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x uu j(xl ulllld vv d loiliildil fol xxi no ig.-tiiiiid sseies salisbury n c thursday february 6 1890 j j bruner editor and i-ror'a t k bruner assistant editouu ill __\ ~^^ fcft>n / ' ■\ , - - ■imp . 1 i 9 r 1 1 i i : il •- : " ; j'e . j u ma wo ' m be - id i :, r lost . ml f m '. i o kir \\ al ino c bos , _ . » tnko no fliocii nlc pm irl w i douglan name and uxiu - - .'•'"• prh'o an it«ii»p«*<l on tho iit i i pi>lj yu j iciory flu losing aavertlaod i ■i ■b a \. s y ' ■• i , / x © . m tl cre d 4 moor v:il . , , ' i ' floe of ies , i vie vr-m flttfns w i ■:■■. -•' c •■• sold ij ..... s v tt r — rt ' 7w 0 :-. -'■: • '- ' .'-*'| '■.-■■■.-.! mmih ' " f.i fi - y'fiyif ■ii ■e : 1 ; i , ■* - i ■ii fy~:j • t j 1 1 rell's .. 1/iv a 1^<h iii ft line nmy i j c . ■: lis ] 1 • 1 0 stat - txiklb v;c y . . , ' ■. uuu 1 ill mm tl '■— a-i r . „ k)j a^t • c s of all k i h d 3 . ei;s in nd mand . .. i ■j 1 1 kinds repaired on 1 y ill ?, pnnnpill ■over mr wil e where they : -. i!;:v anil night -. i n r a lied \ ' m ll 7f i mil i 1 t a ft \ iho"vi»-l<l."<iurf>.'iliti^ar a ■»..,! • j|--ll ; iswewillwntlflleb . : n.al y li ■>. hn write ;; ir i - : at once in make sun of nee allyon i ,• " m ■r ■■:■te e . ., mv v u . t lll lay at - ■-•■romth st irl n itll , ,, ..... u .,,..,■:,!;, sir ., r ii halle n 4 co lui 0 i'uiiti.a.mi m.u.vk i yya salf i'i i -. oii ii.-.l io ! tt ln.ildinji lots . . , nre one te.l is office somebody ,' ; imebotiy crawls into mamma's bed um at t!n hrea of lay snuggles rip clo?c anil wliisp r inul " sonieli . i j come to stay through lli ici'i se s'evi r one door : : . ' - 2 aroiiud tlvi r the inir • ry lloor n ■vn i iiit care i ; - mu pies v ho can som i.o iy ij n iks v ith roguish . ■i'a tlir.iu • - led hnir me she says ■• hut then son i i n't enrc highly concentrated sermon we copy it follwing sermon from nn old file of ihe watchman ( ls 13 ). i '■:•■] deal like sam jones my near d md ies an i lud ies fops and il ft - and ol her si higglers down the hill of life my iexl to-day is thai much used and abu ed sin ing " 1 hn youi in her know you are out ?" iv.or silly inflated grub-worms i would ■-'..;, from yonr shines and capers ' ' il she di in ; know you're out ion young lady wiih a parasol like a wet ibbage leaf on a ram-rod and chains ir down each cheek like a uottle tailed s]d li r dip el i i bhicking had a iii il ; u r ever as ing elopement oyer *. our n uu cowred face leaving i broad i race belt n i bun and wn vour } . i f bran and vour mincing gait like you were picking vour war ill i ng rotten oo-gs or was b:ir<*foo(fd j iii a bi iar patch mid your arm linked ' di h ii ndy ( bul i il come to him as soon as i am done wiih you wriggling along ihe streels nnd for what to-hunl up indigenl virtue or j ing lit noeence lo pour balm mi the wounded spirit of poverty or onlv r vour own giddy heart wil h tl ■i-orr-iilinu rease of vamtv lo hear .-. hi-per a vou pass **\\ hat a fair 7.7 r'tlieillbei van one b,-aut v is skin deep and i he st onus of mal - ■and i he bleak wiads of nfilic bs il a out and leaves i lie •;;:• nre bare and unbecoming a a we lie beaten burn door unless yon ;■il i.i a roal of lasting pain of me.de ne wort aad love and v«r | i-h it i iver wil h beaut v it vou can j ft like him who win and knows .-; , nre slill loved mi 1 lovely a id i ft ,: voil are lid beautiful now iliaj j oss whi li hid vour worth anil i g ■lue i ." in its dazzling gi ire is e :;,•. ■, , . shed a happy influence on all near you rn ike ns poor erring mortals fee just like a man almost frozen f.-.-is when he sits down bv a cheerful fid at his own home lb hears the storm but he heeds it not he i happy once more hot have you done this j an afraid that you are bul a butterfly bora a worm to die an insect ah 1 don't half like thut laugh it was forced vou pretended to he pleased with thai fool wit when you knew ii was stolen oh why such deceit giddv fluttering worm of the cabbage patch vou are sold soul and body for a little empty windy useless adula tion yes sold to the aid snake with ift ft 2 hook on bis tail the same snake that fooled your mammy in ft j nick patch and ok scissors how he will strip that finery and raise i itm i for a mile around with that . of bran say flower-sucking butterfly does vour mother know j you're ml ? if he does she is un : faithful to her trust and oughf not to fte trusted again any more than the man who stole a handful of acorns from tlie blind sow go home gossa mer nnd try lo prepare yours if to be a woman and then when vou are abroad anybody will know that your mol her knows you're out now you th it was cul oui forn man bul was so villainously spoiled in mak ::;,;• up i'll attend to your case for whal end did you burst upon the world's door and rush mi uncalled like a man chased by a mad bull what good do vn expect to bestow upon your fel i iw man ' some useful invention some heroic act some gre i discovery or even one solitary remark n'o urns lliat look j7 i anything u-cful or good from vou will be ju-t as badly fooled as t iie m ui who caught the skunk and thorn-lit it was a kitten or the woman when she made grease of gunpowder lea vou know where the neatest l igh isl pints with the strongest traps cm be got on tick but you don't , where the next useful lecture is to be delivered yon know the fashion -.- of a vest but you never ,. , [*(.,] | ft n , g .,,., . im s of a rain b iw unless it w is i i wi-h f ir a ] iec to make a era val if r od kn w li w t fool feels in dress but vou d m't know how a man feels when he-eats ihe bread earned lion stly by the swea of his ' own brow but you know h iw a in m ! key look for you see evry d i.t twyn 1 fcy'time . in yo ir hn i lady's looki ig glass b il vou d m't k i v h iw a m m feeli after doing a go d acl ion y m don't go where th it sight i-i to be seen 0!i vo i wisp-waisted catfish-mouthed h iboon-shouldered c ttterpillar-leggi d goose-eyed sheep-fa-ed bewhiskt-r.il 7 , : e in the « irld's beehive what are v . i goo 1 for nol liing bul t » cheat yonr tailor nearly i-p by note a line for so ue milk and dder poetseutiuien i tally eat oysters gravely smoke cigars ! luzilv mike silly girls act the fool i fullv 1 - i does your mother . ;, n ,, v v , ,')•,. 0 i p ior u e e toady | mu iifraid yoi have no mother nor \ on are no more use in this world than a time piece in a beaver dam or a hair mattress in a hog pen you fill uo longer space in the world's eve than tlie toe-nail of a mosquito would in a : market house or a stump tailed dog in ! iii out doors you are a h'tlle thought j of i s the f iow n hn knocked his jjrund ! mothers last tooth down her throat and as for brain ten thousand such could he preserved in a drop of brandy and have us much sea room as a tad pole in'lake superior and as for ideas you have but one nnd lhat is stamped on your leaden skull an inch dec that tailors and females were to be gulled by you and that all may envy you your appearance poor useless tobacco worm yon are a case does vour mother know you're out it is lunch time so start buy a brandy toddy on tick from sonic good-natured landlord and cat lunch until you are as tight as a drum sneak to lied and think of not liing until you fall asleep to dream of apes pant straps and tailor's bill not to awake until the dinner bells call you to eat again how ninny harmless shallow mor tals of another order go scudding aboul on the surface of the world's great waters without a motive guided only liy cha-iicc whim or impulse like a niellow bug in a big eddy under a shady willow until they are swal lowed up by the greedy bass of lentil and the first thing that they know they know nothing when i see ot,e ol these 1 always think poor hug your mother don't know vou re out how man v silly ones neglect their business ajid get after some foolish pleasure and chase it and keep chasing it like a boy after a butterfly until lhey wear out the hat of constitution heating the ground with the vain hope of catching the swift phantom and finally fall into mime hidden pit covered with flowers to rise no more i then think poor fool your mother dont know you're out nor you won't be out souii again when 1 sec a young man step in the skiff of dissipation and start down the stream of pleasure using the oars of imprudence while folly holds the helm pishing the shores of propriety faster lhau a streak of ligntning can pass a sick crow and at mi is drawn over the falls of total destruction and dashed inlo as many atoms as a drop of water from a four-story roof i then ask of tnvsetf for i can't ask of inm did his mother know he was out *»\ hen 1 see a boy leaving tla prison door after a long and dreary confinement wiih a pale face und withered hands his step weak aud tottering skulking along dodging all he meets like a guilty tiling shading his eyes from the usu^j glare of daylight cut from the society of his fellow beings fur some trivial offe use committed iii the thoughtless ness of erring boyhood when if oaim treatment hud been resorted to and fhe crime buried in silence and induce ments held out to him to think well of himself perhaps that boy might have been saved from treading tlie slimy road of villainy 1 say when 1 see this 1 think of the grey haired mother al home if ajiovel cai be a home the scalding-tears of misery chasing each other off her high cheek bones and her bony hand shaking with age and sor for her only hope her son while her hold looking eye rests upon nothing i say to myself poor suffering woman you don't know he is oui yes he is out 1 out of jail out of friend out of credit and out upon the world a scoundrel for the rest of his days all ur th • commission and punishment of a boyish crime so the world goes and so it will go till it is run down and i begin to think that but few of our mothers know we are out newspapers ac life preserver washington sun general bussey the assistant sec retary of the interior has a novel use for newspapers the other day when the weather was sharp he was prepar ing to go out of the department build ing for lunch a reporter who hap pened to be iu the room at the same time was surprised usee him unbutton the lower buttons on his test fold up a newspaper and placing it over his ab domen button his vest over if i always t\n that he baid in reply to a surprised inquiry from the report er when 1 am going to le out in the c dd the newspaper is a non-conduc tor of heat and when placed over the stomach preserves the supply in what has been called the reservoir of tlie heat o the body a new-paper is a good'sub^htute for an overcoat and in cold weather is the best device th.it people with scanty wardrobes can ulo-i hisuflh-ent bedclothing cai e r du forced iu thtl sam i w iy and the newspaper may be said to be the poor in m's friend iu more eases thin one when cli'.iled by suddeimold a news paper place i over the stomach soon re stores the normal temperature of the holy and prevents an attack of pneu monia i hive fre pie illy i - ' eoiuiu.mill ed this use o newspapers but 1 find ih it practically very few people really appreciate its value 7 ' m i a l\lj n 3xis writs : my ea?e of long stuiidiit has ball'ed many pliy-ie'iau ; have tried every rcir.e y i could hear m bill llradlields ke nt ile llegulalur is all that rt lievud me write tht bra i lie id lie co man a g.i for furth ,• partieuia . ft !'., l dra-fgi ts we are all guilty the greatest crimes committed in • this country are the crimes againxt i criminals society makes criminals then punishes them for being what . society made them every spirit occupying a material body ou the earth i.s an output from rod the great all-father aad is en titled to the same degree of care and kindness these spirits come from it the great i am as his children not alone our though wc may be the workman who pastures the farm under the rules of nature and make the spir it to be narrow even crooked and war ly as we are bigoted narrow-iuiuded and creed-bo nnd as spots are put on animals be fore they are born so are the lines of character and spots that darken and dismay put in our children during their ire-natal building into the bodies without which they cannot come into this world to endure its schooling and go on with the lading we have given them pre-natally vve make children to feel that they are unwelcome they an born shy timid fearful of cutis blows and ill-treatment they shrink in a measure from the love or touch of their parents and are never at ease till awav from home influences as baliies they are taught to lie cheat dissemble develop selfishness and to st niggle only for pence and plantations they see their parents deceitful and always double-dealing with them they are educated to de ceit and to go outside of blood rela tionship for confidants and advice they see their parents nagging each other quarreling scolding each other ' bickering back-biting and the next moment praising flattering and kissing each oilier thus the mind of the j child is kept in a tremor of doubt dis j guat and disturbance it is educated to hide dirt behind doors under chairs and in dark corn ers and conceal its little acts of mean 1 ness rather than weed them out of its life it hears the parents speaking ill meanly ugly of fleighbors then welcoming them with smiles kisses and compliments thus the child is educated to develop a double on entering the field that is just be yond the garden of maturity so to speak tbe young man is taught busi ness that it to lie cheat dissemble and deceive to make customers drunk and then to do fur them he is taught that all ways to get money are alike honorable to be sure lie has different teachers who teachdiffer ! en i methods to reach the out great ub ject but they all land the studeut iu ■the same rut ue is taught to be sharp to forget honor and man's duty to all other men to hate dis like or distrust all who art not of his \ set sect or society when in truth there are as good men as pure women and '• us lovely children iu other sets and sects as in our own as youth advances lo become an adult i the command of god ii that it shall not commit adultry that is love the individually thut is the birthmark aud j birthright of every one that it shall j journey on through life ever in touch , of the line of spirit from which it is an output not one person iu fifty j correctly understands what is meant hy ihe command against adultry and construct it into something different from the original intention each person should be careful to preserve his own spirit his own individuality | and thus develop us fast as far as strong as rapidly and progressively as possible that mankind owes a duty and al j legiance to ml the all-father but | few persons will deny this is the base of every religion ever sought to tie established it is recognized by every human being of age to reason who i.s not lost in the obscurity that follows skepticism aud determination to oust from all recognition of or affiliation with the divine origin the religions of the past and of the present have all erred in all they have sought to inculcate that man's duty to god consists in worship of god as god and in seeking a reconciliation with the all-father our duty to god is performed only when we proper ly care for assist ami educate all who are born from humanity when we i^ire proper welcome and attention to arrivals from the womb of time and its millions of deaths to care for god's jewels and see that we do not set them in mud tilth sin misery degradation and wickedness to carefully sur snrround our little ones our loved ones with influences aud environ ments lhat will encourage them to , g i and protect them from the ;, , f k is our duty to prohibit by all ueans in our power the approach oi cuemies to the decent and the good l'o protect from the dirty the vulgar obscene the pernicious the easily an gered the ones who cannot control i fcheir tie u i.t words and action those who make our children our ser vants and ourselves other than what we all should in herein consists our duly to god instead of discharging this duty we become selfish and wicked ihe ti-eaui of politics work on hi ml ihe gutter in such little esteem are politicians j held in ibis country that it is impos sible for either of the political parlies | to ruin the country or to lead people far atiay politic parties make criminals they preach profligacy de ceit dishonesty they are born in conceived for plunder and busld up in blocks of five or otber designs in cor ruption they teach that the liar the detractor the smircher of reputations tne briber corrnptionist and drunkard maker are the most important factor in political movements society then steps in to work under its ma<k those who are made weak and are chooked out of their birth rights who are turned adrift wi f h their education to do wrong fall by the wayside made criminals by poli t es and society then imprisoned and educated for being what they are made to be by the avalanche of circumstan ces that ride them down there was never yet a criminal who was not made so by his associations and society thrusts children into these associations when it should seek to remove thein by care and honest re ligion and a progressive education — tameroifs a-lcance tltoaqlu dying expressions it is well — washington t must sleep now — byron kiss me hardy — nelson head of tlie army napoleon don't give up the ship — law rence let the light enter — goethe into thy hands 0 lord tasso independence forever — adams the artery has ceased to beat — ilaller is this your fidelity — nero this is the last of earth — j q adams jive davroles a chair — chester field a dying man do.'s nothing well — franklin let not poor nellie starve — char les what is there no bribing death — cardinal beaufort all my possessions for a moment of time — elizibeth it matters not how the head lieth sir walter raleigh clasp my hand my dearest friend i die — altiieri i feel as if i were to be myself again — scott let me die to the sound of delicious music — mirabeaii i know that my redeemer liveth — horace < ireeley *■( iod preserve the emperor — haydn i loved ray father and liberty — • mine de stael it is small very small indeed clasping her neck anne boleyn i pray you s^e me safe up and fur my coming down l*t me shift for my self ascending the scaffold — sir thomas moore don't l«t thut uwkward squad fire o'er my grare i resign my soul to god and my daughter to my euuutry — thomas ! jefferson i wish you to uudc*r**taud the true principles of the govern ment i wisdi i them carried out i ask nothing more * — harrison 1 have endeavored to di my duty — taylor vou spoke of refreshment ray em ilie tak my last notes sit down to my piano here sing them with the hymn of vour sainted mother let me ! hear how grand these rays they seem to beckon earth to heaven humboldt the sun was shining brilliantly into the room in which he was lying once more those notes which have so long been my solacement and de light."--mozart god bless you my dear — dr johnson god bless you is that you dora — wadsworth now it is come — john knox dying dying — hood the deacon'i propensity an amusing incident occurred in one uf our down-east churches a few months ago tne clergyman gave out the hymn — 1 luve to steal awhile away from every cumbering moe ami sj.i-nil tin hour of setting day lu humble jrr.iti-tul prayer the tegular chorister being absent tbe duty devolvolved upon deacon m who commenced i love to steal and then broke down raising ids voice a little higher he then sung d love to steal as before he concluded he had got the wrong pitch and deploring that lie had not got iiis pitch-tuner he determined to succeed next time all the old ladies were tittering he hind hnir fans while the faces of the voung ones were in n broad grin at length after a desperate cough he mule a final demonstration and roared out i love to steal the eff>rt was too much every one hut the clergy man and deacon was laughing ihe pastor ros and said seeing our brother pr ieiisities let us pray it is needless to add that but few of the congregation heard thai prayer the .- sm ce of all fine breeding is the gift of iiui titati ni a man who posse ses even title tu our respect ex i ept that of courtesy i in danger of forfeiting them all a rude ni.innei renders iis owi.yr liable to affront he is never witho'k dignity who avoids woun ling the digu.ily of other mr davi as a jtaitsr an iktebtiew with mii.o cooper a foemer slave jackson rii le tinirs-l'nion ofilaxdo january 8 the readers of the timed-union wil remeinher that in the press diapafchon giving an ne i count of he death of jefferson davm j *» touching incident was de>c.*ilie.l of the family btrvant who threw himself weeping and praying liesitle the couch of the de;»d they will also rememljer | the timcs-l n i.m's editorial tribute to the old colored man's fidelity under , ! the caption remember miles coop er ' llis name is is mtlo cooper and he has resided in orlando for fiye or ; six years hearing that milo had returned to orlando last ni^ht the tiraes-unio»'s correspondent hnnted him up this morning and had nn interesting chat | with him a portion of which was as follows how old are vou milo i was born in the year m'.'j sir were vou owned by mi llavii yes sir a friend of his j.ave me to him when 1 was about 19 and i j waited on him all the time what kind of a master was he he was a perfect gentleman sir j he wns strict with us but never whip ped us he would talk to us when we | did wrong and make us sorry and hate j to do anything to displease him i have friends but my best friend is gene my only sorrow is that i could not see him before he died but thank god was aide to look at him before he was buried ' where have you been since the funeral i was carried fainting from his side to a drug store and the doctor put me to bed and was just as kind a.s man could be i stayed in new orleans three days not being able to travel and then went to mobile where 1 stopped to visit relatives milo has a house and lot in east orlando the house has three rooms and is worth about 6*4 0 his lot is only 70x200 feet but is a model of neatness end thrift he has twenty five varieties of fruit trees besides or nameual trees and flowers he form erly kept a barber shop but iiis skill at ornamental gardening has opened the way for employment at that business and he is now engaged at a salary to plant and keep the ornamental grounds around the catholic church i lis lit tle home has a mortgage of 400 upon it drawing j 2 per cent interest and if the kindly suggestions f the times union should result in the lifting of this encumbrance it would be a gener osity worthily exercised during the years that milo cooper has lived here he has continually re membered his old friend aud master bj rending fruits ami mementoes aud be has quite a uuiaher f letters from mr havi in acknowledgement of the same some of which he showed our corres pondent and froui which the follow ing extract and copies are made they are all dated at beauvoir miss lu one of oct 5 18"37 occur these words we are indebted to you for kind attentions the delicious pineapples and to iii very rare fruit the full grown citron have been received i shall always be glad to hear of your welfare the fallowing is copied iu full beauvoir mi-s i may j i 1880 \ my good friend milw the plants did not arrive until the day before your letter came they have been planted and are much valued by me and mrs davis unites with me iu thanking vou i'm them the fibre is magnificent and i should think they would be a valuable acquisition to this climate and inestimably valuable in florida mrs and mi^s davis and i unite in kindest regards to you and with be.-t wishes 1 am with thank yours sincerely jefferson davis the word wife what do you think the beautiful w'.rd wife " comes fr.uu it is the great word in which il.e english and liliu language conquered the french and ireek i hope the french will some d iy get a word for it except fein ine but what do you think it comes from the great value of the saxon words is that they mean something wife means weaver you must either be house wifes or h iuse-m ith remember that iu the deep sense von must either weave men's fortiiina and embroider them or feed upon and bring them tn decay wherever a true wife comes home i always around her the stars may be oyer her head the glow-worm in the night's cold i>tctss be the tiire at her feet but home is where she i and for a n ible woman it stretches far aro ind her better than houses celled u lt li cedar or painted j with vermillion shedding the quiet life for t hose who are homeless 1 li . i belieye is the woman's true pi c and power itti.-lriit — »■«'■buciclen's arnica salve thk hi t sai.vk hi tlm w«»»j«j i'-ft <.'<'>. llniisi-s s'-re ulcers salt lnni)j y\'t - | -. |\ e ( l l i ii lie . ullilj.hlll - i i ,,-. an.l ol skin ki ujii ea md p"-,i i\e j ! ;■. in piles oi no nay ictjnirctl it i | j't-iimiiti u to ji ■'• r i :•' ' * ifibl ii lion i ; i intuit ivlieeii 1 i'i : ' ■_'.", • ■nl - [ ■- b j . l sale !,' k!m'/e i i -— - -.:.._ j axs how they made it the new york times prints an in terview with one of the oldest inhab itants who in the course of his re marks savs dohn jacob astor had his store in \ essey street in the buildings in which or ilalleck lived kit greene hal leck the doctor's son was one of as tor's clerks old astor got his start in life by hiring out to a farrier tn beat furs keeping the moths rait of them at a dollar a day ■he was economi cal and saving aud presently began to buy eat furs and muskiat furs and when he had accumulated a lot of them he took them to bin gland nnd sold them at a large profit then he established his own business here and extended his connections westward and northward until he became the largest dealer in the country commodore vanderbilt was at this time running a perry auger ( periauga — a small ferryboat carrying t wo masts and a lee li i.ird i between quarantine station and the city and was becoming very popular with boatmen and others who were thrown iu his way kultou & livingston owned au exclusive char ter to run steamboats between new york aud albany and the monopoly was paying immensely two oid jer seymen then started an opposition line but as they could not run direct be tween new york and albany they gat around tlie difficulty by going from new york to jersey tty and making that the starting point for albany they encountered aii sorts of difficul ties however the monopolists going so far as to wilfully run their boats down ami otherwise cripple them and they were threatened with bankruptcy one of the proprietors was at dew drop one day when i.e asked old mr guoin if he knew of a man who was competent to take hold of their line and make a success of it yes 1 said guoin t know such a man his name is corned vanderbilt he'll take your boats to the mouth of hell if you want him to that's just the man i want 1 was the response aud in a little while the bargain was concluded and corne lins vanderbilt took charge of the line the monopolists tried every pos&iuu raeans to prevent the line from doing business in new york and it last put a sheriff on hoard with instructions to arrest vanderbilt if in should attempt to move the steamer from the wharf ' vanderbilt got all ready to go and theu stood by with an axe and when the wheels had began to revolv and there was a good strain on tho hawser he up with his axe and cut tho hawser and steamed away to albany with the sheriff on board a continue ation of his vigorous policy finally broke up the fulton & livingston mo nopoly and established the opposition line on a profitable basi vanderbilt's daughter w*re a wild kind of girls they were perfectly at home everywhere ou stateu island and were very popular i used to see thuia in a grocery oyer there sitting on the counter and swinging tlieir feet ud talking to the young fellows who were chating them the lorillards bad a snuff und to bacco business aud tln-y made u goodi deal of moin/y out of it there were three brothers of them jacob i'eter a id george jacob had a buti her shop up near the bowery theatre thut was the dutch of it it came to be pierre after it had heen translated iuto french soil a few mouths i'eter and george were the suuff and tobacco dealers after they got wealthy no thing would do but old lorillard must have a carriage and a coat-af-aruis upon it lb chose for his coat-of arms : * who'd thought it snuff bought it this made the people laugh and so he changed it after a while putting iu its place quidi rides 1 which means at what do you laugh his tobacco store was iu chatham street where he liot the fee mv first case iu san francisco said attorney lames k wilder to au examiner reporter was the defence of i young fellow charged with steal ing a watch belonging to a catholic priest i was appointed by the court because the prisoner said he had no money tin jury returned a verdict of not uilty and as the defendant was leav ing the court room 1 called him buck and just us a joke banded him ray card and told him to bring me arounj tin first m he got next day he walked into ray office and planked down two jos and a 1.0 where did you u r t all that money i demanded a soon as i got over my surprise enoj m to speajc sold tie priest's watch he replied as h boiwe ' out fi ney par y forming mr i . c'lmse i'.uy tlie lawyer is tbc ac credited rej • i'tiiiitive in tlii city of tbe order mo cardinal principles are prac tical i lu.^t of the old american party i ui so i .».'"■;. it i a '•) accept as members any i'l.ki-h.i win lias come to this country and owes ullejiiaiice to it and whose obligations tu this joverumeut i sire recftgnized us paramount to those ol an foreiiiii miwer either secular or rt i li._.j,,n ii ,- known as ili american ! i*i i i.o.i parly there is anvsmocia tion of thai ii on with bcaiu-rfrarters ic pittsburg and ui!i branch organisation in several states and many of tbc arg cities ii '■ahitigtoti /'<•*
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1890-02-06 |
Month | 02 |
Day | 06 |
Year | 1890 |
Volume | 21 |
Issue | 16 |
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, February 16, 1890 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 | 601554367 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1890-02-06 |
Month | 02 |
Day | 06 |
Year | 1890 |
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 5267316 Bytes |
FileName | sacw16_18900206-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:31:16 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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