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jl i1u j<xl ulllld hd ll^llllldll ' v()l i fourth series salisbury n c thursday september 7 1893 highest of all in leavening lwr._latest u s gov't report absolutes purs we b " tfh #*>. <& ca castoria toria is i>r samuel pitcher's prescription for infauts d ( biulren it contains mithcr oi>ium morphine nor her sarcotic substance it is a harmless substitute paregoric r<>i soothing syrups and castor oil rt pleasant its guarantee is thirty years use by ions of mothers castorla is tho children's panacea ... mother's friend m castoria cagtoria , u . . ted t<-.v:/u ir r thru castario cure o lie constipation toanypreecription sour stonuxh diarrhooo emciati b a aw lira m i ejbs worms £><* xlw-p c-^d pro.-notoa dl . xtord st broouyn,.n t eeatkra j y.'itiiovt injurious ineuloation tbe -- • ' ctatoria 1 « «■> uiutersal ar.'l , , y rnuuit it iornuwwork • for 80ters.l ye»rs i have rrcommencux j i '" r '- j - ny * i ' jw nrl vi * your astoria and sii^h always coniik-ja u aot k/x;j c:<u<."j:-ij do to os it tuts uitariahiy ik-<xjuo*1 l>-m<icia ■"" ; ' "'!'-, vk j edimtf.pirdbe.h.d new york 3tt ' 133kb street an 1 7th t new york city -]-..; hpahy 77 moseat s-r^^tt new york crr a streak of light bill arp'b happy violon of bright ening skies tlnrrt tlmm t>i«ipi».-iir!ny tlmo will set ul thiu-d klght anniiemeut a good medicine constitution the times certainly look more hope i ful — we feel it in the air the caldron has been boiling 1 and bubbling — the i froth and scum have been thrown ovor | nnd we begin to see the bottom of the pot through tuc clear liquid that has been so dark and muddy tims is a good doctor — in a little while the pa tient will convalesce old folks can't be fooled and alarmed like young folks when i was in texas last year i raut hundreds of good honest people who were wild with excitement about clark and hogg the cry on one side was " turn texas loose and it seemed like tho great state was bound and gagged and her rain was inevitable if hogg was elected the newspapers rnd tbe people in the towns and cities cried in frantic iones " turn texas loose lint hojfg was elected nevertheless and teras is there yet in all her glory iuid all her strength 1 never took sides for it was none of my tight and i was too old to be alarmed memory goes back now to great ex citement both political and financial and when i hear the wild screech of the politician as he predicts ruin ruin ruin if they don't do his way i leel like it is history just repeating itself and the storm will blow over as usual a little time is all that is wanted time to reflect and rest and recuperate th3 great dr alx.-rnathy was asked the secret of his success as a physician he replied " 1 amuse the patient and let nature do the work just so the cation's finances are now kick and congress is the doctor up to this time the doctor hasn't given nny medicine nor done a blessed thing except to amuse the patient and i verily believe thero are signs of re covery the truth is the doctor might safely be discharged and the patient would prct well lu.st let cotton begin to move and the south will be all right england will move it if the united states cannot and there will be two or three hundred millions of dollars put i:i circulation down south this fall nnd winter there will be probably thirty millions paid out in ueoi'gia ami probably three hundred thousand dollars in hnrtow county good gra cious—what :» pile of money i've prct no cotton but surely 1 w ill get a little of that money that will pay lots of debts and that will turn georgia loose and turn texas loose that money will not be hoarded nor hidden most of it is owing now to merchants and the merchants will watch the farmer when he sells that money is bound to circulate for they pay that ten dollars paid to a debtor does uvl stop but keeps on paying from one to another until it has paid hundreds or thousands and is as good or better than the clearing house cer tificates of the banks 15ut we haven't lost confidence in congress there are some statesmen there men whose patriotism is above party — men who rise above self-inter est and re-election and have the good of the people at heart at the last they are the men who control they ere the ineu who will settle this ques tion of disturbed finances and they will settle it right so let the wheels roll on a 3'ear from now we will all wonder that we were so much alarmed the truth is the common people the bone and sinew the fanners and pro ducers are not panic struck and they wouldent know there was a panic if they dident read the papers it is the towns and cities and merchants and bankers that are hurt tlie only ap prehension of the farmers now is that the money kings will pull down the price of cotton so as to speculate on it and get richer and richer they will find money enough to buy at a low price but have none for a fair price when will the millionaires get rich enough like the horse-leech their cry is give give and they keep on bearing what they buy and bulling what they sell until they suck the life blood out of the working man the government has passed laws against combines and corners monopolies and trusts but there is a way to dodge all of them and no oue man can af ford to go to law about it that's wher the people's party comes from when th«y see in the papers that pork dropnad 50 pe>r cent in one day and wheat if per cent on another day they know that the speculators had been bulling it after they had bought it all up and when the hand they played br.r.-ited the drop came the producer would be willing for his bread and meat to l>e cheap to the poor if he did not get a fair return for his own labor it would be a comfort to know that the millions of poor consumers got more of it for their scanty wages but these greedy speculators in the necessaries of life these vampire who buy 03 the million and hoard and keep and bull after the3 f buy are the curse of b th tho producer and the consum er the people understand all this and so when some schemy ambitious fellow gets on the stump and kildees around and talks about jcffersonian democracy and how neither of the old parties can now be trusted they full iuto line and look to him as a moses sent to deliver them from bondage but parties cannot remedy these evils there is a law now in our code forbidding the carrying of concealed weapons and yet half of the young men of the town ami the country carry them habitually just let a row or a quarrel begin any where even at a camp meeting and see how many pi tols are drawn the trouble is that the court s do not execute the laws the courts fling this charge back upon the people and say why don't you prosecute why do you dodge party jjuty why uo you fail to come up u.ncj ancient akchitectuke importitiit x>iacovgrica at cam fcrldgtd cologe england tr<mt interest aroused bj the inearth hig of remnunth of walu erected in the thirteenth century nowadays in england if old build ings are touched at all it is *. to often with a view to their restoration — a word which te this ease is a synonym for destruction therefore when de liberate effort is made not to give a new version of old work but to free that old work from every modern en croachment the event is one of no small interest to all who are concerned with the history of the past of no small importance to all who have made a study of architecture and this is ; exactly what is happening just now at , jcsuk college cambridge bays the new j york nation tho college it will be remembered | was not an independant foundation ' bui sprung from the old nunnery of st ! radeguude the chief portion of the j earlier buildings still remaining is the ■chapel its attraction to the modern tourist no doubt is found in the ilurno-jones windows which it may be noted in passing are quite tbo finest examples of stained glass that artbt hab yet given us hut to the architect and archroolcgist it is the church itself with its nave and tri angle anfl its beautiful early english piers und arches and arcades of course king's stands alone as tho rcat architectural marvel of cam bridge but jesus chapel in its own way is only loss fine if at finst glance it must seem loss imposing while in historical associations and significance it is supreme itceontly an aged follow of the eol loge remembering that when masons were putting a now coat of plaster on the inner cloister forty years ago ho had fancied he distinguished tho bpring of an arch p;irtia!ly concealed in the old stone work determined to have the plaster pulled off what he has found proves to bo one of the most important architectural discoveries made in england for many years the arch which had boon jv.st indicated in \ tho stonework has turned out to be i just one of throe and the;>e have been j almost entirely bet free from the wall j during long centuries gradually built up about them they belong to the purest period of the thirteenth century fool authorities affirming that they j fuvte iiiick to !•-'•!. or thereabouts the roasonis for this bclii-f are the capitals | which still show some suggestion of j norman influence and the beautiful detached shafts which later architects j never introduced having learned that greater strength if less charm was bccored bj connecting them to the ceutra.1 shaft with bands the mohlings and the carved foliage of the capitals are in the most wonder ful state of preservation and the stone is of almost dazzling whiteness — a whiteness to be attributed perhaps j partly to whitewash and destined not ' long to survive exposure to the foggy knglish atmosphere and the smoke of cambridge thanks to their chance burial the arches have escaped the re utorer indeed they have been brought to light at the best moment now that a few men at least begin to under stand the folly of tampering with the none too many relics and monuments of the past still left not so far re moved is the time when tho old piscina was discovered in the chapel then the one idea was to restore it now college dignitaries are of another way of thinking the arches form the door way and near windows of the imps chapter house its floor evidently was much below the level of the present cloister but tho necessary excavations have been made to the very base of the central door so as to show the propor tions of shafts and arches in their original graoe and pui'ity nor will the floor be filled in again the cloister here is in term timo one of the very busy thoroughfares of jesus but for a little space it will be narrowed in order that tho effect of this beautiful bit of the old monastic building may be seen in all its loveli ness and perfection in the courso of digging the worinnen came upon a fine stone cofiln with sculptured top the coffin of an early prioress and this probably will be left lying exactly whore it was found turned to east and | ire«t even though a part of it must re j main hidden under eo much of the pavement ns utility refuses to sacrifice to archsoology this discovery rightly haa aroused great iuteront in cam bridge a lesson from life a masn«<lzed c«ne i d uy a fro«»l old man of rhuburjrh sometimes the simple action of a man will indicate his character one of pittsburgh's wealthiest old gentlemen nccording to the dispatch was seen ' walking along the street the other day pointing hi cane npon m>mc object ; upon the pavement every now and then what caught on he raised and placed in hi liu:;<l he was col lating tiny nails that had fallen from merchandise boxes he continued un til he had gotten a handful then picking up a piece of paper from the the pavement he wrapped up tho nails carefully and pocketed the package a bystander asked him what sort of a cane he had oh he said ifs noth ing bv.t a s?<^'l roxl covered with leather it must be magnetized for it attracts uails and f^aves you from stooping not thct i know of un less the pl cir '^ of ! ' itlu ' r ovt ' r thc steel las done it i.e replied i i\v you picking up some i ails a short time ngo yes interrupted the old man i need 1 some of them then looking downward he exclaimed there's one i missed and picked it up with his magnetic s rvanu taking the package of nails from his pocket ho placed this last in with the rest as an instance of frugality this incident is interesting and as a key to t.i man's success ic life it is perhaps likewise washington le1ter from our regular coi resjxjiideiit president cleveland in accorilann with the announcement made when li j left washington just aftrr t[j»*ex f i , session met is buck it bid dt-sk in th white house am his appearance i the hest refutation of the manv gillj \ sensational stories that have bmi pi.b ! li>hed within the last week about tin dangerous condition he was in hf probably never dreamed wb*n he wat hating those two trotibus?me tteth ex tracted and their ulcerated r(k)ts cut out two months hj.ro that it would kv and by grow into an operation in v bid the greater poriioti of his jaw bunt wonlj in the mind of the sensational writer have to be cut away in ordei to remove th terribly cancerous growth in short it was but smother ver.mon of the familiar old story of the man who vomited three black crows president cleveland is not sick and he has not been sii-k since he lefl wash ing in fact there were few days while he was away that he did not per form some of his public duties as the records in the office of his private sec retary will show the passage of the bill for hie un conditional repeal of the purchasing : of the sherman silver law by lhe house has focussed public attention upon the senate where financial speeches are now the order of the day • how lonnr fche senate will talk befi»i i voting i a question that will be an lswered differently by nine out of even ten men in washington two wtel s i is the shortest time given by an \ oue and the longest goes away up in tin infill hs an agreement of some sorl will have to l>e reached before a vote can be taken and th silver senators dec ie they will make no agreement j unless the voo lines bill which has i been reported as a substitute for the wilson bill that was pass d by the house is amended in n manner satis fuctury to them the ilemociaticlead ers however re coun'di lit that an agreement will shortly be reached procrastination may !)•-• the thief of time as the old school adage s-ays but it isn't getlin a chance to ste;il much of it from the llou e ways and means committee which has buckled rght down to the tariff question with the determination to report a reform tariff hill at the ex-r.i session or very esirly in the regul.tr session while the committee is not disposed to encourage lon^-dreani-out hearings of every 1 m dick and harry who way think them selves tariff experts it will grant prop er hearings to all parties who by rea son of their prominence in lines ui business that may be affected by a change in the tanff have a reasonable ri^ht to be heard the hearings will begin monday and end s«*pf 20 speaker crisp dm a v-rv unn*ual al though not uoprecedentwl tiling wjien he called ruprescntative richardson of tennessee to the speaker's ( ba.r and defcend'-d to the hour of the ll-.u-e to reply to the unj mt and uncalie fur attack irhich ex-sjwaker i ••'•<! maile upon the new rules of the uou>e mr lieeil was surprised and u-foie lit speaker got thorough disgusted lo nii himself justly held up !■•• the com ol the hous and th country for hav ng falsely claimed i hat the new piles were in tiie line of the notorious rul - with ' winch be gagged ibe ii use of tl i tif ' ty-fiist cougies it is no tht 1 rst tim th»t mr crisp h.s : r rve i hiuim if j more lhan a match f r ih m.iin bhi - irrer and it will not be the iav the diffirrence between the new rules i i the house and i lie notori us rwd n les is precisely th it l«etwe i the » ntnenf f the i • s i md ii govern i-nt of k ixsii the ue : ■' tke uitliority f •!■shuttin : i-ff i i ate in the ha.'ijs of the i!nj rity ol tl e house wlure it alone l»eloug and the ttei i tiles put it into tit i iv's f !.' ■•••!. n king him more f » ■■■■■> cmt than v,.ull l tolit.'fl i.i a;i leg - • ' h v of i be rorl . k is n : rdeil as igni . i ' ;.'" r speaker u«-|i nli.»«w have attached if i im in washing n on i at date vslifj and so it seems that overy body is to b'arae more or less for everything our preacher aid la.t night that ho ha i been a close ob servur of the troubles and afiiiction8 of mankind and in nine cases out of ten they were the crop that was planted wliat ye sow that shall yc also reap even the poverty that many complete of is the result of their own planting if a joung man spends ae.t of hia time hunting and fishing and frolick ing with a little whisky thrown in and after awhuv marries some thoughtless girl and-children are born to them the family starts out on tbe down grade j»nd soon comes to poverty they reap what they sowed and they try to lay all the blame on other people espec ially on the rich xo we can't regulate everything in this sinful world but we must do the best we cau both by precept and ex ample a bumblebee stung me on my bald head this morning i said i reckon it was for somo of my mean ness—some crop that i*had sowed but in a few minutes one stung my wife on her head and i can't account for that he made a mistake i reckon the little varmints have got a nest under the floor iu the upstairs piazza and be cause i stopped up their hole the out siders are savage and would sting an _ angel unawares i don't know what , euch things were made for hut nriybe i i'll know some time i hope sa the j body might be nn accident but the .' sting in his tall wasn't as the law j-ers pay it n a put there with malice j aforethought and that's the way he j uses iu rill arp j python eggs a big snake in connnntleot lay half a iitiahel <> r i.'.gr perhaps about an eiirious a thing as dr knox ever had in the line of cu i riosities says the danbury conn news i:i his african python snake ' ev as she lies coiled about a half j bushel of eggs laid a few days ago it is an event that ophiolo.__-i.st3 will be ' interested in the discovery was made one morn ! ing for some time adam and eve j two bi.tr african pythons have been ' domiciled in the big snake cage in j the doctor's hack ol.ice the bottom i of the cag-e is covered by a deep layer j of dirt and ,, ravel loth these snakes j have been in dr knox's possession a year ami have sometimes been on ex hibition one evening 1 dr knox passed tho cage several tir..-s going 1 to and from his front office every time he pns-.ed tha cage the python snake hissed at him lie paid no attention to the snake and was more amused than otherwise at the incident later in the evening he locked up his office and drove over to brewster where his fam ily is now stopping when ths doctor opened his olliee the next day the lir l thing ha remembers doing was to examine his make collection he looked in the cage and saw what ho supposed were several new potatoes lying under the python snake eve he opened the cage to remove them going close to tho snake it hissed at him this made him pause then he took a seemd look and was surprised to see about one hundred snake eggs under her two of the eggs are on the writer's lesk as samples they vary in sir.e pud are rather heavy they arc soft to the touch oval in form and a-shy gray color the smaller of the eggs is tho sizeand shape of a duok's tho larger one is no thicker hut about nix inches long they were slightly speckled it ii said that the shell will become hard i perhaps a snake laying eggs in cap tivity is not unusual but the only ease called to the writer's attention was when a python did c similar thing at the paris zoological garden in 1*44 this serpent l_id three dozen eg;js she brooded on her eggs and hatched young ones she deposited her eggs on the 5th of may and the first young one made its appearance on the 2d of july whether dr knox's collection of pythons will be augmented or not by the eggs is a matter to be seen troublogomo tol_jlit>or the wild cossacks living away down in the southernmost part of the russian empire spend most of their time har assing tbe turks they are peculiarly savage in appearance their uniform irs the cossack coat full trousers scar lr-t undercoat hooked up to tho neck big boots and as an overcoat thoy wear a bonrka a circular cloak mate of ooarsa felt with long shaggy hair on one side of it this cloak is big enough to cottr the rid*r and much of tlio horse the most distinctive point in ihoir dress however is the cylin drical hut of black astrakan whioh they wear t all seasons tho top ii of cloth or velvet they form part of the russian cavalry and live principal ly on pi under steal in during their raids into turkey ar thing they e_n find from a chicken t _ el id people who ought to he hwlmin-ix the seemingly strange suggestion i made and strongly pressed in england that the men who man the navy should be taught how to swim ordinary bailors are instructed nnd expected to qualify in bwimming but the marine firemen and engineers arc not aud it is a fact that a ktrgc portion of tho lat ter large body of men who serve on warships cannot swim it is said thnt nir.ny more men would have been saved from the victoria but for this fact also that many sailors who were good swim mer were undoubtedly dragged down by tlio men who were r.ot the mat ter has been taken up in parliament and it is probable that swimming will bc insisted on as a part of the training of every man serving aboard ship hornets a paper maker the hornet was the first paper maker ar.d holds the original patent the pa-iei it makes is about like that of the newspaper nearly as firm and made of essentially the same material woody fibers scraped fro uld niibj jauii 0___j'd . .- terr1blejxpl0si0ni | too high prossur . [ n thc petition in every .•. in compelled to • ai i er ry energy to the th i erfc book md l:.h rer to ■ti-rrific rate there can ■si n which if • •■■• death loaves ■■■d bodies ... . h pressnre j r .:. souk uiing must u : y trneof ; licre is more | frets , n d the rrsults are the same as mraniiins n is growing worse every lity ol its increase i awful ( lur 1 ■mi s hi kpitals and : forlnnates ed ptill rurlher thero ; m f t!:t m atter recog • ni •■of ii l situation at once : titwitrv r'.easnrea to over u hare fai '.■v nn niory hot • i.«.rvoi sick headache ,,. irritability n.t-lhiu boly sleep .-. nrrvoch dyhjiejfria epi • miv one ' f :!.'- : " •' but the calanii > that may l*fall l,,.i > on hare t sed bo . and trr l witli reputable i little ni no benefit ive dr stive nervine a trial it is jh only ren»rd that may be dertndid f li-nn'.ts 1bg • ,,..-; ir miles rrstr.nihve ■' i « ■;:. lit nnd intel induced ,,. , rick wiih hiarrh of tl.g , in thehnnda of onr bwtptay ti either with it mlleh 1 nerve . rie was bo wnndrrfully bem fited n my wife . ', most excel rr.r results ,• . | .. cr have n.it wed irore thnn mx .. several of onr friends have ra rre i y itnpr to 1 - iouia itoibbdplowro canton ohio ! : e nervine is m^lrt by ell . a positirs puorantee cr imt by dr . rt \< <\.. on receipt of rr !:> ixv<»mle».ss.expre»f prepaid st i noririrelj frre from opiatcs or dangsrota drofi free boot at druggiits oi by rnail for s !•• by nil druggist the fundamental principle of life assurance | is protection for the family unfortunately however the beneficiaries of life assurance are often deprived of the pro : vision made for them through the loss of the principal by following bad advice regard ing its investment under the tontine installment policy of the equitable life ■ire n>v:<u-'.l with an ab f guard against such runic besides securing a much larger amount ol in : ance for the same amount of premiums paid in for facts and figures address w j roddey manager for the carclinas rock hill s c i ■■■- - ; ■: * 4 itra ■. . : :••■' -■' p*t c --- ' • . ::,...' i its site u 3 p < ' f rrl *" . ■> :. •■r - rtp b l.!e or v •'. n ■■■-■«^{ tnarge ourfeenol o 1 1 ft!ea '« t-cenrcd a pamp-l.-t ■- h ■v > obtain 1 tents wits ■,• ■■': r ■-■»«, ■r intashrkctcn i ~. j fcr pitcher's castoria ifsiotlr illiir 1 j i ure ill ; ■■• ■•- - ■plaints and monthly i • .-. trbceaor^hitss p^inin back ' ns the feeble baildi ' upthe-r.holc ykteiiit it has cured thousands ; and tv-ill cure you druggists have it scud blsmi f rl i>li.'j p h«»kfioo»if a co favutillt (&**% rsacketic oil i i .\ insianlkillerrf pjr v / - 3 cares rlleuxailsli keueui j >• (■■'■■j (.! \, i.uu i •-, spriiids bruiser s =:. .-. joiuts colic ir.(l • ckalll-sin»'th?itly cnolora mot '. :..,'.' . a i lij !:■.'.■■, .- e'ilrout , _• . ■1laj ; ii u y r:.!.;ic fijc liffpc-c " i a e«ppeia!iy prepared for the yno powerful and i-flnftrntiagi inimenlformaa cr^.fu '. ihc-u n.:o j rgo$l£i sc 50c.«2ekjc johksok's oriektal soap i ■'.■;. afed i :. : toilet tha grent sk!ri cur6an<l r.-ice • fia-itioerr ladioo will fin.l it o most dalicnta su.i t i'^.w pprfurnod touvt s.-.-ip in . it i it>tio;ute y pure hakes the -.'!-- soft f.i vr-lvotj and rertnrea ho lo«t corn i isxion i unury for thu bath for infants it eiaja itching clonn«ea he trnlp i<r proujo^a tnairo^thof hair priceisc for sale by edwih cut1ieell salisbury x c — 1 mature should be i fc*f|»iin?>pl off impurities of the m^kz^zd^i blood . nothing cures doeg t g0 wc!]j b0 llfllmial promptly or so ipoisoh afcly m swift ' 8 life sad no charms for three years i was troubled with mala ' rial poison which caused my appetite to fail and i was greatly reduced in flesh and life lost ail it3 charms i tried mercurial and potash remedies hut to no effect i could get no relief i then decided to try g^gaes ! a few bottles of this wonderful fwffiswvil medicine made a complete and permanent cure and i tjow enjoy better health than ever j a rice ottawa kan our boot on blood and skin diseases mailed free _ swift specific co atlanta ga l henry m stanley con tribute to mc clure's fnr september one of the remark vb'.e stories lie collected in africa in an interesting introduction mr stanley tells i hr ilii mi other folks tales were related hi the ntives alxuit ihecnmp fire at night • during his journeys in africa springfield m is aiijj»»*t 31 a rerri c nccideui to i in western ex press n ., 10 i i.»;i & allwny lt.il . ihie at springfield at 1:15 o'ckn k i ii;ij:jii'ii l i ! the s-pcoiki railroad liridge e;ut of cbe tcr tliin sifteriioon the bridge colliips*il letting the train l'ikhi'.:!i into tin river below five r jvjkhohs iire reporleo killed and nine injured edward everett hale whose after noon with dr oliver weirtlell holmes was described so f:ifcinalitigly in mc clurc'd mng:izinc for july is bimsclf the sul'j ct of an interview i h >.•:»■o:ii t mc lur '-. writ ten i>v herberl i ward i.bli ■~' ' f "^ " ~ wten bafcj wea siok n jj.i-.-e her caatorl v 1 . >>: i ■•: was a i"r '. 1 xl'e erici ! r caatorin r.'hcn riit l<ktj m miss she clung b3 csatoria wben she had children . shr g-.i tl aao ci»t<>i u r • hi oef ptnnce if n in i it-liver i 1 ■•• ' 1,-m «* u ii.il ce ■' un the 18 ■i meau ■xtr.t se^si i i::!e and ■■r q c . ile m ill !._ i vorhee li it is que : . . it id n.r • lincoln who * ... i iii>sioii utui : ' ! r'.v g«i . ic'iv mil till . ill liif foul i ' ■sioner i>i iv is is except in i ,. ii to have n pension . t pui :• •-• ■for uun at the coming eueanij gauiz.itioii i ! did the happy ■by sjb eton r w.n how haj.pj - . thai itrvcth nol .:. i ■him : '- ■\ ii i siin if initii i whose pa wlume -.;; . . ' . ' : unto ! ' i ■\\ ■i ' if | ul ic ian c r who enricfl none th«t . . . th \ i ■. u ho ii u ill cjd-si ,\ uiida ire giwii b xor rulfs ol tni but rales ol goo who llalli iiis life from hunio i whose conscience is stro whose state can neitue m . rafcu nor ruin make accusers great who got doth late ami efcrtj praj more ut'liis grace than gifts to lend and entertains the harmless da \ with veil-chosen book or frieud tiih man is freed from servile bands of hope to rise or fear to fall — lor.l of himself though iu>t of lands and hare nothing vet hath all newspaper law 1 subscribers who do i jiv pre>s imiite to thec ulra ,, r edas wishiugto continue thrirsuubctip tion 2 if the subscriber order thedisconti nance of tht-ir periodicals the publisnei may continue to send then until all w reuruges are paid 3 if subscribers nfglect or ref us •; take their periodicals from thec v u which they are directed they i.re spon sible until thej have settled '! j bill and ordered ihem discvuliuuett 4 if tl.e subscribers n v t i c places without informing thf pubhah r and papers are sent to the f.'»n:irr d-rfc tion they are held respond . 5 the courts have decided that re ■- iug to take periodicals fron or removing and leaving i(,rtn n ed for is prima facie evidence of in tentional fraud 6 if subscribers pay in ttdvance tuej ure bound to notice to p at the end of their i m if • i not wisli to continue ....,; . ; wi»e the publisher is ,».,...../ send it and the - tbseribei . ll sponsible nutil an express u i payment of all arrearngva m the publisher the latest po - • if newspaper publishers can ri^u one for fraud who takesapaji^r and i - ! fu.-ses to pav tor it under this the man who allow bissnbscrip 1 run along for some fcira laid und tlif'n orders the postctixstei i ■.-. i ; refused and have a postal ar notifying the publisher lays iu^acit liable to arrest and fine the same h for iii-ti etc tue atlanta jouratl aj inchica _'.. i f-.v i . - t r .. a ii > > threateued t . .: the i:nm asedepirtment sore of >., a va.se estab&h r merchandise of all dc sjr:ptio t:i3 prjinpc tctio i •»£ the police pr3veitid t'.ii atttek aai the inob hm di*p s.-d vv
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-09-07 |
Month | 09 |
Day | 07 |
Year | 1893 |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 29 |
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. W. McKenzie, Editor and Proprietor |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | J. W. McKenzie, Editor and Proprietor |
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 Thursday, September 7, 1893 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 | 601552409 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-09-07 |
Month | 09 |
Day | 07 |
Year | 1893 |
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 5187357 Bytes |
FileName | sacw17_18930907-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:19:16 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 |
jl i1u j |