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d i ifipif i f if if mm iff ir tlftf ftt v ml iv third seme salisbury n.c bovemblr 1 1872 no 7 whole no , . is > weekly _ j 1 bruner '. stew a rt : '. , i ■• r . - i lil ii i i'i n . ajvauce 2.fki l.un . -- 10.00 r.t g ' • m l.i ■stones 0 i u\s , . n his friends • is mel li i would . - erti niieil lacilit ie - . - ue - — . uista ail kiuds of i ii ■! , ' - tones ... • . t • '■prefeiing m i i l.-n.il can liort time trictly in e - ifts a - i ■fn tion giiaran '. xorth or .: n ii ill is salisbury new firm e «&. j*i ■*•«- hays & sill druggist sl apothecaries salisbub.v w c fjavi g purchased the contents of the1 | « : nei ly occupied hy 1 r i , sill we respi ctfully call the at j tentiou of the citizens of salisbury and i thi biirroundii g country to the new ar i.mgi merit and inform iht m that we will continue lo carry on the business at the ; ' ici , and the same excellent way we will endeavor to keep on hand all the . mm : ! ,• people may need per il line and tin ri fore hope 1 -':,.-! • . ion to business to receive a lile ral j itronage physician's orders prompt ly attended to prescriptions accurately ftntl carefully com pounded by reliable and i tent druggists dag or night , i riumphant b i a ri rl * a n ' i'i'v fiks'i pre .'. ld iiui silvi r mt litis . ii a i es m sti ei'f i ': ,,.., .- in c m pel ition ... g in uiu'actur the c mntry i uow warerooms st . ti i more ml ns ci i i he latest iui .. ml in a ti it-el iss pi oveineiits of iii own in ■:•• be i i>1 er instruments it finish nf t heir in stra ti li anv uianufactur ' ■- - liiind pianos -.. i ti i i'lni h organ sum t wen v dif . : ' iin.l : iu iii n i:.il upwards ! in rated • atal«»g«ie containing i huudi ed southerners . i are virginians two • . :. one hundred and n il i if hers tliriumlioiil the s ieff piano the -. \ tko n . rei t 22 saii.-l n.c hie ciicuppxl in uol ii i w ij • t he ll 1 hut llii best iul whys the cheapest l\s1 re i i home insurance co of columbus ga is r ini 1s50 capital s350 000 ■■rhohes browne president i k willi t)x secretary all l hssoa equitably adjusted and promptly paid in pull iring to obtain reliable in ■will flo wi ii to protect themselves by - ■' l'"ia . j georgia home insurance vgeneies ul prominent points in all the r ii > ; j ali en brown agent oflice no -. i iranile row april 2v72 iy salisbury n c marriage certificates for sale bere i a chic ag j sensation story of a fifteen year old ac tress who married her father's coachman a correspondent writes from chicago under date ofthe lsih as follows quite often a en*ation of considerable interest is spuing in our courts some times it may be in the matter of an early real estate transaction ; and again the di voree courts may open to ihe view of the public the did rent phases which married life may assume a case was called in the superioi ' ourt on saturday from ihe lac of whieh inr laneiful might draw an exciting romance tit to adorn the pages of terrible temptation novel or a wo.k ot a similar nature it seems that lln parties to the action were the daughter ol one nf onr wealthiest citizens — a resi dent of michigan avenue — and his coach man it necessarily follows that where a divorce is wanted a mairiage exists and such is the fact in tbis matter and upon that hangs all the in teres of the case gossipy people — those who know all about the private affairs of everybody be cause thev say told illllll so delight i indulging in intimations that the mar riage was advised uy the old gentleman after the discovery of certain facts more important to hi file than any one else mr coachman excepted these same people also are ot ihe opinion that after frequent too frequent rides on wliich occasions the old gentleman's close car riage was used to a good advantage as subsequently appeared a lively feeling of friendship sprung up between the fair lieiress and the gallant coachman how ever the facts as divulged at the trial warrant your correspondent iu saying lhat on one of these rides the subject of marriage was broached a ready acquie scence followed the license was procured and before the setting of that day's sun the twain were madk one by a methodist clergyman the happy couple drove back to the father's home and the bride her heart palpitating with joy tor the noble impulses influencing her liege lord considered the matter of too gnat importance lo relate and with the secret sale in her own young heart betook her to her virgin chamber while the gal lant handsome coachman hied himself to his loft in the stable and dreamed as only a happy groomsman can the secret was too much for the childisd wife — for she was only lit i en - and her sister wis in foi und of the status of her domestic affairs tin father-iu-liw dropped t'n that high tonkd coach m a n , and a competent horseman wanted a place in the morning papers the bill tor llie divorce next appeared and the case was on trial when 1 dropped in the argument was just c nduded and the council accompanied by the irate father in-law weie engaged in drawing up iiu amendment to the mil as suggested by the court when in walked the groom of ali groom in the matter of t be separation of l vs l h.s manly figure was pain fully erect and manifestly much money had been squandered in his make-up for the occasion he approached the counsel ami tremulously inquired whethellor n'ohe was a married man at that moment he caught sight of that father-in-law who sat in a corner glaring savagely at him the spinal column willed the bald head shrank down behind the alexis collar the red nectie fluttered for a moment and the sprucely dressed ambitious plebian swung upon his heel secretly folded his tent and silently stole fiom the room iu lime to evade the pater nal benediction : ob w hat a rascal he is the scene that followed was iiecid ediv rich the old gentleman look the floor in strides occasionally bursting lorth in iu a spasm of vehement expletives vow ing lhat ie iik had that scoundrel he would cane him ; and i believe he would for the elderly gentleman was con siderably ou ihe e cite his solicitors endeavored to calm him bv w-bispering new paper mew were in the room but all to no avail and llie e.-capade ot a giddy foolish was told by an injudi cious parent to willing hearers this case is the strangest of all ihe lenia kablc cases on the divorce record of either court for faint hearted ltberals while the lesser administration organs are ei gaged in boasting over their antici pated triumph in november the leading organ oi thai party the new yoik limes grant's own . strikes a much lower key and admonishes tbe r publicans against indulging an overweening confidence it reminds ihem that the presidential bat tle has uot yet beeu fought while ta king bone from the results ofthe october o i elections it yet admonishes its ru nils of the importance of continued effort the times says : the tide of a campaign has been turned before now both in the sttugle nf actual warfare and in lhat of politics by the iash assumption thai a beaten enemy was as good as no enemy at ail it declares with emphasis that the true crisis of the tight has not yet been reached we commend these nggestions of the president's chief organ 10 the taint heart ed iii our own ranks who are disposed lo give up before ths great b.mle has been fought wliile we do not underrate the successes achieved by the radicals in i'i nnsylvaniaaiid ohio ed by fraud and false counting neither do we underrate ihe liberal success in indian and ihe iuio.ids made by liber ali.-m in ohio it should also be borne in mind that thus far there has not been any actual trial of strength between greeley and giant iti any of the states that have '■voted the elections which have been held were purely local and in many cases j the issues were made up and ihe candid i ates nominated before the liberal move , ment was fully developi d we believe that mr greeley is personally stronger • in almost every state and in every local ity than were the various candidates running in opposition to the aduiiuistra i tion and that his vote in november will ! be greatly in advance of theirs thou sands of men will vote for mr greeley ! who would lift vote for any other man against an administration republican we agree with the tunes lhat tbe true crisis of the fi/ln has not yet been reach '. ed — rich'd whig the stay at-homes the mis chief they wokk from the richmond dispatch j n i;r rulk — we have negro rule in this state on account of the disgraceful i apathy of a large portion of the while voters — raleigh netvs true and such would have been the case in virginia had not the conservative - masses white and colored risen in their might in 1869 and by the election of gov ernor walker and their veto of the pro scn'ptive clauses of the constitution de clared that the interest of the people should not be thus subordinated to the supposed interest of one race the good people of north carolina following the lead of virginia took llie same position iu 1870 and redeemed their state from the worst forms of corruption but now — only two years later — they have by apa thy lost nearly all they then gained the radical candidate for governor carrying the s ate at the last election here is ihe moral if north carolina with a regis'ered white majority of 50 000 and with only 20 coo while radicals is loet to the conservatives by conserva tive voters remaining away from the polls are not we in virginia with a registered white majority of only 30,000 and with 15,000 white radicals iu some danger of hav ing our state turned over to the igno rant and vicious who would overwhelm us if we tail to carry a single elect ion had not twcn_y-five or thirty thousand north carolina conservatives remained at home in august the old north state would now have been in the van of the j liberal army the election of greeley and biown would have been assured and 1 noith carolina would have her own gov ernment in her own bauds the stay at i home voters canst the loss of many an important political battle if we would escape the fate of north carolina and the ! still more disastrous condition of states in the extreme south let us poll the full vote of our party for greeley and browu poor south carolina the returns ot the recent elections in | the state come in very slowly yet enough : is known of the result to state that the j moses ticket the rogues party has been i elected by a majority of not less than ■twenty-five thousand — most probably by j a greater majority r chard ii lain ' colored is elected in congress lor the i stale at large ; j ii raiuey colored ; from the first district ; a j ransier col ored from ihe second district ; r b el i licit colored from the third district ; and i a s wallace while from th fourth district over ferry democrat cain and ransier are new men the others were members of the last congress accor ding to the best data we bave been aide to obtain wallace is elected from the fourth district by a majority of over fif , teen hundred — yorkvitle enquirer i i poor south carolina she is again des lined to be ruled by negroes and thieves backed up by iraut and bis administra tion and 3 et you may hear some white men who have the reparation of being honest say ihat grant is a better man than greeley if greeley is elected he will never keen a thut in office or sustain such a slate government as scott's and moses j in south ■aroliua — democrat ., concerning the goring of oxen there is a venerable maxim - the truth of wliich we believe nn one is disposed to deny because it is constantly verify ing ifsell — winch teaches us that curses like chickens come home to most a recent occurrence in new \ ,, k on i which the newspap-ib are commenting j brings this maxim very vividly to our memories in t licit z ai to establish perfect justice and a heavenly condition of things in the south the radical congress ofthe uni j i _ i ted state passed iu 1870 what is known i as the enfoi cement act and again in 1s71 and again in 1872 re-forced that act so j lhat the aforesaid beatific conditi u should be preserved and perpetuated the acts were made of general application to the whole coin try although it was weil under stood hat the blessings they provided were really intended for the so-called in j surrectionary states under their bene cent operation innocent men were instruct ed in their duties by tiro gentle means of detectives deputy-marshals blank war rants perjury e resulting in shaved leads strip d do lies convict labor and blasted lives and ihe spectacle refreshed all loyal hearts illustrating as it did the valii of liberty and ihe triumph nf repub licanism but by some strange misappre hension nn the part ofthe i fficers of the law an attempt his heen made lo extend the blessii g exclusively intended for us into the latitude of loyalty , a respectable citizen of new york has ; ten visifd by two btrangers at bis pri i v.te it sidence h s beeen cross examined : a to his residence n ime age c until his indignation prompted him to show ihe i strangers the door whereupon he was ar i rested tarried uot to court but to the . fifty avenue hotel to answer to a charge j of violating the enl'otceinent act ob ' strutting an officer in the discharge of his duties &., c refused hail although a retired men bant worth fifty times the amount of bail offered himself as surety j was sent to jail and kept there and finally was released on the security ot the sam par ty but was refused an examii a i in h cause tbe witnesses against him were on duty !'' the gentleman whose name is fit inndi and ids friends are very indignant and the papers are loud in denouncing the tyran ny " & , c vv'e don't gee why thi'y should get exei"edab..ut it the effender is not an attached of ihe herald they are allowed by general giant to make a living and t_et along provided tln-v do nothing against his re-election lie saved the union and it with the appur tenances belongs to him besides we would like to know if john brown's soul is not marching ou and if the colored troops did not fight nobly in peimsylvaia and indiana — ivilmington journal what are the profits/1 tjip harvest is nearly ended there is some t'orti to husk poia nes to dig roots to ge her apphs t pick butter and clues to market eie etc bat the farmers who has carclully k.-pt account with the differ ent departments ofthe farm can approxi mately estimate his profits for the year vvhat are they '_ vv'e do not ask for this question because we desire it answered to ourselves and if he finds out there are profits we hope he can put his finger on his ledger and tell just what crops did and what did not yield him his net re venues this course we deem absolutely essen tial to intel igetit economical and proges sive husbandry if the blind leads the blind they both tall iu the ditch it a man's corn crop has cost him sl per bush el and is worth iu market but 75 cents — that is if he can buy corn for 75 cents per bushel equally good th fodder he gets from the crop grown will scarcely till out the margin of difference and hen if he blindly goes on raising corn year after year with uo knowledge of what it costs him it will require the profits he may derive from some other crop to counter balance his loss on com but if he knows what the coin costs him and whence the profits he gets are derived it will be an i easy matter comparatively to stop the leaks and increase the profits the succeed ing year have the profits been derived from econ omy or fmin liberal tv of expenditure ill relation to especial crops in other words is there any o e emp which rc turned s2 for every si expeneded in pro dncing it ; and if ihe expense of culture or for plant food per arte had been in creased would the profits have corres pondingly increased ? or has the fanner found ihe maximum of expense per acre ! it nays to eave to anv one crop ] these " r i t • _■are interesting and profitable questions for inm to answ er the losses of effort and time on a farm | are verv ui ch greater than most men rea lize tie lo.-s of lime perhaps is greater nota ilh.-fanding the a r lhat fai mers woik j so many hours per day this loss is not ! due io the fact thai the time is not all oi i nearly all occupied but to the oilier fact i thai it is too often improperly directed is is not economized and hence is wasted but if the time absolutely spent iu the producting harvesting and marketing of : a crop is charged to that ciop the bus ! bandmati soon discovers its value how much it enters into cost and will devise 1 i i . • : wa}s and means to economize i — iliat is l to expend j ss time in producing the same ! results the trouble is lha in making up accounts with crops too many farmers estimate the amount of tim*1 consumed in their production instead of charging each crop daily with the time actually ex pended upon it the result of such inquiry as we hive suggested above will be to cause a higher value to be placid npon time lo see that it is not wasted aud then fore a better ; jii ction of ihe i.fforts or force expended lin producing crops tne lust ways and ' means will be devised and adopted fordo ; ing the most woi k in the least lime and at i the le si expense ; fur eve.y ihnngutful farmer know a that j i.-t in proportion a he diminishes the cost ot production he en haiicis his profits — rual new yorker something in l'he shape of a wheal field let our eestem readers try to form some conception of the way wheat is grown in california from the following stat ment lathered from the san francis ; co bulletin there is a wheat fi-id iu joaquin valley which covers 36.000 acres the crop this year is reputed to average ' 40 bushels per acre oi 1 110.000 bushels ; in all which would require ver forty ships of medium size to transport if to market one side of this lot is 17 miles long i when ploweo len focir-boree teams were attach to ten gang plows each gang hav ing four plmvs luti'h was served at a i midway station and supper at the termi nus 17 mtles from the place of starting the grain was cut by twenty ofthe larg est reapers there are two other wheat i fields in this valley one of which eon j tains 23.000 acres and the other 17.00 j then as an offset to this magnificent state ! ment we have this — there are thous i anils of tons of wheat which cannot be taken out of ihe valley this season and most remain over a dead capital or what is nearly as undesirable will only com [ maud advances at heavy rates of interest : and then to show the wheat growers of i the western states the importance ot j providing for the consumption at home of their product by encouraging home manufactures and diversifying industry thus rendering themselves independent of foreign markets we print a statement of the tunc paper dated sep 80 that since june 2s sixty-three vessels have left that p it for england loaded with wjua of this number 15 cleared in july 32 in j august and 15 more in september to date before tbe fiist one reaches liverpool nearly or quite 100 vessels will be on the way with tbeir prows pointing to the j same jnirf and carrying 125 00 tons ot wheat it adds that with sufficient ton nage such a fleet can he maintained for six months — rural new yorker • k husband and wife harmony in the married state is the j very first object to be aimed at nothing i can preserve aff ction uninterrupted but a sun resolution never to differ in will land a determination in each to consider the love of tbe other as of more value than any object whatever on which a wish has been fi x fl how light in fact is the sacrifice of anv other wish weighed against fhe affections of one with whom we are to pass our life ! and th"iis_'li op position in a single instance will hardlv of itself produce alienation vet everyone has his pouch into which all ihese oppo sitions are put and whde that is filling the alienation is insensibly going on and when filled is complete it would puzzle either to say why ; because no one differ ence has been marked enongh to produce a serious i fleet by itself lint he finds his affection wearied out by a constant stream of checks and obstacles 0»her resources of discontent very common in deed are the cross purposes of husband and wife it common conversation a dis position to ci ticise and question whatever the other says — a desire always to de monstrate and make him feel himself wrong especialy in sympathy nothing is sn goading much better therefore if our companion views a thing in a differ ent light from what we do to leave him in quiet possession what is the use of reerifytng him if the thing be unimportant and if important let it pass for the pres ent and wait a softer moment and more conciliatory occasion of revising the sub ject together it is wonderful how many persons are rendered unhappy hy inatten tion to the rules of prudence — thomas jefferson secret marriages every now ai.d then the pubic is start led by the exposure of some domestic or social villainy based on a secret marriage some confiding young lady has been in duced to many ber lover secretly and to kei p the marriage secret for months and pei b ips or years in a reeent case a marriage had been kept secret for nea ly seven years of course a man who wishi s to keep bis aii'riage a secret is always actuated by self'fi-h and usually base mo tives he is acting a part — pl<yi';g a game ; and his confiding w i'e is pretty sure iu the end to h d herself the victim of his treachery and baseness .\ woman should i ver consent to be married secretly her marriage should be solemnized in the light ol publicity and uol in the shadow of concealment she sb oilil dis rust a in who has a i reason for shtoiuli ig i:i d.k'i'-.-s the ae which — ti his estimal u al bast should be the crowni g glor of his life the man who always has nun plot on hand who nat ra ly ak - to ickeiy and cou ceahnent ami is never r a iy to hav his actio s brought out into pen day is a t be so constitutionally ■ise that be sel dom even by accident deviates nto ihe path of honor or virtue no woman who values her domestic happiness should t-v er listen to ihe suggestions of such a man in tavor ol a secrel marriage thf new y k herald hiving said tbat greeley allies had sufiered from ibe absence oi any well di li ed issues involv ing a in c ile of government the in bane makes the following jus reply : reconcilatioii with the south reform i at the smith ri form at the north an end to proscription to carpet-bag robbery to ihe reign of corruption and the choice of governors by convict are not thi e wi ll ii fined t.-sne ? do not these involve prin ciples of government ? if members ot i congress sell their votes for railway shares i and dtvid mis ; if a si t ator of the i . s goes back telling falsehoods to catcii the votes of 1 1 slim ii and ti r na is ; if g ant mak.-s a family matter ofthe offices and semis unworthy persons to represent us ai foreign court liiber because they are relations or those of his particular friends ; if all the pastmaslers in tli.-.-oun iry neglect iheir business and conspire to i br k down the circulation of a newspaper b cause they do not like il any belter than it likes thi in ; it the heads of the depart1 men ts leave their duties to make partis n stump speeches in behalf of the president ; ifcleiks paid bv the nation are detailed to envelop documents and to cheat the post office by forging franks — then we say'that there is a photy of issues always and wherever and by whomsoever these offenses are defended m the outlaws — the rubesonian has tlie follow iug on the outlaws - we learn from persons residing in the neighborhood that the remaining out laws have been seen occasionally ol late about tbeir old haunts in scuffleiowu and that they have beeu reiuforceil by a while man of the neighborhood who has recent ly joined them w e were uuabled to i tbe name of this new recruit but are in formed that he is a native id south car oiiua vv in moved to this county wiih bis ■lamily last spring for the purpose of i.ti mug in connection with bis wife's father on the plantation of mr robert mi kenzie who has since died he and his father in-law soon had a falling nut and he sud denly disappeared having bis wrfe and . children unprovided for ft ben next seen in was i.i company with the outlaw s where be has been seen frequently within the pact few mouths " j a beautiful sketch let a man fail in business wliat an effi et it has on bis former creditors ! meu who have taken him by the hoar shrug iheir shoulders and piss on with a cold how do \ ou dn v every trifle ofa bit is limited up and presented that would not have seen light ; for months to come but for the misfortunes i ofthe debtor il it is paid m < 11 and good if uot the seoxvl of the sheriff perhaps meets him at the corner a man v ho has never failed knows bat little of human 1 r it ure in prosperity be sails along gently wafted bv favorable smiles ami kind words from everybody 11 prides himself on his name and spotless (.-:,. i icter and makes his boast that he has not an enemy ki the world alis ihe change he looks at the world in a different ii^'it i ht'ii reverses come upon him he reads suspicion ou every brow ii ha knows how to move or to do i>is thing or tin otlier ; in-re are sje g about inm a writ is ready for his hack to k nw wliat quality ot stud tlu world is made of a person must be mr irianate and stop paying once in bis lifetime it he bus kind friends then ihey are made m uiifest a failure is a moral sieve it brings out the wheat and shows he chaff a man tlius learns that wynls n i pret good will are not and d i.jt constitute real friendship the grakt okgans — here is tbe style of speech employed by col yon •%'!-. y's press in speaking of his brother ii-antife " guam's own "'— tlu xlm v..ik limes : the xew yoik times in the campaign now happvly almost over has earned lor itself a reputation for infamy only surpas bid by that ofthe men in pennsylvania whom in its slavish subserviency it has i iud d to the skies it is the dalgetty oi the american press aud as sue ts ji iid lor slanders can be passed by but its brutality ils ignorance and lack of patriot ism honor and decency constitute it a mean critic of even ihe most ordinary ■>( americans what it cost to carry maine — a well ; . s tedwriterin tlie tribune a rodent f m says tha the last election in that state rosl the grantites hard up two hundred thous and dollars ! says the writer in first o igressiona ', i trict !.■i two weeks since a ' irani politira u lx listed that hi partjj bought sixty votes f.ir ijurleigh iu ;..'- town u here he .' - es .,-.,-., he • •\ ' ii w ut so far as t _ . pi - - ;■■• • i'i - i •- • pj ice w is 5 ' to ■' e i_r r •- i barrel ••:' :! i i;.'i for ■t •• •- -: ly they bought a w>w my own uion is aud it seen eil to be the ijei.era drift ot dis cussion all duriug the last i the cauvass and on electiou day itself that the republicans made use of niouey wherever the d ul !• in some instances to the knowledge ,•*. hund reds it was freely offered at tbe p lis dlskaeli and liithaip — apropos ol it e pi et it new novel from the pen t mr disraeli it is affirmed ihat l*loih iir wight never have been written bul forthe illness ol mrs disraeli now \ scon less ljeaconsfi id she was making slow re coverv md her husband anxious tn amuse tl hou s of coi valesci nee i iugh then press 1 wilh the cares ofthe exche quer contrived to ii d ii.ii fo write a chapter of the novel every day which being written out in t - libi iry i morning wis carried up to the sick ch m her and aransed the tedious li ure of the invalid in the ewei ing . g » grnntnndt ed race — v colored orator named randolph in a speech at cooper institute n vork last m i ida . _■d'-clared wi :. great emphas - .' wheu fredi : : •' i ' ._ -■: i ■- fl i.m i *' w ll eeks '." :'■'.• that " b tt fl ielld of the i..v •• he ;:- d fn fl '" an ! uow william i '■ki d fer who i - ingdon va last week udd thecolored peo ;: ... mong other things that in ivas a fed eral officerdnrina the war aud in ird u-u grant say with his ■,\ i ear tbat if he could he convin i tii.-t the war was waged for the freedom ofthe uegro be would retu n his sword to the scabbard hang it on the rack and there let t remai u consumed ir it ■-■' . wh hartranft*8 majority in the state will he just whateverthe radical state com mittee choose to count ir tbey will manipulate fhe figures to tit then selves and we will have to except the result thev may make it thirty or fifty thousaud as perpetrators ofeh ction frauds and mani pul itors of eb ction returnsthe present k id ieil managements in penusylvai ia ;- : greatest success ofthe age simon came ron h.is taught them their ipssoii well and they have been very apt scholars ust make it whatever yoa please gentlemen we don't care t . bell ' ■■' pa watt itmau ckx1 ink fools — he who wipes \. - nose ou a nutmeg gra er nod pi ..- , - teeth with a razor she who bays no to i proposal ii a gentleman ••■has reached the age of thiry he who g ts so dm k ar night th it b ; its his clothes to bi t 1 hangs him i the f ick of a ch iir she w o rul .- her ch ■* - /. it biicki rs in order to give them • lie who put on his hat takes i i and bl tr s out i'i pursuit of an !. • -' disinterested politician she who pi cbes nd slaps a child to mike it quit lav . the new b;i'!c now in course of con struction over the frith nl i ay .:; s '- la il vi iii be he longest briilge in the world — longer even than the \ c bridge montreal the victoria bridge i 9.194 feet long while the tay bn g will be 10,321 mak ng a difference in favor d tay bridge of 1 136 feet if the tay bridge were eighty \ irds longer it j would be tw.i nii'es exactly and f.»r ai , i tents and nurpoces i may therefore be called a two mile bridge and will have ninety piers and eighty nine spans j s_iwixg wood wn . •- t __ e -. .. — the st ' .' in records the i change of one of the impossibilities of the past into a reality " geo robinson sti d . of new yoik has invented a i of sawing or cutting womi without baw or axe by electri ity thegaivanic ' when p issiug o . .' cient qnantitj heats lh - this wire thus heated . k of baw or sir without any ipj eciable ex ' penditure of muse . .. . rce bj , ing the wires « ith handles or other m ! by which it may be guided ai y .. lumber whether i.i irees logs 01 plank may be cut as desired the battery i ! be only of ihe simplest kind aa quantity not intensity oi current is required a i child by this means may fell the largest t tree in the fen st divide it ; cut it into beards witho t saw or axe — only thi k ofit the idea of cutting : down a huge pine tree with i win s me v is ere stands np and declares : 1 d believe if it ca t be d ne i ut such sh mid remember that '.'■ey ta ked just rheu the telegraph was pn jeeted it is j only another proof thai ihe impo | ol to day are the scii utific is f 1 morrow new york oct 24 mrs greeley has elapsed tol aco n u u fact ares and ' i ive resolved i • favoi no candidate foi con gr bs who will uot pledg in tend for modification ol the present op pressive taxation of their interests a d si privati - lary to ( i..-u bu ... i 1 gyp . p » •. it del i li -.' pi by which tb latter madi some tu thousand dollars in g ! : by a syste black m iling at.d other repn ways — 8 _ also - ites that butler was drunk nearly all the time ind was in frequent strnt row and fights and was under a subsidy of some tho . aiids sterling per yeai froui ihe khedive advisixg wheri ro g we often g • inquires iik ' what par of ti ..... commend me to go i want i g warm climate my means are limited i am a sine i lou'l minu !. is 1 want to get a homi foi myse ;." we have no ad v in resj an im .. ". excepl tbis : ; - ■■■the uni i wh li i - warm c'.i mate that has noi _• - over state ; ing m in able and wl s frugal can mi if a home in any of tin in don't ash : . but go and begin tha work ol securing a hom e the ii st .-; cimen t>l brussels lac so complicated as to require the lab - . . : : ■• : ' ce and operative is en t features nt the w ork the threa it qaisile fineness which i spun in dark in ergroui i ro a -. wh . it is snffi i .• im is t pret • ■.: thi ibn . i if is so del seen and the i be light work it is sue the !' '. of y a two hni dn 1 to thn sometimes used ; and for a larger w id ih is many as • ight bund same piece professor harris i well . . ti . r on pi of ballooning has ■.' . ;. cess :" n •« y :; 1 1 - - - wiih 1 - • us of fire worl .' '. ..- wanted no . festival ot ». with his ■-:- _ in air ai ... • i i r has been « ii ess ■'. in - - re if : ■■. - ■cell y of american ■< nee congri ss should . . llarris to g.-t up the displ lys foi ■>, i he •:•'.:•'• in who can i .'-..;... 1 statesville college — vv'e learn from the american tint capt taj lor m irtin has - nf m de if i)avidj < . .' . a noble - . . . . : the t onfi di r . v at peters burg capt m ;■■rforn i the m.'st hero c ai j of the war ii i " th - batti ry oi artilh ry t : ;;- ■gunboat asc<-ndii g the a and set it on fire with his shells capt ms piecee had to cn -.- an opi o pla '. ■■re getting into position ai d -. g .'•_' m«-i;t !, id ; o s iter « li il 1 1 r ye v ish a : ' i ' i im ' - ti ... i boreal is i - : ' . ov r the vei _ g ng to ip its mysl — t in . profundi i to this lis t - ; . _-!'- '. u on the temp ticket they - . ■. in over the tn try to lie of - w hich unfit him 1 iii . 1 cmplar ship tli f peter tl gi •*. " blot is looked by l . j the _■f the russia ight i jio - . ■i t i ts former and - . | . : tt of st pet r and paul w ■'., ce ;.. similar to tie se w h i transport to mo -•• - i te sit co l idy f/ai k'in ■■-■ritet limes that she is not bufii . n _ m w tut ■■c competency
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1872-11-01 |
Month | 11 |
Day | 01 |
Year | 1872 |
Volume | 4 |
Issue | 7 |
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 | J. J. Bruner |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | J. J. Stewart |
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 November 1, 1872 issue 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 |
OCLC number | 601566475 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1872-11-01 |
Month | 11 |
Day | 01 |
Year | 1872 |
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 5004517 Bytes |
FileName | sacw10_847_18721101-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 10:44:50 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 |
d i ifipif i f if if mm iff ir tlftf ftt v ml iv third seme salisbury n.c bovemblr 1 1872 no 7 whole no , . is > weekly _ j 1 bruner '. stew a rt : '. , i ■• r . - i lil ii i i'i n . ajvauce 2.fki l.un . -- 10.00 r.t g ' • m l.i ■stones 0 i u\s , . n his friends • is mel li i would . - erti niieil lacilit ie - . - ue - — . uista ail kiuds of i ii ■! , ' - tones ... • . t • '■prefeiing m i i l.-n.il can liort time trictly in e - ifts a - i ■fn tion giiaran '. xorth or .: n ii ill is salisbury new firm e «&. j*i ■*•«- hays & sill druggist sl apothecaries salisbub.v w c fjavi g purchased the contents of the1 | « : nei ly occupied hy 1 r i , sill we respi ctfully call the at j tentiou of the citizens of salisbury and i thi biirroundii g country to the new ar i.mgi merit and inform iht m that we will continue lo carry on the business at the ; ' ici , and the same excellent way we will endeavor to keep on hand all the . mm : ! ,• people may need per il line and tin ri fore hope 1 -':,.-! • . ion to business to receive a lile ral j itronage physician's orders prompt ly attended to prescriptions accurately ftntl carefully com pounded by reliable and i tent druggists dag or night , i riumphant b i a ri rl * a n ' i'i'v fiks'i pre .'. ld iiui silvi r mt litis . ii a i es m sti ei'f i ': ,,.., .- in c m pel ition ... g in uiu'actur the c mntry i uow warerooms st . ti i more ml ns ci i i he latest iui .. ml in a ti it-el iss pi oveineiits of iii own in ■:•• be i i>1 er instruments it finish nf t heir in stra ti li anv uianufactur ' ■- - liiind pianos -.. i ti i i'lni h organ sum t wen v dif . : ' iin.l : iu iii n i:.il upwards ! in rated • atal«»g«ie containing i huudi ed southerners . i are virginians two • . :. one hundred and n il i if hers tliriumlioiil the s ieff piano the -. \ tko n . rei t 22 saii.-l n.c hie ciicuppxl in uol ii i w ij • t he ll 1 hut llii best iul whys the cheapest l\s1 re i i home insurance co of columbus ga is r ini 1s50 capital s350 000 ■■rhohes browne president i k willi t)x secretary all l hssoa equitably adjusted and promptly paid in pull iring to obtain reliable in ■will flo wi ii to protect themselves by - ■' l'"ia . j georgia home insurance vgeneies ul prominent points in all the r ii > ; j ali en brown agent oflice no -. i iranile row april 2v72 iy salisbury n c marriage certificates for sale bere i a chic ag j sensation story of a fifteen year old ac tress who married her father's coachman a correspondent writes from chicago under date ofthe lsih as follows quite often a en*ation of considerable interest is spuing in our courts some times it may be in the matter of an early real estate transaction ; and again the di voree courts may open to ihe view of the public the did rent phases which married life may assume a case was called in the superioi ' ourt on saturday from ihe lac of whieh inr laneiful might draw an exciting romance tit to adorn the pages of terrible temptation novel or a wo.k ot a similar nature it seems that lln parties to the action were the daughter ol one nf onr wealthiest citizens — a resi dent of michigan avenue — and his coach man it necessarily follows that where a divorce is wanted a mairiage exists and such is the fact in tbis matter and upon that hangs all the in teres of the case gossipy people — those who know all about the private affairs of everybody be cause thev say told illllll so delight i indulging in intimations that the mar riage was advised uy the old gentleman after the discovery of certain facts more important to hi file than any one else mr coachman excepted these same people also are ot ihe opinion that after frequent too frequent rides on wliich occasions the old gentleman's close car riage was used to a good advantage as subsequently appeared a lively feeling of friendship sprung up between the fair lieiress and the gallant coachman how ever the facts as divulged at the trial warrant your correspondent iu saying lhat on one of these rides the subject of marriage was broached a ready acquie scence followed the license was procured and before the setting of that day's sun the twain were madk one by a methodist clergyman the happy couple drove back to the father's home and the bride her heart palpitating with joy tor the noble impulses influencing her liege lord considered the matter of too gnat importance lo relate and with the secret sale in her own young heart betook her to her virgin chamber while the gal lant handsome coachman hied himself to his loft in the stable and dreamed as only a happy groomsman can the secret was too much for the childisd wife — for she was only lit i en - and her sister wis in foi und of the status of her domestic affairs tin father-iu-liw dropped t'n that high tonkd coach m a n , and a competent horseman wanted a place in the morning papers the bill tor llie divorce next appeared and the case was on trial when 1 dropped in the argument was just c nduded and the council accompanied by the irate father in-law weie engaged in drawing up iiu amendment to the mil as suggested by the court when in walked the groom of ali groom in the matter of t be separation of l vs l h.s manly figure was pain fully erect and manifestly much money had been squandered in his make-up for the occasion he approached the counsel ami tremulously inquired whethellor n'ohe was a married man at that moment he caught sight of that father-in-law who sat in a corner glaring savagely at him the spinal column willed the bald head shrank down behind the alexis collar the red nectie fluttered for a moment and the sprucely dressed ambitious plebian swung upon his heel secretly folded his tent and silently stole fiom the room iu lime to evade the pater nal benediction : ob w hat a rascal he is the scene that followed was iiecid ediv rich the old gentleman look the floor in strides occasionally bursting lorth in iu a spasm of vehement expletives vow ing lhat ie iik had that scoundrel he would cane him ; and i believe he would for the elderly gentleman was con siderably ou ihe e cite his solicitors endeavored to calm him bv w-bispering new paper mew were in the room but all to no avail and llie e.-capade ot a giddy foolish was told by an injudi cious parent to willing hearers this case is the strangest of all ihe lenia kablc cases on the divorce record of either court for faint hearted ltberals while the lesser administration organs are ei gaged in boasting over their antici pated triumph in november the leading organ oi thai party the new yoik limes grant's own . strikes a much lower key and admonishes tbe r publicans against indulging an overweening confidence it reminds ihem that the presidential bat tle has uot yet beeu fought while ta king bone from the results ofthe october o i elections it yet admonishes its ru nils of the importance of continued effort the times says : the tide of a campaign has been turned before now both in the sttugle nf actual warfare and in lhat of politics by the iash assumption thai a beaten enemy was as good as no enemy at ail it declares with emphasis that the true crisis of the tight has not yet been reached we commend these nggestions of the president's chief organ 10 the taint heart ed iii our own ranks who are disposed lo give up before ths great b.mle has been fought wliile we do not underrate the successes achieved by the radicals in i'i nnsylvaniaaiid ohio ed by fraud and false counting neither do we underrate ihe liberal success in indian and ihe iuio.ids made by liber ali.-m in ohio it should also be borne in mind that thus far there has not been any actual trial of strength between greeley and giant iti any of the states that have '■voted the elections which have been held were purely local and in many cases j the issues were made up and ihe candid i ates nominated before the liberal move , ment was fully developi d we believe that mr greeley is personally stronger • in almost every state and in every local ity than were the various candidates running in opposition to the aduiiuistra i tion and that his vote in november will ! be greatly in advance of theirs thou sands of men will vote for mr greeley ! who would lift vote for any other man against an administration republican we agree with the tunes lhat tbe true crisis of the fi/ln has not yet been reach '. ed — rich'd whig the stay at-homes the mis chief they wokk from the richmond dispatch j n i;r rulk — we have negro rule in this state on account of the disgraceful i apathy of a large portion of the while voters — raleigh netvs true and such would have been the case in virginia had not the conservative - masses white and colored risen in their might in 1869 and by the election of gov ernor walker and their veto of the pro scn'ptive clauses of the constitution de clared that the interest of the people should not be thus subordinated to the supposed interest of one race the good people of north carolina following the lead of virginia took llie same position iu 1870 and redeemed their state from the worst forms of corruption but now — only two years later — they have by apa thy lost nearly all they then gained the radical candidate for governor carrying the s ate at the last election here is ihe moral if north carolina with a regis'ered white majority of 50 000 and with only 20 coo while radicals is loet to the conservatives by conserva tive voters remaining away from the polls are not we in virginia with a registered white majority of only 30,000 and with 15,000 white radicals iu some danger of hav ing our state turned over to the igno rant and vicious who would overwhelm us if we tail to carry a single elect ion had not twcn_y-five or thirty thousand north carolina conservatives remained at home in august the old north state would now have been in the van of the j liberal army the election of greeley and biown would have been assured and 1 noith carolina would have her own gov ernment in her own bauds the stay at i home voters canst the loss of many an important political battle if we would escape the fate of north carolina and the ! still more disastrous condition of states in the extreme south let us poll the full vote of our party for greeley and browu poor south carolina the returns ot the recent elections in | the state come in very slowly yet enough : is known of the result to state that the j moses ticket the rogues party has been i elected by a majority of not less than ■twenty-five thousand — most probably by j a greater majority r chard ii lain ' colored is elected in congress lor the i stale at large ; j ii raiuey colored ; from the first district ; a j ransier col ored from ihe second district ; r b el i licit colored from the third district ; and i a s wallace while from th fourth district over ferry democrat cain and ransier are new men the others were members of the last congress accor ding to the best data we bave been aide to obtain wallace is elected from the fourth district by a majority of over fif , teen hundred — yorkvitle enquirer i i poor south carolina she is again des lined to be ruled by negroes and thieves backed up by iraut and bis administra tion and 3 et you may hear some white men who have the reparation of being honest say ihat grant is a better man than greeley if greeley is elected he will never keen a thut in office or sustain such a slate government as scott's and moses j in south ■aroliua — democrat ., concerning the goring of oxen there is a venerable maxim - the truth of wliich we believe nn one is disposed to deny because it is constantly verify ing ifsell — winch teaches us that curses like chickens come home to most a recent occurrence in new \ ,, k on i which the newspap-ib are commenting j brings this maxim very vividly to our memories in t licit z ai to establish perfect justice and a heavenly condition of things in the south the radical congress ofthe uni j i _ i ted state passed iu 1870 what is known i as the enfoi cement act and again in 1s71 and again in 1872 re-forced that act so j lhat the aforesaid beatific conditi u should be preserved and perpetuated the acts were made of general application to the whole coin try although it was weil under stood hat the blessings they provided were really intended for the so-called in j surrectionary states under their bene cent operation innocent men were instruct ed in their duties by tiro gentle means of detectives deputy-marshals blank war rants perjury e resulting in shaved leads strip d do lies convict labor and blasted lives and ihe spectacle refreshed all loyal hearts illustrating as it did the valii of liberty and ihe triumph nf repub licanism but by some strange misappre hension nn the part ofthe i fficers of the law an attempt his heen made lo extend the blessii g exclusively intended for us into the latitude of loyalty , a respectable citizen of new york has ; ten visifd by two btrangers at bis pri i v.te it sidence h s beeen cross examined : a to his residence n ime age c until his indignation prompted him to show ihe i strangers the door whereupon he was ar i rested tarried uot to court but to the . fifty avenue hotel to answer to a charge j of violating the enl'otceinent act ob ' strutting an officer in the discharge of his duties &., c refused hail although a retired men bant worth fifty times the amount of bail offered himself as surety j was sent to jail and kept there and finally was released on the security ot the sam par ty but was refused an examii a i in h cause tbe witnesses against him were on duty !'' the gentleman whose name is fit inndi and ids friends are very indignant and the papers are loud in denouncing the tyran ny " & , c vv'e don't gee why thi'y should get exei"edab..ut it the effender is not an attached of ihe herald they are allowed by general giant to make a living and t_et along provided tln-v do nothing against his re-election lie saved the union and it with the appur tenances belongs to him besides we would like to know if john brown's soul is not marching ou and if the colored troops did not fight nobly in peimsylvaia and indiana — ivilmington journal what are the profits/1 tjip harvest is nearly ended there is some t'orti to husk poia nes to dig roots to ge her apphs t pick butter and clues to market eie etc bat the farmers who has carclully k.-pt account with the differ ent departments ofthe farm can approxi mately estimate his profits for the year vvhat are they '_ vv'e do not ask for this question because we desire it answered to ourselves and if he finds out there are profits we hope he can put his finger on his ledger and tell just what crops did and what did not yield him his net re venues this course we deem absolutely essen tial to intel igetit economical and proges sive husbandry if the blind leads the blind they both tall iu the ditch it a man's corn crop has cost him sl per bush el and is worth iu market but 75 cents — that is if he can buy corn for 75 cents per bushel equally good th fodder he gets from the crop grown will scarcely till out the margin of difference and hen if he blindly goes on raising corn year after year with uo knowledge of what it costs him it will require the profits he may derive from some other crop to counter balance his loss on com but if he knows what the coin costs him and whence the profits he gets are derived it will be an i easy matter comparatively to stop the leaks and increase the profits the succeed ing year have the profits been derived from econ omy or fmin liberal tv of expenditure ill relation to especial crops in other words is there any o e emp which rc turned s2 for every si expeneded in pro dncing it ; and if ihe expense of culture or for plant food per arte had been in creased would the profits have corres pondingly increased ? or has the fanner found ihe maximum of expense per acre ! it nays to eave to anv one crop ] these " r i t • _■are interesting and profitable questions for inm to answ er the losses of effort and time on a farm | are verv ui ch greater than most men rea lize tie lo.-s of lime perhaps is greater nota ilh.-fanding the a r lhat fai mers woik j so many hours per day this loss is not ! due io the fact thai the time is not all oi i nearly all occupied but to the oilier fact i thai it is too often improperly directed is is not economized and hence is wasted but if the time absolutely spent iu the producting harvesting and marketing of : a crop is charged to that ciop the bus ! bandmati soon discovers its value how much it enters into cost and will devise 1 i i . • : wa}s and means to economize i — iliat is l to expend j ss time in producing the same ! results the trouble is lha in making up accounts with crops too many farmers estimate the amount of tim*1 consumed in their production instead of charging each crop daily with the time actually ex pended upon it the result of such inquiry as we hive suggested above will be to cause a higher value to be placid npon time lo see that it is not wasted aud then fore a better ; jii ction of ihe i.fforts or force expended lin producing crops tne lust ways and ' means will be devised and adopted fordo ; ing the most woi k in the least lime and at i the le si expense ; fur eve.y ihnngutful farmer know a that j i.-t in proportion a he diminishes the cost ot production he en haiicis his profits — rual new yorker something in l'he shape of a wheal field let our eestem readers try to form some conception of the way wheat is grown in california from the following stat ment lathered from the san francis ; co bulletin there is a wheat fi-id iu joaquin valley which covers 36.000 acres the crop this year is reputed to average ' 40 bushels per acre oi 1 110.000 bushels ; in all which would require ver forty ships of medium size to transport if to market one side of this lot is 17 miles long i when ploweo len focir-boree teams were attach to ten gang plows each gang hav ing four plmvs luti'h was served at a i midway station and supper at the termi nus 17 mtles from the place of starting the grain was cut by twenty ofthe larg est reapers there are two other wheat i fields in this valley one of which eon j tains 23.000 acres and the other 17.00 j then as an offset to this magnificent state ! ment we have this — there are thous i anils of tons of wheat which cannot be taken out of ihe valley this season and most remain over a dead capital or what is nearly as undesirable will only com [ maud advances at heavy rates of interest : and then to show the wheat growers of i the western states the importance ot j providing for the consumption at home of their product by encouraging home manufactures and diversifying industry thus rendering themselves independent of foreign markets we print a statement of the tunc paper dated sep 80 that since june 2s sixty-three vessels have left that p it for england loaded with wjua of this number 15 cleared in july 32 in j august and 15 more in september to date before tbe fiist one reaches liverpool nearly or quite 100 vessels will be on the way with tbeir prows pointing to the j same jnirf and carrying 125 00 tons ot wheat it adds that with sufficient ton nage such a fleet can he maintained for six months — rural new yorker • k husband and wife harmony in the married state is the j very first object to be aimed at nothing i can preserve aff ction uninterrupted but a sun resolution never to differ in will land a determination in each to consider the love of tbe other as of more value than any object whatever on which a wish has been fi x fl how light in fact is the sacrifice of anv other wish weighed against fhe affections of one with whom we are to pass our life ! and th"iis_'li op position in a single instance will hardlv of itself produce alienation vet everyone has his pouch into which all ihese oppo sitions are put and whde that is filling the alienation is insensibly going on and when filled is complete it would puzzle either to say why ; because no one differ ence has been marked enongh to produce a serious i fleet by itself lint he finds his affection wearied out by a constant stream of checks and obstacles 0»her resources of discontent very common in deed are the cross purposes of husband and wife it common conversation a dis position to ci ticise and question whatever the other says — a desire always to de monstrate and make him feel himself wrong especialy in sympathy nothing is sn goading much better therefore if our companion views a thing in a differ ent light from what we do to leave him in quiet possession what is the use of reerifytng him if the thing be unimportant and if important let it pass for the pres ent and wait a softer moment and more conciliatory occasion of revising the sub ject together it is wonderful how many persons are rendered unhappy hy inatten tion to the rules of prudence — thomas jefferson secret marriages every now ai.d then the pubic is start led by the exposure of some domestic or social villainy based on a secret marriage some confiding young lady has been in duced to many ber lover secretly and to kei p the marriage secret for months and pei b ips or years in a reeent case a marriage had been kept secret for nea ly seven years of course a man who wishi s to keep bis aii'riage a secret is always actuated by self'fi-h and usually base mo tives he is acting a part — pl |