Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / May 28, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 V ';;H'U , 4-,. ' V '" "I.;..- v. '' 4y:yyyyyigyyyyyH gtHhiritIy"iE yk -yira-njwprfHt..,--y:.--;y WE PRO TIB L Y CALL 0 URS A GO VERNMENT Blfr THE - . t,5t,. IN.lTHB BESTiOFSTYLE x r r r mmm ." j . i' . ' r w d ; -.. if f: ;h f i . Ilk tn i 'I web': ill ! ifl L;P-y m:4. - III, rrM,i n ry 'M-yn ;w I sr..- ' - u f b : ym 1: As 4i the eiubieji oaithe fieitrtl . ;A" Itps cblrpiiyr xricket ft 8 fan, ': p1fe? HtchW the v 'a q Anil ITttlhjriiiw'o'oifrtfef'. ? I kn'V.v'nol why j touid not weep . Jvohiasrrpps reuscd to rdll': And ohi thaV-feri,( in wild and deep, ' I twincn scuiw jtaiKSKiin me soul. :-v- But whoa I satrt&yykcant chair, j I'liUK- idle uatuponniife wall, 1 , , ' 1 1 A Jiine sve hoi icstU last jof alW 'f ' !. on jfri-hosllrlendly shli tr iii' inS Qet ftaJ wandered forth, r is .pose xeei iwi maae. toi feebly od the eartk j Frhie countks3 ages fled- . . i y.X seat i would v;kant stand The heart ihaVgave its love u, Torniike be wxhose tendrcurlcd Oh 1 father ' v.- a for her and t Gusheti i a forth the scorci:g tears, And oft, r - and bitterly , avfi'gusne, i -ima jvow. ' ild srows coldaroul a. jrr I itr 'take on their real ne, VTia sad tonni that love is loun JYING GUMPSES. of Citiesmcver ". 7 r7 -v W Boltcbe thehub of the uni i U ' ritviV U is' H'e- Cla v .ntue, Afverse, d6 njr. ; ..: rtJ im li m I.MIII (I jcli r who jjuts iis vet ii? cvy Ptvnse t ' "'Viii'i i f of the rdMnljew OriTin. itntf " hi viffrn go jvhitheroevcr he lists in-the ; " c&v-, he will find that going with the flu'jiiah tids which so slowly ebbs fund flows there he will invariably lvnmi tothat sttltue and that'street. To the native of "New .Oilcans Canal . J..1 iUJlAH J.HJU, VlAAiVlC avenue, jTiitcftv der Lindn, tlo Neyskoi lJ!M-.fekt, Broadway all these and i.nnire;;it is his l-erm idealfcf allthor- 'Ta'!;Eires. But Ato thd stranger, Ll Xm QXi ie brightst.of bmght days, is ;4ut a sun-scprcneai street, pt tiie:oiis width, it is true bordered y i.-iilclings shabby .as a rile, and Lnat 'jactive soxq the rather pictu-j 'S'p. o paviiiops o toe,: street-car pavilions of jthj . . - tan rs, the ragged! and 'only parti- uly entire ;rdw of trees down its pivl ;o, and a line Oil electric light t Hiatal .This is tlu' twain fact about V al street, New (Means. It is h . difficult to t:.kfe a just view.of Jiew Orleans, for n vor swas there so ir,ii.-hvthat .is be iutlful placed ih kuposition io so much that is re k ;ng to thTeye : ; beven a blunt-' Unse of smell :ihfe ."atmosphere .ihr,. verv.moigt tbat 'the feeling is vys, save at night, ajicl sometimes ' r-;jM 1 E.--'-!1 l,,fuiyvnjer chair .V1; V.i . i; I There iretlieiMi.fegl v ; VP. L Hia r ;lv . ''.'...feveii ttien, as if one was in a ioot : .. itratory. Thus much of New Or- "y;. I f foj3 in general, as prparatory to I !, ; 0 1 Orleans in particular:;-The city h, marvel WftrlrieliesrCqanal MWf blBft .i;etweehthe . OeaWof a cihtuy agod that of tiav- To east 6t ylJanai :, ail is f 'ch, and ln:"Soy markwte thfiiine that ' ere are peoplwlio never go out of lieacntown wy-1Uv" p-. lketermed,lHjnxt goon fea resifeW of ) 'lrrL Ut.y ther' have Xiever FPr trarieiea exte1 Si:The4Vtr y iht iruxeaari ov z y I; ''iramSi Jtheity if awaj ' f the rgtf--S de ire fried" alfc ground, mstJ I Jellvco1 itsid''- home, its contrary will "be found at jNcw Orleans. -- -: Walking up Canitl etree't to the Qlay statue, it is i'ound thafi the street is unevenly paved with very Jarge slabs of flat stone, and that the wide sidewalks are covered by Vtiry nearly;; continuous awnings. uthe stores are mainly three or four stories in height. ! The cross streets are narrow and all are crowded -f with slow movingeople. " Arriving i at the- Clay statue, it is seen to be a bronze representation of the' great statesman, reached by a flight of steps,., through, tl e open gates of an iron railing' of small area. ' The stat ue stands upon a pedestal qf granite, onlwhich are carved Clay's famous words against slavery, which seem bvAhe wav a rather singular choice &r Amonument erected in ante-bel- un liys. 'ave in the heat of the lay thi;re are always crowds of peo le sitting oi .the steps around the i tatue, chatting and looking at the qther'mpre . active people who walk wly"to"the street cars, which cen tre jthere-ffrom all points on the Vmerican side. For there is only street car line in Frenchtown, lat running by the French market. tjthe Clay statue, Royal street on the French side becomes St. Charles street on the American 'side, and a little distance'down St. Charles street is the St. Charles hotel, the Mfecca of the traveler.: New. Orleans has no new hotels ; the traveler of half a century ago would feel at horn there now. i ne greax grey graniie iacaae of Ithe St. Charles, withits pillars ju.-an uioso oi too capiioi ruu- eigi its vast rotunda, 'and entrance whilh is cntirolv likn thnt of si nris- L on'K not attractive. Within, its r ooais are lofty, with old-fashioned ban nngs and immense beds. Jsut -i vn gli t. ta be sccrt as one of tb - sights. The Lou-' isanxan speaks Iways with awe of trfc St Charles. It has perhaps mucil of the sime .awe-inspiring stylets -a Niagara hackman. .' - Grettirig aboard a street car and go- ihrf Westward, , the traveler sdon comes to the .cltv hall square, known as i aiayette fuare, because a statue of Behjamin Franklin adorns it. To the nrrrthward ? lands the rather grim andv' smoky city hall, renderedj fa m ous Jii the years from 1868 to 1875 by leon of its being the capital at various, time? f the various factions in 'IjpTusiana 'politics. .It-saw fight- lif:g ih: 1874, ia fact the battle be- tweeh, tne jmetropontan police and the ri& clubs began there and many live lere lost. Near by a church reaf Ef. iTitpire far heavenward. It is the chvirch whose pastor was arrest ed by'ien. Butler, who as military lord ind m ister of the Crescent City, had his it adquarters in the Saint Charkf? fi&td, which was guarded by trobpe id;;; cannon at all hours. Twel vt - pbr tidot guns smiled a sweet welcoi it t') all ;omers. But Butler is g. cffici the preacher that day aries ' Umafiis and still tells the swee :.:h jjja; yci the Gospel of Peace. Soon i ,ti- passing the city hall, the Lee e r- 'ie is reached. It is the no- blest i jbcf Robert E. Lee yet erectc l. and can be seen for miles A siii: jJe shift of white marble, per- naps b-j it-- nignj-' rismg irom a square basd is surmounted by a roo-st2rte, of far more than life size, ol the gfcat general, who, calm m nit r bvome presentment, as m hfe, si'id s with- fieldglass in hand, lookinjr t ;t?t.vVard. It is all very sim pie, ye v .ryfpleasing. Yet a little further n ari one comes to a little park, ii vhllh sits a little marble statue, jo , wlose base is the one word "Ma .r;iT0t. . The figure is that of a?stout ii pin Z in the plain gar ments of ' ; w&rkiner woman, and with a fi wKose kindly homeli Jiess leads, one tb know the statue is a kobchftmVnwhoselife-is1 full ou aowia- tvnct:it;is so, tor tne te-,y lm0oy6 i d rjaxp.rviarirt whASfl ontta tn 'vnue? fcq&asuymgana Tcre"80v"geherdus .stattieyjbrifr- in gifts, Messed is her memory to the poor of NewOrleans, ' V , - But the street car, - drawn, by its mules with jangling bells, goes on and soon the streets lose their busi-! riess air, and stores give place" -to dwellings. This part of the city, for the - space of two miles, ; is' .vert beautiful, looking ' cast and - west along the gentle " crescent curves of the streets, but the sight along the streets running north and south is the reverse. The street on -which the car. runs is wide level and well paved, often with asphalt. The houses are nearly all of wood, mostly two stories high, or at most three, with the most liberal allowance of porti co and verandah imaginable. There is ho exaggerated privacy, as in Charleston; one can look through the fences, which are precisely like those in Raleigh. Within the yards are seen abundance of shrubs, some quaint, and the grass is of the most vivid green. A curious spectacle is presented by the immense rain water tanks, which are so necessary an appurtenance of every house, fur nishing the sole supply of potable water. These tanks are really im mense, and stand one above anoth er, there being always two and some times three thus arranged. The sidewalks on the front of these louses are like those in other cities. This is the right side of the picture ; now for the reverse. It is : to be found when the cross street is reach- ed. A long, narrow, green lawn is seen, with no trace of pavement, and only planks laid with irregularity to make the sidewalk, or rather "ban quette," as it is universally called in New Orleans. These streets look like lanes in a country town, and are full of holes made in them by the hoofs of the patient and long suffering mules which sometimes draw druys along them. There nev er was such a contrast ; the main streets used continuously,' the cross streets hardly ever. Alongside the banquette of these streets flow, two lanes of the greenest and slimiest water imaginable. So sluggish is the movement of the water ' that it can hardly be said to flow. It is run ning from the river always, towards the collecting basin, whence it is pumped into the great canals which run to Lake Pontchartrain. In these foul little canals people may be seen catching crayfish, here ''es teemed as an article of food. A family party of poor people may sometimes be seen close to an ele gant mansion, fishing for the gay and festive crawfish, which, like so many politicians, has the faculty for hiding himself and of going in all directions. A bit of meat at the end of ' a line attached ta a short stick, and a bag arranged like a net, con stitute the crawfishers' equiprnent. The fish seizes the bait, thinking he has a 1 soft thing ; the net is slipped under him,- and in a moment he is in a bucket ready to do his share towards making the family happy at meal time. There are exceptions to all rules ; hence there must be tor the rules of hygieneJ New Orleans fur nishes that exception ; furnishes it at almost every turn ; for the people do not mind these drains, and they SDjeedily become quite a part of the scenery. The foliage is tropical The glossy green of the orange trees adorns nearly every yard,; and great clusters of the rich yellow fruit peep from out the foliage. But that, too, at the end of March, is. deceptive. The oranges are sour-sweets and not to be eaten by anybody, the good oranges having some - tune since been gathered. On the same trees are seen buds, blossoms and rip&or anges every stage of growth. Tife fragrance fills the air to an, jndescri- able degree, and in this - residence quarter, far out on camp and Pry- tania streets, becomes part of the verv atmosohere. - Flower sellers greet . tne cars ax every , stopping- nlnW - wh.h -rnnsspa nf WosRnms in olace,- with masses 01 blossoms m iheir; hands.' "The most fragrant of all these is the Japanese, magnolia. y.y::,r:yyy-y:lM 11 is veiiow. very ynian,' auu sua liko la half-opened tulip with t i petals,.1- and is'tnever seen tpi. the like time, goes on and oh, and pres ently there come to be open spaces, gredt level fields, "with moss draped live oaks here and there and gypsey tents under; the trees: the houses become scattered and meaner; there are orange gardens arid; nurseries, views of great structures, " charity, hospitals, or convents ; and then , vast shapes o: the exposition "buildings rear themselves against the horizon. F. A: O, in News and Ohefver:'y,. A Bostonlan's Opinion of Southern LacUes. Michael E. Wallace, a Boston gentleman, was in Wadesboro last Saturday. He stood in front of a store .where the sidewalk was nar row. , A lady wras seen approaching. He was told by a clerk in the store to stand aside and let the lady pass, Instead of doing this ho deliberately propped himself pn his stick and so effectually blockaded the sidewalk that the lady had to step out into the street and walk around him. The clerk reproached him for not being a gentleman, whereupon the man took occasion to say that he took no stock in the foolish Southern ideas of courtesy to women that he made way for no woman if she wanted to pass she might .walk around him. The clerk was called by i a customer, and the Yankee walked away, doubtless satisfied that he had done something i very smart. Later he returned to renew the discussion, and finding the chiv alric clerk absent, ' asked for that man who had so much respect for women that he wanted everybody to get out of their way. Presently that man" returned. What was first said we do got know, but tle Bostonian ended hr;bv. ask- "Who areyoiir.S'baSHCgIjps? I would like to see them. &fiaye seen have a good many womxen , smce r been -in the Soijthj" but X haven't seen any ladies." He stop ped speaking, no doubt feeling that he had not only demolished South ern virtue, but had also vanquished Southern manhood. Perhaps he now thinks differently, for he had no sooner uttered trie last words than the clerk snatched his stick from his hands and dealt him a dozen blows over the head and shoulders. The flesh whs laid open to the skull arid Michael E. Wallace was kicked out into: the street. He picked himself up and hobbled off to the depot, a "moving mount of gore." When he gets! back to the Hub he will possi bly tell how he was assaulted m North Carolina-arid beat without a cause, and tins anair may lurnish material ? for "Another Southern Outrage," but those who know the facts will know how justly Wallace was dealf with, and will say, "well done" to the party who beat him. Wadesboro Intelligencer. - - :J ! -I . . l? Anecdote of Judge Thomas EuRrt. i y.-'' ' 'i-y?-, ', . About 43 years ago Judge Ruflin went to- school at S.hady Grove, Rockipgham county, tcySJr;- Sam Smiths AcrosrtB, river about a mile and a half, fi-onhe racademy, in tbe rich boiSJthe Mayo, was j a vijrvfine mel patch to which tlie poys occasionally made clandestine visits. The, widow who owned the patch had two' -pretty daughters, sprightly and Hyely and lull of tun. Kufhn occasii called on these young ladies, and on one occasion the theft of the mel ons was spoken of. The young la dies! told young Jlufliix thai-; they thought f the students ofMrSrhith were the robbers Ruffin at onco de fended the "boys" ; from the unjust suspicion and promised : that if it was so he would use his" influence to stop : it, A: few " days afterAyjypds a; riero f girl-camefr6mthe Palch with a ydianttkerchief;:- which she : had found" there; and. ' gave it TtcV the young ladies. ..Ii rtona corner was the &ah ine motngr 01 ,: iney-yuunguiues isev lfirted - the finest'mcloiv s.he coulci i lecteoli the' fh find, tiexi.it up in uiq nandKerciuet srildft itajRjpJnfnext da'V I)y 6tieof hptis whe tended ' -schbolSxItrdlEufiiri Hrom :. ; ,- j hj neyercould fafe, the young lalic: ties y New York Politics-A Cevival of Basineas - --What Some Nortli Carolinian are Do ing in the igjCtotUet TWngrs;iJ!?r: -'0yyy0'" 1 yyy 2?yy0- ':fWfi Iew yEJiajry Ipf; v Tlie LegislA.ture of ; New York has just adjourned, and the Legislatures ih ; iew- x ors scare, so i many gooa people because there is - a constant clanger -: thatv. they will enact laws which will disturb all or ts of things, and give so niany "jobbers" chances to make their trade ; profitable - that the sentiment is growing ih favor of biennial ;instead J.of annual "sessions.': The habit is how for the Legislature to meet every year, but the people offtew York at no distant day are goiiig to follow the example of North Carolina, and have less frequent ses sions and have, them shorter. " There is some comfort if not instruction for a North Carolinian in. studying the New York .Le'gislature. After every session in North Carolina a great manjr people and a' large part of the press cry .out that the . Legis lature has done - nothing, "arid no doujbt there are many people who think that p. North Carolina Legisla ture is a less distinguished body than that of any other State. But it will bear virtuous comparison in every particular with the Legislature' of JS ew x ork. and; your law-makers do - ..... ' I 1 ..... .... about as much 'in their 60'days ev ery two years as tpese law-makers do in two long annual sessions. The people and the ress here find the same sort of fault, and,with quite as good reasons, if not' Detter ; for: the "jobbers"'" herehndertake jobs of much greatermagnitude than" any that you have in North Carolina. During the recent session, for in stance, a neat little piece of Legisla tive work was undertaken which would have cost the people $200,- bometimsou liave had nrliMr trials of strength by meni bWitfbor bocW ' -Well- here in New York Cny, Tht on Broadway, in one" of thecijiost" fashionable and densely populated parts of the city, an ex-member of the Ncav York Leg islature and another gambler got .in to a street .fight with a dirk and -a pistol. I don't think any State can, show a wrorse demonstration of the bad possible selections in politics than that. J After a long and labo rious and mainly useless session all: Jhe winter, the Legislature adjourn ed without doing the work, that the Constitution required, in some par ticulars; and the Governor' has been obliged to call it together in extra session. "When, tlierefore, vour peo ple become; despondent arid over criticar about "their own -Legislature. you may invite them to study tlie works and the manners of their New York conteriiporaries for comfort. Mankind js Tef y much the same ev erywhere, ndLegislatures are not very different from one another but I am inclined to think that you manage to et better ones in North Carolina than they get here. y '-'r--: . They elect a Governor in theVall in New York, and the election will have a peculiar interest because it wih be taken as a test of thestrength of the two parties this .year,-which, by comparison with the Presidential vote of last year, w-iR give fiesh spec ulation aboht the nexiresidential election, and vpR-. in vrf ainx way be a I standard to judgl;PTesident Cleveland's administration by. Tt is very plain, however, that thus far the President has made himself and his -administration uncommonly popular, in New York among the people of all partie. The Republi can tpaperst (except . the bittetarid foohslN;;;yne);'fin to criticise; and the Mugwump and Democratic : papers are' enthusiastic irithaise.ymeXcM ment, the preponderance of political ieeiing- aija ; wie.- wiioie ouuook 111 New York-is ,rDem6Cratic--xqngly so. ; Governor f ttill, y howe verY? who sucuwufu. ; vicyuu icrYuv arvis fir ucceeded Senator Vance -to f" xpired term is by no I.. man as, the l-rcs- UtJ!H. jut.; lent. jiyh . ilLhtheD.0Cir Aiclffiiriee!lor; Governor. ?&ig&3&c. ,. AN ESTTEKESTIKG MTTTKR. in tfeponer of businessp hichT was nibc luoKcu ior una oprmg put wnicn seemsgto havj delayed "iteMf. at least nritil the Fall, is begmning to be apj parent,; ; Dry goods" are generally a good test of the general market for all iprodnffe;. When cloth: L? dull and yety. low, everything else is dull. In tlie dry goods market there has lately been a very easily noticeable lmprorement-'in - the outlook, arid consequently.: eyery othei' branch of business feels more . hopeful. The dry goods trade of New fork inear-r ly all done in one section of the city, which. ,s known as the dry goods "districCy I refer only to the whoh sale trade. .This district runs i across Broadway above the City Hall ; and within a small area there the greater part of all the trade in dry goods tha'jCas donein America is carried on. There the large ; importing houses are situated, where every kind of goods taade in any part of the world are sold in bulk, and where you can buy any quantity of the product of any American mill. ' Wholesale and retail dealers from every important city in the United States go there every j season, and the whole- dry goods market of the world is known as accurately as any of your readers know i the streets in Rockingham. And there (as everywhere else in the whole wide world) you may find North Carolinians at work. Two ate especially well known as sales men there Mr. Ruffin, a nephew of ex-Judge Thomas Ruffin, of Hills boro, who. is with Bates, Reed & Cooley, and Mr. John Anderson, of Fayetteville, who is witli Teft, Wal ler & Co. A few days ago there was a single day's auction sale that brought about $2,000,000. How is that for business on a grand scale? THE REVISED OLD -TESTAMENT. Thfe chief changes made in tho text of thereviseri "tf 'th&.bld Testament; to correspond with the revised ver sion of the New Testament publish ed several years ago, were made known this, morning. Instead of the phrase, "tabernacle of the con gregation," which occurs a good many times in the Old Testament, it now reads, "tent of meeting." In a great many passages they word "hell" is changed tq.' "grave" or to "pit"; "meat offering" has been changed to "meal offering"; the Psalms and rthe other poetical bdbks are printed as poetry in verse shape. The ac count of the creation read3 thus: "And there was evening and there was morning, one day"; "there was evening, and there was morning, a second day," and so on, instead of evening and morning of "the first day," "the second .day," &c. "Ap ples of gold , in pictures of silver" now reads "apjples of gold in figured work of silver" ; instead of "vanity and vexation of spirit," it now reads "vanity and a striving after wind" ; instead of saying "there were giants in the tfarth in thos days," the. new version reads "the i-Nephelim, were in the earthjlri those days." Such changes as . tlscBrifake certain pas sages sound 'unfamiliar, but there are not many of i them ' which will cause any new discussions of church doctrine. The hew version will be on sale here .liow. in a few days. It Last Sunday night at midnight the six-dayroller skating match was beguix at Madison Square Garden. A great many of the men who en tercel the race broke down vcrycdT ly. In five days Snowden had gone 1,045 miles and Boysty 1,035,. and they were skating at the mto of about ten miles, an lr.. Jts the custom. of the men to take such snatches of ping to sleep an hour, sometimes a longer time and sometimes a short er. The most of them, have not shjip? ed, to; eat ; they take food irf their ; ands -anu eat. as they sicate along tne rate pi ten mues an nour.-rr hey?rier is now expected to make OmileVintha is nnteToecxeaxnaias many m ... .-w-jr- Tvic a" j. Tv.rj.i . - 'a 1 3 Jl li f iLiJ Wm rsaid sfaHilef Sr? etk'oOlfHrf -4, vised westament. '.! , ' class- lte't ' ' the -roller SKAT1.NU match. njy she! Indeed IT-said Miss, JtfO- - , .;Mr.' Carl Schurz. has. publwhcdla;; : . TtAWit vaw AiAlii M IMv the, South, in? which,hl8.ab6iitr; M 7Sf4 (. 1,.: . r' -frL:Ji im y. 'y yS he saw there during nis recent Visit, t The pepp)e here. now; go to Eujxlpo ; e ; vcry ouuimer. very-f inucu as ma people m JKicnmona county rvo on yyyy w$v& excursions to'themountans or to y 1 1 y 'M ''Sy the, seashores Tlie trip is not a lone one, and not very xpnsive;Cros 'I n and crowds and crowds aro going now. A man can get steerage pas-u y sage to London for about Jthe same jnoney that it requires to go-froiiiVt here to Rockingham, and for twice that much he can go in f goodquarr ' ters. Olive Logan's Advlc to Girl. A woman's safeguard is to kecpji: " Vj;;-wV man's hands off her. If von near! his assistance in walking take his C '' r. arm instead of his taking yours. Just V A r , tell him in plain . English to "Hands " - , v- K- 1 1 -. on." lie may not like it at first; . but he will 1 respect you teri-fbld more. Men will do just what the women allow them to do. Men will ' not do to trust. Give a man your arm'and you will find him verycori fidential, and. he will take a good " many privleges he Wbuld not take if he was not permitted to do so. He will give your arm many loving . sly little twists and squeezes that h$ -could have no opportunity of doing, and opportunity is just what he iu ; -after. A few more words of advice and I will close. , Keep your girls off the street, except when they have business. Teach them it is unnec essary tq go to the postoffice ever - time they go out. Your girls cap ? go home alona just as well as your -boys. If possible, instill nto their very nature that they are safer in . their own hands than they are in y, . . the hands of any man preachers T ' not excepiea. The Freedom of the Press. "Oh, I think it must be so nice tQ be connected j with a newspaper, -y-said Miss McFlynn to young Quill-'-driver, asthey sat together one eve ning. 14 , ' - "Yes, it is so-so," he replied. "But why do you think it is ?" "Why, it has so many advantages. , I should think you would glory in. : . the freedom, the liberty and all thV? ' privileges of the press." "Certainly, I do. It's a pityr with all your enthusiasm "on tho : subject, that you are not a journal ist."' . , ; : "I think so too;. but it's hard for a . woman to get recognition. I should be delighted to feel that the press ' embraced me." . . "Oh, you WQuld, would .you??. Great Scott ! wait till I turn down, the gas." Ex. "How did the queen, of Sheba tratel when she went to see Solo mon ?" asked Miss R. of hef Sunday school class of little girls. No-one ventured to answer. "If you had; : studied your lesson you could not ? have helped knowing," said the " teacher. " "Now, look over the verses again Could she have gone by the . & cars?"4kcd Miss R beginning to" jj lose natierice. as the chilrlrpn con- faulted thei?- book; but ap"Jeared' to -r'f " Well, Louiawe should Uke.to-? Jcnow. ho you ymnci: tjouiL"j-v v JLLM. VUVV DWUUU ? W 4. IUi A'' -f.i tlie child; rt'it sjres, 'sfie came , ia- fyery greaitram" "Vv -IL -z-r 'We -undefs Nacres- j&jAj0vet, Academy; orf wjnclt he expects, to locate quite a colony of his people who hav . cntiy;cpe;fb this Country, expect to' pay particu1 - -IhjOultiire ofy"" and vr?" o DK. BeatfjlJflf -e- $' :. !'. 2 ' , " 'f . y V i , -yy x : -:i A :'y: .if- Ay; 0- : x ; 11 X i '1 , t W J I yy:)-m?yymy :lry
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 28, 1885, edition 1
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