Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / May 6, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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At Job :.: ,v VLL, Editor and PEOFiiiKToii. Having recently purchased a tir&Vf A4 Officer class t qutfiVwe .jire. reparedio 6.6 all kinds of i ' ' ' ',,-- : V " '. ;"".' , s;mtmth3;r?wi..r.C-.:.u...,...'' .75', ; f V ECS All subscriptions account? i must-be ) SrVWidZL, Editor arid Proprietor. IN !THE TERMS 1 '$1.60 a Yeqrin Advance. . piuu in advance. : r s BEST.U? r y.furniflhed on atj- Y)L,IV,; ; 'IlocraNGHAii, Richmond 'County, N.'C.May 6' 1886. No. 18. - :v :V;V Midi U Mb Mb JMNkffl LI ' L . . 9 , hM: : : ;: - ' - i : .- ! " - : " - . J4 ... . ' ; -. y- r . r ............. . , . " - 1 j - - w v I : -. 'li'u. i -z . r i i . , . V -f -' . yr-i - i ...I a 1 ' i - , ; , i , j ! i v i HAY9Z. - , mortal hcouldst thou bntkno-. ' jYbat truly it means to ?i,w i 4. -. TLawinea-of tLy aoul-wovTd-gloWj"- ; . . - And the hopes of thy I rt beat high ; f ,. - bou onldst turn,, fr - - v 3 Pyrrhonist -; ',r schools; v :. v v And laueh, tnejr largon to "scorn. j wre paoDie 01 miamcnt 10013 -Erth mornin .aBtJearth's madness jtboye.y -- In a trngdom''oriBtrmTes3 brealh of Truth be bornn Xtrazeon the elorv of lov --la the'nnveiled face of Deaths I tell thee bis face iaiaii-i.-i i 1 iSfSs ' 'As the.mQon"bbw'aamber rincs.; ' , And the leam-vinhia unbound.hair . v , Like thV'flnShora thousand: Springs ; h JXia-amild is the,(athomlesa beam V w Of tba. starrfiUin Bacred Hght - When the Snmnifira of Sont.hla.fid drftam J ,- i Inthe lap tfthe Jioly IJight- ' JFor 1 earth's bHridnesstd)dVe, ''.f'T;-.."-I 3 ?n kingdojp6 halcyon breath-r , ';,"',; - I 'e on'the marvelnove ' ,-". .'" '-.-?'friveil(i faceof Deatb y : ;-..Ia iia eyes a, heaven dwells 4 , W .. But they hbld feW mysteriein6w-9" ; Vts' W'pity forarth!s farewells - iiaii furrows that shining brow ; ; 'ilsw taken from Time's cold tide-, , ' le fol<Q'hia fostering-breast, X J .nd the tears of their gnef are dried . Erehey.cnW the courta of rest : vuu. bcui, tsinu a luauuenn uuove, . . " tin a kingdom of siormlesa breath. " gsize on a ugnc- inac-is ioyo ; .In the unveiled Tace of Death. J : Tarough the splendor of stars impcarled i v tin the glow-of their far-oflF grace, ',: He is soaring world by world, , -:; ' 5Vith the souls in-his stronar embrace : jif Lone ethers, unstirred by a wind, ' t ; At tKe passage of Death grow weet, . . With the fragrance that floats behind ' , The flash of his winged retreat : , ".; I tMid a kingdom of tranquil breath, . .Have gazed on the lustre of love ' ; ' In lie unveiled face of Death. AV' f ':. Much History in rw Word.' ..5 lfr Tirntron , 1. i from lan Iinllshstanclpolntpllts, the salient -.t'"-.Tof -' our 'recent cwrim"e'rJial history, in compact foimi. ' i Bat bcmd the stars and the sun ST i I can follow" him still' on his way, - Till the pearl-white gates are won '. -f In the calm of the central day. "A 'Fari voices of fond acclaim ; . ' . Thrill down from the place of souls, JU;d$ahiwi.th r a touch like flanus, ; Uncloses the goal of goals; .' - at'nd from heaven of heavens above ? ; 4 ' . God speaketh with bateless breath. - is . t My , angel of perfect lo vo 0 , : - A ' ts the angel men call Death ! - : ' v s . , ' Harper's Monthly. 7 .1 '"Wht th. Gallant Kx-Coafederat Looks T;. v..,..?. " Ulcc Now. ' ;' ; , i : From the Chicago , Herald. . ' ' U- C . Tberp is much of the physical f piari jret' left of- General Johnston. - He is almost six feet Jn height, ? t -lPeigTabout '"one ' hundred and fifty . JccrBixtypsuimsrls supple and quick aa a boyf"Hisj norves are considera- t)ty shattered, however, as those of a man above sixty might be naturally. He wears a full, short," beard, which Z , Is almost snowy white, as is also his hair,J whichr ;is a : little; long and n -ptraight. His head is. bald on top and half,- way down the back, He has - A quidk, piercing, little, 'light ye, and there is a fullness about his ye whicfi phrenologists say denotes ? ideptri'ess at study The General was ' dressed in a plain, cut-away coat It jver .U3C8 tobacco and is not given to excesses' of any kind. r Hia florid face' indicates health.; ' j general 'Johnston is a good natur .ed and intelligent man, is very, com panionable and intensely , popular. . '"ItfeVeloped' dunbg his investigation that ha was an electrician during his earlV: life, bul he-explained that his Knowieage oi me science waunuw u -no more" use than that of Dr. Frank f iUi'i .feecauserii was' .Xoo antiquated -He evinced a very keen memory and His education, must have been thor '' ouzh. !0eneral ,'ohnston is one o , tejwho, prizes his honor and whtr wotildght a regiment if bis integ j ty.ai questionedv He was always '" considered- ' among the .most loyal - mcri of the. South and is intensely . i popular among Southern ; people, r who say he is'the sW of honor. , It has notr" been shown "that Genera 1 JdYrisBnr tookfs arif ifaiprpper step or - contemplated ''any in the-telephone transactions. The number of. cattle now in the """ed States would make a column deep stretchihg Srom New San Francisco -and - back oston. " The value1 of this lerd is more than $1,200; the annual product is )v great in ? value as the igs pf all .the railway Khe country. ome and 'Farm $1.50 1 yr In U865 the'.- American civil war epded, and was immediately followed--by a forcedj activity of. trad; tnairy joint stock: 'companies were forfned; ? 4 : '"-In 1866. there-was an Austro-Erus-. sian war of six - weeks', duration; whkh considerably -affected t,;Conti- nental trade. " There was a finanqial and- 'commercial panic, and among the failures ;was the celebrated firm of Overend, Gutney & Co. .JA- good number of firms -collapsed- through over-trading. p - ' ...Iri.1867 a bad harvest had some- hihg.to do with -dwindling-tracle" hut in 1868, with one of the besthkr- yesis- on recora, stagnation -was,? as had, as ever. 1 1 t i " ln 1869 there was a great exten sion of railways on the Continent, and business ana pro ved ; ?;s In 1870:: and 1871 occurred the Franco-Prussian war,"t which, when peace; was concluded, was followed py one ; oi ,tne most . remarkable "booms" on record. That led to an extension of our. own capacity for production and to a vast amount of over-speculation, from which we suf fered for years ; indeed, the North of England Iron Manufacturers' As sociation traces ouc present depres sion -to the events "which followed that war, for they say in.reply .'to the Royal Commission, "the origin of the i depression , from which we suffer and which is now at the low est point yet reached, seems to be to some extent a reaction from the coal famine period of 1872-74, and which was perhaps due to the infla tion consequent on the Franco-Ger- manXwar in 1870. The amount tof capital then , invested .was out of all proportion to the subsequent require ments of the trade, and the demand has not yet overtaken the capacity for supply." v : J In 1874 the "boom' quickly sub sided, and wages of workmen, which had gone up by "leaps and bounds" in the previous three years, lell off as rapidly, in spite of the strikes, which were now as unsuccessful as they had previously been successful, 1875 and 1876, ., were marked by many failures in the iron trade, and in 1877, when the Russo-Turkish war commenced, trade became more stagnant and the collapses of manu facturers more numerous than ever. In 1878 fear of our becoming in volved. in a war with Russia had much to do with intensifying the depression of trade, and there was quite'a restriction of credit in this country. This was the year in which the Glasgow Bank failed. - ' In 1879 business was exceedingly depressed for the first eight months, but suddenly, there sprang up an unprecedented demand for iron in the United. States, Tand prices again advanced ; by "leaps and: bounds," though to nothing like the figures Which prevailed in the year;1873." i In 1880 the American "boom" col lapse J, and our exports thither be gan to fall off., Still, our trade went on increasing, money was cheap, our harvest fairj and Our: 'colonies , were better customers. This was contin ued in 1881. when commenced the remwkahle increase ' of activity in ship building, which continued over 3,882 and 1883. Never had our ship vards been so bus v.- ' There was also" in 1881 a vast extension "of railways in the United States, which gave our rail mills plenty of work. - In 1882 trade generally was active and wages of workmen went up ; bu in 1883 business fell off again, and 1884 and 1885 have been sorry years not so much because of the decrease in the volume' of our business as be cause of its unprofitable character. The harvests were good in each year but political -complications, and es pecially the fear of war with Russia in Afghanistan in 1885, kept .busi ness in a very unsatisfactory condi tion. ' 1 " ' " " - ' .... ..r ; ', . L, , , - s A i ..... .j. .. ., . , ,' . v ,. ., i' '"A National; Bank has-feeen "estab lished at High' Point;' N..C 1 ' "- "OurJUues FaUen In Pleasant Places" " Fayetteville Observer and Gazette "if Sitting in, a vehicle just on the out- j.skirts of a largecrbwd assembled at one of out5country churches not lohg since, we watched the ever changing groups old and - young, staid and ;gay and fell to moraliz: ing ' upon the ; unreasonableness ' of humaa'desiFeandthe'ibllyifiaurs-j ing-impatience ; and? .'discontent at our lot in life., . , - - -'i - - TKe"gathering was j ust sucli as can be seen . frequently during the year in Scores pf communitieVof the Gape Fear sections... Aiyery large majority of j those present h ad' never passed the limits of their" native Stateex eept here ani there a mah pf iaiddle age .with! weather-beaten 'i face; and Jiair jiasV turning rgmy," perhaps a cripple now and Uien, who had left his home to do his,part on Virginia's battle-fields aJ quarter of a century ago ; few of the comely matrons and fair girls who gave beauty and color to this charming rural picture knew aught of the wonders of great cities and the refinements of .metropolitan iie--tneirs was tne grace born oi modesty . and " virtue, the , loveliness which God and nature gave ; few of the stalwart men, the conscientious supporters of that humble church and the potent factors in the quiet community, in which they were born and , reared, knew aught of stocks and bonds not one, we will venture to say, counted his wealth in six fig ures. Over the hills, across the val- eys' and along the roads diverging rom this place of meeting lay their homes ab Stately mansion with the adjuncts of- luxury and affluence, but modest homesteads character ized only by thrift and comfort. i And yet how happy should they be! Realizing- what are the truest of God's blessings in, this life, how favoredi the people of such a com munity 1 Those gray old tablets in the ' country churchyard tell where the ashes of their fathers rest ; genet ration 'after generation have heard the truths of the ; living God -pro claimed -from that rudely-fashioned pulpit, and infidelity and skepticism have never dared to pass the thres hold of the sacred edifice ; their sons and daughters gather I perhaps no laurel wreath or trophies of famej within the walls of the village acad emy and the district school, but they learn to be honest men and pure wo men, growing up to be good citizens and faithful wives and not all the world's wealth and polish and refine ment can fashion a better type of manhood and womanhood ; "by the sweat of the f4ce they eat bread,1 and the earth grants no great for tunes and boundless riches to their labor, but a generous providence gives its bounties to the daily board and withholds none of the comforts of life; water as pure as that which slaked the first human thirst in the garden of Eden and a climate unsur passed by that of any quarter of the globe fill youth's veins with health and gladness, strengthen the sinews of manhood and lengthen the even ings of old age and when at the home fireside they read of the devas tating storm, the destructive ' earth quake, the . wasting famine and the consuming pestilence of other lands it is a story to gain their pity and here to lament the "good old times,'? gone never to return, f The posterity of the mep who long for a place mid way m othe tide of humanity's rest- ess ; strife will be plunged into its very vortex and that, too,- before our names shall have faded from the gravestone, though they may ; be aint, indeed, in, the memories ,jof men.:- 38 world iailready realizing that it is taonjaii 'to? allow men el bow room ; and bete yes, here, in his" tranquil rural section of the globe cities will in time dot the hill sides and fill the-plain ; ;our pellucid waters will be stained with the grime of thev foundry and ' machine-shop ; and the railroad iron and telegraph wire will lay a net-work over all our broad"'4' acres'' Will' our people- be better and happier when this climax of progress shall have come to pass? compassion, the horrors of which are far away from them and theirs If it is their lot to enjoy nothing o the splendor and glitter of the life o; great cities, neither are they cursed with'their. wickedness and crime ;i: their quiet streams echo not to the buzz of machinery and the hum o factories, neither are their peacefu neighborhoods invaded by, the vio lence of strikes and the lawlessness of discontented, unemployed labor in a word, standing outside, the arena of the busy world, -if their pathway catches naught of its light and glory, neither do their feet go down to the ;shadow of its darkness and gloom ; 'Far- from the madding crowd's ignoble stnte,'- t - Their sober wishes nevef (learn) to stray, Alons the cool. seaue3tered vale of. life v They (keep) theh6iseloss tenor of their n way- 7 . The great change is to come, and not long, at ttfat ; we shall have pass ed Away, bXt crurcbildren will be Th; RAINBOW F ARTIES. : . v ;Th Very latest Fancy of Society. An Example of Heroism. 4 I . Undertones of Serlntiuv. V , ? Correitondence Richmond State. - J pV0f 'MarmV T Rnir v In a late newspaper was the fol- h.;; Now, just because the Sculptures iowiner notice: . "iied Slarch 23rd. I t-a nn on-nnirttrt.AaaA' y.n . I . -If wvr vuuMAUf., UWIWVM vlUUlVt' HUH 00, itODert Allan Kean, in hwassnd full of the trtith oflifeithey areilso year. , - " I I full "of life's own evanescent nhenom-: Little does the foregoing paragraph ena : phenomena a elusive 61 ahalv-i tell of the manly courage and Chris- iis as a smile,' i flushVa clance of uau lurutuue wnicn enamea tnis tho a on infnTiit;ATY r. yonth rfor he was just twenty-one' to meet death at the very threshold of man s estate. If among- the an cients examples of heroic conduct rTheTe aTein every-NeW'Testament book, as in -anjr chapter of real life, fervors,- sigbsheart-tones,.tears. half discernible, laughter, unmistakable, T , Wh-wbat's that ?' queneJ f expert' a) if the breath', .had? knopkedpuVof him by this sue1 proposition : "what's,that ?' . Dr mean to say I don t hue talking "bout ?rt ;pp you qt" knowle'ofge f J" ' i : . V. I t -The expert was in; -for. It, to facn ibe jftjiXbe, j"jL put r up in the "hands of !lhe dnntoirV. and At. the next ..station all A - hanHs adjoafned.'tb the piaVormrV wnere a .pair ui ous nureea WerO started on awalk to settlerthe noyel x 1 :1 '4 f WelL IV swowj (exclaimed- thevv v From the Chicago News. " . The latest society, no'velty is what is known as the rainbow party.' Al ready it has assumed the propor- 10ns of ; an epidemic, although it made its first appearance in this" city only a few Weeks ago. Old bache- ors and young men who have al ways lived lives of single blessed ness are generally the fortunate ones at these parties. The rainbow party cunningly serves to illustrate th e lelplessness of man, and . also dis plays in no dim light the advantages of being married. . All the young ladies in attendance wear li eat little aprons of such de sign and color as the taste, of the wearer may suggest. The bottom? are ail-carefully left unhemmed. Every young lady has a number, and duplicate numbers are kepLin a box, which is generally placed in the neighborhood of the gentlemen's cloak room fn charge 'of two yoiing adies. - The gentlemen; buy tickets which entitle themHjT.aruwttom he box. The purchaser I having drawn a number, at once sets out to find the young lady wearing the du plicate number . on her apron. The tickets are generally $1 each, but at a South Side party given a few nights ago they brought. $5 each. After all the young men. have found their aprons, or rather their young ladies wearing the ' proper aprons, the. master of ceremonies an nounces the conditions. The young men are to hem the aprons, and , the one doing the neatest, quickest and most careful piece of work is to re ceive a prize.' The young ladies sup ply their escorts with: thread and needle, and at. the call of time the fun begins with the efforts-of the contestants to thread their needles Young ladies are strictly forbidden to thread the needles of their escorts, and a violation of4he rules compels the recipient of the favor to forfeit all claims to the prize. . The young ladies enjoy the i con test immensely, and it is, indeed ,:' a pretty sight to watch a score of smil ing ' younfrh misses .' leaning back" in their chairs andwafch"ihg with 'mer ry eyes the struggles of the clumsy- fingered swains before them. After the ." needles are . threaded ahd' the yoUng men kre'atSvorkih eocene is norie-the" less ihspirihg.rA.t last time is called and a committee judges on the work. ; The prizes are sometimes quite valuable. - At a West Side par- were constantly neid up lof the 1m- plays upon,words, deft and delicate itation of peoples, and tended to railleries and ironies' the impress of Bfronrrthor. thai -nha i I t . , . , .V 1 ' 1 WaffeT- V , - . - v UVUVVU iwvu wuiw utiu iui- wnicn tne;ure.ejc tongue, plastic as Dress them with conrao-A and nnhili DAfc.,A!. ,-i.--:'vt.-. ' 'iL'Ja.. I- - . .. ... '-0-' i UlU UCWU ; MUCH, , US , piCBCIYOIil ,f H l.t.i ,JV "',1 " ij.Ji I iy: or purpose, surely in this-a-e, Translate themj Well, yes; when Jrtl "X?QkV when the press wields an all-powrl you xan dig :the'flr but of ie:am ful influence for g6odorfor evil,the te;&d-xmi:Miito brief story of this -boy's death, pub- of the sky-lark li K-'-.;i 1, SMS lished to the world, can but result In , Did I say these uhtranslatabie oP3 MmtMfi ' j l good. ' V : trifles are important? .Tea, verill lmS He was the son of a physician of As important, as infallibly: in place .a;fe?if, ':. I ability, who was himself, the son of ana necessary, as any transient mi- t- iUii iX-Sii'V Dr. Andrtew Kean, the friend of Thomas Jefferson, to whom, the lat ter twice tendered the chair of Med icine in the University of Virginia j when he was rector,of that institu tion. . His mother was the neice of the late Judge Allen, president of the Court of Appeals. When, about fourteen years of age, and a promising boy, while Walking under a building which was in pro cess of (erection, a brick fell from a scaffolding above, and striking him upon the head, knocked him sense less. He recovered, however, and nor third in the heart of a Repihft- van svmnhonv. modifvinr. iriodiila- Wives, Voove 'all things in the:1 ling, sweetening all that wenfc befpre : wxld,flet 'fI0r and all that is to come after.-' The aDOU? temperance.. we -t mueveti. whole - heart of Christ w'ns iVtf;at put ' the bar-robms 'but:6f -the' city; . brief but intense look" at Peter dur- "S-T !M'?i5-9f i ing the trial, quite as niuchS in the .JJr: a?) ; " nrOlonsred and.towermor Vie?vnno?a- uwucb; ,w,-.uuit . ip-o tpL tion of the Scribeand Pharisees And iust so there ard'neuHar Iea men' who have kep Whiske at'th'cir in the main flow of Greek express-j S fiM ion, incidental flashes of meaning as 1 uut. wcy . uuyc uue on ; quick and as vanishing as the light- sPuf " . ? 'ta;-r v.Tr ?e) ning of the human eye, but almost &l &?$&B&J as emtmatic and ettpptivA-fiQ whrkli, wujo w uo wwi.bw nw.- aiii gical advice was sought, and it was. ascertained that the skull had befen fractured, and a fragment was press ing upon the brain, and his condi tion was rendered more and more' critical by the grpwthrdxelop- ment of thi?.part affected.. - Upon the "one hand, there was the probability hat, . without aft operation, although le might live for some years, he would be a helpless invalid, menac- ty recently the young man who was most handy with needle and thread an - elegant iEreneh carried . home mantel clock. The aprons are raffled off after the i - -i- "i i ' - i prizes are awaraea, ana ,wnen a. jeai bus young man attempts, as as often the - case, to, outbid - a'jrival ;for- the possession : of ai pretty r "girTs apron the prices 'Brought' by the innocent little 1 aprons are amazingly? large,? At one rainbow party the' sales amounted to $72. - - . The proceeds of, the parties,; .may go to any charitable purpose which the ladies may electv an tears oi permanent injury were chapters. You remember; for examT 0!1?0" for a time stilled. But in a few years ple,:.that thersighs ' whiclx' the W " - alarming symptoms appeared, which sisters Uttered over their dead brother frhefr eyesfo V gradually' grew worse. Eminent sur- at the foot of the Lordarc identical S I'SW a ed with the prospect of loss of mind ; tospheres of feeling l and fancy, that tr, a owiiaMn tri A T?-i:,:t, ..J: sooer oreath m nve vears: and the. And even in the Greek. Mary's iaJpo?i?fellowis well:nh to dtTiarrd ; ment onlv dTfft fivmv Aree3U I aajnjiation. Ana:;;taosewwom; -i v ; the possessive enou tiiiAclMiievholft tivc and affectionate nature.' Trifles?. Nay, th tral fire of the Scriptures- someMnies names out into these changeful pho-. position of a single word, the stara Bf&m m - ' y;: but it is obvious i wntempla- Aimignty my who mjJ( ;aidW'MarV't dr0P of.whiSkey in her life, and w6vf,'.- apfvri er wouia suneru to ue nrougnv.inio .-r n ner nome. ' iou mavsav. "ou.'mv ex-:r-.-. : Knew All. upon the other, there was a chance of relief and : permanent cure by means of surgical operations But he' was. told that the chances were' ten to one against mm, as tne Dram had From the. Chicago: grown up around, and probably had I "I've handled adhered to the fragment of bope, j said the rendering .an operation . hazardous j Burlington and doubtiul m the extreme. Yet lie did not for a moment hesitate He Would take that one chance, and endure all the torture incident to the operation rather than be a burden upon his friends. He would either putt himself in a enswathe the rigid and literal orb of truth. husband" is" ''never going tb mak l'rutb 'bf himself." ; : How; ' know t: 'Your usoahdWverad any more i will-power than' I. did hie 'osses all mv'lii .teAanxdsrpui.that Rajfalfji j H;4 U. bragging: passengerifromTi:T. ,Li and. I know i all about J . K v'ri' it wmAA . 1 . "I IH1VH 11 1.1 II k VLLU Ilk LX 11 (V. ILi n UU b UO "jmI. 'c. .ArJ---. can't- .noDody tell me i"M t- ,., . ,Vi. .su:i :' JFi7 -i There nothin' about a boss.' sleepless anxiety, or her tbat.he was w and; devotion. ; His. determination could not not be. shaken, and Ikhows ?em Uu froin the.iirVoweirVnose TneSairSoQational M, last hairs, in. their tails. , Why, dpwp. the WUlisiBUS i died :amtmgt its in ftiiri Rfir.t.inn whon -thftv wunt n j - j i' xtl it rV is. -ri:i.ti's ' ifev- . . ... --v , . i inenoB in um: iiouae uJABfcn strkls';.. ; The;friend3iofJ ne would either pertn a hoss, they send a bty tives' this Week; and the mou condition to help nghtup to my hpuse. Guess .Fve arebw olngDoulhf sti er, and relieve her been called in fifty times as an cx liiv iaL:JxA; jt nis widowed motner. and relieve her Kn 11p,i in.fifeV tAa ' A vL-ivW' or he would shbw ' ' " TW& 4 RWW wa ,yery4iw or ne wouia snow i nert. witness in lawsuits 'bout hoss 1 u:--- x r pu- vf.:4 orthy of her pride trades. But I'll tell you what makes I mtm need not niburnforlflh n me mad, andthat is totmeetdneV. thhHbbmelw wialllts fV tne these book larried " fellers who think v.UVU,i;;,S w;:;yy n' g1 La K$A T PP W11'. W thcan tell' Wia.-iliSSi;. UTien the surgeon, sent for Imn toK,hMthcy .reaa. . Only lt ffeek I mado n the next IUturo'.to .ut' - undergo, the ordeal, recognizing the imminence of his peril, he calmly bade adieu to those around him and sent messages of love to .absent friends ; t and; then cheerfully and without flmching, Submitted to-the knife. ' ,f IC;. -'v v It was a hold operation, even Hp this .age of gpectaol met one o that kind, and ' the way l mixed mtn up tally n"; pout the anatermy "and diseases .lof; the ' hoss, i made hini lsh he hod rem s$t eyes onmeiTts' "By the wayt" said an old man in the nexl? seat; who hid a parr bf '.rb- eyes? d6wn ho school tax to phef lialf Its present ;ratey say '5bbut 250,000, so xnai, wun aue aia ,oi ..i,ne.viAiaw ;;v fupd,the, school .nioiiey infthis.Sate'T f would not araoun trto jnbre .than 4t' is bwabbut 85QQ,K)QC2 . !ii-"iaf'j-iiilZL. iuisiii. performed by Dr McGuire,it is said, with consummate skill and dispatch. It seemed at first' that it would be successful. The patient revived, and for a time all symptoms were favora ble."But owing to certain conditions of the human body; which times baffle the' utmost exertions human ;skillj inflammation and was -followed by' dissolution But tbaitlue,; though young, cannot have beep in vain, which closed with such a beautiful exam pie of true her oism. . . - r in the horse business, purely from, a scientific standpoint !I iiever hah- ". "... ...... .. i -.j, died horses I'm a'prqfesspr of ahat bmy. in a college down , East, ;but there is one point I've always wanti" reported1robtHuterr the; Blair! gressmanl Jleidjof N;t 0j the latter I gressman iieia,, oi -ui.i tne laiter ; ; . ' bUl has heehaOTdon ilie oftheHbufle- with hebpeof hav- Vc . r led settledJ-You-are iiistfthemari vx;.' ?;i?ej&ea'Tt'rl? a i''li A r--'i i I some- t. - inATrihfA;r.wa ir kn -i -t- .u . .ft - set' in pi0i'r:i;:fiiSt V fVV ; tn , vnn-nvtKintv.Jw.ft hnarked in, toe.jcpurse. of a-iccentlec- vr "f glad to settle the poinTyoti '.y iiVi , , v 1 . up oh 'iir..-'-,;"1?tf 4 1 COUI9 ommana no,,ampsinetic to in. . 3 iT)ain;'no.'ant.w Will be are mixed ' TKr,v'0 - Pifl,;oa jr v.y duce lnsenaibintytt" horse walks. .What W.thb motion peptic to-prfimote.nhc'hbaling'bf a,' -, of his forelegs in relation-to the mo4 .wouna,.no cniorai to produce sleep, tion of his hind legs?That is what P? antipyretiQ M general use to con- ' troi tever.;' lie showed that m t! - The christian' religion is ' the Only means'that God has sanctified to eet fallen .man upon his legs again, to clarify;hls reason.-anU to--rectify- his will. - " - i Commerce link's . aU mankind in j .:lix i u. ' 1 has- nnzzled nm." creates that unity, of our raceWch "That's easy enough replied the, MfernU" matAS thA rP,nrrP, nf Bii f b nrm: expert in a tone of confidence, "The pti ot mde life, in Eiv . erty oi eacn ana every member.. ' I """" i""" . -r, e ---rv o r"7 f . ' , . t J t ;, ift T?ri lo .inininorvnclv Wi Vears.-and ;thajLDf -v.-or. Few "consider how 'mueh 'wA arA 1 after- thev liave been set down Vhe f and a. naiv;tne ' iuucdiw wvu . fiurauiucuL ut cansft -mcKS .-.uii liiu leiu inro il'sj aiiu - niri v it -: . m few can represent how wretched inami right liih.d leg At'e'Hm;e.teta kta-..rty, kind would beVwithodt"lt " '.'T '-Bet you $10 hedocsn'' '7 - I M4A ittif - J iu' je.- ; , ; . ; . . 'i?'-, - . - .-V- - ... 1 1 .
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 6, 1886, edition 1
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