Newspapers / Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, … / Aug. 20, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The ■ r _ _PoTotog to tko PNtMiUoB Oi Homo r—* tho V oE xm_Gastonia, X. C„ August 20, 1890. __ I — _ A WOMANS POCKETS. BAB TALKS OF THE DRESS MAKER’S AUTOCRACY IB PBOVIDIBO THEM. »r ike >«nkai-Tb< r*K> !■»« for l'i>r(nmr« Tke oHrlMl ltwH»r« JtiM PMCk-rrah Pm. A llntrplu a WMlUtwde or >tlko-M«» llti.rlM tko lift Xlikt Stave noon Itlorawl. M. t.nuu UeputiUo. As our party oonilsti of mere woman except from Saturday to Monday, we have an opportunity to do not only considerable Ulkiug, bat considerable thinking. Even the molt talkative Wumnu uses up her olistter In time. Aud thro site reals and watU tor freab antuunltlon. Tho thinking is done during the resting period. Oo tutor day w» suddenly become oon sc ions of tho import sue* of mankind, for we are informed that the gentlomeo will arrive ou the 6 o'clock train. The two geulleoten oonaist of Uocie Tim othy brother, who u over 70. and Aunt Maria's Willie, who to lit, and ciorklng in the city. Ths entire tioase hold gets nn its beat clothes and goaa dowu to meet tbeeu. Wlllta to an am* bilious yootb, given to fancy scarfs axid with n desire to make money enough to go to college next year. I respect Ms ambttlon, but 1 do wish that he would ootstntter and blush so every time yon spoke to him and tbat he srould not All bis pockets with all aorta of things. When ha walks around be lias a lumpy appearance, and uulraa Aunt Marls gets hold of him and manages to make him unload, his coat oevrr seta smoothly on him. It to a queer thing that the average drusamakrr nowadays has absolutely no consideration of tba comfort of womankind. WOMEN AND THXtx POCKBTS. »« put a pocket in a aklit She sxpeots yon to tuck your handkerchief up your sleeve, or to keep it io your pocketbook, and eke count* on your betac willing to carry your puree In your band and chance losing it. With the average dress maker I have a standing quarrel on *ubj*ct of pocket*. A pocket 1 will have. I Insist upon having, and I do get it. Of course, I don’t want to put In my pocket all the things that a man carries In bis dye or ssvro or nine «*r whatever number belongs to him, but still I like to know that there ie a place where 1 can slip a lore letter or a bill, nr keep the always neoasmry hair pin. A purse, a knife, s handkerchief, h watch, ■ pencil, a memorandum book and a snuff box are only a few of the things that men carry In their pockets. Some men have louse bits of candy, aud when Ibis candy seta cov ered with scuff or tobacoo. lt lacks the delicacy of taste It bad whan It started. Some other men carry a whole writing get-up; that is, a small pad of paper, one of tliono pens that hold ink, sod Is stooped up when you with to use It, and a collection of postage itamps. Other men indulge Id cigarettes and card*, while sttll other men wear on those double chains and conceal in tbelr pockets not only great bunches ol mji, bat oft fa two tod sometlmea three watches. Tin three watches are worn tnaco what time It la In America Eugland sad Russia Speaking of snuff, which the ex tremely smart middle-aged man la just now taking up again. It la Urn moat difficult thing to Ood a good snnff box. Just try If you want to give one to somebody. You can get bonbon boxes you can get sump boxen, but a aonlT box ought not to bare a hinge, for the snuff collects in It and makes the shot ting somewhat difficult Then, too a snuff box most be flat, so that it will not make the waistcoat bulge, and yet it must hold sufficient snuff for at least half a dsy. To bs •wry swell, yon roust make an effort to get the Pom’s 1 h*** »»eU Jt and Its odor is decidedly good. I am told that the Pope has a great liking for perfumes, consequently the aonff used by him is not only made of the Terr A mat tobec eo, but It It perfumed with altar of roses. Baltimore Is proud of the fact that It la made there and under the S3SZ3oJKZ',M~ *■« six arts ueedtol, that the abominable bag made ofnettlog, which U seen in most of the ollies nowadays, sod carried by ®*‘ro«1w,>0r> out to bay slot of Philadelphia, not In Boston, not in Hew York City, but la Rome, and was fancied by the tun Boman matron? The xnoteut Hebrew matrons carried a pouch, but in addition to the netted bag carried by the Roman matrons, they bad aom« way of arrangiag what W ealled the strophinm, which was rwsllp tltwlr stays, to that a pocket was permitted near the heart, aad la K carried their most precious Jewels Pitnoh ladies of the oid days oarHed a sort or oral bag made of feather, and •it with uncut gsms. The Saxon dames bad wlwt pones, and the Hor mans, when they want to Rowland, wore bag* hanging at their aide* In which tbsra was supposed to be money to «Ito away. Jsss now a good maoy of us would Ilka to meat a good Hor maa dame who Ima sotae moon to burr, or offer without Interest to her WfSSi. L •*!“, r**** Xw did wlthont a hairutn, or was she tbs original Inventor of this aaeful article? Did sho really first call it tbs motiuia lu psrvo 1 1 bets Ixtl.i, but that lust ex premia Die possibilities of IMnpan ■?f wnmaa’s costume. I bay# been trying with Dm help of a girl 1 know, to think of all the Ullage a halrpio eaa do. lu the drat plane, it hirttoM gloves, thorn and collars; It takes the place of a pupsr-eattcr, and it apena a letter neatly. I have seeo It need when u lock was obstreperous It is viduabln wh<*> a cork-screw Is not apiand. It will • mouth end seeks eiee ii the wick eft lamp when It t-o t uses to burn properly aad held lu the P and allowed to darken, It may take Uto plaoeof an eye-brow pencil. hsr ssao. Mias Betty waa asking me tlia other "A0 my hero wu A’ow, Mba Batty li nothing If not proper, and yet aha confcaned, with a faint Maah, that of all tba mao in bletory kba liked C tar lee the Second the teat. laid aha thought be would bare different If tbe proper leffnaoca. through aome good woman, bad been brought to bear upon him, and yet ahe waa not aura that aba won Id bare liked bin quite so well It ho had been dif ferent. From the beginning of the world women hare adored rascals. Wbo waa Interested In Abel t mo caraa for tbe good boy of tbe family ? Aak the average woman about bar baro, and aha will aalact one of tbe Fnooh koala, probably koala the Fourteenth. She likee bla good looks, bla ana manners, and aba la aura he must have been fascinating, alaa eo maoy woman could not have oared tor him. She baa a leaning towards Blob alieu, toward Robespierre, and as ex pressed fondness for Sheridan. Per sonally, I think Disraeli stands fore most. In my affection*. Men say of him that be eras the most cooosltsd mtn that ever 11 red. bat women wbo are wiser than men, know that be bad much to be conceited about. The atory of bis lit*, the story of bis am bitions, bl* public speeches, bl* writ ten hooka and bis Innar Ilfs all com bined hire a wonderful fascination for women and drew tbe feminine heart to him. Jest take op one of bie novel* If yon want to coovfoco yourself of bis thorough and an landing, nut only of woman, and or lore, but of aoeiety. II* bad the wisdom to marry a widow, and be never grew tired of bar; while tbe had tbe wisdom to car* for him as ha wished to be eared fnr, so that lie cover wearied of her. H* said that he believed If two people wished to lire happily they should see vary Uttlsof each other in tbe daytime, should visit at different Houses end meek, after midnight, to diaouae whatever waa in tsnatluf, over cold ohlckun and cham pagne. Wbat a wise man be waa Disraeli suggests primrose*, nod Ciroms soggset to aa that right under my own eyes that old, old etory is being told again nod that tba old. old fashion of making leva la to Ibe furs. Every morning Nanny comas Into braakfaat with a wooderf ul bunch of Oowara at tar ball. At Orat I only thought that aba had base oat in tha garden for a walk, and that this was the result of hear early visit to tha dower beds; but one morning I noticed that her boqnet waa largely composed of primroses nod purple pansies, snob paosiaea aa only grow in Mrs. Jim Jobnaon’a beautiful garden. Tbe story is plain to ns. Every more log aa young Jim Johnson guts down to the village, where he is studying law under the tingle Judge, who la tbe power, he leaves a bouquet no the gate rand Nanny, quaeriy enough, tads H would be cruet, but It would be Interesting to get up early and go down nod preempt that boqoet. 1 wonder what Nanny would think If abe saw her pastes In tbe belt of an other woman! She would probably tblok tha troth, as abe la the only ab solutely yonng girl to the house. TUB BIOM OP LOVJ4. H Is almost aa pratty as aaaiog two birds making lore to watch one yonng girl when ahe ts first conscious that a yonng man’s heart la drawn towards her. She flashes; ahe la nervous and abe flits around in a quick sort of a way asaetly as Urn yellow canary bird doss In Its eage when the bird In tbe other window trills a particularly «®f- It to * good thing, thin old-fashioned love. It keeps every body young. Even the lookers on And their hearts growing tender, end some how every human being bearing tbe love story of someone elm. Ilyee again In the 9rat love that earns to ber. My Ar*t love waa giveo to a gentlemen old enough to be my grmndfabUr. 1 nnraed It In sUence and never told him of the deep affection that I had for him. To me be represented everything that was gnat, everyth lug that was hand some. and everything that waa tntrt laetaal. Tba fact that be waa my own node did not Interfere la tbe toast wltb my low, slnoo It waa a spiritual ooa, purely. Tbe Ant low to always spiritual and that la tha rsasou why no wise woman marries hrr first low. In marriage a little thought most be giwn to the material. Tbe breed and butter of the future la to be considered to la Impossible to live without loving words, and it la also Impossible to llw entirely opoo them. Thai ts the mason why it Is well for a boy to learn the value of metier, slnoo, through It bn can owe properly lac tba woman from whom ha wUhee lertng words and loving kindness. *a* nowi what McnriT it. , I pr*U«4 to undervalue monay I Uilok it a gnat bleating. A ntoe. Uod man wrote me a latter aad aaked mm wbat I thought of tba allvar guee Uoo. To bo unite booent. I do no» J,Ulk TS* “•?" •boot It, bat I do k-owUUa-goW i. mate nloor to ban remember U>a day do,1*r- “»•» awful day whan on* did not know wlwtbar noa'i J^f^Wrt-Pt^aioeoteor on. bon dradof iWm Silver la aot pteaaant b the pane. A man who know* a “t* ^lf *» hart allvar wa will not be counted booete by for otenar*. 1 da not think wo an wont ed aa particularly booaat by foreigner, ■«w* Aa a nation, we an too for giving. Wa overlook tba •mbmlar and eoenl the cawUaami thief m a perm who la to b* regarded with »m pntby. Our law eoutte art hurnbed at by people of the OM World aad whte we aay boaaaty, they UO ea that •a do aat kaow what wa are Utkina *• Mt u Immortal oattoeae tar aahaoetty goto. bat aa rananl one. aot knowing atarfutety 7*1** ^bo**«ir la. And aomatlmm I am afraid thla true. ****Tn-— «* aer maa for eaoney *?*!*!?> °*«P »• forget that "cil,’' d«al» aw not ilwaya mare •oaa; that gatUag ahead of aaaaany rault In • pile of money, but not in Mil raped. In the old days our merchants thought extreme honesty m good edyeithuuent. Nowadays, u la believed that extreme business ability, •o culled, Is most desirable. 1 do not Ilk* those words bustosas ability. Ability ought to meao espa bllltyjin tho direction of honesty,J not la the dlruetlou of uiidriieillng la ooo way sud orsrssUlng In another. If a merchant can sell mo a pair of glares for half Utelr value. 1 know be is going to make it np by ohaiglog double U>o vain* for a handkerchief. It doesn't pay to buy things foe less than they are worth and whan anybody la fool enough to be oaugkt la thU trap •ho deserves to be pinched. You tee I am not strong on the*1lver question, though X confess to liking a silver spoon to eat with, sod a mlver-baokcd break for my hair, but I ara particular ly strung on so boned best* for all business deals When ws are booed In our bsatnsss life ws will be honed In our dally Ills Honesty should per meate our mlod. In the old days a 6lrt waa taught to be virtuous and a oy waa tsosht to be honmrt, sad all •octdy morally waa In a batter state than It is now. To-day it far enough If our womea dress well end our men make money. There is no mention of either of these two things In tbe Ten Command menu. I don’t think there la In the New Testament, but dill aa we read translations, tbe old books can be twisted aroond to salt tho ■orals of tbs day. Wbat are the ■°rsl» of tbs day 9 The chief rule Mem* to bs to get aa much out of your neighbor as you can, and to do •a little for your neighbor as you oan. It la a bad law uoe that la not good to live by. dot to die by, and that is wbd wa hare got to think of. Not only tbe living, but the dying. The sweated old writer who belonged to tbe days that have gone, gave the world a great book on holy llvlog. Than he wrote one on holy dying. He knew that wbat we did here oo anted for wbat wa did lo tbs hereafter and ba combined tbo two. Thai la wbat we want to db. Live so tbst our dy ing will bs easy. Try to 1 Well, vea, as well aa I can, but even it I do not praotice so perfectly, 1 assure you Lhd whan It cornea to preaching, neither yon oor your neighbor can com pare with Bab. Pn> »W*n of Borax. Julian Hawtbo* at In New Tort Journal. Mr. Bryan made a favorable Impres ■Ion on me when X tsw bim (or tbe first time this morning. He It a man of five (sat, ten Inchon, of a figure oot athletic, but naturally solid nnd strong. HU face, as Innumerable por traits have already informed me. is clean shaven, tha lips tbio. but there U a corva Id their line of lanetloo and a tort of dimple—if one may use such a word la describing tbe features of a prospective president—at the corners, which 1 have frequently observed in men distinguished for eloquence. Gladstone and John Bright had It, and So have Uhoata, Bishop Butter, Bourko Cock ran and oar own Chaun eey. Mr. Bryan baa also something which not all tbe above named orators possttsea- large, dark, kindly eyes, which abow tba eomlog smile before it gets lower down, and dispone tba loler kxmtor to smile responsively. His manner lo greeting a stranger la very quiet and courteous. He appears at once eerie os and genial nnd has a dlgoity which la not noanufaotnred, but innate There lino pose about him. When In bis speeches he ascribes the enthusiasm of hi* bearers to hie canes rather than to himself, lie speaks sincerely, and to say tbe truth, It may be tba power behind this young man. rather than force In himself, which will enable him to carry tba coming election. The sowar of the people la unknown and incaleulablo, and tbe beat leader of tba people moat be a man, who, Ilia Bryan, can adequately absorb their passion and purpose sod competently express and execute the tame. I doubt not that Bryan la a greater man hwiay, thanks to his faculty of receiving tba contagion of a national win, than he was before be addressed tbe Chicago convention. Ha is s men who will be developed by bis position and opportunities. and if, os there Is no reason to doubt, Ills judgment be sound and Ills rectitude valid, we may look to see bim beooane a worthy head of the American people. 1 lay tire** upon ini* sympathetic) quality io Bryan, baoaose It mbi to me ant tba leeet valuable element la the ooofllel which Is before btm. Xu men aan ooutrol tills nation when, as •ow, It Is aroused, bat a mao may In tuitively oodprebend Its need* and it* will batter than It can Itself compre hend them and by a happy genius so emphasize what la eonad and manipu late wbal 1* questionable u lu bring forth the best result*. Xeilber Andrew Johnson nor General Grant possessed this Intuition, sad to their lack of It are doe the errors of their administra tion. Lincoln, on the other bend, did pc seen it in full measure, and be be came the loftlrat figure In our potltleM history. Mr. Bryan's bead Is high shove the ears, but sot so much developed be hind. A phrenologist might say lie bad more Urmoeet tbea energy. Out the enthusiasm sod magnetism or hi* nstore prevent this combination from degenerating Into dogged nest. Bryan most always he In tba front of any movement with which be la connected. His Intelligence la nxceptloeal and swift. He perceives U* larger rela tion of things. If there be a typical American of the west, this men Is he, bat h* baa Individual attribute* which lift him shove the type. ■siSlisV A nils* Hate*. Tub Baer sttvs la tba world (or Cat*, Brii lace, Bora* meets, Salt Rheum. Fever Rorra Tetter, CIumwI Heeds, ChilMelus,Corns, and all $kla Kraptioas, sad positively euros Piles, or no pay required. It la gnanmteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money ntuMUA. Price 9ft oeala per box. Pcv sate by Ourrry A Kennedy. ARP SAYS IT IS HOT. HE LITER H A LIVELY VILLAGE AHD BBOULD DOW. •** tu«" #« OantmiiM-tlH Isjer •rewa WemlwlM—t —d Writ** la ■HnumUw r—hi— cMThatM. HIM. tVU Aif la Atlanta OmaiLgQoo. CoaOdencv la a plant of alow growth In an aged bciom. Tbe republican* V® m*kin* “heli ado about aomething Hint Mr. Bryan aald a boat tbe supremo oourt, and a vim eome of tbe Georgia *•*>•» criticised him severely and de fended the court u tbe brat bulwark of war liberties, and moke of It aa tbe high tribunal that stood like a wall to protect tbe people against Ibo aaaaulU Jf passion nod prejudice. AU that I* very pretty to a young mao, bat old nanu liave mere memory and lee* cob Menoe. There waa a time, a good long time, wbeo that oourt had tbe reepeot and tba revareuee of tba «*• ■•«*•». wbeo Joba Marshall and Hoger B. Taney, two Uoalbernera, were the etrief Justices for a period of nearly 00 years; but soon after Taney died partisan politio* and Motional prejudice crept Into tbe court and U Is there yet. It b“,l—en only 20 years alaoe members of the court ruled Mr.Tilden oat of Ure presidency and seated tlayea, as clear au act of legal fraud aa was ever perpetrated by the most unserupulou* politician*. Law la said to be tbe per fecMon of human reason. Then bow Jfic that In sueb groat qosstlons repub lloan judges decide one way and demo crat* Uie other T It u right asslan elioly to recoil that etuprndouj farce— sevM democrats and etgM republican* aU a Oder oath to do Justice la tbto greet question, and yet they drew tbe Party lines to a man. That Tlldan WM sleeted all parlies now admit and history has so recorded. He was cheated out of the uiwts oflN by three members of that supreme oourt. This stiwaam* oourt that decided that ■S00®* Ux to be uoeoorUtoUoual. Why, I wouldn’t trust such a court with any cate that luvolrs* great oor por.tt ions, or eeetional queatioos. Ever slnoo Joe Bradley was a young mao and up to 187V be was president or director of two railroads and several great insurance companies, lie couldn’t tote fair with them on oue side and tba paople oo ths other to save hs life. No, I atn like Bryea. I've lost oonllldeooe In the Integrity of that oourt. 1 will not say that its member* can be bought with money, bat their wills ate moulded by undue iiillueooe and ought to be broken. That Income tax was a fair and just measure and wnald have put into the treasury sour •40,000,000 and no donbt saved tbe government irons the dis grace of that bond business. Bui I didn’t start to writs on polities. The weather it coo hot to ti.lok about anything that excites Indignation. We old eliapt here io Cartenvtlle have been going In school •very night for s weak, preparing for the deeetrlct skills show that was to come off. The ladles got it up and then levied on ut and pat the uldcat men and ladies In an infant class, and wo htd to Coe a chalk mark and learn onr a b o on a blackboard, and ba taught to slug •*! want to ba an •ngel,” and we bad to speak a speech libs ws used Co apeak U away back in the M’s and M*s. boms of us bed to walk op and bs licked for our mtschisf. and we had a recess end played many, many stars with tbs girls and L got kissed several times and so forth. Tlw nights were Lot, but we had fun, lots of fun—old-fashioned, innocent fan. Old people are never so happy ns when recalling tbs memorial of the old school days. That is about at fsr hack we can go, and it ia a big 1 aod mark In life’s history, tlhakospsare tells of the wblutoff schoolboy creeping un willingly into school. That was a true pietnre sometimes, but, as a general thing, ws were glad to go. Uhariea Lamb writes of Ms joyful school days. It eras a most dotlghtfal mixture. With a mother to help us get our leasoos and a father to es courage and a teacher to praise us when ws dll well, tbo dally task was nut hard, aod then tbs surroundings, the frolics, the recess, the dinner buckets, its good time going borne in tbe even lug, tbs pretty bn aches wo bad to crow, tbs rad gullies where ws got sbalk, tbs walnut trees over la tbo Held end tlis obsstnnt trees on tbe blU, •ad then there wars pasaimneons and btaokbawks aod mar pops not fsr awar. Ws had townball at noon, glorious old townball that has been debased and degraded into baseball IV, Med to give g-rod bells to the batter and wanted hlw to bit it aod koock H n wile if he could. Then there was oar old-fashioned ahloay that was akin to the modern golf. It was a bard game •nd kept us wttb bruised shins and bloodly toes, aod gradually fall Into a Mats of Inuocaoua dennetMa. am uwre were pome pretty girl* to took oo and admire, and «• had oar •weethonrta, aad lorod to etaad by them at tbo Ptlday arming spoiling, and eumatlmea eeutured to hold their band* oa tbo aly, nod would puruoeuly misspell the word to let toom get •bore. That waa ohlealrr, pur* and •Inpla Than eaaaa Saturday. a long. : long, happy day, when we gathered ehhigaaidna or ebeethau, or want to Mw mill aud wool lu waablng while waiting for tbo grist. Homttliooa wa didn't watt tba griat, but ran pony raeea hoaao and wont back la tbo after »«on for auothar frolic. It la eUll memory’a delight to recall tboaa drllghtfal dare, and it la no woe Uar that U* poets bar* written aboat litem; aad om of Uiam says: "W—^|t«t baartare tfc* iw-MnrMy The next era that etande out moat premiumUy la that of tba Wear. Shakes inars knew all about that, too, and drew tba picture, no doabt, from hit owa orparleooe whan ha was dying for pretty Ann Hathaway. Kerry man and woman could write n story of lure's young dream If they would, ami •one of them would bw aad, van aad. X wldi that every kd and Iseeiebad a lover—not a transient am, wbo, Hba U»o batterfly, tips tho hooey from om •owar aad then seeks another, bat a traa. food Jovar who chaoses a willing mate and stick*. Tba uno, confiding lava of a young couple wbo are mated, ••married, A tba moat beanti ful thing In life. rar weusw ttciwmet. •aeaM •> iwiuU km tauw 31m tm—el— etswwr. Kev. Cbarlea H. Perkhurst. D. 1)., la an article on ‘‘Halaetlng a Csraei." addressed to yoang men, In A ageist Lnd<t$’ Hor*r Jmrnnl, aajs: “la the life of eaoli one of oe, when wc rmcli a certain stage In our blstory, them oomea a moment that ta the thrilling coaoterpait of that, a moment when we become strangely ooosotoui of ta aooroe, and whan tba Abrea of body, •jwl ••»-} »PlrH bull Ibcnuelvee Into a klod of rigid oeoeoiouaaaas of power, £?d.Jri!?n p#ww U feU »*«» bewildering dlaUuotnaaa la 1U relations to tba timet la wbleh am era Uvlug and to the yaau tbit wa are being. Aadtbfosma overwhelming qnsettoa oomea to uses came to Jesus when Ha hannl God's volar, ns sum to Mesas i when ha bob*Id the bai n log hash; u ! Mm* to Paul amid Urn daxsllog light I ‘What am I goiog ta do ! with it an ? I can make myaalf great t>T ,«»»» of It, or I own tasks the *J*ld . *r!^t m«an* of It—now which?' It la a big question, aad you oannot answer a big quoatlon la a ■mall way. It strike* to the vary root of ilia whole be*loess of life, amd yon cannot possibly grasp tire root by chewing the twigs on tltx bawdies. It tt owe of those crises la a man's life that for success or fallare reaches clear oat to Oe end of the years. The enure taolus of tba whole Christian business lies right in them. “ Jt to a matter of throwing one’s ndf for all be is worth lota the aeak of th* world's necessities, aad the process of choosing a career Is simply the way IB wblob one awto tto uuoBtiou y to tba twrtieekr channel ak/ug wbloh th* world’s Moeesltlee caa bast be reached and supplied by his own personal resources." A IMmHUiiW. Dutrult Plnai Pram. Deacon Pemberton Shlnner is a my devout aud industrious colored men with n penchant for large words. Us Moppwi on his wty boms, at tbs bout* where b» enjoys the sxelusivs ‘cold rittiw” privilege nod remarked to U»s lady on the atey: “I'nity wnhm weather, ahn’ naff." “Yea, it is rather warm lean yon hers you pick and aboral with you. It must be pretty liaixl to work with them when It Is so hot.” *'YM’m Da perfemion of exeava tln’ hah its drawbacks. But I baa mer min ooeypiod wit tiiougbuan’ ao 1 hasps a-raeraatio’ right alou* wlf mar lo<lustrinIity.,, “What do you think about P" *’I puts er good deal «r *y medlta tiousnem on da preachln’ dat I done hynhd de Sunday beto.” “I suppose you gat .a great deal of comfort out of that.” "Sometimes I does. An’ dea sgin’ bits er good drel o’ worriaaot tar me. Deh-s snmpln' datds preacher said laa> Sunday dat keeps er s'rials' t*r my min’ an' a ranklin’ in mer bosom." •‘Wbst Is tt»" "De clergyman, he doue ejoqoenced de aayin' dat or man mui’ earn liis brand by de awaat er hia brow." " Well, your conscience auraly dorso'i trouble you In that connection. That’s howjrou tarn your brand, isn't ltT” "Yas’m. Dai’s how I gits da owner •lilpw all d« luitonaofooiDMi ar din* hare life. Bat DsagHUu’diaeontactad dese wabm days." “Do you get tired of working t" "No1*. I likes tar wubk. Bat ef whut er man gits fob it is measured by de pmpirattou oo bis brow, !'• sholy lotltlad far mo’ dan brand. I ortar bab pie an’ cake at de berry lew»!" • »• niuaOMeergr.BniML A correspondent of the g. *., World writing aboat Mrs. Bryan's ■olieliade for bar basband, tells tbla: 8ba watches her husband with Braes vigllaoee. She wont lat hlaa alt la Uis suo.and ebe marches him oft to hu meals, will* billy. “It's bad enough for him to get hla food on the Issullioaut plan," aim Mid, whan they bad left breakfast three tiaras to go out aad be ebaarad •ad apeeoblBaa and welcomed)"bat food ho must have, oommllteea or no committee*. ” Aewlll not dlaeuaa pclltics. Sbo will not talk about this Huts or that She hopes her bus boot will ha elected Aha My* sbs doeeu't think It b*„“7 *«■ all to bs mlatovsa °* ttS w™** Houaa, Aha mm ahs oould ba*a a good deal batter tlrna In mamy ways if her husband was de feated, and for alt that aha hopMha will nu be defeat ad. “hmh are always waking Ao what la the astro* of my btaahaad'a popular! ty,« Am Mid today. "They Bo not aeem to rselrae what ha rapMasaU a great principle. It isn't Bryaa Umss paopls ebsar; U'a tbs things ha rapts "fl'NM people anil H magma Urea,” Mid "a man with a acts bod.” •Tartmpa Um* do.** lira. Bryaa mid qalstly. "I sou it tooth, and aa boo eet purpose lu speaking it. Thu's Urn hind at magoUMB X believe to.” Nunm«x McertMoi. UIDtaak VmlMrhM rrm Hew M WMfa>ik«hMarn|k HMBWa Mb lorn lUMen In UUh*, Wfer. jgwjaaft&gyse! SSSSS^r*^ oard In Um dock—hot staff and a whole pawleuf It. Br awa* hook or atnrMk I forgo* i? f*;1"1* to now Wgh <w». of Rcofc* Orsek. Aad Um way to which ho whipped LjLa Qgbt and won U>« raov. bands down, jrtt simply bom °P * that AmdmS port* Lara &7pu£*"**wl“ **■*“*' out for* 52 £2 x.!hs ^sSS Uio u liter two they did make Zeroed Lmmeodloa hot and dusty far me" aay* littleBank tom the next day ■ftor tba eleoUou. “But Will Tom 1'iokena b« was a eaadldat* from over to tba blU eooutry, whilst Dud Newton UwaaruBBtotromitowB to Urn Flat Wood*. Will Tom be bad warkad up a eeaadloue strong hackle from Uw boy* in tbo hill*, whilst Bod fee never was lu the Oglit acarooly any to apeak kjUMerfei eemb rwe* L eoold beat Bod Newton every day in U to a whole lot different with Will Toe* riekoBB, wlildi there mno to the aeul* than b‘°»- WeU, I sally, at (eat 1 pot to and J^10* oat In this way. if ®“d don't gff narvteai and ran up the zs&ssisitstiera out*"a >B«wtheMd U> Will Tom and me, than lb* man and the eatlta mutt meat and I wit! have to batbama. “80. oonaoqoantly. yon can mat oaeat, Rufus, that tba inatnert thing with me was to keep Bud Newton in the race and bold out the votes wnicb « Toula. hrto* “P from the Klat Woods. Bright and early tba next murato I saddled up and lit out for tlm “d 1 didn't let any gram grow till 1 nd up the Newton place and called Bud out tor a private con I then up nod told Urn 1 was Uinkin right earloua about poll In ou t of tho race si ace It looked like Uw oW boo wa* hound to toy a Newton egg before aheqolt the nest. I likewise went on to tdl him bow n*y vote* ware f*Uin out and flotltin to the Newton column. • Will Tuts Pickeoi to.Ilk* the total on • bottle,' toy* 1 to Bud—-all around tl but not in it any at all aoorcely— and I would love to be your lint deputy in oaaa the oarda keep on runato your way.* "laprtad it oa aad plied it up la that way, Rufoa, ttU Bud weo tickled ■KMt to death aud I knowed he woo Id atay In the raoe till the evwiu of tho lait day. “Neat then oo ay return bock borne 1 rid around through tho bill country and give oat the mw« (no and promt* eu that Bud Xewton waeat leint three length* ahead to the raoe and gaioia ground at every Jaap. Tlwre to maay and many a man in llito great country. Itufoa, that would a whole let rather rau wtth the ilggett crowd and holler for the wlonlo ticket, and whetlwM aftor over there to the hill oonutry m to Kart a grand rnih and stampede •owe Pickeu’• vote* Into the Xewton column. In the main time 1 didn't have nothin ehw to do bat to i*ua the word around aaoogat ay friends to hold ateady and atilt aad wait far lit* oat to Jaap. “And man. air, the general machin ery worked aa illek aod imooth aa you over law—never mimed a lick nor jumped a ope. Dud Newton stayed In the race. He I if Id hte own aud got aoaM ec acted n votes which I Cad itempeded out of the bill country aud away hum Will Tom ptefcma. And then Anally at tost when the old oat bunched her teat she jumped my way like ebot out of a shovel. ” Human nature u meet lu generally always tinman. Mortal mao, bora of woman, to Of few day* and no teeth, but fall of Mi trteka. Week Ito Ik* Ini I i*lilrtsn iKWVm Itmnkr, The next Legislature wlU to colled !jg" «•.»*ke atops toward withdraw ing public ux-nid from higher edoca UoV£°, »»f«rmato«7 for youthful crimmslt, to laerana the •Oeleacy ot the common whooi* [I*, olodlng the Institution ot a men re and lnoniruptlble plan of adopting pnbli* whoel hooka), to paw an eatl-eaioon kw, to pweakw restrict lag fern of Juallew of Urn inaw la elm owe*. Aad puUUoiaaa nod eaadldato* who diawmstd thaw otdaeto eheekl to UegM a lemon by the people. mri' 'ii . Tke Wear Wnmu In TTtlhsii. WUknMUnm CMeniklu. Dili. sgrga®' ea •nf from taooir to wlaaton. Sta ww walking and pwMog a baby earring* wbisb oontaloed a baby and other household uad kllebsi. fornllure. Mbs WM going at a 9.-40 gm« w ato paaaed ttoaogk town, bto aakw t or 10 mUeajwrday. This I* rattoraaowl wayoTwetag the world, bat the •>eew woman" aw way* peeaitarty tor awn. toe* rtlk tond ytoTaddreaa toM. E. ileokto. ^ftxRixrAfi^cn! total will convince you of their merlin, wy IjHh ddUen and at*1 lurtleulariy aCwtlto In tto ton. of \ anMipatlen and Mek Uaadaeto. Poe >lalarto and Unr Uuahtoe they bava toaa pi lived Invnluabe. Ttoy aw guarnuteeil to he pet(roily rw* tram nrswr detoterkma wtotane* aad to to pnerny vegetable. Ttoy 4o not wauket. i sux^sesSSSF 1_ AXow York Bonk to wading oat» Wd* the oarrsuay ^SuLT^n «f. opting paragraph * wSGktafH&. sKisrssr^rssffam^ what it “the meaolog of 18 to 1,” end th« oaabitr repll** that it “naei U foola to 1 acaalUe aua." Wow this atnptd staff to being di*. trlbatod m tha intonate* tin need moog' qaaec- It anything eouldto 4ovM to do the sliver oaaea note 5*5£“»t»5«S«ap:vi th»t are largely raMcailUt* tot So spread.of the demaid for .liver. Men aloNat «> dltpalr from tha took* age.Jv. ployaxnr aad from tha ttcmrWfcaSB.': mm of their faming rfiuiloii oa aa4»s a surf *}*• tpult of houeet enquiry and .Rivas auboocet answer. These things have driven them almost to dwpora ttoo. sod yet many gold advocates wea to be abaolutely blind to tha danger* that they are ealllag iwlo Mtoteoc*. Im iUn*'«%*T*n' Jtoeonl has repeatedly urged that Mob atone « tWa Im stopped; ibet those people ahall Dot he given a aloes wbentSw ' art for brmP, that they ebaU setS daaoanoed as tbetvn*, foola and aaar 6<>UU1!BT0M* 0**lr *ook aaxtously for •Mie light apoo a question. tha settle ment which oouoerus their ability to ears aa huaaat hviug. If Usama who art leading tu thle work—tha str»“trsssrasjss racbatihl* Wew York tonkusand tna out shall not bo used io this cam paign. Tbto to ao ordinary political “‘“IB"; ll to a edeie la the nation itself, and upon Its settlement moat depend ear fature. It lonotatiai* to toady opltheta: it Is not a time to oall Men fools and thieve* simply fae eaase preeelng poverty has dnveotfcm to Ura any way Per relief. This •bould be n campaign, not of those, «o» * suppreaevd free m«. Jg* campaign bated on Urn hi all ml eduoatloonl line of work, la wUift WT man owes It to *• humanity aad to hie country tobonwt lyaeak to know the truth, aad tab* able to give a reason for the faith that is In him. With aneh a canvass aa that, the JfimaAiota.vrs’ Henri turn no fear of the results. It baa aUdtout faltH in the hnwor. Urn Integrity, the good sense aad the Get] rightful do tomiaalioa uflhto momsotonawtma tton, which adans aomuch far tha oausa of huaanby sad tor ooreoootrj. Oaaft a-'low. Iitk, As extraonlluary mil of btfir moutathr* fooling waa mnwliil aSaataduotU Tliartday by um«. '■!' ■loo p( tb* poaalbl* loflioMa a# ~l-Tfiliidjln llWMb dm ou tm that Un mount _ Iwoinm nnUvorabir. Batoth«r oandlttao* Mt Nt I Ml—im to ■iroiiimiii ro rotU, tba oroya ImMM Z rlow ItOortM. Labor dlBcolUaa ac bad, and tba elottag of ertablttuaanaa for waotof work, aad tba nfoaaloC oyamluai la aui doidry aad trodo. Tba work tbarofore tart week did. witli do* aaimaUr dull Cor tbaa* by charing booaa auhaimL ___ oaut naailgr tbaa tart year aad 1A5 I* K tbaa la tbo aom wk or IWd^ tba tartyaar of fax "rnmutmUm?* ***** ******* ;■ “Wliat proportion of MeKiibr M4#ja»oBip«u btdcta ii* jo* uko* a Port r«i«wt«r ortho ptaarlatar TmZd*" *tan(I •lth* WuCTSSS *- ■ ...'5KX!.!* “,—* ~‘JulS5JW: >>'!"W|ab ona of Making,” w«a Uwiapty. mj 0* ^ Hrpau UadfcX foot rMMab. t lun arttrt A rcmo atn. twt 7«aot know bow loot IwVten to »alt far U*a»." ** i At Ctaatloa * <U«m»'o eiaar sgasar*^ to* rauwoa sjgggjg^
Gastonia Daily Gazette (Gastonia, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 20, 1896, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75