Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Nov. 13, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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The Carolina W atchman. - i- !T0L. SX1I.--TIII2I. SERIES. SALISBURY, N. C. THURSDAY, IXTIMI ES.IS, 1890. ix,':. I - for Infants and Children. CMtorl is so well adapted to children that Cantoris crms Colic, Constipation, , t recommend it aa superior to any prescription kao ,. n U me " A. aocheb, n, u., Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. The line of Castoria ' fa so universal and n.rits so well knowu that it seems a work Vr Inoereropation to endorse it. Few are the trifaat f amilies who do not keep Castoria Uuaeasyreach , ;j) New York City. Pastor Bloomingdal Reformed Church. Sour Stomach. Diaxrhnpa Kmc-tatirm. Kills. Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di pestion. Without injurious medication. For several years I have reconi mended your Castoria, ' and shall always continue to do so as it hits invariably produced beneficial results." Edwin F. I'ardes, M. D., "Tho Winthrop," l-6th Street and 7th Ave., Kew York City. TtlX CSHTAUR COKPAHT, 77 MfRRAT STREET, NW YoRX. GOME! SEE! BUY! .5-' :s - m " ' ' ' ;'j G. W. WEIGHT,; Leading Furniture Dealer and Undertaker tUM SALISBURY. H jiow oilcring the Largest -and Best Assorted Stock of Furni ture ever brought to this plaeo. s - . T y-j PABLOR SUITS! Mohair Crush Plus-h at $( G CP. : Foin.tr Q ,V price $7a.OO. W . Silk riufiliRnt' fCO.CC. Fnmtr price, $60.00. If Wrwil Plnli nt. :i.mo Foi mer mice. ..... ....... v -fc . . T GO k PIANOS A-XD OUOAXS. TYi'e x ard Wl if f Oig:u s ni d I)clir Bros., X liickt lii y. & Sor.s.aud Wluc'ack Ph.no. IEIJ LOOM SUITS! Antique Oik, Antique A she, Cherxj and Walnut -ni j)i irs ll.al defy competition. o fee) 1: 2 A J.AKC.E SiOcK 01' IijiL,tfMftit. KltMisf all Kiios, Spring Beds, Work Tallies for Ladies, Pictures and Pit tire Frames of every stle ttlu. fjxrulity alwnxs in slock, or will he made 1o older n tl.oiH otice at ria.iH.n alde prices. J- BABY CAUHIAOES' A forge stock of Baby Carriages with wire v liet Is at Silk Plush Seat and Satin Parafol Car riages with wire wheels at only $1(5.50. i, Formerly sold lot fS . to UKDEUTAKfNG DIPARTKEK1 ! Sprcial nttti.tion jivin to in d I taking in all its branches, at all hours day and nigJit, Paities wishing my services at ni lit will jail at my residence on Bank street, in Crook I vn." Thanking my friends and the public genera lly-ior prist patronage and asking a continuance dt-ttte same, I am, Yours anxious to olease, G. W. WRIGHT, Leading Furniture Dealer. o m a c The Ml Business Ths World As I Find It. They Pay the world's a wenry place, Where tears are never diied. Where pleasures pass like breath on grass, Ant. goes abide." ft may be so I cannot know . Yet thin I dare to say! My lot has had more ghid than sad, And so it has to-day. They say that love's a cruel jesl; 1 hey tell of woman's wiles, rhat poison dips in pouting lips, And death in dimpled smiles. It may be so I tnntiot know Yel, sure of this I am. One heart is found above the ground Vho.-e love is not a sham. They say that life's a bitter curse That hearts are made to ache, That jest and song are gravely wrong, And death's a vast mistake, ft may be so I cannot know But let them talk their fill; like my life and love my wife, And mean ft) do so still, Fredrick Lanbridge. Laugh and Grow ra With the tomato tannin if firms it L i mutter of 4,j ti up cr h t Are ten dollar gohi pieces called eag- are so eagle-y sought !es Ijecaiise thev for. u34y Tom, how are you psn 1 next Sunday? ' "Goes I will g uu an extnr." "rio? Which line will ,ou take?" "FisbiuK line." to Mr. Siiiiles Mrs. llashington lov t nnd airv veiretaOles in this rege table soup. Mrs. Hashinron No. I nut nout n it I regard such things as soup-erfl ton. The proper companion in life for -euiu tress would be a seaman, at leas it seamster us that way. Can the man in the circus who does the "aerial th ing act"' be called a vau rant because he has no visible means ol -upport ? "Well, liobbie, di-.l you enj y youi TJ:e3 tf Seme fiirdf. THF. THE PJSIT' S THEY OCCVVy IV EOOSOMY OF SATUli Tn recent years much attention has een paid by naturalists to examining he stomachs of various, birds in order ascertain the character of their od. I . those of most wr-fer fowl a .rcentage of seeds and roots of aquat ic plants has leen f und. A subj-t well worthy of c msideration is wheth- r the migratory instincts of alj water owl is not partially utilized to carrv these seeds and roots to point fj r dis- n from one another, wl ich e uld li rt be reached by water curreuts. thus performing the part for water plants ..hat air currents do, for growths. Shore birds, such as snipe, sand pip ers, vellow leg-s plover, "demur large quantities, of beetles and worms iu- juriuiu to shore und shallow olants. thev also assist in the trans- mm i a por a ! nj t i-eens troui place to place. On to.isi their transiiortiug qualities affect us in another wav. Owls and hawks until within late years have had only the uncommercial ralue of wisdom and sharp sight allot ted them. But by u shorter method than the stomach pump investigators aave clearly shown that few more val lable birds to the agriculturist cxis1 in 1 now, instead of offering premiums for their scalps, they are alio vied to re rain them and are protected by law in rheir posession. Their chicken thiev ing is an epicurian eccentricity not worth considi ring w ei com;tr d to their habitual consumption ol mice .nid other small animals which do 'teat injury ti the farmers' trees and crops. The farmers' poultry is under a is immediate protection, but h can not well go mousing to save his pro ducts. mtJfimcaewv I Fanlt-Findin. The bov s iid it w is a imou'.i ir HtrrtT TTt U. i...i.;f ..t J ' "i i lit i lit ll.liU it I es, mamma, any of the nica visit to the iiiusem ? "Do you remember things you saw?" ki(), yes, I remeiuljei tots of h t ." ki And can you tell nie what they were called?" "Yes; most of thcfin were called hand off.'" Opportunity MANY KINDS OF HAWKS. Undoubtedly the entire falcon fam ily demonstrate that bird will eat. bird but the varieties devoured by mo t of them in liny appreciable quantity arc "You seem to enjoy yourself, Bobby,' remarked o ie of t lie guests at a dinnei oarty. "ies," assented Bobby, wit! .us mouth lull, "i am making thi must of it, 'cause after pa an' ma givr a big dinner like this, it's always cold picKin' Jor tie nwxt thirty days." She had la.'eu rhapsodizing about Bro.v.iiug for nearly an h ur to yo air. Waldo, and so he sat Ikeu .o (in J.okering tiivlight, staiiug her eye with out shapely haiid, he thought In u.d never seen a fairer pic.uie. S a was about to go on, when her 1 lib brother ope. ed the door. "Penelope," le said, "can t I have some of -them cold beans you put away to eat after Mr. Waldo go s home.-' Sergeant McFlinn, instructing fie new recruit: "Y ez pull down the ho k ur as ye can and wait won minute foi to hear de bells. Is it clear to yez? Patrolman Newclub: "Yes, sir; all dear. But how do yez ring in a false ilaruin sergeant, if yephize?" Clara: "Mother, just think of i.!'" Mother: "What is it, my daughter? Clara: "Charles has had his life insur- d for my benefit for fifty thousand dollars.1 Mother: "Has he? Well. now,, my daughter, there is no longer auv Obiectroti to niakmir uitn tliat an gel cake you have been talking aboiii She kissed him as he gave her the eny;agenieut ring, "(ieorge, darling. I have always longed for one of thi pattern, and you are the fi rait who lov ed me sumciently to study my taste m the matter." "And yet," replied he, leveling things up, "it is no rarity, in mv engagements I have never used anything else. Smith: "What is the best season for popping the question?" Jones: " never knew that one season was any better than another." "0 yes. An. I the best time to propose is during an ooen winter. "During i i i i l i I i such as ire indirectly useiui to man as insect killers on I v. The appetite and capacity of one hawk for insects much more than compensate for those of all the birds il kills. Th' sparrow hawk is by far the nios! .tumorous of its species. Its chief food is grass hoppers. When this insect is u be had the most tempting morsels .n feathers is eschewed. The red shouldered or chicken hawk ,is it is miscalled, seldom eats chickens; t!:e:i in w nter olily. Its footj conui; t .f quadrupeds., small bird-', lizard., frog-, snakes and insects. iiK- uiarsu hawk me sportsman's special antipathy never preys upon r e anie for which sportsmen seek. Ii is a rapacious cater, varying it bill jf fare with frogs, coleopterous insects uid diminutive members of the feath jred tribe. The sharp shinned or partridge hawk is the Robespierre of the air blood, blood, uo matter whence it conies. H has a liking for spring chickeu, raw, garnished with feathers. H find quail toothsome and ducks piiemi tent IV to h.s taste. lie passes sentence i pon almost everything that ti es, yet the n umbel of these he kills is unim portant when compared with the en trees of his bill or tare. In tact the sharp shinned and the cooper s hawk are the only members of a large fami ly that have a tew tastes in common with man. Because of this allied sin the immeuse good they do should not be forgotten. of to mcco. and w;i 4c no vn is mol iss.s tobaceo, b.-cause it wa- mj weet. The other boys did not ask how he came to know its n. .m" or where he got k boys never ak anything that would be well tor them to know but thev accepted his theory ani his further statement that it w is a mildness sin gula rlarly adapted to learness without misgivings. The boy was himself chewing vigorously on.a large quid,and launching the jujee from his lips right and left like a growu person, and my boy took as large a bite 'as his benefac tor bade him. He found it as sweet as he had been told it was, and the apt ne s of its name of molasses tobacco. It seemed to him a golden opportunity to acquire a noble habit oh easy terms. He let the quid rest in his cheek, as he waterhud seen men do, when he was not crushing it between his teeth, and for some moments he poled his plank up and down tl e canal-boat with a sense af triumph that nothing marred. 1 hen all or a sudden he began to feel pale. The boat seemed to be go ing round an I the sky r elin.j over head. The sun was dodging about very strangely. Drops of sweat burst from the boy's forehead; he let fall his pole and said that lie thought that he would :o home. The fellow who gave him the tobacc b? a.i to laugh and the other fellows to mock, but my boy did not mind them. Somehow he did not know how he got out of the canal boat and started homeward, but at every step the ground rose as high as his kuee before him, and then, when he got his foot high enough and began to put it down again the ground was not there. He was deathly sick, as he reeled and staggered on. and when he reached home and showed himself, .bite and haggard, to his frightened mother, he had scarcely strength enough to gasp out a confession of his attempt to retrieve the family honor by learning to chew tobacco. In an- ithe. moment nature came to his re ief, and then he fell into a deep sleep which lasted the whole afternoon, so that it seemed to hiiu the next day when he awoke up glad to find himself d ve, if not very lively. Perhaps he had swallowed some of the poisonous juice of the tobacco, per haps it hud acted upon his brain without that. His father made no very close inquiries into the facts, and he lid not forbid him the use of tobacco. t was not necessary; in that one little x peril uuiit he had got enough for u whole life-time. It shows that after ill a boy is not so hard to satisfy in everything. William Dean Jlotveil n in llinper s 1 ountj 1 eople. and e uauu or it. its the easiest thing to do and he hardest thing to stop in the wide, wide world. It ruins your temper and spoils 1 ..I. ...... .t . . !. -e ' - J w ann ui juiii inouiii. i ry See able ...... V II - f - i nj$! i uu wouiii not go to a lnemis house and find fault with what she do s, with what she has and her ways of living. What right have you. then, to find fault with those who are more than frknls to you- the people o: your own blood ? It there is a grace that we are all sting with it is that of giving praise, and yet it is one with which we ought to lie lavish. Why should you tell your friend that her bonnet is lecomnting, when you have never said this to your sister? Why should yon go out to tea and praie your neighbor's muffins when you have forgottou to tell mother how good hers were? Why sl.o ild you an nounce haw much Mr. Wilson over Watch Your Bank bo.i:. Ktoai lire Mi-w'urk. -' uYou have no idea, " sa d Flat ' s 8. Turner, a lawyer down town, of tl e vast amount of niomy deposited in tl the. .hhI rather than the disagree- 22SKSllSi!2 -in the people and your surround- ?L TS". You would not Jo tn a trinA ,UU"L " H? Ueposuors auu me oaiiKs woutu reauiiv turn over should the original depositor or in? one woo has -inherited it and can prove h.s identity a t ; -4u ra of fl lepositor appear to claim it. The e accounts have remain d with the banl s various causes. Most if- ihcm, of course, opened years ago and the original depositor is dead and h:s heirs have no idea that there is s.n ' money to his credit in any of the sav-iugs-banks. Very olt n a frying hi nk lepositor keeps the f; ct that he liua any deKisiteil in the batik a close secret and not even tin; members Of liis own family know where his savings, if he has any, arc kept. When l.e dies, un less the bank books is found the secret 1 mm 1 1 rii it uies wun mm. ine UanKs. t coursi ii i m a tiirs nivu nim. lie oailKS, L in a ' . t he way kiimvs, when f. t ,er ,sa great do clmm thejlloueNr d ihel deal better in formed man, and it has L M . . -1 , . hyMPliskLjh . est account is written up as regularly THE C-'EFUL OWL. good YET OFFERED. tHE WINSTON WEST END LAND COMPANY offers foi sale a limited number of its lots in North-West Winston. They re within six minutes walk of the best line of street Lars in the South, eonvenient to schools, churches and stores, shaded, moun , -o p,.HUt;nn in fr'nr thot sr.i tl .CCO:in 1890. fOIII lIVIIDi IVJ'lliUH"" -'-'J 7---7 " twelve thousand (1 2,000). x A million and three-uarters of outside money invested in Winst)iSabm in 1800. Three ' hundred and twenty-six thous : nd cMlr-rs put ir.toactc i ic s and heme buildings in 1800, to Sqvtember.i Three rail roads building into country tributary to Wii ston. This is the best time to buv. Mans,, prices and terms givetr i n application to P M. WILSON. See.. --'. mmm w - - w ter Why so , in I.H..M u'm. ft ..II rir.ii n It. Because in an oien Win&ton, N. C. winter yju can't expect the beautifuTs no. Husband: uThishouse is as cold as a barn, all the doors swinging open, the children yelling, tto signs of sup fiY, no " Wife: "Why, my dear, how nnreasonable you are absolutely brutal. The idea of you talking that way after I ve worked like a slave the whole afternoon trying to finish this 'Heaven Bless our Home' uiolto for the front hall." A-celebrated physici m could not pay a tradesman's bill without a sense of keen suffering. Even a poor paver, who had been employed to cio a job t the stones in front o the doctor's house, could not get his money with out a contest, 'y'ou rascal," cried the doctor, as he alighted from his chariot, never entered your little head to whis per quietly to him how much you up- At "1 c a prcciace uis wimomr iou keep your ability todiscover faults for the home, while the eve that should look for vir tues is closed tightly until you go out? Don't wait till some one is gone from you to tell their virtues. Don t A J 1 1 ' ft wait uuiii your sisrer is rar away m another laud to tell her Imw helpful how pretty, or courttous she is; aiH dou't wait until the weary hands are as if the depositor were a regular visitor to the bank. The uYik sitors dniws in terest onthe iivterest accumulated, and even at the low rate paid by the hanks it noes not take many years tor an ac count to reach large rlismeus ons;" In th Clou Is. Professor Moller, of CarUruhe, has ma'le some interesting o!iserv.itio:isou clouds. The highest cloud , cirrus-and crossed and the long sleep comes, be- cirro-stratus, rise on.au average to fore you make mother know what a a height of nearly S'V.tW'J feed. Tho beautiful blue are her eyes, how tender middle clouds kept at troui ru,UJUJeet her heart, and how dearly you love to 23,000 feet in height, while the her. Tell it al! now now, when the lower clouds reach to between 3,0'.H) walk through life is hard and the sun- feet and 7,000 fret. The enmutu thine of praise is yearned for to clouds float with their lower surface brighten it, and to wa m n I enci r ige at a height of from 4.iMM) to o,O00 feet, the pilgrim Journal by the wayside. Jlmm- Thirteen was Unlucky. It is custom on some street railways misses .1 which a re n urn- Owls continue by night the work of the hawks by day; mice, moles a nil reptiles are their regular food. The barred or hoot owl and the great horn i i i i f j i eu owl ara tne oniv members or me family having an unsavory reputation The barred owl chums right of priori ty to an occasional partridge, and re taliates upon the sportsmen's encroach ment upon its preserve by foraging upou the chicken yard. It feeds prin cipally upon mice and sntali birds aur reuti es. The great horned owl is singular iu its partiality for skunk (no une sliouk entertain malace towaid it for that.) Its children cry for it. Its n. s;s are invariably infected by its order. While its food consists of pheasants, I; re yanif. ducks and noultrr. the diuiii"! i m - on a single skunk gives it resuectabh standing as a friend to the poultry raiser and sportsmen, together with all having noses in any degree more sen sitive than wax ones. The barn owl outlives the cat as a mouser and as a nerve stirring musi- ician by the eloquence ot its silence. For fifteen jears within the writers knowledge a neigh body pair tif tcreech owls have dwelt upon a west Philadel phia lawn, ill the midst of an unusual quantity of nesting birds and ill close contiguity to a chicken yard, without routing a nest or disturbing a chicken, so-far as any indication has ever shown. The regular routine or daily routine of daily life, its work and its relaxation, its i.rduous duties aid r puisibilitie, "US do von nretend to be paid for such a it; nriv.it cares and pleasures, its social piece of work? Why, you have spoil- c aims, all demand thought, deli be ru ed my. pavement, and then covered it . 't on, and coldness that ; r: the very o-'er wun earth to hide the bad work." .antipodes of the hot hate and the. Doctor," said the man dryly, uih.ne is neverceasing strain which are so often not the only bad work the earth ha es." pUt into them. 'Eh, w hat ; so vou're a wit, are ou?" ( .' . . . uti . : i. i ' " aid CMIdren Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Their iirst z uss. The squatter's cabin had grown to )retciisious proportions during the fortv years he had occupied ii. The old man remained unchanged except for the ef- ects of pitssiug years, the crowd of I .1 i iii i young people tn.it nan collected at ins bouse te spend the afternoon pressed l i in to tell tliuui a story of his early ife in that region. After a little hesitation he bega'-i : 'Leinine see, hit's jist forty-fo' year rgo 'at me an1 uier wife was maird an' moved ter this country fur to set up fer ourse'fs. We had cr log eabin with on'y one room, an' er shed fur ther stawk. I worked powerful hard er clcariu' uv lair.au1 er m.tkiiT er crap at ther same time. Wife allers fetched mer dinner ter me, an' she staid in ther tiel with nie moon half her time. NN wuz happy, ez happy ez ef we wuz rich. " One mawuin' we had er fuss. I dis remember what hit wuz eibout, but I went ei way mad an lef her cryin'. At dinner lime she never come. 1 'lowed ter myse'f 'at she wuz im.d, au's I,kLet her stay mad ef she wantsier.' Bimeby I gits so hungry 'at I started fur ther house jist er bilin'. When 1 got thar ever'thing wuz thar 'ceptin' mer wife. Thar wuz mer dinner ready fur ter take ter me, but wife wufcn' thar nur therebouts. I gits skeered an' I calls her, but no answer. Fiue'ly I seed ther dawg er com in'. He axed ine fur ter foller him plain tt. talk an' I done hit. He set off fur ther creek an' tne er fblleriu'. Party soon wa comad ter ther creek an' he runned down ther bank an' me arter him. Nex I heard him bark. 1 Yere she is,' jist cz plainT 1 runned whar he wuz an' thar wuz wife er lay in' on ther groun' pale aii' white ezsr ghos'. She smilad when she seed me an' say, 4 I'm so glad yer come. "Then she p'inted ter er grape vine full cr grapes what wuz on er dead tree, an' she say, s' she, I wuz er try in' fur ter git yer them grapes fnr yet dinner fur ter git yer in er good humor with me. br um broke an I fell. Yer ain't mad at me now, air ye?1 I felt like killin' mer se'f fur ever bein' mad at her. Hit. don't matter whut I tol' her then. I toted her ter ther house, an' nussed her twell she got well. 1 wotildu' let nobody do nothuti' fur her bat me, an' she1 pea red like she nuver wanted no one to. Well, arter er while she got well, an1 we wuz happy . Mi. 9 m ergin. That wuz ther on y luss we ever had. Sence then ef cni shows signs er git tin' mad ther vether say 4 grapes,' an' hit stops thar." Chicago Special rress Unreal. to give annua be red. These passe are not necessarily shown each time a man rides ou the cars of that line,Jjut each oue bears a number, and when asked for his fare I he holder of the pass calls the num ber of his pass, and says the Seattle Press. Not long ago the holder of pass No. 13 o.i one of the Seattle liues got on a car accompiited by two ladies, for whom he must ot course pay fare. It haj peued that the conductor was a new man and not acquainted with the pass system. The conductor entered the car in quest of fares, und the tirst person lit- approchetl was the holder of the pass while their summits rise to 10,000 feet The tops of the Alps are often hidden by clouds of the third class, but the Mjtloms of the clouds of the second class, and especially of the thunder clouds, often enfold them. The vertical dimension of a c-lniH observed by ""'Professor Moller on the NetleWerg was over .1,2 H) feet. He stepped out of it at a height of about 3,700 feet, and high above the moun tain floated clouds of the middle class, while veils of mist layiii thev ravine, and clefts. I l.e upper clouds . were growing thicker, while the lower ones were dissolving, and soon it began to rain und snow. Public Opinion. The First Silk Mill in Enlaui. A portion of tl e old mill built by John Lam be at Derby in 1 IS tne first silk mill ever erected in "England 'ias cjllaLS.il and it is . x ected that The gentleman handed him a dollar the whole building will have to come to take the ladies fare from, at the same time remarking distinctly "Thir teen. The conductor took the dollar, and then began ringing the bell of the reg ister. "Ding, Uing, ding, ding diiur, diii2," went the bell. Here, here, broke in the passenger. "What in the thunder are you trying to do?" "Diud i't you say that von wanted to pay for thirteen ?" fl i ii i r down. If unue worked lisasiik weaver in Italy, and at the risk of his life made drawings of ti e machinery. He then returned, to Englam1, bringing some Italian workmen; and .built li e a t ry ou an n'aad in the D r- went h iving tirst patented the machin ery. He died soon afterward, and it is said he was po soueu by a leui..ie emtaissary of I In? Italian nianuiaciui- er. - The mill was worked for 'hi inv No, you douole-breasted lunkhead, years, but has long I.e. m i.i disu. It - - . II Al. I I ' . . " . . - - I hold pass No. 13, and want to pa) for two ladies."' Legally Dead. The will of Micah W. Norton, tin convicted murder, r, sentenced to State prison for life, was filed in the Pro bate Court of Lomerset county, Maine, recent I v. He wills to his sous a farm was last utihsHil as a slcui iuiun.ry, anil was conuemneu s-nu omi., s.iue bei ug u ns.ife. Gal i'jna r .1 c ren der. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. A Playful Rattiesuaka. PltlSljUrjf I;s,i 1101. John A. Theroiix, of 5pr igue, ;Cal., recently built a playhouse for his chiU Ii I - m I f 1 , - X I . 1 .... i i A t ll'i in I .' w 1 iii ill. 14 I I 1 I It'll til MiUKMW II t -l I 11 if llV.k MP W I Wl I lilLLI. iUJM IVl ill' iiif-iin .tx farms in Concord, a farm in New Nine- been telling their p.ireu s tlit Miere yard, with timber lot and pastures ad- was a big snake in their play house, j . ... 1 . . .i i ...i. .1 . . i ... loiuiug: to his sous, Albert h. iNortor lie gives a farm in bolon," and to ins l I . ' XT . 1 son oarieton v. Norton, a uoie oi $2000 and interest; to his son, Sumner S. Norton, he izives the remainder of bis property, providing the son will provide for his support when requested .... t to. He desires his hve sons to n ire equally in the estate of his late wife, Etizi. His son buiiiuer, is appo.uted executor. Norton leaves an estate ot saying that when tney- were playing the snake would come out and ruu around the playhouse and tiieii run away again, Hnally Mr. Tn-mnx's little son James came running U lus mother saying, "Come to the playhouse and see if I don t knorv what a suuke is. Mrs. Theroux went to was anything theie, and astonished to see a big see if there was ureal ly rattlesnake 2J,000 ..nd makes his will, as hen J calmly snniug itst-lf (u the floor of thw he goes to prison he is legally dead. lij.itou Journal. A Cmart Detective. Sergeant Moser on one occasion saw a waiter in u cafe utSoho receive and place in hit pocket a letter which the detective believed to be from a crim inal a knowledge of whose whereabouts he was an x iou to obtain. He there fore dropped h if ring on the floor and asked the mm to look for it. Ale house, expecting a reward, immediate ly went on his hands aud knees, and wulu thus euLraea sergeant Moser abstracted the letter from his pocket and thus obtained the means of bring ing a forger to justice. Who can doubt th it this was a perfectly justifi able act? Hut if, instead, Sergeant Moser had suborned another pentou to steal for rewind, and without telling him the object in view, he would must assuredly have acted very Spectator. doorway. She picked, up a big bow Ired and muashed the varmint. Wanted Something in His Box. A man stepped up t th. delivery window at the postoffice Siturday nigb and in a savage voice saidi "see here you fellows, I want rny money back. You cankt feel rue I his way. "What's the trouble":'' iuqutrcd tlie clerk. "Wal, I hired one of your gh domed boxes io-t two we k ; ago and lone not got. a letter since 1 h..d it, but ! set most 'er the other tol lows iii.t ji.is boxes gets sfHiielhin iu theirs. dive wrongly. ine lariners finance now uasamem- lership of over two millions. The sound of .church bells is iu-aptr ing music. nie back my monev, I say It I A 1 .1 1 u -ss io argue wun nun, so ine cu-ra told hinithere h is ben sonic nitaia, and i! he called ar rMiid lau r 4e wtu!ii find someihiug in tin I ox. He wut off satistied, while the clerk liUrd inv laiX with patent nniiieine ircirlars. liea f .si A je. - - iu -i. A youngs lady named Kate iiom y, receul4v iiiun itii u i cou.u r o ci. ii lie) "ju-vt c.a ty. If h m n hi.s at iru mu.tache, and in dlSSt t I'll ) W itt1 II, I in- 0.'.i t4i.. i ; is diet bin s . A r ,1 v
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 13, 1890, edition 1
1
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