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ill / -> 1 1 • t j 1 fl a 151 y*cm 1 tl 1 w 1 it ll tv1 q n jl1u udl ullllcl nd lolliilclll fol ""-^- j ies ' salisbury n c thursday august 22 1889 no 44 c r ' f -. . ■■j i ; ■■■■• d ■' " , il h 11 h - ■wjjq i y mm § p t royal pow'oin jt ** w ex "-* absolutely pure ' this i v lei :. i er v < rios . a i \ e 1 mr.l * ml 1 • •■luomv :■» n r o i be sold i i i l l(sv ipf-.t siicn : |<( jlowfio s v l id ml flj lioyai b.vkinc powuei u..lli '■'■all il n 1 foi sali i . & co young & bos "■■. p murpliv j ■■, . - ,,,.; , „ y ■• ■■- how i !. >'■.'■. . . \ v •.::■.'.: ri.i out aii'l r-.^ton . tito : spbndi 1 fjr a spring tcn:c < : june mo 1 888 ■. ■: inoro oi i : v imvliciih thai ■.- /■■u /:. ' !: :- m :!. ti ' •■: no nri'lo uinl for tliis i ■. ■. \\\ every one io'.i in tfiini . i i i urilier gives ti:li:r catisfaction v ■;. i ;. um ciitiirrii . toiiuta ■!',. i \ \ ■■■; i bo ■- r n.ji./j : ■: v - '\' ■■i ; ■. : :. i h,r old 10 ilozeii in . i i satisfhe ■■, to in , ■'. jr.vxiio.v ii eoligvod tho nyles roi u mi ■tai ti mi . m ;:. ! i -.'. 1^87 \ ; ■■■. ral year : i pinijili - on her ; ■- nitifv ■tin • i il ■. an<l let'l hi r [ ■■. i ;■:.': it ion — i have nit o years she | ll~f.lt ;■•.;!■■l;a e -:., ■■■lh anil ■i she ex j . ami ean reeom i ■tc.l m -. s m wilson a book cf wondees fref i i a'u ii die ■■iisi :, '■... , iikl sl.tofll olls : .. i ; • i .::.':.. i ii ism ki.iney . ■■■. ■■. - ■■•;■■• liy in il r i .\ i i wonders i i ■i start ii ;.■-■prool ,,■■:..■■;. ■.• . i 1 . . i •. •. atlanta ca i jcu'.ieii j 13 !■■: . .' : '::■• >. ! icin i son ! ami i '/.; a ! lulmes imaintili i dsnes v l n nicy j tliayor ami , iut ii : ai •! j ii risayi-r w a."lii-i«l l ' : . [(« il minnie liar i k jones kii«i j jess ■s i n i i ilia s finvil jesse c \ smith i ■: i ivai co an i her hus i ..:.].: ; ' •:•. naiiiiie v sexton au :-,-;■ha ' [ jolia l si xion m;ry m i ski en juimi c skeen < liai ily i skecn ; \! . : ■ijt'iin i !: ; i ii ; >' bashan mosus !.. uvan deivi la ■■■' . i i .-■■' and for \ i to i olmcs w itei i non re-kleni : vim are in r ; y r ijiiii 1 to appear be fore me at my oliice in the town of sal is i on ! . ; lay i he _<<> h ilay ofseptom i : . ssj ami answer or d mur to the | eomjilaiut of i lie plaint i ; . august hh 1ss john m loralt c'l'k superier court ofkowan co r t p nciiirn rnl'pp creen3sgho n c the sixty-ninth session of : ihi well equipped and prosperous institution will begin on the 28th : ; ay 0 au5u.t 1839 superior advadtages rert-d in all the lopartmonts of in iosi u.-uaiu hirsuwi in female col s ; ; ; - .,.-'; i-atle ch irge.s very tati . !■'>';■catalogups-juldn --. t m .;■ni resident j7:2m:p<l »■> i-nsboro n < '. h e company | seekin8 home patronage jr | £ gteong company y prompt eeliable liberal w.'v ;. ..- aift-iiu iii ill rltio ami townr iii the south 4 a j rhodes iegwn pn^dcni tal a ,:.•;;•: ffl75o,ooo the beau eaker of bostor i ( ■■•• he ma ms wkalth xt om ; av in which uk jpf.xd3 it a rich bean b iker who would imagine thai i m 11 i f»iih grow wealthy preparing beans i'm lunch vet i j found one ! he ol her i]av in inv ram bles ! i hrough i:l js.'ston ; ml the story of his industry i.s a nso r interesting one ''. 1 was directed to lh place by a singu i '■'>' incident 1 was il : ing in a restau | rant on milk street i c.ir he post office i which recei'i • - and > : i ; ributes the mail j foi the citizi ns of the hub a wag i on drove up an el leriv m;in walked iis ' v ;' i ii brow si pared under hi nrv di posited ii on i he counter received 2 : ■■•■•-- :':■■■■: the ' rl:e | r t ok an einp i vessel in his i uk aiu departed i | n ■: ie d tha t lie man drove a double team to rather a weil wagon but ■i i . dn rli ine hi place in life wi i you have a bean asked col ; w m pitcher the proprietor and hie ham's iinest man in uoston ti e.ie ! an the fine beans in this town where it i s:ii(j thai every m m woman and ; child knows how to bake beans and eat j t!i with a relish 1 took a small dish of boston's well j i known household economy and agreed ! i wit ii my hos as to their quality 1 > 1 1 r where do you get ti;:li l)ealis | put lip and delivered in such style 1 "\\ by from my betinbaker of course : i ! iii 1 you not ice him just come in and ' leave t his po l\>v today's lunch r i acknowledged the'gift of sight and niv enrioifii v "■\\ by that man is rich in 1 ran on j hi has made a fortune baking beans | and delivering them to restaurants and i eating houses all of our people bake | their own beans for family use but no : bar or restaurant i.s complete without a pot or baked beans for its noon i lunch x i u rally they cannot bake [ i themselves and this man taking ad vantage of thi fact and of the beun i eating tendencies of the inhabitants went into the business and has grown ! rich ii is a queer industry and pew people would even imagine thai money '. could be mar'e out of it he has the only factory of importance in boston that manufactures baked leans for daily delivery y here is his place 1 i asked here i his card 1 said col pitcher i as he hande i in • a piece •>!' p isteboard i \\ it h the following print ing on it : l < r parmelke : jean baker : xn it chester park boston : chester park is a very pleasant part i ni t he 1 ub i i is a v ide si reet in | the west end lined with handsome dwellings and withal the list place one would expect to find an establish ment of the character indicated in the j uent email's card an hour after my lunch off the pro duct of mr parmehos oven 1 wa j moving toward chester l\ir!c to look into the mysteries of the singular bus iness i'wi'iity minutes ride b oighl in i to the proper si reet and a half a dozen doors from the corner 1 found nil 1 3 [• v iis a haudsom ■brick | house with side yard flowers and shrubbery looking more like the resi dence of a savings bank president or a well-to-do merchant than the home of a bean baker the name was on t he ! door on a large silver plate but no w here could 1 see t he bakery after looking the place over i re traced my steps to an alleyway and looking down it discovered a small one-story frame bii'lding which bore on the end of its gable roof the fol ing sign ; " bean bakery i sought the door which v,i op?ned by a horny-handed son of toil to whom i explained my errand ! ie invited me into the old structure filled with the evidences of the singular business car ried mi within its wall the whole building was not more than thirty feet long by twenty feet wide the front pan facing on the alley is used for the wagons and horses whi e the rear cud j is devoted to the process of sortingand baking the beans on one side of the ivar apartment i.s a long oak bench over which one pinajl window furnish ed all the light i could discover in the place mi this bench the beans are sorted then dumped into a great kettle at the end and boiled carefully for about an hour the first process is i carefully watched that the beans may i conic tu the oven only half dime the lire is built in a brick vault at the side rather than underneath the oven for the hope of beans cooked in t his way is that they shall bake very slowly the boiling is th o delicate touch for i hey inn t uol gel to well done as :.:■.■oven i.s expected to do the bulk of the cooking as soon as tlie bean arc ready for the baking they are carefully placed in i small vessels with a bit of pork a pint ! of molasses and then pushed into the oven they are rarely baked ii larger j than two-quart pots as better result i arc secured by using the smaller hold ers four hundred of these pots are i prepared for the market in this small i room every day alt h nigh it wa.s n very warm day when 1 looked o:i the . ii •» ess i:.il the )•!; *■; tho ro r.i was not . uncomfortable and ( ask i tha y >■;;; ; ! in n thai w - ! ting the •,.• ;-\- h w i ■■■: ! ■■k \ • ''■<■i :::. w e fiil the oven at 2 o'clock in the day and take them out at 4 in the norning we intend to bake them 14 hours said he you bake 4c0 pots a iky i sug gested "' 1 iiiii is our average 1 . some days it is a few more and vn\i days a few less so i mused by way of ascert i iiiil r how a man could grow rich at this singular business the yield of the oven being 400 pots every twenty-four hours and the price 20 cents each there would be an income of 80 a dav half of which would be clear profit well there is no telling nnnn what a man may gpjw a fat pocket book bv industry and economy i iliouirhf to whom do you serve them i asked after a moment of reverie almost entirely to restaurants and eating houses we have no trade to speak of amongprivatefamilies they all bake for themselves ••) lave you no competil ion ?"' v>;ie in peak pp there is another small establishment down town which started n year or so ago but its busi ness is yet small ••\\ her is mr parmelee the propri etor of the bakerv 1 you will find him in the house was j lie reply thanking him for his courtesy i walked around the corner and ninfftho bell of the residence a well-:lrpss?d servant girl answered the summons and to my inquiry for the mxsterof the house she invited me in she led t ho way to the parlor which was furnish ed well and in good taste i took a seal and looked around while the ser vant went for the master here was every th ins necessary for comfort and c msiderable for luxury but the one thing which attracted my attention was a large safe sitting near t ii > win dow matte and painted to resemble as much as j s<i ]>'.(> a cabinet while 1 was in the midst of a reflec tion upon the curious incidents of my trip to the bakery so far a pleasant faced elderly man entered and took me cordially by the band ihs face and his manners told me that h > wa s a tvpicil yankee i explained that ] had been looking into the mrerpstina features of his business and h rppmed rather pleased that any one should have taken s i much interest i:i his strange calling yes said he i've been baking beans here for more mian forty yea i was born up iu vermont fame down here and worked in a lvikery for a while and then went west i grot tired oul there camo b-ick here and i ) dv the !) isiness which then amount ed to vy iti\p ve b.iked alio'it 40 pots of beans three times a week t!>e;i v it keeps us ius to supply our e htom ■;•> with 40 >. my son who isu illy ten is to th ■business is iiw.iy i id i went out with the delivery wag on myself this morning 1 1 had recognized ere this the f ■- tures and figure of the man i had seen early in the dav deliver his p t of beans and receive his 2 > cents therefor w as your business of rapid growth ?" j no sir it was very gradual but i very substantial and we know what : we are doing every daw consequent ly we never have any surplus stock on i hand do you have any call for your beans from out of town ?" some little but that feature of our : business h is ievej been worked up and i-i ye to be develojxnl oar business i now is confined almost entirely to 15osto:i ' how in mv barrels of beans do you ; us 1 in a year about fifteen hundred as near as i can calculate it and i am quite well ' satisfied with tlu.t amount of trade al i though the demands upon m • aro in i ere s'ng every day i r e and w as about to (•(■]> irt | when mr parmelee noticed i had been : looking at the cabinet in the corner of the room are you fond of rare coin s iid he very 1 i replied if i un get my hands on them ' i have iv hat experts s iv is the fines collection of american coins in exist ence arid would be gla;i to ah v them to you he said i readily assented and he took two curious looking keys from his pocket walked over and unlocked the myste rious safe l upon the inside i dis c ve:vd a hundred or m iru little trays all filled with rare old cuins ha took thi ni out ine i iv one and her 1 , on soft velvet cushions like the jewelers use for their rich gems lay copper pennies mid silverand gold coins most of which are worth many times their face value the owner would t ike the most valu able of these treasures up carefully in his fingers and explain their history in the m t intere ting way tray after tr.iy was taken out and the mysteries of the vario:n coins explained h hat he told me of their value and hi.-ton would m ike a good-sized volume and i grew s i interested that two hours slip ped by ere i knew that i had been in side the house thirty minutes pick ing up one curious looking penny in his hand he said : •• there are only a half d •/ n of these i:i existence and this one cost me 300 and here is another wor'.h morj than s2 0 s > he wc.'.t o:i recounting th value oil his coirja u!i \) he c nie to th j dol lar rf i'-oj " j hi re are only four ■■■tiiese iu ex stenee said be and they re worth 1,2 k e;:ch there are numerous oins in the collection that : re worth several hundred dul l.ti*s each hut i von id take you i lung lime to go i . inoimh all i lie trays in i his safe 1 i»v this time i was becoming bewil j lered with the singular feat nre of the 1 ccasion ii'ti was a man who while . making a fortune baking beans had | pent his leisure hours fur forty year : gathering american coins he has no 1 other in his collection believing thai j ■v devoting himself to i his o e object i , lie could gather the most valuable ex iiibit in i he country being some what stunned by tins array of gold.sil ; ver ami cojiper 1 inquired what it va i worth s venty-fivi tsi msand dollars 1 i suppose ' s lid t!ii j o vuor nonchalent iv as i lion : i tha un i int of money ! was s;:!ij»!y an incident of life that one ' i •;• nd up m any sort of a pen ! chant i itin getting on in years and j may p irl with it soon continued the j old gentleman half sorrowfully as though aboul to sell his life's treasure j my folks in not can 1 much for such things he added but i have had a great d al of comfort and satisfaction in gathering these relies of our finan cial growth 1 i shook the hand of the baked beans numismatist and departed with the so liloquy that boston could furnish more interesting and singular elements of business and social life than any city in the world 1 had ever known it this story i not an illusrratian of thai fact where a gentlemm is found who has made i fortune baking beans and carries 875,000 worth of coins for ;• plaything 1 d not noi know what ev idence is frank k 13uru murder iviil out ih washington correspondent ol the new york herald says the dis content of the north carolina repub licans with the way patronage has been handled is leading to some inter esting disclosures regarding the cam paign there last autumn senatoi quay claims that he put into tin hands of his private secretary mr frank l-*ach 830,000 to save the north state for harrison and morton his secretary says he give 85,000 to mr kites fur u.-e in the district of chat ham the negro 5.000 to judge set t it s son to elect lv lirower and 5 000 for use in congressman ewartv iii.it rict i'm other 15,000 was 1 1 -<■| in oilier districts of the state accord ing to the ci.iiiii of rienat r quay am his secretary the curious thing about the m ittc-r i - th it nob dy caii . discover how the 85,000 in each of the republican districts was expended if ii was expended at all the q.iay fat j i m have been intim iting | r tt . ' b/uadly that estes put the moi ey in his own pocket and as estes was a division s ipenntemlt'iit in the railway mail ser vice they induced l heir good friend pjst master-general wananiaker to turn him out estes is a fair sample f i he men hurried into the railwa mail ser.'ic before the civil service rules took effect to improve according to the republican journals its eiii ciency ami tone he was on ■of the managers for < reneral a iger at chicago and there was some irritation among i the southern politicians over a storv that got about thai he charged the a iger campaign fund 8500 a head for delegates and only paid the delegates 8300 it w:is no doubt considered a legitimate business transaction but carping critics charged that the commission taken out was too high mr estes h now without a job because he had t!u v temerity to deny that he ever received from the postmaster gen eral s friends any of the money that was charged to him but the same accusations comefn m the districts of messrs rj rower and e-vart mr settle admits that i re ceived 83,000 and that seems to !;■■i properly accounted for but the other 82.000 see in to have vanished con gressman e warts denies flatly thai 85,000 or i alf that sum was ever re ceived in his district he says that 81.2 0 was collected by col patterson ! and wax wisely spent but that was all | che matter narrowed down to a ques tion of veracity between quay and l-i ach on the one si le and three con ! pressmen or their representatives o:i i the other the m mey w.i ruse and j whether pncketel by go-betweens or | p lit i i corrupting tha colors 1 v iters is not v.tv in it.-.-i il t.i ; lrry sim | ply adds to the m iterial for the his i r.o'rv of the way in which the present administr.iti m was foisted upon the country agiinst a in ijority of five hun dred thousand of the white voters i . ■t i i _ m ehctric bltsrs this remedy is becoming so well known ami so popular asto need no special raen i all who have used electric bittera sinf the same son of praise a purer medi tion cine does not ex is audit is guaranteed ' to do all that is claimed iclectiic bitter ! will cure all diseases of the liv r and kidneys will remove pimples boils salt rheum and other affections caused '; by impure blood malaria from the sys i turj n;i i p ve it a well ns cure all ma | 1i j ,: [•,..-,.._.- i 1 ..-.- t.re of headache consumption an-i indigestion trj klectric 1 bitten eatir • sati^f:u-ti n jruarantned i or in ■■■' i fimded :': : ■■50 " . and --!.',) pi [• bottle at t v ictni • .: & < \». r ~ < ** < ~ — . • ! wa : ■■]■■■■■. :-.■■i ::■■•■• >■■~ i ■> f in memory of kaury washin ton '. ' • ■• • i a correspondpnt has called our at , tention to two letter ;! l t h t ve been published one in the n.-.v york tri : bnue from julius a palmer jr ot ' ! btjston and the other iu the new york evening post from l m black ford of alexandria va both sug gesting the erection ly the national govei iiment of a mouument to lieut matthew fontaine maury formerly of the uuited states navy the round upon which this action is urged is the immense value of the services which the eminent astronomer meteorologist and liydrnjir iither render il to his country and i lie entire comercisil world leiuten mt i uirv was without doubt t!>e greatest of american ma rine scientists to intimate the va.it imporia.-!i l e of his life-work it is m < s s:»ry to understand that prior tn his time s.u-h knowle ige as navigators had regarding ocean cmtvnts the great wind currents r>v,d kindred matters was incomplete an.t fragiuentary and the record ot it coiifoseil crude and ill-fligested it wits maury's mission to change all that and the publication of his •' physical qeogranhv of the sea ' and his works on the gulf stream ocean currents am great circle sailing as well as the completion of his sailing i charts effected an advanee in theoret ical and practical navigation s great as to be nil bat revolutionary in the words uf mr palmer " his demon stration of the use to be made of the natural phenomena of khe oce-an such as the trade winds the calm belts the westerly variables the gulf stream and other currents was entirely origi nal and of inestimable assistance to the safe and swift navigation of the oeean v probably no other american scien tist has received such ample acknowl edgment of the value of bis discoveries to the world as di»t lieuie.tant maory he received golil medals from england france austria prussia norway and sweden uel gium holland and sardinia as well as decorations from denmark portu ! gal and the czir of russia from tope pins ix he received a complete set of all the medals struck during his pontificate membership in over i twenty foreign scientific societies was conferred upon him and in addition o other distinctions the french em peror bestowed upon him the grand uross of the legion of honor and the king of belgium the i coral ion of st josept all of these testimonial — exc-'pting the last two which were re ur;i'.i are in passe.ssion of his rela tive and it h suggested that they should i 1 purchased by congress and j>l teed in the national museum wholesale desertion in i ! e in t mi s a'es army then are about about 23,000 enlisted men but since 1873 there have been over 40,1 * 0 j desertions in point of numbers the i entire army diserts in about eight years this startling fact makts it self-evident that there is something radically wrong with the i-civue as to what it is there is not much room for doubt to illustrate n captain of cavalry recently wrote to a western paper advocating the branding of all aiiny men with a hot iron m as to msike less difficult to arrest the delinquents i'he man advocating this barbarous practice commands a |>< st \\ hat kind of treatment would the soldiers get who are at the mercy of this brute j and he is a fair specimen of a s^ood in n / ; of the c mimanding officers let any person go o west point and take ol ser vations on the graduating class the e and tell how many of tin m are lit to be in trusted wirh the coatrol of enliste-1 men but these young lieutenants j are put in positions which enable them i tyr iimi/.e over the privates i ninkenness among army ofiscn'-s on j frontier posts in a common tlitnu a records of the service sh-iw priv.ites i are apt to have a h ird time tin ler uch | men and it is at ' hese p'w's that de : sertions are so common privates are oblidged to polish shoe do chores iibout om'eer.s h ) : ; e wait on their families and do all kinds of disgraceful : w ork that i \\ here the t rouble arises an army board recognized this fact some years ago and recommended that privates be paid extra for work done outside of their regular duties | to some extent this recommendation j was carried out and j • i ~ t tothat extent wi s desert ii m les?ened there is need of further reform iu that direction and also greater need of reforming the officers they should be taught to understand th.it they are mortals and not a privileged class with whom privates are not worthy to speak x y a ics -■*" go:i advica shewing result k w:ir i silvcy ■: ■-•■■■-':■■■- t«-stimo 1 .. • mv w ife ii i i catarrh tuenl ■" , , : -.; , iff i .;..-.; |\ for s;x jears ik . -!,,- l>e ii in mm i ri mcil . 1 •• ■■■.', , to | m iitlu ■xci j t lltroujili the va i fi in i i > t criti i n trii-d i-very ■•...; , , .■m itlinul rtlii f « l>e i dr stn ttfi j anvis ■i her to l»uj ( lai kc"s exl i ..- t ol ■•!•• : \ i papihoi ) i v i : ■c re lit li f j f<i!l.>we«l i > i ' ■, .-• i it c t ; . s continue i lo ■.-. .■jj until now - r rurc»l . • j , • in-cll - i •_■> i : 111 • years ' pi ire 1 00 v v is'i the l*:tl»v .,•■- [■' ax .- . ip 15 ■ents i . ■>. l er.i.ia . dr u k uuw li<w i he fls s roii i ■- n i mil miscellaneous - a change is coming ovef tin ace i>f california whenc tho om mines used to lio now forests are springing up the l-inis and wind are doit»g tlir planting - » • ■'■' a v — ft musi hfl a greal ( i wh.-:i husband and wife areofoti - sain i marri 1 lady •• thaf de '■■nir u wh v >.,> mind l1 is ' 7ciai l/?t>i /.-;. - at a buffalo iialf f>ft >;>!•• if wa proven ihat c-nshtnerw «■■>;•;',» sixty-nino cents ))>•■.• yard was sold for ninety threo vent by placing it on the bar pain cmuntc ■tbinjjs aro id always what they seem — high water nnd a i j-.i ■:■.; flood ere ofte i n ! .. m to souther i t>-.7nj jthe au^ustn i.'hrr>t:i;lr of jeonjia saya that the years after the frohots ha.v always been the mo3 ho.ilthy and that thai eity i m-in oae uf tho cleaned in the worl 1 in !■• i •.•..•:•• ■a little h*;i i 3.^rerely punished a i-.n i w?m stol w door tnai was ssntuu ►. t >-.-.;. ui mat to pc ;■/■; ■.• .;,- - ai the publin hiteliins v • a . i fh ■;, was - nl to jail for tlnrty rys - kf-i hill c im in > tho ii mdg o i danker with these worj written in n bold legible hand oa u face this is the t-<t of lim,iin .•." the sontenca epitomizes the story of a spendthrift > speculator of :* debau<*he •. the mo-t original suicide conies f - om yadkin county x (.'., whore one rufe revis broke int > his neighbor's still room and puttins one i il of n syphon in a !);.-. ; •■■! r whisky and tho other i;i hi tnouth jot s > entirelj full thai ho h:i<l tii 1 3paeo for b:vath what soi of labor is !><•.- paid iu this country i^kcl v visiting en g^lishman of an american field ln hoi was the o.:>;>t reply you surf priso mo it's i fnc you oug'ht to 3ee i'i saliiric pnil to o;ir base-ball players i i '■•','■;> >' : r nir ■. — selentisi ■nnl ri habit i >>; o i the mos reliable of all weather pro bostieations th*»v boi'nnvi resiles and irritabl • b«»for>i ;> storm and i i eiffht or niii • insi m ■■ithin tlir > " years their indications havo provoa eoirreet when tho biromi '<• • has failed - yes boys 1 1 old bollowi proudly beating hi breas i'vn boon n soldier in my time am f i do say it myself liki thi warhorp of . scripture 1 c n!'i ■. -. . ' ' !>•,■, 1 ■> from nfar " i s'poso ■''• •. i;ij paperwate thfti on r^j . ■■inn thai snvml your life £•/'■- a man i h if fnd win li<»d suddenly th • oil ■ir ha>l :\ most eurious mania f >.- ifalin^f women's shoes a !"•■■. year's s ;» ho was u ra-!ted anj forty or r.*ty ]**'. % ; or shoes and s!io v ■:■■• v • ■•■i aftor hi9 death over sixty pairs of wthiien's shoes vera foun i ia tho hut whero h i lived alone 1 — a michi«pin farmer aft 1 lofln threj shoats moorol i larjjn boar to the h i t i ifia >;>!■• v.it'i fi • boar that v;is fe::s i : i r oi h : s s'i>-!c tho tjoar possessofl loa tu.j'.ki and pounce ] upon h-.'iiiii tli • r:i > i • .' h • app ■■red the bear attemp'ol to hu hii enemy but the ]> rker v;i t > cute and afte 1 a hii.-i fig-ht rlpp ' 1 t!i ■in id • ope i with his tusks i"n • f irm ■•• the i csuno up with a l.i.i't t i and brainod tho de ire lator with r.n axe - the following paragraph appearetl tho other day in tho sharp county ark hcord wo want within tti nexi ty days delivered at o ir sanc tum east ail if main street or t our wife's residence — * ►• i r ! » r-i<l ■of t->wn within le^al hour <. 1,000 •: i<mi and lawful money of unite 1 state eijjhty ono ffallons of ii r st-«-l:i ; bor^hum i 1 ' bushel nf prim • wheat twenty bar rels oi com i:i shuck no stalk need 1 ). 1,500 new subscribers orders for fifty more i •• •' business eardaan-l ad vortiaei ments fo - our columna which would sh«i\v thai !>: — iii — < in i appreciate tu home ;»:._)■■•. unknown sensation3 s!r john lohhoek on tli 1'nihloin illr>l or;ain of scfuc so-iiiil i thn se isation projucod oa us when i.i • vibrations of the air strike on thed.iun of our i whon thoy aro f«_-\v tii sound i-d ■•;>: a th rj in sreaso in number it b^eom shriller and shriller but v/h i they roacii forty thousand in a ni they cease to bj audible i^ig-ii i i-t tho >•'! l ct i>r i \<- > i on us v.i'-i waves oi li;'i striko i \\ . ■. ; . . ■i ii ire 1 million • of nuliiui n vibratio:n of either btrike the rctin in a - m 1 they pro duce red and : ti ; n ini ■■incraasei the color passe i int > orange the i y low green blua ■ii violot ilu ha two.-n forty f > : ■in i vibratio i i'i n »■': rond an 1 foiu 1 hun ire 1 millio is of millions we havo no or^qa ol cns i capable if receiving the wnprcssion yet betwe n tii - limit any number of sensations ma exlst wo have fivo times fancy that no others :<..■■dossiblc but it 1 obviou.h that we ca i lito r y our own narrow lira tations • moreover looking it the > t lesil n from the otaer side we find in animalh com pier o.-.a-i of sense richly sup plied with nervi s but tho function f which •.■.-..• arc as yet poworlesa i • - ■plain tlie • may bofifty other - a as different fro i ouim aa uaund is fro a sitrht and e/en within th ■boundary i of o ir nw;i sen-res there may be ondlei * ..; .:; : - <. , • l nro can n >: ii a •, anj o oiz as diiferent as red frora green of which we have no conception these nl a thous ind otii | ■stions remain for solution i'.i ■uimiliar world whicb gorrouiids u3 r,\»y be a t t'.!y d.:t r-'i4 place to her aniroa -. to them it may be full of : : i<ic wnicu we can not hf.\r d f eol . ■•' •■•■'■not - ■■. . .• . we i . i n«>1 sir ■uh i /.« ' a k m i u '■■<■' i i'mi man h . i
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1889-08-22 |
Month | 08 |
Day | 22 |
Year | 1889 |
Volume | 20 |
Issue | 44 |
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, August 22, 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 | 601552407 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1889-08-22 |
Month | 08 |
Day | 22 |
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 5370298 Bytes |
FileName | sacw16_18890822-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:29:31 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 |
ill / -> 1 1 • t j 1 fl a 151 y*cm 1 tl 1 w 1 it ll tv1 q n jl1u udl ullllcl nd lolliilclll fol ""-^- j ies ' salisbury n c thursday august 22 1889 no 44 c r ' f -. . ■■j i ; ■■■■• d ■' " , il h 11 h - ■wjjq i y mm § p t royal pow'oin jt ** w ex "-* absolutely pure ' this i v lei :. i er v < rios . a i \ e 1 mr.l * ml 1 • •■luomv :■» n r o i be sold i i i l l(sv ipf-.t siicn : |<( jlowfio s v l id ml flj lioyai b.vkinc powuei u..lli '■'■all il n 1 foi sali i . & co young & bos "■■. p murpliv j ■■, . - ,,,.; , „ y ■• ■■- how i !. >'■.'■. . . \ v •.::■.'.: ri.i out aii'l r-.^ton . tito : spbndi 1 fjr a spring tcn:c < : june mo 1 888 ■. ■: inoro oi i : v imvliciih thai ■.- /■■u /:. ' !: :- m :!. ti ' •■: no nri'lo uinl for tliis i ■. ■. \\\ every one io'.i in tfiini . i i i urilier gives ti:li:r catisfaction v ■;. i ;. um ciitiirrii . toiiuta ■!',. i \ \ ■■■; i bo ■- r n.ji./j : ■: v - '\' ■■i ; ■. : :. i h,r old 10 ilozeii in . i i satisfhe ■■, to in , ■'. jr.vxiio.v ii eoligvod tho nyles roi u mi ■tai ti mi . m ;:. ! i -.'. 1^87 \ ; ■■■. ral year : i pinijili - on her ; ■- nitifv ■tin • i il ■. an |