Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 19, 1883, edition 1 / Page 3
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. - - ; i 1 - ' LP C A L. , 1 1IAY. JULY 19, 1883. cucription Rates : . il.:..:rwt ratoa tf the Carol! tin pn ii ii. " " J - ii'tjdelayed3nio,82.00 . m'cdel'ed 1? mo'sSSJiU lHteru,eif8raieJ tl,i ooDfcjr are filing ufrsfeet this morning. :hgr leadflrsfiH bePleaMd with the T of Willi lNey cruising about the Speof Go4 HiiMi and beyond. w I-i0 Dr M. wluehesd, at Morchead City, .e rtgret toflenfn, was sick enongh to Loire the Ire!1" al,d lldP of hi Son' Dr.Jol.u Whitehead. V were Bleaaea io mrai m miti, Tuewhiv evening, ev. u. tT.umwsssv, i the Metodt E. Church, making a k brfef Tisit tj fii4iidi here, on his return excursion west. from an It is wortf the while of a Special effort ,.t Iho sit is that tears off the i nun T paling :s eiif IbsingJ. D. MtAeeiy s prop- I ..... tin. 1:1 III I kit Oil KisluT -.r mill nemi")," r- o v " I ? . 1 i fm I .. 1 1 i iftiulii'tiiiia ntv. itreft. i tic ciwmwj i iiim"."-i - ought to c exposeuauu pmi- town authorities should jUsh scamp jibed, and riltrll ll Mil o our otlei n l e ward for him. o -L- M. Morgan proposes to ive MiTouey's Hall, It is an amateur cololcd ai'torn, with Mr. Mor jtgrrlaiid he pledges that it gliall he gHM iut way. Mr. John witfitahiiieit at i-vi-niiii: next. 1 III -mi",. r w company of Mill ma 111 -o- Tlie ladies of the Presbyterian church of Newton fill Jve a Soiree ou Tuesday, July 24th, fj,r thf benefit of the Church. An opportunity Jrill be offered to hear the best tujisiejsgiis of the State ; among thi in Prnf. hud 38 r. Bauuiatin, Miss L.in- da Ritniple ace with rfcwKu Sunt hern load, .passet dav. They i uul frof. Evans. Prof. Ilay- is, fill entertain the audi- - I o iusnyauce men, a whole car up .fie Western Road vester ro tiihulit their annual meet ing soniewlfcre it the 'Hand of the sky." Surely, if afty bly of men need sublime itptratioiisf usuautee men ought to come first. 1 ' William iarrfwn, son of Sam1! R. Ilar riiea, Mi.,of tlis city, was bitten by a pet dog a ft w , ddk's ago, which had syin tsnsofrah es. Mr. If. went to Iredell county to t ike i he lienetlt of the mad stone, iiw netl ly a Mr. Dalton, tif that county, aiiret; ned feeling more at ease in regard tt! hislcase, and after a day or two at liofiie, iweiit on a visit to the White-Sulp kur Springs in V i ry in ia. J t fiof.C. I. Smith is gathering minerals and ores, in tho inountaius for the IIos- tou KxpoMiioi He complains of the tardiness ofi thse who have promised to furnish srcinieis. and noti tie's them that MINING. T. K. BRUNBR, MANAtiEJt; Crowell Mine, Stanly Co. N. C. Active work has been resumed upon thin mine. The shaft is being gunk one hundred feet deeper, at which depth it is expected that the rich vein upon the east will come into the shaft. From the 100 foot level ore ef very Hue quality is now being taken out from the above named vein which will bo milled as soon as the impiovements for milling have been com pleted. These improvements are inten ded to save the fine gold and sqlphurets which could not be satisfactorily done by the former process. The mill will be started next week; a large quantity of of ore being ready for the mill. Our mining Editor visited this miue last week and was much pleased at the activity and energy displayed and was shown excellent ore samples of which a good lot has been seemed for the Bos to.i Exposition. Mr. N. U. McCanless of Gold Hill is the Superintendent in charge, and he is very sanguine in regard to the bright future for the C rowel I mine. the tUttiteH expire lie out of i T. K. Bruno- ii elrietlv owu efforts iiiiff for such work will goon A shuijar not itieat ion may not ace in this section, though reiving on Iris o dbllect them. mica i, lfKMJT with Mie junior in Montgomery county, hunting up ores and other thiiigi fu the Boston Exposition, senior not vejry well and crowded ith other liusiiiess, and the thermometer atlH!!5, and every farmer in the land minding hujown business, uary disturber of the jieace on a rampage, and spring roosters refusing to ciow, amino mad dog furor tfxcHing the community, ami too soon by two weeks for sowing turnips, with oetbin ( bnt Dr. Sutnmerell passing off big toiiitot-8 for pills among his pa tieuts, it h hard time for locals. We wu't maktf them worth a cent under a wid suiiHuef- sin, with all around us try ing to keep jeoql. The only sound which greet us is Morgan's ice cream mill, and Blackmer & Taylor's clinking hardware, anid Uie wheat thresher's Tin horn iu the waway drstauce lazily tootiiiK no bus! new. -o- CiirRCH. -New and ilKluC M-1lil1.iU . li.l I'l; b(o nmwu n nair handsome tta nt d jllftt lwiii t.J.. :i. .i i i' i iu i ne cuancel oi st. uikcs cllureJ iii tiis jilace. The window in the ed f the tflmcel is a triple aiudow. In 6 w,,trt! t,,tMe is the figure of Christ thc Good SUeppard with a Iamb in his arms. u ie SIV OM Rh lig,t u rtguIe 01 St. Lukehiftr whom the Church was "auied. VMiill u:. i.. a. H Mi, thj lieloved disciple. Above the ,r baygji, ,lt! tracery, there Is a cross ut 8i(U' '1 a crown on the other, W'thadovalve. The centre bay of ;s window; isa memorial of Bishop At nson, wiq,, fr u,01.e'(lrt twenty-seven govened the Church in North Car 0ia. Ank-i.J i j. - y"v yj is a memorial oi If South Carolina who was , " , ecto of thil Church from 1836 to 1846. third. $ a jnemoiial of tho Kev. John fl larkerUoltoiiu Mr. Davis and JhWi Chureli for about a 51 Taci"b al becoming Sector, W 'daiedto the priesthootl, contii: i o for elevn yeas until his death, ''ere nn nlo two smaller windows in -wdes orftbi Chancel. One containing Mr8!ve f T gmb, is a memorial of l tu. MpaV, an(i tm deceased chil renandgljlud.diU, of Mr Wm Mc. JT? Vf ber-coutaius a figure f tad his deceased child- 'hild. KiMxTn-iJIc Items. The summer communion at St. Enoch church drew an immense crowd to this place last Sunday. Rev. H. Dyisinger, of Mooresville, preached, and a very large number of persons- participated in the communion. ! There will be a marriage celebrated in St. Enoch ou the 18th instant,! at early caudle lighting. The happv couple are Mr. 11. It. Overcash and -Miss M. E. Wil helni ; both of Atwell township. began not The threshers .Mon (la v. uheat is well as was expected. The school opened with pects than ever before. their turning work on out as brighter pros-YY. ti...n ' 1 " ""-inoiiai oi sir. area Mendjrsfn and his deceased chil !,e" ami ,L,Jj i , ....... ft fiad k 1 I believewiiie ' J rH lave lo he seen to lie np Iterated, j 1 DANISH BARQUE RIALTO. Oh the Voyage from Boston, Mass., to Port-Elizabeth, Cape of XJood Hope. Xat, 32 47' N. Lox. 4U 39' W. Makcii 10th, 1833 Well, we are at hist out of the "forty tudes" (40 N.) ! Out of the region of refrigerated ipednl ex tremities, and frozeu nasal organs .' Won der how the Bostonians are disporting themselves this morning ! Giess they would like to swap climates loilg enough to get thawed out. Lots of porpoises skipping aronud the bows, I gauged one of the festive creatures iu the back, with a harpoon, and porpoise steak will for.n an impoitant item in this evening's 'memi.' ..'The Danos, who believe in de scriptive titles, call them "Switie Fish." 18th. Yesterday we passeiH an Am. Barqiientino which left Boston for Cape of Good Hope two days before we sailed. Bravo Kialto ! To-day we have in sight a barque steering South. This is Palm Sun day,, Two years ago to-day I landed iu Montevideo, South America. ; 19th. Strong breeze, tii:e weather, tol erably high seas on the beam. What has become of the N. E. trade wind f It seems to have swapiwd places withjtlie S. E. trade, or blown itself away. This is the fourth time fliat I have been iu these latitudes and found it away from home. Ancient mariners, those pragmatical obi bores, tell us that thirty years! ago, iii a space extending from 15 W. Lou. to 73 W. and from 30 N. Lat. to the j Equator, the wind scarcely ever varied a point from N. E. except duiiug a hurricanej but from that period it has been slowly but surely dying out. This morning between three and four o'clock we came very near being ruu down by a brigautine, evidently a Spaniard. We could distinctly hear tlie voices of the men on board. March 21st. Lat. 15 31' N.-jLon. 37 56' W. Three week out to-day. The weather ho, very hot. The deck is a mass of seething, semi, liquid pitch, which makes it peculiarly interesting to those who indulge iu wearing bare head ed feet. We are now iu the region of that aqua aerial celebrity, yclept nying dull. Due of an iiKiuiriug turn of mind ami a thirst for discovery came on board last night. He remained and the express ive face of our Haitien oat assumed a look of serene joy, which betokeued in ward suf-tish-ency. 22d. Last night we saw the Southern Cross exactly ahead of us, while iu the dim distance" astern is our old associate the North Star. The cold clear radiance of the icy North blending with the soft beams of the balmy Southland. To-uight I beheld a spectacle which inspired emo tions otherwise than poetical a centi pede ! He came out from between my blaukets! Ugh ! If there is anything I mortaIlydetest, loathe and abhor, it is that species of insects which has its pos terior extremity whittled do n to a sharp point. I started iu j uusuit of this crea ture, murder iu my eye, ami an old boot iu my baud I was the maddest, but he was a trifle ahead in the number of legs. However, I got a whack at liina which cufcqff his connection with the rear, but I found that iu dividing his anatomical structure ihy troubles had multiplied, for the 'aft' end went full speed astern, while the forrard' part kept on its course and 'laid to' in a crack for the other part to come along and 'couple up'. I am not natiiiiillv cruel, and when 1 saw so much independent disregard for physiological law displayed by a bug that had nothing but a filed down extremity to com mend him to public notice, 1 desisted and went to bed pondering ou the inscrutable wis dom of Providence which manufactures divimble bugs off hand and yet makes it imiMissible for a man to have even his head chopped off without suffering se rious cousequ'euces. This is a Danish holiday, Thursday before Good Friday. It has a name in Danish but as my time is short and my ink scarce I must refrain from givinu it here. All day long the sailors have been catting up antics. To crowu the whole some of b'qieds put their heads together, and subsequent ly their arms and legs, to form a quadru ped, on which was mounted the boat swain in the full glory of oakum wig and whiskers, and a stove ptpe hat. In a voice which seemed to proceed from his toe nails he' spun the time honored yarn. Being Neptune's ambassador he was sent w ith assurances of a speedy and prosper ous passage through his dominions pro vided his emissaries were treated with ...:. ..ft iliw tit llich iank. 1 o-night is lovely, beautiful, with a beauty which belongs ouly to tropical nights. A solemn .lm tuitods over the surface of the vast bmshiiiif her turbulent tu t . - n to rtrmk. Luna has stieteUeil a ' -i" - - . .. .. i i . ,., liue of molten silvei aei oss uic .u I if waters. Far away over the gently tne Atlantic it bends its tremulous length, far away until it escapes the curious gaze of mortals, form ing a pathway to the invisible world, and tjje feet that press its glittering surface are not human. March 28th. Easter passed very quietly in our community. No one went fishing and fell iu the creek. No one shot some body with a gnu that wasn't loaded. Our church was not filled with a bevy of en thusiastic ladies with decorations of ivy, cedar and holly, beguiling youug men into climbing step ladders, and hammer ing their finger nails off. " Four weeks out to-day and not yet to "the Line." How tiresome this uu varying spectacle of sea and sky is becoming. Gorgeous sunsets, sublime effects of light and shade, moonlight scenes that would inspire the most prosaic, all arc charming for awhile, but when one is forced to gaze upon them day after day. niaht after Lujght, and month after month, only these ana nothing more, it palls upon his senses. 29th. Lat. 3 2fT N. Lon. 30 56' W. This morning, between three and four o'clock we experienced one of those sud den Equatorial saualls which are the bugbear of navigators in this latitude. It was nearly calm and the sky was beautifully clear, except that ahead on the lee bow there hung an intensely black cloud, from which occasionally shot a vivid flash which lit up the sombre mass with a lurid glare. Tne sight of this cloud did not cause much uneasiness as the wind was from the opposite quarter. Suddenly the wind veered completely around, the vessel was caught 'aback' and iu less time than it takes to write it the fury of the squall had burst njiou us. The ship was under full sail when she was struck and immediately careened un til her decks were at an angle of forty five degrees. Some of the lighter sails were blown to tatters, and the s'euder strips of these popping iu the wind sounded like the discharge of firearms. This mingled with the vociferations of the crew, the almost incessant peals of thunder and the roaring of the waves formed a paudemouinm easier to imagine than to describle. How it did rain ! as if the bottom had dropped out of the celestial water tank. Happily these un welcome visitations are of short duration. They come and go in a hurry but oh ! what a forlorn and bedraggled assemblage they leave iu their wake. We made a very unwelcome discovery to-day. Upon broaching our new pitch pine water tank, made in Boston, we found that the contents differed very little iu taste from spirits of turpeutiue. As this contains our water supply for a mont h it is quite a serious matter. Should it prove unfit for use, we must resort to our reserve supply and put the men on short rations, which iu this scorching heat implies real suffcriug and is a fruit ful source of mutiny. One of the crew says he has drunk so much of this tur pentine water that tosiu is oozing from his ores. I do uot credit that statement. One thing how ever, is certain, it is making us an pine lor a change, l have been on a vessel with turpentine cargo, where 1 inhaled turpentine had my food flavor ed with turpentine, laid me down slept and dreamed that I was a long leaf pine, but never before indulged iu turpentine as a be ve cage. March 30th. Lat. 2 47' N. Lon. 30 30' W. Upon taking ihe suu's meridian altitude to-day we discovered that we had met and passed that luminary. He on his annual northward march carrying a supply of sunbeams to bestow upon his children of the frozen Northland. We, speeding ou to encounter the wintry gales of that stormy promontory so appropri ately called (Jabo tie Taraientosa. April 1st. Crossed "the line." This is usually a great event ou ship board, but to-day tlie festivities were marred by the fact that there were no uninitiated on board no one t be ducked, shaved with hoop iron, anointed with tar and grease or undergo any of those ceremonies w hich custom has rendered obligatory on those who for the first time pass the boundary Line of Neptune's austral dominions. Our log book sliows that since leaving Boston we have covered a distance of 3791 miles, and still the unpleasant fact remains that we a:e not half way to our destined port. Strikes me 'tis a long way to carry Bos ton pianos, and Chicago salt pork. There is a tine breeze blowing, but it is provok ingly dead ahead aujl of this kind we have had a superabundance for tho last three weeks. The nearest land is seventy five miles distant a small uninhabited island called Teiredo de san Pedro, or St. Paul's roek It lies in 53 N. 2J 23' VY. The days and nights about equal, there are no so dear to the poet's heart. Old Sol re tires punctually at six o'clock, dropping dowu suddenly, as if com pletelety ex hausted with his arduous tusk of thing hot for us, and springing un in morning at six as if he had overslept himself and must proceed immediately to business. We have not experienced much excessively hot weather during this voy age. Ihe sun is generally overcast during the middle of -the day and toward even ing a breeze springs up. works and looked over, and then it was the word passed up the line (I shall never forget that hour) "Hie works are full of men.'' The farthest man from the line of works was not over tea feet off. Still not the head of a Yankee had showed. They were lying close down waiting to decoy us in. I looked at Col. Hy man and heard him say "retreat." Then it was a run for life one hundred yards across a plain open field before we got to the woods to shelter as. As we ran the full line of Yankee works arose and fired at us. But they must have been scared. They fired too high. But one man was touched and he was ouly slightly hurt. Lieut. Roland Williams, of Company I, was hit on the heel. We got to the woods and fought them behind shelter till the main line made the charge. Maj. Engelhard rode down to the "Thirteenth" andmade them a short talk, j complimenting them on having made "the most gallant charge of the war." I think his horse was either killed by a shell or eating doctrines subversive of law aud he himself damaged in some way while he was sitting at the edge of those woods. Right here let ase congratulate North Carolinians that a history of North Caro lina in the war is in the hands of Col. John A. Sloan. No man fought more bravely or more fait bfuHy all du ring that war than himself. j; IV C. Evans, Cap. Co. "0" ttth N. C. Reg't. I believe It was the duly instance iu the war of a regiment climbing the eut my's breast works lacked tour deep, aud looking over, and Unit a man surrender ing, but all preferring to "run the gaunt let" across a broadened field ro being made prisoners. The thirteenth was Pen der's old regiment. It fought the Yau kess with bayonets at Williamsburg, and one man of it now survives in this coun ty who can show six bayonet wounds and one sabre cut hat he got at Williams burg. Scales' brigade made the last charge that evening at Reams' Station and took the works, losing aud wound ing many of its gallant men in the charge. Adjutant Cal. Grier, now of Charlotte, was shot through and through. T. C. E. Refrigeration iu Fever, j Dr. bdct.es are now making the The First Charge at ileum's Station Cor. of News and Observer. Keipsvillk, N. C, July 9. I notice in your issue of Saturday, the 7th, an editorial iu which you copy froui the Favetteville Observer that "the first charge at Reams' Station was made by- Scales' North Carolina and Tige' Ander son's Georgia brigades, of Wilcox's divis ion, and that the charge was quickly re pulsed though through no fault of Scales aud his gallant men." Now, let s have history right. The first charge was made by the 13th North Carolina regiment, of Scales brigade, which was thrown for ward to drive in the Yankee picket liue, who were pitted at the edge of a thick skirt of woods that bordered a broad, open field about one huu :red yards from the Yankee breast works. This they did in gallant style, the Yankee pickets fly ing across the open field for their line ot works aud the Thirteenth iu hot chase after them like so many fox hounds. Seeing them ruu out from the works as they leaped over, iu the heat of the. mo ment they thought it the enemy leaving their works, aud so called out to Cob llymau, who had ordered them 'halt. "Colonel, we can take the works ; they are leaving them! We cau take the works." "Forward !" cried Hyman, aud away. to the works they went, Col. E. B. Withers niid some of the cottier headed officers advisiui; airainst it. But there was no restraining those men. Forward with the rebel veil and cry, "we cau take the works," they went, till we were right at the woi Us itstjf, ami ou the rijght of the line some of the men even climbed on the The Mormon's in Cleveland. Two -Mormon elders passed t brooch Shelby and tried to preach near Casar iu No. II township. Twenty-five persons assembled at the school house and sever al persons protested peaeably against their preaching their polygamous doc trines in Cleveland county. A citizen publicly asked them if they were Mormons. This they denied, and said they were "Latter Day Saints." They admitted when repeatedly asked in public, that every man had a right to as many wives as he wauted or could mar ry, and said : "This was the law of God and had not been revoked." They allowed the aadience to decide if they should preach. There were ouly three, Win. Parker and his two sons, who voted for them to preach . So t hey did not think it prudent to preach iu Cleveland. Ne threats were use. We are surprised that such men, incul Felix Oswald, in Popular Montl.lv lot August. The premonitory stage of yellow fever is characterized by an intense longing for refrigeration ; fresh air, cold water, cool ing truits or fruit-extracts. The fever dreams of an ague patient are crowded with visions of tree-shade and mountain brooks. Even "chills" are often accom panied by a burning thirst ; ami during the cold stage of au intermittent fever the temjierature of the system is actually ligher than during the sweating stage ; according to Dr. Francis Home, respec tively 104 and 90. In the first place, remove the patient to the a i rest available room in the house. Create a draught, and if possible a cross draught, without fear that the admission of air from a sun blistered courtyard, for instance, would make the room equally uncomfortable : the thermal contrast tself will create an air curreut, and that d i it u ght will be coolor to the feeling than stagnant air of au actually lower tempera ture. The evaporation of ice water or even of common cistern water, will gres.t ly aid the good work. Pour it into flat basins, tubs, etc., aud place them in the center of the room, or get a wheelbarrow full of unglazed bricks, that can be pr -cured at any notterv, out them close t - gether ou the floor and sprinkle them from time to time with cold water. Tl e water will soak into the porous mass and evaporate more rapidly than from au impervious surface. A bundle of bathing sponges or a shear or bulrushes, suspen ded from the ceiling and sprinkled from time to time, will serve the same purpose; and, where ice is cheap, a dog's day sii- occo can oe easily reduced to an Ann! breeze. But the best time to begin the refriger at ton cure is an hour after sunset. On this continent alone, the night air super stition costs annually the lives of about fifteen thousand human beings ; for at least one half of the thirty thousand North Americans who succumb every year to yellow fever, ague and conjestive chill, could have saved themselves by opening their bedroom windows. morality, are allowed to preach iu North Carolina. They are a vile crew teaching hellish doctrines. Cleveland is not the place for Mormans and we compliment No. 11 township for not hearing these polygamous emissaries. Shelby Aurora. A French Detective's Disguises. . From the Nineteenth Century. It was the fourth morning, as I was or dering my dejeuner at the cafe where I had made the appointment, that the de tective came to see me ; but so complete ly was he changed iu appearance, that, uotwithstadiug his having warned me that I would not know him when wo,met, I thought at first the individual who ac costed me must have made a mistake ; and it was ouly when he showed me his card, and whispered something about the Prefecture do Police, that I grasped the fact that this was indeed the geutk man with whom I had bad the interview in the Rue de Jerusalem. Instead of a clean shaved upper lip and chin, he now wore a very neat pair of moustaches, with im perial to match. His hair was dose cut, which, together with the fact that his muttonchop whiskers had disappeared, makes me believe that when I saw him before he must have been wearing a wig and false whiskers. At the Prefecture he was dressed in badly made and some what shabby clothes, and looked like a third or fourth-rate clerk of a small office. But when he came to meet' me at the cafe he was smart, well set up, and had the general appearance of a French military- man in plain clothes, who was trying to look younger than he really was, or what t renenmen would call ceauvant jenne homme. In a word, a more thorough and complete change it would be impossible for any man to work in his owu appeal ance. A Conductor's Pkixtixg-Offic;. It appears that German railway conductors are made happv bv the additiou to their equipment of a paper-milt and printing office, the invention of a Berliu engineer, to be hung around the neck, which, ac cording to au exchange, is to completely manufacture passenger tickets before the eves of the wondering public. The ap paratus is said to be somewhat compli cated in construction, but its manipula tiou is as simple as its working is correct, for. should the onerator not proceed in the way required by the mechanism will not print all the figures and words wanted, but the word "Falsch" (wrong) in the place where the fault was commit ted. At the same time this portable prin ter cheeks the number of tickets issued, so that at any given moment the money in the hands of the conductor can be com pared with the Value of the tickets print ed aud taken. MECKLENBURG IROKf WORKS JOHN WILKES, Proprietor. . CHARLOTTE, N. C. MininMacliinery a Specialty We invite the investigation of Xrne owaer nro Mill-Men seeking MACHINERY. We can furnish on hoard at our Works, or set trp at the mines anywhere in the southern gold region, on short notice STEAM PUMPS, - S3 I A. Mr Ml.l. , (for wet or dry crushing), REVERBERATOR Y FURNACES, REVOLVING ROASTING FURNACES, CONCENTRATING MACHINERY, , CONVEYORS ANU - HOISTING ENGINES, BELT AND FRICTION HOrSTERs WIRE ROPE, RETORTS, BULLION and INGOT MOULDS, AC, 4C. HT" Estimates furnished and prices quoted on application. 25.-m Three hundred miners Soddy coal mines, near Tennessee, are on a strike. employed at Chattanooga, XARKIED. In this county, on the 12th inst., by W. L. Kluttis, Esq., Mr. Walter L. Kenuerly to M iss Lidia Cook. Bv Rev. R. L. Brown, at his residence, on the loth of July, 1833, Mr. John Smith to Miss LaHra J. Earnhart ; both of Kow- an county. BUSINESS LOCALS Mr. II. T. Burke, so well and fa- vorobly known iu this his native county, is Principal of Taylorsville Academy, where firstrate advantages are offered those who have sons to educate. See his notice in another column. Duke's Cigarettes wlioles.de aud retail at Factory prices. Fresh Mackerel Xo. 2 Shore), Fat. Lemons by box or dozen. . Best Leaf Lard ou baud, at A. PARKER'S. SALISBURY MARKET. Bacon Butter Chickens Eggs Cotton Com Flour Foathers Fodder Hay Meal Oats Wheat Wool Corrected weekly by J M. Knox tc Salisuury, July 19, II Co. 1883. to m 20 15 to 20 10 to 12, f)to 10 58 to GO 2.25 to 2.55 40 to 50 HO 30 G5 35 30 80 30 to to to Salisbury Tteo Market. CORRECTED WEEKLY BY JXO. 8UEPPARD. Lugs, common to med. Lugs, med. to irool, Lugs, good to tine. Lugs, fine to fancy, Leaf, common to med. Loaf, med. to good, Leaf, good to tine, Wrappers, com. to mod. Wrappers, med. to good Wrappers, sood to tine, Wrappers, Hue, Wrappers, fain v. none A Shrewd Housewife. Nothing annoys a woman more than to hare her husband bring people home to dinner without any previous notification. It spoils the meals all around, for the wife, guest and head of the family. The guest feels nitcoinfoi table, and no matter how skillfully the wife tries to conceal her annoyance of having a poor dinner, the person who had the misfortune to ie- j ccive an mipronitu mutation wuhes he was well out of it. There is a State offi cial in Carson who has a weakness for taking peoole up home to dinner without giving his wife winy previous warning. Naturally hu better half for we hold the half alluded to be the better half began to devises some plan to teach him better. A few days ago lie came iu with : 'Sis, I've brought a youug man up to dinner.1 Uh, you have. Well, HI go in the parlor aud entertain him while you run down town and get the provisions. Of course when we have company we want something extra.' She jat iu the parlor two hours and eu tertaiued the guest, while the miserable husband rushed about iu the hot mn aud got the extra provisions has come over the spirit of that man's conduct since the occasion. Carton Ap peal. A Type-Setting Machine. At last the Parham type-setter, which for the past eight years has been in progress of construction iu private quarters at Coifs works, has been perfected aud is now on exhibition iu the Goodwin building, on Houston street. It is certainly a won derful machine, doing the work, as its inventor claims, of nve men. It is about the size of an ordinary piano, with letter ed keys, as the operator touches which the type take their places with unfailing regularity. The work of distribution is doue simultaneously with the type set ting and even more rapidly, so that the cases are always full ef type. The chief difficulty heretofore has been justifying, but this hits been overcome and is now done with twice the rapidity of the ordi nary mode. Hartford Courant. Doubtful. file breaks for the past week have been jood and prices have ruled high for all grades. All tobaccos have tound ready ale at the alwve quotations. Quotations are changed whenever there is any advance or decline in the market. Our manufacturers require ver one million pounds of leaf tobacco which they desire to purchase on tins market and will pay the highest mar ket prices for all manufacturing stock. Wrappers, cutters, smokers are in uemanu and hi"h. Concord 3VaCa.x-lx.ot On Thuistlay and Friday one hundred and eighteen of disease, caused by the tenement houses that are add without the sanitary preserve life. in New York children died heat in the ill-ventilated requisites to From "The Times." p.i.-m. th Kama : The statements recently nubUsned la your valuable naper has created, much Lrffinontintiiiscitv nmoDi? the class wlio use and own horses, sbU after reading your request, that all should write you who had been benefited by the w.i., ni,hiibri. frnm Or. Bates. In regard to the tmrtntii success he always had with KendaU'8 s;,. , vtn i decided to write you my experience with It My first knowledge of this remedyy came throutfh a visit to the J)fflee of the Massachusetts Society for the prevention ot cruelty to animals. This aoclety was the first to use Kendall's Spavin car tm Rnstnn and I was Informed by Chas. A. curler, a jfeuileman In whom 1 had the utmost con- T ' . . r.J . . . - M 1W J.J n f I " I 1 I I I, fill! ttdence, thai wiey uau ucva uw auj"uu6 arm-tod wHil for spavins or any lameness in horses, and he stated that he gave it to poor men who hart lame horses and would agree , lo use It, in this w:iv he was esabled to eet along with out prose utlng them, as it was sure to cure when peraevered with. Some Ume after this I received a very severe Injury ta the knee Joint, and the high recommendation which Mr. Currier gave of Ken ..,,. L. in iiik ir.ivf n o so much confidence in it that 1 used It for my knee with the yen' hest of ,.njn, onrt sincA that rime my faith has been so 5.00 to 6.25 6 25 to 7.50 7.50 to 12.25 12.25 to 17.50 6.5S to 8.00 8.00 to If. 50 11.50 to 18.50 12.50 to 15 00 15.00 to 27.50 27.50 to 40.00 40.00 to G5.00 offered. NEW GOODS, CHEAPER till EM! We have received our new Spring and Summer Goods. Our stock is Carge and. Complete, consisting of DRY GOODS GROCERIES, HATS Al STRAW GOODS Boots & Shoes, ' Drugs and Medicines, (JUEENSWARE, CLOTHING, AND everything kept in a First Class 8tore--all of which wc offer as CHEAP as She cheapest for Cash, Goud Produce, or First Class Chattel Mortgage. If you would SAVE MONEY, do not buy until you examine our stock. CORRECTED WEEKLY BY CANNONS ft FETZElt. Bacon, Hog round, Gutter Chickens, Eggs, Cotton, Corn, Flour, eat hers, Fodder, per lOOlbs., Hay, Meal, Oats, Wheat, Wool, Concord, July 18, 1883. 124 to 13 20 to 30 15 to 25 10 to 12i 6i to 9 60 to 65 2.25 to 2.50 30 to 45 75 50 65 to 75 40 to 421 90 to 100 25 to 8 MORGAN'S COLORED 25- MINSTRELS. -25 A Full Corps of 25 well trained Amateurs, ALL COLORED ! Will give an entertainment at MERONEY'S HALL, TUESDAY EVENING, JULYTHE th. The fun-loving portion of our citizens win nave n opportunity of enjoying a pleasant evening '"Every word and act shall be chaste and harm less. EDoors opened at s o'ciock. aobiiwiuh z cu. Reserved Seats 50 cts., for sale at Kiuttz s orug Store. FERTILIZERS We keep constantly rn hand THE VERY BEST BRANDS of COTTON and TOBAC CO Fertilizers. Sr"Wc have a vneeialj preparation for Tobacco that we warrant to ffive entire satisfaction. Don't fail ti get it. Last but not least, is the large bricl Tobacco Warehouse in rear of out Store, conducted by Messrs. Gray & Bell, whert you can get the higuest price lor youi tobacco, and irood accommodations to man and beast. Give them a csli. No. 1. Murphy's Granite Row. J. S, McCrJBBIJTS, Sr. - Salisbury, N. C, April, 1883. To Mine Owners and Miiini Cc's- The undersigned are prepared to purchase ots of (.old. silver. Lead, Copper, and sulphur. In un limited quantities, to be deUvered at nearest no way station, according to market prices. Cm. h payments. Contracts entered Into for one to flfteci years. Kicbamps Powkk ft company. London and Swansea. England. All letters should be addressed to M. I'arrv (Josset, Thomasvllle. Davidson Co .X.C, sole Art i for the United states. sfelypd EVAPORATING FRUIT amm Fall tr eatlne on improved JK-sk AMERICAN M'FO CO ft r'VIHIIUA rsudufttjMoYmr DRS. J. J. & 1. 1 SUMMERILL. FICE: CORNER MAIN AND BANK STREETS. office nouns : 8 to 10 a. m. and 3 to 5 p. jr. " 37 6m A full jury has at hist beeii secured to try ex -Treasurer Polls. i t r.nrr in r if nirrltii oi cni reaifoj i nui r ui uwi r- m the house. I have tried Its alnce that itme tor foot-rot. sore teats and warts on my ..,.,rcti Also for a ireneral liniment for my horses and In my faintly and 1 sincerely believe nrihnthniiwho have wiifn you before, that there never was so good a liniment for bots man and beast ever discovered before. oping j du will continue to give us more light on this subjects, I am, . itOBT C -V.'fcU. I Eoston, Mas ., Oct. l, im. Two of the oldest and best remedies are Alwock's Pokoi-s Plasters and Bras drktu's Pim.8. They are celebrated house hold necessities. Fi"r sprains, rlieumatism, oains in the side, btek, or cheat, or aay suf fering that is accessi We from the exterior, AHroclTs Porous Plasters are perfection, while for reuulatTug tho bitted. Brandreth's Pills are unequaled. Always, keep them on hand. l&ly MEDICAL BOARD of EXAMINERS 0? NORTH CAROLINA. TARBOROCU, .May 14th to 17th, 1883. Dr. E. Mitchell SummereD, of ltowau County, having passed an ftp nmvpri crnmiimt ion lxfnrt the Roa.nl h: been licensed to practice medicine iu all its branches, according to taw, see elm , 258, p. 356, Private Law t 1858-'59. P. E, HIKES, M.D., Pre't. II. T. BahxsoK, M, Sect'y. 37:1m GREENSBORO Female COLIIG. Greensboro, N. C, Tli. T.niU ttoadan rtf thin flrnirLKuirr Tt stitution will begin on the 22nd uf Anj.ni 1888 Borne Comforts, Oood rare, Th r ough Instruction. Special care of health, manners and n r Lt ( 'n ii.i'i-t Mould tp Pa lurtiMl' - r 1 T M InVL'C TJ. 33:2m-pd 4 i lllUlllii. w
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 19, 1883, edition 1
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