Newspapers / Carolina watchman. / Oct. 17, 1889, edition 1 / Page 4
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Some Practical Stiffjestion on Clay Roai. CI ir roods chii only be made into satisfactory ways by means of effective drainage, so contrived that the least posiible-waUjr will remain in the ma terial which feels the effect of the tread of the draught animal or the down-wearing thrust of the wheel. Deep sujeditehes are absolutely neces sary for such roads and the narrower the lomlway the more effective will be this drainage work. It is a great mis take in such roads to have any more width than is imperatively necessary for the iwes of the structure. 'fJie ditches extend to a depth which wolfld maintain the crown of the road two feel above the water level, and the roadway is of the least possible width, the problem of protection against mud is mot easily solved. To effect any satisfactory lesolution of the difficulties which beset such roads it is necessary, however, either to construct an artificial surface of timber or of stone, which is always a matter of great cost,, or to mingle some bind ing materials' with the clay. If grav elly materials or, shingly waste such as i often produced by frost action on slaty stones can commingled in the proMirtion of one-half with the clay, a firm road bed can eotnmonly be se cured, provided the road is well ditch ed. This comuiineled gravel or other lid anhntanee must extend at least far a foot below th surface in order to withstand any heavy carriages. In many cases an equally good result can he accomplished by covering the sur face with repeated coating of any shrubby vegetable matter. In North ern Minnesota, I have seen the ma terial known as "excelsior," i. e., strip like shavings, cut by machinery, from l.Wlcsof wood, serve admirably toh prevent the motion of the clay, and I am of the opinion that it would, in clay countrien where stone cannot readily be obtained, but where timber is plen ty, be an admirable device to have a machine for making excelsoir to be used as a road material. On the sur J face such woody matter rapidly decays, but when worked by the wheels into the clay it may last for several seasons. At uo great cot the material might b; saturated with creosote, and thus rendered much more resisting to de cay. The finest branches of trees, the leaves of pines, even rushes, may serve the need, if they can be cheaply ap plied. The ehitracter of the vehicles which are used upon a roadway hat a great in fluence on its endurance to the beat of the wheels. With the same burden a two-wheel cart does far moredamage to the road than one of four wheels, and this because of the suddenness in the motion of the wheels and their irregu lar twisting movement in the track way. The greatest defect of our American arri iges is that for a given weight of carriage and burden the tires of the wheels are extremely nar row. It is true that on ill-conditioned and muddy roadt a narrow wheel-tread is advantageous for the reason that the thick mud has a less extended hold when it wraps around the felloes and spokes; but with this arrangement the interests of the road way are sacrificed to the convenience of the individual who drives upon it. These narrow wheels, with tires often not more than an inch in diameter, cut like knives into the roud-bed and s i deepen the ruts. If we could require that no ve hicle shoul 1 have a tire Jes than an inch and a half in diameter, and that springless carriages should have tires at least two inches in diameter, in creasing in width with the burden, we would secure our way against a considerable part of the evils from which tmy sufter. AT. 5. Shaler, in t Scribner's Magazine. A Beautiful Picture. The man who stands upon his own soil who feels that by the laws of the luml in trhw-Vi li RrML hv thp l:lVS of civilized nations, he is the right'nl and exclusvie owner of the land which he illsis by the constitution of our na- " tare a wholesome influence not easily imbibed by any other source. He feels, other things being equal, more strong ly than another the character of a man who is the lord of an inanimate world. . .j : j f..i 1 - ui mis rcac aim wouueriui put;rc which, fashioned by the hand of God, and upheld by his power, is rolling through the heavens, a part of his- his from the centre to the sky. It is tlie space n which the generation be fore him moved iu its rounds of duties, ! and he ftels himself connected by a visible link with those who follow him, and to whom he is to transmit home. Perhaps the farm has come down to him from his fa thers. They have goue to their last home; but he can trace their footsteps .ft over the scenes of his, daily labors. The roof which shelter him was rear ed by them to whom he owes his be ing. Some interesting domestic tradi tion is connected with every iuclosure. The favorite fruit was planted by his father's hand. He sported, in boyhood beside the brook which still winds through the meadows. Through the held lies the path to the village school of early days. He still hears from his window the voice of the Sabbath belli which called his father to the house of God, and near at hand is the spot where, when his time' had come, he eh all he laid by his children. These are the feelings of the owner of the noil. Words cannot paint them; mon ey cannot buy them; they flow out of t he fountains of the heart, they are the life-spriugh of a fresh, healthy and generous national character It u a curios fact that there are $200, 000 people in the United States who have artificial legs or hands. This number doe not include the veterans of the Union or the Confederate army. n ew ork city and vicinity there , - , " . ho ntvinr . i (Mltl mii -mi iv. ,m. .11 hv h. ,pplil't.h Am bfl M limbs Mk the MlMd art.cW. i - " .. Anatomy. The following facte in regard to the anatomy of the human body are inter esting; a knowedge of them may often prove useful: . , Average weight of adult, 14o lbs.; height, 5 feet 7 inches; chest measure ment of male (England), 30' inches; drawing strength between hands, 75 lbs. The skeleton is one inch shorter than the measurement of the living person skeleton weighs about four teen pounds there are 240 bones. The body contains about 28 lbs. of blood; about. 10 lbs. pass through the heart at each beat. 80 beats per minute, or 800 lbs.; or in 24 hours, 1,352,000 lbs. All this passes through the lungs and is revivedJy the oxygen of the air as bright red blood goes by the subdi visions of the arterifs to every minutest portion of the body, and returns laden with impurities as dark venous blood through the veins to the heart again. The heart is a little larger than the fist, and weighs about 9 tojt ounces. Th adult male brain weiirhs 49 to 50 ounces, female 44 to 45 ounees. the nerves of motion and sensation from every portion of the body end in the brain and spinal cord. The lungs consist of about 174 mil lion sacs or cells at the end of minute tubes that unite to form larger tubes, and these form the two bronchial tales, and these uniie in the windpipe, opening into the mouth and nose. At each breath the lungs are filled with about a gallon of air, the only purpose of which is to oxygenate the blood. The blood absorbs about 30 ozs. of oxygen per day, sufficient to consume in the tissues of the body the carbon from about 3 pounds of bread. The stomach lies beneath the lungs, near the center of the body, and is a sac of a capacity of about a pint (without distention), in which the food is changed by the digestive juices and ferments. The liver, to the right,and beneath the stomach, weighs aliout four to five pounds; it changes the starch of foods to sugar, secretes bile, and otherwise aids in digestion. Spleen, to the left of the stomach, about the size of the fist, weighs 5 to 7 ounces; functions undetermined. The intestines, about 34 feet in length; the digestion of fowl and the absorption of its nutrient qualities into the lacteal and the blood is com pleted in the intestines. The two kidneys weigh about 4 ounces; about 1,000 ouuees of blood passes through them in an hour, and by them the waste fluid portions of the food not useful to the blood are strained out. The waste fluids of the body are also exuded through the pores of the skin. The area of the surface of the body is about 2,500 square inches, it contains about 7,000,000 pores, each about of an inch long, or a total length of nearly 23 miles of pores. The secretions of the body, saliva, gastric juice, chyle, bile, etc., which are absorbed from the blood and reabsorled by it in twenty-four hours, amount to 25 pounds. Adults require 8 or 9 hours' sleep. Hujtled for it A man with a sort of ''Down-in-Egypt" appearance got on a Chicago cable car at the corner of La Salle and Monroe streets, and after gazing for a moment at a fat representathe of the board of trade, asked: "Does this car go over a bridge ?M "No; goes under the river." "Ah, hah. Now, sir, do you know what's the matter with me? ' "No." "I'll tell you. 1 haven't got a nickle to pay my fare." "Get off then." LI don't want to get off; I want to go way out yonder. . Say, will you let me have a nickle.'' "No." "Give von my n.te for it. Is it a trade?" "No." "You are a rich man, I reckon." "I'm not a beggar.". "Bet I've done rnqre work in one year more real, genuine work than you ever done in vour life. Ever split rails?" "No." "I thought not. Ever work in a field with a hoe that would weigh five pounds?" "I have neverjworked on a farm." "What do yon do?" "I'm a member of the board of trade." "What's you! line mostly?" Wheat "When does the fellow come around to snatch the nickels." "When we get to the tunnel." "And if I don't show up with a uickle hedl put me off, won't he?" "He undoubtedly will." ..!... Ml t c oiu wm you n npre aim see a contemporary that's a good word, a iu inr "First rate." "Well, will you sit here and see a contemporary put off on account of not having a nickle ?" "I am going to sit here and if he puts vou off I may see it." "Without the slightest feeling of regret, too, I reckon." "Yes." "Now, sir, if you was down in my country and neeied a nickle as badly as I dp I'd give it to yoo.M "Perhaps so." "Then why don't vou irive me one?" "Because I believe in the great j m I n mi piiiicipni Ul illlSlIHIg uThen you think a man otiffht to hustle and get what he wants." I do. 4iAnd it doesn't make much differ ence how, eh f "iot a great deal. "Well, er " W th a inni'pnmn f n ii intn. dron tu what. th MlnioninnM. . - I v...n.UliUOI f ; ......... I. ,..1 il.. l - ... j i , . i oimiiiini ine uiiiini iir irnna man wach and .lianppeawl in Ifc. crowd IU waW . Lieh and h.tW for it. What Ha Called a Coincidence. M I used to travel around the country with a patent hay fork," said a man with a green patch-on his left eye as it came hw turn to tell a story. "I am not going to say anything about the patent more than no farmer never got any benefit from it. W hat I wish to bring out is what might be called a curious coincidence and one that I have kicked myself over a hundred times. "It was in this way," he continued, as he got settled back in his seat. "Farmers have their weak spots the same as other folks. You can hit some of them by praising their build ings, others by admiring their horses, others, again through their hogs or calves. 1 had a way of hitting theirr all, and it worked to my great profit every time. When I got up in the morning, after staying all night with a farmer, I got off something as fol lows: "1 had a very curious dream last night, I dreamed that 1 was digging out behind vour barn, iust on the line with a big not hole in the sixth board from the west end, and I unearthed a tin box containing $1,000 in green backs. The dream waft so vivid Chat I almost felt the box in my hands. There's nothing in dreams, of course, but I never had one which seemed so real." Mind you, I had taken notice of the knothole the evening before. Some times I fixed the place behind a barn. in.1 lAmol imtts I hwil flip nhu-p nenr 1 Mini uiiii'.tiiti-" i j. j-. ..-. a stump, or so many paces from a cer tain tree or strawstack; but it was all settled on before hand. It wasn't one time in twenty that a farmer would charge me for my lodging after giving him this dream. It hit'em plumb cen ter, and they were only too anxious to get me out of the way, so they could begin digging." "Go on," said several voices, as he made a long pause. "Well, one morning, after lodging with a farmer all night and getting his note for $50 for a hay -fork, I re lated the usual dream in the usual way. This time it wasburied treasure le neath a stump near his barn-. I saw that he was hard fit at once, and he left me eating breakfast and went down to dig. I was chuckling over his greenness when he came walking in with a tin box under his arm." "You don't say !" "But I do, and it was a box he had dug out a foot or so below the surface. It was broken open right then and there, and may I be drowned for a yel low dog if the contents didn't pan out $1,624 in just as good greenbacks as vou ever saw." "Bnt-but -" "There is no butts about it. He found the money and kept it. This $2 bill was a part of it. He gave it to me as a reward for my dream, and I'm keeping it as a relic to show what a fool a man can make of himself. That's ail gentleman all except that I want some of you to kick me us soon as convenient." A Detective's Keenness. Boston Post. I will venture to relate astofy which I can vouch for as a true tale. A gray horse of some value owned at a town about twenty miles west of here was stolen one night, and inasmucii as no trace of the animal could be found elsewhere, it was assumed that he had been taken to Boston. A detective was employed, and every public or dealer's stable in the city wis visited, but without results. Finally, just jit dinner time one day, the detective dropped in at a large hotel much fre quented by marketmen, teamsters and the like, and as it was the winter sea son a great number of top coats were hanging up in the hall. The detective examined them, and found that two contained white horse hairs, although as he had previously ascertained, there was but a single gray horse in the sta ble, . nd that not the one of which he was in search. Accordingly, l?e wait ed for the owners of the coats to come out. from dinner. The first one went straight to the stable and ordered his horse to be harnessed. The second one put on his coat and went into the street. The detective pursued, and. after tracking his man for an hour or so, finally followed him to a small stable in an obscure street, where he found the missing horse and arrested the thief. A Book Aunt's Great Scleme. haid a book asrent recentlv: "I was a book fiend ten years or more before j the idea dawned upon me. and now I j make more in a week than I ever did j before-in a month. I take out reli- j gious books onlv and never one that ' costs less than ll5 or $6. On striking! a town I get from the directory a list , of the pastors not for the purpose of , working them, for I dou go nigh I them. Then I write down the addres-: es of the trustees, in case the directory j k..c i .1 , , , - I happens to give them; but if it does ; not, I make a round of the janitors to; get tne names or the richest men in the congregation. I spend time enough in J11 n ueigraue, then denoa, and next this preliminary laW to get a route; comprehensively laid out i presence" in Normandy, whether ll JNext, 1 tell to one and another thej mayer had gone in order to "cut a same story, that his minister is dying: dash1' during the summer season with for the book, hut can't afford to buy it. I lhe rcenary creature of bU aflec The wives and daughters of the church Telegraph. -pillars tre easier to eapttne than the brethren. lts the biggest Tiing in nie wuoie nisiorv or nooK canvassing: afld the tntJ of lt 13 the trick "Wom gets exposed. When the pastor receives the book he's tickled and I'm tickled and the donor is tickled it's all right." There are 0,000 girls preparing to ; enter the N. Y. Normal college, and: only bUO can be admitted. - ' .ri 1 . n .1 ii 't SS "i,h Zfe ' ?Si&Z. 300 AN UNWZLCOMZ CALLER. 4 Womiw Open the Innr of Her Ho nd Plnd4 a Lo parti Therr. Ii an Indian bungalow every bed room ha a small anteroom attached, in which the important function of bathing is performed, writes a lady traveler in India, The floor is of Cement and uncarpeted, to allow of splashing, and around the tub are placed the ghurras or earthen pots of water, which aro required for the bath. The little rtiom has always two doors, on&4pening on tho outer hall to admit the bhcesti with his supply of water and tho other opening into the bad room. One evening just as dusk was falling I had finished the unpacking of a box in my bedroom and was moving away when 1 fancied I hear J a slight sound in the bathroom. It was an unusual hour for the bheesti's visit, so I opened tho door. and. to my horror. saw iust in front of me the beautiful . ... u i i ,v:i crouching on the floor and drinkin- : out of one of tho ghurm.3. The room was so small that I found myself quite close to the leopard, and could, indeed have touched the spots ou its glossy coat from where 1 stood. 1 was too frightened to move, and stood perfectly j still; and fortunately for mc, the outer door by which the creature had entered still stood wid; o;en. and with a single bound it cleared the threshold and dis appeared up the hillside. Had the door blown to. or been csed from the outside by a servant, t!v; animal would have had no resoureo but to seek an exit by the doorway in which I was standing, and the knowlodgc of my narrow escape made us careful ever after about shutting up early in tho afternoon. A few nights later we wero awakened bj' hearing th-i watchman call out loud ly that thore was a leopard in the ver anda; and we ran to the window in time to seo th i waving of tho branches where the beast had sprung out among he trees. The beryer, who was lying rolled up in the blankets in the same veranda, slept soundly on meanwhile, unconsciou ; of his proximity to tho stealthy-footed creature. Those leop ards are cowardly creatures, and will never attack a human being if they can avoid it; their special fancy is forlittlo dogs, and they will so haunt tha neigh borhood or any ho ise where dogs are kept that tho gre.itest earo is necce3 6ary to preve.it th: liitlo quadrupeds falling victims to the bi one?. As the weather becam 3 better they trrew le8 bold, and it wa3 only toward the end of tho saascin that we" saw them I again. When snow fell o.i the farther hills they wore driven to seek food lower down, and then again they began to infest thi station. Often in tho month of October, w hen eoming home late night, I have heard the hoars j sort of purring noise thjy make as they rub their sides, like huj-e eats against the trunks of trees. Th men carrying my dandi (light palanquin) would then step out, and talk loud to keep up their courage, while the mate would llourish his lantern and s'iout No leopard would come near so noisy a party, and the only danger pa such occasions is of the men taking a panic an 1 dropping the dandi, when the situation would be awkward. This, however, never hap pened to mi, a id I w.vj equally fortu nate when rajing. C'ticaj) Tribune. A FAMOUS DETECTIVE. Soma of the ClTer Ctptarrit of 5f. Son. dais, of thn rarU Fuller. Tho French detective force haa been greatly decried aiul depreciated by the public of recent years, and it has been commonly remarked that its memborj had lost that professional astuteness and ability which distinguished M. Claude and other famous limiers, who have either published their own ex periences, like that worthy, or who have been described under assumed names by novelists of the "Gaborian school." The promptness with which Allmayer, the notorious swindler, was recently arrested at Havre showj. how ever, that there is still some fine "blood hounds" in tao detective force. M. Soudals, .who wa3 the prime mover in the arrest of Allmayer, is one of these. He is a man' between thirty-five and forty years old. with a short, rugged board, and looks like a rotund and comfortable citi.en who has "made his pile,"' and has nothing to do for the remainder of his life but to disensi politics at second hand and t) play dominoes in cafes. M. Saudais flie3 at all kinds of game, but his favorite birds aro defaulting financiers and big swindlers. Never theless, when theivi is no important culprit to b followed from the boule vards to tho batiks of the Bosporus, M. Soudais does not disdain to trade low murderers and burglars to their lairs in the Palac.3 Maubert or th3 dingy en- I1"" Ul CT , , p" I 0ks v .,i via ..- he arresUd in Vienna. Later on ho hunted out Maisonnouvo, who mur- dered a looso woman in the Rue de Rome; ITm and Farme, two wretches who "knived" an old bonrg oin to death ln Vincennes wood, and finally he tracked Mouvet, the absconding bank dirctor, u Constantinople, and with the ald of two thieves laid J tr for h5ni ? which he felh M- V m T thieves because he could, as he said, but little on tho help of th; Constantinople oilice. As for ah. mayer, the deteetive had looked for - - Tjitelligent Beaderi trill notice that Tutt's Pills "intrrantrti to curt" all classes r 41smcs, bat only sneli m result rrom a clisorUercU liver. Tlx Vertigo, Headache, Dyspepsia, Fevers, CoGtiveneso, Biiioua Colic, Flatulence, ct:. 1 l or sfc tby are not warrant! fallible, hut arc aa nearly Mm It tnjf i bio to niHk' a remedy. Prlee, 'ir.cx. Electric Lamps for Tra?eierji. One of the latest novelties in the j application ol electricity consists of an 1 electric reading tamp, which is being i fitted to the carriages on the main line e . j .-v .a l. or tne oontneasteru railway. It M on the principle of the 4put a penny tu the slot" automatic machims. The apparatus is situated immediately over the passenger's head, and under the rack, and is contained in a small box five inches by three. The light is of five candle power, and is obtained bv the introduction of a penny at the top ill I tin hiiv un. ' l .oUr.oi.nl ap. sure of a ktudi, and will last for half an hour, extinguishing itself at the end of that time automatically. If the light be r quired for an indefinite pe riod a penny every half hour will tuf I fice. The liirht Can be extinguished at i i i y 7' - . , -tit' i rit i jrt. u o ill 'l v o any moment hv means of a second button provided tor the purpose. One .,f the slK"c,!l1 of the mvet nt ion is that if the instrument is out of order, the penny is not ht, as it is in the present machines. It drops right through and comes out at the bottom of the box. o that it can be recovered. and the s.iuie result happen in tljje c::se or any coin tit her than a penny. Each carriage is tttied with an accuinu I lator which supplies the electricity. This invention will add greatly t; the i- . i i comfort of passengers journeys. Nature. during night A Scrap of P.p Savas Her Lifo. It was just an onlinary strap of. wrap ping apvr, but it saved her lite, bite was n (he last starts ol t'olitsUinption, ttdd bv physicians that she was in uralileand couitl live only a short tinit; she weihetl less stventj pounds. On a iee ot wrapping paper site read of Dr. Kind's New Discov ery, and got a sample hoi tit; it helped her, she bought a large bottle, it helped more, bought aiiotlit-r and grew letter Inst, t-tn-tiuutil its use- ami is now strong, healthy, rosy. pump,"wcigliii.f; 140 pounds. For fuller particulars Sl-i.U si i nip to W. II. Cole, D.uggis . Frt Siuilh. Tiiul Oottles of this VVoiniertui Disc.fvcn lice at Kluttz & t.'o.'s Druusttu e. William lieli, a sntaiit surveyor of mi the postothce iU.art nient ot Lngiand. is in this country ex.uiiiuiiig our pos tal system. He expresses surprise that the railway cunUu.t'- here carry the inspecttus ai.u mail cieikstiee. In hugia d'ali postal ciliiMOVes h:.ve to fhei' fare anti ue ieuiu;.rca i v the department. It has al p i pit Xcd Air. lieil to undetsiaiitl how toe -inspectors here are able to complete an examination in one or two rt eek, when it requires a month t r two in England, fie s.ivs that tiie profits of the depart .ueiil ot' tvulail . i.i-t year Wele i0, i.HK,t (K;. i'u iii -t 'ihj Daily. This is what ou otilit t have, in fart, ytu nuisl have it m i n i ei.joy hie. Tltou s.niOs are sea idling lu it daily, mid mourn ing IH.I . l.S " II II I. I I i . illll Li bull ,.- iiM;i t. io,. liicit in imliiim are hiKriit ani u .41 1 y o oar aujili' in :li - h.-pe laat tlie may uhtain tins Ooon. And yit it may he had hy ait. We giurai.tee thai E et tih Bitters, it used sectiniing to direi t ions atiu li.C lint' lli'l nisi I'll III, villi Oilll toll tjililli li fsti-ii iiiri -i si l lie iH'inoii l)y-f icpsin mid inia I m-te.Hi Euppv. N t ii-enm-iii nd Electric Bitters lor )sjepsit and all lis"fs o Livt r, Stoma, h an I Kidiu-s. .oui al "Klc. and $1 per ooitli- by Kluitz & Co., Di ui;ists. The virtues in Lee have always found ;is liaii a. it n-..iiy lecojrniiion in the .nirth as in the South. The men of the South c. ti av nothing of the beauty ot his personal character, his courage, his ievotiiui to h;s ideal of duty, that will .nit H.'id a i.-ady echo ;.ni iin thx.-e he t'ouiriit uirainsr, and bv wuoni i he was conquered. Xcir York Tribune. Buc'clen's Arnica Salve. The Ckst Sai.vi-; in the woild for Cuts. Bruises, ores. Ulcers. Salt Kin inn. Fev r S-uvs, Tt-ite, Chapped Hands, Chilblains Corns, and all Skin Eruptions. and positive ly "Cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to :ive nerlert satisfaction, or monev relunded. For Sale h :J:lv. Price 25 cents pes box. Kluttz & Co. We are often asked why farmers s re organizing? We reply, To attend to their own business, something they have not been doing in the past. Other people have been attending to our business for us, and just for a change we will swap bosses, and trv bossing our selves awhile. Farmers' Exchange. jpsaaq ssaassjq Steam, Air and Vacuum Pumps, Vertical and Horizon tal of evory variety and capacity. VERTICAL PISICN. IK Bnty's Lcttrr City, ln'l Extract or Flax itoipillnn) ant-ft? "1 ir.iw ur-i ...... V 1- ... a . . ...I V.llll' -(i.ai:kk 's C'oiiuh dire stml lino" it st Miiiliift flirt for deep mmU-u cm. is. It has ilni- more .(b ,n r0f ur uu aMUful p!ivsifHi. Mv .ldldrn and I be Wli.M.pmu' v,u- -H. d with the mht i' ir Coiih Cuif, "iln v hail it verv ii ht tiimpmttd with tht "m i JtlMuV children wlw did not take it. I btlifveit :o Ik- tlx !ft eon; ur' ,n ' the market." So it is. A large bottle oulv $1.00. r, ii.k-i 's Ki.ax Soap for the Skin. - -. i .rr I. lead them all. Pri-v Cure and Soil, for MIC 2j l ent. U4nin bv Jio. H. Kimiss, 1..U W,..ini:ilrr's nietv has led U"l .... I office seekers- wito want postoluees to obtain the endorsement of leading divines. Caved From Ccnsumptioa Several phvMcianf pn-diet'd that Mr. Asi It KowVy, Dnojgi-t, f t'liiisgo. u!d soai have CMiiyptin eaust'd b an a-reatl tase J' L':it;irrh. Cato mers tinallv iadiKVd ,im to tr,v Cli;Rk'8 Ext a act ok Flax (lapilon) Catahhu Cuuk. !K a;: Tlic; rt-sutt - uupre 'cvtleiitetl. 1 ct.mnieiict d lu et well nSter Mlit lirst appl'untioii ai:l am now, attt-r a "few werks. Miuielj unci 1 it will dothe saute for ti IVu'e f 1.00. Try I'lm kc's Flax .oaj toi the tkin and ou will use no ..l In i . 25 t nts, AH if Clarke's rt me dics an- for silt- l .In . 11, Enioss. JS OTIC K. liORTH C HbWAtt COUfliT ) SCPEBIOB-TorRT. Nov. Term 1SS0. Mariah L. Smith, pltiintiff, against II. I. Smith, defendant. Action for divorce from the bonds of mat- j rimony : The defendant above named is hereby ! notified to be and appear before the. j Judge of the Superior Court of Rowan county to be held in Salisbury,, on the I Ith Monday after the 1st Monthly in j September, 1881), and answer the com- j plaint which has been deposited in the office of the Superior Court Clerk of said county ; ami if he fail to answer said ' complaint tin- plnintitT will apply to the Court for the relief di iuaiide-l then in as ! stated above. JOHN M. HORAH, Clerk Superior Court of Rowan County. Lee S. Overman, 17:6t. Att'y for PlaintilF. Administratiix Iotioe. The undersigacd hr.vin ipinlifieil as Admini traiiix upon l he e; ate f Nathan II. Nee y, tleeeji.-vtl, all persons having claims against said estate aie hereby no titled o pit'.vent them to rae fia' payment on or fow the 10. h day ot St ; ; inlit r 18D0, r this notice wiil Oe plead in baro their 'eovt iy. -All prr-ons iinleliiid' t said est ' : xioiifuil to mukt immediate settlement. September 2d. 1889. MARGARET C. NEELY, T. C. Linn, Administratrix. Attorncv. 4fi:6t JittAUfltLDS isa specific . wi.ni vii MENSTRUATION lr TaKEM 0uONTHLV SICKNESS jbook TO"WOMAN'Mey BRADFIEL3 REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA GIL SOLiBYALL AffttSSSTS soLnr,v-trTr f EjLS A CQ BUIL m y LO i B FUR Persons want inr to buy building lots i near Livingstone College are reqiustcdj to inquire at THIS OFFICE. 1 HOME Total Assets J. ALLEN BEOWN, 0n Regular HorisDiital Pi3ton. Th? most simple, drratile and effective Pump in tho market lor Mines, Quarries, Refineries, Breweries, Factories, Artcum wells, Fire duty and general manufacturing purposes. OSFSend for Catalc gne. T' A. S. CAIIROH STFAM FOBP WOFES ?. il. THOHrSGH CO. nifCFATcnr.Rm. ! I Sash. Doors, Blinds J?43 Scroll Sawing, Wood Tumi3gi AMD CASTINGS Or ALL -DEALERS IX- Steam Engines and Boiler?, Steam ad Water Pipe, a Steam Fitting, Shafting. Pulley nan ALSO r I L' .ii ,, , ai.ieninciy m an Kinis ropairi; SHORT NOTICE. War. 15, '88. on STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA hU W Art UUIHI1T. j In the Superior Court, 1st Oct R89. jvuic rosier, t'lam t ill". Against John S. Henderson,Hrustec of Kate o Foster, and James Foster, Thos p ter, Edgar li. Kamsay and wife JeJ R. Ramsty, Defendants m"e 4 ouu jut 4c y xvtxu rjsiiue and nett ,-, oj lrusi fund. -incnt In the above entitled case itanno; to the Court by affidavit of the pi. S that Kd-arB. Ramsay, oih-ot the! vft.J' j.ants, is non-resitlent of this state m a j cannot after due diligence be found-. I It is ordered that publication W made' j in tho Carolina Watcliman, a ih vs!);Mh I pubished in Salisbury, notifying tin! JT i Edgar B. Ramsay to appear at the next term of our Superior Court, at the ( 0llrt j House in Salisbury on the eleventh day after the first Monday of September ; A. D., 188U, ami answer or demur Th tlw I comjiJairrt. J M. HORAH, Clerk 50:at. Superior Court, Rowan countv- PATENTS, CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS LYl copy RIGHTS. Obt'ilnef.ind allothti buslnetin the V tuih e atteuUet. to IwJ AltKleiutt Kt i s. Patta I l tu r i illii, 1 w itulM ilill I lin I v i- . . i.m;.. I we-ean oliuilu I'atentbin less tiUit tuan UjcHr, ! mote Irinu vv'iishlngicn. ' iiL-nd Model oi 'drawing. v.u'.v1m asto uioM ' abilli free otobaigt; and makt .vr Au., ' ,., ; Obtain Patent. - Teiefvr tier" to the Post masier. tin Sir o .Money order ldv.,amHo ollirlal oi the t s'h,, ! eul offlee. Forelrcmlar. attvii e. lein.s i h L... i : . ... ' "" iT'tr eiiL-t- ui ici uui oiirin e ui juui on i: iino r i'wimt w lilt to C. A, SliCVV & CGj ipositr Patenl Otu e. Vi.r,uii,uiM i 0t. !.'Si tf. HALL'S II COTT The b st and most pcnubir (niun .-in : nOW II- USl'J Possess all the vert littl itiiptovrtitcnti :i ml 1T1S lllll VflSiil Mltishlt-tliil. For price or tenis-ra rn o iiitdiess, It. J. HCI..M1 s. Act.. 442n. S.itisl ut. N- C. VOiuE trr,m (hlo. IIrr . portrsji of M' Usrn fon, of Saletn. Ofaia. ,H wrifi "Wn at w ork on 'arMLfur ttMi month; 1 now ha' c n rn'-f r Y. C. .V 1IH 4 Co t nliottii' sud XV.- tttioti . -Sx oltcu in-' 'iO a d.j.' if n- t r" W. H. OAKti?o, wit "I ha- DrTt-r kn"rt .urtbm tu. rll like yum Vinw K or, lUmtburc. Tu.. I w over W.ft. W. J tU i re, H-u' r. Me , wri I ltt-ni.iy I took iT't' i f nub-t Ifakf un oi'l. r f t r - ocm rufil i" ofint it- M ' ; ,'-- SfcjfO pf r m iiiiff t tiny Jwoik." p al fverv hoii I viip. . Mv re tm ! not :. to ijiee- nrae who takes tioM of this rrsnd Imi(4m pi leu ttpffian-tprofcit Shall we start YOI in this busiuefrs reader? Write to tu nd Warn all about it for yourself re startiut: many wt will tar you it yudout driay atiM nutht-r irt ia aht a.i of you iu t our part 'Y the ',cui1trvv If y takr hold you will be bbto pi. k up rold Cast.' (ktf"flrf Ou T'.unt of for d tuanufactun r'a sate I 2 tMIW ten dollui PhotOffi jijih Alhiittitt ereto U stdd to t r f.---,r for "36 Hcb H rn i nt Kvat Crimson Silk rv. iMusb.TTirki iiiinerly drcorHted inidrs. l(.-nd'i! rt - buin-mtks wt-rbt. I.arpust irent-t bartrain s)er kuuwtt Jlflrt wanted, l.ibernl tntna. I'.if money for trent ,n become a surcsfut ar'-nt. Sells itv-if on nt;lit -Jittk ar aa talking rtesery. Wlwr"er assowti. evny one snt .r. ehnae. Ar- nt. take tboutnds nf rdWrs wijh rapuuw ht be fore known. Great proflia nwait ever worker A? -nti sw anakinit frtune. Indies make a much at n-w. V ourreadet, randoaa well as any one. FuM iHformation and trrnifrrr( to tjsose who write fcr same, with particular end termafoi -r Family llibles Hooka and reriodteakv. After yotPknosr !!, akvuld you conclude tO fono fur:h- r, whv no harm i door. Addreaa . C. ALLEN A ' O..' Atotr, MaihX Hrni't f rin rh- ir irter.; trr LF-FEEEIKG COMPANY, SEEKING HOME PATRONISE : 0 , - A STRONG COMPANY, Prompt, Reliable, Liberal ! JfcigrA gout in nil cities and towns in the S uth J. RHODES BB0WHFfPniJfI,i C. Co ART, Secrt lary. S75O,O0G. Agett, Salislrcry, H. C. VERTICAL PLUNGf roo-r or L.it JnnTCECT Nrw y.
Oct. 17, 1889, edition 1
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