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riie carolina watchman pol b series salisbury n c thursday july 4 1889 no 37 pianoforte tl j salisbi tfinv<l<nlprsays7n h uw v : . doqklas 4.1 without name and price stamped on the bottom i"'i blin dovrn is a irau x w l douglas ! 3 shoe oerjtl } f.winw best in hie i .,,,.. s5.oogem im ' ''• ■■• s4.o0 iiam»-s ' ',•-. 83 o r hits 83.50 i mi \ go us iriilji - - »:!(>(< and ■. sho1 w l s3 shoe la f d best m lttirg i i on mass examine w l don for m s.b salisbury o t:k1 - n " t jgsb[^^^sb!?j — pei ' i;k . forsale bj in ii ]'■'-■> -. i rr . ■: " m i : m ' ■' '■'■'.-'' ' '■■.'■r '■&£ ; d a atwell's ' hardware 3t0r 3 ■'■ii fgo'his in liis line :. ah a - be round { parf^^rpc 88.i soi . i<i tinttp wmlk '■nr.h 5^^)b : i jlilju t v - — ! h ronr home r c ' ■: i . ... .. • ■■_ ' • ' r ■'..-, '• ■' btiukuu .'-; in ;_ :-_ - i.i.i llllo z&x eixx . :■'■■« . nf.v \ kii absolutely pure i'lii io wtler never varies a marv of pur.t 5 • reiigih.and vliolesomeness more economical ■irdinan kinds and cannoi i sold in on n lib tin innlt it ud ol low tost . . iimn or phosphate powders sold only in itoyjt baking powdeb co 10k wall st n •> fur sale hy binjrliam & co , young fc bos t inn sin 1 n 1 murphy tcs ses 1q 1 everybody wants n spring tonic 1 ' 11 ■> .' testimonial \\ inch shi ws how ii !'•. i .■regarded it will knock your inalu :.' iir ami restore your appetite : splendid for a spring tonic a rlint.t ix ga jane 30 iss-f i uffered with malarial blood poison more or lli ■im ■, n nd the only medicine thai l'ooil is l !'•. ii it i undoubted ly the best l>lood medicinr made and for this il country should be used by every one in the pring of the year and is good in sum mer fall and winter as atonic and blood purifier gives batter satisfaction cadiz ky july g ! 887 please send me one box bloo ! balm catarrh l return mail as one of my customers _ b /.'. ii for catarrl a id wants a bos of ihv snuff b it it gives better satisfaction i ■; ild 1 have sold i j dozen in • 10 weeks and il gives good satisfac i.i 1 ,. i don t remit all right for snuff write me y*oui :. v 11 brandos it removed the pimples ;: • -.■■■1 : . , un terns march 29 1887 nd of mine has for several years ; . ii ubh'd with bumps and pimples on her c for a inch lie use ! varii u - co - i 1 order to reui >\ ■■them and beautify i but tli -;• local ■' ns were ■. : . ; irarj and left her 1 , iition i i mmeud an internal preparation — uood balm which 1 have ,. . and si it two years she l.ottli ■i nearly all pimples have . rcil in r skin i soft and smooth and 1 ■iltli much im rove i she ex : f much gr itifie i and can recom j 11 nd it to all v ho are thus affocted mrs «. m wilsox a book of w0ndees free all w 1 . ;-!:■■fu : 1 ifo in ! ; in ab mt tlie c iusc . ol poisons sa ruin md scrofulous ! s i 1 ■■■; ■■;. so "-. l,'i"u:n il km klliicy v it:ll . ■' ■■i'i secure l m il frpp ! 1 i kn .;■■t rt'o i'iits id start liril r prool ul.lr ss i -,\\ bi.oon 1 w.m c » tlanta in " . sfion r'atnlence til ■.."'- :•:-;» loirn tos 1 _ . ". .. - you hijj iiiad -< : ~^ z f n 1 £ 1 if j i urn - one i:p . s : .—.''. i ii ]> 1 lie . ■< ■■- ; . -. wnfferern from , . 1 r |> ays a<*:il nvmtook will find rei - . - iii :.: l kicclj i ugarcoated : ■■',.'..' lu v ii j i y w 1 1 k he p h th3i^?sdn & go m vntf \' 1 i'klus sash doors blinds work scroll sawing wood turning a>jd castings of all kinds dealers in steam engines and boiler steam and water pipe ■. fitting sh il'ting pulley mangers • >, .' • ■i y i liincry of all kinds repaired on short ndtick miir 1.1 38 ly < r.i:i cu vuje i ii < i.i:mi:nt ; craige & clement s.vi.i.-r.i k v n ('. b'eb.rjnl 1881 home company seekins jj > ]•}] / / ; : jr a strong company prompt reliable liberal ! pjjj j airodis becwnr i'n.-!.j-nt t ..,< asset s75o s ooo e v l s ] sbory ». c how a paper is made !: pr«y !;"■•'• is t paper lnade7 the question is easy to ivk but to answer it fully my dear were rather a difficult task : and yet in a bantering way as the whip-poor-will sings in the glade i'll venture a bil of a iv to tell how i paper in nia.le an editor sits at hi desk and ponilera the things thai appear to be claiming the thoughts of the world — thii .■- solemn and comic and queer — and when he o:s hit on a theme he judges it well to parade he writes and lie writes and he writes and that's how a paper is ma le an editor its at his desk and puzzles his bruin to make out telegraphic so squabbled and mazed it is hurl to tell what it is about exchanges are lyin^r around while waiting dispatches delayed ik clips and he clips and lie dips aa i that's how a paper is made an editor lit in t!u town in search of the things that are new — the things that the people have done the things they're intending t do — goes peering and prying about for items of many a grade : he tramp and he tramps and he tramps and that's how a pa pei is made and all that those workers prepare of every coneeivabla stripe is sent to the printer and lie proceedeth to stick it in type hi lines all respecting his will in slow-moving columns parade — lie sticks and he sticks and he sticks and that's how i paper is made hi short when the type is all set and errors cleared up more or less tis locked in a form as they say a nd hurried away to the press the pressman arranges his sheets his ink gives the requsite shade then he prints and he prints and he prints and that's how a paper is made — printers circular our danger and our duty charleston news ami courier henry w gradys address to ihe alumni of the i diversity of virginia yesterday was perhaps the bestefforl of liis brilliant life to the charm of his unrivaled rhetoric and the beauty of his english nnditied he added the grace of scholarship and the force of invulner able logic it whs out of the ordinary run of commencement orations and savored somewhat more of the school of politics than of academic groves and vet no utterance could have been more timely nor more helpful to the prop solution ut the tremendous problems which press upon us f oni even side the educate men of the count it are tli great conservative force which isio resi>r eiicro.f.-liineiit upon the citadel of our liberties which is to save the con>tii u i.i.i from impious hands which is t t hid against the man lish ment ol w,-.iii u it tit i t he as urice of power as mr iradv says : '" the u liveisily is the training camp of the hi tun ; ui scholar is the champion of the coming years what more ap propriate therefore than that he should have made his stirring appeal to the learned men of virginia and of the south to stand now and forever against the centralizing influences of money in this country lor argue as we please these are the chief dangers of the re public the student of the times cannot have failed to note the great departure of our govern men t from the plain and simple paths upon which it was started by the founders of this nation the constitution is derided the law is the foot ball of popular passion the courts are the creatures of corporations the daises are arrayed against the masses and money is the power which rules the hour the federal'st and the cap italist the centralist and the monoplist the strong government protecting the money power and the political standing army of the government hand in hand eompac tand organized one breathing the necessity the other meeting it ; con solidating wealth and centralizing gov ernment stripping tin 1 many of their right and aggrandizing the few dis trusting the people but in touch with the plutocrats striking down local self-government and dwarfing the citi zen and last confronting the people m the market in the courts at the bal lot box everywhere with the infa mous challenge what are you going to do about it y " such is the true and startling picture which mi iradv draws of the clanger which threatens this boasted land of freedom and well may it give tone to serious meditation and lead the people , to a more thorough and compact or ganization against the twin foes to popular liberty centralization and plutocracy to make our bulwarks strong and our defence stable there must be maintained now and all the time and everywhere the right of self government—the states within the nation anil yet the nation dependent ! upon the states the money-changers must lie driven out of the temple of legislation the concessions granted to the trusts must be withdrawn the peo ple must have tile light to make a liv ing with their own labor and against the dangers of centralizing all political powers united and firm we must pit the approved and imperishable princi ple of local self-government _««^.»<^>«-^^»— — — the pans academy of science is just dow excited over a plant called coloca si.i the plant ofu-n exhibits a trem bling or vibrating motion without any apparent cause i\\a as many as lot or 120 vibrations huje l>\'u observed in a single minute true rcfine^en one hears much talk of this desir able qu dity nowadays but the idea of i it is often very v.igue what is re ] tiuement we are not of those who think that i i it consists of a studied quietness of ; dress and manner some very refined ; people think shockingly and they even j have loud voices and yet their good : breeding is patent to all the world we once met i whole family of deli cate ladies at a fashionable summer re sort on the banks or the hudson whose idea of refinement was languor and ill-health they thought it was just too vulgar to be too healthy and : strong quite too mannish in a lady among some people size is thought to have a great deal to do with refine ! men it is unrefined to be large ! gross to be fat coarse to have weight j rind monstrous to have prominent tea ; tures a large neck large cheeks or | lips are especially opposed to all refine ruent now little peeple are certainly very j cunning very curious but we cannot j all be fairies nor do we wish it only j fancy a whole world of these little creatures why even trade would lan guish smaller quantities of every thing would be needed from cloth and flannel all the way down to oysters and buckwheat cakes no large people are necessary io keep the world moving we once knew of a fash.onable lady j who liked her ciergym in because he preached such refined sermons when ; a distinguished literary man died re cently we were told he was not a re filled person well perhaps he was not but he was so distinguished in other ways that we really had not thought of his refinement we would just us soon have asked whether paul was a refined man or whether isaiah v«nt to babylon to acquire good form as some persons go to london now for that purpose there are some people who are always trying to be refined like rosamond in middlemarch they so trained them selves th it by the help of uice clothes u sweet voice and a placid demeanor they appear outwardly to be refined there are we believe many people in a very humble station in life who are truly refined in their feelings who , are yet quite unpolished outwardly their hearts are right they have the , consideration for others which is the i very basis of refinement there are also others in good society j whose natural sweetness of disposition < constantly shows itself in kind and j i gentle words and deeds toward all no ! j effort is needed on their part to be courteous and amiable for thev fee so and naturally their outward manners are but the reflex of that which i within such persons arc charming they like everybody and everybody likes them we all know a few such and are thankful the chief desideratum appears to be a good heart if we truly love our neighbors we cannot fail to in kind . n 1 sweet to them and if we n e in different all the care we take of our manners all our studied refinement ill our stylish conversation will ha as dust and ashes there are those who find it difficult to care for their neighbors they wish them well but do not want to be bothered with them they always try to be civil but it is uphill work and they are glad when the trial is over their refinement must make them smile and bow and say yes and no at proper intervals but have they nothing more is there no in terest felt except in their departure nothing is valuable miles genuine who cares for paste diamonds and im itation cut glass outward polish is of slight worth without the true re finement of the heart — home journal wanted to see if he was cheated detroit free l'rcv a man who had just set up in the hardware business and who had been a clerk where the eccentric millionaire stephen grirard had been in the habit of trading applied to him for a share of his patronage iirard bought of him but when the bill was sent in i he found fault and marked down the i prices cash off nail he growled which i was offered for so and so you have barged so and so and you must take it off i can not do it said the young merchant but you must do it roared air ; girard i cannot and will not was the final reply girard bolted out apparently in ; a rage but soon after sent a check for the whole bill the young man be gan to relent and say to himself perhaps he was offered them at tha price but it is all over now i am sorry 1 did not reduce the bill and get it out of him on something else hi trade would have been worth a good deal to me by and by girard came again and gave him another order the young man was very courteous and said he was almost sorry he did not reduce the former bill reduce a bill exclaimed iirard had you done it i would never trade with you again i merely meant toste if vou had cheated me " feather beds during the warm weather manv people discard the feather bed as some thing uncomfortably warm for use placing it away with blankets and comforts until the advent of winter some people who are cramped for room put the feather bed under the mattress which is a very poor plan and ought never be done as the feathers are sure to be matted together and will require a great deal of work t.i make them tit for use in the fall when thi . way of disposing of a feather bed is used the mattress should be taken off frequent ly and the bed beneath be given a thorough shaking and airing before putting away a leather bed it should be cleansed and aired well when the ticking is soiled in spots and the rest of the lied clean remove the spots with ammonia water and soap take a basin of warm water and into it put enough water to make it quite soft then with a soft cloth dipped in this and with good soap nib briskly until the stain has disap peared if the spot is very obtinate scrub with a small stiff scrubbing brush rinse well in clear water and wipe with a clean dry cloth place the bed in the air until perfectly dry but never on any account put it where the sun will fall on it as the sun draws out the oil from the feathers and will in a short time destroy them feathers are very much improved by washing have a number of bags about the size of pillow cases made of unbleached ci tton and into these place the feathers place on the stove some ammonia water in a wash boiler and cut up into it some good soap place the bags containing the feathers in the boiler and l^t boil about ten minutes which is usually long enough then tak ■out and put in cold clear water and rinse thoroughly place in a i shady place to dry the ticking should be washed and ready to receive the feathers when they are dry i when ticking becomes old it is much ; better to get a new ticking than to wash the old one after making a new bed always wax or soap the seams on the inside to prevent the feathers working through if there is an attic storeroom it is an excellent place for putting away the feather beds for the summer liave a '■■dothes line across the room and over ibis hang the bed open the windows frequently to air it if it must be placed away in a closet or box take it j mt a tew times each month into a room open the windows and let in the iir in the country some housewives leause a feather bed by putting it on the grass when expecting rain and al otving it to get saturated then when he ram ceases letting it remain tuni ng it and changing its position f re j piently until thoroughly dry -- amrri i mi ( ultivator stay on the farm newewton enterprise the farmers life is one mixed with toil and pleasure there is work to be lone on the farm—a gate to mend a fence to reset an ox in the ditch a broken door co repair a garden to plow i tank o build a crop to plan a crop to plant a crop to cultivate a crop to gather and a thousand things to keep rue active brain and willing hands and feet employed yet if the fanner wishes ii little recreation he can leave his tools and labor and spend a day or two in the woods with his gun or a day with fishing rod on the lakes and streams it is not so with the business man in the city his business must go on he cannot shut his door and walk out if he takes a day off he necessarily has to put some one in his place farm life is a real enjoyable life if well plan ned but it may be full of misery if not managed with a view of making and mixing pleasure with business farmers do more hard work than bus j ness men and usually live longer and harder farm life is made more tolera ble by the joy and happiness the farmers get out of it the business man has ins bills to meet every month and is often puzzled how to make em's meet he looses hours of precion.s sweet sleep over embarressnients that stalk in his pathway while the contented farmer without the fear of being clos ed up by the sheriff takes his rest farnn-rs have bills to meet it is true but they don't come like rifle balls from a whitworth gun every week or two the writer has tried farm life and loves it he has als > tried business in the commercial world where no a lowances are made for dry weather wet weather short crops or low prices the com mercial world has no sympathy with a business man the day hi bills fall due he is expected to meet them if he is unable his paper is liable to go to protest and his business to pieces those who are doing well in agricult ural pursnits should let well enough alone the cities are overcrowded with population and poverty the most in dependent class of people in the world is that one which has a good home on a good farm and make their own liv ing - - — — wt tmt r at the reading class boy i reading > - and re sue sailed down the riv er -" teacher why are ships c illed she'r boy < alive to the r - sponsibilities of his sex because the need men to manage them the merits of the sand-ba sti •■-■■landmark if this paper had any influence with the administration which is about to take hold of the revenue umchine in j this district it would suggest to old i man-not-afraid-of-the-devil to taboo i shooting-irons and brass knucks and arm his reliables with sand-bags chi cago lias the honor of being the hist to : | have introduced the sand-bag in this j country but since then it has been , muh affected by other cities and its in creasing popularity is the best proof of i its merits as we understand it the handy revolver and nimble knucks are not intended necessarily to put the bourbons to death with but only to bring them into a proper state of sub jection and this being the case they rare open to objections the revolver or winchester in the hands of a reve j nne officer being somewhat carelesslv : handled lias been known to snuff out the light of a person whom it was in tended only to cripple for life or to | make a s-eive of and when fatal conse quences thus ensue they might be fol lowed by the annoyance of a trial in : the federal court and the loss of prob i ubly several weeks time the knucks are less apt to do fatal work but they digfignre a man and when the gentle man representing the majesty of the • law jumps on him to stomp him there | is danger of blood getting on the cloth ing and top boots f the gentlemanly j officer and the stain of blood is noto riously bard togetout thesaud-bag on the contrary is neat noiseless and highly effective it deadens a man the same as an axe-heive but does not break his head nor have his blood squirting around over his betters it never snaps and never gets mixed up in the pocket with key rings and the like but is always rea'ly for use and is prompt and rel able its introduction m this district would be a pleasing in novation after using the weapon for ei while the reliable would have no oilier and the citizens generally would prefer it with its paralyzing qualities to the former instruments of perfora rition and disfigurement gathered treasures selfishness is the nioth-r of most of our sorrows set not too high a value on your own ability people's intentions can only be de cided by their own conduct when von meet a heart that is true ilon't be afraid to trust it he who waits to do a good deal of good at once will never do any strict honesty is the crown of one's early days charity is one of the noblest virtues thut link earth with perfection to be able to enjoy art truly and fully is an indication that there is some good within us e is good that does goo-1 to others if he suffers foi the good he doe he is better still thou wilt be great only in propor tion as thou art gentle and courageous to subdue passions l ive in marriage should be the ac complishment of a beautiful dream and not as it too often proves the rnd contentment is a pearl of great price and whoever secures it at the expense often thousand desires makes a wise and h;ip purchase a good deed is never lost he who sows courtesy reap friendship and he who paint kindness gathers love there is no sphere in life so narrow or confined that it does not afford op portunities for doing good to someone we cannot conquer fate and neces sitv but we can yield to them in such a way as to be greater than if we could the distance of memory alone can change the drop of time through which we swim into the rainbow of enjoyment in all wordly thing that a man pur sues vith the greatest eagerness itnag ; inable he finds not half the pleasure in the actual possi ssion that he pro posed to himself in the expectiun of i them honor is but the reflection of a man's own actions shining bright in the face of all above him and from thence re bounding upon himself the severest punishment of any in jurv is the consciousness of having done it and no one but the guilty know the withering p liius of repentance there cannot live a more unhappy creature than an ill-natured old man i who is n ither cap ible of receiving pleasures nor sensible of doing good to otners no man ever sunk beneath the bur den cf to-day it is when to-morrow's ! burden is added to the burden of to-dav that the weight l-econaes more than we < ill bear ). we should no more lament th ave grown nld tli n the husl ludut.an when the blormi and fragrance h:,s p wed away should lament that sun ' ii>er h . - gone and autumn ha come odds and ends there isa company organized in eng land which insures yon against bur glaiy the americans in paris subscribed 10,000 in a single day in aid of th pennsylvania sufferers the out population of great britain is over 7,000,000 and almost 4,500,00(1 kittens annually enter the world in the sydney courts it has been de cided that no sunday newspaper can sue for advertisements the contract being illegal plenty of sleep h conducive to beau ty even a garment looks worn when it looses its nap binghamton repub lican the majority of the writers on oc cult subjects are hindoos and english and the best theosophical works are is sued in london there are only two women living who have gowns embroidered with real pearls they are queen margneritaof italy and airs bonanza mackav news romes from tounga burmuh that koh pal sail a timber merchant there has founded a new religion which is described as a sort of mixture oi buddhism and christianity the desciples who number several thou sands keep the christian sunday and nbtain from strong drink the paris exposition lias brought sadness to a large part of paris the shop keeepers the restaurant keepers and theatrical managers find that the show drains the boulevards and that their business is reduced in a manner unknown since the seige ten ears ago there were twenty-one railroads which could not interchange cars owing to the gauge now all are alike and cars owned in maine are seen slipping over the rails in texas the railroad system of the united states is declared to be as perfect as asystem can be made a connecticut woman is suing her neighbor for damages for putting up fly screens she claims that the hies which cannot get into the neighbor's house on this account will come to hers and she will thereby have double the usual number an encouraging literary note is that there is no longer iiy money in the nov el of passion the public have become tired of the heroes who press kiss aft ei kiss into the rove vale of her curved mouth and of heroines whose sighs of love rend their fragile frames witli their tigerish fervidity attainments are nev r so well exhib ited as when they exhibit themselves the attainment ought to show the man and not the man the attainment a small man is generally anxious tu show all the i/e that he can but a great man's size is seen without his ef fort to show it 11 lay truinbnll the city of beau n os ayres in the argentine republic has expended do - inn the last mx years 10,000,000 m constructing sixty magnificent school buildings fer • '••»•• pupils each these school houses are the finest buildings in the city and a collective exhibit of th jbi has made a sensation at the paris exposition the argentine republic is now after the united states the country which spends most in propor tion to population tor education bankruptcy in england ranks next to h high crime if a member of par liament lose in property ami be abju dicated a bankrupt lie at once loses his seat in that august body a mayor alderman councilor guardian overseer member of school board highway board burial board or select vestrv also forfeits his office if lie prove so derelict in his business affairs as to be unable tu pay his debts no man ever achieved a great suc cess in anything whether finance trad art literature law i science who is habitually buttoned up in i prince albert coat no man h mind and body cm lie entirely free whox in and body are encased or cramped ; in anything but an easy business suit 1 toil ( iz tte — — two ways of telling the story lawyer now mr costello will you have the goodness to answer me dire*ctly and categorically a few plain questions w itness certainly sir now mr costello is there a f male at present living with you who i known as mrs ( lostello 1 there is i she under your protection - she is now on your oath do you ni.tiib tain her i do " have you ever been marriwl t her 11 1 li ive not ( here several jurors scowled gloom ily at mr costello that is all mr costello foil mav go down opposing iun<el stop one mo ment mr costello is the female in question your grandmother 1 ■w hc i
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1889-07-04 |
Month | 07 |
Day | 04 |
Year | 1889 |
Volume | 20 |
Issue | 37 |
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, July 4, 1889 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 | 601561038 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1889-07-04 |
Month | 07 |
Day | 04 |
Year | 1889 |
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 5370363 Bytes |
FileName | sacw16_18890704-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:28:57 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 |
riie carolina watchman pol b series salisbury n c thursday july 4 1889 no 37 pianoforte tl j salisbi tfinv |