Newspapers / Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 16, 1835, edition 1 / Page 4
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Tr,tic t ZrlZif&S&i Recess "MICH YET REMAINS INSING.' From the Southern Literary Messenger. TRUTH AND FALSEHOOD. There's a tuneful river, In Erin's Isle, Where the sunbeams quiver, In silvery srnile; Where the leaves that fall 'Neath the a jtumn sky, Grow gern-like all, And never die; And such ia the stream, by truth enlightened, That laves the breast by wisdom brightened, Where even the joys that the storm dissever, Are turned to genu that glow forever. There's a darkling tide In the Indian clime, By whose heardless side There's a sulphury slime To the flower that it touches, A scorching wave, To the bird that approaches, A weltering grave. And such are the waters of bitterness rising In the desert lxom of dark disguising; And the birds of joy, and the flower? of feeling, Must perish wherever taat wave is stealing. DEFERRED. From the IsontUm Ihrald. ADVENTURES OF A FEMALE SAILOR. The following adventures of a'young female, the subject of the present article, are so truly genuine, and so extraordinarily marvellous, that we cannot refrain from recommending the persual of them to the attention of our readers. An incorrect state ment of the facts appeared in the papers during the early part of the week, but the annexed account being publicly adduced before the Lord Mayor, leaves no doubt as to its aut henticity. His lordship, having read the statement, directed M'Lean, the inspector of the city police, to make inquiry into the circumstances, in order that, if the girl requi red assistance, it might be rendered to her without subjecting her to annoyance. M'Lean thought that the best thing that he could do, after having heard the story of the girl from her own lips, was to bring her to the Mansion-house, and introduce her to his lordship. He accordingly appeared be fore the Lord Mayor, accompanied "by the girl, the captain of the vessel in which she came to London, and several gentlemen who felt an interest in the remarkable details of the fact. Captain M'Entire, of the Sarah, from Belfast, stated that he met the girl, whose name is Anne Jane Thornton, at St. Andrew's, in North Ameri ca. She was dressed in sailor's clothes, and had all the appearance of having been brought up to that employment. He engaged her, at 9 dollars a month, to act as cook and steward, and considered that she was what he seemed to be, until a few days before the arrival of the vessel in the Mrt of Lon don. It appeared that some of the crew had sus pected her, before she was seen washing in her berth, from the circumstance of her having repeat edly refused to drink grog. The Lord Mayor. It. has been reported that 6he was ill treated by her captain and the crew. I wish particularly to be informed upon the point. Captain M'Entire said that he would call upon the girl to say whether ho had not uniformly treat ed her with kindness? and whether, when her sex was discovdred, the degree of kindness and care was not increased ? The girl declared that Capt. M'Entire had act ed towards her with humanity; and had desired her to complain to him if any of the crew treated her harshly. She had been, in the course of the voyage, struck by some of the sailors, because she could" not work as hard as they did a thing she found it difficult to do m a gale of wind ; but she did not tell the captain, as she determined to endure as much as possible without grumbling. The Lord Mayor. U it possible that this mere girl for she cannot be more than sixteen or seven teen years of age performed the duties of a sea man ? Captain M'Entire. It is, my lord. She per formed them to admiration. She would run up to hand the topgallant-sail in any sort of weather, and we had a severe passage. Poor girl, she had a hard time of it. She suffered greatly from the wet : but she bore it excellently, and was a capital seaman. The Lord Mayor. Is the account of the roman tic pursuit of the person she was said to be attach ed to correct Is it true that she went to Ameri ca after the captain who was said to be her sweat heart? M'Lean said, that the account she had given to him corresponded with that which appeared before the public, but she would herself mention the par ticulars. Captain M'Entire stited that he had no doubt of the correctness of her statement. She was not at all given to loquacity ; on the contrary, she did the duty of a seamen M'ithout a murmur, and had infinitely better use of her hands than of her tonmje. This description of the female sailor seemed to be accurate. Her hands appeared as if they were covered with thick brown leather gloves, and it was bv repeated questioning the Lord Mayor got from her the facts, of which the following is the sub stance : Anne Jane Throntoii stated that she is in the seventeenth year of her age; her father, who is now a widower, took ner ana the rest of his farm lv from Gloucestershire, where she was born, to Donegal, when she wan six years old. He was the owner of stores in that part of Ireland, and in good circumstances, and was always affectionate to her: She regretted that she had quitted her home, for her dejKirture, of which she had given no previous notice, to her father, must have caused him many a sorrowful hour. When she was only thirteen years old, she met Captain Alexander Burke, whose father resided in New York, and was the owner of vesse ls there ; .and before she was fifteen they become strongly attached to each other. Soon after Alexander Burke was obliged to goto New York, and she took the resolution to follow him. fche quitted her father s house, ac companied by a maid servant and a boy, and ha ving procured a cabin boy's dress, she exerted her self to obtain a passage to America. She succeed ed in her object. The servant maid and boy took leave of her in i mediately upon her embarking, the latter being charged with a message to her father, informing him of her intention. By degrees she became reconciled to the labors of her new em ployment, but she beheld with joy the shores of New York, where she thought her labors would terminate. The moment she landed, she went oil in the cabin boy's dress, to the house of Captain Burke's father, and said that she had worked under the captain's orders and wished to be engaged by him again. It was by the father of the young man that she was informed of the event which pla ced the eternal Ivinier tietweeu them, and she re tired from tin house disconsolate. America was, howewr, no !;t:e to look for sympathies. In the !i-li"t" tiiat the sea, which no doubt her affection l".r Ihirlie recommended to her, was a more pro liable mode of existence than she could adopt in the dress of her sex, she applied for and obtained a sit uation as cook and steward in the Adelaide, and subsequently in the Rover, in which latter vessel she sailed to St. Andrew's, where she fell in with Capt. M'Entire. The Captain of the Uover had engaged to take her to Belfast, but he received an order from the owner to sail for the West Indies; and, as she was resolved to return to her father as soon as possible, she refused to accomjKiny him. For 31 months she had been engaged in mese re markable adventures, and participated in the most severe toils of the crews, of which she formed part. The Lord Mayor. Are you not weary of so harrasstng a life i The girl. Yes, I am anxious to get home. I hope and believe my father will forgive me for the sorrow I have caused him. I have had my own sorrows too. Captain M'Entire. I am anxiiius, to pav her the wages I owe her, and I never had any idea of giving her less than I agreed to pay. The Lord Mayor. How did it happen that you fancied the sailor's dress, well knowing that by as suming the appearance of one you pledged your- J IUI III SUCH tffc . . A lit: fill I. I uouiuil'l hiiiiiv y'l uiij vn- "r , and I did the duties as well as 1 could. I under went a good deal. I travelled from East Port, in North America, to St. Andrew's by myself, a dis tance of 70 miles, through the woods. I walked ail the way. n The Lord Mayor. And withti jut sustaining any injury i The girl. I received none. I knew the sail or's clothes would carry me through safe, and at St. Andrew's I met Captain M'Entire. Captain M'Entire. It was but a few days ago I learned that we had a girl on board. I was the last person in the vessel who was informed of the fact, and 1 could scarcely credit the mate when he told me of it. 1 can bear testimony to the extra ordinary propriety of her conduct, and I ask her again whether I have not acted properly towards her, and particularly from the moment I became acquainted with the secret which she was so anx ious not to have disclosed. The girl said that she was in gratitude bound to acknowledge the kindness and humanity of the captain, who instantly paid her all that was due her. The Lord Mayor. I shall give directions that you le taken care of until I hear from your father, to whom I shall write to-night. You liave done him great wrong by abandoning him under any pretence, but you have suffered bitterly for your disobedience, and I trust that you will, by your fu ture attention and care, prove to him that your fi lial affection is as strong as your courage in such circumstances of danger and toil as you have been placed in has been so immeasurably beyond that of the rest of your sex in modern days. 31 any gen tlemen to whom I have spoken on the subject, look ed upon the case as the coinage of the brain, but the investigation has, if possible, added to the in terest of the story. Captain M'Entire mentioned to the Lord Mayor that the proprietor of the Coopers' Arms, in Low er Thames street, where the young woman was lodged, is a respectable person, in whose house she would be properly taken care of, and his lordship desired that she should remain in that asylum. The girl then retired, after having gratefully ac knowledged her thanks for the humanity and soli citude of the Lord Mayor. She is low of stature, and her limbs are very firmly knit together her face is comely her eves are dark and brilliant, and her teeth are extremely white. The hardships to which she has been so long exposed have com pletely tanned her face and neck, but the sailor who accidentlv discovered her sex, declares that the natural color of her skin is as white as snow. The female sailor, Ann Thornton, whose roman tic history has appeared in the papers, is all the go in London. The proprietor of a minor theatre has offered to pay her a guinea a night to apear in a character trot up for her in a peace already pre pared for a representation. A celebrated artist al so appeared to In; allowed to take her likeness ; and many proposals were made by persons who offered to pay largely to exhibit her. Things founded in Reason. The idea of supe riority felt by a man in a big fcteam-boat over ano ther in a little Steam-boat. The contempt of a man who is going the whole route in a Stage, feels for one who gets in to ride onlv a few miles. The dislike a person experiences against a stran ger who wears his hat rather to please himself than any body else. The pride of a gentleman in the boxes at the Theatre over one in the pit. The credit you award to a shop-keeper, when he assures you, on his " honor," 'such an article cost so much. " The belief of any thing because it has been in the newspapers. Raise of the Cotton Trade. In the beginninsr of the reign of George the Third, (17GO) this trade ?ave em ployment to 40,(HH persons, and the value of the goods produced was o00,(KK). It now employs not less than 15,(),000 persons, and the value of goods produced ex ceeds thirty-one millions. The cotton yarn annually spun in Ensrlpnd would, in a single thread, girdle the globe 205,775 times; it would reach fifty one times from the earth to the sun, and it would encircle the earth's orbit eight times and a half. , A Curious Fact. It is represented as a singular fact that the present King of England is William I.Wil liam II, William III, and William IV; as William Kinr of Hanover he is William I; as Ivinir of Ireland he is William II; as Kin' of Scotland he is William III; as King of England he is William IV. Geonre Stevens used to relate a story of a man that married a woman so much taller than himself that if he wished to salute her, he was obliged to climb upon the table. "This woman," added George, if her huband was ever out of humor and complained, would look down as if from a two sto ry window, and ask, " Who it was that kept grum bling there below?" Presli (Goods! New ami Cheap ! ! Has just received, from JVt'io York and Philadelphia, A LARGE AND GENERAL ASSORTMENT OF m-...i y- Ci I w --J.T W" W W ' N-, Which have leen selected with much care and at tention and bought for the Spring of 1835. HIS STOCK CONSISTS, IN PART, OF 1)1M-((MH)S, Hard-Ware AND Cutlery, QUEENS-WARE, AND GUOCEUIES, &C, lie invites his Friends and the Public to call, hear prices, examine quality, and judge for them selves. OCT" Country produce, of all kinds, bought at the highest market prices. A liberal discount trill be allowed to all CASH customers. Salisbury, April 25, 1835. f WILKI3SBOUO' ACAIM3JIY. rIMIE Public are informed that the WILKES. A BOROUGH ACADEMY is entrusted to the care of Mr. Roland Jones, whose qualifications as ft Teacher of the English, Latin, and Greek Lan- guages.jtml wlidse nuftaf worth are attested by tne most satisfactory tesflmonials. ' 4 The salubrious situation of the place, the cheap ness and excellence of Boarding, and the cajaci ty and qualifications of the Teacher, we hope will induce a liberal patronage to this establishment. The First Year of this institution will com mence on the 2nd Monday (13A) of April. Terms of Tuition : Orthography, Reading, and Writing pr.year, $10. The Sciences, . . . 15. Latin and Greek, including the above 20. H. BROWN, x m " A. CARMICHAEL, JOHN FIN LEY, J. V ANNOY, M. CHEATHAM, J. R. DODGE, A. MITCHELL, Trustees. April 4, 1835. . 3m rIAKES this method of informing the Ladies , . r d Gentlemen of Salisbury, that he has ta ken a -I'jop a few doors below Mr. Wm. Slaughter's Hotel, where he can be found at all times, (Sun day's excepted,) ready to wait upon all-who may honor him with their calls or orders. As it has been but a very short time since he has been in sseveral of the Northern States, for the very exj press purpose of completing himself in the 'Fon sorial art, he flatters himself that his work shall be done with as much taste and in as good style as it can be any where South of the Potomac. Salisbury, February 21, 1835 tf. Take Notice, r MI AT, in three months from the date hereof, application will be made to the President and Directors of the State Bank of North-Carolina, for the renewal of Certificates for three Shares of Stock in the said Bank, in the name of Eliza Conner, (now Eliza Simonton ;) said Certifi cates having been lost or mislaid. WM. S. SIMONTON. Catawba Springs, April 25, 1835. 3m rpiIE Subscriber wishes to purchase LIKELY NEGROES, from ten to thirty years old, and will pay the most liberal prices in Cash. All who have such property to sell would do well to call on him, or 3Ir." John Jones, his Agent. He can be found at Mr. Slaughter's Hotel, in Salisbury, and Mr. Jones at Dr. Boyd's Hotel, in Charlotte. con- ith etters aunressei be punctually attended to, ROBERT HUIE. Salisbury, May 24, 1834. tf V:ilualile Laud ir Sale. Jt? THE very noted and desirable Tract of Land, which .contains a most valuable seat for Salt AVorlis, will be ofrTer ed at Public Sale, at the Courthouse in Salisbury, ci Tuesday of next May Court. The Salt Lick on this land was anciently visited bv wild beasts, and is now visited by cattle, &c, in great numbers. It lies on the waters of Dutch man and Rear Creeks, near Bear Creek Meeting house, in Rowan County, containing 200 Acres. Terms will be made known on the day of Sale, and due attendance given bv ANDREW BEGGERLY. tmc March 28, 1635. State of North-Carolina, ASHE COUNTY. Superior Court of Law Spring Term, 1835. Martin Oambill ill vs. Petition for a Divorce. Nancy Gamb IT appearing, to the satisfaction of the Court, that the Defendant is not within the reach of the process of this Court, and solemn Procla mation having been publicly made at the Court house door, by the Sheriff of said County, for the defendant to appear and answer, and she hav ing failed : It is therefore ordered by the Court, that publication be made in the Western Carolinian printed at Salisbury, and the Raleigh Star, for three months, calling upon the said Nancy Gambill to appear at the next Superior Court of Law, to be held for the County of Ashe aforesaid, at the Courthouse in Jefferson on the 'third Monday of September next, then and there to answer or de mur to said Petition, otherwise it will be heard ex parte and adjudged accordingly. Witness, WILLIAM BAKER, Clerk of the said Court, at Jefferson, the 3rd Monday in March, A. D. 1635, and in the 59th year of American Independence. WILLIAM BAKER, Clerk. By R. Mcrchisox, d. c. April 4, 1S35.131 Pr. fee S6 75. Ate tfiks iproePosM-,lhat M urW - T. m - . - - . J l to him. or Mr. Jofies. will THE THOROUGH-BRED HORSE lflLL stand the Ensuing Season at the follow- " ing places in Rowan County, viz: One-third of his time at the Stable of the Mansion Hotel, in Salisbury; One-third at Mocksville, and the bal ance of his time at Mr. George McConnaughey's Store, twelve miles West of Salisbury. He will be Let to mares at the reduced price of 820 the Season, payable on, or before the 15th day of June, 1835, at which time the Season will expire. The greatest care will be taken to prevent accidents, but the subscriber will not be liable for any that mav happen. March 21, 1835. R. W. LONG. DESCRIPTION. REFORM is a Dark Browu, fifteen hands and one inch high, with black legs, mane and tail ; and considered, by the best judges of both Maryland and Virginia, to possess as many good points for a STALLION as any HORSE IN AMERICA Gentlemen wishing to raise fine horses would do well to amhrace this opportunity, for such a horse is rarely offered to the Public in this section of cpuntry. 1 he following Pedigree, signed by one of the most respectable Gentleman in Maryland, is sufficient to warrant the public that Reform is of the purest blood. Pedigree and Perf(ian REFORM" was got by Marylander, dam by Richmond, grandam by Ogle's Oscar, g. grandam by Grey Diomede, g. g. grandam by Hall's Union, g. g. g. grandam by Leonidas, g. g. g. g grandam by Othello, g. g. g. g. g. grandam by Gorge's Juniper, g. g. g. g. g. g. grandam by Morton's Traveller, g. g. g. g. g. g. g. grandam by Col. Tasker's Selima, by the Godotshin Arabian. Marylander, Reform's Sire, by Rattler, dam Noli me Tangere, by Topgallant out ofUastianira, Old Sir Archy's dam Rattler by Old Sir Archy, dam by imported Robin Red-Breast, and full brother of the distinguished racers Sumter, Fly ing Childers, and Flirtilla, the victor of the cele brated Ariel, in a match for S"20,000 a side. Polly Hopkins, Jackson, and Lady Relief, the victor of the renowned Trifle, in a twenty mile race, have also descended from the same illustri ous line of ancestry. Richmond, the sire of Reform's dam, by the distinguished racer Ball's Florizel, dam by Old Diomede, grandam Wickham's Alderman Mare, who produced the distinguished race horse Tuck ahoe, g. grandam by Clockfast, g. g. grandam by Wildair thorough-bred, and from whom have descended some of the most distinguished race horses in the country. Mr. Wickham, of Vir ginia, bred both Richmond and Tuckahoe. OCT" The following remarks are copied from Mr. J. S. Skinner's Sporting Magazine : He (Reform) run many fine races, generally under disadvantages as to training and management, but always with credit as a fast and honest racer. To establish his character as a race horse, it is only sufficient to remind our readers that he twice beat Ace of Diamonds, who beat him once ; that he al so twice beat Tychicus, who also beat him once. He run a fine race at the Central Course last Spring (of 1633) beating fine horses, viz. Colum bus, Whitefoot, Floretta, and distancing Orange Boy, who afterwards beat easily the famed racers Medoc and Anvil." 07" Orange Boy, it will be recollected, beat Mr. Mull's gray mare, Betsv Sanders, at Salisbu ry, in the fall of 1632. GEORGE SEMMES, 13t Prince George County, Maryland. The Thorough-bred Young- Horse W HIT E - STr TVE AJK. , "V1TILL Stand the ensuing Season at my Stable at Beattie's Ford, Lincoln County, N. Caro lina, and perform service at 810 the Season, 15 to Insure, and 65 the Leap; 50 cents to the groom in each case. Particular attention will be paid to Mares left with the Horse, but no liability for accidents or escapes. The Season to commence on the 1st of Marcht and end on the 1st of July. PEDIGREE. Whitestreak was got by Lafayette, he by the imported horse Bluster, he by Orlando, a son of Whiskej-, and out of a High-flier Mare, sister to Escape, by Pegasus, her dam by Squirrel; Pe gasus was got by Eclipse, out of a Bosphorus Mare, sister to Grecian Princess. Orlando's dam, Emeline, was got by Highflier; her dam by Miss Limon's Sister Marden, by Matchem Saltrum, a son of Eclipse, out of a Calash Mare by Herod, her dam, Hersa, by Matchem Regulus, and he by the Godolphin Arabian, out of a Chesnut Mare 16 hands high by Alexander. Orlando's g. g. g. grandam by Burza, out of Rose by Sweetbriar, and own sister to the celebrated horse Macedonia. Lafayett's dam by the celebrated horse Dungan non, he by Medley, out of a Mark Antony Mare. WHITESTREAK was out of Fox; she is out of the Janus and Wildair stock, descended from the old imported Jolly Rodger, aud from the im ported Mare, Mary Grey. Fox was raised by Col. R. Walker, of Virginia, who said she was a fine blooded mare of the above stock of horses. Whitestreak run one Race, at Danville, Virgi nia, free for all horses, for 100 Barrels of Corn Corn at 84 per barrel. He DISTANCED THE FIELD at a single heat. Mr. A. J. Davis is of opinion that but few horses in the world can beat him, as to speed his bottom not tried. Whitestreak is 5 vears old, and 15 hands high. "HORACE A. BURTON. February 28, 1835. tf The Western Carolinian. BY ASIICEL SMITH & JOSEPH W. HAMPTON Q TERMS OF PUBLICATION. 1. The Western Carolinian is published every Sa turday, at Two Dollars per annum if paid in advance, or Two Dollars and Fifty Cents if not paid before the expiration of three months. 2. No paper will be discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the discretion of the Editors. 3. Subscriptions will not be received for a less time than one year ; and a failure to notify the Editors of a wish to discontinue, at the end of a year, will be consi dered as a new enfragement. 4. Any person who will procure six subscribers to the Carolinian, and take the trouble to collect and transmit their subscription-money to the Editors, shall have a pa per gratis during their continuance. 5. CT" Persons indebted to the Editors, may transrn it to them through the Mail, at their rik prmidn' they get the acknowledgment of any respectable p rson lo prove that such remittance trajt regularly made. TERMS OF ADVERTISING. 1. Advertisements wrill be conspicuously and correct ly inserted, at 51) cents per square for the first insertion, and 33 j cents for each continuance : but, where an ad vertisement is ordered to go in only twice, 50 cts. will be charged for each insertion. If ordered for one in sertion only, .1 will in all cases be charged. 2. Persons who oesire to enjrage by the year, will be accommodated by a reasonable deduction from the above charges for transient custom. TO CORRESPONDENTS. 1. To insure prompt attention to Letters addressed-7 to the Editors, the jostare should in all cases be paid. FORTUNE'S home:: NORTH CAROLINA STATE For the Benefit of the SALISBURY ACADEMY FIFTH CLASS FOR 1S35. To he Drawn at Hiirfrccsboroiigli, HERTFORD COUNTY, N. C, On Friday, the 22nd day of Mayt 1635, ON THE POPULAR Terminating-Figure System. STEVENSON & POINTS, MANAGERS. CAPITAL JAFITAJL J PRIZE ( 1 Prize of 6,000 DOLLARS is 86,000 1 " of 3,000 DOLLARS is 3,000 1 " of 2,000 DOLLARS is 2,000 8 " of 1,000 DOLLARS is fc,000 10 " of 500 DOLLARS is 5,000 10 " of 400 DOLLARS is 2,000 10 " of 300 DOLLARS is 3,000 10 " of 200 DOLLARS is 2,000 100 of lOO DOLLARS is 10,000 100 " of 50 DOLLARS is 5,000 116 " of 30 DOLLARS is 3,4s0 201 " of 20 DOLLARS is 4,020 300 of 15 DOLLARS is 4,500 6,000 " of 10 DOLLARS is 60,000 6,000 " of 6 DOLLARS is 36,000 6,000 of 4 DOLLARS is 24,000 IS, 854 Prizes, amounting to 8180,000 A Package of 10 Whole Tickets will cost . 840 00 And must draw nett - - - - 17 OqQ 823 00 A certificate for a Package of 10 Whole tickets will be 823 00 For 10 Half tickets, - - - 11 50 For 10 Quarter tickets, - - 5 75 07" All Orders from a distance, by mail (post paid) or by private conveyance, enclosing the cash or prize-tickets in our previous Lotteries, will re ceive the most prompt attention, if addressed to JAMES I. LONG, Salisbury, N. C. ; and an ac count of the drawing will be forwarded immediate ly after its event. 07 All prizes payable in cash, Fortv days after"" the drawing, subject to a deduction of ffteen per cent. Whole Tickets, - - 84 00 Halves, - ... 2 00 Quarters, 1 00 To be had, in the greatest variety of numbers, at JAMES I. LONCrS Office, (Corner of Mansion Hotel,) SALISBURY, N. C. May 9, 1835. td BECiaVITH'S rpHOSE who are afflicted with HEAD-ACHES, -- HEART-BURNS,and other distressing symp toms of disordered stomach, bowels, and liver, mav find relief in Dr. Beckwith's Anti-Dyspeptic Pill.-. which can be had at this Office price fifty cents per box. The Doctor, who once resided in this place, hut now lives in Raleigh, has, after a long and exten sive practice, been enabled to compound a most va luable remedy for the chronic diseases of the di gestive organs, sq common in Southern climates, especially with those who lead sedentary lives. It would be an easy matter to make out certifT cates to prove that these Pills are a "sovereign re medy" for "all the ills that flesh isiheir to?' but it is not pretended that they are an universal anti dote. Certificates -of the most respectable PhysU cians and other gentlemen can be shown to sub stantiate their efficacy in the particular class of diseases above spoken of: and the Editor of this; paper can testify that he has derived speedy aivS permanent relief, in the use of them, from a moU distressing and long-continued head-ache. Some of his friends tried them, at his suggestion, and ex perienced the same beneficial effects. Salisbury, June 14, 1834. tf TILFORD'S Paleivt StYaw-Cvitter. rpHE SUBSCRIBER having purchased the ex ciusivtj ngni ior .Making, Usin, and Vending tne aDove vaiuaoie Machine, for the Counties ot Rowan, Iredell, and Cabarrus, offers the same to the Farmers of those Counties at a very low price ; the right of making single Machines can be had at any time. He will have a number of Machines made in a very short time for sale. JAMES COLES. Rowan County, March 21, 1835. tf o O 3
Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.)
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May 16, 1835, edition 1
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