Newspapers / The Reidsville Times (Reidsville, … / The Reidsville Times (Reidsville, … / Aug. 17, 1888, edition 1 / Page 1
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tevotect 'to the Advancement of Reiclsville anil the State at Large, nv t ' 0 I 7. I -fr-1 io- rA. 5h in VOL. XIII. J 4 REI DS VILLE, N. 0., FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 188?. IEDH0NT AIR-LIBJ ROUTE! 1C11M0NI DAN V ILLS lUlLUQAD. jjpSED'EClIEDp'LB IN EFFECT Ill N HV 7j. MERIDIAN 1IME. SOUTHBOUND. Ill DR. TALMAGE. 11 SHE , iinrkLVNf,Diyiifrs sun DAY SERMON : " " Subject: "U Orthodoxy Stale and t'h- reasonable? Preached at the Chautauqua, (X. V.) Assembly ; ttrtteHgious Educators. DAILY. ,are' vw i orlf, ..jveltnitini'.r I- i.. ... e fJU:'. tU-SVillo, ,ve L'nlilurg a"B nii iiiii'Mi'i, ave ',iir'K''vill', ... K..V .VII1P, .- I'r.'iUH slJranch av( luuivii'e, . .1 .Vf! ' l'ISliOI (, Ave llfil'iKn, . . . rrive ' impel mil, mvo ttitiMioro, ri !S;;loin, mvc nigh iointw .Salisbury, Ktatesville A she ville, Hot Springs, ?i vi) Concord, - avo Charlotte, avo Spartanburg,, wii Greenville, - me ywmnta. . ; I No. 50 j V 3) 9 45 8 :P.M. 5 50 44 3 10 " s n ? 6 37 " fi 12 44 8 50 " 10 41 " .1 50 " 0 52 s 15 7 No. 52. 4")r.M. 0 57 U 42 " 11 00 " r, oo A.M. 5 20 " ,.yj 1 23 5-05 5 21 " " X 05 tM U 43 41 T TopTC a u7 rnvi' TlVC iT ik 12 :;7A.TU. I 2JA.M. J 28 ,ri -ii 43 4 i"2o r. m. 10 a; " 31 PM. as . 01 00 S4 4S t() 4') . NORTHBOUND DAILY. iv Atl.'intn, riv-t;ii'Ti vil!v nvi' Nnn lanl urg, fivc ( li.'irlolta, rivv ( 'nilfonl, riv! Saliftoury, rive Il'tfli Point, rio;ri'nslHro, live jlillsloro. rive Idirhnnv" nvf Cliiipi'l Hill, . n rive lililliiT', nvi- );iv illi-, VnvcMilsi'l;rM!)rl Irivf U'l'NKvUV, friv( Hnrkcville, i rivf it pr ti;rn Tivo ,yiii'lilnira. I I Vf r'li;ii otlcsville nvH lV;isiinton, . iiv- Miila.Iflpliia. tiv New V(,l k. -ilaily. ToT p. M. 1 01 A. M. 2 115 " 0 4 1 " 7 57 " 8 28. ' 11 40 " 12 M V 12 45 . 15 a ro 4 :5 n. M. 7 M. lo 10 A.JSI. 12 41 P. M. 1 00 , V. 140 " 45 . 1 J5 8 40 8 23 "J U 25 .. 3 00 a: m. 0 20 44 No. 5.'. K 4 A. 2.1(1', :t 40 0 25 7 25 ' 11 .) 10 " I2-M A.il. 2 41 A. M- tl 05; 1 1 45 1 1 20 pr m: 2 41 A.M. 3 0:5 3 55 015 2 00 ,4'- 4 10 '; ' 8 10 , 10 0:; . 12 351 n 20 M Tpaily, except Sunday SLEEPING CAR SERVICE. 1 rams Ml rik! 51. 1'u Union IJuITet t iH'tween Atlanta and New York. I I rams 52 and 53. Pullman Buffet '(XT lKtvvcen VV aslnncrton and Mont- acrv, W a8hinctn, and 1 Aueusta. a'ull n Mueper botweim Richmond and Greens- m, Pullman Mconcr lKtween (ireonsboro llaloieh. Pitllnian Parlor Car Ixjtwt-cn I'l-bury and Knoxvillo. UirDiigli tickets on sale at principle stations nil itoints. Nir. fares ami information nnnir tn nnv . - . I K J ' J m oi t ne L-onipany, or to fil,. HAAS, JAS. L. TAYLOR, J rumf Manager. (ron'l I'ass. Agt. . A. 1 UllK, J. E5. t'UMK, Div. Pass. Agt. Dir. Pass. Agt.! Raletab.N. C. ' Richmond Ya ATE FEAT AND YADKIN VALLEY RAILWAY COMPANY. t ONUENSED IbCIlEDUI.E NO. 3.; m ciT(H-t 5 00. a! ni Momlay, June 11, '88 THA1NS M0VINO NOHTIt. I No. 1. Freight & I j Pass & Mail. Accoru. ''('" :vil!y...-.J 0:00am 1:15pm f -l.ix nil 7:05 44 S: 0 44 MiiMnii.;....v-j..-.7:15- " , " :S5' " r r.m'ti,.ille...,- 9:(.K) ". 7:15 " I'n.Hi.vilU. ):15 10:00am r'Wnrd'. 11-15 44 1:40 pm H-nii.,r,K 11:27 44 2:iXt " ' l!iv iishuro ; 2;o0pm 7:25 ," irn'ii;oio. 3:00 pm 10:15jam iMtAiy.... 7:15pm ft:15pm N". 1 linnr t GreenslKu-o. TP.AIXS MOVING SOUTH. Mt. Airy... r Ore tislioro l',iMlinio. '.M'nnl... s nfor.i r'J av.-rt villo; filM'lt.'Vi k t Ma-.,n Maxtiin . ... V1.I(. No. 2. (Freisht & Pass & Mail. Accom. 5:00 pm . :10:15 a m :23 41 -5:40 pm 10:05 a ni 7:4.') am 'l::pm 2.00 p in 1:.V 44 2::) 4:00 5:50 V 4:15 " 5:25 a m 0:15 " 0:50 " 0:25 44 10:15 " 7::;0 44 12.15 pm Ni - lirrnkfast at CI rmanton. 2 flintier at Sanford. - ' -'nU P.UANUU. FP.EIGUT AND ACfty.M0DATI0N. . TRAINS MOVING NORTH. I I f 1 1 V-:: .... 7::am .... 9K 44 IS MCVIVO SOUTH. V( MO I'liiet'on . . .'J S.:0pm 4:-0 44 5:15 44 Kr.i, ni iiiiav. .rav,.tt Trains Urn d-jily x Accommodation Train runs eville to IU nii' tts-vill- and re- III n. . . M ,JlM H,-a H'.v.l...-. 1 ,, Vn.Iovc- in... L ' "' "ille toCreensUiroou TucsoavS Ill l,A, I' "W'Ul Mil, ItllU IIV.II .1 CVI 1,1 rav.'tt... ;n.. r i n-.i..- ''Ttvi'r' lilavs; from (ireonsboro t Mt ''1 fr.'.n, "'Jlays, Thursilaysand Saturdays, on Mon ui r :l 'J o lireonsDoro Tra,,,, and Fridays. n,Mr v,; r '( tory P.ranch run daily except W. E. KYLE, Gen'l Passenger Agent The Mn.l hodv in the The a Parisian liiver had Ml, 'attoocd r dude was cine a few dvs dressed in aod round jiia heart these words: "2'out ntnit)-"M for Jeanne VoUUjr fenow waa r "vll 'fi ll j...o uvcu siiiiju up ueiwcvu 'wlllll'll . -J. 1 t tl,c f uie ''rt,!it St 15eroard me iswis Ai..a i .. . . ta.. ! !" iluu me valley nelow, C'etH ifarfl .' . , , m uscetm- ine pass. If a aptiear ivitfTn a iiriier tiina ' tt-ai to J .4IJ m-itfl the.u. Text: "Ask f& the old paths, where i the pood way, an I walk therein, and ye shall find rent for your mils.- Jeraniah'Ti, id , A great London tog haft come down Upon eom9 of the minister and some of the churches in the fthape of what is called "ad vanced thought" in Biblical intBrpretatlorti AH of them, and without any exception-, rleny the full inspiration ot the Bible. Oeneg's is an allegory.-and there are many ,hiytbs ia the BiLlo, and they philosophize hnd Rnesa and reason and evolute until they land in - a great . continent of mud, from which, I fear, for all eternity they will not be able to extricate themselves. . The Bible is not only divinely inspired, but it h divinely protected In its present shape. You could as easily, without detection, take from the writings of Shakespeare Hamlet, and institute in place thereof Alexander Smith's drama, as at any time during th8 last fifteen hundred years, a man could have made any important change in the Bible without immediate detection. -If there had been an element of Weakness of of de ception, or of, disintegration, the Bonk would long ago ' have fallen to pieces. If there had been one loose i rick or i racked casein nt in this castellated truth. bu rely the bombardment of eight centuries t)Lild have discovered and broken through that iinp-rfectioa. . The fact that the Bible" Stands intact, notwithstanding all the furi ous a$auu3 on ail sites upon it, id proof to nw t hat it in a miracle, and -every miracle is of Oo;U . "But," says some one, "whila we adm't tl.o Bible is of Cod, it has not been under stood until our time." My answer is, that if the lijblo be a letter from God, our Father.to mun, Jiis chiM, is. it not strange that that letter should have teen written in such a wav that it should allow seventy genera tions to pass away and be buried before the letter could lo understood f That would be a very bright rather who should Write a It-tter fnr the guidance and intelligence of His children not understandable until a thousand years after thev Were buried and forgotten ! AVbile as the years roll on other beauties and excellencies: will unfold from the Script ures, that the Bible is such a dead failure that all the Christian scholars for 1N00 years were deceived in regard to vast reaches of its m.aning, is a demand upon my credulity so great that if I found myself at all dispo.ed to yield to it I should tomorrow morning apply at some , insane asylum as unfit to go alone. Who make up this precious" group of ad vanced thinkers to whom God has made eS- Jecial revelation in our time of that which le trie I to make known thousands of years ago and failed to make intelligible? Are they fto distinguished for u n world liness, piety and scholarship that it is to be expected that they would have been cuosen to nx up tne detec tive work of Moses and Isaiah and Paul and Christ? Is it all possible? I won der on what mountains these mod ern esegetes were transfigured? I wonder what star pointed down to t heir birth- pla' of Was it tin North Star, or the Even ing Star, or the Dipper! As they came through, and descended to our World did Mars blush or Saturn lose one of its rings? w hen I find these modern wiseacres attempting to improve Upon the work of th Almighty and to interlard it with their wisdom and to sug gest prophetic and apostolic errata, I am filled with a. disgust insufferable. Advanced thought, which proposes to tell the Lord what He ought to have said thousands of years ago, and would have said if He had been as wise as His nmetenth cen'ury rit:cs! All this conies cf living away back in the eteruities instead of 1S88. I have two wonders in regard to those men. 1 he lir.t is how the Lord got along without them before they were born. The second woniler is how the Lord will get along with out them after .they are dead. 4,But," say some, "do you really think the Scriptures are inspired throughout?1' Ye, either as history or as guidance. Gibbon and Jophus and Pnscott record in their histories a exeat many things they did not approve of. "W hen George Bancroft puts upon his brilliant his torical page the account of an Indian massa cre, docs he approve of that massacre? There are scores of things in the Hible which neither God nor inspired men sanctioned. Either as history or cs guidance the entire Bible was inspired of God. ." -Put," says some one, 4,don't you think that" the copyists might have made mistakes in transferring the divine words from one maims ript o another?" Yes, no doubt there were such mistakes: but they no more affect the meaning of the Scriptures than the mis- . K - , A I 1.1 1 spelling or a worn or ine ungrammawcai structure of "a sentence in a last will and testament affect the validfty or the meaning of tiiat will. All the mistakes made by the copyists in the Scriptures do not amount to any more importance than the difference be tween votir snellinsr in a document the word forty, forty or fourty. This book is the last will an i testament of God to our lost world, and it hoiueaths everything in the richt waV. although human hands may have damaged the grammar or made unjustifiable interpo lation. .-.These men who pride, themselves m our day on boine advanced thinkers in Biblical interpretation will all of them end in athe ism f they livelong enough, and I declare here to-day they are doing more in the differ ent denomination? of Christians,and through out the world, for damaging Christianity nml hindering the cause of the world's Jat'eTn'nt tnan five thousan I Robert IngersoMs coul I do. That nr in who stands biside a castle is far riore dangerous if ho can le an enemy than flo thousand enemies out side the castle. Robert G. Ingersoll assails the castle from the outside. These men who . . . . ,., , n ii pivten l to IM advaneeu tuiniicrs inmi im trnorti:natinns art firhtin the truth from the in-rido and trvincr to shove ladk the U)1ts and swinsr ooen the eatcs. Now, I am in favor of the greater freedom of relicious thought an 1 di5Cussion. I would have as much liberty for heterodoxy as for ortholoxy. If I should chine my theoru-s of religion I should preach them out and oat but not in the builiini whera I ant oecus t.mi vl nreii'h f.r ttaifc wis era X.e I by n mle who bolijve in au entire Bb!e, an I it would be dishonest for nietonromu'gitjsjn timnt different from thos for which that budding was put-up. When we enter any dnoniinaUon as ministers of religion we take a solemn vow that we will preach tlie senti of that Wijo Tiia;ition If we change ur theories, as wj have a right to change them, then there is a world several thousand ;i. in i:n4imfnncD. and 'ere are hun- .ic nf hill ami hun dred nca;lo.mies of m io.' vhre wecan ventilate our sentimimts. I remunber that in all our cities in time .rni;...! arritjttinn there are tho P.epubii- rn hwidmartersand the Pen-ratic heid- ciuarters. Supoose I should go into one of these headquarters pretending to be in sym pathy with their work, at the sanaa time electioneering for the opposite party. I wonht soon tind that th9 centrifugal Jorce was greater than the centripetal! a man enters a leno-ninatioa of Christians, taking a solemn oath, as we all do. that we will promulgate the theories of that denom ination, and then the man shall proclaim some other .theory, he hasbrokea his oath, and he is; an out-and-out perjurer, j ew theHs. 4 de-lare for largest liberty in re HTious'dius.ion. I wouUl f th At'emnt to rear a monument to Thom iVtne io terferth than I wouM have in lilEJl ZltJS lifting of tdimon ument to Washington- .Largb, iJZl the lxl v, largest liberty for the mmd,largt liberty for tho souL J-trr of Now, 1 want to show yon, as a matter of aivocacv for what I beUeve to " the splendors of orthodoxy. Many have up pcltbat i-s discipei are peop J skulls, an I no reiding, and behin. I the age. and ih, victims of gubibi itjv. I ha show 3-ou f 'thnt , - w ni ; orthMoiy 'stanV, f for " the - jrtvt-c- P,fn!i0 9JH.d) ot heaven. Behold tb.J eplealort Of k a?h,ieyemeiti. Ail the missidnaries of the ospel the world round are men who ba le ve in an entire Bible. Call tin roll of all the missionariei who are to day enduring sacrifice in the ends off the earth for the cause of religion and the world' bttermentj and th4y ail believe id an entire Bible-. Jus, as soon as a missionary Wins to doubt whether there ever was a Garden of Eden, or whether there is any tmch thmz as future punishment, he comes right home from Beyrout or .Madras, and goes into the insurance busmeu! All the missionary societies this day are officered by Orthodox men, and are suppdrted by urthodox ehurche : : . . ; i f IrthrHoiVi beirinrtiri? With tH Raridwicrh Inlands, has capture"! vast regidns Jf bar Ijarism foT civilization, while hefcerddxy has to capture the first square inch. Blatant for many years in Great Britain and the United States, add strutting about Witli a peacock! ah braggadocio it has yet to capture tne tirst continent, . tne nrst state. . the first township, the first Ward, the first space of ground as big as you could cover with the small end of a sharp pin. Ninety-nine out of every hundred of the Protestant churches of America were bulls by people who believed in an entire "Bible. The pul pit now may p: each v some otuer ; Lro$pot, but it is a hetero lox gun on an orthodox carriaga The foundations of all the churL-hes that are of - very great use in this world today were laid' - by . men who be lieve 1 the Bible from lid to lid, and if I cannot take it in that way I will not take It at rjl; just as if I received a k-ttef that pretended to come from a friend, and part of it was his and part some body else's, and tlie other part somebody else's, and it was a sort of literary mongrel ism, and I would throw the garbled sheets into tho waste basket. - No church of very great influence to-day but was built by those who believed in an entire Bible. Neither will a church last long built on a part of the Bible. You Dave noticed. I suppose, that as soon as a man begins . to give up the Bible he is apt to preach in ' some hall, and he has an audience wbilo he lives, and when he dies the church dies. If I thought that my church in Brooklyn was bnilt on a quarter of a Bib'e. or a half a Bible, or three-quarters of a Bible, or ninety-nine one hundredths of ft Bibp3. I would expect it to die when I die; but. wh?n I know it is built on the entire Word cf God. I know it will last two hundred years after ydu and I Bleep the last s eeP. Ob. the splendors of an brtho doxv. Wh:ch. with ten thousand hands and tn thousand pulpits and ten thousand Chris tian c-nurcnes, is trying to save tn9 wonai In Music Hall, Boston, for many years stood Theodore Parker battling orthodoxy, giving it. as fome suppose I at tuat time, its death wound. Ho was the most fascinat ing man I ever heard or ever expected to hear. an I I cami out from hearing him think ing in my boyhood way: "Well, thats the ceith o the church." On that satna street and net far from being opposite.- stool Pari Congregational Church, c illed by its enemiet "Hell-tire Corner. ' Theodore Parker diod and his church d:el with mm; or, it it is in existence,- it is so small you cannot s e it with the nake I eye. Pari - Congrega'ional Church sti 1 stands on "Hell-tire Corner," tUunderin' away the mig lifi jcnt truths of this g'orious ortholoxy just as thiugli TbfX d'ra I'arker hid never lived. AM that Bos ton, or Brooklyn, or New Yrork, or trn world ever got that is worth having Cime through the wile ftnu?duct ot orthodoxy from the thr. nc of Ood. Behold the solen lors of character b nlfc up by orthodoxy. Wh hid the great?st human intellect the world ever knew? Paul. In physic-.! stature, insignificant; in mind, head and shoulders above all the giurtts of the age. Orthodox from sca'p to hed. Who was the greatest po-t tne ages ever saw.acknowieugea to be so bocii vy mniieis ana i,nris tians? John Milton, seeing more without eyes than anybody else ever saw with eyes. Orthodox from scalp tohei. w no was tne greatest reformer the world his ever seen? so acknowledge 1 by infidels as wll as by Chris tians. Martin Luther. Orthoiox trom sc.up to heel. Then look at the certitudes. O man, be lieving in au entire Bible, where did you come from! Answer: 44I descended from a perfect parentage in Paradise, and Jehoyah breathed into my nostrils tho breath of life. I am a son of God." O man,believing in a nait- and half Bible, believing in a Bible in spot, where did you come from? Answer: Xt 13 all uncertain; in my ancestral line away back there was an orang-outant and a tadpole and a polywog, and it took millions of years to get me evoiuceo. ' un man, oeneving m a Bible in spots, where are you going to when you quit this world? Answer: '-Going into a great to le, so on into the preaLsome where, and then I shall pass through on to the great iny where, and I shall probably arrive in the nowhere." That is where I . thought yon would fetch up. O man, Dellaving in an entire Bible, and believing with all your heart, where are you going to wnen leave this world? Answer: "1 am goiug to mv Father's house: I am eoinsr into the companionship of my loved ones who have crone before: lam eoine to leave an my sins, and I am going to be with God and like (ioJ forever and forever." Oh, the glorious certitudes o.f orthodoxy! " . Bjhold the splendors oi ortnoaoxy m its announcements of two destinies. - Palace and penitentiary. .falaca wicn gates on all sides through which all miy ; enter and live on celestial luxuries world without end, and all for the knocking and the asking. A palace grander than if ail tno Alhambras and the Versailles and trie vt ina- sor Castles and the Winter Gardens and the imperial abodes of all earth were heaved up into one architectural glory. At tho other end of the universe a penitentiary where men who want their sins can nave tnem. omu it lie fair that vou and I should have our choice of Christ and the palace, and other men 1 denied their choice .or sin ana eternal degradation? Palace and penitentiary. The first of no use unless you have tbe last. Brooklyn and New orK wouki ue oeiir places to live in with Raymond Street Jail, the Tombs and Sing Sing, and all the small pox hospitals emptier! on them, than heaven would le if there were no hell. Palace and penitentiary. If I see a man with a full bowl ot sin, and he thirsts for it, an I his whole nature craves it, and he takes ho d with both hands and presses that bowl to his hps, and then presses it hard between his teeth, and the ! draught begins to pour its sweet Dess down his throat: shall we snatch away the bowl, and jerk the man up to the gate of heaven, and push him in if h-j does not want to go and sit down and sing psalms forever? I No. God has made you an i me so completely frea that we need not go to heaven unless we prefer it Not more free to soar than free to sink. Nearlyj a'i the heterodox people I know be lieve all are comiu;z out at the sime destiny; without jregard to faith or character wa are all coming out at the shining gate.a mere they are, all in g'ory together. Thom as Paine andvGore WhiteSeld, Jezebel and Mary Lyon, Nero and Charles Wesley, Charles Guiteau and James A-GarfieW.John. Wilkes Booth and Abraham LirtcoTu all in glory together I AU the innocent men, wo men, and children who were massacred, side by side with their murderers. If we are all rominff out at the same destinv. without tweeping through the gat-? hashed In tlie ! blodd of the Lar-br "The chiriots ar$ commg!" "l raoun-. I Ayr "WitigvwingsP riiey are coming for mer "Peace, be still!'4 Alfred Cook man's deathbed, Richard Ce'jil' death bxi, Coaimo lore Foite's death bad. Your father's deathbed, your mother's d-th-bed, your sister's death-be 1. your child's death-bed. I Ten thous-ind radiant. songful dath-beds of those who believed an entire Bible. I Now. take my arm and let us eo throuzh that avenue, and look off upon the other side. No smile of hope. No shout of triumph . No face supernaturally illumined. Those Whd reject arty I parf of the Bible never die welL no beckonins fof angels to coiite. Kd listening for the ce lestial escort. Ithoiit as v exeentirin ther go out of the world becaum they are pushed but; while dn the other hand the list df those who I believed in an entire Bible ' and gone out- t the ; world irf triumph is a list sd kirig it Siaetris intermirl- ab.'e. Oh, Is not that a Slendidmfloeace,this orthodoxy, which make5 that, which must otherwise be the most drft'VUul hour of life 1 tne last hour posutveiy jsraa siteai t iuuu; men. ii m?nt minui-tiou mvu, take sides in this contest between orthodoxy and heterodoxy. pA'-k'tor the old paths, walk . then ia, and ye shall find rest for your sou's.? - But you follow this crusade against any pirt of the Bible dlret of ad you will give up Genesis, Which is . as" trite as Matthew; then you will give -up all the historical pdts of the Bible; then after a while you will give up th miraclesj then ydn will- find it convenient to give !iin the Ted Cttmmana- ments; ahd then after a while ydu. will wake up in a fountainless,! rockless, treeless deserr swept oi everlasting etrocca . Jf yon are laug hed at you can afford to be laughed at X for standing by the Bib'e iust as Go 1 has. given it to you and miraculously preserved it. i. .-V- Do not iump overboard from the stanch old Great Eastern of old fashioned Orthodoxy until there 13 something ready to take you up stronger than the fantastic yawl which has painted on. t be side: "Ad vanced Thought," and which leaks at tbe prow and leaks at the stern and has a steel pn for one oar and j a glib tongue for the other oar, and now tips over thi3 way and then tips over that Way, until you do not kuow whether the p issengers Will land in the breakers of despair or on the sinking sartd of infidelity and atheism. , I am in full sympathy with the advance ments of odr tima, but this wdrld will never a"d vance a single inch beyond this old Bible. God was .lust as capable of dictating tlie truth to the prophets and apostles as lie is capable of dictating the truth to these modern, apostles and prophets. God has not learned anything in a thousand years. He knew just as much when He gave the first dictation as He does now, giving the last dictation, if He is giving any dictation at all. So I Will stink ' to the old paths. Naturally a skeptic and preferring new things to old, t never ' so mueh as to-day felt the truth of the entire B.b'e, especially as 1 see iuto what spectacular imbecility men rush when they try to chop up the Scriptures with the m at axe of their own preferences, j now calling upon philosophy, now calling on the Church, now calling on God, now calling on the deviL I prefer the thick, warm robe of the old religion old as God the robe" which has keot so many warm amid the cold pilzrimage of" this j life and amid the chilU of death. The old robe rather than the thin, uncertain gauze offered us by these wiseaCre3 who be lieve the Bible in spots. - - On July 27tb, 1814, at seVentytwo years of age. expired Isabella Graham. she was the most useful woman of hM-day amid the poor and sick, at the head of the orphan asylums And Maerlalen nsvlums. and an angel of mercy in hospital and reformatory. Dr. Ma son, Rseof the mightiestmen of his day, said at her funeral that! sne was mentally anu spiritually the most wonderfully endowei person he had ever met. She was an im personation of the most orthodox orthodoxy. Her last word was peace. As a sublime raroration to mt sermon, I will give an ex tract from her last will and testament, show ing how one who be'ieve3 in an entire Bible may make a glorious exit: An extract from a will : "My children and my grandchildren t leave to m v fovonant. (InA. the (Jott who hath fed me All JSiY life with the bread that peris-he nd ihe Urcnd that never periaaeth, who has been a Father to my fatherless children and a husband to their widowed mother thus far. And now receivinj: my Redeemer's testimony, I eet to my seal that God is true; and believing the record of John that God hath given to me eternal life and this life in in His Son, who. through the eternal Spirit, overcomes without spot nnto God, and being consecrated a priest for ever hath with His own blood entered into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for me. I also believe that He will perfect what concerns me, support and carry me safely through death, and present m to His Father, complete in His wn righteousness, without spot er wrinkle. Into the hande of this redeeming God, Faiher, Son and Holy Ghost I commit my redeemed buirit Isabella Gbabam. Let me die the daath of the righteous, and Iptmv last end be like hers. "Glory bete the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost; as it was in the beginning ia now and ever shall be, world without end. Amen and Amen!" GEN. SHERIDAN DEAD TELFGRAPHIC SUMMARY He Passes Quietly Away flonquitt, Mass. at Hl9 Liast Battle Ended Conqnercd by tho Final and Invincibly Kneiny Thr Great Comiuander CJohp. - - . GEN-. PUILIP U. SHERIDAN. Gftneral Philip Sh ridan died Sunday night at Nonquitt, Mass. He begai to grow worse l.i the afternoon, and gradually sank. Ha w.is surrounde 1 by bis family and physi ciaus. ; Gen. Sheridan's illness which terminated fatally, but nut Unexpectedly, began about tho middle of May, aul on cevral occasions he has hovered between life and doath, oven his physicians abandoning all hop3 of hi3 recovery. But be fought as heroically for his life as hedmd tor liis country. Ho was suf fering with valvular trouble of tho h-art Upon his return from Chicago early in May bo complained of feeling unwell, and spent but au hour or eo at his ottico eacu aay. tie continued to grow worr, aud at length yielded to the persuasions ot his wile aud re mained at his home all the time. He grad ually grew worse, and during the latter part of May, and for toe lirst few days of June be was delirious, riis inn was msp.uroa oi, but he rallied, and, although suffering some relapses, he step by step regained a little b-altn. It was thought mat a cnanga oi mr would Lenefit him, and about a month ago. he was taken to Nonquitt, Mass., where he e:i loved tne sea breeaes of the New England coast. There, surrounded by the most learned members of the medio! profession iiud nu.sed by a devotei wife. Le bean to mend, aud the hope was universal that he would eventually n.covef his full strength. But the heart is a delicate organ, and when once affeted it saldom recovers its normal strensth. 1 as his strength failed to return to him so that he could belter wage the battl ; against the disease, he -vas comp.llei to sue numb. Tue trouble with which Ge.i. Sheridan was afflicted Is due to imperfect closure of the valves of the heart, thus 'allowing blood wtiich had been discharged from that or an to bo forced back again, thereby imposing an additional burden upon it. it is said that Geu. Sheridan has been troubled with this affection of the heart for at least three or four years, and that he must have known of it for one or two ye .ra. It ds said to be a disease with which many men who are ac tively engaged in business and have clear heads and apparently good heutn are ai dtcted. i hey may live along time, and go About their ordinary avocatioDS, while in uther cases the disease quickly runs its course Ana causes tue death oi the person troubled with it. In nine cases out of ten it is said o be caused by acute rheumatism, and it is not at all improbable that Gen. Sheridan may have contracted this heart trouble in the exposures incident to his military service. New rtild fl Ids have been discovered Ue Montana. ! A train on tbe Indianapolis, St. Louto and 5 Chicago road wa thrown from th track and down an embankment. A nnmber of i passengers were badly hurt, and Charles and Jacob Eckert may die. Mrs Haynes blew out the gas in ber room j in a Lewistown (Ue.) hotel, aud be and ber nve-year oiu son are not expf ciea to iwjtw. By the burning of a New York tenement, the, family of Uustav Brg, confuting vt himself, wife, daughter and mother-in-law, were burned to death, " The Sioux Indians decline to sign the treaty providing for the opening ot the reservation Henry Turner, a tailor, is being erchel for by the Boston iolie, cbargrtl with de posing with a large amount of goods ob tained from various dry goods firms. A dispatch from IJvingston. Montana Bays that two prospectors cane in from tbe boulder conuty, bringing with them a buck fckin bag containing over, 2,00J in gold, which they had pounded out with aledgw hammers on Flat ilocks. They also brought the richest specimen of quartx prolaldy ever seen in tbe lerritory. : . A letter has been received at Victoria, IJ. B., from Constable Green, at Fort Hazleton, in which be says that it is :augerous to stay , there, ibere are but nve men m tne ion i against 500 wild Indians, and all on tbe mur der. They have killed nve men in a lew cays, and they say they are going to kill nlL The house of a widow named Cstonettc, at , St. Ignace, Ore., was burned, and in the ruins were found the Lodi.-a of her five daughters, whose ages ranged from 5 to 17 yeara Investigation showed that they had boen murdered. The .only oth r p ruou in the house at the time of the Ore was a young German, who had boen engaged , as a farm band. As be has been missing since uie lire, and as his remains were not found in the ruins, the theory of the neighbors ard local police ia that he outraged young juane uivi then munierea ner, witn m ouier iur bis ters, and then fired tbe premises l ue inotn er was away at the time. The reports from Florid t in regard to yel low fever are still bad. The Senate passed the bill t regulate com merce carried on by telegraph One of th yellow-fever-infestel houses at Jackson vill, Fla , has been burned. There were 2)5 business failures in the United States, and 23 in Canada,', the past week. A duel, arranged between 8 "gar Whiting and Dixie Lee, at Fort Monro., was prevent ed. .lamps Slade. aced twenty-five years, com tnittnd suicide in his elegant flat in New York City. Fire at Chattanoogo. Tenn.. destroyed foui hundred thousand dollars' worth of property and ten lives were lost. A mos Miller, colored, who outraged a ladj in Maurv county. Tenn.. was taken from jail by a mob and banged. kT Charles Henry Riedel. aged thirty-sever Years .was hanged at New Castle, Del., foi murdering bis wife and child. . Fognosin district.Tork county, Va, Toted on the liuuor aaestiuD, auu nuwitvouno men carne 1 the district by thirteen majority In the burning of a tenement at Jersay City two children and a babe were roscued with great difficulty, the infant dying from injuries received. - . Maggie Jonaa, coloreJ,ag3leight3'3n years, was found murdered near h r h n at Cro i moor, L I., a id E nm i J. r i !tc!ii. an old white woman has bam arrete Id j suspicion. Wm. Simpson. Jr. of PhiU ielphia, and a mamber of the firm of Wm. Simpion & Sons, commissi n m jrcaants, sua ye i away wnne suffering from detnintia, causji by the ex cessive heat, ani was fount In the suburbs of PhUadelpbia, wandering aimlessly auauc. Well's College,"in Syracuse, N. Y., was de stroyed by fire. Tho plumbers striKe in aoronio is aba-am NUMBER 21. " yiniE'uwsT" Most Stringent Regulations A"gainst Celestialf, Passed , at iWingtonJf AtMoluto Prohibition Dtcret-rower of Removal from th Territory ' of iho Unltctl Statist. - CAPTURED DEAD AND ALIVE A Sharp-Fight on a Train rsetween Officers and Criminals. A tragedy startled the passengers aboard the incoming Louisville, New Orleans and Texas passenger train, near Wall's Station, Miss., thirty miles below Memphis, bpeciai Deputy Sheriffs Rayner and Elliott, of Lake Common, Miss., boarded the train at that point, and when they reached Wall's Station where the train stopped, tbey learned that two desperate characters, named Ollison and Ward, wanted by the Mississippi authorities for murder, arson and robbery, bad came on board the train. Ollison and Ward were both armed with Winchester rifles and pistols. . . proached tbe men from the rear, walk.ng behind two negroes, and before the despera dos could realize it they were covered with revolvers and told to surrender. Quick as a flash Ollison sprang to his feet and grabbed Rayner by the collar and a life and death struggle ensued, durinj the progress of which Rayner fired his pistol, the ball taking effect in Ollison's left temple, killing him instantly. ' " Ward, after a desperate attempt to escape, was arrested an J fecurely Umnd by Sheriff Elliott. Ward and Ollison are charged with several murders and the Mississippi author ities offered a large reward for their capture, dead or aive, which Messrs. Rayner and Elliott will now obtain. regard I turn heaven. to character, then away ; from such a it is true, debauched Against that cauldron of piety and blasphemy, philanthropy ane assassiuation. self-eacrifice and l-eastliness, I place the two destinies1 of tbe Bible forever and forever and forever apart. BehokJ also the splendors of the Christian Orthodox death beds. Those (who deny tbe Bible, or deny any part of it never die well. Tbey either go out in darkness or they go out in silence portentoii You my gather up all the biographies that have coma forth siru-e the art of printing was invented, and I challenge you to show me a triumphant deth of a man who rejected the Scriptures or rejected ajjv part of them. Here 1 n-ke a great wirt avenue. I . On tbe one I put the death beds of those who believed in an entire Bible. : , Oa the -other aide of that avenue 1 put the death beds of those "who rejected part of the I Bible, or rejected all of the Bible. Now, take my arm and let us pass through thif dividing avenue. Look oi upon the right sida. Here are the deathbed on the right side of this avenoo V M Vfe tnrr through, our Lord Jesus Christf? Sfroe grsoer T-W7. gleryn am MARKETS. J3alttmouje Flour City Mills, extra,M.25 art75v Wbeatj-45outhern Fultz, WJaai cts; Crn-Southern White, 5.5cte, Yellow 56 -57 cts. Oats Southern and Pen .sylvania S3a35cta; Rye4-Marylal and Pennsylvania 5iv.Vjcta.; flay-UMaryland and Pennsylvania ltJ0a rJ000;Stxaw-Wheat,a(arJ.OO; Butter, Eastern Creamery ,2la22cts., near-by receipU lSalticts heejef-E81"11 aay Cream, 10 10i cts.. Western. U)t alO cU; Eggs 13a-14- Cattle ai5a4.t52; Swine sa. cts.; Sheep and Lamb 3a44' cts; Tobicco Leaf Inferior, la2.50, Good Common.3 5Da 4 50. Midiling,5a7.0GooJto fine red, a?U Fancy, 10a12. - , EW York Floor Siuthern Common to fair extra, 3.O0a4.00; Wheat Xo. I Wbit.-,3G airrcts.; live Suae-, 5la-i; Corn Southern Yellow, Ma55cta; Oats White State, 32a33 eta. ; Butter State, la35 cts. ; Cheese tatt 7KaS),'ets.; Egg I5l6 ta. ; Philadelphia Iloar Pennsylvania, fancy, &7Ua&73; Wheat Pennsylvania anvi sv.ii rhm lied. JJa5 1 cu : Rye Pennsylvania 57acta:Corn southern leuow.awoi i ii.i-i ta - RnMitr-'-fstatn. 1S1'J cti: ' SKETCH Or niS CAREER. General Philip Henry Sheridan was born March 6, 1831. Ho graduated at West Point in lW, Served in Texas in 1354 5, and on the Pacific coast until May 14, W, when te was made captain of the Thirteenth Infantry, chief quartermaster aud comnrssary of the Army of Southwestern Missouri, and subse quently quartermaster to Gen. Halleck in Ibe Mississippi campaign of the spring of 1862. On May 2oth, 152. be was made colonel of the Second Michigan olunteer Cavalry. and took part in the pursuit of the Confederates from Corinth. May 'M to June 30, and in tbe engagement at Boonesville, July 1, when he was made brigadier-general of volunteers. In command of the eleventh division of the Army of Ohio he led the ad vance into Kentucky, and was in the battle of Perry ville, October 8, and In the subse quent inarch to the relief of Nashville. Assigned to the Army of the Cumberland, his division was in the campaign of Tennessee from November, 1H52, to September, lwi, the fall of Murfrees- UUllii, .v... yj JJ- - - , - lrfro when he wns made major-general ot volunteers. He capture-la train and pris oners at Eaglcsville in March; crossed the Cumberland mountains and Tennewieeriver i A,,.,.. 1-ru.lr f.art in the battle of Chick- amaug i September 13 and 20, and in the operations about Chattanooga, including the Mi.t.innrv Ridze. November 2:i-i, laim V j ct - , Cma na ciiniifni iv ?nt?ae"M in rsv tki tint I March. l!3l. From April 4 until August 3 be was in command of the cavalry corps of the Army of the Potomac, i iii. kit in rem men. was actively em ployed in operations in the Wilderness and between it and Richmond in May, June and Jniv Vhil mainlv employed in reconnol- tering and protecting the flank of the army his corps male severed vigorous raids, cutting off railway connection ana cajvunns destroying stores, was more than twenty times engaged w.th tbe Confederate cavalry, and took an important part ia tbe actions in and about Cold Harbor. . On August 4 he was appointed to the command of tho Arro v of the Sbenandoah. and oa tbe 7th to that ot the middle military division. He defeated Early on the Opequin September U, tor bich be was made a gad -genera l 1 in the United State army, at Fisher Hill, September 22, and at Oedar Creek, jOctober I'., where be turned a route into a brilliant victory, for which be received the thank of Congress. On November be was made a. major generaL .From February 27 to March 24. lS-Vi, he wa engaged in the raid from Winchester to Feter-burg. during which be destroyed the Jam River and Kanawha canal, cut important railway connections, ,..-i Tr,iiitrir and commissary store hail nnnvrum iiiniuiK ing a serious phase. Sventeen thousand dollars was secured mail robber. v.n the Missouri Pac fic road. The Wislativa assembly of Hawaii has passed tbe military bill over the Kind's vetoj The nUnt of the Eaat End Electric L.fgbt Companyin Pittsburg was destroyed by fire. Shelby F. Parke, of Ferry ville, Ind., shot and killei Dr. II. H. Payton. Cause, jeal ousy, j '-'..' Isaac Fi Huldeman.a Philadelphia broker, has been arrested, charged with embezzle ment. : A tramzof dynamiters is at work in Wilkes- barre. A bomb was found under the bouse . . : l ' ill 1 ti a t uy piueiab Thfitn.-U M. Haines, a defaulting cashier of the Atlantic and North Carolina nwiroaa. was arrested in Chicago. Frederick Schulte Was killed and Michael rsanmer seriously injured by a fail from a New York tenement bouse. Governor Moorehouse ha declined to in terfere in! Maxwells case. The condemnea murderer will therefore be bung. Wm, Ouy, present incumbent, defeated Win. Bird, a full-bloode! L-nicnesaw, ior vne governorship of the Cbickesaw nation. Tbe schooner Flora B. was struck by a squall and cansized in tbe Delaware river. Mrs. A nnie '.Vheaton. Mrs. Sadie Wbeaton. Mrs. Thomaa Finnecan. Mrs. Amy Turner and Dora Wheaton were drowneJ. ThChloe,ri4olinitioa bill was psa! without a diviskKi on WedaeaJay by the . The bud provid-si that front and after tha d ita of the tp'xdbaApB of raUflcatiooa'of tba -peeling trey ." 9o the United State ot America an I Uw Inparl Mjety the Em peror of China, ignJ ua,the 13th dayoC March, ISsS, it shall b .unlawful for any' Cliinese pert wither it ubrtof Cbinn ' or any other Powr, ta emUT tb Unitetl, States except a in this bill provided j .'-.Chinese offldals, tsuher, tulv.i,, mr , chants or traveller for pleasur - c iriily shall .be permitwed to enter t i If.ibed State, but In order to entitle Pivin-lvea to do so they shall flrat obtain thi, pr-u.isio of tho Chinese government or ot:r g vr n- mont of which tbey may at t-tw.iini l citizjns or subject . Such p-nnisii and also their p.-rsonal Ulentity shall in audi be evidenced by a certifloato Ui le malfl nt ty the diplomatic reprweontaMv of 1 1 U nit d State in the country, or of tbe cot.- sular rti'resentative of tne United State nt -tlw port or placo from which the ierott named comes. ' ' Any captain who land or attempt to Inn 1 a Chinos person in the United State with out having in hi- jooion ih4i a eall , certificate shall bo liable ta certain penallie. The provisions of t he act are to apply to all persons ot tlie Chinese race, whether aiib- . . . . . t . ject ot China or otner lort-iun a owrr, v. cept Chinese diplomatic or consular omcerf " . . I . a a . a a,r i ond their aitenaanw, ana tue wora vamw laborers," whenever used in this act, etiall be constru'-d to mean toth killeil and unakiUed laborers and Chinese cnqMoyed in mining. . The master of any vosl arriving in tne United States from any foreign prt or plaeev with any Chinese passengers on board snail. when he delivers his manl est of cargo, ami if there b no carg, when be mal'e legal entry of bis vessel, and Udore landing or f ermittmg to land any cnnies erin mn les a diplomatic or consular ofllcer or attendant of each officer) . deliver to the Col lector of Customs of the district in ivhieh hi vessel shall have arrived the -sealed certifi cates and letters as aforesaid. i From and after the naes.igo of the act no Chinese laborer irrthe United State tball bo ; permitted, after having left, to return thereto, unless n nas a inwim iip, iunh . parent in the Unite! States, or proiwrty therein of the value of 11000 or ilelits of likn amount due him and pending settlement. The marriage to wife unlit have taken placo at least a year prior to tbe application of Ihe laborer for a permit to return to tbe United States, and must have been followed by tb continuous cohabitation o( Uie artl a man and wife. ' ' ' ' r The Chineae laborer pon-ewiog the remiit9 certificate tthalt t admitted to the Lnited States only at the pert from which he d n-d therefrom, ami no Chinese tx-rnon excejit Chinese diplomatic or consular officer and their attendant, shall It permitted to enter tbe United States except at the port of San Fraiicic Portland, Ore , iJostpn, New York, New Orleans, Port Townrnwid or ; surh other ixrU as may le designate! by tho Secretary of the I reasury. Any Chinese perwon or feron oi inniiw descent found unlawfully in the United States or its Territorkt may be rretod upon a warrant is ued upon a onniplaint filed oy any party on oenaii oi me uihi. nmin.. bv any Justice. Judge or Cmnmianioncr of. t: t I any Lnited State court, returnable before bJ I any Jutioe, Judge or Commissioner of a United ritatea court, or ieior any vhhw. State court, and when convicted upon a hearing and found end adjulged to beono not lawfully entitled to b or remain In the th United SUte, uch Jierson shall be re moved to the country whence h came, CABLE SPARKS. IOWA FIGHTING RAILROADS. Chi iu in the Cuiwnt- rt rtt: Butter State, lsaia cts.: Cheese N. Y. Factory, llalJ cts.; Egg btata, 1713 cts.: , enemy. From March s to Apru v ue w In tbe Richmond campaign. On April 1 be rained tbe battle of Five Fork, which in sured the abandonra-nt by tbe Confederate of Petersbjin: pd Richmond, and be led in the nnrsuitof Leo and wa present at bU rpttultion, April O. He wm appointed to the command of toe Southwest JuneS, and of the mUitary division of tbe Golf July 17; of tbe department of the Gulf Aojnit l. isi; of the fifth mihtry d wtrict, Incloduag Louisiana and Texas, March II. lSb7." and of tlv department of tbe Missouri Septem ber 12. j- On March 4. 19t,- be wa nmie Iieutenant-geral and assigned to U com mand of the division of tbe lisouri, inciad Im Li. dnartmenU of Dakota, of Missouri. ol tbe FlaOe and of Texas, with headquarter at Chicago. ; During the political dlrd-urb-anot-s in Louisiana be wa stationed for a few wtk ia 'ew Orleans. Legal Straggle Commencctl to Ieflnc the Power of It (3ommbioBers The State of Iowa, through it executi ve Am.r. tno inctitntd a numlier of mitt against the Chicago and Northwestern, Chicago, Rurlington and Quincy, and caeo and Rock Wand railwajs fer compiiancc with tb term of ioner, tariffs and the law providing for its en fore mint. Tbe Northwestern and "Q roads, not being inwrporated in Ioa, will airaiiint thetn to the federal court, while the It'Jck IU nd caw ;n i. ,im1 in th ntJtta ctmrt. and can th fMeral Sur-reme Court only lkr,i,h The! C Ought tO Ut Ik. laa, r,r.'ft V t IwiTOII B-hl X. In IV Chief Justice Wait aid: Jhw mtam- A niliii u not a uo to letioy. and limitation i n4 the tiival-nt of con fiscation un l' r pret-rie or regui ting iare .i fn.i.ku Th. Ktita rannot rriuire a .If. . ' K " - ----- - n.nmoH inimnuiv to carry persofi " without reward, neither do tbt which in law amount to a faking of firlvate property for public nw without jurt com pensatioa or wun uue prot i Mer. Hasley. Archbishop of Cambral I lead. : - I' i i ' G n. Newdezate U cazettel a governor of tbe Bermudas. ! A meeUnz of 2,000 socialist in IWlin w dissolved by the iiolice, wlu arrested several person.. A commission will shortly assemble in Berlin todicusa Husso-uerman treaty oi commerce. , ! . - Cardinal Maran will shortly viitel tha Archbibop of Armagh to confer upon turn the j (allium. Lawrence Donauln, tbe bridge Jumper was drowned In Ui Tbroe, into which hi jumiel from a bridge. " , At Ibe funeral of General Koom. n raria. there were a number or - aertoua n gi t t tween communist and oiiienr. Th French eovcrnment ha ent prbfaor of agriculture everywhere to alvUJU la mer bow pest to gainer ' yrvmnw www crops during toe weauier criti. Enape-ror William will ao.ourn in AlW- Ixirraine for ten day, making tna P-jar an Strasburg hi healquarWr. He will rlail MeU and other large ujwd. T.iit Wiseman, the German explorer. bad a long interview with Emjieror tV illiam. in which he explained proposals for waotiial development In Africa, and Utl hbiflea of Einin B7' position. rrre district in westers Ruwiaare In- undati in consequence of tle overltw of th river-VUtu la. Th river Nimen has a No overflow 1 iU bank tn ttM Minsk d- trict ni fl xJed the iJcent cauntry. TIi Alexandria Produce Arx:iatlon baa bautd a report tn regard to the Egypt ian cotton crop. It y m piaot i growing yigoroujuy. lie t lue injury uone by worm. Tbe colUvatod area ha in creased l per cant. moe IW. It i reported that the Cxar ba reprl- m&ndl General IgnatiefT for the attack male by him on Austria at a recent banquet at Kief. KUhoo Stremayer has been ummonel to an audience with Km pore r Franci Joseib inconsequencRof bis having sent a telegram to tbe rector of the Kieft University wuoing ucceea to tbe Roi in policy. A BOY IN A' MULE'S BODY. AN AMERICAN VESSEL SEIZED. l'Ul..rmn Vnnnll in CantU ian - leraOrerbaolrd lryv Dimlnkn Crnlecr. , A ?nt:on ha been caused at r- A- drewf. X. B., by tbe rrival of the Domini Cruiser Dream with an American veaael in i- rtmm"laabarT. of Eatport-who is commonly known a the Ung haddock mivrnuinof th Maiue coat. aixl Ch-trle Tu.k kail from a border town on a Rh- intr expedition in Canadian waters. They faibd tnt rovide themnelve witU a Iiccimkb. Ther ailed a far a Campobello and were jnst KCtting" ready to fib when tbe om manjtrof thpciuir caught ?ht of Item and lore down noon tbem. ; 1 ce two u-ner- nm ' trifiii ': liar, f to cro into American .tr iit. wr orerfaauted aod i.mde prisoner. The Faberiea Bvrtment was notified, .j! " ," ". ' Ue, Ih .Struck fry riyinif . vara nu Driven Jlcadflnrf Into the AnlroaL One tbe meat extraordinary actddenU ever re.Krted in the coal field took place In thi IloUeubock mine of tbe Lehigh and Willu liarro Coal Company at Wilke Cairo. Thouia Richard, a driver boy, agl 1 1 waa unling wHh hi mule in a gangway near the foot ofc U-JOP wnen, iop " b.ied car that were being doismm r :ope broke hy and caroediing down. Th toy ana toe mate wer u-uc. -j . dr. ven head-first into tbe boly of lb mu and wa burned almost to hi hip. It wa impowtble to extract him except by cut ting the inula open. Tbe animal wo dead wbeorfoond.- ' .. , The boy is tfll livlng.bat bU tkHil U fro tnrwl - He U totally uncondouJ and U ex pectl to die at may rooment.' l lir. Hberuian rtrrrt and bi father Thcma Uwb ard. Sr., wa killed in tbe Red Aa mine two yean 1
The Reidsville Times (Reidsville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 17, 1888, edition 1
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