Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / June 30, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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r WILSON ADVANCE. Published, Eveby Thursday at IT WILSON NORTH CAROLINA, J. i C C. DANIELS, Mm hi Proprietors SunsontirxioN Hates in advance Otic Vnr 00 1 0 'LET ALL TUii ENDS THOU AIIfl'ST rMonoy run bo sent by Money order o Kcirlstcred Ivttcr at our risk. VOLUME 17.-- rriCB- Tarlxjrc ("Moo Butldiiui. Slreot, In the Old I Poi WILSON, NOETH GA AT, B A THY COUNTRIES, TUY OOD'g, AMD TBUT rigy , T AROLINA, JUNE "30. 18R7 i ' i k . . - - V '. .1 1 T ' J. : t' tof lfi J Whv"did rnn I vnmin iifo r.mm ;n r.tk ln.. - . i f l ; . i wj wuiiacui uuk ii vj vara uaa I - - - - i t m. a f f i - ' w , 1' uu r ouairu mj tuiiri.i 1110 aii iun cuii ft a I - I I AlinV ' SD'am- Tiwm. I M.fiA nnnr litfla Crinm flirav l'nl. ?lae over,, ahd -we herself into the river. : - ! I - :o:- - ?" VI "as of mine and ' ' ' ' I - fu" for . her before ITntflH- 5nff!ndel fi fW v' Exnerlencfl. jt 1. srJ - - tars .1 C that' (treat- J 5n At- ,- none relief or - 1 I The Dothani Morning NeVs fcaB J 1 suspended. . . .---. .! BILL ARP'S LETTER HO W THE rr.OVLEs FEY from pestilence Around The Old Square in Gdins ville. The IJnmmer and the Univ. ltecvl 'led ton Jlostelrie. of. the old 1 M 'Skin lor rIi.'Uyea. Xilat a mn: vW ?iV. te pi, for h v4flc1. Tliat'Mfr Id-even "ttiout'li the devil d5'at;- V Jiy - is it the soldier faces deati with Leroi3m and exultation, ( but let a plague or ipestijence come along and the people fly in terror and in many cases ac tually die of , fright. I fled from Memphis some years ago and, to my great peril, rode all niht on th platform of a car, sitting on the step: and holding fast to an iron railing. It. was an awful nikht and I' think of it now with holror. There 'was no room inside not . a spare . foot, and scores of children were asleep on the 'floor in the aisles and Aavu undpr the seats. 'They were the poor mainly, and the stench inside was hor rible, but skin for skin, andiwe endured it, for life was at stake. I was. thinking about this .yes terday when our kindred (ar rived from New York as refu Kees from Ky West. Their home is in Sanford, but all homes and all ports were closed upon them except New York, and jo New York they ,hadj to o. JX sea voyage of 2,000 miles when their Jiome was n ly a day distant and then an other thousand miles to reach i lonjr haven "of rest. Verily, the llajid of flowers is not always jheaven. They were not .so lAuch afraid of the' fever as they were of the hospital, for the hospital is almost ( certain death. When a 'suspect' is sent to the hospital his loneliness, his separation from his famiy,J his continuity to the .fever,' and his alarm combine togetherand he dies. My kindred oldi,ofjal a youa'fcian whohiid eateH r Air !; fruit a n Ljan 'at- .cv tt.-' jf-4-"! oan. Ills wa8-jW coj-ig3pfrom- the ' iu2i33fEa La 4 ettio . whe:i the sSt ! made known in .some way and he was ordered at once to the ''LosDllal. He !was engaged to be married to a beautiful and invelv irl and she was with Gainesville is the best for good lealth and long life. I This country is healthy, ! very lealthy j but it is. rich and fer tile, and cannot therefore be as healthy a country as around Gainesville, where the soil is poor and thin. Gainesville is a clean 'white town, .ai the pret tiestplace fe pUy marbles in all nor'ii Georgia. 'Theyl . have torrffown the old court ! house the square, so as to give the Doys a chance to play marbles ; and they have b jilt a new court house on a side square, and it cost them thirty thousand dol lars, and is a model of beauty, ai'd it- was Id fpr withyj issuing any b5ud. J They ho debt. The authorities tried to get the people to -vote for bonds, but the poor people said no. If the rich people want a fine court house, let thetn build it and pay for it. W.q ' don't want it. If we ever get rich we dont want to be taked to pay old bonds. ' . J The sound of the hammer and the saw is heard in Gaines ville. The town is spreading out and beautiful homes being established in every direction. It will hot bej long before New Holland spring Will be in the suburbs. Th.e town and the springs are closely connected now by street car rails and hack lines. Those springs -are nature's treasures. Dame.'. Na ture is sweetly kind to us all, and wo ought to thank her eve ry time we see her, and : we ought to be grateful to old man Holland for improviu i that place and offering it to the public. Some folks say j they wish General Longstreet'si fine hotel was there, but I likei the old fashioned simplicity of the hotel and I like the cottages that are nestled among the beautiful" trees, and I like the cheerful, genial landlords who try so hard to make everybody happy. It want to take my wife there and stay a week a wlile week. I think I can get her to o i if J take about two oi the children along. It 13 been some 4ime since -she s thwe. : When she itrets tjere she ouhi to h hnn'nfcl f3 the oldebt iivins visitor- hat is, except xne. "We ; were daed to interfere .With his privileges. On one occasion I remember he came to the front dcor-with crape on his hat, and when asked who was dead, he said, 'Nobody ain't dead, but my old 'Oman's powerful isick mout die 'most any timei sq I got de mournin' all readyj, bless de Lord.' ?; - "VVe were on our bridal.' trip to the falls not Niagara, but Tallulah and it was a journey pt delightful pleasure. Every thing was rosy then. Oh, if we could recall our youth and find that same, old carriage ajid horses, and 'ViT and drive jir to -th&t fftra-iitel -..una. have that' Bamereception bv Mr. Grifijn and his good wife, I think I would try it over again. Yes, I think I would. It is a beautiful country arming Gainesville, and its manifest destiny is to be a health resort for the invalid, and the tired and the restless. A change is what such people want change of air, and water and scenery. When we get our railroad from Uartersville direct to Gaines ville, which we are sure to have, our people will go there for a change, for their freestone wa tor, and their people will come here for our limestone 'water it takes different kinds to suit different conditions.' My father never recovered from his great infirmity until he removed from Gwinnett to Floyd.' and yet Gwinnett is healthy very neanuy. Gainesville will soon have a railroad to Dahlonega, ana that will open up another splendid resort and bring Por ter Springs in reach of the in valids and the pleasure seekers. I love to see them travel, those who have got plenty of money, for it scatters it; but ours is always (scattered before we start. .Gainesville has more than doubled her population since the! last census. There is now a street railroad, and four fine hotels, and a bank, and a daily paper and two weeklies, and a cotton factory going1 up and two fine colleges and a graded school. The old Dr. Banks mansion is still standing auu m guuu . preservation.;, lie was a famous surgeon? in I his AT THE BRIDGE. -:o:- A WOMAN Til A T WAS TR VE TO HER EAIl'l.O VEIL And on' Account of Jier Devotion She Saves Henry from an Un happy MaMi. day, the most famous hfniii the sick chamber begged and plead for his and she would jiurse him, all in vain, and then as t trivilere a priest was sent and they were married. and life but last for -StI . ' u maf seq.a iormni Tr.-eirii fry, an ec;c Shock of the separation wai tob much for him, iand he died m the hospital, but no one be lieves that he. would have 'died if he' had not been sent there. w hen our kindred reached New York they were not permitted to.latd until after an inspection .by the man' who carried ihe lyellow flag, j J'he ipassengers ; were all quite well except la larl nnd his littte 'sister, and they were only weak jand ex hausted from an overdose it Seasickness. 1 he captain was a smart man ana gooa neariea, and so he managed to nave j a lunch spread when he saw the yellow flag coming, and had all the passengers at the table to show how well and strong and hungry theyi Were. The boy good f riena Jujffo 5 "Vas shooting dear all ar-d there. He has p go f irther 'Vi int he talks about fcis youthful ex ploits with an, unction that is1 quite becoming to anti-.diluvian. Thirty eight years ago my. bride and I rode lip o the old Grif fin tavern that had a siga bdard suspended in front with j the welcome words, 'Entertainment for man and beast,' . painted thereon. We always traveled with beasts then. These signs would have . said 'horse' . in stead of beast, for it is more respectful to that noble animal, but) horse wouldn't mciuie mules nor steers, and so beast was the best compromise. I We were traveling In the highest style of prehistoric luxury. iThe finei old carriage was gracefully suspended between four large goose neck springs and: the steps were folded in the panels ot the doors and were let down like a little .carpeted staircase, and the'bride or any other par trician lady ascended and, de-H scended as daintily as a queen lnetair ladies didn't step as high then as they do now. i Mr unmn was a gentleman of the old school and met us at the and lea1"1160 man, a grad Belfasf. He quit teach iu the nebyi t had been" all day in the factory, and wheif the inaehinry stopped at Hx o'clock, and there was th hoes, rfhavetr-jei. . jj counttug,house For half ; A hnar louaer bj'Ir. Hortou, whd wanted to jgive me some neve directions lor-myroom. I was forewoman nf oue ot tue noors, although I was still young only twenty two; but vi 4uici uispoBitiou, and uaviijy um uure anil a grave mauner, I was able to exercise the necesary control over the 'giiisi ' nuiuo ui wuotn. were women past forty. j It was still early in the evening when I. too, left the great baihiiug owned by Ilorton &Co..aud iiUtead fe""j uuiue m luu tea da;ia .vas sur e to lntve ready for die I strolled in an opposite direction toward the bridge that spanned a narrow but deep and dangerous part of the river that skirted the town. It was a iavorite walk of mine when the weather was sultry, as it had been that day; and I seldom met any one, the factory hands, as a rule preferring to take their exercise in the opposite direction, where the town offered eoucerts, beer saloons, ice cream gardeus, and other amusements. Soine times a very cciitimental pair of lovers took their promiiiade in tlie-country beyond the factory wall, but very seldom. 1 was waikibg slowly the heat bing op pressive, and I weary. 'with my daj'4 work, when su l.lt ul.v I start ed td run, and by most, rapid mo tion, caught the skirts of a girl who was. climbing on the bridge rHiliuT. - in my iright 1 spoke to her sharplv: ,Doa'tyou know it is ve- dan gerous to climb up there! You would drown i'you foil into rhe river here, where the current is no strong.' 'Let me go!' was the reply, aud I culd and b stop ue V I soothed her! put her in my Then I won J . . maue over a i -i . ... aitcreu some iU we wenc : to m two days she i exhausted, for j erally run most $ sleep at U$ t, and 4ny spare Joom. ae over, and v we 38 of mine and u" for . her before .ourselves. For passive, utterly nk she had lit fit th Mm A Rinro sue ieiD new Tor r, urged, on and sustained by uasikjaral excitement, lor which l.iiuie was now tatiug her revenge, r ' - -?4 . A 3 ear later. had left the fac tory uud ws walking slowly toward ihe bridge. Fraufli-e, ray protegee, i r wuu.ii i iia.j v-;iiacn wore in r i ci.iav. ir v flic very sjiy S!i6 was very oft e m' furion3 rage uorant girl, who reaJ, but who sau erfnl voiet-. iDitaf. - , i , Very beautiful, ttf gone a wayward, lg ould not even r in a clear, now. .wiK-hing music fir more so siiici! good food a; been her portion, luid rouudeVl a U vn to smiTe. liat beautiful wtti,uo wife for III only Ken of our iti you raster, who l Ai eM.t.4e when Wiv foie tie had doue tine f;ad fallea : alio was ir.ink i.i liM 11, HillH Wl a kiudaess had 3d tier it ail form !, her lips loarn- she was, ' abe nry Ilorton the plover, a boyish iiv uauuteu mv tre at Jrotoe. Ue- f-o a week, rran- love with him. a chijd "iu how- : her linnetuous Itali.itj miuiiJ t$"l him about and WiUulied h;uf ;i tc ventured to show any attent;Vu t me or to any visitor we might' LvdVe" They were so young, they se mere childieu, th no uneasiness at frequency of lien J ed, and Fran mac 1 ny duty to put a t J&t g. I had, to my 11 nade myself tbtf ?3irl'8 med to me such Ht I crave mvself J' 8 visits increas- oecame more rest wjylre it was the w co nscience, s protector -dirS saved her -.. jrac Mr. iior- ow' his son to r; i. ah my re monstrances wiii V ranclne -had beeu met in tLirVwor8t possible inauuer. Teare. ialkin, ; rage, threuts of running K away,.unswered ait my well-me.r.lj j' attempts to cure her of her iufaitilvwon and as " a desnerato resonri fi 1 1 Tesolved, to less artd excited, I i in aud guardian, wa life, and I knew wi tou would never ail many a iaciory had, beeu compelled already to ex ert an my strength to hold the str(iggliug little creat ire, 'Let me A v:. it is t"se nsacr 4 1 fip.'rf'ft stl sieak to Henrv dimply imposst aloue at the co ta to. meet me at 0r was to keep tbij strolled down Li ' small grove off, the water, nelir t Lie was waitf'' ' lorton. It being to'speak,lto hira tev j I a;ked him i Jbridge, and it ti appoiujiensjl viua.rivwr, to n V3 oo the bank i f h bridge.; .' Xor me,", and 'Tub Near Brown wood, Ga., Dec v Gentlemen : For te have had a tumor. - Dartaj timt I have been under tbei meot of the best physician a i lanta Gan and Utica, N. YJ of whom were able to give assurance of cure. Then 1 ' to Jhe use of patent medicines, sev. eral of which I "ui-ed without avail Mr Joc.'or in Juwor;" r - .... j.. - . . j ed me.that I could not liv About two years ago I be WHAT IS UAl'VESlXa MX IHE WORLD AROUND US. A conttenaed report of the aa fathered from the cotutntts of our ctmtemporari. State aiut National. a. b. o., and at once year. an UHDg y tumor yielded to its iuflaeoce t jt grew softer smd smaller, and riiy cenera! health, which was badlyrun down, wa built up with the decrease of the tumor. Fiuallv. I fjit ko well aud my general health o good that I Mopped the Swit Sj)ecrflet and went on performinMny houser hold dunes. .But, or -urae, as "I had not persisted in. thf use of the mejicine until the tuiJor .had. en tirely disappeared, If coold only look for a return of. f he ailment. Agaib 1 resorted to tlo Qso of the Swift's Specific, wicQ the. same happy resuirs as on t1 firt occas ion. This has been repeated sevtr al tijQes-witbin the 1;M two years, the medicine Lever , fading to re duce the tumor aud build . qp my general system. When I first be gan to take the Specific, I was so nervous that IcoulJ not- hle'ep for. hours on retiring. flt that - if I just held my feet ptill .for.'a few minutes by force i( "U that it would have tbrowf 'Die into; (. vulsions. That nOfyoosHesa the S. S. S. entirely cureM My pain was so great that ray physician urged me to keep anden the iuduence of morphine ail; tle time, and to abandon hope of I recovery. When I began the use Pf the Specific, I was on the bed jhalf my. time, a helpless iuvalld. This year I have beeu able to do N my" own cook ing, except whej'1 1 waa down with a severe cold. 3. M. H. SASSEB Hood and. Skin ree. - . .. , ., .. I Specific Co.. The Dothatn Morninir News baa I DeCE . ni I t m nn tl.u irlnrmna A!H ' o . C0J The new Graded School ing, or Greensboro, wm f 10,000. XfiD UUUUtCU U1UIC IWiUI Uaa justoeeu purcuaseu lor toe JuaDdf e man cotton mills. A Teacher's Institute is ip Bession at Greenville, for colored teachers. It will be nqxt week for the white tea A steamboat is to be ro the French Broad Hirer to Bi from Asheville. . . That stea will have to wear 'stilt to fie the rocks. . The Greensboro Southe baoco Journal, after ihoro vestig&t on, puts the estt the North Carolina tpbucco an average of CO per cent The t Keidaville Vll Weekly tells pf a cotored p f Ml Treatise on seases mailed Tnis Swii Dt Drawer. Atlt"ta, Ga. HallDi We Firm Pay. . LV'W to m.lifKTftiarm pay is tbe- build ..s mind in Vo a thio' o'u trit-i, goly call forth his energy vA. In genuity. ; i .. np vard boat ovti :i lo ll in- ite of rop at bster'n U His s anorir . ..tp -and a hmn. studied theology, and went . 8Tinned from my hold aud laj'i down to Columbus to be exam-J bjteud still on the bridge, at mt iiied and, licensed. Old Dr. Gouldink ! was presiding:, ancl Mr. Gray stood a splendid ex aminatioi and was just about to be admitted, when the ven erable doctor leaned forward and said: Brother Gray, I will ask you one mere question Do you feel called upon from the Lord to preach the i gospel to the people?' 'Yes,' said he, T do if they pay me for it.' And they never could get him to say anything else, and he was rejected, lie was a. uusiucsa luclu, .o, and he studied law and settled down in Gainesville, tie was a good man and honest, but could not comprehend the idea of self-sacrifice and martyrdom that old Dr.'Goulding required in a candidate for the ministry The scripture that most im pressed him was that the labor er was worthv of nis nire. "Well, he is worthy, and he oueht to have it, and that church or that people who will not tay it are in a bad way for heaven.' If they don't like the thing. ss wny i am bave come to try j to think of your -3 if he could ;i .s making ..' Yoa have ri .l lift niAt lit fifc r A inf out to vou the fierce . struggles ceased I Jrsrcu 10 useless fig' f lieu ry, oeiore remaps you g this evening. fi..t. 1 1 had thoueht her a chiltf. anu persuaue for site was no taller thau many c!' father's grief a.: J the factory -g'uls of thirteen, buras guess that his ' ao T stooned over her 1 saw that she love to a lactoiy K seventeen, probably. Her still Tace . lolly of suc"au arxacnmeuu , uu. o.s Hooiififnl thnnnrh ilic vmirftwil L'iXK .-Dae iu ouun .Waa i-larb iinil fliA Imio laluw V()d that an ilfl'.IBUt gltl, PrOUgUS i I , i iil.i. ;. in!, ' tirtmrtv. Without riinr I'll? ii twiti our imimuu v l lx i ti-ii'i. i u n jii i ;iri nuipi j . lion roco iroa m.ul .-. n Ti' ii 1 1 r i hn t" nf 5 lad V. IS no Wile UO U W . v VJJ vj -M.M.Vy V- I - . name is James W. roe amJije has a lot of poems in preparation for the printer. His volume t m umfco 150 pages. elected President of" t! tlon of SnperintendeTit Asylamsia the United meeting at whica lie' was held at Detroit. vWe published jn paper that Joe Canoll, boro, attempted to com Tue Star ays he did suicide when he came ing killed by laudanur The "VYeldouevf seaks.'or tue.weiuon rair in gifowiug trm It says sufficient Kt(lck has beeti subscribed to put tbL association on a stolid foundatfouj and that the fait will bo held Nov, ut, 2d, 3d and 4th, and that it will be an uu usm'Iy g'od one. . - -y reenviue ijnector thrs f Insane ....... TM . a 1 1(. 1. JLUO in elf cied it weik s of Golds ait suicide. ot attemut o near te- Ti9 llstrlj Cisis. ' ;Itecently a Brooklyn irate father brought fcUit against the ? newly made husband of Lis daughter to recover 1100, which aom hd been gjveo by tie father lo her for the punose c purchasing her wedding outfit. The particular reasons tor such an ; extraordinary 'complaint hare not fully given in the New York papers aud can only' Ikv de veloped In court wben the trial cornea on. Evidently there wa'n hitch or crank loose somewheie, and it remains to be sol red. But, in the meantime a. North Carolina correspondent of the New York Sun tells even a mora wond erful tale of. penurious meanness practiced upon himself br( riv . 'ii bor recently, ' which ' he. tbiuks comes pear topping, th v Brooklyn father. . This corrcsp adent had rescued from' drown iu this mean man while he wan stekldgforMbe third lime, which i always c.)iisd- e.t'd ih l if. ia d"ing r.i had tn rz hun with micHi "iocuc that it nr.Mtic-'d a H;iou refit .in the d'U-uinj u i an' tout. Thereupon xuc re;co;'d m"iny wlter e?cap ug death and mi-rely recovering from the slioek. si!: hij preserr fr d.iiiiges to ihe o'uut " i.f the tailor's bill l.ir molding . TnVanj oai r.- " . -. - ,11 f :e raiding of Iho Brooklyn c ll.e Itdeigh correspondent had i-Uuiuht lin was the -meanest mvi' in the WorM, but he now tluuk tie two raisers my be placed ajut on iliumelevii. writer, d .uj uic produce fc. od crops, shoe4 worn through, and her whole appearance shabby aud poverty- stricken iu the extreme.- I. bathed her face with cold water, tdappad UCt LtVcbLZ. v&o, uuva o"vu iouou m.i but only to a dull, sleeply resist ance; ot my enous to iirwiv: tier move. It took all mv eloquence aud much of my bodily siieogth to get Ler'uoon her ieet, and "half lead. half carry her to my home, a small cottage, where 1 kept nou?,e with one servant, Jane, a clever inidd.e- asredi womau, who stood aghast at this 1 unexpected visitor. "Wherever did you pick that up?1 she said, in accents of strong dis gust. ' Never mind now, Jane,' I said; let us have some supper. Are you hungry!' I asked my unwilling for you.' .... '1 will chooscjny own wile," ne ausweren, loftil ll am not de pendent unosl. J father. I have fiff, thousand dollars from graiidfirher, um I ,eed ask my no I'Starvcdr she said, 1......T. . . . n Aivra rj UilU CUUiO Jane, and andlrirl were: lifted eentlv out threshold arid gave us glad preacher,, say so and let him igo bioil a slice of ham,' I said, seeing aud girl wereantea gently out ,nmo , A, fa , tA another field, but if they that; my own supper consisted ol 3 I of their berths and propped up at the table with the others The yellow flag counted " them all. aud, finding the number correct, left ;the steamer ad:d gave her a permit to go into" port. It takes sham practice to dodge the red tape of gov ernment doctors. the w rld that the great t)les ings are the least considered. Always graceful and genial and cultii vated, he was the welcome as sociate of the highest in thi land. Lumpkin and Warnei and Nesbit and the bar f that practiced in their court the 'Supreme' court, as: Dr. Miller and Ben Hill called it, were al ways glad to be guests at' that inn and to f easf upoyi r ivrrs. Griffin's batter ' cakes. There "k.n "him. then Day him the full price and a little more Cheer him up with liberality : don't pinch him down to the lowest . dollar. A preacher can't preach with power and unction who feels like his peo ple would let his family come as near starvation as was decent and allowable in a - Christian that, my own supper bust-nit aud berries. Lji!t, rather sulkily, obeyed me, and luy guest devoured the tood et before her as if she was ludeed.. as she said, starved. She did not speak until sue baa nnisuea uer supper, but then she said, standing V'J , ..... , . . Iisuppose l ougnc to inanK jou, but! cannot see much to tnanu auvhodv lorln making it a little one's conseutUchy marriage. i 'But vou are Pji2 nP a lifetime of misery tor yoirsidf,' I cried. 'You are tooyouug to think of marriage.' i '1 am nearly us old as you are. I am past twenty -oue. 'But not nearly as oia as i am, x said; sadly thinting of his petted life of self indulgence. 'Come; listen to reason! am under heavy obligations tofiftuv father, aud I owe some dut his son. : 'And how,'! cried, eagerly, 'cau you better meRibose duties than bv iMfcomiiitr hii daughter ? You have no idea lu' fond ho is of you ; and ! am sure rjiat when lie kuows how I love you, aow my life's hap piness lies iu )our haiid. he will consent to our marriage.' .1 'Love me !' I cried and not because the laborers have been awkward in their work of plowing and cultivat ing the crop, but because they did not know and fully understand the relation of the soil tto the crop. Continued hard dally labor, with out an educated judgment direct ing and applying correct principles mav makalair crops, but it will not nroduce the best results : it will not make the laud produce all that it is capable of y ieidingt One fault with the farmers is, when any crop or a special kind of stock is paying a larger per cent, ot pront man any other stock or grain, tney lmmeai ately turn their attention almost exclusively to that special product or stock, until the supply exceeds the demand, and, as a consequence, prices decline below cost of pro duction. Farmers should notice the signf of these chauges and revolutions in prices of the different commodities. Thev theu could to some extent avoid all the extremes. When any kind of erain or stock paie an ex tremely high ier: cen. oi -prone, they should riot give all their 'at tention to that special object; and, on th other hand, when any ar ticle is selling at or below cost of production, they should not discon tinnft its cultivation or pioluctiou a'ticother. but they should avoid all the extremes, and they will find hTSiCT"'. tall asf -Th says i hp f i Lf r preax edly us belt Rev. odist in the N. C a macea iu tv Asylum." W) the Shelby AV much improved Vv the Morgantoo A fA is a prospect of hF- ation to physica I health. IT!1 A doctor in I nl A girl. She would not V lie loaded an old gun v ber, but wounded A t Charlotte Chronicle say too many imbeciles who t way to win a girl is to w It th" clrls would onlv get i shots first nd kill on row crazy fools it oH h: i that iii the final outcome they will then II ie ,ore successful. There is no one cheeked my exjessions of araize-1 ffneeial system of forming, either in nietir. My tasx wouia uo com para-1 erain or stocu, tnas win give tivelv easy. I had only to dismiss I iArtre ierx;ent. of profit each year him. But wbila I paused, too W- nn the cabital invested and Ubor wildered to franie a sentence, my I perfoimed. The only safety for the boy lover seized my hand and be-1 farmers of this country is lu mixed came fairly cloriuent as he begged I husbandry and rotation of crops, mo to bo his w Check him ; I e community. My kindred from later to die. It would havo beer ood health, pure air, pure wa ter are so common, that nobody prizes them. They are a1 kind of njatter'of Course and a man will make more fuss about his colfee than about the air orthe water. But just let him get larmed. Let the pestilence that walketh at noon day threaten him, and he don't c ire anything about coffee then. It is air pure air he wants Well, we have got that here in Cherokee, Georgia, and ibj Cherokee1 I mean all of north Georgia'. There has never been any pestilence here and I don't suppose the ever will be. There is nothing for it to feed upon. Where there are moun tains and valleys- and fast flow ing streams, there is-no danger of pestilence. IV life human life, moving along without ex traordinary disturbance i-'is worth 100, then good health is worth all of 75c. It is the big irest thinr and the best thini? r- - i --f-t r - -r (t ih the world. Everybody who has been sick knows it. A man with a sick wife or a sidk child cannot be happy except! by the grace of God, and if he jis' pick himself his wife and child can not be happy. I've been rjigh sick myself for three days, and it took more grace than! could master to make me willing to die and leave, my family in -a helpless condition. . I But of all the places that I tow.-5 mv opfciion is that were no sucn cases made lnrl-ey vvest tuiu mo mai iud the State, thev said.- Thev eratiyes in those immense cigar were nearly half an inch thick factories that employ, each, and light bid poru3 inside and about a thousand men and wo- beautifully brown on the out. men, ana Doys ana gins, pay a There are as good cakes made now, I reckon, but they.'don't taste -like thev1 ! lisfid to. As Jiob Martin said, i would give five hundred' dollars if a ginger cake tasted as good now as it did when I ' was a boy.' j The iamous urimn tavern naa . a score of rooms up stairs for the njtl 1 I T X man mty aciiaTs a wees w read to them two hours every day while they are at work. He reads from newspapers and romances, ana can oe neara an over the long halls, and even down in the town. There is no machinery and not a voice but his. Just think of it twenty Ui IJLIC I . J ,,,, inrltrpc ani tim iaTOD live nunarea aouars a year ior wasthe lari?e room for- th reaaing, anu iue v,uuauB v,.x I i soul ket cmei justice xo receive nis as sociates and friends bvinieht and exchange wit and learning ana merriment. Wheri thpv quoted trom famous iauthorato point a moral or adorn a tale s a ; ... m ii,was irom bhaKesneare ann Milton and Burns and Gold smith and Pope and Don Quix ote arid Washington Irving and Walter Scott. They studied thoe standards, but nobody has time to study (hem now. The best rendition of 'Tam O'Shan ter'j I ever heard was at pne of those receptions. But 1 did not flniih our cavalcade. The car riage had a high dickey seat perched in front, and there tat old Virgil a tall, dignified. stammering darkey whose right to that seat of honor -and to flourish- 4,at whip and wear that stovepipe hat was ancient and L exclusive ; not a white child in his master's family out of their wages. Bill xVkp. ' ''Tie Slongli or Despoadency" in which vou are wallowing, on ao- connt of some of those j diseases pe culiar to you mauame, and wnicn have robbed vou of the rosy hue ot health, and: made life, a burden in you, you can easily get out of. Dr. Pierce's 'Favorite Prescription" win free you from all suqli troubles, and soon1 recall the rosektint of health to your cheek, and the elasticity to your strp. , It is a most perfect specific tor all i the Weaknesses aud irregularities"peculiar to your sex It cures ulceration, displacements, 'internal fever,' bearing down sen sations, removes the tendency to cancerous affections, and corrects all yantritural discharges. By druggists. ! Greensboro is evidently on a boom.VThat town is making rapid strides n the march of progress. all' over 'now, if you hadn't bother ed!' - 'You are not going away, I said as she moved to the door. Yes, I am. What woulu I stay here tor?' To tell me ; vonr trouble I said and; let me. comlort you,' She was so small, so pitifully thin, such a child, yet so mtle like a child, my heart seemed oreaKing over herJ Itook her in my arms,! kissed Uiei softly as her mother might uave uone, - anu so meueu the stuboru air of dehance on her face. S!e burst in violent weeping her sobs'shaking her slender frame as she lay in my arms. I won her story in fragments, but it was enough to make me resolve to keep her'.. ' She was an Italian, stolen from home by the vidians who trafficked in children tnt train for street musi cjans. Uer life had been spent in New York streets, singing for pen nies, starved, beaten, lying in a -cellar with twenty other children eqnaly unfortunate. All this she had endured, but her pretty face had attracted the admiration 61 an old man a fruit vender and she had been told to marry him.-: Ig norant, untrained, a street waif, she hail a Woman's heart in her puny frame, and she refused. 'They beat me,'., she sobbed; 'tfc'ey starved me, but I would not marry him. Oh! I Abated him! He made me shad-lir, with hi9 great black eyes, i-nd long yellow teeth. Ue wae-iawolf, a monster! 1 ran away ! Three jays, three nights I ran. 1 btpered something to eat : but I Jxiit5Qiforo 1 ro fcack marry him. au-""" fe. 1 could not ild not release the hand he beidiTv tight clasp ; and I was becoiniugyairly bystericalln laugh, when, trom ee Francioe sprang pzing with fury. Oil had seen her r like this. Utter without the fear my effor pehmd a , oaf, her effort not tol a great t v eyes oi Poor little gii augry, but ueve ;ly undiscipliuei! i t nhonld be the aim to bave i omethii-a return for r'mJS, crazy ioois u y wholesome ellel ;he Selma il was considerate u at Mr out ol the stroko thatXs made and. for evet .iniur in vetted, even when ouiyy few htmse plants are cared for. expect to e! growtn anu ok renav for tucicare. r3 - I w A Giiaj appeal ance of which was w?t Snead's, cominj field and crossii road forty or fill those who iaw Boon filled with "attempt at pon- to no effect aa were more dispo I 1 irv r, the It-til r paces in . The field dog ar.d ki lit were made 4je various X of ill-treatment let her iealous i !anv restraiut ciyen cence might ha was but a stree to subdue her, she. . . t. 1 a?e burst inrougu womanly reti re su2gested. She t, waif, and the lan guage she babipally used was not retiaed ; l ut tnp torrent of abuse revealed possibilities, of a vulgar tousrue I had nlVer before imagin ed. -.. . J Upon both ir'Ws she poured forth her wrath, ae-ing us of deceitof treachery, let'iApsOier passionate love govern hrione moment, , when her appeals to Uenry"i,were.piufui ; the next instant) turning npon me with furious threats ai id reproach es ' N We were bath too bewildereu by on.i.ion oTiitfinnra VtO answer I ' . i- .... . I J jer. but I was recovenns possession, and wond; Atlanta, Ga has in its mu the p?rson of j taker's estaDt some time playing del custom toj shroud, lay have it re J a dead mal and they One day 1; tucky hor offered copse. bad the fri words T could calmJ suddenly shotry cline ot the b' could follow 4 the cvvifh fiirilr It was two dj was recovered,! below the bry slender savin J funeral, wceji unhappy life tragidally. Ileiry Bor'J rejected, took it Address. . ii A is 8 x year 0-'ug" wud Col lew, and GHirre. t Wlr, Ing Kobrfl ... I 1 . n.1, uo gic- Dread , and m-mhi and t ojght to b vtv Tlk Father in lleavt a, L gets lo give oi what Prebj leiian. Eeiil:aIl3:i . If i o:i ak tigut r c tow. fney will U-ll hate U-ing read to. CtUM from their ' t ly to auch rt nonotonas"diona robW J even the Arabian Nlibts ti hilf their charts. The bosband af- ter returning from a hard day woit, comes home to pa the eve iiing ajisotbed in his book, or Uuz ing over the fire, while ti.e wih uii-supa novel or knits in tiA leucc ll be could read to her o t. It rate Li e reading to him. thertJ would be rcramonity of thoughtJ luieicnang.i oi taea, and each du-1 cusioa as the jinion o; twomind. into any common channel Vinnn- j hiil to jirodoce. Ahd It is often thi same' when t lte circle is wider. .1 hive often known a large famlh to pass the 11""" between dini r J aad bed timeTSch one with Yf wtOK or rot k, alrat bLa breath t-caute turbjp, ' But it wa Dot al last cxntary ere year agoread WKis-Trill. 'I in oTire o tliriw lk alv Ik. HUUI.I i ays eo as I ate tm n l. vit .A gaIetl a an acotrpliLmta it wh.k, cc Mcnc'i:lT- far mo r -v j - riiectiy vs!irf lict;c
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1887, edition 1
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