Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Dec. 21, 1893, edition 1 / Page 4
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PLUNGED TO- DEATH -Fifty Men Fan with a Bridge Into . " the Ohio River. iT LEAST 20 DEAD AJD JISSI5C Tfcr Wr mt fTork Balldinr ewpM-f Their Irap Was 110 Feet, and the Miracle 1 That Single One Kara pod Alive. Xoitisvit.i.e, Kr., December 18. At a few minutes past 10 o'clock this tnorninfr the false work and that part of the middle pan of the Louisville '.and Jeffersonrille bridge frave way, 'mod, with all the workmen, was pre cipitated 110 feet into the water be low. The foreman, In beginning the; .work, noticed that during the night .the 'IraTeler." which had ken put in placer last night, had been worked loose by the wind. An order to draw It back into place was given and the 4uen and engines were started. The wlnd was High at the time and the gentle swaying of the false work gradually forced the "traveler off the . f. A? .putt on wnicn n was resting, xc ad slipped, the whole work trembled jiad the men, realizing their danger, 'Urted for the piers. The central ifmt was the first to give way and the jnen oaf this bent went down to be covered by the mass of iron anct tim jber of the other bents, -which fell al- fsost Immediately, carrying with Am the the' other workmen, who .failed to to reach places of safety on jlae piers. The north bent, or the one Attached to Indiana pier, did not fall far ffteea minutes after the other .parts went down. ' As near a eaa be ascertained, there pre re fifty-one men on the bridge when f he alarm was given by the engineer eharjre of the works. Of this num r several succeeded in reaching the .piers. Of those who went down some 9tt covered bv armass of timber, from jbeneath which it will be days before kelr bodies are recovered. When the huge mass of material .struck the water all was concealed tor an instant by the spray that was thrown high into the air. As the Water subsided hire and there could pe seen men struggling desperately to limb upon the timbers that thrust ttheir ends above the water. A few jsucceedod In climbing to places of .safety and were quickly rescued by boats that put out from the shore, others struggled desperately and were (carried off by the current almost when rescue was at hand. General opinion ascribes the cause pf the disaster to tne stiff wind that p ad been sweeping the river all day. t bore with great force on the pon derous framework,' which necessarily jbecame loosened from the constant. strain and swaying of the heavy tim bers. It is believed forty (lives were lost. CAPTUREOF TRAIN ROBBERS. PSIeera rrm the ICobbera Into Dallas and Get Them. AvsTiXy Jkx., December !3. After fbeinjr on the trail of the Sunday night srain robbers for over thirty hours, ihe officers and posse came into the ity this m,ornibg, having become .convinced that the robbers were in " hiding here. Their surmise was cor rect, for soon after their "Arrival they .succeeded In -arresting Dick Wallace and Lram Denton. A good deal of .money and a watch belonging to a passenger pn tHe train was found in Denton's possession. The third rob ber. Bill ltronson, alias Bronas Bill, was found in hiding tonight below town. He resisted arrest and the officers opened lire on him, wounding him seriously. He was brought to the city and put in jail. The fourth rob ber, Burleson, by name, is making his .way to the west .on horseback. Offi cers know of his destination, however. And his arrest is only a question of a. !few hours. ,' Home Rule Shelved. Ditbxix, December 18. JohnRed jnond, speaking at a meeting at Tuani today,- reiterates .his- statement that .the question- of home rule had been helved by the government, lie de clared that jury packing, which Mr. Gladstone and Mr." Morley had de nounced in 109,' was practiced at .Cork last week, when forty one Cath olics were rejected for jury duty and protectant jurors were almost exclu sively empanelled. Tm Mach Morphine. Khoxvillf., Tesx., December 18. A special to The Tribune from Athens, Tenn., says Steve Sweeny lies at the point of death at his home from an pvsrdose of morphine. His wife saya ft was self-administered. He has been tkat condition about nine hours. Sweeney recently married Callie Cash, ( at whose house Dick Crow received a fatal dose of morphine a few weeks Alabaaaa'a Oerernerahla. BrfMraeBAM, Ala., December 18. Y, Johnson authorized The onatitution to formally announco his fandldacy for the democratic nomina MW f9F governor of Alabama. 'It has peen knqjrn for some time that Cap fain Johnson waa in the race, but this fs the first iermal statement to that ffeet. Mayor Rich, of Mobile, has also announced. DUa Kjwckt BUlr Uarphr Oat Pattkbok, K. J., December 17. The ourround glove contest between peorge Dixon, champion feather .weight pugilUt of the world, and Australian Billy Murphy last night uded in Mnrphy being knocked outin the third round. ---'"'I br Hie WUe'a Friend. AreriTA. Ga,, December 18. Mas, fon Smith, an old negro, living three piles from the city, died Saturday nig-ht under Buspicious circumstances. Smith waa about sixty-five years old and had a young wife. He thought he had reason to be jealous, watched closely nd entering his house atin wB.'FP?11 moment was set upon by Aflsitpr named Gus Chilbreth, The latter beat the old man severely and his death prohablyresulted from the injuries; ' MBavrpi 1 Sqw. St. fiTZ?BURQ, December 15. Th fpmlng wrinUr Ijen Jted for m peries oXmteniv armr maneuvers in hm def ply snowTclad portion pf Moa ppjir, The troop will bivouac under tbV'new Chirghcaes felt VecU. The piilitary evolutions in snow wjll only be suspended when 8 degrees below zero are registered by the tber jauietcr; King CobengtrfV Lobengula, according to Mr. B. A. Maund, who brought the Mata bele envoys 'to England four years ago, is by no means so black as be is painted, that is, in character. This traveler differs from those who gay that the king is "deadly cruel." He has to rule a turbulent people, who do not know the value of life. is shrewd, possessed of a wonderful memory and has sufficient intuitive knowledge to despise many of the superstitions of which, as rain: maker, he is the chief exponent. Speaking one day to Mr. Maund of killing, he said: "You see, yoti "white men have prisons, and can lock. a man up safely. I cannot. Wha am I to do? When a man would not listen to orders, I used to have his ears cut off as being use- less; but whatever their punishment V. fmnnnnllv rrwVtpd tllpir Of- fense. Now, 1 warn them, and then a knobkemea. man knobkerried man never repeats his offense." Lobengula was very hospitable to white men. He is de scribed as more adapted to a farm er's life beinr very fond of his cat tlethan to ruling. As a youug man he was a keen sportsman, but became too grossly fat to get on a horse. Though his head kraal has the name of Gubulawayo, or the "place of killing," the approach to his kraal is not ornamented with human heads. Timed the G. O. M. The late Sir Andrew Clark Mr. Gladstone's physician, will be missed on occasions when the G. O. M. makes an important speech. At such times as recently at Newcustle, Sir Andrew used to sit, watch in hand, to see that Mr. Gladstone did not spoak longer than the limit pre scribed by the physician. At New castle the time set was one hour, and at the conclusion of the sixtieth minute Mr. Gladstone tossed aside the last sheet of his notes, while the physician looked triumphant. Cut in the warmth of his oratory Mr. Glad stone went on without notes for nearly half an hour longer, while Sir Andrew's look of triumph changed to one of mingled perplexity and amusement. But on feeling Mr. Gladstone's pulse afterward he was able to say that the veteran states man was even in better form at the end of his speech than at the begin ning " Not a Prohibit'on Gathering. Mrs. Elizabeth Storrs Meade, the 3tately president of Mount Ilolyoko college, told her girls lately a funny story at her own expense. She had been visiting Sprjngiicld to attend;a temperance meeting and was rather confused by conflicting directions to the place where the conference was to be held. At length she walked into a large room and settled herself comfortably, looking about her with smiles of satisfaction that so many men were interested in the cause of prohibition nd were present to dis cuss it. Then it dawned upon her as equally strange and not so grati fying that her own sex was sparsely represented. She felt a vague "dis trust, and leaned over to a neighbor: "This is the Methodist church, Isn't it?" she inquired. "No, ma'am," was the bland answer, "it's the po lice court." The Only Tune Harrison Likes. During the darkest days cf the war, when military tunes and bal lads were sung everywhere till peo ple were about sick of them, there was played in New York, says the Press""of that town, a soldier's march which was immediately jxjp- ular all over the country. It was the late Charles Gounod's ''The Sol diers' Chorus," from "Faust," and' after a year or two America got as tired of it as it recently did of "An nie Rooney." Ex-President Harri son first heard It played by one of the army bands in Sherman's army. It is the only air he ever liked. In the case of most tunes he did not know one from the other, and he is probably the only person in the UnitedStates to-day who hears the "Soldier's Chorus" played and feels Inspirited by it. Prof. Huxley and the Postman. Prof. Huxley now lives in Sussex, in a house which he calls "Hodeslea, " which curious; name is said to be the ancient form of his own sur name. He is the bete noire of the autograph hunter, "whoso excuse for existence he does not see. Yet he relates with much gusto how his postman not long since asked him for an autograph, confessing frank ly that he did not know what the professor's business was, but ex claiming that he 'had heard folks 3ay as how he was something perior.' " An Exception. "Are you going to to wear that big hat to the theater?" the young man asked. "Yes, George." . And after a si lence, she added: "But I am going to take it off when we get inside." And that is what confirmed George's suspicions that she is aa angel. Washington Star. Julian Hawthorne is soon to" re move his family and his lares from the "Hiuse of the Seven Gabblers" at Sag Harbor to establish them for a year or two possibly longer, if he yields to the fascinatioq pf the place as Stevenson has to the" charms of Samoa on the island of 'Jamaica in the West Indies. From there, us iug Kingston, perhaps, as headquar ters, be expects to roam about with a freebooter's freedom in the-old haunts of pirates and to make an ex cursion to the Sargasso sea, the gulf stream's dead center, where the" derelicts congregate. Dreadful ndigestion AND nsomnia ured ompletely LET YOU ATLANTIC ELECTROPOISE CREn 'L1A3 KNEW. He Reneated the Parible of Poll- - I phar and Jczoba!. There was an old darky in south- era Illinois who wanted to join tha mimsiry. tnrougn many year? oi inai anu tribulation from the position of chief Lo" stealer and heni roost robber of the community to the mourners bench, to membership, to a dcacon- Bte, and finally to the dignified office of sexton and chief bell ringer of th white folks' church in the sama town. Ho couldn't read, but his granddaughter Lucindy could and he made her read to him every even ing from the good book and prayer fully paddled her with a bedslat three times a week that she might fear God. He was finally brought before the board of examination, which was conducted as follows: I "Brer 'Lias, clo you know the Bible?" "Yas, praise do Lawd." "Brer 'Lias, do you believe it to be the word of God?" 4sYas, dat I do, praise de Lawd." "Do you believe the parables?" "Dat I do. Ever wu'd ob dem par'blcs is fac's, sho nuff. Gospel troof." I "Do you know any of them well enough to repeat, Brer 'Lias?" I "Dat I do. I knows dem all, but dat one of Potiphar and Jezebal is do truest au' mos' powerful one ob all. Hit goes dis way: You see, Potiphar was a-ridin' down iu his charyit f urn Je'usalein into Jcrico. lie drove 'long lil bit w'en 'long comes Jezebal. She say: 'W'ite man, gimme ride,' and he lone tuk 'er up behind him in . his charyit. An' dry went erlong a lil furder an' fell among t'ieves. An' ( dcy say: 'Frow down Jezebal!' I "An' Potiphar he say: 'Let him among you widout sin cas' the f us stone.' - "But dcy say all de louder: , 'Frow down Jezebal!' ! "An' finall3r he frow clown Jezebal. But dcy warn satisfied, an' yell: 'Frow down Jezebal!' . "An' he frow her down ergin. An' den dcy yell out: 'Frow her down some moT An' he frcw her down seb'n times. But dey was dat mean dcy warn't satisfy nohow, an' dcy kep' a-hollerin': 'Frow down Jeze bal!' ''An' he frow her down seb'n ty times seb'n. An' ob de remains doy geddercd up seb'n baskets full." Washington Post. Orto'zns in India. The fraudulent ortolan enters into ltho menu of most of India's prov .. inces. For the genuine ortolan ; that delicious mouthful-is, as far ' as my experience goes, very strictly localized. I have seen, shot and eaten them in only one district (Kishnaghur), but I have had ground larks, sand-martins and many otier small fowl offered to me in the nam,? of ortolan in twenty districts and in three provinces. yThc sport provided by this winged delicacy is, I need hardly say, poor; it is, iu fact, demoralizing, for there can bo no question of aiming at this bird or that; the shootist has to hie his charge of dust shot into the brown of the swarm that whirls over the dusty plain like unto a cloud of dust. But if one cannot get ortolan save by shooting them, then I should feel inclined to shoot. Black wood's Magazine. He Has the Proof. "Uncle Ebon," said a young man i Yfho was disposed to be jocular, "do you believe that there is luck in a rabbit's foot?" - The old man's eyes twinkled. Put ting his hand in his vest pocket he drew forth a velvety rabbit's paw, and said gravely, as he held it at arm's length: "See dat?" "Yes." "Wall, dere ain' no use tryin tcr tell me dat luck doan go wid dat rab bit's foot. I'se got the proof right hyur in de kitchen." "Proof of the luck that goes with that rabbit's paw?" "Yassir," and the old man's eyes twinkled more than ever. "De rab bit dat used tcr wear dat paw is cookin' in de pot dis minute. An' if rabbit stew fUn' luck, what is?" Washington Star. , PoMte and Grateful. That's what all boys should be, whether trained in the parlor or in the barn. When Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was six years old (in 1762), he exhibited his wonderful talent as a musician before the emperor and j empress of Austria at Vienna. On 1 leaving the instrument he slipped upon the polished floor of the palace j reception room, and fell. Mario Antoinette, afterward queen of ' France, lifted him up and kissed jiim. "You are verv kind," said th ittle musician, "and when 1 grow up will marry you." Harper's Younjj Vople, . rhildr Cry for fitchews r"tona. T US SEND IW A CO., WASHINGTON. D. C. A Lover's wiiSCa.Cit-..w!. "I'll take this seventy-five-cent pottle of perfume if you will take of! this cost mark' and put on one with one dollar and fifty cents on it," said a young man to the clerk in" a drug store. "All right' y It was done. "Great head! soliloquized the young man. "Minnie will notice that cost mark, and love me for spending my substance so liberally for her. It never hurts a young man's chances for the jpbjeet of his admiration to think he regards her worth "getting the very best for." The bottle of perfume was sent, and an 'evening or two later the donor called in person and casually proposed marriage. "James," said the girl. "What is it. Minnie dear?" "You sent me a bottle of per fume?" "Yes. Did vou like it?" "It was good perfume, James, but it wasn't worth any dollar and a haif. Seventy-five cents is the regular price for that perfume, and 1 can't say that I have much use for a young man who is so careless of his money as to pay for an article twice what it is worth." j "But, Minnie" I James was going to explain, but on second thought he refrained. It occurred to him that a girl might like him less for deceiving, her tha:i for extravagance. So he put on hi h." and departed, res lving to try different tactics when he found an other girl. William Henry Siviter, in Harper's Cazar. An Author's Wife. Count Tolstoi is said to have re pnxluced in the courtship of Levin aiid Kitty, n "Anna Kurenina."' where the lovers onlv pronounce the first letters of the words they wish to say to each other, the wooing of hrs wife and himself. Mine. Tolstoi is a remarkable woia:i, who re ceived a dipU-ma from the Moscow university at the a;;e of seventeen, was married when she was eighteen, and her husband twenty years older, and is tiow. after thirty-one years of married life, the mother of nine living children and her husband's potent aid in his literary labors. Until her children r.re ten years old she makes all their clothes. She copies and reoopies her husband's manuscript, a task of which the dif ficulty is increased by the self-invented shorthand in which Count Tolstoi sets down his commit ions. Even his wife is not allowed to in terrupt him when he is engaged in the first draught of an inixrtant work, and at such times he writes nearly all day and sometimes far into the night. Harper's Bazar. ri ru ana iTciiavTjf at trr. New Yohk, December 13. A spceiaf from Panama to a morning puper .ays: "War between Ecuador am l'eru over the boundary disputf is now cerlaiii and will probably be declared diirLujj tile preheat wuiU.' AVER'S Cherry Pectoral Has no equal for the prompt relief and speedy cure of ('olds. Coughs Croup, Hoarseness, Ioss of Voice, Preacher's Sore Throat, Asthma, llroiiehitls, lii irippe, and other derangements of the throat and lungs. The U'st-known cough-cure in the world, it is recommended by eminent physicians, and is the favor ite preparation with singers, actors, preachers, and teachers. It soothes the iullamed membrane, loosens the phlegm, stops coughing, and induces reiHise. AVER'S Cherry Pectoral taken for consumption, in its early, stages, checks further progress of the disease, and even in the later stages, it eases the distressing cough ami promotes refreshing sleep. It is agreeable to the taste, needs but small doses, and does not interfere with digestion or any of the regular organic funct ions. As an emergency medicine, every house hold should be provided with Aver's Cherry Pectoral. 44 Having used Aver's Cherry Pec toral in in v family for many years, I can confidently recommend it for all the complaints it is claimed to cure. Its sale is increasing yearly with me, and my customers think this prepa ration has no e.jual as a cough-cure." 5n W. Parent, (Jueensbury, X. IJ. AVER'S - Gherry Pectoral Prepartni by I i- .1 C A yer o.. I.om cl!. Maj. Sold by all'l iriifjtfirto I'rK' I, -x ttle, $i Prompt to act, sure to cure v 9sr.'uoT;e8xipuiJC'9xq and Osfam Urttta cured a bouit) wlU out ueio. boo' of ri tlrulaeiit FREE. in kt Wniit.i.RV.M n. tiltliiOiJ & Danville r. r. w ,uim.ei S. tcccr, F.W..Huidekoper ayad Reuben Foster jrloccivers. CON D KN s K I JC H ED V L K. LS EFFECT AUGUST 13, 1?V3. LV.KlCulUOliU Uurkcvliie i. ivrjoviur .1 Ham the liauvte Tjrebfcljuu i. vjoiusijuro.. 77.... Al K;tlrt;.U. .. t:aeiy u. v murium r Uieeusuoro iv Vinsioa-Sa lem v.i vcusuoiu H'S: iLsrHH V i M.:l esvilu; ... .r Asiievil.f I.OI S li lugs (. li SOU ! r l Li 1 1 itit e ... r sp.iruiuburg . virvt-iiviiie , r M':mI:! i u..ru,u t ...... r "oluu bla . ... r Augusta it JC r. . i jo vii 3 4 rx M m Sit r X '9 I'll 4 t: t j 3- r 5 9 ru 3 53 AK 5 00 AM ISO AX 1 no AM I 30.AU 5 M AM "4 4r. AM S 00 AM 9 4 AM 0 .4 AM I- A 8i PM 4 00 PM y.O AM 6 ! AM V X" 1 Sl A k li i 4 M 1 i-". AM 4 i' PM to PM II l.) m l s. AM 11 S3 AM 2 0.' TM 4 l PM t 5!S AM 7 ! am 10 J- PM II 3j PM ft It AM 8 45 AM i NOR7HSOuN0r-Nos. DAILA. M &. lo. No . li .SO. k V .il.l.vt:i t);i nrn 1 00 DID V . o.Uluoia S, 5111.. 4 5W pill i(ii.i(U. Kigali! id j m ..v .ii.iuiv. ...77. .. 6ipui 9 5ti am l o ni r ('...: riv.i 'tM'AUt i 45 iu siipiu ..v iUar one H jo am sa pm S24 pif .r auiuoury 4 lo unlo 03 p in 37pm !.v !IoS rlns 77.7.. 1 44 pm.... ...... i.v AsufViln- it 3o pm uV tlif-S lilt 1 put AM.Ulsbuiv Swipj S ui-0urv -1 . n I), ro . . 4 is um 10 II ( ra 9 in 6 loum 1 1 40 pm 19 ' riu 8 3". am tl 5 am T 30 am ij i am 9 SS jm - 3T, Jim 1" anpm 6 so am A r Vlnyon-SaUiii ..v (ii ei-i.hMi .... .r Miihuin r Ka vigh '.v' ltaTt lc-ll . ... . . . .. r coif! bn'O .: it 35 :m M pm ih-isboo 6 05 am 1 so pm lo 49 pm ' l":iUf T 40 am )3m !e' m rN.'vMii, io so am 4 0.' ;t hi 4 f'5 hid r "v.' i:v IMS. tin 4 5lam 451am IMohmoud 1 18 j m I oo am I oo am t l):ii!.v exce I Sunday. 3TVVZEN WST POINT AND RICHMOND !;i' Wist ToSnl T.'.O A. f. flail. nnds.jO A, M. i: upt Sunlay ;mil VoikI.i.x; Mrtve l.tfli "ii i u i i '4 A M. K-ttDirisr Ipiirp l.itli !)::.! ai.f! 4.43 P. M . tlally ex. -pt s-unday; at- t t I'oiiit 5.i and G.to V. .v. 5ET- RICHMOND AND RALEICH VIA Y S V I L L T I.i'avo'iflrbinonrt li.4" ! M.drllv; learf Koi . 111. 3.4w I', v. : arrlvt-oxltud 5..'5 V. M.; ii n-ln-ti T.lti V. .M , Durham T.15 I. Si., Uaic tgh 6 :iO A. n., tN iurnlng I. alt ivrli 1 am. dailr. Durhr.ui 6 15 m iUudt rM.li l.ss I M.. Oxf- rd .44 A. M arrive . . .. H-.P' A. M., HI' Iimond MS P. M. Dallv . '!. u i in ol 6' Ii-av s Kijsll!,e il iily exoi-pl I'd . 4 H a m.. Oxford. 92 a in. and nr tvi- r i sr. a m. Miqed train No. :) ieaves iur :m, iiai! q.'i'pt Sunday. 6 " m., o.ford s pm lid -iir.xth Ke.vslll', I ro I. M. i v -. i 1 1 li. No. is leavi s Oxford, dallv excrpi in I . 2. A. M , undaiaivps Durliam iv A. M k d 'lr Hi No 60 leaves Durhair, dally ixcepi in hi . 7 3 A. M.,and arrives oxford. . l A. M. i i nil- it O. ii. K li , leaver Ofortl 6 "', A V. U;.v 1 1 I Sunday, II l A.M.. dally. hdU 6 2" P. !!' m e;( S'undav.and aiTive H Ddi isin 6 1 M . l . P M .. u nd 1. 1i P. M. Keturnlng. Ieav n1 i-v. i sj.r. and i;ol'. M., d;P ejrr t sundav .'I a i t- t xford 9. . M . 3.1" P. M and s ib V. V No-,. :?r. ai d sx -odriert at Hiwhroond froir an(! ... ! Ii.ihi and Baltimore dally t xeept .unday. PIN1-CAR GRVI"E. On Trt'nsXos. Tian.'i : Pniiin m P.urr I s:erper b( Uv rn tt Vorl .iiid t!ai t . ..... .i :.; and ::s, Pul m n SieepJjr farsXew ,.,1- w. (rle; n. New Voile Anjjiistri anf' V.itvi.ip.rt.i in Mempliis, and Dii injfi arNiw York ' o Mo t '. i I rap .N' s. 1 1 and M inn vr-lM frnu oen IMch j ii'ind a d Allat'M aiidivirrv Pull'iicn sireptnvcars i iwe-- i ii nii'iMio, pa' vine t.u (in enl.oi-o.-T: atn- Nos. 1 1 mid !, W. X. e. I'hlsion. earn 'u! man Parlor Cuts uelween SaMstury, AblieviU. Mid l!oi lll lllj i: JtK'tKLKV. J. S. K.Tl'OMpvoX hUiMTiiit iideiit. su e lidndent i.iienslK- o. X C. I IcIiiDcnd. V.. W. A. TI'KK ; n'r.l P.issonjrer Ageut. W sliiii;iiin, l. i . S. H. llAHDWlrK, As.-t. (Jen'l Pass. Ay nl, Ai I Tila, li:1.. X. II (iltKH'N, SO' l A AS. oi n'l ,in.!.i;i'i. Tn.ftir Mnnatrr WasIiIiiMoii. D. r. W;isi.inuton. I' C. mm - a SOLD UNDER GUAWATmrtr ICTUAL COST LES3 TTMTf 1.26 TUB. OA SffllTHDiAL HANQWAhE' GGT, SOLE AGSXTS. I Iff 3ltB U U 1 THE Steam, Air and Vacuum Pumps, Vertical and Hori zontal of every Variety and Capacity. 1 .'1 so H H-I Q ;y. i km o v-: 9- The Carolina B 111! II MIS? Jfllffll Renews its allegiance to mocracy t he---: Cause of the people, " ... And asks every friend of good gov ernmens progress axd enterprise for support. Its subscription 7 price will be : To Single Subscribers $1.00 j rr year payable in advn To " of over Ten .85 c u " "n the hands of an old experienced Printer, is prepared to execute all kinds of Job Printing, and at ...prices that will compare favorably with any m Orders Solicited. LOST! ar;e amount of mon. v is iiinualiy by parties ptinlui.-iii trees, roses, &c. G-T :h,.m fr,., u arm that grows their own trees, sends ut nothing hut oorl slock miuI sells at reason due prices. We want the ad- 1.":.; !?.r: r literal offer. Write fnr i articular ! Ureat fJnuorrHii ir i m..i, aid prices at once. bend .-lamp len ritie catnlogue. Agents wfcTtteil everywhere. Add i ess, Cherokee Nursery'tV. Wy Cross, (J; (Mention this paper.) " AflEII'Mo99 Regular Horizontal Piston. ir- MJif t . : t ; a ,!.', I " L . V A f . ' t t of 'i! t 2- Y.r A, S, CAMERON STEAM de- STATE WANTED. K'll;,b!e Vis,,,; ;,. i ... .' lost '.-..it u I If l 1 of li World's Columbian Expc- -nuii llIUMIdieU, vii inn -i.ini t j in thetic orbah of the fair. foi the Xext Year. One Chance in a Liineliiaf D Enclose 15 cents in Mump lor Hu ple copy Ntid full particulars. J. B. CAHPBELLTPres., 159 Adams St-, Chicago, 111- MR -A- A. i i 1 1 j S, :i.tl 1 m ii i I F0MP .WOK 8 Wll
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 21, 1893, edition 1
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