Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Sept. 10, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 J -ST VOL. II. MORGANTON, N. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1880. NO. 28. ill lilt AB nar:rn rrnn n I TiTlTAlT 1 1'Tl Mil Ml LIK1HIMM T rpjlM KEMAKKABLi: NEWS FKOM NJ3AK CHARLESTON. A Terrible Railway Ride. Una ami Northeastern railroads! different kinds of sand, varying in and for spaces of several hundred 1 color and shade. yards in width, the dreadful energy j At Summcrville yesterday the scenes Ot the, Oil IT linn ilk" TOnu nvfniwln,! i. . ,. 1 1 - v. . i.un,u in; WLftj biLUJl la 1L IS llllnOSSlule fw ipaitiwuiar ways. Tirst, there j equately describe. All were intervals of a hundred yards I wre closed and the few aim mure in wniCll t ie trap r hm -0v ..-i - ..i ..i the appearance of having been al-; an aimless way, not knowiix what teriiately raised and depressed, i next to expect, .ill the- inhabitants "u a 11 " Vl llves ozeu m their : hud abandoned their homes after the the to ad- etorrs people who 0l'lT0XS IN KUGAED TO THE CAUSE OF THE EARTHQUAKE. CiiAiiTESTox, September 2. A special report from Mt. Pleasant, opposite Charleston, says that a i nuk sink near the. derm an church svliit-li Tuesday was perfectly dry sand, is now full of fresh water. ' oar Shvll street there is a, cabiu occupied by a colored man that is .completely surrounded by u yawn ing chasm extending' through the earth's surface for ten feet and over. lVH around this there are sinks i I fresh water and masses of aim!, With, queer looking soft sub .stancesHlirave never been seen before. ltYs contended by many that the mud and other substances found around the village are vol canic matter. Just after the first great shock Tuesday night there was a decided and distinct smell of escaping sulphur over the entire village. This smell lasted through out the night. It was distinct in those localities where the cavities in the earth were, most numerous. Some sav that the portions of the mud thrown up by the water-spouts are strongly impregnated with sul phur, and that small pieces of sul plpjr can be found' in the mud. Not far fiom Charleston, on the road to Sumiuerviile, extensive mounds of clay were thrown up and hillocks of sand, in most cases in the shape of inverted cones, the hollow part of which had evidently been formed by the action of water returning into the depths from which it bad been raised. In many cases the erupted matter had streamed away from the breaks in the surface of the earth to a dis tance ot twenty to filty ieet. In other places there were fissures, al most invariably extending from north to south. These cracks were not wide and extended downward, always in a slanting direction. The matter that was thrown up was of a dark slaty color and was mixed with gravel. There was also a lit tle slate and in general the mud re sembled that which is thrown from the bottom of the phosphate pits along the river. The water in some places had a taste of our artesian water, but in many instances it was just as clear and limpid as that from a mountain spring. These evidences of the great con vulsion are not sporadic. They ex tend far and near in every' direc tion from the city limits of Char leston to Smnmerville, and at the latter place it was found trust worthy information, that cracks nd fissures are everywhere visible for miles and miles around. Strange ly enough some of these were An active operation, and the constant shocks that were felt at Summer ville sent water out of these fissures in jets to a height of from fifteen to twenty fecit. This was evidently the result of the cracks being filled with water and then the sides opening and closing by each suc ceeding shock. These appearances were of course suggestive of still position, oecond, the inuica- t, ' - : .. i gi'u- infill! IDIV Ul ion was where the force had oseil-j them had the temerity to return, iated iroin east, to west, bending The shocks are said to have been the rails in reverse curves, most of; mnoh .mm- vi..,i.,,t 1 1.. i-j.....i..r. - - - . . v ..... . . j ! toil, but ill rp:ipral met r worn rf ' - . .- x.. in niv.-fu ctw iu tuts ! iiiiu :ipp;uiing as in nariesion. am the rails. The train at through the nig.it there was nothing f the earthquake was 1 but s ekness and suffering. There them taking the shape of a single lrwl ll.n,.., .P .1 . 11., f -1 I ' " mi """ " letter . courso the same. In Su.nmerville, awmciiis occiureu ai- however, the people rushed, fri-diten-most invariably at trestles and cul- ed, into the ink y black darkne.." and verts, laere were no less than tl the general gloom and despair the five ot them between the seven- j wailin- of woman, the shriek, nf mile junction and Jedburgh In j children -mk! the frightened voices cf other places the track had the ap- j men nil!tle n) a sceIHJ ail!, pearance of being kinked for miles, j sounds that wen? equ.nlly distressing out always m those cases in the ! anil anpallmgas in Charleston. AM direct ion oi tl the time of running along at the usual speed, was not a home thai had not been and when about a mile south ofi made desolate in a preater or lrsd- Jedburg it encountered its terrible ; gree. All chimneys beddisappeared, walls were rent iu twain, ceilings fell, rnd id nuit-erous cases liouaes thut rested on .;cden blocks or masonry were leveled to the gicund Oilier houses wie lit from top to bot'om and left with yawning chasms in the buildings. In a yard, strut. ge to s..y, water from a well came no likft ;i wt'Vsiont. ami nvr i, , i i i , i . i wave, suddenly it de- ilwed the v.ud and scended and as it rapidly fell it! inches of h:iimI for was flung first violently over to the j twenty steps around the hcII, in one east, me sides oi tne cars appar- yard is an upheaval about eight ftet vim, iwunHj, uici .inuis ukui i" - square, xso uamare ot consequence ' .1 B 18 reported on the sea island--. experience, it was treighted with ; hundreds of excursionists returning i from the mountains. They were I all gay and happy, laughing aud i talking, when all of a sudden, in the language of one of the excur sionists, the train appeared to have leit the track and was sissippi basin sympathized with the : Central America, such disturbance ; movement. are likely to be frequent, in uoit-j And so it is with all similar phe-: volcanic regions there is no reason 1 nomena. Earthquakes arc direct- to think that they will continue to ' ly connected with volcanic fires, be, as they have been, comparative-j and eruptive action communicate ly unknown. j amotion which is propagated in; "Any person may be struck by! the elastic crnst of the globe. That lightning and any town ma v Ih vis-1 lorco is most violent where the ijed by an earthquake; but the j crust is oi the least thickness, same kind ot experience that teach Those who live in fancied security es us not, to fret our mjuIs over the of the solid structure of the earth chances of the former casualty may may remember that the solid earth well apply, ami with even greater is a mere thin shell Moating on a force, to the wisdom of preserving sea of molten matter, such shell in . our equanimity, iu presence of the thickness varying from three to ten chances of the latter." miles. This molten matter, always- Charleston is lielow the 5."t Ii de bmling, is subjected to additional gree of north latitude. Kichinoud violent action by the admission of is iu .7. .'52.17. Wo hail a good sea water through crevices iu the shaking the other night, but it may earth, and must seek veuts which i l.e m.tny a year before we have they find hi the numerous volcanoes another. In December, lST.'s elev which are found along the coasts of , mi years ago, a reporter for the many seas and in the larger inlands. DhnalcU interviewed Professor Volcanoes ATM r;ir ill tlll intil-i:iiv i Wiiufiin nl' Pii-liinniil P.ll..ni .r.Ti . ... . . llllllltiwii'i V' '111 l , V ' 1 1 i remote irom the access ol water. ; the point under consideration. He Tlui violent discharge of volcanic ! said : matter or its ctiort to escape, causes "It may unhesitatingly he said that prodigious action of the. earth's that no Mtch shaking of the earth crust which was known as earth-; has been felt iti this section within quak?x. Whatever disturbance felt j the memory of the oldest inhabi in the far interior, in a primary for- tan t." matiun, such as the mountains of! "Is it likely t!iat the shock will i North Carolina, is only propagated ' be repeated ? I reply at once that motion slight or intense, according. I think not." "Ill tlic vast ma jun to the degree ot violence at the focus . tv of cases, especially of those oc- erosng up, up, up, into the air. This was the rising; i deposited six a distance oi angle of forty-five degrees. Then there was a refltx action and the train righted and was hurled, with a roar as of a discharge of ar tillery, over X the west, and finally! subsided on the track and look a plunge downward evidently of commotion. curring iu the temperate zone, the The earthquake at Charleston ap- shocks are single or in a small group pears to be phenomenal, and is sof if like those of Wednesday night." that be the centre of distut bance. ' December 2i, 1875. But it is most probable that wo shall"! The learned professor prognoti- yet receive information of disturb- cated correctly. There was no ret urn ancesin the West Indies or South America that will make the violence des cending a wave. The engineer THE EAKTIIQUAKK. The Asheville Citizen of Sept. 2nd says : On the day preceding the recent terrible- and universal convulsion we had published a short article put down the brakes tight, but so ; suggested by the recent earthquake great was the original and added m Greece. A lew hours alter the momentum that the train kept : article was in type, there came the right a head. It is said, on trust-' convulsion,. to our very doors, strik worthy authority, that the train ingly confirmatory of our sugges actually galloped 'along the. track, i tions, and destined to bo forever the front and rear trucks of the : memorable in our annals. Never coaches rising and falling alter- i before, in historic record, has the of such shocks for eleven vears. Professor Winston further said : of the Charleston disturbance, terri- j "Hut what danger are we to ap b!e as it was to the experience of its ; prebend if it should return and witn people, light in comparison to what j increased force! Only the chance it was elsewhere. j of its being snfiicieht to topple down 'The velocity ofearthquake waves I the dwelling above voii." "The is calculated at from seven to eight probability of such a ronvnlsion miles a minute ; and this is sustained by the slight dtilercnces in time no ted in different parts of this country in the recent convulsion. The undulations of great earth quakes extend to an enormous dis hero as would destroy ordinary buildings i.1 extremely remote." The sliock of 1S7.1 was then said to bo the severest known in Virgin ia for a hundred years. It is diffi cult for us to realize now how se- nately. The utmost confusion p re- Atlantic slope been so convulsed; vailed. Women and children mm never Deiore lias an cart nqualce. shrieked with dismay and. the! on that slope been attended with bravest hearts quailed in momenta- j such lose of life or property. The rv expectation of a more terrible i whole United States east of the catastrophe. Eev. Ellison Capers ! fioPk Mountains have been singu- chanced to be on board and he j lar ."T t ,l5stnrbaU?t lost no time in conveying, as best "J"1 wlulo shocks have been lelt, i,.i in fi, .mr ,vT i they nave oeeii so slight as to make ment, the best advice and counsel he could oner. Tne tram was but faint tant terrors of suggestions of the the dis- phenomcnon. work of the earthquakeVas terri-; away, were violently changing bly patent. The train had actually 'a? ot tmv upheaving m nSSP.d over mm nf those, sornpntino tiu,is? submerging islands, C, taken back in the direction of;?he.v were but the sympathetic Jedburg and on the way back the ! "emors oi me moaons, wuicn lar 111U uioun- passed over one of those serpentine J11"'. .M.u.ua, myi curves already described, and it is throwing cities, desolating provin a simple truth to state that every : ces' overwhelming peoples, and de kov.i w..a e,v0,i Bifli;.: monstratmg the prodigious power throimh the interposition of Divine ! of th.e tor('es svYh . lie shamed be- PrnrirfpnPP Th linrrnr nf tliA Ueatll US, tClTlbte, lrrCSlStlOle, ap- .-4..... 4.-. : oi :n v..i palliiiir. when they break their Bittiatiuu i u oummci oic v cioic-: t , -" , , . " - . - day was much intensified by cer-1 b.oml a1Uiblir,t out on their mis ,..!i'uetnfiB ,if,iK...,.a sion ot destruction. ,,4-:.. 4. 4.,.4- ! )nly once in our history have Viiauwuuu to iiiv aiciu caicui.i ... - . . , ... - Ml during the day there was aeon- r 1 i,1 i wcc'" t V" v . tlm II-t' Alimttoii)e i'iifi if m 1 fbilTO JilVVIVt M'X Villi I ll 1 llO ! IIIX'11 CU 4H .f .,,1.1 ,ii .wio.i bore similarity to those whtel: are hl directions. ? It resembled a dis- 80 tqnent and destrnctne iu the , ... , A i Southern continent, in the years cuurge u ueiuy guns at, luicrvais .. . .Cnl,, tnn mif,,, n,1 n-o l: 1. . lo H"J t Utl U P1 I b Ol tllC Jll C O .1 i , i: 4. i.- the MississiDwi lving a little soutn tne sou us ot a uoiuoarumeuL at a T . , v. .- ,1 great distance. All of the explo-1 St Lou.,s "S"1.? i,V v r 5i tlie mouth ot AMnte rner in Ar mnm of fho. earth, :1s if. whs nnlv "11'1 vw.. . ...o.wi.o l0n 0 occasionally that the earth would : which contintied through a jieriou Uheoiie if it -hall nppearthat Giar. tance. One, in tiuadaloupe, u . 1., vere we considered it at the time ; was felt to at! extent of over i,f)J0 j but wo can guess what reiorts were miles. Tne memorable one in Lin- gent out irom a lurairranh of the )onin 170'iextended over a space of Haltimore Gazcttcx (which we hud over tVUAivi) sotiure mt.es, and a par- in our hies) ruuculiug the state- ion of this country was agitated by j ment that persons here had been the shock. The duration varies, thrown out of bed. Sometimes less than ten seconds suffice to do the work of ruin. One in Calabria in 17S,"5, lasted two min utes, iu which time it destroyed twenty-two towns anil villages, and utterly changed the character ef the country around. Continental Xorth America has not been the subject of so vere coa- a sensible rKori:xsoii. On Wednesday a reporter for the Washington Stur visited Professor Simon Newcomb at the Navy De partment, and inquired if the. earth quake of Tuesday night could be (explainer; upon any astronomical j basis. He said it could not. The reporter called his attention to the vulsionsm recent tunes, it we excep t f t t t rcm;U.ka,,le we:uhor t uit portion oi it known as Central ()nhi;; vu b , America am the South Mexican Pa l) vUlwtiiry changes taking ethecoast. InetormeiMl these, es- ,a.e 4hat h an nonsense m r(T pecially the State, ot Guatemala, is ; )lj(Ml U0 Vmi(: uthvVL. llo tiildysiibjecUosucli visitations, ho ia f ch:in alul is .Northern South America, and the Mhen t. lf.m7Mubel.etl t!l,ft tll.. whole Pacific coast of iha5 contme t. So ure some of the West India Is lands, notably the island of Jamaica. Cuba is inguiarly exempt. It is from these countiies that we receive the im pulses which souitjlime- alarm, but until the present inetauce have never bern destructive. A history of this recent earthquake will be exceedingly intcresliug. C;-r- tain it is that opinions as to the ex emption of our Atlantic cna?L mtiRt be reversed. Charleston as an apparent centre, with Savannah aad Wilming ton on the flanks, will suuireht new Day and Wight Darin an ncnt a: lark of r.rom-liiti. a roasolesa tickling hi thu thrmt. anl aa shaustin. liackiu -uo;;!i, afD'ut tlio suITorcr. Sln-p Lt bauinliol. anil jrn-it prostration follow . Tliittli.M-aM U aljnj attont'.cJ with lloarsrniiw, cn.t numc. limes Ixiii of Voice.. It i liublo to b. omic ctironic, involve tlie lunt. an.l t-rininate fatally. Aycr's Cherry r ti ral affor.U pvely relief col oire in ravi of llroncliiti. It outrls th cli.-poitiuu to couh, ami imlut-r rcfrcfhin slfep. I haro lcn a iracii.injf rhyirian for twenty-four year, ami, lor tlie fat twelve, have snfToreJ from anuual ai-tai-k of l'.ronlnii. After xkaustiii all tit usual retucvlics Without Relief, I trleil Aycr' Chen-y I'cctoral. It irrc-tMt a eely cure. U. JSioveall, M. I., Carrol lton,MiM. Ayrr Cherry Pectoral i ileriJedly the . l-st renieily, within my knowledge, for chroutf: r.ronchitis, and hII lutt iIL-thm-a. M. A. Unt, M. !., South I'aris, Mo. I va attacketl. lat winter, with a Kevere Cold, which gTew urc anil setdctl on my I.un. liv nlzht swt-ai 1 wai relucMl almusi toaskrrh'toii. My CoujiW was inros5ant, ami 1 freuenlly fpit b1ool. My physician told tne to t;ive up bmlne-s, or T would lit live a iiKinth. After taking various rcuiodio without relief, I was tinally Cured By Using two bottle of Arer'a Cherry Pertoral. 1 am now in perfect health. ani able to rcsunm hnsinej. after having loen pr noiineetl ineurablH with ConMiinption. B. 1. Henderson, SauUburh, IVun. For years I was in a Wlinr. I liaI weak luns, and suftereil from Itrnn chiti.4 ami Catarrh. Ayer's Cherry Tee. loral restored uo to healih, anl 1 hav been for a Ion1 tiinfl roinjaratively Tlf orous. In raxo of a Kiidden rrld I al wai resrrt to the Peetoral, and find nirt""! relief. Edward K. Curtis, Itutlaiid, Vt. Two years o-ro I uflerel from a sevem Jtmnehitis. Tho i.iyiciati attending iiih iM-r.-inio fearful that t h diseavs woitl-l terminate in Puruiniu:a. After trying varioiirt inetliciues, without benefit. In prescribed Aycr Clu-rry Pectoral, whirh relieved ino at one c. I ont inui-l V take tl;is iniHl'u ine, and was cureL Knu-st Coltin, Ijonn.mrt, lnl. Aycr's Cherry Pectoris. rrcparcd by lr. J.C. Aycr It Co., LowU. Mm. Bold l-y !l PntfUu. rrW 1 ; sis LoUlc,fk EAGLE HOTEL. Ita'ie rlea.6in in nn t my friends and the public, that I am prvpaiv l to accomuioil.it o the trav eling public. My hou-e i- tilted tip with an eye toconvcnieiiccand com fort. My table shall contain iho best the market affords. Clean ImmIs and polite -servants. My house in located fifty yards from the lcjol of tho W. X. C K. U. Ieals served at all hours for tho convenience of rail road passengers. (Jive me a call Pesectfullv. KOI IT. POlfKLL. Pi-opnctor. changes we have had during the season do not all'cct the earth afoot beneath its surface, the absurdity ' of the. theory is apparent." In every community ihrro arc a number of men whse whole time is not occupied, suth ns teacher, minis teis, fanners' son? aid other. To i. A. C L A Y W E L L U Manufactnrert A; for Tombstones, Monuments auA in fact GARBLE YORK OF ALL KINDS. CU.T.oaklnj at th- IM .t 0."Hf l?eror pnr -litinr. Ml rorir y h:ai LlKLiv. Sat Mart ton gmrauteed. Aiifvt IT. iv . 4. A. CL.W'WM.L. Art. Statosvillo Collc?go, STATKSVILLK, N (, these c!Moicially w wcnld My U,jMw,j.j., p.j ? p..., t, mm if vu wish to make several hundred i"- "-;itr.- W.. ,( r..i dotbirs thiriny the quake charge noted in , J l4. i ot eight months, with m, termitteut from the subterranean d.s-; f vi()le;jcc Tho valley of The remarkable fact was Qbio 8ym.lthizcd in the move. lliore viol constant dread everywhere hf bulging of the that there would be a general in wiuation caused by some extraor dinary force of tho earthquake, 'ut only was water emitted in low places, wherdtit might be expected to exist all the" time, but on- the t()l of the highest elevations the jimd could be seen. This latter Jilct indicated that the force was uwng exerted at a rather greater Sinn rr arni m iti vacrtont r ...... ; mem, i f . I ... f. . 1 . ...I..- H .7 interior oi tne es.rui mat neat ly an of the wells had been at low water. There was a sudden rise in all of these wells and the additional water was pure. Looking down into one of these wells, an observer could on the eve of any loud detonation see the water rise up the walls ana after the shock again subsided In St. .In'. but there was no ruin elTeet- lut along the Mississippi the continued agitation eltected great changes in the country. At one time-that river flowed back for some hours in its channel, lt chang ed its bed in many places, never to resume it ; and eastern Arkansas as is now full of lakes and bayous, the former beds of tho stream. Heavy forests sunk into the ground, forming large marshes ot what had lesion was really the recipient of the heaviest force of subterranean ac- tiou. t GROUXDLEStf FKA1IS. The Uichinond Dispatch of Sept. 'Sid says : The telegrams from Charleston next fw months. write at once to 1. r. Juitnioii & Co , nfll'ieiim-md, Va., and they vi.l hhow you how to io it. Aycr' Ague Cnro, when ued ac cording to ditcetio:u. is warranted to eradicate from the system all foruii ofmalxrial disease, Mich as Ferer and Ague, Ch 11 Fever, Interotttctit, Kcmiltent flnd lhllious Fevers, and disorders of the liver. Try it. The experiment is a safe one, and will cost you nothing if a cure is not cb Full corps of AfiLETKCiii:::. i-ifi.li- it vtk. iiomk couiiiaTs and Mo:F.n- ATI. C tlARi.r. Special lessons in cooxixo and norsr.KtKiMXo without extra expense. Ssud for catalogue MISS FANNIE KVKI5ITT, June 24, ISO. Priocipal. drevvs' parish, for ten miles on the JPth than was at first thought to er.8ide of the Ashley river bridge been high lan(l . aml lbo h-eC tols e Uie limit of the force l,,e tuUMU j ,s uuu uiJ UJ ot lotty iorest trjes may ue seen to Xiiar to,, ,5i., Lin Vfot and mud holes of from an inch to two thi i .. morriiiir from out the dentoce.m ie.l Tnocrloxr'ni'frbf TbP feet in diameter. These holes have (ientjis of swain u anl water. The city. Why should anybody wish ; can down n-i j. -r i..? .i 4.t. pmitted blue mud and tzray sand m a.ivfh Mlir into kojiow nnill to excite trroundless tears in the -"'iijiiuiui riniii iiiuii;u i.uui a wack. Rnoio,.,. ua p., lartre quantities, and the whole sur- chasms which have never since telling of the improved condition of the public mind in that city are in-! fectod. It i nut n i! mnn ti itnte. ... ..l;,r,.;H,nt i.v irr.ri.i-jti.in nf i Food for the brain and nerves that .w.l. Kf.nT,P fhnsethronHi which will invigorate the body without in- ci.,,,.i,iwftn in.t iviowl .nwl ! loxitMliiig, is what we need tn these therefore, we have reason to hope ' v. oi rush and worry. Inkers ti..,t "tl.f, : ivnrl,1 l.:ia not vet hoard . w restores the vital energitP, the last of the enterprise, wealth, ! soothes ihe nerves, and bringn good orosneritv. and happiness of thut lita!ii quicker than anyti.ng you m m sew GOOD ue. i a 2111 nr i i i . . . i . - man Arnold (colored) were badly face ot this ara 1S w,vred w,Ul lltlle been filled except with water. The Jiijuied l..- ti.o ..io ia.m mounds. Prople living inth.s panh (.ftmitrv known as 'the sunk lands" winch the train took in the dark sav that uma and wa.,er . 01 ed 11 ? still form.a marketl significant feat- nf Hie Irom live to ten teet in ueigm, huu ure 1U tie topography ol rue coun- Kuock thot 4-1 .i 4-1. . 1 t t.hev all seem to be in a most l!s said ti.- -4.1. ...,i.i ,...1.. a 1 ivied condition. Unc old . Liljll. I II.. I.I I I V.IIII1II'III I .... ramusmuiL-umm. i...u-.;v., - rt i,rst..-iass piano or organ cau Herald louencs mis question iu 1110 following paragraphs: 'Scientists have not, it must l e owned, been able as yet so to ob- p.irt-oaiice nioclc. )tJl U Ml.- V I Mitt FANCY GUOD.H,' T"T.VINO S5 yAr?" xpiTt!' tn tli lrrr-t t luiaQ Jt.u fuin lK.tu Kun" ti d Kmst- t-.t. I pr-pjr.l unr r ll K'.ii lt VMirlw. tl'n k-i. J -v'-!.v. -t- All urK srjutotM. GILMER HIGH SCHOOL, save piano or organ inonev by calling at Tin: Stak office. We can put you on the road for a good trade. demoi- trv. The. region was but thinly set- serve and -co-ordinate seismicplien- PHYSICL1NS IlKCOMMFNI) nen-ro Wo- fifMi ..n,i there was little loss of life loinena as to predict with the sligh-. shriner Indian VermifiiL'e in their of the city' orDrol)ertv: but the towus of New est approach to certainty when .,rjictico :w a suiK-rior article for des- - . -m a 1 ll! . I ...i.1..-.. v1..-v - ....II tiih wi Hit ! V elliu wuiius. Jul toV0 VnV llllfl fhof man said that-- the view ,,1 ,i tn. inau 111c (jllwUi Kiev 1 ... , . 1. 1, 1'iuijoed (iown tmnm,,..,r finMivi- was most appalling, inter tu siuhivs Madrid and liurcuianeum 111 iins caiiuqii.tuc. u. ui nm .wi vv.. , , t roving and txi xi'' It was tl,P vcnrl tr, Vth, wei e felt cues from the city could be som. voro destroyed. but, so tar as Historic precedent ; 05 CCPla a little. Bcceedii,r rv,ocfir distinctly heard, and almost mime-, The chronicles of this great ca- can teach n, we know tltat the 00-1 having reached the top of the "lately tbebght from "tho firoe lit up 2f,v? ndtlenly swerved off to the the heavens over the city. 1,0 I aiul left rtown an embank- At Williams' farm, near the three- hW i ilow ifc was done was mile post, the surface ot the ground Hi , y lnuiated. In many places was- disturbed by vent-holes winch the truck of the South: Caro- threw out during the night seven This School is priocipdly adapted to givo yodng iniMi n ilrig'i prv- iihIioh for LHegt, or tiifnit-.-. For farther parlicuhnt aitdre John A. (rihner, A 1., ftiicipn!, Morganton, N. CL - "Tail term o;eu An;nt rq. ISSC. GRAK Itt Tho LVnn.' a SiVlVillXlil- J. 1'imity exist mostly 1U iraUlllOIl J! cuncucu 01 wi'MHK iv: cau:iijiiiivio j i., .u,iv ... ..iufsl pt:4VI rw: .t ii! i but they were impressed upon re-j above the thirty-fifth degree of . of every every kind cured in J0 Mm Sbir. cord by association with the earth- north latitude is at least 111 North-! ntcs by 11 ootjvrtfs bamtaiy ZoUon. fw pQW rr V!?T4 T nnake which at the same time con- j eastern America highly improba-; Use no other. 1 his never fads. Sold lV!!Li vulsed Venezuela whicn was the ble, and that, while in volcanic re- by Johu lull, Druggm, Morgaa'.oj, vj. t.-t.i tor ir:n-tri-.-i -i ceuter of disturbances, and the Mis- gious, such as those of Naples and N. C. - iuxu''.x xyx-Jivrlk Vcri.Vi. 6 1. !
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1886, edition 1
1
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