Newspapers / New Era (Shelby, N.C.) / April 20, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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;;. M,.,r.vvr.K. R. i..,nycuRK. 'KUAYKK RYBUM, AUC.nt ys at Law, - 'I k'.iv.i.by. x. c: VlVV-prompt attention to all business i.vtf. - : . ..... ; IL flABASISS, .ATTORNEY AT LAW jnd United States Commissioner, ! SHELBY, N. C. 1 U.VCTICES in the courts of Cleve- haul ana untneno.u wunuw. , iftu'e on West Warren street.. 28-tf. B. Frank Wood, , Attorney at Law. SHELBY, N O. . COMMISSIONER of Deeds for Smith J Carolina.- . "Get thy spindsle arid disfaff readv, and God will send thee .flax." My spindle and distill" are ready. . 1 -At'd with weary impatience I wait, For the flax is slb'v in coni'msr. And tlie hours are waxing late. I had planned siijeh beautiful garments, Of texture so fine and fair, With filmj' thread P-r warp and woof, Inwoven with ta re and care. I've hail visions' i 1 .nds t" laces, A mf drifts likcl :iu soft-piled snow ; Of the misty foil's of fabrics white, Whose threaU t" o:n mv band t-hould go. 'My spindle andj distaff" are ready," AYas the burden of my song, "But the Master k'clays to send me The flax I a wa't so long." When a voice, Breathed to 1 "Be thou sur u a softened whisper, y ear and heart, r- of thy distaff and spindle ;il do His part": 11-tf T. B. JUSTICE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, AXI REAL ESTATE AGENT, lllTHKRrORDTQX, K. C ; " I'EGIAL attentinn given to collections Vif all kinds, and to the sale and pur ..1 '.. Q.i.l r.-Titintr of Real Estate, and the i iivi'stigfttioh of and preparation of Titles, ( lilice at.court lionse, in u.'umy ire-. office. I?-" 1 stiT : i)r. VICT(R McBRAYER, . SHELBY, N. C, OVFKHS his professional services to the people -f Shelbv and surrounding .f.,nntrv. Office in old Postoftlce Bmld- -f.. ' ; -: ; ! 14-ly J. A. HAKR1LL, D. 1). S., I SHELBY, N. C.,; 1 ' T S lM.Kl'AUKl) TO DO ALL KINDS n -.f Dental-work in first-class style i Ih fverv modern convenience to facili- 1 ite "ood work. Perfect satisfaction guar- 1 Office up stairs over McBrayer's iVrug Store. f j The Master v I looked. I o ! jiMV trusted spindle " Was broken and needed repair, And quickly I hastenedld mend it, Lest my task be sent unaware. . i ' As I turned frnni mending my spindle Swift feet canje through my door, And soft flax in; Abundance Was the burden which they bore. So I lightly sang at my labor, And the hunyof my toil was sweet, As L dreamed qf the dainty fabrics I might with fmy flax Complete. Mrs. Fannlf Goldsherry, in Good Housekeeping ; POKER (W THE "WENATCHEE. New Tin Shop. ITAVING opened a Tin Shipp in A. R. ! 11 Eskridge's old stand, rihelby, N. C., ! I solicit the patronage of those heeding tin Ware, Tin Roofing and Guttering,Val 1 ley Tin, Sheet Iron, Copper, !&c. Satis faction guaranteed in every respect - Some years iasro I served the North ern Paeifie raikoad company on a ba rometrical Purvey of some passes through the Cascade mountains and of the eastorn apprdiiehes to them. In early August, when the -Columbia plains were brown and the arrdry and hot my business called me to the We uatehee river At its mouth I met the buteher,familLaily . -lied Butch, a red haired, yellow-yed ruffiau from Vir ginia. I hav0 forgotten his real name, if I ever, knew it, which I greatly doubt, as it was not considered polite to iuTJuioitTljr irxjuii-o into tho unto. cedents of the gentleman one met in mining camps or at isolatad trading posts. If you were introduced to a merry man who gloried in the name of "Buckskin'! Or "Arkansas" or"Sprad- dle-Leg Tomj"it was eminently proper 1 T. W. EBELTOET, ' " : . - DEALEB IS. ' ' . T300KS, STATIONERY, ARTIST'S 13 Materials, etc. Will receive sub scriptions for THE NEW iERA and .nthpr lMfl'mfr publications. If vouneed nnviiinp- in his line, call onihim at the Post Office Building, Shelby, N. 0. 50. plains Indians that they, had been stak- by the tribe in hope of winning a num ber of cattle. Ye, he said, the cattle were the stake. Bot'oro trie firsthand was dealt Butch quietly informed the Indians that English and Chinook on ly could be spoken and that the first Indian who spoke in his own (and to Butch uuknownj tongue would have the top of his head shot 'off. The braves cheerfully agreed to this condi tion. Then the relative value of cows, calves, and steers was agreed upon. They decided to play table stakes. The checks were pistol - and musket balls. Ten pistol balls were equal in value to a calf or to a musket ball. Three mus ket balls equalled a cow in value. A heavy California blanket .. was thrown over a rough table. A candle was thrust into a tomato ean that was filled with beans and tho game began. The strong wind cease;! blowing.. The silence of the plains was broken, only by the mysterious, groaning and sigh ing of the miebty river as it swept past the cabin to the sea. . Hour., after hour passed and not a word as spok en by the players. With faces as un changeable as bronze, the three In dians played, and, favored by the dim light and the fact of Buteh's having but one eye, how they did cheat ! The luck varied, as it always does in a pok er game. Now they would be ahead, now Butch. I dropped asleep, and when I awoke it was nearly morning. Bute j's back was toward me. I saw some'eards thrust under bis coat collar. knew he was waiting for the end to come. One of the Indians neait. Butch picked up his cards, raised his right hand to scratch the back of his neck, adtoitiy exchanged the cards he held for those in reserve, and then thrust the cards he had received below his shirt collar. Then he turned to mo, exposing the back of his . head to the ndiansnd he winked a wink of great sagacity at uie. He talked to me-for an instant and then turned to the table. He bad the age. The Indian to his left bet a calf. The next one straddled it. The dealer went a cow better, and Butch saw it all and raised the pot two cows. All stayed. All stood pat. Then the betting began in earnest. ' It went on nntii all . tae cattle' tne Indians 4 Brlllatat lk : by m t'orlerl . Svl MBr. The Baltimore Sun of March 30 con tains an interesting sketch of the caret r of Col. John Taylor Wood, of the Con federate States Navy, He commanded the squadron that destroyed the Fed eral gunboat Underwriter near f New Bern on thf night of the 31st of Janu ary, 1864. j. The whole story is exceed ingly interesting, but we have space only for that portion relative to the capture of the Underwriter. After telling who Col. Wood is a nephew of Mrs. Jefferson Davis and giving an account Of a number of brilliant and successful engagements in Virginia, the wi iter says: "In the following year Col. Wood vis ited Gen. Lee's headquarters and in duced him' to make an attack upon New Berue, N. C, by land, while he, with his squadron ou "wheels," co-op- where the wounded were landed and the Confederate dead buried. General Pickett, usMug abandoned the attack upon New eVne.the "navyon wheels" returned to Richmond and the other stations fr&n which the boat crews had been detailed. For the rallantrv disDlaved bv Col. Wood, he Us promoted to a post cap- wood working actory at Haw River. tain in thnavy, and Lieut. Loyall to commander. . Both officers and men re ceived; th thanks of the Conderate Congress for their gallant conduct. Tbfi Ueleiiiu tb Bread. Happening" ttoeial, Political, t'inn . 'j rial Mid Otherwise. Operations are to be resuined ft the Cagle gold mines in Moore te&acty. Col. Thomas M. Holt wtffVaild a New machinery is to "be erected at the Ophir mine, in Montgomerv Icoun ty. ! s !" "!- It is rumored that large smelting works will be built near Greensboro How uany who weekly fill their measure from the yeast jug in the cel lar nndetand the nature of the mix ture wtiifh is to give sweetness and lightness, to their bread, and how many of them bat would make better bread f they btit comprhended the action of the yeast plant as it is incorporated in to the ftcurr " For yeast is a plant, cap able under proper circumstances of -- 1 .liri, . , ..... erated ou water. By the latter part raPia aeveiopinent ana multiplication, of January, lS&i, everything was in serving, by reason of its peculiar ri;nM? ti,A avv .r 0,11 qualities; an important part in the armed, and aecomDanied bv four boats fanctionM daily household life ' ; and two launches, they left Wilming- "WATT ELLIOTT, Fashionable .Barter and Hair-Dresser, . . ; SHELBY, N. C.j - HAVING secured an expert assistant is prepared to do all tonsorial work iia tirst-cla3s stvle.- HehasntoVed into Ins mew :hnn south of the court house, which ,i; npfttlv furnished. i 1-tf. HOTELS. Commercial xjot el, SHELBY, N. C, J. W. CLARKE. Proprietor. rpHE best faroMii and best kept Hotel 1 in the Wtern part of the State. Per-b-c. wtisfaetioii garajB.tae.d.. j PablicpaN Tonaffe solieitel. ';- h v - ! At tlie begirfg -of b year -the'Com-mprcial. dtanged hands., with the new ttianacement flic "bowse -liaa ibeen refitted -nd furnished ier. Iff.o Effort will be Hnared to maintain Hs wll-deserved rep atation. Iims newly earpeted and neat ly' furnished. Best servant attendance, table fare first-class. i ' fnoi iy GUTHRIE HOUSE. 1 Ruthecfordton, ;N. C. rPHE undersiened has taken cbargre of . 1 the above named house and will en iiavor to keep his table supplied with the best this market affords, and will spare no pains in making his guest3 comfortable. Kates reasonable. - 1 - W.S.GUTHRIL, 6-tf. ; , 1 Proprietor HOTEL, and THE AW LINE ' Black's, S. 1 S ONE of the Neatest, j Cleanest L Best kept hotels in the State. 3F"Careful .attention at all times, Mrs. M. E. BLANTON, Proprietresi 7-f. - ; " I MERCHANT'S : HOTEL BLACK'S, S. C. rpillS House is conveniently situated on i- Ma.n Street, to the Depots and busi '.''ess partjof town and has been newly fur tusheti with sonne beds and mattresses. Table furnished with the best the market affords. Polite servants who give every attention to guests. Porter meets" all trams Sample room in the house.-Firet- v.ia?3i..very Diaoies attached. J.W.THOMSON, 4"u- Proprietor. Forest City Hotel, ; ; FOREST CITY, N. C. I. N. BIGGERSTAFFj Proprietor. MUUWii ana. furniture new. Every s wiiuk in uiiitwM) siyie. nates 10 ton under the command of Col. Wood. The expedition reached Kinston early in the morning of January 31, the boats being at once unloaded from the cars and launched in the Neuse river. Beoding silently to the muffled oars, by Canadian parties. 1 ! 5 1 - The Young Men's Christian Associ ation, of Charlotte, will erect a Jraild- ing to cost from $12,000 to $'15,0QP. I . 1 ' i - . The Wilmington Street R4way Co., will shortly begin building, their road. ' liailshave been purchased. A meeting of the stockholders of the Cape Far & Yadkin Valley Railroad will be held at Walnut Cov on the 5th day of May. j, j Rey. Bishop Duncan will presteh the annual 'sermon at the Trinity College commencement, and Rev. Dr.' W. M Robey dress. iwill deliver the literary ad . It is nw a little more than two hun dred years ago since Leenwenhoeck, a Tinfoil nitnrnlit. Ytv mirriannin in- vestiatkna made tho first discoveries Mr. Jno Woodhouse, editor of the inregaritoit From his original obser- Concord egiter, died suddenly; Tucs ni ; u day eveniumg, of apoplexy, tie was others, it is known that yeast is a liv- a native of New Jersey, and a most es ing mass, consisting of aggregations "marjl man. j of very P minute, round cells. These cells are developed by budding, that is, under favorable conditions simlar cell- the expedition moved down the river towards New Berne. When in sieht of of erymiaute, round cells. These At a marriage in Charlotte fThurs- the town the boats were run into a I ce"8are dey eloped by bud ding, that is, day, the names on the marKageilicense .m.n sfm anA nr Pf ,u under favorable conditions simlar cell- were A. Beaslv. of Wake county, aged mm.y th nA f, wa lite bodies are formed from the parent 60 years, and Wilsey Smith, of, Wake! lasl otiaay (From the Rutherford Banner.) Mr. Thos. Duffy, of Los Angles, Texas is on a" visit to relatives and friends here. Mr. John Craton, who for sometime past has resided in Kentucky, arrived in town on Wednesday afternoon- Miss Hattie Craton returned home on Saturday from Spartanburg, after a visit of a month to friends in' that city. ' Rev. C. B. Justice has given Mr. C. Carpenter the contract to erect a large store house on the lot adjoining the Episcopal church. On Tuesday Mr. Simeon Harris, resid ing near Lottie Kiver, lost his dwell ing with its entire contests, by fire, which leaves himself and family in a destitute condition. Messrs. Arrowood & King have been awarded the contract to build a com modious dwelling for Mr. M. H. Jus tice, on one of the lots recently pur chased by him in the northern part of town. We are sorry to learu that Mr. A. F. Smith, while on his way home one day last week,-was thrown from the wagon in which he was riding, and painfully njured by one of the wheels passing over his body. (From tlie Gaston Current.') Six of Mrs. J. L. Carson's children were taken down with Hip measles on What oar Seigbbors in the l'almelte 8tat are toir.A Bndret Notes on. Matters in General. The Greenville Guards resolved to go to Charleston on the 26th, to help the celebration of the unveiling of the Calhoun monument. - Tho Catawoa Rifles, of Roek Rill, have decided to visit Charleston on the 26th instant, on the occasion of the unveiling of the Calhoun monument. The town of Rock Hill, which was destroyed by fire some time ago, ha commenced to rebuild, and the build ing is now- being rapidly pushed for ward. Messrs. W. S. Creighton & Co., of Rock Hill, have established a planing mill m the rear of their old store and have constructed a sheet iron building near by which is being used as a black smith shop. 1 ' An alligator has been seen in Bash kriver several" times lately. Ed Gar- many saw it one day last week, and Mr. Harmon saw it Monday at Liudsay's bridge. It is about three feet long. Neidberry Observer, The Morgan Rifles of Spartanburg have been' re-organized with about thirty members. The following offi cers have been elected; E Bacon, Captain; W G Smith j 1st Linetenant ; John Hill 2d Lieutenant. this niunicated with. Everything being in readiness, the boats . were again launched, and arranging them in two divisions, the first was commanded by Col. Wood and the second bv Lieut. Beniainin P. Tovall. now a merchant is onlv semething cells growing from their sides, and at tached to them by pedieles, which up on attaining sufficient size, slip from the maii stem and go on propagating in" like raannei. The largest of these like 1-4000 of and healthful to address him as such. and it was considered highly improper and vulsrar to endeavor to climb into the genealogical tree of any gentleman who misht iave sought solitude for the benefit of h health. ButcL was a one-eyed man. The missing eye,! I afterward learned, had een dropped m a California mining Camp one evening when f$utcb was having a little fun with the boys. He was a merry i thoughtless man, and in cautiously raised a full, which he had been at considerable trouble to gather, directly after a cold deck was rung in on the game! In the confusion that fol- owed the discovery that six; or seven aces were on me raoie, uuicn s eye had been promptly extracted by anoth er merry man, and he had .'been awk wardly carved by a third and bung ingly shot by a fourth. On! his recov erv, rsutcu saia mat.inougu pe uia uoi mipd having a little fun with the boys the boys of that camp played a little too"Tongbly!for-bim. So he left and established ! himself ' at the mouth of the Wenatchee. " 'He trade for furs. He played poker with the Indians. lie raised cattle. He sold whiskev to Indians and - provisions to Chinese miners. ; r K ' S Butch was a grand scamp, a brave, reckless ruffian, but he had some very good points. Fpr instance, he could make excellent fine cakes, and he was cheerful and companionable and could tell highly! interesting lies. We be came attached to each other, and, though I knew he was a murderer and thief, and that he was selling liquor to the Indians and smuggling opium across the line from British Columbia, did not care. I was young and care less and besides, as I said, he could make excellent hoe cakes, f One even ing,as we 'sat side by side on the sandy soil,- leaning against the j house and smoking our after supper pipes, and 1 was listening to a remarkably good lie abont a bear that frightened all the bears ' out 1 of an extensive mountain range by fraudulently using a long pole to mark his height on if he trees, a group of Indians driviug pattle before them rode from behind a rocky point that was thrusht into the vHters of the Columbia.; " . ' ' I Ii.stautly- Butch sprang to his feet and rushed into the cabin. He put on a ciimiin:ly devised harness that held t wo navy six shooters in a;handy posi tion under his arms. He; put on his coat. He; pulled at the pistols to see if they were loose, and that there would be iid hitch in the performance if any thing more than a rehearsal should be required, j In a few minutes the party of horsemen drew rein In front " of his cabin. Thev were three young bucks from Moses' -camp in the Grand Coulee, Butch greeted " them cheerfully and helped to; corral the cattle. Then he told me that these men were the select ed poker-plavers of the Columbia an inch in diameter, and when examined under a hiidroscope is seen to consist of a thid sac filled with a fluid in the midst of which floats a space called the vacuole. the method of propagation is this: t he fluid alluded to separates into four parts, each surrouning itself with a sac of its own, when it bursts through the parent sac, and liberates itself. As tn yeast 19 added to the- flour and water in me process ot "bread mak ing, and subjected to. a warm tempera ture, it seizes upon the saccarine ele ment in the flour as its natural food, and rapidly multiplies the number of its gemmules, one branching off from another much like a chain or net of what resembles loose single crochet as much as anything if we may be allow- had won thirty head of eattle. j As we the watch on deck hailed "Boat ahoy !" ed a woman s illustration. got breakfast the king of clabs fell out and immediately sprang the rattle, iour contains m one nunureo pans, of Buteh's right trouser's leg. calling the men to quarters. The seventy-two parrs oi siarcn, seven ano What finally became of the butcher! boarding party pulled rapidly along- t&ree-tentns parts ot gluten, nve and He was accused of stealing cattler-a side, and threw their grapnels on board TOur-ientns parts oi sugar, ano twelve as the enemv Doured vollev after voile v Par" OI waier WUD rmer proper of musketry into them. With pistols and cutlasses in hand, the Confederates scribbled on board, and with a rash and wild cheer, each" one selected his man. The brave Lieutenant B. P. .Loyall was the first to reach the deck, with Engineer Emmet F. Gill and Col. Wood at his side. Following ia their step's came Lieuts. Francis L. Hoge, of Norfolk. They rowed a short dis tance, when Col. Wood assembled the boats around him and offered up a fervent prayer for the success of his mission. It was a strange and ghostly sight ; the men resting on their oars with heads uncovered, the commander also bareheaded, standidg etect in the stern of his boat, the black waters rip pling beneath, - the dense overhanging ronght were staked. Then' came the) clouds pounng down sneenr or-raiwj show down. Batch had four queens I and in the blackness beyond an uuseen and an ace. The Indians bd all fours, I bell tolling the hour as if from some which they had stolen, of coarse. They I phantom cathedral. Guided by the grunted loudly. They struck their (sound, the boats pulleil toward the mouths with the palms of open tands, I Underwriter, the largest Federal gun- to express surprise. Then they bade boat in the Albemarle sound. . She us goodby and mounted, and, singing tired the first shot at Roanoke Island, as they rode, disappeared in the faint and mounted four guns. When with- crray litht of early morning." Butch I in a short distance of the Underwriter lie, probably. The vigilantes visited him aud ordered him to bring in his herder. He did so, but owing to some misunderstanding,bronght him in dead So the exasperated vigilantes hung the I butcher as a murderer, a cattle-thief, a whisky-seller, and a bad man gen erally. What I Yes, I believe they did divide ButchVcattle and goods among themselves. You see. Batch was dead further tions of gum, phosphatas of lime and magresia, alkaline sulphates, and a little chloride of sodium. The yeast in appropriating to itself what it can feed upon breaks up the flour and water into simple chemical compounds, and rejects whatever is not congenial. The uncongenial con stituents, which remain are the car- county, aged oo years. -1 I The Atlanta. Asheville & Baltimore Railroad Co has been organizjpd with N. Atkinson as president; Garrftt Ray, vice-pfesident, and J. J2. Kankins, secretary and treasurer. EdWard W. Coward, a native of New Berne, but for a year a Resident small clear of Mohroe, died in Charlestoni b. C, Sometimes last week, where he had gonfc but a few days before in ill-health.! j The! ladies of the Wilmmgtoi Memo rial Association have selected Col. F, W. Kerehner as chief j marshal for memorial day, and thatgentlefnan has already signing his acceptance It is reported that Albion 'Vf . Tour- gee, autnor oi A a ooi's !irra-iid," etc will rfet Greerlsboro, and will likely b a Re pnblicaa candidate for Congress in the 5th district next year. J I (iov. A. AJ. pcaleshas aceptcd an invitation to deliver the i 12th annual addreiss before the Philotechnc Liter- . . . . 5 ary pociety at tne commencement exercises of Salem HiJrh School in Sampson eounty on May the 50th. Mr! W.S. Hickey and-R. J Young, of Bakers ville, have fehipped their crystalized quartz which thly found sometime jgo.: It' weighed S27 lbs".'. and ts thought to be the hnst speci men bf this kind ever found In Amer- Mr. R. W. White is now busily en gaged in plastering the Presbyterian church at this place. Mr. Robert Rector was married to Miss Jane Griffin, Thursday, April 7th, at Gaither's factory in this eounty, The ceremony was performed by Jus tice A. C. Kelly. Mr. Tobe McCarver and Miss Alice J. Rhyne, daughter of John L. Rhyne who lives about three miles from Dal las, were married last Thursday. They were married within the confines of South Carolina. It was a Gretna C-reen affair. .Miss Alice is a very pretty young lady, and an elocutionist of more than ordinary merit. A"colored fiend named Mose Burton . ) 3. . I i r-Arvmr-A an .siii two rsn a o o O 11 1 1 sv 4-Vi a urn to tors state and settle near o"c,uF"iu uu.iBscvuoaaoouu uu four year old daughter of Mr. Richard Albee. The scoundrel entered the home of the girl during the absence of the rest of the family, and made in decent advances to her the girl kept out of his reac h and finally made her escape from tiie house and ran to lhat of a neighbor, where she disclosed the hellish plot of Button. The scoundrel was promptly arrested and tried be fore Justice B. T. McAden who ordered him to jail. ica. Twelve Mormon propagandists, from 'the sjate of Tennesee, f ho have open- (From tlie Gastonia Gazette.') The Ormand Ore-Bank is in furl blast, working a great many hands night and day. Mr. Van Line is a go- ahead, clever man. At the residence of Mr. Walker, at and did not teed cattle or provisions, but they did not hang him to obtain his herd and goods. Of . course not. He was a bad man, and they hung him for the good of the ruffian community (he lived sixty miles from his nearest neighbor) living on the frontier. And they took charge of the ownerless cat tle so that the poor creatures should not suffer during the following win ter, i i . 1 : -. Treatment of Horse. . Wm. A. Kerr, Philip Pocher, Jas. M. bonio acid gag and alcohol, the former 1 m l 1 . . 11 111 1 1 n . M . -n , T-r -v-rr.,1 I fT nmTAn. BPJlTTPrHI I FirtlULTII TnH 111 11! I'll .m ttt 'A-m. -.r-j,. in Kiniill trftfioii hnbhifw nod held bv ordered them to lea ve at Palmer Saunders, H. S. Cooke, J. the gbiten of the .flour, causes an ex Thomas Scharf and Wm. S. Hogue P- or n familiar parlance the gallantly leading their men. The donto "se; the alcohol escapes firing at this time became so hot that through' the dough, by evaporation, it did not seem, possible that more than and i8 the cause of the strong half the Confederates would escape odor hich bread often gives forth, with then lives. Cutlasses and pistols Thi ?eoholie product is valuable to were the weapons of the boarders, and tQe ana 10 ine QBnuer: ome of them bad to strncs-le with three "Baking the dough converts the ODDonents. There was no halting, no upon the outside of the loaf into i . i- : j ... i. . ed business in the Asherille district of pieastant Grove, Mr. Thomas L, Howe Nortih Carolina, have proven quite of- aJi Miss Mary McAllister, were mar fensive to( the people there, who have ried by Rey. J. M. Lumley. ooce ai me t:.. t nu;ri. ir, ih idea that he has discovered a gold mine The rumors of a -new bank for city are again revived with circum stance and it is stated positiyely that all the arrangemenes have been made and all the required capital has Wen obtained. Greenville Hens. The engineers of. the C, N. & L. road reached Spartanburg last week and on Monday .returned to Lexington county, near Mr. Chapin'?, where they are now engaged in locating and side- . staking the road for the graders. The erection of a cotton factory at Fort Mill is an assured fact, and it i -expected that it will be in full operation by the first day of the next year. Work on the buildings will probably com nience within the next sixty days.- At a meeting of the city 'council of Charleston on Tuesday night the tax on drummers, which has been- a bone of contention, was repealed and the commercial traveller can now pere grinate' over the city without the fear of arrest. Wm. E. Good, the father of the vic tim of the recently lynched Yorkville murderers, is greatly improved ia his mental condition, and is. now allowed to stroll about the grounds of the asy- lanr.j It is within the bounds of possi bility that he may soon entirely recover. The Port Royal and Westera North Carolina Railroad was organized in Augusta by' the consolidation of the roads formerly known as the Poit Royal and Augusta, the Augusta and Knoxville, the Greenwood,. Laurens and Spartanburg, the Savanah Valley and the Greenville and Laurens. Gen. E. P. Alexander was elected President. Dr. Paareu, editor of the veterinary COwardice every man stood at his post dextre and hardens it into a brownish department of the "Prairie Farmer, "is iuthe life .and death-struggle, as did brittl4 crust; the gluten is subjected to peril of pitch and feathers. ; The medical examining board at Charlotte have granted licenses to practice to Dr. B. B. Williams, War- rentbn, Dr. JJ C. B. Justice, fiuncombe county Dr Rl W. Winbornej, Chowan county; Dr. Jno. L.'Ray, Yaclkin coun ty, Dr. J. W Neal, tokes county; Dr. !C. BJ McNally, Rockingham coun- The boiler io'f the steam' saw and an earnest advocate for better treat ment of the herse,and is the contiibutor that journal of a series of articles on that subject, that are worthy the at tention of the owners of this most no ble of all domestic animals. From a late number of that journal we clip the following: : The tight; and continued reining causes poll-evil, strains the deep-seat rh. c-RliaTii n-mv. Colonel Wood, the same change, and the starchy por- placing mill: of Fleetwood" Bros., at with the buDets whistling around him, expanded, fused and hydrated, Hertford, exploded onThusday last to $1856728, Gastonia's proportion on the Whetstone Mountain near the biff cut on the Atlanta & Charlotte Air Line Railroad. During the last six months of -1886, the merchants of Gaston county pur chased goods to the amount of $203,- boi.ai. Of this amount Uastoma is credited with $68,852.74, which is than $1,000 of being one-third of the entire amount of business done in the county. For the corresponding period of 1885, the entire purchases amounted issued his orders as coolly and uncon cernedly as if the enemy had not been in sight. Conspicuous among all was the conduct of the marines under Capt. Thos. Wilson, of the C. S. marine corps, who fought well. The Confede- su William Gale, the engineer and Joe Turner, col., were instantly killed, and Randolph Fleetwood hid an eye put out j and a leg crushed, arid Mstjor Reed, col was very .badly wounded. The building is a complete wreck. Loss solidifying a certain portion of the watefwith which' the flout was mixed. If the loaf is weighed when baked it will found to "weigh raoie than the flburTO which it was made, due to the uuitipg of the starch during the process i (! r . - ' a . t rt Ml 1 I , : . Ao rfn ni . 1 . . .' t aa, K.,f .nMw ,vioioanng. y ub poana 01 uour ui unite aoom w.uw. xne explosion is sup- tb nmvineh bv inch. and in five I a . weighing one and one-fourth 1 posed toj have been caused py turning ed Hp-aments and muscles. It. assists L u,i v. tt,-i k. rKarids when baked. A barrel of flour cold wafer into the hoi boiler when too O I UltUUHW UOU ULAVVU t.UW M. Krs I V . . t , 3 tv.o. . nMulnitiva nt mavrimi a 11A I , , ., , m mi. I wfiicninc lOfinoands. will make, there- I nMr. emntv. 1 I .-j t"""" b ' i tow. wnere xnev cneu lorauarier. ice i r- ' ; . i -7 - induces vice, such as jibbing and rear- flaring then ceased and the ship was foref24o pounds of bread. The dough ing. This should be suffloent to dis- a prize to the Confederates. The loss is rendered more spongy by the action courage their use against anything that of the boarders was severe, havin 6 of te veast, and is thereby more can b3 advance! in favor of their re- kijled and about 30 W0Und"ed out of 100 easiW acted uP?n b7 the astnc 3mce lounuu. tam i i .i,s.. wU- mm or os,,,. over one-third ortneir r"" 1 1 n w:i:-4- 1 vr! tour to the neek but where breed is comuiand. Engineer Gill was lying in .There are two fandsof yeast recog- JJJ lacKin?. HO neanng-rem can remeuy h mncrwav. shot in fonr nlaees and I u",rf "j luv vuciuiaioj being $5479.15, which Jacked $7,000 of being one-th5rd of the ness. . - over bnsi- I The Savannah the French s ( From the McDowell Bugle.y Mr. Burton Turner was married to Miss Hattie Mackev, at the residence of Elijah Hall, last Thursday night. Messrs. G. W. Crawford and J. L. One of the livestand most posperocs and progressive business men in Green- . yille is how working t organize a new manufacturing enterprise whieh pro- - mises great results in many ; direc- tions. It is to be a medicine manu- . facturing company, for the purpose of ; manufacturing and selling several val- uable preparations the patents of which j -are owned here, and if the idea is car ;f lied out fully there will be a. paper box factory in connectio witk it. - J. Hi Haynes is now nt work at tne Huguenot plaid mill building a new cloth house. The cloth house hereto - fore used will be added to the mill and ; sixty new looms and several spindles! iu addition to those now in use will be ; put in. They will give the mill a total ; of 166 looms, increasing its "capacity j about fifty per cent, and employing twenty-five or thirty new hands. With; the added machinery the mill will have! a capacity of 10,800 yards of plaid a day. It is now working day and night. fnrrp.Ti have taken tho contract to (Gi.) Sews reports furnish the brick to build the cotton 1 finds a ready sale for all its product at cruiser I&coueiic at that I factory soon to be elected in Asheville. port: that she will remain Jherefiveor The contract calls for one million 2 -a a 1 six days, and will then; go tp Charleston bricks. . the defect r by putting an arched crest upon a ewe necked animaL Well, it keeps him up. Nonsense,' The di i ver keeps his eye on the animal he is driving, and at the slightest trip re minds his charge by a slight check, which has the effect.not of keeping him up, but of making him keep himself up. The reiqs being ield easily, though not carelessly can be tightened or elongated to the . easement of the horse 'when woing up or , down a hill, or - to allow -play for ' the the head caused by the' mo tion of the body. But the bearing the results of mortally wounded, and Midshipman invesugions maue oy iniu.cuerucu, Palmer Saunders, the associate of Mid- the f--A, or surface yeast, and the shipman Scharf, was cut down iu a hand-to-hand fight, and breathing his last npon tho decks. Captain Wester velt and roost of his officers of the Underwriter were killed or wounded, and nearh three-fourths of their crew. Before the steamer was secured, the Federals opened upon her from their shore batteries and disabled-her ma chinery, thus preventing Col. Wood unter-hefe, or sediment yeast, according to the nature of its deposit in the fer nerting fluid. In their chemical as pects the two are similar and easily eonVertible into each other. Mrt. B. O.Allen, in Good Home Keeping, :- . - Am Expensive Delay. lif failing to provide the proper means to expel from the system those and f torn Martinique via Bermuda. Th'e Jhuouedic is a small steam cruiser barque rigged and fepar f decked, of 1,290 tons j burden, j Herl armament con sists of six . guns?, sixty pounders, arid five Hotchkiss cannon. She is manned by a crew o 150 1 sailors and marine, and conitaandeid by Capt Boulet. Ten Mormon elders left Chattanooga last Saturday for East Tennessee and fair prices and is working smoothly and prosperously in every respect.' Green- tiUeNeia. The annual session of the Grand Chapter of the Knights of the .Golden North CJarolina, going on a poselyting Rnl of the te of South Carolina, campaign. we learn tnai rney nave quite a number of the Latter j Day Saints in the eastern portion of Mitch ell county. (From the Morganton Star.) The commencement of Rutherford y of North Caro- College takes place 2Utn and 21st 01 1 . convened in Spartanburg Tuesday, the ' 5th instant and cdntinned" its sessions for two days. Much important business in the interest of the Order was trans acted. The following Grand Officers were elected for the ensuring year. R S Morgan, Greenville, Grand Com mander, C C Chase, Spartanburg, Vice- reins permits none of these. .. Do not and the steamer made ready for firing, think that when you see a noble, horse jn gve minutes after the boarders left standing in a carriage, tossing Iiis head he side, the Underwriter was one mass and clamping his bit, that it" is pride. 0f flame, burning up the dead bodies No; he b endeavoring to obtain a mo- ft. Fedtralg kiUed iQ the action. ment s cessation to tne . pain inmcieu . .. . . ., by his head being constrained by the Aftei leaving the burning vessel the short rein.j ;! 'boats returned up News to Swift creek, ensninir vear : President.! Dr. T. D from securing bis prize. To spare the ?UV-U '7-malgb,rof 'ayettevUe. 1 Vice presi- Drisoners and wounded. Colonel Wood dfbihty, rheumatism, and sick Drs. W. T. Eanettj of Burgaw; ordered them to be put into the boats S6' , A0jJ!liaDr 106,108 13 Jf B. Dunn, of Raleigh, ;nd.Thomas IThe Medical Socie liaa, in! session last veekia Charlotte, June. Rev. Dr. Bayes preaches the Grand Commander, A B Wright,Green elected the following officers for the Dr.! Harter's Iron Tonic. annual sermon and Mr. D. A. Coving ton, of Monroe, delivers the address. There will be three graduates. Mr. J. Li. J. Jbstes received an ex press package this wees: irotn Mr. ville, Grand Treasurer, G M Girardeau, Newberry, Grand Secretary, W A Carr, Columbia, Grand Prelate, J K Glass, Spartanburg, Grand Herald, D M Ward, Newberry, Grand . Warden, 7snrurinA ror tne vreaccv nronicus i : r.r1oH. laiva PaW nfi col- Pr-' 0. M. Pooljof Salisbury. , 1 I ,1 : . c Tl ,1 A. J. 1 TS Samnle H)r u- JXK)in oi vxioru. issay id li. Anderson.ot Btatesville. Secretary, Thomas BeckJi former citizen of Burke. I Henry Kneble, . Greenville, Grand j Br. J.fM. Baker, of Tarboro. Treas- Ora- ndlns, Only-f L50 per year. free, Subscri be for The Niw Ell. now of Elpaso, Texas, which contained 7 bamboo walking-canes from Hong Kong, China, presents to his friends ut, Dr. W. C. Galloway, of Snow Messrs. J. L. J. Estes, R. N., J.M.and Hill. The society will meet in Fay- H. H Kincaid, Elijah Boone, Sidney lettevUle next year. I Beck and Joseph Brittain. Sentinel, J T Hay, Camden, Grand Trustee The session closed with a public installation of officers, followed by an admirable address by- the Grand Commander hT the Court House. 1 fl m x 1 ! 4-. tt - .1 1 1 ate PS mi r-. A - -.. 1 tf-'- ( - I V y i it 4'" IK 1 ...1 !', V - '- V' if.; .If! f I ' 1 it I i. t'i i: i fi'
New Era (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 20, 1887, edition 1
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