Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / June 25, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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The Gastonia Vol. XVII. -1 'UEJI ■ LJ _ I AS OTHERS SEE OS. BAB OOMPABE8 THE OOMTOBTB OF LB 0 LAID AID AMEBIC A utmvbwWB u« Untr Wumii H»» tt« Mm B*nnb Our rralt An (■iiMnui) rim ci»—eoi ■*•»* ABVrUjMT a urrlru rarity ■>tm>lMUt M4 liar tyn. K*. 1.0,11# Hrpuhllr. There la no dnobt that a big red strawberry framed In Ita green leave#, kissed by tire gun’s warmth, Is food di for the gods, and, more than that, It is food at for lovely woman. A wom an looks pretty eating strawberries. Tbs whiteness and shapeliness of l ei hand show to perfection as sho lift* eoeh strawberry by Ua atem to lier lip*, and then proceed! to eat it in tbs dain ty way that a well-bred woman always does, which botwewn you and me, is something after the fuihiou of u polite kitten. All the good things that we have, strawberries, asparagus, green oom. arc dainty to eat, and tend to make one healthful, which means, of course, beautiful. Tbs trouble is, that we don't appreciate our blessing*. We see a wagon load of plneapplee go by and think nothlog more of It: in England, a pine, as they Inelnt upon oalliog it, oosti a guinea; tbe Bret night It is put upon the table to do duty ai a decoration, and then on the ■sound night Is carefully out by the hostsea, each gneat getting a liny little piece. Mo It is with melons. Th* English melon is a arose between s cantaloupe mad a watermelon, le dealt out aa if It were gold, and Is particular ly laateleaa end dreadfully expocalva. ADOPT TIIK 1CB 3*IV. Then, there is ice. Yon and I, who ora housekeeper*, growl dread fully about the lee men, bat if we were in England and aaked for some loe at dinner a piece the size of a small apple would be brought and that would be expected to answer for every body al the table. I tell you, w* don't appreciate uur noereien. About ibe only Rood thing In the fruit line that Englaud offara is tbo goose berry. Hera, w* know It as s sour, hart berry seldom served In Its natural stats and not over good when mad* Into a pie or tart. Over there It It pink of color and has an exquisite taste, a sweetness with a tinge of sourness about describ ing it. I like to eee an Englishwoman's face—preferably an English house keeper's face—when she bears that all tbe fruits which cost to much money on the tight little Me are within the reach of tbe very poorest people in the States: that peachea, such peaches as she only gets from a hothouse, can be bought tor a few peonies by tbe work ing mao's wife, that great, big. sweet, juley melons are, In season almost given away. It give* her an oppor tunity to say how extravagant we are. And truly we are. A funny sight, sod one that, In Now York to summer, when tbe globe trotter It to the fore, is quite common. Is an Eagllshman eat ing bis first clam and a Frenchwoman her Brat green oorn. Tbe dtffsrcnoe in nationalities stands out plainly. Tbe Far 1sttn is determined to be pleased; lbs Englishman is determined to be displeased, and yet equally determined to taste “the Ultie beast.” for fear be might be thought a coward. He first says tbe clam is too fishy; then be an nounces that it ie neither as hitter nor as aalt as those miserable things that in Kogland a re called '’natives,'’ aud which compare with our oyster* *■ * •tag* pineapple does to * real one. TUX CATTISH DHH. Hut in time the Englishman aud the clam grow very friendly, and when be goes back home tbo Englishman take* with him a chafing dish, and he bop*-* to be able to teach tbe wife uf his bosom liow to prepare on it just such dainties«• be baa bad from tba obafing dish here. Deluded mao I He forgets that clams a la Scbeock would bo Im possible where oUms do not exist, that lobsters a I* Newburg will not please the EagUeh palate, and that terrapin, well to tell tbe truth, be never got qalte accustomed to terrapin hlmsalf. Nowadays he has a beater opinion of American cooking than he uaed to have. It is carious how little tbo well-bred English people know about Mr country, and it must bo eon feaaed that after visiting, not the set that la written about, not tbe set into which American girls have married, but tba real English people who are shyly boscltable, well-mannered, well read and Interesting, one’s vaolty get* a iambi*. The truth is discov ered. It is this. They are not Inter ested In us. tv bat we do aud what we aay la u matter of no Importance to thorn, and. sometimes 1 don’t b)«m« them. They have got tbe fioeat ships i.< the world, they have got the fittest srrny in the world, sod they bav* got tbs bast Government io the world, and why should they be interested In a lot of naif civilised savages like ourselves? They need only read one of oar news paper* if they desire to prom that we are savage*. AU OU|IWaWQQ»D WDO IV4KX UWU VO Iodla several tlcooa, wbo Uaa InnM ail or nr lb* (JootioMt, «h oorprtwd that I wma m white, itooa Amorleunt lived on uotbWg but ult pork. And thU baa only boon Are yoara ago. Olio ■aid eba wao afraid to oorm to tbit country, boeaaoeobo ooderatood lynch ing wao eoeomon, and oho thought if •bo mw a km hong, m abo might do on the street at any time, It would upoet hot oorrM wo thlok that wo oroagroot people. but we ara not; that la, art ara ant In the cyeo of Urn great maM of Kagllob People, while we ara leokod on aeaal baibarfauo by moet at the Freaob. Probably there will be mon imp eat abowa m wlmo we bar* a decent govern meat. but m Mug m wo hamt even an a Uracil re Agurabewd w* eaaoot expect the altlo of aka to to bo particularly admired. Wo are right in Uilaktac a great deal of ouraotraa, but wo moot get away from the Idea that other nutiooa an muab troubled about no. 1 am afraid lha) If » coma to ■ oarml illepU; WO couldn’t do Um JlofO business, and I an alio afraid II H oame to an army display, well—wan hare brought out good Oahure, bat our army la pot par ticularly large, nor does It bare proper sllonUou abown it by the power* that bo. Gracious goodness: [ must atop or eiae somebody will conclude that I bate sartous opinions, and these are not good Uilng* to have. They troub le you io Lite night, aud make you con scloua of aoioetbiug that worries yon — wbat bit 7 Heart or conscience, or what ? On science Is a truublesnia* thing Is warm weather particularly. I wonder If that is tbe reason so many crime* are committed la warm weath er 7 Then, too 1 wonder why whan a man commit!* a crime and le sentenced to be bong Lbe Governor of the Slate doesn’t insist upon bis being absolute ly secluded and allowed to see nobody ? if that were done wi might get rid of some of the sickly MuUmoutallty that nowadays Is about all the awful brutes that cm deserved to be put to death by tor ia re. That ia not a nioeaubject. 1-ot ns talk about tbe girls. The type that la Interesting nowa days baa undoubtedly resulted from the flower trimmed hats. She la the Innocent girl. She talks about Uie UtUe cotton frock aba wears In Us morning, and In tbe evening abe la fair in white muslin, not the dowdy white mosllu of tbe Kngllsh girl; but the white muslin as It la made beautiful by a French dressmaker. It baa a wide skirt a draped bodice, a lace trimmed Acba while ebont the small waist Is a narrow girdle of wblU ribbou. It* sleeve* are (nil and big, and on the dainty little bead Is a straw bat heavy with flowers of tbe flekl and tbe hot house. l ini Iiiuucfiii gin uxni irow under the brim and wooden “bow the gen tlemso know so mack,” and "l« tt reiily true that some of them drink whisky,” and "can anybody have the heart to my that the pretty girls in tbe hallet are even a little tiny bit fast”— and uniter* so when she aaye fast, el moat as If abe were saying something beginning with e greet Mg D; thee she “wooden where mamma Is,” and is afraid that she bas dooe something wroag hopes that you will not misun derstuad her, but, oh dear) she 1s so frlghtcoed. Tbe chances are tan to eoo that you have misunderstood ber. Tbe Innocent got-np Is a snare and a delusion. The Unoy feet In their high-beeled illl>pers car dance vigorously until 4 o’clock in tbe morning; the lithe figure that is baK revealed and half concealed lu tbe white skirt can as sume a batbing dresa that la, to put it mildly, rather scant, while tbe small hands that seem almost afraid to peep out from under the long sleeves osn bold with oertslotv tbs winning baud si poker, or deftly pile obips at a roulette table. Tbe ayes that look so frfgbteead from under that broad brimmed bat eaatly pick out a winning horse, and the sweat rad Ups that trem ble so with the fear of saying some thing that will be misunderstood can give a very business like order to a dis trict messenger boy as to the placing of money on tha favorite. If very much danger lies lu woman's eyes, it Is most dangerous in these Innocent ones. Tbs innocent girl would do well on Wall street, and she can change ber pose with tbe season or tbs fashion. OEM* DAVK OOXK UP. All womankind la troubled nowa day* because tbe so-called semiprecious gems have gone np la price, and Ute emerald, tbe gem that brings good health sod which makes a white band look wbltar, cost* double what it did last year. Advice from a smart girl Is: "Look up tbe obi brooches and bracelets that were eet with garnets, amethysts, emeralds, topasss, aud have them yanked but tint reset, reset In buckles. In broochea, bat choose tbe very best, of comae for a ring.” vVith the coming of the semiprecious gems Into fashion has also oome an sflort oe Ute part of tbe jeweler* to make tits opal fashionable. That an opal Is a beautiful gem nobody will deoy; that It Is unlucky, everybody will affirm who has ever bad on*. I ean swear to a year of trouble resulting from wear ing aa opal pin. A girl I know, who sttTded at tbs idea of Ill-luck and the opal, confesses nowadays that she was a foot Her betrothed gave ber a marntflesnt opal trained in diamonds. It waa put upon her Unger with a loving wish, aed this girl who waa not superfluous, afterwards confessed that within an hour after she assumsd it she became conscious of somebody near her, a somebody who was bad. She said it aeemed to her as If a bat were near bar. and aa If that bat were A deerxm *t htiit, Id rwslity she bad a constant fsaltof of depression. She it tad to g*t rid of tt by saying she wasn't very well sod was nervous, bet she confessed that w I ten ever she took tbe ring off It seemed aa It tbs supernatural demon tbatbovered about bar disappeared, and she felt better. One month after be gave her tbe ring her sweetheart was drowned; within two months after tbs arrival of the opal misfortune earn* to her in tbs shape of a frightful •oaodal about ber sister: she lost In numerable thing* that she prised, ber tog terrier died, and aa old anst who had always promised to leave her mooer to berohaofed her mind and also bar win, tod snnouaesd In It that as her ohm* did not seem to ho obterfal. She wouldn't burden ber by adding to ber laoneae, and Iceland she willed It in ber favorite preacher. That waa the last stroke. That girl took ber ring ho took to the woods and burled It, sad burled it where neither man nor woman can ever lod It, and so no body will get her bad look. •OX* OMBMI. BMUby.ll to Juntas mil ton •«*•* that It yon Mag baton you pot 00 ptarto yoa will waap baton yoa UU them oft. TUr* to wtoftoc In •tylnf, 'AbraeadabtV' baton you M aad tUa a goad fairy wlU U near you rathar Uaa a bad Of** It to all vary wall to tough at Uilap that yoa don't undent end and any l how this question of look to a funny \h4V* maintained that tba lucky man waa the cm who knew bow to emlla at tba rtgbt time, and who knew how to hit at the right Urn aud when lie wiled be made every* body glad, and when ha hit be hit straight oat from the shoulder, and made a number of people eorry. What shall you bit T AH tba mean people, all Urn coward*, all tb* Han aU the aasaki, all the foaalpa, and all the scandal-mongers, all mean orea turca wbo i«y thlog* about woman, really all those wbo, if they belonged to the animal world, would ba treated a* poisonous serpents, and who are la truth social vampire*. What should you amlto at 7 At all the babies, at aU the pretty and pleas ant women, at their dower-trimmed beta, their gay gown*, at every good atory, at every interesting book, and at the man wbo gets In the White House. Who will It be 7 Ask Me* Klnley, ask Ileons, ask Grover, but don’t ask, JUn. j OihMoIo WvKIalcy. ChsrloUa Otm-rvcr. It will surprise do on to learn lliat William McKinley, ot Ohio, la tbe Be publican nominee for PrmdeuL Tlie result of tha balloting yastarday was foreshadowed weeks ago. We are free to say that If we are to have a Repub lican for President we would rather be were McKinley then tome other of his party. Personally bo l* an engaging mao; lo his borne life It be said to ha a Ten lovely character. Personally end politically be Is a clean mao. He ie not a revengeful person, and does not bate every political opponent merely because he la a political npoooeot. Ha la a man of undoubted ability, with large familiarity with public affairs. Orhlaapeclalty.tlietariff.be it par heps more nearly e master than any man of bla party excepting Senator Aldrich, of abode Island. The beat all-’rouud mao In tbe Republican party la Senator Allison, if Democratscoold not escape a Republican President they would prefer that Allison were be; but anybody la the (laid deserved to be preferred above the sarcastic, vin dictive Used. It is at laaat a aailifao llon that be wee not tbe nominee. Arter alt good that can to said of Mr. McKinley, however, there remain abundant reasons why he should ool be President of tbs United Statm He ie the very father of the ChlnM* wall protective tariff Idea end It waa uoder the bill which tore hi* name that all oar present woe* began. Under that bill the Treasury became bankrupt, gold exports bagau, tbe panto of USU3 oame upon tbe coaatry and tbe finan cial agitation originated. Tbe coun try administered a moil decisive re bate to hie policy in 18OT sod It I* to be hoped that, aa represented by him in‘person, it win be rebuked with equal deciilveneva this year. The WUaoo Gorman act la not an ideal tariff measure but it t* In the direction of public lattice while the McKinley Idea leads exactly the other way. A gra ver objection still to Mr. McKinley is that he Is not a firm men. It bee been seen during the pendency ol this con vention, In bla alienee apoo the finan cial qiMftlon, upon both (Idea Of which be has a record, that he Is not a cour ageous public men. Indeed, except upon the question of prohibitory-pro tection, of which he is tbe very high priest, he has Impressed the country eg a man without conviction!. There is always danger that such a mao, en dowed. moreover, with amiable per sonal qualities, will In public place, (all under evil Infiueneet. McKinley I* without the strong characteristics of Lincoln, Grant, or even Harrison. There are many bed man lu the Re publican party to whom he is already uoder obligations, and to whnm be Will be under greeter If hn Ie elected. It cuuld not bn hoped that, as President, lie would bo bis own mao, a» Utevelaod la Ills own man. He would to President for the Kepwblloan party, end. It la to be apprehended that a kite boo cabinet, composed of •uoU person* aa Heans, Uie toodlcr, who ran his campaign, would run him. It la to to sincerely hoped that tbe Democrats at Chicago on tbn 7th of July will nominate a man who will deserve to beat him ami who will beet him. There Is little In the platform, except, indeed, the financial (dank, to commend the caudfdate. It wee drawn by viclona bands and a reeding of It to wall calculated to set the hair od Dtmoorati. Mr. McKinley waa born at Kile*. O., February 96th, 1644, end la. therefore, in hie fifty-tbird year. He reoeieed aa academic education and served In Um Union army la the war between tbe Htatcn, attaining the rank of septets and brevet major. He wee prosecut ing attorney of Htark county. O.. 18<tf —71, was elected e Hepreeentatlve te the Forty fifth Con nee* end served continuously la the Uonan, becoming chairmen of the wayi and meane com mittee, until he waa elected Governor of Ohio, oonlinalng aseh until last ^H^ running east*, Ilotort, of Hew Jersey, la aa unknown quantity, and even the name of the man who dis covered him Ie a* yet sakoown. Rev. R. L. Patton, la a card to tbe Morgan ton Herald, aaya that net of his name In eoeaeotioe with the candidacy for Ooograee la this district la un authorised. He says he la travel trig in the latereet of Foreign mission• aud will not to In the rase this felt TK» Ww»»W> OxrxO Mi LUX Mr. 0. Gal I too tu, DruMtot, Boar orovUto, UL, oayo: ••To Dr. Khio'a Now iMaoovor? I ow* rav Ufa Woo takan wtUi La llrippo and triad all tl>o phjraWlano for a (loo about, bat of do avail and mu given op and .told 1 ao«id not lira. FT * via* Dr. King* Now Dtaoowary to at? atoro I aent for a botUaaad bagaa Ua aaa and from tlw dm dnaa logaa to cot bottar, and aftor Ming tfcrao boUlaa vrna ap and ‘boat again. It It worth IU weight In ■old. Wo won't boon atom or houaa without Got a baa trial at Carry * KaoM.1,’0 Drag flora. SOM IK THE GMDEH. BILL ABB BS00XXEVD8 IT A8 A UKDI BOB nroiBEBTIOg. «/-■»»«• bnM Mmn Mr *■*•**• *■■•» —A at,I— l* »nntv MS. Bill Arp Id AdaniAConiUkktloB, **rmu cunuot bars sa-I have dined to-day." That laths way wafWljuM •Ctera good dinner, especially If we hay# earned It—work«f for It bodily and wanted lu Dnt 1 have beard folk* •ay they war* never hungry and not even tbe odor of oocumben and oniuof In Uu dining-room wuuld ax cite thrir appaUta. I bava heard others aay that ***** I*1*th* appetlta, but wvrs afraid *° **f*5S? 11 bo*5*#** <rf lo dictation. Suoh Tolka are lobe piUed. They have tny sympathy. Uul I doetrely believe *5»* 1«£« ?r phytlo.l exvreiac Ian rvio edy for both. I tuppute thut Khakss (ware suflstyd lo this way, for be save: *•* *** dlgaeuon wall on sppatUe. and health on both.” Certain It it bia death waa auddeo and premature, (or **• ‘'T?* “"** 50 yeara Milton under ««od this bauble, too, for Is says that Adam’a (Jeep was awsst, being bred from pure digestion.’' That's the Mere* -working lo tbe garden-X inherited that trait ftps tbe old mao-Adas, i mtao-aodl deep tweedy, loo. after I bava worked In my garden. There Is no Insomnia about ms, bat Mrs. Arp suffers ftps It sometlsss when I am snoring libs a blnpouotasua. . waa rumiDUlog aboot UM Taiua Of • good gardes toll* family-we had ao excellent diouer to-day, nod I ootln tod op the coat V*a hare Ore in the I family, and tha dinoer coat oa only are | oonta aptaoe, and there waa aoough left lor teeer tbiw ogre. We bad a email piece of middling meat, about half a pound, that waa boiled with tha baaoa, and tbora ware rev*a different ktodr of regetaMaa from m, garden. Tha hot ter and bjttermin „** homa-nraaa. Tha rite and Oorn-meal and hockteber riea eeet a littls-nol muoli. Every thing waa weU-oookcd, and aUtbat waa W‘".U<J appetite and good dl gtat Ion. *f^woa'hly proud of my gardes, for it ia all my own work. 1 prepared the grocnd and dreaaad It and opened the forrowa and planted the seed and colUrated the ptanu and killed the weed*, and It ia my especial pieeaure to very enriou* el ewoh other aad will try to keep up with Uia beat. I bear torn* •ay that tbalr oat* crop la a total fail ure. and wlU mot to at to eat. X tea afawoata ia a Mid sot Air from na »tf l aiaka a food crop. Of coarse than la aoMhloy ia the land, bat there la more in tto farm. Heap plowlag to begin with la absolutely aaoeaaary In farming. I don't maan dOto turning, bat deep plowing. I know a farmer who always follow* tb* toiaptow with* bull-toofua to tto tauao farrow, mod he min food crop* whether It ralne or not. My food neighbor. Widow Field*. Iiaa no hy drant In tor garden, but Me alwny* bae tto fiaaet garden la tto town, and | tto went I* damp plowing and fertlll* lag. 1 can overlook tor work from ay wtadaw, and It aaccita* ma to hasp ia tolllag dtataoeo. Sha baa an aoro In tto high eat state of enlUratteu, and will ouka more on It than will to made on SO acre* of that land balaw Marietta. Wo*k on tto garden* auat not atop. Xeep planting auooawriva otoaa every teo day* or two weoka, aad kayo a fraali supply. A good, large family can llva wall on aa aera for flea month* ta the year. Kata* your *«o atmwberries •ad raapbarrtaa add boy wild berrta* vooagb for Jam and jdly. Then, lr you have grapaa and peartwa around, you can lire like a prtnea and always hare aomethlog nloe for compmiy. A few flower* la tto garden will help to make ft attractive, and my wife want* olltha old fashioned herbe. lLkenage and mint and balm and thyme and . aatamaa aad aamomfle. Kha baa tone radlati enough for a Intel. WerOeolog la the drat work of which wehaveauy blatory. aad It ia the moot ptoaMot and healthy of all occapatlooa. If a man la a good gardener ha will ba a good farmer. Aa you travel oik Uod through the country yoa can tail a good farmer by looking at hu gar* deo, lurt aa you oaa tell a good wKe and daughter by looking at tba flowara and Tinea In tba front yard. They era a alga of good taate aod refinement ar.d good housekeeping aad eon tent aaaot. They save doctor bllla. for ball the diaoaaoe oooaa from dImaged mloda — nuntal mlaary— borrowing trouble ud noralng it. The cultivation af fioarwe la a good tooio for ladlgeatlou. X have ootioad that the people who are ■oat diligent In each ooeopeUone are the least concerned about politics aad ■liver and gold aad the neat preeideu ttal election. Tba farm aad the home absorb them, aad are a bigger thing than tba apotla of ottee. The average Toe Campaign! The Campaign! 75 Seventy-five Cents 75 -GISTS THE GAZETTE From now till ’97. THE OLD RELIABLE BETTER THAN EVER. Largest — of subscribers in five year*, aud constantly increasing in popularity. Lose no Tim* - iu joining Tub Caxkttb'b large and rapidly growing family of interested weekly readers. SUBSCRIBE NOW. IW$I5° “ year: from UOW till ’97 for 75 cents. watcli everything »» it growl, sod gather the vegetable* and wash them at the beck door aad. call the good wife and children oat to ace thorn aad listen to their compliments We have had a long drought, bat I had fortified against It. Every bill was Oral spaaed out n foot deep sad flllod with water, and after it had soaked Into the ground I QlWd up the bole with s mixture of top soil and barnyard scraping* and sifted ashes and put on an cm mors wa ter. Every furrow I opened for beans aad peas aad beets 11st water run luto It. and then pat the fertiliser In aad plan tad tbs toed. I bad 80 boles to dig for tomatoes aad 40 for squashes, sad aa many more for encumbers, and, not withstanding th* drought, everything I has grown vigorously. It Is hard work aad takes patience to lay the founda tion la this army, but it pays. My squash vines saver a apses of four fees squats ta stch hill, and my tomato plant* ate five fast high and full of healthy frslt. Wall, sow. to tell the whole troth, I have n hydrant Is the center of the garden and whan the dry, hot weather wae at IU worst I opened smalt trenobet close by the mote of tbs Manta and turned Urn water on aad >et It rut slowly and soak In and after wards covered the trenches with dry dirt. This, too, le trouble, but It paid wail, dome folks eprlakle, bat that dues harm and do good. It bakes tb« surface and never rsaebcu the root*— •prickle nothing but grass. Where water la plaett aad eooventeal there is no excuse lor a pear garden. It ta better to dig do* end fsrtllise and cultivate a square rod welt than to skim over ball aa sen “nigger fash ion.” and sea it all dry up whoa the dry draught, as Cobs culls It, ootnoa. Tim Intensive system le Um hem for gardens, I know nose long experience. It mads ms sad to ccs tbs crops on the railroad between Marietta and Atlanta Us other day. Asms and norm of osns net sis Inches high and cotton nliucot lovisible. It did lock like perishing to death la Use name of the Lori. Ills n poor country, I know, hut they could cow K down la pan and gradually improve It so that a Geor gian wouldn't be sMiamsd for imrsian to took out af lbs c«r window* as they rid# through it Ill U MOTl*lii| now mo«h Mmm •c* pod ruairMi mrUM »«Afb borboot to wblob M Wroo. Tk»f on politician waota something for noth in*- As Cotas aaya: “11m la Just side wlpioa around bnnUog tbe orthogra phy « *n oJIVjo.” and whan ha gate It the drat lesson he learns la bow to log 1 roll. Do win rota for anybody's bill ; If they will you for bia Tom tickle ! n« aed I will tloklia you, U the motto, • sod they eaU it a compromise of eoa fllatlng interests. Congress baa at la* voted every member a private secretary with a 11,WO salary. Merci ful heavens I When will this tblog etopf blew let them apply fur a re ceiver and sell out the concern. Bat I am off ibeeubjeet, and will gat la a bad frame of miod and have a fltof indigestion; end so T will quit end go to e>y gar dan, where 1 am al ways calm and aersne._ Wlotmwv tel »r ItelMH to | wn>te>uru rnirnMu. The proepeeu ere that Wilkao tlO bare the rewmt number of dtaUUortoo thlo muob known in her htotory TWO will hardly bo o bonded broody dlotlllory in Um county thlo year, the rnronoo offioero oro elotong moot of tho wbtokoy dlotlllmtoe nod time will bo vory fo» Umt ounrlre. Where tboro bore boon bwndrodo before there win booeoraotyn doom. Tbto, ofoouree, will relleyo reoot of tbe rermee ofBeera in UiU oeetion, oo tboro will be noth* «a« for thorn to da They will either bore to go oat of boetDere or led other bold of operation. i - -. _up Tbaoo who are In pool Uon to know, my that more lire* are eared by Chare* bar lain to Oolle, Cbotore nod Diarrhoea Moarey than any other mod loin# In tho world, la almoet every community there io toare one whom life boo been oared by thlo romody. booh yonear ■oldom tot eu opportunity preo to reremmnnd it. Toot to wbat mokoo U the moot popular mod iota* In on for bowel ooeeptoleU. Ur. L R. (tho* maker, of DeaavlOe, Pe., to a largo (•oerii morebont ood former end Otre of lit moot prominent mm In Ante itroog ooooty. Tie ooyr “Otontw hUn'o CoOe, Cholera end DtonWn Raarady oared my Me. I bare reed It eorend yoore for oromy oollo and It breohroyo given mo prompt relief. Thereto nothing better made. Per mo troobtod oo T bare boon U to Mb ItmU.” For reto by t. K. Carry ft Ca •SSSE&fZJf'i&lg. PmMartiiMmNt oonearnlng tba Democratic ettaatU-o. Mr. ClevJaod aril: _“J fry y* no Oruraa m to the OfoteMo action of rtflegatai already eboaan or to bo cboasc to the Demo - oroUo national txjorrnUon. batlre fun to beliara that whee Us M»e orrtraa for drilbarate uatloo. thora will b,_5fr*r?ft— “f°* Damsoratle oanift bailer* thlobSSo f knowthe Dooaoerolla party Is neither tu>patriotic nor foolish audit aaams otaor to ow thataook aoourw wOlInlUeta my aortooa injary oo every Interest of our oountry. which it haebaea the mDelou of Democracy to adTueoa. and will ^^‘lo.^unddliMSrto oorparty organisation. ^Three la little hope that “•■y of eoeoeas this free silver pnjmelileo, attar its thorough discus aloo during a political oampolge, will Ktnota mc£rity ofthe votes ofthe ooootry. , *‘u *• tku msuy of the iHu bo dispelled before the time oomae lor them to out their ballots which will I'Kpiooa their eebar aaoond Ihewbt The adotdiea by tbe Deasoeraoyof thle propcaWoa woo Id. I believe, give to oor oppooeata aa advantage both is (fat Present and future wMchthay do not “My eft inhalant to troa rtnwuiranj li eoatreog that I consider tta easeem aa Idas lira] with tbe promotion of the country** goad. “ThU ought suffleleutly to eecouat far my anxiety that so mistake bo mada at oar party convection. la toy opinion no effort should be spared to secure such action of Uo *l' |af aa will met party demoralisation. “It la a place for mwaiiltafiiwi eud a comparieoa of views of those Demo otau who believe in the oaaee of sound money should then be baaed and be constantly in evidnea. ▲ cause worth flghtlng tor ia worth dgbUog for to the and. If sound money Democrat# sup pose there U danger of a mistake being mada each danger should stimulate their nativity ia avarttaff it loatead of creating dlaoourngammit. "I am eery tar from arrogating to myself a eootroUlot lainenno usou the polieyof my petty; bat ee aa uofllseb I hg Deeoooret who baa been honored by kto party and who desires u—arif M greater political prlvticgm than to so copy the place of private lo 1U raaka, I hope r pay not be Mamed for eaylug tbm much at this Ubm lu the interest, as It aeeme to me, at the grand old or gantertion aa neh la honornUa tradi tion*; *o Juatiy proud of lu aehlev* P*oUl V2. “«*l» «o ^dwtotadaod brsra la its battles tor UmpntoUe wM n« Mlvtp Mt Richmond Timed. Tbe bolt of the silver maa from tbe EUpeUloaD party bee taken place and TMJer. of Colorado, Senator IMlwe, of IdohoiSeoaterttumoa, of Utah, and Mr. cWveiaad. of Xevada, have bid farewell to tbe Kepubtlcu party, aad eaat their lot with tbe all. vrr men of any party or creed that wmj crop oat for a presidential vote. Xow tble ie the • Igactlc West, with which our frtuoaa tbe Democratio MV vorltea were to join farose aad i~iis tbe country. Title I* tbe Moeee who waato to some oat of tbe Udtnwbee aad lead tbe children of tbe loath dry-ebod Into tbe pramlsod load, flowing with milk "jTMa is tbe stalwart eavbeaier from tbe Wert, wbe wee to Ua tbe Mirer tankard to the Has of ttmtbtraty Sooth that It might be full to overflowing. Xow teak at him. What la be F All tbe botUog of which we have reed aod wbleh tbe Mlverltae of Urn South bare boasted so boisterously about, has simmered aad leaked oat to four Utils rettea borough States whose occupation le Miter mining, and whose ropseatataUvee are tbe speakers aad director* of the mine owner*. How have the mlabfy fatten I Tbe Mo«ee le a Pal staff. Tlmrwp-tearerle a beweref wood aad edrawar of watar. A batonfal thing to tie to-Colors do, Idaho. Xevada, Utah, lest tbtr tasa rets* all told la the doctoral col lege. Virginia Uus twain; Kentucky, thirteen( Georgia, thlrteee; ledlaaa, Iftern; IUlaola, twenty-four; Wlaeon els, twelve, apd Kew York, thirty ill, Xbat weald it pvodt a party to lorn aay ooe of them aad aeptaia Urn whole kit at aflvar-mlas nraw. mbwa aad dl T in, . waaavery) SS^wthiir little^ of want, that there 1 nab baby la the whole wortd; end ssssSHS'S UMa atmgarb|a patud kiemd bar aa MUhnM what made the number or eaargatlo man at the now w«e greatly letoraatadla oohmbdag Jt^iSV&.'S'SS^'tSl off the ooaat of {faith CfcreUaa, a beeattfai green leadfaH^daaSara, lha wrO* aea«1Uia‘,yleJV^Md.WiL? ante* and Eleanor Date, the father and mother of ear baby. rarT amou them satUere. Their child waa bora about a moath alter the landtag e< the eolaeieU, August 17. MET. Za the little wooden chapel. two ar three week* attar the evan^Um ootoT late eaaemblad one bright day ta attend “ad <*thS little etraager. Tee Cent ww Urn family'* illnt weah •pooeor wae Gorman the baby* grandfather. __ aba waa known as Vtateia •weet appropriate name tor tk wild flower that bloomed all «] t bat dredate coeat. She wm tbaflnt bonot Bngllrti parent. In Aomriea and waa the only white baby then UTiag on thiacooUneat. About the time that Virginia «m ssasr^srasrwa I£55SJ?2SMrt4aSC them. Governor White MiiUMS aadnater saw hie Uttla Granddaughter
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 25, 1896, edition 1
1
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