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T a. r i H: SENTINEL. GEO. M. MATHES, Proprietor. $1.50 per Year in Advance- Vol. XXIV. WINSTON, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1880. E"o. 31, GEO. M. MATHES, Editor. CASH IN ADVANCE I Oaa copj, wa Jar, " air months, -.' . . three months, . . . . Curiosities of Omnivorous Mankind. 1.50 .50 CIHTXNEL JOS OFFICE THI MOST COMPLETE IN WESTERN N. C. Call Eiamine TermsSamples. Etc." "THE GASTON HOUSE, 8. B. STREET fc SOK Froprietora. THE NATIONAL HOTEL. ITATI BOVJSK S4I7ABI, RALEIGH, IX. C , STREET. 4 805, Ownan and Proprkton. .1 ; Dr. Preston Roan, 1 J OFFEBS HIS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES Tbo the citieens of Winston and surround-in-r country. Kf Office nt his residence. Any mes sre left at either Drug Store will receive prompt attention. X.JCT. URIIAI, Pxactieal Marble' Worker, AND DEA.LEB IN Moments ani Toili-Sloiies, Winston, "N. C. Write for Price List and Designs. May 9th, 1378. W. T. VOGLEB, iPEAvCTICAL JEWELER . Winston, N. C, Main Street, opposite Merchant' H'.4e KEPS CONSTANTLY OX HAND aaiect HMttnnt of Fine nnl Plated Jewelry, flf arery kind. Kcpairing done and Work warranted. Jauuj 33, 1S79. tf SALE AND LIVERY STABLE! CRCTCnriELD4 STEDJIAS Saoceuors to Beck k Moore, Winston, 2T . O., KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND, Carbiao s, Photos, B uoois and Hobsbs for hire. We also buy and sell Horses and Busrfries. C'uk puid imr 1V4. Jan. 23, 1879, tf T X.SfiO?S J.B.VATJGHB .. af BwwVs WaxaioSa. lata of Yaagna & Prathar , NEY HARDWARE STORE. tVa bee leave to announce to our friends ,. and the public that we are now receiving our stock or ' II A R. ft W A It 17. ' mA ilfU h. ..II. nnn In a few davs.l nOlthem ' We solicit the patronage of all, and will J consisting of L-be prepared to sen ail goons i uur uw minute as tow as can pe oangin ciwuhcic ' ,i Hopiujr to see . and serve all ottf old r friends and customers. . , We remain, yours respectfully, ; , v ' Brown & Vaughn JAMES D. PAT TON, iEBOrter, lislesale Grocer Cotnfnissioil ISO, rf&USH MattafactoreH' Sadies A SpWait- ! No " rior Cary Street, ? -. . - if: ! , .. , BIMmM, Vat., : :voU .: ift-r- . , tlCORICE, SUGARS, SYRUPS. OUMS, .--, ' OIL. GLUCOS, " CRAPE SUGAR-,- ' TIN FOIL,- CUOtUHC SU , - o fc! IIEW LTVTERY STABLE, USTfRT . FOIT, Profrrielor "i'Sii- JL (rinids and tha pnblfoithit I un prepared MMinwMiii. Ihm wlt& nmnuiii m all tjrlea.at the ahorteat otk. toep ery -fim tack ef baraca, and bandaoma Thicle. Char ' . ' I also bava amplt room and aeeomnkbdaUoa tvt i i."; i ra-raa, aeswajaa :a be found alaewbere la tbe . ... , ..i it ..,. r,... 1 -PEEE! Manbaadandalldlaordera brought on by tinlia nUMirCM. A" Drntgiiit baa tbe tngre- . There are nnmeroiu we had al most said numberless curiosities in connection with eating and drinking, even although our obser vations are restricted to the human familj. If our natural teeth are examined at maturity, they are found to point out their possessor as omoivorous, aud if they did otherwise, we should in the face of tbe following facts, regard them as false indicators, or, in other words, false teeth. Beef aud bread are tbe typical foods in tbe British Isles, but nowhere else ; almost every country has its own typical foods, together with miscellaneous articles of food of all descriptions. Dug' flesh, cats, monkeys, birds' cetU' are all savor; morsels ot the Chi nese. The hedgehog is regarded as a "dainty dish ta set before a king" in Baibary, and in largely coudumed iu Spain aod Germany. Kangaroos are relished by the aborigines of Aus'ralia. The opos sum is eaten in America, Australia abd the Indian Ltlauds. Tbe wal rus is eaten by tbe Esquimaux, whilst whale's flesh is e&teu almost by all who inhabit regioos far nottb or south, where whales are found. Mice and rats are consid ered delicate morsels in parts of Asia, Africa, Australia and New Zealand. Horse flesh is gradually findiug favor, aud has for a long time Joimed quite the staple flesh food of the ludiac horsemon of tbe Pampas, who eat neither bread, fruit nor vegetables. The elephant is eaten in Abyssiuia aud iu Suma tra. Three elephants were eaten by the Parisians during the seige, aud were considered delicious, tbe liver more especially ao. Dr. Liv ingstone says ho breakfasted lt cooked elepbant'd foot, aud found it a whitish mass, slightly gelatin ous and sweet, like marrow, and quite delicious. Tbe buds' nests we have spoken of as being con sumed by tbe Chinese are procura ble eveu in some London shops. They arc the nests of swallows found in cavorns on the sea-shore of the Eastern Aichipelago, aud are of a gelatinous nature, from a peculiar ruucu? which the bird se cretes and discharges from its mouth whilst buitdiug the nest. Lizzards are partaken of by the Cbiueee; so are suakes. Spiders are relished by tbe Uusbmen, so are grasshoppers. . L custa are eaten, both in the fie6U state aud salted, by Persiaus, Egyptians, Arabians, Bnsbmen and North American Iudiaus. White ants, beet, miths,caterpillers and grub?, all find admirers, especially among the lower savages. We have not eot to tbe lowest depths yet. Earth eating i practiced by the Japanese who make it into thin cakes called lanaarnno, and eaten especially by the women, who take it to produce slender ness of figure. It is gener ally an auctions ciay, consisting oi tbe remains of animal and plant life deposited from fiesh water. Id Europe a bread-meal, the empty shea ol infusorial animalcules, is eaten. The Wanyamwezi, a tnoe living in Cmtral Africa, eat clay between meals, preferring tbe clay ant-hills. ' S'ime earth-eaters take eanh having no' nutrient properties. The Agmaia Indians, for example, eat a gritty whittrsli clay, destitute of all nutrient prop erties. I topical America is tue seene of endemic disorders from tuis depraved dirt-eating habit. Of. hcers who have Indian children in tbeir employ nse wire masks to keep them from, putting, clay into their months, - t" A negro addicted to this propensity is considered to be irrevocably lost for any ueefal purpose and seldom uyes long. Tbe quantity ot lood taken is also a matter of curiosity when we nave well authenticated - instances of the extremes of goiDg along time without food at all, in eatiug next to none, aud the other extreme of eating enormous quantities.- In Si beria, Sir George Simpson procur ed a couple of men having a repu talion for era-frog largd quantities, and prepared a drttner for them o tuirty-six pounds avoirdupois o beef and eighteen pouods of butter tor"eacb; By the ed of tbe first hour their f tomacbs were like ket tle drums, haviDg taken half i the dim e ; in another two bonrs they bad devoured the whole . dinner of ono IroBdred and eight - pounds P beef and batter Those' who: eat so enormously , are in., a state o stuoor for '. three or .four davs neither , eatiorj nor , drmkiDg, jand rolled aoont with a vier to promo ting digestion. Barrow says' the Hottentots eat eQormooly some times: "Ten of oar 'Hottentots ate a midd'ing-sized ox, all bat the two hind legs, iu three days.'' Andagaiu: "Three Bosjesmans had a sheep given to them about five iu the evening, which they partook of all through the oi lit without ceas ing tor sleep, and finished by noon the next day." On the other baud, in Shetland, a number of the pau pers getting le. and Is. 6d. a week out door relief,manage to live upon it year in and out, though food is just ad dear as in any other part of Scotland, sundry cups of tea and a half penny biscuit constituting a day's eating on many days, for they have fuel to buy ont of their money in cases where they cannot fetch the peats in from the hills themselves. No doubt we pass over edible things through ignorance of their properties. Thus, oranges are mostly legarded as things not to le despised: however.ahout thirty five years ago a vessel was wreck ed at tbe Shetland Isles, and amongst the cargo were large pack ages of oranges. Ooe of these was picked up by a peasant, who in a day or two placed his treasure at the disposal of the laird. "I've browt ye some bonny baws for tbe bairus, laird,' said the peasant. "They are oranges, Magoie, why don't you and your wife keep them for yourselves? "Why, ye see, laird," said the man'I tbowt they'd be bouuy baws for tbe bairns to play wi', 'deed, as for eatin'. why we've tried 'em all ways, an' they're bad boiled, tbev're warr rostit, but they'ie the deeval raw." Land lid ater. An Open Letter. rnoM HON. R. F, ARMFIELD TO IIIS CONSTITUENT. No man ever conquered the world by pining for its riches, honors, or amusements ; neither can one overcome it by talking against it, or by groaning beneath the burdens, affliction, and disap pointments which are inseparable from the earthly life. But this is "tlira vifinr tliar rnrrrrf!iTrvr lv thf world even our faith' the faith by which God is made our trust and heaven our treasure. With such a faith one can be happy whether he be rich or poor. When Wilberfbrce stw his wealth melt like 6ttOW in spring he did not tor ture his soul wii.li useles regrets but turning his eye? away from his wrecked estate, said, "I know net why my' lifer is epured so long, except it be to show that a man can be as happy without a fortune as with one." Ho was able to make this sublime exhibition, be cause in loosing his worldly sub stance he etilr retained his- c'hief treasu're, which vas laid up in heaven and was daily foretasted in his spiritual fellowship with the living Jesus. Happy Wilberfbrce f And happy, too, is every man who constantly prays with St. Augus tine; "Lord let my soul flee from the scorcning thoughts of the world, under the conert of Thy wings that being' refreshed by the moder ation- of Thy shadow, she nvay sing merrily.- In it I will lay n?e down and rest Make Rtforri for Others.- The- more a man sees of the world, and the more he . mingles ; with others, tire smaller space he is inclined ' to claim for-himself among his feflows. He . sees that, n the p-fl-shins struggle of life, other pei pie's rights irrnst be con sidered, and he must not take more ground than just enough to stand on.- This is1 very marked in all crowds,- and in all public places and conveyances The man or woman who is best versed in society makes smaller detrfands and occupies least space, JLhe persons who take more room than betorrffs to tlremr are "tttose who have been 'least in company,-least accustomed to adapt themselves to the needs ot those about them. It you want' to be thought well-bred,- traveled,- cosmopolitan, keep in your elbows in a crowd, and sit close in a street-car - If you want to be thought boorish and unculti vated, and. to be recognized - as one who was never much id good com a . '.a panyf pusu-Dotn sides ot - you, as well as-in front and ;rearf m a crowd," and spread' yon rselt out in a car, or in a public hall." "It is by sttclv indications - as these -lhat we see that'the .demands oL Christian regards For the" rights and feelings ot others secure the best results ot good-breeding. Standard of the Cross. lelloio Citizens of the Seventh Con gressional District of Horth Carolina: On my return from Washington I find and unnsnal amount of con troversy and excitement in the Democratic party, about the con gressional nomination. Several of the counties, it is said, have held their conventions, and instructed' their delegates unfavorably to my nomination, and I hear innny muc in ura and complaints ot uie means by which these - results have been brought about. It has been the nniform custom of the party id this, and all the districts of the State, when a man has been elected tor one term, to endorse his conduct and his De mocracy, by nominating him a second time unless he has been guilty of some dereliction of duty, or made some mistake, likely to bring reproach upon the party, or injury to the public service. I am not aware that any such dereliction or mistake has been or is likely to belaid to my charge. .While it would not be candid in mo to deny that I should feel as keenly as any man in the district the reproach of being made the first exception to this immemorial usage a usage pleaded by my immediate predocess or, and allowed to bim without dispute j'et I desire to say, what many of yon know, that I did not 6eek my former nomination by any unmanly art6 ; by the tricks" ot the demagogue ; by descending to per sonal solicitation ; nor would I now purchase, a re-nominition at such a price ; for I believe, with Lord Macau'ay, that, "The man who yields his suffrage to solicitation, is as much bribed as it he sold it for a five pound note ;" and I will add that the man who wins it by solicitation is as corrupt politically, as if he paid for it with a five pound note. During the 6pring of 1878, when my friends were proposing my name for the nomination, I was careful never, on any occasion, to attend or communicate with any convention ot a county or town ships though frequently in the towns whore they wre being held, attending, as usual, to the practice of my profession ; for I knew that ti any man 6houId approach me, eittrer as a voter or a mcmoer ot a political convention, to 6olieit me to support him for omce, I should teel that he had insulted me by under rating my intelligence, my integ rity, rd the independence of my fnagement and I wanted to treat all my tellow citizens with the same respewt and consideration that 1 would require from others. And further, during the spring circuit of 1878, 1 uniformly refused, though solicited to make political speeches, at my conrts, as I had been in the habit of doing on every circuit since 1S65 ; left I might appear to take advantage of the sitting member, who was compelled to b i Washington attending to his-official duties. Ifavrng won a nomination and an election from such a people,- ah-d by such honor able means,- I; have a right and expect to be prottd of it as long a6 Iiiveyard to leave it as- a rich legaey ot IroTror to my children. I do not claim my fellow citizens, that yon owe me re nomination. have alwavs held that a party owe? frothing to the individfral brtt that the individual, if a patriot, owb6 everything to the party that embodies and carries ont h prin ciples. My name shall never, with my corrscnt.'fctand m the way ol the triumph of the" Democratic principles. I ho man who, upon the eve of a great national struggle like the one now impending,- which will shake the continent, and repair or neroetnate the wrongs ot tne say ot me, that I am not what 1 have always professed to bo, a Democrat from principle. Let yonr convention fairly ex press the will of the people ; for they alone have the right to say who shall lead them. Let nothing he done by manipulating, nothing yielded to solicitation or to personal ambition ; and I assnre you that in whatever position you shall assign me I shall cheerfully, and to the utmost of my ability, 6haro with you the toils ot the battle, and the joys of victory or -the , sorrows of defeat. , Your grcatfnl fellow cii'zen, 11. F. Armfielp. No True Work Ever Wasted. No true work since the world be gan was ever wasted ; no true life since the world bf gan has ever fail ed. Oh, understand those two per. verted words, failure and sucsess, and measure them by the eternal, not by the earthly standard. What the world ha3 regarded as the bit terest failure has often been in the sight of heaven the niostmagnficent success. When the cap painted with devils, was placed on the brow of John liuss, and he sunk dj'ing amid embers of the flame was that a failure' W lien l'rancis Xavier did, cold and lonely on the bleak and desolate shore of a heath' en land was that a failure? When the frail, worn body of the apostle of the Gentiles was dragged by a hook form the arena and the white 6and scattered over the crimson life- blood of the victim whom the dense ampitlieatre despised as some 1 1 T ooscure ano nameless dew was that a failure? And when, after thirtv, obscure, toilsome unrecorded years iu the shop of ihe village carpenter, One came forth to be pre-eminently tiie man of sorrows, to wander from city to city in homeless labors, and? to expire in lonely agony upon the shameful cross was that a failure? Nay. my brethren, it was the death of IliiTi who lied that we might foliow His footsteps it was the life it was the death or the Son of God, F. W. Farrur- Of no of of Platform. The National Convention at Cin cinnati adopted the following plat form : The Democrats of the United States, in convention assembled, declare First. We pledge ourselves anew to the constitutional doctrines and traditions of the Democratic party as illustrated by the teaching and example of a long Hue of - Demo cratic statesmen and patriots, aud embodied in the platform of the last National Convention of the party. Second. Opposicion to centrali zaticnism and to that dangerous spirit ot encroachment which tends to consolidate the powers ot all the departments in one, and thus to create, whatever be the form government, as real despotism ; sumptuary laws; separation Church and State for the good each ; common schools fostered and protected. Third. Home rule honest mon ey the strict maintenance of the public faith consisting of gold and silver and paper, convertable into coin on demand ; the strict, main tenance of the public faith, State and national, and a tarriff for reve nue only. Fourth. The subordination of the military to- the civil power, and a general and thorough reform ot the civil service. Fifth. The right to free ballot is the right preservative of all rights, and must and slmll be maintained hr every part of the United States-. Sixth. The existing administra tion is the representative of con spiracy ouly, and its claim of right to surroui.d the ballot-boxes with froops- and deputy marshals to in-" fjinidate and obstruct the electors, and the unprecedented use of the veto to maintain its corrupt and despotic power, insults the people and imperils their institutions. Seventh, The great fraud of IS76 -77, by which, upon a false count of the electoral votes of two States, the candidate defeated at the polls was dochued to be President,- ai.d for the first tin-re in American his tory the will of the people was set aside under a threat of military violence, struck a deadly blow at our system of representative gov ernment. The Democratic party to preserve the country from the horrors of a civil war, submitted for the time, in firm and patriotic faith that the people wowld punish this- crime rn l&SO. This issue preceeds and dwarfs every other. It imposes a ure sacred duty upon the Dcoule of the Union than ever addressed the conscience of a nation of freemen, Eighth. Wc exta-raftf fhc course ot thi? administration in makii g places in the civil service a reward Jor pv-l'tifcar crime and demand a reform1 by statute which shall irvake it forever impossible for tho de feated candidate to bribe his way to the seat ot a usurper by billet ing villains uporr the people. Ninth. Tire resolution of Samuel and" Congress, country upon the honesty thrift of a Dferuocratro which' has reduced tho public ex penditures $0,000,000 a year ; upon the continuation of prosperi ty at home and the national honor abroad,- and,- above all, upon the" promise of such a change in the administration of tho Government as shall insure us genuine and last-, ing reform in every department of the public Ecrvite.- T. L. Hargrove. From the Oxford papers we learn of a most outrageous attack upon the good people of Granville by T. L. Hargrove, iu a speech de livered in the Courthouse at Oij ford on the 19th. Hargrove is a miserable Radical of the most vio lent type, but why he should go out of his way to insult the decent peo ple of his own county we are at a loss to know. We are glad, how ever, to know tht his false and villiaDons charges do not meet the approbation of even the better class of colored men and that tb-ey coti de can his speech in unmeasured terms. lie e'u'rsed every Denioe'ra; in- the county, u."ing epithets that no gen tlee&enr would permit to fall from his lips in a ptrblic speech, and isaid that be was- ready to lead a legimeut of neoes sgatust ihe whites arid slay ihem all. It there tutta-t aat V i t A e r- t, 1 t i Ail rll CS UClDUl nunc uinu wi . ' oa u l . , . i North Onolina who will endorse! J- lllcn noc a' u rr. ii ..i.o itf a a date tor the exalted -place to which the man who can make such a speech is loit fo all sense of justice and decency. The meanest negro in all the laud ought to feel him self contaminated to have this man enter his bouse. We decry personal! ies in poli ties, but when such a man as Taz. Hargrove defames and slanders our best people it is the duty of tbe press aud the people to speak out in terms that cannot be misunder stood, Durkam Tobacco Plant.- A Terrfprans Lecturer. The following item1 farken froTa- X rn-frCh injured1 South, aud give to the whole country peace, fraternity aird a comyletlv restored union, or perpetuate the reign of hate, dis cord and consolrdation-the man, I sav, who at sncir a time as this, could place his personal promotion in competition wit h the success ot hrs party, is as. the soldier who, while his comrades are struggling tcr life and victory, lays down his gun to fill his knnp-sack with the plunder of the slam. If my name is in tho way of Democratic success in this great 6trnggle, take it down, and if I murmur, or lag behind, or do not hunt as long and well as a private iu the ranks,' with a musket in ; my- liands, as when - I was mounted and wore a sword, then Y, Observer is a temperance lecture in kself and from' k we would do well to take lessons in North Carolina : '-The i inhabitants of Edward county', Illinois, do not support anti temperance socie ties or temperance lecturers, or spend their time talking about temperance. They decided twenty-five years ago that no liquor should be sold in the county,, and since that date they have sent but one person to the penitentiary, and he committed a crime while drunk with wbiskev procured m another nonntv, Thev sunDort two or three paupers, and their jail is empty roost of the time. Their taxes arc 32 per cent, lower than the adjoining counties aud their terms of court occupy three days in the year, while their tax rolls show that they return more property than any other county in tbe State of equal population. It is said that the inhabi tants are. unanimously . opposed to liVpntf nnrlor anv circumstance." A ho was elected by a majority ot bio countrymen, and irom which lie was excluded by the leaders ot the Republican psrry, is received by tire Democrats ot the United States with sensibility, and they declare their confidence in his wisdom, patriotism and integrity, unshaken by tho assaults of a common enemy, and they further ape we him that he is followed futo1 the retirement he has chosen for himself by the sympathy and respect of his fel-lo-wcitizens, who regard him as one who, by elevating the stand ards ot public morality a?rd adorn ing and purifying tho public service, merit's the lasting gratitude of his country and his party. Tenth. Free ships and a lfyi'ng chance for American commerce on t! e seas and on the land. No dis crimination in fovor ol transporta tion lines, corporations or monopo lies. Eleventh. Amendment of the Burlinsame treaty. No more Chi nese immigration except for travel, education and foreign commerce, and therein carefully guarded. Twelfth. Public money and pith lie credit for public purposes Bolcly, and public land for acttral settlers Thirteenth. The Uemocratic party is the friend of labor and the laboring man, and pledges itself to nrotect him alike against the cor morants and tho commune. Fifteenth. Wc congratulate the Candidate for Vice-President. William II. English was born in? Scott county, Indiana, August 22, 1822; was educated at Hauover College J studied law, and was ad mitted to the bar in 1846, but de voted most of his time to polities and agriculture. The fir6t offico Mr. English ever filled Avas that of clerk to the Jlonse of Representa tives of Indiana, in the year 1843, being at that time just twenty-ono years of age. In 1844 Mr. English came to Washington and accepted a clerkship in the Treasury Oc -partment, which he resigned in 1S48. In 1850 Mr. English was- elected secretary of the Constitu tional Convention of Indiana, and discharged the duties of that cilice to the entire satisfaction of his partv and to ihe credit ot himself, and to tho honor of his State, In the first Legislature which assembled under the present Con stitution viz: 1851 he was elec ted Speaker, thus establishing his popularity iu Indiana in his youth. He was then successively elected to the Thirty-third, Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth Con gresses, in all of which ho took a, prominent and leading pait. lio was the author of what was known as the "Fwiglish bill" (tho Kansas and Nebraika Compromise bill), which attracted so much attention during the mcmorablo years ot 1854, 1S56, 1858 and 1SG0. Mr. English espoused the cause ot tho Democracy in his yothy and has been a consistent and faithful Dem ocrat all his life. In polities, as iu business, ho is watchful, energetic, persistent and successful,- never iu his lite having failed to secure a nomination which he sought, and" never in his life having failed of air .election after being nominated. He belongs to the old school of De--moc-racy, and is as firm and interpid in his faith and devotion to tho Democratic principles as the rocks of Gibraltar. During the few years whfch ho voluutaiilv retired from political life (via,, iS61 to 187G), he devoted t xciusively to business, aud during this time he amassed u large for tune. For several years he Was presi dent of ihe First National Bank of ludiana,und through his mauage m? ut it became tho leading bank of Indiana, aud was reputed as ono of the strongest aud most reliable banks iu the West, But Mr. Eng lish did not put into Government bonds and stocks his entire fortune, Iot so;- be-was proud of his city aud St aud during that time built some two hundred dwelling bouses in ludianapolis.thus adding wealth to tbe State and to hii city, At tne preseut time he ii engaged iu cresting a fine opera-bouse, which will be an ornament to tho city and will remain ma.uy years as i mnuu:ent to the liDcitsiity oi us builder. Mr. English' was, fow day' since appointed a member of the Demo ciatic State Central Commit'.ee of ndiana, thus showing the g-reat coBfid nee of his party at home m his ability to manage and control s afiairs in the comiBg campaign. He has the eutire conaJeuce ot tliote who know him most intimat ly, and his nomination for the sec ond office iu this Republic will streug'hen the confidence cf tho bu.-iness men of the West, yes, me a Tf - . ! . entire country, in ino jjemocrauu party, and lie will thereioro aua many thousand votes to our graua old party in this, the year ot our jubilee. . , uriwt rr On March 4, losi, vvnuamii. F.nolLsh will bocomo Vice-iresi- dentof these Uuited States, and no more honorable, uptight, honest and dignified gentleman ever ha occupied that position than he, aud when his leim shall nave expireu, be will leave the office as he has all others he has held with honor and credit to hinv elf, aud with the plaudits of bis countrymen "Well done, good an J fai hful sei vant." . . i t t t r " Seventy -nine deaths from fun 6troke in ono day in New York tells a fearful talc of heat and suffering. I C'i jfi" i-!" ir. 3', V. 4 Or' ft; I i k 8- m i. 1' ft. ft ft 1
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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July 8, 1880, edition 1
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