Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / April 8, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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I i "nfrj r .... 1 Oniuo : Jrett wall & company': oyer evbet1 lUmiTTTWS BATES : , ..lJ.-.- $1.50 'One par, " . 75 Six months, "" - 40 T1S5ammu3t be;. paid in advance.. l .' " '. : Advertising rates furnished on ap plication, j ' - j. "1 XS EAKI.X DANDELION. C. G. BLABDEN. , . tip springing from the. chilly mold. Dear dandelion, opening gold, What makes vou, pray, so bravely bold? ' I :: l-v , v.,. v- ; Art not in fear, again the snow Will come iand lay thy beauty low, ; And count as nought thy blooming so? Brave must you.be, with, ample faith : . In wnat tne; cprmg-guu jjiuxmoci-u, E'en doubting not one word he eaith, nAAwmfr oar v warmxn ana ram. tymil your head is old and gray, ... .. ,.' Faith 'a symbol Jo the lonely way. Chicago Current. : ; .i - u - . .. A REAL MEISSQNIER. The Sharp Lesson of a Wife. - "Twenty poundsl for a picture frame I My dear Dora,; isn't that just a little extravagant?" t ' . It was almost the first remon- . ii ' i n n 1 .3 siruiice uiuii wcurtiviiia'jii tiuu ven tured to utter to his wife, for the glow of their honeymoon had not yet faded from the matrimonial horr izon. But he was beginning to think that his young wife's ideas were a little inn fiiorh-t.nnpd- nri snchn lim'it- - ed income as thcirswas. Mrs. Carson turned toward him with a sad, moonlight sort of a m . . L' i . "My dear George," said sh e, u pray lexcuse me, but you are quite igno rant of Ahe subject That picture which dear Edith gave me for a wedding present is a real Meissonier: One of the great artist's earliest at tempts it is true, ami perhaps lack ing the exquisite finish which char acterizes his latest productions, but still a Meissonier. And no common or tawdry piece of gilding would be fit such a gem af arias this. It will light up our drawing-room as a jew el lights up some ocean cave. So the expensive frame was or- home, encased in its splendor. Old, Mrs. Carson shook her head when it was carried in. "It may be a genrof art," said she. 1 m no judge of such things But I'm sure your business won't support Dora if she keeps on at this Tiltp .'Yrmr "crrnnHfitl-iurr'o ! VitrHiro that was1 done by a traveling por- I""'";1" MViV i.V ried, for half a guinea was put in a plain gilt frame that only came to 15 shillings." ! "Oh, grandma !" cried Mrs. Carson, despairingly, "can't you understand that the world has altered since you wero a girl ?'' r f ' . "Oh, I know ihafe, well enough," . said Grandma Carson r. meditatively, polishing her spectacle with the cor ner of her apron. ; "But I ain't alto gethercertain that it has altered for the better." : ! . 5 Grandma Carson, bless her kindly old heart, had" rnany doubts and fears as to the way in which her grandson and his wife were begin ning their career. ' "Brussells carpets all over '. the house," said she. "Kidderminster was good enough in my day, and wnti drugget on the stairs and oil cloth in the hall so that you could crub 'em once a week,' and make sure you were clean. And Dora has got ebony cabinets to hold china and stuff, where I used to be satisfied with a wooden Jcoraer cup board. And tnere are curtains strung "up before every door, and fans tuck .ea in ever v hole and corner, until I fairly ache to fold 'em all nn and Put 'em away. But this picture bus iness out-does everything. What! New currant-colored plush cover JRg for the furniture 1 Why, there ain'tno earthly need, for that." "They must match the band of currant-colored plush in the picture lrame, don't you see?" impatiently ported Dora. "Everything must . tone(l to the key of the Meisson Grandma said nothing, she only "nook her head ain; . this time ttJfe vehemently than ever. wish - the Mezzoncr- had never Ome,into the house," she said to 3. f I'M ' I iril .M .' M r!S IJ H fl f I li II If I IV f' I l ' B 1 w I el I i i''. I 1 a '. . I , , , . .. ,. ; ., ........ ... ." H.. Q. WALL; Editor and . , . .' . -wv . TXT . , Vol. IY. herself. "I don't see as if s any dif ferent from any other picture." Dora, however, thought different ly. She : toned ; the little drawing room satisfactorily to the key of the Meissonier, and then issued cards for "Wednesday evenings." . . "-Nat regular parties, you know," she explained to her friends. "Just evenings. And and music a lit erary conversation,-and all that sort of thing. ' " ' : . I' Herhusband looked doubtful. "My dear," said he, "all that sort of thing, as you call itr costs nioney. And I am not sure that we can af ford it." 7 . "Oh , George, dont be ridiculous !'' said Dora with a petulant shrug of the shoulders. "Afford ! You are always thinking of money. A few slices of cake and a glass of wine or so what "can it signify? And as for my dress, I should have required a new silk dress this winter in any event." Mr. Carson could say no more ; but by and by, when, the bills came in thick as "autumn leaves that strew the books of Vallariibrosa," his face assumed a haggered and worn expression a troubled look that went to grandma's heart. "George," she said softly, "what is it? Don't be afraid of coming to granny, my boy ! It was me that bound up your first finger." "Heart wounds are not so easily healed, grandma," said the young man, half laughing, half sighing. "But I might as well be frank with you. That Meissonier is ruining me. I wish to gpodness Miss Lawrence had kept it to herself." i Mrs. Carson had invited some ar tistic friends that evening to look at her picture. With these came a fa mous connoisseur, whose manners were as brusque as his judgm'ent was excellent. "That a Meissonier !.:' he cried, ab ruptly. ".Why, it is the veriest daub that ever was framed !" . , "A ! copy 1" cried Mrs. Carson, growing pale. - "A copy," said the connoisseur, "and a very poor one. It isn't worth the room it takes up on your-wall, my dear madam." Dora ..cried herself to sleep thai night Trt the! morning, when she came down, Meissonier had broken the cord, and lay prone on the mantle. ' 'Dear me what a pity !"said grand ma. - "It is the best thing that could have! happened '."said Dora, bitterly. That very afternoon sheriffs offi cers took possession of the house, and the family .slept in dingy lodg ings in aback street in Bloomsbury. Dora went to her husband next day. -.. "Ah, George," she said, "what should I. ever have done without that darling Old grandmother of yours ? I may as well confess it all. I was just going to takea dose of laudanumn and end all my shame and remorse at thus having ruined you, when she came in like a guar dian angel, as she is. And, oh, she talked so beautifully to me just ex actly as if I were a little child who had done wrong out of some inad vertence. And she wants us to go out to her little cottage at Wimble don and live there. It's all furnish ed She says, and and " with a little hysterical laugh "there are no Meissoriiers there I" So the young couple went out to the old house on the edge of the common, and there, they begun the world anew.' - "Dear ' Grandma,'' said Dora one day, "how wrong an estimate I made of your character when first you came to us." ' '" ' , "You thought me a meddling old woman, el$?" said grandma, her keen blue eyes sparkling shrewdly through her glasses. "But I don't think so .now," said Dora. "I am so much happier here, and .George hasn't got that troubled look on his face. And he is growing so sunburned and healthy." "You are both' of you contented, eh ?" said grandma, knitting delight edly away. V ' r it .11 ; ' tin 1 1 Fl. ii M Nlinisfl UUU r LS fi Ml!!! AT ft llll aiikmasoi- , . , : Proprietor. .- ' . TV Rockingham, Richmond County, - - ' '. 1 "" ' " : : "Oh, yes, quite," said Dora, giving the old lady's withered hand a little squeeze. : -" -; ,. - "Well, then," said old Mrs. Car son, "I will tell you a little secret : there are two thousand pounds in t.hfi banV whioVi T hnvA Virn eavinnr up for George to begin business again." "Keep it there!" said -George, promptly. "I am satisfied with be ing a clerk." "And wThat does Dora say ?" ask ed the old lady. - - , . , "Dora says the. same," declared the young wife. "She is quite, quite satisfied." v Grandma Carson smiled. The les son of adversity had not been in vain. "The picture that I can seeatsun set from this back window is loveli erthan all the Meissoniers inthe world," said Dora. "I think so, too," said George, but in his secret heart he believed that the happy light in Dora's eyes was a fairer and sweeter picture still. The Labor Problem. By R D. 0. Smith. Political economy is abstruse, be cause it is entirely speculative, de riving its arguments pro and con from experiences, the true causes of which are often unknown or misun derstood. To my mind, the chief er ror is fundamental. It is in the sup position that the subject has such magnitude that it cannot be treated in an individual way. That as it concerns a vast aggregation of indi vidualities, the springs of action in the mass are different from the springs of action in the unit. What is right for an individual to do among his neighbors, i3 right for a-county, for a state, orYora nation. The rule of equity is the same, whtacver may be the power or the numbers, of those affected. In this country we boast our lib erty of person and property. A man maydo as he pleases wTith his own, on his oiin ground. When he steps off his own ground he subjects him self to an obligation to his neighbor. It seems as though nothing could be clearer than the absolute necessi ty of this' immunity from restraint to secure that liberty of which we boast and feel so proud ; for nothing can be clearer than tliis when a ma's treatment of (hat which is his oivn, on his' oicn domain, is subject to the will of another, he no longer has liberty, but is a vassal, and practi cal ownership passes to him who di rects. : ' The facts of the condition are not changed by putting communities or states in the place of individuals. Down to this point I venture to say no reader will dissent ; and will any dissent , if I ask, are the facts changed when a, manufacturer is commanded to manage his property, not in accordance with his own re sponsible intelligence, but in accord ance with the irresponsible behest of an alien power ? Our republic is founded upon the natural Jaw of equitable liberty that every man may do as hepleas es with his own, on hi3 own ground. When that foundation is changed we may, indeed, continue to exist, but it will no longer be as a repub lic. At this moment the great and fearful menace in the assumption of labor organizations, of power to dic tate to every man how he shall con duct his business, whom he may employ and what compensation he shall pay It is utterly impossible that large enterprises can exist if re ally subjected to such surveillance; because capital can not be accumu lated in view of any such dictation. The question before us simply is, Shall property .'invested in business enterprises be managed by the own er or by the employes ? . ; It will now be plain that my re marks are directed to the excesses of the labor unions, now organized as the Knights of Labor, beyond imag ination irresponsible, with a far- reaching grasp which no man can foresee or avoid, and a capacity to paralyze the business of the country ST; in a singlp day, if it suits thetn to do that in order to confer upon some individual rights which he never possessed. A single current instance will suffice, though every reader will know that the number is now almost legion. In' the McCormick Reaper Works some seventeen" hundred men were out of employment, and a, consider able number of them are now livins on the earnings of other men, be cause the proprietor chose to em ploy five men who are objectionable' to the molder's union, merely be cause they do riot belong to that un ion, and do not choose to be idle be cause the union may so direct. The trades organization demand that these men shall be discharged ; and it is reported in the papers that "ev ery man in the hall, except Itwo or three, voted against returning to work if Mr. McCormick insisted on his right to hire non-union men, if he wanted to !" Now, when it turns out that this means that the same power prohib its" the railroads from carrying Mc Cormick machines or materials, and prohibits all other men from selling to him or buying fromihim, i ; is ea sy to see that it means, run the shop under dictation of the trade Union, or shut up permanently. It means that those who. by hard work and capacity have accumulated the; plant and built up this great industry, must surrender it into the hands of those w,lio earn their bread therefor be ruined. It means that no more great industries shall be built jup. It means that we snail return to the days when no workshop had more than a single pair of hands in it, and there were no trade unions ; when no workman had more than one suit of clothes, and that of the meanest, and wheh his food was scanty, and of the poorest, and when he could earn but two or three shil- liners a day. - Labor must find some other mode of redressing, its wrongs than this. Bright' Dlsoaso. Senator Miller died of Bright 's dis- ease and the facts prompt Mr, Ran- dall, the accomplished Washington correspondent of the Angusta Chron icle, to give the formula of die which, he says,' almost miraculously, restored Congressman Reagan, of Texas, to health after years of suffer ing from the dread malady spoken of. The formula is as follows : Keep the body in the same temperature as nearly x as possible. Wear flannel. Drink as much milk as desired the more the better while eating. Can drink chocolate. Don't use stimu lants no wine, alcoholic, spirituous or malt liquors. , Do not drink tea or coffee. Eat bread moderately. Never eat hot cakes with butter. Eat dry toast. No pastry or pud ding. Eat broiled and roasted meats, but not stewed or boiled or fried. Do not eat salads. Avoid all kinds of spices. Avoid asparagus above all things. Onions boiled and car rots are good. Eat strawberries, ripe pears and stewed fruits. Avoid rasp berries. Do not eat cheese or honey. Must not smoke or chew tobacco. A teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda two or three time's a week will cor rect any deposit. This regimen, Mr. Reagan believes, saved his life and he now maintains a high order of health. We publish it with the idea that it may do some good. ' Q- Innocence Imposed Upon. A traveler in western Iowa, notic ing on the wall of the parlor of the hotel the legend, "Ici l'on parte fran cais P said to the proprietor : - "Do you speak Freneh ?", ; , :y " rench iNo: United states is good 'nough fer.mel" ' v.:c "Then why do you keep that le gend on the wall ? J That . means 'French is spoken here?'!' ; "is that so?" - ;- v - ."Certainly." - ; . V; -..v'-Vi "Well, I'm a half breed from up the Missury if a feller, with a wart on his nose, didn't sell me that for a Latin motto: 'God bless our home."' Ncav York Times. . - TERMS: C, April 8 ; 1886. The Chained Prometheus. " i Meridian (Miss.) Weekly News. The story is an old and t familiar one of Prometheus chained to a rock, wjth an eagle consuming his liver by day while during the night time it would grow again, thus making his torment , ceaseless, till Hercules shot the eagle and unchained the captive. The story serves to illus trate the situation of affairs to a great extent to-day. The country's Industry is a Prometheus chained, while on its vitals an eagle feeds, and as fast as it is consumed it grows again, as food to fatten the never sa tiated bird. The eagle that feeds on the Indus-1 try of the country is Gambling ; and when the Chaplain of the House of Representatives at the national cap- ital, on Monday last, prayed God to "rid the land of all gamesters, wheth er they gamble with dice, or cards, or chips, or with wheat, or stocks, or corn, or cotton,"- he Was praying God to relieve the land of an evil which more than any ''other one thing consumes the products of in dustry and sucks the life-blood out of morals and out of domestic hap piness and comfort. That gambling in its various forms does pounce upon the products of industry and consume them -to a great extent as fast as they accumu late cannot well be denied. Many a wife and children go without ex pected bread and clothes, because the husband and father, after getting m his hands the earnings of. his in dustry, carries them straightway to the gambling house instead of to his home, and many a ypung man of cities and towns, without families dependent on them, find it impossi ble to gain a foothold in the world and "get ahead," because their hearts have become chained to the gaming table, and they cannot resist going there with their daily, weekly, and monthly earnings and risking it all and more too upon the fascinating turning of a card. In thousands of instances their industry' and their morals both are bound to a rock, they are perfectly helpless, their in dustry willingly yield to the suck ing vampire, and their morals too often not stout enougli to. resist be ing sacrificed in order to supply it with more. Thus the recuperative powers of both these classes of men men with families and young men without are daily and nightly con sumed ; they are kept dependent all the time, while wives, children, and mothers and fathers want additional comforts and conveniences, and, in the midst of their wishing for these things, nurse the thorns that prick their hearts, and weep alone at home, -r But this is by no means the full extent of the evil. The eagle runs its bill the deepest into the vitals pf thencountry's industry and gnaws off the biggest morsel when it runs into wheat and corn and stocks and cot ton. In such cases as this, the in dustry which produces these things is, as it, were, under the influence of a narcotic it is to a great extent in sensible to the pain, not seeing with its own eyes so distinctly, as in the other cases, the life-blood flowing out, while the vulture comes regular ly every day and gnaws and feeds and fattens, and is perfectly satisfied, in as much as the vital part grows again, as" fast as it is consumed.' In dustry is entitled to have this mon ster choked-off, its ehains broken, and (itself set free. The first thing we shall venture to suggest,, looking in that direction is, a remedy which will not do the work entirely, but will go to no little ex J It 1 1 . T. ieni towards starving it out. , it is this: Let the people quit raffling for everything . they happen to want- Gambling means to get something for nothing. ; Many good people ladies and gentlemen see something they want very much a beautiful piece of needlework, a handsome "crazy quilt,'' a horse and buggy,, a diamond ring, or a watch and not being.financially able to payits full value, they pay .a trifling sum and set the heart upon, the accidental urn m sr or some, kind of a er.rd or $1.50 a Year in Advance. INo. 14. contrivance. The temptation to take a chance in an ordinary raffle comes from an inordinate desire to possess a thing, the value of which they are not able to pay. This is extreme covetousness, and more than covet- ousness; for. it is akin to gambling, gambling coming from An inordinate uesire to possess a pue 01 moneys which you are not able to accumu late in the same length of time by ordinary methods. Covetousness is sinful, and when -indulged in this way, is bound to.be hurtful tp. the heart ; and while many good and well meaningpeople Seem it "perfect ly harmless, yet it is, it appears to us,r but the throwing X. of enticing crumbs to the monster eagle, and an unconscious tempting of him to come and feed by the more greedy mouthfuls upon -the vitals of the country's industry and morals. Where the Hercules is to come from, and in what form, to unbind our Prometheus Industry from its rock and drive the bird away, as in the mythological story, we do not know. Stricter enforcement of -law, is to -do much toward it, but the most effective force to be applied is a strong public sentiment against it in all its forms. North Carolina' Mountain Lands. J. N. Ingram, in Waverly Magazine. 'Blistered with the heat of the low countries, I sought relief amongst the mountain altitudes of western' North Carolina. ' " Leaving Raleigh in the afternoon- after a night's rolling over the rails the early morning found me well up among the timbered spires of the Blue Ridge. Mountains reared their foliaged heads high into-the air. Narrow valleys pierced the forested ranges, and bowl-like basins opened in the laps of circling hills. The breath of the" mountains came in cooling draughts from the dewy ran ges. The craggy chains were cloak ed with the mists of the morning, and their1 bold outlines dimmed with filmy gauze. Towering peaks 'rose from seas of fog like archipelagoes from a silver ocean. ' Lon?? chains stretching' along the distance" wore girdles of cloudy vapor. ' But' the morning sun rose amongst' the trees a lid colored the fosrs with blended tintslmd dispelled thewirids from the wooded crags. ' The mountains looked fresh and green jin their sum mer garband the vales were luxuri ant with rustling leaves. Springs gushed from rocky boulders, and flowing torrents roared over stony channels, and water-falls leaped in tumbling cataracts down the "pali sades. ' The little valleys between, the ran ges presented rustic pictures of farm houses, meadows, ' arid corn ' fields. Orchards hanging , with' fruit, and growing garderis, surrounded the houses of the mountaineers, - and heavily uddered cows grazed in the turfy yards. Wheat - fields covered the strips of soil along the moun tains, streams and yellow shocks were ranged1 into steepled rows, over the'Ievel dells. ' Many garden plots extending along the mountain side and rural cottages clung- like birds' nests to the slopingranges. ; Following up the head waters of the Catawba rolling its clear cold waters .down between the guarding peaks we entered a romantic, an almost uninhabited region well suit cd for tfre seclusion of the moon shiner and his contraband distilla tion. Occasionally a rude cabin was seen in the gorges, and a littierancjhe cheered the eye amongst its isolated surroundings. ' -f ' ? v Grand old mountains reared their tops in '(e very direction, and nature in her qroKen ruggedness stands in "shattered chaps. " :' Scudding around curves, along shadowy chasms,- overhanging tres ties, and up along precipitous slopes, the climbing engine dragged our rolling train higher and higher into the air, arid the atmosphere became lighter and rarer as we ascended ii to the sky. The corn patches be came later, and very stunted in growth, and -bade-fair to be nipped by tV r-r!y es-i "-. 1 - Haying recently. purchased V firXliri class outfit, we . axe prepared to . co - .' PLAIN AND' FANCY . v : , . ". j-'.i '.-lit JOB PRINTING ' - IN THE" BEST OF STYLE . And at Living Prices, iri l In a rounded basin iri the bended ranges we. rolled up to the "Round Knob Hotel," perched pnthemoun tain side overlooking a iarstretchirig vista of gorges, beaks, domes, and valleys. Twenty minutes for break fast gave us a view of the surpassing -scenery commanded frpmj the lo"6k;,.: outs on the airy . balconies. v!n irontjjj,, of ,: the; dining hall 'aJfojMnTf: mountain water isihrpwn to a heigh t ; of two hundred and sixty-eight feet -7 , -. in vthe air,, and .falls in, a. cloud of . 4.., shoyery spray, radiant ; with;, rain-.n;( bows caught from- the sun's pictur-,u . j, j4i ing rays.- From the platform .four. t5 4fr railway tracks are seen streaking tle.. ... uZ - mountain siae as tneroad Dedpnsn- es-its graded path in, bendiug loops , and circling crooks up and over the main range of the Blue Ridge. . Leaving the picturesque. spot, we began the ascent of the backbone of, North Carolina's mountain chain v The scene reminded me of the ziz- . zag in the Australian mountains of New South Wales. Following the , turning curves until we could look. . . down on the stairway jOI iron rails, -,r xi ... 'u' j ...1 ' ' '1 ueiuw, unu paasiug turougii taaiKen ed tunnels bored under . toppling peaks, we reached the summit pf the .. , lofty range. Along the east a wild . picture' of mountain chains barfics- r ded the sky. Mountains strangely shaped, with cable form and chaotic angles, heaved their minarets-in' o. the air. Peaks and cliffs and crags, and stretching chains traced a weird r outline on the horizon of the- dis- ; tance, and shut out . the foot-hill j.. counties from the highlands of the . mountains. s . r V.- Rattling. along the western slope . t;. of the Ulue-liidgc, we descended into, ,, , the rolling valley of buncombe. . Farrns again greeted the . eye, the ; . sound of the cow-bells were heard in the meadows. Country,homesr fields, orchards and- gardens ngain dotted - the hillsides. : " Along the bright cleaV Waters of the French Broad River we followed" ; the bushy banks "and--entered., the town of Asheville. . . ": ' ,' '". ''' Securing hotel accommodations, I '" strolled out to look , at the village in- and enjoy its beautiful mountain" ' scenery, and breathe its'ligKt,"pureJ orpnfirir arid KrotifKo ifa'i?rTTiIt'"-r(i-rH ' 1 ' ( t ". ' i TJiellitUe citcontains mah3rhandaU " soniaj dVellfngs beautiful gSs''' and tasteful cottases. . Larze Drick 'J ffytl , mansions crown the 'hifl tops, arid " u iimeu vnias anu roomy iawns,ex- , - tend into the suburbs. Groves, of "f1 '" oaks shade the yards and rows of' "f - mammoth trees border many thor- u '! oughfares. .: " 1 ' ' ; ' ' ' The buildings front long and riar- ' row streets that stretchout into the ! country without' regard to iangle or r 't symmetry. The suburban avenues ' '.' '-' f. are. only roads following the Jay of : ' the hills: ;The village sit' ii th'e1"' feetofa mountain range, arid spreads fei n,! over uridrilatirig' swells'for two; rniles1' -iV,? into the' valley. Slops rif vbo3iariof vdS" and' verdured hill-sloDes' covef the5 ,iw' outlying landscape. -:t 1-5' '' . . Along the welt the Balsam moun- tains stretch ; their imniense cnairi 6f ;nK peaks, cUryeav and ranges 'pritil lost u in the haze of the 'dis'tknee: (Japs r a u ! f are cloven through the 'uiiscalable11'- . masses, andlittle rivers dash thfPUgH !ii ! the granite passes oil their 'way iri to"fn;1 the Gulf of Mexico. ' " 7 Crowds of tourists and suinriier ; ' 'f' visitors have collected in 'Asheville', ' : fi'? arid the hotels arid boarding-liouses' r are filled with ; pteasure-seekers' of ' various nationalities, ages, sizes arid : jr Ti ? sexesJ Invalids, too, are herb. 'Bron- V A chial and consumptive patients find J ; : "v':. . in this dry and light 1 atriiosph&rir -p' marked and wonderful relief, arid !, debilitated ; systems, " weakened fby f . :" ' luauuia, rtio yuan ujj.m Bucugt", ,? ,.M .. and. rejuvinatcd : both bodily andj ;':;y mentally ; while those who wisli to -. ,- .. .;. see the' beautiful 'in nature enjoy !?0X;X'r' amongst, the Blue 'Rrdge Mountains A-? some ot the most attractive gems of, , her handiwork. r :; : "'. ... .X-'C-X There is a constant warfare being waged- between the various species, ,. ; : . of the animal kifldomt Think of . ; the horribleness o f art army irfwont ssf h storming the citidel of life..-AltfVe of Shrinerlg' Indian "Vermifuge yJlV'v t 1. -!. ''J I - -M .'1.A n;.- ... ii vd OA - II 7 - - 7
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
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April 8, 1886, edition 1
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