w Ills SALipUEY.IlK C, APRIL 26, 1883. Watchman. I lit? vydl(Jl i- -. 1 : . . ; ; . r ' ' --rt- : ' F ..ffltr The Carolina Watchman, ! ABtl9ft T11E YEA1M832. PKE.fl.WifX ADVANCE. , STETTEfc T CELEBRATED 1 1 A . Witt tbf g resHW-swve, mmwimfi Stomach Bitters, will do, must be gathered from what it has done. It baa effected rad- -ical cures in thousands of cases of dyspep its bilious disorders, intermittent fever, nerVotis affecttons, general debility, con tipation, .sick; headache, mental despon dency a(d toe peculiar complaints and disabiiitief to which the feeble are so abject, i Druggists and Dealers . r w 29:ly j II. .9 generally. , arle t0 BOOTS, SHOS & GAITERS, m order: Alliw i k f irst Class seventeen 1 ea "work i nprlem.'P.-4ll Material of the best grade, and work 5one In th latest styles Ready nihile wttrk always on band- Ue.palrlng neatly audprompi lv f'one. onb rs by mal 1 nroinpt lymied. X7ixi.. Snsle. UOj. t SansBLr. N. 0. CK1EB &TAYL0B HAtlNS PURCHASED f THE WM, SMITHDEAL, as vell as Tin: interest of R- R Crawfovtl, of the firm of R. B. CRAWFORD & CO., I f " v We ie nV prepared to supply our custoaurs with all binds of AGRIfj IMPLEMENTS, llest Selected Stock of k Rb W ARE in the f S T A T E. We ;ilsoJl:amllo Rill, ejantl Blasting Powder :U,1 I full Vimf nt 'ML,;..., C....H,... will 1 DPpcate Any Prices in the State. CAI it. SEE US. 00 I r : it j OF A XI) ,- 1 SA'a'L TAYLOR. 50:ly The Rluff'aaJo A lover gave the wedding Into the goldsmith's hand. "Grave roe." he said, " tend thought Within the golden ban." I The goldsmith-graved, With careful art' "Till death us part." The wedding bell rang gladly out, The husband said, "O, wile i. Together we shall share the gr4 The happiness of life. , I -gave to thee My hand, oiy heart, g Till Death us part. 'Twas she that lifted now his hand, (0, love, that this should be!) Then on it placed the golden hand, And whispered tenderly : T Till Death us join, Lo, thou art mine And I t ni thine ! i "And when Death joins wc never more Shall know an aching heart, The bridal of that better love Death has no power to part. That troth will be For thee and uie Eternity." rsf; i So np the hill and down the hill Through fifty changing years, They shared each other's happiness, They dried each otlier's tears. Alas ! A 1 is ! That Death's cold dart Such love can-part ! But one sad day she stood alone Beside his narrow bed; She-drew the ring from off her hand, And to the goldsmith said : ) "Oh, man who graved With careful art, 'Till death us part, Now grave four other words for me "Till Death us join." He took The precious golden band once more, With solemn, wistful look, And wrought with care, For love, not coin, "Till Death us join." i - An Open Letter to a Farmer's Boy, - You ask me for some advice as to your future work in life. You say j that you are dissatisfied with the pros- pect of being a hard working farm- er all your days, but at the same time ' you do not consider yonrself a genius, and do not expect to become a Stew- art or a Vanderbuilt, or to acquire a vast rortuue by speculation. You ex- pect to work tor your living but you the profitless gossip if he does not think there may be some pursuit choose to hear it. Statistics show that which would be equally remunerative farmers live longer than men in any and not so laborious and monotonous other pursuit except Washington's as -the farmer's. You ask if it would body-servants. The farmer can look not be better for you to become a forward to an earthly existence longer "first-class mechanic" than to be a by several years thau that of the black farmer, j smith, the carpenter, the machinist, This is an important question, not the mason, the printer, or any other alone to you, but to many other boys artisan, and as long as that of the av who take a serious view of life; whose eragc professional man. common sense gives them a fairly cor- Third, the farmer has the means rect estimate of their own powers and of obtaining mental culture if he has capabilities, and who wish to learn a the will. The dissatisfaction with business" for which they are adapted, j which many farmers and farmers' which will give them fair wages, a boys look upon their lot in life comes reasonable amount of leisure, aud a from their having too much hard respectable position in life, work and too little spare time. They Now, it is a serious fact that work- have not yet learned to adapt them ers in almost every branch of indue- selves to the modern ten-hour law of try take a gloomy view of their own labor. They toil fourteen hours a business, think almost everybody else day, aud come home exhausted and is better off than they are, and gener- ' fit for nothing but supper and bed. ally try to discourage others from en- They feel discouraged and dishcarten tering their vocation. The farmer and ed at such a prospect through life, meejianicltre about equally ready to Overwork is the thief that steals the say, "Onr business is going to the farmer's happiness. But it ought not dogs. If "were a young man I should : to be so. A farm can be made to learn something else," Sometimes jpay on the ten-hour plan. I have in they do this from the selfish desire to mind a farmer who makes his farm keep down the supply of workers in pay a good dividend, takes an active their own line, in order that the de-! interest in the world's work, has a maud for them may be greater; some fair libraryt keeps abreast of thought times from the habit of judging other . of the age, spends Iris evenings in occupations by the staudard of their reading and writing, is teaching his most successful men. 'I sons the value of study and work coin But the fact remains, in spite of bincd, and does all this on ten hours this almost universal disnarasrement of their own pursuits among working- labor that we put into a thing that men, that some occupations are more, determines the result, it is the intel sme less, desirable than others; and ligenoe. The Xing of Spain, you 1 shall try to give you a few reasons have no doubt read, spent a day in for thinking that a farmer's boy, un- trying to stand an egg on end ; Col less he has a very decided -bent for : umbus did for him in a second. An mechauical pursuits, such as will j hour spent in thinking out a new way quickly take him into that "upper sto- will often accomplish more than fif ry" where there is always plenty of Ueen speut in working in the old way. room and recompense, had better . Farming requires enterprise and stfck to the farm." thought quite as much as any other First, the farmer has the priceless business; and fresh plans cannot boon of independence. He is his own come from a weary brain. Ten hours 1 IT 1 I 1 l-, t Jfc . 1. .. . - a o employer, ne comes auu goes wueii he pleases, not when anotherman pletises. He is responsible to no one but himself. He is captain on his own ship. No matter if Jie onlj has a potato patch; his rule there is none to dispute in Jius workshop. His prosperity depends upon hisdwn thrift and enterprise, not upou the prosper ity and liberality of an employer. He asks no man what he shall do or how he shall do it, except as a matter of advice. He "cares no more for Lord James Douglas than Lord James Douglas cares for him." He is a man amone men, a sovereign of his own domain. The man who owns and -- i cultivates his little piece of ground reflection while promoting lus busi can snap his fingers at Mr. Lofty, and ' ness interests. sit on his fence with his hands in his So, my boy, if you wish to be jnan pockets when the Great Mogul goes . ly, self-reliant, anil independent ; if by; for he is getting his own living 'you wish to be your own employer at firfct hand and need ask no favors and your own master ; if you wish to of any one. The average mechanic, make a fair living indeemlently of ilw. uhr hand, is little more than another's caprice ; if you wish to lay a hired ert while he remains a me- chanic; he surrenders his individual to build our career j if you wish liberty to his employer for his wages, to avoid the temptation into which so and works through another man's : many artisans sink year after year; brains; he is an automaton manipula- : if you whish to elevate your mind, ted by the golden wires of capital, broaden your smpathies, and deepen He learns to gauge his work by what ! your understanding by study, reflee is requiredof intelligent at d conscien-1 tion, and association with those who tious service. Unless he is an ex-. will help, not hinder, you in these ceptional case, his self-respect is u- ! these things ; in a word, if you wish derm i ned by the temptation to "loaf to be while the "boss" is not looking, and Healthy, wealthy and; wise, to work industriously under his eve. my advice to you is, tick to the ti i.., 1 1 1 : 1 c .. 11C UCVUIIJC") il SUlll)()-l)OV iUAlUUlt Ul U 1 .. 1 . l' 1 P I man: icurns 10 jook iiuuveiy ana iaer- fully. at his employer, and bridles his manhood through the necessity of pleasing him or losing his work. The ntecTiauic is a subordinate in his de- partment ; the farmer is chief of his; and it is better to bo captain of a ca- : nal boat, and preserve x$)Hr dence, than to be second mate on the , Great Etsteru and have no mind of your own. ' Secondly, the farmer has health; or , the means of eettinff it free of cost if; he he does not possess it. His busi a CD - - i ness assures him, in larger measure than almost any other, of nature's grand conservers of health air and exercise. Ihe5e are better tomes than any which go into people's stomachs. City patients get them after payiug for a doctor's prescription, but to the farmer they come "as free as air." Better than any one else the farmer can combine business and the hygien ist's golden rule: Take the open air the more you take the better ; Follow nature's laws to the very letter; Let the doctors go to the Bay of Biscay, Let alone the gin, the bra:idy and the whis key. Freely exercise, keep you.r spirits ohcerfol, Let no dread of sickness ever make you fearful ; Eat the simplest food, drink the pure cold wntcr water, Then you will be well or at least you ought to. The farmer Is free from many of the temptations which beset the workingmen whose occupations bring many men into close association. The seductions of the dram-shop and of fast society do Hot appeal to him as they do to the townsman. He can choose his associate! instead of having them forced upon him. He is not compelled to listen to the idle story or daily work. It is not the amount of . . .spout m wuia umi iwu jcui. in stuny dv a minii quicueneu oy ii i ii moderate physical exercise instead of exhausted by over-exertion, will achieve vastly more thau twelve honrs of unceasing manual labor. Make no mistake. When a farm is managed in this way the farmer can devote his evenings to study and to rational enjoyment far more effective ly than the mechanic, for he isolated from the distractions which usually surround the latter. Much of the farmer's work, too, does no require the constant straining of the atten tion which many mechanical pursuits demand, and he has opuortunitv for i - mm a solid foundation of health on which a u r 1 9, i the 1. II 111. II, 11, . HI Uo V.I4 (OtlUll TT union Electric Shoe-Blacks." Profeeaor Arytou, in delivering a lec ture at the Loudon Institution, dwelt on t,,e future 8 f electricity as a gieans :'jnden-.LF""tt,g power, worktiig tools ana muehiuea, and propeling train, carriages cars and tricycle. He remarked "At present much household work is done by hand, simply because there are no easily worked machines for doing it. The old kuife board has given way to the rotary knife cleaner ; but even that requires a certain amount of griudiu to give the knives a polish, so that for large estab Hahmeuts a knife-cleauer boy is still ne cessary. The blacking of boots, the black ing of grates, and the cleauiug of door steps are all done iu a most laborious way by hand. Now there cau be no doubt that very shortly electricity will be sup plied, as gas is now, to houses for light ing purK)8es, aud wheu this has bceu ac complished the same wires that convey the electricity for lighting will be em ployed to convey the power to work electric motors, to turn rotary knife clean ers, to turu a wheel for the blacking of boots and a small motor carrying a brush like the one iu my hand will simply be .passed by the servant all over the grate for the purpose of giving it a good black polish. The black-lead brush will then be taken off and replaced by th blacking brush far the boots, aud later on iu the day a rotary flannel will officiate for the doorsteps. " There is indued scarcely a limit to the possibility of electricity in the driving of small machines, aud especially machines of the class that can be taken to the work instead of th work being taken to them. Iu many cases this will be effected with stored electricity. "Two years ago,1' said the professor, "the storage of elec tric energy in black boxes, and their pow er takeu out of them by Sir William Thompson, may have passed before the minds of the public as one of those mere seven days' wonders which in these latter times have become so common. But to the scientific man, who could foresee the possibilities connected with the electrical storage of power, these experiments of Sir Wm. Thompson were of pre-eminent importance. The two latest employments of elec tricity stored in Faure-Sellon-Valckmar accumulators are in the boat "Electrici ty," which many have seen running at Kew, and the electric tricycle of Profes sor Perry and mj-self. Iu the tricycle no work is done by the rider, but little black boxes, carried on the base-board, contain the stored electric energy, pretty much in the sa me way as a horse's body con tains its breakfast of oats and hay, with the difference that with the accumulator it is the receptacle which has weight, so that neither in receiving its feed iu the morning nor discharging its power da- ; ring the day does the accumulator gaiu or lose in its weight. By means of a tap the rider can turn on more or less elec tricity, and go faster or slower." A Desperado Mcetn Fate Dakersville. Near William Pritchard "Bad Bill" was a notorious outlaw who has long been operating in this county, Burke and Ilitchell, and in the courts of these three counties, on the criminal side, are all sorts of cases against him, the three sheriffs and their deputies having their pockets full of capiases for him. He es caped arrest by slipping from county to county, living like a beast of prey. Last YVedursday two constables named Burleson, brother, camo up with him in the house of his brother-in-law, the noto rious Keese Blaiock, a few miles this side of Bakersville, iu Mitchell county. They had was rants for him and fr his mistress, Ruth Carpenter, who 'was in the house. Pritchard made no attempt at resistance but said (Jiat the woman was too sick for removal and asked one of the constables to go and ask a doctor who was near by to come and give opinion. Scarcely had the constable gone when PritchaVd snatched a gun aud snapped a cap at the other one. Quick as thought the constable who remained behind threw a bullet into Pritchard1 breast, and the noi eot the firing brining back his comrade they both opened tire upon the desperado who fought to the last, attempting to club his assailants with his gun. Ha was shot twice iu the head and twice in the breast. The couutry is rid of a bad man. Sunday in Spain. The Sundays in Malaga are very different from what they are in England. With tiie exception of their great festivals, which are numerous, Sunday is the gayest of all days. The Alameda is crowded with gaily dressed people, ladies with their mautillas and fans, soldiers, servants, beggars ; here and there a stray priest iu his black gown; and of these people not one in a hun dred has been in chuh. The chtirch- es are empty ; the theatres ate full. DAPvBYS PROPHYLACTIC FLUID A Household Article for Universal Family Um. For Scarlet and Typhoid Fevers, Diphtheria, Sali vation, Ulcerated Sore Throat, SmaU Fox, Measles, i I all Contagious Disease s. Persons waiting on the Sick should use it freely. Scarlet Fever has ever oeen known to spread where the Fluid was usea. xeuow fever has been cured with it l black vomit had taken place. The cases oi uipntneria yield to it. F ever ed and Sick Per SMALL-POX aad FITTING of SmaU Pox PREVENTED A member of my fam ily was taken with Small-pox. I Bsed the Fluid; the patient was not delirious, was not pitted, and was about the house again in three weeks, and no others sona refreshed and Bed Sores prevent ed by bathing with Darby Fluid. Impure Air made harmless and purified. For Sore Throat U is a tare cure. Contagion destroyed. For Frosted Feet, Chilblains, Piles, ChiAngs, etc Rheumatism cured.. Soft White Complex ions secured by its use. Ship Fever prevented. To purify the Breath, Cleanse the Teeth it can't be surpassed. Catarrh relieved and cured. Kryslpeias cured. Horns relieved instantly. Scars prevented. Bysentery cured. Wounds healed rapidly. Scurvy cured. An Antidote for Animal or Vegetable Poisons, Stings, etc. 1 used the Fluid during our present affliction with Scarlet Fever with de cided advantage. It is indispensable to the sick room. Wm. F. Sand ford, Eyrie, Ala. had it. J. W. Pah insom, Philadelphia. The physicians hen use Darbys Fluid very successfully in the treat ment of Diphtheria. A. Stollrnwkxcic, Greensboro, Ala. Tetter dried up. Cholera prevented. Ulcers purified and healed. In eases of Death it should be used about the corpse it wilt prevent any unpleas ant smell. The eminent Phy sician, dr. MARION SIMS, M. TX, New York, says: "I an convinced Prof. Darby Prophy lactic Fluid is a valuable disinfectant." Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. , ltiy to the most excellent qualities of Prof Darbys Prophylactic Fluid. As a disinfectant and detergent it is both theoretically and practically superior to any preparation with which I am ac quainted. N. T. Lupton, Prof. Chemistry. Darbya Fluid Is Recommended by Hon. Alexander H. Stsfiiens, of Georgia -Rev. Chas F. Deems, D.D.. Church of the Strangers, N. Y.; Tos. LeCokte, Columbia, Prof.,University,S.C. Rev. A. J. Battle, Prof., Mercer University; Rev. Gao. F. Piekce, Bishop M. E. Church. INDISPENSABLK TO EVERT HOME, miecuy harmless. Used internally or externally for Man or Beast. rhe Fluid has been thoroughly tested, and we m - . - have abiin lant evidence that it has done ever ttM .-1,...! v r. II e . eryuung .....- .i.ihii-u. i ji uniirr iniormation ?et nl vmr jjrugjist a pamphlet or send to the proprietors. ......... wl iww J. H. ZEIUN ft CO., Ma nufacturing Chem ists, PHILADELPHIA. The statistics of crimes iu the South published by Redfield some years ago appeared to us so far at variance with the peaceful disposition of our people that we promptly rejected them as unworthy ot credence. All of us have more or less information about the state of society iu the various sections of the Union aud we preferred to rely on this general informa tion to accepting what had t ho appear ance of cooked figures prepared to order or doctored for a purpose. The census is impartial. Its figures are taken from the most reliable sources aud the work has been done thoroughly. It is proper that we should be judged by the census figures aud we are uothing loth to stand the test. The compilation below, taken by the Charleston Courier from the census of 1880, tells a tale that we of the Sonth need net be at ulP as hamed of. All that we desire is that the truth shall appear, aud these figures speak the truth as near as the thorough aud impartial agents of the government have bceu able to arrive at it. Iu the following table the population of all the Kew England States is given, with the number of prisoners and the pei cent age of prisoners as compared with the total populatiou iu each of the States: Per cent. Pop. Pr's. Connecticut, 622.7U0 732 Maine, 648,036 408 Massachusetts, 1,783,085 3,659 N. Hampshire, 346,IH)1 273 Rhode Island, 276,531 320 Vermont, 332,286 261 Pr'$. .0011 .0006 .0020 .0007 .001 1 .0007 Total, 4,010,529 5,653 '.0014 These figures show that there are 14 i V. F.uidnnd to ever ten i" - o " thousand people. The following table gives the same in formation concerning the Southern States: ifer cent. Pop. Pr'. Alabama, 1,262,505 1,398 Arkansas, 802,525 767 Florida, 269,493 275 Georgia, 1,543,180 1,837 Louisiana, 939,6 1,077 Mississippi, 1,131,597 1,329 N. Carolina, 1,399,750 1,619 S. Caroliua, 995,577 643 Tennessee, . 1,542,359 2,129 Texas, 1,591,749 3,153 IV. .0011 .0009 .0010 .0011 .0010 .0010 .0011 JJXAA .1)013 .0()J1) Total, 11,477,681 14,220 .0012 From the above it appears that eveu counting in Texas there are only 12 pris .niieraat the South to every ten thousand of population. They embrace both whites and blacks, ant it is uianiiesuy unmir to compare the tutored and learued aad tr.-ined people of the North with the Southern negroes. The latter should not be counted. The comparison should be made betweeu the whites of tho two sec tions respectively. Aud tbeso are the figures relative to the Southern whites: V1ite Pop. GG2,185 591,531 142,605 816,900 454,954 479,398 867,242 391,105 1,138,831 1,197,237 White Per Cent. Pr'. 221 302 42 231 230 153 601 56 770 1,579 Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, N. Carolina, S. Carolina, Tenn esse, Texas, Total, 6,741,994 4,191 .OOUb oolv six From this it appeurs that whites in ten thousand are in durance I I Diphtheria I ! OsB3BSKrssssscBB .0003 .0005 .0003 -.0002 .0005 .0003 .0007 .0001 .0007 .0013 NEW SPRING GOODS ! asssssssWsssfc?. jBWn-'-lf?'!? Vtfftfi IW? shNi KLUTTZ & Have now received their entire rtock of Sorin? and Rummr ftnrri -m..k w,. taoMl selected with Rreat care to suit the varied wants and tastes of their numerous c&toBien all of which they offer as cheap as the cheapest. They hove aowHo Store the . T. A "P?rTT,Qrn A CGAT3rrirT?XTrri -r-n DRY GOODS NOTIONS, CLOTHING, FURNISHING AND FAMILY .m they have bought for mauy seasons. "A f UU ASoUK I MEHT UF FIVE CENT TINWARE We still have the best FLOUR, OAT MEAL, MEATS, SUGARS, TEAS COFFEES, RrcE, CANNED FRUIT8, JFLLD2S, PURE LARD, BRAN, 4 MEAL, New Orleans MOLASSES and SYRUPS, &e. A full anoorttnent of ! S I 2 : FAMILY MEDICINES. -Agents for Coats' ! QTT 4 ,Tn VL'hw. Ii ic KSBaVttMsr cloea an1 uM.h v w, veuevu o &Jbf oa. vioiw, auu nuivu (Jome and See us - 1 sVltfjl lf or sell, for we will do you good. W. W. TATLOR & D. J. BOOTtAH. before April 13, 1883 NOfiTH CAROLINA, BOW AN COUNTY, ' IN THE SUPE RIOR CO CRT. Nancy L. Boyd, Plaintiff, ) aqainat Suit for Divorce Henry Boyd, DefiTt. ) It appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, that Henry Boyd, the defendent above named, is a non-resident of this State, It is ordered that publication be made in the "Carolina Watchman." a newspaper published in Rowan county, notifying the Henry Boyd to be and appear before the Judge of our Superior Court, at a court to be hold for the County of Rowan, at the Court-House in Salisbury, on the 9th Mon day after the 4th Monday of March, 1883, and answer the complaint which will be de posited Fn the office of the Clerk of the Su perior Court of said county, within the first three davs of said term, and the said defen dant is notified that if he fail to answer the sai(1 complaint during the said term, the plaintiff" will apply to the Court for the re lict demanded in the complaint. J. M. HORAH, Clerk 24:6w Sup. Court, Rowan County. ; vile at the South, while in the New Eng land States the number is 14. if now we ; exclude Texas, which is a sort of recoir ! nized bete noir, the number of whites in 1 prison at the Sonth would be only about four and a half in ten thousand, to New England's fourteen. That is, Now Eng land lias relatively three tunes as many j penitentiary birds ns the white South ex cluding Texas. Four million whites in I New England have a prison population of 5.653. Five million ami five hundred thousand whites at the South haveapris on population of 2,612. Behold the dif . ference. Now let the leviathan rage and 1 Carl Schurz and the Nation gnash their I teeth. The truth is mighty aud will pre vail. Grapes and Trees iu North Carolina. Wilmington Star. We promised to give a few statistics from Mr. Hale's "Woods ami l imbers ot JNortn aoiio. i lie urupw. i.uu ...u.- . I : M rn !..,. - n i,,,h . o-nnnna to North Caro l na are numerous and superior enouau to attract the attention or . i . . . m all persons who desire investment in that way or who are practical vintners. The summer grape is common to all parts of the United States andts found mail JNortntJaroii- na. From this grape come the varieties, the Warren, Pauline, the Lincoln ami some ten or twelve others. The Fox grape grows in middle North Carolina and from it come the cultivated varieties, the Isabella, Ca tawba, Concord, and a dozen or mors. In this State the Isabella was first found in the Cape Fear section, but is thought to have come ii wm puuin v. hi ui ma. ii Ma - not of foreign origin. The Catawba grape originated in Buncombe county. Then there is the Muscadine. Note. We think Mr. Hale is in errorjn respect to the nativitj of at lenat two of the grapes mentioned above: the "Concord" and the "Lincoln." The fir t is of Concord, Mass., the latter has been known in France and Germany tao long to be called a native of North Carolina. m Dxxc 'iR- The worst way of meeting a danger is to despise iu The most foolish way of describing it is to depreciate. The boldest course is the most prudent, the cool- est is the inost safe. A man or a nation which looks a crisis in the face, which gau- bos its magnitude and estimates consc- quences that manor that nation tomes to contest with the Inst guarantees of firmness and, therefore with the highest assuranccof success. WAsmxcTos, April l'J. -Tho ooont of thecash in the trcHsary was ejpjfleted to- day. Th.e entire eurrem y wascounted once by the committee appointed by the iwrre- fL nr the Treacurx-. then turned over to , the representative of Treasurer Wyman and ,....,ted. The NM,k of the treasury now remain ii be .'xuti!ned. Ksw ksKT sfK r iH1' ien RENDIEMAN GOODS. SHOES. Ladles' amUvW., rath GROCERIES new stock of TABLE and GLASSWARE. Spool Cotton. Agents for the EMPIRE T... 4.... A AA VI " T 5 - vt Ki UUC1 1U1 iUU 1 U5. OI illll CUltOU klt Salusiuess. J. TL. KEEN 9 Salisbury, N. C. .1 f i -tt 4vr at '-ifm-WljsaiM Apt fir PBINIX IRON- WORKS, t .7 iifiies, Boilers, Saw W8t AND m is TURBINE WHEELS Also, Contractor and Builder. Ja 25, '83. ly v -.- - - ! 1 J. ELECTION NOTICE I Notice is hereby given that Municipal Elections will be held for the towns of Salisbury, Gold Hill, Eum hville aud Thirds Creek, on Monday, the 7th day of May, A. D. 1883. The polls will be opened in each of those towns from 7 o'clock in the morning until ' sunset, and no longer. Each qualified elec tor will be permitted to vote lor municipal officers, if duly registered. C. V. K RIDER, Sh'ff of Rowan County. March 28, 1883.-lm Q 1 1 a - 33 g 3 0 so w. d a 3 e is - so 1 2s 7.1 a c "1 E H e I Bel C3 S o 1 - 2 u II 0 U a 35 3 Z m j 2 s 5 1 ft kQ I S3 MO' ana P5x mmt u2iCS HR1 eg o r3 rs S H g 5 Er o B a Great Headers. The girl or hoy who reads the greatest numW of books is not always the best informed because they read without judgment. We know of some young people who have a strange ambition to be considered "great readers." They do not use the word "great" in reference to what they learn by reading, but in regard to the number of books and pages that they read. They are not careful as to the qual ity. Usually this class of readers select tho poorest quality, because " tln-y can get through with it quicker. Indeed they will sometimes boast of the rapidity with which) ( they can read a book, as though it were i an occasion of honest pride to read a whole volume at one fitting. They forget that it j8 not tj1 amount of reading which benefits ont.t but the quality and the manner in .which the book is used. Some get more good from a page than others from a volume. i - l9m- ''m . Ex-Senator Kellotfg sbast that it was his right howl that saved the Repobtleaw pt ty io 18768061110 us decidedly injudic. us in vicwoftticfact that he mutsoon appar be- forea jury of his coontrymen Tin De-nocrsts on that jury will never forgive him for coaBtinsr out Tildcn, uor the Republicns fo . . n counting m Hayes. . . - Goss-P the putting two and two togeth, ei and nuking live of ihen. o La Nli , JQ Tf mam w t . m I -- j c lo 1 ill ?nl y

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