Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / June 28, 1894, edition 1 / Page 4
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f. t JONATHAN DORE Eli Transformation to Savagery nd l"Hi mate Return to Clvillxatlon. In Juno. 174G, Jonathan Dore, a toy 12 years old, was told by his fa ttier, who was at work with "other men in the field, to sit on the fence and keep a sharp lookout for Indians, who wero suspected to bo not far away. This was in or neaTf Roches ter, N. H. The boy sat whistling on the fence. The Indians all at once came in sight He gave the; alarm, and the men all escaped, but before he could get down from the fence tho Indians seized him. ! His fa ther Kiw him captured and carried off, but could' do nothing. Eleven years afterward the. Fort William Henry massacre- -occurred. Among ' the New Hampshire soldiers who es caped was a Dover man, who de dared coJili'Ioiitly t:mt he ha.l w.'en Jonathon" Dore. He had often been at Mr. DojvV house and knew Jona than v.-H. He wr.s sitro he had not ljeen ini.stiiJyfji ii his identification.. When tno niiiivsacn' het-.-iiue y -n end, after the sti.ir'.nii r if 'in f rt, the Dover nt.ui r;t: l';r tl ' y ooils and was t lu: i iy pur n-1 I y": :. hi dinn. His ;:;:: r r :u d uy.-. : y.n fust thai h t-.n.ed at U:A i. x faced hini, to rv.'vt 1 i r:voidai.le f'jite. The iilil;ed t. :..!.... yr v.';s Just tl ('i. iii-iii his la- -1 '.v; a he l"e tj! y . ; '-. i!, itn!'l il;" p:ii; ' vot-l i i; l u:i in :-::i."te ey .f Jonathan Pore. The r oi.'iti; u pi'Jik to le iiHite,.:l. T:; l;:ti a droj-p-d ? iT-i t!::.v1r:t'.vli : . . and wal)al 'it.!y la '.. ; : i i ' Kneh Hit; tl:;' :-; i.ry of.ih:- t- i V .soldi'-r. !ut it p-.iri.- i !: i .- , Two yea; - later, !"..'. ,'.:e. ; Dore sm! : 'y !i';-de i . .i.'. . ill Ji'-W'-h'. i 1' tuml :. . l.i. than 1.'? years. He 1; el been twr.ted 1::: ' the 81. IV.. .: t ' s - V tors di:::i 7-i and dinor-itiou ot i.!..,...:u indeed had almost forgotten that h v '.fleHe'. ;;' :Yoi:i another ; :' lou a part in ull t . : . :.-.: ;- .. .. taking of tn V iili.un tl-. r. : wliiie le.:!! vIh1:I tie w:. . i -turned uj: : IhnT je", in. . , an.- t t:if (Ic.-.'eiiieiiL; i' und tl.-; .i j (,;-,. ;..;tu- a i . ' '-..-j ,leen f.!?::i!i.:r to ).'. a i.i ... V. -h All Mi,! )l Ml:- i ' V and the ji;-.o- y e- :e - ru.-hi d u. -a h-is re: ii'.: iii- . ! I'u. lc t ) , . tk no I'm.-1 her .. i.: ; , .-. : trai-dy. l-V. t !:at4. :: C ' ''' :' h : : I : . his Wiie a I i :. ; tho-'Ii i;... witli tii s t. ho : e ei i-il -Then tame Major ll ran'ei's, iniij.t v.u-m a Foi-t .Willi. .i-An --ly l.ur WiW !hse?it mj 1 .: field ! Heariu.T a i;c!i; ral iseh. i i e : 1 IK 'ers ::d his :: t:-i- - corli. !M.-' a . kcts and kno.viiiu; th.a.t.. was upon the villa -'e, he :-r self einieea led and i roisi i. i plrtce vitne.-:'d the iii:. ,.'n followed. Then the villa w on tire, -ynd Jifter tii fla.e, tllal i: led ho vent uied f rth. Ainon; the ruins ho f:iud tho bKliesof lii: ife aiial el.i '- h. lie buried ' the; f i in yu y.-'x , . . d with tJld1 lli attachment h l:ie li; As soon as po'ssihhi he mrtde h ; .;y back to IiiR-hester. . He sel t. ! in Lebanon, Me., married; ajja-in and spent there the remainder I' his days, famous for hi.-; marl; ;. ' i. especially, with the bow a:..i ; v, and known to every one as "hmi;in Pore.'' Youth's (,'ojnpauion Agrcpl With I ho Tltooloslan. This story u; told of a formerly . well -known eminent divine of Bos ton, who was also president of a rail road: Ho had ocuision to o out into the railroad yard one day and wit nessed the unloading of a carl oral of rail. Tho men werex .tehing them over in a careless mannennd as in those days they wre very expensive he-remonstrated withytho worlnhen. One of the men gently told him ti go to, hades the iHlite expression usel to. describe the torrid zone of hereafter for. tho wicked. "Oh, shame 1" said tho ex-clergy man. "That's the last place you ought to send me fo. " "Faix, I think you are right.'" re plied' tho workman. "There's no doubt but it will bo the last place you'll go to." Boston Telegram. liiiiii S(opiliif Kxperliuentj. It is singular in these days when explosions in air are thought to bring rain that no one has spoken of a sixteenth century cxiieritnent to stop rain by tho use of gunjiov. der. ' Benyenuto Cellini tells us in his memoirs that when Margaret of Austria entered Rome it rained heavily. lil pointed several large pieces of artillery in the direction whero the clouds wove thickest and whence a deluge of water "was-al . ready pouring; then when I began to fno the ram stopped, and at the fourth discharge tho sun shone out." Boston; Journal. Shaftesbury's Retort. Wlien a inemler of tho church con gross at "Manchester "argued that the introducti" !Mf the custom of cremi. tion Would endanger l'lief in resurrection of thelead, the rely i Lord Shafteslmiy silenced any "fur ther doubt when he "askeil, "What, then, has become of the holy piartyrs who were cremated ''Sah Fi-ancist o Argonaut. . That Ivgj p.tinn cotton is competing with that from the south-in the marlicts of Xcw .England will be news to many jcople in the south'. The authority for the statement is the report of United States Consul lYnheld at Cairo, l-gyit. Hcsavs the shipping of cotton from Egvpt -'; to the United States is ilnsUltred as supcrduous as tlK" sending of coat t. Newcastle, but the "records show thai Egypt is competing inaWal wnv witbi us. Hot only in Europe. but at hotne. stijjplying raw cotton, and the! consumption of Egj'ptian cotton byjXcw fengland spindles has grown from nijthing ten years ago to more ithan lk-0,000 large bales, equivalehi to 60,000 American bales, and valued 4 $3,000,000. The Egyptian! cotton area, which was 863,552 acres fr lS92,.now equals 1,072, SH; ao Hltonishing advanoe. Exchange. . GREEK AN0 B0MN CHURCH. I i Their Separation, Its CauiM and Thel Present PolaU of Difference. The separation of the Greek frox the Roman church took place in the .eleventh; 'en'tury. after ft long struggle since kown as the Filioque controversiy. Tp the article of .the council of j Constantinople, which de dared thai the Holy Ghost "proceed eth from tho father," the western church addod, ('and the Son,"- and the words 'gradually cam to be used in servicer; In , the ninth century Popo Iioo jni was appealed to and commanded thelisuo of the words, and a second council of Constantino ple confirmed ,ii.s decree, and the matter would Uave been allowed to rest but fpr the; jealousy which ex isted between - Home and Constanti aiople, rn uecrmnt of which the for mer revivf-d thp use of -, the words. The Greell chitrch resisted, and in 1 053 Pope 1 Leo! IX excommunicated the patrlaifch ojf f Constantinople and all others who refused to accept the Roman doctrine.! The patrareH,MiQhael Cerularius, hoping to i r verse .the sentence, in vited legates frdm the jwpe to Con stantinople to negotiate for peace. They came accp iingly, but entering the chuxch of St, Sophia they repeat ed the pope's sentence of exeommuni cation, laid thd sentence on the altar and returned to Rome. This took place oii Jund fG, 1051, from which tijno tho final separation of the east and west lhaybfe said to date. The patriarch summoned a council and in h,is turn prou6thced excommunica tion against the'pope, with the sup port of about a thousand bishops and other clergy.- Attempts were several times made; to eljTect a reconciliation, but without success. The Greek chii h of the present day remains in dpc trine and ceremo nial almost entirely as it was at its separation. ! TIiq chief points of dif ference from th Roman church are the omission of the fllioque from the Niceuo creed, aiil the denial of the papal supremac', The doctrines of the Trinity andj of the incarnation and life ; ofJ Christ are exactly the same as those of jthe western church, and the Greeks;! follow the Romans wih regard to he belief in purga tjpry and in thd seven sacraments. They hold the Blessed Virgin and the saints in hih reverence and great importance is attached to the sacred pictures, or icons, which abound in their churches, Houses and streets.; Beyond the Nipeno creed there are no doctrinal tets. The ceremonial of the Greek oliurch is more elabor ate than that of.' any other, and the number of services, is remarkable. Sermons are-almpst unknown. Throo f old immersion is practiced in bap tism, the commuiiion is administered to infants and n both kinds, and prayer is madelstanding. In other poiate there; is little difference from the ritual bf the Roman church. The secular priests are obliged to marry once but hbt more than once. Monasteries; an4 convents are very numerous, and the monks are under severe' discipline. Many Chiistians spend their lives wandering from one monastery fo another in their pilgrimage Sand I are always lospit ibly recei vefl . The largest and most famous of theso buildings is Troitsa. which has numbers of churches and ftuniversityjwithin its walls. Brook lyn Eagle, i ; p Deiigal r8ant Proverb. The wisdom of the Bengal peasant cultivators finds ; expression in prov erbs, of which a: collection has been made by a Babti in the agricultural department! of; pthat province. His appreciatioi"of i the outwardly re vered Brahmin i betrays, itself inci lentally in tlie niaxim, "Rain and in andation disappear when south winds blow, like the Brahmin as soon as he has received his fee." Other Bengal rural aphorisms are: "Hay the land which receives the' washings of theMllago, and the bul lock which walks fast, and marry the girlwhosembtherisgood." "He who works in the field himself with the laborers goti the full profit; he who, being unable to tvork himself, super vises tho workings of the laborers, gets half! the profit; he who orders tho laborers froiji his house does not get enough to ea.!' London News. '- -4 i - - A Talable Violin. In a small towfn some years ago a jeweler received in trade a violin, and not caring for that instrument, but having a customer for ah accor dion, he took thi violin to New York and asked if it lould be exchanged for an accordion! The dealer looked at it a few mittutes, then betrayed excitement and Was honest enough to say that thqyiolin wos a rrenuine Cremona anil ! -eyeah S the parch ment which indicated its make and the date of itj and he offered to this jeweler instead - of an accordion a grand piano inxchange for it. "What the history of the violin was before H; came into the jeweler's hands no one could tell.RNew York Letter in Philadelphia Press. A Battle BoyaL Sporting writers and telegraph ed itors used "battle royal" in half the newspapers of the country when tell ing of the Vigilant-Valkyrie race. There is no fueb thing as a battle royal between two contestants. The term is exact kind technical. A bat tle royal yj a right of many, in which every one is against every other one, and the best witis. Exchange. A Wonderful Egg. A peculiar egg has been brought to London by a Mr. J. Proctor of Tamatave, in Madagascar. Itwas discovered by some natives about 20 miles to the southward of St. Au gustine's bay, on the southwest coasfc of Madagascar. It was floating on the calm sea, within 20 yards of the beach, and is supposed to have been washed away with the foreshore, which consists of sandhills, after a hurricane in the early port I of the year. The childlike longshoreman at the antipodes, opining that the egg had a value, showed the unusual piece of flotsam about, and it thus came into the hands of Mr. Proctor. The egg, which is whity brown m color and unbroken, is a fine speci men S3i by 28 inches, and an even higher value is placed upon it than upon the egg of the great auk, which lived within the memory of man. The brobdingnagian proportions of the egg are better demonstrated by comparison with the eggs of the os trich and crocodile. An ostrich egg is about 17 by 15 inches, and the con tents of six such are only equal to on6 egg of the epyornis. The meas urements of the egg of the crocodile are normally 9 by G inches. It would rcqtrire. the contents of 161 emu's eggs to equal the contents of this great egg, or 148 eggs of the homely fowl or 30,000 of tho humming bird. London Collector. EdUoti on Ocean Rapid Transit. Edison declares that rapid transit through the water is only a question of reducing the friction letween the sides of the ship and the water. What makes the resistance that the ship's screw must overcome is the fact that the ship drags a lot of wa ter along with . her. To illustrate this: Say he vessel is going 20 miles an hour; two feet from her sidethe water is 'hK 10 miks an hour, four feet uv;;y 5 miles mi hou.-, eighk feet away 2 miles an hour, l.ine feet off 1 mile an hour and so on iudiiniiuMi ing ratio. All this water tho vessel is dragging along with her. That is what the engine has got to do -not forco the ship through the water, but cany .the water along. This all comes from tho fact U.at t ie water sticks, as it were, to the. . of the ship. Edison believes that t ome means will be discovered of le. s :m.g the friction between the k' i-sot the vet eel and the ocean. The result might possibly be achieved, he thinks, by forcing some cheap oil through the pores of the sides of the si ip uuoer the water line. She would then slip across the Atlantic on a bed of oil like greased lightning, as it were. Buying a Horse. No sensible man will buy a horse of any value, and one which he ex pects to do him good service, without submitting to a quaUlioU veterinary surgeon, says a writer in a foreign exchange. Many an unprofessional man has a good eye for a horse, but he knows little or nothing of its structure and anatomy compared with the trained veterinarian. More over, the amateur judge of a horse is apt to fly to certain points where he think y he may delect s..iicthiiyr and overlook ot hers. The veterinary Sur geon wbo ss examining horses almost every day not only brings his scien tific knowledge to lx?ar, but conducts his examination in n vys-n n::.' man ner, going r.ll over ;.. : -.-.-lore he has done with bin., ii more be manifest unsoundness, it will be dis covered and pointed out, but it is in the discovery and indication of in cipient unsoundness that the training and practice of the veterinarian are of supreme value. Springfield Home stead. MlHiuterpreted. It was at an afternoon tea, and he was young as was shown by the fact of his attending such a function He kept glancing nervously at her from time to time and hovered about her continually marks of Javor which she thought she could inter pret. Several times it was. evident that he wished to speak to her, but the other guests interrupted him. Finally, when she was about to go, he rushed up to her, coloring violent ly. She graciously helped him out. "Is there something you wish to say to me?" she murmured. "Yes yes. I hope you'll pardon my saying it, but you have a streak of mustard on your cheek." Ex change. Didn't Feeze Mr. White. One otaywhile his apparatus for deep sea soundings by means of steel pianoforte wire Was being construct ed, Lord Kelvin entered Mr. White's shop in Giasgow alongwith the great Dr. Joule, celebrated for his determination of the mechanical equivalent of heat. Joule's attention was called to a bundle of the piano forte wire lying in the shop, and Thomson explained that he intended it for "sounding purposes." "What note?" innocently inquired Joule, and was promptly answered, "The deep C." Chicago Post. Novel Insurance. The latest development of the in surante business is interesting. You can buy suspenders which entitle your next of kin to f 500 if you are killed while wearing them, and there are also hats which entitle your heirs to a similar amount if you are found dead with one on your head. If the hat is found by your side, both it and the insurance are "off." Exchange. Sock and Bnakln. The expression "sock and buskin," Which literally means comedy and tragedy, found its origin in the "soc cus," the Latin name of the low shoe worn by the ancient comic ac tors, and the buskin, a contraction of the French word "brossequin," re motely derived from the Greek "bursa," a hide or high soled shoe worn by the ancient tragedians to increase their height, The soccus reached to the ankle only, whereas the buskin extended to the knee jbtageland. The gold which the government obtained by a sale of bonds some time ago has all been drai.yn out and exported. It will, be reimemtx-rt-ri (h?;t when the Treasury was losing its gold a year ago, the President called Congress togetlujr in extra session to repeal the Sherman act, on the supposition that the pur chase of silver had evointhing to do in some mystoioos, vay wit the gold exports. Welt, the act was repealedf and later the bonds were sold and more gold obtained; but now the gold has gone and nothing apparently remains but to go over the same process. Perhaps there is some other Act wh;ch in some mysterious waj' may be causing the gold to be exported, and if so Con gress ought to be asked to repeal it; and then more gold might! he bought with more bonds for the; exporters to send away ? The duty of the Treasury it seems is to get in a stock of the yellow metal for the Rothschilds and for the great banks of, Europe to draw upon at their pleasure. The banksin New York have more gold, it is said, than ever before in recent years; but exporters do not get- their gold from that source; they i make the U. S. Treasury supply them. The New York banks, if applied to, would simply sav Here is a legal tender note which is all we will give you; here is a lot of silver which is legal tender; but we will not part with our gold. The Secretary of the Treasury has been instructed by Congress to use his discretion in the same way; but the Secretary aDdicates his functions as a factor in the c:!s-. and uses no discretion. He says to the exporter we have gold and silver, use your discretion and we will have no discretion in the matter. Your discretion shall be ours! The Wilkesboro News says: The members of the H rushy Mountain Iron and Lithia Springs Co., met on the grounds last Thursday and selected lots on which to erect cot tages. Work will be commenced at once arid several nice cottages will soon be in course of erection, while the grounds will be developed. This bids fair to become one of the most desirable summer resorts in Western North Carolina. As will be seen from the analysis, it is decidedly the best water. The Bank of England does not do that: nor the Bank of France; nor any other bank, either in this coun try or abroad. Hence the treasury always is in a bad box. News-Observer-Chronicle. Atfoiter Million oT (fefcl Qi JropcCrea wj Figures. Washington, June llO-The enga gement to-day of $1,000,000 in gold for export from New York to-morrow, reduces the gold reserve in the Treasury to $68,460,000. When Secretary Carlisle, on January 17th, last, issued his circular letter invit ing bids for $50,000,000 of bonds, the gold reserve stood at $58,971, 000. The "ten days" Treasury state ment issued to-day shows that the receipts, from customs at New York so far this mounth . have aggregated only $1,605,035, an amount less than for any ten days since 183, or prior years for ten years back, it is believed, and less by $1,000,000 than for the corresponding period of June, 1893. Of this amount only 0.1- per cent, was paid in gold, and 86.8 per cent, in silver certificates. So far this month the expenditures have exceed ed the receipts by $2,200,000, and for the fiscal year $73,200,000. IB Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and all Pat ent business conducted for MOOCRATC PCCS. Our Orriec le Opposite u, s. Patent Office and we can secure patent in less, time than those remote from Washington. : Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. T e advise: it patentable or not. tree ot charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A Pamphlet. ' How to oLtaln I'atcnts," with cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries sent tree. Acaress, C.A.SNOW&CO. Opp. Patent Office. Washington.!, c. BICYCLES No event. We sell from CataluL'u; 4U Whole ale ft-i lerM. Mhlpfer exnni (ivallon before ale. Our hi Ui same aa aenta sell for FTi. ours at 1T5 same us ayents sell forlKJU, ours et$80 wood-rims, 25 lbo , iaruo as an 7 126 wheel. 12 styles 1 10 to teU. ACHE ROADSTER $55 Gaaranteed same as agents sell for ITS to (ISO. ACME ROAD RACER, 25 lbs. OQf) WOOD-RIMS, OUUi Perfect lines, perfect steering, perfect adjustment. Guaranteed same as agent Mil for 1135 and $125. Written warranty with every machine. Bvery time you bny a bicycle through an agent yoa pay S3U to S5Q more than our wholesale price for aavaae qaaaity. it miu thnut as much to sell bicycle thrensh agents and dealers as It does to make them. LetJ buy from us direct at wholesale price. m "Jii!' I 1 1 lustrated CaUlogne free. Acme Cycle Company, ELKHART. INO. sJUDGE WALTER CLARK 5 USES AND ENDORSES THE S 3 1 - TMAOC yTAftK. 'Cure! when all elae falls." North Careliaa Sapreiae Ceart. ; Raleigh. N. C, Jan. . Wo (stc found the ElectropoUe Tery Talnable eape . -i:iU- r children. I got one last Xay.and I am Bare I f three time It onst already In doctors and .,re iritis. From my experience with It, and ob- T '.'li. I can Jvly recommend It. Toum truly, Waltir - VST V1TVVirrVinrWVVVVXinf t What to do with suplus horses is proving. a rather perplexing problem in the Northwest. It is estimated that in eastern Washington, Oregon, Montana, Nevada, and Idaho there are 2,000,000 head of half breed hbrses for which no market can be found.Theprices brought .at auc tion sales areisd low that there is no profit in raising the animals. A few dollars will nowbuy a good mustang in that parjt Of the country. lean while the stock running wild ou the big ranches goes on increasing out of all proportion to the demand. The cause of the depression in the horse trade is largely the employment of electricity as a motive power in every part of the country, and no market can be assured in the future except for horses with a thorough bred strain in them. It is now pro posed literally to kill off by thou sands the mongrel herds of the Northwest, and convert them into fertilizing and similar compounds. With this end in view a company has been organized at Portland, Ore., and a site for the abattoir has been secured. It is proposed by the incorporators to bring all the horses purchased to their abattoirs, and there kill them by a painless method. The flesh will then be rendered of all its fat, and the residue, with the bones and hoofs, will be made into a fertilizer. The hides, that have al ways a market value, will be care fully removed and salted, the hair being shaved off, and, with the. mane and tail, used for the stuffing of mattresses and upholstery work. A portion pf the meat will also be com pressed for chilken food, and no part of the hide, hair, flesh, or boue that can be put to any practical use will be lost sight of. A FRIEND Speaks through the Boothbay (Me.) Regitttr, of the beneficial results he has rreeivi-d from a regular use of Ajrer'a Pills. lie say s : " 1 was feeling sick and tired and my stomach seemed all out of order. I tried a number of remedies, but none seemed to give me relief until I was induced to try the old relia ble Aycr's Pills.. have taken only one box. but I feel like a new man. I think they are the most pleasant and easy to uke of anything I ever used, being so finely sugar coated that even a child will take them. I urge upon all who are in need of a laxative to try Ayer's Pills. They will do good." For all disease of the Stomach, Liver, and Bowels, take AYER'S PILLS Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ay er Co., Lowell, Mso. Every Dose Effective Steam, Air and Vacuum Pumps, Vertical and Hori zontal of every Variety and Capacity, i Q o 2 1 Investigation Invited.. 2. 1S4. BOOK. FREE Electrolifcration Cw. Clark. S49 FOURTH AVCNUC, MEW VORH The vote on the motion of Seria tor Hill to putvdal on the free list yeas, 7; nays, 51 did not represent the opinion of Democratic Senators. It is"a part of the sacrifice demanded of the Democratic party by the McKin ley Democrats in the Senate that, in order tcr secure partial Tariff Reform coal, collars and cuffs, sugar und other items should be arrarged to their liking. The Wilson "bill has been revised by the Senate Finance Committee under the threat of defeat held over the heads of the revisers. When it shall finally pass the Senate, if it shall pass, it will not represent the will of the majority, but the hard bargain driven by unscrupulous recusants who do not represent the people Senators sitting as Demo crats who speak for monopolists bent on further protective plunder ing Fhil. Kecord. Queen Victoria, it is said, when she is in doubt about a word, writes it so illegibly that a possible mistake is hidden. Lessens Pain, Insures Safety to Life of Mother and Child. My wife, after having used Mothers' Friend, passed through the ordeal With little pain, was stronger IN ONE hour than in a week after the birth of her former child.- J. J.McGoLDEICK, Bean Station, Tenn. Mothers' Friend robbed pain of terror ana snortenea llDOr. 1 nave, (16 uuesi coua x. erer saw. Mrs. L. M. Ahern, Cochran, Ga. Eipresud to tnjr tddrest, Charges prepaid, ea re Cfilpt bt price, fi.jo per bottle. For sale by all Drue girts. Book to Mother mailed free. . MurltLU K1SULJITUK CO., AtllatS, OS. put; sidbj d3 O sun itiSu si top-ox -Jioiod ajiT oq; jo . itiatudopAap loajiad sqi sT 3;noqV Xjjnoos 3H1 UOIDBJSIl-BS Sut;st;t noX saiS puB area mojj rtoX a.vjasajd 'aouapg -HOD jnoX 3STJ3JDUI I.Vl 'lipW jnoX namSa jiia 3abs o no ;dmoad ux da;s b ipnc; paSuopid sq anoX ji 'qSb ppD ui laoddns u.wo jnoA joj punj b stj uys -aj Wsapn jnoX oi zavzi Xbth noX TJOiTJ.w sreisa ub Suum sn '(poo'oi$ jq pajduaB oozj aoj ao) qoq'i j jo p3iuTeD b sjiid -as Xj;ub;sui ubd ripX oz$ J0 : aiqmbg zv jo Aotjod 9ui;uox w? ii 2m -;s3auj pire siuoDui XjaBoJi inaA jo ;jkcI ijums b Xq SiiiXb Xq aoua IB lSlBlldBD B 3UIODDl UBO VtO V Regular Horizontal Piston. I ijTWI.i.;?, lJ5-.--T4W rrWlJSggfF JTv ; M tr!; lfcy-fr iSt 1" s The most simple, durable and ef fective Pump in the market for Mines Quarries, Refineries, Breweries, Fac tories, Artesian Wells, Fire Duty and General Manufacturing purposes. I3rSend for Catalog. Foot of East 23d Street New York STEAM I RICHMOND (SAMtTKIPKNCEKi F. WrlIEj Hjf.&rit.... . i : n-EIvr.;a!Avtk; In .t 4 KASTBOIIND. Lv Knoxville " Morrlstown II 930 1 Paint Rock Hot Springs ' 1 Asheville 1 Round Knob 1 Marion ' Morganton '. 1 Hickory 1 Newton- 1 Statesville I l- W D li, nfpS: 20p Ar Salisbury I T. vxieciisuoro ' Danville Lv Greensboro Ar Durham Raleigh 1 Goidsborp 1 Lv Danville! Ar Lynchburg if.Wam '.W a li Baltimore Philadej)hia i New York ft. 23 aw. ' iitj. WEST BOUND ri Lv it New York Thiladelphiai Baltimore m p m t u3 p m '.I r. ... L " Washington " Lynchburg Ar Danville Lv Richmond " Danville. Ar Greensboro Lv Goldsbpro " Raleigh " Durham -Ar Greensboro Lv Greensboro " Salisbury " Statesvilk " Newton " Uickory " Morganton i " Marion 1' Round Knob Ar-Asheville " Hot Springs "Paint Rock " Morristown " Knoxville f4ai(1 3s a Hi ;, H 45 a m . v- '"iaiii j 11 5t a n ; 12l6PBJi. I2 5,pttl 1.-6pfti . - W p i -ospm ; 3 ;Ti p m ; "' p 111 : . Mpiu i 7 2pm : o,' 17. MURPHY BRANCH. Lv Ar Aheville Waynsvill' -Bryson City Andrews Taruotla Murphy 53 a m 12 Wanr- ' J J2pm , 4 p nr I 3 03 pin o, is ? Lv Mumhv Ar Tomotia' Andrews ' Brj-sonCity ' Waynesville ' Asheville .45,a oi i? a in . 12 41pm ; 2 24pi CHARLOTTE. STATEn 1UE A- TAY-1 iXJIiSVILLE. No. 12. Daily Except SuniUjv Xo. li. 4 00 p ni -Lv Charlotte Ar Ar HuiitersvilltI, ' Davidson "I " Mooresville "i Statesville 'f Lv Statesville Ar lTioam 10 11 a ia i 45 a m y 22 a in 8 13 a in swam 4 56pm 5 23 p 111 5 54 D ra 7 07pm 7 32 pjn j p m Ar Taylorsville Lf" c 06 am SLEEPING CAR SERVICE. Nos.ll anrf 19 nr?nd Greensboro, -Mid trains ffi" v i 4 uan oieepers fictToch Xew lork, and IIotSprinRs iK-ing haudled ou NOS. 11 anrl 19 nr T? fe ri w v Divisions. Pullman Sleeper between asJm VIIIA I ,lT1lltlniifti! T7- ' Trams Nos. 13 and 14 Solid trains be tween Ashevillei and Columbia conncctinR at Columbia with S. C. R. K.S for CLariey ton and F. C. & P. Ry for Sav knnah, Jack sonville and all Florida points j W. A. TURK, J . Gen. Pass. Agt. '. ' Washinfttoii, ir.C . S. II. HAliDWiUK. Asst. Gen. l,vs. Agt, V. 11. GREEN,, Gen. Man. ,. r " Washiflgtaa, t). 0. V. SL MCBEE, I ept., sol iiaas , ; - i - col umbia, S. C. TrafliUIan' i Wasliipgjon VlV HINDCRCORN8. Tba only snr Cur for Corns. 8top ll p4d. Ebi Oomtortto the feet. Ua. X VrxmMs. UuKXitCS.T Th best of all remedies lor Inward Pain. Colic, Indiges. tion. Exhaustion aid U Stom ach and Bowe) troubles. Also i the most effectiv cure fori Cvughs. Colds, Bronchitis and affections of the breathing! wans. It promotes refreshing sleep, improves the appetite, overcomes nervous prostration, and eives new life aad strength' the weak and aged. 50c. and $ t.oo,.t Prjgui tl r:i.I ilii li iiiiiiiji i V ! li '.fl . - No. 1 mm MM T p. ; ( - . f
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 28, 1894, edition 1
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