Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / May 3, 1888, edition 1 / Page 1
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' H&Ying recentlr'purcbasd a firtt class outfit, tvfl are prepared to do 0VFR EVfiRKTTrALL all kinds of STJBSdBIPTION One year,,.!.!.,!... $1.50 Three months......... .40 All subscriptions accounts must be paid in advance. - 5- Advertising rates furnished on ap plication. . j " Published Every Thursday, v PlrAIK AND FANCY JOB PRINTING IN 1 THE 1: -HV C. WALL, Editor and Proprietor. TERMS: $1.5'0:a Year in Advance. BEST OP STYLE,-, Vol. VL Rockingham, Richmond r County, H., 0., May 3, 1888. No. 18. And at Living Prices.- t -- 11 . , '1 . I ' , jy Y r j jt u h. .KM, iDinrmnn mi n mnnn "WW :n. T n w . ' , , ,, . I ' . . . i I H i f : f i . ' I I 1 I f i i I i f if i , I i i i 11111,11 i i ; I f vr a i 1 .- - . .,, - . .i.. - , i : " ' Notes from HlerbQ Springs. Special Correspondence of The Kocket. Mb. Editor 4rt seems to be time that this remote corner of the earth was again putting in an appearance in the columns of The:Rocket. Spring, with all its beauties, is with us, as may be evident without any great stretch of the imagination. since it is nothing unusual to quite an extensive area of the earth sor--Tace, on this side of the equator, at the time now designated in the cal endars. , The most interesting items to be gathered here now relate to the pro gress of corn and cotton planting, potato beds, cabbage plants, fruit trete and strawberries. Suffice it to say these are all at the customary point of procedure. , One lives more in anticipation than realization dur ing the months of April and May, in regard to an available, variety and freshness of vegetable diet A good many of us have yet to masticate the ' unfailing dishes of beans and peas, while imagination gambols around the coming potato and corn custard. When rabbits appropriate most of the turnip salad and English pea " vines what better can bne do than fold his hands and dream prospect ively of strawberries and cream ? But anticipation finds other fields in which to luxuriate besides those . Written fof The Rocket. MARRIED. Married! The paeans of tVro loving hearts, Singing in harmony fret; ; Married f No longer asunder to rove . Always together to be. ; Married, while robins are flitting. about, .Building in meadow and tre ; across from the cabin, and the older one, "a leetle turned, o' six," had ta ken his little four-year-old brother by the hand and run out into the road to look on. Then, in a moment the Yanks had come thundering I along and they had been caught be- Married, while ring-doves are cooing in t ween the lines and swallowed up in little body. The "little 'un" was in deed sleep for sure. f f :": . - " A kind of frozen horror swept over the group gathered in ,that old field. No man dared for awhile to ook his neighbor in the face, and when he did he saw there an ex pression that he has not forgotten yet if he lives 1 ; , Ten minutes before we were all ready to toss up for the privilege of carrying those little draps home, But now every man of us bung back, dumb and unnerved. "And the ser geant and ?Tom turned slowly and tramped away -through' the falling shadows to lay the living and the dead together in that waiting moth arms. We. followed silently. with uncovered beads. When the Federal omcer in com mand heard that the children were lost, he offered to disarm his men stack theirgunswith oursandjoin in woods,- pestling in innocent glee. Married, when roses are huratingio meet bhowers and sunshine n May Married, when buttercup? blow at our feet, Meeting with daisies so gay. Darling, the dew-drops are kjssing the rose, ljiiy-oeiis dow to me Dee, Traihng arbutus 'neath winter's brown leaves, . s . ! Creepeth up-under each tree. Darling, the sweet-brier; rose is in bloom, Bright are the jessamine bowers ; Brimming the woodbine has filled its red horns, ' j Panting for gladness like ours. Darling, the brook-banks and wood-ways are full Of delicate flower de luce, Now is the halycon days of our lives Who can such pleasures refuse? : the rush and roar of battle. When the short tussle was over they were nowhere to be seen. . She bad gone to where our lines had been re-estabi. lished, and had there got ready leave to pass oyer the Federal camp ; but no one had seen or heard anything of the missing children. Would we help her hunt them ? Wouldn't we 1 Every man volun teered with a whoop. We formed j long line like-.a skirmish line and started searching every foot o ground caretully, and calling out cheerily as we went. We peered un der the edges of fallen trees. We turned over brush-heaps. We scat tered the dead leaves that had drift ed into root-bound hollows. We tauaht school" for a living, and who I bition in a Chiuese town. .The flood never was attended by a maid or t awept down. Showmen and people groom, and when tmarried did her fled for their lives, but many of them own wbrk on an income of $700 per were drowned. The missionary got year, is fully to be regarded and re- out of his wretched cage and made spected as the equal socially of the his escape. Amid the general hor- hiebest even Queen Victoria her- ror and conlusion ne maae nis way self." who hardly drew a breath un- to Canton and called at my store. watched, and never bought a thimble rejoicing in his miraculous deliver qr a box of candy, without a dragou ance. I gave him bread and clothes, of a maid of a governess on guard, and in a few weeks he regained bis Louisa Alcott began her career by former spirits,. With all its wide- 'living out, and worked as a teach-1 spread evil, I think the flood a ceo tri er and a writer, and will any one as- pushed some good in rescuing him. sign to her ;a loiver . social position He is as sanguine of the conversion than some of the dumb-headed duch- of the Chinese as ever. Raes of Eurone who were edncated 1 I 1.. M ? t,t,. anA whn wonld lose AH unrcmanuc awam. Whs is Ui9 2uf in From the Evening Wisconsin. Cutting it across the country at character if they appeared upon.the streets without a guard? Mrs.Cleve- land was broHgbt up with tne ireeaom midnights-otherwise eloping to get of an American girl Will any one married is a custom that has long claim that her social position is lower prevaiied in Kentucky. Many blue- than that of the Empress ol uermany i wouldn't care a cent about the search. And more than once was it or Austria or the vueen qi iuij or marrying if they couldn't run away that our Dickets were challenged "Spain, who were under guard every d d it -Young men in that fa from the other side and anxious m- hour of their lives Married! The mocking-bird jests on the dragged lhe little pools of water ( quiries made for the little ones limb Gardens with butterflies rife ; Rich is the honey from blossoming cup, Luscious the sweet wine of life. Married ! O, joyous and happy our lot, Bull and complete as the noon, Flushing and blushing with rainbows of ' bliss, , Brilliant as sunshine in Jane. Married ! The highest of heavenly types ; Beulah, our joy-land is won I which yield animal sustenance. The J Bleslings to welcome, sorrows to share, High School at this place closes its session on the 25th of May. There will be some exercises of interest, in cluding a picnic in the grove, near the spring, and an oration upon some edifying topic. Fayetteville Presbytery will con- Ever, mv darling, as one. ' Maey Macxje. Ellerbe Springs, N. C. A STEAY SHOT. From Wide Awake. It was eaarly in '64 while our vene at the church on Wednesday brigade (Hood s) was still in Ten- made by the melting snow. We had gorfe over two or three miles in this way. The short after noon was waning, and the wind was growing sharp and keen with the lengthening rays of the sun. A halt was called. Some of the officers and older men consulted hastily together and it was decided to beat around in the opposite direction, when sud denly a shqutcame: "Here they are 1" The shout was caught up and turned into a glad yell as it rolled along the line. I had heard When the answer went back across the hush and the silence of the' night, we could feel, though we could not see, the look that swept over the faces of our foes. And that look made us all akin ! SAVED BY CHINA'S FLOOD. Escape of a Missionary Who Was a Captive in a Circus. . 1 From the New York Star. . Mr. J. B. Jackson, an American exporter and merchant in Canton, China, arrived in New York Sunday Take Cars of Themselves. NO EPISONAGE NEEDED. i jui alt j uituvu M v Ihvwav of San Francisco. He said to a btar reporter inai me receui floods in China were even more ter- Tiioro rpm nt lirppent to be a nhle than the renoris indicated, a A ft No a V wmw w j - - - " great desire among some people, territory as large as New York State writes Bessie Bramble in the Pitts- had been inundated and depopu- the Unra nisnflir.h to nne this Euronean bited. for the time, at least. Thou- I 'o - -- , - - I r l i vored region are of that way of think in?, too. But there was one who o didn't feel that way, as the following shows : "Mother, young Brown was in the store to-day, and he said he wanted to marry our Kate," said an old gen tleman in Kentucky to his spouse. "Well, Brown's a good fellow," she redied. "and I don't believe Kate can do better." "That's what I thought, so I got red in the face and pretended to be mad, just as your father did when I asked for you, you remember, and Hon. W. H. Kitchia in 8. N. Democrat J .The political caldron is at boiling heat. It will be boiling oyer, within the next ten days. , Some of the can didates for high honors are retreat' ing, covering their retreat most mag-,-' .c-nificently. Some are advancing with- J out any protection whatever to thar.' ''- flanks and rear. Who will be the i next nominee of the Democratic paf; V ty? Who will be the next Govern- or? A prophet, thought born 'in Israel in the regular line of succea-- J sion, cannot tell. Fowle is looming . up and booming. So is Stedman. So is Alexander. So is Gilmer.M . ' Clark has thrown a wet blanket over - his rising boom by his letter to W. R. Wood, v And we understand that Jarvis or his friends say he will not be in the race or fight. Holt, they say, is a large manufacturer and In : clined to protection. It is said that ' Julian Carr would make a fine carr vass and a fine Governor, but that some of the tobacco men who want the tax removed from tobacco would not enthuse over the nomination. Bill Saunders is the biggest-l.raioed and strongest man in the pnrty nd the most loved ; they say he cannot run without legs nor fly without wirrg'J, but wc think this is a mis take. Lees sometimes take a man' in the wrong direction nud the want nf ninsrs will keen him upon the - - o earth. James Edwin Moore is a strong man both in body and mind and could make a powerful canvass. Armfield is one of the biggest men in the State, intellectually and phys- before the second Sabbath in Octo ber. These pleasant occasions will create a happy succession of ripples and wavelets upon the surface of our usual placidity, and then if the new railroad is really to run within a dozen or so miles of u?, and Col. Steele is to be our next Governor, our satisfaction can scarcely be spe cified ps less than tempestuous. Ellerbe Springs, N. C. M. nessee, that one morning we receiv ed orders to be ready to march at a moment's notice. We had been idle for some time, and the prospect of action was not unwelcome. Besides, a "brush" meant a possible supply of blankets, clothes and commissary stores of all which we were in sore need I Those! of us ho had them rolled up our ragged blankets; the bugles sounded "fall in," and we were on the niarch. We learned presently that the Fed erals were advancing by Cumber land Gap, wher we had about a reg iment of cavalry and a battery of Wonderful Cures. W D. Hoyt & ,Co., wholesale and retail druggists of Rome, Ga.. say : "We have been selling Dr. King's New Discovery, Electric Bitters and i;ght artillery. -It was a splendid Bucklen's Arnica balve for 4 years. da the groand wa8 covered with a Have never handled remedies that ' ' . tLa4 i:0ono(i ;n ell as well, or give such universal h fall of snow that glistened in .!...: fpu i i tViA orA( Kiinsmne. and melted away nausiaeuou. iiieic nave uctu oumo ij f nnnoa .nNi .ir k. iw. wnondthprp Rhnwinu natches of ost, tangled fence-corners, v VStn ' va iui vuuo uvvv.vs yj v - w i uvi v m v . v. ---0 i It" ill i o i r axa I t 1 4V, TkAfbir 1 11 LI 16 . UlUC 11UIUC8UUU I'Wivo wa kJCVCKtl saOC I ID O FfTk I M IT 1 M AT IITIIW 11 fil 1 Lll. M. 11C B t V I " medicines in thia city. Several cases 1 warm-lookinff brown earth of pronounced Consumption have wa8 a goft, paie blue, overhead ; and they CJZtl!:: the cri.p1itu; wind th.tblw in our torn "rebel yell" before; and I heard it fashion, regarding young women as sands of Chinamen had gone down many a time alter, when n meani incapable of taking care of them- in the angry waters, victory at the close of a life-and- selres of seeming to think that the "One of the most singular inci death struggle, but I never heard daughters of wealth are so little fit- dents of the flood," said he, "was the our boys in gray sound such a note te(j by education and training for escape of Rev. Mr. Perkins, a Prot of triumph as went up from their knowing how to behave in the soci- estant missionary, from a Chinese throats that day, as they double- ety of men that they must be con- circus which was caught in the flood, quicked it to the spot where those stantly watched that girls in soci- Two years ago Dr. Perkins, who was two little runaways were lying I ety could not be trusted to be mod- a most estimable gentleman, called It was in an old field, whose long- est and proper unless under tow of ed at my store in Canton. He had neglected furrows were covered with 80me dowager, or maid, or gover- the spirit of one of the early Jesuit a thick growth of yellow sedge all ness, or groom. But a fashion which missionaries. Neither fever nor dan wet with melted snow and shining applies only in Europe to the few ger could deter him. in the soft red rays of the setting cannot be established in this coun- "He told me that he had bought a sun. A bushy squat pine had shot try as a code of etiquette for the boat, loaded it With Bibles and hymn, up here and there ; the rotting rail many. It is something to be thank- hooks, and was going to sail up the fence was overrun with blackberry fui for and reioice over that Ameri- river to labor among the people in vines and almost lost in a jungle of can men, with all their faults, are the interior of China. I advised brown withered mullein and poke- not such brutes that unmarried wo- him against such an excursion, tell berry stalks that grew in its shelter- men cannot be trusted to go out ing him that he might meet China ing corners. alone'in society, or on the street?, or men who had never seen a white The children were in one of these in the cars, or to churchy or to busi- man, who spoke a dialect which he Their ness. It is something to be glad could not understand, and wno over that our cirls are so trained and might treat him as a public enemy both wore dresses were all educated to be independent that and draggled. Their chubby they are neither innocent imbeciles yelled : 'You can't have her 1 Get off my premises, or I'll set the dogs on(j could storm the Republi on ye, you young scamp u UQ Gibraltar and lead the party to - "There'll be an elopement, then," d and eioriOU8 success. Dot sa:.d the wife, with a smile of pleas- jt ia gaid he docs not wantand wookl not have the nomination. A mir- 1 case. "No, there won't," replied the hus band, with a sigh of discontent. "Why not? That's the way it al ways works in Kentucky." "Well, he's a smart one, mother, acle the only one since the days of the Apostles. The question is mot who can get the nomination by com bination and political thimble-ripg-ing, but wh can fire the heart, con vince the judgment and capture the and no mistake. He first gave me lgoui 0f the Democracy end lead it the wink, and says he: j :Q lhe valleys and'over thewhoun- " 'Father-in-law, I'm dead sot agin uin8 to a grand and glorious -vie- eloDements. Too much trouble. r The Ohio style of getting married on the premises is good enough for me. I know it ain't popular in Kentuck. It ain't so romantic as cutting it across the country at midnight, es caping across the river in a dag-out and hunting up a strange justice of the peace who chews plug tobacco while he ties the knot : but 1 ain't tory? Show us the man and he is our roan. There is no child's play in front of the party in thecptning campaign. e are not stronger man we ought to be. We have no strength to spare. The party will need every man and need him bad. The defeat of the party and the success of its opponent would decrease the value of property thirty-three per cent. We have all to fight for and ail to )r. King's New Discovery, P ""v-"""" - brier-scratched and dirtv. nor idiots, who could not be allow- laken in connection with Electric faces had lost ine oiung euge fc . , . K , trt 'int.. Bt,t without a r 1 I i J rt. n no rnu Ol WO tl 1 uoicucaup a. " 1 " " Bitters. We guarantee them always. Sold by Dr. W. M. Fowlkes & Co. - Advice to Mothers. Dr.Biggers' Huckleberry Cordial should always be used for children teething, it sootnes tne cnua, soi tens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for the bowels. Try it romantic. For a starter I want the He was bent on going, bade me mus-cow ami . mo ucu-woiuca, nose ,f we should be defeated, lno good-bvrandsailed away in his boat, trousseau ana otner KnicK-nnacKs wh-lte people of this State must rule I did not hear of him till two years that go with the regular way. One gnd conlroi L ye can't afford to f...wn can setup housekeeping easier. I BnrrPnder to the neero Dartv. This ii I'l'U.m Kn A Ft An r-4 a W VYI O T T On WIT fl I An Tf HETfl I If II H KITrflJi WILHUUh Ik. I JLl i. W 11UIU. 1 - . .w- OB at dawn. Oar spirits rose a we tel. ' ... ,T ... . n. A Mt. , , in m know it will come little higher for u a white man's government, creat- atep, and there was no Btagglmg. ery man ' "d; . fc d a book-keeper came to me and said time. Perhapstheotherg.rl8w.il in tbe hands of white men. Wecan We had tramped stead.l, forward "X Th! aUempt to make American that there was a man outside who famish the elopement, necessary to tnd tok. eare of the negroes; rJ& STKtSl to d b. wished to see me. I told the clerk kp ..p the reputa, Mn of the fam,- th 0 t and wiil pot take care ahead, and rapid ' work by the bat- closely in each other's arras T .m tx h o .hnrt. hot we neid ur Dreawi aiwi um. uip. It DUU w " J tery. .'-! ,2 DYSPEPSIA. IS that misery experienced when we tod. I rin i tMwmma Ara.rn that we poncoa m AlaboHeat rrnecment called a stomach. Thectomacb lathe reservoir from which. very fibre and tUsae must be nourished, i Md any trouble with It 1b soon felt through out the whole yttem. .Among a dozen dyspeptics no two will hare the same pre domlnant.ymptoms. DyapeptlcsotactlTa menU.1 power and abilfoustemperamrnt, are subject to Sick Headache; those, fleshy and phlegmatic hare Constipation, while the thin and nerrousare abandoned to gloomy foreboding-. Some dyspeptics are wonderfully forgetful ; others hay great irritability of temper. . ... Whatever form Dyspepsia may-;, take, One thing is certain, underlying cause it in the LIlEn, and one thing more is equally certain, no ' one wlU remain dyspeptic who will : it win Addlty of th . Stomach, ' Expel foul gases, Allay Jrritation, Assist Digestion, and, at the sam time Start the Liver to working:, when all other trouptea . soon disappear. "Mr wits was a confirmed dyspeptic. Sos. year, azo by the advice of Dr. Steioer, of trv Simmons Liver three A., Kegulator. I leel grateful for the relief it has gie her, and may an wno reo irawM afflicted In any way, whether chronic w1.Ul: wue, um Simmons Liver Regulator M4 1 foe! confident healihwill berestored to, all who wiB; U advised Wm. M. Km, Frt Valley, Ga, See that you git the Genuine, " with red Z on front of Wrapper, , w " ; MBPAaKD Wit Wt " ; ., ' . JfcH. ZEnXN A CO., Philadelphia, Pa. Pay whiit you owe this paper. fioht without the usual skirmishing, shout lor-tear 01 irignienmg mem, and we were pxit at once on a double- and when the grizzled old sergeant, quick. But much to our disappoint- w-hose very look was wont to make ment when we came to the bit of the recruits tremble in their boots, open country! where the firing had stepped toward them with a soft, al seemed so brisk, save for thetrani- most bashful smile on his lips, and led snow and one or two wounded stooped, we all took off our caps and men and a few dead horses, a broken leaned eagerly forward. How we all down caisson, a sabre dropped here envied big, burly, tender-hearted and there, or a blue or gray cap iom j. wnen uio Bcrgcaui, uuw caught on a bush or tossed on the him and laid the oldest boy, all rosy there was no evidence that and flushed with sleep, into his a regiment of cavalry and a battery arms! The little fellow opened his nf nrtilterv had met here an enemy blue eyes and stared vaguely Unrl.fn.hf.nd conflict. The Fed- around, then clasped hisarms about cral troop, which proved to have Tom's neck and gave a long sigh of been a single regiment out on a content. . . w retired bevond the Gap, The sergeant stopped again with had followed in a low chuckle of satisfaction. "The (XUU V W a wa- . 1 ... . w f hA rlirention of its former I position little 'un is asleep for sure ! he said, tv. ro rrmr,1 W loudlv at hav- as he lifted him gently and turned fr fnr nothinff. when a The next moment he staggered woman, mounted on an old sorrel under his light burden and almost K"ro- nd wearing a blue homespun fell. A hoarse groan burst from his The little head, with iU tan- i nt. . j; t o'mll oo( mflRs of vellow curls, rolled ; ,'t. i onrl walk- heavilv to one side; the little arms nnniiiH-ioy Ctiut.i uvu . l a nnAv over the snot where we were making ready to camp. - . . nanas TT-,i cn nnvthino-ofher two neck were all dabbled in blood 1 - little boys, she asked, turning a pale, The stray shotdid its cruel work agonized face upon, us. . They had well! It had ploughed across the heen Whedupon the fence when small white throat, and the baby the Rebg began forming in line just1 head was almost severed from the bv the standards of Europe estab- admit him. A haggard, famished lished bi and for a small caste, is a man, with long hair and unshaven matter for ridicule and resistance beard, clad m rags and witnout rather than for adoption. Society shoes, entered my office. He was a in this country has no fixed limita- picture of misery. I did not know tions of bloed and family as in Eu- him. ily, but none in mine. of us. God never ordained or de- MAnd what are you going to do creed lfaat negroes should rule over about it ?" asked the wife "Do? Why, sell the hogs and rig Kate out. of course. What else can I do?" - i 1 i. rope, uins nere, wno grow up nw as mountain air, and never had or felt that'they needed a guard, rise to the highest positions and take rank with the best and noblest in the world. "'Who are you?' said I. "'Rev. Dr. Perkins,' said he. I recognized him. "'What has made such a change ciU6vely that more persons die from A Warning. The modes of death's approach . . . i are various, ana siausucs snow coo- in vou?' I asked "He told me his story A sirl here who goes to her daily ing Canton he went a thousand miles B . . ... .1 r rn 1 : toil at a tap of. bell or shriek, ol into tne interior oi vnioa. a-.uB whistle may become a queen as to his Bibles and hymn books he start wealth, and look down upon kings, ed to preach in a Chinese village. A girl here who goes alone tothe Thousands gathered out of curiosi- fontm-v nr tn the shoo or to the tv. Woonecouia unaersiana uV. mw wa 7 w S7 w .hnnlhouse to do. her work, without He could understand nobody. diseases of the- Throat and Lungs On leav- than anv other. It is probable that everyone, without exception, receives vast numbers of Tubercle Germs in to the system and where these germs fall upon suitable soil they start into life and develop, at first slowly and is shown bv a slight tickling sensa tion in the throat and if allowed to the Anglo Saxon race, and they 'nev er will so long as we obey hisdioly decrees. Now we are for the tnan who can lead the white people to victory over all obstacles and 4'fli-" culties, many of which are tf be overcome, in the coming contest. Come one, come all, and 6ght under the white banner of peace against sectional -hate, bloody-shirt scoun- drelism, and superstition. negro barbarism end It Personal i Mr. N. II. Folichstein, of Mobile, Ala., writes: I take treat pleasure continue their ravages they extend I in "recommending Dr King' New trtih-'lu'niranrodacInffConsumDtion. I Discorerv for Consumption, hntving a thought or dread of losing her so happened that there was a traveling and . i the head, causing. Catarrh, used it for a severe attack of Bron- cial nosition is as pure, modest and Chinese circus in the. village that Now-all this is dangerons and if al- chilis and Catarrh. It gave me in. poamon, is ai p - , He drew more people than the lowed tb proceed will in time cause ,taut relief and enUrely cured me divinely good as any duchess or day. He drew more neop e nuu theonset you must act and I have not beep afflicted 4 nee princess who is never allowed to be circus because he was white and the h roaplIiei58; lowing a cold I aIo beg to siate that I had tried out of sight of a governess, a chape- yellow people had never seena white tQ without attention is dangerous other remedies with no pood result. . t ofm Tim rirrns men can- 5 IntA von vonr life. As Have nlno u.ed Electric BittersTand ' I I-.-. t e M - I r-1 enmslhins 11 H. I. inn'n Ko T.llA. Kills. bOtll Ol a I soon as you icct umv ug. -j- wrrinff with rour Throat, Lungs or which I can recommend. an American girl -who knows what tured him as a "freak of nature," . -aV' !n tits arstrlVa Kit. nnrlnait V. And nnt him in a case. H They . o - I . ... . TT. 1 rrintw ntlth-rnl it is to take part in the, world's bat- curiosity, and put mm in a cage, - tUe 0f Boschee'. Drf KingV NWDivery for pon- tifnr Kronrl when she bv fate or couui. not unaereiauu tuem. luck has reached a position of wealth could not understand him. bung inertly, down; the sergeant's which places her among the highest in tne country, iosesiiouuu m tige, nothing in character, nothing in. honor because.she spent her youth out in. the world making her own way alone. Mrs. Stowe, who, when a girl, uFor riearlv two years he was the standard "curiosity, the greatest freak" China. He was the Jumbo of the Chinese" menagerie. . One day the circus, which the; missionary had made popular, was having an exhv German Syrop. It will give you gumption, uoujns ana uins, jsoia immediate reliet on a positive guarantee, i nai 1001, ties free at Doctor w. M. uowines a, Rfnrs V of the interior of philosopher has left fify-.even large oound volumes oi uiiir. ably the only man in one hundred thousand who didn't abandon his diarv when the year was only six veefe;s old. Nrristown Herald. -rax One acre of land well prepared and well cultivated- produces inore a ' . than two which received onit me. wm? amount of labor used onjopo, - .X - -
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
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May 3, 1888, edition 1
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