Newspapers / Warrenton Gazette (Warrenton, N.C.) / Jan. 24, 1879, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE WABBENTOH GAZETTE, A DEMOCRATIC WEEKLY FAMILY NEWSPAPER. THE IABBEIH01I GAZETTi Atirrrtlmimm tlmtemi (TV Lit mi e t m f tnni a htm) O J-ur. t"" .. ........ IVJUi Oa t. v rt lion.. ' ,M ts"t JU O&e lo n?f5-.J , . ..... P3 fa lltw HI m. ac-L..... .18 93 UCt ft9cn. tm jr CSM 1 at tfiy otJU it a-pata. n avmrio asuvva'o! of a c tutr. rlafs wUl ba to-.! t 2 c la a4aMa the following teim..: 1 on Oue Copy, one year nn Bis months ice Club llatemt Five Copies, to one addrees. Eight " ........ 8.0(: 12.00 VOL. VII. WARKENTON, N. C, PRLPAY, .TAKUAHY 24, 1870. NO. 23. TERMa INVARIABLY IN ADYaNCE. WAmEffSlw Gazette Beginning Again. When, sometimes, our feet grow weary, On the ragged hills of life -The path.stretching lorg and dreary With trial and labor rife We pause on the toilsome journey, Glancing backward in valley and glen, . And eigb with infinite longing j: To return and begin again. For behind is the dew of the morning, In all its freshness and light, And" before are doubts and shadows, And the chill and gloom of. the night. We remember the sunny places ,We passed so carelessly then,,. And ask,'with a pasefonate'torigthjj, t , .To return -and begin- again. - -: Ah. vain, indeed, is the asking ! .Life's duties press all of um on, And who dare shrink from the labor, Or sigh for the Hunahine that's gone ? And, it may be, not far on before us Wait fairer places than then, Life's paths may yet lead by still waters Though we may not begin again. For evermore upward and onward - Be our paths on the bills of fife, And scon witha radiant dawning Transfigure the toil and the strife, . And onr Father's hand will lead us Tenderly upward then ; In the joy and peace of a fairer world He'll let us begin again. avalanche had frozen by pressure the moment it stopped, and I was frozen in. urjmg vauuy to move mv arms, I suddenly became aware that the hands as far as the wrists had the faculty i Of motion. The oonftlntrirvn maa aoiw - , ' "J , tney must be above the snow. I set to work as well as I could ; it was time, for 1 could not have held out much loncer. - 1 DR. UIU HAM'S C0UKTSI1IP. Haw a LoalaYllie tteleatlat file l III Fat la Arkansas A Happy Reality Mara Re ntaraable thaa Knirr. Dr. Graham having passed a very creditable examination before the army medical board, was commissioned an assistant surgeon in the United 8 Utea "After you get fixed at your poet I will come down and pay you a visit. I have been thinking about selling out and moving to Texas for some time ; it's getting crowded here, and things are a-moving as alow as liases in winter time." Things were arranged as the old Judge Killed by a Pet Bear. Two bears were fattened by four foot chains in front of the stab! of Wra. H. Thorns, a tavern-keeper at Pszhville, Long Island. One was fastened to the stable building, the ether to a post near by, so that they could approach to with in a few feet of one another. said. The marriage took place, and the -A number of boys were playing in the At last I saw a faint glimmer of light army in 18-, and ordered to report for army received aa addition to its ladies road close to the boars. The village wubi auuve my neaa was getting I duty to the commanding officer at irort Winner and it let a little air pass, but I McKavett, Texas. There were no rail roads in the Western countrv at that time, and the usual way of getting to Texas was by the Mississippi river to New Orleans, and then crossing the. gulf to stage it up through the titate. Dr. Graham was very desirous of exam A dead silence reigned lniQg the Western country mineralogi cally, so applied and received permis sion from the war department to go by way of Arkansas and the Indian Terri tory to his post. On his arrival at St. Louis he shipped the greater part of his baggage by way of the river, and, taking only what he could carry on horseback, started on his journey. While in St. Louis, at the THE AVALANCFL. The following graphic account of the perils of avalanches in the Alps is frcm " Hours of Exercise in the Alps," by the celebrated John Tyndall, the scien tist. A party of six were being con ducted by two local guides aud a famous Alpine guide, Johaun Joseph Bennen, over the Haut de Cry, one of the Swiss alps. They advanced in the beginning of the ascent very rapidly. The peak was glistening before them, aud hope of success cheered their spirits. After a time they came to snow frozen upon the surface which would bear them a few steps aud then break down. This, of course, delayed matters and was very fatiguing. Finally it came to a point that, in order to reach a certain arete, they would be obliged to go up a steep snow field 800 feet high, 150 feet broad at the top and 5 X) feet at the bottom. During the ascent they sank about one . foot deep at every step. After mount ing for some distance the two leading men suddenly sunk above their waists.. Tiey wr waableJ. to get out after some struggles, and presently found better footing and came to the conclu iou that the snow was. accidentally softer there thau elsewhere. But Ben nen was afraid of starting "an avalanche, anl said so. They started forward again but let the book, complete the 8orj : , The snow field split in two about fourteen or fifteen feet above us. The cleft was at first quite narrow, not more than an inch broad. An awful silence ensued, and then it was broken by Ben nen's voice: " Wir sind alle verloren" (we are all lost). His words were slow and solemn, and those who knew him felt what they really meant when spoken by such a manias. JBennen. . They were his last words. I drove my alpenstock into the saow and brought the weight of my b xly to bear on it. It went in to within three inches of the top. I then waited. It was an awful moment of suspense. 3 turned my head toward Bennen to see whether he had done the same thing. To my astonishment, I saw him turn round, face the valley and stretch out both arms. The ground on which we stood began to move slowly, and I felt the utter uselessnees of any alpenstock. I soon sank up to my shoulders, and be gan descending backward. From this moment I saw nothing of what had hap pened to the rest of the party. With a good deal of trouble I suc ceeded in turning round. The speed of the avalanche increased rapidly, and be fore long I was covered up with snow , and in utter -darkness. I was suffocat ing, when, with a jerk, I suddenly came to the surface again. The rope had 1 caught; most probably on a rock, and this was evidently the moment when it broke. " I was on a wave of the ava lanche, and saw it before me as I was carried down. It was the most awful sight I ever witnessed. The head of the avalanche was already at the ' spot where we had made our last halt. The .head alone was preceded by a thick cloud of snow dust; the rest of the avalanche was clear. Around me I heard the horrible Mfs ing of the snow, and far before mts the thundering of the foremost part of the aalanche. To prevent myself sinking again I made use of my arms, much in the same way as when swimming in a standing position. At. last I noticed that I was moving slower ; then I saw the pieces of snow in front of me stop at some yards distance ; then the snow straight before me stopped, and I heard on a large scale the same creaking sound that is produced when a heavy cart passes over hard-frozen snow in winter. I. felt that I had also 'stopped, and instantly threw up both arms to protect my head in case x snouid again De covered up. I had stopped, but the snow behind me was still in motion ; its pressure on my body was so strong that I thought I should be ciushed to death. This tremendous pressure lasted but a short time, aud ceased as suddenly as it had begun. I was then covered up with . snow coming from behind me. My first impulse was to try arid re-cover my head, but this I could not do. The could not reach it any more with mv hands ; the idea struck me that I might pierce it with my breath. After several effqrts I succeeded in doing so, and felt suddenly a rush of air toward my il . X ' it - 1 . . . xuuutu , x saw me Bay again inrough a little round hole, around me. I was surprised to be still alive, and so- persuaded at the first moment that none of my fellow sufferers had survived that I did not even think of shouting for them. I then made vain efforts to extricate my arms, but found it impos sible ; the most I could was to join the ends of myr fingers, but they could not reach the snow tany longer. After a few minutes I heard a man shouting. What a relief it was to know that I was not the sole survivor 1 To know that perhaps he was not frozen in and could come to my assistance ! I answered. The voice approached, but seemed un certain where to go, and yet it was quite near. A sudden exclamation of surprise ! Bebot had seen my hands. He cleared my head in an instant, and was about to try to cut me out completely, when I saw a foot above the snow, and so near to me that I could touch it with my arms, although they were not quite free yet. I at once tried to move the foot it was my poor friend s. A pang of agony shot through meas I saw that the foot did not move. Poor Boissoult had lost sensation, and was perhaps already aead. ie bot did bis best ; after some time he wished me to help him, so he freed my arms a little more, so that I could make use of them. I could do but little, for Bebot had torn the axe from mv' shoulder as soon as he had in the person or the Arkansas ludse a daughter, and Dr. Graham has never regretted the obduracy of his father-in- law or the unsophMicatedness of his wife. Harper Magazine. Words of Wisdom. Who would not be honest if they know its sweets ? A talent is perfected in solitude; a character in the stream of the world. We are more learned in principles of duty, than skilled in the performance of it. Who is it that ever was a scholar that doth not carry away some verses which TUELT TOPICS. Lima went into mourning for ei;bl days for Don Manuel Fardo, late prei dent of Pern, who wit sAa!&ated by a soldi r. in his youth he learned, and which, even Planters hotel, ho formed the acquaint-1 to old age, serve him for homely leesons? I ance oi a gentleman who, learning a handsome man or a handsome where he was Koine:. Rave him a letter I woman i nnt imnmnwl h .h.KK of introduction to his brother, who was a farmer living on his route in Arkansas. It is not necessary for us to follow him on his road, or tell what discoveries he made in the interest of science; suffi cient it is that one day toward dusk ho reached the house of the gentleman to whom he had the letter, and, dismount ing, knocked at the door and presented his letter to the judge (even iu those days everyone was a judge in Arkansas), who would not have needed it to have accorded him an open-handed welcome; for travelers were a godsend and news was as much sought after then as now. After a short visit he proposed to go on to the next town, about fonr miles off, where he intended to put up for the night. The judge would not listen to - s leaving, and was so cordial in his de sire for him to stay that he would have been rude not to have done so. The judge, after directing one of the serv ants to attend to his horse, iuvited him slatternly attire; so the best sbilities are shown to a disadvantage through a style marked by illiteracies. Have only such friends as will advsnce twelT thirteen yesrs of age, and a boys were in the habit of playing with the animate. Thev arprosched and caught bold of them with imrmay, The bears stood s good.deal of taaing. and never offered to resnt the 4ttr Ver- less indignities which the boys heaped upon them. The more they were an noyed the merrier snd more good natnred they sppeared to become; and while they rivaled their tormentors ia cutting capers, they always remained htrmUea, and far excelled the others in placid forbearance. On a recent Monday afternoon there was opportunity for the boys to snow, ball the bears, and they took advantage of it. TUey had frequently been driven away and warned not to annoy the ani mals, but the warning was made on principle, with a view to getting rid of the boys, snd thoee who msde it had do belief of its good faith. Among the persecutors was Peter Stretch, sou of Samuel Stretch, of Parkville, a lad of Denver, Colorado's chief city, is twen ty years old, has a population of thiity thousand, twenty tbmrche, nine educa tional institution, eight newspaper, fonr banks and one theater. A New TV ppe J lhat ia New To rk ei? e there are more ns with S12(A incomes thtn ia alt kro sia. It etimatcis at least 2.000 such again 1 1,00 ia PrnwU. cleared my head. (I generally carry an into the dining-room, where he was in- you in piety and virtue. Friends should give each other good counsel, and stim ulate each other to the love of goodness. Do. not exsct from others that they lovo you as much aa they can, or as mnch as they ought; but exact from yourself that you thus love them. What a grand power is the power of thought ? And what a grand being is man when he uses it aright; because, after all, it is the use made of it that i the important thing. Character comes out of thought; or rather thought comes out of character. The particular thoughts sre like the blossoms on the trees; they tell of what kind it is, As aman thinketh ia his heart, so is he." How the universal heart of man blesses- flowers I They are wreathed round the axe separate from my alpenstock, the blade tied to the belt and handle at tached to the left shoulder.) Before coming to me Bebot had helped Nanca ont of the tmov: ho was lying nearly horizjn tally, and was not much covered over. Nance, found Bevard, who was upright iu, the snow, but covered up to the head. After about twenty minutes the two last-named guides came up. I was at length taken out; the snow had to be cut with the axe down to rcy feet before I could be pulled out. A few minutes after one o'clock r s w M. we came to my poor menu s lace, j wished the body to be taken out com pletely, but nothing could induce the three guides to work auy longer, from the moment, they saw that it was too late to save him. I acknowledge that they were as nearly as incapable of doing anything as I was. When I was taken out of the Enow the cord had to be cut. We tried the end going toward Bennen, but could not move it; it went straight down, and showed us that there was the grave of the bravest guide Valais ever had, and ever will have. bright, sturdy boy. It wss about two o'clock in the afternoon. The boys had grown tired "of their sport, snd half a dozea bad turned to pelting oue .an other. Young Stretch was standing near lien, the larger bear, ue was facing the boulevard, and his lmck was turned toward the animal. All at once the bear, with no especial exasperation and without warning, walked toward him ami caught him by the If g,with bis paw. The boy wore thick leather boots outside his trousers, and the animal claws, si though they pierced, did cot hold. But instantly the bear rose on his hind legs, and, throwing one of his fife paws over the lad's shoulder, caught him with the other around the body, and drew him into his embrace. At the first touch the bny screamed with terror. State savings banks ia Maine have been reduced to fifty-cine ia cumber, five less thsa three years sgo, and of these thirteen have had their deposits scaled down by the supreme court. Tke ilrt Ssw rail. Tl La t-c3s ta tfc tV,s,;rs Aa4 t?r aQ tt t'cM 114 bt tmli a4 lift ma? Wa a Uca aad La. The electric light has been spplied to the velocipede ia Ergland. The b'ght is equal to one hundred and twenty candles, and it lights up the road two hundred yards ahead on a dark eight. r.vrrj fta aad It avi UaWi, W wwtM too 4r tjt aa aati, Atl U roc -i ca U aa trr TTaa frir4 Uxb TJh frt. from tw nf 4 wjlb Carrara Cio CI. bf4 rrvm, Tte t.5 ra La tVr? As4 1 m'.U r4 fca It Wa. I atoo4 at4 vtlrl! If Itm wiMow Tt tximU wed el lie A4 tbe A4a t am c( crwXtZ.; lltr-u L3l.rf t?. 1 Ibcaclt ef a cxat ta alr Wtrt a LZVm l4 Uo toX, tl tL tH m rr f 6? ft r. Aa M rrUa tb tW la tfce wot The Vkksbnrg (Mia.) Herald print eda ten columns a bat of all the gifts I O'Lrarv's. aS a S a m. a. .a ? mat nave oeen rocva mere vr u.e yellow fever committees, and has had a copy mailed to each of the pUces whence the contributions rime. Item ef lattre!. Teople of scttiM cravirtirua Pris cers. Mesne is medal who revrr' is indolence. The time that tn tsn a4e The home of Herr Anguat Wilhelmj, the ooted violin!!, cow plsyisg ia the United rjutce, is at Birbrwrb, on the l'duce, where his father owns many large vineyards, and cext to the espcr or is the Largest vineyard proprietor in German v. What a Practical Joke Cost. In July, 18?7, the newspapers gave an account of a practical joka that was played on William Webber, of New York, by parties who enticed him into a saloon on tho pretense that a lifting machine was to be found there by which their respective strength could be tested. He asserted that they induced him to take hold of the rings and pull, and that, while he was exerting himself to the utmost, Stewart, from behind the bar, had the electricity turned on, there by giving him a shocking shock, to the great disarrangement of his nervous system. -Iiike the frogs in the fable, it was almost death to poor Webber, al though it was great fun for the saloon man and the rest. The fun of the thing is not quite so apparent now. Webber sued the saloon-keeper, and the case has beenjrom court to court, and has been finally settled after being .over a year and a half iu litigation. Webber gets $200 damages, and this, with costs, makes the little pleasantry, amount to a $400 joke, which is altogether too practi cal foythe saloon keeper to go into fits laughing over. . Cure for the Drinking Habit. A tincture, of cinchona rubra is ad ministered by Dr. D'tJnger, of Chicago, with great success," for curing the drink ing habit." He says : ' I was a physi cian at Cambridge, Md., and gave the remedy for ague where quinine had failed, and cured the patient. Some time after I was In a billiard room, and -this man came, aud some friends asked him to drink. . He said No,' and when' they rallied him upon it he told them that Dr. D'Unger had given him some stuff since he was sick, aud that since then he had not wanted to dnnfc. I spoke to tHe man about it, and he per sisted that he had no desire for liquor, and the medicine had done it. Soon after, an old farmer, who was a hard drinker, came to me and asked me to give him' some of. the same medicine, as tho other had told him about it I did so, and with the same result. Then tried Jt on a number of cases in a pri vate' way; and it never failed to cure." troduced to the wife and daughter of his host, and also to a substantial Western supper, to which he did ample justice. After 8uppr tbey adjourned to the parlor, and he entertained his new-made friends with the latest news from the outside world. The old couple retired and left their daughter to entertain him, and he made hot love to her, and finally asked her to be his wife and go to Texas with him; to which she consented. She, being very unsophisticated and innocent, took evervthinc he said in downright ; earnest, and with her it waa a case of "love at first sight." Bnt I am anticipating. Daring the night onr friend, the doctor, woke np a -ill reraembf red what he had said, and it worried him; but he said to himlf, utter emptying his water-pitcher, "never mind; I'll make it all right iu the morn ing. I must have made a fool of myself. She's lovely; but what must she not think of me I" and rolled over and went to' sleep again. Morning came, and upon his going down to the parlor he found the young lady alone, for which he blessed his lucky stars, and was just about to make au apology, when she said: "I told mamma, and sho said it was all right," at the same timo giving him a KISS wnicn nearly iouk. ins uirmu away. "Papa is going to town this morning, dear, and you ride in with him and talk it over ; bnt he won't object, i know." 'But, my dear miss, I waa very fool ish, and" "No, indeed ; you are all right," "Well, I will go to my post, and re turn for you; for I must go on at once " No ; I can go with yon." "You won't havo time." " Oh yes, I will. Papa will fix that. It would be such an cxpenso for you to come all the way back here. " But I have no way of taking you." "I have thought of that; that does cot make any difference. Father wil give us a team." With nearly tears in his eyes be went in to breakfast, to which at that mo ment they were both summoned ; but, alaal aBoeute be cad none. II was a a not that she waa not pretty and nice but he thought what a confounded foo she must be not to see that he wanted eet out of it But it was no use. When the judge started for town, Dr. Oraham was sitting beside him. The ; judge saved him the trouble of broach- iug the subject by starting it himself : "I always, -young man, give Nell her own way ; so it is all right ; you need not say a word." " But I've got to go on to-day. The old judge turned his eyes toward him. He had an Arkansas bowie in each, and one of those ' double-barrel shot-gun looks as he said : " You ain't a-trying to get out of it, are you ? " The doctor, taking in the situation, said, promptly, all hope being gone. f No, sir.". " That's right. I will fix everything for you ; give you that black team of mine, and a light-wagon to carry your wife's things " (here tho doctor shudder ed), " aud a thousand aa a starter. You can be married to-night, and leavo early in the morning. That'll suit, wont it?" "Yes, sir," answered. Graham, faint ly. But on the judge turning toward him, he said, "Yes, sir, certainly. cradle, the marriage altar and the tomb, land the cry attracted the attenticn of The Persian in the far East delights in their perf nmc, and writes his love in nosegays; while the Indian child oi the far West claps his hands with glee s he satheT V.bwdit bloaaoma the MiucaiuBMxi aenptuxca vi van prairies. The enpid of the ancient Hindoos tipped his arrows with flowers, and orange flowers are a bridal crown with us, a nation of yesterday. King Lud wig's royal ehaUau, wbiru helia set about building oa the aland of nerrea-Chiemsee, la Bavaria, after the model of the palace at Versatile, will find him, whea ccar'ttcd. only forty-eight years old; and he Las irt spart fifteen years for the building of it. An Where the TTork i llooe. important place tho apeaker's room is, writes a Washington correspond ent. Possible not half of thoe famil iar with the cajutol kuow where it is. Not the speaker's room down in the guide books a big, tile-floored, well windowed room jnt back of the rliam ler iu which the IIoufo sits. That room is currently known ss the speaker's room, but tho speaker never fees anyone there whom he wsnts to see. It is too oren and accessible by half. The conferences which the speaker hss at which anything done are cot held in this marble- walled saloon. It ia a little closet in a dark entry below the hall. It is hard by a private staircase. The glazed door is screened by green baize. There i not the sign of camo or cote on the door, and it is one of the few doors un marked in the capitol. The corridor his no light, and on a cloudy day is dark. Once inside, you see a room partly covered by a carpet partly ragged. The window there ia only one is screened in some cheap way. There is room for a straggling table, one lounge and three chairs. There is room for nothing else. If you know him, you have got ia with out a card. If you do cot know him. you have cot got ia at all. And in such a room you find the third officer of the government hard at work. It is signifi cant of the publicity of public life when it is uc fenced by class rank that it Is only in pome such coal-hole that he can get timo to work. TJnlsM he hides him- several who were in the vicinity. Jamr drrol, Mr. Thorn's a tableman, was tear by, and he was the Grit to go to the ld rescue. Mr. Thorns himself n ia the barroom. ol. the. tavern, aXkl he also hastened out. Both of these, cvrairg upon the bear with bale sticks which t they can glit np on the way, belabored him soundly, and John Conner, jump ing from his wagon, prodded the scimsl with a pitchfork. The War lnnk away. leaving the hoy lying face downward im the ground. The three men picked him up at once and carried him into the tsvern, bnt he wis qnitedesd. The whole transrtion ocrti pled scarce ly s minute. After ratchicg st his boot, and while endeavoring to thruw his paw over his shoulder, the claws of the beur ripped the lad's clp from the forehead wjy ever to the back of the neck, snd mails deep wounds ia his chest. Catch- Si&ce Jncc 3:b, 1SI7, 9,719.3CH,i27 poaUge stamps hate Ua turned by the Catted 8 ' gr.tr ftraetit, wth over tlsO.OQO.Cui. Vt Hk fift four years ihry amounted to hardly fl.rtU.CtO a year. No New.Ytrk city a!coetai Cl.SV;.0u1 yr. Philadelphia, $V.s,- Krea a carb!e will tain, bea trod Ctn epos. The populaiioa of the German etapire is 73,00O.OtX India couUiaa 210,00101 itUbitasta ssd Cfl.COO prirata. New York bell dr more richly st the ppera thsa ever. The two acts cj Jem Mse the j rite fijrtler, sre prrarb-. Mr. McOtrich Is a magitraU at Cork aal Mr. Whale a lawyer. Geographical estoU are tw taking the place of spel!;tg " rcV Th le f UMe casur Las Lenorse s d tioct biir in IV-Iris. I The UU crsns cf lh LLrt cumVrs tleta at 7M,trJ,tnX Acrffvn prT masafa-i9ra 1 y Ur q AJiUtie 4 ia Ilcyt About twelve Lutn4 ranei f grs f rvw ia tho United S'!. lUsl ht H4n i'raw-.ws-, tr lb GL;fcro qaatUr, b t tf.b-j wTtr- - - v - W - W CJO, sod H. Louis, fC;,ti Tl.e public wotks f the grral r ot rmrutnt in New KcgUnd Lav? cl, daring the Ui two yrrs, s? follawa : 1CT. M to.txti N Uis;Uj l.t?i) Vetoed 11 cm. cm MMcb4a.. ...... t!2.l 2o Miaarvl ...... C-mnrtfc-ttt... .... ZZIUI il n,jw i.! .... .. Zt.'mni tic. ll.o:t.xco XM.:.ta lV.t'J to VV.VUVJ0 Tear l0,tJj frrd!4 in I'Ltl- dr i butiatics givett by Mr. Hkhard Hall, aecrttary to the meetisg cf rw'.t.e im porters at Liverpool, show tht litre baa been a very substantial growth !a liia rttlri lral nWa!lv ia rffrd La ing him thea in a .deadly hng, ho buried iopofUUo6a from this country. The his teeth ia the boy s cecs, and railing inc7TA U aosuthicg eci th him. drew him under his ixlir. I ... . t The teeth of the bear cut throagh the jngular vein, ami made a wound large enough to. put a finger in. The hog that the animal bestowed crushed in th ribs and forced the whole brrat over to the left side X I1y Threat Cot U Sate HU lire. A young lsd earned nccry Dncier, who roil in Cincinnati, while eating hickory cuts swallowed a piece of the shell of one about the size of a dine, which lodged in his throat and resisted all attempts to remove it by coagbiog or otberwiae. He did cot experience mnch "inconvenience from it, however, and went to bod. About three o'clock in the morniog he woke up choilcg acd deathly sick, and rapidly became worw, finally becoming almost incapable of breathing. His step-father, Mr. John Schwarte, accompanied by his brother, started out ia search of a doctor, but though at that time it was but half psat g eccrmoa, a few coclLs, instead of by alow accuaalaUoca. In tdy 72 rattle were imported, while ia 1T3, op M the comnescemt&t of December, the comber was The total for the year would probably reach Cj.GOO, including sheep sad piS,colfar short of 133,410 as iaals. The house ia which the Kspcror ef Germany prefers to live is fiUed with the paraphernalia of war. Portrait and busts cf great soldiers, picture t f famous battle, axe its chief ornament. Models of caanoa, rifle sad ahells wooden statuette clothe! in all the uniforms of the world, fi'i the niche and vacant place. II vs ice ! acd is half la the pi to lt: Jd t, l.ste beca d!p ti. CvU.u I'a-al IW.M3 a4Tlf- - Ito DfU a a i- 11 It i a m!e "I r:rtla 11 'v 6T"w1 at IS-f rc 3n ,kU-if joa wiUtrtntt'.Tifr IulUr-s p"p'e fe5 p i s rxt clala'f a ! V !r1 th ttv ' tc!' Mttu of rts,iill t. The ssoual bnltev a.1 elw ) rloM t4 the Uuitl HUls ia t.OM0 greaUr thsa the wLsScip. The Pant yoew aara M. IIv-. Preaidril " i4 Atactics, hs f4i-.ica the sole cf win at pebt bat-itifV. The court cf Krgaa! lavejeodevl thai when two parrT ;rrtl alt epecitg a wiz-dw in a cr, I e fior,$ e f the cu1cct ahalt t neat t Says Jmh B lHcs : 1 d-a ttat open ped-gree for oaa or heww. If a bcre taa trot fal the pd'ir r ght ; if he ksat, I wjU'I t" hillssg a yxrd ftr L cvgfY. There is sa wl cob'.rts-aa in Peru b alwataaska hlblj-rrTAi.t thre toc opt n;:g ia 11 c ra g : I. tlowlt the atl Z. H-w a-r il borse 1 X VtUr what UrrH revrra taett are w livisg ill etu g T The Atlantic ceeaa, if it wreti I draiseJ, wtu'.i l-e a vat rlais, w.ih mou&taia ride ia the tzuicl rzju-.zK a cacaoa ball, aad his psperwelghtt Ip&rslVl With o-r x-ai. AtUr razr IhriM nVlnrlc. it waa nina a tlcex befora seir, so many people cave a right to see lh mU one eone bonj6 a. . a w a a. V. . V. mi a m a mm s Am a a I v They called on at least a dozen phyti- him that his whole time runs to waste. It is in this litUe hole in the wall that three speakers, Colfax, Blaine and Ran dall, have done the real work of legisla tion. Speaking guardedly, I fancy more of the business of governing is done in that room than ia any other one room in Washington. ciani, all of whom, oa one pretense or another, refused to come to see the boy. though they told them be was dying. Finally Dr. Da via came, bot oa see id g the lsd, the psrents say, told them he wss too far gone to do htm any good. the hoofs of favorite charger. Military books and map fill h's Lbrsry, sad Lis own imperial si gnat a re is givru with a bolder cut from splinters of aa Uhlsa laacey Toe Eflsf4 TTaj. The lfuic Trade 12 r lew has recerl ly found ot thl cewwpaper generally do not like to meatioa the fact that a prfoertaoce cf aa opera or a co&cert had a slim attecdasee, aal it has dis covered that there Is a reaaed of acnooacieg mesjrer pstrtmsge. We cro it fipj New loa 111 toTt'ad, 1cm le Urrpt t7 cf ihih do CO cable. M. Tsui B roe, the fssoas a&tbtc po!git. Is aalhortty foe the aJa!taret that the tallest man errr mciadj et nred was a Flaadar, tits ttl three ssd Mvea-Uiths trcUs L!h, s&Jtht te shortrat &aa ktown tewbtd a dedaal osier aeverteea isehes ta his stocking fet. Popular s-3prlitka : That botur U made from be Ue mats. Ttatyow tsutt pha&t eggs if yoa wc-ald rase t rsrt- Ho gave them a prescriptive, however, cot strove ef dimlriag the secrets of L . rti.l Lil- m the The Original Mother Goose. Mother Goose is curiously unknown in literary circles. No English bio graphical work contains her came ; she is cot, either by the came of Goose or Yergoose, in Allibone's ' Dictionary of Authors," or in Thomas' Biographic! Dictionary. She was, however, a verit able historical personage. Elizabeth Forster was a woman of Boston town. and became a Goose by marriage Joly 1632. What with the children of her husband by- a former marriage, ten in number, and subsequently her grand children, the children of the publisher Fleet, who first gsve her ditties to the public, she seems to have stood for the portrait of the old woman " who had so many children that she didn't know what to do." The first edition of the Goose melodies was' published in Boston, en titled 44 Sonus for the K artery: or Mother Goose's Melodies for Children, ia 1719. A very large goose with very long neck and a mouth wide open ornamented the title psge. for an emetic, which he told theca to ad- mioiMcr, aod left, promising to return at coon. In the meantime another mes senger who had been diptrhed fr.r a physician retarned with Drs. Dawaoa and McMechaa, and the Utter, on seeing the boy's couditioo, determiad to renort the snetam, wit, aa piece, of puUie justice, the pstroas' ef orrera should be givea t naleralaaj what certain terns aad forms of eipre mean, aad we have, therefore, e3. pletei a list of M stereotyped phrases," with aeeocapaayiag eiplsaUioas acd toasnrg'tcal operatioa to save his life. I we aIviepUy goer ta rat it cm! atd With Dr. McMechaa's awistaace. Dr. use it ia cocaectioa saih the averags Dawson msde an iadtion acros the Icewvpsper report of opera sad theatrt- throst, snd, inserting a dull probe, I cal performaacea : scraped away the tissue nntd he reached Select audience' A small aud- that portion of the windpipe called the fcee.;tacJa4iog many ceaateaos. trachea, which be cut open. He thea "Cousuirnsg lae weauier, u.s cou inserted a wire, with which he felt Us weU filled Beggarly amy cf around for the obstructioa. It waa I beache. in tha Umi. whr it Via.1 1 BeswUbl soiieac -Scsall aV lodgod, and, being sharp-edged, had cut tetlnce, Indaditg cube's family. lzz r u, . i-evr. tha flmk and the blood had cot into the Ltrge aad ecthusiastie aadiecc" ( A Uit Mr. Drake, Always used la coanectioa with variety Show. Critical aadlecoe" HUn aad ia appreciative, or the performasc a fail ore. Faehiorsble aadietsce Wheaeter the flenh, and the blood had got Into the bronchial tabes, filling them and render ing breathing almost impossible. After the cut-shell had been remove!, the patient conghed op a large quantity 4 blood. this blood. The wound having been sewn, cp, he breathed quite freely, and the next eight waa resting eaaQy aflir I the critie's lady f rieads are p reseat.. th operation. A Ibany A rps. dairy. TLit thrr a.uclhg aa eltoral e!jire er ta 1 1 eocsl ef JJ CriHo. That a f ramp wj!1 rrfef a traV dollar. tta td,trrr. The family phyre was ejcrwlo lating the U-ly el the lt ei U gol health of her vyr-r 1 wLo, she aaid, bad cxH hal aa aeh or a paa fiT a j tar. Th yoiUi spk to Us father afUiwarJ, asyi&g: M Is mislalra about that ; I Lad a hard p-a Ut cer, aTUr she whippJ m."" Horn Widow Drake, cf Mahlebrg evzzlj, Ky., ha ta her poaka aa spr'.s which ha beeu ia ilf-roc s-&os lh th TVTaalotJLry war. reoesved lh appl frcm his betrOhrd Jtrt a h de part! f"e th army cf Wsahisxtca ; rvt it dnr.as: th wUl war : mrrel after th irret.b-r e Yotktows, ssl tzArti! lh fair dcouT. Tts arl U saasiUy preve4 ta the f amilv. It Is dry aad shiiwled, coihitg rtriaialzg blithe woody tr.
Warrenton Gazette (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 24, 1879, edition 1
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