Newspapers / Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.) / Feb. 1, 1893, edition 1 / Page 1
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O TEX Greatest Achienment. Nothing Like it Before; - o- Onr stock for the Spring season of 1893 is a wonder to behold, exceed ins all former efforts in Volume, Variety and Attractiveness, And embracing many new article and superior goods throughout. Times have changed, old methods hare given place- to . new, , and it is gratifying to know that oar policy of Smallest Profits, Lo7 est Prices and Lar gest Sales, "';?''" Is the winning one. The great increase in trade re sulting therefrom has satisfied ns of iU wisdom, and we shall persist in this policy to the extreme limit. Our customers may therefore ex pect a rare treat in the way of It is worth remembering that our Itock is the - ' largest in toe State. Dry Goods, Notions & Shoes are our leading departments. In these lipes we stall ireen ;fiilf m tyelesd. ' " . - See our stock, or wait for cor floamen before placing yoar orders, nd make no mistake. It will pay joo bandsomelv. : Yourt truly; - . - UaUaco T3ro3. PEILUPS BBQOIS. 8ms Small In Atlanta fonatltatlon. IAe MBit strong oak by amlting bolt laid low. . He fell eo awtft aa to ando ear aisfat I - We look again to learn If -wo eew right t AnJ 1 tw lie who fell before that blow ! -O death, howatranga I O provideuoe, now hud to know - , . .. . ,i, That on who iraned a paragon of might. Fair furniah'd m the fmUeethuman plight. IJow ilea aa pale and pnlaless a the anow J ., This gentle pr .eat whoa heart with lore oVr-ran. - Thia bianop who waa rich io truth an 1 naeeT Tb ohrat-iike man of )iy ae? Fell whan we judged hta chvfeet work began ! We bow o'eraw'd, e gr.ere, bnt God knowa beat : Ha Judg'dlhe end and g"Te the yictor. rtati ' The news of the death of Phillips Brooks was received yesterday among the people of Atlaniajvith profound sorrow. Hig-name seemed to be a familiar one to the masses who com mented with the sincerest respect and affection upon .k his sudden, sad and seemingly untimely death.' He stood fairly at the forefront of the Protestant Episcopal Communion m America in popular confidence and admiration - There was in his com position and career so many: marks of the true and fraternal man, so little of cant, of sectarianism, of religionist bigotry, that the whole Christian world in America, at least, had come to look upon him as a correct and conspicuous type of the Christian. On more than one occasion he an swered "note episcopari" to those who would have put -upon him the robes of bishop in important dio- ceses. He was a man of the eat, a true BoStonian, a loyal son of Har vard, and seemed absolutely unwill ing to put himself permanently away from the environments of hiayonto, and the atmosphei e of his manly growth and first labors It was not until by the death of Bishop Pad dock, a few years ago, that Phillips Brooks consented to be a bishop, and, then only because it was over the diocese of which he was a member and with whose clergy he was al ready a happx brother and might be a beloved father in the Lord. His elevation . and - consecration to tha bishopric was one of the most, nota ble ecclesiastical events of the pres ent decade thus far. Phillips Brooks died yesterday little more than a month past his fifty-seventh birthday. Yet be seem id. with hi8stalwart frame, his erect carriage, his full flash and fervor of health, his full orbed eyes and happy spirit, to b gool for a quarter , cen tury more of vigorous and useful life. ' He was a close . student, a dil igent preacher, an indefatigable worker in all religious fields wherein he had a call, and besides enjoyed social contact and the special func tions of pu blic philanthropies. In his long occupancy of the pulpit of, the famous Church of the Trinity,; in Copley square, Boston, he preach ed to audiences on every occasion that filled the splendid edifice crea ted by the genius of Richardson, that greatest of American architects, and made himself a moral force in the city of culture whose greatness none dared to impeach and whose popularity none aspired to rival. The last time the writer saw him was in his cbspel study. He was buoyant with wit and good ham or and spoke with a joyous optimism of his hopes for the In to re of the Chris tian faith and institutions in this country. He believed in activities, in a f nil and freejcof pel, in a brother hood of Christ that, knew no dis tinctions of birth or 1 wealth; of a Christian unity and a community of zeal that should make the name of Jesus triumphant in all the world. That day was ever in bis hopes And often seemed clear in his spiritual vision. ; The memory of his life, the ex ample of bis deeds, the savor of his splendid, manly Christianity, will survive and make for him a monu ment in human love better than any Angelo or "modern sculptor could manufacture in bronze or marble. Phillips Brooks was a ,msjx of gen uine modesty, with reference to his own personality. Beady enough and brave enough to go .wherever duty demaffded, be yet shrank from any thing that had, the air of personal vanity or glorification. Ufl applying to a noted Boston photographer for one.of llLr. Brooks's plctnres, he in formed the writer that he waa pos itively forbidden to let any one have a photograph of that gentleman Jot any' price. Be swanld nptermit his picture to be sola under any cir cumstances, and .it was onlv. rery recently that ha found himself una ble to control l this matter and was reluctantly obliged to see his face reproduced in nearly every newspa per and illustrated joarnal in the land. Thia was one of the uncom fortable prices he could not avoid paying for his public fame. Only a few days ago Bev. J. W. J. o this city, received from Bishop Brooks a friendly letter and the assurance of the great; satisfac tion and bensfit he expected to.de rife from an early perusal of Dr. Lee's book, MThe Making of a Man. . Naturally such a theme, would bafa: a peculiar fascination for inch a nan as Mr. Brooks. The French moparcJijatB baT!?4ono a silly thing in potting their ene mies upon notice that they will em brace the first opportunity ot restor ing the Bonrbons. Perhaps thev expect their frank simplicity will ditarm opposition. But such meth ods do not iria in politics.- liE CTOIR. TEE B01D CDXSEESS 4X3 TEE EEKEB1L StateavOle iMdmarkv The State road congress wbio met last week at Raleigh. was atten ded by 'delegates representing eighty counties, and adopted resolutions in favor of working the public roads by taxation and by the use of convict labor.- This latter is exactly right ; there are two sides to the former proposition. There are sparsely set tled counties which would be bank rupted by dn attempt to-vput their 1 roads in good condition by taxation oi tneir, people; suere are other coun ties which by reason of their being populous and comparatively wealthy, could well etand. a road -tax, and so, perhaps, could others, not so popa ions or so wealthy, but whose roads by reason ; of : the character of the soil or.theilay -.of. the land" never get in desperate condition and could be maintained in first class repair by the expenditure upon tbem of a tmall amount of money per annum One thing is certain : it would be a great outage .(and there is no dan ger of it) to enact any new iron-clad road law which .would apply equally to every couuty.ittjtbe State. The wants, the needs,' the capacities cf the different counties are almost as various as .the counties themselves and each should be allowed to regu late its road matters in its own way. It would oe a good idea to have en acted a modern road law, providing alternate methods as to ways and means, and let the several counties determine, each for itself, what method is best for it For instance, it might be left optional, with the counties whether they would work their roads by taxation, and if so what tax for the purpose should-be levied, and let the question be deci ded by the magistrates and county commissioners in joint session, or what would be better stilrj decided by a vote of , the people. Mecklen burg county has had splendid results in good road making frcm a. tax of 14 cent8on the 1100 valuation for lead purposes, and the people are represented as being, pleased with the system, bnt it does not follow that what is practicable and proper in Mecklenburg is so in other coon tins grave doubts may be enter tained, for instance, about whether it would be practicable and proper in Iredell even So,iwe say, this whole question is one for the several counties and hot for the Legislature; acting arbitrari ly for all. It is well for the people to think about it. but there is one branch of it upon which there should be no division, and that is with re gard to using the labor of convicts on the public roads. The crime of a county should, as far as practicable, be made to keep up its highways. But here again each should be left free, to. apt for i tself. . Some con nties are so small and others so well be haved as not to furnish a snfficient number, of , convicts to justify the expense of keeping a chain-gang or a convict camp, bnt others do fur nish inch numbers and those that do not might hire their convicts of those thai. do,. or- themselves birt from their neighboring counties enough to supplement their own force. It is a safe general proposi tion that all persons convicted of other than the more heinous offen ces should be made to work out their time on the public roads instead of being sent to the penitentiary or suffered to spend their dais in idle ness in the county jails. The work ing of convicts on the roads was tried in thia-oounty a few years ago, and with good results , they accom plished some, excellent work, and, what was .better still, the - spectacle had such an influence uon evil do ers that there was, for the time the system was in effect, a noticeable d iminnion,in tlie nn.m.be.r of crimi nal cases in the -courts :so. great a diminution, in fact, that the chain cang was thinned onV byt the .expi ration of sentences and the failure to add newxmembersuntU .it got below tbe paying point, and the idea of hiring from, other counties to supplement these, or of hiring this remnant to some other , county, bad not then beeq thought of. ' A chain gang can be maintained at a trifling expense if a copnty. feels , able to. add to U a rock-crusher and other accesiories necessary to.really good road-making so much the; better f but without dwelling upon details or citing1 ;:speciflo : insta.nces.rwe think the two propositions lai,d down in the' foregoing are entirely sound i to wit : (IV-that a general' system of road-working by taxation without reference to the varying wants and abilities' of the various counties would be impracticable acid unjust, and (0) i that: tke criminals ef the Stated wit(Jri certain limitations, should be made to work theiroadsof : the 3taie. . - . -i It has been so of ten said, and by so many; different people, -that- the publio roads of .North Carolina are 'a disgrace to the civilisation oj the age.w hat it doejn'y nepd tp be sad again j'but it does need to be said that they.are far below-the standard with, which an eplighteo?4 people' ahoQld he poptet, end that the pre sent system of working them is a manifest failure, whether inherently so or whether because it is not lived up to, it is not worth while now to stop to discugs Ve hep, the. road ongnv will N. O. , WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1883. mtrk the beginning of a batter ed ucation of public sentiment on this vital subject and: thatrthe State will soon begin to pull out of the mud holes and the ruts of a century. ' Ctisg of ths Board of Esatft Gosfsnsst. Stata Chronicle, Jan. 39. ' i A number Of gentlemen from dif ferent parts of the State met this morning with the North' Carolina board of health in the mayor's office. The president of the board. Dr. H. T. Bah neon, of .Salem, : being nna voidably absent, the meeting was called to order by the secretary, Dr. B. H. Lewis, of this city, Mayor Badger then extended a cordial wei come to those attending, after which Col. W. H. S. Burgwyn,of Hender son, was elected president, and the secretary of the board ol health re quested to act as secretary. On tak ing the chair Colonel Bnrgwyn made some excellent remarks. f The first business introduced was the propos ed amendments to the present law relating to the board of health. The amendments, which were numerous and important, were full and intel ligently discussed in a very interest fog way r nearly the whole day being consumed therein. Upon the con clusion of the discussion , of the law a very valuable and interesting paper was read by Dr. W. G. Curtis, the efficient quarantine officer at South port. The following is a brief syn opsis of the same : " Dr. Curtis went rapidly over the dangers which threaten Wilmington and thence if disease finds lodge ment therein one or more places in North Carolina. This led him ea sily with the discussion of means of dtaiing with maritime sanitation, or what is commonly known as quar antine. So far he eaid he had to congratulate the State And the port of Wilmington that the quarantine officers of his port have been able to deal successfully with the vessels coming to the station nnder their charge, with the meagre means at his'comiiiaud. But the presence of cholera in Europe, now with pros pect of increase in the spring and summer, brings a new danger ; this is increased by the fact that sailing vessels. are being replaced by the large freight steamers that are now seeding cargoes in the port of Wil mington. Notwithstanding the pre cautions now in existence in Ham burg, the disease may still be in readiness to break out in any port of arrival. To be effective, said the doctor, a quarantine should protect this community, the j ship and her crew and the commerce. These can be accomplished if the port, is pro vided with a hospital 'and a bouse of obu ration, as sick and well cannot be left on a ship, and' thia to consid eration of the meanslto be adopted to clean the ship, the; crew and their belongings. To provide for this a large sum of money is necessary, aa it means to erect a modern quaran tine stetion with machinery which" is both new and expensive this is the disinfection: apparatus and this must be pot on o wharf near deep waterconsisting of disinfecting cylinder or boiler and a sulphur fur nace connected with ja fan. Steam and heat is provided by a ; boiler of the best material and a large tank of iron to bold the bi-chloride solution used for spraying and washing the ship. The clothes of men and the bedding and housing of t he ship are disinfected by slots in the cylinder and the ship "by sulphur fume and bi chloride solutions The legisla ture will , be asked j to appropriate such a Bum of money as will provide lor the purchase ana erection ol this plant. Tut of Bill finding Csrdsr. The Oetieral Assembly of forth Carolina do enact : Section 1. All murder which shall be perpetrated by means of poison, lying in wait, imprisonment, starving, torture. " or j by any other kind of wilful, deliberate and pre meditated killing, qt which shall be committed, .in the , perpetration . or attempt c to perpetrate any - arson, rapeT robbery, . burglary, or. other felony, shall oe deemedto be, mur-. der in the first degree, and shall be punished with death'. V s 8eoT.2. All other kinds of murder shall be deemed mnrder in. the aeo ond degree, and shall be pnnished with impritoameot of not less than two nor more than thirty years J in i the penitentiary. - ' Sea 3 Nothing herein cota.ined: shall be constraed j. to require any alteratip.q or modifioatiorj of the ex isting form of :iiidic5tgient for. mur der but the jury before whonr the offender is tried shall determine in their Terdict wheXher the crinie , is murder in the first Or second degree; and if the accused confess his guilt the judge presiding shall, proceed to ascertain the degree of the. rime upon esrAQation ol. the testimonyv and ; render jhdgraent accordingij n Seo.; 4 That tho - provisions -olv this act shall not apply to any orima whicK shaU-have- been commuted prior to the ratification ot this . act, and shall not effect the distinctions now existing between mnr ler and manslaughter, nor; Lbe punishment for manslaughter as. njgifv; nro,viec by Sea This act shall be, iq forco from and af tsr ti ratification. - I CIEAT tflSTE CF VATELL lU tifi Kg :ti:i;ir-r Tan i Tisili. ...... ( aaaOIc'ctttan. ; . " 'W God, honey I certainly tnougnt oe edgment Day had sholy come r were the words used by an old-darkey in describing the manter in which the frost king accomplish ed the wreck of the cityV standpipe in Beaucatcher Qap. . Early Sunday morning the huge tank was-torn with a fracture from top to bottom, and the thunderous crash caused for a time the direst consternation in the minds of the inhabitants in the ravine below. Be f ore; they could leave their , homes the pipe collapsed and the forty seven feet of water and ice which it contained surged around them with a roar that threatened the annihila tion of life and property. The authorities were notified of the disaster, and precautions were at once taken to insure a steady sup ply of water for the city. The wash from the fall covered the roadway and it became so slip pery that it was with difficulty a passage could be made, the first per son to cross, a milkman, having to unhitch his horse and lead it through the snow in the woods while the ve hicle was guided down by hand. The road was littered for s hundred feet with rocks and chuncks of ice; several lengths of pipe were washed down the bank, and a big joint left in the track of the wagons. From the south ban of the ravine the . flattened mass of iron shows a lap for half its length with the point of rupture at the southeast face, the edges irregularly bent, rolled and twisted. The break from the fonn dation plates occurred atthe rivet line and was complete for the entire circumference. A HABEOW ESCAPE. Across . the ravine, south of the big iron cylinder, about 250 feet distant therefrom, was the cabin oc copied by John Clark, his wife and their children. The slush about the door had not hardened when their door was opened to the Citizen, and the wife told the story of the family's fright and their narrow es cape from an awful death. The persons living in the immediate vi cinity had become greatly alarmed, at the loud cracking noises frequent ly heard coming from the direction of the standpipe since the cold weather set in and for ten days had lived in constant dread of a catastro phe. On Sunday morning; just be fore day, the mother returned home from attendance at a sick room. While seated near the fire suddenly there was heard a sharp, cracking, tearing noise, so awful in its note that the woman crouched in speech- Jess terror and the awakening chil dren began to ory. The report was instantly followed by a terrific roar that made the earth tremble and that shook the little cabiu, and then came the wild rush of the tumbling waters that filled the gorge, sur rounded the house, aid hurled the rocks and ice against its sides. The j shrieking children dove nnder their beds, and the appalled parents were certain the house would be washed away. An attempt was then made to get to the higher ground, but the water covered their shoes aud they gave it up and returned to the house, where they remained till day light. Serious damage was sustain ed by tne family in, the lost of their sa pnly q oloihing, which had been left hanging upon the bushes, about the house. Not a trace of a garment could be found; everything bad been swept avray. r "A POWEEPUL 8T0BM." : In 'the tenement hwise west of the- tank, tnd lower down the bank there was a great scare and similar damage.. The ' icy deluge spent its force against a well built wall on the upper side of the building, but suc ceeded in tearing a window sash from its frame and flooded the room from the southeast end. Marks on the walla showed the depth) of water to have been three feet; a family had removed from the room -but a few days. Jane Orr, the head of one of the families,' said there was "a noise like a powerful storm and then the rush of water that splashed to the top of the house and sent the win dow in the basement awincfing. It washed " all ' our clothes awav she said we haven't a change lelt, but we're so glad hj good Lord spared . uS tha.t we dont mind the clothes." Another tenant said : " When I heard that awful noise I knowed the reserboy was busted and was so bad Scared ' t hat I ain't got oyer it yil, and I just kaint go to church." : Belowthis bouse the banks of the gorge sharply;" converge and. the volume of ' water dajhd through the narrow; defile &nd piled itself aga,iu8.t-',the : buildings in its path, where scenes similar to those, de tailed, nbove occurrd; TbQ b&nki and bottom of the gul ly vera washed clean of snow, and its portions immense masses of earth , had ' been loosened and; torn a ay. The receding . waters strewed tha gronnd with debris from, (ha wre el and trees ten inpas -in diameter were tovpfr W b.s.d" been twisted, off. A section of the iron ladder was carried ?00 feet, and the guy bars are Ungled like throadl .The track p( wtor wai Qkarlj enown by the muddied outline of the snow. The scene of the trouble has been Tisited ; by hundreds of people and the heap of black mud a - foot deep, .covennr the exposed bottom of . the tank, caused much unfavorable com ment. Ittscitti Ja:li:i UziT. Macoit, Ga., January' 23. Jus- bice u u. Lamar, or tne United States Supreme Court, died tonight at ten minutes before 9 o'clock. He was stopping at the home of W. H. Virgin, his relative, and late thia afternoon took his overcoat and star ted out for a walk. He had scarcely left the house when he was met by a friend, and returned to Mr. Vir gin's home where he sat and talked cheerfully for quite a time with his friend. Justice Lamar dined at 6:55 with the family and seemed to have a good appetite and seemed to be in a cheerful mood. His friend, Dr. Lewellyn, who he had met, left the house at 7:45 o'clock, and in a few minutes the justice was seised with violent pains and died shortly after. J ustice Lamar came to Macon about a month ago, hoping to recov er from an illness which had attack ed him in Washington. He was suffering, and his death was looked for almost momentarily when he came here. Since his arrival here he seemed to be gaining in strength, and his health seemed greatly im proved. His death was unexpected.' Friends who had seen him and knew his condition thought he was on the sure road to recovery and would within a few weeks be able to re sume his duties on the Supreme bench. i THE MOMENT OF DISSOLUTION. Brights disease with angina pec toris was the direct cause of Justice Lamar'a death and is 'given by the physicians as being the . chief com plication in his case. Justice Lamar came into this - city this - afternoon and called at the office of Colonel R Pardee, where he conversed pleasantly on several topics. He waa accompanied by Dr. Lewellyn on his return to the residence of W. H Virgin, who married Lamar's daughter.1 The attack was very se vere while it lasted and the physi cian, Dr. A. H. Parker, who had been in attendance, arriyed only a few minutes before his death. At this time Justice Lamar was unconscious and beyond : medical aid. Restoratives were at once ad ministered but were entirely without avail. He died with his head on Mr. Virgin's hands, and apparently without pain, the spasm having passed off at that time. No arrangements have yet been made for the funeral. AN EVENTFUL LIFE, Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus La mar was born in Putnam county, Georgia, September 1, 1825, and after bis father died was taken to Oxford, Miss., where he received part of his education. He gradua ted at Emory College, Georgia, in 1845, studied la- in alaoon, and waa admitted to the bar in 1847. In '49 he returned to Oxford, Miss., and for years held a professorship in the University of Mississippi. He re signed, and resumed the practice of law in Covington, . Ga. He . was elected to the legislature in '53, and in '54 again returned to Mississippi and settled on his plantation in La Fajette, being shortly afterwards elected to Congress as a Democrat. He served from 1857 until 1860, when he resigned to take a 'seat in secession convention - of his native State. He oast his fortunes with the "lost cause and left the army with the rank of Colonel, after hav ing shared in many engagements. He was again professor in the Uni versity ol Mississippi, and again took a seat in the House of Repre sentatives. He was elected to the Senate March 5, 1877. , March 5, 1885, President Cleveland appointed Lamar Secretary of the1 Interior, and afterwards i elevated him to a seat on the Supreme bench. Justice Lamar was perhaps as prominent a figure as any that occupied a seat on the bench of - that august body, but for months back he has been almost too ill to take more than a perfunct ory interest in the proceedings. Mr. Depew occasionally makes the interesting statement that the Blaine movement at Minneapolis last June did not have the sanction of the Maine statesman. Mr. Depew bases ; this statement on an interview he had with Mr. Blaine in this city a few weeks before" the - Minneapolis Convention. They talked, for two hours- As Mr Depew. was leaving, he said : "Mr. Blsine; I am going out tojlinnespolis next' week as a delegate at large from this State. I have been a Blaine man for twenty "five years, and I am so today. I think I am entitled to your confi dence. Have yon anything to say to me with reference to my action at Minneapolis V Mr. Blaine - shook' hia feeaa. - 'Notbing, he said. ; ':: 1 . . . -aa HSaaa 1 ' All tho indications point to a sad den : thaw of the recent great snow fall, ; and. - this, , of . courae, means flood along the river valleys, equal, perhaps, to anything kO-QVO, io. tor mer years. .. . HTTMDEHCO ATTE11TI0H, BUYERS. We wish to call attentionto our line of second-hand Buggies, Carts, Wagrons, Hacks, Harness, &c. ..... . . . They are almoit good as new,' and persons wishing : to buy can secure bargains by calling on ns. We have a big lot of NEW baggies, Wagons, Carts, Qaniess, &c, on hand, which will be sold on reasonable . terms. If we hare not got what yon want, we will take pleasure ir getting anything for yon m our line. We , bay direct from manufacturers and can, therefore, give you very close prices. : We have a full line of NEW Har ness collars, bridles, &c every thing in the harness line. Can beat the world on prices. Give as a call. HEHKEL, CRAia t CO. Dr. J. K. MOOSE, , . SURGEON DENTIST. ; Will be In Imaiz tha first week of aaeh aaoath."" ' Uaea nothing but good matarlal. anantttiattoa oaed tix painlw extraetloa. Gold and foroelala crowna attached to the roota of natural teeth. Aching teeth treated, filled and made waefol for reara. i . . . OdVm overjtirbj'i Hardware Store. " DA7EMP0RT FEMAlE COLLESQ Lenoir, NJ O. Fall term begins Sept. 8th. "Scholarly ' Faculty, Thorough In struction, ifractical courses ox study, Special advantages in Music, Art, &c. SS7Superior opportunities for tnose preparing to teacn. Expenses moderate. Free Schol- arships. Send for Catalogue. John P. Mimck. A. M.t Pres. i i 1 1 LAND The IImiqbjlnts Fkied Going West or North west T ake the Chicago & Alton R. R.Z Parties contemplating going West will save time and money going via the Alton route. It is the only line running solid vestibuled trains be tween St. Louia and Kansas City makes direct connection for all points in Kansas, Nebsaska, Color ado, California, Oregon, , Washing- son end Reclining chair cars and Tourist Sleepers free of extra charge. For low rates and full information maps and disention paphlets oi the West apply to J. Cha<ox, G. P. A. Chicago, 111., B. A. NewlJlkd. Tran. Pass Agent, Asheville, N- C. lie New M Weekly Herald. Only One Dollar a Year ! Daring U9S, the Weekly Herald wi4 be wlUont qaeatlon the beat and eheapeet family Joarnal ptlb Uahed hi Anerioa. Jt wlU ba proXoaaljr UlaatraaaS -by the beet artiata In the country, and will be a magaaine of literature, art and nawa abaolutaty n rlTalled In Ita aMoUenee. The Presidential Inaugural WUl be graphically deecrtbed and MrtlaUean V tared, while the great feature oi the fwralwg Tear's hlatory.the - World's Fair. Will be gtran partlonlar attenHon. So aeiplete wfll . be the deecrivtiona of eTerrthlng eonneotad with the great Kxpoattton, and ao true to the reality the many UHutraOona. that a peranu of the Weekly Herald next summer will be almoat aa aatiafactory aa a rialt toChloago. PHIZES EACH WEEK WlU be awardrd for th beat original articlaa on ag. naaltural nbjeeta. Karh taana wul innnln a peg aaToiea to praoucat ana aeiennne i arming. TheWomana Department will be anaacoUed ta' practical anggeatVaie to make the home mora aatrae. . Every week there will be a number of awiatil artt -, elea eai all toploa of haaaat Uiiataet. Aaaong tha unl .hn will wvtta mtntrimm In. tks WMkhf Itan. : aid are Jerome K. Jerome, Dtiwaitar, Mm, Oi Im ) ' wood, Kdwin Arnold, John Stooge Wlntar, Karlev - TT1 W.VAaai - - - - - VTmha Miabat and Hamiltnat Aide. . . " Send for Premium list. r.' , JAMSS GORDOW BS1CBTETT. v Vew York Herald, Kew Xewkv , Subscribe Now.
Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.)
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Feb. 1, 1893, edition 1
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