Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / May 5, 1881, edition 1 / Page 1
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VV J2.0 SENTiN 7 GEO. M. MATHES, Proprietor. $1.50 per Tear in Advance Vol. XXV. WINSTON, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1881. Stj. 21. mm 3 cg GEO. M. MATHES, Editor. $1.50 . .75 .60 5 CASH IN baa copy, one year, . . " six mouth) .'; . three months, ADVANCE f SENTINEL JOB .OFFICE,. tsr-jaii termi, Ac. and examine sample. Dr. Prestoii-Koaiij OFFRS HIS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES "To the citizens of Winston and surround in? country. Office at his residence. Anymes Sage left at either Drug Store will receive prompt attention. Sale ani MieStaMe, I KEEP constantly on hand a large lot of Hone, and Male lor sal. or exchan" Farchasers wishing stock can always find wli" they want at mj Stable. ju6tf GONE AWAY. I wi'J not think ofjhe. aa cold and dead, Low-lying in the grave that I can aea. X would not stand -beeld. when life had fled And left thy body only, there for me. I never aaw thee with thy pale arm. crossed On that unhealing heart that was mine own, They-only told me all that 1 had lost When from thy breast thy lorely soul had flown. Thou w.rt not there f and so I turned away. And left the house when other mourners ijrtayed; ' Nor did I come on that unhappy day When In the '.chub that dreadful thing was laid' I V ' ; Jo me thou art net dead, but gone an hemr ' IntVaooth.t country; fail and Sweet, .Where thou sbalt by some undisooTered power ' Beiept in youth 4 beauty till we meel Thus I can feel that at any given day- . I could rejoin thee, gene awhile before Te foreign climes, to pass dull weeks away By wandering on the broad Atlantic shore ; Where each long wave ht break, upon the ' sand . . ' Bears thee a message f rem me waiting here, And every breath Spring breathea across the land Seems as a sign that thou art lingering near, So I will think of thee as living there. And I will keep thy grave in sweetest bloom Ae if thou gaveet a garden to my care Ere thou departed from our i.glish gloom. Then when my day is done, and I, too, die, 'Twill be as if I journeyed to thy side ; And when all quiet we together lie We shall not know that we have ever died. PBiflTICAL AMD DSALSB IH Monuments aid Tombstones, WINSTON, N.'C. for Price I-iat and May 9, 1878. r Write Ilesigns. t " Outfit furnished free, with full instrnc atrS I I Itioxts) for conducting the most proflta t JL vble business that any one can engage a in. Tbe business is se easy to learn; and our instructions are so simple and plain, that any one can make great profit, from th6 very start No one can fail who Is willing to work; Women re as successful as men. Boys and girls can earn large sums. Many have made at the business over one hundred dollars in a Single week. Nothing like it ever known before: All who engage are surprised at the ease and rapid! y with which they re able to make money. You can engage in this business during your spare time at great profit. Ton do not have to invest capital in it. We take all the risk. Those Who need read v money, should write to us at once. All furnished free; Addrees Thus A Co., Augusta, Maine. V. T. VOGLER, Practical jeweler Winston, N. C, Main Street, opposite Merchant's Hotel, tZETS CONSTANTLY ON HAND -1 a select assortment of Fine and Plated Jewelry, Of every kind. Repairing done and Work warranted. January 33. 1879. 6 tf r. xc jLvmmMTrw. m. ix.wxi.Mjr.- AVERETT & WlXSOKj BookseUers, Stationers, AND PRINTERS! DEALETS iS 7 DANVILLE, VIR&IKIA. ToUSnelS m- r ' ' '- 1. : ' Robert ft. Jolmstoii, -: FJBHIONABLK MERCHANT TAILO&, THE BRIBE ELECT. I really don't see, Kate, how u can reconcile u 10 juur cuu- science to put up with all his actions and whiins," said old Miss Thorne, with a troubled cluud on her usu ally rosy Atid serene face. ' Uut, Aunt eaelope, no lores me. lie has a queer way of snowing his love then, that'g all i" hare to ' And we are to be mamea next week;' added Kate Thorne, her cheeks flushing as she spoke. Then I hope marriage will work the miracle of a change in him. said Aunt Penelope, tartly. For to speak the honest truth, unless he does alter his way 1 don t sie much chance of 6olid happiness for you my ch'ld.' And Aunt Jreneiope added to the general uncomtortableness of mat ters by-shaking -her-wise-eld head, and only wishing Kate liad had tbe good sense to choose Lionel in stead of that other fellow.' ' lie isn't bo handsome and fsn cified, perhaps', added Aunt Pen elope. but as all I know, that beauty is only skin deep, and I do believe that if any man would make a good husband, Lionel Wilson will. Ileigho! I hope fate has got a nice wite in store tor mm somewhere I 'You had better marry him your elf, Aunt Peii!' said Kate mischi evously. . Marry mv grandson ?' quoth Aunt Penelope. 'I've lived fifty odd years without a husband, and I guess 1 can make out a tew more of 'em. But I can't help feeling sorry for Lionel all the same.' Well, Aunt 1 enelope, you know that 1 like him oh, ever so much?' 'Ah r said Aunt Penelope, but that is exactly what he don't want.' And Kate to avoid the coming discussion, stole up to her ovvn room; where the wedding wreath : Yes.' ; , , At once I' - , So Kate (Thorn, and Lionel Wilson were married, and the as sembled witnesses laughingly con-j. coming close to him and putting her littie plump hand to his shoul der, be good humored once again and put away all these disagreeable suspicions for 'Thanks, once more. Perhap9 t,ratnlatftd Rata nnrm the rfY.., I had better take my leay. since, Becr.t aha had nonrriw! to fca, f in addition to tyranny, I hare be- her reaj inton.. , v V come disagreeable. , Two j. v, W. nn. He rose, and Kate for once, fair- . OJlUtt . Thrtrnjl mmnann ' I've just returned o town, li said in a bustling and arrogant fart of, way, 4 and of course I came hero at once. Where U Kate4 V w Y . . The bride and groom haven't returned , yet,' said Aunt Pen- ly driven bevond he bounds of pa tience, did not oppose big depart ure. , . T She had let Harold depart -with out a word to restrain him. Mr. Grenfell's own meditations, tion. He liked to torment Kate, t wi,- k-m-a i. . . -.. - . . . r u 1 " hat bride i wliat groom 1 eiac it was a Bort or earnest of the i. j iT Jh IM1!8 Why,Lion;iand Kate.of course the arrow rankle. calm indifference on her. part de feated' all his intentions. And yet, impossible as it may seem to those of pleatanter and more se rene temperament, Harold fcrren j j - ' Married V echoed Hareld, in blank horror and dismay. i ' Exactly so,' said Aunt Pene lope, secretly exalting in his discom fiture. 'There were no cards, the - . , Tr , rn I .1 1 ULU1 c. a.uv;iv W w. w IIW uai US, IUO fell loved Kate Throne dearly and affair befog rathor 8adderj) butyou VlUITl But I'll will get a piece of wedding cake. tied with white ribbon, in due sea son, I don t doubt. And she complacently ehut the door in hie fa, leaving him to the reluctant conviction that he had lost his treasure, and all through ar- ragance. For the Fair Sex. find means to bring down her pride and teach her a lesson yet,' he thought vindicately. She Bhall not Gefy me in that cool off-hand 6ort ef a manner without repenting it.' And when three days at ter wards k;. own bi;nd gelt-conceit and he called to take Kate out for a drive, be was greatly incensed bj Lionel Wilson in the drawing room helping Dora, hia youngest sister-in-law that Was to be, wind worsted, while Kate sat by, evidently ' enjoying their conversation. He froze into haughty rigidity at once, but w.ate, provomngiy good humored, took notice of his cojl noes. Well, the day of the wedding came, and Jvate luorne, lite an other brides, looked bewitchingly pretty in her white dress and veil. with just enough color to make her cheeks look like blush ro&es. It was to be a home wedding, and the guests already. thronged the parlors of Aunt Penelope'6 spacious old- fashioned house. ' Kate ! Kate ! it is five minutes te twelve !' whispered Aunt Pen, putting her head into the boudoir, where bride and bridesmaids, like Parasols arc made to match toil ets. Corsage bouquets are again worn at the throat. White is to be the evening dress of the summer. the new Stockingette is among material for bodices. vjrentleinen's business hats are low-crowned Derby shapes. xsuttonless gloves hare the run of fashionable favor in Paris. - Wattean bottons, which are gemp, are the fancy of Parisians. Black continues to be the favor ite street dress of fashion'ablo Amer ican women. A crown of Koman .braids, with criinpod front hair, is a favorite rose and rosebuds on a 6tem, await- mode of evening coiffure. ed the stroke of the eventful hour, which, in this special case, happen ed to bo 12 o'clock ' Hasn't he come yet V By way of answer to the old lady s rather nervously put ques tion, a servent entered at that in stant with a" .note- ' For Mi6S Kato,' she said. And Kate tore it open with Square geld nets, bordered with A Cool Martyr. Ten minutes after the Flint & Pere Marquette train had palled out of the depot yesterday noon a young man with a grab-bag in his hand and a cigar. in his mouth saun tered in as it he had half an hour to spare. After walking up and down' for about five minutes he stopped at the ticket-window and asked . . "Ha the' Flint traiu gone yet t" ?' Yea, a qnarteB of an honr ago." The deuce 1 , Why, I was to-go- on that train I" . . "Well, you didn't.'! "That's so, and I'm placed in an embarrassing situation. I was to be married to a girl up the road to-night." No other train, I sup pose !" "JS o, sir." "And I can't pmt there ?" "Perhaps you could hire a loco motive." "Ah I perhaps I could. I'll fin ish my smoke and go and see about it." . . After the end ' of his cigar had been reduced until tbe fire xrarmcd his nose, the young man went up stairs and said to the superinten dent : . "Could you, ah, for about five or six dollars, ah, give me a locomo tive as far as Flint, ah t" "No, sir." , "Ah, yon can't ? Well, that's badish. I was to hare been mar Tied at six o'clock this evening. I might say seven dollars for a loco motive." "And you might say seven times that." "Couldn't do it ; 'pon honor 1 couldn't, though I'll go down and smoke another cigar and perhaps make voq another oner alter a time !" He lit another cigar and paced up and down and all at onco began hunting his pockets. He shortly pulled out a note book, and after running over the leaves he ap proached the ticket-seller and said : . "1 find that I am saved." "How?" "Here it is, iuat as I wrote it down last fall ! 'Miu : The s tid party of the first part which is me agrees to wed the said paty ot the 6ecord part which is Helen on the evening of April 4, 18SL, A Remarkable Year. floods, earthquakes ajto scn spots. aid. avum v gviu uu.vt wa v v-i-a nnu i ) ay 1 t r sevuins, are much worn at London provided, that blizzards, floods, theatres and dinner parties. The pal and rather dull shade of the lilac known by the name of the heliotronpe is still the great rage of the moment. The newest and most fashionable tints are heliotrope, lilac, biscuit, n j l l i z ji . . - . nuBneu cneeKs, as sue recognizu arm0nd, leather, auricula, copper,- the hand-writing ot Jtiaroid ureu- rayoii de lune and seaweed. leu on me superscription ' Mv dear Kate,' it read trttp'g crmsTiTtt o ftiwu a line ot fine imported -. Ckib, CaaimsrESt Yedia and Sutings. " A left practical eiperienee In tire art o f :UT tlNOf la New fork and iz this State jntl flea het kssertloa that I can give a perfect fit, and I gusr ftilte that all goods made op in my establishment - nve satisfaction. All work done on reasonable terms. My eatsfcUsbaient Is next door to Hat Betas M.S. roY, 4. W. FOY, and veil were already eliciting the admiring commeuts of the two dim pled young bridesmaids, Kate s youngest sisters. Harold lirentell was not in the iappie6t of humors that night when te came as usual to spend the even ing with his bride-elect. He crit icized Kate's diesB, her hair, the very twinkling ornaments she wore in her ears. And of course you are the best udge of your own affairs, Kath- riue, lie added, ivate especially disliked the "full name'' in which she was by baptism entitled. 'But 1 don t think it exactly the right thing tor yon -to be walking out with Lionel Wilson the very week before the wedding. Uear me, Harold r cried Kate, making doubled arches of her pret- ty penciled brows. '1 had to go out to get two more yards of white quilled ribbon for my sleeves, and as Lionel chanced to be walking in the same dnection, couldn't very Tim LrVERYTABLE WiAS-taiij 1ST. C, "if S.1F8? i Brb Yroprietors. briefly. ' since yon have studied my wishes so little during the past week, you can scarcely expect me to make a special point of your convenience. I have business that renders it de sirable for ran to leave town this morning to be absent two or three days. 1 am sorry to defeat your arrangements, but, perhaps, the salutary lesson may not be thrown away, and I have longMhought that yott needed time for reflection before entering, , on tho , eolemn ties of marriage. Yours very truly, ' H. Gkenfell.' Lionel Wilson, leaning against the carved marcle standards of the chimney place, watched the vary ing color on Katie's cheeks, as oho perused the billet. ' 'What is it, Kate!" he asked earnestly. ' ' e She handed him the noto -with a little Bnrtle. ' Your services will scarcely bo required as groomsman to-day," Bhe said. Read that.' He read it, the 6Carlet dj c ot an-. ger mounting to his cheek. will not The boudoir sacqne, with an pel sleeves, .and the bouboir dolman sacque have almost superseded tbe ordinary camisole for ordinary chamber tide. Petticoats worn with round skirt dresses are made very close-fitting, and trimmed at the bottom w.th two or three very full flounces, edged with lace or -open work. Cheering Words. broken bridges,' railroad delays, or other acts ot Providence permit. always make a' meirr, of these tlungB to tave misunderstandings missed the tram add that comes under the head ot raSroad delays. eh !" "I think so." ''And she has no grounds for breach of promise i "Can't see any." "Nor I. My conscience tells trie that 1 ought to oliyr about nine dollars tor a locomotive to run me up th'erej and it it is refused I'll go back, to the hotel and take things easy till to-morrow: Are you mar ried J" . ."Mo." . "Going to be!" "I I expect so" . "Make a mem, of it: and, give Providence plenty, of latitude tor delays 1 It's not only business, but WIT AND WISDOM. Victor Hugo: Whn lore ii dead there is no Ged. Sterne r In pnrsuit of rest, lnea often tire themselves. Koscoe Cb'nklihg : Many a genius a harp with only one string. ; Is Isaac d'Israeli c The failure of one uiah' is the opportunity of an other: " Lander': Censure roan pays to the pa eminent; ' the for tax a being Mew York H The country is just beginning to emerge from one of the most dis astrous flood periods on record, the losses occasioned by which would defy computation. This memora ble period set in on the 6th and 10th of February, caused by two great storm centres then passing from the Western Gulf coast north. Waidly, bearing enormous rqlumesl ua trypiuui. ttsuur, wmcu wu COD dented oyer the highest latitudes of the United States, and raising the temperatuie high enough to convert the winter accumulation' of snow into rushing torrents of water: The Signal Service Monthly Jte- vieWi just issued, shows the im mense ravages ot these floods. Tho rise ot the Umatilla and the Col umbia, in eastern Oregon, alon caused a destruction of property to' the amount of nve' hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars.- In Louisiana the overflow of Lake Podchartrain threw ten thousand people on the mercies ot New Or- eans, in the settled part ot which city probably 0,000 inhabitants were driven from their houses. The Ohio exceeded any height it has ever reached since tho great floods of 1847 and "the entire losses," it is reported, ''reached into millionsf 1 while the Lastera rivers emptying into the Atlantic have had their booms. . lo these floods we must add those West, and the Missouri is rising rapidlr be tween Deavenworth and Omaha, as the pracipitation of the last three montliB gave reason to expect and as was predicted by the Herald on March, 11. In the Old World floods and inundations have riot been wanting as the E-u'rofreatf de spatches for several days past show, The Guadalquivir, swollen by tor rential rains in the bieira Morena. is now deluging the Iberian Pen insula, its usually modest and slug gish stream having been suddenly converted into a rushing volume five miles broad above Seville: where aione me autnoriues aireaay great as when he cheerfully bows estimate the damage at over a mil- to the necessity of position, arid non aonars : ana u is prooanie inai makes the be6t of it. with the return of spring to Centr.d Adolph Ricard : A w6ttian antt ' her servant together can get the better of a dozen devil i: - La Rochefoucauld There is but one kind of love, but there are d thousand different copies of it. A man owes: his success in his life work to the weman who walks1 beside him: , . . . Alexandre Dumas f True love always" makes a man better, no' iiiatter.who the woman is who in spires it: ' ' John liuekin :' Nothing is ever done beautifully which is done in rivalsliip,- nor nobly, whichis done in pride; Archbishop Whatiey : Woman is like the reed which bends to every breeze, but breaks not in the tem pest. Mile, de Scuderi : Love is I do' not know what ; it comes from I a UlUSt . t , .i . ; J. T A.J . of the Platte, u the . . w . now, last but not least,- j Seneca : The geoodness ot gold! is tried by fire, the goodness of wo' men by gold, and the goodness ot men by women: George Elliott : Tliere's .a sort of human paste, that when it comes' hear the f?re of enthuYiasm is only baked into' a hard shape: Stick to one thing until it is donoi and done well. The man who chases two hares not only leaves one of them, but is pretty buic to. rose the other also: Lord Beaconsfield r There time In a man s life when he !io so Plutarch : To do an evil action id baser to do a good one without incurring dattiger i common ; but it is the part of a god man to tl great and noble deeds though he risks everything. Chas. Reado : Tke fortunate man' Europe many such catastrophes will occur; The most contemporaneous Oc currence ot the- earthquakes at Ischia in. March, at Chios recently, and at Zinte recently, seems to be more than a mere coincidence. The abnormal rainfalls reported is he who, born poor, or nobody, from our own continent and Etirof.c works gradually up to wealth and lor some time point te an extraor- consideration ; and, having gut dinary activity in the sitn at this them, dies before he finds they were season over the equatorial belt: re- hot worth so" much trouble: ?u""b . . vAv.co., rKv..i. u. Henrv Ueorce : Man is ah am its heated waters: ihe lfcoyal As- . w.,. h. i. .n ri.rw,i ni,,a- tronomical Society- in its latest re- gomthirig He is t!)e mythic port, issued last nlorlth, notices the LrtKvfJ. l-wQ t. In the " increased number ot sun spots ground bnt whoso topmost branch' rriay blossom m the heavems. Thackeray : A woiflan may bo' iovea lor tnree tr.ings : ior ner in- observed in the last year. evef this increased solar may p'oitgnd; it appears W hat- activity that we are entering a penoa 01. uunsuai precipitation, in which the netic and meteorological forces are .....UrfrAJn.r ir.ilrrd fhunrrna anA brief: .I0T the qualities Ol heart U exerting their influence witli great Uv lasting but inouotonous. ffect not only on the atmosphere Unmas fils : Why should a man but upon, the more fragile parts of 0f intelligence become attached to the earth's crust In the districts lm a woman ? For the same reason Prof. A.'R. Ledoux late Chemist you've got 'cm tight as a wedge; at the State Fertilizer Station in Chapel. Hill, but now a resident ot New York,- writes to the Raleigh Observer as follows : "1 cannot fell yon with what in- 1 1 . TVT . 1 ST I . torest A reau me xtorin varwium -ri,Q nir.;nr.ati n-, n,iri papers, nor how pleased i am wuu hfM pnhVlihed it8 aunnal report of the signs of prosperity m the State -o,,!,,,, in tbe WeBi for the a a fc . Mem. it right down in black and Wedge, and if they .talk sassy,- show 'em the door. Bye-bye, old fallow -Tsee you later." TXTE TAKE pleasure In informing our Y V .-friends and the public tbat we are prepared - te aeesaMnodate them with conveyance, of aU "tylea, at the ahortes notios. - We keep very nne toes of herees; and handsome vehicle. Charges i will always he moderate. Wealso have ample room and aooommodatlon for 4vren, aa fool a. can bo found elsewhere in the city.' "" ' 1 " -r 1 April Iflth, 187, ..... -7. .W-t' . well go on the other side of the street.- ' A bride-releet has no business witn the attention 01 any man ex cept him who is to be her husband.' Uear Harold, would you trans .1. X I iorm rne jufnie nusoana into a tyrannical, jailor? Would you viieh to show that you have neither Confidence nor trust in the woman you hav chosen for your wife V y m much obliged to yon, said iiaroia latterly, while a disagreea bio curve came to his liua. Per haps plain speaking is best "under all circumstances, but "it is not agreeable to hear that I am consid ered a tyrannical jailor.' Now, Harold,' coaxed Kate, a WW- . . . Jlate, he said, you marry this man now C where so recently 1 had thy home. This prosperity can more easily discern from my present position outside than when I was actually in North Carolina. Inquiries at out office are , becoming more aid more frequent for . advice as to Southern mines, water powers, tim bers, etc., and several parties have been quietly prospecting in your State at mv suggestion: One com- Never 1 she muttered in a con Pny one, having a paid hp capi- riilsive tone. ' Dear Kate, the guests have all arrived, the uiWister is here. 1 have the ring in my pocket. B married to--day, Kate, and let me be the bridegroom. I have loved tal of2,000,000, have seflt their nc-ent to consult me. and desire to-invest it all in mines North Carolina A young lady noi accustomed to novo iucu i , - - i. u:f: u,iv,u. yon long and more tenderly by half " -r1 P"w of hog, in this sunercil- "4 ' ;ywZi,S"7u T' son is regarded as considerably be- wicter year ending March 1, show ing for tho winter a total 6,916,456 hogs packed, being 30,995 less than the preceding winter. -The total for the twelve months is 12,243, 35-i, showing an increase of 1,241 655. The winter average : net weight is 207,71 pounds against 212,94 last year. The yield of lard is 95.65 pounds against 36.62 last winter, lpe reduction in number and weight during the winter is equivalent to' two hundred thous and hogs. The mess pork made daring the winter, 359,691 barrels, a reductiou ot 170,367. .Ihe re duction in the production of lard is 5,762,043. The prospect tor snp- s for the - summer sea- a score ot years, than this superci ous fop. Show him, Kate, that the euvenomed arrow tails short ot the mark. She looked with' eyes half glad, half sorrowful into his face. - ' 1 can trust you, Lionel' she mnrtnured. . -- , t Then yon will become my wife?' ceutlvi When the music ceased another friend approached her and said, gaily ''Well, I see yod got through all right." the reply, " bat it was a sSSt MATS ' OUVVaiVi " Yes," . Was tight A counterfeiter finds it impossible to make an honest peony at his pusi e63. " - - ' low last yeart up" to Jnno, 'bat be yond that time as not varying much troth last roar. . . sf : Illinois claims to hare tiiado half I the farming machinery made in tho United States last year 4527.727,- OTO worth. - . . tellect a love serious but rare ; for her Usatity a love vulgar and1 ble to Bciemic disturbances: Seis' mologists say that their observa tions point to the influence of cur rents of terrestial magnetism, vary ing witli solar changes, in produc ing earthquakes or determining the date ot thir occurrence. We may therefore, expect to hear ot more of these convulsions as the sun ad vances iuto the Northern Hemis phere. Lemons as a System Renovator. that Horace Vcrnet attached him self to the mast of a 6hip, that he might contemplate the tempest. Oliver Wendell Holmes i Don t you know how hard it is for some people to get out of a room after their visit is really overl One would thiuk they had been built in your parlor orstudy, and were wait- -ing to be launched.' Hawthdrne ': Thatfc" Providence for spring. Tho earth, and in ait ! himself by sympathy with his birth place, would be far other than we if life toiled wearily on-' The way to get the better of a Killirkiia stratum witlxint ti!11a nr I : r . . . J. ;;,:" - z ZY" " find lnm 4u,u.u .n tu M w juiuo i u, , uhot thii neriodical infu two or three lemons, as the appe- e- -m4ll -Wlt lite craves, in as ranch ice-water r e as mates il picasanc io annic wmi- tJariyie : l he man without a out sugarj betore going to bed. in purpose Is like a ship without a the morning on rising or at least rudder 1 a -waif, a nothing, s hw' halt an hour before breakfast, take man. Have a-DufDtae in life, if it the juice' of one lemon iu a goblet ;8 only to kill- and divide, and sell of water This will . clear the sys DXeu well, bfit hare a purpose ; tern of humors and bile With mild and having it, throw such strength emoacy, witnont any oi tne weas- ot mind and tanscle Into your enitig enects ot calomel or uongres works as Ood has given you. 1,1 the stomach by eating lemons clear: Richtef: Ah J it was not thd tliA vowrfnl !! f.f thfl tniftft. mere Lubberland of sweetmeats trli!rl-i l nlmnst; nnrrOqlrPr in fnllihlr and playthings which then, with its ni-ftdrirff intiaination aAsr n while, perspective, Btorms like a river of but properly diluted, so that it doe H"J chambers of our I jr . not draw ot burn the thr ft, it does ftsfnll medical work Without harm and when the stomach is clear ot food, has abundant epportanity to work on the system thoroughly. There are 1,000,000 more men than wojoeo Iu tbe United States. V hearts and which yet, in the moon light of memory, with Its dusky landscapes, melts our soql in sweet ness. Ah I this was it, that then for oar boundless wishes there were still bound loss hopes ; tnif now re elityis arouud us, and V wishe are all that we Liivu iU..
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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May 5, 1881, edition 1
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