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the carolina watchman fol s1s.---thisd series salisbury n c thursday may 17 1888 no 30 l m clkm1 xt ! ige & clement ttorncva a-t lrncv - u.isbcry n i : --: james r campbell ; physician and surgeon the people of i ..,-■- iron front bu ; . • . .-: reets cocfncill m d s ginlis"j^t-^3.'y 3st o ■, -■■: ices to the ■urroundingcomi j day i ■e : • rtln ; i i nnis \ !:■.). b coun il m d lie h xew fifm ed into a , ; id produ •: : to date 7 con ely & j \ r son ! . t hi ■! i t •...■. aud asks 1 1 ■■• - ; he n itt ii r31 . n hand to sei ■■p firm . mcxeely ] ! ! i s oi i ml . rs i ■groceries | ■. to i white an 1 crystal ;• mill flour of the i ost quality raij . l limb . ■:: .. me i ring .:■■: .- i t !;.'.!. holmes ■■. ■■. i to engage i ■■i w brown lm i dyspepsia isthrii misery experienced vh n we sud denly becom uware that re possess a lal olical an ■: icnt <:•,:. •! a stomach the stomach ; the iv-rv ir from which every til • ami ti*euo tmisit h i mrished and an j trou ■lirough out the whole system among a dozen dyspeptics uo two will have the name pre domiuantsymptoins \> ■-. ■■sotactlve mental power and abilii nm temperament are bubjject to sick headache thus fleshy and phlegmatic ha •• constipation whlli r . ' ..'. ■;■med to gloomy foreboding - line dyspeptics are wonderful y forpvi n : others hare greal irritatj .'.. ol :■inper whate ■. . i i . psia may take one thing 1 ■the underlying cause is in the i.if'er wulonctl ingraoreia eq wily certain no one ill ri main t dyspeptic who vill ulujalkrji acidity of the . s^&if&^f 3»i -^" :| y irritation /&$&?("' ~ r assist dififestian xii t i3fi^~^^»y ■"-' i '- - 1 - the iinmq yr j'^z ■t i no start the liter to irorkingr ivhfti all othtr troubles ' sgoh disappear my wife was a c ■...' i • '. dyspeptic srir.e three ] by i f dr steiner of l iver f it has ' i ay all v ' ■• ■' this and :■■)•: ■- ■i . : '. 1 feel . .:. n i .. ■ill ■all who will beadviseil wm m kuj . . fort valley ga sec that you get the genuine with : : 2u ' '■' t of wrapper j ii zkii.in ii < ■<»., riiiladelphla pa d r.julian & co dealers :> general merchandise salisbury x c come ahd see the show at dave julian's in \ 1 1 ■r ~ t 1 f wi mr f h hl % i i i r h h !• hi lias a f u ■'■line of hit citoli ; . it . ; ■.:. ■pkh i han fa i ::. stand pipe ; . ■is nuts t i othi i-xpt'iisisan is st i nc rloljnr's \\ - n i of g ■' • !• '■' ''*'-' '• s ' i ; i : : > oi fertilizers in tin ; . ■. — . ■■■'■-■■vj 1 l'fnl i i buy llc w nts to bin all tin d€3jeiitw in t-:tn ;■t \ ril 19 s8 •. ■:. i ely ' 3 satarhh cream bali^^g ckinses the n^mg^^sjr^co^l pas:aff£s allay sb^rpss^^gw and smell p§p v s^s'a i trythecurrhay-fever catarrh is a disease of the mucous membrane : !• rally originating in the nasal pas ig - and maintaining its stronghold in the h ad from this point il sends forth a poisonous virus into ihe stomach find thran h the ii ■: ; siv > organs corrupting ihe blood and producing other trouble s unc and dangeruiirf symptoms a )■);;■:>■; i : •■appliel into e li n i?i 11 and w igree i : «' price ' 50 cent ■■i*ts by mail ]•,-:-..:■.!. f i:utii ici.v ckos j greenwich stret i :■■:• ■13 ly t str3m8 company iw o prompt me patronageji j^sireliable liberal al assets - - 875o,ooo oo j allen beow:t resident agent salisbury k c the new birdsell clover huller m o x x t o k jv?*sor ■: ;:■•.:.,.. i ti:o be^d eeadj lor nrli«t ■. .- pi jii - heretofore unknown end a perfec : i attained the'n " b crcwnlng effort of its inven hn c eirdge . liiad thirty-three yrors 1 experience in building ry o t?.vir r.o kji world ttio firs ccrcbinad cicver thresher ,• i tt is a feet worthy of note that be acd els e-acceescrs have 3 during the pzst thirty-toree yoara r^neteen=«wcnticths of -; h aio t'ma la and sold daring that 4 ia our factor is by far the -■feind je the-isrorld send for catalojuo and 1,000.00 challlengs birdsell mfc co salisbury n c 0o77thc bebfoj jcwdiar y2 ancisnt pirat a thrilling chapter of north caro lina history there is i o'i ipter of ancient history !■•' i ive to the n rth carolina c last viiichis bnt little known yet which is ■-.-.' interest we refer to thai rel ■;■.■. to the f)iraticai operations of the m-iv j irt of the l8th century s m < race h;is been m ideof latetotheex of e iward te ich or bine beard is h i was known and a few days re the star stated th it he was at t ;,',;.:! off cape fear and he and 49 of his in ti arrived in charleston 1'i h a mistake teach's record of inf nuy was not mad > on the s mth carolina coast buton that of this state ilthough he brob ibly operated along th • at mtic seab lard and also i.f the wi st indie and on the spanish main the liarrative of his piratical deeds and exploits is incomplete but yet such as it is it is a m itter pertaining ' mainly t i the history of north caro lina ah of those who haw written p rtial or complete histories oi the state refer to the exploits of this des ur>rado 1 was a reality and not n myth and it is probable that the old fsvry tale of black beard had its origin ! in the black beard of the north caro lina coast as it is known that teach ii id thirteen wives he having mafried his lavt in north carolina the best and most complete account of the piratical exploits of edward teach thache as it is written in the earlier rec rd of the province is found iu hawks 1 history of north carolina j lie w ts born in bristol england and i his first appearance on the scene was about the year 1706 he served first in a privateer fitted | u:t in jam tic i during the war of the english with france and spain where j ii ■distinguished himself by his daring courage in lsog ha turned pirate in connection with one elornsgold and r lise i betwt e i the island of new provid nee and the co itinent 11 iv ing captured a sloop hornsgold gave i him command of tiie prize and soon after he fell in with n large f.vm-h . tain : irn in b > m 1 for a irtiniq i i which he captured he armed her ! with 40 guns and transferred to her his i ti ig giving her the name of queen j ann's u jvenge dr hawks fiu\iishes i iis with the following account oj leach's exploits and of the close of his sanguinary career his qig w is hoisted on hoard of i ship of 40 glins n vessel which with her armament and stores he could carry into no harbor on the coast bui that ol beaufort and tie had a crew of ico men lii quadron consisted of six vessels vane bonnet and wor ley were hi chief captains in the j month of may 1718 peach cniisinj ■, if the bar of charleston captured a i ship having on board as a passenger samuel wragg one of the council i i | s mth carolina he robbed this gen tleman of 6,000 in specie and then j impudently sent four of his men int charleston with a message to gov johnson demanding a chest of medi cine and accompanied with the assur ance that should it not be seat he should behead mr wragg and all d the other passengers to save their lives the che.-t was after amassing a large amount of plunder he returned io north caro lina determined to disperse bis follow lainy his first step was to go to ill ■ers arid live on the fruits of his vil honse of governor eden with tweenty of his men and t ike advantage ol the king's proclamttion of pardon this he did and obtained the governor's certificate a court of ad mi nun soon after sat at bath when teach who never held a commission nor took a lawful prize with consummate impu dence procured the condemnation of a i sloop which he or some of his followers j had piratical ly taken at sea and sent in he now sat down on land to riot in ! iiis ii-u r itteu weath and for the thir i teenth time married a wife a yming woman who probably was not ver inquisitive as to how many of her pre decessors were living restless and roving in disposition however he could not long remain on shore and when tired of dissipation on land he resolved to diversify his pleasure by a little more robbery and murder at sea he accordingly went on a cruise and soon returned with hi plunder in the j shape of i french ship laden with a valuable c.irgo of sugar and coca i'he lie which he told and to which four of his men sw re was so gross that it seem scarcely creditable that it could have h on listened to fora mo ment he stated that he had found a vessel at sea abandoned by a crew : tough wli i brought in she bo:e no marks of injury from tempests or oth erwise necessitating such abandon ment he libelled her however in the court of admirality which on the oath of the four men alluded to ad judged her to lie a lawful prize to the captors the sin on the ground i thai she was unse iworth ) was burned alter th3 cond m:i if . n or the frencn ship aud ctrg • . fe ch rem nn 1 in pamliiio fiver trading with ta planters an ' w itli of her vessels that i.-atn • in jxe'li inking his sh ire of the plunder for s ich coui nodit tea as b ue i 1 i and pvinci . :. in hi tr the . ital w in i i j \ ■: l v i i ■• ■. ■le r pntm .. ■' .-.- ~- ■. .:. i ruri h ■i .;.: j r ■■■_ . . .- . io ini'.m as 1 1 hi true zh iracter i id oj h -'• on ••'■' i .: i , "< h ■]-■b ? applying to spotswood then gov ernor of virginia to request the brit ish naval officer in command on his ' station t > sen 1 a force into the waters of carolina and take the pirate it is , intima'el that they adopted this course because eden theifown govern or was not in their view sufficiently prompt in affording them redress captain ellis brand was the naval officer ioinm inding in the waters of virginia and he acting in conceri with governor spotswood fitted out two slo p and placing them under lieutenant robert m ivnard ordered iii ii in pursuit of teach spotswood ai the same time offered by proclama tion a reward of 1 m pounds for the apprehension of teach fifteen pounds each for any of his offi ers aud ten pound p,u - m ui for his crew i may nard sailed from the james rive 1 -! in november 1718 and four days s,f ter crossed ocracoke bar and steered f r i pamlico river it had been the effort to keep m iynard's exj e lition a secret : and take the pirate by surprise but . reach had disc ivere i 1 and was pre ; pared to defend himself with ins crew of tw nty-tive desperadoes as may i ii ird came within gun shot he receiv | ed ivich's fire sj that the engagement ) co.iim-.iced on his side maynard then stood directly for his vessel but unfortunitely grounded near enough f r teach to hail him and with horrid imprecations to let him ku w that he would neither give nor take quarters ! the fight thus became one of predeter mined extermination and was desper ate o;i bo h side by one broadside m ivnard los twenty men when he promptly resolved that the contest should be finished h.ind to hand at dose quarters to effect this he re sorted to the stratagem of sending his men below with instruction to !)•■j ready to appear on the first signal prepared t'o close quarters s he anticipated teach perceiving ins deck clear ordered his crew to b iard the moment they touched ins deck miv u nd called his men and then tne slaughter commenced the two coiuifl infers mad for each 1 other and discharged their pistols with out effect then they drew their dirks and alike between officers and men on both sides the blows of death were dealt with fearful rapidity on a deck i ' soon made slippery with blood ai | list teach ml exhausted with the wounds he had received of the seventeen pirates who had bonrded the i king's vessel teach witn nine others i were killed outright and the other i eight were so wounded they begged for 1 oid received mercy maynard then immediately attacked teach vessels c utaining the residue of the pirates [ who had remained on board of her ! ih officer in command had ordered a negro who with a fire brand stood ready to apply it to the magazine and blow the vessel up the moment s'a 1 was b a'rded die broadside was all that she discharged in returning which the commander of the pirates would appear to have been killed and the crew yielded though it was wilh diffi culfcythe negro was prevented fimm blowing up the vessel even after he knew that he who ordered it was dead teach was now beyond the reach ol human punishment he had gone to u more fearful tribunal than that of most men maynard caused his head to be severed from ins body and hang ing it at the end of his bowsprit sailed up to the town of bath where hi landel his men and ran i ted some little time for their refresh met t and recovery he th u proceeded to his station in virginia taking with him his pirate prisoners and still carrying in advance as before the head oi their brave but villainous leader hai g ng at his bowsprit a court of admirality there soon disposed of them and thir teen of them followed their chief to the judgment seat of eternity — wil mington review induction train lelsgraphy the practical value of the system of telegraphy by which messages can be sent.from moving trains was well illus trate 1 by its workings on the lehigh valley railroad during the recent s*reai snow storm in the accident near tree bridge the induction train telegraph operator was on board and at once tele graphed back to flemington for ti wrecking train within a short time superintendent djnuelly arrived an i during the entire day messages were sen to and from the wrecking train and surgical relief was obtained ai the beleaguered pass-nger trains awry oneofwnicn was euquipped with the new system were located by means of u.i\n telegraphy and provisions were sent to the hungry passengers belat ed pi-en 4 j rs sent disp itches to - xions wives from the various stal .. i train : i id all the m mi fold business ■f r lilrj idin.s was carried on wit'i ce \ . ; -;. v . m tre than 200 mamses : were •■■■it"b:ick and forth over the sin je line of the company during th ■j i ; iree d iys of delay th ■[: 1 3 use i to e lj-ry the line are only sixteen feat high m i i n > xp - little surface to the s inn t e m — a es are trausniitt 1 !> y iiid 1 ' t - n th ■in '■i r 1 if of the c tr 1 : he ,, ;: ., , .: mce of ti 11 u i a 1 i even i | n . r r -:,• . ;.-.;/. - nr r in the rise ani fail of tax33 a must saggestive perhaps the most suggestive part of the speech of ; mr mills i that in which he touches on the ris and tall si ice 1800 of our federal taxes in the sense of taxation and physi cal prosperity 1800 was our halcyon year it was a better year th in l [ y when the federal government was not only out of debt but distributed 37 1-2 millions among the states obtained largely by prodigious sales of public lauds better because in i'-vw there was a real estate and u rag-bahv bub ble which was not in 1880 the peri od between 184(3 and i860 was a dem ocratic era of relatively small taxation we had conducted in that era a suc cessful foreign war and in 1860 had a federal deb of only 64 l-'l millions and had a federal tax of only 53 mil lions all levied on imports last year our federal debt was 1.700 3-4 millions and our federal income chiefly from t ixes was the enormous sum of nearly '■>'» 1 1-2 millions oar population in 1860 was 31 1-2 millions in 1888 il is probably nearly twice as large o:ir federal tax in 1860 was less than two dollars a head now it is over three tunes as much ! when in 1861 a sectional war hurst upon us we hurriedly began to increase taxes in a way which was the perfection of unwisdom and in 1866 when the war had closed we began to think of reducing the axes and soon began to reduce with as little wisdom as we had increase them the hit ting at a donnybrook fair was as reck less and unscientific as was the impo sition of taxes from 1860 to 1863 and as has been the taking oil of taxes since 1800 the imposition of taxes culminated in 180(5 wl en th ■total federal receipts were 52 > millions ex cluding loans of which 309 millions came from internal taxes 170 millions from custom taxes and ne rly 2 mil lions from direct taxes but notwith standing the end of the war twenty years ago our custom taxes in ! ss i were 38 millions mart than in 1806 ilthongh our internal taxes were 192 millions less thai is a startling fact ! o'ir federal taxation in 1887 was as t ) i860 in the relation of 571 to 52 >, and yet in lsoj was the taxation ; zenith the specie value of oar imports in j iso'j including coin and bullion was 302 millions as against 752 l 2 mil lions in 1887 in 1s60 the average ad \ valorem per centage ! f c istoma tuxes j on diii : ible articles was 19 p r cent but in is^>7 it was 47 43-100 per cent nothing is to b gained now by an angry arrangement of motives hat vet the fact is that from 1861 to 1865 the manufacturing interests exploited the tax legeshition of the war period to benefit themselves and have since l866 exploited tire reduction of tax ation in a similar way it was the ! surplus and the surplus alone which iias compelled tax reduction since , 1806 as it is thj surplus and only the iiirplus which p tsh h reduc ion : to lay tariff reformers would be impotent as i;ai!,siiie protected beneficiaries were if n t for thesurplns federal income has since 1866 been reduced from 520 to 371 1-2 millions but the reduction has been m sl adroit ly managed so as to ccnsolidate and perfect the pivt^tive system — n y star why mr elaine's setter iva.3 written baltimore sun mr chaunccy il depew'sann imce \ ment t hat he is not a c tndid lte for ' •■presidency isaccomp.ini d by a v lu able expl mation of ii bi line s flor ence letter the letter mr depew say.s only means that mr blaiue will not like senator sherman for example ' — go before the convention as an avow ed candidate for the nomination bu will leave the convention free to make its own choice if the convention of its own motion noinin ites mr biainc it will be his duty as a g tod liepubli can to ancepf the unsought honor bat the new york ttmeit is of opin ion that a trick lay behind this modes ty la fall there were signs of re volt . g linst mr i!l line in t he north | wes . pile i ! ter w;is put out to as ■certain whether this revolt was a gen uine oneor was the w irk oi some rivai candidate it took mr blaiue's par s laality out of che canvass accord ing to nis friends but the latter were nevertheless very careful not to r j :;:: their efforts to capture delegations another obje t i:i vi w w is to precip itate a kilkenny fig it of c m ii i ites so i it the ti id would be me isur ibh ; ear bj tiie cune the cincaj 1 ■iveu . iu -.. 1 •■1 in ■•'• ln oaioii 1 . 1 bo m was pitted •:: iin the 3 term m b 1 mi and a iv-n ti irr.son b.ro.u igainsf til ■grresh l;;i boj 11 grr • - in hirs turn w ;- ised to check the alli son bo > ii hi ■•■: i . ' p ■'■.- • ■in :'■•- i've ~ ■- ' • rs '.;.' this iiue ;■•■■- r ti ,. . : ■, ■[ :. .') . - i i:i -'■•"- tliil nere c t.i ' ■■■• ■- ; ' • ■' : .' ■" '•'■•• , i : lelogition.s to tneco.iventioii 1 eeii quie ly n\uu ifp in his ifld -.•■■:' ■lit i ' ■_ rv mr b.i line ■• • ■r,i mo h r and reporting coiijra^sidnal doings few people aw tv from washington iire aware of the f : that every word uttered upon the ti tor of either h r senate when a dressed to e i speaker or president is tsiken down and : uppeara in the c ■::_>■■- ii nal record •' is true tli ; mu h tira •. p iper printer's ink is vfasted bv this \ nevertheless ii ls a fact but to lo : this of e mrse req tires the em ■ploymeni •; ; lie most r .;>:■! md • \- - ; rienc •,! stenographers five oi : ire employed np n the floor of house simply to tnke down speeches d ■utes etc tli ■i ie c ;•;'- n eeivesa s ilary i while the other fc ur itrc | i 55 i less i liese men simply take down the vvoids in shorthand working for fif teen minutes each in succession when each one's fifteen minutes ex pires h repair to the official rep : ■:' room where ten more stenograph ts are employer — two to each man to who n are read the reports taken on the floor and who takeacopj in short hand then they translate this i i i ' longhand using a typewriter to prepare j the copy for the printer tnese men | are paid by space getting l per col ; umn in the record the same is also gone through with in the s daily the stenographers have recently se cured a machine to faciliate work which has already proven of inestimii bie value it is one of edison's inven tions and is called the graphaphone the machine very much resembles a lady's sewing machine and is worked : the same manner by a pedal the instrument is used in this wise ' w hen one of the principal stenograph ers concludes his floor report he l tes to this machine reads his report into a ' funnel connecting with the main ' : cylinder which is gutta percha coated and revolves while the point ol the aeedle connecting with the tube from ; the funnel mouthpiece rests against it j the cylinder envelopes a screw which prevents the needle tracing o f r ner l.n •. when h e stenographer finishes reading his report another ! operator alt ltdies tubed to the cylinder connecting with his cars works ; hr i machine and ihe words of the steno grapher are repe ited to him in i i s.ime tone of voice of the previous talker tiie rapidity of the talk ran be regulated and the operator can thus with ease take down the exact w rds by the use of a i v ewriler or an orditian pen the m ichine is certain ly wonderful and en ibies a person with tiie assist mce ol a tyj ewnf r to do the work of two ordinary stenographers who first have to take the rep rt ii shorthand an 1 then translate it these gutta percha cylinders i ueg i to mention above c in be 1 1 i\vay and years after if placed upon the machine the same words used to day will lie repeated in the exact t me of the speaker of to-day thus should uiv recor 1 bee 11112 destroyed these av.iy be rosorted to another tiling aho it this tn tchine is that a person here can talk for an hour into one m ul l!h j cylinder to atlanta where by the use of a machine the exact wonls used here will b ■repp tie i thus ■lving the labor of writing long communica tions atlanta constitution how tio pre3id3at work washington utter to lewiston me ; ) jonrnal one of the secretaries ai the white i ouse who has served there during h ■i ituinistratiou of four presi ;• nts in 1 iding ' level m 1 told me recently ■i • he i ;■"■•!■! pel if m •'■■■i studving i : !> v hioh are - it i him by con ..■■■— ; han his pred • peni 1 \- ■ikes nothing for grunt ed and will receive nob >■!;. 3 as.s-uran •■as to the merit ■of a bill until he has given it stulv him elf every b ! i ! ! e'b.-ehimv.iusi ■■■mpanied 1 y th rep irts m tde up n it in e;t rh i r vi f>f congress and by all the inform ition i niching if that can be furnished i y the executive departmeni within whose j irisdiction it comes if in his opinion _ it is ; ii right he signs it if ti t all ; ;,;;; ience ■■■';' the capitol cannot stop his veto h i.snally keeps up with congress in in w rk tip 11 the bills and has them signed n ■.•'■• i early in the ten days i ■• i him by itution after th ir receipt oi ca sionallv he receives n batch of hard cases that have bothered congre ■. bul finally got through then it is he summons dan lamont drives out i ■■•;' ie top 1 shuts himself i n i s ■.■;■tary 0 ' r tha worl !. an i amkes a'day of it the 1 an expediti n i 1 usually two vetoi - to ; ue approval an 1 the anxious eli im • mts h iv com i to look nn 1 t ■ftrrl i'oii as the b iri il pi ice of all t hopes a p •-..■• rian ho ; i • :• ' - w i f rm illy p i ned in the cii ■: si infor i rhe i til w ■■' i . ,■r ■■• ■m . _•■■. •■■■■•■■''"' ■- . . ■- . .. - : .. . • - n ch irit . . ..:■■'■■ill v t . --. if he . - e west tobank heport 1 ;■■■■■■tst.jan ■' - : - nth ■rw h\\y b ■' ■■■■■ren reach ' ■rtuii rev f w i pesub.au pi r it re vv i camj - ■■col p n fj s . ; da a n i prayer . ! the . .'. u n 1 . . i bun b .. id to iu:i - ki on the same tin u • : aa they come up ue j a ■was intro i mr henry r of wi . ■lenl il the v : : i c . . > t . :: !. bain .■: i members re r red i repoi milti ■■on :■■b twei n mt < inni i md ! lion cl urches • i ■mini ■- ■. , : ■ft !'-.■■■. !: ' • ■. • rev 1 !> : order i : i dili liolll ' • ■■• ' ■• ition of ili ' ■■nntil its a lopti ■n hn - was ive . ' prorer led to th item )■•. itr;u ii . i r !!■kie oi pen • -■■" - a ■'■■•■i ■i 1 : : . .!>- the mo ' impoi tant . •■■i k that will . t til • ■' ■;-■■.. ■. ■' ' lhe ltiiu the new ii . . •■1 : 1 1 o nt rev j !' : . .■v ',. y cnnipbi ii v a i.mt ■.. i ; ■■\ i ' • . frown and oth ■. ■coi - stitutio '; v i ■' ■■■■rj to tin instituti n an icr tin ' ( : ■fan 1 by rev ,\ . kimlia tcrcst cf the s : i ; . ■■. ' • rep ■■was rji ..•■-■i nnd refei ■'• '■'■' v w a lnl ■: ■..■■■■■i i for eign mission i and on 1 ti in b t ii the - ■' v e(j nnd •■■ipi .- i ■:• ferrc 1.1 ts on tl called f ir rev r i luth er's c'.iun h this i ■. ■i ii liritual f i he i | o ret v kimb m : ■■.'■:■[:.•■!■|] i h oi : : ; ear thi spii ; i.'i -' '■! t ii i ai j't-i ■ing ; in ce i bnt th i re :- • ii well led on the « hoh i i : ■: . • ■ri : 1 a •• ! ; " . . fear th evil ff5 i uf liqnoi ild si mnd »■'■■>: ili i ■■ivi • _ u hi .• j e •■-• • i i i wi ted but m ■■•' ri '■!: :'■•■■i ■■■' ucv 1 !• - •■.. ■cl tti but sonic do ii take i ■■• i ;. ■.. ■a churches • .. ti the ;• ■• u . a ip rt ! ■i ere ii : :.. r |, ;,. ~! janil-j !( • '•. 0 w br iv .-. .• :■)■:••-■nted an i mr iti ivntooi hio seat ipay afternoon - ■■■syn i ' met at t ' i : ■■■■pejchan in the cli iii m ! was r»p ncd rei w rkel . j ieilij ■| ' w ;. ;.. hurcb rov an : :'-: }<> rh . • t the synod u ■■• t pipe erg ui in the . f . ■■'•■i •. . ■• :•..:■■. : ' r the .- real ■to syn ■■: : . - ■..:■.;.:•..• .:. .,...' :..-.. ■ally in view i ' ■■' -■'■-' ''■'■' ' ' . ■....... i ' • ' ' '■" ■: •■■■. " ' ■■• . •• f and in ere ' • '• ■: '-' ' : ;.: b in titm ■:..-.; • ■; ". '■.. ■' ' '■i .--'■-■.■■:■■j h : ■■•■■-■, w !! ii '' _..■::.. ■. . ■u-iug :•. r •■.. r " . . ■i : ■■■'■' i t item ref rs toan ■-■■'■- 1 -. . . - work r r cniasit f th b«rch on h:2 r.or elera nt i the tv -. : the h:::h h:ho 13 b-in i . - tbe r -••.• g daring i on of tbe :■; rt rev l k :■■' t ~ : lbe ; ■ng remarks i :< . z
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1888-05-17 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 17 |
Year | 1888 |
Volume | 19 |
Issue | 30 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | [J. J. Bruner and T. K. Bruner] |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | [J. J. Bruner and T. K. Bruner] |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The Thursday, May 17, 1888 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 | 601555763 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1888-05-17 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 17 |
Year | 1888 |
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 5303082 Bytes |
FileName | sacw16_18880517-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:23:53 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 s1s.---thisd series salisbury n c thursday may 17 1888 no 30 l m clkm1 xt ! ige & clement ttorncva a-t lrncv - u.isbcry n i : --: james r campbell ; physician and surgeon the people of i ..,-■- iron front bu ; . • . .-: reets cocfncill m d s ginlis"j^t-^3.'y 3st o ■, -■■: ices to the ■urroundingcomi j day i ■e : • rtln ; i i nnis \ !:■.). b coun il m d lie h xew fifm ed into a , ; id produ •: : to date 7 con ely & j \ r son ! . t hi ■! i t •...■. aud asks 1 1 ■■• - ; he n itt ii r31 . n hand to sei ■■p firm . mcxeely ] ! ! i s oi i ml . rs i ■groceries | ■. to i white an 1 crystal ;• mill flour of the i ost quality raij . l limb . ■:: .. me i ring .:■■: .- i t !;.'.!. holmes ■■. ■■. i to engage i ■■i w brown lm i dyspepsia isthrii misery experienced vh n we sud denly becom uware that re possess a lal olical an ■: icnt <:•,:. •! a stomach the stomach ; the iv-rv ir from which every til • ami ti*euo tmisit h i mrished and an j trou ■lirough out the whole system among a dozen dyspeptics uo two will have the name pre domiuantsymptoins \> ■-. ■■sotactlve mental power and abilii nm temperament are bubjject to sick headache thus fleshy and phlegmatic ha •• constipation whlli r . ' ..'. ■;■med to gloomy foreboding - line dyspeptics are wonderful y forpvi n : others hare greal irritatj .'.. ol :■inper whate ■. . i i . psia may take one thing 1 ■the underlying cause is in the i.if'er wulonctl ingraoreia eq wily certain no one ill ri main t dyspeptic who vill ulujalkrji acidity of the . s^&if&^f 3»i -^" :| y irritation /&$&?("' ~ r assist dififestian xii t i3fi^~^^»y ■"-' i '- - 1 - the iinmq yr j'^z ■t i no start the liter to irorkingr ivhfti all othtr troubles ' sgoh disappear my wife was a c ■...' i • '. dyspeptic srir.e three ] by i f dr steiner of l iver f it has ' i ay all v ' ■• ■' this and :■■)•: ■- ■i . : '. 1 feel . .:. n i .. ■ill ■all who will beadviseil wm m kuj . . fort valley ga sec that you get the genuine with : : 2u ' '■' t of wrapper j ii zkii.in ii < ■<»., riiiladelphla pa d r.julian & co dealers :> general merchandise salisbury x c come ahd see the show at dave julian's in \ 1 1 ■r ~ t 1 f wi mr f h hl % i i i r h h !• hi lias a f u ■'■line of hit citoli ; . it . ; ■.:. ■pkh i han fa i ::. stand pipe ; . ■is nuts t i othi i-xpt'iisisan is st i nc rloljnr's \\ - n i of g ■' • !• '■' ''*'-' '• s ' i ; i : : > oi fertilizers in tin ; . ■. — . ■■■'■-■■vj 1 l'fnl i i buy llc w nts to bin all tin d€3jeiitw in t-:tn ;■t \ ril 19 s8 •. ■:. i ely ' 3 satarhh cream bali^^g ckinses the n^mg^^sjr^co^l pas:aff£s allay sb^rpss^^gw and smell p§p v s^s'a i trythecurrhay-fever catarrh is a disease of the mucous membrane : !• rally originating in the nasal pas ig - and maintaining its stronghold in the h ad from this point il sends forth a poisonous virus into ihe stomach find thran h the ii ■: ; siv > organs corrupting ihe blood and producing other trouble s unc and dangeruiirf symptoms a )■);;■:>■; i : •■appliel into e li n i?i 11 and w igree i : «' price ' 50 cent ■■i*ts by mail ]•,-:-..:■.!. f i:utii ici.v ckos j greenwich stret i :■■:• ■13 ly t str3m8 company iw o prompt me patronageji j^sireliable liberal al assets - - 875o,ooo oo j allen beow:t resident agent salisbury k c the new birdsell clover huller m o x x t o k jv?*sor ■: ;:■•.:.,.. i ti:o be^d eeadj lor nrli«t ■. .- pi jii - heretofore unknown end a perfec : i attained the'n " b crcwnlng effort of its inven hn c eirdge . liiad thirty-three yrors 1 experience in building ry o t?.vir r.o kji world ttio firs ccrcbinad cicver thresher ,• i tt is a feet worthy of note that be acd els e-acceescrs have 3 during the pzst thirty-toree yoara r^neteen=«wcnticths of -; h aio t'ma la and sold daring that 4 ia our factor is by far the -■feind je the-isrorld send for catalojuo and 1,000.00 challlengs birdsell mfc co salisbury n c 0o77thc bebfoj jcwdiar y2 ancisnt pirat a thrilling chapter of north caro lina history there is i o'i ipter of ancient history !■•' i ive to the n rth carolina c last viiichis bnt little known yet which is ■-.-.' interest we refer to thai rel ■;■.■. to the f)iraticai operations of the m-iv j irt of the l8th century s m < race h;is been m ideof latetotheex of e iward te ich or bine beard is h i was known and a few days re the star stated th it he was at t ;,',;.:! off cape fear and he and 49 of his in ti arrived in charleston 1'i h a mistake teach's record of inf nuy was not mad > on the s mth carolina coast buton that of this state ilthough he brob ibly operated along th • at mtic seab lard and also i.f the wi st indie and on the spanish main the liarrative of his piratical deeds and exploits is incomplete but yet such as it is it is a m itter pertaining ' mainly t i the history of north caro lina ah of those who haw written p rtial or complete histories oi the state refer to the exploits of this des ur>rado 1 was a reality and not n myth and it is probable that the old fsvry tale of black beard had its origin ! in the black beard of the north caro lina coast as it is known that teach ii id thirteen wives he having mafried his lavt in north carolina the best and most complete account of the piratical exploits of edward teach thache as it is written in the earlier rec rd of the province is found iu hawks 1 history of north carolina j lie w ts born in bristol england and i his first appearance on the scene was about the year 1706 he served first in a privateer fitted | u:t in jam tic i during the war of the english with france and spain where j ii ■distinguished himself by his daring courage in lsog ha turned pirate in connection with one elornsgold and r lise i betwt e i the island of new provid nee and the co itinent 11 iv ing captured a sloop hornsgold gave i him command of tiie prize and soon after he fell in with n large f.vm-h . tain : irn in b > m 1 for a irtiniq i i which he captured he armed her ! with 40 guns and transferred to her his i ti ig giving her the name of queen j ann's u jvenge dr hawks fiu\iishes i iis with the following account oj leach's exploits and of the close of his sanguinary career his qig w is hoisted on hoard of i ship of 40 glins n vessel which with her armament and stores he could carry into no harbor on the coast bui that ol beaufort and tie had a crew of ico men lii quadron consisted of six vessels vane bonnet and wor ley were hi chief captains in the j month of may 1718 peach cniisinj ■, if the bar of charleston captured a i ship having on board as a passenger samuel wragg one of the council i i | s mth carolina he robbed this gen tleman of 6,000 in specie and then j impudently sent four of his men int charleston with a message to gov johnson demanding a chest of medi cine and accompanied with the assur ance that should it not be seat he should behead mr wragg and all d the other passengers to save their lives the che.-t was after amassing a large amount of plunder he returned io north caro lina determined to disperse bis follow lainy his first step was to go to ill ■ers arid live on the fruits of his vil honse of governor eden with tweenty of his men and t ike advantage ol the king's proclamttion of pardon this he did and obtained the governor's certificate a court of ad mi nun soon after sat at bath when teach who never held a commission nor took a lawful prize with consummate impu dence procured the condemnation of a i sloop which he or some of his followers j had piratical ly taken at sea and sent in he now sat down on land to riot in ! iiis ii-u r itteu weath and for the thir i teenth time married a wife a yming woman who probably was not ver inquisitive as to how many of her pre decessors were living restless and roving in disposition however he could not long remain on shore and when tired of dissipation on land he resolved to diversify his pleasure by a little more robbery and murder at sea he accordingly went on a cruise and soon returned with hi plunder in the j shape of i french ship laden with a valuable c.irgo of sugar and coca i'he lie which he told and to which four of his men sw re was so gross that it seem scarcely creditable that it could have h on listened to fora mo ment he stated that he had found a vessel at sea abandoned by a crew : tough wli i brought in she bo:e no marks of injury from tempests or oth erwise necessitating such abandon ment he libelled her however in the court of admirality which on the oath of the four men alluded to ad judged her to lie a lawful prize to the captors the sin on the ground i thai she was unse iworth ) was burned alter th3 cond m:i if . n or the frencn ship aud ctrg • . fe ch rem nn 1 in pamliiio fiver trading with ta planters an ' w itli of her vessels that i.-atn • in jxe'li inking his sh ire of the plunder for s ich coui nodit tea as b ue i 1 i and pvinci . :. in hi tr the . ital w in i i j \ ■: l v i i ■• ■. ■le r pntm .. ■' .-.- ~- ■. .:. i ruri h ■i .;.: j r ■■■_ . . .- . io ini'.m as 1 1 hi true zh iracter i id oj h -'• on ••'■' i .: i , "< h ■]-■b ? applying to spotswood then gov ernor of virginia to request the brit ish naval officer in command on his ' station t > sen 1 a force into the waters of carolina and take the pirate it is , intima'el that they adopted this course because eden theifown govern or was not in their view sufficiently prompt in affording them redress captain ellis brand was the naval officer ioinm inding in the waters of virginia and he acting in conceri with governor spotswood fitted out two slo p and placing them under lieutenant robert m ivnard ordered iii ii in pursuit of teach spotswood ai the same time offered by proclama tion a reward of 1 m pounds for the apprehension of teach fifteen pounds each for any of his offi ers aud ten pound p,u - m ui for his crew i may nard sailed from the james rive 1 -! in november 1718 and four days s,f ter crossed ocracoke bar and steered f r i pamlico river it had been the effort to keep m iynard's exj e lition a secret : and take the pirate by surprise but . reach had disc ivere i 1 and was pre ; pared to defend himself with ins crew of tw nty-tive desperadoes as may i ii ird came within gun shot he receiv | ed ivich's fire sj that the engagement ) co.iim-.iced on his side maynard then stood directly for his vessel but unfortunitely grounded near enough f r teach to hail him and with horrid imprecations to let him ku w that he would neither give nor take quarters ! the fight thus became one of predeter mined extermination and was desper ate o;i bo h side by one broadside m ivnard los twenty men when he promptly resolved that the contest should be finished h.ind to hand at dose quarters to effect this he re sorted to the stratagem of sending his men below with instruction to !)•■j ready to appear on the first signal prepared t'o close quarters s he anticipated teach perceiving ins deck clear ordered his crew to b iard the moment they touched ins deck miv u nd called his men and then tne slaughter commenced the two coiuifl infers mad for each 1 other and discharged their pistols with out effect then they drew their dirks and alike between officers and men on both sides the blows of death were dealt with fearful rapidity on a deck i ' soon made slippery with blood ai | list teach ml exhausted with the wounds he had received of the seventeen pirates who had bonrded the i king's vessel teach witn nine others i were killed outright and the other i eight were so wounded they begged for 1 oid received mercy maynard then immediately attacked teach vessels c utaining the residue of the pirates [ who had remained on board of her ! ih officer in command had ordered a negro who with a fire brand stood ready to apply it to the magazine and blow the vessel up the moment s'a 1 was b a'rded die broadside was all that she discharged in returning which the commander of the pirates would appear to have been killed and the crew yielded though it was wilh diffi culfcythe negro was prevented fimm blowing up the vessel even after he knew that he who ordered it was dead teach was now beyond the reach ol human punishment he had gone to u more fearful tribunal than that of most men maynard caused his head to be severed from ins body and hang ing it at the end of his bowsprit sailed up to the town of bath where hi landel his men and ran i ted some little time for their refresh met t and recovery he th u proceeded to his station in virginia taking with him his pirate prisoners and still carrying in advance as before the head oi their brave but villainous leader hai g ng at his bowsprit a court of admirality there soon disposed of them and thir teen of them followed their chief to the judgment seat of eternity — wil mington review induction train lelsgraphy the practical value of the system of telegraphy by which messages can be sent.from moving trains was well illus trate 1 by its workings on the lehigh valley railroad during the recent s*reai snow storm in the accident near tree bridge the induction train telegraph operator was on board and at once tele graphed back to flemington for ti wrecking train within a short time superintendent djnuelly arrived an i during the entire day messages were sen to and from the wrecking train and surgical relief was obtained ai the beleaguered pass-nger trains awry oneofwnicn was euquipped with the new system were located by means of u.i\n telegraphy and provisions were sent to the hungry passengers belat ed pi-en 4 j rs sent disp itches to - xions wives from the various stal .. i train : i id all the m mi fold business ■f r lilrj idin.s was carried on wit'i ce \ . ; -;. v . m tre than 200 mamses : were •■■■it"b:ick and forth over the sin je line of the company during th ■j i ; iree d iys of delay th ■[: 1 3 use i to e lj-ry the line are only sixteen feat high m i i n > xp - little surface to the s inn t e m — a es are trausniitt 1 !> y iiid 1 ' t - n th ■in '■i r 1 if of the c tr 1 : he ,, ;: ., , .: mce of ti 11 u i a 1 i even i | n . r r -:,• . ;.-.;/. - nr r in the rise ani fail of tax33 a must saggestive perhaps the most suggestive part of the speech of ; mr mills i that in which he touches on the ris and tall si ice 1800 of our federal taxes in the sense of taxation and physi cal prosperity 1800 was our halcyon year it was a better year th in l [ y when the federal government was not only out of debt but distributed 37 1-2 millions among the states obtained largely by prodigious sales of public lauds better because in i'-vw there was a real estate and u rag-bahv bub ble which was not in 1880 the peri od between 184(3 and i860 was a dem ocratic era of relatively small taxation we had conducted in that era a suc cessful foreign war and in 1860 had a federal deb of only 64 l-'l millions and had a federal tax of only 53 mil lions all levied on imports last year our federal debt was 1.700 3-4 millions and our federal income chiefly from t ixes was the enormous sum of nearly '■>'» 1 1-2 millions oar population in 1860 was 31 1-2 millions in 1888 il is probably nearly twice as large o:ir federal tax in 1860 was less than two dollars a head now it is over three tunes as much ! when in 1861 a sectional war hurst upon us we hurriedly began to increase taxes in a way which was the perfection of unwisdom and in 1866 when the war had closed we began to think of reducing the axes and soon began to reduce with as little wisdom as we had increase them the hit ting at a donnybrook fair was as reck less and unscientific as was the impo sition of taxes from 1860 to 1863 and as has been the taking oil of taxes since 1800 the imposition of taxes culminated in 180(5 wl en th ■total federal receipts were 52 > millions ex cluding loans of which 309 millions came from internal taxes 170 millions from custom taxes and ne rly 2 mil lions from direct taxes but notwith standing the end of the war twenty years ago our custom taxes in ! ss i were 38 millions mart than in 1806 ilthongh our internal taxes were 192 millions less thai is a startling fact ! o'ir federal taxation in 1887 was as t ) i860 in the relation of 571 to 52 >, and yet in lsoj was the taxation ; zenith the specie value of oar imports in j iso'j including coin and bullion was 302 millions as against 752 l 2 mil lions in 1887 in 1s60 the average ad \ valorem per centage ! f c istoma tuxes j on diii : ible articles was 19 p r cent but in is^>7 it was 47 43-100 per cent nothing is to b gained now by an angry arrangement of motives hat vet the fact is that from 1861 to 1865 the manufacturing interests exploited the tax legeshition of the war period to benefit themselves and have since l866 exploited tire reduction of tax ation in a similar way it was the ! surplus and the surplus alone which iias compelled tax reduction since , 1806 as it is thj surplus and only the iiirplus which p tsh h reduc ion : to lay tariff reformers would be impotent as i;ai!,siiie protected beneficiaries were if n t for thesurplns federal income has since 1866 been reduced from 520 to 371 1-2 millions but the reduction has been m sl adroit ly managed so as to ccnsolidate and perfect the pivt^tive system — n y star why mr elaine's setter iva.3 written baltimore sun mr chaunccy il depew'sann imce \ ment t hat he is not a c tndid lte for ' •■presidency isaccomp.ini d by a v lu able expl mation of ii bi line s flor ence letter the letter mr depew say.s only means that mr blaiue will not like senator sherman for example ' — go before the convention as an avow ed candidate for the nomination bu will leave the convention free to make its own choice if the convention of its own motion noinin ites mr biainc it will be his duty as a g tod liepubli can to ancepf the unsought honor bat the new york ttmeit is of opin ion that a trick lay behind this modes ty la fall there were signs of re volt . g linst mr i!l line in t he north | wes . pile i ! ter w;is put out to as ■certain whether this revolt was a gen uine oneor was the w irk oi some rivai candidate it took mr blaiue's par s laality out of che canvass accord ing to nis friends but the latter were nevertheless very careful not to r j :;:: their efforts to capture delegations another obje t i:i vi w w is to precip itate a kilkenny fig it of c m ii i ites so i it the ti id would be me isur ibh ; ear bj tiie cune the cincaj 1 ■iveu . iu -.. 1 •■1 in ■•'• ln oaioii 1 . 1 bo m was pitted •:: iin the 3 term m b 1 mi and a iv-n ti irr.son b.ro.u igainsf til ■grresh l;;i boj 11 grr • - in hirs turn w ;- ised to check the alli son bo > ii hi ■•■: i . ' p ■'■.- • ■in :'■•- i've ~ ■- ' • rs '.;.' this iiue ;■•■■- r ti ,. . : ■, ■[ :. .') . - i i:i -'■•"- tliil nere c t.i ' ■■■• ■- ; ' • ■' : .' ■" '•'■•• , i : lelogition.s to tneco.iventioii 1 eeii quie ly n\uu ifp in his ifld -.•■■:' ■lit i ' ■_ rv mr b.i line ■• • ■r,i mo h r and reporting coiijra^sidnal doings few people aw tv from washington iire aware of the f : that every word uttered upon the ti tor of either h r senate when a dressed to e i speaker or president is tsiken down and : uppeara in the c ■::_>■■- ii nal record •' is true tli ; mu h tira •. p iper printer's ink is vfasted bv this \ nevertheless ii ls a fact but to lo : this of e mrse req tires the em ■ploymeni •; ; lie most r .;>:■! md • \- - ; rienc •,! stenographers five oi : ire employed np n the floor of house simply to tnke down speeches d ■utes etc tli ■i ie c ;•;'- n eeivesa s ilary i while the other fc ur itrc | i 55 i less i liese men simply take down the vvoids in shorthand working for fif teen minutes each in succession when each one's fifteen minutes ex pires h repair to the official rep : ■:' room where ten more stenograph ts are employer — two to each man to who n are read the reports taken on the floor and who takeacopj in short hand then they translate this i i i ' longhand using a typewriter to prepare j the copy for the printer tnese men | are paid by space getting l per col ; umn in the record the same is also gone through with in the s daily the stenographers have recently se cured a machine to faciliate work which has already proven of inestimii bie value it is one of edison's inven tions and is called the graphaphone the machine very much resembles a lady's sewing machine and is worked : the same manner by a pedal the instrument is used in this wise ' w hen one of the principal stenograph ers concludes his floor report he l tes to this machine reads his report into a ' funnel connecting with the main ' : cylinder which is gutta percha coated and revolves while the point ol the aeedle connecting with the tube from ; the funnel mouthpiece rests against it j the cylinder envelopes a screw which prevents the needle tracing o f r ner l.n •. when h e stenographer finishes reading his report another ! operator alt ltdies tubed to the cylinder connecting with his cars works ; hr i machine and ihe words of the steno grapher are repe ited to him in i i s.ime tone of voice of the previous talker tiie rapidity of the talk ran be regulated and the operator can thus with ease take down the exact w rds by the use of a i v ewriler or an orditian pen the m ichine is certain ly wonderful and en ibies a person with tiie assist mce ol a tyj ewnf r to do the work of two ordinary stenographers who first have to take the rep rt ii shorthand an 1 then translate it these gutta percha cylinders i ueg i to mention above c in be 1 1 i\vay and years after if placed upon the machine the same words used to day will lie repeated in the exact t me of the speaker of to-day thus should uiv recor 1 bee 11112 destroyed these av.iy be rosorted to another tiling aho it this tn tchine is that a person here can talk for an hour into one m ul l!h j cylinder to atlanta where by the use of a machine the exact wonls used here will b ■repp tie i thus ■lving the labor of writing long communica tions atlanta constitution how tio pre3id3at work washington utter to lewiston me ; ) jonrnal one of the secretaries ai the white i ouse who has served there during h ■i ituinistratiou of four presi ;• nts in 1 iding ' level m 1 told me recently ■i • he i ;■"■•!■! pel if m •'■■■i studving i : !> v hioh are - it i him by con ..■■■— ; han his pred • peni 1 \- ■ikes nothing for grunt ed and will receive nob >■!;. 3 as.s-uran •■as to the merit ■of a bill until he has given it stulv him elf every b ! i ! ! e'b.-ehimv.iusi ■■■mpanied 1 y th rep irts m tde up n it in e;t rh i r vi f>f congress and by all the inform ition i niching if that can be furnished i y the executive departmeni within whose j irisdiction it comes if in his opinion _ it is ; ii right he signs it if ti t all ; ;,;;; ience ■■■';' the capitol cannot stop his veto h i.snally keeps up with congress in in w rk tip 11 the bills and has them signed n ■.•'■• i early in the ten days i ■• i him by itution after th ir receipt oi ca sionallv he receives n batch of hard cases that have bothered congre ■. bul finally got through then it is he summons dan lamont drives out i ■■•;' ie top 1 shuts himself i n i s ■.■;■tary 0 ' r tha worl !. an i amkes a'day of it the 1 an expediti n i 1 usually two vetoi - to ; ue approval an 1 the anxious eli im • mts h iv com i to look nn 1 t ■ftrrl i'oii as the b iri il pi ice of all t hopes a p •-..■• rian ho ; i • :• ' - w i f rm illy p i ned in the cii ■: si infor i rhe i til w ■■' i . ,■r ■■• ■m . _•■■. •■■■■•■■''"' ■- . . ■- . .. - : .. . • - n ch irit . . ..:■■'■■ill v t . --. if he . - e west tobank heport 1 ;■■■■■■tst.jan ■' - : - nth ■rw h\\y b ■' ■■■■■ren reach ' ■rtuii rev f w i pesub.au pi r it re vv i camj - ■■col p n fj s . ; da a n i prayer . ! the . .'. u n 1 . . i bun b .. id to iu:i - ki on the same tin u • : aa they come up ue j a ■was intro i mr henry r of wi . ■lenl il the v : : i c . . > t . :: !. bain .■: i members re r red i repoi milti ■■on :■■b twei n mt < inni i md ! lion cl urches • i ■mini ■- ■. , : ■ft !'-.■■■. !: ' • ■. • rev 1 !> : order i : i dili liolll ' • ■■• ' ■• ition of ili ' ■■nntil its a lopti ■n hn - was ive . ' prorer led to th item )■•. itr;u ii . i r !!■kie oi pen • -■■" - a ■'■■•■i ■i 1 : : . .!>- the mo ' impoi tant . •■■i k that will . t til • ■' ■;-■■.. ■. ■' ' lhe ltiiu the new ii . . •■1 : 1 1 o nt rev j !' : . .■v ',. y cnnipbi ii v a i.mt ■.. i ; ■■\ i ' • . frown and oth ■. ■coi - stitutio '; v i ■' ■■■■rj to tin instituti n an icr tin ' ( : ■fan 1 by rev ,\ . kimlia tcrcst cf the s : i ; . ■■. ' • rep ■■was rji ..•■-■i nnd refei ■'• '■'■' v w a lnl ■: ■..■■■■■i i for eign mission i and on 1 ti in b t ii the - ■' v e(j nnd •■■ipi .- i ■:• ferrc 1.1 ts on tl called f ir rev r i luth er's c'.iun h this i ■. ■i ii liritual f i he i | o ret v kimb m : ■■.'■:■[:.•■!■|] i h oi : : ; ear thi spii ; i.'i -' '■! t ii i ai j't-i ■ing ; in ce i bnt th i re :- • ii well led on the « hoh i i : ■: . • ■ri : 1 a •• ! ; " . . fear th evil ff5 i uf liqnoi ild si mnd »■'■■>: ili i ■■ivi • _ u hi .• j e •■-• • i i i wi ted but m ■■•' ri '■!: :'■•■■i ■■■' ucv 1 !• - •■.. ■cl tti but sonic do ii take i ■■• i ;. ■.. ■a churches • .. ti the ;• ■• u . a ip rt ! ■i ere ii : :.. r |, ;,. ~! janil-j !( • '•. 0 w br iv .-. .• :■)■:••-■nted an i mr iti ivntooi hio seat ipay afternoon - ■■■syn i ' met at t ' i : ■■■■pejchan in the cli iii m ! was r»p ncd rei w rkel . j ieilij ■| ' w ;. ;.. hurcb rov an : :'-: }<> rh . • t the synod u ■■• t pipe erg ui in the . f . ■■'•■i •. . ■• :•..:■■. : ' r the .- real ■to syn ■■: : . - ■..:■.;.:•..• .:. .,...' :..-.. ■ally in view i ' ■■' -■'■-' ''■'■' ' ' . ■....... i ' • ' ' '■" ■: •■■■. " ' ■■• . •• f and in ere ' • '• ■: '-' ' : ;.: b in titm ■:..-.; • ■; ". '■.. ■' ' '■i .--'■-■.■■:■■j h : ■■•■■-■, w !! ii '' _..■::.. ■. . ■u-iug :•. r •■.. r " . . ■i : ■■■'■' i t item ref rs toan ■-■■'■- 1 -. . . - work r r cniasit f th b«rch on h:2 r.or elera nt i the tv -. : the h:::h h:ho 13 b-in i . - tbe r -••.• g daring i on of tbe :■; rt rev l k :■■' t ~ : lbe ; ■ng remarks i :< . z |