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the carolina watchman fol xl third series salisbury if c april 1 1880 hie carolina watchman i rs r\!;i.;-in:i in thi year 1882 k ' 50 is advance nstbact advertising rates c i i.,;i i 20 ; - i .' a m*s 8 in's is hi's i - ,-. so a '■'" it,i s im i ■'." 5.25 7.511 j „ , 0.00 7 mi ll.iiii 15.00 9 imi 13.50 l i.n i1.s5 16.50 25.00 . 15.75 •.:•;. mi j 0.00 ■■'■', l-.t.'i 15.00 j vi1 i e"'"3reat ' southern oi remedy for tho euro of scrof li s\[)liiii scrofulous taint ilhcu mxtism lvhito swelling govt goitre onwnpuon bwnehltta x fr vous dc jlitv buurta and nil diseases arising troman imi ure condition of tho blood svkin or scalp rqsanat«ts cl're scrofula ! cures rheumatism cures syphilis < | a rosadaxixs l cures malaria w , l2&.©s&bams cares nervous debility iiainnw.li "' — irgsabaxiis cures cgxsumption sr.osaed.ai.is has its 1 on every fihowll i.noiir 1 iiv iilan anil he will tell s i i i composed r tho . lb atlves that exist and js an /. itlooil pnrflcr b0sa da lis la sold by all druggists > rr ~ z~s7."ssa::^£a tlji'n panacea for tmsair and beast z j external nnd internal "■: lie ver ' ip tee age r-*s£kt?^z:r r 7~z£.?5?~se2i£ei msfs liver pills thegb vble cathabtic vegetable worm syrup dl l<!f-cl 1 i-l nil — ' " - \\" zr~!3sseh sole by all drntrglhl johnf.iienry ( urran&co . r ■!.;: pa irni ro i collego place new york for sale by t f kluttz druggist i i6:ly salisbury n c poetry ai-it]it.-d anu will appear uui pi uiing w liilf reclining in in i is cliair repining "■• '■llii ! ick i.i true religion and the ileal h of common sense a mih-inn-visagcd |, ( 1 -,- . v io ■■as surely nn the shad v loi h . < utrreil i'i ondly ami to crush in diil commence i scut a poem lure sir 1 iiil the lady glowing fiercer and ihe suhjeet vvhieh i'd chosen yon reineniher air was spring hut although i've scanned your impcr sir liy sunlight gas and taper ive discovered of the loeni uot a soli tary thing she was muscular and wiry and inr temper sure was fiery a-.'l i knew to pacify her i would have fib like fun ■v " i told her thai lier verses v inch were great had eonie to bless a received jusl sixiy-onu ou spring of which we'd printed one and ! added we've decided ' 1 lial they'd he divided the years that follow one to uiccucdiug ii:iu r . so your work i am pleased to nn ntiou w ill receive onr besl attention ''• vci nineteen-forry when tho birds begin to sing fifteen at the white house in the white house parlor a 1 1 goodly hour ol nine : i mr hayes w ns trying to di ine ! he olive hrani h - clu lered . led knee vb<1 : ■, |, nce • s . ' . le of tea " l eagi i rye ; i •;, n ntched hi in the blocks about his efforts '" work tl problem out * •" in one to six the numbers v ; fi in their places straight re all the others ■lit rn red trips up on eleven ihree bul sonu how nd sevi n ! "\" matter how i move tbem i liey're isure to conic the une 1 fret the working " ; i'i pesky fifteen game ke little seotty , v ' : '' jjentle v i ice and low ; : write a letter '" aliunde joe i miscellaneous bm|11 — — — i a faithful dog among the ruins of pompeii and herenlaneuni | the skeleton of a dog was found i stretched over that of a child it was conjectured on this discovery i that this dog from his position at tempting to save the child when the eruption of vesuvius was fatal to the city the opinion was confirmed by the collar which was found of curi ous workmanship its inscription stat ed that the dog was named delta and belonged to a man called sevirinus whose life he had saved on three oc casions lirst by dragging him out of the sea when nearly drowned ; then by driving off lour robbers who at tacked him unawares and lastly by his destroying a she-wolf whose cubs he hud taken in a grove sacred to di ana near hereiilaneum delta after ward attached himself particularly to the only son of severinus und would take no food but that received from the child's hand — christian at won i >«•«»( paying fr m the x c presbyterian the following from a correspondent appeared recently in the christian ob server : there is one great evil iu this country which we think the pulpit and the press ought to denounce more frequently than they do — that is the habit of getting in debt and making no effort to pay can a man be a consistent christian and not strive to pay all his debts can a man be a christian and not be honest ? js a man who does not try to live within his means and pay iiis debts an honest man if so we do not understand the bible should men who habitu ally disregard their financial obi igation be allowed to remain iu the cliurch we think not and think that aman'sj being a member of the church ought to be a letter of credit in any part of the globe where the christian religion ; prevails but it is not the case ; far from it us there are even some minis ters whose sermons du no good because they are preached by men who are not considi rod honest by even the men of the world whisky is pro nounced the great evil of this coun try and it is a great curse but we doubt whether it does more harm to ' to the cause of the chureh than the , the lying and dishonesty of sober i cliurch members whose promise to pay • is not worth the paper it is written on j j the chureh is not the place fbr fraud , laud dishonesty pay the above article reminds me ofa question which i heard asked in a con i gregational meeting not long since '. viz : are they members of the the church the class of persons referred to were delinquent subscri bers io he minister's salary when the deacons reported a number of sub scribers in arrears some one iu the congregation promptly inquired as above • we cannot of course tell what thought was most prominent in the mind of the interrogator but we may suppose it was rather a question of i surpr'se what members of the church not paying what they pro mise it cannot be such conduct ' is highly unbecoming mere world ! ings but for members of the church men professedly of those whom christ died to redeem and purity unto him self and who take the bible for their guide book and standard — for the.^e not to pay their debts unless providentially prevented is wholly uuaccountable and how much more unacouutable when you remember that the delinquency has respect to the sanctuary can it be that members of the church neglect to pay what they promise for the maintenance of the house of god which thev profess to esteem above their cheif joy ! the thing is so inconsistent that tliere must be some mistake in regard tothe matter perhaps the persons in ques tion are not members of the church or perhaps they have paid and the deacons have failed to give the prop er credit it cannot be that members of the church would allow their min ister to serve them from year to year at his own charges and that too when they had solemnly pledged them selves for a certain portion of his sup port why upright worldlings would not think of treating in this manner the laborers who had plough ed their fields reaped tiieir harvests or performed for tlieni the most men ial service < r perhaps the questioner may have in his mind the remedy to be applied are these members ofthe church v then let them be called to an account by the authorities ofthe church is not a breach of lawful promise a violation of the ninth com ' rnandment is not unfnitlifulnes in contracts between man and man thus withholding from our neighbor what belongs to him breaches of the eighth commandment surely the church should not hesitate to discip line its members for doing what god expressly forbids this should be done not only for the sake of morals and religion but for the good of de liniments themselves indulgence to offenders whether they be children or men only encourages them to go \ from bad to worse how many men ' who to-day have no standing or influ ' ence by reason ol unfaithfulness in business matters might have been saved as useful men had they been , dealt with in the proper manner in [' the outset of their downward career ! , doubtless hundreds of families are great sufferers to-day because proper corrective remedies were not applied at the nick of time how sad is the i ■condition of those persons whose prom ' ise to pay is not worth the paper up on which it is written ! for sueh a condition is not the result of mere poverty if a man is known to he i faithful in business matters he can get credit for whatever he asks though he be poor there is some thing far worse than poverty behind he scene where men have lost thel confidence of iheir fellow men are they members of tho cliurch in v a ml ok i a boy's last hymn in a garret i a friend of mine seeking for ob jects of charity got into the upper ! t room ol a tenement house jt was vacant he saw a ladder pushing through the ceiling thinking that perhaps some poor creature had crept up there he climbed the ladder drew himself through lhe hole,and found himself under the rafters there ! was no light but the little which came through a bull's eye in place j of a tile soon he saw a heap of chips and shavings and on them a boy about ten years old boy what are you doing here hush ! don't tell anybody please sir what are yon doing here hush ! don't tell anybody please sir what are you doing here hush don't tell anybody sir i'm a-hiding what are you hiding from ?' don't tell anybody please sir where's your mother please sir mother's dead where's your father hush don't teli him don't tell him ! but look here he turned him self over on his fiee and through the rags in his jacket and shirt my friend ! saw that the boy's flesh was bruised ; and his skin broken why my boy who beat yon like that father did sir what did he heat you like that for father got drunk sir and beat me cos i wouldn't steal !' did you ever steal ?' yes sir 1 was a street thief once and why don't you steal more please sir i we t to the mission school and they told me tliere of god and of heaven and ot jesus ; and they taught me 1 lion shall not steal and i'll never steal again if my fa ther kills me for it but please sir don't tell him my boy you must not stay here you'll die now yon wait patiently here for a little time ; i'm going away to see a lady wc will get a better place for you than this thank you sir hut please sir would you like to hear me sing a lit tle hymn ?' bruised battered forlorn friend less motherless hiding away from an infuriated father he had a little hymn to sing yes i will hear you sing your lit tle hymn ' he raised himself on his elbow and then sang : gentle jesus meek and mild look upon a little child . pity my simplicity suffer tne to come to thee fain i would to thee lie brought gracious lord forbid it not in the kigdoin of thy grace i give a little child a place ; that's the hymn sir good bye the gentleman went away came back again in less than two hours aud climbed the ladder there was the chips and there were the shavings and tliere was the boy with one baud by his side and the other tucked iu his bosom underneath the little rag ged shirt — dead — london christian —^ seed tests at the experi ment station statu papers please coit in accordance with instructions of the hoard of agriculture i submit below a portion of the seed tests made at the experiment station during the last month the samples were obtained by an agent of the board and forwarded to me desig nated by numbers only upon complet ing the tests 1 was informed whose seeds 1 had been examining and where ihey were obtained the first ten reported below were sold in raleigh by robert huist jr of philadelphia the last then were sold in raleigh by david landreth &. sons ~ ='*; g z ~ k 2 — __ m ist g e s ; i b * o j ■s * perct perct 1 long green cucum ber o,:va tn 2 long scharlet radish 0,9(1 100 :{. extra early beet 0,bg 55 4 trophy tomato 0,13 100 5 early bush squash 1,4(1 m i extra early peas trace 98 7 wax suaps none 93 h early corn trace 97 9 early drummoud cabbage 2,40 8fi 10 early cabbage let tuce 1,00 95 the impurities in no 1 2 a & 5 con sisted of dirt chaff c the impurities in no 4 principally tomato skins the impurities in no 9 were mostly split broken and dead seeds no 2 contained seeds ofa weed known ns wild water pepper no g contained living weevils no 10 contained clover seeds and stones no 5 was probably old seed as it took ic days to complete the test & m r z « | f a landreth k sons = z.^l jv " a s » • — . x per ct per ct 11 early curled sile sian lettuce o 97 12 early blood red turnip beet 15,11 97 13 early drumhead cabbage trace hi 14 patty-pan squash trace 92 15 gold'ii globe radish 0,42 9 lfi early frame cu cumber 2,51 hh 17 cook's favorite to mato trace 90 ih early yellow six weeks bush bean none 97 19 pens none 100 20 extra earlj sugar corn trace 97 no ii contained seeds of inulleu weed and clover no 12 contained radish seeds dirt and dust no 15 contained anthracite coal and morning-glory seeds no 10 contained coal stone and dirt while the germinating power of the seeds is low in many instances and the percentage of impurities large in others i owe it tothe dealers to state that they arc no worse than tho average of seeds sold in this country there is however great room for increased care in clean in and excluding dead and old seeds analyses of fertilizers lladc at the experiment station bradley's patent superposphate of lime water 212 f 1653 per cent sand 3 79 per c;-nt soluble phosphoric acid h 35 per cent eqniv to bone phos 18 22 per cent insolnble phosphoric acid 1 81 per cent eqniv to bone phos 3 95 per cent reverted phosphoric acid 1 97 per cent equiv to bone phos 4 31 per cent nitrogen 2 42 per cent equi to ammonia 2 93 per cent commercial val pr ton 2,00011 if>.5 1 patapsco am.momated soluble phos phate water 212 f 14 72 per cent sand 2 93 per cent soluble phosphoric acid 3 46 per cent eijiiiv to bone phos 7 o.i per cent insoluble phosphoric acrid 5 0 per cent equiv to bone phos ii 02 per cent reverted phosphoric acid 5 08 per cent equiv to bone phos 11 10 per cent nitrogen 2 00 per cent equiv to ammonia 2 4'a per cent potash 1 27 jk-r cent commercial val per ton 2,0001l 3266 no 1 peruvian guaxo water 212 c p 1760 percent sand i71 per cent soluble phosphoric acid 5 j3 per cent equiv to bone phos li t per cent insoluble phosphoric acid 059 per cent equiv to bone phos 1 28 per rent reverted phosphoric acid 11 jl percent equiv to bone phos 2600 per cent nitrogen 7 5*2 per cent equiv to ammonia a l'a per cent potash 1 i percent commercial val per ton 20001b 70 aa meiiuy.ii an's ammoni atl.ii dissolved bgkea water 212 i i50u percent sand tl per cent soluble phosphoric acid 1023 per cent equiv to bone phos 2233 per cent insoluble phosphoric acid i 04 per cent equiv to bone phos a 58 percent reverted phosphoric acid 1.72 per cent eqniv to bone phos 7 per cent nitrogen 242 per cent eqniv lo ammonia 2 93 per cent commercial val per ion 2,00thb 40,63 acidulated l-isii i ano water 212 e i 33 per cent sand 5 62 per cent soluble phosphoric mid 5 52 per cent equiv to hone phos 12 05 per cent insoluble phosphoric acid 1 17 per cent equiv to hone phos 7 57 per cent reverted phosphoric acid 1 50 per cent equiv to bone phos 1002 per cent nitrogen 1 o'a per cent equiv to ammonia i 86 per cent commercial val per ton 31.40 maiixi.anu a ip phosphate water 212 f 14 hi percent sand 5 ti'2 per cent soluble phosphoric acid 825 per cent equiv to bone phosphate 7 9»i per cent insoluble phosphoric acid i i per cent equiv to hone phosphate 2 57 per cent reverted phosphoric acid 5 51 per cent equiv to hone phosphate 7(17 percent potach 2 v i per cent commercial val per ion 2,0001b 32 12 a r ledoux siate chemist the methodist mode the metho dist itinerancy is being assailed by many influential methodist clergymen and the movement for abandoning it has a strong advocacy : but the rev dr summers comes out emphatically in its defence a great advantage ofthe system he savs is that it secures to every preacher a par ish and to every parish a preacher some ofthe charges are not very desira ble but ihey all furnish a minister with work and tlu-y all pay him something for the work in performs some of the ministers nre not accomplished men but thev are all approved hv lav and clerical courts and lhe poorest of ihem are bet ter than none dr summers points out too that itinerant preachers by using their sermons over and over save them selves a great amount of labor ib stales a third argil ment as follows what difficulties and annoyances and animosi ties are frequently connected with rcsig ! nations and calls among our brethren ' who have a settled ministry oue of the most revolting things i know is a minis j ter going around pn-aching trial ser mons acting as a supply criti 1 cised by incompetent persons subjected ! to impertinent questions black-balled or if called responding with the knowledge ] that a respectable minority opposed the ! call — new york sun a good ono on judge avery savs the goldsboro mail it was really amusing to hear a nash county darkey ■give an account ofthe way judge avery put tilings through at na-!i court when i the judge read out the sentence two years iu the county jail a man in the [ corner mad an audible grunt take , thai man to jail sheriff said his honor pointing to the grunter good gracious muttered another sheriff take that man to jail directing the officer to the man last mentioned great god said a third sheriff take that man to jail repeated the fudge i tell you ar said the excited darkey i hardly bring my href in dat court house arter dat : but when i got out aud crossed the bridge over stony creek den you bet i just bust ed my boots a stanipin 1 and laffiii steam heating is new ytonk th new york board of aldermen have passed over the mayor's veto a bill granting per mission to lhe cnited stati - heating and power company to lay mains in the street of that city the c impany is enipn to lay pipes and mains thn utrh the and avenues at a charge of three cents per j foot of pipe and two per ci nt of the net i profits when these exceed ten pern nt this j will nol interfere with thi spin ila c«m|kiny \ n hich has already comment i i work and will prosecute it with vigor as soon as the weather will permit so thai if th te is vir tue in steam heating new vork will pel haps realize i at an early day a state convention of the democratic couserative party will beheld it raleigh on the l/tii of june lcst political sketches of ramcaialsit -. exai ..::.- r tin people of north carolina need but [ to lie informed of the character and pur poses of radicalism of i atrocious deeds ot violence and bloodshed of its cruel tyr anny and wanton usurpations of power of ir base duplicity and sbann less rogue , ry to cause tbem to spew it ont ot their . months as an andean thing the fact is j they have not been kept informed as to ; the doings and nature of this pestiverons faction democratic speakers and dem ocratic newspapers have been too timid '■i hey have condoned rather than exposed the wrongs under which the people are groaning the great masses of the peo ple have been so hard pressed to make j provision for iheir families and keep away ( poverty from the door as to become in different in a measure to what has been trapnsiring around them radical lead ers have taken advantage of these circum stances and pressed tin ir sail with all the ingenuity chicanery and persistency of men reduced to the alternative of life or dealh the result is the people have been deceived and have mown indifferent and many calling themselves good dem ocrats even fawn upon and rejoice over the triumphs of sonu of the dirtiestof these most unscrupulous radicals in achieving place and power they seem not to be conscionsof whattheydo tiny seem to have forgotten il they ever knew that the radical pany and those who support it arc responsible for all the urns tears and blood with which the country has been afflicted for the last twenty years tiny seem nol to know that the radical i party and its leaders have stripped our free democratic government of law and i ordi r of marly every attribute ol libt rty and are still encroaching upon the li.-his of the people aud centralizing all the fnnc tiou sof authority as if preparing the way for a despot t rule over us l ' but the people should and musl be in '• formed and so far as the ex vmixei is con cerned i r shall be the object ol these sketches to revive the memory of those who may have forgotten the past history and bloody deeds of infamous radicalism to a proper understanding of its black record i j crimes it is necessary to uo back to the establishment of onr govern ment yea we can trace the rloven foot . ofthe party which has ruled since sixty one and well-nigh ruined the country from the landing of the mayflower on a cobl bleak decemlier day at a plar which tiny afterwards named plymouth to tho landing of this vessel ou our coast i . . . . in sight oil ape cod freighted a it was wilh a band of puritan winners canters reformers and seditious disorganizes may he traced all our woes religious and po litical past present and future thev \ first th-d from england for their own good and for england's good pithched their tents for a few years in holland ; but a the hollanders were not any more i'i iendly to tin ir unsocial and seditious ways than the good people of england had before been they embarked and sailed for wil demess america here they planted the poisonns vine of puritanism which i y uonimous with all that i base and repul i sive in politics morals or religion puritanism and hatred are cou ver table lei ms says the old guard hate some | thing it continues the i'n lit an musl ; and thi hatred is always directed against some endowment or attainment denied . or unattainable by itself xo sooner had the puritans secured a footing on the bleak and rocky coast of massachusetts ' than they fulminated the most foolscap ed i icts againsi roman < atholics,"thongh there were none of that creed within hundreds of miles of them holidays and saint's days were prohibited as well as the great festival of the trie christians liii>t-i mas day : but the wisei om 5 know ing the \ yearnings of the heart for sei days of re creation ami enjoyment conceived the plan nf consecrating au illegitimate shad ow of christinas and hence wasordained an annual carnival for gluttons nnmiii it thanksgiving il-.\y sacred to sectarians ' who tor that one day gormandized on fai turkeys and plump pullets sweet ei der and pumpkin pii -. church edifices were to be no more tor ever bul meeting houses shaped not un like barns were erected in the place there of in which the faithful grunted and i groaned to their heai t's conti nt a 1 wherein was preached politii insti ad of religion ? love church organs were forbidden and the bass viol and vi olin weie anathematized ; n li twanged psalmody was t 1 :.- only music sacred or secular tolerated by tin sancti fied saints of the puritanic l'topia it being as natural for puritans to bate ag i is foi curs to snarl and having no enemies ai hand they mined liki a cei tain class of i ithsome reptiles and hit themselves the rapt ists one of the mo 1 respectable of all the disseuting sects but not quite so pure in bigotry as the simon-pnres of mayflower were di ivcu into the n ildei ness and com pelled to irnst in providence a^aiusl the wiles of the heretofore inoffensive indians rendi red im rciless by the inhuman treat ment of the puritan invaders quakers the most quiet industrious and unobtru sivi of all the eeta tinctnred with puri tanism were declared to be witches and were hauged outright sach episcopali ans as had found their way iuto the »'< 1 oiiv weie fined whipped imprisoned and banished for no other reason thah thai they uwed | 0read t , ie p niter . book and wor>hi god according to the rights of tin ir fathers never sever in the history of the world did bigotry intolerance and per secution reign so supreme as i d umtmt the modern liters ten rs and scribblersof that style ashamed of the of their ancestors attempted by iteration and i iteration to make their readers believe lhat their lathers bed to that land of bigots to es cape persecution at hum that i nol true only in a very limited sense many of the first settlers of massachusetts fled thither to escape the vegeance of those ihey had persecuted when by a fortuit ous concatenation of circumstances they had succeeded in overturning the govern ment of england true some of the em igrants from their old homes may not have been tin s llll . wuo ] ili j iiie gentlemen of eughind ; and then-lore bo tar as they were concerned iheir expa triation may have looked like persecution bnt as i the ism itself the exilement of ; '-' v '- i '- ict of retributive justice meant bile non-puritanic colonists and ad venturers from various places had set tled on the blessed soil-stolen and robbed by piractical pilgrims from the simple in dians and by ihe force of example had somewhat tamed down the savage feroci ty of the bigoted majority the middle ami so he rn colonies w . settled by far different and much better classed of | colonists than those who 6rsl landed at ; plymouth when ihe revolution broke on mie se ditious colony of massachusetts was tar • more obnoxious to the rule i ruin party of lhe mother conntry than wen the ' southern colonies nevertheless the gen rted southrons alianiiys step ped io aiii their not ovi 1 loved cousins f . psalm-sing and quaki r-burning proclivi j lies southern blood and mind shine ! conspicuous ou every page of the history of that unequal struggle lint tor ihem massachusetts mould have beeu a depen dency of england lo this day it is a standing boas ofthe partisans of massa chusetts that thai colouy furuished more soldiers for washington's armies than did . any other colouy 1 his i not true as to men for i'm war though it is i rue thai then were more enlistmeuts from that colony than from any other three i months enlistments prevailed iu that col ony dining the stages of the war and i washington in his public biters com plained bitterly of iheir uselessness by ihosc letters ii appears that recruits wero | sent to camp for instruction and by the time ihey were assigned lo regiments their term of service expired and away thev went met hail way home by high ■bounties they re-enlisted and before they were lit to take the field were again dis charged ; so tint the same men and boys . enlisted over and ovi r again thus add ing to he roll without increasing tho army the nieu who enlisted for during lhe war wen principally from new jer sey pennsylvania deleware maryland '. and virginia the regiments of the line from those colonies win relied upon liy , washington in most ol ii battles and skirmishes oi the revolution the men of those colonics achieved onr iudepen : dence aided as tbey were by many fiom all tin otht : colouii -. when a more perfect union was formed massachusetts lost some of her influence for ( \ i : leu after the death ot washing ton when two gnat panics sprang up 1 '; • favoring a strong government with despotic tendencies the othei in favor of lhe largest liberty to the people and the sovereignty of the states massachusetts puritans sided with the federalist the btrong government nun rat democracy and the people triumphed and tor sixty years with bat a brief interruption or two under the guidance of tlmt party's gnat men the ship ol state anchored in pro perity aud peace during the canvass of jefferson foi president when hydra 1 federalism n a dethroned tl*i malignant spirit of puritanism tinned out a new . and mr jefferson was the mos thoroughly cursed individual of his turn -. i the purchase of i^oiisiana b jefferson aroused the bitierness of puritanism again because th t addition to our terri ,. i ;.. i i ',. chance •>; in ire i'm itau - fn gland claimed th right to ovei lianl . our merchant men on tin high seas and search them lor such seaman as wero rritish-b im subjects uotwi hstanding they had renounced tiieir allegiance ami become amei ican < iti us mi ssachnsi us clamored lustily for redress the people .•; i middle a ■•; f»oul ll :.: mates again iin 1 - gallantly to 111 '. aid ii it do soou ' er did she -> ••■they win in < truest than she < z ■:■i her i i w hiued most ; piteoasly for the blessings and gains of jn ace and at once fi it to deno inciug jas madison and all t democrats after war was declared against great iin massachnsi tts took extreme states rrights ground she would not b-t her ina ■litia march oul ol tl i tate and order triments a wi i .- in the field not o obey order from the tieneral govern ment nevertheless she drew ou the ■_:••■. i-i unii ni for pay foi s ddiers w horn slie denied the right of tin government to ol but it was twenty-five years be fore she rot her pay and she aught nevci to liave bad it it was during that wai that the secret hartford convention wus held by repre sentatives ti m tbe new england states for the purpose of seceding from the union b it the cowardly radical puritanic dogs di 1 not have the courage to secede ( to be • ontinm d no 24
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1880-04-01 |
Month | 04 |
Day | 01 |
Year | 1880 |
Volume | 11 |
Issue | 24 |
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 | [T. K. Bruner and J. J. Bruner] |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | [T. K. Bruner and J. J. 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 April 1, 1880 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 | 601559562 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1880-04-01 |
Month | 04 |
Day | 01 |
Year | 1880 |
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 5323031 Bytes |
FileName | sacw13_024_18800401-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 10:10:41 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 xl third series salisbury if c april 1 1880 hie carolina watchman i rs r\!;i.;-in:i in thi year 1882 k ' 50 is advance nstbact advertising rates c i i.,;i i 20 ; - i .' a m*s 8 in's is hi's i - ,-. so a '■'" it,i s im i ■'." 5.25 7.511 j „ , 0.00 7 mi ll.iiii 15.00 9 imi 13.50 l i.n i1.s5 16.50 25.00 . 15.75 •.:•;. mi j 0.00 ■■'■', l-.t.'i 15.00 j vi1 i e"'"3reat ' southern oi remedy for tho euro of scrof li s\[)liiii scrofulous taint ilhcu mxtism lvhito swelling govt goitre onwnpuon bwnehltta x fr vous dc jlitv buurta and nil diseases arising troman imi ure condition of tho blood svkin or scalp rqsanat«ts cl're scrofula ! cures rheumatism cures syphilis < | a rosadaxixs l cures malaria w , l2&.©s&bams cares nervous debility iiainnw.li "' — irgsabaxiis cures cgxsumption sr.osaed.ai.is has its 1 on every fihowll i.noiir 1 iiv iilan anil he will tell s i i i composed r tho . lb atlves that exist and js an /. itlooil pnrflcr b0sa da lis la sold by all druggists > rr ~ z~s7."ssa::^£a tlji'n panacea for tmsair and beast z j external nnd internal "■: lie ver ' ip tee age r-*s£kt?^z:r r 7~z£.?5?~se2i£ei msfs liver pills thegb vble cathabtic vegetable worm syrup dl l«•«»( paying fr m the x c presbyterian the following from a correspondent appeared recently in the christian ob server : there is one great evil iu this country which we think the pulpit and the press ought to denounce more frequently than they do — that is the habit of getting in debt and making no effort to pay can a man be a consistent christian and not strive to pay all his debts can a man be a christian and not be honest ? js a man who does not try to live within his means and pay iiis debts an honest man if so we do not understand the bible should men who habitu ally disregard their financial obi igation be allowed to remain iu the cliurch we think not and think that aman'sj being a member of the church ought to be a letter of credit in any part of the globe where the christian religion ; prevails but it is not the case ; far from it us there are even some minis ters whose sermons du no good because they are preached by men who are not considi rod honest by even the men of the world whisky is pro nounced the great evil of this coun try and it is a great curse but we doubt whether it does more harm to ' to the cause of the chureh than the , the lying and dishonesty of sober i cliurch members whose promise to pay • is not worth the paper it is written on j j the chureh is not the place fbr fraud , laud dishonesty pay the above article reminds me ofa question which i heard asked in a con i gregational meeting not long since '. viz : are they members of the the church the class of persons referred to were delinquent subscri bers io he minister's salary when the deacons reported a number of sub scribers in arrears some one iu the congregation promptly inquired as above • we cannot of course tell what thought was most prominent in the mind of the interrogator but we may suppose it was rather a question of i surpr'se what members of the church not paying what they pro mise it cannot be such conduct ' is highly unbecoming mere world ! ings but for members of the church men professedly of those whom christ died to redeem and purity unto him self and who take the bible for their guide book and standard — for the.^e not to pay their debts unless providentially prevented is wholly uuaccountable and how much more unacouutable when you remember that the delinquency has respect to the sanctuary can it be that members of the church neglect to pay what they promise for the maintenance of the house of god which thev profess to esteem above their cheif joy ! the thing is so inconsistent that tliere must be some mistake in regard tothe matter perhaps the persons in ques tion are not members of the church or perhaps they have paid and the deacons have failed to give the prop er credit it cannot be that members of the church would allow their min ister to serve them from year to year at his own charges and that too when they had solemnly pledged them selves for a certain portion of his sup port why upright worldlings would not think of treating in this manner the laborers who had plough ed their fields reaped tiieir harvests or performed for tlieni the most men ial service < r perhaps the questioner may have in his mind the remedy to be applied are these members ofthe church v then let them be called to an account by the authorities ofthe church is not a breach of lawful promise a violation of the ninth com ' rnandment is not unfnitlifulnes in contracts between man and man thus withholding from our neighbor what belongs to him breaches of the eighth commandment surely the church should not hesitate to discip line its members for doing what god expressly forbids this should be done not only for the sake of morals and religion but for the good of de liniments themselves indulgence to offenders whether they be children or men only encourages them to go \ from bad to worse how many men ' who to-day have no standing or influ ' ence by reason ol unfaithfulness in business matters might have been saved as useful men had they been , dealt with in the proper manner in [' the outset of their downward career ! , doubtless hundreds of families are great sufferers to-day because proper corrective remedies were not applied at the nick of time how sad is the i ■condition of those persons whose prom ' ise to pay is not worth the paper up on which it is written ! for sueh a condition is not the result of mere poverty if a man is known to he i faithful in business matters he can get credit for whatever he asks though he be poor there is some thing far worse than poverty behind he scene where men have lost thel confidence of iheir fellow men are they members of tho cliurch in v a ml ok i a boy's last hymn in a garret i a friend of mine seeking for ob jects of charity got into the upper ! t room ol a tenement house jt was vacant he saw a ladder pushing through the ceiling thinking that perhaps some poor creature had crept up there he climbed the ladder drew himself through lhe hole,and found himself under the rafters there ! was no light but the little which came through a bull's eye in place j of a tile soon he saw a heap of chips and shavings and on them a boy about ten years old boy what are you doing here hush ! don't tell anybody please sir what are yon doing here hush ! don't tell anybody please sir what are you doing here hush don't tell anybody sir i'm a-hiding what are you hiding from ?' don't tell anybody please sir where's your mother please sir mother's dead where's your father hush don't teli him don't tell him ! but look here he turned him self over on his fiee and through the rags in his jacket and shirt my friend ! saw that the boy's flesh was bruised ; and his skin broken why my boy who beat yon like that father did sir what did he heat you like that for father got drunk sir and beat me cos i wouldn't steal !' did you ever steal ?' yes sir 1 was a street thief once and why don't you steal more please sir i we t to the mission school and they told me tliere of god and of heaven and ot jesus ; and they taught me 1 lion shall not steal and i'll never steal again if my fa ther kills me for it but please sir don't tell him my boy you must not stay here you'll die now yon wait patiently here for a little time ; i'm going away to see a lady wc will get a better place for you than this thank you sir hut please sir would you like to hear me sing a lit tle hymn ?' bruised battered forlorn friend less motherless hiding away from an infuriated father he had a little hymn to sing yes i will hear you sing your lit tle hymn ' he raised himself on his elbow and then sang : gentle jesus meek and mild look upon a little child . pity my simplicity suffer tne to come to thee fain i would to thee lie brought gracious lord forbid it not in the kigdoin of thy grace i give a little child a place ; that's the hymn sir good bye the gentleman went away came back again in less than two hours aud climbed the ladder there was the chips and there were the shavings and tliere was the boy with one baud by his side and the other tucked iu his bosom underneath the little rag ged shirt — dead — london christian —^ seed tests at the experi ment station statu papers please coit in accordance with instructions of the hoard of agriculture i submit below a portion of the seed tests made at the experiment station during the last month the samples were obtained by an agent of the board and forwarded to me desig nated by numbers only upon complet ing the tests 1 was informed whose seeds 1 had been examining and where ihey were obtained the first ten reported below were sold in raleigh by robert huist jr of philadelphia the last then were sold in raleigh by david landreth &. sons ~ ='*; g z ~ k 2 — __ m ist g e s ; i b * o j ■s * perct perct 1 long green cucum ber o,:va tn 2 long scharlet radish 0,9(1 100 :{. extra early beet 0,bg 55 4 trophy tomato 0,13 100 5 early bush squash 1,4(1 m i extra early peas trace 98 7 wax suaps none 93 h early corn trace 97 9 early drummoud cabbage 2,40 8fi 10 early cabbage let tuce 1,00 95 the impurities in no 1 2 a & 5 con sisted of dirt chaff c the impurities in no 4 principally tomato skins the impurities in no 9 were mostly split broken and dead seeds no 2 contained seeds ofa weed known ns wild water pepper no g contained living weevils no 10 contained clover seeds and stones no 5 was probably old seed as it took ic days to complete the test & m r z « | f a landreth k sons = z.^l jv " a s » • — . x per ct per ct 11 early curled sile sian lettuce o 97 12 early blood red turnip beet 15,11 97 13 early drumhead cabbage trace hi 14 patty-pan squash trace 92 15 gold'ii globe radish 0,42 9 lfi early frame cu cumber 2,51 hh 17 cook's favorite to mato trace 90 ih early yellow six weeks bush bean none 97 19 pens none 100 20 extra earlj sugar corn trace 97 no ii contained seeds of inulleu weed and clover no 12 contained radish seeds dirt and dust no 15 contained anthracite coal and morning-glory seeds no 10 contained coal stone and dirt while the germinating power of the seeds is low in many instances and the percentage of impurities large in others i owe it tothe dealers to state that they arc no worse than tho average of seeds sold in this country there is however great room for increased care in clean in and excluding dead and old seeds analyses of fertilizers lladc at the experiment station bradley's patent superposphate of lime water 212 f 1653 per cent sand 3 79 per c;-nt soluble phosphoric acid h 35 per cent eqniv to bone phos 18 22 per cent insolnble phosphoric acid 1 81 per cent eqniv to bone phos 3 95 per cent reverted phosphoric acid 1 97 per cent equiv to bone phos 4 31 per cent nitrogen 2 42 per cent equi to ammonia 2 93 per cent commercial val pr ton 2,00011 if>.5 1 patapsco am.momated soluble phos phate water 212 f 14 72 per cent sand 2 93 per cent soluble phosphoric acid 3 46 per cent eijiiiv to bone phos 7 o.i per cent insoluble phosphoric acrid 5 0 per cent equiv to bone phos ii 02 per cent reverted phosphoric acid 5 08 per cent equiv to bone phos 11 10 per cent nitrogen 2 00 per cent equiv to ammonia 2 4'a per cent potash 1 27 jk-r cent commercial val per ton 2,0001l 3266 no 1 peruvian guaxo water 212 c p 1760 percent sand i71 per cent soluble phosphoric acid 5 j3 per cent equiv to bone phos li t per cent insoluble phosphoric acid 059 per cent equiv to bone phos 1 28 per rent reverted phosphoric acid 11 jl percent equiv to bone phos 2600 per cent nitrogen 7 5*2 per cent equiv to ammonia a l'a per cent potash 1 i percent commercial val per ton 20001b 70 aa meiiuy.ii an's ammoni atl.ii dissolved bgkea water 212 i i50u percent sand tl per cent soluble phosphoric acid 1023 per cent equiv to bone phos 2233 per cent insoluble phosphoric acid i 04 per cent equiv to bone phos a 58 percent reverted phosphoric acid 1.72 per cent eqniv to bone phos 7 per cent nitrogen 242 per cent eqniv lo ammonia 2 93 per cent commercial val per ion 2,00thb 40,63 acidulated l-isii i ano water 212 e i 33 per cent sand 5 62 per cent soluble phosphoric mid 5 52 per cent equiv to hone phos 12 05 per cent insoluble phosphoric acid 1 17 per cent equiv to hone phos 7 57 per cent reverted phosphoric acid 1 50 per cent equiv to bone phos 1002 per cent nitrogen 1 o'a per cent equiv to ammonia i 86 per cent commercial val per ton 31.40 maiixi.anu a ip phosphate water 212 f 14 hi percent sand 5 ti'2 per cent soluble phosphoric acid 825 per cent equiv to bone phosphate 7 9»i per cent insoluble phosphoric acid i i per cent equiv to hone phosphate 2 57 per cent reverted phosphoric acid 5 51 per cent equiv to hone phosphate 7(17 percent potach 2 v i per cent commercial val per ion 2,0001b 32 12 a r ledoux siate chemist the methodist mode the metho dist itinerancy is being assailed by many influential methodist clergymen and the movement for abandoning it has a strong advocacy : but the rev dr summers comes out emphatically in its defence a great advantage ofthe system he savs is that it secures to every preacher a par ish and to every parish a preacher some ofthe charges are not very desira ble but ihey all furnish a minister with work and tlu-y all pay him something for the work in performs some of the ministers nre not accomplished men but thev are all approved hv lav and clerical courts and lhe poorest of ihem are bet ter than none dr summers points out too that itinerant preachers by using their sermons over and over save them selves a great amount of labor ib stales a third argil ment as follows what difficulties and annoyances and animosi ties are frequently connected with rcsig ! nations and calls among our brethren ' who have a settled ministry oue of the most revolting things i know is a minis j ter going around pn-aching trial ser mons acting as a supply criti 1 cised by incompetent persons subjected ! to impertinent questions black-balled or if called responding with the knowledge ] that a respectable minority opposed the ! call — new york sun a good ono on judge avery savs the goldsboro mail it was really amusing to hear a nash county darkey ■give an account ofthe way judge avery put tilings through at na-!i court when i the judge read out the sentence two years iu the county jail a man in the [ corner mad an audible grunt take , thai man to jail sheriff said his honor pointing to the grunter good gracious muttered another sheriff take that man to jail directing the officer to the man last mentioned great god said a third sheriff take that man to jail repeated the fudge i tell you ar said the excited darkey i hardly bring my href in dat court house arter dat : but when i got out aud crossed the bridge over stony creek den you bet i just bust ed my boots a stanipin 1 and laffiii steam heating is new ytonk th new york board of aldermen have passed over the mayor's veto a bill granting per mission to lhe cnited stati - heating and power company to lay mains in the street of that city the c impany is enipn to lay pipes and mains thn utrh the and avenues at a charge of three cents per j foot of pipe and two per ci nt of the net i profits when these exceed ten pern nt this j will nol interfere with thi spin ila c«m|kiny \ n hich has already comment i i work and will prosecute it with vigor as soon as the weather will permit so thai if th te is vir tue in steam heating new vork will pel haps realize i at an early day a state convention of the democratic couserative party will beheld it raleigh on the l/tii of june lcst political sketches of ramcaialsit -. exai ..::.- r tin people of north carolina need but [ to lie informed of the character and pur poses of radicalism of i atrocious deeds ot violence and bloodshed of its cruel tyr anny and wanton usurpations of power of ir base duplicity and sbann less rogue , ry to cause tbem to spew it ont ot their . months as an andean thing the fact is j they have not been kept informed as to ; the doings and nature of this pestiverons faction democratic speakers and dem ocratic newspapers have been too timid '■i hey have condoned rather than exposed the wrongs under which the people are groaning the great masses of the peo ple have been so hard pressed to make j provision for iheir families and keep away ( poverty from the door as to become in different in a measure to what has been trapnsiring around them radical lead ers have taken advantage of these circum stances and pressed tin ir sail with all the ingenuity chicanery and persistency of men reduced to the alternative of life or dealh the result is the people have been deceived and have mown indifferent and many calling themselves good dem ocrats even fawn upon and rejoice over the triumphs of sonu of the dirtiestof these most unscrupulous radicals in achieving place and power they seem not to be conscionsof whattheydo tiny seem to have forgotten il they ever knew that the radical pany and those who support it arc responsible for all the urns tears and blood with which the country has been afflicted for the last twenty years tiny seem nol to know that the radical i party and its leaders have stripped our free democratic government of law and i ordi r of marly every attribute ol libt rty and are still encroaching upon the li.-his of the people aud centralizing all the fnnc tiou sof authority as if preparing the way for a despot t rule over us l ' but the people should and musl be in '• formed and so far as the ex vmixei is con cerned i r shall be the object ol these sketches to revive the memory of those who may have forgotten the past history and bloody deeds of infamous radicalism to a proper understanding of its black record i j crimes it is necessary to uo back to the establishment of onr govern ment yea we can trace the rloven foot . ofthe party which has ruled since sixty one and well-nigh ruined the country from the landing of the mayflower on a cobl bleak decemlier day at a plar which tiny afterwards named plymouth to tho landing of this vessel ou our coast i . . . . in sight oil ape cod freighted a it was wilh a band of puritan winners canters reformers and seditious disorganizes may he traced all our woes religious and po litical past present and future thev \ first th-d from england for their own good and for england's good pithched their tents for a few years in holland ; but a the hollanders were not any more i'i iendly to tin ir unsocial and seditious ways than the good people of england had before been they embarked and sailed for wil demess america here they planted the poisonns vine of puritanism which i y uonimous with all that i base and repul i sive in politics morals or religion puritanism and hatred are cou ver table lei ms says the old guard hate some | thing it continues the i'n lit an musl ; and thi hatred is always directed against some endowment or attainment denied . or unattainable by itself xo sooner had the puritans secured a footing on the bleak and rocky coast of massachusetts ' than they fulminated the most foolscap ed i icts againsi roman < atholics,"thongh there were none of that creed within hundreds of miles of them holidays and saint's days were prohibited as well as the great festival of the trie christians liii>t-i mas day : but the wisei om 5 know ing the \ yearnings of the heart for sei days of re creation ami enjoyment conceived the plan nf consecrating au illegitimate shad ow of christinas and hence wasordained an annual carnival for gluttons nnmiii it thanksgiving il-.\y sacred to sectarians ' who tor that one day gormandized on fai turkeys and plump pullets sweet ei der and pumpkin pii -. church edifices were to be no more tor ever bul meeting houses shaped not un like barns were erected in the place there of in which the faithful grunted and i groaned to their heai t's conti nt a 1 wherein was preached politii insti ad of religion ? love church organs were forbidden and the bass viol and vi olin weie anathematized ; n li twanged psalmody was t 1 :.- only music sacred or secular tolerated by tin sancti fied saints of the puritanic l'topia it being as natural for puritans to bate ag i is foi curs to snarl and having no enemies ai hand they mined liki a cei tain class of i ithsome reptiles and hit themselves the rapt ists one of the mo 1 respectable of all the disseuting sects but not quite so pure in bigotry as the simon-pnres of mayflower were di ivcu into the n ildei ness and com pelled to irnst in providence a^aiusl the wiles of the heretofore inoffensive indians rendi red im rciless by the inhuman treat ment of the puritan invaders quakers the most quiet industrious and unobtru sivi of all the eeta tinctnred with puri tanism were declared to be witches and were hauged outright sach episcopali ans as had found their way iuto the »'< 1 oiiv weie fined whipped imprisoned and banished for no other reason thah thai they uwed | 0read t , ie p niter . book and wor>hi god according to the rights of tin ir fathers never sever in the history of the world did bigotry intolerance and per secution reign so supreme as i d umtmt the modern liters ten rs and scribblersof that style ashamed of the of their ancestors attempted by iteration and i iteration to make their readers believe lhat their lathers bed to that land of bigots to es cape persecution at hum that i nol true only in a very limited sense many of the first settlers of massachusetts fled thither to escape the vegeance of those ihey had persecuted when by a fortuit ous concatenation of circumstances they had succeeded in overturning the govern ment of england true some of the em igrants from their old homes may not have been tin s llll . wuo ] ili j iiie gentlemen of eughind ; and then-lore bo tar as they were concerned iheir expa triation may have looked like persecution bnt as i the ism itself the exilement of ; '-' v '- i '- ict of retributive justice meant bile non-puritanic colonists and ad venturers from various places had set tled on the blessed soil-stolen and robbed by piractical pilgrims from the simple in dians and by ihe force of example had somewhat tamed down the savage feroci ty of the bigoted majority the middle ami so he rn colonies w . settled by far different and much better classed of | colonists than those who 6rsl landed at ; plymouth when ihe revolution broke on mie se ditious colony of massachusetts was tar • more obnoxious to the rule i ruin party of lhe mother conntry than wen the ' southern colonies nevertheless the gen rted southrons alianiiys step ped io aiii their not ovi 1 loved cousins f . psalm-sing and quaki r-burning proclivi j lies southern blood and mind shine ! conspicuous ou every page of the history of that unequal struggle lint tor ihem massachusetts mould have beeu a depen dency of england lo this day it is a standing boas ofthe partisans of massa chusetts that thai colouy furuished more soldiers for washington's armies than did . any other colouy 1 his i not true as to men for i'm war though it is i rue thai then were more enlistmeuts from that colony than from any other three i months enlistments prevailed iu that col ony dining the stages of the war and i washington in his public biters com plained bitterly of iheir uselessness by ihosc letters ii appears that recruits wero | sent to camp for instruction and by the time ihey were assigned lo regiments their term of service expired and away thev went met hail way home by high ■bounties they re-enlisted and before they were lit to take the field were again dis charged ; so tint the same men and boys . enlisted over and ovi r again thus add ing to he roll without increasing tho army the nieu who enlisted for during lhe war wen principally from new jer sey pennsylvania deleware maryland '. and virginia the regiments of the line from those colonies win relied upon liy , washington in most ol ii battles and skirmishes oi the revolution the men of those colonics achieved onr iudepen : dence aided as tbey were by many fiom all tin otht : colouii -. when a more perfect union was formed massachusetts lost some of her influence for ( \ i : leu after the death ot washing ton when two gnat panics sprang up 1 '; • favoring a strong government with despotic tendencies the othei in favor of lhe largest liberty to the people and the sovereignty of the states massachusetts puritans sided with the federalist the btrong government nun rat democracy and the people triumphed and tor sixty years with bat a brief interruption or two under the guidance of tlmt party's gnat men the ship ol state anchored in pro perity aud peace during the canvass of jefferson foi president when hydra 1 federalism n a dethroned tl*i malignant spirit of puritanism tinned out a new . and mr jefferson was the mos thoroughly cursed individual of his turn -. i the purchase of i^oiisiana b jefferson aroused the bitierness of puritanism again because th t addition to our terri ,. i ;.. i i ',. chance •>; in ire i'm itau - fn gland claimed th right to ovei lianl . our merchant men on tin high seas and search them lor such seaman as wero rritish-b im subjects uotwi hstanding they had renounced tiieir allegiance ami become amei ican < iti us mi ssachnsi us clamored lustily for redress the people .•; i middle a ■•; f»oul ll :.: mates again iin 1 - gallantly to 111 '. aid ii it do soou ' er did she -> ••■they win in < truest than she < z ■:■i her i i w hiued most ; piteoasly for the blessings and gains of jn ace and at once fi it to deno inciug jas madison and all t democrats after war was declared against great iin massachnsi tts took extreme states rrights ground she would not b-t her ina ■litia march oul ol tl i tate and order triments a wi i .- in the field not o obey order from the tieneral govern ment nevertheless she drew ou the ■_:••■. i-i unii ni for pay foi s ddiers w horn slie denied the right of tin government to ol but it was twenty-five years be fore she rot her pay and she aught nevci to liave bad it it was during that wai that the secret hartford convention wus held by repre sentatives ti m tbe new england states for the purpose of seceding from the union b it the cowardly radical puritanic dogs di 1 not have the courage to secede ( to be • ontinm d no 24 |