Newspapers / Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.) / Feb. 15, 1883, edition 1 / Page 1
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41 0. A. GIMLET, ATTOHHET 1 - AT UP,-' . lesod., h. a , W.i. WAKEFIELD. J A1LLQ. KEWLAND. WAKEFIELD & NEWLAND; Attorneys at ' Law, lenoiiCn.o. JNO. T,, PERKIKS, at Law, MoRGANTON, N. .?'0. , ? i rrWiU practice in the State and Federal Courts. $. HI. f wnjjonr, ; ; (OKADUATS BaXTTXOKX PXXTAL;CbtU0K. ' Dentist. LESOIii, M. C - . prCsM no impure material for filling teeth. Work h low m good work can be done. ' Patients from a dhtanoe may avoid delay by informing him at what time they propose coming. Coffej's Hotel, i If am street, Booh. T. i. OOFTEY BBO., ProprUaora. This Irat-elaaa houae baa recently teea rernrjaUhed with new and elegant furniture, besides the rooms are all convenient and comfortable. The fare can not be surpassed in the HUte. Attentive and polite Mrranta always in attendance. Good stables and hostlers. Oive ns a call when yon are la Boone. Rates very modesate. The Pioneer Library, LEKOIK, N. O. A circulating Library of standard aieceUaiieoua books. Rich tores of useful knowledge and enter tainiag reading within the reach of all. : . i Term of Membership: life members, $25 i for on Tear, $3; aix months, $1. All aaency received for membership er from dona ions is applied UJ the purchase of new hooks. C. A. CILLKX, President. . O. W. F. Hum, Treasurer. -: , J. M. Sranraoua, Secretary. Practical Life.fftjttE fm Ten, Hiliin 1. C McCURDY i Co.. rVUadeJpkia. Pa ' a J.ClUejmrdj Ce Pfcllaealaata. VmT STILL IN Attorney The bare just moved, into their NEW AND" HANDSOME BRICK BUILDING Recently erected by them. They keep a large and complete stock of PURE AND FRESR DRUGS, C REM IC1LS, TOILET ARTICLES, h lUINT&OlIARNISM fllj F Always on band. Tliev try to never Orders by inaiUr person acex PURE AND FRESR DRUGS - AUowed to ye dispanse.tiipcclal attention WROLESALE CUSTODIERS. ryFaU Hoe ol School 'Books; Garden i. : 'O.M'FLOYSTERJ&COM AT' COST! si lot With a view to forming ' coparoBrf hipig hi8 cantile buriness and laying in a ful new fctock . olosfoi Hhe Spring ancl Summer trade, has decided to offer for, Hb entire stock of NEW GOODS at greatly reduced price, Q fact many goods will be sojd A I or Barter at hi-bsst Market Mces.LBNoiB, N. U., Jan. 20, S3 JLiiv.r i. -iff j ; (fuh. iLietted!to PROPHYLACTIC si: Household Artlel' far TTnirarsnl family Use. -"...-. ' For Scarlet and Typhoid revsri, Diphtheria, figu ration. Ulcerated Sore Throat, SmaU fox, Bfeasles. and Eradicates -HALAEIA. au ontagious Diseases. Persons waithti , tarn m iMW nse at weeiy: Scartet Fi never been kimwn n .v. m..: j SSfclZIf SSi!1' cured with itniber cases of Diphtheria yield to it. t - - . Fnreredand Sick Per. v SMAIX-POX 4 and f t FTTIDtQ of Bmall Pox PBJBTXHTKD A member of my fam ily was taken with Snuul-nox. I uad tha V Rons. . refrcahed ; and BeoVSores prevent ed by bathing with Darbys Fluid. Impure Air made harmless and Durified. . for Sore Threat if j K Fluid ) the paiieat was HUV VUI -.V Contafton destroyed. For Frosted Feet, Chilblains, Plies, Chafing, etc. Rheumatism, cured. ' i Soft White Complex- ions secured by its use. Ship Fever prevented. To purify the Breath, Cleanse the Teeth ' it can't be surpassed. Catarrh relieved and cured. C , - Erysipelas cured. Burns relieved instantly. Scars prevented. Bysentery cured. Wnliila)..UI not aeunous, was not pitted, and was about the house again ia three weeks, and no others nad it. it.-J.W Paji ..Philadelphia. tNabw. The physidaas here use Darbys Fluid very successfully in the treat ment of Diphtheria. A. STOlXKNWSJtCK, Greensboro, Ala Tetter dried up. Cholera prevented. Ulcers, purified and healed. U Scurvy enred. tAiAouumviorAninui or Vegetable Poisons, Stings, etc. I used the Fluid during our present aflliction with Scarlet Fever with de cided advantage. It is foHspenrableeo the Sick' room. Wm. F. Samd tom. Eyrie, Ala. In eases of Dertth it the corpse it will prevent any un .cas aat smell. 'The eminent rhv eloiao, t. MAKIU'N UI91f. D Now York, says : " I am convinced Prof. Darbys Prophylactic Fluid is a valuable disinfectant. Scarlet Feer Cured. Vanderbllt University, Nashville, Term. I testify to the most excellent qualities of Prof Darbys Prophylactic Fluid. As a, disinfectant and detergent it is both theoretically and practically superior to air preparation with which I am ac quainted. N. T. Lurro: Prof, Chemistry. Darbys Fluid is Recomneendrtl ly Hon. Alexander H. Stbphbns, of Gc..r. i. Rev. Cms. F. Debus, D.D., Churcli .f jhe Strangers, N. V.; -Jos. LkCoktk, Columbia. Prof.,Unlverriv S C Rev. A. J. Battlb, Prf. , Mercer Uni v . ry ty : Rev. Geo. F. Piehcb. Bishcp M. E. Ci.un.h. ANDISPENSABI.K TO K VERY 11 0 VI 12. Perfectly harmless. Used internally .tr externally for Man or Beasc 1 The Fluid has been thoroughly tested, nn t wo have abundant evidence that it has done everything here claimed. For fuller information get oi your Druggist a pamphlet or send to the proprietor., M. H. ZEILTjr & CO.. ; Manufacturing Chemists, - PHILADELPHIA. : THE LEAD. be put of anything in their line. IT? f '1 1! . ti U A3 ndFiel'4 3eeds,J; Call and see uf r"AT "COST! S4f. at ' t S 1 r:-M j" BARGAINS for Cash 11 mfare requested to c ill and Ti a. I 3&5uie ' f ii , - I i n ti "Let Bcripta, the written, the written, the statute; ' Ken asripta, aon scripts, the unwritten law. . Include and inolude and. not only the customs Of certain and certain and oertain" o pehawt n Here now I am readiHr4hU chapter of Blackstone ' To the time, to the time of the walteee last night; Yen Weber. Von Weber; and Blacketone and Black-, t stone! . t. ,-,.-;... ,4.. ji) I wonder why waltses wont atop after light." i Ah, met hew we floated together, together; Adown and adown the bright depths of the room; All under and Tinder the wreathing of banner; And into perfumelaad of bloom and of bloom. As one and as one and out soul, the mad muslo' Her heart beating time unto mine, unto mine- We waltsed a war, Waltzed away out of the finite Afar ana afar tnto-oah! it is nine, , )k And hre ia my1 Blacketontf awaiting my pleasure-: i forgot in the dunce I was briefless, and now 111 Forget the i dance too. "lx script, the writ" - uus. BYGONES AHD 'NEWCOMERS. i Written for The Topic by a Caldwell Lady. ILL PARKINS "was a fi,ne iellbwj a great favor ite with the young ladies c :, andoughtnot lojig to hare remained a bachelor, but as he laughingly observed, he was born on the tweniy 'ninth of February and his birthdays came so seldom he felt too young to . marry. He had been my chum at Bingham's School and we afterward obtained license to practice law at the same term of the Supreme Court Being on a business trip to Black's, where be was practicing his profes sion, he invited me to go home with him to spetfd the night; as we walked from the office he told me he was anxious for me to meet his parents, and hoped something would occur to draw out on of his father's stories of his youth, as the old man had been a great hunter in his time, (and now Ms mind dwelt mostly on j the past. i The homestead was three quarters of a mile from the village. An old fashioned house with a wide spread roof covering a storey and a half, and sloping down over a shed in front, which embraced a tiny bed room at each end, with a piazza be tween ; two stone chimneys seemed to fasten the house to the soil. 4 The old house had a motherly lock and made one think of a hen hovering over a brood. The yard was roomy and pleasantly shaded, one huge hollow misshapen sycamore, grew near the gate, which Will said, was sometimes used as a saddle and liar ness room. , Tall hollyhocks stood along the fence between .the Lom- bardy poplars i in one corner , of. the yard was a greab iuuw uui uuou wilu a Scarlet woodbine running over it, boxwoods neatly clipped, edged the borders and one or two tmpruned hall grow;to elephantine size these had been " planted : by Grand mother Parkins as had also the snow balls, lilacs, ftichorus and the honey locust tree, that was now scraggy, and hall dead, obstructing a really fine picturetfque ; view. of. the little . valley below the house with its .sil very ribbon like creek winding down, glinting here and there in the sun light 'r-' Yet theold tree still remained because Grandmother had planted it . All he unselfishness and - reverence had not died but of the family though the arkinses were obliged to ac knowledge, that they often wished the tree was gone, as it was not or napeW jiad the thorns t and fallen leavtl l'wISfef"'; trottblesotne; There were! 5oldtfWoned ; roses i Lord Medartniys,, the sweet pale cabbage roief with . their stunted bashes , and ntthez4itlckstems, and a clear white one with - bluish green leaves, that must have been the ancient rose of York ) in the narrow borders at each end of the piazza step nodded deep red pemitdrer,the shjd robm windows, rioted the dencious Eng lish honeysuckle and the Greville or seyen sisters rose their finest clus ters just out ox reacn. in one cor ner of the piazza hung a string .of red and yellow peppers from last veer's warden, and near the door a bunch of fine wheatheada vLth even ly f cut. tajii j On( : n little ahelf , where the water bucket , used to stand, was a fine collection of relics of jthe mound builders or .Indiahs which had been ploughed up at dif ferent timet daring jcen.turv jo( lawre conch eheU with "E. F. P. W . ; - - , : s .. . mr wtf ii 1 1 i. .l i po cut in m rosy cuee tsurxuuuui -f4rtWi tn' (Via t -BtfVitoK. fnnIA l-tv f nw. Art , from hollow logs and boarded over at the top, with holes bored from side to tide through which i ran sticks 1ST THE yiOBMlIt-Q. hbtfe? 1 Some hnndreds vof ''yards ul j. ux tuo iiuubo luiu, Bututermg. it, ;fronf fthQ noUierlyi windsVralBpur, from a neighboring ? range of hills extending westward ended abrnptlyJ There were clumps Of 'cedars1' grow injg upon its top and one bid walnut tree ; a few grey boulders jutted out, the stones once scattered over the hillside had been collected from time to: time into a stone wall several feet high vfhach partly surrounded a fam ily grave yard on a little, plateau at the top ; a wooden paling completed the enclosure on the western si.de j there were no ornate , monuments . within, the plot ; a few of the -graves had solid head and foot stones of white marble, the others were' mart ed by dull slate colored slabs " On them the dates of death never reach ed the nineteenth century. '; .: ;-i The old home was deserted ''save by ' the old people, one daughter,' sweet Kata Parkins, for whom I had a tender place in my heart since our first meeting in Salem, and my friend Willt who was a painstaking, and successful lawyer in the railroad town we had just left The other Parkins boys, by close industry and application had educated themselves and Kate, and flown beyond the home nest, but Will spent the days at his office and his nights .. at the old house. ; Mrs. Parkins, I found was a fair placid old lady with silvery hair smoothly tucked away under a snowy . cap whose white ribbons were ' tied under her chin and through her spectacles looked dark earnest eyes strangely like Will's. I felt that , 1 1 knew her at once, and said so. i Old Major Parkins was a noticea-' ble rnin. He had married late in life and was much older than his wife; he had evidently been very tall,- but years of toil had bowed hie shoulders until they were considers- ; bly stoop 3d; his keen blue eyes J pctrod out from under the recesses formed by his heavy brows ; his nose was Roman and his strongly marked fa 3e showed great refinement' as -j well as f c TiQ of character ; his hands and feet were of unusual length. Although imperfectly educated in youth his keen observation and strong memory had enabled him to conform his language to the speech of ,tho more cultivated persons with whom late in life he was in the habit of associating. r He greeted me warmly and after, supper I cautiously led him to speak of his home and the length of time he had lived tliero ; in an unlucky moment Will remarked that Harrison Jopling hud open zd a shooting gal-, lery in ithe : outskirts of town, the rates being twenty five cents a dozen shots, at bottlos suspended on wires stretched from tree to tree across a hollow. This roused the old hunter who abhorred anything that savoured of waste of time or money. ; . ' 1 ''A shooting gallery humph" said he., "Its a pity somebody could not, devise a way of making work fash ionable. This railroad has always seemed to me to be one of the mis sionaries of the old boy. Wherever it goes they tell me mosquitoes, air ways follow, and I can tell you - a sight more of pests have followed or 'corat: ahead of it,! rather. 'There 'it', the skating 'rink and the ; bicycle races and people, sitting at s home with thei telephones going into the churches and "no more assembling of yourselves" together to worshipj and then the soda fountain and the town hall with, your operatic per formances every week or two, and camp meetings left out in . the cold" with. S9 many tramps about I'd give fifty dollars if things had stayed like they were when we used . to go to Tucker's barn" to a big muster on training day and a rousing dance at night. You don't remember that do you William t" Here I interposed and beggedthe old gentleman to tell me ' about the old times and how they differed from "Well, - said he, " when I was young, there were few stores and no telegraph, railroad or express offices KsHM&ihii ritfng mouctaches. . Jn, fact there was only, about one razor to a family and boys were so modest in those .days, we generally slipped the shaving tools joi.our diddiea onfttotetUfaMk thed. TwichiWiH replied, thataa it was soie years before sbrtliTBe 'did riotwremember it rdiitmcuy and scraped off the buds of promise as fast as the aggravating, thhige ap peared. We would have thought ? a young chap with i a full- moustache: without a beard was ; crazy,-and nd decent person would 'go ?withi him. As there was no chance for us then to handle yardsticks or hsten to a telegraph machine Tclickr or, be a rail- road Juggernaut we had to go to the corn fifi!l a.nrl-wriad niln A wrV' and thought ourselves well paid in the' fall by getting a full . suit of jeans clothes woven by out sisters : and made up at home plenty of woolen sofck$ knit in the $ chimney corner and; a pair of ' shoes : that had been made on the back porch.. Wo were f not i jjvithout pleasures. T We were often invited to f choppings in' the neighborhood, house raisings corn shuckingsyilog rollings,iwed' dings and infairsdear ;t old wordi that last, the word and the custom, both dead they tell -me now. Polks get married in the morning and have a breakfast and go off on the Narrow Gauge and take their suppers in Dant ille or Columbia. ; : : : - ' ; "But the fun that I loved the best, .was going drrvingin winter. T dbnt mean that we went to a' livery stable and hired a horse and buggy 'and drovd the horse nearly to death try ing to please the preacher's daughter or a parlor boarder at the Institute' who forgets all about us as' soon as she leaves here. I mean we took a pack' of 'hounds and our1 guns "and hunted deer That was what I call driving, and no dollar and 'a1 half to pay for it either.' '"' "Tell us about one of those hunts, Major," said I. "Vell, rephed he, "we usually killed as, many as ten or a dozen deer in a season and sold the skins at Col. Waugh's store in W ilkesboro, taking our pay in powder and lead and sometimes a yard or two of white cotton cloth, to make bosoms and collars for our Sunday shirt3. Ah I those Sunday shirts many a time have "I gone to my sister's side and watched the stitches she was putting in the box plait of the bosom. I honestly believe if a young man had appeared in our" neighborhood with a glazed paper collar on or a 'sham bosom in front of his shirt he would have had as many people after Kim as the clown at the show. But' t must tell you about the big hunt I can't help ' getting ' riled' though,1 ? thinking of the good old days when we were so simple in our tastes and. when the, fellow who could split the most rails" in a day or cut the widest swathe or had the most skins outside the smoke house to dry and could raise the tune at meeting was hero of the' settlement and' co the could generally take his .choice of the girls ' in our part of the county.' I notice now the young gentleman who hires, the horse and buggy and takes the girls to ride oftenesj and wears the shortest coat and parts his hair in the middle and plasters it down where people sused to show their foreheads is the one who takes he cake as you calf it. ':,!-'u '"'. 1 "Well, I can't make the '"country, over and so rwfll go back' to t , my 'story,, . about ' the time' brother Levi, Judsbn .Alloway and I went 'hunting in the; upper dark holfow,' west . ox xupsnm ana ,inat ; was me time we named tlhe mountain. We had a pack of nine dogs, two rifles 'that had been used at King's II pun - tain and Judson carried a, musket Judsoriascburting my uster. Myra, and was.' the finest shot in the settle meat and always looked so comely mhlue'hunhirt belted in at thwaisaitrfo the edge of the skh;t and hia coon1 skin ' cap,"" with the ' creetuis tail hanging down at the back of , hia xueaa. now unit was a garo ni ior a' nunter maJces me pretend they can t bear to ,cut a chicken's head " off, 'wearing dead , birds on their hats, and Jrimming np" their dresses and cloaks . 2 with fur from game somebody else did. kill hats well there is no use i talking about the girls.' hats. .T wish they' could see .what my sister wore on, ' Silt " Sundays, when the weather was pret tr ana tne wina was suu. , it lastea her;zdjnepor,pen years and was called , a 'calaiihj.it was' made of pale blue' .silk on a ratan franisV the front of it was as large around as - a parasol , ana vne onm pouaa pa, jjusuea t dock ( against, the crown ; p, looked mighti macu it to see girls wno. - gies , you fellows pay sevenfite dollars fbrrand smash all "to " pieces going to Watauga and Iinville Falls. . "l5ar; dear, I 'must go on with my story., We star tea as i saia, ana how those hounds yelped whenl Levi ' put the hunting horn to his mouth ! I remember came off of. what - steer : the o hprn He was one of a i yoke father drove ) from ; old Culpepper, Virginia, that had been given him by mother's father ' .when v he '. and mother moved. The steer's name was Lbgan.' We kept him for jthe sake i of bid times, long after he would have made good beef, but one summer ' when he was turned ; out 1 iito the Tange he rniraA f" iinrfi swampy place and the i catamounts Uore- him so he was doadwlien rweul ; found him. We kept . one ! Of his, horns to blow up the hands - to fdin- r. ;ner and to call the dogs with Moth "er used to say old Logan was a calf, when father first began to ri4e home with her from quiltings in Virginia, and that she never blew that horn without thinking of the old place and seeing, away behind the years, the green pastures where old Loge had frisked when he was only a bosV sie But as I was saying '. how the dogs yelped and crowded around us snuffing the air and showing all over that they knew what was' up, fand were fall of havings grand old time ia the woods. I remembtr one hoaod ia particular, bis name was old Troop; lie was a powerful good dog,! but" be. had been given to as when be was a pup bj a n.an named Zach Troop, th. meanest man in, tbs country add so'. sly be never ooald be caught in 'any; of his meanness. : My father used to say it would do no gsod to catch him, as his neck was too short to tie a rope around and they would bare to drive a staple in tae top of hit head to hang him by. Well, well, he got his "come uppance" at last He was - a tory and bad done a great many things that people had not forgotten, though years bad passed by, and at last be was in the wood one day and sht a buck, but he only stunned it; so when old Zach rushed up to cat its throat the deer sprang and pinned him to the ground with bis horns and stamped him until be died; ' The wild things in the woods bad about ruined bis likeasas to himself when be was 'disooTfcred by the wheeling of a 'lot of buzzards. But old Troop, the dog, was as good a dog as ever bayed. How many nights I have juafpcU out of a warm bed and followed the sweet mu-jic of his voice to tiie ride' around here to And a coon or a wild cat treed. I would not give a copper cent for twenty five of the painters and setters you youn; folks have got lying around the firo; they take ' up the Whole hearth rag and fill it full of fleas; if they aro in, they want to get out, and if they are out, they want to come in, and I notice it's generally your mother or your sister who gets up to wait on them, and all they are fit for Is to trollop over .wheat fields after partridges and to find may be one duck in a season. Did you say houWde ate np all the eggs. ' ty, they didn't. Chickens, in; niy'day, iroosled in trees and laid their eggs In the barn loft or in the loom house ia a barrel,' and they were good old fashioned bens, tob,: that didn't have ; cholera'1 like your Plymoath Rock and Sea brigbts and Brahmas ' do, nw, that ybu raise from eggs brought here bj express at a a dollar a dozen . ' Ton say your wish I would ge on with the etory. Well Tm hot agoing to do it rve come, to a pretty pass wbin a child of my raising sets op to inform me that I had better talk aooub somstiiing a m I'm Inclined to think familiar' with.1 that if I had beffn more familiar with vou. wbisa' younwefe?aboy yobwbald not be ' so pert witn your tongae, sittiaz an uere ; witfi store clothes on and bought socks,' ting w asntlfoed enoogk' TToJroa and a playing on Hate every nljrht, look ' Ing'like a Calf tied with a rope' when yoa oagnc to ne m King snacx collars for the ploogh1gears as I iid whet 1 1 was y our age. and hlrl ng . horses ' aad ouggies o bane uieo town , gins to ride ami having yodr likeness taken Mill tFTO or three other fellows' with yoar hats ou and 'cigars stack tu' Vour 4oath.: ' ' -'r ' r :iot sir., xoa aen t get any story oat of me. ' I did intend to tell yoa how we started a deer, that " morning and followed him clean to the 'mouth of EJkaadgotfre'sh doji and flaalfy,. was back with horni ph his bend as big ai a brash heap the gan; burst son near the temple and, he fell 2owo dead. Wc earried him tb bis lather's Knii.A attli rlfla -1.il 1 rrnlVl on poles, and sister Myra, ior .; girl, went once to his grave and'ater that she went out no more, but seemed to pine away still and patient like, mak ing no moan and never ' shedding a tear where we could see it. and there was no doctor nearer than Asbevllle ; , and, though mother made all sorts ot i teas suu ubier suu wt vitcu v puvct . , lio nn . m.hm nM Mtiniu) In tftlrfl mad. ic'tocaas ifi she expected to gel better .but just to please mothtr,. and , at. the jian waea wo tmragut mm w.m Tpaat iiKinzt sue ouepeu uer eves and nz ap ards smiled' a she t id in the old timcsand saidj 0 i,- Juldson, rl'drcamed vou were dead I' an 1 then wcisaw she had met him. , ' ! But I jam getting pld and lejious. and will not trv to tell the sloryjanttl I meet with some body's children wbo have been raised as -' I we, to have mahners euough not to interrupt.' their eklersV It strike me If some people would spend more of their evenings carving kitchen spoons , and baiter ladles out of laurel wood, as we did for Mother, they would not waste so much time or money . putting. running gtaron their feet at the skating rink." Here the old gentleman gathered bis loose boat about hfm and left the room. 1 1 asked Will if his father really be- "liered the times had degenerate d as much as-i' bs - very ' denunciatory language r seemed, to indicate; After a jpuff or two,' he answered "No, I do "not believe he does. He often speaks ofj the wonderful contrivances we have for v8avng.f tints ani labor, of, the perfection printing and electroty ping ,have reached, the great conrenieoce etj the telegraph1 an4 other modern iniproveotnts, bat thej truth is, my sister Kate is carrying on with the Station agent in town,: who was for merly a clerk in Hollivter's store and all the flings he bus given me tonight were directed' at her young man of whom be is not very fond,.' to say the least. Father is ge'ting old aad chooses to remember only the pleasant thiags of his youth; bat if you could see the scars on " his feet aad stiins that were made when part of this land ; wks cleared, and the legs': fbr the old meeting house yonder were cuton top of the ridge, .rolled to the cre c and filiated down, youj would not. think the days bad . been altogether hi cyon. Hp ha a'lteiriUlo hanl lifo au t alto gether they wv3 abau. as much in tlMi ear aove hou-tehold exponiSus as Icau now no ait o in one, by inv pro. fession which, you kaow, fs the more profitable from the fact that until recently the. greater part of the people made their own daeds, wrote or had a neighbor write their ' own Wills and went to the nearest schoolmaster or old magistrate for tUelr legal advice That'chimuey corner law business has bred many a case for the court . So we lit fresh ' ciiir and' zvitiz to the plasza saV there uutil the mouu rose high ia the sky. TOE 1XUISLA rVRE. TWENTY-SECOND DAY. The Senate was called to nrler at 10 o'clock. lVoiiJcat njimja in wins vuMii. t i ' BILLS, ' ETC. Mr. LoviU scat in a comoimnlcaUoa from John B. iiand on edacaliou. CALENDAR. , ' ,Mr. Dortch,' bill jor a graded school In Goldsboro, passed its reaJ.ngs. , An act for the relief of 'disabled Confederate Soldiers. (Gives 13 a month, .to. Coafederate soldiers wbo lost one leg, one eye. one armOwas taken ap oa , motion of Mr. Tobo . Ia viewof an amendment which the committee , had xewm mended should be made the . bill was referred t to a cooamibbee. . lllntrn Tha IIa.... 'f, "I.L met si 10 o'clock. Speaker itsa Ia tbe'eiair. I -T-'l M l. ''.'. . 'J'( f- . ' -i To amend section .369 of the code o civil procedare. , Sj ilr.'. Mcl'udj moved to" amend by inserllngthe word Jfshalr instead of my? ., yarnsa,. ine Diiunen pass. ed it talrd readfn. 5 . To amend the time to redeem land sold for taxes. Passed its third read j j , CAiENDAU , (resumed.) i 'To ,chage part of the line between Wtaaga and Caldwell obaatieai la lartaaiK paua over;
Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.)
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Feb. 15, 1883, edition 1
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