Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Aug. 26, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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123 WaveToii IVrfoclIj- Well. V Fir.T.MoRK, Dubuqua Co.. Ia., Sept., 1683. IMisa K. Firmigan writes : My mother and sis ter used Pastor Koenig'a Nerve Tonic for neu ralgia. They are Loth perfectly well uow and" never tired of i raising the Tonic. Tiveiif y-one Vears. writes the Rev. M. J. Fallihee of Freelaud. Fa., January IS, ISaO, waa C".th. Bfiisr.iN suffering irum fits and convulsions ; she bad three or four attacks every week, tried niaiiy remedies Rud doctors, without any relief, but since she be,:!i to use Pastor Koeiiig'tj Nerve Tonic she i-i abl.; to work, and make her own living. An other ca.sn i-i that of M. (Ut.aohfr, of the same ;Ia-'e. Ha is V yara old, had fits since his 9th year wo swvro that we thought seve ral times he would iiie. tried diilereut doctors and medicines Mfiruoiit relief ; but since be used Koenig's Tonic he Lad only slight attacks, which were probably ca.as3d by violent exercise. Er-A Valuable liook en Nervou9 Lf lise:tses feut. free to any aduress, V and oor patients can also obtain Sn ttiis medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor KoniK. of Fort Wayne, lv.d., Kiuce 1SV0, and is uow prepared under his direction by the KOENiC MED. CO., Chicago, III. Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. C for Larsre Size, "51.73. C Uottles tor ). Tor Sab Uv .!. II. Hill ,V: Son. (ioldboi'O. ake fhs Lead. "'e are now handling the very best that has ever been brought to 1 lie city Best Quality and Lowest Prices. Mutton, Port: and Satswof. Always on hand. Ve pay the highest market price for rattle. S. Cohn & Son, City Matket, and OKI P. . P.uildiug. Br. James H. Powell, i !)iau Stork in "Law Buildino"- (( or. store, north end) Keeps constantly in stock Fresh Drugs, Patent Med icines, Etc., Etc. Pi: ICES AS LOW AS AT ANY DRUG STOKE IN THE CITY. Also offera his professional services to the surrounding community, at any Lour in the day or night. Can be found at the drug store, unless professionally en raged. Residence on West Centre St., between Spruce and Pine. CE3ljEBH.ATEX WITH LATEST I M F'ROVEM ENTS Woe " Frt"8s:!J. Ftillv Guaranteed. .W.KUBBARbAiTrxr '.'' a c arry Hfock &t varlou3 Southern points ur quick delivery upon receipt of orders. OSGOOD" U. S. Standard lid fcr-nt (iii trill Freieht paid. Full.v uarraolctl. 1 fft'n OQC im!it s: :.. l'ropnrtionatelv how. 'uJ' ti.W m UK A Gen. Southern L-ioivr. ATLANTA. tiA. DALLAS TKXAS. SOE PEOPLE May be oppose ! to the use, :ind some t the abuse of whiskey, yet its use is ofti-n absolutely necessary, especially for medical purposes In such eases, the pure, unadulterated stuff is needed not a doctored, drujj combination and when the 1. W. HARPKR is used, you get the best results, without any bad effects. Its purity and high standard will be main tuned because this firm has an enviable refutation which it nieans to sustain. It can be had at John W. Edwards, Jor.osi'.ono, N. C f, LIPPMAN RCS.. Frourletors. Druggists, Lippman's tin. GA. rORTER & UODAVIN, CON'TniCTOKS AND BuiLDKRi, Goldsburo, N. C. t-"Plans and estimates furniahid c upplication. ALAiMAZOO WEED KILLER WILLIAMS MFG. CO. KALAMAZOO. MICH. nrnnYr & m mm ALLIANCE DEPARTMENT. A Sketch of B. H. Clover, First Vice-President. Refused a Gubernatorial nomination But Was Elected to Congress By a Big- Majority. Eeiijamiu H. C lover, vire-pie-ideut of the National Farmers Alliance and Indus trial Union, was born in Franklin county, Ohio, in 11 lived there until he was 2." years old. Was married at the age of -jl, and has live sons and two daughters, all of wLoin. together with their mother, are living exponents of the doctiine;of "Equal rights ;ind exact jus tice for all and special piivi!(-2s foi none." In the spring of he moveil from Douglas county. Illii:f)is, wlu-re he remained for live years. From heie, in the fall of 1S70, he moved to Cowley eountv, Kusits. and settled on the "claim"' where he now lives. This was before the land wa surveyed by the ;ov trnment. Mr. Clover, in his usually cfcaractcrii-tic manner, writes; "litre I endured the privations of a new country, and find it was heaven roinpared to the glorious civilization bejjo'ten of monopo listic LMeed and the newly-advanced doc trines, t bat taxing a man makes him rich, and putting him in a condition lo com pel him to borrow money from Shy lock makes him prosperous and happy. At the age of .V-i ye. is, after a long life of toil, economy and self-denial, I find my self and family virtually paupers. With hundreds of cattle, hundreds of hoys, scores of good hoises, and a farm that re wauled the t"il of our hands with Ki.OOU bushels of golden corn, we are poorer by many dollars than we were yejis ago. What once seemed a neat little fortune anil a house of refuge for our dec'iuin" years, by a fw turus of the monopolistic crank, has been reudeied valueless." Mr. Clover was eleited president of the first State Alliance in Kansas, which was organized in lSs. At the second annu al meeiing. in 1 he was re ehcted. From the iii'-t he has beeii one of the foremost Alliance me.i in the State. ik i a man of ext r.or J i nui v industry and ability, and is l iillio.it in common tense. Ik is a good, pia. tit .d farmer, an occu pation he has followed all his life. In lfs! the State A'liance sent lorn as a del egate to the national convention at St. Louis. IJe took an active part in Ihe work of that conveation, ami his abilities were properly recoynied by his unani mous electiou as vice- piesident of the na tional body. He could have had the nomination for governor of his State on the People's ticket, but he refused. At the earnest reciint of the members of the Order he accept d the nomination on the People's ticket for congressman of the third district. The Democrats made no nomination, and he was elected by a large majority over liishop W. Perkins, tue sitting member. Mr. Clover was reelected vice-president of the National Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union by acclamation at Oeala. A recent letter from him con tains this characteristic, language: "I might say, that of all the past, I look back to the part I to)k in be St. Louis meeting and the for nulla tiTig of the now world-famous demands, and the cam paign of education that was had in Kan sas during my service as president of the State Alliance, and the part I have taken in bringing about a better state of feel ing betwe.n the different sections of our country, and defeating the schemes of those 'who alienate 1 us only to nrev unou us,' as the best spent time of the fifty three years that now have gone by of my life. :;: Honest manhood is as serting itself, and fraud and oppression will soou find no place of refuge in this fair land of ours." Mr. Clover, by virtue of his relations to the Alliance, his great popularity wherever known, and his identity with the People's party organization, will oc cupy a onspicuous place in Congress. Pleasant of manner, he wins friends jn any contact with men; liberal of view ami broad of comprehension, his useful ness to bis people is enlarged with his new surroundings Were there more Ben. Clovers there would Ik fev.t-r party bosses. W 1 TU lloi.MNC Til Kill V.'UKAT. Toi'F.ua. K- The influence of tht Alliance upo , h-; members is beginning to have iis eift-ct in the withholding of wheat ijom the market Notwithstand ing the fact that President McOrath has persistently declared that all that has been done by the oiiicers of th organiza tion was to advi-e farmers to hold their grain for better prices, there is now no doubt that arrangements have been made for storing grain in elevators and for se curing an advance upon it io supply pres ent needs of the farmers. .T. P. French, State Sfrretary of the Fanners' Alliance, says u,. :i tail- re ceipt of letters from secretaries of Mib Allian.es informing him that farmers generally will hold their wheat for an ad vance. The tpi- stioii has ht-eu discussed at Alliance meetings in mu-t of the coun ties, and in aim st eve ry instance plans have been adopted for Coring the lirain and obtaining loans on a basis of ?.- per cent, of its present maiket value. Sec retary French said lat evening; "We are prepared, if n-( e.-sarv. to store one-half of the wheat crop of" 'Kansas. Arrangements have been made with the big elevators at Kansas City, St. Louis, Baltimore, and other cities "to hold wheat forwarded by the Alliance and advance 7.1 per cent, on it. While the officers of the Farmers' Alliance have general super vision of the business, the Alliance Ex change is attending to the details. We expect to handle tic bulk of the wheat. crop this year, and farmers will be the gainers. Small elevators throughout the . State will aid materially in the work, aud we anticipate no difficulty in securing sufficient money for wh at growers to . supply their immediat e wantsand at the ; same time have complete control of the i wheat." ( OM'KTi:,"U WITH sol'TUKi: NCoTTOX. India, Egypt and the Transvaal will add this year about '2') per cer.t. to their last year's crop of cottti. When we consider the growing de mand for Egyptian cotton in this coun try to be used in the finer fabrics, it is plain that southern cotton planters should take steps to improve the general quality of their staple. The New York Dry Goods Economist calls attention to our danger irom this foreign cotton. It says: It is too late to make a diversiou in the by direc ing attention to thegrowth of a larger piautity of the Allan or Peeller cotton. But with the efforts of other nations to grow a poition, if not all their cotton this caily opportunity is improved to remind cotton planters throughout the south that competition is being fostered to their disadvantage, and they cannot be too quick in devising me9sures for a more extensive growth of the Allau cot ton, aud any otlier line, long and colored staple that will auswer in the place of the Eywptiau. There is ample time before the plant ng of another crop to secure much necessary data and seed, aud we feel coniident that with proper care ex tended in the direction suggested the benefits arising from a successful growth of the long combing staple would be very remuneiatixe to the planters, while it would confer a boon upon the cotton manufacturing industry of this country. The sub-Alliances of Lee county, Geor gia, have been n .tilied to meet in gener al session at Leesburg. The object of the meeting is to formulate a plan by which the incoming cotton crop can be held for better prices It is also stated that a process for staying the collection of claims against farmers until a stipulated lime will be discussed. Every allianceman in I ee county is urged to be present at the meeting, the outcome of which promises interesting developments. Curious Laitapli?. While strolling in the fields near a small hamlet not thirty miles from Ro chester, I came across a?i antiquated graveyard overgrown with ivy uad mosses, the stones of which borj dates between 1698 aad 1320. I scrapj.l the mold from a few ot the stones and brought to light these inscription. This one is modest : 'My body to the ;rava f .., My soul to Uo 1 I hope is fiii; When this my chil.lraa You do sse, i-jin3:ntir ui?.'' This, on a child's grave, is not without pathos : '"This lovely biut so yciia aa far, Caltl henc3 by eriy (loom., Just caught to show how sweet a flj'.vdi in Paradise would bloom." This one also preserves the phonetic method : "Youth like a uiornia flour. Cut down and with ii'z.l ia aa hour.'' Notice the unexpected word-division in these: "To worlds of sperits I am gou. And left my friend beh ind to mourn. My body lies here in the dut, Mv soul is stationed wi th the blest. "Hark, my gay friends, to you my voice has been, Refrain from folly and forsake your sin; Still from the dead I fain would sent my cries, Trust in the Saviour, don't His grai de spis?.'' This is as good as any I have seen : "A thousauJ ways cut .shori our days. None are exempt from death, A honey-b?e by stinin nn Did stop my mortal breat h." Hohst'r (.V. Y.) nt'oa Morbid Winking by 3Iiners. Dr. Snell persists iu his opinion that there is no reason for supposing that ny stagmus or the nervous disease which manifests itself in a morbid winking of the eye, so common among miners, is at tributable to working by the imperfect light of the safety lamp." The fact that the complaint is found among the workers with naked lights is in itself sufficient to throw doubt upon the long-prevalent theory. The Government Inspector of Mines for the Midland District notes, oil Dr. Stokes's authority, the case of a man who, after working with the Davy lamp for fourteen years without injury, pro ceeded to work at a pit where candles were used. lit had been employed three three and oe-ha!f years, and during the l ist twelve months he experienced symp toms of nystagmus, aud had ultimately to leave work and seek medical aid. Dr. Snell lias collected a mass of facts and a record of a large number of instances of men suffering from the affection, which will, he believes, bt very corroborative of the views he has before set forth, namely, that, the prime cause of the affec tion is to be found in the position as-s-.-'iied by the miner at his work Low h., Xe?. "Death of a Thousand Cuts.'' " 'The Death of a Thousand Cuts,' of which we have all rer.d in some vague story of the secret atrocities of the East," said George Trimble Davidson, "is by no means the hideous unreality I fancied it. While in Taeoma recently I was enabled to secure with considerable dif ficulty a photograph made instantane ously by an Englishman who in disguise succeeded in being present at the execu tion by the thousand cuts' of a mandarin who had been guilty of the crime of lese majeste. lining discovered, the daring photographer had to run for his life, but cot until he had taken views of the writhing victim in the course of ih" administration of the thousand Mashes with sharp swords by which he was tortured, and indeed dismembered, while life and consciousness vet re mained V'Xt.c Y,,,-k Tim.s. I.iirMuin? Diqrs Up Potato??. Dnnug a heavy electrical storm which passed over Dee.field. Fenn., lightning struck the house of Rev. A. J. S-der and played havoc about the premises. The bolt circled the chimney, tea-.iug up the roof, and descending into the house did a good der.l of damage. From the cellar it went through the wall into ground and dug out a row o;' potatoes completely as if it ha been dou' bj iand. PhilaJtlultiu fn. THE FARM AND (iARDF.!! THE BEST GEESE. A Connecticut poultry man, who speaks from his own experience, distinct ly states that: "No amount of good food will fatten geese of a mongrel type." The best and the quickest birds to-day of good flesh in his opinion are those produced by Embdeu geese crossed by the Toulouse. He feeds his geese with wheat and barly grain and barley meal with brewer's grains, all of which are good fattening foods. He also feeds tur nip and marigold top?, which are greatly relished. Xtio York World. A LOXG TAIL ON COW. W. H. Seeley, of Kalamazoo, Mich., a dairyman of long experience, says: "I know of no physiological reason way a long tail is a good sign in a dairy cow, but I do know that all our best cows have them.'' Mr. J. B. Knapp, ot Port land, Ore., gave a corresponding opinion iu the Irymo rt not long ago. The Hol landers for hundreds of years have ob served that their most promising and long-milking cows had long tail. Hence itbecomesa settled thin? with them that the tail should extend at least below the hock. The Da in; man any : "The long, tail is an indication of nerve power, and that is a thing that is always to be de sired in a cow. It is equivalent to what we call the 'staying power' in a race horse." BADLY EDTCATEI) CALVES. Much of the trouble iu dairies du2 to vices in cows is attributable to the bad education of the calves. Tha traiuing of the calf should begin before it ha? got upon its feet, It should be wrapped iu a sack and canied away to a comfor table pen at a distauce from the cow. To prevent its recognition of the dam is the tirst step to make- a docile calf. It relieves tha cow from a source of much nervoi9 excitement, to whica quite ofteu an attack of milk fever h due. The cow is left in quiet, in a darl:, lone pen if possible, for a few hours, when the acceptable meal of warm bran or oatmeal gruel is given having a pint of molasses iu it. This is las.itivw and nutritious and settles the co.v to a com fortable rest for a few hours, after which she is milked and the milk is at once fed to the calf. A little patience will suffice to teacli the calf its first lesson, which is to drink the milk, and then a second one is given. This is to have a strap around its neck and to be tied in the pen. It will lie down and sleep quietly until the next milking time, which will be iu twelve hours, when it will need a little more patient teaching to drink its next meal. By continuing such treatment the young thing will soon learn to drink, and the ninth meal should be of warm, sweet skimmed miik. To make a good calf its milk should be given warm as long as milk is given to it, whicti may be tun: or four months. Xew York Times. ItOADS AND ROADMAKIXG. The Alabama Agricultural Eiperi-. ment Station at Auburn has issued an Interesting bulletin on this subject from which the followiug extracts are taken: As an unnecessarily long road would increase the cost of construction, the cost, of repairs, and the cost of time and labor iu traveling over it, it sh ould, other things being equal, be perfectly straight, but straightness should always bs sac rificed to obtain a level or make the road less steep. This is one of the most im portant principles to be observed, and yet is most often violated. Koads should be made to curve sometimes for economy in construction, such as to avoi 1 swampy or bad ground, or to avoid large exca-i vations, or to reach points oa streams better suited for the approach of bridges. Besides its substantial advantages, the gently curving road is much more pleas aut to the traveler, for he is not fa tigued by the tedious prospect of a loag straight stretch to be traversed, but is met at each curve by a constantly varied view. The proper width for a road depends of course upon the importance and the amount of travel upon it. The. least width to enable vehicles to pass is as sumed at sixteen aud a half fee:. Iu Eng land the width of turnpikes approaching large towns is sixty feet. Ordiuaiy turn pikes are thirty-five feet, wide, aud or dinary carriage roads across the country are given a width of twenty-live feet. In France the roads vary in width from sixty-six feet to twenty-six feet, and all have the middle portion ballasted with stone. Iu New York all public roads are laid out by the Commissboers of High ways aud are not less than thr.-e rods wide between fences, and no more of them need be worked or formed into a surface for traveling than is deemed necessary. The drainage of a road by suitable ditches is one of the most impottaut ele ment'. All attempts at improvement are useless till the water is thoroughly got rid of. These ditches are sunk to a depth of about three fee' below the roadway, so as to thoroughly drain off the water which may pass through the surface of the roadway. In repairing roads the earth used should be as gravelly as possible and free from vegetable earth. Sod or turf, though at first tough, soon decays aad forms the softest mud in wet weather. Stones of considerable size should not be used, as they will not wear uniformly with the rest of the roiJ, and will pro duce hard bumps and ridges. A gravel road carefully made, with good side ditches to thorouglly drain the road-bed, forms an excellent road. Some gravel roads are very poor, caused in a great measure by using dirty gravel, which i3 carelessly thrown on the road in spots, which causes the roi l rosooa wear into deep ruts and hard ridges. St. r.ouix llfpulVw. HAKE HAY WHILE THE SU SHINES. The American farmer must be a prompt maa. He must do work at the right time and do it we!!, aad have done with it. Our prevailing winds come over a dry continent and are hungry for moiiture, while tne winas ui Entrland and Western Europe pass over the Atlantic Ocean, warmed by the Gulf Stream, and are loaded with moist ure. Here our roads are muddy to-day and dusty to-morrow, and some people giumble and call it a disagreeable cli mate to live in. Nothing of the sort. It is the best climate in the world for foad making. But we must not let the roads get muddy. "We must drain them. And in making hay our climate is the best, or worst in the world. Like fire, it is a good servant, but a bad master. We have seen gras in England that bad been cut three weeks, and repeatedly turned, that was not wilted more thau grass that had been cut here for three hours. And it did uot seem to be in jured very seriously. In our climate a few davs of such exposure would make the hay fit only for the duug heap. Why this difference? When grass and clover are growing the leaves and flowers are covered with a film of gum. Pull off a clover blossom andvou find it sweet. If it were not for this film of gum or wax the rains and dews would wash out the sugar. When we cut the clover or grass and it dries rapidly, the film of wax cracks and then the rain can get at too sugar and wash it out. This is the ouu most im portant fact to be clearly understood aad observed in curing grass. The reason why the grass that had been cut so long in England was injured so much less than we should have supposed was due to the fact that the weather was so wet and the air s; charged with moisture that the grass remained nearly as green nud full of sap as if it had not been cut. The Sim of wax was still unbroken and the rain could uot get at the sn;jar. If we cut a field oi clover, and rain imme diately follows, before the clover wilts, uo harm is done. But if the clover is partially cured and is then allowed to lie out exposed to the rain or even to a heavy dew, much losa of sugar aud other soluble matter will be sustained. Our own plan of curing clover or a mixture of clover and grass is to start a couple of mowing machines in the after noon, and not touch it again until next morning. While it is green the dew in the night will not injure it, und if it should rain iu the nigh, or the ujxt morning little or uo damage will be done. It is better not to touch the hay until there is a chance of getting it dry enough to put into cock. Fortunately, as soon as th rain is over and we have u clear sky and a brisk wind the hay will dry with wonderful rapidity. We vut no eight-hour men on such a day, unless tney do not commence work before noon. The hay must be got into cock bsfore one leaves the field. It is then, if the cocks are well made, comparatively safe. AVelike to get hay in without raiu. It it is not cut too early and has not beea injured by rains or dews, it is astonish ing how green it can be put iu the mow without injury. The richer the sap the better it will keep. A few days ol sharp fermentation will do no haim. Tne heat generated will kill the microbes, and decomposition will stop. It should be remembered that ther is quite a diilcience between internal and external moisture. Ordinary green clover or grass, when cut, contains seventy-live per cent, of water. Iu other words, a tou of grass contains 1300 pounds of water and oi)0 pounds of dry hay. A ton of dry hay, wheu growing, contaius 0000 pounds of water. It is not necessary to get rid of all this water. If 5000 pounds are evaporated, the hay as put in the barn would contain thirty-three and one-third per cent, of water. If the heat generated in the mow evaporated 500 pounds mora water the hay would then contain twenty per cent, of water. This is a litth?" more than hay as sold or fed out usually con tains. -1 Hitrirtni Arricu!irit. FARM A XL) A!)EX NOTE. Pick the geese regularly during the summer to make them pav well. Under ordinary management it costs about live cents a pound "to grow chick ens. The Iloudans are goo-Uayers aad uoa. setters, and their fl-sh U considered very delicate. Whenever young turkeys u iv0 mads a sufficient growth they s:j:mld be "iveu a free range. " If the fowls begin to lose their feathers too soon change their food and do not give too stimulating diet. The refuse of the crop from an acre of tomatoes contaius more fertilizing mate rial than similar remains of most otii-r crops. As hens require u deal of water, drink ing only a small uantitv ut a tinv. it should be supplied abundantly, and ke t clean and fresh. 1 " Fowls are very fond of milk, and they thrive well upon it. .Sour milk will bring better returns in eggs thau m any utlvlz way it can be fed. It is not economical to use the hoe if horse-power can be bestowed, but it is better to use the hoe than to allow weeds or grass to grow in the rows. A poor milker will often ruin the value of a good cow. Patience and good tem per nowhere pay better than in dairvi3-r. Haw foreigners set to wori as milker seldom pay. Reports of extraordinarily large es, or of smaller eggs incased in larger onV, are not uncommon. They simply indi cate that the hens have been overfed, are very fat and iu no conditinn for layin eggs of normal size. If a mm wants to invest a cow with au aroma of greatness, give her a loaznaais fortieth Dutchess of Bungletown Queen Semiramis, or Pride of Beaooas' held's Barnyard. There is a sreat deal in a name, whether yoj believe" it or uot The more thought and care a farmer gives to live stock cattle particularly!, the better his general tanning is pretty sure to be. Horses are sometimes pettel and given extra care by poor and shift less farmers, but sach farmers rareU take much pains with cows. Common Durslai.-r mixed with scalded cor:: r.JV, v green feed for fowls that Corn and oats ground and 'l i '" is very fattening. Aft-r ' month old cracked corn an. i ' ings is better tor them tu . The 3I:v7vVhTlvT::t hT A little story was ivh-.. i .'. Yard the other day whir", r. ' "' Ad mi rat Tboma O. svr..;''''' who is visiting Lis s:);, ( '."" .' r' O. Selfridge, the C ;;". -, , ;" ' Navy Yard. Sj-ju v-u V-"'.-miral, who is the States naval oflher, , ? years of age, was Ji in New York, with a d: pany, among were field, Arthur, She:r .: ; 10 o'clock, when th.- their bight, the old Ad.; at b :-!s";r - i ... the table and called for ' All were surprised a: asked for an ex-jruiat'.-r. that he never perinitied terfere with hi hcilti). o'clock w:is a good i, . ,, ;u tire. All present limr';;. : i. ; him a little aud iv-.-.t He Could not, 1; jv. uc,-. i. remain. After h; Mb-.- :' night" he added, ; sound sleep ten 1 to !.:,.,;; going to prove ir to cept the Admire!, w!i. -v..-. the banquet that ew . j away. The Admiral Ins IS Mo n (Holt. 1 WISE WUKL'.s. Repentance never ! j a:-, i.n comes from the he-iri. There is glory ia auyiliia,. v.i: ply from a sense ot d'ir,-. Men need mora! c.r.;ra . -they do higher for'.M,U. " Health may be b u :t ;5. hard to make the dortor; L-!ior; :t If au alligator c -.f. 1 tr.'ic. i: probably declare he h t i :; ,:Yi How many piMjb t iouls lav in then !i .. j, quill! The first p;o ;' : for anything is his;-:; ;.:.y stigm i of faiiur? in u o:h To judge hu'iin elnrac man may sometime; luxe perience provide 1 !, . h: heart. Every day is a ieif b H day dawns it is a hi rk. .scribed thereon our ibyr;!.!-, vor actions. That which is im-vo Jn, t'ao may oe wori noiii. i- u ). wat, as mat which is nuri uu.i .usn. and which therefore ibi-. lew worker r.-" ...... Ki-,. :.. v. r.r.. .,' ,. wf:, and he is :is in'.M-ii out who iissuraes tVan himself any part above .inol'r.T.-.'o he wW.Jx considers hi::i- If b.-Lnv the ret of taa'-? society. There are h'.w.ks i s o v.mvs of i vikmr st a thing The man v;'ik -;:!!." so slot lv along a narrow sidex-u'!: that he in' i.edes the nro -ress of !!.: uia ISr.mA him is regarded as a y whereas to theslo:'.' w..; patient rapid walk '.- v. trouble and renders lif v ;f ' the , -.ik till tie The discovery of meerschaum neur -'' Mexico, has jut : ' oral mouths ago Clur:; the cropping an I broa-u? i this place. Pieces we:? and Vienna, an I a fe" ' suits of the tets v.-f-r; r; Experts in both of tb-;" : that the specimens we:e ' schauuij and Mr. Neff,of Silver City, hwiu- h: to the place where tl.j made aud located a 1 ' ;!1 Sua. .-in a I:'i ftbd ptWribe It with " grt tti'T jT, v.. . . . . i r. us I ' ; 11 fortni nJ fTsr ' rr""" :r.K W curint 1-cUoo, letter, ts'-ild H'". ?V" V K V. V l ,-.w-rfil t... " tLailirs wtiute tviteffi! " V ' - " 'i mm cictntinir properue of P. r no roiviiam. IIPPMAM BEOS., PWPfJ'Kil CORESSfflS mmmi n 'y) Drnggi3ts,Lippaiaa'8ElocK bah"
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 26, 1891, edition 1
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