Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Dec. 4, 1880, edition 1 / Page 1
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. !- ...... -.'. , . 4 . ... . . ...V :i-.;.::r-::: .. a Devoted to l?ie Troteclion of Home, and itenlefesls of the County. ;j Gatoia. ..Gaston Oount.y, K G, -SATjri47MDnNiNG;;DcciiiEu 4th.y 1 880. I . En ...... .-.,:-, . - ,. . .. . X ' . ! " '' ; , t . f 'Os. 5 v t V r Jt The Fall Session of this School will open tnd Mondy of August, 180,' and continue VuT and a4ial' Month. . Teaches English and Mathematics, also ,11 uiie and the rudiment if Latin, if dent red. ; I'upils will be received at any time. " Board, including washing, fuel and lights, ; per mouth, 19 00. Tuition moderate. Term payable month ly or one-half in advance; the remainder at 1om of session.. The bnaiding-house and t achoolbeiug located just within the corporate 4f limits, three-fourth of a nule from thedepot, are free fra. "the noise and bustle of feaniuf. .Beat of referencee Rrivon. ' For particular! addietis ' 1- 5 J Mia 8- F. CHALK, V7 GaatonU. N. C. RODiGnAHA,VV In the Stale and United Stales Courts, 'Ktcurd lii'urinalinn, Abirutl of lit It SuH'ei(.l)V.,furmlied for compensation. m ' Office, N.-K. c.or. TrtJtt and TryH ('If ARLOl TK, N. C maib.ly t; m. pittm an ATTORNEY-AT-LAW , (jppomle Court Honn',Y Practice in the Hole and federal Ceu'tn - end pny prompt alteiUion to business H'dl itr, vtitate loantt.y Ciiarlwttc N. C . ylG June 5 tf. E. S. I". GILES, Attorney-at-Law, 7 . - ; DALLAS, 1ST C. ' T : Will practice in Gdnton and adjoining tAUntict and the Stale and Federal Court t. Binnetn y omptly attended to. feb2l: u .. . l-larlttf-, North Carolina, Practice littiiil to tl.e Eye, Ear and Throat. Wet with Dr. Jone? Graham. m F R LI T TREES! 1881- - A Fin aatortment of FKUIT TREES, Mt VI K US fr the Fall of 1880, aud Spring of tf 81, at tow rales, Thft Q;ange Nurseries, . XTw MibuHoutii of Garibaldi, N.C.) '" " J M.H.HAMtrrOpriefer. 13T Sead for OUlogue -J eplStf THOMAS JEFFERSON. l H AlthOri E, SOUT11 CAUOL1XA Proprietor Charlotte Hotel Siop.' Ha opened a Branch at tho Metropoli tan Hotl, where he will be glad receive ilia CuUnien and friends. He has the niMt skilful hair-cutters, and guarantees aatisfaction in his line. seplltf CENTRAL HOTEL, Hpartanburgr,H;C, W. a LIPSCOMB, Pro. New house and furniture, ro ms carpeted, , electxic bella, attentive servants, location 'rentral. fare the very beet. Terms, fi.OO a day. 110.00 a week. $35.00 a month. drummers stopping over tniduy fl.60. Only a few yards fiom the Iron Spri ugs. tiep'2ftjanl. KING'S MOUNTAIN HOTEL. KIJVG'S MOUNTAIN, Jf. a, W&' U the place to stop for good attention -ljj3t A RAtxl livery staLlr is uttucheil to the Hotel, -lei mi moderate. L. 11. IXJNG.Proptiilor. Ocl2 tf T. E. !tlcirj. It. II. field Cliiilolte. FIELD HKQS., -paorKiBToaa- or. Tryon and 4th St., CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA JL New and Firtt Clans Hotel. New Red dinr. Aw Furniture. Located in the Ruiiani I'art of the Ciiu. Convenient o to Poet Office and Banl. feb2 1-1 v BUGGIES, OarrlasoB, PliontonB, ct?o. THE LARGFisT STOCK OF Busies Carriages PIIEATONS, &.C., ver brought into North Carolina. CllAKLKS WILSON. S., Ocl2iuo - Chuiiotte, N. C. GYPSTS WARNING. TrttPt him not, O gentle lady, Tliouith hi voice below nm swrct. Herd not liira who kneels befi re tine, SiTily pleading at thy feet. Now thy life ia in its morning, Cloud not thia thy hflppy lo, Linten to the Gypsy's Warning, Gtntle lady trust him not. I.ialj, once there lived a maii'en, Ycuiig and pare and like the fair, Yet he would he would not warn lier Thrilled her eentle leart wi'b can Now he heedetb Bot her we pinjj He'd cure not her life to save, . Soon vhe perished, now she sleeping, "Ifi hef 'cold kitd sileot gruve. ' Lady turn not frcm me so coldly. 1 have only told the truth; .' From a"stei riband withered sorrow, Lady I would ; likld th you h, I would shield thee from all dimmer, Shield thee from the timpter's inure, Lady, shun that durk-eyed stranger, : I huve w..rne'l thee, now bewure. Take your cold, I do not want It. ? Lady, I have praytd for this J For l he hour 'hut 1 mihl foil him, Rb liim of exptcted bliss. Y. a, 1 e tlniH art filltd with wondtr A- niy look ho fierce und wild; Lady u the churcli-yird yonder, Sleeps the Gypsy's only child. A Colorado Lynching. . . . . Initiation of a Pittsburg Gentle man Into Western Mining Life. Tittsburg Evening Ni'ws. Oil Inspector Ramsey, of this city, who wax on a visit to I lie lar west several months aeo, yesterday re!uled to a re porter of the. Evening News an interest jnjr story of how he attended a lynclii- p in a Colorado town. His story is as fol lows: ' 'Wake up, Ramsey !' called out a com paninn of mine one morning at an early hour; 'wake up or you will miss the lynching.' I hud gone to bed at an early hour, tired and sleepy, and hud heur. uothing of the. murder which had beet coinii.Ttltd drj(igtl1rti5ist.V-' i -;rJ Hullo! Jim, is that you.?V.Baid when does the thing take pluce ?' 'Pretty damned quick,' " answered my fri ml. , So hurriedly donning my clothes I saun- tered Dut and found my 'bunky' wiihout tit the door of the shanty. We wulked up the st ret t a short distance, aud fiudiiig a crowd of rough-looking miners uround the door of ii gambling bull, we pushed through and entered the saloon, where we found a coroner's jury empaneied and about to be' gin their investigation. Two tables, used for dealing faro, hud been pushed-together. and on them was stretched the dead: body of a police flieer." 1" had known him well. He WttB a rplendid specimen ol m.inhood, f illy si? feet six inches in height, a lid built in proportion, a quiet, unoflen sjve oiiii n, but thoroughly good officer. On the top of the body lay a coll of hull inch rope, neatly rolled up, with a lung. nuns noofe at one ena, as we enurtu the coroner called the first witness, who. having been sworn, stottd that 'on the evening previous he had been in the gam bling saloon of Jim Beggs, where two lei -lows were playing cards; during the gume they quarreled about something, and both got up from the table and entered the bur ro-.m, where they both drunk, and iigiin commenced to wrangle about the bets- They niude considerable noise, und the midst ol it the ffioer cameiuaiid quietly sit'ul; 'Boys less noise this must be s j pcd. He had no soocer tuid this than oi e ol the gamblers j rked out his 'gun'(revo v r) and shot lite officer through the heart." i he witness hait proceeded thus jar when a sirpi'ing big fellow, clad in a red H n nel shin and with pantaloons stuck into his boot legs, a brad-brimimd hat hull hidi. g his durk eyesquietly waiked op lo the ded bi dy, .ml taking hold of the coil ol lope aid; ' Boys, that's enough, come on, pushing his way out through tue crowd followed by fifteen or lwcnt f his cm paoions. Wiihout a woid they wulkid down to the "cooler ( rume sl.ilion hou') where the prUouer had been imure ruttdi and coming up to the six men on guuid, deaiukded the kejes 7'lay t M that the keys were not in their iipsesioii. Hold op your hands theo,' cri.d the leader. Leti exumio you.' The guaids l?) held up thir bund and quietly submitt d to the exaiuiuatiut . Tbe lyncheis, finding that the keys weie uot in tlieir possession, went to a woodpile and picking up au axe speedily demolished 111 door. The kal r thto efleteJ the room am in a few minutes camo out with or e end of the rope ovvr his shouldi r, olid at the othir end w Hie mur.lerer, the iiikw tightly around his neck. I had taken my stand on Uieopposi fc side of tbe street, and could pluijily see the poor wretch us he came out, He was tidily clad, a (urge diamond stud glistened on hia eliirl Ironi, and on the little Gnger of hia left hand wus a lurge solitaire ; a heavy gold wi.tch chuin djngled from his vest pocket. His countenance did not be'ekon fear, in fact, to look at -the man one would have thought the, whole performiuico was but a joke AfHSr reaching the street, the crjwil 8i:iz d hold o I the rope and ltd the viel in d.wn lo an old buildinr. where a bi tun .tutted out over the sidewalk. When tl reuched this point " wivo umint In ; eiuv J down on to the beam, and took a deliber ate look at the crowd below. Tue leuder of the committee then approached the gambler and said : ' Well, Jim, yer time's short ; want to say any hing V Jim replied und said: 'Now, lonk h re, can't you ytsi as well put a few bullets through me , what's the diff renci ? I've got one thousand dollars in my pocKets, and you can divide the whole thing among you, if you don't hang. Will ou do it ?' 'Not by a dimmed sight,' 'aid the leader. ' irou munh red a good muu, und you've got lo swing for it.' 'Well,' said Ji'ii, 'go on ; I su;in :se I muft swing ; this is tii; third man I put awuy, po 1 suppose my lime's tip.' He had no sooner said the word.-i thau the rrpe was quickly pulled lip a id Jim w is dangling in a horrible inunner. lis bands uot being tied, he reached up over his heud und grasp d the rop, and tlmi re leased strangulation. Tliat wou't do, Jim,' cried the leader, und they let the dungling victim down again and speedily tied his a m behind him, und again clevuted him. where he hung for neurly on hour Alter it was Ascertained that their victim was dead the 'committee" sent for a photographer und had a photograph tukn of the entile gang. ' in the loreground tne committee 4i,i4i t riiPf.(M,,oH sat the' of his station. The entire procedings were as quietly ns ccit'd possibly be; not a woid or shout could be beared. The com panion of the murderer was given six hours time to get out of town, and was mri soine two miles awuy by some of hia friends, wlnj a-'ktd where he whs going. ''Oh, the boys gave me six hours to get out of town," suid he, "and I um new live hours uheud of time." This way m;. first initiation into western life, and I tru-t my lust. '- " r CrimV s Romancer A PILL-BOX SERVES AS A C'Ll'K. A dispatch from Norwich to the . New York Sun of tile 18:h siiy s: I'lie procecu of Churlej A . Yerriiigton and J 1 at lie C Gabel, the romantic young burglars of this city, who pillaged the houses of some ol the weulthitst residents of Norwich, la?! summer, hus reached a cur ous ( iiding in the superior court. The stof .' ol YiTring ton and Miss Gubel'siscapades is as singu lar as anything in the ttnnals of crime Neither is over twenty years of age. Miss Gabel is pretiy and interesting. About the first of last August wealthy families o1 Norwich, rc:u:'uiiig from summer trcl.g(tBy fulier. um ,y own grard- lOUOll lllal III III ir uusente lillir uiiuai-pr had been enter, d by burglttrs and thei contents ftolcn or sc.illcrtd. In ubout ever.. case an entrance hud been effected thMohl a rear wnulu ro wot k on thtt they fiiiully i ililiee of C Il was louiid on the II oi on wrtteti 'was name of a well-k own drug firm of the c The druggist indent i ied the box us one had sold to H itlie Gabel. It was kno. that Miss Gabel und young Vvrniigt were iir.nnaie. iienau uivn. onen with heron the' street, and it was learned that Y rringloti s f..mi'y '" , weli lo do and tiHi. iili.il in soe.ety, I bitterly reprmiched lhe young m.t i his relation-) with the liirl. It as fo i. that young Yerringion li.i'l I (l lhe . II with Mis GaU'l, atid they w re at ho found in a New Haven hotel. They i fesjod their misdeeds with coiilr'ri n. the person of Miw GaM were found m srtiehs ol dress ami j -welry, that hUl stolen. O i Yerringion were other goods, including knives, a watch, c'laom pim-s, ami several loud.il rcv.s of the most costly make Tue cnplcV (f a history of lla-ir visits to the d tle-y had robbed. In the honsc of 3. Johnson tln-y had stayed nearly a k, q draw iuu the curtains close lo keen mil in liiisitivi looks frmn the street, and driiik- iug, jutilg and emi king to theirjill. The cuipriU j'ere Onipglit berore the city court iii.d bi ui J over iy the superior court uu def hyttv : bonds.; Y-rriixt ii'h futhcr fur iiiijir! I j6 buil ior his son. Alius Oubel went jo id. OiM5 altert)Oon.Ciiptaiii Wiial It y-' visii Ji MiwG,.biI in U-r cell, and she coWev I UiwiMiie story ol the crime She ulii hKi thut a large share of plun ler n u hair trUi k, "which they hud lulteii f in wie house, of U. U. Jjliiison iiiid'ii'. d at iheJoot of a (all r.it.e tiee tin- f.jur miles down the Tiium.s river. tMa MUg ton FlieytlK'n marked the spot wilh a fences pbs,'; The cuptuiu procured u team and lh u.d the girl diove down to the wood. Hie .captain fell to woik with a spude llfj iadi brought, und soou the blade siruik ugiftost the top of the truiiK. Jle intmthe Vu.ik up an I open d it. .The mk-4; goods, closely paek d, filled it. Tlie,trui contained the proceeds and pro i of several robberies for which th ? cu Is.iiud not yet been indicted. New con kiiitls were nude out, and they were j.lai f under mueh heavier bonds. Yer iii m's fat iter fur iin!iiid security for his so;i u.a beuevoleitt cit z;n guve bail loi- Mi.-Gu.bel. B itli were at liberty, under $6,pj-.bohds in Yerrington's cise" and ftljDO in Uk cose of Untie Oabe', pi'nd i.ijheir apeartuice lor trial at . the No- v. ur term, A lew diiys ago Mr. itr rii ton circulated h -petition asking lliat ih jrot-ecutiou of his son und . Miss G..bel pi . e . no further. . It was heuded by the uues of the p. rsons uliose premises 1iad bl ribbed, and nearly every cit'Z.'ii of ii JeiiCe in the ci'y. It was signed by the el I und cuptuiii of police, by the jadge 0 le court in whicn they were first itr n md, by the city attorney who ar r, lied theui, and by the editors and pub- 1 er of .the daily itenspupers of this c . Ou Friday of lost weik the case wits e ed in court, and the parties w. re ul- V 'f14 loi"4' nNMt,!.i his disposition ' ' d i Ji8on 'Wliat is ths matter. with you. jlNetyou look inelunchol)?" ' -Yes; the fact of the matter is I h.'ivpt imx-d up so in my fumil nfl'iirs thutlon't know who I am.' Jus n llalher a strange remark. Kxpi yourseli,' N 'I wi I. You see, I nnrried a you widow wlux lived whh tier ste -drtut'r; my futher hhorily after married the p dungh er. My wife was, there fupithe mother-in-luw and daughter in luvf my fa'.h.T; I urn the step futlu r ol myiot hcrin-1u WTaiTd "iTiy wife's step d.it'tr is my slepmnther. -Well, my steJother that is to s.y, n y father's Viind my wife's daughter hud a son Tljl my step brother, of course; but being jttjon ol wisAof lon ol my wife's s'ep-daiighter, my cours", his grandmother, and ir.i 1, ' 7 I 181)18 gi andlutlier as Well us 1.18 61' p- ber.r My wife uho had a boy. My S'modier is cons quently the iftop-sister ofy b -y. nnd uUo his vrindmotlier, be he is the child of her stip-sun, and uther is the brother-iuluw of my mho is the son of my sli p mother. my mothtr's lir.tther-inlaw. my wife ispt of her own son, my sou is the grand f,, HOME AHORNMES1. i -omin hty is . fcsson. n . . ,ing his tg l.is 1 1 ling I .of his wife TlVti and h 1 1 ti. s fur 'e and children, not only coaven- comfortuble, but plessunt. L t ur as eirciimstunees will admit, be indutlriniM in surrouudinc it with lite. unit wit, with thing that tend to tnuke it at'irpu'ih" and ntliaetivt-. lift ind'ltrv ko ,nme lhe Hbode o mutiiess and or- der a place which hrings salisfacti n to eveiv iiiin ite. urd which io absence draws i. ... i .1. r... i .. ..r It'rt llieiivnil ln- i.nm n-"n. Ml t,i c nt -tit. L i Hii bn d.me, ami this i-ucred xpol will become ei.ue t uttly li e scene of c'ie-i fulness and r1"'15"-- Ye parents who would have your children happy b; ind is lii .us to hiing tin-in up jit lite 'midst ot a pleatmit, a eh.t rial, and a huppy I one-. Waste not ywir lime in ticvuimi'utiiig ulih fur them, "but plant in their nfuds ,hl, way ,rH-l j nM. ai e,is virtue and prosperity. AUbam.i has i p pulat on of me an.l a mittf millions. RELIGIOUS NEWS, n VROX TUB BAI.KKiH OBSKBTER The revised Bible will be issued in Feb' ruary. The late general convention ofthe Epis copal church declined a canon lorbiilding the sule of pews. Bishop yihtman, of the Methodiet Episcopul Chi rch, is still ill, but it is hop ed will be able to attend to Ids duties m a few months. 1 I : It is said that Mr, Moody's meetings in Salt Lake City carried consternation into the ranks of the Mormons, aud were very influential for good. The Methodists of Goldrboro are muk- Work on t lie ir new church with the opin 4fng ofepring. It will Lea handsome (di lice- The R-v. Dr. C. F. Deems has been elected Councilor of the University of New York This will be gratifying news to the doctor's many friends in North Car olina. . i Spurgeon's vast congregation in London, generally nupibtring between six aRdVv eiitloustind ppople, j on in singing the hymns without any instrumental accompa nimeiit. Goviruor Wright, of tbe Indian Terri tory m a converted Choctaw Indian. Some times after presiding over a political meet ing of his p ople, he cJIs th m to order und reindicts a sermon to them. Tht North Ge'orgia Metludist Confer ence convenes in Rume ubout the first of December It is a large body composed of over three hundred ministers. In the African Methodist Church of North Carolii.a there are 100 locul ireuch ers, ninety two ex. orlers 1.1C5 Drobatiou ers and a 1 14 m 'mbers. Tue value nf church property is $35,857. The 11 v. A. B. Kurlt?, the noted 'revi valist, preached his fiftieth anniversary ser inon in Boston a lew tluys ago. I ledt flar ed th. t he had been the menrs of mnking 1o0,0j0. converts. He conductij a great revival in Rtleigh about eight yeuis since-'; The general convention of the Christian eh emsed its session at Inlsvi!le rt- rpnAllnlinwe lliul lliajli.Miimiti-.fi. n n n . I .... & 000.000 communicants in the Lnited Stattsalrne. Its membership in North Carolina is quite large.- The Synod of S'outh Carolina, which met Inst wtek decided to endevor to raise 20.' 000 within i's bounds as part of proposed 110,000 eiidowtiiiientof the home memorial fund for the Columbia Theological Si minu- 1 v; there is every prospect that South Cur olltii will raise the ?20,0lKl. At the Fifth Street Methodist church, of Wilmington, recently, the ordinance of baptism was ii'linliiistered to gooii a y ung Chini se convert. lie ussuij.eil the name of Charles Jones, after the captain of the revenue cutter on which he is a sailor. This is probably the first Celestial ever buptiz"d in N rtb Carolina" . - The coloreil Baptists of Texas, A rkrin sits, ti nd Norl hem Louisiana, numlKTinir abnnt 100,000, huve determined to build a c illeire for the education of ministers and teachers, in the city of Marshal, Texas. They are making a vigorous and snec8 sul tffurt to raise ten thousand dollars for this purpose among themselves, and they are hoping that a Ike am uut ir.oy be contributed through the Ame.iean Bap tist iTTPnie Mission. In 1770 there were only nine Baptist churches in this State. In 1876 tlere were 1.442 churches, with 70.1 ministers and 1.17,000 members. There are now about 180,000 Missionary Biptists in North Curolina,ofwhom not more than 80,- 0 0 ore c nistitiients of this convention. Twenty thousand belong to ihe western convention, which comprehends the ix'een counties we-t ol the l"m ltiue, and the convention of the colored Baptists of the Stale comprehends thirty two associations iiiul probably 81,0 -0 communicants. G v. Brown says the world movi-s and he intends to move with it. - - Kuilroud fi:ei!iiii s in I'h r'da urt-Uttir tli'in ever In-fore in that Sta'e. The cms on the Moi in" Y. suvius railway nre now Tghtd by thctiieity. l!.iiciU!(i !d ln-eii p.id 10 OIHI ilw. fi r a nw iAiiciillid Ei.ilymii.i.e. );,e I ii drtd Swiss ininiifiai is will ur J ,.k Ii, ti 4.tl'nfll f2tirtii in ll'.e. inl-r 1 I " -. Tl e n of lhe S hip are irelty si n-r-ally agrnd thut Gov. l.rt wn is i n ! p. Train mld ii g is ci-mplaiiietl of by trav ellers on many .t the muds of iIk- oti.tiry, Bi n Duller is pr: i t ii g an-tn.d lis.kii g f r a new party. Amble opioid i-tK-k ee Jndgp Words lies Appointed Co!. 1 1 . Fin rtiw to Ite a I'uitcd cjtateS (.ononis s;i mer. ' . Tl ere are 15 000 while families in Al abama wilh'.nt n Bible. A six ye r oM girl in Barren county, Ry., weighs 2)30 -pound". ' The school stteridance in South Carolina, in lP7-"80, was 134,072, , ' Monroe county, Tenn., Jina shipped this year t'5 000 bushels of peas. It i8e8t',muipd that President Huyes has saved SI0O,nO0 of his talury, Mobile's two cotton mills paid last year 1G per cent oh the capital Invested. Anthracite coal brings $18 per ton Jri Waco, Texas, and wood fl& -per cord. There will be one colored man io the t; next congress--Lynch; of Mississippi." ' " TJl K3i moiPj.tatuce ittfffl1rY&t4&p-t;-L: the A ir Line ruilroad about $lO,DC't). The South Carolina Baptist Convention will meet in Camden November 24th. Montgomery, Am , 'orT' works shipped ;s , Satarday, fen car'louds.of oil and meal. Eas; Tennessee pork hogs are being sold in Anderson, at fix cents per pound gross The electoral' vote of Califnrnia will stan I five for Hancock and one for Garfield. A Slate D.-ittul Association will be organized at Houston, Texas, mxt month. Five northhrn gold mining bompatties are operating in McDowell county, N. C There are 851 Cripeltd soldiers in Ahv buma who have draWn the bouuty allowed. Nine hundred and ten Baptist churches -----ia Mississippi, with a muoibership of 56,' G30. A man in Nashville, Tvflh., has been wearing the same overcout for twenty. two years. 1 hpre is a tnarkrd increase in the Lou isiana sugar as compared with the crop of lust year. Colonpl Ed R;chardson, ol Mississippi) ' will make 15,000 bales of cotton, worth S6 K,00i '. " Guifivld's vote in Tennessee wos 10, 000 a republican guin of 10,000 votes in four years. Grand comm mdi-ry of K'lights Templar for the s'ate of Texas meets in Sherman, ill February. Mrs Ltieey, a widow ludy in Savannuh, r ever iniiety yeurg of agv is cqtrti.j; a new -' X "CI tttiii: .... ... . ... .i."Y .' ;: r Mrs. J. B Speak, a sixty-year-old Alav. Duma ludy, Juts just finished a quilt contain ing 4 222 pieces. Mr Kennedy, near Corpus Chrisii, TexaS has 1S0.0 Oucirs under fence, 50,000 head of cuttle and 10 000 horses. Yirginti, Tennessee and. North Carolina ruisid this year 2,025.000 bushels of pea nuts, yalne about $1,100,000. Edward Hawkins, in eight year-old boy, of North Carolina, is lectin ing in Km tucky. Objectsmoney to create himself. Gwvernnr R iberti,i-f)f 'IVxarwants a - uew cajiito building lor thai -stale of the bluck in rb'e found in the Colorado river. Kentucky woman, 99 years old, walked three miles to attend a circus, and saved filty centsby crawling under the canvass The 41 cotton seed oil mills of the south turn out. 80.000.000 gallons . of oil annually, besides 1,300,000 tous of hulls. Hon Alvin Ila kins, just dieted gov emor ol 'I'emiessee, is a Methodist, and was iu lhe lute general conference at Cinch; tmti. The season nt Jacksonville, Flu., lusts from lhe middle ol Neviuibr to the mid die of May Sixty thousand visitors lu.-t seus ii. .Icon's A (!.o field is the third pnsidint ol the 1'i ited Slates who began life us a schoolteacher. The otheis wire .Millurd" Fil mute and Frunklio Fierce.- Mrs. Hastings, the president't tibce, and tbe young ludy wl o was murriid at the white house two yeurs ago, has imnud her little duughter Lucy Hayes Hastings. Some of the Cloctuw gills in "ti e n lion," its Indiuii Tiriitory i cu Hid, are highly ulucatt d, very btautilul, utd neaily as fair in. complexion us their sisters in the stutes. - Bei j-iiniii Harris Brewster's m me is .t.i nt l(. I til i a ihi. (Illicit lor t- . ii'oei t in lit liiiiiil Sluii s iiit'iiu e- ui!, in cue ol ii inn i.n lx II g li.mle by tla It tut n:t lit i f Justtiv Slroi'jr. , ('Imm-I U ibert L.geriil siy.s thai S ti nt. r B n Hill's irop nil hh t-i kill lhe d-in- )Hruii' - p-ity provided lh f pulili'-uns kil1 . ...... i ..r .1- Jhii((. .rty , mudi iiK- lite pmi.w.ti oi ioe roosler lo lhe horse, thut lluy uliuuld D t step on each other's feet. lie was Jkv.-nty u ulslwww eihtefn Mini they weie nti their weildinj tour. Hi pointed nut' to her the beautiful scenery, and said : "We may h. ve nmiiy ainiversti rtts td '.his occasion." "Yes," she answer d, -you wid ..probably live long enough . have a tin wedding." ' .
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 4, 1880, edition 1
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