Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / April 18, 1889, edition 1 / Page 1
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f Rockingham Rocketi " " V i' - t ? 1 A officw?, o letter- heads; " . " - ; ' ' HEADS, - J., - - : .' BILL. HEATS, STATEMENTS, ". . . . ; . : r-t -ENVELOPES, ' ' ' .' . -CIRCULARS,!. . - 41AR35S - DODGERS, ; POSTERS, " .OVFR EVERETT, WALL COMPANY'S. i . i j r SUBSCRIPTION RATES! .Gneyear, i.ou 'Six months, . ; .7S Three months........ ....... ...... ..,... . , -.40 ggy All subscriptions accounts must be aid in advance. KNIGHT, Editor and Proprietor, SERMS: $1.50 a Tear in Advance: psg- Advertising rates furnished on application.--'' - ' t , ,4 s ' - ' RECEIPTS, ' . " INVITATIONS, it. , Vol. YII. Rockingham, Richmond County. N. C, April 18, 1889, No, 16. T-t -i' Published EveryThorsday. Satisfaction Guaranteed: :"-' - : 'Q- . 7n? 7 u l - h rtbih ' i. , ' ! . if . . t (Hi LJ myal rt-fSi v " ' Irtmbsrton's Cotton Factory. Mr. A.. C. Meliejof the conamittee to BolitU, -eulscriptions to the capi tal 8 took of tbe ootton factory, has aaet with the. most gratlfyiog-success after the-caavaes ike town. He has succeeded in securing many large subscriptions fteta -4ie capi- talist& ef -tbe town' and all classes of pu? jditizens i kave responded iaberal- ly according.:to ; their-means. iRThC anaoirat ,ered ty him"Mi subscriptions, amounts to the hand- some sOm of $20,610. Mr. Melke, after he has obtained what subscrip- Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of -purityf strength and wholesomenessl. More .economical than -th,e -ordinary kinds',1and cannot be sold ln conityetition with thefaul- iitude of tewtest.'short -weight, alum or phosphate powders. Soid only, in cans. Koyal B aki id Powder Co., ; Wall t., N. Y. Johs W. Cole. "Fra-hst McsNeill. cole McNeill, ATTOtl N EYS miL AW , ROCKINGHAM, N. C. ' Office on corner of Academy Square. . Burwell, Walker & Guthrie, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, The First OMahoman. ; .. , .Captain Payne will go down to posterity as the founder of the com ing State of Oklahoma. - w He was a western adventurer a bold and brainy man, full of schemes and expedients, and gifted with some of the magnetic qualities of leadership. Some ten or a dozen years ago Captaia ayne;.took ft'tripipubj live ' " Bau tfful TCaridTas the In- dias call it. He saw a fertile terri tory witfo genial climate, where every prospect pleased, and where tion3 he can from home people, pro-1 there was nothing vile hut man. poses to visit some of the Northern Why not seize this attractive cities for the purpose of securing ad- country, and turn it over to white ditional subscriptions, and acquaint- domination? With this dazzling ig himself with the workings of idea in his mind, this enterpr sing cotton mills, and gathering all ether filibustered harangued the people of information of interest and benefit Kansas until he had collected A Novel Suit, 1 9 to the enterprise. s A prominent gentleman of our town has -received a letter from a gentleman of large means at Raleigh, making i&qt&ries in regard to the status of the cotton factory and de siring to subscribe to the stock. Xrumberton Robesonian. How Goorga Won Her. "It grieves me to give you paiti, Mr. Ferguson, but I fear it can never be. Try, try to forget me." "I'll try, Miss Laura," replied the young man, in a melancholy, hope less way. "Absorbed in the vortex of business, as I shall be henceforth, iRockingliam., 1ST. C Office opposite the old postoffice. 1 1 may be able to still the clamor of my aching heart and banish your sweet image from my rniod "Then you contemplate going in to business ?" "I have niad arrangements,1' he said, in a hollow voiee, to open a large retail confectioner store.1' "O, George !u exelaimexlthe beau tiful girl, wildly; as 6he flung her self into his arms, "the sight of your suffering is more than I can bear. I am voure l" Chicago Tribune. want-a - .JSiLce. J4cezsT Until you see the fine selection of Ging hams, Summer Worsteds, Prints, Lawns, Muslins, 3be., which I have just received. r A FMii&h(xrl)clrlssl l Always on hand, and sold at lowest cash prices, tail and see me. V ". T. B, COVIfiGTOfl - 1 r- - l ' 'J ' 1 ."' r; Msti mi Tiews of Senator Vanc9. Senator Vance is of the opinion that the tariff is the real issue be tnroon thf nnrtifis. Hft attributes the CASKETS, defeat of Cleveland to the latter's ad- Fine and Common Coffins, W8..n the tariff question, . iiAv u,u y ' his civil service policy and his veto of pension bills, but principally ,to the appeal to the sectional feelings which was made by Northern Re publicans. The Senator claims that these Republicans evaded the real tariff idea', by abusing its leaders and advocates, charging them with being men who once tried to destroy the Union. He praised the admin istration of Mr. Cleveland, and sajd that it would grow in the estimation of; the public the farther away we get from the bitterness of the last campaign. Asheville Citizen. And everything in the Undertakers' Ane at reasonable prices. , 1 nave -, AEi2ie. ffearxe. which wiUie supplied whea.wantei ? . 8 Orders, maiuoi? telegraph j will receive prompt attention.. r' ;WT. HUTQHINSON, . ; 5-tf Waclesboro. N. C. ATTENTION. To Cash Buyers of General Merchandise. - r T f it - Haying juBt established ourselves in our jew store, at the old-stand, you will find our usual a63ment .oLJDr.GoodsCrro-i enes. Hardware, Crockery and (glassware,- Woodenware, Hats, bboes, &c., complete tnd offered at prices that will - 3 , T ' .- ' Surely Astonish''- You! Bought for cash, and to be sold for cash, only, we can offer you snperior induce ments, and, its venfvsoiiristalement, invite jou cordiallv'to come and see fen yourself and be conrtocedof -unexcelled bargains. Auciiou f f Every Saturday of all kinds of General Merchandise, in J lnch, if vodf don't want At my- price, you wn have at Vvur own. The only exejusiye. Furniture Store ia e town, and4Jowest friers oil bedsteads, nattressps "ah pa Chairs. Kales, uraaiea. Hat Racks. Quilts. Pictures, .Picture Cord, window Shades Arr. nil fresh and of latest -uesicns : anrl in fao.t. fiveri-thmcr usuallv '""nd in the Furartute line. Call alT the furniture Storain fth Tlnritbmldinst." i ' " A.K" STEVVARTf crowd of boomers. A land company was organized, and shares were sold at five dollars each. A colony com pany was also organized with two dollar shares. Finally, in 1880, Payne made a break into Oklahoma with 25 men and started a town. At the end of three weeks Federal troops marched i . 1 1 in, captured tne village, and sent Payne and his men to prison. At the tbe expiration of two weeks the boomers were discharged. Finding that he was regarded as a hero, the captain organized a camp ot two hundred men on the Kansas border, and -waited for another op portunity, r or lour or nve years there were occasional invasions o Oklahoma. Squads of men would slip in, locate lands, and be followed by the troops, and ejected, to begin their work over again. In 1884 Payne carried a colony o six hundred into the coveted land and built a town, with a -newspaper, church and school. The soldiers broke up the settlement, and its founder went to prison again. He was released, and was getting ready for another expedition, when death struck him down in his prime. But Payne's work wvnt on. He had started the Oklahoma craze, and men continued to talk about it, and collect in camps on the border. The idea spread like prairie fire, until speculators and statesmen gave themselves up to, it, and at last Con gress yielded to the pressure, and enabled Payne's followers to accom plish in a lawful way what was un lawful during the lifetime of thei leader. So the dead adventurer was the first Oklahoman. When his colony grows into a State it will honor his memory, and, perhaps, vote him a statue or a portrait in its capitol. Although he knew it not, death overtook hira just when success was about to crown his efforts. Atlanta Constitution. A dispatch from Chicago says; A novel1 suit has just been decided by "Judge Clifford, after alitigation lasting several years;- in different courts. The cawas"tKt V of Sorb- sia S. Alexander, "aldy'-pio ater, of BraUleb4ro,;Vt.lfagainst the estate of E. S; Alexander; her broth er. . a wealth v ChicaeoanlL now de- cea&ea. . x n -MUlmLrffEEjStt alleged breaches of agreements made by the deceased I with feis dieter up Wards of twenty years ago. According to the statements made by Miss Alexander and the! evidence giv.erx by num-erefus witnesses, whose depositions were taken in, Boston and other Massachusetts cities, she was at the time of making the first agreement a teacher .of music of ac knowledged reputation andability. Her brother was anxious to have V: ' WorlroHW-Flames. : -! Iast Saturday goes -dowa to his tory as one 61 the tnost wioday days ever known in this country, the re- suit of whicb were; sweeping fires all Around, doing great damage. - "On Saturday afternoon and night the dwelling house and ' furniture of Mr. E. A. PhllUps near here wre burned. Mr. Henry Fairley dost a barfelledwith-Jay -acd 4od4-j Mrs; Martha Murray lost one of her outhouses filled with fodder ; St. Luke church, colored, near -Hasty deppt was burned, and th forest fire burned a streak about 3 miles wide from Barnes Bridge to Red 1 Blufi, S. C, about 6 miles, seriously damaging several turpentine faros. On Sunday afternoon a fire start ed in Major Wooten's forests and burned over a hundred or more acres of turpentine land, two tene- her return to the house of their aged I ment houses barely escaping. Laur parents jn Brattleboro, who, , he inburg Exchange, 10th thought, needed her care. He offer ed to pay her 81,000 a year, or as A Parrot Story, much as she could earn by teaching m,i;r. if h -mild sm th nrJ A Parrot was recently bought by of the old folks. She accented, and a South Side ladX uPon the affida' for a number of years took care of vu OI ine man wno S01U 11 inai 11 them. About three or four years before the death of her brother, Miss Alexander was about to be married and he wrote to her urging her not to marry and leave her parents, but to stay with them. He agreed to pay her an additional $10,000 if she would remain with her parents as long as they lived. With this prom had only a Sunday school educa tion. The bird in reality had been the property of a saloon keeper, andK its cage being near the cracker bowl, everybody made free to give it crackers and teach it tough words. Its new mistress had hardly got it hung up when a lady friend called, and, of course went into ecstacies - -: The Galled JadeWinoes. A Republicarit paper; at Tepeka,, Kansas, has learned something, in the only way that people of a cer tain class ever learn, that is to say. by -experience. It has discovered that there is a possibility of getting too mueh-efth-coloTed 'voter. The-Topeka paper -says that'that city, is creating an indebtedness that it 4-jvHl ''take-yfcurstodear1 a-way:;' that reckless extrrvaganee prevails, and is creating a defet as large as the entire assessed valuation of the city '8 property, personal and real, if not greateT. So far the interest in this plaint is mainly local. The gist of the mat ter is the explanation of the cause of the trouble ax4 the remedy pro posed. The cause is the colored vote under the leadership of whit demagogues. As to the remedy, we read that "there is an effort to break down the rule established by the colored vote, both male and fe male, aodth-e Irresponsive white class. The 2,000 colored voters, who will turn out without fail, it is fear ed, will give Topeka an administra tion, that will lead to bankruptcy. " Comment is unnecessary. Louis ville Courier-Journal. iU in, u l, 4 ise before her she "shipped" her Pver u'e " lover, and the wedding was declared Polie ner nnSe anu OUfc off. Miss Alexander remained an Polly, Polly," the bird opened one old maid and cared for her father eve' cocked his I,ead 8ldewise. look" and mother in their declining years. ed at the v5sitor and 8aid Wlth Sreat Thft old iieonlR ar still nlivfl and Suavity enjoying death Alexander did not even keep his promise to pay his sister the $1,000 a year be had agreed to pay her, and except a few small sums of money, which she used for the "com raon support of herself and parents," she received nothing. Alexander inade no provision in his will for the payment of the 81,000 a year of of the 10,000 promised her. She filed her claim against the estate, but it was disallowed by the Probate Court and an appeal was taken to the Cir cuit Court. The case was 1efore Judge Clif fonl, and upon the evidence a ver dict was given for 41,800 against the estate in favor of Mies Alexan- to have a cracker. Chicago M& I've worn off.'' By Steam Across the Andes. One the most remarkable enter prises of the period is the great rail way over the gigantic chain of the Andes, from Valpariso and Santiago, Chili, to the city of Buenos Ayns. It is to be a trans-continentaLIine, passing across South AnjgS&nTfrom the Pacific to the Atlantic Ocean, and will have a length of about 1,000 miles. Its construction is now pro ceeding, under th direction of en gineers from the United States, who .A Long "Way After"Longfallow.;,r!l il stood on the bridge atinidniglit, as Lrurik t -a:son-of-atgun,. tyt& - moons Tose o r the cty, -whn -there dught to ; have been but one. -M. could ee thk bright reflection, ia - tlve waters -mdeT e, awf experi- euced a feeling Tofwondfr-and gTeaft curiosity. If - only one ; Kafl een v there, I would not have beea in iloubt,' ' tut wViat two moons ': Wt -doing, I could ft we1l mfke-out. The tide was slowiy ebbing, I could hear' the wateFSToll, as J stood 4 -the wavering shadows to 4iide frora the night patrol. How often-oh3 how often in the days of auld lang (Wfle, 1 "have tried to '-cross at mid- -iNght, and got left -evry time. But to-ni:ht I hot aed restless, -my mind was lull t)fare, and the walk that l.-iid before me, vvat; more thaa I could bear. I had do latch-key with me, and lurked would-be the jloor, and 1 would have to sit in the door-way, as I oft have done before, . I'd have to -sit Hi the door-way, in agony and fear, till veiee saiS from the window, "Did -the lodge hold late, my dear?" So to-night I stood there dreaming, and watch ed the restless tide, till a cop came. ilong with a wagon, and invited me to ride. iuxchtmge. Cotton Factory Agitated. An effort is being made to raise money to build a cotton factory in Wadesboro, and so far has met with great encouragement. It is propos ed to build the factory ad pay for it on the co-operative plan publish ed by us a week or two ago. The shares will be one hundred dollars each, on which a weekly assessment will be made of 25 cents per shar until the whole amount of the share is paid up. It our people desire a factory now is the time to get it, and no better mendous difficulties interposed by nature. Th chief of these will be the passage of the Andes, which, be tween the Argentine Confederation and Chili, rise to the height of 20, 000 fset,and rarely fall below 15,000. The line will also pass through much hostile Indian country, and :n.r-; Ohio Eace War. 1 . r. il... 1 AAA .. 1 iU. UBr, lor me ai.uuy a year aiiu toe , e -i u- u j:,j J .... - - , .. plan for building it can be devised 810,000 which she was promised if . .. , As we understand it, a Sewing Machine for familv use should be stmole in its , mechanism ; should .. .. ... i run easily, do a wide range ot wort, " ' .... -m be as noiseless as possible, hand some, durable, as cheap as is con sistent with excellence throughout. The New Home Sewing Machine fills all these conditions to perfection. she would remain with her parents until their decease. On a motion for a new trial Judge Clifford de cides that the plaintiff was not le gally entitled to recover the 10,000 because her part of the contract had not been fulfilled and could not be until the death of her parents. Were she to be paid this amount there would be nothing to prevent her than the co operative nlan. Busi ness men of Wadesboro, show your enterprise by takiug hold- of this matter and pushing it to a success ful issue. Those desiring to take shares in the factory should see Mr. G. W Huntley at once. Wadesbore Intel ligencer. The last violent race-"war turnsup in Ohio, and. the organs will he aw' fully perplexVd 'lo explain bow -it happened. The city of NewIUcrr mond in the rsrrong Republican State of Ohio, has 200 black awIw'OQ white pupils in the schools. As there is no special political necessity just n)W to compel the illustration of the equal rights of whites and blacks Ui the North, the prejudices pils into separate ?clioul roon8.' ATI of the colored families submitted but one James Ringold ty name rand he insisted that his children. should not be discriminated against on account of color. As the school board refused ad mittance of the Jtingold children into the white -school, he brought its builders have before them an un dertaking eveu more difficult andsuit against the directors, and the dangerous than the construction of COurt gave him judgment with costs. the Union and Central Pacific rail ways. Louisville Courier Journal. A Sound Legal Opinion- E. Ba i n b ri d ge M u n d ay . Esq . , co u n - ty atty., Clay co., Tex., says: "Have So the Centennial of the Constitu tion to be celebrated this month in from leaving her parents at once New York is to be quite an aristo- The balance of her claim, the court rv 'e i .a. ii .L. L.i.i j f . j j ..; 1j " 1 crane anair n me papers, ten me ueiu, was vanu, uu ucuucuug uged Electric Bittur8 with most nap I. . 4 r I 1 I ' i CP t 4 t 'J 1U. DI I UUl n. U ..... . . . . . ngnt story, a iew nunarea ricn Hut.auo me jiu,uw-hhu gi m- DV results. Mv brother also was oeonle are to take the matter in terest, which tne jury had included very low with malarial lever and hand the Codfish and Monopoly in their verdict entered judgment jaundice, but was cured by timely 1.1 1 ? .t lU, .-t- f 1? Q A 1 n w n n H a rUSC Ol llilO UlCUlUillC. X 111 OltlHUCU ana. tne Done ana sinew are iu agaiusd uie estate wi aioAauuci i . , , . ,.f rLiieciiiu utitcis savcu ins inc. Organized 1B4S. MEW YORK LIFE MANUFACTURERS OF ... , Cassimeres, Jeans, FLANNELS, LINSEY8, COTTON ADES,&c iWoofcar4ed cheap for cask or-on skarw. "WOOL WANTED, for which 'we will pay cash or exchange..good8. Address ail communicaiious w G. J. FREEMAN, ' Proprietor Harfllet Woolen Mills, Hamlet, N. C. f H W. H. BEERS, President. rsli Assets, goo.iioo.ubft. Total Paid Policy Holders, $115,000,000 i. Iuranrenn Pore,-400,01,000 s ueath Claims n.iirl 4i nnri nnn 4nrual rncom. S'M.OOO.OOO. ' B. F. LITTLE, Special Agent,, ;-- i RSckirfghsn), N.P- STILL GOING ! A larrrfi amount of the stock of W. D MrtRftP Ts still I tmsoia. and these goods f TTST GC) at iome price. We otter ins, - in Clothing and Worsted Goods, and it .will nay vou to give us a call. E--- -7. M. GOVINGTON, -r Trustee of W. D. McRae. 3-6m. Send to ;Tbe Rocket office for Job Print ha. I f v: -Ly r' 400- look on at a distance. If thi3 turns out to be a true report the fuss and feathers brigade will have but little showing and are of but little import ance. The social ideas of 1789 are to be reproduced a hundred years after, and the Big Wigs and Pow Wows will be the thing. But the for $26,847. Mr. D. I. Wilcoxson, of Horse iCave, Ky., adds a like testimony, March At)lil May saying: He positively believes he - 1,1 i j ; .J u ,1 ; Knn fn Are the months in which to purify the "u;u."ar "lt" 11 ucc" ,u ible to benefit from medicine. Hence now . 1 his great remedy Will ward on, is the time to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, a as well as cure, all Malarial Diseases, medicine peculiarly adapted for the pur- and for all Kidne', Liver and btoui "M Quad," in afferent letter from North Carolina, ites.: "VY hen we of the North refer to the South the negro always ceroes into tne ques tion. His status and his future are regarded by us as a great problem. We are much worried over it at times. It is a. matter which should be and can be left with the South to take care of. The Southern ngro is a theory with us. He is a solid substance to the Southerner. He knows more about him in a day than we do in a yeai. He has got, more excuses for his failings than any Northern man dare urge. He treats him more kindly - than we do the same race at the North." As M Quad is a Michigan man be is about the last person from whom such adiuksion would be expected. but he hs been impressed with the facts and records them. Richmond Stats. Dose, possessing peculiar curative powers Tt. prnp.la fiverv lmnnritv from the blood. F. and F. Brigade must toot their an(i ai3o gives 'it vitality and richness. It tUa lnnlir and ht f ho Hmma creates an appetite tones tne digestion, m- , i i - ., , . . i vizorates the liver, and gives new lite and two w.v-.w ..v,,. .w v.ulu energy to every Junction ot the body, me that in 1889. American common testimony of thousands, as to the great people areas bi&as the descendants benefit derived from Hood s . barsapari. a, r , , should convince everybody that it i pecu- from ' green-grocers and dunghills, iiarly the best blood purifier and spring and having rights dare maintain medicine. them. But what a grand humbug after all is this self-assertion of the ignoble lour hundred 1 Wilming ton Star. ach Disorders stands unequaled. 50c and SI, at Dr. W M Fowlkes & Co,'s drug store. Easily Explained. Wibble See that fellow over there? Well, he was in the . Legis lature, and instead of makingii'bigH pile, he actually came back poorer A SAD STOKV. The child coughed. The mother J than he went. ran. Nd remedy was near. Before wabble Such ah example o mnrmnn tha lrnrf'. 1 rt t I O Sllttprpr Willi ii i r k i 1.. t 4 i iiuuesiv is unue liiciis.iui m uuuicui- aiorar. Always Keeu ui. . dead. The colored pupils -then rushed-lnto the schools and such a row ensaed that the board closed the doors and declared the schools closed untfcl next September. Thus both black and white chil- ; dreh in New -'Richmond, in ihegvettt equality-laviug State ef Ohio, must lose three months' schooling beeaase theiaw puts blacksand whites upoa equality ia the schools. The teach ers are entering suits for their sala ries ; the people are wild with ex citement over the dispute, and be cause the colored citizens -assume that the iaw and the -profeiions of the people of Ohio shall be fulfilled. As .-soon as Field Marshal Hal- stead shall pull himself together and satiate his appetite, for Senato rial scalps he will doubtless seethat the colored brother is promptly re stored to his schools and fellowship. He must do- that or be must-stop criticising the bouth lor lollowiug the example of Ohio. PbiladeJphia Times. . , ,1-? CONSUMPTION SURELY CURED. To the. Editoe Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for' the above named disease. J3v its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured, l snail De giaa to send two bottles of my remedy'FREE to anv of your readers who have consumption if they will Bend me tneir express aaa post ' omce address. .Keseciiuiiv, T. A. Slocum, M.-.C.-, HI Pearl tt., N. Y. - - The New discovery- You have heard .your friends and neighbors talking about it. You X Samsan Armistica. Washington, April 10. It is au thoritatively asserted at the Depart-, ment ol State to-day that the three ireaty powers Concerned id Sawaoan aifatrs. England, Germany, aad tlue United States, hae reached an un derstanding, by the terms of whiciV;??:! they will each keep but --one wa3r"; ni-i- 'nrsnHinT' thtfiMS?!'- vessel at Saoeoa; pendin may yourself be one ot ttae'mauy termination of the Berlin conference.' : 5rho know from personal experience r, The vessel to be sent there by tha1' just how good a tlung it is., it you UnUeJ Slate8 will. 5e ihe Aen - have ever tried itvyou are one of its . - : . ... I. ,-..f . staunch friends, becaune the wonder- 1,000 ton , -ship tww at Honoluk. . ful thing about it is, that wheaonco The tSerman Corvette, Sophia, novf " TERRIBLE. Two thirds of all deaths in New York city are from, consumption or nneumonia. the same proportion holds for most other cities'. Delays rp danaerous. Dr. Acker's .English Retnctlv lor Consumption" will 1 WiiVS relieve, and Hiav save VHUcHf For sale by Dr. W- M. Fowlkes .& Co. i cmumi o trial S-Jr. Mn S new IJlaj l.nn ,hor sAir.mit tHini y.-i'iIl.a-r will ' t- " v. nM...i;.u t?.i hnnA ! nlfltn in these bootin!? davs. en. '.:. 1a.- i. ' .1' 1' !. .'.-t z . : ... .T v. . v, --. . j ----- - . - - wicu . J..a-: I""'-' 1 renrpRpnt iTerrnan imeveaLx. 'winie - r C,.- 1 U n W AM ffnwMfoe 'ft W UJn? - - ,l . 1 ' ' - T C U .. I --r". . - ' Z . . . - ' . - "WHY WOMKBi FADU. Women lose their! beauty because colds undermine .their life. D. Ack ers Etfiih ftemedy for Corisump- ti . a'l absolute. cure tor colds." For sale byj)r. V . i."Fowlkes Co. rWibble Oh, Ilont know that he was anyrndre hbust' tbirn tle rest of.tlreni, "but her ran against a straiyrht flush with ftiur kfngs a few davs before Terre Haute Elxprcsfi ift'ui r .onv-thrnat inner or t Hope to return io framoa iTom ya chest iroile. -secure- litU Mt-onct or- will rejit:fci rr;.' if J h ' wis; J-1, and sive it a fair trial;" It rs ;'1ari;rinateria-rlf''ia'm'ssred 'WW. hr?.K.f tt l)Ur UU1SS a ;ew anleAd every tim2 or j6.oyji:fund-' coe.-theT-fope of the session, fd.: Xiy btrt-V VV . -. h .Fowlkr's '& Ci.Ts oriig ttfre. ,1 .. .Clitii ?r -the r i - it-:---. i," V.-:-'.-" "
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 18, 1889, edition 1
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