It is said "manv go for days without bread, and as for meat they don't think of it that the peo ple are actually on the verge of starva - tion. Mr. J. H. Rangely of Patrick Court House is soliciting money and supplies. Those who wish to contribute can send to his address. The Presbyterian General Assemby of the Soutliern -States is in session at At lanta, 45a. It has 121,915 members, 1,959 churches, and 1,061 ministers Since its organization, in 18G1, it has steadily grown. It had but 72,000 mem bers when formed. The Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions gathered iu the past year about $592,000 and expend ed all of it but $C50. If beef keeps rising at the present rate in Chicago, none but the wealthy can indulge in that luxury. Porter house steak is quoted at thirty cents a pound, sirloin at twenty-five and round at sixteen cents. It is said prices will go still higher. Wtill Pay Five Dollars. Wo will pay $5 for lie sight of a weak kneed Democrnt who has gone over or may go over to the Radical party and can swear that he. carried a clean conscience with hi ni ove on an office ami no hope of reward for turn ing his coat.- Milton Chronicle. Intimidating Voteks. Charles ton June 1. -Post master Tuft, aetin county. chairman of the Republican pari v in Charleston, was arrested to day umier tho State law f:r iutimi dating white and colored voters du ring registration yesterday, and was was held to bail in 1,000. At Pleasant Grove, Luneburg coun ty, Va., a few day ago, while Rich ard Wallace, a well known citizen of that county was engaged in a playful scuffle with Henry Johnson, colored, a pistol in Wallace's hand wa3 acci dentally discharged, fatally wound ing Johnson. H. H. Malison writes to the Poul try Monthly : "I believe it is not gen erally konw among poultry fanciers that a few sprigs of a cedar bush mix ed with hay or any kind of litter for hens' nests will keep them entirely free from hen lice." A farmer in Qlay county, Texas, has a 3,000 acre wheat farm and ex pects to break 7,000 acres more this year and 3,000 next year, which will make a 13,000 acre wheat patch. An immense number of icebergs, some of them sixty feet high, are nine miles off Devil's Island light-house station, outside Hal ifar harbor. N If you make your youth a savings bank you will not need any one's char ity in your old age. If you know how to spend less than you get, you have the philosopher's stone. About two hundred Boston girla are studying Latin. Some of thtm will mar ry horse car conductors and -learn to cook and be useful. - Fatal' Collision. Uei I in. May 30. A railway train from Maushi:n cJflne in collision with a,tiaiu from Heidelher near the latter place. Sererstl carriages were Rmashed, eight persons killed aud twenty seriously wonnded. - : .'y-.-- :p,r:,f- W Inn Amos. Lawteuce vna ,iskcd for - ....., .-.. ..j - Vwur : . yn.r-piiucii.le prcwrve ...)' ' laBdiBJLi COUPJITED Thfl feebto Airnx-tnfpVl. ' rifVrfrc 'fivW dyspepsia or Indigestion in any frro. ant ad44 Tiseu, ior uie saxe or their own ocniij arn mental comfort, to try llostPttcr'a Stomiw-ii Bitten. Ladies of tbe most tleliraterorrtitRtjon testify to its harmless and its restorative properties. Physicians everywhere, dipjrvtl with the adulterated liquors of commerre, iwe soribe it aa the safest and moet-rtliablc of all acomacDics. V For sale by all Drnpffists and Pcalers ; gener erauy. i ! . - 20:ly 4 J. Rhodes BROWNE, Pres't. Wm. C. CO.VET, Sec'y, A Home Company,Secking Home Patronage, y StFOPX PrBBUt; BeliaMB. Literal! Term policies written on Dwellings. Premiums payable Onc-balf cash and bal ance in twelve months. J. ALLEN BROWN, Agt., 21.Cra "' Salisbury, S. (. REMEMBER- THE DEAD KM: 1 :Ua 2 "Via in 1 y liTTE, ' ' . r TT7. , ;;r-V;V -J--j i , J ... ' :. 7 f hi ; ' OQ ; y O g es 'g y hr 5 -.oj.;:4 P-t W NJ CO ll q O 7- - ':- t . '. i" Mm;! MONUMENTS TOMBS, dSO. GREAT EEDTJCTION IN THE PRICES OF ' : llzxhte Slcnnaints and Grave-Stones tl , Every Dsscription. . '. I cordially invite the public generally y to an inspcctioii of my Stock and Work. I feel justified in asserting that my past: 1 experience under tirftt-class workmen iu . : all the newest and modern styles, :aiul V4 that the workmanship is equal to any of , the best iu the country. I do iiot say : ' that my work is snjeiior toall other. -Ii-am reasonable, will not exaggerate in orr der to accomplish a sale, i My cudeavons y to please siud give each customer the vali ne of every dollar they leave with me. l , PRICES 35 to 50 Per Cent CHEAPEH than ever offeit-d in this town beforey Call at once or seud tor price list and tic ,v signs. Sat isfaef ion gua rnn t'd or no chsirge; : y Tho erection of marble is the last work nf resject which ve pay to the nicmcry. y of denarted friends. ? t ' hyL l vast s ii u A UJB.J-W a w 4 SUibary, X. C.,;J?ov. 1, ll.v , j MOIEY SATED is MOliET HAD rz-.not ererr body fcnose !aat wliere a iam has no iou.v! rent, lior mur i-rbt nor clerks to birr. can seliioi Mi to J . L. iuu i ior caeap suclj as Bacon, Lard, Ssjrr ?nJ Coffee Motrste and Sjnips. It-iu Cbecse, Crackers. Candles, FU4 &c., &c East corner of Lee acd Fisher ftlw - J!nil , " . ' ' - -it I- : -1 ': i: 'Mi-" .. ' - . :A'-7 1 l':'" . it -Mr 4.-- 1 '.), . - 1 w : - :7 . . - " ... .- -' : , . - ; f .. .: -, " y , ., . ' ' -