Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / Sept. 16, 1880, edition 1 / Page 1
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-,- - - - ERN SENTINEL GEO. M. MATHES, Proprietor. $1.50 per Year in Advances Yol. XXIY. WINSTON, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1880. STo. 41. .Ijt m5t0n Sentinel. GEO. M. MATHES, Editor. CASH TN ADVANCE I On copy, one year, . . $1.50 " " six months, ....... .75 " " three months, 50 SENTINEL JOS 0FFI3E .HE MOST? eoSPLETE TN AVF.STKRN N. C. Call Eismine Tens, Samples. Etc. ""THE GASTON HOUSE, S. K. StKEETi BON Proprietary THE NATIONAL HOTEL. STATE HOUSE ?ftCAHE, RALEIGH, N. C, STEEET & SON, Owners and Proprietors. Dr. Preston Roan, OFFERS HIS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES To the citizens of Winston and surround ing: country. 5gp Office at his residence. Any mes Saue left at eitliar Drug ftore will receive prompt attention. Prac cal Marble orker, A-B DEALKK IX Monnis an J Toil)-tones, Wi-astoir, 27. C. jgg Write for Price List and Designs May 9th, 1373. W. T. VQGLER, PRACTICAL JEWELER i ; ton, N. C, Main Street, opposite Merchant's Hotel, K'CEPS COWSTANTLY ON HAND a sleet as. uueut of Fine :inl I'liileU J'ivlry, of every Wind. Repairing done and Work warranted. Jauuary 23. 1ST9. C if SALE AND LIVERY STABLE CUDTCIiriELDA; STI3D.SAS Successors to Beck & Moore, VVinston, 1ST . C, KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND, Carriag s, Phjetos, 13 uoijis and Houses for hire. We also buy and sell Horses and Buggies. Caaali paid for fed Jan. 23, 1879. 6 tf IJ.BSOWS J.B.VAUGHI! of Brown 'i WarelionEe. late of Vaughn & Prather FiEW HanUWAn!: SIUHh. We ber leave to announce to our friends and the public that we are now receiving: our stock of HARD IV A R C, and will he fully open in a few days. We solicit the patronage of all, and will be prepared to sell all goods in our line ns lew as can be bought elsewhere. Hoping to see and serve all our old friends and Cus'oniers. We remain, yours respectfully. : Disown & Vauoiin. JAMES D. PAT TO N, Importer, Wholesale Grocer AND . Commission Merchant, iotaooo Manufacturers' Snpp'ies A Specialty. No. 1307 Cary Street, Kid-momd, Va. P. 0. BOX lt3- - :0: LICORICE, SUGARS, - SYRUPS, GUMS, OlLt GLUCOS. GRAPE SGAR, TIN FOIL. GLYGEhlNE &C. ipti 16-6mi Written for the "8enUnel." IEGEID OS TIKI- DBVE.t SUB-B-pt. MUM. Suggested on reading Dr. Conway's article on the Seven Sleepers In Seribner for September 1880 : The story of these Sl-epers, seven, I mean in brief to tell ; Their name is known to every one. Their history not so well. When ecitiBr Emperor of Rome,, Vnahcjtlu-d the Pagan -wotd, And persecuted nnto doath The foHoTsers of our .ord. Seven aob.e youths, ot noble blood, Ephesiaus all by birth, Sought safety from tne tyrant's rage, In caverns of thf earth. But heathen maUce found them there And made its cruelty knownv By ordering the trauce way To be built up with stone Imiuediately thoRe favored youths iU into S' umbers deep. And near two centurus had passed Since nrst they fell asleep ; Wvei- ia tha onward march of time. These stones were clear-d away. And gvntly a'l tlaese sitx-pers woke To greet the light of day And thinking, they had. only slept An hour er two at beet, They sent Jambiicits secretly To buy food for the rest.. The youth, (if we may call him so,) Was much surprised; to view Ho v cban&Hl his native country was ; And how surprising too. To see a cross- hat sacred sign Krected o'er the gate Of tpbesns ! where, (as he thought J :ruel Uerius reigned in State Not less surprised tue citizens. Saw theold fahio-ed youth tib tlrcKSso q.-U4iut, anA absoleter UiH manners ho uucouth And when foe curreut coin he gave Some medals-oid an'i rare, They carried him before the judge. To tell his sto'v there. Their nftitual enquiries Soon made t'je truth appear No marvel that the woud'rous new Spread qmckly far and neir f Nor mat a wouder-loviug crowd Soon gathered 'round the cave The -.-ueror Theodo&ius, Audevbu binhops grave The Magiet rated of tplieeus, And al the people too, W ith breathless awe drew near the place The woud'rous youths to view. The Sleepers bfB. d them piouslyr VVith mil Kiidlrv.UiiK britUr Then peacefully without a sigh, 1 he Sfr.veu slept iu death, Si ION. Winston, N. C, Sept. 3d 1880. J For the Sentinel. A Trip to the Pacific Slope. BY KKV. J. B. LI NEB A CK. NO. 3. In letter No. 2 I noticed a mis take which I wish to correct. It read : "A recent letter Unformed rne that wheat if yet in its infancy," and it should have been a recent letter iiifoi aed ue that wheat was better this jear than lor several year? past, although wheat culture it et in liitaney. When I left home I had not ful'.y determined whetliar lo extend mv trip further than Mo , hut left it to circumstances. V inita is a small town in the Indian Territory, lying about thirty miles from the Mis souri line, ana is tlie present ter minus of the St. L. fe S. F. R. It., and also a station on the M. K. & S. Road, and distant lrom St. Louis about four hundred miles. While vet at home a pass on the former K. R. had been tendered me from St. Louis, W. Laclede Co., and retnrn, and when subsequently in conversation with sonio of the offi cials I ventured to ask an extension to the end of their line, it wa im mediately and cheerfully granted. So then, I tin -illy dee'ded to visit my brother-in-law, Rev. T. M. Rights, our Cherokee Missionary, also his associate, my friend Rev. J. Ilillman. The day before I started from home Ur. Sl.elton was at my house and when he hacie me "good--bye" he said: "The next time I eee yon, should yon visit the Indians, you'll have no scalp." But I was easy on that point as the red men are partial to long hair. Several weeks were spent in Mo. before going to the Territory, and -ar . in tins nme l had received an in- NEW LIVE RY STABLE, Winston, 1ST. C, IIEZfRl' S. FOY, Proprietor T Tt'Jl PLEASURE IN INFORMING JL my tends and the public that I am prepared "to accommodate them with conveyances of all atylea, at the shortest notice. I keep very fine stock of norsea, and handsome vehicles. Charges will always be mod-rate. I also have ampl room and accommodation for . droveis. aa goo i as an be found elsewhere iu the eity. April 10th, 1879. 18 tf holding with f-eep admiration there horses. Now I iticlim d? to : PRESCRIPTION FREE ) r fanhood and all disorders brought on by inrii r.eiion or excess. Ai" Urufrxixc hn the invre dieiitn. Adrirf-as, IK W. J tltHKI dc O., - .7 XTeat Mlxlli HtetrU t lncismaU, O. vitation from a Cumberland i'res byteii n minister is Webster Co., to visit him. I intended doing so. and arranged tw lUke 'lie train .11 a . . rvvuive nottrs earlier tuan my pre ens;agemeist with Uro. Kil.ts re- rpiired, and when about ready to board the cars at Lebanon, I fuund that my pass had been left at Mr. Blickensderfer's, so there dvsnoth- nis to he done but await Maste Charlie B's return with it and leave the following morning. With much regret l had to iorego my visit lo the Rev. gentleman's. Some little time before ve reached the Terri tory we CHtne upon the open prairie the realzHfion of many boyhood mysteries and it was a perfect treat to nic. No trees, not even a bush' was in sight, and nothing but green grass decked with' millions of gay flowers, could be seen as far as the eye could pierce. It was surpassingly grand, and evoked exclamations of delight from all present. With the 6ky above, it presented a vast col iseum, carpeted with Nature's best work. 1 had thought to find the prairie quite level, it was not so ; but gently rolling, which, if possi ble, enhanced the scene as there were light and shade, .While pe- ctnie involuntarily to my mind the encred declaration that "even Sol omon in all his glory was not ar rayed like one of them." Fifteen miles from "Vinita the np and down trains pass epch other, and as ours came to a stand I noticed a large, fine looking man get off the up train and board ours. I suspected him of being an official, and- per Imps inspecting. I dismissed all uneasiness and engaged with him in a very pleasant and interesting conversation. Imagine my feelings when in reaching town I was told that it wits Mr. Sanlcey, the gospel singer. He and Moody were on their way from a resting period in Texas, and the citizens prevailed npon them to spend the night and hold service, and in the mean tiiae Moody took a bngsry ride, ard Sankey a car ride. When I found thsy were there 1 songht an in terview with them, but the former had not returned, and the latter had laid down tor a nap. Of Moody I got only a eye in terview, ne is a wonderful specimen ofhuman flesh; not tall, but squarely built witli exceedingly broad shoul ders and a very short neck, and wears a full and heavy teard, while his coadjutor wears side whiskers. It was to be regretted that limited time demanded my departure be fore their service would begin. The eountry around the town is tolerably level, and the train from Kansas city can be seen while yet ten miles away. The head light seems stationary and very gradually growing, until, all at once, it rushes np to yoa before von are aware ot it. The R. R. through the Terri tory to Texas passes through the finest part ot the country, it is a perlect paradise. I landed at Muscogee, Creek Nation, at 5 p. m., where trier.d fiillman had promised to meet me, but he failt d, (the cause will come after awhile), at.d now I found myself in a pre dicament which 1 shall not 6oon forget and if possible not allow a repetition. The brethern, Rights and Hill man, promised in the event ot my coming, to convey me over laud back to Vinita to Muscogee, so I left my trnnk in Missouri and took just enongu money to delray the above expense with some little left, lor 1 considered it best to leave the balance in safe, haud.s ai d not carrj it over so ' much country for nothing. But now for my ad venture. Bro. Ilillman not being on hand, I foresaw supper, lodging, breakfast and thirty miles 6tage transportation to Sahlegnah before me with only 75 ets. in pocket. I don't succumb easily to small dif ficulties, and to great ones 1 show a determined front. So I marched to a hotel where a landlady presi d. d, and addressed her ns fDllowa : "My good madam, 1 am a stranger here and in somewhat a diletnia. A friend was to have mot me at tho the arrival of the train but failed, and may come in the morning. 1 have very little money with me, will yon care for me and wait till I can see him when I will borrow it and pay j'on or send it to yon ?" 'I am nearly a stranger myself," but who is our friend ?" "Rev. Mr. Ilillman, a Moravian preacher," I said, at the same time showing a letter ot general intro duction from the brethern R. & II. which they had sent me in advance, and just at this juncture several . gentlemen overhearing our conver sation arose and asked: "Are you a stranger and know the Moravian preachers?" "Yes, sir," I answered, 'oi e is an acqnainiance and the other a brother-in-law." "We'l," said one, "If that in so yon are all right, and Mrs. , you keep him and we'll risk it," Before retire ing for tjic night I hunted np the stage conductor and told him my story, and wished him to get me to B hleguah "on tl;k," till Bro. Hi lm tn could be seen. 'Certain ly," he said, "I know both the preachers and they are fine men, and you shall go over in the morn ing. credit the account as the wind was blowing very 6trong and the di ivier assured rae it was mild and not un HsnakThe road was perfectly smooth and the the distances , were made remarkably qnick which led me- to think their miles were shorter. We soon came to the Arkansas River, aud crossed in a ferry boat fust below its conflux with the Grand River. It wa low, butjtwo Indians and one white man worked the oars and yet we landed down 6tream on account of the current. Fort Gihson loomed up and . we 6oou entsred the village, whence after 4KeraI hours I-lsSjcrr another stage will gj over to Lahleguah. During the interval I took my letter of intndnetioa and looked up the residence of Major Lyons whose wife and sister-in-law are Moravi ans. I was graciously receive 1 by thera and treated to the best. They are grand-daughters of the old chief John Ross, and their mother, at present, Mrs. Nave, who was edu cated at our Academy iu Salem, is now Matron at the Indian Qrplnin Asylma. At this place I found that Indian boys love money as well as ours, and hesitate not to ask for it, one little fellow accosted me with "Uncle ! give me a 'nick,'" Poor little man ! lie little knew ot my experience the day before, or he would have collected in my bo half. Acquaintances increased nnttl I found myself surrounded, and as we were on the eve of sitting down to dinner, I recognized the well known voice of my delinquent friend, II. We met the first time since 1S70, when in Pennsylvania Now for his excuse, ho had intend ed coming to Muscogee at the set time, but his horse. Tob, being a Mustange and loving the prairie, as his natural domain, had several days previous given him the 6lip, kicked up his heels as much as to si.y: now for a i aee, and left. Bro. II. had spent a whole day in trying to catch 1x1 in. but only after using strategy succeeding, and just at the time he was due at Muscogee. "But, never m:nd, we are glad- to meet, and we'll get these good In dian sisters to help us bnry the t 'tnahawk, and pretty soon start for the house." In my next you will accompany us in Bro. II 'a two horse buggy further into the heart of the Indian Territory. TFor the SE.vnsSL. From the Land of Flowers. Tallahassee, Fia., Sept, 1st, 1SS0. Dear Sentinel : A great many times since my sojourn litre, I have thought that perhaps you would like a few lines from this "Lund of Flowere," I was about to write, b"t there are other distinctive terms, t qnally as d:6criptive and fully as applicable as the word flowers. A friend ot mine says : "Florida was made of the 6c.raps left from building the rest of the world, con- Finished, but by no means con taining a tittle ol everything tound lwefe or twenty feet to depths nnkaown. Frequently these 6inks are from sixty to a hundred feet deep with a small poo (op as the natives, call it "Spring") of clear fresh water always in the bottom, neither in creasing or decreasing in quantity but furnishing always a supply of pure water to those who have bnilt and live in the vicinity. Gibes of these sinks occur among immense limestone boulders, and leave fath omless pools ot water absolutely wonderful in their transparency. The whole conntry coataina lakes after lakes, in whatever direction yon may go. Some ot them have remained from the time they were first known without any percept able change. Others have been known to suddenly loose all their their water except a small surface right over the sink through which it evidently disappeared, and to which no bottom could be found. Then after a time the waters have as suddenly reappeared and the lake returned to its former condi tion. In one point these lakes arc all alike they all abound in qnan tites ot the finest fish, principally trout and brem. One remarkable feature in so level a country as this, is the num ber of caves that exists. A friend gave me a few days ago, a descrip tion of one recently discovered, and explored by him as far as it was practicable to do eo without a boat. It is situated in the pine woods, where the land stretches away for miles in every direction as level as a barn floor, and covered with pines growing in the white sand. At the point -There the cave exists, there is a svmctricat basin- shaped sink, having in its centre an opening or hole, over grown with bushes. At one side of this basin is an opening among some limestone rock, through which a person can with difficulty descend on an incline which opens or leads into a circular cave or chamber immediately n ider the outside de pression, and with the hole above mentioned, in the centre of its roof. On one side of this chamber ia an opening in the side wall opening into a larger chamber, the floor of which is covered with water to a depth that he was unable to deter miuewith a long pole that he carried. Having no boat, tins chamber could not be explored, but by put ting some dry trash upon a board, igniting it, and pushing it out on the water as far a the ple would reach, he could see that the cham ber was a long one. He drank of the water of this subteranean lake, and found it cool and sweet. But it I undertake to tell you of even a tithe of the wonders of this wonderful country, I should bo im posing upon your time and patience, and having to stop, having but lit tle more than began, I had as well stop here. Tallahassee is a finished town. odors to be lonnd iu Nature's store house. The flowers of the Orange, Magnolia, Cape Jessimine and thousands ot the smaller growths, mingle their perfumes together, and every breath of air comes laden with their sweets. TIuj sens of 6inell is not let alone to feast itself at Nature's expense. Every kind of bird fills the air with their music, and the eye is gladdened which ever way it may turn, with- gorge ous sights of flowers of every beau tiful kind. But it will talse a far more gifted pen than I control to do jnstiee to this subject, and I will stop now, promising to write again in the future. J. P. U. Old ami New School. Not many years ago a certain minister who had been a caampion of Old School doctrine died, and lm peoplo were looking about for his successor. They had been thoroughly indoctrinated, and the one idea that their pastor had striven to impress upon their minds was, that they mast never tolerate io their pulpit any other than this Old School doctrine. While the candidating was going on, one of the older members of the Ciiuteb ucet osas who hid joined it more recently, and fell into conversation with him about the comiug man. Here is what the stenogtapher heard : New Member. Have you any body inparticular ic view for the pastorship ? Old Member. Not vet. Only one thing is settled ; he must be an Oid School man. N. M. So I suppose. Let's nee 1 I don't think 1 understand this distinction yet, very well. Precisely wha i the dill-rence between the Old School and the New School ? O. M. Don't you know that: Why, the Old School doctiine of the A tonement is that all men that Christ died that . Well I don't reeall that tli moment; but i i regaid to Election, the Old School aay that the decrees I slept soundly, and after - eating breakfast, called for my bill. '-Six bits," she replied. "Excuse me, madam," I answered "but I am not aware what a "bit" Is." "Your bill is seventy-five cents, sir," was her reply, and it was quite reason able when compared with prices that I will tell yon of in some of my subsequent letters. The early morning found ns rolling over tlm boundless prairie, and. here again I realized one of my boyhood ... ideas, (viz:) the possibility of prairie fires exceeding the speed ot the swiftest elsewhere, but not enough of any thing to be of much value. Truly there seems to be a wonderful amount of truth in this saying. There has been Gold, Sil ver, Iron, Petroleum ; all these things found here, but in such in significant quantities that they are of no value To quote from the friend above quoted from : "They even have a small volcano here, so so small that they would have it nowhere else, so it was cent with the other t craps to Florida." But with all tfe other thir.gs they have like other people, I bt lievothey have soine things unlike anything found in other localities, There arc several rivers in the State that flow right out of the ground from one spring or opening, and with suffi cient volume and depth of water to be navigable tor a good sized river steamer. There is one navigable stream that I know of (the St. Maiks River) that flows along through the pine woods, and sud denly runs into the ground and dissappears, until a few hti'idred yards farther on it as suddenly re- appears and flows on to the Gulf. There is one river called the Lost River, that disappears in the ground and does not appear again any where. Several years ago a man was drowned in it, and his body wsis subsequently found floating in the Gulf of Mexico. There are iu this section of the State thousands of "Sinks," as they are called, where portions ot the ground, varying in area from one fourth of an aero to two or three erc8, have sunk or dropped down, to a depth varying from nftcen How long it has bten finished would perhaps be impossible tor the oldest inhabitant to tell. Evi dently it has been finished long enough to need rebuilding, and were the people to do their part as well as Nature has done hers, it would be one of the beautiful places ot Earth. The town is situated in a rolling country, as much so as the country around Raleigh, N. C though but a couple ot miles south ot ns com mences the level pine lands that stretch away to the Gulf, about twenty miles distant . The close proximity of the Gulf, and the in tervening level country, give us an almost continuous gulf breeze that makes it very pleasant during the hot summer moi ths, and keeps the thermomertcr down to an endura ble tern pert ure. It rarely goes over 9fi here, and many summers does not go so high, but the summers are so long, last ing, you may say, about five months. Yet there are but few, if ati3', nights during that the year, that the gulf breeze does not make it cool and pleasant, eo that one can sleep well at t.ight and get np in the morning refreshed. I have not yet seen hero one ot those oppresively warm nights, that so often prevent on j frcm sleeping in North Cart Una, Take it all together there are many desirable feaiuris about this country, and to say the least of it, it is aa 013- wife said during a visit here : "A delightful country to it visit." - From April to Jnne tha air is j literally loaded' with the Bwcotest that foiekuowledge that God's eternal purpose what h that distinction"? Bat no matter. I suppose the main difference is about Natural and Moral ability. The Oid School say that a man can't lepent utiles that is, if the Aeto School idea is lh.-it Il'ml I dou't get that either just now ; tint anyhow wev'e got to htve an Old School man ! This man, it will be seen, was "fixed" in hisO!d School "princi ples,'" and doubliess most ot bis) bietiirtu in the Church were 119 solid as ho was in their adhesion to thesa principles. It wiil aston ish nobody therefore to know that their choice finally fell upon a I The Osprey The osprey feeds exclusively oa fish, being the oulf eagle that con fines itself to such mild diet, al ways choosing his eyrie with ref erence to such prey ; though it ia, rumored that wast sometimes'com pels him to touch other flesh, at the best a rare departure from' nsnal habw iu so- good a fisher. He catches his silvery food by sweeping along the surface of the water, being able to discover it from a great height, when he- de--scenda Bheer aa a bolt, not headloo? like the solan, but feet foremost, seizing the lacklesn fish with his powerful talons, the lower snrface of which is roughly scal ed to prevent its escape. He prefers to build on the summit cf a high rock, headland or castle wall,eitber by the sea shore or in a loc'- close to good fishing ground, lie is frequently obliged, however, to nestle on a tree, doing eo always on its very head, and, therefore,, generally selecting a fir with a flat top, on which his great nest may lie, in order to command a free, outlook f jr observation and safety, dear to a creature so shy. Scorning all protection from wind and wea'her, hovever fierce and inclement, the hardy biid sita calmly with beak to the rudest blast and under the heaviest del uge. Singularly inoffensive and mild in disposition, he attacks no other bird or beast, though he i as brave as the fiercest of the fal cons, not fearing the heaviest odds. Indeed, the osprey wouid seem to be a kind of Guimar amoog the birds, big, etroug, mild, and daunt less as Nj..ils son, with a like de votion to duty which is as beauti ful as it is interesting. Gooct Words. very New School man.- 4a0le; Good Company- Editor's Cuinesk Treatment of Aximals. They never punish; hence a inulo . that, in the hands of a foreigner, would ! about CO per cent of Water of crys Ick Without Fbeezisg. A new skating surface, called "crystal ice," has beeu invented by Dr. C-tlautarients, of Scarborough, Englacd. Considering that after all ice is merely a crystalline sub stance, and that there is no lack of substances that are crystalline at ordinary temperature, Dr. Calan tarieuts experimented with a va riety of salts, and after a tiaio succeeded in making a mixture consisting mainly of carbonate and sulphate of coda, which, when laid as a floor by his plan,cau be ska ted ou with ordinary heel skates; the resistance of the surface is juat equal to that of ice, it looks like ice, aiid. indeed when it has been skated on, and got "cot up" a little the deception i quite astonishing ; a small experimental floor has been laid iu the skating riuk at Piiucoa' aud has proved so successful that no doubt a large floor will bo laid there cr at some other conven ient plaee ia the autumu. This floor will obviously have great advantaged, both oyer artificial ice floors, which are very expensive iudeed, mid over floors for 1 oiler skating. The surface can at any time be made smooth agaiu by steaming with un apparatus for tha purpose, and tho floor itself, when once laid, will last for many year. The mixture of salt3 used contains be not only useless, but dangerous to every one about it, becomes, in the possession of a Chinaman, as quiet as a l;iinl aud as tracfcibie as a dog. Te never beheld a runaway, a jibing or a vicious mule or pony in a Chinaman's employment; but found the same rat tling, cheerful pace maintained over heavy or light roads by means of a tur-r or clucc-k, the beast turning to the right or left, and stopping with but a hint from the reius. This treat ment is extended to all the animals they press into their service. Often have I admired the tact exhibited iu getting a largo drove of sheep through narrow, crowded streets, and always bv merely having a little boy to lead one talhzatioii, so that after all tho floor consists chiefly of solidified water. Scientific A mericun. A mothi sent her small boy in- to the country, and after a week of anxioty has received this letter; "I g t here all light and I forgot to write before; it is a very nice place to have fun. A fuller and I wont out iu a boat and the boat tipped over and a man got me out aid I was so full of water I didn't know nothin'for a good long while. The other boy has got to be buried after they find hira. His mother come from Chelsea aud she cries all 1 ho time. A boss kicked me nvi'r and I have got to have pome, mo ley to pay a d"Ctr f r fixiu' nieieiv iiLiViii a. nine wov t-u leivt uuv i . r . . - , my head. We are goiqg to set an of the quietest of the flock m front l(j harn on ur0 to -idht, and I. the others steadily followed, without should smile if we dou't have bully the aid either from a yelping cur or a cruel goad, Uravcte in Jfauetit 2hr lary. Fair-Weatiier Rkijgion. Mr. Spurgcon has a kind of wit which ia sometimes as sharp as an arro.y. He says that everv one ia willing to find anjexeuse for staying away from pub lic worship As for instance, brother A. thought it looked like rain an 1 con cluded to remain at home. On Thurs day evening, however, though it was pouring, he hired a carriage and took his whole family to bear Agassiz, at the Academy, lecture ou the "Intelligence of the Lobster.'- It is always easy to find reasons fur not doing what you don't want to do. fun. I lost my watch and I am very sm ly. 1 shall bring homo soma mud turtles audi shall bing lion e a tame woodchuck if I cau get 'eta in ray trunk." What proofs the "ties" ol earth are of tho certainly of He uvea and of the soul's immortality. How, tuns, earth proves Heaven; ancl man's mortal existence demon strates his immortal. The head truly enligbted will presently have a wonderful influ ence iu purifying the heart; and the bait really affected with good, ness, will much morn conduce t C tbe directing al tle head. y rat I tf n Si !n p 1 Ml SI 1 It' 11 J EH it"; - i 4U Hi- Hi) t" if i 41 i h ft Hit ft a a I
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Sept. 16, 1880, edition 1
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