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the carolina watchman vol xx.-thied series salisbury n c thursday apsil 11 18s9 comparative worth ofbaking powders ii±nt ajumtowjer ;<• . - 7 si3kil5&;'??zi^^^.i<a^z : nfa'tfflgghbm bcbfoud's phosphate fresh s72:ji\£4smjrt!l i e f ■v^aamfl basfokd's when fresh li '•-"■■- "-.'^ ,: : t : tf*r redhead's ' "': ■--. r — 7 tmi^rtj-t-l charm alum powder f -~ v .■■■.■■: i t j j '; iy :,>-.„ ajiazox alum powder ■j t „■■„■.■.-.-- j-zztt x cleveland's k ; -. - ' pi0neeb san francisco k^-r ■- i a : :--;' : j':-j;»ftg.''jw 2ab bgv •■-'■•■-.-:.■■■> b price's v r-^grr ■*? i^mwb j gsflw flake grofl'i et faui s^lt ,, .- a bcai&im lettw bmiy.^nwawwril c0ncees3 gillet's ' '■ym haxf02d , when not frc3h 1 ■ag<1 isr-y r \ -.'''.- ,~. " .. .. ■■.• ■■■■- • "* bulk powder solj loese . ci3 i hi oud s when not i v . r~3 reports ci 1 g0veenment chemists as i » purity an 1 wholcsomcacss of the l.oyal baking powder ii ivc 1 e 1 ' royal baking powder v.hic'i i purchased in the qj . i of pure and wholesome ingredients it is a cream cf : . icr of ft li i ci ."■'■< £ merit cud tiouj liut contain i:'.h r d;;ni oi phosphates cr otb r i tacccs l g lovt 1 h.d it it a ec . that l!.c hojcl calling fovrdcr is absolutely pure 1 ii a mott ph.d thavee i s of royal baking potrdcr purchased ty myself in the market il.r 1 rnt.rely free from alum terra alba or cny other injurious sub btai li ••■' iioutox ph.d president of iitevcn3 of technology '■i have :.:. ' .' 1 a j u kfifre of tloval dalcin powder the materials of which it ! j eompoeed :.. . i omc e dana hayes state assaycr mass thesoral b kin powdi r received t'.:o h'ghcrt award over all competitors at the yknna y'.v.r.<r l.\'t i iou 1 .!; at tlio centennial philadelphia 1s70 ; at the american in-titutc ami at s.ate 1 ai i llirougliout the country no ' 1 i ■i : ; •• i ■■- r rereived euch high emphatic uni versil eadcrecr nt 1 ■a eminc-t cuomiits physicians ecientists aui boards of health all over lc vrorld note the r.\-cv di i.cr.am dlnstrates the comparative worth of various baking powders as shown by ( '..'■::: : ra analysis and esperimeuts made by prof schedler a one pound can of < r v.-^3t^':cn tlio total leavening power or tolume in carh can calculati 1 \'.. ■: . • ' ein ; c indicated this practical te;-t for worth by fruf schi d!er i nly provi .; wliat every observant consumer of tlio royal baking powder 1 news 1 v practical experience that while ii cooi3 a few cents per pound more than ordinary hinds it u far more economical end besides affords the advan tage ( f " ■r \ :'.. a single trial of the royal baking powder will convince uay fair mind 1 j er i i f taeso fact * while the diacram shows si me ( f the alum powders to bo of a higher dejjrea rf btrenpth than otiier powder3 1 mke i below them it i3 not to be taken as indie t.r that the . i .'.■■; ny value ah alum powdery uo matter how tigh their strength wo t lj avoided j lsuserous home company "^ -^ seeking home patr0naqe m / "% a strong company ffj|v .. ' i prompt eel able liberal ! v«p^u : -' '- " '• 1 fcr/vajreuts in all cities and town in the south."^b j rh0i)is be0w2ie president wk c coabt secretarj total assets sb75o.ooo j all3n b20771t agent silisb^ry n c if any dealer says he has the av l douglas sikm-s without name ami prico ktniiiueu on the ik.uoiu put him down as a fraud m §§ w l douglas 3 shoe «»?."..«•. _ k m iii th world examine liifl ss.fk oeniink ii -. s •> s \\ iii shoe i 84.'»<i hand-sewi i wi.m shok 0 polick am fakmelts siiok i.so kxtra vau e calf shok »■:. '.'.". ivokkingm vn's shok 0 ai.,1 81.75 ttoys school shoes w.''"lrbouclas co hoe ladies bput material best style best fitting if not eold | ■your di-ali-r write vi l douglas bkockton mass foe sale by rat s brown _ saikbtjry ci:he unni<m ijjlj piles trade -^^ f .-■: v ssnimarm orsaleby jno ii enniss druggist d t j c mccubbins surgeon dentist salisbiry - _ . n 0 office in cole !, itding recom il ior nexl in c um p t ll ( «. opposite d a at\v,-i!c iui . \;,;. ,. u , t . .,. h . almost everybody wants i spring tonic here is a simple testimonial which shows how b !!. i is regarjed it will knock your mala ria out and restore your appetite : splendid for a spring tonic arlixrton ga june 30 ls8i i suffered with malarial blood poison more or less ill the time and the only medicine thai >\ me me any good is b i 15 it is undoubted 1 the best i>lo(i medicine made and for this liialarial 01111117 should be used by every one in the spring of 1 1 1 «_■year and is good in sum mer tall uid winter as a tonic and blood purifier gives better satisfaction cadi ky july 6 1887 pitftse bend me one box blood balm catarrh snuff by rrturn mail as one of my customers is taking h b b for catarrl and wants a box of the snuff b ij ii gives bett r satisfaction than any i ever sold 1 have sold 1 dozen in the past 10 weeks and il gives good satisfac tion it i don't remit all right for snuff write me yours w ii braxdox it kemov:d the pimples r iuxd morxtaix tenn march 29 1887 a lady friend of mine has for several years been troubled with bumps and pimples on her face and neck for which she used various cos metics in order to remove them and beautify and improve her complexion but these local applications were only temporary and left her i skin in a worse condition 1 recommend an internal preparation — i known as botanic blood balm which i have been using and selling about two years flip u-cd three'tjottk's and nearly all pimples have disappeared her skin is soft and smooth and her general health much improved she ex presses herself much gratified and can rccom ! mend it to all who are thus affected mrs s m wilson a book 0 wjudsrs free all v!io desire mm mronnx.ion a>vc,t th use ml lire of bioti poisois s ofal-i and scrofuious ■sv iin»s i leers s irei i ■■umujsm m ''■«•> uom il.ifnis.cu irfn.ft'c . m:i s.rur l in il five i a mm ofoira2-pa^i!lustnl ■! book i-f wo iders dlled with hie mosi vvondfrrul and startling prooj p ■■i toreknown vddivss 4 , : iy u:ouo i'.u.m i i atlanta ga intelligent eeaders will notice that froui » disordereu liver v iz • vertigo headache dyspepsia fevers costiveness bilious colic flatulence etc ror these they ore not warranted f/i vm*l but re y as nearly *.» a it is j.o lble to make n remedy i»rwc in spr.ng fancies thk yol'xg man in spring the youth liis person in the latest fashion decks and begins to cast admiring glances on the other sex in the spring a nameless yearning something | that in caunot trace comes u u liim wlieu ;* meets a maiden with a retty face and thr iuttering of a ribl cm or the perfume j o t glove thrills h - pulse and his fancy lightly tarns to thoughts of love 1 tiik yor.sg woman in the spring the maiden doffs the glossy seal skin sack that she wore which eunble her to don a bigger bustle than before then ht put on lighter garments showy laces ribbons gay and po c<in hat the climax caps of her new s ring army all the secrets of the toilet uses with a ivo inan's skill xor her heart .'»>. is responsive to theseason's : magic thrill nrith soon some strange mysterious process brings i together youth and maid there are ineetii.g-j in tlic iihioi light tin re an meetings in i he shade wanderings in secluded pieces often till the hour is late loving glances sweet confessions stolen kisses at the gate petty quarrels over nothing that v itii misery till life's cup pride's surrender explanations and delicious inskiug up when the tender grass is springing and the opening bu ;.- appear when the birds are gaily singing am the skies are blue i lid ciear tims it course in spring love runneth culmi i nating in tiie may with parential blessings and the naming of the i wedding day m quad cn north caro ina thk old n"o!it!i state he says has come into link - notes n gu people industries and agrtk l'ltukk detioit free i'n ss raleigh n c north carolina h s held to lie traditions lo tiger thai any other state in the sou mi out sue is at last prepared to wheel into line ami welcome the new era from one end of the state to the other the towus are alive and booming and there is a new and better feeiiug among all classes of people and the old north state is a grand doin in — ncti i.i ili b oad acres rich in its umbers ami minerals r;ch in its water powers and waterways and blessed with a thousand advantages denied to other >« uiwns s;ie is to-day working gold mines in hi rty-one coun ties and siiver mines ii iive -.*. tiers she nnih's and markets s^v^n-eighths of i the mica used in the united states : she supplies this country with the etn i ery of commerce she has 112 var.e lei of uati e tiai : ber which are usable and marketable she has 170 varieties of minerals she | has water power estimated at 3,000,000 i horse power she c n grow any gross fruit or vegetable known to the united stales she has an honest conserva tive administration a low death rate a liiyh standard of niuruiity and in no slate in ihe union is ii,e law more respected or more closely obeyed she has the coal uid iron and imuerto iu vite manufacturers the innate aud soil which promise the best reward to the farmer sj much for tiie state at large raleigh and about has raleigh progressed ? if has eeii slow rogression in 1860 she had about 7,000 population sue has to-day about 10,000 this has been a slow growth compared to some other southern cities but the people have come to stay and the buildings erected have been solid yud substantial while war did not destroy the city it impoverished the people until men once worth tens of thousands were ab solute v penniless i he uvstil ution was s i universal that it was hard lo make a begin mil g after peace came and this is the reason why hie growth has been slow the people of to-d-'v have however forgotten the poverty and hardships of the aftermath and a more cheerful hopeful community cannot be found there is much in raleigh that is quaint and old-fashioned much mure that tells of modern enterprise and progress if there was not quaintness one would be disappointed in a city founded so far back in the dim past taken as a whole it compares favor ably with any town of its size in the whole south and its situation is 100 per cent more favorable than a rn ijor ity liii city has many fine streets some of which are well paved a g od iire department splendid water ivories o;)d sewerage ami an honest econom ical government manufacturing and trade raleigh has about twenty manufac tories of impoitance employing about 500 men all of whom are in receipt oi good wages the list includes c ir buildin 1 ", saddlery ciolhing tobacce and snoc manufacture every enter prise is perm inent and doing weli the list lias grown slowly and i beiug added to any mmufaeture which promises success is warmly wel comed and encouraged rieigh is not only the icaiing in land cotton market of the state but enjoys a large wholesale trade through out t.i stnte ijyr aaaual sn!?3 of flour foot up 50,000 barrels of meat 4.000,000 pounds of grain and hay 500 car-loads of fertilizers 8,000 tons ; there are some as fine retail stores j here as can be found in cities of four | times its population public buildings schools ac neither detroit buffalo cleveland i nor cincinnati can boast of as tine a i postoffice as raleigh has she has i | fine large court house a snug city hall two seminaries one college a col ored university insane asylum insti tute for the deaf dumb and the blind state penitentiary and various build ings occupied by state department outside of the capitol building this utter building which is of granite and very massive was for many years the finest public building in the south it is a city of churches and its schools are of the best the moral status of the people can be judged by the fact that there are in the county no less than seventy-eight churches for the whites and about eighty-five for the i lacks the financial credit of both city and county is al and any indebtedness in curred has been for public improvements which the times demanded taxes in the city and county if assessed on a full valuation would be about 23 cents o:i the 100 tkr inducements manufacturers can secure cheap iron ' and coal here und tin of all sorts is abundant and easy of access the railroad facilities are good anil the j people will hold out their hands to all who come to identify themselves with raleigh it is the center of a large j wholesale and retail tra e the country about is fertile and capable of support ing a large agricultural community and there are no drawbacks in the mat ter of epidemics hen on this march d y there is a bracing atmosphere but men are without overcoats and nmin of the boys are barefoot most of the laud has been plowed and the crops put in but the gardens make a fine tjik problem when we of the north refer to the south the negro always comes intothe question u;s status and his future are regarded by us a a great problem \\ e ire much worried by it at times it is a matter which should be and can be ieft with the south to take care of the southern negro is a theory with us he i a solid substance to the sou thi l'iier he knows more al oui him in a d y than w ■d m a year he ha got more excuses for ins tailings than any northern man d ire urge he treats him more kindly than we do the sain rare at the nurlh just now the si ili of north caro lina i overrun whh railroad agents who aie inducing a western hegiru among the negroes fhey have taken 10,000 or more awiy and the number is being added to duly the negro i m.ule to think he is going struighi to puradi.se uud tie accepts as truth any statements these agi ats c*ire to make it all t lie vry ones would go it ituiih i<e good tii;.,'g but the ru h is taking some o1 thf very besi colored men who hare iiail farms and a iv spectable striding intelligent and i v.iiut-d in •■■'. ui some of the trusted hand o;i plantations i'jiey are sncr ticing everything to go with the r ish and most oi t hem will arrive in t he we-t penniless and homesick none of these move are for his benefit it i i a heartless speculation to st-cure his railri id fare but 1 wanted to say that the colored people of north carolina are deserving of praise over those of many other i southern states they are us a rule intelligent respectful and industrious having aims and ambitious and the business of the various localities has depended upon them to a great extent what t-ik nty raises it is a fair forming country abouf [.' deigh although the lands have been tilled for three or four generations wheat will average season with sea s i:i about 15 bushels to the acre oats 25 irish potatoes 2 10 sweet potatoes 400 hay 2 tons turnips 300 bn licls cottorf a bale to thy acre iuis is under a slip-shod system of farming with the southern farmers way ot spending about half his tune in town discussing the best way to saw the country the small farmer white or black lacks energy ambition and e on ornv he would starve to death in ohio michigan or canada where be manges to make a living here a practical hard-working northern far mer wtuld increase the above figures 2 or 30 per cent besides having a climate in which he c in work outdoors day in the year and a winter ! winch takes off none of the profits of his summer what can be done there are several gentlemen hen who know low to farm as il sh ■done and the results of their ibors have been highly gratifying fwo or three years ago capt v illuunson pr - pared an old cotton field of twentv acres for a meadow he used 120 worth of guano iu bringing up the laud he took off two mowings of o.it-gr.iss oivh ird-gra--s and clover in one season winch iem-.i him three tons to the acre the hay was worth j2 i per ton the seeding labor etc cp*t lira 8 per sere making the ex j pense with the fertilizer 2s0 ili i receipts were 1,200 leaving a net ; profit of 920 few farmers can show a better result on 100 acres of land with : ! a diversity of crops maj tucker is another gentleman who farms after moden ideas and makes it pay last year he had loo l acres in cotton and the yield was 1 : bales worth 30 per bale lie had uk acres in coin which yielded twenty bushels to the acre and sold at seventy cents per bushels seventy acres oi wheat yielded fifteen bushels to the i acre sixty acres of meadow yielded j two tons of grass per acre w g upchnrch has a farm of 600 acres near raleigh last year he made 12a bales of cotton worth 36 per j bale he raised 1.300 bushels of oats worth 520 800 bnshels of corn worth 480 200 bushels of sweet potatoes worth 123 fifty tons of hay worth 750 ninety tons of ensilage worth 270 300 bushels of cow peas worth 1 per bushel a portion of the land was used as a stock range and there fore not in cultivation in connec tion with the farm mr upchurch has a dairy of jersey cows the average of milker last season was twenty cows the product of butter was 5,000 pounds v\-t']-y pound of which sold at home for thirty-sve cents he raised thirty calves valued at 25 each and 4.00(1 pounds of pork worth seven cents per pound he is now fattening i forty steers for market and the sole food is cytton-seed meal and cotton seed hulls on this diet tried nowhere else in the south a steer is put in prime condition in four months the net profit is about 810 per head if there is any farmer in ohio or michi gan who can male a better showing than mr upchurch gives 1 would like t i see ills figures the iio.mk of thk grape north carolina can and does gro.v as iiiie a grape as california or any country in europe indeed had her people after the war give every tiling but fruits the go-by she would to-day iv the wealthiest state in the south c.ipt williamson mentioned above has four and one-half acres in grapes the varieties are the 1 ves concord mar tha and champion they ripen about the 18th of july and the harvest lasts about twenty days they are packed i.i ten-pound baskets and shipped to the ivist where they bring live cents per pound net the dear profit on the vineyard last year was 480 in hard cish tie is now adding to the acreage making a total of sixteen he had more clean cash off the four and one half acres of grapes than he did off of thirty acres of cotton the captain has likewise demonstated the fact that it pays ta raise blooded horses in the old north state and at the present time lie has no less than thirty-five on his farm farmers of the north and west who ui iv be thinking of making u change i want facts and figures in regard to ag riculture and i give them at the risk of being tedious i'h ■man of energy who ironies down here to farm has goi something just as good as bank slock m quad curing zteuraljia the stinging of a wasp was efficacious having rend with much interest the item taken from the courier tlf etats i l_';i:s concerning i fere and his new cure for rheumatism the writer wished j to offer the following account of a somewhat remarkable verification of the theory in question it occurred in new jersey near patersou about ; twenty-five years ago and the writer is able to vouch for tik j truth of every detail an irish girl employed ts cook u a well-known family there had been troubled with neuralgia for pome time and at last it grew so that she became aim is fr.uitic wif it p lin aci inl ly knocking t head against the wall in the hope of inducing insensibility hen her employer who had heard thai the sting of a wasp or a bee had been used by some southern physician with the best result in similar cases asked the p or girl if she felt willing tc have such experiment tried on her fa e she onsen ted ai unce probably i with a courage born of despair and a wa p torpid from the winter's cold was produced from a rafter in the att;c alter being well warmed by the kitchen fire the wasp was easily pro i oke«l to sting t he suff rer and was ap plied pi-t where the pain was most in ',,;, rable within a few mom uts there was t sensible diminution of pain and when half an in mr had pass ' ed i he pat ie.it fell asleep and di 1 nor iv.ike for several lours but the most important fuel of all is th there was never any recurrence oi neuralgia in this case though t b ■tvi i.i u remained for ni my months there-after in the service of the same emplnver and had iwen subject to disuse fur ye:ir . ' . s x in x ) . sun th re is trade and lab r d pres-'on in m my parts of t:u j north at h ir i rison's own home there is a u r i ; it of 1 - bor au ! a steady decrease in demand at patersson n j there are m i;i inea dai of e;uj lo meiit in nev york city t!i \ worhl says th i is mils ..::• : i king out for work i is i go 1 1 place t ; suy away from if ; ! pers m ' wants brenti ; the bridge burners a north ( a.k0lixa gentleman tells some nf.w stories about them knoxvllle journal john lady of concord north car olina is in the city and viciuitr visit ing friends and relatives in kuoxville and lick creek j lin ladj is a well-built robust man and has nothing of the feminine appearance about him his name would indicate that he is alive and moving ii top of the earth t«-day is no fault of the confederate forces that infested tii vicinity of lick creek at the break ing out of the war for john ladj was one of the patriotic union nieii who in obedience tu the orders of the united slates government helped burn lick creek bridge the bridge was burned in order to interrupt rebel communications and prevent the con centration of the confederate forces in that country a number of the bridge burners were captured and hung by the confederates but lady in company with a number of fellow bridge burn ers evaded the men wha were thirst ing for their lives and escaped into kentucky where they joined the cnion forces and fought vaiianily for the pre servation of the government a journal reporter talked with mr l:uly and lie gave him the following facts concerning ths bridge burning and subsequent events li the lick creek bridge was burned on the night of november \ ls02 in obedience to orders from the united states government that promised us a substantial reward for our trouble and danger we were doubtless patriotic enough to have done the work for love of country alone but the reward was in the nature of a stimulus it was a d irk night on which the at tempt was made the bridge was guarded by : even soldiers under com m iml of < a t tin maxwell we quiet ly surroundej them and captured them without any bloodshed or trouble with the exception of ne rebel who was patroling the bridge and who leaped into the creek and escaped our work was soan accomplished and quicker than 1 can tell it the lridge was wrap ped in flames there were thirty of us under the command of < apt david frye and be fore enteiing upon the work we bound ourselves by an iron-clad oath to be faithful to our task and lovally sup port the union treachery was not thought of we were of the loyal ;■] ist tennessee mountaineer stock that never hesitated for an instant in decid ing which side was in the right we appreciated the difficulties and dangers of the task before us the country was full of armed rebels and we knew t he chances were in favor of a slip noose being adjusted around our nejks should we iie caught we had been assured by the gorern ment through captian frye that we would be protected as far as possible and would be assisted to escape but the arrangement fell through and after the work was done e ch m m w s made to shift for himself after the deed was done my father henderson lady and myself in com iin with c a ilaiin ■p nt th n'ght at our house in the m irning tlaun was captured on his way home taken to knoxville court-martialed and hung mat henshaw jacob and hen ry harmon were also c.iptured put through the farce of a court-martial and hung '•\\ ha did you do with the soldiers von captured i ' we made them take the oath of loyalty and turned them loos 1 . some of the lads wanted to hang them but arthur haun a cumberland pres byterian minister begged for lheir lives it w-ar eight months before we got away but finally we managed to elude the watchful confederates and escaped into kentucky when we joined the first tennessee company i captain james l me in command we never got a cent f r the work we did in burning the liek creek bridge although promised if by the national government it wa ; under stood that the money to pay ih was placed in charge of gen carter si methodist preacher but the general told me afterward that the boat o.i which f ke money was being conveyed to us struck a snag and u'.i how in in v of ! he in m engaged with von in the bridge burning are stil alive mr lid v 1 think i can vo:i the names of all and their post-offi:e address henderson lidy greenville james mcdonald ii3:irm d way andrew s.-lf depo ag nt miiheim \\ in ii ilder cleveland j k haun midway all of tennessee ii u r i self misso in and m sel !'. ' jouc ■■'<. s ( '. mr i iv will s;i i nd so^ne time in this sectio i ii f<>re returning h i.ue the de r ii rate for february in na towns up n u basis of i year as repote«l in the bulletin ot the north <' rolina boanl i ii alth was iis follows asherille 10.8 percent in the 1,000 inhabitant charlotte 21 '.»; durh . n i b f.iyetteville 12 golds i , r . 10.8 new berne 111 k ! i 21.0 salisbury is washington 8.4 w i ;:.;:;_;■n 10.8 giveiisbo.'o 7 - : .": •. 0 wilson 2.4 hlllswu i & »■odds and ends c incord times there are 27 huh clergymen in this country i ! there are 200 women editors in the i united states grover cleveland was 52ye;ira old ; the jr of march pope leo's fainting fits are becoming more frequent love knows no law save that of its own sweet will it costs new york city 300,000 a year to pay for lawyer's service the fanners alliance have a new sixteen page paper in washington call ed the national economist at monte carlo the gambling cen tre in europe there have beeu lu duels and it suicides thus far during ks^-'.t a frog sixteen indies long is report 1 to have been captured al orlando blonda during the recent heavj rain senator stanford paid 8500 for win dows from which to view the inaugur al parade senator burst 300 mf ira • devenport 150 rochester x v capitalists have tunned a trust in dried applies when they water the stork it will swell to immense proportions a curiously twisted rool of an oak tree exhibi.ej at puuta gorda fla is said to show all the letters of the al phabet in its convol itionf there is a house in atlanta ja made entirely of paper from turret to foundation stun >." no other material is used in i c instruction there an only five bed-rooms in the w hite house mrs harrison wants to know how she is going to make them accomoclate her family and kiu nery a vermont minister i reported to have preached one hundred and twen ty-one funeral sermons with net re turns of two barrels of apples and i silver dollar a ban king system was introdnced in the public schools of long maud citv x v three years ago already the pupils m the nine schools h;ive s'lo.t'ji to their credit a u size in a co:it is an inch in un derwear it is two inches in collar half an inch in shirt half an inch in shoes one-sixth of an inch in pant loons an mch in gloves an inch and in hats an eighth of an inch gen lew wallace prefers to nmain an author and does not want an office tin is a sensible conclusion for mr wallace has written one book from which he has received nure than ik 000 and has been offered 805,000 for anot ier book the new york sun says thot any one desiring to speculate in real rs tue can purchiise an acre of land in wail street new york for the smn 1 sum of 14yu0 0 an i it is ch ai at al bruas-.vick g.u joe wallace vas t ujiiing m liis back door win u ie heard a sound like escaping steam all at one ii f ,:,,,!;, ,, f |, f w ater shot up into the air and continued to " i)u - riift circumstances is a puzzle to everybody a boy living near abilene tex was recently bitten by a snake and was soon taken with convulsions an old mexican scraped oul the bowl of a briar pipe applied t he-scrapings to the chilli's wounds and the next day the boj was well legally there is no such city as memphis tenn n year ago the st ite legislature took away its charter and nam d it the taxing district of shelby county the citizens are now tired of this cumbrous name and want the right t i use their old name a person convicted of any crime in ( iimi i except fh it t»f murdering one of i the royal untily can have u substitute t'j take t . • puiiishmen even if it be death che rat per bead of these snb aitutes has lately been advanced '^',> ■••)• cent and the blame i laid to the eng ish johnson city in k i~t tenn \* i thinking i t changing it iianie to car neige in honor of andrew carn-engle , if the town accepts him as a name sake he proposes to give it a public li , ki.ivy a;i'l reading room worth nwi less than s100.000 c'e e'and and ha ei are the oi ly j living ex-nceupants ol the iresideiittal : chair and hannibal hamliu i the on ly living vice-presiil«ut hayes is ! livi:;g the life f a country gentleman cleveland h;us locatml in x.-.v york an 1 is practicing law bucklen's arnica salve tin bkst s.u.vi in t i i « world for cuts bruises sore ulcers sail ulicum fevt-r s>i\-s tctte cha|>|ieil haitils ciiiluuini corns ami allskiu ei iij»ii.ni uinl positive ly cures piles or no u rcqum-il it it l;.i ii iiitrci tn live jifrlfi i aiv>t'»«'ti«iti nr 1 mont'v rcluinlefl i'.i.i rin,i uux 1 3:1 v no 25
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1889-04-11 |
Month | 04 |
Day | 11 |
Year | 1889 |
Volume | 20 |
Issue | 25 |
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, April 11, 1889 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 | 601559267 |