Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Oct. 5, 1893, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
- b I' i SJ'r. Km OLD AGE WILL FIKD YOU BLESSED i iv. t r Tlo Ti hom Too Have I jRred-Arp Writ I.Ker 8uir- Atlanta Constitution. Erery now and then some rich raati's daug-htfir up jiorth runs away with the coachman or a negro or some uqsuh y, bat asiccp o ms nii- - ... a t ; ? .1 . lysee him except on Sunday aa.i nercr etclos. to him bm children love u oa unless tney are rciiiea f died by fcidiuerenc lU' t3il lliOU w.zl an austere man-fit. many a father mow and the children roon yet weaned rhat girl at St. 8 married thct and bo does the wife. T i'aui would never hare oecTO if she had had a kind father's love and care. Of course she 'wrecked her hopes of happiness, hr narents are to blaiae for it. b:s nr.il Hit home.was not lwppy. "Be ye not une qually yokcMl" sayftta the scripture and .jr-very violation of this injunction brings p-Act to tuo irl, the rictim. and her family. The scamp who works the scheme Is treucrally bought of? and re tired Solomon - sys: "Ma that tron bleth his "own houso shall inherit tbo wind." No husband or wife, no son or daughter h?is &ry rht to bririf trpuilo within that sacred domain called home. I wis raminat-ln.g' about thia becaujie tfcf daily papor aae of !nte so full of dmaD.siia sri". It look like' there ia . Lanily a fitmily in tle land but what noma member of it haa brought troubie to all the rest. I look over the oommja juty where I Hta and the number is Bmsll whew th( ro is no shadow no eeret sorrow. A father's bad habits, a mother's discontent, a son's dissipation icr a daughter's frailty have troubled and t?H are troubling many a house hold that miglit otherwise be happy. A A inestic oipon the .earth, lilackstone says that by the laws of England a man's house is his ca'-tle into which, the ;king of England dare net enter uninvited. I m sure that our people generally do jiot value the privileges and endear jnents of their homes. I do not mean Jthe house with its adomings nor the Jiowers ia the front yard, but I mean tho sweet communion of the fnniily'"by the fireside or under tho lamplight or in the diningroom or sitting in the veranda, and all the tirn loving each other and sympathizing with those who have, suffered or are suii'tring the afflictions that are common to us all. If every member of a .family who is ,old enough to think would only resolve to bring nothing but sur.shins into the household, how happy they, would be. This can be done. It is easy to do. A ,man has no right to enter his own door with a cloud upon his brow, and bad temper in his heart. "Blis coming L .should always rejoice his wife ?.nd hie I children. A woman has no right to be 1 always comphuning about little tb'ogs, , nd Ehowing her discontent in a thous- ' and ways, and keeping the children in a state of constant alarm far fer.r mother will make a fuss about it. There should never be a frown at the ditiaer table, nor at the morning or evening meal, nor should there-be that -dismal silence that sometimes broods over the feast and takes away the appe tite. Food taken "in sullen silence will not digest. The b.'Ml and the board should always be cheerful. The asleep "will not be sweet when there are tears upon thCpilUJw. I wouldte afraid to fcpld a child just before the eyes are .closed in sleep. The responsibility is jr. .-fpr upon the parents than upon the cl ; ' - ij. If the father is loving and eompimionable to his boys, they would be more apt to stay at home and not wander Off into bad company. They would not speak of hiia an "tli old man." They would not bj waiting for him. to die so that, they might inherit -his estate. If the mother wjta. always gentle and kind and reasonable with her girla, they would love home too well to make a r"n-H.way match or to receive the at ;. . .. ' - ,.f unprincipled young men. "iJ Vippy," sa.n:ll be the v - .-tt family. It is well ; ! 'h little prayer, "God ii). li---.mo," painted or worked in ''"'- - 'rh 'ngiug the mantel, ir C: 'i, ,r .viU not do fnr uwhat . ' .MnliM'Oi ourboives. Th.-u are $wJ Ut'.p.1,-. r? h'ime-sickneas sick of hocaa i.'d hick fo homi I know a lassia who, not long ago, was sent away to college. nd she grieved so uftho sepa ration froai the IovimI onca at homo, and. her hrnv-r-ek liters were so full ot te&ri, that s.a wa i laat permitted to jvtu.-u. Her companions l.-h at he, ana mate yort of her chudUh weal-. a, out I huv more rogar.1 for hor '-ha I eer did. She loves her hcuie too dearly to lrav it for any commou lover. Sh win-get eKtucatiou c-novsrh J,e.Pl,.C3K3 '" h V&a b.n " fin rt might hare h mde elsewhere It U . . ' "J of hoUit ffh 1 W5k to col- leg I wm miserable for awhtt and oould cot coneefd it from my roe-inra&t wUo ox&d4 fun of h and talked about my mothr' apron string, but ha had no mothar, and eonld not understand my distress. When th term was ot, and I was to go borne. I did not wait for jthe tun to rise, but left Athena by Eioonlight, about 3 o'clock, riding urseback with a little negro boy be hind me, and made the forty-four miloa in time to surprise tho family at tho dinner table. What a clorlouti welcome I reoeiyd from parents and brothers and. sisters. It was ono of the great eruts of my life, and still lives among th sweetest memories. Parental lovo. conjugal love, filial love, are Uie koy iitone to the aroh that supports the pil lars of government and koops otu ociai system secure. As- a rule anar 'chisU have no children. No nothing to jJoto but themselves. As a rule the poor lore their children better than ths rich, for riches will in time sbsorb a man and burden bis best emotion. With the poor the children arc first, yrlth the rich they are second. The law pi compensation comes into orerythiug toua uio. x no good and the bad. tho oj ana ie sorrow aro kindly mixed by vise Providence, Then let us be con- wiia our lot. Let ua not look ovat Asnoe to envy our nabor. for we know not M secpot sorrows. Let not trouble our ovrn house or fear Vf hIl inherit the wind. . ILL ARP. scaroo who is on the make atuvP P s " .M. i B the old man WUle he is asieep-no here on tpe P- ; and r Ween to hi. Jmniness of pilQi P mon- of the oclcy m' For l,T.n V.ompi is-the onlv naradiisc nnon the earth ar.d whoever makes it unhap- h parksvv-f IK le attend with any py isasgviilty as was the serpent that eueoess. The bison on its native p;. ins cstroyedthe peace of Men. The do- '-c-- --- ' firoktdn U fif most se.Wfl r.laefs -awuv " . TH HABIT OF ,peclmaii3 of the Few Survivors Shipped Acros3 the Atiaatia . 1 r Krrrillll? th An!m!l i A 11. Di:mufTiit . .. u - yi .. I'nnililf-rfd bT 1 111 rnjfimn Br Hon. Very Ukely to I'roTe CnBccefuL flfty.jM- even half that nr.niDer o - jars afro, the possibility ox we our- i flcr"nf the American plains becoming 18 cominr as dreamed udg-et. tor extinct was not so rm-.eri a . W T.. r.f f.iv the rt,-dam;- i-"6 conaupss , rtf " V Thoasand ! , "ZTtZtC WM and ths ' " stes cxrt uuo m .... t- - - ft "t7.1 ,?,n. from which culiim:!-. -the rJy -voyrs and the fur traders obtained their "pemmican,' did uot suffer from the demands made ; uyon their numbers by the Indians, but the wmte nnrier. wuu improving flreanr.a, d imnrovinsr ureanr.a, out v.or:t destruction. Whro once the berds wore 'so cumerorM that It was the prac- , - 1 i. 1 . . I. - l -tice to drive them gradually to zne edge of a precipice and there frighten them, over, none can be found. At last the Cnit&d States government awoke to tha fact that America was upon tho point oloslng the bisfn. The agents of the Smithsonian institute hal a dif ficulty Jn procuring some srn'oimcna which wero required. Tho re-U was that a sir ail herd of about forty is now utriitly preserved in the Ycllowstpno park. But odo or two wander away moat years a-ad are soon killed when once outeid tho protected territory; theseeurity of tho herd is consequent ly by no means assured. The news, there fom, that a number cf Nebraska buffaloes ha-vo boon imported to this country, haying beon obtain od -for the . purpose of being turned tlown in some of our parka, will be welcomed by our naturalist. It Is, unfortunately, very quest. ionable !f tl3 experimjnt oi keeping and . breeding the grand beats in fr.ir Eiig- all that, the climate is a constont ono, ami the change of the variability, the fog and the clsnip of this country will be great. Indeed, when wo look at the condition of tho bison's Europea-n re lation, the aurochs, we may well doubt if tho genus bison will long remain an inhabitant of the earth. It may be many years leforo wo quite lo:-x it, for representatives v'iH probably linger for a comparatively long period pre served la paries; jast the aneicot white Rritinh cattlo linger bow. Dut, as in tho case of thft latter, tl:e want of fresh blood and the convjqv.cnt close interbreeding will tell in time and result in constantly diminishing fertility, until in the courr-e of yvara the last representative of tho race will die and the world know thera no more. Wo m?.y safely say the extinction will not happen in our own time, or even in that of the next few generations; but it is to be feued that coir.o it purely wilL ONLY A TRAMP. Dat TUr Were Tears, nod Hitter Ocm, 8hel for Iliiu. "It's only one of thera pesky tramps. Hill," said a brakeman to his compan ion, as the lights from two lanterns fell on the form of a man mangled as only a railroad train can mangle. "I sup pose wc will hava to get him Jlnto the caboose and leave him at tho r.tation." They gathered up tho remains as best the' could, Rays the New York Recorder, and, after getting them aboard the train, gave the signal to go ahead. Yes he was only a tramp. The brakeman addressed as Kill had soon the man fall between two cars while stepping from one to another. The train had been stoppetL and tho two railroaders went back to see- what .amage had been done. , In tho ca Jjoose "they made a search of the dead man's clothes. They didn't find much; no money, not even a knife. Ia the in side pocket of the ragged vent was a greasjlooking envelope. In taking out the letter a tiny band, of gold foil to the floor. While ono picked up the ring-the other read the letter. It had been welt fingered, and there wcro un mistakable spots thjt only tears could hare caused. The handwriting was a woman's, aud read as follows: "Dear Jim: Mary i-j dead, and in her last words she inquired for papa. She missed you so much, and never scctned to be well after you went. I am sorry, Jim, for what I raid that night, and if yen will come back I will never complain and worry you any more. I send you Mary's ring; you remomber when you got it for her. Please come back. to yoi.r wife." That was all. The wife had hoard in some way where her husband was and bad t.p.ni lim tho ltfi It curred to one of the brakemen to look &tthe postmark, and with difficulty it wa3 that it was a BWnth ohl nJ tht it wa thnt th whicb they had ddcidod leT0 ,1,1 v. i Jim must havo met with misfortune, aad was stealing hi way home, which! he reached onlv to bo cu-ried out and laid befeldo liMda alary. Au OKI Kjl!sa CoMton. Tbo candulatesforbailif? in the town of Alnwick, North England, jnst bo- i fore the election ride iu procession to a horse pond near the town," dismount and struggle through the mud and water aa lest they can. They are ac companied by a brass band and all the population of the town and neighbor hood. The custom dates from the tiraa cf King John, who visited tho town in 1210. The roads were verv bad and some of his baggage wagons had to be left in the mire. Cn his arrival he in quired who was responsible for the condition of the rocul. and learning that the bailiffs were to blame ordered them to be seized and dragged through tlia ccarcst pond. tslljht!y DliT.Tent. An English lawyer, Mr. William Wil lis, was once rather amusingly, inter rupted in a speech. In addressing a political meeting, Mr. Willis found an opportunity of re ferring to Charles Dickens character, Barkis, and of exclaiming "Earkis is williaT "Iso, no" shouted a workingman in the audience, "it aint 'Earkis is wUlin', but 'Willis is barkin'r LADIES " feeding a tonic, or children who want bufllj, lnetTD. should take J BaOWS'S IRON BITTERS, f It i pleannt; cures Malaria, Indieestion, Biliousaess, Liver Complaints and Kcurfugia. DFJUDGEHY. i Some AdrmntasM nd Otherwise of Cat lag m IMstlnguUUed Brother. Bince my brother Mundanus has be come rich and famous as the author and autocrat of the bootjack trust, I J.ave been very strongly tempted to stop working for myself and jxrrangs with him for my support, says a writ er In Scribner's. It may be that I shall conclude that the habit of dredg-ery U i;cfu iiuc firmly fixed on me to be thrown off wth impunity, so that perhaps I shall elect to go on working but if I d wUibe ln the nature of self-indulge ., , . . do It cnce, maintained for more personal ease. gainst my convection of what is just iffht. my argument la. ami It Is con ceived on general and impersonal' - m m tit a j founds, ana lounuou wno prvju- dice on dispassionate ODscrvuuuu. wmv comfortable maintenance wiuioui work is a very moderate set off to any ordinary man for the Inconvenience ! and detriment of having an immoder- g succeshful brother. The reason th incorrigible tendency of so- cietv to measure brothers by the same w-i i iutur , w obeerves - v v . . whih is tho taller. When thoy are grown it piles their acluevements or renown or Incomes up side by side, and remarks which pile is bigger. I Mr. Rockefeller's or Mr. Aster's in come may run up into the millons, without making anyone think the worse of my capacity; but ever blnco it became known that Mundanus was getting fifty thousand dollars a year (largely payable ln Hootjack stock. a3 I happen to know, but the public doesn't), it ha boon impute! to nw &s a fault, and somewhat of a dLsrraoe, that my in-takings were not so large. Ilowcver consoioutiously a man nviy har used the talents given him, and whatever progress ho may have made in life, if it be his misfortune to have a nwteoric brother who has sailei con spicuous where he has had to plod, and arrived glorious whero lve has sweated in patient aspiration, the slow-gaitcd nin is bound to sufTcr as J do by dis paraging comparison with his ocupo? follow of tlie same brood. ENGLISHMEN NOT LOVADLE. I'roud Hud HypiHrrltlcuL The editor of tho Times appears to heve juet di;icoverHl that the French detost the English an bitterly, if not more so, than they do and other neigh boring nation, says Ixmdon Truth, and in a leading article on Saturday that paper astonished the world with a la- bored uttempt to account for the cpurvo of this disli:e to us. But tho reason is a very simple ono. We English are by no moans a ot ble race. Wc have many admirable qualities. We ure a hardy, pr;vctieal, persevering petple; but these arc not in themselves sympathetic properties. AVe sre aggressive, self-assertire, pi!Tx-proud and hypocrlticaL Wo are apt to siug psalms and pick pockets at oue and the wa-- time, and our neigh bors, not altogether unjustly, thcrc foiv, redout the over-righteous tone that we udopt iu 'Criticising them and their concerns. Wherever tho Englishman gr he ha-s the fatal inflticnco of spoiling even the most simple of characters. A few Uritisli tourists will make the Inhab itants of the roor,t Inexperienced prov ince shrewd, suspicions, grasping and dishonest. This is -'within the common knowledge of an' who have traveled ln little-visited lauds, and a. eonrhlcra tion of this phenomenon will enable us the better, perhaps, to understand why our ncigiiiortv, an 1 more especially tho French, so heartily detest us. It Is also a curious fact that whenev er there are any general elect lew to bo held in the great republics the ruwt popular policy is to twist the tail of the British lion. It would be instruct ive as a subject for the dull season to discuss the question: "Are we English really much superior to all other na tions? I think wo are, but apparently ouieighborfl think otherwise; and it might be well, therefore, to discover whether we aro mistaken or whether they are stupidly prejudiced. DEVOTED DOCJS. They Baci-lUcod T!.eiv.tJvo lor TaeU? Little Miotics. A writer in Our Animal Friends re lates a story of two fox-terriers, Tan and Tally, which belonged to a physi cian in southern California, and were the playmates of his little daughter Mabel. Thoy had been her eo2i;vi;i ions from her babyhood, and she was now live years old. Oa the day in question bhu and they wen? frolic , ing In the garden, when the little, girl's at tention was attracted by a peculiar noiso in a bus'h at her elbow. She peered into the bronchos to see what had made the ioIlc Instantly the head of a snake roared itself before her, and the sound of its rattles was repeated. Mubul stood as if fascinatcd. Thc gardoncr, at work not far oil, screamed to her to run, end hurried as fat as ho could to her rcfaoue. Hurry as lie might, howevor, ho would have been too lato but for tho dogs. They saw the little girl's danger, and threw themselves between her and it, worrying tho snake till tha ma could come up and kill It They were quite aware of their own danger; again and again, whoa camping out with their master, the-y had bbovsrn tho jrreatest terror at the sound of a snke'i. rattles; I but they oocld not fs tJtu child tn- j-red. When the mother came in answer to the shouts of tho gardener, sho found Mabel safe, but both dogs wero already in tho agonic:.; of death, EJien lerry'a Fascfnatlc-ft. Charl&s Rcado wroto this about Ellen Terry: "She ia an enigma. Her eyes are pale, her nose rather long, her mouth nothing particular, her complexion a delicate brick dustj her hair rather like tow. Yet, somdnfW, shvi beautiful. Her ex-ires.-ion. k'iiiH any pretty face you &ce beside lier. iler figure is loan and bony, her hand masculine lu ! sizo and form. Yet she is a nattern cf fuwnlike irrr.ee. Whether in movement or rep 0e grace ' porvadea ! ussy, in character impulsive. in'io;:i I A 1 cut, v.-eii:, hysterical in Eliort, all tnat 1 .'.bcminable and i pharming In vrociax Ellen Terry is a very charming actress. I seo through and througliher. Yet elio pleases me all the same." If you ' feel weak and all worn out take BROWN'S IRON BITTERS OrfiOlN Or -rtUhKA.' It Is fc'ald to no Derived fiota the Gorman - luterjectloa -llarr." : A writer in the London Times claimed that the exclamation ".hurra, was of Slavonic origin. Subseqeutly" Dr. C A'. I'ushcim,of King's coi'.cgo, London, alluding to the statement, wrote, saying: "1 presume your cor respondent must have ecmo authority for this assertion, but I hope you will allow tne to point out that, as far as I know, the word is of purely German origin. It U generally assumed to ba . derived from the imitative interjection burr, describing a rapid movement, from which word the middle high tier man hurren, 'to move rapidly, or rather to hurry, has been formed, Hurra Is therefore nothing else but an enlarged form of hurr, ainU a3 I said, of purely Teutonic origin. In Grimm's 'Worterboeh' we find the Interjection quoted from a minnesinger. It also occurs in Danish and Swedish, and it would be interesting to hnow when it was first introduced in this country In. the Anglicized form of 'hurry.' in tier; many it was frequently used during tho Kapoioonio wars by tho Prussian Eoldicre, and it also occurs in some political and martial songs of thatvj days. Since then it seems to have been adopted also by otlu-r nations, even by the French in the form of hourra. That the Interjection did not bocomg so popular in Germany as a cheer at a convivial gathering a.s in thi-t country is probably owing to the circumstance that preference was given here to tho brief exclamation 'lloe.'i!' forming re spectively the e'id and the In'ginning of the phrases 'Er 1 Vuo hoch'uiid-'lloeh poll er loben.' Of la to t3e word hurra Booms t) have' become rather popular in Germany. It Is just possible that the English roiuiported it there, or that It was revived tlirough tho magnificent pooia of 'Iluyra, Gormanla!' written by the poet laureate cf Germ-in poophj, Ferdinaiai Frelb.i-ath." Wishes to fj'tak through tho Eegiattr of tho btii'dicial results he ha3 received from a regular use of Ayer's Pills. IIcs:y-4: "I was feeling sick and tired and my stomaeh scf.Mi'.od all out of order. I tried a number of remedies, but none seemed jo give me relief until I waa in duced to try the old reliable Ayer'i Pills. I have taken only one box, but I feel like a new man. I think they are the most pleasant and e"a.sy to take of anything. I ever used, being so rhiely sugar-eoated that even a child w ill tako thein. I urge upon all who are In leed of a lax.it ive to try Ayer's Fills." Boothbay (M'i.), liefiisier. "Between the ages of five and fifteen, I w.is troubled witli a kind of salt rlM-u.-n, er eruption, rbii tiv eonrlned to the leg.s. a;;il rspeciaiiy to the bend of the knee above the calf. Here, running sores formed whieh would scab over, but would break immediately on mov ing tbo leg. My mother tried every thing she could think of, but ;ili was without avail. Although a child, I read in the j:tj ers about tins beneficial effects of Ayer's Pills, and persuaded my moth er to lot tho try them. With no great faith in tho result, she procured and I began to use them, and soon noticed an improvement. Encouraged by this, I kept on till I took two boxes, when the sores disappeared and havo never troubled me since." II. Chipiuaii, lieal Est;ite Agent, llouncko, Va. "I suffered for years from stomach and kidney trouble, causing very severe pains iu various parts of the body. None of the remedies I tried afforded me any relief until I began taking Ayer's PilU, and v.-u cured." Win. Goddard, Notary Public, Five LakesMich. ruparid ly r. .?. C. Aver it Co.. T.owcl!, Mas, i-olii iy irtiggibla Evc;ywni-ro. Every Dose Effective fv' HUai DiUOlSifillUi liilii i If Jon think there is an thing th- matter with v:ur watch, let us take ? look at it. Don't let it o on tick in : ! '.tself to destruction. A Inw particles ef chut will, in a fgw weeks, do moi dantaa titan thn onliuary ve.ar r.n.. tar of h rear's titue lit'sp'ti. ()u- Have vou seen the beautiful line of ve are now offering, unci the complex elections' of clocks, watches and jewr eiry. We ATr prepared to si.tisf'y l hi des ires of the rnot fastidous, ii .nnj thin in our line, und a call wi! couvinct vou thul we are we i iori firsir m 1 2 i'.i f M t g j ?t j We pay the highest cash price for ; gold, ami will buy in any quantities, j Very Respectfully, Ireisner A Friend" Oil uL'DWSnlJO iSablta lUv tof rar CKEE. Hiciisoaii k Mt& H. E. Go. aiuiii.penc&r, F. V. IIuidekepQr and Reuben Tester, Receivers. cuLti;sL:i st inu'L Lj:. IX EX'fZCk A LO VST 12, 13. Lv nicunioad Lt iiurivtfkilie ...... Lv Kt v ilifJ Ar ii.uiviiif Lv Dah u:e O Tit: nnio Lv liolusVio: o Ar UrWrtj a - U l-ji' i 4' 1 AM L 3 -i I'M; 3 i; Mi i 4 - i'Mj ,: .! ; e if raj s : o am t 1 t'- 4'" Lv jJiieK-n ... Li-UUi-hara .. at Ureeus' eio -I .1" I'M i 1 M.I a VI . .., I A' I'M; f, ja. , v Lv in-je' .-s-,!,.. L rec niu ro , i i - . - r S.i lls:.ir ....... i 03-" tm 9 4- ili Ai-;-.iA.esva: . .r A.-ii."v;!:; fi ll C6 AM I 4 : ri r- i 5 v re ;"..' "v 4.-. i'y. 'J AM j S 1 S A ii 11 15 r-4 1 I ?3 .AM I A J. i.v s.i.:i.--i;ry V ; ::.:; !(! lv .r S:i.M... iilvirir. . . .5 AM' . T-J i 1 A Ar (ir -t ri . !l;e I 2 am! 4 ri I liS - N - T Vi' 10 1'. I'V ! 4 if ' ,. ri.!i-i-f'! ..Tir.. i; X; h: I I .rCVItlU.u;;l...'.. U j 4 '.V Kt AU1XU.-.11 I S ir AM v !.v An,; us: A .r I'oiumMn ... r th.u .i ( i r . . . f. v i::i . . . 9 :& v.:... i- lit' .iin... 1 . pm 4 a- i- ir. 5 I." l li! !.v Mj:mt.t..V. . r cu.iri'.i'.ti- . . Lv .-!.( r t.v . 61j p;;i ii 5 am 1 "i I'T'i "i A ..... 7 4f. 1 :1 S '.4 ; in at s.,n.sbt:ry 4 a-.-i K :3 x m :7jiuj I.T Hot -i:il.igj ,V KiK-V! 'f ... . . Lt Stat t-sv tile Ar Salisbury I'i 41 piil T 1: 1!H S !' p.U Sn'isbiiry '. rvf-r..-l.i:f) at V.'lriHtoii-Salfciu '.v Cirtnsror Ar 1'url.aiM r JUivvp-t) 4 ii rn i'J 1! MO 9 37 pm : tv H:l 1 1 .;) p.-a 3 !9 p.u S". f. .s .un : .ini ; tu ain T7.T. . 5 'J prn ;ir-i .in f :'d;iia ,r '.:u"ii i ,;r ju Ar OoMKRoro 12 1( inn - -rr-.-rf-hor) 6 iz- sr, i ; in i,. i' 4j p;-i r T-?')vi:"i8 7 4o ! :'i -p : ai-i rK; iVilif" :..;) 4 .'..in 4.f, Kr rur:-ri::t l ! '-r- -tin ) si ''isi 4 v. nM r Ili- h-i c r.c) 1 'u 7 m. ;nn 7 ,; .-.nr t ' d'y cxctS't sii.-.'Ji v. f.i r.vc V:U. 7 :(. A M i;.,:':. -.'U-K.y . V.y C."t-pT "-Jlt-vl.', ..Mt V ) ',,; rr , :.. u.!. cl . ii a.,.j i...tn v m i.:-r!i'-i:.,'' :.'.!vjd hh:.1 .T ::..( 4 t - i . ! . (tai r- . t Sii.-h-.y; a:-, lve A'tst l O'iil "..(! .'.-?! G.i'f r. JET .RICHMOND AfiD PALEfCH VIA YCVL. Leave 7:i -hmonf! v. 1' ?.t. 'l t!v; ".. . '-'."" : i!i- .'4 4! P. M ; :viv.- 'zcf'ir-1 y. ii .u : 10 :-. ..; . j)i-:-:.a!.. 7.1- ;. v.. i.-.-;,.- k-, .-. .., . '' i 'i' v.l 1 if vi;--., 1 a.uj. ( : m; r t. r ,.' '.-id--rs..n 7 J.. (f '..4: . y; ;-v: iov-vili- .; . . !;-) .,. ; ;, ;;, , , . ' :v - . . v . ' i- 'J.-.. 4 -. . C:!t-r. a -uvi -.; i. ;i-:u:a!l ' 1 -n 'l;i.ii : i.i.-i X: ?-i i-..1 . :; "1!. i .i'A t-t !:iv. 1. ! v (.1 ;: ; - :' , .1! I ..!: v- K: y-M.t-,.1 - j'. ',!. I M-.l Tr -1 ! No. ; : v s i : : ., .1. :;.i: .' . . , -'Mri-iy. c ;: M . -n:'. .ir lv . Ii-fiiatii .;:, .'Tr -u - f. !..-- i-r-.:;. JiMv - ;,:ri ! v , 7.-;-' v . M.. : ; .-. i ; r. !. i . M . !! r- ;:! '-:'. 11 4 . : -i . . : e. , I . 'I . ' I I'Xl-'O.r '-),. I IV ! ; n ; , m . : 1' ; .. -.is-, ; v .! ; . iv. .'. il i -?: - 1.-. . j.! I...;'. '.! - :-;,: 01 q 5 s'.; o js r. r- p 1. t .vf-ii . V-'i l. :r-i-: 1 ; . ; t .Mi:i Hn.-ii.i; Cr Nov Mt-.iv' rv. 1 .V!i:i'"i.n.;i- -r-, .I-?:!!i.r.r !. .-,)!; -.. r'.v-:t '!!(,-, .. ;i...-..!!o Ml 'oofo '!' '.s V.-' ''.! V I" M-,:i. 1:;!:,,; j. I-.-, -i . .;,; .;,. ( v. .. - v, ..Vi.- , a .-u : iim;;:i.i-:v r. v S 1 .' : .'i-:,.'. r. !:!'' Ii..-;i !. v . a . T 1 ' 1 ; K ?;.-i!.T.-.i r.H-:-1 .'; .. H. n.!'.!)-VI-l'.. As't'. ;,r:, All: (7a. A', ft (ilC'KN. Goal N.aa.iv.-r, Wanhlr.f ' ',', I). C. S' ) 'f AS. 1 i-itr.i-- .V,it!'ai-.T .v.s: !'-.-t i"i, i. r. . SOU u v n?Ji a it A ATTTKE. uz VAX, WOZi-jLZQTiLZJI 1.25 tSR OAS- . I J t '-J i :' 1 . ! r. r "i i ; ? - i - .- A;i-:vrs. ymvi -KTsT 4 I I I - 3? jfe3? T?t I Ster.m, Air and .Vacuum Pumps, Vertical and Hon sontal of every Variety and Capacity. 0 . . V ' r Q O s Mlfl lllillMa i Renews its mocracy of the t2. av. I'X m And asks every friend- of good g0v. erament, progress'and enterprise for support. Its subscription tv w j -v .j n -! r 1 T To Single Suhscrihcrs $1.00 per year payable i; To af over Ten V. i. ! - ; - 1 - ! ' , ; j t - j ' - ! j j 1 . ; I .vft ' ? 1 ! p.., 1 Yotk . 1 I T 3 irt xne iianuB7Gi ,:i v vl;f. 1 ui&& H g 4 a printer, is prepared to execute air kinds of Job Piintirig, and aj r Vi. t . . n - t i A lre aincnnt of nifiify is ht j -nnu-tli v hy pn'rii'-s "pnn 'easing frnit i I'ts, i'.)-e, Gt thf-ni fr(ni aj r..n:.li.ri;tsOV(; want the :r-s of every fuer' or K.inwr V Mil" ' t - WlU !)!.. n e f.-r oriecs at (M!Cc. l-.l ."t.'HWf! Yi ;i ! ' Cat. i !' 'l '.;'. A'reil!! '.Miiitr-l evei v. h.-rr A Id i s. 'Ik idk' T 1 1 rst-i'v Wax :.. i j; - i .Ti WM" W 41i lT 99 Eegular Horizontal Piston. - M30ArHpm ! Tli:- mo.-t sinij.'.lc, (luralilo .'i!i1 ("-!i-(-liv;' ?in.i) iii tlie market for Mirri'jf, Q;:;irrics, Rofiiiericsr Breweries, F;,cj- -torivjs, Artosinn Well,-Fire I.ty aiil G i ' n e r a 1 A I a v. n f ; c 1 u r i r i"tt u r j o c f . ISfond for Ojtalfigue. Foot of Ea4 23d St ret t Xt w York- A. S. CAMERON STEAM Carolina fMehmait, i - allegiance t he Cause People, pince will be : adi :Socy i Si- 11 a m W l H -i & i & Xtmmmmzr s . - an cia experience. "?"!. f"i " inr, -v-. 4r- -v .-. 3 V, if ' $ 1 A Ii'-jiriliie Ifion in KvriT ft: to t riser thp Kxci u.-iy'' Afrncv- f l!,e. 1-' SlUon 1 1 III l T3. ted ' in ' AUTtlETlU OFTH&FB 1 il 11 ii'i'H- !" t- ill Stu.ii!lr fu!' "'S'l (. . )t ropy .1 mi fuM i'..'.rl i' ubiik. i-5;3 Adams St-, Cico,I Q - f A i, . 1 - 'eA . 5 . i,'v,'iv' 1- ' -y i PUMP .57 Cl de.
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1893, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75