- . , . . . - . .. .. ! . , , T; v . . ' - . 1'- ' . . . -.-. i ...... - .Si ".I ! , ' ' -1 -iV i, - ' . ' '. -: -- ( - v,r r. . - , , ; tf . .- . . - , 1 U v-L1: -, - . , v. V-T ''- I TI . - : Ml " O TP TFt Tl nTftft C3i r . ! ; -I , I - " r ' r t i -i hi- ' ' iS Hi Ii A' f - ! i is I ' I s SALISBURY.'!?. C, OCTOBER 26, 1882. VOt XTV.--THIRD SERIES W (P 1 Tftffll M fiiP JL lilwi 1 Carolina Watchman, ABLISIIED IN TUB YE All 1832. PRICK, $10 IN ADVANCE. itk trn antidote to the effects of mUsmfi Ii Hostctter '8 Stomach Bittwa. This mi iSine U one of the most popular remedies of uTtge of successful proprtt-tary sicciil(. intfia in immense demand wherever on tbi Continent fever and -agBejeiistn. A ineriMsful three timf a day is the best potsible preparative for ncoun ermg a STlVrious atmosphere, regulating the lier, juid invigorating Ihe stomach. L , e For eaie uy wi irnfis13" " r generuuy. Ihode8 BROWNE, Pres't. Wm. C. COART; Sec'y. "'IS. - ' ! AfSome Oompany,Seeking Home Patronage. L SlfiL Fromit, Reuaole. Liberal ! Tra policies written on Dwellings.1 miums payable Unc-liali cusli anu uai anecau twelve montns. W v ' I J. ALLEN BROWN, Aert., l;6m Salisbury, N.1U. I - i 0OL BOOKS, ISCHOOL SUPPLIES NOVELS AND STATIONERY. j . Al-At. ERRORS OF YOUTH. (iENTLEMAN who sufferel for years from -ffervoti Uebil.it y. PrkmatCki? Dkcay, anu ail ineenecuoi youimul indiscretion, will for the sake of suflering Jiumanity(Heud free to all who need it, the recipe and direction for making the pimple remedy by which he w;is ue'red. Sufferers wishing to profit h the ail TeHifera experience can doo bv ad(Jres$in;in perfect couiiilence. JOHN 13. OUDEx! THE DEAD ! MONUMENTS TOMBS, C3G. GREAT i REDUCTION "iff IN TIIEPRICP:S Or? Mkile Monument's and Grave-Stones of - s f. Every Seccripticn. tfordialh iu vitc-tho public generall total iusnection of hiy Stock and Work. 1 1 Hfel justified in asiserting tlmt my past exlxltieinco under first-class workmen iu jalte newest iprd niodcru styles, and that:tlio workmanship is equal to any of i the $est" iu the country. J -do not say ? thhtlmy work is siieTior to all others. 1 aiij reasonable, will not exaggerate in or der io accomplish a sale. My endeavor is to please ami give each customer the val ue of every dollar they leave with me. pilJbES35 to 50 Per Cent CHEAPER r than ever offered in this town before. Csvlljat onceJ or send for price list and de siuiL Satisfaction guarautM-or no charge. ll'e erection of marble is the last work f respect which we pay to the memory of departed friends. I J JOHN S. HUTCHINSON. Salisbury, N. C, Nov. h, 1S. NOTICE! 'fife firm of Ii. Ii. Cawkoiu & Co. thBilay dissolved by mutual'' consent. IS tu Efcumi my sincere .trianks- to a generous : public tor the liberal patronage bestowed ;t upb4 me during the" last 17 years, .and re spectfully ask all pcrsorcs indebted to the firito call at once and make settlement. "pfie business will be' continued by my foipHjr partners, Samuel Taylor and W. S. ; Blaokmer, and I sak tor them the same lib jeril patronage bestowed upon yie old firm. 3TI offer my splendid Brick Store, Piling House and Four building lots for .av,pnvatcly. - ' lysiSSstK' COEBMTE0 " U "-' si- i r j. - ;..- L I It. II. ClLVWFOItD. ' Bjlt.t5, 18. -50:tf Coalitiou iii-porthparoiina. A few days Vfflpb llr. Geo. C. Gorliam, the editor of the National Republican, of thU citv, adUresed itri opeu letter to Mr. C. L. Cook, one of the straiglitout Ee- J Tv,.i.n,"ii, ni.M.tAJ fr ip,ri. n -t North Carolina,! reciting a conversation J Utiroen Got ham and President Artlmr In xw York, rihn aMertinir Aniiinritft. 1 lively that the Pr4sident favored the ! coalition movement in North Carolina, and desired the election of all the candi dates on the coalition ticket. This letter of Mr. Goihajn's was printed in circular form and copies of it have been dJstribn ted broadcast over North Carolina by the internal revenue and other Federal offi cials. - j - i . The following extract is from the reply of Cook : j . 'The candidate ;ftr Judge o. the Supreme Conrt on the' Liberal, ticket in this State was indicted for murder by Solicitor Settle, 'now Judge; Settle, just after the war, for shooting Union rmcn in the county of Randolph. The tamnestvactand the liberal use of mon- (ey saved his neck. Thecoalition move v T . ,i i i:.. r luciu, airuuiuiug iu tut; utxiaraiiun oi the chairman; of thc Liberal State committee, iwas organized for the pur pose of destroying the Republican par ity, opposing prohibition and temper ance legislation. I am informed that letters are now being sent to each coun ty in the State calling for the names of postmasters who either oppose or do not actively support the coalition movement, with a view to their speedy removal. A wholesale decapitation is proposed. 1 he victims are earnest and honest Republicans, who have too much honor and spirit to submit to the commands of arrocrant, inflated. self-constituted leaders. If the Pres ident allows this to be done, it will not comport with: your declaration that he does not use public offices as rewards or punishhients. Had; pro nounced Republicans of character been t nominated we would have carried the State beyond a doubt, but there is no prospect tor the success of thecoalition ticket. The bottom has dropped out, the bubble has burgled, the contribu tions from Mr. HubbelTs committee, and the assessments from revenue of ficials can't save it.j If any man from North Carolina tells you or President Arthur to the contrary, he is either after office or campaign money." i ' ! The Next House. The St. Louis Republican "says, the increase of the number of Representa tives in the national House of Repre sentatives by the last apportionment fell iu twenty States, and it was sup posed the parties would share the in crease about as folldws : Stales, v , Don. Arkansas, 1 California, 1 Georgia, 1 Kentucky, 1 Mississippi, 1 Missouri, IT North Carolina. 1 States. Rep, California. . 1 Illinois, ; Iowa, Kangas, j Massachusetts, Minnesota 'Nebraska-' 1 2 4 1 2 2 South Carolina, 2 Michigan,, 2 lexas, 5 New York; 1 1 1 Virginia, 1 West Virginia, 1 Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Tbtal, 16 ! Total, ; 19 California, whiehr cast its vote for Hancock, and has two Democrats and two Republicans in the present House, gains two members,; and these are di vided between the parties.- The Re publican States of Maine, New Hamp- snire ana v erraoni .eacn Jose a mem ber, and the count Was thus left six teen and sixteen increase to the two parties. This calculation has been disturbed in two States which have held elections. West Virginia which it was supposed would add one to the Democratic column, has given; its in crease to the Republicans, and Ohio i . -i i nas reversed us recora ana given a large majority of its entire delegation to the Democrats.: Of the eleven States set down in the Republican col umn above, seven are expected to fol low the example of j Ohio to some ex tent aud give gains to the Democrats. Some of Capt. Kidd Treasure. ; Adispatch dated Raleigh, Oct. 18th, says, "Robert Harris, a poor boatman, yesterday morning iound 300 bpanish uoubloons under a stump ot a tree near the Pamlico river. The finding ot4 lie com has caused great excite ment here. Harris: has been offered 5,000 for his treasure. During the past 100 years periodical searches have been made on desolate sandbars land islands on the! North Carolina coast for treasure supposed to have been buried! by the pirates, Captain jKidd and Blackboard. From time to time money has been found." j It is said that a large amount nf Jay Hubbell's assessment fund is jro- jing into Georgia to be used in tloubt- tul districts.; A considerable amount :u II. I UCIIIST ACULIfTCHI nriiii IWl I r North Carolina, too. Iticbcs and Poyertj'. Oue of the worst "sign? of the time to be discovered jnst now among us is the tendency of 'the poor to grow Poorer and the rich richer. Attempts have often been made j to deny. that this thefijet, but theslern logic ot events" demonstrates it in a way voo palpable J:o! bo concea ed. In any country a jdi vision into a verv rich rand verv roor class is an element of danger; in a republic ike ours the danger is especially formidable.. Can any intelligent observer of American character and habits of living suppose that the large majority of the Ameri can people will permit the wealth of me nation to De so uiviaeu mat, wuhb a small minority absorb the larger share of that wealth, the masses of the people will rest quiet and content if their industry will . bring for them selves and families only ia bare supply of the commonest necessariesof life, with no hope of improvement, with the assurance that, squalor and want and the degredation of having only the meanest clothing to wear must be their lot in all the hopeless future? The Boston Star remarks : "We are in considerable danger of having two classes here, the rich and the poor, between which a wide gulf is to be fixed. .New York is more fa vorably situated to illustrate such an unwelcome theory than any other city in the Union. A number of the cler gy of that city have of late been ex pressing themselves in the columns of the newspapers in a way to place the apprehensions .on the ground of al most positive certainty. All of them seem to confess the fact that a gulf does indeed yawn between the two ex tremes of society. 1 he question na turally arises is this, state of things a necessary and an evitable condition of social life, or is it owing to causes which cau be removed by human skill, so that the rich shall not be extrava gantly rich nor the poor poor to des titution Also, can this change be made without resource; to the crimes of communism or dependence upon the fallacies of socialism ? Unques tionably it can. The laws that gov- ern the distribution ol property at present favor accumulation, they can as readily be made to promote diffu sion. For instance, a law requiring every maker of a will to distribute all he owns above a certain amount to at least a given number of inheritors, in proportiou to the amount of the pro perty bequeathed, would of itself stop any continuance of those vast fortunes that become a danger, iu the course of time, in a country having institu tions, habits and modes of thinking such as prevail in the United States. Memphis Appeal. Gen. Leach has written a letter com plaining that the report of his speech at Raleigh by the reporter of the News and Observer did him great injustice, by making him say that Ransom and Cameron "drank and frolicked togeth er in Washington." He denies using any such language,, and proceeds to pay the following compliment to Gen. Ransom : j "I have known Ransom well for thirty years, and intimately for ten years, and I never saw him take a glass of wine at a dinner or any social party, and the idea of Ransom's "frol icking" is too ridiculously absurd to need contradiction. "Truth to tell, 1 have never known Ransom to do or say anything iucom- paiioie wun me dignity ot a oenator or the honor ot a gentleman. Proud of his State and devoted to her people and their best interests, and distin guished for his fine presence, his tal ents and his courtly bearing, he stands in the Senate Chamber the peer of any of his colleagues, and is regarded there as I regard him, and as thou sands of his friends in the State regard him, as an honor to the Senate aud hi State." The reporter, however, insists th although he may not have given Gen. Leach's exact words, j he "fairly and substantially" reported what he said. Mr. E. J. Hale in the Home and Ltemocrat quotes two items from North ern papers as follows : The darkey ex senator Bruce, of Mississippi, now Register of the" Treasury, in Wash ington, has a sou and heir, whom he has named Rbscoe Coukling Bruce, and whom he has provided with a white French nurse ! -William Hunt, a colored porter on a Pullman car running between Boston and New York, was arrested in Boston Satur day evening for bigamy. He has one wife in New York, where he makes his home; and another in Bostou. Roth are white women. Consistent. In the Senate of 1879, Gen. Leach opposed every measure pro viding far the election of county commis sioners and justices of the peace by the people. See the; Senate; journal page 70, 119 133, and yet he shed crocodile tears in the Radical convention here last Sat urday, because the liberties of the people are taken from them by not allowing i lliem to vote for commissioners aud magistrates. iTlio KeedUttlue." 1. Mr. Stephen, C. Johnston, of j this city, furnished juaiwitn a printed pamphlei prepared iby him contain ing a description and abstract of j title of the famous lieed mine of Cabarrus. It was submitted by Mr.' Johnston to the trustees of the will of Wm. Hirst, now in possession -of the property. The report givv great encouragement for the btd ief that tlie mine will yield rich results lxlh in vein and surface workings.) j The property -consists of 780 acres tipoit which are three veins, and a large stretch of alluvial sands with an average depth to bed rock of two to three feet from which have al ready been taken the 'largest land heaviest nuggets of almost pure jgold ever found iu the United States, j Be low is a list of them i - Weight of pieces of gold, found on Reed property, of which a record is made, as 'follows': I Year 1803 28 pounds. 1801 (( , ; ll ti ii 1826 u ll 1835 ii it it 9 7 3 2, H 16 91 8 13 41 5 1 8 i tt tt u tt it tt tt u tt tt tt tt tt a t ( M ( ( ( i (i Total weiff 116 pounds, Value of gold,; $27,840. Mr. Johnston adds : "I am reliably, informed that niany other pieces of large size, from tjiree to five pounds, were found prior land subsequent to the dates given. The first known gold discovered ononis property was in 1799, but as I can not furnish the weight will only, say that it is supposed to have been worth between seven and eight thousand dollars. And since the last date given above, amongst ' the various nuggets found, one soldi for eight hundred dollars. I j He recommends the .working of the veins, and especially of these alluvial sands, and thinks that to bring water from Rocky River, one mile distant, or from Buffalo Creek, between two and throe miles, for their working would amply repay the expenditure. The statement! is a most creditable one anu contains certincates irom prominent gentlemen of Charlotte as to his experience aud capacity. This Looks like Ilusincss. There 13 a civil service reform as sociation in Maryland which not sat isfied with the party platform pro fessions on that subject desire to know from each candidate for Congresjust how he stands and propounds to him the following pertinent questions in writing to which they demand a writ ten reply: ' 1. Do you regard a reform iu the civil administration as necessary, and as a work which should be promptly entered upon ? . j 2. What, in your view, should be the nature, extent and practical meth ods of that reform, aud what support, if elected, will you give to it? 3. Do you think that the patronage of the departments and great offices should be apportioned among mem bers of Congress, or be interfered with by them ; or on the contrary, do you hold that vacancies in subordinate places should be filled by the proper executive officers appointing the most worthy applicants, to be ascertained by examinations? 4. As the ore hundred and sixty fourth sectiou of the Revised Statutes now requires all persons to be exam ined before being appointed in any of the departments thus declaring that influence and recommendations are inadequate tests, do you or not think that the various applicants should be examined, not as now, independently and privately, but together'and pub licly, so that the most worthy of those offering may be secured? Or, in other words, do you or not favor competi tive examinations? Will you support the Pendleton bill (copy inclosed) or any similar measure for enforcing competitive examinations? 5. Do you justify the promise of places on the part of members of Congress for political support or the use of their influence at the depart ments aud elsewhere in order to se cure offices for their favorities ? Or do you, on the contrary, condemn Such practices and purpose yourself; to avoid them ? 6. Do jou or not approve the prac tice of coercing those in the public service to work for either party, or ot their being removed lor mere party reasons, or without good cause What, in your opinion, is good cause for removing a clerk ? j 7 Tin run nnnrove of nolitica! as- . . j . i cdiA.. n.,A it'en !m wlisii form and laws .of Congress which condemn them j Do you hold that members of Congress, through committees or otli wise, are justified in" requesting the public servants to pay assessments, whether of specific amounts or other wise r Would you haves an officer re- raent? Do you think it justifiable for;Tlie largest Guano Co., in the U. aparty in power to levy political as-. sessmenU on subordinate officials for perpetuating its own supremacy t i xma is going aooui ; me inauer in a business like wav. for thev brimr it; home before election to each candi- date and make his support dependent u ; i 4 i UDOn the nnaif inn he fftkrxt nnt n.ilv r-" - - ... .y as an endorser of party platitudes, but ... wnue.guaiurc. nuw Birui.g .vm .a ii v. vv uu niiun, but it is moving in the right direc tion and is giving a practical begin ning to the Work of civil service re form of which to much has been said and in which so little has been done. Bloody work in Kiioxvllle. The Tragic End of a Bitter Personal ; Feud. Knoxville, Tenn., Oct 19. This morning at a few minutes after 10 o'clock Gen. Joseph A. Mabry, Major Thomas O'Conner and Joseph A. Mabry, Jr., were kiljed in a shooting affray. The difficulty began yesterday afternoon by Gen. Mabry's attacking Major O'Conner and threatening to kill him. This was at the fair grounds, and O Conner told Mabry it was not the place to settle their differences. Mabry then told O'Conner he should not live. It seems that Mabry was armed and O'Conner was riot. The cause of the difficulty was an old feud about the transfer of some property from Mabry to O'Conner. Later in the afternoon Mabry sent word to O'Conner that he would kill him on sight. This morning Major O'Conner was standing in the door of the Me chanic's National bank, of which he was president, Gen. Mabry and anoth er gentleman walked down the street on the opposite side from the bank. O'Conner stepped into the bank, pro cured a shot gun, took delibrate aim at Gen. Mabry and fired. Mabry fell dead, being shot in the left side. As he fell O'Couner fired again, the shot taking effect in Mabry's thigh. O'Con ner then reached into the bank and got another shot gun. About this time Joseph A. Mabry, Jr., son of Gen. Mabry, came rushing down the street. He was not seen by Major O' Conner until he was within forty feet of him- when he fired a shot from a pistol, the ball taking effect in O'Con ner's right breast passing through the body near the heart. The instant Mabry fired O'Conner turned and discharged his shot gun at him, the load taking effect iu young Mabry s right breast and side. He fell pierced with 20 buckshot and almost instant ly O'Conner fell dead without a strug gle. Young Mabry trd to rise but fell back dead. ' The whole tragedy occurred within two minutes and neither of the three spoke after he was shot. Gen Mabry had about 30 buckshot in his body. A bystander was painfully wounded in the thigh with a buckshot and another was wounded in the arm ; four other men had their clothes pierced by buckshot. The affair caused great excitement and Gay street was thronged with thousands of people. Gen. Mabry aud his son Soseph were acquitted only a few days ago of the murder of Major Lusby and Don Lusby, father and son, whom they Killed a few weeks since. Wra. Mabry was killed by Don Lusby last Christmas. Major Thomas O'Conner was president of the Mechanics National bank here, and was the wealthiest - man in the State. Col. E. J. Sanfard, the vice- president, takes immediate control of the bank, Take Your Choice. Take your choice and vote with 105,000 colored, 16,000 white voters (2,000 of which are revenuers) which compose the Re publican party or vote with 140,000 white voters which compose the Dem ocratic party. The former is run by the 2.000 revenue officers, and the lat ter "by the people for the people." The former will take you back to the dark days of 1868, with the Kirk war, hiffi taxes, fraud and corruption ; the latter will keep on under good gov eminent. Take your choice. David son Dispatch. J. H. Wallace, Democrat, from the eighth congressional district in Ohio, will contest the seat with McKinley, Republican who claims a majority of eight. Wallace says that in one dis trict in Stark county, fifteen votes given to him were thrown out, "where McKinley's name was erased from the Republican ticket and his written in place. It was written Major Wal- I lace, tor which reason ttie votes were 1882. SOLUBLE PACIFC FOR WHEAT. Manufactured by the Pacifici r j'. nnA VAUC1' lllK,ou UIB,MMU' ; Thomost popular Fertilizer,5 its - 0- iW - juumuvvp wvuv It is in fine drillinexjondition and rr i 1 lne Sftme planters pontinuo to use i . 1 . i I 1 ; For ; i 00UI win I have on hand the u SEA FOWL GU ANO, " Bradley's Suricn Phosphate," and the ' Equitable," which I will sell for Wheat on terms as for Cotton. I am also prepared to furnish cotton ginners with Bagging, Ties and Twine, at very low rates. as I buy more COTTON than any one man here, it may be a double benefit to make I your purchases or engagements of me early. t Tl ' , 1 "II ii nices are as iow as any one uere win sen. Wilt not be undenold. 9 " WORK YOUR HEADS," and see that this is to voun interest. J. D. GASKILL. Oct 5th, '82. 1m BLAGKMER &TAYL0R i HAVING PURCHASED the OF WM. SMITHDEAL, AS WELL AS THE INTEREST OF R. R. Crawford, of the firm of R. R. CRAWFORD & CO., We are now prepared to supply customers with all kinds of our AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, In addition to the Rest Selected Stock of HARD W ARE iu the STATE. We also handls V Rifle.and Blasting Powder FUSE and a full line of Mining Supplies. We will Duplicate Any Prices in the State. CALL AND SEE US. W.S.BLACOER, Oct. 5, 1882. SAM'L TAYLOEt 50: ly NOTICE. A meeting of the Stockholders of the 1 TI 1 1 f Western JNoriii uamnna iui ivoau wm- pany is called to meet in Salisbury N. C. on 1 liursuay, November vm, loo-;. Ry order of the Rosird of Directors. GEO. P. ERWIN, Oct. 5th 1882. '(Sec. &. Tieas. 51:4t. Notice to Creditors. All Persons having claims against the estate of Zarhariah Lyerly, dee'd, are here bv notified to exhibit the same to the un dersigned on or lefore the 20th day of Oc -m nnay w w tnlr 1883. or this notice w nu u iiiccu in bar of their recovery. . l:4t-pd. TOBIAS LYERLY, Ext. 1882. GUANO ' '"'!- Guano Co. Capital $ ,ooo.Q0O.rJ S. - sales being the largest , ; s.. prepared forlmn ediate use. A i it year after 'ea ; . Sale By i A r r- f ATT PIT T5T3 HTaTTT K - ij .-M CTTTON1 Tuesday, November: 7th, 1882. Notice is hereby given that an election: j ' will beheld at the several election precincts I in Rowan county, on Tuesday, the ?th day of November,.. D. 1882. for the following named officers : j i 1. For one Associate; Justice of the. Su preme Court; Six Judsresof the Superior Court, and a Solicitor j for the Sixth j Jo- dicial District. J. " . S 2. For a Representative in the Congress of the United States for it he State at large.1 3. For a Representative in the Congress of the United States fori 'the Seventh Con gressional District. 4. For Senator of the, 30th District and one member of the House! of Representatives;'-' 5. For Sheriff, Clerk of Superior .-Court, Register of .Deed, Surveyor, Treasurer jand Coroner. . j ' j. G. For Township Constable. J J3r"The-polls will Ik 'opened from seven o clock in no hnqer. the inoruni''; until sun-set, and BSTThe Judges of Election count out the ballots untif after must not the polls are closed. B3F"No person shall lie allowed ti Voto unless he is registered; and no elector shall be allowed to register or voto unlessLho all. ill liva' focll.ftl in ftl.A Kt.itA lutiluA ii ? months, and in the county xikutv1 days, I next preceding the election. . j -.J j. vj. A ivl If ft I i , olJITIU r 'o KtHvun an County. !2. 5 1:1 ill Salisbury, N. C, Oct. 188 THE NORTH STATE LIFE AND NUPTIAL ASSOCIATION OF I SALISBURY NORTH CAROLINA. Chartered under the Laws of North Carolina. and irvr AtT A"- t FROM $1,000 TO $5,000. ! it: J.D. McNBBLV .t-.-r. TrolJenti W. T. LINTOXL....Vlce-rj-ei!tant Oen'l Manager. JAMKS. M. OKAY L Hocfetary. J. MAMt.'EL McCUnBINS,..4 Treasurer. Dr. JOHN WHITEUEAU.....4 Mcctltail DlrBctor. lion. J. S. HKNDEIISON......L lal Aavlser.i Refer to the Bank and business men of Salisbury. Reliable, energetic - local 'and traveling agents wanted everywhere. . For planstcrms to agents, blanks, any information whatever, ADDRESS JAMES M. GRAY and Secretary. ttTWe are Agents for all the best companies in the United 'States, and.jwill 13 1 . r ii can recommend, and wilt will not -recom-J mend of a. wild cat character. Apply atj our office, or to the Secretary. 1 I :?:tf ' lie rlad to take annlicstions in anv that wo ! FOR TUB WI1BAT CROP. ALLISON fis ADDISON'S it STAR BRAND' COMPLETE MANURE 1 Combines the activity Perurian Ha-f wo with the trong and lastiugfjfetsojAn'i imal Bona. " 1 I i It is prepared under cmr personal supcr- vision, and in nuideof the best material contains no thoddij oruUier inferior a-tj ntonidtes. j, -f TI It is Fine, Dry and in ExcelJ lent Condition for Drilling, j This Fertilizer has been in use tvdred yearn, anu nut yunvi npmin cellenec second to none. OVA 11 ANTED. nrsTAX'DAIii) i T11 n lTTOflni TV tAIlluJ l Dj!l SURPASSED! Allison & Addison, Ma n u faeturcrs, Hit hmond, FOU S VLU BV J. ALLEN BROWN, Salisbury, N. C-i" R. M. Roskboro, lhuji CH'-ck pt tiou. X. C, and by Agehti at all lmor- tant IM,iu throughout the wheat grow,! i11,rM-.iioni of North Carolina. 811 IBIS i 4":lt pd 4 1 r.1 -I t't ii; t I: of whom ? Do you approve of j the thrown out. i I - 4 'ji' - t 4

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