Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / March 25, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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ham Rocket. Rocking ... i t T PnTTrtTl AND Pbopbietok. oTSB pySUETT WALL A COMPANY'S. liCBSCRirTIOX batbs: ' , fl.50 Oney' 75 gij month3,-. .... Three months,...; SAl1 subscriptions accounts must be plUi in advance. '. -"Advertising rates furnished on ap- - plication- - . ' ' - Written for the Rocket. ' SHK AND J. . JOSEPH L. MAY., it:,: - tj" Ve were strolling she and l ; On the lovely Sabbath day. ; Jt was evening in the sky - ; -As we wound our gentle way' ghe would gather, as I livej ! " 'Holly and the lowly mosa ; 1 " She would count the points, and give If graceful little toss. . " s. . . We were talking she and I - ' Of many a pretty thing ; r With a deep and yearning sigh, " Yes, we chatted of the spring. . - With a sweet, angelic voice, She would tune her lips- and sing, Could ire other than rejoice, . in our nappy wanaenng i We were sitting-he and 'I In the shadow of the mill J There I caught her raven eye, " And my heart I could not still. men i viewed ner iace bo lair, And her crown of beauteous hair, As I asked me in despair : : " ".Will she ever know a care ?" J. We- were looking-she and I At the little ducks that swam O'er the sparkling waters high, ' From the cool and shady dam. , Twihght gathered o'er the pond, -Ere our spirits wished to go ; Yet upon the road beyond, In our smiling ah, you know ! " We were kissing she and I " In the gloaming, dim and late. As we whispered our "good-bye!" ' At the lightly swinging gate. Oh, I'll ne'er forget the hours, .. With that' dainty, sweet boujuet, t Which, in blisses, called we ours On that lovelv Sabbath dav. r Elizabethtown, N.' C. , " BY CLYDE RAYMOND. "She's a raalch-rnaking old call" exclaimed Buy Stuart, irreverently, as he strode out of his aunt's pres ence with a very flushed face and very angry blue eyes, "and I would not marry that girl now if she were as beautiful as an houri and worth ter weight infold besides," ; Whether hia, wealtr Aunt was an "old cat" or not, it womt wWch we shalLjiot stop to dccMeTbut it was quite true that sbcwas bent, heart and soul, upon match-making. and poor Kuy had been badgered to death for months with tbe.name and virtues of Miss Ruby Dale constant ly dinned into his ears. Therefore it was noTvonder that he had come to absolutely detest the girl, though be had never seep her in hia life, and he ..most devoutly hoped now that he never should. "Ruy, dear," said his aunt a few days later, in her most persuasive tones, "I wish you jwould. run down to sandstone next week and super intend the sale of my property there I really haven't as much confidence Wthat agent as I'd like to have. And then, you know, you can spend two or three weeks down there fish mg. The streams near the place are very fine. Will you go?" n - i Ruy did not answer 'ihimediately. He did not quite trust that ove- graeious manner of his scheming aunt. . , "Will you, my dear boy ?" she re peated, after a moment's silence. is miss uudv i Jaie at fs.inrtsr.nnfir" he inquired, with grim suspicion. - "Ruby. Dale !" cried his aunt, with a guilty start. "Why, certainly not -at least, not that I know of. 'What a question 1" But her embarrassed manner only wunnned ins suspicions. "IH cro. of finiiTSfl. annt. if T nan eof service to vou " he answered. Bt to himself he added :. "She is iner m all the glory of a fashion tiDie young lady's summer; toggery, w they flatter themselves that I'm sing to be entrapped by it. Well, go, but I'll take urecious eood fje that Miss Ruby Dale doesn't I'm in the place." course it neves occurred to uy a masculine vanity to suppose bat the other party concerned might 2 JUlte as averse to the arrangement Jj himself. Could be have looked . the parlor of a certain mansion veral hundred miles away at that i ue luigui xioi nave quite so uneasy. "I sav Off -"aiaiicl, )uu iuxy BCUU 1X1 v . to-- Sandstone "though.'; I don't " Office: - -r t--. ..... ., . . - .,, . -.. -;. .... . : ' : -, ; ... i -. - -r- : - j r . ' : ' ,. : : : ' " - "' r':j l ' H: C. WALL'; Editor and Proprietor: Vol.-IV, want to go -one bit ; but you never can make me marry that odious Ruy Stuart. , Bah ! I'm getting sick of the very sound of his name." And Miss -Ruby Dale's red lip curled very contemptuously as she thought of the unknown man who had become the .very bete noir of her existence. - . - . "Now, Ruby, how unreasonable you are," murmuied Mrs. Dale, fret fully. "Nobody is saying a word about Ruy Stuart, excepting your self. And pray , what has he to do with your going to Sandstone?" Everything, I believe," JJsaid the young lady with a decided pout; "don't you suppose, mamma, that I know this is another plot between yon and that rich bid aunt of his ? But you'll never succeed never. I hate him, and I hope and trust that he hates me." "If they do persist in sending me there," she thought, "Pll take anoth er name, and he shall never know that I am in Sandstone. No, indeed 1 When I marry it shall be for love and I intend to be my own match maker.". r' What a charming girlP thought the handsome, blue-eyed fellow who gat on the bank of a silvery stream, waiting so patiently for the unoblig ing fish of Sandstone to bite. "That isi the style ot woman that I intend to marry, let my ahnt's money go where it will. Lovely brunette) dark eyes full of fire and romance, and dressed so simply too, in pure white muslin. "Wonder if I can manage an introduction ?" . iThe maiden who had just tripped by , so gracefully had cast only one sweet, lingering glance upon the 37oung sportsman ; but it was qujte enough" to set his heart beating most unaccountably. V I'fWhat a handsome fellow he is," sh4 said to herself, as she flitted past; "just my ideal of a herol Wouldn't it be delightful to have a lover like that? But" with a little sigh "I suppose we shall never happen to meet again." But you may be sure that they did meet aeain. and very often. The young fishermen Charlie Reynolds was sufficiently interested to seek and obtain an introduction, after which their little romance went swimmingly along, with scarcely a single break in its perfect happiness. Charlie Reynolds" was not mista ken in his first impression of Minnie Blanchard, the girl, who had thus suddenly won his heart. : . She was really bright charming and lovable just the girl,"he thought to make him happy for-life; and, before his departure from Sandstone he I told her all this, and then thy discovered that they 4iad really fall en in love with each other, at first sight. - . ' They were both so unutterably Happy that, for the time, they for got.everything else. Then, in a half frightened manner, and covered with confusion, Minnie falteringly con fessed that the name by which he had known her was not her own. . "No," she blushingly said, in an swer to his surprised exclamation, "I have been playing incognita for the purpose of avoiding a gentleman whom my friends are trying " to make me marry. But I was deter mined he Should never , make my acquaintance, for," she added, her voice growing firmer and her eyes flashing angrily, "I utterly abhor him, and would not marry him for all the world." ' "And your name is, then M - "Ruby. Dale." ' "What VI ejaculated Charlie, with a violent start. . Then a merry twinkle came into his blue eyes, as he smilingly inquired : ; "Is this gentleman you speak of wealthy ?"' "Very," said Ruby, with a slight ly increased elevation of her pretty, i "tip-tilted nose;" "or,' rather he would be if he and I should consent to be mere puppets in the hands of our scheming relations.: I believe his aunt's will depends upon that, and I also feel sure that he abhors the idea quite as much as I do' "And you are positively certain ROGKINGHAM, RICHMOND COUNTY , ! H"i :G., that you will never be willing to marry him ?" "Never !" ' V- T "V And the disgust and contempt ex pressed upon Miss Ruby's piquant tace were enough to have utterly crushed the despised suitor, could he have been there to see it. Charlie was beginning to feel greatly amused. - , - : ' :"And the name of this unfortun ate fellow," he continued, watching her expressive face with his , mischief-sparkling eyes, "is Ruy Stu art; is it not?" 1 : Ruby stared at her lover in wide eyed amazement. "Wbv, what do you know about it?" she exclaimed. '.. Charlie laughed outright. "Oh, Ruby, Ruby 1" he cried mer rily, taking both her hands in his and kissing her flushed cheeks ; "what a scrape we have gotten ourr selves into by trying to avoid each other! I am that same detestable Ruy, Stuart whom you hate so bit terly, and who, believing that he was sent here on purpose to fall a victim to your wiles, determined to hide himself uner another name. Great was my relief at finding that Miss Ruby Dale, my special aversion, was not at Sandstone. And now to thinkthat we have both walked right into the trap that we have tried so long and so hard to keep out of! Oh, Ruby, how our worthy guardians will triumph over us when they find it out!" , Then, after watching her discom fiture a moment, he provokingly asked : "Well, Ruby, what are you going to do about it?" "It's a shame 1" cried Ruby, spir itedly. "I have vowed a hundred times that I wonld never marry you. Let's declare the engagement off." "Well do nothing of the kind," said Ruy, decidedly ; "I wouldn't give you up now, Ruby, for all the relations in the universe. But, after all, our would-be managers cannot claim the credit of the affair. It must be one of those matches that-l are made in heaven, Ruby, for it has come iust right despite all our ef forts to prevent it. So let them boast dear, if they want to. We know that it was purely providential." And Ruby was content to accept her lover's logic and himself togeth er. The Industrial War. From the New York Star. It is estimated1 by Bradstreets that there are 52,810 men out of work at this date as a direct result of strikes and lockouts. A further examina tion of its figures enables the follow ing classification to be made : The total number locked out is estimated at 10,ZUU; .the total out in conse quence of employers discharging workmen because they are Knights of Labor is estimated at 12,600, which includes the 9,000 railroad men who have tied up the southwest railroads There are 1,000 cotton factory oper atives out in consequence of fines imposed upon them for alleged "soil ing of cloth." This makes a total o 23,600 men now idle in consequence of acts on both sides that are certain ly and readily susceptible of arbitra tion. The reasons given for most o the lockouts are simply disgraceful being devoid of a decent semblance of justice, and belonging to the spir it of chattel bondage rather than o: free labor. The movements started and sustained by the Knights of La bor are based on charges which have their root in the same mode of deal ing. Of the remaining 29,000 idle work ers, 5,805 are out on a strike agains a reduction of wages, and ISSO are demanding a higher rate. The aver age demand will not be over 10 per cent., while, "for three years past. wages, have, in the same pursuits been subjected"., to, a reduction, o about 23 per cent ' The wages ques tion then covers 18,615 workers. The remaining 10,395 idle persons are standing out on matters of shop regulations, the employment of non union men,- against convict labor, against labor-saving machinery and other similar causes, of the right , Or wrong of which it is not , so. easy to udge offhand. The employment of non-union hands has sent 5,710 per sons on strike; That is at all times considered a direct blow at labor or ganizations. .The remaining . 5,405 workers on strike are so acting on various grounds, but - chiefly, from disputes on rules and disciplined lnis great Dxay oiworKerssuot ects of an enforced "or lyoluntary idleness, are divided into various oc cupations as follows : Railroad menj 9,000 ; nailers, 4,000 ; , coal, miners, 21,480; textiles, 10,330, and of boot and shoemakers, 4,075. TfieTemain der are in a .variety of trades -and pursuits. 3 These are interesting sta: tistics. Their -number and the cir cumstances attending them, are such as the overwhelming necessity for a wise and reasonable policy of adjust ment and, settlement i In.a consid erable number of cases, involving two-thirds of the total body of work ers who are affected, organized labor has directly proffered, and apparent ly in good. faiththe plan of arbitra tion. , - .. . - The Sinking of the Oregon. From the Philadelphia Times.' When a sailing schooner and an immense steamer collide at. sea, with the result of sending the sch ooner and all on board to the bottom in stantly and of sinking the steamer a few hours later, it is prett' difficult for the public to' judge .as to who was to blame for the accident. The dif ficulty is not lessened if the officers of the big steamer decline to furnish any information on the 'subject This seems to be about the condition of things at present so far as any definite knowledge of the disaster to the Oregon is concerned. ZTlie pas.-J sengers were all in their berths at the time of the collision and saw nothing, the schooner and its crew have never been seen or heard of since, and the officers of the Oregon who were on duty at the time have not furnished any satisfactory state ment as to how it happened. Whoever was to blame for the orig inal collison, the officers of the foundered steamship deserve great credit for the coolness and skill dis played in transferring the passen gers and crew to the pilot boat and schooner which came to the rescue. All the conditions existed for a heart rending tragedy, and had the ill- fated vessel been in the charge of men with less nerve and skill, a large proportion of the nearly nine hun dred human beings who got off wiA out the loss of a single life must have found watery graves. . The; escape was an. uncomfortably narrow orie as it was, and it may be taken for granted that the fortunate passengers and the members of -: the escaping crew will hope they may be spared any more perils of a like nature. ; The sinking of the Oregon deals a staggering blow to ' the claim - that steamers built in separate water-tight compartments are in no danger of sinking. The Oregon was one of the most perfect of this type of steamers, but this fact did not save it from go? ing to the bottom. It is true that it sank slowly,' keeping afloat some eight hours after, the accident 'Time was thus given the passengers and crew to avail themselves of' such. means of rescue as were within easy reach. - The accident occurring so near the vessel's destination ana in the track of a vast fleet of coasting yessels fortunately help was close at hand and promptly tendered. Had the collision happened in mid-ocean one shudders to contemplate the possiDie resun. - ' A Miserable Fate.' Spartanburg, S. C.j Herald, 10th. Z On Monday morning Mr. J. Bur ton Smith brought his grown son to Spartanburg to have him committed to the' lunatic asylum. J In last Sep tember an ear wig entered his ear j he suflered excruciating torture. His head became so swollen .that it burst at the teraple. ' Twelve : days ago pressure upon his neck forced the ! putrid little viper from his ear. But his "'sufferings' nave been so" in tense that his intellect is gone his mind is a blank,. Z'TERMSi - MARCH :25.-1886. V- p Mr. Johnson's Catastrophe. The Comet. . They engaged a new pQrtez.at.the Lahr House last ' week. : He was an active young man with ' Hibernian type:? of countenance ' and large, horny hands about the size of hams. Everybody liked ; him, ; he was so cheerfulso obliging andciggrously and scrupulously exact in carrying out every order given him.,. In fact his predecessor was discharged on account of carelessness, and when Thomas ; was engaged, Mr. Weekly, the, proprietor, delivered a short but impressive lecture on the necessity of attending strictly to duty, 4This seemed to. sink deeply . in Thonias' mind.,, tfl:i '..'' The clerks gave him the necessary pointers about answering the office bell, juggling baggage, and calling folks for trams, and he entered upon his new duties with a gusto and zest that was really exhilarating. No body ; overslept themselves ; after: Thomas' deafening knock and deep voice,' "Six O'clock, SorJ" and the tender way he fondled a Saratoga made the drummers smile all 'around their necks. On last Tuesday Mr. Johnson, the Vice-President of the Omaha Chilled Plow, .Works, put up at the hotel. Mr. Johnson, is a very dignified and polished gentleman and extremely particular about his room and ser vice. "It does the house good to lave such men as Mr. Johnson stopping here," observed Mr. Weekly to the clerk that evening, "and I wish part icularly, that you would cater to his comfort and convenience. By the way," he . added, "it seems to me that the air is a trifle raw this eve ning. . Be sure to see that his room is properly warmed."- - , 'Certainly, sir," replied the clerk, "you can depend jon me doing my best to make him feel at home." That evening a very extraordinary thing occurred. Some say it was about ten o'clock, others place it as low as 10:30. At any rate, some where near that time Mr. Johnson 1 ' T was amazed to see the door of his room open and a man step in. "Who the devil are you?'" said Mr. Johnson. "' 'Oi am the porter," replied the stranger, deliberately removing his coat and rolling up his sleeves." 'Well, what is the meaning of this igular intrusion?" said Mr. John son. .Thomas did not reply. He spit updn his hands, executed a rapid and fantastic jig, and leaped sud denly upon the astonished guest. " Jlelp ! Murder 1" bellowed Mr Johnson, "crazy man killing me I" "Shut up, ye dirty spalpeen !" ex claimed Thomas, obtaining a firm grip upon the bust of his trousers and propelling him rapidly out of the, room, "it's none of the loikes of ye that's wanted in a dacent house." "But, my good man," gasped Mr, Johnson, his words coming by exci ted jerks, "there is" some mistake! Let me explain !" ; , ; ' "Niver a ward, ye : hoodlum F rushing him toward the stairs, "we are onto ye ! The house has had ye spotted 4". J v ; The next instant the guests in the corridor were amazed to see two figures, one spluttering and kicking and the other grim and determined, shoot down the stair-case, plunge through the lobby and disappear in to the outer darkness. In a few mo ments Thomas returned panting and rolling down his sleeves. "What in the name of heaven were you doing ?" asked Mr. ' Weekly, when he recovered sufficiently from the shock to speak. ' ' ' - 1 I V"I was a.firing that dhirty blacks guard,' Johnson," replied Thomas. , v T-e " . . . : -"firing him li liold me, some body ! Who pxt such . an inferna idea into your '.head , - j "Here she is, replied Thomas with an injured air, holding the slate before the proprietor's eyes. " "By the--great horn spoon 1' gasped Mr. Veekly, and ; swooned away, t - " This was what he read: ' . "AX40;?reaU0:30." vi3 $1.50 a Tear in Advance. No. 12: Io, the Poor Indian. Opie P. Read.' " I was in Fort Smith during a ses sion of the United States court, some ime ago, and was' amused at the manner in which the proceedings were conducted. The court rbofn is immediately over the pris6riahd the . prisoners, when wanted, are brought up through a;bap door.- At a sign from the judge !adeputy marshal raised the. trap door, reach ed down, felt around as if "grabbling"" "or a fish under a rocky and," seizing an. Indian, said : "Come out,v old fellow." "How did you know that you had caught the right one ?" T askedi Vt " "Oh," replied th"e deputy marshal, "I couldn't make a mistake ; for you see it dosen't make any difference which one I get. They've all got to be tried." " :1' " ies said I. "but some are charg ed with ninrder and some with mis demeanor." 1 ' "I know that," he replied. "Then, a man guilty of inisde- meanor might be convicted of mur der." ". - "That's all very well- but there's just this about it : About half of them must be hanged it makes no difference which half, and the sooner we get through with the work the sooner the court will be prepared to take a much needed rest" J A literary Difficulty Overcome. Detroit Free Press. "I want to ask your advice about a novel I am writing," she confident ly remarked to a Woodward-avenue bookseller yesterday. ; . "I shall be happy to give it." "The hero of my story is wound ed by Indians and comes home with his arm m a sling." "That's good." , "My heroine meets him with joy, and he clasps her in his arms." "Perfectly proper; , I'd do it my self." . , ';,'. "Yes, but don't you see that one of his arms is in a sling ? How could he clasp?" "That's so. And yet he must come home wounded?" ."He must", ;. . ' ; ' "And she must be clasped ?" "She ought to be." . "Yes, that's so ; but you must look out for . tie critics. How .would it do to have her clasp him ?'C , . "Wouldn't it Jook immodest? . "Not tunderfithe circumstances; and you can add a foot-note that the joy of seeing him carried him off her balance for a moment. Yes, let her clasp and -take, the 'consequen- ces, li you get tne ngnt Kina o covers on a book you needn't care much about what is inside." " "Very well ;T my heroine shall clasp. I thank you. : v Good-day." J Seven Wonders of a Yenng Lady. . l.1 Keeping her accounts in prefer ence to an album. 2. Generously praising the attrac tions of that "affected creature" who always cuts her outv . , 3. Not ridiculing , the manshe se cretly prefers nor .. quizzing ,what she seriously admires. . . , . 4. Not changing her "dear, dear friend" quarterly-r-or her dress three times a day. 5.. Reading a novel without look- me at tne tnira volume nrst; or writing a letter without a postscript or taking wine; at a dinner without saying "the smallest arop in , the world ;" or singing without ,"a bad cold : ' or wearing shoes 3 that were not "a mile too big'.' for her. - rj" ? .6. Seeing ja baby"witnout rushing to it and kissing it. - ? i j ; ;' ? 7. Carryinga large bouquet to an evening partyand omiiting to ask her partner "if "he understands the language xf flowers. j Hill White, a" negro who has been i faithful employe in the. foundry department of the Shops here for a least v. sixteen - rears! dropped dead .... r 1 " last Monday-: morning:-; -Hill was o; a- quiet disposition," and truly can the epitaph, "He "attended to liis own bnyiness." be written over his grave. Laurinburg Exchange. Jafo Havinsr recently purchased af rst class outfit, wV are prepared to' do all kinds of " . ' - , " ; PLAIN AND FANCY- . - ; ?.'.; i :. : j"- ,. ,V.-: JOB PRINTING IN.. THE BEST -OP.' STYLE : Arid at Living Pricesv t ' OI.D SOR&EL DEAD. Jaelcson'a Pavorlte Horie Die. f. Richmond Dispatch. .. , ' "Old Sorrel," Stonewall TacksdnTs war-horse, died- at the . Confederate' Soldier's .Home,, near this city, at t o'clock yesterday morning.. He was. Jacksbn'j3, favorite, steed, and-often had he carried his master on forced marchess often had lie borne hiin to t battlq ; often .had.be been in the ; m idst . of whirring - bullets ; often'- " heard Jhe crash of, camion and the, ? roar of musketry ; often had he felt his mane stroked by the great chief tain ; ofteq been led with Stonewall's own hand and seated on his back oiv the evening of the,' fateful May, 3, 1863, Jackson received the. wounds which closed, a wonderful career and ' gave .to the Confederacy a shock from which.it never recovered. The horsey survived the rider nearly twenty three years, and , fittingly, closed his ' life at the Spldierls HomeVwhere he ' was petted M and nursed as tenderly as a child where var-worn veterans wept at his death,, and where, his form, wheii passed from the taxider- .1.1-' ' ' i i ; it J, M-'tVi mist's hands,, is to remain and long be an interesting link .in the history ." of one of the greatest of the world's oldjers. , - - - . , , Pleasant Paragraph. ... ji ,'11; u" ,The lawyer's advertisement Givo;t . J,!,) me a trial, ; t . .- Wt u c : str k ' .'i When Fo??' heard r the -If 1.1 J : . V,A -1 ! Jtt -w:- -1--V' ! I he remarked that MrsrBrowiT-wasvliyti. 1 . .. l i. i U. J J : -S A friend of ours, absent otr trip- to Washingtorir'writeSUhatiift'baS' been all through the-nationallita and considerable of his own. - :.: "Yes," replied Brown, "you al--j m ways una me wun a pen rn my-' hand. I am a .regular pen-holder?' my boy.'V 'Ijet's see," said Fox muf ; ' 1 -f ingly, "a pen-holder is usually a'sticky isn't it?" ' -'' Boston Record : A Kansas man1 ' , ; - ; : i , , 14.., sawing wood in ine navy-yam at " Washington. Thus the unexpected. happens. ' He went there for a post- ' "' office commission, and, up to date, ' !r can only say : 'T came, I saw." : - ? So witty a compliment is rarely made as that of Sidney Smith to his ' friends,-Mrs. Tighe and Mrs. Cuffet ' "Ah!, there ! vou . are the cuff that' every. , one , ay ould . ye glad to wear, - and the .tiethatno one would loose !" v ; Chicago News : , "What ?. Women v overworked ?.-Fudge ! :Thinkpf the men l" . " ' .' r t , ; "Ah, but"4hink-of-theJoldsa5ring, f' 'Woman's work1 is - never- done'li ht V j"I,k.nqw it, and that's the reason, she ougKtTnotto complain! Nowar ') manias to da his work1 or lose hii' Bostori Record : : .Papa," said an . v iriquisitive- youth, "what is - iHedif-" , ferenceK between a broker and a' 4 banker ? '- r . Papa is: puzzled," but brings expeC rience , to -his aid. "He finally "tells. 1 . . . .... ; . . , . ;- . .. 1 , w the dmerence : - , " . ; "A broker is one who breaks your to pieces iy degrees. A canker takes you m- at a gulp. , , . - : , : , , ' - ". "' '.ii A'scoteh'"gteenhorn," calling ata photographer's shop the photogra- ; pher, who . was fond of a joke, pro-V. duced the portrait of a young don I key, saying : "Ob, man Jamie, here j is your photograph t" . Turning ,it . ; over, Jamie replied quickly: . "Man, it canna be me, for yer ain name is on the ithcr side." .. ; ; . 1.4 A physician' passing a stone-ma- ? . son shop,'called out; "Good morn-, j ing, ;Mr. D. Hard at work, ,I-see! You finish your gravestones as" far; -as'-'in memory of,", ahd wait, I sup--t , pole, to see who wants a monument-, ; . next?" "Waal, yes, replied the'oldi , man, "tfnr somebody's sick and t. yon're dc . jpg him, and the.nl j -keep right on' . , tt- i ; A'Peaf .'brings " disgrace, , bravery -hrings honor, cowardice .yerua.-' man from his late," says 'the Caliph - ' Omar ;. but : Dr., Bull's Cough Syrup has saved million from aiKawfuV fate.-J :" - For. good fare and comfortable. rooms, stop at the" P. D. Houset e i .'4 .li "i t'r .J u Ai J
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 25, 1886, edition 1
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