The Carolina . ' ' . ' 1 '- 1. Sit j7I.-.TaiRD? SERIES SALISBURY. V; C, 4TOUST 20 1885. 0 4 r mSS 'BmmWm9mmtmmmmmWmmWm9mWmmmWm -3 a S Q m gg 50 i O 1 m M j, o S3 W 1 SPd O r o c. s Ji -t X pun axis. NnVE AND PEUMANENT CURE Fon lyipspsia aad Indigestion- prwlhv D. W. V. UKECiOItY. Chariot to. N. C. Chahlotte, X. C, Nov. 29. 1884. Hit ft Inve recentTv u.sel vonr Dvspeiitie witli.Verv creat ht'iietit to invsi-lf fwiiiaUy reeoiuiiu'ini it t othet. R. P. Waking. Member C. Legislature.! CUARLOTTE, N. C. W. f WT teMimonv In rtp:ilup of vnnr MPfc Beinedr. I haveused it with urreat M Cheerfully recommend it to any one jStrom dyspepsia, indigestion and a 'wxhtian ofliver and bowels. D. A. JENKINS, N. C. State Treasurer. J II Ife&iUn or,.i t r Sn,;il. k otU, K. G., and T. F. Kluttz & Co-. 7.N.C. 4Q.i- QUARTERS Ffl EBAKEU axd TENNESSEE i f ARM WAGOMS. CS.WaTEHTOWN & ClSCISSATI IpW & Spring: Waerons. Bickford & Huffman and Guano Drills. HAY MAKES. IVATORS. THOMAS' II a rrows lA Straw OnVtAinj Atet 'III (TlTlr. It fiRIST Mi! i e She u r;1 f ?1,cr i,,ittinoSGun8, s -faints, (iiu r,;si pawg D CtOVER 'SEED. ,auuapfti..i,nt than thpv imvo il-W. SM1TH0EAL. tm rot T S else by taklnir ,-nffWntflr Non; ,,., t' OOOk" out. Be. ', -J'-mtt 4)i0e toll, terms free. North, Carolina at London. Cor. Nfews and Obeerrer. Raleigh, N. C, Aug. 8, '85. The question of the American Ex 3 S l,0Rlt'on i London next year and of the North Carolina exhibits being ta- ken there is being favorably discussed j . ... 14 n .. - iu me j tapers irooi every section oi the State. It is a movement the wis 3 dom and policy of which cannot be H-l questioned. The State board of agri- culture; to whom have leen lett the various matters of exhibiting and ad vertising North Carolina, have so far pursued a wise and commendable jjj course iu this direction. They have m Q fought a good fight at homeland new when it is proposed to "carry the war into Africa" and to complete victory abroad, it is a proposition that meets the approval and is in accordance with the desire of the intelligent and right minded people of North Carolina. Vast good has been already accom plished by our home exhibitions. As advantageous as it is may be to spread our least at home and invite the for eign world over to partake of it, how much more powerful for good will it be to carry the exhibit to them in their own land and say, "We have brought It to you, before your eyes, at your teet ! .Look at what our State has and is, and has accomplished I" q oo iar as me ooaru nasaireauiy wisely g Q gon in this direction, it is hut gg meet and proper nay necessary, that rj j the work be crowned by this last, e writter does not believe it to & be an exaggeration when he says that j however inestimable has been the good W i result to the State from the various exhibitions in which she has already taken part, the opportunity offered in London next year is oae the bene fits of which, should it be embraced, will be greater than all previous ef forts combined. The advantages to be derived by an exhibition are in di rect proportion to the number of peo ple who will see the display and the a moult of unemployed capital seeking investment, that will be directly reach ed by invitation the thus extended. Let us see briefly what advantages in this direction the American 'Exposi tion in London in 1886 offers. The exposition opens on the 1st of May and will coutine about six months. It will be exclusively Amer ican, and in this line is a new depart ure in the history of expositions. The New York Herald says of it editorially: "There has never yet been a first-class exhibition of American articles anywhere out of this country, and the commercial result of such an undertaking oau hardly be overesti mated. 99 It is-a private enterprise, the United States government being in vited simply as an exhibitor, and not heiug asked to vote any funds for the undertaking The high price of labor in America has driven her to all kinds of devices to facilitate production. All these will be shown, to the wonder and astonishment of the old world. The boundless natural resources of our country will be also fully illustra ted. To give some idea of the num bcr of people who would have access to our exhibit placed there, 1 will state that the site chosen is one such that ten millions of people reside with in an hour's ride, by rail, of the ex position buildings, and that the esti mated ordinary number of strangers who enter the city of Loudon daily is one hundred and fifty thousand. 1 his transitory population will be greatly increased by the presence of the Amer ican exposition there, and the British colonial aud Indian exhibition, which takes place at the same time. These two exhibitions, going on at the same time, and near by each other, will re act, reciprocally to tho mutual advan tage of both. -The multitudes coming to see the one will see the other, ami vice versa, and the friendly rivally be tween the two will stimulate each to the highest pitch of excellence. Our State has already a complete collective exhibit. This prmcipa item of expense being then already incurred and that incident to placing and keeping it in London being prac tically nothing in view or the vast benefits to be attained, the course to be adopted seems to the writer and he believes to the majority of the peo ple of North Carolina as well to be plain. With such an opportunity to expose our exhibit to such countless k.'. j i 1a ...:K in u m times ana in a lanu ttwuuug unemployed capital as well as over crowded with a good, thrifty popula tion seeking emigration, it does not seem that the board of agriculture, when the question shall come up for decision, can long hesitate. Z. Gen. Grant's doctors bills were $12,000 for each physician. The New York papers consider this quite a moderate charge. The" money was made up by subscription by the triends of Gen. Grant's family, great ly relieveing the latter ef severe em barrassment. At the time of his death Grant Archibald Henderson. Wilmington Star. " This distinguished ; native of North Carolina was the son of Judge Rich ard Henderson, of the ttevolation. His mother was a daughter of LordrKeel- mg. He was born in (iranville county J 1 il - .1 ' . -K and was a brother of the eminent Chief Justice, Leonard Henderson. The Legi Mature desired to place Archibald on the Supreme Court Bench of the State, but he declined saying that one of the family was quite enough. We learned this interesting fact from the late Hon Hugh Waddeli, whose memory we revere. We knew him from our boyhood and it was a letter from him to the late William J. Bingham that secured a ' place for us in his school of thirty boys when that was his limit at Oaks. We have heard the same thing concerning Mr. Henderson and the Bench from another person. Unlike his brother, who was of some what stammering speech, Archibald Henderson was an orator. Judge Mnr phey, in his elegant address at Chapel Mill, refers to him as the "model law year of North Carolina." At the time Mr. Henderson was in prime there is no doubt that he was the foremost ad vocate and orator at our bar. He was a great lawyer, eletjant, persuasive. full, learned, profound, He was prob ably not as great a jurist as his brother; he had not so reflective a mind, but he was far more rhetorical, winning, ready eloquent and effective. He succeed when his brother would have failed amentably. If he had been on the oencn ne would have lett a name but lttle lower than that of the three or four first class jurists who have been rU:i T i r L IT 1' l vmei juauce oi rae oraie. ne aiea when his intellectual powers were m I full splendor, at his home at Salisbury. .... . . Jout tew of the many able lawyers of our btate ever so impressed their fellow men for uncommon powers as did this illustrious and admirable man. He was amiable and true as the Hen dersons have been generally. One of the ablest men of the ? Kevolutionary Jia .fliov At T.owi tw1 I Archibald Henderson. Mr. Henderson: has left, no manm. rials of his intellectual srreatness. It is already a tradition, as it is with so many of our strongest and best fur- nished men. Some one ousrht to take the trouble to hunt up alK the remi niscences that can be gathered of this great lawyer. He was a large man physically as was the Chief Justice. lhe Hendersons ot that ancLthe fol lowing generation were men of marked physical proportions. Their faces were very strong noble foreheads, promi nent noses, protuding chins, firm-set jaws, with kindness and openness of vi'v.iiiiv..i..' va. rr i t t i m expression. They were remarkable tor their benevolent qualities. The late Archibald Henderson, of Granville, son of the Chief Justice, was of this type. A man was arrested for stealing from him. He gave the late Judge Gilliam, his intimate friend, the money to get the rogue out of the difficulty, .North Carolina has produced many noble, able, high minded men, but no family has yet given to the State two such men in mental, moral and social qualities as Leonard and' Archibald Henderson, of Granville. Some seven or eight years ago we published in the Story three cohimn sketch of the Chief Justice. We have supplemented this now by telling the ve5 little we know of his illustrious brother. Gen. Grant was at last put away in a temporary vault in Riverside park, New lorK, lasu oaiuruay, anu wiwi every circumstance of military and civic pomp of which America is capable. The line of march from the City Hall to the park was about 15 miles, and it took from morning till night to bury the dead man. Ine procession was in charge of Gen. W. S. Hancock Tkp Pr0nWftnd nbinet. werft consnir.n- mis in the narade The number of Der- o0 ko fL- .mrt in if wn sfitnntd OVUO TV UU W A 1A M.V mmj . v i i i v a at 50,000, and it, is calculated that 2.- 500,000 people saw it. Bands nlaved dead marches all along the way and the services at the tomb were accorded to the ritual of the Grand Army of the Republic and concluded with the firing 1 of guns, i ne Herald oi ounaay aevo ted f our pages, or twentyneight columns of small type, to telling about the dis play and the events of the occasion. A column and a half were devoted to a recital of' the casualties of the day and a half column to the operations of the pickpockets. Landmark. When business becomes so absorb iuff as; to result in insomnia it is tune to storV business, or business may stop vou. No sleep! no brain; no sleep, no vigor, bleep means a nuiug up ot body tltii new strength. Sleep is footl as much as bread. Tliere is a i.i stnn lurhittff a subiect over and over acain until it gains com- plete possession of you, and you turn ind toss and can't lie etrll out of v.rv weariness. That is one of the initiatory steps to the mad-house. eVery gallon of waUfr that it is desir Sleep is money. Sound night's rest lo purify, add a tjeaspoouful of the will irive vou a clearer head for schem- fiherifis fluid, and sMr li Ul,lil every ing, planning and getting tbe best of .)nrticle of the aniwwilcu' is precipi your fellow-man. lated. This usually: takes about five , u- minutes. Then ruil your gallon of t ,nn i Kiel, the Canadian half- rv-7 - - . l) reCCl reDei, Ho imu bciikuvii iv us Lon-rnd Seoten.oer loin. .: MINISTER rFAIIVS. I His Reception by Dol Pedro at Rio De Janeiho. 1 1 Raleigh News afid Observer. Yesterday a gentleman of this city received a copy of te paper O Paiz, published at Rio de Janeir of date Julv 15. It is in t'ortiiguese, and Con'ains Quite an amount of news, 1 - progressive empire, rhicii is iu many ui iii uciuiauic in r " T iu uiai things very much pike our United Stats. Minister T. J. Jarvis's arrival at Rio has been heretofore chronicled, i fli chick an inc jevtrujiig uj uui)' j 11 an andience was granted by his. msjesty to Mr. Thomas A. Osborn, I Mr. Jarvis's predecessor, and to Sen- hor Don V mcente Que-aila, the re- tiring minister from the Argentine Republic. At 7:30 an audience was f given Senhor Don Henrique B. Mo- rens, the new Argentine minister. to . On July 11, at 8 p. m., his majes- ! ty the Emperor receiveil m public audience Mr. Thomas J.-Jarvis. en- vnv aftranr iiiopu anil inline or iilan. . T CAiiawiuiuui i uii'i in i ii unvi invu- ipotentiary of the United States of America, who, on delivering his cre dentials, made the following speech: "Sir The President of the Uni ted States of America having chosen me as envoy extraordinary and-min- ster plenipotentiary of the said Uni ted States to your majesty's govern merit. I have the honor of nresentinir your inaiestv with the letter of his Exce encv. which I Iresnecttn v ask vour mniewtv to reeeive ' Mv inten tion is to act so that when 1 deliver my revocatory. I may, like the sen may, ...i t tiiruiuii iiiil. x succeed, return to my country with the high considera tion of your majesty with the confi dence of my own country. My gov ernment wishes that the cordial rela tions existing betweei this jjreat etn- Pire a,,d that l'owt'M republic snail -'"" ! coei- ami sponger wiui me vears. ana that their beoiiie will enter into more imitate; relations of commerce. Both arel uarts and oor- tious of the same great continent, and their people are citizi'iis of the same new world of extraordinary a;t;ran- dizement and of unlimited nossi hi It- ties. They are ioiued by the same land, traversed by great rivers and possessed of tine hafrbors and their sliores are washed by the waters of the same ureal ocean. The God of Nations, the Creator of all tiling?, connected these twos t real countries by land and by water and I believe that the mission of uan -his creature 111 Tlil I ' 1 I I hfl i t II n Itu 1 inui TT t Ln T i 1 a III ( - , 1 v 'T J v 111U1US OI muuiai nueiesi anu con- miettee. omaying ine history oi uiib great empire, with its various and : inexhaustible resources, the people of the United Stales have been struckj by its rapid development under your majesty's wise government. They re- member with pleasure your majesty s visit to their country and with all their heart thev ioiu their President .IIKi mv8elf in wishtmr reur inaiestv a , life of happiness, ami to vot.r onmilrv ut..APf, niMi nri,s,,M, itv imboun- t fc. w mesty Hl)8vrereJ . i,j . . i , . , ., "k"y F!f itI-.J. J r ' president of the United ;Stal lor tins prool oi ins esteem. ; x nope, mr. Minister, that vour mission will con- tribute to cement t He good relatious existing between ourj countries." Pui-lfytiiff Drinking Water. With the probabilities strong that the cholera may reach ttl:c United States this year, it is essential that J people should, above all othsr things, look well to tlie water uiey (lruiK. Impure water causes sickness and dis- pae under the most favorable cirruru- i - stances : but wheu contagious and deadly diseases are lurkimz around w the danger is then all the greater, for bad water is a slow but sure poison. That much of our drinking water is vilely bad eoes without saying. A very simple way to purify water " I il.,. Clnln n,.l,.!L't .A' Vnilt 19 given oy ine o'-aicwivgio ui i'sn Jersey, in the making ot a cheap but excellent filter: It is the bottle filter, aud made by tying a string, wet with turpentine, around ;tbe bottom ot a quart bottle and breaking out the bottom. This is done by lighting the Ktring, and when the flame has encir- cled the bottle, dipping itiucoui wa- her. Layers of fine cotton batting milsf then be placed! in the bottle till a wa ia collected that rests on the shoulders ot c lie uotue anu over n jk. Now dissnlv a cup of alumn :n t,ot water and poir the solution in I unn tf nold water. This makes - fillonnir substance. ye use alum because it is the only .bjna which will precipitate all impu- I -;;- ;n the water td the bottom. For water thus treated through the titer; ... e vour: waier neeirom i ; . . FROM THE PEN 'OF A MEASLY LIAR. New York, August 5. A special to the Erening Post from Washington contains the following: "There has been but one newspaper in the South, so far as has been observed lierp, which has spoken ill of Gen. Graut since his death, and lias takeu occasion of that event to attempt to re vive war memories, usiug hit grave for a rifle pit. That paper was nublUheri nt Raleich. The editorial h - ' vwMV. M IU most of the Rcpoblicau papers of the North with the comment that its appear ance is a discouragiog sign of the times. A gentleman who raclipil I....- tn 1 from North Caroliua, tells a carious story w aoout me writer and hi tragic eud. The ink upon the paper which contained the article was scarcely drv, and the edition of the had uotaf, beeQ delivred at tbe po8t office, when the man who wrote the article fell dead Thi8 editor waa convicted ag a KuRlux am MQteDeed ta ten Vftrtra .fc 4llln. -n. i i . "1 DIISOll. 1 lie ev if ice hi hid tiii! v iiiuiw tjat fc. lt,fltlflrftf KnK. . llJa a411.t.ltl . ,..,. . ..1Mc1 . ... .. ,,f .e .1 T 1 , v I fhin, a the result of a whipping aud oth I er abuses, was being badly crippled. The I editor remained in thd Albany peuiten i tiary four years, when a petition for par don generally signed m his vicinity was presented to General Grant bv the very Republican Air the abuse of whom he was sentenced. The Piesideut granted the pardon. The man returned to his home; has btreu in politics since, but has com mitted no conspicuous act until he made the recent assault upon tho memory of General Grant, which was so quickly fol lowed by his own death." The above has been telegraphed to the daily press of the countty. A more mali cions falsehood it would be difficult to dispatch over f he wires. Capt. Shotwell, to whom it refers, died of acute indiges tion, after a brief sickness. Ho was taken ill one day and died the uext, and did not "drop dead," as stated in the press - - - ."J.tfc. ... M..l his district. dispatches for sensatioual purposes. Edi 101 messenger. j The serouudel who wired the above concerning Cup. Shotwell, lied for money. Lied willfully and we say, that we wish him and his purchased perjury may per ish, like the accursed Judas Iscariot. This vile defauier ought to fall into the hands of KuKlux, aud be made to account r this vile attack upon a man who was noble, upright and sound to the core as far as his convictions were concerned. Capt. Shotwell was a truly great man and any tiling else said to the contrary is false. Editor Durham Reporter. What is Wanted to Develop Our State. More manufactures aud less politics. The encouragement of home industries and less of sending our money away for things which can be mads at home. The encouragement of good substau- tial immigration and the colonization of people in large numbers. Extension of our railroad systems by building branches in the interior of the State where lie the natural wealth of the country. Diversify our industries and look to something smaller than a bale of cotton for sasteuauce, comfort and happiness. i Let our fanners raise all kinds of grasses, and make their own Hay crop thus savins thousands of dollars annual ly sent out of the State. Come down to the cash basis, and strike a balance every year in the mer cantile aud aricntural business. Let our farmers make their own ferti lizers, aud don't sell themselves body and aoul to tho commission merchants. rut our convict .aoor in me nuprore nient of our public roads, aud draw them out of the lecitiuiate avenues of trade and traffic. Have our State resources exhibited at every County and State Fair North aud West, and encourage our present effi- cieut and practical Commissioner of Iiu- I migration iu his labors of building up the State. Davie Times. I Wilmington Star : A fang of negroes ! arc terrorizing it over the inhabitants i around Huntingdon, Penn. They are 'said t number 80 and came oat of the mountains of Virginia. They take what they want, torture those who will not l i ttU where tneir money is conceaieo.smasn things generally and ,4uiake Rome howl." Here is just one specimen of their dor- iltry: "After a night of debauchery the ne- grocs cresseu tue mountain ana raiueu the saloon kept by Louis Shaffner. They took Shaffner aud his delicate wife into the woods, stripped them of all their clothing, and tied them to separate trees. Leaving tbem there the negroes returned t,ti.. liniitA ami rrn f trd it mmnletalv. Thev secured $160 in money, besides a large quantity of whiskey and tobacco. They then returned to their captives and through the remainder of the night forced them to undergo indignities of the most brutal character. Mis. Shaffner was un bound and carried further iato the woods, where she was found in the morning in a dying condition.'' A Flood of SIlvc Wilmington Star. We publish a brief communication to-day from an-:intellegent business man. He sounds an alarm signal that it will be well for our business men, and, indeed for our people generally, to heed. The purpose to flood the South with depreciated coin ought to be re sisted and, if possible, prevented. If the coin is to )ye distributed among the laboring classes in the South and then the banks are to refuse to receive it in turn it will be a positive swindle upon the people and perpetrated through the connivance of the government. The banks in many places heretofore refus ed to take silver in deposit or in pay ment of indebtedness unless at a dis count. This is very hard upon the people. There is not the slightest rea son why the government should send out a currency that is not good for all debts. Why should a great govern ment like our own have in circulation a currency that is v so debased that it is really worth but 70 cents in the dol lar? It is a stigma upon the very name of Government, and if the Congress was equal to its duties and responsibil ities there would be no occasion for such a complaint. To allow the people to have forced upon them a currency that is greatly depreciated (we refer to the fractional silver) and that can only be made a legal tender when the amount is as much as tiveuollars, is a positive wrong. It is more than this it is an outrage. The papers in the South ought at once to give the alarm and let the peo ple move in conventions against this attempted outrage. It has been an nounced in Northern papers that the Treasury would pay Jhe members of Congress in silver dollars for their ser vices. Why not pay them iu dimes and quarters ? The financial question is becoming of extreme importance. The silver dol- lars are worth but 83 cents and jret they circulate as currency. I he sentiment . mi i I in the South is strengthening against an indefinite continuance of the coinage of the silver dollars. The probability is that the next session or Congress will suspend the coma-re for some years. It ought to protect the people against the serious infiction of a debased cur rency. Absolutely Pure. This rinwrter never varies. A marvel of purity. st rength, and wholesomeuess. More economical than tue ordinary mnas, ana caumn uc sum n II TO T A UTU may be found on file at Geo. IHID S. tX ZaSX pTltowell & Cos Newspaper Artvcrtlslng Bureau (10 Spruce Skrorosmg DavfinnnrtCo ene. Lenoir n.c. " . J A High. Qra.Ce Home School FOR GIRLS. Best Climate, Surroundings, and Advan tages in the South. Debglittul Home. Higher English, Music, Art, and Elocution Specialties. Two reachers Horn the Koyai Leipzig Conservatory. Complete new fit lor ph"cJjEfg Au J2 ig85 ot " ' ' Complete new out- ars. Pres. FOR RENT ! I will rent mv House and Lands, situated in the Northern suburb of the town of Sal isburv. There are 35 aresof jooil tillable land spied id for cotton, tobacco, or for truck farming. All necessary outbuildings in srood renair. A well, a sounir and a branch furnish an abundance of good wa ter. Tue dwelling has six rooms, ano is in spleni(, rcpar Between 500 and 700 fruit trees are on the pla :e just beginning to bear. For terms and particulars address, W. M. BAKKER, 39:1m Salisbury, N. C. for working people. Send 10 cents post- tige, and we will mail you frte, a royal, valuable sample box of goods tbat will out vou In the way ot maktosf more mon ey in arewdaystnaayoueverinou?!iipos-,iDieai unvbuslnesa. Canttal Sot re'iulre. You can live at home and work In spare time only, or aU the Uine. A II of both sex, of all ages, jf randiy successful. 50 cts. to 15 easily earned every evening. That all who I want wnrif m iv test the business, we make thts un r will send il to nay for the trouble of writing hs. Full particuUrs, directions, etc., sent free. Immense py absolutely sure for an who start at once. Don't delay. Address Stisson Co.. Portland, Maine. Not J7,-S4. ly A CHANGEABLE COMPLEXION in dicates the existence of w u tns. A few doses of Shriner's Indian V ;nnitivre will destroy them and make yot r complexion bright sad healthy. a ROYAL MM ll 3 wv competition with the muiuwae or low isi, suon w eight, alum or phosphate powders. Sold only lu cans. Hoyal Baking Powdek CorriatVall st. N. Hon 1XU1U HARDWARE. ? ml " Kfg WHEN YOU WANTf HARDWARE At LOW FIGURES Call on the undersigned at NO. 2. Granite Kowr. 1). A. AT WELL. Ajfent for tha "CardwellThresher," Salisbury, H C, June 8th tf. NEW STORE! 'AVNG bought out the Groce De payment of J. D. McNeely, I intcml conducting a First Class GROCERY STORE. My stock will consist of SUGAR, COFFEE. BACONi LARD, FISH, Mulas?es, FLOUR. Butter, Chickens, Eggs, & c. Also, Candies. Fruits, Ifuts, Crackers, fcc. in fact, I in tend kefping, everything usually kept la the Groeery and Provision line; and by close attention to business and selling low for cash, II hope to merit at least a portion' of the trade. Come and sec me at J.D.Mc Xeely s Store. J. M. IIADEX. June 4 1883. ALL ENTIRELY New & Fresh! J.S. McCUBBINS, Sr., Will continue tho business at the Old Stand, having closed out nil the old stock. His present stock is Entirely New, and will oe otfertjH on reasonable terms for Cash Barter, or first-, lass Mortgages. I ....... i,., l ...... .1 riiosewho could not jiay all their mort gages last year may renew, ii papers are satisfactory arid appliance is made at once. IAS STOCK CONSISTS OF Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Hats, Clothing, Con- feetioneifis, ('rockery, Drugs. Ibiron, I.arA. Corn, Fjour, Feed and Proviaions'of all kinds, with a full line of High Grade Fertilizers, as chcag as the cheapest. You will do well to Isee hiai betore purchasia!; clsi'- where, i Salisbury, April 1st, JS.-5. 25-tf Tadifi Mineral SprapAcaifflj,! I C. II. MARTIN. PkIKOPAIh I?.; iOraduitl of WaUe Forvs College, and alao at,, T ' 1 tna Pniv: Ti ' 1' of 'liirni.i - 1 rri'fioN, $5 to Si 5 ier session ot nianUis. i Tlie oiity school la ilils sncfiou iliatteaehesi the Uahirslty oi Va. met hoa.". Vljrnrons ex- ;tenslve. IhonHiph. 1 he cheapest sehoo'l In tUej v. . wapre-i'ieso wona-r'iio;vea jiclhodH are j taujfht .-s-tiiHxl Hoaiil only M.per i tout h. 3 27 lyj Address, V il. Uktin, Trln. ORGANIZED 1859 CAPITAL & ASSETS, i750.000: J. ItnODi.8 BROWNE- I fWlL C. COART. s Prest. f Secretary V:' Twentj-sixth annual Statement? Jancakt 1, 183. I LIABILITIES. Cash Capital Unadjusted Losses .$100,000 t . H.ooo e 12,117 :?' 7il,3tO m fiescrve for Ce-lnsurance and afl oilier Uabtatles, f Xet Surpl-, ! SCHEDULE OF ASSETo : Casli In Xitloaal Bjuilt $ 7. Mi 0 Caaii la ii U 1-. -i A'.'i;l- ..ll.VCi 29 1 S6t ti 1T9.80SM 51,0T V4 . 15S,40St 114.7S3 39.77S ( 0 United States Registered Bonds State. and Jlunlelp.il Bonds Natloaal B in:: Stocks CottoQ Maaiufaeturtn"r stocks. other Local stocks , Ileal EsUfe (unincumbered city property ) 97.91 UJ Loans, secure! by arst mortgages . 60,41 4 Total Assets. $741,380 2 3. ALLEN BROWN, AgL Salisbury, X. C, March 26. is5. . 6ra SOMETHING NEW! I tST LAMP CHIMNEYS a3 that will not break by heat, tor sale, f I ENNISS. DIAMOND DYES All coiors yn wish at ENNISS! r L' DOi'T FORGET to call for Seedt 4 allkinilsat , , ENNISS". TO THE LADIES: Caft and see the Flower Pots at EXNISS NOf STRANGE BUT TrtUE. TVor i 5 a i i . i s a - - do exist in ine numan lhhiv ana are oi w the capse of disease and death. Shrin. Indian Vermitaje wi 1 detrev ant e. il m . m them pom me svstem. (ft; I " U I 1 i 5 M "ffl uta 4 mi 1 M hp rm dm 1 weighed onlv 85 pounds. ri-'. , - it 1 V" 3&k a& i

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