Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Dec. 14, 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
. X THE EARTH'S AVEIGHT. JIow goIoaU3to Go bout Ascer taining &bo Interesting Fact amplication of th Problem Whlcli DM Earaff4 f Lrnloj-Th ttMolt IttMnred 1 Tom Writ teo la Tirantj-Tw rirre. One of tbonroblerps that men of ?ri, nc occasionally undertake- to P ;-v ro? autn ior iuc &av; . i irer to the exact truth is that density and mass of the earth. ' "M-it V rf ft body is the quan--r that a given volume . ''is, while the mass is the ,u 'v of matter that the itains. In a popular ma' of a body is meas ure 1 by its weight. Water is taken as the standard of cr rr-narison in estimating the den sity of the earth. It has been :;:;ov in a general way for a hundred -ars that the earth's mean or aver c i density is between five and six ti :ves that of water; in other words, hat th parth weirrhs five or six . i a j !-Wouh pmvLd i:. ,he waUr r sucht'Xbehal the same average density that jvater has at the surface of the earth. The matter composing the earth i3 denser in the interior than at the 'surface. If thatT were not so it would only be necessary to take a jcubic foot from the surface of the globe and weigh it against a cubic iooi of water in order to ascertain jhe density of the arth. As it is, the earth's density can be learned pcly by roundabout methods; by noting, for example, the difference Jn the attraction of gravitation at the surfaee and at the bottom of a mi no. j Recently a new method of measur ing the mass and density of the '.earth has been put into 'practice in Prance. This consists in changing 4he level of a small lake, which can to raised or lowered by artificial means, and noting the effect upon the height of a column of mercury. . Tho results of these experiments '.have given for the earth's ,mean .density .5.41 times the density of the water. T:ho latest previous esti mate, made by Messrs. Corun and Jjlaille, gave 5'. 56. It has been cus tomary to speak of the earth as .weighing six sextillions of tons. Jits weight, according to the re cent determination, is 5,757,000, i0Qr0)Q,OOd, 000,000, or five sextil lions, .seven hundred and fifty-seven iqu in til l ions of tons. A very weighty and substantial globe, according to pur ideas, notwithstanding the fact jthat the sun could swallow it in one of its '-'spots" with hardly a wink! .Chicago Post. LITTLE LORD FAUNTLEROY. fThe Dold Deception Practiced by the Small Hero of the Play. It has always been rather interest ing to me to remember that he first presented himself In an impenetra ble disguise, writes Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett In a paper entitled "How Fauntleroy Really Occurred'' Jn the Ladies' Home Journal. It ;was a disguise sufficiently artful to Jiave disarmed the most wary. I, who am not at all a far-sighted per- jpon, was completely taken in by him. I saw nothing to warrant in the slightest degree any suspicion that !he had descended to earth with prac- .tieal intentions; that he furtively icherished planar of making himself into the small hero of a book, the picturesque subject of illustrations, the inspiration of a fashion in cos- tume, ine very jcune premier -in a play over which people in two conti nents would laugh and cry. Perhaps in periods before he in troduced himself to his family that jnorning of April 5, 1876, in a cer- pie in its descent, and possibly boro itain house in Paris, he may have a great hole in the republic of An Icnown all this and laid out his little dorra. Good counsel prevailed and plans with- adroitness anddelibera- the two artillerymen were cona tion, but when I first examined him 'manded to unload the gun. The shot .carefully as he lay on my arm look- has not yet been fired, and the good Jng extremely harmless and ex- republicans are uncertain what to tremely fast asleep in his extremely do with the expensive gun. Inter Jong night-gown, he did not bear at Ocean. all the aspect of a crafty and do-- J Mi3ht Have Changed History. signing person; he only looked warm I . . and comfortable and quite resigned .An interesting "incident" of the "to his situation. career of tho great Napoleon has He bad ben clever enough to dis- guise himself as a baby a new baby u.Tioi powaer ana a oald head and fk fierid eomplexioB. Aator't PugivDog. William Waldorf Astor is the proud posaessorjaf tho black pug dog Man Friday, havlntr just purchased that distinguished animal from R. Morti- yals, of Takeley, Essex, at a big pnee. Man Friday is described by connoisseurs as veryhandsome, with a most perfect jet fclack coat. Black pugs are yery rare and' ex tremely quaint, and Mr. Astor be lieves he is the only American who possesses a specimen of the breed. N-Y. Tribune. Those "Dear Girls. Miss Prune Did you ever see such a dear pug? I never kissed 3 man in my life, but J kiss Gyp q dozen times a day. . - Miss Peach And He's so intelli: gent, too; see how he turns up hii pose. Kansas City Journal. He Was Business. The pianp-prganisthad put his lbple sou into his performance. A small coin was. thrown him, and he accepted it with a bow and a smile. Then an expression of doubt swept pver his face, and be advanced , to within speaking distance. MExcuse me," he said, "but you tell me one ting, if you bli$.M , J'Whatisitr iryou see, you nw customer- of mine. I vish you to tell me if you -.pay for 'nuther tune or for me to go gurajr. "Washington Star. "tHc" SALVATION An MY. Is an Enterprise" That Like OM It Methodism Is Religion on Fifo. Tbe oddest, sinccrcst, in tensest religious enterprise of the present ' day is the Salvation Army, Jhe Jcey to it is its purposed just to save men; nothing else. It docs not k wnnt to do anvthtnir more and at- tempts .nothing else-no schools no pducation. no rehmous training, nothing but to get men into the kingdom of God. It will get them in any way it can. It has no dignity to save, no conventionalities to con sider. Why care for a sneer when there is a soul to save? It is en army in name,and in reality a church; but a very-strange kind of a church. It is a cross between Methodism and Quakerism:- like old Methodism, it is religion on fire, or charged with elec tricity; and, like Quakerism, it has , no sacraments. It knows and cares nothing about baptism and the Lord's supper, -"and yet it has its confession of the faith, in joining the army, which does the of- fw.rf hnnticm in thp parlv church: aDd every meeting U scarcely Vess than a communion with Christ and one anotner. xne oaivaxion jinnj hand-book, doctrines and discip line, in answer to the question: "Docs the army consider baptism a duty that must performed?" says: "Decidedly hot! The army only con siders one baptism essential for sal vation, and that is the baptism of the Holy Ghost." It reckons bap tism with the Jewish rites of circum cision, shaving the head, and other ceremonies never intended to be permanent. All it wants is to save men, and it holds that baptizing them is not saving thom. Just so tho lxrd's supper is recommended to those, who feel that it would help-their faith, but it is not essen tial to membership in- the army or to salvation. So the Salvation Army knows no formal church. Its members may or may not be members of the churches; but its theory is that the army takes the place of the church. Where the rest of us say church it says army. It asks no converts to join the church, only to join the army. Join ing the army does not save anyone; he must bo saved first, and then he is asked to join the army and ea gagc in the work of saving other people. Salvation is its only pur pose, and an army its form of organ ization, because that 13 the most ef fective to save people. Harper's . rrt a. ? A Weekly. A ONE-GUN REPUBLIC. When It Was Secured They Not Safety Fire It. Cou'.J The rulers of the miniature republic of Andorra decided recently that the country should possess a cannon. Krupp, therefore, was ordered to manufacture one of the most modern type. Tho great gun arrived at its mountain destination a short time ago, and was placed on the highest point-in the "country," so that the citizens could sec that the valley was well protected. A day was ap pointed to try the cannon, which was able to send a ball eighteen kilo- meters. -Jur.t as the two artillery - men of Andorra were ready to tire it occurred to one of the prudent cm- tens that the shot might cause somo trouble. The territory of the re- public Andorra does not extend over more than six kilometers. To direct the shot, therefore, toward the sur- rounding mountains would be the same as firing at France or Italy, as the ball would necessarily fall on tha territory of one of these countries. A war might be the result. It was decided to shoot the ball in the air, but some one suggested that it would endanger the lives of too many peo- brouht to light by Prof. Ram- baud, who has just been rewarded for his "History of Russia" with tho Cross of the Legion of Honor. Bon aparte, as is well known, was at one time disgusted with the slowness of his promotion, and entertained seri ous thoughts of directing his talents into other channels. Now M. Ram- i Daua H1 m tnat Napoleon applied Ior servK;e ln tb Russian army, but tnat the petition which he had ad dressed to Zaborowski was rejected, as watnerinc II. would not admit foreign officers on the same stand ing as that which they occupied in their own country. Napoleon would have had to accept an inferior rank, 3 iL!. 1 . . . . anu iuis ne reiUSOUtO do. II 1'rof. Rambaud be correctly informed, and ti ixjiittijurie naa taken service in Russia, the whole course of the his tory of the century , would have been changed, and a whole vista of curi ous possibilities would have been opened. London Telegraph. A True Patriot, "How do you lite France, mc!n hcrr? You spent six months there, I mi tiers taad." "Oh, the country is good enough, but the language is abominable," "How so?" ' ' "It's not'half so musical as our German tongue. For example, when a German makes love to a woman he says: 'Ich Heb sic! Ich lieb siel which certainly sounds very sweet. A Frenchman, on the other hand, growls: 'Che fou saime! 'Che fou sarnie!' which to me seems to sound verv brutal." Paris Fiiraro, MOmOMOKOHOOXtOXOKOKOBOHOOOMOMOMCOptOMOKCmO)BC0Og 8 There's No o M Such Word as FAIL" 8 O M 2 8 5 M O If o M 8 o If o If uREAD THi: XTtmft d. i Sot. "I haVe used the Electro poise in my&mily for eighteen months for Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Constipation, Ner vousness, etc., and it has never failed in any case to cure." Rev. J. K. Fant, High Point SoMOMOKOMOKOMOgOMOMOMOMOHOOMOKOMOMOKOaOBOTOWOyOyOMOa JPICTURES THAT AVAS1L The Remarkable Work Done by a Chinese Colorist. Larr Hecnea the Artiit'e Specialty p4 fheeta AdornaU bf Ulm Oo TbroagU the Laundry Without Lotting Any of Their Original Brtlllanry. ' A Chinese artist came here on the last oriental steamer and has been some qeer thtngs re green and yellow to pis aaminng countrymen. He paints on silk and linen as a rule, but will turn off genre pieces on white paper. His tasteowever, runs to large pic tures on grass cloth, painted in a panoramic way which permits him to paint a scene along several linear feet of space, says the Hawaiian Star. Accustomed as he has been at home to paint by the acre and with both hands, he is not dismayed !by a huge canvas, but with calmness imd industry will proceed to illumi nate a whole set of bed sheets with tlue elms and green roses and dia jbolical Chinese gods and women and lovers. ; One picture that he showed a re porter was said to represent a gar den party, though it needed some assurance at first to dispel tho idea that it was a catastrophe at sea. What looked like the raging main, however, was really a Chinese turf,' iiud the bent and bedraggled object h the foreground was not a wreck, "but a tree. An awful print of a lost fcelestial maid in the grasp of a devil-fish proved to be one of an al-mond-eyxjd damsel twined in the Reaves and tendrils of a flowering ishrub. Instead of slippery squids, as one might have supposed, were :tambourines, and a rock in the boil ing surge was only a pagoda set in jhcather and bushes, f A series of small paintings told a .romatic story very dear to the Chi '.nese heart. The hero of the pic torial talc was the strongest man in the empire, having become an ath lcte under the teaching of his wife, who was a female Sampson. To gether they challenged the world without soft gloves, and "bar none." In course of time, however, war camo and the wife was overpowered and taken away, leaving the hus band very miserable. As the artist jaints him, standing mournfully at tho door of his lavender house, great vermilion tears roll down his mauve complexion, stain his green vest aud trickle along his chromatic-trousers and sink into the scarlet and yellow earth. Then twenty years go by and an other war ensues. Two armies meet and the strongest champions go forth for a preliminary combat. Be hold I The man and wife are sent against each other and the artist rises to the occasion. He shows the husband holding his Dulcinea out at arm's length by her belt, and, as ho bears her away to a saffron river which runs between sky-blue banks, he has a fierce bewhiskcred joy on his face that invites not a pearl tinted breozc but a crimson hurri cane to blow through it. Mean while tho captured giantess, demure and sweet, has surrendered without a murmur. The visiting knight of the brush uses pigments that will wash, and he says that one of his pictures can go through a Chinese laundry with out the loss of the natural biue tint on a maiden's cheek or of the deli cate bronze flush of an opening flow er or leaf. SOUTHERN INDUSTRIES. Bp r of the Situation for the W: 1'ndlne Dv.Dibor -, 1803. In its review of the Industrial situation i t?o .-outu ior the week endi:ia DoemLier 4 The Tiutlesui.kU reports t:,ul l..c ii nJu.o 1 o tt' a.rs i o;itiai o be cn o .i aging. The a vim.e lu the prt 01 iron us 8:oa n l y reren i uivs auJ t .0 disposition .on the part of pre duci-rs 10 bold iielr output f r utal hUue prues i-a hud a j.oort effwi. More furasyre are st&rt n ; up'an l new mined are lcin, op"n'V The chants la ta:-W legislation, so .'ar as ij -outh U . wiverncJ. will i c discount'-d. an t to n'r -waHi.eiir in bettor loudition to oiec the aii atlt.n. Wi'.h a surrtciency o. money, umaiier in .cbtedm-ss ti;tn ervr lefure. n lar.-er crops of ail varieties -in this respet CI ferine Iro;a former years -it is peneratJ rlievd u at an era of contln iod prosi erti' has le n enterrd iipon- T trtv-flvo new industries are reported a estahiish-d or Incorporated during the week t foi icr viih ten enlargements of luaa .rac'r ries an ouht important new biU lings. Ainon the T-:twtlcr foal. Coke a id Iron Company o tttti noticeable usw lnduttries of the wee it w u; a a avc ana neaainij factory 10 to- w.Ou atoreat Cacapon. W. Va.: a door an 1 ni -er oui. any at Bristol. Va.. an'tal 5 DO ana a .iar lware lompaay with 13),000 uapital a oeor. to n. Texas. A tan tiny fa tory Is reported at Brls'o Tena.: a development and improvem-nt com pahy at Wilkeiitoro N. C; a cnar ol iron f . r oace at Krpt. N. C: aula construction com pany at Chattrnooa, Tean. Flour ond grisi iu.is rr 10 vc i.niii at t anoier ana Kaieln N C and Nestorrille and Nevtoo. W. Va. Ai asbestos mine Is to be opened at Cunningham . a nuin cqmc at iron city. ienn.. and a oal m'.ne at Plnerllle. Kjr. A tobacco factory Is to built at Owenaboro. Ky. AmonM new woodworking plants are plan!mr milLi at Meridian. Miss.. Manchester and vyineviue. v-, a ptmp factory at Florence Aia.. and saw mills at Keliar. Ark., Maooa and -iae uir, ua-. aaa f lymontn. n. C MARKET REPORTS By private wire to p. W. Martin. Manager Nkw Yoaa. Dec g. -cotton Dea 7 54. fan. JM; Feb. 7 61; market steady. MMdlln 7 !.: market Arm, - utiicago, Dec. Futures closed a WBaT -Dee. ii Coim.-DecM pAra. May 30 PoM.-Jan, I12TS j"" mt.wi ua. Jan. a.Tfj 7, W! " "fotauons wars at tbUowsj Mess pork II o. Lard . Q "J!""-1- A3&a JO: 'short cte3 nuc inuo, - 'Tfl ' V VJIff.V 8 Turpeatoe qaiet JJ J mm mj. , "Cuwa when all else fatta." Airjistcrs of tbc GOSPEL. speak out for us. These words of commendation from one of the most prominent Baptist Di vines of the State you should believe and appreciate. Con sult with as by mail. Informa tion book mailed free. ATLANTIC ELECTROPOtSE CO., Waahimgtin, D. ft SAILOR BOY'S FORTUNE. From Beggary In California to Snu&r Competence in England. Book of Wild Adventure Lead a Tovth to Ban Away to Sen Ileal Life Disil lusion' Fancy The News of the Inheritance. Thomas Stone, an eighteen -year-old English sailor, who has been liv ing a hand-to-mouth existence in Oakland during the last seven months, has fallen heir to the estate of his father, valued at over 32,000, says the San Francisco Examiner. It was an early hour of a stormy morning last March when a bedrag gled and wbrnout young man ap plied at the home of Michael Rigney for a meal. He told a" straightfor ward story about deserting his ship in the bay the day before, and said he had slept under the bridge all night. Mr. Rigney took compassion on tho desolate sailor, and supplied him with food and warm clothing. As Stone proved willing to work, and there was a good deal of labor to be performed about the place, Mr. Rig ney permitted him to remain, and since then he has made the Rigney home his headquarters. During his leisure hours Stone ppent his time instructing a young son of the Rigneys in the trade of boat building. In a lot adjoining the house he established a miniature shipyard, with cradle, blocks and ways, and there he built a full-sized steam launch, which lacks nothing but an engine to make it complete. The tale the stranger told was about as follows: Five years ago he was a schoolboy in England and had a penchant for reading talcs of adven ture. His reading made hhr; v long for travel that he ran away and went to sea. "When ho came home his father took him to. Liverpool and bound him over to a sea captain for a voyage to and from Australia. Hv was signed for two yours, but ' ; before the voyage had been tint .,h. J the boy's dreams had disappeared and he had determined to desert. When the-vesscl reached San Fran cisco on the homeward voyage he Accordingly got ashore and stayed i here. lie was penniless, hence his application for charity at the-home f the Rigneys. During the voyage from England to Australia the sailor's father died, leaving him a fortune of more than thirty-two thousand pounds. But he news to this effect came only very recently. Young Stone wrote from Oakland to his father several times, but re ceived no response, so when Valtcr Soaweil, an Oakland contractor, left for visit to England a few months ago, 'he was commissioned by the young man to hunt up his father and ice why he failed to respond to th;' ommunications addressed to him. Mr. Seawell found that the elder Stone was dead, and notified the son of this fact and of the further fact hat he was 1.0 longer poor. The lews has since been eoiilimecl by he British consul at San Francisco. Sarsaparilla Is superior to all other preparations claiming to be blood-purifiers. First of all, because the principal ingredi ent used in it is the extract of gen uine Honduras sarsaparilla root, the variety richest in medicinal proper- Cures Catarrh i. low dock, being raised expressly for the Company, is always fresh and of the very best kind. "With 'equal discrimination and care, each of the other ingredients are selected and compounded. It is THE Superior Medicine "because it i always the same in ap pearance, llavor, and'effect, and, be ing highly concentrated, only small doses are needed. It is, therefore, the most economical blood-purifier p in existence. It LUPBS makos'food notir QPRnrill A ishing, work pleas OUnurULM ant sleep refresh ing, and life enjoyable. It searches out all impurities in the system and expels them harmlessly by tiie natu ral channels. AVER'S Sarsaparilla gives elasticity to the step, anT im parts to the aged and infirm, re newed health, strength, and vitality. Sarsaparilla Prepared hr Dr. 3. C. Aver & Co., Lowell. Mass. gold by all DrusgMU ; 'rice $1 ; sis bottle, 9$. Cures others, will Qureyou For Malaria, Lier Trot ble,orIndigestion,uao BROWN'S IRON BITT5I3 c5) f car tienlannnt FREE. IkUWtl.ltYUH AUaatn, COlfcMWhUAUaU hickoii & DaiTille fi. 1 Cej haiuuel Speneer. r.W.Inidckopr a 1 Reuben FostertlOeeeiver. CONDENSED SCHEDULK. ;1N EFFECT AUGUST U. 1SS. L? Richmond Lv liurkcllie Lv HeyiYIUr at Danville Lv Dauvdle Artireenaboro L v Ki olasOoroTTrrr. . Ar KaU'H.h... Lv llaieigu... ...... Ly Durham ArCireeosuoro Lv Wlnston-Sjilem. Lv oretuisLxjro .... . Ar Salisbury ....... AruiiesvilieTm. Ar AshevlUe 11 40 ti S4i ra 3 urn 6 4- FM t 5rn USD am t 40 AM S M 8 35 All 5 5 AM 4 Stt AM 5 r 4 3w ra t 3u m tit 15 fu 1 Mil 1 SH.il S .Wil 4 45 AM S 00 AM 45 AM II 04 AM 4 00 FM Sittri so AM 11 IS AM sasrM 4 a ru to is rx CM AM 9 IS AM I 56 m 1 31 m Ar Uot Springs Lv Salisbury .. 43 rst II 15 m I St AM T 1' AM 11 as r 5 1U AM 845 AM a 13 AM 15 AM II AM U 1 r 4 W ru I Mam 4 to rM Arena none... .r Spartanburg. ArOroenvlile;... Ar At'anta. Lv lUiarlutie Ar Colombia Ar Augusta NORTHBOuNDNos. DAILA. 3 1. No. la tso.t V AUgUSU .... t columuia ... rcbanottt ... ooopm loopm i5pm 4 so pm t ip am lo pm Lv AUanla A r Charlotte.. 6,UiHt am 1 oo pne :wam I 4;h 1 1 4 pm t 40 am 3' pin 8 24 po 4 lo amfcio jeptat 3pm lt44pm......... l io pm tllpm oo pm Lv euur otte ... ArSaiiabury .... I.v llotSprlngs" Lv Aslievllir ... Lt SkttrsvUte . . A r Salisbury ... Salisbury 4 IS am 10 li pm t 37 pin t-reen&bt ro 10 am 1140 ptn l 4 pm Ar WlDston-Malem .. 35 am tt 50 am . Lt Greenabort . r Durham Ar Halelglv . . . . f v:K"ileTyh Ar Ooldsboro ... 7 30 am II 1 am... .V.pm Mam... . 10 SO pm 30 am . .; IftSSaM IS 1" pro f v 'ireensboro .. r;rarivllle r Kjvllle... Ar Rurkevtlle . .. vr Itlcbmood .... t os am II 80 pm 10 o pm T4m l Mam looram 10 so am 4 08 am 4 s sot llSm 4 (lam 4 si am 1 os pm 7 oo am T oo am : Dally except Sunday. BTWK" R.mTONDP"T A" Leave West Point I.so A. M. (tally. andn.5A A. M. lull) except Sun-lay und Mondat; s.rrlve ikcl rirnd. ah i l-MD A M.. Returning leave KKrb mond 3.ic and 4.45 P. M . dally ex,-ept Sunday; ar rive West Point 5.io and o.oo P. M. 3ET RICHMONn AKD RALEIGH VIA KEYSVILLCt Leave ai.-hn ond 11.4" P M.dallv; leve Key? llle3.4tP. ; arrive Oxford 6.W. P.M.: iiDOT on 7.1 P. M , Duruam 7.13 P. M., Haiv'.gh 6.30 A, n., Itt'turnlng laleiKli 1 am, daily, i;urn.im 0.15 am iTd rsfni i 4.. p M oxf. nl .4 . M.; anlve v-iitt- I'M-' . hl. ut Amood I.h p M. lay. ixitro n wi ! leavs Keysvill.e ilally exoept i'tud;i , 4 I a m.. Oxford. .vm. ad unites niriJiiii ll.2',a m. Mqed train . ?o ienrn Iur an. i:i!y t ru'fpf Snnda.v.a ".t n...xfiird S ?9ptxs i-l -rt-v-s Kt'vo-.ijir. 1 ni . M. iravcs Ox ft :.V .: '-sirepl f Ivhn )tirNir- .13A.M. .- Ot;r.. . . i -n. ... ; i-. V.' : u.!'iive-s i-ri 6 m a s. l'::Mn- on O ally t-xoenl Mid 1 , 11 4.. A. M.. dtl. nrt P. l . rtal excitpt Mu rj.tv , ; nrt arri e n'l nn M .ie.t P. t .. I r.' i IV M 'efj'nlnK leave 1 n'VTisn Wi ttu'i !. M.. kI.-'h I Snnday -,yr . Ox'-'r.' : . '. ! i' M ,: ; 55 J M v' . " . .'.0 - ' : i. '.i-i.i SLEEPING C i S.RV. I nTri--etween ' " !''!i!iT) D H-.,;f;-t S!,- jf-r : M ' c ...r.i New I .' !.! - I ,'l r HI r--'! ;."! I'- .' ' -ir PUi!i:T.T. .'f ve "fit- : : ! r ! :-,-!- .. ' . . " '- i-.fl l to MoutgD . 1' . I 1 CriT r IINnrn nit am . 1CTUAL C08I LSS XXULX SUl fUOl rmms. mm till aMH U U Steam, Air and Vacuum Pumps, Vertical and Hori zontal of every Variety and Capacity. 1 H Q H O !25 ' mfl 0 Hf III a vu rtlli Hi JL XIV VUX ViAWl vr vvaa4iau,Ui m THE Renews its alleffiance to mocraGy ' t h e:rS u se of the peopTe, And asks eveir fiiend oi gdoa g ernmenta progr ess vc. i: eniei y for supporta ls subscription : price will be ;: j j I To Single Subscribers $ 1.00 ptr year payable in adi To " of over Ten .80 m n the hands of v?rds of Job ces that favor )' iiotlfjiii; lnr jood ?!t k nini ells v t m i m- V.f (Mum 'f tti: 6i 0S Eepular Horizontal Piston. The most simple, durable aiid ef fective Pump in the market for Mines, -Quarries; Refineries. Breweries Frc tories, Artesian Wells, Fire'tJ'utv afi'd General Manufacturing purpOFes. gSend for Catalogue.. Fot of Eat 23d Street KVw York- A, S. CAMERON gTEAM I jJIISII II c ' an old experienced Printing", -..and at ill compare an TE WANTED. u ..,.b'.e IVrsom in Krerv Twu '.ik' . h Extlurive A gene jr. ot the - ,B World's Columbian Expo sition Illustrated," n er the fail iireat lppuray mt JUBey for the Next Ytr. Oie Ch uct in a LirnttiiHc l J r t H .- iot ra- p? a copy uuii full particulars.. J". B. CAMPBELL, Fres., i.1 m O PtTMP WORKS V1X7 1 1 T- a nee tt
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 14, 1893, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75