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i lie garolma watchman ml xv.--thirb series salisbury n c january 31 1384 ' 0 j6 the carolina watchman established in the year ls : 2 price 1.50 in advance js^qzb for dyspepsia ti if^w&ps riioea j:iun<lice fl imimirily of the viix^q k 6 j • / ■'"<' :'" disease f jyt r:iii*cil by !>*■rangemciit oi liter isowels and kidneys symptoms of a diseased t.iver bad breath pain in oic side s metimes the n l^r general 1 5 of appetite . b iweli „..>, . aetimes alternating with lax ; th ■'•■, with c withapainl ■■'. ■nsati nofh a »■ought to -.■■■■" ■uiej j light dryc 1.4(1 iid fla.i 1 faoe is si incl . s ..;, attendant often mistaken f.r consumptmflf ** '■; itienl 1 m plains t,f wl . s easily startled f ect lor bun nj some rickly sensation u tht si in ■> esp ndent and although satisfied that e v uld be bene ficial yet one can hardly si ip i rtitude to try il >' 1 ptoi - attend 1 ■e i it cases j ■rrea -■■hen but few 1 • ■■■d yet , , the li . er vj have been extensively derailed it should be us«'d by all prisons old in«l jilting whenever any of the above symptoms appear prisons traveling or living in un healthy localities oy 1 ' asion ally to iceed th ion will avoid all malaria hilinns attacks 1 lizziness nau sea i t iwsiness dq ■tc it .; irate like a g but is do in toxicating beverage if you have eaten anything liard of digestion sleep ier ii night take a dot relieved tlux ami doctors hills will be saved by always kr<;|>iii the regulator in the house for whatever i lay be a thoroughly safe purgative alterative and ionic can never .. .: ' ; 1 1 rcn ■. harmless and dots not interfere ii!i business or pleasure it i purely vegetable and i f calomel or quinine ■v 1 efte ts a governor's testimony n my fa . ■i i it is a valua j gi fala hon alexander h stephens f a 53 i i thl usi f c it a further trial thr only thins that never fails to believe i • 1 dys pepsia i vrr affei tion an m never fcave 1 ii mi ! 1 the 1 xtent simmons livci regulal 1 has 1 si nt i 111 min sik a 1 cdii ine and « uld . ■:■. ise .■. il.irl .-• ems the only thiny that nerer,fails to relieve i m janney mi uncap lis mine dr t w mason s 1 \- 1 cx . perienci lt r in by practice 1 . to use nd j jg?*take only the genuine which al«-ays ois on the wrappei the red 7 trarte-mark ud signature of f 1 zkil1n & co for by all druggis fs having fdbg9ased the entire stock of good s formerly belonging to - blackmer & tayloe i will carry on the hardware business in all its brunches including wagons buggies all kinds of agri cultural implements & machinery rifle and blasting powder dynamite and all kinds of mining sup plies in short everything ordinarily found ■i ■■lss hardware establisment x siialli kemoye • — to t ii e — re i will be pleased to see all persons fvlio wish to purchase hardware ■ok rash i will keep no i'.noic's or accounts e^**ah parties indebted to blackmer k faylor are requested to make immediate ment their accounts will be in tlie hands of w s blackmeu who will make icnt luke blackmei octobi i 23d 1883 an old boot on a new leg mixs susan aramantha sears did love and woo a :•. 1 \ lnd j but all despite her p i t mid •• rs a most distressing rime t had slie did not suit lirr invrr's dad tlie old man locked liis lovely boy within a dark and lonesome room — which did the gentle youth annoy and plunyp his sonl in dismal gloom — likewise retard miss sears boom the old man bonglit a pair of shoes which by the gods of war lie swore he would for dreadful nrpose use if e'er again as lieret lore she hnug round his mansion door but late one night miss susan crept in through the gateway undismayed and while the father soundly slept beneath her lover's window nlaynd and sang a dulcet serenade and an she sweetly played and sang slie had no thought of harm i we n — when lo ! from out the darkdness spiang unbidden to the festive scene a bull-dog of ferocious mien ! the bight of that ferocious brute made aramantha sears turn pale — slie shrieking tied — lie gave pi^suit — the fence a lean a growl —^ wail — but why prolong this pitious tale yet to relieve you of suspense we'll say mid sympathetic tears i'll at , tho she nimbly cleared tho truce mi.-s susan aramantha sears without a liustle now appears judge not how do we know what hearts have vilest sin ? how do we know ? many like sepulchres are vile within whose outward garb is spotless as the snow and niitux may be hire we think not so i how near to god the souls of such have been what iueir secret penitence may win - lluw do we know i how can we tell who have sinned more than we i 1i can we tell ? we think our brother walked full guiltily judging him in self-righteousness ah well perhaps had we been driven through the hell of his untold temptations we might be less upright in our daily walk than he — how can we tell « dare we condemn the ills t h : 1 1 others do 1 ai e r condemn ? ■their strength is small their trials not a few :' the tide of wrong is difficult to stem and it to us more clearh than to them is given knowledge of the good t"<i true more do they need our help and pity too daro we condemn ? god help us all and lead us day l>y day ! god help us all ! we cannot walk alone the perfect way ; evils allure us tempt us and we fall ; we tire bnt human and our power small not one of us may boast and not i day : rolls o'er our heads but each hath need to say god bless us all ! — the day bill to regulate distilleries i in the senate of the united states january 16 1s84 mr vance asked | and by unanimous consent obtained leave to bring in the following bill which was read twice and referred to the committee on finance a bill • to regulate disstilleries of spir its of a capacity of less than thirty gallons production per day be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the united states in congress assembled that all i existing laws and regulations which provide the machinery method and officials fur the collection of internal revenue taxes are hereby declared not to apply to distilleries of spirits regis tered at a capacity of less than thirty gallons production per day sec 2 that from and after the passage of this act every person de siring to operate a distillery of spirits of less capacity than thirty gallons per day shall apply to and obtain a i license therefor from the collector of the collection district in which he re sides and at the time of filing his ap plication for said license shall tender his bond with two sufficient sureties conditional for his faithful observance of the internal revenue laws and the payment of all taxes for which he may ! become liable and said bond shall be ; for double the amount of taxes on spirits which the capacity of his dis tillery could produce per annum sec 3 that no one man nor com pany of men shall obtain a license for more than one distillery unless the combined capacity of his or their dis tilleries shall be less than thirty gallons per day an:l for each license there shall be paid the following tax to distill fruit twenty-five dollars and to distill grain or other material on stills of a capacity not exceeding six gallons per day twenty-five dol lars ; exceeding six and not exceeding ten gallons per day fifty dollars ex ceeding ten and not exceeding twenty gallons per day seveuty-five dollars above tlrat and n«t above thirty gul hy.is per d iv one hundred dollars sec 4 that each disstiller under said licj.is 1 shall rcn ler upon oath twice in each year covered by his license a statement to the collector of tire said district of the quantity of spirits dis tilled and the amount of taxes due thereon which taxes shall be payable immediately under penalty of forfit urc of his license and in no case shall the aggregate of taxes due from each distiller of grain for the year covered by his license be less than one-half the amount that would he due the government provided his distillery had bten run to its full capacity for every day counting three hundred working days to the year sec 5 that in all collection dis tricts wherein eighty per centum of all the registered distilleries shall not exceed the said capacity of thirty gal lons per day the salaries of collectors of internal revenue be two thousand dollars per annum and in addition thereto they shall be paid five per centum on all moneys actually col lected which shall be in lieu of all allowances for clerks deputy collec tors office rent and other expenses as now allowed by law and regulations sec 6 that the secretary of the treasury shall make all needful rules and regulations for carrying this act into effect a political secret out arthur's friends trying to steal a march on the enemy new york world the friends of arthur are quietly considering the advisability of doing away with congressional district con ventions believing that such a step would materially aid mr arthur in securing delegates to the chicago con vention it is claimed by those who are identified with this movement that the rule for electing the national delegates adopted by the republican national committee does not compel or lnake if obligatory to hold coil gressional district conventions nor is the rule explicit that the delegates shall be chosen by such conventions the only requirement is that they shall be selected by congressional dis tricts and shall not be instructed by the convention to vote as a unit or otherwise the four delegates at large and their alternates must how ever be selected by the state conven tion accordingly the convention most be held and as one of the leaders of the movement says why should not all the delegates be select ed at that gathering and thus save the expense and trouble of thirty-four separate congressional district con ventions modify the system ortli carolina is deeply interested in securing legislation on the inter nal revenue the democrats of this state desire the total wiping out ot the statutes on the subject but what is desirable is not always practicable the people who have borne s much at the hands of the internal revenue bureau will feel an intense relief when the agents of that tyranny are remov ed from the state there are two ways of removing these agents — by abolishing the tax or by retaining the tax and changing the mode of collect ing it ask the people which they prefer as a direct proposition there would be no hesitation in the response that they prefer the excision of the entire system but they will tell you that if they cannot get that they will accept gladly the latter plan now there is really some doubt whether it would be possible for the democra cy even if it controlled both houses and the president to abelish both ax and machinery there is very little doubt if any that some modification of the mode of collection can be se cured with this statement of the siuation and the statement we feel assured is correct what ought the north caor liua members to do clearly to urge the best plan they can agree upon in conference with their friends that will effect the desired object — goldsboro messenger b aiw — some of our democratic friends of the newspaper fraternity in this state will get into a quarrel first thing they know about who shall be the next democratic nominee for governor the serious question that bothers us about nominating times is who can be elected that's the main question always taking it for grant ed thai all democrats are right in principle the talk about rings is humbuggery anil the samo old old story we don't believe any demo crat is silly enough to oppose a man because he favored mr iiandall for speaker or because he opposed him — home & democrat it now appears that senator vance did not authorize the statement pub lished in some of the papers to the effect that he would vote against sena tor butler's bill to repeal the internal revenue laws he now emphatically states that he will both vote and work for their repeal ex seer taries for senators from the baltimore sun the senate indicated to-day its pur pose to provide at the public expose for a private secretary for each swgp 1 j tor it is quite as well that the rrin«k should be taken off entirely in this matter for a dozen years past when ever a senator wanted a private scc j retary without paying for that luxu ry from his own pocket be has log rolled and lobbied among his asso ciates until he has secured enough votes to erjate a how committee of which he should be chairman tfcen ja resolution would be offered provid | ing for the said committee and au | thorizing the appointment of a clerk this has gone on until the limit has been reached and it has heeu found absolutely possible to revise even j the thinnestof pretexts for more | committees there is nothing like it j iu any legislative body in the world the senate with 71 members has be tween forty and fii'ly committees i fully one-half of which have no pub mic business whatever to transact from [ one year's end to another but the senators who arc not chairman of committoes think they have as much right to clerks as their colleagues and hence the passage of the resolu tion to-day for tbi.s purpose the reconsideration because of technical objection will only cause a temporary delay as there is no reascyi if each senator is entitled to a clerk why each member of the house of repre sentatives should not also have one the example is likely to be followed by the house side and as there would be neaily oo ) members to [ provide for there tue cost of this business would be rather lai e the internal revenue did it ever strike the advocates of retention of the tax on whisky and tobacco that the logical sequence of their position in the raising of all lie governments excises ii there is no objection to the whisky and tobacco excises there is no objection to bank cheque excises and excises on a thou sand other things we could easily thus and at once jump to free trade there may be discrimination against the luxuries in the tariff luid there may be in i i i e internal revenue the north carolina platform does not con cern itself with such discrimination in cither case it opposes as the amer ican people have ever oppoased the principle ol excites lawful tax though it be discrimination against the luxuries is a question of details in ci ther kind of tax — fayettecille obs komance in ueal life the beautiful and highly-cultivat ed daughter of one of the proud old roman nobles the duke of galleses was introduced to the italian poet signor d'annuuzio her kinsfolk never dreamed that a lady of such great expectations and high birth run any risk by an intimate acquain tance with a man risen from the low er ranks the two walked and chat ted together but while the young la dy's friends supposed that she was talking of intellectual matters it turn ed out that the conversation of the interesting couple turned in a very different direction duke leiumd,to his horror and anger that bis daugh ter had dared to betroth herself to the poet as a matter of course he refused to give his sanction to their marriage whereupon the lovers took the train to florence where they were made man and wife this last step made the duke so indignant that he had a legal documont drawn up by which bo disinherited bis daughter but tlie father and the man afterwards so far overcame the aristocrat in him that he settled upon her for life a yearly income of 6,00u lire the sto ry has since obtained an almost tragi cal completeness by the separation of the duke from his own wife heac cused her of having secretly favored the cause of d'annunzi and of al lowing the lovers to hold interviews after the father had prohibited all further intercourse between the two he has consequently broken up his household in home and made a set tlement upon his duchess and declar ed that he will henceforth live as if he bad neither wife nor child — lon don echo vegetables vs pork we be lieve that the farmer should produce and consume more vegetables and le.*s pork we do not believe pork is unwholesome in toto it has its uses which we commend but its abuses we condemn farmers of all men should have the greatest variety of the most wholesome food ; yet half their diet is pork and bread if it were not for that they breathe pure air and take much exercise they could not live on such food god gave man flesh and ! grain for strength vegetables for i health fruit for pleasure while j these are distinctively their offices all are essential to health who hope to have quite an interest awakened in gardening in this the women can take a part hoine-made superphosphate southern world some of the readers of tlie southern i world may wish to make their own su perphosphate or dissolved bones at home in some localities a largo quantity of bones may be easily collected from the various depositaries of dead animals the writer once procured several tons—offer ing and paying 50c to 1 per hundred weight for them delivered at his faun or some designated point an enterprising indnstriocis negro can easily collect i hundred pounds or more in a day in some neighborhoods not heretofore glean ed the cheapest and easiest way to utilize them is to burn them until so soft as to be easily crushed and apply the product to fruit trees grape vines and garden bnt tho crushed burned bones though v<-rv lasting — are not very prompt in ac tion the next easiest way and ono which preserves all the elements of value that are present in bones is to reduce them with ashes as follows break the bouts with hammers into pieces of the size of walnuts having a large hogs head place tlie broken bones in alternate lavers with strong unleached ashes each layer spinkled lightly with quick lime ami the mass kept constantly moist but not dripping if the mass is moistened with brine so much the better in a i few weeks t!ir broken boucs will hare be come so soft as to b.e easily worked up into a paste which may be dried by means of any dry material as scrapings from under an old house or from tlie road by liii.-i plan all tlie elements of value in the uriginal bones are preserved without loss by he first plan the ammonia is jail lost but the most effective fertilizer ( is made by dissolving the bones withsul i pliiiric acid as follows break the bones ! as finely as possible the liner the better 1 place them in a eloso wooden vessel — a half hogshead is good — and cover them with water in which has been dissolved some strong potash or lye or sprinkle strong ashes w itli a little lime — through out the entire mass aud then cover with water let the mass stand sevoral days until the potash or lye has had time to unite with the grease that is in the bones then add sulphuric acid slowly and stir ring the mass thoroughly until there have been added one hundred pounds of acid for each two hundred pounds of dry bones the water used in soaking the bones should be equal in weight to tlie bones or about twice the weight of tlie acid after two or three days with oc casional stirring the mass will become very tough and thick — something like a stiff mud and must be promptly dried by mixing with rich dry earth plaster or road dust great care is necessary in handling sulphuric acid as a drop falling on the clothes or ok in will make a hole or a sore no one but a habitually care ful person should be permitted to handle it i^i the time to kill a hogf speaking generally the time to kill a hog for pork is when the hog is fat and the weather is right this is equivalent to saying that a pork-hog should never be allowed to decline in flesh or to pass a hog killing time without making the acquaintance of the smokehouse the first time he gets fat and of reasonable size and the weather in cold his death knell should be sounded the true poli cy is to have pigs to como ill march or april push them every day of their lives and kill them in december or january when they may be made to weigh from 150 to 250 pounds according to breed and treatment it taken more food to carry a shote through the winter to pasture time again than he is worth tlie food required to barely preserve life and keep up the animal heat during — say four mouths of bad cold weather if fed du ring the tlnee months of fall would make more dear pork than the shote would weigh gross at the end of the winter nothiyg but stock hogs should be carried through the winter if a sow by care lessness of the farmer brings pigs in xo i veinber or december it is good policy to feed sow and pigs well from tlie start aud sell the pigs for roasters at four to six weeks by a little care the sows may be i induced to bring two litters a year one in march and one in september the i march pigs to be killed iu december aud half only of the september pigs carried 1 over to the second winter and killed in | november and the others killed and sold i or kept for fresh eating in late fall aud i early winter we believe a cross of black essex and poland china makes about the best breed | for the southern fanner such a pig will ' graw rapidly and fatten at any age what is wanted for family pork is a pig that will fatten well and net 150 t 200 1 pounds of pork fit eight to ten months of ; age the great overgrown monsters — ' weighing three to live hundred pounds are not fit for the table we want a young and tender and well marbled meat a streak of leau aud a streak of fat k ■"» the museum of comparative zo ology at cambridge has received a jcrab from japan that measures from claw to claw nearly twelve feet in some observed by professor ward the claws were five fret in length tlie strongrest drink water is the strongest drink it drives mills it's the drink of lions i and horses and s:iu)|>smi never dr»n anytliing else lei ymink men !.. jtetotalere if only {,»• economy's - i the beer monev will .<•„,,, !-,,,;]. ] 1 i house if what goes into tho tnasli j tub went into th kneading ti j families would he letter fed a d het ter taught if what is spent in wash were only saved rai d~t a rainy day workhouses would never he built the man who spends his money with the publican and thinks the landlord's bow and how do you do my good fellow mean true respect i i per fect simpleton \\ ■doi i : ii fires for the herring's comfort hut to roa^t him men do not keep pot-houses for laborers good ; if they do they certainly miss their aim why then i should people drink ; lor the good of i tlie house if i spend monev for the good of any house let it be mv own rod not the landlord's h j s * a bad well into which yon must put water and the beer-house is a had friend because it takes your al and leaves you nothing but head aches he who calls those his friends who let him sit and drink by the hour to gether is ignoranl very ignorant why red lions and tigers and eagles and vultures are all creatures of prey and why do so many put therusi ives within the power of their talons and jaws such drink and live riotously and wonder why their fliers are so blotchy and their pocket so bare uoii.l leave off wondering if they had two grains of wisdom they might as well ask an elm tree for pears as look to loose habits for health and wealth those who go lo fh public house l'ir happiness climb a tree to find fish ifep mr spurgeon mr randall still sulks in his tent x y times oh no mr randall never sulk and he dosen't live in a tent or in a glass house either everybody knows whore to find him and he does his duty wherever he is with diguitv and fidelity as a distinguished journalist has lately remarked he neither whines nor threatens sam randall is a good deal of a man — n y sun the legislature of south carolina has appropriated 3,000 for the con struction of a sarcophagus lor the re mains of the late senator john ('. calhoun in st phillips churchyard in charleston where they lie buried and gov thompson has made public proclamation of the fact that he will receive plans and estimates for the construction of the tame until febru ary 15 a section of a mammoth discover ed on the lena river after entomb ment in the ice for certainly not less than five thousand years was so per fect that the structure of the brain could not be distinguished from that of a living animal the natives fe 1 the flesh to their dogs for several weeks i n the rocky mm j habitants all wear en v *] .• . , shoes are mncle oi . ■woo ,] 1m | are prom i ■■■t i i l lc "^ t - they ai • |,, in _ . lure of s!e.is and • „ ,. an , : to slide down hill .. a furioi ,, v .| ground n v - . ; ,, ,; | h ; pushing ili ' is also if -, ; x i cl . i | s fending hills i is ,.,;,] ( j . ; accustomed to these j - a can : ravel fifty miles a rn.«.s c • ■:: try in -,\ day often in iirs // ... d i i ijl " c£leep.at£d js sto3iach *&& the necessity ti.r prompt nn.l efficient housi'hdid remedies is daily growing more imperative and oi the i uos tetter a stom ach bitters ia the chief in merit and th most popular irregularit ol the stomach uml bowels malarial imr 1 i \ <.■r oom platnts debilit , rheumatism and minor ailments are thoroughly conquered \<\ this incomparable family restorative and medic inal safeguard and it is justly regarded ts the purest and most comprehensive reax dy of its class for sale by all druggiau auil pfcilcrs keaerall . important fact ■for ti1k planters & farmers ofmqrthcarouna l:i order that o.ir plantiuk fricuds throuxluut t state ma lx enabled to prorure aii.l uso p * 1 q p p a teq j pure dissolved raw bones ami other om establiiibed brandl of our niaki m v ! as hkill ijk.\iir « i1imk ai.s for i era making llorar-.llade kertllizrn we are scllinic them lillilit to parmera for camu at oui \\ uojleisajlb 1mch l for tli convenience of out niiinnnrh we have chtabilibrd a depot in mikioi.k va aii oiilcri aenl i hiilciniorr can l liippi-tl prompt ir m norfolk ix preferrpd t!i kooditt i cost the same at l>u\t-r tl<-i»>t or landing u if shipped from baltimore iwhpiki for our pami lilet kivln full deacrlp ti'>n and wholt'niilr luiitn f our r-in rul.i ril liiimil of itiint fertilizers an i approved formnlaa a '. ireea all .; inmm and orders ui baugh*sons 103 south st baltimore md morgan's gigar otahdi do you smoke chow cruss snuff , - • nice i ii u i 1 '- wln dowsnf fj ■i :■.!■•• lie me honey & have largest and most complete stock of < \^' s^f dry goods iil tvjnjt notiojsts to too found in tlao totina of sf\lis3l3vii-y a splendid line of black and colored oasiim.ei from i :■81 centa per yard we have the cheapest and lauoest loi r>f silk velve1 velveteens and trimming silks to be found in the city special ba r gain all-wool-fillin jggtin the latest shadus at 10 cents per ya i i - ■• ' iorth 01 inl more and cannot be hail at this extrunv i y 1 . : . * cloaks circulars i i jackets are pretty and cheap frc to 18 a nice line of jersey jackets - f.ts a carpets rugs doge mats gt boots and shoes at low pro americ3d davis k royal si ifn km machines fitii t:.--i ■■: . ' ■iviuced m & b j r keejst salisbury n c glibly apt for phffihix iron w0f r jma ines boilers saw mills y w r turbine v/heel7 - """• 3zl-"jaz ' '•■""" ~ : - a duilder t
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1884-01-31 |
Month | 01 |
Day | 31 |
Year | 1884 |
Volume | 15 |
Issue | 15 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | [T. K. Bruner and J. J. Bruner] |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | [T. K. Bruner and J. J. Bruner] |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The January 31, 1884 issue of the Carolina Watchman a weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
OCLC number | 601565419 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1884-01-31 |
Month | 01 |
Day | 31 |
Year | 1884 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 5332815 Bytes |
FileName | sacw14_18840131-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 9:57:09 AM |
Publisher | Hamilton C. Jones |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | An archive of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
FullText |
i lie garolma watchman ml xv.--thirb series salisbury n c january 31 1384 ' 0 j6 the carolina watchman established in the year ls : 2 price 1.50 in advance js^qzb for dyspepsia ti if^w&ps riioea j:iun |