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the carolina watchman fol xviii.-t2ird series salisbury n c thursday july 7 1887 no s7 while th a queen was receiving the p of her subjects in london at union hall in new york was vr itten on the walls the following of misrule in ireland mine 1.500,000 - v ;....! 3.668,000 i 4,200,000 who d:ed of ship j 5-000 t , ,.,-,.. i t d under coercion - over v in suppressing public meetings j0 ts oo j | for resisting ty \ ninny j died in english dungeons . 27 j the following preparation applied to irface will prevent any rusting on plows or any other metal surfaces : melt n of resin in a trill of linseed oil hot mix with two quarts of |. tfiis can be kept on hand an d applied in u moment with a brush or rag to the metal surface of any tool that ;•',,, t going to be used for a few days . r tii any ni and saving much ime comes to use it again nregenerallv good at flattering t f r nothing else unfailing specific for liver disease ovejatfirsc c bitter or ba.l tuste in otrnrll'fffloi mouth tongue coated • i w i i brown fur pain in the hack shies or joints often mistaken lur rheumatism iur stomach loss if appetite sometiinch nausea and water brash or mi ■■' . n ■liatulent-y uivl acid uions bowels alternately eostivo u headache lossol memory with apnn no having failed to do ■have been done debility ; low spirits a thick,.yeuow np ■• i>f the sk.a and rs a dry r restlessness ; the urine is ire ' . nd if allowed to ■:. posits a si ... ,, it simmons liver regulator purely vegetable rallv 1 in the o'.'.mi to arouse ;. ; ; idl-iver to a healthy action it acts with c<'raord nary efficacy on ih tiver sidneys 1 and bowels : for malaria bowel complaints l>y»l><-l>sla siclc heiutar.li 1 >, count iimtinn lsuionsneso kidney affections jaundice mental i><-j>r«-ssio-i < i\>r f : 7 million ! the best fawisly kzebisffie forchlldren for a.lults ani : i s t;d only genuine has - :- z sump in r 1 on fr nt of wraj ; ex j h zeilin & co philadelphia fa i m moruietoks l'ricc sj <;.). fledmont wagonj midi at hickory n c can't be beat they stand where they ought to right square at the fh nt it was a hard fight but they have won it just read what people say about ih in and if you want a wagon come quickly and buy on i either for cash or on time s.vli8buhy n c s pt 1st iss6 t.ui years n^o i bou 111 i v».'n lh two l»ors \ va^on i ' 1 agi nt j o a boyilen lv nsoi it n r . i tin 1 time sill 1 liave 1 1 i < ■. 1 it si:vel ill ■: s:l\v ,.-; [>, ui.i li.ivt not lu.i to p;i one (•• ui t'n repiirs i look up m thr p liniinl \\ i ' si i'him , .., i i ) i . i te«i slates j j til . ■i 1 -; excellent j tcknkis l i uomasos salisbui'.t n 0 aug 27ih 1886 bout vo ye:irs ir i i»i»ii^ht nt jim a fi v ; ■,;, mil horse pieihuniit iv.i^on whith n ice hll 1 nn h1 t of it in riven ivra und consequent not liiny lor rt-pnirs john d iiem.y s vi.i>m"ky n c sept 3 i i s8g h npn i bought t john , j j in ii thimble skein pied | , used it pretty nun h ; . prnvcil to lie ii ii-l dthin ibout it has u en ,•:.,• ii ias required nn re t a waltox ss i t'i:v n c sept h h i s86 ■<) i hmi.sht it tii 1 alien i . in i cj in thimble kkein picdiiioi.t tea nnc horse « asnr - i | r in almnsi ronstanl ii i r.nd | i iv i i'er in it :.' ii . t 1 •. d tl'iit vv'tlif)ul n i . l r ■"< .-.: "-■-. the turkle and the crane a plantation sermon by rev ephbiam m os ely about twenty-five years since the sub j stance of the following fable was related j to the writer by a venerable family ser vant on a louisiana plantation a young lad returning from a successful terrapin | hunting expedition exultiugly showed i his prize a homely and vicious snapping i turtle to the old plantation oracle who ! forthwith regaled his interested auditor i with a characteristic story and plantej i at once in his breast a feeling of respect i for the peculiar talents of the turkle i afar down souftlar's a lonely lake dat's bordered roun by a tangled brake whar cypress trunks wid deir trailiif mosa rtaml towerin over de live-oak's gloss and l(>tu rafs all aroun its rim low floatin swing in de shadows dim and dar de waters so silent lie key seem like part ofc midnight sky ii ]"».• moon shines dar like a silver plate each star above -'■(.- a sli*epin : in.:te down dar whar oven de stars might rest an time stop still on deir unstirred breast an snnrise sunset may dye detn red bui noonday suns shinin overhead can't light dem waters wid brazen glare thro pale mists hangiu like curtains derc iii no man since noah land from de ark upon dat shore ever lei his mark no man since adam in eden stood has ever slept in dat solitude de varmints only dat nightly roam or birds of air may have t'.nin dat home and dar tore brif-days of abel and cain a turkle lived wid a tall white crane iv dey dwelt in peace and dey fished and j played dc turkle dived vhar de crane couldn't i wade i aii drh ' de fish to the aidge of de lake j whar mister crane kep his eyes awake and gig»ed ! dem thro wid his piiited bill twell l.e and turkle had cotched deir fill dis partnership might have stood till now dut didn't — and dis is de reason how : v dey got too fat an too lazy bofe when one would tish den de udder'd loaf dey quar'led de crane call de turkle ' black : de turkle answer dc crane right back j and scz you lish in your sunday close whilst 1 gits muddy up to my nose de crane ne say dat me turkle's shell all slushed wid mud peared jest as well vi dc turkle sez dat i'm better'n you for 1 got lour laigsand you got two deu 1 sleep down beneai'de oak an you roos high in de rain an smoke de cold days come an 1 makes my mound whilst you must jarney de arth half roun or your long neck cotch desorefroat bad an 1 e lariiu while you feelssad vii but my two laigslo:iger"n ten eryourn thus st-z de eraue an i'm swilny borne wnar you can't climb wid dese wings of mine dat 11 ish like snow in de bright sun shine kin you cotch fish in dat lofty sky you trus your wings an vou bown to die * remark de turkle tho i can't rise 1 crawls au gitd whar de victuals lies viii and dar dey starved for de turkle fused to dredge dc bottom bekase accused of wearm close of a color made to uii de work whar his talent laid d crane couldn't dive air he couldn't swim no tish riz up to dat lakelet's brim so hongry ivadin lou far he drowned de tunde died on de hard dry ground ix afar down souf do i see again broad fields of cotton and sweeps of cane de plow and hoe in de hands dat toil in hands hued dark as the loamy soil and breasts as brown as de turtle's shell all holding hearts dat work brave and well and brawn dat bears bofe de cold and sun j from new year's day till de year is done x my sarnion's done let all wise folks larn about whom lessons like dis cousarn : 1.k darky's made for to dig and hoe or gather craps dat de groun mu.s grow white folks co boss an to trade an sell so bole can flourish iu life's brief spell together bearin each one his share devil prosper eho'ly if hole tote square xi a hard head mule in a hot july would make a million o while men die and gittin credick from money banks would turn we cullered folks uuu u cranks go on old turkle and dredge de lake and mister crane keep your eyes awake but one needn't brag on his clean white close not t 3 udder mind bout his muddy nose r a wilkinson sleeping in water skillful work by the divers i'xr under the gloomy tide did i ever ser a dead man sitting in a chair in a stateroom and bending over a book as though he had been reading when he was drowned nev er nor has any other diver then the tales one hears about such matters are a little off they're siinpl lies there's more iving about diving than any other oe j t upatioii give me a straight story 1 well to begin with i'll dispo.ee of that yarn about corpses being found s'.tting in chairs in the staterooms of sunken steamer i've been in sunken steamers that were full of corpses there was for insance the hamburg steamer cimbria which went down ! in the north sea some five years ago with 500 emigrants i and two other divers from here who were sent for to help iu getting out the cargo literally worked among hundreds of corpses the ceilings were lined with them the ceilings 1 yes sir a diver working n vpssel i or corpse feel for them along the j fceilings if the wreck is older than a couple of days if he goes into her only a day or two after she went down he feels along both the floors and ceil ings that's where the corpses are not in chairs why did the send away over here for divers to go down into tiie cim bria because new york divers are on top of the heap the reason is that most of their work is lone in the dark for it's pitch dark under the waters around new york i suppose it's on ' ; accout of the sewerage a diver from j other waters can't work in those around new york but a new york diver can work in the clear waters elsewhere twice as fast as the local divers because his sense of touch sense of touch under water is so finely developed we new york divers can tell various met els if they are nnder water apart by sense of touch but if they are not under water we cannot teel any differ ence between them hen for instance are a piece of copper and a peice of brass put them on the table and blindfold me and i can't tell which is which chuck em in the basin and pour water over them and i can tell the moment i touch the pieces which is the cupper and which is the brass yon see we new york divers have to ply all kinds of trades in the dark then you have to be pretty handy ?" yes sir if a green hand came to me and wanted to learn the professoin or diving the first thing i'd advise him would be to go to sea till he'd learned the ins and outs of all kinds of vessels and how ro handle and store car go then he's pretty competent to work wrecks next i'd tell him to learn all kinds of trades for we don't consider working wrecks a very fine line of the | profession the real fine work is when the diver has to ply some trade such as carpentering or pipe-laying under j water for instance a very fine job was the laying of the line of pipe for the health department from port i morris to north brother island the diver had to keep the line straight un pick tile pipe put it together and in fact do in the dark the work of a skill ful pipe-layer do you dive much for treasure " there is not much of that going on now the biggest job of that kind was the hussar the work on that wreck had to bo d ie many feet under the l»ed of the river right where she went down right when she went down over a hundred yp;i\:i ago a wreck remains on the same spot where first she reach es bottom as years roll on she works down into the be 1 of the river and so where the hussar sank so long ago lies her hulk the diver got out the stern post but didn't find any treasure i don't believe that any treasure will be found on the site of the wreck i have heard that official documents in england show th-it after the hussar struck the treasure was loaded into her barge which upset from the shifting of ome box s of the coin opposite a red house on randall's island somepeop e '] tve a crazy notion that captain kid's vessel with a vast deal of treasure went down off peekskill and not long ago a syndicate employed a diver for two summers he didn't find a trace of wreck some divers who haven't been long enough in the profession to be .;.,- l.u tlv employed anil have a go ■-, fid ot time on their hands work <>'<• wrecks for instance the commodore off stouington the isaac newton off fort lee and the thomas morgan off honkers but there isn't a fair day's wages in such jobs sometimes how ever we hear of old wrecks that haven't been worked yet and they are worth ooking after two years ago one of us who were building the foundation for the pier of a bridge at say brook heard that a schooner loaded with cop per and coa had gone down there some thirty-live years ago il the wreck and got out the cargo which was still in prime condition but there are as many lies about old wrecks as there are about the corpses whenever a sailor is thirsty but hasn't any money he concocts a lie about a wreck and comes to us with it he almost always goes away as thirsty a he came what does a diver's outfit consist of a boat a pump ho-e line and dress the dress consists of a layer of cluck and rubber the shoes weigh twenty pounds each on his chest and back lie carries forty-pound weights the helmet when it has been placed over the diver's head is screwed into a cop per collar that is attached to his dress a weighted line is sunk to the spot he is to reach and down that line he goes with the life line around his waist and the lose through which the air is pumped attached to his helmet those who handle the ire i e and the hose must regulate t iese a he moves a ,. ut below whrti 1 id:v.-r ; working day snuhb vrrges four hours and 80 if he furnish es his own aparatus his wages are high er 835 to 850 a day for getting a ' hawser out of th 1 steamer's screw i'd , charge 850 if i furnish my own appa ratus i suppose part of the charge is for j the risks you run ?" yes a diver is exposed to a great i many dangers on of them you'll he ! surprised to learn is falling asleep j on a hot day the contrast betwen ihe j heat above and the dilicious coolness ' below is apt to make a diver sleepy j 1 once slept an hour and a half at the i bottom of a wreck near kingston j where i was laying pipe suppose j that had happened in the channel near j governor's island where the tide runs i so swift that a diver can work only one j hour of slack water if i'd slept over | that one hour the deadly rush of tide j would have snapped the life line and j hose then in working wrecks there \ is the danger of getting jammed in \ freight or of getting the lose or line j tinijl d when the hose snaps the frightful pressure kills the diver he i is sicken ly distorted by it are there anv expert divers in new york look he held out a shield-shap ed badge on which was engraved new york divers license f c no 1 what does f c stand for " first class there are only about a doz n of those badges out i'm no j 1 — robert s russell or funeral bob as they call me among others are william carl or buffalo bill jim hicks jack bundy jack chittenden ed mcdonald frank paul bill smith and dan joslin funeral bob once walked against time and made eight miles in eight hours and thirty seven minutes — gustav koble in pittsburg dispatch — m - tim • tim why mark twain left tho army at a recent banquet of union vete rans in baltimore the american hu morist mark twain related his experi ence as follows when your secretary invited me to this reunion of the union veterans of i maryland he requested me to come ! prepared to clear up a matter which he said had long been a subject of dispute and bid blood in war circles in this i country to-wit the true dimensions of my military services in the civil war and the effect they had upon the gen eral result i recognized the impor tance of this thing to history and 1 i have come prepare here are tho de i | tails i was in the civil war just two ' | weeks in that brief time i rose from private to second lieutenant the monumental feature of my campaign was the one battle which my command | fought it was in the summer of 01 ir i do say it it was the bloodiest bat tle ever fought in human history there is nothing approaching it for destruc tion of human life in the tieid if you take into consideration the forces en gaged and the proportion of death to survival and yet yon do no even know the name of that battle neither do i it had a name but i have for gotten it it is no use to keep private information which you can't show off iu our battle there was just fifteen men engaged on our side — all brigadier-gen erals but me and i was second lieuten ant on the other side there was one man he was a stranger we killed him it was night and we thought he was an army of observation he looked like an army of observation — in fact he looked bigger than an array of ob servation would in the day time and some of us believed he was trying to surround us and some he was going to turn our position and we shot him poor fellow he probably wasn't an army of observation after all but thai ". asn't our fvnlt as i say he had all the looks of it in tint dim light it was a sorrowful circumstance but he took the chances of war and he drew the wrong card he overestimated his fighting strength and he suffered the likely result but he fell as the brave should fall with his face to the front and feet to the field — so we buried him vith the honors of war and took his things so began and ended the only battle in the history of the world where the opposing force was utterly extermina ted swept from the face of the earth — to the last man and yet you don't know the name of that battle you 1 don't even know the name of that man now then for the argument sup pose i had continued the war and gone on as i began aud exterminated the opposing force every time every two weeks where would your war have b?en why you see yourself the conflict would have been too one-sided there was but one honorable course for me to pursue and i pursued it i withdrew to private life and gave the uni'-i cause a chance there now you have the whole thing in a nutshell it was not my preseace in the civil war that deter mined that tremendous contest — it was my retirement from it that brought the crash i left the confederate side too weak it is an accepted superstition with the girls of geneseo 111 . that if a girl who walks nine miles on the railroad track without falling off the next man she speaks to will be her future hus band real smart girls take the fellow along and halloo to him a scon as the | ordeal is past agricultural facts | if young horses suffer from cramps give laxative food such as bran mashes in france vicious horses are subdued by electricity while being shod young and growing animals are the m st profitable for the farmer the best breed is good care good water good feed aud good barn resolve that you will henceforth grow small fruits for family use i as a rule the best quality and the best yield go hand in hand , impure air in the hennery causes many of the finest fowls to sicken and dip ; new vegetables fruits and grains are generally overrated by their intro ducers let the boys and girls have plots of their own to cultivate it is better to cultivate a few acres thoroughly than to skim over many coarse-wooli.d sheep are more liable to be infested with ticks than merinoes never forget to remember to salt ; and water your stock regularly the best floor for a poultry house is ! the dry earth kept dry and clean hi france over 200,000 people are ! engaged in raising beets forsugar the red onion is said to hold its flavor longer than any other variety to raise turkeys feed as for chickens and keep from the vet when voung queen bees should always be raised from the very best stock in the apiary unleached wood ashes added to the radish bed will keep it free from worms there are good and rich milkers in all breeds of cows glycerine and sulphur mixed are good for gapes in young chickens better uproot old played-out fruit gardens the lands is wasted raise some variety of popcorn with very small kernels for the young chicks don't grow fruit or vegetables too thick thinning out improves size and quality to destroy briars elders etc cut them down now and as often as they reappear clover pastures increases the milk yield of cows and makes yellow but ter begin bee-keeping with one or two colonies and study the subject as you en huge and extend the business belter late than never clean out the cellar and clear up the yard if these matters are not already attended to sluggish horses are generally made so by the way they are handled a lazy man is pretty sure to have lazy horses the gain on a flock of sheep may be called a weather profit says one good for ewe was trie lamb-like re spone a new cheap and effective insect killer is composed of one part muriate of potash in one thousand parts of water the man who warms himself up every morning grooming his horses will be well remunerated for his trou ble you cannot grow plants with li wet feet farmers had therefore better have tiles in the ground than on their heads there is no one thing that is so much required nowadays on the aver age farm as to thoroughly systematize labor you will be likely to save trouble by speaking kindly to your horses every time you approach them in the stable or elsewhere the more an acre will produce the larger the profit and the better you cultivate that acre the more it will pro duce dandelions for greens 1 are raised by the arce around boston holding the first rank on the list of spring greens most farmers can keep a few hives f bees to advantage honey like fruit should be often found on the farmer's table a kan3as boom a traveler in kansas while crossing ii prairie the other day came upon a party of men who seemed to be j preparing the land for agricultural pur j poses my friend said the traveler ad j dressing one of the men you are lay ; ing off your enn rows quite a distance ' apart corn rows " th.p man gasped yes those rows over there my stars stranger !" exclaimed the kansas man is it possible you ain't hearn of it ' heard of what of the boom man alive them ain't corn rows over thar they air j street an this here is a city you air i now on ihe corner of coromerc.ial and emporium streets an not in the check of a corn row as you moot sappose xew york tribune lightning freaks during a severe thunder storm at as ! bury park n j a few nights ago the lightmng danced all about town on the telegraph and telephone wires little bulls of lire which changed with grei t rapidity to all colors and shapes fizzed and crackled about the telephones iu the hotels a ball of fire sis large as a quart measure played about the tele phone in the coleman house a few minutes before midnight t sputtered and spit like a oat finally disappearing after giving forth four or five reports like that of a small revolver a little firey ball showed itself ibont the tele phone in the office of the dally spray and jumped upon a steel composing stick in the hands of a compositor hurling it high over the type case at which he was at work another bolt ran into the western union telegraph company on cookman avenue and partly melted some of the heavy brass work of the switch board the light ning struck a cottage on bangs avenue iu west park occupied by benjamin ludlow and his family the bolt struck the chimney and bounded off upon the roof tearing the weather boards from three of the corners of the structure and wrecking the dining room the dining-room chairs and table were overturned and the window curtains were torn into ribbons two pretty canary birds whose cages hung from the window casings were un harmed and sang merrily this morn-i ing when crowds of people visited the house mr ludlow and his wife and two little daughters occupied the bed room above the dining room they were awakened by a clap of thunder but did not know that the house had been struck until mrs ludlow smelled fire and her husband went down stairs | and found great holes in the side of his house parts of the weather boards were seperated into slivers which just held together so that the boards re sembled thick straw floor matting at patterson n j an inky cloud had passed over the city quietly and was some distance to the east when from an almost cloudless portion of the sky there came a hash that made peo ple's hearts stop the flash was in a zig-zag course till it neared the ground i in the vicinity of main street bridge where it broke into two forks and struck on both sides of the river it struck mcleans mosquito netting fac j tory on the northern side of the river where it temporarily stunned two fe male operatives and rendered a score hys terical with fright the building was set on fire but the flames were extin guished before any damage had been done on the southern side of the riv er it struck a brick building occupied by a number of stores and shop the electricity came down the chimney in the kite-ken of louis brown a barber and mrs brown was knocked senseless she revived but for two or three hours it was necessary to administer stimu lants to quiet her shattered nerves at least fifty persons in the immediate vi cinity of the stroke were stunned three men sitting on boxes in front of a gro cery store on the corner of main and river streets went over backward to gether in one of the livery stables on the other side of the street all the hors eii went down on their knees in an adjoining black-smith shop the fire flew over iron in the most fantastic manner nearly everybody living within five hundred yards of the place where t'.ie bolt descended felt as if they were full of pins and needle and each one is willing to swear that the light ning struck immediately in front of him for a little while there war a good deal of excitement and alarm simultaneous with the lightning there was one deafening crack of thunder in the central telephone office every one of the six hundred shut-offs were dropped showing that currents had filled all the wires entering the office all the telephone operators wore i :' fected some of them almost knockel iff their stools several perse ns foiscsed in philadel phia-hascaliy confectioner a dispatch from philadelphia snj at a meeting of the board of health a communication was received from prof i stewart of jefferson medic college and henry leffman port phy sician in which they say wo her leave to call your attentidn officially to the indiscriminate use of lead chroinate chrome yellow as coloring material for confectionary pastry and f i or ar ticles of footl among other instances we may mention that a sample of nn dles purchased in the northe:i.«tern sec tion of the city was found to be quit seriously contaminated with lead we suggest therefore that the mat tor be acted on officially by the board 1 the matter was referred to the sanitary committee tliis communication of drs stewart ard leffman was the outcome of t'.uir investigate u into the naysterioua sick ness and deaths in two families living in the northeastern part of tlio city that has for a few years pi»t puzzhil the physicians in thai district the main sufferer from the effect is george m palmer a baker doing business at otter and sophia streets from mrtv i s84 to january l vv t he lost si members of his family including lu wife and five children since th i out more child has died making seven deaths in all n all the cases thesymp ti ms were identical and it was rumored at one time that the deaths were due to the father's anxiety to rid himself of so large a family this idea was dispelled however when in january last pah»er himself was taken down with the same sickness that carried off the balance of his family ho recovered i nd ia time married again and moved to 504 le : high avenue on the 9th of last jan nary a little child living in th neigh borhood of palmer's new home was at tacked with what appeared to bo pois : oning the child died and between then and march three more deaths fol j owed in the same family an investf i gation was made as to the source of ' supply for the table palmer's bakery i was thoroughly searched and a pitcher of chrome yellow or ehromate of lead i was found in the cellar the stuff wa.-t i used to give a yellow color to pas try and in some of the buns analyzed | two grains of load were found it now • transpires thai both families in which i the deaths occurred used the bun ! cakes etc in which chrome yellow win ju c e and were unconscious of the 1 source of their illness eight hours a pay in his recent very sensible address to ■workingim-n in boston edward atkir ! son said respecting the proposed eight i hour system if you cut down the ; work in factories in workshops and j in buikliiig trades to eight hours you cut down the product then there will be fewer goods fewer stores fewer tools l fewer houses and thai means a higher j price and higher rent this is tho doctrine which has been steadfastly preached in our columns for years past the proposition to try to make men richer by reducing the hours of labor and so reducing the amount of wealth created is as stupid as would beaschemn for enlargening a water powei by cut ting down the mill dam textile record xo the old north state haa mad its history and it is a history we should be proud to cherish its sons do not sleep in forgotten grave nor was their woik the work of pigmies let th n v south do us vv-'il it can and ir ought but it haa not yet done it th re ia work still before ns for boast :.- we may the new south i still in many respects behind the old we have the example and can shun tho faults the difficulties that confronted the one are removed from the other the advantage ;- ; ours and the future inviting - asheboro courier eczema eradicated gtwlcmfn k i dn von t raj t . .• i ibbd i .- . ■diin - , well •-.? eczsina t haylaj taken swut's specific if • i it very liiueioniy face iinco laatipribi at the begfnnins of col<1 weathi . . .«' ' . ■m • :- b slight appearance bat werjl r.vi.-v coi lasincverrct.irr.c .'.. s s.s nodoabi at least itpat iny ybtem.m jrorel conditlcn end i pot well ft also benefited mj •• -<• '•• n case of sick headache ui^c m-^.j u j~.rfi.-ct care pf a breafcing out on n - rear old daughter last rammer „___„ trea;ir-e ou iii-^-a a^-4 stia dui ra&'iif fieo ta swifl sptctyiu tv tr:.-^tr £, ailam g aug 28 1886 ly pane npli in * ; fjfi •»",•! 3 * t x . a vitirgy jfatjr ;- ""■*■-" - - j ' i"'cn r ciuu pui asi^cic jf wvft ft o 5^0 5za ijdsl tofhosawhowffer frotn t •- raanj ch^ared ; t8l'itseht.--c j ksstb e3 tei kstli tir tj wor£,ortoofrooindnjgctico,wobsstlia5yon eendus j fep'7'c iqp'vspr.v r -:>•-. l.tukt gnrfiainowltu8tb!wnw.o ir>,;;n4 sacore n«k«ia k.i«e'_>r ., p . c lhrhattj hkiiijpackaorfkr.2.t»i'a)uiis'.'jr-=2pb'-t i 80 it.teatbstxeet,st.ixfwib mo ruf i tursd r er3cftd c^n 3va r f:eb tri^s cj c appijanc .' .;:■. jc 7i i 25:ly
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1887-07-07 |
Month | 07 |
Day | 07 |
Year | 1887 |
Volume | 18 |
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 7, 1887 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 | 601563421 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1887-07-07 |
Month | 07 |
Day | 07 |
Year | 1887 |
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 5169476 Bytes |
FileName | sacw15_18870707-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:45:23 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 fol xviii.-t2ird series salisbury n c thursday july 7 1887 no s7 while th a queen was receiving the p of her subjects in london at union hall in new york was vr itten on the walls the following of misrule in ireland mine 1.500,000 - v ;....! 3.668,000 i 4,200,000 who d:ed of ship j 5-000 t , ,.,-,.. i t d under coercion - over v in suppressing public meetings j0 ts oo j | for resisting ty \ ninny j died in english dungeons . 27 j the following preparation applied to irface will prevent any rusting on plows or any other metal surfaces : melt n of resin in a trill of linseed oil hot mix with two quarts of |. tfiis can be kept on hand an d applied in u moment with a brush or rag to the metal surface of any tool that ;•',,, t going to be used for a few days . r tii any ni and saving much ime comes to use it again nregenerallv good at flattering t f r nothing else unfailing specific for liver disease ovejatfirsc c bitter or ba.l tuste in otrnrll'fffloi mouth tongue coated • i w i i brown fur pain in the hack shies or joints often mistaken lur rheumatism iur stomach loss if appetite sometiinch nausea and water brash or mi ■■' . n ■liatulent-y uivl acid uions bowels alternately eostivo u headache lossol memory with apnn no having failed to do ■have been done debility ; low spirits a thick,.yeuow np ■• i>f the sk.a and rs a dry r restlessness ; the urine is ire ' . nd if allowed to ■:. posits a si ... ,, it simmons liver regulator purely vegetable rallv 1 in the o'.'.mi to arouse ;. ; ; idl-iver to a healthy action it acts with c<'raord nary efficacy on ih tiver sidneys 1 and bowels : for malaria bowel complaints l>y»l><-l>sla siclc heiutar.li 1 >, count iimtinn lsuionsneso kidney affections jaundice mental i><-j>r«-ssio-i < i\>r f : 7 million ! the best fawisly kzebisffie forchlldren for a.lults ani : i s t;d only genuine has - :- z sump in r 1 on fr nt of wraj ; ex j h zeilin & co philadelphia fa i m moruietoks l'ricc sj <;.). fledmont wagonj midi at hickory n c can't be beat they stand where they ought to right square at the fh nt it was a hard fight but they have won it just read what people say about ih in and if you want a wagon come quickly and buy on i either for cash or on time s.vli8buhy n c s pt 1st iss6 t.ui years n^o i bou 111 i v».'n lh two l»ors \ va^on i ' 1 agi nt j o a boyilen lv nsoi it n r . i tin 1 time sill 1 liave 1 1 i < ■. 1 it si:vel ill ■: s:l\v ,.-; [>, ui.i li.ivt not lu.i to p;i one (•• ui t'n repiirs i look up m thr p liniinl \\ i ' si i'him , .., i i ) i . i te«i slates j j til . ■i 1 -; excellent j tcknkis l i uomasos salisbui'.t n 0 aug 27ih 1886 bout vo ye:irs ir i i»i»ii^ht nt jim a fi v ; ■,;, mil horse pieihuniit iv.i^on whith n ice hll 1 nn h1 t of it in riven ivra und consequent not liiny lor rt-pnirs john d iiem.y s vi.i>m"ky n c sept 3 i i s8g h npn i bought t john , j j in ii thimble skein pied | , used it pretty nun h ; . prnvcil to lie ii ii-l dthin ibout it has u en ,•:.,• ii ias required nn re t a waltox ss i t'i:v n c sept h h i s86 ■<) i hmi.sht it tii 1 alien i . in i cj in thimble kkein picdiiioi.t tea nnc horse « asnr - i | r in almnsi ronstanl ii i r.nd | i iv i i'er in it :.' ii . t 1 •. d tl'iit vv'tlif)ul n i . l r ■"< .-.: "-■-. the turkle and the crane a plantation sermon by rev ephbiam m os ely about twenty-five years since the sub j stance of the following fable was related j to the writer by a venerable family ser vant on a louisiana plantation a young lad returning from a successful terrapin | hunting expedition exultiugly showed i his prize a homely and vicious snapping i turtle to the old plantation oracle who ! forthwith regaled his interested auditor i with a characteristic story and plantej i at once in his breast a feeling of respect i for the peculiar talents of the turkle i afar down souftlar's a lonely lake dat's bordered roun by a tangled brake whar cypress trunks wid deir trailiif mosa rtaml towerin over de live-oak's gloss and l(>tu rafs all aroun its rim low floatin swing in de shadows dim and dar de waters so silent lie key seem like part ofc midnight sky ii ]"».• moon shines dar like a silver plate each star above -'■(.- a sli*epin : in.:te down dar whar oven de stars might rest an time stop still on deir unstirred breast an snnrise sunset may dye detn red bui noonday suns shinin overhead can't light dem waters wid brazen glare thro pale mists hangiu like curtains derc iii no man since noah land from de ark upon dat shore ever lei his mark no man since adam in eden stood has ever slept in dat solitude de varmints only dat nightly roam or birds of air may have t'.nin dat home and dar tore brif-days of abel and cain a turkle lived wid a tall white crane iv dey dwelt in peace and dey fished and j played dc turkle dived vhar de crane couldn't i wade i aii drh ' de fish to the aidge of de lake j whar mister crane kep his eyes awake and gig»ed ! dem thro wid his piiited bill twell l.e and turkle had cotched deir fill dis partnership might have stood till now dut didn't — and dis is de reason how : v dey got too fat an too lazy bofe when one would tish den de udder'd loaf dey quar'led de crane call de turkle ' black : de turkle answer dc crane right back j and scz you lish in your sunday close whilst 1 gits muddy up to my nose de crane ne say dat me turkle's shell all slushed wid mud peared jest as well vi dc turkle sez dat i'm better'n you for 1 got lour laigsand you got two deu 1 sleep down beneai'de oak an you roos high in de rain an smoke de cold days come an 1 makes my mound whilst you must jarney de arth half roun or your long neck cotch desorefroat bad an 1 e lariiu while you feelssad vii but my two laigslo:iger"n ten eryourn thus st-z de eraue an i'm swilny borne wnar you can't climb wid dese wings of mine dat 11 ish like snow in de bright sun shine kin you cotch fish in dat lofty sky you trus your wings an vou bown to die * remark de turkle tho i can't rise 1 crawls au gitd whar de victuals lies viii and dar dey starved for de turkle fused to dredge dc bottom bekase accused of wearm close of a color made to uii de work whar his talent laid d crane couldn't dive air he couldn't swim no tish riz up to dat lakelet's brim so hongry ivadin lou far he drowned de tunde died on de hard dry ground ix afar down souf do i see again broad fields of cotton and sweeps of cane de plow and hoe in de hands dat toil in hands hued dark as the loamy soil and breasts as brown as de turtle's shell all holding hearts dat work brave and well and brawn dat bears bofe de cold and sun j from new year's day till de year is done x my sarnion's done let all wise folks larn about whom lessons like dis cousarn : 1.k darky's made for to dig and hoe or gather craps dat de groun mu.s grow white folks co boss an to trade an sell so bole can flourish iu life's brief spell together bearin each one his share devil prosper eho'ly if hole tote square xi a hard head mule in a hot july would make a million o while men die and gittin credick from money banks would turn we cullered folks uuu u cranks go on old turkle and dredge de lake and mister crane keep your eyes awake but one needn't brag on his clean white close not t 3 udder mind bout his muddy nose r a wilkinson sleeping in water skillful work by the divers i'xr under the gloomy tide did i ever ser a dead man sitting in a chair in a stateroom and bending over a book as though he had been reading when he was drowned nev er nor has any other diver then the tales one hears about such matters are a little off they're siinpl lies there's more iving about diving than any other oe j t upatioii give me a straight story 1 well to begin with i'll dispo.ee of that yarn about corpses being found s'.tting in chairs in the staterooms of sunken steamer i've been in sunken steamers that were full of corpses there was for insance the hamburg steamer cimbria which went down ! in the north sea some five years ago with 500 emigrants i and two other divers from here who were sent for to help iu getting out the cargo literally worked among hundreds of corpses the ceilings were lined with them the ceilings 1 yes sir a diver working n vpssel i or corpse feel for them along the j fceilings if the wreck is older than a couple of days if he goes into her only a day or two after she went down he feels along both the floors and ceil ings that's where the corpses are not in chairs why did the send away over here for divers to go down into tiie cim bria because new york divers are on top of the heap the reason is that most of their work is lone in the dark for it's pitch dark under the waters around new york i suppose it's on ' ; accout of the sewerage a diver from j other waters can't work in those around new york but a new york diver can work in the clear waters elsewhere twice as fast as the local divers because his sense of touch sense of touch under water is so finely developed we new york divers can tell various met els if they are nnder water apart by sense of touch but if they are not under water we cannot teel any differ ence between them hen for instance are a piece of copper and a peice of brass put them on the table and blindfold me and i can't tell which is which chuck em in the basin and pour water over them and i can tell the moment i touch the pieces which is the cupper and which is the brass yon see we new york divers have to ply all kinds of trades in the dark then you have to be pretty handy ?" yes sir if a green hand came to me and wanted to learn the professoin or diving the first thing i'd advise him would be to go to sea till he'd learned the ins and outs of all kinds of vessels and how ro handle and store car go then he's pretty competent to work wrecks next i'd tell him to learn all kinds of trades for we don't consider working wrecks a very fine line of the | profession the real fine work is when the diver has to ply some trade such as carpentering or pipe-laying under j water for instance a very fine job was the laying of the line of pipe for the health department from port i morris to north brother island the diver had to keep the line straight un pick tile pipe put it together and in fact do in the dark the work of a skill ful pipe-layer do you dive much for treasure " there is not much of that going on now the biggest job of that kind was the hussar the work on that wreck had to bo d ie many feet under the l»ed of the river right where she went down right when she went down over a hundred yp;i\:i ago a wreck remains on the same spot where first she reach es bottom as years roll on she works down into the be 1 of the river and so where the hussar sank so long ago lies her hulk the diver got out the stern post but didn't find any treasure i don't believe that any treasure will be found on the site of the wreck i have heard that official documents in england show th-it after the hussar struck the treasure was loaded into her barge which upset from the shifting of ome box s of the coin opposite a red house on randall's island somepeop e '] tve a crazy notion that captain kid's vessel with a vast deal of treasure went down off peekskill and not long ago a syndicate employed a diver for two summers he didn't find a trace of wreck some divers who haven't been long enough in the profession to be .;.,- l.u tlv employed anil have a go ■-, fid ot time on their hands work <>'<• wrecks for instance the commodore off stouington the isaac newton off fort lee and the thomas morgan off honkers but there isn't a fair day's wages in such jobs sometimes how ever we hear of old wrecks that haven't been worked yet and they are worth ooking after two years ago one of us who were building the foundation for the pier of a bridge at say brook heard that a schooner loaded with cop per and coa had gone down there some thirty-live years ago il the wreck and got out the cargo which was still in prime condition but there are as many lies about old wrecks as there are about the corpses whenever a sailor is thirsty but hasn't any money he concocts a lie about a wreck and comes to us with it he almost always goes away as thirsty a he came what does a diver's outfit consist of a boat a pump ho-e line and dress the dress consists of a layer of cluck and rubber the shoes weigh twenty pounds each on his chest and back lie carries forty-pound weights the helmet when it has been placed over the diver's head is screwed into a cop per collar that is attached to his dress a weighted line is sunk to the spot he is to reach and down that line he goes with the life line around his waist and the lose through which the air is pumped attached to his helmet those who handle the ire i e and the hose must regulate t iese a he moves a ,. ut below whrti 1 id:v.-r ; working day snuhb vrrges four hours and 80 if he furnish es his own aparatus his wages are high er 835 to 850 a day for getting a ' hawser out of th 1 steamer's screw i'd , charge 850 if i furnish my own appa ratus i suppose part of the charge is for j the risks you run ?" yes a diver is exposed to a great i many dangers on of them you'll he ! surprised to learn is falling asleep j on a hot day the contrast betwen ihe j heat above and the dilicious coolness ' below is apt to make a diver sleepy j 1 once slept an hour and a half at the i bottom of a wreck near kingston j where i was laying pipe suppose j that had happened in the channel near j governor's island where the tide runs i so swift that a diver can work only one j hour of slack water if i'd slept over | that one hour the deadly rush of tide j would have snapped the life line and j hose then in working wrecks there \ is the danger of getting jammed in \ freight or of getting the lose or line j tinijl d when the hose snaps the frightful pressure kills the diver he i is sicken ly distorted by it are there anv expert divers in new york look he held out a shield-shap ed badge on which was engraved new york divers license f c no 1 what does f c stand for " first class there are only about a doz n of those badges out i'm no j 1 — robert s russell or funeral bob as they call me among others are william carl or buffalo bill jim hicks jack bundy jack chittenden ed mcdonald frank paul bill smith and dan joslin funeral bob once walked against time and made eight miles in eight hours and thirty seven minutes — gustav koble in pittsburg dispatch — m - tim • tim why mark twain left tho army at a recent banquet of union vete rans in baltimore the american hu morist mark twain related his experi ence as follows when your secretary invited me to this reunion of the union veterans of i maryland he requested me to come ! prepared to clear up a matter which he said had long been a subject of dispute and bid blood in war circles in this i country to-wit the true dimensions of my military services in the civil war and the effect they had upon the gen eral result i recognized the impor tance of this thing to history and 1 i have come prepare here are tho de i | tails i was in the civil war just two ' | weeks in that brief time i rose from private to second lieutenant the monumental feature of my campaign was the one battle which my command | fought it was in the summer of 01 ir i do say it it was the bloodiest bat tle ever fought in human history there is nothing approaching it for destruc tion of human life in the tieid if you take into consideration the forces en gaged and the proportion of death to survival and yet yon do no even know the name of that battle neither do i it had a name but i have for gotten it it is no use to keep private information which you can't show off iu our battle there was just fifteen men engaged on our side — all brigadier-gen erals but me and i was second lieuten ant on the other side there was one man he was a stranger we killed him it was night and we thought he was an army of observation he looked like an army of observation — in fact he looked bigger than an array of ob servation would in the day time and some of us believed he was trying to surround us and some he was going to turn our position and we shot him poor fellow he probably wasn't an army of observation after all but thai ". asn't our fvnlt as i say he had all the looks of it in tint dim light it was a sorrowful circumstance but he took the chances of war and he drew the wrong card he overestimated his fighting strength and he suffered the likely result but he fell as the brave should fall with his face to the front and feet to the field — so we buried him vith the honors of war and took his things so began and ended the only battle in the history of the world where the opposing force was utterly extermina ted swept from the face of the earth — to the last man and yet you don't know the name of that battle you 1 don't even know the name of that man now then for the argument sup pose i had continued the war and gone on as i began aud exterminated the opposing force every time every two weeks where would your war have b?en why you see yourself the conflict would have been too one-sided there was but one honorable course for me to pursue and i pursued it i withdrew to private life and gave the uni'-i cause a chance there now you have the whole thing in a nutshell it was not my preseace in the civil war that deter mined that tremendous contest — it was my retirement from it that brought the crash i left the confederate side too weak it is an accepted superstition with the girls of geneseo 111 . that if a girl who walks nine miles on the railroad track without falling off the next man she speaks to will be her future hus band real smart girls take the fellow along and halloo to him a scon as the | ordeal is past agricultural facts | if young horses suffer from cramps give laxative food such as bran mashes in france vicious horses are subdued by electricity while being shod young and growing animals are the m st profitable for the farmer the best breed is good care good water good feed aud good barn resolve that you will henceforth grow small fruits for family use i as a rule the best quality and the best yield go hand in hand , impure air in the hennery causes many of the finest fowls to sicken and dip ; new vegetables fruits and grains are generally overrated by their intro ducers let the boys and girls have plots of their own to cultivate it is better to cultivate a few acres thoroughly than to skim over many coarse-wooli.d sheep are more liable to be infested with ticks than merinoes never forget to remember to salt ; and water your stock regularly the best floor for a poultry house is ! the dry earth kept dry and clean hi france over 200,000 people are ! engaged in raising beets forsugar the red onion is said to hold its flavor longer than any other variety to raise turkeys feed as for chickens and keep from the vet when voung queen bees should always be raised from the very best stock in the apiary unleached wood ashes added to the radish bed will keep it free from worms there are good and rich milkers in all breeds of cows glycerine and sulphur mixed are good for gapes in young chickens better uproot old played-out fruit gardens the lands is wasted raise some variety of popcorn with very small kernels for the young chicks don't grow fruit or vegetables too thick thinning out improves size and quality to destroy briars elders etc cut them down now and as often as they reappear clover pastures increases the milk yield of cows and makes yellow but ter begin bee-keeping with one or two colonies and study the subject as you en huge and extend the business belter late than never clean out the cellar and clear up the yard if these matters are not already attended to sluggish horses are generally made so by the way they are handled a lazy man is pretty sure to have lazy horses the gain on a flock of sheep may be called a weather profit says one good for ewe was trie lamb-like re spone a new cheap and effective insect killer is composed of one part muriate of potash in one thousand parts of water the man who warms himself up every morning grooming his horses will be well remunerated for his trou ble you cannot grow plants with li wet feet farmers had therefore better have tiles in the ground than on their heads there is no one thing that is so much required nowadays on the aver age farm as to thoroughly systematize labor you will be likely to save trouble by speaking kindly to your horses every time you approach them in the stable or elsewhere the more an acre will produce the larger the profit and the better you cultivate that acre the more it will pro duce dandelions for greens 1 are raised by the arce around boston holding the first rank on the list of spring greens most farmers can keep a few hives f bees to advantage honey like fruit should be often found on the farmer's table a kan3as boom a traveler in kansas while crossing ii prairie the other day came upon a party of men who seemed to be j preparing the land for agricultural pur j poses my friend said the traveler ad j dressing one of the men you are lay ; ing off your enn rows quite a distance ' apart corn rows " th.p man gasped yes those rows over there my stars stranger !" exclaimed the kansas man is it possible you ain't hearn of it ' heard of what of the boom man alive them ain't corn rows over thar they air j street an this here is a city you air i now on ihe corner of coromerc.ial and emporium streets an not in the check of a corn row as you moot sappose xew york tribune lightning freaks during a severe thunder storm at as ! bury park n j a few nights ago the lightmng danced all about town on the telegraph and telephone wires little bulls of lire which changed with grei t rapidity to all colors and shapes fizzed and crackled about the telephones iu the hotels a ball of fire sis large as a quart measure played about the tele phone in the coleman house a few minutes before midnight t sputtered and spit like a oat finally disappearing after giving forth four or five reports like that of a small revolver a little firey ball showed itself ibont the tele phone in the office of the dally spray and jumped upon a steel composing stick in the hands of a compositor hurling it high over the type case at which he was at work another bolt ran into the western union telegraph company on cookman avenue and partly melted some of the heavy brass work of the switch board the light ning struck a cottage on bangs avenue iu west park occupied by benjamin ludlow and his family the bolt struck the chimney and bounded off upon the roof tearing the weather boards from three of the corners of the structure and wrecking the dining room the dining-room chairs and table were overturned and the window curtains were torn into ribbons two pretty canary birds whose cages hung from the window casings were un harmed and sang merrily this morn-i ing when crowds of people visited the house mr ludlow and his wife and two little daughters occupied the bed room above the dining room they were awakened by a clap of thunder but did not know that the house had been struck until mrs ludlow smelled fire and her husband went down stairs | and found great holes in the side of his house parts of the weather boards were seperated into slivers which just held together so that the boards re sembled thick straw floor matting at patterson n j an inky cloud had passed over the city quietly and was some distance to the east when from an almost cloudless portion of the sky there came a hash that made peo ple's hearts stop the flash was in a zig-zag course till it neared the ground i in the vicinity of main street bridge where it broke into two forks and struck on both sides of the river it struck mcleans mosquito netting fac j tory on the northern side of the river where it temporarily stunned two fe male operatives and rendered a score hys terical with fright the building was set on fire but the flames were extin guished before any damage had been done on the southern side of the riv er it struck a brick building occupied by a number of stores and shop the electricity came down the chimney in the kite-ken of louis brown a barber and mrs brown was knocked senseless she revived but for two or three hours it was necessary to administer stimu lants to quiet her shattered nerves at least fifty persons in the immediate vi cinity of the stroke were stunned three men sitting on boxes in front of a gro cery store on the corner of main and river streets went over backward to gether in one of the livery stables on the other side of the street all the hors eii went down on their knees in an adjoining black-smith shop the fire flew over iron in the most fantastic manner nearly everybody living within five hundred yards of the place where t'.ie bolt descended felt as if they were full of pins and needle and each one is willing to swear that the light ning struck immediately in front of him for a little while there war a good deal of excitement and alarm simultaneous with the lightning there was one deafening crack of thunder in the central telephone office every one of the six hundred shut-offs were dropped showing that currents had filled all the wires entering the office all the telephone operators wore i :' fected some of them almost knockel iff their stools several perse ns foiscsed in philadel phia-hascaliy confectioner a dispatch from philadelphia snj at a meeting of the board of health a communication was received from prof i stewart of jefferson medic college and henry leffman port phy sician in which they say wo her leave to call your attentidn officially to the indiscriminate use of lead chroinate chrome yellow as coloring material for confectionary pastry and f i or ar ticles of footl among other instances we may mention that a sample of nn dles purchased in the northe:i.«tern sec tion of the city was found to be quit seriously contaminated with lead we suggest therefore that the mat tor be acted on officially by the board 1 the matter was referred to the sanitary committee tliis communication of drs stewart ard leffman was the outcome of t'.uir investigate u into the naysterioua sick ness and deaths in two families living in the northeastern part of tlio city that has for a few years pi»t puzzhil the physicians in thai district the main sufferer from the effect is george m palmer a baker doing business at otter and sophia streets from mrtv i s84 to january l vv t he lost si members of his family including lu wife and five children since th i out more child has died making seven deaths in all n all the cases thesymp ti ms were identical and it was rumored at one time that the deaths were due to the father's anxiety to rid himself of so large a family this idea was dispelled however when in january last pah»er himself was taken down with the same sickness that carried off the balance of his family ho recovered i nd ia time married again and moved to 504 le : high avenue on the 9th of last jan nary a little child living in th neigh borhood of palmer's new home was at tacked with what appeared to bo pois : oning the child died and between then and march three more deaths fol j owed in the same family an investf i gation was made as to the source of ' supply for the table palmer's bakery i was thoroughly searched and a pitcher of chrome yellow or ehromate of lead i was found in the cellar the stuff wa.-t i used to give a yellow color to pas try and in some of the buns analyzed | two grains of load were found it now • transpires thai both families in which i the deaths occurred used the bun ! cakes etc in which chrome yellow win ju c e and were unconscious of the 1 source of their illness eight hours a pay in his recent very sensible address to ■workingim-n in boston edward atkir ! son said respecting the proposed eight i hour system if you cut down the ; work in factories in workshops and j in buikliiig trades to eight hours you cut down the product then there will be fewer goods fewer stores fewer tools l fewer houses and thai means a higher j price and higher rent this is tho doctrine which has been steadfastly preached in our columns for years past the proposition to try to make men richer by reducing the hours of labor and so reducing the amount of wealth created is as stupid as would beaschemn for enlargening a water powei by cut ting down the mill dam textile record xo the old north state haa mad its history and it is a history we should be proud to cherish its sons do not sleep in forgotten grave nor was their woik the work of pigmies let th n v south do us vv-'il it can and ir ought but it haa not yet done it th re ia work still before ns for boast :.- we may the new south i still in many respects behind the old we have the example and can shun tho faults the difficulties that confronted the one are removed from the other the advantage ;- ; ours and the future inviting - asheboro courier eczema eradicated gtwlcmfn k i dn von t raj t . .• i ibbd i .- . ■diin - , well •-.? eczsina t haylaj taken swut's specific if • i it very liiueioniy face iinco laatipribi at the begfnnins of col<1 weathi . . .«' ' . ■m • :- b slight appearance bat werjl r.vi.-v coi lasincverrct.irr.c .'.. s s.s nodoabi at least itpat iny ybtem.m jrorel conditlcn end i pot well ft also benefited mj •• -<• '•• n case of sick headache ui^c m-^.j u j~.rfi.-ct care pf a breafcing out on n - rear old daughter last rammer „___„ trea;ir-e ou iii-^-a a^-4 stia dui ra&'iif fieo ta swifl sptctyiu tv tr:.-^tr £, ailam g aug 28 1886 ly pane npli in * ; fjfi •»",•! 3 * t x . a vitirgy jfatjr ;- ""■*■-" - - j ' i"'cn r ciuu pui asi^cic jf wvft ft o 5^0 5za ijdsl tofhosawhowffer frotn t •- raanj ch^ared ; t8l'itseht.--c j ksstb e3 tei kstli tir tj wor£,ortoofrooindnjgctico,wobsstlia5yon eendus j fep'7'c iqp'vspr.v r -:>•-. l.tukt gnrfiainowltu8tb!wnw.o ir>,;;n4 sacore n«k«ia k.i«e'_>r ., p . c lhrhattj hkiiijpackaorfkr.2.t»i'a)uiis'.'jr-=2pb'-t i 80 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