Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 10, 1888, edition 1 / Page 1
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'I - , - - ' Tl - - - - i - - , 1 ' -Jti AjL'JLCCT : r: ' -4 1: . Y f It it'''1 ! -THIED SERIES. SAHSBUBY, IT. C, THURSDAY, HAT 10, 1888. Pf" i J i - 1 111 Odl OIM-M: : V V; U, ILCH i -if 1., 11. CLEMEN? CRAIGE & CLEMENT CAMPBELL, physician and burgeon. his services to the people of .... vri'J vieiaitv. I - ( , p4ii Mai. Cole's iron front building -Maiow Fisherlstrcets. fc -a COUNCILL, M. D 1 - . i i. .i u'i 7 r.i.:..,.nrl iiirrnnnflinor rnm-miini- rt U call prompt y aucnaca, aay Fvv be found at my Office, or the Drug llo ?Ur J- H.-EnniwV:., Respectfully, ir n I ' j. B. 5.1 Ofllce in the Heilig Building, 2nd NEW FIKfi, n nder.-jgiveq nave cim-rm imu .rirb cHsliij f r t lie purpose oi cwmtuci "Co (aiOCEUY1! and PRODUCE business, to clte irom CunHignjncntsespeciay .nito'.i i - - McXEELY & TYSON. I net! takes this opportunity rlttwiHtlnifi ks Co his numerous menu i ..i... ii f 11111 lltUllfHUnV. .in ws: n e w tuu .rif a tu le Will always bUn Jiand to s . r a band to serve the 'J Strf' ; -1 . Jj D.-McNEELY. terciar Coye Narseries, 1 .nf iiMv iiV odds live largest, dcsi Ill(ut'tl wnd wMl stoeKca wjirrxne roosi WilWe Jruitfrpi any luirhL-ry m c ' I .. U.- i , . ... L. o L- f 4 I ,X.Uni mnffl reliable acclimated vane- t,j(lf .nnlck Prinehes, Tears, Cherries ntif iill other iruus lor orc-iiurt.. l-.f..ri,vr, nlsintinir. i We have no com llto7.o ;to bxtent of greunds an L-aWiAilLvrowti frets ano v.nes oi ai (sjrah'e .'ages, ant zc v can am jwiilplofisc you n stock, lour oraen oK-Hed. rrrces reasonuM-. 4iii ivf catalogue scht free. ' Address r-f.r- r-'f : . f CRAFT. ' Bhore, Yadkin County, . C. Ws.no w Receiving Bis till and Winter Stock O f GOODS, : let te tie .lta Maiiits A!d wilLb plea to sec his eustormfrs .be i!re purjcliasUjg e'sewherc. kn4 all other kinds of Goods kept in a . gen rttfek7-''dl Vf soldi at prices to suit tht - il CALL AND EXMINI MY STOCK. Bob Y4ite 4iml Crystal Roller Mill Iloiir oF j the besi quality. .- ' JUST RECEIVED !)XE IfUNDRtE) BAR RfeLS 0F FKESHi VIRGINIA LIME FOR i ' "i - - t& I txpect all per3on3 who haTe given me yrtages on their crop3 to briog me their cot tdh whea it is readv for salt;. I r ; " it. J. HOUIES. L... :,; f- ,j ; ;l , , rlTCfl se:t Wonder exist in thou U U C r saiids of forms, but are surpass 0d bjf the marvels of iuvention. i Those itao are in -need of profitable work that can be done whHo living at home should at once send their idJre.ss to JJallett & Co.jPgrtland, Maine, and receive free, full information how either sex, of all Kecan cjirn from; So to $25 per day and '4pyards wherever thev live. You are started free. Capitiil not required. Soino nave made over $oQ in a siugle diy at this work; Al' succeed. I have made aFranprcmcntd to upply r Esn litLK. mornibg ana tTCaing ci mmencing about tiie first of May. to those who wish to engage It It wHl bo dflivered at the homes f patrons Jit live ecu ta tei qn.-trt. For convcuience, tick- IjUtfi:i be sold- to tbofee who may wish to ob tain Lilk.4Atky tol - - ' ti-l - ' - -h P. W. BROWN. i . ilisbury, April 17, 1688. t ,; lm. HOME COMPANY, SEEKII O HOME PATRONAGE .'. "ail-Cities, Towns and "Villages h tbeSottttb TOTAL assets; Urn - rr. : i: - . - m. HOLMES i I i Groceries,, - . '. . Pit - lM AGENTS ?.-AUiEN BROWN, Evident. AgentThliftefj N. 0. Compare tUlu tritb your purclutMt ye-. FAULTLESS f AMIW MCOtCIMf. Q60i3 6A PHILADELPHIA. Price. OHE-Dolbr As yxi value health, perhapi life, examine each package and b sure you grt the GenarB. See the red X Tnule-Mrk and the full title on front of Wrapper, and on the aide the aeal and ftlgnnture of J. II. ZeiUn & Co., as in the above fc- simile. Remembrr ther ie ao other genuine Simmons Liver Regulator. : i T"Y R TTTT T A ISJ fir CO A. IX. j j I c N . ! . " DEALEE8 IX General Merchandise,- ! CJ rBV MP' DALISBURY, 1. j. COM3 AND SEE the SHOW -! At DAVE JULIAN'S NEW STORE He has a full anil complete line of " ENTIRELY wliich he is offering cheaper than EVEn. te is on Fitfier Street, near tin-Stand Pipe, v where his rents and other expenses are io low t hat he is sellinir one dollar's worth f Good's for 00 cts. EIIe has the b st iru eh en pest of Fertilizers in the mmtv. and decidedly the best line of PROVISIONS n tho market. Be sure to see him before on buy.' JSPIIe wants to buy all the . can get. April 19, 88. 2ti:3m iirs catarrh REAM BALM 31eaii2es the Nasal PassaffesAllays Pain andlniamma- v i o n. H e als the ores. 'Esstores s Senses of Tast. and Smell. HAY-FEVER TY THE CURE CATARRH is a disease of the mucous membrane, generally origiiiuui.K iu .mo usui i ages and maintaining its stronghoM in the head. From this point it sends forth a poisonous virus into the stomach and thraugh the digestive organs, corrupting ihe blood and producing other trouble- some and dangerous symptoms. A particle Is appllel Into each nostril, and Is ajrreeaoie. race 5U ccms aruggists; oy man rejlsterfd, .60 cents. ELY BttOS., rii Greenwich Street, New Yorkr I3:ly. WHEN YOU WANT HARDWARE XT LOW FIGURES T n the undemii'-d at J.O 2. Griunt D. A. ATWELL. Aent for the 'Cardwcll Thresher . vilUburv.N C. Jnceft'h tf. - ! . ! If ont of sorts' Wiih f.- r.Hif . , swi.; i-border, tor pivl liver, jjah- n b Jt-St .r 3:dt ron ill pat ion, tc , Kelpct ir? v l l One dosa r ?f Stron b Sanative Pllta i'l fdve rHi-l . 'y ty! l. rw--li?. f'"- ; !""'' r? I A ' 'I - f STRONG COMPANY - PROMPT! RELIABLE, LIBERAL j, RHODES BROWNE, 5f itent. ! v William C. Coist v - .Smrtaxj S75o,ooo ool Mi HARDWARE " f -The Country Editor'i Wife. : MACOARET ANDREWS OLDHAM. , You have heard of the country editor's life, ,Tr ' With its careand , 'worry' and doubt, Of the rfiabby-gcnteel of his seedy clot Ires, of bin diamond pins and hia calm repose, J jU is happiness, money and gout. , v " But say, have you heard of the editorls ! wife? - - .; ; 1 Of that silent copartner, who, . ; ' With, a .blending of sentiment, beauty and I .sMIV . -J. With temperate knowledge, with tact ! and wiO, " ! The whole of his labor can do? i - .., - - - . . It is she who embroidered the garments ! worn 1 . By, the editor's hard old chair, Now dressed with cushions soft and neat And trimmed up with tidies and ri Ebons sweet, , j Which once was so poof and bare, i y If the editor's sick, or away, or behind, i In need of more hands or more haste, She directs his wrappers so they can be be read, And writes his leaders right out of her head, ; And willingly makes bis paste. She reads the magazines, papers and ! books, As the cradle she softly rocks ; While the editor sits in his easy chair, With his fingers thrust in his tangled hair, i She quietly mends his socks. Then she reads the ads, with the editor, Just to find what each has paid. 'Bnt the column ad of the jeweler, there," So he says, "and the harness, and human iar ,U8t Wn oat iD ,rado!" ne wears corsets she gets for ads., Aud rattles his sewing uiuehine; frLTloSy brings. With a cheerfulness seldom seen. But her life so full of merry delight, ! Has one dark cloud abas 1 Though she shares his ticket to circus and play. To lecture, and negro minstrels gay, She can't use his railroad pass I When time hangs heavy on his hands, , i She beguiles the hours away With joke and laughter, music and song. And pleasant talk, and thus ripple along The whole of each leisure day. Oh, who would change this sweet con- tent, This.simple and trusting life, Tor that ot a queen of royal birth ? For the happiest woman on all this earth, Is the country editor's wife!, GOOD READING. Grady on Ingall. TEE KLOO,tji;NT ' SOUTH ERNEB EXPRESSES HIS OPINIO OF THE FIERY SOUTH-HATER. Atlanta Constitution. . Let nie s.;y one word j the ovation to Mr. D.ii. hope that Senator li.gali iere about w.il com- prehend its true nw .nr g. shameless enough to Manner A IliS man own dead iapartirsah rage; vandal enough to write traitor on the tomb of McPiier son, who first gave victory to the union army; cowardly enough to denounce as an ally of the enemy (while the widow in sound of her weeds sat sil most in his voipp'l Hancock, thp , , ;.. l tf. nf . . T ' " . "r-p-"r, Gettsyburg weltering jn his blood, saved the union cause such a man cannot understand, or understanding, honor the devotion that, twenty years ! after defeat, is still constant and un- shaken. lint, let others know that from Beauvoir to Atlanti. Mr. Davis, rep- resenting a case that brought sacn- fie and sufferinsr and ended in disas- ter. rode amid the unbroken shouts of his oeoDle. From nolughshare and shock they came from hut and man- sion from city and -country site thronging that-thev might look into 1 hi far or have him lav his hands on LfK.iflj nf flioir I'liiUron und IiIkks tnem, For twenty years unexampled pros perity had tet the South to material things; further aud iurther did we drift from memories fraught with ten der and heroic lessons. A growing generation driven early to school and shop had lost sight of the graves arid monuments of its fathers. An old man in his lonely home, poor and un complaining, looked wonderingly on his people, gone mad with trade but bore in silence theirjieglect. he was called forth, and At last trtiatincr came. Then tbe "South "took a day off," and a manly, self-respecting day it was. The most useful, as it was the mof. honnfifol rlav in br history. Filled with love without disloyalty, soldier, and better that she loved her assuming the right jto speak for the ex soldiers so, touching every, grave in Union soldiers of the orth,and it is lL-d AiUVtlVW v a v bft wsw a. a a w uviivm tiurfc lino in the union most in respecting himself, Movor wpro wa hpf ttr Anipripjins thiin in that day, Never did our hearts beat trner to the Republic than wben,. gathering ,1 f of f orwi "flag, consecrated them anew in the presence of our leader and our chil- dren. : No man who believes that .fo.f.ofr. u..n ;nw. e VWUU.MUV 19 1 V w VV VWUU IllVWIiaw tancy, thafdefeat hallows, as victory g ormes, a cause nonesiy enaigea ana bravelv fought can o - b?ttVthan honoring the South in ihat. .two decades after her overthrown gave to him who laid down: her broken ' cerv tre ft grander and more, heartfelt day, than would -have been f hlis Had he re torued fresh from the singing of tri umphal treaty of peace at: Washing ton. . 'r ' What is it.Mr. . Tngalls W(juld have? It- is possible -amazing incredible h it passible, that Jie . wpn!J - demand, as proof of our sincerity .that we shouM denounce, Or, in silence, - hear others denounce, our own people, liv ing or dead? Would he measure oar loyalty to the union by pur treachery to our comrades or j oujr fathers? Would he stop onr widows as they go to honor their husbunds mraves, or have us teach our children -that the monuments that glorify I ou it land from Virgina to Texas teach a lesson fir which they must look askance? Would he have us come to our I brothers;' late estranged, holding out! one hand in friendship, while the other if altered in the defence ot their coniraus.'' it so he shall be disjippoiniedj SThe South is back to the Union in perfect good faith, willing to bear her ! part of its burdens, ready to work out her share of its iflorv and ! orosoemv. she conies uncringirig and frank, yielding nothing of the? love and rev erence in which she holds i those who fought her cause in field and forum.- Were she cravenl enough to tome otherwise, she would be' unworthy jthe welcome of brave men. The Sojuth has accepted as final the results of the war. Not one man in ten thousand of her people would reverse those results if they could. Every i point at issue has been settled and- the verdict im bedded in our constitutional law. The South admits this, and is glad of it. More than this, generous men could not ask or brave med concede. To the North she says, as brother to brother. "We shall honor Davis as yon honor Grant; Jackson - as you honor Hancock. Wei shall find con stant and deepening inspiration in the 26th of April as youjinthe 30th of M;ty. Our dead are a dear to us as yours to you our graves as sacred, our monuments as stainless. But when d inger threatens our common republic, when the future indtek or the present warns, we shall be louud shoulder to shoulder to you in loyalty! and in per fect love." j Tired of Good Feeling and Peace. j : Wilmington Siessc,nger. Fredrick Douglass, f'the pride of the nern race, as ne is oiten termed, made a speech in Washington on Mon day last the occasion being the cele bration of Emancipation" Day.- Re- cent I v Douglas went) on a visit to South Carolina aud -Georgia and ad- dr ssed the negroes of th6se States. If I io notiwe mistake not, he jundertook to ad- dress them upon the hete.-sity of thrift and industry and we? believe he gav' them sound advice, i In his Washing- ton address, however,) he devoted him self to an arraignment ot the white men of the South for their treatment of the negroes in the- vears following the war and up to (the present time His speech was evidently intended for campaign purposes, and abounded in i i reckless statements and daring misrep resentations, i We shail not for the present attempt to refute the charge boldly made that the negroes in the South are svstemat lcallv cheated and imposed upon in their business dealings, by our people. We should like to call attention, how- ever, to the bold staiid tyhich Douglass takes in Tavor oi reviving i ace issues This is what he says, ahd if it is not n threat then we do not know the mean- ing of words: "The time has come, he continued, "for a new departure as to the kind of man jwho is, to be the standard bearer of the Republican par- tv. We have hadienottgh ot names.; f HOW Wi int things8, i We hare had enouah of aaod feelings, enough of shak but hands over the blood a chasm, enouah of conciliation, enoitgK of laudation of tlie braver u of our Southern brethren We tried all that with President Haves, of the purity of whose motives I have no shadow of doubt. His mis take Wiis that he confided in the honor of Confederates who are without honor. Hp sunnosed that if Heft to themselves and thrown upon their 'honor they would obev the-constitution they had sworn to support, and treat the colored i ill.. citizens with fairnes and justice -ai tne ballot box' - Therj Douglas adds that vith the sort of Republican President he would choose, 'the red snirt ana rihV horseback aud j tissue b illot plan of South Carolina, and the Mississippi dalldozing plan wojild j receive no en Iria mfhr imusttig to see Uonghtss Riirnrisinjr to hear him audaciously an 1 O t . 1 1 I nnnnMip. for themL that there has been f thp reconciliation business between the white men pf both sections We should like to know 4)y what au thority, or with what propriety, even so prominent a negro as; D tiglass can " proclaim himself the mouthpiece of the vefpnms nnd make ;them sayjnat tney Jiave.had a sufficiency of good-fee ing, that they have had qmte enough of making up past differences an a Jen3 tho wounds of warj e should use to - vww , . a . know, because we may oe our. upnuo rv,ft...- - gtmtly and foolishly, aspmcd to speak for men who would not tinder anv cir-1 cumstances delegate to 1 liim the honor t of reflecting their sentiments. n ii i there is soiii'ething grotesque-in the sight of the "fpritle of the negro rate'' ooiuiy creaung ;ana prociamiiug tne sentiments of hundreds of thousands of th tiglo-baxonieitrzeus. However, we klesire the people of North Carolina m.mv thousands of whom werei brave soldiers, to know - i - that Frederick Donfflass, speakinc for the Republican party, has served uo- tuii W ' j t ii t ti . uce mat up ana ms leiiow ttepuDlicans re tired of peare and reconciliation, vi, course we have known this all mosc pomis oi our common eclesiasti along; that ii, we have realizexl the fact PplKy that now deal with secular and that the Republican party leaders t -M i.:ii;L-. -Ia : they could to revive all the bitterness of past gears'; antl even set the people at each others throats in order to com pass party ends, i The debates in Con gress since Jariuary last have been proof, plain ft nd positive of the hypoc risy of thes leaders. First Ingails, then Spooncjr, qow Douglass, assured ly if one did; nolJcnoW the stuff out of whiclTthe AmericnBeople ore made he fmight apprehend aangerous conse ouences from the utterance of those unreconciled and nnreeonstructed poli ticians. Bujt it is an ill wind that blows no good, i Evert decliiration of hostilities against the "South is a men ace to the welfare of the whole coun trv. ' r 1 If Douglass and his fellows are tired of shaking hands over the bloody ehnsm, tirctl ot even hearing of South ern bravery, tired of the brotherly re- ation which obtain between the white men of theJNoHh and the South, then it is necessary for the South to stand solid for the Democratic party, in thick ana tnm, tor only to this party can it ook -for justieeand protection ugamst he assaults of bitter and vindictive liepublican politicians. We trust hat everv iNorih Carolinian who has ieen approached hv Kepnblicau in fluences will bar Douglass' speech in mind. i Ignoring Ccjored Voters in Ohio. Washington Letter, April 20 to the Balti more Sun. ; There isjno intelligent and fair man in the whole cduntrv of whatever par- i .i : i;f 1. ii.. 11 ly, uo is ; nut; periectiy wen aware hat the tars so frequent shed by Re publican politicians, masquerading in the iruise or statesmen, over the 1111- :n v wrongs of the colored people in tho South, are crocodile. Mr. John Sherman has for three days of this week. interrupted the regular business of the Semite to rehash the calumnies which he knew to be false when he first began their utterance. . He is awfully hstressed because the colored people of the South have no voice or repre sentation in political affairs, and the other presidential candidates, determin ed that he shall notf be ahead of them, have joined the chorus of weepers. The solicit ude--ofMr. Sherman and of all of them is 'confined exclusively to the booth t they have no concern what ever for the negro in.their own States. Take away the colored voters of Ohio and the certain Pemocratic majority n that Stjite would not be less than fifty thousand. Without the colored vote in ISew lork the Democratic par ty would have as much of a walk-over in that Sthte as in Kentucky. Depriv ed of it ini Pennsylvania the Republi cans would always have a hopeless con test before them. Here are. the three greatest States of the Union, and in all of them tlie Republican partv would have no show whatever but for the colored vote. Yet the party managers in those fjtates have never given the slightest Recognition to their colored allies, nev!er sent one of them to Con gress, or tp the State Legislature or to municipal conncils. Mr. John Sher man has f.t tHis very moment hh em issaries at' work in the South painting his devotion io the colored people and manoever ng for delegation in hi fa vor frmj the South to the national convention. : If this man had any shame the bjld hypocrisy of his pre tended friendship for the colored peo ple would! have crimsoned hi3 face as he stood lip before. the Senate in his imputentf attempt to lecture the South ern Senator, fhe Republican, State convention of Ohio has. just adjourned. It was absolutely tinder the control of Mr. Shertnan nud his friends', and the delegation sent to Chicago according to Goveriior.'Foraker, will s'iek by Mr. Sherman! as long us he has a button on his coat. ; John S., At.vood, of Brown county, a colored Republican of the most respectable character, was nom inated as a delegate for the national convention.! He was presented in a formal address, by the representatives of the 75,000 eolored voters of Ohio, asking h)s selection as a matter of jus tice to tihem, and beseeching the convention, io take advantage of the op portunity to recognize the claims of au element Which had always stood by the party. Rut Jtlfe convention, which was 'under the thumb of Mr. Sherman, contempt noiislj disregarded this just appeal", and fenowed Mr. Atwood under by majorfty of two to one. Thus Mr. Sherinjin turns his back on the colored tiiairrbf his own State while waftingltisljndas kisses to the colored men of Louisiana. - 1 - 1 f - ;-,c- Th sbnJswhat notorious sb-callcdJ mind-reader," W..I. Bishop, is now in n lunatic, iitiylam. The spirit, man, ; p - f Toottrt aj.cd insane. f Organic Union. . uuuisTiiie, ry ,Kls aaoPted e foUowmg jndgmcnl m respect to the proposed union of' the iiortnern - ana southern ' branches of TTnttirt.,r i..u their wav clour tb nrinnt th v. rf ganizimc the colored nconle of tho nnn ?rn states into; separate churches, nre . , A m wm ?J:PJ? od synods. of their own, and - - SAiMbhir fUiw uuciersianaing Drought to Lear upon the minda of m.mv'nf nnr nnnnU Sn .nr.. ...... to their interpretation and application of po l.met' peace and prosperity of both ehurchca will be best secured by ceasine w aviate or prosecute tbe question Of organn; union, ai least tor the present. c have reached this judgment from opin ions expressed among ourselves, as well as opinions ano juugmeut that come to us through various sources, from differ ent parts of our Southprn Church Whatever, therefore, mav be the iudivM- uai iews, ieenngs ana desires of some l . : j . . of the members of this Presbvterv in re . . t guru wi ine great question of organic tin ,on yet ior tne sane ot harmonv, nnd await thcfnnloTdiiig of God's provided to ce m the future, we do nil now ioin in the above expressed judgment: and', while expressing ourselves thus, we, at the same time amrm that we cherish to ward our northern brethren the most kind fraternal feelinars. We admire their learning and ability, acknowledge their piei, zeai anil enterprise in preach ing ana extending the triumph the gospel, commend their iuterest and labor for the intellectual and spirit ual advancement of the Southern coldret people, believe they are of like faith anc order with ourselves, and do therefore most heartily rejoice in their growing power ana prosperity. Their standard oi noctrine ana church order arc lour standards what fever difterences of view may obtain between them and us ini re fcreuec to the exact interpretation pf a few points contained in these. Hence their success every where is, in part at least, pur success. We are one in the true Scripture sense even in the absence of a visible or accomplished organic unioh; A Rising Man. We learn that Mr. J. Everett Rnjuly, of this county, has just received front the University of Heidelberg t he de gree of A. M. and Ph.. D. and that !too with distinction. He has spent nf.ir ly 5 years 'in st udy at the leading uni versities in Europe Leipzig, Gpet fcingen, Heidelberg, Paris, Athens imd Rome, and will soon return to his na tive country. . Dr. Brady has vrjjen two small Philological works, one in German on Modern Greek, audi the jther in English upon another Gram matical subject; both of these works have been published in Germanv,.and were highly -praised by such Journal as the "London Athaenium," and by such scholars as B. L. Gildersleevei. of JohH-Honkin's University. His time has been devoted to Sanskrit, Classical Philology and History and iheMod ern Languages of Europe, but chief! to Sanskrit, German and Greek; as a Sanskrit scholar especially, he has been highly recommended by the faculty of the Universities of Goettiugen j and Heidel!erg. Though Dr. Brady ! is a young man, he has taken front rank amongst American scholars and he will reflect credit upon his State and the University from which he graduated in 1881. We know of no young man in the State wh is his peer in the! field he has chosen foi his life's work, that of phihisophy. Mecklenburg county and all North Carolina may well feel proud of the achievements and promise of this gifted and growing young in.nii. Charlotte Chronicle. About ths Raleigh Bankers. WHAT THE DAKVILLE REQISTEU HAS XQ SAY ABOUT THE PRESENT STATUS OF THE CASE. i Tits sickly sentimentality which is so prevalent iu this generation towards criminals is disgusting. Cres4 and White, the Raleigh bankers, begitrr with a lie on their lips and conducted a fraudulent concern for lyears. They received deposits ind misajpplied them, forged the names of their pat rons and obtained money, fraudulently borrowed from other banks all the funds they could command, and ijihallv ran away to Canada with all the cash they could steal, leaving their friends and patrons to suffer for their ejrimes and deserting in the most shameful manner their wives ana cn.'aren. They were captured and brought back and then they began to cry and plead the baby actand then the people be gan to sympathize with them and to pat them on the head and .to sayp'popr fellow, we are sorry for you. pathv is a beautiful virtue when Sym- prop- p:rly bestowed, but when it stoops so low as to condone crime and encourage dishonesty, it becomes a maudlin mock ery of an honest sentiment. Cross and White have forfeited all claims to pop ular respect and popular symyathy and thejLshpuld be turned over to the law to be dealt with according to their de serts. Senator Reagan, of ' Texas, h;is bought a house in Washington. This makes forty-four Senators out of seventy-six who own the houses in which they live. In i860, it is said, only four Ssnutors kept house and nbt one lived in a hoase of his own. Plnkertons ipecjal police fqree nzT outnumber the United State?; armv. a ; Old TTnele Dani WeatheragsSI When horses rnn en kick hilsl sigi of er cole spelUomin oon. ; 1 -I , When geese finds dere wings.ieir fliV, en clatters, hit's warning er ; -cold weather, When hogs air xootiu 1 en V' beds fee' sho er snap er m hard night , ion Km count on er; rainwhen An cats er washing er face en !m paw slip hind her e:ir. f - f Des note de cows how dpv lilv4a fi- frolics en does , ... M 'iniiviU 11 9 er real cole snap blow np. I J tr " Ef smoke kroes nVht nn do l ivn l fair. " 1 : --T J, V - i Ef 8mo,ke cliuSs to de ground 't woiit' clear off, bht 'twill fai no'. r ' . . .- Antscdme swarmin en A ' Inn,?. -' nates de house when heavv raiii nitrh- Hqnse-fles know when l-ains aTr crm- in en dee crowds tcr shelter. Id Wlieu del peacock yells, lur veils for 1 wet days. ; When er tree falls, hit falls hit fall 3 fer .wet weather. Chickens when'dev waltz dey waliz ' -fer rain. - Tree-frogs weather. singm sign er l.'iid Rain-crow hollers fer rain. Rats air noisy in er house when .le night s bad er gwine ter be bad. '" When both corners of de moon uir up she's holdin' np do wtitor iu her lAp. Ef one corner of de moon be down slis gwine ter let water rain down. l ou may look for a rain when sun goes ter drawin' water. How to Grow Tomatoes to Perfection Because the generous nature of the' . Tomato yields bountifully with seem ingly little care audattentidn. tluMen- - eral impression prevails that the plant ; 1 L I.'lii 11 1' rm-f requires out utile attention Ini3 is a 1 n . . sad mistake, tor there is not a vpcetfl- ble in the garden that is soarross 11 feeder, nor one that so readily pays f Jr all the food and care given iaV the To- raato. To grow it to the greatest per- fection, the hills should le due totke . ' depth of two and a half feet ;, at the bottom 'there should be a half bushel of well-rotted manure ; above this let the soil be an equal mixtnreof loawK and manure thorouirhlv niixeil. The Vi hills should be at least six feet apart. Let the situation be open, warm, airy. When tho fruit begins to set .mulch with clean straw or verv -small brush. Under these -'conditions six plants will furnish sufficient tomatoes for a fanu lypf twelve lxirsons. Whatever vari- ' ety may be plantal in this manner, iW - result will show specimens for size, smoothness, and esculent propertied . unknown to the variety when growiii in the ordinary manner, i " HK - r. l. aLLKN", 1 .., : In the AnjcricftirigricuUumt. ' What French Children Are Taught . In French schools thenenre in ooW manuals of history, showing thegrowihS aud the character of thej social, "legal and political institutions &t the nation Every child grows up to comprehend ' French. He knows what has been tho . evolution of the past, and by what stages affairs reached their present i condition. --He is not likely to be reactionist, and endeavor to -involve the notion in old ex peri nie n is, already ? tried. The fa nit of all faults in Amer ican education is the very small amount ri of knowledge acquired of the why and the. wherefore of existing instilutionf.v Every child should know with what d i fficu 1 ty certai tv con st i t u t to nal pro vis ion were seen red, and their relative 1, value in free government. ""-Political : -conomy and reiiublican f institutViw should be studied in tleuintary fornd by al 1 pn pi l of 1 5. At 2l:t! ie boy lo gins to tinker at public; affairs. . It would be well if cursuffrHge weie bad on a Knowiediw ot our: mstituions.-r Globe-Democrat. When Qoinine will Break up a can It is guprising. sas a family pliis:t c;an, how certainly a cold may .be broken up by a timely doe of qnitiinc.. When first symptoms' make, their iip- pearance, when a little languor, slight hoarseness and ominous 1 tightening of ; the nasal membranes follow cxpostite ; to draughts of sudden chiU Ly wet, five grains of this useful alkaloid are suffi--. cient in mr.n v cases to end the trouble. But it must Jkj done promptly. , if" the golden moments pasfi. nothHig uificM t.-) stop the weary sneezing, haudkrf chief using, red t.ox arid woe bcgotiis looking penodz tnat certainly Ipliow.: A remarkable ph olograph wa tketi in Shelby ville, III:,' intfr. .Tbe 'pu--tore represents a gronp of ti ve r geneta- ' ; ations, from the aged" grea t-gri-u f-v grandmother to the lit.t'e Child of but a few months. The ''parties tb this- re- , rnarkable sitting were grandmother .. Catherwood, aed S3; T.1W: Gatherv'j wood, her son, aged 61r Mcs. iljrggie y Hoxej, her rgran-ddanghfCT. age;l VS: y. her great-granadangnttr Mri?. yi ! (Vrrington. age 19, nn4..ittlp'".4lari. Newta Corrinton,"' h jr grcj-giett grandson, aged 3 mntlrfl j:- : '"'"' ' , ' .--- r..: ...".. :.""f ) '. L h v? ' I-' Mi :':'r Tl 'll - A t 'A I 41 4i ,"! -1 rh ' it':'. 'It- m r-. 4- . 1 .V.J'
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 10, 1888, edition 1
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