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catttlitte hi tttrlmttm salisbury n c monday august 20 1807 no 34—whole no 1777 vol 2 third series tit rms yv'eliki.y 1 year 3 00 0 inonllis i 60 t -. - ii in advance rates of advertising onssquare space ol t-lines firsl insertion 1 un .. 2d 3*1 aud 4th insertion each 60 " for each additional publication m clicaf i.nun - ws iiave tiled llio aurora fluid sold ai ur poulson v co'a drug store nultiiid u i make iba ehesp.it light we have ever u»ud willi oos pint we ki-pl a lamp burniug forslx oiglita unt i bed lime wo used th parlor lamp whioh m ikei « light equal to st lcasti.ro candles from lhal ti until morning we keep a light in our private room all niglu i wi ui lbs safely lamp burning al half blast and equal to aboul onecaiidli dr p & co n.i tbs fluid rn do cis per gallon io that il will i observed that our lights for ono weekcont i ~\ ots ths tl lid is not explosive sn i ia therefore free from ths ssrioui objections to im in ibis uii ' ii and much lens off.n live to tbs iiboii trouble i3rewing prom what wo have beard thoro is to bo some trouble in the matter of registrn lion beveral gentlemon havo told us that they have been refused the privilege of exercising the right c mtrary to tho ex lanation's often published of lhc ac we give the following translation from the wilmington journal aud it strikes ua as being c nee all mult twenty-one years of age who ! ive i sided in this slate one year and -, ho have not been con • icted ol folony i who previous lojhe war did not hold nny slate or fedei al office art i ilitied i -/,'-,'. r and vot . win !/ oi tay ,.,./,!,/■,/ in iif ''• '■■■org to the south if they held offl o an i did i l a ward * ge in ■war or aid l ,-;.,,.- ■' • 1 111 -. i i ■' • ' - igll till iii m the war or .- ■■i ■. i'.irc the vvti i-.i lor .... i-i in tidm taken iho i i tgi 1 tr or j ilie litis d include i i held uiii . tie not i tin iin ■! am ng the di ai li ed it must bo ni ill i-'-'i •- ig d in the rebellion and com ; it to lhe enem ed s at -." , not of i'-'it disfra any one ■must hove been nrec eded by tho holding t a stal fe leial ■ffice pre t ,' • .-.'..- ..- ie '— • radicals 1 . i bi i . of salu - i-i 11 ,...,. ,,'■,-■g sou i a very aim i , nr 1 m.i l.'i''i ' i he ,. , of hi i m • - ■-- atet uml-r n»u nu . i ■■| ■• i ' i ,, , . i in • 1 . i . . ,:! iit 1 i .- i .. in proee«s of execuli in 1 - i ■-- opes il 8 it iu iba ! - • .' ■-- ' ' iu li puts the govi riutii nt in thu handa capable p-1 ui ed by dep a i i pull tl i r of 1 ii ll ' in ' ii i ' - -, .. ,„ would tbui i i - tho ii mi ol ,'. !,_. for tin r own ad perl uf i •■pla undei lhe forma of i iw in ill if i ignorance an 1 i >| i n imed hy tli iiiniii',mil nt race and c tale -•- lb en throned while intell gel ce and viilue would i || i r ■" nn i - ii i | i •■' . i i ; i | i 1 j iii .. 1 ' tlmt ni io sti ingonl legi lalion to towards tho south will grovv out of tho buipension of mr stan ion is plain to all rofli cling men ii ' ■i star a l.i cal ".',->•' • • -. party is governed nol by principle but ny a spirit of petty revongo iu its gov ornuienl ofthe southern siutos because mr johnson has impended a l.adical socretai v ol w r tho i llicrn states are lo bo punishod i * tos history furii bii any procedonl for malignity so despica ble towards an unoffending pooph i mi doctor gumming bassevoral times pro dieted tho end oftho world and fixed tho day for it to ooi tl bin his pi odictions havo always been fulsifiod the worlda would iu spite of him roll on in it ao i ■imed c mi o tho ilootor now however is dotorminod tn utono for the past ainl acknowledged that in his pre diction - li was mistaken i lo saj in rev it-in tho calculations on vv hich ho based tho announcement of tho worlds onding in 1807 ho di icovoi i thai he lunl ovoi loku i figure - vv hich hnd ma lliina liko a rjtitnlillion ol j oars lo tho raoe which thia mundane i ihoro has lo inn to bi o ill real day i tho end of tho wm id thi i afore wo mu il wail - timo longoi . ii \ terrible earthquake ocourrod on tho !• ami of jam on june loth it wai vo ry destructive throwing down many buildings and lulling many i>c-f>plc the losses aro i-iii<l to lie incalculable the sugar crop which hnd just heen brought into the barns is totally lost a huge number of europeans and natives por i-ihi-d — the report says as many as three hundred it was feared also that other parts of java might ne i.-ited with earth quakes even ut batavia shocks were lelt on the day the mail started thei rinderpest ib also making great ravages among lhe entile of java _ colored prophet forlfln the woes ol his people tub white man khali join a btran01 nation a correeponcent living in rawamba c-unit v mississippi hits sent us a curious prophesy recently made by a colored preacher named lewis saxtoti de costa ami causing it ib said immediate senses timi nm-iiig the blacks in that part of m . li'i'i i costa is n very old man who claims to be iim son of african par i,i ; his father who was a prince haw int li.-iii wilh baxton'g mother kidnap ; .| some distance up the n per by a 1 ivi i who bold them io pedro bluncho i llio gr ial trader at the oaliiius they subsequently belonged io tho de costa estate in florida win n lewis wa rais od after forty years of slavery he got ilia ii i'hun by saving from a burning i.milling the children of his mistress lie in mill in in a man of remarkable purity f life btid an army oflicor oaptain van vlect who beard bim in georgia de llml he was the most eloquent man ii i vor beard in his life during the war 1 could not be induced to give aid lu . ither the federuli r c side ii ncj ing rej y beii g tbat it was nn ii comfort the hearts of his . widely known and everywhere ;,■_• i i i i iib extr i io v neratlon by the s it is i t strange ihat ihoy bhould ' ■. nnu lli lis words a -. i ' i !. ! t -, . \,-- hi " ■■; ell n i 1 scc i hi ly 1 tu ii ii v ii its 1 ' tat . ■' i pi 0 '' ; i ; •..-.■ir in :: n ii i b and ' . . ■■nul i.v in ... clear i y -.-, • 1 a . , rl of man is i lu evil 1 la the dumb •■>., i e , ii "., , ir , vly i c ii 1 n y , 1 ■i .-■. t in nn - 1 ii win . u ; mv eye saw the pres it a i . ■. - t i i ■■: tun 1 b . prof inui was my as 11 ntl in gerod i t altliougl [ bad 1 ig 1 bfke i the no who i by mo whal means these rec n isl the shin ng one said they are l e lives of nut ont ru ghty p ople that passu 1 mv u nnd lefl no trace i i.'i 11 i ni in b ra se i p ii --- who i : een debased 1 asked no he r ■i more olt n debasement gi i • be f , ki notion ; open thine eyes an i soe tbo : itu f thy people tbey aro proud they in i'l themselves rather thnii in ii :. lbey have forgotten the i rill bless yonr enemies pray l'.,r il ..-!• u ; ■vv rung y ti they sjiesk b tt oi ly 1 ii v nr le i to hate they made i md in hostile array look , i now an 1 too ihu vision of the i f ,• in i • ■'. i u i lifted up and through the bluoi-ky of a summer day i saw a 1 my i pie 1 saw them working on plan tatmns and iu shops—i baw ilium in i rbarches they vverosome liincs cheated sometimes shamefully ib sod because tliev wore black but men « bi lo l iheir lab r and thoy were i rising above wrong and prejudice i ti theto went forth iwo bearing -.,.., wrath and those they poured • i tlm i hole land 1 non the i i iay lobor bocatne liiished — m v .," n , n the field and tbe work i i choked up iho cotton —; i weeds biuothered the corn the a i i pi s une 1 iy all day tins i l,.i tl bi a lo i rooa in * mi i peel some itiinotak ng all the property ol tho wbito man others crowd i into liquor btores and bpenl their lime iu bpe ikii g bitter ] ly ol in b id i ist iiii t wishing for re tho white pi">i le up n whom the vials of wrath wore puired booame hitter against the colored man tbey bai i thore iiu'ti'ii millions ol us whites while there are only live millions of theso blacks | i why h iihl o boar wuh them longer 1 they seek now to oppress us thoy are mir enemies wo will put bijcii burden upon tl em that ihey will be driven out or blotted out ns a people wo no longer need llioir labor wo can hire mon from , asia wo can got those men who will ! wm k harder and b i ghid lo gol h-r a year's work whal wo pay a black man for working one month thou i baw millions of people brought with oxc ling swift in is from asia and tin v filled up iim whole boulhern o mn in in.'i they were overywhoro preferred to colored men and ihey bottled in tho land then hard laws woro mule againsi the blacki and thoy beoaine outcasts nml vagabonds tho angel brought mo back to my own place and said " i'hoy that seok btrifo ami bittorness bhall ierish tborob.v and i wopt much fur iiii calamities of my people a remnant may be saved if thev seek peace with aii men and lahor i ns iod hits appointed thom lkwi8 sax-ion dbcobta a letter gives tbo following details of i tlio iisbassiniitioii of lopez who betray ed maximilian : i arrived here to-day and learned the startling news of tbe assassination of the traitor lopez tbo particulars of the nssassinatioo are aa follows lope wus stopping nt a hotel in i'uebla where his wife spurned him from her presence j early one morning a mexican arrived und familiarised himself with a hostler in i livery stable adjoining the hotel gen miguel lopez was inquired for but not being in the stranger was told ihat the general would he at dinner bei fore the dinner boar lopez returned and p was pointed out to the stranger who made special note ofhis man when dinner was called lopez and his assassin occupied opposite seats at the table afs ter some minutes during which time the stranger called for and drank u glass of | wine bo deliberately rose drew a con cealed knife and sprung iipnii lopez and stabbed him nine times the stranger then took his hat and as he started to leave baid : this is the way all traitors should be paid no one interfered or prevented the assassin from leaving th us wan the blood ol maximilian mint mon mcjia yes and thousands of others avenged this report is regarded as authentic served tu em right since the election of tennessee thous ands of negroes have heen discharged by their while employers because they voted for the infamous brownlow the radicals sympathise deeply with these unemployed laborers hut they give tbein nol one cent to support tliiin ill their idleness white men neither in tennessee not elsewhere can be expect ed to give employment to negroes who ni i in destroying the material prosperity ol the country and join a p id of ad venturers antl knaves n reducing them to beggary and iu depriving ihem of aii i o privileges nml rights of froemon in new england the cotton manufacturers are all rad cals ; an i '. isl spi ing he rad ical manufacturers i ooiir.ecticnl dis charged almost vi iv w'.'to iii.-in i-in ;,.| >. ed t v them « bo bad voted thu dem ocratic ticket tin ) said t ey could im i : v men who voted a^-.i st their in terests no t er cm southern men give omi vim-lit to those who vote tor their d slratichisement and degra int.on +, honduras—the american settlements a correspondent ofthe nassau guar dian writes with much enthusiasm re specting the american settlements re cently estttb'.ished in honduras as fol lows : a glorious future seems to be arising j for honduras an immense flow of immigrants from the southern states of america have arrived with their wives and families and implements of indus try ami are now buying large trae ol land to settle upon several gentlemen of itihucnce among tbein have heen to bel izo on their behalf to visit the surround ing country and select tewnsbip and j locations the governor,colonel hunt r m.j and mr faber the crown snr feyor have been on a journey with them and tbe result of this has b.en tbat two township have been selected the one is to he called port austin the other buena vista tho former will make an excellent harbor on lhe bay—j the olher up the belize river on the we tern frontier will ho an excellent check on the oncroaehmetith of the indians who will find tlio southerners rather more tough and decisive that the english | settlors wilh whom they have been ill j the habit of meeting each of these townships is to ho populated with 500 persi ns within two years and important inns d ratious aro held out to irami j g-unts by way of encouragement for i'-!.nice for opening up tho river and , le n ing iho bed for navigation they are io have a five yeais conclusive right to tin navigation ol it it they put on a btoamcr tiiey are to neeive from the pub lio treasury j100 per trip twice a v.-oek as ti sort of subsidy and all llieir furni ture lumber implements and chatties aro to he landed il belizo free of all du ty it therefore appears to us that ii tno colonists will only ho liboral and of fer these immigrants solid advantages honduras will in a tow years ho one of the richest of the west india colonies the white sulphur the richmond dispatch has a good correspondent in tho mountains listen at tho follow : -- tho bost sally i.nud nnd riches widow aro at tho alum tho meanest tenpiu alloy is ut the hot the liev di van dyke of brooklyn is at the swi it ile is a lineal descendant of tho dutohmoii who dug down their dykes i'.io old ting did'nt bcaro him i ttlo curls in front are fasliionablo hero the are mado by spitting on iho hair and tolling over tbo little anger thu laun dry mos wa.inboard tbo|oatoror at tho alum is short and can't see his feet i jen joe iiul.tihtnii dime to tho hot nne j evening—fell bach to alum next day tho intent btyo is for tho indies in tlir cabinii i 11c;n it raiim too inticli to attend tbo dance to tend the dresses they would have worn to bo hunt in the ball room they bring them over in u covered sprlng-'wagon kept for the purpose — there's ti kitten ti^er at the alum the best fare and tlie smallest company are ut tho ilealitit blacking shoes is ten cents inio short dresses are fashion aide for ladies with small feet ; trails for cut ankles ihere is a real bengal tiper here be bit a youngster tho other night eauso he kept foolili wid him heard floge—he's u regular rifled parrott witb patent sights—trees the fellows in front und goes clean across after the stragglers and quartermasters a baltimore sam ple clerk thinks lee the greatest captain if lln age—the general had bowed to a crowd ho was in the yankees didn't get nil the jewelry woodward here is tlie same monsieur soyer that lixed up a venison steak out of a mutton for some rich old southerners they would have given him all their estates but they in vested everything in confederate bonds l •__»._ — selecting snd corn an illinois cor respondout of tho independent writes last spring and early summer there was i-'imu discussion about selecting seed corn some advised shelling tlie tips r if aid reserving the middle of the ear j for planting one man said one grain on the same cob is as good as another had j he been a raiser ct corn hu would have known better some ten years ago ii planted an ear of corn to test the differs ence between the produce of the kernels of both ends and thu middle of the same [ ear at.d will give you the result the soil was just alike tbe cultivation tlie same nnd tl.e crop very different i planted the first rows from the large end of the ear the next two rows from the middle and the lust two rows from the tip or small end ; and planted ail the aine morning the large end produced i -. id cars wilh irregular rows much as you wil find them at that en ! of tlie ear tho middle kernels produced large ears tn islly straight-rowed and fair i'lie liroii_-,!.t forth nubbins onl ; lliutu was i it a fa r ear on ii tw i i ows i _ in tni is n experimental fact i ui may use an yon ploase 1 have raised corn in re or less for forty years ai i now plant only about half or nt most two-thirds of the keinelson each ear of eon aud 1 generally raise ni j ei t ... sympathy.—if the image of my friend rises up spontaneously as it were in the mind and dwells there liko nn actual presence so that every lineament of the countenance every glance of the eye is represented ns vividly as if they were indeed before me and tlie sound of their voice is in my car i firmly believe that at tlie very moment tliat person is think ing of mo this is sympathy why if this is not the case does that phantom rise up uncallod for by any previous word thought or association i impressedjwith this delightful convicton i hold sweet communion with the absent and in the atmosphere of thought enjoy the purest ensation ._-.«• — thk old guard for septem ber the september number of tni old guard has boen received it opens with an artieio from the editor the battles f virginia and joscelyn aro combined ti e btory i alvorley is concluded tho mongrel republics of america by l>r van evrie is nn iinportai : resume of the mexican ques tion tne catechism of the coustiu tion is continued tl o book table tlio editor's table nnd some pieces of poetry cotnplet a very readable nnmber bin fle copies sent post paid for 25 conts or s.no l.y nil news dealers van evrie horton & co publishers no 102 nassau si , n y . ♦. — early riting every circumstance contributes lo render early rising advi sable lo those who are lo the enjoyment of health there is no time equal in i beauty and fn shness to the morning whon nature has just parted with the glocmy mantle which night had dung over hoi and stands beforo us like a young bride from whose aspect lhe veil which covered her loveliness has been j withdrawn ... two liishmi'ii were at woik in a by when one of tbein fell on n pi ce ol quicksand and began to sink eliscoin pai ii fi mm nod ran for assistance and finding n farmer begged him to bring a rop nnd como before it was too late lie is alroady i'i up to hisankles exclaimed tho friend in despair oh h.ud iim farmer reassured ihon there is | iitv of lime not a moment for you s e ho went in bead foremost /:, lhe jet nature.—wom dreadful that the fairest of created things bear in their very lovolincss the seal and sign ol tlii'-r deoav ' news of the day sheridan orders art election new hrl-aii aug 18 p m sheriil.iii adticipnted election order was is-u.d yesterday it pr ivkle un days fur lbe election sept 27 nud 28 j li convention ia lo be composed of nin»'y eigbt member the hoards of registration are ordered to reni-h the rolls immediately the registration will taks plsos fourteen days before the elecli '.. the dumber of repreientativ.r in each fariab i dee got ited bhoul i violence or fraud bs perpetrated nt anv of the voting preeincls on lhe dayi of the eh-c j lion the offenders will h punished in the se verest mannerand lbe election within such pri , unit « ill be held over again uml-r the protec tion of united stales troops ]■'■■,-, ign v.wt london aug 18 parliament will bo pro longed on wtdneaday next from washington washington a\,r 18.—commodore kilty releaves rear admiral rowan lbe commander of lln.-norfolk navy yard nho will command the atlaiitic squadron pope writes ijtnerai irunt a letter mn tig two aolid columns the letler of ii ii hill of ileorgia furiii bet lbe lext the following pnragraph occurs ll is my duty however to hale that in my judgment tbe condition ot ml lira in the souih ern states even should reconstruction be sat i fac'.orily accompii.-lied will ofa necessity be a reproduction in a more or l.ss modified degree of what now exists in tenn •-, un ess some measures are adopted to free the country ofthe turbulent and disoinl lenders of the reactionary party whilst tlie.e persons remain in tlie country to exercise tlie baleful influence they undoubtedly possess there can be no peace sixty clerks of whom one half were feina!u have been discharged from the treasury 1 lepart rni-tit for want of w-oik tlie iudian oitiiuiim^ori-ri reached * iin_lin yesterday held a secret b.ssiou and proceeded up the riier proposed meeting of editort augusta auj 18 p m.—the telgraph nr,d message ol macon requested the conservative ; editors in the third military district to meet in m i in on llie 3d i-is'.ant for lhe purpose of la i 1.1 __ min nctioii in reference to general pope's '.'. hr no 40 tbe intelligencer at atlanta .- chronicle and sentinel of augusta approve the suggestion from richmond richmond ang 18 1887.—tbe ciiy council j lasl evening adopted a protest to general soho field against liie gly having to suppoit lbe pauper negroes who hiivc i:iiini_;rated to the city since tlie war the order suspending the freedmen's bureau rations throws tbis c'n-.s of negroes on the cities of the south where lb.-y chance lo reside mrs jefferson davis ariived here last eve i i --. removal of sheridan—thomas assign ed to the fifth district washington aug 19.—tbe president has ii j - i i,-n thomas to the command of tbe 5ib gen hancock o tbe department of the cumberland and sheridan to the department of missouri it is understood that the orders will hsue from tlie war department to-rlay mr plumb proceeds to mexico ai chargede affairs iclie ing otterburg rogei a pryor publishes an affidavit deny ing any personal knowledge ol uonover and bis conferers tbsy were never at his ice nearly six inches of rain fell bereduring lbe recent storm bi ihe a the vienna gasette sayi that an alliance will be effected between austria and france if prussia sn i russia bei otue i,i -. the emperor an 1 i-i npresa of ilie french tbe emperor and empress of austria and the king of bavaria met at salzburg on lhe 18lb i 1 i ii ' r of aii-itia gave a grscd siate dinner /' y ■) '■' t - new v ' ig 19.—a patch on tho bo ii of the steauncr palisade blew out ro-day -- waa leaving tor fort lee fhere wore five hun dred persons aboard none were i several vessels it sickness s - quarantined yesterday fbey contained noth ing contagious bow evi r so i tr a kn iwn the herald's apec tl lays that granl is a ready vssigm 1 vera if stanton's favorite iub oiiiiii.iti to active duty rum's doings a woman w,-nl to -* wood-yard - i ' ry ,.,,! i 1 v and asked lo see the head man lit came forw inl sir 1 i sbs cany " • have a quarter ol bcord f woo idn li i pieoi • in i ■■> i "•'■> • l '■'-'■'■•"'' ng i he in in ! toked closely at her you not soth lilakw's a yea sir i am suid lhe wo i how does u happen ihat you i n ,■rcumitanci i ;" asked the man • sir aniwered mrs wake ii urns - •■! did it thai's bad laid lbs m mi ves sir it ia bad my ebildren are itarving and rum did that mr children are ragged and rum did iimi my ohildren are growing up outside oftho church outside oftns sab bath school outiide of tbe day id i snd rum does ibsl my husband ones kind sndiodus trious in now a vsgnhoml and rum did it my lit-.irt ia broki and rum did that and tho poor woman mink down una log of wood lhe picture of want and woe nor did the rough woodman kcip his eyes dry for he remembered thi timo when st.ih blake wns a promising young printer he married a nico woman anil the young coupl e started in lifo with aa fair a prospect of comfort and happineis aa a young couple could well have i hey hail seals in the methodist church too and used to be seen li.telling to the word of 1,11,1 but seth had a weak point he would some times drink he did not quite behove in to tul abstinence the babilgained on him ; it niast.rtd him ; it ruined bim ; and wlinl i worse a drunkard iim ly lias to ibars a drunkard's shame and de gradation and worst of all drunkenness ruin the soui o put these in your hat to believe a business impossible is tha way o make it so the current coin of life is plain common ser.se ii wbo depends upon another dines ill and sups worse a pilot is not cbos.n for his riches but l.ii knowledge if a man deceives you once shame ou bim if a min deceives you twice shaum on you if you take the deiil in your boat yon must carry him over the sound the dog wags his tail not for you but tha bread if you pay beforehand your work will be poor ly done lie is your fiiend wbospeaki well behind your back the fish is loon caught lhal nibbles st every bait il'you would be nothing just wait to be souse thing uold on to your good character for it is and always will be your best wealth 0 one glass of wine the duke of orleans the eldest son of king louis phillippe was inheritor of whatever rights the royal family could transmit lie wa a noble young man—physically and intellectu ally noble one morning he in.ited a few com pauioos witli iiim as lie was about to take hn il-part ure l'i om paris to join his regiment in the conviviality of the hour he drank loo much wine ue did uot become intoxicated ; he was not in any respect a dissipated man liis char ; aeter was lofty and noble but in that joyous hour he drank a glass too much he lost tha i balance of his body and mind hidding adieu i to his cuinpanions he wiitered the carriage th,i hoises ran away uul for that extra glass bo would have kept his seat ue leaped from tho carriage but for that exira glass of wine ha would have alighted on his feet uishead struck ibe pavement senseless bleeding he was ta ken into a beer shop and died tbat extraglasi of wine overthrew the orleans dynasty confis cated tbeir property of one hundred million of dollars and sent the whole family into exile a young lady school teacher in indiana ■was lately etideavaring to impress upon ber scholars the terrible effects of lhe punish | ment of n.-buchadnezzer she told them that for seven years he ate grass just like a cow i just then a small boy asked : did he give ' milk i a fomer citizen the lion e iwanl stanley formally a rep n sentative from north carolina in the federal c ogress ai.d during the war military gov ernor of that portion of lhe slate in fede-al oc cupancy is making speeches against gorham the republican nominee for governor of cali - i mr stanley opposes the reconstruction policy oi congress but favors qualified negro i suffrage o when asked how he got out of | ri«on wit v r i_;o replied i got oul of my cell bv inge : v ran up stairs with agility crawled ihe buck window in secresy si;d down the lightning-tod with rapidity snd am now l-ask ihe ui.sh.ne of liberty ', . m • a sis sestikci — it was only a single i sentence i - upon the ears of tbe servant in ■iy of i'ayson as she brought to him a » i ■iv -, j ii ri n kt one of his days of illness ■mi v rou nev r a-k iu vain for adrop of water i was but a word a brief sentence yet il proved a word of salvation to tbe person to wbi ra it was a ldre_aed a dancei once sad to socrates : you canaot on one leg so long ss lean true | the phi eopber but a goose cm the new-paper is siermon for tbs thougbtfcil a library for the poor and a bleating to every body lord brougham called it tbe publio lolor married at t\tc residence ot tbe bride's father in summer county tennessee on the 2nd of july mr ebeuezer sweet to m'-s jane leo 11 a hi | ■.'.-. ■xtremei do me<t in ian mil i'l'.'i v i mi io ii but tweet \ lie'i i lemon iquei i i a ■sayi an iren i lo edwin m you ■isl re gu and i'll sco i i '," says i iwin m lo andrew j i'll keep my place ss i bave kepi il 1;i ' iii i i^r s u v ire i lo edwin m li you don'l luave you'll b • supplsnted says e iw in m to andrew j hare 1 ike the pi ic my u tv m grsnt-ed
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1867-08-26 |
Month | 08 |
Day | 26 |
Year | 1867 |
Volume | 2. 3rd series |
Issue | No.34-Whole No.1777 |
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 | J. J. Bruner |
Date Digital | 2009-06-23 |
Publisher | 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 August 26, 1867 issue 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 |
OCLC number | 601585327 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1867-08-26 |
Month | 08 |
Day | 26 |
Year | 1867 |
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 2563991 Bytes |
FileName | sacw09_18670826-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 6/23/2009 2:31:05 PM |
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 |
catttlitte hi tttrlmttm salisbury n c monday august 20 1807 no 34—whole no 1777 vol 2 third series tit rms yv'eliki.y 1 year 3 00 0 inonllis i 60 t -. - ii in advance rates of advertising onssquare space ol t-lines firsl insertion 1 un .. 2d 3*1 aud 4th insertion each 60 " for each additional publication m clicaf i.nun - ws iiave tiled llio aurora fluid sold ai ur poulson v co'a drug store nultiiid u i make iba ehesp.it light we have ever u»ud willi oos pint we ki-pl a lamp burniug forslx oiglita unt i bed lime wo used th parlor lamp whioh m ikei « light equal to st lcasti.ro candles from lhal ti until morning we keep a light in our private room all niglu i wi ui lbs safely lamp burning al half blast and equal to aboul onecaiidli dr p & co n.i tbs fluid rn do cis per gallon io that il will i observed that our lights for ono weekcont i ~\ ots ths tl lid is not explosive sn i ia therefore free from ths ssrioui objections to im in ibis uii ' ii and much lens off.n live to tbs iiboii trouble i3rewing prom what wo have beard thoro is to bo some trouble in the matter of registrn lion beveral gentlemon havo told us that they have been refused the privilege of exercising the right c mtrary to tho ex lanation's often published of lhc ac we give the following translation from the wilmington journal aud it strikes ua as being c nee all mult twenty-one years of age who ! ive i sided in this slate one year and -, ho have not been con • icted ol folony i who previous lojhe war did not hold nny slate or fedei al office art i ilitied i -/,'-,'. r and vot . win !/ oi tay ,.,./,!,/■,/ in iif ''• '■■■org to the south if they held offl o an i did i l a ward * ge in ■war or aid l ,-;.,,.- ■' • 1 111 -. i i ■' • ' - igll till iii m the war or .- ■■i ■. i'.irc the vvti i-.i lor .... i-i in tidm taken iho i i tgi 1 tr or j ilie litis d include i i held uiii . tie not i tin iin ■! am ng the di ai li ed it must bo ni ill i-'-'i •- ig d in the rebellion and com ; it to lhe enem ed s at -." , not of i'-'it disfra any one ■must hove been nrec eded by tho holding t a stal fe leial ■ffice pre t ,' • .-.'..- ..- ie '— • radicals 1 . i bi i . of salu - i-i 11 ,...,. ,,'■,-■g sou i a very aim i , nr 1 m.i l.'i''i ' i he ,. , of hi i m • - ■-- atet uml-r n»u nu . i ■■| ■• i ' i ,, , . i in • 1 . i . . ,:! iit 1 i .- i .. in proee«s of execuli in 1 - i ■-- opes il 8 it iu iba ! - • .' ■-- ' ' iu li puts the govi riutii nt in thu handa capable p-1 ui ed by dep a i i pull tl i r of 1 ii ll ' in ' ii i ' - -, .. ,„ would tbui i i - tho ii mi ol ,'. !,_. for tin r own ad perl uf i •■pla undei lhe forma of i iw in ill if i ignorance an 1 i >| i n imed hy tli iiiniii',mil nt race and c tale -•- lb en throned while intell gel ce and viilue would i || i r ■" nn i - ii i | i •■' . i i ; i | i 1 j iii .. 1 ' tlmt ni io sti ingonl legi lalion to towards tho south will grovv out of tho buipension of mr stan ion is plain to all rofli cling men ii ' ■i star a l.i cal ".',->•' • • -. party is governed nol by principle but ny a spirit of petty revongo iu its gov ornuienl ofthe southern siutos because mr johnson has impended a l.adical socretai v ol w r tho i llicrn states are lo bo punishod i * tos history furii bii any procedonl for malignity so despica ble towards an unoffending pooph i mi doctor gumming bassevoral times pro dieted tho end oftho world and fixed tho day for it to ooi tl bin his pi odictions havo always been fulsifiod the worlda would iu spite of him roll on in it ao i ■imed c mi o tho ilootor now however is dotorminod tn utono for the past ainl acknowledged that in his pre diction - li was mistaken i lo saj in rev it-in tho calculations on vv hich ho based tho announcement of tho worlds onding in 1807 ho di icovoi i thai he lunl ovoi loku i figure - vv hich hnd ma lliina liko a rjtitnlillion ol j oars lo tho raoe which thia mundane i ihoro has lo inn to bi o ill real day i tho end of tho wm id thi i afore wo mu il wail - timo longoi . ii \ terrible earthquake ocourrod on tho !• ami of jam on june loth it wai vo ry destructive throwing down many buildings and lulling many i>c-f>plc the losses aro i-iii |