Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 4, 1889, edition 1 / Page 1
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PIANOFORTE TUNING " ,' v FOB SALISBURY. ' ; Mk. OffE II. Bishop (pupil of Div ,Mnrx. proftfssor of Music at Berlin University, and Benczct of Pnris) has come from EnglamL and geUled close to .Salisbury, silul is prepared to tune, regulate una repair Piano forte?. Orsrans ml Pipe Organs. Having had fifteen years practical experience in Unglfunl, Ladies and gentlemen, who Ynslktheir musical instrument?! carefully and regularly attended to'niiiv rely Upon having thorough and con sciQntious work done if-they' wiil . kindly favor 0 H.-B-. wit'1 ,e'r esteemed patronsfgte. Liv ing near town,, no tr.rvelin expenses will be incurred, ? ml therefore the It-rjns will be iowr tii: $i3o ber pianoforte, ifprneil .oeeasional- a for three tunintrs in one rear. PleasfM gpplv for furtlier particulars by postal card or "note left at office. ' j f. Schumann -srry3 :-. " It is the falsest xeonomr.to a.oy any pianoforte to Yemairrlxn tar.cj, us it fufns both instrument and car." if any AeaUiT Bays lie hai the "W. i. Doaela tbelxoin Put 11 1 1,1 down fraud. W. 1- DOUGLAS $3 ' S HOE CENtS?MEN. , nmt. In lti lrofld.- Examine his IINK JlANJ-SKVKI MI W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE ; uadTes. Beet-Material. Bert Style. Best Fitting. XI not solii tv- vaur dealer, write - W. i. "DQUGLAS. BROCKTON. MASS Examine W. X. Douglas $2 Shoe for gentlsmea and ladies. FOR SALE DV M. S. BROWN, ! i SALISBURY. CURES -PII.E8, yPURNQ For sale by JNO.'II. ENNISS, Druggist.: Di A: AT WELL'S HARDWARE ST0R3, - Whcrc a full line of cok5s in his line, wiav always be found. - SS5 Solid Gll W.t.k.' 8oldfi.rli 1H. until lain v. I Bet f -J walrtl ill ths wori.l. tiautmff lit IU Udirj ami scuts' Krcs. w iiU work st!l rr, cl' rqual Talui. tltie l'rn u -l caiiiT u merpene trrr ttretlir with our U.ie nd ' inbla line tf Itunsrhol J (Srtlnpl- Tli- sauiic. veil i tUi watvli. trni T"i-T. rc.l iifler y..n hr kit h mj hire esllrd, Ihcy become rourown prepei r TboM k writ st once rma bo stir of treeWmg Ua W ntri h nor htrm f-rr 2 sioaib a iln-n lS. m ta those KUmsvbV Co., Hi it I"rt,lad, Bluia. 'i TTTTCS 1 A "DTTT? mzr lo f nunn h file at Oox j Advertising BuiwiuUO Spruce StA. whw advert .sng 1 tuntractg may naio toe It IN NE OUI W&mMPO , i al ets - i : -r. JV. ALLSIT BROWN, 11 JV- V: 8:WOP()M CEANU gAH M KH jj'SHOR nnnn iUUU Absolutely Pure- This powder never varies. A marvelof purity strengtlijand wuolesomeness. More economicul than the ordlnafv kinds, and cannot be sold lu i competition with tlie multitude of low test, abort weijrnt.anun or phosphate powders. Sold only In Leans. Uoy.il Baking PoievCo..10c Wall st. . For sale; by Bingham & Co., Young & Bos tianrnml N. P. Murphy. 35 35 itdi. Almost everybody .wants a "Spring Tonic." Here is a sinrtde testimonial, which shews how It. B. B. Ss regarded. I t will knock your mala ri i out -and restore j'our appetite : Splendid for a Spring Tonic. . Arlington, Ga., June 30, 1888. I suffered 'with malarial blood poison more or less all the .time, and the only medicine that done me any good is B. Ii. 11. It is undoubted ly the best blood medicine made, and for this malariaLcountry should be used bjr every one iu the spring of the year, and is good in sum mer, falViand winter as a tonic and blood-p"urifier. Gfiv2s Bsttjr Satisfaction. .adiz, Ky.. July G, 1887. ricasq send me one. box Blood Balm Catarrh Snuff bv return mail, as one of my customers i taking , is. is. tor catarrn ana wants a don of the snuff. , B. B. B. gives better satisfaction than any I ever sold. I have sold 10 dozen- in the past 10 weeks, and it gires good satisfac tion. If I don't remit all right for snuff write inc. Yours, W. II. Brandon. It Removed the. Pimples. jlRorxD Mountain, Tenn. March 29,-1887. i ludf friend of mine has for several years lefrp troubled with bumps and pimples on her fill and nec, for which she used various cos lmJiips in nnlpf jt) rpmove them and beautifv anlj improve her complexion; but these local a-'apWKvatfons' Twere onlv temporary and left her - skih in a orse condition. l reeonpmend an internal preparation i bubwn as'Botanic Blood Balm which I have i cer. "using and selling about two. years; she usee ithree bottles and nearly all pimples have disappeared, her skin is soft and smooth, and her ;eneral health much improved. She ex '. presses herself much gratified!, and can recom mend it to all who are thus anected. '. Mrs. S. M. Wilson. , A BOOK OF WONDERS, FREF. All who leslre tu'l InformiJon about the cause anljtare of P.torl Poisons, Scrofula and Scrofulous S .veilings. Ulcers, Sores, Rheumatism, Kidney Complaints. O.itarrh, etc., can secure by m dl, free, fO) r of our s2-oasrt Illustr itd Boole of Wonders. ailed with the mos?, wonderful and startling proof Hoa- Bi.ood dAi.M co". Atlanta. Ga unave No n-ieite, Indiseation. r Jatnlenre, Kir.. tlcfilaclie. -a!l r;i tonn," Ios isi r.tfs.j ou Hill 1 lud tlc rmMly yon neotl. Tlier tonenp the v. buj; Ktoiacti utl bailtl up the t"ta:;iar energies. Sufferer frosu iHoiiiul or iihyHtealovcrtvook will rind reliei l ro.it tl'tein. Xlcely siiffar coated. y O VEI6 V WI I E RE. P. H. THOMPSON & CO. - . . MANCFACTCRERS, Sash, Doors, JBlinds, 011 CJrT;.-, WrtniTiiiwinfl. uiuiiavymS, ftuua xuiixxug, AND CASTINGS OF ALL KINDS DEALERS IS Steam Engines and Boilers, Steam and ii aici x pv Stciuii -Fitting', Shafting', Pulley Hangers. :y' ALSO M lirhincry of all Rinds repaired on SHORT NOTICE. Mar. 1588. x ly ERUCrtAIGE L. n.CI.KMENT CRA1GE & CLEMENT, .!; Salisbuuv, N. C. r1el.:rd,l68l O M P A N Y HYo SEEXINS) fl ? 1 r ; A STRONG COMPANY Prompt, Reliable, Liberal ! 1 ,:r;y::A: .- ,.. . , -- XAgeuts in all cities and towns in the South."TJ J. RH0DFS BROWNE, President YV:.KAlvr, Secretary. 50,000. htzt S ilisb'iry, IT. C. - - How a Paper is Made. . "Pray, how is n paper tnade?" The question is easy to ask, 'But to answer it fully, tny dear, Were rather a difficult task ; And yet in a bantering way, . - . As the whip-poor-will sings in the glade, I'll venture a bit of a lay To tell how a paper is made. An editor sits at his desk, And ponders the things that appear TJo be claiming the thoughts of the world 1 Things Solemn, and comic, and queer And when he hvs hit on a theme lie judges it well to parade, lie writes, and he writes, and he writes, And that's how a paper is made. An editor siU at his desk, J And puzzles bis bruin to make out Telegraphic" so squabbled and mazed, I Jt is hard to tell what it is about. Exchanges are lying around, . While waiting dispatches delayed, lie clips, and he clips, and he clips, UAnd that's how a paper i3 made. An editor out in the town, In search of the things that are new The things that the people have done, N The things they're intending to do Goes peering and prying about, For items of many a grade ; He tramps, and he tramps and he tramps, 1 And that's how a paper is made.' And all that those workers prepare, Of every conceivable stripe, ' Is sent' to the printer, and he Proceedeth to stick it in type. His lines, all respecting his will, In slow-moving columns parade lie sticks, and he sticks, and he sticks, And that's how a paper. is made. In short when the type is all set. And errors cleared up more or less, 'Tis "locked in a form," as they say, And huTried away to the press. The pressman arranges his sheets, His ink gives the requsite shade, Then he prints, and he prints and he prints, And that's how a pajer is made. Printers' Circular. Our Danger and Oar Duty. Charleston News and Courier. Henry W. Grady's address to the Alumni. of the University of Virginia yesterday was perhaps the best effort of his brilliant life. 1 the charm of his unrivaled rhetoric and the beauty of his English undified he added the grace of schclarshipTind the force of invulner able logic. It was out of the ordinary run of commencement orations, and savored somewhat more of the sehool of politics than of academic groves, and yet no utterance could have been more timely nor more helpful to the proper solutiorL-of the tremendous 'problems which press upon us f, om every side. The educated men of ..the country are the great, conservative force which is 10 resist encroachment upon the citadel of our liberties, which is to save the Contitu'iou from impious hands, which is to stand against the blanlish meut of wealth and the avarice ; ot power. As Mr. Grady says : 4,The u liveisily is the training camp of the future; the scholar is the champion of the coming years." What more ap propriate, therefore, than that he should have made his stirring appeal to the learned men of Virginia and of the South to stand now and forever against the centralizing influences of money in this country; for, argue as we please, these 'are the chief dangers of the Re public. The student of the times cannot have failed to note the great departure of our Government from the plain and simple paths upon which it was started by the founders of this nation. The Constitution is derided, the law is the foot ball of popular passion, the courts ari the creatures of corporations, the classes are arrayed against the masses, andmoney is the power which rules the hour. "The federal'st and the cap italist, the centralist and the monoplist the strong government protecting the money power and the political standing army of the Government. Hand in hand, compac taud organized one breathing the necessity, the other meeting it; con solidating walr,h and centralizing gov- ernment; stripping the many ot their rightg Knd ag.armiziug lhe-few; dis trusting the people, but iu touch with the plutocrats; 'striking down local self-government and dwarfing the citi zenf and last confronting the people in the market, iii the courts, at the bai- lot box everywhere with the infa nidus challenge: 'What are you going to do about it.-' Such is the true and startling picture which Air. Grady draws ot the danger which threatens this boasted land of freedom, and well may it give tone to serious meditation and lead the people to. a more thorough and compact or ganization against the twin foes to popular liberty centralization and pljitocracy. To make our bulwarks strong and our defence stable, there must be maintained now and all the i time, and everywhere the right of self-1 government the ntates within the nation and yet the nation dependent upon the States. The money-changers must Ik? driven out tf the temple of legislation: the concessions granted to the trusts must be withdrawn; the peo ple must have the right to make a liv ing with their own labor, and against darners of t-pntrall7.in$r nil political nnvvprs" nnifpd kind firm, we must nit the .approved and imperishable princi pie of local self-govern meut.' - ' ,in, : mi n - i o - . ine raw iicaaemy oi dc ence.siusi ruivv DYfiriui iivmt st rii:ni i. iui p n fi in ii".is slit.; Hie plant ot.tn exhibits a trenis bling or vibratiuiiiotion without any apparent cause, ieid us ninny its 100 or 120 vibrations hare ben observed in a single niinute; True Eefineaent. One hears much talk of this desir ahle qmlity nowadays, but the idea of it is often very v.igue. What is re finement? ; We are not of those who think that it consists of a studied quietmss of dress and manner. Some very refined people think shockingly, and they even have loud voices, and yet their good breeding is patent to all the 'world. . We once met a whole family of deli cate ladies at a fashionable summer re sort on the banks of the Hudson, whose idea of refinement was languor and ill-health. They thought it was jiist too vulgar to be too healthy and strung; quite too mannish, in a lady! Among some people size is thought to have a great deal to do with refine ment. It is unrefined to be large, gross to be fat, coarse to have weight and monstrous to have prominent fea tures. A large neck, large cheeks or lips are especially opposed to all refine ment. Now, little peeple are certainly very cunning, Tery curious, but we cannot all be fairies nor do we wish it. Only fancy a whole world of these little creatures! Why even trade would lan guish. Smaller quantities of every thing wduld be needed from cloth and flannel all the way down to oysters and buckwheat cakes No, large people are necessary to keep the world moving. We once knew of a fash. unable lady who liked her clergyman because he preached such refined sermons. When a distinguished literary man -died re cently we were told he was not a re filled person. Well, perhaps he was not, but he was so distinguished in other ways that we really had not thought of his refinement. We would just as soon have asked whether Paul was a refined man, or whether Isaiah .i-wont to Babylon to aconire "Kod form, as some persons go to London now tor that purpose. 1 here are some people who are always rving to be renned. Like Kosaniond n Middlemarch, they so trained them- selves th it, bv the help of nice clothes, sweet voice and a placid demeanor, hey appear outwardly to be refined. there are, we belicve, many people n a very humble station in life who ire truly rennea in their leeiings who are yet quite unoolishea outwarai v. fheir hearts are right, they have the consideration for others, which is the ery basis of refinement. There are also others in good society whose natural sweetness of disposition constantly shows itselt in kind and . i . i ii i 'entle words and deeds toward all. No ffort is needed on their part to be courteous and amiable, for they feel so, ind naturally their outward manners ire but the reflex of that which is within. Such persons are charming; liey like evety body and everybody likes ing it and changing its position fre hem. We all know a few such and fluently until thoroughly dry. Ameri- ire thankful. The chief desideratum appears to be a good he.irt. If we truly' love our neighbors we cannot fail to be kind nl sweet to them. And if we a e in different, all the care we take of out- manners, all our studied refinement, 11 our stylish conversation will bs as dust and ashes. There are those who find it difficult o care lor tneir neighbors. inev wish them well, but do not want to be lothered with them. They always try to be civil, but it is uphill work, and they are glad when the trial is over. Their "refinement" must make theTn smile, and bow and say, ''Yes," and "No at proper intervals. lint have they nothing more.'' Is there no in- terest felt except in their departure r Nothing is valuable unless genuine. Who cares for paste diamonds and im itation cut glass? Outward polish is of slight worth without the true re finement of the heart. Home Journal. Wanted to See if Hs was Cheated. Detroit Free Press. A man who had lust set up m the hardware business, and who had been a clerk where the eccentric millionaire, Stephen Girard, had leen in the habit or trading, applied to mm Tor a snare 1 1 1 . I . p 1. ..... ot his Datronage. Girard bought of him, but vvhen the bill was sent in he found fault and marked down the i prices. "Cash off naiK" he growled "which I wus oSeml for so nud so. You have charged so and so. and vou must take it off." "1 can not do it, said the young merchant. "But voti must do it," ro.uvd Mr. Girard. "I cannot and will not." was the final reply. Girard bolted out, apparently in a rage, but soon after sent a check for the whole bill. The young man be- - - - y gan to relent and say to himself: "Perhaps he w;is offered them at tha nriee. but it is all over now. I am sorry 1 did not reduce the bill and get it out of him on something else. His trade would have been worth a good - deal to me." By aud by Girard came again and cave him another order. 1 he young . 'lifiin was ?er? courteous, and said he , ... h did not rednce the - tor mer bill .... - - Reduce a bill! exclaimed Girard; had you done, it I would never trade with you again. I mercly meant to if you had cheated me." Feather Beds. During the warm weather " many people discard the feather, bed as some thing uncomfortably warm for. use, placing it away with blankets and comforts until the advent of winter. Some people who are cramped for room put the feather bed under the mattress, which is a very poor plan and ought never be done, as the feathers are sure to be matted together jind will require a great deal of work ti make them fit for use in the fall. When thn way of i disposing of a feather bed. is used, the mattress should be taken off frequent ly, and the bed beneath be given a thorough shakiug and airing. 'Before putting away a leather bed it should be cleansed and aired well. When the ticking is soiled in spots and the rest of the bed clean, remove the spots with ammonia, water and soap. Take- a basin of warm water, and into it put enough water to make it quite soft, then with a soft cloth dipped in this and with good soap rub briskly until the stain has disap peared. If the spot is very obtinate, scrub with a small, stiff scrubbing brush, rinse well iu clear water and wipe with a clean, dry cloth. Place the bed in the air until perfectly dry, but never, on any account, put it where the sun will fall on it, as the sun draws out the oil from the feathers, and will in a short time destroy them. Feathers are very much improved by washing. Have a number of bags, about the size of pillow cases, made of unbleached ctton,and into these place the feathers. Place on the stove some ammonia water in a wash boiler and cut up into it some good soap. Place the hasrs containing the feathers in the boiler and It boil about ten minutes, which is;- usually long enough, then tak : out and put in cold, clear water and rinse thoroughly. Place in a shady place to dry. The ticking should be washed and ready to receive the feathers when they are dry. W hen ticking becomes old it is much better to get a new ticking than to wash the old one. After making a new bed always wax or soap the seams on the inside to prevent the feathers working through If there is an attic storeroom, it is an excellent place tor putting away tne leather beds tor the summer, nave a clothes lincrricross the room, and over this hang the bed' Open the windows frequently to air it. If it must be placed away in a closet or box, take it out a few times each month into a room, open the windows and let in the air. J if the country some housewives cleanse a feather bed by putting it on the grass when expecting rain, and al lowing it to get saturated; then when the rain ceases, letting it remain, turn- run Cultivator Stay on the Farm. Ncwewton Enterprise. The farmers' life is one mixed with toil and pleasure. There is work to be done on the farm a gate to mend, a fence to reset, an ox in the ditch, a broken door to repair, a garden to plow, a tank lo build, a crop to plan, a crop to plant, a crop to cultivate, a crop to gather, and a thousand things to keep the active brain and willing hands and feet employed; yet if the farmer wishes i little reereation, he can leave nis tools and labor and spend a day or two in the woods with his gun; or a day with fishing rod on the lakes and streams. . It is not so with the business man iu the city. His business must go on He cannot shut his door and walk out If he takes a day off, he necessarily has fa nut some one in his place. Farm life is a real enioyable lite, it well plan npd? hut it m it v be full of misery it ot managed with a view ot makin ana mixinir uieasuie tvuu uuiucb 1 I. . .... i1 lviir( nne Farmers do more hard work than bust ness men, and usually live longer and harder. Farm life is made more tolera- be bv the iov and happiness the fanners ovt out of it. The business man hits I o his hills to meet every month, and is often puzzled how to make ends meet. He looses hours ot precious sweet I ...... .. .... 1 . . . m .i.nfo i f" ufilL" sleep over euioai u-ssmciuo hkik .-ic,.i in his pathway, while the contented farmer, without the fear of being clos- ed up by the sheriff, takes his rest Farmers have bills to meet, it is true; but they don't come like rifle balls from a Whitworth gun, every week or two. The writer has tried farm life, and loves it. He has also tried business in the commercial world, where no a'lowances are made for dry weather, wet weather, cKnrr rrons. or low prices. "The com mercial world ha no sympathy with a business man. The day his bills fall due he is expected to meet them: if he ; unable, his naner is liable to go to orotest. and his business to pieces Trios who are doing well in agricult ural nursnits should let Twell enough alone. The cities are overcrowded with nnnnlation and poverty. The most in dependent class of people in the world is that one which has a good home on a good farm and make their own liv mg. A t f hp rpudino" nbiss: Bov freadinsr . h - 1 ' I" And shot z.iWed down the nv pr Teacher "Why are ships iiej sie?" Boy (alive to the re- seel sronsibilities of his sex "Because Ithev need men to manage, them." The Merits of the Sand-Baff. Statcsrillc Landmark. If. this paper had any influence with the administration which is about to take hold of the revenue machine in this district, it would suggest to Old- ManNot-Afraid-of-the-Devil to )f-the-Devil to taboo d brass knucks and I shooting-irons an arm ins ueiiaoies wun sana-oags. v;fci cago has the honor of being the firet to I. n.i: i i m i ' have introduced the sand-bag in this country, but since then it has been mnh affected by "other cities and its in creasing popularity is the best proof of its merits. , As we understand it the handy revolver and nimble knucks are not intended necessarily to put the Bourbons to death with, but only to bring them into a proper state of sub jection; and this being the case they are open to objections. The revolver or Winchester in the hands of a reve nue officer, being somewhat carelessly handled has been known to snuff out the light of a person whom it was in tended only to cripple for life or to make a s-eive of, and when fatal conse quences thus ensue they might be fol lowed by the annoyance of a trial in the Federal Court and the loss of prob ably several weeks' time. The knucks are less apt to do fatal work but they digfigure a man, and when the gentle man representing the majesty of the law jumps on him to "stomp'1 him there is danger of blood getting on the cloth ing and. top boots of the gentlemanly officer, and the stain of blood is noto riously hard to get out. The sand-bag, on the contrary, is neat, noiseless and highly effective. It deadens a man the same as an axe-helve, but does not break his head nor have his blood squirting around over his betters. It never snaps and never gets mixed up in the pocket with key rings and the like, but is always ready for use and is prompt and Rel able. Its introduction in this district would ue a pleasing in- novation. After using the weapon for awhile the Reliable would, have no other, and the citizens generally would prefer it, with its paralyzing qualities, to the former instruments of pertora- ition and dishguretueut. Gathered Treasures. n 1C , . ., . . Selfishness is the mother of most of our sorrows. own ability. i ii ;.,i..i- i i. I ei'j'ic J ii leu i suns van "i vie-, il i il. ' J L .ueu uy tueir own coimucu When von meet a heart that is true, don't be afraid to trust it. He who waits to do a good deal of good at once will never do any. Strict honesty is the crown of one's early days. Charity is one of the noblest virtues thut link earth with perfection. To be able to enjoy art,., truly ,and fully is an indication that there ls-some jood within us. He is good that does good to others. If he suffers for the good he does, he is better still. Thou wilt be great only in propor- tion as thou art gentle and courageous to subdue passions. LDve in marriage should be the ac complishment of a beautiful dream, and not, as it too oiten proves the end. " Contentment is a pearl of great price, and whoever secures it at the expense of ten t housand desires makes a wise and happy purchase. A srood deed is never lost: he who sows courtesy reaps friendship, and he who paints kindness gathers love. ; There is no sphere in life so narrow or confined that it does not afford op- portumties for doing good to some one. We cannot conquer fate and neces sity, but we can yield to them in such i way as to be greater than if we could. The distance of memory alone cau change the drops of time through , which we swim into the rainbow of enjoyment. In all wordly things that a man pur- sues .7irn tne greatest eajtrues? iniag- inable, he finds not half the pleasure in the actual possession that he pro posed to himself in the expectnm of them. - Honor is but the reflection of a man's own actions, shining blight in the face of all above him. and from thence re bounding upon hunself. . The severest punishment of anv in- Sousness of having done jury is the consciousness of having it; and no one but the guilty know the withering pains of repentance. There cannot live a more unhappy at.. creature than an ill-natured old man, who is neither capable of receiving! pleasures, nor sensible of doing good to others. No man ever sunk beneath the bur den cf to-day. It is when to-morrow's burden is added to the burden of to-day that the weight becomes more than we c iu bear. . f- , .- , J We should no more lament th... wa have grown old than the husLaidman, when the bloom and fragrance bus j passed away, should lament, that sun. 1 mer h;t3 gone, and autumn has come. - There is a company organized in Erig Iaud which insures . yon agaiiist bur glary.. -.' - - . The Americans in Paris snln't-vl $10,000 in a singfe day in aid ot the Pen nsylyania sufferers, ' v - W - , - - fc - I; The cat population! of Great Hritain is over 7,000,000, aerj almost 4,500,000 Kiuens annually enter the world. - In the Sydney courts it has been de cided that no Sunday newspaper can jue tor advertisements, the contract being illegal. -i " ' . Plenty of sleep h conducive to beau ty. Even a garment looks worn when it looses its nap. Hjnghamton Repub lican, f The majority of tne writers-on oc cult subject8;are Hindoos and English T and the best theosophical works are is sued in London. ".; - There areionly two women living who -hare gowns embroidered with real pearls. They are Queen Margoeritaof I taly and Mrs. Bonanza Mtfckay News comes from Touhgu, Bnrmuh, thaUKoh Pal Sah, a timber merchant there, has founded a "new religion, which is described aMi sort of mixture of Buddhism and Christianity. The desciples, who number several thou sands, keep the Christian Sunday and abtain from strong drink. . The Paris exposition has - brought sadness to a large part of Paris. : The shop keeepers, the restaurant keepers and theatrical. managers find that the show drains the boulevards, and that their business is reduced in a manner unknown since the seige. Ten years ago there were twenty-one railroads winch could not interchange cars owing to the gauge. Now all are alike and cars owned in Maine are feen slipping over the rails inTexas: The railroad system ofhe United Statesis declared to be as perfect as a system cau be made. - " A Connecticut woman is suing her neighbor for damages for putting up fl n ghe , t ,. 1 ..,i,;k i, .,:wt. house on this account will come to hers. and she will thereby have double the usual number. An enconraging itvrnTy note is that there is no longernny money in the nov- 0 . , el of passion. The public have becomd tired of the heroes whopress kiss after kiss into the rose vale of her .curved mouth," and of heroines whose sighs of love rend their fragile framesvrith their tigerish fervidity. Attainments are never so well exhib ited as when they exhibit themselves. The attainment ought to show the man, and not the mail the attainment. A small man is generally anxious to show all the size that he jean, but a. great man's size is seen without his ef fort, to show it. H. Clay Trumbull. The city of Beaunos Ayres, in the Argentine Republic, has expended du - ing the last six years $10,000,000 in - constructing sixty magnificent school buildings far 000 pupils each. These school houses are the finest buildings in the city, and a collective exhibit of them has made a sensation at the Paris exposition. Tht Argentine Republic is now, after the United States, ithe country which spends most, in propWr Hon' to population, for education, j Bankruptcy in England ranks next to a high crime. Jf a member of par- uameni lose nis property ana be abja- dicated a bankrupt, he at once loses his SPrit in that aumist bodv, A nnivnr. alderman, councilor, guardian. overseer. member of school board, highway board, burial board, or select Testry also forfeits his office if he prove so derelict in his business affairs as to be unable to pay his debts, No man ever achieved a great she- cess in anything, whether finance, trade, art, literature law or science, who is habitually buttoned up in a Prince Albert coat. No man h mind and body can be en fi rely free whose arms ana body are encased or cramped in anything but an e;isy business suit, Boston Gazette. C Two Ways of Telling the Story, Lawyer Now, Mr. Costelio, will -ou have the goodness to answer me, directly and categorically, a few plain; HueJ.l.1Qnsv fitness Certiunly, t sir. "Now, Mr. Costelio, is there a fe male at present living with you who is known as Mrs. CostelIo?r VThereis' t T , oL,n . . ,1 i! k4She is." . , ! "Now, oli your oath, do vou main tainherV" " do." . ' - " Have you ever been married lo her?" , - "I have not.' ; , (Here several jurorsscowled gloom ily at Mr. Costelio.) '"That is all, Mr. Costelio;" vou inay rt Annan ; . - .. - -.- Opposing Counsel Stop one : mo- ment, Air. tosiello. , is the ientale iff - question your grandmother? 1 "Yes. 8Qe is.". . - ; Odds and Endi. c-
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 4, 1889, edition 1
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