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tlie carolina watchman fol xx,-ti1ird series salisbury n c thursday may 30 1889 no 32 " p ia;;j^o^te tuning f03 salisbury upil ot dr marx ■• i :.'.:. uiiiversitv iiii'l ■i i\ii '■-, com ■s i ■■■i l iair 1 lano : ijr had ■: cou l if they will kin i ■''::.. i . : \ - ■lorte if tu ;' i •■:;-(• . ' un • , f .„, dealersays he hastho w r . oonglaa c „ .' ithout name and price ht;imu«-d on k^bouoin put him down i u iraud w % % i . , ; w l douclas 3 v^o^fc gentlemen re»1 in hi irorld i'.x:iiuiii liin bl no l :^ i im li v - v d-skw i i shoe ... hi tl in i — iu i it \\ i ! t shok 1'oi.ick m fa km kms f shoe i i xti \ \ i ■i < ai r miiii 55 wokking1h vn's s 1 1 < » k . i;oi s s ikmii shoes w a l bouclas s3 shoe la f dt es . i;est material best stjle best fittlne i not ■\.. i . douglas brockton mass line w li uougl is ftij til'-oe for t iv.c n;l ladies m 3 bro vn salisbury $§§/^: -$'^%£§\ !' .. . . .! \ ). :!. n t xis drtijrgist d a atwell's hardware store i '_<■■js i his line may always be found i tswemvi i f - 1 "« u ia thi wurlj 1 1 \\ rl m x*r r j ' ilcraselioui s:iuimf ii ■sail ; -. .< a krm.ii \ \. : '' •• 2 : ..;■.• n !!.•■■hill ■•■,.. h.-o the v»tch btiam>a co i i't s 1 it x'ortland maine n 7 3 p 5 n t '■■■'■■- ' mm t flic ut seo -' t3 absolutely pure fliis ii.wiri never varies a nianrljl nir'j strength and yliolesomenesfc more economhu tuantheordlnarv kinds and cannoi be sold lu competition with the limit uihii oi low mm iliqn weight ilum ji phosphate powders schio.ii in ■ins iioyai baking powdeh co..m w&ll si n for sale by binjrham it co young & bos tiaii in<l n p murphy this age is full of humbujt3 ami that remedy that disproves this charge is :> jod-send to human ity b li 1 has never failed : l 1 1 • 1 that ou r lit to count for som thing to him who war-tsto bo cured of what i i 1 sets itself uu to cure utterly surprised ! meridian miss july 12 is for a number of j - ears 1 have suffered un told agony from the effects of blood poison i liad tn v case treat i bj several prominent physicians but receive 1 but little ii any re lief 1 resorted to ill sorts of patent medicines spending i large amount of money but yet petting no better my attention was attracted b the cures am to have been affected by 15 b.b and 1 comm nee t iking it m rrelj as an experi ment having but little faith in the results to in \ utter - 1 r,.r — ■■1 soon commence i to improve and deem myself to-day 11 well and hearty per son—all owing to the excellent qualities of li li ii 1 cannoi commi u i it too highly to those suffering from bl od poison .!. ( ). glbsov trainman m k 0 r r after twenty years baltimore april 20 1887 for over twen t years 1 have been troubled with ulcerated bowels and bleeding piles and grew very wrak and thin from constant loss of bloo i i have used 4 bottles of b b li and have gained 15 pounds in weight and feel better in general health than i have for ten years i recom mend your b i li a the best medicine i have ever used and owe my improvement to the use of botanic i'.l 1 balm eugenics a smith exeter st an old man restored dawsox ga june 30 887 — being an old m in and suffering ruin general debility and rheumatism of the joints of the shoulders i found difficulty a attending to my business that of a lawyer until i bought and used five bottles of b il i botanic blood b.ilm of mr t j jones or j li invin v v son and my general health is improved ami the rheumatinu 1-it me 1 believe h to l e a good medicine j ii laixg \ ; ! : n leslh ti i i if inn i ion tl tin rhe ..• u»c i i ■i ■»• oi i'.l-i • i ivii i is s ■■•; li i i 1 t fu 0 is s v'ui'i-is i la ts ii :: i ii 1 1 imii l\l mcj c):n il-il-iis ■■' i lit:i e>c . ciu snuir • b m h fiv n ■. i ..; i i ■■; vx ilimir-t • i b-.vik r xn ders 11 i rifi tne most wo ul-'irul indstartllng proot ■■■) ;■> v'moa i i ir ss 4o:ly i i '•■< iiai.m »'.). tlanta f5a ir.teilirc-t headers vrill notice that ski p s ||- nro tint '•"■"}•}•'• r!r<l fo nn-f alt clas»u>n < j disensos h:.l ns»y n.cl i.h vos...t croiki ii ««!!•<>«•<!«.• rotl liver viz vfsnn llncsi'rinvia pwcr!pf5 ! i i •- c cjj uvotiv'jiivwo u:..o«..«j gttc £ t...l::blll^j i ■• r«r ihcso they krenottrarrante'j ■■• lliblc \. t sro asuouriywutsi £ .: r i t-ik,\.i to tuauo n ■c>.tv«iy i*ri«'c i p h th3^?s9n go m v.nii \( rnti:i:s sash doors blinds s scroll sawing wood turning and castinc3 of all kinds dealers in steam engines and boilers steam and water pipe steam fittings shafting pulley hangers — also — machinery of all kinds repaired on short notice mar 15 88 ly subscribe for the carolina watchman home company seekin3 home patron aqe v : *\ • 0 ft wfl a ste0ng company 1 "™ prompt reliable liberal ! se?"ageuis in nil cities and towns in the south g j rhodes browne president w c cviart secretary total assets -- - j allen brown ager.t salisbury jt 0 tli jrror o oar weighs the church i crow le.l as became tha holiest of i tys the ir-;..lior tol.1 the ;>(•<,;, l of th • i-rror of tlicir ways . he ; t in it v a human life i less w ts fijieht a n ■woul i pi ri-ii who di not for evil deeds repent a ;'! very lou i he s ■ke siiul los:g ( f growing iiuih:im grct i aiiii mil ■.; tjiiii the u i li«i i.l y is imminent iii'leed for those who luui the lu t of gold alvrm he sought to r-iise among the loi who 1 not vfonne l'lic error oi their ways the goo i groc ry.n in 3:vl in i eh if i n u i n :-,'. ■i iii i , ew lie ueciiu t li ijk it me i ti:ougi.t tjtcauat ir i-i t tri.r h;it does he mean by glaring so at me jusi when li says thnt many of us ought to i>ee the error of our weighs if stood tiic thing for h ill an hour then rose u with i lurch an:l stalked in anger down the aisle and issued from the cburch my scales are ri^i.t hs s.ii.i i'll wciir he gi ts full ye gli s who j > : t \ s ; there's n otiiiisfj m the stury of the error of my weighs !" — brldgport standard for the watchman the boys of sixty years ago it would he both curious and instruc tive to trace the history of the boys of sixty years ago but few of them can be recalled by any or.i individual now living tlii^ir names and the memory of most oi ' tlit-tn lias faded from th minds of the survivors 1 ■an gone they are lost as thoi.fj lii i a .. v.-i ii u a place mong the mli.iiiif.il i.s i.l in .. r u [■]■. eh sui * l\oi ih ,\ ...- m o c til up l suiall circle \\ itu wiioin lit 1 was intimately acquainted at.u may know tin history of miiue of tin in : but that is all the isieijie.it body of liiem in niv one neighborhood h ■.> disappeared in the eu of o-»iivion never tu i»e known on ear h again i hf l.-fi no i limning record they did nothing while living for which siii l*eed rig gem ratio'is.-hould know them — did nothing d a charac ter to imp ess themselves on the world's history the bid among them left records on the court doekets but no our c.-.res to trace them out and they should therefore lie classed among the lost lack ii was an earnest,energet ic and adventurous bov he was a bold defender of the south in the iate war lo-;t a fortune honestly ly made before it but is again a rich man in tex is a younger brother jim was his equal as a soldier nor it'-s successful in bu-iness since ilf h.-is endowed a i literary institution and made a name of good fame as a legacy to his children as boys they were a poor as lizaru but coming through h inlness requiring the best euerg.es of mind and uodv their suc ces-in iu liiuiod whs assured and in ci;.e ii:i:e rtad accomplir-lud i!e/.;vi.iii was all exftnplary bov br..\'i and per.e\e ing a good sunday school i ii.,iar ami a studious pupil at t.u y chotd as lit givw up he do i ii . fo iness for two things in p i icui.tr ai.d though neither of them can well be considered s aids to u penniless youth yet they clung to him and exerted great influence in shaping hi hie these were military parades and the beautiful in nature — beau liul women most of all there is no very striking ana ogv between the subjects but h<z.-ki.-.h was certainly very loud of the three-cor nered or cocked hat and feat her and the burnished sword and although rather a scant pattern in regimentals he had a clear and distinct voice and knew how to se'id power with the word of command me possessed a character winch easily distinguished him in a company of sixty men as their leader and they made him captain and strange as it may seem he filled the office with grace and dignity and in the days of company and regimental drills of the aiilitia he stood abreast with the most accomplished ulcers in the country he lived and flourished as a military man at a time when there were no wars consequently his career in that capacity begun and ended in the dusty streets of his native town had there been a demand for his services . in a more sanguinary field the writer risks nothing in saying he would have responded most cheerfully for he cer tainly had the spirit if not the force of a warrior d f apprenticed to his elder broth er to learn the tailor's trade runaway from his master when about 10 years ' old stopped in tennessee worked on ' the same bench with andrew johnson ; who afterwards became distinguished as senator and president of the united sutes later on drifted down into ar kansas speculated in lands made a fortune and distinguished himself as one of the keenest men in that frontier i state and also as one of the raciest writers of his time fought in the late war between the states lost much of his property but still lives respected by all who know him t l settled in new orleans as a lawyer where he enjoyed good success j but died in the midst of his manhood's career j r h went directly to arkansas while that state was forming was succesful as a journalist was elected lieut-governor and for a number of years was one of the most worthy citi hsens of the commonwealth i ii t settled in siimpter connty alabama where he was eminently suc cessful as a b isiness m in and accumu lated a handsome estate mainly bv p|n?culiitirig in land — a conservative sor of a man who though not bril li ut was solid and useful as a citizen s t and ii t his brother went ywst and though good men left no ie i r to gladden the friends left be : • rhe-'om north stat ." a s ore nf others remembered as l-tns in 1s28 have pissed off theslage if viii ho trace known lo those who k t w them then and only a few others whose tracks remain in the smds of rime to tell of what they were hut the writer's chief object was to sj.-e.ik of his most intimate friend iiiuong the boys of long ago and to follow him through at lea>t one inci dent in his early history which at the time w,-,s considered rich as a treat of fat things and ill the more as iikzekiah's fiest courtship is given here very much as he told it him elf a-u ii 4 his other peenli irities hezek iah was fond of practical joke and not infrequently played them off on his friends and comrades and but for his being well known in this respect his record of successful achievements might have been much larger than it was those who play off on others are generally warry and are seldom caught themselves it was so with the subject of this story but before we finish it will be seen iow the wnghim self may sometime letimized although a great a iiuirer of the beautiful and beautiful women in par t cular it must not be supposed that captain woodman as he h;ill here after be known followed them like a j poodle dog or even as the dude of the '> present time his admiration was of a much hijrhi r chaiacter he b.dieved tiiey were i be connecting link between uieii aud the pure and hoh angel aiid tuai as earthly beings they were enti tled to and should receive the best hotn ige in in cou.d render he evinc i e>i this especially in t e compjuy of his ma e associates not one ot whom ever beard from his lips a word of reproach against a woman q>ld or young when the liero of this sketch reach ed the ago of 22 or thereabout he felt that he ought to make selection of a partner for life he was then in a sit uation to consider the subject hi a purely practical way he could make figures on it and be was good at fig ures and reach mathematical conclu sions with absolute certainty he fig j nred over it for some time several j months and to his mortification the ' liguies always came out against him tin-y declared with unvarying regular ity you have no business with a wife — you couldn't support one if you had her it was a very vexatious but a very stubborn fact hezekiah was perfectly willing to swear that the figures were correct but he could not so readily di ! vest ins mind of a hatred for them ] he was in the condition of a man con > vinced against his will but by a hard struggle he brought himself to ac i knowledge the truth and then the line of duty broke out before him as a plain ' well-beaten track and he resolved to walk in it if it carried him a thousand miles from a woman the whole bus ine-s was now settled and he had fairly di.-mis ed it from his mind as one of the impossible joys — attainable only in dreamland cjapt woodman said a friend to him about this time there is an inter esting protracted meeting going on at thyatira suppose we hitch up and spend the sabbath there to-morrow " all right said the captain " i'll join you with pleasure 1 have not been out of town for more than a year ■and 1 think i rdiall enjoy it very much ; passing over the happenings of the trip to the church winch were of no consequence we next find the captain and his friend at thyatia beneath the shade of the magnificent oaks which grow there and which luive afforded such a delightful refuge from the rays of the summer's sun to the godly peo ple who have worshipped for more than a hundred years at that place the | the morning sermon had been deliver j el and a recess given for the people to go out get water eat their dinner and meet friends on the grounds the captain and his friend were strolling about in the great assembly now and then meeting an acquaintance with whom to shake bands and pass a few words when he heard neir him a pleas ant voice calling captain woodman come down with your friend to our carriage and join us in a luncn — come it was not exactly a surprise to the c.iptaiu and his friend but on looking around they saw a neatly-dressed and well-preserve r old lady looking at them with such winsome e\e graceful ges tures and evident sincerity that they instantly lifted their hats and in ale one of their be.-t bjws to her and capt woodsman answered many thanks to you mrs willis — allow me to intro duce my friend mr pike after w=hicli ceremony they followed the fair lady around two or three par ties who had assembled for lunch be fore reaching their destination they stopped near a plain but substantial carriage in a spot well chosen for coin fort and convenience as they ap proached three young ladies rose from the rude bench to receive them thesp are my daughters captain i and mr pike — and pointing with her : dexter finger called th«rr names fen | ny mary and rebecca the introduction was a little inf.ir l ! mal but under the circumstances quite sufficient and very soon all stiffness j vanished and th party was chatting land eating with the ease and noncha jler.ee of old acquaintances no not quite the captain was the ex ception in the accidental positions gained by the several members of the i party lie fell nearest to miss rebecca the junior member of the fair trio and ! the fairest of them all her voice thrilled him her laughing eyes electri fied him her form of exquisite neat ness and her manners of unaffected j gracefulness bore him away to the heavens for a comparison poor fel i low he was what the boys call stuck i | aye and it was a serious affair to the captain indeed falling in love with a girl nearly always ends eriously it is not a thing to be t.iiied with " the . i outcome i.s either blissful or dreadful beautiful as a may morn or black as j a siberian night soothing as the murmur of a r.ver or rasping as a storm ! to be continued making fun dice when traveling in astage-coach : i met a young lady who seemed to be upon the constant lookout for some i thin laughable and not content with laughing henelf took great pains to make oiiurs o the same mow traveling iu a stage coach is ' rather pn sey uiisuitii.s people in the s.ttia.ion are api to show lihiu-.i\es peevish aim seitish so tiie yousi ia y's good humor was for a time veryagree ui..e to the travelers ever oa barn ' v.i made the subject of a passingjoke i while the cows and hens looked demure ly on htlie dreaming that folks could be merry at their expense anim.il are not sensitive in thar respect they are not likely to have their feelings n | jured because people make fun of tiiem out when we come to human beings that is quite another thing sou seem ed to me for after awhile an old wo man came running across the field ' swinging her b ; igai the coachman and in a shrill voice begging him to stop the good-natured c achman drew up his horses and the good old lady com ing to the fence by t lie road-side squeez ; ed herself through two bars which j were not only in a horriz mtal position but very near together the young la dy in the stage-coach made someludri c ins remark and th • p iss ng r-1 ii.hged j it seemed very excusable for in get j ting through the fence the poor old wo man had made sad work with her old black bonnet and now taking herseit be.-ide a well-dressed lady really looked as if she had been blown there by a whirlwind this was a new piece of fun and the girl made the most of it she earn icatured theoldludy up u a card pretended when she was not loo'ciug to take patterns of her b mn ft and i:i va rious oiher ways tried to raise a laugh at length the poor old woman turned a paie face tow aid her " my de ir said she you are young healthy and happy i have been so to ». bit th it time has p isse i i am now de crepit and forlorn this coach is tak ing me the de.ith-bed of my child and then my de tr i sh ill h a poor old woman all alone in the world where merry girls thin m • a very amusing object they will laugh at my old-fashioned cloatl.es and odd ap pearance forgetting that the o'd wo man bad a spirit that has loved and suffered and will li\e forever the coach now stopped before a poor looking house and t lie old lady feebly desueu le i t.ie steps how is she was the first trem bling inquiry of the poor mother just alive sail the man who was leading her into the house putting up the steps the driver monn j ted his box and we were upon the road again our merry friend had placed , her card in her pocket she was lean ing her head upon her hand and you j mav be assured i was not sorry to see ! a tear upon her f lir young cheek it was a good lesson and one which i hope would do her good a snake vein what was known as tlie sullivan falls mine is now only marked by a pile of broken rock but in the days when men's brains were fired by the glittering prospects of untold wealth it seemed a bonanza and assumed corres ponding proportions ground was broken there in winter and the first thing that was struck by the prospec tors after goi.ig down through the frost was a rich vein of - snakes and such snakes they were tiny infant snakes that had ju-t been ushered into this sin ful world 111 re were h tary head do!d grandfathers and uncles and cousins and aunt there were black snakes and green snakes and yellow snakes and every coin of the r.iintmw nakt\s there were thousands in the colony it wasn't a very good paying vein but some of the maine gold mines didn't pan out su well is this though leic ixton journal when a man conveys to you in a loud tone of voice and the language of si ing profanity and bad grammar the infor mation that he is a gentleman it is a waste of time to doobt hv lord knox captured the desperate vurdereb at last brurghttu jc8tice t!ie following letter was received from john 0 lawrence a clerrman of norfolk v;i . u ho spends his life labor ing among the inmates of jails porsnrouth 7a m;iv 19 1889 deab sir there is a criminal cou deniued to be lung « ti tlie 31st of this month in tlie norfolk county department of the jail in this citv who was tried under the name of cole man hitve been told to-day bv one of his nun race colored that his right name is ford knox that he has a wife named martha knox who resides in i charlotte the woman states pusi tively that she knew him when he was a youth in cabarrus county n.c that he has a mother ami sister residing there that he cut a youth named har rison yvinecoff and was compelled to leave for fear of being arrested hence the change of name the tronble is that ti.e unfortunate yon ng man admits he has u mother but has stated to me that he does not desire his mother to know where he is in this he has persisted notwith standing my importunities the time i.s short between this and the day fixed for his execution if he has a wife it seems to me that she should know it a price upon his riead the man referred to in this letter is the notorious ne«roford knox known so well hi person or by reputation to j e\>ry person ik this ptctien of ihei country us the desperate murderer whose hand was against every one and ; against whom every one's hand was raised for eight years he has been a terror to every o.:e with whom he came in contact members of bis own race fetr ing iiim equally as much is the white ' for fuiir ye.m there has been a price j upon his hcul and bis capture will c-iuse i feeling of relief to scores of p r-ons in tins and adjoining coun ties eight years ago when ford knox lived in cabarrus county he killed a negro man as soon as he commit 1 ted the seed be ran away but after wards returned and surrendered himself : to the authorities he was tried and j acquitted about two years after killing tlie npgro knox was indicted for larceny a party set out to arrest him and while they were making the attempt ! the desperate ruffian drew his pistol shot one of the p.irty in the bead and made his escape the young man who was shot was dangerously wounded : but finally recovered he murders his captor a reward was offered for the arrest ol knox but it w.i a long time before iie was d.seovered about two years after in ikin his escape from cabarrus county he w.i seen in south carolina near the north carolina inn and a party of men went at once to arrest mm iu tiie party was mr durant the husband of mrs duraut of this city mr durant who w ..-- constable oi i;ieviile township wa on horse back an.i he went in aiiv.jnc-i of the other members of the party coaling upon knox suddenly mr dar.int with drawn pistol ordered him to halt knox at outre halted and submitted 10 arrest mr ijuraut theu : with pistol still drawn and cocked or dered kuox to wa'k iu trout of him i'he two proceeded m this manner a short distance mr durant with bis pistid leveled at knox and knox walk ing with the meek and submissive air of a m in who has abondoned all hope — when suddenly with the rapidity of lightning the negro wheeled round jerked the pistol from mr l)urant,took deadly aim at him and tired the shot was a fatal one the bullet passing entirely through his u dy his wife marries another man after thus disposing of his c.«ptor knox iu ide his escape l:irge rewards were offered for his capture btit al though he was afterwards seen in sev eral places no one succeeded in secur ing tiie rewards since the murder of mr durant it his been reported that knox was seen several tim--s in tins city l ( > to a short time igo hi wife ivsi ied here and it v i tnaught thit lie cam • ire q:iently to see her not long since li i v v she married another iu in an i n v resiile.s 1 in south carotin siure then no ru<ni r ut in - wiser • tl)«»uts h ive i e:i he ir-l all sorts of re ■■;-.!■. • ■year have been <.!'.." , . ■• . • iu r i ■'■•■)• 3 h.tvi.ii i • put to tie tt!i h ; : iicm i "■.: co , firm - : i a _ . sons belie e uo v ■: i i i ■v . ■r kiilt-d ri ver hi , i i i • : . i 1 ..-. ' ■_ . i ri hi iu i lie portsmouth j .: vtil pi ;.-.• at re.-t ail co j rcture : : i reg ird to an i o i the a r i:i-r the daring nn r d •!•■'!•. with hi ther criine a-i c i to his j a i re wly long list to burden his suul will go his <• ki description of th hurdesb3 as well i itnul i !*- iwir ■., . cir m '■: :: i ..■- . ■. / ;,- kuox is i ioui tiiir • \ •- •>: .;_,-. ; :.. w tbont '■feet s inches ir 1 height and is well proportioned weighing when last seen in this par of the coi irr about 150 pounds he walks with ins shoulders well thrown back ai d n ovn with great agility so gri i - his suppleness that a man w ! i oiue snw him remarketl to a i reporter thai he walked like he w uj m .•■••£ india rubber and was set on springs k 1 1 ■x is coal black bnt his skin the shiny kind and ti he has a very peculiarly shaped head 1 is very large in the reg i>n i i tl bones but tapers upward in .. shape so that he wears i \ en sn hat he ha large teeth and i n stak able mark is the absence ol the left front mv which was broken on close to the gum gov fowls speech gov fowl in his speech at the south ern society dinner in new york said mr president and to ntlei i m 1 think if there is one state in this ame c.in union that don't know how to blow its trumpet it is north carolina | ap plause and yet 1 1 11 you thai there are no people now within the city of new york that are prouder ol tl t display which the union made on j iv before yesterday within your midst than the old north state applause let me tell you men of new york that there was one grevance that north carolina had against new york iind ;.!-. one and i will tell you what it was when yon placed us in the procession you placed 16,000 men from new york in mich a positiou thai it took u long t me for north carolina to greet hei sister south c irolitia j la ight r .-. i ap plause ljut norm carol iki gol then all thesntue laughter and pplause.j now i wanl iu say one thing : this grand new york sou in s m ietv it did my heart good m ■en i saw tnu mtlfiiiiuii the tic . i ii uw e.il to iic ollly vesi yon lu-n tonight ami win r i ■i se members ot ; i a > i lie ., s c ty i wi-ii yon to h im tre .- \ i ur lvcori r\r-;y brave act of even confed erate soldier i.i the late w r bet weeu the states and for hu i ason be cause we waul to show to you i hat the next time i in our day tl •• unitted states ol america isen i . -. rug glewithain foe that the.se nne south ern soldiers intend to sn r re cord [ loudappl.iuse ] : me say to you that while new york may love this american union and while georgia through her ditisnguished son may bonst of their devotion to t union let tell me you thai pi tin north carolina has within her breasi an af fection for this union of our fathers that is second to no stal pun the soil of north am nci [ l i id appl mse | my countrymen do you kii vvh it is is that we had such a grand celebration as this i stood upon your streets and 1 went in a carriage from one end to the other and 1 g ized in i he faces of a million o free men w ho prided themselves in the title of kmericm izeih applause why isitth.it we had such a demonstration us this i will tell you sir why u souther state went fronj i he i nion there was one riini thai the with them what is it r it was thafc • grand glorious instrument i . i work . oi \ our p itno s and s ■ites nien that he>t model of • ■. . - r r i — me:it which human i • doni have ever devised the ( ion oj the unite.l st ites lmd . ise | and when we returned again to tin i union we found that same old gloriotn const itution and at i his d . . plain in u e^t north < aroiina si . and the sisterof in il,m : . en . \ but there is one thing ti at h .- l»een in ray heart e er since this w.i terminated and i tell you my i n id arueric tn counl i \ men 1 1 fore yesterday for i h i seem ed to in t'i it before tin - •■■■. • - . : ised'in death they might see the de>ire of heart fulfilled and this was it in english 4 history h hen the wars . • ■'•: were tinished the sons ister joined in pr lisin i ami the b m i>f .. ( . : .• i in the manhood of law -■conjointly wovei in order to •' form a chaplet « i k n .\ inch they might . crown mother k l md ! i the time come when the gloriou ■<:•• d of l e northern soldier nud t.h rious i ■■> conf dier ii iy ■'■• ' ■iven in ona i hap 1 i with v . [| \: u ,. : -- . ica i i i .- : j j i ise j \ that timeco m ■. will c • ■!•■tfl • ". '■. - be ■■] ■m ii . co.ne.i i-i . ml if it i j tbe u a .;■..-. l • : •. i 1 1 ,.. i ii it everv u,i ...>.... i • break •
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1889-05-30 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 30 |
Year | 1889 |
Volume | 20 |
Issue | 32 |
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 30, 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 | 601560913 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1889-05-30 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 30 |
Year | 1889 |
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 5356640 Bytes |
FileName | sacw16_18890530-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:28:31 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 |
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