Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Nov. 6, 1880, edition 1 / Page 1
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Jm ran into it. The engine of the reac train which by the way, wag the "U. M. Mjll- r," h qVBMBER 6, 1880. waa considerably damaged, (he toiid U having been thrown from thef" a steep embankment,-' -7" 2evotcd to the Protection of Home and the Interests of the County. Oastoxia, Gastox-County, N.'C., Saturday Morning, November Qjth;,' 1-880. Vol. L W IV V VV" 7! A .rv- ;.'' - r . i A picture memory brings I" me: 1 look across tlie year and we Myself beni.le my tnotiier's kn.:e. I fee) h-r gentle hand restrain -; My stlfirth modes, mid know again A ehild's blind sense of wrong and pain. It jt wiser now, a man gray grown, My childhood's needs are better known, My mother's chastening love I own. Gray grown, hat io our Father's sight. A child still grouping for the light -To read His wo ks and ways aright. 1 bow myself beneath His hand ; That pain itself for Kood was jla lied, ' I trust, but cannot understand. 1 fondly dream it need mu t be That, as my mother dealt with me, So with His children deuleth He I wait, anil trust the end will prove Tlmt here and there, below, above, The chastening heals, lhe"paiu is love 3 - , W. G , Whitlier. THE MINISTER'S OLD COAT. Minister's sous are very apt te turn out badly,' mi id 1 to the gentleman wu sat unset to me in the car. We had met io the Tuin bound for Chicago, and hud struck up n acquaintance. lie Biopped me with his hand on my arm ejvl with ua earnest look which I shall never for. et. ' I paused at once in what I was saying, - and it seemed 'for a moment almost is if the rushing traty' had stopped to listen iLet intWr'WH jo Jory,' he eaid. ' J 1cnow.it is a common belief that mil isuutf una are wild, but this is b causw peoplu talk about the bad ones, while those who turnout well are takeu as a mutter of course. 1 gathered slat iatics about them oi.ee, and found out of a thousand sous of " " ""ministers, there were very few who did not B,row up iwlul and induBtn'ous men.'.. "But wbat Ss yaor" story J' i asked, set itiliiiBf uck in my neat. 1 , W suid he, ,it Ugius with a cIush lgHita Bmo"?' uaa yi-ifrgu. : , , iiumUr td old college IriemlN had jatbred Y in tiicr evenii gfor tla ir annual re union. : Jt inong thim Wat the rich merchant J ' K. . : lVillieton ihap yiu liavt luard of liiiu and a poor puhtor of a ctiuntry church in Eloibapk villugv, nut in western N. -Mat-faCliusetta, whose ni.me asjjlae. A Oi,d many f the class had diud, and a lt n .oi 'i elderly men, who ere left It It siion tender tl ao cvir before Uiwurd tacit oUiW, .a tlu v thought of the bright old '. .-'''Art .t (larvuid. and how eoon no one would be itft co earth whui-hured in that -. happy time. '. ' 'Th dirluB came and went, tliffifihte glowed brillinlitly, and at h-8l Uie friends rtw quite gay. But the .render fueling 1 " (have p' ken of would e me uppciiiuioet ni.w nd then J und in one of tla- 4tuii- nio inentt Wdliatun'i eye whs atitraoted ly -.. something gliHtening about the c'oat which Jiis friend Blake, who sat next to him, Iliad on. V . He hoked closer, and saw that the ; black cloth of which it waa made had been "jpuy.nso thin ami smooth tiat it was very ttiuy . v ' V II. Bluke,' rtid he kindly, taking Jhold on liia friend's nrui cintelly (which the S"nn bow hadn't thought of doing be fon), 'how his ttic woild grne with you lately ?' ' . .'B'ake oa'arally bad a saj) and thought ful face; but he looked around quickly with a warm rmile. 'No need to ask,' he said laughinglf. You can read the whole, ctory on my tact. This old coat is a tort of u balmice isheet, which shows ny financial condition to T.' 'Then he spoke pjflre seriously, noding. it is a pretty bard lite, AVilliston, that ol a c untry parson. I don't complain of my lot, though 1'xn sometimei distrmed formy family. The fact is, thia coat I've cot on la hardly fit for a man of my profession to ppeur in; but I'm going to send my boy, t5am, to Harvard, this jear, and must pinch here and there to do it. I really pught to be 'thankful though, that I can gt such advantages forilin by a few little sacrifices of jersooal appearance aud con yeoieuce' D o't yoo g've a thought to your coat, . 'Old Mlow,' returned Williston. 'Nobody who knows you will ever imagine that the heart inside of it ia threadbare, however the garment may look.' JJ ake was pleased with his kindly ex jtsioo; and botVmen after thai exclisqjje of coi.fldence filthappur. But ftmoilhe vjriou incidents of the evening, AtX One 'most lasted out of the minster's mind ' . lj tl V dnj. f bin It ltartJ for !ai- bunk. Spedy as his return wits, however, voinetliiig meant for him bud got Wo hif dia'ltiulioii tn ft re Mm. Ilf wan a Utter, Taking it tip lie tin ki opes the ei velofie, mid round inside a low woi.uVfrotu -Willig-t nrviiih a ekek lor $500 to d fruy the lirKt yeur'fc college ixpeLKSol hie old cluea mui. 's son. ' You are a stranger to me, sir,1 suid my traveling toinpanion at this poiot, ' but I tl ink you will appreciate) the filling witU which poor Mr. Bluke stood in hiisdiiigy study in the old larm pursoiiHge, holding thut ktier in h s hands and lift his tuithlul eyes in thankfulness to God.' Yts " 1 replied. 'Williston did jnct the light thing, too. Aid dow was it ? Did tbeeoufchow that be den-rved the help?" My a' qnaintai.ee looked away Irorn me at the rich country through which we were paRsing. Then jhe said : ' ' S um Bluke was a goodnatund, obedi ent leiiow enough, ui.d was greatly pleusid to have the ixpense of bis first college year tukeu fr'm hisfuther's shoulders ; but ba seusgol'Auty didn't go very far. Mr. Bluke bowglit a iiew coat ai d Sa n entered Har vio that full, and here mutters sttppid fur awhile. A fieehnmn has a good deal to harn, as you know; but I think tie chief thing Sum leuri.ed that term was the great diffeiei.ee that there is between Har vard and a little village like Elnihni.k and the great difficulty of workiog and piling at me wne time. Here he had tiiciety meetings io attend, and roQpi8.f hie own with a chum, where a goo deal of smoking wus done by himself and tLia friends. And theo there aras boee tall, ioto which it ap peared indispensable frr tle bonor of the cluss that he should enter actively, on ac count of bis strong legs, wonderful wiiid and ground batting. He could not refuce to go to lx ll ealie occasionally, with hit richer cimpanions. Hum tcck a natural interest iu the socjety of young ladies, toitf and Lad given op seme time to its culii vatiou. lie also thought a mi derate amount of practice in the gymnasium wat ileiiab!e to prevent his health tunuLing down uudtT the caufiacmeut of ttady. So, on the whole, the actual work that he did iu die colli ge .course was not vry esten siv. '.TI'ididut4J,'em to b'(p any very bad effect until -well along iiathe winter- when thf habit of shirking work had grown et stiong,.. without noticing it, that lie' fell easily into raiding novels when be nnpht to have baciiin Uie recitation room. U ai' t.asium, tlwatre, billiurdi, Smoking, frittered away hia-tiine. One horribly snowy, sleety iorin'ui when he had jOt 'up too late for prayers, 1he postman brought him a note Ironi the tutuliy an 'adomnilion H. droppi d the pipe lie was jiwt lighting, and boiled off to recitation. But be 'dexdo i imintdiately, and that discouraged him. ' He soon began to make light of lh' varniug.,' and did Inniwll do credit in hi? studies. Though he managed to 8f iie(i' through: the cgauMiiution at the end of the iHslman year, he came out. far down to wuid the fool of hit-- class. lie v.aFen't quitn couleuted w 'ah himself, and tliousht di d try to dQ better the next year. But during the journey home he recovered his Ujuul spirit. When he walked up the vil lage toward, the per. Hinge ' farm, he was thiukin! thai since be was a eophomore noil-, he woo Id buy the knottiest and big gei headed car.3 in Cambridge when he should go Uak thote. Add what do ytm suppose was the fir t sight that met him at horn T 'It wus his father out in he field dig ging fur new potatoes, his coat off and hw spectacled faee perrpiring) The fight truck sh&meinto the boy. Ue raulted the fence, and running up wilh hardly a pnuss tor greeting, cried, " Q lather, let me do that. I don't like to r?e yoo at such work.' ' l'r. Blake stopped and looked earnestly and rather sadly at him.,. Well, Fam, I think that's about' Ml gocd'e ' tww-da fvu-da' 3 yoo could have offered me. There's something right about you after all.' It hadn't occurred j to Sam that there was cny doubt on thut point before. He blushed as he asked t ' Where's tne hired man !' 'I've discharged him. I can't ailord one at present, my son,' was the answer Sam was rather polled and began to re flect Tbey went into the house, and there, hen the minister re-appeared after mak ing bis toilet, bis son noticed that be wore the old, shabby, shiny coat. At this he waa more than ever astonished. The supt per, also, notwithstanding thatjt was the first night of tha prodigal's leta n, was very meagre. Not a single luxury was on the tabla, and Sum, observed that his fath er and mother took no sugar nor butter. His own appetite begao to fail at seeing tbu, aud his percept iou was sharpened ao O irdlug'y. tie wus now aware tuai uia father looked very thin, as aellas Sud. Suddenly he laid, down his knife and ex claimed to his eistir Kilty. . '"Sis, what does all this mean? this go ing Without the hired man and starving oui'telveK ?' ' ' 'His tieler looked ut him, thro gluueed at Mr. Bluke and her mother, and n nde no ennwer. I thought,' taid Sam, pcttiliintly, that WiHiaton'b money wus g"ing to inuke it eusy for you, father; and here pinching is going on five tiimn worse than ever.' 1 don'i own my(ri -nd Wnlijton's money B-U the niiniw ei. quiii ly. Ol couise iiot.' B I the live l.ui.dred dul' Hum nlopitd suddenly on an entreat ing gesture fioiu his sisier.- - ''hie sutij ct was not resumed. But. bi fore he went to Ixd Sum buinid an interview wile hia sister alone. ' He fell weielly thut he. was responsible for tne depression ui.d trouble wi ieh m-im-d to fill the household, but that' only made him sneak more imoeluoualv 'Now. sis.' he 1ki;;iii, 'can I get two words oTsense out tf you?" ; ..... . 'Xot until you ask polite y,' she replied. 'Well, then, pleuse tell me wlmt the my-tery is.' 'It oaghtu'l to be u mystery to you, Sam that you haven't done Well at College. Pupa is terribly disappointed '1 don't see why h should commit sai cide, if h is,' Sam retorted 'I havu't cast him much this year!' ' On yes, you have. Do yon know lie uciujlly told the new coui?' 'Why?' Sam frowmd. 'Beeuuse he's been trying ivtry way to save money skice lie beguu to get reports of how y u werv HUDtinyour t ine.' What for?' u kid .Sum, though he begun 10 SUBJKCt. Well, he now should I know? dou't you set? He's ulraid to have that money lu m his old cLssmale, and he's nearly saved enough, ai d he's going to puy it all buck There, 1 vita to ke p it secret, and now 1 huve told you !' und his sister burst into tears. 'You've nearly brtKen Lis heart, Sam, poor papa !' 'The next day Mr Blake's son went off direct ly afterjreukfasr, and wus not seen jyain.liHrfioo. , 'Coming back, he ov-rtook his father f'comiiitf a p-t VfR T:-- . ,:I know" all ab ut It,' he 'exclaimed in liis excitement; Katy told me lust night. "I wish, though, you'd held on io ihe new coat awhik1. , " -Whyr askea Mr- Blul;e,iwierturbably. ' 'lii caune,' said Sttml'in going to pay my own way now. I've been ff today and hind nut for the b a. on to 'Farmer lledireburion. You won't se;d that money to Williston. will you, ather?" You ff too kte.' was the minif.ter's answer. I'e jiiot now mailed the letter to him.' 'In fuct, the m xt da the kind uier hant's eyes were dimuieu uh he read these worda. . JIkar Wii.i.itiT N : My boy it almost breukm nvy hi art to say so hus not proved worthy of your gencreusity I huvi! dicided to return ti e Fi;m hich you e i.jne for hioi hist eor, ai d y u will J6j .i draft Muiosid for that aui' unt. I'.i.akk. Here I interrupted the narrator. H.iesu'l t'h(s story pnovje what. I sa'ni in i he beginning?' I asked. No; lor tha isn't tli-i end of it. Sam went d wn to Boston iu the autumn with a few dollars ol earnings in his pocket. He had d.-ci'l. d to give up f. oljee, and so up plied to Mr. Williston for a cleikship." He tU him :' ' 1 provt.d m;self unworlliy, aa'my father said. Now give me a chance to show my self worthy..' ' VilJigtop gave him a pwitiiu, and he forked tlww ff:a years. Then an oppor tunity ofti red to go V.'est, aj.d lake, a pnrt nership in whut do you think? The clothing business ! Sam jumped at l ; and you may believe he snnt his fal'ver, next C'Uristua;, the finest, coat that ewer,, could produce. I am a well-to-do man nw; sir,' con. tini'vd my acqtuintacci1, suJdenly speukina; in tlie first persou, 'and wlien we got to Chicago, if you will eme to my eaiab liiihmcnt, I will show yoa my father's Che minister's) old shiny cot, which I pieserye because it wai the beginning of my fortune and made a man of mo.' 'Then,' I exclaimed taking him by the band, 4 it ia you yourself yoa have bi-en talking about all this time ! You are' Sam,' fconoludfed my new friend, nod ding and smiling. 0. P- Lai hi op in Youth' Companion. THE CLERKS WHO RISE. ' Many clerks continue la subordinate positions nil their lives because tbey are of- uo rpenui thiuu iu incir c-uiojeiB. i clerk wishes to rise he must make his ser vices so valuable to the house that thiy cannot aff rd to do without tbens. I It is not enough, in order to acquire this ttpfcial value, to be handy and willing. He must also gnin such a knowledge of the buftii-ve as tule muster of all its details. Sir John Vulmsley, a rich merchuiit of Liveroool, beg in us a clerk on a salary of 40 a year. His employers were grain merchants, and the young man, determined to rise, set about atquirirg a knowledge of grain. The man who hud charge of .he wurei house of the fit in prided himself on know-, ing train better thanany one in Liverr pool. Finding the clerk anxious to lejtrn, the old warehouseman wus willing to teach him'. . Twice a week, before bieakfast, and oft bcftf1E':e hours, they would gtt to . gether to the store aud nhips. ' Old Piter,'' us be was called, would show the pujH aumples of rurious kinds of grain. At first, the number ewildtred the youth. Hut perseverance enabled h:m in fiiiie to (mister all the mysteries of grain, such ue quality weight, condition and origin. Old Peter would tuke a handful of all sorts of grain, English, liish, Atuerieaio Scutch, Europeuu and spreading tleni on a tuble, ask his pupil to till all the cliuruc ti rislics or e ach sample. " . :4, No one knew of these early lesson9, ami tlie employer wondered at his cleik's knowl edge of the business, fjusloiue.s Boon fouud out l?the youth knew nioe ub'iut gruio thur. ' any one in the estublishm nt ul& consulted him. " OuC duy tie firm's ".iruveler " and sales-, man resigned, t Wus the bti-t position in iheir employ, und' they at once promoted young Walmiiey to it. His superior knowl edge of the business juslifid their jump ing him over the heads of the other clerks. Tlie rjee, ihough a great one, found the youth abundantly able to meet its rcspon sibililio. lie had so .trained fiiinself that his iniployersrecogniz d his value. l'iieu the Uriu of his cl! kship expired, seveiut ofiRrs ol purtuers ip were raude him, one of which be iccrptcd. lie rosij to wealth and honor, bicuuse he mude himself valua ble to iis tmpbyers. SOME MEN S iriVES. .Three nn n of wealth', meeting, not long biucen New York, the conversation turn ed up'oftli'elr j-l-res.-; InsitatS -of-Hudlng fuult with women in'generul and their wives in parlieu'ur, utb one obejid the wise mau'a advice, aud "gave-'Ju-ajor' ui.to his wife." ' . "1 teihyou whut it is," si i-J one of the men, "they muy ay what i(iyjl(aB- about theuseelKS6 ol miiik-rn v i.uien, but my wiTb has done her share, iu sicuiing our success in lite. '- ! ' Everj bialy knows that hi r family was aristocratic, and exclusive, and all that, and when 1 niarl-iedliersh hud m ver doi e a day V oik in Lir life; but whin W.v& Co: failed, and 1 hud to commence ct ti e foot of the bill again, she diechurgid' the servants and chose out a r.cut little col luge, and did her own houst keeping until was better 'iff agaiu.", " Aid n V wife." faid .a Sfcond.j "wus an only daughter, ca'essed and pet tol todi'.ath, aid everjb.idy s id, 'Wef, if he will urr a dull !!l;e that le will make t lie greatest misj.ake.of his life,-' but I came hi mc the first jfarof rur Diartiae sick with the fiver, sherurscd me back to heulth, and I never knew her (o murmur becnue 1 thought we couldn't afford any better st)!!" or more luxuries." : "Weil, gentkmen," chimed in a third, 'I married a smart, healthy, pretty g''H, liut she was a regular blue-stock :ng. SJie adored Tennyscn.doated on Byron, read Emerson, uiyl named the first baby Rdp- Waldo Emerson and ' the' second Maud; but I tell y ou whut 'tis," and the speaker's ey re'w suspiciously, moist, "when Ave hiUl little Mind in her last b d at Auburn my poor wife had no remem brance of wrg'ect or stinted motherly care" and Ihe l't tie dresses that still lie in the iccked drawer were all mude by her hands." Journal of Cbminvct. LlflG7lTQlIEr. " ' . Y A rule for living huppily v th others is U al having stock sut-J'-ela fi-r disputa lioo. It niosily happens, whn ople live much together, they have cime to hve certaiu set topics, around which, from fre quent dispute, there i su.i-h a growth of angry words, mortified vanity, and tlie like, that the original subject o diflWfuoe becomes a standing quarrel, and there is a tendency ia all minor disputis to drift dowa Ut it. Asjuin, if ptple :h to lie well together, tbey amst not hold too much! to logic, ind suppose thut everything w io be aetiletl by sufficient reason. Br. J -dm soo Saw this clearly with teg rd to marrnd people when be aa ids "Wretched wou'd be the pair, above all names of wretHod bts, who should be doomed to adjust by reason, every rooming, all tba mi note de tail of the domestic day." But the appli cation should be much mre general than he made it. There is no time for sqch reasonings, and ' nothing that is woilh them. And when we recollect how two lawyers or two politicians can go on con tending, and that there is no end of cne sided reasoning on any subject, we shall not be sure that such contention is the best mode of srriving at (ruth." But cer tainly it is not the way to arrive good jL LEAP YEAR PRIVILEGE. Miss Adams, of the Indian Territory, taking advantage of leap year privilege! proposed to the Postmaster at Tulsa, in I that Territory, that, they should wed. The Iiist master, like the Judge in Mand Muller, sat on his horse and mused, miking up hi mind bow he could tell her it could never be. She had no hay rako in her hand, but be saw the devil in her eye and noted thut her hand was under her apron. Finally he summed up all 'ds resolutions; end utter-d the one word which conveys more wretchedness than any other in the lunsntiige. "You won't ha!" shrieked the maid, and with marvellous coolness and celerity she' unm.iskeil a navy revolver and shot her funev dead fiom his horse, and then" delib erately mnunicd a pn. y and notified tl.e neighbors that they had tv-tte go and piek the postmaster up More the hogs antici pated them. The womsifr was the daugh ter of a fugiiive from justice in the S'atts and she. no d ubt, hid inherited herdrci sion of character, list hid cultivated her precision of , uirn. The pooS postmaster never lived to know how in my years of domestic bliss he might bave enjoyed wi-h the women who had marked him for her own. 1'. is well rhat 1 hejjried. QMEXr ABOUT If A Widow of M icir, (Pt sells a-inn illy S.iOO worth of .vegetables of her raining from half an acre of ground Mrs. Myra Clark Haines, the indefati gable, is living in retirement in Wah;ng tow. Although 73 years ovd, she is still as brisk as a young widow of 40. At Ameriens, (Ja., a young mufTwi'iit to his wedding considerably under the in fluence of liquor, when the about to be- tjrM-j'refuseU "to "proceed -turtiier ttnd "an-H lurtner u-na an case Brfi4 I . t. . i i. nounced the engagemen Mrs. Harriet S. Brook of the Omaha Repvbliun, haswc .rt-4"" ted Chuirmsin of the BepurtnaeJilCf Zifrnf and Vegetable' Physiology in the N.-braska Aiad my of Sciences. Mis. Watkiuson has built at White Eirth, Minn., a hospital at a c st of ?7, 000, and it has an eiidowment of $10,000. The venerable Lucretia Mott, isreporteff in rapidly fafling health. Although con fi.-.cd to her room, her mind is strong and bright. She resides with her son io-low- Edward M. -Davis, ou'Chcltoir ffills, Phil udilphia, Pa. THE DUTIES UF JOURNALISM. Of all others, the newspapers, in their lemporaryexcitemenfs, should keep hem selvis self possessed, just and truthful. It is to them the public looks for facts and for guidance. How shall it act aright if evn the news ol the day is steepened with iOod and tingtd with prejudice? Let it kliscuss public q lestidns with all the force and earnestness it can summon ; but let it r 'member also that its first duty is to be fain and honest; to tell the truth of all parting, so ejtpose the real character of 'all candidates; to report the condition of pub--Vc sentiment as they arc, and not as they are represented to be 'by the exaggerations orhof esof those whose wisls alone are futheis to their thought' New Ycrk Eoe i ii'S Post'- r SHE. " WANTED A CHANGE " "Adolpbns, my dear." said she, "it's nearly a year since you 6rst bejrn to call." "Yes, I believe so." nervously. '! And we've talk d about books and music every, night." ' Y-e s. I think so," more neiwous than before. "Well, I don't you think a change would be agreeable?" There was a change" in a few weeks time. The pas tor made it. It is awful hard to reali that a woman is nil angel when Que sees her piek u; a clot In s prop fouriseu foot long to drive a Kc ouiice c'lieken out the yard. AcyoKPiNO Td AVkbstkr. A fiw month ago an old ganllenian ww seen nailing a notiue on a feuce in Hulveston A friend, parsing, nid : ''Why don't you have the no; ie- put iu the paper, where the people can -read h ' 'Wi.il," siid the old Ventleman, "if I tuck it to t'.e newspaper orfice them news; aper . fellers would get it ppi-lied wrongs and llwn sonnWy might think I didn't know4U how to ipcll. The notice read i "Hjit fur .jeut iucliot oo preym -yiaTd eyes tf . (aid, (j.ve - - tvr of mch u tLe .Henry llolteuburg had black'hlVlind a ruddy tomplexiwn when he marcitd !vliss Schwarz, at Nashville, a year.agoj, She supposed he tvus about forty,- though he made no statement on that ppintvvTlw honey-moon was scarcely oyer before bis hair became gray, his cheeks loet their color, and he showed at least sixty years. The fact was tlat be had discontinued the use of dye and rouge. The angry. wife wanted io sje for-divOrce but the lawyer told iter that the grounds were not suffix cient. The worst sho could do was to de sert him, which she lost no time io doing. . He openeil the door cautiously, anoT, piiElng Ifls head in a sugges'jve sort of way as if th re was more to follow, inq iired 'Is thitthe rinktuiii?".,"Thi!. wbai " . frieinl?'1 '-Is this the rioktum sinktum . sanctum, or 8 mu other such place, where the eJiior3 live?" '"This is thu editorial room, y.-s sir. Come in." "No; I g5uesa I won't evine in. I wanted to. see whet a riuktuin was like, th.it'd all. L wks like our guiM only wusr. Hood-day. ..'P' . r-r- r A Get inuii traveller hurried outof. tha cur, tired ui.d- dus-ty. and seating hinuelf at a restaurant tablo cried out : "Waiter, bring ma a tieefstoak 1" Tne Waiter replied that would be charmed to do so, but that it U-ok twenty minutes to CJOk a flteuk; 'while the tiuiu only waited ten m noftes. I The kindly and sw t tempered tra-vellor- ret )rt d ; V ell, then, bring me half aJJeeh steak." Hrin ling remlers all our CJreal grin3 more digestible, by-reducing the six.' of the particles 'to be su'turated und digested by ' ihevue; ric j nee. The whole kernels ol corn are not always fully pern traced by the gus trrc j nee, and hence many of. them pass ca tie undigested. When' cnru'is ground it , should n'i.vd with course I alder, 'so as to . pr. vent i:s adhering in a muss in the stom ach, and iiswe its remasticatibi: and iusal ivation. . The wheat harvest for this year will proliably be about four hundred and sixty milli n ol bushels. Allow ing, say, two, hundred and sixty millions of bushels' -for V home use, that w)ulj"giii us two hundred millions for export, against one hundred aud eighty five millions exported last juar. ' ., ... . -r i I t tempt to m l tempt la Iff' it rs jit isianu io me oeea Aaw-tP ibrl o( the physicians is. that the" disease is not gaining ground. IT XL A lawyer once asked thJ late Judge Pickens, of A'.ibama, to charge the jury that "it is better that niacty' nd woe guilty men should escape than tha one in- ' I 1 L I ' S ,1 "V., . - ient m in sbouiu oe puuisuou. jWWu the "witty jnd;e. I will give that charge, but in the opinion of the court, the ninety and nine guilty men have escaped in thu County. After a recent shower at K'ik'o.na, Iud., the groand was foand covered withfishf alK, of which were aiive and R jping about. I'hev wereabjn the s'zj of minnow?. The trouble about taking- medicine war ranted to cure all diseasisis that it may not know exactly what is wanted of it," sod in that case it will go foaling around io the system trying to cure you cf sSriie'disease that you have not jf at. . " , - : " ' Pa,' asked little Blodgers of his parent, . .' what is paper made of ?"! Lies !'' roared the ilder Bloilgers, who is. running for office, 'lies f in'ernal, outrageous, viliulu oiis lies !' A ml the innocent boy wifotc it down that way In his ooinposiliou. . The N irth Georgia Methodist- Confirwr ence will meet in H ine the first wek ij December. 7 ' - . Many a man slips a three cen, piee ;uto thi! cootribiitioti box with a ten cen air. A colored washerwoman die 1 in New York, the oth.-r day, worth ?SO,000. She . must have been a close collector. ... M 'n'v ?f-w Yrk dry goods firms are usiiu elec iie light. ' One house - Waa . twenty-two bu-ncrs, and some oT them are placed out doors as Pll as within. . G laid: 'Now. Miss, jump in; traia P:iil.l: -Hit I can't go before I have kissed inamuia.' Guard. 'Jump in, miss; I'll attend to that.' An Irishuim Called i.i great baste upon !), Abertiathy, 8i.v i:: " B J -lrs my bo T iu has w..lh.ed a -inous'' l"lieu - J j ibbers, ja- jo(mUougi) buJ prtScutvd I'i'll-' :,k . . tlaboraMy-work.d goLl- Uml I'hj r u.i,vu aim nucwujr cauc uaviujf ... , ....I.... , .i i .. .. . wu iuicn, uu me gum, aucr oeing aaaB mend and but tend, was tflUtd at a pawq brner's in the Borough, aoJ a detective culle-1 at Air. Spurjtou's hciue wilUIk i r ! - !" of IleaTtn.'' relic,
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 6, 1880, edition 1
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