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the carolina watchman salisbury n c thursday june 7 1888 voi xix.-thieb series no 33 ki in ii vw.r l h cr.km^kt ■craige & cleme1nt a.ttornovs a.t xj«.^utt salisbury n g . feb 3rd 1881 _ m james r campbell ! physician ana surgeon oflfera 1 1 i services to the people of salisbury and vici office in muj cole's iron front building corner main and fisher streets 10:6in j b coq c;ll m i "' salisbury tc . o offers his professional services to the citizens of thia and surrounding cominuni ties all calls promptly attended day or ni^'lit may be found at my office or the drug store of dr j if enniss respectfully j 15 council m i jj olfice in the jleiliji building 2nd floor front mum 18:6m new firm i o the undersigned have entered into a co-partnership for the purpose of condui t in s the grocery and p110d1 ' i commission business to date fron march 28 1 7 consignm nts especially golicited mcneely & tyson fhc undersigned tnkesthjsopportunity to return thanks to h\a numerous friends for their patronage and asks the con tinuance ofthesume to the new firm he will always be on hand to serve the i natrons of the xi^v fikm 1 2 7:tf •'■d mcxeely h n ( mes ■is now ri c ivirifs bis fall and winter stonk of goods direct from the uirtta markets wi i be i lea ' ■'■' " itre groceries | and all other kinds ■■:" lio-n kept in a ir";i j ., n 111 be sold al prices to su call and examine wi stock 1 bob white uivl crystal | roller mill flour of the best quality just received one hundred bar rels of fresh virginia l-ime l'or sale l ■i cxp i-1 all persons who have given me , i ps to bring me their cot . i .• i .■■., \\ : ■: sale [{. j holmes 49:tt msktmelki i have made u rang ■iim ts to supply f k n milk m iraing r i ■■i tnm 1 the first ol m iv i :•; who ui-h to enj it it will be . • ■' :'.■- home i : i|i irt ft>r ro vi i . •. : . tli iv h o ma \ v l to w i : ! n s il sbury april it -■; •. looe out compare ihi with ir pnrcbnei wb p i ■■'■"■' " '''' < ■'■'■\ j %$■sf j restlessness 5fn a bttuctly veceta6li fcm faultl**s famiu med:cih fef|y i philadelphia 0 lllpn^o he dollar ||| ..'. • health per a - life cx:,...h.eeach packa ■■■5 n get the genuine see the red / iy.nw-mark and the full title on front of wrapper and on the hide the seal and signature of j if . zeilin & f ( ,., . ; . simile remember thcr i»no other conuiatr si ns liivei regulator d r julian co general merchandise salisbury x c cgmeahb see the show a dave julian's hi h.i a full : ■empli tc line of o , uxfaa mwm c^oollb h hirh hi 1 is i i ; rin ciikapeis til si \ f.n he i tin fisher £ ■' ■■■tin staiul pipe -. 1 1 i •-..-. i i | . ( is si ' ■■ill's wilvtll : ma the li si i .; . ■. tilizsrs in the : line of provisions ; mai •;•■■■. he - nrc to s c him i eforc ■■buy j ; ' ll v ■.:!;-:<> buy ill the c3ox1.isbf he ran ■■■'.. apri 19 ( 68 2<>:3m ely ' 3 satarhh cream ll:a pain and fkayfeveftfljs l tion e k °%^ a::d smell y$*'&j try t ii cure.hsir-fever lj 1 i a itil is a di ease of i . mucous membrane geuer . in i he nasal pas li . _ its stronghold in l he head from tiii | itii il seuds forth i , . ' k siomach and i hruii : n ; . corrupt ing ii other trouble soin ■id 1 i ■; ;■ptoras , i no iril mi is i : - . "•• ii ii ■i ' ■■,■, • i '■:''• home company a _*_ strops company - *- seekip g prompt ! home patronage . reliable liberal n "~ s & ' "' i '■. ' ' • " " y ' ■rhodes browne nsm 3 -~~+? k iy tjffsioeni tii towns and x^f : y wii.mam c co.wtt total assets - - s75o,ooo oo ! j allen brown resident agent salisbury n c the new birdsell cloyer hullbr ! jjomto3 j v 1-4 i o r . t^mtmrl oil w / / j threshes separatee huiia cleans and re-cleans jlio ssr-s ready fo jlnrket r doing its work with a i^ipfdity heret mown and a p**f li»n n?»ver before attained the : n . ro-ftiuas etfart ofitstaven -•-!•, mr john c birdsell who has had u b years experience ii building clover machinery he frlvinii m t f world i st • ;.-•-• c cabi led clover thresher sullerand cleaner it la a f.ift worths of note that he and a euoceseora have lulactuzed and sold during the ; t thirt7-thr'->e years nincteeu-tvrontleth ct '■) b clov i ij-_.,'.'.-t n;l.'.'.c ; nd ■la ry :.-:• tbe g6etoflt t orld stnd for c£.tilo(rueaad cbaillengre john a poyden agt birdsell mfg co in fly time in the morning bright rind early when n man feels mighty surly < oines i h fiv pretty ll ! and it v kes liiu from his sleeping with its innocen bo-peeping with its wzziq and its nipping with its litim nd its skipping prevents i/i mi rning napping wears iiiin mil with constant slipping tin li i prhtj fiyi , bra1 ic ! strange charaewiitifls of bees \ l v have often hwyd it said that bees were very intelligent insects but as we have had very little to do with the little ideals of industry have never witnessed an instance of their peculiar ities bat we are how convinced that they hs.ve ways of their own a gentle years man of this city who for several died kept a number of hives of bees a few days ago leaving them without a master and on tuesday last one of tin hives swarmed the men in the neighborhood tried to hive them but wen unsuccessful some of the men had previously had experience in the business but they could not get them to as much as pitch they left the place we have also been told that any one can be introduced to a lot of bees that it the person who has tended to hem will take his intended successor to where they are kept and knock on the hives the bees will come ont in force and that if he speaks to them and tells them hat the person accompanying him is to be his successor they will buz around on a ten i j of inspection as if it were and will not sting either of them that if bees are always treated with this respect they will not give the person who will have them in charge much trouble in attending to them again they tan be used as an index to different dispositions for instance if any one of a mild loving and friend ly disposition approaches a hive of bees they will pay no attention what ever to their presence on the cn ti'i.rv if a person of a harsh cruel and unfriendly disposition uears their place of abode they will immediately cover and sting him in connection with this trait of character we were told of a gentleman from pender coun ty who h:id i very bad disposition w is cross and crabbed and unpleasant ! whose son purchased n few hives of b e from a neighbor farmer and car | ried them to his father's house the ' son had a much better disposition than | his further and he eon id mingle with ihf bees but the farther could not en ter the garden wlu-re they were kept without being stung on on occasion he became angry and determined to go to the bench on which the hives rested he started but before he had gotten within thirty feet of them he fell to t he ground stung to unconsciousness ii .-. son who was near ai hand ru>h ed to bis rescue and strange to say was not hurt by i single bee w e re member once when m small bov see ing a young man walk deliberately i;p to a hive one sultry afternoon in august and scoop up a handful of bees and we are positive that be was not stung — wilmington review from the wilmington star senator wade hampton of south carolina has an article in the june number of he forum in which he di.-cussfs what n-egro supremacy means ' it is m linlv a review of carpet-baggen and negro supremacy in south carolina and it shows how the people were oppressed and robbed by scoundrels ami thieves at the close of the article page 395 he i copies from mr sin coin's famous speech delivered on 18th september 1 s s when canvassing for governor against judge douglas in sedtember 1s59 at columbus ohio mr lincoln expressed the same views lie felt kind to the negro but he loved his j own race we make room for a part of the quotation given by senator hampton : 1 will say that i am not nor ever have been in favor bringing about in any way social and political equality of j of the white and black races that i am not nor ever have been in fa vor making voters or jurors of negroes j nor of qualifying them to hold office nor to intermarry with white people ; and 1 will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which i be lieve will forever forbid the two races living together on ierms of social and political equality and inasmuch as they cannot so live while they do re main together there must be the posi tion of superior and inferior and i as much as an v other man am in favor of h tvin , the superior position assign ed to the white rare * * i will add to nils that 1 have nvwv seen to my knowledge a man woman or child who was in favor of producing a per fect equality social and political be tween negroes and white me one hundred years ago the town of wilmington x !!.. p:issed the follow ing vote that the town provide one barrel west india rum five barrels n u england rum and one barrel good brown sugar half a box of good lemons two loaves of loaf sug;:r for th framing and raising - lid meeting house " i pithy paragraph watch and hoe consult your wife breed up and not down cl»an b iskets and crates nre good salesmen cut clover at or just before the height of bloom it is highly eltravagant to use low priced mew*:r oil fine surface soil is a mulch ihat will antagonize drouth fly nets for horses will save oats to more than their co>t cut orchard grass in early bloom — later it makes good hay the hog doesn't object to a season ing of cureulio in his fruit keep harvesting in mini for two weeks before the work begins paint applied to undried unseasoned wood only hastens decay if the weather is dry mulch around trees transplanted this spring double the use of water externally and discard hot liquids internally the le^s you disturb the sitting hen the better she will attend to her busi ness all work makes jack a dull boy and no work makes bill a very mean one the only thing that will stop knav ish advertising is the sudden death of all fools there is no profit in ministering to a diseased hog when the disease is wine plague better feed the inferior fruits and vegetables to the hogs than to send them to market before any man goes in deb he should read of the bondage in egypt of the children of israel the secrets of large yields always and everywhere are rich soil goodseed and thorough tillage beauty always attracts and it is not dishonest to send clean bright berries and fruits to market buying hay caps may be a species of gambling with the weather but they are good lottery tickets to hold there is no place like home and when weh observe some homes we are ve.-j thankful that there isn't it is as unjust as it is unwise to shoot the birds because thev take a few berries they have earned a feast \\ hen the wife and children attend to the poultry it isn't fair to exchange eggs for tobacco ami machine oil the boston post i'yn and so far as we are informed it says correctly by far the greater part of the bills whose vetoes go to swell the number charged against mr cleveland's admin istration are private pension bills con ceived in fraud and passed iri the most reckless manner without proper inqui ry by congress of the few important measures which the president has dis approved the dependent pension bill the useless and extravagant bills for public buildingo in certain localities and the river and haibor appropriation bill of last year will answer as examples hardly an instance can be found in which the exercise of the prerogative of the president has been other than entirely commendable southern presbyterians manchester haynes of augusta me a member of the republican national committee who was ap proached as an authority on the sub ject gave it as his opinion that mr blaine's declination of a nomination was sincere and that he has not chang ed it but he is also of the opinion that mr blaine if nominated will accept rather than embarrass the party by a refusal carlisle's speech senator carlisle's speech on the tariff seems to have been the most commanding of all the speeches mad oa the subject five hundred thou sands copies of it have already been issued and orders for it are still ponr ing in it will probably be circulated by the million heavy storms prevailed in the north and west monday the municipal election in norfolk va wag a democratic victory senator merrill of vermont kept a country grocery store senator stewart of nevada mined with a pick and shovel in california senator 0-ullon was famous as a eorn-husker in early days in illinoi to be intelligent is to be hone : , kind and good popular mysteries question whose solution hat taxed the l'o»fw«i many generations al.-'.s ' cried a witty frenchman lately for ihe nnfortnnate man who i lives in the twenty-first epntnry there will be no etuhantrd mysterious cor ner left on the earth for him africa nnil the arctic circle w ill be covered with railway stations and summer tour ists school-buy to-day d n<;t under stand how full f mystery the world was to their great-grandfathers in every continent wide tiluts mi the m?.p wciv marked unexplored territory 1 . there were fire especial mysteries which tormented oar ancestors one was the source of the nil it u i highly improbable says a learned di | vine of the last century that thi.s j geographical secret will over l>o dis ! eevercd by man another was the truth concerning tbe lost atlanfca u fair juitl fertile country whreh tradi tion said had been engulfed age ago in the atlantic ocean tiie center of the earth also gave much nneasiness to curious people there were inanv theories eou corn ing it it was a gulf of liquid fin it was a mas of ice it was the abode of ili damned it w;i n i busy beautiful world filled with in habitants as was tbe surface of the earth books describing this unknown inner continent were published by al leged explorer syinnii's hole was the entrance to ir and synnnes told many tales of his advensurcd under ground a fourth unsolved mystery ivns the location of the magnetic pole various j theories were propounded to explain the attraction of the magnet to the north o;io of the most popular of these three centuries ig >, was the ex istence of a lmcjo monster which was sail to lire under the saa near green land toward whom all magnets were for some inexplicable reason drawn occasionally !•.■• raised his head above the ocean an.l poute;l forth water which fact rationally explained all tidal waves and water-spoufs the high tides on the newfoundland coast were pro duced bv the breath from his nostrils another mystery even yet unsolved was the sudd mi total disappearance of a colony of dar.es from the west coast of greenland it was conjectured thai they had penetrated tiie sea of ice which covers that country to its eastern const there thej ware still supposed to live in a tropic climate amid fruit and flowers no navigator for three centuries has l>-.-n able to reach this eastern coast h tice this legend stiil | remains to delight superstitious sailors but as l!ii'-e old-time uiys eries dis appear others have arisen more pro found and c'o-e at hand the nature i and quality of the elements and their | relation to ea-.h other open a region of research which will tax the powers of many generations to come men foi tge.s told childish tales to each other of genii antl c-nchanted lamps while the aii way foil of unusual electricity aroun ! them and steam served only to eook their food it may be that the common est substances which we handle to-day may possess tremendous energies that when understood and trained to the service of man will change the face of thu earth — youtfi'.i companion the garefowl's fate complete k.ttlnctlon of hip lure nuiner oiw dre:lt auk kumily tiie great auk has became extinct within the last tiny years at am rate the general impression of or nithologists is that the iwrd lias disap peared forever except as specimens are preserved in museums prof new ton of cambridge england has in dulged the belief tha.1 the bird may yet be found living about the more inac cessible shores of the north but the hope has thus far been disappointed the fate f this bird is something strange when we consider that it be longed t a family that i numerons and hardy the divers ot which i was a variety live about the clin of northern shores their retreats are rarely visited by man they have an abundance of food in the lish of the sea they rear their young on the shelves of the rock if they are pur sued they easily escape by swimming and diving 0 all the divers none seemed more capable f taking care of itself than the auk according to wil son its powers of swim ning and div ing nr<»ijal>ly exceeded those of any other species of the feathered race the wing of the great auk appear to have been s short as to bear the character of paddles thus resembling tin pen guin of which it was the n rlhern rep resentative it laid iis solitary eg — about live inches long and thiv • inches at the greatest breadth on thu bare rock with lit any n.'-r as it was iu capable of flight it had to build on the lower ledges a livo specimen of the auk was cap tured oil sf icilda by the tueksm.in of the island of scalpa and wasscen there in the year 1821 while this bird was being indulged with a swim i.i the sea restrained by a cord fastened to one le it contrived to escape fro i a sub sequent owner it has been ascertained that there are about seventy-one ski.h of the auk and sixtv-fivc eggrs in different parts of the world in 1871 the value of a specimen of the fowl va estimated at not less than abo.it lire hundred dollars but it is now very much greater an auk's egg h now valued at from fifty to pounds the eggs vary in siza color and markings s<-mo being of a silvery white and others of a yellowish-white ground — tlio spots and : treak3 a!«r differing in form and ( olor within the in few years some admirably manufactured forgeries i hr-.-e egga hive been '. f red for sale — youth's c-j npanion a b!t of bunting somrihlng b..m n»e of all k nit ami tun manntartare after all wli t v i il 1 the tight little islands known - k .»;.-... t - bitainamoani to if no i'nii n jatk b . mti \ their ; power in •!,.• i , • • f t | m . world a..d as for that matfc-r ih ■■land of the fr.v and the horn ■of ih • h are if there were no stars and strips t .. gloriou«ly over ni mj i : l in : .. quartern i the gl ba i would i in tl ■■utter instan ■the - . . .- dry of erery i:.:l mi uablc dr .,. .: p tti sentiment that ignites in the lirea.-t of ; all fnll-l>l i ,\ rd am.'rii t - n the bare : sigjitof a cerliin ait.vngt ncnt off i citizana of tboae united >• . - ! ardently t the flag h all f:ii and i under all rlrcnnistane and it i one of the delightful s.-nsrtions invariably i reconlej in a journey abroad when • they tell of their bearis swol ing with '. hoiic-t pride atsig'al of tho 8 ii •; red wliiti and blue it seems a bit curious to », whoa o:io comes to think ov«r all die mischief i these national rags have ur • ight for they lead men straight on to death and destruction as gayly :>? though luring him to the surest jrinl of life s desires they may indeed ik mere symboli of weightier realities l>u after il much of l he purest love and honor t many peoples lie in embroidered f.»uls of siik or bunting fhc are immblej m their standard droops and triu uphaut a its colors dictate flags are the outward and noticeable rii of benevolence nii^'nt wealth and victory w.ir p^aee or disaster disaasp death i 1 : iviy as well ns protection and defi t.ic the making f ftagd i i btisinsss i .. iiapi rt ance in all seaport towns !'•>;■there is i continual demand f r such articles aboard all kinds of eraft it is simply astonishing to soa ii.jw blurt a tima it takes for sea wind and weather to whip the stoutest stuffs htto ribbons wlien the breeze uo;vs fair and v.ith sunshine plenly a bunting banner may bo carriej at the mast head oouio three mouths or moiv ■• it let one gale ruffle thu waters and bsfore the pretty strip i'i be lowered tli tctnik'.--t lias blown it into a e!i of latt»".'s siilo.s n i nil •. mttke tll bignals used on their vessels aa.l even borne of the larger standar is l>.u i ach one is supposed lo carry a set of flags belonging peculiarly to its rank which can only be manufuitt uv i on lu:id all the morchantin n have their flags made her nn it is quiie itiuto-stiiiu to turu over those a d'k 1 ■. iriou ear pe:in eon ii tries fur i n:np:u*is n whe ■the brazilian m-in-o'-war u visiiing this ciu the captain ordered a t tnplete set for his ship wbii was made of ihe finest quality of material ; ud num bers haw been - ..■: ee to e . i.>r mexico i .:•■ua \ ... i « .'■. r - uth american nation . in 9pite of all i • up . : . . oi yield he palm ot be.i l . ; ■th -. hag choseu by this connti . it is'uni.jne striking tnd elega'it co:n-i ir d vi ii tin great siinilarity existing iinon j foreign banners the lino and daintiest work is put oa a silk nati»ia an for like tapestry the,cmbroi lerv -!: ws the same on both i thosilk '•- a'wiys rich and u • t !: i : ; ir can i 1 pre tjer than the azure li<-id with slar.-i sown ihic-kly on the deep blue groun.l i tokiu over the stock the repnrrerc.vne ..■. s in yellow fl;krs de-«igni!d for quarantine statioos others fi>r naval dispatch wire white s^aarca with li blu < i.l>s worked in floss 1 ut n nr than all oth ers were fbe fre-jc'i !'. i r used ii iln 14th of july - v 0 tiitu d mocral a sea telephone commadicatltig cutler v:ilrr liv mi ana of n novel device some interesting nxpi-nmonls have lately been made t > t.-i tho fensibility f enabling shij \ , communicate with ono another by means of what may be called i sea ! ; leph •-. ii is known that water i a g..od transmitter of sound and that the vi'lucity with which sound i couvi*y«.l through il is about four tinn .•- great aa it velocity through tlic air experiments made n the lake f ieue\:i long ago showed thai the sound of a submerged ix*ll could be heard by means of :\ speciai form of ear trumpet also placed beneath the water at a dis ianec of sevcrnl n;i!<-s from the bell mr dover of h m s malabar has lately in a measure revived this experi ment only h has used a telephone in t i u of tn car-trampel as receiver of tlif sounds transmitted the apparatus eo:is:s!s i.f i ! ■■: •. hat bell or g.tng place i i i l)el w the water lini a a ship > i ■.: wliich ia 1 on:iccted t>y nif.-in-j of a tube with the deck that a ha mu r ■n be made to net on tho hell ■■: will this s ht transmitter tha :•'• i ; . • r con sists if i bell telephone with i large diaphragm placed in the ci uter <<: the bell and connecie.l by means of wires with another tflephoiie on the deck of the shin llus second instrument ii lie'd t llie observer's ear by ni":m of this apparatus it ia found that on.i'.i an be readily conveyed through the water for np ird uf i mil , and it is claimed that signjil-i i*an be thus made under the s i which w 1 1 ! be quite indep«mid'*nl <•'. fog • ;■my weathei . there • in to i ; to he only one we ik point in ibis method of -!_■ling and that i the want i :■. means of calling ha attention f.f th distant receivei when the tiansmitter wi i snd a flgnnl in rhe work in r < . : i in iry tdephono i •'.• obsorv r hai ..- - j itt iug («•':!, but t'.i .- . .. r.ith ti ca telephon •■i ) tht :'— ic if fog too tbe onlin irjr t •■... i ■". ding i»|t her by aoean of fla ■ight by lashing lights mr • aii c its i . . ndo ■'■a h . about love-letters no i ..: v .„,:, ;„ | ,,,., ull ., u b , j f m ilrirn i hlm t »' writing ,! i re :.-;;■».■began t a very « ; .'. i : :: l . world's hi t 1 '. 1 a ' ■... nenury evkl n v>i lv ,,.- ; l(lw * begun ur wli i «,.!,:. 1 i f^.r hut.tr i hazy when rv nndcrtnke to g<-t atthe ! ""'• ''■■■■■''■.::■..[> itlk f lb ) >■•"■:>! :• •■: i 1 . .- nu u 1 v wa invlud . ,.( lht , hum i i .. r-ilki«l ii ed - ••» lilltc '* • i r '■• . ... fallow — the ( . l uit .- inevit . ■■. *„! l*~t between . * ikhi to '"' s^pai •' ■ifivr tlit iiii lion i wrilii g if ad im :. • r , w n h.>w !.» write ,-.!,, .. ,, _-„>,( how much ; lo:»sun tl , ■. .. il.l fm i in ttio ■i i asaii n ■..-.- ;■.-. <■no il.mbl they would li:;\i )• :;.-.! fr.»m . . i other * few l;i < j .-; i r in epistolary communication t.n i!i;-iv w n do general poat-oiiice no f.i maiw n carrier system n ;•..»- in li.-ir time but v might hav left thiir i.-t t.-rs as millions •■. their descendants hare done in a hollow :•: ■■• an apple true for instance orundcr some loose flouo ii ;,,]) ,,{ tii -.,.'. :. m nil what a relief from ennui tiny w u;.l h:ivn band iii uiii an exchange uf rows and compljmi ::'- ::';'. to , ii r nothings why i it thai ihc publication of l<>v letters in conris i>l ian or in the news papers s ■. i . ... . the eon linen t why do ] ■•!••. ■! ind voting and of nil sort ami condition rush in crowds to :. .::.! almost tiarel over each . . ~ . !- ;.. boar lov letters i i-i and then ir • how and laugh ai them :«- ii ih had found something . . | ie i in n i f inn p why do grave u :■.:. i -.<>'.■: w.iintmi skip iil the sensible reading in n news paper if it h:ij':»-li to contain l luv«j fetter ami having re;vl thu laugh at it a it i v<*ro ll»e i;t ; i ui<1 st of gilbert's >- • ■: iti ■k**r ten t<i one t all the old trunk in all the i.t wen called t ffivo up iliir treasure tli would nriivicl tlu'sc gi'ivi iii^n a.'ul i!n iv hiicii cf j t-i siui ness if u le:»30 r >•'!! ii so a that vrhieli xii ll»;-ir risible x man m .- >■•. ■: tlioyonghly in love -. • i n ' '.. . h ■•!) there w are inl t have mi-m-1 some bappini >?. m least who didn't«ay ami do -..' t!ii _-. why 1j1 n doea evervbodv i ■< ; • iiii an irresistiuc ta eitnati fun ii ;!.<■maaweript love-m;ikin •• nn uufortunate whose letters l r t in > ii ■i-ouru n paper it is a mysten « • ■ill n attempt ta explain there '. ■■. '. - " " - g qata -..' • " .■■: ■u for s,ieoi:i • : * •<■r ••: ; ; i'v l5iu mi ri'j --,'... •,!.,:■ii.t.i i mo raa'pj eowrt ship xa»l llw pf il ■h whieii ■. : i ' " of fuu out of ni vv itt > . l •-- •- there i nothing 1 . . . ■: :! ry l kh old mmfs :■••■'. : ■■•• i i ■- l-i n i • ii iv had the social statist p:tlri.ir hs and weregi i •;'!',■•. ;.. i-iie them on ih i .- i -». would >'-•••.•(• that do ha il '. i7 in . ■- f rh in lnvo with may and .! sit-sihe i>:iiic:j f-iruiu la wen i in iti.il er i»l thi kind '■'■■■■■•"! i(e ibat th«j !..• it ol • ' • for :•. yoiinjj ., ■ih square f hi ■■i .' .. !;■■:■in ; • ■*. -. why make f i . • .. - 1 ■> ; trail - mvitv in'it , ; '. l rmes o lawyers iliiit j • r •■■x vij •. t t i qui'.c i c u . -. partiein ul m ... : iii ..:: ll'nc i and uu thinking x.iiiun . i : ; i rn iintmuitj ■ii ...:,.-..'■i»f ihe l.r-wr i . li'.r iti hid '!•■i '■if this \-. •■: i tru n i»ul i only ipply t a ven - ■■' i p iri ••'" ■■•■■- <» i.wlo arn uncage i in adi . • •• ■•. >■jm .■-. tim gn • ■■■■■i-rsan no o.-u pied in ital i r iit in inal ■■> - of busi ;.••-- t it-i w in re ther i rto : •■■u ;'!••■i'm i n in il ap piii nl lc ■. i udvih-iili's i iit in vitv -|>" i ..,-..!■•- !' i not ill peculiarity i»f the le/al prof i-a ilmi tohaveba-1 v:i«l iinw f ij pi u-titiouer for a inilr i n made at phj sieians an ! elc _;. ■.;!•• i i ■no ii>lble man foimis i jtul^meiii as '■> ah entire profi - ■m ly regard ing mcu oi ex id char i in ■. idenca - f intn more i-ii i l • '<» elhii : i ibli'xa ion mian tin h . - ■■and tlin abler la •• ■ihc in ire senai tive h ■■ii .: ■'; •■■■■'■in lhai respect of course lh lawyer i bound in the ... . ■hies in thi same way ns every other man he has o right to sacrifice them ;<> •> ili :•■•-. iti 1 v client fortunately i is very seldom lurco sr»rv for i lawyer t.i put iu>-;<-!f to th te.-t in l..i ;■-;> ■• 1 ■nl i im-t;»nce wrongful afta in l\m direction are no only iinmor.il lm inexpedient and iinim)'iti an i tl.'s is patent to erenr man of <?■'>* judgment the onti dencci of ■> d^e and jun in i he honor ol t i a iv ,. a ■'■- h'n j k*k i i tr;vde and n in .'- of -••::- • woulil l<e no morn willing i i sa n illcu it tl»a:i be would to cast li m >-' preeiiin iu>m uf hist .... '.■•.< an llie fiiitcry . . n this i pc-'-i is for •!.■i:.'.-i p • for t!»e very men who m i i twil in time jf diffi cult t ti * vr ■> ilh tleli iii.i'l precious . ci i • l»i r r ''*•' a would not i ii i with the i hk--1 v..i m a ;;.- ..- nr n-liarlng he will n-.t h • . i - *.•■:.; n(y lawyer la cvta justified in i'-.^-iviug iiih r the juri r the ■■■•■' . t.:»»i r man of .. • ■• . t try to d •'' ivn him — fr?:u a:t in a > <• i ■'. 1'r dtcighl
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1888-06-07 |
Month | 06 |
Day | 07 |
Year | 1888 |
Volume | 19 |
Issue | 33 |
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 and T. K. Bruner] |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | [J. J. Bruner and T. K. 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 Thursday, June 7, 1888 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 | 601553170 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1888-06-07 |
Month | 06 |
Day | 07 |
Year | 1888 |
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 5303172 Bytes |
FileName | sacw16_18880607-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:24:10 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 |
the carolina watchman salisbury n c thursday june 7 1888 voi xix.-thieb series no 33 ki in ii vw.r l h cr.km^kt ■craige & cleme1nt a.ttornovs a.t xj«.^utt salisbury n g . feb 3rd 1881 _ m james r campbell ! physician ana surgeon oflfera 1 1 i services to the people of salisbury and vici office in muj cole's iron front building corner main and fisher streets 10:6in j b coq c;ll m i "' salisbury tc . o offers his professional services to the citizens of thia and surrounding cominuni ties all calls promptly attended day or ni^'lit may be found at my office or the drug store of dr j if enniss respectfully j 15 council m i jj olfice in the jleiliji building 2nd floor front mum 18:6m new firm i o the undersigned have entered into a co-partnership for the purpose of condui t in s the grocery and p110d1 ' i commission business to date fron march 28 1 7 consignm nts especially golicited mcneely & tyson fhc undersigned tnkesthjsopportunity to return thanks to h\a numerous friends for their patronage and asks the con tinuance ofthesume to the new firm he will always be on hand to serve the i natrons of the xi^v fikm 1 2 7:tf •'■d mcxeely h n ( mes ■is now ri c ivirifs bis fall and winter stonk of goods direct from the uirtta markets wi i be i lea ' ■'■' " itre groceries | and all other kinds ■■:" lio-n kept in a ir";i j ., n 111 be sold al prices to su call and examine wi stock 1 bob white uivl crystal | roller mill flour of the best quality just received one hundred bar rels of fresh virginia l-ime l'or sale l ■i cxp i-1 all persons who have given me , i ps to bring me their cot . i .• i .■■., \\ : ■: sale [{. j holmes 49:tt msktmelki i have made u rang ■iim ts to supply f k n milk m iraing r i ■■i tnm 1 the first ol m iv i :•; who ui-h to enj it it will be . • ■' :'.■- home i : i|i irt ft>r ro vi i . •. : . tli iv h o ma \ v l to w i : ! n s il sbury april it -■; •. looe out compare ihi with ir pnrcbnei wb p i ■■'■"■' " '''' < ■'■'■\ j %$■sf j restlessness 5fn a bttuctly veceta6li fcm faultl**s famiu med:cih fef|y i philadelphia 0 lllpn^o he dollar ||| ..'. • health per a - life cx:,...h.eeach packa ■■■5 n get the genuine see the red / iy.nw-mark and the full title on front of wrapper and on the hide the seal and signature of j if . zeilin & f ( ,., . ; . simile remember thcr i»no other conuiatr si ns liivei regulator d r julian co general merchandise salisbury x c cgmeahb see the show a dave julian's hi h.i a full : ■empli tc line of o , uxfaa mwm c^oollb h hirh hi 1 is i i ; rin ciikapeis til si \ f.n he i tin fisher £ ■' ■■■tin staiul pipe -. 1 1 i •-..-. i i | . ( is si ' ■■ill's wilvtll : ma the li si i .; . ■. tilizsrs in the : line of provisions ; mai •;•■■■. he - nrc to s c him i eforc ■■buy j ; ' ll v ■.:!;-:<> buy ill the c3ox1.isbf he ran ■■■'.. apri 19 ( 68 2<>:3m ely ' 3 satarhh cream ll:a pain and fkayfeveftfljs l tion e k °%^ a::d smell y$*'&j try t ii cure.hsir-fever lj 1 i a itil is a di ease of i . mucous membrane geuer . in i he nasal pas li . _ its stronghold in l he head from tiii | itii il seuds forth i , . ' k siomach and i hruii : n ; . corrupt ing ii other trouble soin ■id 1 i ■; ;■ptoras , i no iril mi is i : - . "•• ii ii ■i ' ■■,■, • i '■:''• home company a _*_ strops company - *- seekip g prompt ! home patronage . reliable liberal n "~ s & ' "' i '■. ' ' • " " y ' ■rhodes browne nsm 3 -~~+? k iy tjffsioeni tii towns and x^f : y wii.mam c co.wtt total assets - - s75o,ooo oo ! j allen brown resident agent salisbury n c the new birdsell cloyer hullbr ! jjomto3 j v 1-4 i o r . t^mtmrl oil w / / j threshes separatee huiia cleans and re-cleans jlio ssr-s ready fo jlnrket r doing its work with a i^ipfdity heret mown and a p**f li»n n?»ver before attained the : n . ro-ftiuas etfart ofitstaven -•-!•, mr john c birdsell who has had u b years experience ii building clover machinery he frlvinii m t f world i st • ;.-•-• c cabi led clover thresher sullerand cleaner it la a f.ift worths of note that he and a euoceseora have lulactuzed and sold during the ; t thirt7-thr'->e years nincteeu-tvrontleth ct '■) b clov i ij-_.,'.'.-t n;l.'.'.c ; nd ■la ry :.-:• tbe g6etoflt t orld stnd for c£.tilo(rueaad cbaillengre john a poyden agt birdsell mfg co in fly time in the morning bright rind early when n man feels mighty surly < oines i h fiv pretty ll ! and it v kes liiu from his sleeping with its innocen bo-peeping with its wzziq and its nipping with its litim nd its skipping prevents i/i mi rning napping wears iiiin mil with constant slipping tin li i prhtj fiyi , bra1 ic ! strange charaewiitifls of bees \ l v have often hwyd it said that bees were very intelligent insects but as we have had very little to do with the little ideals of industry have never witnessed an instance of their peculiar ities bat we are how convinced that they hs.ve ways of their own a gentle years man of this city who for several died kept a number of hives of bees a few days ago leaving them without a master and on tuesday last one of tin hives swarmed the men in the neighborhood tried to hive them but wen unsuccessful some of the men had previously had experience in the business but they could not get them to as much as pitch they left the place we have also been told that any one can be introduced to a lot of bees that it the person who has tended to hem will take his intended successor to where they are kept and knock on the hives the bees will come ont in force and that if he speaks to them and tells them hat the person accompanying him is to be his successor they will buz around on a ten i j of inspection as if it were and will not sting either of them that if bees are always treated with this respect they will not give the person who will have them in charge much trouble in attending to them again they tan be used as an index to different dispositions for instance if any one of a mild loving and friend ly disposition approaches a hive of bees they will pay no attention what ever to their presence on the cn ti'i.rv if a person of a harsh cruel and unfriendly disposition uears their place of abode they will immediately cover and sting him in connection with this trait of character we were told of a gentleman from pender coun ty who h:id i very bad disposition w is cross and crabbed and unpleasant ! whose son purchased n few hives of b e from a neighbor farmer and car | ried them to his father's house the ' son had a much better disposition than | his further and he eon id mingle with ihf bees but the farther could not en ter the garden wlu-re they were kept without being stung on on occasion he became angry and determined to go to the bench on which the hives rested he started but before he had gotten within thirty feet of them he fell to t he ground stung to unconsciousness ii .-. son who was near ai hand ru>h ed to bis rescue and strange to say was not hurt by i single bee w e re member once when m small bov see ing a young man walk deliberately i;p to a hive one sultry afternoon in august and scoop up a handful of bees and we are positive that be was not stung — wilmington review from the wilmington star senator wade hampton of south carolina has an article in the june number of he forum in which he di.-cussfs what n-egro supremacy means ' it is m linlv a review of carpet-baggen and negro supremacy in south carolina and it shows how the people were oppressed and robbed by scoundrels ami thieves at the close of the article page 395 he i copies from mr sin coin's famous speech delivered on 18th september 1 s s when canvassing for governor against judge douglas in sedtember 1s59 at columbus ohio mr lincoln expressed the same views lie felt kind to the negro but he loved his j own race we make room for a part of the quotation given by senator hampton : 1 will say that i am not nor ever have been in favor bringing about in any way social and political equality of j of the white and black races that i am not nor ever have been in fa vor making voters or jurors of negroes j nor of qualifying them to hold office nor to intermarry with white people ; and 1 will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which i be lieve will forever forbid the two races living together on ierms of social and political equality and inasmuch as they cannot so live while they do re main together there must be the posi tion of superior and inferior and i as much as an v other man am in favor of h tvin , the superior position assign ed to the white rare * * i will add to nils that 1 have nvwv seen to my knowledge a man woman or child who was in favor of producing a per fect equality social and political be tween negroes and white me one hundred years ago the town of wilmington x !!.. p:issed the follow ing vote that the town provide one barrel west india rum five barrels n u england rum and one barrel good brown sugar half a box of good lemons two loaves of loaf sug;:r for th framing and raising - lid meeting house " i pithy paragraph watch and hoe consult your wife breed up and not down cl»an b iskets and crates nre good salesmen cut clover at or just before the height of bloom it is highly eltravagant to use low priced mew*:r oil fine surface soil is a mulch ihat will antagonize drouth fly nets for horses will save oats to more than their co>t cut orchard grass in early bloom — later it makes good hay the hog doesn't object to a season ing of cureulio in his fruit keep harvesting in mini for two weeks before the work begins paint applied to undried unseasoned wood only hastens decay if the weather is dry mulch around trees transplanted this spring double the use of water externally and discard hot liquids internally the le^s you disturb the sitting hen the better she will attend to her busi ness all work makes jack a dull boy and no work makes bill a very mean one the only thing that will stop knav ish advertising is the sudden death of all fools there is no profit in ministering to a diseased hog when the disease is wine plague better feed the inferior fruits and vegetables to the hogs than to send them to market before any man goes in deb he should read of the bondage in egypt of the children of israel the secrets of large yields always and everywhere are rich soil goodseed and thorough tillage beauty always attracts and it is not dishonest to send clean bright berries and fruits to market buying hay caps may be a species of gambling with the weather but they are good lottery tickets to hold there is no place like home and when weh observe some homes we are ve.-j thankful that there isn't it is as unjust as it is unwise to shoot the birds because thev take a few berries they have earned a feast \\ hen the wife and children attend to the poultry it isn't fair to exchange eggs for tobacco ami machine oil the boston post i'yn and so far as we are informed it says correctly by far the greater part of the bills whose vetoes go to swell the number charged against mr cleveland's admin istration are private pension bills con ceived in fraud and passed iri the most reckless manner without proper inqui ry by congress of the few important measures which the president has dis approved the dependent pension bill the useless and extravagant bills for public buildingo in certain localities and the river and haibor appropriation bill of last year will answer as examples hardly an instance can be found in which the exercise of the prerogative of the president has been other than entirely commendable southern presbyterians manchester haynes of augusta me a member of the republican national committee who was ap proached as an authority on the sub ject gave it as his opinion that mr blaine's declination of a nomination was sincere and that he has not chang ed it but he is also of the opinion that mr blaine if nominated will accept rather than embarrass the party by a refusal carlisle's speech senator carlisle's speech on the tariff seems to have been the most commanding of all the speeches mad oa the subject five hundred thou sands copies of it have already been issued and orders for it are still ponr ing in it will probably be circulated by the million heavy storms prevailed in the north and west monday the municipal election in norfolk va wag a democratic victory senator merrill of vermont kept a country grocery store senator stewart of nevada mined with a pick and shovel in california senator 0-ullon was famous as a eorn-husker in early days in illinoi to be intelligent is to be hone : , kind and good popular mysteries question whose solution hat taxed the l'o»fw«i many generations al.-'.s ' cried a witty frenchman lately for ihe nnfortnnate man who i lives in the twenty-first epntnry there will be no etuhantrd mysterious cor ner left on the earth for him africa nnil the arctic circle w ill be covered with railway stations and summer tour ists school-buy to-day d n<;t under stand how full f mystery the world was to their great-grandfathers in every continent wide tiluts mi the m?.p wciv marked unexplored territory 1 . there were fire especial mysteries which tormented oar ancestors one was the source of the nil it u i highly improbable says a learned di | vine of the last century that thi.s j geographical secret will over l>o dis ! eevercd by man another was the truth concerning tbe lost atlanfca u fair juitl fertile country whreh tradi tion said had been engulfed age ago in the atlantic ocean tiie center of the earth also gave much nneasiness to curious people there were inanv theories eou corn ing it it was a gulf of liquid fin it was a mas of ice it was the abode of ili damned it w;i n i busy beautiful world filled with in habitants as was tbe surface of the earth books describing this unknown inner continent were published by al leged explorer syinnii's hole was the entrance to ir and synnnes told many tales of his advensurcd under ground a fourth unsolved mystery ivns the location of the magnetic pole various j theories were propounded to explain the attraction of the magnet to the north o;io of the most popular of these three centuries ig >, was the ex istence of a lmcjo monster which was sail to lire under the saa near green land toward whom all magnets were for some inexplicable reason drawn occasionally !•.■• raised his head above the ocean an.l poute;l forth water which fact rationally explained all tidal waves and water-spoufs the high tides on the newfoundland coast were pro duced bv the breath from his nostrils another mystery even yet unsolved was the sudd mi total disappearance of a colony of dar.es from the west coast of greenland it was conjectured thai they had penetrated tiie sea of ice which covers that country to its eastern const there thej ware still supposed to live in a tropic climate amid fruit and flowers no navigator for three centuries has l>-.-n able to reach this eastern coast h tice this legend stiil | remains to delight superstitious sailors but as l!ii'-e old-time uiys eries dis appear others have arisen more pro found and c'o-e at hand the nature i and quality of the elements and their | relation to ea-.h other open a region of research which will tax the powers of many generations to come men foi tge.s told childish tales to each other of genii antl c-nchanted lamps while the aii way foil of unusual electricity aroun ! them and steam served only to eook their food it may be that the common est substances which we handle to-day may possess tremendous energies that when understood and trained to the service of man will change the face of thu earth — youtfi'.i companion the garefowl's fate complete k.ttlnctlon of hip lure nuiner oiw dre:lt auk kumily tiie great auk has became extinct within the last tiny years at am rate the general impression of or nithologists is that the iwrd lias disap peared forever except as specimens are preserved in museums prof new ton of cambridge england has in dulged the belief tha.1 the bird may yet be found living about the more inac cessible shores of the north but the hope has thus far been disappointed the fate f this bird is something strange when we consider that it be longed t a family that i numerons and hardy the divers ot which i was a variety live about the clin of northern shores their retreats are rarely visited by man they have an abundance of food in the lish of the sea they rear their young on the shelves of the rock if they are pur sued they easily escape by swimming and diving 0 all the divers none seemed more capable f taking care of itself than the auk according to wil son its powers of swim ning and div ing nr<»ijal>ly exceeded those of any other species of the feathered race the wing of the great auk appear to have been s short as to bear the character of paddles thus resembling tin pen guin of which it was the n rlhern rep resentative it laid iis solitary eg — about live inches long and thiv • inches at the greatest breadth on thu bare rock with lit any n.'-r as it was iu capable of flight it had to build on the lower ledges a livo specimen of the auk was cap tured oil sf icilda by the tueksm.in of the island of scalpa and wasscen there in the year 1821 while this bird was being indulged with a swim i.i the sea restrained by a cord fastened to one le it contrived to escape fro i a sub sequent owner it has been ascertained that there are about seventy-one ski.h of the auk and sixtv-fivc eggrs in different parts of the world in 1871 the value of a specimen of the fowl va estimated at not less than abo.it lire hundred dollars but it is now very much greater an auk's egg h now valued at from fifty to pounds the eggs vary in siza color and markings s<-mo being of a silvery white and others of a yellowish-white ground — tlio spots and : treak3 a!«r differing in form and ( olor within the in few years some admirably manufactured forgeries i hr-.-e egga hive been '. f red for sale — youth's c-j npanion a b!t of bunting somrihlng b..m n»e of all k nit ami tun manntartare after all wli t v i il 1 the tight little islands known - k .»;.-... t - bitainamoani to if no i'nii n jatk b . mti \ their ; power in •!,.• i , • • f t | m . world a..d as for that matfc-r ih ■■land of the fr.v and the horn ■of ih • h are if there were no stars and strips t .. gloriou«ly over ni mj i : l in : .. quartern i the gl ba i would i in tl ■■utter instan ■the - . . .- dry of erery i:.:l mi uablc dr .,. .: p tti sentiment that ignites in the lirea.-t of ; all fnll-l>l i ,\ rd am.'rii t - n the bare : sigjitof a cerliin ait.vngt ncnt off i citizana of tboae united >• . - ! ardently t the flag h all f:ii and i under all rlrcnnistane and it i one of the delightful s.-nsrtions invariably i reconlej in a journey abroad when • they tell of their bearis swol ing with '. hoiic-t pride atsig'al of tho 8 ii •; red wliiti and blue it seems a bit curious to », whoa o:io comes to think ov«r all die mischief i these national rags have ur • ight for they lead men straight on to death and destruction as gayly :>? though luring him to the surest jrinl of life s desires they may indeed ik mere symboli of weightier realities l>u after il much of l he purest love and honor t many peoples lie in embroidered f.»uls of siik or bunting fhc are immblej m their standard droops and triu uphaut a its colors dictate flags are the outward and noticeable rii of benevolence nii^'nt wealth and victory w.ir p^aee or disaster disaasp death i 1 : iviy as well ns protection and defi t.ic the making f ftagd i i btisinsss i .. iiapi rt ance in all seaport towns !'•>;■there is i continual demand f r such articles aboard all kinds of eraft it is simply astonishing to soa ii.jw blurt a tima it takes for sea wind and weather to whip the stoutest stuffs htto ribbons wlien the breeze uo;vs fair and v.ith sunshine plenly a bunting banner may bo carriej at the mast head oouio three mouths or moiv ■• it let one gale ruffle thu waters and bsfore the pretty strip i'i be lowered tli tctnik'.--t lias blown it into a e!i of latt»".'s siilo.s n i nil •. mttke tll bignals used on their vessels aa.l even borne of the larger standar is l>.u i ach one is supposed lo carry a set of flags belonging peculiarly to its rank which can only be manufuitt uv i on lu:id all the morchantin n have their flags made her nn it is quiie itiuto-stiiiu to turu over those a d'k 1 ■. iriou ear pe:in eon ii tries fur i n:np:u*is n whe ■the brazilian m-in-o'-war u visiiing this ciu the captain ordered a t tnplete set for his ship wbii was made of ihe finest quality of material ; ud num bers haw been - ..■: ee to e . i.>r mexico i .:•■ua \ ... i « .'■. r - uth american nation . in 9pite of all i • up . : . . oi yield he palm ot be.i l . ; ■th -. hag choseu by this connti . it is'uni.jne striking tnd elega'it co:n-i ir d vi ii tin great siinilarity existing iinon j foreign banners the lino and daintiest work is put oa a silk nati»ia an for like tapestry the,cmbroi lerv -!: ws the same on both i thosilk '•- a'wiys rich and u • t !: i : ; ir can i 1 pre tjer than the azure li<-id with slar.-i sown ihic-kly on the deep blue groun.l i tokiu over the stock the repnrrerc.vne ..■. s in yellow fl;krs de-«igni!d for quarantine statioos others fi>r naval dispatch wire white s^aarca with li blu < i.l>s worked in floss 1 ut n nr than all oth ers were fbe fre-jc'i !'. i r used ii iln 14th of july - v 0 tiitu d mocral a sea telephone commadicatltig cutler v:ilrr liv mi ana of n novel device some interesting nxpi-nmonls have lately been made t > t.-i tho fensibility f enabling shij \ , communicate with ono another by means of what may be called i sea ! ; leph •-. ii is known that water i a g..od transmitter of sound and that the vi'lucity with which sound i couvi*y«.l through il is about four tinn .•- great aa it velocity through tlic air experiments made n the lake f ieue\:i long ago showed thai the sound of a submerged ix*ll could be heard by means of :\ speciai form of ear trumpet also placed beneath the water at a dis ianec of sevcrnl n;i!<-s from the bell mr dover of h m s malabar has lately in a measure revived this experi ment only h has used a telephone in t i u of tn car-trampel as receiver of tlif sounds transmitted the apparatus eo:is:s!s i.f i ! ■■: •. hat bell or g.tng place i i i l)el w the water lini a a ship > i ■.: wliich ia 1 on:iccted t>y nif.-in-j of a tube with the deck that a ha mu r ■n be made to net on tho hell ■■: will this s ht transmitter tha :•'• i ; . • r con sists if i bell telephone with i large diaphragm placed in the ci uter <<: the bell and connecie.l by means of wires with another tflephoiie on the deck of the shin llus second instrument ii lie'd t llie observer's ear by ni":m of this apparatus it ia found that on.i'.i an be readily conveyed through the water for np ird uf i mil , and it is claimed that signjil-i i*an be thus made under the s i which w 1 1 ! be quite indep«mid'*nl <•'. fog • ;■my weathei . there • in to i ; to he only one we ik point in ibis method of -!_■ling and that i the want i :■. means of calling ha attention f.f th distant receivei when the tiansmitter wi i snd a flgnnl in rhe work in r < . : i in iry tdephono i •'.• obsorv r hai ..- - j itt iug («•':!, but t'.i .- . .. r.ith ti ca telephon •■i ) tht :'— ic if fog too tbe onlin irjr t •■... i ■". ding i»|t her by aoean of fla ■ight by lashing lights mr • aii c its i . . ndo ■'■a h . about love-letters no i ..: v .„,:, ;„ | ,,,., ull ., u b , j f m ilrirn i hlm t »' writing ,! i re :.-;;■».■began t a very « ; .'. i : :: l . world's hi t 1 '. 1 a ' ■... nenury evkl n v>i lv ,,.- ; l(lw * begun ur wli i «,.!,:. 1 i f^.r hut.tr i hazy when rv nndcrtnke to g<-t atthe ! ""'• ''■■■■■''■.::■..[> itlk f lb ) >■•"■:>! :• •■: i 1 . .- nu u 1 v wa invlud . ,.( lht , hum i i .. r-ilki«l ii ed - ••» lilltc '* • i r '■• . ... fallow — the ( . l uit .- inevit . ■■. *„! l*~t between . * ikhi to '"' s^pai •' ■ifivr tlit iiii lion i wrilii g if ad im :. • r , w n h.>w !.» write ,-.!,, .. ,, _-„>,( how much ; lo:»sun tl , ■. .. il.l fm i in ttio ■i i asaii n ■..-.- ;■.-. <■no il.mbl they would li:;\i )• :;.-.! fr.»m . . i other * few l;i < j .-; i r in epistolary communication t.n i!i;-iv w n do general poat-oiiice no f.i maiw n carrier system n ;•..»- in li.-ir time but v might hav left thiir i.-t t.-rs as millions •■. their descendants hare done in a hollow :•: ■■• an apple true for instance orundcr some loose flouo ii ;,,]) ,,{ tii -.,.'. :. m nil what a relief from ennui tiny w u;.l h:ivn band iii uiii an exchange uf rows and compljmi ::'- ::';'. to , ii r nothings why i it thai ihc publication of l<>v letters in conris i>l ian or in the news papers s ■. i . ... . the eon linen t why do ] ■•!••. ■! ind voting and of nil sort ami condition rush in crowds to :. .::.! almost tiarel over each . . ~ . !- ;.. boar lov letters i i-i and then ir • how and laugh ai them :«- ii ih had found something . . | ie i in n i f inn p why do grave u :■.:. i -.<>'.■: w.iintmi skip iil the sensible reading in n news paper if it h:ij':»-li to contain l luv«j fetter ami having re;vl thu laugh at it a it i v<*ro ll»e i;t ; i ui<1 st of gilbert's >- • ■: iti ■k**r ten t•'!! ii so a that vrhieli xii ll»;-ir risible x man m .- >■•. ■: tlioyonghly in love -. • i n ' '.. . h ■•!) there w are inl t have mi-m-1 some bappini >?. m least who didn't«ay ami do -..' t!ii _-. why 1j1 n doea evervbodv i ■< ; • iiii an irresistiuc ta eitnati fun ii ;!.<■maaweript love-m;ikin •• nn uufortunate whose letters l r t in > ii ■i-ouru n paper it is a mysten « • ■ill n attempt ta explain there '. ■■. '. - " " - g qata -..' • " .■■: ■u for s,ieoi:i • : * •<■r ••: ; ; i'v l5iu mi ri'j --,'... •,!.,:■ii.t.i i mo raa'pj eowrt ship xa»l llw pf il ■h whieii ■. : i ' " of fuu out of ni vv itt > . l •-- •- there i nothing 1 . . . ■: :! ry l kh old mmfs :■••■'. : ■■•• i i ■- l-i n i • ii iv had the social statist p:tlri.ir hs and weregi i •;'!',■•. ;.. i-iie them on ih i .- i -». would >'-•••.•(• that do ha il '. i7 in . ■- f rh in lnvo with may and .! sit-sihe i>:iiic:j f-iruiu la wen i in iti.il er i»l thi kind '■'■■■■■•"! i(e ibat th«j !..• it ol • ' • for :•. yoiinjj ., ■ih square f hi ■■i .' .. !;■■:■in ; • ■*. -. why make f i . • .. - 1 ■> ; trail - mvitv in'it , ; '. l rmes o lawyers iliiit j • r •■■x vij •. t t i qui'.c i c u . -. partiein ul m ... : iii ..:: ll'nc i and uu thinking x.iiiun . i : ; i rn iintmuitj ■ii ...:,.-..'■i»f ihe l.r-wr i . li'.r iti hid '!•■i '■if this \-. •■: i tru n i»ul i only ipply t a ven - ■■' i p iri ••'" ■■•■■- <» i.wlo arn uncage i in adi . • •• ■•. >■jm .■-. tim gn • ■■■■■i-rsan no o.-u pied in ital i r iit in inal ■■> - of busi ;.••-- t it-i w in re ther i rto : •■■u ;'!••■i'm i n in il ap piii nl lc ■. i udvih-iili's i iit in vitv -|>" i ..,-..!■•- !' i not ill peculiarity i»f the le/al prof i-a ilmi tohaveba-1 v:i«l iinw f ij pi u-titiouer for a inilr i n made at phj sieians an ! elc _;. ■.;!•• i i ■no ii>lble man foimis i jtul^meiii as '■> ah entire profi - ■m ly regard ing mcu oi ex id char i in ■. idenca - f intn more i-ii i l • '<» elhii : i ibli'xa ion mian tin h . - ■■and tlin abler la •• ■ihc in ire senai tive h ■■ii .: ■'; •■■■■'■in lhai respect of course lh lawyer i bound in the ... . ■hies in thi same way ns every other man he has o right to sacrifice them ;<> •> ili :•■•-. iti 1 v client fortunately i is very seldom lurco sr»rv for i lawyer t.i put iu>-;<-!f to th te.-t in l..i ;■-;> ■• 1 ■nl i im-t;»nce wrongful afta in l\m direction are no only iinmor.il lm inexpedient and iinim)'iti an i tl.'s is patent to erenr man of * judgment the onti dencci of ■> d^e and jun in i he honor ol t i a iv ,. a ■'■- h'n j k*k i i tr;vde and n in .'- of -••::- • woulil l |