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The Herald from Rock Hill, South Carolina • 2

Publication:
The Heraldi
Location:
Rock Hill, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i IM II 6 BMWWW hinton'cid event the Imhii linrclvii (n fc offtnot coufiuod to llock Hill but vx- both his fnui ily bud J'CujJb lunjifl TTuvocltll ill lleialtl irawift Humors diminution is tiii aitaiifntj condition or cotton choc Wahuixiitox September TheL September cotton report of tliu de-i Ipurtmont of agriculture aliowa thi' jprcvulcrice of jiot ami dry weutlii-r luring August except iu Louisiana Vvfsr-Tl 'Umi 1 acts About the 1 iclils How It llrtts I We published thu following some veurs ago on taken from the American The Sheriff of Newborry has ro Alimuma As it shows how rapidly a ieivod a stay of execution iu the case small increase of interests grows we of Vinuio Nance who was Huntouced again publish it as a caution to our jto bo hanged the J3th instant Tlio readers against borrowing at higli Ji-uh' goes to the Supreme Court on rates of interest: jappeal "One of tlio causes of bankruptcy I jirrict Frost a colored woman HTATJs NHW8 proud lie waa the head of a happy! home the proud father of a do voted family and to them the long is 1 irreparable But to hia chil-lren the inheritance of an unstained name and the record of an? honorable life are hotter thuu gold Fort ou the 11th 12lh audgtended to Charlotte Yorkvillc Chea 13th of April 1861 Eter LnncoHter M'iunaboro Camden Some week subsequent to IhcHur-HMunnettaville and Homo Rcaeons Col rouder of the fort by Maj Aiidcruonfluinbia He was the first buyer in in the South Curoliuu troops tjie Cul-Bihis section to aflbrd to planters thi pge company waa ordered back toalacilities they now poaaeiw of Hellinp Columbia and the old College Udlwheir crons at roiuuneralirc priena ii waa again heard pealing ila to ho delivered in thu Full JOStPH HULL LOITOR 1UH-K IIIIIH IIKITKMHKU IT IHltft HATH' OF (flUJ M1VY In common with the community Thi Hemun mourns the dentil of Col Jatnc JffIvy its founder end pro-printer After a prolonged illuess of year he calmly end peacefully rciitlicdi hii hfttjitti home in this place on Friday afternoon List surrounded by hie family and Rovernl timt so few persons properly estimate the dilfurenco between higl and low rule of interest aud there loro liorniw money at ruinous rute culls to recitation Hut tlio autijcnl of thia Hkctch full I that duty to his country cnlh-d him? another field of action and accom- thus cusnriug the planters agaiual ho fluclualiona of the price of thi topic and rendering their trunaaction ill cotton ulao wife As a result of hi Georgetown attempted to kindle a tiro with kerowme oil The usual explosion followed uml Harriet died from tho effects of her injurioB ou tl- following day Nelson was elected last woslc to fill the vacancy caused in the Ivor per eenkTwUh the inter-Eshaw County delegation to the Login-umiually and added to luturo by the resignation of Miller Uovkin There was uo opposition one umiually will amount to $310 hat no legiiiumto business cuu stand few have figured on this ditTer-I bcLween six aud eight pci cent on liiiinliuiil loaned for hundred purl-UiiMixippi amt Florida Shedding Hof bolls mid di-iii'cmm of vitality have Ins family however we have Bympa-luUeil qulU) trumraUy jroUKlt thy for ourselves the plcuaunl nicuu-gim bei-n serious in Texas and Aikau- ries of a true friend and an honurubh mad for him congratulations surely it is well with a rna'u and it is 7" I'l'pilliir has caused much damage lm 0 host if somewhere in the hereafter he iuUimu Texas Arkansas snd central eun feel that all trouble aud toils und Southeru Alubuma Its piTva-r and Huflei'inga uro over and he is suf leiice is noted throughout central and beyond their reach nud has eiirncitlllu'ieru Goorgiu but with small his rest and that ho is gono from lifcB'! to death or rather from death unto uble sas uml quite general in WesternSl For l'eunesruie and Southorn AlabuinajVery Ucorgia and the Caruliuas Thecal- I 1 I A 2 The boll worm is cuus-liug much duraage in the black licit of lAlabaiua aud in Arkanses and Texas' is chL At pm lied by two young friends he forth Sr'llU coVditiou rriwwleJ homo and made liutvHiroii i Buck Hill wliel amounted anno precarious for several weeks cuter er'9llVllv Uo1 Uo past that the mournful tidings not unexpected When the vice ut the seat of wur in VirgiuiaWbalus before he began business here whero the three joined the Washing-B were ruu up yeurly to from fourteen housuud to thousand bales balings the bhipuiunta of cotton on Light Infantry of Charleston un-Hi seventeen ler command of Cupt James Conner lute years Si i -V The condition lias declined iu every jState and tho uverugo is 87 agauil jitG in August Last year it was 82 iu September und 87 in August The preseiit uverage is two points iilov the September average of tea years The figures for tlio several years are is follows which has been a very common rate the United States it amounts to 413801) or about 700 times ss much At eighteen per cent it amounts $15145007 At Lweuty-four per cent (which we sometimes hear talked of) it reaches the enormous sum of 2 551799404 Oue hundred dollars borrowed at six per cent with the interest compounded annually will imount to $1842 in fifty years while the same $100 ut eight per cent Generally the plants are vigorouslwill amount to $4G90 in fifty years aud capable with favorable autumn Cue thousand dollars at teu per ccut VirKlnla Small Cunillim 88 Klurlila tw 8U Ijuuixlimu UO rkuiNii 83 one of the compauius of the fumousj Hampton Legion lie passed uuscutched through thi-j lirst buttle of Manassas ou the ever-metnorablo 21st of July 18G1 nl- ugh several limes ruck by spent lcketta Battery where the Hampton Legion auflered so Be verely IIo remained in the Army of North irn Virginia during the fall aud wiu- ter of in the spring of 18G2 was transferred with his command lo the where in the buttle Seven-Fines on the 31et day of May 18G2 he was severely wounded in the left shoulder by bull which he carried until bis death and from the effects of which he never fully recovered the use aud slreugtl jf tue arm Xu consequence of his severe wound ne remained id hospital at Richmond until about the middle of July when lie was honorably discharged from Confederate service aud returned from the theatre of war a disabled soldier to enter a new and happier ife He married August 5th 18G3 the daughter of Hon Henry Conner that he had died all the prominent business houses in town at once closed their doors in respect to his memory snd on the following morning all the buildings on Main street the- churches society buildings and public balls were draped in deep mourning Thuolud iutli emblem of woe the town fitly represented the sad feelings of the represented the sad feelings people of the community in the loss of a great oue who had done so much for its proapetity and impor tauce and who hod been idonti- fied with its interests since tJL jime when Bock Hill had no corporate existence At an early hour on Sunday morning funeral servieps were held ove the body in the Epis copal Church of which ho was a de voted member the rector Her Jpyner aud at 10 the re xnaina were escorted to Laurel wood Cemetery by a delegation of tbe huni-j iiese pen of Bock Hill and representatives of the local Lodges of the-Legion and Knights of Honor The! pall-bearers were Messrs 31 Cher rv D0 Williams A FeweJl' E-ll iveryi FeweD Joseph Mil ler Ibibei-t Frew Edward Fowell snd Wc-W Gill employees of On-firms of Ivy A Co and Ivy A FewelL- At the cemetery the ear Tices vvhich hod been adjourned from the cburcli were concluded and all that was mortal of James 3L Ivy after a useful prosperous and honored life was lowered into the tomb and as the I'lods fell upon hie coffin the sweet strains pf the beautiful hymn I life with the respect of those whoE knew him und by them is sincerely mourned rim GEO IIO KTOWN AMI KOHT1I CAH- OI1NA UAILltOAU It seems to us the time -has about arrived when the people of Bock Hill aud vicinity Bhould take some steps towards securing tho locntiou through ur section of the proposed new railroad from Cincinnati to Charleston Wo are sure tbe people of Bock Hill are anxious that the road should puss through their town aud will do all iu i heir power to induce the projectors to favorably consider their claims but the impression has gone abroad ihat the enterprise is treated with in difference here and that the poople take but little interest in the location un-jless it should get ou the oust side the Chester and Lenoir Railroad There is no foundation for such a rumor and its circulation does Bock Hill and vicinity great iujustice Such an idea has never been sugges here Bock Hill stands ready to co-opernlo with l'orkville or any other section of the county in an effort ti secure the road and will contribute is liberally as possible to the enterprise The question of the building of the road has been agitated here but little because it was nut known what would be required of Buck Hill aud becauso it was unsettled whether tki-couuties in North Carolina where elections for subscription were pend mg would extend any aid We are highly impressed with the groat iinportaucoof the read passing by tho way of Buck Hill and now weather of aiuplo growth and boll levulopmeut In the districts most infested with cotton worms the loss is irrcpuruble und Still threatening WUEVT The condition of Spring wheat hns been impaired since the 1st of August Iu the Northwest thu district of the principal pruductiouicuvy ruins were followed by extreme heat betwoeu the lirst and middle of August just before harvest shriveling the grain and cuus ing rust Heavy windstorms pros-j crated aud injured large areas In Nebraska there is some complaint of 'nut and a little in Dakota Chinch bugs have done some durnage in Wis- O' oonfcdii and Minnesota The injury was greater in August than in July 1 The averages are for Wisconsin 77 a loss of 8 points Minnesota 78 a loss if 5 Dakota 90 loss of 4 Iowa 88 i loss of 7 points Northern New England Gulorado and the Territories are nearly or quite up to 100 The general average for all Spring wheat is 8Gj against 95 in August Tlio crop lost year was 15G 000000 bushels The returns of whiter wheat are ilmost identical iu resultn with those July There is a slight advance in Michigan Texas Maryland and some itlier States and a point or two in A young man named II Bov I 1'iunloycd as a train hand on a freight train mi tho South Curoliua Railway fell between the curs near bruncbvillo lust Tuesday morning and was run ovor and iuHtantly killed Orangeburg Time and DemocnJ is a young lady in our County who ruuB a farm aud makes from £0 to 40 bales of cotton on it every ycer in addiLion to other crops She is good -looking and would moke an excellent wife but report Bays she marry Congressman llompbill lias returned from Saratoga While stopping in Washington he had two new IKwtofficea established in Chester one at Sandersvile the oth-or at Mills Mr Alois Gerber of Walhalla who 1 bus in cultivation less than ono-half an acre of grapes huving 700 bearing vines on this plat of ground will make this year about 400 gallons of wins This is considered an enormous yield and at one dollar per gallon would be equivalent to $800 per acre A correspondent from Orangoburg snys: "The caterpillars developed iu force during the month of August and within tho pnst ten days tuey have stripped every vestige of foliage from the plants and are now eating the small holla The fields bo green' and luxuriant a fow weeks ago now look as though they lwd been swept by Tho seventeen prisoners in Kershaw jail got out of their cells a few uiglits ago and wore fast removing tho obstructions from the windows wbeu Mrs Gaskins the daughter aroused by the uoise rushed in with a bar of iron drove them back ini-) -their cells and kept guard until the irrival of the Sheriff The Jailor is a cripple and unable lo get out of bed A travelling pliotogoaphor said to be from Lancaster wits arrested ia Winnsboro last week being charged with attempting to burn the Thespian Hall iu that town Tho man passes under the name of II McMuriy Me was bound over to the Circuit Court It is belioved ho set fire to the building bopiug tlmt the contents of his room insured fur $700 would burn so that he might get the insurance 1 A colored woman named Caivcr claiming to be a voodoo doclrcss frightened a colored family namj McGorkle living in Brovard ('! badly with what she called conjure bulls thrown against the house that the father mother and two children ftnd two others were made very ck' CTldeUCCS 'erp Lincoln county who in 1814flbfalto colluP4e 1877 he Muned liesiifes his enterprise as a merchant aud cotton buyer he never fail id to he uiuong the first in all Umf xniccrncd the public welfare lit xhibited a liberality a charity and a public spirit excelled by no mac in iho community in which ho resided He contributed liberally to aid in the building of the Epiucoptd church ot Buck Hill nud gave generously to till other churches and churitahh associations He was prominent in the movement which resulted iu tlu uitahlishmeut of the Bock Hill Cotton Factory and was a director in that enterprise He was the moving the municipal campaign of 1881 which culminated in prohibiting the granting of license to sell ardent spirits in our town Ho ever showed a disposition to niil all who sought ulvance themselves With this feel-ling and for the convenience of tbc lpublio generally ho established or (rather re-established the drug store lunder the name of Ivv A Robertson te assisted mainly iu establishing the Fjunlern under the editorship of Gen Uohnstone Jones in 1872 and when (that paper through its successive changes of names and editors was ditoriol control himself aud changed Lhe name to Thk Bock Hiu Hkiiald wing to the greut pressure of hi ther varied business interests liow-ver he was noon forced to retire from Hlitoriid chair He continued to bt the owner of the paper up to his dentL indouththe reebiptsof the office uld sometimes fail to pay the run mng expenses he was imbued with such spirit of towu pride that he would nut let the paper go down and would make up the deficit from his own private puree Of kite however the paper has not been such a tax upon his fortune but it has neve: been of any pecuniary advantage to him Mr Ivy was elected In-tenJant of Bock Hill in which position he served with efficiency and satisfaction WTitkoat taking a notably prominent part in politics he displayed a lively interest in all that concerned the public and political welfare of the Stule He was Fresi- (lunt of the Democratic club of Rock Hill in the eventful struggle of 1876 and was accordingly chosen to intro-luce Hampton on the occasion of hb visit to Bock Hill during that memorable campaign He was also selected with others to welcome Governor Hampton to South Carolina on his return from Washington after the historical interview between the Gov- ernor nnd President Hayes Mr Ivy had no ambition for political prefer menh When it became known to him three years ago that certain of hii friends desired to present his name to the convention which met in Ches- ter to nominate a candidate for Con grass Mr Ivy positively refused ti allow of such use of his name aud de would not 'live as sung'byljorCouner Mr Ivy settled at Beattie's xi Ford in Lincoln cmnl tho limn the choir ascended to high' Ford in Lincoln county the homt The generaf average is Gooltisliv as its nominal capital It mokes a surplus ou paper in order to jockey compuuy ue dollar ears at six collected he principal eight per cent it amounts to 42203 or nearly seven times us much At three per cont the usual rnte of interest iu England it umounjs to $1825 whereas at teu percent compounded will ruu up to $117-390 in fifty years Jny Monopoly Saw York World The report of the Western Union Telegraph Compuuy for the quarter ending September 10th shows thu there is a surplus in the treasury ol $4430293 after paying a threi dividend at thu rate of Gj per cent per annum amounting to $1199842 According to this statement the sorporutiou lias earned enough to pay per cent dividend on a r- tnl of $80000000 and to have still it nand nearly four million nnd a hall of surplus The capital of $80000000 is fictitious representing iu actual property only about $20000000 The revenues of the corporation come from the pockets of those who use telegraph linea As the telegraph uos in a great measure taken the place of the mini service aud as business men are compelled to use the wires os a necessity it follows that the people ore squeezed to pay rate nigh enough to yield a dividend ou $6U 1)00000 of aud semi-fraudulent capital stock We believe the financial statement tbe to be ns watery ami it less than oiie-half the charges ex lorted by tho monopoly No wonder the Western Union ana couda has been anxious to swallow up or crush out the Boltimoro and nL Taloonmh Commnv No won- Ohio Telegraph Company No won der the deiunnd lor laws to make Much greedy and unscrupuloua monopolies impossible is growing stronger and Btrougor every day Dakota Wiscon- ducers was about $255000000 for hi- SliOO non 011(1 ra aatiaaf arw-1 cotton $330000 000 for wheat and ihe stock ou the market A corpora lion with an actual surplus of between $4000000 and $3000000 would not be compelled to raise $1000000 oi: ixmds But if the financial state-in incut were an honest one it would itrickiuglr illustrate the outrage ol allowing such a monopoly to exist It shows that a telegraph company with honestly constructed lines and a onujiiie bed-rock capital could make a handsome profit out of tho peopli heaven It was a solemn and impreseive njoment and many an eye was wet with tears There was not a human face that WB8 not dark with grief The gloom woe universal' An immense concourse of friends were present at 1 the interment in fact tbe largest we have ever seen in the town Representatives from the neighboring towns and the country surrounding were in attendance In that vast throng we doubt if there was one person to vpbqu) iMr' Ivy bad not extended sopie kindpi sir or to whom some kind word pf encouragement had not been spoken' In their hearts his memory will V) 4 K- St 3 $1 JiV S' Wi V' i fc f--: Ifc it' entered the 'Army as Aide-de-camp to Gen Joseph Graham in the Creek war and afterwards served asj member of Congress fur twenty uqtisecutive from 1821 to 1841 he declined a re-election Owing to the failing health of 31a- of his father-in-law It was then that the subject of this sketch first com menced his career as a merchant He ipened a store of general merchaiulisc ut that pluce in 18G6 and conducted a successful and prosperous buBineBs for three yean In 18G7 he conceived the idea of seeking another and wider field for the exercise of his business tact anil mergy and upon investigation decided that Bock Ilill oilered rare facil- ities for opening and developing thi mercantile business Accordingly he established and organized at Bock Hill in that year the 'firm of Ivy- Roach A Jones-composed of among the friends of his youth On the 1st of January 1870 the well- known firm of 3L Iy A Co was formed composed of Ivy John -J Roach aud May Allen Jones that the matter of subscription hua been settled in favor of tho road in the North Carolina counties our position should be given definite shape that our friends in other towns maybe assured of our co-operation andj that the projectors may be encouraged to give our claims consideration! gods help those who help and if we do not now begin to move iu the matter our excitedaState averages sinter town to the Southward may step in auif secure the prize The route from Yorkville via Bock Hill and Luncaster or via Bock Hill and Rocky Mount which may be termed the Eastern route would certainly be able and williug to contribute as liberally to the enterprise as the route by the wo of Chester besides the East orn route is far more practicable and would afford a better support than the Chester route From Yorkville to Landsford or to Rocky Mount either the grading could be (lone at or not spirituous liquors shall be sold comparatively trifling cost and lQ that uutj AS person qualified C5 iu July Except as thu igainst C5 ill July Except as the result of threshing may cliango the present expectation the winter wheat irea may bo placed at 217000901) bushels und the remaining area ubout 13401)0000 If the injuries reported the stack should prove to be-grent- ur than at present apparent a few iiiillious of reduction might still ac- crue corn The condition of corn still contin- ues high ranging from 90 to 100 ii) live aud their affection will guard his Iry Roach and Allen tomb Fence to his ashes and may his life teach a lesson to those who come after him which will bring fortl good fruit Below wc publish a short sketch of his life For many of the facts we jinye drawn upon sn article 1 prepare for the York villa Enquirer by Capt Iredell Jones in 1879: '--v- i James Morrow Ivy Major Connor he closed out his business in North Curoliuu and purchased his late home in Bock Hill returning with biB family to his native and left the Bock Hill house with his partners giving his own personal attention to his business at Ford but making occasional visits to Rock HilL In June 18G7 after the death of Recovered Senor Bnbrilles the hot-headod Governor of the Caroline Islands when ho found tho Germans had occupied Yap wont aboard a Spanish mau-of-wor and requested tho Cap- tain to fire on the Germans which was refused tho Governor then -ordered the crew to fire when the Cap- tain shot him in the shoulder and put him under arrest The Local Option hill having passed the Georgia Legislature' ii now a law in thut State As there no prohibition of the Bale of "sacra mental communion celebratiuns will liecome popular in Georgia an' many pew-holders will come to bottle-uoldere It will be odd enougl at firat to see a solemn disciple cff prohibition meandering toward tk meeting with a flask of sacra--mental forty-cont corn-juice smiling it from a hip pocket and the compU cent after-taste of a recent nip posing itself just under hia nostrils was born in Indian Land Township State to seek his fortune amid the in Lancaster County S- on the familiar scenes of his boyhood and The trial of 31uxwell for the mur der of Freller in St Louis has beer postponed to October 1G A negro ex-convict named Scale was lynched in Boone County Ky recently The usual offence The Mollie Maguires are again spreading terror throughout the Lu- when the surveyors strike this section Generali di8ict 01 we are sure they will report a route Assembly are qualified to vote in this that will take precedence over all election The tickets shall be written others in upper South Carolina -for For Sale and Against Sale i the result of the election should the easy and cheap construction of a be the tbe 0rilina railroad The road would follow a ry Blull give notice once a week foi high sandy ridge from Yorkville to four weeks and the Act shall take ef- a boat thm-lourth wm Muag ultbdMtac i 1ml aud railroad ut with that grad- If the reHUlt 0f the election $1500jhould be "For no other election ju the question shall be held in that within less than two years unty Sale no persou shall sell or barter directly or indirectly or give away at his place of business or furnish at come when we should arouse our- otlier PuUic an7 alcoholic Helves and go to work We are-not i other drinks which produce intoxicn it all afraid of Bock Hill dying vp tjon Nothing in tue bill is to pre uven if We should miss the road but vent tho manufacture sole and use it ia an important enterprise that domestic wines or cider or the vale would be of untold benefit pro vided they are not sold by bar-rooms at retail Bev Moses A Hopkins colored if North Carolina has been appoint-Itgcd Minister to Liberia The total cotton crop for 1884-85 was 5669021 bales 18S3-84 5714 )52 1282-83 6992234 If the Oconee river bottom plant- between Milledgeville Georgia no disastrous floods in the river thin full they will make corn enough to lo them for home puvpOBcsfive years A daughter of the Confederate Gen cral Cheatham 3Iiss Kitty by name lias made her dehul upon the dramatic stage She is described as very graceful and pretty with plenty of Ulent and ambition The weather iu the Northwest Saturday aud before last was unseasonably cold an actual snow Mtortn having occurred in Dakota and vere frosts iu MinneHotn Iowa and Northern Wisconsin The crops were huilly damaged and the wheat of cranberries of $2000 per mile The hinds are fer misfor- that is believed the cost of ing would not be more than tile the people are prosperous and progressive and the country stands badly in need of railroad faculties In our estimation the time has retired from the firm of Ivy Roach A dared that he had no ambition what-Jones but was re-admitted in 1872 to the firm of Ivy A Co upon i he retiring of Messrs Bauch and May The firm of Ivy A Co was continued with Allen Jones as a partner until December 1880 when Mr Jones retired and a short time ifterwanla associated himself with Dr Robertson in the' well-known! cotton and mercantile firm of Jones ever to fill a public office On hi flower-entwined tomb let it be written that hia ambition was to nobly do tile work of life to act well his part His patriotism was intense With oil the fervor of bis great heart did he love his native State The tunes and calamities that befell Soutli uroliua from 1861 to 187G seemed to udear her and her people all the 5th day of December 1839 and was tbe son of Rev Adam Ivy a local preacher of the Methodist Episcopal Church South His ancestors were directly from Virginia and remotely from England His childhood was spent in his native county but be began his studies in school at Rock Hill successively under Thomasson GoL 31 -White and Gen A Alston and when Gen Alston was called to take charge of old Mount Zion Institute at boro in tbs year 1858 he followed him there where be remained one session and then entered tbs school of John Shurley at Ebenezer At this school be' completed bis prepare- tdry course for -the South Carolina College which institution be entered in ilia year 1859 Here he pursued Robertson 'The firm of Ivy A' Co continued until the death of Mr Ivy lost week ne bad no partne ifter Mr retirement uot-witbl antagaia the wa ol lreht ratal winnol SJ7toat7 as our Chester friend well says if wejgvented from selling or furnishing uml the standing hia business was fair handiwork gave him an more to his faithful souL Ilia bright tod open face unmarred by those maligned which so often disfigure with their lines and furrows The corn yield is estimated at 2- beBoOOOOOOOO bushels worth $100000-place 00 The Tribune says that "Inst year with unusunlly large crops the Bureau estimate ol the value of pro- pure alcchol lor medicinal or scientific purposes held in any sale ot spirituous liquors is rectly prohibited either by high li No election can where the oould secure it Concerning the new road the Shelby Aurora of September 10th says: The Boston Construction Co lose to go to work on or before Sept hia eullegiate studies during thefl under the firm name of Ivy A eventful period of 1860 and was pres-B(Jo ent iu Columbia an toB In 1877 firm of Ivy A Fewell all those initiatory the furroa-Bwas the firm being uordisl grasp of his hand without tionof the orgauiza-fl Ivy and ET the business ef feeling that the heart that pulsated lion the exciting precessions andBtbe two houses being so wild demonstrations the outbreak ofg-is recently tjiat the latter iiud charge of the department of gen-1 merchandise and the old firm of public feeling at that critical time nnd the of the Ordinance unfailing passport to the good opin ou and friendly courtesies of thi- strauger while no one ever felt tbe brough it was filled with kindly emotion His ardent nature made him in enthuiuuBt in whatever he undertook The coldness of calculating ONLY 25 Cts EACH Former Price 50 Cts Each IVY FinVELL July 1 1SSA Dental Notice mostH- pre-il OmiCr FnCe75 GCIltS LftCji Theso are the greatest bargain? in the kind ever put on the Buck Ilill market Cull early invent-j -j i if cense local option or other legisla- a a at local 20th at or near Rutherfordton with a large force As soon as the route South is determined they expect to work near the Air Line and come towards Shelby- They begin work at Rutherfordton because tbe Rutherford county contract demands iiu mediate work They may or may not purchase aud use the old roarl bed to Shelby They promise to push tbe enterprise to a rapid com plction They accept CTeavelandl330030 immigrants and 1144 per $75000 proposition and thellMons were found to be either convicts contract will be signed by the Com-nlunatics idiots or persons unable to motor with any speed desired by iiiissioners on nest Friday The bonds core of themselves without be- simply bearing the foot on the rest will be deposited in Shelby perhiipaflooming public charges snd were rain the Shelby bank and the bondaltarned to the countries whence they will be safely guarded ireuic Lion so long as these lawn main in force Thia is the Local Option bill which represents the climax of a long prohibition campaign It ia probable that under its provisions nearly one hundred elections will be! held in Georgia between now and the cud of the year there arrived at New York $640000000 for So corn in king in money Value but it is the tton crop after all that helps the National debt aud to pay Iserve tho balance of trado A patent has been issued to two men in Philadelphia for an apparatus! to run sewing machines The ors have succceilod in constructing an apparatus which it is said due: away with the fatiguing treadle The! motive power ia ordinary clock springs arranged so as to run the! A few winding up sufficeH to Btore enough power ia the motor to ruu a sowing machine all day ton per annum 31 Ivy A Co fertilizer and lit may be here the fiims above always devoted hose and sale lion while irol over other ueu He was lealer iu cotton the State He to thirty thousnud transacting a cotton selfishness was all foreign to hia soul bonking business And He was not a man of policy substi remarked that in all tuting tact and craft fur courage and mentioned Mr Ivy directness and strength Nor did hi to its pur- affection for friends fiud its origin iu his personal atten- lojuucious weakness nnd dependence exercising a general cun- ft wna ruther tho impulse of a Leon branches of hia busi- iia gentle as it was breve as noble and perhaps the largest charitable as it was fearless and true in the upper part of Although cut down in the prime of handled from twenty liie manhood he lived long enough Iwiloe of pot cut- ((nblinh a character for honor une-Uin purchares were Culuies aud devotion to duty cf which passage Seresidon which led to the "Wur Be- I wrepthe i The Kpriugof 1SG1 opened 'Wi was declared Tho attack on Fort s' Sumter wns conceived and the Soutli (Ympfcny coinjtosed of all the students and rtunuianded by Cspt John Gary wns ordered tc Cluultiilon to report to General Beau rrgiml 31 Ivy accompanied the company in the capacity ecigesrt and was an eye-witness of tic wreptionof h-tljlitics thut great ihTfTinairng Ifrl OOMMKNC1NH TltLllHliAY JL'NK 4iti l)r 11 Pnlrlc will I at llv Olniir llotol In IbH-k Ilill mull fiirihcr iiiHivt- fur ll purpoM o( prncili-lng Hia iro(rwlMi Hi-iilllco will be iuiilliMl wltb llm lli itiirfiv- -liwlriiincnu and he Ktiaranli'v nulre MU- WTf 'acllun June 3 18X6 9C' I wtM ot receqa-.

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About The Herald Archive

Pages Available:
908,822
Years Available:
1880-2024