Newspapers / Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.) / July 24, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
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Highest of all in Leavening Power. -U S. Cov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. rawster ABSCUUTEUtf PURE JAB. A. JOHN8TON: T. L. ELLIOTT JOETBTSTOBT ElalalOTT, Steam Granite and Marble Works. All orders for wrl will receive prompt attention. 223 and S87 West Trade Street. There are many accidents and dis eases which affect stock and cause scrb tus inconvenience and loss to the farmer in his work, which may be quickly remedied by the ufj of Dr. J. H- Mc Lean's Volcanic Oil Liniment. Get it at W. 3JL Fowlkes & Co's. J. A. McCLENNY, Practical Watchma ker and Jewt-ler, Rockinpham. N-.-C. gjl and promptly done. Children wilt freely take Dr 3 H Mc Lean's Tar Win Lung Balm ; unlike cough syrups, it contains no opium, will oothe and heal any disease of the throat or kmgs quicker than any other remedy. 8old at Fowlkes & Co's Drug Store. W: C. Douglass I Thos. J. Shaw. DOUGLASS & SHAW, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Cartuaob, N. C. ' Will regularly attend the Superior ourts of Richmond. Office in Pee Dee House during the terms of Superior Court. HEW HARNESS SHOP. Don't Buy inferior machine made har ness when you cau get good, substantial hand -made harness . Just as Cheap or cheaper right here at home. I will make you, lor a wagon or buggy, - Siileanil Boie Harness cheaD for cash. Repairing of all kinds done promptly. Y. C. HORTON, Upstairs Tfrrerp.tt, Building. Dr. J. H. McLean's STRENGTHENING CORDIAL AND BLOOD PURIFiER. For many years tbis well known remedy has been the mainstay of thousands now advanced in hie and en Joying a"green old age," who owe their robust health to the strengthen ing ana sustaining prop erties of this , great j medicine, si.w per bottietat druggists. Bend 2 cent stamp for Almanac con taining storm chart and weather forecasts by Irl R. Hicks, the "Storm Prophet," to the DR. J. H. McLEAH MEDICINE CO., St, iotiia, Mo. . LOVE UNEXPRESSED. -The sweetest notes among the human heart strings Are "dull with rust. The sweetest chords adjusted by the angels, Ara clogged with dust. We pipe and pipe again for dreary music, Upon the self-same strains, While sounds "of crime and fear and desola tion Come back again in sad refrain. On through the world we go, an army march ing. With listening ears. Bach longing, sighing for the heavenly music He never hears; Each longing, sighing tor a word of com fort, A word of tender praise, A word of love to cheer the endless journey Of earth's hardv busy" day; They love ui and we know it; this inmost For reason's share. Why should they pause to give that love ex pression With gentle care? Why should tfiey pause? But still our heart- are aching With all the gnawing pain Of hungry love that longs to hear the music And longs and longs in vain. We love them and we know it, if we falter, With fingers numb, Among the unused strings of love's expres sion. The notes are dumb. We shrink within ourselves with voieeiess sorrow. Leaving the words unsaid; And, side by side with those we love the dearest, In silence on we tread, Thus 00 we tread and thus each one in silence His fate fulfill, Waiting and hoping for the heavenly music Beyond the distant hills; The only difference of the love in heaven From love on earth below Is, here we love and know not how to tell And thete we all shall know 1 Constance Fenimore Wooleori. W1 4!!iL..sw sSfW win a BUSIED TREASURE; John W. Cole. Frank McNeill. COLE AIID UCIIEILt ATTORNEYS - AT - LAW, ROCKINGHAM, N. C. THE ALABAMA MATCHLESS MINERAL W A T E R. Nature's Specific FOR MANY DISEASES. An absolute cur for rDysepsia Chronic Diarrbcei. Diabetes, Gravel, or any derangement of the Urinwy Organs, Sick and Nervous Headache, Ulceration abd Hemorrhage of the Womb, Ery sipelas, Rheumatism, Leucorrhce 1, Gleet, 8yphiHs, Piles, Old Sores and Eruptions ef the Skin. Blood Poisoning, Cancer, Eczema. Salt Hheum. Tetter, Ringworm Sore Eyes, Chronic 3ore Throat, Coughs, uatarrn, eiinous uoiic, warts, dudwm, Cuts and Rruises, History of lis Discovery. Office on corner of Academy Sqare. BurweU, Walker & Gulhrle, Attomtbts at Llw, ROCKINGHAM, - N. C. jggf" Office opposite the old Postoffice. H. B. LEDBETTEB R. S. ;LErBETTER. JR Ledbetter Bros. Have in store a COMPLETE STOCK OF- OF ALL KINDS, AND Farm Supplies To wh?ch they invite the attention of the public. Meat, Meal, Flour, Corn, Ac, RECEIVED IN Car-Load Lots. We propose to sell as cheap .as any in - the market. Give us a call... -4 LEDBETTER BROS. v...'-'-. it's Disease, no all Disorflem of the Liver ana KUstys, use - Dr. J II. McXeans LIVER AND KIDNEY BALM it socoese In curing all ail ments of the urinary organs is unparalleled. One dollar - per bottle at druggists. - Tr. J. H. Vtlnl " '. LIVER an KIBHEY PILLEfS (Little Pttli), - ?at a rial. - stamp for Almanac containing - Storm Chart and Weather Fore- - 5ErmTPrODhet.,'tO . .rTbaJstlCEKCCEW,1 Near Greenville, Butler county, Ala bama, ia to be found one of the most wonderful mineral wells in the world The discovery of this remarkable healing 1 water was purely accidental. In dig ging a well at the depth of forty feet the workmen came upon a body of mineral through which seeped a 6mall flow of water, which now yields about fifteen gallons a day. The water had such an astringent, tour taste that the well was abandoned until two years ago, when a sample of it was sent for analysis to E. Smith. Frofessur ot onemistry ana Geology of Chemical Laboratory of the University of Alabama, ana iouna to con tain medicinal properties, es tue testi monials from hundreds wno nave usea it prove. I attach only two from gen tlemen well known to citizens of this section : To Whom It May CoBcern : I took one bottle of the Matchless Mineral Water according to directions, and find that it is iood frlDyspepsia. It is a mild aperient gives tone to the en tire digestive system, ana wnen dyspe psia comes from constipation it operates to remove the cause. Rev. R. E. Stackhouse. Greenwood, S. C, March 10, '90. Mr. Z. L Gibson : Dear Sir: For years I have been a sufferer from dyspepsia. I have taken mmv nreoarations. -but the beneficial effects were only temporary. Dr. T. C. Smith, of Marlboro county, a. y., anoT- iog my condition, brount me one Dome of the A labama Matchlt as Mineral Water, take.n from a well ia Alabama. I took it and was so much tenehten tnat.i sent for more, and will never be without it "if it can be procured. It suits my ais- t . ease better than wything eyer tasen uy me It is a pure, harmless mineral toni , and ' I ' heartily ncommena n w- u suffering public. ' . v . - Kefpecttuuyy r-jui wibbdjn. Gibson Siation, N. C, June 16, '90 cotton, tobacco, indigo, coffee, etc., and many, trading vessels are employed in the traffic. His craft was manned by a mate and four sailors, and I found all of them to be Americans. When "I came to ex press my surprise at this he explained : American war vessels, mate and all. I have picked them up one at a time,, and as none of them has a wife back home' they are content to stay with me. I've got a Chinese cook, but outside of him I want no truck with foreigners." t outlined toy story to Captain Wheaton, as he introduced himself. ' Be heard ma through without interruption, and then quietly said t "Don't' sound so very &thf. but I won't tell you what t think of it until t hear the heathen go over it himself: When I'm looking tquare at a man I .fcan tell whether he's bamboozling or speak ing the solemn truth." I made an appointment, and Semyo re told his story in the presence of Captain Wheaton. When he had retired the Captain drew down his right eye,slapped his leg and whispered : "Colonel, it's a go I The heathens talking straighter than a straight-edged board, and if we can Come to terms, I'm in with the deal' There was very little higgling over the particulars: It was agreed that Captain Wheaton and myself should bear all the expense of the adventure, and if the treasure was secured each of the three should have an equal share. We gave Semyo money to get himself into decent shape and then looked to the fur nishings of the brig. She was already provided with small arms and cutlasses, but we added to the stock, and then, at tb rant.in' fcncrerestiofl. bought A Car- VUW W W ronade whieh had been lying id a ware house for two or three years With it we got a carriage and ammunition, and by the tame the gun was aboaid the brig was watered and provisioned and ready to sail. Her clearance papers were for Manilla, in ballast, and the day of our sailing Captain Wheaton brought on board a short, squatty, bescarrea wnite man. who had just been turned out . of jail, and who proved to be an English cut-sticks" from H. M. 8. The Temp est. It turned out to ue ine racnesi thing in the world that we found him, for he knew how to manage our carron- ade and made it keep us out of an ugly scrape. It was only after we were out of sight of the Chinese coast that Semyo gave us the exact location of his treasure cache. We were to round the Bashea Islands, lying off the north coast of Luzoe, and strike the coast at a met called the -RAtann. after another island. Four miles up this river, whieh is navigable for about twenty miles, was the cache, we had a run of 850 miles across the China Sea to the Bashees, and along this north coast we found several traders. In order to appear all right in case we were board ed by any Spanish vessel in those waters . BiA in snmn carffo here, and took our time about sailing to the river. After we had passed the Babuyan Isl ands and laid our course to the south, we caught sight one day at noon of a felucca approaching us from the east, having rounded the cape. She flew tne epanisa ception to prevent suspicion; We got down a topgallantmast, slacked away some of the rigging, got a stage over the side for the carpenter and appeared to be lying there for the sole- purpose of mak ing repairs. We were soon boarded by natives anxious to furnish cargo, and on the second day a Government gunboat passed us without seeming to take any interest in our case. Semyo had to lie concealed in the hold during daylight, as men were coming aboard who knew him well, and it was about midnight on the second night after our arrival that we pulled ashore for the treasure that is, two men pulled Semyo off to the bank to see if it was all right', and it did not take him many minutes to make a disa greeable discovery A party of wood cutters had encamped close to the ruin, with every indication- bf a long stay. Semyo wa positive that he could not get at the cache without being discov ered, as the party had two or three dogs in camp, and he was sharply -challenged as he scouted around. Next day, after some conspiring on our part, the Captain and I went ashore to the camp to make a bold move. There was a gang of thirty natives under a Spanish boss cutting ebony, and they had a large lot all ready for shipment. This gang had been sent from the prov ince of Zebd, where the owner of the tract resided, ind an agent was daily ex pected to sell the output. The boss, we found to be an ignorant, good-natured fellow who could neither read nor write. While I claimed to be the real owner of the land on which they were then at work, the Captain offered to buy some logs on the sly. Between us we got nun to re move his camp a mile away and to accept about f 60 for logs. We not only accom dropped to the bettom of the harbor, and no one could have mistrusted her. I saw the "outrage" detailed in a Manilla paper two dr three weeks after it oc-. curred, but if the Spanish Government ever investigated the occurrence, none of its movements came to my attention. We got $32,500 apiece out of the little transaction, and the last I knew of Seymo he was a tea trader in Japan. New Tori Sun. The Death Plait ef Java. A magnificent kali mujah or death plant of Java, has been recently received here by Mrs. Madison Black. This specimen, which is the only living one that has ever been brought to this country, was sent Mrs. Black by her brother, Jerome Hendricks,- who went out as a missionary to the island. The kali mujah is found only in the volcanic districts of Java and Sumatra, and then but rarely. It grows from two to three feet in height, with long, slender stems, armed with thorns nearly ai inch long, and covered with broad satin-smooth leaves of a heart shape and of a delicate emerald on one side and blood red, streaked with cream, on the other. The flowers of the death plant are large, milk white, and cup-like, being about the size and depth of a large coffee cup, and having the rim guarded by fine brier-like thorn. The peculi arity in this plant lies in these flowers, which, beautiful at they are, distil con tinually a deadly perfume so powerful at to overcome, if inhaled any length of time, a full-grown man, and killing all forms of insect life approaching it. " The perfume, though more pungent, is as sickeningly sweet as ehleroform, which pushed this during the day, bnt showed J it greatly resembles in effect, producing cur friendship and good wilr by sending 1 ineensibility, but convulsing at the same In 1865 I went to Hong Kong in the Interests of a certain English manufac turer, and it was a year and a half later when I one day received a strange visitor and a strange proposition. I was in charge of a large warehouse, and one of my Chinese employes brought in the stranger, and explained : "I told him you would have nothing to do with him, but he insisted on coming." The stranger was a half-breed of some sort, gaunt, ragged, and evidently hard up. As soon as we were alone he intro duced himself as Semyo, and stated that ha was from the Island of Luzon, one of the group composing the Philippines. Be belonged to the native population, but had Spanish blood in his veins. He had once been a man of importance', but the Spaniards had robbed him bf his power and afterward" feared hie influ- eh'e to such a degree that he had first been imprisoned and afterward banished He had been carried on a native' craft to Japan, and then left ragged and penni less, and had been more than a year reaching Hong Kong. While he had only a few shillings in his pockets, he had neither come to solicit charity nor a a place to work. He had a straight. square business proposition tosubmit. If I anoroved of it. well and (food : If I did not, then he would be no worse off. nag, and Semyo said that she belonged went off to report, but was in no hurry to When he realized that S Danish influence to the coast service. She had tne ngm return, and soon alter aayugui. ia a keg of whisky to the camp, and by night the boss and his gang were al drunk as lords. As soon as it was dark four of us pulled ashore with Semyo, and he led us a straight trail to the treasure. It wu buried in two earthen jars against a fatt f wall, and one of the camp fires of the gang had been built within ten feet of the spot. We had the jars out and on board the bng in half an hour, and ainvestigation proved that Semyo had rather figured under the actual amount. We had neither seen nor heard anything to alarm us, but it appeared that we had been observed pulling back to the brig by a native boat, and that its occupants were meddlesome enough to board a Government felucc lying six miles above and report our action as auspicious. About 2 o'clock in the morning the felucca drooped down with the tide, came to anchor about two cable lengths awav, and sent a boat to board us on the quiet. They were foiled in this by the anchor watch, who stood them off until the brig was aroused. The jar3 were placed in the cook's galley, bejnyo secreted himself in the hold, and then the occupants" of the boat were invited to come aboard. The officer in charge was a Lieutenant, and he was in high dudgeon over his reception. He de manded our papers, inspected the cargo, and pointed to the carronade as proot that we were suspicious characters time the muscles of the face, specially those about the mouth and eyes, draw ing the former up into a grin. An in halation is followed by violent headache and ringing in the ears, whieh gives way to a temporary deafness, of ten total while if lasts. Other plants seem to shun the kali mu jah, which might be termed the Ishmael of the vegetable kingdom, for it growr isolated from every other form of vege tation, though the soil about it may be fertile. All insects and birds instinc tively seem to avoid all contact with it, but when accidentally approaching it have been observed to drop to the earth, even when as far from it as three feet, and, unless at once removed, soon died, the same symptoms as when o - etherized. Mr. Hendricks, who writes describ ing how he secured the specimen sent his sister, says he discovered it first by see ing a bird of paradise he was endeavoring to capture auve fall, stunned by the deadly odor of the kali mujah, and on examining the plant, though warned by the natives to let it alone, himself expe rienced the headache and convulsions which are its invariable results. Phila delphia Time. ' Buffalo: Bill wltt:pdiig to'.lf 4 ' " Weit'sbow came to Texas to engage buck- Mg-broncnos'dTOwb had headquarters atean- Antomoy and made known that he"wanfd'the- wildesl-"- horses and the boldest ridew.MWheat- " -ley went with half a dozen, ponies one . t -of which he- had trained himself . to a de-v f- moniac sort of skill in twbiliU rider; . ' - He sought out Buffalo Bill and that ,dis- ' Anguished' citizen, crpaed .by ?aB - j the cowboys into'wn, went over; toith " V race course to look it iwneauey ponies. Fivetf.them were broughVand tried by . various riders They, gaveysatisfactioa and were yuda&Aiym ' in last but acted so outrageously thai h . -could be neither saddled nor .mounted, . anu consequently cyiuu uvv of. "-'jjC' - h. -!.. Ttnffairt Rill offered a heavy bet, first ' f that Wheatley could not himself saddle --""V the black oony. and. " secondly that - he " r could not ride him. - The wager was the talk all over San Antonio in cowboy cir- ; cles. The next day the' untamed .beast appeared again on the'track, witixa large -j.Jj.-- n,in.fir nt innfatnHL and a tTOoA ddl Of t 'V money staked on the result. The odd j" -were strongly in favor of Buffalo Bill-:-:, . t The first thing that Wheatley did, was , to teach Buffalo Bill's men, whom be it nmt.l id th Pennine Texas cowboy . hold in a sort of contemTjt as not by anr" t means the centaurs they affect to be to - jr teach them a new trick. He placed first ' noon the fiery black a jacimore,' orhead-,-j.'r itall, with a nose piece that prevents the ' t mimal biting. There was still much to 4 - - io to get the saddle upon the beast and f ' ' to mount him. Wheatley applied the - lasso barichecko, another trick a new- Buffalo Bill. rtreperous horse, though nothing but a - bit of twine in a loop knot around the - horse's upper lip, the other end stretched f ind made fast to his ear as if to a belajr t it iniainoiy quiets an op , . 1 -V.-I ""VST . ins: pin. JLept cooi Dy tne lasso uan- , checko, the black suffered himself to oe--. , saddled and Wheatley mounted bim,V: thereby winning the first particular por- .... . ttti r - l ik. M. - - ticm ot tne oet. r uca laxriy iu oia mu- - die the lasso barichecko was removed and - -r tne Diaca pony oegan wuim vw - paralleled antics to throw his rider. :.Th Z Texas people declare they never saw -the v like, but Wheatley held his seat and con- -' r-. "" nnrd. Buffalo Bill offered to birr the ' black at double price' and to pay Wheat-'- ; ley double talary, if he would gowitb - ; , r him to Europe. The offer was declined. 7 and, as Bill would not buy tnanorse, n was taken out ana Bnos as ucmx uowj -j, to any other person. Detroit Free Pre. He bR. W. MOWLKES & CO. Have been apopomted by me aa my authorized scents at Rockingham; Any one desiring the water, or information concerning it.will .rplease apply to them. Bv permission; of Dri TC Smith liefer all parties to him .for, 1 information in reference to the watt r. . ?- " - r: ISSTor circulars. : testimoatals. ' or othtr information address meat Gibson Station, N. O.- -o- " "C7 Z. I. GIBSOK f - f Sole Agent for Richmond was plotting bis downfall, he made such preparations as he could to meet the in evitable. He was a very wealthy man, and he quietly went to work and con verted everything he could into money, gold dust and jewelry. He had got about $90,000 together when the ruling power pounced upon him, but not quick enough to get it. He had cached or buried his fortune, and though he was abused and threatened by the Spaniards for months he would not betray the secret. To get that money by his own individ ual efforts was utterly impossible. The moment he set foot on Luzon he would be arrested. He must have a partner who would furnish a ship and crew, and he would go along to mark down the spot where the treasure was buried. I looked upon the man with pity ana upon his project with contempt when he first began talking. When he was through I had agreed to think it over. There ia a fascination about buried treasure or5 a sunken wreck that will enlist capital to the detriment of honest speculation. I was noted as being a conservative man, and the idea of my going into any such venture would have been regarded by my friends as evidence of approaching men tal calamity. . I went to . the American Consul, and in a roundabout way he con firmed a part of Semyo's story. He had heard of him, and heard of Ills being de posed and banished. - Then I went down to the wharves, and almost the first man I ran against was the Yankee Captain of a brig called- "The John,' which ; was then having' some, repairs made...: She had been running in. the tea trade up and down the fellow Sea, but now, queerly enough, the Captain informed me that he thought of - taking a ' run over . . to the Philippines and try lor a cargo on bis anc that we had to board us and examine our papers while we had no fear of her on ou; own account, it was probable that Semyo would be recognized the moment they set trye on him. We had our plans laid be fore she fired a gun as a signal to us to heave to. Semyo was hidden in the fore peak, and we burned sulphur in the fore castle behind him. By leaving the scut tle open the fumes were drawn away from I the fugitive, and could be scented all over the bng. We hove to at tne oraer of the felucca, and were -presently boarded by a Spanish Lieutenant. He was a very pompous chap, and it was probably his intention to do a great deal Kuincr around, but as ne came over the rail a current of air carried him the smell of sulphur, and be exclaimed- "Good gracious, but is your brig on fire in the forecastle!" It was explained to nun lost a man of some malignant but tm; known disease, and were famigating the brig. Two or three of m were feeling badly, but hoped to escape tne aisease bv steaming in the vapor. - We were a trader, and offered to open tne natcnea and show our papers, but he was tn a hurry. He didn't even notice ,our car- ".. . 1 9 . ronade. but backed to the ran ana ae- scended to his boat, aayiagX Oh. you are doubtless all right, and V mn tnT loM BQ .mOTB uWIi'v AI for me. the services doea not aemana that I run the risks of erAdemfc; Two days later, we came to? anchor in the river opposite a spot pointed out by Semyo.' Tba bank : of the stream rough and broken but, thickly wooded Forty rodf inland was a highway running naraller with the Stream, but this hidden from us. Dn the far s ide of the highway was the ruin; of ano,nhurch boat with seven or eight men leave the f.i o -i ruill nn the river. The tide IQtuvva s r was still running and there was a fair breeze, and we determined to cut sticks. Semyo said the boat had gone to a village about four miles above, probably to con sult civil or military officials, and that if we were seized it would be all up with all of ue. The felucca, as we could plainly see, had two brass six-pounders, but we could not say that she would attempt to stop us. The minute we began to make ready we saw an alarm on her decks. Before we had the anchor off the ground she sent a boat with the command that we must wait the return of our papers. We weighed, however, let fall and sheet ed-borne, and while they were yelling at us we headed down the riverl Wewere well Out to sea when wef espieu vu. felucca following, and as she , sailed two feet to our one : she was within ' range before ten o'clock. If eapturcd now the Foed Lore. Cherries were known in Asia as far back as the seventeenth century. Garlic came to us first from Sicily and the shores of the Mediterranean. Asparagus was originally a wild sea-coast plant, and is a native of Great Britain. Nectarine received its name from nectar, the prin cipal drink of the gods. The tomato is a native of South America, and it take its name from a Portuguese word. Greengage is called after the Gage family, who first took it into England from a monastery in Paris. Parsley is said to have come from Egypt," and mythology tells us it was used to adorn the head of Hercules. Apples were originally brought from the East by the Romans. The rl ia indigenous "to-Great- Brit- v.k -r o ! ain. It is a curious" fact that while the names of our animals are of Saxon origin, Norman names are;: given to the flesh they yield. A The 'onion waa almost an object of worship with the Egyptians 2000 before the Cnristian era. y It first came from India. ITie cantaloupe ia native of America, and so called from tha name of a place near Rome where it w first cultivated; in Europe. 7 Before tho middle of the seventh century' tea was The word: biscuit- "twice baked.' because Spanish Government would b&fig H I QOt used in England and waaentirilyim for conspiracy.: We cracked on every- I known to the Greeks thin in the shape Ot sail, . loaded our carronade and paid7 no 'attention .to the felucca until positively obliged to. C Her gunnery was ao poor that wa wondered if her guns had ever been Cfired u before She had at least twenty shots at us, out the closest call' was'-when a ball , passed ihrmnrb the flving-iib. She wasu t over EirterfHse af Calfftrala Miners The enterprise of California mining . . t it! . . men seems unnmitea, ana, bouubi . daunted by repeated failures, their per severance overcame all obstacles. The . machinery now in use in the different, branches of mitting is unexcelled, and -every idea suggested by experience has : been worked in a practical form, which has established a reputation for the State ' that is appreciated the world over. Inf quarts mills the reduction of ores has . been brought down to a science, and the- gravel miner thinks nothing of turning river miles out of its course or working its bed with wing dams,whichever aeemi,:: most feasible at the moment. The feats of engineering skill encountered on all sides through the principal mining dis-: trictrof the State are in themselves suf ficient proof of the mdomitaMe grit of the successors of the typical pioneer miner, who reveled in the gold picked up with comparative ease on the banks of the Sacramento in the palmy days of",. '49. - Water has often to be"; brought H ; v from great distances, reoiiring at times J great engmeerJng akfll to overcome top- . ogTaphkal difncnltiea. f Great;; atoraso li.n Kjum rtirnt In the Sierras. commensurate with tne magniiuae oiw hvdranlic pen!&cfiShirtrt r- ' built in ; tho Tuba, Bear, Feather - and :;- American Rivers have an aggregate stor- ago capacity of "about 80,000,000 gaV v 7 lona. TheraareinaU about thirty'rnain. 2 dutches in riacerKevadaj . Butte and , H - Dorado " Counties,; the .; cost of eon ,f In conveying tha water many onginal i 5 devioef havabeen emplojeai 'None more - so than Mas bracket flume,whieh has been constructed in : Butto CountT-r along the 4'iii-tmiY'ma. the. is French "for' originally that waa the mode of entirely 1 0j lofty and expensiva trestle- Dispatch. ' - RlDtrlaii Accrttltirt. thatr the owner inland i The: rule Hrmndftrl hv mnninff streams are 'entitled - a 'quarter of a mile awayhenour Eng. I fc6 't' lish gunye sighted bispiece and brought j e of the riW ia not changed or down her entire foremastaad 1 everything with it. ' Jha mast was ;hit4 about i six feet abova the deck and ' broken off,' and the felucca at once fell off fiiterthe trough of the sea; and.: conf usiotti ;reigned ' su preme. We kept our ourset kn"owing that she could not follow us anomer ww, aad:whenclearjf the coast,- ;- headed -op T aVIa Ka nM M aiTXiDl WU ni - a ia mia uswj laso ww ' . run soma 300 yards, up tne canon, ting'against a perrndicular -waTl of ba-.: ..in. -v lAn tha face of which, 118 Mtwu iw).vo feet abova the bed of tba ravine and ztz feet below the top of the cliff, the flurae waacarried in brackets 'for a distance of. 486 fee. - The . brackets are made oli. modified by.the pecii3nW bent into the" form of an L. ' rfffht. feet. apart.1 and i own account, The , products .of, the J- wertpassing up and down: for Shanghai. Amvmg wiere, .tne ong ltf2 - ndCWrJilandsare ebonylogwood, gumwood, t " - that" wa Wt daU wrepamtedaad reiumed her big g : The ; v:j; im.i mim I v..i. .MatsU ftt soart.- aad were jnjSSOUI MTIj..lMi. v T l wnKMWi" "8; . . . nrd and aometimes niaterial changes I tMted to sustain a weight ori W th:ioiniriff land; The rule ii ap- Tha flume Tia four feet wide-and three ioct t?;.M tA lands adiomioff that river and I nnside maasuremeny ana n to changes suddenly madetne aunsu m t pacity ox ftwJBraw Z r such."" changes : were-the - result fi Jow and perpeptibie! 'accrttioha, w I . gon jt thembusli04 of joj .and
Rockingham Post-Dispatch (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 24, 1890, edition 1
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