Newspapers / The Lincoln Journal (Lincolnton, … / July 22, 1898, edition 1 / Page 1
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5- i 6 m HERE SHALL THE PRESS THE ' PEO PUTS 'RIGHTS MAIKTAIK. TCAWD DT IXIXUTSCS A2CD CXnUIITD DT QJLEf. -1 NEW SERIES, VOL. IX N0.19. L1NC0LNTOJJ, NORTH CAEOLUIA, FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1898. 01.00 A YEAR. IN ADVANCE. X. in VIUU FOR PORTO RICO, jin Miles Saite to Conquer . that Island. place a Carefully He Will Have an Army of 40,000 or 50,000 Men. The Xandlnsc Guarded Secret. . tliree daVs consultation between the President, Secretary! Alger and Gen eral Brooke, during which there wer frequent comnjunications with Ge . -Miles at Siboney, the de tails of the. Porto Rican expedition were perfected and the expedition itself was gotten under way. Gener al! Miles with ' some artillery and nilinff to-dav. for Porto Rico LEAD NG A CHARGE Lieut. Shipp's Honorable Career and Glorious Death. - WT 1 8 After diei o FROST LEADING A CHARGE the 1 mt Uii Comrades Write Particulars of Ills - Glorious .rJeath. He - Volunteered for Battle and Died Leadine a Charee Up San Juan's Bloody Hill. llU Heroism in Indian War. Words of Commen- daiion. . followed quickly by. an army of about 40,000 men. notable differences I . this expedition and naval pageant tnai s Tampa under General Shaffer's i , command toattacK aanuugu. ji, - . .'. ii . i there will be pracncaiiy, no uavai There are some in the plan fori for the stately ailed' away from William Ewen Shipp was born at On the converted cruiser Tale, to be Ashdville. N. C, August 23rd, 1861, the son Of the late Hon. William M. Shipp J judge of the Superior Court of this judi cial district, and his wife Kate Cameron Shipp, daughter of Judge i John A. Cam eron. When he was little more than a I ,i . year old, his father moved here and for years made Lincolnton his home and it COnVOyS i he iNayy JLtrpal llucui nao : utxc, uuugj. tumuu vji luira hs declared that they are unnecessa- Mary Wood Alexander and Rev. W. R. rv. There is not a Spanish warship Wetinoie that hia education began. By in the West Indies that dares trust a brilliant examination he won the ap . its bow out of, port. In the second place the expedition does, not 'start roint. but will be divided a. a vs - w among several ports ing th tremendous ras encountered at effqrt q sartvuie pointment to the U. S. Military Aoad- emy at West Point, over about forty ntVio'i' Pfin f ocf n t Q in 1R70 anil nriKiffw thus nreveut-1 ongestion that tnat institution the same year, gradual ; Tampa in the mS eieventn in a very large ciars in the big fleet. J 1883. He was commissioned a Second liistlv there will be no effort made Lieutenant and, by his ovn request, to get the hips away together, but assigned to the Tenth. Regiment, one of transports, will )Q allowed to the two regiments of colored cavalry in ; find their QWirvvay tq iLrel- Qgguna- the J. S. Army, He joined his com tion without concerted movements. (general Miles leads the way. He had been promised: by the President s that he should go to Porto Rico and the promise was redeemed when the iale headed to-day from biboney , : ; ,. ., r- T wounded. liberty Dowicjr In double ttrmJzxs through From eTery part of the countir harel hU rein, be chose the life of a aoUier, come to hUjerraTpd widow f xprraslomi I Trained to anna, he wua hU tpart ua the of erjwpathT, and tee press, especially Wwtern plain, where bonorable meo- the paper of Worth Carolina, hare l-a I tioa by hia commandert rwule bU rtcurd nnanimooji in ttieir enrtioa of aJtni-Jof military conduct. ration for bU life and character. I In the line of duty be wat on the first The Secretary of Wr wrote: -Per- battle field f6r Cuban librrty. and where tnit me to congratulate you aa connected I the braTedle. gave op the 'glory of hi with one who died for such a justifiable 1 life. purjoefl and in inch a heroic manner." - "We xnonrn we mnt ferl the heart's , Oen. Nelson A. Milt, commander of sorrow and nothing, aare Uud'a al the United States Army, aaid: I knew mighty cuoaolatioQ; can gite the heart hi in personally. He was eTery Inch a i surcease man. i nere waa no omcer in me army I "aoatrocg, onou. r : - : rery tf hU rank who coin in and cd more re-1 thought, aa If the aorj pect and. none mere Centring. Ilia aeain waa unrortunate ana my sympa thies go out to his wife and her little children." Col. W. S. Pearson, in bis paper, the Morganton Farmers Friend, siyi: ierr Et cmxjTuut In tb ! : r ment. "Among the grorethe very atraigtt- est plant. The writer knew him, waa hia friend. and often looked or hia stately strength. "Tbe young widow was at Lincoln ton I and thought has often come; Such a with her two children when ne sad nature, where Power la officered by wire reached her wMch told of the great Modesty as gentle aa that of a woenan." sacrifice she had been called on to make The North Carolina State Society of for country and hutn!mity. She has the the Cincinnati at their meeting la Lieutenant William C Trull, Jr., who waa wounded la tbe first day's figtlicj; round Santiago returned to New York a few days ago, and amocjc other thing waa aaked the meaning of tbe terra miwirg., in. connection with tbe re ports of killed and wounded. "I'd hat to hare any friend of mine reported mU?icg,r replied Lieutecaxt Trull, sadly. You see, the rergrowth there Is so dense that I believe the majority cf the missing men were men who -were wounded, and who were cerer found In the undergrowth where they frXL The grass gets matted and tangled up, srnne times reaching a height of 12 fret. Yea can't force your way thrucgh it. Yin ran, only cut a path with a macbetr. Tbe roads are but trails, and you can nfw eajiiy a wound ed man nmt.l ) ali ' LTC -1 cjo--" rtar a-a w : 'r txTrrari, cr acme might bar a a; tzml, bnt X think the charge-. are r.crh aaizat either eTcuL I am afraid that ail the mluicg will eTentcally be counted ataccr lb dead. Speaking of the Calmcs. woondM soldier in New York, the other day. said"; as soon is and cuarda arid trie th mand on the'irontier-ndjought through I all th e bloody wars with the luutausr until: 1889, shortly after his promotion to jFirstj Lieutenant, he received an injury to his. ankle from which he never ful ly recovered, which caused him for several for Porto Rico. 8QQ miles distant General Brooke will be the senior years, fto be placed on sick leave. As Ve officer in Miles' command and upon gradually improved, he was detailed to LIEUTENANT WILLIAM EWEN SHIPP TBQOHJR. TENTn CAVALltY, U. S. AUMV, KILLED IX WATTLE AT SANTIAGO I . do CUKA, FRIDAY. JULY 1st, 1808. . him wijl fall the responsibility for J duty at the Davis Military School and I P41eWs .ianB- !s esumaieui. While serving on the frontier, Lient ffi 9WF&1 W'WW atrive b? enaut Shinn nerformed a most hProi, and I loved him with all my heart,") acrosfe his horse in front of him for 50 tnile , saving it from mutilation by the Indians. This heroic ieed was given a full-page illustration in Harper's VY" He had not seen him thday before he found him dead,, but fromTihers he learned that he tad beeVdoing eplen,did service in guiding the r pp th,"rouch the dense. u.nderrQwth, a service for which - y and glorious feat, which should hav brought him rapid promotion and donbr- Wednesday night at the point se lected for the landing: and will hoist -the American flair aSonce over Por- - - . Iac.6 nrnnU "U,,4- J 4 I J! t0 nicq soil. The TQint chosen for iCS umiw w aim ui hi landing is kepi secret, as the inclination to push himself. The In general will land' before the full dians under the ferocious Geronimo hr.d body of the' Qxpedition is at hand become very bold and were murdering, and it is cnsequenly not desirable- and plundering along the Mexican that the enemy should be able to as- bordt r. Gen. Crook, jaying obtained .1 semble a superior forte, to meet him.' th permission of the Mexican goveri - . I??-; tP uries,vu" ment to pursue the Indiana when -they wbeye tjie rst poay or troops ior files' expedition was to start today, fs more tha double the distance from Santiago to Porto Rico, so that f jig 'transpftrtg whiph gail from the former city can scarcely reach Gen- L-iral Miles before tb0 early part of alTarpuno; and valleys full of boulders. next week. These (jharjeston troops affording excellent hiding places for the are the First Brigade Of vthe First Indiahs and rendering the movements of Army Corps, troops exceedingly difficult, arduous and should attempt to escape by crossing the border, determined to pursue Geron imo'slband to the end, The section of country in which tbe Indians had taken refuge was a broken one with mountains Earnest. The; e Second Wis-! Division of the First a-d are commanded General George H. bVa4 comprises th. eenth Pepsyivania egimepts. The purpose of Secretary Alger is Q Iflftp tpe .Form, niuuu , umupaigu by Brigadier- hazardous.' To pursue, the bloodthirsty 4 Indian band v into this 'cpimry n cap ture and eterini aats- it: was nciT55ly- " 1 . -i most I hazardous task, but seeminelv a hopeless one. . Volunteers wr called fur and among those volunteering, Capt. i! - - - . ' I 4- P ,1 rn I1 n i l A : L. vl v 4 M I ULUlilCL VI a. w I II u - III llir) A 1 1 I 1 1 I MVN rv: tt snore,! one. au uyei wucjuiiug ' - w force will be thrown, upoh the island First Lieutenant Marion P. Mans, (now and it is possible a bloodless victory Lieutenant-Colonel on the staff of Gen. I will.be achieved when the Spanish Miles,) of the First Infantry, and Second become convinced that they have no Lieutenant Shipp.of the Tlentli Cv.ry, 5BaBle "chapge to resikt success- were selected to porraand1 he scouts fyly '."rr . aiid troops forming tbe epediti,on. J he i eipeditiQn i?3 tq comprise 30 After enduring great hardships a.ud after OQQ men-at tb sta.rt, and it will be much. des te figuting, the Indians awelled sobn to 40,000, and if neces- . - - B 4 . ' . . were routed out of their fastnesses andi ary to 70,000 men, the equipments .... , , ! . - a, i j. VA.i as usual, took refuge over the line in of the volunteer forces having now progressed so well as to warrant the Meiico- .u- s- TP8 Pursued statement that number can e ready them and on January 10, 1886, had them for service in Porto XUbon a yery hemmed in pug fo peae. Early IQrt ttm 1-hp eptire body of the next morning oujr' troops were fired troops ai Tampa will be taken, upon by Mexican troops, who claimed numbering about 13,000 men and in- that they-thought they were Indians, eluding a lot of heavy and light ar- CaPt; Crawford was mortally wounded tillery under command of General rd sevetal othera were less severely. . Kodgers. Tne expeauioiv .wi oe , . a nqmber were ni.fi-.nloflxr ctrrn rr with nrtillprv I . ' . . '. - r-S'iy w (i. will (iul(l d seyerl other relativea takeu. It Uypqssible that all of of that fhief .-t now 9om the cavalry will not be called upon. mand of the expedition, yeflt. 4 ; l 1-- t". " r Shipp placed their wounded on litters c he Phief BurgesS' of Mflesburg, Pa., and turned to make their way out of ooub- riWitt' Tiitflft "Rarlv "Risftra are ' the best .pills he ever used in his family this hostile country. After travelling during forty years of housekeeping. 150 miles Capt. Crawford died. Then They cure constipationr sick headache Lieutenant Shipp carried, the dead body n1 etrnnnrh ana liver tron Dies. - Small I : v,,.f oof i'n i.oCi-.if irQT.T t.qw. of his captain (of whom he wrote, 'H 1 II CSkiXj LJiau ia au j. kjAa kj aa.ua a aca i ly.- 'The expedition xi lug yx iuc vc;i4Uiinu Such was Lieutenant Shipp1 modesty and self-effacement s that although he telegraphed and wrote his mother at the first opportunity assuring her of his safety and telling of the death of his Captain, not one word or hint did. either dispatch or letter contain of his own couspicious gallantry and heroism: No one ever heard bm-epeak of his connec tion with this famous epeditou and his friends learned of it through the press. On January 2fth, 1804, Lieutenant Shipp was married to Miss Margaret Busbee, one. of the &ta.te' loveliest and most accttmnlishedyoung ladies, a daugh ter of Hon. Fabius ft. Busbee, of Raleigh, one of the leading lawyers of the Stat p. To them; were born two sons William E. and Fabius handsome, manly little fel lows. Mrs. Shipp has proven herself a true soldier's wife by te brayery aud patienpe with wh.ic.h, 8h,e has" me t this, woman' suprenest gre. nlted-in.tha andxlhla experience iulhe In5an wara pecu- Cubana are all rijrht? In battle ir ami rtu wui w uv war. crcacfte it vu symrthT h,e Et a her aoxrow, and I Raleigh on the 4th, when the cewa of I hard to tell theta from the Sparianla. bWhouldt some solaoe, for not to I Lieutenant Shipp death reached North 01 p ozlltma mrv Woman la It Mn trt a Vin-1 Pimllni mmmI tMtnM. .t.ttr. L. J T - ' wJio tj ' ' " I "v - - "-iinetn wrre aJmct naked. AzxAter band die o glorioualy a did thla young I of the lona sustained by the State: I wounded iM:cr who waa riaaainjr fellow. This writer had but an acnuain- "And In particular do wo wbh to put !nro5.a ycamauga. ca hia way heme. I I I T a . V I . l.i-i i . i . . . , ,. ... . I - - i , vAirvu uiMri.i inns ui wunmm.yei neaaw meaiampana on recora a Meumoaui or ? -I wouMt tmt one of Item aa far a I nesaol tovereimty in hia face, the hand I sorrow with which we have heard of the I coula e him. In a. hot skirmiih of. the Moat High waa on hia brow andldeatha of Ensign Bagley and Lieutenant I rJ cne dJwe 'Qt ttachtnmt cf the u wo wuw w io wiiiB- iium ouip, i (uu ouic, wcoMiUr there. At tbe firtt fire they made m Tour, patriots and loog'ago martyrs. I pcntonal qualitiea endeared theui to their I break for the rear, and when theskii. He haa gone to join that other hero. I frienda while their profriocal attain- Mr hcrt U me later, wp founds VOnnff I1.1C1Y. .nA th tnm ttMtvirnr mimti n1 !r.; Vr?.rr, n.1M.t I . . . . "-Frf - - - - - a i oepeiKieu upon. him lint With if (11 In tkan.J. Ith.m r,i4l.. r9 m H.!.'. k.M I i - " i iscar anj wini. w -- new that ahe beara auch children. I Col. Letcher Hardeman la aa inter-1 tbe 0,ldsbcTr mnmn V.r ik. p.-. Hon. II. A. London, In the Chatham Tiew with a reporter of the St. Loulal0"11 uarouna Ileslraent, who bare i i.i ... Record.aaya: -He waa one of the finest Republic aart; ' . iwoTule lur Cmtr offlcera, phyaically, mentally and moral-1 Lieutenant William E. Shipp wail three reara each in the K-niuc'snr ... I . - I Tl ... . . ly, tnu te haa fumiahe4. I another friend whoee 1cm I deeply I ,ADP Wl" coaEnei at Gorrmor'a 1- ir. Jcmeph P, Calwell. in the Char- deidoie. He waa graduateU la the" daw 4 1 naxu iau;r. lotte UiTXtJZZZ: "The war corneal with Lieutenant Smith, and joined the . , Aluft;0 vcnXnclur ua the home to ua. Since I be death of Enai gal Tenth Catalry aa Second Lieutenant, I killfj at Duna Monday while 1 uagiey it nat Drongt BO ca aaa rHi wnnj oeeme mm aiijne lime. i.ney I wsauiirK iie waa raiacU la t5ain;A mg. 6 was one of the noblest men i ever knew, Lieutenaut KMpp was ordered to join his legiment at Assiniboine, Mont., last August and went with it in April to Chickamauga Park and later to Tampa. So anxious was he to remain 1 with his command that when detailed to open a recruiting statiqu a,t Chickama'uga. and atfer o reorganize a troop at Tampa, he begged off and went to Cuba with the troops, and although he proteteL he was appointed brigade quartermaster, but volunteered for field service and met his death whileloing volunteer duty In the battle of Sah Juan on Friday July 1st. The news of his death reached his f ami- 1g tere on uy tht but it was not until twq weeks after it occurred that any particulars were received aud these are but meagre. The first letter giving any particulars was written by Lieutenant Barnum, Ad jutant of Lieu tenant Shipp's reirnent, y(Vt W ?eYeTey WOUded lq the battle u whiph Lieutenant Shipp was killed. It was written on board the transport gherokee wtUCfi was. bringing the first Jot of wounded home, was dated July 8th and. received by Mrs. Shipp on the 12th. Lieutenant Barnum wrote that in pas sing over the battlefield ' about noon on July 1st, he found Lieutenant Shipp, He had been shot through the body, the ball probably pangjhrougb, bis tWi au mut have been instantly killed. lfarlfi lT-Miu;-Tha t night with a de tail of men, Lieutenant Barnum buried William E, Shipp, killed la the engage- him and carefully marked the grave. I menl near Santiago Saturday. (Friday.) Further particulars were brought in a I A hrave man; a trained soldier; a man of letter written in the trenches in front of I talents; handsome of person; a gentle- Santiago on the 8th by Second Lieuten- man horn; the husban of a bautif ul ant Henry C. .Whitehead, of Lieutenant yang wife the father of two child Shipp's own troop, and, received by Mya. roD there waa much in life to wed him Shipp qu the th. Lieutenant White-1 10 il doea not mitigate the pang to head wrote that he had not been able to ttat 8Qch are the fortune of war. leave his troop for fiva minutea f roin LTbe cvet I an unmitigated calamity. T 1 M m m m I t j my isi until ne wrote cu the tht llel wuuams, city editor of the says that he Lieutenant Bhipp not OUerrer, write!: "There could bare long before he waa killed and asked him no finer gentleman, nor braver of to join the troop, but that he had a line ficer J lhe ry, for he w"aa the purest to conduct into the battle and could not P6 D' either that could bo Imagined. fight with the troop, or as Lieut. White- Ie waa a mar aupeib phyai.me, erect head puts it, 'could not neglect one duty I a' a.rrowi a splendid head and band for another." He says; 'X dtuial0116 Stores. No finer specimen of tne greatest gre my life I admired aan menUl, moral and physical- mm as mucq as any roan 1 1 " vlv cuuniry a unixorm. lie waa ever kpew," a cultured, intellectual, refined and Lieutenant Whitehead through the n!Rk-toncd gentleman of fine addrwa and promotion of Capt. Jonea and the death I lng nature's nobleman. c LdrRticnt. Shipp, is in command of Hon. Clement Manley writer: . lt.C . MM countT aad waa ttry jcr lt the Troop (F .) and writing of the brav- "Of all brave heart tha.t lay coM and ery of the "Black Cavalry, "thVwrib tiU rjae arW teighU of Santiago on known Tenth, and especially of his troop that f atef uttlayrnot one In life beat with with the diplme of wbjc Ljeutenant nobler thoughts and truer than .VV, m uucu J ao, saygj The on or Korth Carolina. W. E. coolness and fearlessness with which our Shipp had all the elements which make men charged the Spaniah works and met a perfect man. a fire which left this little army with 'Handsome in person, beautiful aa an more than a hundred killed and almost a ideal soldier, 'with every line of hia thousand wounded, - simply awea me. strong and virile figure moving with Our colored troops are absolutely fear- ease an race: regular and Hear cut less. My only caution during te whoe I feature ahowing In the broad bn iw and fight waste keep ttem from einoain I clear irray eve the frankness and tmth' themelYea unneceaarily," j whirh virtue and honor speaka. yeutenant Whitehead aays that he "He waa brave he never knew what has not had time to visit Lieutenant feeble men f11 fear Shlpp'a grave although it is in plain view "He waa gallant hia acta, uncontrol, of his position in the trenches. Thla led by consequence of duger, cn tell, shows that he died as Lieutenant Barnum "H? waa just hia thoughtful conaid stated "on the field wel out W front," cratlon of other's righta made him seem IJon Hoke Smith, of Atlanta, sought one horn to authority, for information concerning the death of "He waa strong the unfortunate foe Lieutenant Shipp among the wounded In beneath hia blade well knew, the hospital at Fort McPherson, near "He waa gentle bn hand outstretched Atlanta. He writes Mrs. Shipp's father to the tottering feet of childhood that he waa unable to find "any officer was as tender aa the touch of love, there who waa near Lieutenant Shipp at "And all this splendor of the time he was shot, but there waa a stood In hia ovf n toutU, aa tree from private who knew him well, and he aaya boa ti ever belonged to knightly valor, that Lieutenant Shipp wra st cq FtU "lie waa a man among men. Nursed day, July st, .while hi the very front, ia k cradle fanned by "the breath of leading a charge up "bill, and that be war, with the Wood of ancestora who aiea. in a lew minutea alter he waalhul fondii tn itt!. Point, aud, if powlble, their friendship waa increased after they joined the regi ment together. It was a case of Damon and Pythlaa, and it la a strange coinci dence that they ahould have both bera killed in the aame battle. Their Icks will not only be felt by the regiment to which they belonged, but by the entire army. They were two of the mct ed- tient officers in their rank. While a cadet at Weat IUnt. Mr. Shipp waa confirmed into the communion of the Epi copal church and to the hour of hia death be lived a christian life. Death, though it came to him la aa In stant la the tropical thicket of Cuba, far away from thoee on earth he loved aa only brave, true, honest men can love. had no terrors for him. and be waa re cdved at the Great White Throne with the honors given a christian and a hero. Lieutenant Shlpp'a bravery and hia knightly character were equalled only by hia moderty and worth. He lived a true man and be did a hero, and hia goou name, unguuieu vr an act or thought unworthy a gentleman, hia char acter aa a christian and bis bravery and V K lv LI 1 LiZ rrin. tbe hi in. tTbe accident waa cand y falling between the car. J. W. Itectcr. of thla tuwr-Mn v. . bra SOyeura eld which baa feet yet sar rendered cm the hatchica: Industry, but though blind ctmtlnne inJnrm at tl. old stand, and adnriv trV t,. - . whfacholrrakillrdaUtbe nter uu the place. Thia caa I backed bv all it neightvra. Morjatca FritiiJ." An explrtdon La fin & Rand the lovely woman who sorrow cot even time caa assuage and to th two aohle boys ahe bore him. at the works .f IVlWjrT f VT! Tiltir m. Pomrtcm Lakra, N. J., Tor-day, killl WLU' among ihrm arveraj oiiirr . who had bwa detailrd tu rein! th. powder works. Krauts Wolfe, a citlxra tf Cclra county, saya tbe Monroe Journal, wmt home from cherch oa Sunday cisbt aal bein thinty wrnt to the well to draw bucket cf water. When the batkrt iUrted down the windlaj stmrV IistU which was atickicg la Kraam" pocket, canning it to fire. Th ball. 2 calibre, went through the calf cf hia lVj F aimers ia Mrzico ue oxen cf ton. ctlor in the morning and of aaotker o . or In the afternoun. They have no r-a-m for doing ao beyond tbe fact thai their forefathers did it. and they co dude it mast be tbe right thing to du. Mamma I wonder what we shall call tbe baby! Johnny I don't think we'd better call him any of the name nana ""-,K in '"-'-M mi - -V" " ? md -J " M Something over fClO.000 will U taid by tbe government aa "bead money" to the officers and sailors who destroyed Cerveraa fleet. Thla la according to tbe Ww, which provides the payment of $100 per head for every man on the ship of the enemy when thee ship are destroy ed. A few officers will receive pretty good fortune. 1 Win your battle against dUease by acting promptly. One Minute Cough Cure produce immediate results. When taken early it prevent a constipa tion. And in j later atagt it famishes prompt relief, j Karl Lawing. 6 A Vork county, 8. C, jury rendered the following sealed verdict: "We arre , to disagree." Thereupon the pmkling juae neia them in contempt and they were only saved from punishment by declaring tbt they meant no lirepect to. tw court. . Privat achoolteachera In China get only a cent a day from, each pupil. Ths editor of the Evans City, Pa. Globe, write, "One Minute Cure la. rightly named. It cured my children after all ether remedies failed. It for American1 lung troubles, Karl Lawing. -6 u1 mm t-rv t . . . ' tug. nem-gnt not like It when b growed up. The human race include two kinds of peuple those wao know too much and tbc who don't know reonrh. Fmm the first claas, the knavm are tat-tir recruited, and from the second clxm the IOO LA. And now it la ducovered tliat CV!m bua started oa Friday on his wtlJ f.-v. lg Toyage, and actnally sighted land oa tne same unlucky day, which "should forever rid it of its baa to Americana. A German atadent. not very wIl acquainted with English, trird to qnote wie paaaage. "me spirit is willing, but the fleaa U weak, as follows: "The ghost la willing, but the meat feeble." Ia Jones a Christ Ian r "Ye.- "To what deoominatioa doe be belonfr None. He la only a Christian as yet. He haaa't been converted hrcg enough to become a seclariaa. When you see a pompon, important looking persccajrr. who you know to be unimportant, bow quickly come Into your mind that question Charle Lamb put; "I beg your pardon, air, but are you anybody la particular TT Bob Moore, of LaFayette, lad., aay that for constipation be baa found De Witts Little Early Risers to be perfect. They never gripe. Try them for stomach ami liver trouble. . Karl Lawing. 6 v. , A. - . V- I
The Lincoln Journal (Lincolnton, N.C.)
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July 22, 1898, edition 1
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