Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / April 24, 1884, edition 1 / Page 4
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laUJfcwBii..!a. A .. jn.-.Aiiw. immm -gAAaw 3 ,11 TT:ft WIH 'my Cii"aa y. f -y. w -r 'if r M 1 '1 a II- If A JO r.t . j.J.i r-.t .. 4w-MyrKwf)aftr somen said'1 WT J v- - I AVenlnra end.- .is..-.-- " r?r "r f ,., Thus they chatted. n In a careless wa Baying that papesswere ailing each fla-i ; Bat tHotr KHIa , ,,vJ,,.Vk .r m; -VAU-'.'i. J tiI , Wrecked an crimed when W tWwa$ Aa hi i aink aims kig, JSor of thq,pirtaop bright as the akjr. . And they areraieaWd of the pate aiS Vto ( That ibrged thxortgh Ida ho&rt when the paper ' ; mntg .. ' ' ' ''; . ' . ' Por ti neror kndwn In th world of mnn jl JUttft agony "iannjts a poor editor'a den. . . . . if ' . i: 1. . HU paper he stored with a father'!: oridel And IOTcd.il as rakrx do their chosen brido. . For fta life and weal he had toiled when still ' He had itodiod add dolTed for a sentence' ntfr, That wboldahine with the luster of pin-touched And his though oared off on' tho ing? of l' i bliai. . -. ijQ "Andhia ttane grew as aoft aa an angel's kiss, 6 ' IV hen the printed sheet of his own command " w virau uciu um eager juna. , , f And his bosom thrilled with a tonch of pride i Who he sawprfotion on erery side. - ' f ' ; : ; ! "V , And bk heart grew light, for his faith was :"'riw:.WlBg.,V jfrV;-:v 't"r -', the waves i of i ie sea when they dash ilong Uo'fidaaeoe?liicBm!ner akyr. . And the chCling ids of doubt swept by, j J And the editor's c! leek grew wan and pale, "Tor he felt that his newspaper venture might , ! - M. : ' . i t i .'S'.' jvj ' .v--""h.---. let he toiled away, and the world--for him. . Meant four low wUj and an office-dim. . i With windows smaS and a dusty floor-r- . And a broken hinge on the creaking doorr And be honght of the old-time martyrs when no cumoea tne starrs or bur dreary den. Ho had siruggled bravely without vad ' For now the paper was going to fail. The printers struck, and the harsh blow broke The editor's heartiby the force of its stroke. He yielod at last pvery resoorce ended- , And wrote this fead epitaph t 'Taper Sus- .1 , penuod. Only a-newspaper? aye, there waa more Of heart-ache and prief than ever before - Found place in a Sfe; and the editor wept Bad, silent tears w,hile the careless world slept, Only a newspaper! yet with its life i i Went hope and ambition and strength', for all. . - strife ; And there, like the blood on a battle-field red , M editor'i great aspirations laj dead 1 - ' y . . . iMsa, Geoiqe E. Dvojlk, In an Open !Boat, A, CTOEI , OF MES SBABX, KT Inir- ( . ' -. -ni- ilk J - "My name ia William Jfaqrca. I haye used the sea for above' eTtthtTani-fweDtv ''years, have sailed in aQ kinds pf ships in' all sorts of capacities boy, ""ordinary seaman, . sail-tnaker bo'aun's mate; crossed the'AUanti ftavwteen times, sod be'rxnnl3h4i,lit e5ght; been slupTOOted.thrica jr liiowiBfr, overboard dnring seven (hotus. of .liu-iakBand picked nyat dftybfeat Vith Baieadin a life-bnoy know pretty i&gh. the beet and tbewors of ta,veatlxe fcha sto Qe found at sea ; and am therefore capabla of takfng my oath Iq thin, that ot m tlw bad jobs that ever I was in. or that, ever I heard of any., other sailor being ' in, there's nothtM tqi bwit the etilferiiigs xus men of the schooner &chaiy,Warbrick had to endtne firhes - the foundering - of that vessel obligens to take to the boat. -: .. "The schooner sailed f rqn Runcorn with a cargo of ooal for Plymouth. IShe was twenty years old, and a trifle over a -hundred tons bttrden; -There were five of a eiBitaiidnT)hing particular hap-t pened unitt jwe wera abreast- of the , Bristol Channel, when there blew up a i keary gale of wind from the east'ard. Thm'a im rIl to describe it : it was of r ... the regular kuid, full of wet, and raising a sea a tight too big for a vessel of one . hundred tons pretty nigh chock-a-block ; - with coal and 'With twenty years olhard ; use in her hull. However, we scraped through the gale, and two or three more . that followed fast, until one morning we were somewhere betwixt the Scilly Isles and the Cornish coast. It was dark, -j -j thick weather, blowing and rainins bard. tne sea rough J bitter cold as you, may ,) calculate it was, the month being Jan nary and everythinjr invisible that was ..:..more than half a mile -off. .-The wind '".-vi east and nbrth, and we were ratching m - ;g JXer very small canvas, when '?:?'. "iA in, as it was my watoh be--;vv---'v'--"-rK'od close aboard. S 'J ' ''Y' ' 'A-i-arSubled up ZW'lk :: WKl&vaA. found ":ik ScMT'H. and-'theineh 'over- ;a; t 'S?f!.?Tni .for questions. isel settling under ' an ding on soft mud he seas were wash crrowinir heavier a- jjs sank lower. There was Jat l white r water to be, seen on 'Ltoard bow no rocks, nothing ' above the froth ; but I didn't vl4at any oni? to tell me that we had run 'i k :vfoul,of the S4ven Stones.1 There was no V-Hime to do more than launch I the boat ' . antl rolllnto her. Daly was the last- -" - snan in. and scarce had he jumped when . ' the schooner plunged clean oat of sight, , going down jlike a ceep-sea lead, jso sud-i ilevly that it took my breath away, 1 . VTnere s no sensanon worse man inat;; a man fe$ls jwhen no jooks for tne snip, 1 - ho'a botan forced to almndon and finds bet vanished under the sea. The ocean never seems so 'wide '; as " then. - The whole world appears to be made of .water Sailors are a class of men little given to talking ; and when they comet, .. cleat of such jobs as.thfe they say noxi j to nothing about it, and ' people thina .'. that either they're men" without thd .j capacity' of feeling, 9: else th6ir sufferj '. 'lags were not cquhl to what might be supposed, j Had people who.' take these . views been; in that boat along with n ; . they'd look sharp in altering their opinj I ions., TheJ suddenness of the disaster--:r ".. our being "jane moment safe; and the next ' tossing oij. the sea in a life boat; with the sonoouer gone, nothing saved biit -. what we stood, in, not a morsel of food nor a drop of drink "of any kind, tho -.wind blowing fit to freeze the eyes out ..f . our - heflds.-"rv-miiers Bon of .us r v a r-.it J r" A it r ft Vif ir 4 1A V 'WMH'-Kn'wW Iea ZWgjM"? lie's the hist. 1- tod pave , hKrJ-S-'ti '! --.A: MW.iM'-ftW stood up to seafch the I 'H ?vf;i?lwft as thlck'as it bad v4L ymttf'&M. ;fmmj'-m.mnJ'P06t he said:-- we '?.fc'i'jrr.fH.l lada.. let us 4 -t 'V'l"t-H .". ft1 V VtH; A wholnrewisoentefidthem, I hifi'l.j;, -dofng so,. It is now j P- J ' 'h1 (V 'Ji 'mf "t i1 i ii Vf.fi" -'wfer, no barm seemed tooonfeof t, ? prqpotj!-tJ aiend the statutes so as to for !','' ,r ,;' y 'vell,sir,.there'snonood-ox.met de-lvahtf wifeLe3ieimmuaity ttatt'l ' was so thick that voa oonlan 1 baa Half a mile off t and iboTieh of 'contte'ibiwu I Tv. 'ilI.A. Vi-A Art 4Vw1 LkkWn T 4uC trtaVC tfodaoTn .Art 7 Am' Jf view arcmua weia, Tno qnesnoii was. . a . a i t-i m ' i'. - '.... roWftf -2" gone through sich dreadfa'rofeies as this, onr anfrVriTia'9 Tipffhn tht Thrtaaftnt we tnmbfed into tk boat, fla rfie tewesV latitndes that ever JX waaJaJT never' fefT such cold. Had he. water been fresh our; clothes' ; wonld ;have; froze into, oot-. eriugs of ice. The air was full, of spray, and squalls of sleet 'oarnerolfing up. ffv e sat in the bottoml of the boat in a)arop, to keen her steadrJ and for the shelter of one anofte's fbodiesand ejbM-whVf and others take'thetr place; W&Trado' mast nor BaU,nojiiiiig btthe twoxni we rode tot, u M was 'a HbHajC and all. through the daylighi ws Sat HAiDrt bar eyes above the gunwales, AjjdiTjing, to Eierce the .'hazel for a .vssri! JX, was lowinir about half asraleof wind, and it kej.t.steadyJ!e Now and then we'd ship Rdpsei water, ano: pm i oni witBj pu: caps; bat irisepfitHtt tae Bwams. " reckon ; it was worse' than Jgein&fe'thut boOtB at.alp Te bl didwqvinlie bUped her; "V Afterlfour ta" amffibcVT theinightdre-w nsed lt the darknesa. The daytime was l bad enoagh, bni the night made on bu J feriugs nioaJemng. The , wind, when the sea was black,' would take the feet of solid ioe. We eouldn't see one another, and that made talking a kind of foolish ness; -and so we jnevet spoke whicb caused erery one; to. feel himself a lonely man upon the ea j Likewise the noise of ;the water would sound stronger.. .IA the daytime I'too: no notice, but at night i'cl find myself listening to th crying of the wind np in the dark, and the hissing that rose all over tho ocean from the breaking bt the waves. ; don't know w!h my mates did; but that first nighi I never closed my eyes, never tried, to shut .them, neree thought of sleep; t saw the dawn ooroe, but the haze was ltoo thick to let the) light show on the horizon; if waa :0Ter4 hefiu as well as around when the morn ing broke; there' was .nb darkness thai yon'll find hanging in the1 west at day breaks ' Indeed, 1. believe the sun was tip ebove the sea before any light came, so thick it was. Al the men were awake, and dreadful they looked, as of course I did. One of them was named Barke 1 noticed him: at evuee, and thdugbi !he. Was dying.. lie lay athwartships, with his back against! the starboard 'tide -of, the boat, and there was a strange wdrki ing in Ins fingers, like the iuoroment ot a woman's, handsl .opening' a skein of thread. ' i 'n.r "" ktana fieo u tnere s any- tftuw in (wBiiV. ! -j- a. . i ft K ! j . "The sea, ranJpjgh, and made it dan gisroinfor any of,o etand up, (or, fear of capsizing th i0at mo wedinncr over the . gunwale, wiliU ugr-cMns-ett a level 1 'with it, and. stared' mtc tuet: drtviag smother with all, bur might; but there -was nb'thing td d$ seen but the breaking seas whpni w .were hoye up,4and the ' w&ter standing like walls bn'either hand when wo dropped ,into the troughs. All . at once Burke sat upland began to sipg but (or a drink; of water.- "HB tedked as "jt hfrbelieTed we hadl Hi' and Vouldi't cive it. which was the first sign of his insanity.' The eftptaiii -tried to pacify ! him, speaking- very kindly, and saakdng : to cheer: nimi 'r ( s 'f ; f I 'i we have-' outlived va day -and a iugbt, said he. Keep up your heartvj mate; we may haye v thousand-ton ship . utidirtts before it'eomes dark again.': j ' 'But Burke kepton erring for water,; isayJng that 'tie -was djing fur it, sasd 'pqinting to his thtoat; hid thejb, falling Ion all fours, he puffl bis fac0 to the saH j water washing" aboat' fn' -fbe bottom of ;thej boat and sucked up several) mouthy sfuto. Well, it selmbdjo dQhimnobiu-v I something, knocking about in the sea a : few fathoms astern, and called the skip per's' atter tkn to it. . He said it was one i .- .i ' ' j . of some kegs of -butter, that had been aboard the schooner, so we pulled the oars in and dropped down to it and picked it up. ' We broke it open and ate ; j - -.!. ' -- - the butter in fistfuls, being mad with hunger; but it was; as salt as brine, and the effect of it was to make our- thirst raging. The kntiei we had used to open tuejfeeg lay in the; bottom of the boat, .and Burke; on a sudden' turning over seized hold of it, jumped up, and fell upon the can4fi&iu", but thefclt?e" didn't pierce through the thick jacket the skipper had on, and be fore he could raise . his Jiand again . we dragged him down and kneeled upon him. - : . 'j ! ; ' . i . "There was nq worse part iu all that dreadful time than this.! The madman's face was a terrible ! sight; ' almost black it was. He snapped, about him with his teeth, and hia' cries and curses were things it brings the sweat upon my face to talk about 'Think of our situation; mad with thirst ourselves and struggling with a madman, a killing north-easter blowing- like knives through our frozen bodies; the ' sea . leaping and roarinxr around us, and nothing between us and the' bottom 'but the little old boat - we were in. We .were; too weak, and in too much Buffering . ourselves, to -remain holding the' madman down, and finding him guiet we let go,and squatted one close to another for warmth; but scarrly bad we hauled Off from the poo wretch when he jumps ' up and throws himself overboard. 'Mind 1' shouted s tbe.skip- per one s enoogu v- taanng that u we ti. - . 11 . T -j ; , . 1 - m an. got to too iae xsnrKo nntr Teapea from we' should upset the .boat. J tras ihe nearest, and. aa ho cameup olosej I: leaned Over and' got him by the hair, and dragged him into tne boatTJbto .was pretty nigh dead, and gave ns no more "Well. : sir. the night came down' a second lime, finding us living but with out tho looks of live men. I made sure I should iiever.-seeV another daybreak. My thirst was, not so - sharp, as it had been; but I don't know whew the dull throbbing in .my Jthroat the,, kind of lockjaw feeling in my mouth, tbe burn ing in my tongue- as though it were A lump of botiri, was not - more tortur ing than when the ; craving was fierce. All night long it blew! a strons: wind. with now and then a squall of sleet and tain," and hour -after bour two of - the men, Parsons and Daly, "were groaning in thJt bottom of the boat. "When the licht came If looked to see who was shve, mv eyes falling, -oh Burke, colled out: 'Dead t,' The captain leaned He's mercy my sea; been down Presently, must sat v braver for 3 hum and ' forouneives. S t&K- pd wlien be had done wo lifted the body t ' V? - i d let it go overbonJro.- - 1 ' 'u . t f - fc ' 3is V- tw--fl .! Vf?i C't strong n. Pcdy and' Prfrbns when ' f f - t U V. f fbody wnir.'nQ, a?df ov?tri tbnjr r Tvtir l.t moror ca a, .9 llred,'th in43K SlM'eaaiiJ2Pw oiswa4JeiBrit windxL if,n -wil nimrmg . i-.i v.um day mayreckon tjerezmli did sneh am obieflt ketrvtf to4idit;r- "W less m twau unra am m wji i A?ot& W l0uk m W I -4Erit3ali4e' Wt$ i at or ei f jr$ r7'fep'iifjHsa1nsjhipv tmf 1 to repul ciiurg-lMt,iiiot acTja4 jui tiefuiiwet diiaa,4 1 lk3cenerj thcttpnrf W tolij thrwigbTrat, waa atili eold, but ssotkdnc ft ATfclegraphie dispatch Tim been re liko the ' bitter old' of the gals 'and tba 1 beived from ' General - Qraham. dated heleMJaam. ; og&rpHWmag PTgliyBeamli!pBfaroh 18;-ll.-tfl4 am usBwpacssvDexww iK au that coma oe aone. u we were sailatall we were bound to keep th reeze over our stern, se lothins to draw but upleof to the '."But the eomfcA on of lrht was like Xhe bitterness tself . sir inded it All Jby lenrjbiimoonliab e had reel .thing before we had ho; Wonld heave vessel ia I borne to our llinilcsiO when it drew u amonsr the a;; w4 brought faoe to the? foo1SewaaTaiua1w winter's night, my heartfajji h. then I felt that. mere -waa a.cOTe.i-Puj.a('r wera i.... gams tapon us. ajjAhisnfhmi tingled out to o iami Ja iranel of deaths, because tha kmreiL iThink. of junetir4U.Jioura .iii. tor opes ft t. in .Taritiart. in the ChoossL north- f t gale blowing most ol the -tima, wtb ver a morsel ox food except tne salt butter, and no drink but th salt water washing ujf., tba boat ( And yet when the ITriday morning came we were still 'alive, -the optain .steering, donblad up iwith famtnes and the eold, his knees j against his month, and his bead lollivg 1 Uor want of- strength in bis neok; XdT r and Parsons lying still as dead men 1 i TrnAnr thA tfiwrtanA wnm in Yt 1 - east mt eves around the sea to notice if I tnere was a vessel in signt. v r I . . ... "The morning passed : the afternoon. I . . . ... - . f ""' Wir w tr. go thwimrli mnniar I it ThA nn waa within half n 1 hour of bis setting when Parsons, who wo. wnir. wMakt r.ia mnwalft J was full of froth, and as he tried to 1 frtan, flP- nnt nf hia Hn- tint no words he' spoke, if was naUghl ttut a kind of .desUi-raitlA in hia throat I Ws all looked in tne direotion ne potntea 10, and saw a' large sailing vessel heading right down for us. Ho w Vswstohed -her I all of us standing up, navsr 4aa - ing, and onlv moving with the Ml and toss of the boat, -Xt toliecan jhqpr JUx approach! usijfcdi the4 4sa fortius k line; but her people., had to sling us aboard. Noaef fm could .mTfu ,Sothj ing bet the ajejnent of seeing her had allowed na to stand. . Tha moment the line was in the boat andtoe were along side, we all became as helpless as babies. ; ; hejeMel's naijne, sir I She, vat In Amrjalfci Gfafr iajkrkftfk jbfH manded by so humane a man that i feel fit to cry when I think of him and his kindness to us poor,-miserable, afaipr wrecked English sailors. That's ths story, sir,. ox a much, of it .as. there :ia any1 e&tt to related ViU 'dafs and font nights in the month of January in an open boat, most of tho time blowing heavily 1 - The tale's known at Ply mouthit's known, at Buncori it is known to MrHopkriisi, tbVageal of the Shipwrecked Mariner's Society at Ply mouth. And I'll tell you somebody else it's known to sir some one as '11 swear to every word 01 iv Hia toa( PBEXATUBELT BURIED. The.Sad Fats ( av Tmk GIH W Was Hmpp ta Dead. : A aensatloa ' baa been created in Dayton, Ohio, by the disoorery of the fact that Miss HockwalL younsr ladv of high social connections, who was sup. posed to h ave died uddenly otifwClo, s was buried alive. - A iooal paper says ! J xne wmoie trutn was aiseoverea a few days ago, and sinoe then it baa been the talk of the city; The circumstance of Miss Hockwalt's death was pecuuar, It occurred on the moraingof the marriage of bet brother to Miss JSmina ochwuul at Emanuel's Church. 8hortly before 6 o'clock the young lady was dressing for the nuptials and bad gone into the kitchen. A few moments afterward she was found: sitting-on a chair with her head leaning against a wall and appar ently lifeless. .Medical ' aid ? was aum moned in, jjt. wewett who; after ex amination, pronounced her dead. Mass was being read at the time in Emanuel's Church, and it was proposed to postpone the wedding, but Father Hahna thought best, to continue, and the marnaga ' performed In gloom. ' y ; ; , - The examination showed that Anna was of excitable temperament, nervous, and ' affected with svssDathetio nalpita. hon of the heart. Dr. Jewett thought this .was tba , omum of . her supposed death. Ont tba foUowina day the lady was" mterred' In the Woodland. The friends- ot Miss Hockwalt were unable to forget the terrible impression, aha several ladies observed that her eyes bore a remarkably natural color and could not dfepet an. Idea that she was net dead rrV4- f.- A '. 1 il m,.l- Ma'iW44 Annie's parents and the thought preyed - A. iX T V. TV. I UM HlvU WXAAVM.W upon them so that the body waa taken from the grave. It was stated thai when the coffin was opened it was discovered that the supposed inanimate body had turned upon its right side. The hair had been torn out in bandfuls and the A nali Via A Vszin Kitfm fmin ilia flilMM ' The body was reinterred and' efforts made to suppress' the facta,- but therev are those who- state that they saw the body, and know the . facto to be as nar- rateo. ' - - . ' For .the Children. A treat for the children can bo made in place of the. conventional pie or pud ding. y IVfake a,ct;as if for roty'pofy' pudding Or baking powder biscuit (using, noweveir, jHst as httle baking powder as will answer.- and. a few experiments will convince any conscientious eoott bow lit tie may sjwoessfully fUJ the place of much sue is often fempted to use)r roll the dough" about as thin as if for, pie crust, then cut it in small squares,' heap berries or preserves of any kind,' af tot dranung the juice from it Ufioa tnenv wet tne cages, and fold and press closely together, so that there will be no wast of jnioe; then put them in a deep tin i C- :.: .. -,tz on'e'acm - ' , " ' pan, and scatter some sugar over each littfei pudding;! whan, these, are -done serve them warm jwlth a not too rich. pudding sauce, or , they may bo eaten coia wimoui sauce, Tr7...'- Ti-.-i. TT.-ii'r: fLiLI.! "T Y T, . , . . .... 7 ... iveman iSliabletoindiatrnnrtt fnrM. " she sbBkesber husband.; but tha auf" tv nwyiuuug hut) WU-- JPf W r - ' iinmu3ntM iiiu ,pnaiiiitt.fcj.itsiia wsLukvoff n ATerage, . ,ijmejnnu one i alter- s - 4 - fiown viu u roui iiura'iUB-TrowiT tneieaemr t; been nghtmg-smoe b o'clock this morning, Over seventy of the British were killed and 100 wounded.'; . W: - . Later dispatches safiheliivouae Wed- ritedaynight was eJgaiiMy unpleas ant The Aralis 'kfiit-r'4 persistent fusiElUde taUmrtefd; W The x . n r aiBiTielreUf t-ft jebeU aen' ghtf. igttrmaxrA t, distance, but :H " re be cr2Cf ill eir flra esneciaK which f.ycwstaaTeiBojeuo The ataff Tso - jK.iaTOcjff jr(BicsBs:,?-mer gun yda a most excellent target. Tha Arabaere. soon compelled to re- urtT to thetr maitf positua Hear ' the Tamai wells. Colonel Stewart's savalrv axrbnid at baU-pastsix, and took position on the British left, so as to turn the enemy's right. , v ' , ; General Graham ' has' taken up his quarters for the preaent in the camp trcm which-Oscaan. Digna and the sebel nosts were driven. The enemy fought moat; statbomry, and - fta, battlo was much heavier than the engagement at LTeb. The jailors, the Black Watch regiments suffered fheielcviesf Ibeses. 1. rm , rf-. 'v8" w aa Aign s lorcw whb am rum i f- j; v i ,"' J Tnririnr ia cr.nrnnroTr.OTit the Arabs. nnder covhr of the smoke crept close up to the British lines, and dashed against the . marines and .tha Siity-fifth. - and "i-" " "aJVU01 Ui '" ""o. wowing leariui voouus, GreiU cojifusipuenruod. , Thegjxty-fifth egaa to' retreat; erowdinfcafeon the ma- brines, when all became inextricably mixed. Uen. Urabam and his staff did taeir utmost, to rally the men, retreating UWds if enable them to reform; Assistance from tho other brigade pre vented a serious disaster. There were ftoajfjrrarrW.4WJpes; tnongjtbf offi eetsT TheMrofBeof Jen. Bblkli was hot from under him. The pluck shown by the rebels it uJielftarpled i fd .1 ' i-s Deutesfie Itecfpe si-"w ilidous tapioca, creanfyta be" eaten ldHrsndofilyr 'If tws Asm- of taptoeat soak U aight Mi enough milk to cover it and a trifle more. In the morning heat one quart of mflk to the, boiling point, beat the yolks of three eggs with, half a eup,pf sugar and the tapioca;' wbqirweu mixed stir -these into the boiling milk.- Let it boil for a minute or two, or until you are sure it has all Tench ed tba boiling point, then remove it from the fire, flavor iWiJli leAbu drauilk. Pot it into the dish in wnioh it "is tolw served. Beat the whites to, a stiff froth, or, better still, have serie Oheelse do it, so that, while the, tapioca is still hot, the mer ingue may' be placed' on the tba ""A tablespoon 1 nl of powdered sugar Bhould be beaten with the eggs. .; f-, ' ,.j.s were a wpmai anywhere who has never been vexed to know what to have for dinner? .This may be helped if on some happier day she siU -down ..with pencil and paper, and makesea list t3ie t possible dinhers that - are widda-. hex the kinds ox meat and puddings ind pios waioh are on the bill jot toxkk. Jit . U aaofe that abnost every housewife-has a bill of fare, though she might be surprised if you were to tell her so. This list is really a great help; very often a good dinner, and one .with sufficient variety, might be put upon the table if one could onlvthink just what to have at the proper moment A list which I saw for desserts commenced thus : "Prune pie, , lemon pie,, corn starch pudding, plain, with fruit, or with chocolate; bread - pudding, baked Indian pudding, banberries. lemon tart lets' . ; f Babies not only enjoy but they need some variety m 100a; many a sicKiy- lookinc - child of less than two years might be benefited greatly if care were bestowed upon his diet, j Bread and. milk and potatoes are not sufficient for him: , wet itoast buttered, and Jbroth, -. m . . m w ti a . . ' . with plenty 01 salt, out no pepper, wiu, be nourishing andsappetiaing.. Add bar-. ley to it, or rice.' Beef tea, diluted a little, is also, excel lent, wueat Dreaa alone should not be given, but Graham and Indian or corn bread also. Here fit a good recipe for boiled In dian pudding :. Warm a pint of mo lasses,, then, mix a pint of sweet milk with jt, beat f our egga very light, and add to the molasses and milk; chop one pound of suet very fine, and stir this -4a- enougn: lncuan xnea so , mate a thick batter. For flavonng use one tea- spoonful of ground cinnamon, half a teaspoonlul ot jmtaaeg, ana a mue grated lemon peel. Dip a pudding clotlt inWboiling water, then sprinkle ffnnr in It. nftur The puddmAaln!' leave room at the top for it to rise, thea tie it cJotelyvJ .4ou i ;ior three nouns serve with any puading sauce you onoose. a Sour sauce is generally preferred. The flavoring may, of course, be a matter of choice also: 'some cooks add a cupful of English currants, thinking that theyim xt - a ' prove uw uavvr. gha'Jtncvf His .Mean TTays. Talk about stinirv men." said the ermductor of aPallmaa aar. as ba sat in tb smoking rooin while tha porter was doing the work, Vthe worst specimen 1 ever saw came ont of -Detroit the other night ! , Hia wife, a great fat woman; was with pirn, and they tooK seats n tne or fflnary coach.', TretW sion be came back, select ed 'a berth-- a ; single upper and thOU went back ta bis wife. -Pretty soon he returned and went to bed alone. About. an hour after this 1 was going tnrougn the train when- tba fat woman stopped me and wanted to know jf I had any tifepty berths, s I tokL, het .there uceta. I Tlmt-v of tliem. plenty of them, when sue orougnt ner l r. L T J. ' i . V. ..aa - ,r mat much. I Here. . take my- bag with you. IM as sue sautx . nwuiuh w- and naks ma up tne nest section you have:' ' 111 bObaok ' as flbcto ai the train stops again. U' Xou sea thai selfish bus-, band of hers bad told her there wasn't rT.iu ..4T was t-ha maAApdt nnui .vrai I ever saw next morninsr, when ne bad to hand ov,gr $5 tot ner- night s ad aition tuiuia cs.t ovnsv He gave the'porter dtalytw.v . . shlntognis anoea, ana scowie p .t; aioprresTjocentt dUbJ "" &t W?, tejhjtbp. following. - - BotZ as tratb an bhrtorfa tie 'first- timSTprWentedWi an 'ataM. Boon as'I was walking db th railroad traoK;is mne'or two ouoiu.(M rjprings. Qheoldr i light and hiafeatsKres so tegutosr I-kwMsaiprsnpete before t erfitt suspected .that ho was a colored 'oy:;ilK-.a0 ifwaato laitern, ana x toia mm twenty-mree atiilas,1nd masked bins whether i- rtendad;twaUtil1&4iifet , "Do you think; I can do t before 2arkr bi replied;;;" ' "! . '" -. ; ,1 told him I tris ion - hd coolct in&j ""lot it was thea afterne o'clock. SMI donft waat to i on the track, alter Oirk, you see," sawj be, i'pn aoopunt ol the panthers. Do yon tmnar there s amy between hee and MarveflH t" a - 11 told him I bad been several mile dbw the, track, andMd Xipt n iny.,IDlB Wewrtngs calm he gavt,srs paufe Hctold mer wep -aik4 a.dm, lhalte rry?, lr. ' t4 Wf,f - irMuI-W Vt- i present la her handB tat-bore, mother (4 mulatto lived there, and that. his father 4a white man) was dead; that he started oot more thaua year ago on. bis travels with; a companion of bis own ago, who had ben killed while steal ing a ride before they were' two days oat from home; that be bad come to Hot Snrines looking for something to do, but found nothing; that be had eaten noth- Vlner thai dav and J hftd soent' flB nio-ht outdoors.- I happened to be just on tho point of moving ray quartersjnd had a number of errands to, bo , done, so I .of fered him a meal or two and a lodging on the floor by the stove in consideration hi bis being iny mAU "Friday till the next day. The following day was so bitter cold J. could not y turn ; him out of the house, and he was with me for two days, in the course of which 1 think there was L no single minute in which some part of the stove was not red-hot, lie waa a prime fireman, and the landlord fur nished the wood.' At any hour of the' night I happened to awake,7 George was putting freBh hickory logs; on the fire. He could sing, whistle, dance, , and when be smiled be disolosed .a double bapk of organ-keys from ear to ear. He bad not a cent in the world, his clothes were none too warm, and the weather was like Manitoba but he was as happy as a lark, though he had no-notion what minute he might be invited to "move on.'? . He was a fine boot-black,., a good clothcs-brusber, and did errands prompt ly and, .well, always buying things cheaper at the stores than I could and bringing me back' more change than I expected. He had been ell taught in some school, and answered disdainfully when I gave him little conundrums out of the multiplication table. On the third, day I had "tamove, though it was the coldest day of the sea son and in the new place I could not take George along r When all was ready, the globe and shads of a student lamp stood on the table.'; As I was done wiui waa, x tutu vtouijjo ux migjit uum-j thern o the .china store, where I had paid. thirty-five cents for them, and that ho'cQuld keep wkve'r hie '6d';et Jor thimaHe. trottednT.ma liuand soon came back bidignan. ?'.. ... "Wba,do you think that chap down there tffereA ma KV said he. i'Fif Ipen cents 1 -He must TO ink I'm'a foot .Tle waata to sell them, pver again, and make twenty oenta more, on them. Buthe coaldn't come it. , No, Sir-ee. I told him I'd parry 'em to Malvern before. I'd seH em for that and so I wilt ' -. I tried to dissuade him from this no tion, but he was so indignant at the low offer ha would have carried them if they weighed a hundred -l pounds. He wrapped them in a : newspaper, tied them up with a string and sat before the fire looking at them. J There lay be- hihd the stove a shoe brush and a box of blacking that had been overlooked; like wise on the washstand a cake of toilet soap..-1 These treasures I presented to George rather than Unfasten a trunk, arid be received them gratefully, putting ItfieSsorusti m b inner coat pocket,' frpm which the handle protruded some inches. '"The expressman came; and we parted. if George declaring that " some day be would "beat the railroads" to New York, and would 'surely come and see me. I see him yet, going whistling down the street, sometimes stopping to smile, ' always shivering. Surely no boy ever started out to make his fortune with so' odd a capital a lamp shade and chimney; a shoe brush, and a cake of soap If he stumbled before be reached Malvern and broke his glassware, I am certain he only Smiled a fresh smile and whistled a hew tunexr'fe JSappy George 1 Happy all the, little Starvelings of your raco 1 If I owned -Madison-square I would gladly exchange it for your cheer ful, smile, your s.brighti.browtteyos; and your sunny disposition, i ; " "v 0J HIS WEDBISfil DiT. flew Hia SawaresMat ' Marry , Was Brwkea Off. n A letter ;rom Milwaukee, Wisconsin, says: There was a ?ve.ry rornantro Chap ter in the life of GeorgeH, Fryer, the former- wealthv Coloradoan who com- emitted suicide in Denver. Three years. ago Fryer was engaged to be married to Miss H. Ethelyn Bryant, a dashing and vivacious society lady of t this city. On the day of the wedding Fryer came to Chicago end telegraphed jo his afB- f errced bride that ha bad concluded not to marry and that the event was indefi nitely postponed. He erave no explana tion, and at onoe returned to bk home in liesiver.. .Miss Bryaut's parents are very wealthy, and Tevery; arrangameat rwvd Wn made for a most elaborate wed ding. The news that it was off created a great sensation, and was the. talk oi the town for months. The first meeting between tha oouDle rwas auite romantic. The young lady, vijsited Denver in the summer of loeU at the solicitation or. a friend who was also '.warm friend of George H. -'' Fryer, and the two met at . the house of their mutual acquaintance. An attachment at once sprang up which culminated in an engagement before th'ft lady departed for ner home on the snores of Lake Miohigan. Fryer was said to be worth at that tune about, a million. . He- went from, Philadelphia to Colorado m'1861' and becaii, mining .in Pike county. In 1B73 be went to Tjeadville and opened up tba new, disoorery mine on Fryer HilV hd succeeded id making a rtob strike, soon becoming a wealthy mam; ii When fb met the, Milwaukee ly he was about forty years of age and a Dacneior.-i-.ita4oaqett jhjsb jryan with costly. pxeseaiVgivjftg her among other thinsrs twentv thousand dollars worth Pf diainohdai $fy.&eMpllF never returnea, ana aoout a .year ago Miss Bryant married a Chicago . gentle man: nit -ia aaid ! 4hatfjFrye)rfpidly drifted downward after the dsapoint meat. ..Ba.waa ;marriedrrto (av Chicago woman a vear aco . Before bis death be lost aa.hiarnoneyitiiw &oailtmf&mi.99 9Wbai.irj fif'SV -fails tv- -y- "Ui fd--Ja'i. .imJ-.'mrm't f.'. A PosTkrASTKB's VBijutBU7--ln the POSTMASTKBS ' ly days of Chicago, -tba postnaaster "hirhsfelf oofiaslonallv" became the-inail '"earrtet, although m violation of f the w rnnvs- law.' - v rememoer tuo-cwew o )cstniastet ' who kept tradmgystrore, and pushed forward lther mail ones a month from his post to another through .m. ManjM -' TTa .ant la., ttamrfwersft - , r hole, in tha top oi an empty frour barrel ti tlaca' on - a tne rouowing bjku; ' 'N':rteriSe ... t ... itJiaBoJa -Mih-aoT&JTetteV.. thSSSr I Mil t wen resnant everrw Beauty bo keogbt Or becrwhanaadidwfaL ; ns nataiy ner xounains' ions awpiayea, . illethe rfoh etowinteheek sod rippllas hah' o,tririEhtTofaflotaVatd n , in does tha wild-wood rose, or ferns fntor- 1"-. iMaaaaasi?oi..vi -itV .-m . . jt.hto was the Ass of Gol4;-nt how Ha end' . it "wiroian, aer eu : uui atranse . teau L -BTtUtll! . iyonth, nrijrned a lonelr Ute to tptaxiL " , 4W4ftfawdoMWteoieKwrssa, .?:! Iadtar a giri whom lilies of the vale -, - - "Ckwhf not m frrak-broom beaoty enahvte' ' " ardidthetalrPandoralelya touU .,. ,r, mum itcrauj maa. w nptarea TOTun.ulM f-Wm this chsnhex gave, to blrts wedded A trentth fealJo neHH fhi limb f i ' .Labor was paaOnie. hardships, moed smll&. Ha honow cooghs disturbed nlghfs stfllness so thoaghts of gloom Twere bred br morbid Awl life yt jtatf hened ont a wohdroks while; "Tin rimtif him ati . - - - - " - 1 . m . w vMtmmam iu turn Bngired as u' tba peaked sfrrotlaa rflL-' TVH 1T rtBeasiaata girt oat evarr slda. PbieealyTa A box. of anaint and exquisite deRiira. ' .WMoh'iwhea.Ju husband ped.'-Qh, what a L store. , , - ". Of beMPOM-dld Hut; easkeidbte SoBhriniit n 1; r Tot from it forth, flew each disease malign ' That ever nines 6n nnaaan framea has iwtvnd. And, spreading f'er the earth, did, Man consign 10 eonnueaa aconies nat aooQia mvaao Eaeh itl aonree, till -all his. stalwart strength aeoayeai , Then jnnst flat weakened frame and shortened Till new exasteaee ta lint constant strife , Against a boat ot ailments without end. As still each shattered bark we strive to mend, r. The Iron Aare, that with Pandora came. Does vet o'er earth ita rrindlnc rule extend.' - And sictoneas Joins with poverty to tame - . Bouls that might else a place of pride and honor (- clairnl . - . - ' ; Bnt when had flows forth aQ the killing wees That in Pandora's fatal casket lay. Lot frotn its depths released, sweet Hope . . ' arose, :.. r ... As breaks through sable clonds a san-Iit ray, ' And as she rose, she sang, "Mourn not for aye ! Some balm shall yet for aU these pangs be found. . Not with vain show do Nature's stores dlsr lay The?e trees and herbs, that beautify the gronnd, - . j ; Since in them lnrk the charms to make your - sick ones soundT- . . . "'. To find the balm pledged tn this promise dear. Were many heart through many ages fired, Until, to search onr country's forests here A young physician came, with sonl inspired,' 1 And fonnd at last, "nridwt secret shades retired. The herbs and roots tbat had neglected grown. And nurtured in their vebvi the boon desired, . 'While e'er them many Bummer's moon had shone. And many a wintry enow those treasures had beatrown. Long need to ponder e'er the ilia ot Han, What rapture now In Pierce's bosom rose! For he had marked the source from whence began - - t -- - - s -- The worst and deadliest of our body's woes. Anatomy's keen knife did well disclose .- -What organ, from its duty warped away. Becomes the spring from which, envenomed flows The DrinciDle of sickness and deea-r. Though by a thousand names its work we may portray 1 ; n PHI. T !.. ,A Vaat. T.IAa Onlx-w Cleansed of each taint, and plays guardian's part . - ' By drawing each corrupting germ alde, Wh now compelled, by fell Disease's act. To 1 rove a traitor, and upon the heart And panting lungs, a poisoned stream to pour. up ne tne way ior areaa-uonirampnon s iart, Ana fatal stinss of many an ailment mote. Thus bidding countless homes their slaugiitered sopes aepierer ,-. - Thence - ontme -- the a Wasted ' f emu-. tho aallew The cmbittered'tonKTie And henoe the ltvMt f ice, wHaJuaticreSreak ta ft Displayed as Nature s danger-sign, red. ,t Bcnce, over many n else fair visage spread Unsisrhtly blotches and eraptious Tile, Or hideoas Serotula does sorror shed. t r KiUta lx)Te a gow, ana rreeztaf Or the scorched heart consumes with black and burning bile!. ? ' At once Pierce in hisblest Discovery saw That which the very root of aU should find. And, by the workings ot unerring law. Drive out the foe that thus life undermined. And with benbrnaat ferae, aad wiadonv kiaxL The shattered auun-Bptiag of our frames re pair. That Bile no longer, likes giant blind. liight mischief work, but htatrne part should ; bear . ,-" : - -To make this mortal mould strong, rigorous ana fair. ' . . . v ''- ... This remedy our trembling hearts shall am Ag-ainst Malaria's fiend, though wide his reign. for small wouia ds ms power x wera: us nam Did not some drops of poison in each vein, 1 ,' . Pure bkKfd and healthful bile. shah interpose Ilw faDtid breath the marsh-bred demon blo s. For there have provea ms most victorious loea 1 rCdle Here rescue comes to "those whoss bodies thrill Beneat h the Ague's keen consuminir touch, While t-coroliing lever and pongcaling chill Al ernate wring ine vicum i n inerr cmrca. The healing aid, so often sought for sneh, Is here at last, snu, oy oar swamps ana etreams. - Beet -comes for those, who have endured so mncu, , -And for their fitful Bleep, with hideous dreams, i 4 Shall slumbers sweet prevail, till break each morning's beams! Tims do foil Consumption's slow-advance. That o'er Columbia . stalks, with stern control. For oft the Ola we're touched. w4th rpecdy glance, - - Conclude In lhi, their dark end fatal goal. And with, moat Joy it ahone on fleroe's soul . . That here he smoh his oonatry's chief est foe. And qnelled that malady that of the whole Dark lint did darkest it death rtoord show, A Hydra, all whose beads he lopped atone brave biowl - ; -. . :,.. - ft- I ' '' - '. Now, then, the new-found rem.jdy to name: Perbape the choloe, at - first, perploxing seemed - .'.-v ;. To tbe discoverer's brain, till, like a name,' ' The Golden Medical Msctrterv beamed Before his vision, and was worthy deemed ' To herald to mankind that preciona meed , That should o'er other potions be esteemed y As gold o'er baser ores, and wasdesreedj( , By bringing health and strength, to male men rich, indeed! ; . Mark, uponShakspeares page, how wiia-Mao-both - v ' .- Tells us, in phrase not oft well understood, : That his crowned victim, Panoan, ly is death, "His sUver skin laced with his golden blood. And richer far ie life's aB-precions Wood.., . i ; When by yon great Discovery jwrifled, s ; Than the bright metal (fortune a folded btodT, .That, sought so often, by monntsln, vale br tide,-- ' - - - ' s- --.? Doth in anriferons veins of California hide! , - i But, oh, delay not to ward off the shaft Until a' mortal -.wound he' pierced you through! .1 X" - Sow Jet the heaUns nie-rffsd,-.( -E'er venom can its work comjrtotelyda w Ten flower wb withered petatsjaow bestrew r " The earth shall soon, from Spring's exhaust fcf less store. - ;.- ;; ...?-'. ;"v -' Be gifted wit fresh kaveand blossoms hew, - But llwx's. frail cgsns..whu destroyed, ne Can geal suns revive, or jarOily skill restore! Ionian no iongerplays Ocintij Gazing with oold and curiorss jwarile, to see The nnsuareeieii" tnw , ' Alas 1 earth's greatest sufferer is she. it. nAf wuhni uonr. " Herath beset with counOess sikinwi'ot pain. Thus speeaiiy ro Tr'vf" t And il the toUet's arts are plied m vain -Health's clear and blooming hue ainlroWin( vo regain. t -r.- , ' I. '' 5 ' -1 The pUyfuh dlmfjled child, to Bhood powa. Anrtj fait enrl t'""' ' some aymph ot Stone " No more, her s ports and laaehter ay TeaumeC0 . t , ,,, mmatt mr. ni-m ...miiuuu - - - - park o'er -file parents' hearts" rou elouds er it.7. kiinMi t.M nnttnstr tomb H.STnff hTi and bitehfc. But. In her budding sweet, .steack with insidious, i hllirhtl . ' : B -(-i or nze ew per C. "What Bsemsughr, ;Wbt pesanee hts she I Pome ease from jrrfodW; misery o seekl -: j Wder ncAariejaiaAa frettred aphit wreak oltowed bvtesrs that hum the faded Sheet j When ahe behldsthat even, thoeemost dear itif in aaaata neavtstt or severe. r Avoid her eresxy epuch of woe jjsar jihTilA Earth's vBded - "Out oieae ruseerv w y u 1 . " .- That, wish thoaejs-iaa ihr virtWdhn. . .. TM JotW yOuthi eaehkW awa gohtea- n-,wTr snaultsod'srStreisUuanA woman's Torsa man, if, aba pops Jtbe questiont. to yon, e'en tho' it takes yoq by surpnso and strikes you all of beap like, don't blush a&d stammer ana giggie ana uuier out i something about "seemg papa.'' Take our advice and don't do. anything jof tbakind.v Liook the sitnauon anauio B& squarely in tba faoe smdjuk her bow OI grace ana lOTeuaraB, wiiawiii,"- XThttheo BhaUwith ns through 1" Jre TOltlnaotHllfe'SihaKto Its last tebet;'. - . t.V r.-... nt T hasawaWed-U fUrisJ ,a W V UU V ?f ejfbadrstenM utaextef2?0qtQ barUyjamonzil . sn a. . n - v r s. ' vkijii. uaocieiBon aoaorainer rr eir desertal ThfeV fcat aTa. awoi tb.leut'Jdmi'ir.bbaea: dr'thaiW' ter.-Hhe aTxasty'sssrold- rmodal Ata bt beroio exertions ,b aaving life , at tba. yusj ox vjoiumuna wrecx : to cjant Jbirio Gabrielson, of .- the t same wesaeL thA society's silver medal ; ta snob r.t him offic-uir tie -toajr esfgnais,-' therc eiety'awtificahs fos buinano efforts at thetaama wreckj. The jotnetv baa alan awarded, q;eac of, the Gay Head In dians who went in a boat -to &e 'rescue of thBhrvivdrs ailvermedal and $25 to the members of,-, another erew anAh -. bronze medal and $15. . - The eertiflcata of the society and a cash award are given Light-house-keeper Pease, the'Bev. ; A.' V. Bhields, and- several women of Gav. ' xuc wvit ; mnna eiiUTiS : m. saVMfl We.. -Money, awards front $5 to $10 per bead are given to a large number of other persons on the Island of Martha's Vineyard for their services kfr tha time of the disaster., t-r,f -1 Ti .H U t The Boston Iotf fund vfor T, fihodes, of the cutter Dexter, has reached 1 b.uvx, auu uio vtav iieau inaian lund now amoahts to gj,25i: ' - ; -.fr. To jest your popularitywear a rafi-ered coat. " Contribute niggardly tb charity. Always gat in somebody's way sSoirow T.. T, 1 T 1 -T J" "nmw VVoti j?ejjuuu:iy, ever omit to say something on every occasion. Step into your friend's Office and sit with your feet on "Ms deskjv H you can do alt : thesa tilings and retain ' your- popu larity you wiJH be Tra?rantedm.tri further test of running for offica, ,. . - Tsa House f- Eepresentatives was charged last year, with 450 spittoons for 293 meinbers. r This indicated a recklees waste of tobacco which can. noUonger be tolerated.' y ? ;-'f f --; ' !. a rich legacv; j ... ; The General Attorney of the Pnlhnaei Sleen- ing Car. Company; ex-Chief ' Jnstio O. A, Loohrane, of Georgia, say that old Dr. Bigger eonld leave no better legacy than Iub Southern nemeay ior Dowel ' afieetions, and in all his travels he has aero found; anything to equal Dr. Bigeer's ' Southern Kemedv for the relief of diarrhoea, dysentery and the restoration of uraoitue ones whose system is snuering such a drainage from the effects' of teething, etc This, with -a bottle of Taylor's Cherokee Rem edy of Sweet Own -and Multefnoaiubiiiujg the stimulating expectorant principle of the sweet gum with the demulcent healing one-of the mullein, for- the cure of -croup;:, .whooping contrh. colds and consumption, nresents a little acsmonrs chest ito' household should he with out for the speedy relief of anddea and danger ous attacks of the lungs ana ooweia. Ask your arnggist ror tnem, juanuiactHrea bf waiter Ju Taylor, prop rietor Taxlor'a .Pr.eifliani Co logne, Atlanta, Ga. ' V . j - , Tats TJ. B. Pension Ofnce at Augusta, Maine, distribute annually $2,500,000. that girl of mine 'is twice as' handsome since she commenced using- Cafbolme,- the deodo rized extract of Petroleum, and I would .not be without it for a fortune.. . s Stkoe the opening of the Boez eanal tea has declined esx-hyearin price,,. ;lT fi Snre enrs (tor !Bhnd, Bleeding-and Itehinv Piles. . One box hug cured worst eases; of 20 rears' .ttandmf. 1 No'OUs aeedsuffer -five mh ttesjrftarMiBg William's LjiianJPil Ointment, : It absoroa tdjnorg, allaya itAthg', acts pml-! tie.ea vhctanv rfiiif. Vrepst-eall enlr -'-for ! . Fraxier Med. L U0., Cieveiand. u. - ,were Jpnly ,nwefAtal..ccidentsto, trains in 1882 ItfGreat Brftlan. 1 v liim,y&.l S- . .HO" I .Ift'lT-.j f.J 1; .J Faani eooatyv ;Tew4prlldBte eiApBl.5 iooj. vrnbes as ioiiows; 1 , - j I have been suffering rhmrseeralyeart from, severe Ulnees, aad a .-general breaking down of my phTaicai system, and have tried the treatment aTrripUcvmWiSWS. tors far aadiBsar.'iatitrve)e4 to the Hot Springs afld other mineral springs famous' for" their remedial dtialftie?,' drinking the -waters and bathing) systematically i their, healing depths, but all to, ni avail, as I steadily faded in health ; and atthough Ia fermed by my physiQians that . my ailments ; and weaknesses were tho. result of kidney disease of a dangtru character, theycottld mp nothing jto i cure , ie. J)uring tho past two years my suffeririffs at times were' dreadfuLand J heur-ia!iSSRli?u pains m the,regions about .the Jddneys, ths paroxysms of which were so severe as to render it impossible forme to sleap. While in this deploi-abie and disoouraged condition I was persuaded to try Hunt's Kemeiy, and after using less than half a bottle my great sufferings and raroxysms. of pain were en tirely relieved, and I could sleep better and longer than I had in two years before, and although I am now on my third bottle only my improvement is very remarkable, and 1 regret that I did not know of the wonderful curative powers of Hunt's -Remedy before, as it would have saved me rears of sufferim?. 1 heartily recommend it to all afflicted with any kidney disease or disease of the Urinary organs." '. . : 'llit i Please allow me .to Deak in tha Msbi terms of "Hunt's Remedy." for it hit mv case exactlF. I had kiduey and urinary trouble pretty bad.-, .' X .was xe commended Hunt's Kemedv. I took one teaspoonful as directed. I felt a decided change at the first uosa. x ioe two botttas, and have felt like a sewjnan ever cincB. PlM.ta rmiiv. -tha sincere thanks of mvself for- the rMnonta which I sought vainly for aad found only in Hunt's T-tiunAriir r . . I ' I ' I -will ehetrfuflV ri Wifa Hunt's Remedy to any eae who wishes it, by addressing ROBERT D. ARCHER, ' 8" Unnard street, Hiiladeiphlai PHOTOGRAPHrso 6a silk and linen is sucoess- folly practiced in Ixmdon. ,,-.';. The DactrsIadr0siea(.- . Wr TK. A Fright (cinpati. Ohio, send the. subjoined professional indorsement: . I have prescribed Dr. "Wm. ITatTs' Balsam for tne iungs m a great nuruDer or cases, sua always with success. One case in particular was given up Dy several pnync-ans wno caa been called in for consultation with rnVBelf, Tho patiealv bad wdl the . symptonu of con firmed consumption cold suzh& sweats heetrio fevr, hariasslhcr court, etc He oon tnenced fanmediately to gpt-better, and was soon nsuinn uj um usual uuul a. muntf Dr. Wm. Ball's Balsam for the Lunzs the atwst vahiabk, expectoirant.for breaking up TI'T- 1 HII WMWIWk. - . . ; , .Moiruj.A has produced ai least 2.O00, of tIo deliriaataf. tever and restletsness there aa sack isniedy Mtarttoa wTtso-1!? - T irwstltaaiT wntantly point to emvobiect, self ; but unlike the magnet it has KMvewk'bu St attpoihts wpels."- u- a-J.,W nf TnnL Tr .wltltetl 1'iSa- .. L....1i. ... . -r'. . -Ban"""! Hfi- -7T, " . 1 inaK(an'irmn cured mydaughtat of fitsv fm r?Pt U of the Astor estate U estimated St 13,600,000 s year. If-a oeoxh disturbs jour Bleep, Vone . dpseof Pso's Cure will give you, a sign, s tob. - 1)W HUH .lPQp II7ER OIL AND Liaii. be aabts T ramsdf .for OowobuKish, Af bsia, iSS dSSSs o the Throat . aaeT-riga. at an tos. I'r.hvaVi SV WMdViVi fc giw. Bold by an amay.gw. AfiEriT$VAM!l TSXlaTrBBtli B. f7 DIETliRJCHS. CleTglimd, OMa. 1 j 1 r sV.; ft - j-'.i-V."- ,i v'"'- '-?'.'r 'j a, 4. t iP , '' ---f-' a 5 :'. f LKCTEdVttTiK) BUT W j . - LY. TOUNO OK OLD, wh art saStfiQarr-nt -. yaavova , wi rutnaBi. sad il Idsdied auncs. Rdms -' lief at4 eaotpMto fastontloa to Hu&TH, Viooa ut 'u- " t ...... , t, ' . 1 , .. " ', !l - rDB FOOTED Original iraTHODS' ; 1 .ill n EVES: asaesewwitnoutooc of ? VUI U 1 Uv iors,meaiciaeorgiaHBa pint. DHDTIIDC Cnred wnhoi ton UUI IVHI. , ertuteomforta' trass. wosiss&sSKsassMifl urnwnito t.i.iiih- . ,..,V LltlJ ntniUUOtindxaUonaltTeatniV'' riT? .. Ths DsLOASH TURBINE WATER WHEEU3 and Mimig Machinery. Sunniest aid Cheapest w the-world. Send lot oew f Msiratseiurem aaastsutlav 90LI0' 8ItYir STEET1 , FULL JEWELLED KMTSVlIt tw on 17. frood imI tr naSBt to ': tospsctioa bsfaca pathtnar- , i ! 1 1 -. Xasv tense. Aeertala cure. Wot axpewtve Three months' treatment la one package, uooa 1 , ku CoH Id the Head, Headache, Diixiness, Hay .'ever; o jruur eema, . hi "wsssSI S Wmsa. Fa. 1 n rn si hifcs. - tajnntnst t tarest s4 ssst Mower friasr. j rnmH malt rmml amtlrk've 4kwrar4 'tar ato-fd hiis rssasMttum, goat. Inabasa,. astas. aiVTKf. tc, MNlih eta. H-r "op tarmaot rbaDi. SwoWImsui W M y-jttwa iM. rtuSrTlMtaBiSr knoslMS, kA Bto to lrtok. i font w&ms bHsra.aaasaaOJ..WWiU isatsW Awiwia.ii Convul- ' sioils,' -.JPdl ling El 8icZnct$,&Vttna Dance, Alcohol- W 1 ' - i.if-S- I Scrofula,' Kings JEVtt, Ugly Blood " it , Diseases, JJyrpep rsio, Nervousness, ' Stel .JTeadachs, Si! iheumatism, . JTervova Weatnat,-Brain Worry, Stood Sot, Biliousness, Pwiuets. JfervoUs Prostration, drtj Trmihlta and Irnmdttritie. f L60. ir Sample TeMMMBinls. . f i Vflamsritan Nervine i daijig wonders. ' ,r I -Dr. J. Ot McSemoin, Alexander City; Ala. "I feel it vny duty to recommrrnd it." . Pr. p. F. ianghlin, Clyde, Kansas. "It cured wVerephyriciansfaned.' '' iiRev.J.A.Bdle,Beavef,P. S3 Crrewfendowos freely answer adVS The Dr. S. A. Richmsfl Hed. Co St loteph. Bo. Foe tsatUKmiaU and elrealars send stamp. CO " At PrnggisW C K. Crittentoa, Are,'. T. I it V 1 1 1 1 - 1 " " ' 1 i I 1 " . ' 1 OLD COINS QTIt8 "Bori ar 4hmih var I Mlr9 aumpa, ilo. : 10Hlt coot Uee.ao., e. oaiednaSipUtt iflastnuedtsalsloiiival aohn.. ' - 1 t.mw, i, W?. r'.Jf, eRBAIiy, , , J . - .11 .. . .. . ..-.- - I Giatet indacemratasvar ot 1 &t.V 'itStmA. T Km ' snW for our celsbr.tod' Tens fi T-riiCBa8SuWBbe.!itU 5 f , s fulGUdBmadfrMBoC!hina J(w'i aositsm to ant as- Tea Set, e.H R.M Wisir ns.Piir Sat, V""1 Band . Moss .p 6at. si,aBd8?vsrSt.HewVoft...i atmtuoota w rum Crain and ProvJalort Brokers it 1 , .1) ivnminmt Prodaos XxahapgeS Hesiban or .au If ore. Ohiciwo. St. (xnuaand iL". rffTJCrWiKoBWavaaM o. r jademrat whan reqna jpa. I psrtnlara SoeX. LlSDBLOM 4 OO.. 0 hloaa AL DEN'S MANIFOLD ' CYC iJO PEf) I A. .1 Orer 900,000 subjects and , 00Ofllntrtl"nS, BomeroiM maps. rolomsa,- lars "wtaT. ft eheIer edit on. JI 1 a. SiMjawn P55M g0!'- - OOO vMstBieaOataiee Booka-Mcnptlra eaUMN f. Books for examination befor wiOTt tort. , denoe of corxi zaTin. p u 1 -myiwvr ' low. JOHN B. Ai.iKN..ruoiiaaer, , m'vssw, Stroec Aea-.rora. Bai 1237. CABBAGE PLANTS. hnase romauu auiuuwiii w ew . lofues, 1MDU8TEIA1V OAKDSNS. i Mobile, Aliu J issn :Sa,,ir " ,aUMrM )W aawaa,a suaaSMsr. lfcpaar.a4ora.J tl OPIDIil Aiew wnraKV HAV11 nnatn SO 1.1 TURXK WEEKS. addraaain oaoldaoo., wits at opium 5?- alaraasBtfraa B. M. WOO LET, M.P., Atlaota. Oa. aawariidca. aaa-hf MaOU' nulla 8a4 ataaip aralTBiar. Maaa ay WAatswai, arawrjoCV' Bttl its aoUhwaaad Hfr. Bead stamp fnrCireqlara. C Ol mj- UAJn, AU'y, WaaaiactaavjU U. snrs ssisa jUJita g 4kw.U pan ..a-f 1 X iM saiTS a te. arM. rJb ni. ; pAtEtllSSfSSI A G ET WANTEB : tba and aMat ajf- t iu Pietonal BwifcasM awMaar, a-noaa mwj aa , rToaot. MawosaL FuUMId Oo..tAta.U Ga. 1 1 Hanaaliain. 1 ratuBMi-.bip dawfea aprtoc. ; - aou wi vr vZTTT ! Wra-wnllrltTynw" tot tlB Ca'f W fraaey wort a tksarj hoaaea, eilyjoj oaoagv. r and an SO to SIS par iiwkliiSM for o . Siaas SammerteaAa ffZ -parUcalara. Hndaott Mff. Co., 86t Stats At-. b. Y.'. Sn.KS for PererkAssortjP -aJtbJBai.Warfafciaia- itromo Nward, excelsior, awHtT' 40 aampWlarra P"," , tnMidjaaip, fits ebnoi jiaasAa O0..W1 Fa. rteen'St fieea t Bwrwi 11 si J ' ' iaWa piatri aaiaWt hr - k ... ... u... I will TWO BOTTI.SS r M. . - viah a VaM?ASl ...... ' ...ii-: f - - - 1 ft or.e." v s j j- " . - ? ' t? " " X -r r. , S Jv.- -r, V-
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 24, 1884, edition 1
4
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