Newspapers / North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, … / Oct. 12, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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- 4t i Vol. III.2STo.?t2. SalisTjni'yi 3SH C, Weclnesday, Qctolex 12. XS6T, Whole ISTo. 106. ' . . . . ...... , - , I ", - . ; - - i; ----- -. - y ' TO sax sz3T ssrgTrrvrtrro cr aasss:rsr csosta. : I i i n i i i . . i - . -i, .- r - i. i ii m i ua im r - - j' , r- -n- r f , .j...ii.- Hum , , 1 1 . i i" fi 1 1 r I , ' " 1 ' . ' ' ' ' ' " i't ' I - A. I, STECKEK, ' TR I L O R ! . SALISBURY, n. c. Dyeing, Scouring, Repair ing and Altering. V ; AH work done irHhc cheapest and very bct of . manner. '4- V U TTINO,MA KING JIEPAIIIIA'O ' A SPECIALTY At 31. S. Brown's clothing and hoe store. 01 ly ;: THE ; '- , ; ROCHES1ER GERMAN Fire Insurance Company has the largest' Assets to its Liabil ities of any Company represented in the State. .;' : . . ). Don't forget it when you want reliable Insurance. J. S. McCUBBINS, Jr., Agt. l-tf Salisbury, N. C. CLOSING OUT SALE OF -H AE D W A R B . As surviving partner of the Into firm of Smithdeal & Kifchie, I wilj sell at cost for cash the entire stock .qf Hardware, consisting of Building Materials, A?ri: cultural Implement!, ..Cutlery, Black smith and Carpenter's Tools, and every thing usually found. in a first class . Hardware Stock. All persons indebted t( the said firm must make payment at once as the busi ness of said partnership . must be closed and settled. i , Dated August 26th, 18-37. W. SMITHDEAL. 48tf Surviving Partner. A GIUND OPPORTUNITY 7 nere In consequence ofCthe death of Mr. J. L. Ritchie nw former part ner I have decided iql close out my t GENERAL HARDWARE BUSINESS in this place"; a'rid now offer my entire stock of Hardware at a very low price with the best store room uud stand in Salisbury, to some one wiahiug to engage in the Hardware business. No better opportunity for a good business has ever been offered in North Carolina. For further information, call on or write me at once at-Salisbury, N. C. W. SMITHDEAL. Aug. 31, 1887 48 2m. THE SASH, BLIND AND DOOll MAN, THE - FOUNDRY MAN, The Cheapest Engine Man Yurnishca steam fitters with all needed supplies cheaper than the cheapest. Is prepared to estimate on all plain and fancy woodwork. In fact can supply you with any thing you may want from a boot-jack to a Locomotive. Come and see him and if you can't come yourself, send a "hand" or write. Repairing steam engines, to - bacco mill and mining machinery a spe ciahy. 51pdly Bnclden's Arnica Salve. Tub Best Salve iu the woTld for Cuts Bruise, Sores. tUlcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Bores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction. or money refunded. Price 25 cents per bbx. Por sale by Theo. F. Kluttz & Co Situated in the very heart of the business portion of North Car olina, at the junc tion of the Wes tern North Carolina and Richmond & Danville Railroad, 800 feet above the level of the sea, 250 miles in land, 100' miles last of Mount Mitchell (the highest point in the United States east of -the Rocky ! Mountains), in the center of the ! richest mineral and granite belt of the South, in the midst of a rich tobacco, wheat, corn and cotton zone, surrounded by magnificent forests, and with a population of 4,000, Salisbury is fast becoming a commercial and manufacturing center. There are at present two banks, eleven churches, fivetobacco factories, one cigar factory, three tobacco exchanges.' (warehonscs), two tanneries, five machine shops, three foundries, tht'ee hotels, three newspapers, railroad machine, car and locomotive shops, two steam sasn, floor ana -blind lactones, gas works, water-works about fifty business houses, graded schools for both white and colored, a grammar school, several private schools, two excellent music, schools, Living stone College. The Building' and Loan Ascociation Is in splendid working order. New enterprises project fell are a new railroad both North and South, a $50,000 cotton factory, a woolen null, two tobacco factories and a Brush Electric Light Plant. The opportunities for investments are real estate, tim ber, manufacturing in general, granite, sawing and - mining. The business men are reported to be the safest dealers in the Stated The climate is delightful and ex ceedingly healthy. PURELY VEGETABLE. It aott with extraordinary efficacy on the I IVER Kidneys,'"'.-- and Bowels. AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Malaria, Bowel Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick IIatache, Constipation, Biliousness, Kidney Affections, - Jaundice, . Mental Depression, Colic , Ho Household Should be Without It, and, by being kept ready for Immediate use, will save many an hoi:r of SunVrina and many a dollar in time and doctors' bills. THERE IS BUT ONE SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR $ that you got the gsnuine with red "2" en front of Wrapper. Prepared only by J. H.ZEILIN d. CO., Sole Proprietors, Philadelphia, Pa. l'KICK, Ol.OO. 1879 KstHblislicd 1879 . O. HAEEIS Family Groceries cf all Kinds. . RICHMOND V ROLLER v1ILLS .FLOUF' From one pound packages to Barrels. CONFECTIONERY, TOYS, CIGARS, TOBACCO. TEAS and COFFEE, SUGAR. SPICES. . - CANNED GOODS. - EVERYTHING FRESH I am receivin2 crackers in' fresli lots every week, consequently have no old stock. I am makinisr a specialty of this luie and can Kiipvly the wholesale trade. My new groodnare arriving daily, and are being; offered as cheap as any in the city. I want to supply all the families with first class goods at a reasonable cost. Alt goods delivered to any part of the city free ol cost. Tinne once. 1 :.'Jm MILLER & SMITH, RESTAURANT. We take boanlers by the day, week or raoath and furnish meals at all hours, and also sleeping apartments without meals If desired. Our table is supplied with the best to he had, including oysters, freh fish, wild came, &c.,tc. prepared in the most approved style. Our room are neatly furnished awl kept clean and com. fortahle. Our servants are polite and attentive Charges moderate. Speciaracoommodations foi commercial travelers. -Connected with our House is a first-class Bar, where nothing but the purest wines and liquors are kept, with fine tobacco and cigars. There is ahw a splendid billiard saloon with pool table. l:tf. . - , J. R. KEEN SELLS THE BEST AND CHEAPEST MACHINERY OF ALL KINDS TO BE FOUND IN THE STATE. GIVE IHii A TKIAL BEFORE BUY IXG -ELSEWHERE. SAUSEUBY EUS:EU CIZiCTORY. Xamt$ under apprprritt kspjifji in Cvlumt, teiU U intrttd at f 1.Q9 pep yar. him in ! ' mmtm Attorney $, lion. CbM- Price, L S Orcrmn, Theo. F. KlutU, T C Linn. -t. Hon 3 8 Henderson, CIjii D Crawford, J W Rumple. . L & W C Blackmtr, J W Muney, Craig- & Clement. ;i '.Agricultural IrnpUtnnt. Smithdeal & RUchlc. Boarding nouses. Mm. Crawford, t 31 r. Lowery, Butchers. RW Price. - ' Cou?benour fc Slukfer. J F Smith & Co. Balers, A Prker, G G SejfferL Barlert. RBilcNecly, Geo Anderson. Bankers. DaYis A Wilejr, Books and Stationery. Theo Kluttz & Co., Theo Buerbaum, Boot and Shoes. Kluttz & Rendleman, M S Brown. J Z HcUultz, Whltlock & Wrijbt. Broom and Mattress John Berry Watson. Manufactory : Cement, Lime and P taster Dealers : J. Allen Brown. Cotton Dealers. J F Rm, MCQuitin, J D Gaskilh . Clothing. Kluttz & Rendleiuan. M S Brown. Carriages and Wagons. . i Smithdeal & Ritchie. Cigar s Manufactory. Geo F Heller. Drugs. Theo F Klutte &.Co., J II EmiLss. Distiller, J B Lnnier. Dry Goods. Kluttz & Rendleman, Meroney fc io., R J Ilolnies,- 1 V Wallace. Young fe Bostian. ; Fertilizers : J Allen Brown, T C Bernhardt. Flour Mills. P M Brown. Furniture. J "A Clodfelter, -UM Davii, Granite Works. DrRMEanna. Groceries! A Parker. E C Miller. W W Reid & Son, Bingham & Co., GTMowery, Wright & Ueillg,t A C Harris, i WAEatfle, II & L -Wright, Gallimore & Co., Young & Bostian, C J Bingham. Julius A Peeler, ' Kluttz & Rendleman, : ! Uardwarl .i -Smithdeal & Ritchie, D A Atwell. Mats. M S Brown, J Z Schultz. Racket Store. Motel. National Hotel Mt. Vernon Hotel, Davis House. ', ' Insurance Agents. J D Gaskill, J S McCubbins, Jr., J Allen Brown, Ice Dealers. Coughenour & Shaver, Jticelry. J & II Ilorah, -W H Reisrier, C P Abbott. Lumber and Ttmler. ' J R Keen. f Millinery. Mrs WR Barker, Misses Jones. Machine Shops and Foundries. J D Small,' I Meronev & Bro., ' j , P A Ffercka. I P H Thompson. J R Keen. ' . Picture FratHss. t-. Theo Buerbaum, - . i , lieal Estate Agents. . Buerbaum & Eames, ; Backet Store. Jno Brookfleld, Sash, Doors and Blinds. J D Small. Smithdeal & Ritchie, . " Mcroncy & Bro. ' Tin' Ware and Stove Dealers Wms. Brown. Tobacco Warehouses. Farmer's " Iron Clad Tobacco Factories- Smoking. Foard & Rice, ' . Beall& Co. Tobacco Factories Plug and TtcijJ. J D Gaskill. Foard & Rice, . " Johnson & Ramsay, Tailors. " -M S Brown, Merchant Tailor. Wall)a2)cr. Theo Bucrbauru. OCTOBER. OctoWr is the month that v'ena - ( All woven with midaulnmer dmras; he brinp for u the golden dai That fill the air with arooky hze. She bring for u the lUping breeze and wake the gossit a in the tree. Who wftUper near the Tacant neat Forsaken by its fealhend guet. Now half the Lird forget to riog,0 And half of them have taken wiri". Before their pathway hal! be lort ' Uneath the rossaniei of frost ; Now one by one the gay leave fly ' Zigzag across the yellow gky ; They rustle here arwl flutter there, Until the bough hangs cbilj and bare. What joy for u-, what happinei Shall cheer the day, the night shall blew? 'Tis Hallow e'en, the very hm Shall keep for u remembrance fast. When every child shall dock the head. To find the precious pippin red J REV, SAJIUEL'ROTHROCK. In the middle of the last century a man of German descent moved from the neighborhood of York, Ia., to North Carolina. Belonging to the Moravians, or Ilerrenhuter. he settled near Salem, N. C, then Stokes county. Here a son was born to him and he was named Jacob, who, when he grew up, Iearnid the blacksmith trade as every young Moravian, regardless of pecuniary means, had to learn & trade (and wo wish it were so now). Jacob marriid, and on tho 20'th of November, 1809, was born his son Samuel, whom we all know as Rev. Samuel Rotl.rock, and who we. all love and mere as father Rothrock. In the beginning of this century we had no graded schools and fine colleges he: e, in which the poor child has the same -privileges and advantages with the richest in the land. An old pine field school, kept open three months iu the year, and presided over by a poorly-paid and generally incompetent teacher, was all the advantages young Sam uel had until he was twenty years old. As boy, lie helped his father on the farm, and' when 17 he was apprentice in his father's black smith shop, where as striker he swung the hammer, for two years. lhen he bccanc a disciple of St. Crispin, and he followed shocmak ing for a year. While at his father's anvil and in the shoeshop. young Sam broodtd over the possibility of education and of eventually becom ing a mimsper of the .Gospel. While not dissatisfied with - his lowly labors, the desire of learning J more made him restless, lie found a good friend and able counselor in the Rev. Gottlieb Sliober, the graud-- father of Hon. F. . E. Shober ' of Salisbury, and a man then advanced tn years. I he advice given was cheerfully accepted. To Gettysburg his reverend counselor recommended him to go. Lasts and leather was thrown aside, but not before young Sam had rmade a stout, strong pair of shoes for his own use. lie then made himself a substantial knap sack out of cauvass, in which he stowed his old German bible and liis scaut supply of homespun clothes. Rev. Shober gave him eight dollars to help bearing expen ses, and with his and the parents benediction the enterprising youth started for the Mecca of his dreams, old Gettysburg, on foot. Great were the trials and tribu lations of the youth on his journey of 450 miles. Upstarted on March; 7th, 1829, and it took 21 days.. One morning, cold, and frosty, he en countered a swolen creek and no foot log in sight; ho deliberated for awhile, but finally concluded that he had-not started on his long journey to stop here, so in spite of frost and biting windsj off cume his uhoes and nether garments,! and he waded tho waters. Snow delayed him in the upper part of Y irguna. While warming himself at the fire of an inn at Staunton, 'Vn., he nosticetl a gentleman sitting near, eyeing hiin curiously. The stranger asked him questions, and with his tjnstomarv frankness our young friend told his story, when the astonished gentleman pulled a Mexican dollar out of Ins pocket and preyed it into the pil grim's hanW, saying he would give his mite toiuch a good undertak ing. Touciietiv Samuel said that ho would not sped it, but keep the th j o vonnpr dollar as a ' memento, when the etrantrer asked him to hand him tlie. dollar back, upon iS'liich, with his ren knife, he engraved the initials, "S. D. P.'' - (S. D. ispguc, of Greenbriar, Yi.) and pulliiHg a Spanish dollar ou t of . h is pockethe said : rieep the Mexican, jithen, via v t.m Kill- fl.ic? Snonisli illllr " u,clliur' TTZ' vou must spend. A strange coin cidence that this' lioorconrageou boy should return 1 to Stauntom? nearly forty years later and preside,; there over the . General Lutheran j Lutheran Synod of the United States . Arriving at Gettysburg on the 28th of March, 1829, pennyless and .- ' - i footsore, weary from his long tramp, with nothing but a letter from Rev. Gottlieb Shober to Dr. Schmucker," the President of the Pennsylvania College. The Utter took the Xorth Carolina waif under his special care; procured a boarding plaee and negotiated a loan of 875.00 per ye-ir from an educational society, for tlie theological term of four yjears, to be paid back on demand with interest, if demanded. This. money did not suffice to . meet his -expenses,' and Mr. Rothrock, during .his -term - of ftmlit-s. had to borrow 100 o from the North Carolina Ft nod &ti4 tZO from a frietnl in ClaamWrs- bttrjr. Pa. Uhen the tiitmni came on Mr. R. could I not afford to go homelike tbe otr stodent, n as j w-i v r e IWa ; Kill and in order to t.ire bis """H VIH lie went into theconntrj and worked in the fit-Ids for his board. hen in need of shoes, ho mendel hoes in a shoemakershop till he cltared anew pair for hinmlf. Whcu Mr. Rothrock graduated, all the notes he had given to the educational society as the money was given him, were consolidated into one note, and then he had to go further into debt to buy.a horse, saddle, bridle, a few books and some clothes, and also 112 to pay his traveling expen ses. Here Mr. Rothrock stood at the threshold of life; 300 at that time a tremendous big sum of money in debt.. Relying upon his Divine Maker, undaunted and with firm determination to meet his obligations, he started home, where he found a call from the Salisbury Lutheran congregation. When in' our town he married a Miss 31ary Hoke, of Linc.olntou, and lived in n house that stood where Mrs. William Murphy lives now. ' The health of his wife caused him to acA cept a call near Gold Hill, and her condition not improving he moved to Gettysburg in 183. where he was pastor of the Lutheran congre gation for over a year! ' His wife died in Gettysburg in 183G, and Mr. R. wa3 glad to avail himself of a call from a congregation near Gold Hill to return to his native Stae, and from that year he has continuously been in charge of a congregation near Gold Hill up to the present date. In 1837 Mr. R. married his pres ent wife, Amelia, daughter of I'tter Arey of this county, and last month he celebrated: his golden wedding. Seven years after he. graduated, went to Gettysburg and. settled up all his debts, and when lie returned to his wife he thankfully and proud ly said to her: "Now, I am again a free man." Mr. R. is a quiet and unosten tious man, whose good deeds are not paraded before the world, but are written vith large golden let ters upon the great ledger which will be read out on the day of judg ment, i Faithfully he has done the duties "assigned to him iu this life, never courting the praise Of men but always iu the fear and love of God. . Mr, R. is not a rich man; the moncyjie laid up for a rainy day while in the prime of-manhood, was swept away by the civil war $5,000, in Ndth Carolina "State bonds. Up tb the last few .years' Mr. R. preached alternately in, German and English. ;lle has married more people than any ; minister, in the State, and only lately he has bap tized children whose parents, grand parents and even great-grandparents ho united in matrimony. Mr. R.is a' man remarkably pre served for his age, and we have no doubt that we will yet write up his diamond wedding v The Owner of the "Thistje." George. Alfred rownsendv writes from abroad. to the Cincinnati En quirer: "While in Scotland I went to see the butcher-tfSop of John Bell's Sons,, who own the yaqht "Thistle, " which has gone to Amer ica with "the expectation of bring ing back the America's enp, which has been.there some thirty-six years or more. It may surprise many Americans to know that the -.Bells-were and are. plain- butchers'. . The' shop where their father commenced ibusinet? is at a corner in Glasgow, and beef and mutton are exposed in the wihdriw with prices appended, while within you see two or three butcher's blocks and a long bench to chop meat upon. This show of i humility, however, is only in ac- j cordance with: tradition. As the and ipld man was a butcher, pure ; simple, he insisted upon his ongi- nal shop being nmmtained. A good many years ago he started to bring out cattle, from Canada, and the first purchase he made was very unsatisfactory; about one-third of the cattle and sheep died on the voyage. But at the next venture he had a little better luck. He 'then began to arrange with, the steamship companies for better fa j cilitie's. and at present the Canadian line of steamers bring little else to Scotland but cattle. Wants .the Cup. r ! Mi. Muir. of Dumbarton, Scot- and, owner of the yacht Mabel,,, mg determined to build a ninety- ! n' cutter to comnetc for the Amer- cup in America next yea, on- Ipsa Air. aorain challenges it i . s. The designer of Mr. Muir 8 boat will be Mir. Fife, Jr., of Fairlee, and CajHr Robert Duncan, of Gowrock-pow master of' the .MMajorie,, and formerly-master of the "KadTe." vH be her captain. Ti,n o .nN; George and Edith Kingdom Gonld 7Jrobbly J put down in the diary Of lit 1 nal grandfather as a new isst r preferred stock. Or in ore like t. have clipped tho first coupon: fro the bonds of matrimony. ' r s two j the .pmltentiarT ftuhhrn U4 j fair u tolted ly- thantrr oMRg . Th aa 1 ,hlct . i llhUt ll.n rv... . ....... .. f 0f an? county ma? work the J pruoncrs m jail and all the convict fed to the penitentiary for Uts thn The Probable Solution of Serlan l'roblem fen years (with aome few ttcrp-iited lions) upon the puuuc roaua of the countr. The act kit been adtdt by Iredell. Rowan, Davidson and several other counties. Mccklen- b'iirg has had thi provision in force several vcars, under a sjHsrial tAl- r lIuafn Ui "i h!T CTtJ roads m adm ralde order. Kan- dcdph..(,uilford and other eJ" are thinking oradopting it shortly. Instead of the jail pns nc-ra Ivmg idle in jail they earn their board by putting roads in order, and le- sides the.sight of them has a de-: terring efTect in the prevention of crime. As to the convicts, who would otherwise go to the pcniten-rj nary, xneir luuor u Kepi ai-. nome fo the benefit of the county at ...t ll ... - 4 l" iio&v exjH'use iney nrc convicieu. Aireauy mere is some diminution of numbers in the penitentiary, and if this act is generally adopted the number in the penitentiary will become very small and the convict and road problems will be solved. A Cyclone iu Mecklenburg. The Charlotte Chronicle savs that -citizens of Sharon township. Meck lenburg. county, report that a cy clone passed over their section Wed nesday afternoon of last week, tear ing through the clouds like a big balloon, dipping down and rising again, carrying an eddying of fence rails and tree limb3 in its circling path. It look ed like a big black funnel and it whirled around like a huge top. It was about 100 feet above the snr- face of the earth,? but occaienally would dip down,- wrench ofi! tree tops and sweep up fences. The cyclone traveled at the rate of about thirty-five miles an hour and made - a tremendous roar. It dipped down on the plantation of Mr. Alexander, tore up a number of peach and ap pie trees, took away tho roof of his nouse, anu rising again cusappeareu in the direction of Philadelphia church. 1 he skies were overcast ....it. ji i ii wiin neavy ciouus, among wnicu a j visible commotion was made-as the ! black, funnelishaped mass tore way through;! its From the Wins ton Bepublican we clip the following pleasing infor mation about the Atlanta pageant : "Two companies of original wool hat Democrats; will takupait in the torch-light procession. They will be dressed in copperas breeches, long boots, hick6ry shirts and one "gallns' with rosettes of corn shuck, and coon-tail plumes for their slouch hats. They utterly refuse to handle the new-fangled fnrnhoo lint rirb .no !!! cwnifr ti li-ht-wood knot from the butt end of a pine. They will march in two companies, and it will be known as the battalion crats." of original Dema? . We can imagine the Presiden and Mrs Cleveland grasping the ,se stejliug Veterans by the hand and warmiig;U)toHheir generous, old fashioned welcome. H -This -process sion will contrast strongly with the deputatioirof bankers and brokers, dressed in broadlh, wearing glossy silk beaverliiid bearing gold-headed canes, vko followed Brother Blaine - in the Cincinnati procession i u 188L Lenoi rjlopic. Every enterprise, whether of a private or public nature, that has a tendency to develop some new source of wealth, or to add beauty or health to our homes, finds in the newspapers strong advocates and staunch friends. This tendency of the press is having a whobsome in fluence on the industries of c-ur people, ft moves bur people to greater efforts, and encourages and cheers thoso'who are meeting with' trials, obstacles or defeats. 1 he newspaper in .its turn should be met by encouragement and aid, that the influence it exert3 iu this.direC tion should be rnorc powerfol. ; Goldsboro Argus. V Wilkesboro Chronicle: .A. -ten-year old bov was shot and instantly killed Tuesday, 13th inst., by his father, Nat liana 'Phillip, a citizen of the upper :part of the county The accident happened while Mr. Phillips was handling a pistol that had been handed him to look at, thought it was empty, pulled the trigger, boy standing near, usual result, bang! dead boy, tho ball having entered his right side. . Tlie Desert is Blpssominar. The desert of Sahara is slowly becoming inhabitable with the aid of science. The lower Sahara is an immense basin of artesian waters, and the French are forming fresh oases with skill and stfecess, so that the number of cultivated tracts is increasing rapidly. ' After . a period of thirty vtars f.'irtr-tl.rc.? ffjf have' iM0 i-f!t:f;r ArAz, llv t r e? between I and '1 years cl'J, and ),000 fruit trees. UUnUnrd Dwarfs TheChincfe CHant, Chang . ii ciht feci thrr inehe. (inrriotln tel'i of a youo giantc who wf ten.fcft htg!uv GarpolttS tclli of a youncgiantcti who wa ten ftet high. A giant eigM frU high was exlib- at Roach in 175. Irtrat jeak of a Scotch .giant tltu a fett, C in chef in height, . The irecian cant. Am a nab, ) n. jghiw-n vtats old, ii seven fret j eight inclir The gbnt Utile de Trent, in tho T , td one of the guard. f the duke of Rrumwick, was n.orr thao d , foar indi Un hc lu ; . i I fe j The 'Austrian giant Winektlmter, who was recently exhibited in Iris, measuring eight and ar half feet, j may be regarded as a specimen of Uhe highest st.iture attained by tho human species. . j At tie opposite extremes may be ! juuhh numerous uwaris noi more , t lan twentv inches, and tome evn j m 'little r.s sixteen and even twelve j inches in height; but mcb dwarfs I are tnotulers with atrophied limbs Jor twitedback-bonesV or stunted i infants whose ae is usually extg gefated bv their Rarunmt. Henry Alexander : Cooper, of Lock port, X. V,, was horn in 1SC0 between York and Scarborough, England. He is 8 feet 2 inches iu hefg-ht and weighs 350 tonnds. His j hand is thirteen inches and his foot seventeen inches long. In 1882 he was imported to the United' States by Adam Forepaugh; was exhited oy mm lor tnree successive years; was then secured by V. T. Harnum and contained With his show two years. ' ' ' t.- Dooly county can boast of the i -tallest man us well the tniullt woman in Georgia. ! Sara Casou j stands in his stocking feet, seven ft and two inches; and there i room enough above for several moro i inches'. (Jason is so small that he ! hardly casts asehadow, but he can j gtt over ground about as fast as a j locomotive. Mrs. AA Hall has & J daughter, Anna, thatlwas born in 1872, consequently she is fifteen V("VJ rtbl ttlnl ilvlv tbirtt.' Sm-lina in f ilu-i'ffht. She is n nerfect model of j J m v.v. mi... vafa iaav it.tvo ill ...... - . . a woman, is sprightly. intelligent and pretty. She goes about hef household duties like a little lady, but being so small she is not requir ed to do much. r Nina Van Zandt's DcTotlon. PiTTSnrno. Sept. 30. Thc moth- er oi iNina an Aannt, tne Chicago jgirl who married Anar9hist Spies ; by proxy, came to Pittsburg to-uay, 1 to visit her father, Mr. Clark, and Mrs. John Arthur, her wealthy sis j ter. Mrs. Van; Zandt said that j her daughter would remain in Chi icatne." Shcdenies that Nina and j thc an1ard',.t 8rst rn.ct. Ja,K She says that Spies was bright and in tellectual, und that he and Nina were acquainted long before tho Havniarket affair, and that they f would have probably been marriei I ; but lor ples poverty; lie nau a niotiier iq support. A reporter went to the Arthur tn au si on in Oakland; shortly after Mrs. Vaii Zandts arival. Refer-, ring to the latter; Mrs. .Arthur said : I don't know what she came here for. I don't want to' see her." When asked if it was true that M,rs. Van Zandt's mission was to indueb her, to again grant Nina an allow ance and aid in an endekvor to. se cure Spies' liberty, Mrs Arthur ie- plied 'stiarply : "Allowance? She . never1 "received an allowance., I clothed and educated Nina,. amL that's all. Her husband? Why, he is not her husband'' A Creaking Hinge Ii dry and turns hard, until oil 1 applied,' . after wbkh it moves cai!y. "W'Uu tka joints, or binges of tbe body are 'J2trJ -and Inflanxd br Kbcuniatiiun, Ibcy eau mt bo nipAed wlihout eourfnj tbe mol cxerucfatlui' jwin. 7ffi SttmBparilla, br IK action on the b!oiJ, ' ralluvu tu! c'wliiloJ, end rctrc tle joints to good working ordtr. ; Acer's g3rnparil!a 13 tteetcl, in otir c'n yl inanv nmt rnwirkabUt vnre, a uutu b.r of w'1ik1i bafllrd tlio effort of -tba-niort exiK'ri-iwl UU-biMtn. Wen it ijiu tar-, I -on;t pi tli iiami of many lliviluaJ-w-iioJiavlrn cured by Ukin lhi iiMdWn. 1 wo ra tt ha eer taiulr worked wuuucn, relieving Luc f Rheumatism, after bHntr"f ronMi-d wish It for yni. -In. thU, and il :1wt dlM-a- arUimc front iut)uro b'HNl. tln-m U no reoM-dv with which I uui iiiair.t-d, thnt afford sm h r-H.f Api'n fsraiiirina.--JU. JL Lawreuce, Ji. Halt'mMry, lid. Arer Fararrr.!a eurrdjtme of Cwtt and Hix-utnaiiftm, vfUnf nothing cle Wiuld. It lia erat!l-atf4 evrry trace of d - fr'wn mv nyrteiu. It. If. fcliort, Jlauar'Jiotcl Behaout, Lowell, ilani.- I wa, during nanr tnnrilk. a fufferer frwiu chrnlc KlwuniatUw. Tba atau ti-d mm irrl?voiily, in ifpttc of ell tha rvinedi- 1 emiiI CimI. until l.eoinmeBet'4 ninz A vt-r" faraparitJa, I took evf rul tx!tl of thU pn-pa ration, and wa jx'! Jlr r"tfred to LcalUi. J. i'rcajo, Jado ptrodi'uce, Vs. - t Ayer's Sarsaparllla, pprparfd hr Tr. ,T. C. Arer k Co., fiswr!!, Mia. Bc'A ly til ii ur: iu f u-iu, caii tt i - UczxLSi Cilice; SooJ work, low prices. j V; : ;v 1 " " i
North Carolina Herald (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 12, 1887, edition 1
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