Newspapers / North Wilkesboro News (North … / April 12, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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N Mewl, ORT ILKESBORO T. J. r.D'.iKHT- ON, Kdiu.r and I'ublixhr. DEVOTED TO THE VPBU1LDIXO OF NORTH WILKESEOIIO, WILKES COVXTY AXV THE MAGXIFICEKT VALLEY OF THE YA IW.iS VOL. III. NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1894. v V v I'M; m.i.i.as: in-i NC H. B. PARKER, Jr. Attorney at Law. AND KOTA'.'.Y ITUL1 North Wilkesboro, - - N. C. Will riirti' in hotli Rate and Federal Court. Spt:iiil attention to luttf r. R1T. HACKETT, Attorney-at-Law, WILKESBORO, - N. C. t. n. riM.rv. it. l. (insist:. FIXI.KY & GK15ENE. Attorneys - at - Law, WILKESBORO, N. C. $,, Will t.rn:i:fi iii nil thfl Courts. Collections a itjirciuity Keul cMaienold on commission. Dr. Geo. Doughton, PHY3I0IAH I SURGEON, North Wiin-esooro, N. C. OFFICE at RESIDENCE. W. P. Ilorton, ffi. D. t'h) !! mm rgo. North WilUceboro, - - - N. C. AM. CMXA I'UoM I'TI.Y ATTENDED, It AY Ott MOI1T, 1-3 UTon tci: at nrswzxer. Dr. H. R. Surgeon Dentist. Office - IDC137-3 : -Fmru lsrt to Kill of EACH MONTH. ( fllco over Miller l'.ros.' store. 2-lM2ru Dr. L. A. Hanser, SUEGE017 DENTIST, Oliice : in : Hotel : Gordon. I '. lirxt Mate rial CrfcJAll ' i 'or.- fi hi ra n teal. lr. llnuvr i n r.i lnr.te if tlie P.. C. P. 8 Jl.illiup r'. raid nlli-r hi vro'w''0"' ser vi.Tt t i tli; iwoiilo f North Wllkeaborw mid Kiirrnnii'.inir nmntry. 'in be found in I, ix a x t!io lif't wctk In rucl) month. W. F. HOWARD, Mi Witiim, N. C. All kinds of repairin-j done with neatness and dispatch. A ill he found at Turner" Furniture Store. Guarantee sat isfaction. have opene I a first-claps meat market in the rear of L. . l):ivi' store; and will keep 0:1 hand a nice line of all kinds of SEATS, : OYSTERS, : ;'5"Givc Me a Call.X! G. V. ADAMS. Sc. T. M. BUTNER, AVATCIIM AKEU1&- JEW ELEIi Main Street, - - fflkin, iV. C. I prepared to do all kinds 01 Watch, Clock, and Jewelry Ho pairing. Fine Watch Kepairing n Specialty. KatiM'.M-iioii guaranteed In every tmrtWIar Anything in v..y Sin ordered jr.mi!y at tli low-rot irie Mwtailtln. It will '.tv vo:i tn see rua Ufort buying Wuh or Jew elry. KY'- PATENTS. J. R. LITTELL, .wtumry and Councellor in Patent, Trade-Mark and Copyright Cases, Oj:'to !'.Url:t t'dlir. Wahinton. l. C. '.?!!- v:ir' cTirionce. AMFRt tl. S nn.i l-'ti;vj' I'Btonl. f.W ICATS. n t wit n nrminir umlrr Ilie tnt kt t'.v ntrrfullv j'rujMM-iiti! I. M "J r' "I KIM A " I-." m-i-orditl oil tln .Write ft-r liifornnt''. ;-,T"l'l 'ii r-i-r!t of nioilcl orVi-tcli of In Vfiiiioii, I a-lriM u to putiMitahility without HOIGOfflD Hew Beef Market! SOME DAY. I laow not when the day tha'J ba, I know not where our erei mar mnt, What welcome, jrou mar glTe to , Or will roar words be ! or tweet. It may not be till years liar pawied. Till eye kre dim and treucs gray Tbe world U wide bat, love, at lat Our bauda, oar hearta, mutt meet eome day. THE MATCH LIGHTER. When tbe pretty Margarita was confronted with the necessity of choosing between her two lovers, Don Migusl Gomez, the rich over ?er of the San Adrian mine, and Manuel Campos, the poor miner, aho unhesitatingly chose the latter, for something within her whispered: 'Of what good is money without happiness r Riches fly away, but a a good heart cheers us all along the journey." On the day of the wedding Don Gomez, the rejected, became intoxi cated with the spirit of revenge. Forthwith he proceeded to the home of Juan Pedraza, to whom he offered a position in the galera of the mine at $20 a week if he would follow the happy bridegroom some evening aa he came down tho mountain and push him over tho precipice at Rin conada. The job was to be done neatly and to look as though it had been an accident. Now, Juan was lazy, drunkcu, good for nothing and all that, but he was not tho man to commit murder. Gomez therefore went away disap pointed, while Juan proceeded to re late what had passed to his wife, Anita, swearing her to solemn se crecy, lor he reared tne overseer and would not' for worlds have this mat ter get beyond his household. Alas for a woman s oath ! A day had scarce passed ere Margarita knew all, and had she not been dis creet enough to keep the secret from her fiery young husband thero un doubtedly would have been blood shed. At first she was very much dis turbed and exceedingly anxious, but as the weeks and mouths went by and Manuel's position at the mine c n- tinued to improve eno dcenutl ti:at the overseer had forgotten. It ..as not so, however, for the Latr; d of the man still amoU'err and waited but an opportunity to break forth. One day his chanco came. On the side of the mountain there was a little notch or shelf, from tho center of which gushed a cool epring. The sides were covered with foliage, and overhead spread tho branches of a large tree, sheltering the spot from the burning rays of the 6un and in viting the traveler to rest in its re freshing shade. Manuel was seated here humming a gay song while he waited the com ing of his little wife with his noon tide meal. Presently over the rise of the hill appeared her bonny head. and soon she was standing by his sido opening her basket and setting before him its tempting contents. "You are early to day. Manuelito. How is thatP she asked, for it was not his wont to be there before her. "There is to bo another blast to day," he replied, "and the overseer wishes to have it fired while the men are at dinner." "Santa Maria!" she exclaimed, while a shade passed over her face. "Oh, my Manuel, why will you not give up this dreadful duty t My life is one of constant terror for you. Bet tor to be a simplo miner at t G than risk your life as a match lighter at $16." "There is no danger, my littlo heart," replied the young fellow. "So thought Pedro Bravo, and so, but three months ago, thought Juan Valdez. Ah, when I think of poor Inesita weeping over his mangled body I grow very fearful, Manuel." "They went to their work with brain muddled with aguardiente. It is not so with me, sweetheart, and besides I hope some time soon to bo captain of a mine, and who knows but that I shall ono day be an ad ministrador an overseer and a rich man like Don Miguel, whom you re jected." The young wife pleaded no fur ther, but sat on the turf and watched him as he ate. "Don Jayme, the English director, arrived this morning," Manuel said presently. "He seems not over pleased with the working of the mine. It is whispered that the over seer is likely to lose his place." "Ah, that is good nows indeed. replied Margarita, her face brighten ing. "I have always feared him, ManueL and hate to see you in his power." "Why, littlo wife, Don Gomez is very kind to me. But for him I should not now be match lighter. But, there, my time is up, sweet heart, and I must return to my du ties," and so with her kiss on his lips and her warning to bo careful ring ing in his ears he went merrily up the mountain. A sharp angle in his path brought hm to the Rinconada, and little did he think as he glanced down its sheer descent of 500 feet that the en mity of Gomez would have him ly ing at the bottom a mangled corpse. Reaching the galera, or great shed, aurroundiDg the mouth cf the mine, he found the director, the overseer and several others awaiting his ar rival. "You at least seem to be punctual, my man," said the director, glancing at his watch. "I hear from the men that you are very careful also." ( "Aye, too infernally careful," mut tered Don Gomez, not hearing which Dou Jayme continued: "I trust tho complaints hitherto made among the townspeople and proprietors about the accidents which happen here will now have no fur ther cause to exist It is well that wo havo some one in whom we can place confidence." These words, bo sweet to Manuel, were to Don Gomez gall and worm wood. He took them aa littlo leS than his dismissal. But bitterer than this was the thought that his defeat was his old rival's triumph. Then awoke to full flame the smoldering ; fire of his hate. His swarthy face grew livid, and his eyes flashed with a baleful fire. Having put on his conical hat, with a lighted candle socketed at the top, Manuel stepped into the bucket and was lowered down the shaft The signal for ascent was the shaking of a small rope, one end of which was held by the match lighter and the other by the overseer at the pit's mouth. Two well trained horses were attached to the raising windless and stood ready to draw the bucket swiftly up tho shaft. On this de pended the safety of the match light er from the effects of the explosic-11- Silence reigned, and the horsemen stood waiting for tho overseer's tig nal. "Now! Now!" shouted Doi; Go mez, and instantly the horses vvere loosed and the circling appara.us quickly drew the bucket to tho sur face. "Great God! it's empty," cried the director, paling beneath the sudden shock. "Quick! Quick, men! Down with it as you value human life !" The anxious men needed no urg ing. Before he had finished his sen tence the bucket was again on itj way downward. It had proceeded only a dozen yards or so, however when the roar of the expleion wr i heard, and a cloud of smoke and du: t wa9 driven violently up tho shalt and filled the galera. When this 1 ad cleared away, the men stannl at t ach oL- itn faces pale with horror und dismay. "You villain !" cried tho director to Gomez. "Why did you do thid mur derous thing?" "He shook the rope. As I live, the rope shook in my hands. I am not to blame." The teeth of the man chattered, and his framo trembled with nervous agitation, while his eyes studiously avoided tlioso of his interrogator. Without another word Don Jayme 6eized a shovel and sprang into the bucket Two or three miners fol lowed, and they were lowered to the bottom of the shaft, where they ect to work removing the debris cf tho explosion, expecting at every dig of the shovel to unearth the mangled body of the unfortunate young m?.n. Leaving them engaged in their hu mane occupation, let us seo what has actually becomo of the object of their search. Manuel had just light ed the match and turned toward tho bucket when he saw it shooting away up the Bhaft Instantly tho murder ous treachery of his old rival flashed upon him. A terrible death stared him in the face. Suddenly he remembered that yes terday the workmen employed iu this shaft had come upon a small side cut or passage which they had net yet had time to explore. With eyes mode keen by the horror of hi posi tion he peered eagerly around, and soon he espied an opening in the rocks three feet over his head and just large enough to admit hi body. With a desperate spring he clutched tne jaggea edge, drew nimseit up oad through and rushed headlong down the passage. On he sped for life, expecting at every moment to hear the thunder of the blast and to be dashed to earth by the rush cf air or smothered in the pent up smoke. buddeniy ne saw mat tne passage terminated abruptly in a theet of wa ter which spread three feet below, Unable to check his impetuous course in time, however, he plunged over the sheer edge, and with the roar of the explosion ringing in his cars he sank beneath the surface. Figuring that he could not be more than eight or ten vigorous strokes from the nearest margin, he struck out in what seemed to him the most promising direction. Encountering nothing, he turned very carcfnlly and swam twice the distance in the opposite direction. Again he failed to touch ground, but deeming it better to keep straight on than to waste his strength in swimming around at random he did so, and aft er traversing what seemed to be fully a quarter of a mile he finally touched the farther walL But alas! t rose perpendicularly far above his head and offered no promise of escape. As he coasted along testing its height by splashing water against it and finding no appar ent decrease in its height, his heart grew faint within him. Chilled with the ice cold element and scarcely able to move his exhausted limbs, he was on the point of giving up, when, reaching out his numbed fingers for a final touch of the ' cruel wall, he found that they encountered va cancy. Next moment he found ho was standing in apasaago about six feet square, the floor of which, being slightly below the level of tbe water, formed the bed of a tiny stream. While resting to recover his strength Manuel began to think that perhaps after all his troubles mijht turn out to his decided advantage. The San Adrian mine v.-.-.s over 00 years eld. It has yielded an im mense fortune to its early proprie tors, and then for Eome good reason had been abandoned. There was a tradition of aa ancient tocaboa or adit which had been driven at a vast expense through tho mountain to ef fect the drainage of tho mine. Dur ing tho many years of tho ciao'a abandonment this adit had cf courso been neglected. lt$ external open ing had bocorno closed, ao that now nothing was known of it but the mere fact of its existence. Should the passage in which he now 6tood be tho lost adit it would savo tho present proprietors an immense ex pense. Cheered by this hopo, he advanced carefully along tho vaulted way, wading ankle deep in water. As ho proceeded -the hope grew to convic tion, and forgetting that he was not yet out of danger he laughed aloud. The sound was echoed back in buc!i an uncanny way as fairly to startle him. He had walked, as he judged, about 400 yards when ho reached a barrier, a mass of earth and stoues which he at once set to work to re move. Plying his long knife vigor ously, and caring nothing for torn and blending hands, ho at length came to a largo flat stono. Over turning this with a strong push, he was temporarily blinded with a flash of clear sunlight which poured in upon him. Breathing a prayer of thanks to his protecting saint, he toro his way out and looked around him. "Santa Maria!" he exclaimed in sur prise, "who would have thought itt the very spot where my littlo wife j meets me with my noontide meal. I Here have we been hundreds of tirns :-ihiu reach of our fort'c and did not know ii. " Meantime the news of tho accident had spread through tho village, and j at length it had reached the ears of ' Margarita. In a frenzy of agonized excitement sho hurried up tho moun tain. Don Jayme, after an hour's fruit less search, had just reached the shaft when ho was accosted by the frautic young wife. "Where is my husband? sho ex claimed in peremptory t oucs. "Oh, I know it is all a joke to frighten me. What have I dono that yo'i should torment mo in this way Tell me, scuor, in God's name, where is my husband? "Alas, senora, I would to heaven that it were nothing moro than a joko," replied the director. "It is unfortunately too true." "Dead! Dead! Then ho ban been murdered J" she cried. "It was novcr his own fault that ho wes killed. My Manuel was no sot, no reckless fool. Show me tho murderer that I may call for vengeance upon him !" "My poor girl, thero is no mur derer," taid the director soothingly. "There wan carelessness, but no crime." "I'll not believe it!"' she ccrcamed, the hot creole blood flushing in her cheeks, and her eyes flashing fire. "My Manuel was no sot, no madman to throw away his life like Juan Val dez. If he is dead, I accuse Miguel Gomez of his murder." Here she pointed to the overseer, who cowered beneath her glanco. "Look at tho villain, look in his face and judge. It was but a year ago that he offered tho curgador Pe draza the position of captain of the galera if he would como behind Manuel and push him over the Rin conada. Speak, Juan Pedraza, as you shall answer to the great God for it, is it not so?" Juan Pedraza, a wretched looking creature, with haggard face and bleary eyes, croaked out a trembling answer in the aCirn-ativc. Then en sued a painful silence, which was presently broken by Don Jayme. "Gomez," he said, "thia is a serious charge. It is not for mo to judge, but I feel it my duty to place you under arrest Here, Perez, and you, Francisco, tako charge of the ac cused and see that ho doc-3 not es cape." Tho growing anxiety which had been depicted on tho face of tao over seer now culminated in an expression of fierce determination. "Stand back, you dogs!'' he yelled, drawing his knife as they approached him. "I am innocent cf this man's death, but 1 11 not remaiu to have my life sworn away by mad and drunk en scoundrels. Out of tho way. both of you! Back, I say!" Before a hand could be laid upon him he darted through the door and fled swiftly down tho mountain. On he sped, ever and anon half turning his head to 6se if he was pursued. This he was doing when he neared the Rinconada, and from around the corner ahead came the exhausted match lighter, toiling wearily up to ward the mine. The sight of Gomez approaching at full speed with drawn knife brought Manuel to a sudden stop, so that when the guilty wretch turned his eyes full ahead . he saw the be draggled, motionless form of hi3 vic tim, with pale face and torn and bleeding hands, standing right iu his path and staring at him with an ex pression of ghastly intensity. For an instant Gomez stood gazing at the 6ight before him; then, with a terriblo shriek, he flew to the edge of the precipice and dashed headlong into the awful abyss. George H. Nutly in Boston Herald. PATAGONiAN BADIIS. Bamedtr l'rl WhrnTliry A re 111, la Spit .' Wlilrh Thrr Li. The flispenrariiry of Patagonia knows b it two remedies for the dis eases cf children animal skins and common yellow clay, lxth to bo used at tho Earn-; time, whether the dis ease be in tho head or feet of tho lit tle sufferer. On being called to 6ce a Eick child tho Patagouian doctor takes with him a tight s;:in bag, opened at tho larger end. Clay is plentiful everywhere. Whilo como member cf the family makes c thick batter of this yellow earth tho inedieino man sits staring at tho sick child or else shakes a painted rattle in an idiotic fa&hion before the little one's face. When tho plaster of clay is ready, the child is smeared from head to foot with it and then slipped feet first into the bag before mentioned. Should tho child ceaMJ crying before this proceeding has been carried out it is thought to be a bad 6ign an omen that the dovil is still lurking in the child, but is keeping quiet for fear of punishment On the the other hand, should tho child become calm as he is being bagged the parents and medicine man think that the prince of dark ness has left the body of the child in order to escape imprisonment In the event of this last named contin gency arising the skin bag is immedi ately closed and tied. The doctor then opens another bag and throws three pebbles and some serpents' teeth into it These are well shaken for a moment the idea being to got the devil to jump into the bag after tho charm, whereupon it is instantly closed, tied and sunk in the nearest body of water. After this rite hits been carried out to th letter tho bag in which th cla !esmeared child has been depos ited ma'y Ll rpencd. If the litaono has not already teen smothered b being confined in the bag during llr3 incantations of thy medicine man. it is thoroughly washed and wrapped in a clean, warm skin, the hide of a "muley" white bull killed in the new of the moon being preferable. Strange as it may seem, this treat ment usually cures, the water being a prime factor in restoring health, no doubt. Should death ensue tho doctor tells the bereaved parents that two devils were after the child, and that all the medical science in the world is not equal to the task of coping with two of the imps of tho infernal regions. Bow Bells. The editor of Am Urnuell, a Ger man folklore paper, gives over 150 specimens of secret languages collect ed during the past three years. To bo sure quite a number of these are cot languages of children, as some are of thieves, peasants, secret socie ties, etc., but who knows but that many of these may have their founda tion in child languages? In this list I find "Gibberish," The Black Slang," "Tho Rhyming Slang," "Medical Greek," "Potter's Latin," "Dog Latin," "Robber Lan guage," "Goose "Language," "Crane Language," "Zither Language," "Bob Language," "Erbsen Language," "Sa la Language," "Schu Language," "H Language," "B-, P-, W-, O-, M- and F- Languages." There are many other names be sides these. Thee names, in somo instances, seem to be simply arbi trary, but many arise from the use of the languages or from somo dis tinguishing feature. Keeping: Young-. It is a noticeable fact that some people get old very quickly and others very 6lowly tako their time to it so to 6peak. It is very exasperating, too, when you are aging at the rate of a year or two a month, to see Bome body else going along leisurely, seem ingly as young in spirits as they were 10, 20, SO ycara ago. If you would avoid the rapid down hill process, keep your mind ana neart young. Gather about all the young people you can, gain their love by interest ing yourself in their plans and pleas ures, invite little parties of them to spend evenings with you or join you in little excursions, surround your self by youth and devote yourself to making young people happy. But don't make the mistake of im itating youthful ways. Your heart may be as young as a girl's, whilo your manner has the dignity of years. Philadelphia Times. nia Conscience. Fierce as he was, the infamous Chief Justice Jeffreys did not always escape the sting cf a repartee. He went to a country assize enco where an old man with a great beard came to give evidence, but had not the good fortune to please the judge, so he quarreled with his beard and said, "If your conscience is as large as your beard, youll swear anything." The old blade was nettled and brisk ly returned, "My lord, if you go about measuring consciences by beards your lordship has none." New York Led ger. A Heaui Girl. "I believe," said Mr. Plaine cheeri ly, "that the very best face possible should be put on everything." "So do L" assented tho girl he was talking to as she looked straight at him, "but the Creator doesn't always do it" and Mr. Plaine pondered deep ly upon Ler woria. Hallo. Stone irin. A 6treet fight that interests icop1o istheearvir.gof the ornamental work i of the fronts of lui! lnnjiin course of construction. Much moro stono i I used in buildings now than formerly and much moro carving it dune, and j a grsat deal of it is of a much moro , elaborate character. One firm of cut : etono contractors in this city employs j moro tlian 50 stono carvers. r;tno stono carving is etill done in the yard, but a large proportion of it is done after tho stono is in placo in tho building. The cost is ulmut tho same, but it appeurs to bo tho fashion now adays to carve tbe stone after it is in place, and on large jobs it makes a great saving of time. Models of the carvings are made at the stonecutter's yard by an expert modeler and stone carver from tho drawings of the architect. These models are made first in clay for the architect's inspection. They arc then cast in plaster. Tho plaster model stands near the carver in the yard or lies near him upon the scutluld on the front of a building. Stono carv ers get from $1.50 to $5.50 a day for eight hours' work. They are cxjiert workmen they rarely make a mis take. Philadelphia Press. Soaped I'd try. A correspondent, who confesses to an unquenchable devotion to pie, asks with sincere apprehension whether a certain European practice, to which he refers, has yet been re ported as in voguo this side of the Atlantic. It appears that continen tal bakers are in the habit of mixing soap with their dough to lighten their bread and pastry. The quan tity of Boap used in fancy article:. like waffles, fritters, etc., is nnu h larger than in bread. Tim soap i t dissolved m water, some oil is ad , , ' i iu auu me miAi are, r.iier ir-iu i 2A. ll A . fi 1 ' well S5j$j;cd, is nddwl tojje Hour. TLo cruiubof the .MM!-fiiud-. l.v this ! rrocess is said toTw-hter arid more ; 'i ngy than the ordinary loaf. If the American pastry cook has al ready adopted this Belgian trick of soaping dough, he has saved an im menso amount of uneasiness by keep ing tho fact to himself. Lut ;no t men will occasion :dly cat far 1cm wholesome substances than step with complacency and even with jmsto, and this seems to be one at those cases where 'tis folly to bo wis;?. Exchange. Too Eager Fawlmncn. Is it not nearly time that nomo re striction was put upon thedi. position of surgeons in this town to slice open their fellow creatures in the interest of the complaint called apimmicitis? That late absurd and lamentable op erations have cost the lives of us ful citizens will strengthen the opinion which begins to be pretty generally current that appendicitis is epidemic in the minds of tho metropolitan sur geons, and that human life would lo safer in New York if the ujicratiou was forbidden except by order of a court. The public knows altogether too much about appendicitis, cud the doctors altogether too little. Two fifths of the genuine cases result from scare in the patient, and ono or two more fifths of all tho cases ex ist only in the imagination of tho surgeons. The cure of such legiti mate cases as are left is net worth what it costs. Appendicitis i played out The invention of tho operation for it has changed a very rare malady into a common and dangerous dis ease. Life. Bunted With a Decoy 1'arrot. Uno 01 tuo most reuiarxaoio c acters of the lower river in the days was a hunter boalmanua: Hainan ljasx. or somo mason in T- .1 - O gave up boating ana took to hunting. living in a snug cabin on the Arkan sas river just where a large stream, the Big Mammello creek, empties into it His sole companion was a large green parrot, to whose educa tion he devoted a great part of his time, and which lecame a wonder. He taught the bird to imitate the gobbling of turkeys and tho quack ing of ducks, and thus the parrot acted as his decoy. Tho bird seem? 1 to take delight in the sport too. It never made a mistake and quac!:c-d when it ought to have gobbled, but seemed to understand the kind of game its master was after and culled accorumgiy. at. uouis uwuet.aio crat 1 - 1 ca. t . 11.1 t . - Ilalrplna. Hairpins are made by automatic and very complicated machines. The coiled wire is put upon drums and becomes FtraighteLed as it feeds it self to the machine. It passes altr.'; until it reaches two cutters, which point the ends at the seme tin.e that they cut it to the length required. This piece of wire then slips alcii j the iron plate until it reaches a slot, through which it is pressed into tho regular shape. The hairpins are then put into a pan and japanned, after which they are heated in an oven with a temperature of from 31)0 to 400 degrees. Yankee Blade. What We Owe to Cookery. Edward Egglestou says it was th? cookery of the middle ages that led to the discovery of America. "TL-j rage at that time for spices for fla voring purposes," said the doctor iu a lecture, "sent the Portuguese south to i their discoveries in Africa and sent Columbus in quest of India." San Francisco Argonaut . r THE -SNiF'U''1 Tr. Kill-In Trll Vnv the, Hnfti-Ti t. r Muy '.'t- Cured. ' It is cbvii.u. i-i the f:rt t t it i of the jrre-i - t mr' up every l';r : jr-v cold. The. fiv-l ii..)a:ct .1 wool should .Vj v.-nvln shin. This is tho riW. le-t permits the- norma; i tho skin to pro,jres;v 7 thickness of nndorv.-or. used the you: aroand, th protcetion beiirj made in nal apparel. The bend cover . bo light and well ventilate! allow the escape of hrut. " (,' should bo taken every moi warm room, and tho sum s rubbed until ruddy and war; den exposure to cold should ed, and the child should f tlm w:i" of a draft. 1 K L: I us now f.tudy Vie tr-.v the disease itself. ilheca;di. cipl" is eleaalinets. Keop th cavities ci jr .and do net : H secretions to accumulate arou: nostrils. Tho cavities six. ' sprayed out threo or four tha with bland anti:pticbohuio( simplest of these is ou of salt, which is not only clean: soothing to the mucous mot. Tho lCKt solution, however, if bination of listcnne. boras, and water. Solutions of t;:!.: phato of zinc or nitrato c i should le reserved for tho v affection. The difficulty in feeding nr. once combated by spo ua ' whiotyiuiust be done regulo -y, . is imossil.le in any olb .- '; child at tho breast to re ive noKfribmcnt Tbe temtx-ra' Btsne ro hould lie niMUt T grees, iuTSlcUiM teiiip raturi stTTald' W . in i j Trees, dose of castor oil at tl3 , attack oft :n l' ssenu its VI has a bem licial influent '..-. courso of ihe disease, !;n ..'1 - j, there bo any tendency t v: i.t V stipation. For tho chi min; i f?Vcn other mere powerful Mcais r;t t used, and them should be lef : t t' . skill of the physician. Dr. Ju5 Wj.llaco liheiu in Babvhood. L . X Hart Ila.l .... -.-'i. Hero is a story fromli-'. tvia whi -h iould perhaps lo take ". . ' gr.u shoul of salt To a praad yours tigo at B dinner pvjffc i'Tj r grt .'iv. !;;i'a'lo by an iugtvht. personage to a Liimn irs of disrup tion visiting t capital several nifniiK-r skuptschira, or nali:iul pa had been invited. On ot guests, a W"ll known Prencl cier, happened to K-.wt 1 1 viaa M. i and v.uc2.sidc;J. verted by hi q-u.ru -.yr :1 dealing with certain' aitribu , " ilization ohviously un0mili f Toward tho conclusion of ' c . tho Frenchman selected n V froni a small tray lying and politely jiassed ' L t r c to bis neighbor, -vho, ho v ' emptorily declined his cUV ' ' ing: . " "No, Hospxlia. IX-t1 eaten 10 of the thu, a:I more. Trt-tty American r-eminl : i. ' The tvno of hw . of women number Fifth tuall, hold tn and dree general ca inculcation ' the United hcates large percentage of on .rain , c abroad , vf'.l and women. A trm prove the correctness tions. New York I.I;: i' these &sM'-r-! and ExprcK- ' oll.-.a I !i.:om. j Among t!iu...ux I::;":;a::s Vr. ! mon custom e;;hts. Whcnt.r v ily lxrrows a kettle from an u v n i. . - ; is expeefU wiicn l!io j turned a small portion ;eiti :-is ta- of t; foL4 that has been cooked in it vi)I be left ! in tho bot tom. Shci-ld th;-; -liUmi bo disregarded by any one. ihiipfi -I : on would never bo abl-'i vo iknor again, n: tho owner must a vf.p know what has been cooked iu her kettie. A white woman on on 3 occa sion returned a scoured kt Jr in tending to teach a lesson m clc i ness, but her act l.ecmiw the fed . tho cam pas a fresh ex ..ili;? o C. mcuun .i of tho whitea. New i; 1c T 1. ... i . v 1 ill. 1. , The Numlx-r 40 Iu t:-.o l".i..tiJ The lain that produce 'I Thyf fell for -1: 1 t'..:vs and l'j nn-h . after it cei -ed it ves -1.) da ."j Noah o;encd tho ark. Mot days on ;h mountain tin- si-i;s f-rs 'Tit 4') dnvy . - A -x . matters ia Canaan 1 their report. Elija!1 in the wilderness, Iho people of Nii which to repent. of Jesus is kne" 4 V .1 . js con less - - a of pp:-ti-1 f phw favdv a s i tho New T" public, f iir. ': .-.Soti thi r,,;f I . I ; " K )
North Wilkesboro News (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 12, 1894, edition 1
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