Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / Jan. 16, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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si Ok bckingham : li ockejt. "Job PriY n t i 1. W. KNIGHT, Editor .and Proprietor. Office : , ITU CAPT. KVKRETl's NEW STORE. ; SUBSCRIPTION BATB8 ; e 0b Tear. ...... . ........................... $1.50 Six menths, .75 Three aenihs..................... ........ .40 MOT J1 subscriptions accounts must b paid in advance. ' Advertising rates furnished on an- plica tien. H. W. KNIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. TERMS: $1.50 a Year in Advance- Vol. VIII. Published Every Thursday. Rockingham, Richmond County, N. C, January 16, 1890. No. 3. r. ) LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS,- bill heads statements, ' envelop 3s, Circulars, DODGERS, 'CARD3, POSTERS, RECEIPTS, -. . -.. IN VITA 1 IONS, c -. j IN "BOD'S GOUNTY." BY D. HIGBEE. From Belford's Magazine. . Meanwhile Karl, who had in the nick of .time seized another sapling and thus achieved a safe but pre cipitous descent, was leisurely climbing back to the top. Several minutes elapsed while Lydia lay pale and unconscious ; then thecoel wind blowing on her face revived her. She sat up feebly, and was just beginning to remember why she had fainted, and that in the ra vine below lay the mangled remains of Karl, when she looked up and saw him so close to her that she could have touched him. Thre tran sition from sickening terror to infi nite relief, to something more than relief, was so sudden and so violent mi j . .t tuat nail nao tuiincu ui uuui lu This powder never varies. A marvel o . . . purityf strength and wholesomeness. More the same instant. 1 be deadly lear, economical than the ordinary kinds, and the joyful light that burned in her eyes a moment later, were alike for him. His own face reflected the i Absolutely Pure. cannot be sold inxsompetitionwith the mul titude of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate powders. Sou only in cans. Rotax Bakinj Powder Co., 106 Wall t., N. Y. glow of hers ; it shone with a new light, eager, intense. or a moment they looked at each other ; then he W. C. Douglass. Thos. J. Shaw BDUEIrftSS &: SHAW, asked, "Were you frightened?-' ' ATTORNEYS AT LAW he question-came, softly and with Carthage, N. C. the touch of tenderness sufficient to Willregularly attend the Superior Courts betray his thought. Her face chang ed instantly. of Richmond. Office in Pee Dee House the, terms of Superior Court. Jobs W. Cole Fbank McNeill cole $ McNeill, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ROCKINGHAM, N. C. Ofiee on corner of Academy Square. Burwell, Walker & Guthrie, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Hookinjpjliam., N. C. Office opposite the old postoffice. For Fine Sewing Machines, ATTACHiEXTS, NEEDLES, SUPPLIES, And repairs of the best possible material, apply to . D. T. HARGROVE, Laurinburg, N. C. COTTON SEED WANTED. I will receive cotton seed, in any quanti ty, for the Laurinburg Cotton Seed Oil Mill and Manufacturing Co., for which I will pay highest market prices, or they ay be exchanged for cotton seed meal. ' , W. I. EVERETT. I Burial Cases ... CASKETS, "It was enough to frighten any body," she replied. "And what a perfectly ridiculous thing it was to do 1" He held out the blue flowers mutely and with a penitent face. She hesitated a moment, then took them and put carelessly in her belt. He was safe now and she could afford to be rigorous. On the way home she sat up rigid ly in the phaetonjind did not speak to him, and bitterly resented the fact that Karl, though silent and thoughtful, seemed oblivious of her displeasure. That night in the room over the kitchen a vounz man. with head bared to the caress of the fragrant summer breeze, leaned out of the small square window into the moon light and hummed snatches of a melody in the intervals of a frag mentary soliloquy. "Her face was glorious," he was saying. "She loves me and despises herself. She will be very haughty, very grand, now for a long time. It is curious, this pride, this grand air. In this coun try they ,say all people are the same, but it is not so. Because I wear these clothes and dig in her garden, she despises me. It is very funny, these Americans. I might despise her, 'Fine and Common Griffins, hut idem But i hate Mm. He lUlUKS I no TToriu was luauc iui ujuj. And "everything in the Undertakers' Am ai reasonable prices. I have js v Fine Hearse which will be supplied when wanted. .-: Orders by mail or telegraph will receive prompt attention. . 5 "WrTrHUTCHINSON, fi.tf . Wadesboro, N. C. i;- -ATTENTION. To Cash Buyers of General Merchandise. He is a iconceited jackanapes." In the white-curtained room at the front of the house sat Lydia, rocking vigorously, looking out up on the moonlit garden, glancing oc casionally at the window at the end of the porch, upon the sill of which she thought a head rested. She too was thinking of the incident of the afternoon. She was unable to guess how Karl had managed to reach the bottom of the cliff alive, but she would not have betrayed so much tfavnfg just established ourselves in our interest a8 woaid be involved in di- aw store, at tne oia swmu jrou uu . , . ou , . , n;n.nl assortment of Dry Goods, Gro- rect inquiry. She remembered how ceries, Hardware, Crockery and Glassware, fcjg face looked as it lit up suddenly Wooarewanxc tbftt w giow. How dare he ""r68 look at her like that? How soft his Yurellfi JiStomsh YOU I voice was, how full of tender' con 'li.;jf .nA tn hm sold for cash. a8 asked if she we fright- only we can oW-you superior induce- ened! "What impudence r ments. and, to verify our statement, invite that mad dash over tbe eUff j No on cordiallv to come ana see ior yourueu InA convinced of unexcelled bargains. other man she knew could or would ; : have done it. It reminded her of . ' Aictiw Sale Every Saturday - that old legend of the knight)the if aU kimiUf JSeikraI:M'chandise, m lions, and the lady's glove.. It cer ' rood oraer ana soia u-oyi v-., iainiy t which, ifyaa don't.want at my pnee, you . . . The only exclusive furniture Store m the town. Special attention is directed to ' oar elegant hne of Furniture. Bedsteads - from fl.5alprMattre8ses,r $2.50 up ; Chairs, f3.?0 oer set up; Cane and Spht teat Chamber Suits, J marble buau, $17, 00 "Other suits from $12.50 up. Wash stands, Window Shades, Cnrtin Scrim Ta ble Oilcloth, all latest design Tortec Sots, Hat ' Bact Cradles Safest Tables. Pi6 turei?Pictare-Cord and Nails, Eugsr Mats in fact, nearly every article in the Fur niture and phosiery line, all at bottom r'""' . . tj cm-pun TTi oft this office. was absurd. It was imperti- she chose to consider it ; but it ' was deliriously reckless, and it was flattering to the point of intoxi cation. She had proceeded to crush him instantly, as she always did when he presumed ; but in the pres ent instance there was an annoying sense of incompleteness. She feared that this time she had done it effectively. She flushed as she re called that headlong rush they bad ; Copyrighted 1889, by Belford, & Co., and published by special permission. taken down the bluff, and the sen sation that accompanied it, delicious and yet full of vague terror ; and a thrill that was like the echo of it passed over her. The odorous wind that came in from the garden bore to her fragments of a plaintive melo dy, and presently, for no reason that she could assign, her head drooped upon the high, old-fashioned sill of the window and she began to cry softly. CHAPTER VI. A noted Kentucky turfman who late in life sought refuge in the bosom of the church was frequently heard to remark, with the moisture ol deep feeling in his eyes, that he confidently expected to run his fa vorite thoroughbred in the green pastures of the hereafter. It is not improbable that the indifference of his class to the consolations of re ligion and the promises of a future life is due to the absence of the simple faith upon which the Gener al's blissful anticipation reposed. Were heaven an interminable bou levard, and the transportation of horses assured, no Kentuckian would miss it, though convinced that it lay through a prohibition district. Other men own horses, drive them, admire their beauty, glory in their speed ; but nowhere outside of an Arabian leeend is a horse the object of so much affec tionate solicitude, so nearly a part of its owner's being, as in Kentucky. A Kentuckian may be conceived of without his title ; he may exist with out an imposing pedigree ; a bold flight of the imagination may even picture him without his morning toddy ; but withoat his horse he is impossible. The buggy is the ve hicle with which he is inseparably identified. "Buggy-riding" is his chief amusement. The buggy is to him what the gondola is to the Ve netian, the guitar to the Spaniard at once the chief means of locomo tion and the prime promoter of his love affairs. It is the object about which all the tender and romantic associations of the country cling : the supreme opportunity of lovers the retort in which two souls, un der fairly favorable conditions, are speedily reduced to the elementary substance of a single tbousht. Its advantages can only be fully appre ciated by those who have enjoyed them ; but the security from intru sion, which is one of them, will be readily appreciated by the most, eb tuse. To the sense of possession in duced by the nearness of the belov ed object and the absence of other people is added that keen exbilara tion ; that comes of rapid motion without effort, when one seems to cleave the air as with the wings of a bird. The lover who possesses horse and buggy does not sigh for the wings of a dove, and the one who does not is practically out ol the race if his rival is fully equip ped. Whether he is speeding like a shaft along the smooth, white turn pike in the sunlit glory of aperleet day, cutting the mellow radiance o a moonlit night, or loitering idly through some flowery lane in the warm, odorous twilight of a summer evening, employing the interval as fate or feeling may dictate, he is equally blessed.' He has with him at the same moment the two things dearest on earth, without which heaven is voia of attraction his sweetheart and his horse. . It was the first week in July, and the afternoon, though Coreezy, was hot. Lydia had an engagement to drive, or, as he would have phrased it, "to ride" with Beverly, who a few days before had matched the bay trotter that had been for some time his especial pride. The drive, which was a formal dedication of the new possession to the divinity he adored, was the last they would take to gether for a considerable. itime, for no icvcriy trequeuuy ueciarea WUQ an ,mr of outraged proprietorship, he "never got to look at Lyd after the guests arrived." , , ; At the appointed hour he came spinning down the avenue, the flaw less varnish of bis buggy-reflecting the sunlight from a million angles at once. Three negroes idling in the stable lot turned at the sound of wheels, and, recognizing Beverly,1 engaged in a frantic foot race for the privilege of holding the horses, with an eye to the tip that would be forthcoming at the end of the vigil. Beverly, resplendent in a pair of white marseilles trousers that fitted that the fresco to a ceiling, a vest of the same material cut low enough to expose three diamond studs, a white cravat, a dark cloth coat, and a soft felt hat of a light color, sprang out of the vehicle and walked into the house with the manner of one quite at home. In the hall her met Meriky. "Meriky, go see if yo' Miss Lyd's ready," he ordered, and then went out on the porch to wait. In a few minutes the Colonel came around the corner of the house, blowing from the fatigue of a short walk. He wore a suit of ecrue linen minus he coat, freshly laundried and tiffly starched, and a broad-brim med pananaa hat of the finest braid. As he edged into the shadow he took off his hat and mopped outthe ining with a flowered silk hand kerchief, which he returned to the bosom of his waistcoat 'Hello, Bev 1" "Good evenin', Kunnel." "Whew, but it's hot I" exclaimed the Colonel, as he came up the steps. Is that yo' new trotter?" he asked, as the two shook hands. "Yes," replied Beverly ; "don't you think it's a splendid match ?" "Yes, it is. I can't tell which is which from here. I'll go an' take a look at 'em d'rectly. My stars ! but I'm tired," he groaned, as he sank into a chair. "Where've you been ?" asked Bev. "I've been to the creek pabsture to look at a filly that got hurt yes terday, an' I'm about used up." Outside a community laboring un der the delusion that a man cannot move on less than four feet, it would have appeared that the Colonel's weariness was absurdly out of pro portion to his exertion .ji but they were men of one mfnd, and Beverly merely inquired whether there was anything the matter with the gray mare. Meriky now appeared with the message that Miss Liddy would be ready in a minute. "Have a julip while you are wait in, Bev ?" asked the Colonel. "B'livev I will, Kunnel." Colonel Ransome walked to the end of the porch, near which a dark mass of rags and glistening black limbs was tumbling about on the grass. "Mose 1 Elic I Gabe I" he called, in quick succession. At the sound of his voice the shapeless mass was instantly resolv ed into three small negroes, who sprang up and came toward him with that 'cunning assumption of awe that is one of the many wiles of the race. "Mose, you blacfc vilyun, run to the branch an1 get some mint quick." Mose started off at a tangent, his bare black legfrevolving around his diminutive person like spokes around the bub of a wheel. "Gabe, you go tell Meriky to bring some cracked ice an' some glasses." Gabe flew in another di rection. "Elic, go run that chicken out yo' Miss Lyddy's flower-bed, an' then go back where you b'long. I'll whale the. life out o),you black dev ils if yon don t keep off my j-rass. Mic sped alter tne cnicKen unim pressed by a threat so remote, in definite, and altogether doubtful of fulfillment "The varments are as thick on this place as toadstools alter a rain," said the Colonel, coming back to his chair. "It's worse'n slave time. I'll swear I do know where they come from." ----- "The worst of it is," remarked Bev, "they eat just as. much as the grown ones, and they are no artb Iy account". ;. . " :' : "Well, I don't begrudge any of 'em what they can hold ; but it does rile mV to see' them that's old enough eat my victuals all the year Gov. Lowery's Message. round an' then vote tne Kepublican ticket every chance they get." JacksonMiss., Jan. 9. Gov. Low- "It ain't what they eat as much ery's message consumed an hour in 1 All A 1 A 1 A. X - I V T. , as wnai uiey steal, mat aggravates reaaing. it toucnea upon many me. If you want to eat spring matters of interest to the State ; con chicken you've got to set under the demns severely the carrying of con hen-roost all night with a shot-gun ; cealed weapons, and recommends an you just can t keep a water- stronger laws than at nrespnt melon; I've given that up. I'd to remedy the great evil; Reference rather buy what I want than bother is made to the Sullivan-Kilrain fight, with keepin the niggers out of the and disapproval expressed of such patch. As far as the votin's con- scenes as were enacted at Purvis last cerned, 1 8 pose it is only natural July. Gov. Lowery denounces as they should vote with the party slanderous such charges as reflect that freed 'em ; but it's tough on us." upon the manner of the election held "What's their freedom wuth to in Mississippi since 1881 em T queried the Colonel, explo- All kinds of industries show an 8ively. "1 bey are a million times increase, especially that of stock wuss off a million times raggeder, raising. dirtier, lazier than they'v ever been Saiisfacti-on Guaranteed:; Exactiy.So. ...1 -7 since the first ship-load of the damn- ed war-breedin' devils was landed at Jamestown. Freedom !" finished the Colonel in a burst of bitterness. A Distiller Shot Shelby, N. C, Jan. 7. B. O.Jenk ins, owner of a government distillery Mr. J. M.-Dickinson- of 'Nashville; Tenn.ymade an admirable afterditi-""r' ner speech before the- Bankers' As' HIi sociation of Chicago recently." ' Miv i Of course his themeAvas'lhe "f'edu--" perative power of. the' South' ancl ;tne";!;: best means "of bringing South' Bni'":'" cr North into closer ancl hlore fconfi -:!':'J dential relations with eacri other1'J,' M ":l iue ciose nesaiu : xi I mignt "I know," replied Bev, soothingly, near Earl's Station, nine miles from "but they can't see it that way. here, was shot through the body and They can steal as much as they mortally wouncled by J. H. McNeil want now without gettin' thrashed, ly, storekeeper and gauger at the an' that's wuth a good deal to etn. distillery. The cause of the qrjar ineir bein' lree wouldn t make so rel is not known. McNeilly has much difference after all if we could made his escape, having cashed a only get rid of 'em an' forget how it money order at the Shelby postoffice was done. after five o'clock this evening, and uuu k, D8v, saiu me lAtiuuei, men Birea a norse ana ouggy at a reddening, "don't get me started on livery stable. At that time nothing that to-day ; it's too hot." was known of the shooting here. Here Meriky appeared with the McNeilly is from Burke county and waiter containing the ice and the has been in office only a short while glasses, and a moment later the penetrating odor of bruised mint A Bad Blunder heralded the approach of Mose. The Colonel took a bunch of keys from J Bradstreets has made a big error, his tronsers pocket, and produced and one about which there will like irora the long, narrow closet in the ly be a question of damages. That dining-room a cut-glass decanter authority reports Hall Brothers, of half full of an amber-brown liquid Hickory, as having assigned, while that ran like oil. Beverly was full that firm is to-dav. one of the aonnd- i " - - of fresh turf gossip, which he reeled est in the State off gayly for the Colonel s entertain- It is believed that Bradstreet fell ment as they sipped their julep. into the error of putting Hall Broth When the elastic feminine min- er,e, of Hickory, in place of Hale ute had stretched to half an hour, Brothers ot Halifax. Lydia appeared on the porch in a A telegram correcting this irapres dr Jnhii mnalin fi anrl sion that might have been made by , c , ' ... the publication in Bradstreets, was luminous of drapery, with a super- in nharlf,tt(, tniav irn ' Mr abundance of sash that, as she mov- Hall. He says that the report in ed, rose and floated behind her like Bradstreets is utterly without foun- a cloud. The lezhorn hat with brim dation. llall Brothers have never IL 11 I . m fantastically bent, framed her face ue!u Prcea nave pienw oi money picturesquely. The crown of it was i i ? - . i r . .11 lost in vaporous wreams oi tune, PbyddaBS T7 It ana over tne wim ieu a streamer ot Onegreatargumentinfavorof Dr. West the same material that encircled her moreland's Calisava Tonic is that Dbvsi- pearly throat and dropped forward jans hesitate , to use it , in i their prac- r J if VtXOM I hp farm ii la la rnvniahAH nbira over the cluster of Jacqueminot ciana asking for it. The following is proof roses that burned against her breast, positive as to its ments, 1 Columbia, S. C. t j tifu l i . , j Cientleman. I have rery thoroughly nf Hav With nsr nrtm ntoTtnn irith. 1 1 i 1 n . m . J . . v - - uv. wujr.,wu, " sestea your ansaya ionic ana ao not nes out the roses the toilet would have itate to "pronounce it a most remedial agent. been cold and meaningless ; v that dash of color, softened by the the system and repairing their deleterious film of tnll. it. wna radi.tnt- and effects, for rebuilding, rein vigoratine and ... rnu . i 4. t u giving tone to the system when reduced warm with life. That last touch em- gy protracted or severe fevers or other de- bodied the Doetic inSDiration of an bilitatine causes, there is in mviudsement. acutely feminine temperament that beS.P3StlB f marKs tneaiBtinctmn oetween mere J. F. Ensoe M. D. clothes and a sentiment expressed Former Physician andSurgeon S. C. In . r , . sane Asylum. in laorics. Dr. Westmoreland's Calisaya Tonic is ine enect upon rev was simpiy Dy ur. w. m. lowiices ft Uo. stunning. It seemed that a cool, country to drink to I .would say in"1 ' the language of the Tennessfee Con gressman : 1 ' ' ' r'5'N' "The bloody shir maj; washed in the tears of disapnp;in(I(-; politicians and hung qp on AJjaspn., ,.. and Dixon's line to dry.1' ' ' , . ' We heartily applaud that sen,tl-; ment, and so does evry :..gtipQj4c..f,.:iRf citizen in the Nprth,, A. -qw, Q$ee?,a,Vl. hunters are left who still think they 'Ji. X can make capital; by keeping alive the animosities of the past, bjit Jtheyjj , are poor creatures who one.by one are dropping out of-sight. When. trie last of them departs, we shall t havej. . ,. peace. JN. x . Herald.. .3:1 -SZ is?:::: j.-i A Safa Investment : Is one which isguaraniaedio. briagj-ou satisfactory results, or in. case.fj. failure y,.,.,, return of purchase 'price: TDtf tfiisSe-pta'tt-'''" you can buy from our advertised, jDipjicjgi8;A. . a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. It is ' gaaranle'e'fo iVing'1 h relief in every case, when used; for any af-- '''" - c : ti iT. .f''.- icvuua vi xuroat, lung or-jitest. s-uen'as-' ' consumption, inflammation of l-Utigg,: Bro'n-'' Hi iu chitis, Athma, Tiooping Cough,. .Croup,--(jiO' etc., etc. It is pleasant and agreeable, :6o; .-4 taste, perfectly safe, and caaalwaye be dev, . . pended upon. Trial -bottle free at W.-M." Fowlkes & Co.'s Drugstore fleecy cloud had floated down to his feet from some regioa of perpetu al snow a cloud penetrated by one palpitating, rosy gleam, from the midst of which looked out at him the fairest, freshest, brightest face he had ever saen. There was more in toxication in one glance of her gold brown eyes than was imprisoned in an entire bonded warehouse. The impulse to gather her into a quick, crushing overpowering quelled by the presence of the Co lonel. It subsided ultimately into a consuming desire to melt into a tulle streamer. to be continued. The Time for lotion. "Say, mister," said a small boy, as he climbed the fence to meet the wagon that came lumbering up the road "what have you got in tha wagon ?" "Shingles." "Fur this house f "Yep." "Come on Jimmy. Get the blank- hug was so sudden and e.i ana no u1. rooe that it was barelv Dluo Ui fcur' "uuu BUBU-' may as well start West Merchant Traveler. - now.' ADVTCE TO MOTHERS. The Verdict Unanimous. Wm. D. Suit, Druggist, Bippus, lnd.. testines : x tan recommena Electric fit ters as the verv best remedy. Every bot tie sold has given relief iuLsverv case. One Mra ' Winolvm'a SoaDiIk Snn. .VAi.1J I - 1 til J j Wig. 0 DliUUlU I IIIJLI1 liUtlK H I I H II 1.1 f. W MA I'll IV 1 1 flT always be used when children are cutting I Rheumatism of 10 vears standine." A bra- teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at ham Hare, druggist,-BellviHe, Ohio, af-i once: it produces natural, quiet sleep bvl firms": "The best telbne medicine- I have renevmg the cnud from pain, and tne little ever handled in my 20 years experience is cherub awakes as "bright as a button." It Electric? Bitters." i. Thousands , of others is very pleasant to the taste. It soothes have addad their testimony, so Uiat the liunvi, suiboua iiue gums, rutaya iui paiu veruict is unanimous inai Xiiecuic riitierB relieves wind colic, regulates the bowels, I do cure all diseases of the Liver. Kidnevs and is the best known remedv for diar- or Blood. Onlv a half dollar A bottle at rnoev wnetaer arising irom teething or Dr.. W. M. ifowlkes & Cp.' drug store. ovner causes, xweniy-nve cents a DOiue. i Si-1 ,. V. i) PtfOnlfl who InVft tVt 'liear fKoml -r. -r --. " . . 1. Jr. .Jl ... 'IcnlvAn tnllr , ontrht its fin? a , Ana loon xroaDioa wim nerronsnesi resiuiins i xiwu i tomeweec ovenrortwtu bereuevea Dy uung ..t deal of eratifientinn ; fb . KMfiiti' Iww Kttjm.m- n 1 " ' li.. I.. 1. miVinfl mn nil mil llniimiinir T11 fTl niJTflTjn.' .' T ' ' ' ' That Was 'JJ f. i i i ! ' I i t "See that old man , who just went out?" asked the cashier of a! Ches- nut street restaurant. "Yes." "See him stop to pick up a match. he had dropped?" "Yes." . . . : , ; ; "That man's worth a miiiionr.1' Comes in every noon.and eats a 15' ' .1 l -r-w: ' '1 cent luncn. uo vou SUDnose anv nF his clerks who dine here at. a daily expense of from 30 to 75 centswould take the time or trouble. tp ..picjc up '"' ' a match ? Well, I guess not'' " ' ' ' ' "Then the old fellow's a mier?" "Don t you believe it.;. He is eco nomfcal from force of habit." ThjtV' www i a ni-ln W i w " TL ' i t uun ucujiiuc 1113 UJUllC'. iUlOin goes to waste with . in m ; .But "last Christmas he handeil trie a 'So npte in an envelope, aud he cave thecirl" Lwho waits on him. .a 10, tie tlbubles! " and djoesn't turn a deaf ear to ctian- '1" ' ty when she pleads.' But, he'd sooner1 ' . eat beef and beans, than 'goose-ifye ''' pie, because it's his vav Soni peqi"'' ' pie have very, funny" wayff'fn1.a-" ''' delphia Euqujrer. , ' , - 1 i- '-'0 f.(4Jf13Vfl''V VJ .' pii-ksi' piles! AcriisGrrit3t' 7JI Stmptoks Moisture;! intetisetlichlag . la and stinging, most at .nigJJt;yTWO9 fcy-jfo, scratching. , If-allowed to continue, tamo3 ! form which "often I'lefd. ajid ulcelate,. be- . coming very' 8ere'.":'SwAvwis OiMTwkiSi stops the itcoing and W&edia.u'ifcer ' ration, and ut.niQstCflSS3 removes the'-in- movs sue mors. At drusriaats or bv mail foFn Dr. Swayne & KonPhife'aVlobYii.''.'X cts. T -' ...t xiuy xou've "losr' thti delier can't kick'at iilh !h xfo.t r. ; ' -ft- l'liii ! Wlies Tmyab agile ceyj&e-ljr. wiUetbtifn I can kick higher Irian !tbat chftnde!-i; lier. , i?0iI? Jack I'll take the bet. ill IBS cban ; .V-1- oi w JJiuutw iillla'ijfi wife asr she set dowrx.to'resVafVei'fin ' ishing every bit of an artitioifs round'''? Kof housework, "there's no place lfkej home.'r; '' ;... y j-rvlt "No,". said De Broo aa-iie: pickfcd ; ufl his hat, faud I'm dog-gontd, glad, . . ' Stooped P know tliat I sIwilfc.Lo l called upon for a toast whin it-comes' ta thU chauipgne WbaVlllirprov t'J pose.!Vl -i "Blase O, n jliw ifjliro'fio. ' ' long as it kki,t it-t e's- a log i -. w. ... ------ , v- , . . StoopidWbyinilJuit?iL r tj JBlaseTlit ladies are in fuljife?? y I! -3 r . i' 4 ,
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
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Jan. 16, 1890, edition 1
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