Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Jan. 19, 1899, edition 1 / Page 1
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EiimiiumimmniirmuiimiiiiMiiiung -The Herald- r ium!UuuuiuJ BRI9Q TOITK . . .IS THE. job Printing i BEST - ADVERTISING - MEDIUM 1 ....TO THE.. ....IN TUB.. State Library: H HERALD OFFICE. 5 g - i 2 rirat-Claaa Wara at Lavaat Frlcaa. D krmmmn umuxinrunmnrmrnnn r3 E Piedmont Section 5 1 1 u i in 1 1 1 ii 1 1 n m in 1 1 1 iMHXi.ii.iJi ii 1 1 mu ib Volume. XIV.- Number. 44. M O RG AN TO N.N. C. THURSDAY. JANUARY 19. 1899. $1.00 a Year, in Advance. m ill j I yl Commissioner's Sale. VS commissioner, appointed by a decree of the Superior Court of Burke coun tv, rendered at the Spring Term, 1898, in an action entitled L. A. Bristol, receiver, and .others against Wm. II. Pearson and others, I will, on , Monday, February 6th, 1899, cpose to sale a certain lot on "West Union street, in the town of Morganton, with the residence-, out-buildings and improve ments thereon, described and bounded US IiMlOWS, lU-Vrii ; ut-iuuiiig u ia.R. (n'nv down), corner of Unionand Andter sini streets, and runs with Union street north 58 degrees east 6 poles to a stake, corner of lhe B. S. Gaither lot; then north 33 degrees west 347 feet with the Uaither line to a stake ; then south 58 decrees west six poles to a stake on An- dcrson street ; mence wiui aimersuu street 347 feet to the beginning. Being the lot or. V-liicTv the sr.idVVIL-Pearson now resides, and being the tract con veyed by S. T. Pearson and wife to W. H. Pearson by deed of date "the 1st day of, February, 1890, recorded in Book U, pare 152, in the oflice of the Register of Deeds of Burke count'. Terms of sale cash. Sale made subject to a mortgage of 510 and interest due the Southern Guarantee and Investment Company, of Uiveiisboro, N. C. - This 3d day of January, 1899. W. C. EIIVIN, Commissioner. Execution Sale. TRUTH STRANGER THAN FICTION. A Tru6 Story of Life Among the Moon shiners of the Blue Ridge. BI J. C. r., HARRIS. 1)Y virtue of two several executions ) issued from the Superior Court of Burke county and directed to me in two several civil actions, entitled the Atlantic National Bank against the Herald Pub lishing Company and the National Park Hank against the Herald Publishing 'Company, I will, on Monday, February 6th, 1899, expose to sale, for cash, to the highest bidder, at the court house door in the towrt of 3brganton, a certain lot, the property of the defendant, lying on Green street in the town of Morganton, begin ning at a stake in Green street, J. L. Laxton's corner, and runs with J. L. Lax totis line north 40 degrees 10 east 140 feet to a stake; thence south 49 degrees 1" east 22 feet to a stake; thence south 4 degrees 45 west 140 feet to a stake in the line of Green street; thence with Green street north 49 degrees 15 west 22 feet to the beginning, excepting there from the chimney attached to the Herald building, and the land on which the foun dations of said chimney are built. . This January 4th, 1899. 0. M. McDOWELL, Sheriff. Commissioner's Sale. " Raleigh Ifews and Observer. .Often the facts of real life are more interesting than the tales of fiction. It is not always that love and romance, tragedy, and the final happy ending, is confined to 'the brilliant 'and fertile imagination of well known writers who cater for the literary tastesof the gen eral public. Frequently in the busy bee hive of the people who make up hust ling towns there are constantly oc curring romances and love scenes, now and then a tragedy com mingled with the devotion of a woman, and the self sacrifice or a man, for her to whom he has trusted the keeping of his first and youthful love. Such a true story, occurring in the counties of liutb or ford and Henderson, in this State, among the foothills of the-l blue capped peaks of the Allegha nies, in the year 1871, with the conclusion near the flourishing town of Waco, in the State of Texas, twenty years later, is that which, follows : Shortly alter the wur illicit dis tilling 4n the western part of the State was carried on to a'mnch They deemed it a most outrageous deprivation of their rights of civil liberty that they must pay a tax on whiskey and -brandy. They never ceased to be at war with this law. It was the one black spot on the record ol the Republican party that, atJime8 .almost ,made Old Man Adair and bis boys and neigh bors vote the Democratic ticket. A near ueighbor of the Adairs was a man by the name of Martin Baynard. At this time he was a married man with three children. His wife Sallie was known far and near as the prettiest woman in the county. She had been well educated at a female school in the town of Hendeisonville. She was young man and almost unknown outside of Buncombe county. His opponent was then .the leader of the Democratic party in this State and its ablestmember. He had been chairman of the committee on reso lutions at the national convention held in 185G at Cincinnati. The district had been Democratic lor mauy years. Qeueral Thomas L. Clingiuah had been reepeatedly elected bf it. He was at this time in the United States Senate and the Hon. Mr. Avery sought to be his successor. Mr. Vance" had the -case of tbo State versos Co-1 and tUe silent clasping of bands. lumbus and Govan Adair and In due time the trial came on and Martin Baynard, on pages 293, the three defendants were con- 299, 300 and 301 of tneCGth volume victed of murder and an appeal of the Reports of the Supreme was made to the Supreme court. In Court of North Carol fn a. She says: I regular order came the decision af- Tbat she was the wife of Silas Westou and that' she had been the mother of four living children. That she lived in Rutherford county. That on the night of the firming the judgment and the three defendants were sentenced to be banged. Governor Tod B. Caldwell was annealed to for a commutation of sentence, which he a perfect brunette. Her hair and eyes were as black as the wing of ence of those who listened to it. 2Gth day of April, 1871, abont one I promptly refused to grant. The hour in the night, she and three of I feeling ran high against the de- her children had risen from1 the I fendants and the populace clam- supper table, leaving her husband lored for their blood. The fear of the reply and the rejomder at this at the 'table feeding the baby. I a rescue from jail was so grea" discussion. Mr. Avery opened and I She heard the growl of a. dog in I that Sheriff Taj lor remained there delivered a intfst able and learned address on all the, issues which was mudeistood and appreciated by. only a email number of his audience. He indulged in no humor and did not cite illustra tions with which to point and enforce his argument. It would have been a great speech for West minster Hall and the United States Senate, but it was sadly out of place, considering the education, intelligence and political experi the yard, and went to a crack in all the time after the day for lhe the end of the cabin in which they I execution was fixed. Now came lived, to see what" had disturbed J the time that tried the soul of the dog. On putting her face to I Taylor. Mrs. Baynard was well nigh crazy at the impending death of her husband. Baynard, while Baking Powder Marie from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alunu Alan miTitfrn to powder art tf greatest c fne prcacot day. 1 9Gt0Jl Or lra wejafaw sua;, PHONOGRAPHY, the crack she was fired on, the powder burning her eyes, and she staggered back, exclaiming I'm trilloil Orul horn mjrv nn tnA ' The door was then burst open, and VS commissioners appointed by a de cree of the Superior Court of Burke county at the Spring Term, 1898, in a civil action entitled the National Park IJank against the South Mountain Club and others, we will, on Monday, February ,6th, 1898, j expose to sale, to the highest bidder at the court house door in the town of Morganton, all that certain -property kuown aa the "Burkemont property," consisting of certain tracts of land on Burkeinont conveyed by R. A. Deaton, commissioner, and J. H. Pearson and wife to W. C. Ervin and S. T. Pearson. Sale will be made first in lots and then as a whole, the sale to be reported at the highest price obtained. Terms of sale : 20 per cent in cash on day of sale, 40 per cent in six months and 48 per cent in twelve months. Notes bearing & per cent interest to be given for de ferred payments and title to be retained until purchase money is fully paid. Plat can be been in office of F. B. Davis after January 15th. , This 3d day of January, 1899. F. B. DAVIS, F. II. BUSBKE, . Commissioners. Sale of Valuable Hotel and Gold Mine. 1)Y virtue of a deed of trust duly exe- cuted to me by E. S. Walton and wife and recorded in the Register's oince of Burke county. I will offer for sale at the court house door in Morgan ton, N. C, on Monday, February 6th, 1899, ; the following described real estate in Burke county : Two certain tracts of land lying and being in Burke county and State of North Carolina, adjoining the lands of J. C. Mills and others and bounded as follows, to-wit ; " Fikst Tract. Being the undivided one half interest of E S. Walton in the Glen Alpine Springs tract, with a three Ptory hotel building, cottages, barns and other improvements, containing 300 acres, more or less, as particularly ue ecribed in a deed of date the 13th day of June, 1896, by Thos. G. Walton to E. S. Walton and others, recorded in Book: ( : No. 2, page 435, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burke county, N. C. Second Tract. Known as the Satter white Gold Mine tract, with the mining machinery and appliances and improve ments thereon, as particularly described in a deed from Thos. G. Walton to said E. Stanly Walton of date the 13th day of June, 1896, as recorded in Book C No. 2, page 433, in the office of the Reg ister of Deeds of Burke county, xm. Terms of Bale cash. This January-5th, 1899. " ' E. B. CLAYWELL, Trustee. Administrator's Notice. HAVING qualified as administrator of the estate of J. P. Hall, deceased, ;11 persons indebted to said estate are requested to come, forward at once and nuke settlement. All persons having :laims against the said estate are hereby notified to present them within twelve months from date hereof or this notice will be. plead in bar of their recovery. ' This 17th day of December, 1898. W. S. HALL, Administrator dec22-Gt.-pd. - o o 0 COUCH SYRUP Will cure a Cough or Cold at once. It positively relieves all throat troubles, iiiall doses. Price 25 cents at druggists. greater cxteut than it is now. In those days the moonshiners lay around their " block a dec stills," as they are called, with their guns in their bauds, and they usually fought the revenue officers when they; cani e upon the scene of action to cut np the jftill and destroy the. liquor. And the feeling against the law was so great that it was worth as much as the life of any person, who had kuowledge of the rouning of " avblockade still," for him or her to giv6 information to the revenue officers of this fact.' As soon as it was definitely known that a certain man had become an 'mformer" on the blockaders, he was marked for death and 'sooner or later his doom overtook him and he was found, in some secreted place with a bullet hole through his head. - In the year 1871 there lived in the county of Eutherford, about 10 miles from the court house, near the road leading from Rutherford- ton to Marion, a man by the name of Henderson Adair, lie was-an honest, sturdy mountaineer, who bad raised a large family, and had known what it was to work hard all his life for a liviug. He was at most uncompromising old-line Whig, and before the war his word was law and gospel on election day at MacMahan's precinct. After the war he became an ardent Re publican. Among his family at this time were two grown sons Columbus and Govan. These boys were "chips off the old block." Tbey were radical Eepublicans and were intolerant of the: views of their neighbors. They were cour ageous and aggressive 'and .had many enemies in the county. They had many fights. " During the war they were strong Union men and. delighted in piloting Fed eral soldiers, who had escaped from the Salisbury and other Confeder ate prisons, across the mountains and into the Federal lines. Of course all the Confederate were their avowed enemies. Under the sway of this family MacMaban's precinct was as largely Republican as it had been" Whig. For these reasons the Adair family had many enemies among those whom they delighted to denounce as the "secesh," meaning those persons who had -favored the war against the Union. Like most of the mountaineers, Old Man Adair and his boys despised the law which forbid their distilling the ' grain which they raised without the payment of a tax of two dollars on;the gallon, as it was in 1871, and they did not hesitate to violate the law by run ning . " a blockade " distillery. They resented what they were pleased to term the il inherent right of the people ' to do as they pleased with the products of tfeeir own a raven, and her cheeks were red and rosy with perfect health. Her features and form were such as would have made the admirers of the Greek Slave of Powers die with envy. She was a most expert horsewoman. No man of her acquaintance backed a horse 'more gracefully or securely than she. She "rode to the hounds" in all the fox hunts and generally car ried off the brush. She handled a rifle aud shotgun with great skill. As a girl, she was beloved and petted by all who knew her, and as loug as she lived in Rutherford coonty she retained fbe good will and esteem of all her neighbor. The word of Mrs. Baynard in all social matters was as equally the law aud gospel as was that of Old Man Henderson Adair. rough and uncouth, was the father of her several children, and be had been kind and loving and Govan Adair entered aud fired on 1 true to her, and by force of these her husband while he was seated 1 things ber heart-strings had en at the table, and again as he re- I twined themselves around her treated to the other end of the I husband, and the thought of his bouse. Govan Adair and Martin I being pnt to death and by the ran a 1 " uAj-f WILBUR R. SMITH. LEXINGTON, KY., Tor drcvUr mt fcla Luaow &d npoeTbH WMUEECIAL COLLEGE CF KY. UKIYERSITY 1fTt to I ni at ndailM Is mitrl M Fall B Mir. U1I0 u0 T- When 44 Mr. Vance " came to reply J Baynard then seized her husband I lover of her youth, was worse than I SSad,Ty7Wr,tT.,efkT,fcrt:-i it was seen, after a few minutes, aud cut his throat. As Columbus I death itself to her. She made ap-1 rTr.lV!": Adair came into the house he fired peal after appeal to Taylor to help on David and Theodosia, two of her in Rome way to 'save ber h us her children, and then shot her band from a felon's death, but Martin "Baynard was a rough,' nnconth son of the mountains. His education was limited. He possessed very little property, although he earned a good living for his family. That he was very , inferior to his wife in every respect was apparent to all who knew this ill mated couple. How, pretty Sal l'e Morgan came to marry Martin Baynard was a mystery to all who knew her. It was "talked" that she had been engaged to some young man while she was at school in the town of Henderson ville, and that it had been broken off, and in the rebound she had married Mar- that he had the crowd in the hoi low of his hands. He was chaste and pure in his language, for there were hundreds of ladies present. His speech was literally punctured with wit aud humor that kept his hearers in a continual uproar of laughter and appliuse. It was a field day for Vance. When the discussion ended both candidates were the recipients of flowers from their lady friends. Among those of the Whig girls who presented " Mr." Vance with a bouquet was Miss Sallie Morgan. The writer, who was then 12 years old, remem bers ber as the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. She was most becomingly dieted and fully answered the description hereto fore given of her. She made " Mr." Vance a neat little speech in presenting the rfowers, cougral ulated him on his address and predicted his election. '" Mr." rVlLOUR R SMITH. t r.,NC-v son W. II. Steadman. The two first named children were killed instantly. Y. II. Steadman breathed twice, with a gurgling sound, and exclaiming, 'they have killed me.1 While the shooting aud cutting her husband's throat was going on, she attempted to there was no way except by the betrayal of the law and the com mission of a high crime. Mrs. Notice to Creditors. nAVINO qualified u administrator of A. W. WUaon, deceased, notice is K.miKw tr wan all havlnep Baynard finally declared to Taylor cUlms axmlnet the eute of t&id intM- that if ber husband ws hanged tate to preent them to the undpnigned , . , , . . . ,T . for payment on or before the 29th day that she would remain in Hender of lumber. A. D., or thia notlca son ville during the execution and will bele in bar of their recovery; j . , r , and all penona indebted to said eUte commit suicide on the body of ber htJZ. notlfled to come forward get under the bed. Govan Adair I husband, and that Taylor would I and settle at once and thereby aaTe Adair and Martin Baynard drag ged ber out, and Govan Adair at tempted to shoot her, but' his pis tol did not fiie. lie and Baynard then gave her seven severe wounds, leaving her, as they sup posed, dead ; they then attempted to cut her infant's throat, net the bedding on fire, and fled from the house. She lay upon the floor until the flames began to burn her be responsible for ber death and the making of ber children or phans. 2?ever was man so sorely tried. Between bis sworn -duty to his county and State and the wo man he had loved with the fires of early mauhood, his trial was that of a maityr. - He had never failed theretofore in the honest fearless discharge of bis duty. lie pos sessed the confidence and esteem cewta. Thia 29th day of December, A. D. 1833. A. IL WILSON, Admr. of A. W. WUaon. i PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM J r-M. tama ' 9 m. rlV SMitN Onv , 11 Vo it. TrUJi) Co .or. hair, wheu finding her iufant still I of the people of his coanty more alive, she took it aud nlaced it out-1 thaA anv other man. He wanted TRY ALLEN'S iFO 0T-E ASE, A powder to b bairn lato the shoe. At thia kmos yonr feet irel wbUrn, ntrrom ad damp. Ii yon hre tmtrtiaf feet or tlgkt boc. trv Allem's Eot-Kc. It anu the feet arad maara waJaioc eaav. t urea iwolka and aweatiag- Iret. bltatrrs aad cailoaa apota. Kcbevea coma and bonlona ol all paia and ia a certain enrcor Cbiiblaiea ad Froat bitea. Try it today. Soltlbr a-ll drarjriata and ahoe atom for. 22c. Trial .1..-. . . . .1 . .'.. . . . A. I UIIUI.W .uw .wir. rut, jy.. Vance then got down among the side the bouse ana retnrneu ana 1 now to ao nis amy, on. ne was dui i package fkeb. Addreaa.AUes..oinitcd. . . .1. -.m. . I 1 . r. ... I L( oy. si. x . crowd aud tola anecaotes ana I araggea meouosia oui, wuom ue 1 maue 01 ciay umercui nuu He had loved this made himself "hail fellow well met" with all. How he reversed the vote and was elected by 2,019 majority is now history. As the writer and Mr." Vance rode home after the speaking, the man who was ja after years to fill such a large place in tbe hearts and affections of the people of his State, frequently, referred to left just outside the burning boose I other men dead, being uuable to carry ber I woman who virtually demanded any further on account of a wound I of him not only the life of her bus in her arm and shoulder. She I band, bnt ber own life "as well. theu made her escape to the house Taylor well knew that Bailie Bay of a Mrs. Williams abont a mile card meant all that she bad said from the scene of the qualruple about killing herself. It was the - - 1 murder." Tbe next morning SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES A Ilea 'a Foot-Eaae. a powdcr?for.tbefcet. It enrea oainfnl. awoltca. amartJne. nerroa feet and iaatacUy takea the iuo( oat of corns and basiona. It'a tbe rrcatcat com fort diacoTery of tbe aae. A Ilea a Foot-baae makca tixhtor new aboea (eel eaar. It ia a certain care for ChiJblaiaa.aweaUnx. cailoaa. tired, acbioc feet. Try It today. &oi4 by all draciriata aad aboe atorea. S3 Cta. Trial package rKBo. Addreaa. AUen a. uiaatca. Lc K07, K. Y. tn Baynard, who had been in love L" what a lovely girl Sallie Morgan was." The. war soon came on and the beautiful" girl faded from the memory of the'wrlter, and he next Baynard .was a violeut Republican and was completely, under tbe domination and coutrol of tbe Adair family. He aided them in rouning the 44 blockade distillery," verv much against the wish and r w with her ever since they, went to school at the " White House in the Cove" as children. Such was the rumor, but what was the real truth was not then known. Years after the time of which we write it came to be known that Sallie Mor gan, when she went to school iu the town" of HendersouvilIe was the sweetheart of Terrell W. Tay lor, and. that they were engaged to be married. For some time these two young people were all in all to Unemies of the Adairs and Baynard each other, and when together ftmnd out that a man by tbe name they thought the world well lost, .of Silas, Westou aud Polly, his But the bourse of their affection- wife, who lived near the Adairs, did not run smooth,, and it was had positive evidence of the ruu said that Taylor.became jealous of ning-ol the " blockade distillery." the attention which Miss Sallie This information was furnished to received from other young men. the revenue officers and Columbus Sallie bad genuino affection for and Govan Adair and Martin Bay-' Taylor, but she was somewhat of a nard were indicted in the United coquette, as every beautiful woman States court. The indicted parties is. to more or less decree, and she alwas believed tuat Weston and 7 ... bad much attention from the gen tlemen of Rutherford and Hender son counties. Taylor was as jealous of her as a Turk, and he resented the fact that she would not confine herself to him. Finally they became estranged and the engagement was broken off. Sallie fiuished school and went to her father's home in Rutherford county near what is known as the 44 White House in the Cove." This boose was the first bouse in Rutherford to the jail to see her husband for the last time. She again told former days. Love proved stronger than duty to law and to outraged justice The cry or tbe widowed rife and the dead and cremated 3 its 'uaine. It was here in June, 1858, that the writer saw Sallie Morgau. The occasion was a dis cussion betweeu Mr. Zebulon B. Vance and the Hon. Waightstill W. Avery, Whig and Democratic candidates for Congress. This was the first political gathering the writer had ever attended. He well remembers the occasion. There was a creat concourse of the house was found in ashes and the re mains of three human bodies, cor respoding in size to Silas Weston and three children, were found on the site of the burut bouse, aud tbe heard of her in 1871 as the wife of child, Theodosia, was found dead Taylor that she would never sur Martin Baynard; Like the Adairs, with a bullet hole through her vlre , the lgn0minious death of her breast, ana her oouy ourni ana husband and demanded bis life of lyiBg where her mother said she I Taylor because "of their love In left it the. night befoie wben she escaped from' the flames. The' murderers did uot think for a mo ment that they had left Mrs. Wes 1. . 1 1 . . protest of his wife. Finally, the u a, ana wuen iney weic r- imsband children were lorgot- . a 1 . a, a .1 a . t : i, . resiea ine uext uay auu were toiu len j 0nly the swectneart 01 tola that It was on her affidavit, Govan youth, T for whora "ihere yet re exclaimed "Why, ain't she dead!" mained much of that first love This citcumstauce was very strong Vbich, it Is said, Is ntrer ex against them on the trial. The tingulshed, was thought of. Mrs. case was removed from Buther- rjaynard was permitted by Taylor ford county to Henderson county t0 go to the cell "Of ber husband for trial, because of tbe influence anj n0 one was permitted to wlt of the 'defendants in Rutherford npM this last scene between tbe county. . doomed bnaband and the heart- 1 - At this time, 1871, a man by the broken wife. When the time bad name of Terrell W. Taylor was expired Taylor unlocked the door his wife turned informers and gave bberiff of Henderson county. Fif- and-Mrs. Baynard passed out the information. The truth is, that teen years before this he bad been weeping and lncoosolable ' and tbe information was given by other engaged to be married to the wo- mounting her horse proceeded on hartia an i Weston and wife were mafti who afterwards became the her-, wav borne amid the blue- unwilling, witnesses before that there was some disagreement Rutherford county. Wbeo supper! or addrcaa between Miss Sallie Morgan and was taken to Baynard he was ; B-LVtasos, - Taylor and the engagement was lying down and would not eat. broken off and both in after years Xext morning when breakfast was married another party. Taylor and brought be still would not eat. Mrs. Baynard had cot seen each When it became time to prepare other for years. Tbe black-haired, for the execution Tajlor and a rosy cheeked and black eyed maid- minister went into the cell and en had grown to be a beautiful found Mrs. Baynard. dressed and mature woman, and when he first aw al tine them. - The clothes of came to tbe jail in Hendersouville I her husband were hanging on the to see her husband and Taylor i wall. Baynard bad dressed in the! saw' whis 'first jo ve, it made his clothes of his wife and bad been heart leap and brought vividly permitted to pass out by Taylor back to bim those days when be as he had agreed with Mrs. Bay sat with his arm around her, with oard. to do. Hoe, and cry was children and lived in'a cabin about his lips to ber'a tbe world well raised and a heavy reward was two miles from Vheie Henderson forgotln the experience of love's offered for Barnard's arrest, bnt A.iuir Hve.i n,w well the cob- voune" dream.' In their conversa-1 be was never heard from. Tbe Rniracv to morder w.a executed 1 tions tbere.were references toby story of tbe Garden of Eden over ra n 11 r n pi 11 U C O again. The woman tempted and I A J 111 L II O II I I C O and the man fell. or anj other Udiee who wUh to work The day before the day set for Qan arn LotS of FiloneY tl.A ATAitfifiAfi Cr Tlirnarrt .ram ft ' I aau.Vlaia 9m I V TTt-hA ft I FT B KAfHA W vi SVU4 IVI US u V4 v bMAIO ) wvaaa w 00 oar cloth. We offer 70a a good charjoe to maka plenty of pendiojc money eaailr. In" lei tare hours. Send 13c for cloth and foil direction for work, and oommeoc at oac . Cloth sent anywhere. Ad dree. WLS OOSKET COMPAVY, ' (34-N.C.) Uoton, laa. Mfg. Dept, . , - ; SODTHERll RAILWAY. - : .-. r - . THE STANDARD RAILWAY . or THK . . SOUTH. Thx DnttCT Lcrs to Ali. Porjrrs. TEXAS, CAT iTFOBNIA , . FLORIDA,. c CUBA AND - - :forto hico, Strictly .firtV-daj eqa!pmeot on alt nroagh and Local- Train , Pullman Pal see Sleeping Care 00 Jl Nijht Trains; Faa and ie Schedolee. Travel by the Southern and too are adored Safe, Comfortable and Expe- ditusae Joaraey. grand jury, aud were the only wit nesses for the'government. Right here the trouble began which brings an artful tragedy into tbe story. - As soon as the Adairs and Bay nard found out they wre indicted and th.it Silas Weston and Polly that was painted white, and hence Western were the only witnesses & a . ami m. A . - aWaa ifunf Martin Ravnard It aeema L.n rwaka of the Rln Kidira in L Appiy w ucie. tor ,1 me uuv 1 .. j . 1 v.'- - o iriaoiea, i-atea and general Information, F. IL Dim, T. P. A, C. P. & T. A.. : Charlotte, K. C. Aeherllle, N. C. - Ho Trouble to Anewer Quertiona. FaaJrx (Us05. 3d V. P. & 0 If. J.M.Crt'.T.Il. W.A.Trax,O.P.A. e. WASIILSOTON,-D. C : YCAR8 tXPtRlENCE against them, they conspired and agreed to murder Westou and his wife in "order to remove the wit nesses against them and carry oat the uuwritten lawof the moon- shiners against au informer.- Wes ton" aud wife had four small '- ur - wile.was permitted to go, and .1 , . . . 41 xr .-. 1 niii a hosf tnhi hv Pnlfv Westnn I pone davs aou wnas diizdi uave hanrla a their fathers and grana- peopie present. t utc, iuD ... u - - - - ?att'; before em bad ?4one. Whig candiUate, w. a boyish I as It ppear8 in ber te.timooy Id beeo and there were mo.at .,. (cxjxcxrpto ox rotrsTa paok.) Tiuec Htwi DflraM CormKT Ac - Ayqaaawwc a afcatea at4 tm'gi aiWraif Mic.m tmr n fraa aa IstMKki. MpnAtUf ta. Crmwuttm. U004 mcrtcti r r.aiTUi. liaaanaa cm V it i iu k'mLamM UiM umuk Mwa t lasaire awuMka. it)KNitaVTh lata . Scnntific American. aa4acMaty ITiw itaucm of aay an (Mrt fna BKMitaa L - aaJ ' W L Sllfc-ee-ea. PYMCri la,UW OOoa. CS r WaaataattBH 1 ! ( ! 1 I i
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 19, 1899, edition 1
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