Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Sept. 9, 1891, edition 1 / Page 2
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6) 7 v- A Perfect Success. VII The Rev. A. Antoine, of Jiof uio. Tex., writes: As far as 1 am abh o juao, 1 think Pastor Koe nig's Nerve Touic is a perfect success, for any one who suffered from a most painful nervous ness as I 1M. I feel now like myself again after taking the Tenia Curetl Sritirelj-. Cincinnati, Ohio, IVb., 1 I, tho umlersijued, hereby stuio tim'. iiiy boij had iiil'itic lit3 over two years, hut Man cured by Pastor Koenig'a remedy entirely. 1 make this Htiiteiuuul out of t'latit iiJe. 5 liaco Street. JOHN' XUEST.l'AT. Tho undersigned, knowing the above-named J. Nuenlizt's family, is fully convinced of the truth of above statement. I'. M. SCHAKFKR. I'astor of St. Franciacus Church. EJP" A Valuable JSoolc en Nervoua mj Diseases .sent tree to any addretss, r and poor patients can also obtain Im this meili-iue fieo ot rlianje. This remedy has leen prepared by the Reverend Pastor KoeniK, of Fort Wayne, lnd., siace aad is now prepared under his direction by the KOENIG MED. CO.. Chicago, III. Sold by Druggists at $1 per CoMle. CforSSi LarKO Size, i1.73. C Dottles l'ov iJ. For Sale IIv .1. II. liill & Son. (bud- boi'i . We are now handling the very best B E IS IF that has ever been brought to tlie city Best Qualify and Lawesf Prices. MrrroN', Pome and S.utsok Always on hand. We pay the highest j mi'iket juice for cattle. S. Cohn & Son, f!itv Maiket and Old P. O. IJuildiug. Dr. James H. Powell, S Duuo Stoke in "Law Buildino,'-J-(cor. store, north end) Keeps constantly in stock Fresh Drugs, Patent Med icines, lite-, Etc. PI! ICRS AS LOW AS AT ANY DRUG STOKE IN THE CITY. i Also offers his professional services to j the surround incr rommiinJtv t nw .ut m the day or night. Can be found at the drug etore, unk89 professionally en gaged. Kesidence on West Centre St., between Spruce and Pine. (BOTTOM VVFTH LATEST IMPROVEMENTS B-'ric of Fr'lrrlit. J'uJlv aiiarntitf rd, ..HUBBARD $la'tkxV ' Wii '-a- ry moc k ar. various Southern points for ;ulc:k delivery upon receipt cf orders. "OSGOOD" U. S. Standard tin m"m k b: -nt on tnil. r-fisrht paid. I iiH.v wnrianlnl. '. .TO Sm "ll",r fii;:w rrcif.riioniitflv Low. i0" Vk3,J V 111 UK ts:i. Gen Southern Miif.cer. A I'l.A NT., (.A DALLAS TKS. SOME PEOPLE May be oppose-1 to the use, and some t the abuse of whiskey, yet its me is often absolutely necessary, especially for medical purposes In such ense-s, the pure, unadulterated stuff is needed not a doctored, drug combination and when the I. W. IIAKl'EU is used, you get the best results, without any bad effects Its purity and high standard wiil be main t lined because this firm has an enviable refutation which it means to sustain. It can be had at John W. Edwards, ( !or,nsi;oi:, X. ('. UPP.W.N BKOS.. Fropric-'ors, Drukts. Lipp man's Ei.-.w savANfvAH. C roil n:u & uodwlst, COKTRACTOUS AND BuiLDEHS, Goldsboro, N. C. 3T"Phins and estimates furnisfctd a applieatioa. ALAMAZOO WEED WILLIAMS MFG. CO. KALAMAZOO, MICH. ALLIANCE DEPARTMENT. Various Matters of Interest to The Order. Congressmen Given Notice to Sup port the Sub-Treasury Bill or Step Down and Out. - The Virginia State Alliance Conven tion in session at Richmond endorsed in its entirety the plank of the Oeala ilat form which s-iys: '"That the Govetnnient shall etaln,ishVub-treasuiies or deposits in the several States." The Convention adopted this amend ment: ''And we lint her demand that our Representatives in the United States Congress be iven to understand that unless they can agree with ihese demaads '.hey must give us something belter or as good." The committee on legislative demands reeeommend tin vealiinnatiou of the Lynchburg demands, also recommend the appointment o'f a legislative committee of live lo consider and );esr-nt to the Legis lature matters of legislative importance. The committee recommend the passage of a law to insure the full listing of bonds, no'is, etc. by requiring them to bear a commis-ioner's stami) or be un collectuble by proress of law; a teaure-of-ofiice Act limiting the terms of cer tain collecting and accounting officers, both State aud county, io two consecu tive terms; a law giving to school trustees a fair compensation ; a law ie'aining for the use of ihe agr, cultural department the money derived iiom the fertilizer tax. The committee also recommend the favorable consiileiation of the resolution in reference to the public debt, affirming the conviction that the provisions of lae Riddleberger law should be carried oui. and condemning the use of coupons in the payment of i txes; ulso a .('solution asking fair treatment for those interested in the oyster indu-irv against the en croachments of caoital and monoplv. They also reeeommend for favorable consideration a resolution condemning the fraud of by which silver was surreptitiously demoneii.:ed. The report was leceived and recom mendations agreed to. A resolution was adopted looking lo the passage of a law to p-.hibit trus's throughout the country. THE FARMERS TKUsT. An imj)ortant scheme, the object of which is to save the present c;op of col ton from being sk rilired, has been for mulated in Columbia, S. C, and will at once be pushed throughout this and all the other cotton-growing States. E. M. Stober, a jvoiniuent farmer near Colum bia, is the author of the plan, which lias already received the sanction of leading alliance officers, and a special meeting of the Richland County Alliance has been alled to take the ne i essary s!eps to put Ihe scheme into active operation. It is proposed I hat trust companies, with a capital of $20,000 or $.JO,000 be formed in each county in tlu entire cotton belt, ami receive as subscriptions to the cap ital the one-thrid of the cotton crop made by each cotton raiser in the county. It is proposed o bind the trust compan ies so lirmly that the cotion placed in Uieir trust can be considered the same as if not in existence, or destroyed, for the next twelve months. At the expiration of the period the compauies are to dis solve aud return the cotion held ia trust to the owners. L'y this means it is cal culated to hold the cotton supply for this year down to about six million five hundred thousand bales, aud conse quently bring the price up ro about en cents per pomid, as fo:merly received with a similar supply of cotion in for mer years. It is calculated that, under the present price of cotton, a farmer whose crop is nine bales of ."iOO pounds each at G c ents a pound, would receive only $270, whereas, if throughout the whole cotton belt about one-third of the cotton is withdiawn from the market for one year, his si bales at 10 cents would bring him :J00, and leave him to start next year's crop with three bales on hand. The in st trust company will be organ ized in that county at once, and .after the plau shall have been formally endorsed by the ailianc" and that it will be is a foregone conclusion - the necessary steps will be taken to extend the organialioa throughout the whole cot; cm belt. Tilt ARKANSAS ALLIANCVj The Arkansas Slate Farmers' Alliance, in session at Liitle Rock, has passed res olutions endorsing the Ocala demands aud favoring their enactment into laws, especially the land loan and su'oiieasuvy features, and denouncing the Fort Worth convention of the --so called alliance men as an aboiiive attempt of scheming politicians and political trimmers, rot ten up for the eole purpose of ' side tracking the o-reat reform movement bv creating dissensions and divisions anion"" the members." THE WESTRUP SUB-T'iEASlTRY. The New York Sun says editorially The West nip scheme for irisinir money that has been laid before the 'Farmers Alliance of Kansas is far moie practic able than the Sub-Treasury schc-me R can be carried out without :' e assistance ot Confess or any political parrv, aud m defiance of the red dragoii of" Wall street. It provides ihat the Alliance fv mers shall form a timmcial societv out their landed or personal p.ope-1 y " una a iunJ, aud issue notes upon t ie secur'tv thereof. Of course the Alliance f.-cnurs will sun ceitain r;sks by goi.ig into this rcheme, and will even be liable to lose their real or personal pronely in it. Rut that is their own business." Of course other people wiil have thei:-ht to re luse to take the notes issued upon the se-cu-ity given; but ihat may be the means of saving them from losses to which 'hey would not be liable by accepting them. j.ny tare, tlie rede, at ijovevumeut ! is not held "o any ie-pon-.ibilit- bv t,je j Westrup scheme of borrowing; so that it j has at least one advantage over the Sub- Treasury scheme of the Farmers' Al liance. PEFFER AND SIMPSON SPEAtv TO PENN SYLVANIA FARMERS. Lebanon, Pa., Special "J Not with stand hid a heavy rain at Mt. Gretna a crowd of about 10,000 persons congre gated at the Farmers' Eneamrmient there, the special attractions beinst the speeches of Senator Peffer and Congressman Jerry Simpson. Roth were listened to atten tively and both paid their respects to Congressman Rrosius,who, in his speech yesterday attacked the Alliance, espec ially in its Sub-Treasury schem-f. The Hon. Chawneey F. Rlack of York also spoke in the foreuoou and William M. Derr of Lebanon in the afternoon. ."!: The Sub-Alliances all over Union county. S. C, are taking steps to .educe the acreage of cotton, and to plant more corn and raise more stock. At a meet-iin- of the Sub-Alliance of Gibbes several days ago the following resolutions were adopted : ' Resolved, That the acreage of cot ton should be reduced to ten acres to the plough. Resolved further, That our delegates to the County Alliance be instructed to bring the matter before said Al iance, in order to secure conceit of action, as far as possible, among ail cotton growers. :;: In Vigo County, Indiana, the Farmers' Alliance is protesting against the fact that Axtell. the famous trotting sallioD, is tax, d at only $000, whereas he was bought by his present owners two years agcfor $105,000. It looks as if Europe will not only re turn the seventy million dolhus in gold that she drew from us, but will add from thirty to lifty millions more, all on ac count of the wheat she must buy. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. There are said to be nearly sis thou sand piecei in a modern locomotive. Paris is soon to be lighted, as to its streets, almost entirely by electricity. A cubic foot of aluminum weighs 157 pounds. A cubic foot of copper weighs 558 pounds. The most recent steel rails hava a higher percentage of carbon and the steel produced is harder. Some remarkable experiments in talk ing with monkeys by aid of a phono graph are made public. At Wilkesbarre, Penn., the electric lights and long days have reduced the price of gas from 81. S ) to $1.0'.) per thousand. Pennsylvania make; fifty-two out of every lilt) tons of rolled irou in the LTuited States, aud sixty-nine out of every 100 tons of steel rails. Professor Gardner lm decided to go to Africa to engage in the uncoageuial but scient'tic study of thi laaguige of monkeys in their native state. In the Island of Cuba great progress has baen made in establishing electric light piauts. This is notably the case in Havana, where the central station hai a capacity of GOiJ.) lights. A military force on tha march seem? to sutler less from whit is popularly known as sun-strokj than civilians walk ing our crowded streets or engaged in mercantile and median ical pursuits. Some plants appear to be able to grow and develop in total darkness. A com mittee of the Royal Horticultural Society has been told of hyacinths that developed colored flowers, although prevented by some accident from coming above the ground. One of the London street car compan ies has in use an automatic "starter." Two powerful spiral springs, fastened to the front axle, are wound up through being applied to the car's stoppage, so that when it is desired to go o.i again they are capable of starting it. The great Homestake Mine at Lsad City, South Dakota, uses powder to blast the ore. When the; ore is crushed, it is then stamped into powder and washed over a cpiicksilver plate to citch the gold. More than 150J ni-;n are em ployed, with a pay roll of 10J,();)0 a month. The Chinese Government is about to begin the manufacture of steel, aud blast furnaces on the Cleveland principal, ca pable of turning out 100 tons per day, are being erected at Hau-Kow. Resse mer and Siemens-Martin plant, bat rolling mills, etc., wiil also b.? put up at the same olace. A pneumatic chisel has be3a intro duced into a stone-cutting establishment iu Germany. It resembles in appearance a syringe, which the operator holds with both hands, and as he lets it slide over the surface of the stone or metal the chisel chips off splinters and particles. Compressed air, acting on a piston, im parts a rotation of from 10,000 to 12,000 revolutions a minute. An ingeuious apparatus has bean intro duced to prevent the wheels of eleefie ,and other street cars from slipping. R consists of a revolving brush connected Avith the forward axle by a belt. As thtj axl ; revolves it sets the brushes iu mo tion, clearing a path for the wheels. There is also operated in connection with the device a box which allo.vs roi escipe of a sufficient amount of saud or salt without the slightest waste. A New Insect Ptst. Montgomery and Clinton Counties, Iud., recently suffered under a visitation of a strange insect. It comes in swarm? so thick as to form clouds that darken the daylight as they pass, and' people getting among them cannot avoid taking them into their lungs. Tuey are de scribed an beiag about the siz; of gnat. Their method of locomotion is a cross between a hop and a liy, and is took the swarm three days to .pass a given point. They aie traveling in an easterly direc tion. The insects harmed none of the growing crops, aad their strange ap pearance has caused much wonder. A local scientist has as-ertei that the in sect's name is "tripid ioUeu." iicj-yune. THE FARM AND GARDEN. DEATH TO BUTTERFLY EGGS. A roman gardener says she repelled the butterflies that lay eggs that hatch into green worms by dusting cabbage when wet with dew with flour, turning the crank of a common sifter just enough to let a little fall on each head, repeating the application once, later in the season. "The moths would fly around over the plants but would not alight on them." Xeio York Tribune. THE BRONZE TURKEY. The bronze turkey is the original bird from which all the known varieties have descended. It inhabits the greater part of this continent, and when well cared for and fed, it reaches a weight of from twenty-five to forty pounds at full growth. It has been much improved by careful and skilful breeding; its prin cipal feature is its handsome plumage, which 13 of a dark brown color and has brilliant golden bronze reflections in the sunlight. Breeders of thesj birds are to be found in almost every locality if only sought for. Nero York Times. HOW TO CATCH A FOWL. Few persons know how to secure a fowl to advantage. Never seize a fowl by the tail, if a flue bird, nor touch the back, but grasp both legs at once, with a firm, tight, quick hold, and then raise free from the ground or perch and haug the body down clear of any obstacle. This method does not rurfle the plumage or turn a feather, which in a tine bird must be avoided. When the web of the feathers is once broken it can never be united again, and where much handled this often occurs, giving to the bird a ragged appearance. It is the source of much annoyance to a nice, clean, smooth bird to have the plumage ruffled. Their bodily covering is regarded with the ut most care, and the lustre and beauty of it indicate the health and strength of the fowl. Kanma Fanner . KEEPING COWS INDOORS- E. W. Stewart answeis an inquiry in the Country Gentlerwui as to the advisa bility of feeding cows continuously in stable, as follows: "The dairy cow re quires less exercise, perhaps, than any other farm animal. Exercise is opposed to the secretion of milk, and the dairy cow, if in a light, well ventilated stable, can keep healthy with only an occasional airing in the open yard. We have known herds perfectly healthy without being turned out of the stable during the win ter season. Dairy cows will do better, and give more rnilk on the rame food, when never turned out except for an hour or so on a pleas-ant day. They should be watered when they stand in stable. When fed constantly iu stable, great care should be taken to give food in the most digestible form, and special attention should be given to its being palatable.'' INSECTS INJURIOUS TO CLOVER. The Ohio Station describes three in sects which do considerable damage to clover: 1. The clover root, borer is a small brownish-black, minutely spotted beetle which deposits its eggs during spring in the crown of the clover plant. These hatch, and the larva? burrow downward through the larger roots of the plants, doing serious in jury. The remedy is frequent rotation of crops, thus not allowing the clover fields to stand until they become breeding places for the insects. 2. The clover-seed midge is a small orange colored maggot that develops in the clover head at the expense of the seed. Fields infected by this insect are at once distinguished by the unnatural condition of the heads at the time of blossoming. The best preventive is mowing the field as soou as the presence of the insect is observed and before the seed has reached maturity. 3. Clover hay that has beeu standing in the mow or stack for some time is liable to become infested by small brown worms which web the dried stems aud leaves together and feed upon them. This is most likely to occur when old hay is left over from season to season for them to breed in, consequently the mows should be thoroughly cleaned out each summer and new stacks should not be put oa old foundations until all the leavings of the previous season are removed. Hay which is infested with the worms should be burned. CURING HAY. Clover not thoroughly dried m;y be safely put in barns with tight siding, so that air cannot come in at the sides. But if very green it must be entirely free from water, either of dews or rain, which carries bacteria to the hay, and creates more violent fermentation than is pos sible with the juices of the clover alone. The heat of fermentation dries up these juices so that they make a sweet, gummy substance that is really preservative. If no air can get in, theu such hay would keep, as preserves are kept in closed jars. But the mixture of old hay or straw with new prevents all danger of loss. A farmer remarked that some yean ago he had a stack of hay so poor that cattle ate only a little of it, and he purchased grain and fed straw with it instead. Next haying time he made a stack of new hay,' drawing clover almost as soon as cut,and putting on first a layer of old hay. then of grass, until the stack was completed. The mixture made excellent hay. The old and the new were eaten witt equal greediness. He believed that the same result would have followed alternating green hay with straw, excepting that the straw has a lower nutritive value. Part, however, of the defective nutrition of straw is due to its lack of attractive flavor. In so far as it can be given the aroma of new clover hay, its digestibility is increased. Whatever is eaten with a relish does more good than when forced down. Straw can thus be improve ! as teed, besides helping to secure hay ia better condition than would othe-wise be po-sible. This plan is bes: suited 1 1 out door stacks. Few farmers have enough barn room to stack much straw. Boston Cultivator. PLANTS THAT GATHER NITROGEN. Certain plants of the leguminous fami lv such as the clovers, peas and many o'thers belonging to that class are not only valuable for their own products, but also for the effects following their culti vation upon crops of other varieties that succeed them. This was know to farm ers in their practical experience in the rotation of crops, before scientists had discovered the source from which the most important constituent of the leg umes is largely derived. The mineral constituents of plants, such as phosphoric acid, potash and lime, are derived solely and entirely from the soil. Nitrogen, on the other haud, mav be taken iuto the plant from the air or from the soil, and nitrogen is the most valuable constituent of manures, and by far the costliest ingredient of commercial fertilizers. It now seem? certain, from experiments and analyses made both in Europe and this country, that many of the so called legumes, es pecially the clovers and pc s, have the power of gathering a part of their nitro gen in the form of protein. The protein compounds form blood mUM-le, tendon, b nes and other nitro genous tissues. This wakes plants o this class especially valuable as fodders jn supplying the protein in which many of our most common fodder plants are lacking. When they are plowed under, or are fed to stock and the manure is returned to the ground, they also supply the nitrogen which other crops such as wheat, rye, oats, grapes and root crops are unable to acquire for themselves, except through thf medium of the soil. It has thus become quite generally under stood among farmers that, whether cul tivation for the sake of their own prod arts may be profitable or not, there are ut few soils where they can bo ignored m the rotation of crops without leading sventually to improvement. Xoc York World. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. The canna is a popular foliage plant. Oxalis needs little water after it has Jnished flowering. Heliotropes should be kept shapely by frequent cutting back. By supplying a good variety of food the necessity for feeding condiments is largely avoided. Young poultry should not be allowed o go on the roosts too early ; it causes ieforraed breasts. Old fushia plants for next winter's blooming should be cut back and re potted iu fresh soil. Ducks are so much clumsier than ihickens that it is not a good plan to seep them together in the same yard. Hens should never be fed so well that when they are given a good range they will not forage a good portion of the :ime. One advantage with stone drinking ves jels is that they will keep the water cool nuch longer, while they are easily kept zleau. Summer pruning of the vine, when 3one at all, is usually overdone, and it is Dut little practiced by successful grapa jrowers. If the poultry are confined no v a good nlan is to feed soft food in the monving, i green food at noon, and whole grain it night. In selecting out the roosters to keep for next season's breeding, take those chat are compact, of medium size and very active. A good nest egg can be made by mak ing a hole in the large end, letting the yolk run out and lilliug the shell with plaster of paris. To hatch out late chickens, the best place to make the nests is upoa thu ground. A more even heat and moistura will be secured. In nearly all cases chickens should bo separated from the old hens whenever :hey are full-feathered. Separate them ind let the hens go to laying. One of the easiest and best way3 of luring a setting hen is to put her in a 3ox or cage with nothing to sit oa or imuse herself with but boards. Store away the sorghum seed, some fnillet and sunflower seed, a good bunch of clover hay, as well as corn, oats and wheat, to feed the poultry during the winter. CT If the poultry ara to be fed economi cally during the winter care must be iaken during the summer to secure and itore away a sufficient amount of food or them. Sheep do not like tall gra5, but pre fer that which is short. They will pick ap quite a large share of their food on Selds that are but scautily covered, and ,u wheat stubble they will eat clown all foung weeds as fast as they appear. i' ic ca'jcucui scavengers. Dairymen should remember that les sening the cost in producing milk is Suite as short, a cut to the profits, and equally as certain, as an adv.mn,. ; per gallon. Improvement in the cow Ihe leedaudthe inanawmt t-;ii ,-,. he lust condition, and will most likely . - ,,v.vt me jeconu. Those who are obliged to keep their poultry confined all the time may, by Saving an hour's liberty just at night, provide a daily grass ration an.l . iupply of animal food without expense Ihe amount of scratching u hen can do in one hour in the morning ; c,:,.: but at night this may be avoided. ' A successful plan in making una . . -j .uitui I'j aw to be to sow down iu August i-M mg about two pounds of turnip seed to the acre. The gradual growth of the turnip fduge forms a congenial damp shade for the vegetation and spread of the young gross plants. Th 1 r ... i, of tne vegetable also protect the rrass nu ueany irosts. T.ieir gradual decay and removal are effected b-fn tK grasps are so far advanced as to be hurt by continuous shade, aud a thick sward is secured before winter. St. . 'T i . .IKTlv,. The French w.-itch fr amounted to 404 VV. J''""1-' . A novelty m mens ' of the "stm-e-pipr' inaa?--. An aged traveling scuJ'"V died in Indiana, le v- 1 Jrs at 21,000. '" In California there: is which rises such noxln- whiff of it will extin-ui ?' A Philadelphia v.-o.nJ'r charged a debt of thrc,. cj!' had owed for forf ;--', r v- J ..P.'-' r,, William Woodvvan! 0'" ' ninety years old. ,.."' , ' school teacher for s.,-.0. :3 11 piece oi crown ri In London, has jUst b,..., i ''V1- based on a seilhj.r . 3 . per acre. Near Parkci !;ir-, - y. a young woman jirii;,.'l ' j, " -and brought to s!;. t , drowning. "--V It is said that the f.v V : at Saratoga, N Y., ,'- '":' :" gate of $2,000,r-Ki ,' , ;"J" x : , 1,1 J :i r ... busy season. The hailstones wiiaa j Arkansas City, Ark., v-'C 'J shape of a common V.',,"V.:: nearly as big. v Homing piu'co.is ::.v u-. United States m -of-wur Vr ? cate with the shore Tho ;. . such experiments -.,- TC,'"' taken. ' ' " -: A fiftecu-ycai-oM YirjI- recently wrote a px-:n 'fl ."' 250 line?, each lino 'oiii'.---'." nately with 31 ar.d I;, :nJ7--? the letter I was (.-.uirciy uiuirvj' A "berdash" was a a i ... . given in England to a .,rt ofn'-'-f" and the person win nnh 0'r neck dresses was c;iii..,j a ..i, .'.'3 hence the pre-en t t.-r;n ";i;b-r";X- Chicago and Mihv.iak.- ari, T connected by an el.-vatel j way, the trains oa whic'i wi!lra mue a minute, j U" pioo-; . nave cue ro.a i in ra in:, - ,rj ary 1, ls9:j. Tlr II i?nr.l . .t . T . lias organized a ! a-rue I trth-er atioa of the snurow. rZ must kill fifty oir ls. Tu .1 :-,: to see the des! !-.!:; i :i of T.'ljM'J iu Allegh my C a i y ia tin- n ;. Veirs. A raau with one of t'a- jr,vL t:a propensities hves ra .S!;!-!:, dm 1 has acquired an ;::);-j:i:- ; liv l L irogs, and sw ill .vs tacu v:t.i tils case he would sv:i"y.v th- most morsel that ever wit; c'jokel. 11 is John Sto.vc. A se:jv.oia tree Las bsoi io"m Kane's iiivcr can von. ia the Se' mountain range, whose original diamt exceede 1 f;rty feet, hut lias been luceu bv lire to Hurt v-niae le?t. i is larger than aav of tiie iritiaatie discovered in California by ser.-a fet:. The finest display of gull ori!r- i date tiie German luiscr sr.v oa recent trio was in A u-erini. where vv.c rllii- I l.v tin. ().,':! JJ''A'n: of Hi land. The service, whirl is ?'J5-'. 00') wiiq nrl-rmillv nai-ia Lwlon I William and Marv. IrX. orrie J t Holland aft2r that ki:; lA m"'T century ago Prowu, a step-vj i of Lafayette, Oa., i S; lk is afraid of ra :tlers. Wii'-i t:: one, if it is in the right l'-2;. seize it with his uake 1 hanl ixir. just below the head. H it 15 whip it until it is cr.vel ani head under its body. Chancellor Snow, of the be . University, announce1: that t:c--- 250,000 different sner-es are enemies of the fanner. LI Ff MA 14 UKOS., JWitjjiB, Drnggiste, Lippjian's Block CTW mm or.J prm-Tit it with prrtrt tliI?L,, ' :... i:..'..i.t RwIIii.l". I.tt'-'" J1A 16 fT W K! Hi II I iWvM eurial fois4.ii. I tw. N-M U' t ' V.-, tVi Laihtra vlwse svfUins re y i-a ''i 1 r CUB MMIIR A I I tl . EI SSI est nill' j u q 5 e a e f fg t.lcnii!g properties l r- mnd Polaiuni. jimu' T'
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 9, 1891, edition 1
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