1 The Carolina Watchman. v fOl. XXI, THIRD SERIES. SALISBURY, N. C. THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1890. NO. 26. SEND YOUR JOfflE TO THE-- WATCHMAN X. J, M. PATTON, Jr., Lessee. in all its Appointments. Pvkry Variety of Printing Done With EAprNESS and Dispatch. o Bill Heads, Letter Heads, "Note Heads, Statements, Envelopes, pamphlets, Posters, r Dodgers, . Cards. Tags, m n J ft lW No x Botch :-: Work. fel fa fa fat k fa Satisfaction Guaranteed. Orders by mail solicited and prompt ly attended -to. Address, J. M. PATTON, Jr., Salisbury, N. C. Job worth of Dry Goods to be sold at and below New York Cost. , This is the biggest Dry Goods Sale ever offered to Salisbury and now is your time to save money. The dress goods stock and embraces many Spring-goods at 1 l.w Worn'a on,! fl P AR . , T ill 11V 1U14.. . save 50 per cent, profit. . - : 25 doz. White Sliirts left, some below N. Y. cost. Summer is coming, buy while you can save from 50c. to $1 on the shirt. The largest and finest stock of Jerseys from 50c. to $2.35, will be sacrificed from this on.k Big line Jet Capes, good stock. You can save from $2 to $3 on each grade. This is something every lady needs for Spring. $G00 worth of Ribbons, that are worth 25 per cent, more than when bought, now 10 per cent, less than N, Y. cost. ' All Millinery Goods 25 per cent less than N Y. cost; 40 Rolls of Jeans, all wool filling, cost 28 to 32 cents; take your choice for 25 cents. These goods are cheap at 50c. and will pay you to buy for next winter. BED - The best Feather Tick worth from ocents up. 1 Table Damasks, red and white, just half what you can kuy them elsewhere. The accounts due O. B. Van Wryck must be paid, or satisfac tory arrangements msM about them, in the next ten days. LEE S. OVERMAN, V (TrOYAL ?3K'otS J D Absolutely Pure. Tbls uovrder never varies. A marvelof pnr.tf JtreDglb.and wliolesomeness. More economical than tue ordinary kinds, and cannot be soM tu competition with the lnuliiludi oriow test, short weight, alum or phosphate powders. Sold only in, cans. Royal Baking I'owdek Co., 106 Wall st. N V For sale by Bingham & Co. , Young & Bos tian, an i N. P. Murphy. CAUTION Take no thoei vnleM W. I.. Doul nrlco are Rtamnrd on the iglH' nmo und bottom. If the dealer cannot supply you. Bend direct to factory, enclosing advertised sta price. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. Fine Calf, Heavy taced Grain and Creed, moor Waterproof. Best in the world. Examine his -S5.no GEXTT1NE If ANIVSEwKR SHOS. 84. OO HANn-SEWKll WKLT SHOli. Si.-J.50 POMCK AM FA I! IM Kits' HI-OB. m.an extra yamtik calf shoe. & S3 WORK I NO M EN S WOOES. '. and SI. 75 BOYS' SCHOOL SHOES. An iualc in Congress. Hut ton and Lace. S3 &.$2 SHOES ladies. 81.75 SHOE FOR MISSES. Best Material. Best Style. Best Fitting. YV. L. UoukIub, Brockton, Mass. Sold by S. BROWN. 1 trimmings is still complete and half their value. Hnrscts left. Buv at cost and TICK. 25 cents, now 15c; all grades Anonymous. Probably of the Seventeenth Century. IT IS NOT BEAUTY I DEMAND. It is not beauty I demand, A crystal brow, the moon's despair, Nor the snow's danghter, a white hand, Nor mermaid's yellow pride of hair. Tell me. not of your starry eyes, Your lips, that seem on roses fed, Your breasts, where Cupid trembling lies, Nor sleeps for kissing of his bed, A bloomy pair of vermeil cheeks, Like Hebe's in her ruddiest hours A breath that softer music speaks Than summer winds a-wooing flowers. These are but guads : nay, what are lips? Coral beneath the ocean-stream, Whose brink when your adventurer slips Full oft he perisheth on them. And what are cheeks, but ensigns oft That wave hot youth to fields of blood ? Did Helen's breast, though ne'er so oft, Do Greece or Ilium ought of good ? Eyes can with baleful ardour burn ; Poison can breath, that erst perfumed, There's many a white hand holds an urn, With lovers' hearts to dust-consumed. For crystal brows, there's naught within ; They tire but empty cells for pride ; He who the Siren's hair would win, Is mostly strangled in the tide. Give me, instead of Beauty's bust, A tender heart a loyal mind, Wu&li with temptation I would trust, Yet never linked with error find, One in whose gentle bosom I Cmild pour my secret heart of woes, Like the care-burthened ltonev-fly. That hides his murmurs in the rose, My earthly comforter ! whose Jove So indefeasible might be, That when thy spirit wonned above, Hers could not stay, for sympathy. By His Own Hand. COL. COWLES "SON S DEATH THE STORY AS TOLD BY THE LANDMARK. Oar last issue contained a ruegre an- nouncement of the death of David Worth Cowle's, a cadet at Horner's school in Oxford. The Landmark gives the history of the case and the circum stances connected with it in full. Young Cowles was in his third ses sion at the school. His habits were good, he was studious and popular, was orderly sergeant of the first com pany and i ii -r the line of promotion. Some weeks ago he began complaining of being unwell and became quite de pressed iirspirits. ile was advised to consult the barracks phy ? ici in; but said his treatment would not help his case; nevertheless he received sqme treat ment from him, but without beneficial results, and his melancholia continuing. he was advised by Capt. Drewry to go j nome for a tew weeks lie had mean time written to his father of his con dition and had received cheerful re sponees to his letters, mid had written him, four weeks ago, for permission to go on to Washington, the permission was gr .nted by wire and the young man joined his father and the family in Washington ill a day or two. He returned to -school last Saturday two weeks ago, very much im nrtnf in 4 lcwl In th arm in discharge of his duties and seemingly in the enjoyment of his normal flow of spirits. Sunday evening he was allowed to escort a young lady to church. Mon day he was officer of the day. Early luesuay morning ne made arrange- ments with Capt. D re wry to get him a, luesaav morning he made arrange new gold lace band for his cap, and also some arrangements about a new pair of pants. He was seen sky-larking with some of the boys, after part ing with this gentleman, and jfppeared att breakfast and the early morning ex ercises. At the beginning of the se cond study hour, about 9.45 a. m., he complained of feeling unwell and said to oue of his room-mates, Cadet Emry, that he was not prepared on his lessons and" believed he would go to bed. This was in their room and Cadet Emry left him- At 10 o'clock a cadet iu a neighboring room and Capt. Drewry in the recitation room heard the noise as of a Wind slamming or a a trunk-lid falling, but paid no atten tion to it. At 10.15 Capt. Drewry, in his morning round, entered the room of young Cowles and detected the smell of burt powder. He glanced at the form of the young man, lying on the bed, his head in an uneasy position against the wall, and saw at once that he was dead. He hurried out and soon returned with Prof. Horner. The youths was pulseless, with a revolver lying on the bed between his legs and a bullet through his light temple and lodged just beneath the skin over the opposite temple. A physcian made an an examination but this was a mere formality. A coroner's inquest was held and the verdict was that the de cpased had come to his death from a pistol shot by his own hand whether accidental or not the jury did not un dertake to determine. The pistol was self-acting and was known to have gone off accidentally in his hands on oue occasion. Col. Cowles's theory is that he was sitting or reclining on the bed on this occa sion," handling the weapon when it was accidentally discharged. The facts that the deceased had had his shoes mended Saturday; that he had, Tues day morning, made the arrangements noted about the cap band and the pant aloons;that he had played injthe morn ing with comrades; and that he left no note or writing for any one all these facts are mentioned to negative the idea of suicide, Col. Cowles is well-nigh crushed, His son was a bright, handsome, well devoloped, manly boy and his father's heart was set upon him. The intelli gece or cue awrui occurrence was a shock and grief to the people ol States- gence of the awful occurrence ville, where the deceased was well known and where the deceased was well known and where his- father has so many friends. Young David Cowles was named for his maternal grand father, the late David Worth of Ashe county, and, had he lived until the loth of October next, would have been 19 yearsold. The loss of so promising a son at such an age and under such tragic circumstances is an unspeakable calamity; would to God we could say a word that would comfort in any meas ure the hearts that are crushed and bleeding. Swift and Monstrous. TEN GRAND ENGINES BOUGHT FOR THE TASSENGER SERVICE ON THE R. & D RAILROAD. In connection with the panting monsters which will hereafter pull the passenger trains from Washington to Salisbury and on to Atlanta, the Char lotte News has to say: The first of the ten was brought into the city v yesterday by engineer Tunstall, pulling a freight train, as till new engines are first "broke in" on freights, so as to get their bear ings iu shape for swift n:isseni?er traffic. It was the most enormous thing in the way of an engine ever seen in Charlotte. This new engine is num bered 808. She stand high and is a thing of beauty. Shu has three driv ing wheels on each side, teu wheels al together. The boiler srtrso high that a man can walk under it without stop ping. All the ten engines will be ex actly alike. They each weigh 10 ).000 pounds, and each one cost 810,000. They are provided with every modern improvement and are the finest engines ever seen in the South. They are built for both speed and power, and can pull a train of ten cars at GO miles an hour. Some idea of their size may be obtained when it is stated that" they are even larger than the big consolidat ed 12 wheel engines now in th? freight servic. of the Richmond & Danville. Engineer Tunstall said that No. 808 I worked beautifully and did not show , any inclination to 4,lb down.1' as engi I neers say when they speak of an engine j balking. When these new engines are put iu the passenger service there will be swift transit between Washington. charlotte and Atlanta To Stretch Hemp. A NEGRO SCOUNDREL COMMITS BURGLARY AND ATTEMPTS RAPE. Last Thursday night Allen Nelson, colored, broke into the house of Wil liam Huffines, in Rockingham county. imruay iwu . an(j ln:lkjngi,jg wav upstairs into Ilia proved, and , Mroom of Miss Martha Randolph, at the regular i . . i . . ' teiupii'u tu cuiuiuiL rape upon uer. The young lady screamed and, succeed ing In breaking away from him, ran to the room occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Huffines. The negro followed and at- I tempted to kill her, but Mr. Huffines ! defended her. She lumped from a window and escaped to a neighbor's, Th flp(1 ft, ns snftn ns7nvli(rllh The negro fled. came Mr. Huffines aud his started in pursuit. neighbors Nelson was found concealed under a house in Ihe neighborhood, was cap tured and carried to Iteidsville. That night he was brought here and lodged iu jail. Nelson has a number of aliases and is a desperate and notorious character. He has already been tried for his life and has served in the penitentiary for stealing. It is said that he escaped from the convict force employed on the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley. He was employed on the farm of Mr. Huf fines. wko is said to be one of the most 1 prominent farmers in Rockingham and r it it l mi lives a lew miles trom iteidsville. Miss Randolph is about sixteen years old ami lives w.ith Mr. Hnmues. Talk of lynching the negro was strong in Iteidsville and it was thought here that a crowd would come up Sat urday night and string him up. So far, however, no demonstration has been made. We are told that the wretch lives in mortal terror expecting every night to be lynched. He has committed two crimes bur glary, which is a capital crime, aud as- same wkii intent 10 rape, tne pen any for which is the penitentiary, and the court will doubtless put him where he i . can Pair do no more harm. Greens oro 'Ot. The Senate Concurs. THE nOUSE RE-EMBURSES ITSELF. Right or wrong, the members made the Silcott defalcation good with the Government's money, and the Settate has now approved. The House bill appropriating $75, 000 to supply the deficiency occasioned by the defalcation in the office f the late Sergeant-at-Arms of the Houe, was reported from the committee on appropriation (without amendment) and passed, with the remark byv Mr. Hale that it was almost an invariable rule to leave fo the House itself all sub ject matters that pertain to its organ ization, its force, and its business. Western Hog vs. Southern Negro. Washinwtox, April & By request, e House committee on agriculture tc-day re-opened the hearing on the Conger lard compound bill and the Dutterworth anti-option bill, both of which have been reported to the House with favorable recommendations. On the first named bill, Graves, represent ing the Georgia Agricultural Associa tion, and J. Fennock Jones, represent ing the colored cotton fanners and planters of Arkansas, both colored men, made arguments against its pas sage. Graves, iu addition to argu ments already presented, pleaded for the protection of the cotton seed indus tries against the imposition of the burdeus contained in the bill, on the ground that it would contribute more than anything else to the impoverished condition of the farmers and laborers of the South. To pass this bill, he as serted, would be the entering wedge which driven home, would separate the colored people from the Ropubliean party. In the course of his argument on the bill Jog.es said: If cotton seed must be taxed, why not tax the western hog? Why break down one industry of the country that another industry should be protected? The republican party is committed to the policy of protection of American industries. It is so enun ciated in its platform, and to its music Jit has marched to victory. , But, Mr. Chairman, if the Republi can party7 at Chicago had placed in the platform of its principles a singular creed that one industry of our country should bft taxed t ) death, and that an other industry at home should be pro tected and live, on an appeal to the countrvtiiat they would have been buried so deep by the weight of public disfavor that the trump of Gabriel would not awaken them. The protection to American indus tries, American mechanics and agricul tural laborers, is against foreign manu facturers, foreign mechanics and for eign pauper labor. The system inau gurated by ; the Republican party, in taxing one American industry to pro tect another is innovation that will be resented by a great mass of our people aud will hurl any party from power that insanely attempts Tt7 So far as the Democratic party is concerned, it is committed to free trade. It claims to be in favor of lessening taxes and reducing the tariff. If there is any thing in their professions, or in the principles laid down in their late re-form.-theu we confidently look to them to defeat thismost pernicious measure. How they can do otherwise and be true to their creed as laid down by their leaders is a matter that surprises and surpasses us. , Gentlemen of the committee, this bill, stripped of. all guise, resolves it self into these conditions : Western hog against southeeu negro. Which will win ? There is another phase 'of this indus try. There are supposed to be over 2,000 oil mills, mostly located in the South. They employ somewhere in the neighborhood of 75,000 persons. More than three-fourths of this great number of employees are colored men. It would be safe to say 'that there are at least three persons who rely upon each of these 75,000 persons for sup port and living from this enterprise. The wages paid these people aggregate $3,500,000, at the least calculation The passage of this bill would close uj many ot inese niuis ami pereuance throw thousands of dependent people out of employment and entail hard ship and want upon people who are least able to stand it. And all this to protect western hog." Chauncey Depew's Opinion of the South. WHAT HE n AS TO SAY OX THE SUBJECT IX HIS ASIIEVILLE SPEECH. ,i -li- i i " It is the coming country," he said. Li1 The next twentyfivc years is going to see some remarkable changes. Large cities will be built, the natural re sources will be developed and the South . n . wil be the richest secnm ot tie United States. In my opinion it will boom like the West a few years ago. But the boom will not leave the coun- ... . . it . i frv ns it did that section. Here these is a broad foundation; Iron and coal lay side by si le. There are untel 1 rich es in the earth and the boom will leave the country richer and not poorer Northern capital aud northern enter prise are beginning to learn of the vast wealth that ever crops out of the crround allthrough the houth. 1 hey are beginning to think of it as the best nl.ifp for investments and thev are putting their money in here fast. Be sides that the southern people are AWA'fninf? to the fact that thev are living in a country as srealthv as any on the face of the earth, as they are taking steps to its development. Chicago's Propi33d Fair Building. X. Y. Press: Architect Jenison's plans for a World's Fair building pro vide for a structure 3,000 feet in width, built on piles driven in lake. The central tower of the building will be 1,-tOO feetJiigh. There will be bal conies about the buildings which will be amply large- enough to accommo date all the exhibits. The estimated cost of the structure is 80,000,000, and it is said that it cm be constructed in ' six month3. Stay East, Young Man A NORTH CAROLINIAN IN TROUBLE. A gentleman writing . from Dakota to the Richmond Dispatch makes some pointed remarks as to the follv of voung men leaving their eastern homes J carve out a fortune in the far West. "Dakota is a very riclv fertile coun try, but one wants his garden on the outside of a tin can. Nor verily is it comfortable to retire clad in a fur cap and gloves. Verily, verily I say unto you. if you have a friend who has the "Promise Laud" (reservation) fever say unto him; Come to Dakota in the month of December aud let him j stay until May the lsts and hi fever will be low chilled. Oft in this 1 mg winter have I hungered for old North Carolina with her piney old fields and bad roads. No Virgtn.-i or North Carolina man in his right mind wants to exchange the best country on earth, taking climate, luxuries,, working mouths, four sea sons, agricultural resources, varied, for this God-forsaken, one crop country (and that, too for a success one year in seven), fertile, dry, treeless, and minus home comforts Tis true I have never seen such grit as these people display. Under reverses they have built immense towns with all the imported comforts, hotels, schools, churches, &c, that will put any State in the shade. But what does other it amount to when you take in to con sideration the total absence of other perquisites to make life a heaven? Darn a country where a man is forced toputonafur coat, fur cap, nd fur gloves every time he steps out the door. The ' Promise Land"' is not be ing filledjiip. There are few a boomers here, and none en route. Stay home stay in the South. It is the coming country in this continent and among them all, stay in Virginia and North Carolina. We have thecountry, "God's country." We do need the pluck to work. If Virginia ami North Caro lina would div rsify their crops by planting something of everything, (and we can grow them all save the tropi cal and semi-tropical plants aud fruits.) The people would soon need no mortgage and would be free of debt. Thore is nothing that we can not beat them at if we only try. As David Copperfield would sriy, I have "mean dered.'1 Just charge this meander and digressiod to my love for the South, and last but not least, to grand old North Carolina. 4C0 . - Washington Extravagance. Barrels of terrapins at 2o' a dozen, crates ot canvas-back ducks at 0 per pair, thousand of ices at $1 per plate, these are some of the extravagances that are s niniiiL' down some of the throats of the capital's visiting popula tion this season, says the Cleveland Leader. Then the flowers. Who can compute the gold that has gone up iu he oler ct orchids at bi apiece, roses at 10 per dozen, white lilacs at . 50 cents a spike, and lilies of the valley at 10 cents a stem. On the altar of New Year wejik-$H),0J0 worth of blossoms were saenhced, tor during mat time Roswell P. Flower put 5,000 into the 11 jwers ot" his only d inghter s wedding. the fruits we use are also costing gold i rn i! X I" i galore. Twice in tne social nisrory or the capital opulent hosts have floated strawberries in their white wine when it cost 25 cents apiece to bring each berry from California to Washington. Ex-Senator Palmer, our present minis ter to Spain, treated 1ns guests to such luxurv last vear, and this winter thee mi - 25-cent strawberries rolled over the palajes and through the larynxes of Senator Stanford s guests when he dineTTBIrs. Gen. Grant, from all ac counts that dinner of Senator. Stan ford's to-Mrs. Grant was one to make vour eyes bulge out and your mouth water. There were only eighteen guests, and they ate from plates of gold and silver, lhe "queen of plenty had scattered roses all over the table, and under each bit of crystal there was a napkin of point duchess lace, while the long table had a border of the same priceless web. Instead of linen, the finger bowls rested on napery of lace, and the lordly terrapin was served in individual silver tureens. Every piece was of the same costly nature, and the epicures'of tire capital describe the din ner as h gastronomic poem. Randall's Condition. rt. is almost nine to nothing that Sam Randall will nevert see his seat in the House again. How the Hams of life flickers with him. One day. better another worse. So he fares and so week by week comes the changes. The Wil mint? ton Messenaer reports as fol-1 ' O s lows: Representative Randall is in a pre- precanous stafe, but has strengtn enough left, it is said, to resist the ln roads of his disease for the immediate nrc3PiiL A remarkable thins; about his illness is the extraorJTnary vitality he exhibits. He "rallies surprisingly and has at severat - occasions astonished his physicians, Dii Mallan and Lin coln, by bis recuperative powers. His mind hits been deaf all day and he Ivts been able to move about in bed with but little assistance. In appearance he is wasted and gaunt to a -degree that makes all the more remarkable the sijrength which still remains. Speaker Reed and others called at the house during the day but did not sec the sick nun. Republican Farmers of Massachusetts in Insurrection. New York Times: TbeBoston Post has intelligence from every part of the Commonwealth, indicating that the men w o till the hard and unproduc tive soil of Massachusetts have been aroused, and will organize in a solid phalaux in a common cause. The de feat of the "honest- butter" bill, so called, by a Republican legislature, after t he-party leaders last fall promis ed that it should be passed, is tne last -straw. The bill having been defeated, the farmers wiH be unsuccessful in se curing any legislation this year. They now promise to have a word to say about the matter at the polls. The farmers of Berkshire are espec ally angry. They say the republican leaders at the time -of the memorable convention in SpringneldJastfall prom ised fintely that such a bill as they desired, placing oleomargarine on its merits, should become" a law. The greatest consternation can-be seen in the Republican ranks over the open revolt of the farmers, who are almost entirely Republican, The uprising i$ not confined tc Berkshire. Worcester county feels the effect of the rebufl as keenly, and- Middlesex, "Essex, Ply nionjh, Hampshire, Hampden, Bristol, : Norfolk and Barnstable enter their pro test. Here is a sample opinion of theT YVelister Farmers' League:5 "The Republican party has the pow er, if it wishes to use it, to pass the bill. The farmers of this Common wealth make the Republican party's power possible. Without their sup port it would sink to an insignificcnt minority, and yet they are denied com mon justice by that party with a de mand for the" passage of this bill, and support our demand, not by petitions, by a pledge, signed by every member of the Farmers' League, that we will vote the straight Democratic ticket fliis-fatt unless every Republican can didate for the Senate formally and fully pledges himself to vote and work for this bill. " ' - - t There is one town in the United States which claims the remarkable distinction of havina "second class" hotel, and the proprietor goes even further than this, by advertising it as the only "second-class hotel in the world." It is Hubbard, Ohio, which revels in this distinction. SEXUAL DIRECTORY CO UNTT GO VERXMENT J, Clerk Superior Court, J M Horah. Sheriff, (J C Krider. Register of Deeds, H-N Woodson. Treasurer, J Sam'l McCubbins. Surveyor, B C A rev. Coroner, D A At well. Commissioners, T J Sumner chairman, V L Kluttz, C F Uaker, Dr L W Cole man, Cornelius Kestler. Suj."t i'ublie Schools, T C Linn. Sup't of Health, Dr J J Summerell. ' .-Overseer of i'oor, A M Brown. - TOWN1. Mayor, Chas D Crawford. Clerk, D 11 Julian. Treasurer, III Foust.- roliee, II W Price, chief, J F Pace, C W Pool, It M liaiTinger, Benj-Cailhle. Commissioners North ward, J A Ken dleman, D M Miller; South ward, 1) K Julian, J A Barrett; East ward, J B Gor- don, T A Coughenour; West Ward, 11 J Holmes, J W Kumple. CHURCHES. r. " Methodist Services every-Sunday at 11 am and 6 p m. Prayer meeting every Wednesday at p in. Itev T W Guthrie, pastor. . Sunday school every Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. J W Mauney, sup't. Presbyterian --Services every -Sunday at Ham and 8:W p in. Prayer meeting every Wednesday at 8:30 p m. Kev J Rumple, D I pastor. Sunday sc-hool every Sunday afternoon' at 4-p m. J Rumple, sup't. Lutheran Services every Sunday at 11 a m and 7 p m. Prayer meetiug every Wednesday at 7 p m. Itev Chas B King, pastor. S Sunday school ejiery Sunday afternoon at 3 p m. It (i ivizer,jgnp't. Episcopal Servieesvery Sunday at 11 a m and G:"0 p m and Wednesday at 6:30 p in. Ue-V'F J Murdoch, rector. :J Sunday school every Sunday afternoon at 3 p m. Capt Theo Parker, sup't. Baptist Services every Sunday morn ing and night. Prayer meeting every Wednesday night. Kev pastor. Sunday school every Sunday at 9J-am. Thos L Swink, sup't. . Catholic Services every second Sun day at 10J a in and 7 p rn. . Rev Fraueia Meyer, pastor. - Sunday school every Sunday at-lwa m. . Y 31 C A Devotional services at Thill every Sunday at 10a-mT" Business meet ing first Thursday night in every month. 4 II Funs tt pres't. LODGES. FultoB Lodge No 90 A F & AST, meets . J every (ir.i and tlijrd Friday night ill each month. 1: JJ .Neave, W M. . Salisbury Lodge, No, 2. K of P, meets" every Tuesday night. All Hoyden j CC Salisbury Lodre, No lloK. of U, meet ' every 1st and 3d Monday night in each month. r- Dictator. Salisbury Council, No 272, Royal Ar canum, meets oyery 2dnnd 4th Monday night in each month. J A Ramsay, Regent. ' POST OFFICE. , Ofiiee hours from-?:no a m to 5:30 p m. Moucy order hours 9smfo 5 p nu Sunday hours 11:30 a tn to 12:30 p W. Jil Kum -ay; P M. hi

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