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the western carolinian i . t,ik i'ow ens mot iiia.i.t vnid to the united states by tite constitution cob i ., nv it to nu states ahe reserved to the st.vrus ii i:-i*i:i ti v i:i . oi to the people — amendments to the constitution article a benjamin austin & c f fisher salisbury is c jxmb 15 1838 s no i of volume xix i whole no from co.mmeycji'lkst 937 editors and proprietors ' ii i i 1 1 ii n i jvtriiiiiliiis resources we . hour theui from t by ■v hen nature herself lu mod traitor is its most deadly death \ mel;.i.choly*ase ol men l lieiliv within it assumes a new and superhuman tal derangement and consequent deatfi hns recent po vei . which is grfeater than nature itself whatever i occurred tn this city late ,.. the aalumn t>f it8c . ee d whatever itt sect from wliatwerae iasl yf ll,,,lsa , i """" r " a >"""« wu " u " " mont ortho globe in orisons arise virtue is goft ih i i twent years of age arrived er . i from hig hnjoa he w , , l p 1 » u ' 0 i | fi anen s ft 8 e - though cast iato the distant earth and strugglttig ; ,,,,., w.th two gen.leineii in attending :. h . ui , u ,',| ml ircua of lulu ,, liwl hnarl ,,, t|li about twonionths since sho was carried l ra 8pec(n , org of itsc on_lict orenlisted in i?scause in i state ul derangement to ihe c.iy bosp.tal l.y tho ,, ave lio|r ch ovef . those gentlemen and left their at the.rexper.se of mi ,., i;l , h .. le ( „, ug m %. anh ,*,.„,., icr _ ,„ ever poss.ble kind ofatteni.on was bestowed up<jn her0 t h , he illimitable ether and round tha herb 5 lhe worth steward and h.s amiable lady ; i mpene(rab | 0 darkness at the feet of god iis iri but these with the sk.llful treatment ol he attend i „ , h , . , ne(j b ,,., hjch nrp § ■a [ d b i l -" 0 "•' nv1 "' '". resto'l ™- glories , i tl - i a"i-..r."-7?«/«-.r n re ■tune b in was i tli n i moments i cireiiiii ■to ha zm lo imtlh i ho-jpitnl noilh in to i'l-'i.b on — i ii.-in,.i , — h new terms ! ,--,* - ni'iii of the j oung iu-;iiii , nt -. moment wlien , in the sinking light be remembered bow ardently ', i'.k bach ofthe stranger »;.< turned towards lip r ihey had both watched ibr tliat btill hour soon to it fell i.i hia feet ami was secured and pressed i be one of tenibld bitterness to tbe forsaken ive he bis lip wilh ii respectful courtesy that quickened tli ii mourn ; nud there wen ■■onil nts in which he the pulse of lhc ilunor ; hut nut a glimpse of llie j almost wished tha sho bad .'• ver loved bim fair gin accompanied the gin nnti it teemed ns but the hour of trial came al last stlim had hough ibe huron bail suspected wherefore — r redeemed his word nnd bulhaknfi wa ik ll.s ere long in bis ffpartmen ; aad when be hnd dis j companions in captivity would fain lime quitted missed hia attendants he once more advanced lo ibe fort in the hour bul the blieraie.l pri the wnn w and glancefj anxiously toward ii soner lingered he gave no reasontor his delav ; jealous lattices oy which it was overlooked , ho offered no explanation of his mi lives : he aim there wns a slight i!i,,i,oii perceptible behind ply announced his resolution not to qui the tower the screen ; a white hand waved a greeting and until the morrow ami ihen he shut himself into the imprisoned noble bent forward to ohliiin aj his chamber and passed here some of ths most nearer view of its fairer owner fur a moment bitter hours of bis captivity rechedi hnnoum stood motionless terrified at la once more twiligh lay long upon ihe watej excess ofher own temerity but there wns i more the time ol lit tryst was come — tlie last which powerful feeling at heart than fear ; and in the the beautiful young ltatioum wasever to keep with next she ibiced away her prison bars li.r an in lit r lover sjie had long forgotten the possibility slant aud with the telltale hand pressed upon her of his liberation ; nml when she btole from her bosom stood revealed t her enraptured neighbi r chamber lo the shadow of tho tall cypresses that from thnt day the beauty allowed herself to be 1 bail so ofter witnessed their meeting hor bruit tray to tbe captive hor intere.t in bis sorrows — she bounded like her step bui no fond smile wel did more i she admitted thai she shared thom ; and corned ber coming — no reproach n dear than ere lung there was not an hour thruuglmrt tbe day praise murmur d against her tardiness bulha day in which he thoughts of rechsdi hanouni knff was leaning his head againsl the tree beside were nol dwelling on ihe handsome prisoner whieh he stood and tho young beauty had el i thus were things situated duringtwo long years within her own ihe chill and listless i i that hung when the death of the reigning sultan at ihe ter al his side ore wnh a painful start ho awakened iiiinniiou of that period induced llio ambassadors from his reverie of england and prance to demand from his succaa tho interview was short hut brief as was iis so r selitn llie third tho liberty of t lie russian duration it bad taught ihe wretched girl that for minister the request was refused for the war her there was no future save one of misery she was not yet terminated ami thc new sovereign couhl not weep fuj ii drops of anguish would required no he ier pretext for disiegarding lhe have dimmed ibe i ma o ol him whom bhe had representations ol tho european ainhnssadors thnu loved and wns about to lose she made no reply the continuation of hostilities between the two lo the withering tidings he had brought for wbal countries but selim had other and more secret had words to do wilh sucb a grief as hers 1 she reasons i'or thus preempt inly negativing their was like one who dreamt a fearful dreiun ; and prayer : anil it will lie seen in the sune that they when she turned iivvny to r.-i-:ii.i her chamber she did nol arise from personal dislike to the captive walked with a firm step fur ber heart was broken muscovite and she had nothing now left to do bul to veil from grace settle upon his nnme sbe uti still love nnd cherish bim and if nil lhe v.,,ih cast bim aside sbe is all lhe w orld to him tkbk8 i puumcatlon \. th wcsl irn cai iblished wry l'iti n.w ni 1 wo uolliirs per i:niuiii if paid in advance i i ; •■mi ' fill foot paid bcc oxpiration f llire-j monlita ■_'. no paperwill i i ii 1 antil all urn sal the lis n tion , f die e , , nol :'. uie editor of a a '.'-., "'• ,,- n new ii ut-h . .*, , ..,-:,., nl usly nd correctly t rn e dollar per square for the first insertion , ... nts for ea courl aad judicial ...,.* .-. : j , pei com more than i prices '- i ol 33 per cent from i .. -,. .;,..!.,: „ will bo mad to yearly advertisers terms of advertising to insure prompt •:"• ntion i . l iters ndtlr should 11 all cusi-s be i i,l ro , ' iiiii 81 . n i'i:n is a family poisoned l luirnelt near galena illinois died a lli-w days since and bis children were thrown into leiiiivuuions by eating of tbo water parsnip wl b llike ihe wild parsnip is a deadly poison all urn belliferous water plants ol yellow blossoms and mosl of those that are white are generally poi sonous mis rllaneous a legil.nd of the seven tower av bu rumor on he declaration of war with russia made by ibe turks it 1786 baron bulhakoff the russian minister despite ins representation that lhe im . ,- io muscovite ambassadors on such con abolished by treaty was ne v , ; .,, ;,. ... t o the even towers hy order of the godzn you oul i'asha iho ginntl vizier with uf.im , a treaties were vory good things in timeol pe ce but mere waste paper in tbe event f w ar tin ambassador waa how ever treated with great civility and was even per mitted to sel ' * ■members of the legflion as he desirod should bear him company during bis captivity ; strict orders being given to the com mandtnl ol ihe cn-ile to accede to every request of his prisoner which did not lend to compromise his safely ; snd upon hip complaining of he accom modations of the tower he was moreover permit led to ereel a kiosk on the walls of the fortress whence h :■• a maguificenl view ofthe si a ol marmor - hllei ing islands and to construct „ spnei md handsome apartment within the i r i agricultural i'rnm lite sandusky clarion td de8trov lice and cateiu'ii.i.aiis on a makka 111.1 fact fruit treks wo have frequently noticed the net that if a man i pressed i'or money and 1'unl i accessary to curtail his expenses he infallibly discontinues bis newspaper his tobacco he must have and it will never do to have his family more coarsely dressed thnu his neighbors : and as to eatables thev are delicious things that must be had and then he must lay up something for his children the conclusion is hint it is fir more important to furnish the body with fine apparel and lhe appetite w ith ihe dauities it craves.than to furnish the mind with wisdom indeed it is a general feature in men's economising that the mind is lirst deprived of its food fet god has said happy is the 11,1111 th.-it liiulelh wisdoln and tin man that gettelh understanding for he merchandise of it is bet ter il,n i the merchandise i silver and ihe gain thereof than fine gold she is more precious tiinn rubies and all the things lhat thou canst desiro are not to be compared unto her length of days is in her right hand und in her lell hand riches and honor her ways are ways of pleasantness and all her paths are peace she is a nee of life to them that lay hold upon ber — prov.8 18 if men appreciated those truths they would be slow to deprive tho iiiintl of any source of useful information ihev art not aware of the irrepar ablo injury they do their children by depriving them of the kind of reading most likely to be both interesiiug anil profitable to them thu man must be pour indeed who cannot pay for one or two newspapers and occasionally purchase an interes ting book for bis family 1 have observed that fruit trees in this region aro almost uiuveisally injured by lice and cater pillars they first act ou the outer bark until il becomes almost black and finally destroy the tree it is said that ihey enjoy but a few days of life in the spring aud can then be easily destroyed i have observed that about the time of ihe first blossoms they arc loose in the bark : and i apply a while wash mixed of lime soap fresh cow-dung and wa ler which cllectually destroys them on evciy part ofthe tree to which it is applied as for the caterpillars i never suffer them lo remain on any tree 3d hours utter i discover them the process of destroying them is by boring a small hole two or lh.ee inches deep iu lho body of lhe tree nearly tilling il with common sulphur and stopping it with a soft wood plug driven light but not so bard as to split tho wood or the bark tbey rarely remain twelvo hours aflorwaids in a practice of eight or niuo yenrs neither of lliose , methods has failed in a singje instance s m lockwooh like hnroun alrasehid of arabian memory ■he new sultan timing lhe tirsl weeks of his reign amused himself by nocturnal wanderings about the streets of he city in disguise attended by the sub sequently famous hussein bis first and favorite body page anil iiinneiiiiitely that he bnd refused compliance villi the demand of the ambassadors be resolved on paying an incognito visit to his pri soner nl tho seven towers as soon as twilight had fallen like a mantle over the gulden glorie of stamboul he accordingly set forth ; anil ha ving discovered himself to lhe commandant and enjoined him to secrecy he entered the anti-cham her of lho baron where ho found one of his suite lo whom he expressed his desire to have an inter view with the captive ambassador the individual to whom the sultan had address ed hir-iself recognised bim at once hut without betraying that he did so contented himself will expressing his regret that he was unable to comply with the retpiest of his visitor the orders nf the sultan being peremptory that the baron should hold no intercourse willi any one beyond lhe walls ol lhc foi trass on receiving this answer selim replied gaily that the sultan need never bo informed of lhc cir cumstance ; and that heing a near relative ol the commandant and having obtained bis permission to have a few minutes conversation with the pri soner he truste.l that ho should not encounter any obstnele either on the part of thc baron himself or on that of his friends her lover the extentof her own anguish lest she should add to the bitterness of his the morrow came the baron turned a long soul-centered look toward the lattices ol ins young love and quitted her for ever and ere man weeks were spent the same group of c\p s which bad overshadowed the trysting plaoe of re chedi haiioum gloomed above her grave the rommaudn.it rn lodapd beneath the same roof as mer he had an only daughter so young ihal she might luivo taken j sin • e : n houri who wait at lhc pi ita * . • ... t i * - i the faithful across its tl , - v i ii . ,-, ij loss beautiful than they fill • i i wnh their delicate breathings the | i ofthe roses since the liirth of 1 li 11 iiiuu n and she had far out bloomed the i . ins of lhe fairest seasons her v when ii vvas poured forlh iu song came i the i'l.i.-.-s i,f her casement like thn tones i tan mandolin sweeping over the waters of ill bea — when you looked upon her it was as u . li v,,u looked upon a rose ; and when you lis lei ., vou seemed io listen to llie nightingale i;,(iiodi h.nourn had never yet polluted the - i :-,. lierl ni the garden of llnwers her . n r wns ns free as the breeze that came i , brow from the blue htistun ofthe propontis ; a ■wrfon she hoard that a muscovite giaour was i :, i tu become nn inmate ofthe tower she only ir , bled for she knew that he was an enemy oil , ii i '. - m^t m m m m t'riini the shi ich book borrow for the dead the sorrow for lhe den i is the only sorrow from which we refuse lo ho divorced kvery oilier wound wc seek to heal — every other affliction t forget — but this wound we consider it a duly to keep open this affliction wo cherish and brood over in solitude — where is tbe mother that would vvilln.^ly l"*ir lho infant ll forittlied lik a blos som from her arms though every recollection is a pant — where is the child that would willingly for get the most tender of parents though to remem ber ho but to lament ? who ever in tin hour of ag ony would forget the friend over whom be mourns who even when the tomb is closing upon the re mains uf her he most loved when bo feels his heart as it wen o rushed — in tho closing of its portals would accept of consolation thai must he bought by forgetfulness ! no the love which sur vives the tomb is one of the noblest attributes cf the soul if it has its woes it has likewise iis de lights — and when the overwhelming burst of grief fckcalmetl into the gentle tear of recollection when ugar licet — tlie northampton courier says thc ninon beet will be extensively cultivated this yosr in that county uot merely for the purpose of making sugar but as food for animals the yield to an sere being enormous — averaging from eigh teen lo thirty ions and the soil is at tbe same time benefitted by ii one hundred pounds of heel says the courier will yield seven pounds of sugar giving ut twenty ions to the acre a product of 1500 time — i saw a temple reared by the bauds of man standing upon its high pinnacle in the distant plain i he streams bent upon it ; the <.',,,! of na lure hurled bis thunderbolt amidst it and yet it stood us firm as adamant revelry was in its bulls — ibe guy lhe happy and lhe young were here i r turned — nud lol tlie temple was no more ! lis high walls lay in scattered ruin — moss and wild grass grew rankling there — and at ho mittftighl hour the owls cry added to tbe deep solitude tho young nnd gn who rcvelbv there passed away 1 saw u child rejoicing in his youth be idol ol ins mother and the pride of his falh i returned and the child had become old — trembling with the weight of years he slootl tho lust of his generation a stranger midst the deso lation n round biia ■| economy in feeding there is perhaps no department in tbe business of agriculture so little attended to in this country as that of economy iu the feeding oi stock and none which requires more atteution it hss been demonstrated time after time that the mere bruising of oats or corn or the cutting of bay adds fully one-third to its value ss food : that is that one third less in quantity of cither will answer that this is thc fact we have no doubt and have long been surprised that so few persons owners of slock adopted this mode of feeding no one who lias watched with a discriminating eye the effects of feeding animals with whole grain bul must have observetl the fact a large portion comes from them precisely in lhc same condition it was recoived by them into their stomachs tho reason of this is obvious : their stomachs have become so enfeebled by being long used to uubruised grain corn or oats as to lie unable to digest the regular portions of these substances daily given them this fact alone should bring about n reformation as it is cal culated to convince any ono capable of drawing just deductions from well established principles lhat all food which is voided iu an undigested state so fur from having done any good must have been tbe cause of much positive harm as all bodies which lie in the stomach iu that condition arc so many sources ol irritation derangement and dis ease i tut there is another view which we do not recoiled to have seen enforced it is this : lhat by crushing or bruising all grain food given to cat lie tbe manure will be the more valuable how ol'lon do we sec a piece of ground which has been manured from the horse stable so covered with oats as to induce lhe belief in a stranger that onts had absolutely been sown when in fact they had sprung from th undigested grain which had pass ed through th lorses the trouble which such foul manure i iposes upon the husbandman we need not mention as sad experience hns made every one , intimate wilh it if then one-third in ipinniiiv of : grain can be saved ; if thnt fed is more nutritious i if the manure made from it is cleaner and better i why should farmers and planters hesitate a mo ment ? why do they not at once abandon a prsc tico so replete wit.h evil . we leave lhe solution of hi"*e questions to those interested — farmer jf i gardener was however soon succeeded by curi osity only a lew weeks after the compulsory .: iinestication ofthe ambassador at the seven tow ers his kiosk was completed and from ber closed casements the young hanoutn could sec all that p.issed in the vast apartment ofthe prisoner her first glance at lhe dreadful infidel was iran stent ; bul soon sho took another and a loe.ger look ; and curiosity was iu its turn succeeded by sympathy the russian prisoner was lhe hand soaiest man on whom her eves had ever rested i the dragoman with afflicted reluctance quitted ,■„, a „„ u h all | ,|„, c „. v ini-,i n-mnv v.-t the room lo ascertain as he asserted the determi ulc cn , rll * m8 „,- lll that we ,„„,, | ove d is sof nation ol his excellency but in reality to inform ,<,,„„, rway [„,„ pons j ve meditation on all that it him of the imperial masquerade ; anil in five mm ■the'uuvs of its loveliness who would root "•*■'"""'•' bsguised sulinn and h.s favorite ou , ft c |, a 80 r row from the heart though it may were ushered mto the apartment of the ambassa b0111 eti„,es ,| uow a passing cloud over the bright r - hour of gaiety or spreads deeper sailness over after some inconsequent conversation selisn in t |„. ur ofgioom ; vet who would exchange it quired how the baron had contrived to divert the „ v n ,* f |||( , gonfi of .,| emura orthe | mrs „,* rt;vel , weary hours ol his captivity ; and was answered j f . , n(j „.,,_.,. ; g a vmcc om „ 0 nm gwee jj that he had endeavored to lighten them b books , .^ sof . herc renienilirance „,-„„, d j 1o and by gazing out upon the sea ot marmora irom w | lich w t„ni even from the charms of ihe living lus kiosk bulhnkoff sighed as he made the re ll ,| 10 ■.*•,„■,!— the grave !— it buries.everyer ply and remembered how much more ihey had 1 jy en rvvrv defeel x:ii,gui-hes every re been bnghtmied by he affection ol the fair roche s . 1 „„ 1 ,.„, , from its p refill bosom spring none di hanoum ; and he almost lell as though be were i j ,-,,,,, , ls aml tender recollections * an ingrato that be del not add her smiles nnd her u „, ,,, u lo()u , u)m , ,, 13 c evpn o - „ n solicitude to the list ol ins p on blessings enemy nud not led a conq c.ioti that he should " the same volume and the same kiosk cannot evcr j uivl . w al red with that handful of earth that please forever sain the sulinn with a smile ;, ls mouldering before him ! hit be grave of those and you would nol doubtless be irry to ex 1 we | 0 vd^-«hut a place for meditation ! there it is rhangn your books for the conversation of ynur *|..*. *,,.,. ca || u p j review the whole history of vir fellow men nor your view of the blue propontis |„ t . a d gentleness and lhe thousand endearments for one moro novel a prison is but a prison nt lavished upon us almost utiheeded in our daily in the beet even though you may be locked up'.with t rc ourse and uiiiuiuey — there it is ilmt we dwell all lhe courtesy in the world but your captiv ity i p on the tenderness lhe_solomn awful tenderness is not likely to endure much longer sbekieur „|- ,•,,, parting scene lhe bed of death with all its allah !— praise to god ! i am intimately ac 1 stihoj griefs its noiseless attendants iis niuln quainted with the sultan's favorite and 1 know watchful assiduities tho lasl testimonies l ex ihal bad not the med-lliiig ministers of englaari liring love ! ihe feeble fluttering thrilling oh and france sought to drive the new sovereign into | lmv thrilling pressure ofthe ham the last loud on net of justice whieh he bad resolved to perform loob 0 f the glazing e\e turning upon us eve irom incllliation you would have been ere this at i f rom ti l . thresh hi of existence ' the faint faltering liberty t)o nol therefore u induced to lend your ncrcms struggling indeathto give one more as - ,?. self or your countewinco to nny intrigue that tbey ranee of atlect ' ay t goto the grave of bu mav make to liberate you and which will only tend r)c | | uvc au ,; meditate '. to exasperate his highness ; bul wait patiently for another month nnd nt its expiration yon wilfbe j e m.ilher — there is something in sickne-s set free and restored it y»ur country , thai brenks down the pride of inn nh i ; ihntvift 1 trust thai you may prove a true prophet ens ibe heart and brings it hack lo lhc feelings of saitl the baron and his visitors shortly afterward ■infancy who that bus sulii-re even in nilvaaced departed | life in sickness and despondency who lint has beon the days wore on ; the mont i was almost at an in a weary bed iu the neglect n:,,l hmpline-s of n end and yet the captive nobie bad never ventured foreign bun but ha liirmght ofthe mother ilmt to breath to the fair girl w ho loved him thc pro ; looked on his childhood that smom^ted bis pillow babitilv of his liberation h shrank from thei and administered lo his helplessness qh there-is lask almost wiib trembling for he fell that even to no endearing tenderness in tbe h.feof a mother for him the parting would be a lulter on — even lo inr son lhat transcends all ntboi flections of the him although he was about to ret-over lihorly lent ll is neither lube chilled bv danger nor and gauntry and friends what then would it weakened hy bortbleseness nor stifled by ingra.i bo to her — to his caged bird as he had often tilde shu will sm-rifice everv comfort to his con fondly cnlle.l her who knew no j iv sue in his veneience she w ill surrender every pleasure io his presence — no liberty save thai of loving him ' enjojgmcnt slue will glory in lift fame and exult in as ibe twilight fell sadly over the sea and the tall ; bis prosperity aud il adversity overtake him he trees of the prison garden grew dark nntl gloeuiy i will be the dearer lo her bjr misfortune ; and ifdis ond it was not ihus hut she had pictured to her self the dreaded muscovite he wss unhappy tool i'or in lus solitary moments he paced the fltior with hurried and unequal steps like one who is grappling will some painful memory — and at limes sal sadlv with lus head pillowed on bis hand and hi lingers wreathed amid the wavy hair which en i in-led his brow itkikiii so mournful and above jnij o lasciu.iliiig thnljhejair lurchethjihnsthtj singular and fatal accident a very extraordinary accident occurred in port hope tn y . n l-'riilry last which has plunged a highly respectable family in that town in the deep est affliction in the morning of that day master lames mcspadden a yotilli about 14 years of age eldest son of mr i mcspadderi left home to fetch as he said something from the presbyterian church which stands nearly opposite his father's house not returning immediately it was sup posed he bad walked down the town and no alarm was lilt ibr his safety some hours afterward a young companion chancing to pass in lhe rear of church observe iiini hanging us ho thought in an odd manner from one of lhe windows and call hitn to see what be wus about — receiving no wer be wen up to bim and discovered that the unfortunate youth wss dead having been caught by ibe neck and strangled with the sash ofthe wintlow which apparently bad fallen upon bun while in the uct of passing in oi out of the church he bnd climbed lo the witic'ow by a bidder from which ins feel had slipped — coburgh slur . , * , lu ; ttthm^^jmtt^iv lli iu-i gtse riveted upon him ; and to find more hnppi uess in those tears than in all the simple pleasures lli.il had hitherto formed the charm of her exist ence little did the young ii annum suspect that she i veil tlie giaour she never dreamed of passion but with a'l ihe generous anxiety of innocence in oucciotll lhat a warmer feeling than lhat ol in i pity urged ber to the ellbrt she began to muse upon the means of diminishing the irksome noss ofa captivity which she was incapable of ter minating the first the in t natural impulse led her lo sweep her hands across the chords of her '■b.-.-k ; and as she remarked the start of ngreea ii prise wnh which the sound was greeted by lhe courtly piisoner imr young heart bounded with joy and the wild son gushed forth wilh n wcetness which chained lho attention of the enp livo and afforded lo the delighted girl tbe oppor nn.ily nfu long look lha more ban repaid her for ber minstrelsy during thc evening he watched to ascertain whether a repetition of her song would be expec .' she ditl nol watch in vain to more than ibe ru-.si.in noble leant from his casement sad seemed i . list n : but he came not there alone in captivity was beside bim iri l ■;, : , haooum although sbe guessed not wherefore had inl.lenly become jealous ol her minstrel , aud would not exhibit it before a third the mooi rose frnm the lermnn cf krvmniacln r the guardian angel ofthe flowers who iu the silence of night sprinkles tham with refreshing dew once on a spring day wn lumbering in lhe sbnde ofa rose bush and when be awoke he spoke wnh friendliest mien : most lovely of my children i thank ibee for this balsamic odour and for thy cooling shade was there any thing left for thee to desire how cheerfully would i grant it — adorn me then with some new chnrm prayed lha spirit of lhe rose bush and ibe angel adorn ed lhe beautiful flower wnh a simple moss how lovely appears in this modest attire the moss roee the handsomest of her species reauliful emma leave off those gaudy orna ir.ni — those glittering gems nnd imitate ma ternal nature oaksfor the parlnnr — if you heng an acorn by a siring about half an inch above the surface of some water contained in a hyacinth gins it will throw down long while roots while its stem will rise upwards and become decorated with bright green and delicate leaves when it grows over the top of tbo hyacinth glass it becomes a very prelly objea on the nor row nn equally graceful and equally i'.il . liott whihil the prisoner a timo from ins sorrows a hisler of rosea woven together w.lb a 1,-,-s f bright dark hair was hung from lhe
Object Description
Title | Western Carolinian |
Masthead | Western Carolinian |
Date | 1838-06-15 |
Month | 06 |
Day | 15 |
Year | 1838 |
Volume | 19 |
Issue | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | Benjamin Austin and C. F. Fisher |
Date Digital | 2009-04-13 |
Publisher | Benjamin Austin and C. F. Fisher |
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 June 15, 1738 issue of the Western Carolinian 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 | 601574277 |
Description
Title | Western Carolinian |
Masthead | Western Carolinian |
Date | 1838-06-15 |
Month | 06 |
Day | 15 |
Year | 1838 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 2185086 Bytes |
FileName | sawc04_18380615-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 4/13/2009 10:44:35 AM |
Publisher | Krider & Bingham |
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 Western Carolinian a historic 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 |
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the western carolinian i . t,ik i'ow ens mot iiia.i.t vnid to the united states by tite constitution cob i ., nv it to nu states ahe reserved to the st.vrus ii i:-i*i:i ti v i:i . oi to the people — amendments to the constitution article a benjamin austin & c f fisher salisbury is c jxmb 15 1838 s no i of volume xix i whole no from co.mmeycji'lkst 937 editors and proprietors ' ii i i 1 1 ii n i jvtriiiiiliiis resources we . hour theui from t by ■v hen nature herself lu mod traitor is its most deadly death \ mel;.i.choly*ase ol men l lieiliv within it assumes a new and superhuman tal derangement and consequent deatfi hns recent po vei . which is grfeater than nature itself whatever i occurred tn this city late ,.. the aalumn t>f it8c . ee d whatever itt sect from wliatwerae iasl yf ll,,,lsa , i """" r " a >"""« wu " u " " mont ortho globe in orisons arise virtue is goft ih i i twent years of age arrived er . i from hig hnjoa he w , , l p 1 » u ' 0 i | fi anen s ft 8 e - though cast iato the distant earth and strugglttig ; ,,,,., w.th two gen.leineii in attending :. h . ui , u ,',| ml ircua of lulu ,, liwl hnarl ,,, t|li about twonionths since sho was carried l ra 8pec(n , org of itsc on_lict orenlisted in i?scause in i state ul derangement to ihe c.iy bosp.tal l.y tho ,, ave lio|r ch ovef . those gentlemen and left their at the.rexper.se of mi ,., i;l , h .. le ( „, ug m %. anh ,*,.„,., icr _ ,„ ever poss.ble kind ofatteni.on was bestowed up |